WEATHERShowers probable; somewhatcooler; moderate shiftingwinds. ^ Batlp iHanio ‘‘I’m not smart. I don'tgo to college well, mis¬ter, my private convictionsaren’t printable."—Beverly Hepburn.Vol. 35. No. 116. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1935 Price Three Cent*BeverlyWrites tothe Editor BASEBALLL SQUAD jHighlights of ‘Red^ HearingIn this letter Miss BeverlyHepburn tells her side of thestory which appeared in TheDaily Maroon of April 26. Theletter has not been edited orchanged in any way. The gram¬mar and punctuation are MissHepburn’s.—ed. The following paragraphsconcern random incidents whichhave taken place during the in¬vestigation of radical activitiesat the University.Howard Hudson:The reason I have refrained fromsending this earlier was the fear ofit being contorted out of ail sem¬blance to the original—or else “edit- ELECTS HAARLOW,COCHRAIUEAOERSTeam Votes Dave Levinas Most ValuablePlayerDick Cochran and Bill Haarlowwere elected co-captains of the base¬ball team for next season at a meet¬ing of the squad yesterday after¬noon. Dave I^vin was elected themost valuable player on the team, gize? If so, it won’t do any good;as Seen by Maroon ReporterInteresting, if true, is the remarkwhich Professor Charles Memam, ofthe Political Science department isreported to have made to CharlesWalgreen after the close of the firsthearing. Seeing Mr. Walgreen speak¬ing to President Hutchins, he re¬marked, “Are you trying to apolo-at the same time.Haarlow and Cochran are bothed” so that only damaging excerpts ' j*^*i*o*^- Cochran played ball on thewere printed. i University high school team, play-But figured that things couldn’t i second base and right field. Hebe very much worse than they are went to an eastern prep school for anow, so here it is. .. .and how does year before coming here. Whilethere he played at every position butcatcher. He has also had some ex¬perience playing with the Universitysummer teams. Cochran has beenthe team’s regular short stop thisyear. Last year he played second,third, short, and outfield.Haarlow Basketball CaptainBill Haarlow, who is also the cap-mesesnger out for that i tain-elect of the basketball team, has• I turned in a fine performance at firstbase this year. His smooth fieldingof wide throws has been a sourceof confidence to his fellow infield¬ers. Haarlow was runner-up in theelections for the most valuable play¬er. He played both baseball andbasketball for three years at Bowenhigh school in Chicago.Dave Levin has played three yearsin center field. Coming to the Uni¬versity from a prep school in Chi-one ask for ones own personal prop¬erty. . .a letter that was stolen fromthe contents of my breif case....Iam not pointing the finger of accusa¬tion at you since you assured me inour phone conversation, that it wassent in to you. .. .1 don’t care verymuch how it was obtained all I askis that you send it back. .. .and anmsendingpurpose. •Something about sportsmanshipcould be inserted here....only I’mafraid it wouldn’t do much good.Beverly Hepburn.TO THE EDITORS OF THE DAILYMAROON:Some weeks ago, while on whatwould seem to be, a violent spreeinto the bogy land of “Never, Never”the editors of The Daily Maroonwere moved to print a stirring little capo without baseball experience, hehas risen to his high degree of per¬fection under the direction of KyleAnderson, Maroon coach, and at¬tributes ail his knowledge of thegame to him.D. A. Initiates 41yarn, full of concern over some alleged “Antics” of a “Little girl re¬porter” .... presumably sent out bysinister interests, to “uncover” thedarkest of the “Red” activities onThe University of Chicago Campus.The boys weren’t at all clear, asto just what there was to “Uncover”since for some weeks past, the town _ ^ -rafters have been re-echoing with dtthe bitter wails of protesting stu¬dents, insisting passionately, that it TTVwas all a dreadful mistake the ± UfriUf f UVUmorbid nightmare of a sensationalpress. . . .and not to be believed. ...not for one moment.I confess I don’t get the point.Either the mis-giuded laddies have Forty-one new members of theDramatic association wil be initiatedinto the organization at the annualbanquet which is to be held in thebeen patronizing the local cinema j Coffee shop tomorrow night at 6:30.palaces to an unholy degree. .. .or! The list includes 35 women and sixare posessed of a credubility, that ^ men.would put to shame such profession-1 The women to be initiated areal gullibles as the Alger boys. , Louise Acker, Peggy Allen, FrancesThe only plausable explanationthat would account for the awfulernestness the boys went at thisthing. .. .and the more kindly one Burns, Frances Burnett, MargaretCallanan, Patricia Flood, Nancy Jef¬fries, Eleanor Melander, Mary John¬stone, Mary Kerr, Marion Keuhn,.would be the one, where in j charlotte Marschak, Elizabeth Mc-everybody got lost in the maze of | Caskey, Ruth Glynn, Lorna McDou-journalistic endeavor. .. .and in the j gall, Jean McDougall, Orleans Arch¬wholesale delight of dipping into | ambault, Hope Peterson, Lois Peter-printers ink.... got just a little | son, Gertrude Sern, Katherine Her-drunki on “newspaperman-stuff” andoverlooked. .. .or shall we say....mislaid. .. .the grim facts.Look, your supposed to be .smartpeople. . . .you go to college. .. . andsome day. .. .someday, you’ll carryneat little scrolls bearing indisput¬able witness that you’ve all beengood little boys and girls.... readyour Huxley and Fruend faithfully....and are fully prep ared to bethe little white hope of a slightlyaweed world.And yet you’ed beleive such eyewash.... your all agreed on on onething Here was one hell of a re¬porter come tripping into your midst. .. .armed to the teeth with a “dis¬arming” air. .. .or was it a confidingone?. . . .a little black notebook,one (1) prop camera... .and a leer¬ing grin. Wait, and wasn’t there atell tale smudge on a fair cheek....one would want to be sure aboutthose things.I’m not smart. I don’t go to col¬lege. I’ll admit to being sadly behindon my Marx. . . .and it’s p robablyvery naughty of me to drag you backinto stern reality like this BUT....from what I hear, any reporter....“wide eyed” or otherwise, who cav¬orted about waving credentials inone hand a scrapbook tucked awaysweetly in the other... .went in forleaving “incriminating letters”I around with a fine carelessness....! would be mobbed by bona fide news¬paper men, or taken gently into acorner and told the facts of life.When you were so immersed there[in literary gyrations.... did you II (Continued on page 3) bolsheimer, Sara Paris, and EvelynSmith.Others include Ruth Marquardt,Dorothy Eckard, Verna Winters,Helen Smith, Emily Rodgers, NancyParmalee, Marion McKinney, SarahHicks, Marguerite Bradford, MarianEvans, Marie Bomke, Leanore Wer¬theimer, Helen Mclnnis, EvelynOrtendahl, Eleanor Williamson, andEleanor Graham. The men includeJoseph Coambs, Damon Fulley, Wil¬liam Norby, William Kendall, FloydWeinand, and Robert Lipsis.Award RosenbergerPrize to MacArthurfor Winning ThesisKathleen MacArthur, a student inthe Divinity school, has been an¬nounced the winner of the SusanColver Rosenberger Prize of $175.The award was made upon the rec¬ommendation of Dean Shirley J.Case of the Divinity school for adissertation entitled, “The Search forValue in Life.”This is an award made annuallyin rotation in the departments ofEducation, Sociolog^y, and the Di¬vinity school. “The objectives of theprize are to stimulate constructivestudy and original research, and todevelop practical ideas for the prog¬ress of educational methods or thepromotion of human welfare.” Thisis to be evidenced by a thesis ortheses as may be necessary.Next year’s award will be made inthe department of sociology. you can’t get away with less than aDistinguished Service professorshipin Americanism now.”An extremely interesting and in¬congruous group were ElizabethDilling, author of the “Red Net¬work;” Harry Jung, notorious red-baiter and anti-Semitic crusader,and Charles Walgreen, drug mag¬nate. Walgreen did not sem to fitin with the other members of thetrio; by nature calm, collected, andreserved, he does not want the pub¬licity that the others do. Apparent¬ly innocent of anything except thewithdrawal of his niece from theUniversity, has he become the toolof Dilling, publicity hound, and ofJung, who has been rebuked for hispropaganda by many respectableorganizations and was publicly de¬nounced by the McCormick-Dicksteincommittee of the House of Represen¬tatives?* * *Frederick L. Schuman, on thestand, accused of communistic con¬nections, vindicated himself on mostcharges in his prepared statement,but was obviously perturbed andnervous when he was made the ob¬ject of numerous rapid-fire ques¬tions from Joseph B. Fleming, em¬inent trial lawyer and attorney forMr. Walgreen. Attempting to trickSchuman into admitting some com¬munistic connection, Mr. Flemingused the means of his trade, evento the point of ridiculing Mr. Schu-man’s ability as a political scientistand as a student of history.