RushingIssueSenior class holds election, page 1.Track team faces fightinK IlHni, Sat¬urday, page 4.Chinese StudentsPresent Play toRaise War FundsCather Priceless OrientalAntiques for Show at In¬ternational House.Tonight and tomorrow night at 8the Chinese students of Chicago willtake part in one of the most unusual].erformance8 ever to be given at In¬ternational House. Gathered togetherin “The Flower of Han Palace*’ willbe priceless collections of ancient Chi-!'ese imperial robes. Antique Clunesecourt robes valued at half a milliondollars have been loaned by MarshaUF eld’s, and an imperial wedding pro¬cession, featured last fall in the St.Luke’s fashion show, will be re-en-acled.This performance is being givenfor the benefit of the Chinese civilianrelief. Among the many well knownpatrons are Vice-president and Mrs.William B. Benton, Dr. and Mrs. An¬ton J. Carlson, Judge and Mrs. JosephSabath, Mr. and Mrs. Quincy Wright,Mr. and Mrs. Oswald H. Robertson,Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Douglas, andVice-president and Mrs. FrederickWoodward. Becau.se scenery and cos-|tumes for the evening’s performance!have been donated, production costshave been kept as low as possible so;that a maximum amount of money!may be given for relief of the war-stricken Chinese.•Major OfferingThe major offering of the programi' the play “Chao Ch’un Chu Sai,’’or “Flower of the Han Palace.’’The principal characU*rs are played ib.v Ksther K. Lee as Chao Ch’un.Theodore Chan as the emperor, and(’larence Lee as the Mongolian Chief¬tain. Shing Leung Chau, editor of aChinese newspaper, is general chair¬man of the performance..Another feature of the evening isa Chinese fashion show displayingthe pricele.ss robes of Ch’ien Lung(17.16-1796), the Late Dowager Em-pre.<s Tzu Hsi, and many others. Be-'tween the first and second scenes of|the play the Mei Lan Fang ballet jA ill (lance an ancien*; dragon dance.Classical Chinese music will accom-j'any tnt action of the play, and af-♦er the performance there wilt be so-ca! (lancing from 10 to 1 to the musicof -Art Goldsmith’s orchestra.Tickets may be purchased at Inter¬national Hou.se. Reserved seats are$2.;)0 and four dollars. All othersare one dollar.Newsreel OffersLon Chaney in ;Horror PictureIToday and tomorrow, Paul Wagnerand the Campus Newsreel are pre-.•-enting what is perhap.s the greatesthorror picture ever made and the onewhich started the long chain ofFrankenstein, Dracula and other‘‘shiver’’ dramas of the past tenyears. Produced by Universal in1924, “The Phantom of the Opera’’is one of Lon Chaney’s best and isundoubtedly his most chill provoking;it all takes place, as the name implies,in an opera house, but it is the weird¬est, gloomiest opera house one canimagine. Also to make; the wholething more macabre, below the operahouse there is a veritable network ofs(“cret passages, vaults, crypts, andhidden doors. This is where the phan¬tom lurks and where no one, savethe winsome heroine, dares go. Hispower and his music inspire her'untilshe strips off his mask and sees theawful, grue.some countenance be¬neath. From then on the eerie sus¬pense and excitement grow until thegreat culminating climax, when, ofcourse, the powers of good triumph.The heroine of the melodrama is,(as are five out of seven of he sen¬ior presidential timber), —an oldChicago girl and graduate of thepopulous Hyde Park High Schoolwhere she is remembered by some ofthe more elderly alumni as a prettylittle thing with loads of sex-appealand a dubious amount of brain.On the same 16c program — (Man-del Hall, 3:30 this ^ternoon, 8:30 to¬night. Ida Noyes Theatre 3:30 Fri¬day, 8:00 Friday night,) — will bepresented the pictorially spectacular,“Mystery of Mt. Everest.’’ QPlie Bail? inaroonVol. 38 Z-149 UNrV^ERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1938 Price Five CentsSurvey Clubs for FreshmenReview 13 Women’sOubs as Pledging AidBy LAURA BERGQUISTThe advisability of pledging aclub, the knotty problem which manyfreshmen women must tackle by to¬morrow, can be summed up as largelya credit and debit situation.The club of course has no nationalaffiliations as do sororities, neitherdoes it possess a house or headquar¬ters as a sorority does—but thesorority and the club have one ele¬ment in common—they are bothsocial institutions.Rummaging into the files of theearly university, it can be found thatthe club first appeared as a culturesociety, destined to improve the men¬tal outlook of its constituents. Butit has long ago lost any such signi¬ficance. Today 14 exist on campus,the counterpart of the fraternity inthe social world, whose activities re¬main essentially the same. The quar¬ter’s program usually includes weeklymeetings, a formal party at somehotel, club luncheons, occasional socialfunctions and a maze of other in¬cidental activities which go to com¬prise the social side of Universitylife.A myth has long hovered about thecampus that sororities are forbiddeninstitutions at the school. Chief reasonusually stated for the prohibitionclaims that La Verne Noyes, donorof the women’s clubhouse, gave thebuildings and its facilities only on thecondition that sororities be forbidden.In fact, however, no such limitationis mentioned in the original IdaNoyes grant. In addition deans andsocial advisers vehemently deny anysuch prohibition. Since the majorityof women live at home, since the <dormitories have usually proved suf¬ficient for housing needs, the desirefor national sororities has never beenstrong. Occasionally an ambitiousclub member has been tempted toaffiliate itself with a national organi¬zation but each time has not foundit worth the effort and expense.Clubs are