oPIie BaCtp iManionVol. 37. No. 82. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1937 Price Three Cent*Senior ClassInvites 'AprilFools’to DanceEntertain Student Bodyat Novelty Party NextFriday.As the first in a series of func¬tions sponsored by the Senior classcouncil, an April Fool dance will beffiven in the Ida Noyes gym Fridayafternoon from 3:30 to 6.Planned as a novelty party inkeeping with the spirit of the day,the seniors will present the RhythmClub Orchestra, a well known ten-piece swing unit. Featured withthis colored band will be *‘Sazy-Swingit”, a singer of songs who doesnot confine her entertaining to hervocal chords. The decision to en¬gage this swing band was made be¬cause of the succe.ss of the recentbenefit “jam session” that was heldin Mandel hall.Preview BlackfriarcOther entertainment will include apreview of the 1937 edition of Black-friars, with popular campus starsgiving advance notice of the comingshow. In keeping with the season,an egg-rolling contest has beenplanned for seniors; the ammunitionconsisting of real eggs of the hard-boiled variety and the prize to thewinner being a year’s subscription tothe Alumni magazine. Another sub¬scription to the magazine given bythe Alumni association will be award¬ed to the winner of the title of‘‘Senior April Fool.” This dubioustitle will be applied to the winnerthrough popular vote at the party,after nominations made at the door.Prizes will also be awarded to the“Sweetest Spring Couple” chosen atthe dance and there will also be adoor prize. The latter two eventswill be open to underclassmen as wellas seniors.Dane* InformalInformality will be the theme ofthe dance, it was stated by DanHeindel, chairman of the sub-com¬mittee in charge of arrangements.Although given under the auspices ofthe Senior class, the party is opento all .students, and any proceeds willgo towards a senior gift to the Uni¬versity. Heindel added that it wasthe desire of the committee to makethe dance appealing to all groups andindependents, and to that end it wassuggested that it be not a “date” af¬fair, but that stags of both sexes feelfree to attend.Tickets will be available todaythrough campus salesmen at 25 centsa person. Herman Schulz is incharge of tickets, and Betty Ellisand John Mattmiller are assisting Ingeneral arrangements, in addition tothe members of the Senior classcommittee. Elect Zimmermann,’01, to Position onBoard of TrusteesHerbert P. Zimmerman, a leaderin University of Chicago alumni ac¬tivities for many years, has beenelected to the Board of Trustees ofthe University, it was announced to¬day by Harold H. Swift, president ofthe Board. Mr. Zimmerman is a vice-president and a director of the R.R, Donnelley and Sons Co.V Mr. Zimmerman has been succes¬sively president of the ChicagoAlumni Club; chairman of the Alum¬ni Committee on Development dur¬ing the University’s developmentcampaign of 1924-26; and presidentof the Alumni Association and chair¬man of the Alumni Council. He isat present chairman of the AlumniCommittee on Information and De¬velopment.Prior to his graduation from theUniversity in 1901 Zimmerman wasmanaging editor of the Cap andGown, member of the editorial-staffof the University of Chicago Week¬ly; and member of the Psi Upsilonfraternity and of Owl and Serpent. Blaekfriars NameShmv:' AnnouncePoster Contest“One Foot in the Aisle,” will bethe title of the forthcoming Black-friars production by Paul Wagner,according to an announcement madeyesterday. The book has been com¬pletely rewritten.A poster contest and the award¬ing of the costume contract werealso announced. The group urgesall persons interested in entering theposter contest to attend a meetingtomorrow afternoon at 3:30 in theBlackfriars office. Room B of Rey¬nolds Club.The costume contract has beenawarded to Robert Weiss, a Univer¬sity alumnus. He will be assistedby Betty Saylor, also a former Uni¬versity student. Both have had con¬siderable experience working fordowntown firms.The show will be given on May 7,8, 14, and 15 in Mandel Hall.University Authorities Praise HighCourt for New Stand on New DealCommenting upon the sudden re¬versal of form displayed by the Su¬preme Court yesterday in upholdingthe constitutionality of the railwaylabor act, the Frazier-Lemke farmmortgage act, and the Washingtonstate minimum wage law for women.University professors praised theCourt for daring to overrule prece¬dent in favor of the demands of thepublic interest and speculated uponthe outcome of the important Wag¬ner Labor Relations Act case, whichthe Court must soon decide.Malcolm P. Sharp, as.sociate pro¬fessor of Law, commented:“The decisions remind* us that themembers of the court in pa.ssing onconstitutional issues act more likestatesmen than like Judges in pri-ate cases. The minimum wage de¬cision is a healthy exercise of thecourt’s well-recognized power tooverrule unsatisfactory precedents.The most controversial of the laborcases now before the Supreme Court,that involving the National LaborRelations Act, is still undecided, andit will be interesting to see what de¬cision is reached there.”Paul H. Douglas, Professor of Eco¬nomics, made the following commenton the minimum wage decision in¬volving the Washington state law:“I am vei’y much pleased that thecourt has changed its mind on thiscase. The decision indicates thatMr. Justice Roberts, who changed hisvote, may have been influenced bythe storm of popular disapprovalwhich arose after the earlier decisionon the New York state law. I alsothink that there are several other decisions of the court which need tobe changed as well.”Raleigh W, Stone, Associate Pro¬fessor of Industrial Relations, said:’“The minimum wage decision is'an historic one, since Chief Justice De Mille Speaksin Moody SeriesProminent Author, Direct¬or Will Discuss MotionPicture as an Art.Producer, director, author, andlecturer, William C. deMille will dis¬cuss “The Motion Picture as an Art”in the Moody Foundation lectureTuesday, April 13. Possessing a dip¬loma from the American Academy ofDramatic Arts, he has since 1914served as producer and director forParamount, Pathe and Metro-Gold-wyn-Mayer studios.Educated in Germany and Colum¬bia University, deMille received hisstage training in New York from1902-1914. Since that time his pic¬tures have included “Tenth Avenue,”“Craig’s Wife,” “The Doctor’s Se¬cret,” “Idle Rich,” “This MadWorld,” and “Passion Flower.” In1932 he directed “Two Kinds ofWomen” for Paramount and in thenext year he co-directed “His DoubleLife” for the same company.Author of “Strongheart,” “TheWarrens of Virginia,” “The Wom¬an,” and many other plays andsketches, he is also a regular contrib¬utor to magazines.Tickets to the lecture, to be heldin Lfon Mandel hall, may be obtain¬ed without charge at the InformationOffice after April 7.Established in 1917 by an anony¬mous donor in honor of WilliamVaughn Moody, famous poet andone-time member of the Universityfaculty, the foundation has aimed atHughes explicitly states that it over-‘“1,? e'ivi"n7’thrs7udentr”an'Opportunityto come in touch with “great mindsand large subjects.” Other speakersthis year have been William E.Doublas, Charles E. Clark, Dr. LinYutang, and William C. Kittredge.dent. He makes an interesting