Bail? MwaVo. 40, No. 92 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1940 'Vard CoJfWardFour Pages in this Issuv.University Receives$1,000,000 DonationMarshall Field III GivesTwo Buildings As Gift.The University, this week-end, re¬ceived a $1,000,000 building as a giftfrom Marshall Field III, prominentChicagoan and University trustee.The gift includes two 10 story loftbuildings of 212-220 West Jackson,the gross income of which was $103,-r>43 last year. The net income, afterall expenses and real estate taxes,but before depreciation and federalincome tax was $40,221.Hutchins’ CommentCommenting on the gift. PresidentHutchins said, “There are no plans tosell the buildings. Income will be de¬voted to the university general fund,in line with the urgent need amonguniversities for ‘unre.stricted money’.”Unrestricted money being- of course,contributions with no strings attachedby the donor.In transferring the gift Field re¬marked. “It gives me great pleasure totransfer to the University of Chicagoas a 50th anniversary gift the titleto the buildings.”Campus a Gift 50 Years AgoThe donation nearly coincides withthe 50th anniversary of a 10 acre giftby Mar.shall Field I, prominent Statestreet merchant. Field’s gift com¬prised the original university cam¬pus.The buildings, donated by Field, willnot be removed from the tax rolls.The university is .said to have paid$7,000,000 in real estate taxes.Krueger Million-tu-Oiie Shot to Be\ext U. S. President ASU MembersStill ProtestBrowder Issue Five WomenShare Friars HeadScore Girl PostThere is about one chance in 1,000,-000 that Maynard Krueger, assistantprofessor of Economics, will be thenext President of the United States.Since Kreuger has been nominatedfor Vice-President at the National So¬cialist Convention at Washington, hischances of achieving the presidencydepend on the Socialists winning thenext election and on something hap-paning to Norman Thomas, the peren¬nial Socialist candidate for Presi¬dent who was renominated withoutopposition for the fourth time.Krueger also delivered the keynotespeech at the convention. He advocat¬ed the use of capital for social util¬ity rather than for private profit; de¬nounced the New Deal for increasedarmament expenditures; and forbringing agricultural production downto the level of industrial production,and said that free enterprize couldonly be enforced by “the army andmore lawyers than we have now. Hefinally offered government ownershipof monopolies and extremely waste¬ful private industries as the first steptoward Socialism.Krueger, who is a well known lec¬turer in the College Social Sciencesurvey courses, is a member of the.National Executive Committee of theSocialist Party.liiitli McCain InMarriage Series“Psychology of Marriage Relation¬ships,” will be the topic of Mrs. RuthMcCain in the last lecture of themarriage series to be held this after¬noon at 4:30 in Graduate Education126. Mrs. McCain, a career womanhas two children, is in the councilingservice at Northwestern, and used tobe Educational Director for the Illi¬nois Society for Mental Hygiene. Agraduate of the University of Min¬nesota, she is a sparkling speakerand discussion leader. Mrs. McCainspoke at the marriage lecture seriestwo years ago, and is a frequent ra¬dio lecturer. She is also interested inthe operation and maintenance ofsummer camps. “We have not exhausted our in¬genuity,” cried Sid Lipshires, chair¬man of the ASU, to President Hutch¬ins last Friday morning. “You willhear more from us.” On Sundaymorning the threat was made good.In front of the Chapel Lipshires stoodin an Uncle Sam costume and handedout copies of the Bill of Rights tochurch-going Hyde Parkers. He wasaided in this task by twenty sympa¬thizers, one of whom was dressed asGeorge Washington.The cause of all this activity wasDean Randall’s refusal last Wednes¬day to allow’ Communist Earl Brow’-der to speak on campus. Late Thurs¬day afternoon ASU members led bySid Lipshires stormed Hutchins’ homeand gained an interview with Hutch¬ins for 8:30 Friday morning.Invade Hutchins OfficeOn Friday, over fifty ASU-ers andCommunists invaded the President’soffice. In the main, the reasons givenby Dean Randall for the University’saction were repeated by Dr. Hutchins.The protesting body was told in ef¬fect the administration had to re¬gard Browder as convicted of fraudand therefore undesirable as a speak¬er at the University of Chicago.To the arguments that Browder beallow’ed to appeal his case before thestudent audience. President Hutchinsanswered that “the line had to bedrawn somewhere between forbiddingfree speech to all people with tanshirts and giving free speech to ev¬erybody including inmates of Leaven¬worth.” Hutchins said that he choseto draw the line just this side of EarlBrowder.Planned ParadeFinding arg^ument unsuccessful ingaining their point, Lipshires andsympathizers decided to parade inprotest on Saturday morning. Thisplan was announced last Friday at ameeting of Communists in Kent. Themeeting was dedicated to a discussionof the restrictive covenants on Ne¬gro residence in the University neigh¬borhood, another point which has longgriped Communists and the ASU.But because the American YouthCongress had a parade in the Loopplanned for Saturday afternoon pre¬ceding their large Chicago massmeeting, the campus parade plans ofthe ASU group were called off, infavor of a Sunday morning demon¬stration.Supocna Local RedThus on Saturday morning whilephotographers were patiently waitingoutside Hutchins’ home. UniversityASU-ers and radicals massed down¬town. As over a thousand people filedout of the A ierican Youth Congressmeeting, Thomas McKenna, Com-muni.st committeeman for the fifthward, was handed a subpoena fromthe Dies Committee.Since McKenna was the only Com¬munist ward committeeman thx-ough-(Continued on page three) Jane Myers, Elise Young, Peg andPat Hutchinson, and Mary MargaretMayer would all be Blackfriars’ HeadScore Girl, the Blackfriars Board ofSuperiors announced yesterday.For the first time in Blackfriars’history, the show will have more thanone woman in the position, which inthe past has been almost equal to Sen¬ior Class queen. The Board, announcedPrior Charles O’Donnell, reached its“revolutionary, and epoch-making” de¬cision after an all-night argument.Two reasons were given for thechange, the first moral, and the second,purely expedient.Everyone a WinnerBecause they felt that it would beunjust to the clubs to select only