Today's HeadlinesPublic officials begin moving intoPACH, page 1.Hold annual scholarship day for highschool seniors tomorrow, page 1.Campus Congress holds opening ses¬sions, page 1.First NACC Gymnastic meet tomor¬row, page 4. Batlp illaroonVol. 38, No. 95 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 1938 Price Five CentsHold Annual Scholarship Day TomorrowPublic Officials'Group Moves toNew QuartersThe 17 associations of public of¬ficials which for several years havemaintained headquarters at 850 Eastr,8th Street will begin moving tomor-.row into their new building at 1313Fast 60th Street on the south sideof the Midway.The Public Administration ClearingHouse which will manage the newbuilding and operate several joint-ervices will be first to move. It is ex¬pected that all the organizations will1)0 settled in their new quarters bynext Friday.Other Groups to MoveIn addition to the Public Admini¬stration Clearing House the organiza¬tions which will occupy the new build¬ing are: American Legislator’s As¬sociation and the Council of State('.overnments; American MunicipalAssociation; American Public WelfareAssociation; American Public WorksAssociation; American Society ofPlanning Officials; Civil Service As¬sembly of the United States andCanada; Federation of Tax Admini¬strators, Governmental Research As¬sociation; International Associationof Chiefs of Police; International City•Managers Association; Municipal Fi¬nance Officer’s Association of theFnited States and Canada; NationalAssociation of As.sessing Officers; Na¬tional Association of Housing Offi¬cials; National Association of StateAuditors, Comptrollers, and Treasur¬ers; and the Public AdministrationService.Work on AdministrationAll these agencies are engaged inactivities designed to perfect princi¬ples of government administration,the professional status of public ad¬ministration and technical practices ofpublic officials. Each of the organiza-1tions is autonomous however; theyoccupy joint quarters in order to(Continued on page 3)Name Faculty Hostsfor Scholarship DayFaculty members will preside overtables at the Cloister Club of Ida.\oyes hall and Hutchinson Commonsfor dinner on scholarship day. Mrs.Harvey Carr, Fay-Cooper Coes,Clarence Faust, Charles W’. Gilkey,William Hutchinson, Harvey Lemon,('harles Merriam, T. NeLson Metcalf,Frank O’Hara, and William Spen.serwill head tables at the Cloister Club.Cilkey will be the toastmaster!At Hutchinson Common". A. J.Hrumbaugh will be the toastmaster,and Merle Coulter, Gilbert Bliss,Frances Gillespie, Walter Hebert,Charles Kerby-Miller, Wilma Kerby-•Miller, Jerome Kerwin, James WeberLinn, William Mather, Nelson Nor-gren, Joseph Schwab and ClarkShaughnessy will be present.Student hosts are; Halcrow, Pet¬ersen, Larson, Hoy, Upton, Carey,Wagoner, Eckhouse, McNeill, Ander-^^on, Leach, Fritz, Green, Barden, Brei-han. Booth, Miller, Gordon, Tilling-hast, Kaplan, Hector, Miles, Snod-gress, Osborn, Baer, Nielson, Over¬look, Webbe, Melander, Turpin, Wil-• on, and Goldsmith. Campus Congress Hears Gideonse,Elects 15 to Resolutions CommitteeContinues Session This Af¬ternoon with Six PanelDiscussions.Amidst a general air of ChapelUnion good will, publications puns,and ASU wise-cracks, the CampusCongress at its opening .session elec-te<l to its resolutions committee JesseReed, John Morris, Emmett Headman,John Marks, Adele Ro.se, Bob Eck¬house, Joe Weishaus, Betty Barden,Bill Hankla, Louise Snow, GeorgeHalcrow, Joe Rosenstein, WilliamMcNeill, Norman Brown, and RayEllickson.Today’s sessions of the Congre.ssare the afternoon panel discussions atIda Noyes on the purpose of religion,the place of the University and stu¬dents in politics, emphases in athlet¬ics, the campus community, the ade¬quacy of eating and sleeping places,and the problem of going to schooland holding down a job. Mary B.Gilson will chairman the discussionon student workers.Tonight’s SessionsTonight there will be another gen¬eral session at 7:3() in Ida NoyesTheater to hear reports from thepanels and vote on resolutions.Asking “Am I subversive of God?”,Harry I). Gideon.se told the Congressin an address on “The Purpose ofHigher Education” that the troublewith the University and the modernDA Revives Tear-Jerker as AnnualSpring Offering“Rags are royal raiment whenworn for virtue’s sake.” This hit linefrom Bartley Campbell’s play “TheWhite Slave,” presented in 1882, istypical of tear-jerking lines frommany of Campbell’s plays.Campbell’s play “My Partner,”which is to be revived by the DramaticAs.sociation in its annual spring show,is .scheduled for a one night stand inMandel hall on April 21. Approxi¬mately 700 seats at forty cents eachare to go on sale today in Mandelcloister.The DA revival of the 1879-1900long-run hit about life in the Cali¬fornia gold-fields will recall the daysof the 1880’s in its staging, its cos¬tumes, and its melodramatic action.Printed on a long narrow strip ofpulp-paper, the playbill is the sameform as that used at the originalpresentation of the play.The popular price for the play wasset in order to give all students anopportunity to see the melodrama,long considered a milestone in theAmerican theatre. Season sponsorsare to have their tickets in the sec¬tion reserved for sponsors. Membersof the English department will attendthe performance of “My