^ Batlp ilkmionVol. 37. No. 104. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1937 Price Three CenUCerebralSalvageFrom j. C. M.* • •Among the numerous new studentorganizations to receive official rec¬ognition this year, the names of fourhave been outstanding: the Film So¬ciety, Campus Newsreel, Chapel Un¬ion, and Leaders Organization. Leav¬ing the Chapel Union to a later date,we ask, what have these new groupscoTitributed to University life?The Film Society began the yearwith a number of prominent namesattached to it, but gradually evolvedinto a one-man show, the one manbeing C. Sharpless Hickman. Thisunity of management became finalwhen its co-founder, Wesley Greene,formerly of the International Houseadministration, dropped out at theend of the Autumn quarter. (We donot intend to discount, however, theable promotion work of the Society’sBusines.s -Manager James Bernard.).■\s might be expected, the FilmSociety shares the merits and demer¬its of Mr. Hickman. Like Hickman,the Society has not made as greatan impression on the campus as itwould have hoped. We are inclinedto believe, that in the case of the iSociety anjwvay, this is a reflectionupon the campus and not upon Hick¬man.The Film Society is one of thegreatest unmitigated blessings, in theform of student organizations, thathave ever hit this campus. It hasgiven programs that are not onlyhighly entertaining but educationalas well. It has shown that a studentactivity can be run without a hier¬archy of stoogres and super-stooges.It ha.s put its routine work upon anefficient commercial basis. It ha.sdemonstrated again that not all cam¬pus leaders are seniors. It is a NewPlan activity.The situation of the Campus News¬reel is quite analogous to that of theFilm Society, for it too is a one-manjob. Paul Wagner ha.s been its orig¬inator, promoter, chief executive,head camera man, editor, raconteur,even head chore boy.Its purpose is altogether noble; itsexecution has been splotched withgood and bad, but is consistently im¬proving. Considering the odds Wag¬ner has worked against—little back¬ing, insufficient equipment, little ex¬perience, small staff—he has done aremarkable job.There has been a slight tendencyin the organization to build up abureaucracy or hierarchy, of the typethat most activities can well do with¬out. It does not give the impression Plan Gala Celebration for.Premiere of Blackfriars ShowErect Canopy, Electric A jj o,Sign for Hollywood At- Ada Smoker,mosphere. President Hutchins to Speak on ^TheUniversity’ at Maroon Banquet May 19Plans for a gala first night cele¬bration to open the 33d annualBlackfriars show, “One Foot in theAisle,” tomorrow evening were re¬vealed yesterday by Edwin Sibley,Abbot. The premiere festivities arepart of Blackfriars program of ex¬pansion, which is predicted this yearto produce a bigger, better, and moreextravagant production than the cam¬pus has witnessed in many years.The opening night celebration willcenter about Mandel corridor. Agiant canvas canopy will be stretchedout to the street from the Mitchelltower entrance, and flood lights, ahuge electric sign, and a public ad¬dress system will lend a Hollywoodpremiere atmosphere. A noted newscommentator will be on hand to an¬nounce the arrival of prominentcouples over the amplifying system.Also at the entrance will be a freshblock of cement ready to receivefootprints of incoming notables, inkeeping with the “One Foot in theAisle” theme.Play Hit NumbersInside Mandel corridor an orches¬tra will play Blackfriars hit numbersbefore the show and during inter¬missions. Score girls, under the di¬rection of Jayne Paulman, will havecomplete music scores for sale. De¬spite the elaborate festivitiesplanned, formal dress is unnecessary,Sibley points out.In keeping with the expansion pro¬gram, the scenery will be far morelavish and beautiful and will costconsiderably more than in previousyears. Jerry Moberg, who was for¬merly associated with Norman BelGeddes has been in charge of design¬ing the sets. Something differentand more modern has been promisedin the way of costumes, which havebeen designed by Betty Sayler, aformer student now connected withthe American Academy of Art.A few seats for the opening per¬formance are still available. Dance to LawSchool DinnerHutchins to Speak; Kelly,Horner tj Attend Din¬ner. Ellsworth Vines^ George Lott PraiseSkill of Maroon Racquet WieldersPlans for the annual Law SchoolBanquet and play to be presentedWednesday, May 12, in Mandel Halland Hutchinson Commons have beenchanged to include a dance and asmoker in the Reynolds Club afterperformance of the play. The dancewill be held in the South lounge,while dateless students, faculty, andalumni will gather in the Northlounge for the smoker.President Hutchins will be themain speaker at the banquet, whicha long list of notables including Gov¬ernor Horner and Mayor Kelly isplanning to attend. After the din¬ner, the play, traditionally a take-off j courtsof the Law School and faculty in jgeneral, will be given in Mandel Hall, jOffer Tickets for $1.25 ITickets for the evening, at $1.25 |including the dinner are availableat the dean’s office, law building,and from members of the TicketCommittee. With the increased in¬terest in the law school occasionedby its recent reorganization, and withPresident Hutchins as speaker, thebanquet has a much wider all-cam¬pus appeal than ever befo»'e. [, .. With preparations of the Interna-D^p.te the press of preparation I be held Saturday night in full swing,the personnel of the Steering Corn-Association found time to nominateand elect unopposed its executivestaff for next year. The new slateis headed by Russell E. G. Johnson,present head of the banquet commit¬tee, and working under him will beVice-President Homer Rosenberg,Secretary Arthur Sachs, and Treas¬urer Thomas Parker. , By BURT MOYERWith a poker face and an indol- \ Lott seemed well pleased with thework of Bickel and Burgess. “Bickeland Burgess need one thing, that isexperience. Time will tell just howfar the boys will go, but they havethe makings of a great doublesteam.” The five and a half footmidget, who is regarded as theworld’s greatest all-time doublesplayer, rates the University pair asmuch better than the collegiatedoubles teams in his days on the cam¬pus.Lott is also trainer of the DavisCup doubles team and will devotehis time to the team after he finisheshis present professional tour withinthe next few months. His final wordsas he dashed back to Bartlett were,“Although I could not give any otheranswer, I am firmly convinced thatthe Davis Cup will return to theUnited States this summer.”Vines Saves HimselfIn the exhibition matches, whichare part of the junior Davis Cupmovement sponsored by the Nationaltennis association throughout thecountry. Vines kept himself well un¬der wraps because of his match withFred Perry last night, but Bill Mur¬phy scored several nice placements.Bill took the lead 2-0 and Vinescaught him at 5-5; from then on thematch see-sawed back and forth un¬til 14 games when it was called bymutual consent. In the doubles setsBickel and Burgess started slowly asthey joked back and forh across thecourt with Lott and Barnes. Bur¬gess was tired after his grueling sin¬gles match with Russell Ball and not juntil the second set did the pair start jto click. Lott and Barnes playedeasily but with remarkable steadi-1ness. Ient stride, Ellsworth Vines, mastershowman and world’s professionaltennis champion, played a strictlydefensive game as he tied Bill Mur¬phy, winner of the junior Davis Cupcompetition, 7-7 in an exhibitionmatch on the Varsity courts yester¬day afternoon. At the same timeNorbert Burgess and Norman Bickel,the University’s double stars, metGeorge Lott, 1930 Maroon captainand former Davis Cup player, andBruce Barnes, professional doublesace, in two matches which were split2-6, 6-2.