W. A. A. initi¬ates 35 women tomembership.Vol. 27. No. 110. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1927ARNOLD JOHNSON IS NEW COUNCIL HEADUse of Flowers Will Make HopUnique Campus Social AffairWHAT of IT?WceOt^t MOUCENSTEREToday’s column will, in themanner of Mr. Brisbane, dealwith the latest developmentshere and there—if that ain’ttoo much to expect.The freshman class, ever a brightand enterprising young lot, has beensiezed with an idea. That is, its classcouncil has. The idea is to have abig picnic and field day out in thePalos Park forest preserve for allfreshmen some day in the first weekin June. Everybody will come, ac¬cording to the plan, races will be run,hot dogs and pop baskets lunches willbe knocked off, and every thing’ll bejolly all around. The council hopesthat the general field day will becometraditional with- the freshman class.“Ha, ha!” laughed jolly Mr. Pick¬wick, at one and the same time tak¬ing a bit of tongue sandwich and aswig of ale, “tell us another one,Uncle Remus.”* * *The University also has had anidea. The dear old scholarship com¬petitions for the high school children,held every year late in the spring,will be run this year on the sameprinciples as the basketball tourna¬ment promoted every year by theschool. In other years the contest¬ants came up for their crack at theprizes, sat through their three-hourexam, were hustled over to BartlettGym afterwards and provided withplates of ham, potato salad and pic¬kles, and then allowed to stray backto their native haunts. This year,however, they will (as The Maroonso neatly puts it) “be treated withthe same respect and friendliness asthe interscholastic basketball men.”The smoother frat boys, it is pre-usmed, will be sent out to sell Chi¬cago to the high school grinds. Well,it is a good idea; if we can’t bechampions of the West in anythingelse, it might just as well be in 3-Amen.• • •I have an idea to offer in this“scholarship interscholastic” idea.Well do I recall the sunny day threesprings ago when Mother washed myface just SO clean, tied my bowtie, patted me on the back, and sentme off, the hope of Old Oak ParkHigh, to bring home the Englishscholarship. Well, sir, I didn’t. Aboutmidway through the three hours Ibegan to feel that the orange andtoast I had eaten at 6:45 in themorning weren’t so substantial foran ordeal such as this one was fastturning out to be. About the sametime I noticed a question aboutMacbeth that looked sort of nasty.So I grasped my hat, straight-armedthree proctors that tried to stop myprogress to the door, left the placeflat and went off to 55th Street,where I ate eighty cents’ worth atthe Greek’s. My suggestion is thatplates of sandwiches and hot Oval-tine or something be passed aroundthe arena at intervals of a quarterof an hour. But then, I supposecribbers could be smuggled in amongthe cheese by outside accomplices.Perhaps the contestants will have togo on starving as usual during thefatal three hours.* * •President Rightmire of Ohio Statehas taken his stand against hazing.He is meeting opposition from thecollege lads, who like their hazing—when someone else is going into thetub. The latest bulletin from Colum¬bus is that “the Y. M. C. A. has goneon record by a unanimous vote fav¬oring hazing if the lake is cleaned.”That last clause is the vital one.* * *Blackfriars is to get bucked upfor its show this year by no less aman than Joe Cook, the one-manvaudeville show (as his p. a. says),who is busy entertaining at the ClubBagdad. “I’ve always had a tenderspot for the old alma mater,” saidJoe, “but say, now that I recall, it’sWilliam and Mary. Well, let it go.” MIRROR ADOPTSNEW PLAN FORGOVERNINGSTAFFThree Members-at-Largeand Two ExecutivesReplace HeadsA new plan of management for TheMirror which has been adopted bythe present Mirror Board, composedof Betty Graham, president, MiriamWalker, business manager, and RuthBurtis, general manager, will be putinto effect by next year’s governingstaff.Two new offices will be created totake the places of the present threeheads of the departments. An en¬tirely new council will \>e establishedto supervise and advise the annualproduction.Name Officers-at-LargeThe general manager and businessmanager, as the two new officers willbe called, will perform the dutiesif the present president, businessmanager and general manager.Three seniors will be chosen asofficers-at-large and will take theirplaces on an advisory board of five.The other two members will be thebusiness and general managers. Of¬ficers-at-large serving on this councilwill be chosen from the productionstaff if The Mirror, in order to es¬tablish a means of cooperation be¬tween the two departments of actingand producing. At the first meetingof the council one member will beelected to serve as chairman.List Subordinate Committee*Subordinate committees will per¬form the actual work of productionunder the supervision of the head of¬ficers. The general manager will bein charge of the work of the com¬mittees on costumes, scenery andproperties. The stage manager willbe directly under the business man¬ager.The board feels that this new planwill provide for greater efficiencyand cooperation, and that under thenew management the work of pro¬duction will be simplified.PROF. CONYER READCONTINUES ENGLISHHISTORY LECTURESProfessor Conyer Read, a non-resi¬dent professor in the History depart¬ment, who is a noted authority onEnglish history, is giving a seriesof lectures at the University on“England in the Sixteenth Century.”“Public Finance and the MoneyMarket,” the second lecture in theseries will be presented today at 4:30in Harper Mil.Professor Read is the author of“The Life of Wallingham,” who wasa minister in Queen Elizabeth’s cabi¬net. At present he resides in Phila¬delphia, Pennsylvania, where he ishead of a large woolen manufactur¬ing company.By Aldean GibboneyCharred wood, suggestive of hu¬man inhabitation and perhaps of anIndian burial was unearthed Satur¬day by Dr. Fay-Cooper Cole, of thedepartment of anthropology, in hisexcavations near Lamont, southwestof Chicago.The discovery was made in one ofseven mounds on the Coghill golfcourse, 119th street end Archer road.At present it is impossible to deter¬mine whether the charred wood isreally a relic of some primitive fire-buried by some rodent ,but Dr. Cole Blackfriars To UseNew Jazz TricksJazz instruments of a novel typeand producing a bell-like effectare to be introduced by Black¬friars in their coming productionin which special attention is beinggiven to. the orchestration. Ac¬cording to Norman Reid, musicalsupervisor of Blackfriars, thisyear’s play is to feature lightFrench jazz produced not by in¬dividuals or groups of artists butby the cooperation of all of lastyears’ musicians, the result ofsuch concentration of effort andtalent being the production of bet¬ter music. The orchestration isunder the direction of Harry Al¬ford who also has responsibilityfor some of the specialties of PaulAsh and other famous orchestras.EDUCATORS TALKON SUPERVISIONMid-West Conference ToMeet Here SaturdayThe fourth annual meeting of theMid-West Conference on Supervisionin connection with the Thirty-NinthEducationcal Convention will be heldSaturday, May 7, in Mandel Hall.Three talks on the use of tests insupervision, supervisory techniques ininstruction in reading, and the activ¬ities of good and poor teachers, arescheduled for the morning session, atwhich associate Professor William H.Burton, of the School of