WinningThe WarA BULL SESSIONBy JIM BURTLEI am writing with the recognitionthat America is on the verge of war.Hutchins and the non-interventionists,while they may often be sincere intheir beliefs, are trying to mop up anocean of public opinion which is con-vinced that beating Hitler is moreimportant than keeping out of war.We might then consider how to winthis war. Winning the war meansmore than a military victory. Itmeans that we must end the condi¬tions of international anarchy andeconomic insecurity that gave birthto totalitarian aggression. Too manyof the interventionists have made thegreat error of considering the warprimarily as a struggle against anarch-devil. In reality if this war isworth fighting it must be a doublea war without and a war within:1. We must defeat the rulers of thetotalitarian states.2. We must defeat those on the al¬lied side who are fighting for the sta¬tus quo ante helium rather than fora democratic revolution—who willstand in the way of establishing peaceand democracy on a lasting basis inthe post war world.In our second battle we are oppos¬ing those who still believe that thekind of world we lived in before thedownfall of France should be thefoundation on which a democraticsystem can rest. They will doubtlesswant the post war II world to bebased on the beliefs of their fathersand grandfathers rather than on po¬litical and economic realities. In ad¬dition they may want to appease allthe vested interest groups that thewar will inevitably create. The reac¬tionary interventionists will tend inthe direction of:1. A peace based on a primitive de¬sire for vengeance and booty. Some inspite of their present statements tothe contrary would again force a hu¬miliating Carthegenian peace downthe throats of the German people andfurther arouse their resentment byselfish and exploitative post war pol¬icies. Then they will probably be puz¬zled if the Germans support a newHitler who might well be worse thanthe present one since he would havemore advanced mechanisms of terrorand destruction available.2. They will want to grab coloniesfrom the defeated powers rather thanrecognizing that it is fundamentallywrong that any colonial possessionsshould be controlled for the exclusive“benefit” of any one nation. Theywant freedom for French and Eng¬lish more than freedom for Indianand Africans.3. In order to make the whirlwindblow a little faster they are beatingon the nationalist tom tom when ex¬treme nationalism stands in the wayof forming a workable post war in¬ternational organization. They willwant to fight the war primarily asAmerican citizens rather than as cit¬izens of the World. The red, whiteand blue menace of irrational super¬patriotism is likely to become more ofa danger than the “red menace.”4. They will want to use the war asan excuse for taking away the rightsof labor to decent wages and hours,and a share in management. Whilethe defense program is too often be¬ing choked by monopolistic businesspractices, they and their sympathetic(Continued on page three)Censors Permit"Birth of a Baby"The University’s University Week,slated for April 6 to 10, will have ababy after all, it seems. The scientificfilm “The Birth of a Baby” was sched¬uled as part of the Biological Scienceday of the week dedicated to scholarsin action. But the City of ChicagoBoard of Censors said, “No, no”, tothe University. “We have banned theshowing of this film in the city.” “ButWe’re educational”, said the Univer¬sity. “We are going to show it toadults. They’ve probably all hadbabies.” But the Censors shook theirheads.But now the censor’s heads areshaking affirmatively. They’re goingto let “The Birth of a Baby” beshown. Nobody quite seems to knowwhy they changed their minds, but ifthere isn’t a miscarriage, the alumniwill see “The Birth of a Baby”. Vol. 41. No. 86 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. THURSDAY. APRIL 3. 1941 Price Three CentsNewton EdwardsTalks Tonight onEducational IdealsContinuing the American educationseries of the Walgreen FoundationProfessor Newton Edwards will tellof the “Development of American Ed¬ucational Ideals” in Graduate Edu¬cation at 8 tonight.Professor Edwards has edited theElementary School Journal for tenyears. He has been with the Univer¬sity since 1919, when he left a smallSouth Carolina college to accept aposition in the education departmenthere.Throughout the intervening yearsthe professor has gathered himself areputation in the field of educationalsociology. His academic publicationshave been highly specialized and wellreceived by educational groups aroundthe country.Following Professor Edwards’speech, others from the department ofeducation will continue the series withsimilar interpretive speeches on theworth and place of education in thepresent way of life.Harper. . . law school speakerCapital CounselSpeaks At LawSchool BanquetFowler Vincent Harper, GeneralCounsel for the Federal SecurityAgency in Washington, will be theprincipal speaker at the annual LawSchool Bar Association Dinner tomor¬row night, Phil Lawrence, presidentof the organization announced today.Harper is a Captain in the Judge Ad¬vocate General’s Department, hasbeen a professor of law at the Uni¬versities of Indiana, North Dakota,Oregon, Texas, and Louisana State,and has written several well-knownlegal books.J. Leonard Schermer will serve astoastmaster for the banquet, said DonWollet, General Chairman of the din¬ner. Schermer is a graduate of theUniversity and a member of the LawSchool Senior Class.The name of the annual play pro¬duced each year on the same eveningas the dinner was announced as“Crime Marches On.” While would-becensors attack from all sides, theplay’s authors are polishing up whatpromises to be the best production inyears. The play committee is headedby Bob Simond.John Good, chairman of the ar¬rangements committee, has set theprice of tickets at $1.26 for