Maroon Board Also Votesto Change Organizationof Staff.Edwin Bergman and Max Freemanwill compose The Daily Maroon Busi¬ness Board next year according to anannouncement made yesterday by theBoard of Control. Junior and sopho¬more members of the business stafffor 1938-39 were also announced.In keeping with the recentlyadopted plan for next year’s Editor¬ial Board the titles of business man¬ager and advertising manager willbe dropped, and Bergman and Free¬man will be equal in rank but incharge of different phases of thework. Bergman will manage localand national advertising and super¬vise general office activity, whileFreeman will handle circulation,staff organization, downtown adver¬tising, and promotion projects. Profitpercentages will be equal, and if pres¬ent plans are carried through themen may shift duties at the end ofthe first quarter. Editorial Boardappointments will be announced atthe end of the year, the Business staffbeing selected now so that the mem¬bers may begin preparations for nextyear.New .4ssociatesNew business associates chosen areDayton Caple, Richard Glasser, Ir¬vin Rosen, David Salzberg, and Har¬ry Topping. Business assistants willbe John Argoll, Annette Axelrad, Or-rin Bernstein, Susan Elliott, HerbertGervin, Bernice Glickson, Craig Ha¬zelwood, Robert Lezak, Julian Lowen-.stein Douglas Peare, Lois Pearlman,Ix)rraine Polachek, Roland Richman,and Robert Snow,Bergman is pre.ddent of Pi Lamb¬da Phi, and is the first junior ever tobe elected to the Interfraternity Com¬mittee. Freeman will be vice-presi¬dent next year of Phi Kappa Psi,and has participated in Blackfriarsand freshman football.Debaters AnnounceOfficers, BanquetGeorge Probst, who contrary to allrumors has not formerly been presi¬dent of the Debate Union, wras electedto that post yesterday. Other newofficers are Marshall Hanley, secre¬tary, Maxine Murphy, treasurer, andMarie Ullman, public relations. JackConway, assisted by Pierre Palmer,will manage debates.Because Probst says they haven’thad such a lucky season, the debatershave slated their annual banquet forFriday, May 13. Luther Birdzell ischairman of the affair, which will beheld at Judson Court at 6:30. Anyoneinterested in debating is invited. Ad¬mission is 75 cents.George Messmer will act as toast¬master. Elections to the nationalhonorary debating fraternity. DeltaSigma Rho, will be announced. Seven freshmen and three sopho¬mores accepted nomination to theStudent Settlement Board yesterday,increasing the board membership totwenty-eight. Margaret Merrifield,president, and William Boehner, sec¬retary, will meet the new membersat a tea in their honor tomorrow atIda Noyes hall, when the program forSettlement Day, this Saturday, andTag Day, May 11, will be discussed.Named to the board were RuthNeuendorfer, Shirley Dvorin, NatalieClyne, Margaret Hecht, Janet Geiger,Charles Percy, Lee Hewitt, Len Sor¬enson, Bud Aronson, and Bob Jam-polis. Neuendorfer, Hecht, and Gei¬ger are sophomores.Entertain Settlement BoysSettlement Board and Iron Maskhope to entertain over 100 Settlementboys for lunch at fraternities Sat¬urday, after which they will engagein sports and see the campus underguides John Van de Water and Boeh¬ner. Club women have agreed to givea party the same afternoon for fiftySettlement girls. The group will beentertained at Ida Noyes hall, wheretea will be sei*ved at 3:30. Bothgroups will meet at 4:15 in the Rey¬nolds club.Settlement Day is planned as a“build-up” for Tag Day the followingWednesday. Tag Dag is held an¬nually to raise funds for the Univer¬sity Settlement, located near theStock Yards. Marguerite Sylla isHead Resident.Science AcademyElects ThurstoneLouis Leon Thurstone, Charles F.Grey distinguished service professorof psychology, was elected to the na¬tional Academy of Sciences at theorganization’s annual meeting i nWashington last week. ProfessorThurstone is an authority on mentaltests.The National Academy of Sciencesis composed of some 300 of the lead¬ing scientists in the United Statesand election to it is one of the high¬est marks of recognition accorded toscience researchers. Professor Thurs-tone’s election brings to fourteen thenumber of University faculty in theselect group.Dr. Frank Rattray Lillie, Dean-emeritus of the Biological SciencesDivision, is president of the Academy.Other University members: GilbertBliss, Norman Bowen, Anton J. Carl¬son, Charles M. Child, Arthur H.Compton, Arthur J. Dempster, Leon¬ard Dickson, William D. Harkins,Ludvig Hektoen, C. Judson Herrick,H. Gideon Wells and Sewall Wright.University Offers Specialized Courses toPrepare Students for Administrative Posts yaWk Batlp ilkiroonVol. S8, No. 106 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1938Settlement Board toWelcome New Members Snow White Won^t Talk So FriarsPostpone Judging Chorines’ Legs Price Five Centsand when Disney’s voice of SnowWhite, refused to commit herself.Zerler hopes to have one of them outfor the judging tomorrow.Patrons and PatronessesPatrons and patronesses for theshow as announced yesterday are:Messrs, and Mesdames Robert M.Hutchins, Paul S. Russell, James M.Stifler, Frank P. Breckinridge,Charles E. Merriam, C. F. Axelson,Hayden B. Harris, Lyman Flook,Fay-Cooper Cole, Edward L. Ryer-son, Dalla Phemister, Percy Boynton,Hamilton Colman, George A. Works,A. E. Allyn, Walter S. Brewster,Robert L. Scott, William Scott Bond,William Ogden Vogt, and Ernest E.Irons.Others are B. E. Sunny, Laird Bell,Ogden Armour, Charles B. Good-speed, Charles H. Swift, Wilber E.Post, Henry Gordon Gale, James R.Blayney, William S. Gray, Henry D.Sulcer, Richard P. McKeon, andRobert L. Scott, Messrs. Harold H.Swift, Ira Nelson Morris, Frank Mc¬Nair, and Clay Judson; Mrs. JacobBaur.Peggy Tillinghast, head score girlof the show, will announce her se¬lection of score girls for the produc-ion tomorrow. Joy Hawley, Friarsringer, will preside as honorary headscore girl on Thursday, May 12, whena special “Northwestern Day” showwill be given and members