SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON Bail? JRaroon Today’* Weather:Fair and no decidedchange in temperature.Vol. 30. No. 25. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1930 Price Five CentsCRISLER LEAVES TO INSPECT JOBBlackhiars Select Ten Junior ManagersMEET MONDAYTO FORM PLANSFOR 1930 SHOWWill Announce ScriptShortly, AccordingTo Odell Symphony GivesConcert by StaidModem Maestros ‘OLD IDEAS DRESSED UP’-THA rS THE MODERN POETR YTen of the junior managers whowill guide the destiny of the 1930 jBlackfriars show were announced iyesterday by Joseph Odell, abbot of;the order. The managers were chos- |en by the governing board of the Iorder, composed of Odell, Edward iLawler, Elmer Friedman, James Rut-1ter, and Ernest Stevens. iThose chosen are: program,;Charles Poliak, Pi Lambda Phi;!chorus, George Mahin, Beta Theta!Pi; co.<«tumes, William Kincheloe, iCni Psi; advertising, Lee J. Loven-thal, Pi Lambda Phi. ^Properties, P'rank Calvin, Sigma'Chi; score, Robert Ardrey; publicity,!Hugh MacKenzie, Delta Kappa Ep- ■silon. ;Scenery, Sidney Yates, Pi Lamb-1da Phi; box office, Richard Korten, jBeta Theta Pi; lighting, James |Scheibler, Chi Psi.There will be a meeting of the'newly elected managers in the;Blackfriars office, Mitchell tower,]Monday at 1:15. The show's script jwill be announced in a .sTiort time.WhittEdcer WinsPoster G>ntest- Alice Whittaker’s poster has beenaccepted as the official poster for the1930 Mirror revue, “Yours to Date”It was selected from a large num¬ber of designs submitted duiing therecent poster contest conducted bythe publicity committee of Mirror.Originality and treatment of ahead instead of a figure, were fac¬tors influencing the selection ofMiss Whittaker’s work. The head, inaccordance with the confesl rules, isin two colors, black and emeraldgfreen, and is eight by ten inches insize. As it is drawn in accordancewith the latest tendencies in art, itmakes a timely and smart advertise¬ment for “Yours to Date,’’ accordingto the production staff.Most of the posters handed inwere modernistic or futuristic inidea as well as execution. Amongthe best posters were those of Bet¬ty Simpson, Sam Van Dyne, Har-(Continued on page 4) By Alfred V. FrankensteinThe concert of the Chicago Sym¬phony orchestra at Mandel hall yes¬terday afternoon, which Eric DeLa-marter conducted instead of Fred¬erick Stock, was made up of thestaider, less cacaphonous voicesamong modern composers. First cameBusoni, the heaven-storming pianovirtuoso who was among the first toformulate an apology for contem¬porary methoLds in music, and whonever applied these methods in hisown writing. Then came three live¬ly composers, Glazunoff, Holst, andRichard Stfauss.Curious Fate forWork* of GlazunoffA curious fate has hung over themusic of Alexander Glazunoff. Ac¬cording to the program book of theChicago Symphony which was issuedwhen the composer visited this citytwo months ago works of this com¬poser have been played by the or¬chestra more often than the worksof any other living musician exceptthe above-mentioned Strauss.Skillad WorkmanAt Age of TwentyThe same program book carried aremark by M. Montagu-Nathan tothe effect that the fame of Glazunoffis carried chiefly by his symphonies..4nd yet this writer, who has attend¬ed at least threefourths of the sym¬phony concerts played in this cityfor the past ten years had neverheard a symphony by Glazunoff un¬til the composer came here in De¬cember.(Continued on page 4) ^One Age RecapitulatesAnother,’ SaysDavisonBy Ruth Willard“There is nothing new in poetrythroughout the ages,’’ lectured Ed¬ward Davison last night. But he,himself, with his alluringly resonantvoice, his Cambridge accent, hisboyish enthusiasm, and his poeticsincerity, was something refreshing¬ly new to a small Mandel audience.From his own viewpoint, Mr. Dav¬ison gave one of one hundred andone approaches to poetry. His wayis through the every day, the usual,the fundamental—the themes whichhave always commanded men’s imag¬inations and pens. True poetry doesnot come from the “unfortunate car-Brain Activity IsElectric—acobsonDISCOVER TRACESOF DISAPPEARINGMANDAN INDIANSHutchins and FacultyMembers Speak atChild Study MeetPresident Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins will be one of the leaders of theMidwest Conference on the emotion¬al life of the child, to be Keld March6, 7, and 8 in the grand ballroom ofthe Palmer House. A number ofother members of the University fac¬ulty will also participate in themeetings. Among them are Profes¬sor Anton J. Carlson and EdmundJacobson of the physiology depart¬ment, Mary A. M. Lee, instructorin child psychology of the heme eco¬nomics department, Louis L. Thur-stone of the psychology department,Professor Edward S. Ames of thephilosophy department, Harold D.Lasswell, and A. Eustace Haydon, ofthe comparative religion depart¬ment. A. W. Bower, a graduate studentin the Anthropology department, inanalyzing the skeletons, pottery, andarrowheads of the Mandan Indians,has concluded that they were thefirst tribe to reach the plains, trav¬eling from the Atlantic coast. Fi¬nanced by Frank G. Logan of Chi¬cago, he has been in North Dakota,collecting specimens for the Beloitmuseum during the summer.Until 1780 the Mandans, a tall,long-headed, raw-boned race, weremasters of the plain. Now the rav¬ages of small-pox have reduced themto five or six individuals. Theybuilt scaffolds upon which they plac¬ed their dead until the body rottedaway; the dead were buried only incase of epidemics and wars, whenmany people were killed.Settling in the river bottoms of(Continued on page 4) Two million people all thinkingat the same time could generateenough electricity by their combin¬ed mental effort to light an ordin¬ary lamp. This estimation is the re¬sult of scientific conclusions on theslight neuro-myscular vibrations as¬sociated with brain activity made byDr. Edmund Jacobson, research as¬sociate in the department of physiol¬ogy after two years’ experimentingat the University,j By the use of a delicately attunedi s t r i n g galvanometer, sensitiveenough to detect one-mlllionth of avolt of electricity, Dr. Jacobson hasdemonstrated that imagination andmental activity are functions involv¬ing the entire body, and that theyproduce minute muscular reactionsthat can be measui*ed in terms of afew millionths of a volt.