CAP AND GOWN----Office of the Dean of StudentsCobb Hall, Room 203The University of ChicagQ UUJ:')'-f19(0THE CAP AND GOWN1940the University of Chicagopublisher, Harold Wright ,�� Walter Young, business managerAreta Kelble editors Patricia Shrack��The City Gray that ne'er shall die . "IS that side of the University which has from year to year developedrather than changed. Its traditions of intellectual freedom, of expand­ing research, and of ever-increasing facilities aU accumulate, while theathletic teams, the extra-curricular activities, and the students of 1940fade with the vear. Product of this permanent aspect of the Universitybas been its great scholars, its graduates who have made names forthemselves, and finally its educational, cultural value to the world itcompletes. To give a full picture of the University, we are first portray­ing it in its larger sense and external relations. The Midway, which tiesthe campus world of t he quadrangles to the city of Chicago, seems tobe an appropriate symbol. Areta KelbleChicago, 1940the Universitv as we knew it. To the onlooker it seems that changesaccumulate slowly-another tower, another outstanding scholar addedto the lacu lt v, the departure of a familiar figure. Year after veal' under­graduates. professors. classes and act ivit ies seem essentially the same.But in our brief years on the quadrangles, with their crowded hours,we are aware of each change. The students and members of the facultynow on campus kaye the impress of their personalities on this vearslife. New organizations are formed for new interests and old purposeslost in the pursuit of different goals. New leaders give new direction tothe trend of events. Last year's seniors are now tradition, the freshmenare making themselves felt and we who were juniors find ourselvesamong the seniors of today. In these pages IS the picture of this year.- Patricia ShrockMidwayBehind the AdministrationNoted FacultyThe University as a Community CenteltAlumniGraduatesHonorsHonor SocietiesClass of 1940QuadranglesAthleticsYear in ReviewMIDWAYBehind the AdministrationNoted FacultyThe University as aCommunity CenterAlumniGRADUATESHonorsHonor SocietiesClass of 1940Top: The Social-Science Conference gets underway.Middle Left: Laves of 5.5. snapped at Con­ference.Bottom Left: Louis Wirt gives out his big grinfor Cap and Gown photogs.Upper Right: Shaughnessy and friend.Middle Right: Army and Navy men turn outfor the S.S. Conference.Lower Right: Distinguished divinity school pro­fessor consents to pose.Behind the AdministrationPresident Hutchinsintroduces theAnniversary DriveTop: President Hutchins presents Senator Pepper, lauds hiswork, and promptly leaves. Pepper spoke on the moralresponsibility of students.Bottom: As Hutchins presents the apologia pro sua actione,"foolish virgins" and their male equivalents arrive late. At the end of this year I shall have completedeleven years at the University of Chicago. I havebeen here almost long enough to count myselfamong the old timers, and to call up the good olddays of the past. Some of the more impertinent ofmy friends have even accused me of mellowing.When I first came to the University of Chicago,my pride was tremendous and my awe was tremen­dous. I was found that circumstances had con­trived to place me in one of the country's mostdistinguished institutions. I was awed by the his­tory and the distinction of the University.One of the first limitations I discovered on theopportunity to do what should be done here andelsewhere was the fact that the material concernsof the University have to be administered. Wheninterest rates fell, these concerns became acute.They have been so ever since. They are so acuteat the moment that they threaten the continuedexistence of the University as a distinguished insti­tution. The most important development of theyear is the University's drive for funds. The mostimportant thing the President has to do now isto assist the University in its struggle for self­preservation by enforcing economies and by goingon the road to raise money.-12-The intervening years have not diminished theemotions which I felt on coming to Chicago. I nowhave a fuller awareness of the University's dis­tinction and of its possihilities. My pride and awehave multiplied.The University will certainly survive, It willcertainly remain great. It will hecome greater still.The reason it will is that the students who haveheen here and the community it serves recognizewhat it has meant and can mean in the lives ofour people.Rohert �aynard Hutchins.Hutchins confers with artist-alumnusBaldridge returning for a week of under­grad life in order to get material forhis alumni money-seducer pamphlet. Top left: Hutchins, back to work with Bermuda tan, holdscourt at Ida Noyes for incoming Freshmen,Bottom left: Hutchins dispenses Chesterfield and St. Johns'propaganda at his mirror-clean desk.Right:s Prexy mingles with the hoi poloi for a brief momentupon leaving his office in Harper.-13-Harold SwiftLaird BellJohn MouldsAPPOINTIVE OFFICERSLloyd R. Steere, TreasurerHarvey C. Daines, ComptrollerJohn F. Moulds, SecretaryLyndon H. Lesch, Assistant Secretary,Assistant TreasurerWilliam J. Mather,Assistant SecretaryHortense Friedman,Assistant TreasurerArthur Lincicome,Assistant Comptroller PIONEERING IN EVERY FIELDWilliam BondHONORARY TRUSTEESThomas E. DonnelleyCharles R. HoldenCharles E. HughesSamuel C. JenningsFrank H. LindsayTRUSTEESHarold H. Swift, ChairmanWilliam Scott Bond,First Vice-Chairman.Laird Bell, Second V ice·ChairmanTrevor ArnettSewell L. A veryCharles F. AxelsonHarrison B. BarnardW. McCormick BlairJames H. Douglas, Jr.Cyrus S. EatonMax EpsteinMarshall FieldHarry B. GearCharles B. GoodspeedArthur B. HallPaul G. HoffmanRobert M. HutchinsAlbert D. LaskerFrank McNairJohn Nuveen, Jr.Ernest E. QuantrellClarence B. RandallLessing J. RosenwaldPaul S. RussellEdward L. Ryerson, Jr.Albert R. ScottRobert L. ScottAlbert W. ShererJames M. StiflerJohn StuartJohn P. WilsonHerbert P. Zimmermann-14- What the Trustees have alwayskept a liberal but constrained administrationpolicy; became the talk of the country lastDecember, when the Board dropped inter­collegiate football. For the most part opinionis now resigned, not merely because nothingimmediate can be done to restore the sportbut because a light of reason can be seenbehind the move. President Hutchins ex­plained the position taken by the administra­tion in his speech before the student body inJanuary. "The question is one of emphasis.I do not say that a university must be allstudy and no athletic and social life. I saythat a university must emphasize educationand not athletics and social life."Maintaining a distinguished facultyhas been one of the foremost aims of theUniversity administrators since the days ofthe University's first president, WilliamHarper. In times of depression the adminis­tration's policy has been to leave gaps asthey occur rather than lower salaries - andconsequently the worth of the entire staff.To encourage merit in teachingan alumnus several years ago established afund to provide awards of one thousanddollars for professors excellent in under­graduate teaching. In June, 1939, the winnerswere Ralph Buchsbaum, Instructor in Zo­ology in the College; Clarence Faust, Associ­ate Professor of English and Dean of Studentsin the Humanities ; and William C. Krum­bein, Assistant Professor of Geology and Ad­visor in the College.Not only in depressionis finance a University problem. With thelower interest rates on investments all uni­versities are faced with the need of increasedendowments. President Hutchins explainedin a recent Saturday Evening Post article hisplan of an inverse approach to the alumnifor endowments. Instead of collecting largeamounts from a few people, in the futurea large percentage of all the alumni will be asked individuallyto contribute smaller amounts.Along with the new endowment planPresident Hutchins is advocating financial cooperation amonglarge universities. President Hutchins feels that in view ofincreasing power of the many state universities, private schoolsmust collaborate. Overlapping and waste of facilities can there­by be avoided. The joint project of the University of Chicagoand the University of Texas is McDonald Observatory in theDavis Mountains of Texas. This was dedicated in May, 1939,and has already obtained scientific results of great promise forthe future. The property belongs to the University of Texas andis staffed by us, thus saving hoth universities a million dollars,which neither of them had.Increase in tuition,effective at the heginning of the year, was greeted with nottoo much grace hy the students. Students may still skip throughthe University at a fast pace hut only by paying extra for eachcourse over three, taken for credit or not.The sound movie method of teachingis original with the University of Chicago. So far the Universitypress has distributed thirty-two films produced by Erpi Class­room Films Company. They have been scientifically supervisedby professors directly concerned. They were developed to par­allel the New Plan textbooks in the fields of Astronomy, Physics,Chemistry, Geology, and Biology as presented in the surveycourses. Visual education is an old idea hut its use in soundmotion pictures represents an unlimited contrihution to ourteaching profession. Schools all over the country are using thesystem as a result.Officers 0/ AdministrationRobert Maynard HutchinsEmery T. FilheyWilliam BentonCharles Whitney GilkeyWilliam B. Harrell .William John MatherErnest C. MillerWilliam V. MorgansternJ ames Madison StiflerValerie C. WickhemRobert Carlton W oellnerGeorge Alan Works . President of the UniversityVice-PresidentVice-PresidentDean of the ChapelBusiness ManagerBursarRegistrarDirector of Press RelationsSecretary of the UniversityDirector of AdmissionsExecutive Secretary, Board ofVocational Guidance and PlacementDean of Students and University Examiner-15- William BentonEmery T. FilbeyJames H. StifterGeorge A. WorksAaron J. BrumbaughRobert W oellnerCarl HuthLeon P. Smith Ahove the Bursar's officeand also helow it is Chicago's own puhlishing house, the Uni­versity Press, a publishing outlet for much of the research workdone by memhers of the faculty. During the last two years ithas published several new textbooks which add to the visualeducation library. In the fall of 1937 the University Pressprinted The Machinery of the Body by Carlson and Johnsonand most recently Animals Without Backbones, Ralph Buchs­haum's offering."A landmark in American Culture" is what the New York Timescalled the Dictionary of American English on Historical Prin­ciples. Since 1925 Sir William Craigie, famed as co-editor ofthe Oxford English Dictionary and no professor emeritus ofEnglish here, has been making a scientific study in conjunctionwith the English Department's James R. Hulbert of Americanword usage up to 1900 for the purpose of exhibiting clearly theword meanings by which the English of the United States isdistinguished from that spoken by the rest of the English world.The ninth part of Sir William's scholarly work will be pub­lished in May.In the hands of the Press now,is a monumental work, The Text of the Canterbury Tales, forwhich the authors have been delving into England's fourteenthcentury records for six months at a time ever since 1926. EdithRickert, who began the work, unfortunately died before it wasquite completed, but the job was carried on by her chief col­laborator, John Manly, who has been with the English Depart­ment since 1898 and who is now professor emeritus.Recent years have witnessedan international movement toward consideration of science as awhole. The International Encyclopedia of Unified Science nowat press is concerned with the tying together of the logic, theThe College and the Divisions of the UniversityWilliam Hay Taliaferro . Dean of the Division of the Biological SciencesRichard Peter McKeonHenry Gordon GaleRobert RedfieldAaron John BrumbaughArthur Charles BachmeyerJohn Dale Russell Dean of the Division of HumanitiesDean of the Division of the Physical SciencesDean of the Division of the Social SciencesDean of the CollegeAssociate Dean of the Biological SciencesAssociate Dean and Dean of Students in theDivision of the Social SciencesBasil Coleman Hyatt Harvey Dean of Students in the Divisionof the Biological SciencesDean of Students in the CollegeLeon Perdue SmithClarence H. Faust . Dean of Students in the Division of the Humanities-16-Arthur BachmeyerHenry Gordon Gale history, and the sociology of all sci­ence. Plans for the introductory unitof two volumes under the title ofFoundations of the Unity of Sciencehave been completed, and among themonographs already in print arethose by Charles William Morris,Associate Professor of Philosophy;Rudolph Carnap, Professor of Phi­losophy; and Leonard Bloomfield,Professor of Germanic Philology.The administration has continuedin its traditional attitude of littleregulation of student life and free­dom in choice of courses. Any or­ganized group of ten members, more­over, can be recognized as a Univer­sity activity, provided it representsdecent principles. More cooperationhas been evidenced of late betweenthe administration and the students.The press relations office has activelyaided extra-curricular organizations.Specific aid has been given especiallyto the student Publicity Board as astep in the new official campaign tosion of a stilted undergraduate bodycorrect the erroneous public impres­at Chicago.Merle Crowe Coulter, John R. Davey, Martin J. Freeman,Robert E. Keohane, William C. Krumbein, Adeline DeSale Link, Mirna Maxey, F. Joseph Mullin, WilliamEdlefsen Scott, Zens Lawrence Smith, Harold A. Swensen,Salomon Trevino, Leslie C. WarrenCarl Frederick HuthWilliam Homer SpencerErnest Cadman ColwellLouis Round WilsonWilber G. Katz Advisors in the CollegeDean of the UniversityDean of the School of BusinessDean of the Divinity SchoolDean of the Graduate Library SchoolDean of the Law SchoolWilber E. Post Dean of the Graduate School of MedicineEdith Abbott Dean of the School of Social Service AdministrationMcKendree Llewellyn Raney Director of the University LibrariesOtto StruveJohn Albert WilsonArthur Charles Bachmeyer Director of the Yerkes ObservatoryDirector of the Oriental InstituteDirector of the University Clinics-17- Basil HarveyJohn D. RussellClarence FaustCharles W. GilkeyN o t e d F a c n I t yAMONG THE PROMINENT FACULTY MEMBERSBelow: Compton at thephysics conference; Bur­gess in his office; Across;Carlson in Bi Sci, demoonstrating an experi­ment. Most students willremember him, absorbedin his work, bis glassespushed back. He prefersto do it himself ratherthan leave it to assistants.Edith Abbott-20- whom the University lost over the summer areGrace Abbott, James Weber Linn, and AlgernonColeman of the French Department. Not longbefore her death Miss Abbott was selected bya national poll as one of the nation's outstand­ing women. Her renown is based on the life­time she devoted to the cause of under-privi­leged children. Officially at the University shewas Professor of Public Welfare Administrationin the school of Social Service.There are few alumni smce 1900or students today who did not know Teddy Linnand love him as part of their Alma Mater. Al­though not ranked high academically in theEnglish Department, Teddy always attractedmany students to his classes by his jovial per­sonality and unlimited information on Univer­sity lore. In keeping with his flair for writing,Mr. Linn constantly filled the local editorialpages and published numerous books, bestknown of which are Wind Over the Campusand Jane Addams-A Biography. He was a par­ticularly appropriate biographer of Miss Ad­dams, as he was her favorite nephew. In No­vember, 1938, Mr. Linn was elected Democraticassemblyman to the State Legislature; no can­didate ever had more spirited backing thanthat which the local Alpha Delta Phi Chaptergave their favorite alumnus.Ernest W. Burgess has cometo public notice as author of an article on mar­riage in a recent Ladies Home Journal. A soci­ologist of long standing in the University, Mr.Burgess has attempted to make of sociology aSCIence. For the past few years he has beenJames Weber Linn, Arthur Holly Compton, Anton Carlson, Maude SlyeErnest Burgess, Charles MerriamTeddy Linn observing the results of a thousand marriages which he has onrecord as having advised during engagement. On the basis ofthese he is able to predict marriage success or failure withalmost the same degree of a certainty as an insurance companyevaluates a risk. The tests he used in connection with the maga­zine article enable a couple to compare their own standards ofcongeniality with those of tested science. During the pastmonths Mr. Burgess has been conducting a series of publiclectures on marrrage downtown.Best known as the winner of the Nobel Prizefor Physics in 1927, Arthur Holly Compton reveals a variedpersonality to local campusites, He not only instructs a weeklySunday school in Baptist virtues and occasionally entertains theChapel Unionists, but in his spare time is an excellent glass­blower, a fine tennis-man, and a better than middling performeron the mandolin. Unrivalled in the field of atomic physics,Dr. Compton is an international axis for cosmic ray investiga­tion. This summer he organized at the University a symposiumto which leading scientists came from the world over.Pride of the Physiology Departmentis Anton Carlson, who gives all freshmen an excellent reasonfor liking the Biological Sciences Survey. He is known popu­larly as the sponsor of the Communist Club, although he makesno pretenses about voting the Republican ticket. Dr. Carlsonhas made himself what he is in America, having risen from asteerage immigrant to his present position of distinction as ascientist. From his native Sweden he still retains a definiteaccent, which together with his inimitable method of experI­menting on himself provide his classes with constant amuse­ment. Through his research he has made important discoveriesregarding the heartbeat and the endocrine glands.-21--For thirty years Maude Slyehas been experimenting with mice to prove the inheritabilityof cancer tendencies. She had long been using mice in her studyof heredity of general diseases, when she discovered some of themice developed cancer. Altogether Miss Slye has recorded thefamily tree of some hundred fifty thousand individual micethrough about one hundred eight generations. In caring forthem, she has been able to increase their life span from threeto four years in contrast to the two month career of wild mice.From her observations, Miss Slye has found that cancer heredityfollows exactly the well-known Mendelian principles. She con­tends that two things are necessary to development of cancer:an inherited susceptibility and an irritation of the tissue. Forsome years she has been urging the establishment of a centralrecord for human geneologies, in order to effect some controlover cancer.Charles E. Merriam is a umquecombination, a political scientist and a practical experimenterin politics. Valued equally in Washington circles as in Chi­cago, Mr. Merriam has gained a reputation as an A-I adviserand authority in his field. Author of numerous books on politi­cal theory, notably History of American Political Theories, andthe American Party System, he has had profound influence onAmerican political thought. Using Chicago as a laboratory forhis studies of the political parties and problems of metropolitanareas he has added as much prestige to his personal reputationas to that of the University's political science department. Oneof the city's first citizens, Mr. Merriam succeeded in bringing toChicago the Public Administration Clearing House among manyother governmental bureaus. For years he was an alderman ofthe old seventh ward and in 1911, was candidate for mayor onthe Republican ticket. His contact with Chicago politics hasbeen continuous ever since then.-22-Broadcast and DebateArt, Music, DramaInternational HouseUniversity Settlement���k'���'4�r��'��'�-:k'�'�-��l' ��"'I"��������I"��:-,_�¥�r�-<:i�����->"¥'�-'�-'��-"�-.'k'�""���('��Are You a Communist?"A deep VOIce from the radio startles the listeneras he involuntarily draws his chair closer andtunes up the radio. The program that followedwas the University of Chicago Roundtable, thatprogram which after six years on the NationalBroadcasting Company without interruption nowhas more listeners than any other educationalprogram. In the last year and a half the numberof stations on the Roundtable network has doubledand the audience has increased to some four mil-lion American adults.The Roundtable broadcasts try to provide theseAmericans with stimulating discussions on topicsof current interest. These of course vary greatlyaccording to the program, the artists involved, andthe immediate news of the times.This recent success was due to the research staff,headed by Sherman H. Dryer, set up by the Uni­versity for the purpose of increasing the audienceappeal of the program. Difficulty is encounteredwith such a program because the experts will nottalk in the language of the listener nor have theymuch time to devote to a minor point. In orderto correct these faults a recorded rehearsal of thebroadcast is held where participants lose theirmike fright and tryout the discussion. When thisis played back the errors seem very obvious andsuggestions are made for improvement. The idealgroup of three consists of two recognized authori­ties and a third experienced round tabler who willpoke questions at each one and try to keep themdown to definite terms. At intervals the directorflashes picture cards lettered in cartoon fashionwhich admonish the speaker to put his elbows on the table or to speed up. In this way the sugges­tions are followed but treated as a joke and ac­cepted graciously. To catch the immediate atten­tion of the listener, the programs have beenopened by dramatic news flashes and startlingnews questions. The time spent in planning andcarrying out the program is rewarded by theresponse from the radio audience. On the firstsix days following the recent discussion on theJews by Speakers Willey, Wirth, and Wilson, onethousand letters a day were received. Copies ofeach broadcast are now distributed in pamphletform to five or ten thousand listeners every week.The number of letters received after each week­ly broadcast is sufficint testimonial as to the popu­larity of this feature on the airwaves. However,the future of the Roundtable stood on rathershaky legs last autumn when Vice-PresidentBenton of the University discontinued Universitybroadcasts in connection with other schools. Hemaintained that any advertising the University wasable to do through the medium of radio shouldhe done for the University alone and not for theUniversity merely as one of several institutions.At that time many critics criticized his actions,claiming that the University could never affordhook-ups that would reach such wide audiences,if they went into broadcasting for themselves.Benton felt differently. The result is ohvious fromthe reception the Roundtahle discussions receivefrom Florida to Michigan. Not only is the Uni­versity successfully advertising itself through themedium of radio, but is also providing people frommany parts of the country with excellent intel­lectual entertainment.-24-The Human Adventurebegun last summer as an experiment is the Uni­versity's educational variety show. The dramaticprogram was so well received it returned to theair this winter over CBS. The scripts for theweekly program are prepared at the University byprofessional writers on any subject of universityresearch; research need not be at Chicago but anyAmerican school. It varies from recounting thrill­ing scientific discoveries to the lesser known re­search of literary scholars. For example, one pro­gram described the famed Chaucer research projectof Professor Manley and Edith Rickert; it includedthe story of their world-wide journeys to librariesto photograph original Chaucer manuscripts aswell as to obtain information regarding the contentof Chaucer's stories.Another very popular Human Adventure storywas the dramatization of the finding of an oldIrish manuscript. This playlet told the story ofthe University's famous scholar Tom Peete Cross.Mr. Cross, who has spent much time studying anddoing research work abroad, was made into quitea literary hero through the efforts of the Uni- versity advertisers. The manuscript in question,which was really only a minor contribution of thevenerable scholar, was found conveniently for theHuman Adventure if not for Mr. Cross in the wallof an old monastery in Ireland. The language 111which it was written was of course Old Irish, ofwhich Mr. Cross is perhaps the greatest livingmaster.Human Adventure stories come on the air onSaturday afternoons in conflict with the Metro­politan Opera broadcast. Due to this' fact theaudience is hardly as great as that which hears theRoundtable discussions. However, this perhapswas the idea lurking in the minds of the men whoplanned the program. Certainly it attracts youngerlisteners who are more likely not to be interestedin opera. From the fact that Human Adventurestories are intellectually toned down to the mindof the average high school student one suspectsthat these stories are used as bait to lure prospec­tive students into the folds of the University. Cer­tainly they are rather unattractive to more maturepersons who would be in more of a position todonate sums to the funds for which Mr. Hutchinsis always praying ..-25-Scenes from the Christmas pageant in the Chapel­presented twice to accommodate overflow crowds.Tbe Hyde ParkCommunityhas found good reason to seek the University asits cultural center. Rockefeller Memorial Chapelfunctions both as a community church and as thescene of frequent musical events. Early this yearMarcel Dupre, famous French organist, gave hisfinal concert in collahoration with UniversityCarillonneur Marriot. The local symphony or­chestra can he heard regularly at the Chapel underthe ahle direction of the Music Department's Dr.Sidmund Levarie from Vienna. In Decemher Dr.Levarie attempted Bach's Art of the Fugue whichhad been performed only twice before in America. The success of this venture led him to try more ofBach. Early in March with the aid of the Col­legium Musicum, an organization composed hothof instrumentalists and vocalists, Dr. Levarie con­ducted Bach's Passion According to Saint John,hoth performances of which overflowed BondChapel. Recognizing these successes, Dr. FrederickStock, conductor of the Chicago Symphony Or­chestra, suggested a campus music festival forsometime in May. Comparahle to such largerscale festivals as are held at Michigan and North­western, Chicago planned a three part programto consist of Bach concertos, modern compositions,and the German Opera Armorer.Lighter classics were introduced to the campusand the community at the four Reynolds CluhOpera Hours of teas and illustrated lectures hyHoward Talley. The opera talks were illustratedhy the personal appearance of a numher of famousstars, Helen Jepson, Tito Schipa, Pinza, Ben­tonelli, the new Indian singer-Mohley Lyshanya,and others. Shortly after the opera series theReynolds Club presented Madame Marcelle Denya,a Parisian singer, who sang a program of repre­sentative French historical songs.PRIMARILY A COMMUNITY PROJECT,the Renaissance Society presented a monthly artexhibit to the campus at the art quarters of Good­speed Hall. Among the one man exhihitors wasEdmund Gieshert of the Art Department and theArt Institute, who has gained some repute on hisnudes and effective colors. The sculpture of Mrs.Elizabeth Hibhard was shown, and Miss Laura-26-Van Peppelendam displayed a SIze­able exhibit of paintings. Simultane-·ous with the Art Institute's ItalianMasterpieces, the Renaissance Societyarranged a showing of 16th, 17th, and18th century original drawings bygreat masters. Later in February theArt Department again sponsored onits own a Big Ten art exhibit. Aprilsaw the Ida Noyes Council's AnnualStudent Art Show.THE UNIVERSITY HAS BEENthe incentive of more than aestheticentertainment for the public. Ofmore direct concern to outsiders thanMirror and other campus dramaticsis the Settlement Board Benefit Showproduced every year by the Settle­ment League in Mandel Hall andmade more successful by the partici­pation of not a few faculty husbandsof the Leaguers. The Leaguers weresupplemented in their cast, moreover,by five students and two groups oftalent from the Settlemeut. Star at­traction of the show, however, was aquartet whose best voices were thoseof Clifton Utley aud a campus cop.Throughout the year the ChicagoTheological Seminary presents origi­nal plays of social or religious sig­nificance. Many of these. have re­ceived considerable recognition lo­cally and professionally.THE UNIVERSITY HASBEEN FORTUNATEto enlist the services of a number ofprominent lecturers during the pastyear to whom the public as well as Talley, reviewer at the opera hour; Martinelli; Joan Lyding leads theswarm of autograph seekers; Mr. Hoeppner, innovator of the Opera Hours.students have been invited to listen. The William VaughanMoody Foundation, which was founded in 1917 hy an un­known donor, brought four interesting personalities to MandelHall stage. Monta Bell, veteran of the movie industry, authorsCarl Van Doren and Marjorie Rawlings, and Editor DeVoto ofthe Saturday Review all spoke on various aspects of literature.Carl Sandburg was scheduled for a lecture series in May underthe auspices of the Walgreen Foundation, which brought us Dr.Benes last year. Throughout the winter, three prominent Jewishauthors lectured on campus, primarily for the Hillel League,Ludwig Lewisohn, Maurice Hindus, and Pierre Van Paassen.-27-At left: Van Doren from Mandel Hall platform.Center: University Symphony in Mandel Hall.Right: Marigold Hill at organ during a recital.MOST INTERESTING LECTURERSpresented on campus this year, however, wereMonsieur Jacques Maritain, most prominent ex­ponent of the Thomist School of Philosophy, andCarl Sandberg, author or the latest biography onLincoln, The War Years. M. Maritain was verygracious in all his connections with the campus.Not only did he prepare and deliver long andserious lectures on many various subjects includ­ing the present situation in Europe, but he an­swered all sorts of questions from students andother visitors. This, of course, was quite a trialto the great philosopher, especially so consideringthe fact that his "Englisch iss veree haddd." Nev­ertheless he managed to put to shame many of thestudents who tried their American hrand ofFrench on him. Misquoted hy the Maroon in itsusual manner, M. Maritain interviewed reportersfrom the staff, set them right on their facts, gave along lecture on the war. Maritain has heen inParis since the beginning of the present war andwas there during the last one. He is prohahly oneof the few outstanding men in the world todaycapahle of acting as a philosopher when the finalpeace is made. Even if his views are not put into effect after the present conflict closes, undoubtedlythe influence of his philosophy will he felt bythose who make the peace. M. Maritain is nowpreparing a new book to go to press soon. It willhe a much more comprehensive survey than any­thing he has ever done before.Carl Sandberg, who came to the University inthe late spring, is probahly the most famous hi­ographer in America and perhaps in the world.His early work on Lincoln, The Prairie Years, wasacclaimed by the critics throughout the civilizedworld. His last work, four volumes on Lincolnentitled The War Years, is generally consideredto he even more important than the former. For­tunate indeed was the University to secure hisservices as a lecturer. His series began with gen­eralities worked up to specific incidents pertainingto Sandherg's favorite character, Honest Old Abe.Tickets to the Sandherg series were exhaustedwithin two hours after the time they were offeredto students at the Information Bureau. This provesconclusively the intense interest of the studenthody in such famous persons as the Universitymay be fortunate enough to secure as guestlecturers.-28-The theory behind the University Settlementis individual improvement through participationin group work. The teaching of American artsand skills helps to raise the Settlement poor tocivilized standards of life. The Settlement Houseat 46th and McDowell fairly teems with people ofPolish and Mexican blood during every open hour.:Most of the Mexicans speak English picked upalong the pilgrimage from their homeland throughthe southwest. However, last year the Settlementtaught English to a handful of American citizenswho had lived in Poland since babyhood.Children especially are benefited by the Settle­ment. The Settlement League, an organizationcomposed mainly of University faculty wives, p.ro­vides finances for a summer camp toward whichthe children also contribute. Camp Farr in north­ern Indiana attempts to get some of these peopleUpper left: Settlement children amuse selves over pool table.Upper right: Dirty little kiddies spend more spare time atgame table, who have never been farther than 63rd street intothe country for that kind of a holiday which givesthem the health and strength to carryon anotheryear. Moreover the Settlement is not a charity.Even the clothing raised through drives by theSettlement League and the Student SettlementBoard is sold to the people at prices within theirreach. The Settlement is also a proving groundas well as a full time job for S. S. A. workers. Afurther ,point unique to this Settlement is the factthat officers try exceptionally hard not to makethese people feel inferior. Very little visiting isdone by the officers to homes already imposedupon many times by relief investigators and othercharity workers. The success of the UniversitySettlement is measured by the energetic responsefrom the people who participate in its activities.Lower left: Settlement prodigy does skilled metal work at lathe.Lower right: Younger child learns essentials of woodwork ina Settlement shop.A desirable supplementto an internationally known university, Interna­tional House reflects its spirit - its members areknit together by a common love of university life.Their belief in education is mingled with joy ofliving. While you can always find someone willingto argue on the international situation, there arealso people sitting in the Tiffin Room drinkingcokes all afternoon.International House IS faced with the problemof planning a program to meet the intellectual andsocial needs of its 520 members, most of whomare new to the city. One of the main points of theprogram is to have the students help plan andcarry out the activities in which they are interested.This is done through the student conncil, made upof representatives from each national group, andheaded by Piara Gill, president. The social com­mittee of the council, advised by Miss PatriciaOliver, plans the International Night, the largeChristmas and New Year parties, as well as mid­week teas.Various house facilities - ping-pong tables,lounge, and library are open to members at anytime in addition to the Barber Shop, the BeautyShop, and the cafeteria that the public may alsouse.Musical activities sponsored are popular folkdancing and the glee club. Table conversations inforeign languages for practice or pleasure are fre­quently heard at tables reserved for this purpose.International House is justly proud of its pro­gram of foreign films. Started six years ago whenforeign films were rare in Chicago, their purposewas to better acquaint people with foreign cultures.This year's series included such famous films asMayerling, Pygmalion, and Amphitryon.Under the intellectual activities of the houserank Sunday evening buffet suppers followed by awell known speaker. Among those speaking re- cently were ex-governor La Follette of Wisconsinand Editor Ratcliffe of the Calcutta Statesman(India). A heated discussion was held whenSamuel Harper, Professor of Russian language atthe University, talked on "The Soviet Union in theInternational Crisis" just a few days after Finlandwas invaded. Professor Harper was forced to com­pletely rewrite his talk every day as the newscame in.Top left: Sunday night dinner at Int-House.Top right: Dr. Ernest Price speaks to "children."Bottom: Worldly people discuss across the lunch table.-30-In upper right is Jack Brown in typical costume for English Fair. Below him Mable Chongand Peter Arcoli discuss native Hawaii; top right is the scene: International House. Centerright the French cafe; lower right Jennie Chang and Edna Kanemoto pour Hawaiian punchfor guests.A I n m n � �� �� �� r�� �� �� �� �� ��� �� �� �� �� �� �� �� �� �" �) ,� �� �� �!" "� �" �� f� �� �/:, �, ��� �� �� �r. �� �)� �" �� r.� �� �:, �� &� �\ ��� ���I�)�����:�•IHarold Ickes Each year the University presentsto the world a group of students, fresh with knowledge, andeager for a chance to rise above their milieu. Among thesegraduates are such prominent people as Harold Ickes, JohnGunther, Vincent Seean, Harold G. Moulton, Elizabeth MadoxRoberts, and H. O. Crisler. All these along with many othersreceived their undergraduate education here.Former newspaperman and foreign correspondent JohnGunther was once editor of the Daily Maroon. Since his gradu­ation in 1922, he has gained renown the world over for his workand writings, the latest of which are "Inside Europe" and"Inside Asia."Secretary of the Interior and Administrator of Public Works,Harold Ickes is preeminent among American politicians. Hiscareer, which began with newspaper work and later took himinto law practice, soon brought him into public office fromwhich he attained his present position.Harold G. Moulton, who after graduating became a Professorof Political Economy here in the University, is now presidentof the Brookings Institute. Among his publications are "Prin­ciples of Money and Banking" and "War Debts and World Pros­perity."J ames Vincent Sheean, class of '23, was a foreign correspond­ent from 1922-27 and at intervals since then in Europe and Asia.His latest claim to fame is the book, "Not Peace, But a Sword,"published in 1939. LIST OF FAMOUS ALUMNIProfessorHenry G. Gale, '97Donald R. Richberg, '01. Government WorkerMargaret Wilson, '04 AuthorC. LeRoy Balridge,'Il . Artist-AuthorClinton J. Davisson, '08 Physicist:Morris Fishbein, '10 DoctorDwight H. Green, '20 LawyerHarold H. Swift, '07 Meat PackerJames T. Farrell, '29 AuthorPaul S. Martin, '23 AnthropologistPaul G. Hoffman, '12Auto ManufacturerGeorge T. McDermott, '08Federal JudgeArthur R. Robinson, '13 . U. S. SenatorBartlett McCormack, '22 PlaywrightWalter Bartky, '23 AstronomerA writer well versed in both prose and poetry is ElizabethMadox Roberts, who was awarded her Phi Beta Kappa Key atChicago in 1921. While still in school she won both theHarold G. Moulton McLaughlin Prize for Prose and the Fiske Prize for Poetry,and since then she has received various other prizes for poetryand prose.Herbert O. Crisler, class of '22, distinguished himself in ath­letics while at the University. Upon his graduation he servedon the coaching staff as an assistant. More recently he has beenhead football coach at Princeton University and is now workingfor the University of Michigan in the same capacity.Although James T. Farrell, novelist and critic, received nodegree from the University, he was awarded the John S. Guggen­heim Memorial Fellowship in Creative Literature and has sincebecome well-known in his field.-34-Keeping in personal touchwith as many former students as possible is the job of Charl­ton T. Beck, the University's Alumni Secretary. On the fourthfloor of Cobb Hall, overlooking the quadrangles, are the officesof the Alumni Council over which he presides. Mr. Beck editsthe UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO MAGAZINE, coordinates thenetwork of Regioual Advisers, and sets up the aunual AlumniSchool and reunion in June.The Magazine is published monthly and mailed to some8,000 Alumni Council members in all parts of the world. Prob­ably the most popular sections in the Magazine are The Newsof the Quadrangles and News of the Classes.John NuveenIt is estimated that one in seven of the freshmen who enteredthe University last fall had been influenced by the Regional Advisers in Alumnus Neil Sammons' nationalorganization of some 800 alumni. These Advisers are furnished with the important data about the Uni­versity and become its personal representatives in the communities where they live. FLAGSTONES, amonthly bulletin published by Jack Bracken, '37, keeps these Advisers up to date on what is happening onthe quadrangles.The Alumni School, developed by the Alumni Council with the inspiring guidance of Charlton Beck,has become one of the most popular features of annual Reunion Week in June. This is a week of after-noon, dinner, and evening sessions held at Mandel Hall, inwhich leading faculty members of the various departments ofthe University bring alumni up to date on the latest develop­ments in these numerous fields. Tours are conducted aroundthe quadrangle in the mornings for the benefit of those whoCharron T. Beckwish to see the University "at work."-35-ALUMNI FOUNDATIONThe University's fiftieth anniversary dueto arrive in 1941 inspired the alumni withthe idea of raising a fund which could bepresented to the University at that time asa birthday gift from the alumni. Thiswould be in the nature of a substantial en­dorsement of their Alma Mater and a ma­terial assistance at a time when reducedinterest rates on endowment play havocwith University budget-balancing. Noamount has been set as a goal for the An­niversary gift. The goal is, rather, a gift­large or small-from every alumnus.To give every alumnus from Singapore to Seattle an oppor­tunity to join in this gift, an Alumni Foundation was organizedwith Trustee-Alumnus John Nuveen, Jr., as general chairmansupported by local chairmen in every community where ten ormore former students now live. Although present effort is con­centrated on the raising of a gift for the fiftieth anniversary,the Alumni Foundation will continue as a permanent organiza­tion after the anniversary to provide a medium for annualdonation from the alumni and a closer relationship betweenmembers of the University family at home and abroad.THE SPEAKERS' BUREAUTo handle many requests that are received for speakers theUniversity established a Speakers' Bureau with Howard Hudson,'35, as its head, a year before the Alumni Foundation was organ­ized. This was considered a step in the direction of helpingcommunities to understand and appreciate the University aswell as to help fulfill such a university's obligation to demo­cratic society.It was felt too, that this bureau could be of assistance inproviding faculty speakers for communities where groups ofalumni wished to get together and hear the news from thequadrangles as well as stories of the current projects being car­ried on by their Alma Mater.-36-ROBERT McKINLAY When Howard Hudson moved to the anniversary office towork on the fiftieth anniversary program, the bureau was re­organized with Professor Carey Croneis as its head.In addition to the speakers' service for alumni groups, thebureau furnishes them with an electrical recording of an inter­view between alumnus Clifton M. Utley, '36, and PresidentRohert Maynard Hutchins concerning the state of the Univer­sity, its educational program, and its f:.I.ture. A sound motionpicture titled "Midway Memories; An Album of Old Celluloid"was made on 16mm film which is also sent out to alumni meet­ings. This picture is from the University's film library of motionpictures taken at Chicago from as early as 1904, and includespictures of famous athletes, all the University Presidents, famousfaculty members through the years, and scenes of currentquadrangle life.All of which means that students and alumni henceforth will be better informed about their Uni­versity, and the family ties of generations of students will become more and more closely cemented.