of theEvanston school invited to the cam¬pus to see “Where in the World.”Chuck Zerler and Jack Bonniwellyesterday turned a barrage of soundloose upon the campus as they movedin with a sound truck and began totell the University about “Where inthe World.” Meanwhile the costumedepartment of the production issueda plea for a racoon coat, 1929 model,unstreamlined. Plan Take-Off onLaw School Staffat Annual DinnerMorris Cohen, Professorof Philosophy, Talks atBanquet.A take-off on the faculty is thetheme of the annual Law School play,which will be presented at the annuallawyers’ banquet at Hutchinson Com¬mons, May 10.Morris R. Cohen, professor ofPhilosophy, until recently of the CityCollege of New York will speak. Har¬ry A. Bigelow, dean of the LawSchool, will introduce Cohen and talk.After the speeches and the play therewill be dancing in the Reynolds club.Name CommitteesIn charge of ari’angements for theplay are Robert N. Israel, Jr., chair¬man, Eugene Schofler, Bud Wolff,Harry Kalven, Melvin Ury, JeromeKatzin, David Scheffer, James Fau-cett, Adrian Theriault, Ted Fink, Ir¬ving Feiges, Thomas Moran, andJoseph Andalman. Thomas Meganheads the reception committee, whichincludes Irving Askow, Jack Allen,Owen Fairweather, William Dietrich,John Eckler, George Haicrow, Ray¬mond Ickes, and Jerome Klein.On the ticket committee are CharlesDunbar, chairman, Lydia Levinson,Peggy Shaw, Harriet Jacobs, VernaWinters, Betty Tracy, Helen Beyerly,Dan Smith, Joseph Andalman, JeromeKatzin, John Van de Water, JohnClark, Richard Smith, William Run¬yon, Alvin Samuels, Lester Antler,Emund Moussal, Irving Feiges,Thomas Parker, and Homer Rosen¬berg.Arrange DinnerToday*8 HeadlinesLaw School Play, page 1.Chayes Speaks to PU, page 1.Blackfriars’ Songs, page 3.Maroon business staff reorganizes,page 1.Appoint Bergman,Freeman, As Headsof Business StaffThe University in co-operationwith the American College of Hospi¬tal administrators has, for the pastfour years, conducted a course inHospital administration, for thosewho wish to prepare themselves forwork in this field.A graduate course connected withthe business school, it is desig^ned toafford students an opportunity totake courses in biology, sociology, eco¬nomics and psychology during theperiod on campus, followed by a pe¬riod of training at a hospital.Denies Vocationalism ChargeEmphatically denying the chargeof vocationalism, Gerhard Hartman,associate director of the hospital ad¬ministration course, explained that astudent who is admitted to the coursemust have a wide variety of interests,together with a higlily specialized in¬terest in the field. The Universitymakes no assurance that the studentsupon completing the course, will, ob¬tain a position, nor is it attemptingto supply the field, a large one, with enough trained workers to hold allthe positions.The University selects at the mostten applicants each year for thecourse, believing that individual in¬struction is necessary. The only classwork involved is that which the stu¬dent needs to broaden his formal edu¬cation. All technical training is lefttill the interneship period, when thestudent is given a minor executiveposition in a hospital so that he maygain first hand information concern¬ing the needs of a hospital admini¬strator.As guest lecturers for studentsduring the first period the Universityinvites hospital superintendents, andclinic directors to talk to the stu¬dents. Although these men are fromlocal hospitals, the course itself drawsstudents from all over the country.To encourage students who are in¬terested in this type of work theUniversity now offers a number ofscholarships to students who have ahigh scholastic rating. Unable to persuade either TobyWing or the voice of Snow Whiteout of the loop to judge the shape¬liness of their “chorines’ ” legs,Blackfriars have postponed theirHutchinson Court contest until to¬morrow. Abbot Frank Carey yester¬day announced the list of patrons andpatronesses for the Mandel hall show.The leg show scheduled for todayw'as called off at the last momentwhen Toby Wing, blonde actress nowappearing in a loop musical comedy,reported a full program for today,Filbey Heads NewSummer CourseVice-President Emery T. Filbeywill direct a conference on “TheBackground of Educational and Vo¬cational Guidance,” designed to co¬ordinate the work offered in manyspecialized courses in education, psy¬chology, and sociology, during thefirst term of the summer quarter,from June 20 to July 22.Offered as a background for train¬ing and practice in advisory workwith high school and college students,the course will consist of four lecturesand one conference every week.President Robert Maynard Hutchins,and Professors Charles Merriam,William F. Ogburn, Harlan Barrows,Louis Thurstone, Mandel Sherman,George Works, Aaron Brumbaugh,and William Reavis are included inthe list of lecturers.Headings and DiscussionsThe course features readings anddiscussions arranged to present im¬portant aspects of education, in ademocracy, together with an analysisof the intellectual and emotionalcharacteristics of youth. Lectures anddiscussions will center on importantinstitutional, intellectual, emotional,and administrative problems bearingupon adjustments of youth in schooland employment. Half credit is of¬fered for the course, officially num¬bered Education 345 S.Filbey is well prepared to directsuch a course, since in his formercapacity as dean of faculties he wasmainly concerned with personnelwork. .Formerly professor of Educa¬tion and of Industrial Relations, hehas done much work in vocationalguidance.Speaking on “The Outlook forYouth,” President Hutchins will openthe series. His lecture will be followedby two delivered by Merriam, head ofthe department of Political Science,(Continued on page 3)Archibald McLeish,Carl Sandburs: Talkto Library PatronsArchibald McLeish and Carl Sand¬burg, noted American poets, will beamong the speakers at the annualmeeting of the Friends of the Li¬brary, May 24, at Hutchinson