Today's HeadlinesLying-In Hospital merges with Uni¬versity, page 1.Cap and Gown sponsors contest, page1.H\V() nominates officers, page 1.Review Hutchins’ last Post article,page 3.Wisconsin HandsMaroons SeventhCage Loss, 46-32Kossin Puts in Six Bas¬kets; Powell, Frey Starfor Visitors.BOX SCOREChicago II F'Mullins, f 4 1 0Cassels, f ^ ^ ^Lounsbury, c 2 1 4Kossin, p 6 0 3Peterson, g 0 0 3Kpgemeyer, g 1 0 3Meyer, c, f 1 2 414 4 17Wisconsin B F PPowell, f 4 5 2Rooney, f 2 2 3.Tones, c 2 1 1Bell, c 0 2 0Frey, g 5 I 4Davis, g 2 2 2Dupee. f 0 1 0Mitchell, g 0 0 016 14 12A scrappy, sure-shooting Wiscon¬sin (juintet dribbled rings around anequally scrappy but wild Chicago teamlast night and handed the latter itsseventh Conference defeat of the sea¬son, by a 46-32 score.The wild play rattled the Maroonswho made frequent but reckless triesfor the basket and sank few of them.Their failure to make their freethrows w’as also costly. Whereas theBadgers put in 14 out of 18 freetosses, the Maroons could sink nomore than 4.Wisconsin Takes LeadWisconsin got off to a 3-0 lead whenF’owell put in a free throw and a bas¬ket. At no time thereafter did Chi¬cago seriously threaten the visitor’slead. Starting the second half withan 18-12 lead, the Badgers slippedpast the rattled Maroon guards forfour baskets in less than two minutes.One of the few bright spots of thegame for Chicago fans was theshowing of Morrie Rossin, who hasbeen playing high-grade defensivebasketball as guard, all season, andwho broke through last night for sixbaskets. Rossin played the wholegame..Nominate Candidatesfor Head of Board ofWomen’s OrganizationsNominations for the 1938-39 presi¬dency of the Board of Women’s Or¬ganizations were closed yesterdaywith Laura Bergquist, Judith Cun¬ningham, Persis-Jane Peeples, HelenThomsen and Clementine Van derShaegh as candidates.Nominees for the office were pro-J»osed by the freshman, sophomoreand .senior members of the organiza¬tion and will be voted upon nextWednesday noon. Later in the quar¬ter the secretary-treasurer of BWOwill be chosen by the newly-electedand retiring members of the Board.Initial Election of YearBWO election is always the initialelection of the year since the Board'Upervi.ses all ensuing elections ofwomen’s activities. Thus far March2 has been set as the date for Inter¬club elections, hence all women’s clubelections must be held by March 1.March 9 marks the date for YWCAelections, March 11 for Mirror andMarch 18 for the Ida Noyes Auxil¬iary. The president of Federationof University Women will be chosenon February 18.In addition to choosing Interclubpresident and supervising elections,BWO activities include sponsorshipof a dinner and a dance duringFre.shman week. This year the Boardalso initiated a two-day Women’s Vo¬cational Conference, patterned afterthat of Purdue University, to whichprominent career women were invitedto speak on the opportunities for theuniversity woman in the business andprofessional world. At present BWO>s further carrying out this policyhy co-operating with the UniversityN ocational Guidance Bureau in in¬forming senior women of positions.In the spring the Board will enter¬tain prominent high school juniorand senior women in a series of Sun¬day teas in co-operation with thealumnae of Chicago. ^ Batlp jnamonVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1938 Price Five CentsSerge Prokofieff toPlay Own Music forRenaissance SocietyAdmirers of Sergo Prokofieff andhis music will hear an all-Prokofieffprogram in Mandel hall tonight at8:30 when the brilliant Russian com¬poser-pianist-conductor appears inconcert under the auspices of theRenaissance Society.The program, as released by theRenai.ssance Society, will open withAndante, opus 29, which will be fol¬lowed by Ten Visions fugitives, opus22, and the Second Sonata in D mi¬nor, opus 14, in four movements: Al¬legro, ma non troppo; Scherzo; An¬dante and Vivace.After IntermissionAfter the intermission, Prokofieffwill resume the concert with fourpiano pieces for children, opus 65, en¬titled Marche, Repentires, Soir andSur les pres la lune .se promene.Three fragments from Romeo andJuliet opus 76, will follow; then Pro¬kofieff w'ill play Prelude, opus 12;Etude, opus 52; Two Gavottes, opus12 and opus 25.An interesting anecdote is told ofProkofieff’s first ventures as a com¬poser into the realm of so-called mod¬ern music. When he was a child, hetook his first symphony to his teach¬er, Taneiev, who, after looking itover, remarked that it was “prettygood’’ but that the youthful composerwould have to develop “more interest¬ing harmony,’’ as his harmony wascompo.sed chiefly of the tonic, domi¬nant and sub-dominant chords. Pro¬kofieff was much impressed, andwent away determined to develop anexpression of his own. When he re¬turned to Taneiev some years laterwith a new score, the master wasshocked. “Rut, my dear boy, this isterrible!’’ he exclaimed. When hewas informed that he himself wasthe cause of the departure from con¬ventional music, he shouted, “God inheaven! Am I responsible for this?’’ C.A. Millspaugh, University Fellow,Writes Novel “Men Are Not Stars”‘Cap and Gown’Sponsors ContestOffer Cash Prizes for Saleof Subscriptions; All Stu¬dents Eligible.Cap and Gown is offering cashprizes up to $35 in a subscriptionsales contest ending March 11. Allstudents of the University are eligi¬ble, including members of the Capand Gown staff.The total number of subscriptionsturned in by all contestants will de¬termine the size of the award. Forevery additional 100 subscriptionsabove 100 there will be a total in¬crease of $10 in the prize as fol¬lows:1st Prize 2nd 3rd100-150 I $20 1 $10 I $5 I150-200 I 25 I 12.50 | 7.50 |200-250 I 30 I 15 | 10 jIn addition, if the winner of thefirst prize is a member of a frater¬nity or a club, the organization willreceive its page in the 1938 Cap andGown without charge, provided thata total of 200 or more subscriptionsare sold by all contestants.For subscription books and furtherinformation inquire at the Cap andGown office in Lexington Hall.Political UnionMeets in Kent;Pick SpeakersThe third meeting of the PoliticalUnion will be held