Today's HeadlinesName author of Blackfriars’ book,page 1.U niversity lends Bir Bertha to Tos¬canini, page 1.Orchestra. Singers, Choirs give jointconcert, page 1.Kesiilts of intramural fraternity bas-kelball tourney, page 4.Seniors plan I’rom^ page 1.Peace ConferenceInaugurates FourWay Plan TonightDiscuss Pacifism, Isola¬tion, Collective Security,Fascism. tlDbe Bailp iUlaroonVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1938 Price Five CentsBandas Pride, Big Bertha, VisitsNew York at Toscanini’s RequestOrchestra, Singers,Choir Give ConcertWorking on a four-way plan, thefourth annual All-Campus Peace Con¬ference will try to present all pointsof view more thoroughly than any|)revious Conference. The divisions,which are carried out on the openingnight and in the Thursday seminars,are pacifism, isolation-neutrality, col¬lective security for law, and collectivesecurity against fascism.The theme of the Conference, theformulation of an American peacepolicy, will be presented tonight atat Ida Noyes by four speakers,Garfield Cox, W, G. Grace, WalterLaves, and William Patterson, advo¬cating the four methods above. Fur¬ther, after Quincy Wright discussesbriefly, “Factors Making for WarToday,” at 3:30 tomorrow-, parallelseminars on the same topic with stu-<lent leaders representing each ofthese o|)inions will meet.Seminars TomorrowTomorrow night, .seminars on“What F^oreign Policy Should theUnited States Flave?” will continuethe four-way plan. Student discus¬sion will take jilace in the seminarsand at the final resolutions sessionF’riday. Non-delegates are invited tojattend any of the sessions of theConference. Delegates are requestedto register in Mandel Corridor by 6tonight. The University Symphony Orches¬tra, the University Singers and thetwo University Choirs will join forcesin pre.senting a combined concert Fri¬day, March 11, at 8:30 in Mandelhall. Tickets, priced at 50 cents and30 cents, are now- on sale at the De¬partment of Music and at the Infor¬mation Desk in the Press Building.Under the leadership of Carl Brick-en, conductor of the University Sym¬phony Orchestra, and Mack Evans,director of the vocalists, the com¬bined groups will present a variedprogram. The orchestra will openthe concert with Beethoven’s greatSymphony No. 7, and then will bejoined by the choirs and the singersin the “Crucifixus” from the Bach BMinor Mass and a chorale by thesame composer, Jesu, Joy of Man’sDesiring.Concluding the program, the fourorganizations w-ill present in concertform the overture and the entire ActIII of Richard Wagner’s familiaropera, “Die Meistersinger.”Manitoba DoctorsTour UniversityMedical ClinicsKKVISKI) PROGRAM OF THECONFERENCEWednesday, Ida Noyes Theatre,7:4.")- All delegates meet for electionof chairman and re.solutions commit¬tee. Panel discussion on “Roads toPeace;” Garfield Cox, pacifism, Rob¬ert Law Professor of F’inance in theBusiness School; W. G. Grace, neu¬trality, Veterans of Foreign Wars;Walter Laves, collective security.League of Nations Association; andWilliam Patterson, collective security,.Midwest Daily Record.Thursday, Ida Noyes Theatre, 3:.30—All delegates meet to hear QuincyWright, professor of InternationalRelations, on “Factors Making forWar Tcxlay,” after which the Con¬ference breaks up into four parallelseminars on the same subject. Fac¬ulty and student leaders of the semi¬nars follow*: A. Eu.stace Haydon andJohn Van de Water, W’illiam Cooper,Abraham Goldstein, Paul Henkle,first seminar; Robert Giffen and(Continued on page 3) Billings hospital has been the sceneof unusual activity ‘for the last two-and-a-half days. The Medical Clinichas been entertaining 20 doctors fromthe faculty of Medicine at the Uni¬versity of Manitoba in Winnipeg. Thevisit of the Canadian doctors is a tri¬bute to the Billings clinic faculty;they are investigating the unique Uni¬versity system of full-time facultyservice with regular pay for thefaculty doctors.Introduced at DinnerThe visit opened otlicially Mondayevening with a dinner for 00 in theQuadrangles club at which Dr. A. C.Bachmeyer, head of the Chicago Uni-versit.v Clinic introduced the Manitobadelegation. Since that time, the visi¬tors have been shown the “insideworkings” of the Clinic by men intheir respective departments.The visitors, most of whom are al¬so on the statf of the Winnipeg Gen¬eral Hospital, repre.sent the depart¬ments of Medicine, Surgery, Path¬ology, Anatomy, Pediatrics, Obstet¬rics, Otolaryngology (the study of earnose, and throat diseases) and Opath-almology (ocular study). They areheaded by the Dean of the .school. Dr.A. T. Mathers.Announce Examination Schedule for SpringQuarter Comprehensives; Register by April 15The schedule of May and June ex¬aminations for the Bachelor’s Degreeand the College Certificate, for whichstudents must register no later thanApril 15, is as follows.May 2 Language examinations forhigher degreesIn the Division of the Hu¬manitiesIn the Division of the Physi¬cal SciencesIn the Professional Schools.May 14 Music 101-102-103May 1(5 Latin 101-102-103; 104-105-106; 107-108-109May 16 Examinations for the Bach¬elor’s Degree in the School ofSocial Service Administra¬tionMay 16, 17 Examination for theBachelor’s Degree in the So¬cial Sciences; Departmental.Examination for the Bach¬elor’s degree in the Biologi¬cal SciencesMay 16, 17, 18 Examination II —Methods and Problems ofManagement in the Schoolof BusinessMay 16, 18 Examination for theBachelor’s degree in the Di¬vinity School.May 16, 18, 20 Examination for theBachelor’s degree in the Hu¬manitiesMay 16-21 Examination for the Bach¬elor’s degree in the Physical. Sciences 17 Italian 101-102-103; Greek101-102- 10318 Geology 101-102-10319 Art 101- 102-10320 Spanish 101-102-103; 104-105-10621 Physics 105-106-10723 English Qualifying24 Geography 101-102-10325 Philosophy 101-102-10326 German 101-102-103; 104-105-10627 French 101-102-103; 104-105-10628 Mathem cities 101 - 102 -103 ; Big Bertha reached New York thismorning, glanced upward for a briefmoment to see if the skyscrapers werereally taller than she, and rolledstraight into the welcoming arms ofArturo Toscanini.Friday evening she will make herinitial appearance as a star of theNew York concei’t stage, lending hersingularly low and resonant voice toa special performance of Verdi’s “Re¬quiem” by the world-famous conduc¬tor. This, however, will be only thefirst of her successes. Acclaimingpress notices report that for a wholeseason Bertha is expected to gladdenthe ears of metropolitan radio audi¬ences as she once gladdened the heartsof the Maro.ons.NBC OfficialsHarassed National BroadcastingCompany officials, finding that noneof their drums were of a size andtone to satisfy the former conductorof the New York Philharmonic, final¬ly bethought, themselves of the big¬gest drum in the world.University band director HaroldBachman, guaranteed the same lovingcare that Bertha gets at the Univer¬sity from J. T. Snett, her keeper,agreed to let her make the trip.There are in the United States onlytwo express cars of a size to ac¬commodate Bachman’s pride. For¬tunately one of them was in the Chi¬cago yards, and, speedily hitched tothe Lil^^rty Limited, otfered amplespace for Big Bertha’s generous pro¬portions.Loving band members, their lasthopes of keeping Big Bertha hiberna¬ting on campus dashed, gathered for¬lornly around as Bertha was loadedinto an American Express truck. Theypatted her sides, blessed the two hugeUniversity seals that adorn her, andoffered up prayers that the drummersof the big city would be properlyrespectful. Isadore Richlin Writes Book forThirty-Fourth Blackfriars’ShowShilton Heads Singersof Thirteenth MirrorStromback Tells Trialsof Swedish Scholar Featured singers in the 1938 Mir¬ror, Virginia Shilton, ElizabethSchiele, Grant Atkinson and LeeRoss, swing into the stretch as longrehearsals see the final polishing ofthe show which premiers Fridaynight at 8:30.Virginia Shilton sings “BMOC,”with lyrics which she wrote to musicby John McWhorter, and also sings“Sophistication,” lyriced and tunedby Laura Bergquist, Mirror ProgramScore manager. Elizabeth Schielesings Bud Linden’s “Rock-a-ByeBaby.” Grant Atkinson also singshis own lyrics and music and his“Ghost of Yankee Doodle” featuresthe opening of the second half of theshow. Lee Ross, singing with one ofthe show’s biggest settings for a.song, sings “Low Moon,” written andscored by Dinty Moore,Atkinson, with Martha and Mar¬garet Hutchinson, sings “Two ofYou,” lyrics and music by MarianCastleman. Featured in the musicalpart of the show is the harmony sing¬ing of Virginia Shilton, ElizabethSchiele, and Jean Gayton, In addi¬tion to a repertoire of 1938 songs,they sing other songs which appearin the souvenir score program for(Continued on page 3)104-106-106June 1 EnglLsh 130-131-141; 131-132-141June 2 Introductory Course in thePhysical SciencesJune 3 Social Sciences IIJune 4 Introductory Course in theSocial SciencesJune 6 Chemistry 104-105-120; 104-105-130June 6 Language examinations forhigher degreesIn the Division of the Hu¬manitiesIn the Division of the Physi¬cal SciencesIn the Professional SchoolsJune 6, 7, 8 Examination I in theSchool of BusinessJune 7 Introductory Course in theHumanitiesJune 8 Biological Sciences IIJune 9 Introductory Course in theBiological Sciences. Senior ActivitiesOmitFandango inApril ScheduleTaking over April as “SeniorMonth,” with activities ranging fromthe All-Campus Activities Confer¬ence to a proposed boat trip, butomitting the Fandango, the seniorclass council will open the progi’am ofevents with a Senior Prom on Friday,April 8.I The dance will be held on campus.When a Swedish scholar has com-1 probably at either Hutchinson Com¬pleted his courses which prepare himL^ong or International House, withfor the doctor s degree, and has writ-1 tickets priced low enough to allowten his thesis, he does not in theij^^jy dagg members to attend. Pro-Ameiican manner, submit the book foiceeds will go towards the senior gifthis learned superiors for acceptance.In Sweden, according to Dag Strom¬back, visiting profesor from Sweden,the system of awarding the doctor’sdegree is more dramatic, lasting mostof the day and culminating in a stagparty.Challenge ThesisAssembling to hear the thesis readpublicly, authorities on the subjectupon which the paper has been com¬piled are given a chance to openlychallenge the facts presented. Theoccasion is a solemn one, with the ap¬plicant for the degree appearing atthe hall around ten in the morningclad in white tie and tails. Alreadyselected are three official challengers:a friend of the proposed doctor whois acquainted with the subject mat¬ter; a man chosen by the Universityfaculty; and as a comedy relief, alayman who is supposed to make hu¬morous comments.As the assembly takes about fourhours, starting in the morning andextending past the noon hour, it isthe custom for the student to enter-ain at a dinner to which he inviteshis three challengers together withabout fifty other University scholarsand friends. It is a long day, but amerry one, for Dag Stromback, wholauds this system, assures his Ameri¬can friends that if a man is to be re¬fused his degree, the chances areagainst his presenting his paper pub¬licly. fund. Dave Gordon and Peggy Tilling-hast head the Prom committee.The council decided against theproposed sponsoring of a Fandango toclimax the year’s activities. Althoughthe last Fandango, held in 1935, net¬ted almost $2000 in profits, councilmembers decided that the necessaryorganization would be too elaboratefor the class to undertake.Gambling was one of the