SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON Wht Paflp JRaroon Today** Weather:Fair with rising tem¬perature.Vol. 30. No. 35. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 1930 Price Five Cent*NAME LEADERS,SET DATE FORMILITARY BALLPick Madison, Watrous,Lowenthal, andWeaverKathefrine Madjifion and 'GordonWatrous will lead the right wing ofthe annual Military ball, whileJanet Lowenthal and Charles Weav¬er will head the left wing, it wasannounced yesterday. The date ofthe ball, the outstanding social func¬tion of the spring quarter, has beenset as April 25.All four leaders have bet* prom¬inent in undergraduate activities.Katherine Madison is the presentsecretary of the Undergraduate coun¬cil, a member of the honor commis¬sion, and a member of Sigma.Janet Lowenthal was one of thesupporting cast in the cuArent Mir¬ror show, and is active in the Dra¬matic association.Watrous R. O. T. C. HeadGordo’’! Watrous is cadet majorof the R. O- T. C. unit, president ofCrossed Cannon, military honor so¬ciety, and captain of the Universitypolo team. Charles Weaver ha.s wonhis major “C” in both football andtrack. He is a cadet tirst lieutenant.R. O. T. C. APPOINTEESEffective March 6, the followingappointments have been made bythe department of military scienceand tactics.Cadet Major, Gordon G. Watrous.Cadet Captains. P. S. Campbell,G. F. James, G. Keyser, A. C.O’Meara.First LieutenantsCadet first lieutenants: A. J.Stawarz, N. Veatch, R. B. Lewy, T.Thorsen, C. A. Weaver, L. Levine,R. M. Licht, R. E. Driscoll, A. T.Gardner, O. T. Henkle, R. Bush, S. E. jSacerdote, J. M. Hutchinson, W. H.Hutchinson, W. H. Elliott, A. Danov-sky, H. Van Schaick.Second lieutenants: W. J. Urban,K. C. Hill, T. H. Slusser, W. Her-trais, H. Auspitz, H. Boesel, R. C.Colwell, T. F. Hornaday, J. L.Hough, Chas. G. Kaiser, R. Reid, F. jB. Pietrowicz, L. D. Lloyd, E. E. ^Busse, W. F. Burgess, R. D. Vane, jH. Wald, Mark Goldetine, U B. jErickson, V. D. Hoffman, V. T.Rankin, R. S. Hinds, K. I. Parsons,C. E. Combs, G, W. Spencer, E. J.Fagan, R. T. Garen, R. B. Shapiro,R. L. Witty.These appointments, made by or¬der of Major T. J. J. Christian, su¬persede all previous orders. INTRAMURAL CARNIVAL PRESENTSKALEIDOSCDPE OF VAUDEVILLE,MUSIC, AND ATHLETICS TONIGHTKrausemeyer’s Band1-M Publicity HoaxWhen Professor Krausemeyergoosesteps himself and his authen¬tically German band across thegala colored floor of BartlettGymnasium tonight at 7:30 inhonor of the Intramural Carni¬val, he will both give the audiencea thrill at seeing the swellest un¬iforms South State street costum¬ers can furnish, and bring to aclimax one of the biggest at¬tempts at hoaxing the campus.Five members of the Univers¬ity band agreed to impersonatethe worthy professor’s band andbegan two weeks ago to preparean elaborate program a la theGerman concerts given in the oldtime saloons. According to themanagers, the members conhnethemselves to portraying theplayers in a musical way only.Conclusion: the band is NOTgenuinely German.WOMEN SELECTFEDERATION TRIOAbells, Friedeman, andStinnett Win(Magnifying Glasses Furnished on Request) Ruth Abells, Sylvia Friedeman andAlice Stinnelt were 'Chosen by thevote of all University women as thethree junior members of Federationof University Women’s council at anall day election in Ida Noyes hallyesterday. They will serve on theI council with Frances Blodgett, Dor¬othy Cahill, Lucia Downing, RuthEarnshaw, Katherine Madison,Charlotte Saeman, and CatherineScott, who are already members ofthe council.SEEK UNIVERSITY 5emmao’F/ayers jCAGERS CLOSERADIO STENTOR Conclude Season BIG TEN SEASONMonday Night Both the new members of thecouncil, and the old will meet to¬day at 3:30, in the Alumnae roomof Ida Noyes hall to elect the chair- j from 10:00 to 12:00' Fraternities and Clubsj Display Talents in^ Bartlett GymBy Melvin HardiesThe most kaleidoscopic event ofI the year, the Intramural Carnival,I presents its varied entertainments toj the campus tonight at 7:30 in Bart-I lett Gymnasim. A program that isj hailed to surpass the best efforts ofI Barnum himself assures ^le pleas-I ure-seeking, whatever their prefer-I ences, of a big time. Vaudeville,boxing, wrestling, track events, anddancing, have been compiled into aschedule that is guaranteed to pleaseanybody and everybody. No possiblefeatures of interest have been over¬looked, neither time, labor, nor ex¬pense have been spared to make theevent the best thing ever presentedby the department. The fraternitiesand women’s clubs have co-operatedsplendidly, according to Adolph Ru-binson, general manager of the car¬nival, not only in the entries theyhave made and the stunts they havesubmitted but in the general attitudeof interest they have shown.Vaudeville ActsThree clubs. Sigma, Deltho, andChi Rho Sigma and three fratern¬ities, Delta Sigma Phi, Phi DeltaTheta and Phi Sigma Delta are sched¬uled to display their talents in vau¬deville acts.Eight clubs have submitted teamsto represent them in the annualclub relay, last year won by Quad-rangler in a close finish. Consider¬able interest has been aroused in theevent and the competition is ex¬pected to be very keen. In the reg-lar track events and the wrestlingand boxing contests the quality ofthe entrants was above that of anyprevious year, giving assurance ofexciting battles.Three Music MakersThree different organizations havebeen engaged to supply the custom¬ers with musical renditions and withthe necessary rhythm for the dance.PROFS. TELL WHICHFICTION HEROINESTHEY WOULD DATEDean Chauncey Boucher across asmall table from Becky Sharp, en¬grossed in her vivaciousness; JamesWeber Linn, enjoying filet mignonw’ith the companionship of ElizabethBennett; Lennox Grey conversingwith Antonia over a checked tablecloth, are contrasting and reveal¬ing points of individual taste in “dat¬ing,” brougllt out when eight facultymen were approached with the qurt y,“What woman of fiction would youlike most to take to dinner?”Dean Charles W. Gilkey didn’t con¬fine himself to one, saying, "The brun¬ette who gets left is in my observa¬tion a woman of fiction—but I shouldcertainly