Vol. 37. No. 108.The Fire=Burning=♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ *(This, the first of a series of opin¬ions by campus professors and schol¬ars, is written by Chamer M. Perry,assistant professor of philosophy. Dr.Perry, who is an associate of Profes¬sor T. V. Smith, attempts to informthe campus of the three vital issuesraised by President Hutchins’ latestbook, “The Higher learning in Amer¬ica,” A fourth question is added byThe Daily Maroon in order to includemore of the field of dissension.)* * rftFor a number of years and espe¬cially during: the last ten there hasbeen genera! dissatisfaction with theorganization and curriculum of Amer¬ican universities. Almost every uni¬versity in the country has had afaculty commttee studying plans forrevising the curriculum. The mostimportant results of current criticismare condensed by President Hutchinsinto a sharp diagnosis, a diagnosisnot greatly different, except in itsclarity, from common opinion in theuniversities. President Hutchins pre-.sents also a proposal for curing dis¬order and confusion, a proposal whichis simple and elegant, and which dif¬fers radically from any of the multi¬tude of proposals that have beenmade.His plan involves a separation ofeducational institutions on the basis ofa division of educational functions,educational functions being distin¬guished in terms of the content to betranspiitted to the student. Generaleducation is distinguished from highereducation; and higher education isdstinguished from research and tech¬nical training. Each of these typesis allocated to a different institution,or at least to a separate organizationwithin an institution. General educa¬tion is to consist of the acquisition ofthe intellectual virtues, of learninghow to read, speak, write and reason.Higher education is to consist of ac¬quisition of knowledge of principlesin metaphysics, natural science andsocial science.The problems raised by this pro¬posal are (1) Is it possible and de¬sirable that acquisition of the intel¬lectual virtues should be separatedfrom the learning of subject matter?(2) Is it necessary or desirable thatsystematic knowledge of the worldand man should be excluded fromgeneral education? (3) Is it possibleand desirable to separate knowledgeof principles from application anddevelopment of principles in re¬search and technical work?* s sEditar’s Note: This question maybe added: (4) Should there be a fun¬damental unity in modern society? inknowledge and education? If so,should that unity be establishedthrough metaphysics? What defini¬tion of metaphysics is here used?Need such unity be authoritativelyestablished? Is it inconsistent withthe democratic principle and with theends of individual scholarly activity?Peace Council toRe-Assemble TodayAfter almost three months of inac¬tion, the All-Campus Peace Councilwill meet at 3:30 in Social Science 122today to carry out the appeal of theanti-war strike that “to strike is notenough.” Most important business ofthe meeting will be the election of anew board to start the work of thecouncil next year.Of the resolutions passed at thefinal session of the peace conferenceheld last quarter, all those pertainingto the strike have been carried out.At the strike meeting, Richard Lind-heim, chairman of the Peace Council,pointed out the necessity of carryingon a long-term program for educationtowards peace.Another resolution passeu at theconference was to support the UnitedYouth Day Peace Festival on May 30.Since the celebration comes in themiddle of examination time, probablyno official acton beyond sending dele¬gates will be taken.All persons having tickets re¬served for the coming Blackfriarsperformances should call for themas soon as possible at the Mandelbox office Blackfriars announcedyesterday. Clie Batlp itaionUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. THURSDAY. MAY 13. 1937Send Invitations toFaculty Membersfor Maroon DinnerThirty-three faculty members es¬pecially connected with undergrad¬uate activities have been added tothe invitation list for the Daily Ma¬roon banquet, at which PresidentRobert Maynard Hutchins is tospeak.Since the President is to be theonly speaker of the evening, the af¬fair should not last past 8:30, leav¬ing the rest of the evening for studyor gaiety for underclassmen and sen¬iors respectively.j Invitations to 400 odd studentshave been dispatched, and tickets,priced at $1 each are available at theInformation desk and the Maroon of¬fice. The banquet is to be in Hutch¬inson Commons, and will start at6:30.The banquet is planned to givethe students of the University achance to gain a clearer knowledgeof the President’s plans and hopesfor the future of the University, anopportunity which the size of theUniversity necessarily limits to oc¬casions such as this.Alumni SchoolOpens June 1Plan Four Day Sessionof Class Reunions, Lec¬tures.In response to an enthusiastic ap¬peal for adult education, arrange¬ments have been completed for asecond alumni school, to be held fourdays starting June 1. The patternfor this year’s school will closely re¬semble that of last year.Covering subject matter rangingfrom “Modern Business Practice inAncient Babylonia” to “The Birth jRate of Suckers,” a number of prom-1inent speakers will lecture at ses¬sions held at 2:30, 6:00, and 8:30jevery day. The six o’clock lectureswill be given at the regular alumnidinners held in Hutchinson Commonson Tuesday, Weednesday and Friday,and in the Reyolds Club lounge onThursday; other sessions will be heldin Mandel Hall.Attendance VoluntaryAttendance will be entirely volun¬tary, and although the alumni andseniors are especially invited, any¬one may come. Since over 700 per¬sons attended the five day schoollast year, hopes run high for anequally large attendance this year.An intensive series of programshas been worked out for the alumniin addition to the school. In linewith the traditional June alumnifunctions, there will be class reun¬ions, tours of the campus, luncheonsand banquets, concerts, conferences,and baseball games taking place fromJune 1 to June 11.The idea of having a school forthe alumni is not a new one. A num¬ber of leading universities and col¬leges throughout the country havebeen conducting these programs forseveral years. Report FindsRapid Declinein EndowmentSmall College Funds De¬cline Twice as Rapidly,Survey Shows.In the period from 1931 to 1936the “average rate of return in theinstitutions with large endowmentsdeclined 20 per cent, while the ratereceived by institutions with smallendowments declined 36 per cent ornearly twice as much,” a reportmade last week to the AmericanCouncil of Education at Washingtonshowed.The report, based on a survey of45 educational institutions withabout 40 per cent of the country’s!total college endowment funds was!made by the Financial AdvisoryService. In commenting on the re¬port, the Council’s president, GeorgeF. Zook, emphasized this rapid de¬cline in the small college endow-1ments. 1Total endowments for higher edu-!cation in the United States in 1934, jaccording to the Federal Office of iEducation amounted to $1,539,727,-565. IPeace Education Stressed jSpeaking of peace, Dr. Zook citedthe fact that there were about 9,000foreign students studying in insti¬tutions of higher learning in theUnited States, about 10,000 Ameri-1can students in foreign colleges anduniversities, and said:“If peace ever comes to the worldit will not be through mad arma¬ment races and the negotiations ofweary diplomats, but through thehumble efforts of school teachersand administrators in creating an in¬ternational habit of mind in thou¬sands of school-rooms throughout theworld.”Eight Students WinWay to Finals inPoetry Reading TiltIn the preliminaries of the Flor¬ence J. Adams poetry reading con¬test held yesterday afternoon, eightcontestants qualified for the finals.Those who qualified were: HenryReese, Allene 'Tasker, Lillian Schoen,Frances Brown, Ray Danow, SonjaKosner, Zelda Teplip and EstherLouise Schwerman.The contest is held annually bythe friends of Florence J. Adams,a former teacher of English in thepublic school system. Three prizesof $75, $50 and $25 are to be award¬ed to winners of the finals scheduledfor Saturday afternoon.The list of readings this year wasdrawn from the works of Americanpoets. Judging of the reading wasbased on reading ability rather thana faculty for memorizing or declam¬atory forms of speaking. Five min¬utes was allotted each contestant bythe judging committee composed ofMrs. Aaron Brumbaugh and Profes¬sors Raney and Randall.Social Science Questionnaires CheckPersonalities of Freshmen, SophomoresBy DAVID HARRISWith the injunction to “be asfrank as possible,” first and secondyear students were given question¬naires at the close of Tuesday’s So¬cial Science I lectures.The instructions were to answerevery question and to return themthe following day. The time requir¬ed to check the items was estimatedat about a half hour, and the net re¬sult of it all was supposed to be yourpersonality. Above all, the studentswere not to sign their names. Af¬ter looking at certain of the items,that direction was superfluous.Number one question is “Howstrong is your desire to attain a highscholastic standing?” (Check: No de¬sire —Slight —Medium —Strong —Very Strong). Other desires includeambitions to be leaders of groups orclubs, to have intimate friends, tocontribute to organized charity, andto hpve the friendship