Todaifs HeadlinesMirror and Ida Noyes Council choosenew officers, page 1.Morriam comments on reorganizationbill, page 1.Round-table discusses Negro housingproblems, page 1,Political Union parties hold caucuses,page 1.Elect MerrifieldHead of StudentSettlement BoardName William BoehnerSecretary for ComingYear. Baflp inanumVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1938 Price Five CentsAttack on Reorganization Bill Dueto Misunderstanding, Says MerriamBy SEYMOUR MILLERNew heads of the Student Settle¬ment Board, elected at a meetingyesterday, are Margaret Merrifield,president, and William Boehner, sec¬retary, Mary Letty Green, retiringpresident, announced.President of the organization headsSettlement Tag Day, held annually toraise money for the Settlement, takescharge of recruiting students to dovolunteer work at the Settlement,and supervises the Finance drive,which takes place every year nearChristmas. The secretary dispatchesnotices of meetings and does all cler¬ical work necessary. Retiring secre¬tary is Margaret Merrifield. Bothorticers serve for a year.Members of the Board, which su¬pervises the Settlement’s activitiesand provides volunteer workers, are.ludson Allen, Jeanette Barrett,Bernice Bartels, Bill Boehner, BobFoster, Mary Letty Green, GeorgeHays, Marjorie Kuh, Bu<l Linden,Harry Mendenhall, Margaret Merri¬field, Harriet Nelson, John Palmer,Persis-Jane Peeples, George Probst,Jo.Anne Smith, Kenneth Sponsel, DonThomann, John Van de Water, Ai-leen Wilson, and Helen Woodrich.Friars SwitchTitles; Call forPosters Friday“Medieval Monkery?” said the manwith the big cigar, “What is it, astory about a zoo?” “No”, said theman in the checked suit “it won’t sell.It hasn’t any ummph, no go, noswish, no catch. It isn’t a good titlefor a show.”"Well,” said Abbot Frank Careyand Friar Bob Fitzgerald as memor¬ies of all that medieval and monksand knights and miracles meant tothem flooded their uncowled but New-Planned heads, “well, it looked good.But maybe it’s too intellectual.”So Blackfriars have changed thename of their show to “Where in theWorld.” It was early yesterday af¬ternoon that Carey and Fitzgeraldheard the pronouncement on theirearlier title given by two loop show¬men. Later yesterday, while in theoffice of a downtown publisher tryingto interest him in some of the pro¬duction songs, Fitzgerald noticedone of the titles, “Where in theWorld,"” and suggested it to Carey.Carey liked it and the switch wasmade.“Nobody,” said Carey, “could findany monkeys in that.”Two seats near the aisle are wait¬ing for the winner of the poster con¬test being staged by 1938 Blackfriars.The competition ends Friday, April 1,and all posters, 14 by 22 in size, mustbe submitted at the Order’s offices inthe Reynolds club by 4.Posters must contain the name ofthe show, “Where in the World”; thedates. May 6, 7, 12, 13, 14; the prices,30 cents to $1.10 for the matinee onMay 7, 56 cents to $2.20 for the eve¬ning performances; and the address,Mandel Hall, 5731 University Avenue. “Criticism of the reorganization billnow in Congress is based largely up¬on a misunderstanding of what themeasure contains,” declared ProfessorCharles E. Merriam yesterday. Heexpressed gratification at the passageby the Senate of the bill that hehelped draft.Merriam returned from Washing¬ton Monday. He said he had done nolobbying for the legislation whilethere and had spoken to only oneSenator.Laughs at Dictator CriesLaughing at the cries of dictator¬ship that have been raised, he de¬clared that “There is nothing in thebill, except for one minor point re¬lating to the National ResourcesBoard, that previous Presidents havenot advocated.” Almost exactly thesame powers were given to Hoover in1932 and to Roosevelt, for a period of18 months, in 1933. The present bill isto run only two years and actuallyKelly-Nash Bloc DebateHorner-Courtney GroupBefore Political UnionINegro Poet Speaksat Spanish MeetingLangston Hugnes, noted Negrowriter of proletarian poetry, willspeak at a meeting on Spain spon¬sored by the University’s Committeefor Medical Aid to Spanish Democ¬racy in Kent theatre at 3:30 today.Proceeds from the admission chargeof 35 cents will be added to the fundfor the purchase of an ambulance tobe sent to the Loyalist forces.Hughes has recently returned froma trip to the Spanish war front. Hewill