Today*s Headlinesl.ovett, Thomas, speak on peace, page1.\nnounce Mirror cast, page 1.Hasketball score, page 3.Review of Richard II, page 4. ^ Batlp illanionVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1938 Price Five CentsThomas, Lovett toSpeak at Anti-WarMeeting Tonight( ommittee Sponsors “KeepAmerica Out of War”Campaign.A dinner meeting at the CoffeeShop and a mass meeting to¬night at International house with Nor¬man Thomas and Robert Morss Lovettas speakers inaugurates a “KeepAmerica Out of War” campaign spon¬sored by the No-Foreign War Com¬mittee of the University.The dinner meeting initiates an allcity campaign again.st wars and a-mong those present will be Ralph Zer-foss of George Williams College, Wil¬helm Pauck, Robert Morss Lovett,Maynard Krueger of the University,Norman Thomas, Alva Tompkins,minister of the New England Church,Reverend Mr. Norman Barr, founderand superintendent of the Olivet In¬stitute, and Professor Shultz ofNorthwestern University. There is adinner charge of 75 ceiits. All stu¬dents interested are welcome to at¬tend.Harr Act.s .\s ChairmanAt the mass meeting ni 8:15, Barr,pacifist in both the Spanish-Americanand World Wai*s, will act as chairman.■Admission is ten cents..According to Purnell Benson, presi¬dent of the newly formed No-ForeignWar Committee, the purposes of thecommittee are: “To curb the presentwar drift of the government in Wash¬ington as expressed in its militancyin the Panay incident, the rumorednaval agreement with Great Britainto protect British territories in theFar Eastern war; the efforts of thea<lministration to militarize the coun¬try through increased armament bud¬get, defeat of the Ludlow bill.Other objectives of the group areto defeat the propagandization ofpeople of the United States so thatthey will not fight on any provocationand to oppose joint military action ofthe United States and ether nationsin the Far P'ast. This session climaxesa series of pre-Peace Conferencecampus meetings.Professor Testifiesfor Senate CommitteePaul Douglas, professor of Eco¬nomics, will travel to WashingtonD. C. at the end of this week to testi¬fy before the Senate Committee onUnemployment. Douglas plans topropose a ])rogram for reducingprices, particularly cost of buildingconstruction, by making the publichousing program contingent on sucha reduction.Senator James F, Byrnes of SouthCarolina is chairman of the commit¬tee, investigating unemployment andreliif, before which Douglas will ap¬pear. Also testifying is Professor ofEconomics Alvin Hansen of the Uni¬versity of Minnesota, Juniors Donate $15 toSenior Class CouncilBacked by 15 dollars worth of thesupport of the junior class, membersof the Senior Class Council will meetat 3:30 this afternoon in SocialScience 107 to go over plans for theAll-Campus Conference and to dis¬cuss the suggestion that the classspon.sor a carnival on the order ofthe Fandango of 1935.The donation, which will be usedto begin the publicity campaign forthe April conference, constitutes theremains of profits on a dance mem¬bers of the pre.sent junior class spon¬sored in their freshman year. WilburJerger, head of the social committeethat planned the freshman affair, fi¬nally solved the problem of what todo with the surplus by responding tosenior president George Halcrow’sappeal for solidarity.Members of the council will reporton the success of the plan to interestseniors in their class organization byindividually contacting them. Therewill also be reports on contacts withorganizations to publicize the con¬ference,John Marks, Jack Fetman, Geoi’geMcElroy, George Halcrow, WilliamMcNeill, and Paul Wagner, are mem¬bers of the senior committee drawingup plans for the conference, whichwill be held on two w'eekcnds in April.The program stresses the fact thatthe conference will be one of the rareopportunities for students to presenttheir views.Historians GiveMoody LecturesWilliam Dodd, Philip Giie-dalla. Deliver Talks forFoundation.William E. Dodd, former ambas¬sador to Germany and professoremeritus of American History, andPhilip Guedalla, eminent English his¬torian and literary authority, will de¬liver the next two William VaughnMoody Foundation lectures, James M.jStifler, secretary of the University jannounced yesterday.Professor Dodd will speak on “TheDilemma of Modern Civilization” inMandel hall at 8:30 next Tuesday.The lecture is open to the generalpublic, and tickets will be availablewithout charge at the Informationoffice on and after March 4,Professor Dodd has been ambassa¬dor to Germany from 1933 until hisrecent resignation. A noted author¬ity on American history, he is theauthor of numerous books and textson the subject. In 1934 he was electedpresident of the American Hi.storicalSociety.Guedalla, claimed to be the greatestof modern biographers and histor¬ians, will talk on “The Biography ofa Century” on Monday, March 14, inMandel hall. Tickets for this lecturemay also be obtained without chargeat the Information Office on and af¬ter March 10. Author of numerousbooks, his most recent is “The Hun¬dred Years.”Raleigh Stone Edits Monographon Problems ofIndustrial Rela tionsProblems of Industrial Relationsare seen from various viewpoints in amonograph by that title recently pub¬lished by the University Press.Edited by Raleigh W. Stone, associ¬ate professor of Industrial Relations,the booklet is one in a series of“Studies in Business Administration,”and arises from the fourth Midwe.stConference on Problems of IndustrialRelations, The Conference met herein October, under the joint auspicesof the School of Business and theIndustrial Relations Association ofChicago.Representing the federal govern¬ment, Charles Fahey, General Coun¬sel for the National Labor RelationsBoard, defends the methods, recordand decisions of the NLRB, andtouches on the moot question, “WhatConstitutes Collective Bargaining?”Suggesting “it is time to quitquarreling” with the Labor Act, thefederal spokesman states, “I think itit may very definitely be said thereshall be no retrogression or going back to the days of industrial strifeover the matters now protected bythis act.”Unions Not RevolutionaryIn a discussion of Trends in Trade-union Organization, Structures andFunctions, R. Daugherty of the Uni¬versity of Pittsburgh observes, “Prac¬tically