Todaj/s HeadlinesCap and Gown conies out today, page1.Alumni School begins Tuesday, page1.Blackfriars announces next year’s of¬ficers, page 1.Phi Sigs win I-M baseball crown,page 4. Vol. 38, No. 115 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1938 Price Five CentsAnnounce Termsof $1,500,000Research GiftRockefeller Grant ExtendsScale of Biological In¬vestigation.The Rockefeller Foundation hasmade a conditional grant of $1,600,000to the University for endowment ofresearch in the biological sciences.President Robert Maynard Hutchinsannounced today. To obtain thegrant, President Hutchins said, theUniversity must secure an additionalsum of $500,000 from outside sourcesbefore June 30, 1941.During the next three years theFoundation will provide a total of$180,000, at the rate of not more than$60,000 a year, for biological re¬search. This grant has been made sothat the equivalent of the income ofthe capital sum of $1,500,000 will beavailable to the University during theperiod allowed for raising the match¬ing sum of $500,000. Should the Uni¬versity be able to meet the conditionin a shorter period, the temporary an¬nual grants will be cancelled.Expand ScaleSince 1929 the Foundation has beenproviding annual grants for supportof basic laboratory research in fun¬damental biological problems. Theendowment will permanently supportthis investigation, on a somewhatlarger scale than in the past.“Fundamental research in the bio¬logical sciences must be carried on toachieve systematic advance in medi¬cine. When the General EducationBoard gave us $3,000,000 in Decem¬ber, 1936, to develop our MedicalSchool, it specifically recognized thisrelationship.“The University’s clinical work,conducted for research purposes, isin close co-operation with the naturalsciences departments. We recentlyappointed an eminent physicist. Dr.James Franck, to a professorship inphysical chemistry to study a bio¬logical problem.’’Grants Previously ImportantMany of the leading biological sci¬entists of the University and muchof its important research work hasbeen supported in part by the Foun¬dation’s annual grants during thepast ten years.The recent ^ ..covery by Dr. LesterDragstedt of lipocaic, hormone whichenables diabetics to utilize fat, as in¬sulin does sugar, was one of the proj¬ects supported by the annual grant.Two of the most important of thelong-term > projects assisted were thework of Professor Fred C. Koch, bio¬chemist, on sex hormones, and thestudies of Professors Frank R. Lillieand Carl H. Moore on the biology ofsex. The research of Dean WilliamH. Taliaferro on the mechanism ofimmunity, particularly to diseasescaused by parasites, also received al¬lotments from the grants. Elect Perry I-FCommittee HeadHart Perry, Alpha Delta Phi, willhead the Interfratemity Committeefor 1938-39 according to the electionsheld yesterday by the retiring Com¬mittee. Other members of the com¬mittee are Roger Nielsen, Delta Up-silon, secretary; A1 Jaffe, Phi SigmaDelta; Burt Moyer, Kappa Sigma;and Bob Jones, Psi Upsilon.When asked what his policy wouldbe next year Perry said: “First of allwe’ll try to clean up rushing a bitby redefining it and making the terma little broader perhaps. More impor¬tant, we will try to find some worth¬while interfraternity contact bside thebeer parties of the past. Then we willtry to cultivate a more constructiveattitude toward the University amongfraternities than the negative attitudethat has prevailed in the past.”Perry is chairman-elect of theAmerican Student Union, a memberof Owl and Serpent and has taken anactive part in the Student PromotionBoard and the Intramural department.Nielsen is chairman of the Intra¬mural department for next year anda member of Owl and Serpent.Distribute Cap andGown in LexingtonHall Today at 12Less type and more pictures, fewerpages and conservative make-up arethe earmarks of the 1938 Cap andGown according to Herbert Larson,Publisher. The books will be readyfor distribution this noon at the Capand Gown office in Lexington hall.The chief innovation is the 20,000word history of the University com¬piled by Paul Fischer and a staff ofassistants plentifully garnished withcuts from the files of the Alumni andother University offices. A secondchange from the conventional year¬book is the omission of a section of“Views” as such, substituting shots ofthe quadrangles spread throughoutthe book. There are more than 1000pictures of individuals, and the totalnumber of pictures is over 6000.Make-up is balanced, and the dom¬inant motif is Old English in an ef¬fort to harmonize with the generaltone of the University community,according to Robert Upton, Editor.Particularly ambitious are the 16pages of two color printing.Echo is carried over from previousyears, 4 pages smaller, boasting morecuts than previously, fewer solidcolumns of type. In place of old Timecuts, all Echo cuts are of campus af¬fairs. Selected as man of the year toadorn the cover succeeding FredericWoodward of last year, and RobertM. Hutchins the year before, is Wil¬liam McNeill, editor of the Maroon.A total of 700 books have beenprinted, and since there are about 600subscriptions already sold, the numberof copies still available for sale isless than 100. Copies reserved forsubscribers will be held only for twodays, until next Wednesday. The Capand Gown office will be open for dis¬tribution of books from noon up till6 today, but will be closed Saturday,Sunday and Monday, and will beopen all day Tuesday and Wednesday.Pulse Mixes Walgreen and Norton,But Ends Year With Good IssueBy EMMETT DEADMANThe last issue of Pulse went on saleyesterday. Containing its usual in¬accuracies and condensations and per¬versions of the English tongue, it isnonetheless a good magazine. TheMaroon’s