Name New Dean ofLaw SchooL idatoon Little Theatre Blos¬soms Out.Voi. I. No. 3 THE MAROON, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1929 Price Five Cent*BIGELOW TO HEAD LAW SCHOOLSTUDENTS ANDFACULTY MENBACK VENTUREAim to Elncourage Art,Show ContinentalMoviesF/AT LUX!By Diogenes Tenfelsdrokh“Colleges and universities had toorganise for quantity output andhigh-speed . roduction . . . The re¬sult' has been atrophy, u'd the stu¬dents--bless their perspicacity!—have turned to the only vital ele¬ments remaining in our colleges, theoccasional great teacher and extra¬curricular activities.”What! is this heresy that Mr. Orr,writing in the New Republic, haspronounced? Facultes have for years,as a way of expressing a tepid sym¬pathy with educational liberalism,assumed the attitude that extra-cur¬ricular activities round out a stu¬dent—that the social whirl of them,like a potter’s wheel, gives sym¬metry to the student’s character, asymmetry absent when the humanclay sits lumpish, immobile, andrs.creiy thoughtful But these facul¬ties of ours have always put theweight of their favor on studies asthe only agents creative of char¬acter, in its mass and worth.Mr. Orr exclr .'*1 no. The onlyv''h’ ;; in the oa-Kj.css that is c 1'.cj,**' flickers in extra-curricular act'viiivb and at ne rosi’in T an « c-cn:'(• fc.1 great tv.n her he says. What•ire the qualities iri p tia-curriculara‘.'‘’aes that v J Mr i^rr so toalbu rn, and st*’r,e i.i most • f ihcin.so to act? First of all, there is free¬dom to choose a straightaway forpersistent, purposeful action last¬ing. in general, tor four years anddevoid of small rejt.ainti dictatedby mistrust. The purpose is some¬times money, iroro often prestige;and, it is likely, pure pleasure inmost cases. Te pl>:i. uie usually liesin something in A'hioh the studentfeels himself verioo. If it has anadroit tongue, he enters debating; ifhis pen runs and laughs, he turns toth( Phoenix or to. Forge; if he hassong of the hi*< in his threatlife becomes a member of the choirof Blackfr..>r< Bm v.l.at study,or segment of study, can a studentiay he knows ev?*' semi iKtiyO* lyV ken he er.ts.s c.) .eg 1 J ha. kn-.w! ,.j been able to prove that.Mge brings int'rt.Jt is true far mo.e William Shakespeare did not writeORGANIZE CAMPUS LITTLE THEATERParty of University Students toView Yerkes Observatory This WeekThe Chicago Little Theatre cor¬poration is being organized to opena theatre near the campus for thepresentation of foreign films, orig¬inal plays, lectures, and art exhibits.The aim of this new venture will beto bring the continental movies toChicago and to encourage Chicagodrama and art.The theatre will be decorated byWilliam Schwartz, one of Chicago’soutstanding and modern artists,whose one-man show is opening atthe art institute on July 8. Mr.Schwartz has won a number ofprizes for his modern canvases. Anample lobby will be decorated as amodern lounge, where patrons willbe served with coffee and cigarettes.Have no theatre of this kindChicago has not had the opportun¬ity to become well acquainted withthe lively and thought-provokingfilms of other countries. AlthoughNew York has seven theatres thatpresent continental, films, this cityhas, at present, no show-place of thiskind.It is considered by many that Eu¬rope turns out better films than.4merica.—better in the intelligence(Continued on page 3) University students will look atthe moon and stars next Saturdaynight—not out of a flair for the ro¬mantic but purely as an educationaladventure. They will make a trip,as part of the “Know Chicago” toursarranged by the University, to Yer¬kes observatoi’y at Williams Bay,Wisconsin, next Saturday, leavingReynolds clubhouse at 8 and arriv¬ing about noon at College Camp,half a mile down Lake Geneva byboat.Cost $5.20Expenses for the trip will total$5.20, with the exception of mealsand room in the event that membersof the party desire to remain overSunday. Tickets m.\y be purchasedat the Y. W\ C. A., the Reynoldsclub candy counter, and the inform¬ation desk in the press building.During the afternoon the party will view the observatory at regular vis¬iting hours. Members who prefermay play golf or go boating in lieuof the preliminary visit. In the eve¬ning the party will peer through theforty-inch refracting telescope at thenight skies and will be initiated intothe mysteries of an astrophysical re¬search laboratory.Hold International ConferenceOn the same day an internationalconference, among whose speakerswill be T. Z. Koo, formerly an offi¬cial of the Chinese Nationalist gov¬ernment and now associated with theY. M. C. A. in educational work, andK. T. Paul, an Indian administratorwho has been in close contact withMahatma Ghandi, is scheduled to beheld.The observtory, under the direc¬tion of Edwin B. Frost, has made im¬portant photographic records of thesun and of the Milky Way.New Nations OweBirth to MixtureOf Races—Gini AWARD HUTCHINS.THREE DEGREESShakespeare LosesCredit for a Playfrequently than that interest bringsknowledge. But thorough knowl¬edge is not a product of highschools—we agree—nor even of thefirst two years of college—where weand others disagree—because the in¬timation of compulsion, more effec¬tive than the bare ugliness of thething itself, shadows these