all the unions in this countryaccept the present economic systemand try to get the most out of it”.Because of a proven identity of inter¬est, Daugherty asserts abandonmentof employer opposition will give un¬ions “time to concentrate on thethings that make them valuable, or¬ganized parts of the community”.Speaking to and for industrialists,Cyrus S. Ching, Director of Industrialand Public Relations for the UnitedStates Rubber Company, attributeslabor difficulties largely to too rapidchanges in law, and inexperience ofemployei's in dealing with unions.T. North Whitehead, Harvard pro¬fessor of Industrial Psychology, looksat “Business as a Social Institution,” Announce Castfor ThirteenthAnnual MirrorRix, Wagoner, • Cunning¬ham Head Veteran Per¬formers.Eighteen women and fourteen mencomprise the acting company of the1938 Mirror show opening Fridaynight in Mandel hall.Women featured in the cast includeMary Paul Rix, dramatic associationchairman of acting and veteran ofprevious Mirror revues and DA pro¬ductions, Judith Cunningham, anothermember of DA board w'ho also ap¬peared in last year’s show as didactres.ses Areta Kelble, Jean Gay ton,Troy Parker, Edith Hansen, VirginiaShilton and Adele Woodwai'd.Mirror NewcomersNewxomers to Mirror show are Dor¬othy Overlock, Pat and Peg Hutch¬inson, Elinor Eaton, Alice Meyer,Betty Ann Evans, Martha Anne Pet¬ers, Betty Newhall and Jean Fraine.Dramatic Association men appear¬ing in the thirteenth annual revueare: Robert Wagoner, president,Charles Stevenson, Burton Smith,Grant Atkinson, Frederick Linden,Alexander Harmon, John Wallace,Clarence Sills, Robert Bigelow, Wil¬liam Boehner, Ben Stevenson, CharlesStevenson, William Caudill, GreggGeiger, Ray Lane, Henry Luccock,Stuart McClintock, Charles Paltzer,Robert Sabin, Don Sieverman, AlanTully and Howard Williams.Oliver Statler is aiding in directionof the revue, while Merriel Abbot, forher third successive year lends herprofessional touch to the show withroutines and costumes from the Pal¬mer House Abbot dancers. Mirror willbe held at Mandel hall this Fridayand Saturday night with tickets rang¬ing from 55 cents to $1.85.Honor ProfessorCharles Judd atNa tional MeetingCharles H. Judd, who was cited inTime’s 15th anniversary issue as edu¬cation’s Charles Evans Hughes, re¬ceives an honoi’^ry life membership inthe American Association of SchoolAdministrators at the (18th annualconvention of that organization inAtlantic City which is now in prog¬ress. Payson Smith of Harvard willpresent the membership to Judd, whorecently was replaced as head of theUniversity’s department of Educationby Ralph W. Tyler.Outstanding educators drawn fromall parts of the country, including allthe University’s education men, willattend. Charles B. Glenn will pre¬side, William Lyon Phelps of Yalewill open several sessions, and FloydW. Reeves, of the University andchairman of the advisory committeeon education in Washington, D. C.,will lead discussions.Judd is slated to speak on “Facingthe Future,” “Making New Materialsof Instruction,” and the “Responsi¬bility of the Superintendent.” WilliamC. Reavis, William S. Gray, NewtonEdwards, Geoi’ge A. Works, and JohnDale Russell, professors of educationhere, will all lecture or lead discus¬sions. Leonard V. Koos will presideat a symposium on “Subject MatterEducation of Secondary School Teach¬ers.”Rapoport PresentsSeries of RecitalsAnatol Rapoport, brilliant youngpianist, is presenting a series of re¬citals in the Music Building, Room201, the two remaining concerts be¬ing scheduled for tomorrow and nextWednesday at 4:30.At the second recital of the group,played last Wednesday, Rapoportstressed the sonata, and played aprogram of works composed byHaydn and Beethoven. During thenext two recitals he will trace thedevelopment of the kernel motif, thesmallest structural unit in music. Theprogram tomorrow will be made upof the works of Chopin, and on March9, Liszt. CPU ConsidersMachine Politics\At their next meeting at 7:30 onWednesday, March 9, the PoliticalUnion will continue its discussion oftopics of national interest when itbroaches the subject of party machinepolitics. The exact wording of theresolution will be revealed in a forth¬coming issue of the Daily Maroon.Before a capacity audience, dele¬gates to Friday’s meeting of the Un¬ion decided in favor of collective se¬curity as a means of securing worldpeace by a 24-11 vote. Their decisionwas upheld by the gallery who voted87-50 against the resolution.Noticeable in the voting was thefact that all parties were divided intheir opinions, with Radicals, Con¬servatives, and Liberals lining up onboth sides of the question.Prior to the discussion, an over¬flow crowd witnessed pictures of theMemorial Day strike in South Chi¬cago. The pictures were sponsored bythe Liberal party.Discuss New Planon Debate TourTeams Also Argue Meritsof National Labor Rela¬tions Board.The University and the NationalLabor Relations Board will be dis¬cussed by members of the DebateUnion in their forthcoming tourthrough Illinois and Missouri, begin¬ning tomorrow at Alton and endingSunday in Galesburg.Jack Conway and Elmer Woodswill take the affirmative on the ques¬tion, “Resolved; That the NationalLabor Relations Board should be em¬powered to enforce compulsory arbi¬tration in all industrial disputes,” to¬morrow at Shurtleff College in Al¬ton, and Friday at Rockhurst Collegein Kansas City, Missouri, before theOptimists’ Club. Sunday, at KnoxCollege in Galesburg, Illinois, theytake the negative on the same ques¬tion. Thursday they will support theproposition that the University ofChicago plan is a step toward highereducation at the University of Mis¬souri in Columbia.Woods and Conway have been in¬vited by all the schools with whichthey are debating, and will have theirexpenses paid by the schools.Douglas Ware and Albert Cooperwill take the negative, and MarshallHanley and Pierre Palmer the affir¬mative on the NLRB question at theUniversity of Iowa, in a tournamentlasting from Thursday through Sat¬urday night. The team is debatingeight rounds, and will also competein an extemporaneous oratorical con¬test on peace. Also participating arethe University of Minnesota, theUniversity of Texas, the Universityof Kansas, and other schools in thevicinity.Radio Station WBBM will carry adiscussion of the city manager planSaturday at 3:30, when John Speckand Erwin Salk debate with two rep¬resentatives from DePaul University.Select Hickman andMyers to Edit Capand Gown*s *'Echo”Cap and Gown officially announcesits decision to sponsor another issueof “Echo,” accurate emulator of“Time” magazine. The publicationwill be edited by C. Sharpless Hick¬man and Ed Myers with the co-opera¬tion of “Time” and “Fortune” maga¬zines.This brainchild made its first ap¬pearance two years ago with a stresson humor which w’as highly accept¬able. Last year it donned a moreserious garb which had a localizedappeal. Now its creators hope toachieve a happy medium by applica¬tion of the “Aristotelian mean.”