Price Three CentsgP()c Bafly iitotionVol. 39, No. 101. Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939Iron Mask Chooses16 New MembersDekes, Alpha Belts TieWith Three Men Apiecein Junior Honor Society.Iron Mask yesterday officially an¬nounced the election of 16 juniors-to-be to fill the ranks of the JuniorMen’s Honorary Society. Of the six¬teen men, three were selected fromI>elta Kappa Epsilon, three are Al¬pha Delts, two Psi Us and two PhiDelts had their names on the roster,ami one man was chosen from DeltaUpsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Lambdarhi, ZBT, and Phi Sigma Delta. Oneindei)ondent student was elected tothe society.Deke Dale Tillery, who is publisherof the Courtier, dorm’ publication,ami who worked on Blackfriars,joined DKE brothers Don Wilson andLarry Traeger, both football men, asmembers. Wilson is also a memberof the Dramatic Association Board.The Alpha Delts named were AshTaylor, Social Committee member andDA artist. Bob Howard, grid star,ami Chuck Percy also in DA and awater poloist.Additional MembersPsi U’s named were Johnny Stev¬ens, Maroon sports editor and tennisman, and Baird Wallis, another grid-der and member of the Student Pub¬licity Board. The two Phi Delts wereJohn Bex, Blackfriars man, trackand football athlete, and John Doo¬little, member of DA and StudentPublicity Board.Others named were Bud Aronson,ZBT Settlement Board secretary andcheer leader; Milt Weiss, Phi Sigtransfer student from Notre Dame,and football ace; Bill Hochman, PiLam Blackfriars star; Evon Vogt,member of Chapel Union’s executivecommittee and Delta Upsilon, DaveWiedemann, Phi Psi football letter-man and retiring president of Skulland Crescent; and Bob Boyer, thelone unaffiliated student, a member ofChapel Union executive committeeand of the Peace Council.The men were selected to theirhonorary posts Tuesday night. Re¬tiring president of the organizationis AD Phi Bud Linden.Limit AudienceFor WoollcottDiscussionsW’ith seating capacity limited, stu¬dents who care to attend the threediscussions by Alexander Woollcott,noted writer and raconteur, in theSocial Science assembly room, are tosign up for the lectures with eitherDean Jerome G. Kerwin or Dean(darence H. Faust.Woollcott, formerly dramatic criticfor several New York newspapers,and author of a number of books onthe theatre, will present the studentlectures on successive Thursdays,May 4, 11, and 18 at 4:30.Attendance will be limited to the:‘apacity of the room, approximately170 persons.Tickets for Woollcott’s lecture se¬ries w'hieh begins Wednesday, areavailable at the Information Officetoday. Tickets are without charge,and are available to everyone.Krogh,Nobel Winner^ectures TuesdayAugust Krogh, Nobel prizewinnern Physiology and Medicine in 1920,irrives at the University Tuesday toleliver two lectures. Tuesday, hevill discuss “The Effects of Posturen Circulation,’’ and Wednesday, “The)smotic Regulation in Certain FreshVater Animals.’’ The lectures arecheduled for 8 in the evening in Pa-hology 117. They are open to the•ublic, without charge and withoutieket.Krogh is head of the departmentf Zoophysiology at the Universityf Copenhagen, where he has been arofessor since 1916. His books in-lude “Anatomy and the Physiologyf Capillaries.”... .. Randall PraisesFirst PerformanceOf DA Workshop“The Workshop is just what theDramatic Association needed,” Wil¬liam Randall, director of DA, saidyesterday, after the first public per¬formance of the Workshop’s pre¬miere production, Ibsen’s “Ghosts,”which played to a sell-out crowd Wed¬nesday night.Broadens FacilitiesWhen he agreed to become head ofDA, Randall stated, he announcedthat he meant to broaden the facili¬ties of DA so that more studentscould participate. He feels that it isnot the business of the Associationto train students to act, but rather tolet anyone interested in doing so takepart in a production. “The primarypurpose of the Association, after all,”Randall declared, “is to provide funand experience for the greatest pos¬sible number of students.”Form WorkshopThus the Workshop was formed,and its first effort was so successfulthat plans have been made to enlargeits activities for next year.Instead of five DA productions, ashas been the case in the past, DAwill probably do only an openingplay. Mirror, and a Spring revival. Toreplace the Newcomers’ Bill and aWinter production will be Workshopplays, one about every three weeks,Randall hopes.Since the Workshop only charges20 cents admission, and holds its pro¬ductions in the Reynolds Club Thea¬tre which has a capacity of only 120people, the Workshop is somewhatlimited in its choice of plays, due tothe heavy royalties charged for pop¬ular modern dramas.Next YearHowever, Randall said, next yearthe Workshop will be able to do moreIbsen and some Shakespeare, whichhave no assessments for royalties,and he hopes it will try some foreignplays.For the rest of this year, the Work¬shop has scheduled Moliere’s “TheDoctor in Spite of Himself,” and amodern play, which may be “The Sil¬ver Cord.”Workshop RepeatsPerformance of‘‘Ghosis^^ TuesdayForced to turn away 100 peoplefrom their box-office Wednesdaynight, the DA Workshop has decidedto repeat their performance of Ib¬sen’s “Ghosts” Tuesday evening inthe Reynolds Club Theatre. Admis¬sion will again be twenty cents withtickets available today and next weekin Mandel hall corridor.Last night’s show, the initial pro¬duction of the Workshop, was en¬thusiastically received by the over¬flow audience. A DA tradition of notgiving curtain calls in the ReynoldsClub theatre was broken when theaudience became insistent with theirapplause.Financial Success“Ghosts” was not only a successfrom the dramatic angle, but froma financial one as well. This perform¬ance made more money than anyother single DA production thisyear, including Mirror.Important to those interested incampus drama is the fact that allwork on “Ghosts,” from direction tolighting and scene construction, wasdone by students. The set was thework of Bud Linden, new DA head.Linden was assisted by members ofthe Workshop group in production.Betty Ann Evans’ costume wasdesigned and made by Harriet Paine.Charles Hahn was responsible forspecial lighting effects.Production ExpensesThe production expenses hit a newlow; that of nine dollars. The aver¬age for most productions is betweenforty and fifty dollars.. This loweringof production costs will enable furth¬er productions to expand. Best DressedContest Endsat MidnightDave Wiedemann still held thelead in the best dressed man on cam¬pus contest late last night with PhiDelt Ed Bates, not independent EdBates, Pi Lam Speedy Stern, Psi URoger Flaherty, and Alpha Delt BudLinden pressing on his heels in lastminute efforts to win the contestsponsored by the Erie Clothing Com¬pany and the $50 prize that goeswith the title.With claims of ballot stuffing be¬ing tossed at some of the contestants,the Maroon has named a committeeof student bigwigs to judge the re¬sults, and to award also the $50 prizethat will be w’on by the keenestconoisseur of campus style. Choosingthe best essay of 25 words or lesswill be Maroon Board ChairmanLaura Bergquist, Len Schermer,Pulse Business manager, and Capand Gown Editor Phil Schnering.Deadline for balloting will be to¬night at midnight. Students who havenot voted niay cast their ballots byCobb Hall, or the Maroon office. Theycan also mail their ballots into theDaily Maroon office provided thatthey are postmarked before midnighttonight.The contest has been running forthe past few weeks with interest lag¬ging until last week when the votesstarted rolling in. Candidates whoare in the lead insist that the con¬test will be bigger and better thanthe renowned Cap and Gown beautycontest. Essay writers claim that theessays (25 words or less) will be bet¬ter than the essays in the DavidBlair McLaughlin contest (1500 to3000 w’ords.)And all candidates have been goingaround for the last few days of thecontest, looking like a Darryl Zan-uck version of what Joe College athis best should look like.Stunts—Booths‘Games of Skill’at Fandango“Games of skill”, but not gam¬bling concessions, have finally beenapproved by the Dean’s office as le¬gitimate sport for the senior’s annualspring “Fandango” scheduled fornext Friday night.The entire gym of Ida Noyes Hallis slated to be turned over to carni¬val stunts, booths, games and re¬freshment stand. Hart Perry hasagreed to be chairman of the Con¬cessions and Games Committee. Fi¬nancing and erection of