-37-GRADUATESHonorsHonor SocietiesUlass of 1940Winter snows frost the buildings and turn the campus into an icy scene that isas apt to make an alumnus nostalgic as pictures of early autumn on the Quads.Winter quarter-busiest socially, and yet for those who earned academic honors,the quarter they spent studying for the Bachelors, the prelims or the divisional.Their reward for long dark afternoons in the libraries comes at convocation.H o n o r sA Maroon-TasseledMortarboardPreceding the candidates for degrees at each convocationis usually a smiling gentleman in a gold-tasseled cap,Dean Leon P. Smith," Marshal of the University. LastSummer, however,' Sheldon Tefft conducted the convoca­tion. At other times it may be another of the AssistantMarshals, William Bartky, George Bobrinskoy, FrankO'Hara, Walter Palmer or Harold Willoughby.) . contrasting with the black of the other under­graduates is the mark of an Aide or Marshal.Its possesson is an honor esteemed by the wholecampus and enjoyed only by the Aides and Mar­shals. The ten senior women and ten seniormen are so honored for both high scholasticachievement and extracurricular activities. Ap­pointed by President Hutchins, they are in­vested ceremoniously at the Interfraternity Singby their predecessors with the distinctive mor­tarboard as a gift from the president.Numerous official duties accompany the honor.The Aides and Marshals assist the president atbanquets, receptions and lectures. Their chieffunction is to present the graduates at eachconvocation in such an order that each receiveshis own degree.This year the semor class was organizedthrough the efforts of the Aides and Marshals,and in view of the coming Quinquigesinary cele-Bigelow directs candidates in chancel.Topping and Kelble lead the procession up the stairs; Culp, Brody, and Shrack as rear guard.Shostrum and Parsons examine Peiffer's baton,-42-bration the group offered its servicesto the Alumni Foundation. In addi­tion they have contacted high schoolseniors and aided the Publicity De­partment on speaking tours.Early in December a tea given bythe University Head Marshal Leon P.Smith and Mrs. Smith honored thisgroup. President and Mrs. Hutchinsand other University officials, includ­ing the assistant Marshals, were in­vited.Left (top to bottom): Oldsters and Kuhdiscuss past Convocations.Adams and Powell check attendance ofgraduates.Geiger adjusts cap.Iselman hunts for comb.Right: Pfeiffer and the Tess await gradu­ates.Bill Speck squirms into robe.Ahlquist fills in time till Convocationceremony.Marty Levit quenches his thirst.Grenander and George check seat labelsin basement.-43-PHI RETA KAPPABETA OF ILLINOIS CHAPTERONE HUNDRED NINETY-SIXTH CONVOCATIONWalter J. Blum Judith Ethel Graham Rita Marie McGuaneJohn Peter Britz Frances Louise Greenfield Burton Nathaniel NavidYale Brozen Marjorie Consuelo Hamilton Joseph RosensteinMorris Harold Cohen Cynthia Anne Hawkes Leo SerenGwendolin Loat Cooper Milancie Hill Frederick George SmithJames Michael Davran Edward Robert Hoffman Joseph SondheimerRayna Louise DeCosta Byron Edward Kabot William Burton SowashAlfred Joseph DeGrazia, Jr. Luana Myrtle Kekkonen Shirley Ann StarThomas Anthony Donovan Wasley Sven Krogdahl Lonise Hedja TonessJames Allen Dunkin William Champlin Lewis Anna Elizabeth WehmanDieter Dnx Robert Hoyer Lochner Philip WehnerLeonard Morton Edwards Joan Alexander Lorr Leonard WeissRobert Steiner Fouch Kullervo Louhi Joseph Edward WilsonHanna Marjorie Goldman Kathryn Isabel MacLennan Frances Grace WinnONE HUNDRED NINETY-EIGHTH CONVOCATIONClyde Everett AultzBarbara Eleanor BeerMay Elizabeth GreenwoodRoyal Ernest IhrkeNorman Maurice Kaplan Eugene Hall KramerIrving MackRoland Neely McKeanJohn Madera MolloyWilliam Brannon Neal, Jr.Sarah Elizabeth Romine Adele RoseHerbert SilverstoneLeah SpilbergRobert Leonard StraubeBeatrice Ruth TreimanONE HUNDRED NINETY-NINTH CONVOCATIONWilliam Holmes BondDavid Barrett ClarkTamaara Danish Matthew Theodore GladstoneHelga Rosa HeindlJack Indritz Ralph Eugene LappLaverne Marjorie TessNaomi G. WaxmanMembers elected to Beta of Illinois Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa on nomination by th e University forespecial distinction in general scholarship in the University.- 44---S I G M A X IBETA OF ILLINOIS CHAPTERONE HUNDRED NINTY-SIXTH CONVOCATIONMary Allison BennettRnth BishopRobert Venable BrownJ. Edmond BryantDwight Edwin ClarkThomas Howard ClarkeRuth Eleanor CortellWill Scott DeLoachHarold Harry DubnerRobert Thompson FlorenceGerald FostvedtAnne Hutchinson FullerRalph Lewis Gutke Walter Richard HaefeleJohn Henry HeinenWilliam HeredBernard Leonard HoreckerSarah Cecil KleigerAubrey Wilfred Landers, Jr.Mary Kenny LandersLouis Kimball MannGrayson Eichelberger MeadeEdward Alfred NordhausAlan Theodore PrinceAlbertEugene Reynolds Isadore RichlinJohn Beach RinaldoAaron Q. SartainRemsen Ten Eyck SchenckHarold M. ScholbergMartin W ohl ShookhoffSidney Lash SimonGrace Ann SteiningerJulian Leroy ThompsonMilton John Vander BrookCornelius William VermeulenRaymond Edgar WeinsteinRupert Leon WenzelONE HUNDRED NINETY-EIGHTH CONVOCATIONRichard AbramsRoy BrenerHenry Walter BrosinHarry Victor ChurchNicholas Elias ColliasJames Emory CookCarol Blanche CottonSamuel Thomas EmoryAsher Joseph FinkelLouise Barton FreemanSherman Meyer FriedJohn Henry GarlandGladys Gerner Piara Gingh GillGeorge GomoriElizabeth Riddle GravesSeymour GrayDelbert GreenwoodElla Virginia Miller GreggChauncy Dennison HarrisJoseph Paynter HoltKenneth Irwin JochimRichard Douglas KleeneNicholas Joseph LetangCatherine Zenker Lutherman Marshall Snow NeffWalter NudenbergCarlos Alberto OffermannWilliam Franklin ReadCharles Crane RobySimon RedbardStephen RothmanHst-En ShihRoger Wolcott SperryAlbert Cecil TaylorJohn Anthony VaichulisHsi WangDennis James WortONE HUNDRED NINETY-NINTH CONVOCATIONJoseph Peter BiebelMorris BloomAugusto BobonisAgnes Sanxay Burt BraddockFrank Edward ByrneMalcolm CarrMichael Stephen ChapparsBertha Ellen DavisonWilliam Heyden EastonMorton Zalrnan FinemanWilfred Raymond FosterWinton Elizabeth GambrellWilliam Baptist Hardy Katharine Elizabeth HazardWalter Elisha HookHoward Carl HoppsLyman Coleman HuffShimmon KaplanIrving Myron KlotzJerry John KollrosJoseph Harmon LevinAlfred Richard Loeblich, Jr.Helen Nina Tappan LoeblichClarence Chancelum LushbaughCharles Emmett MarshallNorman Harry Nachtrieb John Aloysius O'Keefe IIITheodore PuckWilliam Brinson RedmondRubin Joseph SchachterRobert Lenzen SchmitzDonovan Cowgill SenterSidney SmithNathan SugarmanLedyard R. TuckerGordon Webb WaresAlfred Frank WhitingJames Laverr WhittenhergerGeorge Green Wright, Jr.Members elected to Sigma Xi on nomination of the Departments of Science for evidence of ability in.research work in science.-45-HONORS AWARDEDSECOND YEAR HONOR SCHOLARSSelected for excellence in the work of the first year in the collegeHelen Anita ArnoldWayne ArnoldStuart BernsteinPatricia Louise BurtJ ames Lindley BurtleRonald Fuller CraneDorothy EinbeckerEdward Ira ElisbergRobert Gene EttelsonVictor Herbert FinkCharlotte Marie FordRobert FreedmanDorothee FriedlanderHerbert Norman FriedlanderHerbert Irving GoldstoneRaymond Dennis GoodmanEleanor Goodrich HammerEleanor Anne HartzlerRobert Welton Hemenway Robert George HigginsJohn Marshall HowensteinPaul Barton JohnsonWilliam Harper JohnstonLouise LandmanLucile Carolyn LapidusSaul LevinJoseph Solomon LevingerJulian Scott LorenzPaul Francis LorenzErcole MottaViacheslaw Alexander NedzelMelvin Micklin NewmanStewart Irvin OostDaniel OrloffRichard Howard OrrSamuel QuitmanCharles Hubert RaethBaxter Key RichardsonJoseph Alfred Rider David Larry RubinfineHenry Leonard RuehrCalvin Parker SawyierHarry SchaffnerWalter SeloveLeopold Julius ShapiroEleanor Clara ShliferIrene Mary SperosAndrew Frank StehneyLaura Lucretia TolstedNeal Vander LaanJ ames Earl WalshCharles William WegnerBernard Ben Zion Weissbourd.J ack Blue WelchonsMarie Bertie WilliamsLester WinsbergSamuel W olfensteinPhyllis Genevieve WrightTHIRD YEAR HONOR SCHOLARSSelected for high scholastic achievement in the comprehensive examinations in the collegePaul Arthur Baumgart Walter John Hipple, Jr. Walter James RockIerThomas Brill Joshua Zalman Holland Herbert Edward RubenVincent John BurkeMarian Jay CastlemanArthur Charles ConnorJ ames Bonar DialFrances Marguerite EngelmannAllen Sander FoxDave FultzNorman Nathan GreenmanFrank Joseph Harrison, Jr. Helen Diane IsenbergJoshua JacobsLorenz Fred Koerber, Jr.Ernest Stern LeiserMorton Harry LeonardHyman Philip MinskyAaron NovickDavid Mitchell PletcherGeorge Greer Rinder J ames Alan SchoenbergerEsther Eleanor SchummJohn Frederick SpeckAlice Louise TerwilligerElmer Beaumont TolstedEvon Zartman V ogt, Jr.Sol WexlerKenneth Eugene WilzbachDIVISIONAL HONOR SCHOLARSSelected by the departments for excellence in the work of the first three yearsBetty Lois Ahlquist, Romance Lan- Mary Elizabeth Grenander, English John Francis McNellis, Geologyguages and Literatures Norman Maurice Kaplan, Robert Scott Miner, ChemistryElizabeth Samantha Austin, Economics Jane Morris, Home EconomicsChemistry V. Claire Kercher, Walter Porges, HistoryJohn Arnold Bolz, Physics Home Economics Dorothy Shawhan, MusicSusan Ann Elliott, Psychology John Albert Lacey, Oriental Lan- Robert Willson Stokley,J ames Bruce Engle, guages and Literatures Political SciencePolitical Science Ralph Eunegen Lapp, Physics Bruno von Limbach, ZoologyAlexander Lawrence George, John Longini, Psychology Francis Louis Wilson,Division of the Social Sciences RoJ:OPQ Nealy McKean, Economics Anthropology-46-Miecislaus Sebastian Bielawski,ChemistryJohn Peter Britz, Romance Lan­guages and LiteraturesYale Brozen, EconomicsRayna Louise DeCosta,Home EconomicsLeonard Morton Edwards,PsychologyIrving Arthur Gordon, Economics GRADUATE HONOR SCHOLARSFrances Louise Greenfield, EnglishCynthia Anne Hawkins,MathematicsMilancie Hill, HistoryLuana Myrtle Kekkonen, RomanceLanguages and LiteraturesBartholomew Anthony Maina,ZoologyLeo Rohert Melcher,Bacteriology and Parasitology Joseph Rosenstein,Political ScienceLeo Seren, PhysicsIsobel Sklow, AnthropologyFrederick George Smith ChemistryHarry Madison Smith, ZoologyWilliam Burton Sowash, HistoryShirley Ann Star, SociologyAnna Elizabeth Wehman, EnglishHONORABLE MENTION FOR EXCELLENCE IN THE WORK OF THE COLLEGE FOR THEYEAR 1938-39:Robert Leonard AdelmanPaul Arthur BaumgartLuther Earle Birdzell, Jr.Mary Georgia BlanchardThomas BrillVincent John BurkeMarian Jay CastlemanArthur Charles ConnorJane Alice DalenbergJ ames Bonar DialWilliam Alexander EarleFrances Marguerite EngelmannDonald LeRoy FabianAllen Sander FoxHugh Allen FrankFave FultzNorton SydneyGinsbergBerniceGlicksonMarjorie Evelyn GrahamNorman Nathan GreenmanSamuel John GuyFrank Joseph Harrison, J 1'.Walter John Hipple, Jr.William Jay Hochman George Greer RinderWalter J ames HecklerAndrew RomanyakAnne RowellHerbert Edward HuhenMarjorie Bea SchlytterJ ames Alan SchoenbergerEsther Eleanor SchummEleanor Clara SchliferPaul William SieverRobert Gordon SmalleyJohn Frederick SpeckJohn Paul StevensAshton B. TaylorAlan Joseph TeagueAlice Louise TerwilligerElmer Beaumont Vost, Jr.Sof WexlerJesse Ernest Wilkins, Jr.John Eric WilsonKenneth Eugene WilzbachSamuel W olfensteinElizabeth Parker WrightIrvin ZelitzkyAndrew Louis HoekstraJoshua Zalman HollandErwin William HornungViola Minnie Doyle HowardHelen Diane IsenbergJoshua JacobsAlfred Jerome KahnMarvin KernesRobert Emil KoenigLorenz Fred Koerber, Jr.Wilbert Sam KurnickAlice Marie LaPertErne.st Stern LeiserMorton Harry LeonardRolf Werner LevyJoan LonginiTed Rudolph MafitAaron Benjamin MandersAdaline Nicoles MatherWalter Roy MillerHyman Philip MinskyAaron NovickDavid Mitchell PletcherWalter PorgesJ ames Lloyd RayMembers elected to the Chicago Chapter of the Orderof the Coif on nomination of the Law School for highdistinction in the professional work of the Law School:Irving Irmas Axelrad Ritchie Gilruth Davis Aaron LevyPaul McClung Barnes John Alfred EcklerMembers elected to Beta of Illinois Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha Fraternity for excellence in the workof the Junior and Senior Years in the School of Medicine of the Division of the Biological Sciences:Horace Martin Gezon Robert Charles Hunter William Keirn KuhlmanElmer Walter Haertig Abraham Judah Kauvar Ruth Elizabeth MoultonViolet Olive Horner. Ralph Emile Kirsch Eugene Alvin Wiege-47-Members elected to Beta of Illinois Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha Fraternity for excellence in the workof the Junior and Senior Years at Rush Medical College:Abraham Isaac BraudeRalph Gordon BrownEdward E. CannonGeorge Thorwald RudolphFahlundRichard Aldrich ForneyClay Briscoe Freudenberger Helen HardenberghLeo Rogers HawkesHenry Seymour KaplanArthur Jerome KovenEdward Lawrence LadenSidney Richard LashRosemary Nelson Julie Etta OlentineRaymond Wilbert PolkRobert Frazer RushmerHoward Bruce ShrevesIrvin S. SiglinHoward Randolph WoldThe Nu Beta Epsilon Scholarship Cup, for Excellencein the First Year of Professional Work in theLaw School, Is Awarded toWalter J. BlumThe Howard Taylor Ricketts Prize for Research mBacteriology Is Awarded toGeorge Hartley, Jr.The Harry Ginsburg Memorial Prize in the Depart­ment of Physiology Is Awarded toDaniel Hedgcox CahoonThe Benjamin Rush Wledal and Prize for Excellencein Medicine Are Awarded toRichard Phillips MorrisThe Milo P. Jewett Prize for Excellence in. BibleReading Is Awarded toWilliam Nelson HawleyThe John Billings Fiske Prize in Poetry Is Awarded toElizabeth Lucile SchoeningThe Noyes-Cutter Prize, for aIt Essay Showing Profi­ficiency in the Common Dialect Greek of theNew Testament, Is Awarded toAlbert Leland JamisonThe David Blair McLaughlin Prize for Excellencein the Writing of English Prose Is Awarded toSamuel W olfensteinThe Medal of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of theFrench Republic for the Highest Distinction in theComprehensive Examinations in French for theBachelor's Degree Is A warded toJohn Peter BritzThe Jeanne D'Arc Medal of "Le Lyceum," Societe desFemmes de France a New York, for Proficiency in theFrench Language Is Awarded toHugh McCulloh Davidson The Theodore Lee Neff Prize for Excellence in theStudy of French Language and LiteratureIs Awarded toSidney James BeHanneseyThe Carl Schurz Memorial Foundation Prize to anUndergraduate for Outstanding Scholarshipin German Is Auarded. toDieter DuxThe Susan Colver Rosenberger Educational Prize,for a Dissertation Reporting the Results of OriginalResearch in the Field of Sociology; Is Awarded toLolagene Con visThe William A. Bond Medal for the Largest Numberof Points in the Outdoor Conference Track MeetIs Awarded toRobert Edwin CasselsThe Conference Medal for Excellence in Athleticsand Scholarship Is Awarded toRobert Edwin CasselsThe Charles H. Sergel Drama Prize for the Best PlaySubmitted to the University of Chicago Is Awarded toCarl AllensworthThe Civil Government Prize for Excellence in thePolitical Science Section of the ComprehensiveExamination in the Introductory Course in the SocialSciences Is A warded toIst-J ack Blue Welchons 2nd-Saul Levin3rd- Walter John Hipple, Jr.The Lillian Gertrude Selz Scholarship for the First­Year Woman Ranking First in the ComprehensiveExaminations of the College Is A warded toDorothee Friedlander-48-H o nor s •o C I e t •I e s " IJ1, (,'" ,;" (,,1 �!, (,f,1 fJ:, (," ,1" (,, fJI, (,f) ,i(, (,�I ,,1" :,f,' rJ,', ", "" "�, �I, ", "" ," "I, I,�! �,'� ," ,:" ,�, �," "f,' ),I'� "" r., ", f,1:, ",I �Ir, 1," �'� "" '):'\ (�)n ,!(, (�""),"�,(�f,':,)';''�NU Ruth BrodyNatalie ClynePI Janet GeigerMargaret HutchinsonSIGMA Martha HutchinsonThelma IselmanAreta KelhleMarjorie KuhBetty NewhallRuth NeuendorfferMartha SteereLaVerne TessNu Pi Sigma is the honor societyfor senior women. Election is hasedon participation in activities. Miss Ballwehher,Faculty Advisor-50-OWLANDSERPENTJ ames Anderson Charles MacLellanJohn Anderson William MacyAlan Bond Charles O'DonnellJohn Culp Russell ParsonsJohn Davenport - Charles PfeifferEmil Hirsch Robert ReynoldsMartin Levit Harry ToppingFrederick Linden Robert Wasem Owl and Serpent is the honor so­ciety for senior men. Election isbased on participation in activities.-51-Top Row: Vogt, Traeger, Wilson, Aronson, WallisBottom Row: Wiedeman, Tillery, Stevens, BexHarold AronsonIRON John BexMASK Robert BoyerJohn DoolittleWilliam HochmanRobert HowardLouis LettsCharles PercyJohn StevensDale TilleryLawrence TraegerBaird WallisDave WiedemannDon WilsonIron Mask is the honor society forjunior men. Election is based onparticipation in activities. Milton WeisEvon Vogt�52-Winston AlsopWalter AngristArthur BethkeJoel BernsteinMalshall BlumenthalRobbin BuerkiJack CampbellDan DeeverAllan DreyfussJay FoxRohert GreenhergChester HandRichard HimmelJerome HollandNeil JohnstonRohert KiheleWalter LoebJohn LevinsohnKenneth MacLellanWilliam NelsonEarl RatzerWilson ReillyRohert ReynoldsBaxter RichardsonRohert SmalleyAndrew StehneyRohert ThorburnClayton TraegerFrederick WangelinPaul Zimmerman-53- SKULL ANDCRESCENTSkull and Crescent is the honor societyfor sophomore men. Election is hasedon participation in activities.Top Row: Thorburn, Fox, Alsop, SmalleySecond Row: Himmel, Waugelin, Johnston, Buerki,LevinsohnThird Row: Dreyfuss, Hand, Reynolds, CampbellFourth Row: Reilly, Deever, Ratzer, AngristFifth Row: Blumenthal, Stehney, Kibele, Zimmerman,DonianBottom Row: MacLellan, Traeger, Bethke, NelsonCLASS OF1940THE UNIVERSITY OF JERRY ABELSONChicagoBusinessPi Lambda PhiTreasurer of Interfraternity Council4; "C" Man 4; Political Union 3;Daily Maroon 2; BaseballVIVIAN ABRAHAMSHighland Park, IllinoisBusinessComadROGER W. ACHHamilton, OhioSocial ScienceSocial Committee 3, 4; RefugeeAid 3Transferred from Hamilton College,Clinton, N. Y.ROY M. ACKERChicagoBiological SciencesAlpha Tau OmegaEVA ADAMChicagoBiological SciencesSettlement I; Chapel Union 1, 2,3, 4; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; BillingsVolunteer 1, 2, 3, 4JACQUELYN AEBYOak Park, IllinoisHumanitiesMaroon 1; Pulse 2; Billings V ohm­teer 2, 3, 4; YWCA 3THOMAS D. AHERNChicagoLawCalvert Club 3, 4; Junior Bar Asso­ciation 3, 4Transferred from Herzl Junior Col­legeCHICAGOU LAS SBETTY AHLQUISTChicagoHumanitiesYWCA 1,2,3; Chapel Union 1, 2, 3;Student AideMORRIS ALLENProvidence, Rhode IslandBusinessEllis Student Cooperative, President3; Board 3; Basketball 1, 2, 3JAMES OTIS ANDERSONChicagoSocial ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonOwl and Serpent; Iron Mask; Sen.ior Class Council; Dolphin Club 1,2, 3, 4; Blackfriars 1, 2; FreshmanOrientation 1, 2, 3, 4; Committee 4;Publicity Board 1,2; Swimming 1,2,3, 4, Captain 4; Waterpolo 1, 2, 3,4SOL APPLEBAUMChicagoLawNu Beta EpsilonBar Association 3, 4; Hillel 4Transferred from Wright JuniorCollege, Chicago, IllinoisWALTER J. ATKINSTulsa, OklahomaSocial ScienceAlpha Delta PhiDramatic Association 1; Tennis 1, 2,3, 4; Football 4MARIANA ATWILLChicagoBiological ScienceYWCA 1,2, 3, 4; College Cabinet 2ANNETTE AXELRODChicagoBiological SciencesDaily Maroon 2, 4; Upper ClassCounselor 2, 3 o FDOROTHY BALMERChicagoHumanitiesWyvernTransferred from University ofIllinoisCHARLES R. BARTONMuncie, IndianaBusinessFootball 1CLINTON BASLERWashington, D. C.BusinessKappa SigmaBlackfriars 1; Sophomore Manager2; Camera Club 2Transferred from the University ofHawaiiEDWARD B. BATESLexington, MissouriBusinessPhi Delta ThetaTransferred from Wentworlh Mili·tary AcademyMIRIAM A. BAUERChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from University of Wis·consinSIDNEY J. BE·HANNESEYChicagoHumanitiesGerman Club 2, 3,4; Chapel Union3, 4; Italian Club 2, 3; CalvertClub 3, 4JAMES G. BELLMinneapolis, MinnesotaSocial SciencesPsi UpsilonBaseball 1, 3, 4; W,·eslling 2 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF BILLIE BENDERChicagoBusinessPhi Delta UpsilonYWCA Cabinet 1, 2, 3; Secretary­Treasurer of "C" Club 3; Secretaryof Comad Club 4; Honor HockeyTeam 1, 2JOHN WYLLIS BERNHARDTChicagoSocial SciencesAlpha Delta PhiStudent Publicity Board 1, 2, 3, 4;Intramural Staff 1, 2, 3; FreshmanOrientation Committee 3, 4; Home­coming Committee 3, 4; Owl andSerpent 4; Swimming and WaterPolo 2, 3, 4; Co-Captain of WaterPolo Team 4KATHERINE BETHKEChicagoSocial ScienceQuadranglerPulse 1; WAA 1, 2, 3; YWCA Cab­inet 2; Tarpon Club President 2;BWO Secretary 3Transferred from Miami UniversityIRWIN J. BIEDERMANSt. Louis, Mo.BusinessPi Lambda PhiBusiness Manager of Pulse 3 4ROBERT RAMSEY BIGELOWChicagoMedicinePhi Delta ThetaBand 1, 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Associa­tion 1, 2, 3; Chairman of FreshmanOrientation 4; Student Marshal; So­cial Committee 4; Basketball 2, 3ELLEN BIRKETTPeoria, IllinoisBiological SciencesChi Rho SigmaTransferred from Frances ShimerJunior CollegeWILLIAM BOHNHOFFLaGrange, IllinoisBusinessSigma ChiGolf 4Transferred from Lyons TownshipJunior CollegeCHICAGOU LAS SALAN B. BONDChicagoMedicineBlackf.riars 1, 2, 3; Abbot 4; Mirror3, 4; Dramatic Association 2, 3, 4Transferred from Wooster CollegeMURLE BORCHARDTHammond, IndianaHumanitiesAlpha ChHfhetaYWCA 3,4EVELYN BORGSTROMChicagoBiological ScienceTransferred from W rig h t JuniorCollegeWILBUR H. BOUTELLFlint, MichiganBusinessPhi Kappa PsiEDGAR MICHEL BOWMANChicagoLawWig and RobePolitical Union 1, 2; American Stu­dent Union 1; Jewish Student Foun­dation 2, 3ROBERT M. BOYERChicagoBusinessALICE ANN BRISKINChicagoHumanitiesGerman Club 3; American StudentUnion 4; Jewish Student Founda­tion 2, 3; Hillel League 4 o FMARIE BROCKWAYDeansboro, New YorkBiological ScienceChapel Union 1, 2; YWCA 1RUTH BRODYDes Moines, IowaHumanitiesDaily Maroon 1, 2, 3; Board ofControl 4; Student Aide; BWO 4;NuPi SigmaRAY W. BRONEZChicagoSocial ScienceBasketball 1, 3; Intramural Basket­ball 4M. VIRGINIA BROWNShaker Heights, OhioSocial ScienceYWCA I, 2, 3, 4; Maroon 3, 4; Capand Gown 3, 4; Pulse 4CARROLL WELLES BROWNINGChicagoBiological ScienceTrack 2; Wrestling 3MARY BURTHinsdale, IllinoisSocial ScienceTransferred from Carleton CollegeWILLIAM CALOGERATOSCicero, IllinoisSocial ScienceOrder of the "C"; Varsity Baseball2, 3; Co-Captain 4 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF BETTY CALDWELLOak Park, IllinoisBiological SciencesChi Rho SigmaMirror 1,2; Student Publicity Board1. 2, 3; Federation 2, 3, 4; Cap andGown 1N. HARRY CAMP, JR.Des Moines, IowaSocial ScienceTrack 1JOHN CARLBORGChicagoBusinessTransferred from Wi Iso n JuniorCollegeJACK J. CARLSONGlendale, CaliforniaSocial ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonInterfraternity Council, Vice-Presi­dent 4; Dormitory Council 2, 3;Orientation Committee 3; Football1; Wrestling 1, 2JAMES B. CHARLTONChicagoBusinessSigma ChiBasketball 1; Varsity Basketball 4Transferred from Wilson JuniorCollege, Chicago, IllinoisVIRGINIA MAY CLARKChicagoHumanitiesSpanish Club Secretary 3, President4; University Choir 1,2,3NATALIE A. CLYNEJoliet, IllinoisHumanitiesQuadranglerStudent Publicity Board 2; StudentSettlement Board 2. 3; Student So­cial Committee 3; President FosterHall 3; Nu Pi Sigma 1; Mirror 1, 2CHICAGOU LAS SMERRY COFFEYWheaton, IllinoisHumanitiesWyvernYWCA 3, 4; DA 3; Choir 3, 4;Mirror 3Transferred from Elmhurst CollegeLEAN ORE COHNChicagoBiological ScienceSEYMOUR KAY COHNChicagoPhysical ScienceUniversity Scouting Club Treasurer4; Representative to American Chern­ical Society 3, 4; Pulse 4; TransferOrientation 4; Intramural Basketballand Tennis 4Transferred from W rig h t JuniorCollegeRAYMOND GWIN COLVERT, JR.Ardmore, OklahomaBusinessPhi Delta ThetaPolitical Union 3, 4; Rifle Club3, 4; Civil Aeronautics; IntramuralTouchball and BasketballTransferred from CulverVICTOR C. COOKReddick, IllinoisBusinessROBERT G. CORBETTChicagoLawKappa SigmaBlackfriars 1; Maroon 1; Skull andCrescent 2; University Bar Associa­tion 3, 4HARRY CORNELIUSOak Park, IllinoisSocial SciencePhi Kappa PsiMaroon 2, 3; Board of Control 4;Campus Peace Council 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 1, 2, 3, 4; American StudentUnion 2, 3; Water Polo 1; Intra­mural Swimming 2, 3, 4 o FEVLYN JUNE COVERChicagoBiological ScienceChi Rho SigmaDramatic Association 1, 2; Fresh·man Counselor 2; Mirror 1, 2; RifleClub; Transfer Orientation 2, 3, 4;YWCA College Cabinet 1Transferred from the University ofArizonaG. DENIS COWANChicagoHumanitiesChoir 1, 2, 3,4; Collegium Musieum2, 3, 4; Baseball 2, 3, 4DAVID C. COXChicagoBusinessWrestling 1, 2BARBARA CHADWICK CRANEChicagoHumanitiesIda Noyes Council 3 ; Executive Com­mittee 4; Student Social Committee4; BWO 4Transferred from Rockford CollegeCHARLES E. CRANEChicagoLawDelta UpsilonPolitical Union 3, President 4; Fresh­men Orientation Committee 4; Hey­nolds Club Council 4; AmericanStudent Union Council 2; Maroon2, 3; Wrestling 3; Chapel Union 2,Board 3; All-Campus Peace Council,Vice-President 2, 3COURTENAY CROCKER, JR.Boston, MassachusettesPhysical ScienceAmerican Student Union 1; ChapelUnion 1; Courtier 2; FreshmanCounselor 3GEORGE CROWELLAlmond, WisconsinPhysical ScienceDelta UpsilonWrestling 2 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF JOHN F. CULP IIIForty Fort, PennsylvaniaPhysical ScienceSigma ChiStudent Marshal; InterfraternityCouncil 3, President 4; Blackfriars 1MARY CURTISEvanston, IllinoisBiological ScienceInterclub Executive Council 4; Mir­ror 3, 4Transferred from Connecticut Col­lege for WomenRAYMOND E. DANIELS, JR.ChicagoBusinessPsi UpsilonBlackfriars 1,2; Baseball 1; Tennis 3JOHN DAVENPORTCedar Rapids, IowaSocial ScienceAlpha Delta PhiFootball 1,2,3, Co-Captain 4; Track1, 2, 3, Captain 4; Iron Mask; Owland SerpentNEDDA E_ DAVISCopenhagen, DenmarkSocial ScienceWyvernIda Noyes Council 1, 2; Tarpon 3ROBERT BERNARD DAVISChicagoHumanitiesDelta UpsilonCap and Gown 1, 2; Pulse AssistantEditor 3, 4; Political Union 3, 4;Transfer Orientation 4DOROTHEA DEFFENBAUGHChicagoSocial ScienceAlpha EpsilonYWCA 4; Chapel Union 4Transferred from Grinnel CollegeCHICAGOU LAS SEILEEN HAZEL DE JONGHospers, IowaBiological ScienceJAMES W. DENNYCharlotte, North CarolinaSocial ScienceSigma Alpha EpsilonTransferred from Elon CollegeJAMES STUART DESILVA, JR.San Mateo, CaliforniaBusinessPhi Delta ThetaReynolds Club Council 3; TransferOrientation 4; Track 4Transferred from San Mateo JuniorCollegeDEBORAH DORFMANChicagoSocial ScienceALBERT DRIGOTChicagoBusinessDelta Sigma PiJOHN DUNKELChicagoBiological ScienceReynolds Club Council 4; AlphaZeta Beta 4; Baseball 2, 3DOROTHY EATONChicagoSocial ScienceYWCA 1, 2, 3, Vice-Prestdent 4;Chapel Union 1, 2, 3, 4; LaborProblems Council o FFREDERICK ELKINAtlantic City, New JerseySocial ScienceASU 1; Chapel Union 3; DebateUnion 1; Sociology Club 3, 4; Co­operative Services Club 3, 4SUSAN ELLIOTTChicagoSocial ScienceTriotaPeace Council 2, 3; Maroon Busi­ness Staff 2; Political Union 2, 3;Transfer Orientation Board 3, Secre­tary 4; Refugee Aid Council 3, 1Transferred from Mills CollegeNORMA JANE EPPENSChicagoHumanitiesYWCA 1, 2; WAA 1; DA 2; ArtClub 4; Mirror 3, 4; Daily Maroon1; Chapel Union 1ELISE ROBERTA EPSTEINChicagoBusinessTransfer Council 2, 3, 4; ComadClub 3, 4; Daily Maroon 2Transferred from Northwestern Tlni­versityELIZABETH ESSINGTONChicagoHumanitiesYWCA 1; Chapel Union 1; Choir 1;Daily Maroon 1; Cap and Gown 1Transferred from the University ofCalifornia at Los AngelesVIOLA F ARMAKISMason City, IowaHumanitiesGermanics Club 3, 4Transferred hom Mason City JuniorCollegeRALPH B. FEARINGOak Park, IllinoisPhysical ScienceKappa SigmaDramatic Association 1 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF MAURICE FEDOTINChicagoLawOrder of Wig and Robe 3, AssociateJustice 4; Intramural Touchball 3HELEN FERDERBERChicagoSocial ScienceTransfer Counselor 2Transferred from H. Sophie New­comb CollegeEDWARD REED FERRISSSt. Charles, IllinoisBusinessPhi Kappa PsiBlackfriars 2; Track 2Transferred from Williams CollegeEUGENE FERNANDEZPuerto RicoBiological ScienceZoology ClubTransferred from the University ofPuerto RicoDOUGLAS FEUERMANChicagoPhysical ScienceChapel Union 4; Reynolds ClubCouncil 4; Blackfriars 4PEARL FISHERChicagoSocial ScienceJewish Student Foundation Council2, 3, 4, Vice-President 3; SociologyClub 4C. CHRISTINE FLANAGANChicagoBusinessDelta SigmaComad 3, 4; Rifle Club 3CHICAGOU LAS SSUSANNE M. FLOODChicagoHumanitiesDelta SigmaCalvert Club 3, 4Transferred from Rosary CollegeHELEN B. FINNEGANChicagoHumanitiesDelta SigmaHospital Volunteer 3; Art Club 4Transferred from Mundelein CollegeJOYCE L. FINNEGANChicagoHumanitiesAlpha Chi ThetaYW CA 1, 2, 3, 4; Tarpon 1; Fresh­man Counselor 4; Interclub Coun­cil 4ETHEL FRANKChicagoSocial SciencePolitical Union 1, 2; Chapel Union2; Hillel League 4RICHARD THOMAS GADDWallingford, ConnecticutDivinityTransferred from Colgate UniversityGEORGE E. GARVEYBronxville, New YorkSocial SciencePsi UpsilonBlackfriars 1, 2, 3; Freshman Coun­selor 2, 3; Track 1, 2JANET LOUISE GEIGERChicagoSocial ScienceSigmaInterclub Council Chairman; SeniorClass Council; Nu Pi Sigma; Stu­dent Settlement Board 2, 3, 4; IdaNoyes Council 2, 3, 4; BWO 1, 2,3, 4; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; Mirror 1,2, 3; Viee-Preaident 4; Upper ClassCounselor 2, 3, 4; Cap and Gown2, 3; Student Aide o FMARION .GERSONChicagoHumanitiesMaroon 3, 4; Chapel Union 3, 4;Student Social Committee 4; Po liti­cal Union 4Transferred from Wellesley Co llegeDOROTHY B. GILESChicagoHumanitiesMACK GILSTRAPArkansas City, KansasSocial ScienceRICHARD L. GLASSERIndianapolis, IndianaBusinessZeta Beta TauPresident, Freshman Co u 11 C il 1Maroon 1, 2; Skull and CrescentChairman of Interfraternity Ball 4·Fencing 3, 4WALTER GLASSNERChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Her zl J u n i 0 rCollegeBETTY GLIXONChicagoHumanitiesFreshman Counselor 2, 3, 4; Fed­eration Board 3, 4JOHN EDWARD GOESChicagoSocial ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonBlackfriars 1, 2, 3 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF WILLIAM LAWRENCE GOLDFlagstaff, ArizonaSocial ScienceTransferred from the University ofArizonaJULIAN R. GOLDSMITHOak Park, IllinoisPhysical ScienceZeta Beta TauMAY GOMBERGChicagoBiological ScienceJOAN MARIE GOODWILLIEChicagoHumanitiesQuadranglerMirror 3; YWCA 3; BasketballTransferred from St. Mary of theWoods CollegeJEAN GORELaSalle, IllinoisHumanitiesPi Delta PhiPulse 3, 4; YWCA 3, 4; CalvertClub 4; Tarpon 4; WAA 1, 2; Bas­ketball 3Transferred from La Sa Il e-Pe r u­Oglesby Junior CollegeMARY-ELIZABETH GRENANDERChicagoHumanitiesYWCA 1, 2; Tarpon 2; Maroon 1, 2;W AA 2, 3, 4; Les Escrimeuses 3, 4;Student Aide; "C" Club 3, 4; Fenc­ing 3,4NELLA VERONICA GRIFFINChicagoSocial SciencePi Delta PhiMirror 1; YWCA L 2, 3, 4CHICAGOU LAS SMARY M. GRILLSRiverdale, IllinoisPhysical ScienceAlpha Chi ThetaYWCA 1, 2; Math Club 2, 4Transferred from Denison UniversityWILLIAM H. GRODYSyracuse, New YorkSocial ScienceZeta Beta TauMaroon 1, 2, 3; Board of Control 4;Blackfriars 1; Student PromotionBoard 2LOIS GUSTAFSONChicagoHumanitiesDelthoCap and Gown 1SVEA GUSTAFSONChicagoSocial ScienceTarpon 1, 2, 3, 4; WAA 1, 2, 3, 4;YWCA 4VERNER G. HAAGChicagoBu�inessJOHN K. HAASChicagoBusinessPhi Gamma DeltaWrestling 1, 2, 3Transferred from Denison UniversityAIMEE M. HAINESFlossmoor, IllinoisSocial SciencePi Delta PhiMaroon 1; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; Cab·inet 3; Chapel Union 1, 2, 3, 4;Freshman Counselor 2, 3, 4 o FJOHN ARTHUR HALGRENHinsdale, IllinoisPhysical ScienceTransferred from Elmhurst CollegeMARY CAROLINE HANESChicagoSocial ScienceEsotericMirror 2, 3; Board 4JAMES W. HARDINGMontoursville, PennsylvaniaBusinessPhi Kappa SigmaOrientation Committee 3Transferred from Williamsport·DickinsonROBERT H. HARLANFreeport, IllinoisLawAlpha Delta PhiUniversity Band 1, 2; Orchestra 1, 2RAYMOND P. HARRISChicagoLawPhi Sigma DeltaHAROLD HARTChicagoHumanitiesRUTH HAUSERMilwaukee, WisconsinHumanitiesQuadranglerChapel Council 1 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF BETTY HAWKChicagoSocial ScienceWyvernIda Noyes Council 3, 4; YWCATransferred from Rockford CollegeJEANNETTE B. HEFFRONChicagoSocial ScienceModern Dance Club 1; SociologyClub 4NEIL HELLERChicagoSocial ScienceUniversity Singers 2; Varsity Base­ball 2, 3, 4; Choir 2, 3, 4; Intra­mural Swimming 2CHRISTINE HENRYCrawford, NebraskaBusinessTransferred from Long Beach JuniorCollegeNORMAN C_ HERROMilwaukee, WisconsinSocial ScienceCourtier 2, 3; Dorm Council 2, 3;WrestlingTransferred from the University ofWisconsinSOPHY HESSChicagoBiological ScienceVINCENT PAUL HOLLANDERNew York CityBiological ScienceCHICAGOU LAS S o FHAROLD HOLMBOE, JR.ChicagoBusinessDelta UpsilonTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollegeLOIS HOLMESOak Park, IllinoisHumanitiesQuadranglerTransferred from Northwestern Uni­versityCARL HONZAKBerwyn, IllinoisHumanitiesChoir 3; Collegium Musicum 3 4Transferred from Morton JuniorCollegeJEAN B. HOODWINChicagoSocial ScienceHillel 3, 4; Maroon 3, 4; SSAUndergraduate Club 4Transferred from the University ofSouthern CaliforniaLOIS HORLICKChicagoBiological ScienceEsotericTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollegeJANE HORWICHChicagoSocial SciencesBWO 4; Tarpon 2"; Freshman Coun­selor 2, 3, 4JOHN EDWARD HURNEYChicagoBusinessFreshman Baseball TeamTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollege MARGARET HUTCHINSONWinnetka, IllinoisPolitical ScienceMortar BoardStudent Publicity Board 1, 2, 3;DA 1, 2, 3; Board Member 4; Mir­ror 1, 2, 3, President 4; InterclubCouncil 4; BWO 4; Upper ClassCounselor 4; Nu Pi SigmaMARTHA HUTCHINSONWinnetka, IllinoisHumanitiesMortar BoardMirror 1, 2, 3, Board 4; FederationBoard 3, 4; BWO 4; Upper ClassCounselor 2, 3, 4; DA 1, 2, 3,Treasurer 4; W AA Board 3; Nu PiSigmaTHEODORE H. HYMENChicagoBusinessZeta Beta TauTransfer Orientation 3, 4; Pulse 3;Associate Business Manager 4Transferred from Northwestern Uni­versityTHELMA ISELMANLaPorte, IndianaBusinessDelta SigmaYWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; WAA 2; RifleClub 1, 2; Aide; Federation 3, 4;BWO 4; Board of Social Serviceand Religion 4; Interclub Council4; Chapel Union 1, 4EILEEN STANZA JACKSONChicagoHumanitiesNegro Student Club, Secretary 4;YWCA, First Cabinet 3, 4; Federa­tion 2WARREN JAMESChicagoBusinessMARGARET JANSSENChicagoSocial SciencePi Delta PhiMaroon 1; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 4; Interclub Council 4 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF MARION JERNBERGChicagoHumanitiesMortar BoardMirr-or 3,4; Upper Class Counselor 4Transferred from Carleton CollegeWINNIFRED JESSEMANBettsville, OhioBiological. ScienceYWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; Chapel Union1, 2, 3, 4CHARLES ALBERT JOHNSONChicagoSocial SciencePhi Kappa SigmaTransfer Counselor 3; InterfraternityCouncil 3; IntramuralsTransferred from Northwestern Uni­versityROBERT ERNEST JOHNSONChicagoBusiness SchoolPhi Kappa PsiSkull and Crescent; FootballROBERT E. JORANSONChicagoBiological ScienceDelta UpsilonARTHUR A. JORGENSENChicagoSocial SciencePsi UpsilonIron Mask; Tennis 2, 3, 4; Basket­hall 3, 4LILLIAN KAMENChicagoBiological. ScienceMaroon 3; Counselor 2, 3CHICAGOU LAS SJOAN KAMMERERChicagoBiological ScienceWyvernChoir 1; Racquet Club 1, 2; Basket­ball 1, 2BUNDHIT KANTABUTRABangkok,ThailandBusinessThai Alliance of America; Instituteof Pacific AffairsTransferred from Northwestern Uni­versityRUTH JUNE KATCHERSt. Louis, MissouriBiological. ScienceDebate Team 4; Pulse 3Transferred from Washington Uni­versityHELEN ARETA KELBLESt. Joseph, MichiganHumanitiesStudent Aide; Cap and Gown 1, 2, 3,Co-Editor 4; Ida Noyes Council 2, 3,Chairman 4; DA 1, 2, 3,4; Mirror1, 2; Federation Board 3, 4; DailyMaroon 1; Choir 1, 2; Nu Pi Sigma;YWCA 1, 2, First Cabinet 3; BWO4; Anderson Society 1, 2; UpperClass Counselor 2, 3, 4HARRIETTE-LOU KEMPChicagoBusinessComad, Vice-President 3, 4V_ CLAIRE KERCHERPark Ridge, IllinoisBiological ScienceFreshman Orientation 2; YWCA 2VERNON L. KERNSMemphis, TennesseeBusinessKappa SigmaTransferred from SouthwesternCollege o FGERALDINE KIDDWinnetka, IllinoisPhysical SciencePhi Delta UpsilonUniversity Orchestra 1, 3; ChapelUnion 1, 2; Choir 2, 4JOANNE KIRCHERChicagoSocial SciencesQuadranglerPsychology ClubTransferred from the University ofNew MexicoPAULEEN DUNN KIVLANEvanston, IllinoisHumanitiesSigmaPulse 3, 4; ASU 4; Mirror 3, 4Transferred from Frances ShimerJunior CollegeLOUISE KLIBANOWChicagoSocial SciencesOrchestra 2, 3; Collegium Musicum4; USF 2, 3; Hillel 4NORMAN KOGANChicagoSocial SciencesSymphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Ten­nis Team 3, 4JOHN KOTSELASChicagoHumanitiesJACK R. KRONEMYERChicagoPhysical ScienceBand 1, 2, 3; Cap and Gown 3;Camera Club I 9 ( 0THE UNIVERSITY OF ROBERT EDWIN KRONEMYERChicagoSocial ScienceBand 1, 2, 4; Freshman Council 1;Political Union 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 1, 2, 3, 4; PulseLORRAINE KRUEGERChicagoSocial ScienceFederation of University Women2, 3; Jewish Student FoundationSecretary 1; Chapel Union 1MARJORIE HELEN KUHMarinette, WisconsinHumanitiesQuadranglerChristian Science Organization 1, 2,3, Secretary 4; Settlement Board1, 2, 3, Chairman 4; YWCA 1, 2,3, 4; Chapel Union 3; DramaticAssociation I, 2; Mirror 1, 2; SocialCommittee 3, 4; BWO 4; StudentAide; Nu Pi SigmaJOSEPHINE LADENSONChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Lawrence CollegeWILLIAM W. LAIBLINChicagoLawMARGARET MARY LANEChicagoMedicineTransferred from the University ofIllinoisLA VERNE LANDONChicagoHumanitiesAlpha Chi ThetaCalvert Club 2, 3, 4CHICAGOU LAS SWILLARD LASSERSChicagoLawLaw Review 4Transferred from the Lewis InstitutePHILIP RUTTER LAWRENCEChicagoLawPhi Delta ThetaMaroon I; Dramatic Association 3,4; Bar Association Council 3, 4;Law Review Staff 4ANDREW LEONASChicagoBusinessMaroon I; Swimming Team 4MARTIN LEVITChicagoBiological ScienceFreshman Orientation Committee 4;Secretary of Iron Mask; Owl andSerpent; Student Marshal; Co­Captain of Baseball Team 4LEONORE LEVYChicagoBiological ScienceTransferred from Northwestern Uni­versityKORDYAN LEWANDOWSKIChicagoSocial ScienceStudent Forum 3; Political Union 3, 4Transferred from Wright City JuniorCollegeBARBARA S. LEWISChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from the University ofIllinois o FALBERT PAUL LILEKChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollegeFREDERICK WILLIAM LINDEN, JR.Moline, IllinoisSocial ScienceAlpha Delta PhiDA 1, 2, 3, President 4; Iron Mask;Owl and Serpent; Stndent SocialCommittee 4; Student PublicityBoard 2, 3; Student Settlement Board2, 3, 4; Blackfriars 2; FreshmanOrientation Committee; WashingtonProm Committee; Mirror; Choir;Homecoming Committee; Track an ICross CountryJOAN LONGINIChicagoBiological ScienceChapel Union 1, 2; ASU 2, 3MARION J. LOTTOrlando, FloridaSocial ScienceEsotericMirror 2, 3; Upper Class Counselor3; Dramatic Association 3MILTON A. LUBINChicagoBusinessPhi Sigma DeltaBlackfriars 3; Campus Newsreel 3MARGARET LUTZMinneapolis, MinnesotaLawTransferred from the University ofMinnesota and Stephens CollegeANNE MACDOUGALChicagoHumanitiesQuadranglerTransferred from Rockford College 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF CHARLES F. MACLELLANChicagoBusinessPsi UpsilonIntramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Social Com­mitteeWILLIAM WRAY MACYAdel, IowaPhysical SciencePhi J):appa PsiIntramural Board 1, 2, 3, 4; Fresh.man Orientation Board 4; DolphinClub 2, 3, 4; Interfraternity Council;Owl and Serpent; Water Polo 2,3,4MARION T. MAGEEBennington, NebraskaPhysical ScienceTransferred from the University ofNebraskaA. STANLEY MARTINOak Park, IllinoisSocial ScienceTransferred from Yale UniversityDAVID E. MARTINChicagoHumanitiesMaroon 2, 3; Chairman of the Boardof Control 4; Student Forum 4;Blackfriars, ·Author of Show 4Transferred from Wabash CollegeCHARLES T. MASON, JR.Joliet, IllinoisBiological SciencePhi Delta ThetaTransfer Counselor 4Transferred from Joliet J uni 0 rCollegeMARY LUE McCLELLANDChicagoHumanitiesAlpha Chi ThetaChristian Science Organization 2, 3,4CHICAGOU LAS SW. A. McCORMACK, JR.Knoxville, TennesseeBusinessKappa SigmaTransferred from the University ofTennesseeCHARLES FREDERICK McCOYAtchison, KansasLawDelta Tau DeltaTransferred from the University ofKansasELSIE McCRACKENShanghai, ChinaBusinessPi Delta PhiBusiness School Council 3; W AA3, 4; Chapel Union 4; VarsityHockey 3,4; Tennis Championship 3Transferred from Colby JuniorCollegeDONALD F. McDONALDChica go Heights, IllinoisMedicineBlackf.riars 1; Symphony Orchestra1, 2; Fencing 1, 2, 3, 4HARRY T. McMAHONChicagoSocial ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonMirror 4; Football 2, 3Transferred from DartmouthBRUCE BUNDY MEADGainesville, TexasBusinessPhi Gamma DeltaTransferred from Gainesville JuniorCollegeMARCELLAMENACKERChicagoHumanitiesTriota o FMARY JANE METCALFEScarsdale, New YorkBusinessAlpha EpsilonChapel Union 2, 3; Pegasus 2, 3, 4;YWCA 3; Interclub Council 3ALICE IRENE MEYERChicagoHumanitiesMaroon 2, 3; Board of Control 4;DA 1, 2, 3; Mirror 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 1, 2, 3; ASU 1, 2; SURUTH GROMAN MEYERSHammond, IndianaBiological ScienceQuadranglerTransferred from NorthwesternDOROTHY MILESChicagoSocial ScienceSigmaCap and Gown 1, 2, 3; YWCA 1, 2,3, 4; Mirror 1, 2ROBERT S. MINERChicagoPh.ysicai ScienceChapel Union 1, 2, 3, 4; CampusNewsreel 1; Band 1, 2, 3, 4; Fresh·man Orientation Committee 4JEROME E. MOBERGJamestown, New YorkDivinityPhi Gamma DeltaChapel Union 1, 2, 3; Chapel UnionBoard 1, 3; Pulse 1; Reynold's ClubCouncil 3, Secretary-Treasurer 4;Freshman Counselor 2, 3; Badmin­ton Club 3; Blackfriars 1, 2, 3;Transfer Orientation 2, 3, 4DANIEL MOMENTOak Park, IllinoisSocial SciencePhi Sigma DeltaASU 4; Rifle Team 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF FRANCES MONSONChicagoBusinessDelta SigmaRifle Club 1; YWCA 4; Gomad 3, 4EFFIE VIOLET MORBERGChicagoBiological ScienceComad Club 3, 4Transferred from W rig h t JuniorCollegeJANE MORRISChicagoBiological ScienceSigmaInterclub 3; Mirror 3, 4; Tarpon 4;WAA 4; YWCA 2, 3HARRY MOSKOW, JR.ChicagoSocial SciencePhi Sigma DeltaHillel 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 3JAMES H. MURRMarquette, MichiganSocial SciencePhi Delta ThetaDA 2GORDON L. MURRAYWestern Springs, IllinoisBusinessPhi Delta ThetaBand 1; Blackfriars 1, 2; Intra­murals 1, 2; Freshman Counselor2, 3,4SAM A. MYAR, JR.Memphis, TennesseeLawTransferred from the University ofVirginiaCHICAGOU LAS SJANE MYERSChicagoHumanitiesEsotericMirror 1, 2, 3, Board 4; StudentSocial Committee 4; Interclub Coun­cil 3, 4RAYMOND KING MYERSONChicagoBusinessPhi Sigma DeltaJewish Student FoundationTransferred from Oberlin CollegeWALTER E. NAGLERChicagoBiological SciencePhi Kappa SigmaGymnasticsINEZ NELSONDeKalb, IllinoisSocial ScienceRUTH NEUENDORFFERNorth Tarry Town, New YorkSocial SciencePhi Delta UpsilonW AA 1, 2; Secretary-Treasurer ofTarpon 2; YWCA 1, 2, 3, President4; Student Settlement Board 3, 4;Chapel Union Board 2, 3, 4; PeaceCouncil 1, 2; Labor Problems Coun­cil 4; BWO 3, 4; Nu Pi SigmaMARILEE NIMSChicagoBiological ScienceSigmaMirror 1; Cap and Gown 2; YWCA1, 2, 3, 4; W AA 1, 2; Hockey Team1; TarponRICHARD NORIANChicagoBusinessPhi Sigma DeltaSkull and Crescent 2; Iron Mask 3;Jewish Student Foundation 1, 3;Freshman Orientation 1, 3; SeniorManager of Intramural; Senior JobCouncil; Tennis 2, 3, 4 o FCHARLES H_ O'DONNELLGary, IndianaPolitical SciencePhi Kappa PsiMaroon 3; Blacldriars 3; Board ofSuperiors 4; Homecoming Chairman4; Owl and Serpent; Chapel Union3; Political Union 3Transferred from the University ofNotre DameMARGUERITE BEROSE OWINGSKeuka Park, New YorkSocial ScienceDelta SigmaYWCA 1, 2; Chapel Union 1, 2, 3;DA 1; Freshman Council 1; PeaceCouncil 1, 2, 3, 4; Debate Union 1;Fellowship of Reconciliation 3, 4JOHN H_ PALMERChicagoBiological SciencesPsi UpsilonBlackfriars 1, 2, 3, 4; SettlementBoard 2, 3, 4; Football 1, 4;Hockey 3, 4PIERRE S_ PALMER, JR.Rock Island, IllinoisSocial ScienceStudent Forum 1, 2; Debate Man­ager 3, President 4RUSSELL J_ PARSONSDavenport, IowaLawPsi UpsilonSkull and Crescent; Iron Mask;Owl and Serpent; Student PublicityBoard, Chairman; Student Marshal;Football 1, 2, 3, 4; Track 1, 2, 3MARTHA LOUISE PEARSONKansas City, MissouriSocial ScienceDelta SigmaTransfer Counselor 4Transferred from Kansas City Jun­ior CollegeROBERT HUGH PEARSONFairfield, ConnecticutBusiness SchoolPhi Kappa SigmaTransfer Orientation Committee 3Transfer from Junior College ofConnecticut 1 9 4 0rTHE UNIVERSITY OF ALFRED PF ANSTIEHLHighland Park, IllinoisPhysical ScienceChi PsiBand 1, 2, 3, 4; Camera Cluh 2, 3;University Newsreel 3CHARLES W. PFEIFFERRacine, WisconsinMedicinePsi UpsilonStudent Head Marshal; Chairman ofSenior Council; Reynolds CluhCouncil 3, President 4; PoliticalUnion, Secretary-TreasurerWALTER E. PHILLIPSChicagoBusinessRadio CluhTransferred from Wright JuniorCollegeNAOMA PINKERTChicagoSocial ScienceSYLVIA PINSKYChicagoHumanitiesWALTER PORGESChicagoHumanitiesMORTON S. POSTELNEKChicagoPhysical SciencePhi Sigma DeltaUndergraduate Chemistry Clnh 4;Blackfriars 1, 2, 3, 4; Scouting Club4; Jewish Student Foundation 1, 3;Track 1CHICAGOU LAS SHARVEY POSVICChicagoPhysical ScienceWrestlingTransferred from Morton Junior Co·1legeJOSEPH W. PRACHTRiverdale, IllinoisBusinessChapel Union; Baseball 1; SocialDancing 3, 4LEONARD PRESKILLChicagoSocial ScienceLambda Gamma PhiUniversity Singers 1JOHN PUNDERSONRochester, MinnesotaPhysical SciencePhi Delta ThetaRadio Club 1, 2, 3; Camera Club2, 3, President 4; Cap and Gown2, 3; Freshmen Orientation 4MARY C. H. QUIRMBACHSt. Paul, MinnesotaBiological SciencesRifle Club 1, 2, 3, 4JANE RASMUSSENWestern Springs, IllinoisHumanitiesPi Delta PhiYWCA 3, 4; Chapel Union 3, 4;German Club 3, 4; Poetry Club 4;Transfer Counselor 4; ModernDance Club 3Transferred from Lyons TownshipJunior CollegeLILLIARD M. REAMSChicagoSocial ScienceTransferred from Chicago ChristianCollege o FCHARLES A. REIDChicagoBusinessPsi UpsilonWater Polo; Swimming TeamTransferred from the University ofTexasWILLIAM R. REMINGTONChicagoPhysical ScienceBeta Theta PiBand 1, 2, 3, 4SELMA RENSTROMChicagoHumanitiesAlpha Chi ThetaChapel Union 2, 3, 4; YWCA 2, 3,4; Freshman Counselor 3; TransferCounselor 3Transferred from Oak Park JuniorCollegeMARIAN RENTSCHSandusky, OhioSocial ScienceDelta SigmaYWCA 2, 3; Rifle Club 2; Fresh­man Counselor 3, 4CHARLOTTE REXSTREWChicagoSocial ScienceYWCA 1, 2, 3, 4, Cabinet 1, 2;Chapel Union 1, 2, 3. 