Today's HeadlinesPresident’s column, page 1.MacMurray returns to Law School,page 1.Newsreel plans frills, p&ge 1.Pifle club wins meet, page 4.Political Union parties caucus, page1. QDbe Baflp itteroonVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1937 Price Five CentsPresidentSpeakingTo WILLIAM McNEILLSome years ago at the time of theWalgreen investigation the downtownnewspapers came in for a lot of rib¬bing for inaccuracy. They have noth¬ing on the current campus press.Pulse for instance recently ran anarticle about the departure of Pro¬fessor Millett. It stated that he hadasked for a raise in status and salary,been refused, and so he resigned andwent in a huff to Ohio Wesleyan.Aside from the fact that he made nosuch request, that consequently hewas not refused, that he didn’t re¬sign, and that he didn’t go to OhioWesleyan, the article was a, very finearticle.WalgreenFoundationOr take the Maroon. Last Fridayyou ran a story on the delay in fillingthe W'algreen chair for the study of.American institutions stating that Iw'as getting restless, had visited theWalgreen mansion several times, andhad suggestions for the occupancy ofthe chair rejected by Mr. W'algreen.Actually I don’t even know whether.Mr. Walgreen has a mansion. I sin¬cerely hope he has. I am not restless,and have not had any suggestionsturned down.What the University plans to dowith the new chair is to bring someeminent man to the campus capableof commanding wide student interestand at the same time qualified to di-rc'ct and take part in research. Sucha man is not easy to find, and noteasy to get once he is found. Afterall, the gift was only made lastspring, and it is not considered goodacademic ethics to take a man fromanother institution on short notice.Harvard is in a similar difficulty withthe Lament professorship, which wasto have been the first of a number ofroving professorships. The gift wasmade three years ago, and nobodyhas yet been found to occupy thepost.University andNegro HousingTne question of University in¬fluence in various property ownersleagues engaged in promoting restric¬tive agreements against negro ten¬ancy has been much discussed re¬cently. The University favors thedevelopment of living conditions fornegroes of a sort that American citi¬zens should have. What the Univer¬sity can do to bring this to pass isanother question. No policy has yetbeen formulated for University ac¬tion that would improve negro hous¬ing conditions, and until such a policyis worked out, nothing can be saidas to University plans for partici¬pating in such a program.University andThe CommunityThis leads to the larger questionof the relationship between the Uni-(Continued on page 3) Carbon Monoxide GasOvercomes ProfessorOvercome by carbon monoxide gaswhile in his garage yesterday,Franklin Bobbitt, professor of Educa¬tional Administration, is now con¬fined to Billings hospital where hiscondition is said to be improving.Although complete informationwas not available last night, it is re¬ported that the garage door slam¬med shut while the University pro¬fessor was inside. The time and otherdetails concerning the incident werenot disclosed.Professor Bobbitt’s name was inthe headlines a few weeks ago whenhis wife filed suit for divorce. Thefamily strenuously denied that theevent was an attempt at suicide,however.Billings reported that ProfessorBobbitt was conscious yesterday af¬ternoon and will recover with no illeffects.Alumni MagazineReviews FootballReprints Article by TimesFavoring Large Univer¬sities.Consisting of varied articles de¬signed to appeal to all alumni, theUniversity of Chicago Magazine’ssecond issue of the season appears to¬day. In the Christmas spirit, thewhite cover boasts an effective photo¬graph of the Social Sciences Researchbuilding by W. L. Simpson of theAnatomy department.Ralph Cannon, class of ’20 and fea¬ture sports writer for the ChicagoDaily News, reviews the differenttypes of football played throughoutthe country. By request, James WeberLinn’s speech at the Alumni Schoollast year, “How Children Csn BestServe the Schools and Their Parents’’has been printed. Credit is given toAmos Alonzo Stagg, who is coachingat the College of the Pacific, by Bra-ven Dyer, staff writer of the LosAngeles Times.Favors Large UniversityBecause he believes the large uni¬versity offers greater opportunitiesfor growth and development, John R.Tunis, author of “Was College WorthWhile?’’ supports the large education¬al institution in a debate, which isreprinted from “The Rotarian.’’ Tu¬nis states, “I want my son to betoughened and battered in the cruel¬ties of a great university like Har¬vard or Chicago. After that nothingis tough, not even a World War. Iought to know. I was exposed toboth.’’E, W. Puttkammer, profes.sor ofLaw, and David Grene, Greek instruc¬tor, review books, while William V.Morgenstern,. Howard Mort, Fred B.Millett, Paul Maclean, and HerbertLarson offer their usual contribu¬tions.Divisions of Political Union HoldParty Caucuses Today, TomorrowBeginning the development of per¬manent platforms and considering theconstitution of the Political Union?caucuses of the Conservative, Liberal,and Radical parties will meet todayand tomorrow in the first step to or¬ganize the newly-elected members ofthe Union.The Conservatives meet tonight at7:30 in the Daily Maroon office andthe Liberals meet at the same placetomorrow night at 7:30, but the Rad¬ical caucus has not yet been 'an¬nounced.Friars Ask Juniorsto Report Today at 1All students interested in obtain¬ing junior positions on the Black-friars’ staff should report at 1 todayto the Blackfriars’ office in the Rey¬nolds club.If anyone interested in securing ajunior position cannot report at 1 to¬day, he is to communicate with amember of the Blackfriars’ boa|;d sothat another time may be set for aninterview.The five junior manager positionsopen are in five departments, busi¬ness, publicity, technical, production,and company. The following officers have been ap¬pointed pro-tem by the organizingcommittee according to chairman NedFritz: president—Richard Lindheim,a Radical; and secretary-treasurer—Bill Webbe, a Conservative. In ad¬dition there are: Paul Henkel and CyRuthenburg, Conservative co-chair¬men; Dennis McEvoy and EmmettDeadman, Liberal co-chairmen; andRadical co-chairman, John Marks andQuentin Ogren.The con.stitution will be mimeo¬graphed for the party caucuses be¬cause the Maroon lacks the space toprint it. The first meeting of theentire Union will be held December8 and the permanent officers will beselected by vote. Following this theparty caucuses will select permanentco-chairmen.Junior PositionsAny University junior interested inworking with the Student Social com¬mittee on plans for the WashingtonProm should interview Robert Eck-house between 4 and 5 this week inCobb 203.The four juniors chosen will act asbusiness manager, publicity manager,and a man and w'oman to act as headticket salesmen. \Bar Rules Force MacMurray to“Amuse** Himself for Three YearsBy JERRYDonald MacMurray, the young manw’ho completed a normal four yearcourse of study at the University inthe record time of nine months, hasreturned to the campus.After proving himself the sensationof the educational world in 1936 byintellectually skipping through thecourses required for a degree in theSocial Science department at Chica¬go, MacMurray attended Columbialast year on a fellowship. He enrolledin the Chicago Law School this quar¬ter.Observers predict that hard-think¬ing MacMurray will glide throughthe notoriously difficult Law School ina few months—or perhaps on somevacant week-end. However, MacMur¬ray announces: “Unfortunately, Imust spend the usual three years inthe Law School because of Bar Asso¬ciation requirements. The plan whichenables a student to advance rapidlyin the College does not apply to theLaw School.’’Publicity HooeyIn regard to the fantastic publicitygranted him by metropolitan news¬papers two years ago, MacMurrayinsists, “It was all hooey.’’ If thereader recalls, city publicationsstated that MacMurray was the typi¬cal genius—studying for 30 hours ata stretch, drinking extra-black cof¬fee, smoking incessantly, and neversleeping.MacMurray claims that he attend,ed few classes during his amazingundergraduate year, and that he spentthe majority of his hours playingbridge. In only one month did heYWCA Opens AnnualThree Day MembershipCampaign TomorrowWith emphasis on posters, pamph¬lets, and personal contacts, the an¬nual YWCA membership drive willbe launched tomorrow, beginning anintensive, three-day campaign to in¬terest University women in the ac¬tivities of the YWCA.Unitjue in the type of informativeliterature used in the membershipdrive, a two-toned blue pamphlet willbe widely distributed on campus andthrough the mail. In an informalstyle, the purpose and functions ofthe YWCA will be explained and amembership card enclosed on whichUniversity women may designatetheir interest in the various activi¬ties of the organization, which varyfrom volunteer hospital and settle¬ment work, to theatre parties, dis¬cussions of best sellers and visits tothe opera.Barbara Boyd, chairman of themembership committee, emphasizesthe point that membership cards arenot only for new members but alsofor the use of old members who