period R- R % '^>938Today*8 HeadlinesT\ler appointed chief examiner andhead of education department,page 1.Wallace speaks on Roundtable Sun¬day, page 1.Hutchins speaks Sunday at Chapel,page 1.Ha'iketball team meets Iowa, Wiscon¬sin over week-end. page 1.Maroons MeetIowa, WisconsinOver Week-endSquad Seeks First(’(inference Victory ofSeason. ^ Batlp itaionVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938 Price Five CentsProbable Lineups:( HICA(;0I.iiinshiiryH.'SMnKkc* ntieycr IOWAStephensKinnickDreesSuesensVan YsseldykConfident of finally winning a con-fcnnce game after missing by an(yohi'h Monday, an aggressive Ma¬roon cage squad is preparing to meetIowa tomorrow and Wisconsin Monday on the Fieldhouse floor.Iowa will present a veteran squadboasting two sharpshooters in for¬wards Stephens and Kinnick and adangerous pivot man in center Dreesbut the team was beaten decisively,48-21>, by the same Ohio State squadthat just managed to nose out theMaroons, The Maroons have beenpointing for this game and can notbe considered underdogs.Amundsen BenchedPaul Amundsen, potentially one ofthe best centers on anybody’s ballteam, was benched between thehalves Monday for his failure toplay heads-up basketball, and he will>tay on the bench till he shows someliromise of repeating the aggressive,able performance he has occasionallyflashed in practice and showed in thel.oyola game, Coach Norgren saidyi'sterday.Amundsen’s place at the pivot spotwill be taken by Dick Lounsbury,who is leading the Maroon scorers atpresent with 44 conference points.Although Dick has been playing for¬ward, he is the second tallest manon the Maroon squad—6 feet 4—andplays from pivot spot equally well.New CombinationA new forward combination willIm' presented when Remy Meyer andl!ob Cassels start the game, Cassels,who is just returning to conditionafter a prolonged kidney injury, andMeyer earned their rights to thestarting jobs by their fighting per¬formances against the Buckeyes..lack Mullins, scrappy forward,will he held out for a time to relieveCassels, but is sure to see plenty ofaetion. Captain Ken Petersen’s in-.lured hand is improving and he isalso expected to play a considerablel>art of the game. Wallace, Gideonse, Smith, SwingSpeak on 350th Round TableSecretary of Agriculture Henry A.Wallace will introduce RaymondGram Swing, internationally knownradio analyst, editor, and writer; T.V. Smith, professor of Philosophyand Illinois State Senator; and Har¬ry D. Gideonse, associate professorof Economics, in the eighth anniver¬sary broadcast of the UniversityRoundtable over Station WMAQ andNBC Red Network at 11:30 Sundaymorning. The topic for discussionis “The 'Need for Opposition in Gov¬ernment.”S.’iOth BroadcastThis will be the 350th consecutivebroadcast of radio’s oldest education¬al program. Not only is the Round¬table the oldest, but it has probablythe biggest audience of its kind. ItsCrossley rating is almost two percent, which means an audience ofapproximately one and a half millionlisteners. Two presidents of theUnited States have followed theRoundtable; Secretary Wallace is notonly a regular listener but also hasthe discussions transcribed and cir¬culated in his department; and sen¬ators, representatives, and othergovernment officials are regular lis¬teners. Senator Robert M. LaFol-lette of Wisconsin is one who tunesit in, as also is Senator BurtonWheeler, who recently stopped off inChicago to tell the National Broad¬casting Company how important heconsiders the program. Scarcely aMonday passes without the Round¬table’s being quoted on the floor ofCongiress.The first Roundtable, in February,1931, was concerned with an issuethat was immediately before the pub¬lic for decision. The succeedingbroadcasts have not always followedthe headlines, but they have alwaysdramatized a national issue. Often it is one which the country is debat¬ing with vehemence and bitter par¬tisanship; sometimes the issue is oneunderlying more obvious questionswhich the world has been too busyto notice.For the most part, the partici¬pants have been members of the Uni¬versity faculty. T. V. Smith; DeanWilliam H. Spencer of the School ofBusiness; Harry D. Gideonse; JeromeG. Kerwin, associate professor ofPolitical Science; the late Stuart P.Meech, associate professor of Fi¬nance; and James Weber Linn, pro¬fessor of English, are known almostas well to the radio audience as theyare to their students because of theirfrequent appearances on the broad¬cast. Occasionally, outside speakershave been invited to talk on theRoundtable, and the coming yearwill see more of these guests—menfrom other universities andprominent in the national life. Appoint Ohio State ProfessorNewChiefExaminerforUniversityInt-House ListsVaried ProgramFor Week-end Also to Assume Chairman¬ship of Education De¬partment.Open Series onNegro CultureVictim of Vigilante, Ne¬gro Poetess Speak atMeeting.Skinner Appears in“Dramatic Sketches”Hutchins Speaksin ChapelSundagRobert Maynard Hutchins, presi¬dent of the University, will give theaddress at Rockefeller MemorialChurch Sunday morning at 11. As yet,he has not announced any topic.