rntMaHv itauinVol. 39, No. 83. Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1939 Price Three Cents^mpas Republicans Sponsor ]\|ake Official Announcement ofMeeting jor Dwight GreenIn Social Science Tonight | Increase iu Tuitiou, FeesChapman, Nance, Econo-mo8, Scholfield, Mont¬gomery Also Speak.Six Republicans, headed by DwightH. Green, Republican candidate formayor, will attack the record of May¬or Edward J. Kelly at a meeting spon¬sored jointly by the Cook CountyYoung Republicans, the Conservativefoalition of Political Union, and acampus committee of Republicans,The meeting is scheduled for tonightat 7:30 in Social Science 122.In addition to Green, John W.Chapman, president of the Univer¬sity Alumni Association and candi¬date for city clerk, Clement A. Nance,candidate for city treasurer, JaniesEcononios, president of the CookCt>unty Young Republicans, and JohnScholfield and Walter Montgomery,both members of the organizationwill score Kelly and the Kelly-Nashmachine.Members of the campus committeeworking on the meeting are BillWebbe, chairman, Martin Miller, Har¬old Miles, and John Chapman, Jr.,son of the candidate for city clerk.The committee will be active duringthe remainder of the week helping theGreen committee reach its goal ofone million pledge cardsThis meeting, the committee an¬nounced, is one of a .series in Green’sfinal whirlwind week of campaigning.The Green foi-ce.s, they said, will wel¬come all non-parti.san support, sinceGreen is taking no stand in the FifthWard aldermanic runoff between Pro-fes.sor Paul Douglas and the presentalderman, James J. Cusack. Time for ActionSince the first rumors begancirculating several weeks beforethe end of last quarter, worriedknots of students in campuscorners have been gravely con¬templating the wreck of NewPlan freedom of educational op¬portunities which the tuition re¬visions would bring about. Ifthey are as serious as the DailyMaroon Board of Control in tuition to a large fee for sup¬plementary courses, to commu¬nicate with us by mail, byphone, or by meeting with Lau¬ra Bergquist in the Maroon of¬fice any afternoon after 4:30.These students will draw up analternative plan and meet withrepresentatives of the admin¬istration as soon as a meetingcan be arranged.The response of the commit-their opposition to the $20 as-1 tee in charge to the Maroon’ssessment for each course over | request for an official statementthree, they will have the chance j on the proposed tuition changesto join us in protest. We are in- i proves the previous Maroon re-viting every individual student,! ports correct but incomplete,and every representative of a The added fees for examina-student organization, who pre-! tions taken without attendingfers a small general increase in I (Continued on page 2)Earl BrowderSpeaks Tuesdayin Bartlett GymSecretary of CommunistParty Discusses WorldPolitics.I In iversil y NeivsreelManips OfficersLoyal Tingly was named businessmanager and Doris Wigger waselected secretary at the last Winter(luurter meeting of the University.Newsreel. Other officers elected wereRobert Weedfall, advertising man¬ager; Robert Sager, scheduler; andBaxter Richardson, publicity man¬ager,A meeting of those interested injoining the staff of the University•Newsreel, as w’ell as its present mem¬bers, will be held tomorrow at 3:30 inthe basement of the Music building.Bill Boehner, newsreel director an¬nounced yesterday.Because this meeting is the last op¬portunity to participate in productionof the next newsreel, those who couldnot attend the last meeting have beenreejuested to notify the staff of theirintention to work if they are unableto be present at this one. The nextshowing of the University Newrseelwill be April 14. Earl Browder, general .secretary ofthe Communist Party of the UnitedStates, speaks in Bartlett gym Aprili 4 on the world political situation after! Munich. Having recently returnedI from Europe, Browder will deal withI the reactions of the French and Span-j ish popular fronts to the Fa.scist ad¬vances.Browder, who was Communist can-1 didate for President in 1936, will also' discuss the possible lineups for thej 1940 presidential campaign. A discus-! sion of problems of “Social and Na-I tional security,” and of the effect ofthe Munich pact on foreign relationsand internal affairs of the UnitedStates, will conclude his lecture.Jim Peterson, chairman of theCommunist Club, is in charge of themeeting. A faculty member is ex¬pected to preside, but has not yetbeen selected.The political discussion will be sup¬plemented and presented by membersof the Communist Club. The meetingbegins at 8:30.Tickets for the rally are on sale atthe Reynolds Club and at the In¬formation office, and can also be ob¬tained from members of the Com¬munist Club. Admission prices at thedoor will be 40 cents, but for the ad¬vance sale the price is 30 cents.Pricesfor reserved seats are 56 cents.Activity AnglesBlnckfrinrsEver since Ned Fritz raised hisstink last year about dirty politicsin Rlackfriars, all has been quiet inthe little room on the third floor ofReynolds Club, According to the pres¬ent F'riars hierarchy, there was somefact, .some pure fabrication, and someexceptionally good guessing to the re¬velations about Psi U domination ofthe organization. However, one state¬ment made by Fritz is impossible toge.insay aow, as last year; that isthe statement that Blackfriars is theperennial sorespot of campus politics.This year, no one has been disap¬pointed enough because fraternitybrothers didn’t get in to raise thedust in the Blackfriars office.Despite the sjioradic charges ofpolitics, however, and occasional ac-cisations of mishandling of funds,Blackfriars fulfills its avowed func-li'ins better than almost any otheractivity on campus, is better known,on the campus and to outsiders, thanany organization except maybe the iMaroon and the football team, andha.s earned deserved prestige and tra¬ditional success.The reason that it has both feet sosolidly on the ground of activity glory is because it annually presents (andthere have been not so many excep¬tions to this statement) a good show.It has b<?en easy to do this becauseof the audience appeal that even not-so-goo<l female impersonators have—and becau.se Blackfriars has gener¬ally had good casts.