Today*8 HeadlinesDaily Maroon staff elections, Page 1.Aides and Marshals, Page 1.New Pulse editor. Page 2.Harden, Kalven review Adler’s Book,Page 1.Interfraternity Sing, Page 1.I-M elections and standings. Page 5.The PrintedPagee * *By HARRY KALVEN, andJOHN P. BARDENSaint Thomas and the Gentiles, byMortimer J. Adler, Marquette Uni¬versity Press, 1938—$1.00.At the beginning of this book, con¬taining the lecture given before theAristotelian Society of MarquetteUniversity, Professor Adler sets him¬self the task not of praising Thomasbut of explaining why such praises“do not re-echo in other corridors oflearfting.” No longer does he dismissthe rest of the world as being out ofstep; it is the modern Thomist apol¬ogists who have been in no small de¬gree at fault. Their dialectic hasfailed to bridge the gap in traditions;they have too often forgotten thattheir opponents are men of good will.In seeking a remedy for the situa¬tion, Mr. Adler finds a striking andsomewhat complicated analogy to thecircumstances giving rise to Thomas’Summa Contra Gentiles. Thomaswrote the book to convey the faithto the numerous disbelievers of hisday, and in writing, he of course hadto forego arguments from revelationand confined himself to tlie naturalphilosophy acceptable to both. Mr.Adler finds in the current situation.similar difficulty. It is not a questionof faith but of philosophy, today. JustMORTIMER J. ADLERus St. Thoma.s recognized that it wasusele.ss to use arguments from i*evela-tion to persuade those who had nofaith, so, Mr. Adler suggests, modernapologists should recognize that it isuseless to use arguments from philo¬sophy to persuade those who rejectphilosophy altogether. By extendingthe meaning of “gentile”, he gives theanalogy a further richness. Thomaswas careful to distinguish three typesof gentiles and to find argument.'’proper to each. There were the Mooi-swho had no faith; the Jews who hadpartial revelation that admitted plur¬ality of religions; and the hereticswho had faith, but rejected someparticular tenet. Today Mr. Adlersuggests there are the positivistswho reject philosophic knowledge al¬together; the systematists who ad¬mit a plurality of philosophies; andthe heretics who dLsagree on someparticular proposition.* • *The remainder of the book is de¬voted to sketching brief argumentsfor approaching each group. Onlythose who are “not silenced by theirown contradictions” are, Mr. Adleifeels, beyond the pale of the rhetoric.The positivists, like his thirteenthcentury analogue, the Moor, is themost difficult audience. But even herethe apologists can do more than fol¬low the negative course of answeringall objections. From the positivists’acceptance of scientific knowledge,Mr. Adler proceeds to draw thephilosophic implications containedtherein. The dialectic is simple com¬mon sense and nontechnical. Thescientist assumes that he knows aboutthe real world and that he is notsame as that which he knows. Hefurther can be easily made to realizethat the question of how to cure aman is different from the question ofwhether he should be cured. And fi¬nally he will see that talking aboutscience is not the same as talkingabout things. Here then, are prob¬lems of epistemology, metaphysics,ethics and politics, and the trivialarts, arising from the simplest consid¬erations of the scientists’ subject-mat¬ter. Further, since the history of ascience is not the same as the science,there are, then, at least two bodiesof knowledge of the real world, and itis at least probable that there is a(Continued on page S) Vol. 38, No. 116 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1938 Price Five CentsVan de Water,MacLennan LeadMarshals, AidesHutchins Selects Twenty toRepresent Him at For¬mal Functions.Twenty members of the juniorclass at the University were namedyesterday by President Robert M.Hutchins to serve as student mar¬shals and aides for the next academicyear. The twenty, ten men and tenwomen, are selected on the basis ofscholarship and participation in stu¬dent activities. They serve as repre¬sentatives of the President at formalUniversity functions.John Van de Water of Long Beach,California, captain of the swimmingteam and Chapel Union leader, wasselected as Head Marshal. The othernew marshals are: John Busby, atrack man; Emmett Deadman, Fair-bury, Nebraska, member of nextyear’s Daily ^Maroon board; TheodoreFink, football player; Edward Gus¬tafson, fencer; Lewis Hamity, cap¬tain of next year’s football team;Robert Merriam, track man; SeymourH. Miller, Daily Maroon editorialboard; Hart Perry, head of the Inter¬fraternity Committee and intramuralboard member; and William Webbe,head of the student social committee.Kathryn MacLennan, member ofFederation Board and Y.W.C.A., isthe new Senior Aide. Other aidesare: Barbara Allee, Chapel Union andY.W.C.A.; Laura Bergquist, Presidentof Interclub 0>uncil and Daily Ma¬roon board member; Judith Cunning¬ham, President of Mirror, women’sdramatic organiiation* Marjorie Ham¬ilton; Alice LaPert, Margaret Merri-field, head of the Student Settlementboard; Audrey Neff, president ofY.W.C.A.; Harriet Nelson, presidentof Federation of University Women,and member. Board of Women’s Or¬ganizations; and Clementine Vander-Schaegh, president of the Board ofWomen’s Organizations.Student PublicityNames New Heads• —_Merriam, Frankel, GentzlerChairman Board; NineJuniors Appointed.A committee of three instead of thecustomary chairman will direct theactivitie.H of the Student PublicityBoard next year, the retiring Boardannounced yesterday. These threewill be Robert Merriam, in charge ofgeneral activities of the Board; Wil¬liam Frankel, in charge of men’s ac¬tivities; and Doris Gentzler, in chargeof women’s activities.After a meeting with the newchairmen, the retiring Board, com¬posed of Harry Snodgress, Jay Kap¬lan and Mary Letty Green, also an¬nounced the junior and sophomoreappointments for next year.Junior men chosen for positions onthe Board were Rolf Becker, JackBernhardt, Frederick Linden, ChuckMcClellan, Russ Parsons, and RobertReynolds. Only two women were ap¬pointed to junior posts. Peg Hutch¬inson and Betty Caldwell. Jean Mac-Kenzie, who has been with the Boardbut one quarter, was given a tenta¬tive appointment to a junior post,but this will have to be confirmed bynext year’s Board at the end of theAutumn Quarter.Sophomores who will work with theBoard next year are John Bex,George Crandell, Alan Darling, JohnDoolittle, William Kimball, Ray Lane,Ray Malmquist, Bob Mathews,Charles Percy, Charles Paltzer, DickSalzmann, John Slade, Ashton Tay¬lor, Alan Teague, Dale Tillery, DavidWidemann III, and Jack Weber.Sophomore women selected areMary Jane Anderson, Kay Cameron,Blanche Graver, Mary Harvey, JeanLeeper, Maxine Murphy, FlorinePhillips, Maris Ullman, and DonnaCulliton. Fraternity MenGather