“Echo” serves as a more completeand intensive supplement to the usualreview of the year given on the edi¬torial pages of Cap and Gown. All Campus PeaceConference WillOpen TomorrowPatterson, Laves, Grace,Cox, Speak at First Ses¬sion.Proponent of collective security atlast Friday’s Political Union debate,William Patterson, managing editorof the Midwest Daily Record, willspeak at the opening session of theAll-Campus Peace Conference, Wed¬nesday, 7:45, at Ida Noyes Theatre.Other speakers on the panel “Roadsto Peace,” are Walter Laves of theLeague of Nations Association, W. G.Grace of the Veterans of ForeignWars, and Garfield Cox, Robert LawProfessor of Finance at the Univer¬sity.Preceding the symposium is theelection of chairman of the Confer¬ence and the resolutions committee,which will bring in its report at thefinal session Friday afternoon. So farJohn Van de Water is the only persondefinitely known to be a candidate forthe chairmanship.Registration in Mandel CorridorDelegates to the Conference willregister in Mandel Corridor this af¬ternoon and all day tomorrow until6 o’clock. If the heads of their organi¬zations have not turned in lists of thedelegates, each must have his owncredentials. Individual delegates, whomay not be members of participatingorganizations, wdll be registered uponpresentation of fifteen signatures.The big day of the Conference isThursday, with seminars both in theafternoon and at night, and entertain¬ment starting the evening session.Ned Rosenheim is working on someskits, and the ASU Theatre Groupwill present a short one-act play.Also in the lighter mood are severalparties planned to follow each night’sseminars, but whose details the Ma¬roon was unable to get.The subject of Thursday afternoon’sseminars is “Factors Making for WarToday”. Quincy Wright will address ameeting of all the delegates at 3:30(Continued on page 4)Enforce Rules LimitingUse of James HenryBreasted Memorial Hall^lestating a policy which has beenin effect, although not strictly en¬forced since the Oriental Institutewas erected, John Wilson, director,announced yesterday that in the fu¬ture undergraduate extra-curricularactivities could not engage the use ofJames Henry Breasted Memorialhall.In the past student groups, amongthem the Campus Newsreel and theFilm Society, have held their pro¬ductions in the hall when other facili¬ties were not available. However, atthe time the building was erected. Dr.James Henry Breasted, after discuss¬ing the subject with University offi¬cials, felt it was advisable to restrictthe extracurricular use of the lecturehall to work hinging on, or in someway connected with, the Oriental In¬stitute. This decision necessarily re¬stricts the use of the lecture hall tograduate groups. Dr. Wilson ex¬plained “There has been no realchange in policy; our decision limit¬ing the use of the lecture hall rep¬resents a reemphasis of our originalpolicy.”New Theatre GroupCasts for Peace SkitsAs entertainment with an intellec¬tual emphasis, the ASU New TheatreGroup plans several short sketchesfor the All-Campus Peace Confer¬ence. Because of the immediacy ofthe conference, casting will takeplace tonight at 7:30 in Reynoldsclub A. These skits, according toVera Rony, executive secretary, willnot be difficult to polish, and sheurges students adept in the dramato attend the casting meeting.At the same time, selections willbe completed for the two mass chants,“Blessing of Old Houses,” and“Spain, 1938,” which comprise thebase of the group’s Mobile Unit.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1938PLATFORM1. Creation of a vigorous campvis community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened president. No, peace cannot be achieved short of the entirereorganization of society, and what prophet is blindenough to envision a reorganizaton complete and ade¬quate to all the needs of mankind?Arsenic —ANDThey Cry Peace, Peace.and there is no peace. Yes, and there willbe no peace in the w’orld until men find their completeself expression and self satisfaction in peacetime pur¬suits. And what prophet today is blind enough to fore¬see that time?There are a multitude; there are isolationists,pacifists, militarists, and those who believe in collectivesecurity, who see peace as the product of one or an¬other of these policies. But then a few years ago,there were people who thought treaties by which theplenipotentiaries of the high contracting parties re¬nounced war as an instrument of national policy wouldbring peace And not so much more than a hundredyears ago there were people in the world who thoughtthat all that was necessary for peace, permanent peace,peace eternal and peace temporal, was a league of thesovereigns of Europe in Christian brotherhood.Their futility is obvious now. Let us examine thefutility of our contemporary blind prophets.Isolationists think that by binding oneself with thebonds of cash-and-carry regulations and neutralitylaws, the whole generously larded down with piousresolutions—that domestic peace can be assured. Theyforget that in case of a general war such measureswould mean the deliberate substitution of a profounddepression for a war boom, something no governmentcould ever do and retain power.Pacifists think—nay, feel—that if enough peoplerefuse to co-operate in a war that there will be nowar. “The prisons would not hold us all,” say they.But the unlimited capacity of the grave they forget.Pacifism, if it were possible, would merely add civil toforeign war. And it is not possible. Men cannot with¬stand the beat of the drums, the fever of