SIIlP Clftrano arnnn54 YEARS OF SERVICE AND LEADERSHIPVOL. 5, NO. 28—Z*149 THE UNlVERSmr OR CHICAGO, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, ljM6"One Last Chance'^-RMH♦ * ^ * ★ ★ ★ ★574 Degrees Are Awarded HereKimpton AppointedTo Vice-PresidencyElection of Lawrence A. Kimpton, Dean of Students at theUniversity, as a Vice-President of the University, effective onJuly 1, was announced yesterday by Chancellor Robert M.Hutchins.Along with the appointment of a Vice-President to succeed 125 V eterans Graduate;List 7 Phi Beta KappasFive hundred and seventy four students, including 125 vet¬erans, were graduated today at the 235th convocation exercisesat Rockefeller Chapel.In two separate ceremonies, necessitated by the large numrber of graduates. Chancellor Robert M. Hutchins awarded 377Council OK*sCollege Plan;PK.B. OustedThe six-month Ph.B. degreedeadlock in the college was ap¬parently ended today as a resultof the University Council actionTuesday approving the five-plankcompromise proposal adopted lastweek by the college faculty.The council, highest facultyruling body, appended two minoramendments to the college meas¬ure. The council asked that theDean of Students make provisionsfor adequate advisory service tocollege students in the light of thecurricular changes, and inserted areview amendment provfding thatthe action be examined at the endof a three-year trial period, sched¬uled to begin with the Fall Quarterof 1947.Plan Alternative CoursesIncluded in the college actiontaken a week ago were proposalsproviding for the establishmentof a General Physics course in thecollege as an alternative to Phys¬ical Sciences 3; the developmentof a foreign language Humanities3 course; joint college-divisionalresidence by a student who hasbeen in residence at least threequarters; and the ‘inclusion ofworld history at some point in thecollege curriculum. The proposalswere seen by observers as a com¬promise between divisional spe¬cialization and the liberal educa¬tion program of the college. Underthe amended motion, only onedegree—the Bachelor of Arts—willhenceforth be awarded, but stu¬dents will have two possible al¬ternative courses and may delayreceipt of a college degree whilecompleting pre-divisional require¬ments.Three Share Best* VTeacher AwardThree one thousand dollar prizes,awarded annually for excellencein undergraduate teaching, wereannounced this morning at theconvocation exercises.Given the awards were RobertE. Keohane, instructor in the So¬cial Sciences in the College; Eu¬gene P. Northrop, associate profes¬sor of Mathematics in the College;and F. Joseph Mullin, assistantprofessor of Physiology.The prizes, the only such awardsin the country, were inauguaratedin 1938 by a New York alumnusto interest teachers in training notonly, scholars and research work¬ers but also young men and wom-ers, but also young men and worn-leadership in business, civic, andprofessional life. Reuben G. Qustavson, who re¬cently resigned to accept the chan¬cellorship of the University ofNebraska, Hutchins also announcedthe appointment of Robert M.Strozier as Dean of Students.Strozier has served as an associatedirector of International House.Vice - President Kimpton, whoserved as chief administrative of¬ficer of the Metallurgical Labora¬tory of the University from 1943to 1944 and as Dean of Studentsfrom 1944 to the present, will alsobecome Dean of the Faculties.Thirty-five years old, Vice-President Kimpton was educatedat Stanford and Cornell universi¬ties, receiving his bachelor’s andmaster’s degrees from the former,and his doctor of philosophy fromthe latter.He majored in the field of phi¬losophy and was elected to PhiBeta Kappa, honorary scholasticfraternity, during his junior yearat Stanford. After receiving hisDoctor of Philosophy in 1935, heserved as teaeher and director ofthe Deep Springs College in Cali¬fornia until 1941, when he re¬signed to initiate a large cattleranch operation in Nevada.In 1942 he returned to academicwork, accepting the post of pro¬fessor of mathematics and philoso¬phy and dean of the Liberal ArtsCollege of Kansas City University.Vice-President Kimpton’s firstappointment to the University,August 1, 1943, was as assistant tothe chief administrative officer ofthe Metallurgical Laboratory, adivision of the Manhattan atomicbomb project. He became chiefadministrative officer two monthslater, and served in this capacityuntil August, 1944.Strozier UC GraduateDean Strozier, who became as¬sociate director of InternationalHouse in May, 1945, received hisbachelor’s degree in 1929 and hismaster’s degree in 1930 fromEmory University in Atlanta, andhis doctorate from Chicago in 1945.He studied at the Sorbonne in1932.Help WantedBureauWE NEED . . .REPORTERS, to find out what’shappening on campus.COPY READERS, to check thestories turned in.NIGHT EDITORS, to superviseprinting.HEAD-WRITERS, people withlots of synonyms.If you are interested in any ofthe above jobs, or if you thinkyou are a budding journalistic ge¬nius, drop in and ask us for a job.We are now filling vacancies onour staff for the Summer Quarter.Offices of THE CHICAGO MA¬ROON are in the Reynolds ClubBuilding, 57 th and University. ChancellorPleads for'One World'Sptcialiiotion ProducesBorborions, Ho AssortsCivilization is doomed unlessa worldwide moral, intellectual,and spiritual revolution can becarried out within the nextyears. Chancellor Robert M.Hutchins declared today at Rocke¬feller chapel.574 graduates at the 225th con¬vocation exercises heard Hutchinsreiterate his thesis that worldpeace is dependent upon worldgovernment and that world gov¬ernment is contingent on a revolu¬tion of “the hearts and minds ofmen” which must be led by edu¬cated men and women.Hutchins condemned the prin¬ciple of “get all you can,” whichhe said is the watchword of Amer¬ican economic life. He also as¬sailed educational specializationwhich he claimed is producingcontemporary “barbarians.”Most universities, he said, per¬petuate a “get all you can”, phi¬losophy by teaching their students“some special technique which .willgive them a definite advantageover their fellowmen. ” Such men,he said, are uncultured, since theyhave no conception of the natureand because they are isolated byof the world or the destiny of mantheir limited views and skills.“The struggles and differencesof mankind can be composed anda human community can arise ifthere is a spiritual revolution inwhich each man sees each otherman as a child of God,” he as¬serted.Hutchins warned that time wasshort. He said, however, that ifwe replace a “get all you can”motto with a slogan of “enough—and no more” and “if we can gainfor ourselves a coherent systemof ideas concerning the world andhumanity and if we can mean thefatherhood of God when we saythe brotherhood /n man, then wemay have one more chance.”/YET BACHELORSAt Michigan State College vet¬erans have begun wearing theirdischarge buttons upside down, tosignify the fact that they arebachelors.Applications for admission tothe University for the SummerQuarter are coming in at twice theusual rate, according to AssistantDean of Students William E. Scott,and registration is expected toskyrocket above the 1941 norm of3636. Approximately 1000 studentsnow in the College will stay withtheir studies during the hot sum¬mer months.Estimations on divisional enroll¬ments are not available, but thetrend here will probably corre¬spond to that of the undergraduatebody. All of the eight summer bachelor -degrees and 197 higherdegrees.Graduated from the college were284 students. Officially it was thefirst complete class to graduatesince the new college was foundedin 1942. Youngest of the gradu¬ates was 16-year-old Lawrence A.Hershensen, who entered the col¬lege in 1944. Eleven 17-year-oldswere among those awarded collegebachelors.Hutchins also conferred 93 Con¬ventional Bachelor’s degrees, 113Master’s degrees, 26 Bachelor ofLibrary Science diplomas, 21 Bach¬elor of Divinity degrees, threeDoctor of Medicine certificates,six Doctor of Law and 28 Doctorof Philosophy degrees.List PBK AwardsAwarded.a Doctor’s degree inabsentia was Ralph Lapp, who isstationed in the Bikini Atolls andwill participate in “OperationsCrossroads,” the atom-bomb ex¬periments late this month.Hutchins also announced theelection of seven students to theBeta Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa.Awarded keys were Evelyn E.Adams, Janice Barbara Brogue,and Clara G. Kerekes of the Bio¬logical Science divisions; ReasonA. Goodwin, Robert W. Hemen-way, and Jacqueline S. Rice ofthe Humanities division; andCharles G. Higgins, a physicalscience student.Merti Leaves PostWith Reynolds ClubMax A. Mertz, a graduate inSocial Science, has resigned asDirector of the Reynolds Club,student clubhouse. Lawrence Keil-man, a student in the fourth yearof the College, is acting head.Radio Midway PlansNo Summer ShutdownRadio Midway, the student sta¬tion located at Burton Court, willcontinue to broadcast during thesummer term.workshops slated for the SummerQuarter have capacity enrollmentsalready, Scott lioted.Autumn Quarter applications foradmittance to the College are al¬ready a problem, Scott said, point¬ing out that while only 2500 willbe accommodated, over five timesthat number are hammering atthe door for consideration. Some1500 of the College’s present stu¬dents will be back in the fall, sothat new students admitted willbe cut to 1000.Of this number 200 will be re¬turning vets formerly enrolled NationalAuthoritiesOn FacultyThree nationally known authori¬ties have been appointed to thefaculty of the University of Chi¬cago, Chancellor Robert M. Hutch¬ins ha§ announced.The new appointees and theirpositions are: Marshall HarveyStone, chairman of the Departmentof Mathematics at Harvard Uni¬versity and son of the late ChiefJustice Harlan Fiske Stone, asDistinguished Service Professor ofMathematics at the University; Dr.Lowell T. Coggeshall, chairman ofthe Department of Tropical Dis¬eases at the University of Michiganas professor of medicine and chair¬man of the Department of Medi¬cine; and Walter H. Newhouse,Professor of Economic Geology atMassachusetts Institute of Tech¬nology, as Professor of EconomicGeology.Appointments of Dr. Coggeshalland Professor Stone at the Univer¬sity will be effective July 1, 1946,and the appointment of Professor-Newhouse, October 1. Dr. Cogge¬shall will succeed Dr. George F.Dick on his retirement as chair¬man of the University’s Depart¬ment of Medicine.Professor Stone, who has servedas chairman of the MathematicsDepartment at Harvard since 1942and as a staff member of the de¬partment since 1927, holds threedegrees from Harvard and onefrom Kenyon College. He receivedhis Bachelor of Arts in 1922, hisMaster of Arts in 1924, and hisDoctor of Philosophy in 1926. HisDoctor of Science degree wasgranted by Kenyon College in1939.In 1943 he served as presidentof the American Mathematical(Continued on Page 2)here; 300, new students in the firstand second years; and 500, in thethird year. About 60 per cent ofthe new students will be ex-GIs,and as a consequence the totalnumber of recent high school grad¬uates will be slashed.Included in the College curric¬ulum this summer will be a newFrench course, equivalent to the101-2-3 sequence, experimental innature and featuring new teachingmethods. Registration for thistriple - decker (three-quarters-in-one) will be restricted td sixteenstudents.Expect Record EnrollmentHere for Summer QuarterFm € i tHE CHICAGO MARObNCnlpnAnr of EventsNext Week onQuadranglesItems to be included in the MAROOK calendar must be received inthe MAROON office by noon, Tuesday, of the week of publication.Address all notices to “The Calendar Editor.”Friday,! June 14EXHIBITION. Prints and Paintings by Paul Klee. The RenaissanceSociety. Goodspeed Hall 108. 