suspending publication for aweek gave it a chance to print someoriginal news and many of the storiesrefiect a more than casual coverageof this news.Its uncovering of an alleged at¬tempt by T. Nelson Metcalf to dis¬place Walter Hebert as tennis coachwas a real scoop. Its searching be¬hind the scenes at the Board of Vo¬cational Guidance and Placement tofind news which was something be¬sides statistics is especially commend¬able.The survey is of the Division of theHumanities. Asking is it a hodge¬podge, Pulse finds there is real orderiin its organization and presents a complete picture of its background,its methods, and its personnel.Holding a post mortem over theUniversity year. Pulse agreed withEcho that William Hardy McNeill isindeed the man of the year. In thesame article the editors pause to listLucille Walgreen as the woman ofthe year in 1936. As the Maroon verywell knows, and as Pulse, who was toobusy casting aspersions on Maroonspelling to find out, should know, hername was really Lucille Norton.Altogether the issue is a fitting cli¬max to a year of exceptional activityby John Morris. Whether the maga¬zine can go without the effort whichhe gave to it must for the time re¬main unanswered.But by all means, buy this issue.It is a good survey of the Univer¬sity year, and it is one of the fewtimes T^ilse has come up to expecta¬tions. University Alumni Gather Tuesdayfor, Third Annual School; LargerNumber; Than Last Year ExpectedBlackfriars ElectsFogle Abbot forNext Year’s ShowMendenhall, Nielsen, MoyerComplete New’ Board ofSuperiors.George Fogle was named as newAbbot of Blackfriars, and HarryMendenhall was named as Prior atthe Order’s banquet held last Tues¬day, May 24, at the Windermere hotel.Robert Moyer was elected Scribe andRoger Nielsen was elected as Hos¬pitaller. The new Board of Superiors,announced that it is considering plansfor moving the production date ofthe Friars’ annual show back into thewinter quarter, or at least into theearly part of the Spring quarter.Abbot and Pribr of the Order areappointed by the retiring Board ofSuperiors. The retiring 1937-38 Boardwas composed of Frank Carey,Charles Burnett, Robert Andersonand Leo O’Neill. The Scribe is electedby active members of the Order, andthe Hospitaller is elected by the en¬tire company of the production.List Fogle’s ActivitiesGeorge Fogle, a student in Physicsat the University, is a member ofthe Sigma Chi fraternity. One of the“founding fathers” of the Chapel Un¬ion, he is also a member of the Uni¬versity Radio club operating stationW9JJT from Eckhart. Working withthe Friars he was progressively amember of the lighting crew, thestage crew, then Junior manager incharge of Production for “Where inthe World.”Harry Mendenhall, new Prior, wasJunior Business manager this year.He is a member of the Phi Kappa Psifraternity, a pre-med student. He is amember of Iron Mask, has been activein Freshman Orientation, and is amember of the University SettlementBoard. Robert Moyer, Scribe, is amember of the Kappa Sigma frater¬nity.Worked on PromRoger Nielsen, Hospitaller, is amember of Delta Upsilon, and hasworked on Washington Prom com¬mittees, on Inter-fraternity councilcommittees, and is a Junior managerof Intramural baseball. He has beenwith Blackfriars for three years, thisyear in the Chorus.Carr Succeeds Shellyas Ida Noyes DirectorMrs. Harvey Carr, Social Adviser,and Miss Edith Ballwebber, assistantprofessor of Physical Education, willshare the duties of Miss Mary JoShelly, who resigns this year aschairman of the Women’s Division ofthe Department of Physical Educa¬tion and Director of Ida Noyes Club¬house. Miss Ballwebber will becomeacting-chairman of the women’s divi¬sion of the department of PhysicalEducation.Mrs. Carr, as director of the IdaNoyes Clubhouse, will direct the so¬cial activities which center at IdaNoyes Hall. Mrs. Carr is the wife ofProfessor Harvey Carr, who will re¬tire next fall as chairman of the De¬partment of Psychology.Gideonse Leaves forColumbia UniversityHarry D. Gideonse, associate pro¬fessor of Economics and spearhead ofthe faculty opposition to PresidentHutchins has resigned his position toaccept a position with Columbia Uni¬versity, it was announced yesterday.Professor Gideonse will engage ingraduate teaching at Columbia andwill act as chairman of the economicsdepartment at Barnard College aswell.Known as the leading publicist ofthe University, and for his brilliantperformance on the Roundtable, Gid-eonse’s resignation comes after a longperiod of friction with PresidentHutchins.Several times in the past he hasseriously considered leaving the Uni¬versity. and almost went to the col¬lege of the City of New York lastfall. OWL & SERPENT1938-39Hugh Hanry CompbellRobert Edwin CauolsRoy Emmott DoadmemLewis Bernard HamityRobert Edword MerriamMartin Dole MillerRoger Martin NielsenFrancis Hart PerryPhilip Blessed SchneringJohn VondoWoterWilUam Edward WebbeUniversity Accepts$5,000 to EstablishPoetry Prize FundGift of a fund of $5,000 to establisha prize for poets in honor of HarrietMonroe was announced at a dinnerpreceding the dedication of the Har¬riet Monroe Library of Modem Po¬etry at the University Tuesday night.The fund was established in ac¬cordance with the terms of MissMonroe’s will, her brother, WilliamS. Monroe, Chicago engineer, said.Under the terms of the gift, when¬ever $500 of income from the fundhas accumulated, the University willappoint a committee of three poets,preferably from different parts ofthe country, to make the award.It was the wish of Miss Monroe,expressed in the will, that the prizeshould be given to any “Americanpoet of distinction or of distinguishedpromise.” “It is my desire,” she di¬rected, “that in making the award theCommittee