wartime, therelease of giving up the attempt to live one’s own life,the attraction of complete oneness of mind and body inthe doubt-engrossing effort of war.Militarists likewise feel, but they feel that pre¬paredness will prevent war through fear on the partof the weaker powers. The madness of an armamentrace by which men toil to store metal in warehouses,metal which seldom is used before outmoded and melteddown to be reshaped into more murderous weapons, re¬sults. This appalling waste would be justified if itbrought peace, but it brings only the temptation to usepower when any significant margin of power exists be¬tween two nations. For nations are moral only whenweak. (Not for nothing did Grotius, the father ofinternational law, live in decadent Holland.) So whenthe balance of power shifts, as it does inevitably witha shifting economic and social structure, wars markthe changes.This fact that nations are not moral, that there isno rule but the rule of strength between the in-groupsthat constitute nations, disposes of the believers in col¬lective security also. For though the weak band to¬gether against the strong, their bonds are always weak.The crumbs from the strong man’s table will alwayskeep such a coalition ineffective—witness Britain’s re¬cent defection—until the strong has absorbed as muchforeign territory as his strength can control, and mo¬mentary stability is achieved. ■APPLESAUCEBy NED ROSENHEIMLIGHTS OUTLilian Schoen, as a columnist, is no more. Bothsweetness and light have fled, leaving behind nothingsave memories and a strong taste of ashes in themouths of Miss Schoen’s erstwhile colleagues. Withwhat eager anticipation did we pick up last Friday’sMaroon to see the parting words of an honored com¬panion, and with what suddenness did our face fallwhen w’e read what Lilian had to say. It was almostas though the gentle natives of the island, gatheredabout the harbor to bid farewell to a dear friend, fes¬tooning the parting ship with garlands and singing“Aloha Oe,” had suddenly received a large pail of tepidwater, full in the face, from the hands of the departingguest.CLEVERWe neither care for nor are interested in the ac¬tivities of an upstart group who call themselvesL’Amour, but it seems necessary to mention the allegedrushing function which they held on Sunday afternoon.If their invitations spoke the truth, Norman Macleanlectured on “Why L’Amour?” and was heckled thewhile by two fellow faculty members. Whether Mr.Maclean spoke or not, we have still not found the an¬swer to the question, “Why L’Amour?”. We wishsomeone would tell us so that we could write aboutother things in this column.RETURNIn contrast to the embittered departure of MissSchoen and the esoteric gambolings of the Maroon’slittle group of Vestals, was the brief, but highly wel¬come visit of Cody Pfanstiehl. Cody, who has beenhibernating in Highland Park since his abrupt de¬parture from the University is, we are pleased to re¬port, the same as ever. He has been spending histime, engaged in a period of reading and meditation,with intervals on Sunday nights, when he plays theviolin with a local chamber music group.To our way of thinking, Cody was pretty close toan ideal columnist. This makes him, according to theauthoritative words of Miss Schoen, the owner of a“flexible temperament, a superficial wit, and a laxconscience.” Somehow or other, it seems a bit difficultto think of Cody in these terms, but perhaps all these >evils were lurking behind an exterior which to most of jus, lacking Schoen’s great perspicacity, seemed asserene, as honest, and as genuinely clever as any wehave ever known.OPERASomewhat belatedly, we report on the Betas’ latestcoup. The same week they gave the tea-cum-lecturefor Walter Lippmann; they also entertained the Salz¬burg Opera Company. The tenor, in particular, wasmost friendly, apparently captivated by the charms ofMiss Barbara Crane, to whom, we gather, he was re¬markably attentive. The Betas, full of ritual, in-viegled the musicians to join them in a little ceremony,! the essence of which seemed to have been the lightingI of two cathedral candles before a bust of Mozart.Letters to theEditorjEditor,The Daily Maroon:At the Political Union meeting onFriday the representative of the So¬cialist Party said in effect, that col¬lective security wouldn’t work becausewe are a bad country and our gov¬ernment couldn’t be trusted to co¬operate full-heartedly in united ac¬tion that would really be for peace,while Tucker Dean, speaking for theisolationist bloc in the Liberal partytried to prove in an emotional if notreasonable manner, that our countrywas a good country and the othersbad, so that we can’t trust them tofaithfullly assist in a collective se¬curity program. I think that both theargument are based on fallacious as¬sumptions of national virtue and ashort-sighted view of what is in stallfor the democratic countries remain¬ing, if the dictatorships make furthergains.But—when I asked Mr. Pattersonabout the practicability of effectingcollective security in time to checkthe world war which, starting on thesmaller nations and progressing to :larger and still larger ones, has al¬ready been begun by the fascist coun¬tries, he could supply no adequateanswer.In view of the advance of the fas¬cist countries already, as well as thesell-out of collective security by adesperate Great Britain, and takinginto account, too, the difficulties inchanging the present attitude of the people and the government, I findit difficult to stretch my imaginationsufficiently to visualize internationalcooperation preventing the spread ofthe present disputes into a world war.A fatalistic viewpoint is painful,especially when emotionally satisfy¬ing panaceas are still available, butI think that objectivity demands it.Collective security would be a goodthing, isolation comparatively poor,but we will have isolation. Therefore,since as Van de Water pointed out,we are all agreed on the ultimateideal of peace, I propose what I thinkapproximates a golden mean whichall can support.First: That we continue the strug¬gle for collective security. It can dono harm to try and economic boy¬cotts may help to weaken the strengthof the aggressors, and at least preventPanays from being sunk by shellsmade in Wilmington, Delaware.Second: Realizing that we will haveisolation, we should prepare for aseffective an isolation as is attainableby:a-Stimulating the will for peacethrough encouraging the “won’t fighton foreign soil” movement.b-Stimulating pan- Americanismand other possible alliances that wouldabet our economic independence.c-Pointing out that Americans in¬vest in foreign countries at their ownrisk.d-Continuing an education policyall the time to stress that the costs ofpeace are great, but not as great asthose of war.The minimum possible benefits ofthis program are that we will keepout of the war until nearer the end.I have been happy in observing theRoosevelt foreign policy to see reasonfor believing that this administration |is in complete agreement with everypoint of the program I have outlined.Daniel Glaser.Vol 38 MARCH 1. 