arerenewing their interest in theYWCA. She states that it is impor¬tant for members to re-sign a mem¬bership card every year, in orderthat a complete and accurate mem¬bership list may be compiled.Signed membership cards may beleft at the “Y’’ tables to be placedin campus buildings for the nextthree days, or brought to the YWCAoffice from 9 to 4:30 on the secondfloor east of Ida Noyes hall.Freshmen Plan toElect King, QueenUndaunted by the exposes of Lil¬lian Schoen, the freshman class willcrown a “King and Queen of Swing”at the Freshman Dance on December10. No election will precede this cor¬onation, however; the royal couplewill be selected on the basis of theirability to “interpret swing,” — inother words it’s a dance contest.The committee in charge of ar¬rangements, headed by Charles Percyand Ashton Taylor, has announcedthat tickets will be on sale at theInformation desk, Ida Noyes and theReynold^ club, beginning today. Theyare priced at one dollar a couple, nostags admitted.The Interfraternity Committee hasdeclared the dance a campus functionand campus rushing rules will apply.Only those couples of which at leastone person is a freshman will be ad¬mitted. ABELSONput forth a concerted study effort.He considers class attendance a wasteof time. Although he has been ap¬pearing regularly for Law sessions,he does so only for amusement.Flunked OnceAs a sideline on his upstate NewYork grammar school training, Mac¬Murray admits that he flunked once.However, he was not promoted be¬cause of refusal to attend a physicaleducation class. Including the oneyear setback, the clever MacMurraymanaged to graduate from highschool at the tender age of 15.Religious LeadersConsider CouncilSeek to Clarify ReligiousGroups’ Status; Strivefor Cooperation.A luncheon meeting of the headsof the religious activities on campuswas held at Kimbark house yesterdaynoon.Presided over by Dean Charles W.Gilkey, the meeting was organized bya committee headed by Robert Giffen,interchurch representative. The pur¬pose of the conference was threefold:to clarify the status of present re¬ligious organizations; to discoverpossible fields of cooperation andcoordination; and to consider the pos¬sibility of creating a University Re¬ligious Council.Suggestions MadeA number of suggestions weremade, among them the issuance of abulletin of religious affairs to act asa clearing house of religious activi¬ties. Another suggestion was a courseof lectures presenting the beliefs ofthe various denominations. A seriesof joint meetings whereby two or¬ganizations get together and learnthe aims ajid ideas of each other wasalso proposed.A census was also suggested inorder to find out to which creeds thestudents subscribed, and to ascertainthe regularity of church attendance.The census would also consider thecommuters, and whether or not theyattended church in their own com¬munities.The last proposal dealt with con¬tacting students in the hospitals. Ofall the suggestions the most impor¬tant, and therefore the most debatedwas the creation of a University Re¬ligious Council. Many delegates feltthat the present Board of Social Ser¬vice and Religion was sufficient,whereas many others expressed theopinion that there is a definite needfor such a Council on the campus.Controversy SettledThe controversy was finally settledby Dean Gilkey’s appointing a com¬mittee to investigate and discuss theproblem and report at the next con¬ference.The officers of the conference were:Chairman, Dean Gilkey; Secretary,(Continued on page 3)Quincy WrightParticipates InTown Hall ForumQuincy Wright, professor of Inter¬national Law, took a leading part ina forum on “Dictatorship versusDemocracy” held last night by theTown Hall Meeting of Chicago at theLake Shore Athletic Club. AbbeErnes Dimnet, French author andphilosopher, was the other outstand¬ing speaker.Before the forum. Professor andMrs. Wright were guests of honor ata special dinner. They have recentlyreturned from Europe where Profes¬sor Wright made a study of Europeanpolitical trends and taught Interna¬tional Law at the College of Interna¬tional Studies in Geneva.Last night’s was the opening TownHall meeting of the season. 