^ IBailp jfflaroonVol 39, No. 100. Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1939 Price Three CentsHOLD TUITION MEETINGAllan Nevins GivesSecondMoodyLectureBull Session* * ♦iI; By JOHN PATRICKISocialized MedicineSince socialized medicine is in prin¬ciple a part of the democratic scheme,it is inevitable that the promotion ofan efficient Public Health Service willsoon become an integral part of so¬ciety.The present scheme of hospitaliza¬tion in America is not compatiblewith democratic principles. The med¬ical profession has in many casesdrifted into a complete commercial.nterprise and medical monopoly inwhich only the select few may profitfrom it.Socialized medicine or medical care—di.'stribution is a subject which inrecent years has become an object ofincreasing interest—probably becausethe consumer has found that adequatemedical treatment is beyond his eco¬nomic means. The issue is in short, theproblem of adjusting the distributionof medical care to society as a whole.This, of course, is based on the as¬sumption that in a democracy everyindividual should, when he is ill, en¬joy all the care and attention thatmedical science can offer him.However, the methods of distribu¬tion of efficient medical care, basedon democratic principles must befound.State control of medicine, and therecent hospitalization insurance pro¬gram, whether as private or publicservice functions, are both forms ofsocialized medicine; and both intheory and in practice have proven tobe very advantageous.Socialized medicine would not nec¬essarily destroy or supplant privatemedical tiiterprise, even as the pub¬lic school system has scarcely effectedany visible change in the private.'ichool system. Perhaps the conceptionof socialized medicine may be placedin the same category as public educa¬tion, inferring that whether or notthe individual has the financial ca¬pacity to pay for treatment, he isnevertheless, entitled to it. An alter¬native may be offered in a plan similarto the Social Security Act, wherebydeductions may be made from thewages of the individual according tohis ability to pay.Whether or not a hospitalizationplan similar to the one conducted inKire, through the medium of a na¬tional lottery could fall into the cate¬gory of socialized medicine, is ofcourse, a matter of opinion. It may besaid however, that under this systemthe advantages greatly outweigh thedisadvantages.A medical service for the wholecommunity however, conducted entire¬ly by the government would be outof place in a democracy, which de¬pends at least, partially on progresson the incentive of private enterpriseon the stimulating action of competi¬tion.Socialized medicine is not andshould not be an industrial enterpriseConcerning itself with the welfare ofthe social order, it divorces itselfcompletely from the assertions that itcan exist only in a totalitarian state.With its strength and weaknessesresting entirely on the people them¬selves, it is an experiment in the ex¬pression of a true progress in a demo¬cratic society.Phi Delta KappaHolds SymposiumsThe Zeta Chapter of Phi DeltaKappa, graduate education student’ssociety, will prevent the first in a.series of two symposiums on “Thedevelopment of the Experiment inThree Secondary Schools’’ at 8 to¬night in Room 126, Graduate Educa¬tion Building.The study which is being made bythirty “progressive” schools is now inits fifth year of operation and in itssecond cycle. The schools have con¬cerned themselves with a study ofcurriculum adjustment and have inthe course of the experiment evolvednew practices and new evaluation in¬struments.The following administers willspeak at tonight’s meeting: MatthewP- Gaffney, Superintendent NewTrier Township High School; Paul B.Jacobson, Principal. University HighSchool and Herbert Smith, Principal,Francis Parker School.All persons interested may attendthe first symposium which will dealwith “The Development of the Ex¬periment in Three SecondarySchools”. Place of Rockefeller inFounding of U. of C,Told.That John D. Rockefeller’s mindmoved by acute and systematic ratio¬cination was the dominant factor inthe founding of the University ofChicago, Allan Nevins, noted biog¬rapher and historian, stressed lastnight in Mandel hall. In the secondMoody lecture this quarter he dis¬cussed “John D. Rockefeller and theFounding of the University of Chi¬cago” from the point of view of theoil magnate’s prudent personality.It was inevitable, Nevins said, thatRockefeller found a university. Sincethe Civil War educational expansionand innovation had been progressing.Rockefeller, one of the richest menin the country and growing old in1888, wanted to give money away forgood purposes. But systematic in hisphilanthropy, he was faced with thedifficult task of investigating desertsof institutions in which he consid¬ered investing.In this work the Baptist Churchwas the best agent to help. Not onlywas Rockefeller its most prominentlayman, but also Baptist clergy in¬cluded some of the country’s leadingeducators at that time. They advisedhim to spend money improving Amer¬ican education.But it was by no means inevitable,Nevins continued, that Rockefellerfound his university at Chicago. Oneof his best friends, Dr. CharlesStrong, president of Rochester Theo¬logical Seminary, for a long time hadvisions of a super-university hewanted the financier to establish inNew York City with an initial giftof twenty million dollars. To Rocke¬feller’s mind, that of “a chess-playerLippmann HasLead ArticleIn MagazineWalter Lippmann, wide known forhis books and his syndicated columnon current problems, contributes theleading article, “The Present Out¬look,” to the June issue of the Uni¬versity of Chicago magazine, on saletoday.“The developments of the past threemonths have persuaded me,” Lipp¬mann writes, “not only that anotherworld war can be averted, but thatvery possibly a world war has in factbeen averted.”Basis of OptimismHe bases his optimistic outlook onthe fact that the preponderance offorce and total power has been shift¬ed from the Rome-Berlin axis, whichmay wish to risk a great aggression,to the FYanco-British alliance, whichfavors the defending of peace andorder of the western world.Following the Lippmann story isan article by President Hutchins,“Civilization and Politics.” The ar¬ticle, a reprint of one of his speeches,is based on the proposition that “Thestate can be no better than the peoplewho compose it. This country has beenthe beneficiary of the greatest giftsof fortune: an impregnable position,vast resources, an ingenious people,and a form of government calculatedto assist them to fulfill the loftiestaspirations of mankind. If we failto make a home for civilization itwill be our own fault and especiallythe fault of those of us who have re¬ceived advantages far beyond ourfellows.”Other articles are: “Two Men AskQuestions,” by Thaddeus Allen, win¬ner of third prize in the magazine’sManuscript Contest; “In My Opinion,”by Fred B. Millett; “The Campus By¬stander,” by Enunett Deadman, ex-Maroon editor; “News of the Quad¬rangles,” by William Morgenstern;and “Athletics,” by Don Morris. brooding over the pieces and seeingnot only his own move but all theothers,” however. Strong’s schemewas too grandiose and imaginative.Rockefeller made the same objec¬tion of impracticality to the plan of¬fered him by President Northrup andSecretary Thomas Goodspeed of theMorgan Park Theological Seminary.When in 1886 their best teacher, Wil¬liam Rainey Harper went to Yale,and when mortgage foreclosurescaused the collapse of the old Uni¬versity of Chicago, they hastily of¬fered a scheme for reviving the col¬lege at Morgan Park with the aid ofa contribution from Mr. Rockefeller.Till 1888 when the American Bap¬tist Educational Society organizedwith Frederick Gates as executivesecretary Rockefeller held out againstschemes from East and Middle West.Then he was finally won over to theidea of a new Chicago school