♦ ♦ ♦Mr. Walgreen was smiling and ap¬parently pleased when Harry D. Gid-eonse, associate professor of Eco¬nomics, mentioned in his statementthat he has referred students in hiscourses to Walgreen advertisementsin the daily press along with refer¬ences to the Communist Manifesto.But, he added, he has warned themin this case also not to believe every¬thing they read.* If *Robert Morss Lovett defendshis pacific views. He has been con¬ nected with the University for 42years—since 1893, and the Univer¬sity was founded the year before.His son was one of the first to diefor his country in the historic battleof Belleau Woods. The crowd ishushed and apparently moved whileProfessor Lovett continues to vindi¬cate himself and repudiate the . blem¬ishes that the opposition has triedto place on his ideas. He tops off histestimony with “I believe that theOxford oath is the individual repre¬sentation of the Kellog pact whichas a treaty of the United States isa part of its fundamental law.”* * ifWhen asked by a Daily Maroonreporter for a copy of the latest workto which she contributed, Mrs. Dill¬ing called him “a red, and a moronto be reporting for that red news¬paper, The Daily Maroon.” But lat¬er, she gave the Maroon representa¬tive a copy when Senator Richey V.Graham, chairman of the commit¬tee,told her that “the A. P. wanteda copy of the booklet to which shecontributed, ‘How Red Is the Uni¬versity of Chicago’?”* * ♦After the investigation hearingwas over, William F. Ogburn, Mor¬ton D. Hull distinguished professorof Sociology, reflected that the tes¬timony was on the whole favorableto the University, but that, extreme¬ly bad for the University, was thepsychological reaction to the contin¬uous association of the words “com¬munism” and “Schuman,” “commun¬ism” and “Lovett.”*Lucille Norton, Walgreen’s niece,is called to the stand. There is mark¬ed attention on the part of the audi¬ence and the University representa-ives as she begins to read in a calm,cool manner from a statement whichMr. Walgreen and Mr. Fleming hadprobably helped her prepare. Shecloses, “I no longer believe that com¬munism would be an excellent formof government.”* * «During a brief lull in the monoton¬ous morning “filibuster” of thesuave Mr. Fleming, two Legion“buddies” are heard conversing out¬side the room. “It seems that it wasno mistake to put the proceedings inthe Red Room,” says one, with a coyglance at his stalwart companion.* *At one time. Senator Baker, whointroduced the motion for investiga¬tion into the Senate, holds up a be¬draggled red carnation, and winkingat the press group, points to it. Someone laughs. The senator returns tohis gum chewing. Yearbook CoverPictures CampusSTAGE AUTO RAGEIN CIRCLE AT NOONFOR MILITARY BALLFaculty Members /See Revivalof Difficulties in ‘NRA DecisionThat nullification of the NRA bythe Supreme Court yesterday helpsPresident Roosevelt out of an un¬comfortable situation but leavessome of the dangers of price-fixingby industries, summarizes the opin¬ions held by Professor Paul H.Douglas, associate professor HarryD. Gideonse, and assistant professorMaynard Krueger, of the departmentof Economics.On the announcement of the un¬constitutionality of the Recovery act,Gideonse remarked, “If I wereRoosevelt, I should cheer the ma¬jority in the Supreme Court whichmade the unconstitutionality pos¬sible. Since it is this way, he canblame it on the Court, while as amatter of fact, the situation was be¬coming uncomfortable for economicand political reasons with the NRAin existence.“My judgment in this matter isdependent on the truth cf the news¬paper article which I am reading.But remember, you have handed mea Hearst paper.”Douglas’ StatementProfessor Douglas, who has beena member of the NRA consumers’advisory committee, summarized theeffects of the Supreme Court decisionas follows:“The declaration that the NRA isunconstitutional will not removesome of the dangers of price-fixingby industry, while it will remove some of the protections prior to en¬actment. Industry has been organ¬ized into trade associations by theNRA and will still tend informallyto fix prices.“I believe that we should try torestore acting competitive priceswherever this can be done and at thesame time fix bed-rock minimum ofwages and orders to protect work¬ing conditions.Practical political comment on thesituation was made by Krueger whenhe said, “If Franklin D. Rooseveltcould dump the NRA retroactivelyhe would have been glad to do sofor some time. Now he can blame iton the Supreme Court. It was a po¬litical hot potato.“The NRA,” Krueger stated, “hasbeen a dead letter for a long timeso far as labor is concerned.”HOLD MEMORIAL SERVICETODAY FOR MRS. SCHUTZE The campus will be treated to apreview of the Memorial Day 500-mile race at Indianapolis this noonwhen experienced race drivers willpilot miniature cars around the circleas part of the build-up for the Mili¬tary ball tomorrow evening at theSouth Shore country club.Frank Thurman and E. Chauncy,both of whom have been frequententrants in National AutomobileRacing association races in the past,will pilot blue and tan racers aroundthe circle. The cars, furnishedthrough the courtesy of the Chaun¬cy Body corporation, are aboutthree feet in width, have 73 inchwheel bases and wheels of about 12inches in diameter.Leaders OfficiateThe race wil be broadcast over apublic address system by Robert S.Lineback, cadet major of the R. O.T. C. battalion and one of the lead¬ers of the ball. Judging the race willbe Sue Richardson, Peggy Moore,and John Pullen, the other threeleaders of the Grand March. Severalmembers of the senior class, includ¬ing Ellmore Patterson, John Womer,Waldemar Solf, William D. Watson,William S. O’Donnell, and HowardP. Hudson, have been‘invited tospeak to the students over the publicaddress system. The sponsors of theball will also describe the gownsthat they will wear.Contest WinnersWinners of Crossed Cannon’s“mystery poster” contest were an¬nounced yesterday by William Sa-franek publicity manager of theMilitary ball. The mystery posterwas found by three people at thetop of the stairs in Ryerson tower.Free tickets were awarded to Con¬rad Lund, a student in the School ofBusiness, and Nancy Kirby, a mem¬ber of Wyvern, who were the firsttwo to hand in complete lists of theMilitary ball posters, including themystery poster.All ticket salesmen have been ask¬ed to turn in money for bids soldand any remaining tickets before 4tomorrow. After this, bids can bepurchased at the Military Scienceoffice, Ryerson 37, or at the door ofthe South Shore country club.Add Two Professorsto Faculty of LawSchool for SummerMemorial services for Mrs. EveSchutze, Chicago painter, who forsix years was president of the Ren¬aissance society at the University,wil be held today at 4 in the JosephBond chapel. The Reverend EdwardS. Ames, pastor of the DisciplesChurch, will conduct the services.Mrs. Schutze, who died last Mon¬day of heart disease, was the wife ofMartin Schutze, professor emeritusof German Literature at the Univer¬sity. Two visiting professors will beadded to the faculty of the Lawschool for the summer quarter, itwas announced yesterday by SheldonTefft, assistant dean of the school.John E. Mulder, a member of thefaculty of the University of NorthCarolina School of Law, will give acourse in Contracts. Mulder former¬ly practiced law in New York City,as a member of the firm of ElihuRoot, Clark, Buckner, and Valentine.The other visiting faculty memberwill be Myres Smith McDougal, of theUniversity of Illinois College of Law.He will offer a course and conducta seminar in Credit Transactions.Other members of the Law schoolfaculty who will be in residence dur¬ing the summer quarter will be DeanHarry A. Bigelow, George G. Bog-ert, William L .Eagleton, Kenneth C.Sears, Wilber G. Katz, and MaxRheinstein. STAFF ANNOUNCESPUBLICATION OFYEARBO^ FRIOAYCap and Gown DepictsUniversity LifeGraphicallyThe Cap and Gown will appear onthe campus Friday morning, an¬nounced the editor William D. Wat¬son yesterday. Because only a lim¬ited number of issues are beingprinted, it shall be necessary for sub¬scriptions to be made before Friday.The book promises to be one ofthe best Cap and Gowns in the his¬tory of the Midway. Probably themost outstanding feature of the newbook is the cover which is the firstattempt to create a photographiccover. It depicts an aerial view ofthe University worked out in a blendof rich brown harmonizing with acream color desig^i.Condense Reading MatterThis year the book has been great¬ly condensed with the idea of por¬traying events of the Universityyear in a more graphic