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. daily, exceptSundays, through June 24.CONVOCATION. The Two Hundred Twenty-fifth Convocation. TheConvocation Address. Robert Maynard Hutchins, Chancellor ofthe University. Rockefeller Chapel. The Conferring of Higher. Degrees, 11:00 a.m. The Conferring of the Bachelor’s Degree,3:00 p.m.RECORD CONCERT. Department of Music Record Concert. SocialScience 122. 12:00 m.-l:00 p.m.CONVOCATION SERVICE. Address. Ernest J. Chave, Professor ofPractical Theology, Federated Theological Faculty. Bond Chapel.12:00 m.-12:25 p.m. .RECEPTION. The Chancellor’s Reception for Graduates and theirFamilies. Ida Noyes Hall. 4:15-5:15 p.m.WORSHIP SERVICE. Hillel. Karasik Housi^. 7:30 p.m. (FiresideTea. 8:15 p.m.)Saturday, June 15 *THE SPRING QUARTER CLOSES.Sunday, June 16RADIO BROADCAST. The University of Chicago Round Table.“Two Billion People.” Prof. Frank W. Notestein, Director of theOffice of Population Research, Princeton University; Warren S.Thompson, Director of the Scripps Foundation for Research inPopulation Problems, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio; Prof. New¬ton Edwards, Department of Education. WMAQ. 12:30-1:00 p.m.Tuesday, June 20DINNER. University Press Employes Dinner. Ida Noyes Hall. 6:00p.m. Dance following.Saturday, June 22, and Monday, June 24REGISTRATION. Registration for the Summer Quarter. Mandel Halland Bartlett Gymnasium.Tuesday, June 25THE SUMMER QUARTER OPENS.WORSHIP SERVICE. First Bond Chapel Service will be on Tuesday,July 2. 12:00 m.-12:25 p.m.RECORD CONCERT. Department of Music Record Concert. SocialScience 122. 12:00 m.-l:00 p.m. daily, except Saturdays andSundays.Wednesday, June 26ORGAN RECITAL. Marcel Dupre. Program of Bach. RockefellerChapel. 8:30 p.m.Thursday, June 27LECTURE. “The Chorale-Preludes of Bach.” Albert Riemenschnei-der. Director of Music, Baldwin-Wallace College. Social Science122. 8:30 p.m.RECEPTION. The Chancellor’s Reception for Summer Students.Ida Noyes Hall. 9:00-10:00 p.m. UC Students toHelp RebuildManila UResponding to a need for booksat the Philippine Women’s Uni¬versity, Manila, a faculty and stu¬dent committee has been organ¬ized at the University of Chicagoto obtain books for the ManilaUniversity’s library, which wasdestroyed in the recent war.Faculty members on the Philip¬pine Women’s University SponsorCommittee include: Robert M.Strozier, assistant director of In¬ternational House; Robert K.Burns, assistant professor of Eco¬nomics; Ronald S. Crane, profes¬sor and chairman of the EnglishDepartment; William S. Gray, pro¬fessor of education; Louis A. Lan-da, assistant professor of English;Robert V. Merrill, assistant pro¬fessor of Education; Louis A. Lan-professor of English and Dean ofeducation school; and Napier Wilt,professor of English and dean ofstudents for the Humanities Divi¬sion. Strozier is official sponsorfor the committee.The student committee, whichis still being organized, will beheaded by Miss Mary Jordan, agraduate student in the Humani¬ties from Cherry Valley, Illinois.Miss Jordan, who served in theWAC, is attending school underthe G. I. Bill. Ruperto Mendiones,a Filipino student, is organizingthe collection of* books from fac¬ulty members.The Philippine Women’s Uni¬versity, Manila, was established inthe year after World War I ended,and is of special interest to peopleon the Midway campus because anumber of the faculty membersattended the University of Chi¬cago. Mrs. Conrado Benitez, whois president of the institution, isthe wife of» Conrado Benitez, aUniversity alumnus of 1911 andthe mother of Helena Z. Benitez,(Continued on Page 3)Stone . ♦ ♦(Continued from Page 1)Society, the highest academic hon¬or within the gift of Americanmathematicians. A starred manof science. Professor Stone wasawarded an honorary doctor’s de¬gree from the University of SanMarcos in 1943.He has also served on the fac¬ulties at Columbia, Yale and Stan¬ford universities and as the WalterAmes lecturer in Seattle, Washing¬ton. He is the author of LinearTransformations in Hilbert Spaceand Their Application to Analysis(1932) and a large number of re¬search articles in the fields ofanalysis of real variables andtopology.Dr. Coggeshall, who first servedthe University of Chicago as aninstructor in medicine from 1930to 1932 and as assistant professorfrom 1932 to 1935, received hisbachelor’s, master’s and doctor’sdegrees from Indiana University.During 1942 he was on leavefrom the University of Michiganto serve as senior medical officerfor the Pan-American-Africa Air¬lines in establishing a medical de¬partment from the west coast ofAfrica to China. On January 29,1944, he was commissioned in theUnited States Naval Reserve todirect a tropical disease study onmalaria and filariasis.Before going to Michigan, Dr.Coggeshall was a staff member ofthe Rockefeller Foundation Inter¬nal Health Division. He is a mem¬ber of the American Society forClinical Investigation, the Societyof Experimental Biology and Med¬icine, American Society of Trop¬ical Medicine, and the AmericanA.ssociation for the Advancementof Science.Professor Newhou.se, who wasmade a starred man of science in1944, holds a Bachelor of Sciencedegree from Pennsylvania StateCollege and a Master of Scienceand a Doctor of Philosophy degreefrom Massachusetts Institute ofTecnnology. Science Dean SangerGoes to Kansas CollegeRalph Grafton Sanger, Dean of Students in the PhysicalSciences and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, leaves theUniversity July 1 to become chairman of the Mathematics De¬partment at Kansas State., Sanger’s new position marks the end of a long carrer—25years worth—at Chicago. Afterreceiving two degrees at the Uni- the six weeks of Lent Dr. Sangerversity (S.B., ’25, S.M., ’26), Sang- left them in peace, and by Easterer w*ent to teach at Wisconsin, two' they had not only ceased being inyears later returned. This was in1928. Since then he’s been at Chi¬cago, in various capacities, andwinding up at present as abovenoted. In ’31 he was awarded hisPh. D.September 1 he will go West—w'est to Manhattan, Kansas—totake up his new duties at KSC.Regrets Leaving“My years at Chicago have beenextremely pleasant, and eventhough I regret leaving, I amlooking forward to my new posi¬tion at Kansas,” he told theMAROON yesterday.In 1941 Sanger received bio¬graphical treatment of a sort inthe MAROON, as follows:“In the brief span of thirty-sixyears, R(alph) G(rafton) S(anger)as he is referred to in the diction¬ary of American Men of Science,has achieved a Ph. D. and an as¬sistant professorship at the Uni¬versity of Chicago, a deep bassvoice and a predilection forblondes with southern accents, abook entitled ‘Synthetic Projec¬tive Geometry’, and a reputationas a dude rancher, a shin-crack¬ing bridge player, a music-lover,and a home-wrecker,Anti-Cupid Complex“This last title was given himby his admiring students. OneSpring in his math class therewas (.sic) a boy and a girl in love.Every day he called on them. Oneday the girl could stand it nolonger, and asked this mathema¬tical Simon Legree to please giveup torturing them for Lent. For love, the girl had left school andmarried a man in Texas.“You will have realized by thislime that our subject is not insen¬sitive, but only mildly cruel . . . ”The columnist that wrote thisstuff had a couple of courses fromSanger, we understand, so maybeshe should know. At any ratethere’s no denying the referenceto a deep bass voice. There are afew other vital statistics, however,so we add them now.Awarded Teaching PrizeR.G.S. early acquired a Phi BetaKappa key, later a Sigma Xi. Amember of the American Mathe¬matical society, from 1930-40 hewas an associate editor of that or¬ganization’s learned journal, andsince 1944 has been on the Boardof Governors of the MathematicalAssociation of America.He may be “mildy cruel”, asaccused above; but, notwithstand¬ing, in 1940 he was awarded theUniversity’s $1,000 prize for “Ex¬cellence in Undergraduate Teach¬ing.” During the war he was large¬ly responsible for administration ofthe Army’s pre-meteorology pro¬gram on campus.Plan Lecture SeriesIn Summer QuarterAmong the events scheduled forthe Summer Quarter are four lec¬ture series, open to the generalpublic.Numerous music lectures, con¬certs and recitals have also beenscheduled. Friday, Jane 14, 194Music DepartmentStarts New SeriesInaugurating the 1946-47 Uni- gram devoted to the works of thversity concert season with apunch, the Department of Musichas scheduled three concerts anda lecture for the first week of theSummer Quarter. Marcel Dupre,who is organist of the Church ofSaint-Sulpice in Paris and aninternationally renowned author¬ity on Bach, will open his seriesof five organ recitals wnth a pro-FraternallySpeakingBY JIM BARNETTThe first revival of Inter-Fra¬ternity Sing since the war washeld Saturday night in the MandelCourt, before an audience of over2,500 students, alumni, and facultymembers. The Quality Cup, forthe best singing, was wmn by theDELTA UPSILON fraternity, withsecond place going to ALPHADELTA PHI, and third place toBETA THETA PI. The quantitycup, awarded to the fraternitywith the most act*ives and alumnipresent, went :o the ALPHA DEL¬TA PHI, with PSI UPSILON insecond place, and DELTA KAPPAEPSILON in the third position.One of the highlights of the singwas the presentation of theSWEETHEART OF SIGMA CHI,Priscilla Joyce, to the audience.The sweetheart w’as then pre¬sented with three dozen AmericanBeauty roses by Sigma Chi mem¬bers.Before the “Sing,” a number ofaffairs were held by the differentfraternities honoring alumni andguests. The ALPHA DELTs cele¬brated their 50th anniverary oncampus with a full day of activi¬ties. The PHI GAMs entertainedalumni and active members withtheir annual PIG DINNER. Fijis’mouths watered as the huge pigwas brought In by the youngestmembers (just initiated), DICKATKINSON