consistently accused ofsuperficiality, misguided enthusiasm,and purposelessness, as strongholdsof discrimination and fal.se values,but the description is sadly one¬sided. In a University noted for itscoldness and dearth of personal con¬tact, the club forms a pleasant oasis in the social desert, the means of ^making binding friendships with girls |of similar interests, a means of im-'parting that “belonging-to-a-grroup”'feeling and keeping alive the spark iof activities interest . . . intangible Iadvantages which nevertheless haveappealed to the approximately 250club women as sufficient inducementfor membership.ArrianArrian is a fledgling on the clubhorizon having existed only since1931, a small group consisting of tenactive members and two pledges.Not noted for leadership in activi¬ties, its members nevertheless arefound on the membership ranks ofmany extra-curriculars. Tarpon, theChoir, Lutheran and Calvert Club allclaim one member apiece, three arcon Chapiel Union, three on Pulse, sev¬en in YWCA work, five in WAA, twoin the Poetry Club, three in El Cir-culo Espanol, two in Les Escholiers,the vice-president of Comad and thefashion commentator for the CampusNewsreel.Arrian is unique in possessing amothers’ auxiliary w’hich combineswith the alumnae chapter to supporta scholarship fund for active mem¬bers.Costs are average. The pledge feeis $5, initiation fee, including the costof the pin $25. Dues amount to $5a quarter while assessments rarelyexceed $5 a year.Officers are: Laveme Reid, presi¬dent; Eunice Price, secretary; Bar¬bara McCann, treasurer; VirginiaBrown, social chairman. YWCA also comprise membershipactivities.Prizes are awarded annually towomen ranking highest in scholasticstanding, for predominance in activi¬ties. Four actives are now on scholar-j ship, two others are Phi Beta Kappas.I Eleanor Cupler is president; BerniceI Bartels, vice-president; secretaryj Mary Grils; treasurer, Catherine Fee-j ney; rushing chairman. Carol Ma-j ginnis.Chi Rho SigmaThough diminutive in size withsixteen active members, Chi Rho Sig¬ma has its fingers in many activitypies. A member of BWO, co-chairmanof the Mirror box-office committee,secretarj' of Federation, treasurer ofYWCA, four on Cap and Gown, eighton Mirror, two on Echo, six in DA.three in the Rifle club, three on Lead¬ers’ organization, nine in YWCA, onemember of YWCA college cabinet,four members of First Cabinet, twoin University Singers, six upper classcounselors, one member of Pulse, onein Christian Fellowship group, ChapelCouncil and Ida Noyes Council.Two members are now on scholar¬ship, another represented BWO at thePurdue Women’s conference last fall.The club also won the Skull andCrescent cup for the best VictoryVanity skit last fall. The alumnaechapter awards a scholarship eachquarter to active chapter members.Costs range a little above averagew’ith a pledge fee of $5, initiationcost of $35, including pin, and quar¬terly dues determined by the clubeach quarter, seldom exceeding $5.AchothWith a membership of ‘22’actives,Achoth is distinguiahed priroairily forscholarship women and an activealumnae chapter. Introductory feesare lower than the avenge club withpledge and initiation fees amountingto $10. Dues are fixed at $7 per quar¬ter with no other assessments duringthe year.Particularly active in businessschool activity, Achoth counts thepresident and treasurer of Comad,the secretary and vice-president ofthe Business School Students’ Coun¬cil among its members. A member ofthe Settlement Board, a women’ssingle tennis champion, four membersof the Chapel Union and four in Delta SigmaKnowm as a very closely knit group.Delta Sigma does not particularlydominate the activities scene, prefersrather to confine activity primarilyw’ithin the group.WAA claims a large proportion ofits 20 active members for three DeltaSigmas are now’ officers, five othersare WAA members, five YWCA mem¬bers, two on Cap and Gown, one inDA, one in Federation, three in Mirror,two in BWO, the secretary of BWO,two members of the rifle team andtwo on Ida Noyes Advisory Councilconcludes the activities list.Fees are $5 for pledging, $40 ini¬tiation fee which covers cost of pin(Continued on page 3)Plan Pro-ChineseMass Meeting ToAdvocate BoycottRepresentatives of leading campusorganizations will meet today in RoomC of Ida Noyes at 12:30 to plan apro-Chinese mass meeting to be heldthe beginning of February.According to Charles Crane, tem¬porary chairman of the committee,the purposes of the mass meeting areto inform the students what the realsituation in China is and to sponsoran individual boycott against Japan.The boycott will be advocated becauseJapan is taking unfair advantage ofChina and to discourage other na¬tions from beginning a war.Tentative plans indicate that therewill be speakers furnished by theChinese consulate, a fashion showdemonstrating silk substitutes, and aone-act jilay.Campus or|:anizations sending dele¬gates to the meeting today are theChinese Student Association, the So¬cial Service Administration club, theNegro Student club, the Progressiveclub, the Daily Maroon, the CampusNewsreel, the North American Com¬mittee to Aid Spanish Democracy,and the University of Chicago Medi¬cal Aid to Spain Committee.Degree for BreckenridgeMiss Sophonisba P. Breckinridge,dean of pre-professional students andProfessor of Public Welfare Admini¬stration, received the honorary de¬gree of Doctor of Laws from TulaneUniversity in New Orleans when thenew president of Tulane was beinginaugurated. Pulse Survey Takes FraternitiesApart; Count Unweaned ChildrenStork Descends onSocial Science DivisionTo the high towers of Harper Eastthe stork winged his way