'The ad¬visory board of the organization in- |eludes two University faculty mem¬bers: Vice-president Frederic C.Woodward and Dr. Anton J. Carlson,chairman of the department of Phy¬siology. Its discussions are heldregularly throughout the winter sea¬son. Campus NewsreelShows Hunchbackof NotreDameInclude Review of AutumnActivities on ProgramThursday and Friday.The Campus Newsreel will presentits second show of the Autumn Quar¬ter Thursday and Friday afternoonsin Mandel Hall at 3:30 p. m., and inIda Noyes Theatre Friday evening at8:00 p. m. The program will be divid¬ed into two main features; a “Sixtyminute review of the Quarter Activi¬ties on Campus”, and “The Hunch¬back of Notre Dame”, starring theimmortal motion picture horror actor,Lon Chaney.The Director of the Newsreel,Paul Wagner, has announced that hehas been able to obtain the servicesof O. C. Dixon, professional con¬tortionist, who doubled for Chaney in“The Hunchback of Notre Dame” and“The Miracle Man.” Mr. Dixon isable to throw thirty-two joints in hisbody out of place. Ripley featuredhim in one of his famous “Believe Itor Not” cartoons a few years ago asthe only man in the world who couldmake himself taller by naturalmeans.Doctors and scientists are amazedthat any human body can be so flex¬ible, and even more amazed at theease and rapidity with which Dixonis able to change his bodily stature.He seems to be able to assume anyposition from a hunchback to aperson having only a broken finger.Contrary to popular belief, LonChaney was not a contortionist. Hehad to be strapped into the grotesqueshape his body was to take, and thiswas done only when a close-up wasrequired. Dixon took the parts thatrequired being in the hunchback posi¬tion for a sustained length of time.He will appear in Mandel Hall in theoriginal costume and make-up heused in the Chaney production.Palmer Christian GivesOrgan Recital Tonightin Rockefeller ChapelPalmer Christian, renowned organvirtuoso, will present a recital thisevening at 8:16 in the RockefellerMemorial Chapel.In addition to an increasing recordof recitals each season, Christian hasbecome preeminent among Americanorganists through his numerous andhighly successful appearances withthe foremost symphony orchestras ofthe country. Among these have beensolo appearances with the Chicago,Detroit, Minneapolis, Rochester, andNew York symphonies, the New YorkPhilharmonic Society and the Phila¬delphia Orchestra.He has also appeared as guest solo¬ist before several national conven¬tions of thtjl National Association ofOrganists, the American Guild ofOrganists, the National Federationof Music Teachers, and other organi¬zations.University SymphonyGives First Concertof Year December 10The University Symphony Or¬chestra will give its first concert ofthe year December 10 in Mandel hall.Prices have been reduced from the $1and $1.50 of last year to 30 and 50cents, in order to encourage studentattendance.David Moll, violinist and youngestmember of the Chicago Symphonywill be the soloist, and as usual, CarlBricken, Director of the 75 piece Uni¬versity Orchestra will conduct. Theprogram, as announced yesterday byHarold Hitchens, head of the newlyfounded Music Bureau, which ishandling the publicity for the concert,will include a Bach Prelude, Beethov¬en’s Third Symphony, the Slow Move¬ment of Sibelius’ D Minor ViolinConcerto, and Don Juan, a tone poemby Richard Strauss.Tickets are available at the In¬formation office or Music building.Some fraternities and clubs have al¬ready purchased blocks of seats.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1937PLATFORM1. Creation of a Tigoroui campus community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Establishment of the Political Union.4. Progressive politics.5. Revision of the College Plon.6. A chastened president.7. Reform of Blackfriors.Religious ConferenceYesterday a group of leaders of religiousorganizations met to discuss the status and re¬lation of religious groups on the campus. Tothe conference came a strange melange. Forreligious organizations, so-called, are of threesorts: the social groups with only a thin dis¬guise of religious affiliation; the groups spon¬sored by denominations, aimed at keeping thestudents aware of their traditional religiousattachments during their college years; and thefew groups really animated with religious be¬lief. There is little real community betweenan organization such as the Christian YouthLeague, composed of students who subscribeto the whole of traditional Christian theology,and an organization devoted almost wholly tosocial orientation like the Chapel Union.The destructive effect of University life onstudent religion is a well known phenomenon.The atmosphere of the University is not favor¬able to the retention of uncritically held beliefs.In refuge from this, most religious groups havebecome little better than social organizations.They shy away from theology, yet it is a poorsort of religion that consists of good wisheswithout any intellectual basis. Actually thegroups now called religious should either facethe problem of why they feel the way they do,construct