“This work has been an attempt(Continued on page 4) icature of the effeminate poet, butfrom life,” he said. “Life and poetryare not to be, cannot be, divorced,but are the bread and butter of lit¬erature.”Eddie Guest vs. ShakespeareFrom such a generalization, Mr.Davison deduced that an age tendsto rewrite the poems of a previousage, with a difference only in envir¬onment and symbolism. Using anever-present theme, death and im¬mortality, Carl Sandburg’s “CoolTombs” is just Grey’s “Elegy” in dif¬ferent verse, and Edgar Lee Mas¬ters “Spoon River Anthology,” is an¬other form, another personality’s ex¬pression, of the same idea.As was graphically pointed out,“Eddie Guest writes on all the samesubjects as Shakespeare, but oh, hoWdifferently!”Reads Own VerseToward the close of his hour andand a half, Mr. Davison read selec¬tions fron^his own poetry. His workfor the most part, does not possessthe joyous freedom and youthfulverve one would expect from hear¬ing his wit and his references to col-legcuC^d war-time life. Rather it isa gi'ave expression, slightly tinged\\'ith pessimism, but highly accept¬able to his audience, which would.have welcomed almost anything inthe Davison voice.POUTJCAL SCIENCESTUDENTS SURVEYWARD CONDITIONS Give Vaudeville andMovie Program toAid Nursery SchoolMandel hall will rival the largedowntown movies on Washington’sbirthday, when a vaudeville and mo¬tion picture performance will begiven for the benefit of the Univer¬sity Cooperative Nursery. The per¬formance will start at 2:15 o’clock. |A movie of the nursery and a Doug-!las Fairbanks film will provide the |cinema entertainment.Dunlap Clark will be master of]ceremonies for the hour of vaude-jville, which will include an act by Imembers of the gymnastic team; tapdancing by University women; mag¬ic and tricks by James Stevens, “a(Continued on page 2) Disagree On NewRhodes SystemThree former Rhodes scholars, |now on the University faculty, dis-:agreed yesterday in regard to the |recent change in the selection of jRhodes representatives. Under thenew method, four men will be named jfrom each of eight sections, a sec¬tion containing six states, as opposedto the former system of the twomen from each state.Dr. Carroll Wooddy, of the politi¬cal science department, is definitelyin favor of the adoption. Dr. RobertMerrill, of the Romance department,is fundamentally against the plan,though he should like to see thenew method receive a fair trial. Dr.M. M. Knappen, of the history de¬partment, is opposed to the innova¬tion.(Continued on page 2) Break Ground forNew Additions toBillings HospitalGround will be brtoken on theUniversity campus today for twonew hospital units, v/hich will be de¬voted to the care and cure of Chi¬cago’s destitute crippled and deform¬ed children. The event will mark therealization of ten years of planningby the trustees of the Chicago Homefor Destitute Crippled Children.The new clinics, to be erected ata total cost of $600,000 have beenmade possible by gifts of $300,000each from Mrs. Gertrude DunnHicks and Mrs. Elizabeth McElwee.Jointly the two structures will housethe activities of the Home.Hutchins to PresideToday’s ceremony, beginning at2 will be conducted by officials andmedical authorities of the Univer¬sity headed by President RobertMaynard Hutchins, and by trusteesof the Home.The Hicks Orthopedic hospital willface the Midway adjoining the pres¬ent Albert Merritt Billings hospitalon the east and extending at a threefloor level toward Ellis Avenue. TheMcElwee Memorial, to be erected asa memorial to Nancy Adele McEl¬wee, will form an L with the Hicksunit, extending at a six-floor levelnorth along Ellis Avenue from theMidway.Six Million SpentTogether, the two structures willbe the counterpart of the new BobsRoberts Memorial hospital for Chil¬dren, which is now rising west of theAlbert Merritt Billings hospital.Plans prepared by Coolidge and(Continued on page 4) NEW COACH OFFFOR SHORT STAYAT MINf^APOLISWill Return In TimeTo Begin Work onInterscholasticAssistant Coach H. O. Crisler,who has recently accepted the postof head coach at the University ofMinnesota, left last night for Min¬neapolis. He plans to spend two orthree days there on this visit, sur¬veying the situation and deciding onthe date for the opening of thespring football season. The entireGopher football squad will meet himat the train on his arrival.On his return to the University,he will begin work on the annualBasketball Interscholastic tourna¬ment, which will be held on April 1to 5 of this year. Crisler formerlymanaged the tournament; after hisresignation it will probably be plac¬ed in the hands of Nels Norgren,basketball coach, Crisler said yester¬day.Accepted FridayCrisler, who hesitated to acceptMinnesota’s offer because of the op¬position aroused by the methodsused in making the appointments,made his acceptance known Fridayin a long distance telephone call toChancellor Lotus D. Coffman of theUniversity of Minnesota.A little later Elton E. Wiemen,evidently advised of Crisler’s action,(Continued on page 2)Breath of Spring!Phoenix Blows InPolitical science students arecompleting a survey of the fifth,sixth, seventh, twentieth, twenty-sixand thirty-fifth wards in order topresent a report of their politicaland racial complexion at the nextmeeting of the “Youth Movement”group on February 27, ProfessorJerome Kerwin of the political sci¬ence department said yesterday.Twenty students, under the lead¬ership of Hortense Barr, chairman,have tuidfliitaken the survey toarouse the political consciousness ofyouth in Chicago. Sharlog’s 194 OpensBowling TournamentShooting an average of 194 pointsLudwig Sharlog yesterday openedthe first three games to be recordedin the bowling contest now beingheld at the Reynolds club alleys. Be¬fore the competition started, he aver¬aged 218 points. Sharlog is alsoholder of this season’s record of 258.The contest will last until March 15,when seven dollars