yesterday.Cigars and candy are now in orderfor members of the History depart¬ment, because that renowned birdplunked a healthy, eight pound malechild in the laps of Mr. and Mrs.James L. Cate. While Mrs. Cate andchild are “doing well’’ in Lying-inHospital, Cate brightens gloomy cor¬ridors with a 14 carat gold smile anda yellow’ chrysanthemum in his but¬tonhole.Not to be outdone by the Historydepartment, Maynard C. Krueger, as¬sistant professor of Economics, andwife increased the population andadded to their family of one with agirl, Linda, born January 11.A unique card in the form of afamily’s chronology proclaimed Lin¬da’s arrival.New Club CoordinatesReligious, Labor GroupsMeeting for the first time this quar¬ter, the local chapter of the Religionan(i Labor Foundation will discussplans and program for the year atKimbark House tonight at 7:30. Thenational foundation, organized tobring religion in contact with laborgroups, has another chapter at Yale.Anyone interested is invited to at¬tend the meeting. The fraternity situation on campusis decoratively as well as informa¬tively dealt with in a two-page chartby Pulse which throbs for the fifthtime today. While some of the in¬formation is so inaccurate that eventhe artistic embellishments of Federoffcan’t conceal it, a surprisingly largeamount w’as of a nature w’hich in¬duces me to emulate Winchell, withall due apologies, thusly:Things I Never Knew ’Til Now—1. That Alpha Delta Phi leads allothers in attendance in Businessschool and owes more money thanthe rest. Might be some connec¬tion there.♦ * *2. That Phi Kappa Psi loves itselfso much that outside affection issuperfluous. It also seems thatthese Greeks are two-faced. Couldbe?« « *3. That according to the scholasticrating of Alpha Tau Omega, itsmembers must be studying to beimbeciles.♦ ♦ ♦4. That Delta Upsilon is so painfullygood W’ith a great affection forthe law. With the Mothers’ Clubas its mascot, how’ could it beotherwise?* * *5. That the preferred club of the PhiBeta Delta’s is the 606 club.Aren’t our campus clubs excitingenough ?« ♦ *6. The ingenious way Beta Theta Pihas enlarged its sanitary facilities.4> « «7. That the Pulse knew its Greekalphabet so well. Seniors Boo, Win,Crow in ElectionToday, Say SignsPresent Tuition Receiptsto Vote for Class Presi¬dent, Secretary.Lulu Foo may be a Suzi-Q as theI signs say, Robert M. Hutchins and, Mike Hanley may have opinions onthe matter, maybe you can win withWagner or crow’ for Halcrow, butone thing is certain—there will bea Senior Class election today.Balloting is from 9 to 3:30 in (?obb,308, with only Seniors being eligibleto vote. Official ballots are printedj in today^s Daily Maroon. Each voter. must present his tuition receipt andhave his name checked on the Senior, list before casting a ballot. The or-' ganizing committee urges all candi¬dates to have watchers present atthe polls.Official CandidatesOfficial candidates are: pre«^''dent—Robert Anderson, George Halcrow,Joseph Mastrofsky, and Paul Wag¬ner ; secretary-treasurer — BettyBooth, and Betty Robbins. Lulu Foo,the Dark Horse, seems to have beendropped into the ranks of the presi¬dential nominees somehow. At least,her supporters held a rally in herbehalf yesterday noon in the Circle,Eleanor Melander has definitely with¬drawn as a secretary-treasurer can¬didate.The platform of Paul Wagner, assubmitted to the Maroon, states inpart:“1. The prime object of every Sen¬ior Class should be more than a sem¬blance of formal organization. Uponthis basis, I propose to foster a Uni-I versity Senate and an Independent1 Council. The purpose of the firstI w’ould be to bring the representativesi of every campus organization into; one body to handle the business nowconducted by such nebulous groups; as are at present intrusted with suchj business. The Independent Council: would give voice to that large bodyI of unattached students who act as; disinterested spectators to the social! game.“2. Along with this first plank, we! would sponsor campus social affairs; at even more frequent intervals than; the Social Committee has thus farj felt free to do. This again would cir-j cumvent the feeling of lack of collegeI (Continued on page 3)Sophomore Honor MenAnnounce CorsagelessDance for January 29. Fraternity men and potentialpledges! Listen well, for a night ofrelaxation has been planned for youand for everyone else for that mat¬ter.Next week w’ith its madcap peptalks and reassuring handshakesw’on’t be all drudgery to you. For onSaturday night, January 29, Skull andCrescent w’ill hold its annual formalball, the most exciting and aristo¬cratic of all the campus affairs. Thefee for entering w’ill be only $1.50,and to keep your expenses to a mini¬mum, the Sophomore Men’s HonorSociety has declared the dance a “no¬corsage’’ ball and has set the site ofthe occasion in Ida Noyes’ famousCloister Club.Freshmen, if you’re planning ondouble-crossing the boys who “sewedyou up’’ last November, this will beyour big opportunity to explain. Ev¬ery pal that has been cast overboardin the w’ild scramble for pledges andfraternity brothers can be regained.Dekes w’ill once more talk to Psi U’s—other fraternities will once againbe pals.But the Skull and Crescent Danceisn’t an exclusive fraternity affair.The history’ of the Ball has provedthat independents can enjoy a goodorchestra as much as the organizedmen. This year’s music makers willbe The Colonial Club Orchestra, fam¬ous 11 piece dance band from Evan¬ston.Tickets can be purchased from allSkull and Crescent men and can alsobe obtained in the Daily Maroon of¬fice in Lexington hall.