1938 No. 75®I|e ^atlg ^ariuntFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPBE88The Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicairo,published morninKs except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday durinic the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters 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.RSeSSSSNTtD FOR NATIONAL AOVSRTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.ColUxe l‘uk>ish«rs keprtuntativt420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.Chicago • Boston - Los Anciles ■ San FranciscoBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILL Editor-in-Chief iCHARLES E. HOY Business Manager |ELROY D GOLDING Managing Editor 1EDWARD C. FRITZ Associate Editor 'BETTY 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: Adele RoseAssistant: Bette Hurwich Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSSupervisors and Social Service.Room A, Ida Noyes Hall, at 7:30.Dames Chorus. YWCA Room, IdaNoyes Hall, from 10 to 11.Interclub. Alumnae Room, IdaNoyes Hall, from 12 to 1.YWCA Cabinet. Room \ Ida NoyesHall from 12 to 1.Business School lunchron. SouthReception Room, Ida Noyes hall,from 12 to 1.YWC.V Photography. Room B, IdaNoyes Hall, from 12 to 1.W.\A Meeting. WAA Room, IdaNoyes Hall, from 12 to 1:30..\SU Workshop. WAA Room, IdaNoyes Hall, from 2:30 to 5..\choth. YWC.\ Room, Ida NoyesHall, from 3:30 to 6.Italian Class. Theatre, Ida Noyes,from 3:30 to fi.YWC.V Religious Group. AlumnaeRoom, Ida Noyes Hall, from 4:30 to6..4SU Executive Committee. Room Room, Ida Noyes Hall, from 6:30 to9.YWCA Hospital Group. YWCARoom, Ida Noyes Hall, from 12 to 1.ASU Dance Group. Theatre, IdaNoyes Hall, from 7 to 10.Dames Club Art Group. WA.\Room, Ida Noyes Hall, from 7 to 10.WPA Class. Room C, Ida NoyesHall, from 7 to 10.Chi Rho Sigma Alumnae. AlumnaeRoom, Ida Noyes Hall, from 7:30 to10.SSA Club. Library, Ida Noyes Hall,from 8 to 10.Senior Cla.ss Council. Social Science107 at 3:30.LECTURES“Lancelot, the Court Lover.” Wil¬liam A. Nitze, department of RomanceLanguages. Art Institute, 6:45 to7:45.Foreign Wars. Norman Thomas andRobert Morse Lovett. InternationalHouse at 8:15.MISCELLANEOUSSurgery Seminar. “Functional Testsof the Reticulo-Endothelial Systems.”Dr. H. L. Harrington and Dr. CharlesHuggins. Surgery 437, at 8.Christian Science OrganizationMeeting. Hilton Chapel Study Roomat 7:.30.B, Ida Noyes Hall, from 6:30 to 8:30..\SU Theatre Group. Private DiningLEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYTAKE PRIVATE LESSONSTERESA DOLAN154S E. 63RD ST.HYDE PARK 3080HOURS; 10 A.M. to 10 P. M.HERE'S 50 c FORYOU !You'll Son^e it by SubscribingNOW TO THE 1938CAP AND GOWNSubscription rates ore:$4.00 THIS QUARTER$4.50 SPRING QUARTER(S2 down is all you need to pay now)SUBSCRIBE TODAY ATTHE INFORMATION DESKTHE CAP & GOWN OFOCEIN LEXINGTON HALL GENUINE FILTERS PACKED ONLYIN THIS RED AND BLACK BOXMADE MEDICOWORLD’SSMOOTHEST SMOKEPIITIR-COOLKDMEDICOsoMnwiM woNouno.fiOCS ON WSIOC:It has the only Pat'ilfiller romhiningmoisture-proof C.cl-lophaneexterioranil66 Baffle ahsorhentmesh Bcreeninterior.resulting in great-eAt acientific pi(>esmoking inven¬tion ever known.Prevents tonguebite, raw month,wet heel, badodor, frequentexpectoration.No breakingin. Improvesthe taste andaroma ofanytohaeco.CAMPUS BOWLINGHEADQUARTERSCROCOMBE'SBOWLING ALLEYS6225 Cottage Grove Ave.STUDENT RATES—15 Cents Per GameDoily. Except Sun., up to 6 P. M.Dr. Wm. E. DoddEX-AMBASSADOR TO GERMANYWill Speak on'The World Outlook for Democracy"WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2 AT 8:15 P.M.AT SINAI TEMPLE4600 SOUTH PARKWAYALL SEATS RESERVED — Phone KENwood 5826TICKETS $1.50 - $1.00 ■ 75cSTART BEATING THE HIGH COST OF UVINGEAT A WHOLESOME, COMPLETEBREAKFAST 20c or 25cLUNCH 30cEIGHT COURSE DINNER 50c"MIDNIGHT SPECIAL" AFTER THAT SHOWIN A DELIGHTFUL ATMOSPHERETHE JdC RESTAURANT1527 East 55th Street- Which Never Closes -' ''.VTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1938 Page Threedaily maroon sportsTipoff Nine Schools Compete in Annual Women’sPlay Day; University Registers Four Teams• « *By SEYMOUR MILLERTwo weeks ago we made some(liiicisms about the coachinj? of thebasketball team and offered somesuL-trestions. As a result the teambroke their three year losing streakand won two straight games. Thiswas highly gratifying to us.However, all the credit was not dueto us. Having thrown off the jittersthat plagued them all season, theplayers showed what has been sus-pi cted of them by most of the grand¬stand coaches—that they have theability to play good basketball. Theirloss to Minnesota was somewhat ofa disappointment but hardly a sur¬prise. inasmuch as the Gophers arein third place. .And as for la.st night’seanie—brr!