Com¬mons, which will be devoted to thededication of the Harriet Monroe Li¬brary of Modern Poetry. The for¬mer home of the Renais.sance Soci¬ety, Wieboldt 205, is being remodeledto house the collection of manuscriptsdonated to the University by the willof the late editor of “Poetry Maga¬zine.” Her magazine first printedthe works of many prominent Ameri¬cans.George Dillon, a graduate of thisUniversity and Miss Monroe’s suc¬cessor as editor, will present the col¬lection, which will be accepted byVice-President Frederic Woodwardfor the University. Lloyd Lewis,drama and sports editor of the DailyNews and president of the Friendsof the Library, will read tributesfrom 32 poets to Miss Monroe.Sandburg, author of the famous“Chicago,” a contributor to “Poetry,”will speak in appreciation of thework of Miss Monroe; McLeish willread a “Defense of Poesy,” an evalu¬ation of the place of poetry in themodern world.The Renaissance Society, whichformerly was situated in the Wie¬boldt home of the Monroe collection,now occupies the first floor galleryof the newly-remodeled Goodspeedhall. Candidates Talkto Political UnionA New Deal Democrat will benamed tomorrow to debate EdwardChayes, Republican candidate formunicipal judge, before the PoliticalUnion Thursday of next week at 7:30P.M.Political Union’s Executive Com¬mittee decided to choose one of theUniversity’s two candidates for officeor to ask Democratic headquarters tochoose a candidate after Chayesasked that a Democrat be named toattack the resolution: “Resolved:That this Union believes that there ismore incipient Fascism in the NewDeal than in the forces opposed to theNew Deal.” The meeting was origi¬nally scheduled for last Thursday.Supporting the question, the Con¬servatives have selected Ralph Rosenand Earl Birdzell to talk five minuteseach in support of the resolution. Lib¬erals and Radicals, opposing it unani¬mously, have picked Bob Merriam andWinnie Leeds respectively as theirrepresentatives to back up Linn’s posi¬tion.After the regular meeting, thegalleries will be cleared of visitorsfor a short business meeting. Mem¬bers will elect a new vice-presidentand a secretary-treasurer to replaceFrank Meyer and Paul Henkel, wholeave the places vacant when theyresign at the end of the school year.Business StudentsHold Spring Dinner John Lynch and R. E. Q. Johnsonare in charge of arrangements, aidedby F. J. Seiter, Jr., Thaddeus Carter,and Thomas Moran. Publicity ishandled by Zalmon Goldsmith, JohnSyke, Joel Alexander, Elroy Golding,and Jerome Simmons.As a certain number of plates mustbe guaranteed, the committee urgesprompt purchase of tickets. Reserva¬tions for groups of six or more maybe made with the Arrangements Com¬mittee. Admission is $1.25.Mathews to Speakat Opening Sessionof Youth CongressDr. Shailer Mathews, dean emeritusof the divinity .school, will be theprincipal speaker at the opening ses¬sion of the First All-Chicago YouthCongress, beginning Friday at 8 inthe Hotel LaSalle. The subject of Dr.Mathews’ speech will be “YouthFaces the Future.”“Youth Meets the Challenge of Chi¬cago’s New Frontiers” will be theslogan during the three-day sessionat which 1,000 delegates representing300 youth organizations will gatherto consider mutual problems andwork out solutions to them. Subjectsto be taken up will deal with peace,juvenile delinquency, democraticrights, public health, education andrecreation.The second night of the congresswill feature a Night of Stars Ball inthe Grand Ballroom of the Hotel LaSalle at which prominent stars willentertain.Paul G. Hoffman, trustee of theUniversity and president of cheStudebaker Corporation, will be theprincipal speaker at the annual Schoolof Business Dinner which is to beheld Thursday evening. May 26, inthe Cloister club of Ida Noyes. Hisaddress will deal with technologicalunemployment.William H. Spencer, dean of theSchool, will also speak. Annual awardof prizes to outstanding students inthe School will be made. Students andalumni are invited to come.Following the dinner there will bean Open House entertainmentthroughout Ida Noyes. Tickets forundergraduates and graduate studentsare $1, and $1.25 for alumni and fac¬ulty. Send Maclean’s Bodyto Montana for FuneralPreparations are now being madefor the funeral of Paul Maclean, 32-year-old University publicity writerwho died early Monday following amysterious assault. The body was en¬trained for Missoula, Montana, hisparents’ home, at midnight last night.An inquest was held yesterday andpostponed until May 24 to permitfurther investigations. Police yester¬day took into custody seven women,four of them Negroes, in an attemptto check Maclean’s movements afterhe left his fiancee earlier Sunday eve¬ning. Woodlawn police last eveningreported that there were no newdevelopments in the case.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4. 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.Words and Thingsare difficult to bring together, mostdifficult. The discussion of education as it should behas suffered profoundly from this difficulty. PresidentHutchins has said that the existing state of affairs isbased on a muddled understanding of what educationmeans; his opponents have accused him of taking wordslike ‘university,’ defining them to suit himself and thenattempting to impose this definition on the things call¬ed universities, to find extensive remodeling necessaryand justify it on this verbal basis. Why, say they,should a university do only one thing? Why should auniversity devote itself to the cultivation of intellectualvirtue, whatever that is, when it can and does performother socially useful roles?At present University training contains no lessthan four elements. Some information as to the stateof the world is imparted, some techniques are learned,some opportunity to develop a just sense of apprecia¬tion is offered, some understanding of the principlesof the world, society and man is achieved. No one ofthese elements can very well be thrown