shall give preference topoets of progressive rather thanacademic tendencies.”Accept CollectionVice-President Frederic Woodwardaccepted on behalf of the Universitythe fund and Miss Monroe’s libraryand collection of valuable documents.The dinner and dedication of thelibrary were conducted by the Friendsof the University of Chicago Library,of which Lloyd Lewis, biographerand newspaperman, is president. Twohundred and twenty-five guests werepresent.Four nationally known poets spokeat the dinner. Carl Sandburg, whose“Chicago Poems” first appeared in“Poetry,” which Miss Monroe foundedand edited for 24 years before herdeath in 1936, spoke in appreciationof Miss Monroe’s service to poets.Ford Madox Ford, British poet andnovelist, expressed the greetings offoreign poets; Archibald MacLeish,poet and editor, spoke “in defense ofpoesy.” George Dillon, editor of“Poetry,” presented the collection tothe University.Hutchins Speaks at192nd ConvocationPresident Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins will address the 192nd convocationof the University in Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel June 10. The con¬vocation prayer service for candidatesis to take place this Sunday in theChapel at 10 and will be followed at11 by the convocation sermon to bedelivered by Charles W. Gilkey, Deanof the Chapel.A total of approximately 980 de¬grees will be conferred. "The higherdegrees will be awarded in the morn¬ing and the 620 bachelors degrees areto be given in the afternoon. Ticketsfor the Convocation will be availablein Cobb 203 during office hours fromThursday, June 2, to noon, Thursday,June 9. Personal applications arenecessary. Two tickets will be givento each candidate.Academic dress is required forcandidates at all occasions and capand gowns may be rented at the Uni¬versity Bookstore. Candidates shouldreport to William H. McNeill, stu¬dent head marshal, in the Chapelbasement at 9:45 Sunday for theprayer service which is voluntary, at10:15 Friday for higher degrees, andat 2:15 for bachelors degree. A college which has no worriesabout a winning football team, norneeds to encourage its students tostudy will open a four-day term atthe University on May 31. It is thethird annual Alumni School and itsstudent body will be larges thanmany a flourishing standard college.First held in 1936, the “AlumniSchool” than had 11 individual matric¬ulants who attended an average ofslightly more than four class sessionseach. Last year the enrollment jumpedto 2,100 registrants and a total at¬tendance at the 11 sessions of 5,800.Though the majority attending livedwithin a 100 mile radius of Chicago,200 of the registrants came from agreater distance—some as far as thePacific Coast.This year Charlton T. Beck, alumnisecretary, is anticipating an evenbigger number of serious alumni, andis carrying the lectures, by a soundsystem, from Mandel Hall, whichholds 1100 people, to one of thelounges of the adjacent Reynoldsclub house, where several hundredmore alumni can hear by means ofloudspeakers.Backstage at the UniversityDuring the time the Alumni Uni¬versity is in session alumni will beafforded to go “Backstage at theUniversity.” The afternoon lecturecourses will be preceded by threetours starting from the Reynolds clubat 10:30 each morning, designed totake graduates behind the scenes ofUniversity research.Wednesday, June 1, Maude Slye and(Continued on page 3)Professor E. Rickert,Chaucerian Scholar,Died Last MondayProfessor emeritus of EnglishEdith Rickert, noted Chaucerianscholar of the University died Mon¬day morning at her home, 6209 Kim-bark avenue. Death resulted froma heart disease which had confinedher to bed for two year. Collabora¬tor with Professor emeritus JohnMatthews Manly, she and Dr. Manlyformed one of the best known part¬nerships in the field of scholarship.Since her appointment as an as¬sociate professor in 1924, Dr. Rickertand Dr. Manly have been workingto establish a critical edition of the“Canterbury Tales.” This research,which will be published this autumn,has provided a text which is as closeto the original as scholarship canproduce. Despite her illness. Dr.Rickert continued work on the proofsuntil the time of her death.Located 83 ManuscriptsIn the early years of the investi¬gation, Professors Manly and Rickertlocated all the known Chaucerianmanuscripts in a literary detectivesearch that finally brought the num¬ber of manuscripts to eighty-three.They persuaded the owners to permitthem to make photostatic copies ofthe manuscripts, and the Universitythereby became the leading center ofChaucerian work so that even Eng¬lish scholars have come to the Mid¬way to study the collection.During the war, Miss Rickertworked in Washington as a memberof the Military Intelligence Divisionof the General Staff, decodifying en- -emy messages.Miss Rickert was born in Dover,0., July 11, 1871. A graduate ofVassar College, where she later,taught, in 1891, she took her Ph. D.degree from the University in 1889.She taught in Lyons Township andHyde Park high schools for fiveyears, while working for her doctor¬ate. Made an associate professor ofEnglish at the University in 1924, shereceived the rank of Professor in1930. She became emeritus last yearafter passing the retirement agelimit.Dr. Rickert was the author of nu¬merous scholarly works on earlyEnglish literature, including “TheOld English Offa Saga,” “The Ba-bees’ Book,” “Early English Roman¬ces,” and “Ancient English ChristmasCarols.” She wrote several novels,best known of which is “SevernWood,” published in 1927.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1938PLATFORML Creation of a vigorous campus community.2. Abolition of intercollegiate othlefics.