fashion.More pictures have been includedand the editorial content consider¬ably lessened. The reading materialhas been condensed and limited toonly the very essential descriptionmatter. The division pages shownovel work, exhibiting moderntreatment of photo-montage effectin snapshots.The color scheme and theme ofthe cover is continued inside on thebrown corbal end sheet which is bor¬dered with a silhouette sketch of thebuildings facing the Midway.According to Duane P. Salisburythe “Cap and Gown is one of thefinest university annuals being pro¬duced in the country this Spring.”Mr. Salisbury is the vice-presidentof the Service Engraving companyof Detroit, engravers of several lead¬ing college yearbooks.Sets High StandardCommenting further on the con¬tents, he said, “This year’s book setsa new high standard of Cap andGown tradition. I have never be¬fore seen such an effective combin¬ation of new and brilliant ideas. Theart work is outstanding, the editorialcontent is interesting, and the pho¬tographs are remarkably good.”Since only 50 extra books over theamount of subscriptions will be or¬dered, Watson stated that in orderthat there may be enough copiesthose desiring books should subscribebefore Friday. The yearbook is pric¬ed at $2.75.Resume FERAWork on CampusAfter SuspensionSuspended since April 30, FederalEducation Relief Administrationfunds are again made available toUniversity students, it was announc¬ed yesterday by Robert C. Woellner,executive secretary of the Board ofVocational Guidance and Placement.The regulations for the disburse¬ment of the funds are the same asthey were before the withdrawal,namely no student may work morethan eight hours each day, or morethan 30 hours each week, and mayearn no more than $16 a month. Itis thus possible for a student making50 cents an hour to earn the max¬imum of $15 during one week.HOLD TWO-WEEK GYMCLASSES FOR WOMENA new type of athletic programfor women will be inaugurated tedayat 4:30 with the beginning of thetwo weeks courses in golf, tennis,and swimming. These short termcourses are given by the athletic de¬partment and will afford an excellentopportunity for women, who havefinished their comprehensives andwith comparatively little to do forthe remainder of the quarter to“brush-up” on last summer’s tech¬niques.All women must sign up today atnoon in Ida Noyes hall and partici¬pants must attend the first classestoday at 4:30 in Ida Noyes hall.IPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 19350a% iMar00«FOUNDED 124 1901MEMBER^sociatrd gbUeptate(EoUe^joIf 1935*-MAfilSOII vaSCONSMThe Daily Maeoon is the official student newspaiJer of theUniversity ef Chicagro. published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarter by TTie Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University Avenue.Editorial office: Lexington hall. Room 15. Telephones:46 and HYDe Park 9221. Business office: Lexington hall.Boom 16A. Telephone: HYDe Park 9222.Subscription rates: $2.60 a year: $4.00 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Dally Maroon. All opinions in TheDaily Maroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily theviews of the University administration.Entered as second class matter March 18. 1903, at the postoffice at Chicago. Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publica¬tion of any material appearing in this paper. The Daily Maroonwill not be responsible few returning any unsolicited manuscripts.Public letters should be addressed to the Editor. The DailyMaroon, Lexington hall. University of Chicago. Letters shouldbe limited to 200 words in length, and should bear the author’ssignatxire and address, which will he witbSeld if requested.Anonymous letters will be disregarded.BOARD OF CONTROLHOWARD P. HUDSON, Editor-in-CniefWILLIAM S. O’DONNELL, Business ManagerCHARLES W. HOERR, Managing EditorHOWARD M. RICH, News EditorWILLIAM H. BERGMAN, Advertising ManagerDAVID H. KUTNER, News EditorEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESHenry F. Kelley Janet Lewy Jeanne StoltsRaymond Lahr Ralph W. Nicholson William W. WatsonBUSINESS ASSOCIATESZalmon Goldsmith Robert McQuilkin Everett StoreyEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSWells D. Burnette Ruby Howell James SnyderEulah Detweiler Julian A. Kiser Edward S. SternGeorge FUlsenthal George Schustek iSinor TaylorZenia Goldberg Mary WalterBUSINESS ASSISTANTSRobert Albrecht A1 Frankel Harold B. SiegelJames Bernard Don Patterson Edwin SibleyHenry Cubbon Allan Rosenbaum Dick SmithDon Elliott Max Schiff Roy WarshawskyNight Editor: George FelsenthalTuesday, May 28, 1935CRAMMING VS. LEARNINGContinuing as a progressive in the'field of edu¬cational experiments, last year the University andmore particularly the Humanities division, in¬augurated a policy in its comprehensive examina¬tions that permitted the use of books. The newplan, based on the criticism that the examinationsrequired knowledge or memorization of too manypetty and unnecessary details, tended to em¬phasize the general trend of the cultural develop¬ments of the course, familiarity with' the texts andsource material and facility in their use.Arthur P. Scott, associate professor of History,and representative of the Board of Examinationshas expressed the ideas and opinions of that de¬partment:“In 1934, students taking the comprehensiveexamination in the Humanities General Coursewere allowed to bring the history text, the sylla¬bus, and their notes to one section of the exam¬ination. TTie purpose of this departure from tra¬dition was in part to show that the examinationquestions were more than mere petty fact ques¬tions. Any question of elementary fact could beanswered by reference to the books. It was hopedalso that the use of books might give the stu¬dents a greater feeling of confidence and encour¬age sounder preparation. No student would behandicapped because a few facts had escaped himfor.a minute.Study of the performance of the students inthe morning and the afternoon sections of thisexamination and a comparison of these resultswith those of the previous year indicates that theavailability of the books made no appreciabledifference. Student opinion was not canvassed,but some students objected to the system becauseinsufficient time was allowed for the use of thebooks. The examination was of approximatelythe same length as the previous ones had been.It has been decided to continue the use ofbooks this year. The students may bring theirnotes and the syllabus to the morning section ofthe Humanities examination. The examinationwill be of the standard length. It is obvious thatunless a student is thoroughly familiar with thesyllabus and has comprehensive and well-organ¬ized notes, he will waste time in attempting touse them. Students may find it desirable to fin¬ish the examination without reference to theirnotes and then to try to locate the points whichthey have omitted.”—J. D. L.\ EDUGATION OF A PROFESSOR(Reprinted from the Chicago Tribune)At the last election Boss Nash graciously per¬mitted the voters on the south side of Chicago toname Prof. T. V. Smith of the University of Chi¬cago as their representative in the Illinois senate.Prof. Smith is an outstanding teacher of philos¬ophy, but he seems to be a very backward orstubborn pupil in the school of politics he is nowattending.Last week the senate was engaged in the salu¬tary task of purging its membership of SenatorBidwill of River Forest. It was discreetly whis¬pered that Senator Bidwill, whose only recom¬mendation was that he seems to have been thechoice of the majority of voters in his district,had committed the unforgivable crime of refer¬ring to the brother of Boss Nash as a gray-hairedold so-and-so.In the face of this overwhelming evidence. Sen¬ator Smith still had the temerity to vote accordingto his conscience. Even worse, he told the sen¬ate:“We Democrats are lousy with power in Chi¬cago and throughout the whole state. We havea majority that lets us do anything we want to,and it brings us into this situation tonight wherenobody knows a damn thing about what we areto vote on, as no time has been afforded for thestudy of the two reports.“When an organization grows so strong andpowerful that it can win its way not by its wits |but by stupidity—and the Democrats are at that |turn in th'e road now—then it is inviting changethrough revulsion. I was born a democrat andhave always been one, but 1 m too much of aDemocrat to go along with this program.” |That, we trust, convinced Boss Nash that he jcan’t make a sow’s ear out of a silk purse. We |expect any day to hear that he has arranged a jsecond purge, to send Senator Smith back to pri- |vate life along with Senator Bidwill. |This political tyro obviously has no’ place jamong the yes-men who do the boss’ bidding atSpringfield. In the first place, he’s faithful to jtiis convictions. Still worse, he s intelligent.Must intelligence be a liability in politics?