membersof the faculty. Bar Association mem¬bers, and guests. Others will becharged $1.60. Law fraternities will,as usual, have reserved tables. Knight Reveals NewSpeed Plane Facts“Although it has not been releasedto the national press, and is consider¬ed a military secret, the Aircobra,produced in New York by the Curtiss-Wright plant, has attained a speed of725 miles per hour”, declared CaptainJack Knight, Director of Public Re¬lations and Public Education forUnited Airlines, in an address lastnight. Captain Knight, who has madeflying his business for the last 24years, spoke before a group of Uni¬versity pilots in a Flying Club meet¬ing in Eckhart Hall.In addition to mentioning thespeeds, horsepower and climbingpower of various planes. CaptainKnight also discussed the great ex¬pansion in airplane factories recently.As an example of the new speed-up,he pointed out that whereas formerlyit took the Boeing plant two and ahalf months to turn out one “FlyingFortress”, they now produce two ev¬ery day.Great Future for U.S. Pilots“With manufacturers doubling theirpersonnel constantly, and the need forpilots to ferry planes growing everyday, there is a great future for goodpilots in this country today,” he said.(Continued on page two)Debate OnSchool PlanThe much debated Johnson plan forreligious education in the schools willbe discussed tonight at 7:30 in MandelHall by William C. Bower, professorof Religious Education, Father RyanGleason, Rabbi Morton Berman ofTemple Isiah Israel, and Evelyn MillisDuvall. The meeting is jointly spon¬sored by the University Civil LibertiesCommittee and the Hyde Park Branchof the Chicago Civil Liberties Com¬mittee.Bower and Gleason will speak infavor of the plan; Berman and Mrs.Duvall will oppose the proposal whichprovides for giving high school stu¬dents credit for religious teaching giv¬en in their own churches.Admit We AreAt War^^—StoneBy MARJORY GOODMANFord Motor Company strike! Allis-Chalmers Company strike! HarvesterCompany strike! Newspaper headlinesscream that rioting strikers are hold¬ing up production of materials fornational defense; that troops may besent to enforce continuation of pro¬duction. But the fundamental issue,Raleigh W. Stone, Associate Profes¬sor of Industrial Relations, stated yes¬terday is, “Is this peace time, or arewe at war?”Pulling no punches Stone declaredthat President Roosevelt should stopusing such “weasel-wording, pussy¬footing” terminology as “national de¬fense” and come right out and say“preparation for war,” if that is whathe means. And if that is what hemeans, the workers should be so in¬formed. The strikers. Stone believes,in insisting upon their right to strike,have only been doing what the Presi¬dent, through his present attitude, hasencouraged them to do. “Accordingto President Roosevelt this is stillpeace time, and the right to strike hasalways been a recognized right tomake good collective bargaining.”Said Stone, “If I were those work¬ers I wouldn’t feel it necessary togive up my admitted peace time rightsand cooperate until Roosevelt told mefrankly that this was war time, andI’d think he was a skunk if he wereto send troops to force the strikersto go back to work. The only justifica¬tion for the sending of troops wouldbe to afford protection in case ofviolence.” Captain Knight. . . tells flyersDA-Mirror PlanCloser Tie-UpFor Next YearTo insure a stronger tie-up betweenthe Dramatic Association and Mirror,the DA Board yesterday voted thatthe treasurer of the Dramatic Asso¬ciation be appointed with the stipula¬tion that she be from the MirrorBoard. This arrangement will placethe finances of both DA and Mirror ina single hand which is acquainted withthe workings of both Boards. Underthis arrangement, the president ofMirror will no longer be on the DABoard.Because the DA treasurer has al¬ways been an elective office, and theBusiness Manager an appointive one,the procedure will have to be changed,and from now on the Business Man¬ager will be an elective position.Another change in the constitutionwas made which bans Mirror mem¬bers from becoming members of theDramatic Association if they have notat any time worked for DA proper.In past years Mirror chorines, stagecrew, and production staff have beenable to be DA members on paymentof the initiation fee.Also the vice-president of the DAhas been constitutionally relegatedthe duties of social chairman.Elections for the new Board isscheduled for April 23, the week afterthe Spring Production, “Yes, MyDarling Daughter”, which is Thurs¬day, Friday, and Saturday evenings,April 17, 18, and 19.The closing Workshop productionwill be taken over by the “Playfest-ers” of the Four Year college, whoare producing a modern dress “Anti¬gone.”Women’s Clubs Plan“Big Four” PartyPlans for the recently discussedfour-way party, including MortarBoard, Sigma, Esoteric, and Quad-ranglar, have been formulated. Itwill be a formal dance, on Friday,April 18th, preferably in a South Sidehotel. Negotiations are being madewith the Colonial Club orchestra tofurnish the music.Representatives from the designatedclubs form the committee in charge ofthe dance, headed by Sigma, Gene¬vieve Hackett, chairman. The four¬way will be paid for by a $40 feefrom each club plus a $1 subscidptionfrom each member.It is not a certainty that the planswill go through because of oppositionamong some of the members. Theirobjection is based on the grounds thatit is a form of out-moded snobbish¬ness, and will breed an ill-feelingamong all the organizations which aremembers of Inter-club. Plan ToAnswerHutchinsThe faculty group broadcasting Sun¬day morning in opposition to Presi¬dent Hutchins will be limited to fivespeakers, W. Lloyd Warner, associateprofessor of Sociologry, announced to¬day. Those speaking will be JeromeKerwin, associate professor of Politi¬cal Science; Bernadotte Schmitt, pro¬fessor of History; Richard