oneof their seniors as queen, when “eachorganization has such magnificentspecimens of modern femininity,” theBoard decided that the only equitable.solution was to select a beautiful sen¬ior from each of the Clubs.Consequently, they selected JaneMeyers, an Esoteric, Elise Young, aQuadrangler, Mary Margaret Mayer,a Sigma, and a Mortar Board. TheMortar Board selection was obviouslyone of the Hutchinsons. Because theBlackfriars Board knew that theywere inseparable, and because theycouldn’t tell them apart anyway, bothPeg and Pat were named.Twins AgainEach of the women will be headscore girl for one night. Because thereare two of the Hutchinsons, they willbe Head Score Girl for the swankopening night.Last year’s Head Score Girl wasMarion Elisberg. Year before last,the Friars Board pulled a surprisecoup, and selected a Northwesternwoman. Move Up DateOf Fraternity RushingPeaceful PeaceStrike^ FerventHope Of Council Changed to Sixth Week ofFall Quarter; Initiation IsSame.Open TrainingSchool ForCounsellorsWorkshop ActorLives His PartNotice: Ticket SalesmenIron Mask and Skull and Cres¬cent members who sold tickets tothe Fandango are requested to re¬turn all unsold tickets immediatelyto John Stevens or Dink McLell-an. All others please return theirtickets to Jack Bernhardt. For the first time in the DA Work¬shop’s history, the hero of a play isreally living his part. As George inthe Workshop’s next production,“Front Room”, Hendrik Jacobson is apolitician worrying about the pettyand major aspects of elections. To¬day as himself, Jacobson will guardthe polls and live the part he playson the DA stage.Opening next week, this studentwritten drama by Bill Wilkerson, isparticularly poignant as it deals withelections and policies which effect in¬timately the lives of Americans.Tickets go on sale this week in theMandel Corridor box-office and theInformation Desk, at 25 cents a head.The show will be produced Tuesday,Wednesday, and Thursday of nextweek. I “We have Federation trainingschools for prospective counselors ev¬ery year,” stated Henrietta Mahon,newly-elected Federation president“but this year our program will besomewhat different. In making plansfor the orientating of next year’sFreshman special consideration willbe given to the criticisms made by thepresent Freshmen of last fall’s activ¬ities.”Three general training meetings forprospective counselors have been setfor April 11, 18, and 25. The first les¬son, to be taught by Henrietta Ma¬hon, will cover the “requirements andduties of a counselor, and the prob¬lems of a Freshman.” Invited to speakat the second meeting on “What aFreshman expects when she comes tothe University of Chicago” is MissSmithies, Dean of Women at U. High.Penalty for AbsenceAt the third meeting Leon P.Smith, Dean of Students at Chicago,will give his version of the requisitesof a counselor. Failure to report to ameeting carries with it the penalty ofbeing dropped from the list.At the end of the three week periodthe 200 prospects will have beenpared down to 100 girls, 20 of whomwill be group leaders; 50 of the re¬maining capable girls will be placedon a reserve list.Group LeaderA group leader in cooperation withtwo faculty wives supervises the activ¬ities of four counselors during Fresh¬man Week in the fall. To wind up itspre-season activities Federation hasarranged a tea for faculty wives andgroup leaders on May 9.According to Federation presidentMahon, “This year there will be aspecial stress laid on informal activ¬ities such as midnight spreads in thedorms, for that was the one criticismmost prevalent among Freshmenwhen the checkup was made.” For the first time in three years areal hope exists that the Peace Strikeon April 19 will be free from internaldissent. In the Friday meeting of thePeace Council a program for peaceaction was unanimously approved, andthe Trotskyites, already facing rup¬ture in their own ranks, constitutedthe only withdrawal.The committee which submitted theprogram consisted of representativesH’om all the major peace movementsplus three independents. MarjorieEwing represented the Youth Commit¬tee Against War, Ithiel Pool was theTrotskyite delegate, Dan Genung of¬fered a program suggested by Divin¬ity School students, and Sid Lipshiresrepresented the ASU platform. Fromthe United Student Peace Actiongroup came Alan Philbrick. Sid Rolfe,Charles Boyer, and Eugene Robinwere the three independents.Three Major PlanksIn the program suggested by thecommittee, and accepted by the entirePeace Council, there are three majorplanks each accompanied by an ap¬propriate slogan. “No new Versailleson either side” is the slogan for thefirst plank, namely, America mustcontribute to a just and democraticpeace. The second plank—Stop thewar; combat all steps that lead towar—has for its slogan “Don’t Followthe Headlines into the Lines.” Thisplank registers disapproval againstloans or credit to belligerents, pro-warpropaganda in the press, radio, colleges and schools, secret diplomacy,M day plans, and militarization ofyouth through ROTC, CCC or NY A.Build democracy at home is the tenor of the third plank. To do this theprogram advocates the anti-poll taxbill, the anti-lynch bill, and the pro¬tection of the right of labor to organize and bargain collectively. ThePeace Council wants increased expenditures for social needs and decreasedarmament expeditures. The sloganfor this plank is “Jobs not Guns.”Three-fourths Majority RuleIn order to bar dissenters from thePeace Council’s action, the three-fourths majority rule was in force forall voting on Friday. Because of this,slogans such as “The Yaniks Are NotComing” were outlawed although manyreceived a bare majority. The OxfordOath also failed to gain sufficient ma¬jority approval.Faculty IndorsePresent RefugeeAid DriveArt Show DeadlineToday is the deadline for entriesin the Ida Noyes Student ArtShow. All those interested in ex¬hibiting their work must have theirart pieces at Ida Noyes todhy. Cashprizes are offered. The Refugee Aid Committee, be¬lieving that students look to the mem¬bers of the University faculty forleadership both in and out of class,has for some time been approachingvarious members of the faculty to actas sponsors for the Drive.Faculty EndorsementThe Committee has had great suc¬cess in this movement. They havegained the moral endorsement of theoutstanding men of practically everydepartment in the University, not tomention President Hutchins.One professor approached, Paul