the Attackon CancerI By DAVID MARTINA systematic Investigation of thejoily tissues and excreta of cancer pa-ients in an attempt to isolate somehemical compound which may beesponsible for cancer in humans is.eing carried on by pathologist PaulSteiner and bio-chemist P. C. Koch,jnder the provisions of a $3600 grantrom the National Advisory CancerCommittee. Also investigating the■fiuses of the enormous increase inung cancer in the last forty years Dr.Steiner, with several assistants, isinalyzing tobacco and the products ofts combustion.Experiments have only just begunA-ith compounds which are suspected)f having the ability to produce can¬cer. Extractions are painted on the!kin, or injected into the veins of lab-jratory rabbits, guinea pigs, andnice, which are then closely watchedfor signs of malignant growths. Sincet takes about 10 per cent of the lifespan of an animal for signs of cancerappear SHie Bailp iViainionVol. 39, No. 77. Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1939 Price Three CentsWater Poloists Win Big Ten Title‘Evening inCathay’ Opensat Int-House History' Will Judge GuiltyAmong Democracies—BenesChinese Theatre GroupPresents Show to AidWar Victims.ible for at least a year* * « To aid their war ridden friends inthe Orient, the Chinese CulturalTheatre Group presents a revival ofresults will not be avail-1 ancient Chinese dramatic and musi¬cal lore at International House to¬night and tomorrow night at 8:30.Over 60 chemical compounds which : The group, composed of noted Shang-jroduce cancer are known, most of hai society women, and of talented:hcm having been discovered within | scholars of classical music is tour-:he last five years. Others such as tar, | ing the United States presenting “Anlowever, were known to be cancer | Evening in Cathay,” a program ofproducing several hundred years ago. j tragedies, comedies, music and danc-S’one of the 60 known compounds ap-ing, all in the age-old tradition of the>ear naturally in man, says Dr. Stein- j Chinese.*r. but it is possible that similar com¬pounds might do so. The compounds The Group is being sponsored byInternational House and the Church‘all into several groups, but most of 1 Committee for China Relief. Part ofhem are hydro-carbons, all being | the proceeds from the Chicago per-'losely related chemically to the ster-1 formancesil.s. to the bile acids, and to some ofhe sex hormones. It is conceivablehat some of these related substances'ound in the human body might•hange and cause cancer, but no oneinows what could cause them to•hange their chemical structure.Cancer begins with an irritation.>lls in some body area suddenly be-fin to grow abnormally. But there is10 apparent chemical difference in;he.se expanding malignant cells, —10 chemical analysis can distinguish acancerous cell from a normal one. On-y way of identifying cancer tissuess by a microscopical analysis.Lung cancer, like all cancer, is•aused by some kind of stimulatingrritation. Dr. Steiner, attempting toocate the source of irritation, isinalyzing, among other things, to-lacco and tobacco smoke. It is pos-ible that there is some correlationMlween the increased use of tobacco will form the contribution of International House to theUniversity of Chicago committee forRefugee Aid and War Relief. Therest will be sent to China throughthe auspices of the Church Commit¬tee for China Relief and the Ameri¬can Bureau for Medical Aid to China.Mrs. Ernest Tong, wife of theCounsellor of the Kwan^tung Prov¬incial Government, was the organizerof the theatre group. It was origin¬ally planned as an amateur group,and devoting itself to the arts of athousand years ago, it has made anestimable contribution to the Chinesestage. Mrs. Tong did a great dealof relief work when the Japanese in¬vaded her country. Seeing hundredsof civilians perishing each day forlack of proper medical relief she de¬cided to take the American tour withher group for the benefit of Chinesewar victims.Speaking of her tour Mrs. Tongince 1900 and the prevalence of lung i said: “I felt that by doing this weIn 1900 doctors considered could not only create a better under-■ancer.hemselves fortunate to have an op¬portunity to examine a case of lungancer, so rare a form of the diseasevas it, but at the present time cancer>f the lungs has come to bo second»nly to cancer of the digestive tractn causing deaths.* * *Four types of dusts are known toproduce lung cancer: radio-activelust, chrome dust, a.sbestos dust, andhe tars and soots. The first threeypes of dusts are common only inertain industries, but tar and sootire common in any large city. Thatar caused cancer was first discovered standing of Chinese arts and culturein America, but also bring relief tothousands of sufferers. It only takes50 cents to save a life in China now,and so we hope we can be of help ina small way to the destitute in ourcountry.” 'Mrs. Tong dances and acts in “AnEvening in Cathay.” Her dance num¬bers include the horsewhip dance, thescarf dance (in which she uses ascarf 14 feet long) and the partingscene from “Lady Precious Stream.”The last scene includes a large amountof pantomime which critics have pro¬nounced to be so expressive that then the 17th century when an English ! English dialogue is unnoticed.ioctor noted the prevalence of cer-ain types of cancer among Londonhimney sweeps.The tremendous increa.se in inci-k-nco of lung cancer may possibly beittributed to increa.sed concentration•f population in large cities, or to thencreased use of tobacco. Dr. Steiners analyzing tobacco and tobaccomoke for traces of chemical com¬pounds which may produce cancer,suspect substances are painte.d onnimals. and other animals are beingegularly exposed to tobacco smoke.If the increased use of tobacco has»cen responsible for the increase inung cancer Dr. Steiner says thatI'omen, having begun to use tobaccoxtensively in the 1920’s, should be-:in to show a higher incidence ofung cancer within the next five oren years. There are modifying fac-ors which must be considered, how-ver, one of them being that therenay be a genetical factor which pre-lisposes animals in their reaction toancer.