Todaj/s HeadlinesHutchins debates Melby, page 1.Social Committee names Webbe chair¬man, page 1.Hlackfriars announces production ti¬tle, page 1.Name Social Science appointments,page 1.Award Varsity letters, page 5. ^ Baflp itaumVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1938 Price Five CentsSocial CommitteeName Webbe asNew ChairmanAnnounce Scholarship DayCompetitive Exams forApril 24.Giving Bill Webbe its chairman¬ship for this quarter, the retiringSocial Committee named seven as¬sociates to carry on the vork it high¬lighted this winter when it broughtthe Washington Prom back to campus,lowered the price, of bids, gave it arecord budget and was rewarded with325 paid admissions—more than theprom had yet seen.Robert Eckhouse, retiring chair¬man, announced that a profit of $16.40made by the Prom will be given tothe Scholarship Fund.Members of the new Social Com¬mittee are Bill Webbe, chairman,Harold Miles, James Goldsmith, Mar¬tin Miller, Marjorie Kuh, DorothyOverlook, Ken Osborn, and RogerNielson. Miles, Goldsmith, and Millerwere members of the Prom committee.Plan Scholarship DayNext important enterprise of theSocial Committee, according to Eck¬house, is Scholarship Day. Scheduledfor April 24, Scholarship Day will beheld in connection with the competi¬tive scholarship examinations for highschool seniors, which annually bringstudents from all Chicago highschools to the University.Senior members of the retiring So¬cial Committee, who are replaced byjuniors, are Robert Eckhouse, ex¬chairman, Margaret Tillinghast, MaryJane Hector, Betty Booth, Dave Gor¬don, Edgar Faust, Joseph Baer, andRalph Leach.Sponsored C-EstaUnder Eckhouse, the Social Com¬mittee of last quarter sponsored thebiggest social event in the history ofthe University when it organized theC-Esta held in January. Designed tobe all-inclusive, the C-Esta actuallyattracted more students than had everbi'fore attended a single campusdance. All principal groups on campuswere represented, without regard torace, color, creed or political affilia¬tion.Because of its succesis in attractingan estimated 500 students, the newly-elected committee is considering thepossibility of organizing a second C-Esta this spring. Pick Title, StartChorus Drill forBlackfriars Show“Medieval Monkery” titles theBlackfriars production for 1938.Tracing the adventures of a group ofstudents hocus-pocussed into the Mid¬dle Ages, the show is scheduled forMay 6, 7, 12, 13, and 14.To complete casting, final tryoutswill be held Wednesday and Thurs¬day of this week. Meanwhile, chor¬us rehearsals start tomorrow nightin the University high school gym.Albert Farrell, chorus manager,yesterday urged that all men inter¬ested in working in the chorus ap¬pear at first rehearsals tomorrownight. The first few periods, he said,are the most important, late comersfinding difficulty in catching up. NoFRESHMAN ASSISTANTSDepartmental positions undersophomore managers in the 1938Blackfriars are open to first yearmen. Those interested will be in¬terviewed at the Blackfriars of¬fice Wednesday and Thursday af¬ternoon from 1 to 4. Positions areopen in lighting, scenery, stageproperties, costumes, continuity,box office, program, advertising,posters, and publicity.special ability is necessary. Weed¬ing out will be done at the end ofthe first week.Ca.stro Directs Choru.sMen called for final tryouts onWednesday and Thursday of thisweek will be notified by noon tomor¬row. Those who tried out for thecast and were not notified to appearfor final casting are encouraged totry out for the chorus.Chorus direction will be under JoseCastro, Blackfriars coach of severalyears standing, who, until last yearwas connected with Hollywood’sWarner Brothers, now works withMarie Veatch of Chicago in buildingroutines for night club and hotelentertainers.Price range for the production hasbeen set at 66 cents to $2.20 forevening performances and at 30 cents1 to $1.10 for the matinee on May 7.Lowell Calvin, University Man, ReplacesKennan as Business Placement CounselorTo fill the gap created last Fridaywhen John Kennan, business place¬ment counselor, left to manage salesof the Plan for Hospital Care by theHospital Service Corporation, LowellS. Calvin has returned to the Univer¬sity from which he graduated in1929.Although Calvin received his B.S.in chemi.stry, he went immediatelyinto the industrial relations field.Working with the Western Electrict-ompany and most recently as theassistant personnel manager of theChicago Mail Order Company. Dur¬ing his first two weeks at the Univer¬sity, Calvin has been struck with theimmensity of what he must accom-I'li.vh and the difference between hispresent and his former occupations.^Vith the Mail Order Company, hewas accepting a bill of sale, makinglabor market surveys, comparingwage scales, all from the industrialangle; with the University his sit¬uation is directly reversed, becausehe must now sell the University’s"product” to the employers.Likes DifferenceEarnestly he declared, “I like thedifference. It’s the finest work I havedone So far and I hope I can con¬tinue making it fine.” *Even as it was fate’s hand that pushed Calvin into personnel workinstead of chemistry, so did he pro¬cure for him Kennan’s vacated posi¬tion. Tiring of the mail order busi¬ness, Calvin registered with RobertC. Woellner, executive secretary ofthe vocational guidance board in thechance hope of discovering a teach¬ing position in chemistry. Whenregistering, Calvin chatted withWoellner about his personnel service.Otherwise, he claims, Woellner neverwould have known of him.Fifty Per Cent NormalBecause of the recession, industrialrecruiting activity has been only 50per cent normal. Worried, but notas downcast as business conditions,Calvin alleged that he had learnednever to place faith in any forecastof future business conditions, becausethey can never be accurate.Name Brickeii Directorof Music at WisconsinAppointed director of the School ofMusic at the University of Wisconsin,Carl Bricken, associate professor ofMusic at the University and chairmanof the department of Music yesterdayannounced his resignation, effectiveSeptember 30, 1938,Professor Carl Earne.st Bricken be¬comes director of the Wisconsinschool of Music next year. Notice ofhis appointment was released lastThursday by the Wisconsin Univer-sity.Bricken was bom in Shelbyville,Kentucky in 1898, attended Yale andgraduated in 1922. He came to theUniversity in 1931. Ernest Melby, Northwestern Dean of Education,Debates