i Today*8 HeadlinesI Hutchins debates Melby, pa^e 1.I Skull and Crescent for 1938*1939»I page 1.I Mustache Race Starts, page 1.I A new columnist, page 2.I Varsity netmen open season, page 5.Announce Staffof Instructors forSummer QuarterFour hundred and twenty-fourmembers of the regular faculty andI 32 visiting professors will comprisethe teaching staff of the Universityfor the Summer quarter which opensMonday, June 20, the recently pub¬lished summer schedule discloses.A total of 662 courses will be of¬fered during the summer, 162 in theBiological Sciences, 119 in the Hu¬manities, 120 in the Physical Sciences,132 in the Social Sciences and 129in the professional schools (Business,Divinity, Law, Library Science andSocial Service Administration.) Thisprogram represents the normal rangeof offerings during the other threeacademic quarters.The summer sessions were one ofthe innovations of William RaineyHarper, first president of the Univer¬sity. He decided that the year wouldbe divided into four quarters, andthat the University be operatedthroughout the year. By this systemthree-quarters of the entire facultyare in residence in each quarter, in¬cluding the summer. Visiting scholarsfrom other universities and abroadaugment the summer program, whichis divided into two terms (June 20—July 22 and July 26—Augu.st 26).Among the visiting professors dur¬ing the summer of 1938 will be:Mabel V. Campbell, professor andhead of the Department of homeeconomics. University of Missouri;Jo.scph Warren Beach, professor ofEnglish, University of Minnesota(who will be Frederic Ives CarpenterVisiting Professor); Rene Etiemble,(Continued on page 2)Koch Ad(iressesMedical AcademyDescribes Future Role ofBiochemistry in Diagno¬sis.New York, Apr. 21—Future stud¬ies in biochemistry may lead to nieth-ods which will enable the scientist todifferentiate quantitatively betweenthe seven known androgen.s (malehormones) and to throw light on thediagnosis of glandular diseases. Dr.Fr^ C. Koch of the University saidlast night in the annual Harvey So¬ciety lecture at the New York Acad¬emy of Medicine.Dr. Koch, who is professor andchairman of the department of bio¬chemistry at Chicago, said that ifsuch methods were devised, theymight give medical science accurateinformation as to the source of eachof the seven different male hormones,and lead to early detection of suprar¬enal or ovarian disorders, thus avoid¬ing the necessity of exploratory oper¬ations.Change ViewsOutlining the progress made in bio¬chemistry during the last severalyears. Dr. Koch said that the viewformerly held was that the male-hor¬mone activity which is responsible forthe typical secondary sex charactersand artivity of accessory sex organsin the male is due to one particularsubstance formed in the testicle.“These studies also showed thatnormal men’s urine contained twopure androgens and that these aredifferent from the pure androgensobtained from the bull testis tissue.Quantitative studies on the rates ofurinary excretion of androgens indifferent species show that adult manis unique in that both men and womenexcrete from 20 to 100 times theweight of androgens per litre as stal¬lion, bull, ram, or male rats.“The exact nature of the andro¬gens found in women’s urine is notknown except during pregnancy whenanother new pure androgene has beenfound. In certain diseases presum¬ably associated with the gonads therates of excretion of male and femalesex hormones, as well as the relativeamounts are altered.“In women with marked virilismand hirsutism these rates and ratiosof excretion tend toward the malefypct but in these conditions part ofthe male-hormone activity in theurine is due to the latest two newmale hormones.’’ (!Pbe Battp inaraonNo. 99 Z-U9 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1938 Price Five CentsHold Third AnnualHawaiian Night atInternational House 99Hold ‘‘Roundupfor Men of ’42A “Sports Roundup’’, in which a-bout 60 “leaders for ’42’’ have been Ernest Melhy, Hutchins Debate“Educational Theory in Practice”As Campus Congress ConcludesProgram Includes Two Mo¬tion Pictures, NativeWedding.Dusky Polynesian maidens doingthe Hula Kui, native musicians, withtheir strings throbbing melodies ofthe South Seas, and dancing underthe stars of Waikiki, will all combineto cast the spell of a tropical eveningover the third annual InternationalHouse Hawaiian Night festivities to¬morrow night.An elaborate program including astyle show, a native Hawaiian wed¬ding, two motion pictures, and danc¬ing to an American and a nativeHawaiian orchestra, has been plannedby Director James MacKenzie.Present FashionsBeginning at 8:30, the evening fes¬tivities will present a fashion show’demonstrating what a debutantemight wear from daybreak until bed¬time at the Royal Hawaiian Hotel inHonolulu. The latest Tahitian bathingsuits will be modeled by DevorahCohn and Mimi Grossman, with Max¬ine Sunderman and Marjorie Caseyshowing Waikiki play suits. Hawaiian.sports wear will be displayed by MaryAnn Patrick and Harriet Nelson, af¬ternoon cocktail dresses by MargoBoertlein and Evelyn Riegel, andsummer formals by Dolly Thomee,Joanne Taylor, Betty Best, and MaryGage.But under the Hawaiian moon,romance flourishes. So, a typical na¬tive Hawaiian wedding will be per¬formed, with Harriet Nelson as thebride, Joseph Casey as groom, andBob O’Donnell as best man. In thespirit of Hawaii in the olden days ofidol worship a native will sing theancient Hawaiian hymnal and chant.The participants, however, will wearthe latest in bridal attire.Demonstrating the Hula Kui dancewill be Jane Griswold, Tess Loth, Vir¬ginia Johnson, Tillie Boertlein, andMimi Grossman. Two colored soundmovies, “Hawaii Nei,’’ and “PacificParadise,’’ the latter being a musicalcomedy featuring Harry Owens andhis Royal Hawaiian Hotel orchestraare to be shown.Continuous DancingFrom 10 to 1:30 there will be con¬tinuous dancing in two ballroomsdecorated as Hawaiian and Japanesegardens. The Healani of the SouthSeas orchestra, a group of nativemusicians who have broadcast over acosat to coast NBC network formany years, and Gene Davis and histen-piece campus orchestra playing arequest return engagement willfurnish the Hawaiian and Americanmusic.The festivities are open to every¬one, with tickets priced at $1.26 perperson available at InternationalHouse and the Information office.Fosdick Speaks on*"When Evil Wins** atChapel on SundayThe Reverend Harry Emerson Fos¬dick, universally known as the fore¬most preacher in the English speak¬ing world, minister and administra¬tive head of Riverside Church of NewYork City, will be the speaker at thechapel service Sunday morning. He ispreaching on the subject “When EvilWins.’’The position and prestige of Fos¬dick are unique. As head of the hugeRockefeller-endowed Riverside Churchhe directs what is probably the fore¬most