Today*8 HeadlinesTrackmen Go to Ohio for Second Con¬ference Meet, page 4.Men and Women’s Orientation HeadsMeet, page 1.Millis Author of New Book, page 3.Comment on Recognition of KappaAlpha, page 1. MOOnVol. 38, No. 113 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1938 Price Five CentsThe NationalProgressivesBy SIDNEY HYMANIIWhile “third” parties in Americanhistory have traditionally been thetactics of the liberals, it is disconcerting to notice that wherever un¬qualified acceptance of the NationalProgressive Party has been made, thedeclarations proceed from individualsusually identified as “conservative.”Those usually identified as “liberals”have thus far responded to the partywith a confusion exceeded only by theconfusion of birth.There are, of course, a number ofconservatives who on hearing thename La Follette, suddenly seepolitical spectrum composed of redruin, black corruption, and the yellowperil. There are, of course, anothergroup of conservatives, who thoughthey praise the National ProgressiveParty, have identical objectives withthe “spectrum conservatives.” Theseutter lago-like words whose ambi¬guity is made clear by the hope thata strong “third” party will split theDemocrats in two and allow forconservative return to power. At thesame time, these conservative posi¬tions are offset by other conservativeswho apparently without partisan pur¬pose welcome the National Progres¬sive Party because it presents forthe first time in American life thepossibility of a clear division of con-.servatives vs. liberals. The NationalProgressive Party, for yet anothergroup of conservatives, is welcomedbecause of its anti-collectivism (in atleast the words it uses). The applauseof the conservatives on this last as-pect suggests the possibility that farfrom splitting the Democratic party,the National Progressive Party maybecome a wedge in the RepublicanParty. If this should occur, one wouldwitness on a national scale that whichmaterialized in Wisconsin politics in1934.« * *It is the liberals, we have noted,who are reserving judgment on theNational Progressive Party. A num¬ber of things trouble them. Despitethe past history of La Follette’sliberalism they fear the “ambitions”of Phil. They fear his symbolism.They fear his “contempt for the in¬tellectual.” They fear his manner.They object that the right peopleweren’t consulted. They object thatthe wrong people have welcomed theparty. They fear Phil’s “mysticism.”They object to the vagueness of hisprogram. They object that this is notthe time to split the forces of liberal¬ism—that this is not the time to playTheodore Roosevelt t o FranklinRoosevelt’s “Fighting Bob” La Fol¬lette. And finally they object that theNational Progressive Party has noth¬ing that Mr. Roosevelt has not alreadyoffered. These are serious objectionsand cannot be dismissed by attribu¬ting them to the overwhelming per¬fectionist pride of liberals.Yes, Phillip La Follette is ambi¬tious. But it seems odd that ambitionshould suddenly become a vice. Itseems odd that liberals who hailedJohn L. Lewis as the great spokesmanfor “the toiling masses of America’’should have found his ambition hon¬orable, if they used the word “ambi¬tion” at all, while they regard PhillipLa Follette’s political aspirations tobe insidious. It would be difficult, in¬deed, to separate the emergence ofany movement from the ambitions ofany man. If a political leader shouldsucceed, his ambition is glorified bythe word “destiny.” If he should fail,his ambition is damned by the word“megalomania.” It seems proper atthis point to paraphrase the Greeksand say “call no man ambitious untilafter his death.”Yes, Phillip La Follette has usedsymbols. But it seems odd that a na¬tion controlled by the symbols of adonkey and an elephant for the pastdecades should suddenly becomealarmed by the symbol of a ballot. Itseems odd that a nation whose greathero used the symbol of a railsplittershould become alarmed by a circleindicating the unity of all creeds. Per¬haps the organizers of the NationalProgressive Party should have used a(Continu^ on page 4) i Co-op MembersBack Store inUnion TroubleProfessor Douglas UpholdsBoard; Organizers Ab¬sent from Meeting.One-hundred and forty members ofthe Consumers Co-operative Store,6636 Harper Avenue, voted unanimousapproval of the stand taken by theBoard of Directors in regard to thepicketing of the Store by the RetailGrocery Clerks’ union, at an unof¬ficial meeting in Social Science As¬sembly Room last night. The Boardhad refused to force its employees tojoin the Union against their wishes.No representatives of the Unioncame to the meeting although theyhad been invited. The Co-op membersheard talks by Arthur C. McGiffert,chairman of the Store and a profes¬sor in the Theological Seminary, Pro¬fessor Paul H. Douglas and one ofthe clerks.Douglas referred to an article inthe April, 19.38 Forum in whichState’s Attorney Courtney, mentioneda labor organizer by the name ofCaldwell who had tried to “unionize”taxi-dancers. The business manager ofthe Clerks’ Union is also named Cald¬well. Douglas declared, however, thathe wasn’t certain that the two menwere the same.The Co-Op members passed severalresolutions unanimously, includingone declaring that “the Board of Di¬rectors is willing to bargain in goodfaith with any union of the clerks’choosing.”About 36 percent of the Store’s 600members are connected in some waywith the University. Woellner Tells Vocational GuidanceProblems to Congress Investigator“The Canipus Congress hit the nailon the head with its resolution con'cerning the Placement Office,” Rob'ert Woellner, executive secretary ofthe Board of Vocational Guidanceand Placement in charge of the ac¬tivities of the office said yesterday ashe met with a representative of theCampus Congress Committee to discuss the problems of the Board. HoW'ever, it was also brought out after afew minutes conversation how verylittle students really know about theextensive activities of the Office andfrom this how little the Board’s prob¬lems are understood.Because of the fact that this is aslack year for employment, Woellnerexplained that the Board must doubleits efforts in order to place anywherenearly as many students as it didduring the good business period oflast year. He feels that the Univer¬sity should not adopt a paternalisticattitude toward its graduates in thematter of keeping them in jobs, butthat it does have a definite responsi¬bility at least to help them in gettingstarted.Functions InconspicuouslyTo many students, the PlacementOffice is merely a place for the re¬ception of employers who happen tofeel disposed to give students jobs.In truth, this is far from the case andthough its activities may not be con¬spicuous, the Board utilizes everypossible promotional technique in or¬der to secure both full and part-timeemployment for University students.Because the demand for teachersAnticipate Hecklersat Political Meeting Adler Lectureson Intelligenceat Int-HousePlans w’ere going forward ‘yester¬day to make the meeting of the Polit¬ical Union tomorrow night the mostexciting of the year. At the lastmeeting to discuss the City Managerplan, catcalls and boos enlivened theproceedings and tomorrow night’s de¬bate over Fascism and the New Dealpromises more