Bail? illaraonVol. 37. No. 118. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FRIDAY. JUNE 4. 1937 Price Three CcntlPresident Appoints New Aides and Marshals;Will Be Inducted at Annual I-F Sing TomorrowFraternities Initiate 166 Outof 198 Pledges in Current YearPsi Upsilon, Alpha DeltaPhi Lead with 17 NewMembers,With “hell weeks” over and of¬ficers for next year elected, the fra¬ternities are next week terminatingtheir activities of this year. Out of198 men who pledtired fraternitiesthis past year, 166 were initiated. PsiUpsilon and Alpha Delta Phi led,both initiating 17.Following are the summaries byfraternities:Alpha Delta Phi initiated 17 outof 18 pledged. Officers are Jack Web¬ster, Charles Hoy, Graham Fairbank,Edward Alt and Hart Perry.Alpha Tau Omega initiated 2 outof 6 pledged. Officers are JosephCaldwell, Milton Tryon, RobertGrant, and Myron Webb.Beta Theta Pi initiated 13 out of17 pledged. Officers are RobertBrumbaugh, Ross Netherton, andJudson Allen.Chi Psi initiated 9 out of 10.Officers are: Woodrow Wilson, Hi¬ram Kennicott, Gene Grossman, Ken¬neth Osborn.Initiated 15 Out of 17Delta Kappa Epsilon initiated 15put of 17. Officers are: Kendall Pe¬terson, Robert Anderson, Harold La-Belle, John Goes, Jerry Jeremy.Delta Upsilon initiated 10 out of12. Officers are: Fred Hewitt, Spen¬cer Irons, Robert Joranson, RobertDrury.Kappa Sigma initiated 11 out of16. Officers are: Newell Reynolds,Bryson Burnham, Francis Callahan,Leonard Hoffman.Phi Delta Theta initiated 10 outof 14. Officers are: Gregg Geiger,Richard Ferguson, Robert Bigelow,Clyde Croft,Phi Gamma Delta initiated 9 outof 13. Officers are: Russel Baird, JayCraven, Stan Summerville, GeorgeAntonie.Phi Kappa Psi initiated 10 out of11. Officers are: Ralph Leach, FredAsh, John Eggemeyer, Emmett Dead-man.Initiated 7 Out of 11Phi Kappa Sigma initiated 7 outof 11, Officers are: William Neg-ley, Robert Cravath, James Wood,Carlton Witcraft, Carl Bloom.Phi Sigma Delta initiated 14 outof 16. Officers are: Seymour Bur¬rows, Ralph Greenberg, Bentley Co¬hen, Eugene Glickman, Robert Cree.Pi Lambda Phi initiated 5 out of7. Officers are: Joseph Mastrofsky,(Continued on page 4) Approve NewCampus Organ‘Campus’ to Pursue BroadPolicy of University Lifeand Interests. Fraternities Viein Sing TomorrowHold Traditional Affair inHutchinson Court at8:45.Tentative approval of a newmonthly magazine, “Campus,” to beissued next year, was announced yes¬terday by the Dean of Students’ Of¬fice.Aimed to attract that vast major¬ity of the campus which has no directinterest in or connection with usualundergraduate activities, “Campus”will pursue a broad policy which willincorporate articles on every phaseof campus interests, humorous andliterary contributions, a regular re¬view section, and liberal use of car¬toon and photograph.Headed by C. Sharpless Hickmanas editor, and Herbert F, Larson asbusiness manager, the staff will con¬sist of Seymour Miller, assistant edi¬tor, and George Steinbrecher, Jr.,Catherine Stevenson and KatherineWells as associates.Appears with MaroonThe magazine may be issued as aregular monthly supplement to TheDaily Maroon. Discussions are tak¬ing place between the newly-electedstaff of the Maroon and the foundersof “Campus” but no definite conclu¬sion has yet been arrived at.Size and format of the new pub¬lication will not be determined untillater in the summer, pending nego¬tiations between “Campus” and theMaroon, or until the printers of themagazine have been chosen. Thefirst issue will appear during Fresh¬man week.Students, whether in activities ornot, are asked to contribute to themagazine. Anything submitted willbe given careful consideration. Thoseinterested in positions on the Busi¬ness staff are asked to contact Her¬bert Larson at the Cap and Gown of¬fice in Lexington Hall, or throughFaculty Exchange. Fraternity men and alumni of theUniversity will present the twenty-seventh annual Interfraternity Singtomorrow evening in HutchinsonCourt at 8:45. Preceding the Sing,the University band will play from8:15 till the singers appear.Seventeen fraternities will competefor the two cups, one for the larg¬est representation, the other for thebest quality in singing, to be judgedby Mack Evans, assistant professorof Music, and two assistants. Lastyear Phi Gamma Delta won the cupfor quality, while Alpha Delta Phihad the largest turnout.Announce Aides and MarshalsAfter the last fraternity has sung,an official installation will bemade of the Aides and Marshals forthe coming year. Following this, re¬sults of the competition for the twocups will be announced. Concludingthe program will be the presentationof “C” blankets to men who havecompleted their athletic competitionin the University.Gregg Geiger, undergraduatechairman of the committee, has ask¬ed each fraternity to meet in HullCourt while the preceding group issinging. From there the singers will 1be lead by the official guide to thenorth walk of Hutchinson Court. !Order of AppearanceAppearance of fraternities will bemade in the following order: Phi BetaDelta; Zeta Beta Tau; Delta Upsilon;Phi Sigma Delta; Phi Kappa Sigma;Pi Lambda Phi; Chi Psi; Alpha TauOmega; Beta Theta Pi, Phi Kappa P.si,Sigma Chi; Alpha Delta Phi; DeltaKappa Epsilon; Phi Gamma Delta;Phi Delta Theta; Kappa Sigma; andPsi Upsilon.The last five gi’oups will be heardon a broadcast over the NationalBroadcasting system at 9:30.Since 1911 the Sing has been heldyearly as one of the few but out¬standing traditions in the Universityand is attended by hundreds of alum¬ni who participate in the event. Section on Campus Events^ ColorWork Highlights of Cap and GownAttempting an experiment in Uni¬versity annuals, the 1937 Cap andGown, which will appear today, willprovide graduating seniors andother students with food for manyhours of reminiscences in the years tocome. The theme of the book, theformat, and the contents all tend togive impressions which should belasting remembrances of college life.Centered around a sixty page sec¬tion devoted to University lifethroughout the school year, 1936-37,the book lists and summarizes all as¬pects of the past year on the Quad¬rangles from President Hutchins’speech to the entering freshmen tothe same speech to the graduat¬ing seniors at convocation.Campus ActivitiesCampus activities are brought inand discussed at the period of theyear when they were most active. Inthis way relevant material only wasused, and the staff did not have towrite a great deal of padding so thatthe activity pages could be filled withthe proper number of words.As usual the photography, whichis for the most part the work of cam¬pus photographers, David EisendrathBy EDWARD S. STERNFifty PercentFail in EnglishPoor Work by Students inPreparatory Courses IsGiven as Reason.Numerous Banquets, Assemblies ClimaxLast Days of Alumni Reunion WeekHutchins DeliversConvocation Talk;890 Get DegreesVApproximately 890 degrees will beconferred at the One Hundred Eigh¬ty-eighth Convocation of the Univer¬sity on Friday, June 11, in the Uni¬versity Chapel. The 400 or morehigher degrees will be granted in amorning session and the Bachelor de¬grees in an afternoon service.President Hutchins will be the Con¬vocation orator at both sessions. OnJune 18 he will also talk over theNBC Blue Network at 8:15 in theevening. The address is under the au¬spices of the Educational Division ofthe National Broadcasting Company,which every year presents a leadingeducator in June. President Hutch¬ins will hold a reception for ail grad¬uates at 4:30 Friday in Ida NoyesHall.Dean Gilkey will preach the ser¬mon on Convocation Sunday, June6. The title of it will be “WhitherBound?” Henrietta Rybezinski, re¬tiring president of the Chapel Union,will read an essay, and Dean Smithwill read at the 10 o’clock prayerservice. The music will include “Se- jlection from the Proverbs,” a plain-song. an English Anthem. “God Be |(CoBtinued on page 4) I As a climax to the Alumni Schooland other activities of Universityalumni, an intensive program of ban¬quets and assemblies has been sched¬uled for the final days of alumniweek. Though somewhat overshad¬owed by the Interfraternity Sing to¬morrow evening, the Alumni Assem¬bly to be held tomorrow afternoon at3:30 in Mandel Hall, promises to beperhaps the most distinctive gather¬ing of alumni week.Harold L. Ickes, Secretary of theInterior, Harold G. Moulton, Presi¬dent of the Brookings Institution, andRobert Maynard Hutchins are thescheduled speakers at this assembly,while Harold H. Swift, President ofthe Board of Trustees, will presidewith the assistance of BenjaminFranklin Bills, General Chairman ofthe 1937 Reunion. Earlier tomorrowthe alumni