P. McKeon,Dean of the Humanities Division;Roland Crane, chairman of the de¬partment of History; and WilliamSpencer, Dean of the Business School.Kerwin will act as chairman of thediscussion. The speakers will broad¬cast over station WGN from 10:30A.M. to 11.Smaller GroupWarner will not participate on theprogram because he is also on theUniversity of Chicago Round Tablethe same morning. It was decided tomake the group speaking smallerthan previously announced in orderthat the program might move moresmoothly. Among those on the com¬mittee sponsoring the program butwho will not speak are Alderman PaulH. Douglas, professor of Economics;Jacob Viner, professor of Economics;Louis Wirth, professor of Sociology;and George K. Link, professor ofPlant Pathology.Not Peace But Freedom?The professors are members of thecommittee which circulated a facultypetition in favor of the lend-leasebill. The title of the broadcast is “Hit¬ler will Decide: A reply to PresidentHutchins.” It will be based around thegeneral theme: “The proposition isnot peace but freedom.” 'The title ofPresident Hutchins’ speech was “TheProposition is peace.”According to Warner who arrangedfor the program with Frank Schreib-er, manager of the radio station, thediscussion will be carried out on a“very high plane.”Mail PreliminaryAlumni Honor RoleTo 3500 LeadersThe preliminary edition of the Fif¬tieth Anniversary Alumni Honor Rollwas mailed yesterday to the 3600 cele¬bration district leaders. The bookletcontains contribution reports of eachstate, divided into cities, and the num¬ber of alumni, number of contributors,and the amount of the contribution.The city of Chicago leads the con¬tributions with $120,903.06 in pledges.Out of 14,326 alumni, 2,707 have con¬tributed. Listed among the thousandsof Chicagoans are alumni from thefirst University of Chicago who grad¬uated in the 1880s, all the way toLaura Bergquist, Betty Ahlquist, andMaxine Biesenthal, who are just afew of the members of last year’sgraduating class listed on the HonorRoll.Foreign contributions list Canada,China, Egypt, England, India, Mexico,Palestine, Porto Rico as well as theUnited States possessions of Alaska,Hawaii, and the Phillipine Islands.Out of the 65 alumni in Manila, 20have pledged $325.00 to the FiftiethAnniversary Fund. On the otherhand, as the report seems to show, thesolicitation in Hawaii has not been asconcentrated or effective. Of 70 alum¬ni in Honolulu only two have contrib¬uted.Even small towns have been pene¬trated by the wide-spread 3500 or¬ganized district leaders. Wide Ruins,Arizona, has come through with apledge, and of the three alumni inCamden, Arkansas, two have contrib¬uted. California seems to have one ofthe lowest state averages for pledges.Of the 51 alumni in Beverly Hills,only one has made a contribution.Hollywood with 65 graduates onlymanaged $96.00 from seven persons.669 alumni are listed for Los Angeles,yet there have been only 70 pledges.(Continued on page three)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. APRIL 3. 19417^ OolLf TJhAoonFOUNDED IN 1902The Dailr Maeoon is the oflSclal student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of ChieaKO, published mornings except Saturday. Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn. Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company. 6881 University avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompanv. 148 West 62nd street. Telephones; Wentworth 612!'and 6184.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for any■tatemenU appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon.TTie Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publication oiany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates: 88 a year$4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the post officeat Ch'^^go. Illinois, under the act of March 8. 1879.MemberP^ssocioted Cblle6icite FVessDistributor ofGolle6icile Di6estBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialWILLIAM HANKLA PEARL C. RUBINSERNEST S. LEISER JOHN P. STEVENS. ChairmanBusinessRobert P. O'Donnell. Business ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESJames Burtle, Mark Fisher. Chester Hand. Richard Himmel. DanielMeslay. Richard Philbrick. Robert D. F. Reynolds, and DanielWinograd.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESLyle Harper. Myles Jarrow. Lynn Tuttle. Chester SmithEllen Tuttle, Office ManagerChester Smith, Circulation ManagerNight Eklitors: Marjory Goodman, Demarest PolacheckA Job To DoIt is a triumph for academic freedom thatten faculty members dare to disagree so openlywith the President of the University that theycan speak to the nation over the radio and letthe public know of their disagreement.It should serve as an object lesson to menlike Nicholas Murray Butler who dare to sayto their faculties, “You’re entitled to disagreewith me, but if you disagree with me, pleaseresign.”But in addition, it should be a triumph forreason. Although we are agreed that there canbe no conclusive statement of what is to be theright policy in a case like this, even if there isagreement on principle, we are certain thata sure statement is more apt to come after suchagreement on fundamentals.Agreement in PrincipleMany of the men who are presenting a caseagainst Mr. Hutchins’ speech are in accord withhis principles, at least to a large degree. Theyhave the same ultimate aims. They understandeach other’s terms. Finally, they are of thesame intellectual stature.We confidently expect an intelligent resolu¬tion of Mr. Hutchins’ position, with a clearstatement of what its weaknesses are, and inhow far it is valid, from these men. There willstill be no certainty that they are right, evenif they tear down the logic and rhetoric Mr.Hutchins offered in defense of his case. But itwill be a valuable indication, at least, of therelative truth of the arguments.Burden of