dis¬tinction between the ideas of free¬dom of contract and liberty; preserva¬tion of freedom of contract is notin the Constitution, but a person maynot be deprived of his liberty with¬out due process of law. Apparently,the court feels that, under modemconditions, in order to secure libertyit is necessary to interfere withfreedom of contract. In this case itis felt that the public interest justi¬fies a law regulating the wages ofwomen and minors. The same dis¬tinction might justify a law regulat-in the wages and hours of men, al¬though that issue was not involvedin this case.”Northwestern Board of PublicationsRefuses Resignation of Editorial HeadBy REX HORTONRefusal of the Board of Publica- Unary recommendation,tions of Northwestern University toaccept the resignation of theeditorial chairman of the DailyNorthwestern yesterday closed thecensorship” dispute which has rag¬ed since last Wednesday on theEvanston campus, according to Pro¬fessor William Slaughter, actinghead of the Medill School of Jour¬nalism. The position of the Boardof Publications will be clarified in astatement which will appear in to¬morrow’s Daily Northwestern.Last Tuesday night Julian Behr-stock. Daily Northwestern editorialchairman, submitted his resignationaccording to the Daily, “in protestagainst the Board of Publications’order to print a statement fromPresident Scott’s office on the Navyissue and its refusal to allow an an¬swer.” The incident came about fol¬lowing criticism by the Daily North¬western for several weeks of theROTC officers for their issuance ofa bulletin the day after a studentemergency peace campaign meetingreading, “Any member of the navalunit taking part in any round-tablediscussion sponsored by any com¬munist organization without approv¬al of this office is aobject to ^cip- It was contended by Behrstockthat “a false interpretation of the is¬sue is given by the statement of thepresident’s office, which is printed atthe order of the Board of Publica¬tions, and that the refusal to allowhim to print an answer is the worstkind of censorship.”The board of Student Publications,composed of three students, threefaculty members, and one alumnus,which has full control over the elec¬tion of editors, will point out in abulletin tomorrow in the Daily North¬western that it has refused to acceptthe resignation and that it stands Add Professorsto UniversityKirkwood of Cornell andWheland of England,Join Chemistry Faculty.firmly behind the editor in his rightto print the news. It will outline the] his Ph.D. in June, 1929.Dr. John G. Kirkwood of CornellUniversity, winner of the 1936Award in Pure Chemistry given bythe American Chemical Society, hasaccepted appointment as associateprofessor in chemistry at the Uni¬versity, Dr. Emery T. Filbey, vicepresident of the University, an¬nounced today.Appointment of Dr. George W.Wheland, now in England on a Gug¬genheim Fellowship, as instructor inthe chemistry department, also wasannounced.Distinguished in the field of physi¬cal chemistry. Dr. Kirkwood hasdone notable work on the dielectricor non-conducting properties of mat¬ter under high pressure. He has en¬gaged also in special theoreticalstudies of inter-molecular forces.Born in Oklahoma in 1907, Dr.Kirkwood went to the California In-.stitute of Technology from 1923 to1925. He received his B.S. degreefrom the University of Chicago in1926. His graduate work was doneat M.I.T., from which he receivedHe was a University PutsFive on Probationfor Pontiac IncidentFor their part in distributing leaf¬lets condemning support of the Pon¬tiac Company’s Varsity Show, fivestudents have been placed on proba¬tion by the University. This was re¬vealed yesterday when the letterswritten to the offenders by AssistantDean of Students Leon P. Smithwere made public.Anne Borders, Daniel House, Leon¬ard Karlin, Beatrice Schonberg andJoan Shalit were those placed on pro¬bation. Copies of the letters notify¬ing the students of the probationwere also sent to their parents.The text of the letter was:My dear :As a result of your confessedviolation of University regula¬tions, by distributing, or causingto be distributed, handbills onthe campus without the permis¬sion of this office, you are here¬by placed on strict probation. Ifin the future you give any causefor complaint, your entire rec¬ord will be investigated and thisprobation will weigh heavilyagainst you.Very truly yours,Leon P. SmithAssistant Dean of Students.Distribution of the leaflets, whichproclaimed in huge letters “Don’t Bea Scab!”, precipitated a vitriolic edi¬torial controversy in which TheDaily Maroon asked if the AmericanStudent Union was being used byoutside radical organizations, andimmediately became accused by theAmerican Student Union of beingFascist and by Phoenix of being thetool of the Publicity Office.Change Library Arrangements OverSpring Vacation; See Improved ServiceCompletion for the first time ofthe University library system’s planto provide students with indispens¬able texts at their convenience isforeseen by M. Llewellyn Raney asthe outcome of changes in library or¬ganization initiated during Springvacation.The Buildings and Grounds depart¬ment Saturday completed altera¬tions of the Harper Reading Roomto provide facilities for enlarged ref¬erence and reserve book collections.Similar work nears completion in theCollege library, the Modern Lan¬guages library, and the BusinessSchool library.Appropriate FundsThe extensive program of libraryimprovement W2ls approved at ameeting of the Library Board onMarch 15. At that time, in excessof their ordinary budget, the li¬braries were empowered to spend$4000 for duplicate copies of booksused in the College survey courses,procedure which may be employedby persons feeling they have beenunfairly treated by the paper. Itwill further point out that the edi¬tors will be required to clear newswith Professor Slaughter before pub¬lication, not for the purpose of con¬trolling policy but to be certain offactual correctness.Professor Slaughter stated thatthe Board has no desire to persecuteanyone, but only to provide for acompletely objective attitude on thepaiL uf thu editors. National Research Fellow at HarvardUniversity in the latter part of 1929and in 1930. He returned to M.I.T.where he served as research asso¬ciate in 1930-31, then becoming anInternational Research Fellow inGermany in 1931 and 1932.Dr. Wheland is a graduate of Dart¬mouth college. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University. In ad-tion to his present studies at Uni-ersity College in London, he has doneresearch work at the California In¬stitute of Toebnolngy Senate CommitteeConsiders CollegeProgram ChangesThe Senate Committee on Univer¬sity Policy will meet this afternoonat 3:30 to consider the curriculumfor the new Four Year College. Theprogram has been approved by theFaculty of the present college alongwith the inclusion of a suggested pro¬gram of physical education.Following the action of the com¬mittee this afternoon, the Senate asa whole will have to approve the cur¬riculum before it is put into effect.It was indicated yesterday that aspecial session of the Senate will beconvoked for this purpose.For the next few years at least,work under the Four Year Collegeprogram will be confined to studentsof University High School. The Uni¬versity does not expect for severalmore years to draw many out-of-townstudents who have completed only thefirst two years of high school. Be¬fore the University can begin to tapthis source of students for the FourYear College, both an expansion ofthe physical plant for teaching pur¬poses and a rearrangement of livingquarters for students will be neces¬sary. placed in the Harper Reading Room,$2000 for new reference works to beand $2000 for “other reserve books.”To alter physical plants wherevernecessary to accommodate new booksan appropriation of $8000 wasgranted.From the Harper Reading Roomreserve books and periodicals havebeen moved to the adjoining roomformerly used for periodicals and thedoor from this room to the East tow¬er has been unlocked. Newspapersand magazines not on reserve arenow shelved at the east end of theReading Room. Expanded shelfroom has been provided to accom¬modate book purchases. It is con¬tended that separation of the reservefrom the reference function of thelibrary will tend to eliminate noise.Improve CobbIn the Cobb library to accommo¬date expansion of book supply thewall between stack rooms has beenbroken through and the enlargedindispensable readings. Optionalreadings have been removed to Cobbarea will be used exclusively to house307 which will ibe unlocked four(Continued on page 3) Begin to W orkon RemodelingGoodpeed HallTrustee Epstein DonatesCollection for New ArtBuilding.Work began last week on the re¬modeling of Goodspeed Hall, one ofthe original buildings on the quad¬rangles, to provide a new home forthe department of art which is nowsituated in an old residence at 60thSt. and Ellis Ave.Henceforth Goodspeed will housethe university Art Library foundedby Max and Leola Epstein. Epstein,a frequent benefactor of the Uni¬versity and a member of the Boardof Trustees, is contributing some200,000 reproductions of paintingsand drawings duplicating the collec¬tion of Sir Robert Witt of London,the world’s most famous art refer¬ence collection. Epstein also has adistinguished private collection ofold masters of the French and Italianschools, including two paintings byBotticelli.Provide* MaintenanceEpstein is, in addition, giving afund, rumored to be about $100,000to provide for the reconstruction ofthe building and its maintenanceover a period of years. This con¬tribution is a part of Epstein’s onemillion dollar pledge to the Univer¬sity made several years ago.The counterpart of the Witt col¬lection, now being prepared, willgive exceptional material for theteaching and study of the history ofart and comparative art.The Divinity school students form¬erly living in Goodspeed have beenmoved to Snell Hall, it was announc¬ed today. Both buildings will retaintheir original names.In its new location, the art depart¬ment will have complete facilitiesfor its work when the reconstructionis completed next autumn.Appoint Managers ofFraternity AgencyThe appointment of Frank Pesekand Robert Ulbrich as co-managersof the Fraternity Cooperative Pur¬chasing Agency was announced yes¬terday by Waldemar Solf. retiringmanager of the Agency, who is va¬cating his post now in order that thenew managers may have plenty oftime in which to work into their newjobs.Pesek, a graduate student in Po¬litical Science, and a member of PhiDelta Theta, has had experience withthe commissary department and willserve in an advisory capacity. Ul¬brich, Chi Psi, and High School Man¬ager of Blackfriars, will handle theaccounting.Miss McAuley, FCPA dietitian,will continue as dietetical advisor tothe three houses—Alpha Delta Phi,Phi Delta Theta, and Delta Upsilon,which have signified their intentionof utilizing the service this quarter.Profs’ Cigar-Box Fiddle, Dime NovelsHeadline Reynolds Club Hobby ExhibitSome may say, “Nuts.”But those members of the Univer¬sity community who are richly im¬bued with the fun-loving spirit of“You Can’t Take It With You” haveto smile admiringly when they seeor hear about the hobbies some ofthe most dignified professors profess.Dr. Harold Swenson heads the listby virtue of his variety. Oil paint¬ings, Tahitian swords and ornaments,box-kodak photos of Tahiti women,and the cigar-box fiddle used whenthe young professor made a livingon the vaudeville stage were all ex¬hibited by him at the big hobby showin the Reynolds Club during springvacation. Furthermore, Dr. Swensonsardined a capacity audience into theSouth Lounge when he opened theannual spring vacation entertain¬ment series with a lecture and dem¬onstration on hypnotism.Dr. Albert Johannsen, retired pro¬fessor of Petrology, or rocks to the4 By NED FRITZmoney-minded, was second in fameamong the exhibitors at the uniqueshow sponsored by energetic HowardMort, manager of the Reynolds Club.But Johannsen did not exhibit rocks.He proudly presented samples of his4,500 dime novel magazines, includ¬ing one copy which cost him $3000in cold cash.Professor emeritus of Botany, Dr.C. J. Chamberlain chose to exhibitnot rare arborea nor flora, but anold notched Springfield rifle he usedin training University students tofight in the Great War.University employees and studentsalso displayed their hobbies in theshow.This is the first big hobby showMort has produced, and the thirdseries of spring programs aimed atcheering students who could notspend vacation at home. Both metwith such clattering success thatMort is already looking forward tonext spring vacation.7►N The Daily Maroon i» the official atudent newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The l^ily 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 appear!: g in this paper. Subscription rates:$2.75 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.i(-.-neseNTEO poa national aovcrtisins avNational Advertising Service, IncColltg* Puhlishers RePrfseatattvt420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.Chicaoo • Boston • San FranciscoLos ANSELeS • 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 Frit* Cody PfansUehlEmmett Deadman El Roy Golding Betty RobbinsBUSINESS ASSOCIATESCharles Hoy Bernard Levine William RubachMarshall J. StoneEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJacquelyn AebyHarris BeckLaura BergquistMaxine BiesenthalRuth BrodyCharles ClevelandLome CookJohn Cooper Paul FergusonJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisRex HortonHarry LeviJohn Marks Seymour MillerLaVerne RiessAdele RoseBob SassLeonard SchermerCornelius SmithHarold SwansonDouglas ■’’’ireEdwin BergmanJerome Ettelson BUSINESS ASSISTANTSAlan Johnstone Howard GreenleeMax Freeman Edward GustafsonDoris GentzlerSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwayNight Editor; Cody PfanstiehlAssistants: Seymour Miller and Harry J. LeviTi -»dmy, March 30, 1937Censorship at NorthwesternOfficial university censorship, that tradition¬al bogeyman of college editors, is again seri¬ously menacing journalistic freedom, and thistime very near to our own backyard. We re¬fer to the resignation of the editorial chairmanand several members of the editorial board ofthe Daily Northwestern because of an orderto print a statement from the president’s officewithout editorial comment or answer.For several weeks the paper has attackedthe