will gather at their Sev¬enth Annual Conference and Forumin Judson Court Lounge, a generalreunion and breakfast in Ida NoyesHall, and a Conference luncheon inJudson Court, to be held at 10, 11,and 12:30 respectively. A SunsetSupper will be served in buffet andcafeteria style at 6 p, m. in Hutchin¬son Commons in addition to the sup¬pers planned for the same time bythe fraternities and clubs.Supplementing these gatherings ofgeneral interest, there will be re¬unions of a number of differentclasses tonight and tomorrow.More than a thousand alumni haveso far participated in the sessions ofthe alumni school, held in MandelHall, and in the various tours, din¬ners, and sundry meetings held onthe quadrangles.The first session of the Alumni School was held Tuesday afternoon.Benjamin F. Bills, general chairmanof the Reunion; Mitford M. Mathews,Research Associate in English; andFred B. Millett, Associate Professorof English were the speakers.Matthews, who is in charge of theDictionary of American English, de¬clared that America and Great Brit¬ain are closer now to a mutual un¬derstanding over changes in the Eng¬lish language than since the rift wascommenced by critics in the 18th cen¬tury.Millett, discussing “Who’s Who inContemporary Literature,” gave in¬timate impressions of contemporaryliterati gleaned from personal corre¬spondence with such notables as Eu¬gene O’Neill, Clifford Odets, WilliamSaroyan, and James Thurber.Discuss Problems of EducationAt a dinner meeting in HutchinsonCommons Tuesday evening. ProfessorJames Weber Linn placed the blamefor the failure of higher educationupon students rather than upon thecurriculum.Education was the general topicaround which the second session ofthe Alumni School revolved. Wil¬liam C. Reavis, Professor of Educa¬tion, said that if parents want a goodeducational system they must bewilling to fight for it. ProfessorNewton Edwards spoke on the ques¬tion, “Should the Federal Govern¬ment Finance the Schools?” Chair¬man Charles H. Judd of the depart¬ment of Education answered thequestion “What is a General Educa¬tion?”Wednesday afternoon the alumnischolars met again in Mandel, this |(Conrinued on page 4) 1 By JULIAN A. KISEROver fifty percent of those whoexamined for the Bachelor’s degreein the English Department this quar¬ter will not graduate. In an unprec¬edented distribution of grades, of thesixty-five students who took the ex¬amination, four received A, six re¬ceived B, thirteen received C, eightreceived D, and 34 received F.Three possible explanations mayaccount for the unusual distribution.First, the preparatory courses maynot have provided an adequate knowl¬edge of the field, which the exam¬ination presumably tests. Second,the examination may have been un¬duly difficult, or may have coveredmaterial not included in the prepara¬tory courses. Third, a large propor¬tion of the students may have at¬tempted to pass the examinationwithout adequately preparing them¬selves for it.Study Course GradesA comparison of the examinationgrades with the previous records ofthe same students in the departmenthas been made by Professor GeraldBentley, showing that a student whohad adequately prepared for the ex¬amination should have completed atleast seven out of the nine prepara¬tory courses prior to the beginningof the Spring quarter. Of those stu¬dents who did satisfactory work (thatis, received a course grade of C orbetter) in seven out of the nine pre¬paratory courses, it has been shownthat 85 percent passed the examina¬tion, while only 15 percent failed.Other figures having a bearing onthis point are presented in the fol¬lowing table. The columns are, inorder: (1) grade on examination;(2) proportion of students receivingthis grade who did satisfactory workin seven out of the nine preparatorycourses; (3) average number ofcourses in which students receivingthis grade did satisfactory work; and(4) average number of courses inwhich students received an R or In¬complete.(2)(4) and Donal Holway, is plentiful, col¬orful although not in color, and can¬did in the manner of the times.For the first time since the year¬book resumed publication in 1933the board has seen fit to use art workin color on the frontispiece, divisionpages, and senior section. All in allabout one-fourth of the book will bein two colors. Except for the coverof the Echo section which is in Timered, the color used throughout is adeep blue which harmonizes with thecover.Cover HighlightThe cover which is the hightlightof the art work has been sufficientlyrepresented in photographs in cam¬pus publications (see Phoenix, June1937) and therefore defies descrip¬tion. It is sufficient to say that itis in two colors, maroon and blue. Thesubordinate design on the cover isin a circle. This form has been car¬ried through all the sub-divisionpages, and in fact is symbolic of thestyle of the book in that the staff hastried throughout to tie the happen¬ings of college life during the yearinto a unified whole.Two criticisms of last year’s bookwere taken to heartby the staff—peo¬ple said the type was too small andthat the makeup was too black. Im¬mediate steps were taken to remedythe situation. This year one willfind white space throughout, perhapstoo much in spots. The body type is12-point. Main criticism of the bookis that the type used is a little toolarge, archaic; the heads, too smalland not varied enough. However,throughout, the book is extremelyeasy to read, in good taste though alittle too conservative.Echo and HickmanLast year we formulated an ideaof Echo by which we judged that is¬sue and are forced to judge the pres¬ent issue. We felt that it was a clev¬er way of telling incidents that couldnot be covered in the book properin a humorous and slightly facetiousmanner. It was also a means of in¬terpretating events. Last year wefelt the issue was successful and wehave found it interesting to rereadin the middle of the year. This year(Continued on page 6) Twenty JuniorsCompose GroupMcNeill Named Head Mar¬shal ; Woodrich, SeniorAide.imn (1) ColumnA 75%B 33%C 25%D 37%F 6%imn (3) Column8 26 2/3 2 1/24 6/6 2 1/63 9/10 2 1/2(CoBtiBued on page 2) Hutchins InstructsSeniors on Statusof Alumni GroupsCharacterizing the Senior gift of anew walk outside of the Coffee Shopas symbolic of their education, “long,hard, and narrow,” President Hutch¬ins yesterday spoke to members ofthe graduating class assembled inKent lecture hall.The President, pointing out that ashe was to give the commencementoration himself the only reason fprhis talk must have been for the bene¬fit of those who were not to graduate,went on to discuss shortcomings ofalumni groups and needs of the Uni¬versity. From his own experiences,he has come to the conclusion thatalumni are more interested in theUniversity in an intellectual way thefurther they are from Chicago, asopposed to the more physical inter¬ests of the LaSalle street groups.Deplores Lack of FacilitiesTurning to the opportunities offer¬ed at the University, the Presidentregretted that the University is notbetter organized and equipped to givea proper education. However, he be¬lieved that this University can givemore opportunities than any otherexisting one. The physical plant hashampered the work of several depart¬ments, namely, bacteriology, psychol¬ogy, and anatomy; and the need fora college building is great for theproper workings of the four year col¬lege.Before the President’s talk, Rob¬ert Bethke, president of the class,announced an all-Senior get-togeth¬er at the Indiana State Dunes park(CoBtiBuedi OB page h) William H. McNeill and HelenWoodrich were named yesterday byPresident Robert M. Hutchins asHead Marshal and Senior Aide, re¬spectively, to head the groups of tensenior men and ten senior women whoassist the president at all formal Uni¬versity functions.Other Marshals are Winston H.Bostick, Edward C. Fritz, ElRoy D.Golding, George C. Halcrow, CharlesE. Hoy, Herbert F. Larson, RalphF. Leach, William C. Lewis, andRobert Wagoner. The nine otherAides are Grace Elizabeth Abney,Elizabeth A. Barden, Elizabeth I.Benson, Hildegard Breihan, GladysGerner, Mary Anna Patrick, FrancesProtheroe, Mary Paul Rix, and Doro¬thy Wells.The Marshals and Aides are chos¬en on the basis of outstanding rec¬ords in both scholarship and studentactivities. They will be clothed ingowns and maroon-tasseled caps,symbolic of their office, by membersof the retiring groups at the Inter¬fraternity Sing tomorrow night.Activities of MarshalsMcNeill, the new Head Marshal, isalso editor-in-chief of The Daily Ma¬roon, a member of the Interfraterni¬ty Committee, and a member of BetaTheta Pi fraternity. Bostick is onthe swimming team and