—ed. 1 Today on theQuadranglesMusic and ReligionJoseph Bond chapel at 12. “TheEthics of the Studious Life.” Profes¬sor Aubrey.Phonograph concert. Social Sci¬ence 122 at 12:30.LecturesPublic Lecture (History of Sci¬ence) : “Classical Historiography.”Professor Larsen. Harper Mil at4:30.MeetingsGraduate Classics club. “Platonismand Aristotelianism.” Professor Rich¬ard P. McKeon at 8.Sigma Pi Sigma. Professor Har¬vey B. Lemon. Eckhart Commonroom at 3:46,Biology club. Dr. Wolfgang Koh¬ler, Professor of psychology at Uni¬versity of Berlin. Pathology 117 at8.Miscellaneous {Annual dinner of the Alumni and :students of School of Social Serv¬ice Administration. Judson court at6:30. iRenaissance society, Joseph Bond !chapel at 4. Memorial service for'Mrs. Martin Schutze. jMotion Picture: “Une Etoile Dis-1parait,” International House theater [at 4 and 8. jGli Scapigliati. Three Italian Com-'edies. Reynolds club theater at 8:30. |CLASSIFIED ADSWANTED: Tenant to rent anunusually well-lighted four-roomapartment, furnished or unfurnish¬ed, with wood-burning fire-place.One block from Mandel Hall. Mid¬way 1617. Louise M. M. Fuller.TO RENT: Furnished apartment.6150 Verhon Avenue. Normal 6024.Three large rms. Beautifully furnish- jed. Private tile bath, Beautyrest bed. jFront and rear entrances. 24 foot'porch. Free heat, gas, light, elec, re- |frig. Bus, surface, elevated. $50. iThe Travelling BazaarBy SAM HAIRSOAPSUDS AND COFFEE GRINDSSome people think that they are the only saneones in the world but then again I’m not so sure....In fact there was an Alpha Delt party lastFriday night, to be exact....And then in orderto convince everybody that they really could giveparties any time they wanted to, they went andgave another one Saturday night.,..And peoplewent to it, too If you go around and ask peo¬ple if they happened by any chance to go to theAlpha Delt party, it is absolutely certain thatsome of them went And if you don’t believe itjust you try.. .There are many of the loyal mem¬bers of that great ole fraternity which goes bythe name of Phi Kappa Psi who seem to thinkthat “Swordfish” Werner maybe perhaps cameout somewhere approximately what you mightcall the small end of the horn when he decided toget to know a girl who goes to Illinois... .Sheturned out to be a fine cornfield philosopher....And another tiling... .There are some people whothink they are cultured and a whole lot of peo¬ple who are laboring under the delusion that theycan make people think they are intellectualAnd if you can tell just what anybody meanswhen they say that they are intellectual andthat’s no lie, just you try and convince someoneelse....And another thing....If you will havethe patience to read down a little further maybeyou will see some thing about Little Beverly Hep¬burn.... And it is a fine commentary on humannature or biological heritance or whatever you,in your superior manner, will choose to call it, toknow that Little Beverly Hepburn puts her car¬bon paper in wrong side too.... And so when youturn over the poper you dont’ get a carbonYou get a anti-impression NeverthelessThat has little to do with it In fact,if you will please take a little initiative, and havethe intestinal fortitude to go on your own for justa very few minutes you will observe, indubitably,that this campus is cynical.... That is, in fact, toeverything but their studies; in fact, that is tosay, to everything with the possible exception ofthe coeds....And just you go and ask somebodywhat is their unbiased opinion of the coeds at thisUniversity of Chicago... .Just you go and asksomebody, preferably somebody who happensjust by chance to happen to be going to that col¬lege up north somewhere Northwestern Uni¬versity, in fact, as well as in name DREXEL THEATRE868 E. 6SrdTuesday and Wednesday‘‘Notorious Gentleman**CHARLES BICKFORDTues. Cash Screeno 9 p. m.WHY DO I LOVE YOU?The President’s house has two chimneys andradiators are homely And another thingIf you want to see some thing really and trulyquite funny and yet quite pitiable just you goand read Little Beverly’s letter which incidental¬ly is just as she wrote it... .or read an editorialin the Daily Maroon... Woodlawn Cafeteria1165 East 63rd StreetSECOND FLOOR“You can have an extra dateeach week with the money yousave eating the Woodlawn way.”3 Months’ ShorthandCoursefor College Graduatesand UndergraduatesIdeal for taking notes at college orfor spare-time or full-time positions^Classes start the first of July, Octo¬ber, January and April.Call, write, or telephone State 1881for complete facte.The GREGG GOLLEGE6 N. Michigan Ave. ChicagoChicago’s Finest CafeUTTLE TED’SGARDENWALT REEDGr His Orchestra3 Floor Showa QNirhtiT OFor ReservationsPhoneHyde Park 10333I—" No Cover Charge1222 E. 63rd ST.‘Next Door to Ted’s Beauty Shop”PATRONIZE OURADVERTISERS At last—a realhe-mantie holderHere’s a tie-holder thatmakes some of this over*fancy, namby-pamby jewel¬ry look silly. A brand newtype, so simple, sensible andsmart you wonder it wasn’tintroduced long ago. Staysput. Encircles the tie. Yetdoes not bind.KREMENTZ & CO., NEWARK, N. J.2.:Mmktrt pf ibfKrtmtmix tvPrU-fampmstCplUr BmttpmKREMENTZ^ree-OfeiionTIE HOLDERCpmps M 0 mtmbtrpf smart mpdrm dnsgtss75c and upQUALITY — VARIETY -- ENVIRONMENTTRY OUR DELICIOUS HOME COOKINGESPECIALLY PIESLilNCIIEON 35cDINNER 5llcSTAIUMN’S TEA ROOM1369 East 57th StreetDINNER SERVED FROM 5-8TennisSuppliesBALLS RACQUETSR. W. &. D. 45c. ,3 for $1.25 Stoefen or Lott $6.95Penija 40c _ . 3 for $115 ^ W. & D.. .$1.50 to $12.50Dunlap & Clubb 25cEnglish 35c 3 for $1.00SHOESPresto Press $1.00 Men’s Keds - Oxfords. .$1.50Covers 50c to $1.35 Ladies’ Keds - Shoes . .$1.35RESTRINGINGTennis players know that a fast racquet makes the game.Why not get your racquet re-strung. . . .give it new life. . . .with all the .speed and accuracy it had when new.EIGHT HOUR SERVICEAlso Balls for Golf. . . .Ping Pong. . . .Hand BallSox.... Shorts.... Sweat ShirtsU. <rf C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Ave.iieii ... lb/ / I jHiK.i 'iiiiniiwii'i!"THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1935 Page ThreeBeverlyWrites tothe Editor(Continued from page 1)wonder stop and concern yourself atrifle more closely with the facts...or were facts what you were inter¬ested in....I hear there very im¬portant to a city editor.I wonder if I concentrated... .ifI could make you know, or under¬stand just how devastating your lit¬tle tear into whimsy was; that peiceconjured up in the heat of creation,and carried on with an elfin dogged¬ness that is frightening in the de¬gree. What was the story about now... .oh yes... .the tender little damewho thought it was one hell of a joketo violate the respect of people,who’s good opinion should have beena pretty important concern in herscheme of things.... a charminglady, who romped right thru the mostelementary rules of good taste....and good sense... .with an elabor¬ate disregard of consequence.Is that what you’ed want us tobeleive mister reporter... .it wouldbe pretty terrible for the girl,wouldn’t it. .. .ff a lot of people whomattered, did... .beleive it.And the letter, the one that wastaken and printed without the knowl¬edge or consent of the one whosepersonal prop erty it was....andstill is. .. .what if the persons mostconcerned should think her a partyto an affair so odorous, that any ad¬jective used in describing it....would be a masterpiece of under¬statement. What about it misternewspaper man....’S life eh.....something rather important ratherpretty damn important... .to me, getit.... to be aired and tittered over Iby a bunch of gurgling undergradu- |ates. Or mabe I’m being to profane Ifor your tas te....which is pretty!bad if you ask me. . . .to ribald forthe pleasant little sheet known asyour campus organ... .well, mister.ALLEXPENSER YEARm.85 — f2 dayi"COACH"5,000 miles by rail. 1,500 miles bysteamer. 200 miles by auto. Colorado,California and North-Pacific Coast. SIXDATES of departure from Chicago.^139e63 —14 days'Tourigt-PuUman"Grand Canyon; Los Angeles; Holly¬wood; Son Diego and Exposition;Ocean trip to San Francisco; FeatherRiver; Moffat Tunnel. FIVE DATES ofdeportxire from Chicago.^159.00—14 Days'Tourist-Pullmcm"Isleta Indian Pueblo, Grand Canyon,Los Angeles, Hollywood, Son Fran¬cisco, North Pacific Coast and Cana¬dian Rockies. FOUR DATES of depor-ture from Chicago.♦209.95-14 dayt"Standard-PuUmon"Colorado, Moffat Tunnel; Great SaltLake; San Francisco; Yosemlte; LosAngeles; Grand Canyon. This tour isfull of good things. EIGHT DATES ofdeparture from Chicago.♦234.00—2t Days"Standard-PuUzncm"Indian - Detour. Grand Canyon, LosAngeles, thence by motor via SantaBarbara and Del Monte to San Fran¬cisco, cruise on Pacific to Seattle; returnvia Canadian /lockles or via Yellow¬stone. Meals additional. EIGHT DATESof departure from Chicago.