Department of Naval Science and Tacticsbecause of a notice to students in the navalROTC that “any member of the naval unittaking part in any round-table discussion spon¬sored by any communist organization with¬out approval of this office is subject to dis¬ciplinary recommendation.” This notice ap¬peared the day following an all-campus emer>gency peace campaign meeting and was inter¬preted by the paper as an implication on thepart of the naval department officers that themeeting was sponsored by communists.The statement from the president’s office,which purported to end the controversy, wasin the nature of a clarification of the policy ofthe Naval department. It read, in part: *'n$6department . . . does not restrict . . . any stu¬dent in the naval ROTC unit from takingpart ... in any campus discussion in his ownpersonal capacity . . . The department . . . hasobjected to any member . . . representing thenaval unit without sanction of the depart¬ment.” Accompanying the order to printthis statement was a refusal to allow the edi¬tors to comment further on the issue, or toclarify their charge that the naval officials were“violating the freedom on which the univer¬sity most prides itself.”Nor is the Daily Northwestern the only col¬lege paper which is forced to battle universityauthorities on the question of censorship. Sucha fight has been waged, valiantly but thus farvainly, by the Daily Texan since the summerof last year. The president of the Universityof Texas sums up his attitude in a few words:“The Texan is not a newspaper, but is an an¬nex to the university. We don’t want the uni¬versity to suffer when the paper forgets this.”Accordingly, the paper is directed to “employan agent to examine prior to publication allproposed non-advertising contents of each is¬sue,” with the power to “exclude libelous ma¬terial, improper personal attacks, reckless ac¬cusations, opinion not based on fact, inac¬curate statements, articles on national, state,and local political questions, indecencies, ma¬ terial detrimental to good conduct of thestudent body, and material prejudicial to thebest interests of the university and any ma¬terial in conflict with good taste or wise edi¬torial management. . All of which seems toleave little room within which the editors mayfreely determine the policy of the paper.On the Midway, the University may trulypride itself on its policy which imposes noform of censorship whatsoever on any of thecampus publications. Recognized by the Uni¬versity as a student owned and operated pap¬er, The Daily Maroon is free to print the opin¬ions of its editors on any issue. The attitudeof the University, stated in the second para¬graph of the masthead at the top of this page,is, sensibly, that all opinions in the paper arestudent opinions, for which the University as¬sumes no responsibility.In appreciation of this attitude, the editorsof The Maroon at all times endeavor to con¬duct the paper in a manner consistent with thebest interests of the University. Occasionally,therefore. The Maroon will voluntarily delay orwithhold publication of certain information,the premature appearance of which might dis¬rupt plans of the University administration orhave an adverse effect on University publicity.Only in such rare instances, however, does TheMaroon feel it necessary to violate the cardinaljournalistic principle of printing all the newswhen it happens.This relationship of voluntary cooperationwith the University administration, but withfreedom from censorship of any sort, is theideal one for a student publication. Only un¬der these conditions can a student publicationcease being merely an annex, or publicity or¬gan, of a university, and become really a news¬paper. We have noted that censorship hasarisen very close to our own backyard. Inview of the great tradition of this University,we need have no fear of it turning up athome,—J. A. K.The Travelling BazaarFIRE OVER THE MIDWAYPolitical Scientist William Belcher Ballis observedGood Friday by starting a miniature conflagrationin his little study nook on Harper’s fifth floor. Headmitted that the fire might have started when heabsent-mindedly dumped hot ashes from his pipe intothe waste basket. The local F. D. was summoned tothe scene and nobly saved the Harper treasures fromdestruction, while, according to the Examiner, “ex¬citement swept the campus.’’CANINE WARFAREIt all started when the Betas salvaged Butch fromthe Physiology lab. Butch is even bigger than Gus,the Alpha Delt policedale who has kinged it overcampus hounds for some six years. Butch’s firstencounter was with Zipper, the Chi Psi setter, whonot only got a severe licking, but developed a badcase of gangrene, so that two Chi Psi’s had to stickaround during vacation to change his dressings fourtime a day.*Soon afterwards, Butch met Gus. Gus was appar¬ently over-confident from his long supremacy andwas taken so much by surprise that he came out onthe short end and had to be taken to the hospital forpatching. For the next few days he plotted revenge.Then, last Thursday, his chance came when he cor¬nered Butch in the Beta entryway. For ten minutesthe hounds grappled until finally the Betas, seeingtheir charge on the brink of disaster, managed to endthe fray. In the process, however. Beta Bob Green¬wood sustained a bitten hand, which he blamed onGus.That night, police came to jail Gus in a dog hos¬pital for a 15 day rest cure. Meanwhile Bruce, PhiKappa Psi’s aristocratic collie, is confined to theirmansion with rheumatism. The dog doc prescribesan electric pad.* * *SENIOR KING GRABS QUEENOn his 21st birthday, Robert Harder Bethke,nominal head of the class of ’37, looked in a mirrorand considered that he had attained sufficient matur¬ity to plant his fraternal badge, the star and crescentof A. D. Phi, upon the bosom of one Patricia Davis,red-headed member of the Quadrangler gang. Themove was nicely timed to take place on the day afterthe last Maroon of the quarter appeared.In return for the jewelry Bob received a handsomesweater, which Pat had been knitting since January“for my father.” Inside the sweater was a clothier’slabel, with the legend, “MADE BY PATTEIU-PORBOB.”The Tarz is still striving for a bachelor’s degree.NO NEWS WANTED • • •The University Has been wont to make much ofits newly appointed faculty scholars. However, inthe case of the two most recent faculty changes—Schuman and Sherburn, we hear only that allitera¬tive “shh.” PHOENIX EDITORS PROTESTEditor,The Daily Maroon:Much as I appreciate the compli¬mentary and approving tone of thereview of Phoenix in last Friday’sMaroon, and pleasantly surprised asI was to see that it took the Maroononly eight weeks to find that I ammarried, and that the Maroon wasonly four weeks off on the date ofthe occasion of said marriagre, I ammoved timidly to suggest that theremay be certain errors in the review.I 'hesitate to mention them, for theMaroon consistently proves me wrongeven when I am right, and may wellconvince me, in its own curious way,that:1. I am resigning from Phoenixwith this March issue. I am not.This appears to have been wishthinking on the part of the Maroon.2. That I have a “phobia” forprinting pictures upside down.” Twopictures have so appeared in Phoenix.If there is any psychosis involved itwould appear to be a mania, not aphobia. Penchant might have been abetter word.3. That Miss Robbins does not needa dictionary to supplement her The¬saurus. Point two indicates such aneed.Inasmuch as I offered my aid inverifying or disproving matters offact to Miss Robbins I am dis¬appointed in her carelessness, par¬ticularly because I like Miss Robbinsand sympathize with her creative as¬pirations as reflected in the review.Anyhow, it was swell publicity.Thanks,Henry A. Reese.P. S. Mrs. Reese extends an in¬vitation to Miss Robbins to drop insome time.