twoyears. It seems to dimini.sh in thethird, and actually be escapable inthe fourth through the outlet of hon¬ors courses. Resistance to compul¬sion is inevitable at the time of lifewhen the blue sky itself holds moreinterest than the physics of it.Knowledge should be imparted inconjunction with two qualities ofextra-curricular activities additionalto pleasure. One is equality, ornear-equality; the other is drama.In extra-curricular activities thereare superiors, of course, but withthe ages of apprentice and masterin the late teens and early twenties,an air of absolutism is rarely as¬sumed. Freshman and senior are en¬joying the activity together. Theonly hiatus is one of experience ad¬mittedly necessary. In the class¬room, on the other hand, the pro¬fessor’s carefully-nurtured intellec¬tual isolation or perhaps his fancythat young people are ill at easewith grayheads, split a deplorablechasm in his associations wHh stu¬dents. He is no teacher; he is therecording angel. The very compan-ionabilitiy wanting in the Universityhas been understood as an essentialcomponent in modem education byDr. Meiklejohn at the University ofWisconsin; and there are two orthree colleges in the country whereit would be hard to distinguish be¬tween docent and pupil, save for themore pointed, more skilfully applied(Continued on page 3) any part of the play, “Sir ThomasMoore” and have ascertained five orthe six authors who did write it,”declared Dr. Samuel G. Tennen-baum, who gave a series of five lec¬tures from June 24 to June 29, con¬cerning Shakespearean documentsand forgeries. “This play was writ¬ten in the last decade of the six¬teenth century for the political pur¬pose of instigating a rebellion in Lon¬don, mostly directed against the for¬eigners. This play includes the earli¬est and dramatic work of ThomasHeywood and Henry Cheute, besidesthe work of Anthony Mandy,Thomas Deker, and Thomas Kyd, theauthor of the first play in Hamlet,which Shakespeare afterwards imi¬tated. Not more than three pages ofthis play contain Shakespeare’s ownhandwriting and is not the most pre¬cious manuscript in the world, as(Continued on page 3) Rise of new nations in the worldis essentially a phenomenon of cross¬breeding, Corrado Gini, professor ofstatistical economics of the Univers¬ity of Rome, said Friday in the finallecture of the Institute of the Har¬ris Memorial Foundation at the Uni¬versity.“It has long been observ-'d thatnew civilizations and * nations fre¬quently result from the mixing ofdifferent populations, but this resulthas been attributed rather to mutualcultural and political influences thanto a biological phenomenon,” theItalian expert said. “The UnitedStates, which certainly constitutes agreat new nation, and from somepoints of view, a new race, is theresult of the mixture of individuals(Continued on page 3)TORGE’, UNIVERSITYPOETRY REVIEW, ONSALE IN COBB HALLVilsiting ProfessorsWarm Up to CampusAt Recent ReceptionIn honor of visiting professorsduring the summer term at the Uni¬versity a reception for the facultywas held last Sunday afternoon inIda Noyes hall. Mrs. George Good-speed directed arrangements for thefunction, which is annually held toacclimate new faculty members tothe Chicago quadrangles.Among the faculty men presentwere David H. Stevens, assistant tothe president, and Dr. Shairler Mat¬hews head of the University divinityschool.A student reception iis scheduledfor Sunday, July 14 in Ida Noyeshall, under the supervision of the so¬cial director. Miss Adelene Bowie. As an introduction to Universitysummer students of The Forge: AMidwestern Review, which makes itsappearance early in August, the edi¬tors of the magazine placed copiesof the spring issue on sale in Cobbhall last week. The price has beenlowered from the usual twenty-fivecents to fifteen cents.Edited by Dexter Masters andFrances Stevens, the Forge is oneof the most widely-circulated poetrymagazines published at any univers¬ity. Recently it has widened itsscope to include critical pieces andessays by Robert Morss Lovett andNapier Wilt. Among its cotributorsare Howard Mumford Jones, GeorgeDillon, Padraic Colum, AlfredKreymborg, and Eunice Tietjens. Woodward, Craigie AlsoGiven Honors'Robert Maynard Hutchins, Presi¬dent-Elect of the University, receiv¬ed the honorary doctor of laws de¬gree from three colleges last week,while eight other faculty membersof the University were receivinghonorary doctorates at the variouscommencement exercises.Oberlin college, at which hestudied for two years, Lafayette col¬lege, and the University of WestVirginia awarded Dean Hutchins theLL.D. degree. Acting PresidentFrederic Woodward, who will re¬sume his duties as vice-president anddean of the faculties in September,when Dr. Hutchins assumes the ac¬tive the active administration of theUniversity, received the LL.D. fromNorthwestern university, where hetaught from 1902 to 1907.Princeton university conferred theDoctor of Letters degree upon Pro¬fessor James Henry Breasted emin¬ent archaeologist, who is Director ofthe University’s Oriental Institute. AtHarvard university Dr. Charles Whit-(Continued on page 3)Gives $30,000 for FundTo Buy Law BooksThirty thousand dollars has beengiven to the University by Mrs.James N. Raymond to establish asmemorial