♦ * *Meanwhile, Dr. Steiner smokes a'ood brand of cigar. Among other notables in the troupeis Miss Virginia Chang, the group’spremiere danseuse, often called the“most beautiful girl in Shanghai.”Only two performances of “AnEvening in Cathay” will be given:one tonight, and one tomorrow night.Tickets are on sale at InternationalHouse and at the Information Office.Compton Declinesro Answer RumorsIn answering rumors that he wouldeave the University, Arthur H.'ompton, distinguished Service Pro-essor of Physics and Nobel Prize'’inner in 1927, refused, yesterday, totote positively that he was not con-idering such a mo^ve.i (k>liiiiil)iaii (CadetsVisit UniversityTen cadets from the Colegio deRamirez, a military school in Bogota,Columbia, S. A., arrived on campusyesterday to visit the University. Forthe past two months the visitors,aged 16-19, have been exchange stu¬dents at Allen Academy, Bryan,Texas, and they are now on their wayto New' York to take the boat backto Colu||bia.These^adets, headed by Lt. Wet-enans Tamago, were selected fromthe best students of each of theirschool’s Spanish classes for the honorof the exchange scholarships, andduring their stay here Carlos Castilloof the Spanish department acted astheir host. Spanish students JackNetherton and William McCuaigguided them on a sightseeing tourabout the campus.However, the sight that interestedthem most was not the view from thetop of the Rockefeller Chapel tower,but a set of rare volumes of Cer¬vantes’ Don Quixote in the stacks. “History will judge not only thetotalitarian regimes but the guiltyamong the democracies,” Eduard Ben¬es, former president of Czechoslo¬vakia, contended in his WalgreenFoundation lecture yesterday, scor¬ing the western European countriesfor failing the smaller, newer ^antralEuropean democracies.“The totalitarian states were al¬ways united in action against thedemocracies. The democracies failedto work in unison and were frequent¬ly deserted by their fellow in timesof stress,” he said.Traces HistoryTracing the history of the smalldemocracies from their inception atthe breakup of the four great centralEuropean empires after the WorldWar, Benes attributes the current de¬cay of democracy partly to the newdemocracies themselves. They beganwith historically determined differ¬ences, he explained, in both externalcharacter and internal quality. Theyhad no traditions. Many of them hadhad no previous experience with par¬liamentary government. Political edu¬cation was frequently almost non¬existent. The masses were unpre¬pared.No revolution produces immediatelysatisfactory results, Benes alleged.Even less than usual could have beenexpected of the revolution created bythe World War since post-war de¬mocracy in central Europe implied astart from scratch, and demandedpreparation and education ofmasses, in addition to the overcomingof problems left from previous re¬gimes and from the war itself.Benes OptimisticBenes is optimistic about the fu¬ture of Europe. “Democracy and free¬dom are the most perfect forms ofpolitical and social life that man hasevolved,” he stated. “The attemptto establish authoritarianism is noth¬ing new, and because of an inevitableand natural sociological law has al¬ways been replaced by a regime ofliberty.”Although the war and the peaceconference had errors, from which present day Europe is suffering, andfrom which he believes it will sufferfor some time, Benes finds some hopein the policy of the war period andits post-war consequences.Mrs. Roosevelt,Thomas MannSupport DriveRefugee Group BeginsDivinity, Medical SchoolCanvass. Defeat Illinois at Ur-bana in Close Game,4-3.Announce CutIn Verne NoyesScholarshipsIncrease of ApplicationsAccompanies Decrease ofIncome.Drastic reductions in the LaVerne Noyes Foundation Scholarshipshave been forced by an increase of66 per cent in applications over lastyear, and a cut of $3,321 in the in¬come available for the scholarships.Dean of Students George A. Worksannounced recently.The Foundation was established byNoyes in 1918 to provide tuition forwar veterans with five months serviceor more, and their blood descendants.These two factors have forced thecommittee in charge of the scholar¬ships to award them on the basis ofneed, rather than, as in the past, toall those entitled to them underNoyes’ grant. '429 ApplicantsIn Winter quarter of 1938, 258students were receiving assistanceunder the fund. 35 of these wereveterans, one the grandchild of aveteran, and the rest children ofveterans. For Winter quarter, 1939,there were _ 429 applicants, 25 ofwhom were veterans, and 3 of whomwere grandchildren. If the increasein applications continue at the pres¬ent rate, the number of applicantsfor Winter quarter of 1940 will havejumped to 715.According to Works, there is noway in which the scholarships maybe awarded for scholastic merit,since Noyes obviously did not haveacademic excellence in mind when hemade the gift.The Noyes scholarship was not theonly one which suffered under the re¬cent cut in funds, Wprks said. Outof 28 scholarship funds, 25 werecurtailed. With faculty pledges and donationscoming in apace, the Refugee Aidcommittee yesterday started to can¬vass the Divinity School and theMedical School for pledges to putover their $10,000 quota. The Com¬mittee, headed by Rita Mayer, decid¬ed that the first few weeks of theSpring quarter will be needed toclean up the drive successfully, andso tentatively scheduled the close ofthe drive at the end of about threeweeks. ♦The Committee, which has alreadygained support in a letter from Elea¬nor Roosevelt, among other nationalfigures, had written Thomas Mann,distinguished author, requesting himthe • to come to speak on the Quadranglesfor Refugee Aid and War Relief.Mann, in a letter to the Committee,said that with regret he was forcedto decline the invitation to speak ata meeting at Chicago because of workand other engagements, but offeredhis letter to aid if possible in thecollection of funds for the drive.He said, “I admire and respect thehelp which the young men and wo¬men of this country, and of the Uni¬versity of Chicago in particular, aregiving to the youthful victims of thebrutal wars and oppressive measuresundertaken and made by the fascistcountries. The fascist interpretationof the world is one of absolute force—a force which is devoid of moralsense, which violates truth and jus¬tice, which degrades the finer sensi¬bilities of human souls, and debauchesthe individual from his allegiance tohonor and to integrity of mind andcharacter. But there is another forcewhich the fascists themselves fear,and which may well prove to be theirundoing. The force which in theyouth of each generation is renewedand vitalized, the human will to livein happiness and security in sur¬roundings compatible with humandignity and peace of mind. That thefascist powers fear this force isevident, for every effort is being madeand every pressure brought to mouldthe fascist youth in the pattern oftheir ill-favored leaders.