Bailp iNianionVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938 Price Five CentsToday's BeadlinesName I’rom Leaders, page 1.Marriage course meets Wednesday,page 1.Pro Arte quartet plays, page 1.Harriet Monroe correspondence, page3.Luckhardt speaks, page 2.M eek-end sports schedule, page 4.Committee OpensMarriage CourseNext WednesdayCong^don Speaks at Firstof Five I^tures on Sub¬ject.As the first in a series of five lec¬tures on preparation for marriage,Pr. Charles B. Congdon of the Uni¬versity Health Service will discuss“Looking Forward to Marriage” inRosenwald 2 at 4:15 next Wednesday.The series is sponsored by the Prob¬lems of Living Committee, composedof representatives of eight campusorganizations.The next four lectures will be givenin Social Science 122. Blanche Carrier,assistant professor in the School ofEducation at Northwestern Univer¬sity will speak February 16 at 4:15.Miss Carrier is an instructor in theNorthwestern marriage course. Thefollowing week, Ruth O. McCarn. lec¬turer on mental hygiene and memberof the Counseling Service of North¬western University, will speak.The Reverend Harold Bowman, pas¬tor of the First Presbyterian Churchof Chicago, will talk on “Mental Hy¬giene of the Marriage Relationship”March 2. On March 9, Ruth McCarnwill speak again.Led by Robert Mohlman and Kath¬ryn Coolman, the Problems of Livingrommittee, which is an outgrowth ofa Chapel Union group, is supqjortedby the Chapel Union, the Jewish Stu¬dent Foundation, the ASU, YWCA,and the Interchurrh Councl. Repre¬sentatives oU the Interciub 'Council,the Ida Noyes Advisory Cowncil, andthe Calvert Club are merabws of thecommittee..•Ml students interested are welcometo participate hi the course. Aftereach lecture there will he a generaldiseu.ssion of the subjocLDiscuss WorldChristianity atSunday Meetiny.At the third in a series of Sundaymorning breakfast discussions in theCoffee Shop, the Reverend DouglasHorton, minister of the UnitedChurch of Hyde Park, will speak on"The Church and the Movement forWorld Christianity” at 9 Sundaymorning. Horton is president of theMovement for World Christianity andis the candidate for the position ofminister-general to the Congrega¬tional churches of the country. This isone of the highest offices in thatchurch..An active participant in the recentDxfoid and Edinburgh religious con¬ferences, Horton will be a represen¬tative to their eastern equivalentscheduled to meet at Madras, India inthe Fall. This conference, originallyplanned for Hanchow, China, willdemonstrate that the Christian move¬ment in the East has proceeded farbeyond the missionary stage.Students who wish to attend break¬fast meetings are asked to makereservations in the Chapel office. TheInterchurch Student Council whichsponsors the discussions will meetFriday at 3:30.To photograph the movements ofthe human eye while reading in orderto test reading rates, a laboratory inthe basement of the Graduate Educa¬tion building is equipped with anOphthalm-O-Graph.At present 60 University fresh¬men, who were recommended for thetest because of minimum speed onthe qualifying examinations, are re¬ceiving special work in acquiringproper reading habits. Most impor¬tant habit to acquire is that of read-mg in phrases and keeping the eyeon the page, rather than allowingit to glance away. Results arechecked at frequent intervals by theOphthalm-O-Graph and a curiousmovie-like apparatus, which runs notpictures, but stories. While the sub- Band PresentsFestival ConcertGlenn Moody Hobbs, who directedthe University band when it was firstorganized in 1898 under WilliamRainey Harper’s administration, is tobe one of the former conductors pre¬sented with the band when it playsits 40th anniversary performance,Sunday, February 20, at 3:30 in Man-del hall.Harper had the first cornetist’schair in the infant band 40 years ago.He was intensely interested in thesuccess of the organization, and de¬voted much time and energy to it.According to his wish, the bandplayed at his funeral, and marched inthe procession to Oakwoods Cemeterywhen he was buried on January 13,1906.At the festival concert on February20, Palmer Clarke and Howard Mort,also erstwhile directors of the band,will conduct several numbers. HaroldBachman, prominent bandmaster, ispresent conductor.By C. SHARPLESS HICKMANStark and almost unbearably dra¬matic, the mass chant—a form ofdrama far removed from the senti¬mental milk-sop to which the Rey¬nolds Club Theatre has been usually!'accustomed under DA’s O'Hara—made its appearance under Use aegisof the ASU’s New Theatre Grouplast night,I’filacheck Excels in RoleAn orail poetic form by noted liber¬al lyricfet Alfred Kreymbottrrg, thechant “America, America” kToogkt tolight the finest actor we 'have seenon any University of Chicago, stagein the past three years, DemarestPolacheck, who in the rede bf theorator poured forth an impassionedtirade ranging from extreme angerto deep emotion without ever slip¬ping over the invisible line stretchedbet wen drama and melodrama. Hisvoice IS perhaps the most expressivewe have heard in any young actor,unobtrusively blessed with perfectdiction and intuitive realization of theproper use of its unusually melodicqualities.Mass Chant EffectiveThe mass chant form is hamstring¬ing to the nerves despite its appar¬ent simplicity. Yet herein, if done aswell as it was done la.st night, liesits effectiveness. That eight people ina circle, backs to the audience; aspotlighted chorus leader, as it were;and two opposing couples represen¬ting “the poor and the rich” couldagainst a plain backdrop be sothrilling is nothing short of a miracleof the modern stage technique whichmany, as the ASU, have chosen tocall “the new theatre.” Certainlythese actors, Polacheck, Sylvia Silver-stein, Otto Lazare, and, in “Jack Rob¬inson”, Toby Moss, con.stitute a ros¬ter which would make the “regulars”of the drama cliques on campus fadeinto such insignificance that, becau.seof consistence, it would be impossibleto cast the two groups in the sameplay!In its two other plays, the ASU didnot so well acquit itself. This wasdue, however, to the banality of theplays themselves, rather