^304e45^20 days"Standard-PuUman"Colorado, Moffat Tunnel; Great SaltLake; Son Francisco; Yosemite andmotor via Coast Highway, Del Monteand Santa Barbara to Los Angeles;San Diego and Exposition; Grand Can¬yon; Indian Detour. This is a real DELUXE TOUR. FIVE DATES of departurefrom Chicago. my private convictions aren’t print¬able. Young in me isn’t it, to beperturbed, sore is the word.... overthe wholesale mis statement of fact. .. .contortion would be correct....I wonder if you can be aware,what it could mean were one engagedin the business of being a reporter.... with a veiw to earning a livingat it. .. .or one say, with any work¬manship.I wonder what they teach you inthat school of journalism. .. .whereyou are engrossed in attaching themore profound phases of the trade.Is there any thing in it about ethics.Here some data for your files;Of course it’s only reiteratingthe things I expressed privately tothe sceptics, who were p rett y per¬sistant on the matter. .. .formost ofwhom was the scurrying little direc¬tor of International house... .whereI seem to have been enconced fora while... .a very breif while....for such disasterous results.The astute Ernest B. Price. .. .Mr.Price who is so very hard to con¬vince, about anything, anything,that would tend to prove that I wasj not of the press....not up in thej circles of the international spy sys-I tern. .. .versed in the art of pullingj bunnies out of a hat. .. .or the lat-I est gadget employed by a guy namedj Stalin to hoist recalcitrant studentsI back into line.I Mr. Price listened politely, but^ with the “Ha-trying-to-put-some-: thing over-eh—” expression that! wouldn’t be erased even after aI strenous word about in which I ad-i mitted that yes I had once been em-1 ployed by a newspaper. .. .but point-I out there was a difference howeverI slight in his^ consciousnes s. .. . ini being employed by the filthy presslast year. .. .and being on it’s pay-I roll today....and vastly important, too, I understand, in attempting to! collect s any gratuity; which in spiteof a pretty “naivette” I’m creditedwith. . . .is not without its points.I mean a “little girl reporter’’doesn’t just tear about the countryside in mad persuit of scoops....just for the pure joy of it.“Mr. Price,’’ I said, “Could un¬derstand that’’No, it seemed Mr. Price couldn’tand off he scampered in a flurry ofdust to report the scandelous carry¬ing-on . . But first it was necessarythat I be presented with an impres¬sive document of whose merits,length was not the least... .demand-iiig my immediate disembarkmentfrom the premises, and out of thelife of Mr. Price and his littlecharges.And out of the lives incidently, ofany newspapermen who might be inthe position to hand out a job....you see. I’m afraid that their senseof humour isn’t very robust. . . .somehow they don’t think things likeprattling girl reporters with a tend¬ency to softening of the vital brainmembrane. .. .a subject for unduemeriment. . . .as don’t the editorwho’s letter disappeared from thecontents of my breif case so mysteri¬ously....! dont think HIS hilarityis too much out of bounds.But we’re coming to the end ofthis touching little word drammer...the last scene discloses our wearyheroine easing out from the campusall a tip toe....her Graphic speedcamera under her arm... .she’s justsnapped the last high spot in thegreat expose.... the last gallopingred has slunk away into the night...and now for the dash (insertbreathless here) to any one of thegreat metro politan Dailies, who arewaiting, waiting. .. . (nice touch ofcity editor biting nails while pacinglocal room) the whole front pageyou see is being held open beingheld open for the truimphant en¬trance of of the little gal. Here wedraw the curtains mercifully. .. .thewihole “Treatment” anyway, shouldhave been turned over to a guynamed Hecht... .who’s turned out acouple of good ones in his time.There just one more point I’ed likecleared up....what did I do....hire me a porter to lug the worksaround, or did I just tuck it some¬where in my lingerie.... or mebee,did I go out and get me one of thosetricky lenses german things (The of- Ickes Defends Academic Freedomin Address to /Chicago TeachersAt the All Chicago Education Din¬ner at the Hotel Stevens Friday,May 24, the Honorable Harold L.Ickes, Secretary of the Interior, de¬fended academic freedom in his ad¬dress to several thousand teachers ofChicago. The dinner was sponsoredby the Steering Committee of Teach¬er Welfare organizations, 185 NorthWabash avenue.Mrs. Arthur M. Nichelson, prin¬cipal of the Hirsch High school,presided. Music was furnished bythe Lane String Ensemble, Oscar W.Anderson, director, and the Lind-blom A Capella Choir under the di¬rection of David Nyvall, Jr. Delight¬ful occasional music was furnishedby Jerry Sigeler of Hirsch Highschool and Nicholas Sewkof of Lind-blom High school, accordianists.Attacks on EducatorsProfessor Charles E. Merriam ofthe University introduced Mr. Ickeswhose speech advocated academicfreedom and that school policy bedirected by educational experts rath¬er than less informed outsiders.Beginning with statements deplor¬ing the “intellectual bankruptcy thatseems to be threatening us,” he Sec¬retary mentioned the too-prevalentattacks on educators. He said inpart,“Since the beginning of the worldfice being short) tagged at a paltryseveral hundred.... I like to thinkof me doing that. .. .sweetly gal-lently, with no thought of sef.Heres anouther thing that worriesme....In one of my hastier mo¬ments (I think probably it was oneof those moments that a few mili¬tant students were crowding in onme, demanding sternly that I tellall....) I dropped off a few carelessre marks that makes me live in dailytrepidition. .. .because any day nowyou see, I might pick up The DailyMaroon and find the bold blackprint of the streamer—hurt to a list¬ening world;“Marie Antionette reconnoiters...lovely queen indignantly demandsthat her head, so long treasured asa rare ash tray in the basement ofIda Noyes hall where the camradesgather.... be given back to theBourbouns. .. .they’ed know what todo v/ith a stray capitalists head.(Aside to Wells Burnette)Sorry the Bourbouns are deadaren’t they....only Im so xxxxxxtired I can’t see the keys. Rememberme kindly fellows... .your for big¬ger and better epose’Beverly Hepburn. the man or woman who was a stepahead of his time in intelligence hasbeen the sorcerer or the witch.”“We have decided to protect our¬selves with some amateur magic ofour own. We will concoct a splendidoath... thus weaving a charm aboutyou that will make you fit for democ¬racy.”“Just as we used to rear our boysand girls in ignorance oif certainvital facts of life... .so will we now,in human-ostrich fashion, stick ourheads in the sand and thus bravelymeet vitally important political andacademic facts by ignoring theirexistence.”“And....we will see to it thatonly the uneducated shall be permit¬ted to select the courses that thecarefully immunized intellects ofour adolescents are permitted tobrowse upon.”“Freedom to search out the basicand undeniable facts, whether theybe physical, social, economic or po¬litical, is a right inherent in any edu¬cational system worthy of the name.”“And whoever attempts to abridgethat right, to break down the pillarof strength upon which our educa¬tional plan rests, is a traitor to thepast who strikes a fatal blow at ourdemocratic form of government.”Duties of Schools“The duty of a school system inour American way of life is to trainfree men and women to carry on, inmutual respect and good will, a com¬munity life which will bring content¬ment, afford an opportunity to earna livelihood and provide those mutualprotections which human society re¬quires. It is further the duty of aschool system to teach the truth ofhistory and current events, so thatwe may lay up a store of experiencethat may serve to keep us from fol¬lowing false political gods and en¬able us to improve our lot as thedays march.“All of which leads to the viewthat schools, since they are special¬ized and scientific institutions,should be managed by specialists.For business men generally... .tothink that success in other fields, es¬pecially if that success is measuredby money, qualifies them to runschools is based on an egotism thatproperly subjects them to ridicule.”