“Everyone who helps you in yourcampaign is not only serving theharassed youth in foreign countriesor assisting in the education of youngrefugees, but is making a definitecontribution to the cause of demo¬cracy.”WAA Holds ElectionTomorrowEleanor Coambs and Caroline Sout-ter lead the list of WAA membersnominated for the Spring quarterelection which will be held tomorrowin the lobby of Ida Noyes.Caroline Soutter will opposeCoambs in the race for presidentwhile Katherine Bethke and DorothyAnn Huber are candidates for the vicepresidency. Mary Blanchard andNancy Santi are competing for theposition of secretary. Other candi¬dates are Mae Alexander and SueNull who are candidates for treasur¬er.Margaret Ewald is the retiringpresident of the organization.Women’s organization elections alsoscheduled for this week includes In-erclub today, and Mirror on Friday.YWCA is also holding elections thi.?week. By DAN MEZLAYChicago’s water polo team provedthat the Maroons can win athleticchampionships when they fought atough battle with the strong Illinoisaggregation at Urbana last Saturdayand won, 4-3 to end the season un¬defeated and win the Big Ten title.The lineup was as follows: PhilSchnering, forward; Jack Bernhardt,forward; Joe Stearns, forward; John¬ny Van de Water, guard; Nye Mc-Laury, guard; A1 De Grazia, guard;Bill Macy, goal, and Jim Anderson,substitute at forward.mini Make Two on FlukesBoth teams appeared nervous,probably because they realized thata title was at stake. Illinois scoredtwo goals in the first half that areknown among water polo players as“flukes”, Macy, Maroon goalie, stoppeda ball near the goal and brought hishands back over his head to throw itbut dropped the ball instead. Hereached back to retrieve the ball andaccidently knocked it In.The second “fluke” occurred whenDe Grazia, guard, and Cutter, Illi¬nois forward, dove under water afterthe ball, which was near the Chicagogoal, and when they came up, theball seemed to bounce, as if from anunseen hand into the Chicago goal.The Maroons played a cautious gamein the first half, attempting to playthe Illinois type of game, which is“man to man,” and the period endedwith the score 2-2.In the second half, the Maroonsabandoned the Illinois style of playand began to show their own bag oftricks. In the main, the Chicago at¬tack consisted of dribbling towardthe opponent’s goal and maneuveringthe goalie out of position by usingintricate pass plays. The most fre¬quently used play is known as the“shuttle.” It works by dribbling inclose on either side of the goal andpassing back to an unguarded manwho, because of his position, canmake an accurate throw at the goal.The only Maroon substitution wasmade because Jim Anderson has agood throwing arm to better facili¬tate this play. Chicago scored easierwith these methods and made twogoals to Illinois’ one to win, 4-3.Van de Water StarsJohnny Van de Water, guard, ob¬tained the ball on every tipoff exceptone. The most spectacular play wasmade when Van de Water threw apass the length of the pool, whichwas gently pushed on its way intothe goal by Jack Bernhardt, forward.Johnny Van de Water, swimmingcaptain, Phil Schnering, water polocaptain, Nye McLaury and A1 DeGrazia, all seniors, played their lastgame. These four stalwarts haveparticipated in only two losing gamesin three years of Big Ten competition.In the last two years, the Maroonswere co-champs of the conferencewith Northwestern. This year, how¬ever, the seniors vowed to bringhome the undisputed conferencechampionship and achieved their longnurtured ambition in the Illinoisgame.Maroons Most Often ChampsThe Maroons have always been athreat to the other teams in the con¬ference and proof of this is the factthat they won more conference cham¬pionships than any other team sincethe inception of water polo as a reg¬ular sport in the Big Ten in 1925. Infact, the Maroons never lost morethan one game a year. Thei’efore,the team that beats the Maroonsu.sually wins the conference title.Part of the success of the Maroonsis due to the fact that the playerswork as a team and not as a groupof fellows attempting to outscore(Continued on page 3)Lippmann LecturesTonight in MandelWalter Lippmann will discuss theinternational situation in his talk en¬titled “The Present Outlook” tonight8t 8:30 in Mandel Hall. This will behis first public lecture of his currentvisit. He has been giving a series offour informal talks on “the AncientMan.” No more tickets are availablefor the lecture tonight.rPage TwoHaroottFOUNDED INMEMBER ASSOCIATEDPRESS 1901COLLEGIATEThe Deilr Maroon' is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,publish^ mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarter* by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephone*: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.A'ter 6:80 phone in stories to ourprinters. The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went-worth 6128.Tlie University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.~The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe right* of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $3 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cent*.