than be¬cause of their execution.ject focuses upon the film, its speedis increased, forcing reading inphrases.Radio ProgramsThe effects of radio programs onchildren’s emotions and examinationson students are determined by auto¬matically regi.stering the heart beat,breathing pressure, and galvanic skinreflex on a moving film device. Thedepartment could not provide statis¬tics on the examination’s results onstudents, but declared that many ra¬dio programs, especially those de¬signed for children, disturbed theiremotions dangerously.Because of the many rooms devotedto experimental apparatus, the build¬ing is unique in having only fiveformal classrooms in its four floors, j Belgian Quartet PlaysTomorrow in MandelThe world-renowned Belgian ProArte Quartet presents its first con¬cert of the series of four scheduledfor performance at the University to¬morrow night at 8:45 in Mandel hall.The three remaining concerts will beplayed Monday, Wednesday and Fri¬day nights at the same time.A limited supply of tickets is stillavailable to studtents for the pro¬grams, and they can be obtained atthe Music building from 9 to 12 thismorning and from 2 to 5 in the af¬ternoon. Those who want extra tick¬ets for any of the concerts may ob¬tain them after 2.'fhe concerts are a gift to the Uni¬versity by Mrs. Elizabeth SpragueCoolidge, well-known music lover andformer Chicagoan, who last yearsponsored a similar series of per¬formances.Halcrow SelectsSenior CommitteeAppointment of 'co-committee headsof the Senior Class were announcedyesterday by President George Hal-crow and Secretary-Treasurer BettyBooth.David Gordon and Peggy Tilling-hast will be in charge of the proposedSenior Prom, with the duty of worry¬ing about a suitable' gift being dele¬gated to Charles Hoy and BettyRobbins. Robert Anderson and MaryLetty Green will take care of reunionplans. JoSin Marks and Betty Qumnhead the ^finance committee. ClassDay preparations will be made byJoseph Mastrofsky and MariannaPatrick. The conference committee isheaded by Paul Wagner and Hilde-garde Breihan. Publicity will behandled by John Fetman.All the original nominees for classoffices, Anderson, Mastrofsky, Wag¬ner, and Robbins were appointed ascommittee heads. Hoy is businessmanager of the Daily Maroon andRobbins is associate editor. Wagneris director of the Campus Newsreel,Anderson is captain of the swimmingteam, and Breihan is president of theFederation of University Women,with the other heads being known forwork in various organizations.Chapel Audience HearsHarvard Dean Speak“Speaking Out” is the title of theaddress which the Reverend WillardL. Sperry will give at RockefellerMemorial Chapel Sunday morning.Sperry, Dean of the Harvard Theo¬logical School, is a distinguishedCongregationalist.In their annual visit to the Chapel,members of the DePauw Universitychoir, directed by Van DenmanThompson, will present a programof a capella and accompanied mu¬sic at the 4:30 vesper services. Theywill sing music by Vittoria, Eccard,Morley, Palestrina, and Bach, asw'ell as some Russian and Englishselections. Two compositions by Mr.Thompson will complete the program.Coming EventsProfessor Burt Koffka today at 4:30in Social Science 122.“Biography” today and tomorrowat 8 in Intel-national House.ASU plays today and tomorrow at8:15 in Reynolds club.Fencing matches tomorrow at 2:30in Fieldhouse.Pro Arte Concerts, Feb. 5, 7, 9, 11at 8:45 in Mandel hall.Sunset Shuffle, Feb. 11, 4 to 6 inIda Noyes hall.Alec Templeton, Feb. 13, 3:30 inMandel hall.Band Concert, Feb. 20, 3:30 inMandel hall.Washington Prom, Feb. 21, atBartlett gym. Chapel GroupsConvene SundayThe two social problems groups andthe religious discussion of ChapelUnion will meet as usual Sundaynight at 7:30. Henry P. Chand¬ler, former president of the UnionLeague Club, will talk about “TheBearing of Religion on the Practiceof Law” at the home of Dean CharlesGilkey.Edith Abbott, Dean of the School ofSocial Service Administration, willdiscuss “The Relief Problem” with theSc^cial Problems group meeting at thehome of Zens L. Smith, 6217 Wood-lawn. The other Social Problems dis¬cussion will hear Will Tuller of theTextile Workers’ Organizers Commit¬tee speak. The group will meet at thehome of Lillian Herstein, 5431 Cor¬nell.Harold Swenson, assistant profes¬sor of Psychology, and Jerome Ker-win, associate professor of PoliticalScience, will be at the Chapel Unionstudent-faculty table in HutchinsonCommons today.By GORDON TIGERA look in last night at the dress re¬hearsal of “Biography,” S. N. Behr-man’s successful drawing-room com¬edy, which will be presented at In¬ternational House tonight and Sat¬urday evening did a little to dispelOUT almost firm conviction that thehope for dramatics on the Universityof Chicago campus is dead.For, the work of the InternationalHouse players at least enjoys the al¬most negative advantage of being byfar the most stageworthy of any yetseen this year. Every minute of theplay shows evidence ' of LillianSchoen’s direction—a commendablepiece of work for its comprehensionof those small details of stagecraftwhich lift a performance out of thehigh-school level, and for its intelli¬gent effort at giving the performancea prevailing tone and an imperiousline of development.Palmer DisappointingThat this was for the most partonly an effort is unfortunate, andcan only be attributed either to amistake of casting or to a mere pau¬city of material from which tochoose actors. For, Behrman’s playbeing what it is—a series of conver¬sational sallies built around an all-important central character—the realresponsibility for establishing tonefalls on the shoulders of ChristinePalmer, whose lethargic mein andpoor projection keep her from everrealizing the essence of the story¬book Bohemian artiste which it is herlot to enact. A well conceived andforceful performance by HaroldJamison as one of Palmer’s most fre¬quent conversational sparring part¬ners hardly saves the performance asa whole from the doldrums, simplybecause it has nothing to which it canadhere to make the contact necessaryfor it to come to light.But it is a compliment, consideringthe low level we have come to