speak on developments in thewar, and read some of his workswhich bear directly on the currentsituation. He is acclaimed as one ofthe foremost modern Americanwriters. The campus will have an opportu¬nity to witness the clash of the twopolitical machines fighting for controlof the Democratic party when arepresentative of the Kelly-Nash blocdebates a representative of the Horn¬er-Courtney faction at the next meet¬ing of the Political Union on April 6on the question: “Resolved that thisUnion believes that City Manager¬ship is the best form uf local gov¬ernment.” The names of the speakerswill be announced in a future issueof the Maroon.At the Con.servative caucus to beheld tonight at 8 in the Daily Maroonoffice, party members will elect anew party co-chairman to replace CyRuthenberg, who resigned, and willcomplete the revamping of the partymembership. Liberals will meet Fri¬day at 12:45 in the same place to dis¬cuss the question and possibly formblocs. The Radicals have not yetannounced the time of their caucus.The executive committee, meetingat 2:30 today in the Maroon office,will discuss problems of membershipand definitely set the time of the pro¬posed meeting. grants fewer powers to the Presidentthan the two previous ones.“The provisions relating to theCivil Service Commission practicallywipe out federal patronage,” he wenton. Despite the fact that this is oneof the points toward which severestcriticism has been directed. CivilService experts consider it the great¬est step forward in the history of theUnited States merit system.Abolish ComptrollerThe objections to the abolition ofthe comptroller-general, whose dutyit is to okay all withdrawals of fundsfrom the Treasury by the executive,Merriam dismissed with the statementthat the country got along withoutsuch an officer from 1789 until 1921and there were no scandals. The re¬organization bill provides instead foran auditor-general who will audit thebooks of the Treasury.The power to regroup, consolidateand abolish various commissions wasone that both Hoover and Roosevelthad and used to advantage. Passageof the bill will not lead to any im¬mediate drastic changes, he predicted,since it would take the Presidentabout ten years to make all the re¬forms that the bill permits.Change Original DraftOnly minor changes have beenmade in the draft since the President’sCommittee on Administrative Man¬agement, composed of Merriam,Louis Brownlow and Luther Gulick,completed it. One change which Mer¬riam termed a desirable one was toprovide for selection of the auditor-general by a joint committee of Con¬gress composed of equal numbers ofRepublicans and Democrats, instead offor his appointment by the President.Senior Class InvitesCampus to Swing atProm at Int-HouseSwing, rhythm, even the Big Ap¬ple, will return to campus April 8when the Senior Prom gets under wayat International House. Planned bythe Senior Class but open to all stu¬dents, the Prom ushers in the Springquarter social season at the Univer¬sity.Featuring such well-known per¬formers as Bob Fitzgerald, Ted Fink,Wilbur Jerger and Ned Rosenheim,the all-student floor show will be ofspecial interest to undergraduates. Inaddition to these entertainers, an un¬known Chi Psi member has promisedto perform a hypnotism act, and BobCassels is scheduled for a tap rou¬tine.Of further interest will be thepresentation of Lu-Lu-Foo to theaudience. Lu-Lu-Foo was a candidatein the recenV election for presidencyof the Senior Class, receiving twovotes. She will be accompanied by themaster of ceremonies, Ned Rosen¬heim, who is also scheduled to repeatone of his famous Senator J. WheelerBlowhoe speeches. Tickets for the in¬formal dance are priced at $1.25 percouple.15 DaysTILL THECAMPUS CONGRESSApril 14, 15, 21, 22 Hold Roundtableon Negro HousingDiscuss Property Owners’Covenants TomorrowAfternoon.A further consideration of the Ne¬gro housing problem and its relationto the University will be given at aroundtable discussion on restrictivecovenants tomorrow at 3:30 in thesouth meeting room of the Law school.Sponsored by the Student RacialRelations committee, which was or¬ganized last quarter to protest therestrictive covenants of neighborhoodproperty owners’ associations, themeeting will offer an opportunity forcomment for and against Negro seg¬regation.Speak Pro and