Wednesday, Feb¬ruary 23, in Kent Lecture Hall, itwas announced yesterday by Presi-ident Ned Fritz. As previously statedthe proposal for discussion is “Re¬solved: That this Union shall favorcollective security as a policy for se¬curing world peace.’’In order to select bloc speakers,representatives from each party fac¬tion will meet with the executivecommittee Friday at 2:30 in the DailyMaroon office.The Liberals plan to select theirrepresentative Friday at 12:45 in theDaily Maroon office. Because theparty wishes to provide vacancies inits delegation for interested stu¬dents, absentees from this meetingwill be dropped from the roll call ifthey have previously shown lack ofinterest in the Union. Their dismis¬sal is subject to the vote of theexecutive committee.The Conservative meeting will beannounced tomorrow. The third group,the Communists, have already select¬ed Richard Lindheim, independentRadical, to represent them at thepreliminary meeting. An importantmeeting of the executive committeehas also been set for tomorrow at 2in the Daily Maroon office.Boulton Lectures onAfrican Music, RhythmAfter four expeditions to Africaand a recent recording trip in theWest Indies, Laura C. Boulton, lec¬turer in Anthropology, returns to theUniversity to give a series of lectureson “African Music: a Study inRhythm.’’ The talks begin next Wed¬nesday at the University College, 18South Michigan avenue, at 6:45, andare open to the public.Illustrated with motion pictures,colored lantern slides, and musicalrecordings, the series include “TheDawn of Music,’’ tomorrow; “TheRole of Music in Native Life,’’ Feb¬ruary 23; “Music and the Dance,”March 2; “Musical Instruments,”March 9; and “Drums in the Old andNew World,” March 16. AFofL, CIOSpeakers Talkon Union SplitTwo speakers, representing op¬posite factions in the current laborfeud, will speak in Social Science 122tomorrow at 3:30 at an open meet¬ing sponsored by the Labor Commit¬tee of the ASU, according to FloydReeves, chairman. The subject up fordiscussion will be the various phasesof the CIO-AF of L war and the pos¬sibility of a reconciliation.Leon Despres, labor lawyer, willpresent the CIO point of view, whileC. A. Saunders, connected with theUpholsterers’ Union, will expound theAF of L philosophy. Following formalpresentation of the arguments, thespeakers will answer questions fromthe audience.At the fourth current event affairsdiscussion, presented weekly by theASU, S. W. Halperin, instructor inHi.story, will lead a discussion of thepresent crisis in Germany. The meet¬ing is tomorrow in Classics 17 at12:30. Phases of the subject whichwill probably be emphasized are thereported Nazi riots in Austria andPrussia, strengthening of militarytroops along the German-Belgianborder, and the rumored shakeup ofhigh military officials within the Naziclique. Halperin conducts a courseentitled “The War, the Peace, andthe New Europe” every Fall quar¬ter, and is considered an expert.Next Monday, Nat Grossblatt, amember of the ASU Labor Commit¬tee, will lead a discussion on thebasic difference between the the AF ofL and the CIO in Room C of IdaNoyes at 3. Grossblatt has conductedclasses in labor history at the unionheadquarters of the Steel WorkersOrganization Committee. The meet¬ing is open to the public. Veteran writer at 30, C. A. Mill¬spaugh, graduate student at the Uni¬versity, is the author of a new novel,“Men Are Not Stars,” published lastweek. Since the beginning of theWinter quarter, Millspaugh has helda fellowship in the English depart¬ment, having received the award forhis distinction in creative writing.“Men Are Not Stars” is to be theMarch selection of the Book Leagueof America. The novel is the story ofa family as told in the first personby one of the children, a sensitivethoughtful boy just entering his teens.The father, Daniel O’Riordan, a paint¬er who remains a stubborn academi¬cian in an era which is witnessing thedevelopment of modern art, is thedominant center around which thefamily and the friends who frequenttheir barnlike studio revolve.Long Writing RecordMillspaugh, who was born in Kala¬mazoo, Michigan, and did his under¬graduate work at Ball State Teachers’College in Muncie, Indiana, has along record as a writer. Although“Men Are Not Stars” is his firstnovel, he has published many poems,short stories, and book reviews, ap¬pearing in Poetry Magazine, Pagany,Windsor Quarterly, New Republic,Commonweal, The Magazine, Signa¬ture, New English Weekly (London),Lyrica (Genoa), and other periodicals.For the most distinguished initialcontribution to Poetry Magazine in1935, he was awarded the MidlandAuthor’s Prize. This award went thisyear to another University student,Stephen Stepanchev. Millspaugh’sshort story, “Ludwig,” published inThe Magazine, was one of thosecho.sen by Edward J. O’Brien for his1936 collection.His first book of poems, “In Sightof Mountains,” was published byDoubleday, Doran, the publishers of“Men Are Not Stars,” in 1936.At present, Millspaugh is workingon a new novel and as poetry re¬viewer for The Beacon, liberal Chi¬cago magazine. A new group of hispoems will appear in the March issueof Poetry. Merge ChicagoLying-in HospitalWith UniversityPlan to Change Name toJoseph B. DeLee Hospi¬tal.Committee AnnouncesDecoration Schemefor Washington PromOnly seven more days to the 34thannual Washington Prom, one of themost important events of the studentsocial calendar. The committee alsohas announced the complete decora¬tion scheme for Bartlett gym. Aminiature model of the plan of Bart¬lett will be shown in Mandel corridorand Cobb hall during this week.The orchestra stand will be againstthe west wall of Bartlett, and is tohave white pillars with red cellophanebetween them. The rest of the wallswill be dark maroon with whitedrapes hanging to the floor for thewindows.Tables will be placed around thesides of the gym and soft drinkswill be served. Reservations fortables can be made through anymember of the committee. Dean Gale AnnouncesDegree RequirementsIn Physical SciencesRequirements for students in theDivision of Physical Sciences whowish to get their Bachelor’s Degreeby accumulating course credit ratherthan