SUBSCRIBE TO THEDADLT MAROON Todajr** Weatfiar:bicreanni^ C1 o a d yand Warmer.Vol. 30. No. 22. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY II. 1930 Price Five CentsMILLAY GIVES READING THURSDAYChoose Forty-Two Women for MirrorMinnesota Makes Final SelectionOf Crisler as Head Coach in 1930;Fritz Decides Today or Tomorrow“NEW MENTOR”Spring football practice un¬der the direction of Fritz Crisler,newly appointed mentor, mightbegin next week on Northropheld if fair and warm weather,forecast for today, continue.s.—The Minnesota Daily of Feb. 8.Final selection of Assistant CoachH. O. Crisler as head football coachat the University of Minnesota wasmade yesterday morning by theMinnesota board of regents. Crisler,informed by telegraph of his ap¬pointment, has not definitely decidedto accept the proffered post. "Mydecision," he said, "will be made to¬day or tomorrow.”Terms Agreed OnThe terms of the offer have beenagreed upon by both parties, and noobstacle stands in Crisler’s way ifhe decides to accept the position.Crisler refused to mention definitelythe terms on which the appointmenthad been made.fad Wieman, former Kend C’^eebat Michigan University, and report¬ed to have been considered as a pros¬pective candidate for the Minnesotajob, will be offered th post of assist¬ant coach under Crisler if he decidesto leave the University.Selection a SupriseAnnouncement of Crisler’s selec¬tion came as a surprise at the Uni¬versity of Minnesota. For the pa.st Roads Likes Life ofActor—EntertainerDusty Roads, leader of the firstorchestra for the WashingtonProm on February 21, has chosenentertaining others as his lifework, because he "wanted to bean actor.""It has always been my ambi¬tion to entertain others," the sing¬ing drummer said recently, "andit still appeals to me as beinghighly desirable to cheer up peo¬ple in this world of worries.”In pursuit of a worried worldto be entertained. Roads has play¬ed in every principal city of theUnited States, at prominent ho¬tels and cafes.week it had been supposed that Ber-nie Bierman, Tulane mentor and Min¬nesota alumnus, was all set to re¬turn to his alma mater in the roleof head coach. The Minnesota Tri¬bune explode^ this belief last Fridaywith the assertion that: "Fritz Cris¬ler, assistant football coach at theUniversity of Chicago, has been chos¬en as head football coach at the Uni¬versity of Minnesota for 1930, andTad Wieman, former head coach atMichigan University, has been chosenas his first assistant."Unsupported rumors have set thesalary offered Crisler at $9,000. SECOND BRIDGEROUND OPENS;12TEA^CUSHPsi U. and Zeta BetesTrump IntramuralOpponentsWith thirteen fraternities elimin¬ated in the first round of the Inter¬fraternity Bridge tournament endinglast Wednesday, the second roundopened last night with victories forPsi Upsilon over Tau Delta Phi andfor Zeta Beta Tau over Acacia. PsiUpsilon was represented by GeorgeLott and Griffing Bancroft; TauDelta Phi, by George Barnard andNorman Roski; Zeta Beta Tau, byMurray Rosenstein and Willis Alon-son; and Acacia, by Rogers Church¬ill and John Bown.The winners of the second roundmatches will then play for the leaguechampionships. The other secondround matches must be played by to¬night and are as follows:Beta LeagueBeta Theta Pi vs. Delta Upsilon.Gamaia LeagueSigma Nu vs. Kappa Nu.(Continued on page 3)3 CAMPUS DAILIESREVOLT AGAINSTSCHOOL POLICIESStudent resentment at present ed¬ucational policies has precipated edi¬torial charges in The Daily Prince-tonian. The .Minnesota Daily, andThe Daily Nebraskan w'ithin the last-few days.The Daily Princetonian asks forelaboration upon the schemes pre¬sented by Professor Daniel EdwardPhillips of the University of Denverin an article for “School and So¬ciety" in which a scheme for a uni¬versity without entrance require¬ments. Compulsory courses, degrees,fraternities, athletics, or other dis¬tractions is advocated.The Princetonian challenges thepoint in the scheme which advocatesthat no financial burden should beplaced on the student, by saying thatpeople would flock to college drivenby urge of their stomachs rather(Continued on page 4)Chapel Council toFormulate EthicalCode for StudentsAre university students in need ofan ethical code? What kind? Whatwould they do with it when theygot it?These problems will form the ba«sis of the discussion at the next sup¬per meeting of the Chapel council,to be held Sunday, at 6:15, at thehome of Dr. and Mrs. Charles W.Gilkey. The council, the only or¬ganization of its kind in the country,feels that the college student body,as a group, deserves its own moralstandards. A tentative outline tobe used as a working foundation fordiscussion is being drawn up by !)d-(Continued on page 4) Critique ElectsFour to StaffThe promised reorganization ofLaCritique made further progressyesterday with the announcement byBetty Ann Ducey, editor-in-chief, offour new appointments to the staffand the addition of poetry and dra¬matic criticism to the present de¬partments of the liberal magazine.Although the staff is broadening thescope of LaCritique, the trend will.still be mainly political.Harry T. Moore will head thenewly established department of dra¬matic criticism. Other appointments(Continued on page 3)Annex Old Delta ChiHouse to CooperativeNursery