enjoy taking her out.”Shakespere’s Rosalind would beFred B. Millet’s choice, because hefeels she is the best conversational¬ist he knows among the women offiction. His modern preference wouldbe Rebecca West’s Harriet Hume,for she is ’'the personification offeminine intuition.”T. V. Smith would put in a bid(Continued on page 4) | C. B. S. Offers Job toCampus CandidateUniversity Stentors may find anopportunity to spread the goldenw'ord if the present plans of the Con¬solidated Broadcasting System ofAmerica are .successful. This organization is looking for an out¬standing radio announcer and hassent word to the University that per¬haps there is such an individual inthe student body.If this hypothetical person can befound who possesses the type ofvoice that will appeal to radio list¬eners, he will be provided with profi¬table employment which will not in-(Continued on page 2)McConnell Is ChapelSpeaker on SundayBishop Francis J. McConnell ofNew York, author, social reformleader, and official head of the or¬ganized Protestant churches inAmerica, will speak Sunday at theservice in the University Chapel.Bishop McConnell will be on campusall week and will hold daily officehours from 3 to 4 in the Chapel forall students.Tuesday night, at the Methodiststudent dinner to be held in IdaNoyes hall. Bishop McConnell willmake his only informal appearancebefore a University audience. Tic¬kets for this affair are on sale forone dollar at the University book¬store, Ida Noyes hall, and the Rey¬nolds club. “The Neighbors,” Zona Gale’sone-act comedy of rural life, will bethe concluding presentation of theSeminary players, under the direc¬tion of Dr. Fred Eastman, Monday,at 8 in Graham Taylor hall. No ad¬mission will be charged.“The Neighbrs” is one of the bestknown work.s of Zona (ialc. and is adescription of life In a typicalAmerican village. The play has ele¬ments of both humor and pathos.The Seminary players have offer¬ed a wide variety of plays during ;the past months, ranging from bibli- jcal drama to an imaginative glimpse !of the future. “The Neighbors” is Ithe last in a series of religious !dramas. ITwo of the offerings of the Sem- jinary players have had the distinc¬tion of being first production. “TheDeathless World,” by J. M. S. Tomp¬kins, an English prize winningdrama of the twenty-first century,had never been offered by an ama¬teur group due to difficulties of in¬terpretation and production. The(Continued on page 2) Journey to Lafayette toBattle PurdueBy Walter BakerCoach Nels Norgren’s Maroon fivewill travel to Lafayette tomorrow toclose the season in a tilt againstWard Lambert’s championship Pur¬due team. Of course the Boilermak¬ers are top-heavy favorites to swampthe Chicago aggregation but with thelocal team having the scalps of Wis¬consin and Illinois carefully storedaway, almost anything can happen,even a win over the champs.Chicago Turn* MagicianIf the Maroons had played thetype of basketball earlier in the sea¬son that they displayed In the Illi¬nois fracas, the team standings(Continued on page 2) . man of Federation of UniversityWomen. She will be chosen fromamong the juniors composing thecouncil.Miss Abells is a member of thesecond cabinet of Y. W. C. A. andworked on Mirror publicity. MissFriedeman, Quadrangler, is a soph¬omore member at large of the Boardof Women’s Organizations, Is a mem¬ber of Mirror, and wa.s ti'fasurer ofthe Freshman Women’s ClAb. MissStinnett, Phi Beta Delta, is a mem¬ber of Mirror and the Dramatic as¬sociation. All were active in Federa¬tion during freshman week. The first will be furnished by theUniversity band and Krausmeyer’sConcert Band, a new find in the mu¬sical world, and the latter by JerryConley and her Shoreland Hotelorchestra.Favors will be distributed tothose attending. Their nature hasbeen kept secret but the departmentpromises that they will be attractive.The elaborate decorative scheme hasnot been disclosed either but estim¬ating from the amount of workthose in charge have spent on it,it ought to be unusally clever.(Continued on page 4)Four Clubs and Five Fraternities BidFormal Season Adieu in Full DressA SHY NATATORMrs. Robert Maynard Hutchinswent swimming yesterday In the IdaNoyes pool at open-hour In a charm¬ing grey suit and blue cap. She saton a bench most of the time, laugh¬ing at the struggles of four girlstrying to ride in buckets. Finallyshe dove in, swam the length usingthe crawl stroke and left. Placement Bureau OffersSummer Camp WorkThe Board of Vocational Guid¬ance and Placement has openingsfor men experienced in summercamp work. They are especially in¬terested in finding an expert handi¬craft man to teach leather working,wood working, weaving, and otherwork in this line.Positions are also open for se¬nior internes wishing to becomecamp doctors, experienced swim¬mers, preferably senior red crosslife savers, and for camp counselors.Anyone interested should get intouch with Mr. Kennan at the Boardof Vocational Guidance and place¬ment immediately. Campus formals will receive anairing again this week-end, as clubsand fraternities vie for notice in thesocial field — offering everythingfrom stable parties to dinner dancesas post-Intramural entertainment.The woman of it seems to inclineto formality, as four clubs announcetheir dinner dances. The Esotericswill frolic in costume tonight at theCastillian Grill in the Shorelandhotel, where demure crinoline girlsand pirates, Turkish dancers andEves will dine side by side. MortarBoard will also dine and dance to¬night, when they hold their winterparty at 900 N. Michigan Avenue.Clubs again do their bit tomorrownight, Eis Phi Delta Upsilon dancesat the home of its president, IreneHeinick, and Udlta Sigma dines atHie South Shore Country club.Kappa Nu will lead the masculinetonight when its guests come direct from the carnival to thefrateimal fireside. Tomorrow nightthe Graduate club of PKi Beta Deltawill hold its fifth annual formaldance at the Windermere East.Graduate representatives from Wash¬ington university, Indiana, Michigan,Ohio State, and the MassachusettsInstitute of Technology will attend.Sigma Chi house will present a viv¬id contrast, when formally attiredguests are ushered into a stable,where the Society Syncopators en¬courage festivities in the “bizarre”atmosphere. Chi Psi will entertaininformally to the music of WayneKing’s orchestra, and Tau KappaEpsilon will round out the day’s fes¬tivities when their Mothers’ clubsponsors a card party.Ida Noyes hall claims attentionSunday when the Graduates, Fel¬lows and Faculty of the Medicalschool are entertained at an openhouse from 4 to 6:80.I1Page Two THE DAILY MARCX)N, FRIDAY, MARCH 7, . 