by taking the Bachelor’s com¬prehensive were announced yesterdayby Dean Henry Gordon Gale.Those who desire to omit the com-prehensives may do so providing thevhave passed the necessary number ofcourses in their department with agrade of “C” or better, that theirsecondary sequences have grades av¬eraging “C” and that their electivesare reported as satisfactory. Theseregulations were set up by the com¬mittee of inter-departmental counsel¬lors as provided in the Senate actiona week ago Saturday.Students may now take comprehen-sives in both their specialized and re¬lated fields, they may work for cred¬it in one and take the comprehensivein the other, or they may work forcourse credit in both. Every pro¬gram is subject to the final approvalof the inter-departmental committee,however. This committee consists ofone person from each department, itspresent members being Dean Gale,Physics; Dr. Walter Bartky, Astron¬omy; Mrs. Adelaide Link, Chemistry;Miss Edith Parker, Geography; Dr.Jerome Fisher, Geology; and Mrs.Mayme Logsdon, Mathematics.These changes in the degree re¬quirements in the Physical Sciencesare similar to those recently an¬nounced for the Division of BiologicalSciences. By the terms of an agreement be¬tween the University and the Chica¬go Lying-in Hospital and Dispensary,signed Thursday, the hospital will be¬come a part of the University in thebiggest merger in recent years. Al¬though the contract stipulates itshall not take effect unless confirmedby the courts, such action is seenas only a formality, and certain toto come within the next few weeks.In this event, the University willassume control of an obstetrical hos¬pital having the highest medical rep¬utation with assets of $775,000, notincluding the hospital equipment andbuildings west of Billings hospital.Name After DeLeeUnder its new status, the Lying-InHospital building will be renamed af¬ter Joseph B. DeLee, distinguishedProfessor Emeritus of Obstetrics andGynecology, founder of the Hospitalwho has been closely associated withit from the time of its organizationin 1897.Foreseeing no great changes otherthan in ownership. Dr. Fred L. Adair,Chief of Service of the hospital,stated: “The hospital staff in generaland myself are pleased wdth the pro¬posed arrangement, which representsthe logical outcome of the affiliationagreement.”As a consequence of the affiliationagreement, as amended in 1929, theUniversity leased to the Hospital itspresent site for a nominal rental ofone dollar per year, the Hospital un¬dertaking to build upon it. Althoughthe University provided a profession¬al staff, medical care, and trainingand instruction, the Hospital retainedsupervision of nursing and other hos¬pital services, as w'ell as legal own¬ership and financial responsibility.(Continued on page 3)Registration CorrectionLast week’s article concerning reg¬istration dates for the Spring quartershould have stated that the informa¬tion was announced by the registrar,rather than by Dean Smith.Students who have registered inadvance for the year need not regis¬ter again, but they must call forphotostatic copies of their registra¬tions in the registrar’s office. Hutchins DefinesEduca tion’s A imBy ALICE MEYERTaking his text from Aristotle,President Robert Maynard Hutchinsspoke briefly on education and ethicsto over two thousand people inRockefeller Memorial Chapel Sunday.Defining the object of education asthe development of virtue, he statedthat justice, prudence, temperance,and fortitude, —virtues required forgood living in society, come throughpractice. Without being trained ingood habits early in childhood, it isunlikely we can acquire them by thetime we reach college, he said.Although they cannot teach thevirtues’, Hutchins believes colleges cansupply a rational basis for goodhabits by developing the intellectualvirtues, peculiar to man, of wisdom,science, understanding, and prudence.“If the habits formed through train¬ing in childhood are to survive, theymust be sustained by reason. All edu¬cation swings around the ancient dic¬tum that man is a rational animal.To perform good actions, therefore,a man must do them from correctchoice which “depends on the deter-Continued on page 3)Int-House Shows“Spanish Earth”Ernest Hemingway’s “SpanishEarth” will be showm today and to¬morrow at International House, inaddition to the short film “ChinaStrikes Back” and a March of Time.Showings are scheduled for both daysat 4:30 and 8:30, with admissionpriced at 35 cents in the afternoonand 50 cents at night.Narrated by Hemingway and filmedby Jonis Ivens, “Spanish Earth” isregarded by most as the best pictureon the Spanish war yet made. TheChinese film will deal with the edu¬cation of youth to meet the situationwhich China faces today, while theMarch of Time includes the Rise ofFinland, The Laugh Industry, andthe American Merchant Marine.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1938PLATFORM1. erection oi a Tigorout campus com¬munity.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened president.Letters to theEditorEditor,The Daily Maroon:The poster in Mandel Hall carryingthe appeal, “Help the Chinese —Don’t buy silk,” indicates that ourrighteous-minded element is lendingits support to the Japanese boycott.