Educationwill preside. Dr. William S. Gray,professor of Education and dean ofthe College of Education will conductthe afternoon session.Women RepresentLocal Y. W. AtRegional MeetingDelegates representing towns andcities of the mid-western states willbe present at the Y. W. C. A. Region¬al conference being held this week atthe Edgewater Beach hotel for thepurpose of considering the religiousfoundations of the association. Thesession which started Tuesday noonwill continue until Friday noon.Representatives from the Y. W. C..A. at the University are Mrs. CharlesW. Gilkey, Mrs. Nathaniel Butler,Mrs. Samuel McClintock, Mrs. Har¬vey Carr and Mrs. Elliott Downing.The conference is open to all mem¬bers of the Y. W. C. A.Federation SponsorsTo Meet TomorrowFederation sponsors will hold theirweekly meeting tomorrow at 1:45 inthe alumnae room of Ida Noyes hall.Katherine Rose, chairman of the or¬ganization, has urg’ed the sponsors,who were recently installed to bepresent.is hopeful that utensils and skeletonswill be uncovered later.Illinois has contributed very littleto the mound discoveries, Dr. Colesaid, although perhaps these moundswill show the state to be richer inrelics than has previously been sup¬posed.In the same field, but not in amound as was the case with thepreserved wood, two Indian arrow¬heads were unearthed by a groupof graduate students working withDr. Cole. The Interclass Hop is going to sayit with flowers.* A small corsage with a card hear¬ing the University crest, the namesof the leaders, and the list of patronsand patronesses will compose the pro¬gram for the spring formal, the hopleaders announced today. Theseprograms will not only differ fromnay program ever designed for a Uni¬versity affair, but will be more col¬orful and elaborate.Flowers are to be the motif of theentire dance, according to FrancesKendall, in charge of decorations,who reports that smilax and foliagewill adorn the balconies of the Black-stone ballroorti, while the sides ofthe dance floor are to be coveredwith ferns and wild flowers.Clyde Keutzer, senior class leaderwith Ruth Burtis, requests that allfraternity representatives for ticketsales meet him at 2:30 Friday after¬noon in Classics 20. * Tickets havebeen allotted to the various housesand are also on sale at the Univer¬sity bookstore and the Reynolds clubat $4.40.With the ticket sale started andWar Is a Virtue,But Pacifists AreEssential—Sm ith“War is a virtue; men will fightand ought to fight, and if they don’tfight, they will lose their souls,” de¬clared Professor T. V. Smith in histalk, “The Ethics of Pacifism,” de¬livered to a hundred dinner guestsof the Liberal Club, last night, inthe Reynolds club.“The hope of pacifism,” ProfessorSmith added, “is the wildest dreamof adolescent imagination. As a so¬cial policy, however, it is good tchave pacifists, merely to neutralizethe action of the militarists while therest of us in the saner world havetime to think it over.”PROF. NITZE FETESGERMAN NOBLEMANAT DINNER TONIGHTProfessor William A. Nitze, headof the department of RomanceLanguages and Literature, and Mrs.Nitze will entertain Baron and Baron¬ess Maltzan at dinner this feveningat the Casino.Baron Maltzen, German ambassa ■dor to the United States, and his wifeduring their stay here, will be enter¬tained by Vice-president and Mrs.Dawes, and the German consul-gen¬eral.CARS TO BE BANNEDAT MICHIGAN, REPORTThe Board of Regents, deliberat¬ing on the recent ghastly accident,in which one student was killed andthree injured, were, from last re¬ports, contemplating putting an endto the series of accidents of the pastyears by abolishing the autos en¬tirely at- Michigan.MACMILLAN TALKS 'TO ETA SIGMA PHI“Classical Astronomy” will be dis¬cussed by Dr. William D. MacMillan,professor of astronomy, in an illus¬trated lecture sponsored by Eta Sig¬ma Phi tomorrow at 4:30 in Classics20. The lecture will be preceded by atea for the Graduate Classical club.Tickets are now on sale for fiftycents for the Eta Sigma Phi bridgeparty to be given Friday. the first few batches already dis¬posed of, the Interclass Hop is des¬tined to attain the goal which theplans and arrangements of the lead¬ers have set for it, they say. Thelargest Hop ever given will be thisyear’s, tickets for which are con¬siderably below those of last year,it is hoped.“The first distribution of ticketshas been almost exhausted,” saidKeutzer today. “We expect the larg¬est attendance in Interclass Hop his¬tory, but the Blackstone affords morecommodious quarters than we haveever had before. I think that ourmove from campus is already justi¬fied by ticket sales.”THIRTY-EIGHT TOJOIN WAA RANKSWomen Initiated atQuarterly DinnerThirty-eight women were initiatedinto W. A. A. at the quarterly ban¬quet held last night in Ida Noyeshall. The new members are: LucilleAlexander, Carrie Barton, MarionBauer, Alice Binney, Helen Clark,Marjorie Cooper, Ruth Crabbe, Dor¬othy Cunningham, Clair Davis, The¬odora Eastes, Cora Mae Ellsworth,Mona Flanders, Betty Galt, Eliza¬beth Gates, Geraldine Hacker.Virginia Hanna, Frances Holmes,Marianna Irwin, Sinah Kitzing, Mar¬cella Koeber, Anna Kostka, BerthaLevin, Katherine Madison, SophiaMalensky, Olga Misura, Ruth Moore,(Continued on Sports page)Women Speakers toGive One-Act PlayTo Entertain MenThe Women Speakers club will en¬tertain the Men Speakers at theirnext meeting, Thursday, May 5, at7 in the theater of Ida Noyes hallby presenting the one act play“Sham” by Frank D. Tompkins.The part of the thief will be tak¬en by Helen Shoemake. Naomi Mar-kee will play the role of the husband,Charles, and Elizabeth Runyon willbe his wife, Clara. The newspaperreporter will be portrayed by EstherZumdall.Kemp, WhittleseyJoin World CruiseDr. H. S. Kemp and Dr. D. S.Whittlesey, professors of geographyat the University, have been namedfaculty members of the second cruisearound the world of the Ryndam Uni¬versity Afloat, which is scheduled toleave New York on September 23.“So Tarzan,"Says his creator,Edgar Rice Burroughs, “is purely theproduct of my imagination. I do notbelieve that any human infant or childunprotected by adults of its own spe¬cies, could survive a fortnight in suchan African environment as I describein the Tarzan stories.”Breathes there a man with soul sodead who has never, during the in-disinct days of wild-eyed childhood,roamed and charmed and conqueredwith the mighty Tarzan and themisty, impossible persons and thingsthat have brought impenetrableAfrica and its undiscovered denizenshome to millions of pent-up city-dwel¬lers?From Tarzana, his ranch near Re¬seda, California, Edgar Rice Bur¬roughs has revealed the sources andbackground for his fiction in an ar¬ticle written especially for the Celeb¬rities’ Number ofThe Dally Maroon ELOISE KRESSEGETS SECRETARY-TREASURER POSTBanquet of EntireCouncil FollowsElectionsArnold Johnson was made presi¬dent of the Undergraduate /councilfor the ensuing year at the annualelection of officers which took place *last night at the home of WendellBennett, the retiring president.Eloise Kresse was elected Secretary-Treasurer.Johnson’s election was expected,considering the fact that he led overCarl Hendrickson, his opponent inboth of the elections to the Council.Miss Kresse’s victory, however, cameas a surprise, since she was onlyelected on the second ballot in thecampus vote, whereas Helen Kingled the field on both.Banquet Follows ElectionThe elections were followed by abanquet for the entire council atwhich Bennett was the host. Herethe campus celebrities temporarilylaying aside their traditional dignity,under the leadership of last year’spresident, engaged in games of Ringaround a Rosy, Thumbs Down andHands Up until late into the evening.