religious center in America, andthrough radio broadcasts his voiceis heard by millions of followers ev¬ery week.Dr. Fosdick has come to the Uni¬versity chapel almost every year sincethe beginning of the services and in¬variably draws the largest chapel at¬tendances. Dean Gilkey is conductingthe services while Herman Koenigwill be the student reader.The services are being broadcastover WGN and the Mutual Network.Dr. Fosdick will be heard again whenhe addresses the Sunday EveningClub Sunday night. invited to participate, is scheduled bythe Student Publicity Board for Sat¬urday. Beginning at noon, the pro¬gram for the high school seniors in¬cludes lunch at the fraternities, atalk on the University, and participa¬tion in swimming, basketball or ten¬nis until the Wisconsin baseball gameand the tennis meet with WesternState College.Before going to the fraternities, allthe guests will meet at the ReynoldsClub, where they will return at 1 tohear Dean Smith, Charlton Beck orMartin Freeman talk on the advan¬tages of a University education. Af¬terwards they will be given theirchoice of activities to engage in un¬til 3 or 3:30. Time permitting, theywill be also conducted on a shortcampus tour.Underclassmen Guide GuestsSince a good many juniors andseniors will be absent owing to ath¬letics, Student Publicity Board plansto make the most of this handicap bytrying out its freshmen and sopho¬mores.Potential women leaders will cometo the campus the week following, atwhich time Student Publicity, in co¬operation with Interclub, expects toserve tea at International House for100 high school senior girls. Arrange¬ments for the tea are in charge ofDoris Gentzler.Skull and CrescentAdds 27 Membersto University ChapterSelection of 27 men for Skull andCrescent, Big Ten sophomore men’shonor society, was announced yester¬day by Ken Sponsel, head of the Uni¬versity chapter of the organization.Members were selected on the basis iof activities and standing in the Uni-Skull and Crescent 1938—1939Harold AronsonOrrin BernsteinRalph BurchGeorge CrandallJames EternoBenum FoxFrank HarrisonCraig HazelwoodLee HewittWilliam HochmanRobert JampolisRaymond LaneRaymondMcNameeCharles Paltzer Charles PercyLee PierceJames RichardsGeorge SchatzNorman SigbandJoseph StampfAshton TaylorAlan TeagueDale TilleryEvon VogtDavid Wiedeman,IIIDonald WilsonRichard Wilsonversity. Kappa Sigma did not nomi¬nate any candidates.Of the new members, Burch, Hew¬itt, Stampf, and Teague have nofraternity affiliations. They wereelected in accordance with a changein the constitution made last year toallow the Chicago chapter, formerlyexclusively a fraternity society, toinitiate deserving independents. Theorganization promotes University ac¬tivities and campus spirit, co-operateswith Iron Mask in arranging the an¬nual Victory Vanities, and sponsors aformal dance during the Winter quar¬ter each year.There will be an important meetingof all members, including the newlyelected, at 1 Tuesday in Room D ofthe Reynolds Club. Initiation willtake place the afternoon of Friday,April 29, followed by the initiationdance the same evening.Admit Top Six ofLaw School to CoifSix men have been admitted to theorder of the Coif, the law school or¬ganization for students ih the high¬est ten per cent of their class. Themen are: Melvin Cohen, Marcus Cohn,Robert A. Crane, Harry Kalven, Don¬ald A. Morgan, Maurice Rosenfeld.These men are asked to see GeorgeG. Bogert, president of the Chicagochapter as soon as possible. Describe StudentsWho Key PeaceStrike FactionsBy BETTE HURWICHOne detail on which members ofthe Greater Peace Strike Committeecan’t disagree is the heterogeneousassortment of associations they repre¬sent. With Betty Barden, famousactivity woman. Hazel Whitman, theCampus’ lone Quaker Pacifist, MarkAshin, poet laureate of the people’sfront, Joe Rosenstein, Chapel Union¬ite, and Hart Perry, loyal fraternityman, the committee can boast a vege¬table from practically every pot ofcampus soup.To make the strike effective, thefollowing committees for action havebeen organized. Publicity, headed byBobby Suckle includes Harry Levine,Emily Shield, Joan Michelson, GeorgeBlankstone, Catesby Thomas Jones,Harvey Ancel, Emmett Deadman,Clarence Jameson, and E. Socoloff.Jim Peterson chairmans Barney Wie¬ner, president of the Communist Club,Joshua Jacobs, Ruth Harris, JudyForrester, Dick Feise, Bob Merriam,Florence Glaser, and Ray Ellickson inany organization’s most difficult de¬partment, finance. To perfect the pro¬gram, William Speck, representingBurton 700, meets with Jack Conway,Norman Brown, Dick Lindheim, andMuriel Schecter.Primary publicity and financialmove is selling of round green badgesstating that the wearer will “Strikefor Peace April 27.’’ And it is bytheir buttons and the descriptionsthat will follow that you shall knowthem:Dynamo, and combined with BrittenHarris, the greater committee’s braintrust, Nobbie Brown, works long andhard to further the strike’s success.Here on a Commonwealth Fellow¬ship from Oxford University, Brown’scompetence in handling matters forthe ASU Education and Peace com¬mittees have gained him leadershipin all liberal activities.Able to survive the fieriest fracasof isolationism versus collective secur¬ity with nary a curl disturbed and acool, powdered nose, Hazel Whitman,representing the Fellowship of Recon¬ciliation, defends her Quaker-Pacifistprinciples to the point of submittingher resignation rather than allow(Continued on Page 6)Seniors Start Fuzz-Raising Competitionat C-Bench TodayBy DAVID MARTINSenior Men! Now is the time toprove that you can raise somethingelse besides beer foam on your upperlips. Rally round the C bench attwelve today and you too can havethe chance to win a loving cup witha mustache guard. Think how theladies will cheer. Ah, what is lovewithout whiskers?Listen, my hearties, and you shallhear of how the mustache race be¬gan, among the class of E-o-leven,hardly a man there was unsheven (soit rhymes); each to prove he was aMAN.Brad said to a friend, “I miss thegood old days when ‘handle-bars’were rife; it seems to me as if weshould, introduce these men to LIFE.A bush on the lip is worth two onthe chest, and what could be betterthan whiskers? Let each little mando his hair-raising best, and throwthe winner, the loser, and everyoneelse into the Botany POND.Regulations for the whisker racehave not changed. The only thingthat will be counted is the length—or depth—of the hair on the upperlip. Ones that grow in moles don’tcount, and the luxuriousness of thecrop will be taken into consideration.All entrants in the derby must ap¬pear shaven, before the C bench atnoon today. Brad will be on handwith his eighteen inch razor to cutdown on head starts that anyone mayhave. Hold Resolutions Sessionat Ida Noyes This Af¬ternoon.Speaking for the only time thisyear that