fireworks as rumorsof Fascist hecklers pervade the cam¬pus.Benjanlin Adamowski, democraticfloor leader in the Illinois House ofRepresentatives and Edward Chayes,Republican candidate for municipaljudge will take opposite sides of thequestion “Resolved, there is more in¬cipient Fascism in the New Deal thanin the factions opposing the NewDeal.”Call for CounselorsTransfer or other students whowish to become counselors to studentswho will enter the University fromother colleges next fall, should seeMiss Fareen at Cobb 201, the Trans¬fer Orientation Committee announcedyesterday. “Is Intelligence Democratic ?” is tobe the query of Dr. Charles Adler,teacher of languages and psychologyat Parker High School, in his talk atInternational House scheduled for to¬night at 8.Formerly of Vienna, Austria, Dr.Adler has in his brief three years inChicago, become known as a fore¬most individual psychologist. Themeeting, sponsored by the SocialProblems Club of the House, is opento the campus at large. Following thelecture and discussion, the regular In¬ternational House midweek tea willbe held with Dr. Adler as guest ofhonor for the evening.Plan DanceHouse Committees are also plan¬ning a Spring Swing Dance for thisFriday night, for undergraduatescelebrating a completion of exams orseeking relief from cramming.Admission price is 76 cents forcouples, 60 cents for stags.A band is being procured, theCommittee guaranteed that therewould be no floor show, and the dancewill be open to the campus at large. had not been as high as in previousyears, the Board sent out individualletters to superintendents of schoolsin towns of over 2600 population inOhio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan,and Minnesota and to all towns inIllinois last week, telling them of theservices of the Office. The letter ex¬plained the unusual training which isgiven teachers under the New Planand carried enclosed with it twoforms for reporting information con¬cerning available teaching positions.The response has been very goodfrom these letters already, and theyare merely one example of Boardpromotional activity which helps toassure students of job opportunities.Publicity TechniquesOther means besides direct mailpublicity which are used to secureknowledge of positions available areforms enclosed in alumni news lettersfor reporting positions, letters sentout to all large corporations everyyear telling of the services of theoffice, and pamphlets and circulars toall potential employers of part timeworkers in the Chicago area. Latestinnovation of the office with regardto publicity is the distribution ofbook matches advertising its services.Information inside the cover invitesemployers to use the office’s facilities.Also on the list of promotional ma¬terial used by the office is a street-guide on the covers of which areprinted personal commendations ofthe service and blotters which aredistributed to employment officers.The activities of Woellner himselfare largely restricted to securing pro¬fessional positions and acting as ex¬ecutive secretary of the Board. Theperson responsible for finding busi¬ness positions is Lowell Calvin, whothis quarter replaced John Kennanas Placement adviser. In order tofind more opportunities and to estab-V- (Continued on page 3) Name Leaders ofMen’s FreshmanCounselor GroupFederation Heads AlsoPlan for FreshmanWeek.Members of the Freshmen Orienta¬tion Committee for ’38-’39 were listedyesterday by Martin Miller, Orienta¬tion chairman. The committeemen,who serve also as group leaders tofreshmen and their counselors, willmeet today at 12:30 in the Reynoldsclub to choose counselors from theapplications submitted last week, andto formulate plans and policies fornext year.Counselors, according to Miller,“will be selected on a purely in¬dividual basis rather than for affilia¬tions.”Name MembersMembers of the new committeeare: Jack Conway, independent, Rich¬ard Worthington, independent, Fred¬erick Grail, independent, John Bern¬hardt, Alpha Delta Phi, Burt Hughes,Delta Kappa Epsilon, Fred Hewitt,Delta Upsilon, Burton Moyer, KappaSigma, David Moonie, Phi Kappa Sig¬ma, Melvin Rosenfeld, Phi SigmaDelta, and Henry Grossman, PiLambda Phi.Women Leaders MeetTwenty-two group leaders chosenrecently by Women’s Federation alsomeet today at 3:30 in Ida Noyes hallwith a group of faculty members whohave offered to give teas next fall forfreshman women and counselors.Today’s meeting is the last thisspring for the women group leaders,who last week agreed upon a tenta¬tive arrangement of freshman groupsand leaders. Group leaders, each ofwhom is responsible for about tencounselors, are themselves each ad¬vised by two faculty members.Students See Corkscrew Waltz.4s Moholg-Nagy Speaks on ArtFraternities Meet TodayThe Interfraternity Council willmeet tonight at 7:30 in Room D ofReynolds Club.Several important items will comeup for discussion at the meeting,which is the last scheduled thisspring.An Open Letter to FraternitiesSince a majority of campus fra¬ternities voted favorably on theadmittance of the Negro fraternity.Kappa Alpha Psi, to the Interfra-ernity Council, and since we feelthat refusal of membership to thegroup contradicts the University’sliberal tradition, we urge the fra¬ternities to reconsider their deci¬sion.The implications behind theirfinal decision, whether for oragainst admittance, are too far-reaching, and react too important¬ly on the University’s reputation,for the issue to be settled lightlyand on any other basis than purelyrational consideration. Grace AbbottMortimer J. AdlerWilliam B. BallisWalter BlairJ. L. CateA. H. ComptonH. F. GosnellLouis GottschalkS. N. HarperP. M. HauserEarl Johnson Jerome KerwinW. C. KrumbeinNorman MacleanR. V. MerrillFred B. MillettC. W. MorrisMelchior PalyiArthur P. ScottLouis WirthQuincy Wright(The staff of the Daily Maroonhas taken the liberty of reprint¬ing this letter fratn the Maroon ofFebruary 26, 1937, as an indica¬tion of faculty opinion on thisquestion.) By DAVIDA transparent corkscrew-like spiralof celluloid wove across the screen inan eccentric dance. Behind it perpet¬ually moving planes and lines inspace and intersecting each other inthree dimensions, and over all playedhyperbolic lights and shadows.The students sat and stared.Professor Moholy-Nagy talked tostudents in the Humanities surveysections yesterday, in a lecture titled“Art Since Cezanne.” Feature of thelecture was a film made under thedirecuon of the professor, illustrat¬ing in graphic manner the multiplici¬ty of methods of the treatment ofspace. Supplementing the films withlantern slides the professor rated fun¬damentals of space treatment asused by various of the modern “Ism”schools.They StareThe students sat and stared.Though he spoke with a foreign ac¬cent, students in the auditorium hadlittle trouble understanding hisspeech. They agreed that he knewwhat he was talking about and thateven if they didn’t know what he wastalking about, that it must be theirown fault. Whether they understoodit or not they admitted that it wasfun—especially the pictures.There were a great many pictures.There was one where if one lookedhard he could see half a dozen faces,all combined in one figure. One facelooked one way, one looked another,one looking straight at the