4; Cap andGown 1, 2; Mirror 1, 2ROBERT G. REYNOLDSTopeka, KansasSocial SciencePhi Kappa PsiSkull and Crescent 1; Student Pub­licity Board 1, 2, 3; Student SocialCommittee 4; Washington PromCommittee 3; Owl and Serpent 4;Senior Council 4; Leader of Wash.ington Prom 4; President of PhiKappa Psi 4; Freshman Orientation4; Basketball 1; Tennis 2, 3ANNE RICKCORDSChicagoHumanities 1 9 ( 0THE UNIVERSITY OF HELEN FLARSHEIM RITTERCincinnati, OhioBiological ScienceJUNE L. ROBERTSChicagoBusinessAlpha EpsilonYWCA 1, 2, 3, 4; Interclub Coun­cil 4ARTHUR C. ROCKOak Park, IllinoisBusinessTransferred from Oak Park JuniorCollegeMELVIN A. ROSENFELDChicagoPhysical SciencePhi Sigma DeltaPhoenix 1; Blackfriars 1, 2; Skulland Crescent; Washington PromCommittee 3; Treasurer Student So­cial Committee 4; Freshman Or ien­tation Committee 3, 4PAUL W. ROTHSCHILDChicagoLawPhi Epsilon PiBar Association Council 3, Treas­urer 4Transferred from the University ofIllinoisGILBERT ROTHSTEINChicagoBusinessPhi Sigma DeltaPresident of Hillel 3WALTER ROTHSTEINChicagoBusinessPhi Sigma DeltaCHICAGOU LAS SDAVID A. SALZBERGChicagoPhysical SciencePi Lambda PhiDaily Maroon 2, 3; Freshman Coun­selor 3; Senior Placement Council 4SONYA SAMMELChicagoSocial ScienceChristian Science Organization 3, 4;YWCA 3, 4; Art Club 3,4Transferred from Wright JuniorCollegeKENNETH PAUL SANOWChicagoSocial ScienceHillel 4; Economics Club 3, 4; Ad­vanced Dancing 3, 4Transferred from Wright JuniorCollegeMIRIAM SCHAFMA YERChicagoSocial ScienceWyvernYWCA 3, 4; Sociology Club 3, 4;Interchurch Council 4; Chapel Un­ion 3, 4Transferred from Cornell CollegeEMILY LOUISE SCHERERChicagoBiological ScienceAlpha Chi ThetaVERA SCHROEDERWausau, W,isconsinBiological ScienceDelta SigmaRifle Club 3; YWCA 3JACK SCHUBERTChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Central YMCACollege o FALBERT SCHULMANChicagoBusinessHillel League 4; Intramural Base­ball and BadmintonWALTER WILLIAM SCHWIDERSKIChicagoBusinessAlpha Tau OmegaFootball 1, 2REBECCA SCOTTChicagoHumanitiesWyvernBWO 22; Ida Noyes Council 2, 3,4, Secretary 2; YWCA 1, 2, 3, 4;Interclub Council 4; Mirror 2,_ 3MRS. ADDIE SEENEYChicagoHumanitiesTransferred Irem Crane Junior Col­legeLOUIS M. SHAPERAChicagoLawBand 1; Jewish Student Foundation2; Hillel League 4; Wig and RobePHYLLIS SHAPIROChicagoHumanitiesDOROTHY SHAWHANChicagoHumanitiesSigmaMirror 1, 2; Cap and Gown 1;Upperclass Counselor 2, 3; Cham­bel' Orchestra 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF LILLIAN SHEFFNERChicagoSocial Service AdministrationAvukahTransferred from Lewis InstituteEDWARD C. SHILENSKUSHarvey, IllinoisBusinessAlpha Tau OmegaCHARLES VICTOR SHOSTROMChicagoSocial SciencePsi UpsilonTennis 1, 2, 3, Co-Captain 4; Stu­dent Marshal 4PATRICIA SHRACKChicagoSocial ScienceDelta SigmaStudent Aide 4; Cap and Gown 1,2, 3, Co-Editor 4; YWCA CollegeCabinet 1, 2, First Cabinet 3, 4;Upperclass Councelor 2, 3; W AA 1;Ida Noyes Council 1SIDNEY S. SIEGELChicagoHumanitiesTransferred from Wright JuniorCollegeCLARENCE WILLIAM SILLS, JR.ChicagoSocial ScienceDelta Kappa Epsilon.Dramatic Assocbiation 2, 3, 4; IronMask 3; Intramural Department 3MORRIS L. SILVERMANChicagoLawPhi Sigma DeltaBlackfriars 2; Freshman Counse­lor 3Transferred from the University ofArizonaCHICAGOU LAS SJEAN SILVERSTEINChicagoSocial Service AdministrationTransferred from the University ofIllinoisMARILYN SINGERChicagoBiological ScienceChoir 1, 2; ASU Theatre Group 2,3GLENN W. SLADEChicagoBusinessDaily Maroon 1; Dramatic Associ­ation 1, 2, 3; Mirror 1, 2; Rifleand Pistol Club 1, 2, 3, President4; Rifle 1, 2, 3, Captain 4BERNARD L. SLOANChicagoBusinessPhi Beta DeltaRANDOLPH SNIVELYChicagoSocial SciencesKappa SigmaASU 1, 2, 3, Chairman 2; RefugeeAid Committee 3CAROLINE E. SOUTTERMinneapolisSocial ScienceDelta SigmaChapel Union 1; YWCA 1, 2; W AA1,2,3,4; C Club; BWO 3; Upper­class Counselor 2, 3JOSEPHINE SPAMPINATOChicagoPhysical ScienceSpanish Club 1; Choir 1, 3, 4;Mathematics Club 3, 4 o FWILLIAM S�ECKLansing, MichiganLawStudent Forum 1, 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 2; Swimming 1, 2,2 3, 4;Student MarshalKENNETH HERRICK SPONSELGary, IndianaMedicineDelta Kappa EpsilonSkull and Crescent; Iron Mask;Student Settlement Board; CrossCountry 1, 2, 3; Track 1, 2, 3LOIS E. SPOONERChicagoHumanitiesDelta SigmaUniversity SymphonyTransferred from Oberlin CollegeDONALD STILLMAN STANDENCleveland Heights, OhioHumanitiesPhi Delta ThetaCARL SEATON STANLEYTopeka, KansasSocial ScienceAlpha Delta PhiSenior Job Council; Intramurals 2,3, 4; Basketball 2, 3, 4ADA STEELEChicagoHumanitiesEsotericSymphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4; Dra­matic Association; Transfer Or-ienta­tion CommitteeTransferred from Oberlin CollegeMARTHA STEEREChesterton, IndianaHumanitiesDelta SigmaDramatic Association 1, 2, 3; Inter­club Council 3; Cap and Gown 1;YWCA 1,2,3,4; BWO 3, Chairman4; Nu Pi SigmaTransferred from Pine Manor Jun.ior College 1 9 4 0THE UNIVERSITY OF MELVIN STEINChicagoBusinessTransferred from Wilson JuniorCollegeCARL EDWARD STEINHAUSERChicagoHumanitiesBand 2, 4; Orchestra 3; ChristianYouth League 3, 4; E and R Club3, 4; Deutsche Geselschaft 2, 4Transferred from Wilson JuniorCollegeMAYER STERNChicagoHumanitiesPi Lambda PhiHillel League 2; Track 2MARJORIE JANE STRANDBERGChicagoSocial ScienceQuadranglerMirror 3; YWCA 3; BasketballTransferred from Oberlin CollegeELVIN SUKYSChicagoLaw SchoolPhi Alpha DeltaTransferred from George William,;CollegeSTANFORD KING SWEANYChicagoPhysical ScienceTransferred from Wright JuniorCollegeLEONARD SWECWestern Springs, IllinoisPhysica:l ScienceTransferred from Lyons TownshipJunior CollegeUHIUAGOC LAS SLOIS HAY SWISHLERLogansport, IndianaBiological SciencesInterchurch Council 2, 3, 4; ChapelUnion 2, 3Transferred from Indiana UniversityMARGERY TANNERKankakee, IllinoisBiological ScienceJournal Club 4Transferred from MacMurray CollegeNICHOLAS T. TAPP, JR.ChicagoSocial ScienceDelta UpsilonDaily Maroon 1; Skull and Crescent2; Blackfriars 1, 2, 4JOANNE TAYLORGreenwich, ConnecticutSocial ScienceMortar BoardMirror 1, 2; Dramatic Association1; Student Publicity Board 2; Capand Gown 1; Upperclass Counse­lor 3ALICE TERWILLIGEREast Cleveland, OhioPhysical ScienceYWCA 1 2; Chapel Union 1, 2;Ellis Student Club 2, 3LAVERNE MORJORIE TESSChicagoSocial ScienceNuPi SigmaStudent Head Aide; YWCA 1, 2;2Ellis Cooperative 3, 4; Ida NoyesCouncil 3; Circule Espanol 1, 2;Chapel Union 2, 3ELSIE TEUFELChicagoBusinessPi Delta PhiChapel Union 3; Tarpon 3 4,;YWCA 3; President Comad Club 4;Secretary of Stndent Council 4 o FEMIL P. THELENWood River, NebraskaBiological ScienceAlpha Tau OmegaTransferred from Creighton Univer­sityCOLIN G. THOMASMonticello, IowaMedical SchoolAlpha Delta PhiWrestling 1, 2, 3, Captain 4WILLIAM A. THOMASChicagoBiological ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonBlackfriars 3, 4 ; WrestlingHELEN J. TOMLINSONOak Park, IllinoisHumanitiesEsotericTransfer orientation 4Transferred from Mount HolyokeCollegeHARRY FRANKLYN TOPPINGKankakee, IllinoisBusinessAlpha Delta PhiMaroon 1,.2,3, 4, Business Manager4; Owl and Serpent; Student Mar­shal; Iron Mask; Skull and Cres­cent; Freshman Counselor 2, 3 ;Student Publicity 2; Golf 2, 3, 4;BasketballBONNIE TURNBULLChicagoBiological ScienceQuadranglerCap and Gown 4; Comad Club 3,4; Chapel Union 3Transferred from Morgan Park Jun.ior CollegeCORA E. TURNERManhattan, IllinoisPhysical ScienceTransferred from Joliet TownshipJunior College, Joliet, Illinois I 9 4 0JEAN DAVIDA TURNERChicagoSocial ScienceVice-President of Hillel Founda­tion 4Transferred from John MarshallCollegeCARLOS URIBEPereira, Colombia, South AmericaBusinessHENRY W ALLBRUNNChicagoBiological ScienceSymphony Orchestra 1, 2, 3, 4MARSHALL S. WALLERCharleston, MissouriPhysical ScienceTransferred from Wright JuniorCollegeRALPH McCOLLUMChicagoBusinessAlpha Delta PhiDolphin Club 1, 2, 3, President 4;Blackfriars 1; Freshman Counselor2, 3, 4; Debate Union 3; Swimming1, 2, 3, 4ROBERT WASEMFort Dodge, IowaSocial ScienceAlpha Delta PhiOwl and Serpent; Iron Mask; Skulland Crescent; Football 1, 2, 3, Cop­Captain 4; Track 1, 2, 3EDNA ISABEL WEBERChicagoSocial ServiceTransferred from Lawrence CollegeWILLIAM O. WEBSTERDonia, MichiganBiological ScienceWrestling KATHRYN H. WEINBERGHighland Park, IllinoisHumanitiesTransferred from University of Illi­noisSAUL WEISMANAurora, IllinoisSocial ScienceZeta Beta TauBoard of Social Service and Reli­gion 4; Political Union 3, 4; Avu­kah 3, 4; Maroon 1; All-CampusPeace Council 1, 2; Hillel League1, 2, 3, Chapel Union 2, 3, 4ESTHER WEISSChicagoBusinessTriotaRUTH WEISSMANChicagoSocial ScienceCAROLYN JOAN WELLSFrankfort, KentuckyBusinessComad Club 4; W AA 4KATHERINE LOUISE WELLSChicagoBiological ScienceSigmaUpperclass Counselor 4; Daily Ma­roon 1RICHARD E. WHEELERHermosa Beach, CaliforniaSocial ScienceDelta Kappa EpsilonSenior Job Council; Football 1, 2,3, 4ELLA L. WIENERMontreal, CanadaSocial ScienceSecretary of Sociology Club 4Transferred from McGill UniversityROSEMARY FRENCE WILEYMaywood, IllinoisHumanitiesYWCA 2ERNEST J. WILKINS, JR.ChicagoPhysical ScienceKappa Alpha PsiBETH WILLIAMSHammond, IndianaPhysical ScienceAlpha Chi ThetaInterclub CouncilTransferred from Marshall CollegeCATHRYN WILLIAMSChicagoBiological ScienceWyvernPhotography ClubTransferred from Rockford CollegeMURIEL WILSON,ChicagoSocial ScienceHillel League 4; Mirror 4Transferred from University of Wis·consinROSEMARIE C. WINKLERColumbus, NebraskaBiological ScienceTransferred from the University ofNebraskaWILLARD WOEHLCKChicagoBiological ScienceSigma ChiEUGENIE WOLFChicagoHumanitiesTriota HAROLD PERRY WRIGHTChicagoSocial ScienceDelta UpsilonCap and Gown 2, 3, Publisher 4;Political Union, Chairman of Lib­eral Party 3; Dramatic Association2,3TEIJI YOSHIMURAAiea, Dahu, T. H.BusinessJapanese Student ClubTransferred from Waseda Univer­sity, Tokyo, JapanELISE YOUNGChicagoBiological ScienceQuadranglerTransferred from Carleton CollegeRUTH HOPE YOUNGChicagoPhysical Science�,' TriotaModern Dance Club 3 ; WorkshopDance Group 2; American StudentUnion 2, 3; Volunteer Service 1, 2WALTER X. YOUNGChicagoBusinessPhi Kappa PsiCap and Gown 1, 2, 3, BusinessManager 4; Band 1 ; Wrestling 1, 2,3,4IRWIN ZATZChicagoLawANNA R. ZELLICKLewistown, MontanaSocial ScienceTransferred from the University ofWashingtonHELEN B. ZORNOWRiverdale, IllinoisSocial ScienceYWCA 3,4; WAA 3; Racquet Club3,4YEAR IN REVIEW. .AthleticsYear in ReviewATHLETICSLeft, above - Co-captain 1939, BobWasem. Left-John Davenport, Co­captain 1939. Above, right-Jay Ber­wanger. Lower left-Chuck McGuire,also All American.WE LOOK BACKThe afternoon of Saturday, Octoher 21, 1939, was a dismalone for the Chicago Maroon football team, for on that other­wise sunny day, Tom Harmon and his Michigan cohortswhipped Chicago to the tune of 85 to o. Immediately after themassacre, Bobhy Hutchins invaded the locker room and quietlypromised the hoys that something would be done. Little didthey guess that he was speaking prophetic words.But the prophecy came true, and something was done. Onthe night of Decemher 31, 1939, the Board of Trustees, headedhy Mr. Harold H. Swift, announced to the unsuspecting publicthat they had voted to aholish intercollegiate football as a partof the athletic program of the University of Chicago. No defi­nite reasons for the action were given at the time. Commentspro and con were flung far and wide, petitions were circulated,and other forms of action were threatened. The opinions of the-92-FOUR QUARTER MENstudents, the majority of whom were out ofthe city for the holidays, were quite diversified.Gradually, however, the bewildered studentbody came to realize that the decision wasdefinite and would not be changed.Whether or not abolishing football was agood thing, only time can tell. The fact thatChicago, a school esteemed for its football tra­dition, should no longer conduct the sport waspretty much of a shock to everyone. The deci­sion brought back fond memories of Maroonfootball greats such as Eckersall, Des J ardiens,Wally Steffen, "Fritz" Crisler, and Jay Ber­wanger among others; memories of Amos AlonzoStagg and his small but powerful squads whocaptured more undisputed Conference cham­pionships than any other Big Ten School; mem­ories of tremendous crowds that made Staggfield buss with enthusiasm. All these are gonenow, but will not be forgotten.Besides bringing back many memories, theaction of the trustees also aroused much doubtJohn Davenport, Bob Wasem, Richard Wheeler,Don Wilson, Kenneth Jensen, Louis Letts.as to what will be done with the football facil­ities of the University. Prominent questionswere, "What will be done with Stagg Field?";"What will happen to Head Coach ClarkShaughnessy?"; and above all, "What actionwill be taken by the freshman football squad,which was publicized as one of the best to gracethe Midway in the last decade?" One of thesedoubts was erased when Coach Shaughnessysigned a five-year contract to become Directorof Football at Leland Stanford University inCalifornia. There was much talk of turningStagg Field into an Intramural playground, andvarious rumors concerning the freshman foot­ball squad were also heard around campus.Perhaps those who were most affected by theaction said least about it. They are the men whoplayed on the University of Chicago footballteam. Picked by a sports writer, Henry Mc­Lemore, as the only true All-American team inthe country because of their amateur standing,these men played football for the fun of the-93-game and not because of any personal gain.The amateurism of the team was reflected inits record throughout the 1939 season-the worstrecord ever compiled by a Maroon football ag­gregation. While scoring only 37 points againsttheir opponents' 308, Chicago won two gamesout of eight, both of them against smallerschools who play the same brand of footballas the Maroons did. Top Row: Basile,Hector, Romney, Mc­Mahon, Walker, Leach,Tropp, Bach, MetcalfThird Row: Anderson,Jensen, Kimball, Jam­polis, Adelson, Beeks,Atkins, Woolams, Steh­ney, Bob A. Miller,Dean, GiblerSecond Row: Blumer,Nyquist, Palmer, Kel­ler, Wilson, Scott, Ot·termeyer, Rendelman,Weiss, Grinbarg, Ki·bele, Bob C. Miller,Shaughnessy.Bottom Row: Louns­bury, Richardson,Howe, Wheeler, How­ard,Davenport, Wasem,Maurovitch, Wallis,Stearns, Parsons, LettsLed by two co-captains from Iowa, John Daven­port and Bob Wasem, the 1939 Maroons showedan undaunted spirit of loyalty to the last man.The end positions were taken care of by basketeersRichardson and Loushury, and the tackles hy DonWilson and Hugh Rendleman. Performing at theguard positions were Ken Jensen and WalterMaurovich. Dick Wheeler, blond giant from Cali­fornia, held down the center post.-94- Top Row: Kosacz,Fitzgerald, Moynihan,Weinberg, Ivy, Furda,Nedvar, Mustain, Rai­man, Meyer, Gwinn,Evans, Silhermam.Third Row: Nicola,LaBuda, Paresi, Hat­tenherger, Stenberg,Turean, Dodd, Jacob­sen, Heller, Cutshaw,Hansen, Dra-ke, Nor­gren.Second Row: Berwan­ger, Beaubien, Thomp­son, Sandquist, Moller,Leach, Boyd, Nelson,McKean, Cummins,Armbruster,Oosten­brug, Basich, Derr.Bottom Row: Sahlin,Von Henke, Monaghan,Humphreyville, G Ia t­man, Durkee, Naas,Leggitt, Sikora, Bates,Balla, M c K e en, Pal·mer, Jordan.The backfield combination was more or lesschanging from week to week. Besides Davenportand Wasem at the halfbacks, men who saw con­siderable action were R. A. Miller and J ampolisat quarter, Letts, Howard, and Howe at full, andOttomeyer at half.-95- When the bombshellburstwhich rubbed football from the sportcurriculum early last winter, the ex­plosion resulted in several setbacks.Under the direction of Coach WallyHebert, the five-man cheerleadingsquad of the 1939-40 athletic termhad set their goal on the revival of asomewhat dormant school spirit. Theahandonment of the gridiron put adamper on such hopes.With a spirit reinforced hy theirnear extinction the cheerleaders fo­cused upon the basketball crowds.Efforts along the line of cheerleadingfor the coming year will, according toCoach Hebert, be centered about thecage season, and will he in the handsof a smaller group.The five-man coterie of the pastyear was led by Bud Aronson, and in­cluded Charles Brown, Marshall Blu­menthal, Allen Green, and WayneBarlow.Chicago's last eleven gave Maroon cheer­leaders plenty of opportunity for action.Top Row: Busby, VorresSecond Row: Ivy, Jezik, Herro, Weiss, Butler, CernyBottom Row: Moore, Stone, Thomas, Zafros, Pyle, YoungMany sophomoreshelped the Chicago wrestling team of 1940 to enjoya very successful season under the able guidanceof Coach Spyros V orres. The Maroon grapplerswere undefeated in Conference dual competitionand won a large majority of their bouts with non­Conference opponents. However, the dual meetswere not held with any of the stronger Big Tenschools and when the Conference meet was run offat Purdue, Chicago did not qualify a single entrantfor the finals.Captain "Tim" Thomas wrestling in the 145pound class led the team to most of its victories.Tim with two years experience behind him was analmost sure point-getter in every meet. In the 121pound division, senior and minor letterman Walterx. Young won enough of his bouts to qualify fora major letter. Sophomores Carroll Pyle and SamZafros competed in the 128 and 136 pound weightsrespectively and both boys were significant factorsin the team's impressive record. A Maroon matman turns theheat on with a toe hold A Chicago version of theproverbial "squeeze play"Completing the lineup of regulars were BernieStone, Robert Butler, Ralph Moore, and Milt Weissin the 155, 165, 175, and heavyweight classes re­spectively. Moore, another first-year man, was es­pecially known for his body bruising tactics. Withan abundance of material returning next year dueto the large number of sophomores on this year'ssquad along with a couple of very promisingFreshmen, Vorres is looking forward to an evenbetter record next season. And having gained muchvaluable experience this year, Chicago may 'havethe Big Ten title in 1941.Major "C"Robert Butler, Ralph Moore, Carroll Pyle, Ber­nard Stone, Colin Thomas, Walter X. Young,Sam Zafros.Old English "C"Edward Cerny, John Ivy, Milton Weiss.-96-A disappointmentto preseason forecasters was the mediocre per­formance turned in by the 1940 track sqnad.According to Coach Merriam, the bright outlookfacing the team at the beginning of the year wasdimmed considerably by the failure of five of lastseason's point getters to return.Plunging into the dual meet season the trackstersraced through their first two non-conference meets,capturing the scalps of North Central and WayneUniversity runners. Third meet of the season wentto Ohio State and was followed hy a second throw­back in a three way tilt with Purdue and Wisconsin."The bitterest pill of the year," in the opinionof Coach Merriam, was Northwestern's victory, theresult of a default in the relay event. A spill onthe part of a Maroon speedster gave the Wildcatsthis tilt. Substantial revenge was ohtained, how­ever, in the Daily News Meet in which Chicagonosed out the Purple trackmen by a considerabledistance.Approximately fifteen men composed the small­est indoor track squad the University has everturned out. Honors for consistently good perform­ances througout the 1940 term went to CaptainJohn Davenport, 60 yard dash; Hugh Rendleman,shotput; J ames Ray, high jump; and Chet Powell,distance runner. Team. Members:Top Row: Abrahamson, Plumley, Wilner, Caulton,FradkinSecond Row: Merriam, Ratzer, Rendleman, Peyer,Lambert, StabenauBottom Row: Kasius, Ray, Davenport, Powell, Da­vidson, Beatty-97-Splashing their waythrough a nine meet season, University of Chicagoswimmers wound up the current year with a size­able record of five wins and four losses.Sickness both on the part of varsity membersand Swimming Coach McGillivray blanketed earlyseason hopes for a record year. Chicago team vic­tories took place in meets against George WilliamsCollege and North Central College before Big Tencompetition opened. In conference dual meets thesquad swamped Indiana, Purdue, and the Uni­versity of Wisconsin. Two squad leaders, Leo Luckhardt and BohStein, fell victims to the flu epidemic, disappoint­ing Maroon expectations for a medly relay showingin the Conference, and cost the squad the victoryin the Illinois meet.Best showing of the year was recorded hy RalphMcCollum, who capped a championship year witha third place in the Conference 60 yard dash. BohStein, despite illness, donated a neat 63 points forthe year's performance. Jim Anderson, seniorcaptain, suffered only two defeats in the dualtilts, and in turn came through with a Conferencerating of fourth in the 200 yard breast-stroke.Major "C" AwardsJ ames AndersonJohn ArgallJohn BernhardtArthur BethkeCharles Brown Ralph McCollumWilliam MacyCharles PercyJohn StearnsRohert Stein Old English "C"PaullordanWilliam LeachAndrew LeonasLeo Luckhardt Paul SmithJohn SpeckWilliam SpeckAlan Teague-98-Most consistenttitle-holderon the sports roster is the Maroon waterpolo team. A point getter by tradition,this sport attracts more candidates thandid the football team.Under Coach E. W. McGillivray, na­tional leader in the field, the Maroonsquads have succeeded in . establishingthe Big Ten polo crown as property ofthe University for the past five years.This year, due to an attack of pneu­monia, "Mac" failed to carry the squadover the line for a sixth straight. Theteam, without a coach, fitted into sec­ond place only, following the swampingreceived in the 7-4 Northwestern tilt.Swimming Team, Left Below:Top Row: W. Speck, J. Speck, Richardson, Stearns, Luckhardt,Leach, McGillivrayBottom Row: Bernhardt, Argall, Bethke, Capt. Anderson,McCollum, Teague, Brown Water Polo Team, Right Below:Top Row: McGillivray, J. Speck, Luckhardt, LeachSecond Row: Reed, Teague, Florian, Smith, Bethke, ThorburnBottom Row: Percy, Anderson, Stearns, Bernhardt, Macy, Argall-99-In early season practice sessionsThe game with Chicago Teachers Collegebegins the season;Jack Fons takes the ball to score.the 1939-40 Maroon basketball team showed very muchpromise of becoming a first division team in the Big Tenrace. The same outlook prevailed throughout the pre­season games before the Christmas holidays during whichtime the Chicago quintet rang up three easy victories.against teams from Chicago Teachers' College, NorthCentral, and Armour Tech. A new type of offense, center­ing around a double pivot combination and designed espe­cially by Coach Nels Norgren because of his abundance oftall men, was coupled with a tight zone defense inaugu­rated by the Maroons the preceding season to produce apotentially winning team to Chicago fans.At the beginning of the season the starting assignmentswere handed to four cagers each averaging six feet, fourinches in height and a fifth man rising five feet, eleveninches. The advantageous height of this combination wasfurnished by Center and Captain Dick Lounsbury, GuardsArt Jorgenson and Ralph Richardson, and Forward JoeStampf. Carl Stanley, speedy forward, missed the six footmark by one inch. Despite all the appearances of invin­cibility, Norgie's boys met their first reversal on NewYears' Day at the hands of a traveling Mormon crew fromUtah. The loss by a heart-breaking one point margin IIItwo overtime periods however was not as upsetting asmight be supposed because of the outstanding record ofthe western team.The next two games were just as heart-breaking to theMaroon five for they lost one to Wisconsin by two pointsand the next to Illinois by one. While a victory had beenexpected over Wisconsin's "hapless Badgers," the Illinoisteam was supposedly one of the best in the Conference.By this time rooters for Chicago's "hard luck boys" hadcome to expect the worst as they had during the footballseason. Perhaps this was the reason for the team's show­ing during the rest of the season.With two Conference games left to be played the Ma­roons stood at the bottom of the standings with a recordof one win and nine losses. The one win was chalked upagainst Minnesota by a score of 35 to 32. Their record forthe whole season showed five wins as against twelve losses,by all means not the answer to a coach's prayer_-100-Team Members Above:Top Row: Norgren, Geppinger, Sotos, Alsop ,Second Row: Wagenberg, Charlton, Fons, Wilson, ZimmermanBottom Row: Stampf, Richardson, Lounsbury, Jorgenson,StanleyToward mid-season Coach Norgren attempted toadd a little spark to the team's play by introducinginto the lineup four sophomore "pony boys" whoformed the bulwark of the 1938-39 Freshman team.This group was composed of all fairly small boys,but boys with lots of zip and fire. The speediest ofthese men was diminutive forward Paul Zimmer­man, while his running mate at forward, Jack Fons,had lots of drive and a very good eye for shortshots and rebounds. Charlie Wagenberg, secondsmallest man on the squad and one of the best de­fensive men, teamed at the guard position withlong-shot artist Jim Charlton. Undoubtedly the"pony boys" were good and full of fight, especiallywhen playing together, but their inexperience inConference competition kept them from fulfillingNorg's purpose-that of producing a winning bas­ketball team.The original starting five, "the height Brigade," were individually very good hasketball players,but they did not seem to be able to get going as aunit. One of their main weaknesses, and a sur­prising weakness it was, was their inability to re­cover the ball off the backboard. Due to this factthey had control of the ball only a minor part ofthe time and consequently were unable to starttheir offense functioning. One department of thegame in which the Maroons did excel, however,was the free throw department. In many gamesmargins of defeat were made smaller by this par­ticular attribute of the Chicago team. For exam­ple, in the Michigan game, Chicago registered atotal of onlv Iour field goals, but were defeated byonly nine points.Captain Dick Lounsbury was the most seasonedperformer on the whole squad, this being his thirdyear as a cog in the Maroon machinery. "Lonnie's"-101-favorite shot was a one-handed toss from either sideof the basket and in practice he couldn't miss. Buthecause of his size he was very carefully guarded inevery game and consequently hardly ever allowed totake advantage of a set shot. Nevertheless he gar­nered his share of points and was always most dan­gerous when the going was toughest. Dick was atrue captain, cooperating with Coach Norgren to thefullest to keep up the team spirit and to he constantlyon the lookout for things which might improve theteam play.Big Joe Stampf, lanky Junior forward, was theteam's leading scorer. He was a dead shot from any·where inside the free throw circle and especiallycapahle at tipping in rebounds. Joe also led the BigTen in percentage of free throws made; he madeeight out of eight at Ann Arbor. As the middleman in Chicago's zone defense, hespectacled Stampfstopped many opposing passes and made intercep­tions that started the fast-breading offense by whicha majority of the team's points were gained.Tennis-playing Art Jorgenson was the most im­proved player on the squad. A senior this year,"Pellet" seemed to develop more with every game,and towards the end of the season led the team inscoring in several games. Most of his points weremade on a high arching one-handed shot from aboutfifteen feet out.Pairing off at guard with Art was Ralph Richard­son, playing his second year with the Maroons andhaving one year of competition left. When RichrealJy got going he was practically impossible to stop,because he was one of the fastest starters and one ofthe shiftiest men with which Chicago opponents hadto cope.Carl Stanley, senior forward, looked like a midgetcompared to the rest of the starting combination, buthis size did not hinder him in the least hecause hehad plenty of speed to make up for it. One of thehardest workers on the squad, Carl never let down,and whenever there was a scrap for the ball it wasonly natural to see him in the middle.It is hardly necessary to comment ahout CoachGrab it and run, according to the adjoining panel, is thesecret behind high score games. Stampf, Jorgenson, and Stanleyare shown in "the thick of the battle."-102-Nels Norgren who is in his own right a fine athlete,being one of three twelve letter winners at Chicago.Norg is exceptionally well liked by those who playfor him and probably idealized by some. A shrewdmentor and in every sense a gentleman, he instillssomething in his players besides basketball knowl­edge. He teaches them the fundamentals of sports­manship and grafts into them a competitive spiritwhich is long remembered after they have left thescene of their athletic endeavors. Looking forward to the season of 1940-41 thehardwood court in the Field House should seesome excellent basketball. Only three men of thepresent squad will graduate this year and theothers having gained valuable experience duringthe campaign of 1939-40 should present a wellhalanced quintet to Chicago fans next year. Bigthings should he expected esp_ecially from theafore-mentioned "pony hoys." To the team of1940-41 we wish a very successful season.Cage Laurelsfor 1940: Major "C"Arthur JorgensonRichard LounsburyRalph RichardsonJoseph StampfCarl Stanley Charles WagenbergPaul ZimmermanOld English "c"J ames CharltonJack Fons�103-Shanken twins surroundPierre on the flying rings.Team members, below:Pierre, C. Shanken, Degan, E. Shanken, Failey, Robertson.-104- Hard-Luck TeamExperiencing a luckless season, the Ma­roon Gymnastic team of 1940 came throughthe season with a fair record, but in lightof past performances, the record was notan enviable one. The "Muscle Men" werecaptained by Glen Pierre who was ham­pered hy an injury for a large part of theseason, but when he did compete he car­ried the bulk of the attack. Another pairof twins to replace the Murphys in Chicagoathletics competed on this year's gymnas­tics team. They are the Shanken brothers,Earl and Courtney, a pair of sophomoreswho stood out in all meets despite havinghad no previous conference experience.Pierre and the two Shankens did mostof the work on the rings, the parallel bars,the side horse, and the horizontal bar,while Al Robertson took care of the tum­bling. The team seemed to have a lucklessseason because both the captain and thecoach, Dan Hoffer, were unable to activelyengage in their work during the greaterpart of it. Pierre was out with a wristinjnry and Coach Hoffer was confined tohis bed by illness. During the time ofHoffer's sickness, the coaching duties werehandled by Irwin Beyer, Maroon star ofthe past three years.Major "C"Glenn Pierre, Alan Robertson, CourtneyShanken, Earl Shanken.Winning all fourof its games this season, the Maroon hockey teamkept intact its record of never heing defeated ortied in an intercollegiate contest. Three of the fourencounters were won from Armour Tech hy scoresof 4-3, 5-3, and 5-3; in the other game the Long Arrows, a Chicago amateur sextet, were defeatedhy a 6-4 score.All games were played under the north stands ofStagg Field where the Chicago pucksters held regu­lar practice workouts. The team did not enter theLes Dean pushes puck into net for a Maroon tally; Practice beneath the north stands findsmen scrambling for the puck.Big Ten hockey league because it was an informaloutfit as was the Armour squad and did not com­ply with Conference eligihility rules. Freshmenand graduate students played on the team, whichis not allowed under Big Ten regulations.This year's team was successful not only fromthe games-won standpoint hut also from the stand­point that enough interest was shown during the season to have the University plan to enter a teamin the city league next year. The squad was coachedjointly hy Don Hoffer and captain Vern Mooreand outstanding men in the lineup included BohFerguson, Irv Brecher, Ken Cornwall, Les Dean,Stu Bernstein, Bill Elliott, Dave Solomon, and JakePfender. Although these men have received noawards for their efforts, they should he highlycommended for their good work.-105-Paced by a sabre teamthat won consistent victories throughout the season,the Chicago varsity fencing squad successfullydowned all opposition in dual meets, and thenwent on to win its fifth consecutive conferenceteam championship.Under excellent coaching of Alvar Hermanson,coach of the last U. S. Olympic team, the Maroonsdefeated Northwestern, Ohio State, Wayne, NotreDame, Illinois, and Wisconsin before the confer­ence tournament. The battle for the championshipwas extremely close - the last bout decided thewinner as Siever defeated his Northwestern oppo­nent to give Chicago a 16-15 victory.The team that brought the conference champion­ship to the Midway was composed of five seniorsand one junior. Co-captain Alex George and StuartMacClintock composed the foil team, co-captainLoyal Tingley and junior Herb Ruben were theepee fighters, and Donald McDonald and PaulSiever the sabre men. Of this group George, Tingley, and McDonald had conference experiencelast year. Tingley fought in the national fencingtournament in San Francisco in July, 1939, and hereturned with the distinct honor of being the onlyjunior in history to win a national championshipin the epee division. The nation tournament i�open to all amateur fencers. So far, only two uni­versity men have won national titles, one of theseheing Tingley.In the conference tournament, each man duelsfour times, and the sabre team of Siever andMcDonald which had the best team record allseason, won seven of their eight fights. The foilteam won six and the epee team won three of theeight bouts. Siever and George both won all oftheir conference duels.Tingley, Siever, and George took second placesin the conference individual competition, Rubenand McDonald got fourth and McClintock tooksixth. place.Top Row: Giedt, Ruben, Her·manson, McDonaldSecond Row: Reilly, Lewis,Pallis, Richards, StraetzBottom Row: MacClintock,Gladstone, Tin gley, Georg e,Siever, Glasser-106-Major "C" Old English "C" FENCERS BRING UNIVERSITYANOTHER TITLEAlexander GeorgeRichard GlasserStuart MacClintockDonald McDonaldPaul SieverLoyal Tingley Matthew GladstoneJoseph MolkupBenjamin PritzJ ames RichardsHerbert RubenRobert Straetz-107-Inexperienceseems to be the chief threat to a successfulseason for the 1940 Chicago golf team.With only one veteran, Captain HarryTopping, returning, the outlook is nonetoo impressive. Topping has been thenumber one man on the squad for the pastthree years and his presence is the onlyhright spot on the team's horizon.Chuck Tanis, professional at OlympiaFields, continues to coach the Maroon golf­ers. Included in this year's schedule aredual meets with four Conference opponentsand tentative matches with several non­conference schools. The Big Ten meet isbeing held at Ohio State on May 20-21. Thesquad of 1939 also led by Topping wononly two dual meets and finished tenth inthe Conference race. Captain Topping demon.strates proper stance as team­mates Bohnoff, Swec, Wise·ley, and Brunner look on.One thing Maroon golfers will have thisyear that they had never had hefore is theprivilege of playing on one of the finestcourses in the country. It is the Mill Roadfarm golf course which is a part of therecently donated Lasker estate. Two andpossibly three matches are to be played onthis course all with conference opponents.In the first match with Northwestern,Harry Topping shot a thirty-six on thelast nine holes, which certainly merits at­tention on a course as tough as this one.Although positions on the squad arequite indefinite, outstanding candidates areEd Rachlin, Al Wiseley, Frank Brunner,Leonard Swec, Al Schmus, and WilburBohnhoff. None of these men have hadany previous conference competition, how­ever, and unless there is a budding BobbyJ ones in their midst, the team will prob­ably duplicate last year's record.-108-Better than usualwas the seasonal rating of the 1939 outdoor tracksquad due to the high-ranking individual per­formances of several of the thin-clads.In the first meet of the spring dual-tilt season of1939, Chicago was pushed forward by two victories.The Maroon runners trounced their all-time rivals,the Northwestern squad; and Bob Cassells pole­vaulted into the limelight by outdistancing North­western's famed vaulter, Thistlewaite.The cinder team was doomed to disappointmentin the way of establishing a clean slate of wins, butCaptain Cassells, by dint of numerous outstanding practice wins, established a new Big Ten record offourteen feet, two and three-fourths inches. PennState and Western State "came, saw, and con­quered" on Maroon Soil, and DeKalb went downto defeat before Chicago.John Davenport captured a second in the Drakerelays, a position safely above all other Conferencecompetitors. An ankle injury on the day pre­ceding the Big Ten Conference track meet gave"Davvie" only a fifth in the actual tilt. Bob Wasem,junior hurdler, and Hugh Rendleman, sophomoreshot put, discus, and javelin man were also citedfor their high-point seasonal performances.-109-During the long winter months tennis enthusi­asts turn to the indoor clays of the Field Housefor their court activity. Although hampered bybad lighting conditions and crowded by indoortrack men, the tennis team manages to get enough practice during the winter to be in good shape byspring. The courts are good enough to be usedfor various exhibition matches in which such starsas Bobby Riggs and Alice Marble have played.--IlO-Led by co-CaptainsShostrum and Jorgenson, the 1940 Maroon tennisteam is attempting to WID its fourth straightBig Ten championship. These two men are wellsupported by veteran Jim Atkins and sophomoresensation Cal Sawyier who together with BenumFox and Bud Lifton complete the "A" team. Thissquad, although considerably weaker than theracket-wielders of 1939 has an excellent chance tocop another Conference title.Jorgenson and Shostrum have heen throwingrackets at each other since grade school days andare of equal ability, but due to the fact that Art'stime during the winter practice season was takenup hy hasketball, Shostrum fills the number oneberth on the team. Playing together they form thenumber one doubles combination. Sawyier andAtkins hold down the third and fourth singles positions and comhine to follow Tollie and Art indoubles. The remaining rankings are more or lessuncertain because of the potential power of the topthree or four men on the "Boo team, any of whichmay be able to displace Fox or Lifton at the bot­tom of the first team.The 1940 racketeers are confronted by a difficultschedule, but it is a schedule that is really a testof their prowess on the clay courts. Starting off byplaying better than .average small college teams,the Maroons work up to matches with seven toughBig Ten opponents and one match with Notre Dame.The nationally ranked Murphy twins, Chet andBill, led the 1939 squad to one of the most decisivetitles in Conference history. This team won a totalof twenty-five matches out of a possible twenty­seven in the Big Ten meet. If this year's teamwishes to duplicate, they have an outstandingexample to follow.Tennis men match strokes inwinter practice while dodgingbaseballs and track men.-111-With thirty -five men,including five lettermen, reporting for early springbaseball practice, prospects for a successful yearare very good, and coach Kyle Anderson expectsthat the present team will win more than two con­ference games-the record of the '39 squad.There are a number of reasons for the expectedimprovement. Five of last year's regulars are backwith the team again to supply the backbone. Co­captains Levitt and Calogeratos, Abelson, Me­Cracken, and Lopatka are the veterans, and, withCowan and Manders who were reserves last year,these men will form the nucleus of the team.There are also a number of new men that showmuch promise. These include infielders Hershberg,Sotas, and Hurney; outfielders Fons and Reynolds;and catcher Bob Miller. The team as a whole ismuch faster and has more all-around power thanlast year's squad and they should have a more suc­cessful season.Another important fact that points to a betterball club is that there is intense competition forthe positions. This is making the whole team hustleand is giving them a certain fight and spirit thatis necessary to a winning team. Perhaps the keen­est struggle is over the third base job where Mooreand Sotas are making the veteran McCracken reallywork to hold down the hot spot.According to coach Anderson, if the pitcherscome through with some good work, the team willWIll. The pitching staff consists of Lapatka, asouthpaw and only left-handed batter on the team,Bell, Beeks, Garverick, and McCracken, is alsotrying his luck on the mound.Five of the regulars from last year's squad were-1l2-lost through graduation - Co-captains Meyer andKlas, Gramer, Reynolds, and Harlan. The loss ofthese men left vacancies at two outfield positions,first hase, short-stop, and pitcher.At this writing, none of the positions have heendefinitely filled, hut the team will probably line upas follows: Hershberg, first base; Calogeratos,second base; Cowan or Hurney, short-stop; Mc­Cracken, Moore,or Sotos on third; Levitt or Miller,catcher; and the pitchers are Lopatka, Bell, Beeks,and Garverick. The outfield posts are wide openwith Ahelson, Fons, Reynolds, Lopatka, when heis not on the mound, and Leach having a merrybattle for the jobs.The present squad of 1940 will not have to winmany games to better the record made by the team last year. This team was slow, for the most partlacked hatting punch, and the fielding was notconsistent, although good at times. This squadwon only two of their twelve conference games toend up near the bottom of the Big Ten standings.The two games were won from Indiana and Minne­sota, who thus provided only a faint rainhow in anotherwise dark and stormy season.The team showed its lack of power very plainlyhy losing four games hy a margin of one or tworuns. The two games with Iowa went into extrainnings, hut in both cases the boys from the corn­fields won out in the twelfth inning by one run.Northwestern also heat the Maroon squad hy onerun in eleven innings and the othei: close game waslost to Wisconsin hy two runs,-1l3---1l4-W 0 men's A t hie t ius � ,)r, (,� �(�')r, (,� �� ,)I, (,') �I, (,� �(� (,� �l'� �(, I�',) �(, I,� �I' "� �)�II, !