out of the Uni¬versity curriculum. Students want all four; thereseems no particular interference between the varioussorts of training that makes necessary their segrega¬tion in different institutions. On the contrary they areso inextricably tied together in most courses that sep¬aration would be impossible. important functions of a university. In such casesthere seems no particular necessity for segregatingthe technique learners from other students, since everytechnique depends on some general principles for itseffectiveness, and the relation may be taught.The same may be said for esthetic appreciation:some students want opportunity to cultivate it; it doesnot interfere with other pursuits; it is enriched bycontact with efforts to explain phenomena in terms ofgeneral principles.The simple ordering of University curriculum inthe light of general principles, then, is inadequate.This is not to say that more order cannot profitablybe brought to the curriculum by more emphasis on gen¬eral principles than has been common in the past; itis to say that some of the disunity, even confusion ofpresent higher education is desirable.QuestandInquestBY LAURA BERGQUISTPresident Hutchins, I think, would not ask thatuniversity education should attempt to limit itself tothe effort to understand the world. It is absurd tothink of understanding apart from information; in¬complete to think of understanding without masteryof techniques. The relation between appreciation ofbeauty and understanding is less clear. If understand¬ing of a work of art could be achieved, it would addan intellectual element to direct appreciation whichis the core of esthetic experience. Appreciation cannot,I think be reduced to understanding of general princi¬ples, but that hardly necessitates its rejection from auniversity curriculum.All four, then, are bound together. The questionis whether general principles should be the legislatorsto decide the emphasis and place of the other threeelements in education or not. It is easy to say thatfacts and techniques should be taught only as they con¬tribute to the understanding of some general principle.It is easy to say, but more than a little unsatisfactorywhen rigidly applied.Obviously we are in a particular environment, andlearning particular facts about that environment quiteapart from general principles is of value. It wouldbe nice if general principles could be adduced to makeintelligible every event that is likely to impinge uponus. But the whole field of knowledge of society is asyet unshaped—general principles governing men’s as¬sociation are simply not known. That is no justifica¬tion for excluding information about societies or oursociety especially.Similarly, men have to make a living by exercisingcertain techniques, and in many cases teaching thosetechniques does not interfere with the other and more WHILE THE CATS AWAYPersonal emotions, especially of vengeance, arenot the stuff of which frothy columns should be made.But somewhere along the line we’ve become a littlecynical about campus affairs. First there was Black-friars, that grand old University tradition, which man¬aged to hoax not only wide-eyed, trusting columnistsbut the whole city about their “mistake” in choosing ascore-girl head... then cooked up tales for downtowntabloids about riled club girls when club girls refusedto get riled in the first place.Poetic justice is’now having its fling, for the lastrecorded words of Chuck Zerler, big BF publicity man,were—“But tickets aren’t going anyway in spite ofthat score-girl stunt.” Which makes us feel a littlesorry for the Tillinghast-Hawley duo in their roles ofglorified saleswomen, a dubious honor to say the veryleast.Then there was the the Daily Times, which credit¬ed us with the divinely-inspired prophecy that “Sex WasSweeping the U. of C. Campus,” an appalling thoughtindeed. Even the Times editors’ assurance that theyfeatured sex for purely educational purposes failed toassuage Bergquist wounded pride.Next step toward cynicism came with the discoverythat Grant Atkinson had only leased his pin for anevening. Not for keeps as we reported.Only ray of sunshine at this hectic time of year isthe news that in 1914 the Betas ranked second fromthe bottom in scholarship, clearly proving what can bedone with a little elbow grease.For further reading matter we refer you to theeditorial column.At OtherSchoolsPROVIDENCE, R. I.—(ACP) —With 31,515 students from 101 col¬leges voting in the Brown Daily Her¬ald-United Student Peace CommitteeSurvey on Peace, pronounced sympa¬thies for neutrality, withdrawal ofAmerican Troops from China, pas¬sage of the billion dollar naval ap¬propriations bill, and establishment ofROTC on an optional basis, have beenindicated.Results from the survey are not com¬plete and further statistics will beannounced later. Thirty states arerepresented in the tabulations to date.American withdrawal from Chinaand application of the neutrality acthas a 2-1 majority over collectivesecurity or unilateral action againstJapan by the United States, in theFar Eastern question. In the questionof a permanent U. S. peace policy,neutrality registers exactly the samevote, while collective security ranksa little higher. Isolation rates low,while the Spanish Situation drawsbut little attention. Despite the pro¬boycott propaganda campaign, stu¬dents still do not support it as over¬whelmingly as has been often stated.Perhaps one of the most interestingresults is the large vote cast in favorof American entrance into a revisedLeague of Nations, and for action bythe United States leading toward pro¬gressive disarmament; particularlyis this interesting in view of the lightvote for an aggressive collectivesecurity either through economic ormilitary sanctions.The ROTC issue brought forth atremendous majority for optionaldrill only, with only a few votes castfor compulsory drill even in ROTC colleges as a whole. Abolition of theorganization entirely was favoredover establishment of compulsorydrill.