to her husband in theform of a library fund to purchasebooks, manuscripts, and magazinesfor the law school. The RaymondFund is to be a supplement to pre¬sent appropriations made by the Uni¬versity for the law school library.Mr. Raymond, who was the founderof the Raymond Lead company diedin 1919. Broadcast SundayChapel ServicesVia WMAQ StationThe crowds which are regularlyturned away from the Universitychapel on Sundays may consolethemselves with at least hearing theservices over the radio. Broadcast¬ing apparatus has been installed inthe chapel and full services aremade available to a radio congrega¬tion through WMAQ, the DailyNews station. It was utilized forthe first time on June 23, when Dr.Shailer Mathews delivered the ser¬mon.WLS, the Seal's Roebuck station,formerly broadcast from the micro¬phone in Mandel hall. The threemicrophones installed in the chapelare located at the pulpit, the read¬ing desk ,and at the choir pews.4,782 ENROLLRegistrations in the first week ofthe summer quarter totaled 4,782,exclusive of the university collegedowntown. In the schools of arts,literature, and science, the graduateenrollment is 2,555 and the under¬graduate 994. CAMPUS SOCIALGROUPS ORGANIZE;ELECT OFFICERSGiven their initial impetus by thereception held on June 21 groups ofUniversity summer students organ¬ized on a geographical basis are al¬ready under way with social func-tins for the term.The following officers have beenelected: western group, Paul Upde-graff, president; Ella M, Johnson,secretary-treasurer; middlewestern,Fleta Childs Petrie and Doris Myers;southern, Lillian Bottorff and Hen¬rietta Russell.Tonight at 6 in the north loungeof Ida Noyes hall the western groupwill meet to formulate arrangementsfor a proposed dance and entertain¬ment to be held on July 4.Urges ProtestantClergymen to AidIn Farm ReliefRural Protestant churches inAmerica can find their greatest op¬portunity in abandoning their beliefin theocracy and developing farm co¬operatives that will make the ruralregions economcially independent theRev. Warren H. Wilson, director ofthe town and country department.Board of National Missions of thePresbyterian church, declared lastWednesday in a lecture at the Uni¬versity. The Rev. Wilson was talk¬ing on “The Neglected Econolhic-Religious Experience in CooperatingProtestantism.”“The cooperative movement is thegift of the Protestant countries tocivilization. It was developed be¬cause the clergymen of Europe wereinterested in the movement, and infact, began it in Germany. The(Continued on page 3) SUCCEEDS LATEPROF. J. P. HALLIN DEAr^ CHAIRSpecial Honors AwardedTwo Other MembersOf Law FacultyHarry A. Bigelow, Professor ofLaw at the University, has been ap¬pointed dean of the law school tosucceed the late James Parker Hall,the board of trustees of the Univer¬sity has announced. Honors havealso been given Ernst Freund andEdward W. Hinton, who are to holdspecial professorships, the same an¬nouncement said.Professor Bigelow, who has been amember of the faculty since 1904,has won wide recognition as a schol¬ar and teacher, his chief fields beingthe law of property and conflict oflaws. He is the author of variouscasebooks in these subjects and isreporter in the law of property andadviser on conflicts of laws to theAmerican Law institute. He accom¬panied Herbert E. Bradley and MaryHastings Bradley on their 1924 ex¬pedition to the Belgian Congo, whichwas the first to traverse the regionwest of Lake Edward.Here Since 1894Professor Freund, who was in¬structor in Roman Law and jurispru¬dence at the University from 1894,(Continued on page 4)CAMPUS CHAPTER OFC. AND A. FRATERNITYHONORED FOR WORKAs the most active hit in the na¬tional organization, the Universitychapter of Alpha Kappa Psi, profes¬sional fraternity in commerce, hasbeen awarded the Alpha Kappa Psisilver anniversary cup presneted an¬nually to the most progressive chap¬ter of the year. Since the presen¬tation was made at the end of theorganizations first year of existence,the officers feel a definite honorhas been paid to it. The cup wasgiven at the twenty-fifth anniversaryconvention at Troutdale-in-the Pines,near Denver, Colo., on June 22.Members of the University chap¬ter are drawn from the ranks ofstudents enrolled 'in the commerceand administration school or major¬ing in economics. The fraternitypossesses sixty-five chapters. Sophomore GetsFiske Poetry PrizeOfficial annou-TiCemettt has beenmade of the annual award of theJohn Billings Fiske prize in poetry.The winner of the prize is AlfredVictor Frankenstein, a Chicago stu¬dent in the junior colleges. First hon¬orable mention was given to PexterWright Masters ,of the senior class,chairman of the editorial board ofthe Daily Maroon and editor of TheForge. Three others received hon¬orable mention. There were fortycontestants in the competition, thelargest number in the history of theprize, which was founded ten yearsago by Horace Spencer Fiske inmemory of his father.The committee of award includedProfessor Robert Morss Lovett, act¬ing chairman of the department ofEnglish; Jessica Nelson North, asso¬ciate editor of the magazine Poetry;and Robert Herrick, novelist andcritic. The successful poem will ap¬pear in the July number of the Uni¬versity Record.Program for