in Courtfor Annual Sing Editorial Board of Five Directs <Policies of Daily Maroon NextYear; Deadman Acts as ChairmanBarring rain, several hundred fra¬ternity men, both students and alum¬ni, will parade down the steps ofHutchinson Court, crowd around thefountain, and lift their voices in theirchapter songs tomorrow night at the28th annual Interfraternity Sing,Seventeen fraternities, the samenumber as last year, will take partin the Sing, which begins promptlyat 8:46. The University Band willgive a concert in the Court from 7:46to 8:46 for the benefit of the assem¬bling audience.Name Aides, MarshalsFollowing the Sing, the official an¬nouncement and investiture of nextyear’s Aides and Marshals will bemade by President Hutchins and theresults of the evening’s competitionwill be announced. T. Nelson Met¬calf, director of Athletics, will award“C” blankets to men who have com¬pleted their athletic competition forthe University. The singing of theAlma Mater and a Chicago yell willclose the ceremonies.The participating fraternities, inthe order of their appearance, areAlpha Tau Omega, Phi Beta Delta,Pi Lambda Phi, Beta Theta Pi, PhiSigma Delta, Zeta Beta Tau, KappaSigma, Phi Kappa Psi, Delta Upsi-lon. Sigma Chi, Phi Gamma Delta,(Continued on page 4) WPA Symphony Begins'Music Series TuesdayThe WPA Illinois Symphony Or¬chestra, under the direction of IzlerSolomon, brilliant young Chicago con¬ductor, will give the first of a seriesof six concerts Tuesday at 8:30 inHutchinson Court. The concert isfree to the public. In case of rain itwill be given in Mandel hall.The program for the concert Tues¬day begins with Mozart’s Overtureto the Magic Flute. The main pieceis Brahms’ Symphony No. 2, and se¬lections from Smetana, the BarteredBride, DeBussy’s Nocturnes andWeinberger’s Schwanda, the BagpipePlayer complete the program.Other concerts of the series will begiven June 30, July 14, 28, August 11and 18, all in Hutchinson Court at8:30.Last summer the University spon¬sored a series of concerts by the Illi¬nois Symphony orchestra which wereextremely successful. Crowds of sev¬eral thousand attended the concerts,and enthusiasm was so great thatCarl Brickefi, associate professor ofMusic, was encouraged to try a winterseries in Mandel hall with the lowadmission price of 36 cents.Echo Goes on Sale Today; PoorWriting, Inaccuracies Mar IssueBy HARRY CORNELIUSThe current issue of Echo, Cap andGown’s magazine news supplement,is a good idea murdered by poor au¬thorship. Containing more than itsregular quota of inaccuracies as astudent publication, it is chieflydamned by its poor style. Outside ofthat, it’s a good review of the year’sevents.Written in burlesque Time style, itrarely attains the light touch, fre¬quently becomes uninspiredly deroga¬tory. The repeated telescoping of twoor three good words into a verbalsnarl distracts attention from thethought rather than facilitating thereading. Occasional long, ramblingsentences also tend to obscure themeaning.The make-up, taken directly fromTime magazine, is consistently good.Confining the cuts strictly to campussubjects makes them distinctly su¬perior in interest value to those oflast year.Campus AffairsHowever, Echo echos last year’sEcho in again talking up UniversityVice-President Bill Benton, and goesinto detail about the University’s en¬dowment campaign. Its main ele¬ment is plenty of publicity from pub¬lications such as Time, Fortune, Life,and the Post, as well as the radioand the movies.Tracing the origin and program ofthe Campus Congress to its climax inthe Hutchins-Melby debate. Echo pes¬simistically concludes that the Con¬gress accomplished practically noth¬ing save raising money for the seniorclass gift. Little space is devoted tothe actual meetings of the Congressitself, or to the resolutions which itpassed.President’s ReceptionFollows ConvocationDetails of the President’s receptionfor students receiving degrees wereannounced yesterday by the Office ofthe Dean of Students. It will be heldin the Ida Noyes Cloister club at 4next Friday, immediately followingthe afternoon section of the 192ndconvocation of the University inRockefeller Memorial Chapel. A to¬tal of 980 degrees will be conferred.Two tickets for each candidate willbe available in Cobb 203 until Thurs¬day. After that time the remainingtickets will go on general distribu¬tion.In the receiving line at the recep¬tion will be Pi-esident and Mrs Hutch¬ins, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bricken, Mrs.Edith Foster Flint, and Harvey Carr. In reviewing the publications. Echois more kind to the Maroon than wasits editor Bill McNeill writing on it inthe Cap and Gown. Running Mc¬Neill’s picture on the cover as manof the year. Echo proceeds to a plankby plank analysis of the editorialplatform and the controversy center¬ing around it. The abortive attemptsto start an opposition paper aretreated with considerable distortionand detail.The Residence Halls’ Courtier isduly mentioned and then full atten¬tion is devoted to irritating the edi¬tors of Pulse. The magazine is rep¬resented as a flash in the pan pro¬duced chiefly by John Morris andprobably not destined to survive an¬other year.Education, Under the heading of education,the coming departure ' of AssociateProfessor of Economics Harry D.Gideonse rates a column and a half;the Physicial and Biological ScienceDivisions are charged with emascu¬lating the New Plan by making thebachelors comprehensives optional;Dr. Thurstone’s recent work on men¬tal factors is discussed; and the Ma¬roon’s stories on the Chapel Unionmarriage lectures are rewritten tosize.Amos Alonzo StaggReturns to Midwayfor Alumni ReunionChicago’s Grand Old Man, AmosAlonzo Stagg, returned to the Mid¬way this week for the a4umni reun¬ion. Scores of his former players,friends, and associates greeted himand Mrs. Stagg at a reception in theQuadrangle Club yesterday after¬noon, and at a dinner last night.Nattily clad in cream trousers anda blue coat, his hair white but stillplentiful, Stagg looked as rugged andspry, despite his 76 years, as whenhe left the University five years ago.Standing outside of the QuadrangleClub before the reception yesterday,he greeted acquaintances, took offtheir hats to see how much hair theyhad left, and berated former playersfor having quit training.Stagg arrived on campus Mondayand will stay for about another weekbefore returning to California.Attendance at the sessions of thealumni school this week has beenrunning 5Q per cent above last year’srecord breaking enrollment. Whilenumerous class reunions will be heldthis week and next, that of the classof ’37 has been called off. Bergquist, Biesenthal, Mil¬ler and Rose CompleteBoard.An editorial board of five memberswill direct the policies of the DailyMaroon next year. Laura Bergquist,Maxine Biesenthal, Emmett