�f) f)(, "�) �)('I ,') f,J(� "') �)" (�f,J f,)(, I,') f,Ji I,"f,' 'J, (�') "" r,r; �i, (,�) ,)(, �f,J �(, "�\,')(,,)'"�i,�I�Most uniquefeature of women's athletics at Chicago is the fact that it is entirely voluntary. No gym requirementsmust be fulfilled before degrees are granted; no regular hours spent exercising the body. Despite this fact,women's athletics draw quite a turnout during the year. The girls enjoy such group sports as hockey,baseball, and basketball. The University provides all facilities for these from the very playing fields toexperienced coaches. Dudley field serves as a baseball and hockey grounds, as well as an archery field.Fortunately, these sports are not practiced simultaneously.Individual sports attract most of the women interested m keeping trim. Ida Noyes offers archery,fencing, golf, modern dance, tennis, and swimming, not to mention minor sports such as badminton andBelles of Ida practice ex­ercises supposed to yieldproficiency at modern dance.Bottom Right: Fruit of theexercises is gathered as bal­lerinas "swing into la danse."-116-bowling. Ida Noyes Hall is equipped with a fine swimming pool wbicb is thrown open to both men andwomen on certain days.Interest in tennis has been increased by the addition of Bill and Chet Murphy to the coaching staffand the visit of Mary K. Brown, ex-professional, for a week of classes. Fencing is very popular among thewomen; possibly the excellent coaching has something to do with this. Varsity Coach Hermanson handlesthe job and turns out some very good women fencers each year. Golf also has fair coaching. The facilitieshere are nevertheless limited. Girls must provide their own clubs. Jackson Park is the only course avail­able. Possibly the acquisition of the Lasker estate will remedy this deficiency. However, Dudley fieldserves as a good practice range and a putting green is bandy in the rear of Ida Noyes.Riding instruction is also available at the University. However, horses must be rented from nearbystables at an exorbitant rate and city bridle paths are the only ones in proximity to the campus. Ida NoyesHall is equipped with rather good bowling alleys and instructors but here too the dainty deb must set upher own pins. Nevertheless, the alleys are very popular. BilJiards and pool tables as well as ping-pongtables are also available in Ida Noyes, but furnish no instructors. Strangest sport of all, if it can be socalled, is modern dance. Ida Noyes has a private dance floor in the basement, where women gather withwhatever males can be found; there they undergo instruction in preparation for frequent exhibitions.--II7 -Top: Swordswomen duel in medieval Ida Noyes atmosphere.Bottom: Hermanson's female fencers practice elementary lunges.-1l8-Reureational AutivitiesWomen's RecreationExclusive athletic club at no expense - that'sIda Noyes Hall, girls' recreation center. Limitedto University people alone, the hall is actually ex­clusive and offers such a vari etv of activities thatstudents could easilv devote all their days torecreation.To illustrate, let's watch someone at the club­house. It's a scorching day and she couldn't study-120-much anyway. Twelve o'clock finds our friend inthe pool splashing around. The guard, consideringsplashing of little value, recommends some honestpractice. So with his help, she works on her jack­knife for the next half hour. Then fifteen minutesunder the hair-dryer and she's ready to meet ahypothetical young man for lunch in the CloisterCluh. Scenes aroundIda NoyesBadminton attracts faculty and students many evenings: Cards azain-c-hut this time in the library, mostly Esoterics playing;Marthabelle Bowers takes a lesson in pool from Miss Burns; Chess for those who are able-this time it's John Howensteinteaching Aimee Haines, whose hands alone are visible.After lunch they are apt to bowl a line or shootsome pool together hefore their golf practi�e_scheduled for 2: 30. Then after her shower, lassiedecides that a sun hath on the roof might be finerelaxation. Meanwhile the young man meets someof the fellows for more strenuous bowling with theBowling Cluh. Our friend comes down with aburned nose just in time for a cokeat the Cloister "Corner." The Bowl­ing Club boys instead, take advantageof the mixed swimming hour at hand.One of the young men stays with herto shoot with the Archery Club at--121-5 o'clock. Two g:ids just hack Irornriding join thcm for SUPPC1' at theCloister Club. After supper the new­comers are rcadv for some ping-pongupstairs but our original hiends pre­fer to browse in the lounge and catchup on the month-s magazines. nized as gospel by the Bartlett gymauthorities. Judging from the exten­sive list of activities presented towork-weary students, these officialsare using every appeal of a "red­hlooded" nature to keep students onthe happy side of the line.To wind up the day, t hcres socialdancing at 9:00 and at 10:00. After­wards they all leave without payingtips or signing any memhership hills. With a program beginning at abouteleven o'clock in the morning, theactivity list whirls the bespectacledThe ill effects of the "all-wol'k-and­no-play philosophy has been recog-sports' enthusiast throughout a longday of squash, swimming, handball,and other sports until blisters, scratch­es, and floor-burns turn the scholar toa pug-ugly wreck.Men's RecreationBiggest play of the year followsfreshman week activities. Freddie-122-Freshman, a very verdant young man,suddenly finds an athletic scheduleand is swept into the swing of Bart­lett gym. After a drowsy eleven o'clockBi Sci lecture, Freddie finds his wayinto the pool, determined to shakeoff that sleepy lethargy envelopinghim. During the 1: 30 class Freddiediscovers that sleepy feeling is stillhovering about despite the refreshingnoon-day dip. At 2:30 he is back.He is welcomed into a small basket­ball game, one of several on the floorat the moment. 3 :30 and he learnsabout parallel bars, side-horses, andhorizontal bars from a competentcoach.Downstairs, Freddie hears how ane­mic scholars are being turned intoAtlas ads. Freddie watches with won­der the magic of several jiu-jitsucandidates. He runs into difficultieswhile attempting to "punch the bag,"but earns a compliment from thewrestling-coach for pinning a good­sized opponent.West stands if he is to make supperby six. Also with surprise, Freddiefinds that sleepy lethargy gone thenext day, and he's not so verdant.With surprise, he discovers thathe'll have to omit both the handballmatch, and rifle practice under the-123-Adding a degreeTop Row: Einbeeker, Brown, Grenander, Johnson.Bottom Row: Blanchard, Coamhs, Null.-124- of social life to the activities of thevarious women's athletic activities isthe job of the Women's Athletic Asso­ciation. In order to provide bothpleasure and practice in addition tothe regular physical education inIda Noyes, W. A. A. sponsors severalrecreational clubs, intramural tour­naments, intercollegiate play days,contests in basketball and hockey,and awards "C" medals for outstand­ing skill and sportsmanship.Sixteen teams participated 10 theannual basketball tournament thisyear. Supplementing the regular in­tramural matches, intercollegiate ten­nis meets have been scheduled. Rec­ognition for ability in these and othersports is made at the spring banquetwhen major C's are presented to thoseselected by the W. A. A. board.The Board of W. A. A. consists ofsix executive members, the presidentsof the seven athletic clubs, and thehead of the "C" club. Students par­ticipating in any of the clubs auto­matically become members of W. A. A.President Eleanor CoambsVice President Katherine BethkeSecretary Mary BlanchardTreasurer Sue NuhlSocial Chairman Jane BureauPublicity Happy NusbaumHockey Annabel BrownBasketball Caroline WellsBaseball Elsie McCrackenTennis Marjorie BrownSwimming Mary HammelRiding Janet JohnFencing Mary Elizabeth GrenanderDolphin Club, honorary swimming fraternityDOLPHIN CLUBMEMBERSJohn ArgallJim AndersonHarry BeachJack BernhardtArt BethkeDick BovbjergCharles BrownPaul FlorianPaul JordanLouis KapostaBill Leach Andy LeonisBill MacyJerome MarkoffRalph McCollumCharles PercyPaul SmithJohn SpeckWilliam SpeckJoe StearnsBob SteinAlan TeagueHenry WellsCoach MacGillivray of national latitude, occupying an important nicheon the roster of extra-curricular sports activities,sprang from the efforts of four early leaders.Pushed by the neighboring chapter at the Univer­sity of Iowa, the Midway branch of the fraternitydrew its first breath on campus in 1937. Amongthe group that nursed the chapter through theincipient "growing pains" is current President,Ralph McCollum.With one eye upon the strengthening of benefi­cial campus ties, and the other fixed upon thecomely sister swimmers of the Tarpon Cluh, theexchange splash parties of the two organizationspossess a family air of mutual good will. Out­growth of this spirit is the water-carnival, a high­light of the natatorial season.Top Row: Stein, Mowery, Macy, Speck, Bethke, SmithBottom Row: Percy, Argall, McCollum, Bernhardt, Kap osta, Leach-125-One hundred seven marksmencompose the Rifle and Pistol Club. Any student oralumnus of the University is eligible for member­ship in the organization and use of its facilities.There are two rifle teams among the members ofthe club. One is the Varsity; the other the clubteam. Both of these teams compete successfullywith other teams and schools.The Varsity team maintains a Big-Ten scheduleas well as an inter-collegiate one. This year washardly a banner year for this department. Winninghut one match and that against Purdue, it wasvanquished by all other Big-Ten comers. However,against other inter-collegiate competition, the Var­sity made a pretty fair record. It won a majorityof its matches with other schools. Also the Varsityteam managed to beat many other club teamscloser to its own status.The club team did somewhat better with its schedule. Strengthened by the participation ofmembers ineligible for inter-collegiate competition,the club team participated in some thirty riflematches, winning all but two. One of these waslost to Minnesota, the other to the United StatesMarines. This record is somewhat phenomenalconsidering the status of University athletes.Every spring the National Midwest Champion­ship Matches are held in the Fieldhouse. Theseattract annually some 500 of the best riflemen inthe world. Riflemen from New York meet riflemenfrom as far west as Idaho and exceptional recordsare made and broken every year at this exhibition.Russel Wiles makes a very adequate coach forthe rifle teams. Excellent instruction is availableto prospective shooters in the digs under the weststands of Stagg Field.-126-Rifle team sharpshooters practice on outdoor range at FortSheridan (top) while fellows fire away at home under theWest Stands (bottom).RIFLE AND PISTOL CLUBGlen Slade PresidentJoe Hackett Vice PresidentHugh Bennett. Secretary-TreasurerWoman's Representative Mary Ellen Bean-127-Hull Gate garguyles guard entrance to QuadranglesIntramnralsParticipants in Intramural athletics often go out of their way toenjoy their favorite sports, for the facilities for some �f them arenot available on the quadrangles. Such is the case with bowling, inwhich nearly one hundred twenty men compete each winter qua r­ter. During the spring quarter the same number of competitors hitthe trail in search of anyone of a number of golf courses ill andabout the city on which they battle each other for the IntramuralGolf Trophy.-130-The average male studentof the Universityfinds that Intramural sports continue toplay an ever-increasing part in his life.To the fraternity man they offer a chancefor recreation as well as a means bywhich he may boost his house in theeyes of the campus; to the independentthey give the opportunity of engagingin athletics and at the same time notdevoting the greater share of his timeto it. Since the abolition of football asan intercollegiate sport at the university,more attention has been centered onIntramural athletics. However, to saythat Intramural activity will increase byleaps and bounds because a sport wasgiven up in which about forty men ac­tually participated is obviously a mis­statement.Close to eight hundred men competein Intramurals every year, the greatestnumber coming from the fraternityranks, the halance heing quite evenlydistrihuted hetween dormitory and in-Senior Board: Norian, MacLellan, Hebert, Bernhardt, Macy.-131- dependent teams. From a standpoint ofnumher of men competing, this seasonof 1939·40 has been a very successfulone. There has been an increase in thenumher of men participating in all themajor sports so far conducted. A gainin the interest of independent men wasshown by the fact that an independent,Ernest Brogmus of the Jailbirds, led inindividual participation points at theend of the fall quarter.The Senior Board, headed this yearhy quietly efficient Charles MacLellan,together with faculty Intramural repre·sentative and Head Tennis Coach WallyHehert form the ruling hand of thisactivity. Hebert is the perfect man forthe work which he does. Having servedas a student manager of Intramurals inhis undergraduate days, which were notso long ago, Wally is perhaps closer tothe students than any other member ofthe athletic staff. Questions concerningeligihility of players and forfeits or anySENIOR BOARDCharles MacLellan, Student ChairmanJack Bernhardt Bill MacyRichard NorianJUNIOR SPORTS MANAGERSWalter KurkBill Pauling Boh MathewsGeorge RinderLawrence Traeger Art Wolfother problems wbich may arise are all decided bythe Senior Staff with the advice of Hebert.The hardest working men on the whole staffoutside of Hebert are the Junior Sports Managers.Their work consists of writing sports letters, plan­ning schedules, supervising and writing reports ofwhatever sport for which they are manager.Sophomore and Freshman assistants are called onto serve as scorekeepers in touchball, basketball,and softball, and to act as officials in other sports.Touchball, one of the favorite Intramural sports,as usual inaugurated the fall quarter activity. Dueto exceptionally good weather the tournament wasrun off with a minimum of postponements andconsequently was finished nearly two weeks earlierthan usual. The end of competition in this sportsaw the title of University champions once againin the fraternity fold, resting on the proud shoul­ders of Phi Gamma Delta. The Phi Gams broughtthe title back to Fraternity Row by thoroughlytrouncing the Aristotelians, Independent champs,in the final tilt. For the third year in a row AlphaDelta Phi was runner-up in the fraternity division.bowing in the finals to the all-around ability andteamwork of the Phi Gams. Burton "600" pro-duced a stronger than usual dormitory winner. Top Row: Schnoor, Schlageter,Mathews, Miller, Fisher, Weedfall,Gentzler, Weis, Emswiler.Bottom Row: Kurk, Pauling, Nor­ian, Bernhardt, Macy, MacLellan,Hebert, Rinder, Traeger.The swimming meet had the biggest entry since1934 and featured a tight battle for first place be­tween Phi Kappa Psi and Phi Delta Theta withthe Phi Psis finally coming out on top by a narrowmargin. The times in every event but one werebetter than the preceding year, and the time inthat event was equal to the previous mark. DeltaUpsilon, winner of the 1938 meet, did not evengain entrance points this year.By virtue of their fine showing in Table Tennisand Billiards, Phi Kappa Psi led the organizationpoint standings at the end of the autumn quarter.They reached the finals in both these sports aswell as coming in third in touchball and first inswimming. Phi Delt and Alpha Delt were bothclose on the heels of the Phi Psis, assuring a tightbattle throughout the year for the coveted trophy.The individual point standings at this time weredominated by three organizations, Phi GammaDelta, Jailbirds, and Phi Kappa Psi, each one hav­ing four men in the top-ranking twelve.Basketball, the most popular winter sport, alsosaw an increase In number of men competing.Fifteen fraternities entered twenty-five teams andtwo independent, one dormitory, and one em­ployees league completed the entry list. With-132-only the quarter finals run off in all divisions,Alpha Delt, Phi Delt, Psi U, and Phi Gam re­mained in the fraternity section and the Geology,Chicago Theological Seminary, Dekeons, Burton­Judson Eagles, and Schlepper quintets left amongthe independents. Phi Delt and Alpha Delt ap­peared to be the strongest teams in the GreekDivision, while C. T. S. and the Burton-Judsonteams were headed for the finals of the non­fraternity section.Continuing the upward trend, competrtron Inboth Indoor Track and Wrestling increased overprevious years. Delta Kappa Epsilon aided by thestrength of its freshman class won championshipsin both of these sports. The wrestling meet wasdivided into two classes, novice and advanced, andconsequently had a much better turnout. By reach­ing the semi-finals of the bowling tournament andcopping the wrestling and track trophies, the Dekesimproved their position in organization pointstandings considerably.The bowling tournament reached an unusualclimax when two Alpha Delta Phi teams playedeach other in the finals. During the winter quar­ter, competition was also held in badminton, hand­ball and squash.In the spring quarter, softball shows the samepopularity that touchball and basketball show inthe two quarters previous. Held the first part ofthe quarter, it does not interfere with exams andusually has a large turnout. Outdoor Track isexceeded in enthusiasm only by saftball, the cindermeet being held over a two day period. Otherspring sports are tennis and golf, both receivedvery well and adding a finishing touch to theIntramural year.Hindered by the usual rainy April weatherwhich causes the postponement of many games,the softball tournament brings out new threats forthe Intramural crown. Fraternity teams which are very strong In some sports seem to let up in thespring quarter and consequently honors are takenby some darkhorse. The darkhorse this year isDelta Upsilon, who with the aid of some verycompetent freshmen have succeeded in upsettingboth Alpha Delt and Deke-usually strong teams.Along with D. u., Phi Sigma Delta and Pi LambdaPhi look like the best teams in the fraternity sec­tion. Last year's University champions, an inde­pendent team called the Schleppers, are againplaying together but under the name of LambdaGamma Phi, and they appear to be a winner of thecrown for the second consecutive year. Their chiefcompetition in the independent league comes froma group of freshmen who call themselves theElites.Both golf and tennis competition proceed quiteslowly due to the pressure of impending examsand a certain amount of Spring fever or lazinessas the case may be. Teams which ranked high inthese sports last year are again entered and if theycan succeed in getting their matches played beforeconvocation should wind up near the top oncemore. The outdoor track meet, conducted thesecond week in May, has a little more success thangolf and tennis because it does not take as muchtime from the all-important studies.The rifle meet, held in the spring quarter thisyear instead of the winter quarters as is usual,was very successful. Although no organizationpoints were given for entering the meet, there wasstill a large turnout and a few good scores. Theteam championship, if there can be said to be one,was won by Alpha Delta Phi. Although the com­plete program of sports has not been completed,the Alpha Delts, due to their fine showina inbwinter quarter sports, will probably take perma-nent possession of the organization point trophyhy winning it this year for the third straight time.This monopoly on Intramurals has come to givethe AD's a reputation similar to that of the NewYork Yankees.--133 -HEADLINERSSelected by J ory of Prominent J onio rsCHARLES PFEIFFERJANET GEIGERROBERT REYNOLDSMARJORIE KUHDAVID MARTINJOHN DAVEN­PORTARETA KELBLEJOHN CULPRUTH BRODYROBERTBIGELOWTHELMAISELMANFREDERICKLINDEN900 New Students250 upperclassmen organizeto aid orientationThree groups conduct orientation of new students into the Uni­versity. The Federation of University Women plus the FreshmanOrientation Committee plans and executes Freshman Week. TheTransfer Orientation Committee orients transfer students duringthe second week of the Autumn Quarter.This year Federation tried to work in closer cooperation withthe Freshman Orientation Committee. The former, much betterorganized than men's orientation, adequately provided rooms forboth Freshman women and Counselors. Actually some Freshmanmen were unable to get rooms in the dorms due to an over­abundance of Counselors. This condition was, of course, caused bythe fact that Freshman Week is a continuous rushing function forfraternity men. However, in spite of these disadvantages Fresh­man Week was quite successful this year. One Freshman mixerwas entirely closed to upperclassmen, and the doormen at IdaNoyes did an exceptionally good job in keeping Bob MacNameeand other wolves from "crashing the gate." The Barn Dance,now become an institution, banged over under the leadership offormer B. M. O. c., John Van de Water. The dinner preceding thePresident's reception was as bad as ever. The food at the Commonshardly improves the atmosphere and actually dampens the ardorof bewildered Frosh. On the other hand, the activities dinnerswere more successful than usual. Better crowds than ever attended.Successful innovations in Freshman Week were the re-showing ofD. A.'s success, "The Cat and the Canary," and a concert presentedby the Collegium Musical.Transfer orientation had its problems as usual. Despite thenoble efforts of the Committee many transfers refused to beoriented. Result: as many lost transfers as Freshmen. Doubtlessthe whole problem of orientation is a worry to both the Universityand the students. Tbe men's organization is poorly handled, thetransfer organization better, and Federation perhaps more thanadequately.,-136- FEDERATION COUNCILThelma Iselman, PresidentPat Hutchinson Caroline GrabeAreta Kelble Henrietta MahonBetty Glixon Marian CastlemanJane Horwich Janet VanderwalkerAmy GoldsteinMEN'S ORIENTATION COMMITTEERobert Bigelow, ChairmanJames Anderson William MackJohn Bernhardt Robert MinerWilliam Blackwell Joseph MolkupCharles Crane Melvin RosenfeldKenneth Geppinger Richard Salzmann)Martin Levit Dale TilleryRichard WorthingtonTRANSFER ORIENTATION COUNCILCo-chairmen-Richard Ranney,June CoverJack Brown Elise EpsteinMary Coffee Ted HymanNan Dickson Don LeveridgeSusan Elliot Jean MacDonaldJohn PatrickLaveridgeRanneyBrownDickson PatrickEpsteinMcDonaldElliot A bove, right:Top: Kelble, Goldstein, Mahon, Grabo, Vanderwalker.Second: Castleman, Hutchinson, Iselman, Glixon, Horwic.i,Third: Tillery, C. Crane, Salzmann, Westenberg, Rosenfelil,J. Crane.Bottom: Levit, Anderson, Bigelow, Macy, Minor.-137-College gets a new meaningThe latest development of the Hutchins educational sys­tem is the Four Year College, now in its third year ofbeing. Viewed as a continuous unit, the complete systemis carried through the nursery school, six years of elemen­tary school, four years of high school, and four years ofcollege, topped hy the graduate and professional schools.The change from the current plan lies in the college sec­tion, which includes the eleventh and twelfth grades ofhigh school and the first two years of college.In principle there is resemblance to the continentallycees which graduate students at approximately the sameage and provide an equivalent amount of academic workin the curriculum. The quality of academic work in theFour Year College, moreover, is such that the student willacquire the tools with which to proceed into specializedgraduate schools, for higher degrees.At the moment the Four Year College is in a transitionalstage. Ultimately President Hutchins expects to award ahachelor's degree at the end of the college, but for thetime heing, when not even one class has completed theexperiment, the work will be less concentrated than it willprohahly be in the future. A study of the present cur­riculum illustrates what is being attempted.THE FIRST YEARA. Required Courses1. Reading, Writing, and Criticism A (Problems inNarration)2. Humanities A (Civilization up to Middle Ages)3. Social Science A (American Political Institutions)4. Physical Education5. Study periodB. One of two courses required1. Physical Science A (Physics, Astronomy, Geology)2. Biological Science A (Botany mostly)C. One elective (Language, Mathematics, etc.)THE SECOND YEARA. Required CoursesI. Reading, Writing, and Criticism B (Expo­sition, elementary logic)Lacking the activities of the first three classes in the Four YearCollege, the fourth year students congregate on steps during thelunch hour.-138-2. Humanities B (Middle Ages to French Rev-olution)3. Social Science B (Economic Society)4. Physical Education5. Study periodB. One of two courses required1. Physical Science B (Chemistry, Geology,Astronomy)2. Biological Science B (Zoology mostly)C. One elective (Language, Mathematics, etc.)THE THIRD YEARA. Required Courses1. Reading, Writing, and Criticism C (Ap­proaches to lyric poetry and philosophy)2. Humanities C (Modern times, emphasis onAmerican culture)3. Social Science C (Sociology)4. Physical EducationB. One of two courses1. Physical Science I2. Biological Science ITHE FOURTH YEARA. Required Course1. PhilosophyB. Two electives (any field)In extra-curricular life no serious changes haveas yet been made. During the first two years in theFour Year College, students participate in regularUniversity High School activities, except for thenewspage which they puhlish themselves as aweekly supplement to the Daily Maroon. Thirdyear students are free to take part in all activitiesoffered for University freshmen. Thus a break stillexists in the four year unit. However, when theoriginal plan of separate huildings for the FourYear College is adopted, the hreak will he almostcompletely overcome.At top Four-Year College tasties edit the Weekly as expertlooks on. Below the basketball team relaxes between spurt's.Four-Year College dollies lounge in saddle-shoes.--139 -_After stormy weeksof mass meetings and heated discussions, led hy thesophomore class, the 1939 Freshmen developed aunique but efficient method of organization. Thecouncil of nine, elected as a governing body, carriedon the tradition of originality hy immediately spon­soring a sports dance. In addition to the low-priceddance, popular demonstrations of sports were held, -including everything from golf and foothall profes­sionals to girls in white shorts playing ping-pong.The council plans to have a function with North­western and to aid in orientation of February Fresh-men.Rohert E. Smith Sarah Jane PetersBetsy KuhKay ChittendenFaith Johnson Rohert DoddOrville KanouseMonroe FeinRichard ReedTop: Council poses.Back Row: Fern, Chittenden, Reed,Kanouse.Front Row: Peters, Kuh, Smith,Johnson.Second: Bashful boys apply to "datebureau."Bottom: Council chooses appropriatedates.--140-A clearing housefor organizations on campus IS definitely needed.B.W.O.-Board of Women's Organizations-aspires tobe such for any activity involving women. The two topofficers of each organization together with membersat large from each class comprise B.W.O. Supposedlyit controls the division of activities among thegroups, but actually there can be no real authorityin B.W.O. when one organization, Interclub Council,necessarily controls thirteen of the prominent wom­en's organizations. Those groups over which super­vision is exercised are few in number-Federation,Ida Noyes Council, W.A.A., and Y.W.C.A. - andhave activities which rarely overlap. Representativesfrom any of the mixed organization which do needco-ordination are refused a vote on B.W.O.The question "Why B.W.O. ?", although perhaps un­answerable, has several justifications. In view of the importance of student activities to incoming fresh­men, B.W.O. offers a convenient medium for present­ing them at the Activities Dinner Freshman Week.The one project undertaken during the year was thetraining meeting for all new officers on com pus earlyin April. Mr. Randall, Miss Denton of the Dean'sOffice, and Miss Carlson of Ida Noyes Hall each re­viewed the points officers should know in regard toUniversity regulations, date reservations, and parlia­mentary procedure.Martha Steere, PresidentKatharine Bethke, SecretaryMembers at largeRuth Brody, Barbara Crane, Caroline Grabo,Clarabelle Grossmann, Faith JohnsonTop Row: Coambs, Grossmann, Iselman, Geiger, Neuendorffer, Johnson, CraneBottom Row: Kuh, Kellam, Bethke, Steere, Kelble, Peg Hutchinson, Pat Hutchinson--141-Custodians of the Reynolds Clubfor its social well being are the fourteen members of the Reynolds ClubCouncil and overseer Howard Mort, director of the Reynolds Club. BothGreeks and barbarians are represented on the Council in all four under­graduate classes.In keeping with the wave of orientation prevailing at the first of theyear the Council planned a special program for Freshman men. Besides Top Row: J. Crane,Mooney, Gentzler, C.Crane.Center Row: Blumenthal,Brown, Feurman, Dunkel.Bottom Row: Cornwall,Pfeiffer, Mr. Mort, Ran­ney.-142-introducing them to Brad, the barber, the Councilarranged for a performance by Charles Petersen,world's champion trick billiard shot. With the open­ing of the grid season the Council began the regularseries of after-football-game dances which despite the usually ardor dampening results of the games,were well attended by independents who had no fra­ternity teas to attend. This fall the Reynolds Clubdiscovered the potency of "smokers" as good en­tertainment. Two of these were staged during theJoe Markusich sells candy and apples to billiard players; Out-of-towners catch up on news from hom'e; Independents whileaway lunch hour playing billiards; Davenport watches as Brad "polishes off" youngster; "Doc" Jampolis gets shaved inpreparation for Blackfriars,-143--The inevitable pause before the tray is checked through; digging down for a black and white; freshmen start right in at theperpetual card game; some of the pumpkins that graced the Commons table after being rated in the contest, and their creators;Phi Psi's Horton at the C shop with brother Young.first quarter and were open to all men. Dressiestof Autumn quarter social events were the fourHoeppner-Reynolds Club Opera Hours. The ex­periment of selling season tickets to the lecture teaseries was for a second time successful. Mr. HowardTalley of the Music department reviewed four fa­mous operas whose stars were afterwards intro­duced in person at the tea. Much interest inoperatic music has been both created and revivedin this way, especially among the unsuspecting clubgirls and fraternity men found ushering.Winter quarter the Council backed successfullyfive basketball game-dances, having little compe­tition with fraternity houses. Both lounges of the Cluh were always used and Big-Ten banners dec­orated the walls. Music was hy campus bands withgood local floor shows. Hohhy exhibitions havealways found popularity in the Roynold's Cluh.This year saw the Mexican exhihit, a pastel dis­play, plus the all-campus camera display. In Feb­ruary the Reynolds Club came to the aid of themid-year freshmen by honoring them with a huffetsupper plus faculty speakers.The all-campus duplicate hridge tournament inReynolds Cluh style is always good for a laughspring quarter. Won in '39 hy rank amateur PsiU's Wallis and Jernberg, it is always well attended,especially by those who fancy themselves card-144-sharks and covet the loving cup awarded the wm­nero The Reynolds Club barber shop personifiedhy esteemed Brad is the traditional starter andsole judge of the annual senior mustache race.Final event of the Council is the dance held afterthe Inter-fraternity Sing, for the benefit of boththe students and the many alumni on hand for theoccasion. During the summer the Club is open butthe Council plans no original program. MEMBERS Douglas FeurmanJack Brown Al GentzlerMarshall Blumenthal Julian LowensteinKenneth Cornwall Jerome MobergCharles Crane Clyde MoonieJack Crane Charles PfeifferOFFICERSCharles W. Pfeiffer. . . . . .. . PresidentJerome E. Moberg Secretary Robert Cummins Richard RanneyJohn Dunkel C. Harold SteffeeMarge Grey (Exeter laments the Courtier) sings at the Sherry; "two minute" Howe picks up brunch; trying out ideas for theVanities Skit; impressing dates with glamour pictures; after the game talk; date luncheon at the Deke house with Betty Smithlosing out to the food in catching her date's interest.-145--146- Hoosing on camposis provided for the hundreds of out-of-town studentsby ten dormitories, supplementing the fraternityhouses and International House. Freshmen andsophomore men flock to Burton Court and theremaintain a reputation for wild pranks and waterfights. Judson Court, the counterpart of Burton,attracts the more subdued upper-classmen andgraduates. Together the courts form a unit inthemselves, containing the facilities of any goodathletic club .. These two new dorms combine to give frequenttea dances, the Waiters' Ball, and winter and springformals. In view of the ever-increasing social lifein the courts, fraternities have a little serious com­petition on their hands for the first time in years.Men seriously intent on studying retreat toSnell and Hitchcock halls where in cheaper butlarger rooms, many of which have fireplaces andeasy chairs, they can pursue their search for knowl­edge in the quiet atmosphere known only to upper­classmen and professors.Along University Avenue directly across fromthe President's home lie Foster, Kelly, Beecher,and Green, the most attractive of the women'sdormitories. Chief advantage over the others isthe service of meals in modern looking diningrooms. Freshmen and sophomores are attractedby the sorority house atmosphere of Foster, Kelly,and Beecher while Green houses the more sedategraduate students.Blake and Gates hall mean the same to womenas Hitchcock and Snell mean to men-more quiet,less expense, and no meals. Along with upperclasswomen, these dorms are inhabited hy city girlswho do not wish to commute.Freshman walks along path at the courts.Trout and Hiller entertained at Songfest by Dorm men.Kuh and company cook at men's dormitories.PUBLISHERBenjamin CrockerASSOCIATE PUBLISHERSCharles Darragh, Betty Van LiewEDITORSThomas Hill, Byron MartinFEATURE WRITERSGordon Watts, Marshall Patullo,Bob Nye, Phil OIlmanTHE GIRLSShirley Smith, Chris Fryar,Betty Lon Furry, Jerry Barlick,Gail Grassick, Elizabeth Snow,Betsy Kuh, Georgia Disch,Sally Adams,Shirley Latham, Anne Haight Right: Horace Byers, Shirley Latham, Betty Lou Furry, Anne Haight, Elisabeth Snow,Betty Van Liew, Benjamin Crocker, Gail Grassick, Robert Gruhn, Philip OIlman, GordonWatts, Bob Nye, Charles Darragh. Left: Charles Darragh, Bob Gruhn, Benjamin Crocker.THE COURTIERContinued to grow in importanceduring the second year SInce it changed from mimeograph to a regularnewspaper style of printing. With a weekly circulation of 1500 reachingeveryone in the men's and women's dormitories, it had the best coverageof any campus publication.The main purposes of the paper, namely to make official announcementsconcerning the dormitories and to integrate and enlarge the social life ofthe residents, were well achieved. Working in close cooperation with theDormitory Council, the Courtier sponsored tea dances, classical concerts,the Winter Formal and intramural athletics.Benjamin Crocker, a third year veteran with the paper, organized it atthe beginning of the year and became publisher from then on. Talent forthe paper was of high calibre. Charles Darragh became the best knownwriter due to his daring style. In Bob Nye the Courtier discovered a firstrate gossip columnist. Specializing in a happenings rather than namestype of column, Marshall Pattulo gained a reputation as the best writeron the staff. Thomas Hill, as editor, was the most hard-working, reliableand able man on the whole paper. Newcomer Byron Martin, SportsmanOIlman and BMOC Gordon Watts all contributed much.The girls who belonged to "the most beautiful staff on any paper" wereall active, and Betty Van Liew deserves special credit for her editorials.Readers of the Courtier responded to the improvements with increasedinterest and attention which assured its continuation as the Official Dormi­tory Newspaper of the U. of C.Courtier Staff--147-Music on the MarchThe football Band and its drum major enlivened a ratherdismal 1939 gridiron season. Smaller than most Big Ten bands,Chicago's outfit carried an exceptionally full program thisyear playing at every home game. The intermission reper­toire was varied and entertaining. Number one spectacle wasthe Band's working in conjunction with a group of colorful,if not too skillful, baton artists. A special program was arrangedfor the Ohio State game which fell on Armistice weekend.Along with the usual C formations, a moving anchor and anarmy drill were used appropriately. At the Michigan-Chicagogame the two hands presented a joint program. And Illinoisbandsmen, home for the Thanksgiving holiday, were invited toappear with the Chicago Band at the Illinois-Chicago game.The team's one trip this year, to Virginia, was made withoutthe Band which, as compensation, was given a banquet hy theAthletic Department. Musie ians' feelings were soothed; every­one was satisfied. Guest speakers at the banquet were Mr. Met­calf and our former football coach, Clark Shaughnessy. Later IIIthe season the Band played for the annual football banquet.�14S�After the excitement of the football season, with winter come dignified recitals; and with spring, ro­mantic open-air concerts in Hutchinson court.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BANDConductor: Harold BachmanTHE Rohert Mohlman Frank RekerBAND ASSOCIATION Stewart Olson Ray BlauAlfred Pfanstiehl, Pres. Jordan Canzone Nat ElliottRobert Fouch, Vice Pres. Ralph ParksDale Anderson, Harold Steinhauser CORNETS ANDSecretary-Treasurer Edward Miller TRUMPETS:John Korf, Historian Carl Steinhauser Rohert FouchFLUTES AND PICCOLOS: Rohert Purinto JohnKarnAlfred Pfanstiehl Henry Wallhrunn Bruce WarnockAlhert Freedman Rohert MinerDale Anderson Andrew Weston Alan GravesPaul Strueh William Calkins John AllenJulian Levinson Donald Weeks William BlackwellBenjamin Bluestein Victor Zajek Daniel SahathOBOES: Albert J ezik Richard AdamsRobert Reker Howard HellerCarl PritchettRobert Buchshaum George Bonjernoor Phillip OllmannCurt FrancisDavid Probert George LewisBASSOONS: ALTO CLARINETS: HORNS:Adele Mendelssoh Mona Wilson Reid PooleAnton Cerveny William Black Lyle MyrtleRichard HarrisonE FLAT CLARINET: BASS CLARINETS: Richard MenaulTony Geiser Frank Smith Robert BucklewCaspar BoghasianB FLAT CLARINETS: TROMBONES:John Korf SAXOPHONES: Paul WochosGlen Bigelow Paul Leatherman Rohert JonesWarren Giedt William Kester Hatton YoderWilliam Johnston Phil Strick Harry Beach-149- George OlsonHarold HoytBARITONES:Robert BassElmer HinkleCharles RileyBASSES:Victor UhlElmer KakeyRichard RussellThomas RemingtonJoseph WoodRohert KlemmSTRING BASS:Charles ToweyPERCUSSION:John DearhamAl Vaitis- Noel WeaverKenneth WiedowHerman WiegmanHARP:Betty AnthonySTUDENT MANAGER:Reid PooleLIBRARIAN:Robert FouchCollegiate for a week-endInto these sedate gray quadrangles bursts a carnival spirit for Homecoming. Friday noon it begins withthe tug of war. By tying their rope to a passing truck, the sophomores broke tradition and won this year.The entrance of muddy figures into the Coffee Shop to give the audience from the Botany Pond a taste ofwhat the ducking was like never happened before. The Vanities Skits in the afternoon filled Mandel Hall tothe last row. The football team, the University and life in general were scanned and panned hy fraternitymen and cluh sisters; the scathing innuendoes drew violent applause, perhaps because they were so obvious.Top honors went to Pi Lamhda Phi and Sigma. Dating couples on their way to the Iron Mask Dance wentfirst to the Circle for the pep rally and bonfire, and then along fraternity row to view the decorations of thefraternity houses. Nearly all lacked the confident "Roll up the score" note of earlier years, and took a "hackto the wall" note.Charlotte Rexstrew was crowned Homecoming Queen with an orchid and a hox of candy at the dance.Between halves of the game Saturday she awarded cups to the Vanities winners, to Foster Hall for winning-150-the dormitory decorations and to Phi Kappa Psi. The Phi Psis decorated on a large scale, with a timely warmotif. The inevitable and expected defeat at the hands of Ohio State threw a brief shadow over the gaiety;particularly led returned alumni to dream wistfully of their day. But dancing and open fires and tea soonrestored the festive air.November also saw the Psi U house opened to the campus at the annual Hard Times party. Rustic decora­tions and sloppy clothes gave a highly informal atmosphere to one of the most successful campus affairs ofthe season. Living up to its name, Phi Psi's annual Esquire party presented the combined collections of allPetty girl fanciers to the campus socialites. The whole Phi Psi establishment was decorated with them andin the crowd could be seen many exam­ples of "what the well dressed Esquirewill wear."Following the newly changed date ofThanksgiving, Interfraternity Ball wasstill on Thanksgiving eve.. With DukeEllington's high class Harlem rhythmand the Drake Hotel as its setting, itsurpassed the Balls of the last few years,The Three Way Party of Psi U, AlphaDelt and Doke was enlivened by Nohland Brown's little turn at the mrcro­phone during the intermission. Increasing swing tounsophisticated funTop Left: Johnny Stevens at Iron Mask-Hornecomingdance.Bottom Left: Strutters mass around the "Duke" at I·FBall. Top Right: Charlotte Rextrew, Homecoming Queen,beats the drum as Chicago loses.Bottom Right: Ellington entertains Bud Arquilla andbeauty-Alt at I·F.Janet Geiger and Johnny Culp.Thelma Iselman and Dick Glasser.J-F Leaders-152-Margie Kuh, Dave Martin, and Jim Burtle participating m an open forum sponsored by the StudentForum discussed both sides of the decision eliminating football from the sports curriculum. All threespeakers were in favor of the ban, and of thirty persons eligible to participate in the discussion onlytwo were opposed to it. At the last moment Russ Parsons, football player, refused to speak.Perhaps the innovation of game captains rn­stead of naming a football captain for '40 shouldhave warned the campus that something wasgoing to happen in the football situation. AsSchommer speaks here, we catch a weary, dis­illusioned look on Shag's face. Football becomes the chieftopic of conversation-153-CAP AND GOWN FEARING CRITICISM-Carlos Selects Most Photogenic Girls on CampusAdvancement of rushingfrom winter quarter to mid-fall quarter was the spectacularaccomplishment of Interclub Council this year. Combination oftransfer and freshman pledging was also effected. At the be­ginning of the year Interclub initiated registration by fresh­man girls to determine those interested in joining a club. Itwas also decided that men should be eliminated at rushingparties and that all pledges must meet certain academic stand­ards before being initiated.Immediately following pledging III November, Interclubplanned a tea for all club women which was intended to fosterinterclub spirit. Throughout the year the Council scheduledexchange luncheons among the clubs. In the same spirit wasthe first Interclub Sing, held in Ida Noyes garden last spring.Due to its success, the Sing this year will be open to the public.The Annual Interclub Ball left its traditional setting at DianaCourt for the first time and moved to the Lake Shore AthleticCluh. Janet Geiger, PresidentMargaret Janssen, SecretaryAlpha Chi Theta Joyce FinneganAlpha Epsilon June RobertsChi Rho Sigma Betty CaldwellDeltho Betty LindbergDelta Sigma Thelma IselmanEsoteric Jane MyersMortar Board Margaret HuthinsonPhi Beta Delta Anita ArcherPhi Delta Upsilon Billie BenderPi Delta Phi Margaret JanssenQuadrangleI' Mary CurtisSigma Janet GeigerTriota Susan ElliottW yvern Rebecca ScottTop Row: Roberts, Myers, Peg Hutchinson, Scott. Second Row: Bender, Iselman, Curtis, Elliot.Bottom Row: Caldwell, Geiger, Janssen, Finnegan.