biggestmoney-makers at the 1935 affair, butthis year no gambling would be al¬lowed. A decision by the dean’s officebanned it from campus after theFandango. For this reason, but main¬ly because the other activities of theclass do not permit such a compli¬cated undertaking, the proposal wasvoted down. Story Revolves Around Lifein Modern, Medieval Uni-ersities.The Board of Superiors of Black¬friars yesterday announced the se¬lection of a book by Isadore Richlin,as the 1938 Blackfriars production.The selection was made by a commit¬tee of judges appointed by the Boardearlier in the year.The plot of the book revolvesaround the attempt, through the in¬genious, if fantastic, device of a time-reversing machine to compare objec- ’tively the relative merits of modernand medieval Universities. A groupof five students, four men and a girl,go back to 1438 to study the middleages and compare them with whatthey know about the modern world.Innocent BystandersWhile only intending to be innocentbystanders, they soon become involvedin a medieval argument. Sir JakeSchmulbein, the wicked Baron ofPincus Manor, thwarted in his desirefor Judy Archer, the daughter of theprovost of St. Thomas College, hashad his servile witch curse the col¬lege and its athletic teams. Of courseJudy falls for the 20th century tech¬nique of one of the commission andit soon becomes necessary to shoot atthe frustrated Baron’s feet in orderto suppress his homicidal desires.Nonetheless, he accuses the wholegroup of moderns of black magic andwitchcraft and they are soon in dan¬ger of roasting to death. “Thesmooth Bill Bridger,” whose mentalmachinations produced the time-re¬versing machine, which started all thetrouble, saves the company by thejudicious use of hypnotism and sug¬gestion which break down the moraleof the Baron’s forces. To completehis triumph he overwhelms the witch,and restores Pincus Manor to therighteous.Reason for BookRichlin commented that his reasonfor writing the book was a promisemade to Bob Basley (former super¬ior) when he first came to school sixyears ago. “I promised to writethen,” Richlin said, “and time wasgetting short—so it had to be thisyear.”Harold L. BowmanLectures on Marriage“The Mental Hygiene of Marriage”fourth lecture in a series on prepara¬tion for marriage, is the topic Har¬old Leonard Bowman will discuss inthe Graduate Education lecture roomtoday at 4:16. Dr. Bowman, whospoke on the same subject last weekto the Chicago Association for ChildStudy and Parent Education, is min¬ister of the First Presbyterian Church.Ruth McCarn of the NorthwesternUniversity counselling service willspeak on “Successful Marriages”next week. Her lecture will concludethe series.Lovett, Thomas Agree That United StatesNeed Not Fight in Forthcoming WarElection RegistrationThere will be a congressionalelection registration for eligiblestudents living north of the Mid¬way March 5 at 5714 Blackstone.The election will be for statesenator, state representatives, andlocal Cook county offices.To be eligible the student musthave resided in the state for oneyear, in the county for ninetydays, in the precinct for 30 daysand must show that he has earnedpart of his living while at the Uni¬versity. Agi*eeing that the United States isdrifting to war and that our presentpolicies and indecision will certainlyend in our entering the coming warbut that we need not fight if the“will to peace” is sufficiently strong,Robert Morss Lovett and NormanThomas spoke to a overfiow audienceat International House last night onthe subject, “Keep America Out ofWar.”Lovett stated that in the last de¬cade, up to a week ago, the oppor¬tunities for collective security inmaintaining world peace were excel¬lent, but failing to take advantage ofthem then, the United States is nowbehind time in calling for it. Now hebelieves that there is no hope in sightfor security in any collective actionundertaken. He pointed out that the“great purpose of collective action isnot punishment, it is appeasement,”so that we will not make another mis¬take, as in the World W'ar.Roosevelt Foreign PolicyThe vacillating foreign policy ofthe Roosevelt administration and thegreat temptation put before the Presi¬ dent again to save the world forsomething, Thomas said were itemsthat endangered American peace. Healso maintained the super-navy wouldget us nowhere except into trouble.Related to this is the idea that theUnited States should defend not onlyher shores but also her insular pos¬sessions, the Panama Canal, her com¬merce and nationals abroad, no mat¬ter where they are or what the costof protecting them.Prevention of WarPoints outlined to prevent Amer¬ica’s needless entrance into war were:opposition of Super-Navy bill; opposi-toin to the May bill, recent successorto the Shepard-Hill industrial mobili¬zation bill; breakdown of tariff bar¬riers; action on housing industry tohelp alleviate unemployment condi¬tions in the United States, for if thechoice for millions of men is unem¬ployment or war, they will choose thelatter.The meeting was sponsored by theNo-Foreign war committee, and waspresided over by the Reverend Nor¬man Barr, pacificist.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1938PLATFORM1. Creation of a vigorous campus community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened president.All Kinds of Peopleare interested in peace. The one fact in theworld today against which nearly everyone protests iswar, and the universality of the revulsion is reflectedin the wide variety of advocates of one or another peaceprogram on the campus.The concern about peace comes to a head this weekin the annual peace conference. Some hundreds ofstudents will gather in Ida Noyes and listen to astream of words for hours at a time. The question,“What, does it accomplish?” is one that must disturbsupporters of the conference and provide scoffers withammunition.Some look upon the peace conference as a meansto forwarding something vaguely called the “peacemovement.” But the conference would be hard putto it to avoid the charge of futility, if that were itsjustification. When all shades of differing opinion arepresented, when programs for peace that involve dia¬metrically opposed action in the present world situa¬tion are advocated, it is obvious that a peace movementis little helped. Action is hamstrung by such diver¬gence. If the object of the peace conference were toconvert students to one or another program for peace,preaching, not conference, would be the proper means,since conferences are notoriously unable to come to aconclusion.How deeply the idea of agreement and action isembedded in the conference is indicated by the presenceof a concluding resolutions session. The hope is thatthe delegates will agree on something. Actually it isimpossible to get agreement on anything more than thegoal; there are chasms between the various programsfor peace or for the reduction of war that talk willnever bridge. Resolutions to be accepted must be sogeneral as to be meaningless as a basis for action,but the gesture satisfies those who feel a movement tobe the only good.There is another role for the Peace Conference,however, that fully justifies the effort it calls fortheach year. For it helps to make students think, thinkabout a small part of their total environment to besure, but still think.President Hutchins has said that the purpose of aneducation was to make students think. The tendencyof all too many classes is to make students sponges,sometimes waterproofed sponges at that. A conferencesuch as the peace conference enables students to standup on their own hind legs and react to the problems ofwar and peace. The best possible stimulus to thoughtis the obligation or opportunity to say in words whatyou believe on a given issue. The peace conference thusprovides a much needed supplement to the formal edu¬cation of University classrsooms.But how small a sector of the student’s environmentit covers! The completely educated man should havethought about the whole of his experience, direct andas extended through books. If a conference is goodfor making students think about international rela¬tions, a conference should be able to stimulate thinkingon other questions. It is with this in mind that theStudent Conference has been planned for April. Itwill extend active student education to the immediateUniversity environment. MORE ABOUT NOTHINGThough hearing more than our share of human wofeand agony through virtue or vice of being a column¬ist, it suddenly dawned the other day that it had beena long, long time since the Date Bureau had beensighted on the campus horizon.In dire fear that catastrophe might have overtakenit, we started in search of the Holadays, intrepidbrothers from New Jersey who launched the venturelast year. Duncan, the tall, red-haired genius of theenterprise had buried himself in a chemistry lab forthe afternoon, but Horace, who is shorter and a bitless devilish looking, pleasantly offered to satiate ourcuriosity.First of all, let it be known that the Date Bureauis no more. It expired gently at the end of last year,but neither from bankruptcy nor lack of business (acheerful strain in these gloomy days)...on the con¬trary, the Holaday prodigy assumed abnormal propor¬tions, .needed the tender care of a fulltime secretarybadly...left the conscientious Holadays with time tothink of nothing hut dates, a most pleasant pastime forother people but a headache to the Holadays in itsextreme form.At the height of prosperity it boasted nearly thirtymembers who were employed at least once a week.Clients were drawn almost entirely from off-campus,attracted by the ads which were run in “This Week inChicago,” a sheet devoted to Chicago night club andtheater ads, and from the gratis publicity donated bysuch as the Daily Maroon and June Provines. Furtherstatistics revealed that dateless women came chieflyfrom the ranks of Chicago saleswomen in and aboutthe age of 35. They needed men for 1. teas 2. staglines 3. fourths at bridge 4. fillers in for parties.Rates ran accordingly. For $5 you could rent alovely man for an afternoon shindig, for $5 more youcould have him all evening resplendent in tails.Campus business was extremely poor. \i first thecoy litle Foster wags teased the Bureau by calling upfor dates, but the Holadays were a crafty lot, sawthrough the ruse nearly every time. “We could alwaysspot the phonies,” said Holaday “by the hunch ofwomen who stood around the telephone and giggled.Women who really wanted dates had a certain note ofsincerity in their voices.”The only competition raised its head when TedPeckham, who originally launched the idea in NewYork, decided to give Chicago boys a run for theirmoney. But bankruptcy soon followed with successfulbrothers Holaday and lack of business as the roots ofall evil.Duncan was the Don Juan of the Bureau, with hiscombination of red hair and women-I-have-known-air,but is satisfied now with his chemistry, chalks the bur¬eau up as good experience, remembers with pleasurethe approximate $100 profit after expenses were paid.Horace is a little less happy. “I never was muchof a hand with the women, anyways,” he explained.QuestandInquestBY LAURA BERGQUISTLetters to theEditorSUPERFICIAL SCHOLARSEditor,The Daily Maroon:Apology. This version is admittedlybiased as the writer’s capacity forintellect is comparable to that ofa C.I.O. slugger.A few years ago technocracy of¬fered the political fanatic somethingwith which to occupy himself. Somesay it has died a natural death. Thisis a misstatement. Today our livesare greatly influenced by