4itoum ’■^*5Vol* 37. No. 75. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1937 Price Three Cent*Appoint New Leadersof ’37 Social BoardEckhouse, Wasem, Faust,Price Elected to Jobs forNext Year.The Student Social Committee yes¬terday selected five men and twowomen to serve on next year’s Com-mitte.* Bob Eckhouse was appointedchairman of the committee and willbe assisted by David Gordon, JoeBaer, Cody Pfanstiehl, Martin Mil¬ler, Pesr Tillinpnast, and Mary JaneHector.As next year’s head of FreshmanOrientation who will also be an ex-officio member of the Social Com¬mittee, the members appointed DickWasem, Alpha Delta Phi. Wasem isa member of the Leaders’ Org^aniza-tion, on the track squad, a junior In¬tramural manasrer, and a member ofIron Mask.Faust Heads Transfer GroupTo take care of transfer orienta¬tion a men’s and a women’s chair¬men were appointed. Edf?^ Faust,independent, was selected to headmen’s orientation and Mary LouPrice, a Mortar Board, to head wom¬en’s orientation. Faust is also ac¬tive in the Dramatic Association.The Committee also announcedthat it had cleared $341.54 on theWashin^rton Prom, the larg:est profitof which there is any record. Thisexceeded the next largest profit,made at the Prom in 1924, by morethan $100, and will be turned overto the Scholarship fund.Eckhouse, a member of Zeta BetaTau, served as publicity chairman forthis year’s Washington Prom. Hewill be a senior next year, having Fete Quincy Wrightat Ida Noyes DinnerA dinner in honor of QuincyWright, professor of InternationalRelations who is leaving soon forGeneva, will be given by his col¬leagues and students on Friday at6:30 in Ida Noyes Hall, it was an¬nounced yesterday.Reservations are one dollar eachand should be made before Thursdaynoon with either Miss Pye in the of¬fice- of the department of PoliticalScience or Melbey Kidd at Interna¬tional House. IGive Preview ofDA Production“Green Grow the Lilacs^Opens in Mandel Hallon April 22. Prominent ChineseWriter to Speakin Moody LectureDr. Lin Yutang, one of the mostprominent scholars and writers ofChina, will speak in Mandel HallTuesday, March 9, at 8:15, under theauspices of the William VaughnMoody Foundation on the subject of“The Reasonable Spirit.’’ Tickets forthe lecture may be obtained withoutcharge at the information office ofthe University.Born in Changchow, the son of aChristian pastor in the American Re¬formed Church Mission, Dr. Yutangwas educated in mission schools andSt. John’s College, Shanghai. Aftergraduating from St; John’s, he be¬came a teacher of English at Tsing-hua, the American Boxer IndemnityCollege. In 1919-20, he and his wife,also of a mission family, came toAmerica where Dr. Lin studied atHarvard. He then went to Germanyto study at Jena and Leipzig. Hereceived the A. M. from Harvard andthe Ph. D. from Leipzig, his, subjectbeing philosophy.From 1923 to 1926 he was on thefaculty of the Peking National Uni¬versity, but his interest in the Chin¬ese rebellion led him to join the Wu¬han government as secretary in theministry of foreign affairs. Losing Thirty CampusTonight in GroupsOriental MeetInstitutefor Third Annual Peace ParleyBy ROBERT FOSTERAudiences at this year’s Mirror ! his interest in the revolution, he turn-production on Friday and Saturdaynights will receive a preview of“Green Grow the Lilacs,’’ the lastplay to be presented this season bythe Dramatic Association in co-oper¬ation with Mack Evans *and his Uni¬versity Choir and Midway Singers.At the beginning of the second halfof Mirror, several scenes will be pre¬sented in which the Mack Evans Sing¬ers, some Mirror actors, and theMuriel Abbott trained dancers in anIndian Territory dance will take part.This will be the first time in the histransferred here as a junior from the | tory of Mirror that a preview of aUniver.sity of Michigan. i Dramatic Association production hasA member of Psi Upsilon, Gordon i ^'rst timeis a track letterman, a member of I women have danced to-Iron Mask, and was ticket chairman I P^^^her in Mirror. ^for the Prom. Baer, an independent, j This announcement of the pre.sent- |is a guard on the varsity water polo ! ation of “Gren Grows the Lilacs’’ is I ed to writing. In addition to writ¬ing, an exposition of “My Countryand My People,’’ Dr. Lin was com¬posed several textbooks on Englishused in Chinese schools, and is theeditor or member of the editorialstaff of five magazines, two in Eng¬lish and three in Chinese. At pres¬ent on a year’s vacation in NewYork, Dr. Lin is currently writinga work on philosophy and the art ofliving.team.Work on PublicationsCody Pfanstiehl, a member of ChiPsi, is an editorial associate of TheDaily Maroon, and served last yearas sophomore manager of Black-friars. Miller, who will be the onlyjunior member of the committee, isa member of Alpha Delta Phi, Skulland Crescent, and advertising man¬ager of the Cap and Gown.Peg Tillinghast, Mortar Board,was chairman in charge of promotionfor the Prom. Mary Jane Hector, aQuadrangler, is seicretary-trdasurerof the Interclub Council.Inl-House PlayersGive Performanceof English DramaAfter a highly successful two yearrun in London, the psychologicaldrama "The Wind and the Rain’’ byMerton Hodges comes to Chicago forits debut on Friday and Saturdaynights under the sponsorship of theInternational House Players.Concerned chiefly with the charac¬ter development of a young Englishmedical student, the play unfoldsagaiTist the background of the Uni¬versity of Edinburg medical school.Several native born Englishmen havebeen cast as characters in the playwhich is the first dramatic productiongiven by the Players this year. Kath¬erine Ewing, of the Chicago FederalTheater Project has also been securedto direct the play in an advisory ca¬pacity, assisting Harry W. Malm, of¬ficial director for the group.The cast itself includes RichardElmhirst who plays the lead, GerhardtSchildt, John Auld, Helen Poynter,Elizabeth Nicols, John Whiteside,Ethel Powers, Lester Wilson, MaryLouise Williams, and Adele Sandman.Since the House first opened, thePlayers group, a voluntary LittleTheater unit, has been producing, act¬ing and directing dramatic venturesas an important part of Internation¬al House activities. In the past,Seven Keys to Baldpate,’’ “EmperorJones,’’ and “Murder in the Cathe¬dral’’ have been presented.