ConRepresentatives from the Kenwood-Oakland and the Hyde Park Proper¬ty Owners’ Association will offer ajustification for the covenants, whichforbid colored tenants the privilege ofrenting property in certain southside areas. Arguments against therestrictions will be forwarded byHorace R. Cayton, research assistantin Anthropology; Truman B. Gibson,attorney; E. Waters, of the staff ofthe Chicago Defender, Chicago’s Ne¬gro newspaper; and a member of theChicago Urban League, which hasmade intensive studies of Negrohousing. Any other persons inter¬ested in the problem will be invitedto comment or to question the speak¬ers.Newitt Lectures fromLahorite’s ViewpointFollowing her appearance on Pro¬fessor Jerome G. Kerwin’s weeklyradio program last night, HilaryNewitt, English author, will speak on“British Foreign Policy from a Lab-orite’s Point of View,” at 3:30 todayin Social Science 122.Newitt, only 29 years old, is typical¬ly a product of the post-war era, andis characteristic of the small butgrowing group of young women whoare taking an active interest in politi¬cal affairs. She is the author of abook, “Women Must Choose.” For thelast few months she has been travel¬ing in America, lecturing and studyingpolitical and economic developments. 30 Students DiscussPlans for Conferencein Lexington FridayAbout 30 students not active incampus organization but recom¬mended by faculty members to partic¬ipate in the Campus Congress willmeet Friday at 3:30 in Lexington 5to discuss the plans for the confer¬ence. All interested students whetherinvited or not, are asked to attend inorder to see if they care to take parteither in the preparatory work for theconference or in the meetings of theCongress itself.Those students named are AllenSchwartz, John Harban, ArthurRaack, Ennis Coale, Frank Lopez,Edward Opperman, Katherine Freund,William Malinowski, David Pletcher,Carl Larson, Grant Adams, WilliamStokely, Marshall Hanley, JoshuaJacobs, Ray Lane, Deborah Dorfman,Nausincaa Chioles, Jerry Kollros,Harold Koff, Joseph Freilich, RichardCook, Demarest Polacheck, GrantYoumans and Don Thomann.Letters have been sent to 600members of the Senior Class, whichis sponsoring the Congress, outliningthe Senior Class program for springquarter and announcing the Congress.Tickets for the Hutehins-Melby debatewill go on sale tomorrow at the In¬formation Office, Reynolds club, andother places to be announced later.University Debaters toMeet Amherst SquadThe University’s debaters meet an¬other rival tonight at 8:30 in Room Aof International House. Amherst Col¬lege is sending a team to oppose theMaroons on the question: Resolved,that isolationism as a policy for theUnited States is impractical.The local team, which will take theaffirmative, is made up of Paul Good¬man and George Probst. Their East¬ern opponents are Charles Hill andThomas Conway. Spectators are in¬vited to witness the contest. Name CunninghamMirror Presidentin Recent ElectionIda Noyes Council AlsoAnnounces Results o fElection.Judith Cunningham was chosenpresident of Mirror for 1938-1939 inthe recent election. Treasurer of DA,and a Mortar Board, she appeared inseveral skits of the 1938 show. Inaddition she is a member of the Stu¬dent Publicity Board and the Wash¬ington Prom Committee. Other offi¬cers elected in the voting, which washeld in Ida Noyes the last few daysof winter quarter, are Betty Beard,vice-president; Persis Jane Peeples,Betty Jean Watson and Jeanne To¬bin, Board members.Beard, PeeplesBeard is an Esoteric, member ofFederation, and stage manager ofthis year’s production. Peeples isalso a member of Federation, andDA, is chairman of Mirror Publicitycommittee, and a Quadrangler. Bet¬ty Jean Watson, a Sigma, was 1938costume head, while Jeanne Tobin,a member of DA and Mortar Board,was chairman of properties.Results of Ida Noyes Council elec¬tions were also released yesterday.Helen Thomson was voted chairmanand Caroline Grabo secretary. HelenThomson is head of the coming IdaNoyes art show to be held from April19 to 25. This exhibit which is openonly to student artists at the Univer¬sity, will accept entries until April11. Inter-Club Council is donatinga prize of $5, and all other organiza¬tions who wish to donate prizesshould notify Miss Shelley. This Fri¬day the newly organized council isto hold a meeting to outline