{Th^ Daily Maroon regrets that ithas erred in reporting both EditorReese’s physical and mental states.Mr. Reese yesterday declared that hewas about to register for one course \in the English department, admitted ithat he at one time considered drop^ :ping out of school this qtiarter, be- !queathing the Phoenix to Hickman !and Eichenbaum.—Ed.) Carl F. Huth, dean of the Down¬town College, was re-elected pres¬ident of the Adult Education Councilof Chicago by representatives of its90 educational and cultural organiza¬tions March 18.The council greatly enlarged itsservices to the community duringToday on theQuadranglesLECTURESDivinity Chapel, Joseph Bond Cha¬pel, at 12. Dean Shirley J. Case.Public Lecture, Division of the So¬cial Sciences, “The Scope and Sub¬ject Matter of History”. ProfessorGottschalk, Social Science 122, at3:30.Arno B. Luckhardt Lecture, DeltaChapter of Phi Beta Pi, “The Bio¬logical Basis of Individuality.” Dr.Leo Leob, professor emeritus ofPathology, Washington Universityof St. Lous,. Pathology 117 at 8.MEETINGSMeeting of the Senate committeeon University Policy, Classics 13 at3:30.MISCELLANEOUSFinal Tryout* for DA productionof “Green Grow the Lilacs”, TowerRoom 2:30-4.Result* of battery of test* givenby L. S, Thurstone to determinefactors of Intelligence. Available tostudents who participated, if theywish to discuss the results in connec¬tion with their choice of vocation atthe Board of Vocational Guidanceand Placement. Dean Huth’s previous four years ofleadership, presenting 130 radio pro¬grams, four conferences and traininginstitutes and publishing bulletins oneducational events which have re¬ceived general distribution through¬out the community.The council announces the spon¬sorship of the National Folk Festivalat Orchestra Hall from May 22 to28. It also conducted the Musical ArtsSeries which drew a record attend¬ance at five piano concerts held atOrchestra Hall.66 BAFFLES insideFILTER-COOL SMOKEMEDICOFILTER RIRIlettiTaitM woMeorai•MS M INStMThi* *iaiple appearw• iuf jrel amaiimiug Tel amaaiegabMroeiit filter iu>Mk•1 veation with Cello*phaae exterior aadeoplias aieah acreeokoemiuiccaaad flake* in filterand out ofaMMidi.vmuRtMJum Prevent* toi^bite, raw aoutlwet keel, baodor, fre^ei' expeclontioiNo breakinin. Improvetbetaateanaromaofaatobacco.•it* eitttITTE SNt CIttIBAFFLES BREAK UPSMOKE STREAM - -FILTER REALLY FILTERSEditor,The Daily Maroon:. . . Personally, I also protestagainst Miss Elizabeth Robbins’ writ¬ten insinuation that I am the authorof my own biography. . . .C. Sharpleaa Hickman,Associate Editor, Phoenix.(Mr. Hickman merely protests,does not deny. On this point, TheDaily Maroon stands pat.—Ed.)DANCEat theAPRIL FOOLS’Dance... YOUR NAME!Watch for it in“E C H O”**,.. the feature section of the1937 CAP & GOWN,.SUBSCRIBE NOWatLEXINGTON HALLDICTIONARIESANDREFERENCE BOOKSWe carry a large selection of useful reference books. Such in¬dispensable works as Roget*s Thesaurus and Crabb’s English Syn-onymes priced as low as $1.00.JUST PUBLISHED!Reprint edition of:J. ARTHUR THOMPSON - THE OUTLINE OF SCIENCEFormerly published in 4 vols. for $18.00—1700 Pages . .800 Illustrations — 31 Pages in Full ColorBecause of the fact that 70,000 sets of this work have been sold at $18.00per set the publishers are now able to offer the one-volume edition atNOW IN ONE VOLUME —New and Second Hand Books, Notebooks, Paper, T^ewriters andAll Supplies for Your Classes.U. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ElJJaS AVE.THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. MARCH 30. 1937 Page ThreeDavis Ascribes CapitalisticBias to American Education“Education in America tends to berefracted by the dominant capitalistic |economic order,” was the chargelevied by Jerome Davis, recentlyousted Yale professor in his discus¬sion Sunday of “Education and Fas¬cism in America and Abroad.” Thelecture was given under auspices ofthe American League Against Warand Fascism at the Hotel Sherman.The case of Professor Davis, authorof some half-dozen recognized worksin religion, sociology, and economicshas been a storm center of discussionin academic circles for severalmonths. After 13 years of teachingat Yale, the administration decidedthat his contract will not be con¬tinued after June 13, 1937. Formerpresident James Rowland Angel 1holds that Davis does not possess“those qualities of scholarship, judg¬ment and poise which we justly ex¬pect in members of our professionalstaff.” Many educators, however,claim that Davis’ active participationin a New England labor dispute ledto what was tantamount to his dis¬missal.Charging that a democratic statewhich is controlled by a financialaristocracy may and often does turnto Fascism, Professor Davis pointedout various examples of Fascistictendencies creeping into our educa¬tional system today. Several of the I incidents which he cited were ofj peculiar local interest, among thembeing the demonstration on the Uni¬versity of Indiana campus precedingan Armistice day talk by Dean Char¬les W. Gilkey, of the UniversityChapel, in which students paradedwith various banners, one of themreading, “KEEP COMMUNISMFROM OUR CAMPUS—KEEP GIL¬KEY FROM OUR CAMPUS.” Healso commented on the recent ROTCincident at Northwestern University.Professor Davis pointed out vari¬ous methods of censorship employedin capitalist-controlled schools suchas the selection of “safe” instructors,the tranfer of “dangerous” teachersin social sciences to “safe” subjectssuch as mathematics, auto-mechanicsand janitorial services, and the dis¬missal of instructors who too activelyparticipate in labor disputes and ini other controversial matters.He claims that our climate of edu¬cation is materialistic, and that thecapitalistic control of our culture isalso reflected in our amusements,press, and radio as well. “Capitalismwarps our educational patterns awayfrom the truth,” he declared.Henry N. Wieman, University pro¬fessor of Christian Theology wasgeneral chairman if the meeting.Robert Morss, Lovett, professoremeritus of English, was in charge ofarrangements.Cap and Gown Valerie WiekhemiContest Ends^""®“"‘^®?