Deadman,Seymour Miller, and Adele Rose com¬pose the board which is an innova¬tion in Maroon staff organization. Inorder that the board may have an ad¬ministrative head, Deadman will serveas chairman.The board plan of organization wasadopted this year in the belief a divi¬sion of labor according to functionswould result in better and more equalwork being done, than when titleswere distributed and the work tendedto fall on the editor.Deadman, as chairman, will also bein charge of the desk; Biesenthal willbe assignment editor and be in chargeof staff organization; Bergquist willbe responsible for special features,contributed columns and promotionalprojects; Miller will have charge ofall stories after they are written, andsupervise re-write work; and Rosuwill be in charge of the editorial col¬umn, writing most of the editorials.The retiring Board also promotedseven to positions as editorial as¬sociates. Although the constitutionprovides for eight appointments, itwas thought better to leave one posi¬tion vacant to be filled next year onthe basis of work done in the autumnquarter. The seven promoted weieRuth Brody, William Grody, BetteHurwich, Wallace Hersehel, DavidMartin, Alice Meyer, and Robert Sed-lak.Sophomores appointed to positionsas editorial assistants were Sarah LeeBloom, Marian Castleman, Judy For¬rester, Mary Elizabeth Grenander,Marian Gracenick, Ernest Leiser,Harry John Levi, and John Stevens.Other members of next year’sBoard of Control who were electedseveral weeks ago are Co-BusinessManagers Ed Bergman and MaxFreeman.Some of the members of the in¬coming board are active in other stu¬dent organizations.Deadman is a member of Phi Kap¬pa Psi, Owl and Serpent, and of theCongress Committee. Rose was chair¬man of the ASU last quarter. Berg¬quist is head of Interclub and anAide in addition to her Maroon duties,and a member of Pi Delta Phi.Rosenheim EditsNext Year’s PulseNed Rosenheim as Editor-in-Chief,and Leonard Schermer as BusinessManager will bead Pulse next year, itwas announced yestei'day by the re¬tiring board of the campus magazine.George McElroy, Managing Editor,will complete the three-man board ofcontrol.Other positions assigned are thoseof Art Director, Ann Federoff; As¬sociate Editors, William Sheeley andWilliam Work; Advertising Manager,Alfred Jaffe; Circulation Manager,Louise Snow. These positions willbe profit-sharing, although not on theboard.Thid staff will be supplemented bya group of Contributing Editors: Vin¬cent Burke, Jack Green, Carl Larson,Lorraine Lewis, Ruth Moerchen,James Ray, Peggy Rictf, WalterRockier, Marjorie Schlytter, John Se-grave, Milton Semer, George Stein-brecher, and Frank Weiner.Rosenheim, a member of Zeta BetaTau and a Winnetka family, is notedfor his miscellaneous writings in theDaily Maroon, Pulse, and the Englishdepartment, and for his fish-wavingappearances before group gather¬ings. McElroy, red-headed mentor ofBeta Theta Pi, also runs for thetrack team. Schermer, red-headedmanager of Pi Lambda Phi, will man¬age the groceries of a boys’ campthis summer in preparation for hiswork on Pulse.Page Twoputfqbii1. OeqMoa oi a vigcMous campm conanmnUf*2. MtxMoa oi Inlircottegicdo al|il«ic%3. Iboqiearttt polUlpB.4. Revision oi ths CoUogs Plcm.5. A chastened presidentAlma MaterToday w« gladly sing thy praist, alois mater.We who see life whole and see it unafraid praisethee. Thee who hast consumed us for days and monthsand years in a flame of unsurety, the unsurety of theexpert who sees things as greys, as probabilities, asapproximations, we praise. We praise thee for givingus a just estimation of the nature of things, showingus that all human values are illusory, that all is flux,that all things pass away and die. Still more we praisethee that thou hast lent us courage to face the worldunafraid proud of our strength, proud of our self re¬liance. Loudly we sing thy praise, alma mater.We who see life whole and see it beautiful praisethee also. Thee who hast bathed us for days and THE DAILY MAROON, FRtPAY, JUNE 3, 198^ArsenicANDAPPLESAUCEBy NED ROSENHEIMADVICE TO FUTURE COLUMNISTNote: I do not expect you to follow these in theirentirety. They are, to be quite honest, the things I wishI had done, and it is only because I feel sure they willbe the things you wish you had done, that I am printingthem.1. Nice names make news. (This is apparent onsight. Lucifer Limpinsky is not a nice name; JayBerwanger is.)2. Do not seek a mean, but let two extremes coun-teract one another. (This means that when you havea story to run about a shot-putter don’t discard it inftavniir nf n about a man who vets C’s. Hves on Badnaii Leads Bandn Tlird TwilightConcert Yliis EveningThe University Band under Direc¬tor Harold Bachman will play thethird of a series of twilight couoertsin Hutchinson court tonight at 7:30for the Alumni School and campusstrollers. The next evening the Bandwill play before the InterfraternitySing also.The program for tonight is: March,El Capitan by Sousa, Spanish Maix:hby Jose Franco, Overture to Sakul-tala by Goldmark, Serenade from Si-monetta by Curxon, On the Trailfrom the Grand Canyon Suite byGrofe, Selections from the SuiteFrescos by Haydn Wood, March—Onthe Mall by Goldman. The programwill be completed by University ofChicago songs.At the annual Band Banquet Wed¬nesday night sweater awards weremade to men completing a year’s service in the band and three years’performance during the football sea-son. Those awarded sweaters were*Dale Anderson, Ben Bluestein, LouisFrench, Norman Poster, RobertPouch, Lou Hochman, Bill PouchNicholas Kotrana, Bill Kester, JohnKorf, Charles Paltrer, Prank RekerJames Runyan, Robert Smitter, EllisSteinberg, A1 Vaitis.Those awarded medals and watchfobs for three years’ work in thefootball band were: Richard ArnoeLahman Arnould, William BonnellA1 DeGrazia, Howard CombinerGeorge McElroy, Robert Mohlman’,George Sharpe, Clyde Shepherd, DonThoman. Carl Bricken, chairman ofthe Music Department, made theawards.yJoWUB [BUmiBIIIS NOT CBmPllUaariL sBu’ve submonths and years in the precious fluid of Truth, whohast shown us the eternal in the changing, vouchsafedto us a vision of the Good, the True and the Beautiful,and shown us the way to true content, we praise. Loud¬ly we sing thy praise, alma mater.Today we men of science sing thy praise, almamater. Thee who hast trained our hands in the skillsof the test tube and microscope, and our brains in thestrenuous method that alone gives true knowledge, wepraise. We praise thee that thou hast shown us thereal nature of the world, exposed to us the cunningcontradiction of the senses which prove a world incom¬prehensible to the senses, and shown us the method bywhich alone mankind may truly be saved. Loudly wesing thy praise, alma mater.And we who see life as it really is praise thee too.Thee who hast given us