School PlantThe old Delta Chi fraternity househas been transformed into a brightparadise for babies between the agesof two and four, now that the Uni¬versity Cooperative Nursery schoolhas taken over that building as anannex. Bright chintz curtains,painted walls, tiny tables and chairs,hygienically-white apparatus forweighing and examining children,and toys make it one of the most up-to-date services of its kind. Membersof the University, faculty, and out-(Continued on page 4) FRESHMEN PONDERQUADRANGLE LIFEAT DRUCE LAKECampus activities were discussedat the second week-end trip toDruce Lake camp, ten miles north-; West of Waukegan, sponsored byI the Men’s commLssion. Activities; under consideration were publica-I tions, athletics, Green Cap, and fresh-' man week.; Those that made the trip were:I Ralph Bowersox, Keith Parsons,I Robert Howard, Harold Murphy,I James Porter, Garland Routt, Ray¬mond Zenner, William Butler, Mar¬shall Foreen, Samuel Prest, CarlBode, John Elam, Donald McFayden.Henry Sulcer, Dan McGuigan, Rob¬ert Stephenson, Burtt Smith, andJohn Moore, freshmen; Errett VanNice, Wendell Stephenson, PaulStagg, Lloyd Davidson, Ray Vane,Harris Hornstein, Louis Engel, andEarl Stocker, upperclassmen.Administration and facultymembers present were W. E.Scott, Charles W. Gilkey, A. P. Her¬man, George Moon, Ken Rouse, Dud¬ley Reed, John Kennon and M. D.McLean.A few of the students drove up,but most of the group took the NorthShore electric from 63rd street. O’Hara SelectsCast For Skits,Special NumbersClub drawings for blocks of seatswill be held on Friday noon at thebox office. Seats are $2.00, $1.50 and$1.00. Boxes are $12.Forty-two women have been chos¬en by Frank H. O’Hara, director ofdramatic productions, for the cast of"Vours to Date,” the 1930 Mirrorrevue which will be staged on Feb¬ruary 28 and March 1 in Mandelhall. Twenty-one of those chosenfor the acting company are new toMirror productions. Eight will ap¬pear in specialty numbers accordingto an announcement made yesterday.Former SuccessThose who have been in formerMirror shows and who have beenchosen as part of the cast for "Yoursto Date” are: Janet Cunningham,Marguerite Fernholz, Jane Kesner, iDorothy Hartford McGiveran, AliceRansom, Beatrice Roberg, BeatriceScheibler, Catherine Scott, FlorenceStackhouse, Alice Stinnett. MarionWhite and Martha Yaeger.Twenty-two Are New‘^Those new to Mirror productionsare: Elizabeth Benthey, Mary Ar-telia Bowne, Helen Dyer, WillowmineEpp, Birdie Errant, Florence Flem¬ing, Mary Lou Forbrick, MargaretGoodman, Natalie Gordon, MaryRose Greenstone, Lucile Hoerr, Hel¬ene Johnson, Adeline Kaehler, RenaLipchitz, Janet Lowenthal, DorothyReiner, Aldern Riffe, Ruth Ina Sch-(Continued on' page 3) P. O. DELAYS FORGEThe Forge: A Midwestern Re¬view, is waiting for post officecensorship and will not be issuedon February 13, at the Millayreading in Mandel hall, as previ¬ously announced.Further announcement as to theappearance of the magazine willbe made in The Daily Maroon ata future date.YOUTH MOVEMENTSTRIVES TO CURECHICAGO POLITICSFreshmen Meet Today toGird for BattleHutchins HelpsFofund Institute Youth will accomplish the politi¬cal salvation of corrupt Chicago, be¬lieve sponsors of the new municipalparty movement, recently formed oncampus. The new movement will beorganized at a meeting this aftrnoonat 4 in Classics 10. Students inter¬ested in the program of sirousingcommunities, schools and local or¬ganizations to political consciousnessare ihvited to assume responsibilityfor carrying out these projects ineach of Chicago’s fifty wards.The freshman poltical discussiongroup, under the leadership of Pro¬fessor Jerome G. Kerwin of the po¬litical science department attackedthis problem of arousing youth in itsmeetings last quarter.No ofi'icers have been elected, noprogram outlined, and informality isthe desire for all the members ofthis novel agitation for the "YouthMovement.’’ORGAN PROGRAMPorter Heaps will play "Allegro”from Sonata I, by Borowsky; "Slowmovement" from Concerto I, byBach; "Humoresque,” by Yon;"Etude”, by Cellier “Intermezzo,”by Dickinson; and “Vision,” byRheinberger, today at 6 in the Uni-rersity chayel. ECKHART, NEWESTBUILDING, TO BEREADY BY MAY 1Bernard A. Eckhart hall will becompleted and ready for occupancyabout May 1, according to officialsof the construction office. Thefunds that made possible the con¬struction of the building were don¬ated by Mr. Bernard A. Eckhart. Thededication of the building will takeplace during the early summer.The building, which is located justsouth of Mandel hall and east ofRyerson, will contain the mathema¬tics, physics, and astronomy depart¬ments. The first floor and basementwill house the physics department,and the rest of the floors will beoccupied by the mathematics and as¬tronomy dpartments. Claude Z. Klan-der designed Ute building.. When President Robert M. Hutch¬ins was dean of the Yale Law school,he became conscious of a deficiencyin the training law students were re¬ceiving. He was not alone in feel¬ing that such specialized trainingwas inadequate for a well-roundedlife and for the fullest possible serv¬ice. Dean Milton C. Winternitz ofthe Yale school of Medicine also re¬alized that this was so and that itwas partly caused by a lack of co¬operation