(’oming under the category of lay¬men who speak at the Chapel onethical subjects, President Hutchinslast delivered a full-length sermon•lune 30, 1936, His other appearancesat the Chapel have been limited tobrief convocation addresses.The student giving the reading willhe Richard Ranney.Directed by H. William Nordin,the Wheaton College Men’s Glee Clubwill sing at the 4:30 vesper services.I he program will consist of selectionshy Palestrina, Arkhangelsky, Soder-^trom, and (IJhristiansen. FrederickMarriott will present a carillon recitalat 4 as usual. Under the sponsorship of the Set¬tlement League, Cornelia Otis Skin¬ner, exponent of the dramatic mono¬logue, will present “DramaticSketches” on March 15 in Mandelhall at 8:30. Seats are now on saleat the Information office, ranging inprice from 75 cent.s to $2.Miss Skinner has recently com¬pleted a Chicago engagement inwhich she portrayed the femininecharacters from “Edna His Wife.”To date no announcement has beenmade as to which of her repertoireshe will present to the campus au¬dience.Proceeds from the performancewill go to the University SettlementFund. Mrs. W’illiam E. Carey, wifeof the assistant clinical professor ofMedicine, is in charge of tickets andpublicity for the benefit. Willie Sue Blagden, whose workwith Negro sharecroppers in theSouth evoked a flogging by an angryvigilante, and Margaret Walker,well-known Negro author and poet¬ess, will be the principal speakers atan open meeting of the ASU RaceDiscrimination committee in SocialScience 122 at 3:30 today.Today’s meeting is the first of aseries, “The American Negro inAmerican Culture,” being sponsoredby the committee.Wilfie Sue Blagden, who has doneconsiderable work with the SouthernTenant Farmers’ Union, will speakon Southern sharecroppers. Mar¬garet Walker’s subject will be “TheNegro in American Literature.”A third feature of today’s meet¬ing will be the reading of LangstonHughes’ protest poetry and originalworks by three campus writers, Al¬vin Cannon, Bob Davies and BobMcKewan.For the second meeting of the se¬ries the committee is planning a pro¬gram dealing with Negro music.In conjunction with this meeting,next Thursday’s record concert inSocial Science 122 at 12:30 will bedevoted to all-Negro music. Featuredon the program will be Hall Johnson,spiritualist singer, Marian Anderson,and Duke Ellington.The committee will also present anexhibition of Negro art some timein the near future. The week-end’s activities at Inter¬national House begin tonight with aSt. Valentine’s ball, continue tomor¬row with the weekly radio forum, andconclude Monday night at 8:30 witha meeting of the Social Problems clubat which Harold D. Lasswell, associ¬ate professor of Political Science, willspeak on “The Garrison State”.At 9:30 tonight the annual wintermasquerade will begin, with the resi-dents, if they take the publicity of¬fice’s suggestion, coming clothed intheir “bedspreads or dignity”. Therewill be prizes awarded for originaland curious costumes, and JohnnyJones band will furnish the music.Speaking on the “Foreign Policy ofTurkey” tomorrow at 3 over WGNand the MBC network, Leonard Great-wood, AJimet Deniz and Gregory Bardwill present their views in a half-hour discussion.Monday at 8:30, Professor Lass-well will address the Social Problemsclub. Having recently worked out anew classification of governments, helists four types: the business state;the state ruled by an official bureau¬cracy; the state dominated by aparty bureaucracy; and a statehanded over to the army. The last,which he calls the “garrison state”will be the subject of his talk.Versatile Artist GivesPiano Program SundayAlec Templeton’s approaching con¬cert suggests some interesting detailsof his career. The blind pianist’sgenius refuses to confine itself to thepiano, and he performs with equalproficiency on the organ, flute, andviolin. Although his first love isthe piano, Templeton next prefersthe flute.Further proof of Templeton’s ver¬satility is evidenced in his talent asa composer, singer, and arranger aswell as in.strumentalist. His pub¬lished musical opuses include fourorchestral