NextSunday’s ServicesThe Reverend King, D. Beach,of St. James Methodist Episcopalchurch, Chicago, 111., will be theUniversity preacher for nextSunday morning at the chapel.Services, according to the follow¬ing arrangement, begin at 10:50:The prelude, processional hymn.Call to worship, invocation, gen¬eral thanksgiving.Chorale and anthem.Reading of scripture, prayers,hymns.The sermon.The offertory, recessional hymnand benediction. Elect Ex-Curator ofWalker to Cuba’sAcademy of ArtsProfessor Frederick Starr, anthro¬pologist at the University from 1892until his retirement in 1923 has beenelected “Academico Correspondi-ente” of the Cuban National Acad¬emy of Ai*ts and Letters, it is learn¬ed at the University.One of the University’s most dis¬tinguished authors and lecturers, andfor thirtyone years one of its mostpopular teachers Professor Starr hasreceived recognition from seven for¬eign governments. Only two otherAmericens are members of the Cu¬ban Academy. Professor John D.Fitz-Gerald of the University of Illi¬nois and Charles Moore of the Li¬brary of Congress. ^Professor-emeritus Starr was cur¬ator of anthropology of Walker Mu¬seum, his principal field studies hav¬ing been Japan and Korea, the Con¬go, the Philippine Islands, Mexico,and Liberia.ij^i^.y.:- ■ - ■'■"EtT'.frwpwrwo » IWPT'U^'?- W"iWH.'!W>!W!^’»Ji!; winipfi I'f iwpiwi[:t!f.!iPage T wo THE MAROON. TUESDAY. JULY 2. 19290I1|? marnnttOFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE SUMMER QUARTER. 1929The StaffEARLE M. STOCKER, BUSINESS MANAGERLOUIS H. ENGEL. JR.. MANAGING EDITOREdward G. Bastian Editorial Assistant)Jerome B. Strauss . Editorial Assistant;Robert McCarthy Business AssistantJames J. McMahon Business Assistant:DR. JOHNSON^S CHILDRENTTie other day an anti-Fascist leader was pronounced an“ankylometic lansquenet” by an irate Italian newspaper of NewYork. This select epithet, combining with its syllabic testiness acertain Ciceronian solemnity, ought to be a treasure for manyblossoming young writers of this day and age. Recommending itcheerily to them, we have clearly in mind the widespread tendencyamong young writers—from the age when they yearn to expressthemselves to the age when they have something to express—touse big words, often in an aggravatingly inept way.These writers range all the way from hapless contributors toThe Daily Maroon’s Athenaeum to Aldous Huxley, whose writingwe detest because every page means a journey or two to the dic¬tionary. Forgive us our trespass if we mount the platform for acouple hundred words and explain the fundamental bad taste ofusing archaisms and many words of more than five syllables.First of all, the use of such words gives the reader a feelingof inferiority, while good pieces of writing should give him theconverse. Every schoolboy knows that (as Macaulay says). Sec¬ond, the use of such words gives the author a feeling of superiority,which may lead him to mistreat his readers still further, as S. S.Van Dine, author of the famous “Canary Murder Case,” is said toHave deliberately done in creating an insufferable pedant likePnilo Vance. Carried to an extreme, the practise may reduce toineffectuality any sense of precision a writer may have, and turnhis phrases, once bright, to ashes.Besides, a very long word or an archaism has rarely the suc¬culence of a shorter or more current word, because usage makesmeaning. It is true more often that sustained usage gives a wordits flavor than that it takes it away. • Of course, we are expectingthe occasions when archaisms are necessary, such as when Wil¬liam Butler Yeats reproduces the talk of ancient Irish heroes.We aren’t, we confess, an exemplar of our own preaching bya long shot We couldn’t be acquitted of the charge that we our¬selves never yielded to the charm of a centipedal word. But webelieve in the efficacy of self-castigation and include ourselvesamong the reprehensible people who cannot restrain their passionfor the sound and look of an expression like “necrophilous glos-solalia.”AS OTHERS MIGHT SEE US”Ach Gott!” exclaimed the German student, feeling the heal¬ed gash on his jaw and making a sly grimace at Francois. “Thecollege life of you Americans has nothing picturesque about it.There is no solidarity among students; there are only little cliquesof homunculi ineptly called fraternities. Your extra-curricular ac¬tivities mimic extra-mural life. Knowledge you unthinkingly in¬hale like air. And you exhale it, with a sigh of relief, after thefinal Prufung. Your run-herauf, herab, und quer und krum—fora mere nothing, a scholarship, a presidency—” OFFICIAL NOTICESTuesday, July 2Divinity Chapel, Bond chapel,11:50 a. m James Moffatt, professor;of church history. Union Theologicalseminary.University Public Lectures: “Sci¬ence, and Philosophy.” Edwin Ar¬thur Burtt, professor of philosophy.Harper, 4:30 p. m.“Modern Tendencies in BusinessManagement: Modern Tendencies inAccounting.” George E. Frazer, Bhra-zer and Torbet, accountants. Com¬merce 105, 4:30 p. m.“Co-operative Protestantism: TheScope and Limits of Protestant Co¬operation, Within and Without.” Dr.Guthrie, Bnd chapel, 4:30 p. m.