days and months and yearsgreatly to enjoy, who hast taught us the ways of get¬ting a living and given us in the microcosm of thecampus a model of the outside world "'here we mighttest our powers, we praise. Loudly we sing thy praise,alma mater.First chorus: We praise thee, alma mater, that weare not as the philosophers are, hiding from uncertain¬ty in flimsy systems, products of their own imaginings;that thou hast saved us from embalming ourselves inthe precious fluid of Truth until we became nought buttalking mummies, insensitive to all that falls outsideour system. We praise thee that thou hast trained usto see life whole and see it unafraid.Second chorus: We praise thee, alma mater, thatwe are not as other men are, deluded by the surfaceseeming, incapable of penetrating to the reality, blindto the Good, the True and the Beautiful. We praisethee that thou hast accorded us a glimpse of that hightriad that we may follow it to the ends of the earthand the gates of death.Third chorus: We praise thee, alma mater, that weare not as the spiders who weave endlessly of theirown substance; that we are not hamstrung by doubtsand worries about the unascertainable; that we are notdistracted from the real world, the world of measurablethings. We praise thee that we are men of science notof visions.Fourth chorus: We praise thee, alma mater, thatthou hast shown us the ways of the world, absolved usfrom the silly dreams of our freshman days, shown usclearly where our interests lie, and trained us for theworld of men and actions.All; Today we gladly sing the praiseOf her who owns us as her sons. Cottage Grove Ave., belongs to a class C fraternity andhas never kicked his aged aunt downstairs. Rather,balance it with a story about an endocrinologist.3. Do not devote a column entirely to Psi U.4. Do not devote a column entirely to Deke.5. Mention Psi U and Deke at least twice a week.6. Get to know some club girls, and you will eitherlike them or not; in either case, try to be polite.7. Remember you are a columnist, not a crusader.When you feel like grinding an axe, file your nails in¬stead—they probably need it.8. Remember that just because a man’s a Psi U,Deke or Alpha Delt doesn’t necessarily mean he can’tread. Also try to remember that everyone at Inter¬national House doesn’t wear a loin-cloth, eat eggs PooYong, and read Hegel.9. Read the above again. Something will reallyhave to be down to break down the two legends of theMoronic Fraternity Man, and the Unwholesome Intel¬lectual, and you may as well have a stab at it.10. Be as nice as you can to the Maroon people.They’re noisy, but aren’t we all.11. Don’t get the idea you’re Walter Winchell orJames Thurber. Unless I miss my guess, you’re not.12. For God’s sake, don’t go high-brow. You prob¬ably won’t be able to carry it off, and even if you do,you’ll find you’re a drug on the market.13. As to pinhangings—er—uh—well, they’re there.Make the best of them.14. It’s fashionable to be nasty. It’s fun to be notnasty. Take your choice.15. Don’t make too much of the weather. After all,people have seen rain, snow, sun, and sleet before, andcan probably make their own observations.16. (Sret a decent name for your column—not Corn¬flakes and Cream or Hell and Heaven or Wear and Un-derWear or anything like that. Why not try calling itMy Column.17. If you’re looking for news and the quadranglesseem deserted, try Hanley’s. It’s quite possible thatyou’ll find something amusing there to write about; ifnot, stick around and keep the musty brew flowing.After an evening or two like that, you’ll probably beable to turn out some pretty decent stuff on exotic wildlife, or rotating bedrooms.18. Don’t take advice from anyone;LeHers to theEditorEditor,Daily Maroon:■ 1 have learned that the three judgeschosen to award the prize in the JohnBillings Fiske poetry contest thisyear have made a decision to awardno prize owing to the unsatisfactori¬ness of all the manuscripts submitted.I believe this decision is not unpre¬cedented in the history of the con¬test. But no matter how many prece¬dents for it, there are circumstancesat this time that would render such adecision extremely singular.As president of the University ofChicago Poetry Club, revived herelast autumn after a lapse of someyears, I have been in more or lessintimate connection with the poeticmovement on this campus—a move¬ment which has been called a renas¬cence of poetic activity at the Uni¬versity. The meetings of the Clubthroughout the year have consistedlargely in reading and discussing thepoems of campus poets. Among thosepoets who offered material to theClub were, I should say, at least halfof the fifty or so who entered manu¬scripts in the competition for theFiske prize. Many of the individualpoems in the entries had previouslybeen read and well received at themeetings of the Club.On the basis of that knowledge,and both as president of the Poetry Club and as a former winner of the .Fiske prize I protest against the Ifailure of the judges to make anaward in a recent contest. If myview of the facts about the poeticrenascence at the University are inany way sound, and it is a view notpeculiar to me, then I must regardthe outcome of the Fiske contestprimarily as the result of incompetentjudging.The three judges in the contest, 1understand, were Professor Crane ofthe English Department; Elder Ol¬son, a candidate for the doctorate inthe English Department, and a poetof distinct ton; and Miss Marion Stroe-bel, likewise a poet of distinction.With the principles of Miss Stroebel’scriticism, I regret that I am notfamiliar. But I have some knowledgeof the critical principles held in com¬mon by Professor Crane and -Mr.Olson; and I regard these principlesin their application to contemporarypoetry as prejudiced and unsound. Sofar from the poetry submitted in thecontest failing to meet the test ofthese principles—and that they wereapplied absolutely with no thought ofequitable comparison, I have nodoubt—I believe that these principleshave failed definitely in a notableinstance to meet the challenge offeredby contemporary poetic practice. Thejudges, or at least two of them, haveignored all merit that they were notpredisposed to accept.I had previously read a number ofthe manuscripts submitted for theprize. To the best of my knowledge,at least three of.