Hutchins for Campus Congress, April 22Int-House Council Hears ChargesAgainst Price; Vote Supports Titus “Educational Theory andPractice” Chosen Topicfor Symposium.By EMMET1The residents of InternationalHouse began a new quarter yester¬day. And considering the furorw’hich attended the end of last quar¬ter, they began unusually peacefully.Student Council members were ableto register and to start to studywithout the continual fear that atany moment they might be called in¬to special session to consider thelatest statements of The Daily Ma¬roon, and a harassed director wasable to resume his normal duties ofadministration.Beneath the placid surface of thisroutine activity, however, bubbledthe beginnings of a new attack uponthe House administration which, if itdoes not encounter the formidableobstacle of an indifferent Board ofGovernors, may provide the campuswith even more political excitementand may effect several definitechanges in the administration of theHouse.Board Hears ComplaintsOn Sunday. March 20, severalmembers of the Board of Governorsmet with the Student Council andother interested members of theHouse to hear the complaints againstthe administration. At this meeting,which lasted five hours, specificcharges were made against Price bypresent and former members of theHouse. The most important seemed^0 be that he had discriminatedagainst foreign students who werenot of the more “socially desirabletype.”Clay Judson, chairman of theBoard, who was one of the threeboard members present, was out-of-town yesterday and could not bereached for a statement. Dr JamesM. Stifler, secretary of the Univer-Debate Value ofCity Manager Plan“City Manager Government—Yesor No?” will be the subject of a pub¬lic “town hall” meeting in Mandel hallat 8 tonight. George O. Fairweather,assistant business manager of theUniversity, will do the yessing, op¬posed by Alderman William A. Rowanof the 10th wal’d. Fairweather is awell known advocate of better busi¬ness methods in local government.Following the principal speakers,candidates for the General Assemblyfrom the Fifth Senatorial Districtwill be given the opportunity to dis¬cuss the subject. Five minutes havebeen allotted to each.The meeting is being sponsored bythe Fifth Senatorial District Unit ofthe Chicago City Manager Committee,the Progressive Club of the Univer¬sity, the Hyde Park Kiwanis Club,Hyde Park Lions Club, 65th StreetBusiness Men’s Association, and theHyde Park League of Women Voters.Mrs. Eric Stubbs, vice-chairman ofthe Fifth Senatorial District Unit ofthe Chicago City Manager Commit¬tee will serve as chairman of themeeting.Pianist Gives ConcertSeries Starting April 5Gunnar Johansen, young Americanpianist whose work has been attract¬ing much favorable comment on thewest coast, will present a series oftwelve historical piano recitals atOriental Institute, the department ofMusic announced yesterday. Begin¬ning April 5, the recitals will takeplace every Tuesday and Thursday at4 until May 12.Peace CouncilConvenesThe All-Campus Peace Councilmeets today at 3:30 in Cobb 310 forelection of officers. Joseph Rosensteinand Charles Crane retire as chairmanand vice-chairman, respectively. ' DEADMANsity and also secretary and chairmanof the Activities Committee of theBoard was non-committal. He saidthe Board had taken no action; was,as far as he was aware, contemplat¬ing no action; and had registered noopinion either on the report of Titusand Benson or on the complaintsmade at the meeting a week ago.Council ReticentThe Student Council, meanwhile,has become equally publicity shy andwill neither affirm nor deny anything—not even that they are holding ameeting Thursday night to make aformal resolution of Council opinionto present to the Board of Governors.From unofficial but authoritativesources, it was learned, however, thatthe Council had spent a four-hourmeeting on Saturday, March 19, try¬ing to formulate a definite opinion.They voted to re-affirm their confi¬dence in Titus, representative of theIndian group, whose constituency hadsigned a petition of lack of confidence(Continued on page 6)Hilary Newitt, EnglishLecturer, Speaks onBritish Foreign PolicyHilary Newitt, young English writ¬er and lecturer, will discuss “BritishForeign Policy from a Laborite’sPoint of View,” at 3:30 tomorrow inSocial Science 122.Miss Newitt is the author of “Wom¬en Must Choose,” published last year,the American edition of which is nowin preparation. The book is a compar¬ison of the condition of women underfascism, socialism and Europeandemocracy.After studying at Geneva, Switzer¬land, Newitt lived in Germany from1929 to 1932, studying economics atFrankfort am Main and watching thegrowth of the forces which led to theestablishment of the Nazi dictator¬ship. Late in 1932 she returned toEngland to speak and conduct re¬search for the Union of DemocraticControl, an organization which seeksto promote an informed public opin¬ion on international relations andforeign policy.During 1935 and 1936 she was inclose contact with the women’s move¬ment and, after attending the Inter¬national Congress of Business andProfessional Women in Paris duringthe summer of 1936, spent severalmonths traveling through France,Switzerland, Austria, Czechoslovakiaand Nazi Germany. In each of thesecountries she investigated generalpolitical and social conditions, partic¬ularly of women.According to Professor Mary B.Gilson, whom she has been visiting.Miss Newitt is “young, attractive andbrilliant, a combination it will behealthy to see (and to hear).”Chicago Students Singat Edgewater FridayThe University will take the spot¬light this Friday evening in the Mar¬ine Room of the Edgewater BeachHotel when a miniature inter-frater¬nity sing will be presented.'The fifteen or more members ofeach delegation will sing two of theirown songs and then join in severalchoruses of university songs. A tro¬phy will be awarded to the winningfraternity.The Edgewater Beach emphasizesthe fact that the yellow half-ratecards are still good every Fridaynight. They can be secured at theReynolds club. Information Desk, andThe Daily Maroon office. With thisticket the price per couple is $1.16.Students not affiliated with anyfraternity are particularly welcome. Aprofessional floorshow will be pre¬sented in addition to the music ofGriff Williams and his orchestra. The“Queens of Hearts” from Vienna,under the direction of Edmund Fritz,is the featured act. Ernest O. Melby, dean of North¬western University’s School of Educa¬tion, will