(Elftrag0 Mar00n54 YEARS OF SER^E AND LEADERSHIP ' If*yOTj. 5, NO. SS—Z-149 the university of CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1946 31 PRICE 5 CENTSADC Releases MedSchool ReportOn DiscriminationBy CLARE DAVISONThe present policy of admissions to the University MedicalSchool was the subject of an interview held recently betweeng nine-man Anti-Discrimination Committee delegation and Dr.Arthur C. Bachmeyer, Director of the University Clinics andAssociation Dean of the Division of Biological Sciences.Specifically concerned with theadmission of Negro and Jewishstudents, the Committee headedby Chairman -pva Emmanuellearned that no Negroes have beenadmitted to the Medical School for:i;ime tv/elve years—from 1935 to1942, when applications were, how¬ever, being accepted, and from1942-1945, when the Army took‘‘■'er the School and had complete*narge of admissions.This year Negroes are again be¬ing accepted as applicants for ad¬mission, but so far none has beenadmitted. '‘A Negro student mighthave been admitted this year hadhis scholarship not fallen down,”Bachmeyer said.Accepted for Two Years“In the past,” the Clinics Di¬rector continued, “we have accept¬ed Negro students in the first twoyears of our coursecame to clinical work, we have re¬quired that they take their clinicaltraining at Provident Hospital.”These arrangements, howe\^er,were considered discriminatory byProvident, the only Negro hospitalin Chicago, and were discontinuedseveral years ago.Present policy, if a Negro wereadmitted, would be to admit himwith only one provision, Bach¬meyer told the Committee. “If pa¬tients object to that student’s serv¬ices to the point where he cannotround out his education here, thenwe will have to make other ar¬rangements for his clinical instruc¬tion.” In regard to the factor of“patient objection,” Bachmeyerstated several times that “we can¬not control public attitude.”“1 know that we are conserva¬tive. I feel that we have to be con¬servative in this particular area . ..We have had enough complaints tomake us wary . . .”“Don’t you think,” a member ofthe delegation asked, at one pointm the hour-long interview, “thatone of the functions of the Univer¬sity of Chicago ... is to make anenlightened public opinion? . . .Don’t you think that Billings Hos¬pital could accept a few Negroesind not worry too much about in¬dividual patients and public com¬plaints?”Bachmeyer replied by pointingout that Billings “is reliant formore than 75 per cent of its budgetupon the earnings from patients.Our financial situation is not suf¬ficient.”Denies Quota SystemQuota systems for minoritieswere denied by Bachmeyer, as wasany kind of pressure in that re¬spect from the American MedicalAssociation.As a result of the interview,ADC is currently conducting a na¬tionwide mailing project, urgingNegro students to apply at the Uni¬versity Medical School, since nodiscrimination can be provedwithout actual case histories. TheADC plan will also provide an op¬portunity for the hospital adminis¬tration to clarify its admissionpolicies.The Bachmeyer interview waspreceded by a petition campaignsponsored by ADC, which garneredsome 1300 student signatures. NEXT MAROON ONSATURDAYBecause of the legal holi¬day next Thursday, May 30,and because of printing con¬ditions, the next issue of theMAROON will appear oncampus Saturday, June 1,instead of Friday, May 31.All notices for the MAROONshould be in the office bynoon, Tuesday, May 28.U of C DeanNamed PrexyAt NebraskaR. G. Gustavson, Executive ViceWhen it:President University andDean of Faculties, Monday wasnamed chancellor of the Univer¬sity of Nebraska, effective Sept. 1.Gustavson, eminent chemist whodid important atomic researchwork during the war, assumedhis present position at Chicago in1945. A native of Denver, hebegan his career at Colorado Agri¬cultural college in 1917 as instruc- ator in chemistry. Later he moved publication.Procedure ChangedFor Entrance intoDivisional WorkChanges in the procedure for entering a Division or Profes¬sional school, together with some qualitative changes in re¬quirements of several divisions, were announced this week bythe administration.Henceforth, students entering from the University of Chi-cago College will be required tofile formal application for admis-Chicago ReviewSpring IssueOut Next WeekThe eighty page Spring issueof THE CHICAGO REVIEW willput in its appearance early nextweek. Featured in this issue willbe fiction by Kenneth Patchenand Asher Gerecht, poetry by KarlShapiro, Erling Eng, and RadcliffeSquires, essays by Margaret Web¬ster and Harold Watts, and draw¬ings by Maude Phelps Hutchinsand Leon Bishop.According to Ira Corn, manag¬ing editor, THE REVIEW will besold starting next Tuesday atstands at International House, IdaNoyes, Cobb Hall, Commons, Har¬per, and Social Science, as wellas at THE REVIEW office, 203Reynolds Bldg. At ^these stands,students will also be able to pur¬chase subscriptions to THE RE¬VIEW at the special campus rateof $1.00 per year.In discussing the results of thefirst issue, Corn said that themagazine has subscribers in tnirty-bookstores all along the easternseaboard and the midwest. In ad¬dition, forty-five university li¬braries are also subscribers. “Itis interesting to note,” he added,‘that sales are about 35 per centgreater off campus than on, whichis rather remarkable for a studentto the University of Denver, andfrom 1927 to 1943 was head of thechemistry department at the Uni¬versity of Colorado. From ’43 until Scheduled for the August andfuture issues of THE CHICAGOREVIEW are short stories, essays,poems, one-act plays, and reviewshe came here in ’45 he was presi- by Jacques Maritain, James T,dent at Colorado. * Farrell, and Tennessee Williams. All-AmericanAward WonBy MAROONTHE CHICAGO MAROON yes¬terday was awarded the All-Amer¬ican honor rating for the s^ondconsecutive year in the nation¬wide Associated Collegiate Presscritical service.THE MAROON’S superior rating,based on issues published duringthe fall quarter, was the highestin the paper’s history and thehighest ranking granted in theACP contest. Newspapers frommost major universities were en¬tered in the contest.Singled out for special com¬mendation by ACP judges—Uni¬versity of Minnesota journalismschool professors—were the pa-ohe stat^-and *'^H9&ig^-»oia at general news, cpverag^ itsand sports departments,editorialand its general makeup techniqueThe paper’s “professional touch”was hailed by ACP critics.THE MAROON entry was sub¬mitted in competition with otherweeklies of universities whose en¬rollment is in excess of 5,000. Atotal of 1,005 out of a possible1,100 points were granted the pa¬per as compared to 885 last year.The paper’s staff during the fallquarter was headed by Abe Krash,former editor, and Ward S. Shar-bach, Jr., business manager.Three Students Are ChosenAa Candidates for. PraguePlans of campus organizations to I Jane Colley, and Lloyd Mendelelect a representative to the Inter-! son for the students.national Students Conference to be I occasioned byheld in Prague in August got un- i coming election on May 29 willderway this week after a com-1 campaign speeches of thebined student-faculty comrnittee ^ nominees. This will take place onselected three of nine nominees. | Tuesday, May 28 in Rosenwald 2Qualifications by which the se- .^.30 p students are urgedlection was made included a “B”scholastic average, experience inboth the college and the divisions,and active interest in campus af¬fairs, an indicated political ma¬turity, and an awareness andknowledge of world affairs.The three nominees who wereconsidered competent by the com¬mittee were Isabelle Kohn, nomi¬nee of Tau Sigma Upsilon Wom¬en’s Club, Russell Austin, nomineeof both the American Veteran’sCommittee and the Anti-Discri¬mination Committee, and HenryGoodman, who was nominated ona petition signed by fifty students.The Student Federalist Organiza¬tion is going to support Goodmanas delegate to Prague.The committee, who spent all ofWednesday afternoon working ona set of standards for selection,was composed of Dean LawrenceA. Kimpton, chairman, Milton B.Singer, Edward A. Shils, and Wal¬ter Johnson for the faculty, andAnne Duvendeck. Estelle Turner,' to attend.The final election by the studentbody of the student who will rep¬resent the University will be heldon Wednesday, May 29, from 9:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with all studentsbeing permitted to vote. Pollingplaces will be set up in MandelCorridor, Ida Noyes Clubhouse,and Harper Library. Voting willbe accomplished by presentationof certified student identificationcard, which will be stamped by theelection workers to prevent anyirregular voting.Nominations for thePrague conference candidatehave been reopened untilSaturday, May 25, at 12:00noon, according to a lastminute announcement. Thecandidates mentioned below,selected Wednesday after¬noon, are still, however, upfor election. Candidates' CommentISABELLE KOHN: “The mainpurpose’ of the conference is toestablish a permanent internation¬al student organization. Organiza¬tions of this kind are directed to¬wards the furtherance of under¬standing between nations. It is thatunderstanding which is funda¬mental to world peace. I shouldlike in some measure to contributeto' that understanding through con¬tacts with the students of othernations, through discussion of themomentous problems facing theworld today. If I am elected U. ofC. delegate, I hope to bring backfull information as to what wasaccomplished at the conference,what problems are facing us, andwhat we as students and youth cando about it.”RUSS AUSTIN: “I am verymucti interested in the World Stu¬dent Conference, principally be¬cause of the increasingly tense in¬ternational situation. This is theearnest concern of all those whovalue peace and democratic prog-gress. I am hoping the World Stu¬dent Conference can take somesteps toward alleviating worldtension.