booths willeither be taken over by local businessmen as an advertising medium orwill be sponsored by fraternities.Cloister ClubIn addition to the carnival, thereis to be dancing to the music of theColonial Club orchestra in the Clois¬ter Club. Lew Hamity, stalwart ofthe Maroon football team, has ven¬tured into the field of floorshow pro¬moting for the party. Chuck Comp¬ton, long-legged wonder-bump-dancerof the current Blackfriar’s show, willdo an Ina Ray Hutton act and AshTaylor has also been recently addedto the 7-act show as an impersonator.Although sponsored by the seniorclass as a means of raising moneyfor a freshman scholarship, the “Fan¬dango” is to be an all-campus party.Tickets are now being promoted at$1.10 by campus organizations.Speech, Dance LivenInt. House WeekendInternational House resident s’weekend will be livened by a RadioDance Saturday night, and their in¬tellects will be stimulated Sundaynight when Rabbi Louis L. Mann willspeak on “Civilization at the Cross¬roads” at a 6:00 supper.The radio dance from 9 to 11 willbe open to all House residents, andtheir guests will be admitted fur 15cents. Tennis Team BlanksMichigan to OpenConference SeasonBill MurphyWins 6-1, 6-0Land DeterminesAmerican EconomicT hought---CohenAn unlimited supply of land till theend of the 19th century has been adetermining factor of American eco¬nomic thought, Morris Cohen, profes¬sor of Philosophy, said yesterday.Continuing his series of lectures on“Developments in American Thought,”he emphasized three movements inthis country’s economic theory sincethe seventeenth century.Colonial AmericaThough at first colonial Americahad much the same economic ideasas those of England, Cohen said, arecurring note of dissatisfaction withmercantilism was evident very early.Significantly, both the Declaration ofIndependence and Adam Smith’s“Wealth of Nations” appeared in thesame year. Both appealed to thecourt of reason and the law of na¬ture. Thus economic liberalism began,opposing restrictions on business.But in America, Cohen thinks, pes¬simism underlay the apparently op¬timistic idea of limiting governmentinterference. Strictly checking gov¬ernmental power, it seemed to involvethe view that “corruption of humannature is manifested in government;”and shows “profound distrust ofhuman nature, especially in politicalfields.”American RevoltIn the 19th century the Americanrevolt against later classical econom¬ics began outside academic circles.Then, growing out of German theory,the academic revolt insisted on therelatively pre-estabished harmony ofeconomic life and theory; called theclassical method of deduction unscien¬tific and advocated instead an “evo¬lutionary” historical study of eco¬nomics; and attacked individualism.The third movement Cohen men¬tioned was that for efficiency. De¬veloped in a short-sighted manner, he;jaid, this can become applied physiol¬ogy merely adapting human organ¬isms to machines.Knappen to TeachAt Michigan StateMarshall M. Knappen, assistantprofessor of History, will leave theUniversity at the end of summerquarter to take up his new positionas professor of History and head ofthe department of History and Po¬litical Science at Michigan State Col¬lege in Lansing, Michigan. As yetno one has been appointed to fill thegap which Knappen’s departure willleave in the History faculty.Knappen joined the University fac¬ulty in 1927 when the predecessor ofthe Humanities survey was intro¬duced under the title of “History ofCivilization.” Murphy Twins LeadSquad to 9-0 Win; MeetWisconsin Tomorrow.By WALLY ANGRISTPlaying yesterday under adverseconditions that included both rain andwind, the Maroon tennis squad de¬feated Michigan 9-0 to start theirfourth season of consecutve dual vic¬tories. Honors for outstanding playof the day go to Bill Murphy for hisdecisive play against the Michigancaptain and to sophomore JohnnyTobin who thrilled the spectatorswith his amazing saves of Chet Mur¬phy’s net smashes.The Maroonmen play their secondmatch against Wisconsin on the var¬sity courts at 2:00 tomorrow. Allpre-match dope gives Chicago a bigedge over the Cardinal courtmen. Bigmatch of next week will be the tus¬sle Wednesday with Notre Dame.Best showing of the defeated Mich¬igan squad was staged on the num¬ber one court where Tobin, a sopho¬more from Detroit, gave Chet Mur¬phy some nice competition before hebowed to the Murph’s superior netplay, 6-2, 6-4. Biggest asset of thisnewcomer to the Big Ten courts ishis ability to handle what appear tobe impossible shots, backed up by asteady forehand game and back handstrength to serve in the pinches. To¬bin is a boy to watch next year.Co-Captain vs. CaptainCaptain Don Percival took to thesecond court at 2:20. After facingBill Murphy for only 30 minutes hewalked off, the most decisively beatenman on the squad. Bill, who didn’tgive his opponent a chance, droppedthe shuffle and held a winning streakof 11 games before letting up. Justtoo good for the Wolverine netmen,Bill won the match 6-1, 6-0.The match that received the mosttrouble from the steady drizzle wasthe tilt between Charlie Shostrom andMichigan’s John Kidwell. Shostromhad the first set in the bag and wasdeuced at 3-3 in the second framewhen the precipitation developed in¬to a heavy downpour. In the Field-(Continued on page 3)Friars EnterLast WeekendOf ProductionWith most of their difficultiesironed out after consultation betweenthe directors and the technical crew,the Blackfriars show “Love Over theLine” enters upon its last weekendof pi’oduction with performancesscheduled for Friday and Saturdayevenings and Saturday afternoon.Show DirectorsThe excellent entertainment quali¬ties of the show arouse no wonder¬ment in one’s mind when a consider¬ation of the professional talent di¬recting the show is brought to light.This year’s producer, Gerhart Schildthough a food chemist by avocation,is considered in theatrical circles asone of the best musical comedy di¬rectors available in the midwest.Schild, a student of Max Reinhardt’sSchool of Drama formerly situated inSalzburg, Austria, emigrated to theStates in 1933. During his years inChicago, he has been stage managerfor Max Reinhardt’s Chicago stageproduction of “Mid-Summer Night’sDream.” He has produced a numberof short plays in the InternationalHouse Amateur resident series, andalso in other varied Chicago dramat¬ical groups.Dance DirectorJose Castro, the dance director,was formerly employed by WarnerBrothers Studio in Hollywood astheir authority on the rumba, tangoand other phases of Mexican danc¬ing, He is associated at present withthe Abbott School of Dancing. Untilone month ago, he appeared as oneof the featured dancing entertainersat the Empire Room of the PalmerHouse.1Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939^aromtFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBEK ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTb« Daily Maroon is tl>e official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicaso,publish^ morainKS except Saturday, Sun<day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to ourprinters. The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went¬worth 6123.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered Into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialapitearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates; $3 a year: $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago.llHnois, under the act of March 8, 1879.RseRisKN-rsD roa hatiohrl AovaaTisiNa arNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison AvE. NewYork, N. Y.CHICASO • BOSTOS • LO* ASCSLIt • SAB FBABCISCOBOARD OF CONTROLEDWIN BERGMANLAURA BERGQUIST, ChairmanMAXINE BIESENTHALMAX FREEMANADELE BOSEEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRuth Brody. Harry Cornelius. WilliamGrody. Ernest Leiser. David Martin, AliceMeyer. Robert Sedlak. Charles O'DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Caple, Richard Glasser, RolandRichman, David Salxberg.Harry ToppingNight Editor: Ruth BrodyAssistant: Richard HinunelPre-OrientationTalk-After every freshman weekthere are always some studentswho gather together and mut¬ter that next year somethingmust be done to make everyonehave a good time. Dances proveto be no success at mixing, din¬ners start out with hopeful plansand end up by being as unin¬formative about college life asall dinners in the past havebeen. And every year someonebrings up the fact that in spiteof good intentions, freshmanweek somehow takes on