H.Douglas of the Economics Departmentand Alderman of the Fifth Ward,when answering the request that heact as a sponsor of the Drive, sent thefollowing letter to Mimi Evans, Ref¬ugee Aid Chairman:Letter“The success of the Refugee AidDrive is of the greatest consequenceson both practical and symbolic grounds.No charitable project can be more cer¬tainly fruitful than that of helpingthe most promising young men of Eu¬rope and Asia to gain an honest edu¬cation at the time when such help ismost needed.Unless the world sinks into perma¬nent and universal despotism, therewill be a time when these menwill be the leaders in reestablish- I The Intei-fraternity Council’s pet¬ition that the time of fraternity rush-ings be changed to the sixth week ofthe Autumn Quarter has been con-jsidered and approved by the Commit-jtee on Fraternities of the Board onthe Co-ordination of Student Inter¬ests, it was announced yesterday.Included in the Council’s petition isa stipulation that the time of initia¬tion remain unchanged, that is, thebeginning of the Spring Quarter, andthat an average grade of C be re¬quired for initiation. The Committeeon Fraternities, however, is of theopinion that this average is too high,and recommends that the same re¬quirement be made for fraternities asthe one now in use for women’s clubs.This requires that for initiation thecandidate must make a plus score forthe first two quarters on a ratingscheme which reduces letter grades tonumerical terms.Fraternity RequestThe Committee points out that thescholarship requirement is the sug¬gestion of the fraternities themselves.“It should be incorporated in the by¬laws of the Interfraternity Council,and not made an official action of theUniversity,” the Committee report de¬clared.The Sigma Alpha Epsilon issue wasone of the problems which gave riseto the Committee on Fraternities, ac¬cording to the report. In expressingits present views *on that subject, theCommittee said:1) The University should in general,approve the organization of such fra¬ternities.2) For the present, only those fra¬ternities which now have or at sometime have had, chapters on the quad¬rangles should be allowed to organizedormitory chapters.Ask House CounsellorsThe Committee continued its reportby suggesting that all fraternities berequired to maintain graduate coun-(Continued on page three)Says Friars MakeBetter Women ThanWAA^MU Show Has“Look at the Pulse cover, and you’llsee what I mean,” said Chuck O’¬Donnell, Blackfriars publicity manyesterday, as he commented on thechallenge the Order had issued topromoters of Northwestern’s WAA-MU show. “Why, our female imper¬sonators make better women than youcould find in a dozen WAA-MU pro¬ductions ”This gust w’as inspired by a remarkpassed by Ted Grefe, president of theNorthwestern chapter at Phi KappaPsi after the boys inadvertently choseGrant Atkinson as one of the queensof the Navy Pier flower show. SaidGrefe, according to Pulse as he recall¬ed last year’s gag when Atkinson wasentertained at Evanston sororityhouses as a woman, “This is too much.You’re making chumps out of us toooften. We’ll get even. Besides, ourWAA-MU show is better anyway.The Northwestern WAA-MU .show,produced by the Women’s AthleticAssociation and the Men’s Union, isa musical comedy much like Black¬friars, except that there are womenfor the female parts. “Our show isbetter,” stormed O’Donnell. “We’remad, we are. We’re real mad. I’mthumping my chest.” At this point hethumped his chest. “We can beat themany time. Where can they And awoman that can look as sultry as thekind that Hochman makes.Contacted by the Maroon, Grefehad only this to add: “We’re realproud of our show. We can dwarfBlackfriars with WAA-MU any day.”ing sanity. And the very fact thatstudents in this University ere will¬ing to support such a cause is ofalmost equal importance in demon¬strating, both to the world and tothemselves, that their ideals are realto them and not just discussion top-4Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1940^ailo (^aromtFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATE PRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni-Tersity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday andMonday during the Autumn, Winter and Spring quarters by TheDaily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue. Telephone: HydePark 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 148 West 62nd street. Telephone Wentworth 6123.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon or for any contractinterH into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the righte of publication ofany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates: $3 afear: $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3. 1879.RCPRESKNTCO FOR NATIONAL AOVERTISINO RVNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y.CHICASO ’ BOSTON ■ Los ARStLtt • SAH FSAHCISCOBOARD OF CONTROLEMitorialRUTH BRODY WILLIAM H. GRODYHARRY CORNELIUS DAVID MARTIN, ChairmanALICE MEYERBusinessHARRY F. TOPPING, Business Mgr.ROLAND 1. RICHMAN, Advertising Mgr.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESJohn Bex, Herb Gervin, William Lovell, and Julian LowensteinEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESDemarest Polacheck, William Hankla, Pearl C. Rubins, John Stevens,Hart Wurzburg, Marian Castleman. Ernest LeiserNight Editor: Chet HandAssistant: Marjory GoodmanIn The Cover ChargeRobert Maynard Hutchins, the Sir Galahadof the educational tournaments, has the statusof a moden hero. Whether he likes it or not, hehas glamour. Something about what he is,what he has done, what he is trying to do hascaught the imaginai;ions of people. He has be¬come a sort of symbol; often a symbol of whathe is not.Almost every day the president providescopy for newspaper writers. He is a devil to thesports page, and a dog to the Tribune editorialwriters. To some others, he is almost in a classwith Jesus. Everytime it can, the Maroon usesa picture of him to brighten its dreary sheets:our columns have been filled with tales, pleas¬ant and unpleasant, of Hutchins, his family,his activities. Off campus he is thought of as aneducational pioneer or upstart, depending onwhat kinds of prejudices influence the think¬ing: on campus he is a man of mystery. It is acommon thing to hear some student exclaimexcitedly— “I just saw Hutch on the way tohis office!” or, “I could see right into the nurs¬ery—they forgot to close the shutters.”Like