withHarper as head.Present BarAssociationDinnerTonightAs happens once each year, lawschool students and their friends willbe entertained tonight at the Bar As¬sociation-Alumni dinner at Interna¬tional House with the traditional playat the expense of the law faculty.Lindsay Rodgers, professor of pub¬lic law at Columbia and visiting pro¬fessor under the Walgreen founda¬tion will give the principal addresson “a few things I’d like to tell law¬yers.” John Ekler, honor studentand an editor of the Law will bemaster of ceremonies.Present PlayThe play is entitled “Heaven’s OurDestination, Or, The World Well Ridof Rhetoric,” and was written byJerome Katzin, John Levinson, andSaul Stern. Its 27 characters takethe parts of the faculty, includingDean Bigelow and Assistant DeanTeft, several biblical characters, andseveral men famous in the history ofEnglish law.Student-actors are Charles Long-acre, Don Smith, David Skeer, Jer¬ome Moritz, Bernard Apple, FredMesserschmidt, Melvin Goldenstein,Jerome Katzin, Lawrence Goldberg,J. Winslow Baer, James Dunkin, Har¬riet Jacobs, Francis Brown, MaryShaw, Charlotte Blakemore, MableBrown, Fred Ash, Houston HarshaJr., John Levinson, Joseph Andal-man. Jack Webster, Sanford Gold-fine, Morton Abramowitz, Ted Pabst,John van de Water, and Robert Si¬mon.Officers of the Bar Association areRobert Cook, president; Fred Ash,vice-president; David Scheffer, treas¬urer; and Frances Brown, secretary.Low Prices DrawStudents to DA PlayWith the sell-out of “Ghosts” lastnight the future of dramatics seemsbrighter for the campus. Heretoforethe Dramatic Association and othertheatre groups have been greatlyhampered by finances. Charges offorty to eighty-five cents for produc¬tions such as “Mr. Pirn” and “TheButter and Egg Man” have kept thecampus away from them, and hasmade little money.Last night twenty cents was thesingle low price for a play that crit¬ics seemed to think matched anythingDA has done this year. “Ghosts” hasalso made a bigger profit than anyof the productions this year except“Mr. Pirn,” so there is a great prob¬ability that from now on twentycents will be the top price for playsin the Reynolds Club theatre.Plans are being made to give re¬peat performances of “Ghosts.” Oneproduction is scheduled for the entirecampus and another for a high schoolgroup. Drs. Jerger andLeland CondemnState MedicineAt a Political Union meeting before160 medically conscious students andonlookers yesterday afternoon. Dr.Joseph Jerger AM A outcast andauthor of the book, “Doctor, Here’sYour Hat” joined with Dr. Roscoe Le¬land in condemning state medicine.Dr. Jerger, who was to have repliedextemporaneously in rebuttal againstDr. Leland attacking the AmericanMedical Association and in support ofthe resolution, “Resolved; that thisUnion favors socialized medicine,”confined his speech to an attack onthe status quo, and a demand thatchanges in the existing set-up bemade.In an interview after his speech.Dr. Jerger said that he had beengiven unfair treatment by the Amer¬ican Medical Association. He referredspecifically to the Hospital Councilof Chicago which deprived him of theright to practice at any^ recognizedhospital. The Council, he said, al¬though not legally affiliated with theAMA, was used as an instrument toexpress the Association’s disapprovalof the views in his controversial book.Dr. Leland SpeaksDr. Leland’s talk was devoted to apraise of the work of organized med¬icine as it has existed in the Unite*!States in the past. He pointed to thestrides that have been made under pri¬vate medicine and warned his listen¬ers of the disadvantage of a medicalbureaucracy.In his reply, Dr. Jerger stated thathe and Dr. Leland “don’t play in thesame back yard.” He said that theprofit motive must be taken frommedicine, but adding that he wasstrongly against a system of statemedicine in which the right of the in¬dividual to maintain his personal relations with his doctor would be chal¬lenged. He said that in its stead, hewould introduce a system of clinicslike that of the Mayos, which heclaimed was the most successful med¬ical group ever organized. He feltthat these clinics should be supportedby the money which he said was pour¬ing into the coffers to be used by thepoliticians for less worthy purposes.His suggestion for reform includeda cabinet post for the medical ad¬ministrator, who could, he felt be ap¬pointed from organized medicine it¬self. But he said, no progress couldbe made under the present regime ofthe AMA.Political Union speakers for andagainst the resolution respectivelywere Liberal Bill Hankla and Con¬servative Daniel Gauss.There was no record vote taken.Polish FriarsShow for LastPerformancesInevitable aftermath of the firstw’eekend of a Blackfriars productionis the drive to eradicate superfluousparts in the show, remedy unfore¬seen difficulties in staging, and light¬ing, and push ticket sales to insurea capacity house for the followingproduction dates.The first two items are a matterof form, with both the technical andlighting crew, and the acting anddancing directors collaborating on atwo-fold plan for ironing out theirtroubles. It is with the third itemthat the Friar board can usually ex¬pect to encounter its major difficulty.Despite the fact that this year’s showwas generally accepted as the bestBlackfriar production since “Plas¬tered in Paris” in 1927, the ticketsales though much better than lastyear, are still not what the monkswould like them to be. This shoulddispel the belief tbat it is too lateto get good seats for last three per¬formances this weekend, Friday andSaturday evening and Saturday aft¬ernoon.As a preview to those HutchinsonCommons patrons who have not yetseen the show, several numbers fromthe current production will be pre¬sented in the Commons Friday noon. Discuss Changein Fees Todayat Mandel HallAll’Campus StudentCommittee Reports onWork at Noon Assembly.At a mass meeting in Mandel hallat noon today, students of the Uni¬versity will have their first chance toprotest personally the recently an¬nounced changes in tuition, and tohear at first hand reports of the workof the all-campus student committeewhich has been investigating andseeking to change the new regula¬tions.The action has been taken as aprotest against a plan to raise fundsfor the University by levying acharge of $15 for every course abovethree, which is the minimum require¬ment for students going through theUniversity in four years. The planalso assesses $15 for College compre-hensives taken without registrationfor the course, and $15 per unregis¬tered coure on divisional and depart¬mental comprehensives. The commit¬tee feels that these levies constitutean abandonment of New Plan free¬dom and place the burden on thosestudents wishing to take extra w'ork.Lipshires ReportsThere will be only one speech atthe meeting, a report of the commit¬tee’s activities by temporary chair¬man Sidney Lipshires. Following theelection of a permanent president andsecretary, the principal part of themeeting will be devoted to discussionby the students. The floor will bethrown open for questions, discus¬sions, and specific proposals by the(Continued on page 2)Discuss Planof Pre-MedicalEducationSince the practice of medicineleaves little time after graduation forthe acquisition of a liberal education,medical students agreed last night,at a symposium on Medical Educa¬tion, that pre-medical educationshould be devoted to this type oflearning. A knowledge of the cul¬tural heritage of our civilization anddevelopment of intellectual abilitiesto read critically, write and talkclearly, and think intelligently wereestablished as the objectives of thepre-medical years.President Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins, Ralph W. Gerard, associate pro¬fessor of physiology, Walter L. Pal¬mer, professor of medicine, and twomedical students, Norris L. Brookensand James Wharton, led the sym¬posium. Ruth Barnard served