1930iatlg iUarnnnFOUNDBD IN IMlTHE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublish«d morningB, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Automn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. 6831 University Ave. Sub¬scription rates |3.00 per year; by mail, $1.50 per year extra. Single copies. 5 cents each.Entered as second class matter March 18. 1903, at the poet office at Chicago,illiaois, 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 EditoraiRLE M. STOCKER, Business ManagerROBERT L. NICHOLSON, Assistant Business ManagerHARRIET DEAN HATHAWAY, Woman’s EditorHENRY D. FISHER, Sports EditorEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTEDWARD G. BASTIAN _.News EditorEDGAR GREENWALD _..News EditorJOHN H. HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL Junior EditorMARION E WHITE Junior EditorWILLIAM R. HARSHE Whistle EditortUDNEY GOLDBERG - Day EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF....Day EMitorMARGARET EGAN Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTabb blinded Advertisiiig ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL ...Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH-.- Circulation ManagerGEORGE GRIEWANK ..Circulation Asswt.ROBERT McCarthy ...Sophomore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH _.8ophomore AsstSPORTS DBPARTME»ITALBERT ARKULES Asst Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EditorMARJORIE TOLMANWoman’s Sports EditorTHE DAILY MAROON PLATFORMEncouragement of student participation in undergraduate campus actizities.Promotion of student interest in lectures, concerts, exhibits and othercultural opportunities.Abolition of grading systm and extension of research principles.Cessation of extensive building program.Adoption of a plan for supervised, regulated rushing.‘JUST AROUND THE CORNER*Enuring the autumn quarter, four of the twenty-nine fraternitiesat the University had accounts outstanding to tradesmen totalingmore than $500. Together, the twenty-nine chapters owed some¬thing more than ten thousand dollars. Only three were out of thered.”The fraternity situation at the University is unique. Located,as it is. in heart of a great city, it draws more than half of its stu¬dents from those living in and around Chicago. The small numberof out-of-town men entering school each year are divided fairlyevenly among the several chapters; in few fraternities do as manyas half the men live in the house.In the last analysis, men living in the house are the source offraternity revenue. One of the principles at the foundation of thefraternity system is that of providing for its members good food andgood lodging at the lowest possible price. To a man who lives athome, a Greek-letter society has little to offer more than a certainmeasure of prestige, a circle of friends, and a handsome badge.Yet, at the University, more than half of the fraternity menlive at home. Three courses are open to chaptters: they may levylarge taxes on the out-of-house men; they may maintain large chap¬ters, so that there are men enough dependent on them for bread andboard to enable them to meet expenses; or they may run into debt.This last procedure seems to have been followed by twenty-six ofthe twenty-nine.More than heretofore, the next decade will be a period of trialfor the chapters now existing at the University. It cannot be doubt¬ed that only a few of the fittest will survive. With the realizationof the dream of the school across the Midway, and the consumma¬tion of the four-million-dollar dormitory project, the difficulties ofgraduate social fraternities will be multiplied a hundredfold. Itis a moot question whether a student in the new University willprefer comfortable quarters at a reasonable price in the new men’sdormitories to the often less comfortable and more expensive ac¬commodations which fr&ternities have to offer.Faced with this situation, fraternity men maintain a complac¬ency which is amazing. They are, it seems, little concerned aboutthe future of their own chapter, regardless of the dire possibilities.Despite this smug complacency on the part of those who are mostconi-.erned, a sweeping change is inevitable.Fraternities must stand or fall on their merits alone. If theyreally have something to offer th'e undergraduate—something def¬inite and uncontestable which cannot be obtainable elsewhere, thenthey will remain, and then only. For the present, affairs will movealong much as they have in the past.If freshmen are required to live in the new dormitories, thistoo will have a profound effect on the fraternity system; it will re¬duce by one-fourth the number of men available to meet fraternitybills. When deferred rushing is adopted, at some time in the indef¬inite future, the practice of sweeping off his feet the man who doubtsthat he really desires to join a fraternity will also be discarded.When he becomes eligible for pledging, he will view the fraternitiespropositioning him with a fishy eye totally unclouded by prejudice.Still, the fraternity men ndio are worried are scarce. AH seem'happy in their conviction that change is distsmt indeed. "After ua,-the deluge,”—L N. R Official NoticesFriday, March 7Radio lecture: “American Litera¬ture since 1890,” Professor PercyBoynton of the English department,8:20 a. m., WMAQ.University chapel service. DeanGilkey, 12, University chapel.Public lecture (Downtown): “Pom¬peii,” Gordon J. Laing, dean of theGraduate Schools of Art and Liter¬ature, 6:45, Art Institute.S'xth Annual Intramural Wintercarnival and dance, 7:30, Bartlettg;ymnasium.Saturday, March 8Meeting of University RulingBodie.'