control over its activities except in so far as it has become the practice of the Ataletic Board to dclegate the choice of faculty members to the Senate. 3. There appears to be considerable evidence that provision for student physical recreation other than intercollegiate athletics is inadequate in com- parison with other institutions. This inadequacy seems to be the result of aumsrous factors, including insufficient funds, inadequate equipment, and in- sufficient personnel. 4, No definite information is’ available as to the actual number of students served by the present intramural program, but it is highly probable that not more than fifty percent of the total student body is served by such programs and that dispsrity exists in respect to the proportion of students in organized fraternities and those not so organized who are involved; also there appears to be a disparity in respect to the number of men as compared to the number of women served. 5. The intranural and general ohysical recreation program as now existent seems to have no recognized sponsoring body. It is at present carried on by the Department of Physical Education, whose principal recognized obligation is the physical education curriculum in all its wvhases. 6. There is, in fact, an almost complete separation between competitive athletics and the physical education activities and physical recreation activities. The personnel concerned with As former is almost, though not completely, separate from the latter two, and the administrative machinery of the former almost com- pletely divorced from the latter two. In effect the competitive athletics care carried on and financed by a corporation outside the University, though theor- etically responsible to tne facuity according to the regulations of the confer~ ence to which we belong (see quotation above).