scores, numerous selectionsfor solo instruments, and many pianoworks.Many prominent people are ex¬pected to attend the concert Sundayafternoon at 3:30 in Leon Mandelhall, after which tea will be served.Issue Tickets Todayfor Lippmann TalksDistribution of tickets for theforthcoming series of three lectureson international peace to be deliveredby Walter Lippmann, noted Americanpolitical commentator, will begin thismorning at the Information Office.The tickets are free, but will beavailable only to University studentsand faculty members.The Lippmann lectures will be givenin Mandel Hall on February 16, 17,and 18 as the first of a series ofpublic talks sponsored by the CharlesR. Walgreen Foundation for theStudy of American Institutions. Survey of Comprehensive Grades Reveals No FixedCurve; Chief Examiners Explain Scoring SystemBy ROYAL WALDGrades on examinations at theUniversity are supposed to indicatehow well a student knows a subject.Arc they a true indication? The pur¬pose of this article is to provide someaccurate basis upon which the studentmay formulate a fairer judgment ofexamination grades and of the test¬ing system employed at the Univer¬sity,How is a comprehensive graded?Contrary to general opinion, no fixedcurve of grade is used at the Uni¬versity. The proportions of A, B, C,D, and F grades are not necessarilyconstant from test to test. The grad¬ing system however seems to bearbitrary.Explain Grading SystemAccording to an explanation madeby M. W. Richardson of the Board ofExaminations, the (simplified) meth¬od generally followed in grading a setof examinations is as follows:After the numerical scoring num¬ber has been given to all the papers,the examiner and a faculty committeetry to ascertain, by systematicallyreading over each paper in a repre¬sentative pile, which show a thoroughknowledge of the subject and whichare just on the borderline. To theformer they give an A; to the latter,a D. With these papers as bases, the will get a high mark if he knows theother grade qualifications are made.Thus, admitted Richardson, gradestandards are made by human judg¬ment and so are fallible. If anyargument occurs, the chief examinerand others are called in to settle it.However arbitrary the systemseems to be, the general accuracy ofthe grades cannot be questioned. Andthis method means that a studentKelly, Foster HoldAnnual Winter PartySea-waves, ships, and sea-gulls, tosay nothing of fiying fish, and aschool of porpoises against the wall,are only a few of the things whichwill appear in a completely trans¬formed Foster hall tonight. The an¬nual winter party given by the girlsof Kelly and Foster dormitories isdefinitely nautical in theme this year,even to four wholly authentic life-preservers among other decorations.Perry Kinzie’s orchestra, which hasappeared on this campus before, willplay for dancing from 9 until 1. Thelounges of both dormitories will beopen for the use of the girls andtheir escorts. subject, whether his fellows who aretaking the test are exceptionallybrilliant or not. Under the curvesystem, a person with a B knowledgeof a subject will probably get ahigher mark if taking a test withpersons of a C knowledge, than withpersons of a B— knowledge.This flexibility of structure is ap¬parent in the percentage of personswho failed on the last two Englishqualifying examinations. In Novem¬ber, 1936, 32 per cent of the stu¬dents failed, which obviously indicatedthat the subject was not known by athird of them. But in May 1937, whenthe students had the advantage ofmonths of classwork and study, only13 per cent failed.Works Heads BoardThe Board of Examiners, with DeanGeorge A. Works as chairman, in¬cludes representatives from the divi¬sions, the College, and the University-at-large. Six specially trained faculty-members, headed by Louis L. Thurs-tone, professor of Psychology, makeup a technical staff of examiners. TheBoard confines its activities to thedetermination of general policies,leaving to the technical staff thedetermination of procedures in har¬mony with the policies. Dr. Ralph W. Tyler, professor ofeducation, and research associate ofthe Bureau of Educational Research,Ohio State University, has been ap¬pointed professor and head of the de¬partment of education and chief ex¬aminer of the Board of Examinationsof the University, President RobertM. Hutchins announced last night,following the confirmation of the ap¬pointments yesterday by the Board ofTrustees. Dr. Tyler will come to theUniversity October 1 of this year.Professor Tyler, a Ph. D. of theUniversity, will succeed as head ofthe department of education thenoted educator, Charles