*<X>MPLETECAMPUSCOVERAGE”Vol. 28. No. 67. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1929 Price Five CentsMusic NotesEditor's note—We attended theconcert to the Kedroff quartet lastnight. Not being a qualified musicalcritic, we leare the reriew to Mr.Frankenstein; we can onljr say thatlike the rest of the audience, wewere tremendously impressed bythe dignity and beauty of the con>cert. Certainly the UndergraduateCouncil should be praised for mak¬ing the singers' risit possible. Afterthe concert we had the pleasure ofmeeting the members of the quar¬tet, and we understand that theywere convinced they had surpassedthemselves in their art. Certainly,we feel so. We can't describe it, butwe know that if you were there,you'll not soon forget the beautyof the performance.By Alfred FrankensteinIf ever I am elected to an officeof autocratic authority (whichseems )urJ^ko^y, despite its desir¬ability) my first ukase will order theinstant execution of all male quar¬tets found in my realm, exceptingonly the jingly combination of I. K.Denissoff, T. K. Kasakoff, N. N. Ked¬roff, and C. N. Kedroff. These Rus¬sians. forming the Kedroff quartet,who sang at the University chapellast night, have been labeled byChaliapin “a miracle of vocal art,”(See advertising folders). They aresomething more than that. They arethe type of nationalist musical groupthat can make you feel that theirparticular folk art, their particularforms and national style, are theonly ones worth bothering about.One finds oneself figuring the cost oftransportation. If in a couple ofweeks one can arrive at St. Basil'sin Moscow why stay longer in theshadow of the stockyards?The Kedroffs gave two groups offolk songs, one of songs of Chay-kovski as arranged by the quartet'sleader, N. N. Kedroff, and onegroup of religious compositions.The religrious works give the im¬pression of great age, mysticism, in¬cense-scented twilight. The oldmodal melodies are one with the an¬gular golden iconography of Russianchurch painting. An excellent ideaof their ritualistic color and feelingcan be obtained from the words ofan Easter song the quai'tet .sang:"Let God arise, and let His en¬emies be shattered. Today is theholy Passover revealed to us: thePassover new and holy; the Passovermystical, the Passover all-august,Christ, the Passover and the Atone¬ment The spotless Passover, thegreat Passover, the Passover of thefaithful, the Passover which open-eth unto us the gate of Paradise;the Passover which sanctifieth all thefaithful. The day of Resurrection!Let us be illumined with the solemnFeast! Let us embrace one another.Let us say: Brethren! And becauseof the Resurrection let us forgive allthings to those who hate us, and inthis wise exclaim: Christ has risenfrom the dead trampling down Deathby death and upon those in thetomb bestowing life.”In the choice of folk songs forthis program the quartet might havedone better.One missed the lively, -electric,polychromatic touch that should bepresent if Russian folk music is tobe fully represented. The melan¬cholic Russian was there. The bardicRussian was there. The tender Rus¬sian was there. But the dancing,swilling, belching drunk Russian ofthe -Chauve Souris and of Musorg-ski did not come through. This doesnot accuse the Kedroff quartet oftoning down or turning away froman authentic expression, as too manyRussian musicians have done, butmerely a statement of incomplete¬ness in this particular program.But the discovery of flaws seemsa mean and petty activity when onethinks back over what the quartetdid in the way of vocal magic in thewedding song “The Bells of Nov¬gorod,” or when one thinks of whatthey accomplished with the too-(Continued on page 4) “MR. CINDERELLA” NEW FRIAR SHOWMills, W. V, Morgenstepi Write 1929 BookDIRECTORDonald MacDonald III, chosen todirect the Friars, has had wide ex¬perience in handling men's produc¬tions. He is to oversee all phases ofthe production.Director of FriarShow Stops HereElnroute to N. Y.Donald MacDonald III, whose se¬lection as director of the 1929 Black-friar production w’as announced twoweeks ago, arrived in Chicago lastnight at 7:30 on the Oriental Lim¬ited from Vancouver, British Colum¬bia, where he supervised the ServiceClub Follies. He will make severalpreliminary arrangements for theFriar show before leaving for NewYork.Mr. MacDonald, who is a directoractor, singer, dancer, lyric writercomposer and imitator, is responsiblefor the formation of the JuniorLeague Follies in the large cities ofthe United States. He has directed(Continued on page 4) LAW GRADUATESARE AUTHORS OF‘MR. CINDERELLA’Judges Select ScriptAs Best of SevenSubmittedGeorge D. Mills and William V.Morgenstern, University Alumni, areco-authors of this year’s Blackfriarsproduction, “Mr. Cinderella.”Mills received his Ph. B. degreein 1920, was a Phi Beta Kappa, andwas graduated from the Law schoolwith a J. D. degree in 1922. He wasa Delta Sigma Rho, captain of thedebating team and player on thewater polo team. He was also amember of Wig and Robe. At pres¬ent he is a practicing attorney inChicago and is also an assistant cityattorney.Author* Also ClassmatesMorgenstern graduated from theundergraduate schools with Mills andalso went through the Law schoolat the same time. He was a mem¬ber of the Order of the Coif, honor¬ary legal order. He has been a writ¬er for the Herald-Examiner for thelast few years. He is now directorof the department of Public Rela¬tions at the University.The script written by Morgensternand Mills was selected from sevenplays submitted to the committee onselection. They were two of severalalumni requested by Charles Warnerto write a play suitable for a Black¬friars production. “Mr. Cinderella”was the result.(Continued on page 4)BOOK BY PROFESSORJERNEGAN ADDED TOU. S. “EPOCH” GROUPMRS. FUNT ATTENDSCLEVELAND MEETING,SPEAKS SATURDAYMrs. Edith Foster Flint, chairmanof the University Women’s council,left yesterday morning for Cleve¬land, where she will attend the an¬nual convention of the National As--sociation of Deans of Women, whichmeets in conjunction with the con¬vention of the National Educationalassociation.Saturday morning Mrs. Flint willdeliver an address to the NationalAssociation of Principals of Schoolsfor Girls. Mi’s. Flint's subject willbe “The SchooVs Product as the DeanSees It,” in which she will discussthe girl’s school graduate as she isunderstood by the college faculty.While on her return trip, Mrs.Flint will visit President Wilkins ofOberlin college, formerly dean ofthe A. L. and S. school of the Uni¬versity.Sustains Injury toHip Through FallMiss Mae Grady, a member ofthe personal' service department ofIda Noyes hall, broke her hip as theresult of a fall last Wednesdaymorning. The injury will confineher to her home indefinitely.Miss Grady h^s served on thestaff of Ida Noyes ball for the lastsix years. “The American Colonies,” a vol¬ume by Marcus Wilson Jernegan,professor of American history at theUniversity, which has just been pub¬lished by Longmans, Green andcompany of New York, has beenadded to the “Epochs of AmericanHistory” series .It will take theplace of Thwaites’ “Colonies,” for¬merly in the series.Professor Jernegan’s book, whichcovers the period from 1492 to 1750,gives an unusually full account ofthe era before the Revolution. Onepurpose of “The American Colonies”is to set forth the factors, forcesand events that produced a new so¬ciety in America, a society whichwas very different from that of Eng¬land.Professor Jernegan gives muchspace to economic changes andtendencies affecting the relations ofthe colonies to the Empire, to Eng¬land, and to each other.Taylor to LectureOn Scott MondayGriffith Taylor, who recentlycame to the University as a profes¬sor of geography from the Univers¬ity of Sydney, will lecture Mondaynight at 8 in Leon Mandel hall onthe subject, “With Scott in the Ant¬arctic.” Professor Taylor, one of theforemost geographers of the world,was a member of Scott’s last expe¬dition, and led parties to the antarc¬tic in 1911 and 1912.His lecture, which is for the ben¬efit of the University Nursery, willbe illustrated with pictures taken onthe Scott expedition. Tickets are adollar and may be obtained fromgn^aduate students in the departmentof geography and at the door. I AUTHORS OF NEW PRODUCTIONGeorge D. Mills, graduate of theUniversity Law School in 1922 witha J. D. degree, it co-author withMorgenster.1 in writing the scriptfor Blackfriars. At present GeorgeMills is assistant city attorney inChicago.Former StudentGiven ResearchGrant at NaplesDr. Ernest Everett Just, negro bi¬ologist who has done notable re¬search work in heredity and sex de¬termination and a University grad¬uate, has recently been sent to Nap¬les under a special gi’ant of the Ju¬lius Rosenwald foundation to con¬tinue work in his chosen field. Dr.Just received the degree of Ph. D.,magna cum laude, in zoology andphysiology from the University in1916.Dr. Just’s rise in the world ofscience has been steady if not spec¬tacular. In 1915 he was presentedwith the Spingarn medal, which isgiven annually by J. E. Spingarnto “the man or woman of Africandescent and American citizenshipwho shall have made the highest(Continued on page 4) “Bill” Morgenstern, Director ofthe Department of Public Relationsof the University, has collaboratedwith George Mills in writing “Mr.Cinderella” for Blackfriars produc¬tion.Dewey Speaks onRussia Tonight inLeon Mandel HaUEDGERTON LEAVESUNIVERSITY TO JOINCORNELL FACULTYHenry W. Edgerton, professor oflaw at the University, has beenelected to the law faculty at theCornell law school in Utica, N. Y.Professor Edgerton first practiced inBoston, where he continued until1921, at which time he joined thefaculty of law at George Washing¬ton university. During the presentacademic year, he has been visitingprofessor in the law school here.Professor Edgerton is a frequentcontributor to legal periodicals andhis articles have received favorablenotice from the legal fraternity. Hisspecial fields are criminal law andthe law of public service.He will assume his new duties atCornell July 1. Professor John Dewey of thePhilosophy department of ColumbiaUniversity will talk on the “Educa¬tional System in Russia” tonight at8:15 in Leon