plansfor the show.Campus CongressTentative ProgramThursday, April 143:30—General session in Kent Theater. Panel discussion on problemsto be considered by the Congress.7:30—Preliminary meeting in Ida Noyes Theater to assign rooms.Panel discussions:Publications and publicityShould they reflect student opinion?How can student opinion be articulated?How can information best be disseminated?Artistic expressionCan students be artists?What is the relation between curriculum and artistic ac¬tivity?How can dramatics, literary efforts, and music be im¬proved?AthleticsShould we drop the Big Ten?Are intercollegiate athletics worth while?How should athletic policy be changed?ReligionIs religion necessary?Is religious doctrine tenable in view of surveys?Is religious activity justified on some other basis?PoliticsShould students be social reformers?What is the relation between the world and the academiccommunity?Social systemShould fraternities and clubs be subsidized?Is extension of the fraternity desirable?General meeting for reports from each group.Friday, April 153:30—Panel discussions at Ida NoyesAthleticsDo we need more body building?Does the athletic program properly emphasize durablesports?Reli^onWhat should religion do on campus?Social service versus soul care, action versus meditation.ServicesStudents must eat and sleep — but how?Are University dormitories satisfactory or adequate?Co-operatives, fraternities, rented rooms.Cafeteria rates and wages.PoliticsHow should the University change the world?Professors in politics.Advisory commissions.Agitation.JobsCan a student worker be a student?Vocational guidance serviceNY A — the government and education.Social systemHow can we build a campus community?Discussion groups.Faculty friendliness.Campus affairs.Fixed desks7:30—General session for resolutions prepared by the resolutionscommittee.(Continued on page 3)THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY,.MARCH 30, 1938Page TwoPLATFORM1. Creation of a vigorous campus community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened president.Whirling, Whirling to Deathlike flies buzzing in a wine shop and drown¬ing themselves in the dregs of emptied glasses. It isa famous simile, the wine shop was Mme. DeFarge’s;and the flies, the aristocrats, in Dickens’ Tale of TiroCities. Today it is we who are the flies, and the wine¬shop is the world.The indifference of most students, much less ofaverage persons to the approaching cataclysm, so glib¬ly called the next war, fully earns them the rank ofinsects. Over the vacation, while a bright sun shoneand pleasant winds blew in this part of the world, inanother part of the same world it was shown howcivilization is crushed in a breath, and it was presagedhow the civilization epitomized in the University willsomeday vanish from the face of the earth, and thatat no distant day. Halcyon days and marching men,civilization and a dead corpse of a once civilized coun¬try are strange neighbors to be crowded into a springvacation.The simple fact that a state organized f6r militarymight can coerce a state organized for civilian pursuits,confronts civilian states with the alternative, of imita¬tion or subjugation. And states organized for militaryefficiency are states organized for suicide. Yet thereare such states in the world today, and the suicide ofthe West waits only on the development of the belliger¬ent spirit among the civilian states.Prediction of a return to an agrarian economyseems absurd, when issued from a metropolis, by meansof such miracles of industrial ingenuity as the lino¬type, power press and social organization of a printshop. Yet if men spend their time killing one anotherthe industrial structure which is the peculiar achieve¬ment of our civilization will not maintain itself—itis far easier to destroy a factory than to build one,easier to bomb an enemy than restore your own indus¬trial strength. And a wrecked industrial system meansoverpopulation, and social disorder, and disorder meansthe throttling of trade, and the end of trade means thereestablishment of agrarian economy. How easy it isto destroy with violence the elaborate web of industrialsociety is appalling. The iron broom that is about tosweep away that web is already moving in our world.In the face of such a prospect, indifference