of membersof your own sex.Other.secret passions brought to light in the questionnaire are thosereferring to desires to excel in gamessuch as cards and chess, to have theaffection of members of the oppositesex, to avoid doing things that mightbe considered unconventional, and tobe decisive in dealings with sales¬people and servants.We think the prize desire, how¬ever, is “to have strangers or casualacquaintances smile pleasantly atyou;” and a close second is the oneabout wishing to pet dogfs and otherdomestic animals.A desire that many may have beenguilty (though unconscious) of is“to be considered the ‘life of the par¬ty’ at gatherings.”Another section of the seventeen-page analysis deals with happiness,•satisfaction, interests, and achieve¬ments in a variety of flelds.Altogether, this piece of workopens up questions about a person’spersonality that really makes youwonder. Hutchins Exhorts Teaching ofLaw as Intellectual EndeavorExplains Aims of RecentReorganization at LawSchool Banquet.Stating that it is a proper func¬tion of the University to produce American StudentUnion Backs Playby Repertory Group EdnaTorrenceJudges Friars’Leg ContestHold Annual Competitionin Hutchinson Court To¬day.lawyers educated to take their prop¬er places in society. President Hutch¬ins justified the existence of a lawschool as a part of the ideal univer¬sity and set forth the aims of therecent reorganization of the Uni¬versity Law School to guests at theannual Law School banquet held in !Hutchinson Commons last night. [If law is merely a trade, he said, jit can best be learned in a law of-;flee or a night school; not in a uni-1versity. But if law is to be considered |an intellectual endeavor, he continu-;ed, it becomes a rightful function of Ithe university to maintain a school jdesigned to produce properly edu-!cated lawyers, public servants, and !scholars. Th^se, according to thePresident, are the aims of the Re¬vised Law School. ;Model Husband jDisclaiming responsibility for the jnew curriculum, Hutchins revealed ithat the first steps in the develop-1ment of the Plan were taken by the ;faculty three years ago. It is gen¬erally conceded, he added, laudingthe Law School faculty, that it isthe purpose of a law school to edu¬cate lawyers, but only that of thisUniversity has so far done anythingabout it.President Hutchins was introduc¬ed by law student Hubert Will, whopresented him as a shining exampleof a “well-trained husband.” Hutch¬ins replied that he had done his bestto get “This Gracie Allen” throughthe University, but that he evidentlyhad not done it fast enough.Will also introduced Dean Bigelowof the Law School, who congratulat¬ed the Law School Bar Associationon the success of the evening, andwelcomed the alumni and pre-profes¬sional students.After the dinner the throng whichhad filled Hutchinson Commonsmoved into Mandel Hall to see theannual Law School play, “Midnightof the Supreme Court.” After theplay, which was preceded by theplaying and singing of several Black¬friars songs, a smoker and a radiodance were held in the ReynoldsClub.Pick Team forSpelling MatchFinal tests for a radio spelling b^will be held in Room 5 of Lexingtonhall this afternoon at 4:30 to de¬termine a team of fifteen women torepresent the University againstMount Holyoke in an NBC broadcast.May 20, from 8:30 to 9:30. JosephWechler, manager of the UniversityRadio Studios announced.Tryouts last Friday failed to at¬tract enough competitors to fill outthe places on the team, so the testwas postponed until today. In addi¬tion to the pries of $60 to the lastperson up, and $25 to the next tolast, the sponsors of the program offereach contestant two dolla^fi to coverexpenses involved in going down tothe studios.The test will consist of fifty wordsdictated which the competitors willwrite down. The papers will begraded and the fifteen ranking highestawarded places on the team.The originally announced opponentof the University was Vassar, but forunannounced reasons. Mount Holyokehas been substituted.The program is complimentary to aPrinceton-Chicago spelling bee heldlast quarter in which men alone werepermitted to Compete. The Maroonteam lost to Princeton, heaviest mor¬tality being on the word “Chinqua¬pin,” which is a species of chestnut.Since in the tryouts preceding thatbroadcast, three women qualified forthe team, but were not permitted tocompete since the affair had been pub¬licized as an all-men affair in theEast. Wechler believes the women ofthe campus just as good spellers asthe men. 'They appear to be lessavaricious however, judging by thesmall turnout last Friday. In support of the Chicago Reper¬tory Group’s objectives, the AmericanStudent Union is sponsoring tomor¬row night’s performance of the cur¬rent production “Help Yourself” nowbilled at the Goodman theater.Although the play is primarilycomedy, it contains the social messagewhich characterizes the Group’s pro¬ductions, for advance notices havetermed it “a hilarious satire on banksand bankers.” In humorous terms itportrays young America seeking a so¬lution to its perplexing problemsalong the road of progress. “HelpYourself” first saw production inVienna and then migrated to NewYork last summer to become a success¬ful Federal Theater project.From a small group of volunteerplayers who desired to produce socialdrama, the Group has advanced to thepoint where it can now stage pro¬ductions in the professional theater.Though interested in producingworthwhile plays, the Group also aimsto present drama with social signifi¬cance. The players have been seen onthe campus in the plays “Black Pit,”a drama of the coal regions; “Burythe Dead,” an indictment of war;and “Waiting for Lefty,” CliffordOdet’s play on the taxi strikes.Tickets for the production “HelpYourself” are now being sold by mem¬bers of the ASU for 50 cents to$1.60. The most beautiful pair of legs inBlackfriars will be selected today atnoon in Hutchinson Court as a partof the annual Blackfriars leg-judg-ing contest. Chief Justice of theSupreme Court on shapely underpin¬nings will be Edna Torrence, head¬liner at the Chez Paree. She will beassisted by a bevy of chorines fromthe same show.Miss Torrence is soon to be co-starred in a picture with Fred As-tair, and is hailed as the second Gin¬ger Rogers. Last year Mitzi May-fair of “Awake and Sing” famechose Richard Hood as the possessorof the best legs. So far this year,Bob Fitzgerald is considered as alikely prospect, but in a Blackfriars'event anything can, and often does,happen.A preview of some of the shownumbers will be given by the chorusfor the benefit of those who have notyet seen “One Foot in the Aisle.”Various songs and a duet will com¬plete the program.Hit numbers from the show willbe played this morning by HaroldTurner, popular pianist, on WGN at11:5. Included on his program willbe “My Heart Remembers,” “Symp¬toms of Love,” “One Foot in theAisle,” and “Our Hearts’ Desire.”Ben Kanter will give a similar pro¬gram later in the week over WINDand WJJD. A special broadcastover a national hook-up is being ar¬ranged for the near future by theradio committee, headed by HarryMendenhall.Students Express Fear of CloisteredEducation in Second ASU SymposiumWith viewpoints ranging fromthat of the Aristotelian Marxist tothe sociologist, six students at theAmerican Student union symposiumlast night alternately patted Presi¬dent Robert Maynard Hutchins’“Higher Learning in America” onthe back and knifed it in the sameplace. The balance of power wasdefinitely on the side of the opposi¬tion, for of the six speakers, onlytwo, Aaron Bell and Leo Shields, up¬held the stand of Mr. Hutchins. jChief bugbear of the anti-Hutchins igi’oup was the fear of a dogmatic jassertion of one truth, and the con- jseqent danger to freedom of educa¬tion. Frank Meyer, presenting theMarxist position, stated that thefunction of education is to preparefor living in the present world. Con¬demning especially the cloister ideaof education, Meyer said that in ademocratic university the questionof synthesis cannnot be determinedby one man or group of men.Thomas Howells, liberal speaker,said that as a democrat he was nat¬urally opposed to any concentrationof power. A sociologist’s viewpointwas taken by Herbert Goldhamer,who quoted inconsistencies in “TheHigher Learning” and criticizedHutchins for oversimplicity of no¬tions as to social causality.Formerly a student at Oxford, ad-Settlement Tag DayMakes New' Record |Setting a new high in receipts fromtheir Annual Tag Dev, the StudentSettlement Board announced thatmore than $136 had been receivedfrom yesterday’s sale of tags. Thisconsiderably exceeds last year’s re¬ceipts of $80.All day yesterday the campus wascanvassed by 46 girls, representingthe women’s clubs. Mary LettyGreen, chairman of the Board, ex¬pressed her appreciation to these girlsand to the rest of the Campus forcontributing so generously.This was the first time that theSettlement Bazaar was held on thesame day as Tag Day, and as a re¬sult of yesterday’s success, an all¬campus Settlement Day will becomean annual affair. The tax was recog¬nized as admission to the Bazaar atthe Settlement House back of thestock yards. mittedly the most Aristotelian uni¬versity in the world, Norman Browncriticized the Aristotelian implica¬tions of the book. He said that Hut¬chins was evidently tryng to ration¬alize conservatism, and that the is¬sue for the anti-Aristotelian was oneof intellectual freedom. Throughthe