“Conferences Relating to the Cur¬riculum: Progressive English Curri¬cula for Secondary Schools.” RolloLverne Lyman, professor of Eng¬lish. Rosenwald 2, 4:30 p. m.The Botany Club, Botany 105,4:30 p. m. “The National Parks andNational Forests as Centers for Re¬search” (illustrated). ProfessorCowles. ,Radio Lecture: “Public Speaking.” \Associate Piofessor Nelson. Sta- jtion WMAJ, 7:00 p. m.Christian Science organization.Hilton Memorial chapel, 7:30 p. m.The New Testament club, Com¬mon room. Swift hall, 7:30 p. m. Dr.Moffatt.Wednesday, July 3Divinity chapel. Bond chapel.11:50 a. m. Professor Haydon.University Public lectures: “Be¬haviorism and Psychology.” Ells¬worth Faris chairman of the depart- ^ment of sociology. Harper, 4:30 p. ,“Co-operative Protestantism: AComprehensive Strategy of UnitedService and Action.” Dr. Guthrie,Bond chapel, 4 :30 p. m.“Ambroise Pare, Renaissance Sur¬geon and Patriot” (illustrated), Ba¬sil C. H. Harvey, A. B., M. B. deanof medical students and professor ofanatomy. Rosenwald 2, 4:30 p. ni.The Mathematical club, Ryerson37, 4:30 p. m. “A Planar Configura¬tion of Ten Points.” Artnur ByronCoble, professor of mathematics.University of Illinois.The oology Club, zoology 29. 4 :30p. m. “The Histogenesis of the Ovi¬duct of the Chick.” Mrs. Raquel R.Dexter.The Scandinavian club, Ida Noyeshall, 8:00 p. m.Thursday, July 4Independence Day—A UniversityHolidayFriday, July 5University Chapel assembly, theUniversity chapel, 12:00 m. “Reli¬gion and Architecture.” The Rever¬end Von Ogden Vogt.“Oui! The vehement monosyllable came from Francois’ lips.In his voice was the suave tone of a Catullus soothing his Lesbia.“You American students can do nothing carefreely, gaily. Youmust have an aim and a result. If you have liquor, you must getdrunk. If you work in an extra-curricular activity, vous zyeutezla veute—you eye the money in it, or th'e prestige. And if youstudy, it is to be a banker, a lawyer, a book-writer. Why not thepresent?—if not to study so earnestly as Heinrich, then at least,with the gentility of aimlessness, to amuse yourself. University Public Lectures; “Ear¬ly Greek Sculpture and How ItHappened” (illustrated. Lorado TaftProfessorial Lecture on the Hi.storyof Art, Mandel hall, 4:30 p. m.“The Function of Geography inSecondary Education.” Charles C.Colby, Ph. D., Professor of Geog¬raphy. Harper Assembly Room 4:30p. m.Your dances are a bore because they are restrained. Butwhat a joy to fight the police for a political principle! or to swag¬ger along the Boul Mich (I speak of Paris) with a red studentcaps in your hand and a song in the air! Que diable, there is noadventure, no eclat in your life: no unique clothes, no passions,no gaiety.”The American student swept the campus with a gesture of his$ 10,000,000 invested in me. $ 10,000,000 can’t be wrong. ”Germany and France smiled at each other, being for onceon terms of good understanding. The Bacteriolgy club, Ricketts 1,4:30 p. m. “Yellow Fever in WestAfrica.” N, Paul Hudson, West Afri¬can Yellow Fever commission.Saturday, July 6All Junior College Classes meet.For information concerning otherclasses see Oicial Notices.“Know Chicago” Tour. Yerkes Ob¬servatory, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.Radio Lectures: “Elementary Ger¬man.” Mr. Kurath. Station WMAJ.11:00 a. m.“Elementary Spanish.” Mr. Bech-tolt. Station WMAQ, 1:30 p. m. WOODWORTH’SSUGGESTIONS FORA GLORIOUS FOURTH!PLAY GOLF ON THE FOURTHGOLF CLUBS$1.65 to $9.00GOLF BALLSRepaints—25c up.Seconds—50c up.New—50c-75c-$ 1.00.Sets of Matched Irons$16.80Beginners Sets$7.95 complete. PICNIC SUPPUESEverything for a Delightful Picnic!PAPER TABLE CLOTHSNAPKINSSPOONSPICNIC PACKETS—CompleteWAXED PAPERPAPER PLATESEverything You Need!TAKE ALONG A BOOK!Many New Titles of Merit for Your Reading1. Dodsworth - Lewis.2. All Quiet on the Western Front—Remarque.3. Peter Victorious—Rolvaag.4. Henry VIII—Hackett.5. Chicago—Merriam. TENNIS TIME!TENNIS BALLS3 for $1.25TENNIS RACKETS$1.75 to $17.50RESTRINGING$1.75 to $9.00( 1 2 hour service.)TENNIS TROUSERS$2.50 Pair.OPEN EVENINGS TILL NINE!1311 Blast 57th St. Hyde Park 1690WOODWORTH’STEXTBOOK PUBLISHERSEXHIBITHELD ATLEXINGTON HALL5831 University AvenueDURING WEEKJuly 8th to 13th InclusiveThis will be a joint exhibit of themost modem textbooks anid profession¬al books and of interest to everyonein the educational field.III • Hi jiffIIV ml ■ I li Iii TmfWr"THE MAROOr^, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1929New Nations OweBirth to MixtureOf Races—Gini(Continued from page 1)belonging to the most diverse racesand nations.“England as a nation dates fromthe conquest of the Normans, whomixed with the previous population,formed of Mediterranean and Nor¬dic elements. So France, Germany,Italy, and even the ancient civiliza¬tions of Greece and Rome derivedtheir origins from the invasions ofnew populations. Even Egypt,which apart from the later filteringin of negroid blood, has been regard¬ed as being of purely Mediterraneanrace, seems in the light of modeminvestigations to be rather the pro¬duct of a combination of a Assyroidrace superimposing themselves on aMediterranean population,”While cross-breeding may oftenproduce inferior races. Prof. Ginisaid, a combination of biological fac¬tors may occur that confers on thehybrids a plasticity that allows thenew race to start on a new and vig¬orous life cycla.