--156 -PHI BETA DELTAHONORARY MEMBERSMrs. Julian HessMrs. J ames McKinsey Founded in 1898First Row: French, Luostari, Manly, Siniscalchi.Second Row: Thompson, Turgasen, Wilson.MEMBERSPLEDGES Betty AhlquistAnita Jean ArcherElizabeth FrenchPat;icia GilmoreDorothy IngramVerna NelsonGeraldine ScottYolanda SiniscalchiLaura Lou TolstedHelen TurgasenDorris WiggerCarol WilsonGertrude LucostonMiriam ManleyMarua Thompson---157 -ALPHA CHI THETAFounded in 1916HONORARY MEMBERSMrs. Rodney L. MottAnne Elizabeth TaylorFirst Row: Bohaboy, Borchardt, Cargill, Corkell, Finnegan,Geiger, Hornstein, Kinder.Second Row: Landon, Locker, Mattila, McClelland, Renstrom,Scherer, Williams.MEMBERSMurle BorchardtJoyce FinniganHazel CargillEvelyn GeigerMarie GrillsClaire HornsteinFreda KinderLa Verne LandonSelma RenstromEmily SchererBeth Williams PLEDGESEvelyn BohaboyAlice CorkellEdith LockerlIma MattilaMary Lue McClelland--158 --CHI RHO SIGMAFounded in 1903HONORARY MEMBERSMrs. Charles DawleyMrs. Adela ParkerKendallFirst Row: Allen, Bebb, Birkett, Caldwell, Cover, Easton,Elvin, FrodinSecond Row: Harvey, Hermes, Hoover, Howell, Komerska,Landis, Loller, MacDonaldThird Row: Murphy, SpeuhlerVirginia AllenMary Elizabeth BebbEllen BirkettBetty CaldwellJune CoverSuzanne EastonJean Elvin Muriel FrodinMary HarveyMary Jane HooverBertha HowellDorothy KomerskaSue LandisMildred LollerJeanne MacDonaldMaxine MurphyJean SharbauAurel SpeuhlerMarie UllmanMEMBERSPLEDGEGeraldine Hermes-159-TRIOT!Founded in 1939MEMBERSSusan ElliottJean LevitanJeanne MarksMarcella MenacherLila MullerMiriam RosenNaomi SmithEsther WeissEugenie WolfRuth Young First Row: Elliott, Frumkin, Hirshfeld, Lerner, Levitan, Leuritz,Marks, MenackerSecond Row: Mendelson, Muller, Moss, Osherrnansky, Smith,Weiss, Wasprin, WolfThird Row: Young, Y orroverPLEDGESShirley BlumenthalNeva FrumkinJane HirschfeldBlanche LernerElaine LeuritzNita LibermanMaxine MendelsonJanet MOBSElaine OshermanskyEunice WaprinNorma Yonover-160-ALPHA EPSILONFormerly A rrian !,,First Row: Aichner, Berg, Breidigan, Brown, Chetister, Def.fenbaugh, DeRose, De Vol.Second Row: Dryburgh, Floyd, Jansen, Jansen, Lach, Metcalfe,Milcarek, Roberts, Roy, SamadeenMEMBERSMarion Aichner Carol BlissVirginia BrownAnna Mae CummingsLorraine FloydMary Jane MetcalfeVirginia MilcarekBetty ReichertJ nne RobertsElaine RoyCarol RussellPLEDGESDorothy BergJune BriediganJ nne ChetisterDorothea DeffenbaughJeanette De RoseEva DeVolKay DrybughMarjorie JansenRnth Mary JansenHelen LachBetty Samadeen-161-PHI DELTA UPSILONFounded in 1915HONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. Otis FisherMrs. Alice Duddy Mrs. Nina SandsMrs. Alice E. Elander Mrs. Mary VilasMrs. M. Jay Chapin Mrs. Alma WildFirst Row: Bender, Carlson, Cuneo, E. Davis, M. Davis,Drechsler, Dunne, Eaton.Second Row: Hamlin, Kidd, Keippel, Moore, Neuendorffer,Perisich, Saba dar, Wilson.MEMBERSBillie BenderAlice CarlsonDorothy EatonBeatrice Frear PLEDGESMarjorie HamiltonEloise Husmann Annette CuneoEdith DavisMary Elizabeth DavisElsie DrecklerMargie DunneMarion HamlinGeraldine KiddVirginia LongShirley MooreRuth NeuendorfferAngela PerisichGeraldine Kidd Milly KeippelEllen WilsonNadezdia Sabadar-162-PI DELTA PHIHONORARY MEMBERSMrs. S. W. DiseonMrs. A. D. Dorsett Mrs. A. E. HalsteadMrs. Franklin HessMrs. A. J. BrumbaughTop Row: Augustus, Beyuon, Bieser, Cummins, De Jong, DeYoung, Eaton, Eppens, Erickson.Second Row: Gardner, Gore, Griffin, Hambly, Haines, Hill,Holston, Howell, Janssen.Third Row: Kemp, Knauss, Knudsen, Lukens, Mahlam, Me­Cracken, McElvain, McKeighan, Ploebst.Bottom Row: Rasmussen, Sharfenberg, Teufel, Thompkins,Tuttle, Walker, Wesche.MEMBERSJosephine BeynonRuth BieserDorothy De JongNorma Jane EppensHelen EricksonJean GoreNella GriffinJean HamblyMargaret JanssenJeanne Knauss Doris KnudsenGenevieve MalhamElsie McCrackenHarriet PaineJane RasmussenMarjorie SchluytterElsie TeufelElizabeth TuttleMargaret JanssenElizabeth Walker Aimee HainesRosemary McKeighanLouise CumminsPLEDGESJoan AugustusHelen DeYoungMary EatonMarjorie Gardner-163- Mary Elin HillMarion HolstonPhyllis HowellHarriet KempAbbie LukinsElizabeth McElvainGloria PloepstCecile ScharfenbergMary Jane TompkinsMary Alice WescheFounded in 1894 MORTAR BOARDMEMBERSHelen BickertDonna CullitonMuriel EvansMarian FarwellCaroline GraboBlanche GraverClarabel GrossmannMargaret Hecht Margaret HutchinsonMartha HutchinsonMarion JernbergJoan LydingPatricia LydingBetty-Jane NelsonNancy OrrMargaret PeacockRuth Scott First Row: Adams, Bickert, Culliton, Evans, Gaidzik, Crabo,Graver, Grossmann, HutchinsonSecond Row: Hutchinson, Jernberg, Lowry, Lyding, Nelson,Newhall, Orr, PeacockThird Row: Peacock, Price, Scott, Sill, Smith, Tallman, Taylor,Warfield, WarrenFourth Row: Wendrick, WheelerJoanne TaylorPat WarfieldDorothy WendrickJo Ann WilliamsonBetty NewhallPLEDGESSuzanne AdamsBeatrice GaidzikAlice Lowry-164- Janet PeacockMary Lu PriceJoan SillShirley SmithJane TallmanJane WarrenCaroline WheelerBetty MuellerMargaret Ann RathjeWYVERNFounded in 1898HONORARY MEMBERS Zoe M. PrendervilleMrs. Burns Ellen C. SunnyMrs. Hibbard Adelaide TaylorMrs. Luckhardt Mrs. William TempletonFirst Row: M. Adam, V. Adams, Ball, Balmer, Brown, Coffey,Collinson, Doutt, Earle.Second Row: Esperschmidt, Flynn, Hawk, Kammerer, Lapp,McMurry, Megan, Molitor, Mortenson.Third Row: Petrone, Phalen, Procter, Reynolds, Schafmayer,Scott, Shaw, Smith, Stromwall.Fourth Row: Thornston, Toft, Urbanek, Whiting, Williams,Wilson.MEMBERS Ardis Molitor PLEDGES Gina PetroneViolet Adams Ruth Mortensen Marie Adam Marie PhelanDorothy Balmer Eloise Procter Annette Ball Irene ReynoldsMerry Coffee Miriam Schafmayer Georgene Brown Paula ShawCelia Earle Rebecca Scott Audrey Collinsen Veryl ThornstonRose Esperschmidt Beverly Smith Charlotte Deterding Eleanor UrbanekNedda Davis Lois Stromwell Diana DouttPeggy Flynn Mary Toft Frances Lapp Marjorie WilsonBetty Hawk Francis Meagen Catherine WilliamsJoan Kammerer Ruth McMurry Lois WhitingMary Irwin-165-&fI!IIy DELTA SIGMAFounded in 191.5HONORARY MEMBERSMrs. Edwin A. BurtMrs. William Scott Gray Miss Mary E. HayesMrs. Dudley B. ReedFirst Row: Aberg, Ball, Boerger, Dursema, Dzubay, Eichstaedt,Einbecher, Everett, Finnegan.Second Row: Flanagan, Flood, Fonger, Ford, Graham, Huling,Iselman, Monson, Owings.Third Row: Pearson, Rashevshky, Rentsch, Schroeder, Shrack,C. Smith, P. Smith, Sockolovsky, Soutter.Fourth Row: Spooner, Steere, Willis.MEMBERS Charlotte Ford Patricia Smith Marsha nzubayJeanne Ball Anna Mae Huling Caroline Soutter Gertrude EichstaedtJean Boerger Thelma Iselman Martha Steere Felicity FongerDorothy Einbecker Marguerite Owings Corabelle Wells Mary GrahamMartha Pearson Caroline Willis Frances MonsonPeggy Lou Everett Marion Rentsch PLEDGES Joan OlsonHelen Finnegan Patricia Shrack Marjorie Aberg Emily RashevskyChristine Flanagan Vera Shroeder Verna Anderson Pauline SockolovskySuzanne Flood Christine Smith Cynthia Dursema Lois Spooner-166-ESOTERICFounded in 1894 •First Row: Adamson, Anderson, Amrhein, Beckwith, Berg,Brown, J. Cameron, Jean Cameron, Colley.Second Row: Daniels.Ex ter, Geisert, Gracenick,Haight,Hammel,Hanes, Hiller, Horlick.Third Row: Howard, Kellam, Knowlson, Latham, Lott, Mahon,Mead, Myers, Rahill.Fourth Row: Rice, Shimmin, A. Steele, S. Steele, Swanson,Tomlinson, Van Lieuw, Wagner, Wilson.Fifth Row: Zimmer.MEMBERSMary Jane AndersonGail BeckwithMarjorie BergMarjorie BrownJanet CameronJean CameronDoris DanielsMarjorie ExeterMarian Gracenick Mary Jane GeisertMary HanesLois HorlickHelen HowardLucile JacobsonCatherine KellamMarianLottShirley LathamHenrietta MahonCynthia Mead Jane MyersClarissa RahillMary RiceBetty ShimminAda SteeleSuzannah SteeleCarolyn SwansonHelen TomlinsonShirley AdamsonPLEDGESMargaret Amrhein-167- Mary ColleyBetty Lou FurryAnne HaightMary HammelN aneen HillerElizabeth KnowlsonBetty Van LiewJanet WagnerJane WilsonMargaret ZimmerFounded in 1895 QUADRANGLERHONORARY MEMBERS Mrs. WallaceH.Heckmal'Mrs. Victor Falkman Mrs. Otis H. MaclayMEMBERSBetzi AbrahamMargaret ArgallAnne Gregory BaumgardtPhilomela BakerKatherine BethkeMargery BrooksShirley BurtonNatalie ClyneMary CurtisNan DicksonRuth May Doce�alJoan Goodwillie Ruth HauserLois HolmesJane J ungkunzJoanne KircherHarriet LindseyAnnie MacDougalRuth Groman MeyersJean PetersonJean PhillipsJean ScottJosephine StanleyMargery StrandbergBonnie Turnbull First Row: Abraham, Alt, Argall, Bethke, Brooks, Burton,Clyne, Dickson, Duncan. 'Second Row: Eaton, Goodwillie, Hauser, Herschel, Holmes,Hoover, Kreuder, S. Kuh, M. Kuh.Third Row: Lindsay, MacDougal, McCarthy, McKey, Osborne,Patterson, Peterson, J. Phillips, R. Phillips.Fourth Row: Quinn, Rickard, Ryerson, Schulze, Scott, Snow,Strandberg, Turnbull, W olfhope,Fifth Row: Young.Louise WarnerPatricia W olfhopeElise YoungMartha ZimmermanLouise EatonLucille HooverPLEDGESDoris AltJoan DuncanMary HerschelJean Kreuder--168- Betsy KuhMarjorie KuhMarian McCarthyLibby McKeyMary OsborneAnn PattersonRosalie PhillipsBarbara QuinnHarriet RickardMary RyersonElinor SchulzeMary Elizabeth SnowSIGMAFounded in 1895 ]i'.. ,First Row: Ahlquist, Argiris, Bean, Borman, Burt, Chittenden,Clements, Clough, Comstock, Dieckmann.Second Row: H. Dillon, M. Dillon, Disch, Evans, Foote, Frech,Fryar, Geiger, Goode, Greening.Third Row: Hackett, Horal, F. Johnson, Kivlan, Klein, Mayer,Miles, E. Miller, M. Miller, Moore.Fourth Row: A. Steel, Moran, Morris, Nichols, Nims, Rexstrew,Rolf, Ruby, Shawhan, Skeeles.Fifth Row: R. Steel, Taylor, Teberg, Wells, Wetzel, Winston,Woodward, Yarotsky.MEMBERSAgle ArgirisMary Ellen BeanShirley BormanMary BurtMargaret DillonCharlotte ElyBetty Ann EvansBarbara FooteDorothy FrechJanet Geiger Pauleen KivlanMary Margaret MayerDorothy MilesLibby Ann MontgomeryJane MorrisMarilee NimsTroy ParkerCharlotte RextrewLois RofIDorothy ShawhanRuth Steel-169- Mary Ellen TaylorDorothy TebergMimi ThomasBetty WetzelDiana WinstonPLEDGESRuth AlquistKay ChittendenBeverly ClementsCarol Patrice CloughKathleen ComstockDorothy DieckmannHonore DillonGeorgia DischCalista FryarEloise Goode Mary Jane GreeningGenevieve HackettJacqueline HoralEvelyn JohnsonFaith JohnsonLorraine KleinEsther MillerMary MillerJane Barbara MoranMarietta MooreVirginia NicholsVirginia RubyJean SkeelsAnn SteelKay WellsJean WoodwardOlga YarotskyMartin paints the banner. Modern dancers in the Christmas Pageant; Warfield in the Twelfth Night floor show;burning the Christmas greens 011 Twelfth Night; Himmel, and admirers attracted bylolly pops; jitterbnrg at Maroon Party; Himmel, and detractors aiming at him.The Christmas season,filled with many festivities, was inaugurated hy the Daily MaroonChristmas Carnival at Ida Noyes. Next the Cloister Club was the sceneof a Christmas luncheon complete with music hy Mack Evans' carolersand Ida 'Noyes Council members as hostesses. Because of capacitycrowds the annual Christmas Pageant was presented twice in the Chapel.Closing the holidays Ilia Noyes Council sponsored their second TwelfthNight Party,-170 ---Although twelfth nightis a date of importance to Ida Noyes Council, thesocial program includes other parties as well. Afterthe two customary open houses held in collaborationwith the orientation committees, the Council ven­tured successfully an all-dormitory banquet for wom­en on Hallowe'eu eve. Fantastic decorations and afloor show, complete with chorines from BeecherHall, provided the entertainment.The cultural note of the Council program was firsttouched upon by a Sunday afternoon musical teaheld in early March. The chamber music was playedby members of Collegium Musicale under the direc­tion of the Music Department's Dr. Levarie. In thesame vein was the ninth annual Student Art Show,which is looked forward to by campus artists inter­ested in amateur exhibition. The circulation Iibrarvhas continued to operate under the Council as well.Embarking on a program of expansion, Ida Noyes Council reorganized at the beginning of the year andunder the presidency of Areta Kelhle began to pro­mote its new policy of providing both social andcultural entertainment in Ida Noyes Hall for thebenefit of the entire campus.Executive CouncilAreta Kelble-ChainnanKay Kellam-SecretaryBarbara CraneMary HammelBetty Jane NelsonAuxiliary CouncilHelen BickertMary ColleyMargaret CoxMimi EvansMuriel FrodinJanet GeigerCaroline GrahoMary HarveyBetty Hawk Mary HershelMary Lou PriceClarissa RahillBecky ScottJean ScottRuth SteelMarjorie SullivanElizabeth TroutYWCA RepresentativeEloise ProctorW AA RepresentativeEleanor CoambesFaculty MembersMrs. Gertrude SmithMrs. Agnes P. SmithMiss Marguerite KidwellTop Row: Herschel, Evans, Price Second Row: Coambs, Crane, Rahill, Front, Frodin, Harvey, Hawk, GeigerBottom Row: Hammel, Kelble, Kellam, R. Scott, J. Scott, Nelson-171-Dramatic Association'sproverbial shoestring has been replaced this year by the tre­mendous profits netted by the Mirror Show. For once D. A.received something more than bills from this hranch of theirorganization; in fact this is the first year in a coon's age thatD. A. has actually been able to express some happiness over thefact that they underwrite the Mirror Show. Next year, withD. A. in the blue, the campus can expect better work and moreexpensive productions. Coupled with this financial recovery arethe improvements resulting from the new "WoFkshop" set-upwhich was inaugurated last year. D. A. proper does only twoshows per annum; these are presented at 40 cents per head inMandel Hall. To work in the Mandel Hall productions is thesupposed goal of every member of the organization.Contrary to popular opinion the Workshop is not a talent­recruiting concern for D. A. itself. It was formed purely to fillin the long periods of inactivity between Mandel Hall produc­tions, and to give the students who are fond of acting the chanceto experience the enjoyment of producing many plays; thecaliber of these plays often equals or is superior to that ofregular D. A. plays, mainly because they are produced forpeople who enjoy amateur acting by amateur actors; the budgetshowever are usually smaller. These plays are usually student­directed as well as acted and produced. First Workshop produc­tion of the year to grace the stage of the Reynolds Club theaterwas Awake and Sing," starring Dick Himmel, Jackie Cross,and Demy Polacheck. From here the Workshop, assumed a moreserious vein with Chekov's "Uncle Vanya," featuring JackCampbell and Pete Atwater. This proved to be the biggest flopof the year, one critic claiming that the whole cast was com­posed of Zombies. (Critic was R. Evans.) Comedy proved moresuccessful with the production of G. K. Chestertons' Magic.This play gave the histrionic element of the campus a new starin the person of Mike Rathje. Her brief career, however, provedto be a recapitulation of "A Star Is Born." The dramatic yearwas climaxed by Ibsen's "Doll's House," in which tiny, toosweety-pie, Betty Ann Evans rode to everlasting fame in Chicago'spasse du piece. This was also D. A.'s greatest financial success.-172-Outstanding student director of this year's Workshop was bril­liant Clark SergeI. His achievements were "Awake and Sing"and "A Doll's House." This year the Workshop also enjoyedthe aid of expert set maker, Barry Farnol. Major male star ofthe Workshop is Himmel who is mentor of the D. A.'s publicitydepartment and general handyman, as well. Known affectionatelyto such stars as Paine and Atkinson as "Stinky," Himmel is, tobe brief, the very soul of the organization. As yet his ambitionto direct "Oedipus Rex" has not been realized but he has beenallowed to direct the coming Spring production, "Front Room."Regular D. A. productions started last fall with an experi­mental twist when the D. A. entertained the new freshmen withthe delightful horrors of Willard's "The Cat and the Canary."Freshmen laughed off their skillets at the allegedly seriousantics of the cast. Only silent moment in the whole play wasduring Marian Castleman's strip-tease which was effectuallyhidden hy Margaret Penney. Regular Fall production directedas usual by Dean Randall was Betty Ann Evans' masterly inter­pretation of "Night Must Fall." From her wheel-chair she stolethe show. Her juvenile lead was droopy Charles Murrah whosedownstate Illinois accent was bad to start with and worse whenhe attempted an English accent. Hattie Paine's comedy waseven hetter than usual in this production. Spring productionscheduled for Mandel Hall in May is "Goodhye Again." Anall-star cast is expected in it. Following the Broadway trend inrevivals, D. A. has selected a more recent comedy to avoid themustiness of former "Spring Revivals." Ruth Whelan willlanguish in the part of Julia with Grant Atkinson as Ken, RuthAhlquist playing Anna opposite Dick Himmel. Betty Ann Evanswill scintilate in the lead. At the other end of the cast good­old-Hattie-Paine will take the part of Clayton, a man in thescript hut sexagenesized to suit Hattie.Frederick Linden PresidentClarence Sills Vice-PresidentMartha Hutchinson TreasurerHarriet Paine Chairman of ActingDon Wilson Chairman of ProductionHomer Havermale Stage ManagerJohn Doolittle Business Manager-173-Top: Linden, Sills, Peg Hutchinson, Randall and Castleman reading script.Bottom: Randall at rehearsal, Fisher, Doolittle, Paine.Membership to the enviable mysteries of theDramatic Association is attainable through per­formance in any D. A. production. However, onlybudding stars and Himmels are sincerely encour­aged to join, for the life membership fee is threedollars. Traditional membership privileges haveinvolved a free banquet, but this has been dis­continued this year in favor of a Revels whichone-in-on-the-know assure's us will be an orgy ofprivate characterization, drinking, and Lucullanfestivity.The board for the commg year IS annuallynominated by the out-going board and elected bythe entire D. A. body. Hattie Paine, Chairman ofActing, holds an appointee position on the board.Since the split in the Beta house, little or no fra­ternity pressure has been exerted on the organ­ization. However even if D. A. were politicallycontrolled, the productions would be of the samequality; the board acts merely as an okayer toDean Randall's decisions. This is its proper func­tion as can easily be gleaned from a glance at its membership. President of Mirror holds one voteon the board. Bud Linden, this year's president,has worked in productions for the last four yearsand deserves his position. D. A. unlike Blackfriarsis conspicuously devoid of Psi U's for obviousreasons.Last year D. A. initiated an experiment in audi­tioning with the "Apprentice Plays." They haveheen eliminated from the D. A. hody of activities,much to the relief of the regulars. It is to he ex­pected that the Playfesters from the Four YearCollege will have the same unfortuante demise.They drove Hattie Paine practically crazy withtheir antics behind stage, and their antics on stagepractically drove the whole audience out of thetheater.On the constructive side of achievements, D. A.has entertained a trend toward better criticismfrom the campus publications. Ernest Leiser hasbecome official Maroon critic and Dan Crabb isthe reviewer for Cap and Gown. (With the helpof genius Evans.)-174-CARNIVALS andCARNIVALS An uncivilized tropical isle, "infested with native womenand cannibals," converted from the wet tiles of the Bart­lett pool, was the setting for the 1940 Water Carnival.Queen of the show was Kay Chittenden, crowned by theswimmers Campus Dream Girl. Straight from the Bowerycame the "Y" Carnival held at Ida Noyes the week-endbefore the Wash Prom. Final revelry of the year was theFandango run off in April by Nu Pi and Owl and Serpentjointly.-175-Among the numerous formal panies of the WinterQuarter Was the traditional Interciub ball, held at theLake Shore Athletic club. Gay Claridge played and themob Was as large and colorful as usual. The highlight ofthis party was the lack of a bar which will no doubt godown in llistory as the "Dry Ball of 1940."....:_:.��:-:u-�--176 _Held in Ida Noyes' Cloister Club in conjunctionwith the Social Committee, Skull and Crescent'straditional "Corsageless Formal" was the scene ofa novelty blues singing contest. The winner, BeatiGaidzie, was awarded the honor of singing inMirror Revue. Still in January, the dorm boys inBurton and Judson with the help of Gay Claridgeand his orchestra again provided one of their fa­mous feasts. Later on in Febmary Foster and Kelly each came across with dinner-dances-Kelley dec­orating in Palm Beach style. International Househecame the scene of a world-wide carnival at itshiggest party, "International Night." The sameevening the local barristers gave up their bookslong enough for a fling featuring legal talent likeVandwater and Jerger. Greeks were busy withparties every week, the Deke Ball, Phi Delt formal,and the Phi Psi Mirror party sharing prominence.- 177--One or several clubs flourishin many departments of the University; these areorganized to give a little social interest to the stu­dents' intellectual pursuits. In Rosenwald Hall,Kappa Epsilon Pi, the geology society, proudlydisplays a case in the museum, for which membersarrange montbly exhibits of specimens, panoramas,and graphs. A collection of all past collections isnow in preparation and will be on exhibition dur­ing the fiftieth anniversary celebration.Skits, usually satiric take-offs on faculty and de­partment heads, constitute the activities of theJunior Mathematics Club and the Bar Association.Several other law groups are formed for more po­litical purposes, particularly moot court sessions.English students sip tea and bull session withdifferent professors on Friday afternoons; romancelanguage students congregate for the same purposein their Wiebolt Hall clubhouse.University scouts are banded together to form aboy scout troop for crippled children at BillingsHospital Clinics. Another new organization, theYacht Club, is attempting to sponsor an inter­collegiate regatta in its first year of existence. Withmembership almost exclusively of easterners thereare high hopes of maintaining in the future severalcrews plus a number of dingeys.,Physicists operate electric switches in laboratory while PatLear examines complicated instrument under direction ofanother physicist switch puller. Many people are drawn to these "interest" clubsbecause of the inspiration of certain classes. Espe­cially in the science departments where the skilleduse of special apparatus is often imperative isthis so.Lately the Yacht Club has been contacting prom­inent alumni in order to enlist their support. Manypersons have already promised financial aid, how­ever the Yacht Club has as yet not seen fit to acceptthis financial help. Starting under their own powerthey have been able to procure several second-handdingeys for use during the sailing seasons. As yetnone of our new found sailors are interested infrostbiting through the Lake Michigan ice. Newmembers in the Yacht Club will pay a certain rea­sonable fee which will enable them to use theseboats at certain times. To gain further funds theClub plans to rent these boats during the holidaysto people interested in sailing. One unique featureof the Yacht Club is the variety of people it em­braces. From freshmen in the Four-Year Collegeto grizzled graduate students the membership isgathered. This means that a student can enjoyprivileges of the Club for more than the usualnumber of years. Also people in any branch ofthe University are apparently eligible in inter­collegiate competition.-178-The Uomad Womenoutnumbered as they are by men in the Busi­ness School, have organized into a society, ComadClub, in which they can air their mutual interestsand problems at regular luncheons and other suchfunctions. Every Wednesday they hold a luncheonand attempt to introduce their members at thattime to a woman prominent in some business orprofessional field. These luncheons prove to bejolly social successes as well as mediums for intro­ducing business students to the more importantpeople in their chosen fields. The women discussjob opportunities in the different fields mainly,as well as any other problems that occur to them.These contacts prove to be of greater than tem­porary value. Later in life it is an acknowledgedbenefit to be acquainted with the people who aresuccessful in their particular field of endeavor.Often Comad meetings prove to be merely socialgatherings. High spot of the Autumn Quarter wasthe faculty luncheon where little folders were pro­duced telling both "what I wanted" and "what Igot." The atmosphere was filled with laughter atThe School of Business Councilattempts to integrate a school more disintegratedthan any other on campus. Actually it affects onlythe independents; the large enrollment of frater­nity men form a clique of their own. Public bal­lot of the Business School elects four members tothe Council; Comad Club, one; each of the twoprofessional fraternities, one; and theclub, one.To effect its social purpose, the Stu­dent Council sponsors parties so thatfaculty and students can get acquainted.Gala affairs at Halloween and at Christ­mas, along with dinners and assembliesfeaturing good speakers, all appear onthe social calendar. Principal event,however, is the faculty-student dinner,highlight of which is the presentationof the Delta Sigma Pi key award to thestudent with the highest scholarship.President of the Council is effectiveSam Woods who has been ahly assisted graduate Top Row: Bender, Eichstaff, Monson.Bottom Row: Kemp, Teufel, Flanagan.this novelty. Another high point during the yearis a luncheon to which males are invited. Thisalways proves to be quite successful both with theComad members and their escorts.throughout the year by the two Elsies, McCrackenand Teufel. Ed Gordon holds the funds of theorganization in his business-like hands. TheCouncil functioned so well this year that thereis much promise for the next to be not only inter­esting but profitable to all concerned.-179- Cook, Teufel, Byrd, GordonAlpha Delta PhiBeta Theta PiChi PsiDelta Kappa EpsilonDelta UpsilonKappa Alpha PsiKappa SigmaPhi Delta ThetaPhi Gamma DeltaPhi Kappa PsiPhi Kappa SigmaPhi Sigma DeltaPi Lambda PhiPsi UpsilonSigma Alpha EpsilonSigma ChiIZeta Beta Tau-180-Top Left: Phi Psi's dine prospective pledges.Top Right: The illustrious hody sits for itsportrait.Bottom Left: As rushees mill and Macy sells­no hotbox this.Bottom Right: Freshmen sign away body andsoul at Bartlett on the fatal morning. is to make and enforce rushing rules for the Fraternities. Actualpotency of the Council is nil. This year demonstrated excep­tionally well how weak the Council is. Policy of the big houseson campus has of late been to cheat the other houses by com­mitting every rushing offense that they thought they can getaway with. Little houses have naturally taken up the cue andfurthered this policy. This year's criminals were so open abouttheir crimes that they were actually caught in the act by I-FCommittee President, John Culp. Unable to whitewish crimeswhich he actually saw perpetrated, Culp tried valiantly hutfutilely to enforce the rules. For a time he succeeded with thehacking of the Dean's office. However, given time for the stinkof the offenses to die down, tp.e criminals polished the matteroff by persuading the Council to retract the penalties imposed.From the houses that still maintain some semblance of honorand want to play ball the cry is now for rules with teeth in themsupported firmly hy the Dean's Office, or no rules at all.Next problem in importance presented to the Council thisyear was that of the recognition of Kappa Alpha Psi, Negrofraternity. This was referred to the respective fraternities andlacking a three-fourths majority support was defeated.Main functionof the J-F CouncilI·F COMMITTEE MEMBERSJohn CulppresidentJack Carlsonvice-presidentBill MacysecretaryJerry Abelso�treasurerDick Glasserchairman of the ballThe I-F Ball handled by the Council was as successful asusual. Set in the colorful Drake Hotel, the Ball was even moresuccessful than formerly. Publishing fraternity averages wasthe only other large scale task undertaken by the Council.-181-BETA THETA PIChartered at Chicago, 1894Founded at Miami University, 1839MEMBERS IN F ACUL TY: Arthur Barnard, Merle Coulter, HaroldDunkel, Winfred E. Garrison, Dr. Samuel Slaymaker, William H.Taliaferro.MEMBERSDaniel S. BarnesFrank J. Harrison, Jr.John P. JeffersonEugene R. LaterRichard H. OrrAllan E. PeyerDavid M. PletcherEarl M. RatzerWilliam R. RemingtonRalph J. RosenLouis M. WelshJohn E. WilsonJohn B. Zurmuehlen Top Row: Armstrong, Scheidler, Mongerson, Darragh, Mather,GraybillSecond Row: Heddon, Peyer, Netherton, Warner, Jefferson.Wilson, Later, �artinBottom Row: Harrison, Remington, Barnes, Zurmachlen, Ratzer,Orr, WelchPLEDGESEdwin H. ArmstrongDaniel ConnorCharles DarraghWilliam DurkaGregory HeddenRohert KrayhillCharles MatherJohn J. MongersonPierre PalmerJerome P. Scheidler-182-Chartered at Chicago, 1919Founded at Yale University, 1895PI L!MBDA PHIMEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Alfred Frankstein, Ralph Gerard.Louis Leitter, Earl Zauss. Faculty Counselor: Ralph Gerard.Top Row: Freiman, Leibman, Mandel, Horner, Pregler, Silber­man, Bilsky, LichtenbergSecond Row: Lazarus, Kamensky, Lowenstein, Jacobs, Krane,Greenberg, Levy, Friesleben, LezakBottom Row: Salzberg, Stern, Abelson, Biederman, Richman,Beenstein, ReenbergMEMBERSMaurice BilskyRobert BreglerEdward HornerLeo LichtenbergAlbert LiebmanHerbert MandelAbbott SilbermanKenneth Treiman Jerry AbelsonJoel BernsteinIrwin BiedermanBernard EptonMilton FrieslebenRobert GreenbergWilliam HochmanRobert JacobsSol KamenskyJames KraneDavid LazarusWilliam LevyRobert LezakJulian LowensteinHerbert ReubergRoland RichmanDavid SalzbergMayer SternPLEDGES-183-��\�'J.Kl( �\? �:f:! (\� �, 'k\, PHI SIGMA DELTAChartered at Chicago, 1921Founded at Columbia University, 1909MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Louis Landa, Arnold I. Sure.Faculty Counselor: Arnold I. Sure.Bottom Row: Rothstein, Norian, Moskow, Solverman, Roth­stein, Berkson, Rosenfeld, Lubin, HarrisSecond Row: Sornin, Blumenthal, Holland, Halperin, Weiss,Levy, Mich, Schaty, Cohen, GoldbergTop Row: Moment, Steinberg, Holzman, Pierce, Bartman, Bell,Tropp, Shane, Sahlins, Rosen, PostelneckMEMBERSReinhardt BendixAlbert BerksonArnold GoldbergLester GootnickLewis Grossman Melvin SteinbergMilton WeissArthur WolfLawrence CohenMarshall BlumenthalWilfred HalperinAlfred Harris, IIJerome HollandMilton LubinDaniel MomentHarry Moskow, Jr.Raymond MyersonRichard NorianMelvin RosenfeldGilbert RothsteinWalter RothsteinMorris Silverman PLEDGESWilliam BartmanTheodore BellStanley LevyMartin PierceBernard SahlinsTed RosenLeonard ShaneHenry Tropp-184-ZETA BETA TAUChartered at Chicago, 1918Founded at the College of the City of New York, 1898Faculty Counselor: Mandel Sherman.Top Row: Hahn, Morganroth, Claster, Slottow, Wurzburg, Wile,Wittcoff, Kahl, Diamond, LeonardSecond Row: Ellbogen, Levin, Winkelman, Levinsohn, Blue­stein, Jarrow, Aronson, So lis- Cohen, Fox, Mitchel, SabathBottom Row: Slobin, Grody, Loewy, Goldsmith, Glasser, Weis·man, HymenHarold AronsonCharles BluesteinJay FoxRichard GlasserJulian GoldsmithWilliam GrodyArnold HasterlikEmil HirschTed HymenMyles JanowRichard KahlHarry John LeviJohn LevinsonArthur LoewyMarvin Mitchell Edward MorganrothMorton SlobinHays Solis-CohenSaul WeismanRichard WileHoward WinkelmanRaymond WittcoffHart "!/urzburgMEMBERSPLEDGESStanley ClasterIrving DiamondDavid EllbogenGeorge GilinskyGerald Hahn\.J ames LeonardRichard LevinDaniel SahathGene Slottow-185-PHI GAMMA DELTAChartered at Chicago, 1902Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Rollin Chamberlain, Knox Chandler,William Hutchinson, Frank O'Hara, Robert Redfield, BernadetteSchmidt. Faculty Counselor: Rollin Chamberlain.Top Row: Paltzer, Vertuno, Harmon, French, Pittman, Price, Bancroft, Dvorsky, Donian, Norling, Rider, BriggsSecond Row: Tasher, Sieverman, McCracken, White, Moberg, Lopatka, Kosacz, Martin, Brummer, Ploshay, WiselyThird Row: Hill, Sotos, ClarkMEMBERSHarry BennerRobert BrownellFrank BrunnerArmand DonianThomas DvorskyThomas FrenchAlexander HarmonArthur LopatkaJoseph MarkusichFrank McCrackenJerome MobergCharles PaltzerMarvin PittmanBernard PloshayWilliam PriceAlfred RiderAlan RobertsonAzad Sarkisian Dean TuckerJack VertunoTed WhiteAllen WiseleyPLEDGESGeorge BancroftRodney BriggsThomas HillPaul JonesAdam KusaczBernard LabndaDavid MartinAlfred NorlingGeorge SotosWilliam Wright-186-CHI PSIChartered at Chicago, 1898Founded at Union College, 1841MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Fred Barrows, Charles Child, ClarkFinnerud, Richard Gamble, John Manly, Walter Payne, WilliamWatson. Faculty Counselor: Walter Payne.Bottom Row: Grossmann, Stoner, Thomson, Plumley, Tingley,Phanstiehl, Pabst, BriggsSecond Row: Francis, Kester, Degan, Atwater, Richard,Westen.berg, Parks, Sager, Weedfall, Marrow, CookTop Row: Gillison, Richard, Richardson, Costello, Mullen,Connor, Giovadohini, Lawson, Hull, HellerPierce AtwaterPeter BriggsJack CampbellRobert ClarkJames DeganNeill EmmonsPeter GiovacchiniWilliam KesterRoy LarsonAndrew LawsonAlfred LinkPaul LuckhardtDonald MarrowAlfred PfanstiehlRalph ParksWilliam Plumley J ames RichardBaxter RichardsonRobert SagerJ ames StonerJohn ThomsonLoyal TingleyRobert WeedfallWilliam WestenbergMEMBERSPLEDGESDonald ConnorJohn CookScott CostelloTruman DahlbergCurtis FrancisJ ames GillisonRobert HullHoward HellerRobert LawsonJ ames MullenFrank Richard--lH7 -KAPPA SIGMAChartered at Chicago, 1904Founded at the University of Virginia, 1869MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: G. W. Bartlemez, Edward Duddy,L. M. C. Hanson, James L. Palmer, W. A. Thomas, Emmet Bay.Faculty Counselor: James L. Palmer.Bottom Row: McCormack, Corbett, Fearing, Henry, Basler,Snively, Dunn, Kerns, HamSecond Row: Dwyer, Bielak, Fisher, Cerny, Kurk, Panling,Howat, Boutell, Kaposta, Barlow, WuesthoffTop Row: Foster, Emory, Noble, Schlageter, Gordon, Chapin,Schnoor, Edelbrock, Afton, Hawkins, Dwight.MEMBERSRobert AftonWalter BarlowClinton BaslerWayne BoutellAlvin BielakEdward CerneyWilliam ChapinRobert CorbettWilliam DunnJohn EdelbrockRalph FearingA. Lee FisherNorman FosterThomas GreenElton HamBruce HowatRobert HughesJ. Gordan HenryVernon KernesWalter Kurk William McCormackWilliam PaulingHarry ReadCharles SchlageterRandolph SnivelyAlfred SchnoorPLEDGESWendell DwightJohn DwyerRoy EmeryEdward GordonDonald HawkinsLouis KapostaRohert MooreCharles NohleWuesthoff, Huhert-188-PHI KAPPA SIGMAChartered at Chicago, 1905Founded at the University of Pennsylvania, 1850MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Hiller Baker, Charles Colby, GeorgeHibbert. Faculty Counselor: Charles Colby.Bottom Row: Nagler, McCarthy, Pearson, Howard, Milakovich,Johnson, Ranney, Harris, Harding, Guy.Second Row: Hippchen, Cochran, R. Howard, Ford, Young,Reilly, Bigelow, Moonie, Slichter, Conway, Grable, Blyers,Top Row: Sowders, Rothrock, Russell, Arnold, Keck, Sareve,Buffington, Nelson, Grafton, Stancher, Burgstone, Linderson.MEMBERSWayne ArnoldReed BuffingtonGilbert FordJ ames HardingStanley HarrisCharles HippchenJohn HowardCharles JohnsonDan McCarthyBertram McElroyEli MilakovichClyde MoonieWalter NaglerBill NelsonRobert PearsonWilson Rei1lyLee Russell Richard RanneyDavid RothrockJack ShreveJack SlichterCharles YoungPLEDGESMyles AndersonBen BanfordHarry BigelowFrank BurnsHorace ByersHarry CochranAlvin ConwayPerry GraftonVaughn GrableRay HowardLatimer JohnsRobert KeckTed SowdersWesley Sancher-189-SIGMA CHIChartered at Chicago, 1897Founded at Miami University, 1855Faculty Counselor: Dr. Charles Shannon.Top Row: Nichols, Von Henke, Peel, Fairservis, Harper, Turean,Stenberg, Caldis, Cattrell, HurstSecond Row: Fisher, Hall, Romuey, Tainter, Lusk, Wangelin,Alsop, Camp, Cash, CastellBottom Row: Gentry, Stampf, Fogle, Culp, Charlton, Woehlck,Stretter, Bowers, StegmeirMEMBERSWinston G. AlsopWilliam F. BethardWilbur C. BohnhoffJ. Robert Bowen, Jr.Turner CampJames B. CharltonBenjamin L. CoyteJohn F. Culp, IIIRobert EastFrederic B. EmeryGeorge D. FogleRichard F. GaleRichard GentryRichard HallLorin KingThomas LuskO. Donald OlsonMillard W. SaundersJoseph M. StampfTheodore S. StritterRolfe S. Tainter John UmhsFred G. WangelinJoffre HeineckHawley ParmeleePLEDGESGeorge CaldisRichard A. CassellWebster C. CushThomas L. C. CottrellWalter F airservis, Jr.Robert R. FisherWilliam R. Harper, Jr.Charles E. HurstWilliamP. MacLean, Jr.A. Peter NicolaThomas PeelMiles Q. RomneyRobert P. StenbergJohn TurianVincent A. von HenckeEdgar E. Warner-190--DELTA UPSILONChartered at Chicago, 1901Founded at Williams College, 1834MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Fred Adair, Charlton Beck, Fay­Cooper Cole, John Cover, Paul Douglas, Charles Gilkey, WillisGouwens, Karl Holzinger, Hilger Jenkins, Simeon Leland, HarveyLemon, Lyndon Lesch, Robert Lovett, G. L. McWhorter, HarveyMallory, William Mather, Edwin Miller, John Moulds, BertramNelson, Wilbur Post, Henry Prescott, Conyers Read, George Works.Faculty Counselors: Bertram Nelson, Fay-Cooper Cole, Harvey B.Lemon.Top Row: Naas, Balla, Tenney, Boyes, Dragstedt, Gwinn,Armbruster, Whipple, Fitzgerald, Bjorklund.Third Row: Read, Swanson, Arthur, Nardi, Emswiler, McClure,Randa, Demetrey, Tulley.Second Row: Crane, Courrier, Ogburn, Faris, Anderson, Wil.son, Rinder, Smalley, Buerki.Bottom Row: Harris, Hill, Vogt, Holmboe, Miller, Davis,Patrick, Joranson, Wright, Tapp.MEMBERSGordon AndersonGeorge ArthurRobin G. BuerkiGeorge CourrierJack CoverJack CraneGeorge CrowellRobert DavisJ ames EmswilerElsworth FarisWillard Harris James HillHarold HolmboeRichard TrowbridgeEvon VogtRobert JoransonKarl KoosJ ames McClureEdward McKayErnest MillerGeorge NardiFielding OgburnJohn Patrick Richard ReadGeorge RinderRobert SmalleyRobert StraetzJacob SwansonNicholas TappRichard WilsonHarold Wright Alfred BjorklandDonald BoyesJames DemetryCarl DragstedtJack FitzgeraldMerritt GwinnGene JohnsonHarlan NaasDonald RandaAshton TenneyRobert TulleyReed WhipplePLEDGESPaul ArmbrusterGeorge Balla-191-PHI KAPPA PSIChartered at Chicago, 1894Founded at Jefferson College, 1852MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Charles Beeson, Gerald Bentley,Algernon Coleman, Vernon David, Robert Park, Everett Olson.Faculty Counselor: Gerald Bentley.MEMBERSMaurice AbrahamsonBud ArquillaCharles BanfeWalcott BeattyWilbur BoutellDayton CapleWilliam CaudillHarry CorneliusRobert CrowRobert CumminsEdward DavidsonBruce DicksonJohn Farish Edward FerrissAlfred GentzlerAlan GreenWilliam HanklaVictor JohnsonWilliam LovellWilliam MacyFrank MeyersJoseph MolkupRalph MooreCharles O'DonnellRobert ReynoldsRichard SimsPhillip Strick Top ROH': Monaghan, Gentzler, Weis, Strick, Farish, Murrah,Wilder, Watkin, Moore, Crow, Wickham.Third Row: White, Palmer, Taylor, Zahrn, Bates, P. Reynolds,Petty, Munger, Hoatson, Evans, Self.Second Row: Abrahamson, Davidson, Sainsbury, Caudill, Wie·demann, W. Reynolds, Stier, Hankla, Johnson, Lovell, Buch,Luckow, Molkup.Bottom Row: Gorgas, Sims, Banfe, O'Donnell, Macy, R.Reynolds, Cornelius, Caple, Ferriss, Greene, Beatty.Clark WatkinJack WeberEmil WeisJohn White,Corwin WickhamDavid WiedemannGeorge WilliamsW alter YoungPLEDGESLawrence BatesThomas EvansJames HoatsonCharles Luckow--'-"--192- Walter MaurovitchRobert MonaghanEdwin Munger �Charles MurrahEdward NelsonStuart PalmerDavid PettyPaul ReynoldsWilliam ReynoldsCharles SainshuryWilliam Self �George StierPhilip TaylorWentworth WilderFredZahrnDELTA KAPPA EPSILONChartered at Chicago, 1893Founded at Yale University, 1844MEMBERS IN THE F AGr-LTY: Gilbert A. Bliss, Carl D. Buck,F. N. Freeman, Henry Gordon Gale, Wellington D. Jones, Charles H.Judd, Elmer Kenyon, Preston Keyes, Frank McNair, Shailer Mat­thews. Faculty Counselor: Wellington D. Jones.Top Row: Long, Raiman, Lauerman, McCormick, Norris, W.Lorenz, C. Lorenz, Ragle, LeggittFourth Row: Gordon, R. Thompson, Kincheloe, Baugher,Moynihan, Morris, Coffman, Moller, Daschbach, J. Thompson,Warfield'Third Row: Lynch, Pyle, R. C. Miller, Hackett, Siebert, Thor·burn, C. Traeger, Frey, R. A. Miller, Lewis, MitchellSecond Row: Tillery, Wilson, Mathews, Steinbach, Slade, Gallander, Ashley, Darling, Carter, L. Traeger, Wolff, Brown,H. ThomasBottom Row: Sponsel, McMahon, Anderson, Badger, Carlson,Sills, Wheeler, Goes, Stuhr, Howe, W .ThomasMEMBERSJ ames Otis AndersonEdwin Hunt Badger, Jr.Charles William BrownJack Junior CarlsonAlan Greene Darling, Jr.J ames Leonard FreyThomas R. GallanderJohn Edward GoesJoseph J ames HackettTheodore Pleas HoweJohn Edward LewisFrancis Joseph LynchRobert Warren MathewsHarry T. McMahon, Jr. Robert Abner MillerRobert Charles MillerJ ames Bruce MitchellJohn Carroll PyleDavid Nathaniel SiebertClarence W rn. Sills, Jr.John Lathrop SladeKenath Herrick SponselRaleigh R. SteinbachRobert George StuhrWilliam A. Thomas, Jr.Robert Clifford ThorburnJohn Earl ThompsonHarry Dale Tillery-193 -- Clayton Lars TraegerLawrence Carl TraegerDonald Kelsey WarfieldRichard E. WheelerDonald Slade WilsonWalter Eldon WolffPLEDGESRalph AshleyCharles BoydWilliam BaugherKenneth CoffmanFrank DaschbackHarold Gordon William HectorRobert KincheloeGeorge LauermanJohn LeggittVincent LongClyde LorenzWarren LorenzThierry McCormickRobert MollerTaylor MorrisArthur MoynihanLionel NorrisJack RagleRobert RaimanRex 'I'hom psor,ALPHA DELTA PHIChartered at Chicago, 1904Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Kyle Anderson, Arthur Compton,Clifford Holley, Albert Palmer, Lewis Sorrell. Faculty Counselor::Arthur H. Compton.MEMBERSJohn ArgallJ ames AtkinsCharles BallengerArthur BethkeJohn BernhardtDonald BrownJohn BusbyJohn DavenportLester DeanRobert DeanJohn FralickRobert HarlanLyle HarperHomer H avermale Rohert HerschelJoseph HowardNeil JohnstonPaul JordanWilliam LeachLouis LettsFrederick W. LindenRalph McCollumHenry McWhorterAlexis MillerKenneth MorrayCharles MoweryCarl NohlWallace Ottomeyer Top Row: D. Smith, Robinson, Flanagan, Merrifield, Philbrick,L. Leach, Thompson, ReedFourth Row: Stierer, Roberts, R. Smith, Oostenburg, Angelo"Durkee, Drake, Blakeslee, Matheson, SawyierThird Row: W. Leach, Jordan, McWhorter, Morray, Johnston"Miller, L. Dean, P. Smith, Harper, R. Dean, BethkeSecond Row: Mowery, Snow, Ballenger, Brown, Nohl, Herschel"Woolams, Letts, Busby, Percy, HavermaleBottom Row: Perry, Harlan, Topping, Wasem, Bernhardt"Linden, Stanley, Atkins, Thomas, Stearns, DavenportCharles PercyCalvin SawyierPaul SmithRobert SnowCarl StanleyJohn StearnsColin ThomasHarry ToppingRobert WasemJack W oolams George DrakeDavid BurkeeGeorge FlanaganLindsay LeachJ ames MathesonRichard MerrifieldWilliam Oostenburg;Richard PhilhrickRichard