“On this campus I would like to University be properly represent-see wide student interest and par- ed.”sio» to a division or professionalschool. The step has been taken,according to Dean of StudentsJohn R. Davey, in an effort toformalize procedures, and to con¬vey to the student that continuingfrom the college into a division orprofessional school is not an auto¬matic process.Should See AdvisorsStudents in the last quarter ofthe college, he said, are expectedto discuss their future plans withadvisors, and obtain applicationblanks to be submitted to the deanof their chosen division.In addition, three of the divi¬sions, Social Sciences, Humanitiesand Physical Sciences, announceraised requirements for admission.Social Sciences will now requirea C average in other subjects .thanSocial Sciences 3, the former pre-requi^te, to relieve tremendousovercrowding, especially in theEconomics and International Rela¬tions Departments.Physic^ Sciences, which has al¬ways' required a B average ofstudents from outside, will im¬plicitly, if not expressly, requirethe same standard of performancefrom Chicago college students.All Grades CountThe Division of the Humanitieswill judge applicants on all-roundacademic standing, with .specialreference to grades in all Human¬ities courses. Students rating lowin other courses, however, willreceive little consideration fromthe division, the dean of studentsannounced. Adequate preparationin languages, much neglected inthe past, will be one of the im¬portant criteria of eligibility.MUSTACHE RACETODAY!TODAY IS THEGREAT DAY! Gatherround the C Bench (infront of Cobb Hall) atnoon and sign up for theMustache Race. Protectyourself against social os¬tracism — you too willhave the perfect answer tothe ever-present questionof the next two weeks:Where’s YOUR mus¬tache?All you have to dO' iscome to the C Bench atnoon, clean-shaven if pos¬sible, and enter yourselfin the race. Full detailson page two.ticipation in the coming electionof the delegate.”HENRY GOODMAN: “Throughthe World Student Congress wehave an opportunity to participateat first-hand in helping to solvethe international problems whichface us. I would like to urge everystudent to learn the qualificationsof the nominees and, above all, tovote next Wednesday. It is vitalthat all eligible students cast bal¬lots, for only in this way can the1Nt« t THl CHICAGO MAROON iWdmy, May 24^Calendar of EventsNext Week onQuadranglesItems to be included in the MAROON calendar must be received inthe MAROON office by noon, Tuesday, of the week of publication.Address all notices to “The Calendar Editor.”Friday, May 24WORSHIP SERVICE. A Service of Reading. Robert Clark, Student,Chicago Theological Seminaiy. Joseph Bond Chapel. 12:00-12:25p.in.POLITICAL MEETING. “The Negro in American Democracy.”Speaker Doxey Wilkerson, National Committee Member of Com¬munist Party. Sponsored by Communist Club. Rosenwald 2.4 p.m.LECTURE. “Great Men of World Religions. Mohammed: Arabian’sMajesty of the ^^ildeiness.” Kurt Reizler, Visiting Professor ofPhilosophy. University College. 19 S. LaSalle St. 6:45 p.m.RADIO BROADCAST. “The Human Adventure.” WGN. 7:00-7:30p.m.WORSHIP SERVICE. Hillel. Karasik House. 7:30 p.m. (Fireside tea.8:15 p.m.)H'^TION PICTURE “Les Disparus de St. Agil (Runaways of St.Agil).” A film on Argentina as an extra feature. Assembly Room,International House. 8 p.m.Saturday. May 25INFORMAL DANCE. “Tropical Night” sponsored by Alpha Beta Chi,music by Kiki Ochart’s orchestra. $1.10 per person. AssemblyHall, International House, 8 to 12 p.m.Sunday. May 26UNIVERSITY RELIGIOUS SERVICE. Reverend Duncan E. Littlefair,Fountain St. Baptist Church. University Chapel. 11:00 am.RADIO BROADCAST. University of Chicago Round Table. “TheFuture of Liberal Government.” Ellis Arnall, Governor of Georgia;Robert M. Hutchins; Wayne C. Morse, U. S. Senator from Washing¬ton. 12:30-1:00 p.m.CONCERT. The Spring Conceit. The University of Chicago Choir.Music from the Mass in B Minor by Bach and the Requiem byBrahms. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel. 8:00 p.m.Monday. May 27RECORD CONCERT. Every day Monday through Friday. SocialScience 122. 12:00-1:00 p.m.RECORD CONCERT. Ida Noyes Council. East Lounge. Ida NoyesHall. 4:00-5:00 p.m.Tuesday, May 28WORSHIP SERVICE. A Service of Reading and Choral Music. JosephBond Chapel. 12:00-12:25 p.m.LECTURE. “Tomorrow’s Home. Interior Design.” Mar>’ Willesh, Con-, sultant, Institute of Design. University College. 19 S. LaSalle St.7:30 p.m.LECTURE. Works of the Mind Series. Committee on Social Thought.“The Historian.” C. H. Mcllw'ain. Mandel Hall. 8:30 p.m.Wednesday, May 29LECTURE Dante and the Crisis of the Middle Ages. “Dante and HisWorld.” S. A. Borgese. Social Science 122. 7:30 p.m.Thursday, May 30LECTURE. Department of Anthropology. Series on Growth Patternsin School Children. “The Grid-Graph.” W. M. Krogman.' SocialScience 122. 4:00 p.m.LECTURE. “The Folk Society.” Robert Redfield. Social Science 122.4:30 p.m.Friday, May 31WORSHIP SERVICE. Chapel Talk. Paul Schubert, Visiting Professor,Federated Theological Seminary. Bond Chapel. 12:00-12:25 p.m.RADIO BROADCAST. “The Human Adventure.” WGN. 7:00-7:30p.m.WORSHIP SERVICE. Hillel. Karasik House. 7:30 p.m. (Fireside Tea.8:15 p.m.)MOTION PK^TURE. “One Heavenly Night.” Assembly Room, Inter¬national House. 8:00 p.m.CONCERT. The University Orchestra and the University Chorus.Program of Haydn, Beethoven, Brahms, Weelkes, et al. MandelHall. 8:30 p.m. Old Tradition ofMustache RaceBegins at NoonToday at noon the Hirsute Agesupersedes the Machine and At¬omic Ages when the U. of C.’sannual mustache race resumes itstraditional place of winding upthe school year in a cloud of gloryand hair. Scene of this portentousevent is the C Bench where Chi¬cago’s brave young men will gath¬er to flaunt their brawny andclean-shaven upper lips for thekeen inspection of the ReynoldsClub Barber Shop’s head man,Elmer Bradford (Brad to the ini¬tiated). At his nod they will beaccepted as contestants for thesilver cup, complete with mus¬tache guard.For 15 days—until noon at Ju<oe8—the Chicago stalwarts will tryall conceivable means to raise ahefty handlebar (or any othertype of mustache). On that day,judgment will be held as to whogrew the biggest and best mus¬tache and the silver cup will beawarded to that lucky man.Watch the Maroon for furtherbulletins.Choir ProgramIn ChopelFeatures BachMusic from Bach’s Mass in BMinor and Brahms' German Re¬quiem will be featured by * theUniversity Choir in its spring con¬cert at Rockefeller Chapel onSunday, May 26, at 8:00 p.m. Thechoir for this occasion will includeeighty voices drawn from the TwoUniversity choral groups: theChancel Choir, made up entirelyof students in Uie College, and th'eGallery Choir, composed of divi¬sional and graduate students andalumni. Jean Leisk. soprano, Elea¬nor Limbach, contralto, DenisCow'an, tenor, and James McEnery,baritone, will be soloists. Fred¬erick Marriott, Chapel Organist,will be accompanist and will alsoplay Bach’s Chorale-Prelude“Komm Suesser Tod” (“Come,Sweet Death”).Movements from the GermanRequiem to be heard will be thechoruses “Blessed are they thatmourn,” “Ye that are now sor¬rowful,” and “HoW' lovely is Thydwelling place.” Sections of theMass in B Minor will be theChriste Eleison, Qui tollis peccata,Oomlne Deus, Quoniam tu solussanctus, Crucifixus, Agnus Deiand Sanctus.Ellen BaumThe TravelingBazaarPinnings are becoming more nu¬merous as June draws near . . .Sigma president Pris Joice is wear¬ing Jim Love’s Sigma Chi pin . . .Gerry MacDowell took RandyRansome’s Fiji pin ... At longlast Joan Hayes and Jim Halvor-sen have decided his Psi U pinlooks best beside her MB pin. . . .Phi Psi Brad Durling hung his pinon Pat O’Halloran . . . MargeMoffet and Howie Husum arepinned too.Another PrizeJanet Halliday just put anotherfashion feather in her cap—she’sone of the twelve finalists inVogue’s Prix de Paris contest . . .She’s won a trip to New Yorkwhere she'll be feted at a dinnerMonday night given by Mrs. EdnaWoolman Chase, Vogue’s editor,and interviewed by the editors . . .After she returns she’ll learnwhether she has won first or sec¬ond place (first prize involves atrip to Pans and second a positionon Vogue’s staff). Good luck!This apd ThatA campus correspondent reportsseeing a large white rabbit shed¬ding its fur in front of the WaterTower the other night—evidently Easter isn’t over yet . , . One ofour young track stars is preparinghimself for a career as a model.Four times in one day he was toldby his prof to take off his shirtand exhibit his muscles to theanatomy of art class. Small won¬der he blushed, though—the classwas duly impressed by the muscleflexing, but convulsed by the factthat he had his belt secured with asafety pin.Rebellion from CompsSkull and Crescent men are tak¬ing time off from studies Sundayafternoon for their annual teadance at the Blackhawk . . . ChiRhos are planning their annualdinner before IF Sing—and lott¬ing to the end of the quarter, areall set for their annual houseparty,this year at Sturgeon Bay . . .Friday night the staid ClassicsClub breaks with a beer party . . .More PeopleDonna Gleason, Maroon exchangeeditor, has been selected as Chi¬cago representative for John Pow¬ers (of Powers Girls fame)—callDonna any weekday between 3 and6 in the Majroon office or at DREx-•1 4206 if you’re interested in be¬coming “The Most Attractive Pow¬ers College Girl of 1946.” Fraternally SpeakingBy JIM BARNETT and LOU FITZGERALDThere are many diverse opinionsas to the place of fraternities onthe University of Chicago campus.A lamentable incident occurredseveral weeks ago which wouldmake any anti-fraternity individ¬ual clap his hands in glee, andwith justification. A fraternityon campus “Removed” the car ofanother fraternity member fromits parking place and rolled it intoBotany Pond. Now at first thissounds like quite a joke; but, whenyou stop to realize that the car-represented an investment to theowner, and that a number of re¬pairs were necessary to get itback in shape, it's not quite asfunny. Such stunts furnish am¬munition for anti-fraternity sen¬timent on campus. If fraternitiesare going to endure, they mustsettle dow’n, and use their surplusenergy not to destroy, but to dosomething constructive for thecampus as a whole.piSA AND DATA:A vote of thanks should go tothe PHI PSI’s for staging such aswell all-campus dance. The crowdwas large, the band was swell, andthe Esquire cartoons and pin-upswere a riot. After the parly endedlots of people W'ent over to thePHI DEI.T house and wound upthe evening (or morning) with.scrambled eggs.FLASH; The housing shortagehas reached a crisis. Foster Hallhad gone Co-ed, with Fiji’s DONWINKS, BUD SEBOLD, and DICKATKINSON making it their bead-quarters.ALPHA DELTS entertained thecampus with their Annual FormalSaturday night. ' Preceding thedance, members put on severalvery clever plays. One was en¬titled “If Men Played Bridge AsWomen Do” and starred tRose fourbridge fiends, JOHN HORTON,FRANK BANE, JIM BOND, andDICK PETERSON.This week we want to give a“Comprehensive A” to BOBSCHLEGEIi, the good lookingPHI PSI w'ith plenty of savoirfaire.A “Comprehensive A” to BETA.JEFF MONGERSON, actor andplaywright who always givesProf. Frank O’Hara the right an¬swers.A “Comprehensive A” to FijiRANDY RANSOME who’s doinga lot to cement fraternity good¬will with the