students will be able tohear him. President Robert MaynardHutchins debates tht issue of “Edu¬cational Theory in Practice’’ withDean Ernest 0. Melby of Northwest¬ern University at the final session ofthe Campus Congress tonight at 8:30in Mandel hall.The suggestions from yesterday’sgroups of panel discussions and twoleft from last week will be voted up¬on at the final resolutions sessions at3:30 today in Ida Noyes theater.Divided into three groups by the reso¬lutions committee—those immediatelyenforceable by the Administration,those for future enforcement, andthose for independent student action—they will be presented to Hutchinsbefore the debate by John Marks.Speak InformalllyEach debater will speak for twentyminutes (Hutchins first) in statinghis views. Following the formal pre¬sentation, the educators will discusseach other’s points over a microphonesystem and bring out whatever meas¬ures of agreement can be reached.Written questions may be submittedto either speaker, who will answerbriefly.Tickets for the debate (admission35 cents) may still be secured at theInformation Desk, Re3niolds Club, In¬ternational House, and the Bookstore,although Bud Herschel, ticket man¬ager, believes that less than 100 arenow available.Two sparsely attended groups offour panel discussions took up theproblems of education in the Uni¬versity. Both discussions on the Uni¬versity favored a broad general back¬ground with the four surveys com¬pulsory as a basis for further educa¬tion. The role of the Business Schoolin the University was defended byDean Spencer and large numbers ofBusiness School students, who pointedout that its excuse for being is itsscientific teaching of the principles ofbusiness management.Ask Humanities II CourseThe other afternoon panels, Meta¬physics and the College, presentedmore concrete suggestions, the Col¬lege discussion recommending estab¬lishment of a Humanities II course,composite weighting of quarterly andcomprehensive grades, more reviewsections, increase of the facilities ofthe advisory system, and preparationof a handbook discussing each surveycourse.The resolution of the panel onMetaphysics asked for examination ofthe various philosophical problems ofthe University and their relation tothe special scientific disciplines. Thediscussion on The Divisions recom¬mended integration of courses. Thediscussion of the reorganization ofthe English department suggestedmerely that it would be perferable forEnglish majors to take Philosophy101-2-3 in the College instead of theEnglish literature sequence.The section on Course Content de¬cided that facts are important butsubordinate to organization, that theunderlying assumptions of coursesshould be presented explicitly, andthat all material in a course shouldbe related to the fundamentals of thecourse.Discuss Relief Problemson Round Table SundayThe University Round Table willdescribe the two roads the Admini¬stration can take if work relief turnsinto a blind alley, in their discussionSunday of “The Relief Problem.’’The choice: dole versus competitionwith private industry, which pumpI priming may have to make to supple¬ment work relief, will be argued outby economist Harry D. Gideonse; FredHoehler, executive director of theAmerican Public Welfare Association;and sociologist Louis Wirth, all mem¬bers of the University faculty.’ Page Two THE DAILY MAROON> FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1938PLATFORM1. Creation of a vigorous campus community.2. Abolition oi intercollegiate athletics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision oi the CoUege Plan.5. A chastened presidentThe DebateDebate is seldom the way to truth. Normally it isan exercise in rhetoric, a confusion of words in whichone or the other speaker gets the sympathy of theaudience, and wins the debate. When President Hut¬chins meets Dean Melby tonight to debate “EducationalTheory in Practice”, the debate may follow this con¬ventional pattern. If so, the debate will be a brilliantdisplay since both are able talkers, and have a subjecteminently suitable to verbal fireworks.But a rousing debate, while it may be more enter¬taining, is a futile thing for those who seek to under¬stand the meaning and implications of the words of thespeakers. With this in view the Hutchins-Melby de¬bate has been arranged differently. After a formalpresentation, the two will seat themselves across atable and try to make clear the meaning of their re¬spective positions, and their mutual criticisms conver¬sationally.If Hutchins and Melby enter into this roundtableas a serious attempt to understand each other and theextent of their differences, the debate may be highlyilluminating to the many students who have been morethan a little puzzled by President Hutchins’ words, andwonder what they mean for the future of the Univer¬sity, if they are ever realized.If they enter resolved to score one another off,the show will be interesting, and serve to confirm eachschool in its sympathy. Let us hope, however, thatthere will be more light than heat.Surpri;;egreeted at least two membersof the Interfraternity committee when the Maroon an¬nounced the appointment of Hart Perry, Roger Nielsonand Bob Jones to a committee to agitate for a shorterrushing period yesterday. It is characteristic of theway the Committee has operated this year that Her¬bert Larson troubles only to inform Ralph Leach, pres¬ident of proposed action, forgetting the rest of the fiveman committee.And the remarkable thing about it is that nobodycares very much. The Committee each year goesthrough motions of threatening to enforce rushingrules, and complaining about the length of the rushingperiod, and does nothing. So perhaps the lack of inter¬est in the doings and appointments to the Interfrater¬nity committee is not remarkable after all.So if the work done by this year’s committee is ameasure of the function of the I-F committee, its taskcould be handled by a secretary in ten hours a year.It drew up a schedule for rushing functions; it matchedbids from the houses with the freshman registrations,and talked quite a bit.Plans for Interfraternity consolidation have uni¬formly been failures. The last interfratemity stagended in a riot doing considerable damage to Burtonand Judson. Proposals for enforcing rushing ruleshave been politely laughed at. The Committee has apoor excuse for existence. QuestandInquestBY LAURA BERGQUISTSome smoothie, wordly-wise fraternity men walk¬ed into the office yesterday afternoon, expressed ahaughty disdain for Maroon columnists and their col¬umns this year, volunteered to dish one up as it oughtto be dished.And here is their little contribution to posterity forthe day—Who said these days are gone forever? The oldface of the bar room floor once again rears his headto peer around, as only he can do, to see what has beengoing on