aschairman of the discussion period.The meeting was sponsored by theAssociation of Medical Students.Hutchins Predicts State AidIn addition to theories of educationin general as applied to pre-medicaleducation, discussion concerned thelength and cost of a life as a medicalstudent. In view of the increasingcost of such education. PresidentHutchins predicted that in the futureFederal and State funds will be usedto provide for the necessary expenses.The warmest discussion centeredon the current proposal for lengthen¬ing the medical curriculum by in¬creasing the school year to fourterms, adding summer quarter to thepresent three. This plan was pre-sented by Dallas Phemister, profes¬sor of surgery and chairman of thecurriculum committee.Students ObjectStudents opposed the plan becauseof the increased cost to them, andbecause of the increased cost of med¬ical care for the public, which mightresult if a medical education becamemore expensive. Other objections werethe increased strain on the health ofthe student and the curtailment ofsummer activities such as teaching,research, and working for suppoi..David Slight, professor of psychia-try, proposed a plan for shortening(Continued on page 3)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1939^aroonFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTb« Daily Maroon Is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings 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 6:80 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¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $3 a year; $4 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.RSPRE8KNTCD FOR NATIONAL ADVSRTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison AVF. NewYork, N. Y.Chicaso ' Boston ’ Lis Ansslis - San FnanciscoBOARD OF CONTROLEDWIN BERGMANLAURA BERGQUIST, ChairmanMAXINE BIESENTHALMAX FREEMANADELE ROSEEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRuth Brody, Harry Cornelius. WilliamGrody, Ernest Leiser, David Martin, AliceMeyer. Robert Sedlak, Charles O’DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Caple, Richard Glasser, RolandRichman, David Salzberg,Harry ToppingNight Editor; Hart WurxburgAssistant: Bob Reynolds treatment of those who gaveway that there is still a need inthe world for the cliche pioneerfighting spirit.And he made us complacent,hearing our own brave talk andseeing our own free-swingingwalk, and made us think thatwe were the best and bravestpeople on the earth, with free¬dom, with guts, with ideals,with everything that Europedoes not have.Therefore we dedicate to Hit¬ler this statue, to remind usthat we are no better than Eur¬ope, no braver than France, nowiser than England, no moreidealistic than Hungary.We are just more lucky.”It is not much more than amonth until the time of theSing. The Daily Maroon willfrom time to time report to thecampus the progress of this pro¬ject—the support given by theadministration, the choice of anartist, the state of the fundgathering. Plan now to sav'eforyour contribution. Consider w^ellthe cause, and be generous.Workshop RevivalSpring DedicationYesterday a letter made therounds of the President’s Officeand the Daily Maroon office, re¬ceiving only the most com¬mendatory of comments on allsides. The writer was in a cheer¬ful mood in regard to the flowof distinguished German schol¬ars and scientists into the Unit¬ed States at cut rates. The sug¬gestion which he made was thatHitler is doing a great thing forAmerican universities “in mak¬ing all this help available atpractically no expense by run¬ning them out of European-academic cloisters.”He has done a great thing,and the students recognize thefact. They gave him a birthdayparty, they dedicated their refu¬gees aid contribution to him,they flock to learn fromthe professors he has sent tothem. The only thing which theyhave not done is to make clearto the off-campus their true feel¬ings on the subject.Our proposal is to broadcastthese feelings and give due hon¬or to the man. We can think ofno more ideal way than to dedi¬cate to Hitler a statue, to be setup in Hutchinson Court in theexact center of the fountain,bathed in colored waters atnight and sun-sparkling sprayin the daytime. The cost—to becovered by small voluntary con¬tributions from those who havelearned a valuable lesson fromhim. The ceremony — alreadyprovided. For nothing could bemore fitting than the Univer¬sity’s most glowing picture ofcomradeship and noble tradition,the Inter-fraternity Sing. Afterthe songs are through, after thefinest and fairest of the outgo¬ing senior class have transfer¬red their caps and gowns whichmark them Aides and Marshallsto the ordained leaders of theincoming seniors, the stage willbe set. President Hutchins willadvance to the stilled fountain,jerk a string, and unveil theUniversity’s tribute.There at the bottom will bethis dedication:“To Hitler:He brought ruin to Europeanuniversities, but he sent to usBenes and a host of others, bothfaculty and students, to addluster to the name of the Uni¬versity.He ended truth and freedomin Europe, but he enhanced itsvalue here.He brought peacetime con¬scription at last to England, buthe forced our students to thinkover what will happen to themif they allow his menace tospread to this hemisphere.He caused men who fearedhim to give way before him, buthe warned Anioricans by his The DA’s baby, the Work¬shop, startled the campus andthe actors themselves by turn¬ing in its first production,“Ghosts,” with more than a fairmeasure of success. Foundedwith serious intent to do “thebetter things,” the Workshop isoff to a good start with a finan¬cial success.Other workshop groups haverisen for brief periods, droppedout of the running, and risenagain, groups like the PoetryClub, the ASU Theater Group,the Camera Club.The weakest of the w’orkshoplot is the manual arts aspect.That there are good artists oncampus is attested to by thesuccess of the Ida Noyes ArtShows, —but there is no placewhere amateur artists can gettogether and criticize their ownwork and hold their own shows.An Arts Workshop would bea welcome addition to the cam¬pus amateur groups.* If the art¬ists ask long enough, perhapsthe University can be convincedthat artists need rooms, as wellas actors. A studio workshopwould endow campus artistswith a prestige value that ac¬tors have monopolized too long.B & G RejoicesAt Dearth ofFlower PickersBuildings and Grounds is pleasant¬ly surprised by the lack of flower¬picking this year. For the past sev¬eral years that pastime has steadilydecreased, this year being the banneryear with no reports of it so far, offi¬cials say.Those brilliant yellow flowers nowin their blossoming peak are a vari¬ety of narcissus which were purchasedby Beatrix Farrand, consulting land¬scape gardener. They spread rapid¬ly, are extremely hardy for theirdelicate shape and are distasteful tosquirrels. They come from the re¬gion of Washington and Oregonwhere horticulturists have been ex¬perimenting with that species.The crocus bulbs which were plant¬ed last fall, suffered mightily at thepaws of squirrels who seemed to re¬gard the tubers as a rare delicacy.Very few if any survived the on¬slaught.Courts SocialLIFE BloomsBoys and girls came to play in Bur-ton-Judson Courts last night. Thegirls. United Air Line hostesses, heldtheir annual Gardenia Reunion in theBurton dining hall. The boys, merelythe prosaic residents you pass everyday, partook of the beer, milk, andpretzels provided gratis by the DormCouncil in the Judson hall as an ad¬ditional move in its social integra¬tion scheme. TravellingBazaarTo Defy All the Lawsof Nature, spring weather is back¬firing this season. Currently goingthrough the reversal process is LoisRolf who is giving back an Alpha Deltpin and Thomas Waller who is in itsreceiving line. Chuck Banfe has alsodeserted the ranks of the hitched as aresult of tiffing with Janet Smith.Dorothy Teberg evidently has also