between the professionalschools.Out of this grew the Yale Insti¬tute of Human Relations. The planfor it was worked out and the neces¬sary finances were obtained byPresident Hutchins and Dean Win¬ternitz, supervised by James R. An-gell, president of Yale university.The avowed purpose of the Insti¬tute marks a radical change in edu¬cational methods. The plah providesthat the Graduate school,. $ii4: theprofessional schools shallopportunity of relating thi|fr"#brkto man so that the studjfttjt ikr Any(Continued on page’t4)Place F. Z. Glick^^'Welfare Coiiiji|^ipnFrank Z. Glick, Leila Hooi^talingfellow in social science during 1928,1929, 29-30, has just been appoint¬ed secretary of the new Public Wel¬fare commission in Illinois. He hadbeen doing research work on the In-stitutior; for the Aged in tRe Chi-cagj region and serving as directorof the Bureau of the Aged in theChicago Council of Social Agencies.As secretary of the Welfare commis¬sion Mr. Gliek will help with akn-housc care of the aged In Illinois. CHINESE THEATEREXPERT INSPECTSDOWNTOWN PLAYSThe East and the West, the twainKipling said would never meet, arejoining hands, at least in the thea¬tre, according to Dr. C. P. Chang,dean of Nankai university at Tient¬sin, China. Dr. Chang, who arrivedin Chicago last Saturday, is visitingtheatre centers of the United Stateswith a view to adapting some oftheir stagecraft devices and ideasto the Nankai university theatre.While in Chicago Dr. Chang hasseen "Strange Interlude" at theBlackstone theatre and the “TheField God” at the Goodman. Hehopes some day to translate"Strange Interlude" into Chinese“since it reflects new trends in so¬cial life.”POPULAR TUNES ONUNIVERSITY BANDCONCERT PROGRAMA varied progi’am of popularclassical, and military music will beoffered by the University band,under the direction of Mr. PalmerClark, in Mandel hall Friday.The program will consist of: “Jap¬anese Sunset,” by Deppen; "PestOverture,” by Lortzing; "GlowWorm,” by Lincke; Victor Herbert’s"Entr’ Acte, from Mile. Modiste;"In a Moonlit Garden,” by King;and "The Whistler and His Dog,” byPryor.A group of popular tunes, in¬cluding "Tip Toe Throngh the Tu¬lips,” "Painting the Clouds withSunshine,” and “How am I toKnow?” will also be included EUNICE TIETJENSWILL INTRODUCENOTED^OETESSFifth Appearance UnderSponsorship ofThe ForgeTickets for Edna St. VincentMillay’s reading Thursday inMandel are on sale at Wood¬worth’s, the University book-»tore, and the Mandel box of¬fice, and will remain on sale upto the time of the reading. Theprice of tickets ranges from$1.00 to $1.50.Edna St. Vincent Millay will bringto a climax six years of The Forgelecture series Thursday at 8:30 inMandel hall. This is Miss Millay’sfifth appearance under the auspicesof The Forge, and it will mark her“farewell” reading under Forgesponsorship.Tietjens Introduces MillayMiss Millay will be introduced bya kindred American poestess of thelyricist school, Eunice Tietjens, aspecialist in the field of Orientalpoetry. Miss Tietjens’ recent anthol¬ogy of Chinese poetry is considered astandard in its field. Her latest workis "Leaves in the Wind.”Miss Millay will read several newand unpublished poems, as well asselections from her older works.In 1927 the internationally famousAmerican poetess wrote the bookfor Deems Taylor’s opera, "TheKing’s Henchman,” which enjoyedthe greatest success of any singleAmerican opera, and was producedin the Metropolitan opera house inFebruary, 1927.Wins Pulitzer Prize in 1922Miss Millay was born February22, 1892, and, graduating from Vas-sar college in 1917, immediatelystarted to produce poetry. Her firstwork, released in 1917, was "Ren¬ascence and other poems,” and wasfollowed by “Figs and Thistles” in1920. 1921 was Miss Millay’s biggest(Continued on page 3)Students, ProfessorsOf Graduate HistoryHold Dinner Thur-^dayGraduate history students andprofessors will discuss problems ofthe past and present at their an¬nual dinner which will be held Thurs¬day, February 20, at 6, in Hutchin¬son commons.All students in the graduate His¬tory department are invited. Reserv¬ations for dinner are one dollar andcan be secured from members of thecommittee or at the desk in E 11.Social Scince Research building.Elizabeth Cochran, Caroline Bartel,Ruth Twitchell, Mrs. Rose Horowitz,and Louis C. Nolan and ChesterDestler frt*e members of the committee. It is urged that reservationsbe made ready.INTRODUCE CHINA TOSTUDENTS ON NEXTRECONCIUATION TRIPTwo Chinas—the ancient pagoda-strewn land of the Mings and thearoused republic absorbing westernprinciples—will be introduced toUniversity students on a Reconcilia¬tion trip planned for next Saturday,Peb. 15. Reservations for the party,which leaves Resmolds club at 12:45,may be made through Ira I. Jenkins,1421 Chicago Temple. The excursioncomprises a visit to the Chinese sec¬tion at the Field Museum and toChinatownPage Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11. 