“Bill Murphy shows great promise.He has a solid foundation of thebasic shots in the game. It would beimpossible to say much more thanthat because of strong wind whichkept both of us uncertain as to justwhere the ball would end up,” wasVine’s verdict on the match as thelanky Californian walked off the Invite 400 Student Leadersto Private Dinner atCommons.Prepare forI-H CarnivalName Steering Committeefor Gala Party of Na¬tions.Name Holders of New Plan CollegeScholarships: Hyde Park fCins MostWinners of the twenty scholar¬ships offered for the first year of thenew Four-Year College were an¬nounced today at the Office of theDean of Students.Awards were made on the basis ofof being a smoothly running outfit, i vecent competitive examinations andbut one that has been driven on interviews, in which about 140 stu-through the sheer power of one man. dents at the sophomore level in highConsequently, it exhibits the limita- i schools of the surrounding area par-tions of any one man, more so than i ticipated. Aim of the scholarshipsthe Film Society because it is „larger enterprise.The greatest weakness of the News¬reel itself is that it fails to overcomethe handicap of silent pictures by pro¬viding an effective running comment¬ary. The monologue of Mr. Wagneris not only often dull, but has at timesbeen grossly inaccurate.We credit the Newsreel with a gen¬uine attempt to reach an all-Univer-sity audience. It has failed to do so,not any more than any other campuspublication, perhaps, but the criti¬cism holds nevertheless. We fullyrealize the enormity of this task ona campus of as varied interests asours, but we still have hope thatsome student group will some day dothe job.The Leaders Organization has doneso little this year that it has hardlyjustified all the fuss made over it.Formed as a student agency to assistin the recruiting of high school sen¬iors, it has found its activitieschecked on the one hand by the ad¬ministration, and already performed,on the other, by the Student Promo¬tion office. When you add to this alack of imagination on the part ofits leaders, you find an organizationwhose work could have been perform¬ed equally well by another part-timeassistant in the Promotion office.We think it is only natural andgood that students should assist theadministration in attra)cting betterstudents to the University. However,it seems doubtful if they shouldspend a great deal of their time inthis work without any compensation.Consequently, we question the needot this organization. is to build up the junior and senioryears of the University High School,which become the first two years ofthe reorganized College.List WinnersThe following are the names ofsuccessful candidates: Betty JaneBlocki, Ruth Cooper, Eloise Goode,Mary Ellin Hill,' Mary Ii*win, OrvilleKanouse, John Kenneth Law, Nan¬ette Lowenstern, Donald McKnight,Hold Spelling BeeTryouts TomorrowTryouts for the forthcoming spell¬ing bee between the University wom¬en and the Vassar girls will be heldtomorrow afternoon in Lexington 5at 4:30, according to Joseph Wechler,manager of the University Radiostudios.The match will take place onThursday evening. May 20, from8:30 to 9:30 over the NBC Blue net¬work. A group of cash prizes are tobe presented to the winners. A $25award will be given to the last per¬son remaining up at the close of theprogram, a similar prize to the lastperson up on each team.The present bee grows out of thesimilar contest last quarter in whichUniversity men competed with agroup from Princeton. In that matcha team including three gprls was orig¬inally chosen to represent Chicago,but the feminine members werefound ineligible when it was learnedthat the program had previouslybeen announced in the East as an allmale affair. Beata Muellei’, Russell Nelson, PaulReynolds, Richard Runge, FlorenceSargis, Warren Sikora, Evelyn Steck,Milton Sykes, Joseph Van Hise, An¬nette Weiss, Robert Oren Wright. mittee has been completed. On thecommittee are members of everygroup exhibiting in the Carnival.The Carnival, proceeds of whichwill be donated to the Student LoanFund, will be the gi’eatest Interna¬tional Night ever presented. Mod¬elled on the lines of Chicago’sWorld’s Fair, the plans include con¬cessions and national exhibits ofevery kind as well as several cabaretswith floor shows and dance music.Name Committee MembersThe Committee includes: Margaretpease, Midway; James MacKenzie,Assembly Hall Cabaret; Mary Ream¬er, Hall Decorations; Estor Araya,Latin American Group; Dirnell Ben- President Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins will speak before a selected groupof student leaders at a banquet inHutchinson commons, May 19, JulianA. Kiser, editor of The Daily Maroon,announced yesterday. The Maroon isarranging the banquet, and will is¬sue invitations later in the week.President Hutchins chose as thesubject for his speech “The Uni¬versity.” The banquet will serve togive the students a clearer idea ofhis plans and hopes for the futureof the University, similar to that pro¬vided by the Trustees’ dinner for thefaculty. President Hutchins will-bethe only speaker on the program.No Report of Meeting.The meeting will be private, andno printed report of the President’swords will be made, making the at¬mosphere freer. The banquet willbe the only occasion on which thePresident will speak before a largepart of the undergraduate stu¬dent body in the curent school year,although the week preceding he isthe headliner at the Law School ban¬quet.Printed invitations will be sent outby The Daily Maroon to a selectedlist of students prominent in under¬graduate activities. The list will in¬clude about 400 names, the capacityof Hutchinson commons. Tickets tothe banquet will be priced at $1.Like 1934 DinnerThe banquet is similar to a Ma¬roon-sponsored dinner at whichPresident Hutchins spoke in 1934.A new student generation has grownup since, whose opportunities forcontact with the President havebeen slight. The banquet was ar¬ranged with a view to creating acloser understanding between thestudents and the President as to Uni¬versity policies.Newsreel Expands Program; Seeks^ Woman Announcer for Tuesday ShowFive of the successful candidates! son. League of Nations; R. Flood,are students at Hyde Park HighSchool. Also represented are LakeView High School, Calumet, Lind-lom, Morgan Park, Englewood, Til-den, University, Hirsch, and Sullivan.Joseph Jacobson, Hyde Park HighSchool, has been awarded the Silber Camera Club; Dr. Tashiro, Japan;Charles Greenleaf, Major Barker;Dennis McEvoy, Publicity; P. M.Titus, India; Melbey Kidd, Canada;Otto Reisher, Viennese Garden; Ab¬dul Abbass, Near East; Ruth Glynn,Cabaret; Anstra Todd, Costumes;man two-year scholarship beginning; W. H. Cheu, China; John Neulson,in the junior year at University High j Movies; Harry Nolan, Tickets; andSchool. i Pamela Pisher, England. Because of the fact that theSpi’ing issue of the Campus News¬reel, to be first presented Tuesdayand Wednesday afternoons at 3:30in Mandel Hall, contains more newmaterial than any of the other threeeditions, that it is longer, and thatmuch needed equipment has beenpurchased, the price of admission hasbeen raised from 10 cents to 25cents, according to Paul Wagner, di¬rector.Call for a woman with a pleasingradio personality to announce thefashion review of the five Newsreelshowings has been issued by Wagner.Tryouts will be held Uiis noon from12 until 1 in the radio~room on theDaily Maroon Foreign Correspondent Gets Bad Caseof