audience.And Moholy-Nagy said that if theM, W, Fodor Lectureson Anschluss TomorrowM. W. Fodor, Central Europeancorrespondent of the Chicago DailyNews and the Manchester Guardian,will give a free public lecture tomor¬row at 4:30 in the Social Science As¬sembly Room. His subject is “TheAnschluss and Czechoslovakia.”Author of “Plot and Counterplot inCentral Europe,” Fodor has been de¬scribed by fellow journalists, includingDorothy Thompson and John Gunther,the outstanding authority on Cen¬tral European affairs. MARTINaudience would stand on its head itwould see another face. The invita¬tion was declined. There was a slideof a painting that looked like a cob¬blestone street. That also was veryinteresting.He then skipped to what he definedas one of the best of all modernworks. The painting was merely awhite square on a white background.Then the students nearly died.Moholy-Nagy said that this wasmerely meant to represent the po¬tentialities left to painting. He ex¬plained that artists had done aboutall that could be done with color, thatthe next move was to work with lightand shadow in new ways. To achievethis he has invented a new “ism”—“Transparentism” by which he hopedto represent space and the illusion ofspace in a new manner.Another IsmHe explained that in his “ism” hepainted on a transparent sheet whichhe mounted, by means of clips, sothat it was suspended a few inches infront of a background. Light, pass¬ing through the colors on the trans¬parent painting, threw a pattern onthe background and this pattern var-(Continued on page 4)Band Plays Tonightat Incurables HomeBand members will entertain in¬mates of the Chicago Home for In¬curables with a program rangingfrom Verdi’s Quartet from “Rigo-oletto” to the works of modern Chi¬cago composers, when they play inthe Home’s garden, at 66th andGreenwood, this evening. The publicis invited to hear the concert, whichbegins at 7:30.The musicians were invited to playthe outdoor concert as a part of thesummer concert series of the Homefor Incurables. The following week,on May 26, they will begin a groupof three programs in HutchinsonCourt, which will continue on June 3and 4. The last concert will immedi¬ately precede the Interfraternity Sing.■vVf>age Two .PIATFORM1. Craotiioo oi a ▼iyorous conipiis commwiity*2. Abolition oi intorcoilooicite othloticfk3. Progressive politics.4. Revition oi tiie CdUege Plan.5. A chastened presidentUntil Next YearSmoke screens are handy things. In the unofficialdecision which fraternity votes have just registered onthe question of admitting Kappa Alpha Psi to the Inter-fratemity Council they were handier than ever. Argu¬ing with perfect logic, opponents to the admission ofKappa Alpha Psi pointed out that the Negro fraternitydid not have a house on campus, that restrictive agree¬ments prevented it from having a house on campus,that the constitution of the council required all memberfraternities to have houses on campus. Therefore, firmlegalists all, five fraternities voted that they did notwant to admit Kappa Alpha Psi.The saddest part about it is that ten fraternities de¬cided to instruct their delegates to vote for admission.Ten fraternities, constituting a majority of the Council,would have been enough to admit the applicants, hadnot the constitutional provision blocked them. The fivedissenters may well be happy for the protection of theconstitution against their more liberal colleagues.Their smoke screen isn’t quite impenetrable. Under¬neath the arguments that only a fraternity with ahouse can understand the weighty problems brought upat Council meetings lies a clear stratum of prejudice,surprisingly clear when one considers the traditionallyliberal reputation of the campus. It would be futile torepeat all the objections offered; what they add up tois merely this—^we are not in favor of encouraging Ne¬groes to feel that they are on a basis of equal oppor¬tunity with whites, t'.ierefore neither are any other ofthe “right people,” and such an action on the part of theInterfratemity Council would discredit the University.As simple and as time-worn is the answer to them—you have learned in your classes that racial prejudicesand racial inequalities are unfounded in fact, and allthat we can ask you is to remember that the Universityexpects some degree of rationality in its students. Afavorable decision on this question would stamp thefraternities as worthy of belonging to the University’stradition of social justice.The very fact that Kappa Alpha Psi has petitionedfor entrance into the Interfraternity Council is enoughassurance that they would willingly comply with any ofthe Council’s requirements which they do not now fulfill,wmald willingly answer any of the supposedly unanswer¬able difficulties proposed by the opposition group. Asthe situation now stands, a purely social fraternity, onewhich a majority of the members of the InterfraternityCouncil feel should be admitted into the Council, isbarred from membership on the strength of an argu¬ment between neighborhood business men and propertyowners. The place of fraternities on a campus wouldneed redefining if possession of a house were found tobe the fundamental purpose.But there is still a majority in favor of admission,and that majority will not submit to what it considersan unjustified prejudice. The admission of Kappa Al¬pha Psi will be a basic issue before the InterfraternityCouncil next year.A. R. S'-',,,' ’_ T . i-. ‘THE DAILY MaHoON. WEDNESDAY. MAY 18, 1988 ' 'QuestandInquestBY LAURA BERGQUISTPetty, creator of the Esquire version of the femaleform divine.. .whose drawings of ultra very shapelywomen has replaced the Gibson girl and the PoliceGazette as chief decorator of college men’s rooms, visit¬ed campus last Friday.Will Rogers and Ed Myers, canny heads of the Bur¬ton Courtier, played hosts for the day since theirs wasthe honor and glory of brainchilding the Petty contest—wherein dorm boys chose their favorite Petty pic¬tures to be judged by the artist himself. For lo, of allcartoonists, Mr. Petty strangely seems to lead all therest, anyway in the college man’s estimation. Collegewomen’s choice as yet unknown.Mr. Petty was a nice middle-aged man, in fact muchlike any ordinary business man (if there be such a crit¬ter).. .sandy-haired, mustachioed, with just a littletouch of the arty about him... perhaps because, unlikehis ladies, his clothes didn’t quite fit him.But anyway, he was a talkative individual and de¬lighted the boys with the account of his exceedinglycommercial career. He seemed to be a bit embarrassedby his drawings, which as every should know, are on thevoluptuous side. Just now he’s in the throes of a reformmovement. His mind, it seems, doesn’t exactly run inthe same grooves that Esquire jokesmiths do.They supply the gags, he merely fills in the draw-ing...and sometimes he just has to put his foot down.For in addition to being an artist Mr. Petty is a goodfather and husband. And it disturbs him greatly whenwrathy college deans reprove the sort of stuff he drawsfor national advertisers whose ads reach the tenderminds of clear-eyed college youth.In general he strives to keep men out of his pic¬tures since they’re nothing but distractions, uses tele¬phones to indicate second persons. Occasionally