^ The curtain for this year’s produc¬tion rises at 8:30 in the assembly jl»all. Admission price is 50 cents. { sure to be welcomed by all who knowof the highly successful play or whoare interested in the University’smusic and drama. Produced in 1931on Broadway by the Theater Guildwith Franchot Tone, Helen Westley,and June Walker in the starringroles, it was hailed as the only playthat thus far successfully combinedsong with drama. It’s original storywhich, among interludes of songs ofthe range, tells a romance of the prai¬rie country at the time Indian Terri-ritory was still outside the union andbefore the state of Oklahoma wasmore than a politician’s dream, madeit an immediate success and a lead¬ing contender for the Pulitzer Prizeof that year. After a long seasonon Broadway, the play was taken ontour to several large cities includedamong which was Chicago.Of it. Burns Mantle, outstandingdrama critic reported, “I found itshumor bold, its characters true, andits story interesting in revealing anew division of the American Scene.’’“Green Grow the Lilacs’’ intro¬duced its author Lynn Riggs intothe field of native drama, and wona place for him among such outstand¬ing folk dramatists as Paul Green andE. P. Conkle. Riggs has been char¬acterized as a very careful play-write, not interested in the dollar.This is evidenced by the fact that(Continued on Page 3) Women’s GroupsHold EleclioiiofOfficers TuesdayYWCA, WAA, and Mirror willhold their annual election of officersTuesday, March 9, in the lobby ofIda Noyes Hall.For president of YWCA have beennominated Helen Woodrich andFrances Protheroe, for vice-presidentHelen Thomson and Audrey Neff, forsecretary, Mary Lou Price, and Bet¬ty Abney, and for treasurer AdaSwineford and Clementine VanderShaegh.WAA has nominated for presidentand vice-president Marcia Lakeman,Alice DeBois, and Virginia Gray; fortreasurer, Doris Wolcott and JaneHoffer; and for secretary, DorothyEshbaugh and Meg Sieverman.Mirror nominations are withhelduntil after the Saturday night per¬formance of Mirror’s show.Any active member of any of theorganizations can vote. Offer Shaw’s Play“Bury the Dead,” Anti-WarStory, Given TomorrowEvening.By ADELE ROSE“Bury the Dead,’’ anti-war playwhich was a Broadway success lastyear, will be presented by membersof the ASU drama group for dele¬gates and visitors to the all-campuspeace conference in Ida Noyes Thea¬ter at 7:15 tomorrow evening. Firstwork of its young .author, IrwinShaw, the play is dedicated to “thewar that will begin tomorow.’’ andopens with a scene In which fourcorpses of the war-dead come to lifeand relate their stories to the sol¬diers who were burying them.Rony, Polacheck DirectDirectors of “Bury the Dead’’ areDemarest Polacheck and Vera Rony.Other members of the cast areMarion Rapaport, John Marks, Rob¬ert Wolf, Mark Ashin, Paul Glass-berg, Bob Speer, Robert Kronemey-er, and Leonard Hart.The main features of the Thurs¬day program are the eight seminars,open to all students, which will be jheld at Ida Noyes in the morning, |afternoon and evening. Directionsfor meeting places will be found inthe hall jtomorow. Students may at¬tend as many seminars as they havetime for, and it is suggested that theytry to get some preliminary informa¬tion on the seminar topics that theymay be able to participate in the dis¬cussion more profitably. Everyround-table group will select a mem¬ber to sum up their conclusions andpresent a report at the resolutionssession Friday.Name Discussion LeadersFrom 10 to 12, William Ballis willlead a discussion on “United StatesWar Preparations,’’ and E. B. Gar-man will head the seminar on “ThePart of Labor Movements in War.’’From 3:30 to 5:30, Maynard Kruegerwill discuss “War and Fascism,’’Wendell Hayes will lead a seminaron “Neutrality,’’ and Frank Spencer,of the American League against Warand Fascism, will head the group dis-!cussing “The League of Nations ^and Security.’’ The three eveningseminars, starting at 7:30, will be on 1“The History of the Student Peace |Movement,’’ led by Joseph Watseka, |president of the Chicago Youth As- jsembly, “Spain,’’ led by Clifton Ut-1ley, head of the Chicago Council of ;Foreign Relations, and “PropagandaTechniques,’’ with T. F. Gleek as;leader. Senior PicturesSeniors who wish to have theirpictures in the 1937 Cap andGown have only until Friday toget them taken. The photograph¬er will be in Room 16 LexingtonHall every day from 10 to 12 and1 to 4 until then. Friday at 4 isthe absolute deadline and no pic¬tures will be accepted after thatdate. Three DaysSeminars and SymposiumsFill Evening Programsof Conference.Loewenstein FindsNaziism^s Originin Time of Otto INaziism had its birth in 960 whenOtto the Great became the emperorof the Holy Roman Empire, statedPrince Hubertus zu Loewenstein inhis lecture on the “Origin and Riseof Naziism’’ in Social Science 122yesterday.It is taught by the present dayNazis that the failure of Germany’sthousand years of development is dueto the fact that that country becamea universal community, rather thana nationalist state.People in America, said the prince,do noj realize that the situation as itexists in Germany today is the finaldevelopment of the problems presentsince the establishment of the HolyRonvan Empire, and resolves into abattle between the tendencies ofnationalism and universal imperial¬ism.Germany would find the realiza¬tion of her ideals only in serving thatoccidental community set up by theempire. Factually, she was a reflec¬tion of all the various elements in theempire, and not a centralized form ofgovernment. As early as Napoleon,it was believed that the Roman idealof universality must be carried outif Europe would live. Napoleon, how¬ever, was too nationalistic too attainthis end, pointed out the prince.Speaking of Hitler, Prince Hub¬ertus remarked that he resembledgreatly the famed Aimee Semple Mc¬Pherson, in his oratorical and preach¬ing speeches. Despite his radicalprinciples and’drastic orations, Hit¬ler is always legal. He is legal to(Continued on Page 2)Left Wing Splitson Interpretationof Moscow TrialsChicago Federation of Labor OpposesPlans for City Manager GovernmentThe recently manifested oppositionof the Chicago Federation of Laborto proposals for a city manager formof government in Chicago was notunexpected in the opinion of JeromeG. Kerwin, associate professor of Po-i litical Science, and a member of theGideonse Disavows That F. D. R.Poisons Well-Springs of Freedom”By REX HORTONClaimed Monday’s issue of theWorld’s Greatest Newspaper: “TheRoosevelt administration through itsunion labor policy is poisoning thewell-springs of American freedom’’,Professor Harry Gideonse of the Uni-vesity of Chicago’s economics depart¬ment said yesterday before the Chi¬cago forum at 32 West Randolphstreet.’’Retorted Professor Gideonse yes¬terday: “The Roosevelt administra¬tion or the New Deal were not men¬tioned in either the lecture or thesubsequent discussion. There was,therefore, no reference to the ’laborpolicy’ of anyone at Washington atthis time.”Mnanwbilp wondered the campus: “Has ‘Uncle’ Harry joined the Lib¬erty League?”Continued the Tribune in its edit¬ing of the speech: “Unreasonable de¬mands on the part of organized labortend to create monopolies just asmuch as do the practices of some in¬dustrialists, he said. And both vic¬timize the great mass of unorganizedconsumers.”Pointed out Professor Gideonse inhis editing of the Tribune’s editingof his speech: “The main topic wasthe general trend to monopoly in allits varied manifestations, includingtrusts, employers’ trade associations. advisory board of the City ManagerCommittee.Similar opposition has been foundin Cleveland and other large citieswhere the labor unios are tied upwith the political regime in power.Professor Kerwin pointed out yester¬day.There are also several other rea¬sons for this opposition, he claimed.