Nostalgia Associating with Heil Hitlering GermansBy JACK WEBSTER(Special to The Daily Maroon)(Jack Webster left the UniversityInst Jamiary to travel around Eu¬rope, with the purpose, like any othertourist, of seeing as much as he could,blit also with the purpose of gettingas close to the people as possible bycycling, staying in native lodgings,etc. When he returns to the univer¬sity next year he will be a senior inPolitical Science.)Rome, Italy, April 10—The posi¬tion of foreign correspondent for TheDaily Maroon carries with it a stag¬gering responsibility; especiallywhen one has spoken as little Eng¬lish as I have in the past threemonths. One thing I am quite sureof is that, here in Italy, I must writenothing derogatory about the Italiangovernment.When I left Paris I went into anentirely new world; the jovial, hand¬shaking, jolly Frenchman was replac¬ed by the stolid, stupid, Heil-Hitler-ing, Nazi. I remember getting on atrain in Nienburg and finding three orfour dour looking old goats and sev¬eral military officers in the compart¬ment. I said nothing as I enteredand fell as though I were killed with looks from my colleagues. The nextperson to sandwich himself into thesmoky compartment gave a verymilitary looking salute and an ex¬pressionless “Heil Hitler” as he en¬tered. The others replied in anequally expressionless “Heil Hitler.”The same procedure ensued as eachleft the train.Lack EnthusiasmOne might as well say one-two-three for all the voice modulationthose Germans put into their greet¬ings. Now I don’t want them to doa Highland Fling and sing a melodi¬ous aria but I do want to impressupon you two thingfs: the substitu¬tion of the name of a political lead¬er for every other pleasant sort ofgreeting. This, I believe, was one ofthe master strokes of the propaganda day, “How does it please you in Ger¬many?” I replied “Fine.” Then mycompanion (whoever he was I gotthe same remark) would nod know¬ingly and say “Alles in Ordennung,nicht wahr?”Germans StubbornNow perhaps the German thinkseverything is dandy. I don’t know,but it’s a sure thing that, eventhough he didn’t think so, he wouldalways stubbornly say everythingwas dandy. Then there is alwaysthat small matter of concentrationcamps which he must never forget.The propaganda department feedsthose poor blind sheep the most aw¬ful lot of stuff and nonsense that itmakes my head swim. But the Ger¬man believes it all, finds no contra¬dictions in it, and lives in a perfect second floor of Mitchell Tower, atwhich time the woman announcer willbe chosen.The spring edition is also to bepresented Wednesday at 8:30 in IdaNoyes Hall, and due to special de¬mand, Thursday at 8 in Internation¬al House. It includes shots of theBlackfriars’ show, “One Foot in theAisle,” a fashion show in color, ath¬letic teams in action and a review ofthe best portions of the previousthree editions.The movie will run for two hours,with an intermission between theshowing of the two reels.This is the first time that a moviehas ever been made of Blackfriars.The play has been filmed by PaulWagner, its author, from the put¬ting on of makeup to the final cur¬tain.Pictures of the Senior Carnival,featuring candid shots of the mem¬bers of the Senior class at play, willalso furnish a portion of the new edi¬tion.The style show, which is the sec¬ond to be given this year, includesshots of University women modelingthe latest in spring dresses.Placement Bureau FindsMore Jobs for SeniorsThe Germans are a hero worship¬ping type of people and were in avery receptive mood during the re¬construction period after the war.Von Hindenburg was idolized duringhis life but did very little to stirthe people on to a blind worship asHitler has done.I was asked at least five times adepartmentto further deify Mr. Hit- i state of happiness, basking in hisler. Rasestolz (which is a marvelous wordmeaning racial pride.)There are such things as we seeonly in the horror books like “TheLast World War” printed every dayin the newspapers. Horrible picturesof mangled masses of carion (prob¬ably taken in some German trenchesduiing the World War) attributed2) An optimistic outlook for thegi-aduating class of ’37 is seen bythe Bureau of Vocational Guidanceand Placement, whei’e placement op¬portunities show a definite improve¬ment over the 1936 record. That, inturn, was the best showing since1929, when the Bureau was establish¬ed.Although it is comparatively earlyin the season, about 85% of the sen¬iors have received offers of jobs.The number of those people whohave definitely chosen their jobs isnot known. Approximately 200 sen¬iors are regfistered with the Bureau.In the business field, the greatestdemand has been in the division ofsales, where, considering the desiredqualifications, demand may be said toexceed suddIv.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1937iatl^ ilaroonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Collegiate PressThe Daily MariKin is the oiTictal student newspaper of theUniversity of Chica(^>, published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 4€, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Marivm, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the viewsof the University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearirg in this paper. Subscription rates:$2.76 a year; $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 S, 1879.■{..■assaNTEO roa national ADviaTisiNU avNational Advertising Service, IncCollege Publishers Representative420 MaoiaoN Avc. New York. N.Y.CHtCAOO • BOSTON • San FranciscoLos ANOELSa • PORTLAND • BCATTLSBOARD OF CONTROLJUUAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChifffDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagrerEDWARD S. STERN Mana8:ini? EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD. Advertising ManagerEDITOKIAL ASSOaXTBSBemiea Bart^ Edward Frits William McNeillBeMuett Deadman El Roy Golding Betty RobbinaBUSINESS ASSOCIATESCharles Boy Bernard Levine William RubachMarshall J. StonaJacquelyn AebyBarbara BeerHarris BeckLaura BcrgquistMaxine BiesenthalRuth Brody(Aariss ClevelandLome Cook EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn CooperPaul FergusonJudith GrahamAbnee HainesDavid HarrisWallace HerscbelRex Horton Harry LeviSeymour MillerLaVeme RiessAdele RoaeBob SasaLeonard SchermerDolly TbrnnceDouglas ^NraBUSINESS ASSISTANTSEdwin Bergman Alan Johnstone Howard GreenleeJerome Bttelsoa Max Freeman Edward GustafsonDoris GentzlerSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwiyNight Editor: William McNeillAssistant: Dave HarrisThursday, May 6, 1937Fantasia in A MinorSt. Thomas Aquinas was a fat man. He wasso fat that he overhung the straight and nar¬row path on either side, but being an accom¬plished tight-rope walker, (having had lessonsfrom the greatest master of the art, AlbcrtusMagnus in his youth,) he kept his feet in theway, although his sides perforce overhung theabyss.But his condition had its advantages. Nonecould pass him without falling off from thenarrow way. Being fat, his gait was slow, andso he accumulated a great following, to leadsubsequent generations in their ascent to thepearly gates. Tliat was why he got his halo.And he deserved it. He saved Peter muchtrouble through causing many a man toabandon the road through impatience at theslow gait.But this is wandering. For when the saintat the head of his great cavalcade came to thepearly gates, what was his dismay to discoverthat they were no wider than the way he hadtrod for so long.