will be awardedto the man with the highest three-game average, and three dollars tothe second best score. Thompson LecturesAt Texas UniversityOn Medieval HistoryDr. James W. Thompson, profes¬sor of medieval history, will give aseries of lectures at the Rice Insti¬tute, Houston, Texas, on March 6, 7,8 on the “Studies in Social History.”His series includes a discussion of“Science in the Middle Ages,” “Rur¬al England during the War of theRoses,” and the “Origin and Devel¬opment of the Newspaper.”Professor Thompson is the authorof several historical books and ar¬ticles in periodicals. His most prom¬inent books include “The Wars ofReligion in France,” “Feudal Ger¬many,” and “The Lost Oracles.”Basil C. H. Harvey, professor ofanatomy and dean of the medicalstudents, addressed the annual Con¬gress on Medical Education held inthe Palmer House this week, on“Providing Adequate Facilities forthe Education of Colored MedicalStiidenta.’ WHY IT COSTSYOU $7.75 TOATTEND PROMHow every cent of the $7.75charged for bids to the WashingtonProm is spent was revealed yester¬day by William Garvey, businessmanager. The lion’s share, $4.40 orapproximately fifty-seven percent,will be spent for supper.This leaves exactly $3.35, whichmust cover the cost of two orches¬tras, the program, the tickets, pos¬ters and general expenses. Garveyestimates that more than $2.50 willgo to the orchestra. The printing ofthe program, minus advertisements,will cost forty cents. Advertisingwill consume another quarter of adollar, and general operating ex¬penses will claim the rest, approxi¬mately twenty cents. \The program, howevVr, will beworth at least forty cents, Garvey(Continued on page 4)MEN’S COMMISSIONARRANGES SPRINGQUARTER EXCURSIONAnother trip to Druce Lake, nearWaukegan, open to men students willbe taken under the direction of theMen’s Commission during the Springvacation, stated Dan Autry, presi¬dent of the Commission yesterday.Details of the excursion will be madeat the meeting held next Sundayin the home of Dean Boucher at6:15.Election of a new chairtnan ofthe Commission to succeed Autrywill be held. The works of the Com¬mission’s first year will be reviewedby the retiring president. Harbinger of spring, the newPhoenix will appear on campus to¬morrow, purveyed by the same beau¬tiful damsels with which its debutis always associated. This month’sissue will contain an announcementof the startling revelations to bemade next month. Who wrote thenew Blackfriars’ show? What is theplot about? And more inside dope!Inimitable woodcuts, chiseled andblasted out by Sam Van Dyne, willbe sprinkled among the erudite lit¬erature; for Orin E. Tovrov, a localstory-teller of repute, is writing“The Story of a Smart Fellow.” Amasterpiece composite, abstract,symbolic “trance” drawing in fourcolors, fished out of the misty depthsby A1 Sterges, represents Mirrorand the Washington Prom combin-(Continued on page 4)Freshman Women GoBack of Yards; SeeSettlement WorkWork at the University Settle¬ment and the conditions of the sur¬rounding neighborhood will be ob¬served by the Freshman Women’sclub, which wlil make a trip back ofthe yards on March 1. The gn^oupwill leave Ida Noyes atThe council also plans a bridgeparty for March 4, from 3 to 5 atIda Noyes hall. As an incentive toall guests there will be a prize of¬fered, and refreshments will be serv¬ed throughout the afternoon. Therewill be a charge of fifty cents.Nancy Clark, chairman of thecouncil, asks all Freshman womento report at the Ma Epstein clinic toaid in making surgical dressings onWednesdays from 1 to 4. Miss Clarkpoints oQt that an opportunity tomake new acquaintances is offeredthrough this work.Page Two THE DAILY MARCX)N. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 19. 1930iatlg iim^aanFOUNDED IN 1»01THE OFFICIAL i^TUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription ratestS.OO per year ; by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, 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. BASTIAN News EditorEDGAR GREENWALD „..New8 EditorJOHN H. H.ARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Junior EditorWILLIAM R. H.ARSHE Whistle EditorSIDNEY GOLDBERG Day EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EMitorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF....Day EditorMARGARET EGAN Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL....Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH-.Circulation ManagerGEORGE GRIEWANK Circulation Assist.ROBERT McCarthy -Sophomore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH Sophomore AsstSPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULES Asst SporU EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EditorMARJORIE TOLMANWoman’s Sports EditorTHE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement of student parUcipation in undergraduate campus actknties.2. Promotion of student interest in lectures, concerts, exhibits and othercultural opportunities.3. Abolition of grading systm and extension of research principles.A. Cessation of extensile building program.5. Adoption of a plan for supervised, regulated rushing. Official NoticesWedneaday, February 19Radio lecture; “American Litera¬ture since 1890.” Professor PercyH. Boynton of the English depart¬ment, 8:20, Station WMAQ.Divinity chapel, 11:60, JosephBond chapel. Professor A. E. Hay-don of the department of Compara¬tive Religion. fessor of history. University of Wis¬consin.Divinity chapel. Professor Chiera,11:50, Joseph Bond chapel.Graduate club of Business andEconomics, “A Generalization of theRent Concept,” Dr. Henry Schultz,7:30, Social Science Research 122.Faculty Women’s luncheon, 12,Ida Noyes hall.Meeting of the University Senate,4:30, Harper Assembly room.Liberal club, 4:30, Rosenwald 2,“Cultural Education for WorkerLillian Hertstein, Teachers’ UnionI>eader, Chicago.”Mathematical club, 4:30, Ryerson37.Zoology club, 4:30, Zoology 29,“The Present Status of Certain Prob¬lems of Echinoderm Development.”Miss D. Rudnick. Theology club, “The Significanceof Jesus,” Associate professor Mc-Giffert, 7:3^, Common room. Swifthall. NEW COACH OFFFOR SHORT STAYAT MINNEAP(HJSMissionary