consideration of man as a ra¬tional animal based on eternal prin¬ciples, he continued, Hutchins dis¬carded the necessity for socialchange.On the pro-Hutchins side, AaronBell, a member of the committee onliterature, pointed out the advan¬tages of the system of separatingtrue intellectual content from tech¬nicalities by a system of profession¬al schools. Leo Shields, defendingthe book, and agp*eeing with Hutch¬ins especially in his condemnationof money-grubbing tactics and theservice station idea of education,said that the fundamental flaw in thebook was that it failed to realizethat before there is any real reform(Continued on page 3)BWO ProgramIncludes VocationalDiscussions on specific problemsof women’s organizations, sponsor¬ship of a series of vocatipnal talks,and reorganization of the electionsystems of women’s organization con¬stitute the three main points in thenew program recently drawn up byBWO.This program, which will go intofull effect next year, has produceda single effect thus far—a series ofresolutions sent to the InterclubCouncil following a discussion onclub rushing.These three resolutions suggestthat the week of silence just afterfreshman week be abolished; thatthe silence regulation during theweek of intensive rushing be dropped(this was recommended by a minor¬ity of members); and that no oneexcept upperclass counselors contactfreshmen during the first week withthe agreement that rushing rules berelaxed for the counselors.DiscussionsPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1937imly jlar00nFOUNDED IN 1901Member A>*ociate<l Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the officUl student newspaper of theUniyersity of Chicago, published morninss except Satordsiy, Sun¬day. and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 4f. and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or fur 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 appearing in this paper. Subscription rates:12.75 a year: $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the poet officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March S, 1879.•(..-ReSCNTEO FOR NATIONAU AOVERTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, IncColUgr Publishtrs Rep-rrsentativ*420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y.Chicaso • Boston • Can FranciscoLos ANOELES • PORTLAND . SEATTLEBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESBernice Bartels Edward FVitz William McNeillEmmett Deadman El Roy Golding Betty RobbinsBUSINESS ASSOCIATESCharles Boy Bernard Levine William RubaohMarshall J. StoneJacquelyn AebyBarbara BeerHarris BeckLanra Be^suistMaxine BiesenthalRuth BrodyCharles ClevelandLome Cook EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn CooperPaul FergusonJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisWallace HerschelRex Horton Harry LeviSeymour MillerLa Verne RieesAdele RoseBob SassLeonard SchermerDolly ThomeeDouglas ’’’••reEdwin BergmanJerome Ettelson BUSINESS ASSISTANTSAlan Johnstone Howard GreenleeMax FYeemanDoris Gentzler Eldward GustafsonSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HohrayNight Editor: Edward C. FritzAssistant: William GrodyThursday, May 13, 1937Six Day Philosophers* RaceThe Buildings and Grounds department ap¬parently has not yet awakened to the greatestfree energy source which the University hastapped in the forty years of its history. Eversince President Hutchins’ digging into “TheHigher Learning” struck natural gas and hotair at a depth far greater than most author¬ities had suspected, the University has founditself the owner of a surplus of energy, man’sgreatest boon in an industrial age.By some it has been suggested that if thesupply could be brought under control, theUniversity could sell the heating plant andilluminate all University buildings with thelight of learning. But every attempt to tapthe source has been followed by new ex¬plosions which have driven the workmen tocover. Others have proposed that the gas beused to run a giant steam shovel to stand per¬manently in the circle. With such a shovelthe Buildings and Grounds department couldmove trees all day so that the sidewalks wouldalways he in shade.Personally we think that all attempts toharness the energy will fail until the naturalgas is separated from the hot air. To do thiswe think all who have opinions on the “High¬er Learning” should be brought forcibly orotherwise to the circle for a six-day philosoph¬ers’ race. Patterned after the bicycle races,philosophers would enter in teams of two—Adler and Schwartz, the rhetoric-Catholicteam; Barr and Burchanan, the Virginia gen¬tlemen; Linn and Gerard, the Science-Amer¬ican combination; McKeon and McKeon, thedialectical demons; Morris and Perry, theprides of the International Journal of Ethics.Hutchins would be referee,A six-day race would be ideal to settle allphilosophical disputes. Peripatetics wouldThe ABC’sFIRST STAGE OF COMMUNISM...In its first phase or first stage Communismcannot as yet be econtmically ripe and free of alltradition and of all taint of capitalism. Hence theinteresting phenomenon of Communism retainingin its first phase, “the narrow horizon of bourgeoisrights.” Bourgeois rights inevitably presupposesthe existence of the bourgeois state.. .Consequent¬ly, for a certain time not only bourgeois rights buteven the bourgeois State remains .under Commun¬ism, without the bourgeoisie!V. 1. Lenin,The State and Revolution.\ have ample time to circle and think; otherphilosophers could think «n circles without em¬barrassment. The gentlemen would not be go¬ing any place in particular, and would havelots of time to get there. The only difficultywith the race is we don’t know what it wouldprove. But for that matter we don’t knowthat anybody has proved anything about the“Higher Learning.” We wish all sides wouldspeak to us in two and three syllable wordsand explain.Again WalksThe Buildings and Grounds departmenthas not been awake to other things also. Per¬haps the lesson of the repeal of Prohibitionhas not registered on the minds of the depart¬ment. In no other way can we account forB & G’s continued refusal to awake to thefacts of life and the foibles of human nature.We would like to obey the signs which thedepartment puts up back of the chapel inform¬ing us to “PLEASE—save this lawn for sum¬mer.” But we find it much too easy to sneaka guilty look over our shoulder and climb threefences to make the short cut back of theChapel and Lexington Hall. The energy whichwas employed this winter in putting up eightfences (later taken down) and this spring inseeding the lawn (which is now again bareearth) could have been better expended fora concrete walk.The Travelling BazaarWE GO TO A PICNICAT 4:30 IN THE MORNINGSocial activity at the University usually ends of-ncially about 2 with scattered remnants lasting intothe wee hours, but Tuesday night the campus wasrudely awakened at 4:30 by the whizzes and thewliees of the sirens of the Chicago Fire Departmentconverging on the University.Some awakened slightly and thought that the cor¬onation had come to America, and turned over andwent back to sleep. Other less rational (not Mr.McKeon et al) beings hurriedly left the warmth oftheir rooms for the breezes of the outer world.Glances told them that either there was a fire orBlackfriars was holding another grand openingsomewhere in the vicinity of 61st and University.It turned out to be a fire, and the subject of thefire was a combination ice house, riding academy,and beer warehouse. Beer kegs were popping mer¬rily, but the horses were grazing contentedly onGreenwood field. (Note: people keep insisting thatice doesn’t burn.) And the campus had turned outsleepy-eyed but en masse and undressed.There were the little groups from the women’sdormitories in pre-morning makeup, preserving theirbeauty. The little girls who are usually self-con¬fident and not in the least shy during the festivitieshuddled their faces together whenever a male ac¬quaintance approached. For some reason, no onewanted to be recognized.We walked around the block looking for a vant¬age point from which to see walls tumble and fire¬men scientifically fighting the blaze. At the comerof 62nd and University we discovered Bill Runyanand Jimmy Melville looking around with dazed ex¬pressions on their faces trying to find what wascausing all the excitement. It seems that DickSmith had driven a bunch of the brothers over fromthe A. D. hostelry, but being a little weary-eyed hehad been forced to stop three times. The boys hadalready had enough excitement for one morning.On reaching the alley-way from which four bat¬talions were fighting the fire, we found that thefiremen had found a new friend. He was a littleinebriated, but was having the greatest time of hislife. Each time a hose was carried in toward thefire, he would follow the boys into the alley—andeach time two burly boys in blue (you may callthem policemen, dear reader) would converge uponhim and bounce him back about 10 yards.When we got to the thick of it, we found the per¬son who we knew must be around somewhere—Cody Pfanstiehl. He and Diantha Warfel had all thedetails of the fire from first-hand sources. Codysaid that he left his bed when his roommate (seefirst-quarter Bazaars) turned over and mumbledthat Lexington hall was on fire.Wending our way homeward in the early morningair and smoke, we met a policeman, who was tryinghard to persuade sleepy motorists that they mighthave a little spat with a few fire trucks should theyventure down Woodlawn avenue. We spent anotherhalf-hour discussing fires we had seen and the wilesof the police radio. He told us that he himself wasway off his beat, but that he had to stay there be¬cause the squad that was assigned to the districthad not shown up as yet. It was 6:30 and the mes¬sage about the fire had gone on the air at 4:16.