ReedAshton RohertsMilton RobinsonDavid SmithRobert SmithRohert StiererRohert ThompsonPLEDGESJohn AngeloRichard Blakeslee-194-PSI UPSILON •Chartered at Chicago, 1869Founded at Union College, 1833MEMBERS IN THE F ACUL TY : Stores Barrett, William Bond,Percy Boynton, Harold Gosnell, J ames Herrick, George Howland,Henry Morrison, Edward Oliver, James Stifler. Faculty Counselor:James Stifler.Freshmen and SophomoresBottom Row: Johnson, Gibler, Bills, Vanderhoof, Reynolds,E. Caulton, Bolks, Graves, K. McLellan, Crabb, Senn, Nichols.Top Row: Cutshaw, Matthews, Patterson, F. Evans, Ruml,Weinberg, Anderson, Krakowka, Beaubien, R. Barnard, Crosby,Bean, Fawley, Meyer, Von Albade.Juniors and SeniorsBottom Row: Jernberg, Daniels, Garvey, Palmer, Parsons,Pfeiffer, MacClellan, Bell, Shostrorn, Reid, Jacques, A. SalzmannTop Row: Kimball, Stanton, Hewitt, Huffaker, Rendelman,Barnard, R. Salzmann, Keller, Jampoljs, MacNamee, Schmus,Stevens, Callahan, Wallis.MEMBERS Alan Graves William Reid William BarnardHarrison Barnard Lee Hewitt Hugh Rendleman Robert BeanJames Bell Gregory Huffaker Robert Reynolds Mark BeaubienGilbert Bills Richard Jacques Arthur Salzmann John CroshyRichard Bolks Robert J ampolis Richard Salzmann J ames CutshawEdward Caulton Robert Jernberg Albert Schmus Frank EvansKenneth Cornwall Dale Johnson Leonard Senn Samuel FawleyDaniel Crabb Arthur Jorgenson Charles Shostrum John FraineRaymond Daniels John Keller Roy Stanton George KrakowkaHobert Evans William Kimhall John Stevens Robert MeyerEdward Faherty Charles MacLellan Allan Vanderhoof Jay NicholsRoger Faherty Kenneth MacLellan Baird Wallis Bradley PattersonPaul Florian Rohert McNamee Wenzl RumlGeorge Garvey John Palmer PLEDGES Joseph Von AlhodeWilliam Gihler Russell Parsons Randall Anderson Robert Weinherg-195-PHI DELTA THETAChartered at Chicago, 1897Founded at Miami University, 1848F acuIty Counselor: Carey Croneis.Top Row: Humphreyville, Randall, Dabbert, VanMeter, Godsave,Erickson, OIlman, Axelson, Finney, Gustafson, Knause.Fourth Row: Mustain, Trow, Nye, Beach, Tedrow, Weiland,Wochos, Cantzler, Stehney, McKnightThird Row: Yoder, Oakley, Streuh, Geppinger, Blackwell, D.McKinsey, Gruhn, B. McKinsey, Hand, Smith, MossbergSecond Row: Browning, Lewis, Walker, Anderson, Bex, Brown,Williams, Reker, Doolittle, Baumgart, Cassels, Peterson, BimsonBottom Row: Pun derson, Mason, Colvert, Bates, Standen, Muir,Bigelow, Murray, Smith, DeSilva, LawrenceMEMBERS Kenneth Geppinger David Smith Richard FinneyDale Anderson S. S. Gordon Don Standen William GodBaveEd Bates Robert Gruhn Paul Strueh Fred GustafsonPaul Baumgart Chester Hand Alan Teague Eugene HumphrevilleJohn Bex George Kimmler J ames Tedrow Richard HullRobert Bigelow Robert Lewis Robert Walker Orville KanouseLloyd Bimson Charles Mason George Weiland Phil OllmannWilliam Blackwell Richard McKinsey Ben Williams Robert MustainWaIter Blair Rohert McKinsey Warren Wilner Don McKnightRobert Brown Rohert Mossberg Paul Wochos Rohert NyeCarol Browning James Murr Hatten Yoder Raymond RandallRichard Cantzler Gordon Murray Jim TrowRobert Castles Raymond Oakley PLEDGES A. D. Van MeterRaymond Colvert, Jr. Thomas Park Ken AxelsonCarey Croneis Andrew Peterson Harry Beach FOREIGN EXCHANGEJ ames DeSil�a John Punderson Al Dahhert STUDENTJohn Doolittle Frank Reker Rohert Erickson Alan Smith-196-SIGMA ALPHA EPSILONChartered at Chicago, 1903Reorganized at Chicago, 1938Founded at University of Alabama, 1856MEMBERS IN THE FACULTY: Ned Merriam, C. E. Parmenter,William F. Ogburn, Durbin S. Rowland, Ernst Haden, George O.Fairweather.Bottom Row: Yancey, Pritchett, Mallory, Hand, HowensteinTop Row: Zolad, Rampeck, Baumann, Fitzhugh, LewisMEMBERSGeorge HandJohn HowensteinRobert MasonCarl PritchettDale ScottDavid Seyler PLEDGESHarold BaumannDonald BergusErnest Lee FitzhughWalter LouisGeorge RamspeckRobert Yancey-197 ---KAPPA ALPHA PSIFounded at Indiana University, 1911;Chartered at Chicago, 1918F acuIty counselor: Harold F. GosnellTop Row: Cannon, Boykin, Bowen, Baptiste, Sengestacke,TaylorSecond Row: Wilson, La Vizzo, Mitchell, Gilbert, Cunningham,Washington, WhiteBottom Row: DeFrantz, Wilkins, Crawford, Johns, Wimby,ReedACTIVES:Oliver W. Crawford William MitchellJesse A. Reed, Jr.Sylvanus TylerFrancis TaylorCurtiss L. WashingtonStanton H. WilsonAlvin N. CannonBenjamin H. CrockettWalter A. CunninghamFaburn E. DeFrantz, Jr.Lloyd GallowayHarold GilbertElmer Henderson J. Ernest Wilkins, Jr.Lucius W. Wimby IIIWilliam WintersClarence C. JamisonSteven A. Johns Sherman W. White, Jr.Theophile La VizzoByron Minor-198-ProfessionalFraternitiesAlpha Epsilon IotaWomen's MedicalAlpha Kappa KappaMen's MedicalAlpha Zeta BetaScience ClubDelta Sigma PiMen's BusinessGamma AlphaMen's ScienceKappa Beta PiWomen's LawKappa Epsilon PiMen's ScienceKappa Mu SigmaWomen's ScienceLambda Gamma PhiMen's BusinessNu Beta EpsilonMen's LawNu Sigma NuMen's MedicalNu Sigma PiWomen's MedicalPhi Beta PiMen' s MedicalPhi Delta PhiMen's LawPhi ChiMen's MedicalPhi Delta EpsilonMen's MedicalPhi Delta KappaMen's EducationPhi Rho SigmaMen' s MedicalPi Lambda ThetaWomen's EducationSigma Delta EpsilonWomen's ScienceZeta PhiMen's SociologyDELTA SIGMA PIBottom Row: Theotikas, Pappageorge, Clark, Vatter, Cook,Rovetta, Winons, Uribe.Top Row: Pracht, Works, Drigot, French, Brown, Cheek,Bachmeyer, Dixon.Robert BachmeyerGeorge BrownJohn CheekJohn CookDavid ClarkRobert DixonAlhert DrigotRichard FrenchThomas PappageorgeJoseph PrachtCharles RovettaGregory TheotikasCarlos UribeWilliam VatterEdward WinansGeorge Works-200-LAMBDA GAMMA PHITop Row: Deitz, Levin, Wasserman, Preskill, Krieberg.Bottom Row: Epstein, Leeds, Becker, Smith, Gross.MEMBERSDonald BeckerRalph DertzBernard DolnickByron EpsteinHershel GrossHymen KriebergSydney LeedsHarold LevinLeonard PreskillMarshall SmithHarris SprecherAlbert WassermanHONORARY FACULTYMEMBERSMr. Garfield V. CoxMr. Paul H. Douglass-201-Wash P. Makes MoneyTop: Ach, Rosenfeld, Trowbridge.Bottom: McClellan, Clyne, Reynolds, Myers, Linden.Enlarging its personnel with an advisory committee planned by last year'schairman, Bill Webbe, the Student Social Committee this year became amore representative organization under Phi Psi Bob Reynolds. The seriesof Social C-book dances so successful before seem to have become a campustradition.Winter Quarter the S.S.C. acted as promoter of several annual parties,Skull and Crescent Formal at Ida Noyes Cloister Club and Iron Mask's For­mal at the Reynolds Club. Although the last ticket was torn from the SocialC-books, the Committee was left with the biggest job of the year, the Wash--202-ington Prom. Contrary to the custom of the pastfew years, the setting was changed from BartlettGym to the Lakeshore Athletic Club. In spite ofthe fact that the ballroom had afforded insufficientspace for the Interclub Ball the week before,tables were rearranged and a bar introduced toaccommodate the dancers. No small factor in itssuccess was Jimmy Dorsey's orchestra, who mod­erated their swing to harmonize with the formalbackground of the Lakeshore. A double-winggrand march was led by Student Settlement Board'sMargie Kuh, Head Marshal Chuck Pfeiffer, JaneMyers of Mirror, and Chairman Bob Reynolds. Financially a greater success than any prom inthe last decade with one exception, when a cheaperorchestra was hired, the 1940 Prom drew overfour hundred couples. Deke Dale Tillery managedthe affair with the help of JohnnyBex, Al Schmus,Patty W olfhope, Wayne Boutell, and George Schatz.Rohert G. Reynolds, ChairmanRoger AchNatalie ClyneHarry LeviFrederick Linden Charles MacLellanJane MyersMelvin RosenfeldRichard Trowhridge-203-A trip to South Americawas the purported theme of the 1940 MirrorRevue, but the traditional loosely knit structureof the show provided only rare intimations of theoriginal intention. However, this has always beenthe difference between Mirror, the review of thecampus year, and Blackfriars, the musical com­edy. Advertised as less clean and Puritanical thanusual, Mirror was probably just what it claimednot to he. ·With the exception of an odd skit ortwo, Director Dean Randall's influence was every­where evident, which censorship was the makingof the show. With the talent of veterans likeAtkinson, Himmel, Evans, and Paine and the addi­tion of several new singers the show had a goodchance of success at the start, especially whenpublicized so thoroughly as it was.The first act brought two notable skits, Espionageand Tallulah's Tremors, both starring Himmel andPaine. In the latter Hattie Paine outdid DorothyLamour with her sarong, and then outdid herselfin her superlative burlesque, I 117 ant to Be aGlamor Girl. Jean Scott proved herself the newsinging find, surpassing both Ruth Whelan andBeati Gaidzik, whose voices didn't carry to thefifth row center. Reker and Farwell came throughwith a first rate comic number in the sty Ie of IshKabibble.The chorus, otherwise fairly good, fell down atthe beginning of the second act with the difficultrhumb I! dance. The ever present Grant Atkinson,however, gave finish to the dancing. Student Ac­tivities, Misplacement Bureau, with Evans, Ahl­quist, and Himmel, and Whose Little Girl AreYou?, Louis Welch's superb take-off on John Bar­rymore, were the high spots of the second half ofthe show. Punch line of the Barrymore skit eli- MIRROR BOARDMargaret Hutchinson, PresidentJanet Geiger, Vice-PresidentMary Hanes Martha Hutchinson Jane MyersTop: Mirror chorines rehearse beforeC&G camera spies.Middle Left: Girls swing into zippynumber. .Middle Right: Beati steals a pictureat Mirror rehearsal.Bottom: Rosalie Phillips resting afterstrenuous routine shows best campuslegs in many a moon.-204-maxed the evening. Hattie Paine stepped ontothe stage leading a troop of girl scouts. Alreadyhaving some sixteen daughters and one son, Barry­more was swept off his feet in bewilderment; noteven a quotation from Shakespeare came to him.He muttered, "I never went to no picnic." Col­laborating with Hattie Paine, Polly Kivlan gave asong performance equal to her successes in thenumerous campus floor shows at which she hasappeared.Much credit for a better than usual show thisyear goes to those who wrote the music. DAPresident Bud Linden again produced many of thehits, while others were contributed by LindsayLeach, Earl Ratzer, and funny-man Frank Reker.Lyrics were written by a variety of students in­cluding Richard Himmel, Jane Sekema, MarionCastleman, Harriet Paine, and Joe Stampf. Skitswere written by many of the same people, MarianCastle�an, Grant Atkinson, Dick Himmel, WiltonSchiller, Rohert Cohn, Robert Foster, and JackCampbell. MIRROR PRODUCTION STAFFStage Manager Henrietta MahonCostumes Mary HammelProperties Jane WarrenBox Office Blanche GraverProgram Doris DanielsPublicity Ruth SteelHead Usher Martha SteereProduction Manager Donald WilsonLights Homer HavermaleOrchestra Bernard E. YoungSettings Barry FarnolDance Director Dorothy DaviesOrchestration Arranged by Norman KroneProduced by William M. RandallCover Design Phil StrickMIRROR STAGE CREWJames TedrowAl DubertDon McKnightAshton Roberts John AngeloDick BlakesleeBruce MitchellRobert Stierer-205-MIRROR DANCERSMary Ellen BeanPatrice CloughKathryn ChittendenCathleen ComstockDorothy DieckmannHonore DillonBarbara FooteLouise EatonBeatrice GaidzikMary Jane GearyEloise GoodeMarjorie GoodmanAnn HaightNaneen HillerMary Jane HooverEdith HungateShirley J. LadensonPatricia LydingElaine LewitzFrances MeganEsther Miller Jane MyersJean PhillipsRosalie PhillipsGloria PloehstMargaret Ann RathjeEmily RashevskyMary RieeRuth ScottShirley SmithRobert EricksonFred GustafsonOrville KanouseJohn MorrisonRobert NyeAnn SteelCarolyn WheelerRobert NystromMnrshaIl Pattul oJames TrowRichard OrrRodger Dodds MIRROR REVUERSJack CamphellLorraine PolachekDavid FletcherTed FinkLouis WelshGrant AtkinsonHarriet PaineAlice MeyerRobert NystromMarshall PattuloRichard SalzmanRichard Himmel Pierce AtwaterWilton M. SchillerDonald WilsonJacqueline CrossPeggy O'NeilMarion CastlemanBlanche RomerRuth AhlquistMary Margaret MayerChloe RothMary HammelBetty Ann Evans-206-Luring prospectivehigh school seniors to the quadrangles to sell themthe University is the job of the Student PublicityBoard. During the past year numerous seniorsfrom many city and a few out-of-town high schoolshave been guests of the Board at football games,Iiaskethall games, track meets, Mirror, D.A. Work­shop plays, band concerts. These activities it iscalculated will inspire the students to pay theirtuition regularly to Mr. Mather. In addition tothese official views of the University, the guestshave also been entertained informally at meals byfraternity houses and the girls' dorms, and bySaturday tours of the campus.Since it is against the rules of the North CentralAssociation of Public Schools to write to highschools for names of seniors, the Publicity Boardhas to be careful in getting names of prospectivestudents. The Board members therefore solicitnames from students, alumni, and certain Univer- sity offices which have extreme insight in suchmatters. In return the University pays the majorexpenses of the Board.An interesting fact from the files of the Boardis that during the autumn quarter approximately65 per cent of the high school students invited toattend University functions accepted and showedup; during the winter quarter only 25 per centaccepted, and even less than that percentage actu­ally came. This was prohably due directly to theabolishment of football. It presents a difficultsituation for the Administration of the Universityto handle at least for the next few years.Jack Bernhardt, PresidentJunior Board MembersJohn Bex Alan Darling Blanche GraverBaird WallisBoh MathewsTop Row: Mathews, Darling, BexBottom Row: Wallis, Graver, Bernhardt-207-Patients, PleaseBOARD OF SUPERIORSAlan Bond. . . .. . AbbotCharles O'Donnell PriorRobert Stuhr _ ScribeJohn Palmer. . . . . . H os pi talerCharles Towey PraecantorAlan BondGerhart Schild Production DirectorJose Castro . .. . Chorus DirectorDavid Bennett Musical DirectorJohn Pratt , . Costume DirectorBarry Farnol , . . . . . . . . . .. . SetsDavid Martin AuthorTop Row: Bex, Salzman, Kurk.Bottom Row: Faris, Paltzer, Kester.-208- Charles O'DonnellRobert StuhrJohn Palmer1940 Blackfriars."Patients, Please!"Act I: Student Health.1. Opening Kick Chorus - "It's Blackfriars TimeAgain"; Carroll, 1933.2. "Scrubwomen's Chorus," - Timmons, 1940.3. litterburg Number - "Ricki-T'ick" - Dasch.bach, 1940.4. Mothers and Daughters - "Every DaughterNeeds a Mother"- Vinograd and Richlin, 1940.5. Babies Number - "Some Day Soon" - Vino-grad and Ricblin, 1940.Act II: A Hospital Ward6. "Nurses' Dance" - Rappaport and Tapp, 1940.7. Parade Number - "Boogie-Wo ogie Blues"­Timmons, 1940.8. Finale - Reprise of "My Love Is Just a Dream"- "Through the Years" - Some Day Soon."Opening Man Lester PatinkinSilent Nurse Bruce MalleryMiddle·Man William BaugherToll-More Robert CohnFat·Man Charles BanfeSilent Interne Frank MeyersJane William HochmanDr. Carlson Cnarles MurrahErnest Douglas FeuermanCollege Man Robert ThorburnLinda Marshall PattulloStretcher Bearer No.1 Kenneth AxelsonStretcher Bearer No.2 Richard MerrifieldGnome Henry BrooksInterne No.1 (Joe) Marshall BlumenthalInterne No.2 Azad SarkisianInterne No.3 " Donald WilsonMale Visitor Fred ZahrnWoman Student , Monroe FeinCollege Woman Robert C. Mill�rJohn Lee HewittCoed Fred KochMrs. Cameron , Jim StolpAnother College Man John CookPale College Woman Sol KomenskyMr. William Rockwell " Ed ArmstrongMagician Jack VenturoJitterbug Donald WarfieldNurse Lenoard TurovlinOld Woman Myles Jarrow Publicity Richard Salzmann, Junior ManagerBud Arquilla NeighborhoodGilbert Bills Newspapers and RadioLee Fisher . CityJohn Thompson General PhotographyBusiness Staff John Bex, Junior ManagerFred Wanglin ProgramJohn Parrish ScoreBruce Dixon A.dvertisingLights Bill Kester, Junior ManagerDave FisherG. W. ConnorTechnical. Harry Reed, Junior ManagerCharles SchlagetarAlvin BielakLouis KapostaWalter BarlowProduction Ellsworth Faris, Junior ManagerWilson Reilly CostumesJay Nichols Assistant to DirectorBoh Buerki Assistant to DirectorCompany Walter Kurk, Junior ManagerDale Johnson CastAl Schnoor ChorusGeorge Hackett Hand PropertiesBox Office Charles Paltzer, Junior ManagerBoh Crow Off Campus SalesBoh Bowers Campus SalesFrank Brunner Box OfficeI II Watkin J. DavenportOPENING NUMBER SCRUB·WOMEN Florian JampQlisPsota KimballJampolis Bernstein Kimbel AxelsonPsota McKnight LechtenbergBoyes Gwinn Gustafson StancharGustafson Sapp Williams BolksKimbel Mandel VTully Godsave IVBABY CARRIAGES··Wilson Kretschmer JITTERBUGSWilliams Lehrer HippchenWatkin Gold Silora HarperDragstedt McKnight Swenson FoxFox Swenson Sapp GodsaveMullen Fisher Wei! SmalleyFlorian III Bernstein MandelHarper Mitchell Bernstein··Leggitt MOTHERS AND French WilsonNichols DAUGHTERS Faster DradstedtSmalley Gwinn Pregler Gold-209-Blackfriars for 1940 gets under way with thehellish efforts of the Board to gather campus talentto back the show. The call is out for Blackfriarsbooks. Musicians are being contacted, property­men interviewed, customers felt out. As soon asthe story is chosen the problems will multiply andremultiply. As yet the Business Staff merely hangsaround inactively waiting for a job. The Boardtears its hair over the peculiar property of time tofly. From utter confusion must come a bang-upmusical comedy, and as yet they haven't even gota book. Junior and sophomore managers are beingpushed into line previous to the day when DaveMartin is to rescue the Board with Patients Please.The brain-clrild must grow and mature amazinglyfast if the campus is to see Mandel Hall jammed onthe night of April 12th for another Blackfriars' hit.--210-Due to the geninsLeft:Top: Scrubwomen choruspractices.Middle: Publicity stunt a laBlackfriars.Bottom: Chorus makes facesat cameraman.Middle:Top: Bill Hochman, heroine,poses on steps.Middle: Hose fumes at cho­rus star wriggler, Bill Harper.Bottom: Brad shaves Palmeras mustache race begins.Right:Top: Scrubwomen assumeanother pose.Middle: Blackfriars publicitystunt No. 847·34 and V3.Bottom: Chorus gets underway again after short rest. of Maroonman Dave Martin, Blackfriars for 1940 presentsPatients Please, a clever musical comedy wound around aBillings Hospital farce. Theme of the show is as always sexrearing its ugly head, only in Martin's brain child the uglyhead proves not so ugly after all. Main love interest is betweenJohn and Jane who have nightmares trying to keep their secretmarriage from John's father who is the first act villi an. Furthercomplications arise when Jane lends John's pin, only visiblesign of their union, to an old friend, Linda, who is off for aweekend at Purdue. Linda's mamma proves to be an exactcounterpart of John's father. Complications are brought to ahead when Mamma finds out that Linda is wearing John's pin.Together with John's papa she cooks up a marriage for the twowhich is further complicated by Linda's latest love interest inthe person of Joe, a young interne at Billings. Resolution comesthrough the appearance of the three Yankee Yogis. Announcingthat their pet rabbit is ahout to become a mother, they hlunderthe procedure to such an extent that Jane thinks she is the oneto be hlessed. At this sudden turn John's father trys to makeJane an honest woman hy forcing a marriage to his son. Thus,the play ends happily, leaving only the Yankee Yogis to hepurged hy the imagination of the audience.Seventy males compose this year's chorus. They present sixnumbers under perennial director, Jose Castro. In keeping withthe Billing Hospital setting, these numbers are mainly nurses'dances, scrubwomen's capers, and dancing germs. High spotcomes with the novel "hoogie woogie blues" number in thesecond act facetiously called The Parade of the Germs.Twenty-two songs are on deck for Patients Please. Hit of theshow is Richlin- Vinograd product called "Through the Years."In fact so good is this number that it can he heard on theCoffee-Shop jook for one nickel. Stars of the Recording areBlackfriar's veteran, Lee Hewitt, with Margie Gray Exeter.Title song of the show is the work of Nick Tapp. Greg Huffaker's"Our Love Is Just a Dream" ranks number three on the Black­friar's Hit Parade.This year's Board has supposedly remedied the mistakeswhich made last year's Blackfriars elections the crookedest seenon this campus since the days of God Carey and Psi U sheep.No longer is each fraternity confined to one man on the Board.Strange coincidence of Blackfriars election is, however, the factthat no matter how politically the Board has been elected theshow has always heen up to par with the Triangle and Maskand Wig shows.-211--Interesting student�A star among us-that's Loyal Tingley, National epee champion. And more thanthat he is the youngest man to hold this title, awarded for winningfirst place in the epee class of fencing at the National Tournamentheld last June at San Francisco. Previously he had won the Mid­west individual meet and captained the University team whichplaced second, entitling him to a trip to the Fair to compete inthe National. Also interested in track, Loyal, while still in highschool, set a 10 foot, 7'%, inch record for indoor pole vaultingwhich still stands. Afraid that professionalism will take the funout of his fencing he's going to remain at the "hobby level" andcapitalize on physiology instead.It is harder to classify Virginia Clark because she's so versatile.The fact that she has danced for Mirror four years and has beendancing professionally ever since she could walk might put her inone category; but then how could we explain her job with the ColeBrothers' Circus as one of the Bronze Ladies, her experience sing­ing on the radio for a year, and winning three scholarships to theArt Institute for her painting? We couldn't explain - we couldn'tdo it. But Virginia does it; and although she enjoys every phaseand is well established professionally, she plans to keep it all asa sideline and really specialize in Spanish, her major here at school.However, everyone who has a hobby isn't going to squelch itfor an academic career. Myron Davis who has done the "shooting"for the University Press Relations Bureau and has just completeda project for Mirror Publicity is really going to be a photographer.Highlights in his embryonic career were the acceptance of someof his work by the International Leica Salon, the publishing ofa photo montage depicting the future peace of the world as thefrontispiece in a history book, and Time's use of his portrait ofAlexander Wolcott. Other pictures have been printed in CollegeHumor, Mademoiselle, and Pulse, in addition to the prints andarticles on photography which he supplied for Student Life, amagazine for high schools. Myron has also recently illustratedbooklets for the Art League in Oak Park. To supplement photog­raphy he intends to work his English education into his field.While we're on photography let's look at the students on theother side of the camera, the models. A good many students makeextra money this way or do it just for fun, but none of them claimsmodeling as his chosen field. Incidentally, this business isn't lim­ited to pretty girls. Handsome young men seem also to be indemand, since "Doc" Jampolis, Wilbur Jerger, and Dick Salzmannare found registered at the models' bureau. Prominent among thefeminine models are Charlotte Rexstrew, Joan Lyding, and Mar­garet Dillon. These three are all registered as the College GirlType, which means they are most apt to be called for fashion workor to pose as a pretty face. Some of the work is commercial pho­tography; a big percentage of it is actual modeling at fashion showsand in college shops. Hours are short, some pictures taking only,Courtesy Heratd-American ]uapitalize on talentfifteen minutes at five dollars a sitting. Whenmodeling fashions, naturally the concern suppliesthe outfit but at other times the models are ex­pected to have their own smart wardrobes. All thegirls claim it's fun being made pretty and dress­ing in the latest fashions, not to mention the extracash it profits them. But as a profession they arechoosing something "more academic."All the pretty girls, however, aren't modeling.Dorothy Shawhan, a music major, is well on herway with her chosen career. At the end of herjunior year she received the scholarship awardedto the highest student in the department. Sincethen things have been happening one after an­other. Accepting a position as organist for theAvalon Park Community Church she did so wellthat in addition she has been given the job ofdirecting the Junior Choir. Dorothy teaches pianoto several youngsters and often gives recitals her­self at women's clubs. She claims her most thrill­ing experience in music was the time she led theUniversity band as a final examination for hercourse in conducting. Although one of the musi­cians piped up, "Let's flunk her," when it had beenexplained why she would lead them, she did pass.When Dorothy graduates this June she will keep;up her present jobs for a while until she is readyto teach music in public schools.Also in the music field in Marjorie Grey Exter,prominent campus blues singer. Known mostly forher rendition of tunes with Chuck -Towey's orches­tra, for several performances on College Night floorshows, and for her work in Mirror 1939, Margehas also broadcast with J an Garber and spent asummer on the radio in Kansas City. Most notablefact is that in spite of all this Marge has had novoice training whatever. She does consider takingsome lessons just to increase her own enjoyment,hut says singing is merely a side line with her,"strictly for fun."Jerry Moberg, combination artist, industrial de­signer, promotional man, and student, came herehis freshman year to find no extensive art serviceavailable and immediately took over the workhimself. Since then he and associate, Art Salz­mann, have made signs for Ida Noyes Hall and Bartlett, and done research work drawing thegraphs for University projects. A professional signpainter, Moberg is also interested in advertising.He illustrates pamphlets and promotes productsfor several concerns. Last summer he took theplace of the regular University Press artist. Com­monly displayed are his hook jackets for bothMerriam's and O'Hara's new hooks. For three yearshe has designed the sets for Blackfriars and orig­inated the score covers. In the strictly professionalfield he has designed twenty-seven products on themarket at present and is ready to sell a new deskclock. Another type of his art work has been ex­hibited in Ida Noyes Hall; for his second oil paint­ing he was offered a fancy price. He has studiedmedicine and law hut finally selected the ministryas his field and will finish his work here in theDivinity school, hoping eventually to get a Ph.D.However, he will no longer direct his businessfrom Swift Hall; very soon he is opening downtownoffices for the newly estahlished Pontius, Moberg,Painter Advertisement Agency. Working withJerry in the shop is Art Salzmann, another com­mercial illustrator who is particularly adept atthe technical side, having done all the art work onseveral small town dailys before coming to school.Later he was a newspaperman in Duhuque andlater organized a campus paper at the Universityof Dubuque and a press service publicity bureaufor them.Lee Hewitt, known to the campus through hisrole in Blackfriars last season, will-sing again thisyear in the show, but meanwhile has been doingmore outstanding things. Specializing in cantatasand Oratories, he has sung in various churches andmost recently in the St. John's Easter Passion pre­sented by the Music School at Chicago. His firstjobs came through his training studio, but nowwith plenty of experience to his credit jobs arepretty much on his own. Last summer he startledthe campus by winning first place in the ChicagoDistrict contest of the Musical Festival and laterplacing third in the entire contest. A junior atChicago, Lee plans to be a doctor - not an operasinger.-213-Chapel Unionis a living organization-its mood varies from theromping spirit of the harn dance to the seriousthought of a deligious discussion. Through itsvariety of activities are attracted people who areinterested in all sides of campus life.Included among these activities are the Sundaynight meeting with speakers followed hy discus­SIOns. Here such men as A. Eustace Haydon,Guiseppe Borgese, Father Dunn, A. J. Carlson,Rahhi Pekarsky, Dean Colwell, Louis Wirth, ErnestW. Burgess, and Clifton Utley discuss philosophiesof life and social prohlems.Students also gather in small groups to discussand plan and carry out programs for improvingstudent-faculty relations and for solving pressingcampus prohlems. The recreational events that Chapel Union spon­sors throughout the year include barn dances,picnics, heach parties, and best, according tomembers, the outings. These weekends held fre­quently throughout the year are for fun and dis­cussion; students and faculty play touchhall, getacquainted, and exchange opinions in an informalatmosphere.EXECUTIVE COMMITTEEBud Briggs PresidentEvon Z. Vogt. Vice-PresidentMargaret Cox TreasurerJanet Vanderwalker Chairman ofRecreation CouncilBob Boyer Chairman of ReligiousProblems Council-214-Largest wOlnen's organizationon campus is the Y.W.C.A. Directed tothe end of a spiritual purpose and highideals, the organization has succeededin enlisting the membership of everytype of girl at the University and hasunited them by a program of practicalapplication of these ideals.More than ever the "Y" has becomesocial-problems conscious this year. WithRuth Neuendorffer as president, theyhave participated actively on the LaborCouncil, the Youth Committee AgainstWar, the Refugee Aid Committee, andthe Marriage Lecture Council. At theAssociation meetings - discussions opento the entire membership of the "Y,"several prominent women spoke on cur­rent affairs in Europe; Rhea Seegar ofthe Chicago Tribune gave an informaltalk on clothes, and a discussion panelwas held to acquaint job seekers withthe nature of business opportunities.With the many interest groups, Art,Music, Religious Discussion, there wasno slack of social functions for "Y"members. The Cabinets sponsored aswell frequent luncheons open to thewhole campus. On a greater scale thanusual was the annual carnival in Febru­ary which swelled the treasury consi d­erablv.Ruth Neuendorffer PresidentDorothy Eaton Vice-PresidentEsther Durkee SecretaryHarriet Augustus. .. . TreasurerBetty AhlquistBillie BenderEvelyn BrowneJane CooneyEdith DavisJune HansonDorothy Ann HuberThelma Iselman Eileen JohnsonMary KorellisMarjorie KuhDorothy MilesPat ShrackChristine SmithRuth SteelLa Verne Tess-215-Connecting the off-campusSettlement with the quadrangles, the Student Set­tlement Board has become an important campusactivity. It provides in the main student volun­teer workers to teach classes for the children whoare under the protective. wing of the Settlement.In addition, the Board raises approximately threehundred dollars in cash each year and collectsdonations of old clothes.A traditional method is employed hy the Settle­ment Board to collect the old clothes. Each yearat Christmas. time a drive is conducted hy thecluh girls through the fraternity houses. This ismore profitable than the raids on the men's dormi­tories which net an amazing quantity of even newclothes. Boxes are also placed in the women'sdorms for the same purpose but with less produc­tive results than the organized raids. Money is raised by smokers and tea dances forwhich slight charge is made, and this year withthe help of a C-dance and a style show. The mainhulk of the funds, however, is gathered hy thewinning ways of the feminine Board members.Each spring a tag day is held; all of campus beautyis enlisted in the enterprise. The method is veryeffective, for all persons crossing campus are way­laid for the tag boxes.The student Board is ably headed hy MarjorieKuh, assisted hy juniors Hankla, J ampolis, Hewitt,and Secretary Aronson.Active sophomores are Margie Brooks, BobReynolds, Clayton Traeger, and Jay Fox. Seniors,slightly less active, are John Palmer, Ruth Neuen­dorffer, Janet Geiger, Natalie Clyne, and BudLinden.Top Row: Bob Reynolds, Sara Richman, Jay Fox, Marcia Mer­rifield, Bob Jampolis, Margery BrooksBottom Row: Clayton Traeger, Ruth Neuendorffer, Bud Aron­son, Marjorie Kuh, Bud Linden, Natalie Clyne, Bill Hankla-216-The Christian ScienceOrganization makes a successful effort to enlightenthe University on the subject of Christian Scienceand to promote fellowship among members of theUniversity who are Christian Scientists.Meetings are held at seven-thirty every Tuesdayevening while the University is in session. Theseare composed of readings from the Bihle and fromthe Christian Science textbook, Science and Healthwith Key to the Scriptures, hy Mary Baker Eddy,followed hy testimonies hy memhers of the con­gregation.One of thc functions of the Organization is themaintenance of a Study Room in 208 Swift Hall,which is open from 12 to 1, Mondays throughFridays. Here the Bihle and authorized ChristianScience literature are available for study. Sub­scriptions to the Christian Science iYlonitor areprovided for ten of the campus lihraries.The Organization also sponsors two lectures ayear on the suhject of Christian Science. Theseare delivered by memhers of the Board of Lec­tureship of The Mother Church, The First Churchof Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. Our­ing the past year the lectures have been given hyMr. John Henry Weer and Mr. John Randall Dunn.Each Fall, those students who have expressedtheir preference for Christian Science are invitedto a reception, which is the only official socialfunction of the Organization. READERSCharles Percy Fall QuarterBruce Young ' Winter QuarterMarjorie Berg Spring QuarterEXECUTIVE COMMITTEEMary Lue McClelland PresidentMarjorie Kuh. : SecretaryLois Gartner., TreasurerHazel Cargill Fourth Member-217-That the pursuit of knowledgewithout attempting to develop the implications ofman's spiritual life is characteristic of the Uni­versity docs not make any easier the accomplish­ment of one of the Calvert Clnh's purposes - toorient the Catholic student in a non-Catholic uni­versity. Its other air is to foster friendships amongCatholics on campus. These ends are pursued at aseries of hi-monthly meetings held throughout theacademic year, the first of which is purely social,an informal party. The program of the second isintellectual. At these meetings a speaker of noteis presented. Last year the Calvert Cluh was for­tunate in hearing such men as Father D'Arcy,noted Britisher; Mortimer Adler, leader of theHutchins followers in the University; Jerome Ker­win, Social Science mentor; Father Thomas Mc­Glynn of the Dominican House of Studies; andHoward Talley of the University Music Depart­ment and "Opera Hour" fame. The eminence ofthe speakers and the importance of these messageattracts serious students to the less social meetings of the month and furthermore such men act aspowerful counterweights against the University'sindifference toward religion in general.Every Wednesday noon members of the organi­zation gather in Hutchinson Commons to lunchtogether. Besides these informal comradely gath­erings the group enjoys the more formally organ­ized function which highlights their year. At anoccasional weekend at Childerly Farms nearWheeling, Illinois, a stimulating religious programis carried on. Such a Saturday is well spent forit is a holiday as well. The two general socialdances held by the club this year proved to heexceptionally successful.Alice CarlsonLa Verne LandonMargie DunnRobert Hughes .William SozumplickDr. Kirwin. PresidentVice-president. SecretaryTreasurerSocial ChairmanFaculty AdvisorTop Row: Gudas, Cuneo, Shultz, Flood, Graham, MurraySecond Row: Britz, Howard, Harper, Father Dunne, Phelps,MeyerBottom Row: Sullivan, Cooper, Landon, Carlson, Dunne,Hughes, Fonger--218-Promomoting discussionof subjects of such current importance as educa­tion, the international crisis, and youth problems,is the aim of the Student Forum. Through con­tacts with local civic organizations and with theUniversity Speakers Bureau, the Student Forumgets many requests for student speakers and themembers receive worthwhile practice in publicspeaking.Student Forum members had this past yearseveral opportunities to participate in the BullSession, a weekly radio program for discussion bycollege students from all over. Two British stu­dents who were touring the country offered force­ful opposition to the Forum's Jim Engle and Maurice Rothstein in a debate on the necessity ofwar in nationalistic Europe. One of the more un­usual of the speaking tours was the round-tableheld at Rockford College. After the debate on thevalue of the Chicago Plan, Joe Molkup and WebbFiser were entertained as sole and special guestsat the girls' college.STUDENT FORUM OFFICERSJoseph Molkup PresidentWebb Fiser TreasurerLouise Landman Board MemberW. Alvin Pitcher Faculty AdviserTop Row: H. Fiser, W. Fiser, , ,Darragh.Middle Row: Ramm, Davis, Durka, Raschevsky, Galinsky,Breidegan, Cliff.Bottom Row: Pitcher, Molkup, Sandman, Palmer, ,Ochsten.-219-THE DAILY MAROON"The World's Second Greatest Newspaper," so called in 1940 Mirror,The Daily Maroon opened its 1939-40 year as the only morning com­petition to the Chicago Tribune. The Board of Control, admittedlylacking in brilliant personalities, found itself blessed with a largestaff of hard-hitting Juniors, enthusiastic Sophomores, and willingFreshmen.To edit a better, more interesting, more accurate newspaper becamethe great crusade. To this end the new paper appeared with liveliermake-up, sporting more pictures, interesting columns, and betterwritten news. Were it not for sundry items which appeared in theTraveling Bazaar it might have been said that the general accuracywas near an A rating. The Bazaar, however, graduated into a fullfledged gossip column, most popular reading matter at the Univer­sity, and the Bazaar writer� led by Dick Himmel, more than oncenearly got the Maroon boiled in oil for indiscretions committed inthe name of "names.""Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" said the banner of the higgeststory of the year-about the junket of one of the Deans to appearbefore the Dies Committee. Failing political groups raised a lastgreat cry, to which The Daily Maroon added a denunciation of themethods of Mr. Dies. Choosing hetween evils the Maroon had earlieradvocated lifting the Embargo, then slapped at the A. S. U. as beingCommunist run, was laheled a war-monger, and passed on to editorialconsideration of more immediate problems. It paused in its examina­tion of needs in education to defend the abolition of football, pluggedfor a realiaztion of the close connection between a "Iiheral" educationand a "liberal" government, and kept a wary eye on AnniversaryPuhlicity painting the University as a joy-boy heaven.A Sun Valley Contest, a successful Christmas Carnival, a TravelingBazaar which really went p laces, the annual dinner to PresidentHutchins, all helped to publicize the Daily Maroon, to awaken thecampus to the fact that the paper was on an upswing. By its workin staff organizations and by its editorial policies the Board attemptedto lay a firmer foundation for future growth.David E. Martin of the Board of Control.-220-Top Left: Adele Rose of last year's Board returns to Maroon office to type her papers.Top Right: Castleman, Martin, and Leiser discuss situation over a typewriter.Middle Left: Bro. Crane sits on desk in office.Middle Middle: "Hutchins Resigns" extra hawked in Harper.Middle Right: Reynolds--enough said.Lower Left: Topping audits the books.Lower Left Attic: Stevens confronts the mike.Lower Right: Polacheck upraids Wehlan, undoubtedly over D·A performance.Editorial StaffEDITORIAL BOARD OF CONTROL SOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSDavid MartinHarry CorneliusRuth BrodyAlice MeyerWilliam Grody Dan MezlayJames BurtleJack JeffersonDick HimmelBob ReynoldsChester HandRonald Crane Jacqueline CrossDorothy FantlDan WinogradLester DeanPaul FlorianWalter AngristEDITORIAL ASSOCIATES FRESHMAN ASSISTANTSClaire RubinsJohn StevensWilliam HanklaHart W urzburgMarian CastlemanDemarest Polacheck Bob LawsonDick PhilbrickMark FisherDonald CronsonMarjorie GoodmanBob RaymerChloe RothStuart PalmerErnest Leiser-222- Eileen MurphyNancy LesserMary GrahamRose EsperschmidtLois CromwellDick LevinDonald McKnightJim MooreTop Row: Palmer, Phtl­brick, Lesser, Winograd,Fisher.Second Row: Reynolds,Florian, Graham, Crane,Himmel, Goodman, Mez·lay, Burtle, Roth, Raemer.Bottom Row: Wurzburg,Castleman, Stevens,Grody, Meyer, Martin,Brody, Cornelius, Leiser,Hankla.Business StaffBUSINESS ASSOCIATES OF DAILY MAROON BUSINESS ASSIST ANTSJohn BexHerb GervinWilliam Lovell Dick KahlDick DeanLyle HarperJulian LowensteinBUSINESS MANAGER FRESHMENHarry Topping Bob PreglerNanette Lowenstein Herb MandelJohn AngeloJim HoatsonBud BatesADVERTISING MANAGERTop Row: Slottow, Hoat­son, Jarrow, Harper, Man·del.Middle Row: Flanagan,Bates, Pregler, Erickson,Levy, Gustafson.Bottom Row: Lovell,Topping, Lowenstern,Richman, Lowenstein.Roland Richman Don ConnorGene Slottone-223-EDITORIAL STAFFEmil G. Hirsch .. Editor-in-ChiefIra S. Glick .... Managing EditorWalter Angrist HelenHarry Sholl SchwartzMax Kaplan Grant AtkinsonMel Newman Virginia BrownJean Gore Robert HullLeonard Robert PerryTurovlin MarjoryHarry John GoodmanLevi Stud RumlGeorge Van MeterMcElroy Ned MungerEmil Mayer LorraineJohn PolachekCecil Kann Jimmy RaeJohn Punk WarfieldThompson Lee WeinsteinDoug Shanken TwinsFuerrman Grant AdamsBeverly Ward Chuck ShawMyron Davis Elsa Teller This year's Pulsehad no precedent; not even the famed first yearunder John Morris. For Pulse, 1940 successfullycombined the news talents of the first year with thefeatures and photos of a professional magazine.Rather than using the magazine as a medium ofplugging undergraduate activities, the publicationunbiasedly presented and attempted to interpretphases of student life, oft reporting much that hadescaped the Daily Maroon, often presenting thenews of the month in a clear light, made clearbecause of the interpretation that can be givenwhen things are written from a retrospectiveviewpoint.Again, this year the magazine more closelyapproached its ultimate aim of presenting news astrends, and of portraying people and names in thenews as characters, and not merely names.Pulse functioned efficiently most of the time,mainly because of the concentration of respon­sibility among three people; the editor, businessmanager, and managing editor. Though the editordropped out during spring quarter, the magazinecontinued as before, the managing editor takingover most of the work that remained.Certain features were added to the magazine,notably the fashion pages, which were capably-224-handled by Beverly Ward, and surveysand articles on colleges throughout theworld, all written by persons who hadeither attended or were attending theircertain college. Perhaps the most strik­ing innovation in this year's magazinewas the development of a new coveridea, having both a feature and a news­worthy value. Starting out innocouslyenough, the covers, under the directionof Lee Weinstein, developed into achieve­ments that received national recognitionas may be attested by clippings in pos­session of Pulse. All photos in the serieswere taken by famed Chicago photog­rapher, Maurice Seymour.News shots again played an importantpart in the magazine, most being handledby John Sanderson; while fashion shotswere turned out by Emil Mayer andMyron Davis.By Pulse Staff.Fl;ank Alexander, Newman, Me­Elroy, Angirst, Massell, Levy,Tarrovlin.Second Row: Brown, Weinstein,Benjamin, Glick, Goodman.First Row: Harry Sholl, MaxKaplan. Top: Fox, Teller, Angrist.Bottom: Doctoroff, Biederman, Osherman.BUSINESS STAFFIrwin Biederman Business ManagerCharles Banfe Advertising ManagerJay Fox Jack QuinnBetty Jane Nelson Paul ReynoldsJean Perlman Bob MonaghanSarah Jane Peters Irving DiamondElaine Osherman Jerry HahnVictor Johnson Tom EvansJoel Bernstein Phil TaylorMilton Sykes Al DreyfussTop: Alexander, Newman, McElroy, Angrist, Massell, Levy, Turovlin.Second: Brown, Weinstein, Benjamin, Glick, Goodman.Bottom: Sholl, Kaplan.