ProofThe ten to one advantage that they haveover Mr. Hutchins will not prevail if his argu¬ments are more true. But if they cannot prevail,then it will seem a reliable index that he isright.Mr. Hutchins has thrown the burden ofproof to his opposition. These men are under¬taking to give that proof. We are waiting eager¬ly and confidently to see how well they do thejob. E. S. L.Cross CountryBy MARY GRAHAMLike a pot of gold at the end of a rainbow, theBrown Daily College Cullings reports a Good Samari¬tan. Say they, a Dartmouth man posted the followingnotice on the college bulletin board! “If anyone wantsan overnight reserve book left in the library by 8, leaveit in room 206 with your name and I will return it onmy way to work at 6:30.” It would be nice if Chicagohad a Good Samaritan to stand in line and get booksout of the college library at 4:30,Brown, disdaining landlubbers, takes its ROTC train¬ing in a naval unit. Two afternoons a week Brunonianmidshipmen study the semester, semaphore, and theMorse Code. Reverting to childhood scout days, theystruggle with knots and splices, while, for somethingdifferent, they visit a $15,000 pet torpedo kept in a base¬ment locker room.Emily Post goes to PrincetonPrinceton has lighter matters on its mind, the GreatMoral Issues of the Tiger prom. The Princetonian willrun an Emily Post column of advice to the bewildered.Problems include the junior with the Boston accentwho got a date with his Dream Girl after three yearsof effort. Then he came down with a fever. Solved how¬ever, is the one popped by an overly generous under¬graduate who got three dates. He got out of town andhis roommates got the girls. The Traveling BazaarBy DICK HIMMELThe Four WayEverybody in the Coffee Shop (Hah, hah, everybody)is talking about the 4-Way party that Mortar Board,Quad, Sigma, and Esoteric are planning, which will cer¬tainly will be juicy if it ever takes place. I suggestthat instead of a “south side hotel” as suggested, whydon’t they take over the Marigold Gardens which has anexcellent boxing ring. I can see the whole thing. In onecorner Quadrangler. In the other corner. Mortar Board.Round one will feature “One Crack” Burton and “Slug¬ger” Culliton. And now in this corner we have Sigmaand in the other corner Esoteric. And for a good fightin'round from those comers step “Killer” Rahill and “Caul¬iflower” Teberg. After two bouts, the company will re¬tire for three minutes of dancing in which an MB willbump into a Quad and each will rush out to take ashower. The main event will be a mass wrestling match,with all the girls pulling hair and kicking slacks. The4-Way, I can hardly wait. It will be just one big happyfamily, and I’m going to rush to the bar to get oneof those sizzling Arsenic and Gin cocktails.Bars and Stripes. . . The Dekes have found a woman that has come inhandy for blind dates. A very nice gal they tell me,but she’s proving a jinx for the boys. She had a datewith Linebarger the night before he left on a box-cartour. 'The next day Linebarger was in jail. Later shehad a date with “Scoop” Leman. The next day he was injail. If any Deke wants to fix you up with a blind date,wire home for mama to bake you bread with a file init. You may be in jail.Dreamy Eyes... A red cat, slightly dirty, with dreamy green eyeswas found in Harper a couple of nights ago. It wasfound by an illustrious member of the corn-belt kidswho are located on the main floor of Harper and whohide under a sign which says Press Relations. If youhave lost a cat with dreamy eyes that looks like hername ought to be Gertrude, drop around to Press Re¬lations, if you can stand it, and claim what’s rightfullyyours. Drop around anyway. The boys are funny as acrutch.Measles Wilson. . . Any little token of your affection for Dum DumWilson may now be sent to Lying-In, I mean Billings.Cause Dum Dum’s got the measles. Not only has DumDum got the measles, but the whole Deke house and halfthe Deke annex are scared stiff. He got it the morningafter a Deke party. Dum Dum was the belle of the party,too. He had a jug of beer which was communal. Every¬body drank out of it, AND THAT IS WHY HALF THEDEKE ANNEX IS SCARED.Mary Colley. . . who was in the hospital so long, and who made aheroine out of herself by keeping up her chin whenthings looked kind of black was back in Foster yester¬day looking the picture of health. She’ll be back inschool next week.Rummage. . . On the corner of 55th and Woodlavm, The Esotericsare having a rummage sale for the benefit of the Stu¬dent Fiftieth Anniversary Fund. Come and rummagearound an Esoteric.Art Show“Work turned in to the Student Art Show is of su¬perior quality this year,” commented Miss Kidwell,Assistant director of Ida Noyes. “Great interest is evi¬denced and works of all descriptions have been ac¬cepted.”Yesterday evening was the deadline for entries anda checkup in the early afternoon listed 26 contributors:Lorraine Benlle and Foster Hull—oil and sculpture,Amy Herschel—water color, Martha Trimus—oil andpen and ink, Shirley Pavlicek—oil and water color, RexGoreleigh—oil, Alyce Le Vasseur—pastel, Norma Tir—charcoal, Ruth Prescott—oil and sculpture, ElinorKlime—oil and water color, Beth Fisher—pencil draw¬ings, Theodore Klitzhe—oil, water color and charcoal,Joshua Holland—oils, water color and pen drawings,Martha Belle Bowers—water colors, George Pappas—pencil drawings, Helene Lichenbaum—chalk drawings,Mary Louise Rowland—oil, Olga Adler Titelbaum—oil,Joanne Kuper—oil and water color, Edward Voska—oiland lithograph, Elmer Kline—oil, Ruth Klopstag—sculpture, James Orcutt—sculpture, Kenya Bement—tempera, R. Wylie Smith—oil and linoleum block print,George Herman— water color.The judges, Mrs. Hutchins, Mrs. Gale, and Mr.Kepes, yrill meet Friday, and awards will be given April8 at a tea. Pictures will be hung by the committeeSaturday, the show will be open to the public