“The architect,” as Gabriel explained tonewcomers in afterdays, “had thought it un¬wise to make the gates any wider that theway leading to them. After all someone mightsneak in.”When Peter had examined and approvedboth baggage and credentials, the saint essay¬ed to squeeze himself through under his ownpower. Failing, he next tried going throughsidewise. Even the help of the foremost ofhis followers who were impatient to cross thethreshold failed to do more than get theweighty doctor stuck in the entrance-way.By this time the heavenly host had beenattracted by the red and indignant countenanceof him who so energetically sought entrance.Suggestions were as numerous as observers.Some favored breaking down the wall that thesaint might enter, but those up on their class¬ics raised their voices in loud protest, assert¬ing that the celestial realm was to be but an¬other Troy. Some went so far as to say out¬right that St. Thomas was but a decoy of thedevil, sent that the heavenly walls might bebreached, and Satan renew his contest for theworld. “How else could man, and friar too,grow so monstrous fat>“ said they.God came up just then and had the situa¬tion explained to him. After some thought,he showed his engineering genius, by suggest¬ing that the halo be removed from the saint’shead, put around his neck, and a rope attach¬ed to it. This was accordingly done, but thepushing of those without, and the pulling of those within merely bent the halo out of shape,and wedged the saint tighter in the gateway.One of the recent arrivals ventured timidlyto observe to those around him that in a sim¬ilar case, Winnie-the-Pooh had extricated him¬self by abstinence from food, but this sugges¬tion went unheeded since it came from a merechild, and was but timidly pronounced. Inany case it appeared that the saint had small'mind to fast, for having already far over pass¬ed his usual time for a little something, he be¬gan to call loudly for food. When told thatthere was no eating in heaven, it was noticedby several bystanders that the saint’s own ef¬forts flagged. “Due to physical exhaustion, thedear,’’ as a portly mother of six remarked toher single heavenly child, who had missed thesight, due to the strictness of his harp instruc¬tor.St. Anselm then stepped forward and said:“No being can enter heaven save through thepearly gates. The pearly gates are ten cubitswide. St. Tliomas is twelve cubits in diam¬eter. Two being cannot occupy the same spaceat the same time. St. Thomas is a being. Thegates are being. There St. Thomas cannotenter heaven. Quod erat demonstrandum."Hearing such beautifully Aristotelian syllog¬isms rippling from the mouth of the PlatonistAnselm, St, Thomas felt the inward glow fromanother convert, and felt half resigned to hisfate. Accordingly, when he had been hauledout backwards and had taken a Arm grasp ofhis twisted and almost unrecognizable holain his right hand, he stepped gracefully off thenarrow path. As he fell a full smile suddenlyoverspread his face. “Ah,” he murmured, “thefruits of evil.”Arrived in hell, Satan met him at the com¬modious portals, and greeted him with a lowbow. “It is long,” he said, “since 1 have hadthe pleasure of entertaining a saint. Pray stepin."The saint’s first inquiry was after the fruitsof evil, which Satan duly gave him. A few hoursafter his arrival the Thomas even wheedled adouble ration, which the devil granted onlyreluctantly.TTie devil was satisfied. And the saint,while he would have liked a triple portion,was content. “I never did mind the heat,” hesaid.But it is only of late years that the trafficsnarl caused by the saint and his adventures onthe straight and narrow path and at the pearl-ly gates has been unraveled and the press offollowers relaxed. So at last St. Peter is sat¬isfied. For the other denisons of heaven,the event was supremely satisfying—it gavethem something to talk about.—W.H.M.ITS SPRINGTIME ON THE FACULTYWe’re not assuming any responsibility for whatthe Hearst press makes of this, but with due respectfor the freedom of the college press we feel dutybound to report what happened in and out of FosterHall yesterday afternoon.Bursar Mather and Professor O’Hara came togeth¬er to call upon Ruth Doctoroff. What ensued we canonly speculate upon, but we do know that for sure.Anyway, afterwards we found scrawled in chalkon the flagstone sidewalk outside the door, in per¬fect schoolboy style: “Mr. Mather loves Ruth,’’ Mr.O’Hara loves Ruth,” and in not-so-good grammar,“Mr. O’Hara and Mr. Mather loves Ruth.”* * *OPEN DOOR POLICYWe’re starting a one-man campaign, right now,for better facilities for getting in and out of thePress building. In all our years of getting used tothe eccentricities of the University, we’ve never man¬aged to get the hang, or rather the swing, of mani¬pulating those doors. If you remember, there aretwo sets of doors; swings in two directions, the otherset swings the wrong way. We alays feel as thoughwe should try to hurry to get out the way of onepair, so we push hard against the next one, but itdoesn’t push. Then we always manage to meet some¬one when we’re on his side, and it isn’t our fault, butwe get the dirty look anyway.Maybe this is a purely personal problem, but ifthere are any kindred lost souls, we’d like to hearfrom them. We feel that something ought to be done.THE TENNIS TEAMreally had fun plajing around with Vines, Barnes,and Lott yesterday afternoon, but before the funbegan, and while the No. 6 match with Northwesternwas being played, a girl near us inquired if JohnKrietenstein, our No. 6 man, was Ellsworth Vines.* ♦ ♦Personally, we thought Bill Murphy looked al¬most better than Vines. At least he put on a bettershowjbecause he did so much more running around. GermanyBRICKBATS FOR TROTSKYITESEditor,The Daily Maroon:As another non-Communist or So¬cialist member of the ASU, and onewho has worked on committees, Iwish to reply to S. A. F.’s letter inyesterday’s Maroon. I quite agreewith him that the illogical position ofthe Communist Club with regard tothe Trotsky situation has cost thatorganization the respect of any rea¬soning liberal on campus and leavesits whole program open to question.My point is, however, that irre¬spective of the rightness or wrong¬ness of Trotsky’s relation to theUSSR, the methods adopted by thosewho call themselves his adherents aresufficient cause for their rejectionby an ASU member. First, theAmerican Student Union, by defin¬ition and its name, stands for a unit¬ed front of students, a group whichis not included in the narrow prole-tarianism of the Trotskyites. Sec¬ond, I call the attention of S. A. F.to the annoying time-wasting meth¬ods of the Trotskyites in committeemeetings, as well as to their deliber¬ate infraction of regulations they hadagreed to for the strike parade.These attempts to create animosityand antipathy, these piddling effortsto draw the class lines more sharply,should as matters of tactic and ultim¬ate policy, be discarded by any ASUmember viewing the situation realis¬tically. And last, any liberal who seesin a sort of semi-socialism the onlyTiossible non-Fascist development ofdemocracy must regret the passingfrom the Socialists of eventuation ofa better future by a process of edu¬cation, evolutionary socialism.Therefore I repeat, regardless ofwhatever wrong may be done to Trot¬sky personally, regardless of theCommunist Club’s anti-intellectualtreatment of the question, an hon¬est liberal cannot support the move¬ment calling itself Trotskyism.Sara Lee Bloom. (Continued from page 1)to the dastardly work of SpanishCommunists.Hitler Lett Deified in SouthOne notices that as he goes furthersouth, and there is an increasingamount of Catholicism, Hitler seemsto be a little less deified. The housesin Bayern and Oberbayern have littleniches above the doors with a smallstatue of the Madonna and child.Many of the fields have large, al¬most life size crucifixes at the en¬trance and all of them have somesort of chapel. In southern Germanywe no longer hear the “Heil Hitler;”we hear a cheerier ‘Good Morning,”etc. The people are a much jolliersort and not quite such a stolidbunch of blind sheep.Here in Rome I ran into a priestwho attributed this to the type ofperson which Lutheranism broughtup. This was probably an exampleof rationalization to some extent;hut it was interesting to see the in¬verse proportions of Catholicism andNazi enthusiasm.Down in Austria I saw a very in¬teresting thing in the pro-Nazism.As I walked along the street withseveral German fellows, many of theWanier Broa.