during the Maroon’s (slightly red) revolution..Since Lil Schoen is dead to all except John Barden,Joe College will now come out of the hole and assumehis place in the sun.Did any one see the D. D.’s (drunken Dekes) atHanley’s last Friday nite with Pierce in the lead,weaving like a blimp...True to form and as usual,“Pickle Puss” Goes (Art to both of his friends) is play¬ing the part of a drunk in the Blackfriars show. ($2.20per seat).. .Speaking of burglars. Hoy thinks that heis stealing the Ann Binkley show, but he is really duefor a blackout.HERE’S ONE FOR EASTER“Seasquirt” Cummins gave Phyllis Todd a bunny“wabbitt” for Easter. That’s putting all your eggsin one basket.PULSE...the news behind the news, says JohnMorris who is angling for a job with Time. The onlyjob he will ever get with Time is that of cleaningclocks.COLLEGE BOY MAKES GOODIs it true that Bob Eckhouse, of C-Esta fame, hasbeen offered a job as promotion manager for 'the SilverSlipper? Well, Bob, at least you have a dance pricewithin the reach of everyone.TRAVELLING COMPANION...On his return to school after the recent holidays,John Marks campus communist, was approached by aporter at the Union Station with the usual query:“Carry your bag mister!” John turns to the porter withthe remark, “Naw, let her walk.”We understand that Quadrangler’s Pris Hawleyis engaged to Gale “Moonfaced” Compton, nephew of“Cosmic Ray”...Hal Bondhus has robbed the cradle byhanging his pin on Jean Phillips, Hirsch high school.Congratulations to Mary Letty Green—she is stillable to hold Bob Upton. What’s happened to theLouise Hoyt-Dan Smith affair? Frank S. Carey hadsix dates with Shirley Adams in one week. Do youthink it’s serious?Graham “little Moose Nose” Fairbank is trying tothrow strikes in the Betty Betz league. He’d bettergo back to the minor leagues.Letters to theEditorEditor,Daily Maroon:Some thirty faculty members in theEnglish department every year teachseveral hundred students who wrotewhat in the English language andwhy, when and how he wrote it. TheUniversity Announcements listsscores of courses in the Department,nearly all of them being about Eng¬lish or American literature.A student may spend a whole quar¬ter studying Ben Jonson or Miltonor Melville, or he may cover brieflythe whole field of literature if hewishes, but if he desires to studyFrench or Russian or German poetryand prose intensively and is unable toread French or Russian or Germanthen he’s cast out on his own. Surely,if English literature is worth study¬ing, that of other languages is too—even if it has to be read in transla¬tion.A department of English shouldconfine its curriculum to what ispeculiar to the English language, justas a department of French shouldteach only the French language.But literature and literary criticismand literary history are not peculiarto any one language. A novel is justas good or bad in one as in another(except for the slight possible lossinvolved in translation). Rules of lit¬erary criticism apply equally to liter¬ature in all languages. And the liter¬ary history of England and the UnitedStates is not more important thanthat of the rest of the world.Hence, I recommend that a depart¬ment of Literature be established atthe University to offer classes dealingwith the writings of the whole world.The various language departments,including English, should provide on¬ly the ability to read literature.Seymour Miller. Announce -(Continued from page 1)professor of French, Lycee de Beau¬vais; Leo Gershoy, associate professorof History, Long Island University;William C. Greene, associate profes¬sor of Greek and Latin, Harvard Uni¬versity; Kenneth Burke, author andcritic (in the English department);Lloyd Lewis, biographer and news¬paperman (in the history depart¬ment; Horace G. Byers, Chief, SoilChemistry and Physics Research, U.S. Department of Agriculture (in thegeography department).James Wilfred Cook, Research In¬stitute of the Royal Cancer Hospital,London (in the chemistry depart¬ment); W. W. Horner, professor ofengineering, Washington University(in the geography department);Aubrey A. Douglass, professor ofEducation and director of graduatestudies, Claremont Colleges, Calif.;Malbone W. Graham, professor ofPolitical Science, University of Cali¬fornia at Los Angeles; E. E. Ober-holtzer. Superintendent of Schools,Houston, Texas (in the department ofeducation); Paul W. Terry, professorand head of the Department of Psy¬chology, University of Alabama.Special events in the department ofeducation include the twelfth annualInstitute for Administrative Officersof Higher Institutions, which will beheld July 13-15 to discuss “TheTraining of College Teachers.” OnJuly 18-22 the Conference of Ad¬ministrative Officers of Public andPrivate Schools will be held. A newConference on Reading Problems willconvene under the direction of Profes¬sor William S. Gray on June 23-25 to“Current Issues Relating to Readingin American Education.”Other features of the Universitysummer quarter are three symposiaon science, a field conference onMississippi Valley archaeology andthe Harris Foundation Institute. The science symposia will begin at Wil¬liams Bay, Wis., on June 22 and con¬tinue through June 25. Distinguishedastronomers from all over the UnitedStates and from Europe will discuss“Molecular Spectra in Stars, Planetsand Intrastellar Space.” On June 27the scene shifts back to the Universityof Chicago quadrangles, where forfour days the time will be devoted tosymposia on “Nuclear Physics” and“Cosmic Rays.”Vol. 38 APRIL 22, 1938 No. 91'Slic JHaromtPOUNDED IN 1991MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon ia the official atudentnewspaper of the University of Chicaso,pabliahed morninKs except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephones: Local 857, and Hyde Park9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our print¬ers, The Chief Printing company, 1920Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3S11.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any eon-tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Marv>on expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptonrates; $3.00 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: five cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.boareTof “controlnapnasBNTBO son national AovBRTisiNa avNational Advertising Service, Inc.ColUt* Puhliiktrt Rtpriunlativt420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.Cnicaso • Boston - Lot AseiLts - San Fsanciscowilliam H. McNEILL Editor-in-ChiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE....Adverti8ing Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist, Maxine Biesenthal,Emmett Deadman, Ruth Brody, Rex Hor¬ton, Seymour Miller, Adele Rose,^SINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman, Max Freeman, HarryTopping, Irvin R^n.Night Editor: Harry LeviAssiaUnt: John Stevens Cohen Speaks MondayContinuing his series on recenttrends in logic, Morris Cohen, pro¬fessor of Philosophy, will speak on^‘Logic and the Physical Science—The Nature of Scientific Method andResults” in Social Science 122 at 4:30Monday. His lecture is open to thepublic.MAY WE REMINDYOUlP/,c(pi f6324 WOODLAWN AVE.