fromSunday to the 12th.Patrons are: Miss Edith Ballwebber, Mr. and Mrs.Laird Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Brumbaugh, Mr. andMrs. Leland De Vinney, Mr. and Mrs. James Douglas,Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilkey, Mr. and Mrs. Herschel,Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Haydn Huntley,Mr. Frank McNair, Miss Marguerite Kidwell, Mrs.Eleanor Morse, Mrs. Adeline Link, Mr. and Mrs. PaulRussell, Miss Gertrude Smith, Mr. and Mrs. HermanSchlesinger, Mr. Harold Swift, Mrs. Mable Sayre, Mr.and Mrs. Edward Ryerson, Mr. and Mrs. George Works,Miss Laura Van Peppelendam, Interclub, Esoteric andWyvern. Knight—(Continued from page one)According to Captain Knight, whohas recently talked with RAF pilots,in this country to fly ships to Eng¬land, American planes and Americanequipment are superior to anythingproduced by the British or Nazis. Hereported that although the German air force outnumbers the British fouror five to one, the ratio of air lossesis about the same.Secret British AirportsHe also described secret under¬ground landing fields in the Dovercliffs. “Planes, returning from bat¬tle, land on a field camouflaged to re¬semble a plowed terrain, and are thenlowered by elevators to the subter¬ranean fields”, he explained.^ Why is an Arrow Shirt like apretty girl?Because they both bring your friends aroundTo koop Hio wehros from yoor girl, wear Arrow thirts. Charmher with one of those new multi-striped jobs that has the lowslope, loog-poioted Arrow Bruce col-hu:. It’s up to the minute in style andfit $2 up . , . a low rate for glamourinsurance.^o koop tho wohroa from yoor drowor,get a padlock. Wolves just naturally“go” for the cut of an Arrow, for itis Mitoga-cut to fit the torso. We ad¬vise a bolt and chain for those irresist¬ible, wrinkle resistant. Arrow ties thatharmonize. $1 and $1.90. See yourArrow dealer today.ARROM^ SHIRTS;For play—night and day—ARROW GORDONThe most useful shirt you can have in your ward¬robe is our fine Arrow oxford shirt, GORDON.It is cool, sporty, and good-looking for the outdoors... it is trim, smart for indoors. Plain or button-down collar. Guaranteed not to shrink out of perfectfit. Sanforized-Shrunk (fabric shrinkage less than1%!) Get some GORDONS today! $9 \ERIECLOTHING STORES837 East 63rd Street-;THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. APRIL 3. 1941 Pag® Thr^Alumni—(Continued from page one)Cookeville, Tennessee has a perfectrecord. All four of the alumni therehave contributed. There is only onepledge from the entire state of Ver¬mont. In Selinsgrove, Pennsylvania,Mr. and Mrs. Amos A. Stagg Jr. areamong the Honor R(dl members. Inthe Washington, D.C. district, 287 ofthe 819 graduates have pledged overseven thousand dollars.The smallest contribution was aquarter, which at first had the AlumniFoundation slightly insulted untilthe facts were made known. The con¬tribution came from a college profes¬sor in Iowa who, with the rest of thefaculty, hasn't been paid in severalyears. Instead the professors are Hillel HearsSchomer Friday“The Great Hatred,” Maurice Sam¬uels’ widely discussed book, will bereviewed by the Reverend Mr. How¬ard Schomer at the Friday Firesidesponsored by the B’nai B’rith HillelFoundation at 8 in Ida Noyes library.As Hillel’s contribution to the Cam¬pus Conference on Religion and theSocial Order, representatives from allthe campus religious organizationswill attend. A religious service con¬ducted by Rabbi Harry Essrig willprecede the talk.housed in the dorms and fed in thecommons of the school.v'v ' S\ -f .>VA<«V. •. A.- A*- S I ** 's ^V V A* . ^ s'* s s A' '■ -V in thisp;iitt'iiiimmm mustsineakfour languages!Each operator in San Francisco^s Chinatown telephone ex¬change must speak English plus at least three of the fiveChinese dialects—Som Yup, Soy Yup, Heong Sow, GowGong and Aw Duck—in order to handle calls. For the averageChinese understands no dialect but his own!Since there is no Chinese alphabet, the 36 page directory,listing 2200 subscribers, can*t be printed in the usual way.It is handwritten—then reproduced by engraving and print¬ing processes. Subscribers are listed by streets, instead ofalphabetically. And operators must almost know the bookby heart, for the Chinese seldom call by number—>but byname and address.Here is a Bell System exchange that in manyways is unique. But it is just Lke thousands ofothers in giving good service to telephone users. HarvardDelegatesReportPerez Zagorin, Quentin Young,Pearl Paul, Ruth Brandstetter, BillStarke, and Ernest Van Haggen comprised the delegation which represented the Committee for the Defenseof Democracy in Education at a conference at Harvard University overthe week-end. They will give a reportof the conference at a meeting of thecommittee a week from today.The delegation which the committeeis sending to the American People’sMeeting in New York City will alsoreport at the same time. Sponsoringthe New York gathering is the Amer¬ican Peace Mobilization, a nationalorganization.Pearl Paul will give a report at thenext meeting of the Social ServiceAdministration of the Campus PeaceCommittee, which will be held in theReynolds Club at 7:30 on Friday.The report will be on the HarvardConference for the Defense of De¬mocracy in Education which MissPaul attended.The election of officers will be heldat the meeting, and plans for thespring Quarter will be discussed.Wai^(Continued from page one)newspapers will raise a cry to highheaven that every legitimate demandof labor is “interfering with nationaldefense”.5. They are likely to regard thearmy, the armament program, andconscription as good in themselvesrather than as tragic necessities.They will want to keep these thingsas permanent institutions rather thanas emergency measures.6. Above all they will expose movesin the direction of economic planningwhich might lighten the burdens