expectfrom campus productions, that wecan discuss the acting on a levelthat presupposes a gratifying amountof professional smoothness.Among the more important experi¬ments being carried out in the nat¬ural sciences at the University arethose of Dr. H. G. Swann. Dr. Swann,a member of the department of Phy¬siology, has been experimenting oncertain endrocinological aspects ofmetabolism of water in the body. Hiswork involves the use of operativetechniques and observations of theintake of water and excretion ofurine in white rats.How is water metabolism handledby the body? What factors are in¬volved in the maintenance of theequilibrium of water metabolism?These are the main problems withwhich Dr. Swann is concerned andupon which he hopes his experimentswill shed some light. Such consider¬ations are of fundamental impor- Committee NamesProm Leaders; SetBid Price at $3.25Choose Wilson, Fitzgerald,Eckhouse, Barden toLead Prom.Betty Barden, Aileen Wilson, Rob¬ert Fitzgerald and Robert Eckhousehave been named leaders for theWashington Prom by the Prom com¬mittee. The price of bids has alsobeen definitely set at $3.25, establish¬ing a new low over that made bylast year’s price of $3.75.Betty Barden is head of the Boardof Women’s Organizations, one of thehighest positions held by women oncampus. She is also vice-president ofMortar Board.Head of Mirror, president of Eso¬teric, member of Women’s Federationcouncil, and delegate to InterclubCouncil are the positions held by.Aileen Wilson.Eckhouse Leads WingRobert Eckhouse, chairman of theStudent Social Committee, is respon¬sible for bringing the WashingtonProm back on campus. The financialsuccess of last year’s Prom is alsolargely due to him.Besides being captain of the foot¬ball team and former basketball star,Robert Fitzgerald has been a chiefwriter for the annual Blackfriars'show, contributing many song hits.Nine women ticket salesmen to beknown as Prom-enettes have beenselected. They are Betty Jean Dun¬lap, Betty Franks, Betty Friedberg,Jeanne Gay ton, Marjorie Kuh, Hen¬rietta Mahin, Dorothy Overlock,Mary Anna Patrick, and MargaretPenney.Goodman, HanleyTo Broadcast OnA bolishinyPa role“Out on Parole: Shall the parolesystem be abolished?” will be thesubject of the roundtable discussionby Paul F. Goodman and MarshallHanley of the University and ElaineLarson and Dwight Croessmann ofNorthwestern University over .stationWBBM at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon.Three aspects of the problem willbe taken up: the philosophy of thepenal system, why the parole systemhas seemingly failed in many cases,and what reforms can be institutedin thos<; states in which the parolesystem lias failed.Haydon Discusses Christian God“The Christian God” will be thesubject of the lecture to be given byDr. A. Eustace Haydon, professor ofComparative Religion, over stationWGN at 8 tomorrow night.Dr, Haydon will discuss the devel¬opment of the Christian God fromhis background of the many Gods ofthe Greek and Roman Era until hebecomes a trinity. His character underwent refinement under the ScholasticDialectitions and he became a heaven¬ly sovereign. Coincident with the riseof the national state and the absolutemonarchial form of government, Cal¬vin made an absolute monarch ofHim.tance for theoretical physiology andmay have valuable medical implica¬tions in handling Diabetes Insipidusand other diseases of abnormal waterexcretion.Glandular InfluencesIt is well known that various glan.dular bodies have an influence onthe properties of the kidneys in con¬trolling the amount of water to besecreted or retained by the body. Forexample, when the posterior lobe ofthe hypophysis (pituitary body) isremoved, an animal will secrete anabnormal amount of urine and con¬sequently must drink a large amountof water. Sometimes the amounts inone day are equal to over one halfthe weight of the animal. It is uponthis knowledge that Dr. Swann is(Continued on page 4)Ophthalm-O-Graph tests Reading Rates byPhotographing Movements of Human EyeASU Presents Mass Chant in New Theatre Project;International House Players Show “Biography” TonightSwann Experiments on EndocrinologicalAspects of Water Metabolism of BodyBy IRVING JANISPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 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.Are You Good?If events are determined it follows thatmoral judgment is a mistake. If things happenbecause they must, it is foolish to blame cer¬tain agents or objects because they are asso¬ciated with something we do not like. Goodcan only mean conducive to that which we ap¬prove ; bad, can only be the name commonlyused of things that get in our way. Thingsare neutral, neither good nor bad in them¬selves. They merely are.To him engrossed in the daily round of hu¬man life, conclusions such as this seem toofantastic to be taken seriously. To him wholooks at the earth as a mote in space, and ex¬amines human action from a cosmic point ofview, it seems only reasonable. It would bestrange indeed if the universe had an attitudetoward the inhabitants of the earth. As menlearn more and more about the situations con¬trolling human action, it appears more andmore clearly that men are neither good norbad. They merely act and are acted upon.This view of the world makes righteousindignation and whole-hearted devotion alikeimpossible. If values are subjective—read intothings by the wishful thinking of men, theonly reasonable guide to action that remainsis the satisfaction of one’s desires.But it is obvious that one of the most fun¬damental of desires is the desire for a har¬monious life which can only? be attainedthrough a life guided by values that can serveas a measure for all activity. This means thatthe intelligent man will look around the world,pick the values by which he will guide his ac¬tion, and act accordingly, yet in full realiza¬tion that his values are subjective, and a meredevice for leading a harmonious life. The un¬intelligent will take his values from others, orworse, will realize that values are not absoluteand fail to recognize that they are necessaryto a happy life. It is these latter that commitsuicide.But the captious may object that such be¬havior contradicts the determinism so baldlyproclaimed as a necessary part of a new intel¬lectual synthesis yesterday. This objectionoverlooks the fact that belief in determinismchanges one’s behavior by no jot or tittle.Decision and indecision, intelligence and stupi¬dity, resolve and irresolution alike are a resultof things that have gone before. The accept¬ance or rejection of determinism itself is de¬termined by what has gone before. One isfreed of regrets for the past by the accept¬ance of a determined world, freed from anxietyfor the future, free to live harmoniously in thepresent, secure in the belief that what will be,will be.Vol. 38 FEBRUARY 4, 1938 No. 64FOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is 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, 683i 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 3811.