de¬cided that freshman year is too soonfor permanent pinships and is break¬ing loose from Psi U Baird Wallace.Sing for your supper girlssaid the Phi Psi’s after they fedthe Esoterics potato salad and coldham at a coeducational luncheon yes¬terday. After dessert came bundles ofballots in the Maroon’s Best DressedMan Contest upon which the willingclub girls indicated that they thoughtone leading Phi Psi was undoubtedlytops in dressing.A Phi Psi Triocomposed of Max Freeman, DavidWeidemann and Hal Bondhas hasbeen elected, without benefit of ballotstuffing, to spend $92.50 of the PhiPsi cash box at the annual fraternityconvention at the University of Min¬nesota.The clear-eyed, clean-cut Chicagodelegation has ideas other than busi¬ness in mind, as most male-on-the-loose conventions do. All three haveexpeditiously sent in orders for datesin mail-order-catalogue fashion. Maxhas signed on the dotted dine for ablonde with brown eyes who can talk.Weidemann prefers a blonde-blue-eyednumber who doesn’t even have to beable to carry on conversaton. Bondhusmerely pleads for a blonde who candance. All three demand that theirprospective dates be good looking.This survey of the typical Chicagofraternity man should prove con¬clusively to Chicago women thatreading books, being able to cook orbeing kind is absolutely unessentialto popularity.Concentrate on the peroxide girls.Today on theQuadranglesTHURSDAYProtest Tuition Change.s. Massmeeting sponsored by the studentcommittee on tuition changes. MandelHall, 12.Bond Chapel. “Facing Limitations,’’by Carter E. Boren. 11:55.Tennis Matches. University versusMichigan. Varsity Courts at 2.YWCA Spring Luncheon. 35 cents.Ida Noyes hall, second floor, 11:30 to1:30.Phonograph Concert. Sonata in EFlat for Violin and Piano, Opus 18,Strauss. Sonata in D Minor for Un¬accompanied Violin, Bach. SocialScience 122 at 12:30.The Development of AmericanThought. Economic Thought. Talk byMorris Cohen. Eckhart 133 at 4:30.Symposium on The Eight Year Experimental Study — The Relation ofCollege and Secondary Schools. Spon¬sored by Phi Delta Kappa. Speakers,Gaffney of New Trier High School,Smith of Francis Parker, Jacobsen ofUniversity High School.Deadline for the Fiske Poetry Prizeand McLaughlin Essay Prize contestis May 1. Students wishing furtherinformation go to Room 304 InglesideHall.LEXINGTONTHEATRE1162 EAST 63rd StStanley Lambert, ManagerTHURSDAY"Winterset"— PLUS —MARGO & BURGESS MEREDITH“Blondie Meets theBoss"THE FINESTTENNIS RACKETSFORDISCRIMINATING PLAYERSGordon's Sport Shop5757 Cottage Grove Hyd. 6501 Tennis Raekeis$1.65 to $17.50Balls. Presses, and all accessoriesShorts, Sox. Shirts, Shoes, etc.Most complete stockWOODWORTH'SOPEN EVES.DORchester 48001311 E. 57th SLNear Kimbark Ave. Christian Scientists Use‘Divine Faith’ as WeaponWith ‘divine faith’ as a weaponagainst mortal fears, some 100Christian Scientists on campus findlife an easier proposition. Represent¬ing these ‘believers’ is the ChristianScience Organization, the oldest re¬ligious club on campus, and certainlythe most powerful of the minoritygroups.Unlike most religious organiza¬tions, which are either intensely de¬vout or significantly social, this grouphas a mixed representation. There areabout ten who approach their reli¬gion studiously, and the rest are justas beleiving, but accept their religionless seriously, not making it the dom¬inant part of their lives.For those who are interested in thestudy of Christian Science and theteachings of Mary Baker Eddy, itsfounder, the Organization has areading room open from 12 to 1 Mon¬day through Friday in Swift. In thisroom copies of the bible are circu¬lated as well as “Science and Health,’’the official text of the Christian Sci¬ence church. Also on hand are thevarious Christian Science publica¬tions, including the crack daily,“Christian Science Monitor,’’ whichranks along with “The New YorkTimes’’ as the best newspaper in thecountry.Besides the facilities of the read-Tuition—(Continued from page 1)students as to action that they wantto .see taken.Cards, distributed at the meetingto be signed by those attending, willindicate the student’s interest in thework of the committee and his ap¬proval of the plan to carry on theactivity. Members of the committee,which is made up of representativesof organizations will meet Friday tomake further plans on the basis ofthe ma.ss meeting. Unaffiliated stu¬dents may join the committee by ob¬taining five student signatures fortheir petition.Committee Leads ActionThe executive committee of the all¬campus group, which has planned to¬day’s meeting, is made up of SidneyLipshires, Adele Rose, Mary Kather¬ine Toft, Wayne Barker, James Pet¬erson, Pierre Palmer, Henry Wil-Hams, Irwin Lieberman, and DaltonPotter.Four students, dressed in patchedcaps and gowns, will dramatize theplight of the ambitious student aspublicity for the meeting, in front ofCobb hall this morning. ing room, a regular church service isheld every Tuesday evening in Thorn-dyke-Hilton chapel. These meetingsare testimonial meetings at whichthere are Scripture readings, followedby Mrs. Eddy’s interpretation ofthem contain^ in “Science andHealth,’’ and testimonials given by stu¬dents and faculty on the various waysin which Christian Science has aidedthem.At the meeting I attended, whichwas at the time when the cold and fluepidemic was at its height, most ofthe testimonials concerned the heal¬ing of colds by ‘divine faith.’ Thesetestimonials are given informally.When someone feels inclined to speakhe stands without ceremony andsimply says his bit. Before anyonespoke the night I was there, therewas a long silence interrupted onlyby my untimely sneezes.The first testimonial came from abrawny member of the swimmingsquad who related how coach andfriends had warned him, when heshowed the first signs of a cold, tostay out of the pool and to wear hi.sneglected hat. “I hate that hat,” hecommented with a smile. At any ratehe didn’t heed the warnings of hissolicitous friends, but had faith in¬stead, He didn’t wear his hat; hewent in swimming; he seemed in goodcondition.After another awkward pause thesecond testimonial was given, thistime by a faculty membtu- who toldof being cured of food poisoning alsoby ‘divine faith.’ Perhap.s the neat¬est trick that Christian Science hadthat week was giving one girl a per¬fect score on an examination. Sheknew she reflected “the jierfect intel¬ligence of God’’ and therefore couldmake no errors.Christian Science is fast becomingone of the leading religions in theUnited States. Regardless of whatcan be said for or against it, the factthat those who believe in ChristianScience have been successful in con¬quering fear, cannot be denied. Theirfaith in “God and Mrs. Eddy” hascarried them over hurdles that somenever seem to be able to clear.LUNCH TODAYSPECIAL 25cHOME BAKED MEAT LOAFWITH MUSHROOM GRAVYSMALL CHOCOLATE SUNDAEFRESH SRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE I&cREADER'S"THE CAMPUS DRUG STORE"6l8t ST. & ELLIS AVE.THIS YIAR see the SovietUnion—every mile ofyour way a fresh, broaderhorizon! Here is vivid ^ ,color, 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. 67-H.SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT, orNEW YORK I 545 Fifth AvanuoCjlI^CAOOi 350 N. Michigan Ava.tOS ANGELESi 756 S. Broadwoy HtRBtCKand Hiswith Romance"EVERY FRIDAYAt The BigCOLLEGENIGHTIn TheMARINEDINING ROOMCome for a Grand Time.Enjoy the Blossom Festi¬val. See the Big CollegeSh ow and ProfessionalShow.