«them were superiorin poetic achievement to any prize- I winning manuscript during my fourI years at the University, including myown group of 1936. The three manu¬scripts to which I refer were offeredrespectively b y Edouard Roditi,Charles Butler, and Stephen Stepan-chev. Roditi has had poems publishedin Poetry Magazine and in T. S.Eliot’s London Criterion, and he is theauthor of a book of poems. Butlerhas been published in Trial Balances,a recent anthology of younger poetsStepanchev has appeared severaltimes in Poetry, he has a group ofpoems in the current issue, and hewas the recipient this year of theMidland Author’s Prize. To thesepoets the award of the Fiske prizecould have added no particular lustre.But their presence among competitorsuniversally dismissed as having littleif any merit cannot but lead to se¬rious reflections about the status ofliterature and literary values at theUniversity.There is no opportunity now for meto make those reflections. This is thefirst and the last occasion that I shallspecifically attack University men inthe performance of a University func¬tion. If the attack seem personal, 1can only say that it is made uponprinciple and out of a compellingneed to utter what I believe to bethe truth, particularly the truth aboutintolerance subject to the self-decep¬tion of infallibility. I protest with allthe earnestness at my command a-gainst absolute judgments made in aspirit of the narrowest traditionalismupon contemporary writing.Thomas Howella WE WISH....To thomk you lor yourpotroaago during thepent yecor.DURING THE SUMMERWE WILL CONTINUETO SERVE UNIVERSITYSTUDENTS. It'i true. Think whet you can learnin the lend that gav# the worldGoethe, Wagner, iMthoven, Durar,Nietuche, Mozart, Kant and Luthar,Great art end uiperb mutic . . .each an education in itseH.Our SludonlServiceWIU Centiaueas BeforeHoping to see you nextFolL your StandardService Station.Waldrom's6Ut AND ELLISDorchester 10046 Poiaibly you would enjoy even morae glorious steamer trip on thaeastfo-guarded Rhine or the bluaDanube ... a visit to daar oldHaidelberg . . . or a healthy, in¬teresting hiking or biking tour fromone Youth Hostel to the neit.For e gtimpse of continental lifeand leisure, you will stroM alonglerlin's Unter den Linden. Ofhospitable Munich with her goldenbrew, you have heard . . . Not faraway are the Reverian Alps andAustrian TyroL And then romanticVienna, living in welts time andhappily reunited with Germany. ^Everywhere historic or legendarynames will jog your memory—theMeistersinger at NOrnberg, Fred¬erick the Great at Sanstouci,Charlemagne at Aachen. Living andtravel are ineipensive, especiallywith Travel Marks at 40y, savingsand special rail tickets at hOy.reductions.Consult your Trerol Agont and wrirafor information and booklot "C".GiRnan rgiirordsinroRinaTioR otricf333 No. MICHIGAN AVE.Chicago, IllinoisREMEMBER THESTUDENTSBOOK EXCHANGEBRING IN YOUR USED TEXTBOOKS NOW—WE ALSO BUYOUTRIGHT USED TEXT BOOKSWHICH WILL BE USED INFUTURE CLASSES.U. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueTHE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. JUNE 3, 1938 Page ThreeThe PrintedPage(Continued from page 1)third—philosophy. Again, the historyof science will show that in somecases science has merely confirmedwhat men already knew on the basisof what Mr. Adler likes to call“common experience”. This muchgi'ound-work laid, Mr. Adler suggestsphilosophy then be presented “subjectto all the strictures the positivistswish to impose.”The program for the remaininggroups is even more summarilysketched. The systematist must beshown that he has relied too much onthe analogy of mathematics. Andfinally in the case of the contempor*ary heretic, Thomas will be a directhelp, because intellectual history, too,tends to repeat itself. Today on theQuadranglesJUNE 3Meeting of the South Side MedicalAlumni, University clinic at 9.Tour, Backstage at the University.The party leaves the Reynolds clubat 10:30.The Alumni school and conference.Leon Mandel hall.It is, however, in the concessionswhich Mr. Adler suggests be madethat the book is most exciting andilluminating. Philosophy, he says, istautological, circular, basically con¬tradictory. The triumph of the “otherside” is short-lived, however. TheseoppiH>brious epithets are quickly to beturned into compliments, even criteriaof good philosophy. First principlesare tautologies in the sense of self-evident propositions. The statementof them does not add to our knowl¬edge, but merely explicates it. Yetthey are not petty, inutile verbalisms;they express knowledge. Philosophyis circular, but the circles, we aretold, are concentric and ever-widen¬ing, or, to borrow a metaphor which.Mr. Adler does not use, philosophy isan ever-ascending spiral. For we are jnut dealing with “deduction in amathematical sense but with enlight¬enment in the philosophic sense”. Fi¬nally, there are contrrfdictions, but inthe sense of basic antimonies whichpoint to residual mysteries and to thenecessary, but not tragic frustra¬tion of man the knower. Luncheon for delegates. The Quad¬rangle club at 12:30.Afternoon session, “Collective se¬curity in the World-Crises,” QuincyWright. “A Constructive ForeignPolicy for the United States.”Dinner, Hutchinson Commons at 6.“America Looks at the GarrisonState.” Harold Lasswell.Evening session at 8:30. Showingof sound pictures in the BiologicalSciences. Addresses: “The British At¬titude toward European Problems.”Professor Schmitt. “The March ofFascism,” Professor Borgese.Meeting of the South Side MedicalAlumni. University Clinics at 2.Annual dinner of the UniversityAides. Ida Noyes hall at 6.Annual Banquet, South Side Medi¬cal Alumni association. Judson courtat 6:30.Twilight concert. University band,Hutchinson Court at 7:30.ASU cooperative committee, roomC of Ida Noyes at 4:45.Phonograph concert. “SymphonyNo. 9 in D Minor.” Beethoven. SocialScience 122 at 12:15.JUNE 4Alumni conference breakfast, at 8,luncheon at 12:30, in Judson court.Men from Missouri are not shownby the hook, but it will induce inthem a suspicion that they can beshown. Those who have been shownthe necessity of the study of philoso¬phy will find a useful set of fair tac¬tics against their intellectual op¬ponents. The book is too brief to beof much use to those not familiarwith the intellectual controversy stillin progress at the University. But tothose who have observed or takenpart in the controversy, the book isimportant because it reveals a changein Mr. Adler. He no longer gives theimpression of a bright young mananxious to show what silly mistakesother people make. He writes as onegenuinely and seriously perturbed bythe difficulties of communication andof understanding those who dissent.Compared to his former works, Mr.Adler’s literary style is a model ofclarity and ‘brevity. His writingachieves a literary quality so well sus¬tained that readers may be abruptlypuzzled when they find, on page 48,“avalanches of syllogisms falling inan orderly cascade.”Friars Call SpecialMeeting for AuthorsThere will be a special meeting onuesday in the Reynolds club office»r persons who are planning to writejoks for next year’s Blackfriarslow, the Board of Superiors an-3unced yesterday.Plans call for moving the show up• earlier in the school year, and the^adline for books will be set in