the as¬pects of advance rushing week.Hopefuls point to the fact thatevery year, however, there arefewer old-type mixers and moreevents that even the most shyand least breath-taking can en¬joy. This year especially, rumorsissuing from the second floor ofCobb point to a far more sensi¬ble freshman week program forthe fortunate class of 1944.Our own suggestions arethese: There should be lessstress on orientation duringfreshman week and more duringthe freshman year. Incomingstudents have enough to do withjust getting used to the campusand meeting a few people. In¬troductions to people, to activi¬ties, to curricula are rushed atthem so fast that they remem¬ber not more than a smatteringof each. When, a little later in !the year, they know just enoughto consider sensibly what thebest course of action might be,they find their counsellors eitherunobtainable or uninterested. Alighter program during fresh¬man week, coupled with counsel¬lor-freshman activities spreadthroughout the year, would pro¬vide both better orientation anda more pleasant time.If orientation became a seri¬ous year-round activity, most ofthe counsellors who take chargeof freshmen as a part of theirrushing activities would lose in¬terest. This would do as muchto bring relief to the rushingproblem as anything ever will,and would at the same time liftup both the prestige value oforientation activities and thequality of counsellors.Counsellors, especially thecounsellors for freshman girls,have usually been apt enough attheir task and conscientiousenough to cause little worry asto the fate of orientation. Thetentative program plans for nextyear are excellent. A great inumber of the freshmen haveno need for orientation anyway;—they need a map of the cam¬pus and a rule book and areperfectly self-sufficient there¬after.Those students who really need a counsellor need one fora long time. A spread in the al¬location of orientation activitieswill be the best method of cor¬recting orientation’s chief fault. Independents FailTo Place Member inSkull and CrescentToday on theQuadranglesFRIDAYTuition Committee meeting, S.S.106, 12:30.Settlement League Book Review,Ida Noyes Library, 10.Blackfriars’ “Love Over the Line,"Mandel Hall, 8:30.Ida Noyes Council meeting, IdaNoyes Alumnae room, 12.University Baseball game, Chicagovs. Indians, Greenwood Field, 3:45.Negro Student Club meeting anddance, Ida Noyes Social RecreationRoom, 8.Christian Youth League luncheon,Hutchinson Commons, 12.JSF Fireside meeting and tea, IdaNoyes Library, 8.Consumers’ Cooperative dinner.Cloister Club, 6.Pi Lambda Phi party, Ida Noyesgym, 8.Gli Scapigliati, “Cosi e Se Vi Par-ee" and “L’Avarizia di Pantalone,’’Reynolds Club theatre, 8:30.Chicago Lutheran Club party, IdaNoyes YWCA room, 7:30.Spring Shuffle, Ida Noyes theatre,9.Quadrangler meeting, Ida NoyesRoom A, 12:45.Hispanic Group tea, Ida Noyes Li¬brary, 3:30.Public Lecture — Arthur F. Scotton “Colonial Problems in Contempo¬rary World. Hitler’s Colonial Ambi¬tions," Art Institute, 6:45.SATURDAYDames Club dance, Ida Noyes thea¬tre, 8.Blackfriars’ “Love Over the Line,”Mandel Hall, 2:30 and 8:30.University Tennis meet, Chicagovs. Indiana, Varsity Courts, 2.University Baseball game, Chicagovs. Indiana, Greenwood Field, 3.SUNDAYAlumnae Group recital and tea, IdaNoyes YWCA room, 3.ASU May Day Breakfast, Mabry’sRestaurant, 11:30.Collegium Musicum Bach concert,Joseph Bond Chapel, 8:15. Cantata105 — Herr, gehenicht ins Gericht,Cantata 78 — Jesu, der meine Seele,Letters to the EditorBoard of Control,The Daily Maroon:I am a member of the Associationof Medical Students but was not tohave participated and did not takepart in the debate on the questionof socialized medicine before the Po¬litical Union last Wednesday (as wasannounced in the Maroon). I hadbeen asked by the Political Union togive a short talk on the Health Pro¬gram suggested by the National Skull and Crescent, honorary so¬ciety for sophomore men, is this yeara victim of fraternity politics. Ac¬cording to Dale Tillery, vice-presidentof the society, no independents willbe taken in this year. By voting toexclude independents, the society hasnecessarily ignored such men as AlDreyfuss, president of the freshmanclass, and Ira Glick and Mel New¬man, prominent members of the Pulsestaff. However, the newly electedmembers can include these men sincethe reservation was made that in¬coming members can elect indepen¬dents from their class if they so wish.Last year at least three indepen¬dents were elected. Joe Stamph, LeeHewitt and Alan Teague were inde¬pendents who later joined fraterni¬ties.Feature Bach atCollegium ConcertTwo Bach cantatas comprise theprogram for the fourth public con¬cert of the Collegium Musicum inJoseph Bond Chapel Sunday at 8:15.Directed by Siegmund Levarie, con¬ductor of the University Orchestra,the Collegium orchestra and chorusare presenting Number 78 “Jesu, derdu meine Seele” and Number 105“Herr, gehe nicht ins Gericht.” Ad¬mission to the concert is free.Both cantatas are built over thesame chorale tune. While Number78 in very popular. Number 105 isvery rarely performed.Soloists are the soprano, HenriettaChase; alto, Alice Mary Baenziger;tenor, Julian Miller; and bass, PaulHume. Ruth Archipley is at the or¬gan.Farm Aid SubjectFor Roundtable“Have We Helped the Farmer?”is the questio.T set for the Round Ta¬ble broadcast Sunday morning at11:30 over station WMAQ. WilliamSpencer, dean of the School of Busi¬ness; Edward Buddy, professor ofMarketing; and Edwin Nourse, direc¬tor of the Institute of Economics atBrookings Institution in Washington,D. C., will consider the problem.Suggested readings for this topicare: “Three Years of AgriculturalAdjustment Administration" by E.Nourse, J. Davis, and J. Black; “TheMounting Cost of Doing Somethingfor the Farmer"; in Business Weekfor February 4; “Mr. Wallace InchesAlong" in the New Republic for Feb¬ruary 1; and “The Present Farm Pro¬gram" by Henry Wallace in The Com¬monweal, July 1, 1938.Health Conference held last year atWashington D. C. The report wasnot given due to its having no bear-ing on the question being debatedbefore the group. Paul Gray.THEGRAPES of WRATHby JOHN STEINBECK$2.75THE NOVELS ofJOHN STEINBECKA First Studyby Harry Thornton Moore$1.50U of C BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE Entertain Men atComad LuncheonPeter Mancina and Leo Chiodiniwill help the members of the Comadclub, an organization of women inthe Business school, entertain themasculine members of the school ata luncheon in the Commons room onWednesday by preparing spaghettiby a special method of their own.EVERYTHINGFOR THE PIPE SMOKERM. Shorris and Co.TOBACCO MANUFACTURERS1005 EAST 55th STREETW« Cur*. Cut and BlnndOur Own TobaccosGrand Opening ofSweeCsStore for Men1541 E. 53rd STREET—Featuring—A COMPLETE LINE OFNATIONALLY KNOWN BRANDS A PERSONAL TYPINGSERVICELower contrsct prices — Corrections, ofcourse. Work celled for end deliveredMester of Arte—19 jresre’ experience withThcece end Mennscripts.CALL DON AT ATL. 5137TODAYIs TheLASTDATTo Cast Your Votefor the"BESTDRESSEDMAN"★ ★ERIE'S $350.00PRIZE CONTESTSMARTSTYUSHSPRING &SUMMERHaberdasheryPRICED TO FITTHE COLLEGE BUDGET ENDS AT MIDNIGHTCAST YOUR BAUOT INDAILY MAROONCONTEST BOXESe^e 1^^ ■■■k YOUR ENTRIESOfllM Vf MAROON OFFICEMAIL YOUR VOTE TOTHE DAILY MAROONOFFICE TODAYHIKE and BIKESAIL and SWIMgay at low cost inGERnUUlY^ You'll be surprised at how little ittakes to get around in Garnnany! Gothis summer. Meat and rub elbowswith the happy, informal groups ofnature loving fellow-students in eagerquest of ever glamorous scenic beauty.Knowledge fills you as you hike, bikeor feltboat to the great enduring land¬marks of Germany's age-old art andculture.Visit historic cities: — heraldedHeidelberg, glamorous Berlin, Wag¬ner’s Bayreuth, sublime Beethoven'sBonn, great Goethe's Frankfurt-on-Main, the lovely Rhine-kissed Ko'olenz,melodious mirthful Vienna hallowed bythe immortal spirits of Mozart, Straussand sweat, lyrical Schubert.At night, after zealous eventful days,relax in the truly inexpensive, restfulquarters awaiting you at modest-pricedhotels, or at one of the 2,000 intelli¬gently planned Youth Hostels. Heretravel-loving groups win and welcomeyou into the composite charm of folksongs, country dances, tales fromlegend lore and sincere, simple friend¬liness. THIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCETO SEND IN YOUR ENTRY,REMEMBER. YOU CAN WINONLY BY TELLING US. IN 25WORDS OR LESS, WHY YOUHAVE MADE YOUR SELECTION.ERIECLOTHING