* * *P. S. Stineway’s also burned up last night.\\ Lettersto the Editor“RAZZING ROBBINS”Editor,The Daily Maroon:In an editorial in today’s “Maroon,”Miss Beatrice Robbins (or so I as¬sume from the initials B. R.) belit¬tles the coronation of George VI bycontrasting the publicity surround¬ing this event with the relative lackof publicity on the Spanish govern¬ment’s fight to save Spain from Fascism, or the labor difficulties in Hol¬lywood.While it may be all too horriblytrue that the Spanish war is in itstenth month, and that the failure ofthe Hollywood box-officers to sup¬port the striking technicians ol Hol¬lywood may have failed to give thema moral advantage over the produc¬ers, I fear that Miss Robbins is writ¬ing about the coronation merely tosay something which might be a lit¬tle different from the “World’sGreatest Newspaper,” or is just try¬ing to find a subject on which to'whittle her editorial wings for thefirst time.Much as I respect Miss Robbins, itis probably the most juvenile edi¬torial I have read in The “Daily Ma¬roon” this year( and I do not ex¬cept some of Edward Stern’s standson the ASU). I suggest that MissRobbins read a bit more Engl sh his¬tory, and study a bit more psychol¬ogy before she brashly goes off thewrong end in print.I do not think I am an over-zeal¬ous “Anglophile,” or that I am adied-in-the-wool reactionary whenI say that Britain’s coronation is eco¬nomically, psychologically and politi¬cally a case of God-given opportun-I ism for the rapidly dismemberingBritish Empire. If it is any pleasureto Miss Robbins’ liberalistic tenden¬cies, she may achieve some small,smug pleasure from the fact thatGeorge VI was named King, not ofthe British Empire, but of Canada,the Union of South Africa, Aus¬tralia, etc., thus fulfilling the termsof the recent Parliamentary billwhich grants virtual autonomy toBritish Dominions. Thus Miss Rob¬bins will see that heterogeneous“league of nations” which she lam¬poons is gradually becoming less andless of an entity in the politicalsense. Perhaps she does not remem¬ber that Sir Samuel Hoare, FirstLord of the Admirality, had to re¬ceive permission of the Union ofSouth Africa to enlarge their navalbases to accommodate British war¬ships protecting a contra-Suez routeto Biitish possessions in the east!The coronation is a fait accompliwhich is of deifinite importance tothe British Empire and, especially,to British inter-Empire relations andtrade. That Britain’s stand (andAmerica’s too, from Miss Robbins’words) on the Spanish situation isregrettable I also feel. But I can¬not help but feel simultaneously,with my pity for the Basques, thatBritain is far wiser (in the long run)not only for its own safety, but forworld safety, to keep such a conflictbottled up as far as possible on theIberian peninsula. To be sure, Ger¬many and Italy are helping Franco,but I am of the opinion that theSoviet and Spain are more than hold¬ing their own against the opposingtriumvirate. And, according to re¬cent dispatches, British seamen, de¬spite the ‘Iblockade” have pretty Conduct VisitorsThrough Billingsfor Hospital DayOver 100 persons were shownthrough Billings Memorial Hospitaltoday in celebration of National Hos¬pital Day. Included in the itinerary'of the tours, conducted by volunteerguides under the supervision of Mrs.Ament, were the cafeterias andkitchens in the basement and a viewfrom the seventh fioor of a green tileoperating room.Between these extremes came visitsto the play rooms, brace and cast fac¬tories, and massage rooms of the Or¬thopedics Hospital, an excursion intothe library for patients, a glimpseinto a private room—unoccupied—anda walk through the various clinics.After the visit to the hospital, tea,accompanied by cake and sandwiches,was served in the rotunda of BobsRoberts Memorial Hospital by theWomen’s Auxiliary of Billings Hos¬pital.The University Hospital group, in¬cluding Billings, Bobs Roberts, LyingIn, is one of the most complete hos¬pital units in the city.successfully supplied Bilbao withfoodstugs and pretty successfullyevacuated the non-combatants.I maintain that for the pure joyof raising a “rumpus” in print, MissRobbins’ sneer at the coronation iseminently unjustified.C. S. Hickman. Today on theQuadrangles“The X-Ray Interpretation of Pro¬tein Structure.” Dr. W. T. Astburyof the Textile Physics Laboratory,Leeds, England. Pathology 117 at4:30.Divinity Chapel. “Religrion for theLayman.” Wesley P. Lloyd. Anthem:“Jesus, the Very Thought Is Sweet”(Charles Wood.)Twenty-Seventh Annual Meeting,The Association of University andCollege Business Officers. “FutureTrends in Education,” Robert May¬nard Hutchins. Judson CourtLounge at 9:30 a.m. Luncheon, Jud¬son Court dining hall at 12:30.Speaker: L. R. Steere, treasurer andbusiness manager of the University.“Future Trends in Education,” A. J.Klein, professor of Education, OhioState University. “Problems of theBusiness Office Aiising from FutureTrends in Education,” Harry L.Wells, business manager. Northwest¬ern University. Judson Court loungeat 2:00. Dinner, Judson Court din¬ing hall at 7. “College Finance,Past, Present, and Future.” TrevorArnett, formerly president of theGeneral Education Board. “Observ¬ations of the Day’s Progrram,” Fred¬erick Woodward, vice-president ofthe University.■. ^ V't [.■ • V '•'V •- .WHOOPS,VACATIONEERS..Let staunch, dependable Railway Express ship your baggage, bundlesand boxes straight home. Top speed. Low cost. Rea/ economy. Pick¬up and delivery without extra charge—in alt cities end principoltowns—and send collect If you want to. Just phone the nearest Rail¬way Express office when to call. Easy as that, and believe ut, you'llrelax contentedly in your Pullman.Railw. XPRESSAGENCYNATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERYKEiHe’s Got RHYTHM and an “A” Averaget • • 1—But—He Can’t EatLost His GirlWHY? —and—He’s GripedOwn Dog Bit HimWHY?He Didn’t Order HisThe 1937/I "2^'^- I' .. it;./■ t ■THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1937 Page ThreeCerebralSalvageFrom j. C. M.• * *It is worth one’s neck to even tryto state facts regarding the meritsand demerits of the Dramatic Asso¬ciation, and when one brings Black-friars into the picture one must riskcommitting social suicide with dev¬otees of one group or the other.However, our neck has already beenchopped so many tmes that a fewmore strokes will do little more thanfurther expose our esophagus.This year has seen at least a tem¬porary check upon the political man¬ipulation in the Dramatic Associationwhich in past years has characteriz¬ed D. A. elections, and last year in¬fluenced the choice of casts. Thisyear tryouts have been more demo¬cratic than . ever before, and al¬though there have been personal con¬flicts, there has been no rulingclique, as there was last year. Con¬sequently, the year has seen the in¬troduction of many new actors and ■ much worse.It is said that he is undemocraticand plays favorites. This may beflatly denied; although he has fixedideas on what things are essentialto the success of his productions, heis willing to hear suggestions, andtries to be strictly impartial. It issaid, and never denied, that he isboth sensitive and proud.We know of two specific criticismsof O’Hara’s direction. The first isthat he has casts rehearse the earlyparts of a play over and over, leav¬ing the last act or so to the lastnight, with the result that it is jum¬bled on the first night’s perform¬ance. This was evident in “Androc-les and the Lion,” but has beenbeen avoided in more recent produc¬tions. Another, more vital, critic¬ism is that he spends a g^reat deal oftime instructing his actors in stageposition without giving them muchhelp on the interpretation of theirparts.