“Rumors are abroad that the citymanagers are efficiency experts whowill attempt to step-up things. Theyare also supposed to have an anti¬labor outlook. Another claim ad¬vanced by the opponents is that theplan is a movement of the intelli-gensia, and should, therefore, becondemned.”“They use the usual cry of ‘un¬democratic’ but they refused even togive the city manager committee achance to send speakers before thegroup,” he pointed out.“The action was not unexpectedbecause labor is generally opposed tothe city manager plan in large cities,particularly where the labor situationtariffs, trade unions, and so forth.There was a specific effort to distin- j is not so healthy,” concluded Profes'(Continued on page 3) j sor Kerwin. By JUDITH GRAHAMAn earmark of any discussion ofthe recent Moscow trials is heatedcontroversy. Approximately 28 menwere tried and condemned to deathby the Russian government, headedby Stalin, for being Trotskyists, andterrorists. Argument concerning theevidence presented during the trials,their background, and the possibleconsequences of them, has spreadthroughout the world, a bit of it set¬tling at this University in the process.This is shown by the fact that lastweek two speakers on the subjectwere presented on campus: EugeneDavid by the Communist Club, andMax Shachtman by the Socialist Club,and the latter group challenged theCommunists to a debate on the trials.The Socialists, holding that themen were convicted without any evi¬dence whatsoever, merely as one ofStalin’s measures for removing theold guard, have challenged the Com¬munists who maintain that the trialswere legitimate in all respects, to de¬bate the subject publicly. In a con¬ference of representatives, of the twogroups, the Communist Club laiddown the following conditions uponwhich it would debate: (1) That aTrotskyist does not speak for the So-1cialist Club; (2) That the SocialistClub speaker does not attack theStalin government, although theCommunist Club reserves the rightto attack Trotskyism; (3) That thediscussion be based on the historical(Continued on Page 2) When the third annual all-campuspeace conference opens with a sym¬posium on “The Student’s Part in thePeace Movement” in the lecture hallof Oriental Institute at 7:30 this eve¬ning, representatives from over 30campus organizations will be presentas delegates. Any classes wishing todo so may send delegates under thesame rules applying to organizations,with the exception that classroom del¬egates must get signatures of fiveclass members on the petition.Petitions, which are found on theback of the “Call,” should be signedby the president of the organizationor by five students if it is an indi¬vidual petition, and turned in to theregistration desk in Mandel Hallfrom 12:30 to 3:30 today, or at Ori¬ental Institute from 7 to 7:30 thisevening. There is a delegate’s fee of25 cents to cover costs of the con¬ference, which should be paid by theorganization or by individual dele¬gates. At the registration tables, rep¬resentatives will be given instructionsheets telling the procedure for nom¬inating 15 members of the resolutionscommittee and complete informationabout the conference program.Conference DinnerAt 6 Thursday evening delegatesand any other students interested inthe conference will meet at th Clois¬ter Club of Ida Noyes, where tableswill be reserved for a conference din¬ner. Students will buy their ownmeals and meet at one table for dis¬cussions and speeches.The resolutions session, most im¬portant part of the whole conferenceprogram, will meet at Ida Noyes onFriday from 2:30 to 5:30. Therethe credentials committee will reporton delegation to the conference, sem¬inar representatives will report onthe conclusions drawn from their dis¬cussions, and members of the resolu¬tions committee, selected by dele¬gates at the opening meeting, willmake the statement of policy theyhave decided upon. Richard Lind-heim, vice-chairman of the perman¬ent Peace Council in charge of ar¬rangements for the conference, stat¬ed, “The only resolutions put beforethe conference will be resolutions ofaction. We hope that organizationswill encourage discussion of desir¬able resolutions within their groups.”Sub Committee HeadsHeads of sub-committees planningthe peace conference are Beth Potter,in charge, of organization,* AudreyEichenbaum, publicity, Ruth Bloom,finance, and Quentin Ogren, incharge of the program committee.Arthur Zinkin heads the group check¬ing delegates’ credentials. Jack Loebis chairman of the Peace Council,which was set up following a resolu¬tion of the conference last year. PaulBerg was in charge of writing the“Call.”Charles E. Gilkey, dean of thechapel, is sponsor of the Peace Coun¬cil. He heads a list of 21 facultymembers sponsoring the conference.Sachar TalksStudent BeforeFoundationAddressing the members of theJewish Student Foundation today inIda Noyes Theater at 4, Dr. AbramSachar will speak on “Survivals, thatSpeak.” Dr. Sachar meets with thisgroup annually.Head of the Hillel Foundation ofthis country, and an authority onJewish student organizations. Dr.Sachar has, in previous years, adapt¬ed Jewish lore to modern problems.He is also well known for his char¬acter sketches of Bible figures.Refreshments will be served at theclose of the meeting. Compliment¬ary tickets for Dr. Sachar’s lecturetonight at the South Side HebrewCongregation Forum are still obtain¬able in The Daily Maroon office. Thesubject for this address will be “Newi Forces that Challenge Our Youth.”P«8® Two THE DAILY MAROW. WEDNESDAY. MARCH 3, 1937iatl^ iiarnanFOUNDED IN l»eiMember Associated Collegiate PressThe Dsitr Msroon is the ofTicisI student newspaper of theUatversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day. and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 46. and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the viewsof the University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearii g in this paper. Subscription rates:$8.76 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the poet officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3. 