the effectsof technocracy. Our widely discussedNational Recovery Act was a directresult of the principles laid down bythe technocrats.The political fanatic is nothingmore than an individual anxious toimpress the rest of the world withhis unlimited education. Not contentto theorize peacefully he must makehimself obnoxious in the eyes of oth¬ers by trying to force his opinionsupon all. Contrary to the popular be¬lief that all such persons are unitedin principle, purpose, and platform,they are decidedly not. Few reallyknow what they want. It is not uncom¬mon to hear two such individuals withconflicting beliefs. F'ew are really eversatisfied. This is illustrated by thefact that today the communisticdesires of ten years ago are practical¬ly all fulfilled. Are they content ?They are not. The communists of today are notthose of ten years past. Radicalismlike adolescence is outgrown by mostnormal individuals. But the commu¬nists of today claim they are progres¬sive. I challenge the truth of thisstatement. They are striving to reacha point where all wealth is sharedequally. Where then would the incen¬tive to work and progress lie?The majority of communists arenot willing to let conditions adjustthemselves normally but insist onforcing them. Many young radicalshave been suspended from schoolsthroughout the country for refusals toterminate their unwise teachings.They believe themselve to be martyrsto a worthy cause, but it would bebetter indeed if more were treatedsimilarly.The communists latest tool forpropaganda is the anti-war question.Fortunately there are a good manyflaws in the stand they take. It canalmost be said that no one living to¬day is desirous of war, yet the com¬munists are not content to believe this.They insist upon abolishing the Re¬serve Officers’ Training Corps. Theentire military history of our nationhas been one of unpreparedness. Thisone fact alone has been responsiblefor the loss of many lives — manymore than necessary, all because poor¬ly trained men were sent out to beslaughtered. Instead of di.scouragingwar, withdrawing our entire defensewould certainly promote it. The com¬munists anti-war stand might easilybe converted to pro-war.They contradict themselves and arementally unsound, maladjusted in¬dividuals seeking self satisfaction inconspicuous activities.L & K. It Takes AllKinds of PeopleAmong the less-famous professorsof the University who teach out-of-the-way languages is Dr. Che.sterGould, specialist in Swedish and Ice¬landic.Tall, stooped, ju.st rounding 65,with a tendency to puff a little onthe fourth flight, he pursues his gen¬tle way in the Germanics department.Although of German descent, he hasadopted Sweden as his second love,spent the greater part of a lifetimestudying its peoples, its languagesand customs, and married one of itsdaughters.Students know him for his uttergentleness and naiveness of his gazeabove a pair of horn-rimmed glasses,for the lock of hair which foreverdroops over his right eye. No onehas ever been known to be over¬worked in his cla.sses. The more craftyinevitables take advantage of him,the studious bemoan his hazy un¬willingness to clamp down on loafers.Although he has read the texts tentimes over, he never fails to demon¬strate a childlike delight in readingthem anew. He laughs at the obviousjokes, and wipes away a tear at theheroine’s misfortunes, being a com¬plete sentimentalist.His life revolves in very orderlyfashion about his small son, his tinyexecutive wife who must always re¬mind him of his rubbers, a smallhome in the suburbs, and his after¬noon nap in the Germanics office, allsuffused by his delight in anythingScandinavian. Mysterious BenefactorContributes $180 forSpanish Medical AidMost mysteries devolve around thefinding of a criminal. This mysteryconcerns the finding of a benefactor.Two weeks ago, on Wednesday, anenvelope containing two ten dollarbills was found in Box 213 of theFaculty Exchange, addressed to theMedical Committee to Aid Spain. Thenext day, Thursday, another envelopewith same sum in it appeared andwith the exception of Saturday andSunday the contributions continueduntil the next Tuesday.On the following Morfday it beganagain and continued for four moredays, making a total of $180 that theanonymous donor had given. A secondfive-day period has now elapsed with¬out a contribution. Members of thecommittee hopefully peer into thebox every few hours, hoping themanna will continue to fall.Conjectures as to the source of themoney are many. Is this the work ofan individual or an organization? Isit a faculty or a student contribution?Whoever the my.sterious benefactor is,if he reads this story he may feelrewarded that with his funds, themovement to send a University ofChicago ambulance to Spain now’ hasa total of $724, only $376 short of itsgoal. Vol. 38 MARCH 2. 1938FOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATPPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of ChicaKopublished morninKS except Saturday, Sun!day, and Monday during the AutumnWinter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University avenueTelephones: Local 357, and Hyde Parii9221 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 MaroonThe 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 ChicagoIlHnois^^under the act of March 3. IBTo!nsencscNTCO son national ADVcsTifciNO erNational AdvertisingService. Inc.Collttt FuhUsA*rs keprneHtalivt420 Madison Ave. New York. N. y.CSIOISO - Boston - Lot Angilis • S«N FtANCiscoBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILI Editor-in-chiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D (lOI.DING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL .1. STONE...Advertising Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist, Maxine Biesenthal,Emmett Deadman, Ruth Brody, Rex Hor!ton. Seymour Miller, Adele Rose. BurtMoyer.GRAND =NOW PLAYINGMAURICEEVANSMON., TUES., WED. EVENINGSWEDNESDAY MATINEEFALSTAFFIn King Henry IV Part ITHUR., FRI., SAT. EVENINGSSATURDAY MATINEEKING RICHARD II"UNDOUBTEDLY THE GREATESTACTOR ON THE ENGLISH SPEAK¬ING STAGE." — JOHN MASONBROWN in NEW YORK POST.Chinese Relief GroupAnnounces SponsorsThe recently forme'd committee forChinese Relief announced its officialsponsors yesterday. They are theChapel Union, ASU, InterfraternityCouncil, the Interchurch Council, andthe Fellowship of Reconciliation. Com¬posed of student and faculty members,the committee includes Charles W.Gilkey, Dean of the Chapel; Harley F.MacNair, professor of Far FlasternHistory and Institutions; Harold D.Lasswell, associate professor of Poli¬tical Science; Bill Speck, chairman,Barbara .-Mlee, Jud.son Allen, ClarenceF. Chang, and Royal Wald.Organized to coordinate movementsfor far-eastern aid, the committee,which recently brought P. C. Changof Xankai University to campus, plansa drive for funds by means of pledgecards as well as general contributionsfrom students, faculty, and employees. BUSINESS ASSOCIATESFxlwin Bergman, Max Freeman, HarryTopping. Irvin Rosen.Night Editors: Ruth Brody. Bud HerschelAnthropology ClubWillard Park of Northwe-tornUniversity, who spent last summer innorthern Colombia studying the Ka-gaba Indians, will speak on SouthAmerica before the Graduate .An¬thropology Club tonight at 8.AND HIS ORCHESTRASELWYN THEATRE S-M-A-S-H !\ GEORGE ABBOTT I'RODUCTION!by JOHN Murray mi tUB* borU' 463LAUGHSMatinees 50c to $1.50Wed. and Sat. EVERYNOW hichtLexington Theatre1162 E. 63rd St.LEO CARRILLO ELLA LOGANKENNY BAKER"52nd STREET"—PLUS—KAY FRANCIS PRESTON FOSTER"FIRST LADY" FROLIC THEATRE55th and Ellis AvenueTODAY ONLYIAN HUNTER LEO CARRILLOKENNY BAKER"52nd STREET"—PLUS—WENDY BARRIE WALTER PIDGEON"A GIRL WITH IDEAS"Page ThreeTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 2. 1938Find Editors ofCollege PapersMore SeriousBy MAXINE BIESENTHAL andRUTH BRODYLast year, when the Daily Maroonrumored that President Robert May-n-ud Hutchins was being considered asa possibility for new president ofYale University, Hutchins, irked, de¬nied the rumor and retorted; “Stu¬dent newspapers are naive and irre-sponsiblo. ^On the contrary, Walter Lippmann,famed political commentator, recentlyno^od that youth of today is serious,conscious of the problems confront-1[ng it, and able to take action on^them. ;The following excerpts from theeditorial columns of college news¬papers, concerned as they often areS analysis of affairs of nationaland international scope, with <*onsideration of prominent educational the¬ories. or with reformation of sornephase of university life, belie Hutch¬ins’ statement and confirm L.PP-mann’s.When the Daily Hlim made its at¬tempts to clear Champaign of itshouLs of prostitution, other collegeNewspapers followed suit, and openeda militant campaign against syphilis.Among the most insistent of thesehave been the University of Texaspaper, and the Daily Kansan whoseeditorial columns carry periodic pleasthat Wassermann and Kahn tests fordetection of venereal ^sesmade compulsory for all .students.War, PropagandaTo war and its attendant evils ofpropaagiida and rearmament, mostcollege newspapers devote consider¬able space, emphasizing especially therole of the United States and ofvouth. “Rearmament,” asserts theDaily IHini, “is inevitable.” “It makeslittle' difference,” pens the editor otthe Yale Daily News, “what our for¬eign policy is if the press and thenewsreels make a con.stant sensationof trivial snubs and events in coun¬tries at war.” “The Nazi militarymachine may yet errupt in the lullfurv of war, the war that will de¬molish Western civilization,” predictsthe Minnesota Daily.The Daily Northwestern suggests.satiricallv: “Northwestern Arbor daymight be held this spring on somevacant strip of land west of K\an-ston. and each student be given ayoung tree to plant. This would rep-re.sent himself, and be carefully tend¬ed until he was killed in the nextwar. Then it would be cut down. Inthis way, everyone wmuld see his owmmemorial, and the mockery of trib¬utes’ would be obviated.”Minor IrritationsMinor irritations are dragged outby collegiate reformers, who, like theMichigan State News, demand morerapid distribution of library books,or like the Oregon State News, wantso that students may have a “smokeeither improved checking facilities incloak rooms, or an extended curfewand coke” before returning to thehouses while the Chicago NormalitePaper asks students to clean up thelunchroom tables.As a protest against some educa¬tional systems, the Iowa State Stu¬dent cites the University of Chicago ssimplified plan which, according tothis publication, “merely informs thestudents at the end of a term wheth¬er or not they pass a course...nofurther division is made into units ofA to F gamut.. .the student eitherpasses or he doesn’t pass and that isthe end of it.” The Iowa State Stu¬dent is sure that the University is,because of this system, breedingscholars, not bookworms. Northwest¬ern’s and Illinois’ papers quoteHutchins freely.That their University is too mucha collection of academies, lacking inmutual communication, is the Wash¬ington State Students opinion. “VVeshould create more of a Universityin.stead of a collection of technical. I The PrintedPage♦ * *By GEORGE STEINBRECHER, JR.I Men Are Not Stars: C. A. Millspaugh.1 Doubleday, Doran & Co., Inc. GardenCity, N. Y. 1938.Daniel O’Riordan, belligerent son ofstaid Michigan farmers, finds Art hisambition. Goaded by his insatiablespirit, Tie leaves home and attends anart .school in Chicago. In travelling! over the country during the summerhe meets a farm girl and marries her.Celia O’Riordan is a good mother tohis children and loves him dearly.When they are pressed by povertyshe manages to keep her growingfamily togethei' with her husband’spenance. The story opens in 1908 whenthere are four young O’Riordans andis told in retrospect by one of theboys.The children, alert and intelligent,have no doubt that their father is aGenius. He well articulates his Nietzs-chean ideas. He practices the princi¬ples of painting heroic pictures witha sincerity that more than impresseshis offspring. They admire him for hisQuixotic ways and accept his defianceof the rest of the w-orld. For subsis¬tence they sell papers so that he canpaint and they defend him againstthe jibes of their classmates. WhileDaniel O’Riordan lives for his Art,his family lives for him.