an adequate intellectual frameworkfor belief, or recognize themselves as instru¬ments for social adjustment pure and simple.Until such a separation of the sheep from thegoats is made, no real basis for co-operationcan be established.Of the suggestions made at the conference,the proposal that a course in the doctrinal dif¬ferences of the various creeds represented onthe campus is the most practical. Students aredisgracefully ignorant of the creeds whichmoved their ancestors to the depths. A well-publicized course of lectures might in part rem¬edy this situation, only touched upon in thepresent Humanities survey.No RenegingIt has come to our attention that the fa¬thers of the “new paper” say they have aban¬doned their project because the Maroon with-Vol. 38 NOVEMBER 30, 1937 No. 34(^arotmFOUNDED IN IMlMember Associated Oollegiate PressThe Dailr Maroon ta the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 68S1 University avenue. Telephones:Local 357, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers, llte Chief PrintingCompany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarerest 3811.The University of Chicago assumes no reaponsihility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are opinions of the Board of Control, and are not neces¬sarily the views of the University administration nor of a majorityof students.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription ratea:18.00 a year; )4 by mail. Single copies: five cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the iK>at officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.rOPI NATIONAL ADVBIITI0IN4 BVNational Advertisin? Service, Inc.Collttt Publither420 Madison Ave n . i'oak. N. Y.Chic»«o • Bo.TOH • Lus ANeiLti • Sam FmamciscoBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILL Editor-in.ChiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist Rex HortonMaxine Biesenthal Seymour MillerEmmett Deadman Adele RoseBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard GreenleeMax Freeman Alan JohnstoneNight Editors: Hank Grossmanand Jerry Abelson drew its plank advocating the abolition ofintercollegiate athletics. The Maroon has doneno such thing. The plank was merged into thegeneral plank of which it is a part—The Ma¬roon advocates a vigorous campus community,as attention was shifted from the initialplanks. But the connection between athleticsand campus community is too subtle for ourrivals, so The Maroon restores the originalplank to the platform today. Bland Button etal will soon have to fall back on confession ofincompetency to explain the non-appearance oftheir sheet-SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy LILUAN SCHOENMy friend, Ned Rosenheim, is awfully nice, if alittle opaque. His wit is the kind that creeps up onone. We are glad to have it creep up on us like this,because we are struggling with a baccalaureate exam¬ination in physiology which unfortunately has nothingdo with columns—nothing printable, that is.Dear Lil,Last week you asked me to write you a letter fromChampaigne and I consented, feeling very much likea foreign correspondent. Then the roads froze up andmy mother said I’d have to wear rubbers, and I real¬ized that even if I arrived there without an accident,I certainly couldn’t feel much like a foreign correspond¬ent wearing rubbers, so we called it off.This week, you must be having an exam or some¬thing because I haven’t seen you and I got a strangemessage to write your column for you.Of course I went to the I. F, Ball but 1 didn’t seemuch of anything. I was too busy watching the facesof certain interesting folk who’d been to the opera.They seemed to be having no end of trouble making thetransition from Tri.stan to Joe Venuti. I was startingto get some ideas for your column but then the partyw'as over—bang—and we went down to get our coatsin the check room—bang, bang, and there was a ter¬rible rush and Mort Goodstein was behind me—bang,bang!Be sure to remember the story about our CaliforniaDekes. Seems they went down to South Rend to .seeNotre Dame play the team from the home state. Fur¬ther seems they told some folks down there they hadjust finished a week’s trek from the West Coast towatch the game. The South Bend papers got the storyand eventually it reached the Coast, via the A.P. I’vegot a hunch there should be an aftermath of .somesort, so keep awake. 