other romantic notions, the Hutchinslegends probably have large elements of un¬truth. For instance, Hutchins is still called theboy president; yet his ten years of hard servicehere entitle him more to the description ofvenerable. He is praised and blamed for theeducational innovations of the University ofChicago; yet most of our policies were, in gen¬eral, conceived by Harper. His speeches andwritings arouse tremendous excitement proand con, although much of what he says is notonly obvious to common sense: it was saidyears ago by Aristotle and St. Thomas, and to¬day by Maritain. It is a sad sign of a muddle-minded age when application of old truths tonew circumstances is shocking.Perhaps the greatest of all untruths is thelegend which makes Hutchins a hater of thestudents; remote, scornful, aloof in the sneer¬ing solitude of his synical ivory tower. True,the president does not as yet kiss babies. Buthow many other heads of universities conductundergraduate classes, as Hutchins has donefor years? He performs his duties of appearingat receptions and handing out degrees: whyblame him if he looks bored at these rather dullroutine affairs? Not only that, but he sees stu¬dents by appointment when they have some¬thing to say to him; he addresses the under¬graduates at least once a year in RockefellerChapel, and again at the Maroon dinner. Didformer presidents of the University do thismuch?Sometimes student leaders get angry withHutchins because he won’t consult them abouthis policies in regard to the school. Their feel¬ings almost resemble jealousy. But if he con¬sulted them he would not only be seeking im¬mature advice, he would be doing a injusticeto the rest of the students. It is almost impos¬sible to find a representative student attitudearound here.What the students seem to resent mostabout the president, however, is his evasive¬ness in meeting their questions, his tendencyto poke fun at them. It seems that Hutchinshas a sense of humor, which in a college pres¬ident is evidently something unexpected. Andwhen he is asked broad, loosely-framed ques¬tions which cannot be answered ultimatelyanyway, maybe he can’t resist the temptationto evade.Be all this as it may, Mr. Hutchins, in thefull glory of his fascination, is scheduled tospeak to anyone who has enough money to bea student leader at the Maroon dinner nextweek. Then, he will answer, off the record,questions put to him by students. It wouldseem wise, therefore, for those who intend togo to start thinking about what they want toask the president and how they can frame their the undergraduate mind; and the undergrad¬uates will just have more insults to resent. Toavoid a deadly evening, then, we suggest thatstudents start thinking how they can expresswhat is worrying them.Traveling BazaarBy ERNEST LEISER{assisted by Paid Florian, Emmett Deadman, BettyAnn Evans, Bob Evans, Bob Crow, Sally Adams, andDavid Martin, who did all the work.)The Fandango was fine...The orchestra was thebest we’ve heard on campus in years—too good for acarnival, and everyone was having a wild good time,except Frank Daschbach, Deke pledge whose fraternitybrothers were tossing pies at him all evening long.The only thing wrong was that there were too manythings to throw at, and too many people w'ere throwingit. Like Dunder Anderson who was trying to auctionoff a pansy plant, and likeable Chuck Pfeiffer who wastrying to keep equally likeable Janet Geiger from beingauctioned off.. .Incidentally, Janet was the only onewho didn’t take a sadistic pleasure in seeing Dodgeblocktake a beating.The Four heels who crashed the gate, according toRuml’s modest admission are Jane Talman and her littlechum Stud, Donna Culliton, and Emmet Deadman.Everyone else, even Owl and Serpent, paid to the SeniorScholarship Fund.The best booth, albeit the cruelest, w'as the Dekea’.They had a poor little freshman white mouse, who hada hard time making its mind what fraternity or club tojoin. First it pledged Quad, then changed its mind andwent Sigma; then under the taunts of its persecutors,depledged, and entered Psi U. Either this proves some¬thing about the Psi Us or the mouse. But when it wentPsi U. Johnny Stevens blushed.All the seniors were parading their hardly-gained(Blackfriars) mustaches For quantity, Johnny Palmeris probably ahead For quality, however, Harry Corn¬field Topping certainly outshines anyone, Deke CharlieShostrom, has the longest, but his is much too mealylooking to win.Betty Van Liew was one of the proprietors of thebronco busting booth, the wickedest and most dangerousattraction, except the dance floor, at the Slambango.Roger Neilsen came back, which was too bad, but wewere glad to see Emmet, even if he did break and enter.At the Maroon booth, w'e collected exactly ten cents.O’Donnell gave us a nickel to mention Blackfriars,someone gave us a penny to put his date’s name in. BobEvans gave us two cents to put our own name in, andJ. Pierpont Palmer, gave us two cents to keep his out.The Mortar Board booth was practically the mostfun, with people saying in telegrams what they hadbeen wanting to say for years. With Caroline Wheeler,Mike Kathje, Janet Peacock, Shirley Smith, and SallyAdams working at the desk, most of the telegramswent to the hired help. But we’re sure Hillard Thomasgot one off to Natalie Clyne.Buddy Aronson looked awful foolish with a I'ed derbyon—Bob Reynolds, not the pinned Bob Reynolds, butJohn Stevens’ Bob Reynolds, looked slightly less silly,with an orange one. Mimi Evans sent us two telegramswhich thought warms our heart even if we didn’t geteither of them.Prizes of the party were the Wvyerns in short shorts—we hear they had a booth to go around the shorts,but our eyes didn’t get that far.Most affectionate looking gent of the evening was ;sleek Bill Caudill who when we asked him a civil ques¬tion, looked at his date, Charlotte Watkin, who room¬mate and fellow artist. Bill Hankla, says is his onlytrue love, and murmured adoringly, “Huh?” Moderns Blush AtOld Time CensusThe 1940 census taker would blushto ask some of the questions whichhave been listed in previous nose¬counting questionnaires, according toexperts who discussed the forthcom¬ing census on the University of Chi¬cago Round Table broadcast today(Sunday 1:30 P.M. CST.).The Round Table’s Roving Reporterquestioned Louis Wirth, associateprofessor of sociology at the Univer¬sity of Chicago, and J. Frederic Dew-hurst, economist for the TwentiethCentury Fund, New York City.In 1907, it was pointed out, the In¬dustrial Census included the question:“How many petticoats do you wear?”