-225-CAP & GOWNAt top: Lights of Lexington Hall reflect on winter covered streetsas Cap and Gown staff works late to make the first deadline.Below: The Board. At upper left: Areta Kelble proof readscopy. At upper right: Walter Young gives salestalk. Lower left:Harold Wright at phone. Lower right: Pat Schrack checking listof engravings.-226- Although the organizatiou of the1940 Cap and Gown suffered an unfor­seen loss when Editor John Andersonfound it impossible to return to schoolthis fall, the new co-editors, Areta Kelbleand Patricia Shrack, were immediatelyable to take over the lay-out and editingof the forty-fourth volume of the annual.They expanded the plans already made,adding ideas of their own, and reorgan­ized the badly depleted editorial staff.Over the summer the physical equip­ment of the office was improved; desksand supplies were added. And in orderto insure the competence of our pho­tography staff, the Board furnished thephotographers with a new camera andcomplete dark room equipment. At thesuggestion of Photographer John Thomp­son the hitherto unused vault was turnedinto a much needed dark room. To theamazement and slight confusion of thestaff, the Buildings and Grounds Depart­ment in the middle of the winter quar­ter offered to redecorate our previouslydingy office in a light green.As a result the Board of Control waspleased to find that more people wereinterested in working on the staff andactually working than there have beenfor many years. In fact the staff is sowell manned this year that the 1941 Capand Gown has an excellent chance ofbeing a better book than this one.The increase in efficiency on this year'sstaff is doubtless insured by the reorgan­ization effected by the permanent con­stitution adopted last spring. By thisthe tenure of the Board members islimited and defined, and moreover cer­tain positions were created for the workto be done rather than for certain peo­ple. The constitution recognizes too theneed for centralization and co-ordinationbetween the business and editorial staffs.Consequently the permanent office ofpublisher was created. It is the pub-Rinder manages business; Florian boosts publicity; PhotographerFrankel shoots; Ruth Steel covers women's activities; Bob Mathewsedits the sports; Sanderson pauses from picture hunting; JoanLyding, senior editor; Himmel and P. C. Rubins, creators of Fadeout.-227- lisher who acts as chairman of the Boardand as contact-man with the Dean'sOffice. The many changes in organiza­tion and policies would not have beenpossible without the help and sugges­tions of Dean William Randall. The de­�ree of co-operation which the Admin­istration offers the publications neces­sarily implies that whenever such a re­lationship with the Dean's Office failsto exist, it will be the fault of thepublications.BOARD OF CONTROLHarold P. Wright PublisherAreta Kelble Co-editorPatricia Shrack Co-editorWaIte-r Y oUl13 Business ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert EvansRobert MathewsRuth Steel Donna CullitonJoan LydingJohn ThompsonMary HammelEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSBonnie Turnbull Mary Elin HillJohn Patrick Betty MuellerCharlotte Ford Virginia AllenAlan Graves Peggy FlynnDick Bolks Sally AdamsDan Crabb Janet WagnerJim Frey Florence SargisChuck Brown Marian HamlinMark Beaubien Chris FryarDorothy Frech John SandersonMargery Sullivan Allan FrankIeBetty Van Liew Evelyn JohnsonGail Grassick Jean CargillPat Lyding Gretna YunkerGenevieve Hackett Jim EmswilerSam FawleyBUSINESS ASSOCIATESCeorge Rinder Assistant Business ManagerJohn Levinsohn Circulation ManagerJohn Bex Advertising ManagerBob Erickson Assistant Advertising ManagerAl Conway Assistant Advertising ManagerJohn CraneBUSINESS ASSIST ANTSPaul FlorianJim EmswilerAlan GravesCarl DragstedtVirginia AllenBob Weedfal Dorothy DejongRuth BieserKenneth AxelsonMary Lu PriceMarvin MitchellWilliam WestenburgRadical, Conservative,and liberal political groups have been free to arrtheir opposing views in Parliamentary fashion eversince the founding of the Political Uuion in 1937.Political Union's third year made certain its posi­tion as major political activity on campus. Otherpolitical organizations lost ground as a result ofdevelopments in Europe, the radical activitiestaking a hard rap from the Russian invasion ofFinland. Improvement within the Union added toits prestige. The leader of the reforms in the struc­tural framework of the Union of the preceedingyear, Charles Crane, became the Union's secondpresident.In February a group of the party leaders feltthat unexploited latent possihilities lay in thestructure of Political Union and altered the organ­izational framework from one resemhling the pres­idential system to one corresponding with thecahinet system. Now members once selected need not follow party loyalties but follow and supporthy their votes that group of leaders whose partyplatform commands their intellectual loyalties asa cure all for national ills. When the cahinet fallsby failing to receive a vote of confidence thePresident selects an outstanding leader of the oppo­sition to he a new majority leader, which leaderthen chooses a new cahinet. Time alone will testthe efficacy of this plan.Party quotas were re-determined hy the all­campus political straw poll in February, afterwhich attendance at meetings was increased anddebates were hetter planned. This year saw thegrowth of a powerful Conservative Party with theRadical parties losing ground hoth in discussion onthe floor and in their number of seats. The Liberalsbarely held their own in Parliamentary debate butin February all-campus political seutiment strawpoll they proved to be the favorite of the student-228-Left: Crane wields gavel as Gauss speaks.Right: Kronemyer and Molkup boost Anti-War movement.hody and in a landslide captured 43 of the possihletotal of 75 seats, the Conservatives received 22 seats,the Communists 4 seats, the Socialists 4 seats, andthe Trotzkytes 2 seats. The stalwart leader andco-chairman of the Liheral Party, Joe Molkup, waselected the new president.The outbreak of the second World War and theRussian-Finnish War in the autumn made foreignpolicy the main theme of Political Union meetings.At the first fall meeting the Pitman Arms Embargocash-and-carry hill was passed with difficulty by anon-party vote. The Conservative Party was theonly party to hack this proposal of Roosevelt.Oratory was heated and there was much namecalling. The Communists in particular were chas­tised for a right about face on the peace issue byConservative speakers, Gauss and Jacobs. In theNovember meeting the Ludlow Amendment, aproposal calling for the declaration of war by anational referendum, was defeated; the pacifists,radicals and a liberal minority who supported thebill were outtalked and outvoted. December foundthe Union discussion a campus problem, whethera unit of the Civil Aeronautics Authority should be established on the quadrangles. With speed anddecisiveness the Union decided student pilot train­ing was a good thing and then in its third daywhile the Communists were not in attendance,proceeded to pass a Conservative sponsored reso­lution condemning the Russian invasion of Finland.The January meeting concerning the motion,Resolved that this union recommends that Congressgive fifty million dollars to Finland, was the high­light of the year. Communists urged that the inva­sion was justified. The pacifists and isolationistsargued that such a loan was in reality a gift, anda breach of American neutrality; the Conserva­tives insisted that tiny Finland, a democracy, wasfighting a tremendously larger dictator nation, anddeserved help in its fight for freedom; the Liberalssplit. When Political Union voted, there was a tiewhich was broken when the President cast his votefor Finland.Charles Crane ..................... PresidentGeorge Hand Secretary-TreasurerJerome Kerwin Faculty Adviser-229-Swift's PremiumTender FrankfurtsDinner SizeFrankfurts Graduateto the "Banquet" Class of MeatsSwift Scientists Make 'E m Supe r Ten de rWith Aid Of Pineapple JuiceIf you enjoy the best in foods, you'll confer a "summa cum laude"on Swift's Premium Tender Frankfurts in the big Dinner Size.These extra large frankfurts are juicy ... flavorful ... like a thicksteak or double lamb chop. And Swift has perfected a way oftendering them, in fresh crushed pineapple juice (patent pending).You don't taste the pineapple juice, but you see its effect when eachjuicy link cuts at a touch of your fork.You'll be delighted with the savory goodness of Swift's PremiumTender Frankfurts, delicately seasoned and fragrant with the smokytang of hardwood fires. Order the big, juicy Dinner Size from yourdealer next time you shop.-230-FADEOUTA dim grey fog settles over the campus. A giant airliner hurriesnoisily through the sky. Dim grey clouds whirl wildly on currentsof animated words and harsh laughter. The coffee shop is jammed.Talk of comprehensives . .. talk of degrees ... talk of summer.The year 1939-40 fades slowly out.The smoke clears. A giant airliner is heard as it hurries noisilyover the campus. The months fly back. A candid camera slungcasually over a shoulder focuses the blur of the fadeout until thepast becomes sparkling clear. The coffee shop is jammed. Talk ofthe Prom . . . Mirror next week . . . that date last night . . .outing?, no it's a week-end ... what was in the Bazaar ... theIF Sing?, not till spring . . . whose picture on the cover of Pulse?.. . too bad. The year 1939-40 is at its peak.The first table in the coffee shop is sardined with club girls knitting,gabbing, smoking, gabbing, playing bridge, and gabbing. Dick Salzmann's long legs clutter the aisle. DonWilson almost trips with his tray. Salzmann doesn't notice. He is busy peering into Jane Tallman's handand glancing furtively at Pat Lyding . . . The Hutch twins and Janet Geiger talk eagerly about Mirror. . . Big Jim Anderson scratches his field house shirt and yawns good naturedly . . . water polo . . .Jane Myers, Shirley Smith, and Rosalie Phillips look at the Maroon. Their own images stare back at them.. . . Mirror opens tomorrow . . . Doris All talks gingerly to a big but beautiful chorine, who seems muchdifferent from the Mirror type. Bud Arquilla laughs back at Alt during a coke recess from Blackfriar'srehearsal. . . . A gang of muddy sophomores come in. "Dreyfuss in the -Botany Pond," they shout . . .a tussle ... no dice ... Dreyfuss puts on a clean mess jacket ... the erciternent is over. The coffeeshop is back to noisy normalcy.DA boss Randall beams proudly over coffee at his actingchildren. Sergel, Evans, Paine, talk animatedlyStevens waits . . . Mary Lu Price discussing dry Inter­Club. Wheeler and Johnny Palmer practice their jitter­bugging ... Henrietta Mahon and Gordon Murray sun­tanned by Sun Valley.Chuck Pfieffer listens to his senior council after theirelection ... Bob Reynolds excited about the Prom ...Geiger worried about Inter-Club ... [selman glad all herorientating is over . . . Anderson doesn't know aboutfootball yet.Harold Wright congratulates Betty Meuller on pledgingMortar Board ... sister pledge Mike Rathje looks onand receives her congratulations in turn. Quads look attheir long lost Rathje. Smile . . . everybody makesmistakes. Punky Johnson-231- by Pearl C. Rubinsand Dick HimmelBeati Gaidzik!I ttzte f!i�lnUtrr §l1npFlowers for All OccasionsGIFTS, POTTED PLANTSCORSAGES, WEDDINGST ABLE DECORATIONSFUNERAL DESIGNSOpen Sundays. Holidays· Evenings1301 EAST 55th STREETPhones Midway 4020·4021Delivery ServiceforPHOTOGRAPHIC EQUIPMENTused by* * * * * * *CENTRAL CAMERA COMPANYMain Store - 230 South Wabash Ave.Branch - 346 North Michigan Ave.Telephone: HARRISON 5580GEORGE�SSHOPMEN'Sfeaturing• Mallory Hats• Portis Hats• Royal Smart Shoes• Kingly Shirts• Cheney Cravats• Interwoven Socks• Swank Accessories1003 E. 55th ST.AT ELLIS We manufacture the followinghonor society and clubs' pinsSKULL and CRESCENTIRON MASKNU PI SIGMAWYVERNDELTA SIGMAQUADRANGLERESOTERICPI DELTA PHIMORTAR BOARDSIGMACHI RHO SIGMASPIES BROTHERSINCORPORATEDReliable Since 187827 E. Monroe St. ChicagoRandolph 4149MA:\IUFACTURING JEWELERSAND STATIONERSWe invite you to try our specie] ...WAFFLESSTEAKSSTUDENT LUNCHESDINNERSBLUE CIRCLEGRILL1320 E. 57th ST.-232- QualityFlowersatSensiblePrices•We Specialize in Corsagesfrom $1.00 up•PROMPT DELIVERYFLOWERS TELEGRAPHEDANYWHERE•J. E. KIDWELLFLOWERS826 E. 47th St.Phone Kenwood 1352Sweating and smelling Dave Martinand Bro Crane storm to table thirtywith pick and shovel on back. RuthBrody says, "It certainly is." . . .Martin and Crane complain aboutdigging in the circle for buried treas­ure .... Bex comes up. .. "Keepup the digging boys" . . . it's all forthe Washington Prom. . . . Brodygoes back to talking to the "Rumps"after their en masse Beta walkout.Tomorrow the Alpha Delts get finedfor illegal rushing. Tomorrow ChuckPercy won't be smiling. Peggy Flynnwill make him smile again in Feb­ruary.Farther back in the shop a smallgroup of intensely argumentive peo­ple . . . social conscious campusliberals. . . . Shaggy Grant Adamsand Troy Parker discussing the "Mr.Smith Goes to a W shington" rever­berations with radical Peggy Rice,who will soon go bourgeosie with lip­stick and new hair do. . . . DavidRubinfine, Lorraine Lewis, and thePetersons Mrs. P. drinkingmiddle class milk for plutocraticstomach ulcers. . . .At a small table senior John Cor­coran in a lab coat trying to psycho­analyze Myra Kovan . . . she doesn'twant to play . . . he knows betterReginald Stevenson, young physicsinstructor, talks shop over a cup oftea with other physical scientists . . .instructor Joe Schwab at an adjacenttable listening quietly to WilliamClark's Halthwistle accent describingtheir mutual interest in radio.At still another table Chi Psi PeterBriggs looking happily into the eyesof little Bohemian partner DottyGanssle. . . Murray Starrels makes asound like a cow . . . it isn't springyet. . . . Bob Hemingway talkingabout Paul Goodman's course ....George Peck and wife Christine dis­cussing last night's Passion Accordingto St. John ... they're about to be parents . . . St; John had nothingto do with it.Swooping up to the front again .. . Pat Shrack laughing malicious­ly at club sister's questions. . . .Bud Linden and Harriet Lindsey."There's Something" . . . music byLinden. . . . Perry watching Gaidzikmaking eyes. . . . Crow, Ruml, andFlorian. . . . Deadman selling theUniversity instead of bibles.Kuh looking at Aronson through hischeerleader's megaphone . . . it'sall for the Settlement. . . . RuthWhelan, Roy Larsen listening to plansfor the Chi Psi Bohemian party . . .lodge brother Jack Campbell doingthe dishing.Leiser and Castleman discussingeditorial policy. Alice Meyer takinga long one before proceding to theHutchins-Adler course . . . intellec­tualism. . . . Adler will publish abook soon .. "How to Read aBook" . . . Mrs. Hutchins will re­view it . . . intellectual incest.The room gets cloudy again. .The months fly back still faster. Thecoffee shop is jammed with new faces.Talk of placements . . . orientation... dinners ... places to live ...it's September, 1939.For one solid week freshmen wereon the receiving end of the Univer­sity's fastest joy-boy and intellectualpunches. Placement tests, aptitudetests, and every other little job theUniversity had time and imaginationto cook up, took most of the fresh ..man's days that week, but his nightswere filled with story book joe collegeaffairs.A break for the boys and a set backfor the girls, was the freshman mixer.Barred were big had upperclassmenwho last year wolfed freshman womenand left the little boys decorating thewalls. The little boys were happy,the little girls not so. Who wants togo out with a freshman when you can-233-NOMYSTERYHERE!No extravagant claims-no specialblend for you alone. Butcoffee pricedright that is going to please your pa­trons and increase your business.Backed by 55 years experience insupplying hotels and restaurants.Conveniently located on the campusSTINEWAY DRUGSS. RINELLA & SONSWholesaleFRUITS and VEGETABLES Chicago's Most OutstandingDrug StoreCanal 5421-5449 131 S.W. MarketMake This A College of Musical Knowledge- HEADQUARTERS FOR-Radio ,_ PhonographsSTUDENTSRadios THE STUDENT HANDOOKCONTAININGCOMPLETE SCHEDULEOF THE SCHOOL YEARRUSHING RULESSCHOOL SONGSSUMMARY OrSCHOOL ACTIVITIES35c CAP & GOWNGOOD FOOD, WELL COOKEDP*c.P*COLONIAL RESTAURANT6324 So. Woodland Ave."Attradive and imma :ulale," saysDuncan Hines, author, "Adven­tures in Good Eating./IEXPRESS PHOTO SERVICEserve you623 Livestock Exchange Bldg., ,• •RecordsSTROMBERGCARLSONZENITHDETRO LAFARNSWORTHMOTOROLA STRADER'S955 E. 55TH ST. PLAZA 7800, COLUMBIAVOCALIONVICTORVARSITYROYALDECCAMUSICRAFTSCHIRMER-234-get a senior just as easily? Crashingthe mixer gates were Pulse boogymen who were searching for candi­dates for freshman beauty queen.Singled out were blonde "Punky"Johnson, wooly Chloe Roth, Doris Alt,Alice Lowry, Peggy O'Neil, Mary LuPrice, Nonee Dillon, Mary Herschel,Marian McCarthy, Barbara Quinn,Jane Moran, Shirley Smith, EvelynJohnson, "Mike" Rathje, and TobyMuskin.At the freshman social C dance, amidVandeWater's corn, judges watchedScandals Girl With Dekesthe scared little beauties introducedto the hungry wolves. Caroline Whee­ler, originally slated to appear onthe ticket, sat the number out andwouldn't play pulchritude for Pulse.Peggy O'Neil fell once but recoveredwith a smile.At the football game, a defeat wasmade brighter by the presentation ofDoris Alt as freshman beauty queen,and "Mike" Rathje and "Punky"Johnson as her maids of honor.That week, too, in return for a lot of free advertising, the Daily Maroonoffered to send two people to SunValley during Christmas vacation, allto pep up the Maroon circulationdrive. Chairman Martin busied him­self with odd little jobs, like makingsigns and parading with them.Billed, not as a beauty or popular­ity contest, but as a really "represent­ative" deal, the Maroon found it rana contest to see which fraternity orclub was the hest organized. Theunited pull of Esoteric and Phi Deltsent two nice kids to Sun Valley.Henrietta Mahon and Gordon Murrayhad a good time, and even wroteabout it.Seventy freshmen men turned outfor foothall practice that week, andfrom Shag down they were hailed asthe greatest freshman crop in years.The seventy men kept on, however,in spite of having to watch their bigbrothers lose 6-0 to Beloit in a dullgame that Saturday.Freshman also found sentamental­ists talking nostolgically about TeddyLinn who had died a few weeks be­fore. A favorite with the oldtimers,Linn had hecome a curiosity to thepresent generation. He was amusingin his college courses but not veryhelpful to anyone when it came timeto passing comprehensives.A writer of poorish novels aboutthe University and University life,Linn redeemed himself in his lastyear and rode fast and hard into astate representative's chair. Studentsoften found a "gone to Springfield"sign on his classroom door.Freshmen slipped in that week, too,to see DA repeat its thriller of theprevious year, "The Cat and theCanary." Freshmen caught on quick.The girls biggled and screamed. Theboys craned their necks while Maria:"Castleman did a rather incompletestrip tease.The next week Franklin Roosevelt-235-Old man winter is thru.Bring your car in nowfor a spring check-up. Underwriters andDistribu tors ofMunicipalandCorporateSecuritiesFull Chassis Lubrication75cChicago Headquarters forMASON & HAMLINCONOVER • KNABE • CABLEFISCHER • ESTEY PIANOSTires, batteries and accessoriesat lowest prices for qualitymerchandiseMAGNAVOX and RCA VICTORRADIOS andPHONOGRAPH-RADIOCOMBINATIONSCertified Simonize StationOTIS & CO.Established 1899CHICAGOWaldrom'sStandard Service COLUMBIA. VOCALIONBLUEBIRD • DECCA • VICTORRECORDSPiano and Radio DeportmentsOpen Evenings61st and Ellis AvenueDorchester 10046 New York Cleveland DenverCincinnati ColumbusToledo Detroit CABLE PIANO CO.303 S. Wabash Ave. ChicagoTHE CAMPUS SHOPPING CENTERHBuilt Especially for U of C Students"READERS CAMPUS DRUG STORE61st and Ellis AvenueDrugs - Lunch - ToiletriesWhen You Are Hunting Giftsfor Any Occasion TryTHE COLLEGE SHOPFor Those Good GroceriesGo toANDY'S FOOD SHOPBe Proud of Y our WatchesSend Them toDICKOSON'S WATCH HOSPITAL SAMUEL MOLOTT"Cuts Your Hair the Way You Say"BARBER SHOP(Over 50 years experience)Clothes That Are Cleaned Well Are Cleaned ByMAX BROOKDry Cleaner & Tailor-236-jammed up the freshman schedule.Fraternity rushing dates had to beshifted around for the "new" Thanles­giving.Freshmen found Hanley's that week,too. The tavern was alive Friday andSaturday nights with bright freshfaces and some familiar ones. Thebig boys were rushing the little girlsfast. When the lights went out in themiddle of the evening, the customerswere thrilled again and sang fraternaland dirty songs in the darkness. Itwas just like a page out of LibertyMagazine.The "other half" were busy thoseweeks too. The ASU and CommunistClub were on a spot after the Russian­German alliance. Professor Daicheswarned the ASU to get out of theirivory tower. Judy and Jim Petersonweren't too busy being married tostart planning to defend Russia'sstand.While DA veterans were racing forthe part of the baby face killer in"Night Must Fall," a newcomer stolethe lead out from under disappointednoses. Charles Murrah led a com­petent DA cast in a good show, up­staging everyone he could. He failedonly with Hattie Paine who stoleevery scene she managed to get herbuxom proportions in.From a European hell, Dean Gilkeyand David Daiches returned late toanswer eager questions about "condi­tions." They both told of the grimdetermination in Europe to wipe outHitlerism. Local radicals turned gen­uinely red.Marjorie Rawlings opened theMoody lecture series with a lectureon "Fact and Fiction." The authorof "The Yearling" told the formulafor a good novel. Facts plus fancyequal fiction.One morning 3,000 males woke upto find Dean Works asking them in aletter, "Want to Fly." The University was instituting a course in flyingwhich would consist of 72 hours ofground school training to be given onthe Quadrangles, plus 35 to 50 hoursof air training. Final figures showthat 40 students, three of them women,were selected as potential pilots. Thatweek-end the Crimsons crushed Chi­cago, 61-0.The man with smiling pan anditching palm made a plea for moremoney when one year got under way.President Hutchins reiterated thefact that the University's recurringincome was severely declining; thata new source of income was vital tocontinued existence. The answer tothe golden boy's prayers came par­tially with the establishment of the50th Anniversary Celebration, a shinynew instrument to get alumni handsinto the pockets, and moths out.Friday for the benefit of her fa­vorite Settlement, Marjorie Kuh stuckher pretty little nose into the thirdSocial C dance, which had a taxidance motive. Sigmas taxied them­selves around better than anyone andwon the prize for the most cut-in-onwomen. That week-end, Florian andCrowe wrote their first Bazaar aboutall the people at the C dance and atHanley's on that and the successivenights. People hated them quicklyfor what they wrote.On October 26, in the Maroon col­umns appeared an "Inside Story" ex­posing the stink on Pulse. Surprisedwhen the story appeared were Maroonpeople, because their nice little ex­pose had been changed. The storygave Pulse members nice little adjec­tives that the Maroon never intended.After much chasing and detecting,the Maroon moguls were unable tofind out who was responsible for thedirty work. After a week they didn'tgive a damned. Somebody's little sab­otage turned into a boomerang.That week too from the foothall-237-RENTALLIBRARYMAGAZINES�ARTPRINTS�PICTUREFRAMING BooKS*GFTS STATIoNERyTYPEWRITERSATHLETICGooDSKoDAKSU. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave. ONE PRICE ONLY•� 19 East Jackson BoulevardChicago ;564 Fifth Avenue • N. v York ""-(b���li)�n�ftQIll))ut�jff!!1���elY I�t�{l;.Young gentlemenwho wish tfJ begarbed in a mostdistinguishedm ann er, withoutgreatly disturbingtheir allowancefor dress expendi­tures, will be un­pressed with theclothes and acces­sories presented inQuad ley House.<<-<THE AUTOMOBILE:Is it a Great Blessing orAn Implement ofDeath and Destruction?Man has always yearned for swift, effortlessmotion. After centuries of stumbling andgroping he is given the automobile, " meansof travel beyond the imagination of a genera­tion ago and yet today enjoyed by millions.And how are we using it? The weak, theincompetent, the careless the vicious nowcontrol a death dealin 9 mass of steel weigh­ing tons and force it over the face of theearth with the speed of the wind.Intelligent men created it and can learn tocontrol it but unfortunately it is used bymany of little intelligence, and while, it issometimes impossible to guard our livesagainst this carelessness, we can protect our­selves against the aftermath of claims thatfollow every automobile accident.Who knows what damages will be chargedas the result of an automobile crash?We can only entreat you to drive carefullyand carry Sound Liability Insurance, Withoutit an accident may take your all. Premiumpayment can be made 50 convenient thatthere is no excuse for anyone to drive with­out it.CRITCHELL - MILLERInsurance Agency175 W. Jsckson StreetCHICAGO•SUITSTOPCOATSFULL DRESSTUXEDO•PhotopressIncorpordted•OffsetLithography•731 So. Plymouth Ct.Phone Wabash 8212-3-4CHICAGO-238-Fencers Parrylocker came a feeble plea from thebig boys who asked Coach Shaugh­nessey to crack down on them. "Shag"we need it. They did. "Shag" didn't.Two hundred freshmen got off theirfannies and elected nine of theirclassmates to the new Freshman Coun­cil. Among the chosen few wereBetsy Kuh, Faith Johnson, and KayChittenden, whose votes outdistancedthe other candidates by a large meas­ure and left no doubt as to who waswearing the pants in the freshmanfamily.With club rushing nearing its peak,Peg Hutchinson, Janet Geiger, andan unidentified male Maroon report­er, rushed into print to defend cluborganization against the potelmics ofindependent Marian Castleman. Thatsame week Columnists Florian andCrow went to bat for their favoriteclub, Mortar Board, and printed asurvey of the big five clubs, taggingon Delta Sigma who either in spiteor or thanks to them pledged a goodclass. Nine out of the fourteen galslisted as the stuff of the stuff wentMortar Board. Quad and Sigma di­vided up the rest. Florian and Crowalso picked a sweetheart for each ofthe big five fraternities. Psi U drewFlorian's friend, Marian Jernberg.Deke got Charlotte Rexstrew whichmade them very happy. The Phi Psis found that they were all in love withDoris Alt. The Alpha Delts were inthe same condition about HarrietLindsay. The Betas got Ruth Brody.After the Beta break-up, Brody wasasked ceremoniously for her pledgebutton. Handing it to a Beta "cleancut" Brody breathed, "If you thinkI ant to have anything to do with youdamned stinkers. . . . Over seventywomen pledged clubs.Clark Sergei seceeded from thetrinity of Sergei, Evans and Ibsen toproduce a hit with the Workshopopener, "Aioake and Sing." Using acast composed of newcomers such asJackie Cross, Edde Armstrong, andAlice Koolish, Sergei turned out ahuge success.In a Maroon editorial precociousjunior Ernest Leiser, patted Alumnion the back; suggested that specialathletic scholarships be donated byfootball loving alumni; said footballstars would give us better teams then;winning teams would encourage moremoney, and eventually the Universitywould be out of the red.That same day, the Daily Newsbannered across its sport page lettersspelling mutiny on the Maroon foot­ball team. Incensed football menwere ready to throw campus corres­pondent Vincent Burke into the busyBotany Pond. Burke pleaded inno­cent, saying it was all done in the"rewrite room." The whole storywas fictitious. It was, however, atremor building up to an egregariouseruption. From coast to coast, sportswriter Les Dean reported, columnistswere cracking high and wide at theMaroon football teams. Look maga­zine, however, chose the Maroons asthe All-American team of the year,claiming they were the only amateurson the American scene of pigskinpushing.The next morning freshmen andsophomores dragged out their old-239-A devotion to an ideal, by master craftsmen, in theproduction of high quality engravings merits theService Engraving Company an enviable position inthe school annual field. Truly this name symbolizesall that is fine in the creation of superior yearbooks.-240-clothes to prepare for the annualBotany Pond Feud. The 1939 vir­ginity of the pond hal' been brokenthe night before when some thirtydorm men had raided the stage of"Alcake and Sing" and threw Marooncolumnist Himmel in. The next day,the sophomores broke a long losingstreak and beat the freshmen at therope game by tying their end to atruck.Victory Vanities came that sameafternoon. With Skull and Crescentconducting, fraternities put on theusual amount of filth and corn. Final­ists Phi Psi, ZBT, Pi Lam, and PhiSig worked hard for the fraternities.Sigma and Delta Sigma did their bitsfor the clubs. Pi Lam won the cupfor the second year. The Sigmas, whowere "off to see the Wizard," wereoff to get the club crown.Iron Mask, working with the Stu­dent Social Committee and ChuckO'Donnel's Hocecoming Committee,ran the Homecoming dance that samenight and presented Charlotte Rex­strew the Homecoming Queen crown.Rexstreio was elected by an all cam­pus vote. The next day, Ohio schnoz­zled out the Maroons on the footballfield 61-0. People said, "Too bad"and went gayly on with Homecoming.The IF Ball came around the eveof President Roosevelt's Thanksgivingday. Ellington swang for the chil­dren. Ivy Anderson sang for the chil­dren. The har served for the children.Actually the har was only open topeople over twenty-one. The rest hadsigned a pledge not to touch the lu­minous liquid on thread of a guiltyconscience. Guilty consciences werevery popular.Florian and Crow nominated Har­riet Lindsay and Bud Linden the bestlooking couple there, told about StuMacClintock and his formal kiltie,said everyhody had an hilarious eve­ning. The football team ended the worstseason in history on November 25 hylosing to Illinois, 46-0.Maude Hutchins made the head­lines that week when the story hrokeahout her wanting co-eds to pose inthe nude for her. Artist Mrs. Hutchinshad heen using co-eds as models foryears, feeling that they can use thehigh pay as well as anyone else.Slip-up came through the "PlacementBureau," which made the mistake ofcalling Peg Hutchinson, Mirror pres­ident, and asking for Mirror chorines,giving Mrs. Hutchins' name.The Maroon seized the story andran in a "The Night and the Lady"column. The Daily Times for twodays made the most of it. The nextweek it was suggested that the Maroontake it easy on Mrs. Hutchins. Mr.Hutchins remarked, "I get paid forit. I have to take it. My wife doesn't!"Thinking it was a gay follow up totheir pranks, the Maroon printed astorytelling of Hutchins' "ultimatium"ahout stories of his wife. Hutchins gotsore. The Maroon got in hot water.One morning the Daily Maroon re­ceived an anonymous phone call ask­ing, "Where's Dean Smith?" followedby a receiver click. Picking up thecue, the Maroon called Dean Smith'ssecretary and asked, "Where's DeanSmith?" A pleasant voice answered,"Dean Smith is in Washington." Aftera rapid telegram to the WashingtonPost, a testimony of a certain DeanLeon P. Smith hefore the Dies Com­mittee investigating uri-American ac­tivities was received. The next morn­ing the campus awoke to find that"Mr. Smith Goes to Washington."Slipping away more or less on thesly, Smith took the University organ­ization files and all his intelligenceof these organizations on a plane andhopped to Washington and the armsof Mr. Dies."Two student groups at the Uniuer--241-See the 1940 Style LeadersJ. A. LAVERY MOTOR CO.Chicago University Campus Ford DealerFORD CONVERTIBLE CLUB COUPEComplete Line of Sport ModelsAUTHORIZEDFORD - MERCURY - LINCOLN ZEPHYRDEALER6127 COTTAGE GROVE 6529 COTTAGE GROVE- MIDWAY 5300 --242-sity of Chicago, the American StudentUnion and the Communist Club," saidMr. Smith are engaged in un-Americanor subversive activities. There is ab­solutely no doubt in my mind thatthe American Student Union is indi­rectly controlled by the Communistparty."The Dies Committee wanted toknow about the Maroon; was it tooan organ of the Communist party.Mr. Smith told them that there wasonly one communist reporter he knewof that was on the Daily Maroon.He did not mention Judy Peterson'sname, nor did he tell them that shewas wife of the chief Communiston campus. Several days later, Mrs.Peterson resigned from the Maroonstaff, calling it a red baiting organwhich she felt it her duty to attack.Knocking her knees and watering herspeech, Mrs. Peterson gave an effec­tive and sincere Maroon swan song.A few days later, Dean Smith re­turned to campus and answered theaccusations flung at him. He said hethought it better to go when askedrather than wait to be suhpoenaed.He also stated that the opinions ex­pressed were his. From this state­ment it was inferred that the Uni­versity had nothing to do with it.From unofficial comments it was in­ferred that the University was sore ashell. Think what it would do to thedrive for funds.The ASU was not going to let theincident go without raising a majorstink ahout it. Calling a mass meet­ing they corraled most of the studentleaders on campus and MalcolmSharp. The meeting was a mixture ofa rat race, saving the ASU's face, call­ing Dean Smith names, and just plaincondemning the Dies Committee.To a jammed Mandel Hall, Sharpdefined Smith's terms for him andmade his testimony sound pretty silly.Adele Rose defended the ASU from Dean Smith's attack. Her speech wasviolently broken up hy a hlock offraternity men who had come to themeeting just to air their noisy tonsils.Rose was least flustered hy the jeer­ing moh. She remained a perfect ladyand waited for the noise to he overbefore she continued her speech. Inthe middle of Ruth Brody's speechthe joy-hoys walked out and the meet­ing got very dull.The senior class elections came offin comparative silence. Elected wereJim Anderson, Janet Geiger, ThelmaIsleman, Bob Reynolds, and ChuckPfieffer heading. Their main func­tion was the Fandango.In an address to high school seniors,Davenport and Wasem predicted higthings for Maroon foothall.Campus cut-ups celehrated Christ­mas ahout two weeks too soon at theMaroon Xmas Carnival in Ida Noyes.Big and gaudy, people had fun, theMaroon made money and a mistake.The giant newspaper hehind the hand­stand was a perfect reproduction ofthe Maroon, except that the flag wasupside down. Mirror patrons saw themistake repeated in a puhlicationssatire.A campus lady got her revenge onravenous columnists and wags thatweek, too. She wrote her own col­umn and took the boys over the coals.Coffee shop murmur was all about,"Who is Luter." Headlines telling ofLuter's murder solved the enigma andexposed the Maroon perpetrated hoax.Uncle Charlie Walgreen died ahoutthat time, too. Red scares and con­ditions were given a quick unearth­ing again.Conditions dwiddled down to amild calm while everyone hecamehappy and peaceful in tune with theChristmas spirit. While students werehusy packing hags and saying fare­wells, the Board of Trustees and Mr.Hutchins were discussing and prepar--243-v • §§ : §§ I §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ ! I§§ ! i§§ : I§§ • I§§ : I§§ : I"§ : !§§ : §§ I §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ : §§ :� t §CARLOS PHOTOS942 Spanish CourtWILMETTE, ILL.Wil. 650CARLOS PHOTOS APPRECIATESTHE OPPORTUNITY OF ACTINGAS OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERSFOR THE 1940 CAP AND GOWN-244-Parsons Pushes B·& Out of Blizzarding the football kick in the trousers.Three days after school was out, head­lines screeched that the Universitydropped footbalL To a desolate cam­pus came hungry campus correspond­ents looking for quotable people, mostof whom they found in the Psi U andAlpha Deft houses.Griping all over the place wererah rah boys, most of whom changedtheir minds after school resumed, andthere was time for discussion. Down­town papers speculated backwardsand forwards on just what effect thiswould have on athletics as a wholeand the specific effect on the Big Tenrelationships with this University.President Hutchins immediately an­nounced he would speak to the stu­dent body on January 12, and explainall about it. Simultaneously withHutch's speech came the word thatShaughnessey would resign from hisjob as ten thousand dollar a yearhandball coach and pursue his oneand only love, football, on the greenfields of California. Looking back onShag's tough years here, everybodywas glad that he at last had gotten abreak.Smiling his very best smile, Hutchtalked humorously to a student andflashbulb ridden Mandel Hall. "Youwill remain calm until a loud speakeris installed in the Reynolds Club forfoolish virgins and their male equiv­alents," Mr. Hutchins began, and im­mediately everyone was very happywith his president. Hutchins told his children thatthere were other ways to get whatfootball was supposed to give, andthat Chicago had those other sports.He also said the only way that wecould win in football was to subsidize.The Big Ten makes no provisions forsubsidization. You wouldn't want todo anything illegal, would you, fel­lows? The fellows cheered loudly.Unsuspecting Greeks were surprisedwhen a new fraternity grade ratingsystem was announced and severalupsets which were predicted camesorrowfully true. The new rankingswere compiled, not from last quarter'sgrades but from examination averagesof fraternity men of the past fiveyears. Beta, number one scholasti­cally, held its own, but ZBT and PiLam, usually number two and three,tumbled and gave way to DU andPhi Psi.Into the loving arms of the Univer­sity came eight million dollars in do­nations, the most interesting part ofwhich was the Albert D. Lasker 480acre estate near Lake Forest. Worth$3,500,000, the Lasker do maine in­cludes a large residence, barns, the­ater, greenhouse, farm land, a golfhouse, and the famed Mill Road Farmgolf course, one of the three best inthe country. Under the terms of thegift Lasker asks that the Universityhold the property for two years andif at that time no educational use isfound for it, it can be put up for sale.To see what can be done with MillRoad Farm, a committee of facultyand students was appointed. LocalBMOC Harry Topping and BWOCBarbara Crane are to help the Uni­versity decide.Busy as the proverbial bee, activeASUers did not waste their vacation.Meeting at the University of Wiscon­sin they heard Earl Browder speak,passed a multi-resolution platformwhich branded the German-French--245-BACK TO THE MIDWAY!MORTON B. WEISS, '18ANDSAMUEL N. KATZIN, '18CHEVROLET DEALERS FOR NINETEEN YEARS, are happy toannounce their new dealership.MIDWAY CHEVROLET CO.6522 Cottage Grove Ave. ALL Phones Midway 3500Chevrolet Sales, Parts and ServiceNew Chevrolet Cars and TrucksAll Makes and Models of Used CarsOpen Evenings and SundaysSPECIAL ATTENTION TO THE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY-246-English conflict "imperialistic," op­posed giving loans to Finland, andasked that the Dies Committee beabolished."Round Table" broadcasts were in­jected with new blood when the firstof a series of three way talks with a"roving reporter" were introducedone Sunday afternoon. The RadioDepartment tried to keep the identityof the intellectual representative ofthe people a secret, but a few cam­pusites recognized the nasal twangeand adolescent squeak of MiltonMayer, general assistant, ex-officio, toPresident Hutchins.The social season started up againwith the Ida Noyes Twelfth NightParty and the Dolphin-Tarpon WaterCarnival. As A. Eustace Haydon,undergraduate favorite, finished hisexplanatory talk on Twelfth Night,campus leaders trooped in, throwingdried pine wreaths on the blazinglogs. This also was the week-endwhich started intensive rushing. Allwas relatively quiet until two nightsbefore pledging, despite rumors ofSigma Chi giving rides to freshmenfootballers.. The first blow came toBeta when eleven of its memberswalked out and vocally aired theirdisgust. The brothers who stayed inthe house, claimed they weren't anti­intellectual, they just wanted a strong­er group organization. The groupwhich took it on the run, and whosemembers included the house presi­dent and vice-president, claimed theirobjection was that the "In" groupwanted to quash individuality. The"in" Betas managed to survive rush­ing, pledged six. The "out" Betasmanaged to exist, formed themselvesinto the now notorious "Rump Club."Second blow fell when Alpha DeltaPhi was penalized for I-F violationsafter Dean W m. Randall heard thetestimony of twelve freshmen, JohnCulp, I-F head and Charles Percy, AD rushing chairman. The night be­fore, Culp had been aroused from hissleep by the Psi U's who asked himto investigate illegal rushing in thedorms which they thought was beingdone by the Dekes. At the dormsCulp found twelve freshmen andChuck Percy talking in a freshman'sroom. When asked by Culp if theywere discussing rushing, Percy saidyes. Dean's office penalty was to re­fuse to allow eight of the freshmento pledge until June. They pledgedin February.Total fraternity catch was 177, justtwelve men less than last year. Abouthalf of the total eligible men pledged,and the Dekes carried off the most,garnering twenty men. The final nightof rushing baffled many fraternitymen, with freshmen switching alle­giance every five minutes.University men and women withsocial consciences had been stewingpro and con about the planned speechby Red leader Earl Browder. Brow­der, on trial for charges placed againsthim by the Department of Justice,was unable to come as scheduled.Rumors that Browder's speech wouldbe disturbed went unproved.A week after the crime, the twobandits who had the Bursar's officeof $4,500 were caught and they con­fessed. Picked up by the police, EarlUnderwood, one of the robbers, be­gan confessing his crimes and toldhow the group had "lived big off theUniversity job," buying an airplaneand four new cars with their loot.Politics came out from under againwhen University students Merriamand Jerger formed "The ProgressiveDemocratic Club," and other prospec­tive politicians retaliated by forminga rival "Machet for Ward Committee­man Club." Conservatives reachedinto national affairs and pulled a"Dewey for President" committee andrabid New Dealers formed a "Third-247-Fine Craftsmanshipthroughout the entire production of thebook assures you of an outstanding annual.Efficient Serviceis interpreted by us to mean on-the-spot as­sistance which reduces the usual year bookwornes to a rmrumum ...Pleasant Relationshipsmake the task of producing a fine annual aninstructive and memorable experience forevery member of the staff ....THE FOWLE PRINTING CO.MILWAUKEE, WISCONSINCreators of Fine Annuals-248-Term Club." Meanwhile Paul Doug­las and T. V. Smith went their var­ious ways, Douglas holding NewEngland Town Meetings all aroundhis ward, and T. V. running again,this time with much opposition forcongressman at large.President Hutchins announced thedates of the big Fiftieth Anniversarycelebration and told of complete plansfor the occasion. The Anniversaryyear will begin October 1, 1940, andwill culminate in an impressive fourday ceremony in the last week ofSeptember. The formal theme of thecelebration is "New Frontiers inEducation and Research" and willbe carried out by special conferencesof scientists and scholars and a spe­cial Alumni school.David Martin, Maroon Board Chair­man, had his book about undergrad­uate capers in Student Health, "Pa­tients, Please!" accepted by the Black­friar's board a few days before theMirror show. The Mirror show, star­ring Atkinson, Paine, Whelan, andHimmel, was a complete sell out forfour performances, a record to beenvied by many former shows.Kappa Alpha Psi, negro fraternity,again petitioned the InterfraternityCouncil for admission. Their petitionwas defeated when it did not get therequired three-fourths of fraternityvotes, seven houses being against andeight; for it. The status of SigmaAlpha Epsilon, former campus fra­ternity which dropped off during thedepression but returned in the formof a dormitory fraternity, was straight­ened out. The Dean's office announcedthat as SAE had never been off theInterfraternity Council it was now amember in good standing.The Washington Prom, followingfast on Interclub, had Jimmy Dorseyand the Lake Shore Athletic Clubwent over bigger than ever before.Prom committeemen, Bex and Tillery, put on the pressure and really gotpublicity, making absence from theProm a sure sign of social ostracism.Political Union reorganized for thesecond time in three years and helda straw hallot on presidential candi­dates at the same time. Rooseveltwon out over Dewey by two to one,and the largest votes were cast hy thcliberals. In the Union the liberalsgained six seats, while the Conserva­tives and Radicals each lost three.Chapel Union left off giving out­ings and teas just long enough tostart a drive for three hundred dol­lars. It began to impress itself on thecampus again when it helped sponsorthe marriage leetures. The lectures,which had heen given before on cam­pus, were mild and never even faintlysuggested anything biological.A flurry of elections closed thequarter with Evon V ogt, running forthe second time, gaining the pres­idency of Chapel Union, the firstsenior to be eleeted to the post. JoeMolkup, curly headed cheerleader,captured two important posts, thepresidencies of both Political Unionand Student Forum. Ruth Steel, pre­dicted to be the biggest and busiestwoman in next year's galaxy, waselected head of Mirror Board. Otherimportant posts in the woman's worldwere gotten by Henrietta Mahon,"most representative woman" whowas chosen head of Federation, DonnaCulliton, Interclub, Caroline Grabo,new BWO head, and Mary Hammel,Ida Noyes Council.The talk fades out again and thegrey fog becomes thick again. A yearonce alive with activity dims out tomemories; memories which will bemade still dimmer by the next yearwhich will in its turn takes its placein college day retrospection. A giantairliner hurries noisily through thesky. Fadeout.