„ Both ActiveJohnson has had an active careerin campus life. Among other activ¬ities, he has been manager of Intra¬mural fall sports, chairman of thereception committee of laif; year’strack Interscholastic, a committeemember of the 1927 basketball In¬terscholastic, a member of Black¬friars and of Kappa Sigma fratern¬ity.Miss Kresse has been a member ofthe Freshman, Sophomore and Ju¬nior class councils, has taken partin settlement night vaudeville, 1925and 1926, and is a member of W.A. A., Federation and Esoteric.FOUR FACULTY MENGIVEN GUGGENHEIMMEMORIAL AWARDSResearch fellowships abroad wererecently awarded to four membersof the University faculty by the JohnSimon Guggenheim Memorial founda¬tion. Dr. Frank C. Hoyt is to dowork in physics; Dr. Bernadotte C.Schmitt in origins of the WorldWar; Dr. Archer Taylor in Germanicfolk-lore; and Dr. Leonard D. Whitein economic conditions in GreatBritain.TOWER PLAYERS TOACT ORIGINAL SKITActing as they write the TowerPlayers will dramatize an originalplay at a meeting to be held at 2:30in the tower room of Mitchell tower.One of the members has plannedthe idea around which the plot willbe developed. The cast will be theauthors, and will fill in the detailsof the main outline as the rehearsalsprogress.LEADERS ON CAMPUSFIT TO GUIDE BOYSThat the majority of men in posi¬tions of leadership on the campusare fitted for constructive leadershipamong boys was the theme of a talkgiven by Mr. Milton D. McLean,executive-secretary of the Y. M. C.A., over the radio broadcasting sta¬tion WMAQ last night. He showedhow the average boy idolizes thecollege man.Anthropologists Unearth CharredRemains of Ancient Indian BurialPage Six THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, APRIL 26, 2927^ jVMsfle miaCOURAGEWhen courage, dying, lets its scutch¬eon fall—The Emblem of the will to do anddare—In shameful thought that mayhap af¬ter allThe world will never learn its pres¬ence there,A searchful query steals into my mind,If then the world should never learnto careYet in its vast expanse I still shouldfindA friend—that gift of all great giftsmost rare,Should all my endless striving be invain?Nay, timid heart! All Life is thine togain.—Alice in WonderlandA FRIEND of ours came into theoffice the other day with a sad radiostory. It seems that he had just gotmarried and one morning his wifeasked him to copy the radio recipefrom WGN. His set, however, wasnot working very well and instead ofgetting the radio recipe alone he alsotuned in a program of morning exer¬cises—both at once. This is what hetook down: “Hands on hips, place onecup of flour on the shoulders, raiseknees and depress toes and wash thor¬oughly in one-half cup of milk. Infour counts raise and lower the legsand mash two hard-boiled eggs in asieve. Repeat six times. Inhale one-half teaspoonful of baking powder andone cup of flour, breathe naturallyand exhale and sift. Attention! Jumpto a squatting position and bend whiteof egg backward and forward over¬head and in four counts make a stiffdough that will stretch at the waist.Lie flat on the floor and roll into amarble the size of a walnut. Hop toa standstill and boil in water but donot boil into a gallop afterwards. Inten minutes remove from the fire anddry with a towel. Breathe naturallyand dress in warm flannels and servewith fish soup.”“Trippingly We Wend Our School-ward Way . . .Dear GeoG:Struthers Burt concludes his novel“The Delectable Mountain” with thisphilosophical sidelight—“Men stum¬ble—so do women.” Mr. Burt was un¬doubtedly referring to the inconveni¬ences arising from that pile of lumberstraddling the sidewalk next to themedical buildings under constructi m!—GertrudeTO THE MOONI kneel beside my bedAt night,And see the moonThat shinesSo bright.I wonder if the manUp there,Has kneeled down, too,To sayHis prayer?—Petite SoeurTHE CAT bandit has lately beenoperating in the neighborhood of theUniversity. Last winter when he firstput in his Chicago appearance oneheard of him only occasionally. With¬in the last few weeks, however, hisnefariousness has become so frequentan occurrence, and has covered sucha wide range of territory that it isalmost impossible to believe one mancapable of the depradations. We cancome to only ©ne conclusion—The CatBandit must have had kittens!NOW that the Senior MustacheRace is upon us, we wish to offer forpublic opinion a little scheme of oursthat we have long cherished. TheWorld, as we all know, is not right.Men are not afforded equal rights;they do not receive the same propor¬tions of the earth’s wealth; some areblessed with much, and others arecursed with little; and—some menhave (potentially) great big, bristling,briusing mustaches, while others mustbe contented with soft, camel-hair tea¬spoon dusters. Therefore, in order thatthe Senior Mustache Race be put #n afair and square basis The Whistle rec¬ ommends that a booby prize be offer¬ed, besides the regular first prize, tothe man most slighted by the god ofMustachios. And wre further recom¬mend that the booby prize be a silver-plated shaving cup on which will beengraved the one word—“Mamma!”—GEO-G TONY HINKLE TERMSNEW RULE BACKWARDSTEP—NOT ADVANCE(Continued from sports page)ing in basketball. More points willprobably be scored by foul goals. Thismakes the game a fout shooting con¬ test, exactly what the sporting publicdoes not want.“It tends to do away with the brainwork of the individual players. Theplayer will become more or less ofa mechanical man, fitting into a sys¬tem with no chance to use his ownbrains.“It does away with the spectacular part of basketball that is, the individ¬ual cleverness. It is the same as elim¬inating the home run of baseball or thelong end run in football.“It gives the defensive team by farthe greater advantage.“It is a backward step in basket¬ball rather than an advancement.” SPRING FOOTBALL PRACTICE(Continued from sports page)“Peanuts” because of his 130 pounds,and Heywood, 140, are the jackrabbitsof the backs. Raysson lacks experi¬ence. Rudy Leyers is a better playerbecause of his year of experience lastseason.n Unusual IntroductionUnusualAsk “Ken”Rouseor“Wallie ”Ma rksto show youthe newGRIDIRONand CO-EDHere are the new collegiate Pony Coats — the Gridiron for men, and the Coed forwomen. They’re different from anything you have evea seen — rich looking, warm,and comfortable — especially designed to give you that collegiate swagger.Each coat is carefully tailored from selected black or dark brown northern ponyskin, and distinctively lined with a high quality quilted maroon sateen. It’s really aknock-out. iFeatures of theGridiron and Co-edPony CoatsSoft and comfortable.Beautiful lusterous sheen.Selected whole pony skins.Lined in your school color.Reinforced leather arm pits.No loose hairs to fall out.No streaky after-rain effects*Waterproof and Stormproof.Guaranteed for 3 years.Can be purchased on con¬venient payment plan. You’ll want one of these coats next fall. Tobe sure of getting it, place your order nowwith “Ken” or “Wallie.” Their phonenumber is Dorchester 0045. Samples ofthe coats are also on display in Paul andWilley’s, 55th and Woodlawn.Gridironor Co-edModel $ 57 SOD. D. Mindel & Co.Oxford Bldg. .... 118 N. LaSalle “Ken"and “Wallie” intheir new GridironsftVol. 