debate President RobertMaynard Hutchins on “EducationalTheory and Practice” April 22 at 8:30in Mandel hall. The debate, for which35 cents admission will be charged,is the last session of the Campus Con¬gress.Rather than stress their differences,the two men will attempt to clarifytheir policies in an informal manner.They will sit at a table with a micro¬phone between them instead of fol¬lowing formal debating practice.Practical ApplicationFor twenty minutes each man willspeak on the practical application tothe curriculum of his educationaltheories, after which they will discussthe points of difference presented.Answers to written questions fromthe audience will be given by eitherspeaker.Dean Melby is the author of a seriesof articles criticizing the Hutchinspolicies which ran in the Daily Newsthe year before last. He condemnedHutchins’ theories as a return to“stark and sterile medievalism” inthought rather than education for acoming social order.The Campus Congress, Thursdayand Friday afternoons and evenings,April 14, 15, 21, and 22, will cover allaspects of student living, education,recreation, and actual living condi¬tions. A study of activities, includingpublications, arts, athletics, religion,politics, social life, and eating andliving facilities will be the subject ofthe first week’s sessions.Consider EducationThe second week the Congress willconsider education at the University:the general courses, facts versusideas, departmental groups, compre-hensives, graduate work, place of thebusiness school in the University, theclassics, the New Plan, field andlaboratory work, relations betweenstudent and faculty, function of theteacher, and the aims of higher educa¬tion.Each set of panel discussions will befollowed by a general resolutions ses¬sion which will try to summarize thediscussion. Publicity for the Congressis being handled by Jack Fetman,delegates by George McElroy, andtickets by Bud Herschel.Hutchins ListsAppointmentsNew appointments for the academ¬ic year,, announced by President Rob¬ert Maynard Hutchins at the Winterconvocation, include Wilton MarionKrogman as associate professor ofanatomy and physical anthropologybeginning next fall, and RichardHenry Tawney as visiting professorof economic history for spring quar¬ter of 1939.Krogman, who received his Ph.D.degree from Chicago in 1929, hasbeen concerned with growth changesin the skull and face of anthropoidsand man. His work has been impor¬tant to orthodontists (dentists con¬cerned with correction of imperfectgrowth of teeth) as well as to ana¬tomists and anthropologists. Since1931 he has been at Western ReserveUniversity.Of Krogman’s appointment to theUniversity, Professor Fay-CooperCole, head of the anthropology de¬partment, said: “Mr. Krogman’s rec¬ord of research and publications isexceptional for so young a man. (Heis 34.) His appointment effects moreclosely a working arrangement be¬tween closely affiliated fields, anat¬omy and physical anthropology.”Richard Tawney, of the LondonSchool of Economics, is regarded byeconomists as an outstanding scholarin the field of English economic his¬tory. His published works, includ¬ing a study on “the acquisitive so¬ciety” have exercised a marked in¬fluence on students of economics, ac¬cording to Dean Robert Redfield ofthe division of social sciences.Page TwoPLATFORM1. Creation of a vigorotis campus community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened presidentThe Campus Congressis a reality now. A debate between Presi¬dent Hutchins and Northwestern’s Dean Melby hasbeen arranged to cap the program. The program forthe eight session Congress has been drawn up. A drivefor delegates is about to start. The Congress is underway.Opportunity for student discussion of the Univer¬sity of which they are a part has been provided by thesmall group of students, headed by George Halcrow,who see in the Congress a new and effective means ofimproving inferior phases of the University and edu¬cating students. The only question now is whetherthe University’s students want to react to their en¬vironment, want to discuss the University, want tothink and speak about the process called educationthey are put through. The success or ill-success of thedrive for delegates will provide the answer to thisquestion.Three years ago the class of ’35 made history withits Fandango, a monument to the gambling instinct ofUniversity students. The class of ’38 has undertakena still more ambitious task in the Congress. May itbecome a monument to the alertness and intelligenceof the present generation of University students.The Social Committeeadhered strictly to convention in guiding itsselection of next year’s chairman by fraternal affec¬tions. The election is the more disappointing in that itmarks the reassertion of tradition which limits thesphere of the Committee’s interest to the fraternitygroup, a tradition that has largely been cast off bythis year’s chairman. Bob Eckhouse, in favor of aneffort to create an inclusive campus community.Candidates for the chairmanship were Marty Miller,Alpha Belt, and Bill Webbe, Psi U. Since only thechairman and ambitious juniors work for the Com¬mittee, this appointment is all-important to the com¬plexion of next year’s Committee. Both worked hard,but Miller worked throughout the year in close co-op¬eration with Eckhouse, and was largely responsiblefor the success of the C-Esta. Webbe did his work onthe Washington Prom, tradition soaked, rich students’affair.In the circumstances a forward looking committeewould hardly have chosen Webbe. But the Committeeis not forward looking. They let Eckhouse do the Com¬mittee’s work as he saw fit, and proceeded to vote frat¬ernally. A majority of the Committee is composed ofPsi U wheelhorses. Gordon is a Psi U; Faust and THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 29Baer, the Committee’s 'independents’, lack only initia¬tion; Tillinghast and Hector are Psi U appendages.In the circumstances, the Committee had no diffi¬culty deciding for Webbe.The record is not conclusive, of course. Webbe mayprove as progressive and energetic a chairman as Eck¬house has been or Miller would have been. But it isa lame start.ArsenicANDAPPLESAUCEBy NED ROSENHEIMSTEWARDTo those students who are familiar with Holinshed’sChronicles the name McSorley-Steward must strike aresponsive chord. The legend of Wallace Pibroch Mc¬Sorley-Steward is well known through the varioussources of our knowledge of Scotch history. WallaceMcSorley-Steward