Partner” byspecial invitation.Because DA revivals are usuallysell-outs, Ralph Springer, businessmanager has advised early purchaseof tickets to avoid disappointmenton the evening of production.Burton Smith is student director ofthe show assisting Frank O’Hara andNapier Wilt. liberal world is its lack of values.The overwhelming secularization ofall field.s of thought and the scientificpoint of view, with w'hich we areindoctrinated from the beginning ofour education*by people who have avested interest in it, are the .sourceof our present frantic searching forsomething to give meaning to ourlives and integration to the campuscommunity.This lack of unity, he stated, un¬less filled by shared values, will pro¬vide a fertile field for the impositionof values, as in Germany. To replacethe void, some men cling to “the holybook of Karl Marx, some to otherholy books, and some to mixtures ofboth.” Tolerance and diversity, re¬pressed under all systems of unity asby the Church in medieval times, arethe faith of the liberal, who shouldfear that “integration perhaps leadsto regimentation.”Emphasis on ReasonThe emphasis of reason on the uni¬versity level, he continued, result ofa mistaken idea that what troublesthe world is bad thinking, is as mis¬placed as the emphasis on practicalvocationalism in the world. “Educa¬tion is a matter of the whole man”;it is therefore impossible to separatea discussion of extra-curricular ac¬tivities from a consideration of edu¬cation, a dichotomy based on the “badthinking” fallacy.But Gideonse believes that the con¬sideration of extra-curricular activi¬ties as it is planned for the Congresswill have no purpose unless the stu¬dents seriously ask themselves,“What is the purpose of the Univer¬sity, of publications, of religion?What is the idea of the good behindthem?”Favor Big TenLast night’s panel discussions allreached more or less consensus ofopinion on the various subjects dis¬cussed. Editor William McNeill still isin a minority of almost one as far asthe University’s withdrawing fromthe Big Ten is concerned.The political panel also reached thealmo.st unanimous decision that stu¬dents should take part in politicalactivities. The discussion of artisticexpression recommended that a facul¬ty-student body be set up to considercurriculum changes in the arts, thatthe Coffee-Pepper bill giving federalfunds to art be passed, that a StudentUnion building bo erected for activ¬ities, and that the idea of the ASUExperimental Workshop be extended.Admit Kappa Alpha PsiThe resolutions of the panel on thesocial system urged setting up divi¬sional and other interest organiza¬tions, including fraternities as a socialinterest, and asking the admission ofKappa Alpha Psi to the I-F Council.A petition to this effect will be cir¬culated on campus beginning today.The religious panel reached no definiteconclusions, centering discussionmainly on theoretical questions.The discussion o f publicationsagreed that the editor should expresshis own opinions but provide moreaccessible and prominent space for hisopponents. A recommendation for theequalization of subsidies (that is,room and light facilities) to radicalpublications w'as made, and approvalof subsidization of the Maroon Unecessary to ensure wider distributionbe recorded, subject to stringentSmith Leads Rival inCongressional ContestWith downstate returns still notcomplete, Professor T. V. Smithwent into the lead yesterday overL’ongressman Lewis M. Long forthe second Democratic nominationfor congressman-at-large from Il¬linois. John C. Martin, present treas-nrer, has already yon the other nom¬ination.Smith overtook his Kelly-Nash rivalyesterday as returns from SouthernIllinois, where his main strength lies,were more fully reported. With sev¬eral hundred downstate precincts yetto turn in their votes. Smith leadsLong by approximately 4,000. Int-House PlayersGive Greek DramaPresented by a group of Interna¬tional House players, Euripedes’“Trojan Women” will come to lifethis Sunday evening at 8:30 in theInternational House theater. Admis¬sion will be free to House membersand fifty cents to outsiders.Written twenty centuries ago, theplay is still a moving anti-war ap¬peal. The players, directed by Lil¬lian Schoen and David Grene, willemphasize its universality by use ofmusic, lights, and symbolic scenery.Immediately following the play atea will be given by the Social Ac¬tivities committee. (Continued on page 2)Waiters Dance in JudsonCourt Saturday NightThe second annual “Waiters’ Ball”will be held in Judson Court dininghall April 16th from nine until oneo’clock. Past and present waiters inthe halls are invited to dance to BillWiedeman’s eight piece orchestra.There will be a few guests present be¬sides the waiters. A similar dance washeld last year at about this time andthe men working in the courts decidedto make it an annual affair. NormanHollingshead, in charge of arrange¬ments for the dance, expects about60 couples. Hutchins, HalcrowWelcome CandidatesAddress of Welcome to Studentsentering annual competitive prizescholarship examinations.