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd St.Today“PAROLE RACKET*“SING ME A LOVE SONG”Friday and Saturday“MAMA STEPS OUT*‘THE SOLDIER AND THELADY** young bloods standing on the cor¬ners greeted us with a weak but veryperceptible “Hoil.” Upon asking sev¬eral people about it, we were toldthat about 66 per cent of the peoplein Austria were pro-Nazi.Many, Many UniformsWhen I first went to France Iwas impressed with the number ofmilitary people there were runningaround. But in Germany there weremore and Italy takes the cake.American tourists whom I meetask me whether I think war is immin¬ent; I merely tell them of the ma¬chine gun practice I heard in theBavarian Alps, of the camouflagedtrucks which are used by the arbeits-diensts in Germany, of the lists ofboys who have reached their twenti¬eth year that one sees posted on thesides of buildings here in Rom'*. Atthat time, you know, the practicallycompulsory military service goesinto effect.The stories we hear about short¬age of butter and cold meats in Ger¬many are not true—people in Eu¬rope are still eating plenty and allthis preparation merely helps unitethe people. However, the peoplethemselves are not stirred up to afighting pitch, even though armiesare mached through the streets ever>’other day.Frolic TheatreSSrii fr EUlS AVE.Today“THE SOLDIER AND THELADY**“MAMA STEPS OUT*Friday and Saturday“SING ME A LOVE SONG*’“MURDER GOES TOCOLLEGE**DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdToday“GIRL OVERBOARD”“STAR OF MIDNIGHT* CAR OWNERS:**Spng Has Cub ffCHANGE TO SUMMER PRODUCTS NOWSPRING INSPECTION FREECOMPLETE CHECK CHART LUBRICATION ANDWASHINGSTANDARD SERnCE STATION55th and Greenwood Ave. Trf. Midway 9092**W€ take a Personal Interest in Your CaP*IN THE BLACKFRIARS ISSUE OF PHOENIX:®V)• Professor Max Schoen criticizes Hutchins.• Dr. Ben Reitman contributes a second article.• Bob Fitzgerald is carricatured and ^^Boswelled.”ON SALE AT BLACKFRIARS, FRIDAY AND SATURDAYNIGHTSI smi ,:L. : {THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. MAY 6. 1937 l^age inmWright HouseShows FutureDesigner’s Work RevealsNervous Temperment,Unadjustment.By HAROLD SWANSONIn 1908, at 58th Street and Wood-lawn Avenue, Frank Lloyd Wrighterected a house that is truly symbolicof the modern trend in architecture.Of course, back in 1908, it stood outin the realm of the building art asbeing distinctly out of place; it wasclassed as being just the radical out¬put of a personality that was like¬wise erratic and radical intrinsical¬ly-But, as time has indicated, FrankLloyd Wright was prophetic in right¬fully predicting what the future wasbound to reveal. So he proceeded onthe basis of drawings and plans mademeticulously perfect to their last andmost minute details. He combinedbroad horiaontal lines, meeting sharpvertical lines, in a whole scheme thatstood out as being designed to givethe familiar ''futuristic” square boxdesign.In exterior view, the structure is anacurate presentation of long sweep¬ing horizontal plazas, which seem tolend the whole an appearance ofsquatness. Yet it has beauty, of acertain rugged nature; it is said thatWright strove to make the housestimulate in actuality a prairieschooner, in that it would make anappearance on its prairie location,similar to the kind of a picture thatmight be cut by a tramp steamer,shall we say, of extremely moderndesign, as it lay on the water.In interior view, the same generaltheme predominates, with elaborategrill work and squat windows risingtheir short heights to reach the cor¬ner cot by the ceiling and the sidewall. Concealed radiation for heatand ventilating purposes is employ¬ed, this being an exceptional feature,German EconomistDiscusses Monopoly,Technical InertiaMonopoly is merely a symptom andnot the cause of restriction of com¬petition, Dr. Adolf Loewe, professorof Economics, the University ofManchester, told a University audi¬ence yesterday afternoon.Formerly in the German govern¬ment service as an expert on repara¬tions, and later Professor of Eco¬nomics and Sociology at the Univer¬sity of Keil and tha University ofFrankfurt, Professor Loewe is wide¬ly known for his work in the relation¬ship between economics and sociol¬ogy.Violations of Economic LawsThe solution to German inflation.Professor Loewe has pointed out, asillustrating that economics is depend¬ent on sociologfical factors, was moreinflation, through the printing of therenten-mark. That device, condemn¬ed by every economist in Germany,was successful in spite of economiclaw, because of its psychological ap¬peal to the people."Background of the operation ofan economic law such as that of sup¬ply and demand is a definite socialstructure namely that of a liberal so¬ciety which has many competing in¬dividuals with free disposal of theirservices and products, acting in themarket on a profit basis,” ProfessorLoewe said.Lack Free Competition"We can show that the systemdoesn’t work today because the lawof supply and demand does not oper¬ate properly. The main items in itsoperation are the profit incentiveand perfect competition. The profitincentive is still working but perfectcompetition has never existed in anyperiod of our modern system."The large scale organization andmodern technique which has built uplarge plants and companies has cre¬ated businesses which are not as sen¬sitive as they should be to changesin demand and techniques. Indus¬trial organization is suffering asmuch from technical, immobility asfrom monopoly.Discusses Depression"Monopoly, trade unions, cartels,and the like are a means of protec¬tion against the difficulties whicharise from technical immobility. Aniron and steel plant can not shift itsesuipment and trained labor to pro¬duction of some other goods whendemand falls off for that commodity.There is, therefore, always the dan¬ger of a cumulative depression asROOT! AS big changes arise."Cartels, trade unions, and tar¬ o'lly eclipsed by a streak of real mod¬ernism that is revealed by the win¬dows that seem to stretch along thewalls, in broad band form, payingno heed to corners but joining in de¬lightful blend, and seeming as if toerase the corner entirely This lastfeature might have beer, unpredict¬able, and still in obscurity in 1908had not Wright turned his ingenuityto the task, and given the world, es¬pecially the world of architecture,his phenomenal design.The Personality Behind the NameWhat kind of a personality was itthat managed to astound architect¬ural circles? In fact architecturewas not so much astounded as it wasunwilling to accept the new model,and as a consequence, Wright wasseverely abused for having the tem¬erity to produce this thing they lab¬eled atrocity. In income personality,he might be called equally as radicalas the building he created. Domesticdifficulties made of him something ofthe unadjusted type, and his nervoustemperament, desiring adjustmentturned to the creation of unusualpieces of architecture. Here, fortu¬nately, he