1930iatlu iOarannI FOUNI^ IN IMlI — — -■ -. —! THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOI PublishMl morninga. except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,‘ Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subacription rates9S.OO per year ; by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single c<H>ioSt Bve cents "each.Ii Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,f /llinoia, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressely reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationEDWIN LEVIN, Managing EditorEARLE M. STOCKER, Business ManagerROBERT L. NICHOLSON, Assistant Business ManagerHARRIET DEAN HATHAWAY, Woman’s EditorHENRY D. FISHER, Sports EditorEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTEDWARD G. BASTlAN News EditorEIXIAR GREENWALD News EditorJOHN H. HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL - Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Junior EditorFRANCES STEVENS Literary EditorWILLIAM R. HARSHE Whistle EditorSIDNEY GOLDBERG Day EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EWitorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF....Day EditorM.ARG.AREIT EGAN Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENlABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL—Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH....Circulation ManagerROBERT McCarthy ...sophomore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH Sophomore AssLSPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULES Asst. Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EMitorMARJORIE TOLMANWoman’s Sports EditorI THE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encourogement of student parttcipotion in undergraduate campus activities.• 2. Promotion of student interest in lectures, concerts, exhibits and otlier! cultural opportunities.• 3. .Abolition of grading systm and extension of research principles.4. Cessation of extensive building program.5. Adoption of a plan for supennsed, regulated rushing.SEASIDE VS. BEER-FLATSIn presenting Edna St. Vincent Millay. The Forge brings be¬fore a University audience on the evening of Thursday, February 1 3the greatest exponent of a school of poetry rapidly vanishing amidthe turbulent Sturm and Drang pressure of a period steeped in rabidindustrialism. Despite her exotic Paris gowns, the polish of a Vas-sar education, and the stimulus of success, her poems have remaineduninfluenced by the subcurrent of a dynamic progressivism whichhas turned the songs of most other poets into impressions receivedon elevated trains or fantasies in cheap beer-flats.Like the rest of the New England poets Miss Millay has re¬tained in her writings the sensations of nature and has turned theminto the background of idealistic settings. The proximity of the sea,the blue-blackness of the pines, the imminent danger of death, andthe smell of salt and tar have left indelible impressions which achange of circumstances could not efface. Subsequent experiencesin a world of artificialities have left her intact.Among her contemporaries she is uniquely individual. Shedoes not define the deafening clash of steel upon steel with Sand¬burg, the homely realism of Frost projected into the moral, theclassic exactnes.s of Untermeyer, or the somber logoaedics of Lind¬say. A certain carelessness features her writings as if in a hurryto transcend the realistic into the ideal she fails to tread the intersmediate steps. Yearning, death, mythology, and pastorals fall intoone category in her classification. She writes like a woman.True to Mencken’s prediction that the young writer of todayhas a greater chance of having appreciation crown his efforts thanever before in the history of literature, the works of Miss Millayhave found admirers as fast as they have been produced. Achievingalmost inunediate recognition with her "Renascence and Other |Poems” produced shortly after she left Vassar, she has been stead-jily progressing upwards with works, which, though they still retain jthe original purety of sensual impression, have been characterized by ja certain deeper understanding and perhaps an adjoining sadness Iborn of dreams that fail to come true.In 1921 she wrote "Second April,” throwing the whole gamut jof her feelings and diversifications of expression into this one effortsimultaneously. Her love of sea strongly asserts itself in “TheBurila,” "Elxiled, ” and “Inland”; the proximity of death is mani¬fested in "Lament,” "Elegy” and "Epitaph”; and her mechanics ofverse form have been so neatly stripped of difficult casts and cum¬bersome arrangements that their very simplicity strikes a morevibrant tone than the elaborate punctuation systems of her modern¬istic colleagues. It is here that she really shows herself as distinctlya member of the New England class. She is parading the banner ofan army that is dead.In one respect she does not write like a woman. Her worksare hardly refreshing. They call to mind a host of discarded youth¬ful ambitions, lost in a more definite quest. They emphasize theprice paid for tangible reality in tones that put Wilde’s glaring as¬sertion on that head to shame by reasserting a subtle backgroundthat formed an essential part of each one of us. She does whatUntermeyer did by trying to avoid doing it.Thfursday night she will be here. There will be no hackneyedmelodrama of heart throbs and the old home by the seaside, noquavering voice choked by emotions, no gestures of despair, novoice crying in the wilderness. Letterwriting CrankAMerts Himself asSmith, The MessiahThree letters from an “astrologer,astro-psychologyst, universal seer—the fourth horseman,” as Mr. An¬drew B. Smith modestly introduceshimself, w’ere the most grafic resultelicited by a recent University radiolecture on the achievements andpossibilities of science. The com¬munications were addressed to theUniversity of Chicago BroadcastingTower, were written entirely in cap¬ital letters, and started off with thebusiness-like salutation ‘Dear Gents.”Gents.”Mr. Smith asserts himself as thenew Messiah, gifted with the powerof prophecy, upon whom the salva¬tion of the world is to rest. The firstletter read, “Did you ever read pro¬ phecy of count Tolstoi of 1912T Ifso, you may noticed where hepointed out that everything will bewrecked to its foundation. But aMangolian slav will arise and puteverything in proper order. Now,gents, the mangolian slav is me my¬self.” Some of the more conserva¬tive souls at the University will per¬haps be pained at the future masterof the world’s flagrant disregard ofgrammatical constitution, and hisruthless spelling.PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERSPB^TEia^ifrelcweliyHAPPEN PIP^AOO31 N. State St., Chicago SHUBERTGreat NorthernNow Playing:Prior to New York OpeninnThe Messrs. ShubertpresentThe Season’s Greatest Musical Play“NINA ROSA”By OTTO HARBACHAuthor of "Rose Marie.’’ "No, No, Nanette’’Music by SIGMUND ROMBERGcomposer of"The Student Prince,” "The Desert Sonir’’Lyrics by IRVING CAESARwithGUY ROBERTSONand cast of 125A Short Walk Takes You to theELLIS TEA SHOP63rd and EllisLUNCHEON — 50cTry Our 6 Course Dinner 75c—5 to 10Delicious SandwichesFountain Specialties TYPEWRITERSSoldRentedRepairedExchangedRental applied toward purchase of any machineAll makes of Portable and CommercialTypewriters— New and Rebuilt —Guaranteed for ONE YEARTerms $5.00 per monthFor Quick Service — Phone Fairfax 2103We call for and deliverWoodworth’s Book Store1311 East 57th St., near Kimbark Ave.Open Evenings until 9 P. M.To pipes,Men,to Pipes!Tradition has it that yeshall know the fellowship ofpipes with seasoned, masculine, mel¬low men of every age and degree.Some try to join this brother¬hood, yet fail, and are absolved asbom to pipeless lives. But honesteffort is required—each man’s owntest with good tobacco in a good pipe.That is the formula. Both pipeand tobacco must be good. Thepipe must be pure of bowl, and thetobacco must beWell, Edgeworth, if you’ll permit—good old Edgeworth, Class of ’04.Tried Edgeworth yet.? Now’s yoiu*chance! Use the magic coupon, andwe’ll rush right back to you a free-for-nothing packet of genuine Edge-worth to fill your good pipe with.Edgeworth is a carefulblend of good tobaccos—selected especially forpipe-smoking. Its qualitytmdflavor never change.Buy Edgeworth any¬where in two forms—"Ready Rubbed" and"Plug Slice”—ISr pock¬et package to i>ound hu¬midor tin.EDGEWORTHSMOKING TOBACCO Typing by wire—an adventurein communicationLARUS as BRO. CO.100 S. 23d St., Richmond, Va.I’ll try your Edgeworth. And I’ll try |it in a good pipe. |IName IStreet.Town and State.Now let the Edgeworth comet V The telephone typewriter, a new BellSystem service, has commercial possi¬bilities as yet barely realized.For example, a business house can type¬write a message over telephone wires,and this is retyped instantaneously andsimultaneously in any number of branchoffices. The advantage is obvious — in knitting together far-flung organizationsand in quickening the pace of business.Here is still another extension oftelephone service which has alreadyproved its value. The telephone type¬writer promises even greater things asindustry discovers new uses for this in¬strument of convenient communication.BELL SYSTEM*yf natioH-wide system of inter-connttttng telephones‘'OTTR PTONF.RRTNG WORK HAS JUST^ BEGUN*'///' THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY I I. 1930 Page ThrM. Between the Twoof UsByAlbert ArkulesandWilliam HarsheBill weighed a teaspoonful of su¬gar and dropped it into the goblet.The bubbles be^^am^ a bit merrier. Itoo was happy.I sat there and tried to forget thatthe world existed. For, after all, Iknew that the world didn’t careabout me and that nothing really ma-ttered beyond a desire to perpetuatelove.When I came to school, I thoughtthat the world needed my enthusi¬asm; and I felt obligated to it. I feltthat it wanted me to get an educa¬tion so that I could make it a bet¬ter world. So many of us realizedits deficiences—and, of course, WBwere to be the torchbearers.I thought of my friends. Wewere all so alive, understanding,hopeful. We believed in this thingor that. We all had philosophies oflife . . . we were humanitarians.W’e were striving toward some de¬gree of perfection.The world was getting worse. Idecided that it didn’t make any dif¬ference. I would lead a differentlife now . . . perhaps write littlepieces like James Weber Linn didfor the Herald and Examiner. Itwas plea.sant not to disturb yourselfand others.I had even given up being a hil-manitarian. 