“ffin lime ScheduleMargaret Hutchinson won the re-1cent Cap and Gown subscription jcontest by turning in 48 subscrip-!tions. Jerry Jeremy followed in sec-!ond place with 25, and Kathryn Mac-Lennan was a close third.As but six or eight entrants tookthis contest seriously, only 138 sub¬scriptions were turned in. The prizeoffered to the winner’s fraternity orclub, a free page in the yearbook,was not awarded, since the required200 subscriptions were not received.The prizes awarded to the threewinners were twenty, ten, and fivedollars respectively.Cap and Gown also announces thatall proofs of pictures taken by Car¬los for this year’s book must be re¬turned to the photographer at Lex¬ington Hall 16 on or before Friday,April 2nd. Although this refersprincipally to seniors, it also appliesto club women and to all special sit¬tings taken last quarter.Club women are requested tocome in this week to be photograph¬ed for their chib pages. This yearindividual, rather than group pic¬tures will be used. However, be¬cause of an unexpectedly large turn¬out of seniors, the schedule has been.seriously impaired, and it will notbe possible to “retake” all the clubwomen.All pledges, transfers, etc., whohave never been photographed byCarlos are to come in this week.Seniors will have their senior pic¬tures used on the club pages, andsophomores and juniors will have thephotographs taken before this yearfor the club albums. As this is thelast week of picture taking it is nec¬essary for the club women to comein at once if they want to be pic¬tured with their club sisters.Libraries(Coatinned from page 1)hours a day. To reduce noise in thelibrary the ceiling has been sound¬proofed, a sound-proof wall has beenbuilt between the library and thecorridor, and a similar wall will beconstructed between the circulationdesk and the reading rooms. Cobb310 has been converted into a Col¬lege Common room equipped with in¬direct light, rocking chairs, and peri¬odicals. Chairs equipped with rub¬ber gliders have been ordered for thelibrary.In the Wleboldt library a rubbercarpet has been laid to decreasenoise of passage and plans have beenapproved for a book-case to central¬ize reserve readings at the east endof the library.According to Director Raney im¬provements in lighting have beenmade in the Psychology library, andorders for new installations in theEckhart library and the Billings hos¬pital library have been approved.Studies of lighting in the HarperReading Room in the Classics libraryand in the Law library have not yetbeen completed by the Departmentof Buildings and Grounds. Due to the withdrawal of Cobb311 as a classroom, Valerie Wick-hem, editor of Official Documents an¬nounces the following changes:9:00—English 130 Maclean....Cobb 310English 102d Gundy.....Eckhart 208German 103c Nullsen....Cobb 407Humanities Sec. f. FridaysEckhart 20810:00—English 131 Maclean ....Cobb 312Humanities Sec. m, Fri¬day Cobb 308A11:00—English 293 MacleanCobb 3121:30—Humanities Sections s andw, Mondays and FridaysCobb 4092:30—Social Science Administra¬tion 381 Wright..Cobb 406Other changes in rooms:Philosophy 360 to Eckhart 305French 336, 367, Coleman to Wie-boldt 203French 109a to Cobb 316English 141a to Cobb 210English 352 to Classics 10Social Science sec. K, at 11 to Ros-enwald 28Changes in hours:Social Science Administration 305from 3:30 to 2:30 Cobb 110English 405, at 10 (Tuesday-Friday)Wieboldt 103CorrectionPolitical Science 348 will meet Sat¬urday from 9 to 11 (not 9 to 1).Courses Added:Greek 102 (Xenophon), 11, Stukey,Classics 17Math 313, Continuous groups, 2:30,Dickson, Eckhart 208Art 377, Practice Teaching in JuniorColleges, WhitfordArt 263, Gothic Art, 11, MargaretRickert, Classics 10Courses Withdrawn:Math, 320 (See Math 313)German 361, 362, 472 (illness of Mr.Philip S. Allen)Social Science 303Students Show ArtWork at Ida NoyesCampus artists will this week dis¬play their work at the student ArtShow, opening today in the IdaNoyes Hall library, under the spon¬sorship of the Ida Noyes Advisorycouncil. Any student who has beenin residence for four quarters mayexhibit in this show.Awarding the prizes to winningexhibitors will be Franklin P. John¬son, assistant professor of Art, Mrs.Kathryn Lee, a member of the Uni¬versity High School faculty, and Ul¬rich A. Middeldorf, assistant Profes¬sor of Art. The rewards, to be giv¬en Tuesday at 4:30, consist of tendollars from the patrons of the show,and five dollars from Wyvern club.The list of patrons includes Dr. andMrs. Arthur H. Compton, Dr. andMrs. Basil Harvey, Dr. and Mrs.Phillip Miller, Dr. and Mrs. HarlanBarrows, Mrs. Harold A. Swenson,and Dr. and Mrs. Merle C. Coulter... A. Announce $12,000Gift from Swiftat ConvocationAnnouncement was made at the187th convocation, held March 16 atthe University Chapel of a $12,000gift by Charles H. Swift. This sumwill be used in the general budgetof the Music department.Irene Viola Toabe was awardedthe Susan Colver Rosenberger Educa¬tional Prize for a dissertation report¬ing the results of an original re¬search in the field of Sociology.Members to the Beta of IllinoisChapter of Phi Beta Kappa on nom¬ination by the University for espe¬cial distinction in general scholar¬ship in the University are: HelenMarie Curl, Gordon Gale MacLean,Olive Henriette Rabe (March, 1921),James Lee Walters, and MordecaiAllen Waxman.Associate members elected to Sig¬ma Xi on nomination of two Depart¬ments of Science for evidence ofpromise of ability in research worksin Science were:Kenneth DembKurt Wilhelm EderAnne Hutchinson FullerRaymond Ellsworth JanssenKatsuwo KasugaJerome KritchevskyJosef Victor MansfieldRichard Janvier PorterRalph Crawford SeylerHarriet Minola SmithRosamond Pendleton Brown SpicerSilka Gerber StockerMembers elected to Sigma Xi onnomination of the Departments ofScience for evidenc of ability in re¬search work in Science:Rupert Edward ArnellFrancis Keith BradfordFrank Clayton Cleveland, Jr.Joseph Harry CooperEdgar Isadore EisenstaedtJohn Fee EmbreeMelvin Arthur Goldbert ,,Mary Barbara HabarzetleKenneth LaDoyt HertleKatsuji KatoElizabeth May KnottStewart Joseph LloydMarshall Thornton NewmanWilliam McDaniel PottsHarriet ReesHarold William RigneyElizabeth Buckley Shull RussellLaurence Louis SlossEdward Holland SpicerBegin New Series,of Lectures Todayat Art InstituteStarting with today’s lecture on a“General Background and Introduc¬tion to Labor Law” by Charles 0.Gregory, the series of lectures givenby the University College at the ArtInstitute will continue with severallectures a week until June 9.This year’s series is divided intothree groups: “American Drama To¬day,” “A Survey of Labor Law,” and“The Co-operative Movement.” FredB. Millett, associate professor - ofEnglish, lectures on the first on Tues¬days at 6:45. Charles 0. Gregory,associate professor of Law, lectureson the second on Tuesdays and Fri¬days at 7. The lectures on the lastsubject are given by Paul H. Doug¬las, professor of Economics, on Wed¬nesdays at 8.Tickets for separate lectures orthe whole series may be purchasedin Room 1100 of the University Col¬lege at 18 South Michigan avenue.STUDENTS!!SAVE Vz OF YOURLAUNDRY BILLYour entire bundle is washedsweet and clean in pure soap andrain soft water.Handkerchiefs and flat piecesironed. Underwear, Pajamas, Sweat¬ers, Socks, etc., are fluff-dried readyto use at only12c PER LB.Shirts De Luxe Hand Finished,starched, mended, and buttons re¬placed, at10c EACHwithStudent Economy BundleMETROPOLELAUNDRY, Inc.Wesley N. Karlson, Pres.1219-21 EAST 55»h STREETPhone HYDe Park 3190We call and deliver at no extracharge Ruffled Tempers Make Debate OnHutchins’ Book Wax AcrimoniousBy WILLIAM McNElLLRuffled tempers and unwonted ture, theoretical. Experience andvenom have come to disturb the education are two different