1879. -RKPRESENTCO PON NATIONAL ADVERTISING BYNational Advertising Service, IncCollege Publishers Represenutive420 Madison Ave. Nrw York. N.Y.Chicago - Boston • San hranciscoLos ANGELES • Portland • SeattleBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESBernice Bartels Edward Fritz Cody PfanstiehlEmmett Deadman El Roy Golding Betty RobbinsBUSINESS ASSOCIATESCharles Hoy Bernard Levine William RubachMarshall J. StoneEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJacquelyn AebyHarris BeckLaura BergquistMaxine BiesenthalRuth BrodyCharles ClevelandIx>rne CookJohn Cooper Paul FergusonJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisRex HortonHarry LeviJohn Marks Seymour MillerLaVerne Riess.Adele RoseBob SassLeonard SchermerCornelius SmithHarold SwansonDouglasBUSINESS ASSISTANTSEdwin Bergman Max Freeman HowardAlan Johnstone Doris Gentzler EMward GreenleeGustafsonSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendratb Donal HolwajNight Editor: Cody PfanstiehlAssistant: Douglas WareWednesday, March 3, 1937Peace Strike—Purposc^less AgitationOne of the main problems to be consideredat the sessions of the All-Campus Peace Con¬ference this evening, tomorrow, and Fridaywill be that of the Student Peace Strike. Weare asked by those particularly interested inthe peace movement to join students on hun¬dreds of campuses in a nation-wide demon¬stration against war. Surprisingly enough tothese advocates of the Peace Strike, consid¬erable opposition to it has arisen on campusfrom students equally sincere in their antagon¬ism to war. In the light of this division ofopinion, we feel that the reasons for andagainst the Strike bear careful analysis.One objection rather frequently encounter¬ed should be disposed of first. Both trite andfoolish, this is the argument that a "Strike" isimpossible at a University where class attend¬ance is not compulsory. It should be madeclear from the outset that the proposed dem¬onstration is against war and the possibility ofwar, and not in any way against the Univer¬sity administration. A change in nomencla¬ture—perhaps to Peace Parade — would besufficient to satisfy these objectors.On the other side of the question, thereseem to be three main arguments in favor ofthe Strike. The first contends that this is themost effective method of putting student de¬mands before the public and the government.We are inclined to disagree, however; we notonly doubt that the Strike is the most effectivepropaganda technique that can be used, butwe doubt whether it is at all effective. In thefirst place, such a demonstration representstoo vague a protest: it shows that students areintensely interested in the war question, but itin no way indicates what measures they thinkare necessary to prevent war. Secondly, webelieve that student demands can be moreThe ABC’sEconomic EvolutionBiological evolution was a tremendously wastefulprocess. In the interests of true progress it is im¬portant that in the realm of social and economicevolution the structure should remain plastic andflexible, and that such changes as are necessary toadjust the form and type of organization to new con¬ditions and the expression of new wants should bemade gradually from within rather than violentlyfrom without. Only so is it possible for the neworder to absorb all that was wise and valuable in theold.Warren B, Catlin,Ths iMhar Prnhlu-m effectively presented by the democratic meth¬od of petition.The second argument in justification of theStrike is that it represents preparation for thecourse that students should adopt in case wardoes occur. To parade for peace, we aretold.—in other words, to use the devices andsymbols commonly associated with militarismin support of a completely anti-ethical cause—would be an effective means of indicatingpopular refusal to support a government warprogram. We fear, however, that there is moreweakness than strength in this method. Themartial spirit is quite contagious: only a slightdisplay of it would be necessary to turn a par¬ade for peace into a parade for war.The way to develop a strong movementagainst war is not to demonstrate against it,but to educate public opinion against it—toshow that war is unnecessary and that cer¬tain measures can be taken to prevent it. ThePeace Strike can by no means be construedas a method of educating the public or thestudents. It is a propagandist device pure andsimple.But it is in this fact that the Strike finds itsonly justification. Before people can be edu¬cated it is necessary to arouse them from theirnatural indifference, to show them that a seri¬ous problem does exist concerning which theymay be able to take some constructive action.That is the real reason for the Peace Strike.The question immediately arises then: Whyhold the Peace Strike April 22? Why holdit after instead of before the Peace Confer¬ence? Beforehand, it would undoubtedly at¬tract students to the Conference where theymight begin to do some intelligent thinkingabout the war question. Afterwards, even ifit does succeed in calling to the attention ofsome the fact that a strong student peacemovement does exist, that interest will havedisappeared by the time educational activitiesin behalf of peace are resumed.We would enthusiastically support a PeaceStrike that served as a prelude to objectivediscussion and constructive action with regardto the problem of preventing war. We can¬not support, however, a Peace Strike thatmerely represents purposeless agitation.——J. A. K.The Travelling BazaarBy MEG TEFEXTRA MEERROURFLASHMirror HiccupsThe home town girl tripped expectantly across thestage Monday night at rehearsal to greet her longlost love. But instead of said Love dashing into herarms she was greeted by a projected burp from be¬hind stage.The tale ends not here. Said young lady trippedexpectantly across the same stage Tuesday nightand was greeted by—no one. Said lover was asleepin a chair backstage.Mirror Shake-Up“Now girls, pretty as you may be, attractive asyou all are, and much as we like you, we wouldgreatly prefer that you did not—”Tired voice from rear, drawling,“Get back girls, get back.”Mirror Make-Upas read by O’Hara:“Ponies in pantalettes, followed by ‘The Bottoms’sfallen out of Everything.’ ”‘Look here, Wagonner, you’ve got to take longerbackward steps.”“But, Doc Yungmeyer, I can’t do it!”“Good Lord, man, your legs are longer than mine.”