“. .. . I doubt whether it has everbeen so necessary in this country asit is today to train the minds of ouryouth in the sound principles of de¬mocracy. They should be sent outfrom the schools, not only firmly be¬lieving in American principles; theyTennisRacketBargain$7.505.008.75 $15.0015.0015.00^ “Top Flite”“Gold Star”Davis Cup. .DreadnoughtDriver ...9.85 to 15.00Hundreds of other racket bargains $1.50 to $9.90. Wright &Ditson-Reach-Wilson-Lee-Spalding and others. Largest stock on allsouth side.RESTRINCINC SPECIALS(3ur$ 7.50 grade for $5.75 and our $3.75 grade for$2.90. This week only. Other restringing jobs $1.50to $8.00.Fresh TennisTennis Clothing—Men’ssox— Balls—1 5 Varieties 25c to 45cand women’s shorts—shirts—shoes-visors—and all accessories -pantsWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th St.Open Evenings Near Kimbark Ave.Phone Dor. 4800★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ThsM lours aro lolntly oporotod orsponsored by the railroads and plannedto see the most In the least time atmoderate cosL Each tour escorted.SOEA Cool comfort In Santa PaAIR-CONDITIONID trains——————Mall Coupon ——^I Santa Fe Travel Bureau M |I 179 W. Jackson St., Chicago, Ill. jI Phone Harrison 4900 |J Send folders about all-expense tours. JJ Address I The Daily MaroonTheater Bureauwill save you a great deal of time and worrywhen you buy theatre tickets.Stop in at Lexington Hall and take ad¬vantage of this added service to our readers. should be made aware of the dangersthat threaten our system of Govern¬ment and be taught how best to wardoff that danger.”Right of Free Speech“....take those two threateningsystems of government that are ob¬noxious to every well-balancedAmerican mind, Fascism and Com¬munism. Are we to ignore what wedo not like, or are we to turn on thefull light of truth through investiga¬tion, honest thinking and plain talk¬ing to the end that we may intelli¬gently oppose these two systemswith all our strength,”“There is another issue involvedin this situation. I refer to the right jof free speech, implicit in which is |the right to search for the truth !wherever it may be found and to an¬nounce that truth when discovered.” They are the beacons that light theway of progress for us. If one isextinguished the others will languishand die.”Mr. Ickes also made mention ofthe fact that he held two degreesfrom the University of Chicago andvoiced the opinion that all Chica¬goans should resent attacks on an in¬stitution that ranks as one of theforemost in the world.Rykick’s Tennis ShopExpert Racket RestringingTo Measured Tension$1.29 to ?6..501544 East 64th StreetHvde Park 7473“Free speech is as vital to the :school room as free assemblage is to jthe people, and as a free press is to !the newspapers. Each is an integral ipart of the trilogy which guards our jliberties. Without them we might be icalled upon to endure the tragedies jwhich have befallen other peoples;who have been deprived of these Ibasic and fundamental rights. Ma-1jorities can protect themselves, but:minorities must rely on the protec-1tion afforded by these three rights. | lilTENSIVIStenographic CourseTor College Men and Women.100 Words a minute in 100 days.Assured for one fee. Enroll now.Day classes begin each quarter.Tel. Ran. 1575Also Regular Courses. Day and Eva,BRYANT4TRATI0N18 SO. MICHIGAN AVE . CHICAGOtheMILITARY BALLYou 11 see this White Palm Beach Tuxedo at the Ball andin the smarter night clubs this summer. . . .in fact, where-ever young men and women assemble to be gay. It isin very truth the latest note of fashion.The jacket single or double-breasted, with shawlcollar. The trousers tuxedo style, of black PalmBeach. The nice thin gabout it is not just its good looks,but the way it keeps them. For it’s made of the newlydeveloped Palm Beach Cloth that resists wrinkling andmussing.It washes or dry-cleans perfectly, of course, and presentsthat smooth, shapely, unruffled exterior that proclaimsthe well dressed men.And don’t forget, the Interfraternity Sing follows the Ball.You’ll need a Palm Beach for that occasion, too.Palm Beach Suit $15.75Palm Beach Tuxedo $17.50ERIE CLOTHINGCOMPANY837 E. 63rd StreetOpen Eveningsiiimrrl I fi riiftHi iiiiliiiWMMiDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Pour TUESDAY. MAY 28. 1935MAKOON NET SQUADRETAINS CONFERENCETEAM CHAMPIONSHIP Michigan TakesTitle, MaroonsCellar in TrackNUMBER FOUR!CHICAGOMinnesotaIllinoisNorthwestern 14| Iowa9 Ohio State5{ Michigan4| WisconsinChicagro won the Big Ten confer¬ence tennis title for the fourth con¬secutive year at Northwestern Sat¬urday w'hen the Maroon quartetwon championships in three singlesand one doubles divisions to beat itheir nearest rival, Minnesota, by ifive points.Play this year was run under six iseparate brackets, all the no. 1 men |playing among themselves, the no. |2’s among themselves, etc. Numbers |1 and 2 doubles teams followed the ,same system. IWeiss Loses |Captain Trevor Weiss, after de- jfeating George Ball, Northwestern, jlost to Billy Schommer, Minnesota, |in the championship play-off 6-1, |6-4. Weiss lost five consecutivegames in the first set, recovered toforce the score of the second to 3-3,but was unable to hold the Gopherstar after that. ^In the second bracket SaturdayNorman Bickel defeated Schommer’sdoubles mate, Huber, 6-2, 6-4. HerbMertz took the third bracket fromSherwood, Michigan, 6-4, 4-6, 6-2,and Burgess defeated Nye 6-2, 6-2to win the fourth.Weiss and Mertz were defeated inthe first round doubles by Huberand Schommer, who eventually wonIn that section, but the Maroon no.2 team, Bickel and Burgess, carriedthrough to a championship in thesecond doubles bracket by defeatingLewers and Hicks of Illinois 6-1, 6-1. The Western Conference outdoortrack and field championships weredecided last Saturday at Ann Arbor,when Michigan, the host team, pull¬ed down a surprise victory in thefinal event to win out by a narrowmargin over Ohio State. The Wol¬verines ran the mile relay in 3:15.2for a new conference record.Jesse Owens of Ohio State scor¬ed a personal triumph in the meetwhen he shattered three world mai'ks,and tied a fourth. First he tiedFrank Wykoff’s world record of 9.4seconds for the 100 yard dash. Nextin his first and only broad jump hecleared 26 feet 8^4 inches, smashingthe previous world record by over ahalf foot. Then he raced down the220 yard stretch in 20.3 seconds,ten yards ahead of his nearest oppon-nent and broke the accepted worldrecord by 3/10 of a second. Finallynear the end of the meet Owensagain thrilled the crowd when hesprinted over the low hurdles in22.6 seconds, 2/5 of a second bet¬ter than any previous record.Berwanger ScoresThe University team finished inlast place. Jay Berwanger talliedthe single point w’hen he placed fifthin the javelin with a throw of 183feet 1114 inches, some 35 feet lessthan the new conference recordthrow set by Panther of Iowa.T. Nelson Metcalf, director ofAthletics, predicted in Friday’s is¬sue of The Daily Maroon that theprobable order of finish would beMichigan, Ohio State, Northwestern,Wisconsin, Indiana, Iowa, Illinois,Minesota, Purdue, and Chicago. Theresults were as follows: CHICAGO NINE BEATSNORTHWESTERNIN LAST BALL GAMEOVERTAKENw I pet.Minnesota .5 2 .714CHICAGO .7 3 .700Illinois .7 3 .700Ohio State .5 3 .625Michigan .6 5 .545Indiana .4 4 .500Wisconsin .3 5 .375Northwestern . . .3 7 .300Purdue .3 9 .250The varsity ball team wound upMichigan 48 1 Iowa 19Ohio State 43 H 1 Illinois 18)4Wisconsin 29)2 1 Purdue 11Indiana 24)2 ; Minnesota 10Northwest’n 20 1 CHICAGO 1Track Finals and Horseshoe MeetClose Intramural Athletics Program. its season last Saturday with anavenging victory over Northwestern.After dropping a thriller to the Pur¬ple last Tuesday the Maroons cameback with a 2 to 1 win at Evanston,tying the conference performance ofthe mini.But at the same time Minnesotawas defeating Purdue, 11-1, to moveinto the lead in the Big Ten. TheGophers have won five of sevengames played, and have four moreto go. They meet low’a at Iowa Citythis weekend in two games and playWisconsin in two games next week.If the Gophers drop two of theirgames the Maroons and Illini moveinto a firm position at the top.Ohio Ha* ChanceThere is likely to be a crowd inthe championship berth, though,since Ohio State still has a chance lomake the grade. The Buckeyes meetIndiana in a double-header on Dec¬oration day. If they take both games,they move up on a par with Chicagoand Illinois.Maroon ball players continue theirregular workouts in preparation forthe Alumni game on Thursday, June6. There are a lot of good alumniaround, but their condition is ques¬tionable. The annual alumni game,however, is always a classic, and thisone should folow suit.With Intramural track finals sched-led for this afternoon at 3:45, I-Morseshoes singles set for Friday at::30, and golf, tennis, ping pong,nd playground ball finals rapidlypproaching, the intramural programor this year approaches a close.The schedule of events for therack meet, preliminaries of whichTere run Thursday, includes the fol-awing events in order: 100-yardash (semifinals), mile run, 100-ard dash (finals), 120-yard lowurdles, 220-yard dash, 440-yardun, 880-yard run, and 880-yard re-ly. At the same