CO.837 E. 63rd St.Reductions in Roil Fares“Travel Marks" save about 40%Consult your Travet Agenf and writ* forbooklet "C”GERMAN RAILROADSINFORMATION OFFICE331 N. MICHIGAN AVE. CHICAGO HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 E. 55th St.COME DOWN AND SINGIfyou can’t find “College Spirit”on the Campus you will findit all at “Mike’s.”DROP DOWNbefore, after, during anythingon campus (in fact anytime)and you’ll find a congenial at¬mosphere.We welcome all Universitystudents, but we only servethose of age.HANLEY’SOver forty years ofcongenial service>THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939 Page ThreeMaroons BlankMichigan, 9-0(Continued from page 1)house Kidwell forged ahead to takethe set. Shostrom rallied with fore¬hand and steady service to take thematch, 6-3, 5-7, 6-1.On the number four clays JohnKreitenstein finished off his man inshort order. Steady play broughthim an easy 6-1, 6-3 victory. BigArt Jorgenson improved his state ofhealth enough to down Eddie Morriswith a 6-1, 6-3 tally. Atkins’ matchwent to three sets before he came upwith a win. Score: 6-1, 3-6, 6-1.The doubles matches registered nosale for the Michigan tandems withthe Murphs pairing up to win 6-2,6-2, Shostrom and Jorgenson turningin a 6-2, 6-1 score, and Atkins andKreitenstein smashing out a 6-1, 6-1victory.Tennis RacketsS1.65 to $17.50Balls, Presses, and all accessoriesShorts. Sox. Shirts. Shoes, etc.Most complete stockWOODWORTH'S1311 E, 57th St OPEN EVES.Near Kimbark Ave. DORchester 4800HYDE PARK 3794FAVORITELAUNDRYLAUNDERERS OF FINE LINENSYou Con Sedely Intrust YourBest Garments To UsAll Services1308 E. 53rd StreetLOVELY GIFT/or aLOVING MOTHERMOJUDSILK STOCKINGS• Watch the happysparkle in her eyes as sheopens her gift box of thesebeautiful silk stockings.Ja^ud,$1 pr. fWIwMSlVltWWGlTHEHazel HoffSHOP1371 E. 55th ST.HYDE PARK 8180 Maroon Nine TriesFor Conference WinPlay Indiana at Green¬wood Field in FirstHome Big Ten Game,In view of several hard drill ses¬sions during the past week, the base¬ball team’s chances of winning atleast one of their weekend gameswith Indiana are greatly enhanced.The results of Wednesday’s gamewith Wilson Junior College, a teamwhich walloped the Maroons 13-5, arenot particularly important, becausemany of the Chicago regulars wereeither on the bench or completelyabsent.Perhaps the best basis of judgmentis Tuesday’s Notre Dame contest,which went to twelve innings beforethe Irish were able to pull away fromthe tenacious Midwaymen. Chicagoouthit the boys from South Bend 14-11, but was unable to bunch its hits,and consequently lost several goldenscoring opportunities.Indiafla has been on the victorywagon ever since the beginning ofthe season, and has yet to taste de¬feat; the Hoosiers were conferenceco-champs, and they have almost thesame outfit again this year; so a winin one or both of the weekend gameswould be a real feather in the Ma¬roons’ cap.Sparky BackSparky Calogeratos, the reliablelittle second sacker for the Chicagoteam, is back in the lineup after athree weeks’ layoff because of a se¬verely wrenched shoulder; it is ex¬pected that his return will bolster theteam’s power at the plate, and, atthe same time, will strengthen theinfield considerably.Coach Kyle Anderson plans to startSophomore Art Lopatka in Friday’sgame; Art has been somewhat er¬ratic in his two pitching assignmentsduring the past week, but some ofhis unsteadiness can be attributed tolack of experience. What meagerGolf Tee OffAgainst MarquetteThe Maroon golf team will openthe season against Marquette atOlympia Fields today and though thetwo squads have never met before, ifthe Hilltop boys are as good as otherteams from the Milwaukee school,“Chicago will have to work hard tobeat them,’’ in the words of JimmyGoldsmith, Midway number two man.The team will have six places on itand since there are seven men on thesquad Jim Nash, a transfer fromWisconsin, and James Lytle will com¬pete tomorrow for the number sixspot. Alfred Folsom a senior, butplaying collegiate golf for the firsttime, will fill the fifth spot.Harry Topping will continue in thefirst position and his game is still asoutstanding as it was last year. Hehas been going around the course inthe low 70’s and should win his matchtomorrow with ease. Bob Sampsonis number three man and WilliamWelter has the fourth spot on theteam. All the players except Fol¬som, Nash and Lytle have had Con¬ference experience.ERIE GIVES YOUChicago'sPrize Collection ofARROW SHIRTSTRIE’S might is in Arrow“White! Tests prove Ar¬row collars are good for twoyears of wear! Arrow haseverything — and Erie hasArrow!BUDGET ACCOUNTS INVITED 'Erie CLOTHINGCOMPANY837 EAST 63rd STREET advance dope there is on the Hoosierswould indicate that Dale Gentil willbe in the box for Indiana in the firstgame.Veteran moundsman Bob Reynoldswill represent Chicago in the secondtilt on Saturday. Bob has pitched su¬perlative ball every time he hasstepped onto the rubber, but has beendogged by poor breaks and the fail¬ure of his teammates to hit when heis pitching. “Something’s wrong,’’he moaned Tuesday after the NotreDame game, “every time I get in thebox, the boys just can’t hit—I mustbe a nemesis!”I-M GAMES TODAYAlpha Delta Phi—Kappa SigmaPhi Sigma Delta—Delta UpsilonChi Psi—Psi UpsilonBeta Theta Pi—Phi Sigma Delta“B”Phi Kappa Sigma—Psi UpsilonSigma Chi—Phi Kappa Psi “B” Mathews ScoresFour Ruus to LeadDekes to 18-3 WinThe Deke softballers continued theirwinning ways yesterday with an 18-3victory over a weak Delta Upsilon“B” aggregation. Mathews, Dekebackstop, scored four runs, one ofwhich was a homer to lead his team’sbatting.The Shleppers, a strong indepen¬dent team, served notice on futureopponents that it is to be reckonedwith by licking a far from weakQuadrangle Club squad 11-2. Stein¬berg paced his team’s attack by scor¬ing two runs including a homer.The Chicago Theological Seminaryten lost to Kappa Epsilon Pi, grad¬uate Geology fraternity, 11-7 in afree-scoring battle. Rasmussen, Fuchs,Kurk, Stritter, and Stevens bore thebrunt of scoring, each accounting fortwo runs.The only real Bar-B-Q Pit for miles aroundTOOTSY'SOelicious Old Southern Style Bar-B-Q RibsFREE DELIVERY6306 MARYLANDPLAZA 66442 INSEPARABLE NAMESThe Hub and Arrow. For here at the Hub you'll findone of the largest selections of Arrow products in thecountry.the hubHenry C.Lytton & SonsState and Jackson — CHICAGOWhat is your I.Q. on Style?(For Men Only)\\White handkerchiefs shouldalways be worn with whiteshirts.YES NOA newer: Although white hand¬kerchiefs are perfect withwhite shirts, there’s a steadilyincreasing trend toward col¬ored handkerchiefs that har¬monize or contrast with yourtie. Arrow handkerchiefs, 26cup. Arrow ties, $1.00 & $1.50.Shirt sleeves should fall be¬low the cuff of your suit coat..YES NOAnswer: Yes, from one-quar¬ter to three-quarters of aninch of your shirt cuff shouldshow beneath your coatsleeve. And the best shirt toshow is an Arrow. $2.00 up.Cluatt, Peabody * Co., Ine.. Troy, N. T. Q. How close to groundshould trousers hang?A. Pegged trousers shouldhang just low enough totouch your instep at the bot-tom laces. Straight-cuttrousers should touch betweenthe bottom lace and the backof the toe cap, and shouldhave one slight “break” abovethe instep.Q. Is there such an animalas a comfortable pair ofshorts ?A. There is . . . and they’reArrow shorts. Arrows haven’tthe center seam you find in somany shorts — the seam thatmakes shorts chafe and rideup. Arrow shorts, 65c up.Undershirts, 60c up.If it hasn’t an Arrow label,it isn’t ArrowTEAR OUT THIS COUPON!“BEST-DBESSED MAN” CONTEST BALLOTI THINKIS THE BEST-DRESSED MAN ON CAMPUS.Candidate and contest entrants must be registered students. Deposit this ballotIn a Daily Maroon Box at various points on campus. (Write, on separate paper,25 words or less the reason for your selection and deposit in Contest Box.)Your NomeAddress$350.00 IN PRIZES OFFERED BY ERIE CLOTHING CO. UNIVERSITYTAVERN1131-33 EAST 55thMIDWAY 0524Fried ChickenWITH FRENCH FRIESAND COLE SLAW25eCOMPLETE LINE OFFINE BEERS - WINES - UQUORSFree DeliveryTODAYIs TheLASTDAYTo Cast Your Votefor theBESTDRESSEDMAN★ ★ERIE'S $350.00PRIZE CONTESTENDS AT MIDNIGHTYOUR BALLOT INC A S T daily maroonCONTEST BOXESYOUR ENTRIESKKIMG TO THE DAILYMAROON OFFICEIn A I Tj THE DAILY MAROONOFFICE TODAYTHIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCETO SEND IN YOUR ENTRY.REMEMBER, YOU CAN WINONLY BY TELLING US, IN 25WORDS OR LESS. WHY YOUHAVE MADE YOUR SELEC¬TION.ERIECLOTHING CO.837 E. 63rd St.