•Half Rate Tickets at Press Bldg,and Daily Maroon Oi&ceEdgewaterBeach Hotel5300 Block - Sheridan Rd.THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1939 Page ThreeAsks Abolishmentof School BoardsProfessor John A, ViegWrites on Education inSew Book,School boards should be abolished,and the power to appoint school su¬perintendents should be placed in thehands of mayors. This principle isadvocated by Assistant ProfessorJohn A. Vieg, of Iowa State college,in ‘‘The Government of Education,”a study of schools in the Chicagometropolitan area, made at the Uni¬versity of Chicago.Professor Vieg’s book, which waspublished Tuesday by the Universityof Chicago Press, is one of a series ofresearches on the local metropolitancommunity, carried out by the SocialScience Research committee of theUniversity of Chicago.The schools of the region, includingthose of Chicago, have never beenkept out of politics by school boards.Professor Vieg’s study shows. Hebelieves that direct appointment ofsuperintendents by the mayors wouldtix responsibility for school conductand make possible effective controlby the voters.“Through the ‘stormy’ years ofHarrison, the brazen years of Thomp-son, the ‘decent’ years of Dever, theindecisive years of Cermak, and theruthless years of Kelly, the City Hallhas set the standards for the opera¬tion of all public schools,” ProfessorVieg asserts.No one can be responsible for ac¬tions of superintendents appointed bythe Chicago Board because of thejumbled authority, split among thepresident of the Board, Board mem-i)ers, superintendent, school businessmanager, school attorney, and mayor.“William H. Johnson, present headof the Chicago system, has been inoffice too short a time to delineatehis philosophy. There are some signsthat he may turn out to be a geniusfor sponsoring the right ideas thewrong way.”Political interference in schools ad¬ministered by ‘‘independent” schoolIviards has not been limited to theChicago school system. ProfessorVieg observes. He cites in detail( icero, Kenosha, Gary, and an “inde¬pendent” Cook county district, as ex¬amples,‘‘Kducation cannot be protectedfrom politics; it can be protected onlythrough clean politics.” Political re¬sponsibility for school administrationwould integrate school managementwith financial, health, library, andrecreational divisions of local govern¬ment, Professor Vieg believes.\\ oolicott OpensL(‘eliire SeriesNext Wednesday ^^Ediication WillFurther Cause ofDeinocracv”-TvlerAdvocates of the democratic formof government are by no means tak¬ing a back seat in furthering theirbeliefs through education, Ralph W,Tyler, chairman of the departmentof Education, stated recently. “Thereis no more common term than ‘Edu¬cation for Democracy’ in our educa¬tional literature and conferences oftoday,” he said.In a speech delivered to the Wis¬consin Parent Teachers Associationin Madison, Wisconsin, Tyler ex¬plained his theories on the adequacyof school preparation for the worldtoday.“If the schools are to prepare theyouth adequately for the modernworld, the community must clarifyits conception of the responsibilitiesof the schools. If we can clarify whatwe want the schools to do today w'ecan confidently expect that theschools can meet these responsibili¬ties effectively.”Would Have Planned CurriculumTyler puts his faith in a plannedcurriculum for the high schools andcolleges which will make youth facethe problems of the democratic liv¬ing. There should be an increasedemphasis on continuity of courses andon integration of one field with an¬other. Social studies should be in¬tegrated with the humanities; chil¬dren should be shown the connectionbetween technology and literature andsocial phenomena. To this endthe University is giving special edu¬cational courses during the summer,and progressive high schools through¬out the country are planning curric¬ula which will enable children to fullyunderstand and appreciate the com¬plexities of democratic living.“Educational experiments today aretrying not only to give students im¬portant facts and to develop some ofthe fundamental skills in the use oflanguage and number but they arealso seeking to develop means bywhich a student may continue his ownself education, to teach him effectivethinking.. .to develop that kind ofadjustment in work and play withother boys and girls that enables himto be happy and c<j(^operate effective¬ly with other p^ple, and to makehim more stable emotionally.” It isthrough experiments such as these,according to Tyler, that Americanchildren should be taught to under¬stand and appreciate the democra¬cies.Alexander Woollcott, noted writerand critic, who is a visiting lecturerat the University in May, will givethe first two lectures in a series ofsix on his newspaper experiences nextweek at the University.Woollcott, a veteran of 30 yearson New York newspapers, will speakon “Experiences in Journalism” inMandel Hall Wednesday and Fridayevenings at 8:30. Tickets for his lec¬ture series may be obtained free ofvharge at the University’s informa¬tion office.J. Fred RippyJ. Fred Rippy, professor of Ameri¬can history, will give the fourth offive lectures on “Whither Latin Amer¬ica?” speaking on “Bulwarks of De-lense” Tuesday evening at 6:45, atthe Art Institute.Morris R. Cohen, professor of phil¬osophy and one of America’s out-^^tanding contemporary philosophicalthinkers, will speak on “ScientificThought,” the fifth of eight lectureson “The Development of AmericanThought,” in the Social Science as¬sembly room Wednesday afternoonat 4:30.“.Mussolini’s Colonial Demands,” thefourth of five lectures on modern col¬onial problems, by Arthur P. Scott,associate professor of history, will bediscussed Friday evening at 6:45 atthe Art Institute. Medicine—(Continued from page 1)Chapel Union HoldsRoundtable SundaySomething new will be tried at thenext Chapel Union Sunday nightmeeting. Instead of having one per¬son speak, there will be a studentroundtable on the topic “My Reli¬gion.” Participating in the discussionwill be Audrey Neff, Joe |Rosenstein the period of medical education bymeans of a more intensive and com¬plete high school training for ex¬ceptional students. This w'ould allow'students to go directly from highschool to medical school. Dr. Slightbased his contention that medicalstudents would be able to take such acourse on the results of a surveywhich shows that the present sopho¬more medical class averaged 140 inscores on the Sanford-Binet intelli¬gence test. This places them in theupper 5% of the population.Proposes ApprenticeshipDr. Slight also proposed a returnto the older apprenticeship methodwith clinical experience to enable thestudent to study later the fundamen¬tal sciences with more purpose anda better grasp of his needs.Dr. Gerard’s plan for medical edu¬cation has four parts. The first isa course in the concepts and vocab¬ulary of the basic medical sciences,the second a study of the organ-.sys-tems, the third a study of diseasesand syndromes as they affect the var¬ious systems, and the last the studyof disease in the patient.Dr. Sylvia Bensley, of the Depart¬ment of Anatomy, called attention tothe discrepancy between the Univer¬sity’s concept of an ideal medical ed¬ucation and the legal requirements,such as State Board Examinations, inregard to the necessary training topractice medicine.and Johnny Van De Water, all activemembers of the organization. This,the final Sunday meeting of the sea¬son, will as usual be held at the Gil-keys’ home and will be open to every¬one. Women’s ClubsContribute toRefugee AidAbandoning the idea of having abaseball game to benefit the RefugeeAid drive, the Women’s clubs havedecided to solicit indixddual contri¬butions in an effort to raise theirquota before the end of the month.Janet Geiger, president of Interclub,is in charge of the collection.With part of the money already in,the clubs will pass the hat for thesecond time at their meetings Mon¬day. The short notice given the mem¬bers has necessitated the second col¬lection.An announcement of the results ofthe three day table drive conductedlast week will be announced withina few days, according to Rita Mayer,chairman of the drive.With over half of the S10,000 quo¬ta already raised, the Refugee Aiddrive will continue until the end ofthe month. In addition to the moneyto be used for refugee students at theUniversity, the surplus