“It is not too much too say thatforces playing on education fromwithout, forces over which educatorsthemselves have little or no directcontrol are making it necessary foreducational institutions to redefinetheir goals.” University of Chicago’sProf. Newton Edwards points an un¬wavering finger at one cause of whatmany call today’s educational revolu¬tion.“Any education which would seemto have as its slogan ‘training intechniques which will prevent a suck¬er from getting a break’ or ‘trainingin techniques of friendliness that willenable you to get the better of theother fellow’ simply falls without thepale of true education. It representsthe lowest standards of our societyand cannot but be condemned.” Prof.A. B. Williamson, New York Univer¬sity, speaks his mind on a publicly-popular phase of education.“The universities are in the presentjuncture on the side of the scientificspirit and freedom of inquiry. Busi¬ness will be well advised to welcomethe dynamic force of education.” Uni¬versity of Michigan’s Dean C. E,Griffin calls on business to accept theaid of its best ally.More Harvard University seniorsselected business as their professionthan any other line of endeavor.The budget for Columbia Universityfor the fiscal year beginning Julywill be $14,806,021.Jftke Fredrickson earns his waythrough the University of Minnesotaby catching rats in university build¬ings. Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSBWO. Alumnae room of Ida Noyesat 12.YWCA college cabinet. Alumnaeroom of Ida Noyes at 2:30.Federation of University Womentraining meeting. Ida Noyes theatreat 3:30.Arrian Room B of Ida Noyes at4:30.ASU executive committee. IdaNoyes, room C at 7Kappa Alpha Psi. Room A of Rey¬nolds club at 4.Poetry club. YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Chicago Theological Seminary rol¬ler skating party. Ida Noyes gym at8. 'Christian Youth league. Room A ofIda Noyes at 7:30.Mathematical club. Eckhart 206 at4:30.Zoology club. “Certain Features ofArtificial Parthenogenesis in StarfishEggs.” Professor Lillie. Zoology 14at 4:30.LECTURES“Chicago Politics.” By AssistantProfessor Maynard Krueger. HaskellCommon room at 8.MISCELLANEOUSSymphony concert. Social ScienceAssembly at 12:30. “Quartet in GMajor” by Beethoven and “La Mer”by Debussy.Chapel Union student-faculty tea.Ida Noyes library from 4 to G. Radical Groups HoldClasses in Historyand Doctrine of Party ! Club They conduct threeclasses and one bi-weekly.They may cut every class forwhich they register, but no activeearnest young radical would miss allthe classes arranged by the educationcommittees of their respective groups.To enlighten Trotskyite protegeesso that they will be able both toknow accurately their own principlesand refute their enemies, the groupwhich is known internationally asthe Socialist’s Workers Party, theBolshevik Leninists, and the 4th In¬ternational, conducts three classes.Every other Wednesday night theclass entitled “The Road to Power”meets to discuss political problemsconcerning especially such matters asa people’s front, the class struggle,how to obtain a united front, and tac¬tics in various historical situations.After treating Marxian economicslast quarter, the Friday night ses¬sion currently is studying imperial¬ism by comparing three theories,those of Hilferding, Kautsky, andLenin. The most elementary classborders on the open forum and re¬lates to immediate tactics and his¬tory of the party devoting itselfprincipally to Trotsky’s “Theory ofRevolution.” It meets Sunday morn¬ings at 11 in Bud Ogren’s apartment.Communist Club ProgramAs extensive as the program out¬lined above is that of the YCL,known on campus as the Communist weeklyTEA DANCING EVERY SUNDAY1923 - ANNIVERSARY WEEK -1938SPECIAL LUNCHEONS and DINNERS35c and 50c—SPEQAL ATTENTION TO PARTIES—KENWOOD TEA ROOMMIDWAY 2774 6220 KENWOODMOTHER’S DAYSunday May 8thYou will be able to find a gift that willexpress just the sentiment you desire inour store. Also, Mother will appreciate agift selected right on your own campus.Just in BOOKS alone you con select agift for every taste.. There ore absorbingnew spring NOVELS • BIOGRAPHIES •BOOKS ON CURRENT TOPICS - POETRY- TRAVEL - COOKBOOKS, and MAGAZINESUBSCRIPTIONS moke lasting gifts.MORE SUGGESTIONSPERSONAL STATIONERY - CANDY - REPRO¬DUCTIONS OF THE OLD AND MODERNMASTERS - HANDKERCHIEFS - POTTERY -COSTUME JEV^ELRY ■ PURSES - ETCHINGSU of C BOOKSTORE5802 ELUS AVENUEKimbark Theatre6240 KIMBARK AVENUEWEDNESDAYANNA NEAGLE (Star of Victoria theGreat) In"LOOK OUT FOR LOVE"WithTULLIO CARMANITAI. BARRYMOREin"BULLDOG DRUMMOND'S REVENGE" Lexington Theatre1162 E. 63rd St.WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY"MAID'S NIGHT OUT"AndJONES FAMILYin'LOVE ON A BUDGET'THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1938 Page ThreeHarper Lectureson Soviet RussiaProfessor Samuel N. Harper toldan Art Institute audience last nightthat Soviet Russia’s occupation with“cultivating its own garden” pre¬cluded unprovoked aggression on itsneighbors.The speaker, who is professor ofRussian language and institutions atthe University, gave the concludinglecture of four on the subject “Sov¬ietism After 20 Years.” ProfessorHarper asserted that the “so-calledanti-Communist pact” of Germanyand Italy, joined in by laly, was “amask to cover aggressive aims.”Liberals Aid Fascist Policy“The Soviets challenge fascism,”he said, “because the fascist statesare sallying outside their own terri¬tory, not because they have a com¬peting ideology. Liberals have beendoubtful of the Soviets as partnersin programs of collective security.They have been unable to accept thepurges, although these were aimed tostrengthen Soviet self-defen.se. There¬fore the liberals have helped the fas¬cist policy to isolate the Soviets.”Professor Harper, who has made17 observational trips to Russia, saidthat Stalin has taken the view thatrevolution cannot be “exported” andproposed that the Soviets “cultivatetheir own garden.” -Not Working for RevolutionProfessor Harper .said that inSpain and China, Russia is not work¬ing for proletariat revolution. Headded: “In selling arms to these rec¬ognized governments, which are notSoviet but ‘bourgeois democratic’ inthe Moscow terminology, the Sovietgovernment believes that it is con¬tributing to its own defen.se.”