Mandel hall under theauspices of the William VaughnMoody foundation. Under the au¬spices of the Society for CulturalRelations with Russia, an organiza¬tion for the promotion and ex¬change of Russian and Americanart, literature, and education. Pro¬fessor Dewey, the vice-president ofthe New York chapter, was sent toRussia last summer.As head of an educational delega¬tion of professors and college presi¬dents, he investigated the education¬al system of Russia. The ,tourthrough Leningrad and Moscow wasconducted by the Russian govern¬ment to interest American educatorsin the Russian situation. Among thecountries that have consulted Pro¬fessor Dewey in an effort to per¬fect the organization of their edu-(Continued on page 4) CURRENT EDITIONIS OUT AND OUTCOMEDY_REVUEAdventures of MovieStar Form BasisOf 1929 Plot“Mr. Cinderella,” has been chos¬en as the Blackfriars’ show for 1929by Professors Percy Holmes Boyn¬ton, James Weber Linn, and B. G.Nelson, the committee on selection.George D. Mills (’20) and WilliamV. Morgenstern (’20) are authorsof this year’s production.This year’s play is a reversion tothe old type of Blackfriars shows,being a straight out and out musi¬cal comedy The play, which consistsof two acts and three scenes, has atypical movie prologue. All scenesare laid on the University campus.The Quadrangle in front of Cobbhall furnishes the setting for thefirst act of the play. A bedroom inFoster hall will be depicted in thestage setting of the first scene ofthe second act, and the play closeswith the second scene of the secondact, laid Eit a fraternity house dance.Concerned With Movie LifeThe plot is distinctly farcical innature. It deals with the adventuresof a Hollywood male movie idolwho has been brought to the Uni¬versity to study college atmosphere.Rin-Tin-Tin and two big movie mag¬nates are also worked into the plot.All elements in campus life areroasted by the authors. ^Two of the three members of thecommittee on selection yesterdaygave their opinion of the play. Pro¬fessor James W’eber Linn of theEnglish department said, “The showwill probably be very successful.The humor is fairly agreeable andnot suggestive in any sense of theword. The play does not attempt agreat deal, it is not full of dramaticidealism. But what it does attempt,it does attain.”Nelson ApprovesProfessor B. G. Nelson remarkedthat, “The play has a great deal ofmovement. It has some very uniqueintroduction features, and is char¬acterized by extremely clever dia¬logue. ‘Mr. Cinderella’ has a real sit¬uation and is not made up of loose¬ly connected wisecracks. On the(Continued on page 4)ELECTION CHAIRMANTALKS TO POLITICALSCIENCE STUDENTSIssue Time ScheduleFor Spring QuarterTime schedules for the SpringQuarter are available today at theBureau of Information. Dates ofregistration for students with pri¬ority grades are February 28 forSenior college students and March1 foir the Junior colllege. Those-who possess the required gfrades havebeen sent notices to that effect. Aeroplanes Fail ToInterest StudentsCampus response to the contestin aeronautics offered by the Alex¬ander Aircraft company has not ma¬terialized and, according to HenryG Gale, dean of the Ogden graduateschool of science, there seems to beno immediate probability of candi¬dates. However all students inter¬ested have been urged to ma>e them¬selves known.Four students from the Universityof Illinois and four from the Uni¬versity of Kansas have entered thecompetition to win a four year Uni¬versity scholarship in aeronautics.The scholarship is offered to theAmerican undergraduate who showsthe deepest insight and imaginationin the field of aeronautics. A thorough analysis of electionlaws and methods was the main fea¬ture of a talk by Fred G. Maguire,chairman of the Board of ElectionCommissioners, which was given topolitical science students Tuesdayat 4:30 in Harper M 11. The lawswere considered especially withrelation to the coming alderman-ic elections next Tuesday. Rulesand regrulations of the electionboard and its general functions weretreated in some detail.Students taking political sciencecourses will be watching at the pollsnext Tuesday, and it will be com¬pulsory to appear, it was announced.Michelson HonoredBy Scientific MedalProfessor Albert A. Michelson ofthe department of physics, togetherwith Dr. R. A. Millikan of the Cali¬fornia Institute of Technologry willreceive the g^)ld medal of the So¬ciety of Arts and Sciences at a din¬ner at the Biltmore in New Yorktomorrow.The medal is awarded for distinc¬tive service in science.Pctge Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY Z1..I929iatlg iiar00ttFOUNDED IN 1»«1THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPvMialMd morninsa, except Saturday. Suudar uud Monday, durins the Autumn,Winter and I^rinc quartern by The Daily Maroon Company. Sufaecription mtailAM per year; by mall, 11.60 per year extra. Single eopica, five oenta each.Stared aa aeeond claaa matter March It, lOOS, at the poet office at Chicago,lllinoia, under the Act of March S, 1879.The Daily Maroon exprcaaly reaeryea all righta of publication of any materialappearing in thin paper.Member ef the Weatera Conference Pram AaoeciatienThe StaffLOUIS H. ENGEL, JR., MANAGING EDITORROBERT W. FISHER, BUSINESS MANAGERHARRIET HARRIS, WOMAN’S EDITORHENRY D. FISHER, SPORTS EDITORVICTOR ROTERUS, CHAIRMAN EDITORIAL BOARDOFFICE—ROOM 16, 5831 University Avenue, LEXINGTON HALLTel^hones: Midway 0800, Local 44, Hyde Parii 9221MENChartae H. Good. Nuwa EditorEdwin Levin Newa EditorRobert C. MeCormack Newi EditorLeon J. Baer Day EditorEdward G. Baatian Day Editoritualey M. Oorbett Day EditorNorman R. Goldnmn Day EditorEdgar Groenwnld —Day EditorJohn H. Hardtai JDay EditorHenry C. Rlplay—- Day EditorWOMENHarriot Hathaway Junior EditorRooallnd Green ——Junior EditorJ. Aldaaa Gibboaey Faatnra EditorFianem A. Biadgutt. Sophomore EditorMarjorie Cahill Sopboumre EditorPearl EWa Stwhomore EditorMarina B. White Sophomore EditorMargaret Eaatman Smior ReporterAKce Torrey Society Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENTAlbert Ariculm Sophomore EditorMaurice LWbman Sophomore EditorJerome Straum SopheuMre EditorEnunarette Dawnoa Womon’e EditorMarjorie Tohnan..Aaooeiate WeuMa’a EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTEarle M. Stocker Advurtiaing ManagerRobert Nieboiaon Gircnlatien ManagerLouia Forbrieb Circulation AmiatantWilliam Kincheloe ^..Circulation AmiatantLee Loventhal Office ManagerRobert Mayer ..Dowatowu OqqrFred Towaley Downtown CopyAbe Blinder — Local Co^Robert Shapiro Local CopyTHE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM .1. Eneowrag»meni of studont imtiative tn undorgr^UMto activityamd •cHolarchip.2. Application of rcaearck principlea and abolition of gradea foraanior coUaga atudanta.8. Promotion of undergraduate intereat in leHurea, eoneerta,emhdbita and other eampua cultural influancea,4. Erection of a field house.5. Adoption of a deferred fraternity and club rushing plan.6. Institution of a Reading Period plan.DINGLETREE’S DIALECTICSOur philosopher friend Dingletree dropped in at the officeagain yesterday. After offering us an Omar—Dingletree is ouronly acquaintance who smokes th'em for a steady diet , Joe said,‘T take it that the point in your editorial the other day about theClark street massacre was that, in the end, there is no appreciabledifference between war and gang war; was it not?-Well,’* we replied, wondering what the old fellow had underhis hat, “if our adumbrations ever have a point we suppose that thatmight have been the point of that one.“Then,” and Dingletree pointed his finger at us most threaten¬ingly, ‘you did those gangsters a rank injustice. Why? Let meexplain.“Why did those gangsters pop off those other fellows? Mostprobably because these latter chappies were cutting in on their boot¬leg trade. The gangsters figured that here was a field only forone faction; and that the further existence of this Moran gang meanta constant menace to the profits of their illicit trade—hence to theirmaterial welfare. They reasoned that for the sake of their futurecomfort and well-being this source of endangerment—i.e., the othergang—must be done away with. So they put their heads togetherfor a while; and an expedition of four of them went up to NorthClark street cleverly garbed as policemen, and nonchalantly wipedout these unfortunate individuals who stood between them andprosperity.“Now,” Dingletree was getting warm, “all this was done byand through the promptings of reason. Passion pnd prejudiceswayed them not. Unlike your soldier boy they were not blind vic-times of propaganda; their minds were not clouded with such highsounding, fallacious phrases as Democracy, God’s will. Cause ofRight and such trash. The gangsters are admittedly tools like thesoldier boys; but they are not unwitting dupes like the soldier boys.The gangster and his chief agree that murder must be done if theyare to benefit and protect their material welfare; but the soldierboy has no such understanding with the low greedy politicians andprofiteers who send him off on his course of murder. Where thegangster is aware of the facts of the case and willing, the soldier JEWETT, UNIVERSITYALUMNUS,.HONOREDBY EDISON AWAIH)Dr. Frank B. Jewett, vice-presidentof the American Telephone and Tele-igraph company, and University grad¬uate, has recently been awarded thisyear’s Edison medai.Dr. Jewett, whose directing g;eniusis responsible for hundreds of im¬provements in telephoning in the lastseventean years, is president of theBell Telephone Laboratories of NewYork, the organization whose recentachievements are the trans-ahantictelephone service, some of the spectac¬ular steps in television, and much ofthe creative work in making talkingmovies. He is also vice-president ofthe American Telephone and Tele¬graph company in charge of develop¬ment and research.Graduated in 1920Dr. Jewett received his Ph. D.from the University in June, 1902.then taught for two years at Massa¬chusetts Institute of Technology, andentered into his life work of telephoneengineering seventeen years ago. Astransmission engineer of the Ameri¬can Telephone and Telegraphy com¬pany he did notable pioner work inthe development of the theory andpractice of voice transmission overtelephone wires. As chief engineer ofthe Western Electric compai^ andlater as lieutenant-colonel in the sig¬nal corps during the World War, hewon the distinguished service medal.Dr. Jewett is receiving the Edisonmedal “for his contributions to theart of electrical communication,” andit will be presented to him daringthe annual mid-winter convention ofAmerican Institute of Electrical En¬gineers.Bears Likeness of EdisonThe medal, “for meritoriousachievement in electrical engineeringor the electrical arts,” was founded in1904 by the friends and associates ofThomas A. Edison, in commemorationof the first quarter century of theart of electric lighting. It is designedby James Frazer and beers on oneside a likeness of Mr. Edison and onthe other an allegorical c<mception of“the genius of electricity crowned byfame.”boy i.". only willing. The latter seeshis cause for murder only in thecapital letters with which the propa-g^andist has cloaked his eyes.