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, 1879.1937 Mcmoer 1938PUsocioted GDlIe6iale PressDistributor ofGDlIe6iafe 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 RoseRuth Brody Burt MoyerBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Harry ToppingMax Freeman Irvin RosenNight Editor: Seymour MillerAssistant: Ernest S. Leiser SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy LILUAN SCHOENAND A LITTLE CHILD—The Int-House Players were having a line rehear¬sal. A member of the cast barged into Room A on thesecond floor where he thought the rehearsal was to be.Much to his amazement, he was confronted with agroup of young men all of whom were lustily blowingon wind instruments. The actor retired hastily andrepaired to the bulletin board where the schedule ofthe House is posted. There he looked up Room A andfound:—Rh. A. 7-9 P.M. Economics Seminar. W'ehave always admired the frankness of the economistsas to the value of their profession, but we never thoughtthey would go so far as to put the wind to good use.PSI UPSILON FOREVERJack Bonniwell thinks this column is just dandy—because it fills up space (an original enough commentfor Mr. Bonniwell). We offered to let him take overfor a while but Bonniwell rebuffed us, saying in dig¬nified manner, “So long as Bill McNeill is editor nocolumn of mine will appear in the Daily Maroon.” Inthis crisis the staff of the Daily Maroon has voted todemand the immediate resignation of Editor McNeill.The Psi U’s, or at least parts of them, are sure wewould learn to love them after we get to know them.The boys don’t like to be too obvious about their merits—give the other men a chance—etc.The brothers might do well to remember Davy Gor¬don, of whom it may be said that it is not necessaryto “get to know' him” in order to like him. Also BobJones is very sweet when he is very tight. (As he w'asthe one time we saw him).AND GOD SAID—Sidney Hyman, the intellect of the class of ’35,is at his old philosophy notes again. Some days agoSidney and Ann Binkley got off on a conversationabout Spinoza. Hyman, in his glory, proceeded to ex¬pound at great length. Ann listened with attentionand then began to show friend Sidney just where hewas wrong and why. Hyman kept up his bluff as longas possible and then retired as fast as possible toaforementioned philosophy notes.EXPOSE(For the delectation and edification of Beta ThetaPi, Lillian Schoen, the Poetry Club, the RenaissanceSociety, whoever teaches Medieval French Philology(700-1200 A.D.), International House, and ChristinePalmer.)Look out, little children, and hide in your beds!You’ve nothing to fear from the horrible RedsOr menacing morons who crawl round in KedsCompared to Roditi, prodigious Roditi, the sligiousRoditiOf Wieboldt and Int-House.The people who stalk through the stacks and throughClassics,Folk of broad crania, narrow thoracics.Shudder like Aryan-chastened Karasiks:They’re scared of Roditi, pedantic Roditi, semanticRoditi,Of London and Paris.Oh, terror arrived with the Fall Quarter’s dawning;It creeps through the night and the sorrow’ful morning;So gibbous the moon, so terrific the lorningWhen Eddie Roditi, unshaven Roditi, depraven RoditiSaw Midway and Gothic.He doesn’t like w'omen with rouge on their faces;He doesn’t like women who don’t keep their places;He pinches their bottoms and counts corset laces!Heretical Eddie, the wary Roditi, the hairy RoditiWhom nothing escapes.The muses are frightened, the poets are frantic;Bow down to the master, unhappy romantic.In fear for the fate of your latest creantic!Look out for Roditi, the sharp-tongued Roditi, the harp-tongued RoditiLook out, little children, and hide in your beds!You’ve nothing to fear from the horrible RedsAnd menacing morons who crawl round on KedsComjmred to Roditi, prodigious Roditi, the sligious.RoditiOf Wieboldt and Int-House—F. Power.It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLEDick Glasser, the Gentleman from Indiana, is .atypical “good fellow.” Although a bit too suave, a bittoo much the perfect fraternity man, the smooth sales¬man, he is genuine.His personality, some of which he borrows fromhis brothers in Zeta Beta Tau, is a genial one. He isgood-humored, and relishes going out on a “hoot.” Hischief love, the pride of his life is Wasson’s departmentstore in Indianapolis, where he spends his workinghours in the summer.He was the genius behind the raucous Skull andCrescent ads in the Daily Maroon, but no one tookthem amiss because Dick isn’t the kind of fellow youget sore at. He doesn’t work too hard in school but,his marks are good enough.He is not especially outstanding, but people likeDick. LuckhardtSpeaksto Medical HistoryClub on MondayDr. Arno B. Luckhardt, professorof Physiology, will be one of twospeakers at tbe second meeting oftbe year of tbe John Hopkins MedicalHistory Club on Monday evening. Tbemeeting, to be held in tbe Instituteof tbe History of Medicine, 1900 EastMonument Street, will begin at 8:30.Luckbardt will speak on “A Neg¬lected Chapter in tbe History ofAnatomical Illustration and Instruc¬tion.” One of tbe featured displays oftbe evening will be a carved ivory“anatomical mannikin” from Dr.Luckhardt’s collection. The “manni¬kin” is the model of a woman whichcan