♦Until five years ago some form ofregular exercise was required of ev¬ery freshman and sophomore. Manystudents, having no interest in anyparticular sport, went to calisthenicsclasses several times a week, duti¬fully swung their arms and kickedtheir legs in time to the instructor’s“oiie-two, one-two”, and then swarmeddown to the inadequate facilities ofthe shower-rooms, happy in thethought that they would soon be asstrong as Popeye and as agile asTarzan.At that time there were usually■ieveral classes a day, numbering attimes up to two or three hundred>tudents. Now. however, there is oneclass in calisthenics, the daily number.)f students in it ranging from two toeight.However, it should not be thoughtthat all athletic participation has de¬clined to that extent. While not asmany College students exercise asformerly, the .Athletic department’sbroadened program has appealed tomany other classes of students who\veri“ not reached before.One of the best indications of theamount of participation in athleticsIS the number of towels launderedyearly, a number which reaches sur¬prisingly large proportions. Last year1()."),000 towels (of a more or lessragged nature) were given out, whichis actually more than in some of theyears when gym was compulsory.This year the indications are that thetotal will be slightly more.The following figures giving thenumber of students in each division ofthe University who used Bartlett gymor took some form of athletic instruc¬tion during the autumn (juarter, werecompiled by the Athletic department.The second column indicates the per¬centages of students in each division.College 589 6UTDivision, undg 154 25'/Graduate 202 30%Business 103 43%Law 104 40%>Medicine 72 30%SSA 26 18'fDivinity 26 24'/Faculty, alumni andmiscellaneous 280 Twenty-five crack intramural teamsfrom the Middle West colleges anduniversities meet Saturday in the an¬nual Play Day scheduled for IdaNoyes hall. Nine schools includingthe University will enter over twohundred women in the day-long tour-I nament.Teams from Wisconsin, Northwest¬ern, Purdue, Michigan State, BattleCreek, Rockford, University of Iowa' and Mundelein are registere<l forI play in the 35 continuous games onI the card. Each school plans to enterI from one to four teams. The Uni¬versity registered four: Delta Sigma,330's, Alumnae and Mortar Board,victors in the Intramural tournament.Play Day this year is under thedirectorship of Burns, assisted by acommittee of students, E 1 e a n o r' Coambs, Gertrude Polcar, Margaret Ewald, Carolyn Soutter, PatriciaWeeks, and Jane Woodruff.Each team in the event will playthree games, as far as possible withteams of their own choice. Accord¬ing to the tentative schedule, Chica¬go teams will oppose the following:330’s against Rockford, MichiganState and Wisconsin; Delta Sigmaagainst Mundelein, Battle Creek andWisconson; Mortar Board againstBattle Creek, Purdue, and Wiscon¬sin; and Alumnae against Iowa, Pur¬due and Mundelein. Four games willbe in play at once; two in the IdaNoyes gym and two in the high schoolgym.A special luncheon will be servedat 12:30 in the sun parlor for allparticipants and officials. All of thefacilities of the Hall will be openthroughout the day.Weekend Results1556Instruction in classes or in teampractice was given to 796 men, ofwhom 470 came out regularly enoughto receive a grade. If you can stand Iowa Defeats Track SquadUnbeaten in a dual meet since1932, the Iowa track squad barelynosed out the Maroons in the Field-house Saturday by a 46-40 score. TheHawkeyes clinched the victory whenthey copped the mile relay. Two ofthe Maroon.s—Halcrow and Webster—were handicapped by colds.First places in the meet were even¬ly divided, with the Chicagoans scor¬ing a slam in the shot put. The bestdi.stance was turned in by Hamitywhen he heaved the iron ball 43 feetfour inches. Letts was .second, andGoodstein third.The other Chicago scoring was asfollows: McElroy, third in the mile;Davenport, first in the 60 yard dash,time :06.4; Halcrow, third in the 440;Kobak, third in the 70 yard high hur¬dles; Linden, second in two-mile run;Webster, fir.st in the 880, time 1:57.9;Cassels, first in pole vault, height, 12feet 4 inches; Sergei, second in polevault; Gordon, first in high jump,height, 5 feet 10 inches; W’arner andKobak, tied with Roberts and I>ambof Iowa, for second in the high jump.Capers I^se to MinnesotaTo the strong Minne.sota squad theMaroon cagers lo.st their last homegame of the season 38-27 Saturdaynight. .The Maroons played a fight¬ing game of basketball and actuallyoutscored the Gophers from the field,13 baskets to 12, but scored oncefrom the free throw line while theNorthmen dropped in 14 con.secutivepenalty points.Lounsbury and Eggemeyer led theChicago attack with three bucketseach. Lounsbury’s total would havebeen higher had he not missed all hisfive free throws. Mullins, Cassels,and Rossin each scored twice fromthe field, and Captain Peterson putin one. Matmen Win One, Lose TwoThe wrestling team is finally backon the campus. For the past severalweeks the squad has been travelingabout the Mid-west encountering op¬posing tussle teams. The late.st tripresulted in one win and two losses.The team beat Grinnell 2214-9^2, Sat¬urday, and lost to Iowa State 24-914,Friday, and to Cornell 23-3, Satur¬day evening.On the traveling squad were Tink¬er, 118 pounds, Hughes, 126, VVTlliamThomas and Gil Finwall, 135, Butlerand Bob Finwall 145, Colin Thomasand Jim Bell, 155, Lehnhardt, 165,and Valorz, at 175.Bob Finwall took honors for theout.standing performance of the week¬end. He increased his blue ribbonrating of .seven wins by tw’o wins andone draw. The draw bout occurredSaturday evening at Cornell whenBob met Dale Brand, former U. S.Olympic team member. Ed Valorzmanaged two wins and one draw also.Gil Finwall, third in line for honors,scored two draws and one loss by de¬cision for a week-end of efforts. Young Scores 29 Points asBoilermakers Crush MaroonSquad, 64-33; Gymnasts LoseA numble trio of tumblers carrieda losing Illinois team to victory overthe Maroons in the final event of agymnastics meet in Bartlett lastnight. Final score was 565-555.Beyer of Chicago was high pointman with 202 points. He took firstin the horse and the parallel bars,second in the horizontal bar, andtied for third in the rings, failing toplace in tumbling.Giallonbardo, the mini’s all-aroundperformer took second with 15914,closely followed by Wetherall of theMaroons with 154 ^4. Giallonbardotook first in tumbling, second on theparallel bars, third on the horse, andwon the horizontal bar competition,tied for first in the rings. Wetheralltied for first on the rings, took secondon the horse and third on the parallelbars.With Chicago leading by sevenpoints at the end of four events, Il¬linois swept the first three places intumbling to pick up 17 points andthe match.bett won two and lost one, Chapmanwon two and lost one, Tingley didthe same.Against Wright the B team’sGreenberg won three bouts at foil;McDonald, McClintock, and