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1938PLATFORM1. Creation of a vigorous campus community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Progessive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened president.Lulu Foo for PresidentElectioneering with the benefit of an ad¬vanced stage of college education is a strangeand wonderful thing. On the outside, it is afeeble mockery of national electioneering, onthe inside it is no very feeble imitation of the, methods of full fledged politicos.The whole merry dance is initiated by thesenior men’s honorary society. The Dean’soffice plays stooge by appointing an electioncommittee, which thereafter takes over andacts as front.Next step in the process of selecting theman to lead the class of 1938 down the decadesis taken in the chapter rooms of a few of thelarger fraternities. This year Larson, Deke,Hoy, Alpha Delt, and Anderson, Deke, allwanted to represent 0 & S in the election. Lar¬son was squeezed out when the Dekes decidedhe didn’t have the popularity to win. Insteadhe combined the parts of Anderson’s (un¬official) campaign manager, and chairman ofthe election committee, an auspicious combina¬tion for the success of Anderson. Anderson wasselected by the Dekes because he had alwayshung around activities, and had never trod onanybody’s toes because he had never taken astep.Next step in railroading Anderson to theoffice was to dissuade Hoy from splitting thegentile fraternity vote. Larson took this littlejob in hand, and in a long and stormy meetingtalked Hoy out of running. His method wasto appeal copiously to loyalty to 0 & S as tran¬scending mere fraternity loyalty, neglecting tomention that it was fraternity loyalty thatdictated his every move.Wagner had his heart too set on gainingthe title of class president, as climax to a cam¬pus career devoid of high sounding titles, to bedissuaded from running. Halcrow, coming fromPsi U, Deke mortal enemy, naturally could notbe squeezed out of the race by Larson’s man¬ipulation, although Carey and Upton had moreor less promised Psi U support for Anderson.The remaining candidate, Mastrofsky, is thecandidate of Pi Lambda Phi, and commandsthe support of most of the Jewish fraternities.Political experts of the campus have it that hewill run second to Anderson in the final ballot¬ing.Deals are not the limit of the doings. Lar¬son, as chairman of the election committee,cavalierly disregarded the time limit set forthe submission of petitions, admitting severalafter the deadline, and, even more cavalierly,refused to check the names of petition-signersfor duplications. It would be embarrassing ifa candidate were disqualified merely becausehe had not met the requirements of the electioncommittee. What a close election, if there isV^ol. 38 JANUARY 20, 1938^ailg ^arnonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Oollegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the oiTicial 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, B831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 367, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3311.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are 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 rates:$3.00 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies: five cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago. Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.*937 MemDcr 1938Plssocioted GolIe6ial6 PressDistnbutor ofGolle6iale Di6estBOARD 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 Editor: Bud HerschelAssistant: Harry Cornelius one, will bring forth in the way of ballot-boxstuffing and miscounting, today will show.The amazing thing about it all is that Uni¬versity seniors take the election so seriously.There are at least four persons who desperate¬ly want to be president of their class althoughit means nothing and involves no duties. Per¬haps that is why they want it so much.The perfect climax would be the election ofLulu Foo class president. We hope the seniorshave enough sense of the absurdity of thewhole affair to elect her.SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy LILLIAN SCHOENLU-LU FOO FOR ME AND YOUA woman for President of the Senior classShe’s dumb, she’s elemental.She’s just an All American Girl.She wrote as much of the Blackfriars book as PaulWagnerShe’s collossal.WIN WITH FOOLu-Lu stands firmly behind a platform the meritsof which should be obvious to every clear head on cam¬pus.1. Encourage good clean fun for every one.2. Beer in the Coffee Shop.3. Strafght gin in the Commons.4. A jam session with every class, and a Con every Beta.5. She’ll make every La Salle street coach a pro¬fessor and vice-versa.6. Encourage good clean fun for everyone. jacketCLEAR HEADS WANT LU-LUGrody says: Can’t do without her.Morris says: Next to Crosby I’ll take Foo.Larson says: You !Eckhouse says: Boo!Horton says: Foo!Deadman says: Ooh!TRIED AND TRUE—LU-LU FOOLu-Lu’s claims to this high office are based uponthe following unique and original characteristics.1. Lu-Lu is a natural leader.2. Lu-Lu is a scholar.3. Lu-Lu will give the school a dandy Senior gift.4. Lu-Lu is a born organizer.5. Lu-Lu will give us a Senior Prom on—and off—campus.6. Lu-Lu will unify th^ Senior class—singlehanded.No. 56 LU-LU'S THEME SONGBie mir Lu-Lu FooShe’s noble and trueBei mir Lu-Lu FooMeans she’s O.K.Bei mir Lu-Lu FooA platform that’s newShe’ll see us all thruIn every way.We could say vote for WagnerEven vote for HalcrowAnd there are even folks who’d vote forBobby and JoeButBei mir Lu-Lu FooFor me and for youYou know what to doJust vote for FooIt TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLEMorris H. Cohen (he now uses the H. to be dis¬tinguished