was Thane of McSnee in the earlyninth century and it is his foul murder of his wife, thebeauteous Lady Claudia, which has given rise to thefamed legend of the Green Woman. According to thislegend, a woman six inches high and proportioned toscale, of a gorgeous verdant hue, still haunts the an¬cestral castle of the McSorley-Stewards and percheson the foot of the bed of any of the family who hasdrunk an appreciable quantity of whiskey.All of which is of no particular interest to the Uni¬versity, save for one remarkable development of thelast 24 hours. The sole American member of clanMcSorley-Steward has just been engaged as officialnews-vendor for the Maroon. His name is WalterSteward, the McSorley having been dropped to avoidthe taxes during the Jackson administration. Unawareof his illustrious ancestry, Walter has led an unevent¬ful life, leaving school in eighth grade and working atthe steel mills until a recent layoff. He’s a nativeChicagoan, but the famous Steward wanderlust hasbeen strong enough to send him on long trips to suchremote corners of the earth as Grand Rapids and Mil¬waukee. The father of five children, three boys andtwo girls, who range in age from three to ten, Walteris anxious to make good at the Cobb Hall stand.So from now on, when you see a short, sandy-hairedman selling papers on campus shut your eyes and feelthe wind, fresh from the Trossochs, imagine the skirlof bagpipes accompanying the newsboy’s shout, and pic¬ture the tartan of clan McSorley-Steward in place ofWalter’s gray trousers and leather jacket. Or in caseyour imagination isn’t all it might be, you might bepersuaded to buy on the strength of the fact that Wal¬ter is a Cubs’ fan, and voted Republican in the lastelection. BY TELEPHONE"Bagdad on the Subway” (as O. Henry called NewYork City) is now able to telephone to Bagdad on theTigris.Today your Bell telephone puts you within speakingdistance of some 70 foreign countries and a score of shii )Sat sea —93% of all the world’s telephones!POLITICO-PEDAGOGUEJames Weber Linn is running for the office of statesenator on, among other things, his reputation as anEnglish professor. Somewhat startling, then, are thesigns which can be observed in the neighborhood, on 1which the N’s are inverted, giving the whole displayan appearance of whimsy or of schoolboy writing onfences, but hardly the dignity and learning which will, jwe hope, carry Mr. Linn into office. Whether you talk to Bagdad or Bali — to Oslo orBuenos Aires — or just around the corner.Bell Telephone service proves its valuewherever and whenever you use iuIIKI.L TKI.KI*IIO.\KTEXT BOOKSFor All Your CoursesNEW AND SECOND HANDDon't Forget AboutThe Book ExchangeBring in your old texts now^ You will enjoy visiting ourI GENERAL BOOK SECTION^ For Fiction - Biography - Magazines - Nonfiction - Children's Books UseourPostalStationandourRentalLibraryandourPublicTelephone STATIONERYEverything in StationeryFor School UseFor Social UsePencils - Notebooks - Inks - Filing Boxes §Fountain PensWe carry on excellent stock of the well knownmakes of fountain pens in all their various styles. Youwill find that it will be easy to make a ;uvise choice ofpen here. We have complete fountain pen repairservice.U. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. MARCH 29, 1938 Page ThreeAnnounce Rulesfor Ida NoyesArt ExhibitionHelen Thomson, chairman of theannual Student Art Show to be heldat Ida Noyes from April 19 to 25, yes¬terday announced the instructions forstudents planning to exhibit theirwork in this year’s show. The instruc¬tions are as follows:Set Rules1, All entries must be submitted atthe office of Ida Noyes hall by April11.2. Paintings and drawings must beframed or mounted.2. All material is left at the own-t r’s risk, although the hall will takeall reasonable precautions againstloss or damage.4. Exhibitors must be studentsregistered at the University this year(19;i7-38), or in the summer quarterof 1937.5. The exhibition will probably bedivided into the following classes(.subject to change by the jury):Oils, water colors, tempera, etc.;drawings (charcoal, pen and ink, pen¬cil); sculpture (modelling, woodcarving); pottery, textiles.d. No limit is set upon the numberof entries which may be submitted byany exhibitor, but no work shown ina former student art show will beaccepted.7. There will be one or more cashprizes, awarded by the jury.For further information the mainoffice of Ida Noyes hall should beconsulted or Local 1071 phoned.Rumor Hutchins WiUHead Stock ExchangeCurrent Washington and WallStreet rumors report that RobertMaynard Hutchins, president of theUniversity, may be offered the posi¬tion of president of the New YorkStock Exchange.When questioned. President Hutch¬ins, according to the Chicago Times,replied, “All rumors about the presi¬dent of the University of Chicagooriginate on the campus of the Uni¬versity of Chicago. Some student orprofessor probably saw in the paperthat the New York Stock Exchangewas going to elect a new presidentand .said to himself or to some otherstudent or professor, ‘Wouldn’t it befine if Hutchins would take thatjob’.’’Upon further questioning Hutchins.said that the New York Stock ex¬change “has a new constitution thathas been drawn up but not adopted.If there is no constitution, there isno presidency under the constitution.’’ Use Radio Referendum -to Determine NationalVote on War QuestionUsing the “hump system of radioreferendum,” the George Washingtonleague, during the week beginningEaster Monday, April 18, will take anation-wide poll on the subject ofAmerican entanglement in foreignwars. Chicago will be the scene of anexperimental poll beforo^ the nationalsurvey is attempted.The “hump” system depends uponthe ability of electrical engineers tomeasure any increases in electricalconsumption during any given period.Proposed plan for referendum yes andno votes is to choose a time duringthe day when electrical consumptionis fairly steady, for example between8 and 10 in the evening, then tobroadcast on the radio a request thatthose in favor of proposed measuresturn on all the electrical appliancesin their homes, thus increasing theelectrical load and making a “hump”in consumption graphs. Then a simi¬lar procedure can be followed intabulating the negative vote and acomparison of the charts will showthe concensus of opinion.Before attempting the national votethe League plans to take test refer-endums in the larger cities of thecountry, one of which will be Chicago,taking votes on local problems.Change Schedule ofNef Lecture SeriesProfessor of Economic HistoryJohn U. Nef has changed the orderof his series of lectures, “IndustrialCapitalism and Civilization in Franceand England, 1540-1640,” scheduled tobegin April 5 in Social Science 122.The new order of the four lecturesis: April 5, “Government”; April 12,“Social Thought and Philosophy”;April 19, “Science and Technology”;and April 26, “Literature and FineArts”.W. Lloyd Warner, associate profes¬sor of Anthropology and Sociology,will begin his series of four lectureson “Social Space: an Attempt at aComparative Analysis of Society”April 6 when he speaks on the generalproblem of social distance.