thejtumn quarter, so that it is hopedime prospective authors will be ableI complete their books during theimmer.At the meeting Nels Foqua willcplain the requirements for a Black-'iars book.. 4 MONTH INTENSIVI COURSEeeiuoi iTuoiNTs an* aiADUAntmoserlUSINESS COLLEGEPAm MNii*. i.n.nu. Eighth Annual Alumni conference,Judson court at 9.Alumni reunion. Cloister club at 12.Annual luncheon of the classes of1916-17, Coffee Shop, at 12:30.Alumni Baseball game, 1916 vs.1917, at 2.Sunset Supper, Hutchinson Com¬mons at 6.Dinner of the class of 1903, Hutch-iiKson Commons dining room at 6.Dinner of the association of Doc¬tors of Philosophy, the Quadrangleclub at 6:30.Twenty-eighth Annual UniversitySing, Hutchinson Court at 8:45.induction of Aides and Marshals,Hutchinson Court at 10.Wyvern, room C of Ida Noyes at 5.Arexis and Dames, Theatre of IdaNoyes at 6.Phi Delta Theta. Cloister club ofIda Noyes at 6.Phi Beta Delta alumnae, library ofIda Noyes, at 5.Phi Delta Upsilon, sun parlor ofIda Noyes at 8.BOBCROSBYand his bandwithMARION MANNThe "BOB CATS"andGrand Swing RevueEvery Sunday 3-6 p.m.''BOB-CATS^ CLUBMEETINGBLACKHAWKRANDCXPH & WABASHDEARBORN B2S2 Chi Rho Sigma, YWCA room ofIda Noyes at 4.JUNE 5Communist club, WAA room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Delta Sigma, YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 3.JUNE 9 Gideonse Spetdts toInt-House Alumni MAT WE lOMINDYOr;Dames, dance room of Ida Noyesat 7:30.Spanish class, room C of Ida Noyesat 7.ASU Workshop, room C of IdaNoyes at 2:30.Alpha Zeta Beta, library of IdaNoyes at 7:30. ,JUNE 10President’s Reception, Cloister clubof Ida Noyes at 4.ASU cooperative committee, roomC of Ida Noyes at 12:30.Negro Student club, YWCA roomof Ida Noyes at 4.German Club, YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 4.Dames, room C of Ida Noyes at 2. Alumni of International House liv¬ing in Chicago will meet in the As¬sembly hall of the House Friday,June 10, for the first banquet of theInternational Hou.se Alumni Associa¬tion. Harry D. Gideonse, associateprofessor of Economics, is a speaker,taking as his topic “Geneva—Autop¬sy or Embryo?”Sponsors of the Banquet empha¬size the fact that it is informal andopen to the general public, at $1.25per plate. Members of the Associa¬tion, organized about a year ago,may attend for $1.00 upon presenta- jtion of membership cards. jPresent members of the House who jwill leave at the end of this year will jbe honored at a Farewell Party Tues-'day in the Home Room. “CharlieChaplin and the Great Train Rob¬bery,” will be revived for the occa¬sion, with refreshments to follow. iPhct/ii <■' 0M24 WOODLAWN aVE.S*rv* Exc*ll*nt FoodLUNCHEONS 35e opDINNERS. 50c upTHEY’RE GOING FAST!Hurry and get your copy todayand assure yourself of untoldpresent and future enjoyment.The Cap and GownOffice in Lexington HallForyour lighter momenis9 There's nothing like a white suit to giveyou a real lift.... to jack up your spirits andappearance,. .and there's nothing like a gen¬uinePALM BEACH WHITEto give you that balanced blend of style andcomfort. -We recommend several to see youthrough a whole summer of week-ends, vaca¬tion days and pleasant evenings. You'll findthe new Palm Beach whites a wise investment—for the smooth weave sheds soil, washeslike new, holds its shape. Why not a double-breasted drape and a tucked back sport suit—grand values, both, atlUaHtU BY OOODALl^PudCni Tijdiich )))y $ 17.75Add a few pairs of the new PalmBeach slacks to complete your sum¬mer- wardrobe. Th^ new CabanaBlue, Brittany Brown and GullGray slacks will contrast smartlywith your white Palm Beach coat.$5.50ERIECLOTHING COMPANY837-839 E. 63rd StreetMARYLAND THEATRE BUILDINGHi irto i’ iridfHii- ifiriiii I'i-iPage Four THE .DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1938ILiT’Sock*®'* ‘""IWNeW l4»v»rtftve Blocics OutHormful R^f—Does Not Prevent Tan NOTAN OIL!Sing -(Continaed from page 1)Chi Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Psi Up-silon, Phi Delta Theta, Alpha DeltaPhi, and Delta Kappa Epsilon.Fraternities BroadcastThe last six will sing not only forthe spectators in Hutchinson Court,but for a nation-wide audiehce. The Sing will be broadcast over WMAQand the Red Network of the NationalBroadcasting Company from 9:30 un¬til 10.The fraternities, as usual, willcompete for two cups, one for qualityand one for the largest number ofmen participating. Alpha DeltaPhi and Phi Delta Theta, who joint¬ly wdti the qnality cup last year, willcompete for only the quantity cUp this time, and Psi Upsilon, last year'squantity winner, will compete foronly the quality award.The Sing Committee, in charge oftomorrow’s program, is composed ofS. Edwin Earle, ’ll, and Arthur C.Cody, ’24, co-chairmen, Allen Miller,'26, and three undergraduates, Ar¬thur Goes, Alfred Jaffe, and EmmettDead man.^oiiiKePriiMResultsAnnounceriietit of various pri^s. toUniversity students made yes¬terday by the Office of the Dean ofStudents.The Theodore Lee Neff cash awardof $50 for excellence in the study ofFrench language arid literature wasmade fb ^ta McGudrie. jCdooardRoditi ^as awarded the Jeanne d’ArcMedal of “Le Lyceum, Societe desfemmes de France a New York,”which is offered to the student mostproficient in the French language!Hugh Davidson received the medal ofthe French Government, which is of¬fered annually to the student whomost distinguishes himself in theComprehensive Examination for theBachelor’s degree in Frehch.^All ofthese awards were made u^ri therecommendation of the Department ofRomance Languages and Literatures.William Blakemore was awardedthe Susan Colver-Rosenberg prize foran essay on “The Definition in Re¬cent Psychology of Religion of theStimcture and Function of Faith.”The award, amounting to $215 wasmade on the recommendation of DeanShirley Jackson Case of the DivinitySchool. Frederic Edward Blume re¬ceived the Noyes-Culter prize for ex¬cellence in common dialect Greek ina study entitled, “The Greek of theHamburg Papyrus of the Acts ofPaul in Relation to the Greek of theNew Testament.”The McLaughlin prize and the JohnBillings Fiske Poetry contest awardswill not be made this year. Iri theFiske contest the judges concludedthkt no poem or group of poems sub¬mitted was of such quality as tojustify awarding the prize of $100. Plan Changes inSS ExaminationChanges in the present system ofbachelor’s comprehensives are beingconsidered by the Division of the So¬cial Seiences. Any changes made, how¬ever, are likely to be along differentlines from those made racently by theDivisions of the Biological and Physi¬cal Sciences, who made the final com¬prehensives optional.A special committee, headed byFay-Cooper Cole, has recommendedthat the bachelor’s comprehensives beretained in the Social Sciences butthat some account be taken of workdone in courses. No action