(Incidentally, the poster itself is adirty advertisement for the rayon de¬partments of four Chicago clothingstores.) How does it happen that theAmerican people are so wise as to beable to make a categorical moraljudgment on the situation in the FarEast? Is it only necessary that weread a few newspaper headlines inorder to come to a decision as to whois right and who is wrong in theChinese-Japanese war? — These peo¬ple who support the boycott aremaking a blanket judgment of Japan,a rather naive if not presumptuousthing to do. Even more naive thantheir belief in their own wisdom isthe boycotters’ belief that they aregiving full vent to their touchinglybeautiful humanitarian sentiments.Really, since their weapon will nothelp the Chinese more than it willhurt the Japanese people, they haveto be inhumanitarian in order to behumanitarian. Considering that theemotion of fellow-feeling is so strongin them, their scheme for humblingthe Japanese militarists is a gro¬tesque one. They intend to subdue thegenerals by starving the people.If our humanitarianism is so strongthat we cannot refrain from actingupon it, the logical course of actionis to enter the Japanese-Chinese war,on China’s side. Our army and navywould be immeasurably more bene¬ficial to China than our boycott evercould be; the suffering in Japan atleast wouldn’t be concentrated amongthe working masses; finally, generalsand military chieftans are more di¬rectly effected by war measures thanby boycott measures.We believe that a boycott will berelatively effective within a measuredlength of time, but it is a beliefwhose consequences we are likely torue. For it is quite impossible to fore¬cast, as though it were a problem inscientific graphing, the progress bywhich peoples’ morale is broken; andit is likely that the boycott will ef¬fect Japan so gradually that theJapanese will be willing to fight usbefore they are willing to succumbunder our economic pressure. Thus,as I see it, if we must be humane; ifwe must feel for suffering humanity;if we can’t stand by, unmoved bythe horrors of war, there is mani¬festly just one policy to follow. It isto declare war on Japan.Hal Jamison.Vol. 38 FEBRUARY 15, 1938 No.«9©le ^ailg^arooitFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of ChicaKo,published morninKS except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday durinK the Auturnn,Winter, and Spring :uarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Telephones: Local 357, and Hyde Park9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our print¬ers, The Chief Printing company, 1920Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3311.~The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptonrates: $3.00 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies; five cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MSeRKSINTCO POR NATIONAL ADVCRTISINO BVNational Advertising Service, Inc.CoUttt Puilishtrs Ret/rtstntattvi420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.Chicago - Bostch • Los AHoet-ts - San FranciscoBOARD OF CONTROL ^WILLIAM H. McNEILL Editor-in-ChiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE.. .Advertising Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist, Maxine Biesenthal,Emmett Deadman, Ruth Brody, Rex Hor¬ton, Seymour Miller, Adele Rose, BurtMoyer.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman, Max Freeman, HarryTopping, Irvin Rosen.NIGHT EDITOR: SEYMOUR MILLER Hutchins and AristotleOn Sunday a capacity crowd gathered in the Chapel to hear PresidentHutchins. Instead they heard Aristotle. The President dealt with theproper role of a University, finding it to be the cultivation of the intel¬lectual virtues in order that they may support the moral virtues w’hosepractice constitutes happiness, the end of man.Aristotle could not have spoken more neatly. But phrases like theintellectual and moral virtues, statements like “understanding dependsupon the intellectual virtue called wisdom, which is the habit of graspingfirst principles” sound strange in the mouth of a University president,when uttered as the best possible description of the nature of the world.If one translates the terminology into contemporary language, hisspeech makes good sense. If one takes the moral virtues to mean effect¬ive habits of action, it is true that their exercise constitutes happiness.But the phrase “moral virtues” has naturally tended to become identifiedwith a particular set of habits which were effective once, are still per¬haps, but in any case are subject to vicissitudes of circumstance. There¬fore the phrase “effective habits of action” is much preferable to thetraditional “moral virtues” as less ambiguous. But President Hutchinsfor some strange reason prefers the old phrasing, and has been almostuniversally misunderstood by consequence. He would do well to conformto contemporary usage, rather than demanding that it conform to him.A similar translation of “intellectual virtues” into “habits of carefulgeneralization” makes his statement of the proper role of a Universityeducation eminently sensible. In the contemporary world of decayinghabits, it is true, as the President said, that “If the habits formed throughtraining in childhood are to survive, they must be sustained by reason...He (man) may be trained in his infancy as animals are trained. But ashe becomes a man his reason must understand and approve his ac¬tions. .. ”But there are signs in the speech that President Hutchins prefersthe old garb because he prefers the old conclusions. For instance last la¬cunae above stand for the words, “for in the order of human powersreason rules,” a statement calculated to send shivers down the back ofanyone acquainted with modern psychology.Arsenic andApplesauceBy NED ROSENHEIMIn a comparatively short time wehave found out that the major partof a columnist’s life is spent in run¬ning around asking people, “What’snew?” Almost—but not quite—invari¬ably the answer is “nothing.” Lastweek, however, we had the pleasant¬est surprise in years, when we askedMiss Finn of the Dean of Students’office if she had anything for us toprint. It seems she did, and her of¬fering, with its accompanying letter,follows.