things.”academic calm in the current discus¬sion of the new education proposedby President Hutchins in his book.The Higher Learning in America. )Central in the exchange of acid civ- [llities are Professor Dewey andHutchins himself, and numbers ofeducators have sprung to the aid ofboth champions.Accusing the President of evasionand quibbling, John Dewey closes hisrebuttal in the current issue of So¬cial Frontier Magazine with thesatirical: “The tone and substance Iof President Hutchins reply wouldlead one to suppose that after all hewas not raising or meaning to raiseany fundamental issue. I must ask |his forgiveness if I took the book tooseriously.”The fundamental issue to which herefers is the question as to the val¬idity of non-empirical metaphysics,to which, Professor Dewey asserts,Hutchins w'ould subordinate theknowledge and method of the physi¬cal and social sciences.Neilson Attacks HutchinsMilder, but equally opposed to thePresident’s proposals, William A.Neilson, president of Smith College,criticises Hutchins’ proposals on thebasis of their adequacy in the com¬plex modern world. In ,an articlein a recent issue of the New YorkTimes Magazine, he says, “The cul¬tivation of the intellect cannot beprovided for on the assumption thatall intellects can be cultivated in thesame way. Successful stimulus tothinking is dependent on discoveringsubject matters that interest theprospective thinkers.”He further accuses PresidentHutchins of neglecting importantelements which have a legitimateplace in higher education. “The stu¬dent’s development on the physical,moral, esthetic and social sides aswell as the intellectual is an essen¬tial part of this training.”But all commentators are notaverse. J. P.- Noonan, regent ofLoyola University, comes to his de¬fense. “Education is of its very na- He accuses modern thinkers, singlingout John Dewey for especial oppro- {brium, of throwing out all principlesbecause it is necessary to modify andrevise some of those handed downfrom the ancients.The debate with Professor Deweyhas reached its present acrimonyOnly through a series of rebuttals,appearing in The Social Frontiersince the December issue. In a re¬view of the President’s book, Deweyaccused him of deprecating the nat¬ural sciences. The president answer¬ed by pointing to the places in whichhe had pointed to the importance ofscience and the scientific method inhis book. He set the acid tone inhis famous jibe to the effect that hewas forced to conclude either JohnDewey could not read, or that hecould not write.Taking up the challenge, Deweyasserted that the President wouldrelegate science to the inferior realmof the practical reason, putting overit an absolute science of metaphysicsw'hich would be arrived at by purereason, independently of experienceand observation. To this view hesays “I believe there is but one ulti¬mate alternative; namely the primaryplace of experience, experimentalmethod, and integral connection withpractical in the determination ofknowledge.” To the second of thesemethods of arriving at truth, helends his support.Warner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd St.TODAY“ONE IN A MILLION”“DEVILS PLAYGROUND” Avukah DiscussesPalestine Situation“Jewish-Arab Relations in Pales¬tine” forms the discussion topic forthe first spring quarter meeting ofAvukah, to be held tomorrow at 3:30in the Social Science Assembly Hall.The speakers will be delegates of therecently formed Antifa, the PalestineLeague against War and Fascismand for Jewish-Arab solidarity.The two delegates, M. Erem, theJewish delegate, and Nadjit Yusuf,the Arab delegate, both of whomhave recently arrived from Palestine,are well qualified to bring tbeir solu¬tions to the Jewish-Arab question.Auditorium TheaterBALLET RUSSELast 4 PerformancesTONIGHTLes SylphidesScheherazadeLe Beau Danube/ WED. EVE.Scuola di BalloAurora’s WeddingL’Apres Midi d’un FauneGypsy DancesWED. MAT.Hundred KissesBoutique FantasquePrince IgorTHUR. EVE.(Final Performance)PavilionSymphonie FantastiqueCimarosianaSEATS 55c-$3.30at Information Officeno 17 Y171 THEATREUiVCiAEiL 858 E. 63rdTODAY“DANCING LADY”‘BIG HOUSE”TEXT BOOKS—Used and New—For all University Courses InclucJingLaw, Me(dicine and E<ducationFountain Pens, Note B(X)ks, Zipper Cases, Stationary,Laundry Cases, Brief BagsLargest and most complete lines ofTypewriters, For Sale, Rent or Exchangec/^WOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57fh St.Near Kimbark Ave. Phone Dorchester 48002 blocks east of Mandell HallOPEN EVENINGSAward Lettersfor Winter atSport Banquet StrongTennisTeam Aims atNational TitleMajor C*s go to 30, OldEnglish to 18; FreshmenWin 38 Numerals.Eighty-six sports awards earnedduring the winter quarter in fiveactivities will be presented at theWinter Sports banquet next Tuesdayin Judson Court.Major C’s will be given to 30 ath¬letes, Old English sweaters to 18.Numeral awards will be presented to.38 Freshmen.First-time winners of major lettersare Irving Richardson, James Wal¬ters and Edward Fritz for fencing;David Tinker and Horace Fay inwrestling; Erwin Beyer and NelsonWetherall in gymnastics; and CecilBothwell, Richard Ferguson, RichardSmith, and John Van de Water inswimming and water polo.Other winners are as follows:WrestlingMajor award: Robert Finwall, Ed¬ward Valorz, Sam Whiteside.Minor: Nicholas Collias, Royal Cut¬ler, John Haas, George Schoonmaker.Numerals: J. Brookhart, JackCarlson, David Cox, Myron Davis,Colin Thomas, William Thomas.GymnasticsMinor: Russel Baird, Albert Guy, jGeorge Hays. 'BasketballMajor: Paul Amundsen, RobertCassels, John Eggemeyer, RobertFitzgerald, Fredrick Mullins, Ken¬dall Petersen, Morris Rossin.Minor: Howard Durbin, RobertMeyer.Numerals: Morris Allen, RichardAmundsen, Robert Bigelow, VictorCook, Howard Issacson, GeorgeKromhout, Robert Moyer, RussellParsons, Lyman Payne, Robert Rey¬nolds, Carl Stanley, Frank Stormer,Harry Topping.Swimming, Water PoloMajor: Robert Anderson, RobertBethke, Jay Brown, Juan Homs, Wil¬liam Lewis, Richard Lyons, FloydStauffer, Charles Wilson.Minor: Joseph Bear, GuentherBaumgart, Winston Bostick, NyeMcLaury, Phillip Schnering, RobertSorenson.Numerals: James 0. Anderson,John Bernhart, Harry Cornelius,Lloyd Deist, Karl Koos, Ralph Mc¬Collum, William Plumley, Henry Rit¬ter, William Speck, Robert Stein.FencingMajor: Henry Lemon, Jr.Minor: Charles Corbett, EdwardGustafson, Herbert Strauss.Numerals: Rolf Becker, AlexanderGeorge, Stuart McClintock, DonaldMcDonald, Edward Notov, MelvinRosenfeld, Paul Siever, Loyal Ting-ley, Jack Vertuno.Select New Suits |for Baseball Squad;Faces Good YearWhat every well dressed baseballplayer, at least the well dressed Maroonplayers, will wear consists of an in¬dividually tailored white flannel twopiece suit, trimmed with maroon andwhite piping. Accessories to this out¬fit will be a solid maroon coloredcap and maroon and white hose.Baseball shoes will this year againbe of dull black shade.To go with this striking uniform,the university is furnishing a snappywell drilled group of peppy players.These together should make the ballclub have a successful season in their12 conference games.Weather has so far this springheld the team to practices in thefieldhouse, but if the sun is up to¬day the group expects