and BUD SEBOLD.Then all members, one by one,kissed the pig’s CENSORED. Afterthe dinner all members and guestswent to the sing. . Leipzig master.M. Dupre, who will be in residence at the University from Jun24 until July 27, will teach a master-class in organ in addition this series of public concerts. Ahis first recital in RockefelleChapel, on Wednesday, June 2fat 8:30 p.m., he will perform thPrelude and Fugue in A Minorthe Prelude and Fugue in D Majorthe Passacaglia and Fugue in (Minor; the Fantasy and Fugu(“Great Fugue”) in G Minor; thToccata, Adagio, and Fugue in (Major; and the Toccata and Fuguin D Minor. This recital is opeito the public without charge.In Mandel Hall, on Friday, Jun28, at 8:30 p.m., Ralph Kiikpatrick, pre-eminent American harp.sichordist, will play the first 0four programs devoted toharpsichord music of Bach, giveias part of the series of six sub‘wription concerts offered by thDepartment of Music in the Summer Quarter. The program on thioccasion will be the Partita in {Minor, 15 Two-paVt Invention;the Partita in B Flat Major, thFantasy in C Minor, and the Fugufrom “The .Musical Offering tFrederick the Great.”For his second concert, on Monday, July 1, at 8:30 p.m., in Mandel Hall, Mr. Kirkpatrick will pla;Bach’s Partita in D Major, thCapriccio In B Flat Major, ihPartita in A .Minor, and the Chromaiic Fantasy and Fugue, whicMr. Kirkpatrick played la.st February on the Mandel Hall subscription series. Tickets for thsummer subscription series are 01sale at the University InformatioiOffice, priced at $7.20. Single tickets for the Kirkpatrick concertjpriced at $1.50 for the main flooiand $1.20 for the balcony, wilalso be available.On Thursday, June 27, at 8:3p.m., in Social Science 122, Professor Albert RiemenschneideiDirector of the Conservatory cMusic at Baldwin-Wallace Collegewill speak on “The Chorale-Preludes of Bach.” This lecture iopen to the public w'ithout charg<!iGentlemen, this isno bureau-cravatNo, no. This thing o£ beauty is nojoy when hidden in a drawer.This Arrow Tie must b;, worn. Itmust drape the full length of itshandsome grace down your shirt-front. It must breathe its spectrumedlife into every fold of your suit.As with all Arrow Ties, it glidesinto a perfect knot with a minimumof manipulation.Practically eternal.See it at your Arrow dealer’s.ARROW SHIRTS and TIBSUNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTSfriday# THE CHICAGO MAROQN Pace 3Complete Text of Hutchins' Convocation AddressThe text of Chancellor Robert M. Hutchins* address deliv¬ered at the 225th convocation exercises here'today follows infull.The sudden change in the inter¬national position of the UnitedStates confronts the rising genera¬tion of her citizens with problemsunknown to their predecessors.Tliis change, added to the dislo¬cations attendant upon the end ofi great war, has placed an unpre¬cedented strain on the characterand intelligence of our people;and the results so far are not en¬couraging to those who believethat the- prospects of civilizationdepend on the world leadership ofthe United States. It sometimesseems as though we had stoppedfighting the Germans and the Jap¬anese only to begin fighting oneanother, and to talk about fight¬ing the Russians.Many people think, and I am oneof them, that we cannot haveworld peace without world gov¬ernment. But, if world govern¬ment is to last, it must rest upona world community. Our agitationfor world government unfortu¬nately coincides with the demon¬stration that we have very littlecommunity at home; and our vast imilitary preparations suggest thatwe place our hope for the futurein beating other nations ratherthan in joining them.Civilization DoomedThese facts and tendencies re¬veal once more that civilizationis doomed unless the hearts andminds of men can be changed, un¬less we can bring about a moral,intellectual, and spiritual reforma¬tion, so deep and drastic as to becalled a revolution, throughoutthe world. Since I believe that thisrevolution should be led by edu¬cated men and women, and since Iam convinced that this is the mostimportant task you have beforeyou, 1 want to take the last fewminutes of your formal educationto tell you exactly what the taskis.The moral problem has beendramatized for us in the last fewweeks by the response to the de¬mands of John L. Lewis and theRailroad Brotherhoods. The out¬cry against these demands wasabsurd; for they were in the stand¬ard tradition of American eco-noinic life. The motto of Ameri¬can economic life is, “Get all youcan”. When Mr. Lewis and theBrotherhoods saw a chance to getmore, they took it; they would havebeen un-American if they had not. Criticism of their action came withbad grace from those who by pre¬cept and example had taught themthe lessen that you should get allyou can, that the more power youhave the more you will get, andthat justice is the interest of thestronger.Pursuit of WealthWe hear that labor will neverbe satisfied. Why should labor besatisfied, when nobody else everhas been? As Tawney has said,“The naive complaint that work¬men are never satisfied is strictlytrue. It is true, not only of work¬men, but of all classes in a society-which conducts its affairs on theprinciple that wealth, instead ofbeing proF>ortioned to function, be¬longs to those who can get it. Theyare never satisfied, nor can theybe satisfied. For as long as theymake that principle the guide oftheir individual lives and theirsocial order, nothing short of in¬finity could bring them satisfac¬tion.” The educators of AmericasupFK)rted the Army Enlisted Re¬serve Corps, an obviously undem¬ocratic proposal, because theyhoped it would maintain theirtuition income during the war; andthe last reforms that will be madein American education are theabolition of academic rank and thesubstitution of faculty living al¬lowances based on need for facultysalaries based on market value.Desires for things in the materialorder can never be satisfied. Ifthere is no standard of economiclife except that each man shalldesire more than he has thus farobtained, if economic activity issimply organized competition ingreed, then there is little hope ofcommunity at home, and none ofcommunity on a world scale. AsWalter Lippman has put it, “Thesocial problem of the modern worldarises not out of the objectivedifficulty of providing an adequatematel’ial existence, but ourt ofmen’s subjective expectations,which, because they are unlimitedand insatiable, cause violence, in¬equality, hatred, and frustration.”Violence, inequality, hatred andfrustration—these are the con¬sequences if our watchword is,“Get ail you can”.Moral DissolutionOur moral disorder ha.s an intel¬lectual foundation. The principleof order is the intellect. If we do D.U.'s Win Quality Cup(SEE “Fraternally Speaking,” Pagenot know what is good or what isthe right order of goods, the failureis an intellectual failure. If it isto order the parts in relation toone another and to the whole, theintellect must see the whole andthe parts in relation to it and toone another. But contemporaryeducation has denied the value ofthe comprehension of the whole.Instead of combating the doctrinethat you should gel all you can,it has supported and abetted H bysaying, “We will help you in yourstruggle to get all you can byteaching you some special tech¬nique that will give you a definiteadvantage over your fellow-men.”Other civilizations were de¬stroyed by barbarians from with¬out. We breed our own. The newbarbarians have, many of them,very sharp wits. They have mar¬velous technical skill. They mayeven be very learned in specificdisciplines. But they are barbariansbecause they are uncultivated;they lack culture. Culture is notmere aesthetic ornamentation onthe one hand or the grasp of anarrow field of specialization onthe other. Culture is the masteryof a system of ideas.Cites OrtegaAs Ortega pointed out, livingis simply doing one thing ratherthan another. Life is a chaos, ajungle. The mind of man revoltsagainst bewilderment and findsGOOD SlIMMER READINGFICTIONTHIS SIDE OF INNOCENCE, CaldwellRUTH MIDDLETON. ZaraBERNARD CLARE, FarrellTHE HUCKSTERS, WakemanADVENTURES OF WESLEY JACKSON. SaroyanOUR OWN KIND, MeSorelyTHOSE OTHER PEOPLE. O’DonnellGREAT AMERICAN SHORT NOVELS, Edited by PhillipsA POCKETFUL OF PEBBLES. StrutherBERLIN STORIES, IsherwoodPALE HORSE. PALE RIDER, PorterIVY GRIPPED THE STEPS, BowenBIOGRAPHYALEXANDER OF MACEDON, LambHONG KONG HOLIDAY, HahnEGG AND I, MacDonaldTALKING THROUGH MY HATS, DockeDRUMS UNDER THE WINDOW, OfosseyEDUCATION OF A CORRESPONDENT. MaHhewsPUSHKIN: POET AND LOVER, LambertAMERICAN DAUGHTER, ThompsonNON-FICTIONTOP SECRET. IngersoHREVEILLE FOR RADICALS, AlinikyA FEW BRASS TACKS. BromEeldEDUCATION FOR MODERN MAN, HookCONDITIONS OF PEACE, CarrMHERSITY OF OHIOAGO BOOKSTORE ways through the jungle in theform of clear ideas and positiveconvictions. These become tne ei-fective guide of existence. Wecannot live on the human levelwithout ideas. Upon them de¬pends what we do. Culture, in thesense of the mastery of a systemof ideas, is what saves human lifefrom being mere disaster, whatmakes it something above mean¬ingless tragedy or inward disgrace.The new barbarians are those whohave had no will or no opportu¬nity to develop a system of ideasbecause they have confined them¬selves or been confined to smallfractions of human interest andexperience. They have no concep¬tion of the nature of the world orthe destiny of man. They are iso¬lated, isolated by their privatepreoccupations and their limitedviews. They cannot communicatewith others because they havenothing in common with others.They cannot be members of acommunity.It seems altogether likely thatany true communiiy must have aspiritual basis. Why should welove our neighbors? Why shouldwe regard all men as brothers?The brotherhood of man must reston the fatherhood of God. If Godis denied, or man’s spiritual na¬ture is denied, then the basis ofcommunity disappears. If men arebrutes like any others, then thereis no reason why the law ot thejungle should not prevail amongthem; there is no foundation for'our talk of the dignity of man orfor our notion that one man shouldnot regard another as an instru¬ment to be used or exploited. Ifa man has the power, whyshouldn’t he get all he can, eventhough he gets it at the expienseof the weak? Why isn’t justicethe interest of the stronger?I All God’s ChildrenI Unless we believe that every manis the child of God, we cannot loveI our neighbors. Most cats and mostdogs are more attractive than mostmen. Unless we see men as chil-J dren of God, they appear to us as' rivals, or customers, or foreigners,unrelated to us except as means toour ends. Even if all men could insome way come to know what was good and to see the goods in theright order; even if all men hadI! acquired the highest culture, thecompetition for material goods! among them and the intellectualdifferences between them wouldstill tear them apart. But thesestruggles and differences can becomposed and the human commu¬nity can arise as men meet in thereligious dimension and each mansees each other man as a child ofGod.