♦ ♦If names make news, let me tellyou right off—this .story is about T.V’. Smith. I had nothing whateverto do with the poem—I merely sentit to Mr. Smith. (He and I have hadconnections of a sort, academic andsenatorial, in times past). He chidedme somewhat for holding out on himso long, and seemed to think verywell of the sketch. And since theauthor hasn’t done anything aboutit, I think I should see that it getsa little more publicity. It came aboutthis way: The “women of the ad¬ministration staff,” as Mr. Hutchinsonce called the female subalterns(office clerks to you) of this institu¬tion, give a Christmas party everyyear at Ida Noyes hall. This yearthe entertainment was arranged byJane Kesner Morris of the Univer¬sity of Chicago Press. The programtook the rather trite form of a radbbroadcast — but there was nothingtrite about the way she dealt withthe Univer.sity and the faculty. Thefavorite lyric, spoken for T. V. Smith,went like this:SENATOR T. V. SMITHWhen I say I am an ignorant manPlease—don’t agree with me.It’s just one hallowed phrase in myCampaign philosophy.I’m a coy linguistic devilCrawling downward to the levelOf the doting, voting public whomI serve.Once down there, my ambitionSoon reveals my erudition.I can’t conceal my verbal zeal, itspouts with verve.My allegiance is Socratic—Demo¬craticThe Party thinks me—well—a biterraticBut the way I sway the rabbleThey forgive me when I dabbleIn etymology that’s enigmatic.I’m an orator of very fine degreeOf phraseology a rabid devoteeI love every word I utterBe it Grecian or the gutterWords slide off my tongue like but¬ter—volubly.I incline toward liberalityIn the .senate that is practically ras¬cality.A philosopher in HadesAnd a devil with the ladiesWho elect me for my Texan person¬ality!—Jane Kesner Morris. TODAY ON THEQUADRANGLESLECTURES And .MEETINGSSocial Service Administrationgroup. Room A of Ida Noyes hall at7:30.YWC.\ Cabinet. Room A of IdaNoyes hall at 12.Interclub, .Alumnae room of IdaNoyes hall at 12..\SU Education Committee, Ma¬roon office at 12..Alumnae club. Alumnae room ofIda Noyes at 7.Business School, South receptionroom of Ida Noyes hall at 12.W.AA, W.A.A room of Ida Noyes at12..ASU art group. Room C of IdaNoyes hall at 2:30.Federation of University Women,Room A of Ida Noyes hall at 4.Nursing Education, YWCA room ofIda Noyes at 7:30.Graduate Education Seminar, Her¬bert Wiltsee, speaker. InternationalHouse at 7:30.Surgery Seminar, Dr. W. E. Adams,speaker. Surgery 437 at 8,ASU Dance Group of experimentalworkshop, Ida Noves Theatre at 4..MISCELLANEOUS“Spanish Earth,” “China StrikesBack,” “March of Time,” Internation¬al House at 4:30, 8:30.Sergei Prokofieff, Concert, Mandelhall at 8:30.Cap and (iown l^ictures, Ida NoyesTheatre.Jr. Managers of Blackfriars at 3:30.Sophomore Managers of Blackfriarsat 3:4,5.Communist Club, at 4.Aides and Marshals, at 4:30.Maroon Editorial Staff, at 5.Skull and Crescent at 4:45.Senior Committee chairmen at 4:15.Maroon Business Staff, at 5:15.Stifler Announces Titlesof Lippmann LecturesTitles of the lectures on “AmericanDe.stiny” to be given by W’alter Lipp¬mann, noted American political com¬mentator, Wednesday, Thursday, andFriday in Mandel hall were an¬nounced yesterday by James M. Stif¬ler .secretary of the University.Lippmann will speak Wednesdayon “The Shattered International Or¬der,” Thursday on “The British De¬cline,” and Friday on “The AmericanSuccession.”Junior Math ClubThe regular meeting of the JuniorMathematical Club will be held thisafternoon at 4:30 in Eckhardt 206,preceded by tea in the CommonRoom at 4. “Finite Fields” will bethe topic discussed. individued HedrdressingAt Modarot* PricaaShampoo aad Wave 50Monicura 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57th ST.HYDE PARK 7860Mrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sal. to 6 P.M.SCIENTIFIC EXPEDITIONExplore interior of South America. Sail¬ing: about September. Place for scien¬tifically and Unancially qualified person.Six to eight months. Submit qualificationsin detail.Write Room 1803, 280 W. 41st St. N. Y. C. PATRONIZE OURADVERTISERSMAKEThe BETTER’OLERESTAURANT1551 E. 57th (3 doors wsst oi Stonv la)YOUR MEETING PLACECLUB BREAKFASTS 15c--40cLUNCHEONS 25c—45cDINNERS 40c—70cUntil furthar notica wa will girs adiscount oi 10 par cant to oil atudentaGRIDDLE CAKES, WAFFLES, HAM¬BURGERS, CHILI.TRY US!Mr. Smith’s note read; “No, I hadnot seen it, nor even heard about it.I should never have forgiven you hadyou not sent it to me. I want to keepit. It is really quite delightful, andI wish to be commended on whatevergrounds possible to its authoress.” CAMPUS BOWUNGHEADQUARTERSCROCOMBE'SBOWUNG ALLEYS6225 Cottage Grove Ave.STUDENT RATES—15 Cents Per GameDaily. Except Sun., up to 6 P. M.START BEATING THE HIGH COST OF UVINGEAT A WHOLESOME. COMPLETEBREAKFAST 20c or 25cLUNCH 30cEIGHT COURSE DINNER 50c"MIDNIGHT SPECIAL" AFTER THAT SHOWIN A DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERETHE J&C RESTAURANT1527 East SSth Street- Which Never Closes -A BEAUTIFUL NEW BOOK BY ONEOF UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO'S SONSMENARE NOTSTARSBY C. A. MILLSPAUGHS2.50MR. MILLSPAUGH IS NOW A FELLOWIN THE DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH ATTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. NODOUBT YOU WILL REMEMBER HIM BESTAS THE AUTHOR OF THAT DELIGHTFULLITTLE VOLUME OF POETRY, IN SIGHTOF MOUNTAINS.HIS NEW NOVEL, MEN ARE NOTSTARS. IS WRITTEN WITH RARE BEAUTY.THE PROSE WHICH COULD ONLY HAVEBEEN WRITTEN BY A POET TELLS AMOVING STORY OF DEEP HUMAN IN¬TEREST. MR. MILLSPAUGH POSSESSESAN UNUSUAL INSIGHT INTO CHARAC¬TER AND THE VICISSITUDES OF LIFEFOR ONE SO YOUNG.WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TOCOME IN TO OUR STORE WED¬NESDAY, FEBRUARY THE SIX¬TEENTH TO MEET MR. MILL¬SPAUGH FROM TWO TO THREEU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEIF YOU ENJOY GOOD FOOD...THE BAGDAD CAFE-1145 East 55th Street-INVITES YOU TO TRY OURArabian and American CookingLUNCHEONS 25c - 30c DINNERS 30c • 35c - 40cENIOY YOUR BULL SESSIONS WITH A SECOND CUP OF COFFEEFREETHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1938 Page ThreePresident Hutchins Presents Planfor Reorganizing Modern Educa tionBy REX“What Can We Do About It,” asksPresident Robert M. Hutchins todayin the Saturday Evening Post. Heanswers the qu§ry by presenting aconstructive program for reorganiza¬tion of the American educational sys¬tem in the last of a series of fourarticles.He points out that our ancestorswere too busy building schoolhousesto build a program of education, andthat we will continue to be withoutsuch a program unless our educatorsstop to develop one. This programlesssystem which has grown up, withits rigid time requirements, credithours, and grades based on class at¬tendance and politeness to teachersdampens student initiative and placesa premium on mediocrity.Proposes General ExamsIn place of this. President Hutchinspropo.ses, “We should .set up goalsfor the student. His manner of