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEPOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intonsive, stenographic courso—starting Jannary 1. April 1, Jufy 1, Octeborl.Intoresfing Booklet sent free, without okligatiom—write or phone. No solteitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGERAUL MOSER, J.D..RH.B.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ava., Chicago, Randolph 4347LEXINGTONTHEATRE1162 EAST 63rd StStanley Lambert, ManagerFriday and SaturdayCLARK GABLE & NORMA SHEARER"Idiot's Delight"— PLUS —OTTO KRUEGER & GAYLE PATRICK"Disbarred"Start Sunday: “Gunga Din*'and "Boachcoml^T''{I< 1—■ntfiifiiriPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939GreekGossip« « «By BOB REYNOLDSThe cups of frivolity of the localjoy boys have for this second weekof Blackfriars been lifted high inthe spring breezes and drained of thebrimming and bubbling social con¬tents. The Greeks who are to set upthe drinks this weekend, namely theChi Psis, Phi Delts, Z.B.T.’s, and PhiGams, will cap the closing perform¬ances of “Love Over the Line’ Fri¬day and Saturday evenings with par¬ties both open and closed but equallyloaded with gusto.In their annual risque Bohemianparty, the Chi Psis, .to say theTODAYIs TheLASTDATTo Cast Your Votefor the"BESTDRESSEDMAN"★ ★ERIE'S $350.00PRIZE CONTESTENDS AT MIDNIGHTM M Mi '^OUR BAUOT IN^ A 9 X MAROONCONTEST BOXESYOUR ENTRIESHfflNG TO THE DAILYMAROON OFFICEMW VOTE TOn A 1 li the daily maroonOFHCE TODAYTHIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCETO SEND IN YOUR ENTRY.REMEMBER. YOU CAN WINONLY BY TELLING US. IN 25WORDS OR LESS. WHY YOUHAVE MADE YOUR SELEC¬TION.ERIECLOTHING CO.837 E. 63rd St. least, intend to drop the bars of con¬ventionality in entertaining thedesirables of the campus elite Sat¬urday night after the brothers havewitnessed en masse the last of themonks’ efforts. Behind their red,blue, green, and yellow patched win¬dows, the lads have waxed the firstfloor and procured an uninhibitedswing band for dancing, arrangedthe second floor solely for feminineuse, and turned the third floor intoan old fashioned saloon of the gaslight era . . . cuspidoor, swingingdoors, and backdoors; beer, pretzelsand bromos; and sawdust, bouncers,and checkered tablecloths. Call theparty either famous or notorious, itfollows the Artists’ and Models’theme and permits complete latitudeof operation.* * *Closed and hilarious, the *‘SillyStrut” of the Phi Delt breaks outSaturday swathed in funny papers,comic sections, and other documentsdevoted to rib ticking. Their theme,obviously, is taken from the laughsections of the Dailies. All will comein pairs dressed in character, suchas Smiling Jack and Orphan Annie,Skeezix and Madame Lupesco. Thewalls, in the way of decoration, havebeen papered with clipped comicstrips and the brothers for days haveendeavored in their unique ways towork into an analogous mood.* * «Perhaps their perception of timeand appropriateness errs, but theKappa Sig house with its annualChristmas party—open—in the offingSaturday night at least steps alongin the spirit of things.* ♦ *Amazing, truly amazing, the gustoof these Pi Lams. Just to recounttheir plans evaporates one’s energy.Friday night they intend to trekeover to Ida Noyes for a spot ofbowling before seriously applyingthemselves to the remainder of theevening’s athletics, to wit, rollerskating and dancing. When thej chimes toll 12:00 the assembly willmove themselves to wagons for ahay ride.This open shindig will be followedSaturday by another muscle stretch¬ing affair, this closed. The lads andlasses will prop their orbits openwith toothpicks and proceed to PalosPark for a picnic and treasure hunt.Then, if they are still able to ac¬celerate, they will terminate theweekend with an evening of dancing.ASU to MobilizeFor PeaceAfter meeting for breakfast atMabry’s at 11:30 on Peace Day, May30, the University contingent of theASU will leave for the Peace Dayparade, which mobilizes downtown atRandolph and Michigan. Marching toUnion Square, the University ASU-ers will keep step alongside of manyunions; the American Federation ofTeachers, the musicians’ union, print¬ers’ unions, doctors and dentists, andother united organizations, belongingto both the CIO and the AmericanFederation of Labor.At Union Square, speakers willurge the crowd to act for the causeof peace. These orators will includeMarxists, communists, and palepinks, but all of them are expectedto turn a vivid scarlet when theytalk against war and for peace. Ithas not been decided as yet whetherrepresentatives from the UniversityASU are to speak.Profits from the Mabry breakfastare tn be split between the ASU andMabry’s.HOTEL SHERMANpresents theCAVALCADE of SWINGOENE KRUPAACE DRUMMER MAN AND HISORCHESTRA NIGHTLY IN THE NEWPANTHER ROOMOF THE COLLEGE INNMuggsy SpanierImmortal oi Swing and His Ragtime Bond in theOLD TOWN ROOMFri.. 9:30 to I A. M.—Sot., 9:30 to 2 A. M.Also in the Panther Room Matinees Wednesday and SaturdayJoin the Old Town Swing Club—No DuesNO COVER. NO MINIMUM IN EITHER ROOM Five TrackmenLeave forDrake RelaysBy GEORGE McELROYCoach Merriam and five of Chica¬go’s star track men left yesterdayafternoon for the Drake Relays, tobe held at Des Moines this weekend.The five are pole-vaulters Casselsand Davidson, shot-putter Hugh Ren-dleman, sprinter John Davenport,and hurdler Bob Wasem.Entering a relay meet without arelay team is a rather unusual move,but Chicago lacks middle-distancemen in sufficient numbers to make apotent team. Coach Merriam didhold time-trials in the half-mile tosee whether a two-mile relay teammight not be made up, but the timeswere unimpressive, possibly due tothe fact that most of the runnershad no great desire to go.Chicago’s best prospect is probablyCome ToFAUBELSafter the Show Bob Cassels, who has set his sightsfor 14 feet in the pole-vault and mayclear it any time. If Davidson’s in¬jured knee does not hamper him, heought to do 13’6” at least. Wasem’schances would be good if he couldmanage to hit not more than twohurdles, and Davenport, who neverhas had a very fast start, ought tobe more effective in the 100 than inthe shorter indoor dashes.CLASSIFIEDTYPING OP THESIS—gpeoimlisU in SUtis-tical TypinR. Call Independence 2d98after 7 P. M.ARE YOU "CHOOSY"ABOUT YOUR TENNIS RACKET?There's one to suit your gome and purseatGordon's Sport Shop5757 Cottage Grove Hyd. 6501 PlaisanceBicycle Club6022 Stony Island Ave.RENT A BICYCLE OR ATANDEMNew Bicycles25c per hr.GOLD COAST ROOTED WEEMSAND NISORCHESTRAThe ‘‘tops" in colorfulentertainment everynight except Monday.Minimum; Weekdays andSunday $7.00; Saturdays$3 SO; Sunday Afternoon TeaDancing $1.S0. No CoverCharge at any lime. GRAND SLAST TWO WEEKS“Will nak^ yen wiah the world werefull of mn.ical roeiedie. and that Hue-ton wwre in a new ane every year ”—Lloyd Lowia. DAILY NEWS.PLAYWRIGHTS'COMPANYpresetotxWALTERHUSTON(m.Iht andPrudentlyImvfmitMusicalComt&yBook tMjd. Juries btfMAXWELL ANDERSONASrurui Ar/ ITtmT WVIttEvss. sxc. Sun.. 1:30 — Pop mat. Wad.Host Soata $2 — Mat Sat."Endof Term"SailingsWith College Orchastras on Each ShipENGLANDFRANCEGERMANYSwift Lloyd ExpressesBREMEN • EUROPAJune 14-July 1 & 25 June21-Juiy8Hapag ''Famous Four" ExpressesDEUTSCHLAND • HAMBURGJune 22-Juiy 20 June 29NEW YORK • HANSAJuly 6 July 13*THE ANNUAL'^SPECIAL STUDENT SAIUNG*'with msny special events designed forstudent delightBREMEN • JULY 1For leisure at our Lowest RatesCabin and Third Class OnlyL/oyd BERLIN • Hapag ST. LOUISJULY 2* JULY 8**Call at IrelandAU-EXPENSE TOURS OF EUROPEin connection with "End of Term" sailings Just call on your nearest travel agent or at a Hapag-Lloyd office. And whether you go Cabin, Touristor Third, you'll find scores of other college men andwomen on liners of Hapag and Lloyd enjoying themany entertainments, the exhilarating sports, theglorious days and glamorous nights that come onlyat sea. Plan now — and talk it over with others.OUR EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DEPARTMENT willgladly assist with information on summer study inEurope. A copy of "SUMMER COURSES ABROAD",now in its ninth edition, will be sent free on request.It covers 145 courses in 15 countries.•The ways to see Europe are many, enjoyable andinexpensive, whether by HIKING, FALTBOATING,BIKING, MOTORING (especially for small groups)OR RAIL. And you can save through special con¬cessions in many foreign currencies. Germany offersconsiderable savings through Travel Marks and 60%reductions on the German Railroads for visitors.