27. No. 110.WHAT of IT?y/GCORpe MORgENSTER^Today’s column will, in themanner of Mr. Brisbane, dealwith the latest developmentshere and there—if that ain’ttoo much to expect.The freshman class, ever a brightand enterprising young lot, has beensiezed with an idea. That is, its classcouncil has. The idea is to have abig picnic and field day out in thePalos Park forest preserve for allfreshmen some day in the first weekin June. Everybody will come, ac¬cording to the plan, races will be run,hot dogs and pop baskets lunches willbe knocked off, and every thing’ll bejolly all around. The council hopesthat the general field day will becometraditional with- the freshman class.“Ha, ha!” laughed jolly Mr. Pick¬wick, at one and the same time tak¬ing a bit of tongue sandwich and aswig of ale, “tell us another one,Uncle Remus.”* * •The University also has had anidea. The dear old scholarship com¬petitions for the high school children,held every year late in the spring,will be run this year on the sameprinciples as the basketball tourna¬ment promoted every year by theschool. In other years the contest¬ants came up for their crack at theprizes, sat through their three-hourexam, were hustled over to BartlettGym afterwards and provided withplates of ham, potato salad and pic¬kles, and then allowed to stray backto their native haunts. This year,however, they will (as The Maroonso neatly puts it) “be treated withthe same respect and friendliness asthe interscholastic basketball men.”The smoother frat boys, it is pre-usmed, will be sent out to sell Chi¬cago to the high school grinds. Well,it is a good idea; if we can’t bechampions of the West in anythingelse, it might just as well be in 3-Amen.• • •I have an idea to offer in this“scholarship interscholastic” idea.Well do I recall the sunny day threesprings ago when Mother washed myface just SO clean, tied my bowtie, patted me on the back, and sentme off, the hope of Old Oak ParkHigh, to bring home the Englishscholarship. Well, sir, I didn’t. Aboutmidway through the three hours Ibegan to feel that the orange andtoast I had eaten at 6:45 in themorning weren’t so substantial foran ordeal such as this one was fastturning out to be. About the sametime I noticed a question aboutMacbeth that looked sort of nasty.So I grasped my hat, straight-armedthree proctors that tried to stop myprogress to the door, left the placeflat and went off to 55th Street,where I ate eighty cents’ worth atthe Greek’s. My suggestion is thatplates of sandwiches and hot Oval-tine or something be passed aroundthe arena at intervals of a quarterof an hour. But then, I supposecribbers could be smuggled in amongthe cheese by outside accomplices.Perhaps the contestants will have togo on starving as usual during thefatal three hours.• * *President Rightmire of Ohio Statehas taken his stand against hazing.He is meeting opposition from thecollege lads, who like their hazing—when someone else is going into thetub. The latest bulletin from Colum¬bus is that “the Y. M. C. A. has goneon record by a unanimous vote fav¬oring hazing if the lake is cleaned.”That last clause is the vital one.* * *Blackfriars is to get bucked upfor its show this year by no less aman than Joe Cook, the one-manvaudeville show (as his p. a. says),who is busy entertaining at the ClubBagdad. “I’ve always had a tenderspot for the old alma mater,” saidJoe, “but say, now that I recall, it’sWilliam and Mary. Well, let it go.” UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1927ARNOLD JOHNSON IS NEW COUNCIL HEADUse of Flowers Will Make HopUnique Campus Social AffairMIRROR ADOPTSNEW PLAN FORGOVERNINGSTAFFThree Members-at-Largeand Two ExecutivesReplace HeadsA new plan of management for TheMirror which has been adopted bythe present Mirror Board, composedof Betty Graham, president, MiriamWalker, business manager, and RuthBurtis, general manager, will be putinto effect by next year’s governingstaff.Two new offices will be created totake the places of the present threeheads of the departments. An en¬tirely new council will W establishedto supervise and advise the annualproduction.Name Officers-at-LargeThe general manager and businessJ manager, as the two new officers willbe called, will perform the dutiesif the present president, businessmanager and general manager.Three seniors will be chosen asofficers-at-large and will take theirplaces on an advisory board of five.The other two members will be thebusiness and general managers. Of-ficers-at-large serving on this councilwill be chosen from the productionstaff if The Mirror, in order to es¬tablish a means of cooperation be¬tween the two departments of actingand producing. At the first meetingof the council one member will beelected to serve as chairman.List Subordinate CommitteesSubordinate committees will per¬form the actual work of productionunder the supervision of the head of¬ficers. The general manager will bein charge of the work of the com¬mittees on costumes, scenery andproperties. The stage manager willbe directly under the business man¬ager.The board feels that this new planwill provide for greater efficiencyand cooperation, and that under thenew management the work of pro¬duction will be simplified.PROF. CONYER READCONTINUES ENGLISHHISTORY LECTURESProfessor Conyer Read, a non-resi¬dent professor in the History depart¬ment, who is a noted authority onEnglish history, is giving a seriesof lectures at the University on“England in the Sixteenth Century.”“Public Finance and the MoneyMarket,” the second lecture in theseries will be presented today at 4:30in Harper Mil.Professor Read is the author of“The Life of Wallingham,” who wasa minister in Queen Elizabeth’s cabi¬net. At present he resides in Phila¬delphia, Pennsylvania, where he ishead of a large woolen manufactur¬ing company.By Aldean GibboneyCharred wood, suggestive of hu¬man inhabitation and perhaps of anIndian burial was unearthed Satur¬day by Dr. Fay-Cooper Cole, of thedepartment of anthropology, in hisexcavations near Lamont, southwestof Chicago.The discovery was made in one ofseven mounds on the Coghill golfcourse, 119th street and Archer road.At present it is impossible to deter¬mine whether the charred wood isreally a relic of some primitive fire-buried by some rodent ,but Dr. Cole Blackfriars To UseNew Jazz TricksJazz instruments of a novel typeand producing a bell-like effectare to be introduced by Black¬friars in their coming productionin which special attention is beinggiven to the orchestration. Ac¬cording to Norman Reid, musicalsupervisor of Blackfriars, this*year’s play is to feature lightFrench jazz produced not by in¬dividuals or groups of artists butby the cooperation of all of lastyears’ musicians, the result ofsuch concentration of effort andtalent being the production of bet¬ter music. The orchestration isunder the direction of Harry Al¬ford who also has responsibilityfor some of the specialties of PaulAsh and other famous orchestras.EDUCATORS TALKON SUPERVISION__ #Mid-West Conference ToMeet Here SaturdayThe fourth annual meeting of theMid-West Conference on Supervisionin connection with the Thirty-NinthEducationcal Convention will be heldSaturday, May 7, in Mandel Hall.Three talks on the use of tests insupervision, supervisory techniques ininstruction in reading, and the activ¬ities of good and poor teachers, arescheduled for the morning session, atwhich associate Professor William H.Burton, of the School of Educationwill preside. Dr. William S. Gray,professor