“As long ago as 1850,” Dr. Wirthsaid, “the census required citizens tosay whether they were idiots, had anydisease, were prisoners or paupers,and to value all their real estate andproperty. No one can say that the1940 census goes as far as that.”The speakers emphasized the im¬portance of census information tobusiness men who will profit fromknowing where people are moving toand from, what are the trends inpopulation distribution, and whattypes of homes and facilities familieshave.Foster Holds AnnualFaculty DinnerNot to be outdone by the DailyMaroon’s dinner for President Hutch¬ins, Foster Hall has planned to hold adinner Wednesday night for certainchosen ones of the University facultyand their wives. ClassifiedSCHOLARLY EDITING—dlswrUtion*. ih^„books. M.A. Y»le Unirersitr Criti^mand marketing for writers.Writer’s Service, 1020 Ardmore7986. Lon.123 E. OAK ST. AT MICai. AVE4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSErot COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRAOUATISA thoeoisgh, intesuive, ttessographic course—stmrtiMf January 1, April 1, July J, October 1interesting Booklet sent free, without obligutiem— write or phone. So solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGERAUL MOSER; J.D. RH.t.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Gradsustos only, start first Monday. Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startMonday. Day and Evening. EventneConrsas i 'open man.06 S. AAichigan Av*., Cbicogo, kondolph 4341THE NEWLEX THEATREFEATURING “PUSH BACK” SEATS1162 E. 63rd St Op«n 11:30 A.M. D0U7Wad. & Thurs.JEFFREY LYNN &GERALDINE FITZGERALD"A Child is Born''andANN SOUTHERN & LEWIS STONE'Joe and Ethyl 1 urp Coll onthe President" THERE’S NEW THRILLSNAPSHOOTING WITH AKODAKYou'II find Your Model HoroTHE urge to complete that snap¬shot record of yours will be all thestronger when you see the newKodaks here. Easier to carry about,styled for the times, more capablethan ever, they're a delight to any¬one who wants good snapshots.There’s a model in every pricerange that will make the picturesyou want. See them here soon.Full line of all Kodak Supplies.24 hour printing and developing service.PHOTOGRAPHIC GUIDESHANDBOOKS, ANNUALS. ETC.U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueHow To Learnquestions so as to get an answer. Otherwise, Mr.Hutchins won’t know what, if anything, is on by Alice MeyerHow to learn through instruction is the problemMortimer Adler faces again in a four-page article forthe April 5 issue of Commonweal. Since most peoplelearn through instruction rather than by discoveryalone, they must have the right attitude toward theinstruments of instruction before they can be goodlearners.The right attitude is gotten through the habit ofdocility. The instruments of instruction are teachers,living or dead. “Docility is the virture which regulatesa man’s will with respect to learning from a teacher.”Because this virtue “consists in rendering to teacher.*?what is their due,” Adler classes it under justice.Students Owe Teachers DocilityStudents owe docility to their teachers becau.se theteacher has greater knowledge or skill than the stu¬dent. The authority of teachers- then, lies in theirability to speak the truth, as recognized by “the nat-uial light of human reason.” This, Adler believes, isthe intrinsic test of authority. Extrinsic tests are thereputation and office of the teacher.From his own experience Adler tells how he foundthat excess and deficiency in respect for teachers canimpede learning. Through too much respest for Aris¬totle he had accepted his errors on natural slaverythrough too little respect for Hume, he overlooked theimportance of Hume’s positivism to empirical science.The first error, subservience, Adler says is likely to bea characteristic of Catholic schools; the second, in¬docility, is found more often in secular education.Tw’o maxims the learner should follow in approach¬ing his teachers are to judge by the natural light ofhis own reason, and to suspend judgment until he issure he understands what he is judging. If he is in¬clined to agree too readily he should suspend judgementawhile: if he is inclined to disagree too quickly, heshould also hesitate. He may appeal to extrinsicauthority then. WAFFLES. STEAKS Meet the Crowd at thePICCANINNY53rd ST. AT BLACKSTONEChicago $ Most Attractive BarbecueSPECIALIZING INDELICIOUS BARBECUED CHICKEN• SPARE RIBS •BEEF. PORK. AND HAMServed with Our Famous "Southern Barbecue Sauce"FOUNTAIN SERVICELUNCHEON We Deliver FREEHyde Park 5300After 4 p.m.35 CENTS DINNERSrofoe.IVhHEN you’re having a man-to-man talk at home aboutvacations — bring up Sun Valley, the Idaho “SeasideRanch in the mountains”—the place that has everything. . . superb fishing, swimming, shooting, horsebackriding, golf, tennis — even ice skating on an artificialice rink outdoors! Inexpensive, too — rooms from $3,meals moderately priced. Write for details, direct toW. P. ROGERS, General Manager . . .^UN Valley • IdahoSERVED EXCLUSIVELV BY THE UNION PACIFIC RAILROADI •LTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY^ APRIL 9, 1940BullSession(Because a Maroon reporter didn’tthink Endymion would really saywhat the Maroon reported him in itsThursday and Friday editorials assayinpT, the Board let the reporter tellit his way.)Flditor: Hello. So it’s you again.Endymion: Hello. Look Remember,we were talking last week aboutwhether Browder should be allowedto come to the University.BM. Yes.End. Well, I’ve changed my mind.I think it was between my first andsecond beer at Hanley’s Saturdaynight.. .after hours of arguing I de¬cided that it would be a greater in¬justice to the University, and to itsfjture students to allow Browder tocome than it would be to Browder toforbid him to come.Ed. What? Was it the beer thatchanged your mind?F]nd. No, I think it was the sit¬uation itself. In the first place, let’sbe clear on one point. It is unjustto forbid Browder to use the campusfacilitie.s—not illegal, of course, butunjust. And under almost any otherconditions it would be an intolerableinjustice.F'or understand this: In the firstplace 1 feel certain that our studentswould have adult intelligence enoughso that they wouldn’t be seduced byhis rhetoric, that they would be ableto reason out what he said. Thereis no danger on that .score then. Inthe second