•"YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE"—Th« 1939 edition of this 230-pagebook will repay its small cost many times over in time end moneysaved through its countless hints on trevel to end in Europe. Itrepresents the practical ideas and experiences of two greetsteemship^lines, one 82 years, the other 92 years in the trans-Atlentic service. Send for it to be sure youget the most out of your European trip.iSkYour Travel Agent, or HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINENORTH GERMAN LLOYD57 Broodwgy, New York, N. Y.I enclose 25 cents (stomps accepted) for the1939 edition of “YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE”.1?^ HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE m NamtNORTH G€RMAN LLOYD Address.130 W. MANDOLFH ST„ CHICAGO. ILL.CityA 1—raaaawaaaaajlBMBMai-Stote- ■aFIFifth RowCenter* * *By DAVID GRENEKnickerbocker Holiday ^ Battp itaionVol. 39, No. 102. Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1939 Price Three CentsHow many variations from tepid tohottest hot can be played on the Mika¬do remains to be seen; but the musicalcomedy imitation of Gilbert and Sul¬livan—to judge by this specimen—isapparently not capable of extension.Most of the points that were effectivewere borrowed from Gilbert and Sul¬livan but the borrowing only servedto set off the sadness of the trans¬formation—witness the close kinshipbetween the “Hush-Hush” scene andPooh-Bah’s “family pride.”The story of many of the G. and S.operas is meagre, and even the bookof lyrics, when read dispassionately,is not impressive, the characteriza¬tion, with a few notable exceptions, isneither striking nor acute—but withthe blessed conjunction of all of theseelements and the music, the show un¬doubtedly goes. And it goes with anexhilaration and vitality which is in¬dividual and enchanting. Nothingcould go less than KnickerbockerHoliday. It isn’t just that the begin¬ning is amateurish and longwinded,nor yet that the lyrics are stringyand flabby, nor that the politicalsatire, wherever it becomes explicit,is cheap, trite and vulgar. Over andabove all these* the play moves withan air of indefinable fatigue which isamply reflected in the feelings of thespectators.* * *The one saving grace is Mr. Weill’smusic. Perhaps it hasn’t all the dra¬matic force of his airs in JohnnyJohnson, though I am not sure thatyou can blame the composer for that.Paul Green gave him words to pointthe music. And I don’t think thatthere is any tune in KnickerbockerHoliday which is as haunting as “Go¬liath was a giant Huge and defiant”which Mr. Weill wrote for The Eter¬nal Road, — but it’s grand dramaticmusic for all that. “The One Indis¬pensable Man” and “There’s NowhereTo Go But Up” are among Mr. Weill’sbest and Mr. Weill’s best is, in myhumble opinion, better than the bestof any other writer of dramatic lyricsnow that George Gershwin is dead.Mr. Huston made a tremendous ef¬fort to do something with the show.But his lines were so slight and thecharacterization so weak that he wasultimately driven to try to create acharacter rather than act it, and inthis, he just missed success. All therest of the cast were more than com¬petent and Jo Mielziner did some finesets.« • *For a short space the audience wasstirred to enthusiasm by a songwhich indicated that the characteri¬zation of the American was a consti¬tutional inability to take orders.(How You Can Tell An .\merican).They were also happy to learn thatyou could not regiment Americans in¬to buying or selling or any otherform of social activity. But after thislittle flutter, rather too ostentatiouslypopular, apathy settled on the au¬dience until the end of the piece. Yourreviewer was among the apathetic.Tuition CommitteeStarts Union CardChampaign DriveThe student committee on tuitionchanges is organizing the campus by“union card” methods, in its drive toget at least 2000 students to signcards endorsing the committee’s work.These cards, according to chairmanSid Lipshires, will be a strong talkingpoint in the hands of the committee,in its conference with members of theadministration.The committee members, by thestrength of the card campaign, hopeto make clear to the administrationthe opposition of the student body tothe recent tuition changes. If moneymust be raised out of student fundsimmediately, they are asking thatmembers of the administration listthe alternative methods of raising theprecise sum needed. Then, if, afteradequate discussion, these proposalsare voted on by the students in orderof preference, the committee mem-bers feel that the changes will befair.Besides endorsement, the cards askfor the status of the student, and will¬ingness to work for^the committeeand contribute frWn onV^y* Commit¬tee workers ar^'^ g signatures. Douglas TellsNecessity ofWard OfficesAlderman Is Voters’Only Contact With Ma¬chinery of City.“The alderman is the one personthat the voter can talk to,” said Al¬derman-Professor Paul Douglas yes¬terday as he explained why it is nec¬essary to have well established branchoffices. One ward office has been es¬tablished at 1154 E. 57th and is al¬ways open, and Douglas meets withhis western constituents once a weekat 309 E. Garfield Boulevard.“The alderman,” says Douglas,” isthe one person that the voter thinkshe can control.” Consequently the al¬derman is often beseiged by peoplewith requests for jobs, enrollment onthe WPA, releases from jail, permitsfor signs, awnings, school transfers,zoning-law releases and demands forstreet and alley improvements.Receives RequestsTo Douglas’ward offices, particular¬ly in the western part of his district,come requests from the “underpriv¬ileged, overcrowded” Negro popula¬tion. Determined to cope with thispressing problem Douglas introduceda resolution at the city council meet¬ing Wednesday providing for the es¬tablishment of a Race Relations Com¬mission to recommend legislativemeasures not later than August 1,1939.A similar commission was created in1919 after the mas-sacrous race riotsof 1919. Douglas urges that a studyof the needs of the Negro be madebefore increasing pressure precipi¬tates another explosion.WPA SurveyA survey is being conducted byWPA investigators working for Col.(Continued on page 4)F andangoOpensFriday NightThe world’s .second Fandango willopen for one night only next Fridayin Ida Noyes Hall. Recalling the firstFandango of four years ago whichraised $2,000 for the University’sscholarship fund, the affair will againinclude dancing, side-shows, fortunetelling, a big floor show, and “gamesof skill.” All profits will again becontributed as a Senior ScholarshipGift to the University.Ida Noyes GymThe entire gym of Ida Noyes hasturned over to the carnival for boothsand the refreshment stand, and theColonial Club orchestra will play forthe dancing in the Cloister Club.Lew Hamity, captain of the foot¬ball team, has arranged a cracker-jack floor show for the party. ChuckCompton, long-legged wonder-bump-dancer of Blackfriars, will do an InaRay Hutton act, and Ash Taylor hasbeen recently added to the show as animpersonator.Although sponsored by the seniorclass as a means of raising money fora scholarship, the Fandango is to bean all-campus party. Tickets are nowon sale for $1.10 at the InformationOffice and the Reynolds Club.Independents NotOut of S & CIndependents have not been ex¬cluded from Skull and Crescent, itsvice-president Dale Tillery empha¬sized yesterday as he commented up¬on an erroneous article printed inThe Daily Maroon Friday. He ex¬plained that in its conception Skulland Crescent was a fraternity honor¬ary society for sophomore men, thattwo years ago its members decidedto include a number of independentmen in the group, but that this ex¬ception was not meant to establish atradition that made inclusion of anycertain number of independents com¬pulsory. It was decided that it wasthe right of each new group to decideif they wanted independents and that,since they knew the men in their ownclass, they would be able to make bet¬ter selections. Best Dressed Bates. . . THE WINNERCUGroup ToursMadison StreetFlophousesThe Urban Problems Committee,newest of the Chapel Union socialproblems groups, is planning its firststudent -education tour Wednesdayevening. Under the leadership of atrained guide, the group will visitWest MadLson Street, the largest cen¬ter of migratory workers in the coun¬try, to see employment agencies, “ho¬tels,” missions, lady-barbers, flop-houses, shops, movies, forums