of Education and dean ofthe College of Education will conductthe afternoon session.Women RepresentLocal Y. W. AtRegional MeetingDelegates representing towns andcities of the mid-western states willbe present at the Y. W. C. A. Region¬al conference being held this week atthe Edgewater Beach hotel for thepurpose of considering the religiousfoundations of the association. Thesession which started Tuesday noonwill continue until Friday noon.Representatives from the Y. W. C..A. at the University are Mrs. CharlesW. Gilkey, Mrs. Nathaniel Butler,Mrs. Samuel McClintock, Mrs. Har¬vey Carr and Mrs. Elliott Downing.The conference is open to all mem¬bers of the Y. W. C. A.Federation SponsorsTo Meet TomorrowFederation sponsors will hold theirweekly meeting tomorrow at 1:45 inthe alumnae room of Ida Noyes hall.Katherine Rose, chairman of the or¬ganization, has urg’ed the sponsors,who were recently installed to bepresent.is hopeful that utensils and skeletonswill be uncovered later.Illinois has contributed very littleto the mound discoveries, Dr. Colesaid, although perhaps these moundswill show the state to be richer inrelics than has previously been sup¬posed.In the same field, but not in amound as was the case with thepreserved wood, two Indian arrow¬heads were unearthed by a groupof graduate students working withDr. Cole. The Interclass Hop is going to sayit with flowers.' A small corsage with a card bear¬ing the University crest, the namesof the leaders, and the list of patronsand patronesses will compose the pro¬gram for the spring formal, the hopleaders announced today. Theseprograms will not only differ fromnay program ever designed for a Uni¬versity affair, but will be more col¬orful and elaborate.Flowers are to be the motif of theentire dance, according to FrancesKendall, in charge of decorations,who reports that smilax and foliagewill adorn the balconies of the Black-stone ballroorti, while the sides ofthe dance floor are to be coveredwith ferns and wild flowers.Clyde Keutzer, senior class leaderwith Ruth Burtis, requests that allfraternity representatives for ticketsales meet him at 2:30 Friday after¬noon in Classics 20. Tickets havebeen allotted to the various housesand are also on sale at the Univer¬sity bookstore and the Reynolds clubat $4.40.With the ticket sale started andWar Is a Virtue,But Pacifists AreEssential—Smith“War is a virtue; men will fightand ought to fight, and if they don’tfight, they will lose their souls,” de¬clared Professor T. V. Smith in histalk, “The Ethics of Pacifism,” de¬livered to a hundred dinner guestsof the Liberal Club, last night, inthe Reynolds club.“The hope of pacifism,” ProfessorSmith added, “is the wildest dreamof adolescent imagination. As a so¬cial policy, however, it is good tchave pacifists, merely to neutralizethe action of the militarists while therest of us in the saner world havetime to think it over.”PROF. NITZE FETESGERMAN NOBLEMANAT DINNER TONIGHTProfessor William A. Nitze, headof the department of RomanceLanguages and Literature, and Mrs.Nitze will entertain Baron and Baron¬ess Maltzan at dinner this feveningat the Casino. 4Baron Maltzen, German ambassa¬dor to the United States, and his wifeduring their stay here, will be enter¬tained by Vice-president and Mrs.Dawes, and the German consul-gen¬eral.CARS TO BE BANNEDAT MICHIGAN, REPORTThe Board of Regents, deliberat¬ing on the recent ghastly accident,in which one student was killed andthree injured, were, from last re¬ports, contemplating putting an endto the series of accidents of the pastyears by abolishing the autos en¬tirely at- Michigan.MAC MILLAN TALKSTO ETA SIGMA PHI“Classical Astronomy” will be dis¬cussed by Dr. William D. MacMillan,professor of astronomy, in an illus¬trated lecture sponsored by Eta Sig¬ma Phi tomorrow at 4:30 in Classics20. The lecture will be preceded by atea for the Graduate Classical club.Tickets are now on sale for fiftycents for the Eta Sigma Phi bridgeparty to be given Friday. the first few batches already dis¬posed of, the Interclass Hop is des¬tined to attain the goal which theplans and arrangements of the lead¬ers have set for it, they say. Thelargest Hop ever given will be thisyear’s, tickets for which are con¬siderably below those of last year,it is hoped.“The first distribution of ticketshas been almost exhausted,” saidKeutzer today. “We expect the larg¬est attendance in Interclass Hop his¬tory, but the Blackstone affords morecommodious quarters than we haveever had before. I think that ourmove from campus is already justi¬fied by ticket sales.”THIRTY-EIGHT TOJOIN WAA RANKSWomen Initiated atQuarterly DinnerThirty-eight women were initiatedinto W. A. A. at the quarterly ban¬quet held last night in Ida Noyeshaft. The new members are: LucilleAlexander, Carrie Barton, MarionBauer, Alice Binney, Helen Clark,Marjorie Cooper, Ruth Crabbe, Dor¬othy Cunningham, Clair Davis, The¬odora Eastes, Cora Mae Ellsworth,Mona Flanders, Betty Galt, Eliza¬beth Gates, Geraldine Hacker.Virginia Hanna, Frances Holmes,Marianna Irwin, Sinah Kitzing, Mar¬cella Koeber, Anna Kostka, BerthaLevin, Katherine Madison, SophiaMalensky, Olga Misura, Ruth Moore,(Continued on Sports page)Women Speakers toGive One-Act PlayTo Entertain MenThe Women Speakers club will en¬tertain the Men Speakers at theirnext meeting, Thursday, May 5, at7 in the theater of Ida Noyes hallby presenting the one act play“Sham” by Frank D. Tompkins.The part of the thief will be tak¬en by Helen Shoemake. Naomi Mar-kee will play the role of the husband,Charles, and Elizabeth Runyon willbe his wife, Clara. The newspaperreporter will be portrayed by EstherZumdall.Kemp, WhittleseyJoin World CruiseDr. H. S. Kemp and Dr. D. S.Whittlesey, professors of geographyat the University, have been namedfaculty members of the second cruisearound the world of the Ryndam Uni¬versity Afloat, which is scheduled toleave New York on September 23."So Tarzan,"Says his creator,Edftar Rice Burroughs, “is purely theproduct of my imagination. I do notbelieve that any human infant or childunprotected by adults of its own spe¬cies, could survive a fortnight in suchan African environment as I describein the Tarzan stories."Breathes there a man with soul sodead who has never, during the in-disinct days of wild-eyed childhood,roamed and charmed and conqueredwith the mighty Tarzan and themisty, impossible persons and thingsthat have brought impenetrableAfrica and its undiscovered denizenshome to millions of pent-up city-dwel¬lers?From Tarzana, his ranch near Re¬seda, California, Edgar Rice Bur¬roughs has revealed the sources andbackground for his fiction in an ar¬ticle written especially for the Celeb¬rities’ Number ofThe Daily Maroon EL0ISE KRESSEGETSSECRETARY-TREASURER POSTBanquet of EntireCouncil FollowsElectionsArnold Johnson was made presi¬dent of the Undergraduate /councilfor the ensuing year at the annualelection of officers which took place *last night at the home of WendellBennett, the retiring president.Eloise Kresse was elected Secretary-Treasurer.Johnson’s election was expected,considering the fact that he led overCarl Hendrickson, his opponent inboth of the elections to the Council.Miss Kresse’s victory, however, cameas a surprise, since she was onlyelected on the second ballot in thecampus vote, whereas Helen Kingled the field on both.Banquet Follows ElectionThe elections were followed by abanquet for the entire council atwhich Bennett was the host. Herethe campus celebrities temporarilylaying