will betaken however, until Dr. Tyler, newlyappointed Chief Examiner of the Uni¬versity arrives.Suggestions made several years agoby Robert Redfield, Dean of the So¬cial Sciences Division, for revisingthe curriculum are likely to be recon¬sidered.LEARN TO FLYSpecial School RcrtMGot. LicmiMd Airplamos andInstructortNEW AIRPLANESWrite or CoUMlDWEStflYing Sehodl89rd CICERO Portamouth 6606Request Subscribd*^ toCrH for Cup & GownSubscription holders for the 1938Crip and Gown are advised to stop inat the office in Lexington hall to claimtheir books ab soon ri^ possible.griarantee to hold bobks ended 19)11Wednesday, and now it is a matter offirst come, first served, according toBud Larson, publisher. All remhinifl^books are now on sale tor $4.60 atthe office and the University Book¬store. The usual sell-out appears tobe a cei^hity, and all down' priyriieritson books not claimed at once will beforfeited.Honor HalcrbwGeorge Halcrow, captain of thetrack team, has been aVarded tlileBig Ten medal at the University forproficiency in athletics and scholar¬ship, Athletic Director Nelson Met¬calf announced yesterday. Halcrowwas 1937 Big Ten outdoor quartermile chtimpion, his time of 0:47.8 be¬ing the second fastest ever recordedin the conference meet. As a sopho¬more, Halcrow scored 28 % points;last year he scored 77 % points, andthis season his total was 60 % points.His scholastic and athletic record isthe more noteworthy, Mr. Metcalfsaid, because Halcrow spent an aver¬age of four hours a day in outsideeinployment. Throughout most of hiscareer, he has been one of the chiefushers of Artdy Frain’s organization.Hanley’sBuffet1512 E. 55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT "COLLEG¬IATE" ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY’SOtm lorty y«an of coiig«nial ’ iMIMNHIStaU and Jackson, CHICAGO * kVANStlDN « OAX PARK b €ARtGET READY for a LONG ROT SUMMERSmart, Cool STRAW HATS by DOBBSThe **Lel$ure-Llfe" Boater $4The "Headspring" Sailor $5The "Biscayno" Sailor $5The "Tuscandire" Sailor ..$5The 'TryofeoN" Cabana «... .$5The "Linsolfi~koad" Panama $7.^0 - $10PALM BEACH SUITS . $17.75V TROPICAL WORSTEDS .. $25Pa/m Beach suiti fol' every occa¬sion, white for evienihg or dr^ upand patterned sriits for day¬time or vacation wear. Our new1938 collection i^ the largest andfinest we’ve ever presented. Takeour advice and get ready now fora long, hot summerCoat and VestTropical fVorstt‘ds are preferredby many men for hot weatherwear. Because they’re woven ofwool w'orsted they resist wrink¬ling and hold their shape and looklike an all year sriit. In dark andlight shades, po|iular patterns andfavorite stylesCoat and VestTHE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, JUNE g, 1938 Page FiveV,L »8 iVNB. a IMS N*. US^iltaroonPOUNOn IN listmember assocIatbd collegiatePRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the Univeraity of Chicago,publish^ mornlnss except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, S8S1 University avenue.Telephones: Local 867, and Hyde Park9211 and 9222.After 6 :S0 phone in stories to our print¬ers, The Chief Printing company, 1920Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 8811.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for afif con¬tract entered into by The Dally Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $8.00 a year; $4 by mal. Singlecopies: flve cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at. Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March t, 1879.ssenaeaNTaa son nationac AovaaTisiM# evNatioMlAdvertisi||S«iiioi»lM.OsRsfs AtMisOsn RsQressafeNos410 MaomOM Avg. NEW VONK. M. V.csKAse • OosTea • lea Aasaiss • Osa nsaciseeBOARD OP CONTROLWILLIAM H. MeNEILL Rdltar-in-ChiefCHARLES E HOY Baaineas ManageiKI.ROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL ^ STONE.^dvertising Mgr.EffifORUL ABSOCIATBSLaura Bergqust, Maxine Biesenthal.Emmett Deadman, Ruth Brody, Rex Hor-ton, Seymour Miller, Adele Rose.BUSINESS ASSOCIATES iEdwin Bergman, Max Freeman, Harry iTopping, Irvin Rosen. |Night Editor: Emmett Deadman IAlpha Delts, Psiilpsilon Competefor Golf CrownAppoint Nielsen to HeadStudent IM Board Next;Year.With the difference between Arstplace and a tic for Ar^t dependingon the outcome of the Anals of the !golf tournament, Psi U has AlphaDelta Phi as its pressing competitorfor leadership in intramurals. Thesame pair led in last year’s standings.The Owls have 536 points, the AlphaDelts 530, but may add 5 points if.they win the golf. Highest individ¬ual scorer is ^ymour Burrows, with420 points. IThe twelve leading organizations jof the 42 that competed during the |year are: Psi Upsilon, 535; Alpha jDelta Phi, 530; Phi Sigma Delta, j462Vi; Delta Upsilon, 4W; Phi KappaPsi, 436'/^; Pi Lambda Phi, 400; Del¬ta Kappa Epsilon, 390)4; Sigma Chi,375; Phi Beta DelU, 370; Phi KappaSigma, 363; Phi Delta Theta, 360^;Kappa Sigma, 340. |Following Burrows in individualstandings are Odens, Herschel, Run¬yon, Libby, LoiU, Fried, Sapperstein,Daniels and Jeremy.Pi Lambda Phi won the cup for jshowing the greatest improvement inintramural standings, having raiseditself from 17 to 6.Nielsen HeadsI-M BoardRoger Nielsen will head the stu¬dent intramural staff next year, ac¬cording to Walter Hebert, divector olIntramurals. The senior board willbe organized on a different basis for1938-39, with managers for autumn,winter and spring, aad a fourik incharge of premetion of independentparticipation. FRiing these respec¬tive posts are dene GHckman, BillWebbe, Hart Perry and Marty Miller.Junior managers for separatesports are Jack Bernhart, CharlesMacLellan, Bill Macy, Dick Norian,Clarence Sills, Bob Wasem, GordonWatts and Harry Moscow. Goodspeed PlansNew Translationof ApocryphaPiiblislies Books as Supple¬ment to Translation ofBible.Edgar J. Goodspeed, distinguishedProfessor Emeritus of Biblical andPatristic Greek and author of thenoted American Translation of theNew Testament, will shortly Anishthe Arst complete translation directlyfrom the Greek source into English,of the fourteen “hidden” or Apocry¬phal books of the Old Testament—long the object of controversy be¬tween Catholics and Protestants.Written in tke Arst and secondcenturies B.C., the Books of theApocrypha are “important as form¬ing an invaluable link between theOdd Testament and the New.” Also,according to Dr. Goodspeed, they con¬tain notable examples of literaturesuch as The Prayer of Maneseh, con¬sidered by him to be “one of the An-est monuments of liturgy”.Now seldom printed as part of theProtestant Bibl^ the Apocrypha have! led an uncertain life since about 400A.D. when 9t. Jerome, in oppositionto St. Augustine, objected to thebooks because they were not ac¬cepted by Hebrew theologians. In1646, however, the Catholic Churchdecreed ten of them to be “canonical”Protestants set