Furlough club, withAssociate Professor Baker, 8, 5844Stony Island Avenue.DISAGREE ON NEWRHODES SYSTEMTHE PROM AND ROBBERSThe mere mention of the prom, the Interfraternity ball, or anysimilar event which theoretically should fall into the category ofa social function seems to be synonymous with so much ballyhoo,intended not primarily to create an active interest in student affairsbut rather to augment the bank balance of those who are in chargeof the proceedings. At least that is the general opinion. The re¬sults have proved the assumption. Hampered by a lack of money,charged with all forms of extortion, and denounced as robbers, themanagers of what ought to be social functions have been drivento the methods they were falsely accused of.Just why the apprehension of h'arboring robbers in their midstshould have taken such a strong hold on the students is one ofthose campus mysterious which has caused endless, unfoundedtrouble. Under the guise of denouncing a lack of campus enthusi¬asm the trouble-makers have vented their private prejudices andgrievances against those whose initiative has elevated them in theeyes of their fellow students in some commendable undertaking.The prom is not the only recipient of that sort of criticism.The proof of the injustice is the continuation of the greatestsocial affair of the spring quarter. Without enriching themselvesa few who have the backbobne continue in the face of the difficul¬ties. They run the risk of financial failure, criticism, and outrightlaughter. They hope for success and suspect failure. And mean*while their pockets are always empty.The prom is only a few days away. For thirty-six seasons ithas been the climax of the University social season, rising in thatrespect to the rank of a tradition. And still the same student*—they are quite numerous—whose cries have been against the lackof enthusiasm have failed to support one of the best opportunitiesfor the spread of something akin to University spirit.Without trying to be too dramatic in our plea, we do urgesupport for the prom and defense for those whose efforts perpetuatea tradition of the campus.ANSWERING THE NATIONThe Nation of February 12 meets President Hutchins’ pro¬nouncement for increases in university professors’ salaries with thecriticism that the professorial group, like rats which learn fasterwhen a little hungry, should be constrained to accept unsatisfactorypay in order to keep its critical intelligence innocent of conservat¬ism. ’’Boost the professors as a group into the high-salaried class. . . and you almost inevitably set the universities as a whole todefending things as they are, instead of formulating the intelligentcriticism that is an essential part of the process of the orderly socialchange," exclaims the Nation.But the Nation assumes that the pay which university profes¬sors now receive is so abysmally low that it encourages them tomake every exertion for a better social order. On the contrary,it is clear that the middle class, to wHch most professors belong,is just as conservative-minded as the rich—perhaps more so, sinceits members entertain a necessarily keener solicitude for their small¬er properties.Again, the same argument used against the professors maybe used against laborers who want more than a "decent livingwage." Why not also fix maximum wages to provide for the con¬tinued humanitarian outlook of more than half of the Americanpopulation) Organ music, 5-5:30, the Uni¬versity chapel. Porter Heaps.Religious Education club, 7, Com¬mon room. Swift hall. “What Is theFuture of Week-Day Religious Edu¬cation?” Miss Mary Abernethy, Su¬perintendent of Community ChurchSchools, Gary, Indiana.Socialist club, 7:30, the Graduate!Clubhouse, “What Socialists Can Doin Chicago,”Philosophy club, 7:45, Classics,“The Meaning of the Platonic Theryof Ideas.” Professor Paul Shorey ofthe Greek department.Thursday, February 20Radio lecture: “American Litera-,ture since 1890.” Professor PercyH. Boynton of the English depart-1ment, 8:20 a. m.. Station WMAQ. (Continued fiom page 1;In supporting the change. Dr,Wooddy said, “Inasmuch as the pur¬pose is to secure the best possiblemen, the change in method will pro¬cure the most fit. and eliminatemore of the unfit. I don’t attachsuch importance to the representa¬tion of states, but of getting goodmen, who are, in a way, nationaldelegates to Oxford.”In direct contrast. Dr. Knappensaid, “Mr. Rhodes’ purpose was notan academic, but a political one. Hede.signed the scholarships, in myopinion, to develop a friendly spirittoward England in men who wouldbecome leaders in the different poli¬tical units of this country.”While Dr. Merrill recognized thatthe change would result in an im¬provement in the caliber of Rhodesscholars, he pointed out the dangerof reducing Rhodes scholars to morenearly a single type of character,by elimination of men with certainstamp from their own regions. Ox¬ford would suffer from this, and sowould the states after the scholarsreturned. (Continued from page 1)telegraphed from Ann Arbor, “I ac¬cept with pleasure your appointmentas assistant football coach at theUniversity of Minnesota.”Gains University SupportChancellor Coffman, in a formalstatement issued Friday, said, “Nocomment on the outcome of thecoaching situation would be com¬plete without a statement of my sin¬cere appreciation for the efforts ofthe press, public, alumni, and uni¬versity staff who sent expressions ofgood-will and support to Mr. Crislerand Mr. Wieman. The coming ofthese- two men will help the univer¬sity materially in carrying forwardits constructive program for the de-;velopment of physical education and iathletics.” iHesitates to AcceptCrisler’s hesitancy in acceptingthe position offered him last Mondayby the board of regents was causedby the storm of alumni protest whichwas aroused at Minnesota by themethod in which the appointmentswere made. The opinions of Rus¬sell B. Rathbun and Arnold C. Oss,alumni members of the Universityof Minnesota senate committee onintercollegiate athletics were notconsulted by the special sub-com¬mittee which made the appoint¬ments. This action of the