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plan.5. A chastened presidentSpurlos VersenktThis is the time for all good men to sum up theyear, and who are we not to follow their example ? So,gentlemen, we give you the Maroon for 1937-38, mayit soon be forgotten and its sins forgiven.The Maroon is many things to many men. To therelatively small sector of the campus that takes anactive interest in campus affairs it is a medium for in¬formation more or less inaccurate—this year, sadly,rather more than less. To most of the campus it is aname, slightly tinged with pink, if we are to believereports that have sifted through from that shadowyrealm of professors who are only professors and notmen, and of students who are workmen going to school,or students and nothing more. To a few the Maroonis a combination fraternity and club. To even fewer,the Maroon is an instrument for the expansion of theiregoism. To practically nobody is the Maroon a news¬paper, and therein lies its great defect.Due to personal friction on the Board of Control,enhanced by undiplomatic administration and a verysmall staff, the Maroon this year has been even less of anewspaper than usual. Many stories have been mis¬handled and most stories have been only partially dugout—an announcement has usually served without thewhy and wherefor. Pulse is more than kind—it is in¬accurate—when it says the Maroon has been undistin¬guished. It has been distinguished for its sins.Not the least of the Maroon’s sins in the eyes ofmany has been the editorial policy, and now that it isall over it might be well to glance at the mastheadagain and see what has become of the planks of ourplatform.Creation of a vigorous campus community. Well,obviously we haven’t. Nevertheless a new set of wordsand with them a new awareness of the social inade¬quacy of the University campus have found fairly gen¬eral acceptance among the groups that dominate stu¬dents’ activities at least. Some progress toward cheap¬ening and bringing social affairs to ^he campus hasbeen made, and next year’s Social Committee promisesto continue this year’s progress. The Maroon does nottake credit for this transformation, but claims to havehelped in spreading the new vocabulary. Adequate so¬lution, if there is any, is still far away.Abolition of intercollegiate athletics. That argumentseems a bit musty by now. The Maroon made no con¬verts, merely raised an old problem to new intensity bythe extremity of its position. The solution of the prob¬lem is as far away as ever.Progressive politics. Sounds nice since everybodyprogresses. The question is in what direction, and herethe Maroon has on more than one occasion resolutelyseized its own tail and gone round and round in circles,progressing most furiously fast. To apply principleswhich are unsure to cases which are complicated andobscured by humanitarian sentiment against immediatesuffering and wrong, is always difficult, and that is whatthe Maroon has faced. Our analysis indicated onecourse of action—conservative and isolationist—; ourbias was liberal and behind the effort to build an or¬dered world community. Revision of the College Plan. Originally this re¬ferred to a great scheme for the reorganization of Uni¬versity teaching, but before the blue-print for the fu¬ture escaped us, we came to realize that it is the subtleintellectual background of the teachers and studentsthat alone can make courses live; that pouring poorwine into new skins does not change the flat taste andmay burst the skins. So instead we talked about in¬tellectual community, synthesis, and similar abstrac¬tions; things important, but giving the editorials anunmistakable air of absurdity in so solemnly layingdown the law and nonchalantly overthrowing rival law¬givers, all within 600 words ground out daily to size.But the biggest fiasco was the last plank—a chas¬tened president. Originally we meant to light intoPresident Hutchins for undiplomatic, even unfair, han¬dling of faculty and criticize efforts to impose his phil¬osophic views on the University. Unfortunately he wasso diplomatic in his handling of the buzzing nuisancewhich was the Maroon and of his faculty that therewas no occasion for the first, and a host of appoint¬ments of men who obviously disagreed with the Presi¬dent’s ideas knocked the props from under the second.The plank was thus left like a magic carpet suspendedin mid air, a momento of our brash temerity.All of which is to say that our ideas have changedduring the year, and leave us less to write about nowthan we had before our fallacies and futilities becameso clear.Wandering WillieSuggestions ForGRADUATION GIFTSU. OF C JEWELRY BOOKSPins - Rings - Compacts - Watch CharmsOTHER GIFTS WITH U. OF C. SEALWall PlaquesBook EndsPillowsBlanketsFOUNTAIN PEN and PENCIL SETSPURSES —POTTERYKORK-CRAFT CREATIONSCAMPUS ETCHINGSGRADUATION CARDS BIOGRAPHYBarnard—EAGLE FORGOTTENRorke—STORY OF MELINA RORKEPOETRYMacLeish—LAND OF THE FREETeasdale—COLLECTED POEMSNON-nCTIONde Kruif—FIGHT FOR LIFEAdamic—MY AMERICAMumford—CULTURE OF CITIESFICTIONLancaster—PROMENADEBentley—SLEEP IN PEACEBriston—THE HANDSOME ROADU. OF C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue End Co-op Picketing; I Exhibit Collection ofClerks Join Union Paintings in GoodspeedThe dispute between the Hyde ParkConsumers’ Co-operative store andthe Retail Clerks’ Union came to anend this week, following a conferencebetween Professors Paul M. Douglasand Arthur C. McGiffert, representingthe Co-op, and the Executive Councilof the Chicago Federation of Labor.President John Fitzpatrick of theA.F. of L. wholeheartedly supportedthe stand of the Co-op Board in re¬fusing to coerce its employees to jointhe Union, and suggested that theclerks meet with several labor repre¬sentatives and discuss the matter.This was done and the clerks reversedtheir former decision not to join. An exhibition of the paintiiur^the late Robert H.rshe. direZthe Art Institute of Chicago, nowhangs in Renaissance Society’s roomsin Goodspeed hall. The collection hasbeen loaned by the Harshe family Zthe Art Institute, the Toledo Museum, and Mr. Charles Worchester*The exhibition which consists ofoils, water colors and several draw-ings, will hang until June 7.LEARN TO DANCECORRECTLYTAKE PRIVATE LESSONSHYDE PARK 3080HOURS: 10 A. M. to 10 P.M.TERESA DOLAN154t E. t3RD ST.