* * *Last year O’Hara was severelycriticized in the Cap and Gown’sEcho section for his penchant forthe cheesebox stage in the ReynoldsClub. The evils of the ReynoldsClub stage and theater are obvious,but the only alternative, MandelHall, has staging facilities that are Twenty StudentsOpen WisconsinIndian Moundsactresses, many of considerable abil¬ity. Furthermore, many of the new¬comers are from without the fra- This is indeed a sad dilemma. Pre¬senting a play in the Reynolds Clubmeans limiting the audience to theternity-club circle, which has previ- j relatives and friends of the actors,ously nearly monopolized the organ- j There is no need of energetic promo-ization. I tjojj yp j20 seats for aThis forward step may be partly! four night run, and consequently theattributed to circumstances and j Dramatic Association’s efforts makepartly to President William Beverly, j little impression upon the campus aswhose democratic, friendly manner! a while. High admission prices fur-and impartial judgment have sue-1 ther restricts the audience. Andceeded in dispelling factionism and I the business staff becomes so usedpetty jealousies. In Bob Wagoner j to the feeling of financial securitytho Association has fortunately I of the Reynolds Club that even whenchosen a president for next year who | a production is staged in Mandel sev-scems to have the same ability to get i oral hundred seats remain vacant,along with everyone. This, rather' • ♦ • Ithan any marked executive ability, | We have several suggestions to iis what the D. A. seems to need in its i make to the Dramatic Association: Inominal head. j (j) Could not a great part o the!Despite the additions to its per-1 drudgery of scene-building be dele-sonnel made this year, the Dramatic | gated to professional carpenters, tak-Association might well profit from ing the burden off of the over They have no idea what they aregoing to find, but twenty students ofanthropology wil go to Beloit, Wis¬consin, on May 20 to start two days ofdigging in old Indian mounds. Be¬sides introducing them to field meth¬ods, the trip wll provide relaxatonfrom the anthropology bachelor’sexam the day before.Profesor Fay-Cooper Cole, head ofthe department of anthropology, andThome Deuel, field director and co¬author with Dr. Cole of “Rediscover¬ing Illinois,” will head the trip. Twograduate students, Alex Spoehr andRoger Willis, will be their assistants.Open Indian MoundsProbably the mound opened by theprospective anthropologists will be anIndian burial mound, of the type com¬mon in Northern Illinois and South¬ern Wisconsin. Sometimes thesemounds are formed roughly in theshape of birds and animals, like thefamous Snake Mound in Ohio.Members of the field expedition willstake the mounds in five-foot squares.Then, according to Dr. Deuel, theywill put a trench on one side and cutthrough in sections five feet thick toexamine for implements that mighthave been buried in the mounds withtheir owners. Institute Film, ^The HumanAdventure,’ Scores SuccessBy LaVERNE RIESSa more extensive search for localtalent—considering, for example,some of the members of the Inter¬national House Players, ASU FineArts group, and Blackfriars. worked students who now do thejob. (2) Why not seek campus tal¬ent, instead of following the you-come-to-us policy? (3) Why not trya little more experimentation in pick¬ing plays—and what has become ofj student playwrights? (4) Why notAs for the season itself, the low' extensive promotion campaignpoint came in “Androcles and the 1 son^etime to secure a large audienceLion,” the peak in “The Country prices, using perhaps the In-Wife,” while “The Lower Depths” ternational House theater? ifell on the lean side of the middle, O’Hara, we have only re-1and “Green Grow the Lilacs” fell! Plated a few criticisms frequentlyon the fat side. Mirror took a loss i made. On the other hand, the Dra-1from the all-time high in the previ-1 matic A.ssociation rates at least aver Intercollegiate DanceTourney Ends FridayFriday night offers the last chanceto students who wish to enter the In¬tercollegiate dance contest, sponsoredby the College Inn. This contest of¬fers $300 in cash prizes for the win¬ning intercollegiate couples.Last week’s contest winners in¬cluded Walter Brandenburg and Phyl¬lis Morley, both residents of Inter¬national House. Judges for thisweek’s contest will be the Stanleytwins, who recently played in theZiegfield Follies. Although this is thelast week of preliminaries, a silvercup will again be awarded and thefinal awards will be announced onMay 21.Macdonald^ MeganWin Law Contestous year, and reverted to type byfalling far below the entertainmentlevel of Blackfriars. These state¬ments are made, as much as possible,upon the basis of observed and re¬ported audience reactions, and uponthe statements of so-called campuscritics.As for the traditional rivalry be¬tween the Dramatic Association andBlackfriars, it seems to be general¬ly admitted that the current Friarsshow deserves more acclaim than anyother stage entertainment of theyear. We also find a sigm that therivalry may at least be di.spelled,for we find the strange phenomenonof a president-elect of the D.A. hold¬ing down a major role in the Friarsshow.The success of Blackfriars this age, as campus activities go. We donot feel qualified to judge whetheror not another director could do bet¬ter. However, we do say that thestudent members of the DramaticAssociation should not hesitate, ifthey see fit, to take responsibilityupon themselves for matters of gen¬eral policy.Symposium(Continued from page 1)of the educational system there mustbe a change in the social system.During the discussion followingthe symposium, Richard McKeon,Dean of the Division of the Human-^ . ... ities, attempted to silence fears ofdogmatism and a narrowing downtendency in certain divisions by re¬producer, Bob Storer. If this indi¬cates anything as to the respectiveabilities of Storer and Frank Hur-burt O’Hara, it indicates only thatthe former is the greater master ofthe musical comedy type of show,leaving the question open as to whichis the better producer of seriousdrama.This brings us to the frequentlyasked question, “What aboutO’Hara?” Many accusations andcounter-accusations are hurled onthis point. It is said that O’Hara istempermental. That is undoubted¬ly true; close observers say that heis unpredictable, sometimes flighty.SUMMER HOMES$825.00 buys new 5 room cot¬tage on splendid 37j/^ foot lot;'vater, electric, lavatory, wellbuilt. On Bass Lake, Indiana’smost popular Resort. Adjoins ex¬cellent 18 Hole Golf Course.Free Season’s Playing Ticket witheach purchase. Lots can be hadwithout cottage if desired. L. E.Allen, 1 109 W. Garfield Bivd.,Chicago. Phone Englewood 6842. ferring to three recent appointmentsin the Humanities. “I find it difficultto find any dogmatic tendency inthis,” he stated, “when Carnap, aman who says that metaphysics doesnot exist, and two others differingradically on the interpretation ofAristotle have been added to the de¬partment.”The John MarshallLAWSCHOOLFOUNDED 1899ANACCREDITEDLAW SCHOOLTEXT and CASEMETHOD•for Cotolog, rocom-mended list of pro-logolsubjectSf and booklot**'Studyof Lowond Prop orPrtporatton' oddrotsiEdward T. Loo, Doon. COURSES "(40 wMkt par yoar)Aftarnoon—Syoors5 days... 4:30-6:30Evaning — 4 yoarsMon., Wod., Fri.,6:30-9:20Poit-graduota1 yoar. .Iwico a wMkProctice course*excluiivoly.All courses leadto degrees.Two years' collegework required forentrance.New classes formin Feb. and Sept.315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, III. Robert W. Macdonald and ThomasA. Megan, representing the Univers¬ity Law School, won the State Inter¬collegiate Moot Court Appellate Com¬petition held Monday night in the Cir¬cuit Court.The Moot trial, open to all lawschools in Illinois, was participated inby Northwestern, Illinois, Loyola, De-Paul, and Chicago.In the finals, the Chicago team con¬sisting of two second year men com¬peted against DePaul’s four third-year students.Judging the contest were IllinoisAppellate Judges O’Connor, Friend,and Hall. Judge 0’C!onnor was thechief justice, and Judges Friend andHall acted as associate judges.This contest was sponsored by theJunior Illinois Bar Asociation, andwas not originated by the schools Thursday afternoon two brightyellow and green buses parked onthe drive between the tennis courts,while their load of over one hun¬dred and fifty eager boys and girlshurried into the Oriental Institute.The occasion? History pupils of SennHigh School came to see “The Hu¬man Adventure,” an eight-reel talk¬ing picture produced by the Institute.After the students were assem¬bled in the auditorium. Dr. John A.Wilson, Director of the Institute,gave a short summary of the workbeing carried on in the Near East asillustrated \y the latest discovery, ahoard of gold in Megiddo. Then thelights were dimmed, and the storyof man’s rise from .savagery to civil¬ization was unfolded on the screen.Breasted Prepared FilmThe picture is introduced by ashot of James Henry Breasted,founder of the Oriental Institute,who supervised its production. Thenthe audience is carried by airplanethrough the lands where civilizationfirst arose—Egj'pt, Palestine, Syria,Anatolia, Iraq, and Persia. Eightof the Institute’s fourteen expedi¬tions are shown actually engaged inunearthing precious relics of thepast.Some of th • highlights of the filmare sequences .elr*wirg wheat fromthe days of Joseph, King Solomon’sstables, excavati ms revealine f..ur-teen cities built one upon anorherwith a Stone Age village at the bot¬tom and an early Christian templeat the top, the great obelisk of Hat-shepsut, the giant columns of thettmple of iCiiieak, and the harem ofDarius, which the Institute has re-C‘ iistructed nnd i« using as head¬quarters for its Persian E.vpediticnShow AroliAeoIogical WorkThere are interesting scenes of themen copying tomb paintings, scalingaiicient walls to check their nirro-glyphics, descending into burialchambers, carefully brushing, mendii g and claesifving unearthed ob¬jects. The hired natives are shownworking, receiving their week’s pay,scrambling for delicacies at a party,and doing a queer, hopping dance ata celebration.The film ends with the first profes¬sional movie record ever made onstandard size film of Persepolis, cap¬ital of the P';i!’in Empire, built byDarius the Great about 500 B. C,Its monuments columns, and carvedstairways are among the finest ex¬amples of art and architecture in thewcrld, rivaled oi ly by the glories ofthe Acropolis.More than three years were spentiii making this p’tfare, during whichtkvc separate trips were made fromCniTgo to the Near East. Over 32,-OOC feet of film were exposed, anda*ore than 9,000 mile? of flying weren'.{t.