from the newest addition to the Philosophydepartment) is another of those students about whomthe campus as a whole hears little. That is probablybecause Morris is really a student. A junior in thePolitical Science department, Morris is a member ofthat rare group of individuals who can manage to at¬tend this University for three years and still receiveno grades lower than “A”.Morris is unlike the sensational nine-month won¬ders that have zoomed through the local educationalfogs and come out clutching an A.B. He came to Chi¬cago to get an education, and he believes that he canbest do this by following a more conventional plan.He goes to most of his lectures, he takes notes on mostof the important points, he studies most of the indis¬pensable readings, then when comprehensives comearound, he answers a few more questions correctly thando the other examinees, and thereby gets somewhathigher grades.Rather short, about five-foot-three, Morris takesconsolation in the fact that Napoleon was even shorter.Appropriately enough, he comes from Cincinnati, withits reputation of being the best-governed city in theUnited States. His chest frequently swells with justi¬fiable native pride; he thinks Chicago offers wonderfulcultural opportunities but in the matter of governmentit is just another big hick town; he remains profoundlyunimpressed by Mayor Kelly’s Keep Chicago a Head¬ache campaigns.Morris likes nothing better than arguing aboutpolitical and economic problems, unless it be a goodsymphonic concert. But Morris has his worries. Healways realizes how much he doesn’t know about allhis courses; and that worries him, because he thinksthat he will probably get something around a “D”—but he never does. Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGS The round table given under the spon¬sorship of the Calvert club is onento all students.Arrian. Alumnae room, Ida Noyeshall, from 12 to 1.Deltho. Room B, Ida Noyes hall, ifrom 12 to 1.Calvert Club. Library, Ida Noyeshall, from 4:30 to 6.ASH Executive Committee. RoomC, Ida Noyes hall, from 6:30 to 7:30.Alpha Zeta Beta. Library, IdaNoyes hall, from 7:30 to 10. Refresh¬ments.Sigma Delta Epsilon. Alumnaeroom, Ida Noyes hall, from 7:30 to10.Christian Youth League. Room A,Ida Noyes hall, from 7 to 9:30.Camera Club. Class for novicephotographers, 5420 Blackstone av¬enue at 7:30.Peace Council executive committee.Social Science lobby at 3:30. LUBRICATIONIs the Liie of Your Cor75 cLECTURES“Language, Social Science, and^Society. The Use of Language to'Discuss Language.’’ Associate Pro¬fessor Manuel J. Andrade. Social jScience 122, at 3:30. jMISCELLANEOUS jDivinity Chapel. Joseph Bond Chap- ;el at 11:55. “Knowledge and Vision.’’’Sidney E. Mead. ICampus Newsreel. Lon Chaney in"“The Phantom of the Opera.” Leon iMandel hall at 3:30; Ida Noyestheatre at 8. iUniversity Symphony Orchestra.Tryouts. See Mason, orchestra man- |ager. Everyday from 11 to 12 and'1 to 2. ISenior Class Election. Cobb hall,9 to 3:30.Schwartz Talks TodayHerbert Schwartz continues hisopen discussion of the application ofThomist doctrine to capitalism, com-^munism and other present-day prob-ilems today at 4:30 in Ida Noyes hall. I For a complete Job includingtires checked, battery checked,vacuum clean and windowspolished.AlsoAtlas Guaranteed Batteries forSlick sure startsuccronteed Tires formaximum traction, long wearWashing a Real Job$ 1.00FULL LINE OF STANDARDPRODUCTSSEE US FOR SERVICEWALDRON'S61st and Ellis • Dor. 10046HALF A BLOCK FROM THE DORMSSTANDARDSERVICEJ. & C. RESTAURANT1527 East 55th StreetServing DailyLUNCH 30cEIGHT COURSE DINNER 50cALSO MIDNIGHT SPECIAL LUNCHEONWHOLESOME FOOD. SERVED AND COOKED RIGHTOpen 24 Hours a DaySENIOR CLASS ELECTIONi9:i8! FOR PRESIDENT□ PAUL WAGNER□ JOSEPH MASTROFSKY□ GEORGE HALCROW□ ROBERT ANDERSONFOR SECRETARY-TREASURER□ BETTY ROBBINS□ ELEANOR MELANDER□ BETTY BOOTH(vote for one in each office)This is the official ballot for the senior class election.Bring it with you to Cobb 308 between 9 and 3:30 today.IFRATERNITIES ^EXPOSEDREADPULSE SiOUT TODAY/THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1938 Page ThreePublish Club Survey for FreshmenReview 13 Women’sClubs as Pledging Aid(Continued from page 1)and all assessments throughout mem¬bership. and $5 dues.Oflicers are; Pauline Turpin, presi¬dent; Ellen Schmus, vice-president;Marguerite Sieverman, correspondingsecretary, Martha Steere, RecordingSecretary and Corabeth Wells, treas¬urer.DelthoThe smallest club on campus, Del¬tho is comprised of eleven members.Activities, strangely enough, centerabout the Rifle club, for four mem¬bers of the rifle team and the man¬ager of the Women’s Rifle Team areDelthos.There are also three members ofYWC.A, one in Chapel Union, two onCap and Gown, four in DA, two inthe Tap Club, two in Anderson So¬ciety, two in Comad.The alumnae organization takes ac¬tive interest by not only supportingthe .scholarship fund but by givingthroe parties for the active chaptereach year. Initiation fee is $20, pledgefoe $5, dues $5 per quarter.Officers include Allene Tasker,president; Betty Lou Lindberg, vice-president; Marjorie Ann Ewing, Sec¬retary; .lane Jordan, treasurer; rush¬ing chairman, Rhoda Weakly; Editor,.Sarah Sutcliffe.EsotericThe 18 active members of Esotericare liberally sprinkled throughoutthe activities field—though best rep¬resented in dramatics.The President and stage managerof .Mirror, seven Mirror members,five in DA, one member of Federa¬tion, seven upperclass counselors, onetransfer coun.selor, a member of theSettlement Board, one aide, the as-istant circulation manager of Pulse, amember on the Maroon and Cap andGown, two on BWO and one scholar¬ship student comprise the activitiesHst.Each year a full scholarship is giv¬en to a student, not necessarily anEsoteric, by the alumnae chapter.Fees include a $5 pledge fee, $25 ini¬tiation fee, including club pin, $10dues per quarter and no asssessments.