“The Soviets continue to urge col¬lective security,” the speaker asserted,“but the forced isolation and the con¬centration on domestic problems pre¬cludes at present any unprovoked ag-gre.ssion on neighbors. It has beentypical of the confused thinking ofliberals who ask why Russia doesnot fight Japan to help China al¬though such a move would tend tosupport the fai.cist claim that ‘com¬munism’ and not fascism is thetrouble maker in the world today.”Elect Three DelegatesAs Representatives atChicago Youth CongressThe Campus Congress Committeeyesterday elected Dorothy Overlock,Britton Harris, and Pattie Quisen-berry as delegates to the ChicagoYouth Congress, May 6, 7, and 8, andappointed John Van de Water, HartPerry, and Bob Merriam to takecharge of visiting the various fra¬ternities for the purpose of admittingKappa Alpha Psi to the Interfrater-nity Council.Members of another sub-Committeewill interview Lowell Calvin, head ofthe Bureau of Vocational Guidanceand Placement, in order to makeavailable more information on studentworkers, as was requested in one ofthe resolutions of the Congress.Know of Any Discrimination?Students who think that they knowof any cases of discrimination againstapplicants for admission to the Uni¬versity on the basis of race or onpolitical convictions are asked to re¬port them to the Maroon office, backedup by all substantiating details, sothat the Committee can take action onthem.Britton Harris and Pattie Qui.sen-berry are writing to the heads of de- -partmental clubs asking for their co¬operation in trying to extend thefacilities of such groups for greaterdiscussions of campus problems.Ex-Scouts MeetA meeting of all men interested informing an independent scouting fra¬ternity on the Quadrangles, with theintention of petitioning Alpha PhiOmega, the National organization, foradmittance, has been called for 3:30today in Cobb 310.THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mgr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOR MEN AND WOMENRepairing and Remodeling ofAny Cloth, or Fur GarmentOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. 5Sth St, near UniversityTeL Midway 331S Summer Courses -(Continued from page 1)on the “Assumptions of Democracy,”an analysis of the premises on whichdemocracy rests.Ogburn Speaks on YouthOgbum, Sewell L. Avery Distin¬guished Service Professor of So¬ciology, will speak on “Youth, SocialChange, and the Future,” anticipatingpossibilities of changes within thenext 44 years, which is the life ex¬pectancy of present day youth. Re¬lating trends in our major social in¬stitutions, to technological changeshe will point out factors to whichyouth should be orientated.Two talks on water resources andland resources will be delivered byBarrows, chairman of the departmentof Geography, followed by a series offour by Professor Thurstone. Thelatter will discuss his findings on theisolation of mental traits by factorialmethods.Sherman, associate professor ofEducational Psychology, is offeringfour lectures on human motivation,and the relatives importance of var¬ious factors, social, cultural, andphysiological. He will speak on thepersonality pattern as related to so¬cial and vocational adjustment, point¬ing out the influence of trait organi¬zation on social adaptability.Works, Brumbaugh TalkSpecific cases of vocational guid¬ance problems are scheduled for thelast week of the course, when Deanof Students George Works talks onstudent relations, especially as theyrelate to his work at the University.Brumbaugh, Dean of Students in theCollege, in discussing “Current Is¬sues in College Student PersonnelWork,” will draw on studies of mid¬dle western colleges and universities.The last lecture will take the sub¬ject down from the college level.Professor of Education William C.Reavis will talk on “Integration ofGuidance with Instruction and Ad¬ministration in Secondary Schools.”Vol. 38 MAY 4. 1838 No. 105 Friarsingers WarbleDespite Lowering ofSpring ExaminationsBy DAVID MARTINVoices float on the evening breeze,serenading those lesser souls whoare quailing before approaching com-prehensives. The Friarsingers, prac¬ticing in Reynolds club for “Wherein^ the World,” lift their manlyvoices for the glory of the Order,and give never a thought to the low¬ering shadow on campus. The showgoes on.“Yaki Dax,” with the entire com¬pany caroling, will be the first songheard by the Mandel Hall audiencewhen the curtain rises Friday night.\Hardly taking a breath, the companystarts out on “We’re Having Fun inCollege.” Dialogue, banter, and thenJack Hageboeck tosses out the titlesong “Where in the World,” (typicalline: Where in the world would Ifind a girl like you?).Ta tatatata ta taDrinking scenes being number onespecialty of the Friars, at the firstchance comes a Bacchanal, with theentire company. The first part of itia a fox-trot “Five O’Clock,” then “Scheherazade,” and “Monks’ Dirge.”More dialogues, more monkey busi¬ness and then in scene five anothertattoo of songs.The audience drops back into itsseat for a rest and waits for the firstact finale. The Friarsingers againloosen their striped coats and letloose on “Pass the Cup,” “Red Wasthe Wine,” and “For We Are Drink¬ing Men”; then, with the buxom bar¬maids at hand comes “Waltzing inRhythm,” and the first act curtain. Intermission.More MelodyA reprise of “Soldiers of the King”opens the second act, and next is“Vision of Salom •' (complete withseven veils). The Friarsingers nextdream up “Oh Suzanna” (Oh gosh.Oh gee! Oh my, Oh me! Cause I’min love with you, Suzanna!).The show’s finale rings down on“Where in the World,” and “LuckyBoy, Lucky Girl.” Then everybodygoes home to study.