-249-"Gentlemen, we are in grave clanger of peace"WAR talk fills the air. Nationsare busy insulting each other.Good profitable hate smoulders inevery breast. Naturally com­panies' factories are beginning torun day and night, and dividendsgive promise of becoming fat aspampered hogs.Now and then developmentsprove disturbing. People begin toshow a distressing tendency towardtolerance. Threats give way toreasonableness. The outlook fora prolonged war seems to be van­ishing. And the Chairman of aBoard that gambled on that chanceof huge war-time profits, makesthis alarmed remark to his fellowdirectors:"Gentlemen, we are in gravedanger of peace!"* * *They say that in Europe muni-tion moguls have deliberately stirred up war scares in order tosell more of their dandy devicesfor killing people.There are a lot of Americans,too, who think there's big moneyto be made out of war. But historyproves that war profits are "fool'sgold." The evidence pops up timeafter time in the pages of history-and nowhere does it prove thatmore convincingly than in the lastWar.As a neutral nation, we sold bil­lions of dollars worth of goods toour future allies. We loaned themout of our own pockets the moneyto pay for part of this war mate­rial. We put the rest on the cuff.And so heavily did we involve our­selves that we were inevitablydragged in, to spend more billionson our own account.When the war was over, it wasnaively assumed that the loser-250- would foot the entire bill foreveryone! The only drawback wasthat the loser was dead broke. Sowere the victors. So were we­only it took us until 1929 to find itout. And the world is still broke.How could it be anything elseafter squandering on the waste ofwar an estimated 337 billion dol­lars!It is extremely doubtful if theeconomic structure of any countrywill survive another war. Our onlyhope of preventing complete eco­nomic catastrophe is to stay outof war and the dealings that leadto war. And our only hope of doingthat is an enlightened and deter­mined effort to stay at peace.We're making such an effort, andwe'd like to hear from people whowould like to help us. Write toWORLD PEACEW AYS, INC., 103PARK AVE., NEW YORK CITY.ADVERTISERS INDEX�.�PageBlue . Circle Grill 232Cable Piano Company 236Campus Shopping Center 236Carlos Photos 244Central Camera Company 232Chevrolet Motor Company 246Critchell and Miller Insurance Agency 238Express Photo 234Finchley & Co 238Fowle Printing Company 248George's Men's Shop 232Kidwell Flowers 232Lavery Motor Co ' 242lVIitzie Flower Shop 232Otis & Co 236Phelps and Phelps 234Photopress 238Rinella & Sons 234Service Engraving Co 240Sexton Foods 234Spies Brothers 232Stineway Drug Co 234Strader's Radio Shop 234Swift and Company 230University of Chicago Bookstore 238W'aldron Service Station 236�rorld Peaceways 250-251-STUDENTS DIRECTORYAAbelson, Jerry, 56, 181Aberg, Marjorie, 186Abraham, Eva B., 168Abrahams, Vivian, 56Abrahamson, Maurice F., 97, 192Abrams, Richard, 45Ach, Roger W., 56, 203Acker, Roy M., 56Adam, Eva H., 56Adam, Marie J., 165Adams, Richard M., 143Adams, Sally J., 147, 164, 227Adams, Violet C., 165Adamson, Shirley, 167Adelman, Robert L., 47Adelson, Robert L., 94Aeby, Jacquelyn, 56Afton, Robert, 188Ahern, James J., 56Ahlquist, Betty, 46, 57, 157,204,215Ahlquist, Ruth, 169, 173, 206Aichner, Marian D., 161Allen, John, 149Allen, Morris, 57Allen, Virginia, 159, 227Alsop, Winston, 53, 101, 190Alt, Doris M., 100, 168Amrhein, Margaret, 167Anderson, Gordon, 191Anderson, James C.,51,57,98,99,136,193Anderson, John W., 51Anderson, Mary J., 167Anderson, Myles B., 189Anderson, Randall B., 195Anderson, Robert C., 94Anderson, Verna R., 166Angelo, John B., 194, 205, 224Angrist, Walter, 53, 222, 225Anthony, Betty, 149Applebaum, Sol, 57Archer, Anita J., 156, 157Argall, John L., 98, 99, 125, 194Argall, Margaret C., 168Argiris, (Miss) Agle, 169Armbruster, Paul F., 94,191Armstrong, Edwin H., 182, 209, 210Arnold, Helen A., 46Arnold, Wayne, 46,189Aronson, Harold L., 52, 99, 185, 216Arquilla, Guido, r-, 192, 208Arthur, George E., 191Ashley, Ralph c., 193Atkins, Walter J., r-, 94, lIO, 194Atkinson. H. Grant, Jr.,173, 204, 206, 225Atwater, Pierce H, 172, 187,206Augustus, Harr i=t F., 215Augustus, Joan W., 163Aultz, Clyde E., 44Austin, Elizabeth 5., 46Axelson, Kenneth, 196, 210, 227BBachmeyer, Robert W., 94Badger, E. Hunt, 193Baker, Philomela, 160 Ball, E. Jeanne, 166Ball, M. Annette, 165Balla, George, 94, 191Ballenger, H. Charles, 194Balmer, Dorothy A., 57, 165Bamford, Benjamin J., 189Bancroft, George E.,186Banfe, Charles F., Jr., 192, 209, 210, 224Baptiste, Maurice, 198Barlick, Geraldine R., 147Barlow, C. Wayne, 99Barlow, Walter 5., 188, 208Barnard, Harrison, 195Barnard, William B., 195Barnes, DanielS., 182Bartman, William 5., 184Barton, Charles R., 57Basile, Anthony R.; 94Basler, Clinton, 57,188Bass, Robert A., 149Bates, Edward B., 57, 196Bates, Lawrence J., 94, 192, 224Bauer, Miriam A., 57Baugher, George W., 193, 209, 210Baumann, Harold R., 197Baumgart, Mrs. Ann G., 168Baumgart, Paul A., 46, 47,196Beach, Harry M., 149, 196Bean, Mary E., 126, 169, 206Bean, Robert H., 195Beatty, Walcott H., 97, 192Beaubein, Mark S., 94, 195, 227Bebb, Mary E., 159Becker, Donald M., 201Beckwith, (Miss) H. Gail, 167Beeks, John E., 94Be-Hannesey, Sidney J., 48, 57Bell, James G., 57, 195Bell, Theodore D., 184Bender, (Miss) Billie,57,156,162,179,215Bendix, Reinhard, 184Bennett, Hugh D., 126Bennett, Mary A., 45Berg, Dorothy-Jane, 161Berg, Marjorie E., 167, 217Bergus, Donald C., 197Berkson, Albert, 184Bernhardt, John W., 57, 98, 99, 125,130,133,136,194,207Bernstein, Joel, 53, 183, 224Bernstein, Stuart, 46, 105Bethard, William F., 190Bethke, Arthur,53,98,99,125,141,190,194Bethke, Katherine, 58, 124, 141, 168Bex, John E., 52, 196, 204, 207, 208,209,224,227Beynon, Josephine, 163Bi,kert, Helen L., 164, 171Biebel, Joseph P., 45Biederman, Irwin J., 58, 183, 224Bielak, Alvin J., 188, 208Bieser, Ruth, 227Bigelow, Harry, 189Bigelow, Robert R, 58, 135, 136, 196Bills, Gilhert C., 195. 208Bilsky, Maurice H., 183Birnson. Lloyd A., 196Birkett, Ellen J., 58, 159-252- Bjork.land, Alfred M., 191Blackwell, William, 136, 196Blair, Robert, 196Blakeslee, Richard C., 194, 205Blanchard, Mary G., 47, 124Bliss, Carol, 161Bloom, Morris, 45Bluestein, Bennie, 149Bluestein, Charles, 185Blum, Walter, 44, 48Blumenthal, Marshall T.,53,99,184,209,210Bobonis, Augusto, 45Boerger, Jean B., 166Bohaboy, Evelyn R., 158Bohnhoff, Wilbur C., 108, 190Bolks, Richard G., 195, 210, 227Bolz, J. Arnold, 46Bond, Alan B., 51, 58, 208Bond, William H., 44Borchardt, (Miss) Merle, 58, 158Borgstrom, Evelyn, 58Borman, Shirley J., 169Boutell, Wayne 5., 188, 192, 203Boutell, Wilbur H., 58Bowers, Martha-Belle, 120Bowers, Robert, 208Bowman, Edgar M., 58Boyd, Charles, Jr., 94, 193Boyer, Robert Mo, 52, 58, 214Boyes, Donald, 191,210Braddock, Agnes S. B., 45Brecher, Irving, 105Breidigam, June E., 161Brener, Roy, 45Briggs, Peter, 187,214Briggs, Rodney D., 186Briggs, Walter L., 214Brill, Thomas, 46, 4·7Br iser, Ruth, 155Briskin, Alice A., 59Britz, John P., 44, 48, 218Brockway, Marie, 58Brody, Ruth, 50,59, 135,141,222Bronez, Ray W., 58Brooks, Henry P., 210Brooks, Margery, 168,216Brosin, Henry W., 45Brown, Annabel, 124Brown, Charles W., 98, 99, 193, 227Brown, Donald A., 194Brown, Georgene C., 165Brown, Jack E., 136Brown, M. Virginia, 58, 161, 224Brown, Marjorie L., 124, 167Brown, Robert E., 196Brown, Robert V., 45Browne, Evelyn Moo 215Brownell, Robert Moo 186Browning, Carroll W., 59, 196Brozen, (Mr.) Yale, 44Brunner, Frank G., 108, 186, 208Buerki, Robin c., Jr., 53, 191, 208Buffington, Reed, 189Bureau, Jane E., 124Burke, Vincent J., 46, 47Burns, John F., 189Burt, Mary L., 59, 169Burt, Patricia, 46Burtle, James, 46, 153, 222Burton, Shirley J., 168Busby, John W., 194Butler, Robert E., 96Byers, Horace W., Jr., 147, 189Byrne, Frank E., 45, 178CCahoon. Daniel H., 48Caldis, George, 190Caldwell, Betty, 59, 156, 159Callahan, James E., 195Calogeratos, William, 59Cameron, Janet L., 167Cameron, Margaret J., 167Camp, N. Harry, Jr., 59Camp, Turner, 190Campbell. Jack, 53, 172, 187, 204,205Cantzler, Richard M., 196Caple, Dayton F., 192Cargill, Hazel, 217Cargill, Margery J., 158, 227Carle, Celia, 156Carlson, Alice M., 162,218Carlson, Jack J., 59, 181, 193Carr, Malcolm, 45Cassell, Richard A., 190Castleman, Marian J.,46,47,136,173,204,206,222Castles, John R., 196Caudill, William A. II, 192Caulton, Edward, 97, 195Caulton, Richard G., 195Cerny, Edward V .• 96, 188Chapin, William A., 188Chappars, Michael S., 45Charlton, James B., 60, 101, 103, 190Chetister, June R., 161Chittenden, Kathryn B.,140,169,175,206Church, H. Victor, 45Clark, David, 44Clark, Dr. Dwight E., 45Clark, Robert J., 187Clark, Virginia M., 60, 212Cluster, Stanley M., 185Clements, Beverly C., 169Clough, C. Patrice, 169,206Clyne. Natalie A., 50, 60, i68, 203, 216Coambs, Eleanor, 124, 141, 171Cochran, Harry J., 189Coffey, Merry, 60, 136, 165Coffman, Kenneth M., 193Cohen, Lawrence A., 184Cohen, Morris H., 44Cohn, Leonore Roo 60Cohn, Robert A., 204, 209, 210Cohn, Seymour K., 60Colley, Mary E., 167, 171Coilias, Nicholas E., 45Colman, William G., 165Colvert, Raymond G., 60, 196Comstock, Kathleen, 169, 206Connor, Arthur C., 46Connor, Daniel F., 208Conway, Alvin C., 189Cook, James E., 45Cook, John A., 210Cook, Victor C., 61, 178Corbett, Robert G., 61, 188Corkell, Alice M., 158Cornelius, Harry, 61, 192, 222Cornwall, Kenneth, 105, 195Costellow, Tom S., 187 Cotton, Carol B., 45Cottrell, Thomas L., 190Corrier, G. W., 191Cover, E. June, 61, 159Cover, John H., r-, 191Cowan, George D., 61Cox, David C., 61Cox, Margaret F., 171, 214Coyte, Benjamin L., 190Crabb, Daniel M., 174, ]95, 227Crafton, Perry E., 189Crane, Barbara C., 61, 141, 171Crane, Charles E., 61, 136, 222Crane, John N., 191, 227Crane, Ronald F., 46, 222Crawford, Oliver W., 198Crocker, Benjamin B., 147Crocker, Courtenay, 61Croneis, Carry, 196Cronson, Donald B., 222Crosby. John A., 195Cross, Jacqueline, 172, 206, 222Crow, Robert, 192, 208Crowell, George H., 61, 191Culp, John F., 51, 61, 131, 135, 152, 190Culliton, Donna, 164, 227Cummings, Anna,161Cummins, Clyde, 192Cuneo, Annette, 162,218Cunningham, Walter, 198Curtis, Mary, 156, 168Cutshaw, James A., 94, 195DDabbert, Albert M., 196Dahlberg, Truman L., 187Dalenberg, Jane, 47Daniels, Doris, 167, 205Daniels, Raymond E., 61, 195Danish, (Miss) Tamaara,44Darling, Alan G., 193, 207Darragh, A. Charles, 147, 182Daschbach, Frank J., 193Davenport, George L., 191Davenport, John H., 210Davenport, John L., 51, 92, 93, 94, 96, 97,109,131,135,194Davidson, Edward V., 97, 192Davidson, Hugh M., 48Davis, Edith L., 162, 215Davis, Mary E., 162Davis, Myron H., 212, 224, 225Davis, Nedda E., 61, 165Davis, Robert B., 61, 191Davison, B. Ellen, 45Davran, James M., 44Dean, Lester B., 105, 194, 222Dean, Richard, 224Dean, Robert W., 94, 194De Costa, Rayna L., 44Deever, Donald R., 53Deffenbaugh, Dorothy, 62, 161De Frantz, Faburn E., 198Degan, James W., 104, 187De Grazia, Alfred J., 44De Jong, Dorothy, 163, 227De Jong, Eileen, 62Demetry, James P., 191Denny, James W., 62De Rose, Jeannette, 161De Silva, James S., r-, 62, 196Deterding, Charlotte E., 165De Vin, Jeannette B., 213De Vol, Eva E., 161-253- De Young, Helen, 163Dial, James K, 47,46Diamond, Irving T., 185, 224Dickson, Bruce, 192Dickson, Nan, 136, 168Dieckmann, Dorothy J., 169,206Dillon, (Miss) Honore, 169,206Dillon, Margaret, 169, 212Disch, Georgia, 147, 169Docekal, Ruth M., 168Dodd, Robert B., 94, 140Dods, Roger W., 206Dolnick, Bernard, 201Donian, Armand, 53, 186Do is, Jack P., 201Donovan, Thomas A., 44Doolittle, John C., 52, 174, 196Dorfman, Deborah, 62Doutt, Diana R., 165Dragstedt, Carl A., Jr., 191, 210, 227Drake, George T., 94, 194Drechsler, Elsie, 162Dreyfuss, Allan L., 53, 224Drigot, Albert, 62Dryburgh, Kathryn L., 161Duncan, Joan L., 168Dunkel, John F., 62Dunkin, James, 44Dunn, William B., 188Dunne, Margie, 162,218Durka, William J., 182Durkee, David M., 94, 194Durkee, Esther M., 215Dursema, Cynthia D., 166Dvorsky, Thomas, 186Dwight, Wendell H., 188Dwyer, John J., 188Dzubay, Mae, 166EEarle, Celia S., 165Earle, William A., 47East, Robert I., 190Easton, Suzanne D., 159Easton, William H., 45Eaton, Dorothv 0., 1, 63, 162Eaton, Louise K., 168, 206Eeaton, Mary E., 163Edelbrock, John F., 188Edwards, Leonard M., 44Eichstaedt, Gertrude, 166, 179Einbecker, Dorothy, 46, 124, 166Elisberg, Edward I., 46Elkin, Frederick, 63Ellbogen, David F., 185Elliott, Susan, 46, 63, 136, 156, 160Elvin, Jean A., 159Ely, Charlotte E., 169Emery, Frederic B., 190Emery, Roy F., 188Emmons, Olin N., 187Emory, Thomas E., 45Emswiler, JamesE., 133, 191, 227Engelmann, Frances M., 46, 47Engle, James B., 46, 219Eppens, Norma J., 63, 163Epstein, Elise R., 63, 136Epton, Bernard E., 183Erickson, Helen M., 163Erickson, Robert A., 196, 206Esperschmidt, Rose, 165, 222Essington, Elizabeth, 63Ettelson, Robert, 46, 48Evans, Betty A., 169, 172, 173, 204, 206Evans, Franklin F., Jr., 192, 195, 227Evans, Muriel L., 164, 171Evans, Robert 0., 172, 195, 227Evans, Thomas E., 94, 224Everett, Margaret L., 166Exter, Mrs. Margaret G., 167, 213FFabian, Donald L., 47Faherty, Edward M., 195Faherty, Roger B., 195Failey, James F., 104Fairservis, Walter, Jr., 190Fantl, Dorothy R., 222Faris, Ellsworth E., 191, 208, 209Farish, John, 192Farmakis, Viola M., 63Farnol, Barry, 172, 205, 208Farwell, Marian, 164Fawley, Sam S., 195, 227Fearing, Ralph B., 63, 188Fedotin, Maurice, 64Fein, Monroe S., 140, 210Ferderber, Helen, 64Fernandez, Eugene, 64Ferriss, Edward R., 64, 192Feuerman, Douglas, 64, 210Fineman, Morton Z., 45Fink, Theodore P., 206Fink, Victor H., 46Finkel, Asher J., 45Finnegan, Helen B., 65Finnegan, Joyce L., 65, 156, 158Finney, Richard A., 196Fiser, Webb, 219Fisher, (Mr.) Alvah L., 188, 208Fisher, David, 208Fisher, Mark A., 222Fisher, Robert H., 190Fisher, Pearl, 64Fitzgerald, John W., 94, 191Fitz.Hugh, Ernest L., 197Flanagan, C. Christine, 64, 166, 179Flood, Susanne M., 65, 166, 218Florian, Paul A. III,99,195,210,222,227Floyd, F. Lorraine, 161Flynn, Margaret L., 165, 227Fogle, George D., 190Fonger, Felicity M., 166, 218Fons,Jack,100,101,103Foote, Barbara J., 169, 200Ford, Charlotte M., 46, 166, 227Ford, Gilbert F., 139Foster, Norman, 188Foster, Wilfred F., 45Fostuedt, Gerald, 45Fouch, Robert S., 44, 149F ox, Allen S., 46, 47Fox, Benum W., 53, noFox, Jacob L., Jr.,53,185,210,216,224Fradkin. Arthur M., 97Fraine, John R., 195Fralick, John F., 194Francis, Curtis E., 149, 187Frank, Ethel, 65Frank, Hugh A., 47Franke, Allyn J., 227Frear, Beatrice A., 162Freach, Dorothy, 169,227Freedman, Albert, 149Freedman, Robert, 46Freeman, Mrs. Louise B., 45 French, Elizabeth, 157French, Thomas R., 186, 210Frey, James L., 193, 227Fried, Sherman, 45Friedlander, Dorothy, 46Friedlander, Herbert, 46Friesleben, Milton, 183Frodin, Muriel K., 159, 171Frumkin, Reva, 160Fryar, Calista, 169, 227Fultz, Dave, 46, 47Furda, Harold J., 94Furry, Betty L., 147, 167GGadd, Richard T., 65Gaidzik, Beatrice, 164, 204, 206Gale, Richard, 190Gallander, Thomas, 193Galloway, Lloyd E., 198Gambrell, Winton E., 45Gardner, Marjorie E., 163Garland, John H., 45Gartner, Lois M., 217Garvey, George E., 65, 195Geary, Mary, 206Geiger, Evelyn J., 158Geiger, Janet L., 50, 65, 134, 141, 152,156,169,171,204,205,216Geisert, Mary, 167Gentzler, Alfred L., 133, 192George, Alexander L., 46, 106, 107Geppinger, Kenneth E., 101, 136, 146Gerner, Gladys, 45Gerson, Marion L., 65Gervin, Herbert L., 224Gezon, Horace M., 47Gibler, William K., 94, 195Giedt, Warren H., 106, 143Gilbert, Harold R., 198Giles, Dorothy B., 65Gilinsky, T. George, 185Gill, Piara G., 45Gillison, James H., Jr., 187Gilmore, Patricia, 157Gilstrap, Austin M., 65Ginsberg, Norton S., 47Giovacchini, Peter L., 187Gladstone, Matthew T., 44,107Glasser, Richard L.,65,107,152,181,185Glassner, Walter, 65Glick, Ira S., 224Glickson, Bernice, 47Glixon, Betty, 65, 136Godsave, William A., 196, 210Goes, John E., 65, 193Gold, William L., 65Goldberg, Arnold M., 184Goldman, Marjorie, 44Goldsmith, Julian R., 65, 185Goldstein, Amy, 136Goldstone, Herbert, 46Gomberg, May, 66Gomore, George, 45Goode, Eloise L., 169, 206Goodman, Marjory R., 206, 222, 225Goodman, Raymond L.. 46Goodwillie, Joan M., 166, 168Gootnick, Lester, 184Gordon, Edward E., 188Gordon, Edward S., 178, 196Gordon, Harold R., 193Gore, Jean, 66, 103, 225-254- Grahle, D. Vaughan, 189Grabo, Caroline E., 136, 141, 164, 171Gracenick, R. Marian, 167Graham, Judith E., 44Graham, Marjorie E., 47Graham, Mary M., 166, 222Grassick, (Miss) Gail E., 147, 166,227Graver, Blanche, 164, 205, 207Graves, Alan, 149, 195, 227Graves, Mrs. Elizabeth R., 45Gray, Dr. Seymour, 45Green, Alan P., 99, 192Green, Thomas M., 188Greenberg, Robert H., 53, 183Greenfield, Frances L., 44Greening, Mary J., 169Greenlee, Howard, 191Greenman, Norman N., 46, 47Greenwood, Delbirt, 45Gregg, Mrs. Ella V., 45Grenander, Mary E., 46, 66, 124Griffin, Nella V., 66, 163Grills, Mary M., 67, 158Grinbarg, Morrie S., 94Grody, William H., 66, 185, 222Grossman, Lewis S., 184Grossman, Clarabel, 141, 164Grossman, Eugene, 187Gruhn, Robert, 147, 196Gudas, Augusta, 218Gustafson, Alois, 67Gustafson, Edward R., 191Gustafson, J. Frederick, 196, 206Gustafson, Svea F., 67Guy, Samuel J., 47, 189Gwinn, Merritt S., 94, 191, 210HHaag, Verner G., 67Haas, John K., 67Hackett, Genevieve M., 169, 227Hackett, Joseph J., 126, 193, 208Hahn, Gerald S., 185, 224Haight, Anna M., 147, 167, 206Haines, Aimee M., 67, 120Halgren, John A., 67Hall, F. Richard, 190Halperin, Wilfred, 184Ham, Elton W., 188Hambly, Jean, 163Hamilton, Marjorie C., 44, 162Hamlin, Marian, 162, 227Hammel, Mary, 124, 167, 171, 205,206,227Hammer, Eleanor G., 46Hand, Chester C., Jr., 53, 196, 222Hand, George W., Jr., 197, 229Hanes, Mary C., 67, 167, 204, 205Hankla, William B., Jr., 192, 216, 222Hansen, Thomas E.. 94Hanson, June L., 215Harding, James W., 67, 189Hardy, William B., 45Harlan, Robert H., 67, 194Harmon, Alexander, 186Harper, Lyle, 194, 224Harper, William R., 190, 210Harris, Alfred II, 184Harris, Chauncey, 45Harris, Willard, 191Harris, Raymond P., 67Harris, Stanley G., 189Harrison, Frank J., 46, 47, 182Harrison, Richard, 149Hart, Harold, 67Hartzler, Eleanor A., 46Harvey, Mary E., 159, 171Hasterlik, Arnold D., 185Hattenberger, Fred, 94Hauser, Ruth, 67, 168Havermale, Homer, Jr., 174, 194, 205Hawk, Betty, 68, 165, 171Hawkes, Cynthia, 44Hawkins, Donald, 188Hazard, Katharine E., 45Hebert, Walter, 130, 133, 137Hecht, Margaret E., 164Hector, William D., 94, 1�3Hedden, Gregory D., 182Heffron, Jeannette B., 68Heindl, Helga, 44Heinen, J. Henry, 45Heller, Howard E., 94, 149, 187Heller, Neil, 68Hemenway, Robert, 46Henderson, Elmer W., 198Henry, Christine, 68Henry, John G., 188Hermes, Geraldyn M., 159Herro, Norman C., 68, 96Herschel, Mary, 168,171Herschel, Robert, 194Hess, Sophy, 68Hewitt, A. Lee, 195, 209, 210, 213, 216Higgins, Robert G., 46Hill, James R., 191Hill, Mary E., 163, 227Hill, Milancie, 44Hill, Thomas B., 147, 186Hiller, Catherine, 167Hiller, Naneen, 159, 206Himmel, Richard C.,53,170,172,173,204,206,222Hippchen, Char-les J., 189, 210Hipple, Walter J., 46, 47Hirsch, Emil G., 51, 185, 224Hirschfeld, Jane R., 160Hoatson, James R., 192,224Hochman, William J.,47,52,183,209,210Hoekstra, Andrew L., 47Holland, Jerome, 53, 184Holland, Joshua Z., 46, 47Hollander, Vincent P., 68Holmboe, Harold, Jr., 69, 191Holmes, Lois L., 69, 168Holston, Marion L., 163Holt, Joseph P., 45Honzak, Carl M., 69Hoo dwin, Jean B., 69Hook, Walter E., 45Hoover, Lucille J .• 168Hoover, Mary J., 159, 206Hopps, Howard c., 45Horal, Jacqueline A., 169Horlick, Lois, 69, 167Horner, Edward, 183Horner, Violet 0., 47Hornstein, Claire, 158Hornung, Erwin W., 47Horwich, Jane, 69, 136Howard, Helen, 167Howard, John, 189Howard, John, 94Howard, Joseph R., 194Howard, Raymond, 189Howard, Robert, 52Howard, Viola M., 47Howat, Bruce, 188 Howe, Theodore P., 94, 193Howell, Bertha M., 158Howell, Phyllis L., 163Howenstein, John M., 46,120,197Huff, Lyman C., 45Huffaker, Gregory D., 195Hughes, Robert R., 218Huling, Anna M., 166Hull, Richard B., 196Hull, Robert F., 187, 225Humphreville, Eugene L., 94, 196Hungate, Edith N., 206Hunter, Robert C., 47Hurney, John E., 69Hurst, Charles E., 190Husman, Eloise, 162Hutchinson, Margaret,50,69, 141,156, 164, 204, 205Hutchinson, Martha,50,69,141,164,204,205Hymen, Theodore H., 69, 136, 185IIhrke, Royal E., 44Indritz, Jack, 44Ingram, Dorothy M., 157Iselman, Thelma, 50, 69, 135,136,141,152, 156, 166, 215Isenberg, Helen D., 46, 47Ivy, John H., 94JJackson, Eileen S., 69Jacobs, Joshua, 46,47Jacobs, Robert H., 183Jacobson, Joseph, 94Jacobson, Lucille, 167Jacques, Richard E., 195James, Warren H., 69Jamison, Clarence, 198Jampolis, Robert W.,94,195,210,212,216Jansen, Marjorie E., 69, 156Jarro,v, Myles, 210Jefferson, John P., 182, 222Jensen, Kenneth, 93Jerger, Wilbur, 212Jernberg, Marion, 70, 164Jernberg, Robert E., 195Jesseman, Winnifred, 70Jezik, Albert F., 96, 149Jochim, Kenneth E., 45Johns, Latimer D., 189Johnson, Albert C., 70Johnson, Charles A., 189Johnson, Dale, 195, 208Johnson, Eugene M., 191Johnson, Evelyn M., 169, 227Johnson, Faith L., 140, 141, 169Johnson, Paul B., 46Johnson, Robert E., 70Johnson, Victor H., 192, 224Johnston, Neil, 53, 194Johnston, William, 46,149Joranson, Robert E., 70, 191Jordan, Paul H., Jr., 98,99,194Jorgensen, Arthur, 70, 100, 101,103, uo, 195Jungkunz,Jane, 168-255- KKahot, Byron, 44Kahl, Richard, 185, 224Kahn, Alfred, 47Kamen, Lillian, 70Karnensky, Solomon, 183, 210Kammerer, Joan, 71, 165Kann, Cecil, 224Kanouse, Orville, 140, 196,206Kantabutra, Mr. Bundhit, 71Kaplan, Max, 225Kaplan, Shimmon, 45Kaposta, Louis, 125, 188, 208Karn, John, 149Kasius, Richard, 97Katcher, Ruth, 71Kebele, Robert, 53Keck, Robert, 189Keippel, Mildred, 162Kelble, Areta, 5, 50, 71, 135, 136,141,171,227Kellam, Catherine, 141, 164, 171Keller, John, 94, 195Kemp, Harr iette-Lou, 71, 163Kercher, Claire, 46, 71Kernes, Marvin, 47Kerns, Vernon, 71,188Kester, William, 149, 187, 209Kibele, Robert, 50, 94Kidd, Geraldine, 71, 162Kimball, William, 94, 195, 210Kimbel, John, 210Kimmder, George, 196Kincheloe, Robert, 193Kinder, Freda, 158King, Lorin, 130, 226Kircher, Joanne, 71, 168Kivlan, Pauleen, 71, 169, 204Kleene, Richard, 45Klein, Lorraine, 169Klibanow, Louise, 71Klotz, Irving, 45Knauss, Jeanne, 163Knowlson, Elizabeth, 167, 213Knudsen. Doris, 163Koenig, Robert, 47, 226Koerber. Lorenz, 46, 47Kogan, Bernard, 48Kogan, Norman. 71Kollros, Jerry, 45Kornerska. Dorothy, 159Koos, Carl, 191Korellis. Marv, 215Korf, John, 149Kosacz, Adam, 34Kotselas, John, 71Krakowka, Georl!;e, 195 -Krane, James, 183Krayhill, Robert, 182Kretschmar, Frederick, 210Kreuder, Jeanne, 16BKrevitsky, Charlotte, 213Kr ieber«. Hvmen, 201Krogdahl, Wasley, 44Kronemyer, Jack, 71Kronernyer, Robert, 72Krueger, Lorraine, 72Kuh, Alice, 160Kuh, Betsy, 140, 168Kuh, Marjorie, 50, 72, 134, 141, 153,168,203,215,216,217Kuliu, Peter, 191Kurk, Walter, 133, 188, 208, 209Kurnick, Wilbert, 47L,Labuda, Bernard, 94, 186Lacey, John, 46Lach, Helen, 161Ladenson, Shirlie, 72, 206Laff, Frances, 165Lambert, Rollins, 97Landes, Emily, 159Landman, Louise, 46, 219Landon, La Verne, 72, 158, 218Lane, Margaret, 72La Pert, Alice, 47Lapidus, Lucile, 46Lapp, Frances, 165Lapp, Ralph, 44, 46Lasser's, Willard, 73Later, Eugene, 182Latham, Shirley, 146, 167Lauerman, George, 193Lawrence, Philip, 73Lawson, Andrew, 187Lawson, Robert, 222Lazarus, David, 183Leach, Lindsay, 94, 194, 204Leach, William, 94, 98, 99, 125, 194Lear, Patricia, 178Leggitt, John, 193, 210Leiser, Ernest, 46, 47, 174, 222Leonard, James, 185Leonard, Morton, 46, 47Leonas, Andres, 73, 98, 99Lerner, Blanche, 160Lesser, Nancy, 222Letang, Nicholas, 45Letts, Louis, 52, 93, 94" 194Leuritz, Elaine, 160Leveridge, Don, 136Levi, Harry, 185, 203, 225Levin, Jack, 4,5Levin, Richard, 185, 222Levin, Saul, 46Lovinger, Joseph, 4,6Levinsohn, John, 53, 227Levinson, John, 185Levinson, Julian, 149Levit, Martin, 51, 73, 136Levitan, Jean, 160Levy, Leonore, 73Levy, Rolf, 47Levy, Stanley, 184Levy, William, 183Lewandowski, Kordyan, 73Lewis, Barbara, 73Lewis, George, 106, 149Lewis, John, 193Lewis, Robert, 196Lewis, William, 44Lewitz, Elaine, 206Lezak, Robert, 183Liberman, Rita, 160Lichtenberg, Leo, 183Liebman, AlbertLile, Albert, 73Lindberg, Betty, 156Linden, Frederick,51,73,135,172,194,203,216Lindsey, Harriet, 168Lochner, Robert, 44Locker, Edith, 158Loeb, Alfred, 53Loeblich, Alfred, 4,5Loeblich, Mrs, Helen N., 45Loewy, Arthur, 185Lollar, Mildred, 159Long, Vincent, 193 Long, Virginia, 162Longini, Joan, 47,73Lopatka, Art, 186Lorenz, Clyde, 193Lorenz, Julian, 46Lorenz, Paul, 46Lorenz, Warren, 193Lorr, Mrs. Joan A., 44Lott, Marion, 73, 167Louhi, Kullervo, 44Louis, Walter, 197Lounsbury, Richard, 94, 100, 101, 103Lovell, William, 192,224Lowenstein, Julian, 183,224Lowenstern, Nanette, 224Lowry, Alice, 164Lubin, Milton, 73, 184Luckhardt, Leo, 98, 99Luckhardt, Paul, 187Luckow, Charles, 192Lucoston, Gertrude, 157Lukens, Abbie, 155Lukins, Abbie, 163Luostari, Gertrude, 159Lushbaugh, Clarence, 45Lusk, Thomas, 190Lutherman, Catharine, 45Lutz, Margaret, 73Lyding, Joan, 164, 212, 227Lyding, Patricia, 27, 164, 206, 227Lynch, Francis, 193MMacClintock, Stuart, 106, 107MacDonald, Jeanne, 136, 159MacDougal, Anne, 73, 168Mack, Irving, 44MacLean, William, 190MacLellan, Charles, 51, 74, 130, 131,133,195,203MacLellan, Kenneth, 53, 195Macy, William, 51, 74, 98,99,125,130,133,181,192Mafit, Ted, 47Mahon, Henrietta J., 136, 167, 205Malhem, Genevieve, 163Mallery, Bruce W., 210Mandel,Herbert S., 183, 224Manders, Aaron B., 47Manley, Miriam A., 157Marks, Jeanne D., 160Marrow, Raphael D., 187Marshall, Charles K, 45Martin, Arthur S., 74Martin, David K, 74, 135, 154, 186,208,210,220,222Mason, Charles, 74, 196Mason, Robert J., 197Mather, Adeline N., 47Mather, Charles K, 182Matheson, James C., 194 'Mathews, Robert W., 133, 193, 207, 227Matthews, Richard, 195Mattila, lIma A., 158Maurovich, Walter, 94, 192Mayer, Emil, 224, 225Mayer, Mary M., 169, 206McCarthy, Daniel, 189McCarthy, Marian, 168McClelland, Mary, 74, 158, 217McClure, James J., 191McCollum, Ralph, 86, 98, 99 l28,194McCormack, William, 75, 188McCormick, Thierry, 193-256- McCoy, Charles F., 95McCracken, Elsie, 75, 124, 163, 198McCracken, Frank, 186McDonald, Donald, 75, 106, 107McElroy, Bertram W., 189McElroy, George C., 225McElvain, Elizabeth, 163McGuane, Rita M., 44McKay, Edward M., 191McKeen, Charles L., 94McKey, Mary E., 168McKinsey, Richard D., 196McKinsey, Robert J., 196McKnight, '196,205,222McMahon, Harry T., 75,94,193McMurry, Ruth H., 165McNamee, Robert P., 136, 195McNellis, John F., 46McWhorter, Henry, 194Mead, Bruce B., 75Mead, Cynthia, 167Megan, Frances, 165, 206Menacker, Marcella, 75, 160Menaul, Richard, 143Mendelson, Maxine, 160Merrifield, Marcia, 216Merrifield, Richard, 194, 210Metcalf, Alan, 94Metcalfe, Mary, 75, 161Meyer, Alice, 75, 206, 222Meyer, Robert, 34, 195Meyers, Frank, 192, 210Meyers, Mrs. Ruth, 75, 168Mezlay, Daniel, 222Milakovich, Eli, 189Milcarek, Virginia, 161Miles, Dorothy, 75, 169, 210Miller, Alexis, 194Miller, Edward, 149Mill"" Ernest, 191Miller, Esther, 169, 206Miller, Mary, 169Miller, Robert A., 94, 193Miller, Robert c., 94, 193, 210Miller, Walter, 47Miner, Robert S., 46,75,136,140Minsky, Hyman, 46, 47Mitchel, Marvin, 227Mitchell, Bruce, 193,205Moberg, Jerome, 75, 186, 213Mohlman, Robert, 149Molitor, Ardis, 165Molkup, Joseph, 107, 136, 192, 219Moller, Robert, 34, 193Molloy, John, 44Moment, Daniel, 75, 184Monagham, Robert, 34, 192, 224Mongerson, John, 182Monson, Frances, 76, 166, 179Montgomery, Elizabeth, 169Moonie. Clyde, 189Moore, James, 222Moore, Marietta, 169Moore, Ralph, 96Moore, Robert, 188Moore, Shirley, 162Moore, William, 192Moran, Jane, 169Morberg, Effie, 76Morganroth, Edward, 185Morray, Kenneth, 194Morris, Henry, 193Morris, Jane, 46, 76, 169Morrison, John, 206Mortenson, Ruth, 165Moskow, Harry, 76, 184Moss, Janet, 160Mossberg, Robert, 196Motta, Mr. Ercole, 46Mowery, Charles, 125, 194Moynihan, Arthur, 94, 193Mueller, Elizabeth, 227Mullen, James, 187, 210Muller, Lila, 160Munger, Edwin, 192, 225Murphy, Eileen, 222Murphy, Maxine, 159Murr, James, 76, 196Murrah, Charles, 173, 192, 210Murray, Gordon, 76, 196Mustain, Robert, 94, 196Myar, Sam, 76Myers, Jane, 77, 156, 167, 203, 204,205,206Myerson, Raymond, 77, 184NNaas, Harlan, 94, 191Nachtrieb, Norman, 45Nagler, Walter, 77, 189Nardi, George, 191Navid, Burton, 44Neal, William, 44Nedvar, Walter, 94Nedzel, Alexander, 46Neff, Marshall, 45Nelson, Betty-Jane, 164, 171, 224Nelson, Edgar, 192Nelson, Inez, 77Nelson, Verna, 157Nelson, William, 53, 189Netherton, Ross, 182Neuendorffer, Ruth,50,77,141,162,215,216Newhall, Betty, 50Newman, Melvin, 46,225Nichols, Jay, 195, 208Nichols, Virginia, 169Nicola, Peter, 94, 190Nims, Marilee, 77, 169Noble, Charles, 188Nohl, Carl, 194Norian, Richard, 77, 130, 184Norling, Alfred, 186Norris, Lionel, 193Novick, Aaron, 46, 47Nudenberg, Walter, 45Null, Susan, 124Nusbaum, Miss Hapie, 124Nye, Robert, 147, 196, 206Nyquist, Ewald, 94Nystrom, Robert 0., 206oOakley, Raymond, 166O'Donnell, Charles, 51,77,192,208Ollerman, Carlos A., 45Ogburn, William, 191O'Keefe, John, 45OIlmann, E. Philip, 147, 149, 196Olson, George, 149Olson, Joan, 166O'Neil, Peggy, 206Oost, Stewart, 46Oostenbrug, William, 94, 194Orloff, Daniel, 46Orr, Nancy, 164 Orr, Richard, 46, 182, 206Osborne, Mary, 168Osherrnan, Elaine, 160, 224Ottorneyer, Wallace, 94,194Owings, Marguerite, 77, 166PPaine, Harriet, 163, 173, 174, 204, 206Pallis, Peter, 106Palmer, John, 77,94,195,208,216Palmer, Pierre, 77, 182Palmer, Stuart, 94, 192, 222Paltzer, Charles, 186, 208, 209Parisi, Dominic, 94Park, Thomas, 196Parker, Miss M. Troy, 169Parks, Ralph, 149, 187Parmelee, Arthur, 190Parsons, Russel, 51,77,94,153,195Patinkin, Lester, 210Patrick, John, 136, 191, 227Patterson, Ann, 168Patterson, Bradley, 195Pattulo, Marshall, 147,202,206,210Pauling, William, 133, 188Peacock, Janet, 164Peacock, Margaret, 164Pearson, Martha, 77, 166Pearson, Robert, 77, 189Peel, Thomas, 190Percy, Charles, 52,98,99,128,194,217Perlman, Jean, 224Perry, Robert, 225Peters, Sarah, 140, 224Peterson, Andrew, 196Peterson, Jean, 168Petrone, Miss Gina, 165Petty, David, 192Peyer, Allan. 97, 182Pfanstiehl, Alfred, 78, 149, 187Pfeiffer, Charles, 51, 78, 134, 195, 203Pfender, William, 105Phalen. Marie, 165Phelps, John, 218Philbrick, Richard, 194, 222Philli ps, J ea n, 168, 206Phillips, Rosalie, 168, 206Phillips, Walter, 7SPierce, Morton, 184Pierre, Glenn, 104Pinkert, Naoma, 78Pinsky, Sylvia, 78Pittman, Marvin, 186Pletcher, David, 46, 47, 182, 206Ploepst, Gloria, 163, 206Ploshay, Bernard, 186Pulmley, William, 97, 187Polacheck, Demarest, 172, 222Polachek, Loraine, 206, 224Poole, Reid, 149Porges, Walter, 46, 47, 78Postelnek, Morton, 78Posvic, Harvey, 79Powell, Chester, 96Powell, Thomas, 97Pracht, Joseph, 79Pregler, Robert, 210, 224Preskill, Leonard, 79, 201Price, Mary Lu, 164, 171, 227Price, William, 186Prince, Alan, 45Pritchett, Carl, 107, 149, 197Procter, Eloise, 165, 171Psota, Frank, 210-257- Puck, Theodore, 45Punderson, John, 79, 196Py le, Carroll, 96, 193QQuinn, Barbara, 168Quinn, John, 224Quirmhach, Mary, 79Quitman, Samuel, 46RRachlin, Edgar, 108Raeth, Charles, 46Ragle, John, 193Rahill, Clarissa, 167, 171Raiman, Robert, 94, 193Ramspeck, George, 197Randa, Donald, 191Randal, Ray, 196Ranney, Richard, 136, 189Rashevsky, Emilie, 166,206Rasmussen, Jane, 79, 163Rathje, Margaret, 172, 206Ratzer, Earl, 53, 97,182,204Ray, James, 47, 96, 97Raymer, Robert, 222Read, Harry, 188Read, Richard, 191Reams, Miss Lilliard, 79Redmond, William B., 45Reed, Jesse, 198Reed, Richlard, 140, 194Reichert, Betty, 161Reid, Charles, 79,99, 195Reilly, J. Wilson, 53, 106, 208, 189Reker, Frank, 196, 204Remington, Thomas, 149Remington, William, 79, 182Renberg, Herbert, 183Rendleman, William, 94,96,97,195Renner, William, 48Renstrom, Selma, 79, 158Rentsch, Marian, 79, 166Rexstrew, Charlotte, 79, 150, 169, 212Reynolds, Irene, 165Reynolds, Paul, 192, 224Reynolds, Robert D., 53, 195, 216, 222Reynolds, Robert R.,51,79,134,192,202Reynolds,William,192Rice, Mary, 167, 206Richard, Frank, 187Richards, James, 106Richardson, Baxter, 46, 53, 187Richardson, Ralph,94,98,100,101,103Richman, Roland, 183, 224Richman, Sara, 216Rickard, Harriet, 168Rickcords, Anne, 79Rider, J. Alfred, 46, 186Rinder, George, 46, 47, 133, 191 227Ritter, Helen F., 80 'Roberts, Ashton, 194, 205Roberts, June, 80, 156, 161, 178, 179Robertson, Alan, 104, 186Robinson, Milton, 194Roby, Charles, 45Rock, Arthur, 80RockIer, Walter, 46, 47Rodbard, Simon, 45Roff, Mildred, 169Romanyak, Andrew, 47Romer, Blanche, 206Romney, Miles, 94, 190Rose, Adele, 44Rosen, Miriam, 160Rosen, Ralph, 182Rosen, Ted, 184Rosenfeld, Melvin, 80, 136, 184, 203Rosenstein, Joseph, 44Roth, Chloe, 206, 222Rothman, Stephen, 45Rothrock, David, 189Rothschild, Paul, 80Rothstein, Gilbert, 80, 184Rothstein, Walter, 80, 184Rowell, Anne, 47Roy, Elaine, 161Ruben, Herbert, 46, 47, 106, 107Rubinfine, David, 46Rubins, Pearl, 222Ruby, Virginia, 169Ruehr, Henry, 46Ruml, Wentzle, 195, 225Russell, Carol, 161Russell, Lee, 189Ryerson, Mary, 168SSahador, Nadezdia, 162Sahath, Daniel, 149, 185Sager, Robert, 187Sahlins, Benard, 94, 184Sainsbury, Charles, 192Salzberg, David, 81, 183Salzmann, Arthur, 195, 213Salzmann, Richard,136,195,206,208,209,212Samadeen, Elizabeth, 161Sam mel, Sonya, 81Sanderson, John, 223, 224, 227Sandquist, Elroy, 94Sanow, Kenneth, 81Sapp, William, 210Sargis, Florence, 227Sarkisian, Mr. Azad, 186, 209, 210Sawyier, Calvin, 46, 110, 194Schachter, Rubin, 45Schaffner, Harry, 46Schafmayer, Miriam, 81, 165Scharfenberg, Cecile, 163Schatz, George, 203Scheidler, Jerome, 182Scherer, Emily, 81, 158Schiller, Wilton, 204, 206Schlageter, Charles, 133, 188, 208Schlytter, Marjorie, 47, 163Schnitz, Robert, 4:>Schrnus, Albert, 108, 195, 203Schnoor, Alfred, 133, 188, 208Schoenberger, James, 46, 47Schofmayer, Miriam, 165Schroeder, Vera, 81, 166Schubert, Jack, 81Schulman, Albert, 81Schulze, Elinor, 168Schumm, Esther, 46, 47Schwartz, Helen, 224Schwiderski, Walter, 81Scott, Dale, 197Scott, Duncan, 94Scot�Eleano�168,171,204Scott, Rebecca, 81, 156, 165, 171Scott, Ruth, 164, 206Seeney, Mrs. A., 81Self, William, 192 Selove, Walter, 46SetHI, Leonard, 195Senter, Donovan, 45Seren, Leo, 44SergeI, Clark, 172Seyler, David, 197Shane, Leonard, 184Shanken, Courtney, 104, 224Shanken, Earl, 104, 224Shapera, Louis, 81Shapiro, Leopold, 46Shapiro, Phyllis, 81Sharbau,Jean, 159Shaw, Paula, 165Shawhan, Dorothy, 46, 81, 169,212Sheffner, Lillian, 82Shih, Hsi·En, 45Shilenskus, Edward, 82Shimmin, Elizabeth, 167Shlifer, Eleanor, 46, 47Scholl, Harry, 224Shostrorn, Charles, 82, 110, 195Shrack, Patricia,S, 82,166,215,227Shreve, John, 189Siebert, David, 193Siegel, Sidney, 82Siever, Paul, 47, 106, 107Sikora, Warren, 94, 210Sill,Joan, 164sm., Clarence, 82, 172, 193Silverman, Morris, 82, 184Silverstein, Jean, 83Sims, Carl, 192Singer, Marilyn, 83Siniscalchi, Yolanda, 157Skeeles, Jean, 169Slade, Glenn, 83, 126Slade, John, 193Slichter, Jack, 189Sloan, Bernard, 83Slobin, Morton, 185Slottow, Gene, 185, 224Smalley, Robert, 47,53,191,210Smith, Alan, 196Smith, Beverly, 165Smith, Christine, 166, 215Smith, Daniel, 196Smith, David, 194Smith, Frank, 149Smith, Patricia, 166Smith, Marshall, 201Smith, Naomi, 160Smith, Paul, 98, 99, 128, 194Smith, Robert, 140, 194Smith, Shirley, 164, 206Smith, Sidney, 45Snively, Randolph. 83Snow, Mary E., 147, 168Snow, Robert, 194Snyder, William, 226Socko lovsky, Pauline, 166So lis-Cohen, D. Hays, 185Solomon, David, 105Sotos, George, 101, 186Soutter, Caroline, 83, 166Sowash, William, 44Sowders, Ted, 189Spampinato, Josephine, 83Speck,John,46,47,98,99,128Spector, Lea, 83, 98, 99Speros, Irene, 46Sperry, Roger, 45Sprlberg, Leah, 44Sponsel, Kenath, 83, 193Spooner, Lois, 83, 16t\-258- Sprecher, Harris, 201Spuehler, Miss Aurel, 159Stabenau, Clifford W., 97Stampf, Joseph, 100, 101, 103, 190, 204Stancher, Wesley, 189, 210Standen, Don, 83, 196Stanley, Carl, 100, 101, 103, 19�Stanley, Josephine, 168Stanton, Roy, 19SStar, Shirley, 44Stearns, John, 94,98,99, 125, 194Steel, Ann, 162, 206Steel, Ruth, 169, 171, 205, 215, 227Steele, Ada, 83, 167Steele, Susannah, 167Steere, Martha, 50, 83, 141, 166, 205Stehney, Andrew, 46, 53Stein, Melvin, 84Stein, Robert, 98, 9<)Steinbach, Raleigh, 193Steinberg, Melvin, 184Steinhauser, Carl, 149Steinhauser, Harold, 84, 149Stenberg, Robert, 94, 190Stern, Mayer, 84, 183Stevens, John, 47, 52, 195,222Stier, George, 192Stierer, Robert, 194, 205Stokley, Robert, 46Stolp, James, 209,210Stone, Bernard, 96Stoner, James, 187Straetz, Robert, 107, 191Strandberg, Marjorie, 84, 168Straube, Robert, 44Strick, Phil, 149, 192, 205Stritter, Theodore, 190Strom wall, Lois, 48, 165Strueh, Paul, 149, 196Stuhr, Robert, 193, 208Sugarman, Nathan, 45Sukys, Elvin, 84Sullivan, Marjorie, 171,227Swanson, Carolyn, 167Swanson, Jacob, 191Sweany, Stanford, 84Swec, Leonard, 84, 108Swishlar, Lois; 85Sykes, Milton, 224TTainter, Rolfe, 190 .Tallman, Jane, 164Tanner, Margery, 85Tapp, Nicholas, 85, 191Taylor, Cecil, 45Taylor, Fletcher, 191Taylor, Francis, 198Taylor, Joanne, 85,164Taylor, Mary, 169Taylor, Philip, 192, 224Teague, Alan, 47,98,99,196Teberg, Dorothy, 169Tedrow, James, 196, 205Teller, Elsa. 224Tennev, Ashton M., Jr., 191Terwiiliger, Alice, 46, 47,85Tess, Laverne, 44, 50, 85, 215Teufel, Elsie, 85, 164, 178, 179Thelen, Emil, 85Thomas, Colin, 85, 96, 194Thomas, Mimi, 169Thomas, William, 85, 193Thompson, John, 193,208,224,227Thompson, Marcia, 157Thompson, Rex, 193Thompson, Robert, 194Thomson, John, 187Thorburn, Robert, 53,99,193,210Thornston, Miss Veryl, 165Tillery, Dale, 52, 136, 193, 203Tingley, Loyal, 106, 107, 187, 212Toft, Mary, 165Tolsted, Laura, 46, 157Tomlinson, Helen, 85,167Tompkins, Mary, 163Topping, Harry, 49, 85, 108, 194, 224Towey, Charles, 149, 208Traeger, Clayton, 53, 193, 216Traeger, Don, 52Traeger, Lawrence, 52, 193Treiman, Beatrice, 44Treirnan, Kenneth, 183Tropp, Henry, 94, 184Trout, Elizabeth, 171Trow, James, 196, 206Trowbridge, Richard, 191, 203Tucker, Ledyard, 45Tully, Charles, 191, 210Turean, John, 94, 190Turgasen, Helen, 157Turnbull, Bonnie, 85, 168, 227Turner, Cora, 85Turner, Jean, 86Turovlin, Leonard, 210, 225Tuttle, Elizabeth, 163UUllmann, Marie, 159Umbs, John, 190Urbanek, Elinor, 165Uribe, Carlos, 86VVaidrulis, John, 45Vanderhoof, Allan, 195Vander-Laan, Neal, 46Vanderwalker, Janet, 136, 214Van Liew, Elizabeth, 147, 167,227Van Meter, Abram, 196, 224Vertuno, Jack, 186, 210Vogt, Evon, 46, 52, 191, 214Von Albode, Francis, 195Von Henke, Vincent, 94, 190Von Limbach, Bruno, 46WWaganberg, Charles, 101, 103Wagner, Janet, 167, 227Walker, Robert, 94, 196Wallbrunn, Henry, 86, 149Waller, Marshall, 86Wallis, Burton, 52, 94, 195,207Walsh, James, 46Wang, Mr. Hsi, 45Wangelin. Fred, 53. 190, 208Waprin, Eunice, 160 Ward, Beverly, 224, 225Wares, Gordon W., 45Warfield, Donald, 170, 193,210,224Warfield, Pat, 156, 164Warner, Eugene, 182, 190Warner, Louise, 168Warren, Jane, 164, 205Wasem, Robert, 51,86,94,109,194Wasserman, Albert, 201Watkins, Clark, 192, 210Watts, Gordon, 147Waxman, Naomi, 44Weber, Edna, 86Weber, John, 192Webster, William, 86Weedfall, Robert, 133, 187, 227Weeks, Donald, 149Wegener, Charles, 46Wehlan, Ruth, 173, 204, 224Wehner, Philip, 4 ..Weiland, George, 196Weinberg, Kathryn, 86Weinberg, Robert, 94,195Weinstein, Lawrence, 224Weinstein, Raymond, 45Weis, Emil, 192Weisman, Saul, 86, 185Weiss, Esther, 86, 160Weiss, Milton, 52, 94, 96, 184Weissbourd, Bernard, 46Weissman, Ruth, 86Welch, Louis, 182Welchons, Jack, 46Wells, Carolyn, 86, 124Wells, Cornbeth, 166Wells, Katherine, 169Welsh, Louis, 182, 204, 206Wendrick, Dorothy, 164Wenzel, Rupert, 45Wesche, Maryalice, 163Westenberg, William, 187,227Wetzel, Betty, 169Wexler, Sol, 46, 47Wheeler, Carolyn, 164, 206Wheeler, Richard, 86, 93, 94, 193Whipple, Reed, 191White, John, 192White, Sherman, 198Whiting, Alfred F., 45Whitin!! Lois, 165Wittenberger, James L., 45Wickham, Corwin, 192Wiedemann, David, 52, 192Wiener, Mrs. Ella, 86Wigger, Doris, 157Wilder, Wentworth, 192Wile, Richard, 185Wiley, Rosemary, 87Wilkins, Ernest, 47, 87,198Williams, Beth, 87, 158Williams, Cathryn, 87, 166Williams, Edward, 196Williams, George, 192Williams, Marie, 46Williamson, Jo Ann, 164Willis, Caroline, 166Wilner, Warren, 97, 196Wilson, Carol, 157-259- Wilson, Donald, 52, 93, 94, 174, 193,205,206,210Wilson, Ellen, 162Wilson, Jane, 167Wilson, John, 47,101,182Wilson, Marjorie, 165Wilson, Mona, 149Wilson, Muriel, 87Wilson, Richard, 191Wilson, Robert, 209Wilzbach, Kenneth, 46, 47Wimby, Lucius, 198Winkelman, Howard, 185Winkler, Rosemarie, 87Winograd, Daniel, 222Winsberg, Lester, 46Winston, Diana, 169Wiseley, Allen, 108, 186Wittcoff, Raymond, 185Wochos, Paul, 149, 196Woehlck, Willard, 87Woere, John, 191Wolf, Arthur, 184Wolf, Eugenie, 87,160W olfenstein, Samuel, 46, 47,48Wolff, Walter, 193Woifhope, Patricia, 168,203Woods, Sam, 178Woodward, Jean, 169Woolams, Jack, 94, 194Wort, Dennis, 45Worthington, Richard, 136Wright, Elizabeth, 47Wright, George, 45Wright, Harold,S, 87, 191, 227Wright, William, 186Wuesth.off, Hubert, 188Wurzhurg, A. Hart, 185, 222YYancey, Robert, 197Yarotsky, Olga, 169Yoder, Hatten, 149, 196Yonover, Norma, 160Yoshimura, Mr. Teiji, 87Young, Bernard, 205Young, Bruce, 217Young, Charles, 189Young, Elise, 87, 160, 168Young, Ruth, 87, 160Young, Walter,S, 87, 96, 192, 227Yunker, Gretna, 166, 227ZZafros, Sam, 96Zahrn,Fred,192,210Zatz, Irwin, 87Zelitzky, Irvin, 47Zellick, Anna, 87Zimmer, Margaret. 167Zimmerman, Martha, 168Zimmerman, Paul, 53, 101, 103Zornow, Helen, 87Zurmuehlen, John, 182CAP AND G 0 W N - �---�-��-�.-=----------�-=· '