'A fellow just told me, Lil, that the reason youhaven’t had time to write a column is that you’ve beendrawing pictures of Ralph Beck that hardly do himjustice, and showing them to him. Don’t spend yourtime that way, Lil, Ralph’s all right in his place.This is certainly not for your column, Lil, but youknow we’ve been looking for something to brighten upour room, and at la.st we’ve hit upon—goldfish! They’rea pretty good substitute for a dog like big Stoop, be¬ing smaller, and really, only a little bit wetter. Room¬mate wants to call them Siegmund and Sicglinde, butI’m holding out for Maude and Charlie, not being ahighbrow. What do you think? Or would guppies bebetter; they say they’re instructive as all hell.Well, I certainly hope you get your column writtenin time and that I haven’t let you down. Don’t forgetto buy the Ouija board for Burt Moyer’s birthday.May twenty-fourth.As always.NedCody's notorious cock-roaches havebeen eliminated. The vermin thatprance about the famous columnist'sdesk at night have been slaughteredby this mysterious cat.For the enlightenment of Daily Ma¬roon readers, we ask, "Who's pussyis this?"It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLELoneliness touches you.It is the daytime, and the room is full of chatteringpeople and smells of coffee and toast and food for itis lunchtime. All about you are people, talking andclattering, talking and clattering. Behind you, besideyou, around you are people chattering and clattering.Suddenly the wavelets part. A voice stands out."That person? Who wants her?"With a little spatter the place is covered over andthe waters bubble evenly as before.You are suddenly insecure. All the little thingspeople have said come rushing back to swirl throughyou, and you are limp with them.Lois joked about you this morning. Did she meanit? Marg had whispered something to Pat yesterday,and Pat had laughed and looked at you. There hadn’tbeen any dates since this summer . . .There is no-one near you—reaUi/ near you. TheWorld is full of They, and there is no Us,If they only knew you, the real you inside, it wouldbe different, but there was no chance lest they thinkyou foolish. They w'eren’t interested, they didn't know,they all had friends, they, chattered and clattered andyou were in loneliness. STUDENTS!!Save % of Your Laundry BillYour entire bundle is woihed tweet and clean in pure soapand rain soft water.Underwear, Poiamat, Sweaters, Socks, etc., ore fluif-driedready to use at only12e per lb.Shirts De Luxe Hand Finished, starched, mended, and but¬tons replaced, at 10c each addltfonoLHandkerchiefs ironed at ic each additional when includedStudent Economy BundleMetropole Laundry, Inc.Wesley N. Korlson, Pres.1219-21 EAST 55TH STREETPhone Hyde Paih 3190FREE PICK UP & DELIVERYA bird in the handFine CandyAssortments You don't horvo to go hunting torquality condioi. Evoryono knowithot Goyoty Condioi or* madeof tho finost ingrodlonts . . . thatIhoy aro quality through andthrough. Romombor tho old ad-ogo—a bird in tho hand U worthtwo in tho bush. Whon you wantquoUty candy don't waoto monoywith "unknowns"—go to Goyoty'sCandy storos and got ootiolaction.29c lb. 39c lb.CHOCOLATE NUT CLUSTERS. .39c lb. boxCHOCOLATE ASST. CREAMS. .29c lb. boxASST. CREAM CARMELS 29c lb. boxLOG CABIN PECAN ROLLS 39c lb. boxThe Gay ety Candy Shoppes920 EAST 63rd STREET9207 COMMERCIAL AVENUEnifiiii I I ■' I MM mil I I iOmmmiiiimi inirni ii"iiii'i rii’HHtlWr-iii'-ii'.liifTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1937The President-(Continued from page 1)vcrsity and the community. We ,areinterested in keeping the districtaround the campus of a sort thatstudents and faculty members will bewilling to live in. This is the reasonthat the University has bought landin the neighborhood. (The revenueproducing real estate apart frommortgages is nearly all concentratedin the loop.) This much is necessaryto maintain the University as a greatinstitution of learning. But we dofeel that it lies upon the University’sshoulders to lead the community andthe city to better things. It should dothis in addition to performing itsgeneral task of advancing knowledge.The University has long been con¬cerned with the Chicago school ad¬ministration. I really don’t know thesituation. The reports of the metro¬politan press are confused and unre¬liable, but it appears that Superin¬tendent Johnson is instituting somesort of vocational scheme in the highschool level. If this is true, the effecton University student material de¬pends on the execution of the pro¬gram. Vocationalism, no one candeny, is in tune with the times, andI have heard that an accreditingofficer at a nearby University hascommended the program. I do notsee how those who believe that voca¬tional success is the aim and test ofeducation can logically oppose theplan. Any effective opposition mustre.st on the conviction that educationis an intellectual process, that itsobject is to train students to thinkwith a view to intelligent action. Weknow that this is a minority view.The question of political favoritismand its effect on the Chicago schoolsy.stem is a distinct one. If the Uni¬versity finds evidence that politicalmaneuvers are ruining Chicago’sschool’s, we should do what we havedone before, expose and oppose thesemaneuvers in every possible way.Members of the faculty and adminis¬tration did this when a few years agothe School Board made great and un¬fortunate changes without even ask¬ing the advice of the Superintendent, j89e Pr.HAZEL HOFF1371 Ecut 55th St.