“I am happy to welcome you to thequadrangles of the University of Chi¬cago. Your presence indicates willing¬ness and desire up¬on your part tocontinue in educa¬tion. It is a privi¬lege you as Amer¬icans enjoy. All ofyou cannot qualifyfor scholarships.But your presencehere is proof youare fitted to takeadvantage of thePres. Hutchins educational oppor¬tunities which you want. Seek themand both you and your university willbenefit.”Robert M. Hutchins.Dear Candidates:Welcome to the University. Mayyou write a good exam and gain agood interest in the University ofChicago. If you wish to find out whata fine school Chicago is, ask an under¬graduate., George Halcrow,Senior Class President.Chapel PlansThree SpecialEaster ServicesAs the extensive Holy Week activ-it.iPS of t.ha UnivP-rRity Chapel drawto a close, three more special Easterservices will be held this weekend.At noon today the Chapel will playhost to churches of the Hyde Park—Kenwood—Woodlawn district for acommunity Good Friday service. Theservice is non-denominational, andDr. Douglas Horton will deliver theaddress.Hold Sunrise ServiceFour campus religious groups willjoin young people’s clubs from neigh¬borhood churches for an Easter sun¬rise service on the Chapel steps at 6Sunday morning. There will'be no ser¬mon, but instead music by a trumpetquartet from the University orches¬tra and the choir of the WoodlawnPark Methodist Church. The Evangel¬ical club. Interchurch Council, Lu¬theran Students Association, andYWCA are the campus groups spon¬soring the sei'vice. It will be followedby an Easter breakfast in Ida NoyesCloister Club, planned by a studentcommittee headed by Ruth Neuendorf-fer.Dean Charles W. Gilkey will speakat the Sunday morning Chapel serviceat 11. There will be a special pro¬gram of Easter music sung by thechoir.As the leading event in its Easterweekend program, the Chapel Unionwill again sponsor an informal dis¬cussion by Dean Emeritus ShailerMatthews of “Religion Confronts aChanging World.” Second in a seriesof three by Dean Matthews on thissubject, the discussion will be held inthe home of Dean Gilkey Sundayevening.SSA UndergraduatesForm Campus GroupRecent organization of a pre-pro¬fessional Social Service Administra-tiort' club was announced yesterdayby Helen Linder, acting chairman.The group was formed Wednesdayat a tea given by Sophonisba P.Breckinridge, professor emeritus ofPublic Welfare Administration. HelenWright, professor of Social ServiceAdministration, was chosen as facul¬ty adviser. The pui'pose of the clubis to bring pre-professional SSA stu¬dents together to win recognition asa campus group, and also to establisha closer relationship with the gradu¬ate SSA school. Permanent officerswill be elected next week. High School SeniorsCompete for Awards.Seven hundred and eight outstand¬ing high school seniors from 78 highschools in the Chicago metropolitanregion will compete in the twenty-sixth annual competitive prize schol¬arship examinations at the UniversitySaturday morning.In sixteen other cities in the coun¬try, an additional group of 657 highschool seniors will try for the scholar¬ship awards, making a grand total of1,265 candidates. Value of the prizeawards is approximately $10,000.Thei-e were 801 contestants in the1937 examinations, of whom 485 par¬ticipated in the examinations held inChicago and 316 in outside centers.Of the 52 full and half-scholarshipsawarded, Chicago students received 33of the prize awards and students out¬side of the Chicago area, 19.Oak Park Holds 'TrophyOak Park high school, winner twoyears ago of the plaque given theschool whose students won the great¬est number of places, has the largestnumber of entries this year, 66. HydePark high school, which won the“team” trophy in 1937, is a closesecond with 66.Among the centers outside of Chi¬cago, Detroit has the largest numberof entries, 137, with Cleveland’s 52second in the totals, and KansasCity’s 51, third. Examinations in the16 outside centers will be held simul¬taneously with those in Chicago.Each candidate will take examina¬tions in a total of three selected sub¬jects. Each section examination willbe one hour long and largely of theobjective type. The examinationsstart Saturday morning at 9 o’clockand will terminate at noon.Awards for the Chicago region willbe announced Saturday night in Man-del hall by Aaron J. Brumbaugh, Ac¬ting Dean of the College. The win¬ners for the out of town centers willbe announced next week. The Chicagostudents will be guests of Midway un-dergi’aduates Saturday afternoon.Peace Strike LeadersPoll Campus OpinionOn War-Time MeasuresFilling out questionnaires is thething to do this week on campus, andmembers of the Peace Strike commit¬tee report that the ones they distrib¬uted yesterday and today were wellreceived.Not as personal as those of theCampus Congress, but requiring morethought and a definite stand on thecollective security issue, the poll isattempting to obtain an accurate ex¬pression of campus opinion on em¬bargoes and the Neutrality Actamendment. Results will not be tab¬ulated until the beginning of theweek.Propose Two ProgramsTw'o handbills were displayed con¬spicuously at the polling places. Onesheet, put out by the ASU, announcedthat a petition to President Rooseveltand the democratic countries to “endthe pretense of non-intervention” andabolish the Spanish arms embargoand signed by such prominent per¬sons as John Dewey, William E.Dodd, Lewis S. Gannet, DorothyThompson, Harry D. Gideonse, Hen¬ry Seidel Canby, Helen Keller, PaulDouglas, Donald Ogden, will be madepublic this week. Following the ex¬ample of these w’orld famous pro¬gressives, the ASU believes that lift¬ing the embargo on Spain is the firststep in stopping fascism’s spread andrestoring world peace.The dissenting voice was presentedby the No-Foreign War committee’sleaflet, which urged students to strikefor peace by voting these positivepeace policies in the poll: defeat ofall industrial mobilization bills, com¬pelling the government to maintaina non-partisan attitude in foreignwars, withdrawal of American armedforces from China in order to avoidanother Panay crisis, defeat ofAmerica’s war preparations such asthe super-navy bill, under no circum¬stances support of the government ina foreign war.