# «Oiganized in 1904 by Frank R.Adams as “a permanent campus unitwhich wouhl manage the productioneach year of an all-male musicalshow,” after tw'o productions had al¬ready been presented, the Friars havecarried on every year except 1918 Set $3 Quarterly Feefor Student Health Ser¬vice.Beginning with the Autumn quar¬ter next year, a Health Service feeof three dollars will be charged allstudents registered for more thanone course on the quadrangles. Here¬tofore no fee has been charged. Thechange is designed to make theHealth Service self-supporting, thuseasing the financial strain on a de¬creasing University income.The service to students, however,will be enlarged. The most importantchanges are that the period of hos¬pitalization will be extended from thethree days now provided to two weeksfor each illness, and that emergencyoperations will be included in theservice. Contagious cases will be hos¬pitalized for the period of quarantine.Diagnostic tests and X-rays, as or¬dered by physicians of the HealthService, are other new services cover¬ed by the fee. Treatment for emer¬gency cases whe.i the Health Serviceis not open, and consultations at oth¬er clinics are likewise included underthe service.The cu.stomary medical examina-tions for new students and healthconferences, important aspects of pre¬ventive medicine, will be stressed.EARL BROWDERPresent ExhibitionOf Modern Dancing;In conjunction with the Third An¬nual Student Art Show, the ModernDance Classes will sponsor an exhibitof modern dance photographs at IdaNoyes, from April 4 to 10. The pic¬tures were taken by Barbara Morgan,official photographer of the Bening-ton School of Dance.Included in the collection of aboutforty photographs is one of MarthaGraham in the “American Document,”and one of Doris Humphrey andCharles Wiedman. Hanya Holm andher dance group are also represented.There are pictures of Marian VonTyle, Louise Kloepper, and EleanorKing, the three fellows at Benning¬ton. Rounding out the exhibit, whichcomes direct from the Mid-West con¬vention in its tour of the country, area few informal shots of Beningtoncampus.Copies of the photographs, in24x36 frames, may be purchased atthe exhibit.The advanced modern dance classIS now preparing for the ChicagoDance Council Festival, on May 19,in which they hope to participate. Russell ApprovesTuition Changes“The majority of the faculty, I be¬lieve, will approve the changes madein tuition charges,” John Dale Rus¬sell, professor and secretary of theiilupBrtiiiwffr’OfHBdweatign said yester¬day. “Heretofore students have some¬times registered for five and sixcourses, and then have failed to do allthe work in some of them. The newsystem will curtail this custom.“The new system will be hard toenforce, however, unless a plan is de¬vised to check the number of coursesa student takes,” Russell continued.Professor Russell also pointed outthat tuition charges at the Univer¬sity are still the lowest in the coun- Plan $20 ChargeFor Each CourseOver Basic ThreeA change in tuition rates, effec¬tive next Autumn quarter which pro¬vides for a $20 fee for each extracourse over the minimum three aquarter necessary for graduation,was announced officially yesterday bythe President’s office. In addition,new fees have been added for specialservices, and a one dollar quarterlyincrease in registration fees was an¬nounced.The new schedule provides thatstudents in the College who I’egisterfor more than the normal load ofthree or four courses a quarter willbe charged $20.00 for each extracourse. At the Divisional level, thecharge for each additional over threealso will be $20.00.Tuition fees in the Law’ School, theMedical Schools, University College,and Home Study, remain the sameas heretofore.Students permitted by their deansto carry a reduced program of studyin the College or Division w’ill pay$35.00 for a single course, or $70.00for two courses.If a student wishes to take a Col¬lege comprehensive examination in acour.se for which he has not beenregistered, an examination fee willbe charged. If the examination istaken before or during the first quar¬ter of residence the fee is $5.00, aservice charge covering the cost ofadministering the examination. If theexamination is taken after the firstquarter in residence the fee is $20.00.This examination fee covers the areaof a general, not a quarterly, course.At the Divisional level, the fee fora comprehensive examination takenin fulfilment of the requirements fora degree by a student who does notregister for the number of coursesspecified in the field of specializationand in related fields will be $10.00 foreach non-registered course.A Health Service fee of $3.00 willbe charged. Heretofore, there hasbeen no such fee.The quarterly registration feetry for an educational institution ofthis type. Colleges