=:Fary bec tioe so much of thepicu'ie was -ri .de from the air. ‘Ihe Human Advent arc’’ has beenshown all over the country, breakingbo.x office record j and enjoying anunprecedented in the historyrf cdocationil films. New York“Salad Days Are HereAgain”Fresh Lobster SaladFresh Shrimp SaladFresh Vegetable SaladServed with Mrs. Driesen’s Special ReducersSalad Dressing, Toast or Rye KrispFREE—A generous serving of our delicioushome made sherbet given Friday noon with anysalad.The Maid-Rite (mil1309 E. 57th StJust Two Short Blocks East of Mandel Hall Botany Pond, NotSeniors, Gets W orstof Annual DuckingsDenisons of the deeps of the BotanyPond grot a surprise yesterday after¬noon when the Department of Build¬ings and Grounds decided that it wasthe pond, not the seniors, that gotwas the final test, and there it sur- the worst of the recent duckings at¬tendant upon the moustache race.To give succeeding gfenerations abetter vantage point from which tothrow victims into the drink, thepond was drained, and the banks builtup to artistic steepness. Large quan¬tities of muck from the bottom weredug up and piled neatly along thesides.At low water permanent inhabi¬tants of the pond proved to be merelya couple of turtles. The magnificentconcrete wall which divides the pondin two and provides the turtles withtheir favorite sunning station stoodforth in stark ugliness. Exposed, onewondered how senior and freshmanbacks escaped being broken. Therumors about fresh tons of stone be¬ing deposited in the bottom just be¬fore the end of the moustache raceproved to be false, but the boys didtheir best to supply the lack by push¬ing in quantities of earth.pnred even the optimists. It crowd¬ed Camegpe Hall four times, eventh:ngh rain wa» pouring steadily thesecond day. Mr. M. Murray Weis-n:an, president of the hall, wrote toW. ndell Shiells, distributor of thepicture, “In viev. of the myriad at-cmfvions offer.-d in New York it isno small feat to crowd an Audi¬torium seating approximately 3000persons with an attraction of this na¬ture.”Now the Oriental Institute isshowing the film to high schools of'Chicago and vicinity. Arrangementshave been made for about 1400 stu¬dents to see it during the month ofMay. After th? picture has beenrun, the pupils are divided intogroups and taken on a conductedtour of the Museum. That this pro¬gram is enth’.siastically received isshown in the words of one young fel¬low who said, “I wish we could studyhistory this way a’: the time.”YOU WILL BE OLDERTOMORROW — WILL YOUALSO BE RICHER?Bill Walling, Ph.B. ’33Paul Whitney, Ph.B. ’36Connecticut General LifeInsurance Company1 N. LaSalle St.Randolph 8440 TENNISMost complete stock is here. All leadingmakes of rackets, balls, clothing andaccessories.Many Items at Special Prices All ThisWeek.WOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE; 1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsDorchester 4800Western ElectricAUDIOMETERIt’s all around youIn this busy age, things made by Western Electric ap-pear on all sides. For in addition to its primary fimctionas manufacturer, purchaser and distributor for the BellTelephone System, Western Elcclric produces appara¬tus to meet almost every sound - transmission need.That is why Western Electric is called “the leaderin sound-transmission.” ffAPlMBf. at Ckinmftt. IB., gawy. IV. «imI HmMimam. Md.DAILY MAROON SPORTSSmith, Little,Thomson ShowGolf StrokesHips, Wrists, Most Im¬portant in Perfect Swing,Says Smith. Several FreshmenShow Promise inBaseball Practice Little Expects Colleges toProvide Future Golf StarsBy WILLIAM GRODY“If only I could make a shot likethat” was frequently uttered yester- jday at Stagg Field when Lawson Lit¬tle, Harry Cooper, and Jimmy Thom¬son displayed the ability that hasmade them famous in the golfworld. Approximately 250 peoplew'ere present to witness the exhibi¬tion.With Horton Smith explainingtheir actions with the aid of a loudspeaker, the three golfers pointedout the common mistakes which poorgolfers make and then proceeded todemonstrate the correct methods.“The two most important thingsin golf,” said Smith, “are properwrist motion and the correct use ofthe hips.” The proper grip, stance,and swing were also stressed in the40 minute performance.Demonstrate Dub ShotsA bit of humor was injected intothe show when Little, Cooper, andThomson assumed the roles of dubgolfers and proceeded to top the balland dig large holes in the ground.However, they quickly returned tochampionship form and made severalbeautiful shots.Lawson Little proved his reputa¬tion as one of the longest drivers inthe business when he drove two ofthe balls over the wall at UniversityAvenue. Thomson and Cooper didtheir best but could do no betterthan strike the concrete barrier.Horton Smith did not demonstrateany shots but gave an excellent ex¬planation of the proper golf tech¬nique as displayed by the other threegolfers. A similar procedure is usedin all the exhibitions.The performance yesterday wasbut one of several which the famousquartet has been giving in variousparts of the country in the past year.They are sponsored by A. G. Spauld¬ing and Company. Freshmen baseball players wind uptheir training Friday with CoachNorgren who has been working withthe squad for the past months inhopes of developing several playersof varsity ability. jWith the graduation of CaptainBob Shipway, there will be a holeleft in the team’s "roster of catch¬ers. One of the most outstandingfreshmen is Marty Levit, who atpresent is out of practice because ofa sore arm. Other catchers on thesquad are Howard Isaacson, ArtBlum, and Jim Bell.Bell has shown promise both as acatcher and as a pitcher, dividing histime between the two positions. Rob¬ert Burke and Sid Grossman haveexhibited great talent on the moundand should provide good materialnext year for Coach Kyle Anderson,Other pitchers showing promise areJoe Andalman and Jerry Abelson.The greatest trouble with the moundstaff is that they lack experience.In the infield Brinker and Mac-Lellan have held down first base.The rest of the promising infieldplayers are Sparky Caloyeratos, Den¬nis Cowan, Wm, Pfender, and JoePracht. Sparky has shown abilityboth in the field and at bat.Outfielders of the squad are Chap¬man, Femdt, Daniels, Schulman andBaron. The outfields as a unit areweaker than the infield, although sev¬eral of the fielders have possibilities.Play Final Roundin Table Tennis “The great golfers of tomorrow arethe college stars of today,” believesLawson Little, Jr., himself a formerstudent of Stanford and now one ofthe leading money ‘ players in thecountry. “The caliber of college starsis steadily improving and soon themajority of professionals will comefi-om the schools and universities ofthe country.”Thus Little is confident that moremen will follow in his footsteps. De¬spite the fact that he is still in hisearly twenties, the former collegianhas attained prominence through hisdouble victories in both the Americanand British amateur championshipsand through his rapid rise to the forein the professional world.Fisher Best GolferWhen asked who were the most ablegolfers in American universities to¬day, Little did not hesitate to praiseJohnny Fischer, his successor to theAmerican amateur crown. “Ofcourse,” he said, “Chuck Koscis ofMichigan still ranks with the best.”The former simon-pure champseemed eager to discuss the encour¬aging increase of interest in golf asshown by colleges. Since golf is theonly sport that can be of continual useto a student after graduation, itshould be a major sport. “Collegesare realizing more and more thattheir job Js to prepare the student forlife after graduation. Men can playgolf either for a livelihood or for ex¬ercise, so it should not be left out ofa university curriculum.”Driyes Long BallI To prove to the spectators at theI exhibition that his reputation of beingi a long driver was true. Little pro-I ceeded to drive two balls over theconcrete wall onto University Avenue, j Little,I And just to prove that he could also ' away.be humorous, he played the role of aperfect dub by topping a few shotsand unearthing large pieces of earthin the process.Of course. Little wasn’t the onlyprofessional at Stagg Field yesterday.Harry Cooper and Jimmy Thomsonwere also present to display many ex¬cellent shots, and although he didn’tswing a club, Horton Smith partici¬pated by explaining the actions ofthe other men.Demonstrate Correct MethodsThe exhibition, which has beengiven throughout the country duringthe past year, is sponsored by A. G,Spaulding and Sons, “Through it,”said Smith, “we hope to demonstratethe correct way of playing golf andhope to increase the public’s knowl¬edge of the game. Although the exhi¬bition can not take the place of pro¬fessional lessons, it can point out thedefects of one’s game.”W’hen questioned regarding the jmost common fault observed in the Iaverage golfer’s game. Smith felt jthat poor or average golfers some¬times make two bad mistakes. Eitherthey try to play without ever havingtaken a lesson or knowing how golfshould properly be played, or theybecome too methodical in executingtheir swing.During the entire exhibition Smith,who is incidentally the leading put¬ter amongst the professionals, alsostressed the fact that proper wristaction and hip movement were neces¬sary, In addition proper grip andstance are important.