reach¬ing them should be immaterial. Abovethe elementary level a system ofgeneral examinations must be devel¬oped.After briefly review'ing the Chicagoplan, he presents some suggestionsfor reorganizing the American edu¬cational system. At the beginningthere would be a six-year elementaryschool devoting itself “to a balancedprogram in which the children beginto learn to read and write and figure,to use their hands, and to love theircountry."6-4-4 PlanSince, “We shall have to educateall our young people until they reachthe age where they can find employ¬ment," President Hutchins furtherpropo.ses a union of the last twoyears of the present elementaryschool and the first two years of thepresent high school into a four yearsecondary structure. Above this wouldbe a four year unit made by combin¬ing the last two years of the pre.senthigh school and the first two years ofcollege, providing local educationalopportunities for students up to theage of twenty at public expense.This latter unit would have two pro¬grams. one consisting of “generaleducation transmitted chiefly throughbooks.” The other would be “technical,business, or homemaking training ofa subprofessional nature for thosewho do not learn best through books.""Beyond this point, however, nostudent would be entitled to proceedat public expense until he had dem¬onstrated that he had a mind tocultivate or that he had the interestand ability required for professionalor scholarly work. The universitiesTODAYIRENE DUNNE and GARY GRANTin "THE AWFUL TRUTH"PLUSLESLIE HOWARD - JOAN BLONDELLin "STAND IN"FROLIC THEATRE55th and Ellis AvenueLexington Theatre1162 E 63rd St.Tues.. Wed.. Feb. 15th-16thIRENE DUNNE and GARY GRANT"THE AWFUL TRUTH"PLUSLESLIE HOWARD JOAN BLONDELL"STAND IN"Kimbark Theatre6240 Kimbark Ave.THREE HITS"HOLD 'EM NAVY""BORROWING TROUBLE""A SUNDAY NIGHT AT THETROCADEHO" HORTONwould be f fje to be universities. . .The population of the last two yearsof the universities might be reducedby as much as 60 per cent.”Place Ideas FirstThe general education in the pro¬posed college “must be the trainingof the mind for intellectual activity.”It would be based on ideas and therelation of ideas. Facts and informa¬tion would be used to illustrate orconfirm the ideas under discussion.An AB degree would be awarded onCertain economies can be made bythe elimination of duplication andcompetition, but the proposed ex¬pansion, and an equalization of educa¬tional opportunities throughout thecountry. President Hutchins believes,“demands a permanent Federal pro¬gram of support for education.”Lying-in -(Continued from page 1)Thus, under the new agreement,the character of the hospital will notbe materially changed, particularlysince the University agrees to retainthe courtesy staff which has servedprivate patients. For a period of atleast five years, the University alsoagrees to continue the “Stock YardsDispensary” conducted by the hospi¬tal.In addition, the University willseek to secure funds for the erectionand operation of an adeciuate Gyne¬cological Pavilion in connection withthe regular ho.spital. Although theUniversity will adhere as clo.sely aspossible to the general aims of thehospital as heretofore understood,.some changes in operation and man¬agement may be effected. Wage in¬creases for certain classes of Hospitalemployees are considered likely.It provided in the new agreementthat the Chicago Lying-in Hospitalwill maintain its corporate entity. Probst AnnouncesWinter Scheduleof Debate UnionThe tentative debate schedule forthe Winter quarter was announcedtoday by George Probst, secretary ofthe Debate Union. The schedule,which is subject to change in a fewcases is as follows:The University will take the nega¬tive on the proposition; “Resolved:That the National Labor RelationsBoard be empowered to arbitrate allindu.strial disputes.” February 15against Union University. February19 a Semi-Tournament will be heldwith Loyola, Marquette, and Chicagoparticipating.Ludlow BillFebruary 17, the Ludlow bill willbe debated before Elmhur.st HighSchool and a downtown service club.Minnesota and Northwestern will bethe opponents of the home team. TheWinter quarter men’s Big Ten com¬petition will be held at about thesame time.Chicago will take the affirmativeon the NLRB ca.se against Randolph-Macon Women’s College here on the25th, and on the 27th will meet DePaul on the same side of the question.March 3, a tournament will be heldat the University of Iowa on theNLRB. Four debaters and a judgewill be .sent. The ^ame day the Uni¬versity of Missouri will play hostto two debaters from Chicago.Five other universities and collegeswill be met on the trip there andreturning. March 25 four debatersand a judge will be sent to the Wis¬consin debate and a discussion tour-! nament on the NLRB. March 30,I Amherst College will be met herej with Chicago taking the affirmativeon the question, “Resolved: That apolicy of isolation is impracticablefor the United States.” Judd Withdraws From ActiveTeaching ;ThurstonePlans ResearchRelieved by their present admini¬strative duties by the recent appoint¬ment of Ralph W. Tyler as newchairman of the Department of Edu¬cation and Chief University Examiner,Dr. Charles W. Judd and Dr. LouisThurstone have revealed their plansfor the future. Judd reaches the re¬tirement age in June and will with¬draw from active teaching, whileThurstone plans to devote more timeto his research dealing with “TheProblem of Isolating Human Abili¬ties.”Dr. Judd, is one of the most in¬fluential educators in the country.Probably no other man has his widegrasp of the range of educationalproblems and in his profession he isknown as the “educational states¬man.”Came From YaleHe came to the University in 1909from Yale where he was professor ofPsychology. He has been head of theEducation department since thattime. Reorganizing the school anddirecting it with such skill that itachieved a reputation of being with¬out peer in the country, his influencehas been notable. He is pai'ticularlyan important figure in secondaryeducation and has been one of theleaders of the North Central Associa¬tion of Secondary Schools and Col¬leges.At the