andother institutions which serve thesemen. The group will also visit thehistoric Desplaines Street Police Sta¬tion with its mementoes of the Hay-market Riot.The tour is open to all Universitystudents and is free except for car¬fare. The group leaves at 6:30 fromIda Noyes.First in SeriesThis will probably be only the firstin a series of such tours for the Ur¬ban Problems Committee. Next yearthey plan to visit other parts of Chi¬cago in order to acquaint studentswith problems facing the people in abig city like Chicago. The leaders ofthe group, A1 Cannon, Don Leveridge,and Ann Hartzler expect to arrangetrips to labor union meetings, poorhousing areas and factories.Int-House ShowsMovie ^Amphitryon,’Disney CartoonsArt and humor come to Interna¬tional House simultaneously today at4:30 and 8:30 when Amphitryon andWalt Disney cartoons will be thrownon the screen of the Int-House theatre.The spicy classic, which was pre¬sented on the stage by the Lunts, hasbeen presented to campus movie¬goers before. The screen version, allin rhyme, with English sub-iitles, hasbeen recalled to International House,where it entertained students and art-lovers last year.Amphitryon tells of the gods cometo earth. Jupiter, jaunting down onan umbrella, falls in love with a mor¬tal and the story tells of the godlikeromance. Flowing robes lend artistryto the setting of the masterpiece, andthe French dialogue, for linguisti¬cally-minded is suggestive.Cap and GoivnOut in Two WeeksCap and Gown will be out in ap¬proximately two and a half weeks,according to Editors Phil Schneringand John Anderson. The editorialwork has already been completed andnow the printing is being done in Mil¬waukee, Wisconsin.Robert Mohlman, business manager,and Harold Wright, circulation man¬ager, report that sales have leaped120 per cent over the same period lastyear. Anyone who is planning to buya yearbook should subscribe imme¬diately since only a limited numberare being printed. Ed Bates Wins BestDressed Man ContestDr. August Krogh^Nobel Winner^Speaks TonightDr. August Krogh, Nobel prizewin¬ner in physiology and medicine in1920, will arrive on campus today todeliver the first of two lectures at 8tonight in Pathology 117. He willspeak on “The Effects of Posture onCirculation.” His second lecture willbe given tomorrow on “Osmotic Reg¬ulation in Certain Fresh Water Ani¬mals.”Dr. Krogh is head of the depart¬ment of Zoophysiology at the Univer¬sity of Copenhagen, and has honorarydegrees from Edinburgh, Harvard,Rutgers, and several continental uni¬versities. He is also a member of theRoyal Society, London, and of the Na¬tional Academy of Sciences at Wash¬ington, D. C., and the author of anumber of books on anatomy andphysiology.His wife, Marie, who is accompany¬ing Dr. Krogh, is a doctor and a sci¬entist in her own right, and is anadviser to the Danish government onproblems of nutrition.Benes Speakson FascismContinuing the discussion of demo¬cratic institutions in his lecture atMandel Hall yesterday, Dr. EduardBenes outlined the theory and prac¬tice of Fascism, concluding by repeat¬ing his belief that the totalitarianprinciples will in the end be defeatedby those of democracy.“Fascism,” he stated, “while it isan absolute doctrine and rejects paci¬fism, democracy, and liberalism, nev¬ertheless has borrowed several beliefsfrom other forms of government. Itpreserves the idea of class groupingsfrom democracy, and it believes as docommunism and socialism, that socialbenefits should be for the masses.National Unity“In addition. Fascism is based on astrong national unity. The state isthe moral, economic and spiritualforce. There is practically no libertyas the state is the source of all au¬thority.“In Fascism the leader is the ex¬pression of the national will. He issurrounded by a sentimental and na¬tional halo that makes him reveredand almost synonymous with thestate.“Fascism further believes that de¬mocracy is not truly representativeof the national will. It is inevitable,the Fascists believe, that a few peo¬ple will gain control of the powerand will rule the country as an oli¬garchy or as a tyranny. In Fascismit is the belief that the leader trulyexpresses the wishes of the people.”Post-War ItalyCommenting on Fascism as it ispracticed. Dr. Benes stated that Italyemerged from the war dissatisfiedwith the results. They were eagerfor expansion and power which theybelieved could be obtained throughwar and military strength.The final lecture in Dr. Benes’ serieswill be delivered Monday when he re¬views National Socialism and com¬ments on the present condition ofdemocracy.Call Transfers forOrientation WorkTransfer Orientation counsellorswill be signed at a meeting to be heldtomorrow in Ida Noyes Library at 4.Rich Ranney and June Cover, mem¬bers of last year’s orientation commit¬tee, have been appointed by Mrs.Harvey Carr to guide the new com¬mittee which will be announced to¬morrow.The committee will choose as coun¬sellors people who, to quote Ranney,“have travelled the transfer path andwho are interested in seeing that fu¬ture transfer students are allotted aproper place in orientation activity.” Tucker Dean Takes $50Prize with Essay on Hal-crow.As Ed Bates was named winner ofthe Erie Clothing contest. Phi DeltaTheta members and campaign man¬ager Johnnie Bex announced that airtight organization, a good candidateand straight honesty will win anycontest in a walk-away. For now thatthe smoke has cleared away it is anadmitted fact that Bates won honest¬ly in the most crooked contest of theyear.Law student Tucker Dean’s 25 worddescription on why he considersGeorge Halcrow the Best DressedWinner of the Best Dressed ManEssay contest:Tucker Dean.Runners-upAllan DreyfussJohn LaceyRobert LocknerMan on campus netted him the firstprize of $50 in the essay contest.Dean, amazed at his victory overhundreds of essay writers, declared“This is like manna from Heaven . . .now I can job-hunt in a coat andtrousers that match.”Lucrative ContestThe contest, especially lucrative,attracted not only the tried and trueballot stuffers of the campus but al¬so the embryo politicians. Through¬out the last week the Daily Maroonoffice was looted of its papers by 10every morning; copies, if left for sub¬scribers at all, remained singularlyballot-less; in fact the campus hadgone on one mad campaign to win thecontest by any method available.The simplest was the use of theStudent Directory, a method sub¬scribed to by the usually more origrinal Betas, who had chosen six footfive Bill Corcoran as their man, solelybecause they thought Erie would havetrouble finding trousers long enoughfor their gangling lad.Daily Maroon Business managerMax Freeman, very much on the “in”as to the workings of the contest,transplanted all available ballots tothe Phi Psis who were pluggingbroad-shouldered Wiedemann for manof the day. Phi Psis started by in¬viting the Esoterics for lunch andasking politely for their signatures,then decided that this method wasdefinitely the hard way, and took tocopying the student directory. Free¬man left the scene of battle for LakeGeneva before the contest closed, andPhi Kappa Psi ballots limped intosecond place, 200 votes behind victorBates.Pulse StoryBy Thursday night Pulse sensed agood story in the offing and decidedto make it a sure thing by stuffingthe ballot boxes,-sitting back on their(Continued on page 2)DA Gives ExtraPerformance of^Ghosts^ TonightTonight “Ghosts,” the first produc¬tion of the DA Workshop, will bepresented for the third time in theReynolds Club Theatre at 8:30. Tick¬ets are on sale all day today in Man-del corridor and also at the door to¬night. “Ghosts” was originally sched¬uled for only one performance, butsuccess after the opening last weekdemanded the repeat performances.With the success of “Ghosts” comesa reorganization of the Dramatic As¬sociation. Heretofore, DA put on fiveplays, two in Mandel Hall, and Mir¬ror. Now in favor of the Workshop,the three plays normally given in theReynolds Club Theatre will be sus¬pended. Except for Mirror, a fall pro¬duction, and the spring revival, DAwill be entirely W'orkshop next year.William Randall, director of DA,would like to dispense with all pro¬ductions except Mirror, and concen¬trate on the Workshop. The newBoard, however, favors two produc¬tions in Mandel. Latest appointmentsto the Board are Homer Havermaie,Harriet Paine and John Doolittle.