found his forte, and pro¬ceeded with fervor to build such fam¬ous architectural modernties as thishouse, and the famous Imperial Hotelbuilding to withstand the terribleearthquakes of recent Tokyo history.Europe, fortunately, sanctionedWright’s architectuaral type, al¬though his own country failed utter¬ly in giving him the appreciation thathe so well deserved. Today on theQuadranglesLECTURES“Sociology. Population.” ProfessorStouffer. Social Science 122 at 3:30."Art and Culture of PrehistoricEgypt.” Georg Steindorff, ProfessorEmeritus of Egyptology, Universityof Leipzig. James Henry BreastedHall, the Oriental Institute, at 8."The Educational Significance ofthe History of Science.” Robert S.Woodbury, Assistant Professor ofEnglish and History, MassachusettsInstitute of Technology. Social Sci¬ence 122 at 8.RADIO PROGRAMS"The Old Judge” (dramatization).WLS, 7 to 7:15."The Significance of the NationalLabor Relations Act.” Mary Gilsonand Mrs. Robert Keohane, under theauspices of the Illinois League ofWomen Voters. WLS, 7:46 to 8.MISCELLANEOUSSociology Club. “Social Disorgan¬ization in Chicago During the Depres¬sion.” Dr. Ernest R. Mawrer, North¬western University. Social Science302 at 7:80.Phonograph Concert. Quartet in BFlat Major, Opus 67 (Brahms). Bud¬apest String Quartet. Social ScienceAssembly Hall, 12:80 to 1:15.Divinity Chapel, Joseph Bond Cha¬pel. 12.University Press Prints Joumahon History, Philology, BusinessBy ROBERT FOSTER House Fourteen Governmental Groupsin New Public Administration BuildingBy HAL HAZELRIGG{Continued from Tuesday)With Bemadotte E. Schmitt, pro¬fessor of Modern History and chair¬man of the department of History, aseditor and Louis Gottschalk, profes¬sor of History as associate editor.The Journal of Modem History coversthe history of Europe and its ex¬pansion from the Renaissance to theclose of the World War. The Jour¬nal is a common meeting groundwhere disputed points on politics, re¬ligion, economics, arts, and sciencesof those periods may be presentedfrom both sides.The Journal of Business is devotedentirely to the aspects of the worldof commerce and administration thatgive perspective on the problems,movements, and methods of modernbusiness. Not primarily concernedwith reporting the facts of businessconditions, its articles deal in generalwith problems of economics, finance,risk and risk-bearing, marketing ad¬vertising, adjustment to natural re¬sources, factory management, person¬nel, business psychology, transporta¬tion and communication, technology,and the public relations of business.Of immense value to librarians in¬dividually as well as to educators,prospective students of librarianship,and vocational counselors is TheLibrary Quarterly. The Quarterlylis a journal of investigtetion anddiscussion in the entire field of lib¬rarianship and the,fields of generalbibliograhy, the history of printing,education for librarianship, and adultand juvenile reading.Exploring monastic libraries andunearthing medieval manuscripts,finding new meanings and ti-acing olddevelopments in modern literature isthe modem philologists adventure. Acomplete survey of the results of hisresearch is published in Modem Phil¬ology. Edited by Ronald S. Crane,professor of English, this Journalpublishes many letters and other doc¬uments of historical and literaryvalue which have never before beenpublished.Because it is one of the few re¬ search journals which can be under¬stood by beginners in its field. Phy¬siological Zoology is read by an in¬teresting variety of people from manyoccupations. Present subscribers in¬clude not only libraries, schools, andadvanced research scholars but alsocommercial laboratories, hospitals,museums of science, and public healthorganizations. Its managing editorsare Charles Manning Child, profes¬sor emeritus of Zoology, and WarderC. Allee, professor of Zoology.The Social Service Review, whichhas one of the largest circulations ofany of the Journals, presents timely,important articles which meet theneeds of the public interested in theworkings of public and private wel¬fare and social service institutions.Since the new profession of socialwork crosses the frontiers of econom¬ics and sociology, of political scienceand law, of psychology and psychia¬try, the Review brings to its readerscontributions from all these groupsin this country and abroad. Grace Ab¬bott, professor of Public WelfareAdministration, is the managing edi¬tor, and she is assisted by WayneMcMillen, associate professor of So¬cial Economy.The latest of the Journals is TheLaw Review, the only Journal ofwhich students are entirely in charge.It presents a national review of cur¬rent trends and controversial issuesnow before the public, and recordsthe mass of current state and nation¬al legislation. For the last few years the Univer¬sity Political Science Department hasincreasingly cooperated with the 14governmental organizations in thefield of. public administration. Con¬struction is under way for a newbuilding to house this group, builton University-owned property at thesoutheast corner of the Midway andKenwood Avenue.Although only indirectly associat¬ed with this, governmental studygroup, the University exchanges in¬formation with it, and each makesuse of the other’s facilities. Severalof the directors of the associationsare regular lecture members of theUniversity faculty.The “dean” of the g^roup is LouisBrownlow, director of the Public Ad¬ministration Clearing House, who be¬came nationally known this year aschairman of President’s Roosevelt’sCommittee on Administrative Man¬agement, which recommended a thor¬ough reorganization of the executivebranch of the Federal government.List OrganizationsThe associations are: The PublicAdministration Clearing House, Mr.Brownlow, director; the AmericanLegislators’ Association and theCouncil of State Governments, Hen¬ry W. Toll, executive director; theAmerican Public Welfare Associa¬tion, Fred K. Koehler, director;American Municipal Association,Clifford W. Ham, executive direc¬tor; American Public Works Associa¬tion, Fred W. Herring, executive di¬rector; American Society of Plan¬ning Officials, Walter H. Blucher,executive director; Civil Service As¬sembly of the United States andCanada, G. Lyle Belsley, director;Governmental Research Association,Robert M. Paige, secretary-treasurer;International City Managers’ Asso¬ciation, Clarence E. Ridley, execu¬tive director; Municipal Finance Of¬ficers’ Association, Carl H. Chatters,executive director; National Associa¬tion of Assessing Officers, Albert W.Noonan, technical director; NationalAssociation of Housing Officials,Coleman Woodbury, director, andPublic Administration Service, Don¬ald C. Stone, director. Consultingand Research Division.Staffs of all these organizationsare engaged in development of new¬er and more effective administrativemethods and operating techniques intheir respective fields of government.They serve as headquarters and re¬search centers for their membershipin this country and abroad. Theirmembers are officials actually on thejob conducting the public business onthe state and local levels, and the or¬ganizations naturally are non-parti¬san in nature.Each organization is independ¬ent. They have come together sim¬ply to cooperate for better public ad¬ministration.Their further services include: Dis¬seminating information to raise thecapacities of governmental officials,and to encourage better personnel standards for officials; advising gov¬ernmental units which are seekinginformation and advice on adminis¬trative action; and giving direct ad-miistrative seiwices through surveysand consultation. This last functionis performed through a joint agencycalled the Public AdministrationService, governed by a board com¬posed of the various directors.These groups also act as a “cataly¬ tic agent” between the universityand government, between scholar¬ship and practice. Each director isnot only specially educated in hisfield, but also a former official in it.Occupy New BuildingThe liaison process between thenational governmental group and theUniversity has been furthered by thenew building which will be occupiednext January. This building was.made possible by a $1,000,000 grantfrom the Spelman Fund of NewYork, given to the University withthe provision that the structure housethis group and any other associationswhich might in the future join it.AND DON’T FORGET TO VOTE MY WAY!!I. ' ILucky Candidate to have Ll I’l LE FENDRICH *campaigning for him and it’s a cinch that after , ■/ he’s the new class president they’ll still cast jtheir votes anytime for LITTLJB FENDRICHPANETELAS!! The favorite dgar among young ;men for years...