Beckereach lost two. At sabre Rosenfeldand Janes each won one, lost one.Polacheck at epee won two.Icemen Outskate IlliniSweeping the ice of Illini hockey-men the Maroon “unofficial” hockeyteam turned in a brilliant perform¬ance to win 3-1. Goals w'ere made byMclvor and Herschel. Clicking teamwork and good goal defense by Fen¬der featured the game said CoachDaniel Hoffer. Purdue tightened its grip on theConference lead last night at the ex¬pense of a bewildered Maroon bas¬ketball squad. Chicago lost 64-33 inthe most one sided game of the sea¬son.Jewell Young, the Boilermakers’star, not satisfied with the three yearBig Ten scoring record he hung uplast week, put on a one man show forthe Purdue fans, making 29 points.This set a new Conference seasonrecord of 174 points, breaking Young’sown record of 172, and ties the scor¬ing record for one game. Purdue stillhas another game to play.Lounsbury was high point man forthe Maroons, sinking six baskets andone free throw, and bringing his totalto 97 points in 11 games.The game was marked by wildplaying, 25 personals being calledagainst Chicago and 11 against Pur¬due. The crowd booed in annoyanceat the frequent whistle tooting. Ros¬sin, Mullins, Eggemeyer and Peter¬sen of the Maroons all went out onfouls.The Boilermakers scored the firstbasket and from then on had thingstheir own way. Score at the half¬time was 29-9.The game was the ninth defeat forChicago, and the ninth victory forPurdue.CLASSIFIED ADSLOST—Wristwatch; silver, name "Shirley”on back. Lost in or near Ida Noyes.Reward and no questions asked. Returnto Shirley Adams, Foster Hall.LOST: Small tan coin purse, in or betweenIda Noyes and Foster. Reward. No ques¬tions asked. Mary Hammel, Foster Hall.rKrg!8ME!llM;KKKIgM'l;iPENitFencers Trounce IllinoisBy the score of 21-6 the Maroonfencers handed the Illini the biggestconference defeat of the season inbouts fought Saturday afternoon inBartlett gymnasium. The Maroonshad been gunning for the Illini toavenge a defeat in the ’36-’37 season.Fencing against Wright Junior Col¬lege the Maroon B squad won 9-8.At foil in the Illini meet Strausswon three bouts, George won three,Goldberg won two and lost one. Atsabre Fritz cleaned up three bouts,Gustafson did the same, Butler wonone, lost two. Fighting at epee Cor- The pen tested Ink for every make ofFountain Pen. Created by Sanford'sUse PENit Blue Black—it will notsmudge.'Oim* more statistics, you will findthe relative popularity of participa¬tion in the various sports, in the fol¬lowing table: IF YOU ENJOY GOOD FOOD ...THE BAGDAD CAFE-1145 East 55lh Slreet-INVITES YOU TO TRY OURArabian and American CookingDINNERS 30c - 35c - 40cLUNCHEONS 25c - 30cENJOY YOUR BULL SESSIONS WITH A SECOND CUP OF COFFEEFREE 2 oz. — 15c4 oz. — 25 c.'V/VVWV\rtWWVVWWVVWVWWUWWWWWmWVWVWWVWSwimming and water polo . .. .. 134Football . . 94 !Boxing, wrestling and self- 1defense . . 94rrack and field .. 75Basketball .. 59Fencing .. 53 jGymnastics .. 50Tennis . . 33 ,FROLIC THEATRE55th and Ellis AvenueTUESDAY. MARCH 1ROBERT YOUNG JAMES STEWART"NAVY BLUE & GOLD"PLUS — JANE WITHERS"FORTY-FIVE FATHERS"WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2nd""52nd STREET " and "GIRL WITHIDEAS' STUDENTS!!Save Vz of Your Laundry Bill FREE—With each four ounce bottle a PENitminiature that you can carry to classes.Especially good at examination time. Also achamois skin pen wiper.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. U. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE12c per lb.SHIRTS DELUXE HAND FINISHED, STAftCHED, MENDED. AND BUT-TONS REPLACED. AT 12c ADDITIONAL.-HANDKERCHIEFS IRONED AT Ic EACH ADDITIONAL WHEN INCLUDED- Lexington Theatre1162 E. 63rd St.Student Economy BundleMetropole LaundryWESLEY N. KARLSON, Prop.1219-21 EAST 55th STREETPHONE HYDE PARK 3190FREE PICK UP and DELIVERY TUES. MARCH 1MICKEY ROONEY JUDY GARLANDSOPHIE TUCKER' THOROUGHBREDS DON'T CRY"Plus—Lionel Barrymore James StewartRobert Young"NAVY BLUE & GOLD"WEDS. MARCH 2nd"52nd STREET " and "FIRST LADY" Kimbark Theatre6240 KIMBARK AVENUECHICAGO. ILLINOISFIRST SOUTH SIDE SHOWINGTUES. - WED. MARCH 1 & 2"NON STOP NEW YORK-ANNA LEE'PLUSHUGH HERBERT"THAT MAN'S HERE AGAIN" ‘i.i4II■■'jPage Four5th RowCenter* ♦ ♦By GORDON TIGEROf all the Shakespearian perform¬ances so vigorously heralded in re¬cent times, by far the most dramat¬ically thrilling and praiseworthy yetseen in Chicago is Maurice Evans’production of the infrequently per¬formed chronicle play, “Richard II,now on view at the Grand OperaHouse.This production alone makes no at¬tempt to conceal the soul of thedrama under any form of specialpleading, as the exploitation of apopular star or the use of any novelsetting or costume, but in purelytraditional lines, with an extraordi¬nary richness of colorful detail, strikesthe Shakespearian mood and doesbrilliant justice to the Bard’s unsur¬passed characters.Evans’ Richard InspiresMr. Evans’ Richard, as is to be ex¬pected, sets an inspiring example forthe essential psychological veracityof most of the other portrayals. Hisacting is not only textually andpsychologically sound, but remark¬ably communicative and often sub¬lime in its regard for Shakespeare’spoetry.In the early scenes, Evans, by thealmost effeminate beauty of his per¬son and bearing, the grace of his ges¬tures, and the sensitive refinement ofhis voice, expresses the essentialcharm of Richard, the exquisite dilet¬tante, and at the same time conveys ioften by a mere raised eyebrow oran especially felicitous posture, thecruel, tyrannical hauteur of Richard,the egotistical and imaginative ex¬hibitionist.Triumphs in SurrenderBut the greatest triumphs of theportrayal come in the scene of Rich¬ard’s enforced return from h’eland tofind his kingdom slipping into thestrong hands of the usurper, Boling-broke, and in the intense scene ofRichard’s abject surrender to his rivalat Flint Castle.Here Richard’s wretched vacilla¬tion between the most high-flung hopeand abject despair, and the poeticflights of imagination with which herevels in the emotional aspects of hismisfortune, are compassed with anunforgettable force, hardly equalledeven in the later official abdicationscene.All of the portrayals are clearlycalculated to present Shakespeare asliving drama, not as so much bom¬bastic