“Of course,” he concluded, “itlooks easy when we do it but youprobably won’t be able to imitateCooper and Thomson rightYou’ll have to practice first.” Captain Hi Lewis will return to thegolf team today to play againstNorthwestern University at Evanstonthis afternoon. His broken ankle hashealed sufficiently to permit him toplay at least 18 holes. Other membersof the team will include Jim Gold¬smith, Bill Webbe and Jack Gilbert.The golfers are still looking fortheir first victory, having suffered de¬feat at the hands of Notre Dame,Wisconsin and Purdue. This will alsobe the last opportunity for practicebefore the Conference meet is held.This year the Big Ten meet willtake place May 10-11 at Northwesternwith representatives from all theschools competing. Maroon Nine FacesIndiana This Week-EndMaroon baseballers will get theirchance to stop a conference-leadingteam Saturday and Monday whenthey meet the Indiana Hoosiers in thelast games of the season.Indiana has a full schedule thisweek-end playing Michigan today intheir fourth conference tilt, Wabashat Crawfordsville on Friday andChicago on Saturday, The Hoosiershave gone through their three-gameconference season without a loss.Chicago has shown consistent im¬provement as the season has prog¬ressed. Their recent game with Illi¬nois was lost by a one-run margin.If they can cut down on the numberof errors they should make a • goodshowing against Indiana.a LITTLE FENDRICHPhi Sig, Phi Psi,PhilBD, Advancein Softball LeagueSix fraternity teams remained inthe Intramural softball meet afteryesterday’s three games. The PhiSig “B” team joined their “A” teamin the semi-finals by nosing out PsiU, 7-6, in an eleven inning game. ThePhi Psi’s and Phi B D’s went to thequarter-finals with their victoriesyesterday, after having receivedbyes.The Phi Sigs scored five runs in thesecond inning to take a 5-2 lead overPsi U. The latter made two in thefifth and tied the score in the eighth.Both teams scored a run in the firstovertime frame, and the Phi Sigrs putover another in their half of theeleventh. Button of the losers tookbatting honors, although he failed toscore a run.Phi Beta Delta pounded out a 23-10 victory over Delta Upsilon, scor¬ing in every inning. The D U boyshad the slight compensation of know¬ing that they outhit their opponentseven if they didn’t out score them.Phi Kappa Psi also went to thesemi-finals, as a result of their 8-0whitewash of Kappa Sigma. The lat¬ter had but five hits to show for theirafternoon’s labor. P'inals in the Reynolds Club spring !table tennis tournament will be played !at 4:30 tomorrow. The finalists will [be Seymour Greenberg who defeated 1Mertz recently. Greenberg won the IIntramural meet two months ago and |will therefore be the favorite thistime. He will meet one of two dark jhorses, Finn and Anderson. IFinals in the consolation half of the jmeet will be run off at the same time, jEither Joffee or Huebsch will play IBartman for the consolation title. jTwo other tournaments have beenin progress at the Reynolds Club forsome time. A straight-rail billiardmeet is to be finished by April 29.Three semi-finalists, Orwin, Wilkinsand Stein, have been chosen. In theconsolation meet. Hart Weisdorf,Fried and one more will play for themedal.Chess players have been engaged ina heated tournament for about half ayear. One sage, Maslovitz, hasreached the finals where he will bejoined by either MacKnight or Kel¬logg.CAR OWNERS^‘SPRIG HAS CUB”Change to Summer ProductsNowSpring Inspection FreeCompleteCheck Chart Lubricationand WashingSTANDARD SERVICESTATION55th and Greenwood Are.Tel.—Midway 9092“We Take a Personal Interestin Your Car” FREE FREEA Generous Serving of Our New HomeMade Freezer Fresh Ice CreamFree With Every SandwichFRIDAY, MAY 14thfrom 12 to 1:30 P. M.The Maid-Rite Shop1320 E. 57th StJust Two Short Blocks East of Mandel Hall AND DON'T FORGET TO VOTE MY WAYI!Lucky Candidate to have LITTLE FENDRICHcampaigning for him and it’s a cinch that afterhe’s the new class president they’ll still casttheir votes anytime for LITTLE FENDRICHPANETELAS!! The favorite cigar among youngmen for years ...-LittleFENDRICHPANSUPER MILD E T E L A SIMPORTED LONG FILLERCLASSIFIED ADSLOST: A small, black, ladiesfountain pen containing black ink.Lost between Bookstore and CBench. Finder please return to Box5, Foster Hall.Warner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd St. DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdToday and Tomorrow‘SING ME A LOVE SONG’‘‘SEA DEVILS”Today, Fri., Sat.‘HEAD OVER HEELS INLOVE”‘‘BELOVED ENEMY”Sunday‘‘LOVE IS NEWS”‘PENROD AND SAM” Frolic TheaterSSth & ELLIS AVE.Today and Tomorrow‘‘BELOVED ENEMY”‘‘CRIMINAL LAWYER”Saturday‘‘HEAD OVER HEELS INLOVE”‘‘CASE OF THE BLACKCAT” There are but a limited number of tickets leftfor theMAROON BANQUETin Hutchinson CommonsWednesday, May 19, at 6:30President ROBERT MAYNARD HUTCHINSon‘THE UNIVERSITYBy Invitation OnlyTickets $1.00, tax includedObtainable at Information Office or Room 15, Lexington Hall»XkJ»f. • It is the custom ot U.Congressmen to make arly vi'it to their appointees at the U.S.lItar^• Academy to see how they areting work. Cadets arejjtccting their sponsors during last[Ith's period. IntenummalInternationalThis skeleton is just lOO million years oldr^Ki c<>lf>r Harvard museum of comparativeV^lllbCld zoology chips away at the granite encasing a fossil of anancient plesiosaur, a serj'ient which roamed the seven seas more thanlOO million years ago. Length of the reptile is more than 40 feet.._ -BCiX^Vr-'build£k£ ^ AfiAiNST H^RVMlKourp.XHORTING U.S. college and high schcxil students to^ fight tor |vace and to damn international conflict, anestimated 1,000,000 undergraduates two weeks ago paradedon 700 college and 200 high schtxil campuses in their fourthanniul “Peace Strike.” Generally jieaceful was the strikeon mast campuses, with only scattered rejxirts of violeiKe.Not unusual were the jeers and jokes of skeptical collegians,and at Vass.ir College they held a “strike” against the“pc.ice strike.”Reports from college campuses indicate that the OxfordOath not “to support the government of the United Statesinany war it may conduct” was somewhat more popularthan It was in previous years. Tied up withthe jvace strike were protests against dictator-ships and enemies of .icademic freedom, andresolutions for the outlawing of military training.cnfhusiaxm ’the demonstratorsevidenced in largei in all .sections of:iuntry and signsin great promi-everywhere. Hereitlui^i.istic C.C.N.udent shouts and■' .1 Mgn for peace.IntfriutK^ail Signs, speeches and inarches. . formed the greater part of thePeace Day program of these College ofthe City of New York students.In Chicago picl{ets marched 10 feet apart> s;itisfy a city ordinance. Here University of Chicago, Lewis Insti-nd Central YMCA College students, 300 strong, are parading one Street. Coihoiat* Oicm Photo by Edwards A hymn of peace... IS I'leing sung by the.se ColumbiaUniver.sity students, caught in thisinteresting photo. intorn.itioi..,iHouseworkdaily routine of many of the Texas Aggiestudents who are earning all or part oftheir way through school. Here they arcshown doing the weekly wadiing.First U. S. institution of higher learning to definitely abolishthe torture and absurdities of fraternity Hell Weeks is theUniversity of Minnesota, which this spring instituted a Fra-ternity Week with an educational program designed to provide“a conference of the constructive phas(K of fraternity life servingas a prc'initiation training for pledges.” Big'wigs of many na'tional fraternities and many colleges and universities were onhand to watch this experiment'-and to voice their approvalafter the final session. Here Collegiate Digest presents ex-elusive photc« of important phases of the conference.Good Manners was the topic of Mrs. Leora E, Cassidy,director of a Gopher women’s dormitory, when she addressed^the pledges on the dos and do^nots of social behavior.Important speakers and observers were (I to r) W. S. Barron, IowaState; Fred Turner, University of Illinois; Charles Dollard, University of Wis'consin; Alonzo Jones, University of Iowa; Carroll Geddes and Otis McCreery,University of Minnesota. Managing and finaiKingfraternity chapters isbeing discussed in this roumltable session presided ovei inCarroll Geddes, Sigma I’iiiEpsilon and financial adviserof student organizations itMinnesota.Featured at the pledge sm k-er during Fraternity Weekwere Judge P. S. Cunc'i,Phi Delta Theta; W. 