will be sentto help sufferers in Spain and China.CLASSIFIEDFOR SALESmall Portable Victrola, Furniture.Dishes, Kitchen Utensils. Mrs. A. Kline,1400 E. 5-th St. H. P. 2349. WiedemannLeads ContestDave Wiedemann of Phi KappaPhi, according to latest returns, isleading the Best Dressed Man contestsponsored by the Erie Clothing Com¬pany and the Daily Maroon. Run¬ners-up in the contest are MayorStern of Pi Lambda Phi, Ed Bates,an independent. Bill Corcoran ofBeta Theta Pi, and Bud Linden ofAlpha Delta Phi.Competition has become increas¬ingly intense with the approach ofthe deadline at 3:30 Friday after¬noon. Voting must be done on ballotsprinted daily in The Maroon. Theman who gets most votes will receivea complete 50-dollar wardrobe fromErie. In connection with this sartorialcontest Erie is running another forcampus epigramists with a second Gideonse SpeaksOn Town MeetingHarry D. Gideonse, former head ofthe College Social Sciences surveyand now professor of economics atColumbia University, will be heardwith Norman Thomas and HughJohnson on the Town Meeting of theAir this evening, at 8:30 over stationWENR.The discussion will center on adiscussion of war and the LudlowAmendment, w'hich asks for a pop¬ular vote before a war can be de¬clared.50-dollar outfit going to the authorwho, in voting for his favorite dress¬er, relates in not more than 25 words,his reasons for his choice.WORLD’S 7 FINESTTOBACCOSSold by your dealer. If not send10c for sample to John Middle-ton. 1211 Walnut Street.Philadelphia. Pa., Dept ^WALNUT Blend 30( IntensiveShorthandCourseFOR COLLEGE GRADUATESAND UNDERGRADUATESIdeal for taking notes at collegeor for spare-time or full time posi¬tions. Classes start the first ofApril, July, October and January.Call, tirite or Iflephone State 1881for complete factsThe Gregg College6 N. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGOOnly TWO More DAYS to CAST YOUR VOTE!S2 Bit PlllES FREE$350.00 IN VALUABLE PRIZES TO CHICAGOSTUDENTS IN ERIE'S CONTEST TO SELECT'THE BESTDRESSED MAN on CAMPUS'Here's How Easy It Is To Win!1. Cast your ballot for the studentyou sincerely believe to be Chi¬cago's Best-Dressed Mon.2. Tell us in 25 words or less whyyou hove made your selection— simplicity oi essay coimts most.FIRST PRIZETo the Best-Dressed ManA Complete $50.00 WardrobeIncludes a "Hart, Schafiner & Marx" SUIT, a"Mallory" HAT, "Edgerton" SHOES. "Arrow"SHIRT, a TIE, SHIRT and SHORTS. 3 pairs oiHOSE, "Swank" BRACES and JEWELRY.SECOND PRIZETo the Best Entry>A Complete $50.00 WardrobeIncludes a "Hart, Schalfner & Marx" SUIT, a"Mallory" HAT, "Edgerton" SHOES, "Arrow"SHIRT, a TIE, SHIRT and SHORTS, 3 pairs ofHOSE. "Swank" BRACES and lEWELRY.Next Three PrizesComplete jewelry sets of "Swank" PERSON¬ALIZED JEWELRY — Key Chain, Collar Bar,Tie Holder, and CuM Links.Next 47 PrizesHonorable Mention Awards oi $5.00 Merchan¬dise Credit Certificates.Rules oi Contest1. Select the person that you sincerely believe isthe “Best Dressed Man on Campus”! Write thename of that person and your name on the bal¬lot printed in the Daily Maroon — with each bal¬lot, tell us in 25 words or less why you havemade that selection. Both, ballot and the 25-wordessay, must be deposited at various points oncampus. Use the contest ballots printed in theDaily Maroon every day.2. Only registered students of the University ofChicago are eligible for prizes—members ofthe Daily Maroon Board of Control will selectthe winners of grand prizes and their decisionmust be considered as final. No entries will hereturned. In case of ties, duplicate awards willbe given.3. Grand prizes of equal value will be awardedto the student receiving the greatest total ofvotes as “Best-Dressed Man on Campus" — andone to the student best describing his choice. Allother awards will be given to entrants submit¬ting best essays of 25 words or less.4. The Daily Maroon reserves the right to rejectquestionable entries. Contest ends Friday, April28. All entries must be received by that time.DEPOSIT YOUR BALLOT IN DAILY MAROON CONTEST BOXESCOBB HALL. FIBST FLOOR —MANDEL HALL. LOBBY —DASY MAHOON OFFICEERIE CLOTHING CO.837 EAST 63rd ST. Open EveningsFRIDAY, MIDNIGHT Is Contest Deadline!Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1939DAILY MAROON SPORTNetmen Open SeasonAgainst MichiganI-M GAMES TODAY M T T 1\T T Q I Delt8 Slam^LliM ID • I Out 14-1 Win OverBy LES DEANArt Jorgerson III, MayNot Play; ReynoldsReady to Fill Gap Today,By WALLY ANGRISTThe varsity tennis squad takes tothe courts at 2:00 this afternoon toopen the Big Ten conference witha dual match against Michigan. Com¬pletely dominating Western confer¬ence court play last year, the Ma-roonmen are out to repeat the recordthat caused sports writers to hailthem as one of the best college teamsever assembled.Playing as number one man for theChicago squad will be Chet Murphy.Bill will be on the second court.Choice for number three is CharlieShostrom and John Kreitenstein willperform on the fourth clay. Original¬ly chosen by Coach Wally Hebert toplay in the number five berth, ArtJorgenson may not be able to playbecause of illness. If sickness keepshim out. Art will be replaced by JimAtkins, stepping up one rung fromthe number six position. In reserve tofill the sixth court is Bob Reynolds,the “B” team player who showed upwell as number one man againstNorth Central and George Williams.The first doubles combine will con¬sist of that familiar pairing of theMurphy twins and Shostorm playswith Jorgenson (if w’ell enough toplay) for the second tandam event.The third doubles team consists ofKreitenstein and Atkins.WolverinesThe Michigan squad that facesChicago today will consist of fourveterans and two new men. Leadinghis teammates to what is pretty sureto be a slaughter will be Captain DonPercival. The Wolverines took aSouthern trip this spring, and madea poor showing without the help ofsuch athletic infirmities as themumps. The Ann Arbor boys w’on 10dual meets last year and placedeighth in the conference tournament.The Chicago-Michigan score last sea¬son was 9-0 and all pre-match dopeshows that a repeat is likely.A fair crowd is expected to taketo the bleachers that front the var¬sity courts today when 2:00 rollsaround. Some spectators will probablyremember that a Maroon defeathasn’t been chalked up here for thelast three years, this record also hold¬ing true for Big Ten matches heldaway from home. Biggest drawingcard on the varsity clays in ’38 wasthe exhibition play that featured DonBudge, Mako, and Riggs. Budge andMako bowed to the stellar court playof John Shostrom, last year’s cap¬tain and Chet Murphy. Bobby Riggsmanaged to turn away Bill Murphyin a close match. Chicago Theological Seminary—Kappa Epsilon PiDelta Upsilon “B”—Delta KappaEpsilonQuadrangle Club—SchleppersJudson “300”—Burton “700”Bacchalians—JailbirdsEllis Students Club—Barristers.Savants LoseResistance; toPlay in I-M’sBy MARIAN CASTLEMANWith proper and necessary regardfor quality, quantity, place, position,and other accidents, the PhilosophyClub has at last come to realize theinimitably Aristotelian character ofsoftball. As a result, G. KimballPlochman hopefully posted a bulletinin the Philosophy library calling allThomists, Patonists, Logical Positiv¬ists, Hegelians, Pragmatists, and Mc-Keonites to indicate their desire toplay softball by signing the whitebulletin.Noble philosophers flocked. Afterselection operate by the laws of ne¬cessity and probability, a group ofnine men who knew how to hold abat was named. Some had playedbaseball before. Two of these, RobertBrumbaugh and Kimball Plochman,were slightly cautious because theyhad once played intramural softball,and the intramural office might ob¬ject when they applied for officialregistration as members of an inde¬pendent amateur team.However, despite many apparenthandicaps, the nine hopes to practiceat 9:30 at “Cottage Grove room.”This weekend they will play theirfirst