fustian, yet there is none ofthe insipid attempt at a colloquialChicago Wins IllinoisMoot Court TourneyWith a second win in the IllinoisState Bar Association Moot Courttournaments chalked up, the Univer¬sity barristers have only to win the’39 competitions to become perma¬nent possessors of the cup-trophy.Robert W. Macdonald and OwenFairweather, victorious Universityteam, downed the Loyola squad in adecision won before judges of theUnited States Circuit Court of Ap¬peals in the competition finals heldSaturday, February 26, in the OldPostoffice at Jackson and Clark.Judges W. A. Sparks, Y. L. Major,and T. L. Treavor were on the benchto hear the arguments of the twoteams. The huge silver cup, which hasbeen held by the University Lawschool since Herbert Megan and Mac¬donald won it in 1937 against DePaul,is engraved with the names ofthe winners, and when w'on threetimes in succession by a school be¬comes the possession of that school.READER'S CAMPUSDRUG STORE1001 East 61st St.The Finest Pipe & TobaccoCenter on the CampusComplete Stock of DomesticImported TobaccosWE SERVICE YOUR PIPE FREE THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1938Bilgray Reads Paper atPoetry Cmh Meetingreading of the lines with which somany modern actors approach theplays. Instead, the speech of Mr.Evans and his colleagues is markedby a sincere reverence for the formalbeauties of the lines of blank v rseand the frequent rhymed couple cs.A large part of the success of thepresentation as a whole is accomp¬lished through the extremely skillfulstaging. The sets are in the finest ofrecent Shakespearian staging tradi¬tion, and, except for the unwieldlyFlint Castle setting, create the illu¬sion of reality, as well as moods andscenes of surpassing beauty. Andmost helpful is the clever manipula¬tion of the stage to achieve an almostElizabethan rapidity in the pace ofthe many scenes.Shakespearian Tradition StrongAll the actors in “Richard IF’ areso imbued with a correct tradition ofShakespearian acting and are so well-trained and directed that the level ofperformance is amazingly high. Ex¬cellent portrayals are given by LeeBaker as John of Gaunt, by EleanorPhelps as Richard’s Queen, and byFrederic Worlock as Bolingbroke.The only disturbing note was LionelHogarth’s interpretation of the Dukeof York as a doddering, senile oldbusybody in the Polonius manner, aliberty for which there is no textualjustification. Leppard DraftsMap Series ofSeaboard CitiesOut of residence for the Winterquarter, Henry M. Leppard, assistantprofessor of Geography, is applyingknowledge gleaned from six quartersresearch abroad to the drafting of aseries of maps on seaboard urbanagglomei’ations of Western Europe.Chief agglomerations dealt with inthe maps will be those cities clusteredabout the estuaries of such rivers asthe Seine, Elbe, and Thames, whichempty into the North Sea. Leppard’saim is to make a comparative study Iin regard to their function on thezone of contact between the mostdensely populated parts of Europeand the seas which are the principalcenters of world shipping.Done under a grant from the So¬cial Science Research Committee, themaps will vary in size, some being 60inches long.During 1937 Leppard worked aseditor of Goode’s Series of BaseMaps, which were founded and editedby Goode before his death five yearsago and are published by the Uni¬versity Press. Ruth Bilgray, a graduate studentof the University’s committee on lit¬erature, will read a paper on “ThePeace -(Continued from page 1)in Ida Noyes, after which the Con¬ference will split into four parallelseminars on the same topic, eachrefereed by a faculty member and ledby four students. Faculty men in theafternoon session are Eustace Hay¬den, Robert Giffen, M. Hazard, andHerbert Goldhammer.Evening seminars on “What Foi'-eign Policy Should the United StatesHave?’’ begin at 8:45, after the en¬tertainment. Faculty referees at thattime are Ralph Gerard, GerhardtMeyer; Charles Kerby-Miller, and M.Hazard. Student leaders, who willserve through both afternoon andnight, are John Van de Water, WilliamCooper, Abraham Goldstein, PaulHenkle, Charles Crane, Richard Lind-heim, Adena Joy, Ralph Rosen, JosephRosenstein, John Marks, Henry Wil¬liams, William McNeill, .Audrey Neff,Norman Brown, Purnell Benson, andRichard Anderson. 19th Century Renaissance of HebrewPoetry” at an open meeting of theTo complete the program, Bilgraywill present selections from theTranslations of Chaiim NachmanBialik, Tchernikovsky, Schneeown, andother modern Hebrew poets which isthe field in which she is preparingfor her doctorate. *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 TRIAL1 Enjoy the Post tonight’‘You youngsters’ll have to fightblizzards, Indians, drought, mebbe starvationHIS BASEBAUS10UCHISTswwai..0«aieje4/ajufefIntroducing “Muscles” Medwick (ex-“ Ducky Wucky”), the fightingest fighterin the Cardinals’ Gashouse Gang. TheNational League’s most valuable playerand leading hitter is apt to fight anybody,friend or foe. Why? How did he quieteven Dizzy Dean? Here’s a story for theHot Stove Leaguers.Lord Medwick, of Carteretby J. ROY STOCKTON**Cowboy, don*tget roped by thatDUDE-RANCH GIRL!''The boys in the bunkhouse shook theirheads when Buck Langdon fell for a wealthyEastern girl. Maybe Eleanor was different—but suppose it turned out she just wentfor the big hat, and the spurs, and thescenery? What then? Buck knew a way tofind out, and he staked everything on it.A short story. Country Boy. Young DAVID BEATON joined the rush whenthe thrilling cry of “ Free land I ’ ’ lured homesteaderswwtward. There lay opportunity, and adventure. Hisbride, Mary, felt the excitement of it. She trembledwhen she heard about the perilous land ahead of them—the tough, lonely land that might break them beforethey could break it... Turn to your Post today andbegin “Free Land,” a new full-length novel of pioneerlife in the Dakotas.Beginning a New Novel of Adventuroush OLIVER LA FAROEALSO . .What’s happening to America’scrusade for peace? Stanley High tells you inPeace, Inc.... Guy Gilpatric describes abattle, octopus vs. octopus, and CaretGarrett reports on just what caused the “re¬cession.” Plus the second installment of ThoGay Banditti; stories, articles, cartoons. Pioneer Days byROSEWILDERLANETHE SATUI(pAY EVENING POST