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 15, 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.Mr. Gideonsehas spoken. He told the first meetingof the Campus Congress yesterday afternoon that theUniversity was too authoritarian and too intellectual.He warned against order that turns out to be regimen¬tation, and took his cracks at the rival dogmas of thecampus, Aristotle and Marx. He displayed his sadignorance of history in attributing the Inquisition tothe Middle Ages.The thesis of his speech—that freedom rests onconsensus as to values is of course true. If people donot agree on the fundamental rules of behavior and con¬clusions about the nature of the world, society becomesimpossible, and an imposed unity is perforce substi¬tuted for consensus. It is this imposed unity which hesees in fascism, communism, and Aristotelianism, andhe dreads all three.What Mr. Gideonse did not discuss was the prob¬lem of getting voluntary consensus in a society so var¬ious as ours. He himself cast, doubt on the efficacyof discussions such as the Campus Congress in gettingat the fundamental values where consensus is neces¬sary. Indeed in a society so unstable and complicatedas ours it is more than doubtful whether consensus asto values can be achieved save through dictation fromabove. Yet the sad thing about it is that people dodemand the sense of security that only agreement onbelief and custom can give.But if concensus is to be striven after the univer¬sities are surely the place where the movement shouldstart, and it is only through intellectual effort, a sin¬cere and arduous attempt to formulate the truth aboutthe world and man, that consensus can even be hopedfor. Yet Mr. Gideonse finds fault with the Universityfor being too intellectual! It is a strange contradic¬tion when the University is at once charged with thetask of finding a consensus of values w’hich can onlybe arrived at by intellectual effort, and is criticizedfor being too intellectual at the same time. But per¬haps Mr. Gideonse puts his faith in psychic communionor word mongering to establish his community ofvalues. little as you like, attend as many or as few classes asyou like, study or play as much as you like. The Uni¬versity treats you as adults, the University offers youthe world. It is worth taking, even at $100 a quarter.QuestandInquestBY LAURA BERGQUIST LEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYTAKE PRIVATE LESSONS, HYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.TERESA DOLAN154S E. 63RD ST.Vol. 38 APRIL IS. 1938 No. 95Scholarship Dayis tomorrow', and some hundredsof the best students of the high schools of Chicago willspend the day on the University campus.To them we say that we believe the University isthe best of all places to spend four years of one’s life,even though it is possible to improve it. Here onecan learn to know a great deal about the world, and per¬haps find an interpretation adequate to one’s own ex¬perience. Here one can experience beauty. Here onecan learn techniques for living and earning a living.The University offers all four sorts of training,and offers each freely. You can learn as much or as There is something about an anonymous question¬naire which seems to bring out the most distorted incampus humor.Take, for instance, the recent Daily Maroon poll—answers to which proved to be fine studies in contra¬diction to say nothing of downright sadism.The Daily Maroon, as conglomerated by studentopinion, has turned out to be a queer, freakish com¬posite sort of creature. The poor thing was first con¬demned as a joe-college scandal sheet, next as a dirty,dogmatic pseudo-intellectual treatise. A female de¬plored the fact that it had no Mickey Mouse—a bus¬iness school light said that it was too drab, a physicalscientist that it was too colorful. The prophecy wasmade that the Maroon was in the sad process of dy¬ing on its feet, that it was the worst paper in years,that is was the best paper in years, that it was noth¬ing but announcements, that it was nothing but editor¬ials, that it was nothing.Ideas about University social life faintly resem¬bled an Irish stew...