is active inthe Dramatic Association; Fritz isthe new associate editor of The DailyMaroon, a member of the fencingteam, of the Chapel Council, and ofPhi Kappa Psi fraternity; Golding ismanagring editor of The Daily Maroonfor next year and a member of ZetaBeta Tau; Halcrow is captain-elect ofthe track team, a member of theASU, and of Psi Upsilon; Hoy is thenew business manager of The DailyMaroon and belongs to Alpha DeltaPhi fraternity; Larson is publisher-elect of the Cap and Gown, secre¬tary-treasurer of the InterfraternityCommittee, and a member of DeltaKappa Epsilon; Leach is chairman ofthe I-F Committee, co-chairman ofIntramurals, and a member of PhiKappa Psi; Lewis is a member of theswimming team, of the ASU, and ofPsi Upsilon; and Wagoner is presi¬dent of the Dramatic Association fornext year and a member of Phi DeltaTheta.Of the Aides, Woodrich is presi¬dent of the Y. W. C. A., Abney is sec¬retary of Y. W. C. A and a memberof Pi Delta Phi; Barden is president(Continued on page 6)WPA Workers SitDown on Projectin Social SciencePickets patrolled outside the SocialScience building yesterday afternoonas 11 members of two WPA projectslocated in the basement of the build¬ing sat down in strike over the dis¬missal of two workers.According to the strikers, the twoworkers, J. W. Morris and MelvinBrown, had been fired because of“union activities.” According to Lew¬is Copeland, supervisor of the proj¬ect, they were fired because “Theyspend most of their time loafing onthe job.”These are seven WPA projects op¬erating on the University quadrang¬les. They have no connection withthe University other than that theUniversity grants them space. The twoprojects affected by the strike em¬ploy 70 workers, most of whom werenot sympathetic with the strike. Thetwo workers fired both belonged toCopeland’s project, which is concern¬ed with a sociological survey of theChicago region.The strikers represent an A. F. ofL. union. They demand a re-classi¬fication of their work to raise theirwage scale, the reinstatement of thetwo dismissed workers, and the dis¬missal of Copeland, the project head.\Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1937iattg ^arannFOUNDED IN IMlMember .\>«ociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday. Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 4€. and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contra<^entered 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 appearirg in this paper. Subscription rates:12.76 a year : $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as fiecond class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago. Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.■(...RESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BVNational Advertising Service, IncCollege Publishers Representative430 Madison AvE. New York. N Y.Chicago • Boston • san FranciscoLos Angeles • Portland . SeattleBO.\RD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASS0C1.\TESBernice BartelsEranrett Deadman fidward FritzEIRoy Golding William McNeillBetty RobbinsCharles Hoy BUSINESS ASSOCIATESMarshall J. StoneEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJacquelyn AebyBarbara BeerHarris BeckLaura BergquistMaxine BieaenthalRuth Brody Lome CookJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisWallace HerschelRex Horton Harry LeviSeymour MillerLaVerne RiessAdele RoseLeonard SchermerDouglas "'-reBUSINESS ASSISTANTSEdwin BergmanJerome Ettelson Alan JohnstoneMax FreemanDoris Gentzler Howard GreenleeEdward GustafsonSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Efeendrath Dona] HolwayNight Editors—8 Nu Pi SigmaFriday, June 4, 1937Composite CampusiteLet us attempt to form an image of the com¬posite campusite. Let us make him partly fra¬ternity man, partly socially-conscious liberalor radical; partly activities devotee, partlyserious-minded scholar. Let us combine inhim neither the best nor the worst qualities ofthese various types of students; rather let usmake him representative of typical traits whichcan be found in each group. Finally, let usexamine his ideas and opinions about some ofthe more visible manifestations of Universitylife, the campus institutions and traditions.We immediately find that our compositecampusite has one conspicuous trait—an un¬hesitating willingness to comment freely onwhatever he sees going on about him. Hiscomments most frequently take the form ofuncritical disparagement, and the things heabuses are usually those about which he hasleast knowledge and which he has not bother¬ed to investigate before criticizing.His opinions are usually most crystallizedon the following topics:Fraternities. Drawing largely from the lib¬eral, radical, or scholarly aspects of his make¬up, he thinks that fraternities are worthlessvestiges of the rah-rah college days of theboom period, and that fraterntiy men are in¬capable of serious thinking on any subject. Inthis same classification he places undergrad¬uate honor societies, although he knows almostnothing of their aims and activities.The ASU: Because he is partly fraternityman, he thinks that the ASU is composed en¬tirely of radicals and that its ultimate objectiveis to further the cause of the Communist partyin this country.Athletics: Perhaps because of his contactswith alumni, he is quick to blame our diffi¬culties in football and other sports on eitherthe coach or the policies of the Athletic De¬partment; he never takes into considerationeven the elementary fact that there are onlyslightly over 800 males eligible for athletics en¬rolled in the University.Campus Politics: Whenever he hears of anelection in any organization, he looks for anexplanation of the outcome in the realm of fra¬ternity politics; he is not willing to concedethat advancements may be made on the twocriteria of merit and potentiality alone, witha view only to the best interests of the organ¬ization involved.In a word, we may say that the compositecampusite lacks two prime qualities whichit is the object of his University trainingand associations to InstiU in him: the viewpoint) which demands objective investi¬gation of all available facts before any state¬ment of conclusions is made, and tolerance ofthe interests and beliefs of others.—J. A. K.Next Year on CampusForecasting the future is always a fascinat¬ing pastime, and one for which the Universityoffers unlimited possibilities. The fascinationis in no way reduced by the realization that theprognosticator is more often wrong than right.It is unlikely that the coming year will bringany important changes in the University’s edu¬cational policies. Yet it will undoubtedly be acrucial year, for not only the program of thefour-year College, but the new curricula ofthe Law School, English Department, andPhilosophy Department will be tested for thefirst time.In athletics, the outlook is no more encour¬aging than in previous years. We will prob¬ably continue to have strong teams in the samesports as heretofore and to have weak (orweaker) teams in the others. Prospects infootball are particularly poor. It is possiblethat next season's experience will reenforce thetrend toward limiting our relationships withother members of the conference, and it mayhasten our ultimate departure from the BigTen.No startling transformations in student or¬ganizations appear in prospect, even if anactivities conference, as suggested, is held.One or two more fraternities may disappear,but the remaining ones should be as strong asever. Next year will be a trial period forPulse and should determine whether or notthere is a place for a magazine a la Time ona university campus. The ASU may continue. to develop into a well-rounded interest group,or may be supplanted by a more all-inclusivestudent political union. Campus peace activ¬ities will probably continue to become morerepresentative of the entire student body andless dominated by the radical elements.Finally, with respect to The Daily Marcxm,we predict with confidence that in the hands ofnext year’s Board of Control it will continueits evolution in the direction of more adequate¬ly serving the members of the University com-^>munity as a news medium and more truly rep¬resenting the interests and opinions to befound in the student body.