game.HippocratesObvious sluggers in the group areHippocrates Apostle, ’Abraham Kap¬lan, Helen Erlich, and Milton Singer.Captain Irving Copilowish will beshort stop, Plochman will be pitcher(it is rumored that he has concocteda mighty twist), Benbow Ritchie willhold first base, Norman Dalkey thirdbase, M. Trumbo second base, andFrank Dowley is manager.The organization of the team hasbeen carried out • feverishly whileguiding hand McKeon has been ab¬sent in the East for conferences. Butwhen he gets back they hope he willserve as catcher. At any rate, a cer¬tain pleasure may be derived fromthe argumentation between refereeand players over such properly Aris¬totelian problems as the differencebetween strikes and balls. Like several other Chicago teams,the baseball club seems unable tocome through when it counts; theyhave the ability, and they can playgood ball, but they don’t bring homethe bacon very regularly. “If it isn’tone thing, it’s another;” remarkedCoach Kyle Anderson yesterday,“when we have the pitching, we can’thit, and when we have the hitting, ourpitching goes to pot—I don’t knowwhat’s the matter.”If any hurler ever deserved to wina game, it is Bob Reynolds, who setNotre Dame down with only two hitsfor the four innings that he was inthe box. yet he will probably becredited with the loss, for the Ma¬roons and the Irish were all evenwhen he took over the mound assign¬ment.In the Notre Dame game, the boyswere hitting first rate, but their field¬ing, the department in which theyhad shown the most promise, col¬lapsed completely; they made a totalof 8 blunders, seven of them in theregular nine innings of play, and onein the last extra inning.Time and time again Chicago menwere on base, many times in scoringposition, only to be stranded, whentheir mates failed to hit in the clutch.Just as the basketball team waitedhalf the season for a “real hot night,”the ball team is waiting until they getinto midseason form; for a change,the weather has been on their side,and they have gotten in much goodpractice this week. This drill shoulddo much to help them come throughagainst Indiana tomorrow and Satur¬day, because all they need is just alittle more punch, just a little “umph”at the crucial moments in the game. Phi Gamma DeltaAlpha Delta Phi and Phi Sigma Del¬ta topped all the other softball gamesyesterday, the Alpha Delts with a 14-1 win over the strong Phi GammaDelta team and the Phi Sigs with adecisive 9-2 victory over the Phi Psis.The Phi Sigs made 16 hits to 7 forthe Phi Psis. Burrows, Phi Sig back¬stop, led his team’s batting with threeblows and Wiedemann topped the PhiPsi hitters with two hits.Psi U and Phi Delta Theta lostheartbreakers to the Pi Lams andDekes. After leading 1-0 going intothe sixth, the Psi U’s fell before afour-run Pi Lam rally and finallylost 5-2. The high-flying Phi Deltslost a 17-12 slugfest despite a terrificsix-run comeback in the sixth frame.Zebes ExplodeThe ZBT’s, who have been takingit on the chin in softball circles late¬ly, exploded their pent-up energy onthe hapless D U “B” team in theform of a 15-6 victory. The DU’s led1-0 at the end of the second inning,but the Zeta Betes tallied three in thethird stanza and from then on theresult was never in doubt.In the only independent game ofthe day. Lambda Gamma Phi out-slugged the Bacchalians 16-10, col¬lecting twenty-three hits to the los¬er’s fifteen. Britan and Ashin, Lamb¬da sluggers, led their team’s batting—Ashin with a perfect day—four forfour and Britan with three hits.Adelson, the Bacchalians shortstop,also had a perfect day with four hitsand his teammate Miller, short cen¬ter, made three hits.On the today’s record the Phi Sigs,Alpha Delts, Pi Lams and Deke standout, but the Sigma Chi’s past per¬formances bear close watching. THE NEWHIGH ROLL MODELSUITSTrim and cicvcr suitstailored to drape soft andstunningly. Availablein coverts, shetlands,cheviots and worsteds.»QC00Oabardint Sum . , $40Camd Hair Topcoats $35lacomparabl^ VaJuegjFmcfjIe?19 £ Jackson Boulevard Chicago564 Fifth Avenue, New YorkGolf VeteransMeetMarquetteA team composed of nearly all vet¬erans will tee off against Marquetteat Olympia Fields tomorrow. Themeet will be the first of the seasonfor the experienced squad and thoughthe Milwaukee boys usually turn outa well-balanced group, the Maroon-men should provide some stiff com¬petition.Since the deluge of a week agocleared up the Maroons have beenpracticing at Olympia Fields CountryClub every afternoon. Chuck Tanis,an outstanding instructor and pro, iscoaching the boys in preparation forthe month of college competition pri¬or to the Big Ten meet at Kildeer onthe 29 and 30 of May.After ending up in the tail posi¬tion at last year’s Conference meet,Chicago’s team should be able tomove up a few spaces in the final Show Rumba, TangoAt Spring Shuffle THE ORDER OFRumba and tango steps will be ondisplay tomorrow night when the so¬cial dance classes hold their springshuffle at Ida Noyes Hall from 9 un¬til 12. This dance, the third and lastsponsored by Ida Noyes during thepast year, is open to the entire cam¬pus. Besides an orchestra, entertain¬ment will be furnished by BerniceRipka and Josephine Kelly who willperform tap dances.The mixers, which have been wellattended and enjoyed, are primarilyto give the people in the social danceclasses an opportunity to show theiradvancement in dancing. BLACEFRIARSPRESENTLOVE OVER THE LINEtabulation this year. Only three outof seven men on the squad have hadno conference experience while twohave had two years and two othersone year.TEAR OUT THIS COUPON!“BEST-DBESSED HAN” CeNTEST BAUOTI THINK FridayApril 28IS THE BEST-DRESSED MAN ON CAMPUS.emd contest entrants must be registered students. Dejsosit this ballotIn a Doily Maroon Box at various points on campus. (Write, on separate paper,25 words or less the reason for your selecUon and deposit in Contest Box.)Your NomeAddress SaturdayApril 29Matinee SaturdayOENERALLT ACKNOWL^GED AS THE BESTBLACKFRIAR PRODUCTION IN THE LASTTEN YEARS$3SO.OO IN PRIZES OFFERED BY ERIE CLOTHING CO.Submarine Comet Heads for the BottomL««vins • smoky trail of bubbles in her wake, Betty Feldmeier flashesdown past the observation window built into the new Wellesley Col¬lege swimming pool. The window is used to study the action of swim¬mers. !nrrrn«tiondlNo. 1 IntercoNefiate Beauty Teamir< the seven reasons why the University of Akroned Kent State University in the first intercollegiater contest. Judge Edgar Martin, creator of the "Bootser Buddies’* cartoon, is in the center. Akron Jounwi A Lons, High Fly... was the result of this hit by CarlMorgan of Manhattan College inan early-season diamond duel withColumbia University’s Lions.Wide World iS-Thar’s Gold In Them Thar* Gulps! And Indigestion, TGoldfish sobbling has come into itsown! And to be a real contender forhigh honors you must down themwhen they're live and wriggling. Itail started some months ago when aTittle-publicized University of Ak¬ron student^ Paul Buzzi, downedone —fycs, just one. Now the re¬cord stands at 89, and it's held byJoseph Deliberato, Clark Univer¬sity, who gulped them all in 14minutes with the help of a half-pintof milk for a wash. Just in caseyou're contemplating entering thisnewest form of intercollegiate com¬petition, we pass on to you thiswarning of an eminent medical au¬thority: Goldfish are subject to fishtape-worms. When they are eatenalive these worms settle in the int¬estinal tract and cause anemia. 1 Harvard's Lothrop Withington, Jr.,started the fad on the road to fame byswallowing one four*inch goldfish for$10. 2 Gilbert Hollandersky, University of Pennsyl¬vania, held the title for a couple of days after heAcrk forced down 25. With collegians all over theU. S. competing, he didn't keep the title long. 3 Then Irving Clark, Jr., returne ito Harvard by swallowing 29. "kinda bitter, but they go down eaclaims.4 Top honors in the slippery sport were held for a short while by 3 First co-ed competitor is MarieDonald Mulcahy of Boston College. He topped off his 30 with a dish Hansen, University of Missouri. Herof ice cream. The president of his college has since barred further at- record of one was accomplished aftertempts at the record. a big oyster breakfast. 