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.KOH NATIONAL AOVeNTISINO *VNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y.Chicago • Bostor • Loi Argilis - S*R FrahcigcoBOARD OF CONTROLEditorial StaffLAURA BERGQUIST, ChairmanMAXINE BIESENTHALSEYMOUR MILLELADELE ROSEbusiness StaiTEDWIN BERGMANMAX FREEMANEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRuth Brody. Harry Cnrnelins. WilH«rnGrody, Ernest Leiser, David Martin, AliceMeyer. Robert Sedlak, Charles O’DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Caple, Richard Glasser, RolandRichman, David Salzberg,Harry ToppingNight Editors: David Gottlieband W'illiam HanklaDemocracy in theSenateThe University Senate, by thepowers outlined in the statutesof the University, “shall havelegislative and administrativepower over all matters not spe¬cifically reserved to a Facultyby this Statute.” Under thepresent order of things, thismeans that the legislative andadministrative power of theUniversity is vested in a groupwhich usually numbers about 35members interested enough toattend a meeting.Occasionally, an issue may^ arouse such a furor in profes¬sorial offices that a Senate meet¬ing is attended by almost all ofthe near-200 members. Such aturnout last fall heralded the ap¬pointment of two special com¬mittees to investigate problemsbrought forward by the AAUP.For such matters as a change inthe comprehensive system, how¬ever, which in affecting one de¬partment affects all the depart¬ments, professors stay away.They stay away because noth¬ing that interests them everhappens at Senate meetings.Nothing that interests themever happens because they stayaw'ay.The Senate membership ismade up of the President of theUniversity, the Vice-Presidents,and all Professors of full rankin the University. This is apopular form of university or¬ganization in America, and itwas once a democratic form. Inthe small college with a closelyknit faculty, everyone from thePresident down to the youngestinstructor used to gather aroundand discuss educational policiesand the football team. As col¬leges grew into universities, andsuch general discussion grewunwieldy, administrators lookedaround them and decided thatthe oldest, the wisest, and themost honored members of theirfaculties should retain the dem¬ocratic privilege.If the University’s presentSenate, inactive and uninter¬ested, is any indication, themajority of the full professorsare not interested in the privi¬lege of government. They are re¬search scholars, slow to beurged away from their booksand their test tubes for suchimmediately practical mattersas a meeting. There is no reasonfor forcing them to participatein a form of government whichthey obviously do not careabout.The full professors who havebeen active in the Senate andwho desire to continue would bejust as well served by a Senateorganization made up of repre¬sentatives of the departments. THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1939The associates, assistants, andinstructors who now have no di¬rect opportunity to be heard,would be better served. Andthere is no doubting that theshaky relationship between thefaculty and the administrationwould be improved if the Sen¬ate were strong, active, and ableto speak authoritatively.The representative system isalready well typified in the Sen¬ate by the committee on Policy,which is made up of depart¬mental representatives. This isalso the committee which car¬ries on almost all the work ofthe Senate, because these mem¬bers, having a responsibility totheir departments and to thetotal organization, are interest¬ed in doing the work. Theywould not otherwise have al¬lowed their election.The experience of Harvardshows that the same effects, ona broader scale, might beachieved by the introduction ofa completely representative sys¬tem. The departmental repre¬sentative plan came in withConant, and has resulted in anincreased interest in the depart¬mental meetings which elect themembers of the governing bodyand discuss policies with them,and an increased effectivenessin the governing group itself.There is no justification forforcing professors to take aninterest in democratic governingof the University. There is nojustification for a governingbody which includes professorswho take no interest. A repre¬sentative Senate is a studentsuggestion as an answer to apressing professorial problem. TravellingBazaarDespite the Cap and Gown fiasco,(see tomorrow’s Maroon), the week¬end rolled merrily on. It was a bigweekend, what with Mirror on Fridaynight, basketball game and Mirroron Saturday night, and Phi Psi for¬mal, Alpha Delt party, Phi Delt blow¬out, and the ZBT Hill-Billy riot.Jaybe, who sees everything andtells it to the Daily Maroon, sendsin the following tidbits:Has the Betty Hawk—Henry Par¬ker combination gone bust? He es¬corted the queenly blonde, BarbaraThompson to the Phi Delt after-Mir-ror dance Saturday night. At thesame affair. Jack Wass evinced a keeninterest in the luscious redhead onBill Cook’s arm.B. J. Dunlap’s heart, supposed tobelong to her Johnny, is neverthelessacting up for Bob Bigelow.Wally Beatty’s one-and-only, LouiseEaton, apparently believes in safetyin numbers! Ho, well, don’t we all?A number of alumni rejoined the PhiPsis at their Black and White formal.Jane Anderson, Lou Eaton, and MollyDocekal represented the Quads. JoeMolkup was cutting up as usual.Chuck Banfe gave an air of “theproper man” by keeping his gloveson while dancing. Emmett Deadmanwas searching for a grand march tolead. Danny Deever just couldn’t eat.Bill Hare was proud of his smooth andunexpected date. Chuck O’Donnell,who had a sore ankle, tried to explainit away by saying he miscounted thesteps at Judson, which in itself wasan admission. He was also worriedabout his date’s, Lucille Jacobson’s,cough. Bill Boultell was commentingon surprises.Today on theQuadranglesDivinity Chapel, Joseph Bond Chap¬el, “What a Man Does With His Sol¬itariness,” The Reverend HollandSchloerb, Hyde Park Baptist Church,11:55.Pi Delta Phi, Ida Noyes, Room B,12.YWCA College Cabinet, Ida Noyes,Alumni Room, 12.WAA. Ida Noyes, WAA Room,12:30.Chicago Youth League. Ida Noyes,Room C, 12:45.Federation of University Women.Ida Noyes, Alumni Room, 4.Mathematical Club. Eckhart 206,“Milne’s Kinematical Relativity,” Dr.Page, 4:30.Blackfriars. Reynolds Club, RoomA, 5.Public ’ ecture. “Chaucer’s Canter¬bury Tales: The Cock and The Fox,Professor Hulbert, The Art Instituteof Chicago, 6:45.Library Club. Ida Noyes, YWCARoom, 7.Chi Rho Sigma Alumnae. IdaNoyes, Alumnae Room, 7:30.Lutheran Student Association. IdaNoyes, YWCA Room, Rev, Carl Lund-quist. “A "View of World Lutheran¬ism,” 7:30.Christian Science Organization.Thorndyke Hilton Chapel, 7:30.A S U Theater Rehearsal. IdaNoyes, Theater, 8.Graduate Classical Club. Classics20, “Hanibal and the Price of Tiles atDelos”, Professor Larson, 8.