^•rv« Excellenf FoodLUNCHEONS 95c upDINNERS SOc 1Q> 2ND WEEK25c to 1 P. M.Ex. Sot & Sun."Th* Actor Boris V.Shchukin is auporbin tho roU oi Lon-in." —C. J. BullioLlDcdlr Nows.1. II .SONOTONEEnolith Dialog TltltiCMrf. II 4. M. to MMnIft•S I. VAN BL’REN—NR. MICHIGANLotto Show Sort. Nils 11 P. M.BLACKTRIAR” NIGHTAT THE BLACKHAWKTONIGHTBOB CROSBY, HIS ORCHESTRA ANDMARION MANN THE "BOBCATS'A PREVUE OF THE BLACKFRIARS’ 1938 MUSICAL "WHERE IN THE WORLD"WITH THESE CAMPUS STARS;HARRY SNODGRESS — JOHN'HAGEBECKBOB JONES — DEAN LINGER — GRANT ATKINSONSONGS BY BOB FITZGERALD JOHN MeWHORTER ED ALTBOB-CATS” Club Meeting — Every Sunday,3-6 P.M.BLACKHAWK 'i^ RANDOLPH AND WABASH ^ANOTHERSALEAll this week we are having a special clearancesale. Especially will this sole featureFICTION29c to 59cWe also hove a fine collection ofBIOGRAPHIES Especially reducedfor this soleU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ELUS AVENUEBETTER NOT WAIT !Last year many students were disappointedand unable to obtain yearbooks in the CAP ANDGOWN sell out. Don't let yourself drift into thatstate this year when a small down-payment willreserve a book for you. Better subscribe today atthe Information Desk or the office in Lexington Hall.THE CAP AND GOWNTHE DAILY ifeASeON, FRIDAY, APRIL 22. 1988 P^e ThreeCAMPUS WEEK AT ERIEReturn Engagement by Request!CLOTHING COMPANY837-839 E. 63ird StreetMoorylandBonnie Breternitz^^Quadrangler^^ says'BRADLEY knits ore the answer to a co-ed'sprayer."—"Model Illustrated" $22.75 ^RY ONE ONI . . . These smart, new -fashions by(RADLEY are unexpectedly colorful . . . they reimmed with trinkets and gadgetslat no one ever thought of before,:nd they're the kind of dress thatlakes for slim, trim lines and gay,ophisticated. "color." All sizes and: rich variety of style and color com-inations. Other Styles*12®' Sport SHaeks ®4®®wDesigned ior Smart Campus WearThere ore plaids, checks, herringbones, stripes andsmart solid colors in tweeds, worsteds, cheviots^ and flannels. Smartly tailored; full cut and roomy,^ pleated if desired. These are odd-trousers tailored ^especially for sports and street wear. They're Wsplendid values. All sizes.The Fabrics are rich rareand youHllike themifHART SCHAFFNER& MARX$3750Charge it theErie Way90 Days to PayVaett referriog, of course* to the new*'roagh fabrics”! For this spring-*accord-ing to all indications, smartly dressedyoung men are going to show a distinctpreference for softer, rougher materials—such as shetlands, cheriots, etc.And we have prepared for such a de¬mand—with the result that yoa*U find herea complete selection of ri<^, nigged suit¬ings that offer some of the bestdookingpatterns and colorings you’re erer seen.Styled in either the two or three-buttoncoat, these rougher materials tailor upinto suits that show a definite trend awayfrom the smoother-finished type of cloth¬ing that most men hare been accustomedto in the past few years.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1938Orchestra PresentsManheim SymphonyWhen the University SymphonyOrchestra assembles next Friday eve¬ning in Mandel hall to play its eighthconcert under the direction of CarlBricken, the work of a faculty mem¬ber, Assistant Professor of SociologyErnest Manheim, will be presented.The group will play the second move¬ment of his Symphony in D Minor.Manheim, who joined the Univer¬sity faculty last fall, studied musicin his birthplace, Budapest. He con¬tinued his studies in Vienna, but af¬ter the war switched to sociologry.In harmony and rhythm Manheimsympathizes with the moderns, butconsiders that the folk music of thepast went as far in the matter offreedom in these two phases as it isneedful to go today. Consequently,he believes that the music of Debussyand Hindemith constitutes the properlimit to “modernity in music tixlay.” University Clinics Include VolunteerService as Part of Working PlanBy JUDY FORRESTEREUZABETH'SPeasant PantryREGULAR PRICES:LUNCHEONS 35c-50cDINNERS •.... 50c-85cSUNDAY DINNERS 65c-95cSpecial Rates to Student GroupsELMS HOTEL5253 CORNELL AVENUEHYDE PARK 20204 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEroi COlllOI STUOINTI AND ORAOUATISA IlkereM^ eamrm—AWfi i.1^1. Oetoierl.td $tnt fn$, without obUgaHonlerMMA No tommoserBUSINESS COLLEGErAUl MOtll. LO. PH.S.W mtontk. Admmeod ComnMMsdM. Dof end EotHing.UMifMi MMLn« AMIcMgae Ave.«Chieaoe,«aadelpA 4UrHanley’sBuffet1512 E. 55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT "COLLEG¬IATE" ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY’SOver iorty yecors of congenialservice In November, 1935, an idea that,had long been a rather unimportantone in many hospitals became a sys¬tematic reality at the UniversityClinics. Under the joint guidance ofthe administrative head. Dr. ArthurC. Bachmeyer, and the AuxiliaryCommittee of University Clinics, vol¬unteer service was made a functionof the hospital’s working plan.At present, directed by Mrs. Thel¬ma Kratochvil, who was formerlyplacement secretary of the VolunteerService Bureau, Council Social Agen¬cies, in Kansas City, 60 women everyweek give at least one period, w'hichmay range from one to four hours, towork in Billings Hospital, Bobs Rob¬erts Clinic, and the Home for Desti¬tute Crippled Children. Their person¬nel includes-students and Dames clubmembers from the University, debu¬tantes, young married women, andmembers of the Junior L«eague andRed Cross.Work With ChildrenPlaying with children, which be¬comes occupational therapy in BobsRoberts, still consists of taking toysto them, playing games, and tellingMaroon Faux Pas HitsNew Yorker’s ColumnsNo longer is Time the supreme out¬let for publicity on the University’sachievements. The New Yorker, af¬ter holding back for almost a year,this week released the coup thatTime missed, and printed in its “OfAll Things’’ department the follow¬ing startlingly original announcementfrom The Daily Maroon of May 11,1937.“Members, of the retiring commit¬tee are Robert Shallenberger, EdwardStern, Charles Axelson, Robert Beth-ke, and Herman Schulz.The whole world will be repeatedtoday at 4:30 and 8:30.The Daily Maroon.’