—J. A. K. English(Continued from page 1)The point that the departmentwishes to make is, of course, that thegreat bulk of those who flunked theexamination did not do satisfactorywork in even half of the preparatorycourses. The moral, again from thepoint of view of the department, isthat students must do the work be¬fore they can expect to pass the ex¬amination. In any event, the depart¬ment is appai'ently overlooking thefact that under the New Plan stu¬dents are encouraged to prepare forexaminations outside of class, if theywish, and are under no compulsionto present evidence for course creditof having done the preparatory work.To show that they did not do thepreparatory work either in thecourses or independently, the depart¬ment relies solely on the examinationgrades. Now the custom in otherparts of the University, particularlythe College, has been to disregard anysection of an examination on whichhalf of the students fail, on the as¬sumption that average standard ofperformance is maintained from yearto year. (This assumption is serious¬ly affected by the trend toward an in¬creasing number of R’s taken incourses by students; it is a point ofcontention whether R represents lessor poorer preparatory work, or mere¬ly work done independently of thecourse.) Accepting this practice asa valid one, however, we must relysolely on the statements of the de¬partment members themselves thatthe examination was a fair one. Inthat case, it is open to serious ques-}tion whether the fault lay entirely iwith the students. DON’T TAKE TIME FROM YOUR STUDIES TO GETTHAT MILKSHAKE; USE OURFREE DEUVERY SERVICEYour Nickel RefundedSTINEWAY’S DRUG STORE57TH AND KENWOOD DORCHESTER 2844HOE SAI GAIChicago’s finest ChineseAmerican RestaurantThe University of Chi¬cago students have by pop¬ular acclaim chosen HOESAI OAI to be the officialChinese-American restaur¬ant.If you desire the finestAmerican dishes or quaintChinese delicasies. you willbe more than satisfied withour service.Come in and enjoy thecongenial modernistic atmo¬sphere.85 W. RANDOLPH ST.and75 W. RANDOLPH ST-Just the Place for afterthe show. Hanley’sBuffet1512 E. 55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT "COLLEG¬IATE” ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—' YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY^SOver forty years of congenialserviceThe Travelling BazaarBy CODY PFANSTIEHLWe wandered about the spring-warmed campuswith the gentlemen of the press yesterday and bump¬ed into a Suicide, a Sit-Down, a Protest, and aTonsure,The Suicide was John Landwehr, a graduate stu¬dent. Poison. Found Wednesday night.The Sit-Down was in Social Science basement.Betty Robbins (Daily Times), Henry Reese (HeraldEx.), and John Morris (Youknowwhat) were thereso we didn’t bother about remembering the facts.What we do remember concerns a fat colored wom¬an sprawled on a spindly chair—Sitting Down—beaming answers at the reporters; a lazy white man,vest open—Sitting Down—doing nothing so they’dgive him back his job; and a beautiful colored girl—seated but not Sitting Down—punching an addingmachine and laughing at the whole thing.The Protest was at noon in the circle, and Unionmen shouted to those who listened that they didn’tlike this business of policemen shooting strikers.The Tonsure was on 17 year old Roland Whitman,freshman. He said that way back last Autumn he’dread the Decameron and St. Thomas Aquinas, andthought he’d rather like a Monkish head shave. Hewould have bought one then and there, he said, butthe weather was too cold.“So last Saturday,” said Roland, “I passed a swellbarber shop downtown, and the weather was warmand everything, and I went in and got one. The bar¬ber was new at it, so I directed him with mirrors. Hecut me once with the razor, but not badly.”Then Roland cooled his bare pate with a walkto a Customers. “But,” he admits, “I kept my hat onso they didn’t say anything.” He rented a Fran¬ciscan robe, and wore it to dinner in Burton Court,cowl up. There was a lovely little uproar, he said,when he pulled down the cowl in the middle of themeal.He hopes to collect about five dollars in bets, buthe’s quite firm* in stating that the mercenary urgehad nothing to do with it.He wears a skull cap now (“Miss Benz didn’t tellme to”) but he was glad to unveil for us.It was fuzzy.♦ * *And that’s all for the year. This writer, havingmajored not wisely but too well in activities, won’tbe among you next year, but the Gray Gothic on theMidway will always mean home for those who havelived in it.Good-bye, and good luck! GRADUATION GIFTSWhich Carry Enduring Memories ofTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOGOTHIC SHIELDU. of C. SEAL EVERLASTINGBEAUTIFULSolid Chromium - Stainless SteelFinished in solid gold plate in bas-relief$2.00OTHER GIFTS WITH U. of C. SEALRings Pins Pillows Paper KnivesCompacts Blankets Brass Desk SetsU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue4m ©DMlmlftpUniversity Church ofDisciples of Christ5655 Univertity AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward ScribnerAmes. Minister's Associate:Mr. Fred B. WiseSUNDAY, JUNE 6, 193711:00 A. M.—Sermon.Sermon subject: “H u m a nViews of God.’ Dr. Ames.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers. Teaand Program. Dr. W. C. Bow¬er, Speakerm8:00 P. M.—Convocation of theDisciples Divinity House.Speaker: Dr, A. W. Fortune,Subject: “Preaching and King¬dom Building.” All are invited. Hyde Park Baptist I The First UnitarianChurch5600 Woodlawn Ave.Non is L. Tibbetts and RollandW. Schloerb, MinistersSUNDAY, JUNE 6, 193711:00 A. M.—Children’s DayService.No eetning service. ChurchWoodlawn Ave. and E. 57tb St.Von Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSUNDAY, JUNE 6, 198711:00 A, M.—“Note of Univer¬sality.” Dr. Vogt,THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1937 Page ThreeOffer 115 Lectures to SupplementCourses During Summer SessionsApproximately 115 lectures will be(fiven on campus dunng the summerquarter, in addition to the regularcourses. The annual bulletin, givingthe complete list of the lectures willnot be out until about registrationday, due to a number of late changes..\ series of talks by members of theBusiness School faculty will be givenfour days a week at 12:30 during thefirst term. The suoject is “CurrentTrends in Business” and credit willbe given to regular students. Thepublic also is invited—at one dollara lecture.The Harris Foundation Lecturesthis year will be on the subject of the“(leographical Aspects of Interna¬tional Relations,” emphasizing thelands about the Atlantic basin. Therewill be three speakers, Isaiah Bow'-nian. President of John Hopkins Uni¬versity, who will talk at 8:30 on June21; Pierre Denis, author and formermember of the Secretariat of theLeague of Nations, who will talk on4:30 on June 22, 2.1, and 24; andHarlan H. Barrows, Chairman of theDepartment of Geography here, whowill talk at 4:30 on June 28. The lec¬tures will be given in Mandel HallChapel CouncilAnnounces Listof New MembersNew members of the Chapel Coun¬cil, elected by the Council and ap¬proved by the Board of Social Serv¬ice and Religion at its last meetingare Frances Abney, Barbara Alee,Victor Altman, Billie Bender. Rob-,ert Bigelow, Barbara Boyd, MerleBurgy, Keith Butters, Donald Bus¬sey, Kathryn Coalman, Harry Cor¬nelius, Jack Cornelius, G. DenisCowan, Dorothy Coleman, Hugh Dav¬idson, Mary Alice Duddy, ThomasEadie, Gene Llbinger, Elizabeth &s-sington, Alexander Furtwangler,Janet Geiger, Ruth Hauser, MarjorieHess, Harold Hutson, Robert Janes,Judith Kahn, Lorin King, LorraineKrueger, Muriel Levin, Fred Linder,Catherine Lutherman, Kathryn Mac-lennan, Anne McNeill, Gordon Mc¬Neill, Jerome Moberg, AnastasiaMajarakis, Audrey Neff, Ivan Niven,Elaine Ogden, Lucille Overhoff, Mar¬guerite Owings, Ruth Neuendorffer,Frederic Pera, John Palmer, Mon¬rad Paulson, Marjorie Pendleton, Ra¬chel Reese, Charlotte Rextrew, MaryRobbins, Ellen Seeger, Bernice Sha¬fer, Richard Sidell, Josephine Stan¬ley, Ralph Straetz, Louis Stuckart,Helen Thomson, Alan Tully, Ger¬trude Wright, Joseph Yoh, and Wil¬liam Butters.A buffet supper for both old andnew’ members of the Council will beheld next Sunday evening at 6:15 onthe lawn of the home of Dean andMrs. Charles W. Gilkey. The supperwill be followed by games and anafterdark trip to the Chapel tower.Officers of the Chapel Council,who were also elected at its last meet¬ing are Fred Ash, president, WilliamCooper, vice-president, and FrancesProtheroe, secretary. and special discussions and dinnerswill be held in Judson Court.Discuss Social SciencesThe Social Sciences Division isholding two series of talks. TalcottParsons, assistant professor of Soci¬ology at Harvard and Pittman B.Potter, visiting professor of Inter¬national Relations will give them.Various members of the faculty willgive lectures almost daily on popu¬lar subjects. One of the first willbe by Carl Bricken, who will discuss“Modern Trends in Music,” with pianoillustrations on June 25. Garfield V.Cox, w’ill give an “Analysis