“Prom trotting degrades the levelof University life,’’ sez one—“There are too manyhomesick hayseeds here,’’ said another. “Boys andgirls aren’t close enough together,’’ was explainedglibly as the source of all cantpus evil. “Too manymore males than females—females get plenty conceit¬ed around here,’’ came from a good cause-and-effectadvocate. “This is a dead place—there is nothing todo but get drunk,’’ moaned a dissolute—“There shouldbe course in female psychology,’’ said an inadequate...there should be a course on how to win races and in¬fluence horses...and above all there should be coursesin sex. Sex, and SEX. A constructive estimate of 75per cent of the questionees pleaded for instruction inMarriage, Parenthood and the Facts of Life and allstuff which makes the world go round.At last we’ve found a platform on which the wholecampus can agree...GOSSIP AT BARGAIN RATESHildegarde Breihan, tall, slim, head of Federationmarries this spring as does also freshman beauty queenPhyllis Kiesselbach who hunts apartments these daysw’ith divinity student Guy Meyer... Dennis McEvoy re¬ceives a letter from papa J.P. saying that he is pen¬ning the script for the new Shirley Temple picture...Johnny McWhorter and Jean Fraine dissolve their pin-ship by mutual consent. International House civil warbubbles away as Tucker Dean and Burnell Benson van¬ish from House public life with their resignations.And all’s right with the world. ‘Stic ^aroonFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon ii the official atudentnewspaper of the University of ChicaKO,pablished morninKs except ^turday. Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6881 University avenue.Telephones; Local 867, and Hyde Park9221 and 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories to our print¬ers. The Chief Printing company, 1920Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 8811.TTie 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: $8.00 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: five cents._Entered as second class matter March18. 1903, at the post office at Chicago.Illinois, under the set of March 8, 1879.naensssNTto roa national AovsRTisiNa avNational Advertising Service, Inc.C»lUu Puilishtn RtprtuntaHv0420 Madison Avt. Niw York. N. Y.CHICASO - BOITOS - LOS ASSILIS - SAN FSANCISCOBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILI Editor-in-ChiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE....Advertising Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist, Maxine Biesenthal,Emmett Deadman. Ruth Brody, Rex Hor¬ton, Seymour Miller, Adele Rose,BUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman, Max Freeman, HarryTopping, Irvin Rosen.Night Editor: Harry Cornelius SWING CATSJOIN CHICAGO'SNEWEST 6c GREATESTSWING CLUBBOBCROSBY’S“BOBd^ATS”Meetings every SundayAt the BlackhowkessSEE CHICAGO-CATBOB FITZGERALD FORDETAILSAt each meetin' CrosbyRecordings will be qrivento Lucky CotsMeetin' Time—Sundays3 - 6 P.M.BLACKHAWKRANDOLPH & WABASHDEARBORN 6262Letters to theEditorEditor,Daily Maroon:Once upon a time (about 1909),when handlebars of hair were yetfairly popular under the nose, thegymnasts of the University of Chi¬cago began wearing tights. Somehow,although 1909 was closer to the dayswhen women in tights were quite asensation, there was never the causefor excitement that came about lastyear in smoky Pittsburgh when theNational A.A.U. competitors inno¬cently asked a University of Chicagoman if he was competing in thewomen’s division. (It seems thattights for gymnasts are proper only in the women’s division in this modernday.)After this incident, the boys pleadedwith “D. L.’’ and collided with tradi¬tion, “D. L.’’ finally pleaded with Met¬calf and collided with the budget, andMetcalf (who ain’t like PresidentRoosevelt nohow) pleaded with hisconscience and counted the shekels.Well, the boys got their new pantsand a sentence to participate in thetypical “squeeze-the-nickel-until-the-buffalo-thereon-looks-like-a - giraffe’’policy of the new athletic regime. Thecoach’s office is now a pants-vault.Every night the pants are carefullytucked away and gently covered withtissue paper, told a bedtime story sothey won’t wrinkle, and locked quietlybehind a combination lock. So endsthe story of shattered tradition,blasted budgets, and six pair of pantswhich, (le.spite their whiteness, arethe cause of it all.Pincher ChinchclI. Campus Congress-(Continued from page 1)limitations in regard to censorship.List OrganizationsOrganizations sending delegates tothe (Congress are Achoth, ASU, ASUNew Theater Group, Arrian, BetaTheta Pi, Cap and Gown, ChapelUnion, Committee for Medical Aidto Spain, Communist Club, DailyMaroon, Debate Union, Delta Sigma,Delta Upsilon, Federation, Film So¬ciety, Interclub Council, Kappa Sig¬ma, Kelly Hall, Mirror, MortarBoard, Negro Student Club, Phi Be¬ta Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gam¬ma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi DeltaPhi, Quadrangler, Senior Cllass Coun¬cil, Burton 700, Sigma, Burton 600,Skull and Crescent, Student SocialCommittee, Judson 300, and YWCA. $1.00KINGS 3pr.-$2.85• It’s spring:, going on Easter and every¬one’s mindful of clothes. When you thinkof Easter gifts, remember MOJUD. Andwhen you think of your own Easterwardrobe, remember that the clear beau¬ty of our Screenlite shades will supplyan extra lift even to your most perfectcostume.HAZEL HOFF1371E. 55th St. (near Dorchester)ORDERS TAKEN BY MARGARET MERRIFIELDwwwtfvwwvywvAVkrjvvwwi"jVb"»niVvwwvwvvuvuvy%ww%‘^SPECIALS FOR SCHOLARSHIP DAY SAT. APR. 16SCHOLARSHIP LUNCHEONSCHOLARSHIP DINNER - 2540Giant Double Rich Malted Milk - - 15 from 11:30 A. M. to 1:30 P. M.from 5:30 to 7:30 P. M.Jumbo Ice Cream Sodas, all flavors 11Delicious Sandwiches and Stdads Served at all HoarsiTHE MAID-RITE SHOPWhere University Students eat and meet" Just two short blocks of Mandel Hall■ THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 15. 