H. Judd,whose retirement is effective thisJune.Highly RegardedAlthough Dr. Tyler will not be 36until April, he is highly regarded byprofessional educators. Trained inthe natural sciences and also wellequipped as a statistician and educa¬tional psychologist, his skill as anevaluator of educational methods hasbrought him particularly to the at¬tention of secondary school and col¬lege authorities.At Ohio State he has been Chair¬man of the Committee on Evaluation,a position in which he has cooperatedwith all departments of the Univer¬sity in defining their educational ob¬jectives and measuring their realiza¬tion through the tests he has devised.In laymen’s language, he has beenmeasuring how well particular meth¬ods of education really educate.Dr. Tyler is also directing a study,supported by the General EducationBoard, for the Progressive EducationAssociation. This study is evaluatingthe performance in college of grad¬uates of progressive high schools incomparison with that of graduates oftraditional secondary schools. In di¬recting this study Dr. Tyler heads acommittee on curriculum and one onevaluation.Doctoral DissertationWhile working for his doctorate atChicago, Dr. Tyler studied mostlywith Dr. W. W. Charters, head of thedepartment of education at OhioState University, and Dr. Karl J.Holzinger, whose field is that ofstatistics and educational measure¬ment. Professor Tyler’s doctoral dis¬sertation was on “Statistical Meth¬ods for Utilizing Personal Judgmentsto Evaluate Activities for Teacher-Training Curricula.”He was born in Chicago, April 22,1902; did his undergraduate work atDoane University, and received theMaster’s degree from the Universityof Nebraska in 1923. A high schoolteacher at Pierre, South Dakota, in1921, he was assistant supervisor ofsciences. University of Nebraska,1922-27; then associate professor ofeducation. University of North Caro¬lina, 1927-29. He was appointed as¬sociate professor of education at OhioState University in 1930, and in 1931was given the rank of professor.He is the author, with ProfessorDouglas Waples of the Graduate Li¬brary School of the University ofChicago, of “Research Methods andTeachers’ Problems,” and “What Peo¬ple Want to Read About.” His book,“Constructing Achievement Tests,”published in 1934, is the acceptedauthority in that field.Hold ‘Sunset Shuffle’at Ida Noyes TodayWhether is it said in shorthand,hieroglyphics, Burma-Shave rhymes,or just plain English, it is still “Sun¬set Shuffle” and the time is still thisafternoon from four to six at IdaNoyes hall. The dance will be heldin the library and lounge while allthe facilities of the Hall will bethrown open. Admission to the danceis 25 cents a couple. Tickets may bepurchased from any council memberor at the Ida Noyes office.The new all-student orchestra underthe baton of Chuck Mowery of BurtonCourt will be introduced to studentsat this dance.fmmm mm .^‘■r ■■ ■■ ^ >f ■ ■■ ■■' ■*7- r 'll. C •' -TiJ^>*>2; *.. '^ri'' • . , 'Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 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.The Perennial Complaintof teachers is that students do notthink. Most courses have given up the effortto make students think. They ask mere mem¬ory. Yet President Hutchins has said that theend of a general education is to teach studentsto think. Perhaps an understanding of whatthinking is would explain this failure.Thinking is a substitute for action. Givenhalf a chance, men acquire habits of action,physical or mental, which they follow auto¬matically, without thinking. All men are drawntoward this dead level of vegetative content,but only in a very stable society is that level ofautomatism approached.The tendency is constantly ' checked bychanging conditions rendering old habits un¬satisfactory. Habits which in the early days ofthis country were so eminently successful insatisfying the wants of people—habits ofthrift and shrewd bargaining by which a mancould achieve material ease and social respect—are today running into changed conditions.With habits inadequate to a changed socialsituation, frustration, discontent and, as the•fine flower, thought, appear. Thought is areorganization of the elements of experience,by means of which new habits may be set upto satisfy human wants.Most such thinkers seek a re-establishmentof the old habits by minor changes in the socialorganization. Some, with clearer intelligence,realize that the expanding economy of frontierdays is gone for good, and seek some basicsocial reorganization to make possible againeffective habits.But as old habits lose their ability to satis¬fy, thought