♦ * •But the whole family is thrown intodoubt when “Napoleon in Egypt” isrejected. The blustering artist becamemoody and not until he looks at thestars with his son does he regaincourage. Never again, however, is hequite the same. During the summertrek with his family to sell his art, heis both despondent and joyous. Onlythe thought of creating “The Sur¬render of General Lee” gives him realhope. The children hope too, but havedoubts.O’Riordan’s suspicions graduallybreak down his egotism. “The Sur¬render” is a failure. He turns to drink,then for final aid to Catholicism.When at last he realizes that he wasnot meant to be an artist, he plansto start anew.The tragic figure, seen through theeyes of one. of the children, is devel¬oped and contrasted against the back¬ground of his family and friends. Theindividual hopes, trials, and fears ofhis wife and children are well de¬lineated as are the less concernedlives of those who know him. Mr.Millspaugh has carefully created theatmosphere of an art colony, givingthe book an authentic setting.This storv moves along with a wellproportioned balance of action and |reaction. The author deals ably withhis Becthovenesque character, presen- jting him with humor and pathos andthe proper detachment that keepsO’Riordan within the limits of thereader’s understanding. The charac¬ters of the indomitable little O’Rior-,lan family and their Bohemianfriends are all evolved with a veritythat make vivid their experiences. 1at times the conversation is long andsomewhat stilted, if there is an over¬simplification of detail and an occa¬sional prosiness, these are lost in thelarger sweep of the book. As m reallife, there are scenes of great strength-moments when the prose breaks intoprose poetry-that give to the bookand its theme an exhaltation that .truly masterful.The book does not describe an age,nor can it be taken as a symbol of aparticular period, but through itsvivid characterization and the ex-THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mar.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOR MEN AND WOMENRepedring and Remodeling ofAny Cloth, or Fur Garment Business SchoolStudents Vote onCouncil ChangesTo vote on a proposed amendmentto the Student Council constitutionwhich would make it possible to electthe new student council at the begin¬ning of the Spring quarter. Businessschool students are faced, on March11, with a general balloting. Proposedby the present student council, themove has been recommended to makethe council more efficient.Under the present Student Councilconstitution election of new membersis deferred until the third Friday be¬fore the close of the spring quarter.It is recommended in the motion tobe presented to the student councilthat a general election be held toamend the constitution so that thenew council may be elected insteadwithin the first few weeks of thespring quarter. Then, for the re¬mainder of the quarter the regularcouncil and the council elect wouldserve together as a double council.Advantages to be gained by thismove are two-fold: first, the juniorselected to the council w'ould serve an“apprenticeship” under the regularcouncil and thus be more capable ofconducting their business during thefollowing school year; second, withmost of the activity of the studentcouncil falling in the spring quarterit would be less burdensome to in¬dividuals because the work could bemore widely distributed.The propo.sed amendment is to besubmitted for the approval of thestudent body of the School of Busi¬ness. Balloting will be in the first1 floor hall of the school upon presen-I tation of tuition receipt.Peace -(Continued from page 1)Charles Crane, Richard Lindheim,Adena Joy, Ralph Rosen, second; M.Hazard and Joseph Rosenstein, JohnMarks, Henry Williams, William Mc¬Neill, third; Herbert Goldhammerand Audrey Neff, Norman Brown,Purnell Benson, Richard Anderson,fourth.Thursday, Ida Noyes Theatre, 7:45—Entertainment by Ned Rosenheimand the ASU Theatre Group. Semi¬nars on “What Foreign Policy Shouldthe United States Have?” at 8:45.Same student leaders, following fac¬ulty men: Ralph Gerard, GerhardtMeyer, Charles Kerby-Miller, M. Haz¬ard,Friday, Ida Noyes Library, 2:30—Resolutions session. Ipression of simple feeling of peoplefor people, there is achieved a univer¬sal quality. While it is not truly a mas¬terpiece, we must realize the youthof its author and be aware of hispotentialities. Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSSSA Club. Library of Ida Noyes.4-7:30.Settlement League. Drama Group.Alumnae room, Ida Noyes. 10-12.BWO. Alumnae room, Ida Noyes.12-12:45.Wyvern. Alumnae room, Ida Noyes.4-5:30.Christian Youth League. Room A,Ida Noyes. 7-10.Spanish Club. Alumnae room. IdaNoyes. 7-10.Faculty Club. Folk Dancing. Danceroom, Ida Noyes. 7:30-10.Italian Club. Library, Ida Noyes.7:30-10.Poetry Club. YWCA room, IdaNoyes. 7:30-10.Zoology Club. Zoology 14. 4:30.“Rat Prostrate and Seminal VesicleGrafts in Relation to the Sex and Sex-Hormone State of the Host”.LECTURESPublic Lecture. Art Institute. 6:45.“African Music: A Study in Rhythm.Music and the Dance.”MISCELLANEOUSAll Campus Peace Conference. IdaNoyes Theatre. 7:45. Garfield Cox onPacifism; W. G. Grace on Neutrality;Walter Laves on Collective Security.Mirror -(Continued from page 1)this year’s Mirror, including “TheBottom’s Fallen Out of Everything”by Laura Bergquist, and “Just Ba¬bies” by Edward Levi, former Mirrorcontributor and now a professor ofthe Law School faculty. Their num¬ber “Jammin’,” a song by PaulineWillis, leads into the finale of the1938 Mirror.Mary Paul Rix, member of theMirror Board, joins the ranks of thesingers this year in a character song,“Orchids on Your Budget,” writtenby Carol Simons Whitney, formerMirror member. Adele SandmanWoodward joins in the song and ac¬companying dance. Betty Ann Evansand Betty Newhall sing of club lifein a song titled “Sisters,” the lyricswritten by Jane Kesner Morris, mu¬sic by Henry George Shafer.HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 EAST 55th ST.If you want college longs—If you want "Collegiate" Atmosphere—If you want to see your friends—You are assured of such an evening atHANLEY’SOVER FORTY YEARS OF CONGENIALSERVICEcultural, and scientific schools, asseih-bled for administrative convenience.” Our prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. 55th St., near UniversityTel. Midway 331815AN EXCLUSIVE TREAT AT STINEWAY'SFOUNTAINSGRILLED OLIVE PIMENTO CHEESE SANDWICHESIF YOU LIKE GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICHES, YOU WILLPOSITIVELY RAVE ABOUT THE NEW OLIVE PIMENTO GRILLED CHEESESANDWICH MOW FEATURED AT STINEWAY'S. IT LITERALLY MELTS INYOUR MOUTH AND THRILLS YOU WITH A DIFFERENT TANTALIZINGFLAVOR. SERVED WITH A VARIETY OF PICKLE CHIPS.STINEWAY DRUGS57TH AND KENWOOD PHONE DOR. 2844 WOODWORTH'SSpring SaleBOOK SETSSTOCK LIMITED - A DEPOSIT WILL HOLD ANYSET IN THIS SALELIBRARY OF UNIVERSAL HISTORY — 9 Vol $3.85IRVINGS WORKS — 24 Vol 4.10HARVARD CLASSICS —50 Vol. New Set 38.00ENCYCLOPAEDIA BRITANNICA, 11th Ed 32.00WAVERLY NOVELS — 12 Vol 7.20GUIZOT — HISTORY OF FRANCE — 6 Vol 4.90WORKS OF DICKENS — 3 Large Vol 6.00LOWELL — 12 Vol 3.95SHAKESPEARE — 13 Vol. Set 6.00CONCISE ENCYCLOPAEDIA. New — 8 Vol 2.69MANY NEW ADDITIONAL BARGAINS NOT LISTED ! !STATIONERY SPECIAL!49cClub Parchment, Deckle Edge -Note or Semi-Note Sizes — PriceQuire BoxWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. — Open Evenings Kansas House Votes$7,500 to Investigate‘Reds’ at UniversityBy BUD HERSCHELCollege ‘red’ baiting has been re¬vived at the University of Kansas,vv^here, arming themselves with agrant of $7,500, alarmed legislatorsare prepared to swing into action—if and when the Kansas Senate passesthe House resolution to investigate“all subversive activities and propa¬ganda in the state” and particularlyat the University.Ask Speedy AdoptionHouse leaders are hoping that in¬cidental matters like income tax andsocial security legislation will bequickly disposed of, permitting theSenate to act on the Muir-Carperresolution before adjournment of thespecial session.In the face of widespread editorialopposition, however, and a plea for“tolerance” from Alf Landon, thesenators are expected to show greatercaution than their confreres in theHouse, who passed the bill 92-4. Ad¬vises the Concordia Blade-Empire,“They (the senators) had better tendto their own knitting, which happensto be one of the most perplexing taxproblems in half a century.”Students PhilosophicalKansas students, however, were in¬clined to be philosophical. “After all,”they said, “anyone who has visitedone of their sessions realizes they areduller than a 1:30 lecture.”The Kansas “red scare” beganwhen student Don Henry, a commu¬nist sympathizer, came to an unhappyend in the Spanish trenches. Sponsorsof the resolution have since presentedphotostatic evidence and notes of themeetings of the Young Communists’League (the YCL, here) from Henry’sdiary. Carper states his committee“has not had time” to ascertainwhether any members of the Univer¬sity faculty actually advocate com¬munist doctrines.BUY NOWTREMENDOUS SAVINGSONATLAS TIRESMONEY SAVING TRADE-INALLOWANCES ONFully GuaranteedATLAS TIRESTRYSTANDARD RED CROWNandISO-VIS low AND 20W OILFOR QUICK STARTINGBROWN'SSTANDARD SERVICE1101 East 55th Street55th and GreenwoodTelephone Midway 9092STANDARDSERVICEKimbark Theatre6240 KIMBARK AVENUECHICAGO, ILLINOISFIRST SOUTH SIDE SHOWING"NON STOP NEW YORK-ANNA LEE"PLUSHUGH HERBERT"THAT MAN'S HERE AGAIN'THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1938Page FourLOST—Wristwatch; silver, name “Shirley”on back. Lost in or near Ida Noyes.Reward and no questions asked. Returnto Shirley Adams, Foster Hall.Individual HairdressingAt Moderate PricesShampoo and Wave 50Manicure 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57th ST.HYDE PARK 7860Hrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sat. to 6 P.M. . .ifouV find MORE PLEASUREin Chesterfields milder better tasteCopyright 1938, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.I-M Gaines ScoresDeke 29; Phi Sig 16Alpha Delt “B” 20; Phi Sig “B” 6I-M Games TodayCTS vs. Snell HallDeke jumped into their usual earlylead, but a gamely fighting Phi Sigquintet held them to 11-7 at the half.In the second half the fireworks brokeloose, and Deke forged into an un¬touchable lead.Other scorers in the game were forDeke: Graemer, two; Chet Murphy,four; Kelly, one; Farced, five; for PhiSig: Harris, two; Krause, five; Ury,three; and Fried one.