1938Cohen LecturesIn the second of his series of sixlectures on recent trends in logic,Morris Cohen, professor of Philoso¬phy, will speak on “Logic and Lin¬guistics—the Nature of Symbols andMeaning” in the Social Science as¬sembly room Monday at 4:30. In hisfirst lecture earlier in the week, Cohendiscussed the confusion of logic withpsychology.TENNISRackets $1.50 to $17.50Ball!. PrsBMt. and all accttsoriatShorts. Sox, Shirts. Shoos, etc.Most complete stockWoodworth's1311 E. S7th St. OPEN EVES.Near Kimbark Arm. DORchester 4800 Scholarship Day Schedule8-8:30 Registration, Mandel hall.9-12 Examinations.12-1:16 Luncheon, HutchinsonCommons.1:16-2 Professor Gideonse con¬ducts a sample class. Man-del hall.2-4 Campus tours leaving fromMandel hall.Sports exhibitions includ¬ing Varsity baseball game,tennis exhibition, swim¬ming exhibition.4-6 Entertainment in Mandelhall featuring Ned Rosen¬heim, master of ceremo¬nies, Mirror skits and songsBlackfriars songs and acts,gym and fencing exhibi¬tions.6-7:16 Dinner, Hutchinson Com¬mons.7:30 Announcement of awardsby Dean Brumbaugh, Man-del hall. Social CommitteeMakes Plans forScholarship DayGideonse Gives Sample Lrec-ture to High School Sen¬iors.The 26th group of high school sen¬iors to write examinations for Uni¬versity scholarships will assemble inMandel hall Saturday at 8:30, whencampus guides will show them toclassrooms. After writing examina¬tions in three subject.s, they will re¬assemble at noon in Hutchinson Com¬mons and at the Cloister club in IdaNoyes hall for lunch.Planned by the Student Social com¬mittee, headed by Bill Webbe, theprogram for the afternoon includes asample lecture by Harry D. Gideonse,associate professor of Economics. Thesubject matter will be drawn fromthe Social Sciences I survey course.This is the first year in which a pro¬fessor has addressed the ScholarshipDay students on course material.See Swimming ExhibitDuring the afternoon the studentswill witness a swimming exhibition inBartlett gym pool, follow'ed by a var¬sity tennis exhibition. Members of thecast of the current Blackfriars pro¬duction will put on several scenesfrom the show in Mandel hall, and aMirror skit will feature Jean Gayton,Virginia Shilton and Elizabeth Shiele.The seniors will dlso be given theopportunity to see a varsity tennismatch and a gymnastic exhibition.Harold Miles and Marjorie Kuhwill head the student guides who willshow points of interest on the cam¬pus. Guides will be provided by Owland Serpent, Nu Pi Sigma, IronMask, and Skull and Crescent, stu¬dent honor societies. From the Stu¬dent Publicity Board, Jay Kaplanand Margaret Penny have chosenguides.Roger Nielson and Ken Osborn arein charge of the entertainment forthe day, while Dorothy Overlock andMartin Miller are in charge of boththe lunch and dinner.Public Officials-(Continued from page 1)facilitate co-operation in their activ¬ities.The location near the Universitywas chosen because of the value ofbeing near a great research center.The organizations are entirely inde¬pendent of the University, which isin no way responsible for the develop¬ment of their activities.Plan of BuildingThe associations have a total per¬sonnel of about 130, which will oc¬cupy about 24,000 square feet of of¬fice space in the four-story and base¬ment structure. In addition to officespace, the first floor provides a re¬ception room, a conference room, com¬mittee room, and a joint reference li¬brary; the second floor, a board room.The building is built on land setaside by the University as a result ofconstruction grants from the Spel-nian fund of New York for the pur¬pose of housing organizations of pub¬lic officials. The building cost $660,-000. Its architect is C. C. Zantzingerof Philadelphia, with Emery B. Jack-son, consulting architect of the Uni¬versity, acting as associate.GRAND OPERA HOUSEby Ann Foster *3.95Carson’s own young designer, not so long off cam¬pus herself, knows just what you’ll want for sum¬mery spring school days. Left: sheer seersucker.Brown, navy, black. 12 to 20. Right: two-tonelinen. White with navy, copen with brown, naturalwith copen. Sizes 12 to 18. Each $3.95.DAYTIME DRESSES, THIRD FLOOR —3 WEEKS ONLY—"GORGEOUS ENTERTAINMENT"—N. Y. World Telegram"Superbly acted by Burgess Meredithand Lillian Gish in one of Mr. Mc-Clintic's master performances. A vig¬orous and variegated play." —N. Y.Times.