everywhere were charged in recent years in lieu offorced to raise tuition during the de- the matriculation fee, w’ill be in-pression and, according to Russell, the ' creased from $2.00 to $3.00 a quar-trend is continuing. I (Continued on page 2)Survey Shows Senior WomenHave Great Faith in EducationBy DAVID MARTINEwald Speaks FridayAt Ida Noyes HallCharles J. Ewald, who spent threerecent months in Spain as represen-Its biggest years were the roaring | tative for the American Friends Serv-twenties when the show rolled up | ice Committee, will speak at Idaaround $10,000 per annum; but even I Noyes at 6 Friday. “Observationsin the lean years it has managed to j and Impressions of the Spanish Sit-earn around $6,000. Membership in nation” is the title of his talk, to bethe College Musical Comedy League, 1 presented at a dinner sponsored byalong with elite Harvard’s HastyPudding Club, Pennsylvania’s expertMask and Wig, and Princeton’s Tri¬angle Club, prove that the shows haveearned a claim to fame.« « «Headed by a Board of Superiorswith a powerful Abbot (this year’sAbbot, George Fogle is more nearlya technician than an executive) aPrior who this year is also the(Continued on page 4) the American Friends Service Com¬mittee. Reservations for the dinnershould be made in advance.Ewald was administrative secretaryfor Latin America of the Internation¬al Committee of the Y.M.C.A. over aperiod of 30 years. He was also thefirst executive secretary of the Move¬ment for World Christianity.Dean Charles W. Gilkey will pre¬side and Sylvester Jones is chairmanof the banquet. “career women” succeed in findingjobs through the office. The bureauMore faith in education and less in | already has registration cards of 44men seems to be indicated by tabula- senior women who wish business ortions of a survey of the post-gradua- ‘ professional work after graduation,tion plans of 204 University women, expanding field of careers forwho plan to receive B.A. degrees m ^gjj covered with 21 sep-June. 66 plan to continue m arate vocation choices being indicated,uate study, 44 wish to go into teach- entering the business worldmg 79 into business and professions , commercial sub-and only 10 include marriage among ^ gggretar-their immediate plans. j personnel, statistical, merchandiz-These were the results of the five , jng, accounting and other office work,weeks’ survey conducted by Doris; Twelve will find niches in scientificLarsch, who heads the placement of: fields, five planning to teach, and sev-University women in the business gn to become commercial researchers,world, and Clementine V a n d e r j Chemistry is the most popular of theShaegh, chairman of the Board of I sciences with six women planning toWomen’s Organiaztions. BWO senior | enter this field; others will do workin bacteriology, zoology, and botany.Not including the ten women whomembers worked as interviewers.A lone woman will return to herhome with the intention of stayingthere, while 86 will enter the businessworld, 7 of them having already ac¬cepted positions. One other graduate intend to be married, sixteen willmake home economics their chief in¬terest—three as teachers, 13 as di¬eticians, clothing designers, or inter¬thinks she has earned a long vacation ior decorators.and will begin a period of intenseresting immediately after her com-prehensives. Three others intend to Among those who plan to teachover one-third plan to be English in¬structors, mathematics claim the sec-travel, but an equal number have been : ond largest number, with history andunable to make up their minds about j art following. Four of the careerwhat they will do after they receive j women intend to be journalists, andtheir diplomas. all say that they have some journalis-BWO members made an effort to! tic experience. Another four indicatedreach every graduating woman by' the desire to work in publishingphone, appointments or checking cap ■ houses, and one wants to find work asand gown senior lists. This is the first: a translator.time that any systematic attempt has j Miss Larsh remarked that employ-been made to ascertain the post-; ers who came to the Placement Bur-graduation plans of University worn- j eau to hire University women askeden, and plans are being made by the j first about academic record, and sec-Placement Bureau for following this | ondly about participation in activi-survey with a check on how many, ties.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1939patlg ^aroonFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTb* Dkily Maroon is tlie official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicsfo,published moraines except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6 :S0 phone in stories to ourprinters, The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went-worth 6123.