*The whole thing looks like an adcooked up .by, the InterfraternityCommittee and the publicity office.The youngsters of New York mightwell be expected to flock to studynatural history at the very first hand,even at one 'liundred dollars per shot.There’s only one slip-up in thewhole gag, though. Someone forgotto let the puzzled New Yorker read¬ers know what university the Maroonwas the official undergraduate publi¬cation of. stories, all with an idea of lesseningthe feeling of hospital imprisonment.In the Home for Destitute CrippledChildren volunteers assist the occupa¬tional therapy department by takingchildren up to work rooms and supervising their activities there, as wellas by preparing materials for them towork with. There are also specialprojects of tutoring many youngsterswho can scarcely remember a life out¬side the hospital.The nearest equivalent to this sortof work in Billings is library service.Volunteers, in maroon smocks andwhite collars, bring the world outsideof the hospital staff into the rooms ofthe patients when they recommendbooks which will lighten the tediumof three or thirty days in bed, andbring them from the patients’ libraryon third floor. Several patients havebeen tutored in French or Germanby these workers, and volunteers havespent many hours reading to peopletemporarily or permanently blind.Clerical Po.sition.>-In clerical work, the admitting deskof the gfeneral clinic offers an inter¬esting morning or afternoon a week.Necessary information about each en¬tering patient is recorded, and thevolunteer can make waiting much lessirksome by offering books and maga¬ zines and a few cheerful words. Amore responsible position is that atthe X-Ray and Information desk onsecond floor. There, after a shortperiod of training, volunteers directpatients to clinics, give appointmentsfor X-ray examinations, and make thevarious charges.On visiting evenings each of thewards uses a few volunteers for anhour in showing visitors to patientsand regulating the time of their stay.PLEDGING NOTICEPi Delta Phi announces the pledgingof Phyllis Kiesselbach of Chicago, Ill.CLASSIFIED ADSBEAUTIFUL 6 ROOM HOME 6705 Mary¬land Ave. All light rooms. Glased PchElectric Refrig. New stove. Storm win¬dows. Venetian blinds. H. W. Heat (olll.2 car gar. Bargain for 17000 Keys withWoodrich Bros. Triangle ISOO. LEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYTAKE PT'IVATE LESSONSHYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A. M. to 10 P. MTERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63RD ST.LEARN TO FLYSpecial School RatesGov. Licensed Airplanes andInstructorsNEW AIRPLANESWrite or CollMIDWESTFlying School83rd CICERO Portsmouth 6606ACCURATE and RAPID LENS DUPLICATIONS oAndFrame Repairs YourPrescriptionFilledNELSON OPTICAL CO.1138 E. 63rd St. at University AvenueDr. Nels R. Nelson Hyde Park 5352Optometrist 30 Years in Same LocationDrive to Make WoodlawnCommunity ConsciousTo make Woodlawn a better com¬munity in which to live and to makeall Woodlawnites conscious of thefact that they live in a complete citywithin a city, is the aim of the Wood¬lawn Business Men’s a.ssociation asit opens a drive for $22,000,000 dol¬lars worth of business. A feature ofthe drive will be the election cam¬paign for the Mayor of Woodlawn.A series of merchandising and civ¬ic events have been planned by J. M.Earle, head of the business promotioncommittee. The drive will end witha ball at the Trianon where the new¬ly elected Mayor of Woodlawn willbe presented. TENNIS RACQUET SPECIALSKimbark Theatre6240 KIMBARK AVENUEFRIDAY. APRIL 22JON HALL in "HURRICANE"—Plus—"PATIENT IN ROOM 18"SATURDAY. APRIL 23MICKEY ROONEY in"LOVE IS A HEADACHE"—Plus—"CHAN AT MONTE CARLO"Mat. Only - "BLAZING SIXES" Lexington Theatre1162 £ 63rd StFRIDAY & SATURDAY. APRIL 22-23FRED MARCH FRANCISKA GAAL"BUCCANEER"—Plus—SONJA HENIE DON AMECHEin"HAPPY LANDING"SELWYN THEATRE S-M-A-S-H !A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION!463LAUGHSby JOHN MURRAY uA AUDI BORFt/Matinees 50c to $1.50Wed. and Sot EVERYNOW „OHT A Great Purchase Famous I9S7 ModelsSPALDING-WILSONWRIGHT & DITSONList Price $!5 Up, atOur Price $Q 95O upTop line, guaranteed perfect frames, 1937 modelsstrung with Armour Gut to your own specifications.SPALDING: Top Flite, Futura, Mercer, Beasley, Lamina, Anzac,Kro Bat, Princess.WRIGHT AND DITSON: Top Flite. Title Cup, Austral. Davis Cup.WILSON: Vines Personal, Ghost.(Silk strung, list price, $12 .... our price, $6.95)Nationally Known TENNIS BALLS . . . 45c ... 5 for $1.25THECf^UsState and Jackson, CHICAGO • EVANSTON • OAK PARK • GARYFROLIC THEATREFRIDAY & SATURDAY. APRIL 22-23FREDERICK MARCH,FRANCISKA GAAL"THE BUCCANEER"MAY 16-17-18ROBERT TAYLOR in"YANK AT OXFORD"MAY 26-27-28CLAUDETTE COLBERT in"TOVARICH" ! BANNED BY THE DEAN !ROY ELDRIDGE AND HIS SWING BANDand, incidentally,THE ASU PEACE BALLBut come what may from Mother GrundyWe expect to see all and sundryAt the After theHotel Morrison Peace StrikeWednesday Night, April 27; Adm. 60c; 75c at door.Tickets—Inform, desk. Office or any ASU member ^THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL. 22, 1938 Page FiveOpen Varsity Tennis SeasonAgainst Western State TeachersBill Murphy Plays MiltonRuehl in Number OneSpot.Chicago’s championship tennis teamwill be given its first test tomorrowon the Varsity courts when WesternState Teachers College brings itsstrong six-man team to the Midway.Match play will begin at 2 o’clock.Graduation of Carl Fischer, forthree years Michigan state intercol¬legiate champion and a high rankingnational intercollegiate player, weak¬ened Western State’s team this sea¬son, but Coach Frank Householderhas a clever band of netmen.Bill Murphy No. 1Captain Milton Ruehl, runner upfor the Michigan state title as asophomore last year, will be in theNumber 1 spot. He will oppose Chi¬cago’s ace performer, BilP Murphy,ranked Number 1 in Chicago and themiddle west.Matt Chandler, veteran WesternState tennis player, will face ChesterMurphy, Bill’s twin brother, in the.Number 2 singles matches. Bob Ol¬son, Willis Judd, Jack Sims, and OlinVandenberg will make up the remain¬der of the Western State team.Coach Wally Hebert will use thefollowing players: Bill Murphy, Ches¬ter Murphy, Captain John Shostrom,.Art Jorgenson, John Kreitenstein, andCharles Shostrom. The Murphytwins, Captain Shostrom and ArtJorgenson, and Kreitenstein andCharles Shostrom, will be paired inthe doubles.