is notcriminal, as those who think that the destruction canbe avoided would have it, but rather animal. It seemsthat the person reacts only to his immediate environ¬ment. Everyone who lays claim to intelligence mustexamine current events, and still more try to under-f stand the processes whose manifestation he sees. Butmost students are content to be animals. How sur¬prised they’ll be when the world comes tumbling downabout their ears. 5th Row Center• • • •By GORDON TIGERSomething distinctly new under the theatre sun isrepresented by Orson Welles’ Mercury Theatre pro¬duction of “Julius Caesar’’, now being performed at theErlanger by a road company. The modern dress, whichhas so captured the fancy of theatre-goers, is only theleast of the innovations of this “Caesar,” which drawsfrom its ruthless simplification and curtailment ofShakespeare’s play an immediacy and directness ofappeal which are at least melodramatically effective inthe modern theatre.Probably most shocking to sticklers for Shakespear¬ian tradition is the preoccupation of this performancewith theatrical mood, to the exclusion of any attemptat characterization, except for the broadest and mostelementary strokes. In its projection, it is consistentlyeffective, but the exact mood which it creates defiesanalysis. Negatively, it may be noted that it is neitherrealism nor anything approaching it.Frequent use is made of that nameless nervous ex¬citement created by glaring spotlights converging in apoint on an otherwise dark and bare stage, and atother times, all illusion of what we have come to acceptas dramatic reality is replaced by a curiously sugges¬tive sort of symbolism. A case in point is the meetingof Caesar with the rebellious and threatening Cassius.Such also is the brief scene of Cinna the Poet’s captureat the hands of the enraged mob, a scene protracted outof all proportion to the shortness of the performance,and characterized by fantastic effect, strong as it is, iswholly vague and unlocalized.As to the manifest concern with making this playapplicable to current events, the present productiononly gathers to itself a credit that is really Shakes¬peare’s. We all know, and have long felt, thatShakespeare being a great dramatist and history hav¬ing its well-known repetitive habit, the plays are in avery real sense not only timely but timeless. It is con¬ceivable that an intelligent audience might resent re¬iteration and bold underlining of the obvious. However,here again, there can be no denying the soundness ofMr. Welles’ showmanship.The real value of the work of the Mercury Theatreis its partial demonstration of the capacities of themodern stage for rich and various dramatic appealsindependent of our superficially realistic settings andcostumes. We look for further progress along theselines when such bare stage performances eschew alsothe novelty appeals which are almost as competent asscenery in distracting attention from the actual lines.♦ • ♦“Father Malachy’s Miracle,” sixth offering of theTheatre Guild, follows a well-established formula forlight comedy in raising a semi-serious question andproceeding a laugh it down.The moral, if any, is soothing to human frailty.After the attempts of a simple monk to reform thecorruption of our modern world by effecting a truemiracle and lys ludicrous failure, not much has beensettled except that the corruption is, for many reasons,incurable. And when to this is added a merry endingof delightful inconsequence, the whole is enough tosend us all home in an unsullied mood, proudly indul¬gent of our weaknesses, or, as we are pleased to callthem, our “human traits.” irS DELECTABLE ! IT’S NUTRITIOUS !FORTIFIED MALTED MILKGobs of wholesome Hydrox Ice Cream, certifiedwhole milk, vitimized malted milk, and STINE-WAY’S super flavoured chocolate.IT'S A TREAT YOU CAN'T BEATSTINEWAY DRUGSS7TH AND KENWOOD PHONE DOR. 2844ORCHESTRA HALLThursday Evening — Friday AfternoonMARCH 31 & APRIL 1CHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAHANS LANGE ConductingSoloiit: ALEXANDER BRAILOWSKYOvorturo, "Tho Corsair," Opus 21 BERLIOZPour una fete de printemps ROUSSELConcerto for Pianoforte. No. 4, C Minor, Opus 44... SAINT-SAENSALLEGRO MODERATOANDANTE.ALLEGRO VIVACE.IntermissionSymphony No. 4, E Minor. Opus 98 BRAHMSALLEGRO NON TROPPOANDANTE MODERATO.ALLEGRO