spreads through all human experi¬ence. A man who has an all-satisfying path ofaction clear before him does not bother to thinkat all. A man without such a path, forces hisintelligence to range over the whole world, oversociety and man. He seeks in an understand¬ing of his world and himself explanation ofhis uneasy condition. The result is philoso¬phies.Thinking, then, is a function of a dammingof satisfying outlets of action. To teach stu¬dents to think, one must first jar students fromtheir uncritically accepted habits of action andbelief. They must be shown that such habitsare inadequate, they must be shown that a newsystem of belief, new habits are necessary ifcontent is to be achieved, and the general linesof the new philosophy must be pointed out.This is what education must do to train stu¬dents to think. It is not the sort of educationwe are offered. Most courses do not concernthemselves with problems but with informa¬tion; most courses are labors rather thanVol. 38 FEBRUARY 11, 1938 No. 68^ailg ^aroonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Oolleffiate 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, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 357, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222After 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, 1879.1937 Mcrntwr 1938Pissocided ColIe6ide PressDistributor ofGolle6iate 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 P’reeman Irvin RosenNight Editor: Ruth BrodyAssistant: Royal Wald pleasures because they do not relate them¬selves to the problems, the unsatisfactory be¬liefs; and the striving for more adequate be¬liefs that disturb the life of the intelligent manin the world today.SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy LILUAN SCHOENIn a wanton moment we threatened Betty Robbinswith a column about the faults and frailties of theASU. We just picked on Betty because she was han¬dy. We could think of others who would react moreentertainingly, but Betty became sufficiently irate toconvince us we had hit on a good thing.In the first place the ASU is a firmly establishedcampus institution with an illustrious, if somewhatstormy history. May we suggest that it is becominga bit smug? After all, it isn’t every campus organiza¬tion (take the Dekes, for example) that can elect aSenior Class President. It isn’t every organizationthat can put up as good a man as Halcrow either. Byand large, even we can see that the ASU as it nowexists at the University is an institution with rapidlydeveloping vested interests. It is ripe to be pickedon. Since no one else is “baiting reds” at the moment,we may as well start in. .Take the collective ASU’s hatred of Big Corpora¬tions. They regard them as ogres about to pounceupon humanity and chew it up in a fascist orgy. Per¬haps they confuse corporations with the corporatestate and the corporate state with laissez-faire capi¬talism and laissez-faire capitalism with what we havewith us today. The confusions are founded in ignor¬ance so intentional that there is almost no hope ofarriving at some understanding of the modern socialorder—and such understanding must be the basis ofany intelligent criticism.Take the Anti-Japane.se silk boycott. These sym¬pathizers with proletariats want to strangle Japan’sbasic Industry so as to starve the Japanese proletariatto death or to sufficient fury to cau.se a revolution.Consensus of intelligent opinion is that the Japaneseproletariat will starve to death, not to revolution. EvenT. Z. Kuh, China’s finance minister, has said, here inChicago at the Institute of Foreign Relations, that aboycott would be, and is, worse than u.seless.Take this war-mongering from the left. Peoplewho are ancient ASUers, or even so ancient as to havebeen NSL-ers and SLID-ers, used to march militantlyin parades for peace. This was derided by level headswho even then said “Change the tune of the trumpetsand they’ll all march for war.” The tunes have nowchanged. The Soviet Union is said to be in danger,as if it should not or could not take care of itself. Asif it were not in more danger from wdthin than fromwithout. As if the distinction between the SovietUnion and the fascist state were not so minute as tobe incapable of discernment. As if the United Statesgives even a small damn about the Soviet Union. Whatthe United States wants to do is stay out of war, be¬cause if it does go to war it will go in organized forwar like, for all practical purposes, a fascist state.The present “idealists” are leading us into a newwar as surely as the “idealists” of 1917 did. For someobscure reason our