^ailo ^aroonFOUNDED IN miMEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEP^SSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except ^turday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephones: Local 367, and Hyde Park9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our print¬ers, The Chief Printing company, 1920Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3311.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con-tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptonrates: 13.00 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.BOARD OF “CONTROLnamassNTao soa national AOVsaTisiNe avNational AdvertisingService, Inc.CtlUg* FuklUlun Rttrtuntativ*420 Madison Ava. Naw York. N. Y.CNICASO . BOSTON . LOS ANSILIS • SAN FSANCISCOWILLIAM H. McNEILL Editor-in-ChiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE....AdvertlBing Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist, Maxine Biesenthal,Emmett Deadman, Ruth Brody, Rex Hor¬ton, Seymour Miller, Adele Rose,BUSI^SS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman, Max Freeman, HarryTopping, Irvin Rosen.Night Editor: Bud Herschel UNIVERSITY MENREMEMBERIMOTHER’S DAYSUNDAY, MAY 8thOur Special Gift ServiceBEAUTIFUL MOJUDSILK STOCKINGS$1.00WE WILL WRAP YOUR GIFTATTRACTIVELY FREE AND MAH. ITFOR YOU IF YOU WISHHazel Hoff1371 E. 55th STREETHyde Park 8180(NEAR DORCHESTER) GOLFwr CLUBS AT50%DISCOUNTWE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR ENTIRESTOCK OF GOLF CLUBS AT, >/2 PRICE and LESS.HERE IS AN OPPORTUNITY TO BUY A NEW SETOR "FiU in" AT EXTREMELYLOW PRICES$4.00 Steel Shaft Irons for $1.652.50 Wood Shaft Irons for 791.25 Wood Shaft Irons for 498t50 Steel Shaft Woods for 2.955.50 Steel Shaft Woods for 2.353.50 Steel Shaft Woods for 1.3520.00 Set of 5 Irons for 7.5020.00 Set of 4 Irons for 10.0015.00 Junior Set of 4 Clubs for 7.50FIRST COME-FIRST SERVEDWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 EAST 57th STREETNEAR ElMBARE AVE. OPEN EVENINGSPh. DORCHESTER 4800XXVXX MARVINFREDERICAND HIS ORCHESTRAWith an ExcitingNew Floor ShowEmaturingMARVIN FREDERICat the pianoin the air conditionedCONTINENTALROOMSteueni HotelNO COVER CHARGExyyxxxxxxi HERE’S A TIP!All copy for the 1938 Cap and Gown is now atthe Printer’s. The book will soon be on thejvresses and only a limited number over thosesubscribed for will be ordered. To assure your¬self of a copy of the best U. of C. yearbook in the43 years of its publication, take our advice andsubscribe at once. Subscriptions may be boughtat the office or the Information Desk. The price,$450 and $2.00 down will reserve your copy.THECAP & GOWN FOR 1938Office in Lexington Building(9Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 4, 1938Much AboutNothing...By HARRY CORNELIUSDon Budge, Gene Mako, and BobbyRiggs, the ranking aces of Americantennis will meet the Maroon tennisteam in a series of three matches to¬morrow, Friday and Saturday after¬noons on the varsity courts.Budge, top player of the world, andRiggs, No. 2 in American singlesranking, will play alternate matcheswith Capt. John Shostrom and BillMurphy. Budge and Mako play theMurphy brothers in doubles. Thegames tomorrow will be late in theafternoon and about 3 o’clock on Fri¬day. The exhibition on Saturday willbe part of the conference duel matchbetween Chicago and Michigan.I-M Baseball ResultsPhi Gamma Delta 21—Sigma Chi 5Minyans 19—Delta Sigma Pi 16Kalazars 6—Broadman-Mugglers 6K 9’s 31—Snell Hall 2Lambda Gamma Phi 8—C.T.S. 3Bobby Riggs was scheduled to playwith varsity last week and failed toappear with no explanations given. Itseems that his mother and fathercame East and he went off with themto see his sister without troubling toinform the Chicago Tennis Associa¬tion which arranged the match outhere about his changing his plans.He is back in Chicago now nursing acold and expects to play out here asmentioned above.« * *Our colleague Mr. Mort of the Rey¬nolds Club would like it known thatthe Reynolds Club is the coolest spoton campus. We pass it on for whatit’s worth.Buckeyes DownMaroon GolfersThough they lost to Ohio StateMonday by a score of 15 to 12, theMaroon golf squad, since it already issome fifteen points ahead of lastyear’s season total, considers itselfto be doing very well, according toHarry Topping, number one man ofthe squad. The meet with Ohio Statewas held at Olympia Fields. Gilberttook low score for the Maroons witha 74.In the singles Topping tied Spring¬er of Ohio States at 81 all to splittheir round 1%-lV^. Welter dropped3 points running. Goldsmith downedEvans of Ohio State, 2-1, by winninga nine-hole round and the 18 holetotal. Gilbert beat Bartsky of OhioState 3-0, but Sampson’s 77 wasn’tgood enough to top his opponent’s 74and he lost 0-3. Webbe won his match3-0.In the doubles Topping and Gilbertwere beaten 0-3, Goldsmith and Samp¬son were downed 1-2. Welter andWebbe split a series with the Ohiomen and made itScoring gave one point for the lowscore on each nine hole round, andone point for the low on the totaleighteen hole score. Netmen WhitewashNotre Dame forThird Straight WinThe varsity tennis team defeatedits toughest opponent to date whenthe Maroon net men trounced NotreDame Monday in the usual 9-0 fash¬ion. This was the third straight vic¬tory without the loss of a match forthe Big Ten champs.Captain John Shostrom, playing inthe number one position for his secondtime, won easily. He defeated theNotre Dame ace performer in straightsets 6-2, 6-3.The other singles matches were alldecided in two sets too. Chet Murphybeat Kilrain 6-2, 6-0, Bill Murphy de¬feated Gregory 6-0, 6-4, John Krie-tenstein beat Rodgers 6-1, 6-2, ArtJorgenson downed Wolf 6-2, 6-3, ancTJim Atkins licked Simon 6-2, 6-3.Doubles Matches DecisiveThe doubles matches were also de¬cisive. Bill Murphy and Chet Murphydefeated the number one South Bendpair. Fay and Rodgers 6-3, 6-3. J.Shostrom and Jorgenson lost only onegame while winning from Simon andGregory 