universityofficials has been the cause of thegrievances between the alumni andthe institution’s authorities. In a statement issued last Friday,Crisler said, in part, “My delay inaccepting the appointment wasprompted by the earnest desire tobe fair to the interests of the Uni¬versity of Minnesota as well as tomyself.Regrets Leaving University“It is not without regret that Ileave the University of Chicago,where my relations have always beenso completely pleasant. It is espe¬cially hard to withdraw from closeassociation with the gfreatest influ¬ence for good in amateur athleticsand the finest football coach in thecountry—A. A. Stagg.”GIVE VAUDEVILLE ANDMOVIE PROGRAM TOAID NURSERY SCHOOL(Continued from page 1)well know’n necromancer” of Chi¬cago, and Spanish dancing by a classfrom the Marie Veatch studio.Tickets are $1.50, $1.00, and 75cents, and are on sale at Wood¬worth’s bookstore, and the Univer¬sity bookstore.ORGAN PROGRAMToday’s organ recital by PorterHeaps at 5 in the University chapelwill include “.\ndante and Scherzofrom Symphony IV” by Widor;“Drink to Me Only W’ith ThineEyes” by R. H. Miles; Foster’s “Sun¬set in a Japanese Garden and the“Fantasie in G Minor” by Bach.Panatrope concert, symphoij;^ rec- jords, 12:45 to 1:15, Reynolds club-1house. I Lovett Meets ClassAt Northwestern U.Organ music. Porter Heaps, 5:00to 5:30, University chapel.Radio lecture: “Ghandhi,” DeanCharles W. Gilkey of the Universitychapel, 6; Station WMAQ.Public lecture (downtown), “Ju¬dicial and Legislative Law Making,”Professor Freund, 6:45, Art Insti¬tute.Graduate History club and facul¬ty, “The Frontier Theory in His¬tory,” Dr. Frederich L. Paxson,' pro- “The Value of Living” will be thetheme of Professor Robert MorssLovett of the English department,who will talk to the ContemporaryThought class Wednesday, February26, at Northwestern University.The Contemporary Thought classis a s3rmposium introduced intoNorthwestern curriculum, which pre¬sents the interpretations of the con¬temporary school of thought by vari¬ous prominent men. SHl'BERTGreat NorthernNow PlayingPrior to New York OpeninKThe MesHn. ShubertpresentThe Senson'i Greatest Musieal Play“NINA ROSA”By OTTO HA ft BACHAuthor of “Rose Marie.’’ “No, No. Nanette”.Music by SIGMUM) ROMBERGcomposer of“The Student Prince,” “The Desert Sona”Lyrics by IRVIXG C.AES.ARwithGUY ROBERTSONand cast of 125 GARRICK Pop. Mats.Wed & Sat.TWO WEEKS ONLYSTRATFORD-UPON-AVONFESTIVAL COMPANYFIR.Sr WEEK—Wj'd. Mat.—A “Midsumnrter-Niirht'sDream.”Wed. “Romeo and Juliet’’Thur.—“The Merry Wives of Wimlsor”Fri.—“A Midsummer-NiKht's Dream”Sat. Mat.—“Twelfth NiKht’’Sat.—“Hamlet".SECOND WEEK —Mon.—“The Merry Wives of Windsor”Tu«*s. “Romeo and Juliet”Wed. Mat.—“Much Ado About Nothing”We<l.—“Julius Caesar”Thur.—“A Midsummer-Nittht’a Dream”Fri.—“'The Mero' Wives of Windsor”Sat. Mat.—“Romeo and Juliet”Sat.—“Macbeth”Pricea: Evea. 6te-$3. Wed. Mat. S*c-I2Sat. Mat. 5«e ta |:.S«CiftRI _ . la StenographyI College Student!I —No SoUtiteri Emplojidt*th riMTPhoac Randolph 4347 Chicago. IllinoisThe Butineu CMtgeOfith a Umvmity Atmetf^iere”, ^ . 00*0 aUmytTntyAtmosphe\Coom ERNST ROEHLKArtist Photographer5809 Harper Ave.Phone Hyde Park 8282ELIZABETH OLK-ROEHLKCello instructor- Available for Solo andEnsemble Engagements. ATTENTION — StudentsALL SIZESFOR YOUR PROMS ANDAFFAIRS THE SMARTESTTuxedos -- Full-Dress -and CutawaysCOMPLETE LINE OF FUR-NISHINGS FOR WELLNEW MODELS DRESSED MENSPECIAL S'TUDENT RATESOPEN EVENINGiS .WD SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENTSam Gingiss & Son6 EAST LAKE STREETTHE COLLEGIATE HOUSEDEARBORN 8946 ROOM 304^olels Hmdepmere*Far 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 Store WideClearanceSaleFountain Pens withPencil to match iukisolid gold pointswere *7= now *2=*THC MARK OF QUALITY'1225 East 63th StreetTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1930 Page Threem■Between the Twoof UsByAlb«rt ArkulesandWilliam HargneVidor, the motion picture director,wanted to make the picture “Hallelu¬jah” several years ago. His financialoverseers objected on the grounds thatit would stir up race prejudice orsomething equally assinine. So Vidordidn’t make the picture. But henursed the idea along until the oppor¬tunity came. Even then the film fol- ^lowed a devious trail. When it was jreleased in Chicago, instead of beingbooked at one of the downtown palac-ios, where it belonged, it was shu^itedoff in a little house where it enjoyeda run of several weeks. Its wander¬ings has finally brought it to the Tow¬er theatre where it is on view for thebalance of the week.Vidor, of course, has gone in forthe same kind of realism that made“Porgy” a sensation on two contin¬ents for several seasons. The nfgroand his habitat has finally received |his just due. There are still some peo-1pie, however, whose conception of the |negro is limited to the quaint drollery !and at times strange antics of Eddie jCantor and A1 Jolson. 'The negro is an interesting fellow |both as an entertainer and as a hu-1man being. .‘\s an entertainer, he has |been breaking into the Big Time con-1sistently. There have been negro re- ivues that were superior to white re¬vues. And our memory has not alto-1gether dimmed on recollections ofLew Leslie’s Blackbirds. There wasdancing in that of a fairish nature..\.s a human being, the negro wasgiven a pretty rotten break when adozen or so enterprising dramatistswrote a stage version of “Uncle Toni’s jCabin.” If ever a piece of tripe play- jed behind the footlights, this was it. |It had the kind of hooey in it, though, ;that made grand sentiment and no one Iever sat through a performance of the jshow without shedding a volume oftears. It is seventy years now thatthe atrocity was first played and it is jstill popular in the wayside inns. |However, there comes a Judgmentday. The writers, of course, were thefirst to see the glamour and racinessin the negro. Du Bose Heywardflashed across the literary firmamentwith “Porgy” and achieved distinctionof a stellar nature. The dramatic ver¬sion was even more appealing than thebook, which was to be expected, forhere at last were Negroes acting justlike they did all the time in their na¬tive surrounding. .X lot of "Porgy”was theatrical but most of it was sin¬cere. The drama itself was elementalbut powerful, simply because the Ne¬gro is a primitive creature and primi¬tive people make for real drama.Vidor’s “Hallelujah” carries themovement to acknowledge the Negroone step further. “Hallelujah” in partsis as good as “Porgy”. .More»>ver,the camera allows Vidor a scope thatobviously was denied to the stagepresentation and he made good useof his opportunities. His genius, too,for finding characters unearthed Dan¬iel Haynes, the hero, and NinaMcKinney, a mulatto, who renders asuperb portrayal as a girl who hasgone the wrong way.