GIOCOSO.ALLEGRO ENERGICO E PASSIONATO.TICKETS: Main floor, $1.50. $2.00. $2.50; Balcony, $1.00. $1.50: GaUery, 50cHenry E. Voegeli announcesNATHAN MILSTEINPopular Violinist—in RecitalOrchestra Hall—Sunday Ahemoon, April 10thProgramDeTil's TriU TortiniSonata in G Major. Opus 30. No. 3 BeethovenAllefcro anaai.Tempo di Menuetlo, ma molto moderato.Allejtm vivare.Concerto in G Minor BruchAllesro moderato (Prelude).Adasio.Allesro energico (Finale).IntermissionCanto No. 1 PisiettlTwo Caprices Paganini(a) G minor(c) E flat majorFontainne d'Aretuse Tarantella SsymanowskiTickets: Main Floor $2.20. $1.65: Balcony $1.65. $1.10; Gallery 55cBoxes (seoting six) $16.50 (Tax Included)DICTIONARIESDon't strangle your mind! In orderto get the most out of your Universitycourses it is necessary to get theDICTIONARY habit. Think of all thetime and effort you waste when youunderstand about half you read. Do you know it has been estimatedthat 99% of our adults do not knowthe meaning of INGENUOUS, UNMIT¬IGATED. VIRULENT? That doesn'tspeak very well for us does it?LET US HELP YOU SELECT THE RIGHT DICTIONARIESFOR YOUR USEENGLISH AND TOREIGN DICTIONARIES ARE AVAILARLE AT THEU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue Room 106, Blaine HallTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 30. 1938 Page ThreeCampus CongressTentative Program(Continued from page 1)Proposed topics: Student Union, Co-operatives, Big Ten, Sub¬sidies to Activities, Discussion Groups, Fraternities.Thursday, April 210.30—General session to sum up what has gone before and what isto follow.Panel discussionsAre college surveys too superficial?Should all four be required of everyone?Should the emphasis on the courses be changed?Should courses impart information or understanding, facts orideas?Should departmental clubs be extended to undergraduates?Student faculty relations.Should comprehensives be optional?Does the busine.ss school belong in the University? SSA?Home economics?What is the proper place of the classics in a college education?Short general session for reports.7;30—Panel discussionsWhat should divisional education achieve?Vocationalism versus intensive understanding versus spec¬ial information.Departmentalization versus divisional trainingAre the 20rs worth while?Is direct acquaintance with field and laboratory indispens¬able?Is there enough in social sciences, humanities?Should the professor be a teacher or a research expert?Should the two roles be separated in the lower school?Should teachers have equal rank with research men?Does the University need a new metaphysics?What is the proper end of higher education, vocationalism, in¬tellectual virtue, or citizenship?Are students mature enough for the New Plan?Advisory system.Required class attendance.Written work.General sessionFriday, April 22';:><)—General resolutions session.^.-j()_Hutchins debates Melby on “Educational Theory in Practice.CLASSIFIED ADSHOt'SE FOR RENT—10 roontw. 3 bathg. 5717Blarkstone Oil Heat. Near U. of C.and I. C. Will decorate. Available May1 Parker HoUman Co., 1501 East 5itnSt.. HYDe Park 2626.PORTABLE TYPEWRITER Brand new. bar-gain Phone Fairfax 8177 after 6 P. M.KOR SALE 3 Blocks to Univeraity of Chi-ratfo; 8 room quality built colonial brickri>»idence; 6 large bedroom*. 3 bath*. 2are tile, completely finished. Full base¬ment. hot water heat (oil)—brick garageelectric refrigeration—lot 60 X 164 fUKnusual value on today’s market. DRA¬PER AND KRAMER. INC.. 16 No. Dear-liorn Street.(lO.NE-From Hutchinson Common* coatroom as of 6 p.m. Saturday. Blue tweedovercoat, with gray pigskin glove* inpocket, of sentimental value. Reward forreturn to 65 HitchcockChe Sailer (iKarooiiFOUNDED IN 1*01MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon i* the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,pablished morning* except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn.Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company. 6881 University avenue.Telephones: Local 367, and Hyde Park9221 and »222.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statement* appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con-tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The> Daily Maroon expressly reserve*the rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptonrates: $3.00 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: five cents. ^ _l^ntered a* second class matter March13. 