.- Faculty and Conference otthe Divinity school, 9, Swift 101.Board of .Admissions, 9, Cobb 104.Executive Board of the GraduateFaculty, 10, Cobb 115. Graduate Fac¬ulty, 11, Cobb 110.Radio lectures: “Elementary Ger¬man,” Mr. William Kurath of the Ro¬mance Languages department, 11:33,Station WM.AQ.Dames club: “The Contemporary.American Stage,” .Assistant ProfessorFred Millet of the English depart¬ment, 3, Ida Noyes hall. SEEK UNIVERSITYRADIO ANNOUNCER(Continued from page 1)terf^re with his scholastic effort.The man selected will be chosensolely upon his merit, by a board ofcritics made up of the radio editorsof Chicago papers. The men whowill form the committee are Evans iPlummer, Herald and Examiner; Wil¬liam Clark, Evening American; YorkTaylor, Daily Times; Charles Gil-chrest. Daily News, and the fifthmember will be Hugh Rager, Com¬mercial Manager of The Consolidat¬ed Broadcasting system.The man selected may not neces¬sarily be a student of public speak¬ing or dramatics. He may be oneof the most obscure people on cam¬pus, since the competition is opento everyone. Anyone may receive anaudition, prior to the flnal hearing,at the studios of the company, t^llentries must be made not later thanMarch 22.CAGERS CLOSEBIG TEN SEASON(Continued from page 1)SEMINARY PLAYERSCONCLUDE SEASONMONDAY NIGHT(Continued from page 1) might have been somew^hat different.In the 35 to 22 victory over theOrange and Blue rdptesentation theNorgrenites functioned like a firstclass group. The visitors were ac¬tually outplayed and outmastered inevery department of the game. Chi¬cago intends to prove in the finalBoilermaker game that their come¬back w'as not a flash in tb^pan.Boesel Dependable at Canter.After a lot of slipshod playingduring the first half of the year, theother first production was Dr. East¬man’s own tljree-act play, “The Tin¬kers,? a dmina of modern life builtarouil4 tl)4(|^haracter of a presentday St rf|M is. Another productionduring* tha Ipason was Mary P. Ham¬lins’ liiMieal drama, “He Came See¬ing.” CINEMAChicago Ave., Just East of MichiganThe Art Theatre of Shadow ScienceDRAMA OF NEW RUSSIA“VILLAGE OF SIN”PAfRONIZE THE DAILYZ4MAROON ADVERTISERi STARRING THE MOSCOW ARTPLAYERSMae Tinee: “It w pietorially fascinatinK.”Rob Reel: “Breathtakinitly exquisite.”Fanny Batcher Rerfewinc “The CrystalIckic” hy K. Keith <Adler)Continued 1 P. M..-11 P. M.Matinee 50c - Evening 7Sc Maroon center Harold Boesel has de¬veloped into a really dependable cen¬ter. It is unfortunate that the lan¬ky cage player didn’t get rid of hiscase of floor-consciousness earlierin the schedule. Tarwain, the Illi-ni pivot man, was pratically uselessin the Chicago g;ame because of thestellar defense work of Boesel.- Butin the coming clash with the winnersof the bunting, the Chicago athlete^11 have a huge task cut out forhim, that of stopping the man whois after first honors in the Con¬ference individal scoring race, Mr.Slim Murphy.Marshall Fish, the guard with theshooting eye of a forward, ran wildand sank a number of difficult longshots that spelt defeat for tbe Cham-paign cagers. The red-headed de¬fense man is one of the mainstaysof the team. Fish is the high scor¬er on the Maroon team. The rest of of Stephenson and Captain Chang-non at the forward posts and Ash¬ley at the guard position. The Ma¬roons have done a great deal ofdamage already as the Badgers andmini will aver. To mar the perfectrecord of the Conference champswould be a fitting climax to thedestructive work of the Chicagoteam.KENWOOD TEAROOMEvening Dinner 65c4:30 to 8:00Luncheon 40c11 to 2:00Sunday Dinner 90c12 to 8:006220 Kenwood Ave.MIDway 2774Look for the I ’cnetian StarstudioteashopBETWEEN KENWnon AND DORCHESTER 1369 E. 67th ST. Published Today!SEVEN WOODSA Novel byEldith Rickertof the English departmentMiss Rickert has written several thingsof note, both for children and for adults.This new hook is a story of England.You will want to own a copy.The Great MeadowbyElizabeth Maddox Robertsa U. of C. alumnawas published last week.Unusually fine reviews are appearing.Both of these are now on saleat theU. of C. Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.4 H ^ ^ *4mI bm ®o nrHlttaSt. Paul’s Church50th and Dorchcatci ’Pariah Office: 4945 Dorcheatcr Avenoar Tel. Oakland 3185REV. GEORGE H. THOMASREV, OTIS C. JACKSON1 'V Sunday Services:((Holy Communion, 8:00 A. M.Church School Service, 9:30 A. M.Morning Service, 11:00 A. M.Evening Service, 5 P. M.Young Peoples’ Society, 6 P. M. Chicago EthicalSocietyA non-sectarian, religious societyto foster the knowledge, love andpractice of the right.THE STUDEBAKER THEATRE418 S. Michigan AvenueSUNDAY, MARCH 911 A. M.Dr. Horace J. Bridgetwill speak onStart and Soula:The Newest RevelationsAll scats free. Visitors cordiallywelcome. Hyde Park BaptitlChurch5600 Woodlawa Ave.Norris L. TibbettsRoUand W. SchloerbMinisters11:00 A. M.—“Religion and Con¬versation,” R. W. Schloerb.7:00 p. m.—Discussion groups.8:00 p. m.—“Religious Experi¬ences that Brought Pleasureto Young People.”9:00 p. m.—Social Hour. Th« Church ofThe Redeemer(EPISCOPAL)19th and Blaekat.aaRev. E. S. WhiteUniversity Student Pastor*Rev. W. S. HorstickAssistantSUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion, 8:00 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon,11:00 A. M.Choral Evensong and Sermon,7:30 P. M.Three services every week-day.Church open every day for prayerand meditation.UNIVERSITY CHURCH OF DISCIPLESOF CHRIST57th and UniversityMinister: Edward Scribner AmesDirector of Music and Education, Basil F. WiseSUNDAY, MARCH 7Sermon; ’’Dreams and Visions.”Wranglers at 5:30—-Mr. Dan Norman will speak on "Story-Telling.” THE R^ BRICK CHURCHForty-Sixth and Woodlawn Avenue(New Church, Swedenborgian)PERCY BILLINC^, PastorA bright, helpful service every Sunday morning at 11:15,with an interesting, practical talk and a hearty welcome.Sunday, March 9: **The Passing of the Curse.*’Tune in Sunday. WMAQ, 12:45 to 1:00, and hear a goodtalk.THE DAILY MARCX>N, FRIDAY, MARCH 7. 