“The soldier boy fallaciouslythinks that he is making the worldsafe for democracy; the gangsterrigditly knows that he is making itsafe for X’s liquor. The impassionedsoldier boy wildly imagines his mur¬dering is ethical, on a high moralplane; the iself-possessed grangsterrealizes that his shooting is unethi¬cal but damned prudent.“So in one war you have a bunchof immature, frenzied soldier boysblind to why and what they arefighting for; in the other a bunch ofrational, deliberate gangsters withtheir motive and aim clearly install¬ed in their minds. Which do you re¬spect the more? Myself I’ll alwaysrespect the rational individual no'matter what his motives be. So yousee that the two wars are not alike;and that you did the gangsters in¬justice the other day.”We nodded our heads in assent,more from expedience than fromagreement; we never coqld win anargniment from Dingletree. He’ssuch a perverse chap.Telephone H. P. 3080TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1208 E. 63rd StreetMonday, Wednesday and FridayBexinnera ClasseaPRIVATE LESSONS ANYTIME THE STORE FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD& COMPANYfteuF Spring madels ufe hawpctailarcd particutjawly far tHemUniversity men set the pace For styles and a number of thesesame men have told us how. to create new models for Spring. . . As a result we offer these two styles of Suits for campuswear knowing that they actually contain all the essentials requiredby men at the University of Chicago . . . They have two trousers,a feature of great importance, and are correctly priced at $40and $45 . . . Come down tomorrow, Washington's Brithday,and inspect these Young Men's Suits I There is a whole floor of themiSaaita, THtrd FioearTERM PAPER TIME IS HERE!GET YOUR SUPPLIES AND A TYPEWRITER ATrthst^ WOODWORTH’S h p lesoWHERE YOUR SELECTION IS COMPLETEoD'-k;-. THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1929 Page ThreeHNV*I '•/ SCHIODT, ANDERSON,DURANTE, McCarthyTO HEAD FRESHMENCharles E. Schmidt, Doris Ander¬son, Jessamine Durante and RobertMcCarthy were yesterday chosen bythe members of the Freshman classto truide the affairs of that bodyduring the remainder of the schoolyear.Schmidt was elected president froma field of three candidates, the num¬ber of votes cast for him placinghim in office on the first count. Hepolled 126 votes on the first count¬ing of the ballots, against 56 forP. Alan Dawson, of Phi Kappa Psi,and 35 for Everett J. Olenicl^ ofPhi Sigma Delta. Schmidt fs a mem¬ber of Delta Tau Delta.Anderson UncdntestedDoris Anderson was elected vice-president of the class without theelection being contested. She is amember of Wyvem.In the selection of a secretaryJessamine Durante drew a suf¬ficient number of votes to securethe election on the first ballot. Therewere 110 votes cast for her, 62 forCecelia Listing, Pi Delta Phi, and43 for Maurine Bledsoe, Deltho. Thesecretary is a member of Chi RhoSigma.The race for treasurer was themost hotly contested of all, thecount of the second choices beingnecessary to determine the winner.On the first count, Lawrence Carr,of Delta Upsilon, received 42 votes,Snideman, of Chi Psi, 61, McCarthy,of Sigma Chi, 90, and Jorgensen, ofBeta Theta Pi, 25.When the second choices were counted, Snideman received 76,Carr received 5, and McCarthy’s to¬tal was 119, enough to elect him tothe office.Schmidt was graduated from Mt.Carmel high school, and was a mem¬ber of the city championship foot¬ball team of 1927. In Freshmanfootball he played on the *‘Yale”team, in the annual “Yale Harvard”game played between the Freshmanteams.Tarpon InitiatesElleven MembersThose initiated into Tarpon clubat the meetiiig held last Tuesdayevening in Ida Noyes hall were:Vedidi Bahu, Mary Bohnet, MargaretCarlson, J^^anne Hyde, Mary EllenMalloy, Hazel Fueling, Helen Taylor,Gladys True, June Venton, FernleWeinreb and Ruth Willis. Refresh¬ments were servedTjpstairs after theinitiation which took place - in. thepool.Candidates for the new officesnominated at the election were: Lil¬lian Egerton and Marjorie Tolman,nominees for the combined office ofpresident 5ind vice-president; RuthLee and Lillian Peterson for secre¬tary; and Harriet Gerber and MaryE. Tompkins for treasurer. Theelection will take place Feb. 2S. THE THEATREBy Albert ArkulesThe drama practically passed outof Chicago with the departure of the‘Macbeth' company, ‘Coquette,’ andthe Stratford players. The Shake¬spearean fare dished up for thosewho take their theatre seriously wascertainly quite appetizing, what withthe two weeks that Arliss appearedin ‘The Merchant of Venice.’Opinion naturally varied on thequality of the performances of thethree units that performed the worksof the Stratford Bard, Many pro¬fessed displeasures at Arliss’ char¬acterization of Shylock, particularlythose who accept Shakespeare on astrictly orthodox basis. Nevertheless,there were just as many who enjoyedArliss’ novel interpretation of therole.It was interesting too to note thebox..office attraction of Arliss. Seatswere extremely difficult to obtain forany of his performances and not afew wanted to know why he stayedin Chicago for so short a period. Itseems that Mr. Arliss has an engage¬ment with the motion pictures to do‘The Green Goddess’ over again. Hedid it once before as a silent picture,but of course with the talking pic-FOR RENTSHOTWELL HALLFifty-Fifth Street at Blackstone Ave.FOR DANCES - LODGES - PARTIES ,SWAN & LORISH, Inc.SSth St. at Blackttone Ave. Dorchester 3000The First Hundred YearsAre the HardestWHAT will you be doing ten, fifteenyears from now? Fifteen yearsseems a pretty long time to be worryingabout, you say. Yet it’s the fellow wholooks ahead who usually comes out ontop. He builds the foundation now.The successes of today and tomorroware built on the foundations of yesterday.In the utility field that statement is par¬ticularly true. A power station built todayanticipates the needs of the communityfor many tomorrows. A transportationsystem is laid to take care not only of thepresent but of the future riders. Stone & Webster finances, builds andoperates public utilities. It is constantlylooking forward, developing new methods,new ways, new ideas. The Stone &Webster man is progressive. His businessmakes him so. He pioneers because onlythrough pioneering may the service needsof his public be met satisfactorily.You’re going to know Stone & Websterwhen you leave college. You’ll find an or¬ganization of men with sound judgmentand upon whom you can depend. You’llfind the Stone & Webster organization isworth knowing and worth doing businesswith.Stone & Webster tures the rage of the country, it wasinevitable that his second attempt bea talking production.As for ‘Macbeth,’ the George Tylerproduction is now safely enscondedin Minneapolis. The show did fairbusiness in the Auditorium, thanks tothe thousand's of students and teach¬ers who swarmed to the popular mat¬inees. The house was jammed forthe last two performances, althoughwe wonder what the people up inthe gallery were thinking about.While Gordon Craig’s scenery wasunquestionably appealing and impres¬sionistic, the performance of the playwas entirely out of tune with theeffectiveness of the scenic effects.Florence Reed proved the danger ofplaying one role toe long. Those who*saw ‘The Shanghai Gesto/e’ keptharking back to her excellent work asLady Goddam. Her voice rangedfrom a falsetto hoarseness to a shill-ness that made many of us feel un¬comfortable. Anyway, she tried tobe convincing as Lady Macbeth, whichis something, and since many failedto see her in the better known Woodsplay, she drew the customary ap¬plause at the end of the sleepwalkingscene.Lyn Harding and William Farnumw'einq creditable. Frankly, we en¬joyed Farnum best of all. For onewho has spent many, many years on the lots of Hollywood, he gave a warmand sympathetic interpretation ofhis role. Harding accomplished halfof his task because of his immensebuild. He was easy to visualize inthe role of Macbeth. At times, helapsed into incoherency, but he re¬deemed himself in the first and lastact.