“Society and Culture” will be thesubject of visiting Professor AlfredL. Kroeber’s lecture on April 7 in his“Study of Culture” series. The SensationalBUSHCOATin 4 rich tonesMaroon - GreenBrown - ChampeneSmartly TailoredFine CORDUROYAll SizesSPORT SLACKSTo Go With It14.95ERIEClothing Co.837 E. 63rd St. YOUR SPRING TOPCOATis ready and waiting for youat yourfavoriteStyleHeadquartersTWEEDSPOLOSNOVELTIESHERRING¬BONESCharge it!The ERIE WAY90 days to payAll that you want in fabric, tailoring and smooth, customtailored fit are yours for the choosing in ERIE’S special offer¬ing of fine, new topcoats. They all have that Park Avenue,Hollywood boulevard appearance and they’re all topcoats thatyou’d expect to pay as much as $35 or $40 for. Come in andsee them!ERIE CLOTHING COMPANYOPEN EVERY EVENING837-9 EAST 63rd STREETMARYLAND THEATRE BUILDINGTEXT BOOKS-USED and NEW-FOR ALL UNIVERSITY COURSES INCLUDINGLAW, MEDICINE & EDUCATIONFountain Pens, Note Books, ZipperCases, Stationery, LaundryCases, Brief Bags Largest and Most Complete line ofTypewriters For Sale, Rent,or ExchangeWOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE1311 EAST 57th STREET OPEN EVENINGSNEAR KIMBARK AVENUE PHONE DORCHESTER 4800-2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALL-THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1938Pige FourDAILY AROON SPORTSBaseball Begins With Count ofTwo Up, Three Down for MaroonsThe University’s baseball teamplayed five games on a trip duringthe spring vacation, winning two andlosing three. March 23, DePauw Uni¬versity defeated them by a score offour to three. On the 24th they wereagain taken in a three to two gamewith the Illinois Normal College. How¬ever, in their games with IllinoisWesleyan on the 25th and 26th thislosing streak was broken. On the firstday Chicago won with a score of six tothree. Chicago also won the first gameof a double header to the tune ofseven to six the following day, butlost the second eight to three.The chief reason for the team’spoor showing was that their hittingwas off the first few games. Five hitswere made in the first game and onlythree on the second. The general lackof experience of the team was alsoa deciding factor. The pitching wasgood however, and the team did wellon the defensive.Coach J. Kyle Anderson has anucleus of nine players, six of whomwon major letters last year, withwhich to build this season’s Maroonteam. The squad also is strengthenedby seven valuable men from lastyear’s freshman club.Returning VeteransReturning veterans include CaptainFrench White, short stop; Roy Soder-lind, out fielder; Joseph Mastrofsky,Paul Amundsen and Robert Reynolds,pitchers; Robert Meyer, first base;Jerome Sivesind, third base; ArtDean, catch, and Lawrence Klass, sec¬ond base. Capt. White, Meyer andSivesind batted over .300 last year.Outstanding sophomore recruitsare: William Cologeratos, secondbase; Denis Cowan, third; MartyLeavitt, Howard Isaacson and TedStritter, catchers; Robert Burke,pitcher, and Robert Brinker, first base.Although the Maroon pitching staffwill be made up chiefly of veterans,Burke, a sophomore, will be one ofCoach Anderson’s mound mainstays.On the basis of indoor season prac¬tice, Reynolds tops the pitching listwith Burke a close second.Amundsen ImprovedThe most improved pitcher on thestaff is Paul Amundsen, senior bas¬ketball player. Erratic on the moundlast season, he has improved his con¬trol and has added punch to his curveball. Amundsen is 6’6” high and haslong arms and ideal pitching hands.He can completely encircle a ball withhis hand. Mastrofsky, ace of lastyear’s pitching staff, has been both¬ered with a sore back and will notbe in shape for several weeks.The Maroon team will have a fast. BASEBALL SCHEDULEApril 12April 15April 16April 22April 23April 30MayMayMayMayMayMayMayMay 713142021252830 At Wheaton■ Armour• Notre Dame- WisconsinWisconsinAt Notre DameAt PurdueIllinoisAt IllinoisAt IowaAt IowaPurdueNorthwesternAt Northwesternsnappy infield. Capt. French, one ofthe conference standouts last year,will handle the shortstop assignment.Meyer will hold down first base. Klassor Cologeratos, who are competingfor the second base post, both arecapable of making a good double playcombination with White. Third baseis the scene of a hot contest betweenSivesind, who batted .350 last year,and Cowan, a speedy sophomore re¬cruit.Four fine catchers are competingfor the backstop post vacated by thegraduation of Robert Shipway, 1937captain. Dean, last year’s reserve,and Leavitt, Stritter and Isaacson,sophomores, all are big, fast candi¬dates.The outfield presents the only se¬rious problem for Coach Anderson.With Milton Bernard and HarveyLawson both lost to the squad, theMaroon outfield this year is lackingin speed and hitting strength. SollieSherman and Cliff Cramer, reserveslast year, and Soderlind, a veteran,are the outstanding candidates. Conference RifleTeams Competein National Meetlearn to danceCORRECTLYTAKE PRIVATE LESSONSTERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63RD ST.HYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A.M. to 10 P. M. More than 100 small bore rifle ex¬perts from Big Ten universities andfrom other colleges and universitiesin the country will compete in theintercollegiate shoulder-1 o -shouldermatches of the National Rifle Associa¬tion to be held, April 1, 2 and 3, inconnection with the third annual Uni¬versity Rifle Club Invitational Meet.Similar matches will be fired inthree other sections of the UnitedStates. A member of the NationalRifle Association will be present ateach place, will score the targets andwire the results to Washington, D. C.,where they will be compiled and thename of the winning team announced.Many Teams AttractedRussell Wiles, Jr., University rifleteam coach and match manager, saidthe