time, the high jumpnd broad jump will be completed.Because of the delays in the meetaused by unfavorable weather, en-ries will be accepted up to the timef running in the half-mile, mile, andigh jump, according to RandolphSean, manager of the sport.Horseshoes singles will be held'riday if enough players enter byomorrow, Richard Adair, manager,tated yesterday. The meet will ben elimination affair.The semifinal round in golf has been filled by Gilbert and Carey, PsiUpsilon; Krause and Kolber, Phi Sig¬ma Delta; Morrison and Dudgeon,Phi Kappa Psi; and Draine and Neg-ley, unattached, according to BobWhitlow, manager of that event. SAVERooms for Summer QuarterAvailable |une 15$2.00 per wk. $8.50 per mo.Mr. Lund5541 WOODLAWNBROKEN LOTSNew Wool Suits $12.50All Sizes Real Valuesalso slightly usedKenwood Garden ClothierMERCHANT TAILOR & CLEANERSAM ZOHN. Prop.5515 Kenwood Ave. Phone PLAZA 1261 Send YourBaggageomeRAILWAY EXPRESSTHREE MONTHS’ COURSEFor College Students and GraduatesA thorough, intensive, stenographiccourse—starting January \, April 1,July 1, October 1. Interesting Book¬let sent free, without obligation—write or phone. No solicitorsemployed. No need to burden yourself with the transporution of trunks,baggage and personal effects at vacation time... send themall home by Railway Express.Here’s the way...merely telephone Railway Express andwe’ll call for the shipments—whisk them away on fast pas¬senger trains, swiftly and safely to destination; they’ll behome almost as soon as you are. Rates surprisingly low; tworeceipts—one at each end—insure safe handling and delivery.After vacation, we’ll bring your baggage back again, elimi¬nating all worry, trouble and unnecessary expense.For service or information telephonemoserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D., PH.B.Regular Courses open to Htyh SchoolGraduates only, may be started anyMonday. Day and Evening. EverJngCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ave. ChicagoRandolph 4347 70 East Randolph Street’Phone Harrison 9700CHICAGO, ILL.The best there is in transportationSERVING THE NATION FOR 96 YEARSRAILWAY ExpressAGENCY INC.NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICE Faculty GroupOpposes Use ofTraining TableThe faculty committee of theWestern Conference denied tworecommendations made by the athlet¬ic directors at the annual meetingin Ann Arbor last weekend. Thecommittee declined to discuss theproposals submitted; but it was as¬certained that the group again failedto approve of the reinstatement ofthe training table for conferencegrid men.Also denied, it is said, was per¬mission for football games betweenconference B teams on Friday after¬noons or evenings.At the directors’ meeting, the foot¬ball schedules for 1937 were drawnup. In that year Chicago will resumerelations with Michigan and Prince¬ton. Altogether it will play onlyfour conference games; the othersbeing with Illinois, Ohio State, andWisconsin. The Wolverines and Il¬lini games will be away while theother two will be played on Staggfield. Chicago usually has met five !conference foes in the past. i PHI B. D. BIU TEAMTAKES PHI SIGS; WINFHITEHNITY lEKGUE 8 Freshmen NetmenPaired In Play-OffPhi Beta Delta beat Phi SigmaDelta 9 to 6 yesterday afternoon inthe fieldhouse, and so took the fra¬ternity playground ball champion¬ship. The winner of the Universitycrown will be determined Wednes¬day when the Rinkeydinks, winnersin the Independent league, play the jPhi B. D.b at 69th and Cottage IGrove. iMarver and Kessell made up the 'winner’s battery, while Roessing and ;Wolf worked for the Phi Sigs. jMarver, who has a great strike¬out record behind him, accounted foronly three outs in this manner, whileRoesing fanned five. Marver wasable to disturb his opponents enoughwith his speed, however, to holdthem to eight hits, w'hile Roesing al-low'ed fourteen.Scoring for both sides was doneduring the first half of the game. ThePhi Sigs started a rally in the eighthwhich availed only two runs and abat broken by Wolf. Results of the freshmen round-robin net tourney place eight menin position to play for the top elim¬ination.Pairings, which will be played offduring the week, are as folows:Shostrom vs. Cook, Swift vs. Upton,Baird vs. Bostick, and Swenson vs.Friedman. Numerals will be award¬ed to outstanding players of thisgroup.rrmrPmAorWWhen you come. ■ , SPICIAtwback nextFALLThese special school and college railtickets, with their liberal extended re¬turn limits,are imnitensely popularwithand a great saving to students andteachers. When you're ready to comebock next Fall, buy one and save othird of the regular two-way fore. When Christmas Holidays come, youcan use the return coupon to travel .home again.The ticket agent in your own town,or any railroad passenger repre¬sentative con give you full detailsregarding return limits, stop-overprivileges, prices, etc.ASSOCIATED EASTERN RAILROADSPATRONIZE THE DAILY MAROON ADVERTISERS • A keen idea — wear theSwank Cravat Chain withyour initial... At jewelert*and smart men's shops you'llfind innumerable designs —both conservative and sportsubjects . . 50c — $1.00 — up.SUURriKJewelry Acce$$orie$ for MenDon't get your tux out of moth balls ....Just slip into last year s white flannels — put on asoft white shirt — and don one of your dark suit coats—Now, isn’t that simple? Think how free and com¬fortable you’ll feel dancing to the music ofCHARLES GAYLORDand his orchestraMIUTARYBALLProceeds Co to Senior Scholarship FundBids obtainableAll members of Military Dept.Fraternity RepresentativesUniversity of Chicago BookstoreTOMORROW NIGHT10 to 2 South ShoreCountry ClubBids $3.50i ... .lua JSECTION**National Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph**U. S. TRAOKMARK SERIAL NUMBER SIS4I1IGNORED » Betsy Wadsworth of SIcidmoresen Queen of the Prom at Colgate University,la paid her homage when they presented this EXAMINE NEW FOOTBALL » Harry Stuhidreher of Villanova, Hunk Anderson of NorthCarolina State, and Jimmy Crowley of Fordham give a new type of football the once over at ameeting at Catholic University (Washington, D. C.). keystone>LAIN ALUMNUS NOW » Former President Hoover played a very minor role ativersity (Palo Alto, Calif) alumni dinner He's shown here with Mrs. Hoovy Dr.ur Secretary of the Interior under Hoover and now Stanford s president, and Mrs., 1 keystone DEVELOPING NEW ACOUSTICAL DEVICESC. R. Lewis and Prof. R. B. Lindsay, of Brown University,have perfected this research apparatus for the study ofsound filtration. wide worldAND ALL THE WINNER GETS IS A BOOK * Eachyear Massachusetts Institute of Technology students stagea book rush,” the object of the game being to reachthe top of the greased cylinder. internationalFROM PRESIDENT TO BOOTBLACK . R. C. Ingalls, director of Los Ang.Junior College, opens the shoe shine benefit drive staged to raise funds for n?students.PROFESSOR LEADS "DOUBLE LIFE" .Prof. Sidney A. Rowland, of Ohio WesleyanUniversity (Delaware), teaches higher mathe¬matics in the morning and the rest of the day actsas Mayor of Delaware, a city of 10,000.INTERNATIONAL"MURDER IN THE CLASSROOM" » Here s one of the thrilling scenes fromthe moving picture being made by Northwestern University students and facultymembers. Dr. Oliver Lee, astronomy professor, is the unwilling victim. acmenineTIVES COLLEGES SENT REPRESENTAto the annual style show at NorthCarolina State College O^aleigh) Textile Ex^sition. This group includes students fromPeace, Meredith, oaint Mary's, C^atawbjLouisburg, Oueens-Chicora, Elon, and FloraMacdonald Colleges, and the University of\ North Carolina.e ins, R. J. Reynokb Tob. Co.BASEBAUMelvin OnHomo-Run Hittorof tho N. Y. GiantsWATER KHOStubby KrucerWotor Polo andOlYmpic Swimming StarTENNISLester R. StoepenU. S. Ooublos Tonnis ChampionOMFTOfAMY ARMOURWho Hot Won tho U. S. Oporip 0 A-. “"tl British Op onBRONCHO RIDERPete KnightBroncho Riding Champion1932 and 1933DIVINOAMY lou OliverPormor Southorn ChampionPoncy OivorTONIMY ARMOUlU » Camel smoker of many years’ standing, who says: "I’vesmoked Camels for years, without jittery nerves or cutting down my wind"YOU LL LIKETHEIRMILDNESS TOO!^md below what these famous athletes sayabout their experiences in smoking CamelsA suggestion: Follow the athletes inyour st arch for cigarette mildness. Theycan't trifle with healthy nerves—their"condition”—their wind. The cigarettethey smoke must be mild.Tommy Armour, the golf champion,says: "C amels never bother my nerves orshontn my wind—convincing evidencethat (Camels are mild.”Mel Ott, heavy-hitting outfielder ofthe New York Giants, reports: "My ex¬perience is that Camels are so mild theynever get my wind.”And Stubby Kruger, water polo andswimming star; Amy Lou Oliver,diver;and Le ster Stoefen, tennis star, agree withPete Knight, the rodeo champion, who says: "Camels—there’s asmoke so mildit never cuts down your wind, nevergets you out of condition.”A mildness that willlease you too!Camels are made from costlier tobaccos.They are mild, cool, gentle on the throat.Smoke them all you wish. Camels don’tupset your nerves ... or tire your taste.And athletes find that Camels do notget their wind.ICONSIDER THAT LIPS IS MORE WORTH WHILEwhen you feel physically fit, "in condition."Think of your nerves, and turn to Camels.Athletes say, "They don’t get your wind.”COSTLIERTOBACCOS!