“Yes, but Doc, I have on longer shoes!”Mirror Fake-UpThe lusty singing of The Internationale heard inMandel Corridor at midnight, is not the signal topage Mr. Walgreen—it’s Aida (As Odet’s would havewritten it.) Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSAchotfa. Room A of Ida Noyes at3.Arrian. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 12:30.Peace Conference. Opening ses¬sion. “The American Student andWar.” Robert Morss Lovett, LillianHerstein.* Oriental Institute at 8.Radio Club. “Tank Circuit Effici¬encies.” Franklin Offner. SmallLounge of Burton Court at 8.Jewiak Student Foundation. “Sur¬vivals That Speak,” Abram Sachar.Ida Noyes Theater at 4.Dames. Room A of Ida Noyes at10 a.m.Women’s Athletic Association. Li¬brary of Ida Noyes at 3:30.YWCA board. YWCA room at9:30 a.m.Recreation Committee of the Cha¬pel Union. Chapel office at 3:30.LECTURESPublic Lecture (School of SocialService Administration.) “The NewJersey Methods of Selecting . forParole.” The Honorable Winthrop D.Lane. Law South at 2:30.Public Lecture (Downtowm). “Cur¬rent Problems in Business. Robin-son-Patman Act—Aid or Obstacle toFree Enterprise?” Associate Profes¬sor Malcolm Sharp. The Art Instituteat 6:45.“Equality of Educational Oppor¬tunity. Regional Birth Rates and theSchool Loa’,.” Professor New’ton Ed¬wards. The Art Institute at 8.Public Lecture (InternationalHouse). “Trends in ModemThought: Music.” Associate Profes¬sor Carl Bricken. InternationalHouse Assembly Hall at 8:30.MISCELLANEOUSYWCA White Elephant Sale. Pri¬vate dining room, south receptionroom, and Alumnae room of IdaNoyes from 3:30 to 5.Luckhardt Elected toAnesthetists’ CollegeDr. Arno B. Luckhardt, professorof physiology at the University, hasben elected a Fellow in the Interna¬tional College of Anesthetists by theBoard of Governors of the Interna¬tional Research society. The honoris in recognition of Dr. Luckhardt’sdiscovery and development of ethly-ene as an anesthetic.r^PI7Y17l THEATRELHvIliAlltL 858 E. 63rdToday“GARDEN OF ALLAH” Loewenstein(Continued from page 1)the point of destroying the opposingfactor in the old German legislatureso that he might carry a legal ma¬jority, he commented. When askedabout propaganda being distributedby the Nazis, the prince said that theillegal publications in Germany large¬ly outnumber in circulation those of-fically recognized by the government.Discussing the possibilities of warin the near future, Prince Hubertussaid that he was firmly convincedthat Hitler was actually preparingfor such an event very soon. Concern¬ing the line of battle to be taken, hebelieved that Hitler would begin hisattack on Czechoslovakia, and event¬ually move into Poland.Left Wing(Continued from page 1)development of Trotskyism; and (4)That the Socialist speaker does notallege the trials were frame-ups.Submit Written Term*George Reedy, president of theSocialist Club, asked a representativeof the Communist Club if these con¬ditions were laid down to make thedebate impossible. He was answeredin the affirmative.The Socialist Club then asked thatthe conditions of the Communist Clubbe put in writing. The CommunistClub complied, but in its letter in¬cluded only the condition that a Trot¬skyist does not represent the So¬cialist Club. Lettersto the EditorTRULY LIBERAL?Editor,The Daily Maroon:In a truly liberal university whoseaims are genuinely intellectual thereis no basis for one group’s puttingup barriers against another groupbecause of differences in race or insocial background. Although it hasbeen professed that the Universityof Chicago is such a school, it is theplain truth that this ideal is far frombeing realized here. The fraternityand club system is only one expres¬sion of the discrimination that ispracticed in almost every phase oflife on this campus, the recent de¬cision of the Interfraternity Councilbeing merely an open denial of theprinciple of racial and social equal¬ity. We regret the practice of suchdiscrimination and should like to seethe principle of equality receive moresupport.The Chapel Union Board.Editor,The Daily Maroon:In reply to R.S.F. who yesterdayproposed a student night club oncampus?Dear sir, have you ever been toHanley’s?R.R.B.PLEDGINGWyvern announces the pledging ofShirley*Manheim of Chicago.Sweet as a well-seasoned pipe, on the firstsmoke I And the honey-curing keeps itsweet. Special attachment supplies (1)automatic free draft (2) double action oon-you can buy for $1.SWEET AS HONEYFrolic Theatre55th & ELLIS AVE. Warner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E 63rd St.Wed., Thurs., Fri.“THEODORA GOES WILD”“WHITE HUNTER” Wed. and Thurs.“WHITE HUNTER”“ARIZONA MAHONEY”Saturday“WE WHO ARE ABOUT TODIE”“COLLEGIATE” Fri. and Sat.‘THEODORA GOES WILD”“WE WHO ARE ABOUT TODIE”! Extra Special SaleFOR A LIMITED TIME ONLYRegular Price $4.95Green ormahoganyfinishAll steeltyping table14x20 inchesU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVE.COME IN AND SEE THEM FOR YOURSELFShding shelf12x13 inches Rubber rollersAlways theright heightforcomfortabletyping Keeps yourt3rpewriterhandy andreadyTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1937 Page ThreeBigelow TellsNew Law Planof Pre-Legals At OtherSchoolsMay Take Full New Plan,Four Year Course, orModified Plan.Centering his discussion of thenew Law School plan about arrange¬ments being made for transition stu¬dents, Dean Harry A. Bigelow yes¬terday told students that the newplan would go into effect progressive¬ly one year at a time, reiterating thatstudents now in the Law School willnot be affected at all by the intro¬duction of the new curriculum.Explaining the position of presentpre-legal students. Dean Bigelow saidthat they will be allowed to takeeither the full new plan, a four yearcourse, or a modified form of the newplan in a three year course coveringthe materials presented by the oldplan. According to Bigelow, the firstyear of this modified course will in¬clude Real Property and Criminal jLaw, old plan courses, as well as Con- ;tracts. Torts, Procedure, and Meth- iods and Materials under the new 'plan.The second and third years of thiscourse will also be designed to in- ;elude as many of the new plan;courses as possible, specialy those 'which cover old plan materials, with- jout eliminating materials now pre- isented under the old plan.Dikciuteg Summer SchoolDiscussing abandonment of the jsummer school, Bigelow emphasized :the need for close coordination be- ,tween all courses inherent in the new ;plan, pointing out that use of a sum-!mer school would make such unity jimpossible. He warned all studentsnow in the Law School intending to |do summer work