aside their traditional dignity,under the leadership of last year’spresident, engaged in games of Ringaround a Rosy, Thumbs Down andHands Up until late into the evening.Both ActiveJohnson has had an active careerin campus life. Among other activ¬ities, he has been manager of Intra¬mural fall sports, chairman of thereception committee of la$ year’strack Interscholastic, a committeemember of the 1927 basketball In¬terscholastic, a member of Black¬friars and of Kappa Sigma fratern¬ity.Miss Kresse has been a member ofthe Freshman, Sophomore and Ju¬nior class councils, has taken partin settlement night vaudeville, 1925and 1926, and is a member of W.A. A., Federation and Esoteric.FOUR FACULTY MENGIVEN GUGGENHEIMMEMORIAL AWARDSResearch fellowships abroad wererecently awarded to four membersof the University faculty by the JohnSimon Guggenheim Memorial founda¬tion. Dr. Frank C. Hoyt is to dowork in physics; Dr. Bernadotte C.Schmitt in origins of the WorldWar; Dr. Archer Taylor in Germanicfolk-lore; and Dr. Leonard D. Whitein economic conditions in GreatBritain.TOWER PLAYERS TOACT ORIGINAL SKITActing as they write the TowerPlayers will dramatize an originalplay at a meeting to be held at 2:30in the tower room of Mitchell tower.One of the members has plannedthe idea around which the plot willbe developed. The cast will be theauthors, and will fill in the detailsof the main outline as the rehearsalsprogress.LEADERS ON CAMPUSFIT TO GUIDE BOYSThat the majority of men in posi¬tions of leadership on the campusare fitted for constructive leadershipamong boys was the theme of a talkgiven by Mr. Milton D. McLean,executive-secretary of the Y. M. C.A., over the radio broadcasting sta¬tion WMAQ last night. He showedhow the average boy idolizes thecollege man.Anthropologists Unearth CharrediRemains of Ancient Indian BurialL lifePk|t Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1927Qfyt JBailp jllaroonFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublisher mornings, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn, Winterand Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates $3.00 per year; bymail, $1.00 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as second-class mail at the Chicago Postoffice, Chicago, Illinois, March 18, 1906,under the act of March 3, 1873.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any material appearingin this paper.OFFICE—ROOM ONE, ELLIS HALL5804 Ellis AvenueTelephones: Editorial Office, Midway 0800, Local 245; Business Office,Hyde Park 4292; Sports Office, Local 80, 2 ringsMember of the Western Conference Press Association VOICE OF THE PEOPLEiApril 25, 1927The Editor,The Daily Maroon,5804 Ellis AvenueChicago.Dear Sir:Why the personal abuse? Yourplethora of denunciatory adjectivesdoes not trouble me. I am accus¬tomed to abuse and vilification. I dis¬like however, to see the question in-vovled in my talk to the FreshmanForum shifted aside by the “argu-mentum ad hominem.” Your personaldenunciation and your Menckenian sneer at my profession answer noquestion.I came to the University of Chi¬cago Campus on the invitation ofthe Freshman Forum to discuss theSeventh Commandment. Becausethis “old saw” has been discarded,on their own confession, by certainof my critics, why should you fallon me with all your ungentlemanlyspleen? Be frank and sincere. Dis¬cuss the Seventh Commandment. Itis foolish, sophomoric, and irrevelantto discuss Yarrow.Very truly yours,PHILIP YARROW.WALTER G. WILLIAMSON MANAGING EDITORMILTON H. KREINES BUSINESS MANAGERJOHN P. HOWE CHAIRMAN OF THE EDITORIAL BOARDRUTH G. DANIEL WOMEN’S EDITORTOM STEPHENSON SPORT EDITOREDITORIAL DEPARTMENT BUSINESS DEPARTMENTGeorge JonesNews Editor Charles J. Harris....Fred Kretschmer. Circulation ManagerA1 Widdifield News EditorWhistle EditorAssistantHubard Lovewell Office ManagerMadge Child Junior EditorJunior EditorBetty McGeeVictor RoternsRobert Stern ..Assistant Sports Editor..Assistant Sports Editor...Assistant Sports EditorDay Editor Joseph KlitnserRobert Fisher ....National Adv. ManagerSophomore AssistantDay Editor Sophomore AssistantDay EditorJack McBradyWallace Nelaon Sophomore AssistantSophomore AssistantHarriet HarrisEllen Hartman Sophomore Editor....Sophomore Editor Whenburning themidnight oilsmokeEdgeworth The PiedmontAn unusual Ruby semi*dress slipper for tbe co- edstyled in many of tbe sea¬son's newest leather com¬binations.Unified T RUBY?063 EAST 53BD STREETHYDE PARKtTHE DAILY MAROON’S PROGRAM FOR AMORE EFFECTIVE UNIVERSITY1. Encouragement of student initiative in undergraduate activityand scholarship.2. Extension of the Intramural principle.3. An augmented Department of Art.4. Blackfriars on the Road.5. An Interclub sing. *6. Abolition of Convocation Ceremonies.7. A Post-Office on the Campus.THE SACRAMENT OF EXTREME UNCTION'T'HE SACRAMENT of convocation, which is administered inT due and solemn form to every communicant of the Univer¬sity who has thirty-six credits of college work, two years of gym¬nasium bluffing and the price of a degree, is a bit of ritual whichmight well be dispensed with in a university which prides itselfon its genuineness. The rite is hoary with respectability but itschief value seems to be to provide the students with a bit ofhocus-pocus to make them feel that they have actually come tothe end of their college careers, and that they are actually edu-cted, and to make their parents feel that the money was not allwasted.The ceremony itself is amazingly uninteresting. It is truethat the students whose aim was to play around for four yearsand be bachelors-of-something at the end of that time have afeeling of secret glee in having gotten by with something. But itis also true that the students who have really benefited by theircontacts with the University and who are mature of mind lookupon the ceremony as the last of a series of dull penances whichthe authorities have seen fit to impose upon them. And it is mosttrue that the members of the faculty who are in attendance (andthey are few. considering the blanket scope of the invitation) arethere with no love of the business in their hearts but wtih a feel¬ing that they are required to give the departing boys and girls alast pat upon the back. The only people who seem to find theconvocation salutory are the college marshals and aides, and theyare glad first because they can wear their robes and feel import¬ant and second because they are excused from examinations tobe there.It would hardly do, however, to disappoint those who reallyfeel that a band, a dull speech, and a robed march across the con-vocatory platform are the final and necessary adjuncts of an au¬thentic education. For these, and for the people whose parentsdemand an opportunity to feel proud, some sort of sideshowshould be provided. But for all the others—and their number ismany—the thing should be abolished.WE PROTESTOOME PEOPLE about the campus are aware that a clock, a^ rather large clock, decorates Cobb Hall. It is immediatelyabove the. main entrance and every day the clork looks down onthe boys and girls who hang around to smoke and talk betweenclasses.Nobody seems to remember just when, if ever, this clockworked. A graduating class gave it to the Universtiy two or threeyears ago, and we distinctly remember seeing its hands. Theywere removed recently, and since then the clock has looked down,in embarrassed impotence, on all the boys and girls.Surely it would be humane to give this clock its hands again,so that it would have at least the appearance of vitality. It’s rath¬er cruel to leave this shamefaced thing exposed to the public gazeday after day. Where is the University’s conscience?