“An Evening In Cathay.” Interna¬tional House, 8:30.Charles R. Walgreen FoundationLecture. Mandel Hall, “The PresentOutlook,” Walter Lippmann, 8:30,Movies, “2nd Bureau” and “Insidethe Maginot Line,” InternationalHouse, 4:30 and 8?30.NOTICEIn accordance with the recent term-of-office amendment in its constitu¬tion requiring a change of administra¬tion for the spring quarter the De¬bate Union will hold its last meetingof the quarter today. Meeting atLexington Hall, the election will beheld at 4:30. s s sChuck Brown, arriving in townlater then he expected, found his datealready taken care of by a Wisconsinbrother Deke. The three of them hadan enjoyable evening.Ruth Steel was backstage at Mir¬ror with pansies from Greg. Whiteroses were sent to all the Esotericsparticipating in the Mirror show bythe other E.soterics. Judy Cunning¬ham was silencing everyone back-stage. Ben Coyte was worried abouthis “tails” which had fallen to theground while he was carrying them.Mary Ellen Bean made herself help¬ful by brushing him off. Hats off toLetters to theEditorDaily Maroon:The Maroon, on Thursday, March2, erroneously referred to me as thecampaign manager of Paul H. Doug¬las in the recert aldermanic elec¬tions. Mr. Douglas’ manager is Mr.Michael Greenebaum, a former stu¬dent of the University and an out¬standing member of one of the Uni¬versity’s successful football teams.Mr. Greenebaum is perhaps more re¬sponsible than any other single per¬son for the splendid showing made byProfessor Douglas in polling 5,500votes more than his nearest competi¬tors. I merely worked with the cam¬pus volunteers during the campaign.Claude E. Hawley.Poulter Shows MoviesOf Little AmericaDr. Thomas C. Poulter, Ph.D. ’33,who was senior scientist and secondin command on the second antarcticexpedition of Admiral Richard E.Byrd, will show his motion picturesof Antarctica and lecture on “Life inLittle America” on Friday, March 10,at 8:15, at the Shakespeare School,1119 E. 49th street.Awarded a congressional medal“for scientific accomplishment un¬equalled in polar research,” Dr. Poul¬ter distinguished himself also by hiscommand of the expedition when Ad¬miral Byrd went to his advance base.Local Bar AssociationElects Officers TodayThe Bar Association of the LawSchool holds its annual election ofofficers today from 10 to 3.Joseph M. Andleman, Robert Cook,for president. Bert Warshaw, FredAsh, and P. Rothschild are runningfor vice-president. Frances Brownwill be the next secretary since thereis only one candidate. Dave Scheffer,Thelma Brook, and Phil Lawrencewere nominated for treasurer. In going to the rescue of the admiral, jDr, Poulter became the second man iin history to make a journey in thewinter night of the polar region, 1Tickets for the lecture, priced at25 cents, may be obtained at Shakes¬peare School.School ForBRIDESApril 11 U May 23 Tie KHOOL ofoomfmcRRuand KI6n(6Glorlfled meala a ijeux or fa, 20 cor¬rectly aerved. Individual Inatnictlon Inshort-cut cooklnc. Clevar maraKementof monay, time and servants. MarriaxeCuldancp. Hay or Evening. Booklet C.350 BELDEN AVE. LINCOLN 0927n Ernestine Stresen-Reuter, who car¬ried off her untimely fall very well.Hattie Paine and a crowd were outbeering after a succesful evening.Jimmie Murr appeared stag at thePhi Delt party.Jerry Moberg was tired out by hiswork on Blackfriars’ show, and yet hewas anxious to get to the BasketballDance on Saturday night. Bill Mur¬phy began to realize the truth of thesong, “I Get Along Without You VeryWell.” Incidentally, here’s someoneto cheer for in the team’s playagainst Wisconsin.♦ * sBunny Hoover was wearing arti¬ficial eyelashes and she looked devas¬tating. Helen Schwartz had a smilefor Howard Greenberg.Mirror was the beginning of manybeautiful friendships, the scene of alot of good times, and, incidentally,of some stories. Prize story is aboutthe supposed Mirror “find,” BenCoyte, the glamor boy from SigmaChi. Friday night he didn’t arrive atMandel until ten minutes before cur¬tain time and gave the cast the jit¬ters. Judy Cunningham had a quickspeech composed, and one of the ac¬tors was ready to change from abathrobe to a fully-dressed conditionin no time at all. But Coyte arrived intime and sober. However, Saturday,he pulled his “coup d’etat.”Ten minutes before curtain time anice young prop girl ran up to Doc Yungmeyer and told him to dashdownstairs to the dressing room.Yungmeyer, easily excited, dashedand on the way called for Bill Randallto come along. “I think some onebroke his leg,” he called. When Yung¬meyer stopped long enough tobreathe, he asked the girl what thetrouble was. “Oh, nothing, she said.“Ben Coyte wants you to tie his tiefor him.” Yungmeyer’s words, ifprinted, would cause Randall to sus¬pend the Maroon.Other choice items include the factthat the skit, “Little Girl Afreud."wasn’t a week old when produced. Itwas the only off-color skit in theshow, and its angles were accentuatedby direction and action. The line, “myfudge belong.s to daddy,” was ananonymous contribution.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSErOR COLIEOE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough. mUtuioe, stessograpkic course—storting Januorr 1. April 1, JuU 1, October 1.Intomting Booklet tent free, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUl MOSER, J.D. RH.t.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startaity Monden. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Avs., Chicago, Kandolph 4347WE INVITE YOU TOInspect Our Mew Collection ofFINE PRINTSfrom all theMODERN MASTERSWe have prints all sizes and prices. Hun¬dreds of fine postcard prints only ten cents.BE SURE TO SEE OUR WINDOW THIS WEEK AS WTHAVE PART OF OUR COLLECTION DISPLAYED THERE.We do superior framing — frames selected to fityour picture and your home. ‘U of C Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVENUECOMINGFRIDAY MARCH 10thG"HUTCHINS'TENTH YEAR"A SPECIAL EDITION OFTHE DAILY MAROONTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1939 Page Ti 'ireeSt. John's CollegeThe Formal Lecture at St. John’s—By SCOTT BUCHANANThis is the second half of an ar¬ticle about St. John's College at An-vajHylis bn President Hutchins' for-,„er associate and friend, ScottPuchanan.After some years of endurance oflectures at Oxford and Harvard ironyplaced me in charge of adult educa¬tion by lectures with the People’s In-stitute in New York. I spent a goodileal of time and energy arrangingdiscussion groups as antidotes, but mymain job was securing, introducing,and