^11 GUTHRIE McCUNTICpresentsSTAR-WACONNew Pl«y bymaxwell ANDERSONwithBURGESS • ULLIANMEREDITH GISHEvenings $1.10 to $2.75Wed. & Sat. Mats.,$1.10 to $2.20Carson PiRiE Scott & Co Engagement Ends Sat,,April 30Seats now on Sale for allperformances Consider Union MonopolyAspects on Round TableWhether big business has a mo¬nopoly on monopoly, or whether theCIO and AF of L also are monopo¬listic will be discussed by the Uni¬versity of Chicago Round TableSunday.Taking part in the discussion will Page Threebe Dean William H. Spencer of theschool of Business; Raleigh W.Stone, associate professor of Indus¬trial Relations; and Theodore 0.Yntema, professor of Statistics, allUniversity faculty men.Unions, the trio of economists willpoint out, have had some of theirthunder stolen by such governmentactivities as the Wages and Hours billand free employment agencies.Complete Selections ofARROW SHIRTSStat* and Jachtan, CHICAGO - EVANSTON - OAK PARK - GARYVAS SEEN IN THE MAY EsquizeShirts and Tiesthat harmonizeBring yourself up-to-dcrte with cm Arrow Broad-tone Striped shirt, which reflects the currentstyle trend toward pastel colors in fine shirt¬ings. Like all Arrow shirts, these are endowedwith the famous Arrow collar. Mitoga tailoredto fit . . . Sanforized-shrunk. $2*75 eachTo complement these shirts Arrow has createdBroadtone ties — square design or stripe. $1.50ARROW SHIR TSand TIESCampus Florist1233 E. 55th near KimbarkFull Line Easter Plantsand Cut FlowersAlso CorsagesORDER EARLYPhoneHyde Park 9414FROLIC THEATREFRL. SAT.. APR. 15-16MICKEY ROONEY - FRANCHOT TONEGLADYS GEORGE - TED HEALY"LOVE IS A HEADACHE"PlusBOB BURNS, JACK OAKIE,MILTON BERLE"RADIO CITY REVELS"COMING MAY 15-16-17ROBERT TAYLOR"A YANK AT OXFORD"MAY 26-27-28CLAUDETTE COLBERT, "TOVARICH" Follow theARROWforARROWSHIRTSALL GOOD'maroonsLIKE TOBUY HEREERIECLOTHING COMPANY837 E. 63id SlreetLexington TheatreFRI , SAT.. APR. 15 and ISBOB BURNS. JACK OAKIE.MILTON BERLE“RADIO CITY REVELS" Kimbark Theatre6240 KIMBARK AVENUEWALLACE BEERY in“BAD MAN OF BRIMSTONE"And PlusWARNER OLAND KAYE LUKE“CHAN AT MONTE CARLO” JOHN PAYNE in“LOVE ON TOAST"Gymnasts Compete in First AnnualNCAA Meet at Bartlett Tomorrow22 Outstanding CollegiateStars Registered forCompetition.' Twenty-two of the country*® besteoUegiate gynanasts from nine col¬leges, uai^rsities mM academies inthe Wes?t» Mid-We^ and East, willcompete in the first antmal N.C,A.A*^mnastics meet, to be held in Bart¬lett gymnasiim tomorrow 'evening,at 8 o'clock.Entries haw been reseelwd fromthe U, S. Military Academy, Onsta-vi*s Adolphus -college of St, Peter,Minnesota, XJniversaty of SouthernCalifornia, Temple University, Uni¬versity of Minnesota, University ofIllinois, Washington University of. St, Ijsmis, Southern State TeachersCollege of Carbondale, lUinois, andthe University of Chicago.Although the field contains only 21.^tries, Uankl L. Hoffer, Maro«{»acb and meet manager, saidit contains the country's outstandingcollegiate talent.‘ Rope climbing and long horse willbe added to the customary events inU.S.C. is iending the Pacific Coastall-around champion, James E. Rob¬erts, and Temple University is send¬ing Joe Hewit, eastern collegiate all-around champion.Joe Gialltmbardo of Illinois, holderof the Big Ten all-aitmnd chawpion-,^ip, ig entered only in the tumMlng.event of the N.C.A.A. and is expectedto take it hands down.Erwin Beyer, of the Univemty ofChicago, sewnd plai^ winner in theBig Ten all-around championship,and C. Nelson Wetherell, also of theUniversity of Chicago, Uiird-placewinner in the conferenw all-aroundi^ampionship, will heighten (»mp«sti-tion in the all-around evtnto. Minne¬sota, Big Ten waference champion,will attempt to demonstrate its teamsuperiority with four entries, whileC. A. Nelson of Gostavus Adolphusis a contender for high honors in theall-around championship. Errors M IttarorasArmour Tech Game sAtpSigma Sl-4M SoftbaU Game4 MOHTH fNTINSlVf COURSEroe coiLtoi rruotNTi and o«aouati«teMinAJmmn 1, Ap^ hjtth I, (kpa^t*jur f0ithotu tlSSilittim-turpktttt. Np pQueiipn•mpt/ppiti.moserBUSINESS COLIEGESAUl MOtIt.IMMf GnmMm ^ twrt arar MofWPef mA mpmtk. Adoamfd Cemrm $iartmis MmmUn. Day and fyaaing. EttaninsComm apim iw mmn.ni AlMdileaR Aiwi^Qiteog*, Samdalph 4SdJHanley’sISI2 & ^*b m.IF YOU WANT COLIB3ESONGS--iF YOU WANT "cmmlATE" ATMOSPHERE-IP YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRUNDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFAN EV0IING ATHANLEY’SOvetr loriy fo®f ofsoivlee The Maroon baitball tea^ in prep¬aration for its game Saturday withJake Kline's contingent finm NotreDame, lost a hard fought game toArmour Tech, by a score of 4 to 0.The score doesn’t half tell the tale.With Krate pltehibg, and Seidenbergcatching for the victOTs, Armourstarted out in the third inning, scor¬ing one run. The Maroons had twogood chaiHMs to score, once in thefifth and once in the ninth inning.In the fifth, Savesihd, third baieman,started with a single to center, butwas caught trying to .^eal second,Dean, catcher, then singled to centerfield. Soderlind, next up, was walkedhy Kruse, Cologeralos, shortstop,then singled to right field, Dean stop¬ping at third. Soderiind rounded sec¬ond and WMM caught .trying to getImck. Reynold pitctel the lullgame for the Maroons.Saturday the boys play Notrename at Greenwood field, in the firstbig game of the year. Coach KyleAnderjtou will probably start PaulAmundsen, tall Maroon burler.Today on theQuadranglesFRIDAYMEETINGS and hEm'RES“April, 1917--War, April, lf»S—?Ithiel Pool, Sponsored by the SoclalfctClub, 4th International. Social Seienc#m at 3:30,Biackfriars Chorus, Ida Noyestheatre from 2:10 to S,ASU Cooperative Comwlttee, IdaNoyes Room C from 12:30 to 1:80.Campus Cwigresa. Idb Noy«® li¬brary, Alumwie Room, YWCA room,WAA imm, rooms-- B and C from. 3:80to i:S0, Theatre from 7:80 to 10.