\ It i uI. It "One gallon, Dad, and lift anchor. We gotta make Newport by dark n"Only one?" •nSure? Whered'ya think we’re goin’—Shanghai? Read the nameplate—it’s an 'Erskine Coupe!"FINALS (ugh)... then Commencement (ah)... and sum¬mer just ahead! Vacation days... soaking up sunshineat the beach . . . evenings spent with that jchic blonde youmet at the homecoming game ... a smart car ... your ownpersonal car—an Erskine Six Custom Coupe.Undergraduate America’s new car—the Erskine Six—miles out in front of the rest. Dietrich, without a peeramong custom body carrossiers, designed it; moulded itslines, endowed it with Continental sophistication. Trimas a silken ankle... inside, room no end for two... rumbleseat behind.built just for a double date. High hat in every¬thing but price.And can it do its stuff? Yes, sir, and how... slips throughjumbled traffic with the ease of an inspired eel... hangsonto, the road at sixty like a co-ed at her first prom ...climbs up a ski slide in high... handles, wheels aroundand pulls up like a polo pony.Summer is beckoning—so is "The Little Aristocrat"—a real companion for vacation days.The Erskine Six Custom Coupe, as illustrated, sellsfor #995 /. o. h. factory, complete with front andrear bumpers and self-energizing ^wheel brakes. yERSKINE SIX/^N^THE LITTLE ARISTOCRATUa §oo n Diamond Team in secondBig Ten Game at Illinois to¬day. jTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1927MAROON BALL TEAM DOWNSTATE; ENCOUNTER ILLINI TODAYintramural ballteams battle inRAIN; SIX GAMESSigma Nu, Phi B. D., T. S. O.,Kappa Nu, Macs, AndPhiPsiWinTwelve teams turned out yester¬day to participate in I-M playballbattles during the rain, and at theend of a hectic afternoon Sigma Nu,Phi B. D., Macs, Phi Psi, Kappa Nu,and Tau Sigma Omicron were re¬turned victors, sending down PhiSigs, A. T. O., Sigma Chi, Acacia,Manners, and Phi Delta Theta todefeat. Pi Lambda Phi won fromthe Burtons on forfeit.Sigma Nu downed the Phi Sigs ina close battle, 4-1. Barker, hurlingfor the winners held the opposingteam to 2 hits, while Caplow, PhiSig, gave the winners 5 blows.Phi B. D. 9, Phi Dolt 8With 2 out in the last inning andthe score tied Phi B. D. camethrough with a run to defeat PhiDelt, 9-8. Meadows of the Ph B.D. pitching staff was the whole team.Klaff of the Kappa Nu nine hurledan unhitable ball for 7 innings andhis team beat A. T. O. 14-2. Klaff onlyallowed 3 hits, while his teammateswere garnering 13.Goodman StarsGoodman of the Macs was thewhole story in the Macs-Acacia game.Allowing but one hit in 6 inningsthe Macs came out ahead 9-0.In a free hitting contest Phi Psiwas returned victor over Sigma Chi15-13. Both pitchers weakened andhits were very numerous. Six Make Varsity Net Team; OpenSeason Against Northwestern! TodayWEEK’S TENNIS CARDLISTS TWO MATCHESApril 27—At NorthwesternApril 30—At Iowa.May 4—Northwestern herejlay 13—Minnesota hereMay 16—Illinois here.May 21—At MichiganMay 23—Ohio State hereMay 26-29—Conference tourna¬mentMay 30—At Wisconsin. Hudlin Elected To CaptainNew SquadWith the first match to be playedtoday, the. Maroon net team, consist¬ing of Hudlin, Place, Wendy Ben¬nett, Marumota, Bud Abbott, and SiLesser, will swing into action againstNorthwestern at Evanston. The Chi¬cago tennis players have been prac¬ticing quite steadily for the last fewweeks and are in pretty good condi¬tion at present.REVISE PAIRINGSFOR I.M. TOURNEYSend Out Individual SinglesNoticesThe I-M Tennis Tournament is be¬ing played this week with a revisedschedule which includes last week’spostponed matches. Today’s pairings:Delta Chi vs. Lambda Chi.Sigma Chi vs. A. T. O.Beta Theta Pi vs. A. A. E.Psi U. vs. Alpha Delts.Delta Sigs vs. Kappa Nu.Phi Kaps vs. Sigma Nu.Phi Gams vs. Delta U.Tau Delts vs. Phi Delts.Pairings for the I. M. SinglesTournament were sent out yester¬day. The I-M Department is allow¬ing plenty of time for the matchesto be played and requests that thenumber of forfeits be minimized ifnot entirely eliminated. The Purple representatives are ledby Collins who has already seen twoyears of conference competition.Phillips is the best man on theNorthwestern outfit and one of theoutstanding Big Ten players, al¬though he is only a junior.Hudlin, who was chosen captainof the Maroon outfit, should be thestar, for he has seen two years ofvarsity competition. Place is also out¬standing. Wendy Bennett is the onlyremaining member of the team whohas played varsity tennis before.Marumota, Bud Abbott and Lesserare inexperienced but are expected todo much in the coming season.SPORTS BULLETINThe following candidates havebeen dropped from the varsity tennissquad and are now eligible for I-Mtennis:Cole, A., Gruskin, Go., Hoppe,Thomas, Leibsohn, S., Mandel, F.H., Roque, F. T., Szold, S., Wik-gren, Allen.Without a stop!Surely and swiftly the preferencefor natural tobacco taste is trav¬elling right across the country!In no other cigarette domen find such natural¬ness of taste and charac¬ter— and what, after all,can be better than that?Chesterfieldaud yet’Liggett at Mybrs Tobacco Co. CRISLER STRESSESINFIELD DRILL TOSTRENGTHEN TEAMKaplan Versus Stewart inMound Duel; OfferBreaks LegBy Vic RoterusThe Maroon infield, outfield, pitch¬ing staff and a few more will leavefor Champaign this morning to en¬gage in a game of hard ball with theUniversity of that neighborhood thisafternoon. To date, the Big Tenactivities of the two teams have beenmeager. Both played last Saturday,the Maroons digging the dirt in vainand Illinois with results.The Maroons were deprived of anoutfielder when Offer, who perform¬ed against Ohio State, broke a legin practice. Macklind will play in hisplace if Macklind does not pitch.Should Macklind assume the dutiesand responsibilities of the man onthe mound, Drabinsky will be assign¬ed the territory in right field.Crisler MumAlthough Crisler as usual wasmum about his hurling selection itseems as though Kaplan, sophomoreand southpaw, will chuck. The bat¬ting and fielding advantages gainedby putting Macklind in right fieldoffset his pitching ability. Stpwartwho has been Illinois’ best bet thisseason and last will probably fire’em at the Maroons. Stewart is thechap who lost a 14.inning encounteron the Greenwood lot last spring.This season besides going good onthe southern trip, he outjtychedMaxton, Purdue ace, in the opener.Drills InfieldThe infield work of the Maroonswhich was disappointing Saturday,has been stressed by Crisler allweek. They still lack the coordina¬tion, snap and confidence that theyshould attain before the season isover. • PROBABLE LINEUPSFOR TODAY’S GAMEChicago— — IllinoisPrice, lb Finn, ssMacklind, If Dorn, IfMcConnel, ss Gundlach, 2bAnderson, 2b Hoffman, rfBrignall, 3b Bryden, 2bGordon, rf Paul, 3bHoerger. cf Sweeney, cfWebster, c Kusinski, cKaplan, p Stewart, pSTATE FENCERSCOMPETE HEREChicago Entries Show Well InEventsThe second round of the annualfencing tournament staged by theIllinois Fencers’ League will be heldat Bartlett Gym Saturday. In theopening round last Saturday, Chi¬cago entries snared two second andtwo third places in three events. Inthe foils Edward Wallace took sec¬ond and Bill Nash the same in thesabers. Elmer Friedman capturedtwo thirds, one in the duelling-swordevent and one in the sabers.The EntriesIn the 3-man novice team competi¬tion next Saturday night, the Uni¬versity will be represented by a teamwhich will consist of Wallace, Quinn,and Goldberg. Eisendrath may besubstituted for one of the others.In the individual foil, duelling swordand saber events Kerr, J. Steere,Nash, Peterson and Graves will en¬ter while Merrill, Senior Fencer, willenter himself in the senior division.W. A. A. INITIATES(Continued from page 1)Ethel Moulton, Madolin Rider, NellieRooeveen, Irene Rudnick, CarolynSchroeder, Lois Selmer, HarrietSmith, Marjorie Tolman, JosephineTurner, Katherine Lloyd, ChariotteSmith, Lillian Wellner.J :—*Announcement of the$30,000 Coca-Cola prize „contest will appear in manynewspapers and in the fol¬lowing magazines:The Saturday Evening Post... .May 7Literary Digest May 14Collier’s Weekly May 24Liberty May 14Life May 5Watch this contest for thenext three months* Collegemen ought to win*The Coca-Cola Co., Adamca, Ga. GALAXY OF POLEVAULT STARS ATDRAKE CLASSICWhite, Pickard, McGinnis,Northup Among ThosePresentDes Moines, la., April 27.