Chicago shoot would attract teamsfrom all of the Big Ten universitiesand from colleges as far south asAlabama and as far east as Pennsyl¬vania. Regulations permit a collegeteam to shoot in any of the fourdesignated matches.The intercollegiate shoulder-to-shoulder matches consist of 10 shotsoff-hand or standing, 10 shots kneel¬ing, 10 shots sitting and 10 shots inthe prone condition. The firing will bedone at a distance of 50 feet with .22caliber rifles equipped with ironsights.Because the Chicago intercollegiatematches offer college marksmen theadded opportunity to participate inthe Dewar course competition of theUniversity Rifle Club InvitationalMeet, many teams will leave their own sections to compete in the Chi¬cago shoot, to be held in the MidwayFieldhouse and in the basement ofBartlett gymnasium.400 Enter MeetAdvance entries indicate that ap¬proximately 400 of the nation’s cracksmall bore rifle experts will take partin the invitational match, second insize only to the annual outdoor eventat Camp Pe#ry. The match is spon¬sored jointly by the University ofChicago Rifle Club, the Illinois StateRifle Association, the American Leg¬ion, and the National Rifle Associa¬tion.With facilities for 30 targets, 18 ata distance of 100 yards, and 12 at 50yards, the University of Chicago Field-house is the largest and best equippedindoor rifle range in the country. Anderson Discusses GolfSeason With CandidatesCoach Kyle Anderson will discussthe coming golf season at a meetingthis afternoon at 4 in the trophy roomin Bartlett Gym. All candidates forthe varsity team should be present tohear plans for practice and the actualmeets. Of the six meets which havebeen scheduled, all except the meetwith Wisconsin and low.i at IowaCity and the Conference Meet at Min¬neapolis will be held at the OlympiaFields Country Club. The schedulefollows:April 22 Notre DameMay 2 Ohio StateMay 7 Wisconsin and IowaMay 9 PurdueMay 13 NorthwesternMay 23-24 Conferencefl NEW LOW PRICE FOR"STUDENT BUNDLE" All IronedYour entire bundle completely Washed andIroned ready to use. Shirts De Luxe Hand Finishedat NO EXTRA CHARGE.25c per pound(Minimum bundle 50c)ask forStudent Economy BundleMETROPOLE LAUNDRYWetUy N. Karlson, Prop.1219-21 EAST 55th STREETPhone Hyde Pork 3190 Free Pick-up and DeliveryiaggMKiaaaHwaiMCiMBMa8iaHiW(KiawaBffi<WB^THE LEXINGTONTHEATRE1162 EAST 63rd STREETTUESDAY, MARCH 29thJOEL McCREA - FRANCES DEEBOB BURNS"WELLS FARGO"PLUSDICK FORAN - ANN SHERIDAN"SHE LOVED A FIREMAN"ISMS;Advertisement Advartisemant Si3JAMES WEBER LINNDemocratic Candidate for State Repre¬sentative—Fifth DistrictBelieves that he is endorsed by every Democratic, Republican andSocialist voter among the members of the University of ChicagoFaculty, and many of the Republicans will vote for him in theDemocratic primary. Hundreds of the 3400 alumni ond alumnae inthe District have written him pledging their support, including asmany Republicans as Democrats. He hereby announces that heexpects equally solid support among undergraduate and graduatestudent voters of the District (Third, Fourth, Fifth and 36 precinctsof the 6th Ward). If YOU are opposed to his candidacy, pleasewrite him; if you are supporting and working for his success, don'tbother to write.Professor Linn will be glad to publish, in an advertisement personallypaid for, as this is, the name of every member of the Faculty whois opposed to his candidocy. In the name of free speech, if youoppose him, LET HIM KNOW!JAMES WEBER LINNDemocratic Candidate for State Repre¬sentative—Fifth DistrictSponsored hut not bossed byHenry Horner — Thomas J. CourtneyT. V. Smith — Robert Maynard Hutchins FIGURES DON'T LIEHere's The Real McCoy onLOW b^k's pricesUSED and NEWJust a Few of ourMany BARGAINSReg. Our YouPrice Price SavePark & Burgess: Intro, to the Science ofSociology 2.25 2.25Duddy & Freeman: Written Communicationin Business ...3.50 2.50 1.00LaPiere & Farnsworth: Social Psychology.. .3.50 2.45 1.05Carr: Psychology ..2.40 1.60 .80Rorem: Accounting Methods, revised ...3.50 2.45 1.05Daugherty: Labor Problems in AmericanIndustry 2.45 1.05Trevor: History of Ancient Civilization,Volume I .3.50 2.60 1.00Murdock: Our Primitive Contemporaries .3.50 2.45 1.05Bemis: Diplomatic History of the U. S .4.00 3.00 1.00Cubberly: Public Education in the U. S.,revised .J.OO 2 10 .90Brooks: Pol Parties & Elect. Problems .3.50 2.45 1.05Langsam: World Since 1914, 3rd edition... ...4.00 2.80 1.20Benns: Europe Since 1914, 2nd revisededition 1926 2.75 1.00Benns: Europe Snee 1914, revised edition1935 .3.75 2.10 1 65Elliott & Merrill: Social Disorganization.... .3.50 2.50 1.00Freeman: Mental Tests .2.60 1.50 1.00Holzinger: Statistical Methods in Education 3.60 2 50 1.10 Every Bookfor Every Course'This ia only a partial list of th# many aavings we canmake you from our unusually large Btt>ck. A trip downhere will be well worth your whileFreshman Special—VAN DOREN A L: WORLD’S BEST POEMSSPECIAL NEW $.7*Every freshman U repaired to have thU b^k forthe Humanities Survey . . . Our price of 1.79 fornew copies is exceptionally low . . . You can orderin»il If remittance accompaniee your order . • *We’ll pay the postage.Math StudentsYoung & Morgan: Elem. Math. Analysis....3.25 .90Logsdon: Elem. Math Analysis, Vol. 1 2.25....1.25Rietz & C.: College Algebra. 3rd ed 1.85 1.05Brink: First Year College Math 3.50 2.50Granville S & L: Calculus 3.40 2.50 LAW STUDENTSBuy Now—Used Stock Is LimitedFreund: Cases on Adminisraive Law, 2nd ed.—regular price $5 00—our price 13.25Park: Cases on Mortgages, latest edition„ . —regular price $5.00—our price $3.25Britton: Bills & Notes. 2nd edition—regultr price $5.50—our price $4.00Landis: Cases on Labor Law, latest edition—regular price 17.50—our price $5.50Leach: Caaes on Future Interests, 1935—regular price $6.50—our price $4.75Smith. Dowling & Hale: Cases on Public Utility Regula¬tion, 2nd edition—regular price $6.00—our price $4.75Chaffee & Simpson: Cases on Equity, 2 vols.