“Cross-breeding is evidently morelikely to occur in ^immigration coun¬tries, not only because the nativeraces often amalgamate with the im¬migrants, but also because the immi¬grants themselves present in compar¬ison with the peoples they come amarked heterogeneity. Immigrationcountries thus become the meltingpots of the old races, the anvil onwhich new races are hammered out;forged under the hammer of selec¬tion they will move up to replaceand vivify the races on the down¬ward path of decline.Emerge From Torpon“There is also the case of peoples,who more or less uddenly and with¬out any immediate influence exertedby external races, emerge from thedemographic torpor into which theyhad fallen, and display quite unex¬pected energy. This is the case ofJapan, which until the middle of thelast century, had a stationary pop¬ulation, and since then started a de¬mographic expansion. Moreover itwas an expansion not limited to thepopulation.“This phenomenon can also be ex¬plained by cross-breeding, for in thecase of such nations, different raceshave lived side by side, sometimesfor long periods, with their amalga¬mation hindered by political barriersor by psychological resistance, or bylegal prohibitions, or by differences^of culture or of language. The timecomes when these obstacles are elim¬inated, they assimilate their respec¬tive cultures, intermix on a largescale and come to form a single na¬tion. Thus in Japan the revival coin¬cided with the abandonment of thecaste system.Italy Revive*“At present there is taking placein Spain and Italy a revival whichstarted before the war but whichhas been intensified since its close,a revival embracing political, cul¬ tural, economic, and military activ¬ities. We may well ask whether inthe case of Italy at least this revivalis not due to the more thoroughamalgamtaion of the racial stocks ofthe several regions which has takenplace on a large scale only duringthe last one or two generations andwhich is becoming more and moregeneral.“Racially the Italians had to beunified, and that unification, nowhastened by the centralizing policy ofthe government, is beginning to bearits fruits.GIVE 3 DEGREESTO DEAN HUTCHINS(Continued from page 1)ney Gilkey, dean of the Universitychapel, was given the honorary doc¬tor of Divinity degree. Yale univer¬sity and Ohio State university pre¬sented Professor Arthur H. Comp¬ton, co-winner of the 1927 Nobelprize in physics, with the doctorateof science.Sir William A. Craigie, co-editorof the monumental Oxford Histori¬cal Dictionary, received the Litt. D.at the University of Michigan’s com¬mencement.Before leaving for Cape Town torepresent the Geological Society ofAmerica at the Interational Geolo¬gical congress. Professor Rollin T.Chamberlin was given the Doctor ofScience degn*ee at Beloit college. Dr.Henry Nelson Wieman, Professor ofChristian Theology in the DivinitySchool, received the Doctor of Divin¬ity degree from Park college, hisalma mater, Professor Edward W.Hinton, acting dean of the lawschool, received the honorary LL.D.from the University of Missouri,where he was professor of law, 1904-1.3, and dean of the law school, 101213.Urges ProtestantClergymen to AidIn Farm Relief(Continued from page 1)American clergyman has failed ut¬terly to take an interest in the prob¬lems of agriculture, and has not rec¬ognized that before religion can pen¬etrate, the people must have self-re¬spect. The only hope for the Ameri¬can farmer out of his present econ¬omic enslavement lies with the co¬operative movement, and the Protes¬tant churches can find true Christianeffort in assisting that movemnet.TYPEWRITERSALL MAKES FOR RENT$3.50 per mo. 3 mot. $9Royal 10 $28.00Remington 24.00Underwood 28.50Portables, new and usedStandard Keyboards — allguaranteed $33.00 upRibbons CarbonsREPAIRS FOR MA^Quick and Efficient ServicePHILLIPS BROTHERSTypewriter Exchange1214 E 55th PUza 2673Open Till 9TONSORIAL SERVICE AT REASONABLE RATES“TBE CAMPUS SHOrHOTEL DEL PRADO BARBER SHOP59th at DorchesterHyde Park 2410 WALTER REEDA Class at 8(P.M.)Maybe it’s not scheduled in theDean’s office but it helps smoothout the wrinkles of the day. . .Music in all its charming formsat Lyon & Healy’s in Woodlawn.Portable Phonographs andRadios . . new record releases . .sheet music . . Sax. Banjos. Stopin after classes.Easy Monthly TermsWOODLAWN STORE^ 870 East 63rd Streetlyon^HealyOpen Evenings till 10 o’clock STUDENTS ANDFACULTY MENSPONSOR VENTURE(Continued from page 1)of their material in the freshness oftheir imagintion, and in the techni¬cal skill of ther photography. Onlya few American films, the sponsorsof the theatre believe, have tried topresent something more than juven¬ile entertainment. The Patriot, Sun¬rise and The Crowd are lonely mile¬stones in the history of the Amer-can cinema.Professor Paul Douglas has drawnup a financial plan to make thisventure a reality. The Chicago Lit¬tle Theater corporation is to be or¬ganized as a stock company, sellingshares at fifty dollars each. A bonusof one season tickets (fifty-two ad¬missions) will be grven with eachshare sold. And every stock willreceive its annual interest, as wellas its share of the profits at the dis¬cretion of the executive committee.Professor Douglas is to be one of themembers of this committee. Mr. Ed¬ward