Girls’ Clubs on cam¬pus.A “Comprehensive A” to AL-FROM THE DEAN OF STUDENTSTo reserve a place in the College for the Autumn Quarter, a sfudtntnow in residence MUST register in advance. Advisers will be availablefor registration conferences from-May 15 through June 8. Appointmentsmay be made in Room 20;t, Cobb Hall. Students who wish to registerin advance for both the Summer Quarter and the Autumn Quarter maydo S9 in the same registration conference.Advance registration includes the payment of a deposit of $4() tothe Bursar. This deposit is to be made In two installments: (1) $10payable by June 15; ('2) the $30 balance payable after August 1 but notlater than Augu.st 31.. A reminder of the second deposit installmentwill be sent out by the Registrar shortly before August 1 to studentswho have made the initial deposit of $10. Failure to pay either part ofthe required deposit will result in the cancellation of the student’sregistration. If a student withdraws his registration after the paymentof either the initial installment or the entire amount, no portion of thedeposit will be refunded, except for reasons approved by the Dean ofStudents in the College upon the student’s written request to him. TheUniversity reserves the right to cancel any registration made In ad¬vance and to refund the deposit.All students who register in advance must pay the registration de¬posit. Students who hmd scholarships or who are entitled to educa¬tional allotments through the Veterans’ Administration are required topay the deposit from personal funds. The deposit will be returned tothem after payment of tuition fees has been arranged at the openingof the Autumn Quarter. For all students the registration deposit willbe credited toward payment of tuition fees.ISBELL'SRESTAURANTthree locations590 Divertey Pkwy.940 Rush St.1435 Hyde Pork Blvd« PHA PELT, DICK PHILBRICK“The Thinker.”A “Compiehensive A” to JImMcGOWAN, a Sigma Chi with redhair and a smile to go with itA “Compiehen.sive A^’ to DICKATKINSON, the Phi Gam with atennis racket. We predict a BMOCrating for this guy before long.A “Compiehensive A” to PHIDELT, STEVE FINNEY, the manwith the dog.MISCELLANY; ZBT will re-oc-cupy their house in October; I F.Sing will be resumed June 8thwith twelve fialernitie.s (includ¬ing DKEs) harmonizing in Man-del Court at 8:45 p.m.New officers at the PHI PsiHouse are JACK NEFF, president-DICK GOCKSHOOT, vice-presi¬dent; BOB ELLIS, recording sec¬retary; BOB KLINE, correspond¬ing secrelaiY; and BILL BELLtreasurer. ’Hutchins Is SpeakerOn UC Round Table“Future of Liberal Govein-ment ’ will come under considera¬tion for half an hour Sunday whenGovernor Ellis G. Arnall, SenatorWayne C. Morse, and ChancellorRobert M. Hutchins talk the sub¬ject over on the Univerity RoundTable. Ainall is governor of Geor¬gia and Morse is senator fror^Washington stale.A total of 1,623,738 unemployedveterans were paid readjustmentallowances during April 1946, ac¬cording to the Veterans Adminis¬tration."Giv# me PasamhoOr give me deathDANCINGTREATNOW!!n.■' yOPENIKG MAY 31JIMMY PORSiYRAINBOBALLROOMCLARK Mid LAWRIHCKStudent Federalists ChooseCommittees, Outline PlansStudent Federalists’ second all-campus meeting Wednesdayresulted in appointment of pro-tern chairmen for the group’sthree committees, and in clarification of the immediate objec¬tives of each subdivision of the newly-formed campus organiza¬tion.L<)U Leopold, a third-year stu¬dent in the College, was appointedchairman of the Political ActionCommittee, whose immediate tasksaid to be snowing undergooate Military Affairs ChairmanAllien Barkley with letters favor¬ing the McMahon civilian atomcontrol bill. Chairman of the Self-Ikiucation Committee, which willte in chai-ge of posters and pub-licit v for the Northwestern Feder¬alist Rally May 29, is Russell Mor¬rison, a second-year student in dependent organiiation at North¬western University, which is con¬sidering affiliation with the na¬tional orfanisaiion. The rally willfeature as speakers Albert Ein-c^io (by radio from Princeton),Norman Thomas, Clifton Fadiman,Senator Glenn Taylor of Idaho,and Ely Culbertson, author of'‘Must We Fight Russia,*’ Dr. Ein¬stein. shining light of the all-starslate, was secured by an intrepidNorthwestern group which droveto his home in Princeton, N. J.,th 3 Coll^g®. Public Relations is i interviewed the eminentheridled by Jim Compton, a divi¬sional student.Long-range duties of the threecofnmittees are: Support of theTaylor resolution to call an inter¬national conference amending theU N.; securing prominent speakersto educate and inform the groupitself, and working to aid pro¬gressive Chicago political groups.«■ «Student Federalists is stronglysupporting the May 29 rally of akindred group—Students forWorld Federal Government, an in- mathematician in bed.FALL REGISTRATIONAdvance registration lorthe Fall Quarter is proceed¬ing at the unprecedentedrate of 100 to 120 studentsper day, John R. Davey,Dean of Students in the Col¬lege, told the MAROON thisweek. By June 8, he said,advisors will have processed1,100 to 1,700 advance regis¬trants. Give 19 StudentsFellowships inNuclear Studies Announce Programs forComing Campus ConcertsNineteen students have been ap¬pointed fellows in the Institutefor. Nuclear Studies, ChancellorHutchins announced this week.The list includes one of the menwho dropped the atomic bomb onHiroshima, Harold M. Agnew ofDenver, and two scientists assignedto the joint army-navy operationsat the Bikini Atolls, Donald W.Engleheimer of Nebraska and Ar¬thur Knudsen of St. Louis.The fellowships for study andresearch in the physical sciencedivision, were granted for 1946-47to graduate students whose ca¬reers were interrupted by work on iwartime projects. iThe nuclear institute, an out- !growth of the University’s role in jwar research, was established in iAugust under the direction ofSamuel K. Allison. Two Nobelprize winners who also worked onthe bomb, Enrico Fermi, the firstto achieve chain reaction, and Har¬old C. Urey, discoverer of heavyhydrogen, are among the insti¬tute’s 26 staff members.Eighteen of the fellowship win¬ners have been working on theatomic bomb project at the Uni¬versity metallurgical laboratoryor at Los Alamos, New Mexico.Chicagoans receiving fellowshipsare; Ellis Steinberg, Martin Stu-dier, and Roger Wilkinson. The Department of Music hasannounced that the concert by theUniversity Orchestra and Univer¬sity Chorus will take place inMandel Hall, on Friday, May 31,at 8:30 up.m. This concert, origin¬ally scheduled for May 17, hadto be postponed because of the“brown-out.” Works to be in¬cluded on this concert will .beBrahms’ Schicksalslied (“Song ofDestiny”) and Beethoven’s Ele-Int. House DriveTo Collect BooksFor LithuaniaPRE-INVENTORY BARGAINS!Here are a few of the titles now on safe at reduced pricesNON-FICTION FormeriyFEDERAL FINANCE IN PEACE AND WAR by Sftirros 2.00RELIGION. SCIENCE. AND SOCIETY by Lindsey 1.50LADIES NOW AND THEN by Fairfax 2.75GEOGRAPHY IN HUMAN DESTINY by Peaffie 3.00JUVENILESPETER RABBIT by Potter 75HENRY CLAY by Mayo 2.00THEE HANNAH by DeAngeti 2.00PORTRAITS OF OUR PRESIDENTS by Pack 1.50RELIGIONCHRISTIANITY AND SEX by Cabot 1.00PRAYER AND INTELLIGENCE by Maritain 1.00PATTERNS OF THE MIND by Hough 1.50LIVING ABUNDANTLY by Kirby Page 2.50RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN LATIN AMERICA by Howard 2.00HEW TESTAMENT IN BASIC ENGLISH 2.00HUMORIS IT ANYONE WE KNOW? by George Price 2.S0G.l. JOE by Private Breger 1.00BEST CARTOONS OF THB YEAR by Larlar 2.00BETTER TAYLORS 2.50FICTIONIF WINTER COMES by A. $. M. Hutchinson 1.00ALL NIGHT LONG by Erskine Colwell 2.50CENTENNIAL SUMMER by Albert Idell 2.7SDAYLIGHT ON SATURDAY by J. B. Priestly 2.50POETRYTHI HITLERAID by A. M. Klein 1.00STAG'S HOMEBOOK by William Rase Benet 2.50(.OrS WIFI by Max Eastman 2.00SOLITUDE by SackvIUe-West. 1.75LITERATUREA TIME IS BORN by Gareb GaWetf 2.S0MONTEZUMA by Joseph O'Kane Paster...^ 3.00BEQUEST OF WINGS by Annis Duff 2.00Letters of JOHN FISKE by Ethel F. FIske 3.00SOCIAL SERVICEcommunity organization by Jesse Steiner 2.75NORMAL LIVES FOR THE DISABltSD by Edna Tost 2.50YOUTH OF NEW YORK CITY by McGill and MaHkews 3.50EDUCATION FOR PUBLIC SOCIAL SERVICE 3.00 NOW1.00.751.371.50.381.001.00JS.50.50.751.251.001.001.25.501.001.25.501.251.371.25.501.251.00.871.251.501.001.501.371.2$1.751.50(MIVEKSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORES802 illif Avenae A program featuring Lithuanianfolk dances and songs will be pre¬sented at International HouseSunday, June 2, from 4:30 to 6:00p.m., opening a drive to sendbooks, pencils, notebooks, etc., toLithuanian students in universi¬ties all over Europe.Miss Sonia Pipiras, a studentin the Modern Languages Depart¬ment, and initiator of the drive,said that these students are tragic¬ally handicapped in their studiesbecause of the dearth of booksin Europe.Peter Dauzvardis, LithuanianConsul, will give a short talk onLithuanian folk-lore and culture.The internationally famous “Bir-utes” choir, the “Ateitininku”(Futuristic) dancers, and the Lith¬uanian University Club are spon¬soring the drive. Everyone is in¬vited. Admission is free.Political...Communists WillHear WilkersonDoxey A. Wilkerson will addressthe CorTWTiunist club forum next!Friday, May 24, at 4 p.m. in Ros- :enwald 2, according to MarkSkinner, chairman of the club.“Wilkerson is one of the fore¬most leaders of the Negro people,”Skinner states, “and a distin¬guished educator of national repu¬tation.”Formerly associate professor ofeducation at Howard University,Wilkerson has served as ResearchAssociate for Roosevelt’s AdvisoryCommittee on Education and forthe Carnegie Foundation’s study of“The Negro in America.”At present Wilkerson is a mem¬ber of the national committee ofthe Communist party and generalmanager of People’s Voice, weeklypaper. He is author of SpecialProblems of Negro Education andco-author of What the NegroWants.Add Volumes toCollege LibraryA variety of books, fiction andnon-fiction, have recently beenacquired by the College Library.Many of the books are of currentinterest. The collection includes:The Short Novels of Dostoevskyby Fyodor Dostoevsky; To WhomPalestine? by Frank Gervasi;China In The Sun by RandallChase Gould; Iran by William S.Haas; Peoples of The Soviet Unionby Corliss Lamont; Key To Japanby Willard de Mille Price; Per¬plexities and Paradoxes by Miguelde Unamuno Y Jugo; and TheHouse Near Paris by Morris R.Tartiere, Drue, and.Werner. gischer Gesang (“Elegiac Song”).The Department of Music has an¬nounced that next season’s serie.