to move to thewide open spaces for this afternoon’swork.This wdll be the first time in quitea few years that the athletic depart¬ment has allowed itself outside of its 'sombre shell. From the spirit shownin practice, the Maroons look as ifthey are in the class of the gas housegang Cardinals.If the ground dries up the teamhopes to journey to Peoria to playBradley and Illinois Normal thisweek-end.GOLFERS ASSEMBLETomorrow at 12 Coach KyleAnderson will meet in the trophyroom of Bartlett all boys who havehopes of playing varsity golf. Themeeting will be to organize thegroup and to decide on the try¬outs for the team. Olympia fieldin Chicago will again be used forpractice and home meets.S The strongest team in the historyof the University, and that takes ina lot of strong teams, this year’s ten¬nis squad is not only confident oftaking the Big Ten title, but is de¬termined to win the National Col¬legiate championship also.The change in the Big Ten froma four to a six man team this yearhas aided Coach Hebert considerably,but it will still require some rotationto fit eight good players into sixpositions. Fighting for first place onthe squad will be Norman Bickel, lastyear’s captain, and Bill Murphy,with Bickel favored. Third rankingshould go to Captain Norbert Bur¬gess or Chet Murphy. John Shostrumhas greatly improved since his some¬what disappointing showing last yearand seems sure to occupy the fifthspot.Rounding out the team will beeither Herbert Mertz, third man lastyear, or one of two sophomores,James Ware or John Krietenstein.Two substitutes on the 1936 squad,Sol Freedman and Russell Baird,may also be used.•Rifle Meet HereDraws Entry Listof Four HundredThe work of preparing thirty-onefiring points to be used for the con¬test sponsored by the UniversityRifle and Pistol club by over fourhundred shooters representing thir¬teen states begins Thursday evening.A squad of seventy-five men will beused to set up and run the world’slargest indoor rifle range in the Uni¬versity Fieldhouse. The first shotswill be fired at 7:30 Friday evening,the pot-shot artists continuing to firesteadily until midnight. Saturday andSunday will see continual firing from9:00 a. m. until midnight.Should a contestant wish to fire inall the matches scheduled, his entryfee would be five dollars. The feevaries according to the match beingentered. All persons interested areeligible to enter the meet.Thurman Randle, Dallas, Texas;Eric Johnson, Hamden, Connecticut;and Fred Johnson of Joliet, Illinois,lead the Southern, Eastern, and Cen¬tral shooters. Half the Internationalteam that will go to Bisley, England,next July has entered the RifleClub’s great “shoot-fest.”Shorten IntramuralSpring List, DropHorseshoes Meet“The student Intramural managerspassed a resolution February 15 tothe effect that the spring quarterschedule should be definitely lighten¬ed,’’ stated Wally Hebert, head of theI-M department, yesterday. The rea¬son: early comprehensives this yearhave shortened the athletic season.The schedule for the present quar¬ter with approximate dates is as fol¬lows :Softball—3rd week of the quarter.Tennis, singles and doubles—3rdweek.Badminton—4th week.Golf, doubles—5th week.Outdoor track—7th week.The horseshoe tournament has beeneliminated, and the badminton meet,although retained this year, will nextyear either be cut out or changed toan earlier quarter. Student managersfor the Spring sports will be selectedtomorrow at a meeting of the Seniormanagers.TheHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57th StreetN. W. Comer Stonj lalaad CHutlu :SPOl lidroonRTSTUESDAY, MARCH 30. 1937Shortened Athletic Schedule\ AWAYBaseballApril 7 WheatonApril 13 Notre DameApril 21 NorthwesternApril 30 WisconsinMay 1 WisconsinMay 7 PurdueMay 11 Illinois^TennicMay 1 IllinoisMay 11 NorthwesternMay 15 IowaMay 18 NorthwesternMay 20-22 Conference at Mich¬iganTrackApril 17 Michigan StateApril 23-24 Drake RelaysMay 1 NorthwesternMay 8 Western StateMay 21-22 Conference at Mich¬iganGolfApril 19 Notre DameMay 10 PurdueMay 13 Northwestern AT HOMEBaoeballApril 10 Armour 3:00April 12 Armour 3:30April 16 Iowa 3:30April 17 Iowa 3:00April 22 Notre Dame 3:30April 24 Purdue 3:00April 27 Illinois 3:30May 5 Northwestern 3:30May 15 Indiana 3:00May 17 Indiana 3:30June 3 Alumni 3:30TennisApril 23 Wisconsin 2:00April 28 Notre Dame 2:00April 30 Indiana 2:00May 3 Western State 2:00May 5 Northwestern 2:00May 8 Michigan 2:00TrackMay 15 Purdue 2:30GolfMay 3 WisconsinMay 17-18 Conference at North¬western Shorten SportProgram, AidSpring StudyRecognizing the need of longerstudy hours at the end of the Springquarter because of the Universitycomprehensives, the Athletic depart¬ment has shortened the spring sportsschedules two and three weeks.Baseball ends on May 17, leavingonly the annual Alumni-Varsity fra¬cas for June 3. Golf finishes at theConference meet at NorthwesternMay 18. Track and Tennis each ex¬pire in Ann Arbor in Conferencetilts May 22.This move, an adjustment of theDepartment to cooperate with theChicago plan, was evident in theSpring sports progi'am released byNelson Metcalf. Director of Athlet¬ ics. It answers a long felt need fora slackening of extra-curricular ac¬tivity before the all-important Springexaminations.The complete schedule appears inan adjoining column.3 Months’ ShorthandCourse for CollegeGraduates andUndergraduatesIdml for Ukins note* at c*U«c« vrfor tpore-tiaic or fnll tiao pooitioiu.CImom start the flrot of Jaaaarr,April, Jnly, and October.Call, write, or telephoneState 1881 for complete facte.The Gregg College• N. Uichigan Ato., CUcaca TAki vom «AkTin A' SHOWTheie ace lots of pleasanttkiisgs you can do widi diemoney you’U save by ea^at Younker’s regulariy.rom|rfe#a LMchooe 35'65'51 E. Chicago Ave.If 10 Hyde Park Bird.901 Davis Street, EranitoaJanet Gaynor says:"Leading artists of the screenprefer Luckies”live at the bettch most of the year andthere is hardly a weekend that a number offriends don*t drop in. Naturally, I keep severedbrands of cigarettes on hand for guests, butthe Luckies are always the first to disappear. Isuppose it*s just natural that Luckies would bethe favorite brand because most of my friendsin pictures have discovered that the long hoursof rehearsing and shooting at the studio placeasevere taxon the throat. Lecuiingartists of thescreen prefer Luckies because they are a lightsmoke that sympathizes with tender throats.**FEMININE STAR OF DAVID O. SELZNICK’STECHNICOLOR PRODUCTION OF ” A STAR IS BORN”A. independent survey was made recentlyamong professional men and women—lawyers,doctors, lecturers, scientists, etc* Of those who saidthey smoke cigarettes, more than 87% stated theypersonally prefer a light smoke*Miss Gaynor verifies the wisdom of this pref¬erence, and so do other leading artists of the radio,stage, screen and opera* Their voices are theirfortunes* Thaf s why so many of them smokeLuckies* You, too, can have the throat protectionof Luckies—a light smoke, free of certain harshirritants removed by the exclusive process ”It^sToasted”* Luckies are gentle on the throat* THE FINEST TOBACCOS—•’THE CREAM OF THE CROP**A Light Smoke’It’s Toasted”-Your Throat ProtectionAGAINST IRRITATION—AGAINST COUGHCaprrliiit I9Sr, Tbt Anmeu iomcm iMaipur