present time, he is in Wash¬ington on leave of absence, directingresearch for the National ResourcesCommittee on the relation of educa¬tion to government; he also is con¬ducting a study as a member of thePresident’s Committee on Educationas to the relation of general to voca¬tional education. He has had onemonograph printed under his direc¬tion with regard to the first investiga¬tion entitled “Problems of Educationin the United States.”Net Curtains - DrapesSLIP COVERS — UPHOLSTERINGSILK LAMP SHADES - - BED COVERS :MODERATE PRICESCALL H. P. 4541 1328 E. 61tt STUDENTS!!Save Vz of Your Laundry Billsolution toHosiery ProblemsMOJUD Thigh-MoldsO Four magic strips absorbtho strain that causss mosthosiery troubUs. Those stripscheck garter runs, hold gartersfirm and keep seams straight YOUR ENTIRE BUNDLE IS WASHED SWEET AND CLEAN IN PURESOAP AND RAIN SOFT WATER.UNDERWEAR. PAJAMAS. SWEATERS. SOCKS. ETC.. ARE FLUFF-DRIED READY TO USE AT ONLY.12c per lb.SHIRTS DELUXE HAND FINISHED. STARCHED. MENDED. AND BUT¬TONS REPLACED. AT 12c ADDITIONAL.-HANDKERCHIEFS IRONED AT Ic EACH ADDITIONAL WHEN INCLUDED-Student Economy BundleMetropole LaundryFREE WESLEY N. KARLSON, Prop.1219-21 EAST 55th STREETPHONE HYDE PARK 3190PICK UP and DELIVERY<^^vvvwvvvwvwwOS g die. II your active life is^ much lor most.hosiery, try Thigh*I Molds.$uoHazel Hoff1371 E. 55th STREET(Near Dorchester)HARRISTHEATRE Mats. Wrd. and Sat.Robert Henderson and Estelle WinwoodpresentEstelle BramwellWINWOOD FLETCHERHelen Jessie RoyceCHANDLER LANDIS Like the man upon the beachGrab everything within your reachIN THE INTERNATIONAL HIT: at theJlUlL , «'to-niKhJpi/S^*CYCLE OF 9 PLAYS—ALL DIFFERENT Washington PromenadeThe Third Week(“Still Life”iThura , Feb. 17 ■{ “Shadow Play”("We Were Dancing”i Tuce., Feb. 15I Wed. Mat. ANight Feb. 16 J “Family Album"Sat. Mat & I "Hands Across the Seai Night Feb. 19 ^Request ( "Fumed Oak”Program (“Shadow Play”Fri., Feb. 18 ( "The Astonished HeartiNights—65c to 12.76, Wed. Mat. 66c to11.66, Sat. Mat. 66c to 12.20. Bigger and better than everFEB. 21st BARTLETT GYM$3.25 per couple Professor Thurstone has been ac¬ting as Chief Examiner since theBoard of Examinations was instituted,but with the understanding that hewould be relieved as soon as a satisfac¬tory appointment could be made. Ori¬ginally intending to hold the post forabout one year, he yesterday ex¬pressed himself as being very glad toget back to where he could devotemore time to his research on the iso¬lation of mental factors.Hutchins-Continued from page 1)mination of the right end and of theright means of obtaining it.” Prud¬ence, the intellectual virtue requiredfor correct choice, depends uponunderstanding, which, in turn, de¬pends upon wisdom, “the habit ofgrasping first principles and firstcauses upon which universal judg¬ments are based.”Moral ContentSince the specific contribution of auniversity is in providing p rationalfoundation for moral conduct, thecriterion of a good course is its in¬tellectual content and the intellectualeffort necessary for understanding it.Courses, however instructive or pros¬perous, failing to meet this test haveno place in the university.Virtuous activity which makes aman a good citizen, makes him happy.“The difficulty about happiness is thetrouble we have in understandingwhat it is.” Therefore, Hutchinsthinks that by teaching the studentto face intelligently the great prob¬lems of today, all intellectual andmoral ones; by developing in himability to judge and discriminate, theuniversity can perform its functionof producing good citizens.A NEWTRADITIONtheVARSITYPUB’SCocktail Hour4:30.5:00 pm.FREEBEEROR ANYTHING ELSEYOUCHOOSEWITH EACH DRINKMEETBERNIE & JACKTHEBARTENDINGPRIDES OF55th STREET(1155 TO BE EXACT)TWO BLOCKSFROM THECOFFEESHOPAND IT'S WORTHITIgnnngn saiiHKiifiMiilPage FourWeekendResultsGymnasts Defeat IlliniSecond victory of the year was theplum that Coach Hoflfer’s gymnasticsteam brought back from Urbana Sat¬urday. They defeated the Illini, 435-387^. Erwin Beyer, all-around Ma¬roon star was high point man of themeet with 160 points. Joe Giallom-bardo of Illinois was 5% points be¬hind, and Nelson Wetherall of Chi¬cago took third in scoring honors.Beyer took first in the parallelbars and sidehorse, and seconds inthe high bar and flying rings. Weth-erall won the high bar and came inthird in the sidehorse and flyingrings. Illinois swept the first threeplaces in tumbling.The victory was not very conclu¬sive, inasmuch as three of the Illinigymnasts were ineligible.Fencers Beat WisconsinThe fencing team remained unde¬feated in Big Ten competition lastSaturday by defeating Wisconsin, 11to 6.Strauss topped Maroon point get¬ters with three firsts in the foil divi¬sion. Goldberg won two foil matches,and George and Greenberg won oneeach. The foil score was Chicago7, Wisconsin 2.Chapman and Tingley each wonone epee match to split the score inthat division at 2-2. Fritz and Gus¬tafson completed the Chicago scor¬ing by winning two sabre matches be¬tween them. Both of these Maroonfencers fell before the steady swordof Fred Kaftan, conference sabrechampion.Trackmen Down N UVictories in six of the ten eventsenabled the Maroon track team todefeat Northwestern, 47 1/3 to 382/3, in the Fieldhouse Friday night.A win in the final event, the milerelay, would have given the Wildcatsthe meet, but Chicago’s quartet ofPowell, Sponsel, Webster and Hal-crow won the relay by ten yards.Other Maroon victories were thoseof Davenport in the 60-yard dash,Halcrow in the 440-yard run, Kobakin the 70-yard high hurdles, Websterin the 880, and Sergei in the polevault.Handball Team Licks IrishLosing but one of the five matches,Chicago’s handball team defeatedNotre Dame 4-1 in their first matchof the season. Chicago made a cleansweep of the singles with Gilbert,Adler and Sherman taking firsts, andwith Gilbert and Sherman teamedtogether, winning, the first of thedoubles games. Adler and Kolandropped the only game to NotreDame.The next match will be playedwith the Hyde Park YMCA tomor¬row.Cagers Lose to IowaOne more loss was credited to theMaroon five when Iowa defeated it,42-29, in the Fieldhouse last Satur¬day. The