<iof campus subscription concertswill comprise thirteen program.s,.priced at $15.60, tax included, forthe entire series. Patrons who wishto renew present locations for nextseason are requested to ordertheir tickets before June 1, fromthe Concert Office of the Depart¬ment of Music. Mail orders, ac¬companied by check or money or¬der payable to the University ofChicago, may be sent to the Con¬cert Office, Department of Mu.si(r,After June 1 all locations will boplaced on general sale at the Uni¬versity Information Office.Autumn and Winter QuartersFive concerts each in the au¬tumn and winter quarters, andthree in the spring quarter, aroplanned. The opening concert onFriday, October 25, will featureplayers from the Chicago Sym¬phony in Schubert’.s Octet iu FMajor, Op. 166; and Strawinsky’sOctuor. On Monday, November 11,the Gullet String Quartet will playHaydn’s Quartet No. 67 in D(“Lark”), Op. 64, No. 5; RandallThompson’s Quartet No. 1; andDeBussy’s Quartet, Op. 10.Albeneri Trio ReturnsOn Monday, November 16, theAlbeneri Trio will return for iUthird season, to perform Schu¬mann’s Trio No. 2 in F, Op. 60;Mozart’s Trio in C, K. 548; andMendelssohn’s Trio No. 1 in DMinor, Op. 49. On Tuesday, No¬vember 26, Arthur Gold and Rob¬ert Fizdale, duo-pianists, will playMozart’s Sonata No. 3 in F, K. 497.for piano four hands; Messaien’aSept visions de '’.Amen; Debussy’sSix epigraphes antiques; Marcellede Manziarly’s Sonata; and DariusMilhaud’s Les Songes. The con¬cluding concert of the autumnquarter, on Tuesday, December 3,will present the Stuyvesant StringQuartet in Beethoven’s Quartet No.5 in A. Op. 18, No. 5: Bartok’sQuartet No..2, Op. 16; and Mozart’sQuartet No. 14 in G, K. 387.Outstanding works to be pre¬sented during the winter quarterinclude Bloch’s Piano Quintet;Schubert’s String Trio in B Flat;Walter Piston’s Sonata for harpsi¬chord and violin; Hindemith’s So¬nata for Violoncello Alone; andDebussy’s Sonata for Violoncelloand Piano. Artists for the winterquarter include the Fine ArtsString Quartet; the Pasquier StringTrio; Alexander Schneider, violin¬ist; Ralph Kirkpatrick, , harpsi¬chordist and Raya Garbou-sova,’cellist.Krenek Program, April 1The opening concert of thospring quarter, on Tuesday, April1, will feature Ernst Krenek, theoutstanding contemporary com¬poser, in a program devoted to hi*music. Included will be his Quar¬tet No. 7, and his new Sonata forviolin and piano. The concert ofFriday, April 14, will be devotedto a performance of four Beethovenviolin sonatas by Henri Temianka,violin, and Leonard Shure, piano.On the closing concert of the se¬ries, Friday, April 25, the ChicagoSymphony Quartet, assisted byPerry O’Neil, pianist, and Charle*Foirdart, violinist, will play Bruck¬ner’s String Quintet; Piston’s PiauoTrio; and Schumann’s Piano Quin¬tet in E Flat, Op. 44.ClassifiedEXCEPTIONABLE tutoring job avail¬able beginning June. Hours, pay*excellent. Phone H.P. 0820. Slade.PROMPT REPAIRSTYPEWRITERS and ADDING MACHINES&UARAHTEED WORKWK BUY TYPEWRITERSL. IW. MITCHELL1228 L (280 ST8IBT HYDi PARK 1201COINIt or glMIAMm mmim liiiiMiiiilNiintt iEifs 000 THE CmCAGO MAROONDorm Probe * June Moon Don*t Shine on Me ...miiilThe University of Chicago ^ Official Stndent Newspaper• . - ...1945 /4CP Alb American1946 ACP All-AmericanPublished every Friday during the academic year by THE CmCAGOMAROON, an Independent student organization of the University of Chicago. Girls' DormConditionsInresfigatedNOTE: The following article, basedlargely on the results of the thirdMAROON POLL. Page 5, has been pre¬pared by a MAROON staff writer. Allquotations may be verified in theMAROON office.THE BOARD OF CONTROLJoan Kohn, Acting EditorWard J. Sharbach, Jr., Business ManagerEllen Baum, Staff MemberTHE EXECUTIVE EDITORSManaging Editor. .Wm. R. WambaughNews Editor Antoinette TotinoAsst. News Editor Clare DavisonFeature Editor Rose EncherSports* Editor Richard FineVeterans Editor Irving Scott Copy Editor .. Alan Locke McPherronArt Editor Cissie LiebshutzPhotography Editor Alfred CohenCirculation Manager James E. BarnettExchange Editor...Donna K. GleasonEditorial Consultant Abe KrashEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSBarbara Barke, Don Bushnell, Babette Casper, Judy Downs, Alfred Eck-ersberg, Lucien Fitzgerald, Albert Friedlander, Fred Hartstone, Eleanor Hoyt.Shirley Isaac, Patricia Kmdahl, Julia Kugelman. Tess Le Ventis, Sidney Lezak,David Lighthill, Fayette Mulroy, Kathleen Overholser, Hillard Anne Perry,William Phillips, Ray Poplett, Betty Stearns, Jules Strickland, Helen Tarlow,Virginia Vlack, Gerard Wayne, Ralph J. Wood.BUSINESS ASSISTANTSDick Atkinson, Charlotte Block, Denny Denman, Unis Gilbertsoon, BarbaraPayne, Nora Slight.EDITORIAL AND BUSINESS OFFICES: The Reynolds Club 5706 SouthUniversity Avenue, Chicago 37, Illinois. Telephones MIDway OSOO, extension351 (Editorial Office), extension 1576 (Business Office)SUBSCRIPTION RATES: On campus. 50 cents per quarter. By mail. 75cents per quarter.ADVERTISING RATES: Quoted on request. Address all communicationsto the Business Manager. The Chicago Maroon.Member Associated Collegiate Press (1945 ACP All-American) and Inter¬collegiate Press.Efficient EducationNow that the tuition raise is an accomplished fact and theadministration has given no sign of retreating from its stand,it may be well to ask whether the University intends to employits reinforced income in such a manner that the student willreceive maximum value for his tuition dollars. A vice-presidentof the University has said that students who have no con¬fidence in the administration should not be coming to schoolhere. There are many who feel that confidence in the facultyfar outweighs lacks of confidence in the administration.Many returning veterans have expressed surprise that theUniversity should continue to employ instructional procedureswhich are out-moded beside those they saw in use in the armedservices. To the extent that dated educational methods are usedin lieu of better ones, the student is not receiving maximumvalue per dollar paid.It is true that efficient and alert instructors can do much toactivate an inefficient curriculum. One may ask, however, howmany such instructors there are here. The reader should reflectupon the discussion sections he has known. Was there regularattendance at each section by about eighty per cent of the classlist, or did the students habitually attend other sections—orstay away completely? Was there vigorous discussion by bothinstructor and students, or was the “discussion’^ another fifty-minute lecture? Did the instructor skillfully elicit participationby all members of the section, or did he concentrate on the fewwho, by their abilities, needed least attention? To the extentthat the alternative proposals are true, such discussions wereinefficiently taught.In last week’s MAROON, Mr. Bill Hatheway, guest colum¬nist, indicated salient weaknesses. Grading on the curve is oneof these. The bell-shaped curve theory of grade distributionis no longer so widely embraced as it once was. There are manyauthorities, including members of our Department of Educa¬tion, who hold that graphic representation of grade distributionat the end of a course should show a right triangle whosefarthest advance is a vertical line perpendicular to the base.Knowledge of factors in grading has come far since the earliertheory was stated.Another point at which the University badly needs efficiencyis in its faculty counseling service. Students in the Collegeknow how hard it is to see their adviser, how long in advancethey must make appointments. The number of advisers is toofew and the adviser-load too heavy for efficient counseling.The heavier the adviser-load, the less effectively can the adviserexplore the individual student’s problem. Students in the Divi¬sions know how difficult it is in many departments to see thedepartmental adviser. As little time as possible is grudginglygiven by professors who feel that any time taken to give coursesor counsel students is wasted, when they might devote the timeso much more profitably to some research problem of their own.In a recent issue of the alumni magazine a plea was made formore equal distribution of administrative and counseling bur¬dens between the heads of departments and their departmentalassociates. With greater justification the tuition-paying stu¬dent may insist that faculty members who teach or occupycounseling positions concern themselves more with these func¬tions : while they hold these positions, their prime duty is to thestudent.Now that the student is paying a higher tuition bill thanever before, he is entitled to expect a maximum return for hismoney, even at the sacrifice of some administrative fetishes.If lack of confidence in the administration exists among thestudent body, it is because the administration has not evidencedsufficient desire to serve the best interests of the student. The University of Chicago openedits first dormitories for women in1896, and the plumbing hasn’t beenfixed since, avow residents of Fos¬ter and Beecher, two of the pioneerhalls, together With a majorityfrom other dormitories—Blake,Kelly, Gates, Green, and to a lesserextent, Hitchcock and Snell. Theeight houses now contain all wom¬en students living on campus, in-.cluding many accommodated dur¬ing war years in fraternity build¬ings.Lighting RappedMingled with their fervent de¬nunciations of the ancient wash¬room facilities, 64 out of 120dormitory residents, this week’sMARCXDN POLL reveals, callreading lights and study condi¬tions, in effect, completely impos¬sible. The dissatisfied are mainlyin dormitories containing firstthrough fourth - year students,many still growing girls, whocarry the usual three, four, or fivecourses.Perhaps as well equipped as theaverage, in the way of washroomsand laundry facilities, is BeecherHall, where there are six toiletsfor 52 girls, nine washbasins, threeshowers, and three tubs. One elec¬tric iron each is placed in the dor¬mitory’s three corridors (houserule forbids electric irons inrooms); and two Bendix washersand six laundry tubs in the base¬ment often in use by a professionalwasherwoman, serve Beecher,Kelly, Foster, and Green—a totalof 270 girls.At Gates Hall, a non-boardingdomitory, 85% of the girls thinkwashroom facilities inadequate.Most used stronger language. Somequotes: “everything leaks,”“showers are awful, drying roomterrible.’