'Elder, national secret.irvof Delta Kappa Epsilon; anJW. I. Jackson, national pie rdent of Phi Kappa Sigma.PiccuK*, Inc.Davies moods: enthusiastic, thoughtful during interviews"K/ILLIONAIRE Joseph Edward Davies, new U, S. amlmssador toSoviet Russia, mi^ht well consider the Red's ideal of equalopportunity for Russia s youth slow and roundabout; he is an ex¬ample of America's way. Forty-one years ago Mr. Davies came tothe University of Wisconsin penniless from his home in Watertown.Though he wtrked his way through school, he made Phi Beta Kappa.Today he has one of the largest private yachts on the ocean. To hisown large fortune has been added the enormous one ofhisseoMid wife,the General Foods heiress, whose charity provides 700 meals daily inNew York’s slums.Ambassador Davies received his law degree at Wisconsin in igoi.He practiced in Wisconsin 11 years, then went on to huge corporation fees in Washington. His post in Moscow is more than a rewardfor 25 years as a Democrat who served well and gave much. He hasbeen a counsel for five foreign governments. He knows diplomacy,but above all he know's well the industnal and agncultural problemsthe Soviets must face because he has intimately witnessed the capitalistic handling of similar problems. Aemt... to the sporadic career ofthe Veterans of Future WarsIS being written here by its officers,Thomas Riggs, Jr., and Robert Barnes, ofPrinceton, shown dictating the statementthat brcxight to an end the activities of60,000 members in 534 chartered posts.Hell Week Is BannedFrom Gopher CampusWhen Drake Univeraity fine** arts students broadcast ahalf-'hour program of Bizet’s opera. Car'men, on a coast'to^oast CBS networkthey received telegrams and lettersccMigratulations from thousands of U. S.listeners.RnQQ McHenry, master of cerc'JJUoo monies for the University erfWest Virginia Press Club ^w, giveslast'minute instructions to the cast beforetheir stage appearance.CotuoiATi Dwot Photo by YoumToday the sport of fenc¬ing puts much the samevalue on healthy nervesas did the deadly duelsof long agoIN Joanna de Tuscan’s ownwords: "A person whotwitched or didn’t have nervecontrol would never stand outin fencing. My No. 1 reason forchoosing Camels is—they neverjangle my nerves. I enjoy smok¬ing Camels as often as I please.It’s Camels for me always ’fordigestion’s sake’ and when Ifeel I need a lift. They’re sounusually mild and never makemy throat harsh or rough.”^JACK OAKIE7SCOLLEGE’’Jack Oakierans the’'coUese"!Catchrmusic by Benny Goodman and GeorgieStoll! Hollywood comedians! JudyGarland sings! So join Jack Oakic‘3College. Tuesdays —8:30 pm E.S.T.(9:30 pm E.D.S.T.), 7:30 pm CS.T..6:30 pm M.S.T., 5:30 pm P,S.T.,over WABC • Columbia Network.SCHOLARSHIP MAH. "Thetoughest part of studying issticking to it hour after hour,”says James Dean, ’38. "Tvelearned that smoking Camelshelps ease the nervous ten¬sion of study.”•i&y‘4HE BROKE the world’s indoor 440-yd.dash record twice in one day. RayEllinwood—sensational U. of Chicagoquarter-miler—prefers Camels. "I findthat Camels opened the door to smok¬ing pleasure,” he says. WRESTLING ACE, Joe Green, absorbsplenty of punishment. “A long traininggrind strains nerves,” says Joe. "I enjoyCamels often —they never jangle mynerves. When I’m tired after a bout, aCamel gives me a real ’lift’ in energy.”COSTUeKTOBACCOSA THROTTLE MAN of the 20thCentury Limited. Chas. J. Chasesays: "1 don’t take chanceswith my nerves. I smokeCamels—smoke ’em all I havea mind to. Camel’s mild flavorjust hits the spot!” Camals ar« mada fromfiner, MORE EXPENSIVETOBACCOS... Turkishand Domestic... thanany other popular brand.. M. CCwTriakt. in?, a. J. TobMea C*., WiMtoDTimbertoppersthese California and Michigan hurdlers take the firstbarrier in the iio^yard high hurdle event in their dualmeet. Osgood of Michigan (right) won in 14.9seconds. AcmeQueens rule all sorts of meetsrrcbciitdtiuiiTeachers College congratulates WillardLorette of Oklahoma A M for winninghis match in the national collegiate wres'tling meet.xxt^avCbraska’sfamed Sam Francisputs the shot 5: i ^feet to set a newworld's record for theevent. AcmeRoughestrough sports is lacrosse,and here's ample proof inthis photo of a Princetongame. WiJe vv,.rid Golf has a favored program spot nowr^lllKmPn prominence as anintercollegiate sport, more emphasis isbeing placed on it as a competitive sport on the campus.Here's Oberlin’s champion, Alfred Meese, warming up for atough schedule. 0)LLtGiArt Duim Photo hy W«k1[ wVolleyball is fast becoming a leading intramural sportGood Shot Hommil of the Phi Kappa Sigma team demonstrates excellent volleyballv-i21 match being played on the University of Alabama courts. Notice thekeen interest and attention of both players and spectators. CoLtEciATt oicm Photo by Gorm..nBaseball is still the real major sport of the spring seasonNovak of College of the City of New York bats out a high one in the first inning of the fastgame with the Columbia nine. Plossl is catching, with Maurice Shannon calling the plays.University of Miami'sINCtiilCil tennis team is shownwarming up during a practice session that is oneof many that keeps them in shape for a stren-UOUS traveling season. Pictures. Inc.PrPICf'lCP football is not aIdCtiUC springtime competitive sport.It looms large on the athletic program now be¬cause early grid training is essential. Here agroup of coaches are getting the lowdown at aPurdue coaches’ conference. i a.•fP" L 1 1 ^yi'*' JMShe's one of DePauVs student leaders■p y\\r>Y Margaret Wilson, senior in the eveningrnllpa<> nf rnmm4>rrp nf DpPaiil I Inivpr^college of commerce of DePaul Univer-sity, is one of the outstanding 1937 graduates of theChicago institution.Both the academic and the practicalin news photography were presentedto 140 students enrolled in the firstshort course in pictorial journalismconducted by a U. S. college or uni'versity. Sponsored and conducted bythe University of Oklahoma depart'ment of journalism under the direc'tion of that department's Prof. A.Clarence Smith, the short coursefeatured a program of lectures anddemonstrations by the nation’s lead'ing news photographers.CoLLtciATt Digut Photos by Harold Tacker What mal{es a good picture good... is being explained to this large group byHomer Frerking, one of the staff of experts on theshort course faculty.This class is learning the proper use of photographic lightsElizabeth Hogue, school of journalism senior, is posing for this active group of photo shortcourse students.A newspicture contest was held in coiijunction with the courseand newspicture experts Jess Gibson, William Vandivert and Jack Price are shown ad'miring a first'prize picture submitted by J. B. Gasquet of the Shreveport (La.) Times. Contestants did a lot of cutting up^ too!* general view of the broadcasting stivjrUliClo which an anxious public learned of recentvelopments in the great chin golf (count the strokes it takes you to sh;contest staged for collegians by an eastern radio station. Students andnouncers raised considerable ofreport. a lather as they broadcast a stroke'by'StInteiiutK/nvention fteThe fastest astronomical camera everbuilt, with an f/ i focal ratio, is now nearingcompletion at ^own University for use inphotographing this year's total eclipse of thesun. Those working on the camera are(I to r) Prof. C. A. Smiley, H. A, MacKnightand F. W. Hoffman. KeyitooeThat an artist and hisrated is proven by thiphotos of John Steuart Curry, ;the University of Wisconsin anccivc such an appointment tofaculty. CkHXMlAT* DkmtPhoKM byA. M. VinieFirstRustic college recreation centerKi This picturesque log cabin has been given to Hender'‘ son State Teachers College (Arkadelphia, Ark.)students as a recreation center by Mrs. J. P. Womack, wife of theprc.sijent of the college. Coluciati Dwht Photo by SellerThey've done all their schoolworJ^ together^^tirtnerS kindergarten to college graduation, thesesix students of Tennessee Polytechnic Institute' ^ ' gone to school together. Four of. the six are honor students,‘*‘*i til arc campus leaders. Exclusive CoLLECLATt Dicnr Photo SAY JUDGE, THIS NOT NECESSARIL'j'\hALRUS-TUSK PIPES MAROASROCIC.THOSE ESICIMOSMUST UKE TOUGH SON. THeV USEDVjALRUS-TUSKBECAUSE ITMAICKA COOL- SMOKING THEN I CERTAINLYWISH THIS RPEOF mine wereMADE OFWALRUS-TUSK' SOMETHING TELLSME YOOVE neverSMOKED PRINCEALBERT IN THATBRIAR, SON.MgRE-^PRINCE ALBERT IS SPEOALLV TREATED FOROOOL SMOKING. THANKS TO THE 'CRIMP CUTIT RACKS AND DRAWS RiSHT — BURNSEVENLY AND SLOWLY AND THE 'no-BITEPROCESS REMOVESALL THE HARSHNESS.NATURALLY YXIGETAMILD, SAVORY SMOKE JUDGE, PRINCE ALBERTIS ALL YOU SAY -AND THEN SOME!^pipefuls of fragrant, tobacco inevery 2>oz. tin of Prince AlbertOoMrrtClit. 1M7. B. t. aayBoMi Tobacco OeoeanrPRINCE ^ERT MONEY-BACK GUARANTEESmoke 20 fragrant pipeful* ofPrince Albert. If you don't findit the mellowest, tastiest pipetobacco you ever smoked, re¬turn tke pocket tin witk therest of tbe tobacco in it to us atany time within a month fromthis date, and we will refundfull purchase price, plus post¬age. (Signed) R. J. ReynoldsTobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.kiKCE Albert THE NATIONALJOY SMOKE8very improvement offered by (icncrjMotors cars represents an investment runnininto millions of dollars. Hut this pioncerinprogram is possible because (Jeneral Motoisells millions of cars. You get the benctiiin terms of such extra values as the 1 urrtTop, the Unisteel Hody, Knee-Action, NDraft Ventilation, and improved llydrauliBrakes, at prices within the reach of allProfessor Turret Top is touf^hyThe way he marks exams is roughyYet Dora Dumby with reason firmyExpects to pass his course this term!■ sidc'shov;Champion '"'hi 'omacronbarking co«e»t j^.r MKappa-spon*®'-, oHara,U'-!!fLraftelsherS';fc£lrmanof uatft Mi'k(nght) is shov\n takoath of office lunimpressive cereau)iwhich he was ii.Jupresident of t\,i 1sity of South (la-olCoUtGIATt Dkut Pk hvThey're dismissed from classes when the fire whistle blowsT^l'rpfl O’Kfprc; Stellar Dartmouth College athletes, under the leadership of Football Captain-fi CllgllLCi o sweater), have been made members of the undergraduate liredepartment and assist Hanover firefighters in all emergencies. The undergraduate squad has a traditionof more than a century behind it and there is still preserved by the college the firebucket used by DanielWebster. Coli.kjiate Dicm Photo by Brown General MotorsPublic-Minded InstitutionCHEVROI.ET . PONTIAC . OI.OSMOBII.E . BCICK • IJ» SAI.I.f. • '