“Fritz” Woodward is a versatile guy. Not only ishe an effective vice-president, stooging for Hutchinsupon occasion, but on the side he is a perennial star offaculty Quadrangle Club revels. It is this latter talentthat he will bring to bear next fall, if present plans gothrough, for he is to sub for newly appointed W’illiamRandall as Coach of the Dramatic Association for thefirst half of the season while Randall visits the Arabsin Palestine. “FVitz” will be relieved of his vice-presi¬dential duties since he reaches the retiring age, and ap¬parently aims to fill his leisure with a little play. We ‘need more vice-presidents like that.At the other end of the University heirarchy isThomas B. Stauffer, garrulous philosopher and idolaterof McKeon. Last April 1 was a real April fool dayfor him. Both Harvard and the University politely de¬clined his applications for a fellowship on that day.But the rejection was only a prelude to promotion, fora day later he found himself a member of the faculty—assistant to Chamer Perry in a new course on thephilosophical implications of social science.Johnny Morris having gone through the Universitymill from nursery school to graduate student would likestay even longer. His latest is a plan that would createa University publisher to manage student publications,the official calendar, etc. Such a job would just fit himhe feels.Rumor has it that the University is emphasizing therowboats of Jackson Park more in its summer prospec¬tuses. The explanation is the drop of over 20 per centin registration last summer. Rowboats are expectedto compete better with Northwestern beaches. Direct from your rooms, at lowcost, high economy and onemove: Merely phone our agent to call. No extra charge for deliveryin all cities and principal towns. No waiting around, no dickeringAnd you can send "Collect," if you’re pressed for cash.Handy? Rath-rr.' And fast as well as convenient. When you returnto college, go summering, or travel anywhere, ship by the same depend¬able, helpful route. Special tags and labels —by far the best to use —yours free for the asking. When you phone, tell our agent the exacttime to call and you’ll enjoy your train trip immensely. |70 E. RANDOLPH STREETPhone HARriaon 9700CHICAGO. ILLRAILWj^AOBNCV^ XPRESSNC.NATION.WIDC RAIL-AIR SKRVICIAT THE HUBspecial sellingTENNIS RACQUETSBancroft"*The Racquetof Champions**Bancroft racquets are used and en¬dorsed by many of the ranking tennisplayers of the country. Featured inthis sale are guaranteed perfect 1938models at special prices. All strungto specifications. All with leathergrips. All frames available in variousgrades of gut. Typical prices follow;(Strung with finest split sheep gut)B Plain Forest Hills(Strung with split sheep gut)3 Internationalist(Strung with silk gut)3 Champion DeLuxe(Strung with silk gut) RegularPrice OurPrice$19.00it) $14.95. 18.00I 13.95. 14.50 9.45. 9.00 6.95. 7.50 5.95fSHOliiaStmtm mnd Jaekttn. CHICAGO - EVANSTON - OAK PARK - GARYPage ThreeCampusBriefs* « *Split Ryerson Estate;University Receives ShareAn equal beneficiary with the ArtInstitute and Field Museum underthe estate of the late Martin Ryerson,the University recently received itsshare of the books, furniture, andpainting's bequeathed by his will. Mrs.Ryerson, who died last September,held a life interest in the estate andit was not distributed until her death.Harper Library and Kelly Hall eachreceived part of the library from theChicago home, and the OrthogenicSchool and Drexel House shared agood deal of the furniture. Portraitsof both Mr. and Mrs. Ryerson havebeen hung in Ryerson laboratory.Furnishings of Bonnie Brae, theLake Geneva house, are being distrib¬uted this week. All three l)eneficia-ries receive an equal share of the in¬vestments from the estate.CommonwealthScholarsTwo Commonwealth P’und Fellowshave been assigned to the Universityfor two years of study beginning nextautumn, the Fund announced recently.David C. Bryson, from Edinburghand Corpus Christi College, Oxford,will spend his first year in the studyof American history with specialreference to political institutions. Hissecond year will be devoted to re¬search on pressure groups in theAmerican democracy. William D.Clark, from Oriel College, Oxford, al¬so is interested in history, but hisapproach is by way of philosophy. Hewill work out the meaning of free¬dom and authority both in philosophyand modern political theory.Cancer Expert TeachesHere This SummerDr. J. W\ Cook, professor of chem¬istry, the Royal Cancer Hospital ofLondon, discoverer and synthesizerof the chemical hydrocarbons whichproduce cancer, will present twocourses on cancer at the Universitythis summer. Announcement of hisappointment was made today byPresident Robert M. Hutchins. Dr.Cook will lecture in the first term ofthe summer quarter, June 16 to July21, offering two courses in the de¬partment of chemistry. One will beon “Cancer Producing ChemicalAgents and their Biological Ef¬fects;” the other, “Polycyclic Hydro¬carbons and Their Relationship toBiological Problems.” This lattercourse is concerned with the relation¬ship between cancer and hormones.Dr. Cook will lecture before theAmerican Chemical