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con-traet entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $3 a year; 34 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.RCFRCSKNTSD FOR NATIONAL ADVSRTISINO STNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.Chicaso ' Boston ' Los ancilis • San FnanciscoBOARD OF CONTROLEditsrial StaffLAURA BERGQUIST, ChairmanMAXINE BIESENTHALSEYMOUR MILLERADELE ROSEffnsiaess StaffEDWIN BERGMANMAX FREEMANEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRuth Brody, Harry Cornelius. WilliamGrody, Ernest Leiser, David Martin, AliceMeyer, Robert Scdlak, Charles O’DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Caple, Richard Glasser, RolandRichman, David Salzberg,Harry ToppingNight Editor: Charles O'DonnellAssistant: Leonard TurovlinEditorial--^(Continued from page 1)the courses make the shelvingof the New Plan even more com¬plete.The officially inspired publi¬city release on the now verifiedfee changes says of the revisionthat “basic tuition rates remainunchanged.” Students, beingmore closely affected than deans and trustees by cha.nges in edu¬cational policy, cannot so blithe¬ly disregard as not basic achange which relegates thefamed University freedom ofeducational opportunities to theash heap.The fact that three coursesfaithfully passed every quarterwill get a student through infour years has never beforemeant that three courses is thebasic load. The University wasformerly the place where creditswere disregarded in favor of aflexible system which indicatedthat those who could getthrough school in less time werefree to do it, and that those whow^anted to take extra courses toround out their three years wereencouraged.This is a matter which ismore serious than the adminis¬tration apparently realizes. It isalso a matter in which strictlyamateur students could do a bet¬ter job of financing while pre¬serving educational ideals than astrictly professional group ofeducators.The majority of students willnot take more than three cour¬ses if they must voluntarily diginto their pockets for an extrafee, even though reduced. Itwould, how’ever, be a rare stu¬dent w'ho would not consent to asmall general tuition increase tohelp the University out of a fin¬ancial hole, if he were allow^ed tocontinue his freedom of visitingand taking as many courses asw'as practical. A $10 quarterlyincrease in tuition, added to the$4 medical and registration fee,would for the the three usualquarters alone bring in almost$300,000. This is over half of Letters to theEditorDaily Maroon, Board of Control:Boycott BrowderThe decent Americans on thiscampus have themselves given thisUniversity its reek of red by their at¬tendance at the unopen forums andrallies of our handful of radical nutsand revolutionists and plain traitors.Since decent people do not heckle andriot at public meetings we have byimplication at least endorsed all thedrivel and goo handed out on localrostrums. We know it is the same oldsoviet slop whether they call it peace,anti-fascism, security, re-armamentor what not. The entire strength ofthis hullabaloo is in our inertia. Sincewe are too I’efined to ride Mr. Brow¬der out of town on a rail I suggestthat every member of the Universitycommunity who does not endorse theentire red program keep away fromtheir meetings. This would show whothe local disciples are and exactlyhow unred this campus is. Our cur¬iosity should not outweigh a decentrespect for the reputation of ourschools. Boycott Browder!GTM.the reported deficit for thisyear, far more than the revisedfee plan would bring in.The committee explains its ac¬tion by reporting on the pre¬carious financial condition ofthe University. We are sympa¬thetic, and will do everythingthat we regard reasonable, tohelp. It excuses it by reportingthat Harvard charges $100 foran extra course. We do not be-i lieve in following Harvard’s bad■ example. It may feel that thestudents w'ho take extra courses, should pay for them. We feel Tuition'^(Continued from page 1)ter.Laboratory fees in physical andbiological sciences Divisional courses—the 200, 300, and 400 level—will be$5.00 per course, but no student willbe charged laboratory fees beyond atotal of $10.00 a quarter. There areno laboratory fees in the College gen¬eral courses.The Ph. D. reduced fee remains at$35.00. The graduation fee for allstudents remains at $20.00.The new fees were instituted forrevenue purposes to offset in partthe declining rate of return on en¬dowment which has reduced incomeon all types of invested capital inthe country since the advent of thedepression. Ten years ago the en¬dowment funds of the Universitycould readily be invested to realizewith safety a return of approximate¬ly 6 per cent on its endowment, butin recent years investment to providethat there should be as muchequality of opportunity in theUniversity as possible.Members of the committeeare obviously not anxious to dis¬cuss any changes in any Univer¬sity rulings with students. Wit¬ness the fact that one memberasked a Maroon reporter to waituntil everything had been de¬cided before the matter could bediscussed, in spite of the factthat the time when plans werestill flexible seemed the logicalmoment for discussion.In this, of all cases, however,students deserve to be heard. Ifcatalogues are already printed,we can promise to round up anynumber of volunteers to hand-write welcome revisions whichwill put the New Plan back intooperation. Today on theQuadranglesPublic Lecture (Division of SocialSciences) “Democracy in WesternEurope With Special Reference toGreat Britain: Democracy on the De¬fensive.” Richard H. Tawney, Univer¬sity of London. Mandel 4:30.Zoology Club Zool. 14. ProfessorKluver, “Some Interesting BehaviorDisturbances Following Cortical Les¬ions”. 4:30.Phonograph Concert Social ScienceAssembly Hall 12:30 to 1:15. Sym¬phony No. 2 in E Minor, Opus 27 —Rachmaninoff.Peace Council, executive committeemeeting. Alumnae Room of IdaNoyes, 2:30.even a return of approximately 4per cent has been almost impossibleto achieve.With a decline in rate of returnfrom endowment, despite an increasein total of endowment funds, the ad-mini.stration faced the alternative ofreducing the quality of its instruc¬tion or of making slight offsettingincreases in student fees.The problem is one not uniejue tothe University, either as to declinein return from endowment, or in in¬crease in fees. A recent study byTrevor .