* From Foster Hall, suc¬cinctly, “filthy.” Two contrastingBeecher comments: “Enough foreveryone,” and “inadequate.”From Blake: “A bathtub wouldbe greatly appreciated.”Cooperation among the residentsin keeping washrooms clean issadly lacking, many commented;however, little incentive is felt tocare for leaking sinks, pluggingtoilets, dripping showers, and thelike. (During much of the Autumnquarter, washroom facilities forundergraduate girls at ManlyHouse, now returned to the PhiKappa Psi fraternity, featuredopen toilets and showers. Therewas one “solitary” bathroom inthe house, in addition to the housemother’s private bath.Room Layout, PricesPhysical layout of most dormi¬tory rooms conforms to a two- orthree-girl pattern, although thereare a number of single rooms ineach dormitory renting for higherprices. Rentals range from $65 to$84 per quarter in the non-board¬ing dorms; while in Foster, Kelly,Beecher, and Green., room andboard cost from $190 to $219 aquarter; culmination of a two-timehike in prices since September1944. A Beecher hall spokesmansaid first and second-year girls, forwhom extra chaperonage is re¬quired, pay $240 per quarter for asingle room.The three-room suites have asingle bed in one room, a double-decker in the other wing, and threedesks and three bookcases in thecenter room. One part of the two-room suites is usually a doublesleeping room; the other is used asa study.The University furnishes bed,dresser, desk, study lamp, and bed¬spread. Coeds frequently bringcolorful spreads and drapes fromhome. Study lamps equipped withreflectors are often purchased toreplace University - furnishedgoosenecks, or other variations ofI the naked-bulb fixture. Without a helping hand.Gotta make that ConvocationIf by them we stand.So, lower the curve, Kids, for old time’s sakeFor we’re desperate, ev’ry man.... J.K.Quadrangle OpinionThe Other Side of theFence ConcerningVet GroupsTO THE EDITOR OF THE CHICAGO MAROON:Hope for more constructive action by students here seems justifiedby your recent report of campus attitudes toward veterans’ groups,despite the discouraging percentages. Especially is one glad to heardisgruntled veterans express both disgust with the special-interestveterans’ organizations, and the conviction that distinctions between“veterans’ problems” and “society’s problems” are unjustified anddangerous. These very beliefs were the ones which led many of us tojoin AVC, and we believe that in the long run they will have the sameeffect on others.For the problem is not, “Is a veterans* pressure group rationallyjustifiable?” Of course not. The veteran wounded in action has nogreater claim on society than the war worker who lost a leg at amachine; he has no special wisdom which makes him a more valuablemember of the state than the gal who left school for a War Service jobin Washington. But in the irrational and sentimental nation, veterans’groups will be an illogical, unjustifiable, but tremendously effectivepower. The real problem is, then, “To what ends and by what forceswill that power be used?” American history between two World Warsshows the results of reactionary dominance for selfish and nationalisticends in the Legion and VFW; and the question is squarely before usin this post-war world.One would rather not believe that any large number of Universityof Chicago students pleaded “lack of time” or “lack of interest.” Noone has enough time; but the problem of priorities in allocating one’sinadequate 24 hours cannot be solved by a panicky 100% concentrationon immediate scholastic tasks. And, while food and shelter remainnecessities, there is no one who is “not interested.’* In this connection,the AVC motto—“Citizens first, veterans second”—states not only apreference but an inescapable fact: society’s problems are there. In¬action will not solve them; selfish, narrow action will aggravate them.Broadly conceived, liberal action now through an independent, demo¬cratic veterans’ organization promises the greatest results for good.PAUL JOHNSON* * •The Franco Question AgainTO THE EDITOR OF THE CHICAGO MAROON:Obviously no-body likes Franco, nor should they. He is a Fascist.Fascism is wrong because it demands the submission of the person tothe State, just as Communism demands the submission of the personto a Class which is also wrong—the difference between the two isabout the same as the difference between robbery and burglary.Communists today, would have us think that they are the onlyorganized, interested group opposing Franco. This is wrong. Witnessthe Spanish Republican exiled government in Mexico with Jose Geralas leader, or the Spanish Royalists supporting Don Juan (neithergroup affiliated with Communists) besides all the other freedom-loving people. The Spanish people hate Fascism; but they hate Com¬munism even more. Franco uses this fact for one means of keepinghimself in power. Hence the Communists with all their sword-rattlingare only defeating their purpose. Likewise, any rash move on thepart of other nations would only consolidate Franco’s position.Spain is one of the military and cultural bastions of WesternEurope. I doubt if Russia’s interest in Russia is solely loving Humani-tarianism. This is far from being a question of “Good-vs.-Evil” as faras Russia is concerned.We must look at this question very calmly. Let the MAROON re¬port to its readers on the Spanish situation. Let it be most objective,yet state a definite policy that speaks for this University and its en¬lightened people. Don’t let the University’s policy be set by a verysmall group of very opinionated people, namely, CJomm.unists andfellow travelers who may have something to say, but definitely notall that is to be said about Spain. I am not trying to whitewash Franco,anymore than anyone can whitewash Peron or Tito or Stalin.Now is the time for slow, precise consideration of every side of th«Spanish question. Let the UN talk for months. Talk may be cheap,but it is a lot cheaper than lives—anytime,PHILIP A. DAVISoFriday, May *4, Pafft IPatched'Up University . . ♦"Whirling Dervish" ComplainsOf UC's Hectic, Forced PaceOr the Piteous and Ramblinr Reflec>tions of a Mind Most Woefully Dis¬ordered, Distracted, and Disillus¬ioned by Modern Atomic Edu¬cation, Composed in DeepestDespair and Disgust andMost Rebellious.By WILLIAM EDWARDSWhen the University of Chicago\vas born, its proud papa’s timewas completely taken up with hisstruggling oil business. And so heentrusted the care of his million-(lollar baby to one William Raineyliarper, who brought it up so wellthat it became one of the greateducational ‘forces’ in all theworld.But about the time it turnedthirty, it fell in with some otheruniversities who proved to be verybad companions. Harper hadpassed away (and been honoredwith a great gray mausoleumwhich for some strange reason wascalled a library, even though thebooks it was supposed to containwere always somewhere else if youwanted to take them out); thepapa was likewise not there togive it good advice and warn itabout yielding to temptation; itwas a big university now; and itwent out with the other univer¬sities, and they imbibed so gener¬ously of the gin of the jazz age thatit was now, with the rest, one ofthe greatest educational farces inall the world.They Called in Interne HutchinsIt sowed so many wild oats thenext ten years that it began to feela wee bit seedy. And so it calledin a young interne named Hutchinsto give it a check-over and restoreit to its one-time vigor andstrength. This young interne sawfrom a quick glance that its bloodpressure was higher than its IQ.He had very simple remedies andlost no time in effecting them. Heforbade it any form of vulgaramusment, such as football, andset it to contemplating the goodand the evil and the duns from theBursar. He lifted its lace, stand¬ards, and tuition, and he polishedoff the blood pressure by—remov¬ing its heart. Too simple for words,and also, I fear, too drastic . . .Now the University of ChicagoIs no longer an institution. It is anautomaton. The electrical gradingmachine and printed comprehen¬sive forms have taken the place ofits formerly living, pulsing heartand its old spirit of quiet study. Now the whole aim of life forevery student is to work, dig,grind, stuff the mind, cram thebrain, pass the comps, pass thecomps, pass the comps, comps,comps. It doesn’t matter whetheryou’ve taken a course or not, youcan get credit for it if you have themoney to buy it and can pass thej comps, pass the comps. Takethem in March, take them in Sep¬tember, take them anytime andevery time you can. Always re¬member, it’s the comps that count!“Hurry, hurry, hurry! Botany,anatomy, zoology, physiology, em¬bryology, microbiology, anthropol¬ogy, psychology, genetics, and eu¬genics, and, yes, ecology—in threeeasy quarters! Free movies, Paulde Kruif’s “Microbe Hunters’’thrown in! Dogs, turtles, andpigeons in whole or in part! Thewittiest and most amusing lectur¬ers in captivity! BiSci 3’s about tobegin, get your tickets now, folks,step right up, hurry! hurry! . . .Now, at last, you too can be a radi¬cal! Socialist! Communist! Evena social scientist! Presenting, forthe first time in this country, foradults only, the SocSci 2 Revue,featuring Freud and Marx, uncen¬sored! Shocking! Thrilling! Mas¬terful abridgments!’’Those Wild LooksPeople I meet on the campushave a wild look in their eyes.They carry notebooks that looklike annotated Britannicas. Whenthe bells of the Chapel or of Mitch¬ell Tower ring out every fifteenminutes to recall the wanderingmind to the purpKJse of its exist¬ence, every step quickens; theydrag their huge satchels a littlefaster, rush back to the dormi¬tories, or huddle in some readingroom, and get to work, get to workon Herodotus: “The Utians, theMycians, and the Paricanians wereall equipped like the Pactyans.They had for leaders, Arsamenes,the son of Darius, who commandedthe Utians and Mycians, and Siro-metres, the son of Oeobazus, whocommanded the Paricanians . . .”We are whirling dervishes in amental Saint Vitus* dance. Dailynewspaper reading is a rareachievment. People say they can’tfind time. Then they sigh and add,“I’ve so much to do.” Things thatcome up in courses are never fin¬ished: theories and ideas arethrown at you, and then you rush on the next batch. There is noabsorption, no real congealing ofconviction-—only a dim haze, ahodgepodge of subtlety. What weare doing is most worthwhile, butwhy the feverished, panicky pace?why this obsession with passing,comps ahead of time, and why thisdread of all that is not cold andformal, and impersonal, and im¬passive? Why don’t we calm down,and take time out, and live??? MAROON POLLJudy DownsNorman Granz brought his “Jazzat the Philharmonic’’ to Chicagolast week for what turned out tobe one disappointing evening ofmusic.Despite Granz’s confused an¬nouncement in the middle of theprogram to the effect that he waspresenting “neither Dixieland norRebop, but rather something in-between, which everyone couldunderstand;” actually the jazz onexhibition was l*e extreme of themodern style, and delivered verystalely at that.It was unfortunate that by achange in program Meade LuxLewis was forced to open the showwith an unrelieved half hour ofboogie woogie piano. Meade Luxhas a tendency to perform pro¬ficiently but coldly, and especial¬ly from the concert stage his ma¬nipulations become tedious.The opening boredom was re¬lieved little by the appearance ofthe all star band. Buck Claytonfailed to warm up through the en¬tire length of the program: Cole¬ man Hawkins could not be ex¬pected to. Lester Young showed alittle fire towards the end of theevening, along with his usual dis¬play of poor taste. Kenny Kerseyoccasionally added a light andpleasing bit of piano.A real spark was brought to theprogram with the introduction ofvocalist Helen Hume. One of thebest of the modern blues singers,she offered “Bebabaleba,” “HeMay Be Your Man,” and the othermore familiar numbers of her re¬pertoire.All in all, however. Jazz did notgo too well at the Opera House.