criticising lecturers. I exploitedmv friendship with Richard McKeonand Mortimer Adler, and alwaysclaim now the honor of having intro¬duced them to the lecture platformand to their first non-academic au¬diences. It was also through themthat that the Columbia Honors Coursewas introduced to adult students. Inthe course of this collaborative expe¬rience we rediscovered the full pan¬oply of the liberal arts which the or¬dinary college and university practicewas caricaturing. Among these artswas a rhetoric which was not the per¬son-to-person art of seductive opinion,hut rather an art of mediation be¬tween ideas and symbols. This art de¬mands first a reworking and rethink¬ing of the subject-matter to find itst ssential intellectual articulations, andas a consequence the finding of the ap¬propriate modes of expression in in¬telligible symbols. Preparation mighttake weeks of private work, with theimage of platform, speaker, and au¬dience no more obtrusive than thepromised date of delivery. Discussionwith small groups would take theplace of the conventional rhetoricalconsiderations of time, place, and cir¬cumstance. The ta.sk was primarilythe construction of .something to bo(ommunicated and discussed, just asthe writers of the great books havedone for their subject-matters. Mc-Keori, .Adler, and 1 differed in our in¬terpretation of the art. but we allagreed that we had di.scovered an ar¬tistic problem of great importancefor the improvement of teaching. Wethen set ourselves to the practice andanalysis of that are in relation to theother arts of the trivium and quad-rivium.This is the genesis of the formallecture at Saint John’s. The artisticproblem is now posed to all membersof the faculty at the beginning of theyear, and the important work is donein the faculty studies in Annapolis.N’obody, but the Dean who breaks allthe maxims of excellence, gives morethan two or three lectures during theyear. All are invited ^to work on atleast one lecture. The lectures arearranged to parallel the subject-mat¬ter of the books as they are read,not to cover a subject-matter or topedagogical emergencies. Lecturersan* asked to prepare lectures whichmight be deliverd to any audienceanywhere without “talking down” toit. The image sugge.sted is that of>tudents stretching their necks to getwhat is being .said. The assumptionis that lectures descend on the audi¬ence from an intellectual level, notthat we tickle students in the ribs tokeep them awake. The general publici-^ .Annapolis is invited. The lecturesare given twice a week at the mostand they run from an hour and a halft'< two hours each.The ideal lecture would pose a morelestricted artistic task. It would deniwith at least two books, one repre¬senting a subject-matter, such asHuclid or Homer, the other, like aPlatonic dialogue or Aristotle’s Po¬etics introducing critical points ofleference in the liberal arts. Theprepartion would consist in the lectur¬er getting up his own perspectivewith Plato’s and Homer’s lines of ref¬erence terminating in the subject-matter, For another case try Shake¬speare and Coleridge.Of course the Muses have not al¬ways been as kind as these cases sug-gc.st. In the more difficult cases, as inthe easier ones, the lecturer ma?tbring his own system of knowledge tobear as his problem demands. It^-hould be unnecessary to remark onthe great variations in individual lec¬turers, but we are so often chargedwith strait-jacket aims and methodsthat I must insist on the effectivenessof imposing tasks as a means of in¬creasing individual variation. Theseure heavy and interesting tAsks, andthey force each lecturer to all the in¬genuity and idiosyrcratic techniqueshe can provide, acquire, or borrowfrom his colleagues.The receiving end of the lecture im¬poses an equally heavy task. Studentsare encouraged to listen rather thantake notes. Visitors, particularly fromthe Navy, are amassed at the atten¬tion students pay Mie lecturer; I think the students are also amazedtoo, since many of them are not ac¬customed before to listening to goodtalk. Listening is also a rhetorical artwhich plays an important part in theseminars as well as -in the lectures.Listening only begins in the lecture,and then it goes on for at least asmany weeks as the lecturer spent inpreparation. At the end of MortimerAdler’s first lecture this year a soph¬omore announced that he had justunderstood what Mortimer Adler saidlast year; we are sometimes able tobring off recognitions in shorter pe¬riods. Such recognitions marks theprogress of the rhetoric as it rever¬berates in memory and imagination.I have myself only recently seenthrough some lectures that ProfessorShotwell of Columbia gave at Am¬herst in 1913. Some immediately notunderstood lectures have had a longrhetorical life — recall Plato’s fam¬ous unrecorded lecture on The Good,which had only Aristotle as auditorat the end. Educational statisticiansplease make a note.In addition to this formality we dostoop to a few showman’s tricks. Wehave our lectures in the evening whenimagination is most awake. We haveguest lecturers fairly often to addnovelty as well as excellence to theoccasion. Our most regular guests areMortimer Adler, Mark Van Doren,and Edward Kasmer. We do not yetspeak of the “height of the lecture.season,’’ but we do feel the impact ofthe lecture occasion — lest familiarroutine breed content.U. of (]. Scout (]liil)Holds Open Smoker;Tells of ProgramUniversity men with past or pres¬ent Boy Scout affiliations will attendan open smoker and busine.ss meetingFriday evening, March 10, in theReynolds Club to learn of the serviceprogram for the University ScoutingClub.The club will petition for a charterin the national Scout fraternity. Al¬pha Phi Omega, when the project isin satisfactory operation,2.') Students EnrolledA non-social organization open toGreeks and non-Greeks alike, thegroup now numbers 25 active withabout 20 others intereste<i but notformally enrolled. In line with theprogram of service to the universtiystudent body, to the country as par¬ticipating citizens, to the youth of.America, and to the Scout brothers,the officers have been conferring withfaculty and administration officialsfor several weeks on what is to bedone.Results will be outlined at Friday’smeeting.Regular noon luncheon meetingsare presided over every Thursday inthe Hutchinson Commons BanquetRoom by Robert Smitter. HarryBeach is secretary, Mitchell Seidler,treasurer, and Jack Brown, historian.The project committee consists ofMaurice Lovejoy, Seymour Cohen andLee Weinstein.THIS YIAt see the SovietUnion—every mile ofyour way a fresh, broaderhorizon! Here is vividcolor, dynamic progress, the inspir¬ation of a great travel experience.Complete tour-transportation in theUSSR, hotels, meals, sightseeing,guide-interpreter service, ALL foronly $5 a day, $8 tourist, $15 firstclass. Many group and independentitineraries: write for illustratedbooklet No. G7-B Atkinson Leads MirrorRevue to Sparkling Successsn YGUI TRAVIL A6CNT, orInto' fnc«NIW YO«Kt 545 Fifth AvrnuoCHICAGO! 