‘Coquette’s’ departure was somewhatof a surprise. For the three monthsthat the Jed Harris production \»ashere, it drew capacity houses. He/enHayes and her suporting cast will fol¬low the play out to the coast, al¬though for a while it was thoughtthat the production would be sentover the sea to London.Mary Pickford has purchased themotion picture rights to the plays.When announcement was made of thefact, Mr. Fairbanks’ wife declaredshe was v'iHing to risk her untarnish¬ed screen reputation to play the partof the southern belle who is not sopure. There’s food for thought there.The joker, though, is to be discernedin a supplementary announcement ofMiss Pickford’s, this to the effect thatshe will make two endings. Theoriginal or tragic ending will be usedwhen the picture is displayed in thecities, and a sweet ending tacked onto the picture for those who view thecinema in the rural areas. Hodges Lectures onDiscoverer of X-RayActual slides made by ProfessorPaul H. Hodges Professor of Roent-igenology, in the laboratory of the lateWilhelm Konrad Roentgen, discovererof X-Ray, will be shown at the lec¬ture on “Wilhelm Roentgen,” to begiven by Professor Hodges tonightat 6:45 at the Art Institute.The discoverer of X-Ray was bomin 1845 in a little town in Rhineprovince, Prussia. He was educatedin Holland, Switzerland, and Ger¬many ,and from an assistant he roseto the head of the Physics depart¬ment at the University of Wurzburg.In 1895 he made the discovery ofX-Ray, since when both medical andphysical applications of X-Ray have'been invented. In the latter field,Thomas Edison joined with others inthis 'icaritry for experimentation.Roentgen was the first physicist towon in 1901. Until 1919, he'kept upbe awarded the Nobel prize, which hehis active work as a professor ofPhysics. “At the time of his death in1923, he had already triumphed inthe knowledge that his discovery hadovercome its early handicaps of costand speed, and was applicable in sogreat an enterprise as the WorldWar,” said Professor Hodges.INCORPORATED STUDENTSUITS AND OVERCOATSSUITSNOW *29WERE $45SUITS & OVERCOATSNOW *39WERE $50 $55TAILORED AT FASHION PA?.KrH/S EVENT O PEERS A VERY DEFINITE OPPORTUNITY TO STUDENTSTO SECURE, AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES, THp' EXACT TYPE OFCLOTHES MOST WIDELY FAVOURED IN AMERICA BY COLLEGE MEN.FANCY SHIRTSNOW ^2^^ $3.50'fr$4.00WHITE OXFORD COLLARATTACHED SHIRTS $j95HALF HOSENOW n.50Ti%2.50 NECKWEARNOW $2 0cTo$2.50SWEATERSNOW ^8^^ $12.5S'fo$20.00MUFFLERSNOW ^2^^ $3.50"^o"f5.00LUGGAGE AND LEATHER GOODS AT ONE HALF PRICE20% REDUCTION ON GLOVES, PAJAMAS AND UNDERWEAR20% REDUCTION ON LARGE PORTION OP FINCHLEY CUSTOM FOOTWEARTHEJackson Boulevard East of StatePage Four THE DAILY MAROW, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1929 ¥FORMER STUDENTGIVEN RESEARCHGRANT AT NAPLES injfton, D. C., as an instructor, alsocarrying' on research work.Author of Ckem. TextWith some of the most prominentscientists in the country, Just is theauthor of a book on cytology, pub¬lished in 1924. When leading biol¬ogists of Germany were looking overthe world’s list of scholars for acollaborator in a work they werewriting, they picked Dr. Just as theone best suited to their needs. Heis also one of the authors of a pon¬derous tome on colloidal chemistry.Dr. Just is a member of theAmerican Association for the Ad¬vancement of Science, the AmericanSociety of Zoologists, the AmericanNaturalists and is a correspondingmember of La Societe des SciencesNaturelles et Mathematiques ofFrance. He is editor of the officialorgan of the Marine Biological Lab¬oratory and a member of the edi¬torial board of the internationaljournal Protoplasma, published inBerlin.(Continued from page 1)achievement during the precedingyear or years in any honorable fieldof human endeavour.” Some of hisexperiments are in the field of can¬cer research; others, in which heuses ultra-violet li^t, bear upon thesubject of human heredity and thedetermination of sex.Near Top of ProfessionDr. Just is now near the top ofhis profession, but about twentyyears ago his only assets consistedof five dollars and a fierce determin¬ation to learn and pass on his learn¬ing to others of his race. In addi¬tion to his poverty, he was handi¬capped by the fact that he was anegro.His inheritance was unusuallygood. H'je^father was a wharf build¬er who died when Justfour years His mother was awoman of high co.-,r‘*cter •with afairly good education who, whenher son was born forty-five yearsago, was engaged in teaching schooland working in the phosphate fields.It is said Mrs. Just established the j ^ promising outlookfirst industrial school in the state ofJ ® Kood show.”South Carolina and was its first | According to a statement madeprincipal. { yesterday by Charles Warner, Ab-D.ri„,.,h Honor Student i “n •■'"“I"""'"! «PP«rI soon in The Daily Maroon giving de-Ernest Just attended his mother’s I tails of the Blackfriars lyric contest,lege at Orangeburg. Later he de- |cided to go north and study. Heli a\i/ r'DArkITATi:school and then went to State col-' UKALJUAltfound a job on the Clyde line andworked his way to New York fromwhere he went to Kimball academyin Meriden, N. H. At this schoolhe completed the four year coursein three years, finding time mean¬while to be editor of the school pa¬per and president of the debatingsociety. PALMER PREDICTSSPREAD OF CHAINSTORE BUSINESSISSUEIS OUT AND OUTCOMEDY REVUE(Continued from page 1)ARE AUTHORS OF“MR. CINDERELLA”(Continued from page 1)The co-authors are now' working jon the first revision of the show and |will probably revise it several times |more to suit the various charactersand actors in the production.He then entered Dartmouth col- | The writers of this year’s produc-lege, graduating in 1907 with spe- ' tion, in roasting campus life andcial honors in zoologfy and history I traditions, have provided for some iand with the only magna cum laude i twenty speaking parts, with eight 'in the class. During his first year ' leading roles.in the study of biology he discov- j George Morgenstern, a brother of |ered how little was known relative- | the author of this year’s production, 'ly about the development of the egg. j wrote “The House That Jack Built,” |After graduating he accepted a posi- | last year’s show in collaboration jtion in Howard university in Wash- i with Milton Mayer. ' Professor James L. Palmer of theSchool of Commerce and Administra¬tion in a recent speech made at a con¬vention of the Ameiican Paint andVarnish Manufacture’s associationpredicted a vast increase in the sizeand scope of chain-store organizationsduring the next two decades. Inde¬pendent retail stores wrill not lisap-pear, but their business methods willhe vastly different from W'hat theyare today, he says.“Probably more than twenty percent of the country’s retail businessat present is done through chai.istores, with the groceries, drug, anddepartment stores leading the ad¬vance,” states Professor Palmer.“Now the retail meat business bidsfair to fall into the hands of thechains at an even more rapid rate.Causes of Growth“Increasing density of populationand the migration from the farms tothe cities is partially responsible forthis growrth. The 1921 depressionwith its accent on economy also help¬ed. Our improved standard of liv¬ing the growth of installment buy¬ing—forcing people to economize onthe necessities that they might haveluxuries—have played a large part.“Other factors in the success ofthe chains have been the inefficiencyof many independent stores, the per¬fection of transportation, and the de¬cline of the factor of personal rela¬tionship between the retail dealer andhis customers. Financial strengthhas given them advantages in buyingand use of advertising media beyondth* reach of the small independentretailer. They have been able to de¬velop prestige through large-scaleoperations, reduce selling coststhrough coordination, accomplish awide distribution of risks, and disposeof salvage more readily than smallstores. And each unit profits fromthe experience of the others.“Fight Fire with Fire”“Fighting fire with fire is the onlyway in which independents can suc¬cessfully compete with the chains,“Professor Palmer concludes. “The•patronize home industry appeal’ ismore naive than successful. If theThat 47thImprovement. •. Pressureless TouchGeo. S. Parker’slatest, in the ModemDuofold—aids collegework immenselyThinkofthis'.Apen that’s 25%lighter than rubber, yet this lightweight alone is all that is re¬quired to start it writing at thefirst touch of the point to paper.And keep it writing—smoothly,evenly and beautifully at anyspeed!Finger-pressure is relieved!No bearing down! No effort!Merely guidance from your hand—the pen itself does all the writ¬ing for you!And none of the interruptionsor intrusions that any other kindof pen has ever caused before—a gliding, smooth response thatclears the track for THINK¬ING, thus producing BETTERthoughts for class-room or homework.So smooth and even that allpapers take ink better from it.This is Geo. S. Parker’s 47thImprovement in a fountain pen,known as Parker PressurelessTouch, The result is the most able penyou’ve ever vised — a pen we* guarantee forever against alldefects so its benefits to you areeverlasting.Try it without obligation atany nearby pen counter today.All dealers are glad to have youdemonstrate it to yourself.Other Parker Duofold featuresare Barrels of Parker Permanite,Non- Breakable, Ink-TightDuo-Sleeve Cap, Non-Leakable,Choice of Five Flashing Colorsand New, Modern Black andPearl, the Latest Mode.Every genuine Parker DuofoldPen or Pencil is stamped, “Geo.S. Parker—DUOFOLD,” on thebarrel. That is there for yourprotection. See it when you buyThb Paeker Pin Company. Ianesviue. Wis.OFHCES AND SUaSIDIARIES:NEW YoUl • CHICAGO • AT1.ANTABIIPPALO • DALLAS • SAN FRANCISCOTORONTO, CANADA • LONDON, ENGLAND*To prove Parker Duo¬fold is a pen of lifelongperfection, we offer tomake good any defect,provided complewpenis sent by the ownerdirect to the factorywith 10c for returnpostage and insurance. r«lerPeas 0 to ^10, according to size and finishDut/tld FituUt t$ mmttb ptnt, 13, $3.50, $4 *nd $5, to tint and fimtk. consumng pubic felt that the chainstores • had an anti-social effect,chains would not prosper. Chain storecompetition can be met only bymatching chain-store efficiency, ororganization to secure the advantagesof mass-merchandising.”DIRECTOR OF FRIARSHOW STOPS HEREEN ROUTE TO N. Y.(Continued from page 1)follies in Atlanta, Memphis, Chicago,Louisville, Spokane, Seattle, Port¬ land, Oregon, St. Louis,. KansasCity and Providence.Actors, authors and stagehandscall him “Dynamic Dinnie.” He is aswell known in the social world as inthe theatrical world. During thewar he produced the two outstand¬ing Service Shows.DEWEY SPEAK ONRUSSIA TONIGHT INLEON MANDEL HALL(Continued from page 1)cational systems are Mexico, Tur¬ key, Russia and Japan. ^ 'Tickets for Professor Dewey’s lec¬ture may be obtained without chargetoday between nine and five in Har¬per M 12.The Liberal club will give a lun¬cheon in honor of Professor DeweyFriday at 12:30 at the Del Pradohotel. Members and their guestshave been invited to attend.PATRONIZE THE DAILY MAROONADVERTISERS!