“But”, you say, “why do I needto see men this way? I am a hu¬manitarian and a liberal. I willhelp my fellow-men without wor¬rying about whether we have a(Continued on Page 7)GET IN THE CAMPUSSPIRIT AT THECAMPUS BRILLN«w PropriatortliipN«w MmhNtw AtmospheraN*w Hours: 7:30 A.M.—11:30 P.M.WE WELCOME YOURPATRONAGEELLIS at 57tli Mqnila U.(Continued from Page 2)a former student of the Univer¬sity’s school of education.The faculty committee willchoose some 1,000 books whichthey feel will be particularly valu¬able to the Philippine Women’sUniversity.The drive will emphasize thedesirability of obtaining at leastone copy of these significantworks for shipment abroad. Eachbook, thus chosen, will carry theUniversity of Chicago crest as asymbol of the university’s interestin the Manila institution.The^ Philippine Women’s Uni¬versity is a private non-sectarianschool that offers schooling fromnursery school to graduate work.Boys are admitted only up to theelementary grades. Girls havecontinuous schooling through highschool and into the various col¬leges of liberal arts, education,junior normal college businessadministration, home economics,pharmacy, music and the graduatedepartment. Enrollment variesfrom 1,000 to 1,200 students, andthe univerity maintains the larg¬est boarding school (350 to 400students) in the Islands. Theboarding school arrangement isnecessary because students come'from all over the Islands.The faculty is composed mostlyof Filipinos trained abroad fortheir graduate work. English sub¬jects are I andled by both Ameri¬can and Filipino teachers. The factthat English is the language ofinstruction in all Philippineschools makes it very easy andconvenient for an American in¬stitution, like the University ofChicago, to help out the devas¬tated school. Furthermore, ideol¬ogies and cultural patterns aresympathetically American, so thatAmerican ideas and books arcwelcome.The Philippine Women’s Uni¬versity, being in the south districtof Manila, was almost totally de¬stroyed during the liberation op¬erations. Only two concretewings of its one city-block build¬ing remains, burned and shelled.However, plans for the reopeningof the school sometime in July arebeing made. Quonset huts ac¬quired from the army will providesome additional temporary shel¬ter.Pftfc 4 • THE CHICAGO MAROON fViday, Ju«e 14, IJ1The University of Chicago OflRcial Student NewsiiaperACP All-American, liFnbllslied every Friday during the aca<MAROON, ad Independent student organlzatlc H5, 1946demic year by THE CHICAGO>n of the University of ChicagoTHE BOARD OF* CONTROLJoan Kohn, Acting EditorWard J. Sharbach, Jr., Business ManagerEllen Baum, Staff MemberTHE EXECUTIVE EDITORSManating Editor Wm. R. Wambaugta Art EditorNews Editor Antoinette TotinoVeterans Editor . . Irving ScottCopy Editor . Alar Locke McPherron Cissic LlebshutxPhotography 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 Kindahl, Julia Kugelman. Tess Le Ventis, Sidney Lezak,David Lighthill, Fayette Mulrcw. Kathleen Overholser, Hillard Anne Perry.William Phillips, Ray Poplett, Betty Stearns, Jules Strickland, Helen Tarlow,Virginia Vlack, 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 0800, extension351 (Editorial Office), extension 15'<u (Business Office)SUBSCRIPTION RATES,mail, 65 cents.ADVERTISING RATES. Quoted on requestto the Business Manager, The Chicago Maroon.Summer Quarter: On campus, 45 cents. ByAddress all communicationsMember Associated Collegiate Press and Intercollegiate Press. Needed: OneHouseeleaning Lifelines Bill Rob«rfs, USI>«The'' reactivation of Iron Maskand other university “honorary”societies should be the signal fora thorough investigation andhousecleaning of quack back-pat-ting agencies.For many yeai^ membership ina university honorary was recog¬nized as a distinction. In recenttimes, however, the organizationshave degenerated into offshoots ofthe fraternity system and in themain represent the elite of thosegroups. Simultaneously, the scho¬lastic requirements for member¬ship have been sabotaged andparticipation in extra - curricularactivities has been installed as thesole basis for selection.Badly needed is an organizationin the senior year of the collegeor the second year of the divisionsawarding honors to students whocombine both academic merit withextra - curricular leadership. Thecriteria are not mutually exclusiveand students who fail to blend,the two should not be eligible forconsideration. Membership in suchsociety would be an incentiveand a reward for excellence andwould bring a breath of badlyneeded fresh air to a thoroughlycorrupt and disreputable system.Nu Pi Sigma, the women’s hon¬orary, has already begun to sweepthe broom in its own house. Otherhonofaries would be wise to fol¬low suit. —A. K.What's Wrong With Chicago?“A University is a community of scholars.It is not a kindergarten; it is not a club; it isnot a reform school; it is not a political party;it is not an agency of propaganda. A universityis a community of scholars.”It has been nearly a decade since RobertMaynard Hutchins first gave expression tothat conception of a university. Today hisinstitution is bogged down in the mire of inde¬cision and confusion, precisely because it lacksthe vision of that purpose.Within recent weeks the lack of that com¬munity was strikingly evidenced by the strug¬gle within the faculty over a unified curriculumfor the College. The debate was waged alongtraditional party lines: the sciences steadfastlyopposed the humanities; liberal education wasmatched against specialized education. Dif¬ferences within a university are to be desired,but when a college curriculum is made a poli¬tical football, it is high time to call a halt.There is no community between faculty andstudents. Harvard and foreign* universitiesprovided this leadership through the tutorialsystem. At this university the richness to begained between student and scholar has beenlost, partly because of mutual apathy, in themain because of the practical difficulties in¬volved in bringing together teacher and stu¬dent. The net result is misconception as to thepurpose of courses and a formal relationshipwhich ends with the classroom.Nor is there liason between administrationand students. Decisions vital to the welfare ofstudents and actions in which their advicewould have been of immeasurable value havebeen handed down in total disregard of theopinions or suggestions of the student body.Thoughtful students are well aware of thefact that they will never make basic policy decisions. They are equally aware, however,of the need for an effort on the part of the ad¬ministration to understand the needs andwishes of the undergraduate., The same dissension, the same drifting inde¬cision and confusion, is most evident amongstudents. Inability to comprehend the simpletruism that a university is not a country clubor a political agency has precipitated the cur¬rent crisis in extra-curricular activities. Fra¬ternities and a desperately misguided fun¬seeking class are crying for a return to “nor¬malcy.” A small but vociferous group who can¬not distinguish between thought and actionwould convert the university into a great cen¬ter of political turmoil. The administration,through lack of vision and imagination, andthrough inability to act with foresight andfirmness, has only catalyzed the dilemma.Only a feeble hand has been raised to developa community in the dormitories, a source ofrich but as yet unexplored potentialities.Piercing the otherwise bleak and drearypicture here and there are a few rays of hope.The compromise among the college faculty,though a product of fatigue, indicates thatunity is possible. There is a growing evidenceof the concern for fostering student-facultyrelationships. Inter - Organizational Council,riddled though it is by feuding factions, hasevery possibility for gaining stature and de¬veloping into a student-governing agent. Newleadership is rising, particularly among re¬turning veterans, for student activities.We have temporarily loSt sight of the pur¬pose of the University. The faculty and theadministration need to clarify and restate thatpurpose; students need to understand it.The world crisis is Chicago’s crisis. It is theunending search for community and unity.A. K. Oh. him? He goes to the University of Chicago!Guest EditorialAMQ Book Burning OffersCivilizationTragic Parallel(Ed. Note: The following editorial appeared in “The Daily Bruinstudent newspaper at U. C. L. A.)By ANNE STERNThey look mil the books and carted them off to be destroyed. Whiledelighted spectators watched, all the writing that was considered detri¬mental to the future of German thought and German life was torn iniunrecognizable rags. The printed words disappeared. The books, andall the thought behind them, disappeared.Ellen BaumTravelingBazaarInter Fraternity Sing, Saturdaynight, climaxed a highly successfulyear for the fraternities, with ahuge turnout of actives and alum¬ni and visitors which jammedHutchinson Court for the event.. . . Art Bovee, seemingly perma¬nent fixture of the Sing, was evenmore effervescent than usual—theAlpha Belt parties get more andmore hilarious each year . . . Forthat matter, everybody was in astate of good humor after thetraditional club and fraternityparties before the Sing . . . Wildrumors flew thick and furious.hrough the audience: Hutchins would sing (“Well, he did whenI was a freshman.”), Hutchins wasjudging the Sing . . . Some snideobservers remarked that the AlphaBelts and Psi U’s must haveraided the chapters from North¬western and Be Pauw to producesuch numbers ... A highly suc¬cessful evening except for the non¬opening of the C Shop.Post Exam EventsThe Wyvern annual Summerformal last night at the Winde-mere was a glorious blow-out,packed with the Wyverns’ cluband fraternity guests . .