“B” Team PlaysThe Junior Varsity will also go in¬to action this weekend. It will meetIts toughest opponent of the seasonto date in Wheaton this afternoon onthe Varsity courts. The same menwho have played in the other meets,Jim Atkins, Dick Norian, NormSvendsen, Tony Furmanski, and BobReynolds will again participate. Al¬though Wheaton is stronger than ei¬ther of Chicago’s previous opponents,the Maroon netmen should be ableto hang up their third straight vic¬tory. Wisconsin NineMeets MaroonsIn Opening GameWisconsin’s baseball nine, alreadyvictor over Michigan, will open theMaroon’s Big Ten conference seasonthis afternoon at Greenwood field at3:30 o’clock. A second game will beplayed Saturday afternoon.Coach Lowell Douglas has a strongBadger aggregation, composed of 10veterans from last year’s club and anumber of clever sophomore recruits.The team is strong defensively, sharpat the bat, although its pitching staffhas been weakened by unexpectedlosses.Coach Kyle Anderson will use PaulAmundsen, tall Maroon right-hander,in the first game. Amundsen haswon two of three games this season.He lost last week to Notre Dame ina close game. Robert Reynolds, curve-ball pitcher from Gravity, la., will beused on the mound Saturday. Al¬though Reynolds has won but onespring game, he pitched two otherthree-hit contests.The Maroon club has strong bat¬teries, is fairly strong at the platebut definitely weak defensively. CoachAnderson plans to replace ClydeShepherd, right fielder, with JerryAbelson, a sophomore candidate fromHyde Park high school. Saturday’sgame will begin at 3 o’clock.Golf Team PlaysNotre Dame SquadThe Maroon golf team will openits season with Notre Dame tomorrowwith Harry Topping and Bill Web¬ster playing first and second, andJim Goldsmith and John Gilbert tiedfor third. However, this tie will bebroken before the meet. Notre Dameis conceded to have a better chanceof winning than Chicago.Topping and Webster were not onthe team last year, and it was rathera surprise when they beat out lastyear’s first two men. Goldsmith andGilbert. Bill Webbe, a member oflast year’s team, was unable to tryout with the others because of schol-ar.ship day activities, but may yetmake the team.TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICETHE GREASE JOBThat Gives You Floating, ChassisLubrication—SUSPENDS CAR WEIGHT WHILE LUBRICATING— ■ALL THIS FOR ONLY75cSale on Atlas TiresBROWN'S STANDARD SERVICE1101 EAST 55th STREET 55th emd GREENWOODTELEPHONE MIDWAY 9092TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICEWhere ToWorshipFIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH |Woodlawn Ave. and East 57th St.Von Ogden Vogt. D.D., MinisterSunday. April 24, 1938 ,11:00 P. M.—“Personal Prayer,’’ Dr.jVogt. I4:00 P.M.—Channing Club Tea andDiscussion, “Farmers Around theWorld,’’ Professor A. E. Holt.All young people, especially students,cordially invited. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OFDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward Scribner AmesMinister's Associate: Mr. B. Fred WiseSunday, April 24, 1938Services: Communion 10:30; Sermon11:00 A. M.Sermon subject: “Moods of a Reli¬gious Service Illustrated by theChoir Music,” Dr. Ames.12:20 Forum. Leader: Professor W.C. Bower. Much AboutNothing...By HARRY CORNELIUSThe Maroon Baseball team has wonone and lost two of the three sched¬uled games this season, while PaulAmundsen and Bob Burke have beendoing the best pitching that the ninehas seen in years. Poor fielding andbatting are the reason that the teamhasn’t done better than it has. WhenFrench White quit the team to goprofessional and Harvey Lawsondropped out of school at the end oflast year, the team lost its two bestplayers. Not only were they the besthitters, but White at shortstop wasthe best infielder and Lawson wasthe best outfielder. The Armour gamewas lost principally because of er¬rors, and they were a contributing fac¬tor in the Notre Dame game. Wedon’t care to predict the outcome of to¬day’s and tomorrow’s games, but ifthe squad improves its fielding andbatting, it will have a good season.* * «The track team is having all its out¬door meets away this year, and there¬by hangs a tale. The city of Chicagohas an ordinance to the effect that allplaces of amusement seating morethan so many thousand, which chargeadmission must pay an annual tax oftwo thousand dollars. And StaggField.qualifies. Since the athletic de¬partment likes to charge a nominalsum for admission to its track meetsand gags on paying any such sum asmentioned above, the trackmen runelsewhere. The University still has topay a thousand dollars for the halfyear of the football season. Track Squad MeetsWestern State TeamCoach Ned Merriam will take alarge track squad to Kalamazoo,Michigan, to meet the Western StateTeachers tomorrow. The team shouldhave an excellent chance to avengelast year’s defeat.The Chicago team is better bal¬anced than their opponents althoughWestern State is very strong in thehigh jump and dashes. Their coloredsprinter, Bryant, will give Davenportsome real competition.This meet will be the first test ofthe outdoor season for the Maroons.' CHICAGOETHICAL SOCIETYSTUDEBAEER THEATRESunday, April 24th, at 11 A. M.GDoylight Saving Time)MR. ALGERNON D. BLACK(New York City)"CAN DEMOCRACY DEFEATDICTATORSHIP?"Organ Recital at 10:45Children's Sunday Assemblyat 11.Your dealer nowhas this big assort¬ment of 1938 Yello-Bolestyles — see it today.Yello-Bote was made toconvince smokers of 25-50(1 pipes that theycan get more pipe-pleasure if they buy thishoney-cured briar for $1.We’ve increased pro-ductioi^S times becauseso many men find Yello-Bote better. Starts s^'eet,stays sweet. 500 styles.LLO-BOLE•EG. u. s. fAT. orr.^ Tuc ruAKirc nc aTHE CHANCE OF ALIFETIME TO GOHAPAG-LLOYDOnce graduated from college, it may be years before you have thetime or as good an opportunity to see Europe as now. And, perhaps,in later years, the happy, carefree days you spend crossing the Atlanticon a ship of Hapag or Lloyd may be hard to match. In Cabin, Tourist,or Third Class you'll find scores of other college men and women who—like you—chose Hapag-Lloyd for their hospitality, comfort and service.'"END OF TERM" SAILINGS' With Collvg* Orchvstrat on BoardSWIFT LLOYD EXFBESSESBREniEnJUNE 16 - JULY 3 • EUROPHJUNE 22 - JULY 9Fifth day morning arrivals at Charbourg and Southampton . . .noxt morning at Braman for tha Berlin express, ond all Europo.COIRRIBUE—^ “Student Special" . JUNE 30HAPAG “FAMOUS FOUR" EXPRESSESDEUISCHinnO-HRinBURGJUNE 16 - JULY 14* JUNE 23*REUIVRRK • HHilSHJUNE 30 JULY 7•Calls at Ireland, in addition to England, France, GermanyFor a more leisurely course at our lowest ratesHAPAG ST. LOUIS • BERLin LLOYDJUNE 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-AAAERICAN LINENORTH GERMAN LLOYD130 WEST RANDOLPH ST.. CHICAGOTELEPHONE: FRANKLIN 4130 NAME YOUR INTEREST —EUROPE HASTHE ANSWER—Perhaps it's just a right royalgood tima, with hara and thare soma sight-taaing . . . Final — or If it's ART, ARCHI¬TECTURE. MUSIC. HISTORY. LANGUAGES— think what Europe offers. Europe is thahome of HIKING. BIKING. FALT-BOATINGand of the YOUTH HOSTEL SYSTEM. Horhighways are excellent for MOTORING andit costs only $1 to taka a car into Germanyfor a month. You can enjoy every form ofsport, and there are FESTIVALS and FAIRSand entertainment in every region.IN EUROPE. TRAVEL COSTS ARE DOWN—Many countries now give special concessionsto tourists. In Germany, you save on travelcosts through registered Travel Marks, andIN ADDITION, tha German Railroads offer60% off on rail fares."A TUTORING COURSE ON EUROPEANTRAVEL"—That's