ofthe post war depression on the groundthat a system of anarchic psuedo-lais-sezfaire will automatically adjust it¬self to human needs.We must not only stand in the wayof achieving any of these false waraims; we must be thinking about howto meet two challenges after the warthat will tax our skill in social en¬gineering. They are very involved andcomplicated problems that can onlybe mentioned here:1. Setting up a workable system ofinternational organization.2. Reorganizing the economic sys¬tem so that we can:a. Solve the basic economic prob¬lems of inadequate food, cloth¬ing, and housing in a technologythat is physically equipped toproduce them.b. Prepare a cushion against thepost war economic depressionthat will otherwise tend to trans¬form hopes for preserving de¬mocracy into naive optimism.America today witnesses a foolishdebate on the question: “Resolved thatthe foundation of a house is more im¬portant than the roof”. Both the de¬fense program and “social gains” areindispensable. They are the two bat¬tles we should be fighting in this war.Losing either battle means in the longrun losing the war. Those who wouldfollow a policy of economic and so¬cial reform without due regard towhat is going on in the rest of theworld are likely to find themselvesunable to defend even their blue¬prints for Utopias. Winning a mili¬tary victory at the cost of “socialgains” means restoring the old breed¬ing place for new Hitlers. The warto be a victorious war must be won onboth fronts. We must defeat the Nazirevolution. We must also wipe out thecauses of future reactions through ademocratic revolution. The war isworth fighting only as a democraticrevolution.LENTEN VESPERS will be heldat 4:30 this afternoon at Thorn-dyke Hilton Chapel. The speakerwill be the Rev. A.R. Kretzmann,pastor of St. Luke’s LutheranChurch in Chicago, one of the fivelargest churches of that denomina¬tion in the United States. Theservice is sponsored by the Univer¬sity of Chicago chapter of GammaDelta, the national association ofLutheran students. ''How To Find Right?”Conference To SayPrimary purpose of the all-campusconference on religion and the socialorder is the discussion of the ques¬tion: How do we know right andwrong? Beginning tomorrow night at8:15, small groups will be meeting totalk about this and other similar basicproblems. At this first meeting, in theIda Noyes library, Howard Schomerwill review the Hillel Fireside Maur¬ice Samuels’ “The Great Hatred”.Next is another Sunday eveningChapel Union meeting to hear a fac¬ulty member discourse on his answerto “What is the good life?” Assem¬bling in the Ida Noyes library at 7:30,CU members and their guests willhear Dr. Warder C. Allee speak.Other meetings to which all stu¬dents are invited are the Lutheranmeeting Tuesday evening in IdaNoyes, led by Clifton Utley, whoplans to discuss the basic problem ofthe conference, and the Wednesdayevening Methodist Student Leagueget-together in Swift Hall Commonsfor the same discussion among them-Two NeophytesAdd Sparkle ToFriar ShowBy CRAIG LEMANWhen the curtain goes up on “DustIt Off” three weeks from tomorrow,not far from the front will be twodynamic young men, both playing im¬portant parts for the first time.Last year it was the strutting cam¬pus social lion, “Punk” Warfield, whomade a sensational hit with his jit-terbugging speciality in “PatientsPlease.” And in Victory Vanities lastNovember one of the high points wasthe work of sophomore Johnny Cros¬by as the red-wigged chairman of the150th anniversary Board of Trustees.The two, ex-schoolmates at Harvard(school for boys) of Chicago, now ap¬pear together in “Dust It Off.”Warfield has drawn the female lead,a sort of powerhouse University wom¬an who divides her time betweensnooping for the Daily Maroon anddriving the men ga-ga. The infectiouspep and humor of the popular “Punk”make him a perfect choice for thepart.Those who know Crosby, varsitydiver and Psi U, can hardly wait tosee what his interpretation of NelsFuqua will be. Here and now let uspredict a smash hit, for this cleversophomore, who as reported previous¬ly sports a two-tone voice register,is at his best in a part of that nature,equipped with gag lines concocted bythe Himmel-Martin team.Reveal LatestRacial DiscoveriesThe most recent scientific discover¬ies on the origin and physical char¬acteristics of races will be disclosedat the twelfth annual meeting of theAmerican Association of Physical An¬thropologists, to be held April 7-8 onthe Quadrangles.More than 200 anthropologists fromall parts of the country will attendthe meeting, which is being held inChicago as one of the features of theUniversity’s Fiftieth Anniversary cel¬ebration. selves. There are also two off-campusgroups to meet. The first is on Mon¬day evening, at 7:30, scheduled forthe home of Dr. Dudley Reed, 5636Blackstone. Dean Charles Gilkey’shome will be the scene of a Wednes¬day evening discussion at 7:30, at5802 Woodlawn.As has already been announced, thefocal point of the conference is pro¬grammed for Thursday evening at 8in the Oriental Institute auditorium.Dr. Douglas Steere, one of the mostgifted and original of the youngerphilosophers in this country, willspeak to an all-campus meeting.Besides the all-campus groups tomeet, various campus organizationsand religious groups are sponsoringmeetings of their own. Among theseare organizations who are backing theconference. Other than the Board ofSocial Service and Religion, these or¬ganizations are Calvert Club, ChapelUnion, Hillel Foundation, InterchurchStudent Council, Lutheran StudentAssociation, Methodist StudentLeague, Westminster Student Group,and Y.W.C.A.Roundtable forPublic in MandelFor the first time in its ten yearhistory, the University of ChicagoRoundtable will broadcast in front ofa public audience when it takes theair next Sunday, at 1:30, on stationWMAQ. The program, which willoriginate