4,00('.000 Chinese werestarving to death; their Tood, meresawdust, and often le.ss than that. Iremembered that I had recentlycomplained to a Coffee Shop waiterfor delaying service five minutes.I sipped the result of Bill’s efforts.He smiled. “Potent?” I nodded,“Quite.”I thought of the faces I had seenin cars . . . robots reading “TheWorld’s Greatest Newspaper!” Thefaces of some stenographers still ex¬pressed a virginial quality. Galahadwas somewherc'on the way.Some of these robots, I ponderedmight have .sat next to me in acla.ss . . . might have become myfriends. They might have had theirmeasure of four years’ at the Univer¬sity, if their fathers had beenshrewder or had possessed the rightkind of connections.And then I thought of the girlswho would have been stenographers,but, who instead, ate lunch at theCoffee Shop. After all, why not beborn in the right cradle. It was sopleasant to be alive ... to knowyou ‘belonged’ ... to know that youknow the right kind of boys. TheUniversity had a cultured species ofstenographers.Bill had finished his glass. Hetook out a cigarette and tossed me Swimming TeamBattles GophersAt Twin Cities CRITIQUE ELECTSFOUR TO STAFFThe Maroon tank-artists will cel¬ebrate Lincoln’s birthday by a meetwith Minnesota. Eight men are go-1ing—Stephenson, Moore, Brislen, 1McMillan, Rittenhouse, Silverstein, jMcMahon and Lloyd. Minnesota has :a strong team. One of the Gopher Imen is known to be able to clip his ;time in the backstroke several sec- ^onds lower than that of Stephenson,the Chicago backstroke specialist.The University is there for revers¬ing the field somewhat by enteringStephenson in the breaststroke. (Continued from page 1)are: Gene Hagel, Hortense Barr andHenry Barber, who will serve ascontributing editors.Miss Ducey was unable to divulgethe contents of the next issue of LaCritique, whose appearance is sched¬uled for February 25, but she prom¬ised at least one surprise. SECOND BRIDGEROUND OPENS;12 TEAMS CLASHO’HARA SELECTSCAST FOR SKITS,SPECIAL NUMBERSI one. 1 wa.s quite happy. I was cer-tain that it didn’t matter.I Still, I said to myself, what about ‘I the divinity students whom I passedI in Swift? They did care. But why? !What difference did it make? Surelythey didn’t believe that they wereI going to rectify matters—the statusI quo would remain that way, and theyj would become merely firm defendersof the faith.In a sense, divinity students werenecessary. I liked them. They had |j an outlook and knew why. They'i would hell) keep people out of mis- ,: chief. '; 1 thought of those brilliant meni whose life work was tied up in sci-, entific laboratories. I admired thescientist’s existence. He too didn’t.have to care, and probably didn’t.:There were atoms and electi’ons andprotons . . . and queer machinesand apparatus . . . and tubes, andmicro.scopes which I’egulated anotherworld of organisms.It was even pleasant to be an Eng¬lish instructor. True, it was a bittedious reading themes on “How ISpent the Summer at Devil’s Lake”but, there were worse things in life.Bill was gtting restless. I shiftedabout in my chair uneasily. I real¬ized at that precise moment some¬one was insisting that ‘Strange In¬terlude’ was not a dirty play, thatthe Book Store charged too muchfor text books, that Charley had act¬ed like a child at the party Satur¬day night, that it was better to startoff at forty dollars a week and knowthat you had a chance to make more.I knew that someone was arguingthat next year Chicago would have;a basketball team . . . that obvious- (Continued from page 1)Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi BetaDelta.Delta LeagueAlpha Epsilon Pi vs. KappaSigma.Zeta LeagueI Delta Sigma Phi vs. Lambda Chi1 Alpha.Pi Lambda Phi vs. Sigma Chi.1 Results must be telephone to PaulI Brady after 7 o’clock at Hyde ParkI 6694. Any other information mayj be obtained from James Rutter,i chairman of the tournament, atj Hyde Park 3250.(Continued from page 1)ley, Helen Schneller, Margaret Ste¬phenson, Marjorie Vann and Vir¬ginia Wier.. The eight women who have beenchosen to present specialty numbersare: Golde Breslich and JeannetteSmith, Marie Howland, Mary Mor¬ris, Rosalia Poliak, Beatrice Robin¬son and Sarah and Jeanette Stein. FROSH WOMEN CAGERSDOWN SENIOR TEAMMILLAY GIVES READINGTHURSDAY(Continued from page 1)year, for in it she produced “Second.April,” “.Aria di Copo,” “The Lampand the Bell,” and “Two Slatternsand a King.”On the basis of her work in thisyear she was awarded the Pulitzerprize for the best book of verse in1922.Ushers for the reading will beEleanor Maize, Mary Shean, AnneBolling, Martha Harris, PriscillaBishop, Harriet MacNeille, FrancesBlodgett, and Ruth Lyons.]y the municipal situation was inbad shape, that Mayor Thompsonought to resign . . . that the mid¬terms were nothing compared withwhat the finals would be . . . thatHarper was no place to study . . .that the Prom wasn’t what it usedto be.1 looked at my drained goblet. Be¬tween the two of us, it was goodstuff. I Two very hotly contested basket-i ball games were played this after-i noon at 4:15 between the Senior-i Freshmen and Junior-Sophomore1 women.TI)e freshmen defeated the seniorsI in a game that was very close and! exciting as can be seen by the score,18-16. Helen Walters was the out-i standing star of the freshmen mak¬ing over half of the baskets whileBertha Ileimerdinger starred for theSenior team. The fast playing ofthe freshmen was what won thegame for them finally though theywere not as experienced.The Juniors won over the sopho¬mores in a game that was rally verymuch closer than the score of 21-11indicates.CINEMAChicago Ave., Just East of Michigan'I'hc .Art I'hcatrc of .Shadow SciencePresents U. F. .A.’s Masterpiece“S 1 G F R I E D”A Poetic Drama Ha>ed on tl)e J^agaof the ‘‘.Niebelungen”Also CARL SANDBURG andOther .Short Film GemsContinued I P. .M.