place, I feel equally cer¬tain that what he said would not leadto revolution or disorder. And thatis the only criterion that I believeshould be used to limit free speech.In the third place, he might havesomething new and something in¬teresting to say.I'd. I doubt that. But go ahead.B'nd: Well, then, looking at thesituation in vacuo, I would say, lethim come.Ed. Sounds good to me.Bmd: .Just a minute. I’ve stoppedloking at the situation in vacuo, .mdthat’s why I’ve changed my mind.You said, if you remember, that itwould be inexpedient to allow Brow¬der to come here, I half agreed, butI decided that certainly moralityshould not be sacrificed for expedi¬ency... that we should not take thecoward’s way out. And you wereconvinced by my arguments, as I re¬member.Hut here’s where my thinking onthe situation underwent a change. Itried to estimate the damage that hisspeaking on campus would do to theUniversity. I read the article in theDaily News v/hich told how PapaHutchins shooed the A S U andCommunist Club members away whenthey demanded that he let Browdercome, .^nd I heard people commenton the article—lots of people in lotsof positions high and low'. Flverysingle one of them, liberal or conser¬vative, said that Browder should notbe allowed to come. I must be a rad¬ical, then, because I disagreed w'iththem. But they ^ot me awf'ully wor¬ried.Some of them were alumni of theUniversity. One of them had evenalready contributed to the Fiftieth•Anniversary Fund Drive. And usingthem as a sample, I reached somestartling conclusions. I decided, andI’m fairly sure of this, that if Brow-<ier spoke at the University, a sub-'^tantial sum of money would be with¬held.Ed: Well, an idealist like youcertainly won’t let that stand in yourway, will you?End: That’s just it. It was a con¬flict of ideals, and the Universitywon out. I still insist that it isunjust to forbid anyone to speak here—unless he has been convicted of acrime that really violates our moralstandards, not just one that GeorgeHu rns or -Jack Benny would have gotout of with a fine of a week’s salary,or unless his speech is immediatelyseditious. But I am also convincedthat it would be a greater injusticeto American youth if the Universityof Chicago were not to continue, atits present size, and with its presentfaculty, as one of the best Univer¬sities in the world. And I am afraidthat if Browder were to come here,a barrier would be thrown up that'Wight make that continuance muchmore difficult. So, you see, it is real¬ly more than merely inexpedient tolet him come; it is actually unjust.ICd. Hey, wait! I don’t fall forthat stuff. Now I’m on the otherside. As I remember, you didn’t usethat argument v/hen the Universityabolished football. And thei’e wasplenty chance then that alumni mightget sore enough not to give to theDrive. Members of ForumIn DiscussionsTwice Today Page ThreeStudent Forum members will par¬ticipate in two speaking engagementstoday. Keith McKean, Monrad Paul¬sen, and Morris Abrams will dis¬cuss “Higher Education’’ with thestudents of the National College ofEducation at Evanston this afternoon.Purnell Benson and Bill Wrightwill talk before guests of the AllertonHotel at 8 on the topic- “Unemploy¬ment.’’The main program of the regularWednesday Student Forum meetingwill consist of a demonstration ofhow a Round Table should be con¬ducted. George Probst, Joe Molkup,Peggy Zimmer, and Charles Uarraghwill make the demonstration. Theywill conduct a similar performancebefore high school students at theHigh School Round Table Tourna¬ment to be held at the University thisSaturday. Collector Plus SportsWriter Make New NovelWAA Spring SportBanquet Plans NearFinish, Says IngramPlans for the WAA Spring SportsBanquet in Ida Noyes are rapidly be¬ing completed by the Banquet Com¬mittee.Dorothy Ingram, new WAA presi¬dent, Eleanor Coambs, the retiringpresident of WAA, Mary ElizabethGrenander, former president of thefencing club and Marjorie Brown,Racquet Club representative, are onthe committee.There will be six tables set up inthe Ida Noyes theater, the head tableat which Mary K. Brown, the guestof honor, will sit, and tables whichwill be decorated by Les Ecrimeuses,Tarpon, the Modern Dance Group anda table for those in General Athleticssuch as golf, basketball, baseball, ar¬chery and badminton. Pegasus, theriding club also announced that itwould have a table. Also at the headtable will be Miss Burns, the facultyadvisor of WAA, Miss Manning, MissEastburn, Miss Kidwell, Miss Ball-webber and Miss Weisner.In order that everyone who is in¬terested in athletics can attend, thebanquet has been opened to the stu¬dents of the Four Year College.Those who wish to attend can gettickets which are 65c to WAA mem¬bers, 75c to non-members from theoffice of Ida Noyes, from members ofthe banquet committee or from offi¬cers of the sports clubs. By BILL HANKLABack of the old miniatures, lettersand antiques now on display in theBookstore window lies a lot of inter¬esting history, and several remarkablestories.The history is the history of one ofthe more significant pioneers of medi¬cal science Dr. William Beaumont.For those who may not know. Dr.Beaumont was a backwoods, self-trained physician, who by an unusualaccident was privileged to become thefirst man to study experimentally theoperations of a living human stomach.His studies opened to the medical pro¬fession a new understanding of gas¬tric juices, much to the everlastingbenefit of mankind.CollectionAlong with the historical collectionin the Bookstore window, is displayeda new book, which explains the Book¬store’s pre-occupation with collections.But the connection between the bookand the antiques makes a good story.Dr. Arno B. Luckhardt, emminentprofessor of physiology at the Univer¬sity, and discoverer of the anestheticproperties of ethylene, is responsiblefor the collection, which is on perma¬nent display in Billings Library. Hisinterest in Dr. Beaumont comes fromthe fact that he too is interested instomachs.Historical NovelBut Dr. Luckhardt, the physiologistwith a flare for collections, is a friend I of University alumnus and Daily Newsi sports writer, Ralph Cannon, who in away is historically minded.It is the unusual combination ofphysiology, collection, sports. Dr.Beaumont, and friendship which pro¬duced the book. Mr. Cannon was im¬pressed by the story contained in someold letters, in Dr. Luckhardt’s collec-I tion, written by Robert E. Lee to theI Beaumont family about 