be taken apart to sbow’ tbe struc¬ture and character of the internalorgans. Used in teaching, and for il¬lustration for lectures, it was a veryvaluable aid in early physiology.The other speaker of the eveningis Dr. Henry E. SigerLst, whose topicis “Vagbhata’s ‘Astangahrdayasam-hita’, an Indian Textbook of Med¬icine.” Refre.shments will be servedafter the meeting in the Great Hallwhere new acquisitions of the Insti¬tute will be exhibited. ivoiiKa iLectiires on‘Ego and His World’“The Ego and His World” will bethe topic of Dr. Burt Koffka, worUl-renow'ned psychologist, who will lec¬ture this afternoon in ,Social Science122 under the sponsorship of the Di¬vision of the Social Sciences. Amember of the faculty of Smith Col¬lege, Koffka is internationally recog¬nized as a pioneer in Gestalt psycho¬logy and at present is the leading ex¬ponent of the school in the UnitedStates.In the summer of 1925 Koffka gavecourses here at the University. Be¬sides teaching, he has written severalpopular books on psychology andnumerous essays on the Gestalt psy¬chology.Individual HairdressingAt Moderate PricesShampoo and Wave 50Manicure 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57lh ST.HYDE PARK 7860Hrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sat. to 6 P.M.CLASSIFIED ADSLOST—Lartrp. Pointed. Hand Made SilverRing with uncut garnet. Unique valueto owner. Reward to finder. NotifyRoom 319, International House.V- 'A'We will go to anylengths to helpyou win herFor Valentine GiftsMOJUD Silk StockingsAre heartily acceptable!,P*^-$1Hazel Hoff1371 E. 55th STREET(Near Dorchester) THE BANDThat IntroducedSINGING SONG TITLESKAY KYSERfflS GREAT ORCHESTRAAND ms SINGING STARS-PLUS—AN ENTERTAININGFLOOR REVUE* « «Saturday Tea Dancing4-6 P. M.« V •Sunday Tea Dancing3-6 P.M.a * aNEVER A COVER CHARGEMIN. WEEK NIGHTS SI.SOSATURDAY EVES. S2.S0BLACKHAWKRANDOLPH & WABASHDEARBORN S262NOW FOR THE FIRST TIMEl$1.39 EDITION OFDR. SIGMUND FREUD'SA GENERALINTRODUCTION TOPSYCHO-ANAYLSIS$1.39THE ENTIRE SUBJECT OF PSYCHOANALYSIS IN SIMPLE,POPULAR LANGUAGE BY ITS MOST FAMOUS EXPONENTU.oiC. BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUETHE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938 Page ThreeToday on theQuadranglesFRIDAYMEETINGSCommittee for Medical Aid toSpain. Social Science 105 at 12:30.Negro Student Club. Alumni roomof Ida Noyes at 7.ASU Cooperative Committee. IdaNoyos Room C at 12:30.YWCA Photography group. IdaNoyos Alumni room at 12.Advisory Council. YWCA room ofIda Noyes at 12.Dames .Art Group. Room C of IdaN'oyos at 2.Acholh, meeting and tea, YWCAroom of Ida Noyes at 3:30.Organization Meeting for All Uni¬versity Conference on Student Prob¬lems. Lexington 5 at 3:30.LECTURESProfessor White. “Public Serviceand the Party Machine,” in SocialScience 122 at 3:.30.Kurt Koffka. “The Ego in HisWorld,” in Social Science 122 at 4:30.Profes.sor Koch. “Hormones andVitamins. The Gonads.” Art Instituteat r.:45.MISCELLANFIOUSASr Workshop Music group re¬hearsal. Theatre of Ida Noyes at 6.University Symphony Orchestra re¬hearsal. Mandel hall at 7:30.Pi Delta Phi tea. WAA room of IdaNoyes at 3:30.Phonograph concert. Social Science122 from 12:30 to 1:16. Brahm’sQuartet in C Minor, Borodin’s “Onthe Steppes of Central Asia,” andAlbeniz’s “Holiday in Seville.”(terman Club tea. Library of IdaNoyes at 4.SS.A Club supper. Sun parlor ofIda Noyes at 6.“Biography,” modern comedy. In¬ternational House at 8:30.•ASU play, “Jack Robinson.” Rey¬nolds Club theatre at 8:16.SATURDAYSettlement League Drama Grouprehearsal. Ida Noyes theatre at 3..Alumni group bridge and tea.YWCA of Ida Noyes at 3:30.“Biography.” International House.8:30.“Jack Robinson.” Reynolds Clubtheatre at 8:15.Concert by Pro Arte quartet. Man-del Hall at 8:46.SUNDAYPhi Delta Upsilon alumnae meetingand tea. YWCA room of Ida Noyesat 3.Jewish Student Foundation. RoomC of Ida Noyes at 3.University chapel service. Rev. W.L. Sperry of Harvard University at11.Communist Club. Room C of IdaNoyes at 7.MONDAYMEETINGSIn Ida Noyes—•ASU labor committee. Room C at2:30.Phi Delta Upsilon. WAA room at 7.Federation of University Women.Alumnae room at 12:30.SSA Club. Room C at 7.C hapel Union recreation committee.Room B at 6:30.Delta Sigma. Room A at 7.(hi Rho Sigma. Alumnae room at7. ExhibitLetters from Correspondenceof Harriet Monroe, Noted PoetessSomewhat out of the ordinary runis the Renaissance Society exhibithanging currently in Wieboldt hall,Room 206. Comprised of manuscriptsand letters of poets of England andAmerica, the collection is a part ofthat bequeathed to the University bythe late Harriet Monroe, and is madeup of correspondence received byPoetry Magazine during the 25 yearperiod of its existence. Most of thematerial in the Renaissance Societyexhibition refers directly to the con¬tents of Harriet Monroe’s autobio¬graphy, “A Poet’s Life,” to be pub¬lished probably this month, by Mac¬Millan and Company.Among the most interesting letters,especially in view of the phenomenalsale of his recent book, is one writ¬ten in November, 1925, by HerveyAllen, author of “Anthony Adverse”in which he declines an offer of Mon¬roe, evidently to loan him some mon¬ey, saying that his poverty at themoment was not a matter of bread andLettersto the EditorEditor,Daily Maroon:Did it ever occur to you that it isvery bad taste and gets one nowhereto be unkind and nasty when talkingof others. It doesn’t take talent normuch intelligence to throw stones, infact it shows a decided lack of in¬genuity that one can find nothingbetter toward which to direct one’sefforts and energy—save tearing thepersonalities and characters of othersapart.However, I presume this attitude ismuch too humane to interest the“progressive”, “enlightened”, and“God-like” Maroon staff who don’tseem to give a damn what they sayor whom they hurt just so they canprint something.B. L. S.Pi Delta Phi. Y'WCA room at 7.Bridge clas-s. Library at 6:46.Fellowship of Reconciliation. In¬ternational House at 7.Wilson Junior College AlumnaeAs.sociation. Reynolds club theatre at7.MISCELLANEOUSProfessor Gerhart Husserl of theUniversity of Frankfort. “Philosophi¬cal Approach to Law.” Law South at4.Gil Roke speaks to Communist club.