-ll P. .M.Matinee .SOc - F.vening 75cLook for the Venetian Starstudiotea shop—Delicious Food—You’ll find it at The Studioamid charming surroundingsand the smart set of the Uni-t>ersity Quarter. ; Afternoon tea is a far more de¬lightful ritual if you chooseThe Studio.—for Epicures—NUMBER 1S6« EAST 67TH ST.K*nwM4 * DorehMttr — Announcing —A Prize-Winning TournamentwithLots of Fun For EverybodyStarting Thursday, February I 3th an ex¬citing Ping Pong Tournament will open atThe Bookstore for everybody on the cam¬pus.Come over to The Book Store at 5802 EllisAve. and get in on all the fun. All that’snecessary is to register, and maybe youwill win the attractive Prize.Register Today Valentines!Valentines!Valentines!Woodworth^Book Store1311 E. 57th St.1—ilSS' ■**" "““COpen Evenings■XSSPVALENTINEDECORATIONSandFANCYSTATIONERY CHICAGO TRACK TEAM EMERGESVICTOR IN BOILERMAKER MEETCoach Merriam’s V'arsity trackmenwere busy last week-end in the taskof annexing its first dual meet vic¬tory from the Boilermakers to thetune of 57 to 27. Captain Root wasout with a slight injury and Hatha¬way, another regular, did not com¬pete. Buck Weaver s heave of 47 ;feet 7 was the feature accomplish-:ment of the meet for, because of thapoor track, the times made in therunning events were little more thanmediocre.Nevertheless the Maroon team re¬vealed enough strength to make itone of the favorites in the Quad¬rangular Meet to be held at North¬western this Saturday with represen¬tatives from Ohio State, Wisconsin,and Northwestern. The Buckeyesare slated to win but the Maroon aregiven an outside chance to cop firsthonors.Summaries of the Purdue Meetare:40 yard dash—Won by East Chi¬cago; Odom Purdue second; Wal-coff Purdue; third. Time: 04.6.40 yard high hurdles—Won byNoreus Purdue; Baker Purdue sec¬ond; Kramer Chicago third. Time:05.6.One mile run—Won by BrainardChicago, Doyle Purdue second; Cha-sey Purdue third. Time 4:39.7. 440 yard run—Won by SchulzChicago; Colville Chicago second;Bowden Purdue third. Time :56.4.Pole Vault—Won by Cowley Chi¬cago Gobi and House Purdue; tiedfor second height 11 feet 5 inches.Half Mile Run—Won by LettsChicago; Teitelman Chicago second;Doyle Purdue third. Time 2:08.8.High Jump—Won by Cassle Chi¬cago; Lange Purdue second; Stew¬art and Grimes Chicago, and Hol¬lingsworth Purdue; tied for third.Height 5 feet 11 inches.Two mile run—Won by HarlacherChicago; Kelly Chicago second; Els-bury Purdue third. Time 10:28.Shot Put—Won by Weaver Chi¬cago Lange Purdue and Trude Chi¬cago tied for second. Distance 46feet 7 inches.Relay Race—^Won by Chicago(Ramsay, Hayden and Schulz). Time1:53.2.TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1208 lEast 63rd StreetYoung and old taught to dance.Adults’ lessons strictly private Noone to watch or embarrass you.Day or EveningTelephone Hyde Park 3080IPwiFqju lPi;,DAJWY:l|lA«pQ^,..i;UESDAy,fE^ L?3aiiiiki3€i^US6AlL^REVOLT AGAINSTSCHOOL POUCIES(Continued from page 1)than their heads. However, they ad¬mit that obstacles to the plan mightbe ironed out in that the need for asystem which would promote intel¬lectual honesty is paramount. Theespecial bone of contention is thosestudents who come to college forpurely social reasons.It is claimed that they hamperthe work of honest students becauseof the restrictions which have to beplaced upon them in order to keepthem at work.Pampering of students is deplor¬ed by The Minnesota Daily, whichasks for a continental system ofeducation, whereby students wouldcome up to the university so pre¬pared that they would be able tothink for themselves. In America theyaver that the ’‘Joe Collitch” type isrepresentative of undergraduate su¬perciliousness.Failure of professors is anotherphase of this educational programstirring university editorial writers.The Daily Nebraskan claims thatprofessors must do more than mere¬ly point the way. They should beleaders, and must light and burn thetorch of knowledge. The Nebraskanurges that professors forget thosewho come to dream through recita¬tions and devote their attentions tothose who have real intellectual in¬terest. Annex Old Delta OdHouse to CooperativeNursery School Plant(Continued from page 1)siders bring their children to be tak¬en care of, fed, and treated with ul¬tra violet rays.This new annex, besides carryingon the work of the main school, willbe used for experimentation in nutri¬tion and other fields of child wel¬fare. Miss Lydia Roberts, associateprofessor of Home Economics, ishead of the school and director ofthe experiments. The Undergradu¬ate Home Economics club and allothers interested will be shownthrough the building on Thursday.The school is supported by the Uni¬versity, and trained specialsts inthe care of children are in control.HUTCHINS HELPSFOUND INSTITUTE Official Notices Wa.r.'-school.T««Mlay, Febniary 11Radio lecture: “American Litera¬ture since 1890." Professor PerdyBoynton of the Department of Eng¬lish, 8:20 a.m. Station WMAQ.Divinity chapel: Associate Profes¬sor McGiffert of the Chicago Theo¬logical seminary, 11:50, Joseph Bondchapel. ioua fedncatioa "Neighborhood Groups,*’ Dean of theDivinity school. 