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 28, 1939GreekGossip« ♦ «By BOB REYNOLDSThe cups of frivolity of the localjoy boys have for this second weekof Blackfriars been lifted high inthe spring breezes and drained of thebrimming and bubbling social con¬tents. The Greeks who are to set upthe drinks this weekend, namely theChi Psis, Phi Delts, Z.B.T.’s, and PhiGams, will cap the closing perform¬ances of “Love Over the Line’ Fri¬day and Saturday evenings with par¬ties both open and closed but equallyloaded with gusto.In their annual risque Bohemianparty, the Chi Psis, .to say theTODAYIs TheLASTDAYTo Cast Your Votefor the"BESTDRESSEDMAN"★ ★ERIE'S $350.00PRIZE CONTESTENDS AT MIDNIGHTM M Mi BAUOT IN^ A S X MAROONCONTEST BOXESENTRIESBRING TO THE DAHYMAROON OFFICEPI A 1 li DAILY MAROONOFFICE TODAYTHIS IS YOUR LAST CHANCETO SEND IN YOUR ENTRY.REMEMBER. YOU CAN WINONLY BY TELLING US. IN 25WORDS OR LESS. WHY YOUHAVE MADE YOUR SELEC¬TION.ERIECLOTHING CO.837 E. 63rd St. least, intend to drop the bars of con¬ventionality in entertaining thedesirables of the campus elite Sat¬urday night after the brothers havewitnessed en masse the last of themonks’ efforts. Behind their red,blue, green, and yellow patched win¬dows, the lads have waxed the firstfloor and procured an uninhibitedswing band for dancing, arrangedthe second floor solely for feminineuse, and turned the ^ird floor intoan old fashioned saloon of the gaslight era . . . cuspidoor, swingingdoors, and backdoors; beer, pretzelsand bromos; and sawdust, bouncers,and checkered tablecloths. Call theparty either famous or notorious, itfollows the Artists’ and Models’theme and permits complete latitudeof operation.« * «Closed and hilarious, the "’SillyStrut” of the Phi Delt breaks outSaturday swathed in funny papers,comic sections, and other documentsdevoted to rib ticking. Their theme,obviously, is taken from the laughsections of the Dailies. All will comein pairs dressed in character, suchas Smiling Jack and Orphan Annie,Skeezix and Madame Lupesco. Thewalls, in the way of decoration, havebeen papered with clipped comicstrips and the brothers for days haveendeavored in their unique ways towork into an analogous mood.« « *Perhaps their perception of timeand appropriateness errs, but theKappa Sig house with its annualChristmas party—open—in the offingSaturday night at least steps alongin the spirit of things.* ♦ «Amazing, truly amazing, the gustoof these Pi Lams. Just to recounttheir plans evaporates one’s energy.Friday night they intend to trekeover to Ida Noyes for a spot ofbowling before seriously applyingthemselves to the remainder of theI evening’s athletics, to wit, rollerI skating and dancing. When theI chimes toll 12:00 the assembly willmove themselves to wagons for ahay ride.This open shindig will be followedSaturday by another muscle stretch¬ing affair, this closed. The lads andlasses will prop their orbits openwith toothpicks and proceed to PalosPark for a picnic and treasure hunt.Then, if they are still able to ac¬celerate, they will terminate theweekend with an evening of dancing.ASU to MobilizeFor PeaceAfter meeting for breakfast atMabry’s at 11:30 on Peace Day, May30, the University contingent of theASU will leave for the Peace Dayparade, which mobilizes downtown atRandolph and Michigan. Marching toUnion Square, the Uni'^ersity ASU-ers will keep step alongside of manyunions; the American Federation ofTeachers, the musicians’ union, print¬ers’ unions, doctors and dentists, andother united organizations, belongingto both the CIO and the AmericanFederation of Labor.At Union Square, speakers willurge the crowd to act for the causeof peace. These orators will includeMarxists, communists, and palepinks, but all of them are expectedto turn a vivid scarlet when theytalk against war and for peace. Ithas not been decided as yet whetherrepresentatives from the UniversityASU are to speak.Profits from the Mabry breakfastare to be split between the ASU andMabry’s.HOTEL SHERMANpresentB theCAVALCADE of SWINGOENE KRUPAACE DRUMMER MAN AND HISORCHESTRA NIGHTLY IN THE NEWPANTHER ROOMOF THE COLLEGE INNMuggsy SpanierImmortal of Swing and His Ragtime Bond in theOLD TOWN ROOMFri., 9:30 to 1 A. M.—Sot., 9:30 to 2 A. M.Also in the Panther Room Matinees Wednesday and SaturdayJoin the Old Town Swing Club—No DuesNO COVER. NO MINIMUM IN EITHER ROOM Five TrackmenLeave forDrake RelaysBy GEORGE McELROYCoach Merriam and five of Chica¬go’s star track men left yesterdayafternoon for the Drake Relays, tobe held at Des Moines this weekend.The five are pole-vaulters Casselsand Davidson, shot-putter Hugh Ren-dleman, sprinter John Davenport,and hurdler Bob Wasem.Entering a relay meet without arelay team is a rather unusual move,but Chicago lacks middle-distancemen in sufficient numbers to make apotent team. Coach Merriam didhold time-trials in the half-mile tosee whether a two-mile relay teammight not be made up, but the timeswere unimpressive, possibly due tothe fact that most of the runnershad no great desire to go.Chicago’s best prospect is probablyCome ToFAUBELSafter the ShowFREE PARKING IN THE REAR Bob Cassels, who has set his sightsfor 14 feet in the pole-vault and mayclear it any time. If Davidson’s in¬jured knee does not hamper him, heought to do 13’6” at least. Wasem’schances would be good if he couldmanage to hit not more than twohurdles, and Davenport, who neverhas had a very fast start, ought tobe more effective in the 100 than inthe shorter indoor dashes.CLASSIFIEDTYPING OF THESIS—specimlisU in SUtis-ticml TypinK. Call Independent 2998after 7 P. M.ARE YOU "CHOOSY"ABOUT YOUR TENNIS RACKET?There's one to suit your gome cmd purseatGordon's Sport Shop5757 Cottage Grove Hyd. 6501GOLD COAST ROOTED WEEMSAND NISORCHESTRAThe "tops" in colorfulentertainment everynight except Monday.Minimum: Weekdays andSunday $2.00; Saturdays$3.50; Sunday Afternoon TeaDancing $1.50. No CoverCharge at ony timeThe JJral] PlaisanceBicycle Club6022 Stony Island Ave.RENT A BICYCLE OR ATANDEMNew Bicycles25c per hr.GRANDLAST TWO WEEKS"Will makf yen with the world werefull of mnsical coiaediee and that Hus¬ton were in a new one erery year ”—Uoyd Lewla, DAILY NEWS.TfcPUYWRIIGNTS'COMPANYftresetUfU/ALTERHUSTON(kIhf (3a^ andPrudtntl^ImvfmxtMusicalCome^Book mstd. XjiTtcs byMAXWEU ANDERSONJmu einku irtmT WNtttEtss. sxc. Sun.. 1:30 — Pop mat. Wed.Bost Soots S2 — Mot Sat."End of Term" SailingsWith College Orchestres on Each ShipENGLAND-FRANCE-GERMANYSwift Lloyd ExpressesBREMEN • EUROPAJune 14-July 1 & 25 June21-July8Hapag "Famous Four" ExpressesDEUTSCHLAND • HAMBURGJune 22-July 20 June 29NEW YORK • HANSAJuly 6 July 13’“THE ANNUAL^^SPECIAL STUDENT SAILING'^with many special events designed forstudent delightBREMEN • JULY 1For leisure at our Lowest RatesCabin and Third Class Only1/oyd BERLIN • Hopog ST. LOUISJULY 2* JULY 8**Cell at IrelandAU-EXPENSE TOURS OF EUROPEin connection with “End of Term" sailings Jusf call on your nearest travel agent or at a Hapag-Uoyd office. And whether you go Cabin, Touristor Third, you'll find scores of other college men andwomen on liners of Hapag and Uoyd enjoying themany entertainments, the exhilarating sports, theglorious days and glamorous nights that come onlyat sea. Plan now — and talk it over with others.OUR EDUCATIONAL SERVICE DEPARTMENT wiUgladly assist with information on summer study inEurope. A copy of "SUMMER COURSES ABROAD",now in its ninth edition, will be sent free on request.It covers 145 courses in 15 countries.•The woys to see Europe are many, enjoyable andinexpensive, whether by HIKING, FALlBOATING,BIKING, MOTORING (especially for small groups)OR RAIL. And you can save through special con¬cessions in many foreign currencies. Germany offersconsiderable savings through Travel Marks and 60%reductions on the German Railroads for visitors.•"YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE"—The 1939 edition of thii 230-pagebook will repay its small cost many times over in time end moneysaved through its countless hints on travel to end in Europe. Itrepresents the practical ideas and experiences of two greatsteamship lines, one 82 years, the other 92 years in the trans-Atlentic service. Send for it to be sure youget the most out of your European trip.Your Travel Agent, or HAM8URG-AMERICAN LINENORTH GERMAN LLOYD57 Broadway, New York, N. Y.I enclose 25 cants (stamps accepted) for the1939 edition of “YOUR TRIP TO EUROPE".HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE 1^ Nome ■■■— 1NORTH GERMAN LLOYD LsJl Address__ ■1130 W. KANDOLPH ST„ CHICAGO. ILL. 1 CUy 11J. "■ ”i AE-1 1■wwwiL eiw»we.W—■■■■■■■■■peowey*