6-1, 6-0, and Atkins andKrietenstein defeated Ki^ra’-U andReppenhagen 6-3, 8-6.This afternoon at 2 on the varsitycourts the squad will meet its strong¬est conference opponent when North¬western’s Purple team invades theMidway. Although Chicago should winthis meet the Wildcats have alwaysprovided formidable opposition.The most important match of themeet will be the number one matchbetween Cfiptain Shostrom and North-western’s star Wachman. Wachmanwill be the man Shostrom will haveto beat in order to win the Big Tensingles championship in the Confer¬ence meet at Evanston, May 19-21, sothis match will be a good indication ofShostrom’s chances in the finals.B-Team WinsThe junior varsity tennis team wonits fourth straight victory when itdefeated Armour Tech 6-1. The onlyman to lose was Dick Norian playingthe Armour number two man, Swan¬son. Norian started well winning thefirst set six-love, but then he sud¬denly went to pieces and lost 0-6, 6-3,6-1.In the other singles matches JimAtkins defeated Natinchel 6-0, 6-3,Norm Svendsen downed Lang 6-0,6-2, Tony Furmanski defeated Kubik6-1, 6-2, and Emil Jarz licked Wagner6-2, 6-1. In the doubles, Svendsen andFurmanski beat Natinchel and Swan¬son 7-5, 6-0, and Reynolds and Bos-kirk beat Kubik and Lang 6-2, 6-3.HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 EAST S5th ST.li you want collate song5—If you want "Ck>ll*9iate" Atmosphere—li you want to see your friends—You ore assured of such on evening atHANLEY’SOVER FORTY YEARS OF CONGENIALSERVICE South and Southwest Lag Behindin Providing Library FacilitiesOf the 45 million persons withoutlibrary service in the United States,about half are found in the Southand Southwest. In the Far Westonly 3 persons in 25 are not servedby local public libraries, as against16 in the South. In two southernstates, the Negro population to whomlibraries are accessible falls belowfive per cent.These are among the facts dis¬closed in a recent survey on librariesand literacy in the United States.Louis R. Wilson, dean of the Grad¬uate Library School, directed thework, results of which the UniversityPress expects to publish soon underthe title "The Geography of Read¬ing.**Far West is ProgressiveWilson’s survey shows the FarWest leading all other sections of theI-M Teams BeginSoftball PlayoffsDelta Upsilon defeated both PhiKappa Sigma and Phi Delta Thetayesterday to win second place in theGamma league and thereby enter theplayoffs for the fraternity champion¬ship. The DU victories broke up athree way tie for second place inthat league.With these results, the ten teams thatwon first or second place in the fiveleagues are ready to start the play¬offs. The teams are Phi Kappa Psi,Phi Sigma Delta ‘B’, Psi Upsilon,Delta Upsilon, Phi Beta Delta, PiLambda Phi, Phi Sigma Delta ‘A’,Alpha Delta Phi, and Delta KappaEpsilon. As the teams line up PhiSigma Delta ‘A’ seems to have a goodchance to meet either Phi Beta Deltaor Psi Upsilon in the finals. country in cultural advance, if in¬dices such as membership in PhiBeta Kappa, college library expendi¬ture, magazine circulation, automo¬bile ownership, and money spent forgovernment and education can becalled conclusive.The Northeast can claim the na¬tion’s highest literacy rate (98 percent); the Midwest is best suppliedwith one-room schools. Among thestates, these distinctions are discov¬erable: that Nevadans are the keen¬est Book-of-the-Month and LiteraryGuild subscribers, and Kansans thebest prospects for encyclopedia sub¬scriptions.Compare ExpendituresSeen in relation to per capita in¬come, library expenditure is high inMassachusetts and California, low inKansas and Pennsylvania.“The American public library,’’Wilson explains, “has been includedin the general stocktaking that wasa result of the.. .depression.” From1929 through 1934 several . millionAmericans who had not previouslymade use of its services turned to itfor aid.LEARN TO FLYSpecial School RatesGov. Licensed Airplanes^ andInstructorsNEW AIRPLANESWrite or CollMIDWESTFlying School83rd CICERO Portsmouth 6606 Plan New Exhibitsin MicrophotographyLatest work of the University li¬braries in microphotography, besidesarticles • contributed to magazines bvDirector M. Llewelyn Raney, are ex¬hibits prepared for several conven¬tions. For several weeks, Raney hasbeen working on demonstrations andpapers which have been sent to theInternational Congress of Chemistry,meeting in Rome from May 15 to 21.On May 12, the Board of Trusteeswill also see an exhibit.The John MarshallLAWSCHOOLFOUNDED 1899ANACCREDITEDLAW SCHOOLTEXT and CASEMETHODF«r Catalet, racom-mandad lUt of pra-lagol•wbjactf, and baoklal."Study af law and ProparPraporatten" oddrastiEdword T. lau Daan. COURSES(40wsakt paryaar)AFTERNOON3H yaara. 5 days...4:30-AtSOEVENING-4 yaartMon., Wad., Fri.,6i30-9>20POST-GRADUATE1 yaar..Nyjca o waakProctica coursat ax-clutivaly.(Evanings)Two yaors' collagawork raquirad foranironca. Coursaslaod to dagraat.Naw cloMas formin Sapt. and Fab.315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, III.Stineway Deluxe Chocolate Flavor**All that a true chocolate should be**Double Dip Soda.. .15c Fortified Malted Milk.20cDouble Dip Sundae 15c Ex. Rich Milk Shake. .15cTRY IT TODAYSTINEWAY DRUGS57tli AND KENWOOD PHONE DOR. 2844 FROUC THEATRE951 EAST SSih STREETWEDNESDAYFANNIE BRICE JUDY GARLAND"EVERYBODY SING"Comody • Cartoon • NawiroalMAY 15.1617ROBERT TAYLOR In"YANK AT OXFORDMAY 25-26"TOVARICH"CLAUDETTE COLBERT in## Where In The WorldTWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICETHE GREASE JOBThat Gives You Floating, ChassisLubrication—SUSPENDS CAR WEIGHT WHILE LUBRICATING—ALL THIS FOR ONLY75cSale on Atlas TiresCAR WASH 75cBROWN'S STANDARD SERVICE1101 EAST 55lh STBEET -i- 55th and GREENWOODTELEPHONE MIDWAY 9092TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICE 40 -Beautiful Chorus Girls-40Come See, and HearBLACKFRIARS'Greatest Musical ComedySong Hits GaloreMANDEL HALL TICKETS: MANDEL HALL57th & UNIVERSITY AVE. BOX OFFICE)