7:30. Joseph Bondchapel.Public lecture: (downtown):“Samuel Butler," Professor RobertMorss Lovett of the Department ofEnglish, 6:45, The Art Institute.Radio lecture: “Elementary Span¬ish.” Mr. Bechtolt, 4:15, stationWMAQ. Church History club: “Advocacyof Church Union daring the PastHundred Years,” Professor McNeillof the Divinity school, 7:30, SwiftCommon room.Public lecture: “Frenchence in the East." Dr. Nicholas lor-ga of the University of Bucharest, 20.4:30, Social Science Research As¬sembly room. j Graduate Classical club: “TheReligion of Socrates," Professor PaulInflu-, Shorey, of the department of GreekLanguage and Literature, 8, ClassicsOrgan music: Porter Heaps.5 :30. University chapel. Wednesday, February 12LINCOLN’S BIRTHDAY—A UNI-5- VERSITY HOLIDAY. OrgRQ llnsle:University chnpeLSocialist club: **The Problem of So^list '"Ihropagandii(7*~ '~As^iiaoiProfessor Rarold Lasswell of thePolitic^ Science DcpartmenttGraduate clubhouse.STOP! LOOK! LISTEN!We have private rooms for card luncheons, dinner parties,committee meetings, etc.Luncheon 40c, II to 2. - Dinner 7 5c, 5 to 8" A la Carte Service I I to 8Sunday Dinner $ 1, 12 to 8Witch Kitch Inn6325 Woodlawn Ave. Fairfax 9153(Continued from page 1)Students Represent18 Foreign Nations one of them wll gain a comprehen¬sive view of the others. The Insti¬tute aims to avoid a dangerous, butprevalent, specialization that shutsout an understanding of the compli¬cated forces behind the problem ofthe individual. Instead of leavingthe physician to treat an illness with¬out consideration of anything but bi¬ological causes, the Institute enablesthe lawyer to study his case froma legal aspect, the sociologist froma social view point, and the econom¬ist from his angle as well, so thatthe whole reason for his illness maybe revealed.The cosmopolitan nature of theUniversity of Chicago is shown bythe geographical chart from the Re¬corders office for 1928-1929. Canadaleads with a list of 150, China fol¬lows with 65, and Japan with 21. In¬dia has a list of 9, Korea 7,Czecho¬slovakia 6, Palestine 5, Turkey andAustralia 4, Belgium, England,France, Ireland, and South Africa3, and Mexico, Germany, Greece,'New Zealand, and other countrieswith 2 or less. 1 CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Tuxedo, $20. Orig¬inal price $110. Plaza 0958.FOR S.\LE—Coop. 5 rni. sunpar-lor, Nr. I. C., L, Midway. Telephone |Dorchester 4828.FOR SALE—$175 Atwater Kentradio. Cabinet. Excellent condition.$25. Call Stewart 0102 after 6 p. m.CHAPEL COUNCIL TOFORMULATE ETHICALCODE FOR STUDENTS LOST—Glasses in brown pocket-book. Reward. R. H. Baldwin, KellyHall.(Continued from page 1)w’ard Bastian and Leonard Great-wood. The open discussion will beled by a member of the facultyyet to be invited.Plans for the remainder of theyear will also be announced anddiscussed. j GREGG COLLEGE jI Home of Gregg Shorthand |? Thirty-fourth Year ?FRATERNITYJEWELRY STATIONERYDANCE FAVORSSpies Brothers, Inc.27 E. Monroe StAt Wabash 5th Floor Imatrine how much easier It would beto take all your class notes In short¬hand. It is easily and quickly mas¬tered at Gregg College ... in con¬venient spare time, special Collegiateclasses, meeting days or evenings..\»k for particulars and FREE BOOKOF F.4CTS225 Wabash Avenue, North =a Phone State 1881 Chicago, Ill. illUIII>|lltllllllll|!IIHIIIIII|lllllllllllllllllllllll|ll|ll|llllllnlMIIIITYPEWRITERSSOLD RENTEDAll Makes REPAIREDAll ModelsNew and Used Portables $5.00 Per Mo.Portables, Demonstrators, $60.00 val $48.00PHILUPS BROTHERS1214 E. 55th St. Plaza 2673Just Around the ComerThe Rambler Tea Room is offeringespecially to students of the UniversityAPPETIZING, DELICIOUS FOODPLEASANT SURROUNDINGSPROMPT SERVICESpecial arrangements for parties and meetingsLUNCH 11:30 to 2 :00 — 40cDINNER 5:30 to 8:00 — 60c and 75cThe Rambler Tea Shop5628 Kenwood Ave. Society of Sigma Xi: “Modern,Ideas in Cosmology.” Professor Wil-1liam MacMillan of the Department of.\stronomy. Dinner, 6:30. Quad¬rangle club.Extension lectures in Religion andLeadership Training Classes, “TheOrigns of Prophecy,” Professor J.M. P. Smith. “Augustine," DeanShailer Mathews of the DivinityKENWOOD TEAROOMEvening Dinner 65c4:30 to 8:00Luncheon 40cI I to 2:00Sunday Dinner 90c12 to 8:006220 Kenwood Ave.MiDway 2774 yotive ^\^et\astedNestlesMILK CHOCOLATE ^olels HindermereFor Every Off-Campus FunctionDinner-Dances — Club MeetingsBanquetsThe facilities of THE WINDERMEREare beautifully suited to your needs.Here you will always receive completesatisfaction.GIVE YOUR NEXT OCCASION THEPRESTIGE OF A WINDERMERE SETTINGHyde Park Boulevard at 56th Street Fairfax 6000.. .on the lot it's Action /a a • cigarette it's Taste /HaSY to say, hard to do.** Easy co daimevef3rthing for a cigarette; not so easy to ghrethe one thing that really counts: taste.Hard to do>—but Chesterfield does it. Spark¬ling flavor, richer fragrance, the satisfying char¬acter that makes a cigarette—because, in everystep, we aim at taste . •.TASTE .above everything MILD ... and yetTHEY SATISFYRNE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos^ not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDED^ a Wnw Tmmm Ob.,i t,.-