• Camels are made from finer,MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS—Turkish and Domestic —than any other popular brand.{SigHtd} R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO.Winston-Salem. N. C.HE GOT A HEAD START^ so Walter Mason was given a tfcy ■Barbara Beam so he would not have an unfair advantage over dHoversity of Oregon (Eugene) "Days of ’49” whisker contestJUST A FLICK OF THE WRIST, AND POOF! GOES A RECORD . Earl Meadows, top vaulter ofUniversity of Southern California sky climbers, actually had the world’s pole vault record in his hand—but that hand failed him. Right after setting a new meet record in the contest with Stanford, 14 feet,3^ inches, he had the bar hoisted to 14 feet, 6H inches. The photo shows his third attempt at thisheight. He was over the bar, his body clear, and as he threw back from the vaulting p>ole his lefthand scraped the bar. It wobbled for a few seconds, and then fell to the pit. ACMEFIVE CENTS A (SLEEPY) HEADis the charge made by HaroldJeserun ancT Vincent Marchese,who operate a thriving waker-upper service at Columbia Uni¬versity ACMEAN SO-YEAR-OLD FRESHMAN » Seiichi Takagi,Japanese octogenarian, proudly displays his universitycap after having passed Nippon University (Tokyo) entrance examinations. He is the oldest university studentin Japan, and possibly the oldest undergraduate in theworld. WIDE WORLD “PRESENT ARMS" . Lons li. es o(during the first dress parade of re <SCarper andin the Uni-MECHANICAL LOVER » Cyril Cesspickel, robot who performed at theshow of University of Minnesota electrical engineers, holds hands with CcMorse, a freshman at the Gopher university.A LEAP AND HE’S SAFE » An unusual candid cameraphoto of a Washington University (St. Louis) base runnerdemonstrating the correct form for arriving safe at thirdwithout getting one’s uniform dirty.TWO NEW PRESIDENTS . Dr. IsaiahBowman (Left), president-elect of JohnsHopkins University, congratulates Dr.Fred P. Corson following the latter’sinduction as 20th president of DickinsonCollege. internationals as academy officials inspect themAcademy (Annapolis, Md.). GESTURE TO OLD MAN HARD LUCK » Forthe thirteenth successive year the University of Wash¬ington (Seattle) observes its tradition for the main¬ tenance of favorable luck by burying a penny underthe home plate before the opening game of theseason on their home field. ACMErSHEIL BE HRST BRIDE IN HER CLASS » At least that's what tradition sawill be Genevieve Knupfer's reward for winning the Wellesley College May Drhoop rolling contest for seniors. ac ■^ Superstructure C. P. Parichurst, Jr. WILLIAMS COLLEGEPICTURB OF THB WKBK RULBS: Five dollara ia paid each w««k to coUcce atudent* and[faculty membera whoae pictnica are aelccted by CoUc^atc Digcat aa the beat that it receiveafrom amateur pbotocraphera. Any photo aubmitted ia elicible for publicatica in CoUeciateDiceM at regular ratea. Print name, inatitutioti, name and aiae of camera, kind of film used,: and time of expoaure on back of phtko. Addreaa entriea to: Picture of the Week, CollegiateDiseaL Boat 472. Madiaon. Wia.IT’S THE OLD SHELL GAMEwith new players University ofPennsylvania co-eds work out onthe Schuylkill river under thetutelage of varsity coach RustyCallow. ACMEAMHERST, UNION MEN DISCUSSLIBERTY a These representatives fromThese representatives fromthe two eastern colleges held a two-dayjoint seminar on the Union campus inSchenectady, N. Y. They are shownhere at the home of Union’s PresidentDixon Ryan Fox. “SWEETHEART OF TEXAS” . Ga lMcDavitt, a Pi Beta Phi at the Univer ityof Texas (Austin), was voted this honorby her classmates.NATIOMAtJOY SMOKE ! STAR'S CHOICE » Cine¬mactor Fredric March se¬lected Virginia Yates as "mostbeautiful” at William WoodsCollege (Fulton, Mo.)*)-CAPTAIH QUADRUPLETS . W. F. Reidy, D. A. Shea, Jr., W. F. Donnellv, andJ Doyle share the captaincy of the Holy Cross College (Worcester, Mass.) golf team.25,000 DAFR^ILS have been planted in the new flowergardens of Duke University (Durham, N. C.). The university’s$2,500,000 chapel, shown in the background, will be dedi¬cated in June.HE CAMERA'S EYE » And in the public s eye and ear, too, is piquante Annette Hanshaw,ie low-down warblings thrill those who listen to Glen Gray s Casa Loma orchestra CaravanI leasts. CO-ED LEADERS MEET » Presidents of women’s governmentassociations at Bates, Colby, Vermont, Middlebury, NewHampshire, and Maine Universities, and Rhode Island, Con¬necticut and Massachusetts State Colleges confer on the Uni¬versity of New Hampshire (Durham) campus.Printed by Alco Gravure Inc., Chicago, IlL 5391.3-34Chubby, sandy-haired, freckled, in 1922 Spencer Tracy {at left} was the solemn captain of Riponcollege's debate team and a student actor in roles demanding vigor. A stock company life taught himto act a breezy comic salesman and stark killer with equal ease. His next film is ”\\ hipsaw," withJean Harlow. Together in “Goldie" four years ago, both were unnoticed newcomers.I IKE PAT O’BRIEN, a boyhood chum in Mil-1— wduk^e and later a companion actor starvingon Broadway, Spencer Tracy got into the moviesfour years ago when film stories began to call forunhandsome but lovable characters who couldtalk with speed and incisiveness through thecorners of their mouths. Now thirty-five yearsold and a busy star who has never failed to makemoney for Fox, Spencer Tracy is one of the lastof the old school of performers who knew therough-and-tumble of stock company nomadiclife and hard times.In February, 1921, he was late of the U. S.Navy, one of the many wartime high school kidswhose plans for college had been postponedby patriotism. To get ready for his father’s,thriving truck manufacturing business, he enrolledat Ripon college (Wisconsin) that same month.HIS success in forensics caused the dramaticscoach to invite him to act. Some of thetoughness he had acquired in the Navy stood himin good stead as he played maturely two forcefulroles in Fitch’s The Truth and The Validnt inthe Ripon City Auditorium.He took naturally to platforms, captaining, byreason of his earnest oratory, the varsity debateteam on its eastern trip in his sophomore year.In West Hall he was useful in quelling such re¬strained whoopee as was then tolerated atRipon. Alpha Phi Omega elected him its presi¬ dent. Young faculty members met in his room totalk; he was a sophomore of ready wit.AT O’BRIEN, having enrolled at Sargent’sdramatic school in New York, persuaded hisfriend to do so also Together they took theirdiplomas to booking agents. Before he faced aBroadway audience, Tracy served a long andshoddy apprenticeship in eight different cities:poor pay, drafty theaters, weekly rehearsals ofnew bills, social ostracism, the badgering ofhotel owners and tailors who- wanted theirmoney—all were his lot.Then in New York he got engagements withEthel Barrymore, George M. Cohan, and theTheater Guild. In 1930 he scored as the des¬perate Killer Mears in Last Mile a fierce tragedyof men in a prison death block A Fox directorsaw him. He was cast in his first movie—Up theRiver, a light-hearted comedy! He had succes¬sively outplayed Jean Harlow, Sally Filers, andJoan Bennett before Hollywood, slow to acceptplain troupers, noticed that an actor was in itsmidst. After The Power and the Glory, he wasformally recognized.Married to Louise Treadwell, an actress whoshared his hard times, father of a son and daughter,he is a social recluse who has only ^hree cronies,Pat O’Brien, George M. Cohan, and WillRogers, all men without illusions about theirglamorous calling.DID YOUR CAMPUS produce a personality who is now prominent in the radio, motion picture, suxe, art, business,or political world’ If you want to sec that personality the subject of a “Spotlighter" thumbnail sketch, write TheSpotlightcr, Collegiate Digest, P. O. Box 47a, Madison, Wis. One dollar will be paid for each acceptable picture sub¬mitted, in addition to one dollar for acceptable authentic anecdotes about the famed of today. CHIEF STORY TELLER » Jane Sanford, senior at PerrortCollege m Brown University, edits Brun Mael RroLegends’ , to you—the senior class year bookHOT TRUMPETS . And the king of the modern trump< te(these days is the inimitable Red Nichols, whose band islonger just Five Pennies. He’s heard on the College Pribroadcast.