Lundquist, manager of thesouth side branch of Lyon and Healy,is the acting treasurer.This plan has been pronounced fi¬nancially sound both by a banker,Mr. Jesmer of the AmalgamatedBank of Chicago and by a theatremanager, Mr. John Knight, formerlymanager of the Balaban and Katztheatres in Chicago.So far, the corporation numbersamong its shareholders: Messrs. PaulDouglas, T. V. Smith, A. EustaceHaydon, Edward Scribner Ames,Samuel Harper, Edwin Sapir andRobert Morss Lovett and others. Theselling of stock will be closed whenthe number reaches one hundred.Anyone interested in this venturecn receive further information bycommunicating with The ChicagoLittle Theatre Corporation, 1537 E.55th Street. Shakespeare LosesCredit for a Play(Continued from page 1)some English scholars have claimed.”Dr. Tennebaum’s lectures werebased on a study of original docu¬ments, many of which involved ques¬tions of genuinenesss or forgery.'“To do this particular kind ofwork one must be a handwriting ex¬pert or bibliotest,” Dr. Tennebaumcontinued. “As a result of examin¬ing documents, I was able to provethat certain documents relating tothe stage history of Shakespeareanplays are forgeries. Only seven sig¬natures and the two words “by me”enables us to correct mistakes madeby the printers of Shakespeare’s ear¬ly plays.”Dr. Tennebaum attempted toprove that Christopher Marlowe wasnot killed evidently during a quarrelabout the payment of a bill in a tav¬ern, but was assassinated for politi¬cal reasons. He showed reasons forthinking that the instigator of theplot again Marlowe’s life was SirWalter Raleigh and that the motivefor the assassination had its begin¬ning in the illicit love affair betweenQueen Elizabeth and Sir Walter Ra¬leigh.ATHENAEUM(Continued from page 1)observations of the former amongthe amateurs of learning with whomhe talks and to whom he listens.Finally, studies, to compete withthe torrential life of the age, shouldbe dramatized. The University ad¬ministration has caught the appro¬priate idea in connection with theannual scholarship examinations,where the number of competitorsplus the premium for talent plus theintellectual electricity in coming' KIMBARK HAND LAUNDRY1324 East 57th Plaza 3480For Quality, Service and Popular PricesCASH AND CARRY PRICESShirts B.V.D 12cCollars SocksUnion Suits .... Hand&rchiefs . . . . lYlcMending FreeFor a Malted, a Lemonade, orAny Cooling DrinkVISIT OUR NEW FOUNTAINTHE UNIVERSITY PHARMACY ILuncheontte Service1321 East 57th St.Dine and Dance at —Cocoanut GroveSixty-third Street and Drexel AveFEATURINGJohnny Maitleindcind his OrchestraMusic and Dancing from 7 to ClosingNO COVER CHARGEEXCELLENT CUISINEALWAYS 10^ COOLSpecial Table d’Hote Service—LUNCH 11-2. 50cDINNER 5-9, $1.00SUNDAY DINNER 12-9, $1.25 Page Threeinto contact alone with three hoursof problems give a sum, for thesestudents, at least, equivalent to theexcitement of a basketball game.How could studies be dramatized?The essence of the formula is thatsince drama is conflict, classesshould be battles—though in the na¬ture of iFVoissart’s medieval battleswhere decorum and courtesy rule—battles among students and pro¬fessors in which ideas are flung andparried I do not advocate congres¬sional uproar; I suggest strenuous. spontaneous discussion as the initialstimulus for a love of knowledgeamong students. Bring the teachingof knowledge into hannony with1929, “cosmeticize” it, and you willhave students enamored of it in asshort a time as any experiment ofsuch importance takes.If a measure of freedom, profes¬sorial companionability, and dramais added to our Latin, our sociology,and our botany, the darkness thatnow is will be light—until the cen¬tury turns, at least.WITCH KITCH INN**Where The Witchery of Good CookingLures’*6325 Woodlawn Ave.COOL - QUIET - ATTRACTIVELuncheon 40c Dinner 75cSunday Dinner $1.00^ THE STORE FOR MEN ^= MARSHALL FIELD M= & COMPANY =A Timely OpportunityTo Select Smart FallGlotbes at a SavlnpSUITS-*45Young Men who are spending theirsummer at college appreciate thechance to secure new apparel forautumn wear at this interesting priceof $45. These Suits show the comingshades of Oxford Blue, CambridgeGray and Brown and are tailored instrict accorc^ance with fall style notes.THIRD FLOORmPage Four THE MAROON, TUESDAY, fVLY 2. 1929TempestBy Jerome B. Strauss(Editors note—This is the secondand last of the summaries of Uni¬versity of Chicago athletics for thecurrent year).The Maroon basketball squad suf¬fered from the same handicap oflack of material that all the otherteams did but the responsibility ofbuilding up a good squad around onereal player and a few fair ones wasmore poignantly shown to be impos¬sible than in most sports. When asmooth, well-rounded team likePurdue or Wisconsin would comeagainst Chicago the comparison wasso unfavorable as to cause some peo¬ple to wonder whether the Athens,Texas squad. National High Schoolchampions could not give the varsitya good workout.Nels Norgren is a wily coach, andhis record shows that if he has anysort of material at all, he can turnout contending terns. Virg Gist, whoalternates his activities between cageplay and track was really a greatplayer, and it was very unfortunatethat he had no one to feed him theball. In spite of this