“Hallelujah” may not prove a box GYM TEAM MEETS HAWKEYESCHICAGO TURNERSSEEK TO CONTINUEDRIVE TO TITLE Cage Team ToBattle Second-Place BadgersTeam Is Best In SeveralYears; Menzies IsStarChicago and Iowa, the erstwhile jbad child of the Western Conferencewill resume athletic relations tonightat Bartlett Gym where Coach Hoffer'sundefeated gymnastic team will engagethe Hawkeye turners in a dual meet.This will be the first engagement forIowa with a Big Ten school since shereceived her parently admonition fromthe Board of .Athletic Control of theWestern Conference.Coach Dan Hoffer acknowledgedsatisfaction in being the first coachto schedule a game with the Hawk-eyes but at the same time he made itknown that his geniality wouldn’tdeter the chanipion.ship hopes whichhe has few his proteges. He intendsto extend a cordial welcome to Iowaand will then go about the task of ad¬ministering a defeat to the visitors.The Maroon team is about the bestsince the days of Flexner and David¬son and the Maroon mentor intends todo a great deal of efficient limberingup work in the form of dual meets andthen regain the Big Ten title.Captain Menzies is about the bestall around gymnast in the country. Inall of the recent dual meets Menzieshas come through with many firstplaces. At the start of the seasonCoach Hoffer didn't have much hopefor his team because he had many un¬tried men on the squd. But many ofhis sophomores have improved so re¬markably that the team is now com¬posed of second year veterans.Olson has been seting a stiff paceand has become a dependable perform¬er on the team. Bromund is a relia¬ble man at club swinging. In addi¬tion Phillips, Kolb, Howard, Bell Al-vare, Hutchinson, are valuable assetsto the team.Tonight will be the time for Chi¬cago to turn out to welcome Iowaback. The meet will be interestingand according to reports from Iowavery close. Coach Nels Norgren’s basketeersresume home operations Saturday-evening when they take on the sturdyBadger team at Bartlett gym. Wis¬consin is at present resting proudlynear the top of the conference stand¬ing, being second to Purdue. It haswon five games and lost but one. TheMaroons, as a result, will have a mostdifficult assignment.The Chicago team should be com¬mended for the spirit in which it hasentered and the the way in which itha.s battled through games in whichthe odds were against them. Theyhave been steadily improving, but arestill sorely in need of a basket shoot¬er or two. Boesel has been playing amore effective game of late, but willhave a good deal of trouble in beatingFoster of the Badgers at the jump..Stevenson is working smoothly atforward, and Changnon seems to befinding his eye again. Fish still leadsin scoring, while Ashley has been per¬forming commendably at the guard-po't. 'I'eTiiple and Fraider have madegood showings in the last few en¬gagements.Last month the results of the firstChicago-Wisconsin game were 33 to23 in favor of the Badgers. CoachNorgren believes that his men will beable to cut down that lead consider¬ably Saturday, if victory is not possi¬ble. The Badger rooster includessuch men as Farber, forward; Foster,center; Chimelewiski, guard and sev¬eral other cagers of no mean ability. MAROONS FAVOREDTO DOWN MICHIGANON TRACK SATURDAYAnn Arbor will be the scene of a Idual track meet this Saturday be- itween Coach Ned Merriam’s Maroonrunners and Coach Farrell’s Wolve¬rine tracksters. The Chicago team |has recuperated from its disastrous |affair at Northwestern last week and jwill oppose the Michigan team withthe primary objective of wiping outdisagreeable memories of the recentQuadrangular. On the other handCoach Farrell will be leading histeam through a dual meet for thelast time and he intends to stage avictorious departure. THREE ONESIDED VICTORIES MARKOPENING OF QUARTER-FINAL PUYIN INTRAMURAL CAGE TOURNAMENTTau Kappa Epsilon Defeats Phi Sigma Delta In Hard-- Fought Battle; Macs Run UpHigh Score in WinThis meet on Washington’s birth¬day will mark the first time that ameet has been held at Yost Fiefihous£ with the basketball floor stillin place. Because, of the reducedspace occasioned by the floor CoachFarrell has in past years foregoneearly meets. This has handicappedthe Wolverines in the indoor con¬ference meets because almost in¬variably they have gone into it with¬out any preliminary meets.'I'he last few contests, although lostby the Maroons, have not resembledrun-aways. It must be rememberedthat the Boilermakers with their greatMurphy and Harmeson were bested in the second half of the tilt. Since, al¬though Indiana and Illinois have beenable to pile up a five or six basketmargin, the games have been hardSought.Following is a table of the basketswhich the various members of Maroonteam have amassed in Big Ten con¬flicts:h'ish 15Stevenson 10Changnon 10Boesel 7Ashley 1Temple 1Fraider ] Four games of the Intramuralquarter-finals were played in Bart¬lett Gym last evening. As a wholethe contests were disappointing. TheTau Kappa Epsilon—Phi Sigma Del¬ta fray was a real contest but fraz¬zled out at-the end. The remainderwere relatively unexciting, thescores in every case being over¬whelmingly on one side. The T. K.E’s. Macs, Ponies, and Phi Pi Phiemerged victorious.Ponies 22; Delta Kappa Epsilon 4In a hotly contested scrimmagethe Ponies trotted away from D. K.E. with a wide margin on the score-board. Neither of the teams hittheir best stride until the last halfof the game. The floorwork of theteams was about evenly