hethrows in a little goggle-eyed bald headed man whopeers around comers to admire the beautiful women.This little man is no other than Mr. Petty himself,minus his dandy thatch and with a leer thrown in forgood measure.His model, surprisingly enough, is his own 18-yearold daughter.. .a rather mousy, athletic girl who at¬tends Northwestern, does not belong to a sorority, andgenerally doesn’t advertise the fact about campus thather father is THE Petty.His latest coup, that of nailing the Old Gold ad waspure freakish chance. An Old Gold magnate happenedto visit his son at Harvard, came, saw Petty’s pictureson the wall, and was conquered. “That’s the sort ofthing we need for our ads,” sed he, and he certainlyshould know.Nevertheless Petty plans to stick with Esquire, whodiscovered him, even though he turns a loving eyetoward advertising work. He doesn’t care particularlyfor his own pictures, would just as soon draw trees asgirls, claims that he is no artist, has no aspirationtoward any higher forms of art and is beautifully satis¬fied with drawing for Filthy Lucre.His family life is q(;uite happy, thank you. Daughteris kept happy by her pay of a new car ever year orso...but his wife, a brunette, quietly laments some¬times that he favors toward blondes and redheads (Pet¬ty says consolingly that it’s just for color effect). Study Geographical, Social Aspectsof Distribution of Louisiana FrenchBy WERNER HERINGInstructor in Romance LanffuagesA research in Louisiana FVenchsponsored by the Council of LearnedSocieties and by the Romance De¬partment of the University andwhich was mentioned in one of theDecember issues of the Daily Maroonhas been carried out by Mr. WernerHering of this University and Mr. E.0. Bourgeois of the State Universityof Louisiana during the winter quar¬ter.The special object of this investiga¬tion was to find out, if the geographicand social aspects of this languageare such that a linguistic atlas ofLouisiana French as a part of theLinguistic Atlas of America could beeffectively concluded. The inquirywas done first orally by means of apreviously prepared questionnaire towhich 48 persons chosen in 34 differ¬ent localities of Louisiana were sub-jected. Then a sound machine wasused for recording patterns of speechdialogues, stories, songs) with somecharacteristic subjects. A sufficientlynumerous French speaking popula-1tion was found in a compact area of26 parishes (counties) in the SouthWest of Louisiana.Three types of French are used:standard, acadian and Negro French.The material obtained by this inves¬tigation is being examined now. Itindicates that the talk of the oldplanters (standard French) and thepatois of the Acadian refugees, for¬merly reflecting a social differentia¬tion, are presently about to become two merely geographical variationsof languages, whereas Negro Frenchspoken by the white and the colouredpopulation in some communities onlycan be observed influencing on bothof the previously mentioned types.This mixture of speech causes thespecial difficulty as to the choice ofcommunities and subjects for a gen-eral investigation. At the same timeit constitutes its particular intere.st.Mr. W. Hering believes that a Wn.guistic atlas of Louisiana French to-gether with the English atla.s be>ingpi'epared for the same region wouldallow one to study problems quitedifferent from those of Europe.V*l. 38 MAY 18. 1938 N*. ItsPOUNBXD IM IMlMEMBER ASSOCIATED COLt-EClATEFRE8SThe Dailir Msraon ia tK* oflUtol atadentBawaaapar of th* Univeraiw of Cliieoco.potliabwl morninsa aiacairt Mtuntor. Sttti-4*7. oBd Mondaur durina Autuian,Winter nnd Sprinc qunitera bir The DnilrMnroon ComiMtnjr, 8881 Unlaci^tr nrenua.Tote^onea: Loan] 367. and HrdO Park•221 and »222.Aftor i:39 abonc in atoriaa to oor print-ora, Tho Chiof Printins oonpanf, 1920Monterey Aro. Tolepbono Codareraot Htl,Tlw UniroralW of Ckieaao aaanaaeo noroaponaibility for any atatementa appenr-ina in The Daily Mnn^on. or for any eon-tract entered into by The Dally Maroon.Hie Daily Ibitvon expreaety raeerraathe risbte of pobtieetion of any materialappeoying in tbia paper. Snbeeriptonrataa: 38.00 a year; |4 by mail. Singleeopiea; ftee centa.Entered aa aecond~eiaaa matter ItiTreb18, 1903. at Uie poet office at Chicago,Illinoia, under the act of March 3, 1879.aeeaxaeMtan roe national AOvaimawM evNatiMHriMv«i1isugS4nfiee,lM.CUht* FmiUikm Mtprrnntetift4RO Madwon Avs. Nsw Yonk. N. Y.CaKaao • toatea • tea AMaita - Oan yaAaeiaceBOARD OP CONTROLWILLIAM H. MeNEILL.....Editor-in-ChiefCHARLES E. HOY.„ Bualneaa ManagerELROY D. GOLDtN6....„..Maoagii« EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ. Aaaoetate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Aiaoeiate EditorMARSHALL J. 8TONB..„AdyertiaiBg Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquiat, Maxine Biaaenthal,Emmett Deadman. Ruth Brody, Rex Her-ton, Seymour Miller, Adele Roee,BUSINESS ABSOClATira^ ~~Edwin ^rgman. Max l^eeman. HarryTopping, Irvin Roaen.Night Editor: Bud Herachel WBR mmmIS NOT comPLeuunm sou've sstnIf'i true. Think whet you can leemin the tend the! qeve the worldGoethe, Wegner, Seethoven, Diirer,NSetnche.lMlozert.Kent end Luther.Greet ert end superb muiic . . .oech en educetion in ittolf.Potttbly you would onfoy ovon moree glorious ttoemar trip on thecetSo-guerded Rhino or the blueOenube . . . e vitit to deer oldHoidelborg ... or e heelthy, in-terofting hiking or biking tour fromono Youth Hostel to tho next.For e glimpte of continontel lifeend leisure, you will ttroll elongBorlin'i Untor den Linden. Ofhotpiteble Munich with her goldenbrew, you heve heerd . .. Not ferewey ero tho Beverien Alpt endAuttrien Tyrol. And than romenticVionne, living in weltx time endheppity reunited with Germeny.Everywhere hittoric or legenderynemof will jog your memory-—theMeittertingar at Nurnberg, Frad-arick the Greet et Senitouci,Chertemegne et Aechen, Living endtrevel ere inexpensive, etpeciellywith Trevel Merks et 40% tevingsend ipeciel reil tickets et b0%reductions.Contulf your Travl Agoot and writofor information and bookhi “C”.GESniBn RBIIRORDSIHFORIRRTIOR OFFICE10 fast Sfth Straet, New York, N. Y.Letters to theEditorKAPPA ALPHA PSI: CONTRAEditor,The Daily Maroon:The scream of racial prejudice, dis¬crimination and inequality is stillringing in my ears, all to the ques¬tion of whether Kappa Alpha Psishould be admitted to the I-F Coun¬cil. The group advocating their admis¬sion screams so much it never triesto answer any questions that are veryimportant to consider, questions con¬cerning the position of fraternities onthis campus and the relation of fra¬ternities to the Council. W’ould theadmission of Kappa Alpha Psi addanything to the I-F Council or theposition of fraternities on this cam¬pus?I have thought this question overfor a long time and I can see nodefinite addition, but quite a fewdetriments. First, the fraternity inconsideration has no fraternity houseto support or maintain and has nopossibility of obtaining one in thenear future. Every other fraternityin the Council has, and is required tohave one, to be a member of theCouncil. If this requirement is with¬drawn it opens the way for the down¬fall of one of the major requirementsof keeping a chapter of a fraternityin a sound or strong position on acampus. If