—TheDrake relay record for the pole vault,hung up in 1924 when McKowan ofthe Kansas State Teachers Collegeof Pittsburg, Kansas, cleared the barat 13 feet even, appears doomed tofall this week when the pick of thecollege and university pole vaultersof the west come together at Drakestadium.White FavoredMcKowan’s record has been bet¬tered by a number of the collegestars who will compete here. Lead¬ing the list of contenders for firstplace in the local meet will be Whiteof Illinois, whose mark of 13 feet3 1-4 inches at the Rice relays lastmonth is the best on record duringthe present season. In addition tohis great vaulting at the Rice meet,he took first place at the Kansas re¬lays last Saturday with a jump of 12feet 10 inches.Many RivalsOne of his strongest rivals will bePickard of the University of Pitts¬burgh, who cleared 13 feet to winat the Ohio Relays last Saturday.Glazer of Marquette is anothergreat performer. He won the in¬door meet at Notre Dame this yearwith a jump of 12 feet 10 inches andearned a tie for first place at theIllinois relays.Wirsig of Nebraska, who holds theMissouri Valley conference record of12 feet 9 7-8 inches, is anotherstrong contender.McGinnis, Wisconsin’s great all-around star, lists the pole vault asone of his favorite events. He un¬corked an indoor leap of 12 feet 10inches to win the Big Ten indoormeet, tied for first in the Big Tenoutdoor meet last summer and fin¬ished third in the pole vault at thePenn relays in 1926.. MPOMFRETis anARROWfiLH IRTwith anCOLLARon it. It is made of a finegenuine English Broad¬cloth that retains itsnice, silk-like finish.It pays to insist onArrows, because by sodoing, you get the bestthat there is in shirts,collars and materialsASK YOUR DEALERPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 1927In BriefbyDexter W. MastersOnce again the attempt to spanthe Atlantic by air has been thwartedon the eve of the trial, and this timethe two entrants were hurled totheir death as their giant plane, theAmerican Legion, faltered andplunged to the earth while on atrial spin.It’s a bad policy to condemn thissort of thing, since it bespeaks a too-conservative and short-sighted mindto refuse to admit that all this pre¬liminary testing will ultimately pro¬duce something worth-while. But it’sjust as bad policy to repeatedlywaste time, money, and life on en¬terprises having as their sole reasonfor being, the love of glory and cashremuneration which the participantsvision.Mayor Thompson has placed hisverbal bugle to his lips, has an¬nounced that he himself will takepart in the relief work being con¬ducted for the refugees and victimsof the Mississippi flood. He has sign¬ed a lengthy pact with the mayor ofNew Orleans to the effect that the two of them will countenance suchactions on the part of the Mississippino longer, and he has offered the¬ories and propounded principles toshow how they will stop it all. Ourmayor has entered the lists, andwhile some thousands of peoplescamper about from tree to tree andIndian mound to Indian mound, ourmayor speaks of the future and ofhow such distressing circumstanceswill never occur again.Mississippi, beware! rent; immediate possession. Rent$77.50. October lease. Furn. Reason.Newly dec. 5491 University Ave.FOR RENT—Nice light room forone or two boys. 1403 E. 60th St.,Apt. D. victrola and records, bric-a-brac, etc.Prof. C. F. Castle, 5715 KenwoodAvenue, apt. 3, Phone Hyde Park5133.CLASSIFIED ADSJEWISH STUDENTS — Desiring’strictly Kosher Meals, call Fairfax10318. Will furnish reliable refer¬ences.REAL OPPORTUNITY —Homey6-room apartment. Rent paid toMay 1. Income of 3 rooms pays FOR RENT—A beautiful 6-roomapartment. Outside rooms. All mod¬ern conveniences, private porches,adjoining campus. Reasonable rent.5519 Kimbark Avenue.FOR SALE—Today at a sacrifice:Household furniture, bookcases,China and glassware, pictures, rugs, FOR SALE—Book case, flat top oakdesk. Household articles, etc. Hirch,7429 Luella Ave., South Shore 8091.UNIVERSITY LUNCH5706 Ellis Ave.Try Our Minute Service Lunch35cChop Suey & Chow MeinOur SpecialtyTERESA DOLANDANCING SCHOOLi:08 E. (3rd St. Tel. Hyde Park 308SLearn to dance correctly. Take a fewprivate lessons, day or evening. PrivateLady or Gentleman Instructors,lessons given in a closed room. TOWER63 RD AND BLACKSTONEf&’vlp&vaum, (SaaojoJoVAUDEVILLEv-4ND THE BESTFEATUREPHOTOPLAYSComplete ChangeOf Prq^ram EverySunday fit ThursdayBARGAINMATINEfS DAILY ADULTS30cJUST THE PLACE TO SPENDAN AFTERNOON OR EVENIN6At Last!What the Campus has beenLooking for—GOOD MEALSatLow PricesPrivate dining rooms may be secured forgroupe meetings or parties.the nUNIVERSITY TEA HOUSEKenwood, South at 57th Student ManagedONLY A STUDENT KNOWSCLOTHESReady-*! ad*And Cat to OrderESTABLISHED ENGLISH UNIVERSITYSTYLES, TAILORED OVER YOUTHFULCHART8 SOLELY FOR DISTINGUISHEDSERVICE IN THE UNITED STATES.i i;(|U%Ttev HouseSuits and Topcoat**40, *45, *50 H. P. 1690 WOODWORTH’S Fairfax2l031311 East 57th StreetTHE BEST TYPEWRITERSTORE IN CHICAGOREJUVENATIONmENTIRE TYPEWRITER SECTIONTypewriterRentalsAllMakesPortablesNew CoronaNew RoyalRemingtonUnderwood TypewriterRepairsAllMakesLarge StandardL C SmithRoyalUnderwoodRemingtonEASY PAYMENTS ARRANGED CHEERFULLYCome in or phone for appointment.We Call for and Deliver.Nk/oyYOU’RE probablyfed-up withfood advice. It’s abothersome barrage.But you actually canenjoy sensible eat-ing by just makingone mealy anymeal, every day, ofShredded Wheat.Through thirty-five years of “Eat this andthat,” this pioneer whole wheat biscuit hascaptured ever-growing favor. Made of themost carefully selected wheat grains,shredded for utmost digestibility and cookedcrisp clear through for appetite enchantmentthat’s the Shredded Wheat Story.New appetite appreciation, freedom fromdrugs and laxatives, better health everyday; Shredded Wheat can give all this —and make you like it.SHREDDEDWHEATTRY IT A WEEK AND SEE MAY POWERS MILLERTeacher of Piano1352 E. 55th Street STUDIOS 1810 W. 103rd StHyde Park 0950 Beverly 5009*★ ★<PBKrv Official CollegeFRATERNITYJewelryBadges -PingsrMjveltiesWARREN PIPER &CQ' 31 N. STATE ST. AN INVITATIONis extended to all Universitystudents to dine atANNA LYON’S TEA SHOPDelicious Homecooking at reason,able prieea.1449 E. 57th STREETAPRIL SHOWERSBRING OUTTOWER’SFISH BRAND SLICKERSThe most Practical; and StylishRainy Day GarmentsH&NER'S^i>ur dealer Aas t/tem.A.J.TOWER CO.Boston. 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