(N*or Dorchottor)Plac* your order withMorqarot Morrifiold Today on theQuadranglesLECTURES“Why the University Has LostTheology.” William Adams Brown.Social Science assembly at 4:30.Symposium of Negro Student Club.“Housing Conditions on the SouthSide.” Social Science 122 at 8.MEETINGS^VA.4. WAA room of Ida Noyes at12.YWCA First Cabinet. Room B ofIda Noyes at 12:45.ASU Music Group. Room D of Rey¬nolds club at 12:30.School of Business luncheon. Alum¬nae, room of Ida Noyes at 12.ASU Art Group. Room C of Rey¬nolds Club at 4:30.Chamber Orchestra. YWCA roomof Ida Noyes at 7.ASU Theatre Group. Room B ofIda Noyes at 7.Chapel Union. Room A of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Lambda Gamma Phi. Room B ofReynolds club at 8.MISCELLANEOUSPhonograph Concert. Branden¬burg’s Concerto 5 and 6 by Bach.Social Science as.sembly at 12:45.“Problems of Higher Educatioain a Changing Society.” ProfessorWorks. Social Science 122 at 3:30.SPECIAL INTENSIVE COURSEroi COllEOE STUDENTS AND OBADUATSSatmitmg Jammcry 1, Atriil, Jnkfl,—wiH$ or pktfis. No toUdtanmoserBUSINESS COLLEOESAUL MOSIR. J.D. BN.!.RggiUarCminm,oPmk>HithSd^Gm^mim omfy, mtmy Dtfand EoamiH^ EaaminaComnma^m O mam,116 S. Michigan Avs.. Chicago, Randolph 434P43: Ird WEEKSCHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS prosoatsThe Funniest Comedyin a GenerationYOU CANTTAKE ITWITH YOUPULITZER PRIZE PLAY. 1937by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS 'GOOD SEATS AT BOX OFFICEFOR ALL PERFORMANCESSELWYNLast three weeksTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVEBI"JUBILANT" HU—ROCKS THEATRE WUH LAUGHTER"' Doily NewsEVES. 55c to $2.75 MATS. Wed & Sat. 55c to $1.65 Tax Inc. Page ThreeCLASSIFIED ADSReligious-(Continued from page 1)Henrietta Rybczynski; Ruth Emerson,chairman of the Board of Social Ser¬vice and Religion; Aaron J. Brum¬baugh, Dean of Students in the Col¬lege; and Leon P. Smith, assistantDean of Students.Organizations participating in theEverything you look forin a Christmas Card, youwill find in our new selecttion of Christmas Greetingsnow on display.Among the many, manydifferent desi^ from whichthere are to choose, you willfind such an abundance ofsmartly designed and color'fill numbers that your big'gest problem will be todecide just tufuch ones youlike best.May we suggest that theearlier you make yourchoice the more completethe selection will be?Woodworth'sBOOKSTORE1311 East 57th St.OPEN EVENINGS conference are the Anderson Society,the Calvert Club, the Cl^^pel Union,the Christian Youth League, theEvangelical and Reformed ChurchStudent Club, the Fellowship of Re¬conciliation, the Interchurch Council,the Jewish Student Foundation, theUniversity of Chicago Lutheran Clubthe Lutheran Student Club, and theYoung Women’s Christian Associa¬tion. LARGE NICE ROOM in small adult family.Prefer a xirl. Call after five. Plaza8460. B. Rosen, 6426 S. Maryland Ave.MAN’S $80 GREEN TWEED SUIT—Size 89long. Worn once. Will sell for $16.Plaza 6676 or call at H. Wheeler, 6629Drexel Ave.MAN’S RACOON COAT—Recently remade &relined. Perfect condition. Will sacrifice.Phone 6 to 7 P. M. Vehon; Fairfax 8000.HOLIDAY SEASONis the time to danceSTUDENT HALF-RATETICKETS ACCEPTEDEVERY WEEKNIGHT!NOVEMBER 30th toDECEMBER 3IstORRIN TUCKERand his orchestraEdgewater Beach HotelGreta Garboin“The Atonement of Gosta Berling"(1923)Garbo's Second PictureThe Production That Attracted Hollywood's AttentionORIENTAL INSTITUTE3:30 - Tomorrow - 8:30THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1937Can youYes, W<thispr tides IPage FourBeginning a new novelFUGITIVE FATHER4'CUIIENCi BUMHCfON KEUANDIn a post season touchball gameplayed on the snow and ice Sundaymorning on Greenwood field the Uni¬versity chapter of Pi Lambda Phiwas defeated by the University ofIllinois chapter of Phi Epsilon Pi,24-12.As a result of the victory in theannual Thanksgiving week clash thePhi Eps retained the coveted “Inter-fratemity Cup” which they obtainedin last year’s victory over the PiLams.The John MarshallLAWSCHOOLFOUNDED 