idealists are certain—in their ownminds—that the contemporary situation is differentfrom all past situations, and that at-last we have metall past situations, and that at last we have met the“ideal” and “necessary” war. The slogans of the pastwar, they believe, were vicious products of munition-maker-monsters—the new slogans are of a new orderand will lead to “Peace on Earth.” The students oftoday are leading themselves and their friends to deathand misery just as certainly as the young lady in theROTC uniform on anti-war posters, led her admirerto his end on a barbed wire fence. The “idealists”of our generation are not stupid persecutors of man¬kind—they want to save Man. This is a most depress¬ing fact. It has been truly said that the greatestenemies of Humanity are those who are only tooanxious to save it. The ASU was organized to saveYouth from the altar of Death—they are now leadingthe procession.Take the ASU’s abhorrence of critichsm. We real¬ize that this column, written just for fun, will alignus with fascist ogres and red-baiters. But since whenis any campus institution immune from criticism?Stupidity is the proper target for criticism at a uni¬versity. The ASU grew up howling its head off forthe right of free criticism. Perhaps it will begin itsdemise howling its head off about being criticized.Write us some letters, children, .so we can howl too.LIGHTChuck Hoy is known to his more intimate friendsas Chucklepuss. Originated, so goes the rumor, by oneDorothy Overlock...Heard at 58th and University“It’s the big building with the tower. No, it’s notexactly a Settlement, they call it InternationalHouse”...Don Holway innocently walked into theFilm Society’s showing of early films yesterday after¬noon and was thrown slightly off balance when hisuncle’s name suddenly appeared on the screen as aco-editor of the Ben Turpin picture “The Clever Dum¬my”.. .Greatly gratified were we at friend Ned’s col¬umn of yesterday. By actual count we occupied 2.6inches of his valuable 12 inch space. Goodness, duck,we never dreamt you cared. STERLINGYOUNGAND HIS ORCHESTRAIN 7NEIR FIRST CHICAGO APPEARANCEDINNER FROM $2.00SUFFER MIN. $1 JONO COVER CHARGE NEWMID-WINTER REVUETHREE PRESENTATIONSNIGHTLYNEW BOULEVARDSTEVENS HOTEL ROOMON YOURNEXT DATEWear an ArrowStarched Collar<^RROWCOLLARS You’ll be amazed tosee bow much adetachable whitestarched collar can dofor your appiearance.Try Duncan, mostfavored by youngmen. 25^ eachARROW SHIRTS. TIES. HANDKERCHIEFS G UNDERWEARHanley’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 congenialservice follow the4 K K 0 WA K R 0 WSHIRTSALL GOODMAROONSLIKE TOBUY HEREERIECLOTHING COMPANY837 K. 63id SlreeliMiSiiiii ■MSBMMyuiiaiMMHlilliiSMiSMliHIMlilMTHE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938 Page ThreeLEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYtake private lessonsTERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63RD ST.HYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.CHICAGOETHICAL SOCIETYSTUDEBAKER THEATRESunday, Feb. 13th, at 11 a. m.MR. J. HUTTON HYND(Ethical Society of St. Louis)"IMPERIALISM IN THEORIENT; THE POLICY ANDTHE PEOPLE"Children's Sunday Assemblyat 11.ArtiKAffEL"and hi< orche/traLintheuinLnuT^«L^MOCOVIKCMARCi nool/howpifMARCK^ O T E L • RANDOLPH af LA SALLE4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOI COllIGC STUDENTS AND ORADUATtSA tkorottfK imUnsivt, Bttmo^pkic amru—tturting Jammmn 1, April 1. Jmh 1, October 1.Inttnsting Bookltt wilkout obligmUon- writ* or pkom*. No aoltdtor* omplofod.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.O«PH.S.Rtgulmr Oomr***for Boginnor*, opon to NMSaiool Grodoat** only, ttmri Jlnt Mondayof mcA month. Adoaneod Comroo* ttartony Monday. Day and Boomng. EoomngComnoa op*n to man.114 S. MU«higan Av„ ^kogo, Mamdolpk 4i4TKAY KYSERand his orchestra featuring"Ginny" Simms, Horry Babbitt"Ish Kabibble" BogueSully MasonAlsoLoyanne and RenardStars of the DanceandRalph Spreter and theContinental FourSaturday Tea Dancing4-6 P.M.Music bySpreter and the ContinentalFourSundoryTea Dancing 3-6 P.M.Music byKyser and the boysNEVER A COVER CHARGEMIN. WEEK NIGHTS SI.50SATURDAY EVES. $2.50BLACKHAWKRANDOLPH & WABASHdearborn 6262 Today on theQuadranglesFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11MEETINGSAll Campus Racial Relations Com¬mittee. Room C, of Ida Noyes at 2:30.Hlackfriars. Entire staff will meetin Blackfriar Room, Reynolds Clubat 1.Socialist Club. 4th International.Social Science 202 at 6:30.Achoth. Ida Noyes. 3:30-6.I ASU Cooperative Committee. IdaNoyes Room A at 12:30U. of C. Lutheran Club. Ida Noyesat 12.Communist Club. Wieboldt 202 at3:30.Rifle Club. Rosenwald 2. 