*50 *60 *65SUITS ANDOVERCOATSREDUCED TO$ 39 50That’s a big reduction, evenbigger than you first realize^every suit and overcoat’sband«Tieedled by the most fa¬mous makers of this countryand England. One or two-trouser suits-golf suits-dresscoats^town ulsters-ulstersMen’s suits 2nd ft, ^ youngmen*s 4th - overcoats 6thMAURICE LROTHSCHILDState at JacksonimirnTHE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1929The TempestCoach Stagg recently came outwith the announcement that theWorld’s Greatest Interscholastic,that is the National Basketball tour¬ney that is held annually at Bart¬lett, would probably be discarded in1930. The reason that was givenfor this announcement was the fac^that the National Federation ofState High School Athletic Associa¬tions has decided to withdraw its ap¬proval of the meet and MR. STAGGREFUSES TO FIGHT THEM.The famous Maroon athletic direc¬tor refuses to stoop as low as tobow before this body, call them nicenames, and thus gain consent. Thegesture of the national high school• body is just the dying wave of thefeeble arm of a more feeble body.It is trying to do what the Nation¬al A. A. U. and the United States’Lawn Tennis Association have beentrying to do for the past few years.And that is to show their authority.No matter what false arguments theNational Federation of State HighSchool Athletic associations putsforth for their refusal to sanctionthe meet, we cannot help but feelthat their motives are other thanselfish ones. That the Associationnow has the power to prevent therunning of our interscholastic is un¬deniable, but that they should exer¬cise this authority seems to us theaction of a poor sport., No one will deny that as far asNational interscholastic basketballtourneys are involved, the Univers¬ity of Chicago meet is easily theoutstanding one. Teams from everystate in the Union have at one timeor another been represented in thistourney. The teams that have com¬peted have been the leaders of thecountry in prep basketball - and thebrand of playing that has been dis¬played at the meets has been thehighest kind. The teams have comewillingly and gladly. They have en¬joyed the Interscholastic. Theyhave profited by them in many ways.The idea that the meet was too greata strain on the players was with¬drawn after it had been realizedthat the World’s Greatest Inter¬scholastic has sponsored moresportsmanship and clean playing andhas brought about a greatly nation¬al feeling between the schools. Themeet has succeeded in producingmore harmonious and finer relationsbetween the prep schools.That is why. we feel, Coach .St;*ggdeliberately efiisid to fight the as¬sociation. The battle is not one forhimself. He has never gained any¬thing out of the sport. The eventhas only meant more and harderwork for himself, but the rewardwas the knowledge that he was doingsomething for youth and sportsman¬ship. That is all A. A. Stagg evergot out of it. And if a narrow mind-' ed and bigoted body deliberatelyopposes it, why should he fight themwhen the fight is not his own. It isthe fight of those who have gainedthe benefits out of the tourney. It isthe high schools of the nation thatshould be loudest in their lamenta¬tions of the passing of the World'sGreatest Interscholastic. Let thembe the one to oppose the associationand let them be the ones to showwhat they hav gained.Let us not be narrow-minded inour view of the situation. It ismerely a show of authority on oneside and a bid for the youth of thecountry on the other. If we are tohave faith in our athletics, if wehope to instill the ideals of fair playand sportsmanship in the youngergeneration, and if we want to provethat our athletic system has notbeen a failure, let us demand thatthe National Federation of StateHigh School Athletics associationsnot only give its sanction to Statr^r’smeet but do all in its power to makeit bigger and better. GOPHERCOMPLETING PLANS FOR I-M CARNIVALTO BE HELD ONMARCH EIGHT INBARTmTGYMInterest of OrganizationsAssures SuccessOf EventThe Fifth Annual Intramural In¬door Athletic Cair-ival will be con-du-’ted Friday, March 8 at 7:30 inBartlett gym. According to the inter¬est shown by the organization, the af¬fair is expected to be a greater suc¬cess than the carnival held last year.The plans ai;e almost completed.Many New ErentsNew track and field events havebeen added this year namely the 440yard dash, 880 yard run and thestanding broad jump. There will be atotal of eleven events on the trackprogram. A change has been madethis year regarding the number ofevents a may may enter. He maynow participate in two running eventsand one field event plus the relay ortwo field events and one runningevent plus the relay.Prelims On TuesdayNo new entries will be received af¬ter Friday March 1. The track pre¬liminaries will start promptly at 3:30on Tuesday March .“i at Bartlett. Theapproximate time schedule for thetrack prelims is as follows: 60 yarddash at 3:30 on the lower track 50yard low hurdles at 1:00 on the low¬er track. On the upper track the 300yard dash will be run at 4:20 the 440yard dash at 4:30 and the organiza¬tion relays at 4:40.The field prelims are scheduled for3:3 on Wednesday, March 0. Theplace of eac hevent is as follows: shotput on the North Court, high jumpon the Center Court and the standingbroad jump on the South Court. Allfield events will be finished the day ofthe prelims.According to the Intramural officeruling cross country numerals or let¬ter is eijuivalent to a track numeralor latter; consequently possessors ofthese awards are ineligible for carni¬val competition. Monilaw OfficiatesAt Big Ten MeetWalter J. Monilaw has beenselected as the starter for theWestern conference indoor trackand field championships, to beheld in the University of Iowafieldhouse, March 8 and 9.Every one of the Big Tencoaches decided on Monilaw tohandle the gun. He served lastyear in the same capacity in theHawkeye fieldh^ouse, and he hasbeen the starter of other Confer¬ence meets in late years.Dr. Monilaw is a graduate ofDrake university, of Des Moines,and now holds a position in Chi¬cago as director of the NationalAssociation of Camp Directors.TRACK MEET ATBARTLEH FRIDAY MAROON MATMENLEAVE FOR TOUROVER WEEK ENDChicago Has Best TeamOf Last FiveYearsMany Entries Already InFor First ArmourInvitationalMAROON MERMENTAKE ON HOOSIERSThe Maroon water poloists andswimmers both will be alert to takedown the Hoosier teams when theyinvade Bloomington this Saturdayafternoon.In common with the basketballteam, the University of Chicagoswimmers have yet to win their firstvictory. Indiana has never beenparticularly outstanding in its swim¬ming teams, but this year they havea fairly well balanced squad andmay be able to tip Chicago’s cartagain. Winston, their dash flashwill meet with unexpected competi¬tion from Oakley, Chicago ace, whohas been ineligible up till now. Chi¬cago hEis lost the services of threeof its stars. Tucker, who is ineligi¬ble, Jacobson and Way who havedropped out of school.Szold, Maroon water polo captainhas been showing up very well inpractice as hEis also Wendell Steph¬enson who is a backstroke star andwho acted as captain pro-tern duringSzold’s recent illness. There is apossibility that the poloists may re¬peat their sweeping victory over theCardnals, whom they vanquished tothe tune of 16 to 0. The First Annual Armour Invita¬tion Track Meet will be held on theafternoon of Washington’s birthdayFebruary 22 at Bartlett Gymnasium.The events to be run are the 50 yarddash, 50 yard low hurdles, 50 yardhigh hurdles, 220 yard dash, 440yard dash, half mile, one mile,' twomile, high jump, pole vault and shot■ put. Because of the number ofcompetitors' in both 440 and halfmile, two races will be run in each.Although the entries are expectedto be inci’eased in the near future,the present list includes Armour In¬stitute, University of Chicago, CraneCollege, Beloit, Lake Forest, Moose-hart, Morgan Pai’k Military Acad¬emy, Chicago Normal, De Paul, Loy¬ola and Butler. Eligibility rules willbe governed by the institutions thatare competing. There will be noentrance fee of any kind nor willthere be an admission fee to themeet.Coaches should be present for thedrawings which will be made at 1 :30on the gym floor of Bartlett. Nation¬al Collegiate rules will be adheredto.According to Assistant CoachStagg Jr. a number of records maybe tied with the possibility of a fewbeing shattered. In the shot putDonald Paul, of Armour, who did47 feet 5 inches in the National Col¬legiate last year may break the markof 46.5 established by Weaver in a(Continued on page 7) Coach Vorres and eleven mem¬bers of the Maroon wr^^ ag teamleave today for three . - s in theeast with Syracuse University. Me¬chanics Institute of Rochester, andFranklin and Marp-hall of LancasterPa. Syracuse will be met Friday af¬ternoon, Mechanics Institute in theevening and Franklin and MarshallSaturday.The Maroons boast one of thebest wre^^tling teams in he last fiveyears, having scored victoriesover Michigan Si,«.,e, Wis¬consin, and Iowa, and 1 aing byclose margins to Michigan and Min¬nesota. Bill Dyer, 138 pounder, haswon has won five straight matchesthis season, and Max Sonderby, hea¬vyweight, has won his last fourr.atches by faPs. In Archie Winningand Louis Levine, Vorres has twogood 118 no unde’s. Other men whohave good reeo’ds include GeorgeNnrdin, 12^'’ r:ounder; j^tewart Brad¬ley, 148 founds; F'.nix Kolodziej,I also 148 pounds.I Much Interest In TeamUnusual interest is being mani-' fested of late in the activities of thewrestling squad. Competition forj places on the team have been soi keen that Coach Vorres has been; able to split up his squad into twoI teams. This enabled him to use twofull teams agnainst Iowa and WesternElectric lest Saturday night.The eastern trip will give thesquad plenty to do. With these threemeets under their belt, the Maroonsquad will be ready to engage infurther conference competition. Asusual, a number of teams are mak¬ing a fight for the conference cham¬pionship, and Chicago has a splen¬did opportunity for the title. Boilermaker TeamsCompete SaturdayPurdue’s five minor wintersports teams will all be in actionthis Saturday to attract the at¬tention of the home fans. HerbMiller’s wrestlers will get a tasteof non-conference competition af¬ter a series of strenuous Big Tentussles when they