the fraternity was ad¬mitted to the Council it would haveto be admitted with 100 per cent co¬operation or there would be serious danger of a split in the Council.It is said that the fraternity wouldnot participate in the social functionsof the fraternities, (open houses andhouse dances). What use are they tothe Council then, when one of its ma¬jor functions is to promote the friend¬ship and social relations of the fra¬ternities.Then there is this point. KappaAlpha Psi’s membership is made upof men from other schools such asIjoyola and other colleges in the city.Their actual membership of studentsin the University is very small.Should men from other schools havethe right to vote in the affairs offraternities on this campus? I havenever seen a statement from KappaAlpha Psi to the effect that outsidemembers would be dropped from theirroll if they were admitted to theCouncil. Their advocates make thisstatement quite freely. Even if theydid drop the non-University members,would it not weaken their positionas a group? Has not the fraternitysystem on this campus enough weakhouses to try to help and worryabout, without acquiring another one ?Kappa Alpha Psi seems very quieton the subject of their admission.Their advocates seem to be more in¬terested in their admission than thegroup itself.Max Freeman.KAPPA ALPHA PSI; PROEditor,The Daily Maroon:This confused liberal gets moreconfused all the time.On Saturday night I went down tothe Savoy Ballroom. It’s plenty black down there. I had a good time. Wewhite men have so much to learnabout having a good time.And I noticed something. There isa bar in the Savoy. Plenty of peoplewere drinking. And not one of themwas drunk. That made a real impres¬sion on me. No drunks. Colored peopleare swell, I thought.One of my brothers hjre at the fratclub has just looked ove’* my shoulder.He is a very nice gent, but very muchagainst admitting Kappa Alpha Psi.“So what?”, he asked. “You haven’tproved anything.” I told him that Iwasn’t trying to prove anything. AllI was doing was saying that I thinkcolored people are nice people. “Ohsure,” he said, “some colored peopleare very nice.” To which I was forcedto reply that some Jews are very nicetoo. To which he answered, “But weJews have been given more opportu¬nities in this country.”Further argument brought out theadmission that he thought that coloredpeople should be given the same op-poitunities, but that he didn’t want tobe the one to give them to them. Hefeels that by so doing he may sufferin some vague way.He took and passed Soc. I, and sodid almost all the fraternity men whovoted against admission of the coloredlads to the I-F Council. This mustmean that he, and all the others, knewtlie right answers to all questionsregarding the differences between theraces. The point is that he doesn’tbelieve them.Now what I want to know is, whatgood is education if nobody believeswhat he learns.Norm Joffee. FROLIC THEATRE951 EAST 5Sth STREETWednesday & Thursday“BARON^ESS and theBUTLER”PLUS — John Barrymore“BULLDOG DRUMMOND’SPERIL”Both Days—-Beautiful Petit Point22K Pie Plate—FREETo every lady with a 30c ticketCOMING—SUN., JUNE 12“SNOW WHITE and theSEVEN DWARFS” Lexington Theatre1162 EAST 63rd STREETWednesday & ThursdayMAY 18 - 19thPreston FosterIn“DOUBLE DANGER”Jimmy Savein“RECKLESS LIVING”TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICESAVE MONEY!SPRING TIRE SALEAU SIZESSAVE HALF THE PRICEON ONE TIRE WITH PURCHASE OF TWOFREE TUBEWITH PURCHASE OF FOUR TIRESCASH OR CREDITE-Z TERMSBROWN'S STANDARD SERVICE1101 EAST 55th STREET 55th and GREENWOODTELEPHONE MIDWAY 9092TWENTY-FOUR HOUR SERVICETHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. MAY 18, 1938 Page ThreeErnie La Marche, Master Tuner,Explains Workings of Chapel OrganBy HARRY1 thought for a minute it was NewYork harbor in a fog at high noon,but it was only the tower of the Uni¬versity Chapel, and I was perched ona ladder high in the organ loft whileErnie La Marche bent anxiously overone of the organ’s 7,000 odd pipeswith a jack knife in one hand and ascrewdriver in the other.Tuning a church organ, believe itor not, is a mighty technical andintricate business, combining theabilities of a locomotive doctor and asymphony conductor. Ernie didn’twant to talk about himself, but he didadmit that it takes 10 years of train¬ing to become a master tuner.Tune Organ WeeklyThe chapel organ gets tuned everyweek, though not all of it is apt toneed tuning that often. However,the reeds frequently need cleaning ormay slide out of position. Tempera¬ture or humidity changes may throwthe resonators just enough out ofadjustment to develop “beats” whentwo or more pipes are played togeth¬er. When this happens Ernie goesafter a slit near the top of each pipewhere the metal has been rolled downlike a half opened sardine can andand twists up or down till the “beat”subsides.The chapel organ, one of the larg¬est in the country, carries 92 stops,or sets, averaging about 73 pipes toa set. The main console carries 100dranabs—those things marked “Oboe”or “Clarinet” and so on—while a sec¬ond keyboard is there so that thechoirmaster can play the organ anddirect his singers at the same time.Pipes in Main LoftMost of the chapel pipes are in themain loft in the tower, but some ofthe pipes are located above the far endof the nave, and are used for variousspecial concert effects. Unlike manyorgans, the chapel instrument has nofalse pipes for decorational effects.Every pipe in that huge decorationalfacade is a working part of the or¬gan.But not all the pipes look like thosevisible from the chapel floor. Manyof the pipes are wooden, and the met¬al pipes come in all sorts of oddshapes and sixes, with special “lips,”“beards,” “ears,” and “feet”—all re¬ferring to the design of the air aper¬ture. The various tonal qualities areobtained not only by changing themouth of the pipe, but by changingthe shape and material of the resona¬tor. Organ companies cast their ownalloys, and many of the pipes arepractically the same today as theywere when the industry began 300years ago.Smallest PipesThe smallest pipes are literally nolarger than an ordinary tin whistle,while the largest are huge woodencigar boxes 32 feet long, more thanWoellner-(Continued from page 1) JOHN LEVItwo feet wide and deep. The “foun¬dation tones” they give are so deepthat one feels rather than hears them.Adding to the natural overtones ofthe pipes to give an even greaterrange of tone, many of the pipes arebuilt in “banks” of five. When theorganist so desires, he can play theentire bank, comprising the one pipeof the fundamental tone and the fourovertones, by touching the one keyof the console.The console itself is in four banksof keys. Although each bank coversthe same octaves, there are subtlevariations in the quality of soundproduced by the corresponding pipes.Concert organists usually carry themelody on the topmost, or “solo”bank, and accompany themselves onthe various lower keyboards.Played by Air PressureAll the pipes are played by airpressure, kept at the proper pressurefor each of the many types of pipesby being passed through spring-con-trolled pressure boxes. So carefullyhas the chapel loft been designed thateven when the full organ is in opera¬tion there is almost no sound of