350 N. Michioan Av*.LOS ANGELESt 756 S. Broadway By DEMAREST POLACHEKWell, folks, the 14th annual MirrorRevue came and went last weekend,leaving the campus vastly surprised,somewhat agog and highly enter¬tained. As a campus production, it seta mark which the Blackfriars are go¬ing to have quite a time equalling.Led by a series of sparkling bits ofdancing and foolery in the skits byGrant Atkinson, the entire companyenjoyed huge success is mowin’ ’emdown for the two night stand in Man-del.In response to the critique of mycriticism in the skit “The town blowsup,” I am revising my technique, forthe present at least. In modifiedTime.style the “bests” (and worsts) ofthe show will be set down briefly:Best written skit: “Our City,” auth¬or unknown.Best-acted skit: “Little Girl A-Freud,” by Atkinson and Himmel.Best dance number: “Round andround,” the routine at the end of thefir.st half of the program. This is purepersonal preference, since all thedance numbers were excellent.Best singer: Elizabeth Felsenthal.Best acting: Clark Sergei in “OurCity.” Best gag: “Oh, an Aristotelian,eh?” I liked this one because it wasso unappreciated.Best (just plain best); Grant At¬kinson, or if you like GRANT AT¬KINSON!I have jotted down this list in thespirit that “These things must be so;since all men know them.” (An atti¬tude like that is what makes a critictick). In the matter of credit, themajor share should go to five sources.In no particular order the deserv¬ing ones are the Mirror Board, Direc¬tor Randall, Atkinson, the cast, anddance director Davies, who was men¬tioned twice in the program, andrightly so. To be more specific wouldlead to the mentioning of practicallyeveryone connected with the produc¬tion. Since this cannot be done, Iwould like to add to my list of bests:Best and most deserving member ofthe company: Ah there, Jane Ander¬son.Send Out CallFor Friars StoogesStudents interested in working onthe technical crew for next quarter’sBlackfriars show are requested tomeet Ted Stritter, chairman, in theFriars’ office today between 3:30 and5:30.The following are already workingin the crew: David Lazarus, DaveFisher, Charles Martin, Fred Wange-lin. Bob Weedfall, Anthony Monaco,Homer Havermale, Don Wilson, JimTedrow, Bob Dean, Bob Ettelson, Jei’-ry Gordon, and Harry Beach. The only things that I did not likewere the eight typographical errorsin the program, and the brass sectionof the orchestra. As a prominent Betasaid (prominent for big): “10,000Decibels can’t be wrong.” In re¬trospect the evening was a riot fromthe bit of scandal that Atkinson usedto read the funnypapers to childrenover the radio through to the un¬veiling of the Beta Prexy’s kilts.Somewhere in this review you mayget the idea that I liked the 14th an-rmal Mirror revue. You are right. SSA Students ElectClub OfficersAll Social Service Administrationstudents are eligible to vote this weekfor officers of the SSA Club for thecoming year.Ballots, obtainable in Cobb 109,carry the names of the followingcandidates for offices: President—Lewis, Bee Rich; Vice-President—Hugo Fenske, Jean Osgood; Secre¬tary—Nathan Cooper, Jessie Harden;Treasurer—Howard Lamb, FrankKeller; News and Views Editor—Anne Gussack, Elizabeth Will; As¬sociate—Ruth Hopkins, Marion Roe-Cloud; Delegate-at-Large (votefor five)—Michael Dolnick, RuthHoadley, Gilbert Hunter, HarryIsenberg, Harold Jambor, ValarieJustiss, Ben Meeker, Sidney Speigl-man, Milton Wittman.Classified AdsFOR SALE- 1936 Ford Conv. Sedan; Radio,Heater, Recond. Engine. 1375. Tel. Mid.2809 or at 5463 Kimbark Ave. Mr. Ste-LEXINGTOHTHEATRETUESDAY. MARCH 7Last Time TodayR. Young - I. Crawford - M. Douglas"Shining Hour"plus Jackie Cooper'Gangster Boy'Water Poloists—(Continued from page 1)each other. Another point which fa¬vors team work is that no recordsare kept of individual scoring, in di¬rect contrast to other schools.McGillivray Gets CreditCoach McGillivray deserves mostof the credit for the team’s success.The fact that the water polo team isone of the most consistent winners \among a group of Maroon athletic [teams which consistently lose is am- 'pie proof that McGillivray has theability to develop his material, goodor bad.McGillivray is one of the foremostauthorities of the game. Seven yearsago he rewrote the rule book for thebenefit of colleges because he thoughtthat it was too ambiguous. He playedthe game when it was in its infancy.Last year he was referee of theA.A.U. championships. He is fre¬quently consulted by coaches whowant to improve their teams.The swimming team lost to Illinois57-26, because the Maroons savedsome of their men for the water pologame and several of the splashersfailed to make the trip due to effectsfrom the flu. M t MISS CHICAGO'S"FAMOUS SCHOOLOFFEMININE APPEALGirls WantedTo Learn Fashion andPhoto ModelingJOBS Are WaitingINTRODUCTORY COURSES AT$15 THISWEEKOur regular price is $45.00 — you canpay as much as $70.00 for a courseelsewhere and it would be no better.DAY AND EVENING CLASSESModel for Part of Your TuitionNO REGISTRATION FEESmall Tuition FeeFREE PLACEMENT SERVICEDON’T DELAY—CALL - VISIT - WRITEMISS CHICAGO'S'STUDIOS155 N. Clark St.Dear. 7573SENIORS - CLUBGIRLSLAST THREE DAYS TO HAVEYOUR PICTURE IN1939 CAP & GOWN10-2, Today, Thursday and Friday inRoom 16 Lexington Hall 11 sliV;,)ft. 1; ■>. ’€1J!