from the more spaciousMandel Hall instead of the usualMitchell 'fower site, will signal thestart of the long awaited UniversityWeek, which will provide the focalcelebration of the University’s fiftiethanniversary observance.T. V. Smith, the well-traveled pro¬fessor of philosophy, Lloyd Warner,Associate Professor of Anthropologyand Sociology, and Maynard C. Krue¬ger, Assistant Professor of Econom¬ics, will participate in a discussion of“War Aims and Peace Aims.”GREGGSECRETARIAL TRAININGFor the Collece TreinedOur methods and our graduates are sonotably outstanding, the demand forGregg Secretaries, Stenographers andAccountants always exceeds the supply.ENROLL NOWDay and Erening SessionsDay beginners start first and third Mon¬day of each month. Advanced day stu¬dents and beginning and advanced eve¬ning students—any Monday. Call, writeor telephone STAte 1881 for Bulletin.Free Employment Bureau.THE GREGG COLLEGE(Co-educational)Home of Gregg Shorthand6 N. Michigan Ave. ChicagoBoost Your HeightDon't fool Inferior bscsuie you are short.Amaxing new product makes you appearTALLER IMMEDIATELY. Simply slip BOOST¬ERS into YOUR OWN SHOES. No oneneed know. No clumsy expensive, specialshoes with built-up heals or thick soles. Nostretching exercises. Holps your posture, tooSEND NO MONEY. Send name, addressand shoo size. BOOSTERS will be sent inplain, personal package. Pay postmanSPECIAL LOW PRICE ($1.98) plus postage.We will pay postage if you send moneywith order.MONEY BACK GUARANTEE. If you arenot completely satisfied, return in 5 daysand wo will refund purchase price.THE MARTIN CO.,""”"'338H S. CATALINA, LOS ANGELES, CALIF.THE BOCKIS BACKy yFor those who want the best driEtkBLATZUNIVERSITY TAVERN55th & Universityi¥n9\Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. APRIL 3. 1941Riggs, McNeill Here Tonight the duo of Jim McClure and JerryScheidler, won a victory in the con¬fusion of a crowded, rapidly darken¬ing Fieldhouse, on an 8-6, 6-4 win overFrees and Hakewill.Evert, SmidI AlsoOn Fieldhouse CardThe biggest tennis event to hit theQuadrangles comes off tonight whenBobby Riggs, Don McNeill, SeymourGreenberg, Jimmy Evert, and BobSmidl participate in what is adver¬tised as a “Championship TennisWhirlwind” in the Fieldhouse.Main feature of the star-studdedprogram will be the singles matchbetween McNeill and Riggs, two outof three sets. Riggs is the former Na¬tional Singles Champion, losing histitle to McNeill at Forest Hills in fivelong sets last year. Riggs previouslyhad beaten McNeill for the NationalIndoor Singles title, then the positionswere reversed as McNeill took theNational Clay Courts tourney fromRiggs. This is their first meeting ofthe year.Erratic But GoodAn erratic player, Riggs was, never¬theless, tabbed by none other than thegreat Don Budge as his successorwhen he left the amateur ranks. Mc¬Neill is a comparative newcomer tobig-time tennis. Bobby’s bigest faultaccording to reports is his tendency tolet up. He has defended himself bysaying that it isn’t necessary to playas hard as possible all the time.Great champions in all sports, how¬ever, play as fiercely in exhibitionsas in title matches. McNeill is asteady, unspectacular player with agood all-around game and a verystrong service.Greenberg is the Number One manon the championship Northwesternsquad, which last year lifted thecrown from Chicago mainly on Green¬berg’s play. He didn’t lose a matchlast year in Conference competition.Meets EvertGreenberg will tangle with Evert ina singles match, two out of three sets.Evert is the National Junior IndoorSingles and Doubles champion al¬though he is still in attendance atSenn High School.Evert and Smidl will then team upto face McNeill and Riggs in doublesin the closing event on the program.Evert and Smidl are the Chicago In¬door Doubles Champions, and Smidlis a member of the University fresh¬man net team in addition to havingbeen a stand-out on the yearling bas¬ketball squad. The young team hasn’tbeen defeated this winter.May SurprisePerhaps something spectacular mayhappen as the time when Don Budgeplayed here and played a one-set exhibition to Bill Murphy. ’The doublesmatch in particular may afford a bigsurprise.The progrram is sanctioned by theUnited States Lawn Tennis Associa¬tion and is presented by the ChicagoTennis Association with the entirereceipts to be “turned over to theJunior Development Committee tofinance the training of desirable youngtennis players in Chicago and suburbsfor the purpose of perpetuatingAmerica’s supremacy in tennis.”The first match will begin at 8o’clock, and tickets will be availableat the Fieldhouse box office. Studenttickets will cost 40 cents, generaladmission 56 cents, and reserved seats85 cents.As I Was 1SayingBy BOB LAWSONWith five intercollegiate sports onthe docket and nine others listed forintramural competition or class in¬struction Spring sports are definitelyon the way with a corresponding riseof the University’s athletic stock in¬dicated.Baseball, golf, tennis, and outdoortrack all have their regular schedulesto compete against Conference com¬petition. The gymnasts end their sea¬son in the NCAA meet here on the12th of April.IM’s, TooOther sports listed for student com¬petition range from social dancing toyachting. The intramural programwill be in full swing with most em¬phasis on the softball competition.Both in baseball and tennis Chicagolooks strong this year, at least rel¬atively. The ball team fiinished last inthe Conference last year, but to allintents and purposes Kyle Andersonhas a squad working under him thatshould have little difficulty climbingout of the cellar berth. Reports fromother Big Ten schools show that mostteams will be weaker than last year.The Maroons may not be champion¬ship material, but they certainly looklike first division material.NU Netters StrongThe tennis team has its work cutout for it with a tough