-Vi-nett for the General Edu¬cation Board shows a steady in¬crease in tuition fees in colleges anduniversities during the last ten years.Fees at Harvard are $400 a year,with a charge of $100 per extracourse; Stanford has $100 tuition aquarter plus a quarterly fee of$15.00; Princeton, $450 tuition, witha general fee including library, in¬firmary, and laboratory charges of$60 a year; Yale, $4.50 tuition withlaboratory fees of $10 to $45 ami a$10 Health Service fee; Columbia,$190 tuition per semester, plus a s<*-mester registration fee of $10.EVERY BOOKAT A SAVINGUSED TEXT BOOKSWe Have Used Copies of Practically Every U. of C. BookEducationCourseNo. AUTHOR & TITLE303 CUBBERLY: PUBLIC EDUC. IN U. S..313324375300 Whitiord: Intro, to Art ot Education,RevDOUGLAS: AMERICAN SCHOOLludd: Problems of Education in U. S.Cubberly: Public Educ. in U. S., Rev335 Cox & L: H. S. Administration & REG. OUR PricePrice New Used3.00 2.75 2.10.2.50LITY 2.304.00 3.65 2.952.50 2.30 1.752.50 2.30 1.002.50 2.35 1.753.00 2.75 2.103.25 3.00 2.35Science206 Pool: Flowers & Flowering Plants,1929216 BURRELL: ORGANIC CHEMISTRYKingsley: Vertebrate Anatomy, 1st ed.Arey: Developmental Anatomy.105 Schlessinger: General Chemistry,Schlessinger & L: Lab. Manual,130 & 230 Hogness & J: Qualitative240 & 242 Pierce & H: Quantitative325 Hickenbottom: Reactions of Organic103 Chamberlain & S: Geology,Vol. 2, Rev242 Dana: Manual of Minerology.Smith: Elec. Measurements, 3rd ed.Business S EconomicsCommons & A: Prin. of Labor Legis.,4th '36 3.253.50 3.25 2.353.50 3.20 2.60 2035.00 4.70 3.502.75 2.55 1.95 2064.00 3.65 3.00 2014.50 4.25 3.25 2104.75 4.75 3.751.00 3125.00 4.55 3.50 2076.50 6.50 5.007.00 7.00 3.50 2114.00 3.65 2.802123.50 3.20 2.50 2212511.50 1.40 1.05 2603.75 3.45 2.752.75 2.55 2.003.75 3.45 2.753.00 2.80 2.10ft3.75 3.50 2.752706.40 5.90 4.50 2814.75 4.40 3.352923.90 3.60 2.504.00 3.70 2.80 3125.00 4.60 3.75 3224.25 3.95 3.254.00 3.70 3.003.00 2.80 2.102.45 We Accept MAIL and PhoneORDERSMail and Phone Orders Shipped Promptly C.O.D.We Pay Postage! C.O.D. Charges Added.CourseNo. AUTHOR & TITLE350 SEGAR & G: TRUST & CORP.PROBLEMS 3.50225 Mitchell: Production Management240 CATLIN: LABOR PROBLEMS IN U. S.,Rev. '35 3.50CATLIN LABOR PROBLEMS IN U. S.,1926DAUGHERTY: LABOR PROBLEMS INAMER. INDUS., '38 3.50DAUGHERTY: LABOR PROBLEMS INAMER. INDUS.. '36203 Duddy & F: Written Communicationin Business 3.50206 BRATT: BUSINESS CYCLES 3.50201 ELY: ECONOMICS SPECIAL @.210 Paton: Essentiols of Accounting.... 5.00Paton: Problems in Accounting .... 2.75312 Mills & D: Prob. & Tables in Statistics 1.90207 Chamberlain: MonopolisticCompetition .: 2.50Marshall: Prin. of Economics, 8th ed. 5.50211 Sailers & H: Basic AccountingPrinciples 4.00212 Neuner: Cost Accounting 4.00221 Mills: Statistical Methods, 1938 4.00251 Phillips: Marketing 3.75260 LOCHLIN: ECONOMICS OFTRANSPORTATION. Rev 4.00HUEBNER: FOREIGN TRADE 5.00JOHNSON: ELEM. OFTRANSPORTATION '09 3.00MILLER: INLAND TRANSPORTATION2nd ed 4.00DAGGETT: PRIN. OF INLANDTRANSPORTATION, Rev 4.00270 Hardy: Risk & Risk Bearing 4.00281 Spenser: Textbook of Law & Business 4.00Christ: Business Law 2.20292 Hutchinson: Secretaries' Handbook. 3.50SORELLE & G: APPLIED SECRETARIALREG. OUR PricePrice New Used3.50 3.45 2.654.0R 3.65 2.80S.,3.50 3.25 2.50.503.50 3.20 2.451.753.50 3.20 2.453.50 3.20 2.45.905.00 4.552.75 2.501.90 1.75 1.152.50 2.35 1.755.50 5.10 4.254.00 3.65 3.004.00 3.65 3.004.00 3.65 2.803.75 3.654.00 3.65 1.505.00 4.50 3.50. 3.00 1.25 .904.00 3.65 2.304.00 3.65 2.804.00 3.65 2.804.00 3.70 3.002.20 2.10 1.603.25322 Ezekiel: Methods of CorrelationRietz: Math, of Statistics, 2nd ed.201 Social ScienceWOODWORTH: PSYCHOLOGY.211 Bills: Experimental Psychology 1.405.00 1.304.55 .904.50 4.15 3.503.25 3.00 2.252.70 2.50 1.854.00 3.70 2.80 Course REG. OUR PriceNo. AUTHOR & TITLE Price New Used235 Shaffer: Psychology ol Adiustment.. 3.00 2.75 2.10Strong: Psych. Aspects oi Business.. 4.00 3.70 3.00Viteles: Industrial Psychology 4.25 3.95 3.00209 Montague: Ways of Knowing 5.00 4.60 3.25317 McKeon: Medieval PhilosophySelec. 2 vols., ea 1.25 1.15 .85203 COHEN & N: INTRO. TO LOGIC & SCI.METHOD 2.75 2.60 2.10213 Trevor: Hist, of Ancient Civilisation'39. n 3.50223 THOMPSON & J: MEDIEVALHISTORY 3.90263 Marchem: History oi England 4.25291 Morrison & C: Growth oi Amer.RepubUc. II 3.25Hacker & K: U. S. Since 1865, Rev. .. 3.75398 RIPPY: HISTORIC EVOLUTION OFHISPANIC AMERICA 3.75238 Grant & T: Europe in 19th & 20thCentury 4.00201 WILSON: ELEM. OF MODERNPOLITICS 4.00336 MacKenzie: Party Gov't in U. S 3.75204 MacDonald: American City Gov't &Adm. Rev 3.75255 Cook: History oi Political Philosophy 4.00231 Smith: Age of Reformation 4.25201 Park & B.: Intro, to Science oiSociology 4.00English130 Blair & C: Approaches to Poetry.... 2.75Quiller Couth: Oxford Anth. of EnglishVerse 3.00131 MILLETT & B: PLAY'S THE THING.. 3.25Millett & B: Art oi the Drama 2.25141 Craig: Shakespeare 4.00Parrott: Shakespeare Handbook .... 1.25201 LEGOUIS: SHORT HISTORY OFENGLISH LITERATURE 2.00Legouis & C: English Literature .... 4.00204 Wood: Poetry oi Romantic Movement 4.50313 Baugh: History oi English Language 3.00203 Smith & P: Great Critics 3.90252 Woods: Poetry of Victorian Period.. 