*. Halfof Gates Hall was reported in ahighly unsober condition last week,thanks to an after comp drinkingbout . . . Tau Sig throws a party' tonight at the Sherry.MiscellanyBond Chapei was the scene ofone of the year’s biggest campusweddings last Monday when Gwen Schmidt and Bick Stoughton tookthe fatal step . . . Judy Held andEarl Isbell were married yester¬day . . . Marjorie Mather’swearing a bright new spar¬kler . . . Two prominent veteranson campus, Gertrude Nelson andRalph Wood, are planning theirwedding next Fall . . . ShirleyTaitel and Arnold Stern were mar¬ried Tuesday . . . Bess Tibbet’swearing Jim Walson’s Sigma Chipin . . . Hank Laing will be mar¬ried next Thursday . . . Phi SigSimon Wynn hung his pin on LoisKaplan. . !It Was a Great Fight, Mom |The 1946 Mustache Race woundup last Saturday in Botany Ponidas per tradition . . . Proud posses¬sor of the biggest and best mus¬tache was Jim Richey who tookhis silver cup and year’s subscrip¬tion to the Maroon, after sufferinga dunking in the Pond . • • The The world was horrified withthe news that the fanatics who hadseized hold of the German gov¬ernment and made the trains runon time had wreaked their ven¬geance on all that was worthwhileand noble and great in literature.Civilized people in democraticlands stood aghast at the thoughtthat a nation’s leaders would dareexterminate the work of centuriesbecause they happened to disagreewith what the books said. Free-thinking intellectuals sneered alittle at the naivete of those Nazihotheads who thought that theycould kill ideas by eradicatingprinted words. An outcry of furyand disgust and shame and ridi¬cule arose when the books wereburned—back in 1933!They took all the books and cart¬ed them off to be destroyed. Theysaid, *'We do not want to thinkthese things any longer," and toreup the books that contained thosethoughts and went away satisfiedthat no one would ever again haveany ideas contrary to the approvedline of thinking.Some people were favorablyimpressed by the 1933 episode, itseems. Some people watched, orheard about, the tactics of thebrown-shirted hordes and decidedthat they were using the rightapproach. Bravo! They kept trackof the state of mind pervadingGermany and they found thatfrom 1933 on no one breathed aword of the philosophy of Voltaireor recited a line of the poetry ofHeinrich Heine (except a fewsongs that had become folk songsarkd which were published with thediscreet and racially pure creditline of “author unknown”). Theflames that devoured the printedpages also have devoured all “per-booby prize—a large (pre-war)bottle of hair tonic—went to ArtParsons . . . Other Botany Pondincumbents were the judges ofthe contest, the Barber Shop’sBrad who thoughtfully brought anextra change of clothes, and yourstruly who did not come prepared.The practice of issuing specialdischarge insignia to members ofthe AAF has been discontinued.Never intended to replace, but tosupplement the customary “rup¬tured duck”, the War Bepartment’sdecision is “based upon the policythat there should be one dischargebutton, and only one, for all theservices.” nicious” thought, they felt certairThey conveniently overlooked thpresence of concentration campand police torture chambers anthe possibility that they contrihuted to keeping German mind“pure.” ^And somehow men like the?went to work for the Americaarmy. Because they were allcated, and had some credentialto show that they were educatorithey were put on the job of rthabilitation of enemy countritand peoples. They were shippeto Berlin, or Munich, or Nuremberg, and proceeded to reeducatthe Germans, to bring them bacto the fold of democracy.They took all the books and cart¬ed them off to be destroyed. Theyscrutinized Germany’s reading andgot rid of those works that were ab¬horrent to their owtl way of think¬ing. They were proud of themselvesfor having used the direct methodof eliminating a dangerous systemof thinking.The powers that Toe in the occiination and rehabilitation forcelast week conducted mass destruction of all Nazi textbooks, essaysmilitary manuals, and otheprinted materia\ They seize(them and ground them into pulpThey we^-e partially justified iitheir actions, of course. It wa:necessary to cut the theories oNordic supremacy and the pre¬cepts of Gen. Clausewitz and th<quotation from “Mein Kampf” ouiof school curricula, and to see thaiteachers no longer turned theiibiology lectures into eulogies ol“Might makes right.”But were they justified in themethods they used? Were thejeven wise in employing the tacticsthey did use?They are placing too much olthe emphasis on the negative as-spects of Gernrian regenerationThey are concentrating far toeheavily on tearing out one philo¬sophy (and often they are noteven tearing.it out by the roots)to give sufficient thought to plant¬ing the seeds of another system inits place. Germany must not onlylose naziism, it must find democ¬racy. And democracy must there¬fore show itslf to be stronger thannaziism, must be able to stand inthe light of contrast. ITho.se books needn’t have bcOBground up to pulp. Extra pul^should have been manufactuiiw(Continued m Page 7) ' wDFriday* June 14, 1946 THE CHICAGO MAKUON Page •The Critic's CornerWe have now arrived at the endof another University concert sea¬son, and another inventory columnhas rolled ground. This is the timeof year when University impre¬sarios look at the crude statisticsof the season just ended and hopethat financially and artisticallythey are in the black.Foi* most critics inventory comesin the early fall, after the lastfeeble September recital has ex¬pired and there comes a lull, be-^re the advent of the first autumnconcert. Here at the Universityit is much easier to take the aca¬demic year as the period constitut¬ing the season, and it is easily themost natural one.Source of Statistics ^Concerts counted for the pur¬pose of compiling these statisticsare the two subscription concertseries of the Department of Music,which together accounted fortwenty-seven vp r o g r a m s. Nextcome performances by the Uni¬versity Orchestra, of which therewere three in the period of 1945-46. Finally, there are various in¬dividual programs, such as thePoulenc program sponsored by theStudent Committee of the Renais¬sance Society, and the specialconcert arranged in honor of Ar¬nold Schoenberg by the Depart¬ment of Music, which enter intothe totals.During the season 1945-46 therewere performed a total of 162different compositions, by 68 dif¬ferent composers. Of the 162works performed, 53 were worksby living or contemporary com¬posers. One hundred and nineworks were by composers, whethermajor or 'minor, not belonging tothe contemporary scene.Number of ComposersTwenty-six living or contempo¬rary composers were responsiblefor the 53 contemporary works.Of these, two composers, BelaBartok and Anton von Webern,died during the second half of1945; but by no stretch of theimagination could either be con¬sidered W belong more to the his¬torical past than to the contem¬porary scene of the last twentyyears.Forty-two composers contribu¬ted the 109 works performed inthe non - contemporary category.These ranged chronologically fromPerotinus Magnus who flourishedabout 1200 A.D., to Gabriel Faure,who died in 1924. A heaviersho\ving than is customary wasmade by composers of the six¬teenth and seventeenth centuries,since three concerts in the Univer¬sity College series were devotedentirely to music of the Baroqueperiod.High Educational ValueProbably one of the best indicesof the educational value of thetwo subscription series of the De¬partment of Music is the fact thatof the 162 works performed, 32.7per cent were contemporary works;and of the 68 composers repre¬sented, 38.2 per cent were con¬temporaries. It is demonstrablethat the va§t majority of theseworks would not have been heardhere, had they not been presentedin these two series.Commercial concert series donot present a representative pic¬ture of contemporary musicthrough fear of losses at the boxoffice. The commercial concertmanager is interested in offeringonly proven successes to his audi¬ences. The consequence of thispolicy is that the great bulk ofsignificant modern works go un¬heard, outside of Paris, London,and New York, where there are asufficient number of culturallyand intellectually mature peopleto insure a favorable reception tothe modern.Ingrown Toe-NailsAnother consequence of the pol¬icy of presenting only proven suc¬cesses can be seen in the ingrownnaental toe-nails which most mu¬sical forces in the country havedeveloped. Every symphony or¬chestra in the land now devotesitself to playing the same fiftyworks every season. OccasionallyTchaikovsky’s Romeo and Julietwill give way A) a new work by/ Milhaud or Hindemith, for oneperformance; but you may safelybet that next season Tchaikovskywill be back on the same spot,and the Milhaud score will be onthe shelf.While one might question thevalue of anything Hindemith pro¬duces, Milhaud is certainly a boxoffice success these days. Never¬theless, a manager prefers a surelyhalf-empty house for Tchaikovskyrather than take a chance on afull house (or an empty one) forMilhaud. The fact that most or¬chestras lose money, anyway, andhave to be shored up by guaran¬tors, doesn’t seem to bother them.The logical conclusion, that mu¬sic will shortly stagnate and decayunder this vast repetition, is in¬escapable. If the art is to breatheand to grow, it must expand viathe medium of new productivity;and new productivity will not con¬tinue unless it has a chance to beheard.Composers FavoredEven the University concertsshow a predilection for certaincomF>osers. Mozart had seventeenworks performed this season,which brings to 29 the total num¬ber of Mozart works ‘heard sinceconcert-giving at the Universitywas reorganized three seasonsback. Bach is second, having hadfourteen works played, bringinghis total to 21. Beethoven wasthird, with nine, making his total15. Haydn and Brahms each hadsix works performed. Handel andPurcell each had four worksplayed; and Schubert and vonHassler (1564-1612) three each.Among the contemporaries, Pou¬lenc had fifteen works performed,all of them on the concert de-Don Baum{\ Paletteanjd BrushThe work of Paul Klee does notyield to a cursory examination; buta close and detailed scrutiny willgive an insight into the wealth ofinvention, fantasy, and humorthat characterizes his work. Theexhibition of the work of PaulKlee that opened June 5 in Good-speed Hall under the auspices ofthe Renaissance Society gives arare opportunity to view the ex¬ceptional work of an exceptionallyintereting ; rtist.Klee was born in 1879 nearBerne, Switzerland. In his earlytwenties he traveled over Europeand from this early period severalworks can be seen in the show,among them: Virgin in the Tree(1903), and Two Men Meet, EachBelieving the Other of HigherRank. These pieces are done in astyle which Klee later abandonedas too limited; but in them can beseen the embryo of the satire, andsurrealistic feeling which he laterdeveloped with such brilliancy andingenuity.Pre-War CareerLiving in Munich from 1906 un¬til World War I, Klee became in¬terested in the work of Van Gogh,Cezanne and Matisse, and in 1912formed with Kandinsky, FranzMarc and August Macke, a groupcalled the “Blue Rider.’’ His workchanged in this period, showingmore his persistent desire to ridhimself of every trace of academictraining. This can be seen in ThePergola (1910) and Comedy ofBirds (1918). From this time onthe interest in fantasy and sur¬realism became stronger, but insharp contrast to the photographicsurrealism of Dali and Chirico,Klee believed that only throughabstraction could the strange andshadowy world of the subcon¬scious be rendered with precision.In 1920, Klee became a profes¬sor in the Baubaus Academy inWeimar and later in Dessau; but,owing to his biting ridicule ofNazi policies, his works wofebanned and, in 1934, he settled inSwitzerland where he died in 1940.The last fifteen years of his lifeare represented by some extreme¬ly interesting paintings, among William Wambaughvoted to his music by the Renais¬sance Society. Roy Harris, theAmerican composer, made his ap¬pearance for the first time in thelist of composers, with four works—all performed on th^ programdevoted to his works. Hindemith,who is strongly favored by theDepartment of Music, had threeworks played, bringing to thirteenthe number of his compositionsheard here. Milhaud is a closesecond, with three this season, tomake a total of ten. Stravinsky,who in earlier seasons had beenin the vanguard, with seven per¬formances, had only two thisseason.Second World PremiereThe third season, just ending,brought the second world pre¬miere to University audiences. Da¬rius Milhaud’s new ballet TheBells had a stunning, performancehere, which quite eclipsed the pre¬vious world premiere, that ofHindemith’s Ludus Tor ilis in 1944.Stravinsky again was distinguishedby a performance of his Duo Con-certant for violin and piano, theonly work which has been per¬formed here in each of the threeseasons. Performed in Mandel Hallin the first and second seasons, ifmade its Kimball Hall debut thisseason. This is one of the fewworks to make its appearancewhich would seem worth perform¬ing almost every season.If I were asked to designate thebest concert presented this season,should unhesitatingly designatethe Kimball Hall concert of lastJanuary 30, when Dorothy Lane,David Moll, and Morris Morovit-sky gave a perfect and virtuallyflawless concert of Purcell, Han¬del, Rameau, and Bach. Suchsmoothness and mastery wouldseem impossible to duplicate soonagain. 'Fine Arte Quartet ExcelsProbably the best Mandel Hallconcert from the purely musicalviewpoint was the last one, onMay 3, when the Fine Arts StringQuartet turned in excellent per¬formances of Beethoven, Piston,and Mozart. While it had flaws,it was in some respects a super¬lative concert. Certainly the mostexciting evening was provided bythe Milhaud ballet. This com¬bination of theater and musicmade Mandel Hall ro,(;)c with ap¬plause when it was done, and helda sold-out house spellbound dur¬ing its progress.Summing up, I should say thatthis season was a real musical as¬set, in spite of a few poor per¬formances. If, however, the pres- Sidelights on FootlightsBy HARLEY SMITI4(Editor’s Note. This week ’’Sidelighti^ on Footlights” is guest-written byHarley Smith, departing Director of Dramatics at the University We feelthat Mr. Smith’s message is very important to this campus )The University of Chicago can have the most outstandingdramatics program in the nation. It can be either very bad orexcellent—it can not be in-between. The curriculum in the Col¬lege is unique in that, while no courses in speech or dramaticsare offered, the study of dramatic literature is required for allstudents. Dramatics might be pacedplays. Staging, alvjrays, a problembut a greater one here than inmost universities, will grow lessdifficult if the plans now begunare continued. The ingenuity dem¬onstrated by Charley Walls, MurielDeutsch, Roger Englander, andothers, is prophetic of what mightbe done with adequate facilitiesin the College plan, and the trialorganization of the various dra¬matic units was not sufficientlywell-knit to correct those faults.Although most of the studentslacked technical training, theywere successful in those activitiesbecause of their intelligent ap¬proach.Many ContributionsThere have been many who havecontributed to the experiment bytheir intelligently critical attitude.Foremost among these is BettyStearns who gave criticisms andsuggestions based on a knowledgeof the aims of each of the groupsin the Players Guild.If any program is to succeed,the administration, the staff di¬rectly concerned, and ihe studentoody must understand and ap¬prove. I know that the admin¬istration will give full support toa continuation and enlargementof the program started this year:the new Director is in accord withthe philosophy back of the pro¬gram. It is left for the studentsto participate, as an audience andas performers, in such a way thatthe program will be worthy of thehigh purpose for which studentsselect the University of Chicago—acquiring a general education.as it is in most universities, itmight be modeled after the activi¬ties of a “Little Theater,’’ or itmight serve to enhance the workin the humanities. It cannot go inall three directions. The programmust be different from that atother universities if it is to be'anything more than an activitythat runs a fifty-fifty chance ofbeing meaningless.The dramatics program, with theapproval and support of DeanChidsey, Mr. Yarhell, Dean Kimp-yton. Dean Faust, and Mr. RussellThomas, during the past year wasan exploration in the direction ofservice to students who desire tofurther their acquaintance withliterature by hearing oral inter¬pretations of material studied inHumanities surveys and by seeingplays or excerpts from plays stud¬ied in the Humanities. There havebeen many failures during thepast year; but each of them re¬sulted in a better understandingof the “HOW’’ of this new pro¬cedure.ExperimentsThe organization of the pro¬gram this year was experimental.While this particular organizationis not essential, it has proved tobe of great value and I believethat one not too different will becontinued. The larger organiza¬tion, The Players Guild, includedThe Intimate Theater, The Ex¬perimental Theater, and TheWorkshop Theater. The IntimateTheater, under the direction ofMarvin Peisner, presented litera¬ture from the Humanities readinglists via reading hours and “TableTheater.” Martha McCain directed,in The Experimental Theater,shorter plays and scenes fromplays that all college students.should have the opportunity ofseeing.The Workshop Theater, underthe direction of Robert Carter, didan outstanding job in the chal¬lenging production of one-actent trend continues, the Universityshould shortly find itself a first-rank musical center in the UnitedStates and, perhaps, in the not-too-distant future, in the world.Who’s Qot a Phxnimeter?Look for the IntegroforThat Looks Like a Victrolathem. The Relapse of a Convertand Exotic, which illustrate Klee’sexpressionist interest-in color andthe influence of the stained glasswindow technique.Anticipated ThurberIn such works as Buffoonry,Ass, and The Witch with theComb, one realizes Klee as theprecursor of such people as JamesThurber, Alexander Calder, andWilliam Steig.Unfortunately, the paintings areonly those of his later period; butthe complete show is quite ade¬quate to show the immense vari¬ety and originality of his work. Inlooking at the exhibit, it ipight bewell to keep in mind the fact that,in all of Klee’s work, there existsa connection between the subjectand an appropriate art form, oe itOriental or mediaeval; and, thoughnot essential to the enjoyment, itis a pre-requisite to a completeunderstanding. As a guide ex¬cerpts from his diary and com¬mentaries on his work are hifng inthe gallery, and are of interest andhelp.The show is made up of draw¬ings and prints from the Museumof Modern Art and pamtmgs fromprivate collections in Chicago andwill continue through June 24. Peter Sen, a veteran student inEconomics has called upon theMaroon to help him in a madsearch about the University cam¬pus, for a PLANIMETER. Pete as¬sured us that all good schools havea Planimeter on campus which isused as a mechanical integratingmachine by students in the studyof Paleography, (i.e. the science ofletters). Sen’s class have lookedthrough innumerable inventory re¬ports, disposal records, and sundryoffices of the University in theirsearch for IT, and have been re¬warded with only one clue—ITwas last seen in the Physics De¬partment in 1926. This fact is sub¬stantiated by the reports of Pro¬fessors who were on Campus then.However, some time in the follow¬ing 20 years, the machine, (whichresembles an overgrown victrolawith wheels on all sides), has gotITself lost in one of the forgottenlaboratories. Sen claims that themachine will still be usable andmodern enough for present dayuse by his class if they can onlylocate it. Therefore, if you knowof ITS whereabouts or have anyclues leading to ITS capture. The Biographyof Mr. UnchiBy ED LOWENSTERNMuch has been written—usuallyuncomplimentary, and much hasbeen said—usually unrepeatable,about the average student on thiscampus whose head is customarilyburied in a book published andsold by the University of Chicago.Although not usually the type, Mr.Unchi may occasionally be seenwalking across the circle with theOxford “Student’s Aristotle” un¬der one arm, amusing himself inhis walk with an instrument ofthe Devil known as the Yo-Yo.As I said, he doesn’t usually dothis; but one thing must be un¬derstood—there is such a person:I know him.Unchi is not a joiner, althoughhe does belong to two campus poli¬tical organizations. These organi¬zations, in case you want to meethim personally, are the Universityof Chicago Chapter of the Com¬mittee for the Overthrow of theCapitalistic Economic Structure,and—in order to be fair to bothsides of any question—, the Uni¬versity of Chicago Congress toUphold the Doctrines of the Na¬tional Association of Manufac¬turers. He has a fervent desireto see both sides of each question,so that his liberal education cancome to the fore, and he can be al¬lowed to think, and thus make uphis mind on all pertinent politicaland economic questions of the day.Unchi Always AroundOur friend (you all know himby his efforts to monopolize thephone on the third floor of Har¬per) is also typical in that he hasknown (third hand as is usual incases of this sort) the young cam¬pus belle who was incarcerated inLying-In for three weeks throughthe efforts of Student Health, be¬cause of a bad appendix. Actually,Unchi has been through part ofthe College, and i^ aware of suchworld-shaking facts as, “MarginalCost should f’qnal Marginal Reve-please liifoiiu the MAROON officeor Peter Sen, 6208 Drexel, MID. nue,” and that, ‘ Phylogeny tends3231. (Continued on Page 7)UC Vets Attend AVC National Conclave TodayPeter Krebel THE CHICAGO MAROON Friday, June 14, INfC-RationPETE KREHEL was a ^'bootleg** coal miner at 16, a smalltown news-paper publisher at 19, and, prior to entering the college last winter, a captainin the army’s Information and Education Division.Rather than takes “sides” insome controversial issue, Fd liketo tell you about a memory of aviolent controversy—an