“Reply to Isolationists.” Law Northat 7:30.Delta Sigma splash party. IdaNoyes pool at 7:30.Settlement League Drama Grouprehearsal. Ida Noyes theatre at 7:30.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEI POI COlllOI STUOCNTS AND ORADUATISOeMtrl.ohUattHonHARRIS Pl»yln«'Pim w •nnn 2 WEEKS ONLYTHEATRE WH. and Sat.Robert Henderson and Estelle WinwoodpresentEstelle BramwellWINWOOD FLETCHERHelen Jessie RoyceCHANDLER LANDISIN THE INTERNATIONAL HIT:umCYCLE OF 9 PlAY^ALL DIFFERENTThe First Weeklat Series -‘wH$$0rplicn*. No ootialon tmpltjfod.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSII, J.O.PH.I.J OrwAmstos onb.^ mek momtk. AdseweW _CstwaM apm to «MN.ne %. Av»„ Chiccg*. Raadofpk 4UJSun., Jan 30Mon. Jan. 31Sat. Mat. &Night Feb. 6 "Fumed Oak”“Family Album"“Hands Across the Sea”T„«". fS",Wed. Mat. & (“Ways and Means”Night Feb. 2 / “The Astonished Heart”3rd Series “Still Life"Thurs. Night “Shadow Ploy”Feb. 3 “We Were Dancing”Special ) “Family Album”Program > “Still Life”Fri., Feb. 4 } “Hands Across the Sea”Nights-66c to $2 76, Wed. Mat. 66c to$1.66, Sat. Mat. 66c to $2.20 ■ A Gilbert Miller HitUmitod Engagementajdwyil Tonight at 8:30Mate. WED. & SAT.• • A Routing Comedyof Two Russian Aristo¬crats Down to Their LastShirt in Paris • •EUGENIELEONTOVICHInHer Greatest Success“TOVARICH”with McKAY MORRISBy JACQUES DEVALEnglish Text by ROBERT E. SHERWOOD"FIRST RATE CAST . . -SPARKLING SHOW"—Robert Poliak, TimesMATINEES: 55c, $1.10. $1.65. $2.20EVENINGS: $1.10. $1.65. $2.20. $2.75 butter, but merely short rations oftobacco. He went on to say that hewas going to leave Columbia, re¬marking “. . . if I have to look overany more of these dreadful poems and‘short stories’—now! that the poormeek souls in the. ‘poetry course’hand in I’ll never be able to write aline again.” He was at the time work¬ing on his biography of Edgar AllenPoe, and compared Keats’ life to thatof Poe as being a happy one.Benet’s PoemWilliam Rose Benet submitted his“To His Excellency, the Ambassadorof China” accompanied by a carica¬ture and the following amusing let¬ter:“Low and behold!If so—much goldIf not—refoldAnd return unsold.”Ernest Hemingway wrote a gossipyletter from Paris in 1922 to Monroein which he touches on various mutualacquaintances. Other valuable and in¬teresting parts of the collection are aletter from Rupert Brooke, manu¬scripts and letters from Robert Frost,W’illa Cather, D. H. Lawrence, VachelLindsay, John Masefield, Carl Sand¬burg, the signed manuscript of EdnaSt. Vincent Millay’s famous “Euclid”sonnet, a letter from Louis Sullivan,one of the three great Americanarchitects, and a fantastic menusigned by poets for a poetry dinnergiven at the National Arts Club,January 28, 1913. There is also a jletter from Amy Lowell in which she 1refers to Chicago as the “city of my 'heart.” ' CampusBriefsForum DiscussesPalestinian Policy“The Foreign Policy of Palestine”is the topic to be discussed on theInternational House weekly radioforum tomorro-w at 3 over a WGN-MBS network.Three viewpoints will be presentedby the three speakers Charles Prince,American, will uphold the position ofthe Jews in Palestine, while AzizAraj, a Palestinian Arab, will speakfor the Arabs. Leonard Greatwood,Englishman, will present Britain’sstand.Fan mail for this program has beenreceived from such points as Van¬couver, Massachusetts, Washington,Texas, and California, indicatingthat the forum commands a wide fol¬lowing over the country.Joins Publicity StaffRube Frodin, managing editor ofThe Daily Maroon in 1932-33, willjoin the staff of the University Pub¬licity Office, William V. Morgenstern,director of publicity, announced yes¬terday.Frodin, who will begin work in themiddle of this month, is at presenta member of the San Francisco bur¬eau of .Time magazine, and was form¬erly a writer with Associated Press.Shapiro Speaks to JSFFiresideAt the first Fireside of the winterquarter, to be held at Ida Noyestheatre Friday evening, February 11,If Winter ComesCan SWING Be Far BehindCAMPUS COMICSTONIGHTANYONE (AND EVEN TWO) CAN EASILY DINEDANCE AND RUB SHOULDERS VlfITH 'THE CAFESOCIETY' TO THE MUSIC OF THEKINGS JESTERSAND THEIR ORCHESTRAAnd The Phi Psi Trio, toolaSalle hotelMADISON AND LASALLE STREETP.S. THE MAROON BUSINESS OFFICE WILL CHEERFULLYDISTRIBUTE SPECIAL MINIMUM RATE CARDS FOR STU¬DENTS. the Jewish Student Foundation willpresent Robert E. Shapiro of B’ naiB’rith. Mr. Shapiro’s subject will be“Youth’s Blind Date with Destiny.”Shapiro has devoted some time toa statistical study of vocational op¬portunities for Jewish youth. His talktherefore will concern the variousprofessions, how readily newcomersare welcomed into them, and oppor¬tunities for new fields of endeavor.Refreshments will be served fol-'lowing the meeting.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 congenialserviceyOUPRBSCniBE...AHV W€ BLEHD...A TOBACCO MIXTUK !UoM the average etandardiced blend suityour taeteT Are you etill searching forthe perfect pipe smoke T Then send forthe complete Royal British Tobacco Blend¬ing Kit A little experimenting . . youdiscover your perfect blend IEleven types of guaranteed flnest-quaiitytobaccos, and simple Instructions, enablayou to create your own excluaivc individu¬al blend (not obtainable in any othermanner). File your formula with us.Thereafter, we will All your order accord¬ing to your prescription, at moat reason¬able prices. Large humidor kit alsoincludes mixing tray, meaauring Jigger,instruction-formula book. Sent complete,postpaid. $2.60OFFER NO. 1On* hall pound of your progcriptionfroo U ordorod within thirty dayg altorpurchoM of Royal BritUh BlondingKlLOFFER NO. 2For twonly-flvo conto in coin to corocpartial cost oi mailing, packing andgoTommont tax. wo wiU sand an as¬sortment oi six diRarant typas oi outcustom blandod tobaccos.Rcyal British TobaccoCompanvSuita 904 140 S. Daarbom StRoyal British Tobacco Co.Suite S04 14S S. Dearborn St.Gentlemen; □ Send me theRoyal British Tobacco BlendingKit by return mail, postpaid. Ism enclosing $2.50. (Send checkor money order do not mailcurrency Ii□ Send me your sample otterof assortment of six