handicap, how¬ever, he was one of the high scorersof the Big Ten and was feared byevery team that Chicago played. BobKaplan a fast and flashly little for¬ward, made some startling one armshots at criticl times nd always man¬aged to be in the thick of the play,but his size was too much of ahandicap. When “Kap” would comeup against some giant like StretchMurphy, it was the old story ofDavid and the giant, with no sling-1shot for David.The rest of the squad, Changnon.Cooper, Crawford, Abbott, Yates andthe rest were all hard fighters butthe handicap that they had to over¬come was too much ,and the team’srecord was singularly deplorable.The gymnastic team, which hasbeen Chicago’s pride and joy for thelast dozen years with its continualConference and National champion-the Big Ten meet insted of its hab-ships had to take a second place initual first. The team found it hardto supplant its national champions,Davidson and Flexner although theydid develop a remarkable ace in theperson of Jack Menzies.Coach Daniel Hoer, affectionatelyknown by his associates as D. L. hasbecome famous throughout the en¬tire country for his teams. This iscoach means practically everythingone sports in which the ability of theas very few people have any experi¬ence in this line when they come tocollege.The fencing team, under the ablesupervision of Mr. Merrill, wholearned his art partly while studyingin England as a Rhodes scholar, con¬ference champions of 1927 and hadto be content with second honorsthis year because of unexpected re¬verses. Captain Friedman, foilschampion of 1927, met with defeatat the hands of a man whose scalphe had already taken in the previousseason’s competition.The wrestling season, although notthe sport was developing in thesingularly successful showed thatschool. The team made an easterntrip and made a very creditable rec¬ord against the pick of the east.hTe swimming team was singular-Present this cou¬pon at the Maroonoffice for a freepass to beautifulPATRONIZETHEMAROONADVERTISERS : ly devoid of stars this year and asj a result, victories were not so plen-j squad did win were a real credit toi tiful, but the meets that the aquatictheir fight and determination. Thegood, as Coach MacGillivray is rec-water polo squads have always beenognized s an authority in this sport,and if it had not been for a few un-I expected reversals, the team wouldhave won the Big Ten title again.CLASSIFIED ADSLOST—Pocketbook containingmoney, and watch. Return to BlaineBookstore. Keep money and returnthe rest.INSTRUCTORS WANTED—Forall departments in universities, col¬leges, normals and accredited schools.Register at once. Allied Profession¬al Bureaus, Marshall Field AnnexBldg.WANTED—One car garage near5615 University. Box O, FacultyExchange.SUCCEEDS LATEPROFESSOR HALLIN DEAN’S CHAIR(Continued from page 1)and became a member of the orig¬inal faculty of the law’ school whenit was established in 1902, will be¬come “John P. Wilson Professor ofLaw” at the opening of the autumnquarter.This chair was established in thespring with a gift of $400,000 inhonor of the distinguished Chicagolawyer for whom it w’as named, byhis son, John P. Wilson, member ofthe law firm of Wilson, Mcllvaine,Hale and Templeton and his daugh¬ter, Mrs. William R. Dickinson, ofSanta Barbara. The gift providesthat “an eminent scholar, distin¬guished for his accomplishments in the field of legal education,’ shouldoccupy the chair.Professor Freund is an authorityin the fields of administrative andconstitutional law and legislativedrafting. He has taken an activepart in various phases of legal re¬form ond social legislation and wasinstrumental in framing the “homerule” demands of the city of Chi¬cago both in the charter convention of 1907 and in the constitutionalconventon of 1920-22. His books areregarded as the leading statementsof the law in his fields. ProfessorFreund is the representative for Illi¬nois of the Commission of UniformState Laws, and a former presidentof the American Political Scienceassociation.Professor Hinton is to be appoint¬ed “James Parer Hall Professor of Law,” a chair to be established inthe immediate future from funds pro¬vided by alumni in honor of DeanHall, who was a member of the orig¬inal faculty of the law school andits dean from 1904 to his death inMarch, 1928. Professor Hinton, whowas dean of the University of Mis¬souri Law school at the time of hisappointment to Chicago in 1913, andwho last week received an honorary LL.D. degree from Missouri, haswon distinction for his work in evi¬dence and practice. He served asacting dean of the Chicago Lawschool during the past year. He isthe author of several texts, a direc¬tor of the Judicature society, and amember of the committee appointedby the Illinois Association for Crim¬inal Justice to study the crime sit¬uation in Illinois.CLEARANCE SALE OFBOOKSNOWat the UNIVERSin OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUEA Hot Weather Tip--Don’t let the heat slow down your studies—mix some play with your work. Swim, playtennis and golf — and eat wholesome food atour shop. Of course our delivery service isavailable — if you’re too tired to come in—call us.The Maid-Rite Sandwich Shop, inc.1324^2 57th StreetBetween Kenwood and KimbarkPhone Plaza 5551 Free Delivery Service1