1930 Page. Three■ i" I '■^ 541 it Between the Twoof UsByAHMrt ArkvU*an4William Hartuv mtiWaropnNote: Ruth Ziev is again propri¬etor of the column for the day. Herarticles on Mirror last Friday pos-seched such a sparkling grace thata return engagement was inevitable.If this keeps up, the two of us mayhave to take Ruth in as a silent part¬ner. -A. A. MAROON TRACKMENGO TO MINNESOTAFOR BIG TEN MEETIN DEFENSE OF AFFECTATIONBy Ruth ZievWith the spray of scientific inquirywe have disinfected the germs ofgods and devils and ghosts and as¬trology and romance and Fate thatonce crawled excitingly through thesocial organism. Reluctantly, I grantthe claims of enlightenment. Nodoubt crusades and funeral pyres andwitch-burnings are less spectacularthan they are dangerous.But why, I lament, must we houndout the last pleasantly innocuous lit¬tle germ from the blood stream ofcivilization? The animated little germ,the unexpected little germ, the color¬ful little germ, the grand little germ ofaffectation?Please let’s not.Because all of the charming peo¬ple in the world arc affected. Skil¬fully affected, of course, but affectednevertheless. Tall slim girls whotake mental notes on the savoir faireof Lynne Fontanne are delightful andshort freckled girls who do the samething arc impossible, because the for¬mer affects wisely and the latter af¬fects foolishly. This is no argumentagainst the pose, only a plea for care¬ful selection of it.Consider history. Is it in yourmind a^ systematic chronology ofevents, or a kaleidoscope of sublimeand ridieflious gestures?Did Sir Walter Raleigh really careif Her Majesty the -Queen soiled herslippers? Beau geste!Did'Salome take any sincere Inter¬est in I the unhandsome head of Johnthe Baptist? Theatricalism!Did Francois Villon honestly enjoyall that wine? Merely a pose?Did Gabriele d’Annunzio do the nat¬ural thing by holding a funeral forhis goldfish? Grotesquerie! -None of these things were eithersignificant nor normal. But you re¬member them. They are marchingsongs to relieve the laliorious treadof cause-and-effect centuries. Theyare the nuts and raisins in the factualingredients. Grandeur In history,drama in the theatre, imagination inpoetry, arc approving terms for theanathema hurled at the people weknow.; So why he Inconsistent?There may he potential OscarWildes and Isadora Duncans, Raspu¬tins and Machiavellis and Catherinede Medicis scattered among us. Weneed them. Shall we be guilty of mur¬dering the artistic creation or person¬alities by that most unfeeling of allremarks:* nice person, but so af¬fected!”.\nyway, why not? There’s nothingparticularly natural about wearingbows at your neck or snake skin onyour feet. So why not, if you un¬derstand how it’s done, keep a cucka-too or quote “Song of Songs” atbreakfast or order a baked sweet po¬tato after a party or do your hair incurls or play jokes?For while it may be true that “per¬fectly natural” people are kind andhonest, it’s also true that God wasyawning when he made them. Be¬ware of that deadly day when theurge to dramatize and emphasize andgestVfize is killed—when, in otherwords, everyone is “perfectly natural"—for it will mark the doomsday inwhich all men are- merely bread-win¬ners, all women are merely bread-slicers, and all conversation is merely“I’ass the salt.”Not even please. ^ Merriam’s Men Have SlimChance of Winningthe MeetCoach Merriam’s Maroon trackteam left this morning for Minneapo¬lis where the prelims of the Big TenConference Indoor track champion¬ships will be held tonight and the fi¬nals on Saturday night. Judged frompast performances the Maroons haveonly an outside chance to cop thechampionship. They lost in the Quad¬rangular, Iiarely defeated Michiganand then succumbed to the Indianateam. The record for the Chicago ag¬gregation is not very bright; never¬theless the personnel of the team con¬tains a number of stellar trackmenwho are likely to break Into the scor¬ing column. If these men comethrough not even the highly toutedWisconsin team nor tlie Iowa champsnor Ohio State nor Illinois will havea show.Root, East In DashesIn the dashes both Chicago menetitered are capable of placing or atleast have a good chance or finish¬ing well up in the run. Captain Rootalthough slow in rounding into formis one of the ranking sprinters inthe Conference and Bud East must beregarded as a serious contender forthe crown because of hts victory overthe Michigan runner Eddie Tolan.Only one athlete will representChicago in the hurdles, Harold Hay-don who was undefeated in his fav¬orite event last year until late in theseason. Haydon holds the record forthe 70 yard highs and he intends todefend the crown against all comers.Only one man has defeated him thisyear and that was Hatfield of Indianathe meet in which all the Maroon menperformed far beliow their ability.Schulz and Colville will wear theMaroon colors in the 440. The form¬er has been defeated a number oftimes this year and has little chanceof placing in the quarter mile eventunless he snaps out of it and runsthe way he did last year. The latteris a sophomore who has been devel¬oping rapidly but lacks the experienceneeded to garner points In the Con¬ference meet.Letts Should Place HighLetts and Brainard are a fast setof half milers who will add to theChicago total. Dale will get his stif-fest competition from Orval Martin,the Boilermaker flash and Strothers(Continued on page 4)CRACK! CRACK!Another Record Broken—ORGAN PROGRAMToday’s organ recital will includeBach’s "Toccata and Fugae in D-Minor”; the “.