\ iVi'S'i \{senior retttii feSiaccmistV in ffaskfn^tox, /), C)... or any one of the1,044,492 tobacco dealersin the United States aboutCkesterfield^s can^t-be-copiedCombinationChesterfieldrt«£aT fottm&HPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 7, 1939Maroon Cagers BeatPurdue Team 28-26Climb Out of Big TenCellar in Close Game;Tie for Seventh Place.An inspired Maroon basketballsquad succeeded in nosing out a vic¬tory from Purdue by a “photo finish”score of 28 to 26 last night bringingChicago from the bottom rung of theBig Ten ladder to a tie for 7th place.Cassels, who played hi's last game,led the Maroon scoring attack with10 counters, and Allen followed close¬ly with 9.As the season ends Chicago holdsfour victories in the Conference. Theother victories were from Wisconsinand one from Michigan. Both Mich¬igan and Purdue have beaten Indianawho finished in second position justbeneath Ohio State.Two other Big Ten finals werefought last night between Mich¬igan and Northwestern and Minne¬sota and Iowa. Michigan was victor¬ious making it tied with Chicago andWisconsin for the seventh position,while Iowa suffered which leaves heron the bottom as the season closes.This is the first time Chicago hasfinished out of last place for severalyears.BIG TEN STANDINGS/ Pts. Pts.f W. L. for Agst.< Ohio State 10 2 498 415"' Indiana 9 3 508 446Illinois 8 4 433 358* Minnesota 7 5 408 390Purdue 6 6 406 401i Northwestern 5 7 386 405Chicago 4 8 352 431* Michigan 4 8 394 422Wisconsin 4 8 352 431Iowa 3 9 417 460Ice Men TieEagles 2-2 inOvertime GameIn a much disputed game, followedby a ten-minute overtime, the Maroonhockey team scrapped to a 2-2 dead¬lock with the Chicago Eagles on theNorth Stands rink last night. Playingwithout their star center, Loane Ran¬dall, Chicago jumped to an early leadon a follow up shot by Jim Elliott.Craig Mclvor made it 2-0 on a solodash later in the first period. TheEagles came back, however, and be¬fore the middle of the last periodknotted the count at two all.Les Dean was hard luck man of theevening, scoring two goals during theregular playing time, only to havethem called back, and coming withinthree seconds of winning the gameduring the overtime, when he flickedthe puck in after the whistle hadsounded.Because of lack of time, the gamewas played in only two periods, in¬stead of the usual three, but the pe¬riods were lengthened to 25 minutes,instead of the customary 20.Since no qualified referee had beeiiengaged for the contest, an officialwas selected more or less at randomfrom the crowd. His knowledge of therules was not what it might havebeen; so Mclvor, stellar defense manon the Maroon outfit took over thethankless job of calling them.Sport ShortsMarquette’s well balanced trackteam defeated Chicago, 71 to 28, inthe Fieldhouse Friday night. TheHilltoppers won nine of the elevenevents and scored slams in the mileand two mile runs.4c ♦ *The University’s Big Ten cham¬pion fencing team defeated North-\ western, 17-10, in Patten GymnasiumSaturday afternoon. The Wildcatswon the foil bouts to jump into anearly 6 to 3 lead, but the Maroonsoutclassed them in the saber, 8-1,then wound up by taking the epeeevents, 6-3.« * 4>Illinois defeated Chicago, nationalcollegiate champions, in gymnasticsSaturday, 533.5-468 at Champaign.The mini marched to victory led bysophomore Paul Fina who won twoevents.♦ ♦ *The University of Michigan wrest¬ling team defeated the Maroons, 22-6, in Bartlett gym Saturday evening.In the feature match, D. Nichols,Western conference champion, de¬feated Captain Ed Valorz of the Ma¬roons. Bill MurphyWins RatingOn Big Ten Team Maroons BeatBadgers, 39-33;In Early Lead Theologists WinIn IM LeagueBill Murphy was the only Chicagoman to receive notice in the UnitedPress all Big Ten team. He was giv¬en honorable mention at one of theguard posts.The first team consisted of BenStephens (Iowa), and Jimmy Hull(Ohio State) at foi-wards; Pick Deh-ner (Ilinois) at center; Ernest Andres(Indiana), and Fred Beretta (Pur¬due), at guards. The second team wasmade up of Johnny Kundla Minne¬sota), and Dave Dupee (Wisconsin),at forwards; Bill Menke (Indiana), atcenter; Bill Hapac (Illinois), and BobLynch (Ohio State), at guards. Thosereceiving honorable mention were:Forwards— Igney (Purdue), Dro (In¬diana). and Harmon (Michigan). Cen¬ter— Koble (Northwestern). Guards— Maki Minnesota), Vance (North¬western), and Bill Murphy, (Chica¬go). By LESTER DEANThe Maroons came back strongfrom their defeat by Illinois last weekto register their third conference bas¬ketball victory last Saturday, whenthey took Wisconsin into camp, 39-33. Captain Bob Cassels and BillMurphy were particularly outstand¬ing in breaking dowm the floor, andRemy Meyer played what TommyFlinn called a “real bang-up game,”and made three follow up buckets asa result of his alert play under theWisconsin basket. Dick Lounsburyhad the “hot” night he has beenwaiting for, and made a total of six¬teen points before the final whistlesounded.Chicago jumped to an early leadjust after the opening of the game,and had ten points before the be¬wildered Badgers got under way. BillMurphy netted six of Chicago’s firstten counters, and was very much inthe game throughout. Chicago main¬tained its lead and was ahead, 19-9,at the end of the first period.W’isconsin didn’t seem to get usedto the Fieldhouse until late in the Playing below par, allowing theShleppers to constantly break uptheir offense, the Chicago TheologicalSeminary managed to win their semi¬final game in the Independent divisionof the Intramural basketball .tourna¬ment yesterday afternoon, 30-22.Grant Adams, Shlepper high pointman, was well bottled up by bothCTS and his own men who wouldn’tfeed him the ball under the basket asusual and made but one basket.In a playoff game in the Fraternitydivision Friday afternoon Alpha Delt“B” beat Phi Delt “B”, 19-7. Miller,Dean, Perry, Tully, and Runyon,played for the winners. Benson, Doo¬little, Cook, Yaggi, Archipley, Degame, when the Maroons had thecontest on ice; it was only by deter¬mined effort that the Badgers wereable to pull up to within six points ofthe Chicago team.In the game w’hich preceded themajor contest, the Blue freshmanteam, composed of the so-called“first string” freshman players, tookthe Blue over, 40-22. Paul Zimmer¬man was the spearhead of the Blueattack; although he only made threebuckets, he was instrumental inbringing about several others. Silva, and Geiger, played for PhiDelt.CampusRestaurantAnnouncingTHE CAMPUS ISOPEN FORBREAKFAST—Complete -Breakfast15cDINING ROOM AVAILABLEFOR PARTIES.OPEN EVERY DAY8 A. M. TO 9 P. 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