divided, al¬though the Ponies displayed their su¬periority in coordinatjibn and team¬work.Tau Kappa Epsilon 20; P. S. D. 15Playing an air-tight, heads-upgame Tau Kappa Epsilon and PhiSigma Delta fought to a 15-20 scorewith the heavy side for the T. K.E.’s. Mid-way through the contestPhi Sigma Delta held the advantagein a 11-10 count.The battle was rough in the latter half, fourteen personal fouls beingcalled throughout the contest. Som¬ers of the successful aggregationscored best with four field basketsand one from the penalty mark.Macs 37; Commons 12Fighting a game but up-hill bat¬tle all the way the Commons quin¬tet took its first defeat from thestrong hardwood aggregation of theMacs. Again the superior coordin¬ation of p team triumphed over ma¬terial which if organized properlywould produce an excellent.Phi Pi Phi 26; C. T. Seminary 6The Divines, although offering de¬termined opposition to the Phi Pinetsters, trailed far in the rear inscoring. After a scoreless first halfthe Theologians ‘came back’ to net6 points.FENCING TEAM TOMEET N. U. SQUADHaving trounced Ohio State in adual meet. Coach Merrill’s Varsityfencers will meet the Wildcat foilerstonight at Reynolds Clubhouse. Sofar the Chicago fencers have hadthings pretty much their own way.office riot. Much of the picture is nottheatrical; it is sheer realism and arealism of a kind that is painful tovast multitudes who sink down intothe comfortable seats of a palacio inorder to escape from the dullness oflife. “Hallelujah” does not escape thereality of life, even though its char¬acters are negroes.Tomorrow!What?-TTiat ImportantAnnouncement toProm Goers One-ounce Flocor.sin Coloured Galu-chot Boxes. PopularCo»y Odeurs.$3.75 to $5.50DOUBLE THE THRILL OF HOME-COMINGLES PARFUM5" YELIEVE it or not—nothing willso delight the mater as yourthoughtful gift of a CotyPerfume—exquisite butnot costly. Better Banking Servicefor StudentsCarry your allowance in a savings accountwith this strong National Bank, or to yourchecking account, if you prefer. Con¬veniently located near the university.Hyde Park-Kenwood National BankOF CHICAGO53rd Street and Lake Park AvenueA NATIONAL BANK FOR YOUR SAVINGS'BSOHPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 19, 1930BREAK GROUND FORNEW ADDITION TOBILLINGS HOSPITAL DISCOVER TRACESOF DISAPPEARINGMANDAN INDIANS(Continued from page 1)Hodgdon, architects for the great ■south side medical project of theUniversity, on which $6,000,000 has ialready been spent, call for 100 bedsin the McElwee and Hicks hospitals, iFeatures of the new structures will Ibe a large playroom under glass, anopen air playing space cn the roof,and a room for the latest therapyequipment. iPlans have been concluded whichwill make the new structures for ithe Home an intrinsic part of oneof the greatest children’s medicalcenters in the world. The work ofthe McElwee and Hicks hospitalswill be closely cooperative not onlywith that of the University clinicsproper but for the Bobs Robertshospital, the Country Home forConvalescent Children, the Chil¬dren’s Memorial hospital and theChicago Lying-in hospital, the latterthree of w'hich are also affiliatedwith the University. The home willserve as the clinical and teachingheadquarters of the University Med¬ical school, and will be a center ofresearch on corrective work for de¬formed children.The new buildings will be finishedby January 1, 1931.WHERE THE PROMDOLLAR GOES TO (Continued from page 1)North Dakota, they were the mostnorthern race to engage in agricul¬ture. Their corn ceremonies werevery impressive, and the upper-mostofficial was the corn priest, whosesole duty was to pray for rain, goodcrops, and to direct the ceremonies.The most important finds werethe flint mines from which the Man-dans got their flint for arrows. Manybones, a few skulls, and potterywere also found. The scarcity of theskulls is due to the fact that all theheads were removed from the bodies•and buried only a few feet belowthe ground.The Mandans are believed to havebeen the first tribe in the plains be¬cause their language is understoodby no other tribe; they have manyearth ruins and mounds, built insnake or turtle effigies; they start¬ed a trade with the Columbia rivertribes; they selected the choicestspot for their habitation, one whichwas good for agriculture, and whichwas abundant in game in the winter.Next summer, Mr. Bower will re¬turn with six Beloit students to re¬cord the life story of the last in lineof the corn priests, and to recon¬struct as much as possible of theirculture from the story of the sur¬vivors of the race.(Continued from page 1)promises, for it has a gold motif andwill contain pictures and descriptivematter about the leaders and thedance. The cover design is by Rob¬ert Bruce. BREATH OF SPRING!PHOENIX BLOWS INWHITTAKER WINSPOSTER CONTEST(Continued from page 1)riet Ann Trinkle, Maureen Tesdell.James Scheibler, Edward Schwartzand Lillian Schlesinger. Their pos¬ters are on exhibit today in theMandel hall cloister. (Continued from page 11ed. There is more about the Mirrora preview dramatic criticism, by an¬other local story-teller; an “Exposeof What Critics Think, and WillThink of the Mirror Show." A fullpage exchange with the Yale Recordcompletes, with the added quota of“he and she” jokes, this month’s re¬pertoire offered by the Old Bird. BRAIN ACTIVITIESELECTRIC—JACOBSON(Continued from page 1)to bridge the gap between physicsand psychology,” said Dr. Jacobson.“Attempts to measure mental activ¬ity at the moment it occurs are new.The work here, however, has notbeen in any sense to measure ideas,but only to answ^er the basic ques¬tion as to whether there is anybodily concomitant to thinking.”It was necessary to insulate thewalls heavily and change the light¬ing system in Dr. Jacobson’s labora¬tory, that the delicate apparatusmight not be disturbed. Completerelaxation is required of the sub¬jects, whose mental activity is meas¬ured in terms of electricity, and aphotographic plate records the vibra¬tions. One subject was able to seeand hear herself think by watchingthe dancing silhouette and by list¬ening through a stethoscope connect-ted with the amplifier. She becameso excited that she lost the requiredrelaxation, and thus ended the ex¬periment.