stack upagainst Western Reserve here Sat¬urday night. The Boilermakermatmen made an excellent show¬ing against Michigan here lastSaturday, although they lost themeet, and are expected to givethe visitors from the Buckeyestate a real battle. Another homeattraction will be provided whenWisconsin’s swimming team in¬vades the local pool and the Boil-ei'makers attempt to chalk uptheir first conference victory. HAROONSOUTTOTAKE FIRST TILTFROM MINNESOTAChicago Team Faces TrioOf Stars FromNmihlandILUNI GYMNASTSTHREATEN CHICAGOI. M. - BOWUNG GOESINTO SECOND- ROUNDThough a little bit slow in start¬ing, the Intra-mura? bowling tour¬ney has finally gotten into swing andthe first round of singles is nearlyhalf over, three quarters of the en-first matches. Pat Kelly has issueda request for the rest to play theirmatches before Monday when thearranged. Alleys will be open Fridaybrackets for the next round will beso that matches may be played iff.In the doubles tourney there areeight teams left in the running, thequarter finals in this being run offat three and four-fifteen tomorrowafternoon. The semi-finals will beheld on Monday, and the finals willcome off this Tuesday Judging fromtheir performance up to date theprobable finalists seem to be Loomisand Gartside, Alpha Delt and Ripleyand Berry, S. A. E. FOILSMEN BATTLEI POWERFUL ILLINOISSQUAD SATURDAYThe fencing team, which won itsmatch wiih Michigan on Monday bya 12 to 5 score, is pointing now forj the hardest neet of the season. The■ Mar.yon f< <lmen meet the Illinoissquad on Saturday of this week. Tht;' mini beat Michigan by the samecount that Ch’ ago did, and beat the: Buckeyes, whom the Marccnc tie-!.I Chicago has yet to fill cfeat in! their ^ tournaments. The y havewon their battles by seperiorstreii^'-h an»' cont’nue to improve.Wallace made an exce’Ient showingin Mondry’s meet, He was undefeat¬ed in his foil nid dueling swordmatches. Bickley and Goldberg, bothnew saber men in the conferencecame out of the Michigan meet vic¬torious. Captain Friedman and theother regular will also be in goodfonn for the Illinois clash.The freshmen fencers are com-^ing along nicely according to Mr.Merrill. Shinn and Sacerdote havemade mighty fine showings. Nextyear’s team ought to get some goodmaterial from this season’s froshquad. Herr, Gillies and Almond alllook like promising material.The swordsmen will engage theWisconsin team a week from Satur¬day and will proceed to the Confer¬ence meet at Illinois on the follow¬ing Friday and Saturday. HoFFemien Meet Strong TeamSaturdayCoach Hoffer and his squad ofacrobats will journey down to Ur-bana Saturday to stave off what isregarded as Illinois’ most seriousthreat to defeat a Chicago gym teamin eighteen years. The Illini havenot been defeated this season andlast week downed Ohio by a fiftypoint mar^n. The Maroons wereable to beat the Buckeytt by nine¬teen points. Illinois is, therefore,justified in thinking it can breaktradition and win a gym meet fromChicago. But then. Coach Hoffer andCaptain Menzies have something tosay before the aforesaid traditionwill be shattered.Fulton GoodThe Illini have Fulton, last year’sconference title in tumbling andMitchell in tumbling, Reiter is a staron the horse and parallels. Thesemen will probably be relied upon tobe the chief-point getters for thedownstate team.The Maroons have been doingwell. The team in the TriangularMeet with Iowa and Wisconsinshowed fight to come from behindtwice to win. It was in the last twoevnets that Chicago gained the win¬ning points.Sherubel and Broman have beendoing well. Weaver, working inthree events last Saturday, turnedin the most consistent performancej of the day. He made fewer misj takes than any other man on Coach! Hoffer’s squad. Hutchinson andj Cobh are doing good work and(Continued on page 7) By Albert ArkvlesThe Maroons will make theirtenth attempt to win a conferencebasketball game Saturday nightagainst Minnesota. The Norsemenare the only team Coach Norgreu'smen have not yet encountered inthe course of the season’s play, andthere is possibility of a Chicago vic¬tory, inasmuch as the Gophers haveonly won one game thus far.Last Home GameChicago will be making its laststand on Bartlett for this season..Their remaining two games areagainst Minnesota and Wisconsin,both of which -will be played on theinvaders’ courts.The ignominy of finishing theil929 race without hanging up asingle -win threatens the Chicagocagers. Against Ohio, the Maroonsrallied strongly in the second half,and with Gist leading his teammateson, victory seemed imminent. Chi¬cago’s defense weakened -with onlyfiv minutes left of play. Ervin wasthe inan who caused Crawford somuch trouble, while Van Heyde wasunusually effective whenever theplay centered around the basket.Coach Norgren sprang a surpriselast Monday when he inserted Yatesand Cooper in the • opening lineup.Cooper failed to hold up his end ofthe defense, and was relieved byKaplan. Yates, however, perform¬ed in scintillating fashion. His ex¬cellent work against the Buckeyesstamps him as a fine prospect whena ne w season rolls around.Gophers Have Beaten IowaMinnesota was barren of a con¬ference victory until last Mondaywhen it finally dumped Iowa, Zl-Wi..The Gophers are not especiallystrong, although they possess severalflashy stars in the persons of Otter-ness, Nelson and Hovde. The Ma¬roons chances of victory against theinvaders is considerably enhancedby the fact that they will be play¬ing on their own floor.Captain Virgil Gist brings a bril¬liant three year record to a closewtih the Minnesota fray, and Ma-(Continued on page 7)CARDINAL FRESHMENSHOW REAL TALENT JUNIORS BEAT SENIORSIN WOMEN’S GAMESThe showing of the Wisconsinfreshman basketball squad underCoach George Nelson this season in¬dicates that Dr. Walter E. Meanwellwill have at least a dozen outstand¬ing sophomores on deck when he is¬sues the first call for practice nextautumn.Nelson who finished three yearsas a Badger forward and guard lastyear, has been giving the yearlingsthe same plays that are used by thevarsity, but his chief concern hasbeen in teaching the men the coni-plicated pivots, blocks and passes ofthe Meanwell system.The frosh have met the regularsin several pratice games, losing bya two point score on one occasion,20-18. Women’s intei’-class basketballgames held yesterday afternoon inthe gymnasium of Ida Noyes hallended in a Win for the juniors in theJunior-Senior tilt and one for thefreshmen in the Freshman-Sopho¬more contest.The juniors took their fourthstraight win from the seniors witha score of 16-9. Bertha Heimer-dinger star Junior forward was highpoint man of the game with a totalof 9 points to her credit.The freshmen came out on top ina closely fought contest with ascore of 29-21. The sophomoreslead at the half 16-11. High pointman of the game was Olive Eg-gan. Sophomore forward. She gain¬ed 17 of her team’s points. The threeFreshman shooters, Margaret Hill,Dorothy Newman and Iona Shoreenranked next with 8 points apiece.The Juniors still lead in the racefor the pennant with a perfect sheetof wins. These games have attract¬ed more attention this year than everbefore and the prospect is very finefor next year.Page SixJOHN REES SPEAKSTO POLITICAL GROUPOF WOMEN VOTERSSays Property Tax WillPostpon^ for TwoYears ' BeReassessment of property in CookCounty now under way does no>t prom¬ise to be effective for more than ayear or two, John 0, Rees, directorof the Joint commission on Real Es¬tate Valuation told the members ofthe Illinois and Cook County Leagueof Women Voters at their Institute ofPolitics at the University of Chicaoroyesterday.“I am not optimistic about the ben¬efits to be derived from reassess¬ment” said Mr. Rees, who has studiedthe tax problem of cities for manyyears. “There will undoubtedly bea benefit for a year, because of thepressure to get tax bills out as soonas the assessment is completed. Byrtiat tinae the various governinggroups will be desperately in needof money, and there will be no time to would tie up at least 100 millions ofdollars in taxes because suits wouldbe based on the contention that thosefigures were fraudulently established,a charge that seems well founded.“Reassessment will not help muchuntil the present setup of tax boardsis done away with, eliminating twoconflicting agrencies such as the Boardof Assessors and the Board of Re¬view The responsibility must be defi¬nitely located, and there must be pro¬visions for understandable publica¬tion of assessments .so that the pub¬lic will know how their taxes comparewith those in the neighborhood. Oneof the most effective means of ex¬posing the gross inequalities < of as¬sessments was based onttfle.^blica-tions of the figfures by street numberrather than legal description. Thenewspapers of Chicago were able totrace down the properties and pub¬lish stalling examples of discrimina¬tion.”Mr. Rees predicted that some in¬teresting problems would arise in Chi¬cago’s financing within the nextyear or two because he said the citywas borrowing from 130 to 160 percent of its possible tax revenue. “Thecity is borrowing the legal 75 per centfrom the banks, and is taking the restfrom various funds. Thai expendi-THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1929OFFICIAL NOTICESPiper GreenDiscoversSuperior SmokeBaltimore, Md., Aug. 31, 1928Larus & Brother Co.,Richmond, Va.Dear Sirs:I have used one small box of yourextra High Grade Plug Slice Tobacco,and as I have had twenty-seven jearsof experience as a tobacco user, I f.ndyour High Grade Edgeworth to besuperior to all others.There is extra enjoyment in the useof it, which I will make known to myfriends and continue the pleasuremyself.Yours,(Signed) P. F. GreenEdgeworthExtra Hi^h GradeSmoking Tobacco of trouble shortly; the banks are al¬ready getting cautious about lending.There is likely to be a very interest¬ing suit on the bonds of some of thepublic officials, and another possibil¬ity is that the banks wil shut offcredit eiitirely.”E. 0. Gritfenhagen, president ofthe Civil Service Association of Chi¬cago, told the Institute that there w’asa “fighting chance” that bills intro¬duced yesterday in the Illinois As-tinker. But the assessmerit figures | ture in excess of income means plentywill degenerate rapidly into the samesort of condition as they are at pres¬ent, because they constitute the chiefinstrument of party patronage.The taxation groups have been“stalling” for months in an effort toevade the reassessment order, Mr.Rees said. “There was five months ofstalling and evasion because the tax¬ing authorities hoped to find someway of defeating the order,” he toldthe women. “Now everyone but onemember of the Board of Review iswell convinced that the order estab¬lished legal rights, and must be com¬plied with. The cry is that reassess¬ment should have been done nextyear, but in 1927 when efforts werenaade to get such an order, the at¬tempt .was futile because Homer Gal-pin, now out of the state, refused topermit such reassessment.