to plan their pro-1grams carefully, as while all old plan 'courses scheduled for summer pre-1sentation will be given this year, only Ia restricted program of third year,work will be offered the next sum¬mer.Settling the much-debated exam¬ination question, Bigelow stated that icourses griven under the old plan will ibe followed by old style examina-1tions. Students under the modified Iplan may thus expect to take quar-'terlies in their old plan courses, but!will probably be examined in their Inew plan courses under the compre¬hensive system.Kappa Alpha PsiHolds Banquet toOp en 19th YearAt a banquet in the Coffee Shop iSaturday night, the University chap- 'ter of Kappa Alpha Psi, national |negro fraternity, celebrated the be- !ginning of its 19th year on the Uni- 'versity campus.The banquet was al.so a reunion be- |tween former graduates of the Uni¬versity and the present active mem¬bers. Special guests and speakers for jthe evening were Harold Gosnell, as- <sociate professor of Political Science ^and faculty advisor of the group; At¬torney Theopolis Mann, Grand Pole-maerh of the fraternity; Attorney J.Ernest Wilkins, Grand Keeper of Rec¬ords and Exchequer; Julius Morgan,Provincial Polemarch; Truman K.Gibson, Jr.; and two charter mem¬bers, Nelson Willis, first polemarchof the local chapter and Dr. JohnLewis of Peoria, Illinois. By ARETA KELBLE* • *The University of Wisconsin is do¬ing Chicago and the other Pontiacprogram entertainers one better. Assoon as the Board of Regents givesfinal approval, Warner Brothers willbegin the staging of a film, “VarsityShow” on the Madison Campus. Itwill be similar to West Point’s “Flirt¬ation Walk” and Princeton's “SheLoves Me Not.”* * «A group of Minnesota Alpha Del¬ta Phi brothers, veteran dead-eyepenny laggers, recently found them¬selves dubbed campus philanthrop¬ists. After displaying their art bytossing $3 worth of coins into a milkbottle, they discovered they were con¬tributing to flood relief.4> * *Of the 1,100 shirts collected week¬ly at Louisiana Tech, 575 are alwaysblue.* * •A short time ago men at OhioState decided that love is the causeof most scholastic failures. A start¬ling contradiction was revealed bya report of a similar survey at theUniversity of Toronto. The majorityof women students there were so in¬spired by their love affairs that theirstudies improved.* . .The Minnesota Daily made the dis¬covery that there were 3,379 lbs. ofdeans at Minnesota. Compositely theMinnesota dean is 5 feet 9 inches talland weighs 161 pounds.* *After his class told him he waswearing two neckties, a Universityof South Dakota professor confessedthat he rarely looked in a mirror, notwanting to be a dandy. Commentingon the incident he said he thought itsucceeded in breaking the monotonyof the class.* * *According to psychology ProfessorJenkins of Cornell, that institutionhas the largest collection of preserv¬ed brains in existence.* * *When the co-eds at the Universityof Utah went on a ki.ssing strike be¬cause of the great germ menace, thecampus slogan became “Science vs.Romance.” In order to remedy thesituation, the boys retaliated and or¬ganized a date strike. Latest re¬ports indicate that the boys won outin the deadlock. Perhaps the out¬come was a sit-down?« « •A student at the University ofCalifornia has found little compe¬tition in the line of work he has chos¬en to put him through college. Forthe past five years he has maintainedhimself in school entirely through hisearnings as a sleight-of-hand magi¬cian.Entertain Faculty at |Beecher Hall TonightBeecher Hall will hold its regularquarterly faculty dinner tonight, in¬viting elected members of the facul¬ty. Those present will include Mr.and Mrs. Harvey, Mr. and Mrs.Compton, Mr. and Mrs. Krueger, Mr.and Mrs. Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs.Kunstmann, Miss Koch, Miss Smith,Mr. Millett, and Mr. Brookens.This dinner is held each quarter,and is desigrned to bring closer con¬tact between faculty members andthe women of Beecher Hall.Johannsen Plans Bibliography of DimeNovels-^Features Beadle PublicationsBy CHARLES CRANEProfessor Albert Johannsen. lead-1 tales of the late 19th century, whiching American authority on the classi¬fication of rocks, is planning to writea bibliography on the dime novel.For years he has gathered dime nov¬els and now has a collection of over4,600 exciting, blood-tingling storiesincluding the first Deadwood Dickstory: “Deadwood Dick, the Princeof the Road, or The Black Rider ofthe Black Hills.”Last summer. Professor Johannsenhad a grand vacation reading dimenovels from 9 to 6 each day in therare book room of the library of Con¬gress at Washington. Out of hisreadings he assembled an extensivebibliography, especially of the Beadlepublications, which enjoyed greatpopularity in the Civil War days. Attimes they had a circulation of over600,000 copies, and were traded be¬tween battles by the Confederate andUnion soldiers. They were followedby the “black and whites,” famous in turn were succeeded by the col¬ored covered ones. Johannsen be¬lieves that in a sense the dime novelmay be regarded as the forerunnerof the modern “Wild West” and de¬tective magazines: it had thrillingcovers, was packed with action, butyet differed in being not vulgar andunsophisticated. In it the men hadto be heroes or villains, and the wom¬en, cha.«te and virtuous. In spite ofthe fact that it was the read-it-when-mother-isn’t-looking literature, hethinks that it was an early stage ofAmericana which had an-importantinfluence on the man in the street—better than the ‘pulp’ stuff of today.Professor Johannsen, w’ho will re¬tire next March, has other hobbieswhich he pursues in moments notspent in writing his four volumes onpetrology. He also collects first edi¬tions of Dickens, autographs of fam¬ous men, and original drawings ofdistinguished artists. IIItion.Death Takes FormerUniversity ProfessorServices for Edward S. Robinson,former assistant professor of Psy¬chology at the University and pro¬fessor of Psychology at Yale Uni¬versity were held Monday on theYale Quadrangles.Robinson served as a member ofthe University faculty from 1920 un¬til 1929. According to James Row¬land Angell, president of Yale andformer head of the University’s Psy¬chology department, his death“brings an irreparable loss to Yale,for he was a central figure in someof the most important educationaldevelopments (at New Haven).”D. A.