windin the loft.Because of the necessity for a con¬stant air pressure, the only way theorganist can regulate volume ofsound, besides cutting duplicate pitchpipes in or out, is to open or closesections of a huge system of Vene¬tian blinds located in front of theloft proper. Herein, said La Marche,lies the advantage of the new electri¬cal organ, which can give any de¬sired volume simply by turning aknob, as does any ordinary radio.However, the tone of the electric or¬gan is artificial and as yet no wayhas been found to accurately imitatethe natural overtones of the wind in¬strument.ih better contacts, Calvin attendsidustrial Relations Councils in the^icago area, meets with personnelanager’s associations and sees to itlat the services of the Office areade personally known to probablenployers. Women’s positions aremdled through Miss Larsh and Miss^ood.After explaining in fairly good de-il the functions of the office, Woell-5r returned to the resolution con-irning the office passed by the Con¬fess. “There is a great deal of mis-iderstanding of the work of the of-:e because most students only seeJ as the men across the desk,” helid, “but as you may see we are atle same time working outside, try-g to discover all available oppor-inities. In times of depression ourork is doubled as more sales-worknecessary to attract employers toir offices.” At the time of the in-irview, Woellner was preparing arcular to be sent to the members' the Board asking if they knew ofly additional job opportunitieshich would not reach the Placementfflee through any other source. Theoard is composed of faculty mem-jrs.“We certainly would like to providele students with more informationmcerning jobs,” he explained, “butnancial limitations make it impos-ble for us to do so at present. Ifle Campus Congress Committee>uld educate the students who wishbs to keep in closer touch with us,e could probably effect some im-fovement under the present systemitil more funds are available.” Anthropology StudentsDig in Chicago WoodsThe annual spring anthropologydig will be held in Chicago’s backyard this year. Professor Fay Cooper-Cole’s class in archeological methodswill journey out to PottowattomieWoods, a nearby forest preserve,Thursday, Friday and Saturday forits practical instruction in anthropo¬logical digging.Several amateurs found pottery ina field within the Woods last yearand while digging in a small moundcame upon a skull. University an¬thropologists were notified and madea preliminary excavation of part ofthe mound. Then they marked thesite and left it for this year’s train¬ing class to finish. It is thought thata whole village may lie buried be¬neath the weeds of the field.The dig is headed this year byAlex Spoehr.Bob Wagoner WinsPoetry Reading PrizeFirst prize of $75 in the FlorenceJames Adams poetry reading con¬test went to Robert Wagoner for hisreading of selections from Sassoon,Heath, and Masefield in the finalsheld yesterday. Demarest Polach-eck won the second prize of $50 withpoems by Huxley, Stephens, andChesterton. Mary Paul Rix, whoread from Brooke, Housman, CJolum,and T. S. Eliot, took the third prizeof $25.M. Llewellyn Raney, director ofUniversity Libraries, and Mrs. AaronJ. Brumbaugh acted as judges in theI finals held yesterday in Mitchelltower. In this contest, more stresswas laid on reading than on declama¬tory aspects of vocal expression.HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 EAST 5Slh ST.11 you wont coll*9« soa9»—If you wont "CoHoglalo" Almosphoro—If you wont to soo your filonds—You or# ossurod of such on ovonlng atHANLEY’SOVER FORTY YEARS OF CONaElflAL8BRVICB Millis Collaboratesin Writing of Bookof Labor ProblemsA three-volume work, literally ofepic size and covering almost the en¬tire field of labor, is being writtenby Harry A. Millis, professor andchairman of the department ofEconomics of the University, andRoyal E. Montgomery, professor ofEconomics at Cornell. The first twovolumes of this work, which is en¬titled “The Economics of Labor,” willbe published within a few weeks.Both authors have had consider¬able experience with problems of la¬bor. Millis was a member of the firstNational Labor Relations Board andis now an arbitrator in the clothingand newspaper industries. Mont¬gomery has made studies of labor re¬lations, particularly in the buildingindustry.The first volume, entitled “Labor’sProgress and Some Basic LaborProblems,” deals with such mattersas wages, incomes, child labor, work¬ing hours governmental regulationand wage theory. The second volume,called “Labor’s Risks and Social In¬surance,” treats of the problems ofunemployment, sickness, work injur¬ies and old-age and of the variousproposals for dealing with them. Thefinal volume, “Organized Labor,” isnow in preparation.This book is the first of a newseries, entitled Business and Eco¬nomics Publications, edited by Wil¬liam H. Spencer, Dean of the Busi¬ness School.Purchase BritishWar Office Mapsof Asia, AfricaWith the recent purchase of 1,000maps from the Geographical SectionGeneral Staff of the war office ofGreat Britain, the University mapcollection now boasts of a wide mapcoverage of Africa and Asia, twocomparatively unmapped sections ofthe world.Although negotiations to acquirethe collection of drawings • made byofficers of the British army havebeen going on for several years, itwas not until lately that sufficientfunds could be budgeted to allow forthe purchase. Previous to this timethe map collection located in Rosen-wald Hall had been weak in drawingsof the two countries.Maps Total 35 MillionOriginally only a map library, theGeographical Section General Staffhad been responsible for supplyingmaps to the British army. As Brit¬ish interests grew, the general staffhad to compete with the problem ofthe unmapped world and began pre¬paring its own maps which now total35,000,000.For the most part the maps coverterritory where the British army mayat some future time be expected tofight. Although individuals are notpermitted to buy them from the staff,the University was able to completethe necessary arrangements andacquired the 1,000 maps for perma¬nent use. Fewer Summer Jobs Available atPlacement Office; Expect IncreaseThe supply of temporary positionsfor summer is rather low, Lowell S.Calvin, placement counselor for menin the Board of Vocational Guidance,revealed yesterday, although thenumber will probably increase con¬siderably as the end of the quarterapproaches.As could be expected, the numberof positions available is considerablyless than last year, due to the cur¬rent situation in the business world.By far the greatest number of jobsare commission selling, with a re¬muneration equal to the student’sability to sell.Second in importance, as far asnumbers go, is camp counselling, withsalaries beginning at $5 per month,including room and board. In campwork salary depends to a great ex¬tent on the endowment supportingthe projects. A student experiencedin camp work earns, as a rule, manytimes that of the inexperiencedcounselor.Business JobsBusiness jobs rank next in impor¬tance, ranging from clerical to tech¬nical marketing research. It 'is inthis field that the depression hastaken its toll, the available 'supplybeing exceedingly limited. If busi¬ness conditions improve, ‘Calvin ex¬pects an upturn in the supply to takecare of the two-week vacation pe¬riods.A suiprisingly large number ofstudents is interested in laboring jobs, and the placement bureau eachyear secures them for a number ofstudents. Calvin said that the stu¬dents who wanted these jobs gener¬ally took them as an antidote for thelack of exercise during the schoolterm.Students are urged to register inthe Board office at any time, andthe Board will do its utmost to help.Generally the number of applicantsexceeds by far the number of avail¬able positions.The John MarshallLAWSCHOOLPOUNDRD 1199ANACCREDITEDLAW SCHOOLTEXT and CAMMETHODFor Catoloa, racem-mandad tlrt af pra-lagal■ubiacti, oad bookiat,"Studyof lowond ProparPraparatlen" addraisiEdward T. lat Oaan. COURSM(dOwaakaparyaef)AFTERNOON3(Xyaan.Sday*...4i30-6>30EVENINO-4yaaraMen., Wad., M.,6i30-9i20POST-ORADU ATE1 yaar..lwlea a weakPracHca ceunaa aa*clMivaly.