« « *Last Sunday at Moose Hall, theHot Club of Chicago presented,in this reviewer’s opinion, the mostmusically satisfying of the six con¬certs it has thus far presented.Doc Evans’ clear, driving horn isthe best example of jazz trumpetwhich Moose Hall has yet heard.Almost on a par with Doc Evans,was rugged valve trombone ofDon Thompson. These two littleknown Minneapolis jazzmen, alongwith such Chicagoans as BudJaconson and Lew Finnerty, pre¬sented three hours of DixielandJazz, of the sort the purists dreamabout.• « *In its last meeting of the quar¬ter, the campus Jazz Club thisweek offered Frank Marshall Da¬vis, of the Associated Negro Pressand the Abraham Lincoln School,discussing “Boogie Woogie and theBlues.' Wilton Krogman'Average Woman'Idea Leads HimInto Bad GracesWilton M. Krogman, the U. ofC.’s effervescent Professor of An¬atomy and Physical Anthropology,again got himself into the newsand incidentally into the badgraces of two women members ofCongress. Two pronouncements byKrogman on the “average man”and the “average woman” ofAmerica characterized them as “noprize” and “a mess” respectively.Special target of the verbalbombs tossed by Jessie Sumner ofIllinois and Chase Going Wood-house of Connecticut were the pro¬fessor’s statistics on the averagewoman and his comparison of MissAverage to Marie MacDonald(commonly referred to as “TheBody”). The representatives rec¬ommended that Krogman first seean oculist and then a psychiatrist.The lady from Connecticut addedas an afterthought that he take agood look at the specimens put outby eastein women’s colleges.Krogman stated that the aver¬age male was balding and paunchyand possessed only half his com¬plement of teeth (in short, noClark Gable)—but the averagewoman better be satisfied withhim, for he was all she could get.Evidently Doc K. considers him¬self a better than average male:“Please say that I have a veryattractive wife.”Exhibit Held OverThe Frank Lloyd Wrightexhibit at Goodspeed Hall,scheduled to close earlier,will be kept open by popularrequest through Sunday, May26, a member of the staff an¬nounced. The exhibit willcontinue to be shown inGoodspeed 401, and will beopen on Sunday from 10:00until 5:00. Of 120 women’s dorm residentssampled in this week’s MAROONPOLL, a majority of 87 declaredthat dormitory life at the Univer¬sity of Chicago “lives up to theirexpectations.” But, with manyreservations.The poll, taken among fifteenstudents apiece from each of theeight Quadrangles dormitories—Foster, Kelly, Green, Beecher,Gates, Blake, Hitchcock, and Snell—showed many a dissenting noteon various aspects of the dormi¬tory way of life.Recipients of MAROON ques¬tionnaires were asked to indicatesatisfaction or dissatisfaction—andthe reasons therefor—with eightlisted phases of life in the dorms.Over half of the polled studentsgave “washrooms, laundry andother physical facilities” most ofthe dissenting checkmarks, withthe largest number of complaintscoming from residents of Snell,Gates, and Hitchcock.Typical comments were “notenough of any of them,” “intoler¬ably dirty,” and, from Hitchcock,“no tub, just one shower perfloor.”Study Facilities Poor, ’Iliey SayRunning second in disfavor byone point was “study conditionsin dormitory.” Foster and Greenled on this score, nearly all thepolled residents of those housesindicating dissatisfaction. “Toomuch noise,” “poor lighting,” and“too much distraction” were oft-quoted reasons. A solution of¬fered by several students, how¬ever, was “provision for a dormlibrary or study hall.” Showingthe opposite view here were resi¬dents of Snell Hall—graduate stu¬dents in the main—who praisedthe quiet atmosphere of that dor¬mitory. “Almost too quiet!” ex¬claimed one Snell student.“Social program within dorm”drew the most complaints fromGreen and Gates Halls. Differ¬ ences between students in the firstand last two years of the Collegewere cited in this respect, as wellas “lack of cooperation and spirit.**A few students expressed satis¬faction with the absence of aplanned social program but atypical response was given byone Gates resident who askedt“Why can’t we have some thingswithout men!”Foster residents, for the mostpart, objected to “dining-roomregulations” and “student govern¬ment in dorm.” The last-namedwas termed “a bureaucracy” by aFoster! te and “fascistic” by aBeecher resident.Two House Heads CensuredDissatisfaction with the dormhousemother was cited by mem¬bers of two residence halls in.particular. “No emotional stabilitywhatsoever,” “too highly strungto be competent with younger,more active girls,” “incompatibil¬ity,” “often oversteps authority,’*“a feeling of animosity” weresample quotes from these students.However, most students in otherdorms showed satisfaction, with“all the qualities that make for afond relationship exist,” “house¬mother is wonderful,” “she hasbeen a house mother, not a headresident” the typical comments.Most of the reasons for pastchanges in residence halls cen¬tered around the recent exodusfrom dorm-converted fraternityhouses, and several girls expresseda wistful hope that they might notbe shifted again for a decent in¬terval. But one unexpected replywas: “I wanted a single room.My room-mate was a bit unusual.’*Refecting overall student opin¬ion in the poll was the commentof a College-4 Foster resident!“On the whole, the opportunityto live with congenial people ii)ipleasant surroundings is worththe few objectionable conditions.’*^*Battle of the Qreat Books”Corey Frames Answer toMayer's Answer to Corey“The best way to learn how toread the Chicago Tribune is toread the Chicago Tribune with agood teacher.” Stephen M. Coreytold a MAROON reporter yester¬day in. commenting on a statementof Milton Mayer. Mayer had saidthat “If good books are unintelli¬gible to the young, bad books mustbe even more unintelligible, andthe Chicago Tribune must be whol¬ly unintelligible. As one conse¬crated liberal to another, I ask Mr. Corey, how are we to fortifythe young against the Tribune?”This exchange of verbal Irishconfetti commenced over Corey’gspeech in Atlanta in which heexpressed some doubt about thevalue to “immature youths” of ex¬posure to the Great Books.“I like Milton. He’s a very in¬teresting guy,” Corey added, soit appears there are no hard feel¬ings, in spite of all the proddingMAROON reporters have been upto.The Critic's CornerConcert in tribute to Arnold Schoen¬berg, presented in Mandel Hall, Mon¬day, May 20, at 8:30 p.m. The ProArto String Quartet (Rudolf Kolischand Albert Rahler, violins; GermainPrevost, viola; Ernst Friedlander, vio¬loncello); Lorna Freedman, assistingviola; Arnold Kvam, assisting violon¬cello.String Quartet No. 3, Op. 30 SchoenbergFive Movements for String Quartet,Sp. 5 Anton von Webernng Sextet, “Verklaerte Nacht”(‘‘Transfigured Night”), Op. 4....SchoenbergA demonstrative audience inMandel Hall Monday night greetedArnold Schoenberg with an ova¬tion at the conclusion of a musicaltribute to the man who, more thanany other, has influenced the har¬monic thinking of all contempo¬rary composers. What matter if the“school” he founded begins andends with his own immediate con¬temporaries. Even the composerwho has rejected atonality exhibitstraces of the revolution effected inVienna in the period 1910-36.Atonality already belongs to thepast, its goal of freer musical ex¬pression has been brought one stepnearer, however, by its divorce¬ment of music from older concepts.Atonality is the arrangement ofthe twelve tones of the chromaticscale in a “row” or grouping pleas¬ing to the composer with non-repe¬ tition of any of the twelve tonesuntil the “row” has been gonethrough. This prevents the workfrom possessing a tonic or “key”(such as C major), because no noteof the “row” assumes the positionof leader or center. By the timeSchoenberg (who is generally re¬garded as the discoverer of aton¬ality) came to write his thirdquartet, he permitted modificationof the concept by allowing repe¬tition of notes in transitional andintroductory passages, and by usingtranspositions and inversion of the“row” simultaneously' with theuntranspoeed “row.” The work isnot easy listening, nor alwayspleasant listening; but one cannothelp be impressed by the earnest¬ness and utter seriousness of thework. It possesses a broad scopefor exploration and development.Anton von Webern, who wasmurdered last September, is one ofthe two most outstanding disciplesof atonality. While to the other,Alan Berg, in his violin concerto,goes the honor of having writtenthe unqualifiedly greatest atonalwork, von Webern was content towrite a great many small, intenseworks. He attempted to inlrodtire William Wambaughpointillism into music by havingthe changing timbre assume melo¬dic value. As it did in the secondof the five movements, this canproduce a poignant nostalgia, as o|great longing, rare beauty distilledto its greatest purity.The program concluded with theearly sextei, which is better knownas a work for string orchestra andas the music to the ballot “Pillaipof Fire.” This early, romantic workof Schoenberg’s is a passionatedeclamation which even today,though its gilt plush is a little tar¬nished at the edges, can, with ef¬fective projection, have a strongimpact upon the listener.The Pro Arte Quartet has im-»proved its ensemble considerablysince it last played the Schoenbergthird quartet here on December 1 J,1944. Interpretation of the quartetand the von Webern were first-rate. The sextet, on the otheyhand, evidently posed problem4which were not entirely solved inrehearsal. Ensemble was rough attimes and tonal inbalance occa^sionally buried a leading motifunder subordinate ideas. It was^otherwise, quite an acceptable per¬formance.John McBrideC-RationShould fraternities participate actively in current affpirs? Muchpressure has been directed at them recently urging that they widen thescope of their interests and, accordingly. Beta JOHN McBRIDE wasasked the following question: **As a veteran, and president of Inter-Fraternity Council, do you think such a shift is justified? If so, whatare I F’s plans for the future?'