-Little(-ENDRICHPANSUPER MfUD E T E LAS•• IMPORTED LONG PILLERWhitney to JudgeCollege Inn ContestEleanore Whitney, petite dancerand featured player in the picture"Turn Off the Moon,” will be one ofthe judges of the third College Inndance contest, next Friday evening.DePaul University will be featuredon this night although couples fromall colleges in the Chicago districtare eligible to enter.Three winners are chosen eachtime. From the final group of twelvethe ultimate winners will be selected.First prize is $150, second, $100,and third $50. Each night cups areawarded the winners.iffs, though being built up to protectagainst this, themselves make thesystem even more immobile and in¬creasingly difficult to operate. Thelaw of supply and demand thereforebecomes increasingly inoperative.This situation, however, is only asign of the general transformationof our economic and political sys¬tem.” Hear Ye! Hear Ye!Annual Law School BanquetSpeakers—President Hutchins and Dean Bigelow.^ Drama—Law School Players Saterize the Supreme Court.'A' Dancing—South Lounge of Reynolds Club.'A' Smoker—North Lounge of Reynolds Club.A’ All for $1.00HUTCHINSON COMMONSWednesday, May 19th 7 P. M.DAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1937Netmen Crush Northwestern; Title Hopes RiseCaptain Burgess Loses SoleMatch of Day to Russel Ball\Team Is Ovei whelming 11» i j . iFavorite to Take Confer-! i-reiims inence Crown. Intramural Spring NorthwesternDefeats BallWith Captain Burgess’s defeat atthe hands of Russell Ball after ahard fought three set match as theironly loss, the University tennis squadcrushed Northwestern, their only for¬midable contender for the Big Tencrown, 8-1 in a dual match on theVarsity courts yesterday afternoon.The Wildcat’s failure to put up abetter showing makes theoverwhelming favorites to take away ithe Conference title which the North- jwestern team captured by one point |from the University racqueteers last jyear. jIn the Maroon’s only loss. Captain iBurgess succumbed to Russell Ball in ‘three sets, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Ball was too jpolished for Burgess in the first set iand took a 3-0 lead in the second be- jfore the Chicago man rallied bril-1 Track Meet TodayPreliminaries in the 11th annualIntramural spring track meet will beheld on Stagg field today, beginningat 3:45. Trials in the 100-yard dash,the 440-yard run, the 220-yard dash,120-yard low hurdles and 880-yardteam relay will be run off in the or¬der named. In addition, finals in theMaroons! held.Friday’s events include the finalsin the events mentioned above, ex¬cept the shot put, and the 880-yardrun, the mile run, the broad jump,and the high jump. Fraternitiesmust have men competing in one-halfthe events including the relay in or¬der to gain organization points. Noman may enter more than threeevents including the relay.Many Compete Last YearLast year, 91 men representing 14 Famous Cktlf Professionals WillGive Exhibition on Stagg FieldTeam, 24-11 jEnd of SoftballLeague SchedulesFive Pitchers Attempt toStem Purple Attack inVain. Little, Cooper, Smith andThompson Will Demon¬strate Shots.It took Northwestern a long timeto get even but they finally did. Foryesterday they beat the Maroons24-11, thus avenging a 24-8 shellack¬ing they received in the good olddays when Coach Kyle Anderson wasstarring for Chicago. University students will have theopportunity of seeing in action fourof the greatest professionals in thegolf world when Lawson Little Jr.,Jimmy Thompson, Harry Cooper, andHorton Smith come to Stagg FieldWednesday to give an exhibition.With the aid of a public addressThe independent teams in the I-Msoftball meet advanced another steptoward the finish of the first roundyesterday. The Ladies Aid gavenotice of their determination to addthe independent softball title to their, i • jbasketball crown, when they smash-j .Northwestern scored in evex'y inn- ■ 24-15 win over the Schooling except the last two when they I Business. The victory was thewere held hitless by relief hurler i ^^ourth in four games. The battingMorry Neiman who entered the game i honors of the day went to Espen-in the seventh inning. During the I ®hade of the losers for his three horn-time Neiman was on the rubber not i single, and Adelman of the Post Pairings in Women’sAnnual Tennis TourneyThe pairings for the women’s an¬nual tennis tournament have beenposted on the bulletin board in themain gym of Ida Noyes. Also on theboard is a list of the full names, ad¬dresses, and telephone numWrs ofthe contestants.All the first round matches mustbe played off before next Wednesday.liantly to sweep six games in a row Iand win the set. However, Ball isteadied again in the third set andBurgess went down to defeat.Bickel Much SteadierNorm Bickel met George Ball in |the first singles match. Bickel was imuch steadier than during his loss jto Carl Fisher last Monday, and | fraternities and some independent or¬ganizations competed in one of thebest track meets in years. The AlphaDelts won as usual, making 83 points.Beta took second with 61 points, andthe Dekes made 33 to take third place,Psi U was fourth with 32 and thePhi Delts fifth with 26.In the Winter quarter indoor meetthis year, the same two fraternitiesbree^d through 6-3, 6-2 as Ball made j ranked first and secohd, but therea vain attempt to rally. Once again ^re additional events outdoors.Bill Murphy made his opponent lookweak as he whipped the highly ratedWildcat sophomore, Marvin Wach-man, 6-3, 6-0, in the second singlesmatch. iChet Murphy met Dick Rugg in the!fourth singles bracket and Murphy ^was a bit afraid to break down with jthe strong wind. He finally foundhis toucii, however, and after a gruel-'ling first set 8-6, Chet smothered the ifourth flight conference champion'6-1. Johnny Shostrom kept his sea-1son’s record intact as he swept'through Ollie Adelman 6-4, 6-0. The :Northwestern football star looked abit dangerous in the first set but iJohnny settled down to work in thesecond.Krietenstein Play* Well 'The final singles match featured:John Krietenstein for the Maroons!and Frank Froehling of Northwes-itern. Krietenstein, who is probablythe most improved player on the Uni-'versity squad since his freshman com¬petition last year, found Froehlingineffective as he won 7-5, 6-2. In the idoubles matches George Ball andWachman proved a bit stubborn as,Bickel and Burgess won 7-5, 7-5. The ^Murphy brothers whipped RussellBall and Froehling 6-4, 6-4, whileShostrom dominated the play as heand Krietenstein beat Rugg and Adel¬man, 6-1, 6-2. However, the new eligibility rulesthis year have taken a heavy tollfrom these fraternities and they areconceded