(Evanliio4Two yoon' cellaeaworic raquirad forantranca. Cawraaalead le dagraea.New doMat formin Sapl. end Pab.315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, III.WOODWORTH’SMAY BOOK SALE -Booming Along !THOUSANDS OF BARGAIN BOOKSSee our tables of 19c-39c-69c-98c books. Arm loadsof new specials added doily. It will pay you to taketime off and browse—^we're open until nine o'clockeach evening.SAMPLES OF OUR BARGAINS* Thornton Wilder, "Lucrese”—$2.00 edi 39c* Hutchins and Adler, "Diagrammatics"—^Now...98cWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsSPRING CELEBRATIONDANCECome Celebrate the Completion ofthe Bachelor's Exams.FRIDAY NIGHT AT INTERNATIONAL HOUSE5 Piece OrchestraTickets $.75 Stags $.50..-/I ■Four THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. MAY 18, 1938Seven TrackmenEnter ConferenceMeet This WeekHalcrow. Aims at SecondTitle in 440-Yard Run atOhio State.Led by Captain George Halcrow,one of the two defending titleholdersin the Western Conference outdoortrack meet, seven members of theUniversity cinder squad will travel toColumbus, Ohio, this week for the38th annual running of the meet, Fri¬day and Saturday.Halcrow, who ran the quarter milein 47.8 seconds to win the event atAnn Arbor last May, will again enterthe 440-yd. run. He has not approxi¬mated his last year’s time this spring,but Coach Ned Merriam points outthat the Maroon captain has not beenpressed in any of his races. Halcrowwas timed at 51.1 seconds on a muddytrack Monday in a dual meet whichChicago won from Northwestern.Plenty of CompetitionThe quarter-miler is certain to haveplenty of competition at Columbus,with Harley Howells of Ohio Statein the vanguard. Coach Merriam saidHalcrow may also run in the 220-yarddash.Another likely point winner for theMaroons is John Davenport, a sopho¬more football player who won the 60-yard dash at the indoor conferencemeet this winter. Davenport haslooked good in the dashes outdoorsand in the broad jump. He was highpoint man in the Northwestern meetthis week, winning the 100-yard dashand the broad jump and placing thirdin the 220-yard event. However, heis not in a class with Michigan’s Ne¬gro broad jumper, William Watson,the defending Big Ten title holder.Kobak Enters Broad JumpMathew Kobak, third place winnerin the Conference broad jump lastyear, will enter the event again thisseason at Columbus. He has beenjumping over 22 feet, but has notbeen outdistancing Davenport.Bob Cassels, captain of next year'sMaroon basketball team, will enterthe pole vault event. He placed inthe Drake Relays with a performanceof 13 feet. John Webster, whose besttime in the half mile run is 1 minute67.1 seconds, will run in this event thisweekend.Coach Merriam said that the milerelay team would probably be com¬prised of Halcrow, Webster, ChesterPowell and a fourth man, either Dav¬enport or Bob Wasem.Moholy-Nagy-(Continued from page 1)ied under different lighting and ac¬cording to the position of the personviewing it.'Then Professor Moholy-Nagy hadhis film run off. In it endlessly mov¬ing planes, curves, spheres, lines, andeccentric figures marched and tum¬bled across the screen. This was yetanother method of representing space,by forms in motion. This was the end.The students thought so too.Register for DowntownCollege June 15 to 18Persons who find it impossible toattend classes on the Quadranglesmay register on June 15 to 18 for theUniversity’s one term summer sessionunder the auspices of the UniversityCollege. This session will meet in thequarters of the University College at18 South Michigan Avenue from June20 to July 22.Four two-hour sessions will be heldeach week—forenoons, 8:30 to 10:30,10:30 to 12:30: afternoons, 1:30 to3:30. Schedules may be obtained bytelephoning Dearborn 3673 or writingto the Dean, University College, 18South Michigan. Hyman Writes Second ArticleIn Series on Progressive Party(Continued from page 1)crooked line instead of a geometricsymbol. This may be naivete on theirpart, but it is certainly not knavery.The symbolism in the phrases Gov¬ernor La Follette employs follows theLa Follette formula of traditionalism.It would have been possible for himto use world symbols such as “Work¬ers of the world’’ or “the dictatorshipof the proletariat.’’ These arc inclusivesymbols and appear in all revolution¬ary political parties. But we have in¬dicated that Governor La Follette be¬lieves these phrases react negativelyon the American masses. Hence hehas used and will continue to use localsymbols, rooted in American life andideology, under whose guise he caneffectively work out a “liberal” pro¬gram. What may prove so disturbingto most liberals is the absence ofworld revolutionary symbols, whichthey have come to associate with lib¬eralism. La Follette seems to haveburrowed his way under the familiarliberal slogans by seeking to substi¬tute a new set indigenous to theAmerican soil.* * *Yes, Phillip La Follette is con¬temptuous of intellectuals. But thisdoes not mean that he is anti-intel¬lectual. One of the great leaders inAmerican education is reported tohave said, “Every advance in educa¬tion is made over the bodies of count¬less educators.” Yet no one calledhim anti-intellectual. The alleged“contempt for the intellectuals” placedagainst a framework of La Follette’sreliance on a “brain trust” must begiven a very restricted meaning. Gov¬ernor La Follette’s “contempt for theintellectuals” is limited to a sense ofannoyance with those social scientistswho condemn him for the changes inhis political formulations, withoutunderstanding that the changes cameabout because of a change in thefacts on which those formulationshad been based. He is annoyed by thestandardized imperfection of theirsystems. He believes that the socialsciences are functions of the practicalintellect and should be directly relatedto the problems in social relationsneeding solution. There are a numberof other intellectuals who raised thesesame objections to the social sciencesand yet no one has called them anti¬intellectual. In fact, in the generaldistribution of name-calling, thesesame men here used the word “anti¬intellectual” to describe their col¬leagues to whom La Follette also ob¬jects.Yes, Phillip La Follette has a re¬markable manner. But apparentlysomething has decayed in a societywhich holds mere charm of manner tobe a vice. Were he aloof where he isintimate, were he pompous where heis simple, were he indolent where heis energetic, were he austere wherehe is democratic, were he corruptwhere he is just, were he stupid wherehe is astute, would he then be a properleader? And yet, because of a mannerwhich inspires followers he is heldin suspicion. Something has decayedin a society which says, in effect, “Ifear him because he inspires my ad¬miration.”