1899ANACCREDITEDJ.AW SCHOOLTEXT and CASEMETHOD•For Catalog, rocom-mondod lilt of pro-legalsubjecti, and booklet,"Study of Law and ProperPreporaiion" oddreit:Edward T. lee. Dean.315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, III.Rifle Team BeatsHyde Park YMCAUniversity Shooters WinBy 903-893 ScoreSaturday.The University Rifle team chalkedup a gold star on the right side ofthe result list when they toppled theHyde Park YMCA in a shoulder-to-shoulder meet Saturday by a 903 to893 score.The meet was fired in the HydePark YMCA range at a distance of75 feet, in four positions, with fiveshots in each.Bill Otis topped the Maroon marks¬men with 188 out of a possible 200points. Close behind Otis was thesquad’s “old reliable” Hugh Bennettwith 183 points to his credit. Thencame Fred Klein with 179, GeorgeMatousek with 177, and Art Dean,with 176 to complete the Chicagoscoring.This week the inspired gunmen areintensively training for their forth¬coming postal meet with Iowa nextSaturday. The contest will open theBig Ten season for the home squad.The meet will be fired from a dis¬tance of 50 feet, and from three po¬sitions prone, kneeling and standing.Ten shots will be fired in each ofthese positions. Hebert, UmpiresName IntramuralAll-Star TeamsHeaded by Intramural Coach Wal¬ter Hebert, a committee of refereesand umpires of the touchball gamescomposed of Eggemeyer, Leach, Run¬yon, Weiss, Jeremy, and Krietensteinyesterday announced the selection ofan all-University all-star team. Ac¬cording to Hebert, the members ofthe committee did all the choosing,and he just “stuck in his two cents.”The selections were fair, althoughwith the exception of Longacre ofthe Barristers the whole first teamconsisted of fraternity men. Theywere Bell and Bland Button of thechampion Psi U’s ,Cassell and Run¬yon of the fraternity runner-ups, Al¬pha Delta Phi, Jeremy of the Dekes,and Leach of Phi Kappa Psi, thelatter two men also intramural ref¬erees.The second squad consisted ofBrown and Murphy of the Dekes,Allen of Snell, Archipley of the PhiDelt team. Wills Button of the PsiU’s, Eggemeyer of Phi Kappa Psi,and Lytle of the Alpha Delts.Hebert’s assistants gave the fol-lllini Phi Eps TrimChicago Pi LamsTHE NEWSTUDENTDIRECTORYCONTAININGNamesClassificationUniversity AddressesPhone NumbersHome AdressesFraternity orClub AffiUotionsof All Students.35cFREE WITH YOUR SUBSCRIPTIONTO THE193S Cap and GownOn sale at the Cap & Gown office.Tailor Tom, U^^'iversity Bookstore,ond the InformatioD Desk.TUESDAYSYLVIA SIDNEY — JOEL McCREA"DEAD END"HUMPHREY BOGART-ALLEN JENKINSplusCONSTANCE BENNETT-CARY GRANT"TOPPER"WED.. & THURS. DECEMBER 1 & 2KENNY BAKER—ALICE BRADY IN"MR. DODD TAKES THE AIR"Feature No. 2DEANNA DURBIN-ADOLPHE MENJOU"100 MEN AND A GIRL"Frolic TheatreSSth and ELLIS Tarzan and Mate ToRule Over AnnualWater CarnivalAs a part of the Annual WaterCarnival scheduled for December 4, a“Tarzan” and “his mate” will beselected by popular vote, and thewinners will be announced at theCarnival. Ballot boxes will be placedin Ida Noyes and Bartlett Gym.The Carnival will be immediatelypreceded by a water polo game be¬tween varsity and alumni teams.At present the white hopes forTarzan according to rumor includeJack Homs, Mort Goodstein, and EdValorz; for his mate, Ruth Doctoroff,Phyllis Green, president of Tarpon,and Betty Booth.BALLOTMark your selection here forTarzan and his mate for the Wa¬ter Carnival and deposit in a bal¬lot box by Friday.TarzanMatelowing honorable mention: Adams,Arnold, Baird, Barnard, Daniels,Flinn, Gordon, Graemer, the Krausebrothers, Mahoney, Nyquist, Upton,and Wolff. BARGAINS IN USED BOOKSThe Colony Book Shop1540 E 57th St DOR. 8392Houn: 11 A.M. to 7 P. M.TERESA DOLAN1545 E 63rd St— Learn to dance correctly —take private leisonsHyde Pork 3080Hours: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. MAY WE REMINDYOU6324 WOODUWN AVE.^erve Excellent FoodLUNCHEONS 35c updinners 50c upJ. di C. RESTAURANT1527 East SSth Street%Serving DailyLUNCH 30cEIGHT COURSE DINNER 50cALSO MIDNIGHT SPECIAL LUNCHEONWHOLESOME FOOD. SHIVED AND COOKED RIGHTOpen 24 Hours a DayCOURSES(40 weeks per year)Afternoon—3H years5 days. ..4:30^:30Evening — 4 yeorsMon., Wed., W.,6:30-9:20Post-graduote1 year, .twice a weekPractice coursesexclusively.All courses leadto degrees.Two years' collegework required forentrance.New classes formin Feb. and Sept. .please getGrange novel tte «ekBudington Ke character, the tnyou’ll meet h« y parsloe, and anriage-flraingMr. B Jassorted parcel o « ^^h myst^'in a romance well ^i„ading‘’Stand-Remember the fan y j^diand novel at’? Well,th..c^ea new^^^^^.„^,t^ewsstand toaay-