“Big Stoop” was up last night tocheer on Alpha Delt’s “B” team intheir fight for “B” championship withPhi Sig. It was Alpha Delt all theway this time, and they won easilyby a score of 20-6.Alpha Delts LeadNeither team shot accurately, andat the half, the score stood 8-2 forAlpha Delt. The second half openedup some for Alpha Delt, but Phi Signever did get under way in an ef¬fective fashion.Miller of Alpha Delt topped thescorers with ten points followed byTully of Alpha Delt with six.Alpha Delts, Pi LamsBreak Bowling RecordThe Intramural bowling record of1517 pins for a single match, set byPi Lam last week, and at the time thehighest score in many years of thetournament, was twice shattered yes¬terday.The record breaking match was be¬tween Alpha Delt and Pi Lam. Themark was first shattered by Pi Lamwith Stern, Horwich and Abelsonbowling 1550 pins, only to have itbroken by Alpha Delt’s Bob Hersch-el. Perry and Shaver who bowled1570 pins.The match was in the quarter finalround of play-offs and moves AlphaDelt into the semi-final round.CLASSIFIED ADSRifle Team LosesChicago’s varsity rifle team lost amatch to the University of Illinoismarksmen by a score of 929 to 915.Bennett led the Maroons with 186points; Dean and Slade were secondwith 184; Klein was fourth with 182;and Elliot completed Chicago’s scor¬ing with 179.This week the Maroon gunmen faceBowdoin College of New Brunswick,Maine, and Fenn College in postalmeets.Women’s rifle team meets the Car¬negie Institute of Technology girls’rifle team this week.DAILY MAROON SPORTSDekes Win I-MFraternity CageTourney, 26-19Defeat Phi Sigma Delta inTournament Finals inBartlett Gym.Delta Kappa Epsilon was crownedchampion of the fraternity divisionof Intramural basketball last nightwhen they took Phi Sigma 29 to 16on Bartlett’s big center court. Dekeput on a thrilling demonstration ofgood all around team play to win.Credit must be given, however, tothose two Murphy brothers. Bill andChet. They were unquestionably thestandouts of the game. Bill was athis specialty last night with his longshots, and was sinking them with aregularity discouraging to the PhiSigs.Bill Murphy led the scoring w-ithnine points, followed by the irrepres¬sible Jeremy of Deke with eightpoints. Sherman, usually a highscorer was so effectively bottled up,that he was able to tally only fivepoints. Maroons Lead Big TenFoil, Sabre StandingsWith four men unofficially leadingthe Conference at sabre and foil theMaroon fencers point to win the BigTen tournaments to be held hereMarch 19. Most of the A squad willlay off over the next week-end inpreparation for the conference meet,leaving it to B team men to meetMichigan State when the Wolverinesinvade Bartlett this Staurday.Gustafson, leading the Maroons intotal bout-victories with 18-2, holdsfirst place in the Conference sabredivision. Fritz and Corbett are tiedfor second place at 11-7. At foilStrauss, with 11-1, also tops the BigTen. Goldberg is second with 9-1.Tabulations are unofficial, as the BigTen teams do not officially keep boutrecords of individual fencers. I-M Wrestling Tournament BeginsTomorrow; Announce RegulationsIntramural wrestling makes its an¬nual two-day stand at Bartlett Gymtomorrow and Friday. The tourna¬ment last year was the largest since1926 when 70 men competed. Themeet was won last year by Deke with54 points, followed by Phi Gam with41 and Chicago Theological Seminarywith 36 points.Several of the winners and run¬ners-up from last year including Da¬vis of Beta in the 126 pound class,Ickes, independent in the 155 andJeremy of Deke in the 175 pound willbe back.Twenty-one varsity and near-var¬sity men have been declared ineligiblefor the meet. Regulations announced by the I-Mdepartment are:Bouts will be eight minutes inlength unless a fall is accomplished.If the contestants are on their feetafter two minutes, the remaining sixminutes of the match will be dividedinto two three-minute periods. Insuch case, if there is a fall in thefirst period and also in the second,the contestant winning the fall in theshortest time will be the winner.In bouts in w-hcih there is no falla decision will be given. Three pointswill be awarded for an aggressivenear fall, two points for top positionand one for escaping and coming freein determining the decision. The same points toward totalmatch points will be awarded in allmatches._ ArtKAflELAND HIS ORCHE/TRAk INTHEUfilLnUT JHOcovinCHABCf jtoom^ /MOVPlfMARCKH O T E L - RAN DOLPH af LA SALLETodaifs HeadlinesKlect Peace Conference chairman,page 1.Name Laura Bergquist president ofInterclub, page 1.Wayne McMillen seeks state senator’spost, page 1.Hesults of intramural basketball tour*ney, page 4.Political Union selects topic for nextmeeting, page 1. ^ Batlv itoumVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1938 Price Five CentsJ. Van de WaterHeads CampusPeace MeetingEntertainment,Discussions,Party Head Tonight’sProgram.The unopposed election of JohnVan de Water as chairman of theAll-Campus Peace Conference wasthe only peaceful procedure of thefirst evening’s session. Audrey Neffwas chosen secretary after a disputeas to what recommendation had beenpassed that made it necessary to keepminutes of the meeting.Delegates elected to the resolutionscommittee of the Conference are Au¬drey Neff, Pi Delta Phi; Hart Perry,Alpha Delta Phi; Mary Sloan,Y W.C.A.; Robert Merriam, Psi Up-silon; Janet Geiger, Y.W.C.A.; JohnMarks, Senior Class Council; EmmettHeadman, Iron Mask; Sara Leehloom, ASU; Norman Brown, ASU;Paul Goodman, Debate Union; DickLindheim, ASU; Adele Rose, ASU;Barbara Allee, Y.W.C.A.; CharlesCrane, Delta Upsilon; Pattie Quisen-berry. Mortar Board; Laura Berg¬quist, Daily Maroon. The chairmanof the Conference votes as an ex-officio member of the committee.Credentials of the No-Foreign-WarsCampaign were contested by the cre¬dentials committee on the groundsthat according to the record in theItcan’s office, the group was entitledto only one delegate. Counter-chargesthat there were too many delegatesfrom other^ organizations werebrought by the No-Foreign-WarsCampaign, with the result that in-vtcaci of other delegations’ beingpared, the credentials committee de¬cided to accept all delegates so farregistered in case the organizationhad a larger number of delegates thanan officially registered.Pre.sent Skitshintertainment is the order of theevening for today’s Peace ConferenceX >^ions, with the ASU Theatre Group 1ami Ned Rosenheim presenting skits |at the beginning of the second sessionand an ASU party after the .seminars.Kosenheim is the author of a versesat li e on boycotts, which will bejilaved by Rosenheim, Julian Gold¬smith, Travis Kasle, and James Gold¬smith. The ASU offering is an anti-N’tizi monologue, “The Bishop ofMunster,” which, in the form ^of aspeech from the pulpit, shows themisfortunes of the Aryan Christians"f (iermany. Demarest Polacheck, star"f “America, America,” is the bishop.At the party following tonight’ssession, the Theatre Group will pre¬sent “Peace Quartette,” a skit in-corjiorated in the successful New Yorkmusical comedy review of the Inter¬national Ladies’ Garment W’orkersI’nion, “Pins and Needles.” Hitler,Mussolini, Franco, and Baldwin arethe four angels of peace.“Factors Making for War Today”and “What Foreign Policy Should theLnited States Have?” are the subjectsof today’s seminars. Meeting in IdaNoyes theatre at 3:30 for a brief talkh.v Quincy Wright, professor of In-t'rnational Relations, the delegates\vill then go to the four seminars.Kvening seminars begin after theplays. Students representing fourpoints of view will lead the discus-sions, intended to cover the groundpicparatory to the debate of the final^sion. Wayne McMillen SeeksPost of State SenatorFrom Fifth DistrictWayne McMillen, professor of So¬cial Service Administration, is run¬ning for the post of state senatorfrom the 5th senatorial district, theposition formerly held by professorof Philosophy T. V. Smith. The dis¬trict runs from 43rd to 72nd streets,from State to the lake.McMillen was a late candidate, get¬ting his petition in just a few daysbefore the deadline, A group of tradeunion leaders and neighborhood pro¬gressive group heads, realizing thatthe only Democratic candidate in thedistrict was a Kelly-Nash man,pressed the SSA professor into serv¬ice as an independent Democrat andrushed through a campaign to get hispetitions filled out. There has sincebeen a candidate for the Horner groupadded to the list.Prominent on his platform is sup¬port for social security legislation, atopic on which he is a recognizedauthority. He will campaign for ade¬quate relief, increased state supportfor schools, and liberal labor legisla¬tion.There are now three Universityprofessors, McMillen, Smith, andJames Weber Linn, running for officein the coming elections. There will beno conflict in any of the candidacies,however, and according to McMillen,each candidate is supporting all theothers. Linn is a candidate for officein the state house of representatives,and Smith for the post of congress¬man-at-large.Several University men, including(Continued on page 3)Legal FraternityInitiates ElevenInitiating eleven men and electingtwo honorary members, the Univer¬sity chapter of the Phi Delta Phi,national legal fraternity, meets to¬night at 5 at Ida Noyes, Charles P.Megan and James VV. Moore will re¬ceive honorary memberships.The meeting of the fraternity be¬gins at 5, dinner will be at 6, andhonorary initiation will follow' thedinner. Pledges to be initiated are:Tom Moran, Allan Johnson, DanSmith, Charles Dunbar, Jim Melville,Thad Carter, Peter Schneider, JohnGilbert, Karl Jinitzky, Frank Seiterand Charles Longacre.Charles P. Megan, who becomes anhonorary member tonight, is pastpresident of the Chicago Bar Asso¬ciation and is the father of Tom andGrayton Megan, members of Phi Del¬ta Phi.James W. Moore, professor of Lawin the University, has written a num¬ber of texts and magazine articles onlaw subjects and recently assisted aWashing^ton commission in draftingnew federal rules for legal proced¬ure in federal courts.Oldest professional fraternity inthe United States, Phi Delta Phi in¬cludes on its roster the President ofthe United States, members of theSupreme Court, many of the Lawschool faculty, and President RobertM. Hutchins. Officers of the Univer¬sity chapter are David Smith, JamesFawcett, John Lynch, Owen Fair-weather, John Clark. Oliver StatlerDirects MirrorTechnical StaffThirteenth Annual Produc¬tion Takes Place Friday,Saturday.Oliver Statler, veteran of manyDM productions, is heading the 1938Mirror production staff.Co-operating w'ith him in his w'orkare Jeanne Tobin who is takingcharge of properties assisted by Pa¬tricia Grinager, while Betty JaneWatson heads the costume committee.Betty Beard is stage manager thisyear. Other people working behindscenes are Clementine V a n d e rSchaegh and Virginia Jonnson whoare managing the box-office, and Persis-Jane Peeples who has the respon¬sibility for publicity. Another fea¬ture of this year’s show will be afull program-score, containing boththe program and music from thisyear and past year’s revue. Thescore has been arranged by LauraBergquist and Marjorie Hess.Design ScenesLouise Snow and William Tallonhave been desigpiing some of thescenic effects for the Mirror. Thestage crew’ working under Statlerconsists of John Argali, Robert Cole,Alexander Harmon, Mitchell Hutch¬inson, Frederick Linden, GeorgeMead, Jack Merrifield, James Murr,Charles Paltzer, Robert Sabin, Don¬ald Sieverman, Clarence Sills andGlenn Slade.Mitchell Hutchinson is director oflighting. Final rehearsals for theshow, to be held Friday and Satur¬day nights, are now’ under way di¬rected by Frank Hurburt O’Hara, whoproduced the first Mirror production13 years ago. BWO Elects Bergquist to HeadInterclub Council for Coming Y earPolitical Union DebatesCity Manager PlanMagazine AnnouncesEssay