(^antabile” by Franck;Harvey Gaul’s “Dj^erreotype- of anOld Mother”; BfaKm's “O World, IE’en .Must Leave Thee”; and the“Scherzo from Sonata V” by Gull-mant. ^ l*orter Heaps will play at-S. EVEIN when you knockoff a couple of yourhost’s expensive records,you can still whistle gaylyin the face of disaster know¬ing that you can replaceany record he owns atLyon & Healy’s. . . Alllatest record releases byVictor, Columbia andBrunswick. Musical master-^pieces in album sets.Stop in Lyon & HeoJy’s to¬night and hear your favorites.Convenient terms.WOODLAWN STORE:870 East 63rd Streeet0)f>en Evenings Until Ten Chicago FencersMeet Michigan InImportant MatchThe mo.st important dual fencingmatch of the season will be held atAnn Arbor tomorrow when the Ma¬roons meet the Wolverines. NeitherChicago nor Michigan has lost a meetthis year, so that the competition willbe unusually intense.Captain Edward Wallace, formercaptain Elmer Friedman, and SydneySacerdote will wield the foils. Lastweek, in the meet with the Universityof Illinois, the present champs, Sac¬erdote was the only man to win threeinatchs, losing none. Friedman andWallace both won two matches andlo.st one. Illinois was defeated 10 to7.Ed Wallace and Sacerdote will alsoappear in the epee combats, .^s bothof these men are exceptionally talent¬ed in the use of this weapon, the Ma¬roon team stands an excellent chanceof gleaning points in this event aswell.In the sabers, \'an der Hoef andGoldberg will provide competition forthe Wolverine entries. THREE PREP FIVESACCEPT BIDS FORINTERSCHOLASTIC'I'he team will leave for Ann Arbortonight, and fence the L^niversity ofMichigan tomorrow. They will thengo by bus to Lansing, where they willcompete with the Michigan StateTeacher’s college. Next they will re¬turn to Chicago to engage in the Illi¬nois Fencers’ Invitation Meet.BRIDGE TOURNEYLambda Chi .\lpha defeated ZetaBeta Tau in the only match playedThursday in the round robin final ofthe interfraternity bridge tournament.Earle Spuck and Lief Erickson play¬ed for Lambda Chi Alpha and Willis.\ronson and Murray Rosensteinplayed for Zeta Beta Tau. Florida, Louisana andArizona EntriesInThree liigh school basketballteams, those of Robert E. Lee highschool, Jacksonville, Florida; Jena,Louisiana; and Bisbee, Arizona, haveaccepted invitations to the twelfthannual National Basketball tourna¬ment, held at the University fromApril 1 to 5. There )are no other in¬vitations outstanding.H. O. Crisler, newly appointed ath¬letic director at the University ofMinnesota, will remain at the Univer¬sity tv) get the meet under .way, untilMarch 31, on which date spring prac¬tice begins at Minnesota.Lee High StrongRobert E. Lee high school has astrong team which has won the “BigTen” clianipionship of Florida, losingonly one out of twenty games. Theywere defeated by the Lakeland, Flor¬ida team, which represented thesouthern state in the 1929 meet.Jena Gets InviteJena, state champions of Louisiana,accepted the second invitation sentout. In last year’s meet, the Jenafive reached the quarter finals, dis¬playing a brand of basketball surpris¬ing in a team hailing from a townwith a population of 520.Arizona AcceptsArizona, missing in the 1929 tour¬ney, will be represented by Bisbee,Miami, of .\rizona, was invited lastspring, but was unable to raise thefunds for the trip to Chicago.The tournament is open this year(Continued on page 4) Gym Squad TakesMinnesota TurnersFor Fifth Victory TANK TEAM SEEKSWIN IN SEASONSThe University gym team sirength-ened prospects of a conference cham¬pionship by defeating Minnesota 1042-954 at Minneapolis, Ohio, Wisconsin,Iowa, Illinois, and Minnesota havesuccessively fallen before the Midwayturners already this season. Illinoislast years champions, has alreadybeen downed by the Maroons, butnevertheless remains the strongestopposition that the Bartlett gymnastswill come against to decide the 1930champs here March 15th.Menzies, all-around conference tit¬le holder, is certain to cop high-pointhonors and retain his title. At Minne¬sota Menzies took first place In thehorizontal and parallel bars, and athird place on the rings and on thehorses. In the latter event Hutchin¬son and Kolb tied for first place, withMenzies but a half point behind. Hut¬chinson is steadily improving, andlooks like certain material for achampionship in at least one event thisyear or next.Bromund took the championship inclub swiflging last year, and has notbeen defeated in this event this sea¬son. It is almost certain that he shallrepeat, Olson, like Hutchinson, isanother new man ok the squad thathas classed himself as a'point win¬ner in one season. Olson jiook a sec¬ond in the horizontal bar. , He is notonl.v good on the bars, but is able todo everything with veteran'skill. Ol¬son is but a sophomore. ' Phillips isanother second year man ofi the squadshowing considerable promise, havingtaken one or two places In every meetto date. LAST DUAL mmWater Polo Team FavewedTo DefeatIndianaTh Hoosier splashers invade Chi¬cago tomorrow to engage the Maroonsin their final dual meet of the season.The meet promises to be a close oneall through, and should therefore af¬ford plenty of excitement for the spec¬tators. In the water polo game thecompetition will be as keen as ever,but the Chicago aggregation are giv¬en an advantage in view of the factthat they have won all their engage¬ments so far, among them taking thegame from Illinois, last year’s champsand highl}' rated outfit.The dope sheets have It that theswimming events will break very near¬ly even, and that the winner ^ill bebe able to boast of only a small mar¬gin. That ought to make it all themore interesting.In the ralay the Chicago mermen(Continued on page 4)PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERS SHUBERTGreat NorthernNow Playin*:Prior to New York OpeningThe Messrs. ShubertpresentThe Semson’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 Song”Lyrics by IRVING CAESARwithGUY ROBERTSONand cast of 125NEW ROYALTYPEWRITERS$49.50S..: These are brand new machines with full guarantee andinclude our complete service, and are the same modelmachines we have been selling for the past year - - - Anew model Royal portable typewriter has just been an¬nounced so we are closing out our present stock of cur¬rent models at thfe very low price of $49.50. Many colorsto choose from.Your old machine accepted as part pa3rment.Terms if desired.Now is the time for a real t3rpewrtter “BUY,Woodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th Street Phones: FaMax 2103Near Kimbark Avenue Hyde Parii 1690OPEN EVENINGS. . 4-. . IPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, MARCH 7. 