—regular price $8.00—our price $6.00Hanna: Cases on Creditors Rights, 2nd edition—regular price $7 00—our price $4.90Your Old Books Are As Good As CashBring Them AlongAmerica’s Largest Educational Book HouseWILCOX s FOLLETT CO.1255 So. Wabash Ave. Wholesale-Retail ChicagoTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1938 PageFiveS4 Gain Varsity Letters, AwardMajor C’s in Basketball to EightThe athletic department awardedvarsity letters in winter sports lastquarter. Those who received majorC’s in basketball are: Paul A. Amun-densen, Robert E. Cassels, JohnEpgemeyer, Richard Lounsbury, Rob¬ert E. Meyers, Jack Mullins, KendallC Petersen and Morris M. Rossin.Howard G. Isaacson, Lyman Paine,and Carl Stanley earned minor C’s.Numeral winners were Walter F. Con¬rad. William R. Georjfen, Howard G.Hawkins Jr., Willis L. Littleford, Ray¬mond H. Malmquist, Robert P. Mc-Namee, Howard J. Morton, George E.Sehatz, William P. Steinbrecker, Otto\V. Snarr, Lynn A. Sorenson, JosephM. Stampf, Raleigh R. Steinbach,David Wiedeman, and Jo)m E. Wilson.Four of the Major C winners,Amundsen, Eggemeyer, P et e r s e n,and Rossin, will be lost to the teamthrough graduation, but Cassels,Lounsbury, and Mullins will be astrong nucleus for next year's team.High point man Lounsbury and BobMeyers were the only new men to re¬ceive major C’s.Members of the fencing team whowon major letters were Charles Cor¬bett Jr., Edward C. Fritz, Laurence L.Goldberg, Edward R. Gustafson, andHerbert L. Strauss Jr. Old English Cwinners included Edward B. Butler,Richard Chapman Jr., Alexander L.George. Ralph Greenberg, Donald F..McDonald, Demarest Polacheck, LoyalH. Tingley, Jr., and Jack L. Vertuno.Freshman numerals were awarded toJames T. Corbett, Edward B, Donnel¬ly. John D. Farr, Mathew T. Glad¬stone. Norton S. Finsberg, TheodoreKritchevsky, Joseph J. Molkup, Mor¬ton L. Pearce, Herbert E. Ruben, andRobert P. Straetz.The only major letter winner in this conference championship teamwho will be lost through graduationis Ned Fritz, second place winner inthe conference sabre matches. Theother men on the team who receivedmajor awards were all getting themfor the first time.Major C’s in gymnastics wereawarded to Russel M. Baird ErwinF. Beyer, Albert G. Guy, and C. Nel¬son Wetherell. Minor letters went toGeorge L. Hayes, Robert H. Lochner,and Walter E. Nagler. Numeral win¬ners were James F. Failey, SamuelJ. Guy, Jacques V. Merrifield, GlennL. Pierre, Alan M. Robertson, Mitch¬ell Sniegowski, and Richard B. Wil¬son.Of the four varsity letter men,Baird and Wetherell will graduate,but their best man. Bier, for the sec¬ond time all around conferencechamp, still remains.The swimmers and water poloplayers earning major letters wereJames 0. Anderson. Robert B. An¬derson, J. Winslow Baer, Cecil L.Bothwell, Winston H. Bostick, Rich¬ard S. Ferguson, Juan Homs, Wil¬liam C. Lewis, Ralph C, McCollum,Nye McLaury, Phillip B. Schering,and John R. Van De Water. MinorCLASSIFIED ADSHOUSE FOR RENT—10 rooms. 3 baths. 6717Blarkstonp Oil Heat. Near U. of C.and I. C. Will decorate. Available May1. Parker Holsman Co.. 1501 East 57thSt.. HYDe Park 2525.TO RENT—Home and Ten Acres of Beauti¬ful Flossmoor land- $.50 a month. ApplyMrs. P. S. Russell. Drexel 6651.PORTABLE TYPEWRm':R—Brand new. bar-irain Phone Fairfax 8177 after 6 P. M.CONTRACT BRIDGE CLASS — PracticeGames S6c. Call or write Daily Maroon.Lexinirton Hall. ^arnottFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGUTEPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicano,published mornings except ^turday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5881 University avenue.Telephones: Local 857, and Hyde Park9221 and 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories to our print¬ers, The Chief Printing company, 1920Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 8311.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptonrates: $3.00 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: five cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the imst office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3. 1879.aBeaassNTBD ron national AOVBBTisiNa avNational AdvertisingService, Inc.CoiUgt PuhlUkm R*pr$$ntativ*420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.CaicAso • Boston • Los ansslss • San Psanciscnaward winners were Karl L. AdamsJr., John W. Bernhardt, Robert W.Brown, Richard N. Lyon, Gene Rich¬ardson, John D. Stearns, and RobertS. Stein, Those awarded numeralswere John L. Argali. Richard V.Boubjerg, Charles W, Brown, GeorgeH. Crandal, Louis B. French, Alan J.Teague,4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEPOI COllEOt STUDENTS AND ORADUATESA tkotrtmgk. inttHMVt, tttmgnphie eomru—tfmfirngjtnman 1, APrQ J, juh 1, October 1.mtnwmt Bochitt ttfUfn*, without obligution—writoor phono. No ooltdton employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D«PH.S.RepilmrOmnetfor Beginnon.open to HighJRmb/ Graduates only, start first Mondayeg oaeA mumth. Advanced Courses start009 Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCotwses open to snen.T14 S. Mlchlgon Aicogo, Randolph 4S47Over Easter Vacation—PLANAND PASS YOUR HOME EXAMINATIONS ON WHYAND HOW YOU SHOULD GO TO EUROPE THIS SUMMEROne feature to engage your studious attention is the marvelouscooperation on Hopog and Lloyd ships to give you o good time.Officers, crews, chefs, stewards oil unite in expressing Hospitalityto you. It’s the sort of teamwork that brings cheers from Third,Tourist and Cabin Class olikel"END OF TERM" SAILINGSWith Collaga OrchNttrai on BoardSWIFT LLOYD EXPRESSESBRERIEII • EUROPRJUNE U • JULY 3 JUNE 77 • JULY 9Fifth day morning orrivoli at Cherbourg and Southampton . . .Raxt morning at Bremon for the Berlin express.coiuniBus"Student Special" • JUNE 30HAPAG "FAMOUS FOUR" EXPRESSESDEUTSCHinnOHRinBURGJUNE 16 • JULY 141 JUNE 23 tJUNE 30 JULY 7tColls at Ireland, in addition to England, France, GermanyFor a more leisurely course at our lowest rotesHAPAG ST. LOUIS-BERlin LLOYOJUNE 11 • JULY 9 JUNE 4 • JULY 2CONSULT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT, orour EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DEPARTMENT especiallydevoted to the requirements of teachers and studentstraveling for pleasure, Summer Courses Abroad, JuniorYear Courses, Post Graduate Work and Regular Study.HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINENORTH GERMAN LLOYD U130 West Randolph St., ChicagoTelephone: Franklin 4130 ELECTIVE COURSESin the Fine Art of European TravelRAIL TRAVELHIKING FLYINGBIKING BUS TRAVELBOATING MOTORINGTravelers in Germany may reduce thecost of their sojourn up to 40% throughthe use of registered Travel Marks.German Railroads offer 60% fore re¬ductions.Thousands hove found that taking theirown cor abroad is an excellent and«economical way to see Europe. Particu¬larly attractive for groups. This yearcar tax is only $1 for one month inGermany.Renewal for one more month$1 additional.The above subjects and many questionsos to planning, preparing and takingyour trip to Europe ore ALL covered inthis 225-page book: YOUR TRIP TOEUROPE. It is a handy pocket-sizevolume illustrated byWallace Morgan. SendCOUPON for it and boneup for your homeexamination.