4.00383 Blair: Native American Humor 3.00Mathematics102 REITZ & C: COLLEGE ALGEBRA.3rd ed 1.85103 Wilson & T: Anolytic Geometry.alt. ed 2.12104 Logsdon: Elem. Mathematical Analysis,Vol. I 2.25106 Logsdon: Elem. Mathematical Analysis,Vol. II 1.75216 Granville S & L: Calculus, new ed... 3.60220 Smith S & J: Calculus 3.25249 Fite: Advanced Calculus 5.00 3.253.60 2.903.95 3.203.00 2.353.50 2.653.50 2.603.65 2.403.60 2.403.50 2.803.50 2.653.70 3.003.90 3.003.65 2.802.55 1.952.80 2.102.95 2.352.05 1.603.65 3.001.15 .951.903.654.202.753.603.652.75 1.402.803.252.202.802.802.101.70 1.052.00 e1.502.05 1.401.603.302.954.55 1.252.502.403.75WILCOX « rOLLETTAMERICA’S LARGEST EDUCATIONAL BOOK HOUSE1247 So. Wabash Ave. Wholesale - Retail BRING IN YOUR LASTYEAR'S BOOKS . . .THEY'RE AS GOOD ASCASHChicagoTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1939 Page ThreeTwelve Veterans GiveHaseball Squad AddedStrength.With more pitching and hittingpower than he has had available inmany years, Coach Kyle Anderson, ofthe University of Chicago baseballteam, is enthusiastic about his team’sfhanoes of finishing well up in theBig Ten first division this year.Lining up an outfield which can beused steadily without the necessityof substituting pitchers on their daysoff is the only major difficulty visibleat the start of the season.Chicago lost six members of lastyear’s squad, which finished in sev¬enth place by winning four and los¬ing five conference games. CaptainKoy Soderlind, a .300 hitter, was con¬sidered the most important gap left!)>• graduation.Six C-Men BackTwelve members of last year’ssquad, including six major lettermen,provide Chicago with ample strengthin the box, in the infield, and behindthe plate this year.Bob Reynolds, a veteran righthander from Gravity, Iowa, is theletter winner who heads the pitchingdelegation. Martin Levit, who battedbetter than .250 last year as a sopho¬more, probably will have a perma¬nent lease on the catcher’s parapher¬nalia.Co-captains Larry Klass, who hitbetter than .360 last year, and Rob¬ert (“Remy”) Meyer form the nu¬cleus of an experienced and efficientinfield, which is backed by plenty ofreserve strength for the first time inyears.Third Base OpenThe veteran combination of Meyer,at first base, William (“Sparky”) Cal-ogeratos, at second, and Klass, atshortstop, leav(i^s only third base tobe filled by a yearling. Calogeratoshit over .300 last year.The six letterman, Clifford Gramer,won his “C” as an outfielder last sea¬son. This year the massive right¬hander has become a pitcher, and ap¬parently a good one, while retainingthe batting punch of an outfielder.Sophomore Arthur Lopatka is Chi¬cago’s third first-string pitcher, andjudging by early season activities isat least as good as Reynolds or Gra-nuT. Lopatka, incidentally, is the only left hander of the three; he isalso a switch batter and much betterthan the average pitcher when hit¬ting.Three Good SophomoresA sophomore trio appears fairlysure of three of the four remainingfielding posts. Frank McCracken, anAustin high school team mate of Lo-patka’s is the best of the third basecandidates, although Bob Schnertisn’t letting him nap on the job.Frank Feeney, in right field, is theoutfielder who is surest of his berth,although he is also capable of doub¬ling behind the plate. Aaron Manders,a hard-hitting Hyde Tark novice, willprobably be the choice in left field.All four, McCracken, Schnert, Feen¬ey, and Manders are as good hittersas last year’s best.Center field, which was Gramer’sspot last year, is still a toss-up amongDenis Cowan, a sophomore, who isalso candidate for Klass’ job at short¬stop; Neil Heller, who will probablybe .squeezed out at second base; andSchnert.Baseball ScheduleApril 8 Wheaton — ThereApril 12 Armour Tech. — HomeApril 15 Ill. Wesleyan — HomeApril 18 Notre Dame — ThereApril 21 Purdue — ThereApril 22 Purdue — ThereApril 25 Notre Dame — HomeApril 28 Indiana — HomeApril 29 Indiana — HomeMay 5 Iowa — HomeMay 6 Iowa — HomeMay 12 Minnesota — ThereMay 13 Minnesota — ThereMay 16 Northwestern — HomeMay 19 Wisconsin — ThereMay 20 Wisconsin — ThereMay 27 Northwestern — There1938 BIG TEN STANDINGSTeam W. L. PcLIndiana 7 2 .778Iowa 7 3 .700Purdue 6 ^ .545Ohio State 6 5 .500Wisconsin 6 5 .500Illinois 4 4 .500Chicago 4 5 .444Michigan 4 6 .400Minnesota 4 7 .364HEARDwight H. Green- REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE -forMayorJohn W. ChapmanCandidate for city clerkClement A. NanceCandidate for city treasurerOther Prominent SpeakersFree CigarettesSmash Kelly-Nash!IONITE 7:30SOCIAL SCIENCEASSEMBLY1126 E. 59lh StreetTHIS AD PAJD FOR BY STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY.DAILY MAROON SPORTSDiamond ProspectsEncourage Coach Net NotesBY WALTER ANGRISTWhile the Chicago varsity tennissquad was kept occupied during itssouthern tour, Chet Murphy and ArtJorgenson managed to lose their lug¬gage somewhere south of Memphis.When Art arrived in the Windy Citylast Sunday his total baggage con¬sisted of two tennis racquets and anew tooth brush.We’d like to throw a little sympa¬thy in the way of Bill Murphy, one ofthe better known victims of themumps this season. Bill not onlymissed a trip to New Orleans and oth¬er points south, but was not able totake his quarterlies, and he won’t beeligible before the middle of April.Incidentally, the college grapevinehas brought us whispers that the bigguns in the athletic office of the Uni¬versity of Miami turned down He¬bert’s bid for a match on the south¬ern trip because they were afraidtheir record would be marred by adefeat by Chicago. North Carolinaand Georgia Tech also gave Hebert“the busy signal” whenmatches. asked forThe individual players’ records forthe recent Southern jaunt arebelow. listedPlayer Won LostC. Murphy . 