defendingchampionship squad from Northwest¬ern headed by the redoubtable Sey¬mour Greenberg, offering the chiefstumbling-block. Captain Cal Sawyier Net SquadWhips ElmhurstDefending their four year string ofundefeated racquet competition, theMaroon tennis “B” team overwhelmedElmhurst College’s regulars, s i xmatches to one, at the Fieldhouse. He¬bert’s auxiliary forces, one of the fewtennis junior varsities in the Amer¬ican collegiate scene, played theirusual steady, unchanging game toovercome the travelers by a widemargin.Elmhurst gave notice that theywere not to be taken too lightly, whenSchweer drove Bob Weedfall off thecourts inf two sets, 6-3, 7-6. But RalphJohansen ran through, and over,Greene, of Elmhurst, 6-2, 6-2, to evenup the tourney.McClure WinsThe Chicago host moved ahead inthe next match, never to be headed,with Frees, the Elmhurst NumberThree man, dropping two straight setsto Jim McClure, 6-2, 6-2. Grover Dalyshould be in for his best year as aMaroon, and plenty of support seemsto be forthcoming from sophomoreWally Kemetick, who has clinched theNumber Two berth. Bill Self, BudLifton, Dave Martin, and Jim Hillconstitute the remainder of the vars¬ity team.The track outlook is not as brightas those in the other two sports. Likethe indoor squad, the group will stillbe handicapped by inexperience, manyof the outstanding men being soph¬omores. Ray Randall, Hugh Rendle-man, and Jim Ray will probably pro¬vide the bulk of the team’s points asthey did during the indoor season. Abig help will be Bob Hixon in the fieldevents. In the one outdoor meet hecompeted in, he finished second toRendleman in the shot put. In addi¬tion he is a good javelin man, some¬thing the Maroon track team hassorely needed for several years.Golf starts much later than theother three sports, their first meetbeing against Illinois on Monday,April 28. With Captain Han*y Top¬ping, Number One man last year, lostby graduation. Coach Chuck Taniswill be hard pressed to find a bell¬wether for his charges this year. Theteam showed poorly in the Conferencemeet last year, but this was due tothe inexperience of the competitors.Last year was the first year the teamI had a coach and a regular schedule.Sixteen Men Leave On SouthernBaseball Spring Practice Trip cemented the Chicago victory in thesingles division by romping to a6-1, 6-2 triumph over Hakewell.Despite the assurance of a Chicagowin, Ed Ide had to extend himself tothree close sets to stand off the netgame of Elmhurst’s Winbeck. Idelost the first &et to Winbeck, 1-6, thefirst set to go Elmhurst’s way sinceSchweer outplayed Weedfall, but Idesettled down in the second and thirdsets to eke out a 6-4, 6-3 combinationover the surburban representative.Doubles WinsHebert sent Weedfall and Johansenagainst Schweer and Greene in thefirst doubles match, and the two topChicago men bested the Elmhurststand-byes by a 6-3, 7-6 count.In the last conflict of the afternoon.PU 47th-Kjmbarli I C a 6 to 25cKenwood 6000 • WW 6:30 AfferThori., Frt.. Sat.. Apr. 3. 4. 5JACK BENNY v». FRED ALLENRodio's FavorHe FeudisH"LOVE THY NEIGHBOR"I"FATHER’S SON"Selected ShorttSKYLINE In FLUORESCENT—Free ParLinq START SPRINGATStinewaysFor the finest campusFountain Service nearthe center of things,1335 E. 57thBy WERNER BAUMThe Maroon baseball team left onits spring training trip at 8:15 thismorning. Sixteen players and KyleAnderson comprise the travellingsquad. The players are Robert C. Mil¬ler, George Basich, Art Lopatka, KenGarverick, Bob Myer, Nick Paresi, SyAllen, Bill Oostenbrug, Sy Hirsch-berg, Earl Shanken, Ernest Barrett,Armand Donian, Aaron Manders, BobMore, Ken Jensen, and Jack Fons.The team will meet Milliken dt De¬catur at 3:30 this afternoon. Tomor¬row a game is scheduled with Ken¬tucky State at Murray and Saturdayfeatures a tussle with Western Ken¬tucky Teachers College at BowlingGreen. Kyle Anderson hopes that theKentucky weather won’t give the boyssunstroke.Ragle InjuredThe squad suffered its first seriouscasualty when it was learned yester¬day that Jack Ragle would be out forthe rest of the season with a brokencollar-bone. Jack was injured duringinfield practice Tuesday. While tend¬ing shortstop he collided with the sec¬ond baseman on a short groundball.Jack immediately gave signs of ex¬treme pain, but it was not thoughtthat the injury was as serious as itturned out to be.In an inter-squad game the Yan- nigans yesterday defeated the Regu¬lars by a 4-3 score. The line-up forthe Regulars was: Beeks P., Basich C.,Oostenburg IB., Hirschberg 2B.,Shanken SS., Fons 3B., More L.F., Lo¬patka C.F., Manders R.F. This willprobably be the starting lineup in to¬day’s game except that Captain ArtLopatka will have the starting pitcherassigmuient. Parisi or . Jensen willprobably take his place in the out¬field.Need Batting PracticeYesterday’s game showed conclu¬sively that the team is in sore needof some batting practice. 'The fieldingwas good but most of the regulars'runs were scored on errors and walks.The team’s new infield is workingtogether in an excellent fashion. EarlShanken, in his first year on the team,has developed into a g:reat fieldingshortstop. He is still somewhat weakat the plate however. Sy Hirschberghas accustoiped himself to his newpost at second base. Shanken andHirschberg make an excellent doubleplay combination.Bill Oostenbrug is a newcomer atfirst. He is a six feet 200 lb. sluggerbut is still sluggish in his handling ofthe ball. Only infield man gettingserious competition for his post isJack Fons at third. Ernest Barrettmay take his place before the end ofthe practice season.GOOD FOOD IN A HURRYSPIC-n-SPAIV1321 EAST 57th Every Friday isCOLLEGENIGHTNow BERNIECUMMINSand his OrchestraPROFESSIONAL FLOOR SHOWSBETTER THAN EVER COLLEGE SHOWSGet Special Student Tickets ... Maroon OfficeMarine Dining RoomEDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL5300 Block Sheridan Road