them apart in theirBibles, and as early as 1629, accord¬ing to Dr. Goodspeed, the Puritansdemanded new copies of the KingJames version omitting them alto¬gether.Inaccurate VersionsThough reprints of the originalKing James version have, as in thecase of some Family Bibles, incorpor¬ated the Apocrypha—so that they arestill available, this version of thebooks is several times removed evenfrom the Latin.Not the least important books ofthe new translation are Maccabees 1and 2, recording the glorious years ofJudaism from 176-135 B.C. Whereasthe Arst historian is careful to admitdefeat and restrained in speaking ofenemies, the second uses frequenthyperbole and colored narration. Dr.Goodspeed notes here the only knownoccurrence of several Greek wordswhich he regards as highly rhetorical,or coined by the writer. *The University Press will publishthe Apocrypha early in the fall, thuscompleting The Bible: An AmericanTranslation, published in 1936, andedited by Dr. Goodspeed and the lateProfessor J. M. P. Smith.LEABN TO DAHCECOBRICTLY .TADS PRIVATE LE8S(»fSHYDE PARK 3000HOURS: 10 A.M. to 10 P. M.TOWA DOLANIStt E. t3ID IT.EL'ZABCTH'SP«GMKmt Pantry^^DLflLPRICESiLUNCHEONS 35c-50cDINNERS 50c-85cSUNDAY DINNERS 65c-95cSpecial Kalee lo Sbideni GroupsELMS HOTELS25S CORNELL AVENUEHYDE PARE 2020Where ToWorshipFIRST UNITABUN CHURCHWeodknra Ave. and East J7A EbYen Oqim Vpgl. D.D.. MlateteiSUNDAY, JUNE 5, 193811:00 a.m. ^ “Religious Enthu¬siasm,” Dp. Vogt. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OPDISCIPLES OF CHRISTMSI ValvwMIr AvMnMMbdsten Dr. Bdword fcilbaer AsmsMbilslet's Aasedelei Mr. B. Fred WiseSUNDAY, JUNE 5, 193811:00 a.m.—“Limits of Emo¬tion”, Dr. Ames12:20 — Forum,“Living Condi¬tions in Little Egypt (Illi¬nois)” by Ralph M. Light0:OD — Wrangler’s Tea andProgram. STORE FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD COMPANY■mwMiFat acTfre mportm—THE PLAYTIME SUIT$750«n<f St»chmPncdcal, smart, and frankly just sloppyenough to delight that part of a man’s char¬acter that makes him Hke to go careless on aholiday. Made of denim, with a short sleeveshift with two roomy pockets—and a pair ofpractical slacks. Shirt can be worn out ortucked in. Sixes small, medium and large.In bhie, brown, green, wine. $7.50Otksr Suits at $5, $10 and |20Tikm Spoetesnask’e Floor, tke FifdsI1^ For night-tiwm* dmiPALM BEACHSUMMER FORMAL•soFor holiday evenings, the shawl collartuaedo with a cool, crisp, white Paks Beachjacket and dark blue Palm Beach trousers,is just about perfect! Available in eithersingle or double-breasted model.Men*a aod Yowog Mco*aSommer SoitaF otirc Foortk FloorFor itnochohoni wemr"^MEXICANHUARACHES*39* pi.The peasant footwear from Mexico that hasbeen adopted for lounge wear by America:,men. Made with braided leather tops, andleather soles with very low heels. Porous,ea^y on the feet, perfect for everythingbut too-active spurts. And they'd be idealwith your denim suit.Shoes—Sccoo^ FloorYaiu*il liAvc comfojpguinderfoot withSLACK SOCKS55So«l»Op.irFor golf, tennis, or garterless lounging—you'll need slack socks. We carry as complete a stock as we know how to maintain—from cotton and lisles at 55c to soft,absorbent wools at $1 and $1.50. Thsy’lladd to your enjoyment of any leisure-time activity.Fists! Flowr\Also Evanston and (ksk ParkPage Six THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JUNE 3, 1938 □List Athletic Awards for SpringQuarter; Give 26 Major LettersThe announcement o f baseballawards yesterday completed the listof 26 major letters awarded forspring sports. Baseball leads the listwith 11 major letter awards. Eightwere made in track and 7 in tennis.The complete list is as follows:Tennis major letters, James Atkins,Art Jorgensen, John Krietenstein,Chester Murphy, William Murphy,Charles Shostrum,, John Shostrum;Old English letters, Anthony Furman*ski, Dick Norian, Norm Svendsen;plain garment, Bob Reynolds. Trackmajor letters were won by Bob Brum¬baugh, Bob Cassels, John Davenport,George Halcrow, Matthew Kobak,Chester Powell, Kenath Sponsel, andJohn Webster. Old English awardswent to Morton Goodstein, DaveGordon, Lew Hamity, LawrenceHirsch, Louis Letts, Frederick Lin¬den, Russell Parsons, Chris Sergal,Loyal Tingley, Franz Warner andGeorge McElroy. Plain garmentswere awarded to Lahman Arnould,John Busby, Alan McClimoa, BubMerriam, Ross Netherton, Ed Val¬ors, Bob Wasem, Andrew Herschel.Baseball LettersBaseball major letters went to PaulAmundsen, Bill Colageratos, ArtDean, Clifford Gramer, LaurenceKlass, Martin Levit, Bob Meyer, BobReynolds, Clyde Shepherd, JeromeSivesind, Roy Soderlind. Old Englishletters were given to Jerry Abelsonand Robert Burke, while Bob Brinker,Denis Cowan and Ed Valors won plain garments.In golf only Old English letterswere awarded, John Gilbert, JimGoldsmith, Bob Sampson, Harry Top¬ping and Bill Webbe winning thataward.Freshman numeral winners havealso been announced by the respec¬tive coaches. In baseball numeralswere* given to Omer Anderson, EdBarker, Charles Cavanaugh, WalterConrad, Frank Feeny, Lee Hewitt,Art Lopatka, Aaron Mastrofsky,Frank MacCracken, Samuel Plame,Bob Sehnert and William Steinbrech-er.Track NumeralsIn track numerals were awarded toMaurice Abrahamson, Caroll Brown¬ing, Edward Davidson, Richard Kas-ins, James Lineberger, Willis Little-word, Ted Mafit, Howard Morton,Don Polon and James Ray.Wrestling numerals were awardedto Charles Brown, Ed Cerney, AllanGreen, Robert Hughes and MartinJones.Fencing numerals went to WilliamHochman and Patrick McLaughlin;swimming numerals to Charles Per¬cy; tennis numerals to Arthijr Cohen,Ben Fox, James Hill and John Stev¬ens.CLASSIFIED ADSSUBLEASE—2^ rooms; modora apt.; thow-«rs; large cloaau. Very raaaoftjibla. Fur-aished or unfurnished or will sail fur¬niture. 826 E. 66th st. Dor. 8498. GRADUATIONI GIFTSBOOKS-SPECIAL GIFT EDITIONSBioQrcqthy — Rdion — PoetryGREAT SALE OF STOCK BOOKS; NEWGIVE SOMETHING THAT IS DISTINCTIVE OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOOTHER GIFT SUGGESTIONS. The following all bear the University coot oi anas:BOOKENDS — PmS WITH GUARDS — RINGSCOMPACTS — POCKET KNIVES — aGARETTE CASESLIGHTERS — BILL FOLDS — KEY CASES — PAPER KNIVESPHOTOGRAPHS and ETCHINGS oiCAMPUS BUILDINGS. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenuePv..,Gracs moorsANDHB KOSTBLANBTZ ^ n o o ^ ,*ooCSh o o o to o o o;3 J; oo O O.Iff OO OO^n.^OOOCCMPaul WhitbmanDbsms TaylorPAUL DOUGLASFor aroma,,,for taste...for mildness Ghesterfields ... just a wispof Chesterfield^s aromatells you right away—thert’s areal cigarette.That’s because Chesteriieldaare blended with skill from aro¬matic Turkish and mild, ripehome-grown tobaccos.Light one and at once youHknow that Chesterfields are. milder and taste better.give millions of smokersMORE PLEASURE than any other cigaretteCdpytisk Itfloerr * HynsToiuooCiCO.