3:30-5.Senior Class Council. Lexington 5at 3:30.ASLT Social Committee. Ida NoyesRoom C at 12:30.('hapel Group. Reynolds Club A.4-6.Jewish Student Foundation Fire¬side. Robert Shapiro. Ida Noyes Club¬house. 8-1.MISCELLANEOUSPro .\rte Quartet. Mandel Hall at8:45.Sunset Shuffle. Ida Noyes. 4-6.Foster Hall P'ormal. Foster Hall.9-1.Phi Delta Theta. House Dance. 9-1.SS.\ Supper. Ida Noyes. 6-10.Negro Student ('lub radio dance.Ida Noyes 9-1..\SU Lecture. “Negro Culture in.America—Literature.” Social ScienceAssembly at 3:30.S.ATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12Snell Hall Winter Party. ReynoldsClub. 8-10.Chapel Union. Sleigh Ride..Evening.SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 13•Alec Templeton Concert. MandelHall at 3:30.Communist Club. Ida Noyes at 7:30.Slavonic Club. Musicale and Tea.Ida Noyes. 3-7.Wyvern. Ida Noyes. 6-10.Phi Delta Theta. Supper at houseat 6:30.Chapel Union. Dean Smith. IdaNoyes at 7:30.Chapel Service.,Robert M. Hutchins.Rockefeller Memorial Chapel at 11.Carillon Recital. 4.Wheaton College Men’s Club. 4:30.MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14SS.A Club. Social Science 122. Mr.Maxwell, “Flducational Program ofthe WPA”. 7:30.Communist Club. William Patter¬son, “Negro Question”. Law North at7:30.ASU Labor Committee. Ida Noyes,Room C. 2:30-5.Profes.sor Gerhart Husserl. “Lawas a Science”. South Room, LawSchool.Collis Discusses Church,Denominationalism SundayDiscussion of “The Church and theProblems of Denominationalism” willconclude a series of Sunday break¬fast meetings at the Coffee Shopsponsored by the Interchurch Stu¬dent Council. The Reverend RalphHall Collis, minister of the HydePark Methodist Episcopal Church,will talk.Individual HairdressingAt Moderate PricesShampoo and Wave 50Manicure 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57th ST.HYDE PARK 7860Hrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sat. to 6 P.M.'■ Whether for your sweet¬heart. a member of thefamily, or a good friend,the affection and thought¬fulness expressed by thesending of a Valentinecard means more than athousand ordinary words.' In our wide selection oflovely, up-to-the-minutedesigns, you will find justthe sentiment to suit each'person on your Valentine/card list/"'WOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open Evenings WArCHA PO/N* BUrCH-TBAiNiN* FOB FOURNWXT BOUT ? MAW.iMMSTPttAerieui'nw/aa/mrmsGOBf \ROYAL HOSIERY CO.rut: HKAKT 0» TIIK« II<M F>AI.F I>I>TKM I306 W. Adams St. MAIL YOUR ORDERCash or C. O. D. with CompleteSpecificationsCOME IN ~ OR PHONEDEARBORN 1353(All mall orders pins mailingand C. O. D. charges)LISLE HOSEMADE i. tE. U. S. A.BUY DIREaandSAVE MONEYSold by the Box OnlyMeshPull fashioned first qualityA $3.00 VALUEBox of 3 pairsPlus ni.state TaxIN THREENEW SHADES Fine QraugeFull fashioned first qualityA $2.65 VALUEBox of 3 pairs$175■ Plus III.state TaxElrotique (light burnt copper)Tropic Tan (gleaming copper tone)Stroller (golden tan) Kimbark Theatre6240 Kimbark Ave.TODAY"THE GREAT GARRICK"and"SECOND HONEYMOON"SATURDAY. FEB. 12"THE LAST GANGSTER"Plus"THIS WAY. PLEASE"Lexington Theatre1162 E 63rd StFRIDAY AND SATURDAY"WHITE BONDAGE"and"SHE MARRIED AN ARTIST"SUNDAY. MONDAY. & TUESDAY"THE AWFUL TRUTH"Plus"STAND-IN"FRIDAY & SATURDAYWILLIAM POWELL &-MYRNA LOY in"DOUBLE WEDDING"Plus"BORROWING TROUBLE"SUN.. MON.. & TUES."THE AWFUL TRUTH"Plus"THEY WONT FORGET"FROLIC THEATRE55th and Ellis AvenueHARRISTHEATRE Now Playing2 WEEKS ONLYMats. Wed. and Sat.Robert Henderson and Estelle WinwoodpresentEstelle BramwellWINWOOD FLETCHERHelen Jessie RoyceCHANDLER LANDISIN THE INTERNATIONAL HIT:CYCLE OF 9 PLAYS^ALL DIFFERENTThe Second WeekFri.. Feb. 11All musicalprogramSat.Mat. & Eve.Feb. 12 1 “Family Album”' "Fumed Oak”I ‘Hands Across the Sea’Nighta—56c to 12.75, Wed. Mat. 55c tori.65, Sat. Mat. 55c to $2.20 SIoPorBliutFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Ave. and East 57 Ih St.Von Ogden Vogt, D.D.. MinisterSunday, February 13, 193811:00 A.M.—“Living with Yourself”4:00 P.M.—Channing Club Tea &Discussion. “The Conditions forAdequate Housing,” by Mr.George Fairweather, Vice-Pres.of the Univ.7:00 P. M.—High School Club.Speaker, Rev. Miss Vilma Szan-to of Penn. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OFDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward Scribner AmesMinister's Associate: Mr. B. Fred WiseSunday, February 13, 1938Services: Communion 10:30; Sermon11:00 A. M.Sermon subject: “Symbolism.”Dr. Ames.12:20 Forum. Leader, Prof. U. C.Bower.6.00 P. M.—Wranglers. Tea. Mr.A. H. Pass will discuss “Indus¬trial Relations.”Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1938Alpha Delta Phi BeatsPsi Upsilon to ReachIntramural Semifinals West*8 Political PowerIs Declining-OlmsteadWhile “Big Stoop” alternatelypaced the sidelines and buried hishead in his paws in anguish, AlphaDelta Phi moved into the semi-finalround of the Intramural basketballplay-offs in the Fraternity division bydefeating Psi Upsilon 23-18 on Bart¬lett’s big center court last night. Itwas a fast, hard-fought game, and atI-M Games Last NightAlpha Delt 23; Psi U 18Phi BD 25; ATO 21Burton “600” 19; Snell Hall II 18Snell Hall I 40; Burton “800” 13Burton “500” won a forfeit fromBurton “700” which had droppedfrom the league.Barristers 37; ASU 19CTS 36; Delta Sigma Pi 16AMBH 20; Press 16B & G 18; Int-House 10Faculty Exchange 29; BillingsTech 27.all times a very close game. AlphaDelt jumped into an early lead bywinning the tip-off and almost im¬mediately sinking a basket. Theyscored several times again, and itwas not until nearly five minutes ofthe first half had ticked off that PsiU tallied on a pair of free throws.Their offensive and defensive machin¬ery then got under way. and at thehalf the score stood 10-6 for AlphaDelt. Staging a desperate rally in thesecond half, Psi U at one time trailedby only 20-18. The Alpha Delt de¬fense once more went into actionthen, however, and both teams wereforced to resort to long shots. Automobiles may speed over theplains of the Near East, airplanesmay breeze over its passes, and thewomen may unveil their faces and“go modern,” but the Orient is es¬tablishing its own new culture, utiliz¬ing only the best of western civiliza¬tion, Dr. Albert Ten Eyck Olmstead,professor of Oriental History at theUniversity, said last evening in apublic lecture at the Oriental Insti¬tute, on “Ancient History WarmedOver.”“Ancient history of 2,000 years agois actually being warmed over today,”Dr. Olmstead said. “The politicalpower of the west is declining, butat the same time westernization isincreasing. The time soon will comewhen the mixed civilization will be anew Oriental culture, better adaptedto the needs of the Orient.”While parts of the later ancientOrient adapted the Greek and Romanculture to their owm needs, othersrevived the older cultures and made startling innovations in industry andin the intellectual life of the time.“Civilized thought began in theoldest Near East. From it came manyan element of material culture, fromit came also our religion.“Greek science was based on Orien¬tal to a degree even now we do notrealize, and when Greece went dead. Oriental scholars writing in Greekcarried on the development. Oncemore in the Middle Ages the Orientcarried on while the west was indarkness.”Westernization, however, continuesand the once-called “unchangingeast” is being transformed by mech¬anization.Also FirstShowing LAST 7 DAYSTHE 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'! 20th Anniversary CelebrationTHEATRE66 E. Von BurenWEEK DAYS OPEN 10:45 A.M.—25c to 1 P.M.SONOTONE Campus Florist1233 E. 55th nocu KiinhQrkFULL LINE CUTFLOWERS ANDBLOOMING PLANTSALSO CORSAGESDon't forget Her onVALENTINE'S DAYPhoneHyde Park 9414Weekend ScheduleGymnastics: The Maroons open BigTen season tomorrow at Urbana.Track: Thin-clads m9tt Northwest¬ern in the Fieldhouse tonight at 8.Wrestling: The Chicago, A and Bsquads meet teams from DuncanYMCA and Morton Jr. College, res¬pectively, in Bartlett tomorrow. Boutsbegin at 8:30.Fencing. Wisconsin swordsmen willtry to hand the Maroons their firstdefeat of the season here tomorrowafternoon.You Can Have Everythingat theCAMPUS COMICSTONIGHTAT THEBLUE FOUNTAIN ROOMwith the famousKINGS JESTERSand their orchestra^ But everything, hut definitely: dine,dance, jam, swing, susie-q, laugh; have aswell time or what have you, at prcw^tically no cost.La Salle HotelMadison and LaSalle THE STORE FOR MENFor college men who want new high style—All outstanding special groupof newSHETLANDSUITSin douhle-hreasted drape orInitton single breasted drapestyle at only32 .50“Casual Clothes!” That’s the stylecry of today—and more and more theyoung men who set the country’sstyle pace have turned to rough,casual shetlands that are at home onthe campus, in town, or country. Thisgroup includes herringbones, diamondw'eaves, and diagonals—in shades ofgray, green, brown, or blue. Double-breasted drapes or the new 3-buttonsingle-breasted drape to be w'orn withthe two top buttons fastened. Alltrousers tailored wdth Talon.YOUNG MEN’S SUITS, THIRD FLOORTHE STOr^E FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD 8i COMPANYmuuauuiumuiiuuuuiuuBiiwl