(Continued from page 1)though “Green Grow the Lilacs” had |been written and bought by the Thea- jter Guild several years before, Riggswould not allow them to produce ituntil 1931 after he had supervisedit. Since then Riggs has written “ALantern to See By” and the Broad¬way success of last season, “RussetMantle.”When Riggs’ “Green Grow theLilacs” is presented in Mandel Hallon the evenings of April 22 and 23,it will not be the first time that theUniversity’s music department hascombined with the Dramatic Associa- VISIT OUR SHOW ROOMJ. A. LAVERY MOTOR CO.AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERA Large Selection of Used Cars6127 COTTAGE GROVE AVENUEKimbark House Co-operativeServes Inexpensive Meals to 80By MAXINE bTeSENTHALIt was 12:30 and the members ofthe Kimbark House co-operative weregathering for the noon day meal.About 80 of them, mostly men, werein the lounges, discussing classes, theweather. . .whatever Divinity Schooland Theological Seminary studentswould be apt to discuss while wait¬ing for luncheon to be served. Longbare tables in the two largest roomssuggested a picnic ground, or (hor¬rible thought) an institution of somesort.Lines formed outside the kitchen,where it seemed food was servedcafeteria style. Once safely seatedat the tables, with steaming plates ofsweetbreads and corn pudding beforethem, the members were willing todiscus the workings of a student eat¬ing co-operative.Expression of DissatisfactionThe co-operative, it was explained,had been established last year by agroup of students who had been dis¬satisfied too long with eating condi¬tions in the University community;set out for themselves determined toserve good and cheap meals threetimes a day to a congenial group ofstudents. Because the group wascomposed chiefly of Theological stu¬dents, the Chicago Theological Sem¬inary co-operated to the extent of al¬lowing the group to use KimbarkHouse, at 58th and Kimbark, as theirmeeting place.Complicated indeed is the workingof a student cooperative. Althoughthe kitchen is presided over by atrained dietitian, the organization isguided by a student council, electedeach quarter. One of the main dutiesof the council is to assign jobs tostudents who desire work with the co¬operative (dishwashing, cleaning,etc.), and who by virtue of thesehalf hour daily jobs are credited with$1 weekly toward their food. Financially the co-operative hasworked out to the satisfaction of themembers. Striving for a minimumfood cost, cutting out such “frills”as tablecloths, and careful budgetinghave led to a weekly charge of $4.09for those who do no co-operativework. When quarterly accounts re¬veal a profit, dividends are paid tomembers on the basis of money paidin.Luncheon over, the members left,satisfied with their carefully balancedmeal, which, though it might not de¬light a food connoisseur, representsthe solution to the daily eating prob¬lem of some eighty students. Gideonse(Continued from page 1)guish organizations on both the em¬ployers’ and the employees’ side thatare a menace to the free enterprisesystem from those that are neutralor even helpful to it.“To describe this as criticism ofthe New Deal is certainly due to false focus. Mr. Roosevelt has indeed en¬couraged trade unions—and, in nayjudgment, this strengthens monopo¬listic tendencies—but have Republi¬cans or ‘old deal’ Democrats discour¬aged holding companies, corporatemonopoly or tariff privilege.“Today even “freedom of thepress’ is primarily invoked by thosewho in varying degree control thepotential competition in their owntrade.”STINEW AY’S—HEADQUARTERSFOR COSMETICS AND ALLBEAUTY NEEDSSTINEWAY’S DRUC STORE57th and KenwoodSPRINGSHOESforCampus or DressGabardine and Patent<2^ and ’2^947 E. 63 rd Street(at Ellis Ave.)Shoes Repaired While YouWait. THE CAP & GOWNUnusual campus photography . . . modem art . . . interesting com¬ment ... a faithful record in words and pictures of your cc^egelifd... and of your friends* university progress ... a lasting referenceto the best years of your life.SUBSCRIBE TODAY AND HELP YOUR FAVORITE CONTEST¬ANT WIN ONE OF THE BIG CASH PRIZES ... YOU’LL BE DaING BOTH HIM AND YOURSELF A BIG FAVOR . . . ONLY$3.50 AND $1.50 DOWN WILL RESERVE YOUR COPY FORYOU.The 1937 Cap & GownOffice in Lexington HallPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 1937Dekes Take Championship inIntramural Basketball Tourney i- iBeat Psi U, Phi Sigs in'Fraternity A, B ClassFinals.The Dekes won the fraternity i Musty Banners Tellof Grandeur ofPastclass A championship in the Intra- imural basketball tournament last |night, by trouncing Psi U, 27-14. Led iby the Murphy brothers, who scored 117 points between them, the Dekeshad little trouble keeping last year’s}champs well in hand. The score at |the half was 11-5 and at no time wasthe game in much doubt.In the second game of the eveningthe Ladies Aid advanced to the finalsof the independent division by defeat¬ing Goodspeed Hall 29-23 in a fastgame. The outstanding player of theevening was Cannon of the Ladies’Aid who tossed in seven baskets andthree free throws. Thursday, Burton600. meets Hoffer’s Reds for the right |to meet them in the independent fin- jals. IThe Dekes made the evening com- jplete by taking the class B fraternitycrown from Phi Sig ‘X’ by the scoreof 28-11.Dake <27 fg ft p'Psi U (14) fg ft pF*areed. f 2 0 2 Cochran, f 4 0 1W. Murphy, f 5 1 2| Lawson, f 2 10Phemister, f 1 0 O'Upton, f 0 0 0Phenister, f 1 0 0| Bickel, c 0 0 0Graemer, c 10 0 Bell, g 0 0 0C. Murphy, g .3 0 L Button, g 0 10Lewis, g 1 0 l!Skoning. g 0 0 2i113 1 8i 6 2 1 IJust for fun ... |Get in the swim at Ida !NoyesWednesdays: 7:30-9:00Fridays: 4:45-5:30 j In a musty room to the right asyou enter Bartlett Gymnasium, arehoused the trophies won in athleticcontests, impressing the visitor withthe grandeur of the old days whenthis University ranked as high insports as certain others do now.Trophy cases line the walls of theroom, while from the moulding hangtattered and frayed banners won forthe most park in track meets.The greater part of the cases arefilled with half inflated basketballsand footballs with the score of thegames on them. In one case are 26footballs, trophies of the games withPurdue between 1899 and 1924. Dur¬ing this time Purdue only scored sixtimes, tied the University once andnever won.At the back wall are two cases fill¬ed with baseballs used in games inJapan. In the center of the case isthe pitching glove used by Jack Page,star player and later coach of theUniversity.It must be admitted that there isa certain feeling of mustiness aboutthe place. The room is a gentle re¬minder of the days when the Univer¬sity was playing Notre Dame, theHaskell Indians, Virginia, and Ne- !braska on equal terms.The most conspicuous trophy won |recently is the large cup donated by ;Mrs. Knute Rockne, and won by JayBerwanger for being the captain of jthe All-American football team. iCLASSIFIED ADSStudents Typing Service. Classi- jfied Ad. Dorothy Ann Cahill. 