differenttypes of custom blended RoyalBritish Tobaccos I am enclos¬ing 2&C in coin.Ii liiiiiiiPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1938DAILY MAROON SPORTSWeekend ScheduleSwimmers Splash at IowaThis morning the University swim¬ming team, 15 strong, board the trainin search of their first victory. Thesquad is scheduled to meet Iowa andMinnesota in a triangular tilt on theIowa grounds.According to Coach McGillivray theprospects favor Iowa. Chicago’schances of taking honors in the meetare slim. But the water polo team isalso scheduled to meet Iowa, andhere Chicago may expect to win.An important factor in both tiltswill be the length of the pool. TheBartlett pool, scene of numerouspractice tilts measures 20 yards long.The pool at Iowa is 50 yards inlength, but without so many turnswhich are so effective in deciding therise and fall of swim scores.In the 150 yard back stroke eventMcGillivray expects Iowa to lead thefield, Chicago taking possible secondand third positions. In the 220 swimChicago should take third, Iowa andMinnesota following in the ordernamed. The diving will give Minne¬sota a first, Iowa a second, and Chi¬cago another third. The 100 yard freestyle swim and the fifty yard sprintmay go to any team.Following are the men McGillivrayexpects to take to Iowa: Anderson,Captain Anderson, Baer, Bernhardt,Bostic, Bothwell, Fergueson, Homs,Lewis, McCollum, McLaury, Schner-ing. Stern, Sterns, and Van de Water.Matmen Meet DeKalb■ Wrestling against Wheaton atWheaton, Illinois, at 3:30 tomorrowand against DeKalb here at 9 Mon¬day night. Coach Spyros Vorres’ mat-men face a busy week-end. In bothmeets he is using his first stringmen.Final selections of the men whowill wrestle Saturday and Mondayhave not been made but Vorres hasa tentative line-up set. Final selec¬tions will depend upon eliminationbouts to be held today and upon thetrend of the contests. When enoughpoints have been tallied to make Ma¬roon success certain Vorres will prob¬ably enter some of his less experi¬enced men. Dave Tinker will prob¬ably wrestle at 118, R. Hughes at126, G. Cook, Gill Finwall or W.Thomas at 135, and Bob Finwall, EdiButler or Jim Bell at 145. IJohn Hass or Colin Thomas will jprobably wrestle at 155, Fred Lehn-hardt at 165, Ed Valorz or GeorgeSchoonmaker at 175, and Wilson orMorrie Grinbarg in the heavyweightdivision. Trackmen Start HomeSeasonThe Chicago trackmen will faceNorth Central College in their firsthome indoor meet of the current sea¬son in the Fieldhouse Saturday af¬ternoon at 2:30. The Maroon thinclads will be seriously crippled inseveral events because of the loss ofBob Wasem.This week the relay will be runwith two men running a 220 each,and two men running a quarter mile.Davenport and Hersch, Arnold, orCaulton will run the 220’s and Spon-sel and Halcrow the quartet-miles.Caulton, Kobak, Brumbaugh, andParsons will run the hurdles for theMaroons; while Davenport, Hersch,and Webb will wear the Midway’scolors in the dashes. Halcrowr andSponsel are Coach Merriam’s choicein the quarter mile. These men canexpect plenty of competition fromthe “crack” quarter miler that willrepresent the Teachers.Tingley, Gordon, and Sergei willagain compete for the Maroons in thepole vault; and Gordon, Kobak. andWarner will high jump. In the broadjump the Maroons will enter* Kobakand Davenport.The Midway’s hopes in the shotput will rest on the tossing arms ofHamity, Goodstein, and Letts.Webster, Sponsel, and Bonniwellwill compete for the Maroons in thehalf mile, and Chet Powell and JackBonniwell will run in the mile. Mc-Elroy will carry the Chicago hopesin the two mile.Maroon Five Takes OnOhio State MondaythethetheMaking their first home appearancesince their defeat of Loyola twoweeks ago, the Maroons meetstrong Ohio State quintet inFieldhouse Monday night.The Maroon lineup depends onimprovement of Captain Ken Peter¬sen’s sprained left thumb. He is ex¬pected to be ready for action byMonday, but if he does not startJohnny Eggemeyer may be movedback to guard and either Jack Mul¬lins, whose injured leg has finally re¬turned to condition, or Bob Casselswill start at the forward post.Swann-(Continued from page 1)Fencers Meet Lake ShoreThe championship Maroon fencingsquad will finally be the underdog asit takes on the Lake Shore AthleticClub group in a return match in theFieldhouse at 2:30 tomorrow. TheMaroons will be out to avenge thedefeat handed them by the A. C.swordsmen in an engagement held atthe club several w’eeks ago.Fencing for the invaders in theepee and foil will be Campbell Wil¬son, captain of the Chicago squadlast year and individual title holder.German Club MeetsFeaturing three German travelfilms, the German club will hold itssecond meeting of the quarter todayfrom 4 to 5 in room 126 of the Grad¬uate Education building. Plans forthe coming German dance will bediscussed, and after the meeting re¬freshments will be served in IdaNoyes.Campus Florist1233 E. 55th near EimbarkDON'T FORGET THAT COR¬SAGE FOR HER FOR FORMALOR INFORMAL OCCASIONSSPECIAL FOR WEEKEND;3 GardeniaCorsage $1PhoneHyde Park 9414 basing his experiments.Dr. Swann performs the delicateoperation of removing the posteriorportion of the hypophysis of his whiterats. During the subsequent periodhe observes very carefully the in¬take and excretion of water on thepart of the animals, which is of hugeproportions. His experiments thenconsist of exploring the effects ofvarious salts upon this abnormalcondition.Effect of SaltsHe has found that table salt(NaCl) and sodium bicarbonate(NaHC03), when placed in thedrinking water, cause the secretionto be even greater; other .salts donot have this effect. Another factwhich Dr. Swann has discovered isthat if the thyroid gland is removedfirst, and then the posterior portionof the pituitary, there is not the Badminton GroupMeets for FinalPractice TonightMembers of the new UniversityBadminton club will gather at IdaNoyes tonight for their last practicebefore the meet with the well-knownBad:nintoii club of the city on Sat-urda.v evening at 8 in the main gymof Ida Noyes. The meeting ton’ghtwhich will afford a final intensivepractice for the players, will