1903. at the post office at Chicago.Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879. Captain White Playsfor St. Paul, Sox FarmIn ye.sterday’s paper captain FrenchWhite was listed among the playerson this year’s baseball squad. It hassince been learned that White leftschool about a week before springvacation and is now playing profes¬sional baseball in Texas. He went firstto the Dallas club of the Texas league,and was then sent to practice withSt. Paul, a farm for the White Sox.Coach Kyle Anderson said that hisplace is being taken at shortstop bysophomore, William Cologeratos, whohas done unexpectedly well in hisnew position.The team has two more practicegames, this coming Saturday and thenext, before its regular conferenceschedule begins.HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 EAST 5Slh ST.li you want colloge gongs—II you want "CoIUgiato" AUnotphar*—li you want to too your iriondt—You aro atturod oi tuch an oToning atHANLEY’SOVER FORTY YEARS OF CONGENIALSERVICEHARRIS POSITIVELYLAST WEEKMATS. WED. & SAT., 2:30"Oallop as quickly as your legs can carryyou to ‘Father Malachy's Miracle’.”- George Jean Nathan. NEWS WEEKTho Thoatro Guild and Dolot ChappollPRESENT“Father Malachy’sMiracle”A Comody by Brian Dohorty from theNovel by Bruce MarshallA DELOS CHAPPELL ProductionWith AL SHEAN and theOriginal CostDirected by Worthington Miner—SeHingt by Jo Mielziner“One of the truly happy events of thedramatic season."—Richard Watts. HERALD TRIBUNE.eves.. $1 16 to $2.75; MATS. WED. andSAT., $1.10 to $2.20. Is Here!BOBCROSBYand hisSensational Swing Band* *StarringMarion Mann''Bob-Cats*« « «RONALD & ROBERTASTARS OF THE DANCETea Dancing. Sunday, 3-6 P.M.BLACKHAWKTHE EIMBARKTHEATRE6240 KIMBARK AVENUEWED.. THURS., MARCH 30-31JOEL McCREA in "WELLS FARGO"PlusJOHN BARRYMORE in"NIGHT CLUB SCANDAL" Today on theQuadranglesLECTURES“Britain’s Foreign Policy.” HilaryNewitt. Social Science 122 at 3:30.“Art of the Migration Period, A. D.300 - 800”. Herbert Kuhn. Classics 10at 8.Langston Hughes. Kent Theater at3:30- sponsored by Committee onMedical Aid to Spain.MEETINGSRiding Club. Ida Noyes at 3:30.Spanish Club. Ida Noyes at 7,Poetry Club, 7:30 in Ida Noyes.Senior Council Committee meeting.Social Science 108 at 2:30.Socialist Club LSI. Social Science107 at 7:30.Socialist Club Fourth International.Social Science 302 at 7:30.Zoology Club.tZoology 14 at 4:30.Minna E. Jewell will speak on “Stud¬ies on Fresh-Water Sponges ofNorthern Wisconsin.”Medical Conference, Medicine 137at 4:30.Delta Sigma Pi. 12 in HutchinsonCommons.MISCELLANEOUSCarillon recital by Frederick Mar¬riott in Rockefeller Memorial Chapelat 4:30.Tarpon tryouts at 3 :30.Wyvern tea. 3:30 in Ida Noyes. Deltho tea. Ida Noyes at 3:30.Arrian. Ida Noyes at 12.Individual HairdressingShompoo ond Wove 50Manicure 35KAMERIE BEAUTY SHOP1324 EAST 57th ST. HYDE PARK 7860Hrs. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Mon., Wed., Sat. to 6 P.M.TENNISRackets $1.50 to $17.50Balls, Presses, and all accessoriesShorts. Sox, Shirts, Shoes, etc.Most complete stockWoodworth's1311 E. 57th SLNear Kimbark Ave. OPEN EVES.DORchester 4800YOUR NEARESTSERVICE STATIONArtKAIfELr‘ ‘ND Hit ORCHE/TRAINTHEUfALnUT JJtOOfILefflPlfMARCKHOTEL - RANDOLPH af LASALLE SALE ON ATLAS TIRESTremendous Trade inLUBRICATION — 75cComplete, a Real JobBROWN'SSTANDARD SERVICE1101 East 55th Street55th and GreenwoodTelephone Midway 9092 THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mgr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOR MEN AND WOMENRepairing and Remodeling ofAny Cloth, or Fur GarmentOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. 55th St., near University• Tel. Midway 3318TEXT BOOKS-USED aad NEW-FOR ALL UNIVERSITY COURSESINCLUDING LAW, MEDICINE& EDUCATIONLargest and Most Complete line of TypewritersFor Sale, Rent, or Exchange$Fountain Pens, Note Books, Zipper Cases,Stationery, Laundry Cases, Brief BagsWOODWORTH'SBOOK STOREOPEN EVENINGSPHONE DORCHESTER 4800 1311 EAST 57th STREETNEAR KIMBARK AVENUE-2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALLVase Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 30, 1938A®-V6® ★★ ★ ★ *"U. of C."INTER-FRATERNITY SINGThis Friday Night★ ★ ★ *★O'" v'II