Society on June24.Elect Schmitt toAcademyBernadotte E. Schmitt, professorof Modem History at the University,was notified this week of his electionto the American Academy of Artsand Sciences. The Academy is thesecond oldest learned society inAmerica, being junior only to theAmerican Philosophical Society,founded b y Benjamin Franklin.Among the organizers of the Acad¬emy established in 1780, was JohnAdams. Professor Schmitt is theauthor of “The Coming of the War,1914,” awarded the Pulitzer Prize inhistory in 1931.Award FrenchDepartment PrizesEight first year French studentswho held upper quartile grades forthree quarters, and did extensivereading of superior quantity andquality, will receive honor prizes ifthey call at the office of the Frenchdepartment, Cobb 412. Assistant Pro¬fessor Rowland will be there thismorning from 9 to 12 to awardFrench dictionaries to the honor stu¬dents.Receiving awards are: Mrs. BeulahEngland, Donald Fabian, RichardHagen, Josephine Kelly, Jane Morris,Edith Shore/, Leonard Weiss, Rose¬mary Wiley.This is the third year that thesimilar prizes have been given tostudents in French 101-2-3.Quantrell LendsPrint CollectionCurrier and Ives prints of famousracing scenes, and Indian fights, anda number of other prints of gamebirds and hunting dogs are anmngthe 80 pictures lent to the Reynoldsclub by Ernest E. Quantrell, Univer¬sity trustee. The pictures will hang THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1938Present “C” Awards atWAA Dinner ThursdayMary Jo Shelly, will present the“C” awards for the current year atthe WAA dinner on Thursday at 6:30in Ida Noyes hall. Marcia Lakemanwill act as undergraduate toastmis-tress at the dinner.Margaret Ewald will present thetennis cup to the winner of the an¬nual tennis tournament, now in prog¬ress. Alumnae toastmistress is LouiseViehoff, who will introduce Dr. RuthTaylor, guest speaker of the evening.Twenty-two campus women repre¬senting all WAA activities are sellingtickets which are priced at $1.10.Preference for seating location can beindicated at the time the ticket ispurchased. Edith McKee is in chargeof ticket sales.Alumni -(Continued from page 1)her cancer prevention laboratorieswill be surveyed. Thursday the tourwill visit Guy T. Buswell’s eye move¬ment laboratories in the basement ofGraduate Education building wherereading habits are scientificallyanalyzed and corrected, Friday Dr. M.Llewelyn Raney, head of the Univer¬sity libraries, will explain the workdone in the microphotography labor¬atory in transferring current news¬paper files to small films, which arelater read by a special magnifyingI apparatus.Opening SessionThe opening session on May 31 willbe on “The Attack of Unemploymentand Plans for Social Security InAmerica and Great Britain.” GraceAbbott, professor of public welfareadministration; Frank Bane, execu¬tive director of the Federal SocialSecurity Board, and Ronald Davisonof the London School of Economicsand the British Ministry of Labor, avisiting lecturer in the School ofSocial Service Administration, will bethe speakers, each taking a specificapproach to the question.The second day of the University,will be devoted to the biologicalsciences.In the afternoon, five members ofthe staff of the division of BiologicalSciences will lecture. Carl R. Moorewill speak on sex hormones, “TheWisdom of the Animal Body andSome Follies of Man,” Louis L. Thurs-tone will speak on mental attitudes,“Why We Get That W’ay,” and Hein¬rich Kluver will discuss “The HairyApe and Other Allies.” The talks ofGeorge K. K. Link and Eugene M. K.Geiling are entitled “The Plants AreNot So Dumb,” and “An Assist fromMr. Whale.”Our Social SuperiorsAlfred E. Emerson, telling about“Our Social Superiors—Termites,”will be the guest speaker at a dinner inHutchinson Commons that evening.Lectures at Mandel hall will continueat 8 with Franklin C. McLean speak¬ing on bones, William Bloom discuss-,ing “Culture via Tissue Culture,” andin the North lounge and in club houserooms on the second and third floors.Hoffman Speaks atBusiness Dinner“The Collective Responsibility ofBusiness for Free Enterprise” wasdiscussed by Paul G. Hoffman, presi¬dent of the Studebaker Corporationof South Bend and a trustee of theUniversity, last evening at the annualdinner of the School of Business heldin the Ida Noyes Cloister club.A talk by Dean William Spencer,and dancing and other entertainmentwere included on the program.Chicago RepertoryGroupSummer StudiosACTING, BODY-WORK, MAKE¬UP, SCENE-DESIGN, VOICEPRODUCrriON, and theatreMANAGEMENTClasses for professionals, teachers,students.Evening Studio — May 31-Aagust19Day Studio—July 6—August 19Under Direction ofLEWIS LEVERETTFor further information address,Registrar, Chicago RepertoryGroup, 29 East Balbo Street, Web¬ster 4691. Hold InterfraternitySing Next SaturdayThe 28th annual InterfratemitySing one week from tomorrow will berun strictly according to tradition,with “no novelties of any kind . . .permitted.” From 9:30 until 10 it willbe broadcast over WMAQ and theRed Network of the National Broad¬casting Company.Following the Sing, the new Aidesand Marshals will be initiated, and“C” blankets awarded to Maroon ath¬letes who are graduating.The fraternities, as usual, will com¬pete for two cups, one for quality andone for the largest number of menparticipating. However, Alpha DeltaPhi and Phi Delta Theta, who jointlywon the quality cup last year, willcompete for only the quantity cupthis time, and Psi Upsilon only forthe quality award.Paul R. Cannon telling what can bedone for the inherited defenses.The biological sciences day willconclude when Merle C. Coulter re¬lates what every Chicago freshmanwill know, or “Biology for Babies,”and Anton J. Carlson predicts “TheExpanding Battle Line in Biology.”Economic competition and politicswill receive the attention of graduatesattending the University when thedivision of che Social Sciences con¬trols the lecture program of June 2.In the afternoon there will be threetalks, Theodore Yntema on “TheGround Between Monopoly and Com¬petition,” Raleigh W. Stone on“Causes of Imperfect Competition,”and Henry C Simons on “A Programfor Dealing with Imperfect Competi¬tion.”Although Professor James WeberLinn is not a member of the division,he will lead into the discussion ofpolitics by speaking on “The Amateurin Politics” at the buffet supper inReynolds Club Lounge that evening.He will be followed by Leonard D.White, speaking on “The PublicService and the Party Machine,” T.V. Smith on “A Philosophy for Pol¬itics,” and Charles E. Merriam on“Leadership for American Life.”Further LecturersThe next day international relationswill be combined with physiology, forat 8:30 in the evening two BiologicalSciences sound pictures, “Reproduc¬tion Among Mammals,” and “Diges¬tion,” will be shown. All the lecturesof that day, however, will deal withforeign affairs.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSErOI OOIUOI tTUDINTt AND OIADUATMA tkmwgAK tntmuiM. ettmtn^hic emrm—jmumn 2, AprU l,Juh 2, Oeteierl.w BaHlei witkoutSerMoiM. N» toUeUon mHfilejftd.moserlUSINESS COLLEGEDAUl MOtll. J.O, PH.S.IM •.MMritMi Av*., Oik^awilM^elDfc 4M7 Int-House MembersJoin in CandlelightingFellowship CeremonyUpholding an International Housetradition, one representative fromeach country which has residents atthe House will symbolically kindle theflame of International fellowship atthe annual candle-lighting ceremonyon Sunday evening, immediately fol¬lowing the Supper. This ceremonymarks the conclusion of InternationalHouse Sunday night suppers for theyear.The candle-lighting ceremony, heldby members of the Cpsmopolitaii clubin this country, and by the membersof the International Houses in Berk¬ley and New York, has been staged atthe local International House yearlysince the building was erected. Theman representing his countrymen ap¬pears in native costume, if possible,and as he takes his light from the onelarge candle in the center of thestage, indicates his country in thenative tongue and in English.As acting head of the House Coun¬cil, Juan Gastello will introduce theceremony. Ernest Price, director ofInternational House, will greet thealumni members and friends of thegroup assembled with the Housemembers.On Tuesday, Ruth Conant, a pupilBOBCROSBYand his bandwithMARION MANNThe "BOB-CATS"andGrand Swing RevueEvery Sunday 3-6 p.m."BOB-CATS" CLUBMEETINGBLACKHAWKRANDOLPH & WMBASHDEARBORN 6262 I of Alexander Robb, will present apiano recital at International House.Her selections include four of theBach-Busoni choral preludes, a MozartSonata, two Brahms numbers, and agroup of Modem compositions. Therecital will begin at 8:30.e E e e E sMENS SHOPDecoration DaySpecials• SPORT SHIRTS $1.00• SPORT SLACKS .... 1.95• SPORT COATS 1.95• SPORT SHOES 3.951003 E. 55TH ST.AT ELLISOPEN EVENINGSTires BatteriesSave on gasoline withStandard super powerRed Crown.When the filtering elementon your air cleaner isclogged with dirt yourmotor consumes on ex¬cess amount of gasoline.During the month of May'we will clean and oil yourcleanerFREE!Just show this adWALDRON'SStandard Service61st and EllisDorchester 10046Lubrication Washingis the Food Served at theStineway Drug StoreCORNER 57th AND KENWOODStudents away from home will do well to eat at Stineway's wheremost sanitary conditions always prevail and food of only thehighest obtainable quality is served. Every product we usebears the name of a reputable maker, such os; Hydrox IceCream, Borden's "Grade A" Certified Milk and Cream, ChoicestMeats and Bakery Goods, Savoy Foods and others.STINEWAY FOODS MUST MEASURE UP TO THE HIGH-EST STANDARD OF QUALITY REGARDLESS OF THEPRICE WE HAVE TO PAY —YET IT COSTS YOU NOMORE THAN THE UNKNOWN BRANDS SERVED ELSE¬WHERE.Enjoy the cool comfort of Stineways Air ConditioningPaife Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 27, 1938Kirby-Millers Go toWellesleyList ScholarshipsAwarded JuniorCollege StudentsThe sixth annual competitive schol¬arship examinations for junior col¬lege students for the coming yearheld April 23, at 46 junior collegesresulted in the awarding of 12 fullscholarships, and 13 half scholar¬ships.Those who received full scholar¬ship awards are: Bernard Abraham,Junior College of Kansas City, Kan¬sas City, Missouri; John Bauer,Woodrow Wilson Junior College,Chicago; John Brondsema, MuskegonJunior College, Muskegon, Michigan;Sherwyn Ehrlich, Wright Junior Col¬lege, Chicago; David Fine, TrinidadState Junior College, Trinidad, Colo¬rado; Cornelius Groot, Central Y.M.-C.A. College, Chicago; Walter Heiby,Wright Junior College, Chicago; Eu¬gene Kramer, Los Angeles JuniorCollege, Los Angeles, California; Jer-rome Lerner, Herzl Junior College,Chicago; Alfred Reed, Mesa JuniorCollege, Chicago; Melvin Schlesinger,Woodrow Wilson Junior College, Chi¬cago; Darrell Wood, Kansas JuniorCollege, Kansas City, Kansas.The half scholarship winners are:Ralston Deifenbaugh, Junior Collegeof Kansas City, Kansas City, Mis¬souri; Richard Dyer, Hutchinson Jun¬ior College, Hutchinson, Kansas;Lewis Grossman, and Richard Harri¬son, Muskegon Junior College, Mus¬kegon, Michigan; Gilbert Hirsh,Wright Junior College, Chicago; Ar-die Lubin, Wright Junior College,Chicago; Robert Picard, New MexicoMilitary Institute, Roswell, NewMexico; Hervey Posvic, Morton Jun¬ior College, Cicero, Illinois; HarryRubinovitz, Herzl Junior College,Chicago; Sam Silbergeld, BlackburnCollege, Carlinville, Illinois; HaroldStral, North Park Junior College,Chicago; Neal Willis, Kansas