•Aileen Wil.son is president, Mar¬garet Waller, vice-president, Mary•Anna Patrick, secretary, Betty Beard,treasurer, Lois Kelsey, social chair¬man and Barbara Kennedy rushingchairman.Mortar BoardFounded in 1894 Mortar Board hasthe distinguishing feature of beingthe oldest club on campus, in additionto one of the top-flight organizationsin extra-curricular life.Composed of 26 active members, itclings most closely to the originalpurpose of the club by holding liter¬ary meetings once a month, invitingoutside speakers for the session. Onescholarship and one Phi Beta KappaTHURS., FRI., SAT., JAN. 20-21-22ROBERT MONTGOMERY In"LIVE, LOVE AND LEARN"Also"TRAPPED BY G-MEN"Frolic TheatreS5lh and ELLIS are also included in Mortar Boardranks.Three are Pulse members, three inLeaders’ Organization, one on theSenior class committee, two are SeniorAides, three, transfer counselors, onein WAA, three on Settlement Board,one in the choir, the President of Fos¬ter hall, twelve Mirror members, twoBWO members, two University Sing¬ers, five upperclass counselors, twogroup leaders, two members of. Fed¬eration Board, three ASU, three onStudent Social committee, fifteen inDA.Mary Letty Green is President;Judy Cunningham, treasurer.There is a $5 initiation fee, $2.50pledge fee, $.3 a quarter dues, and a$5 social fee. No special assessments.Phi Beta DeltaOf average size, average partici¬pation in activities. Phi Beta Deltahas also average fees.Pledging costs are $5, initiation $20.This $25 total covers all expenses ofthe first year including the pin. Duesthereafter amount to $7.50.Phi Beta Delta’s fifteen mem¬bers participate in Cap and Gownwhich claims five members,and the woman’s editor, six are inDA, two on YWCA College Cabinetand eight in the general membership,two in Campus Newsreel, two onPulse, two in Chapel Union, one inUniversity Singers, one in the Or¬chestra, three in the Rifle and PistolClub.Margaret Baugher is president,Margaret Huckins, vice-president,Elizabeth Bergstrom, treasurer, Ern¬estine Stresen-Reuter, secretary, andMargaret Scott, chaplain. At presentthere are three scholarship students.The club also awards a part scholar¬ship every year.Phi Delta UpsilonPhi Delta Upsilon is a comfortablylarge group of twenty-three memberswhich usually reaps a good pledgeclass each year through virtue of avaried, untyped membership.PDU’s can be found in the Univer¬sity Singers, the Orchestra, theChoir, Deutsche Geschallshaft, thesecretary of Tarpon, two on WAAboard, four on YWCA cabinets, oneAide, five on Chapel Council, threeon Chapel Union Board, one in ASUthree in C Club including the secre¬tary of the club, one in the League ofNations Assembly.Each quarter a $50 scholarshiploan fund is available to any Univer¬sity student. At pre.sent seven mem¬bers are honor or scholarship stu¬dents.Initiation fee is $25, including pin,pledge fee $5, dues $5 per quartereffective after the first year.Marjorie Hamilton is president,vice-president is Joan Fuchs, record¬ing secretary, Phyllis Clemens, cor¬responding secretary, Violet Fogleand treasurer, Dorothy Eaton. Particularly predominant in activi¬ties, the group has the vice-presidentand secretary of the YWCA, thepresident of Tarpon, the secretary-treasurer of Interclub council, twoAides, the co-chairmen of the pro-gram-.score committee of Mirror, 17counselors and two group leaders, aneditorial associate on the Daily Ma¬roon, chairman of the poster com¬mittee of DA, three members on IdaNoyes Council, three members ofBWO, four on YWCA first cabinet,the chairman of Westminster founda¬tion, one on the Political Union, threein DA, four in Mirror, nineteen mem¬bers of YWCA, four scholarship stu¬dents, member of Eta Sigma Phi, theChoir and Singers, six members ofChapel Union, member of the Boardof Social Service and Religion, one onthe Dance club, the Interchurch coun¬cil, WAA and C club, and the rep¬resentative to the Purdue Women’sConference.Pledge fee is $5, initiation fee $25,dues thereafter $5 per quarter withno special assessments. A half schol¬arship is awarded each year by thealumnae association to a club mem¬ber.Officers are — Marjorie Hess, presi¬dent, Phyllis Greene, vice-president,Katherine Coolman, rushing chair¬man, Audrey Neff, treasurer, andKatherine MacLennan and MarjorieRyser, co-social chairmen.QuadranglerQuadrangler ranks high in activityand social rating.Its twenty-seven members and onepledge are engaged as follows: — amember of Mirror Board, the pub-icity chairman and seven members ofMirror, two members on ChapelCouncil, one in Political Union, fiveon Pulse, one on Tarpon, one inYWCA, one in Debate Union, threeon Cap and Gov(n, two UniversitySingers, three upperclass counselorsand two group leaders.A full scholarship is awarded eachyear to an active member.Persis Jane Peeples is president,Faraday Benedict, vice-president,Betsy Chase, second vice-president,recording secretary Gertrude Benn,corresponding secretary Jane Weston,and treasurer Barbara Furry.Pledge fee is $25, initiation fee $25,quarterly dues $5, and assessment forquarterly party usually $5. Seventeen are in Mirror, the vice-president and chairman of the cos¬tume committee is also a Sigma, tenwere upperclass counselors, four areon BWO, fifteen in DA, nine inYWCA work with three on the Col¬lege Cabinet, the secretary of chafielCouncil and two members, five mem¬bers of Cap and Gown, the presidentand two members of Ida Noyes