“This is the first step,” said Pro¬fessor Anton J. Carlson, head ofthe department of physiology, “onthe long road toward determiningthe sensory and motor componentsin so-called mental processes. Atpresent we do not see a clearway toward making the experimentsentirely objective. That is, apartfrom the electrical and physical rec¬ords of what goes on in the armduring the imagination of move¬ment, we cannot measure what goeson in the brain when the signal tostart imagining is given.”PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERASSETSCajjhAccounts R«eivable DAILY MAROON 1929-1930Balance SheetDecember 31. 1929 SYMPHONY GIVESCONCERT BY STAIDMUSIC MAESTROS(Continued from page 1)In other words the lighter andlesser compositions of AlexanderGlazunoff have been repeated to sat¬iety by the Chicago Sympflony or¬chestra and the larger works haveremained untouched.Why this should be it is difficultto explain. Glazunoff occupies a lit¬tle niche of his own in the history ofRussian music. He was a pupil ofRinisky-Korsakoff in the palmy daysof the Russian nationalist school. Be¬fore he was twenty he was a skilledworkman, and part of his enormousskill went to the repairing and over¬hauling and general fixing of worksof composers more celebrated thanhe who would not or could not bringtheir own creations to completion.One might logically expect him tocontinue in the great Russian tradi¬tion. Instead he was the first tobreak with it. Without fuss or man¬ifesto he kicked over the traces ofRussian nationalism and pursuedTeutonic gods, particularly Brahms.The sixth sympnony of Glazunoffwhich Mr. DeLamarter played yes¬terday is not Glazunoff at his best, ifMontagu-Nathan is to be believed.Its prime fault, in the ear of onelistener, is its lack of anything ap¬proaching style. It contains prac¬tically nothing you can put your fin¬ger on and say, “This is Glazunoff.”Parts of the work might be Brahms,parts might be Tschaikowsky, butthe whole is nobody. Nonethelessit is an infinitely finer work than theformless hashes of Miaskowskywhich we have heard so often at Or¬chestra hall and have been given atMandel as well.The Holst work, the Oriental suiteentitled “Peni Mora,” occupies arather anomalous position among this English composer’s works. Inthe first place its title is a mystery,at least to one who tried to find outwhat it means. The suite was writ¬ten after a trip to Algeria but al¬though I once spent six solid hoursin the New York public library stud¬ying maps, gazeteers, encyclopedias,Baedekers and miscellaneous guidebooks I failed to discover who orwhy or where or what the words“Beni Mora” might mean. I am toldit is the name of a district of thecity of Algiers.Gustav Holst started life with theintention of becoming a piano vir¬tuoso. During his student days aslowly developing paralysis killedhis pianistic ambitions and Holsttook to composition. The great bulkof his music shows a man who hashad to face trouble and work out ofit as best he could. The works are'either gloomy and harsh or mystical, i“Beni Mora” is an exception. It is ja savage work, reflecting a land !where Arab, Negro, Jew, Turk, and IChristian mingle in a hell-broth civi¬lization under the desert sun. Yet its savagery is beautifully temperedby musicianship; it is essentially inthe small orchestra v^ih.Incidentally this performance ofMr. DeLamarter’s was the best inter¬pretation of some four or five thiswriter has heard.The Strauss work which closed theprogram was the familiar rondo“Till Eulenspiegel.”CLASSIFIED ADSGERMAN university graduatewants to teach German. Ralph Gutt-niann care Steifel, 6132 Vernon Ave.FOR SALE— 1929 DeSoto con¬vertible roadster, rumble seat. $395.Originally $1050. Cash or terms.5623 Dorchester Ave. Fairfax 8467.OffkyiMtPbATEBNITTPIPES &CD81 N. State St.. Chicago‘•THERE IS A NEWPOLICY COMINGTO THESOUTHMOORCirculation 4II6..S..Display Advertising . 1,301.51Classified Advertising . 19.80Total . 1.728.16Less reserve for bad accounts 236.81Total .LIABILITIESAccounts PayableClarke-McElroy Publishintr Co. .University of Chicago, .Auditinii FeeTotalE-stimated Surplus l,491.3.i7 52.-5025.00 1,804.81$1,027.31INCOME FMwin Levin, EditorEarle Stocker, Business ManagerDAILY .MAROON 1929-1939Statement of Income and Exp^mdituresSeptember 26 to December 31. 1929Circulation •Advertising . $ 602.50 S 406.85 $1,009.35Display 3,448.65 1,.301.51 4.750.16Classified 63.21 19.80 83.01University of Chicago SubsidyW. A. A. Electroptyping (See refund(Unaccounted for 4,114.36 1.728.16 5.842.52250.0021.70.34Total ' 6.114.56 TOURISTThird CabinTheThriftyWay*tUROPEEXPENDITURESGeneral AdministrationTuitions and salariesProprietorship remittanceCommissions (on Church Directory iDiscountsStationery, forms, etc.Rental of tyjjewritersPostageSupplies and expenseTelephoneMoving furnitureDesk lamp .■Auditing Fee (not paid)Refund to W. .A. A.Operating ExpensePrinting (Unpaid $752.50)ElectrotypingCuts .Departmental ExpenseEditorialAdvertisingCirculationSports 4kSocial ExpensePrinceton trip (E. Stocker)Illinois trip (E. Levin)Football tickets (to advertisers)Flowers and gifts (to advertisers)Christmas cardsBanquetLess receipts oP980.00110.007.6011.6289.8175.0057.7746.64.18.8714.477.0025.0021.702,752.50129.3777.99 1463.182959.88.73.5059.50Pins 18.6.3157.2914.1436.6240.0040.0041.5018.0011.1714.0033.75 198.42TotalNet IncomeNet IncomeLess reserve for bad accounts;Circulation25% of amount outstandingDisplay advertising10% of amount outstandingClassified advertising26% of amount outstanding 4,850.441,264.121,264.12101 71130.154.96Total 236.81Eatimated Profit 1,027.31 OF course you want to seeEurope, and of courseyou want to do it as inexpen¬sively as possible, and yet com¬fortably. That suggests ourTourist Third Cabin... fairlymade to order for the collegecrowd. For as little as 3f‘ a mile,you can cross on such famousliners as the Aiajest/c (world'slargest ship); Belgenland(gratworld cruiser), and manyothers including—Tourist Ships de iuxeS. S. Penntantiand 5. S. 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