“Should the Supreme Court knockout the reassessment order in its rul¬ing on the t«tst cast now before it,there would be desperate confusionin ihd taxation siuation. An at¬tempt to, fail back .on 1927 figmes1, - ■ sembly to place the elective countyoffices and the Sanitary Board em¬ployees under civil service would suc¬ceed. Passage of the bills wouldmean not only more competent ser¬vice by employees but would also bea big factor in eliminating the pro¬fessional politician by preventing thatgroup from paying for their cam¬paigns out of public treasuries, Mr.Griffenhagen said. The SanitaryBoard has approved the proposed leg¬islation, he said.E. W. Burgess, professor of socio¬logy at the University of Chicago,speaking on “Pardons and Paroles,”said that farm boys and newly ar-riveu immigrants are the state’s best“risks” for parole from prison andseem to make the most satisfactorysocial adjustments after release, whilehobos, ne’er-do-wells from the cit;,and older drug addicts are all likelyto become parole violators. Prof.Burgess recently applied twenty-onetests to the records of 3,000 men pa¬roled from Illinois prisons during thelast five years. The gangster has aparole violation rate somewhat underthe averagre.Of the 25 per cent who violatedparole by failng to observe the re¬quirements or by committing newcrimes, the men with previous crim¬inal records, classified by Prof.Burgess as “professional” criminals,were by far the worst violators, com¬mitting five times as many new crimesas the first offenders or occasionaloffenders, who proved most amenableto social rehabilitation. Thursday, February 2lRadio lecture: “American Liter¬ature.” Professor Percy H. Boyn¬ton of the English department, 8 a.m. Station WMAQ.Divinity Chapel, W. C. Bower,Professor of Religious Education,11:50, Joseph Bond chapel.Public Lecture (YWCA): “Peace—A Goal or a Method?” Bishop PaulJones, Secretary, Fellowship of Re¬conciliation. 4:30, Y. W. C. A. roomIda Noyes hall.The Bacteriology club, “Studiesof Certain Factors Affecting the Ac¬tion of Anti-pneumoncoccus Serum.”Professor 'O. H. Robertson of theMfdical department 4:30, Ricketts1.Public lecture (downtown): “Wil¬helm Conrad Roentgen.” Paul C.Hodges, Professor of Roentgenology,6:45, the Art Institute.Radio lecture: “Crime and LawEnforcement in the Modern City.”Professor' E.* W. Burgess of the So¬ciology department, 7, StationWMAQ. Faris, Sociology departmrat. 8,Swift 10.William Vaughn Moody Lecture:“The Educational Situation in Rus¬sia,” Professor John Dewey. 8:15,Leon Mandel Assembly hall.Friday, February 22Radio Lecture: “American Litera¬ture,” Professor Percy Boynton, 8.Station WMAQ.Public Lecture (Dowmtowm: “TheProblem of Efficiency: A City Man¬ager for Chicago.” Professor LeonardD. White. Economics department.6:45. Art Institute.Saturday, February 23The Board of Physical Culture andthirties: 9, Harper E 41.The University Senate: 10, HarperM 11. CLASSIFIED ADS *OPPORTUNITY FOR STUMNTSBoard with exclusive family. Roomwith private bath. Small salary of¬fered for few hours daily tendingtwo children. Phone South Shore6404.EMMcummsaenirrAmiAi.TRADfllfOPea. Mau.We4. * Sat.GARRICKBeg. Tues., Feb. 26 NOWLEE SHUBERT Presents •Radio liccture: “Elementary Ger¬man,” Mr. William Kurath, Germandepartment, 11, Station WMAQ.Radio Lecture: “Elementary Span¬ish,” Mr. Bechtolt, 1, Station WMAQ.The Dames Club: “AmericanChants,” H. D. Roberts. 3, Ida Noyeshal?The Patristic Club, 7, 5706 Wood-lawn Avenue.Sociology Club: “Sociology andEducation,” Professor Ellsworth A Dictionary of ChemicalEquationsContains twelve thousand completedand balanced chemical equations, ciaasifiedand arranavd for ready reference.ECLECTIC PUBLISHERSHit Tribane Tewer Chicage, 111. Basedon ,tkeWfyofSASvapavs, THE PLAV THAT KTPT ALL NEW yORKt fiMD LONDON LAUGHING FOR A ytAR. •COHANS Nishto 8:2« NOWGRANDGEORGE CHOCS SaysCYCLONICMUSICAL|<X>HCDYwithHITVirainiaWATSONYOlWSILfFredWARING CariRANDALLandWAKING’SPENNSYLVANIANSSnapptsat. Payplaat Omtaa la Tawu9 1Official CeNle^* FEATEBNITY* *<PBK cJewelrjBoE^ee^Hn^lhteliies'WARREN PIPER &(XI !31 N. State St., Chicago The Spare PairShares the Wear [Anticipate your futurerequirements at theseadvantageous prices. .BOOK FAGBefore the evening spent over thestudy table, why not relax a bitwith music? A record or two ofthe latest hits from musical shows;radio entertainment. Or do somepracticing on the Sax, Banjo orUke. Everything Kncnen in Musicat Lyon & Healy’s not ten minutesaway. Come in after classes.Low Monthly TermsWOODLAWN STORE:870 East 63rd Streetlyon^ HealyOpen Evenings Till 9 P. M.SKATES AND SOUPNot a very practical idea and not properly lyrical but,nevertheless, did you ever sit down to a plate of home¬made vegetable soup, steaming and savory, after acouple of hours of skating, or even after a cold hike inthe wind? “Wonderful,” you say, “If it is soup prop)-erly ‘built*. “We have never in our lives served a dishthat we would not gladly put on our own table at homeand be proud to put on yours. Just try us, that’s all.THE ELLIS TEA SHOP(Twenty hours a day)940 East 63rd Street a l%ort Time OnlyNew Spring Importations Included■ Malt Grays, Navy Blues, Grayish TansSUIT AND EXTRA TROUSERS ORKNICKERS AT THE PRICE OF THESUIT ALONE, $65 to $110Nothing Restricted—Every Yard of Woolen IncludedThe very Choicest of this Season’s Woolens.Beautiful, Conservative, Medium Weight Fabrics Suitable for Year ’Round Wear.NEW SPRING FABRICS for those who wish to anticipate their futurerequirements at these Remarkrble Prices.rSHETLAND This beautiful yet quiet Scotch fabricwill be worn wherever style is studied.L Its subdued attractiveness suits practically every one. An ideal assortment. 1Scotch, Irish andHarris Tweeds7. N. LA SALLE ST. Formal Business and Sport Clothes324 S. MICHIGAN AVE.(McCormick Building) Evening Clothes andCutaway FrocksforWeddings andReceptionsa Specialty71 E. MONROE ST.140-142 S.' Clark St. (near Adams)225 N. Wabash at Wacker Drive (2nd Floor Fisk Bldg.)Page SevenTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1929 ¥ILUNl GYMNASTSTHREATEN CHICAGO(Continues from sports page)should gain many points for Chi¬cago.Captain Menzies will be enteredin all events. He has shown remark¬able form this season, and, in allprobability, wil win the all-aroundConference title. The meet willhave bearing on the Big Ten cham¬pionship race.TRACK MEET ATBARTLETT FRIDAY(Continues from sports page)recent dual meeet. Burt Nelson ofButler, Bangert of Chicago Normaland Frey of Chicago all of whomhave been jumping around six feetregularly may break the presentBartlett record of 6 feet 4 13-16 in.In the 60 yard dash and half milerecords may be approached. ^ " DIAMOND UL“Diamond Lil," a play of the gayBowery.; starring Mae Weat, doesnot encourage one to take out hisscalpel and uncoVer the psycholog¬ical motives impelling the charac¬ters. The play succeeds only in cre¬ating a picaresque atmosphere ofthe New York of 1900, and leavinga breath, liquor scented, of course,from ^ the alleys and sidewalks trodby the heroine and her pals.Diamond Lil is a young woman ofengaging depravity who vows tosnare a Salvation Army crusader;his emotions and conscience are con¬sequently thrown at odds. Much tothe relief of the audience to whommorals on the stage never appeal,the young crusader quells his con¬science and yields to both his emo¬tions and Diamond Lil.“I knew he could be got,” mur¬murs she over his shoulder upon thedescent of the curtaio.The play is no sermon. Lord no,no sermon. But it’s a clever twist ofthe old Thais theme and needs nodidacticism to be interesting. !%ow ‘‘Flying Fleet”At Tivoli Theater“The Flying Fleet” with RamonNavarro as the air cadet who winsthe girl —in other words, the hero—is being featured at the Tivolitheatre this week. Frankie, Mastersis master of ceremonies in the ac¬companying musical program.Ronald Coleman and Lily Damita,the French actress, are mixing it atthe Tower in “The Rescue,” adoptedfrom Conrad’s book. Lou Kosloifpresents the musical program.Alumnus AppointedChaplain of LegionRabbi Lee J. Levinger of Colum¬bus, Ohio is the new national chap¬lain of the American Legion.Rabbi Levinger served overseas aschaplain with the 27th division. Hegraduated from the University in1909 with the degree of Ph B. Until1917 he had been doing graduate workin the Divinity School.Her best friendsought to tell her!Her RYES are her best feature, but whocan discover it if she iosiata on hjding thembehind heavy “horn-rims’'? For evening wearher choice should be White Gold rimlessglasses. Shell-rims have their proper place, ofcourse—in the lit»‘ary or study. For the street,or afternoon occasions, rimless White Gold eye¬glasses or oxfords are all that the new close-htting hats will let you wear!White gold is a new metal whichgives to glasses the dainty, well-bred inconspicu¬ousness of fine jewelry. Your optical specialist willshow you excellent examples of White Goldcraftsmanship in,a variety, of styles.For mning wear—white gold rimless glasses*THE MARK OF QUALITV'“Manufacturing Opticians and Optometrists.”1225 EAST SIXTY-THIRD STREETJust Across The Midway MAROONS OUT TOTAKE FIRST TILTFROM MINNESOTA ference race. In addition to Gist,Kaplan, diminutive forward. Coop¬er and Blattburg 'are playing theirlast game on the Maroon floor.