“Monopoly and Its Implfeatims, TheGround Between Monopoly and Com¬petition.” Associate Professor Nw-love. The Art Institute at 6;4S.MliClELAHlGUSPhonograph Coneert. Wagner ■Parsifal, Act III. Social Science 112from 12:80 to 1:IS..Eeiiten services. Sponsored by theLutheran Club. Thoradyke HiltonChapel fj-om 12 to 12:30.Community G«)d FrWay Serviee,Dr. Douglas Horton, speaker; muskby the Univeroity Singers. Rockefel¬ler Memorial Chapel at 12.ELIZABETH'SPeasant PantryREGULAR PRICES:LUNCHEONS 35c-50cDINNERS 50c.85cSUNDAY DINNERS 65o-95cSpeciol Rstie« to StodaiU GroupsELMS HOTEL52S3 CORNELL AVENUEHYDE PARK 2020SELWYN THEATRE S-M-A-S-H IA GEORGE ABBOTT PHO0UCTION!lAmms% pm itlRAf AUIN 80l«f?Mmtnsss SOc to $1.50Wsd. and Sat. EVERYHOW «aHr In tlie second day of play in theintramural baj^eball tournament fivefraternities, Psi U, Deke, Phi Psi,Pi Lam, and Zet& Bete vanquishedtheir opponents in interesting games.The highest score of the day wasmade by the Psi U “A” team whenit soundly trounced Phi Kappa Sigmaby the score of 31-4. The winner:^were very strong both in hitting, asthey made forty-four hits in the sev¬en inning game, and fielding. Theoutstanding player of this game wasDean Libby who made six hits andsix imns.The closest game of the day wasthe Phi Psi “A” victo,i*y over KappaSigma. Th.®' .game was close up tothe eighth inning when the Phi Psislugger** made an eight i-un rally toput the game on ice. The finalscore was Phi Psf 14, Kappa Sig 11.;The Deke team also showed great;strength in its one-sided victory over!fklta Upsilon “B” by the score ofM-8. After a slow start the Defce>!began their heavy hitting and fromthe second inninf on had little oppo¬sition. Their second baseman Paine,made five bite and five runs in thetame number of trips to the plate.Neither -of the other two gameswa# as -well played as the abovethree. In a cIosb game the ZetaBetes rallied to beat Phi Psi “R” 8-4,and In a rather sloppy ganwe- Pi Lam-da Phi easily beat Psi U **B” 17-S,SATURDAYieholarship Day. Ida Noye® hall *day.National Collegiate Athletic As-soctetion. dPlrst annual jjymnastkmeet. Bartlett gymnasium at 8. Ad¬mission: students, 2§ cents; others, S0cents.SUNDAYSunrise Service. Chapel steps at6 a, m.Interehureh Council, Breakfast. IdaNoyes 8rd flcsor from 8:30 to 0:30:A,M.Channing Club of the First Unitar¬ian Church. “Varieties of Poetk Ex¬perience.” Reverend R. Lester Mon¬dale. First Unitarkn Church, 57thand Woodlawn at 4.“The ■ Troian Women.” Interaa-tional House at 8:30.Yoalf neY«r ween a hot yoellItkii beOer;,. It’s a brillkintcombinofion of fbe bevf stylefekaies of tbe season ,., dis-fitirtive die band of exeksiYedesJ'ifi. .. reinforced, shape*reloiniog brim-edge.. /'Swons*bock” moisfure-repeltenf fetish. . . those ore Portls iptelWyfeotwes you’ll apprecike. SeetheiobiaTODAY,tnnewsprtng shadesC?|i ik&wn iM C^uimHAffP yAStflGNED »YP0nn%e C' c n e c sMENS SHOP1003 East 55th Street -AMJ IMeet in Fieldhouse PAtRbNIZE OltRADVERTISERSNoyes,Moyea, Approximately 150 wrestlers wdllaompete in the Central AAU Wres¬tling tournament to be held in theFieldhouse today and tomorrow.Entries have been received fromHUnoij;, Northwestern, the Univer¬sity, Duncan YMCA, EnglewoodYMCA, Hyde Park YMCA and theHamilton Park Athleric Club, %'bichhas the largest entry, 20.Spyros K. Vorrea, the University’sW’reatling coach, has enterod most ofthe Maroon team. Entries inclutle EdValorx, 175 imunds; Boh Finwall,145 pounds; and Gill Finwall, 185:pounds. today-m y.DARY NEWS Cont. from l\ AU.25c ic IAmkino Pr«MnliLENINCommunist Club, Ida Noyes, WAAroom from 7:30 to 10.t'fcapel Servike. Charles W. Gilkey,dean of the Chapel. Roekefellbi’Memorial Chapel at 11.Radio Broadcast. UaiversityRound Table. WMAQ and Red Net¬work of NBC from 11:80 to 11.MOND.4YChi Rho Sigma, Ida Noyes, YWCAroom from 4:30 to 6,Arrian, Ida Noyw, Alumnae roomfrom 4:30 to O.YtVCA First Cabinet, Ida Noyes,;Alumnae room from 12 to 1:8©.Delta Sigma. Ida Noyes, WA.Aroom from 7 to 10.Fht Delia Upsilon. IdaWAA itmw from 4:30 to S,Settlewent# League. Idatheatre, lounge, and library from 3to 0.Dames. Book review. Ida Koyes,:Alumnae room from 2:45 to 5.Press Behearsal, Ida Noyes, tlwa*tre from 7:30 to 10.Pi Delta Phi Lia Noyes, YWCAroom from 7 to 10. CHICAGOETHICAL SOCIETYSTUDEBAKER THEATRESUNDAY, APRIL 17thAT 11 A. M.DR. HORACE I MIDGESLIFE TRIUMPHANT’’: ANEASTER SERMON i&if. Dtetei tittoEd % K ia aVice-Ptosid^if of the UnOe.i Press $gyg:"In Kcnario. acting, direetton and ph®.tography the Him surpauet ony l^ty.wood product 1 hovo ioon in yaartS**SONOTONE66 E, Von Buren—Nr. MichigarLENew way of 'butningtobacco — better* eooter,cleaner. Carburetor-Action toofeamcfke. Keepabottom ofbowIatMo/uteAydry. Treated with honey. Get the genuine.UPDRAFT makes tobaccoburn betterTHAT EPICBEST SELLEROriginally $5.00, Now«J89T. E. LAWRENCEPILLARSOF WISDOM58 Original Map$ and IllustrationsU. of C. Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUEWhe ToorshipFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoadtewn Av*. and Ea»t 57th M.Von Ogi«n Vogt, UJi., Mtntator UNIVERSITY CHURCH OFDISCIPLES or CHRIST5655 UntvorBily AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward Scribner AntesMinister's Associate: Mr. B. Fred WiseStotidov. April 17, lt3811:00 a.m.—“The Free Spirit,” Dr.Vogt.4 p.m.—Channing Club Tea and Dis¬cussion, “Varieties of Poetic Ex¬perience/* Rev. R. Lester . Mon¬dale.All young peopk^ espemallyeorimBy imvMl Sunday* A|^l If, 1938Serviros: Communion 10:80; Sermon11:(«J A. M.Bmmoa subleetf “Elmm. w-ith Christ”Br. Ames.12:10 Forum, Leader: ProfessorCISe^jltetawAl; '