\ Educational Service Department• HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE! NORTH german IlOYDI 130 West Randolph St., Chicago! Sand me your 235-page booki*'YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE .■ Enclotad it 35c to pay coiti. COl-3II Name.I Address —Jj City Sfqfo) AN ULTRA-ULTRAinCollege NightsUniversity of ChicagoInter - Fraternity“SING SESSION” ,at theEDGEWATERBEACH HOTELThisFRIDAY NITETrophy to beaivarded toivinning houseHalf-rate ticketsavailable atReynolds Club,information desk,Daily MaroonITs not too late to set a dateGRIFF WILLIAMSWith dance musicthaVs SwankyPlus The “Queens of Hearts”Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1938 'Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGS and LECTURESTown Meeting, “Should Chicagohave a City Manager?” Affirmative,George Fairweather, Negative, W. A.Rowan, Mandel Hall at 8. Sponsoredby Progressive Club; City ManagerCommittee, 5th Senatorial district;Kiwanis club of Hyde Park, HydePark League of Women Voters, HydePark Lions club, 55th Street BusinessMen’s Association. Admission free. Spector, Authorityon Dysentery, DiesMrs. Bertha K. Spector, researchassociate in Medicine, died Sunday inBillings hospital. Mrs. Spector was abacteriologist and an authority onamebic dysentery.A graduate of the University, shehad been a member of the facultysince 1929. During the war she didbacteriological research at Fort Riley,Kansas, and aided in checking theamebic dysentery epidemic during the jCentury of Progress. | Exhibit QuantrellPainting in VeniceJonas Lie’s “Afternoon in March,”which has been on exhibition in theReynolds Club, will be shown in theInternational Art Exhibition in Venicefrom May to October. The picture isowned by Ernest Quantrell, a trusteeof the University.When Erwin Barrio, recently ap¬pointed Director General of theAmerican Society of the InternationalArt Exhibition, asked if ne could showthe painting in Venice, QuantrellDivinity Chapel, “Let’s Be Realis¬tic,” Dr. Harold Leonard Bowman,Joseph Bond Chapel at 11:55.Medical Seminar, “Cardiac Output.”Dr. Wright Adams and Dr. IreneSandiford. Medicine 443, at 4:30.Alumnae Group, Alumnae room ofIda Noyes hall at 7:30.Arrian, YWCA room of Ida Noyeshall at 7.Dames Art group, room C of IdaNoyes at 7.Princeton Asks Olmsteadto Lead Islamic Seminar IF YOU ENJOY GOOD FOOD...THE BAGDAD CAFE-1145 East SSth Street-INVTTES YOU TO TRY OURArabian and American CookingLUNCHEONS 25c • 30c DINNERS 30c - 3Sc • 40cENJOY YOUR BULL SESSIONS WITH A SECOND CUP OF COFFEE iFREE agreed to allow him to have it for alimited period. In the fall it will re¬turn to the Reynolds Club.International-(Continued from page 1)in him when it became apparent hisreport was attacking Price. The voteto support Titus was opposed by onlytwo members, Malecchio Vega, Phil-lipine member, and Violet Horner,secretary of the Council.Until the Student Council formu¬lates its resolution, observers can only conjecture about the ulti aateoutcome. But when it does go onrecord, one of two things can hap.pen—changes in personnel and orthe rules of the administration willbe made (assuming of course thatthe resolution is not favorable to theadministration—a probability whichthe vote of confidence in Titus fore-shadows) or else it will have to berecognized that the Student Councilmust take a back seat and bow tothe will of the administration in therunning of the House.SMOOTHEST SMOKE YOU EVER ENJOYEDlEW SHAPES A FINISHES .wMEDICOhot only Pat'd fllfor combining moisture*proof Cellophane exterior and 66 Baffle ab¬sorbent mesh screen interior; resulting ingreatest scientific pipe smoking inventionever known. fCccps/u/ccs/g filter, out of mouth.Albert Ten Eyck Olmstead, profes¬sor of Oriental History, will conducta seminar in Arabic and IslamicStudies at Princeton University thissummer. Designed to afford teachersof religion, philosophy, medieval andNear Eastern history, Romance lan¬guages, and fine arts an insight intothe Islamic phases of their subjects,the course is open to students withgraduate standing.Under the direction of Philip Hittiof Princeton, the seminar, beginningJune 25, will last for six weeks. It issponsored by the American Councilof Learned Societies.MORIZROSENTHALFinal AmericanConcertOrchestra HallTues. March 29, 8:15Spec. U. of C. Rate25c-50c-60c-80cTICKETS AVAILABLE ATINFORMATION OFFICEOne of the World'sGreat PianistsMORIZROSENTHAL——♦THE KIMBARKTHEATRE6240 KIMBARK AVENUETUESDAY. MARCH 29thANITA LOUISE ERROL FLYNN"THE GREEN LIGHT"—PLUS—"SQUADRON OF HONOR"K , - - ■THE FROLICTHEATRE951 EAST 55th STREETTUESDAY. MARCH 29th" HOLLYWOOD HOTEL"DICK POWEL - FRANCES LANGFORDTED HEALY—PLUS-MICKEY ROONEY - LEWIS STONE"YOU'RE ONLY YOUNG ONCE" •k-k-k iNJOY THt POST TONIGHT kk kareThe exciting story of one of the world^sriskiest jobs—and how it changed thelives of two men and a girl!ANYTHING can happen on a job like thisl“ taid onaof the linemen who went out to electrify the railroad.^'Men’ll be hired and fired and killed and burned andcrippled and promoted. Some women will get theirhearts broken—and some'll wind up with good men.All told, a lot of people’s luck will be changed consid¬erable''. .. This is the drama of those men, and of thethree people in particularwhose lives were changed most.Beginning^HIGH TiHSlOHby WIIUAM WISTBt HAIHES author of “VimSCHOOISFORA NO pumHUniiRNorman Hicks, 09,wanted to be helpful, todrop a word here, a hintthere in his son’s behalf.It took a crucial hockeygame to show how easy itis, in well-intentionedways, to ruin a sensitiveboy’s school career.Son and Heirhy J. G. COZZENS A MATIOMAL LEAGUER TEUSWHY THE AMERICANLEAGUE WINSHere’s the inside story, by a pitcher who spentthirteen years in the American League and the lastsix seasons in the National. He tells also why hitting—not pitching—is the most difficult of the base¬ball arts, and how John McGraw, Connie Mackand Miller Huggins rate as managers to the onlyman who played for all three.by WAITE HOYTAl Cn* "*'*'** ERECTOR TAKES DOWN HIS■■■■wUw HAIR! In “One Minute to Go” KennethL. Watt tells what happens when Big Business decidesto go on the air . . . NEW RUMBIN STORY BYBOOTH TARKINGTON ... PLUS short stories byKarl Detzer and Naomi Lane Babson, serials, edito¬rials, cartoons and Post Scripts.