* * «Whether the right people were con¬sulted is a question of fact. Paul Y.Anderson maintains that Senator Nor¬ris was not consulted prior to theMadison meeting. Despite Paul Y. An¬ derson’s constitutional objections toeverything except his own birth, heremains as one of America’s mostforthright journalists and there isno reason to doubt the truth of hisstatement. But however truthful hischarge, it seems unwarranted to con¬demn a political movement for anoversight of one individual—even ifthat oversight was deliberate. Andthere is no evidence that it was.Attention is called to the fact thatLa Guardia has given but qualifiedsupport to the National ProgressiveParty. Now La Guardia as a politi¬cian has ail the characteristics ofPhillip La Follette. He puts on a goodshow. He is clever. He is incorruptible.He has an excellent sense of timing.And he too is ambitious. It seemsevident that he hopes, along with theaid of William Allen White, to gaincontrol of a liberal Republican Party.If that control should be denied him,it is likely that he will ally himselfwith the National Progressive Party.For, in New York City,, La Guardiahas performed the same function withhis Fusion Party that the La Follettesperformed in Wisconsin with theirProgressive Party. As an ambitiousand shrewd politician, he has, by hisqualified support of the new party,placed himself in a position of great¬est mobility—to move forward toeither the offered candidacy of theRepublican Party (which seems un¬likely) or to an alliance with the LaFollettes.> tAttention is also called to the factthat John L. Lewis has little to sayfor the National Progressive Party.One liberal magazine tells us that afew days before the Madison meetingwhere the party was launched, PhillipLa Follette met with Lewis over din¬ner, but that the plans of the partywere not cjven discussed. The pictureintended to be communicated, is thatof a deliberate snub to Lewis, and byimplication, the aid of labor will bedeliberately rejected by the NationalProgressives. Here again there existsan issue of fact.Assume the position most unfavor¬able to the La Follettes. Assume thatJohn L. Lewis’ words about the Na¬tional Progressive Party are to betaken at their full value. Now placeyourself in the position of GovernorLa Follette. Though he does not be¬lieve in the popular front concept, heis willing to use its techniques. Hewishes to tap the reservoir of themiddle class and draw it into a liber¬al party. He knows the mentality ofthat class. He is not a perfectionist.He does not believe things happen allat once, but in stages. He knows that if labor does not see in the liberalrecord of both his brother and himselfa genuine interest in their well-being,then labor must be blind. But laboris not blind. Labor will probably haveno other choice but to follow the LaFollettes. Since labor must come alonganyway, why not capture the middleclass first? Do not frighten them.Gather them into the fold. Once theyare in, tell them what a conscientiousmother should tell her daughter.From a La Follette point of view,it is arguable that far from John L.Lewis of his own volition being luke¬warm in his enthusiasm about theNational Progressive Party, the LaFollettes may have asked him to with¬hold his identification with the Na¬tional Progressive Party until theycan educate the middle class intorealizing that John L. Lewis is not a“kiss-of-death boy.” From Lewis’point of view, it is important to re¬member that he is the head of a labororganization which must play politicswith any incumbant administration 24hours a day for every day in the year.There are two crucial years before1940 in which the faith of the CIOmay be decided. Why undermine what¬ever standing the CIO has with thepresent administration by overtlyaligning the organization to a newemergent party whose fate is uncer¬tain.(To be continued)Financial Editor ConwayTalks at Smoker TonightJ. P. Conway, financial editor ofthe Chicago Journal of Ck)mmerce,will speak at a smoker sponsored byDelta Sigma Pi, professional frater¬nity, in the School of Business, at8 tonight in the Commons room ofHaskell hall. Conway will speak on,“The Business Situation in the Lightof Finance and the Stock Market.”An informal discussion will followthe talk.All business students who are in¬terested are invited to attend. Thiswill be the last smoker sponsored bythe club this year.THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mqr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOB MEN AND WOMENRepcdring and R«mod«ling ofAny Cloth, or Fur GarmontOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. SSth 8l. near UniversityTeL Midway 3311 Today on theQuadranglesBWO. Ida Noyes, Alumnae Roomat 12. ’’Federation. Ida Noyes, Library, at4.Wyvern. Ida Noyes, Alumnae Roomat 4:30.Arrian. Ida Noyes, Room B, at 4:30.“C” Club Settlement Party. IjaNoyes Gymnasium, at 7.ASU, Executive Committee. IdaNoyes, Room C, at 7.Poetry Club. Ida Noyes, W’AARoom, at 7:30.Goodwill Celebration to commem¬orate 124 years of ‘ peace betweenUnited States and Great Britain.Speakers: Dr. Charles W. Gilkey forU. S., Richard E. Elmhirst for Eng¬land. Fountain of Time (69th andCottage), at 2.Delta Sigma Pi. Hutchinson Com¬mons at 12.Zoology Club. Zoology 14 at 4:30."A Statistical and ExperimentalStudy of the Tricolor Pattern of theGuinea Pig.”Medical Conference, Medicine 137,at 4:30.Pediatrics-Roentgenology Seminar.Billings 536A, at 2.Roentgenology Seminar. Medicine137, at 7.Obstetrics and Gynecology Confer¬ence. Dora DeLee Hall, at 8.Thirty-fifth Annual contest in Biblereading for the Milo P. Jewett Prize,Joseph Bond Chapel, at 4:30.Carillon Recital. Rockefeller Mem¬orial Chapel, at 4:30.Phonograph Concert. Social ScienceAssembly Room, 12:30.Eine Kleine Nacht-musik—Mozart.Les Noces—Stravinsky.Kimbork Theatre6240 KIMBARK AYE.WednesdayAlexander Korda’s‘STORM IN A TEACUP’—PLUS—Evelyn Venable in“FEMALE FUGITIVE’’PLUS AUDIOSCOPICSr-LEARN TO FLYSpecial School RotesGov. Licensed Airplanes andInstructorsNEW AIRPLANESWrite or CediMIDWESTFlying School83rd CICBHO Portsmouth 6606SBia^BBBKKBiaBqaiaKBBiaaaHiwgiaMMHB^^Meet Your Friends at theCAMPUS PHARMACYCor. SSth and Univ. Dorchester 10267-10269TASTY SANDWICHESSUPER DELUXE MILESHAKESFraternities - DormitoriesUse our Free Delivery ServiceWe Pay lor the Phone Call Friday Night May 20th isUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO NIGHTin theCONTINENTAL ROOMSTEVENS HOTELMARVIN FREDERICAnd His Orchestra FeaturingGLOVER & LAMAEwho present theCHAMPAGNE HOURevery night at 9, an hour of fun and laughterDance Contests — French Champagneand Free Dinners as prizesALSO—UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO CAMPUS ENTERTAINERS1. Ginny Shilton—songstress2. Tex Rosie—tap dancerDINNER FROM $2.00 SUPPER MINIMUM $1.50NEVER A COVER CHARGE IN THE AIR-COOLEDCONTINENTAL ROOMSTEVENS HOTEL