5649 :Dorchester Ave. Men, Women HaveFun in MixedSwimming PeriodsEvery Wednesday evening at theIda Noyes swimming pool increasingnumbers of men and women studentsare taking advantage of the oppor¬tunity of the “mixed” recreationalswimming period. From 7:30 to 9,for the nominal fee of 10 cents, bothsexes may enter the pool on Wednes¬day nights.Friday afternoons, from 4:45 to5:30, is also a time when the pool isopen to both sexes. Although thelovelier sex is provided with hand¬some black wool suits, the boys areforced by the nature of things tobring their own suits.Accommodations for men are atpresent only temporary, bpt if thepool continues to be as popular inthe future as it has been, permanentquarters will probably be assigned tothem. During the spring quarter, asmore people are interested in swim¬ming then, Friday evenings will alsoprobably be used as a mixed recrea¬tion period.Although these swimming periodsare strictly recreational, a life guardis always present who is glad to as¬sist the beginners, especially thewomen.Conference Track Meetto Be Held March 12-13As the conference season of dualtrack meets draws to a close thisweek-end, such stars as Lash andDeckard of Indiana, Graves of Iowa,and Halcrow of Chicago will be pre¬paring for the annual Big Ten indoortournament to be held in the Field-house March 12 and 13, accordingto T. N. Metcalf, athletic director.C-Books will not be good for ad¬mission, Metcalf stated. Girls’ BasketballDrags on to DismalNeglected FinaleBy DOLLY THOMEEThe girls basketball tournament,which no one is interested in, leastof all the players themselves, con¬tinues feebly on. So far, almost halfof the games have been defaulted ashalf the team failed to show up. Ofthe remaining half, all of the playersare lousy, with the exception of thosethat are too lousy to be mentioned.The only interesting game of theseason was an exciting game whichtook place on February 18 betweenBeecher and the University Settle¬ment girls. The Beecher girls, whoall have the advantage of greatheight and brawn—I’m not sure abouttheir I Q’s—were defeated 40 to 18 bythe settlement girls, who are all un¬der-privileged, under-nourished, andfar below the average in height.No one cares when, how, or wherethis tournament comes to its finale. Swordsmen Have Best Chance ofBringing Championship to MidwayRifle Club EntersNavy Pier MeetTiny Minnesota StarOvercame HandicapSmall men in the University cantake heart from the example of Gor¬don Addington, diminutive star for¬ward of the Minnesota basketball fiveas the little boy who made good onthe conference-leading aggregationwhich will play here Saturday. Gor¬don, who is the smallest player on thesquad is also the leading scorer.The greater part of Addington’sfriends scoffed at him when he de¬clared that he was going out for bask¬etball. In Minnesota there wereplenty of Tall boys whom his friendsthought would outplay him because oftheir physical advantage, Gordonhowever took his athletics seriouslyand went hard to work at it. His re¬sults are a moral lesson. A four-man team composed of Free¬man Morgan, Hugh Bennett, GeorgeMatousek, and Scott Harvey or HenryMiller will represent the Universityof Chicago Rifle and Pistol Club inthe meet being held in conjunctionwith the National Sport and MotorShow now being staged at Navy Pier.The meet is under the auspices ofthe Illinois State Rifle Associationand sponsored by the Chicago DailyNews. Several girl sharpshooters areplanning to enter the 20-shot pronecontest for women to be fired Friday.These matches are to be fired anytime between 1 and 10.Rachel Reese broke her own recordof 172 in the four position string byperforating the target to the tune of180. Only seven men have everreached that degree of proficiencywith a shooting iron since the clubwas actively started last year.The varsity rifle squad lost atough postal meet to the Universityof Mississippi, 1806 to 1784, la.9tweek-end. 2000 was the highest pos¬sible score.The University of Minne.sota over¬whelmed the local lads by a score of1406 to 1309. This is the highestscore the Maroons have made in apossible 1500, and also the highestscore that has been made againstthem. Hugh Bennett led the Chicagomarksmen in each meet. The pistolteam won its first meet from the HydePark YMCA by 98 points.Hugh Bennett leads both the three-position ladder and the four-positionladder with scores of 264 and 183 re¬spectively. Rachel Reese tops thewoman shooters with a score of 195,while Charles Speer has taken overthe leadership of the pistol ladderwith 180. There is only one sport in whichChicago has high hopes of winning aconference championship this quar¬ter, besides in water polo. Thatsport is fencing, which is compara¬tively little-known in the Universitywhere the Big Ten crown usually re¬sides—Chicago.The Maroons, including three skill¬ed sophomores, are now tied with Il¬linois at the top of the heap, bothteams having an average of 9.8 boutswon per meet, or well over half ofthe 17 bouts fenced. Illinois hasfenced its last conference tilt, butChicago has one left—against thelast-place Purdue aggregation atBartlett gymnasium Saturday after¬noon at 2:30.To retain the championship whichthey brought to the Midway last year,the Maroons must win ten boutsfrom the Boilermakers Saturday,which would not seem so difficult inview of the fact that Purdue has yetto win a Big Ten meet this year. Butfencing is a sport in which, even morethan most other sports, the resultscannot be forecast with certainty.The impending meet, first majorfencing conflict held on the homestrip this year, will provide campu^sports fans perhaps their only chanceto see a home team annex a crown.Third in the conference race isOhio State, with only a statisticalchance of winning out. Fourth isNorthwestern and fifth is Wisconsin.Co-captain Henry Lemon has ledthe Maroon attack with a .791 aver¬age in bouts won and lost in epee.Next come Ned Fritz and Ed Gust¬afson in sabre with .714, followed byco-captain Jim Walters in foil with.666. The entire Maroon team, in¬cluding also Irv Richardson, CharlesCorbett, and Herb Strauss, has scor¬ed consi.stently.You hear somebody com¬pliment Chesterfields at aparty. Another time, thegrocer tells you it*s a darn ,good cigarette. Or you seea group of men on a streetcorner, most of "em smok¬ing Chesterfields.Because they have whatsmokers like. Chesterfieldsare humming right along,,All over the country, you hear morepeople mention the refreshing mild¬ness and thepleasingtaste andaromaof Chesterfield cigarettes.CopTtiatif 1937, LiGGi-Tr & Mye*s Tobacco Co.