2 6C. Shostrom .. 7 1J. Kreitenstein .. 4 4A. Jorgenson . 8 0J. Atkins 3Don’t let Chet Murphy’s poor show¬ing bother you. It was not only dueto his lack of practice (basketball andthe mumps) but also because he facedthe toughest competition. Wally He¬bert is confident that Chet can becounted on to be in his usual top formby the time the first regular matchrolls around.Here’s an interesting item . .. Last year the squad ranking was Jorgen¬son, Krietenstein and Shostrom . . .this year Hebert is playing them inthe reverse order. However Kreiten-stein got the upper billing over Jorg¬enson during the Southern matchesonly because he is a senior. CoachHebert gives them the same playingability.There’ll be some real play shownwhen Hebert stages his impromptuvarsity tournament sometime in Aprilto determine the positions the squadmembers will hold down for confer¬ence competition. Right now the ten¬nis mentor finds it hard to make anypredictions.We wonder if Charlie Shostrom willdo a repeat act of that put on bybrother John last year when he madeboth the Murphs bite the dust.Sponsor PingPong TourneyThe Reynolds Club is sponsoring anopen tourney in table tennis, whichwill begin about April 10 and last amonth and a half. Everyone may com¬pete, regardless of previous expe¬rience. A 10 cent entrance fee will bethe only charge made for thematches. Registration closes April 10.Over one hundred players competedin the open tourneys during the falland winter quarters. John Kreiten-stein won the fall quarter tourna¬ment, but will not compete in thepresent one because he is playing onthe varsity tennis team. J. Wilkinswon the last tournament and is an en¬trant, but few champions repeat theirvictories so the contest will be wideopen. The only real Bar-B-Q Pit for miles aroundTOOTSY'SDelirious Old Southern Style Bar-B-Q RibsFREE DELIVERY6306 MARYLANDPLAZA 6644GOLF MEETINGCandidates for the Varsity golfteam will meet in the Trophy Roomin Bartlett today at noon. Tennis Rackets$1.65 to $17.50Balls, Presses, and all accessoriesShorts, Sox, Shirts, Shoes, etc.Most complete stockWOODWORTH'S1311 E. 57th St OPEN EVES.Near Kimbark Ave. DORchester 4800TEXT BOOKS- USED and NEW -FOR ALL UNIVERSITY COURSESINCLUDING LAW, MEDICINE& EDUCATIONLargest and Most Complete Line of TypewritersFor Sale, Rent, or ExchangeFountain Pens, Note Books, Zipper Cases,Stationery, Laundry Cases, Brief BagsWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 East 57th StreetNear Kimbark Avenue Open EveningsPhone Dorchester 4800-2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALL-Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1939They developed asupersensitivejrtoF.D.K.tnanauy— I#IMTMCQJOSEPH ALSOP and ROBERT KINTNPhoto Finishby DOUG WELCH! SobTerrible." Fam-turn to page 15.hound vs. BEAR. Spadef.^.5Mpc»^oWgblack bear, and Musket^rBlack Mountains, meet m an exciuujjHetlrtRavenel Sass. Youll find .t on page 16.ckikniur UARSES is a bread-and-butter business toracing HOKbta IS a orca run for the;ri "y"A.";g tells you how precarious lifecan be when Horsemen Race to Eat.THE NEW DEAL SCALPING THE NAVAHO? this**Th,,nder Over the Southwest.“Why, daddy! How richcuiousiWe drove your car °Tt.from the hospital, and you can 8.t^tie the damage later, arid ppoJhe intern was a little od^ «dclanged his bell . • •story for all the family 1Now, Ripley, Please! ...bytarkingtonBOOTHCampusBriefsPeace CouncilHolds MeetingThe possibilities of holding an all¬campus peace conference later in thequarter will concern today’s meetingof the executive committee of thePeace Council, Joe Rosenstcin, chair¬man, announced yesterday. The meet¬ing will take place at 2:30, in theAlumnae room of Ida Noyes. Therewill probably be a meeting of the en¬tire Peace Council at the end of thisweek to discuss the Conference, andto elect next year’s officers, Rosen-stein said.Other members of the executivecommittee are Henry Williams, Hen¬ry Luccock, Harry Cornelius, KayBrandt, Audrey Neff and Bill Speck.Political UnionDiscusses Kelly“Resolved, that this Union favorsthe reelection of the New Deal Ad¬ministration of Mayor Kelly,’’ will bothe subject of debate at the PoliticalUnion meeting Thursday at 8 in LawNorth. The affirmative side will betaken by a liberal and a radical, whilethe negative will be debated by a con¬servative, Henry Luccock, and a Lib¬eral. Three minute speeches from thefloor will follow.In order to select speakers for theP. U. debate, the liberal party caucuswill meet Wednesday at ^:30 in Cobbhall. At that time a new co-chairmanwill be elected to succeed XDharlesCrane, newly elected president of theUnion. A member of the executivecouncil will also be elected.Koos, BrumgaughSpeak on SchoolsThe North Central Association ofColleges and Secondary Schools openits 44th annual convention today inthe Stevens Hotel. Two Universityprofessors will present reports beforethe convention.Dean Aaron J. Brumbaugh, profes¬sor of Education and Dean of theCollege, will deliver his annual reportas secretary of the Commission of In¬stitutions of Higher Education.Dr. Leonard V. Koos, professor ofsecondary education, has been work¬ing on an experiment approved by theassociation and will report on his sur¬vey made of Kansas City, Missouri.Si-Lan Chen GivesDance at Int. HouseSi-Lan Chen, daughter of the form¬er Chinese minister. Dr. Eugene Chen,presents an evening of dance tomor¬row night at 8:30 in InternationalHouse. The program is sponsored bythe Chinese Aid Council, and proceedsvvill be donated to the Chinese RedCross Relief Commission.Miss Chen was educated in Eng¬land, and studied ballet in Moscowwith a pupil of the dance master Fo-kine. She made her American debutlast year at the Guild Theater in NewYork.Admission is fifty cents, and tick¬ets may be obtained at the door.JSF Plans SederFor Passover NightTo celebrate the Jewish holiday ofPassoveV, which commemorates theexodus of the Jews from Egypt, theJewish Student Foundation hasplanned a Seder supper to be heldTuesday, April 4. Though a dining-place has not yet been selected, it willbe on or near the campus.Reservations for the dinner mustbe made in the chapel office today.Price of individual tickets will be.