no better chance to win thanany other organization. (This doeshave a sightly familiar ring, but theMaroon assumes no responsibility forthe statement. It emanated from theIntramural Department.) a hit was made.Amundsen StartsPractically every hurler on thesquad saw^ action before the game’send. Paul Amundsen started thegame and held the mound for twoinnings, but after allowing five runshe was replaced by Joe Mastrofsky.Little Joe held his own on the moundbut received little support and in thethird inning after walking two play¬ers an error was made allowing thetwo to cross the plate. In the lastof the fourth Soderlind got on a walkand in an effort to score. Dean wentin to pinch hit for Mastrofsky. Thisscoring effort failed.Reynolds was given his chance tohurl next, but after retiring two men,two Wildcat players got hits one along double. The next man walkedand three hits followed, thus beforethe inning ended five men crossedthe plate. Reynolds pitched the sixthand then Schuessler batted for him.In the seventh, the big inning. Law-son took over the pitching assign¬ment. He allowed two hits followed Ladies Aid for his five hits.Lambda Gamma Phi lost its firstgame in four tries, to the Barristers,i 13-5. The latter thereby kept theirj record clean, and took first place in, the Zeta League. Perfect batting rec-' Olds were made by Lawyers Alexan-' der and Longacre and Businessman! Rootberg.Burton Judson WinsBurton-Judson defeated the Coun¬selors 12-4, mainly on the basis of an' eight run rally in the fourth inningwhich included four circuit clouts.The Kents failed to show up for their.scheduled game with the Magglers,and the latter won the game on a for¬feit.Owing to the Intramural track meetthere will be no softball games thisafternoon.Shelley Reports Trend to Be TowardCommunity Type Recreational ProgramBy AIMEE HAINES“The current trend in College andUniversity recreational .supervisionis toward the community type of pro¬gram,” stated Miss Mary J. Shelley,director of Ida Noyes Hall, on herreturn from the recent convention ofthe National Physical Education As¬sociation at New,York.This program of varied seasonalactivities fits the student to go onwith his recreation after finishingschool and is merely part of the na¬tional movement to provide activityfor the increased amount of leisure*time now available continued MissShelley.“At the convention we heard Mr.Lindeman, the head of the WPAspeak along this line,” she said. “HeMuch About NothingChicago’s baseball team just can’tget going. The reason for this seemsto be not that they are not trying ^but that they are trying too hard.When the team goes to bat they aretense; seldom can they loosen upenough to take a good cut at theball.The Illinois game was a good ex¬ample of practically every player’sbeing on edge. It seemed that theyall realized it was the MIGHTY IL-LINI they HAD to beat, and whenthe games were over they foundthemselves on the short end of thescores.The squad still has a lot of goodgames ahead of it though, and if thefellows can forget about trying towin and just play ball, they may turnout to be the team they were sup¬posed to be at the beginning of theseason.George Halcrow laid down a lotof feet in a short time to win the440 at Northwestern Saturday. Ac¬cording to corrected reports, hi* timewas 48.9 rather than 48.11, but it isstill fast stepping.. Birleson of Mich¬igan, winner of the indoor 440 thisseason, was the only one in any BigTen meet to do better for that dis¬ tance. He covered it .4 of a secondless.Bob Cassels also took a beatingfrom the downtown papers and theMaroon when he wasn’t given creditfor winning first in the pole-vaultingcontest with a jump of 12 feet 6inches. Nice work. Bob.♦ ♦ *Minnesota’s baseball coach FrankG. McCormick expects his players toput forth vocal efforts as well asthose directly connected with play¬ing ball.During a recent game a diminu¬tive sophomore was stationed on thecoaching line for the Gophers, wherehe gave forth a particularly loud andvoracious monologue directed at theopposing pitcher. Indeed, so bomb¬astic was his oratory that evenCoach McCormick was attracted bythe noise.“There,” announced the coach sol¬emnly to the men on the bench, “isan outstanding man. He is the onlyone on the squad who can talk abovea whisper.”* * aRed Ruffing is still practicing withthe Maroon baseball team. Maybe ifhe keeps holding out and we keeplosing we might run him in as a ring¬er some day. Bet we’d win that one. stressed the fact that this gi’owth ofinterest in a large variety of sportsand games is universal all over thecountry.”Miss Shelley further remarkedthat sports have become democratic—“open even to dubs.” Another trendindicates increased interest in mixedrecreation, especially in those gameswhere men do not have the advan¬tages in power. Badminton andbowling are good examples of thistype of game. by two walks and then Larson, slug¬ger of the purple gang, came to batto knock the ball over the fence fora hqmer. Neiman came in next tohelp out Harvey.Syring went the entire route forNorthwestern. He allowed ten hits,two walks, and struck out twelvemen.Many errors were made by bothsides, five for Northwestern and sixfor the Maroons.CROCOMBE’SBOWUNG ALLEYS6225 Cottage Grove Ave.OPEN ALL SUMMERSpecial rates to students dailyexcept Sunday up to 5 P. M. onstration which the other three willpresent. He will also attempt togrive a few pointers to the golferspresent.The exhibition will be similar tothe ones shown in the golf schoolsnow being conducted in four of thecity parks which have attracted 15,-000 people to see the professionalsperform.Little Former ChampionLawson Little is the former Brit¬ish and American golf champion, hav¬ing defeated the best amateurs ineach countr>' to win the titles twoyears in a row. His professional ca¬reer is not yet a year old but hisplaying has put him among the top-notchers in the game.Horton Smith has been unanimous¬ly declared by all followers of thegame the greatest putter in the busi¬ness. His rare putting ability has en¬abled him to win the Master’s Opentwice and made him a leading moneywinner in the winter golf circuit.Although Harry Cooper is not sup¬posed to excell in any particularfield, his steady playing had madehim a consistent low-score player andone who is hard to beat. CROWN YOUREUROPEAN TRIPWITH AHOLIDAY INGERMANYTTieHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57th StreetN. W. Corner Stonr Island EOLLOW the lure of the ro¬mantic Rhine. Stroll along theulevardi of Berlin. Browse in thegalleries of Munich or Dresden.Dream in the historic grandeur ofmedieval picture towns. Take a curein Germany's fashionable tpat.This yar isFestival year in Germanywith a magnificent program ofmufic, opera, theatre and pictu¬resque fdk festivals. Among themare the Wagner Festivals at Bay¬reuth; the Berlin Art Weeb; theGreat German Art Exposition andthe Wagner-Mozart-Strauss Festi¬vals at Munich; the Exposition"Nation at Work ' at Duesseidorf;the Heidelberg Dramatic Festivals.For your personal comfort: moderntransportation and homelike ac¬commodations at honest prices.Railroad faros reduced 60%. TravelMarks available far below regularReichsmark quotations.ContuU your trevol ogont or writ* forInformation ond Intoroftino booklot *‘C .GERMAN RAILROADSINFORMATION OFFICE66S fifth AvMtu*, Naw Yoik •SEEHEAR THE FOOTBALL line dance in the Beef Trust Chorus.THE RHUMBA Chorus originated especially for Blackfriarsby JOSE CASTROMarv Jacob and Ted Fink and the Phi Psi Trio singing thefinest songs Capt. Fitzgerald has ever written.atBLACKFRIARS“ONE FOOT IN THE AISLE”MAY 7-8-14-15Tickets Now On Sale at Mandel Box OfficeSBB