1840. The1 story inspired him to attempt his firstj historical novel, “Lee on the LeYyr”j The novel treats of a period in Lee’slife that is little known—his early ex¬periences as a young army engineerassigned to change the course of theMissis.sippi near St. Louis. Duringthis period he and his family livedwith the Beaumonts. BLACKFRIARSAll tickets on reserve seats forthe first weekend of Blackfriarsmust be called for before 9 tomor¬row evening or they will be sold.Read the Maroon iPoetry Club MeetsAll undergraduates are invited toattend this evening’s meeting of thePoetry Club. The meeting will beginat 7:30 in Wieboldt 205. Save 20% to 30%ON OUR CASH AND CARRYLAUNDRY SERVICEThe Bachelor BundleDE LUXE FINISHMENDING—DARNINGBUTTONS FREESHIRTS 11cCOLLARS (starched) 4cCOLLARS (soft) 3cUNDERSHIRTS 5cDRAWERS 5cUNION SUITS 12cPAJAMA SUITS 16cSOCKS, per pair 5cHANDKERCHIEFS 2cTOWELS 2cBrowder—(Continued from page one)out Chicago to be subpoenaed afterthe American Youth Congress meet¬ing, suspicious ASU-ers and Com¬munists put two and two together.They believe that University admin¬istration officers asked for an investi¬gation of McKenna’s activities inconjunction with University refusalto allow Browder to speak here. Mc¬Kenna, in addition to being ward com¬mitteeman, is on the committee whichpublishes the Campus Citizen, Com¬munist newspaper distributed oncampus.Last night at 7:30 delegates fromseveral campus organizations met todiscuss further action protesting theBrowder ban. TENNIS RACKETS$1 “ to $17 “Rackets of all leading manufacturers.Balls, Presses, and all accessories. Shorts,Sox, Shirts, Shoes, etc.COMPLETE RESTRINGING SERVICEWOODWORTH'S1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsDORchester 4800 FOR REAL ECONOMYWearing apparel FluffedDry and Folded. Hanker- 8c poundchiefs ironed.SHIRTS—De Luxe Finished,when included.Exclusive Cash & CarryMETROPOLE LAUNDRYBETWEEN WOODLAWN^g. KIMBARK AVES.1219-21 EAST 55th STREETOPEN 7 A. M. TO 8 P. M.YES! There is a GOOD PLACE to EAT!Miss Lindquist has served discriminating folks on the South Side for thelast 16 years.SMORGASBORDChicken — Steak and Fish Dinners at popular pricesLuncheon 40c to 85cMISS LINDQUIST'S CAFE5540 Hyde Pork BoulevardMIDWAY 7809Rushing—(Continued from page one)sclor.s a.s residents in their houses.This, however, was considered unwisefor the present, due to the financialconditions of some houses. Reportsthat study conditions in fraternitieshad improved and that some are laxin making financial reports were made.It is suggested that a reasonable in¬terval of probation be enforced afterreports are submitted to speed up thelagging houses.The Committee closes its report byasking for continuation. It suggeststhat it meet with alumni representa¬tives of fraternities to clear up anymisunderstandings a.s to Universitypolicy toward fraternities, and to talkover general financial problems.End. I thought of that. But thereal reason that we dropped football,and you know this as well as I do,was because it was less of a detrimentto our fund raising to have no teamthan to have the kind we had. Theonly kind of team we could have hadthat would have helped us would havehad to be attained by absolutely dis¬honest means, means that were ille¬gal. And that would have been aperfectly clear-cut injustice, on thatwould outweigh by far any consid¬erations of expediency—we wouldnot have had a legal, or a moral, legto stand on.Ed. Yeah, I guess you’re right.End. I am right, but when I dis¬covered the truth of the situation itdidn’t make me very happy. To knowthat even small injustices are neces¬sary to achieve final justice is not en¬couraging. And the fear that thesmall injustices will grow larger is,frankly, harrowing. If it turns outthat more and more steps are taken,in the names of this greater justice,to limit the goods for which the Uni¬versity has stood for the last fiftyyears, I may be proved wrong inupholding its stand. All I can do isto hope that this will be a unique in¬cident. Well, after doing all thisworrying, I tossed off two more quickbeers, and felt much better about thewhole thing. Ernest Leiser. Mary K. BrowneTENNIS RACKETSGreetings to Miss Mary K. Browne who istennis at the University this week ... A realand a good teacher ... Three times National. . . Twice captain of Wightman Cup team . . . etc., etc. Her listvictories is indeed a long one.All numbers of Miss Browne's autographed rackets, including the famous "Master"model, are on display in our store end you are invited to inspect them.'Master'' model, strung with spiral gut $9.85'Master" model, strung, with silk 5.90'International" model, strung with silk 3.65Other rackets $1.75 to 17.50. Restringing your racket 2.75 to 9.00.Complete stock of tennis accessories and tennis clothing for menand women. teachingchampionchampionofWOODWORTH S STORE1311 E. 57th StreetNear Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsPhone Dorchester 4800Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1940THE DAILY MAROON SPORTSMaroon Nine SweepsSeries With DePauwLopatka, Beeks, McCrack¬en Pitch 10-8, 3-2, and 8-1Victories.By BOB LAWSONBuoyed up by their sweep of thethree ^ame series with De Pauw Uni¬versity over the week-end, the Uni¬versity baseball team is preparing tofurther their streak to five straight atthe expense of Armour Tech tomorrow.Art Lopatka, Johnny Beeks, andFrank McCracken pitched, each finish¬ing the game he started. The scoreswere 10 to 8, 3 to 2, and 8 to 1, thelast game going only six innings. Lo¬patka was troubled by a sore arm andused mostly slow stuff for the firstpart of the game, but when he startedfiring the ball in he was unhittable.Beeks Allows FourBeeks allowed only four hits butwas aided by some queer strategy onthe part of the Hoosier team. Hisinexperience was evident as he balkedone run home and almost blew up inthe ninth after walking two men onlyto be saved when a runner was nailedtrying to steal home. McCracken gaveup three hits in the abbreviated con¬test, and had a lot of stuff, but he, too,was bothered by inexperience andwildness.Marty Levit celebrated his return tothe lineup by catching all three of thegames. He was pretty tired about themiddle of the second game of Satur¬day’s double-header, but he finished.Injuries IncreaseThe injury list has swelled, addingLopatka and Abelson to the ranks.Abelson picked up a charley horse asdid Levit. Lopatka played center-fieldin the third game in place of Abelsonand