lastfrom 7:30 until 10.About ten outstanding players fromthe city team will meet the best ofthe L’^niversity team tomorrow nightin a series of friendly matches.Matches include both men’s and wom¬en’s singles, men’s and women’s dou¬bles, and mixed doubles. Any stu¬dents who are interested are welcometo watch.Kent Heads TeamNumber one man on the Universityteam is its president, Jock Kent, withGertrude Polcar number one woman.Both wiP .see heavy action in thesingles tomorrow night. Second posi¬tions on the teams have been won byRobert Ralstron and Eleanor Coambs.Women’s doubles will probably seePolcar and Coambs as the numberone te?m, second place being accordedto Pat Weeks and Rachel Smiley,both alumnae. The first team in themen’s doubles consists of Jock Kentand possibly Ben Gurney. Seconddoubles team is sure to see RobertRalstron and Oscar Sugar playing to¬gether.Four mixed teams have been drawnfrom the new club to represent theUniversity before the city teams. Thenumber one mixed team finds JockKent pairing up with Rachel Smiley,who can handle the shots in close tothe net; Polcar takes Ralstron as herpartner for doubles play and JaneWoodruff and Oscar Sugar make upthe number three team. Coambs andGurney, who have shown up well inhome competition have the fourthberth.Marguerite Kidwell announced yes¬terday that the last date for the firstround game of the men’s and women’sUniversity badminton tourney is Feb¬ruary 5, while February 8 marks thefinal date for second round games ofthe bowling tournament. Both of thesetournaments have been gaining muchnotice with about twenty-five girlsand the same number of men strivingfor first places in the bowling tourney,and nearly 60 men and women outfor the badminton top ranking. Intramural Cagemen Play 13 Games;Tight Contests Mark Wild Eveningcharacteristic increase in water me¬tabolism that occurs when the thy¬roid is intact. Both of the.se dis¬coveries have given Dr. Swann someleads as to the relation.ship betweensalts and water metabolism, and alsoas to the influence of the glands onwater metabolism. It is expected thatthe continuation of the.se experimentswill lead to fruitful conclusions con¬cerning the physiology of water me¬tabolism in the body.LEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYTAKE PRIVATE LESSONSTERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63RD ST.HYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.STERLINGYOUNGAND HIS ORCHESTRAIN THEIR FIRST CHICAGO APPEARANCENEWMID-WINTER REVUETHREE PRESENTATIONSNIGHTLYBOULEVARDSTEVENS HOTEL ROOM Inti’amural basketball went rollingmerrily along last night as indepen¬dents, employees, fraternities, anddormitories met in thirteen games onBartlett courts.The best games were between PsiU and Kappa Sig, who played aknotty 18-17 game, with the Psi U’sfinally coming out on top, B. & G. vs.Press in the employees game, an¬other tight contest which was wonby the Press by the low score of 12-11, a free-for-all independent game inwhich the Barristers ploughed DeltaSigma Pi under, 54 to 18,Harper Says SovietsResist EntanglementsA self-styled “devil’s advocate,”Samuel N. Harper, professor ofRussian Language and Institutions,told his audience at his final lectureWednesday “Sovietism After TwentyYears,” that the communist statescontain the beginnings of mass parti¬cipation in government r.nd they haveresisted bureaucratic entanglements.He also concluded that the Sovietexperiment has come from a “harsh”past, that the people have been given18 years of peace, that there hasbeen less cruelty and rigidity thanunder the Czarist regime, and thatthere have been rising standards ofliving.Harper sees the Soviet Union as asteadying force for world peace, be¬cause of willingness to join in collec¬tive action for peace, as well as com¬mitment to passive action only, inregard to world revolution.Noting the decision of the Com¬munist Internationale in 1935 tofavor the “Popular Front” move¬ments against fascism. Harper feelsthat the Soviets have allied them¬selves with the bourgeoisie democ¬racies. Scores:Reynolds Club, 41; Billings Tech, 5Burton “600”, 41; Snell No. 2, 18Burton “600”, 27; Snell No. 1 7Medics, 16; ASU, 6Burton “800”, 28; Burton “700”, 14AMBH, 28; Faculty Exchange,* 8Sigma Chi, 38; Pi Lambda Phi, 18Solicitors, 28; Lambda Gamma Phi22Psi U “C”, 24; Phi Sig “C”, 17Psi U, 18; Kappa Sig, 17B. & G., 12; Press, 11Barristers, 64; Delta Sigma Pi, 18Phi Sig, 16; Phi Gam, 16.FRIDAY & SATURDAYGEORGE ARLISS — "DR. SYN""THIS WAY PLEASE"CHAS. BUDDY ROGERS, BETTYGRABLESUN.. MON.. TUES., FEB. 6, 7, 8"HOLD 'EM, NAVY"Plus"EBB TIDE"Frolic Theatre55th and ELLIS AVENUECHICAGOETHICAL SOCIETYSTUDEBAKER THEATRESUNDAY, FEB. 6th. AT II A. M.DR. HORACE J. BRIDGES"THE STATE: "FREE" OR PROVIDEN¬TIAL'?"Organ Recital at 10:45Children's Sunday Assembly at 11 If you're not one of the many studentsenjoying our delicious food then youARE missing somethingl Yes, sir-e-e-e.PRICES TO MEET YOUR BUDGETSPECIAL STUDENT LUNCHEON 25cREG. LUNCHEON 35c DINNER 40cMAKE A HEALTHY HABITEAT AT THEMIRA MARDINING ROOM6212 WOODLAWN AVE.Also FirstShowing THE STORY OF THE FIRST LOVE AFFAIROF A GREAT ROMANTIC POET"YOUNG PUSHKIN"THE STRANGE AND BEAUTIFUL DRAMA OFONE OF THE IMMORTALS OF WORLD LITERATUREALEXANDER PUSHKINSoviet Russia's 20th Anniversary CelebrationTHEATRE66 E. Van BurenWEEK DAYS OPEN 10:45 A.M.—25c to 1 P.M.SONOTONEFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Ave. and East 57th St.Von Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSunday, February 6, 1938YOUNG PEOPLE’S SUNDAY11:00 A. M. — “Your Young MenShall See Visions,” Prescott Win-tersteen4:00 P.M.—Channing Club Tea &Di.scussion. “Why Be Interestedin the New Testament,” Dr. Ron¬ald Riddle. jAll young people, especially students'cordially invited. lirrrnralftpUNIVERSITY CHURCH OFDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward Scribner AmesMinister's Associate: Mr. B. Fred WiseSunday, February 6, 1938Services: Communion 10:30; Sermon11:00 A. M.Sermon subject: “Fruitful Doubts,”Dr. Ames.12:20 Forum. Leader, Prof. U. C.Bower.6:00 P.M.—Wranglers. Tea Pro¬gram: C. S. Sommer on “FirstFive Years of Life.”i