of theInflation Problem” July 6. GiuseppeBorgese, professor of Italian Liter¬ature, will speak about the poetD’Anunzio, July 9..T. V. Smith will talk from 2:30 to.5, July 26, on the “Promise of Amer¬ican Politics.” Dr. Arthur HollyCompton, Nol)el Prize winner, will dis¬cuss the “Structure of PhysicalWorld,” July 23. William De Vane,head of the English department atCornell University, has something tosay about “Milton, and the Fall ofNature,” on August 3.Report Whaling StudyThe University’s only whaler. Dr.Eugene M. Ceiling, gives some of theresults of his biological studies on thewhale, August 5. On August 18,Professor Charles H. Judd, head ofthe Department of Education here,will try to answer the question of“What is General Education?”In addition to the lectures, therewill be a series of concerts on Thurs¬day evenings, from July 8 throughAugust 12. They will be given by theIllinois Symphony Orchestra, a unitof the Federal Music Project of theWP.A, in Hutchinson Court or MandelHall.University PressAnnounces Listof Summer Books“The World and Man as ScienceSees Them,” edited by Forest RayMoulton and including chapters by13 eminent scientists, is one of theimportant books announced yester¬day in the summer publication sched¬ule of the University Press.Appearing in August, it will suc¬ceed the popular “The Nature of theWorld and of Man” published in1926, and will cover the advancesmade in the physical and biologicalsciences during the la.st decade.Also included on the summer pub¬lication schedules are “MaternalCare,” by Dr. Fred L. Adam; “Pub¬lic Medical Services,” a survey oftax supported medical care by Mi¬chael M. Davis, Chairman of theCommittee of Research in MedicalEconomics; the second volume of‘Perlesvaus: Le Haut Livre duGroad,” by William A. Nitze; “Chi¬cago Credit Market” by MelchiorPalyi;” “Gastroscopy—the Endoscop¬ic Study of Gastric Pathology,” byRudolph Schindler; “Personality De¬velopment in Children,” by Ernest J.Chave; volume two of the Dictionaryof American English, edited by SirWilliam Craigie; and “Machine Poli¬tics; Chcago Model” by Harold F.Gosnell.CAN YOU AFFORD TO BE INJURED?WHO WILL PAY THE BILU5 WHEN YOU HAVE YOURACCIDENT?' Bill Walling, Ph.B. *33Paul Whitney, Ph.B. '36CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANYI N. LaSALLE STREET RANIX)LPH 8440Caricature, Photography, Humor, FictionREAD THEPHINAL PHOENIXA SAM HAIR BALLAD“THE DAMNED JEW”THE SYCOPHANTIC MAROON”and a signed Gertie.McEvoy, Pfanstiehl, Plochmann, Griffith Students ProtestPolice Shooting ofStriking WorkersFive hundred students gathered atthe noon hour yesterday m the Circleto hear two representatives of theSteel Workers Organizing Committeediscuss the current strike at the plantof the Republic Steel Corporation inSouth Chicago.After the meeting, which was spon¬sored by the American Student Un¬ion, a collection netting $35 was gath¬ered from the crowc, and approxi¬mately fifty students left for .strikeheadquarters in South Chicago to at¬tend ma.es funeral services for the .sixstrikers killed by police in the Sun¬day riot at the plant.The speakers, were Mrs. VirginiaBerowitz, head of the S.W.O.C. wom¬en’s auxiliary, and George Patterson,also from the C.I.O. union.Patterson told the full story of thsSunday afternoon fray. The strik¬ers, he declared, had no motive otherthan to form a mass picket line infront of the plant, although the policehad been wrongly in formed that thestrikers would attempt to invade theplant. When the strikers pressed ondespite the police warning, the policebegan to club them. When the strik¬ers fought back the police opened fire.The strikers were unarmed, accordingto Patterson.Patterson condemned the metropol¬itan press for its handling of thestory, saying, “If you believe the Trib¬une and the Examiner, God help you.” Judges AnnounceWinners of Fiske^Folklore AwardsJudges of the John Billings Fiskepoetry prize, the Susan Colver Ros-enberger prize, and the Chicago Folk¬lore prize have announced their re¬spective winners.Isaac L. Ro.senfield, a sophomore,was named winner of the $100 Fiskepoetry prize for a group of poemswas entitled “A Season of Earth.”Horace Bond or Dlilard Universityin New Orleans, who submitted a the¬sis on “Social and Economic Influ¬ences on the Public Education of Ne¬groes in Alabama, 1865-1930,” andAxel Wallgren, who wrote on “TheRegistrar in the Junior Colleges ofthe United States,” were each award¬ed a Susan Colver Rosenberger prizeof $115.Fritz Frauchiger was named win¬ner of the Chicago Folklore prize of$50 on the basis of his essay on theKuhriehen or Rans des vaches.THREE MONTHS' COURSEPOI COILIGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATtSA tkonmgk, imUnsiPt, stanpgraphie count-aterting Ja$autry 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.bUanatlng Bookkt rantfrt*. without obligation—mitt or phono. No oolidtora employ jd.moserBUSINESS COLLEGErAUl MOSER. J.D..m.S.MegtAmrCenrtea, open to High SdtoolGraAutteo only, may ho otartod any Monday. Dayand Evening EvoningCourua open to men.HAS.Michigan Av*.,Chicaga.Randolph 434^ DESIGN PATENT U. B. PATENT OFFICENO. D6064224.HOURSERVICE THIS'RADE MARKIS YOURGUARANTEE WIMPY GRILLS, Inc.Famous for'The Glorified Hamburger"(Trade Mark Reg.)Invite you to the most beautifullyappointed Sandwich Shops inAmerica.1558 E. 63r(l 1400 E. 63rdAt Stony Island Ave. At Dorcheater672 W. 63rd St., East ef Halsted117 E. Chicago Ave., at Michigan1055 Lawreneo Ave., opp. AragonHouse of Wimpy in the Boston StoreQnalitySarvic*ClcanllnaMWONDERFUL ACCOMMODATIONS FOR THESUMMER ON THE CAMPUS5747 UNIVERSITYAVE.LIBRARY, GAME, BILLIARD AND PING PONGROOMSAvailable at No Additional Charge.jiieenea, r«prENliM$ed fronf!■« etEihings, are on Msehplate. 'Thoae showa aresUniversity ChapelIda Noyes Hall 'Cobb HallHull CourtHarper Memorial LibrarySwift Hall and Bond ChapelRyerson LibrarySnell and Hitchcock HallsEckhart HallBillings Memorial LibraryHarper CourtHutchinson Court andMitchell TowerProbably tbe last chance to get yourUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOommemorailvemade by Spode Copeland in EnglandWhether you are an alumnus, a near graduate or a freshman, youwill treasure a set of these plates in your collection of mementosof University days. They not only bring back memories but areuseful and very decorative as well. They were designed and madeespecially for the alumni of the University of Chicago by one ofthe world’s finest potteries ... And when these sets are gone, addi¬tional ones will be obtainable only on special order and at a muchhigher price. By special arrangement they are conveniently dis¬played at Woodsworth’s Book Store, 1311 East 57th Street,where you may leave your order. Also available in Field’s ChinaSection, Second Floor.#075Limited qaaiitity9 specially priced dozenMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANYnuuiiniiiiiii^^ flDHiiiiinHiiiiiiiiimiiiniPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1937Chapel UnionOutlines Plansfor Next Year Discuss Plans for Harvard AppointsBusiness Congress Staley Professorat Annual Dinner at Fletcher SchoolHold Party for FreshmenDuring First Week ofSchool.John Van de Water, president ofthe Chapel Union, yesterday an¬nounced the partly completed sched¬ule of Union meetings for next year.The group will begin its social pro¬gram with its annual freshman partyto be held Sunday evening, October3 at the home of Dean and Mrs.Charles W. Gilkey.The second meeting of the yearwill be a combination beach partyand get-together to be held the fol¬lowing Sunday, October 10. Thebeach party will be held in the af-ernoon, after which the entire mem¬bership of the Union and anyone in¬terested in joining will meet in IdaNoyes Hall.The first meeting of the SocialProblems group will be held Sunday,October 17.The annual party for transfer stu¬dents, to be held Saturday, October16, concludes the meetings whichhave so far been arranged for Oc¬tober.The first outing of the year will befor freshman students, and will con¬tinue this year’s policy of one-daytrips, which can be planned moreeasily and participated in morecheaply than weekend outings. Sat¬urday, November 6 has been chosenas the day for the trip.The following day, Sunday, No¬vember 7, the second big meeting ofthe quarter for the entire member¬ship will take place.The Student-Faculty tea, of whichthere were two this year, has beenscheduled for Friday, November 12.Those given this year proved so suc¬cessful in enabling students and fac¬ulty to meet one another socially thatthe committee in charge felt justifiedin planning another.Another successful venture of thisyear was the Barn Dance, which