Contest WinnerThe University of Chicago Maga¬zine, monthly Alumni Council publi¬cation, appears tomorrow, containingthe results of the manuscript contestand featuring the winning essay.Other articles appearing in thisissue include “The Further Educationof a Business Man” by vice-presidentWilliam Benton; “William RaineyHarper” by George Vincent; “In MyOpinion” by Fred Millett.Paul Maclean comments an athlet¬ics, and Lewis Dexter strikes aplaintive chord with “A Recent Alum¬nus Complains Too.” The departmentscontaining news of the quadranglesare written by William Morgenstern,Howard Mort, and others. “Resolved, That this Union shallfavor city management as the onlypermanent solution to the problem ofspoils politics in Chicago” will con¬stitute the subject for discussion atthe Political Union meeting Wednes¬day. The meeting is called for 7:30in Social Science 122.The guest speaker for the eveningwill be announced in tomorrow’s issueof the Daily Maroon. Party leadershave been requested by Ned Fritz,chairman to hold party caucuses atonce in order that student speakersmay be selected and that the view¬point of the delegates towards theproposal may be determined.There will be as many caucuses asthere are viewpoints, regardless ofparty affiliations. As is the usual pro¬cedure, the guest speaker will proposethe issue in a talk of about 30 minutes,followed by a student speaker in sup¬port of the motion and at least twostudent speakers in opposition, withadditional speakers to present theviewpoints of each caucus.Because of the approaching examin¬ations, Wednesday’s discussion will belimited. This is also the last time thatthe Union will meet this quarter,postponing the remainder of its pro¬gram until the Spring quarter. Group Plans to Name Sec¬retary - Treasurer NextWeek.Show “Nanookof the North”Exhibit New Workby Maude HutchinsFrom March 4 to March 9, MaudePhelps Hutchins will exhibit threenew bronze heads and 43 pen and inksketches at the Quest Art Galleries,810 North Michigan.The heads, which have not been dis¬played before, are of Mrs. Inez Cun¬ningham Stark, president of theRenaissance Society, Mrs. W. S. Brew¬ster, and Eugenie Leontovich, who re¬cently acted in “Tovarich.” The penand ink drawings are not limited insubject matter. The University Filmsents “The River” andthe North” today. “The River” isskillfully photographed documentaryfilm portraying the ravages of theMississippi floods and the role of thegovernment in controlling and pre¬venting these catastrophes. Directedby Pare Lorentz, the picture was pro¬duced within the last year, and hasbeen shown widely both in Chicagoand throughout the rest of the coun¬try.“Nanook of the North” is an ac¬tual record made in the north por¬traying native life and the environ¬ment of the Eskimos. Robert J.Flaugherty has a long and disting¬uished record as the outstanding di¬rector of naturalistic films, and Nan¬ook, his first picture of this sort, wasproduced in 1921. • It was the pred¬ecessor of “Chang,” “Grass,” “Tabu,”tt-tr MONLY i17^ ROUND TRIPTHIRD CLASS At the last meeting of the quarter,BWO elected Laura Bergquist aspresident of Interclub Council fornext year.Bergquist is, in addition, the presi¬dent of Pi Delta Phi, co-chairman of-the Mirror program-score committee,a member of YWCA First Cabinetand the Political Union, a represent¬ative to BWO and the Purdue wom¬en’s conference last fall, and an edi¬torial associate on the Daily Maroon.Secretary-TreasurerSecretary-treasurer of Interclubwill be elected next week when thenew club presidents join the Council.Thus far Martha Steere is presidentof Delta Sigma, Helen Thomsen ofChi Rho Sigma, Eloise Husmann ofPhi Delta Upsilon, Jane Jordan ofDeltho, Beth Williams of Achoth, Ju¬dith Cunningham of Mortar Board,Ardis Manning of Wyvern, TroyParker of Sigma, Peggy Huckins ofPhi Beta Delta, Faraday Benedict ofQuadranguler, Mary Jane Metcalf ofArrian, and Lois Kelsay of Esoteric.Retiring officers of the Council in¬clude Betty Booth, president, andMarjorie Hess, secretary-treasurer.Besides electing the president ofInterclub BWO is supervising otherelections of women’s activities beingheld in the near future. Mirror elec¬tions will be held on March 11,YWCA on March 9 and WAA onMarch 10.Society pre-Nanook of Repertory GroupTHRU Gives Play onSpain, LaborUnder the auspices of the ASU,the Chicago Repertory Group willbring its three most recent produc¬tions to International House theevening of March 19. Taken out ofthe headlines, the plays’ plots con¬cern themselves with the MemorialDay massacre at the Republic SteelCorporation, sit down strikes, andthe struggle in Spain.“Aftermath,” written and directedby Charles Desheim, “Plant in theSun,” composed by Ben Bengal anddirected by Lewis Leverett, which isreputed to be the most sensationallabor drama since Clifford Odets’“Waiting for Lefty,” and “Remem-er Pedrocito,” authored by Johnoftus, comprise the program .Exponents of the social aspect:ama in the Middle West are best,ampled by the Chicago Repertory,oup, which has gained plaudits ofamatic critics for the ability to in-rpret this most modern dramarm. Because all members of theoup work, they claim their per-rmances contain a complete sincer-y which those not closely allied toie laborers are incapable of main¬lining.Students Air Campus Problems at Ac.Warder Allee Speakson N. U. FoundationNorthwestern University plays hostto a University of Chicago professortiext week. Warder C. Allee, Professorof Zoology at Chicago, will present a(‘l ies of six lectures on “Group Ac¬tion among Animals and Its Sociali'nplications,” starting March 8. Thectures are sponsored by the Normantv ait Harris Foundation and will bebold at Harris Hall in the EvanstonSchool.Dr. Allee is a noted student of’loup behavior and mass psychologyanimals. He is the managing editorf the journal. Physiological Zoology,[•nd a trustee at Earlham as well asin eminent practical social worker.The public is invited to his lectures. Talking nonsense is a man s oneprivilege over all creation.What do you think is wrong withthe University and campus life?What has it done for, or to, you?What hasn’t it done? W’ould you liketo have no fraternities, a chastizedDaily Maroon, a change in the collegeplan, a subsidized football team, lesspolitical activity or more Chapel Un¬ion? Or are things just dandy?Student opinion — your opinion —on this campus has had no I’eal voice.Obviously the best way of expressingstudent opinion is for the students toexpress their opinions, and that iswhat the All-Campus Conference thisspring will do. The Conference issimply the getting together of a largegroup of students to tell how theUniversity’s educational program andsocial life have affected — or failedto affect — them. Aside from the in¬formation and ideas which are bound to come out of such a conference, themere bringing together of a largecross section of the student body tolisten to each other’s kicks and in¬spirations will help the students tounderstand each other and to realizewhat is going on in the University.It will give them a feeling of unity—“the school spirit”.* « ♦The Conference will be held on thesuccessful week-ends of April 15-16and April 22-23. The delegates to theConference will come from every stu-, .... 1 iU V- - ’ ORMAL DANCINbowman Talks on“Mental Hygiene”USIC. M M -Defining mental health as an adjust-X TWj B ir WM ifflHent of human beings to each other’ith the maximum happiness, Har-jd Leonard Bowman, minister ofjie First Presbyterian Church, spoke' testerday on “The Mental Hygiene ofI llarriage.” By understanding andpplying principles of mental health,'e can attain a successful relation-lip, he said.Problems of mental health include.le resolving of emotional conflicts,chieving emotional maturity, facing^ality, and attaining emotional secur-y. A marriage comradeship of twoeople whose relationship reinforcesnd liberates their inalienable rightsIS human beings demands a fair de¬cree of mental health. This comrade¬ship, Bowman thinks, is more nearlyPossible in these days of voluntary or‘a la carte” relationships than former-fer when marriage patterns weregid.ER BEACH HOInutes from the Midwayir^[yi?ii?»Yi:^r^ir^ryiifisvif7i^t^tr^t^r^r^Tir7ivit^r^fysvir?siir7SYir7s\ir^r7i^Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1938Individual HairdressingAt Moderate PricesShampoo and Wave 50Manicure 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57th ST.HYDE PARK 7860Hrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sat. to 6 P.M.I-M Games ScoresDeke 29; Phi Sig 16Alpha Delt “B” 20; Phi Sig “B” 6I'M Games TodayCTS vs. Snell HallDeke jumped into their usual earlylead, but a gamely fighting Phi Sigquintet held them to 11-7 at the half.In the second half the fireworks brokeloose, and Deke forged into an un¬touchable lead.Other scorers in the game were forDeke: Graemer, two; Chet Murphy,four; Kelly, one; Fareed, five; for PhiSig: Harris, two; Krause, five; Ury,three; and Fried one.“Big Stoop” was up last night tocheer on Alpha Delt’s “B” team intheir fight for “B” championship withPhi Sig. It w'as Alpha Delt all theway this time, and they w'on easilyby a score of 20-6.Alpha Delts LeadNeither team shot accurately, andat the half, the score stood 8-2 forAlpha Delt. The second half openedup some for Alpha Delt, but Phi Signever did get under way in an ef¬fective fashion.Miller of Alpha Delt topped thescorers with ten points followed byTully of Alpha Delt with six.Alpha DeltSf Pi LamsBreak Bowling RecordThe Intramural bowling record of1517 pins for a single match, set byPi Lam last week, and at the time thehighest score in many years of thetournament, was twice shattered yes¬terday.The record breaking match was be¬tween Alpha Delt and Pi Lam. Themark was first shattered by Pi Lamwith Stern, Horwich and Abelsonbowling 1550 pins, only to have itbroken by Alpha Delt’s Bob Hersch-el, Perry and Shaver who bowled1570 pins.The match was in the quarter finalround of play-offs and moves AlphaDelt into the semi-final round.CLASSIFIED ADSRifle Team LosesChicago’s varsity rifle team lost amatch to the University of Illinoismarksmen by a score of 929 to 915.Bennett led the Maroons with 186points; Dean and Slade were secondwith 184; Klein was fourth with 182;and Elliot completed Chicago’s scor¬ing with 179.This week the Maroon gunmen faceBowdoin College of New Brunswick,Maine, and Fenn College in postalmeets.Women’s rifle team meets the Car¬negie Institute of Technology girls’rifle team this week.LOST—Wristwatch; silver, name “Shirley”on back. Lost in or near Ida Noyes.Reward and no questions asked. Returnto Shirley Adams, Foster Hall.Copyright 1938. LiGGETT & Myees Tobacco Co. . .youV find MORE PLEASUREin Chesterfields milder better tasteDAILY MAROON SPORTSDekes Win I-MFraternity CageTourney, 26-19Defeat Phi Sigma Delta inTournament Finals inBartlett Gym.Delta Kappa Epsilon w-as crow-nedchampion of the fraternity divisionof Intramural basketball last nightwhen they took Phi Sigma 29 to 16on Bartlett’s big center court. Dekeput on a thrilling demonstration ofgood all around team play to win.Credit must be given, however, tothose two Murphy brothers. Bill andChet. They were unquestionably thestandouts of the game. Bill was athis specialty last night with his longshots, and was sinking them with aregularity discouraging to the PhiSigs.Bill Murphy led the scoring withnine points, followed by the irrepres¬sible Jeremy of Deke with eightpoints. Sherman, usually a highscorer was so effectively bottled up,that he was able to tally only fivepoints. Maroons Lead