(Continues from sports page)roon fans are expected to turn outen masse to witness his last homeperformance. Gist still contiues asone of the high scorers In te con- Waraer Issues CallFor More SophomoresA call for sophomores has been issued by Charles Warner, Abbot ofBiackfriars, who states that pos¬tions in departments of productionare open to all second-year men up¬on application.Men interested in working underthe junior heads of the departmentsare requested to place their appli¬cations in the Biackfriars’ box atFaculty Exchange.1H£(Oi)RDBIfeniy CLgtton S SonsSTATE and JACKSON — ChicagoBROADWAY and FIFTH—Gary MARION and LAKE—Oafc ParkORRINGTON and CHURCH—Evarwfon.jT'r: OCmCACIDANSpring SuitsJust Arrived^ intite!Heu)ed and Smartest Shades and Styles at05 ”^^40m0AFTEIR months of planning, we are open¬ing the Spring Season with this specialfeature. Here is a collection of UniversitySuits — the Newest and the Smartest — plusmore quality and character than even we wereever able to build into the famous “Chicago¬ans” as a regular thing. You are ready fornew clothes. You’ll find what you want inthis rich assortment. Complete ranges in allsizes, styles and models.Suits with one or two trousersIn the Lytton College Shop'■ .V' . V -;.’^ .*■ •• -^ ,v ••Page Elight THE DAILY MAROCW, THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 21. 1929 Vi-,^//P •VTO CECILIAAnd did you think I meant itWhen I said I would be true?And did you think I meant itWhen I said that I loved you?What makes you quite so funny?Amusing is the word,I never thought you’d thinkI loved you. How absurd!And did you think I meant itWhen I said that I lov© you?You really did? You silly girl, jBut I’m afraid I really do! iOSCAR i ing to think of a suitable reply.More of this in my next issue.DEAR J. L. P.Talk .about terrofTism at thepolls yesterday during the Froshelection! Several prcniinent clubwomen were threatening to kissthose men who voted for their can¬didate!CAPTAIN ABSOLUTEOscar Foxglove Zilch consents torun for alderman opposing thatsnake in sheep’s clothing, EtaotnShrdiu! This stupendous announce¬ment was made to the Whistle yes¬terday by the well known Mr. Zilehas the first step in J. L. P.’s plan torid the city and especially this wardof the evil influence of Shrdiu, thePeople’s Pest. As perhaps some ofyou know, the Line O’ Type of theTrib is behind this devilish move toplace Shrdiu in the aldermanicchair in order to get low'er rates ontypewriter ribbons for R. H. L.Zilch is a member of the Masons,the Knights of Columbus, the Daugh¬ters of Job, Y. W. C. A., and theKu Klux Klan. He is also a leader inthe “back to Africa’’ movement.“Although my honored opponent,Shrdiu, has always boasted of hispurity in politics, perhaps he can explain why, despite his vaunted clean¬liness, he invariably mi.stakes a bathtub for a coa! bin,” stated the au¬gust Mr. Zilch in an address beforethe Foster Hall girls last night. Atthe moment of going to press Mr.Shrdiu was busy biting his nails try- WHICH REMINDS me that theFreshman elections are over. Andthe police report a pretty quiet dayon the whole. Of course there werea few altercations but the Froshseeemed to know what it is all about.Paul Brady, chairman of the Elec¬tion Board, was kidnapped repeated¬ly during the day but the bloodthirsty Blodgett forces who tried tomake him throw his influence forEtaoin Shrdiu as against the Whis¬tle’s man, Zilch. Professor Kerwinwas forced to eat nine peanut but¬ter sandwiches by fourteen mon¬sters, evidently freshman, in an ef¬fort to make him reach for a Luckyinstead of an onion. Cobb Hall wasterrorized for several minutes abouteleven o’clock when some unearthlyscreams rent the air. It was foundon investigation that it was onlyBuck Weaver. It seems that one ofthe Dodd sisters mistook him for aradiator and tried to put her muddygaloshes on his neck.On the whole however, the election was a triumph for law and or¬der. The frosh are to be congrat¬ulated.DEAR J. L. P.:The Sophomore class states thatVOiiCAN YOU ROLLICK?If you can, joinThe MidwesternUniversity ToursSailing from Montreal in thenew Cunarders ANTONIAJune 21st or ATHENIA June28 th.Membership open to thestudents, faculty and Alumniof the Midwestern Universitiesand Colleges.You’ll visit France, Eng¬land, Belgium, Germany.Switzerland - - - 38 days spentin visiting the gayest . . mosthistoric, and picturesque pointsof interest in Europe.It will cost you $426.50from Montreal to Montreal or$489,45 from Chicago to Chi¬cago.Let the experience of themany Midwestern Universitypeople who traveled with usin 1928 be your guide in plan¬ning your 1929 Tours.For further informationSEE LOCAL AGENTSTHE AMERICANEXPRESSCOMPANYCUNARDLINE346 N. Michigan Ave. KEARTSliSliVGAiYOUneftieSr m • r- » IuisyUi L3 'CHICAGO ILLINOIS NESTLE’S is rich in con¬centrated energy— nourishing — delicious.Everybody praises its mel¬low er, creamier flavor.The purest, freshest, full-cream milk blendedsmoothly with the richnessof chocolate — that’sNestle’s, the creamiest ofall milk chocolates, thefavorite everywhere.You’re certain to like itbetter! Look for the clean,silvery wrapper. In^Scand 10c bars—red-lettcred for PlainBars — blue let¬tered for Al¬mond Bars.‘‘Richestin Cream* it is going to give a mixer that willbe ‘diflPerent.” Ah, perhaps therewill be some Sophomores there.Abdullah the MastaganistI see where another navy shipgoes under at Cuba. If many moreaccidents occur in our dear Navyit will have to change its slogan to“Join the Navy and see the OtherWorld.'”J. L. P.FACULTY GROUP TOSEE FOLK-DANCINGEXHIBITION SUNDAYAn exhibition of folk dancing willbe given by Mrs. E. M. Hobbs, vice-chairman of the English Folk Danc¬ing Society, Monday at Ida Noyeshall before a faculty group, headed byMr, Valentine Morrow.The faculty group or about twentymembers is interested in dancing andhas been in existence for about fiveyears.Mrs. Hobbs is from Oxford, Eng¬land and belongs to the group whoworked with Cecil Sharp, the revisercf English folk dancing. Chdu*ity PositionGiven to GraduateMiss Josephine Starr a graduateof The University, has lately takencharge of the Riverside Drive officeof the Charity Society organizationin New York city. The purpose ofthe organization is to solve the prob¬lems of those families who are infinancial trouble by giving them freeconsultation on their financial affairs.This is an entirely new field of char¬ity and as yet is only an experiment.MUSICAL NOTES(Continued from page 1)familiar tunes of their encores, theVolga barge song and the Rimsky-Korsakoff Indian song. The firsthas been too long in the hands ofJewish neurotics, the second too longat the mercy of such anemic exoticsas plan vaudeville acts for moviehouses. In the voices of the Ked-roff quartet they returned to nativeRussian throats.TEACHERfor College EnglishENROLL NOWAmerican Teachers’ Agency710 Old Colony Bldg.DES MOINES, lA. University Drug Co.61st and EllisLUNCHEON SERVEDReal Home Made FoodServed as You Like It.We Deliver Fairfax 4800 Make It a Real Party**Friday Nite IsCollege Nite**Coon-SandersOriginal Blackhawk OrchestraPlus a Corps of FamousEntertainersSPECIAL COLLEGE FEATURESAND NOVELTIESRALPH WONDERSas Master of CeremoniesDINE — DANCE — BE ENTERTAINED. D F S ■f’Ai IJl A NrfoXoralftpHyde Park BaptistChurch5600 Woodlawu Av*.Norris L. TibbettsMinisterSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2411 a. m.—College Classes.11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship.Young Peoples Church Club.6 :U0 p. m.—Tea and Social Honi7:00 p. m.—Discussion Groups.8:00—Evening worship plannedby young people.8:45 p. m.—The Home Party. EPISCOPALCHICAGO ETHICALSOCIETYA non-sectarian, religiou? societyto foster the knowledge, love andpractice of the right.THE STUDEBAKER THEATRE418 S. Michigan AvenueSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2411 A. M.Dr. Horace J. Bridgeswill speak onThe ‘Man’* Code” of Honor: ItsMerits and Its FaultsService broadcast by WCFLWave Length, 309.1 meters,970 kc.All seats fiee. Visitors cordiallywelcome.Hyde Park Presbyter¬ian ChurchRalph Marshall DavisMinister.Blackstone Ave. and 53rd St.10:00 a. m.—Church School.11:00 a. m.—Morning Worship.5:30 p. m.—Young People’s So¬ciety Tea6:30 p. m.—Young People’s So¬ciety Meeting8:00 p. m.—Evensong Sttosiileton'Stiemir anb srfii street(Jon O^den Ucxft — ministerSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24I 1 A. M.—-“Mid-Life.”6 P. M.—Channing Club, Meadville House. "The Spirit ofScience.”Hyde Park Congregi^tional ChurchDorchester Ave. and 86th 91.WILLIS LAITEN GOLDSMITH,MinisterWATCHSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2411 o’clock—Regular Service. THE6 p. m.—Scrooby Club for YoungPeople.Interesting Entertainment.7:46 p. m.—Evening service inDewhurst Hall. CHURCHADSMoving Pictures, 'The Man No¬body Knows.”University students invited.GOINGT OCHURCHI SGOOD FOR YOU Christ CkarchWoodlawB at 65tkThe REV. FRANCIS R. NITCHIE7:30 a. m.—Holy Communion.9:30 a. ni.—Church School.11:00 a. m.—Holy Eucharist orMatins and Sermon.5:30 p. m.—Evensong. Address.All students are welcome. Dailyservices.TIm Choreh ofThe RedeemerUV. JOHN HHNBT HOriUMa. D. D..University Student Pastor:Rev. W. C DovnerAssistantSunday: Holy Communion, 8 ajn.and, (except 3rd Sundays) at 9:15a. m., also with sermon at 11 a. m.Choral Evensong and sermon,7:30 p. ni.Confirmation lecture for adultsStudents especiallvDaily chapel services. welcome.St. Paul’s ChurchISta aaS 0«.clMstarPariah Offics: 4946 Dorehsstsr Atsbw-fsl. Oaklaae SISSREV. GEORGE H. THOMASRev. Frank R, MyersRev. Otis C. JacksonSunday SarvtcasHoly Communion, 8:00 a. m.Church School Service, 9:80 a. m.Morning Service, 11:00 a. m.Evening Service, 6 p. m.'*Young Peoples* Society, • f). m.Woodlawn Park Methociist Episcopal ChurchWoodlawn Avenue at 64th SLGILBERT S. COX, PaetorSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 249:4&—Sunday School.Morning 11 o’clock—^’Givhig or Sharing.”5:30 P. M.—Epworth League.7:45 P. M.—“The Present World Situation” by SherwoodEddy.Students will find a most cordial welcome. UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF DISCIPLES57th and UniversityMinister: Eldward Scribner AmeeBasil F. Wise, Directbr of Music and EducationSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 24Sermon: I 1 A. M.—Regular Service.Wranglers 5:30 P. M.—Entertaining Program.■J.:-