JuniorCollege, Kansas City, Kansas; Rob¬ert Yancey, Oak Park Junior College,Oak Park, Illinois.Honorable Mention went to Augus¬ta Gudas, Woodrow Wilson JuniorCollege, Chicago; Robert Hummel,Woodrow Wilson Junior College, Chi¬cago; Sonya Sammel, Wright JuniorCollege, Chicago; Eli Shulruff, HerzlJunior College, Chicago; Henry Tri-wush, Wright Junior College, Chica- PM Sigs Win I-MBaseball TournamentDowning the Barristers 6-6, PhiSigma Delta won the I-M Universitybaseball crown in a game playedThursday afternoon. The Phi Sigswhipped Phi Beta Delta 8-3 to topthe fraternity group. To take thirdposition Alpha Delta Phi beat Psi Up-silon by a score of 7-2.In the game with the BarristersSherman laid down two home runs inthe first two innings to set the PhiSigs off with three runs for their finaltotal. Odens slammed out a home runalso. Sherman and Fried turned inthe best performances for Phi Sig,Longacre starred for the Barristers.Maroon Baseball SquadOvercomes Purdue NineMaking a two run rally in the lastof the eighth, the Maroon diamondsquad overcame Purdue 8 to 6 onGreenwood Field Wednesday after¬noon. Coach Kyle Anderson’s boyswill play their final game of the sea¬son tomorrow afternoon at 3 whenthe Northwestern Wildcats come tocampus.In the Purdue game, Chicago gotoff to an early lead with two runs inthe first, but the Boilermakerscountered with three in the second,two in the third, and one in the fifth,with the Maroons coming back withfour in the fifth and two in theeighth.go; Menahem Steinberg, Herzl Jun¬ior College, Chicago; Donald Van Ry-zin, Duluth Junior College, Duluth,Minnesota; Robert Williamson, HerzlJunior College, Chicago. Today on theQuadranglesFRIDAYGerman club, YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 4.Negro Student Club, YWCA roomof Ida Noyes at 8.CCS Folk dance, dance room of IdaNoyes at 8.Spanish club, sun room of IdaNoyes at 4.SATURDAYDames, library of Ida Noyes at 2.SSA club dance, YWCA room ofIda Noyes at 8.SUNDAYCommunist club. WAA room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Gli Scapigliati, Wieboldt Lounge at3.TUESDAYAchoth, Y^VCA room of Ida Noyesat 3:30.WAA, WAA room of Ida Noyes at12.School of Business, alumnae roomof Ida Noyes at 12.Alpha Epsilon Iota, Alumnae roomof Ida Noyes at 7.Arexis, theatre of Ida Noyes at 7.WEDNESDAYWyvern, Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 4:30.ASU executive committee, room Cof Ida Noyes at 7.Poetry club, YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Christian Youth League, room A ofIda Noyes at 7:30.Arrian, room B of Ida Noyes at4:30.BWO, Alumnae room at 12.Pi Lambda Theta. Alumnae room ofIda Noyes at 6. Maroons MeetBrown in TwoFootball GamesHome and home football gameswith Brown University have beenscheduled by the University for 1940and 1941, Athletic Director NelsonMetcalf announced today. The Ma¬roon team will play at Providence,R. I., on November 23 to close its1940 schedule, and Brown will cometo Stagg Field on October 25, 1941.The two games continue the Chi¬cago practice of scheduling homegames with eastern opponents, a twoyear series with Harvard, beginningwith a game at Cambridge this au¬tumn and a two year series with theUniversity of Virginia, starting in1940, now being on the Maroon card.Brown and Chicago have met ona football field three times in thepast, the Maroon team winning two—in 1899 and 1924—and losing in1900.Chicago’s football schedule for both1940 and 1941 is still incmnplete.LEARN TO FLYSp«cicd School RortMGot. LiconMd AirpkmM andInstructorsNEW AIRPLANESWrit* or CallMIDWESTFlying School83rd CICERO Portsmouth 6606 Charles Kerby-Miller, Humanitiesdiscussion leader, and his wife Wil¬ma, an instructor in English and ad¬viser in the College, are leaving theUniversity next year. Appointed as¬sistant professor of English Comp¬osition at Wellesley, Kerby-Millerwill go to Massachusetts this fall.Mrs. Kerby-Miller will do researchin the East.CLASSIFIED ADSBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIESFORTUNES WILL BE MADE in new CHEM-ICAL GARDENING FIELD sUrt nowdietributinc BAL-NUTRENE in your lo.cal community. Write for particuUnrelative exclusive territory. Stuart In-duatrial Service. 4608 RooMvelt, Chicato.FOR SALE—Eaaex coupe with rumble seatEverythinit in excellent condition; juitpaas^ city‘teat. $46.00. Phone Dea. 9020.SUBLEASE—214 rooma; modern apt.; thow-era: larye cloacta. Very reaaonable Fur-niabed or unfumiahed or will aell fur¬niture. 826 E. 66th at. Dor. 8498.Val. 38 MAY 27. 1938 Na. Ill^arooiiPOUNDED IN IHlMEMBER ABBOCUTRD COLLEGIATEPERMwaeaaaawTBD eoa NATiOMAk AOvaariatM# avNatioMl AdvartUigServicc, Inc.Ctlht* PtMiaktn Rapraaeaialfae4ao MaotaoN AvB. Naw Yonit. N. Y.CBKaae - PeaToa - Laa aaaetea - taa PaaaciacaF aterad aa aeeond elaaa matter March18. 1003. at the poet oOm at Chieaco,niinoia, under the act of March I. 1871.Night Editor: William McNeillREADER’S CAMPUS DRUG STORE1001 E. 61st St.-TODAY-CREAMED TUNA nSH IN PATTIE SHELL WITHMASHED POTATOES. SALADPLUS CHOCOLATE ECLAIR ... AND COFFEE 30c ENRICHES THE FLAVOROF m TOBACCOHoney In Yell o-BoleImprovea ail tobaccoa. Youapcwd at leaat $20 for tobacco ina year —$1 spent on Yello-Boiemakes that $30 worth of tobaccotaste twice aa good I Oet youia.ELLO-BOLEtio. u. s. Sat. Ott.“lin^neu,^ brandanChesterfield’s my brandbecause they give me morepleasure than any cigaretteI ever smoked—Aar none/*More smokers every dayfind a new brand of smokingpleasure in Chesterfield’s refresh¬ing mildness and better taste.It’s because Chesterfields aremade of mild ripe tobaccos andpure cigarette paper—finestingredients a cigarette can have.Grace MooreAndre KostblanetzPaul WhitemanDeems TaylorPaul DouglashesterfieldCopyright 193$, Ligcitt 8c Myiis Tobacco Co.