Big TenFoil, Sabre StandingsWith four men unofficially leadingthe Conference at sabre and foil theMaroon fencers point to win the BigTen tournaments to be held hereMarch 19. Most of the A squad willlay off over the next w-eek-end inpreparation for the conference meet,leaving it to B team men to meetMichigan State when the Wolverinesinvade Bartlett this Staurday.Gustafson, leading the Maroons intotal bout-victories with 18-2, holdsfirst place in the Conference sabredivision. Fritz and Corbett are tiedfor second place at 11-7. At foilStrauss, with 11-1, also tops the BigTen. Goldberg is second with 9-1.Tabulations are unofficiaU as the BigTen teams do not officially keep boutrecords of individual fencers. I-M Wrestling Tournament BeginsTomorrow; Announce RegulationsIntramural wrestling makes its an¬nual two-day stand at Bartlett Gymtomorrow- and Friday. The tourna¬ment last year was the largest since1926 when 70 men competed. Themeet was w-on last year by Deke with54 points, follow-ed by Phi Gam with41 and Chicago Theological Seminarywith 36 points.Several of the winners and run¬ners-up from last year including Da¬vis of Beta in the 126 pound class,Ickes, independent in the 155 andJeremy of Deke in the 175 pound willbe back.Tw-enty-one varsity and near-var¬sity men have been declared ineligiblefor the meet. Regulations announced by the I-Mdepartment are:Bouts will be eight minutes inlength unless a fall is accomplished.If the contestants are on their feetafter tw-o minutes, the remaining sixminutes of the match will be dividedinto two three-minute periods. Insuch case, if there is a fall in thefirst period and also in the second,the contestant winning the fall in theshortest time will be the winner.In bouts in whcih there is no falla decision will be given. Three pointswill be awarded for an aggressivenear fall, two points for top positionand one for escaping and coming freein determining the decision. The same points toward totalmatch points will be awarded in allmatches._ ArtKAflEL^AND Hit ORCHE/TRAintheiuaLnuT.iJROOfll/howPliMARCKH O T E L • RAN DOLPH af LA JALIEToday's HeadlinesFled I’eace Conference chairman,page 1.Same l aura Bergquist president ofInferclub, page 1.Wayne McMillen seeks state senator’spost, page 1.Results of intramural basketball tour¬ney, page 4.Political Union selects topic for nextmeeting, page 1. ^ Batlv iHaroonVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1938 Price Five CentsJ. Van de WaterHeads CampusPeace MeetingEntertainment,Discussions,Party Head Tonight’sProgram.The unopposed election of JohnVan cie Water as chairman of theAll-Campus Peace Conference wasthe only peaceful procedure of thefirst evening’s session. Audrey Neffwas chosen secretary after a disputeas to what reconunendation had beenpassed that made it necessary to keepminutes of the meeting.Delegates elected to the resolutionscommittee of the Conference are Au¬drey Neff, Pi Delta Phi; Hart Perry,Alpha Delta Phi; Mary Sloan,Y.\V.C..\.; Robert Merriam, Psi Up-silon; Janet Geiger, Y.W.C.A.; JohnMarks. Senior Class Council; EmmettDeadman, Iron Mask; Sara LeeBloom, ASU; Norman Brown, ASU;Paul Goodman, Debate Union; DickI.indheim, ASU; Adele Rose, ASU;Barbara Allee, Y.W.C.A.; CharlesCrane, Delta Upsilon; Pattie Quisen-berry. Mortar Board; Laura Berg¬quist, Daily Maroon. The chairmanof the Conference votes as an ex-officio member of the committee.( redential-s of the No-Foreign-WarsCampaign were contested by the cre¬dentials committee on the groundsthat according to the record in theDean's office, the group was entitledto .>nly one delegate. Counter-chargesthat there were too many delegatesfrom other, organizations werebrought by the No-Foreign-WarsCampaign, with the result that in->tea(l of other delegations* beingpall'd, the credentials committee de¬cided to accept all delegates so farregistered in case the organizationhad a larger number of defegates thanan officially registered.Present SkitsKnteitainment is the order of theevening for today’s Peace Conferenceses>ions. with the ASU Theatre Groupand Xerl Ko.senheim presenting skits Wayne McMillen SeeksPost of State SenatorFrom Fifth DistrictWayne McMillen, professor of Social Service Administration, is run¬ning for the post of state senatorfrom the 5th senatorial district, theposition formerly held by professorof Philosophy T. V. Smith. The district runs from 43rd to 72nd streets,from State to the lake. .McMillen was a late candidate, get¬ting his petition in just a few’ daysbefore the deadline. A group of tradeunion leaders and neighborhood pro¬gressive group heads, realizing thatthe only Democratic candidate in thedistrict w’as a Kelly-Nash man,pressed the SSA profes.sor into serv¬ice as an independent Democrat andrushed through a campaign to get hispetitions filled out. There has sincebeen a candidate for the Horner groupadded to the list.Prominent on his platform is sup¬port for social security legislation, atopic on which he is a recognizedauthority. He will campaign for ade¬quate relief, increased state supportfor schools, and liberal labor legisla¬tion.There are now three Universityprofessors, McMillen, Smith, andJames Weber Linn, running for officein the coming elections. There will beno conflict in any of the candidacies,however, and according to McMillen,each candidate is supporting all theothers. Linn is a candidate for officein the state hou.se of representatives,and Smith for the post of congress¬man-at-large.Several University men, including(Continued on page .3).it the beginning of the second sessionand an .\SU party after the seminars.Kioenheim is the author of a versesatin on boycotts, which will beplayed by Rosenheim, Julian Gold¬smith, Travis Kasle, and James Gold¬smith, The ASU offering is an anti-Nazi monologue, “The Bishop ofMunster,” which, in the form ^of aspeeih from the pulpit, shows thenii't'ortiines of the Aryan Christiansof G( rmany. Demarest Polacheck, starot ■ America, America,’’ is the bishop.At the party following tonight’sses Kill, the Theatre Group will pre¬sent “Peace Quartette,’’ a skit in- Legal FraternityInitiates ElevenInitiating eleven men and electingtwo honorary members, the Univer¬sity chapter of the Phi Delta Phi,national legal fraternity, meets to¬night at 5 at Ida Noyes, Charles P.Megan and James W. Moore will re¬ceive honorary memberships.The meeting of the fraternity be¬gins at 5, dinner will be at 6, andhonorary initiation will follow thedinner. Pledges to be initiated are:Tom Moran, Allan John.son, DanSmith, Charles Dunbar, Jim Melville,Thad Carter, Peter Schneider, JohnGilbert, Karl Jinitzky, Frank Seiterand Charles Longacre.Charles P. Megan, who becomes anhonorary member tonight, is pastpresident of the Chicago Bar Asso¬ciation and is the father of Tom andGrayton Megan, members of Phi Del¬ta Phi.James W. Moore, professor of Lawin the University, has written a num¬ber of texts and magazine articles oncoi porated in the successful New York i subjects and recently assisted aiiuiMi'.il comedy review of the International Ladies’ Garment WorkersInion. “Pins and Needles.’’ Hitler,Mus.solini, Franco, and Baldwin arethe tour angels of peace.‘Factors Making for War Today”ami “What Foreign Policy Should theFniti'd States Have?” are the subjectsnt today’s seminars. Meeting in IdaN'oyi s theatre at 3:30 for a brief talkn.v (Quincy Wright, professor of In-t' lnatiorial Relations, the delegateswdl then go to the four seminars.I'.vouinjr seminars begin after theplays. Students representing fourpoints of view will lead the discus¬sions, intended to cover the groundpi eparatory to the debate of the final;.si()n. Washington commission in draftingnew federal rules for legal proced¬ure in federal courts.Oldest professional fraternity inthe United States, Phi Delta Phi in¬cludes on its roster the President ofthe United States, members of theSupreme Court, many of the Lawschool faculty, and President RobertM. Hutchins. Officers of the Univer¬sity chapter are David Smith, JamesFawcett, John Lynch, Owen Fair-weather, John Clark. Oliver StatlerDirects MirrorTechnical StaffThirteenth Annual Produc¬tion Takes Place Friday,Saturday.Oliver Statler, veteran of manyDM productions, is heading the 1938Mirror production staff.Co-operating with him in his workare Jeanne Tobin who is takingcharge of properties assisted by Pa¬tricia Grinager, while Betty JaneWatson heads the costume committee.Betty Beard is stage manager thisyear. Other people w’orking behindscenes are Clementine V a n d e rSchaegh and Virginia Jonnson whoare managing the box-office, and Persis-Jane Peeples who has the respon¬sibility for publicity. Another fea¬ture of this year’s show will be afull program-score, containing boththe program and music from thisyear and past year’s revue. Thescore has been arranged by LauraBergquist and Marjorie Hess.Design Scene.sLouise Snow and William Tallonhave been designing some of thescenic effects for the Mirror. Thestage crew working under Statlerconsists of John Argali, Robert Cole,Alexander Harmon, Mitchell Hutch¬inson, Frederick Linden, GeorgeMead, Jack Merrifield, James Murr,Charles Paltzer, Robert Sabin, Don¬ald Sieverman, Clarence Sills andGlenn Slade.Mitchell Hutchinson is director oflighting. Final rehearsals for theshow, to be held Friday and Satur¬day nights, are now under way di¬rected by Frank Hurburt O’Hara, whoproduced the first Mirror production13 years ago. BWO Elects Bergquist to HeadInterclub Council for Coming YearPolitical Union DebatesCity Manager PlanMagazine AnnouncesEssay Contest WinnerThe University of Chicago Maga¬zine, monthly Alumni Council publi¬cation, appears tomorrow, containingthe results of the manuscript contestand featuring the winning essay.Other articles appearing in thisissue include “The Further Educationof a Business Man” by vice-presidentWilliam Benton; “William RaineyHarper” by George Vincent; “In MyOpinion” by Fred Millett.Paul Maclean comments an athlet¬ics, and Lewis Dexter strikes aplaintive chord with “A Recent Alum¬nus Complains Too.” The departmentscontaining news of the quadranglesare written by William Morgenstern,Howard Mort, and others. “Resolved, That this Union shallfavor city management as the onlypermanent solution to the problem ofspoils politics in Chicago” will con¬stitute the subject for discussion atthe Political Union meeting Wednes¬day. The meeting is called for 7:30in Social Science 122.The guest speaker for the eveningwill be announced in tomorrow’s issueof the Daily Maroon. Party leadershave been requested by Ned Fritz,chairman to hold party caucuses atonce in order that student speakersmay be selected and that the view¬point of the delegates towards theproposal may be determined.There will be as many caucuses asthere are viewpoints, regardless ofparty affiliations. As is the usual pro¬cedure, the guest speaker will proposethe issue in a talk of about 30 minutes,followed by a student speaker in sup¬port of the motion and at least twostudent speakers in opposition, withadditional speakers to present theviewpoints of each caucus.Because of the approaching examin¬ations, Wednesday’s discussion will belimited. This is also the last time thatthe Union will meet this quarter,postponing the remainder of its pro¬gram until the Spring quarter.Show “Nanookof the North’’Exhibit New Workby Maude HutchinsFrom March 4 to Mai’ch 9, MaudePhelps Hutchins will exhibit threenew bronze heads and 43 pen and inksketches at the Quest Art Galleries,810 North Michigan.The heads, which have not been dis¬played before, are of Mrs. Inez Cun¬ningham Stark, president of theRenaissance Society, Mrs. W. S. Brew¬ster, and Eugenie Leontovich, who re¬cently acted in “Tovarich.” The penand ink drawings are not limited insubject matter. The University Filmsents “The River” andthe North” today. “The River” isskillfully photographed documentaryfilm portraying the ravages of theMississippi floods and the role of thegovernment in controlling and pre¬venting these catastrophes. Directedby Pare Lorentz, the picture was pro¬duced within the last year, and hasbeen shown widely both in Chicagoand throughout the rest of the coun¬try.