Coun¬cil, members in Singers, Choir, cham¬ber orchestra, WAA, settlement work,student social committee, one Aide,one member of Eta Sigma Phi, andthe president of Interclub council.Sigma yearly scholarship amountsto $150. Initiation fee is $25, pledgefee $5, dues per quarter $5, the pin$4.50 and special assessments from$2 to $5 per quarter.Betty Booth is president, BettyQuinn, treasurer, Mimi Thomas, vice-president, Bernice Shafer, secretary,Betty Jean Dunlap rushing chairman. Senior Elections-(Continued from page 1)WyvernSigmaKnown as the victorious reaper oftwenty-seven pledges last year. Sigmaranks as one of the largest clubs oncampus with a membership of thirty-three. With twenty-two active membersengaged in a wide variety of extra-curriculars, Wyvern is one of thedefinitely untyped set of clubs.Four are in Ida Noyes Council,twelve in Mirror, eight in YWCA,two on BWO, six on Cap and Gown,three are scholarship students, thesecretary-treasurer of Ida NoyesCouncil, co-chairmen of the Mirrorbox-office committee, a member ofYWCA first cabinet and the hand¬book editor.Pledge fee is $5, and initiation fee$20, including pin, dues a quarter $5and average assessments of $3 perquarter.Eleanor Melander is president,Frances Burns, vice-president, DennyScheule, treasurer, Ardis Manney,sec¬retary, corresponding secretary, Eliz¬abeth Brownlee, mistress of ceremon¬ies, Virginia Johnson, social chair¬man Kay Herbolsheimer, co-rushingchairmen Jo Hibbard and Joan Kam-merer.PLEDGINGKappa Sigma announces the pledg¬ing of Edward Van Horn and John P.^Vergoth, both of Chicago. life which is now prevalent.“3. As for a definite program tobe followed in the Spring Quarter, Ipropose that the Senior (^lass sponsora circus, to be held in the Fieldhouse,sometime during the first weeks inApril. As publicity seems to be theheart of modern civilization, and asthe University administration seemsto be following a course of actionalong that line, I believe these fundsshould be turned over to the use ofthe newly formed Publicity Boardwhich should help in the procuringof finer undergraduates, in both anintellectual and an athletic sense.”Newsreel DirectorWagner is director of the CampusNewsreel, author of last year’s Black-friars show, and a member of PhiDelta Theta, His managers claim en¬dorsement by Phi Delta Theta, theCampus Newsreel, Alpha Tau Omega,Kappa Sigma, Wyvern, and largenumbers of independent voters.Robert Anderson is running uponthe following platform: “1. Sponsora Super Senior Ball or Carnivalalong the lines of the old Fandango,if possible; 2. Creation of a realClass gift to the University; 3. ASenior week-end in May; 4. Encour¬age co-operation and representationof independent students with the al¬ready organized fraternity-club group;5. Create definite class spirit amongseniors; 6. Active Senior participa¬tion in recruiting new students; 7.A strong alumni organization withClass reunions at the end of the first,second, third, fifth, tenth, and fif¬teenth years, and every five yearsthereafter.”Swimming TeamAnderson is captain of the swim¬ming team, a “C” man, and a mem¬ber of the three men’s honor soci¬eties, of the Board of Superiors ofBlackfriars, and of the School ofBusiness Council. His backers claimsupport of Alpha Delta Phi, DeltaKappa Epsilon, and Phi Kappa Psi.Platforms of the other candidatesappeared in yesterday’s Maroon. Thestatements of Miss Lulu Foo, if theybecome coherent in time, will be foundin today’s “Sweetness and Light”column.LOST: One election—to Miss LuluFoo. CLASSIFIED ADSHOUSE FOR RENT—10 rooms. 3 baths. 6717Blackstone. Oil heat. Near U. of C. andI-C. Will decorate. Available May 1.Parker-Holsman Co., 1601 East 67th St.HYDe Park 2626.USED TEXT BOOKS Larsest Stock ofUsed and NewText Books inAmerica.CALUMET 45801255 SO. WABASH AVE. WILCOX & FOLLETTPi Delta PhiThe largest club on campus. PiDelta Phi has at present 38 activemembers.MAKEThe BETTER’OLERESTAURANT1551 E. 57th (3 doora weal of Stony la.)YOUR MEETING PLACECLUB BREAKFASTS 15c—40cLUNCHEONS 25c—45cDINNERS 40c—70cUntil further notice we will give adiacount of 10 per cent to all atudentaGRIDDLE CAKES, WAFFLES, HAM¬BURGERS, CHILLTRY US! IT STILL GOES ON -EVERY FRTOAY NIGHTCOLLEGE NIGHTAT THEEDGEWATER BEACH HOTELSATURDAY NIGHT ~FORMAL DANCING WITHORRIN TUCKERAnd His OrchestraPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, 1938Trackmen OpenIndoor Season atIllinois SaturdayMaroons’ Chances LookGood as Ineligibility Hitsmini.Coach Ned Merriam’s Maroon tracksquad will this afternoon conclude itspreparation for the opening meet ofthe indoor season at Illinois Satur¬day. The Maroons’ gloomy coachsmiled today as he stated that reportsfrom Champaign maintained that theFighting Illini were seriously weak¬ened by ineligibility.Probably the strongest Chicagotrack squad in many years will makethe trip to Champaign Saturday tomeet the crippled Illini. However,Illinois is extremely strong in thedistance runs, high jump, broad jump,pole vault, and hurdles. The Mid¬way squad hopes to overcome this“concentrated” ability with a wellbalanced squad.The Maroon hopefuls in the dasheswill be Davenport, Hersch and Weber.Kobak, Brumbaugh, and Parsons willwear the Chicago colors in the 75yard high hurdles. Captain Halcrow,last season’s Big Ten champ, and BobWasem will be the Midway’s entrantsin the quarter mile.In the half mile run Webster, KenSponsel, and John Bonniwell will rep¬resent the Chicago squad, while Bon¬niwell and Chet Powell will attemptto garner points for the Maroons inthe mile.A potentially strong mile relayteam will probably cause the Illiniplenty of trouble in that event. Theteam will be composed of