* This is his reply.—(Veterans* Editor.)The return of veterans who areresuming former Greek ties orentering into fraternity affiliationsfor the first time has been thecause of a great deal of discussion.Most of these discussions havecentered around the part to beplayed by fraternities on a univer¬sity campus or the fu«\ctions whichthey should serve.Their first and most obvious roleis that implied in the name socialfraternity as compared to the pro¬fessional groups; and this socialfunction is definitely n^ded. Ona large city cantipus such as thisone where the present housingshortage makes a true Universitycommunity an impossibility, it isquite difficult for new studentsto make the friends and form theassociations that should make upan important part of a universityeducation. In this field a fraterni¬ty with a planned social programand the facilities of a house on thecampus has much to offer.Wide Range of ViewsThis, however, is not the onlycontribution which can be made,in a fraternity men from differentsections of the country with great¬ly diversified experiences join ina closer association than wouldordinarily be possible. Thus onecan gain a real appreciation of theideas and aims of other men whoQI of Week . , .By RALPH WOODChairman of the Board of Con¬trol of Gambolier, FRED MAN-COURT, has sweated out manyworthy trials and tributions inOrganizing Chicago’s own Collegehumor magazine.A native of Detroit, Fred gradu¬ated from Cranbrook School in*39 and then entered Olivet Col¬lege, Enlisting in June ’41, hewent through the gamut of AAFand ASTP, (at Yale), before“shipping over” in the 78th Divi¬sion. Wounded in Dec. ’44 in Ger¬many. he was subsequently re¬turned to the states and sent toCamp Custer for treatment, be¬fore his discharge in July ’45.Returnirg to school at Chicagoin Fall ’45, he immediately startedtaking part in several worthycampus activities, including theAmerican Veterans’ Committee,and his fraternity. Delta Upsilon.Last Decembe he and FredSulcer came to the decision thatChicago needed a good humormagazine, “to harpoon stuffedshirU on campus, and to haulthem out in the sun where theycan dry out.” Since then Man-court has battled coal strikes,paper shortages, arid comprehen¬sive)? in organizing Gambolier,Which is now on the presses withthe fourth edition.A third year student in the Col¬lege, Fred plans bo enter the divi¬sion of the social sciences after hegets his degree in June *47. , should later be of influence intheir communities. This helps todevelop those abilities for under¬standing and working with otherstoward a common goal which willbe useful in later life.Houses Encourage DiseussionThere has been some questionas to what position the fraterni¬ties should take with regard to theimportant social and economicproblems of today. Since mem¬bership in the various fraternitiesis not based on attitudes towardthese problems, I do not feel thatit is possible for them to adoptspecific attitudes as organizations.These questions should be andare discussed in the houses bothamong the members themselvesand with guest speakers. Knowingthat other men have ideas differ¬ing from his own, one can thusexamine his opinions more closely.Because of these divergent view¬points and varying backgroundsand interests, it would be impos¬sible for the fraternity as a wholeto adopt a particular view.Individuals Active PoliticallyIndividual members can and doparticipate in political parties andsimilar organizations, but a na¬tional fraternity can no more beexpected to take a position insupport of an interest group thancan the University of Chicago orinstitutions of that sort.An important factor to be con¬sidered in this regard is that afraternity, more than any otherorganization on a campus, bringsinto close association men of dif¬fering incomes and interests on apersonal basis, not a political oreconomic one.Fraternity System FlexibleOne can be sure that with vet¬erans making up as large a partof the fraternity membership asthey do on this campus, activeparticipation will lake place on anindividual basis.In an article as brief as this,it has obviously been impossible togive more than a brief picture ofthe system. Fraternities have beenjustly criticized in the past for afailure to direct their efforts pro¬perly; a reconsideration of theiractivities at this time can be ex¬tremely valuable.As always, the greatest singleadvantage of the fraternity systemis a flexibility which is limitedonly by the wishes and abilities ofthe members, and which permitschanges to be made at any time.AVC Plans Rally toSecure New HousingPlans for easing the housing sit¬uation have received a set-backwith the announcement that theArmy’s Vaughan General Hospital,I originally scheduled for reconver-; sion to provide dormitory space,: is now being considered as addi¬tional office space for the army.The Hyde Park and campuschapters of the American Veter¬ans Committee are planning aJoint protest rally at Mandel HallMonday, June 3, in an effort tosecure release of the hospital toprovide badly needed housing.Tentative speakers for the rallyinclude Professor T. V. Smith.Gl Bill BoardAll veterans who plan tointerrupt their education un¬der P.L. 346 for the summerquarter, should notify theoffice of Advisor to Veter¬ans during the 11th weekof the quarter, at the timewhen they turn in their al¬lotment books for audit. •. ■■■ ■THE CHICAGO IIAROOHMichigan's Hoffman on OPA: rtuur, Mar u, ihcCongressman Mocks U of C VetFor Letter Urging His Support^'Perhaps I Have Been Too Dumb, , „ An Unfortunate Situation"By IRVING SCOTT“Regret very much that you are not here to give some of the com¬mittees the value of your knowledge . . . Perhaps I have been too dumbto understand or to analyse and weigh the facts which have been pre¬sented and, if I have, that is an unfortunate situation for the people of(my) district.”Thus Clare Hoffman of Michiganlast week replied to a letter sentto him by Ralph Wood, MA¬ROON reporter, which urged re¬tention of OPA.Wood’s letter, reproduced in theMay 3 issue of the CongressionalRecord as “typical of those (Hoff¬man asserted) who adhere to‘theories,’ ” reads in part:“Honorable Sir?“. . . I fully realize thatthere are several small por¬tions of the OPA programwhich are unfavorable to thegeneral good of the nation,but in view of the greatamount of good that the en¬tire program would have onthe nation, it would seemsheer folly to destroy the en¬tire program in order to do away with the trivial sorepoints . . .“I hope that, realizing thatthe great majority of the vot¬ing public favors the retain-ment of the OPA you will inthe future, vote the way yourconstituents want rather thanthe way you see fit . . . ”Continuing his caustic reply toWood, Hoffman’s letter declares:“The facts show, no matter whatyour theories show, that produc¬tion is the answer to the threatof inflation and that you will notget production without an ade¬quate return to the producers.”In an earHer reply to Wood,Hoffman asserted, “It is odd howmany folks who know ndthingshout the workings of OPA feel free to advice those who havespent many, many months livingwith it. hearing the testimony ofthose who come under it, and ofthe silly answers made by Bowlespersonally and hb top-flight men“Though you are not in my dis¬trict, will reply ... by saying thatI probably know more about OPAand its activities than you do,just as you know far more aboutthe Service or the University ofChicago,”Actually, Wood is a regbteredvoter of Representative Hoffman’sdbtrict. He states he wm prompt¬ed to write to the congressmanfollowing a poll which indicatedthat eighty per cent of veteranshere favored OPA, and after see¬ing government reports showingthat production today is equal tothat of 1941.Lt. General George E. Strate-meyer, commanding general of tliaair defense command, has dis¬closed tentative plans for an airnational guard of three thousandpilots, twenty-six hundred planes^and seventy-nine airports.because ft^ THE MAN’S MAGAZmCFOR JUNEGet your copy now at yourfavorite newsstond TODAYEllE STMIIEY CMIMEnThe Case of theMovie MurderErie Stanley Gardner, famous author of thePerry Mason mystery stories, b a'notedcriminologist. Out of the thrilling facts ofthe Taylor case, one of America’s bestknown, real life mysteries — out of thevanbhing clues, contrary statements,Holl5rwood reputations, secret iden¬tities and missing witnesses — comesa fantastic puzzle. Don’t miss ErieStanley Gardner’s anaiysb of thisamazing case — amazing, butevery word true in true, theMan’s Magazine.WHO WIU WIN THELOUIS-CONN nONT? Previewing the biggest fight in fiveyears, true, the Man’s Magazine,gives you the views of ArthurDONOVAN, for years one of America’smost famous referees — and:HOW I WIU WIN!told OMdvsiviY m tho Juno TRUf byJOE LOUIS“I'm gunnin’ for anearW k.o.over Billy Conn and I justfigured how to do it,” saysJoe Loub in a thus exclusivethat you can’t afford to misa. HOW I WIU WIN!told oxelusivoly in tho Juno TWUf bffBILLY CONN“Joe’s a nice fellow. But onJune 19, William David Connis going to be heavyweightchampion of the world.” ’That’fBilly Conn talking back.If so, this won’t interest you, hut if the brats haveyou bulldozed, read how Father Engle solved hb 'problems.. .then go ahead and do it your own way.NOW TO K N PAPA by VHtlkim Inpla And DON'T forget—A new PETTY OIRI,Miss CurvaceousAngler — plus theadventure, sports,humor andspecial men’sdepartmentswhich makeover 160 pageiof swell reading in theJune TRUE.Almost a million men are buyingTRUE, the Man's Magazine. Getyour copy Jodoy — on sate atyour favorite newsstand now.ftiOAf, M»y M, lf4i THE CHICAGO MAROONBaseball Team Bows OutNetters in LastTwo Dual MeetsIn its final tune-up matches of the year before the Confer¬ence Meet, the University of Chicago tennis team plays host toJPuidue this afternoon at 2 p.m. and travels across lown Mon¬day for a return engagement with Northwestern.The Boilermakers are one of the weaker outfits in the Big/>!! and should prove easy victimsfor Coach Wally Hebert’s win-hungry squad. Northwestern was4lefeated earlier in the season, 6-3,by the same Maroon team.Only to miniVictories over these last tw'o op¬ponents would conclude Chicago’smost successful net season since1942. Undefeated in non-confer¬ence play, the Maroons lost but onematch—to Illinois—all year. Tobalance that defeat, the team canshow 10 victories, six of whichhave been over Big Ten foes. Thisdoes i^ot include today’s or nextMonday’s match.But rather than rest on its lau-/els the net-men are definitelypointing towards the coming BigTen meet up at Northwestern nextThuisday, Friday, and Saturday.Idea. First year students are re¬quired to register now for autumnquarter; optional students whowant to be sure of getting into ai'ertain class will do well to regis¬ter now while all classe.s are open.Look over the following list ofcourses offered in the quarters tocome, make your choice, and reg¬ister next week. In autumn quar¬ter you have a choice of arch-eiy, tennis, swimming, badmin¬ton, hockey, fencing, modern dance,bowling, .social dance, and golf.'This summer you might take oneof these: tennis, archery, swim¬ming, social dance, bowling, orgolf.4 • 4>Betty Clifford of Beecher Hallla.st week romped over her oppon¬ents to win the annual spring opengolf tournament sponsored by thePhysical Education off ces. Fos¬ter Hail’s Lois Click •' placedsecond.