explosivemixture of religion and politics.In this instance I remember thescene which was my mother’s ac¬tive answer to the request that sheexplain the reason for all thedifferences that lead to conflictsir the world. My request was' anormal one—a 12-year-older won¬dering why people should differ,hate, quarrel, kill and destroy.By leading me to the followingscene I was introduced to the airof controversy from which, it washoped, I would glean the answer.Tale of Two BarbersTo look upon it aroused nowonder. Unless it would be un¬usual to see one of your small¬town neighbors cutting another’shair in barber-shop fashion out-of-doors. Even a further descrip¬tion of the two men involved inthe scene would not provoke con¬cern. The “barber” was a tall,well-proportioned blonde gentle¬man who appeared to need thenext haircut that would be ac¬complished in the chair. The “cus¬tomer” was a heavy-set, dark¬haired, mustachioed gentlemanwith eyebrows to match. He wassitting on an ordinary kitchenchair and was covered from theneck down by a tablecloth. Shorntufts of his black hair were scat¬tered about the porch.Then I heard the conversations.I tried to shift my reception fromthe foreign dialect I understoodto the one which was being spokenand met with only a minimum ofsuccess. So I turned to my mother«and asked her to explain.Argument in RussianIn clear and slow Ukrainian shesaid, “The two gentlemen get to¬gether once a month, my son, tocut each other’s hair. The blondeis a Lithuanian BIBLIYASH(salesman of religious literature)and the mustachioed one is aUkrainian Communist. Neitherspeaks the other’s language so theyconverse in their auxiliary tongue,Moskovite Russian.“During their meetings, theBIBLIYASH talks about religion,mostly Roman Catholicism. It willindeed surprise you to hear howa pro-Catholic argument soundsin Russian. In the meantime, theUkrainian desires to discuss theMarxist doctrine in an attempt toconvince the BIBLIYASH thatman does not live by faith alone.”As I observed the restrainedactions of the barber and hesi¬tantly translated the conversationI couldn’t help but chuckle overthe trend of the discussion.“Don’t Spoil the Hair!”The barber appeared flusteredsomewhat and swiped the Ukrai¬nian’s hair with the shears. I no¬ticed t>je Ukrainian wince andheard him say, “Easy, Comrade, lest you spoil the hair. Remem¬ber, you are next.”“I have heard, my mother,” Isaid, “that politics is importantbecause men are governed thatway. I have also understood theUkrainian to say that governmentshould have the big say in eco¬nomic affairs. Yet the BIBLI¬YASH has only reaffirmed mybelief and strengthened my con¬vections that religion can not beruled out as a factor necessary tothe fullness of life. Tell me then,what lesson am I to learn fromthis mixed dispute of religion andpolitics-economics?”“I had hoped, my son, that youwould isolate the points of agree¬ment in the discussion rather thanget confused by the areas of dis¬agreement. Did you note that bothmen mentioned they desired‘peace?’ Did you note that bothstressed ‘economic security’? Didyou further note their emphasison ‘political freedom?’, whateverthe meanings they gave the terms.Did you not feel that their viewswould appeal to the same largesocial strata?No Violence Please“From all this I wanted you tobear in mind that it was impor¬tant for both these men to recog¬nize their basic agreements andthen to attempt to iron out theirdifferences. Surely there must bea middle ground—and either orboth should honestly admit andabandon their excessively extremeviews. It was further importantthat under their arrangement theyhad to stay and listen to the other’sarguments. And one step better.Neither could get violent andexercise a free hand with theshears without jeopardizing hisown appearance at the time histurn came to lose hair. Theiragreement was in a sense a higherauthority which required that theyget together once each month.”I shook my head. It didn’t ap¬pear as the full answer to theproblem of controversies. Therew.as no mention of psychology,human nature, science, folkways,and the other factors I would oneday tangle with at the Hutchins-governed hallowed halls.Perhaps I would have lost allhope in the future of mankind had 13 Campus Delegates CoTo Des Moines MeetingI not later read a statement ofThomas Jefferson’s: “I never con¬sidered a difference of opinion inpolitics, in religion, in philosophy,as cause for withdrawing from afriend.”The Lithuanian and Ukrainianwere applying the principle. Per¬haps I could leave the readerseriously reflecting on it.QI of Week . . .By RALPH WOOD' ' 'c x''Veterans Now Number15,884,000, VA SaysThe veteran population of theUnited States on April 30 was15,884,000, according to a statis¬tical summary issued by the vet¬erans’ administration.Of this number, 1,623,559 werereceiving unemployment allow¬ances, 75,109 were being rehabil¬itated as disabled veterans, 620,-465 were receiving education oron-the-job training. Lia LyngoardVery active in keeping dormi¬tory functions moving smoothly,LIN LUNGAARD has participatedfully in making the men’s dormi¬tory social affairs quite success¬ful during the past school year.From Kansas City, Missouri,Lin* attended Southwest High,where he was active in the Stu¬dent Council and student paper.Then he studied at Texas A. & M.for a year before he volunteeredfor the Army Air Force. Enter¬ing service in April, ’43, he wassubsequently trained as a fighterpilot, and then went to the Italiantheater where he proved to be apretty hot ace before his returnto the states in July, ’45, shortlyafter which he was discharged.Entering Chicago in the fall of’45, he became active immediatelyin Dodd House social affairs, andwas subsequently elected its pop¬ular President. He also devotedsome of his talent to working forimportant student social organ¬izations, including the StudentOrientation Board; World ServiceStudent Fund; American Veter¬ans’ Committee as a member ofthe Program Committee; andRushing Chairman of Phi GammaDelta, of which he recently be¬came a member.After he gets his degree fromthe college in March of '47, Linplans to enter the divisicMi ofBusiness Administration, pursu¬ant to entering business himselfafter he gets his master’s.ISBELL'SRESTAURANTthr«« locatioM590 Divtrsey Pkwy.940 Rush St.1435 Hyde Park Rlvd. Permanent OrganizationOf AVC Will Take ShapeDelegates from the campus chapter to the first national con¬vention of the American Veterans Committee will meet in DesMoines, Iowa, today with more than 1500 others from 500 chap¬ters throughout the nation to help form a permanent organiza¬tion out of the existing temporary sej-up.Headed by Paul Johnson, a stu¬dent in the Social Sciences Divi-Gl Bill BoardMr. Zens L. Smith todayannounced that all veteranswho attended schooMast ,fallwhile on terminal leave andtherefore had to pay theirown tuition, should checkthe Office of Advisor toVeterans for a special an¬nouncement concerning pos¬sible refu.nds before leavingfor summer vacations. Thisannouncement will be postedearly today.* «■ *The Office of Advisor toVeterans is in dire need ofextra clerical assistance dur¬ing vacation week and alsoduring central registration,June 22 and 24. Any veter¬ans wishing to work sparetime during vacation weekor registration should reportto Miss Fischer in the Vet¬erans Office immediately,and in all events, not laterthan Wednesday.State Department-Exams for VetsThe State Department has an¬nounced that a special writtenForeign Service examination forqualified members of the armedforces and honorably dischargedveterans will be held September30 and October 1, 1946. This ex¬amination is part of the programto expand the Foreign Service byrecruiting its officers from veter¬ans and members of the armedforces.By agreement with the War ancjNavy Departments, members ofthe Armed Forces will be eligibleto apply regardless of rank, lengthof service, and where stationed. sion, the group will include Ru.ssAustin, Russ Allen, Gertrude Nel¬son, Richard Pelz, Sherwood Mil¬ler, A1 Popham, Dave Rich, NedRosenheim, A. Goodman, GeneKaplan, Mark Skinner and RalphWood.In addition to the election of na¬tional officers, the agenda for thisfirst national convention includesthe approval of a constitution, theadoption of a domestic, interna¬tional, and veterans affairs policyplatform and the selection of apermanent name for the organi¬zation. Decisions on these mattershave been postponed since AVC’sinception pending the demobili¬zation of the majority of its mem¬bers.A prominent list of speakers, in¬cluding Secretary of CommerceHenry Wallace and former Gov¬ernor Harold Stassen, will addressthe delegates. Secretary Wallacewill discuss “The Future of theVeteran in the American Econo¬my,” while Stassen will talk on“The Veteran’s Responsibility inthe World.” Other speakers in¬clude Governor Robert Blue ofIowa; Donald Nelson, former headof the War Production Board, andRepresentative Mike Monroney ofOklahoma. .The campus chapter, establishedlast Winter by Ed Wood, DavidSander, Dave Lerner, and othens,is one of the oldest in AVC. Com¬posed entirely of World War IIveterans, the organization is oneof the most prominent of thosewhich have come out of this war.PRACTICE PIANOS AVAILABLETwo pianos are now availablein the Reynolds Club for anyonewho wishes to use them. They arelocated in the main floor lounges.ClassifiedHAVE room available for 1 or 2 per¬sons on Paw Paw Lake this summer.Call Drexel 4.537 eveninj{s.''' ^ ^ J. ■' ;ARTHUR PARSONSU. of C. TheInformalPortraitCreatedforYOUYe invite you to inspect our work.Drop around for a chat.thehalo studio1603 I SStt STREET FAIRFAX 10MJane 14, 1944Qeneral Kenney"Atom Bomb MokesWar Intolerable"Our only choice today is be¬tween peace and destruction, forthe atomic bomb has made warintolerable, General George C.Kenney, representative of theArmy Air Forces to the JointChiefs of Staff and senior Ameri¬can member of the United NationsMilitary Staff Committee, de¬clared on the University of Chi¬cago Round Table broadcast Sun¬day.“The soldiers of today,” Kenneysaid, “consider that their job is topolice the world in order to rid itof international ‘pirates.’“World survival,” General Ken¬ney continued, “is at the cross¬roads. We cannot have WorldWar III. The atomic bomb has sochanged the situation that wemu.st find a way to make war outof date. The weapons of mass de¬struction are so annihilating thatwe must find a way to preventwar. The one bomb at Hiroshimashowed us that we cannot affordanother war.