the way a student describedHapag-Lloyd's new 225-page book, "YourTrip to Europe". It's a condensed, interestingsummary of everything you'llneed to know about trans-Atlantic and Europeantravel. To obtain thiseducational book, fillIn and mail coupon.P Educational Service DepartmentHAMBURG-AMERICAN LINENORTH GERMAN LLOYD130 W. Randolph St, Chicago Ill, ’Send me your 225-page book:*yOUB TRIP TO EUROPE”. Enclosed is*25c to pay part of distribution costs. Loc. 2dNome.Page SixToday on theQuadranglesFRIDAYLutheran Club. WAA room, IdaNoyes, 8-11.ASU Education Committee. RoomB, Ida Noyes, 7:30-10.ASU Peace Committee. WAA room,Ida Noyes, 12:30-1:30.ASU Cooperatire Committee. RoomC, Ida Noyes, 12:30-1:30.Campus Congress. Theatre, IdaNoyes, 3:30-5:30.Dames. Room C, Ida Noyes, 2-6.Art Group.Nursing Education. Tea in the Li¬brary, Ida Noyes, 4-6.Chicago Theological Seminary BamDance. Theatre, Ida Noyes, 9-12.Debate. Robert Maynard Hutchinsand Ernest 0. Melby, Dean of Educa¬tion, Northwestern University, on“Educational Theory in Practice.”Mandel Hall, 8:30.Student-Faculty Table. HutchinsonCommons at noon. Dr. Lemon andMrs. Logsdon will be there.Phonograph Concert. Recital ofDebussy songs by Maggie Teyte, So¬prano. Passacaglia for violin andviola—Handel. Social Science Assem¬bly Hall, 12:30-1:16.ASU Dance Group. Room D, Rey¬nolds Club, 2:30-4.Italian Club Rehearsals. ReynoldsClub Theatre, 7:30-10.Blackfriars Rehearsal. ReynoldsClub Theatre, 2:30-6:30.Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. RoomD, Reynolds Club, 12:30-1.Chapel Union Recreation Commit¬tee. Room D, Reynolds Club, 1-1:30.Public Lecture “Monopoly and ItsImplications. Monopoly and Competi¬tion as a Means of Economic Organi¬zation.” Professor Yntema. The ArtInstitute, 6:45.SATURDAYLutheran Student Association. WAAroom, Ida Noyes, 7-10.Mortar Board party for Settlementchildren. Ida Noyes, 2-6.Dames, Art program and tea.Theatre, Ida Noyes, 3-6.A Night in Hawaii. InternationalHouse, 8:30.SUNDAYChapel Service. Harry EmersonFosdick, at 11.Carillon Recital. Frederick Marriott,the Chapel at 4.Organ music. Chapel, 4:30.Chicago Alumnae Club. Library andLounge, Ida Noyes, 3-6. Tea.Achoth. WAA Room, Ida Noyes,3:30-6. Initiation.Lutheran Association party. IdaNoyes, 3:30-10.Slavonic Club. Meeting, tea andfolk-dancing. Ida Noyes, 4:30-8:30.Communist Club. WAA room, IdaNoyes, 7:30-10. 1MONDAYPhysiology Club. YWCA room, IdaNoyes, 7:16-10.Social Service Association Group.Alumnae room, Ida Noyes hall, 7:30.Arexis, Rehearsal. Ida NoyesTheatre, 7:30-10.YWCA first Cabinet. Alumnae room,Ida Noyes, 12-1:30.Student Co-operative Services Club.SS 108, 12:30.Delta Sigma. WAA room, IdaNoyes, 7-10.Phi Delta Upsilon. WAA room,4:30-6.“Government and the Citizen inSweden.” Social Science 122, 3:30.Nils Herlitz, Professor of Law, Uni¬versity of Stockholm.“Logic and Physical Science—TheNature of Scientific Methods and Re¬sults”. Morris R. Cohen. SocialScience Assembly Room, 4:30.Reading Exams in French: Divi¬sions of the Social and BiologicalSciences. Italian Club rehearsal. Rey¬nolds Club Theatre, 7:30-10.The exhibit of Bali art, sponsoredby the Renaissance Society, is inGoodspeed 106.De Grazia Leads SwingBand on European TripFive University students will sailfor Europe on July 23 as the swingorchestra aboard the Nieu Amster¬dam. The band is led by AlfredDe Grazia, and includes Bob Mohl-man, business manager of Cap andGown, Sebastian De Grazia, Dan DeGrazia, Dan Phelan, and CarmenGuerino. The group has played forcity dances during the year.The “Maroons” will sail on the Hol¬land American Lines Nieu Amster¬dam, and expect to work in Parisuntil September 17 when they play onthe return voyage of the same ship. THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. APRIL 22, 1988Peace -(Continued from Page 1)their discard.So earnest and sincere in handlinghis equivocal task as chairman of theGreater committee. Jack Conway,president of the Chapel Union, oftengoes into a conference with his con¬science in the midst of a session inorder to make certain he will honestlymake the correct decision.Tagged by Pulse in their radi<^lsurvey as the hard-working, conscien¬tious Communist Club stooge knowing nothing of the theory she supports,Martha Jane Marshall belies the epi¬thets attached to her. Truly con¬scientious, perseverant, and hard¬working and able, she knows what sheis doing and why.Promoting the Alpha Delt traditionof an important delegation in everyPeace Strike, Hart Perry, only malemember of the ASU’s praesidiumboard, supports the confused liberalplatform. Adhering to the majority’scollective security principles, he hassucceeded in inducing brothers andother fraternity chums to come outand support the Strike. Add Falk to List ofSpeakers on ReligionDr. A. G. Falk, prominent coloredphysician, will present the Catholicview of “The Function of Religion inthe Modem World” at the Chapel Un¬ion weekend discussions to be heldtomorrow and Sunday at the Univer¬sity Settlement Camp in Chestertop,Indiana.Previously announced speakers inthe four way discussion are the Rev.R. W. Schloerb of the Hyde Park Baptist Church, Rabbi George G. Fox,sponsor of the JSF, and Carl Furr,humanist.Matthews Talks SundayDean Emeritus Shailer Matthewswill lead the last of a series of threediscussions of “Religion Confronts aChanging World” at the home ofDean Gilkey Sunday night. At thesame time professor Robert MorssLovett will attempt a “Justification ofFascism from the Economic Point ofView” to the social problem groupin the home of Mr. and Mrs. WilliamJ. Mather, 1220 East 67th Street.■nn Manludl Field'* STORE FOR MENSaRRSBmSoft, supple flannels woven hyguildsmen in a famous oldmill in the heart of EnglandSUITStailored oiIMPORTEDFLANNELspecially priced$42*0Apperly Bridge is a tiny town in England ... builtaround its only enterprise ... the old, thick-walledmill where, for seven generations of the sameownership-management, skilled craftsmen havedevoted their time to the production of fine flannels.For these are flannels that have all of the charac¬teristic softness, plus a sleekness of finish that isunusual. They’re firm enough to take hand-tailor¬ing, but soft enough to drape smartly and "springy”enough to hold their shape. Because of the long,staple wools used, the nap is anchored in the heartof the fabric. And the colorings are as clear as thespring-fed stream that flows past the mill door.There are grays, blue grays, and greens in solidshades or with chalk stripes. There are both singleand double-breasted models. And they’ve all beenhand-tailored in this country to rigid specification.And when you remember that with all these qualityfaaors, we’re selling them for $42.50—you can seewhy we say, "Come early for the best selection.’*Men’s and Young Men^s ClothingEntire Third FloorTHE STORE FOR MENHALL FIELD &> COMPANY