* * •Manley House last week beatFoster, 2-1, in the finals of theconsolation tennis tournament.The victors won one singles matchand the doubles for their victorymargin. Though the Maroon will be rankedas definite under-dogs, matchesearlier this year have proved thatupsets will probably be the rulerather than the exception at theforthcoming tourney.Michigan Defends TitlePlay so far this season has es¬tablished undefeated Illinois as theteam to beat, but not be jcountedout are last year’s title-holderMichigan, always powerful OhioState, and home-team Northwest¬ern as well as the Maroons.Chicago’s chances could bei greatly enhanced by a break in thedrawings. If Maroon players didn’thave to meet the top men in theirbrackets in the first round, theycould pile up considerable pointsearly in the tourney.U High WinsPSL TennisChampionshipTaking individual crowns inboth number one singles and in thedoubles, the University High ten¬nis team repeated last Saturday asPrivate .School League champs. Alltold the J-V squad piled up 21points as compared to Harvard’ssecond place total of 12.Larry Olin, entered in the num¬ber two singles spot, went as faras the .semi-finals in his bracket.Previous to the tournament, thesquad had won all eight of itsdual matches and ended the sea¬son undefeated.Besides the aforementioned fel¬lows, the following players alsocompeted for U. High at varioustimes during the season: FrankRothman, Pete Winchell, Bill Bok-man, Paul Huebner, Howie Barron,and Ronnie Goldenson. Number One .. .EARL THEIMERChicago varsity tennis team willenter the Big Ten Tourney next jweek led by number one man Earl iTheimer.ITrack TeamEyes Big 10Cinder MeetChicago’s varsityHrack team willmeet Wi.sconsin State TeachersCollege tomorrow at Stagg Field[at one-thirty. It will be the lastmeet prior to the Big Ten Champ¬ionships to be held next weekend.It is expected that the Maroontrack team will again prove it¬self better than non-conferenceopposition although the team hasmade only poor showings in reg¬ular competition.Beat Wheaton, 66-65Coach Gil Dodds’ Wheaton teamwas met and -defeated, if not con¬quered, last l^aturday by the ex¬tremely narrow margin of 66-65.The meet was very close all theway and going into the final event,the mile relay, the Wheaton squadhad a four point margin. How¬ever, the team of Jung, Cooper,Bogman, and Beatty was fastenough to turn in a 3:33 perform¬ance, good for an eight yard andfive point victory.A Wheaton man, Crozier, wasby far the outstanding star of themeet. He turned in four winningperformances and one secondplace effort to ahtiass a total oftwenty-three points. He showedhis amazing versatility as well asendurance by winning both hurdleevents, the high jump, broadjump and placing .second in thejavelin throw.Adams Bested in MileJim Bucher, of Wheaton, tookJohnny Adams’ usual double gloryby winning both the mile and thetwo mile. His time of 4:25.5 wasfive seconds better than Adams’ inthe mile and he all but finishedalone in the longer event.Chicago swept the dashes, Kelsowining the hundred in a slow 10:4and Beatty the 220 in 22:8. Asusual, Chicago’s chief weaknesswas in the field events but a cleansweep in the discus throw savedseveral points.U.T.113M133 E.55th St.Complete Selectionof Beers andOther BeveragesHID way 0524Blatx BeerNEED A HAIRCUT? NEED A SHINE?Reynolds Club Barber ShopHOURSt 1:00 TO 5:00 MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY8:00 TO 1:00 SATURDAYtrices remele fke same on SaturdaySHINI SIRVICITHE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCHWINNER OF 10 World'sFair Grand Prizes,28 Gold Medalsand more honorsoccuracy than anyother tlmeplecoe Vfl. ^MOSTCoed Contests ... by YlackIt’s time to register! Both summer and autumn registrationmay be taken care of at the same time next Monday and Tues¬day, the 27th and 28th, in the Physical Education offices in IdaNoyes.For all first year students it’s a necessity; for optional phys¬ical education student.*? it’s a wise — Leaves Big TenAfter Wind-UpAgainst GophersProbable Starting LineupsChicagoLevine, IfBail in, rfJohnson, 3bEi sen stein, lbDuncan, cSharp, ssFreeark, 2bCostakis, cfNotfsinger, p MinnesotaRedi.S'ke, ssOlson, cBrink, rfFrank, lbStewart, tfGilbert, 3bKopperud, IfJohnson, 2bTepel, pBy DICK FINEA 50-year-oId tradition comes to an end this afternoon andtomorrow when the University of Chicago baseball team takesthe field as a member of the Western Conference for the lasttime.The Maroon diamond squad winds up its 1946 season as wellas its Big Ten history in a twogame series against the Universityof Minnesota at Washington Park,55th and Uottage Grove, at 4 p.m.today and at 2 tomorrow.Chicago will again be seekingits first Conference win of* theseason as well as its first since1942. Prospects aren’t too good.Team Is ImprovedThough Coach Kyle Anderson’scharges now bear little resem¬blance to the team that stumbledthrough the first half of the sea¬son, they have the misfortune ofwinding up their schedule withone of the better outfits in theleague.The Gophers boa.st of a five-won, three-lost record includingwins over league-leading Wiscon¬sin and 1945 champs Michigan.They present a well-balancedsquad which can both field andhi^L"* cat-eher Stu Olson and inoutfielder Bob Brink they haveone .400 and one .300 hitter. Inpitcher Don Tepel they have one Pi Lams CopFraternitySoftball CrownBy ANSON CHERRYA highly underrated Pi Lam ballclub raised cain with the pre¬game score guesstrs by whippingthe D.U.’s 12 to 7 to take the fra¬ternity softball crown.Going into the championshipgame, powerful Delta Upsilon wasodds-on favorite to walk off withan easy victory. A few daysearlier it had warmed up,slaughtering the Phi Gams in apractice game, 38 to 6. These samePhi Gams were the only team towhip the Pi Lams in the regularseason. On top of that, D.U. hadgone through its own league, un¬questionably a tougher one, unde¬feated.Seventy-three runs had trottedof the most effective hur lers in over the plate in the D.U.’s fourthe Conference.Maroons Unable to Hit regular season games, but the bestit could do was push seven acrossThe Maroons on the other hand against the fine pitching that liaswill again rely on Hal Noffsingerand Curt Smith for their pitchingand on a prayer for their hitting.Though fellows like Johnson andDuncan and Eisenstein have reallyclouted non-Conference flingers,they haven’t been able to hit the been characteristic of the Pi Lam’svictories throughout the year. Notonly was their pitching of a stellarquality, but the new championswere hitting the ball harder than,they have all season.This game was merely an anti¬size of their hats against Big Ten climax after the real thriller theopponents.Despite its feeble hitting, Chi¬cago promises to make a contestout of both games by virtue of thefine pitching it has been gettingmost of the year as well as by itsmuch irnproved fielding. Pi Lams had played against theAlpha Delts to get into the play¬offs. Trailing all the way, the PiLams exploded some solid basehits in the first half of the ninth,scoring five runs, and winning 7to 4.Mead Downs MathewsFor Intra-Mural TitleMead’s not-to-be-denied sluggers walked off with the Col¬lege House Softball League title last Tuesday afternoon, beat¬ing Mathews, 20-12, in the play-off game.Both teams ended the season with a six-won, one-lost recoid,necessitating the play-off. Mathews sole defeat had been at thehands of Mead earlier in the sea¬son, while Mead House lost onlyto Linn.Mead assured itself of victoryYou have poiaa on campua, but willit deaert you when you atep into thebuaineaa world? At Katharine GibbaSecretarial School, you not only re¬ceive outatanding technical training,but become familiar with buaineaamanagement and procedure. Forcatalog and information, addreaaCollege Courae Dean.KATHARINE GIBBShlW YORK 17 »99 fark Ava.MgTON It f* WariAiMvinifc atCNICA60 li ..............721 N. MUhtaM Ava.mOVIOKNCI t...... - —189 Allfall tt in the championship lilt by scoringeight runs in the first inning andwas never headed after that.Of the three major sports whichheaded the intra-mural programduring the past three quarters,Mead placed first in two—basket¬ball and softball—and Mathewsin one—football. Mathews alsowon the swim crown, but Coulterbroke up the two team monopolyby copping the volley-ball title.Final standings at the conclusionof the softball season are as fol-lows:Team w L. Fct.*Mead ..« 1 .S36*M«thcws ...« 1 .S56.. .♦ S ..371Chamberlain ... . .3 4 .429Coulter ...2 .3 .400iiAdd ...2 4 .333Vincent . .2 S .2MHalltbury . t 3 .JOT*Tle settled by play-off.Friday, May 24,1946h^'V. ''ir^THE CHICAGO MAROON^ V- '‘. .J> !>Store Hours. 9:45 to 5:45put a mote um puur eulewturz 9hoot some pool.. . or billiards soon at the reynolds Hubnrnlng thecampuscalendarRack ^em up and lag for break.You’re in for a game of pool! You’llhave lots of fun and skill right off, »ocome to the Reynolds Club,Second floor up.Pool is one ofJenny Nih’s favoritesports, and she’s a bit ofan expert (as you can see). Expert, too,is our Young Chicago Shop ... specialists ingathering all that’s new and lovely—particularly for you gals who boast a juniorfigure like Jenny’s. Splashed with gaywater lilies, her crisp pique dress looks likea dream, and fits like it, too. (Bright blue,black, maroon or brown flowers on white)Sizes 9 to 15. $9.95Come to Young Chicago Shop—Sixth Floor, South, StateWritten by: Betty SteamsCartoons by: Cissie Liebshuts