Hawkeyes had a 17-15 leadat the half, but in the first eightminutes of the second period blastedthe Maroon hopes with a 14 pointsplurge before the Maroons couldcatch their breath.Van Ysseldyk of Iowa and Louns-bury were the leading scorers with12 points apiece. Cassels made twobaskets and four free throws butmissed four of the latter.Matmen Win TwoWith a total of 87 points to theiropponents’ 15 the Maroon A and Bsquad matmen last Saturday downedDuncan YMCA and Morton Jr. Col¬lege. In the meet held at Bartlettgym the A team felled Duncan Y bya score of 31-5, and the B team tookMorton Jr. 26-10. The Maroons lostonly three of their sixteen bouts inthe dual meet.Against Duncan Y, Hughes and R.Finwall won by decisions; G. Fin-wall, C. Thomas, Haas, Lehnhardt,and Valorz won on falls; Tinker losta fall. In the Morton bouts W.Thomas and Dunn won decisions;Butler, Thomas, Bell, and Schoon-maker won on falls while Grinbargand Young lost on the same rout.CLASSIFIED ADSTUXjiiDO FOR SALE — Size 38. Good con¬dition. $8.00. Call Midway 7854 after. 6 P. M.A FITWELL DRESS SUIT RENTAL CO.Fall Dress, Cutaway and Tuxedo SuitsSummer Formals. Masquerade Costumesand Wraps to RentACCESSORIES FOR SALETrianon Building - 6207 Cottage GrovePhone Plaza 7310 THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1938I-M GAMES TONIGHT7:30Phi Sig vs Phi B. D.A. D. Phi “C” vs. Phi Sig “C”8:15Phi Psi vs. Phi Delt9:00Deke vs. Delta Upsilon5th RowCenterift )|>By GORDON TIGERChicago is host this week and nextto the disitinguished Abbey TheatrePlayers of Dublin, who are presentingsome of the mainstays of their reper¬toire at the Grand Opera House.The Chicago opener and attractionfor the first three nights is LennoxRobinson’s “The Far-OflF Hills,’’ thecomedy whose refreshing Irish humorhas made it the most characteristicand in many ways the most creditablepresentation of this group.Centering around the household ofPatrick Clancy, a widower, and histhree young daughters, “The Far-Off Hills” gives a somewhat roseate but thoroughly delightful view of themost wholesomely amusing charactersof joke-book fiction, the Irishmen.The plot is concerned with explodingthe wistful longings of almost all themajor characters, to prove the neatlittle point that the far-off hills lookthe greenest. This leads to a numberof humorous, semi-surprising char¬acter changes, most gratifying ofwhich is that of Clancy’s eldestdaughter, Marian, w'ho starts out withvague longings for the convent andstrict religious ideals, until the con¬vent is actually within her grasp,when she becomes considerably morehuman in the good old Irish way.Little need be said of the techniqueof the Abbey players in “The Far-Off Hills,” since the cast with oneminor exception is the same, that in¬troduced the play to Chicago someyears ago and has given countlessperformances of it in Dublin andthroughout the United States. Notonly have the players become admir-LEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYTAKE PRIVATE LESSONSTERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63RD ST.HYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M. ably identified with the charactersand the play, but they have preservedthe necessary mood of disarming jov¬iality free from any tinge of bore¬dom. The whole performance is oneof unassuming simplicity which, morethan anything else, has rendered itworthy of the many repetitions it hasenjoyed in Chicago.The acting is of that cooperativequality to be found only in repertorygroups which are free of the evils ofthe “star” system. Still there areperformances, as those of EileenCrowe as Marian and Maureen De-lany as Susie, the best comic figurein the play, that stand out. But ex¬cellent expression of irrepressibleIrish mirth is also given by AideenO’Connor and Frolie Mulhern asClancy’s younger daughters, and by4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEPOI COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA Ufonmtk, intentivt, iUno^aphic amn«—ttmrting January 1, April 1, July 1, Octobar 1.Booklat santfrta, without obligation— writt or phono. No sohdtors ttnploytd.m ose rBUSINESS COLLEGERAUL MOSER, J.D.PH.I.RmuiarComrwafof Boginnart,optnto HighStfaat Gradnatts only, start Jmt Mondaytack month. Advanetd Conrttt ttor/any Mondey. Day and Evening. EveningConreet open to men.114 S. Michigan Ava., Chicago. Randolph 4id7 Michael J. Dolan and Austin Meldonas Clancy’s cronies.During their two weeks’ stay, theAbbey Players will also give pre-formances of “The New Gossoon,”“Drama at Inish,” “The Plough andthe Stars,” “The Playboy of the West¬ern World,” and “Silver Jubilee,”the latter with Synge’s one-acttragedy, “Riders to the Sea,” as a cur¬tain raiser.Kenwood GardenLunch5511 KENWOOD AVE.PHONE PLAZA 1530—HOME COOKING-CLUB BREAKFAST10c - 15c • 20c • 25cLUNCHEON and DINNERS25c • 30c - 35c • 40cALL DINNERS INCLUDESOUP—SALAD—POTATOESVEGETABLE—DESSERTCOFFEE—TEA—MILK10 PER CENT DISCOUNTON $2 MEAL TICKETSSUNDAY DINNERS 40cGIVE US A TRIALh WALTER D. EDMONDSAl Cll HOW MUCHHLOU SCHOOL DOYOU NEED? What’swrong with education,and what we can do aboutit, by Dr. Robert M.Hutchins. AND storiesby Booth Tarkington,Ann Morse, EverettRhodes Castle and M.G. Chute; serials, edito¬rials, fun and cartoons.Meet the mummy who tours under this banner:$1000 REWARD TO ANYONE WHO CANPROVE THAT THIS IS NOT JOHN WILKESBOOTH. He has been bought and sold, kidnapedand seized for debt. He’s been chased out oftowns for “not having a license,” and threatenedwith hanging by indignant G. A. R. veterans.You’ll find his strange story in your Post this week.**John Wilkes Booth** on Tourby ALVA JOHNSTON . .o Devil’s Islat'd,NO. aUF?der^3^^^^teUs about ^ j^^ovies about M ^ predirtf Peek’stlus spring .AlcatrazTwenty Months ^ ^ Alexander. «rYM*C0H>«W,Ho.293.«As told by BRT _Introducing^IheManWhoKiUedlincoln fnsieaelpiano...ISEEMTOHAVEBOUGHT A LION!...JVbtp What?At the auction, Mr. Benedict hadn’t raisedhis hand more’n a fraction ... and now heowned a I ion I What would Miss Satterleesay when he returned without the grandpiano for the Female Seminary? By theauthor of Drums Along The Mohawk.Mr. Benedict and the Madagascan Lion