contributed a beautiful runningcatch.The fielding during the first gamewas sloppy, but it improved as theseries went on. The team fielded wellenough during the final game to showthat they have a potentially good teamthis year and can be a distinct threatin the Big Ten race. If Coach Ander- Taiidem ChessA chess tournament with twoplayers opposing two other playerson a single board is being spon¬sored by the Reynolds Club. Thematches begin this week and thoseinterested may see Howard Mortto register for the tourney.The moves are made in a manneranalgous to partners in a pingpong match. With the first playeron team A making a move, and thefirst player on team B retaliating.Then the second player on team Amoves, and the second player onteam B retaliates. In making themoves, players on the same teamcannot talk to each other.soh can work his inexperienced moundstaff into shape and can keep Lopatkapitching instead of just throwing, theoutlook is rosy.Levit looks as though he were in fora very good year if he can rid himselfof the sore arm he picked up by pitch¬ing in batting practice. He will be abig help to the green pitchers andshould be able to nurse them through.Infield Loks GoodBuilt around Co-captain SparkyCalogeratos at second base, the infieldis in good shape. Anderson is havingdifficulty choosing between Sy Hirsch-berg and Aron Manders, two veryclassy fielders, at first. Denny Cowanand Jack Hurny are still battling itout for the short stop position, withCowan having a slight edge. Cowanhas one of the strongest arms on theteam and is a good fielder. Bob Morewill probably hold down third basewhen Frank McCracken is pitching.McCracken was regular third-basemanlast year, but Anderson pressed himinto service on the mound because ofhis powerful arm.Abelson is the only regular return¬ing to the outfield except for Lopatkawho patrols the outer gardens whennot pitching. Jack Fons and Bob Rey¬nolds, both sophomores, have lookedgood so far. Frosh Track MenNeed Only Practice—Coach RootBy ROBERT DEAN“The 1940 freshman track teamcould be extraordinarily good if all itsmembers would report for practice,”remarked Coach Norman Root. “Starssuch as Boyd, Stierer, and Boisewould be valuable assests to the teamif they would come out.” He saidthat it is also rumored that there aretwo exceptional half-milers that havenot shown up at all.Perhaps the most outstanding ofthe freshman thin-clads, commentedRoot, is Ray Randall, city championhalf-miler of Chicago in high school.He also is being used in the mile andthe quarter mile. Another championfrom New York City is Wally Fair-servise, a 4:30 miler in high school,!who has not reached his peak in themile yet, but will become an excep¬tional runner if the coach’s predic¬tions come true. In the pole vaultKinchelo has inspirations of 12 ft.The best quarter-milers are DocKanouse, University high champion,who will run the 440 in 51 or betterthis year, and Dick Blakeslee, whohas shown fine form in practice.Trudy Dalhberg and John Antelperform in the two-mile. DashmanLong has been timed unofficially in6:3 seconds in the 60 yard spurt. BobWeinberg, husky football tackle, hasshown great promise as a shot putter.Valorz Wins N.A.A.U.191 Lb. ChampionshipEd Valorz, University of Chicagostudent, captured the 191 poundchampionship at the National Ama¬teur Athletic Union wrestling tour¬nament held at Iowa State over theweekend. In heading his division atthe two day mat carnival, Valorz re¬placed Ohio State’s Virgil Cavag-naro, last year’s champion.I-M FENCINGI.'itramural fencing, in all threeweap'jns, opens this Wednesday. Allbut varsity members are eligible. “B” Team TakesSeason OpenerTennis on the Midway was official¬ly ushered into being Saturday whenCoach Hebert routed out his “B”team early enough to trounce a wellbalanced squad from North Centralbefore lunch time came around. Theteam score was 5-1 but study of theresults of individual matches showedthat N.C. was no setup for the Ma-roonmen.Rich Norian took the number onevictory with a hard fought 6-4, 6-4win over Bill Evert. Sophomore BobWeedfall garnered his first victory asa Maroon athlete, dropping only fivegames in the two set tilt. Bespectacle<l‘Killer” Kogan played a brilliant match to take a quick 6-0, 6-3 countover Eberhardt, while Stan Le\7wonin straight sets, 6-1, 6-3.Only loss of the day came when thecombination of Norian and Weedfallfailed to stop the North Central dou¬bles. Score: 6-4, 0-6, 6-1.GOOD FOOD, WELL COOKED"Attractlv* Old l■mac■•lafc,** soyt DiBcaa HImi,aafher, ”Adv«itar*t laGood Eatiao."Luncheon from 35cDinners 50c to $1.25Waffles and SandwichesCRUISE — DANCING — POLOWRESTLING — GOLF — RIDING, ETC.$27.00 in Admission Tickets for $1.00By special arrangement of the advertisers, listed below, we have available booksof admission tickets, valued at $27 on sale for $1. This is done for advertisingto acquaint you with the sports these concerns have avall.ible.The Tickets are as follows:DANCING. BEACHWALK.edgewater beach hotelPOLO. OAKBROOKMOONLIGHT CRUISEDANCING PARADISESWIMMING. ILGAIREROLLER SKATINGGOLF. PICKWICKGOLF. WHITE PINESGOLF. GLENBARD, BRIERGATEWRESTLINGDANCING. CASINO MODERNEINTERCOLLEGIATE BASKETBALLHORSEBACK RIDING. OAKSHIRECUMBERLAND STABLESDANCING No. ofAdmissions22142322224233438 Value$2.501.00.752.05.801.201.501.501.003.601.601.503.003.002.00$27.001940All for $!.00 and good for entire Spring and Summer ofThe edition is limited and will be on sale Tuesday through Friday,Apr. 9 to 12—so if you are interested in securing one of these valuablebooks, be sure to GET YOURS AT ONCE.BOOK AVAILABLE IN DAILY MAROON OFFICE^usiesfGit... (j/iedq^e/(/Going ^'two packs at a timebecauseChesterfield is today's definitely milder^cooler-smoking^ better-tasting cigaretteThese three qualities—mildness,COOLNESS, TASTE... are the sum andsubstance of real smoking pleasure.You enjoy all three in Chester¬field’s right combination of theworld’s best cigarette tobaccos.<y4fiss ylastaJPedersen• .. the smiling hostesswho welcomes guestsat one of New York’smost famous hotels.She will tell you Chest¬erfield is the busiestcigarette in the place. At over a million placeswhere cigarettes are sold youcan see these clean white Chest¬erfield packages going into morepockets and more handbagsevery day. All over the countrysmokers are finding out you cantbuy a better cigarette.Today s DEFINITELY MILDER, Cooler-Smoking, Better- Tasting CigaretteCopyright 1940,Liggett & Myeks Tobacco Co.