0 Somewhat more original, John Patrick, UnivenChicago junior, has a record on record-eating. He crudown three, but refused to eat the centers because 'gives me indigestion".Mile. Cunc HonoredEve Curie (left), daughter ofthe discoverers of radium, re¬ceived a Doctor of HumaneLetters degree at Mills Col¬lege. She is shown here withDr. Aurelia Henry Rein¬hardt and Dr. A. Cecile Reau.InternetionetCabaret RulerMarjorie Helman, Ohio University sophomore,versity sophomore, was queenof the junior prom cabaretdance which featured PaulWhiteman and his music.!jJurf- *Students Cheered... when Alee Temple¬ton, famed Enslishblind pianist, presentedhis many entertainingballads at an informalmeeting with PurdueUniversity engineers.Photo by Heimlich**Pleasantest... room in the world".Raconteur AlexanderWoollcott calls the newbrowsing room for"haphaxard reading"established in the Ham¬ilton College library.No textbooks are al¬lowed in the room. iHbr-!ftSmokingPleai0 at its best"Won’t you have a Camel.’” Those five words have opened up a newworld of cigarette pleasure to many and many a delighted smoker...ingly delicate in flavor... in other words, America’s favorite cigaretteAnd every Camel, in every pack, has the same charm for your taste. You canalways depend on Camel’s costlier tobaccos for the peak of smoking pleasure!These Are Actives Getting e PeddlingPledge days were recalled with true realism (or these two actives o( Alpha Tau Omega fraternity at Drake Uni'versity. They lost an intramural game to Sigma Alpha Epsilon and to pay a bet spent a night in the S. A. E. houMas pledges.• Close-ups Aren't Flittering. . . when the subject is a be-wigged and paintsmember of the cast of the "About Face" shostaged by U. S. Military Academy men. This"pert and pretty" Fred Hampton. imrrn4t>o«It May Be Great for Science, But lt*s Rough on Feminine CharmStudents in the biology department at Occidental College make an annual trip to the beach of the Pacificocean near Los Angeles to collect specimens of saltwater life. Coii»9.«te D.sest pwo by Voig* A Ducking for a PinJean Hahn, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta aMichigan State College, gets the tubbing prescribe<for all members who wear the pin of a fraternity manOigrtt Photo by Croweti Must BalanceInstructor will know her pro-if»g smoothly. It’s a specialMissouri State Teachers Col-anti-jitterbug miovement. Twilight Bike-AboutDuke University students enjoy en efter-cless ride es theCaroline sun casts long shadows on the paths and roadwaysof their 5,000-acre woodland campus.slate Weaverol North Carolina Statetile school is but one ofients in nine North Caro-who are learning how toom raw materials grownstudents recently held adisplay garmentsundergraduates. Acin* it. Vfmm "Tk4World's Tallest College StudentAt least that's the title claimed by "Tiny" Grayson, Clemson College stu¬dent. He's 7 feet, 2 inches tall and weighs 302 pounds. The 19-year-oldjunior wears a size 20 shoe. w.de WorldYes, Collegiate Digest Bit, Too!Just to prove that some of these beauty contests are notwhat they’re supposed to be, these four Franklin andMarshall collesians organized a "Charm Quest" and dupedco-eds and publications in all sections of the country. Theirslogan was "It can happen here!" Members of the SteepleClub are R. M. Landis, Frank Lewenberg, E. D. HackmanJr., and J. K. DeBold.Pre-Season Training for Future ChampionsGolf is now being added to the women’s physical education pro¬gram at many colleges and universities. Here Valena Harper andMarjorie King are getting their first fesson from Ed Newkirk, Uni¬versity of Nebraska golf instructor. Coiicsidir Di<irst Photo by uion Aiding in the Undergraduate Movement to Promote Peace. . . members of the Catholic Student Peace Federation met at Rockhurst College for their annual corence to discuss war and its prevention and to chart a program for the coming year. Joseph Schmidt (made the keynote speech of the convention, while Melvin Kleb was its secretary.For New York Fair VisitorsStudents Plan Special Exhibit A special exhibit of pottery and how it is made is now being prepared for aspecial New York World’s Fair exhibit by students of the New York State Col¬lege of Ceramics at Alfred University. These four photos of a vase in the makingillustrate one of the many prpeesses that will be demonstrated for fair visitors byAlfred students. ,NO MORECOMPLAINING IS RIGHT!PRINCE ALBERT’S^ THE ANSWER. IT SUREGIVES TONGUE-BITE■L THE GATEColl«sc^ shows the sreatlengths to which an engineerwill go to impress the campuswith his scientific accomplish¬ments She'll Rule Sweet Briar's May FeteViola James, possessor of a high scholastic record (and beauty, too), willbe Queen of the May for the annual spring pageant at Virgii’^ia's SweetBriar Colleqe Interndtion-iHe Creates Parthenogenetic (Fatherless) RabbitsDr Gregory Pincus, experimental zoology professor at Clark Uni¬versity, has succeeded in producing a strain of fatherless rabbits.are removed from a female rabbit, treated chemically and arethen put into the fallopian tubes of another rabbit, the "hostmother", for foetal development.‘At birth the baby rabbits havethe markings and other characteristics of their actual mother, and''One of their foster mother's. Dr. Pincus is shown examining rabbitova in a nourishing blood serum preparatory to iniecting them intomother (not the one from which the eggs were obtained).Work in this field may lead, it is hoped, to the breeding of purestrains of domestic animats. WHEN you load up with Prince Albert, men, you’re in for a ses¬sion of cool, smooth joy-smoking. P. A. has an extra mildnessall its own, because it’s "no-bite” treated. Harshness is o-u-t, leav¬ing in the RICH, RIPE TASTE and good, full body of choice to¬bacco. Prince Albert’s "crimp cut" not only packs easier, but packsright for slower burning, easier drawing. Fill up from the big redP. A. tin There’s no other tobacco like Prince Albert. pipefuls af fragrant to¬bacco in ovary bandytin af Prince Albert('•tpvrbrht, I9:ni, K. J. T«4Nt«*«*SO mild;iHAT’S HAPPENEt^DVOULATEiy?DON’T HEAR youV\PLAINING ABOUTDNGUE-BITE INVOUR PIPES!TRIAL AT NO RISKSmoke 20 fragrant pipefub ofPrince Albert, if jrou don't find itthe mellowest, tastiest pipe tobac*CO you ever smoked, return thepocket tin with the rest of thetobacco in it to us at any timewithin a month from this date,and we will refund full purchaseprice, plus postage. (Sign*J> R. J.Reynolds ^Tobacco Company,Winston-Salem, North Carolina hlMCEAlbertTHB NATIONAL JOT SMOKEPOLOyODLE•yellins a good game^Bill Shaw and GeorgeFiske, University ofCalifornia at Los An¬geles water poloists, tryto scare each other outof position during apractice session. Noticehow the photographer"stopped” even themovement of the waterin this remarkable actionpicture.A Stock Punishment from the Old Dayswas used on "Doc" Parsons by his Sigma Chi fraternitybrothers the University of Oregon after he "hung" his pin onBetty Cown, an Alpha Chi Omega. Coiir9>«ir by PrtsrColl«s'<>*e Digfit Photo by DdllmjefRivalling the Thrills and Excitement of the N. Y. Exchange. . Cornell University hotel administration students annually sell stock in the "Hotel Ezra Cornell" togain funds with which to operate some hotel for a day. The stock has never failed to return 100 per centdividends to investors. Driving and Pounding for Victory *. . . Don Walher of Bucknell University won a decision over ZimeiCollege of the City of New York in the annual Eastern IntercollegiBoxing Conference. Final team rankings were: Bucknell, first; CN. y., second; Temple, third; Rutgers, fourth; West Virginia fifth