“Nanook of the North” is an ac¬tual record made in the north por¬traying native life and the environ¬ment of the Eskimos. Robert J.Flaugherty has a long and disting¬uished record as the outstanding di¬rector of naturalistic films, and Nan¬ook, his first picture of this sort, wasproduced in 1921. • It was the pred¬ecessor of “Chang,” “Grass,” “Tabu,”«TlC ftONLY >17q ROUND TRIPTHIRD CLASS i Group Plans to Name Sec¬retary - Treasurer NextWeek.At the last meeting of the quarter,BWO elected Laura Bergquist aspresident of Interclub Council fornext year.Bergquist is, in addition, the presi¬dent of Pi Delta Phi, co-chairman of-the Mirror program-score committee,a member of YWCA First Cabinetand the Political Union, a represent¬ative to BWO and the Purdue wom¬en’s conference last fall, and an edi¬torial associate on the Daily Maroon.Secretary-TreasurerSecretary-treasurer of Interclubwill be elected next week when thenew club presidents join the Council.Thus far Martha Steere is presidentof Delta Sigma, Helen Thomsen ofChi Rho Sigma, Eloise Husmann ofPhi Delta Upsilon, Jane Jordan ofDeltho, Beth Williams of Achoth, Ju¬dith Cunningham of Mortar Board,Ardis Manning of Wjrvern, TroyParker of Sigma, Peggy Huckins ofPhi Beta Delta, Faraday Benedict ofQuadranguler, Mary Jane Metcalf ofArrian, and Lois Kelsay of Esoteric.Retiring officers of the Council in¬clude Betty Booth, president, andMarjorie Hess, secretary-treasurer.Besides electing the president ofInterclub BWO is supervising'otherelections of women’s activities beingheld in the near future. Mirror elec¬tions will be held on March 11,YWCA on March 9 and WAA onMarch 10.Society pre- ^ ^Nanook of Hepcrtory GroupTHRU Gives Play onSpain, LaborUnder the auspices of the ASU,the Chicago Repertory Group willbring its three most recent produc¬tions to International House theevening of March 19. Taken out ofthe headlines, the plays’ plots con¬cern themselves with the MemorialDay massacre at the Republic SteelCorporation, sit down strikes, andthe struggle in Spain.“Aftermath,” written and directedby Charles Desheim, “Plant in theSun,” composed by Ben Bengal anddirected by Lewis Leverett, which isreputed to be the most sensationallabor drama since Clifford Odets*“Waiting for Lefty,” and “Remem-er Pedrocito,” authored by Johnoftus, comprise the program .i Exponents of the social aspect^ama in the Middle West are bestampled by the Chicago Repertory•oup, which has gained plaudits ofamatic critics for the ability to in-rpret this most modern dramarm. Because all members of theoup work, they claim their per-rmances contain a complete sincer-y which those not closely allied tole laborers are incapable of main¬lining.Students Air Campus Problems at Ac;arder Allee Speakson N. U. Foundation-Northwestern University plays hosthi a University of Chicago professornext week. Warder C. Allee, ProfessorIII Zoology at Chicago, will present a'('lies of six lectures on “Group Ac¬tion among Animals and Its Social•'‘■plications,” starting March 8. The‘ ctiires are sponsored by the Normantait Harris Foundation and will be'('1(1 at Harris Hall in the Evanstoni^chool.Dr. Allee is a noted student ofbehavior and mass psychologyof animals. He is the managing editor“I the journal. Physiological Zoology,«n(l a trustee at Earlham as well as‘‘n eminent practical social worker.1 he public is invited to his lectures. Talking nonsense is a man s oneprivilege over all creation.What do you think is wrong withthe University and campus life?What has it done for, or to, you?What hasn’t it done? Would you liketo have no fraternities, a chastizedDaily Maroon, a change in the collegeplan, a subsidized football team, lesspolitical activity or more Chapel Un¬ion? Or are things just dandy?Student opinion — your opinion —on this campus has had no x’eal voice.Obviously the best way of expressingstudent opinion is for the students toexpress their opinions, and that iswhat the All-Campus Conference thisspring will do. The Conference issimply the getting together of a largegroup of students to tell how theUniversity’s educational program andsocial life have affected — or failedto affect — them. Aside from the in¬formation and ideas which are bound to come out of such a conference, themere bringing together of a largecross section of the student body tolisten to each other’s kicks and in¬spirations will help the students tounderstand each other and to realizewhat is going on in the University.It will give them a feeling of unity—“the school spirit”.* * *The Conference will be held on thesuccessful week-ends of April 15-16and April 22-23. The delegates to theConference will come from every stu-, .... ’ 4.V I- - ’ ORMAL DANCIM bowman Talks on“Mental Hygiene”Music■ M M --Defining mental health as an adjust-I JuIf ICfHent of human beings to each other’ith the maximum happiness, Har-Id Leonard Bowman, minister ofjie First Presbyterian Church, spoke< lesterday on “The Mental Hygiene ofilarriage.” By understanding andpplying principles of mental health,'e can attain a successful relation-lip, he said.Problems of mental health includele resolving of emotional conflicts,hieving emotional maturity, facingality, and attaining emotional secur-y. A marriage comradeship of twoeople whose relationship reinforcesnd libei’ates their inalienable rights'is human beings demands a fair de-ree of mental health. This comrade-hip, Bowman thinks, is more nearlypossible in these days of voluntary orfa la carte” relationships than former¬ly when marriage patterns wereigid.ER BEACH HOnutes from the Midwa'yPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2, 1938Individual HairdressingAt Moderate PricesShampoo and Wave 50Manicure 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57th ST.HYDE PARK 7860Hrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sat. to 6 P.M.I-M Games ScoresDeke 29; Phi Sig 16Alpha Belt “B” 20; Phi Sig “B” 6I-M Games TodayCTS vs. Snell HallDeke jumped into their usual earlylead, but a gamely fighting Phi Sigquintet held them to 11-7 at the half.In the second half the fireworks brokeloose, and Deke forged into an un¬touchable lead.Other scorers in the game were forDeke: Graemer, two; Chet Murphy,four; Kelly, one; Fareed, five; for PhiSig: Harris, two; Krause, five; Ury,three; and Fried one.“Big Stoop” was up last night tocheer on Alpha Belt’s “B” team intheir fight for “B” championship withPhi Sig. It was Alpha Belt all theway this time, and they won easilyby a score of 20-6,Alpha Belts LeadNeither team shot accurately, andat the half, the score stood 8-2 forAlpha Belt. The second half openedup some for Alpha Belt, but Phi Signever did get under way in an ef¬fective fashion.Miller of Alpha Belt topped thescorei’s with ten points followed byTully of Alpha Belt with six.Alpha Belts, Pi LamsBreak Bowling RecordThe Intramural bowling record of1517 pins for a single match, set byPi Lam last week, and at the time thehighest score in many years of thetournament, was twice shattered yes¬terday.The record breaking match was be¬tween Alpha Belt and Pi Lam. Themark was first shattered by Pi Lamwith Stern, Horwich and Abelsonbowling 1550 pins, only to have itbroken by Alpha Belt’s Bob Hersch-el, Perry and Shaver who bowled1570 pins.The match was in the quarter finalround of play-offs and moves AlphaBelt into the semi-final round.CLASSIFIED ADSCopyright 1938, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. . .youll find MORE PLEASUREin Chesterfields milder better tasteRifle Team LosesChicago’s varsity rifle team lost amatch to the University of Illinoismarksmen by a score of 929 to 915.Bennett led the Maroons with 186points; Dean and Slade were secondwith 184; Klein was fourth with 182;and Elliot completed Chicago’s scor¬ing with 179.This week the Maroon gunmen faceBowdoin College of New Brunswick,Maine, and Fenn College in postalmeets.Women’s rifle team meets the Car¬negie Institute of Technology girls’rifle team this week.LOST—Wristwatch: silver, name "Shirley”on back. Lost in or near Ida Noyea.Reward and no questions asked. Returnto Shirley Adams, Foster Hall.DAILY MAROON SPORTSDekes Win I-MFraternity CageTourney, 26-19Defeat Phi Sigma Delta inTournament Finals inBartlett Gym.Delta Kappa Epsilon was crownedchampion of the fraternity divisionof Intramural basketball last nightwhen they took Phi Sigma 29 to 16on Bartlett’s big center court. Dekeput on a thrilling demonstration ofgood all around team play to win.Credit must be given, however, tothose two Murphy brothers, Bill andChet. They were unquestionably thestandouts of the game. Bill was athis specialty last night with his longshots, and was sinking them with aregularity discouraging to the PhiSigs.Bill Murphy led the scoring wdthnine points, followed by the irrepres¬sible Jeremy of Deke with eightpoints. Sherman, usually a highscorer was so effectively bottled up,that he was able to tally only fivepoints. Maroons Lead Big TenFoil, Sabre StandingsWith four men unofficially leadingthe Conference at sabre and foil theMaroon fencers point to win the BigTen tournaments to be held hereMarch 19. Most of the A squad willlay off over the next week-end inpreparation for the conference meet,leaving it to B team men to meetMichigan State w-hen the Wolverinesinvade Bartlett this Staurday.Gustafson, leading the Maroons intotal bout-victories with 18-2, holdsfirst place in the Conference sabredivision. Fritz and Corbett are tiedfor second place at 11-7. At foilStrauss, with 11-1, also tops the BigTen. Goldberg is second with 9-1.Tabulations are unofficial^ as the BigTen teams do not officially keep boutrecords of individual fencers. I-M Wrestling Tournament BeginsTomorrow; Announce RegulationsIntramural wrestling makes its an¬nual two-day stand at Bartlett Gymtomorrow and Friday. The tourna¬ment last year was the largest since1926 when 70 men competed. Themeet was won last year by Deke with54 points, followed by Phi Gam with41 and Chicago Theological Seminarywith 36 points.Several of the winners and run¬ners-up from last year including Da¬vis of Beta in the 126 pound class,Ickes, independent in the 155 andJeremy of Deke in the 175 pound willbe back.Twenty-one varsity and near-var¬sity men have been declared ineligiblefor the meet. Regulations announced by the I-Mdepartment are:Bouts will be eight minutes inlength unless a fall is accomplished.If the contestants are on their feetafter two minutes, the remaining sixminutes of the match will be dividedinto two three-minute periods. Insuch case, if there is a fall in thefirst period and also in the second,the contestant winning the fall in theshortest time will be the winner.In bouts in whcih there is no falla decision will be given. Three pointswill be awarded for an aggressivenear fall, two points for top positionand one for escaping and coming freein determining the decision. The same points toward totalmatch points will be awarded in allmatches.ArtKASIEI^AND Hl« ORCHE/TRA■ ntheuiaLnuT.!jtoom./howPlfMARCKHOTEL - RANDOLPH af LA5ALIE '