$1.00. The difference will be made upby the Foundation.Classified AdsV‘. ANTKD : Stronst heavy set student for tem-pcraiy employnnent. Need not be goodlooking but must be quick on his feet andnot afraid of meeting people. Sissies neednot apply. Box 15. Daily Maroon.o ne it app a-ing ni n to call on list of’ ■/'' ni ' i"du'5trial Tainting prospects.' e furni-h the list and will give full eo-op-• ■ation. '1 he right man CLin make a nice■ '-nnip, worl ing hard a few hours a day.I‘o s-hility of working into a full time sum-n er job. Commission basis. Apply 4 to 6P. m. M irtay Brr.s. Painting Contraclois.I S M chigan Avenue.1 Ds P—A black female Scotch Terrier puppy,on campus Momlay. If found please no¬tify: Nate Goldberg. 1221 E. 53 St.. Dor-Chester 5687. Activity A ngles-(Continued from page 1)treasurer of the organization, aScribe, an Hospitaler, and a Prae-centor, Blackfriars is run autocrati¬cally. Having no official admihistra-tion control, only its finances aresupervised “to protect the members.’’Rut the Superiors are advised, andoccasionally ordered, by an all-pow¬erful Board of Trustees, a Boardwhich in 1931 even went so far asto depose members of the Superiors,and supplant them with its own se¬lections.Part of Fritz’s expose last yearwas directed at the fact that theSuperiors, officially elected by the de¬parting Board, were actually electedby the Abbot alone, whom Fritz al¬leged was “now known as God.’’ Hisgriping paved the way for a newconstitution, which {u-ovided thatonly the Abbot and Prior were to bechosen by the outgoing board, thatthe Scribe should be selected by the iactive members of the order (exclud¬ing cast and chorus), that the Hos¬pitaler should be electe<l by the castand chorus, and that the Praecentoris appointed by the current Board.This last position was instituted to assuage the wounded feelings of un¬represented fraternities.('fficial bases for advancement inthe order are supposed to be: activityfor four years, amount of time whichcan be spent, originality, ability toget stooge work done, and amount ofwork done in the previous year. Un¬officially added to this list, of course,is fraternity allegiance.Blackfriars is almost exclusively afraternity organization. Independentsare “encouraged’’ to come out for theshow, but chances of their reachingthe Board of Superiors are slim. Con¬sequently independent participationin the Friars is strictly limited. Theattitude seems to be that a good showcan be put on wthout independentparticipation, ergo why bother to getthem to come out and work. .Althoughall fraternities have at least one manworking each year, approximate totalmembership figures reach the 100mark, Blackfriars in past years hasbeen controlled almost exclusively bySigma Chi, Psi U, and Kappa Sigma.This year the Psi Us are unrepre-.sented on the Board (despite Fritz’prediction six months in advance thatJack Bonniwell would be Abbot) and the Alpha Delts and DUs have each on. The seven departments ineked out a top spot.The Board of Trustees administersa trust fund for the Order. Any prof¬its are supposed to go into the fund,and all losses come out of it. Despitethe whispered stories of ticket stubsbeing dumped in Lake Michigan onwild parties, the money is probablyhandled as honestly as that of otherorganizations, certainly as much soas in those keeping their own books.Most of the average $6,000 incomecomes from ticket sales. A little isadded on the side from advertisingon the programs and score scales. Itsaverage of the same amount dishedout in expenses include salaries forcostume designer, dance director, mu¬sical director, and producer, and theusual items for jiroperties and adver¬tising, etc.Most of the .small fry aren’t muchinterested in how the organization isbeing run. They are out either forjust the pure fun, the desire to bein activities, the urge to be in thepublic eye, or to raise to new heightsthe prestige of their fraternity. Theygripe occasionally about politicsamong the higher-ups, but only raisetheir voices in protest when theydon’t get the job their heart is set theOrder, Technical, Design, CompanyProduction, Publicity, Business, andProgram, each headed by a juniormanager who is in line for the Boardprovide outlets for all the activity en¬thusiasms of the undergraduates, andmake it a good activity to join, evenif chances of promotion are in.fluenced by reasons oxtier than sheerability.4t *Therefore, despite the fact that itis occasionally and justifiably pickedapart, Blackfriars continues on itssuccessful way, heading the spring.social sea.son together with the I.psing, and adding color to a campussadly in need of it.LEXINGTONTHEATRE1162 EAST 63rd St.Stanl«y Lambert. ManaKerWed., Mar. 29thLast Time—TodayERROL FLYNN BASIL RATHBONE"Dawn Patrol"— PLUS —MELVYN DOUGLAS VIRGINIA BRUCE"There's ThatWoman Again"