“Generals today,” he added, “donot want war. There may havebeen military men in the past whowanted w'ar, but today they arelooking for ways in which theycan help establish and keep thepeace.”Participating with General Ken¬ney in the Round Table discussionof “The Military Staff Committeeof the United Nations” were Mal¬ colm Sharp, Professor of Law inthe Law School, and Louis Gott-schalk. Professor of History, bothof the University.Professor Sharp, agreeing withGeneral Kenney, declared thatnot even the victor can affordanother war. War, like crime, hesaid, can not win. In our presentsituation, he added, the militaryhave a chance for leadership.They have the opportunity to showthat they can become the force forpeace—the policemen of the world.' “The generals,” Sharp said,“have the chance to dramatize tothe world that they are ready tostay together and to show how tokeep the peace. I suggest that aninternational staff college be es¬tablished which drills officers onhow to keep the peace ratherthan on how to fight. I think themilitary have a great opportunityto assume leadership as keepersof the peace. They can becomethe force which is always neededto enforce the law.”General Kenney pointed outthat the Military Staff Commit¬tee of the United Nations has beenset up to serve as the force forworld law. At the present time,he said, it is working on the meansof implementation.“The Staff Committee,” he said,“in spite of all the differenceswhich arise, is finding some com¬mon grounds. For instance, avia- Book Burning ...(Continued from Page 4)and the books of democracyprinted up on it. Germany wouldhave had a chance to read them,and compare them to what theyhad been bottle-fed with in thedays of Hitler. Which would the^?have preferred?They took all the books and cart¬ed them off to be destroyed. Theywere afraid to let the people readanything besides the ideas theywanted to instill in them. Theirphilosophy, they feared, might notbe able to face competition.tors tend to agree. Since moun¬tains, rivers, boundaries havenever mattered to airmen, it iseasy for them to think in worldterms. No forces are yet at theCommittee’s disposal. But if everynation contributes, as it is planned,the forces will be sufficient to takecare of any individual aggressorin the future.“Something more, however,” hesaid, “will be needed to stop thethreat of war, for it may be toolate if one of the policemen breakthe law. I do think, nevertheless,that a real police force can comeout of this group. The United Na¬tions is a real start, even thoughwe cannot have final assurance ofpeace until the people are readyto give up a little sovereignty sothat we have a real united statesof the world and a real policeforce out of our present begin¬nings.”Professor Gottschalk empha¬sized the historical lesson thatworld conquerors and aggressorsnever win, and he called for themilitary’s tradition becoming oneof keeping the peace. In conclud¬ing for the speakers who agreedthat the military profession canplan an important part in peace,he said that in the future the goc»dsoldier must first of all be a citi¬zen of the world.Unchi ♦ . ♦(Continued from Page 5)to recapitulate ontogeny;” but hismajor academic difficulty is inreconciling Plato and Hume intoagreement with these two doc¬trines. My friend has a definiteaversion to technical education—he plans to eat his copies of theclassics, if he should lose hismeans of support at some future■ lime and become hungry.Unchi’s social activities extend, to all the campus affairs (againhe can be recognized by his for¬mal attire at beach parties, andby his blue jeans at formal “C”dances); but he studies late into} the night after a brief sojourn atU. T., where the boys are whoop¬ing it up (in the sense that Kantuses the term) in the back room.jLook around for him; you should-I n’t have too much trouble finding' him.THE WORID’S MOST ROROREO WATCRWINNER OF 10 World'sFair Grand Prizes,28 Gold Medals 'and more honors foraccuracy than anyother timepiece. r7^^ MOST -^O^/apeV-a>%.WARNING!!If yoH are contemplating checking or shipping your portable orstandard typewriter home for the summer, have it professionallyboxed or packed to insure safe delivery. RATES AS LOW AS ONEDOLLAR.CAMPUS MAINTENANCE SHOPTYPEWRITERS BOUGHT. SOLD and REPAIRED1202 E. 55th STREET HYDE PARK 7912Free Summer Storage on Reconditioned WorkReadTHE CHICAGO MAROONthis summer!To be in the knew, keep up with the campus b**reading THE CHICAGO MAROON every Friday. Ever-Friday THE CHICAGO MAROON brings you these reg¬ular features:Palette and Brush C-RationSidelights on Footiights The Critic's CornerIf you're going home this summer, stay posted bytaking the MAROON with a maii subscription. Only 65cents by mail. If you're going to be here, just 45 centson campus for ten big issues.SUBSCRIBE TODAY, DON'T DELAY! 42 Qiven B.A. WithHonor; Other PrizeAwards AnnouncedForty-two students were awarded their Bachelors Degreein the college with honors today while 29 were named to SigmaXi, the honorary science society.Other contest awards were also announced^ at the com¬mencement rites.Awarded honors with . the col¬lege B.A. were Constance Alien-berg, Charlotte Block, Alex BoothJr., William S. Boylston, Robert C.Brooks Jr., Marilyn Buehrer, Yad¬viga Dowmont, Jerome D. Fen-mann, Lawrence Fisher, AliceMarie French, Charles Gasteyer,Walter R. Goedecke, Edwin Gold-berger, Marvin Goldman, JosephGusfield, Jacob Hayton, EdwardHobbs, Dorothy Hodson, WinslowHunt, Charles Kahn, Robert Kha-rasch, Patricia Kindahl, WilliamLawrence Korst, Violet Krai, Dor¬othy Jean Ladendorf, RicardoMeana, Ella Lees Melton, RichardWalter Peltz, Charles Rector, BertRifas, Jay Francis Ruzic, NaomiLois Sager, Raymond C. Sangster,Francis Sarnat, Maril C. Stierer,Malkah Tolpin, Motel Twerski,Gilds Vaslow, Edward M. Wasser-man, Constance Woolshin, andPauline Zuckerman.Elected to Sigma Xl on nomina¬tion by the Department of Sciencewere Ross S. Beham, George Ben¬ton, William Botzum, Reid Bry¬son, Margaret Cavanaugh,-JamesClarke, Armin Deutsch, John En-dacott, 21achary Feisher, DaveFultz, Bernard Greenberg, RosalieA. Hankey, Charles Hock, HerbertC. Johnson, Seymour Katcoff,Harry LeVeen, Gayle K. Lumry,Samuel N. Maimon, Dougla?^ RossMorion, William E. Rickets, Eliza¬beth Welles St. John, RobertSchreck, Arthur Shapiro, FrancesE. Smith, Henry C. Spruth, Ed¬ward H. Storer. Bernard Strick-ler, Sheldon Walker, Jack I. Woolf.The law school named RichardF. Babcock to the Chiago Chapterof the Order of the Coif, honorarylaw group.Other awards announced at theconvocation included the FlorenceJames Adams prize for excellencein artistic reading awarded toHomer Goldberg; the AmericanDaughters of Sweden scholarshipgiven to Evelyn Elma Johnson;the John Billings Fiske poetry prizeto James R. Squires; the ChiagoFolklore society prize to SamuelP. Bayard; the Harriet Monroepoetry award to Wallace Stevens;the Milo P. Jewett bible-readingprize to Fred Berthold Jr.The David Blair McLaughlinprize for excellence in Englishprose was awarded to CharlesKahn; the Charles H. Sergei dra¬ma prize for the best play sub¬mitted to the Department of Eng¬lish was given to Bob McKnight;the Political Institutions awardfor the best essay on the theme ofFreedom Under Planning wasgiven to Stephen Elliston.'Other divisional awards werethe Elsa Reinhardt award con¬ferred upon a student in first yearof study in the School of SocialService administration given toZella Zoe Larimer. Hutchins • • •(Coulinued from Page 3)common Father. I will work forbetter housing, shorter hours, high¬er wages, and greater educationalopportunity for all mankind. Iwill oppose discrimination amongmen on the basis of race, creed, orcolor. I will moderate my desires,seek to get culture, and practicethe social virtues twenty-fourhours a day. What more do youwant?”Praises AristotleI will admit that if the wholeworld practiced Aristotle’ Ethicsthe whole world would be muchbetter off than it is today. But Idoubt if any single man, to saynothing of the whole world, canpractice Aristotle’s Ethics withoutthe support and inspiration of re¬ligious faith. This Aristotle him¬self seemed to recognize; for theideal man whom he holds up toour admiration is one who is al¬most divine. The modern critic isinclined to scoff at the Aristotelianphrase that men are rational ani¬mals. It is no longer fashionableto refer to the rationality of man.But Aristotle was saying notmerely that men were rational,but also that they were animal.Because men are aninral, becausethe flesh is weak and life is hard,the virtues cannot be consistentlypracticed without divine aid.The humanitarian effort, more¬over, is vitiated by the sense ofsuperiority which it implies. Itbecomes another form of self-seeking and self-glorification. Ifyou set out to do other peoplegood, it is difficult to avoid theultimate conclusipn that you cando them good because you arebetter than they are. To found adurable community we must havea deep sense of our own unim¬portance and a deep conviction ofthe importance of others. Thatsense and that conviction cannotbe sustained by any merely mun¬dane considerations. They requireus to meet our fellow-men upona spiritual plane.If we want world peace, a worldcommunity, and a w'orld state thatwill last, therefore, we must pro¬mote a moral, intellectual, andspiritual revolution throughout theworld. To try to get all we can,to breed more barbarians, to re¬gard one another as so many ani¬mals, rational or not, will lead usinevitably to the final catastrophe.It is very late; perhaps nothingcan save us. But, if we can takefor our motto, “Enough—and nomore”; if we can gain for our¬selves a coherent system of ideasconcerning the world and human¬ity; if we can mean the father¬hood of God when we say thebrotherhood of man, then we mayhave one more chance.■ — iJt>JUST TO MAKE IT EASY!YES. I want THE CHICAGO MA¬ROON this SMmmar. I am ancles-inq (4S) (AS) cents. Please sendme the MAROON (throngh Facnl-ty Exchange) throngh the mail).If yen are going to be oncampns this s n m m e r. can't bereached through Faculty Ex¬change, and bo want to take theMAROON at the special quarter¬ly rate, drop into the MAROONoGce. Reynolds 201, and we'llbe glad to sell you a subscriptioncard, entitling you to recolvo theten summer issues for 45 cents.NomeAddress -—City..... ZoneState(Pleas* Print)On Campus, 45cBy Mail. 65c —ROBERT M. HL^CHINSU.T.1131-1133 E. 55th St.Complete Seleetionof Beers andOther BeveragesMIDway 0524Blatt Beernrnlnft tA«campiiH4*alend«rHey Sun Lovere! Grab your✓goggles and close your )>ook^! >XeVeoff for the^Point to soak up I liesunshine to a glorioiiK hroiize,and dive off the ro<'ks fora cooling swim.whoa there.Sun Lovers, just onemore thing. HereVsun and< swim stuff you ean^t miss seeing. New andterrific, a triple treat! Play suits by Jantxenthat go swimming, too, and have a wrap¬around skirt to match. Our basking beachqueen is Eleanor Ellis. Her outfit,a Jantzen, is a play-full plaid-terrific in turquoise, rose or chartreuse.Sizes 12 to 18. $17.95Come to the Sports Room—Sixth Floor, Middle, WabashWritten by: Betty StearnsCartoons by: Cissie Li(d}shiitz