1930MAROON TRACKMENGO TO MINNESOTAFOR BIG TEN MEET STAGE INTRAMURALCARNIVAL TONIGHTIN BARTLETT GYM(Continued from sports page)oi iowa. Letts is running pretty welland is sure to place but will have ahard task' in beating out the versatilePurdue runner.Alfred Kelly will run the two milefor Chicago. Kelly has been defeatedby Leas of Indiana who is one of thebest two milers m the Conference.Wisconsin has a formidable pair ofdistance runners and counts upon get¬ting some points in thi> event. If Kellycan place in this event the Badgertotal will be greatly reduced.Weaver Certain ScorerIn Weaver Chicago has a certainchance of either a first or a secondfor there is no man better than Buck-in the Conference with the possibleexception of Behr of Wisconsin. Bothare in the 48 feet class.Cassle will be in a real group ofhigh jumpers. This is the nrst yearin a long time that there has been agood field of jumpers in the Big Ten.Gordon of Iowa and Shaw of Wis¬consin are good performers. Casslehas a chance of scoring a stray pointor so.TANK TEAM SEEKSWIN IN SEASON’SLAST DUAL MEET(Continued from sports page)are slated to win. They took the In¬diana team last year on their homeground, and cornere<l the Hoosier |tank record at the same time. The Ibreast stroke will be taken care care ;of for the invaders by Coon andWright. McMahon and MacXeillewill endeavor to add some point> tothe Chicago score in that event.The free style events will be tak¬en care of by Hodges and Hudson forIndiana, and Moore. Brislen. Silver-stein and Smuckerfor Chicago. Thisdivision of the meet is anybody’s. Ste¬phenson and Rittenhouse swim theliack for the Maroons and should beable to take at least a first and thirdfrom Hammer, Hoosier back stroker.Beidinger and Rittenhouse meet inthe diving event. Beidenger competesfor Indiana, while Rittenhouse carriesthe Maroon colors.If the Maroons cop the breaststroke and back strokes, the medleyrelav should be easv.Press Team MeetsUniversity BowlersThe University bowjing team,which recently won the western Con¬ference Bowling meet, will meet achallenging University Press teamnext Thursday, March 14, in the Rey¬nolds alleys at 7:30. Nothing isknown of the potentialities of thePress team, but they must make astrong showing if they are to defeatthe University team which bowled ateam average of 198 i:i winning theBig Ten title.According to Pat Kelly, manager ofthe alleys, the Bowling tournament,sponsored by Winter’s Men’s Shop isprogressing rapidly, but .since thescores turned in have not been ex¬ceptionally high, late entrants standa good chance to win. (Continued from page 1)Tickets, which are fifty cents andinclude the dance, are obtainable atall fraternity houses and at the boxoffice in Mandel Hall.The program as arranged follows:VaudevilleRhythms in Wrestling—Membersof the Varsity Wrestling Squad.“Auld Lang Syne”—Sigma Club;Marion Massey and Louise Garrett.The Phi Delt Peppers—Phi DeltaTheta fraternity; W. McCandless, J.Bunge, C. Oakes, Bill Kirkland.‘‘Gentlemen Prefer Blondes”—ChiRho Sigma Club: Mary Lou For-brich and Georgia Au Buchon.“Stop, Look and Listen”—Phi Sig¬ma Delta fraternity: Laufman, Pink,Ashback, and Rubinson.“So This is College”—DelthoClub: Frances Tigue, Betty Kendall,Dorothy Schulz.“Out of the Pit”—Wm. Potter,Sig Nu; Roy Black, DKE; Ray V’ane,Phi Kappa Sigma.Broadcast, ‘College Uplift Hour”—Delta Sigma Phi fraternity: Callaghan, Tillman. Nelson, Munster-man, Stocker, Roach, Keyser, John¬son, Maneikis, and Bagdon. Mr.Herbert Hedeen announcing.“In the Gloaming” — BeatriceRobinson and her Mirror dancers.Finale,—“Cheer for the Winner.’’MusicU. of C. Band, Palmer Clark, Di¬rector.Krausmeyer’s Conceit Band.Jerry Conley and her ShorelandHotel orchestra.Boxing xnd Wrestling8:06—Wrestling Finals, 128-lb.Class. Chladek, Sigma Chi vs. Field,TKE.Boxing Finals, 128 lb. CIa.ss. Heim-bach, Kappa Nu vs. Leonard, DeltaTau Delta.8:18—Wrestling Finals, 148 lb.Class. Schock, Kappa Sig. vs. Ran¬kin, A. T. 0.Boxing Finals—148-lb. Class. De-Pinto, Medics vs. O’Hara, Phi Gam¬ma Delta.8:23—Boxing Finals, 138 lb.Class. Smith, Psi U. vs. Caldwell,Delta Tau t>elta.8:36—Wrestling Finals, 158-lb.Class. Sommers, Delta Upsilon vs.Bellstrom, Phi Delta Theta.Boxing Finals, 158-lb. Class. Ca¬hill, Psi U. vs. Changnon, Medics.8:4i—Wrestling finals, 168-lb.class. Gable, Lambda Chi vs. Hor-witz. Phi Sigma.Boxing finals, heavyweight. Mane-'ikis, D. Sig. vs. Bunge, Phi D. Theta.9:00—Wrestling finals, 118-lb.class. Pi ess, Unatt. vs. Roshal, Un-att.Boxing finals. 168-lb. class. Bir-ney. Phi Psi vs. Priess, Phi Sig Del¬ ta.9:20—Wrestling finals, 178-lb.class. Yates, D. Sig. vs. Erickson,Lambda Chi A.Boxing finals, 178-lb. class. Elliott; Johnson, Phi D. vs. Becker, Unatt.; Trackj 7:38—Finals, 50 yd. Low Hurdles,I Freshmen. Ashback, Phi SigmaI Delta; McComb, D. K. E.; Haydon,1 Psi U; Pollyae, Macs; Wemple, Phij Kappa Sigma.I 7:40—Finals, 50-yd. Low Hurdles,Upperclass. Schock, Kappa Sigma;Valentine, Phi Sigma Delta; Gold-bus, Macs; Roberts, DKE; Beardsley,Phi Pi Phi.7 ;42—880-yd. run. ,7 :4/3—Finals, 50-yd. JJash, -Up-perclass. Tucker, Phi Gamma Delta;Ratcliff, Psi U Power, DKE; Moore-house, Phi Kappa Sigma; Greer,DKE.7:48—Finals, 50-yd. Dash, Fresh¬men. Jontry, DKE; Pink, Phi Sig.;Simpson, DKE; Pollyae, Macs;Lynch, ATO.7:51—Mile Run, Upperclass (13laps).8:08—Finals, 300-yd Run. Moore-house, Phi Kappa Sigma; Tucker,Phi Gam; Beardsley, Phi Pi Phi;Polakoff, K. Nu; Ray, Phi Psi; Pow¬er, DKE; Wolf, Macs; Lee, Phi DeltaTheta.8:20—Mile Run, Freshmen (13laps).8 :38—600-yard run.8:49—Finals, 440-yd. run. Fresh¬men. Offil, Kap Sig; Waldenfels:Friedheim, A. Sig; Jontry, DKE;Pink, Phi Sig; Row'an, A. Sig; Wem¬ple, Phi K Sig; Andrews, K Sig; Alex¬ander.9:02—Club relay first heat; Quad-ranglers. Phi Beta Delta, Phi DeltaUpsilon, Achoth.9:22—Club relay, second heat:Mortar Board, Chi Rho Sigma, Sig¬ma Esoteric.9:40—Finals, Intramural Relays:Delta Kappa Epsilon, Macs, Phi PiPhi, Kappa Nu, Kappa Sigma, andPhi Delta Theta. ADVERTISEMENTin A ROCKGRAY SEASONIN MEN’S SUITS PROFS. TELL WHICHHEROINES OF FICTKWTHEY WOULD DATEStyle Authorities AcclaimThis Smart NewColorCLASSIFIED ADSAPTS. FOR RENT—6014 Har¬per Ave., 2nd apt. 6 rms. newly dec¬orated, new floors and elec, lightfixtures, excellent service near I. C.bus, “L”, surface cars and JacksonPark. Free rent to May 1st. Actquickly. Rental$80. Peterson, Sag.1336.FOR RENT—One large doubleroom for two students. $10 per wk.1 single rm. $6. 