thecommittee hopes to make a Univer¬sity institution. The first one of nextyear will be held Saturday, November20.Although nothing has been defi¬nitely decided upon, there will besome kind of social gathering duringThanksgiving vacation for those stu¬dents who are in the city. Concluding its social activities ofthe year, the School of Business willhold its annual dinner next Thurs¬day evening in Hutchinson Commonsat 6:30.Principal speaker will be Harry A.Wheeler, president of the Railw'ayBusiness Association, who will dis¬cuss the plan for establishing a con¬gress of Business.Assistant Dean W. N. Mitchell ofthe School will present the annualaw'ards to the outstanding studentsin the graduating class.Presiding at the dinner will beJohn Mathieu, president of the Stu-i dent Council, who will introduce thej speakers. The program of speecheswill be followed by dancing.Tickets, priced at $1.10 for Busi¬ness School students and $1.25 forothers, are on sale at the School ofBusiness office and from studentagents.Hugh Impey, Robert Miller, Cath¬erine Feeney and Gordon Freese arethe new members of the StudentCouncil, elected last Friday.Initiations(Continued from page 1)Ed Bergman, Herzl Daskal, FranklinHorwich, Leonard Shermer.Psi Upsilon initiated 17 out of 17.Officers are: Francis Carey, RobertPainter, Robert Upton, Robert Jones,John Palmer, James Douglas, BillCummins.Sigma Chi initiated 14 out of 18.Officers are: Thane Benedict, CharlesBurnett, William Hardy, John Culp.Zeta Beta Tau initiated 6 out of9. Officers are: Robert Eckhouse,Robert Eisenstein, Robert Rosenfels,Louis Rubin, Charles Stern.TheHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57th StreetN. W. Corner Stony Inland Eugene Staley, assistant professorof Economics, has been granted ayear’s leave of absence to take overa professorship of International Eco¬nomic Relations at Harvard’s recent¬ly inaugurated Fletcher School ofLaw and Diplomacy at Medford,Massachusetts.Professor Staley and his wife areleaving next week for Europe wherehe will serve as a member of theAmerican delegation to the Tenth In¬ternational Studies Conference of theLeague of Nations meeting at Paris.At the General Study Conference onPeace Change, he will present a pa¬per on raw materials and markets.This paper, entitled “Raw Materialsin Peace and War,’’ will be publishedthis month in book form by the Coun¬cil on Foreign Relations. CLASSIFIED ADS |LEAVING for Los Angeles at end |of term; room for three. Dallas, jCarlsbad, Grand Canyon, Boulder;Dam. W. Elliot, 7023 Woodlawn, |Hammond, Indiana.COLLEGE STUDENTS—for sum¬mer months; splendid experience;pleasant w'ork; good salary; oppor¬tunity for permanency. AddressDept* E, 59 E. Van Buren St., Chi- jcago. DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdToday‘Ready Willing and Able**‘Boss Rider of Gun Creek** Phone Hyde Park 3701 E.^tablished ISSRHYDE PARK CITYEXPRESS AND VANFURNITURE, PIANO MOVING ANDEXPRESSING5639 Harper ArenaeConvocation(Continued from page 1)Alumni School(Continued from page 1)time to hear Dr. David Slight discuss“Mental Health in Modeim Life andF'uture Prospects.’’ This was follow¬ed by a discussion of “Mental Con¬flict in Personality Adjustment’’ byDr. Mandel Sherman. PhysiologistNathaniel Kleitman concluded theafternoon session by reporting on thestudies he has made of sleep.In an address Wednesday eveningin the Commons, Orientalist WaldoH. Dubberstein revealed that the sub¬jects which perturb business men to¬day are the same w’hich the ancientBabylonian merchants discussed intheir public bars.Spencer on Wagner ActThe business school faculty tookover the sessions Wednesday evening.Professors Palmer, Cox, and DeanSpencer giving vent to their views oncurrent marketing trends, inflation,and the implications of the WagnerAct.Anthropology was introduced tothe alumni (mostly alumnae) yester¬day by a trio of scholars, Alfred R.Radcliffe-Brown (making what wasprobably his farewell appearance be¬fore a University audience), W.Lloyd Warner, and Fay-Cooper Cole. In My Head,’’ and an antithonal an¬them for two choirs called “YeWatchers and Ye Holy Ones.’’ At¬tendance at Convocation Sunday isI voluntary. *i The latest list of degrees gives thej following number of recipients: A. B.,1 485; LLl.B., 1; A. M., 99; M. B. A.,2; J. D., 57; M. D., 216; J.S.D., 1;I Ph.D., 49; and D. D., 1.i Admission to the ceremonies is byI ticket, two of which will be given to' to each candidate They are being dis¬tributed now in the corridor of CobbHall. Any extra tickets will be giv¬en out in Mandel Hall at noon, Thurs¬day, June 10. Students desiringthem may come in an hour early andsit down, and will receive the ticketsin the order of their arrival.All candidates for degrees mustwear academic dress, which may berented from the Bookstore. A rep¬resentative of the Bookstore will bein Ida Noyes Hall after the servicesto take up the caps'and gowns.Candidates will assemble at 10:15and 2:15 in the basement of the Cha¬pel, where the Aides and Mar¬shals will count them before the[ group files in.BLUE BIRD CAFENow in Their New Homeat7009-11-13 Stony IslandAvenueformerly at8327 South Chicago AvenueLUNCHEONSDINNERSBEVERAGESMrs. Emma McFaddeninvites you.Special AttentionPartiesTel.: Dorchester 8227 VICTOR%25575‘Buzzin** Round With theBee—F.T.Whoa Babe—F.T.Lionel Hampton and hisOrchestra25576The You and Me That UsedTo Be—F.T.When Two Love EachOther—F.T.Eddy Duchin and his Orchestra25577Alibi Baby—F.T.He*8 a Gypsy FromPoughkeepsie—F.T.Tommy Dorsey and hisClam Bake SevenUNIVERSITY MUSICAND RADIO CO.1371 East 55th St. at DorchesterOPEN 9 A M. to 9 P.M.CARBURETORYELLO-BOLENew way of burning tobacco—better, cooler, cleaner. Car¬buretor-Action coolt smoke. Keepebottom of bowl abaolutely dry.Caked with honey. At dealers’ now.LATEST DISCOVERYIN PIPES I NEW THRILLS-CHILLSRIVERVIEW!In spite of the fact that theyare competing with the newestand most thrilling inventionsof the amusement park field,the Ferris Wheel and the“Chutes" retain their placeamong the most popular ofthe many attractions at River-view.Riverview’s Ferris Wheel,an up-to-date descendant ofthat fascinating device intro¬duced to Chicago and the Mid¬dle West at the Columbia Ex¬position of 1893, ri.ses about85 feet in the air.The "Chutes” combines thepleasure of a sweep throughthe air with a swift glide overthe water and a journeythrough a dark and mysterioustunnel. Over 100 feet high, itis exceeded in height only bythe 220 foot tower of the new' ‘Pair-O-Chutes. WHOOPS,VACATIONEERS..Let staunch, dependable Railway Express ship your baggage, bundlesand boxes straight home. Top speed. Low cost. Real economy. Pick¬up and delivery without extra charge — in all cities and principaltowns—and send collect if you want to. Just phone the nearest Rail¬way Express office when to call. Easy os that, and believe us, you'llrelax contentedly in your Pullman.70 E. Randolph St.Phone Harrison 9700, Chicago, III.R AI LWA^^^XPRE S SAGKN'CY'x /i.nc.MEDITERRANEANand SOVIET RUSSIA!This is a cruisc'offer that no college student canafford to “pass up" without careful thought! Weighthe pros and cons—the itinerary against the extremelylow price—this rare travcLeducation against any othervacation! And at barely more than $5 per day, theRoma Summer Cruise is actually one of the mosteconomical vacations you might plan.YOU’LL ENJOY THIS THIRD CLASSGood food, good times, real cruise entertainment! Planned es'pedally fa: students, professors, vacationists of culture. Neat,ooDofortable staterooms, big Dining Salon, Smoking Room, Bar,Lounge. CoUege orchestra. OUTDCDOR SWIMMING POOL.Seci/re complete details, illustrated literature, etc., fromLOCAL TRAVEL AGENT orITALIAN LINE • THOS. COOK & SONTHIRD CLASS reservedfor touristsLeaving New York... June 30Returning.. .Aug. 2253 DAYS • 20 CALLSIncluding Madeira, Gibraltar, Ville-franche^ Genoa, Naplea, Palermo,Beirut, Haifa, Port Said, Rhodes,cruising the Dardanelles and Bos¬phorus, Yalta, (}o8tanza, Istanbul,Phaleron (Athens), Ragusa, Venice,Naples, GtnoA, Cannes, Gibraltar.FirstClass$62SDp > Tourist Closs$365up333 No. Michigan Ave., Chicago 3.50 No. Michigan Ave., ChicagoIf You Have Already Subscribed ...You may claim your copy by presenting your sub-sciiption at the CAP & GOWN offices in Lexing¬ton Hall. Any balance due must be paid beforebooks will be given out. All books not claimed be¬fore Wed., June 9, will e placed on sale and thedown payment will be forfeited. THE NEW AND DIFFERENT1937 CAP & GOWNWILL BE OUT TOMORROWGet Your Copy By Presenting Your Sub¬scription Receipt at the Offices inLexingtop Hall If You Want a Book and Have Not YetSubscribed ...There is still a very limited number of books whichwill be placed on sale Monday, June 7. Whenthese few are gone, the only available copies will bethn^r. sobor-ribr.d for and not claimed, which v;il!be placed on' sale Thursday, June 10. $3.50.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1937 Page FiveCerebralSalvage ♦ ♦From j. G. M.a e VIn a 9x12 manila folder on ourdesk lies a sheaf of yellow papers.They represent the Unfinished Busi¬ness of this column. Sadly, for us atlea.st,the column ends with the year’sMaroon, !»o the business must remainunfinished.But perhaps the columns already !written represent Unfinished Busi-1ness even more than do these papers.We have written on a number of sub¬jects, but certainly we have not set¬tled anything. We have stirred noend of controversy, which is desir¬able, but not an end in itself. How¬ever, we feel complimented in theknowledge that almost every columnhas provoked both approval and dis¬approval, both sentiments havingbeen expressed very intently at onetime or another.* * *As for resulting constructive ac¬tion, there has been little. A few of ithe organizations criticized have Iquickened their pace. A few confer¬ences have been held, and an all¬campus activities conference is inthe offing for fall.Fraternity men, generally, have re¬sented, refused to take seriously, orignored, the attitude of the columntoward them and the fraternity sys¬tem. Yet when the candidates fornext year’s Interfraternity Commit¬tee appeared before this year’s groupto be interviewed, they showed a sin¬gularly serious consciousness of theproblems before fraternities.On the grounds of ignorance, wehave largely ignored the academiclife. Yet we aroused the ire of thePolitical Science department by sim- jply stating a case history and a ques- \tion. Our hunch is that yet more jstorms would be provoked by asking !more questions of the faculty. jWe would like to ask questions else- |where, also. We would like to ask jwhat the distinction between a stu-}dent “liberal” and a student Com-1munist is. It has been increasingly 'hard to make.\^e would like to ask more aboutthe place of intercollegiate athletics inthe University. Considering the num¬ber of those who participate, the Uni¬versity is spending a lot of moneywhich is not coming back at the gates.* * »Yea, we have our prejudices; every¬one does. It is only by bringing theminto open discussion that we can hopefor progre.ss in accord with reason.For one of the foremost institutionsof higher learning, tnere is certainlya lot of primitive back-biting goingon in this University. We are clos¬er than w’e think to those who arefighting it out in cold steel and bul¬lets.Must we always find the same mis¬understanding between the variousstudent groups? Must we always findthe same sort of rigid, voluntarilyenforced segregation? We have ablind faiih that the answer is no,an answer for which we have littlematerial evidence in the last year’sactivities.But there is some evidence. On theUniversity AlumnaPresents Artists atParis ExpositionMathilda Ernestine, a former Uni¬versity of Chicago student, is to pre¬sent American musicians and artistsat the Paris Exposition of 1937 atthe invitation of the French Govern¬ment during the American Day thatis being planned for American talent.This is to be a feature of Miss Ernes¬tine’s Beaux Arts Salon Good-WillTour through England, France, Bel¬gium, Holland and Switzerland, whichsails from New York on July 9th onthe Isle De France and returns onthe S8 Normandie sailing August11 from Le Havre.In Chicago, Miss Ernestine is nowthe Directrice of the Beaux Arts Sa¬lon of Chicago and Paris. At theMedinah Club, 605 North MichiganAvenue, she has presented a “NewStar Series of Chicago artists”—sev¬eral of which have won opera andcinema contracts during this seasonthrough this appearance.Mr. John Stocks of the Universityof Chicago Travel Bureau is MissErnestine’s campus representative.Women’s Tennis TitleTaken by KarahutaTerminating a month of play, MaryKarahuta won the women’s all-cam¬pus tennis tournament by defeatingMarguerite Sieverman 7-5, 6-4, onthe Varsity courts yesterday after¬noon. Maroon this year a more varied lotof journalists worked thanever before, we can safely say. Thepeace activities of the year drew up¬on wider interests than ever before.The Gilkey’s home, with the ChapelUnion to aid, again fostered a demo¬cratic spirit. And unknowns appear¬ed in D. A. casts.The year has been interesting, ifnot profitable. Senior PartyAll seniors are urged to leavefor the class day party at theDunes Park Tuesday at 2. Trans¬portation may be by automobile.South Shore suburban, or by busby signing up at the coffee shoptable between 10 and 12 today. Seniors(Continued from page 1)next Tuesday. The only charge willbe a ten cent admission charge tothe park. Dan Heindel, a memberof the Class Council, told of plans forthe gift fund. The amount collected by the class, $400, is to be added to$600 given by the University, andthe complete sum is to be applied toan outdoor cafe to be built next tothe coffee shop and for a partial re¬building of Hutchinson Court. The ce¬ment sidewalks are to be replacedwith flagstones, and the area aroundthe fountain is to be partially paved.Plans for the Dunes party include a campfire, at which Dean Smith willtell stories, a marshmallow roast andsing, swimming, and baseball games.Food and locker room facilities maybe found at the park. All of thoseinterested in going in a bus may doso for one dollar a round trip, andshould see Florence Rottersman orHenrietta Rybsezinski in front of theCoffee Shop between 10 and 12 today.Lay out something cool—it looks like a hot day in townCarson Pirie Scott & CoThe Summer Edition ofThe Single Needle Stiteh ShirtIs of Zephyr Weight Madras$2.50If you yield to the urge of ideas, here’s a chance toyield in the right direction and provide yourselfwith shirts capable of proving to you that dressingfor warm weather doesn’t call for a letdown in yourluual high standard of appearance. The weight ofthese shirts is negligible and what they offer in col*lar interest and original new thoughts in stripearrangement and coloring is pulse stirring. Theshirt with short point collar comes with French cuffs.Shirts, First Floor.Of Imported Silk CrepeAlive with New Patternand Color Interest$1.50For a fabric as well suited for spring andsummer neckties—silk crepe, in our opinion,hasn’t had the following it deserves. Thisseason should, however, see a change, for thedesigns and colorings in this 1937 collectioninclude besides the large, colorful figures forwhich crepes are noted, patterns not only towin over the devotee of small, neat all-overfigures, but others in subdued colorings thatwill he of interest to the most dyed-in-woolconservatives.Ties, First FloorTropic Weight WorstedTwo Trousers9 Coat and Vest$38o50To take a practical view on the matter of summerclothing—there’s nothing better fitted to stand the gaffof six hot days a week in town than a suit of tropicalworsted. That’s especially true of crease resistant tropicweight worsteds of this quality. They hold their pressand their screen-like weave is an open invitation to everypassing breeze. Along with that they tailor beautifully,and hold their lines with the rigidity of the muchheavier weight materials whose patterns they take after.Clothing, Second FloorTtoo-fiece single breasted, doublebreasted, and sfort back TroficalWorsted—$25.* Two-fiece double breastedDrafe tailored Trofkal WorstedsS30,Two-piece single breasted, doublebreasted, and sport back TropicalWorsted—$22.50.Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. JUNE 4. 1937Show Biology Filmsat Alumni SchoolTwo new movies in the University’seducational series, a set of films deal¬ing with topics from the BiologicalSciences course, will receive an ad¬vance showing at the Alumni Schoolat 8:30 tonight.Ralph W. Gerard, associate profes¬sor of Physiology, prepared the movieon “The Nervous System.”ABLACKHAWKRandolph and wabashAnnounce Listof Counselorsfor Freshmen Accusadom at Maroon SapplantAristotle in Last Issue of PhoenixSnodgrass Shifts Emphasis Ifrom Social to Academic IAdjustment |!Harry Snodgrass, recently appoint- ited chairman of the Freshman orien-1tation committee, announced yester-!Iday the tentative list of one hundredupperclass counselors whose duty itwill be to orient freshmen duringfreshman week next fall.Snodgrass indicated that presentplans call for less emphasis on thesocial side of the orientation pro¬gram, more on the academic adjust¬ment which college life requires. Pur¬suant of this plan, only two danceswill be scheduled, one a barn dance.Snodgrass takes the place of DanHeindel, retiring chairman of theorientation committee.Counselors NamesThose selected follow: HerbertLarson, William Thomas, RobertBrinker, Robert Anderson, Paul Tat-ge, James Anderson, Richard Evans,Kanath Sponsel, Jerry Jeremy, Rob- iert Corbett, Burton Moyer, ClintonBoslek, Albert Farrell, George Krom-haut, Geen Gustafson, Emmett Dead-man, Harold Miles, Peter Wallace,Harry Mendenhall, Leo O’Neill, Har¬ry Moscow, Robert Simon, MelvinRosenfeld, Richard Norian, HenrySapperston, Eugene Gleichman, A1Joffee, Winston Bostick, Jack Bern-hart, Fred Ash, Thomas Alves.Others are: Houston Harsha, Spen¬cer Irons, Jason Kaplan, FrancisCallahan, Alfred Derazia, WilliamOlson, George Works, HarlowSmythe, Cecil Bothwell, Joseph Ste¬phenson, Allan Johnstone, ArthurClauter, Francis Johnson, JohnThompson, John Meyers, Ned White,John Wilcox, Dan Whitley, MarkHutchinson, Dean Tasher, ArthurEdwards, Stanley Sommerville, How¬ard Isaacson, Robert Brumbaugh,Lincoln Clark, Donald McDonald,George Grabow, David Levatin, Mor¬ris Rossiri, Max Wruzburg, CharlesStern, William Grody, Arthur Loewy,Gordon Tiger, Julian Goldsmith.List RemainderThe rest are: Richard Glasser,Lloyd James, Charles Hoy, John Bus¬by, Graham Fairbank, Alan Tully,Martin Miller, Harold Thomas, Wil¬liam Speck, Charles Manly, DavidHarris, Karl Prigram, Charles Pfeif¬fer, William McClellan, William Web-be, Charles Zerler, William Chap¬man, Robert Anderson, Robert Mer-riam, Richard Gale, William Webster,Joseph Caldwell, Byron Grundlach,Gordon Murray, Emil Thelin, Rob¬ert Bigelow, Richard Ferguson, Dun¬can Holaday, Jack Cornelius, RobertGrant, Robert Mahaney, James Murrand Hugh Campbell.Twenty alternates will be selectedlater. All that’s wrong with the Maroon.,is that its editors can’t get off thefence, or even steal down after allthe shooting is over and the issuedead, according to the featured ar¬ticle of the cifrrent Phoenix, put onsale yesterday. Biography, impres¬sionism, fantasy, balladry, an analy¬sis of campus, anti-semitism, plus theregular columns fill the remainder ofwhat is an issue distinctly better thannormal.Bob Speer, a born crusader whochronically sees things either black orwhite, accuses the Maroon of havingmiffed all of nine campus issuesthrough fence straddling or neglectof fundamental issues. He furtheraccuses it of tergiversation on thequestion of athletics and the influ¬ence of local plutocrats on Universitypolicy.Sam Hair contributes a ballad ofCap and Gown•(Continued from page 1)Echo turns its face away from thehumor which it possessed last yeartoward the style of the news maga¬zine that it attempts to ape. ButTime is a weekly.Echo interpets and interprets andinteprets, but it tells little more thanwas said about the events in the pagesof the Maroon in most cases, andwhere it does it often garbles thefacts.Last year we caught the personal¬ity of Editor Bill Lang in the lightlywritten commentary on many sidesof University life. This year Langhas been subdued and over hm risesthe verbosity of C. Sharpless Hick¬man sitting in his ivory tower andwatching the campus. Although it isapparent that he believes himself tobe all-seeing, he does not see all; andwhat he does see is not very dis¬tinctly portrayed. Giving vent toprejudices, peeves, and petty gripes,Hickman has dwelt to an abnormalextent on his unfortunate associa¬tion with members of the MaroonBoard of Control, his more fortunateassociation with International Houseimpressarios, James Wellard andWesley Greene with smatterings ofhis other loves the films and the stagethrown in at odd (oh, very odd attimes) intervals.But enough of Hickman. As awhole the yearbook, which includesEcho, hits a new high for Cap andGowns of recent years. It surpasses1933 in content, 1934 in format, and1935 in general all-around attractive¬ness.Marshals(Continued from page 1)Elect ShostromCaptain of TennisSquad for 1938Undefeated in Big Ten dual play,winner of the Conference fifth flighttitle, and co-holder with Krietensteinof the third doubles title, John Shos¬trom was elected captain of the 1938tennis squad by this year’s teamchampions.Shostrom, a member of Psi Upsi-lon, won his varsity letter last yearwhen he went to the finals in hisbracket. He holds 14th place in theNational Inter-collegiate rankings,which is the highest for any memberof the Maroon squad.Returning with Shostrom next yearwill be Chet Murphy, fourth flightwinner, and Bill Murphy, the numbertwo man this year.Numeral winners in tennis thisyear are James Atkins, Kenneth Bec¬ker, Arthur Jorgensen, and CharlesShostrom, brother of the new cap¬tain. Shostrom won the freshmentournament by defeating Jorgensenon the Varsity courts yesterday 6-1,6-2. One more numeral may beawarded next week. of B. W. 0. and a member of Mor¬tar Board; Benson is a member ofPhi Delta Upsilon; Breihan is head ofWomen’s Federation; Patrick is amember of Esoteric; Protheroe ispresident of Ida Noyes Council, mem¬ber of the first cabinet of Y. W. C. A.,of the Chapel Council, and of Sig¬ma; and Rix is a member of MirrorBoard, chairman of the play com¬mittee of the Dramatic Association,and a member of Mortar Board.Chicago TheaterRobert Taylor - Barbara Stanwyck‘THIS IS MY AFFAIR”United Artists TheaterJanet Caynor - Frederic March“A STAR IS BORN”GARRICK THEATRE‘‘ELEPHANT BOY”Roosevelt TlieaterEdw. G. Robinson • Bette Davis‘‘KID GALAHAD”Oriental Theater‘HOTEL HAYWIRE’with Leo CarilloAPOLLO‘The Prince and the Pauper’with Errol Flynn Tillie the Toiler, more remarkable forlength than for anything else. It re¬lates the genesis of a burlyque per¬former.Some of the more private adven¬tures of Cody Pfanstiehl in the bigwicked city are related in “Bound¬ary.” Gertie assumes a German titleto portray George Messmer, Germanemigre, former Nazi, self-styled de¬bater without peer.“Abrahamson” comes to the con¬clusion that anti-semitism is less pro¬nounced on the University campusthan it was in the time of VincentSheean, and less conspicuous on thiscampus than on most others. Herather exaggerates the intensity ofthe chasm between the two groups.An impressionistic picture of campuslife is attempted in an article sug¬gestively entitled “Insanity.” On thewhole it succeeds more in annoyingthe reader by its disjointedness thanin fixing the campus tone.McEvoy proves himself illiterate byattributing to Shakespeare what real¬ly belongs to Tennyson. FinallyPhoenix takes a leaf out of the Ma¬roon notebook with a fantasy on theauction of philosophers to Universityprofessors. |The chief virtue of the issue is Ithat there is no discussion of scholas-'ticim and Aristotle barely raises his jhead. -Howard TemperoWho’s Who on Campus Next YearHead Marshal— William McNeillSenior Aide—Helen WoodrichBar Association president—Russell JohnsonCamad (School of Business)—Jane WilliamsPhi Delta Kappa (Department of Education)-Chapel Council chairman—Fred Ash ,YWCA president—Helen WoodrichFederation of University Women chairman—Hildegarde BreihanFreshman Orientation head—Harry SnodgressStudent Settlement Board president—Mary Letty GreenBWO chairman—Betty BardenInterfraternity Council chairman—Ralph LeachInterclub chairman—Betty BoothOwl and Serpent president—Robert B. AndersonIron Mask—John Van de WaterThe Daily MaroonEditor—William McNeillBusiness Manager—Charles HoyCap and GownPublisher—Herbert LarsonEditor—Robert UptonBusiness Manager—Robert MohlmanPulseCo-Editors—John Morris and Audrey EichenbaumCo-Business Managers—Wilbur Jerger, Everett WarshawskyBlackfriars Abbot—Francis CallahanMirror president—Aileen WilsonLeaders Organization—Harry SnodgressWAA—Marcia LakemanDramatic Association—Robert WagonerChapel Union—John Van de WaterIda Noyes Council—Frances ProtheroeIntramurals—Ralph Leach, Graham FairbankFrolic Theater5Sth & ELLIS AVE.Today and Tomorrow‘‘MIDNIGHT COURT”‘‘WE HAVE OURMOMENTS”Sunday, Monday, Tuesday‘‘Personal Property”**GirI From Scotland Yard” Warner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd St.Today and Tomorrow‘‘MIDNIGHT COURT”‘‘WE HAVE OURMOMENTS” LMi/eer29 flagBecause they’re milder... becausetaste better ••• because they give smokersMORE PLEASURE • • • Chesterfields are satis¬fying millions of smokers, men and women,in all the four comers of the earth.Often a cigarette wins popularityin a small part of the country. . .a few. cigarettes become known allover the country.But you will find Chesterfieldswherever cigarettes are sold in theUnited States and on board all thegreat ships of the world . . . under29 flags and wherever they touch...and for good reasons.Chesterfields willgiveyoumorepleasure.. 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