Sponsel,Powell, Webster, and Halcrow.Gordon, Sergei, and Tingley willbe the Maroon’s competitors in thepole vault Three football backs,Hamity, Goodstein, and Letts willthrow the shot for the Midway squad. Freshman CagersBegin CompetitionAfter three weeks of concentrationon fundamentals. Coach Kyle Ander¬son’s freshman cagers will beginscrimmage competition next w-eek,w'hen the squad will be split into fouror five teams for the first of a seriesof round robin tournaments.The games will be played eachTuesday and Friday under regulationrules and scoring except for a short¬ening of the halves from 20 to 15minutes. Each team will play twogames with each of the other teams,and both team and individual per¬formances will be totaled at the endof the season’s play.Although the freshman group as awhole lacks height, Anderson is wellpleased with the rapid improvementof the group in ball handling and de¬fensive fundamentals. Among themen that have shown particularlywell during the first weeks are Ber-nie Krichiver, Ray Steinbach, BillSteinbrecher, Ellis Steinberg, DaveWeidemann, Tom Snarr, How'ardHawkins, and Bob McNamee.Begin I-M BadmintonTourney, January SIThe annual Intramural badmintontournament has been scheduled to getunder way on January 31, it wasannounced by the I-M office today. Aninnovation this year is the consola¬tion tournament for players defeatedin the first round of play. Medalswill be given to the winner and run¬ner up, and also to the winner ofconsolation play. Individual partici¬pation points will be given to all thosecompeting.Games may be played free at IdaNoyes Hall from Monday throughFriday, or at Bartlett Gym every dayuntil 3:30. There will be a smallcharge for use of the Bartlett courts,1 however. Plan Badminton OpenHouse for Ida NoyesHall Sunday AfternoonThere will be a badminton openhouse at Ida Noyes hall Sunday af¬ternoon from 3:15 to 6, MargueriteKidwell, assistant director, of thewomen’s clubhouse, announced yes¬terday. This open house has been ar¬ranged in order to stimulate thegrowing interest in badminton andto appease the constant calls formore chances to play the game.The open house will be a coupleaffair, open to anyone holding anactivities card at Ida Noyes. How¬ever, those who wish to come alonemay do so merely by signing thesheet on the bulletin board in thedownstairs gym. There will be a prizegiven for the winner of the roundrobin tournament. The matches willbe played in the large gym, refresh¬ments being served afterw'ards in theNoyes Library.Badminton ClubKidwell is the faculty adviser ofthe new University Badminton clubwhich was formed recently. Membersof this club are students especiallyinterested in badminton who wish toplay outside organizations.John Kent, graduate student, whowill help in instruction for begin¬ners, has been elected president andMiss Vivian Carlson, secretary-treas¬urer. Next Friday registration closesfor both men’s and women’s singlesin the badminton and the bowlingtournaments. Registration can bemade by signing the sheet on theBulletin Board.l-M Games Tonight\ 7:30! Delta Upsilon vs Zeta Beta Taui A. D. Phi “C” vs Phi Sig “C”Psi U. “C” vs Deke “C”I 8:15I Kappa Sigma vs Sigma ChiPsi U “B” vs Phi Gam “B" Fishhein Speakson Medicine inModern SocietyDr. Morris Fishbein, editor of theAmerican Medical Association Jour¬nal, Hygeia, and noted authority onmedical problems, addressed the mem¬bers of the Jewish Student Founda¬tion yesterday afternoon in Ida Noyestheatre on the relation of medicineto the modern changing trend of so¬ciety.Dr. Fishbein quoted specific ex¬amples of the manner in which man’schanging environment has affectedhis medical needs, and vice versa. Hemaintained that socialized medicinewas impractical, that physicianswould work harder for private gain than they would if they were state-employed.He also devoted a portion of hisaddress to refuting the charges madeby Harry D. Gideonse that doctorswho charged a lower fee than theirbrothers w'ere informally forced outof the profession.The main point that Fishbeinbrought out in his talk was thatmedicine’s part in the social orderhad vastly changed since the machineage, the automobile, and a more so¬phisticated standard of comfort hadwormed their way into it. He pointedout that the function of medicine isnow vastly more important, and de¬plored the fact that the middle classspends a greater portion of its in¬come on tobacco, automobiles, radio.s,and then advocates a more rationalsystem of medical service, preferablya free one.SPECIAL!From Wednesday to FridayTRIPLE DIPPEDMALTED MILK and15c SANDWICH25cTHE MAID-RITE GRILL1303-1320 East S7th Street“WHERE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS MEET AND EAT"HE SEUS TOBACC010 THEM AUBut Brandi Bobbitt, likeso many other independentexperts, prefers Luckies..."AT AUCTIONS in my warehousein Farmville, North Carolina,"says Mr. Branch Bobbitt, "thehigher the tobacco sells for, thebetter my profits. So I’m alwaysglad to see Lucky Strike buyers inthere bidding. They know whatthey want and they’ll keep biddingright up until they get it."Well — in a cigarette — it’s thetobacco that counts. I know to¬bacco and 1 know what tobacco isin what cigarettes. So that’s one reason I’ve smoked Luckies for 5or 6 years.”Mr. Bobbitt represents the "aris-tCKracy" of tobacco experts. Hejudges the tobacco that thegrowersgrow. He’s impartial, not connectedwith any cigarette manufacturer.Many other experts agree withMr. Bobbitt. Sworn records showthat, among independent tobaccoexperts, Luckies have twice as manyexclusive smokers as have all theother cigarettes combined.OVfiVkl n* AmImMmm ()■■■«WITH MEN WHO KNOW TOBACCOBEST-IT’S LUCKIES 2 TO I