1 single rm. $4. Mid¬way 5172, 5221 Ellis Ave.FOUND—Platinum wrist watch inClassics rest room. Phone Kenwood0567.LOST—Large amethyst lavalliere,with pearls in large envelope. Re¬ward. Call Local 712, Miss Baker.F»VTEK^lfrcJeweli^^t.7- witk pf pep a on81 M. StAte St.. ChicagoSTOP! LOOK! LISTEN!We have private rooms for card luncheons, dinner parties,committee meetings, etc.Luncheon 40c, II to 2. - Dinnet 75c, 5 to 8A la Carte Service I I to 8Sunday Dinner $ I, I 2 to 8Witch Kitch Inn6325 Woodlawn Ave. Fairfax 9153*’Dance at the South Side’s most popularrendezvous, Venetian room of the South*moor Hotel, 67th and Stony Island Avenue,Herbie Mintz and his orchestra, a Kenn*away attraction. Dancing every evening,Mondays excepted. Moderate Menu. Cov¬er charge $1.00 per person.” THEANNUALMID WESTERNUNIVERSITIESTOURS TO EUROPEhomMONTREALANDANIAJUNE20tbATHENIAJUNE27‘^S9DAYS 453'52 DAYS 633^Send coupon below for completefree information.THE AMERICANEXPRESS CO.70 E. Randolph StChicago. 111.Gentlemen: Please send mewithout any obligation on mypart, complete details on theThird Annual Midwestern Uni¬versities Tours. *NameStreetCity .State. University of Chicago men, alwaysalert to pick up something new, aresure to approve of “Rock Gray,”the new Spring Suit color, it wasfelt yesterday.This smart new' shade, which isbeing sponsored by The Store forMen, Marshall Field & Company,made its appearance in their YoungMen’s Section last week and hasbeen acclaimed by style experts asthe outstanding Spring color.Gray Is Neutral ColorNicely-tailored in single anddouble-breasted models it shows thata gray season is in sight for well-.tressed men. While the majority ofthe Suits are in solid tones, simulat¬ing a rock in color, there are somepatterns with a very faint all-overplaid. This lends rather a pleasingeffect and livens up a color whichmight not other\vise be becoming tosome types.“Gray, however, can be worn bythe majority of men for it Is a neu¬tral tint and doe® not conflict withcomplexion or hair,” one of Field’sstyle authorities said yesterday.“And as this partiular shade has notbeen ‘in’ for several years we lookfor it to be most popular in 1930.”Tweed* Will Be GoodOther colors for the man who doe®not prefer gray will be imperial blueand blue-green. Tans will not bequite as good this year due to theheavy brown season last autumn.Tweeds, it was learned, will alsobt popular—particularly the blackand white variety again emphasiz¬ing gray.The Store for Men issued an in¬vitation to University of Chicago meninterested in this new color to cometo their downtown store and lookover the new shipments of Suitswhich have just arrived.Accessories Must HarmonixeWhile there they suggest an in¬spection also of the new Spring ac¬cessories such as Shirts and Ties,which will harmonize with the newSuit. ,Special arrangements have beenmade for young men to wait on you,if, when arriving on the third floor,you mention to the floorman thatyou are from the University of Chi¬cago. (Continued from page 1)for Thornton Wilder’s latest crea¬tion, the Woman of Andros, “a truephilosopher.”Dr. H. H. Newman is not keen ontaking any of them, in fiction or not,out to dinner. Dr. J. Harlen Bretzsaid, among other observations, that“I couldn’t answer the question, andfurthermore, I don’t give a damn, andI don’t think you do either.”In explaining his inclination to¬ward Thackeray’s fiery heroine, Bec¬ky, Dean Boucher said he made hischoice “without qualification.” Onthe other hand, Lennox Grey said ofWilla Gather’s Antonia, “One couldsee how far Antonia shows under¬standing of her own career, and howfar one understands her only throughthe author’s interpretation.” If thedate must be dinner, he should findthe heroines of Will LevingtonComfort, as in “Routledge RidesAlone’’, a novel about Chinese musicand the Gobi desert,—very stimulat¬ing,—once or twice.Mr. Linn simply felt that Eliza¬ beth Bennett, the pride in JaneAusten’s “Pride and Prejudice,’'would be the most fun.THREE PREP FIVESACCEPT BIDS FORINTERSCHOLASTIC(Continued from sports page)to all secondary schools, public orprivate, provided only that they meetthe eligibility requirements of theUniversity. This admission of acad¬emies, private, and denominationalschools will not lower the standard ofeligibility, for the secondary school' requirements of the University are al-j most universally accepted.' PNery state in.the union, with theexception of California and RhodeI Island, has been represented in one‘ of the annual tournaments. In Janu-: ary of this year, McKinley high ofi Honolulu asked to enter the meet.They will he admitted, if their subse¬quent record is found to justify theI step.Plight state cliampionships tourna¬ments will he played Saturday, andthe winners will receive invitations tothe tournament.You’ll lind awide selectionf th e newROCKGRAYSUITSa tTHE STOREFOR MENMARSHALLFIELD &COMPANY HycREST Jewelrym J~L.iXrmonizin^ Qnli Biaxessicpyou wi II find every type ofcostume jewelry—glcatmn3, colorfulconceits —the perfect complements olsmart lall costumes. AAore than that/they come in gift boxes in attractivecolors to match the jewelry itself sothat they make the most desirable gilts.Necklaces—chokers, festoon*And pendants in allthe latest destsn ideas.sJBrooches— unique effects Inreal stone colors bothtransparent andopaque. PopuUu-withthe smart new neck*lines on (all costumes.Jfev/elryEnsembles—much of this jew¬elry may be chosen tomatch so that youmay have the correctensemble idea earnedout in these costumeaccessories. £ar 'E^rops—both button andpendant types inpearls, colored stones,metals and enamels.bracelets—smart,intricately cutmetals,colored stonesand enamels.THC MAWK or QUAUTY1225 E. 63rd Straet 1♦♦♦♦♦4f♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦>