SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON Battp i¥laroon Today’s Weather:Mostly unsettled withrising temperature.Vol. 30. No. 36. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MARCH II, 1930 Price Five CenUELECT TWENTY-FOUR TO PHI BETEName W. G. I. Committee MembersHINDUSET FOR FRIDAYPROGRAM HONOR SOCIETYPRAISES ROREMITHIRTY MEN TODIRECT WORK OFCAGE 1]^URNEYSix Juniors to Act asCommittee HeadsFor MeetCommittees for the NationalBasketball Interscholastic tourna¬ment to be held April 1-5 in Bartlettwere completed yesterday. The ar¬rangements will be taken care ofby a group neaded by Sayre Brad¬shaw with Robert Hoagland, CharlesFarwell, and Clarence Johnson,helping.Committee on PublicityThe publicity committee has Al¬bert Arkules for chairman andHarry Moore, Louis Ridenour II, andVincent McComb as assistants. ScottRexinger is head of the Entertain¬ment committee which is composedof Joe Temple, Jack Clancy, andRaymond Zenner.The Consolation tournament willbe taken care of by a committee offive with Marshal Fish acting aschairman and Paul Stevenson, JamesPorter, William Crawford, and Don¬ald Birney his assistants. DonaldMoore has been chosen head of thedecorations committee, consisting of(Continued on page 2)Elect EkmshawFederation HeadRuth Earnshaw was elected chair¬man of Federation at the meeting ofthe old and new council membersheld Friday in Ida Noyes hall. MissEarnshaw will act as head of thenew council composed of Ruth Abells,Frances Blodgett, Sylvia Friedeman.Charlotte Saeman and Alice Stin¬nett.The installation ceremony will beheld today at 5:30 in the alumnaeroom of Ida Noyes hall. Laura Rey¬nolds, who was one of the first chair¬men of Federation and who was re¬sponsible in a great degree for thepresent system, will preside at theceremony and tell the story of Fed¬eration, its work and its ideals.Following the meeting the old andnew members will have dinner to¬gether in the refractory of Ida Noyeshall.The retiring members of the coun¬cil are: Dorothy Cahill, chairman,Katherine Madison and CatherineScott.SO THEY SOLD THEIRBOOKS TO BUY BREADCollege students, unfortunately,sell their textbooks, decided DeanThomas Arkle Clark of the Univers¬ity of Illinois. He gave no reasonsfor seasonal outbursts of these sales,the indifference of the college stu¬dents, and the well known fact that“a college student is always broke.”The practice is an unfortunateone, it is decided by university au¬thorities, for textbooks are recom¬mended as an economic and usefulnucleus for an extensive library.Furthermore, there are sentimentalreasons, advanced by President JohnGier Hibben of Princeton univers¬ity: “Every undergraduate leavingcollege should take his textbookswith him as a reminder and recordof a past chapter in his life and asa nucleus of a library. March Phoenix Out; ISaleswomen WantedSaleswomen for the Phoenix whichcomes out Thursday, March 13,should report to Suzanne Kern, cir¬culation manager, at the Phoenixoffice in Lexington hall Tuesday andWednesday.Announcement of the author ofthe Blacr.friars show, what it’s about,and whai it is called will appear forthe first time in the Phoenix. Thiswill be the first chance to find outwhat the show is about, since a syn¬opsis of it will appear for the firsttime in the Phoenix.The cover will be a lithograph fig¬ure on a yellow background drawnby Robert Bruce.In 'addition to the Blackfriars an¬nouncement, the March issue ofPhoenix will include: A Parody ofKatherine Brush by Ruth Ziev, asymposium of campus comment en¬titled What’s Wrong with the Phoe¬nix, an article by Julian Jackson,“College Then What,” and the “IdealMirror Show” by Orin Tovrow.Woodijoard, BishopMcConnell AttendMethodist DinnerCampus women will preside to¬night as hostesses, at the Methodiststudent dinner in Ida Noyes whereBishop Francis J. McConnell of NewYork will be the speaker. Jessietlustin, -Arline Feltham, FrancesTaylor, Harriet Celemens, MurielDavis, Alice Neil, Helen Parks andLila Ijcaver will each be at thehead of a table.Orvis Henckle is to provide enter¬tainment at an informal receptionpreceding the dinner, at 6:30. Dr.Gilbert S. Cox of the Woodlawn ParkMethodist church, which with the.4strato club is sponsoring the din¬ner, will introduce Vice-PresidentFrederick C. Woodward as toastmas¬ter.Tickets for the dinner may be ob¬tained in Id.i Noyes hall this even¬ing.Bishop McConnell, who will talkon “Views of the Times,” is consid¬ered the outstanding Methodist lead-(Continued on page 2)BOWLING TEAMSMEET THURSDAYThe University bowling team willmeet the University Press teamThursday evening at 7:30 in theReynolds Club alleys. Priess, Shar-log, Kauffman, Snow, Marquard, andBerry, alternate, will compose theUniversity team, while Lasky, Riley,Trout, Hug, Moskal, and Dorman,alternate, will bowl for the Univers¬ity Press.A return match is scheduled forFriday, March 21, at the WoodlawnRecreation alleys, Sixty-Third streetand Cottage Grove Avenue. Threegames will be played at each meet¬ing of the teams, and the total pinsfor the six games will decide thewinner.POUTICAL CHALLENGEThe Charles F. Deneen club,through the columns of the DailyMaroon, wishes to challenge theRuth Hanna McCormick club to adebate. Ralph Lewis, undergradu¬ate head of the Deneen organization,can be reached at the A. T. 0. housefor arrangements of details. Present Celebration atHotel St. ClairStrange melodies on instruments5000 years old, intricate rhythms ex¬pressed in colorful Oriental dances,wierd feats of eastern magic andsavoury native viands will contrib¬ute to the atmosphere when Hindus-tanese from the University and oth¬er institutions celebrate Hindu nightFriday, March 11 in the Hotel St.Clair roof garden at 8. Proceeds ofthe program of speaking and unusualentertainment will be added to theHindustan association of America’sfund for Hindustanese students inAmerica.Professor Arthur Compton, NobelLaureate of the University, will dis¬cuss the need for real brotherhoodbetween India and America. R. C.Malhotra, a research worker at theUniversity working for his Ph. D. inplant physiology, will be chairman.He was president of the Hindustanassociation three years ago when heattended the University of Califor¬nia. Although he has been in thecountry only eight years, he holdsdegrees from Oregon State Agricul¬tural college, Leland Stanford, andthe University of California.Swami Guaneswarananda, whocame from New Y'ork especially forFriday’s meeting, will chant from(Continued on page 2)By Louis N. Ridenoin' IIThe University’s annual three-ringcircus, the 1930 Intramural carnival,rocked Bartlett Friday night inmuch the manner predicted pictorial-ly on the program cover. The bleach¬ers were crammed to capacity earlyin the evening; if you came afternine, you didn’t sit down either.Three hundred and twenty-sixpeople were engaged in the produc¬tion of this year’s spectacle. Seventy-five held administrative positions,such as officials, clerks, ticket takers,guards, ushers, etc. Fifty-six wereentertainers, and forty-three music¬ians. Fourteen boxed, and twelvewrestled, while the track I'esoundedto the thunder of 126 pairs of run¬ning feet.Dekes Win MeetDelta Kappa Epsilon won the meet,with a total of forty-nine and one-half points. Phi Kappa SigmaAnnounce ScheduleOf Winter QuarterFinal ExaminationsFinal examinations for the Win¬ter quarter will be held as follows:8 o’clock classes, Thursday, March20,8-10.9 o’clock, Friday, March 21, 8-10.10 o’clock classes, Wednesday,March 19, 8-10.11 o’clock classes, Wednesday,March 19, 1:30-3:30.12:30 o’clock classes, Friday, March21, 1:30-3:30.1:30 o’clock classes Thursday,March 20, 10:30-12:30.2:30 o’clock classes Friday, March21, 10:30-12:30.3:30 o’clock classes Thursday,March 20, 1:30-3:30.4:30 o’clock classes Wednesday,March 19, 4:30-6:80. “Accounting Method” IsOutstanding“Accounting Method,” a textbookwritten by C. Rufus Rorem, a form¬er member of the University faculty,and published by the UniversityPress, was voted by the accountingprofession to be one of the outstand¬ing works published during the yearended May 1, 1929.This announcement was made bythe grand council of Beta Alpha Psi,a professional and honorary frat¬ernity for college students of ac¬counting. Each year a list of allbooks on accounting is compiled andcirculated among the profession,with an invitation to indicate thebooks considered the best of theyear.The six books receiving the high¬est number of votes are named tothe grand council. Of the six thusselected, “Accounting Method” wasthe only book written to serve as aninti’oductory textbook. “CapitalStock Without Par Value,” by Wild-man and Powell, was voted the bestv\iwlr of the year, and the winnerswere awarded scrolls of honor bythe fraternity..Mr. Rorem is a certified public ac¬countant, and holds the Ph. D. de¬gree from the University. He is amemljer of the reseai'ch staff of theCommittee on the Cost of MedicalCare, in Washington, D. C.trailed closely behind with a thirty-eight point total, and Phi Sigma Del¬ta was third. The club relay, a fea¬ture of the carnival, was won by theteam representing Esoteric.Three clubs. Sigma, Chi Rho Sig¬ma, and Deltho, and three fratern¬ities, Delta Sigma Phi, Phi DeltaTheta, and Phi Sigma Delta, sangand danced and wise-cracked in theprogram of competitive vaudevillerun off in the lulls between athleticevents. The stunt put on by PhiDelta Theta was finally judged thebest by popular acclaim.Good VaudevilleLet me remark, in passing, thatthis vaudeville was good. A smallfortune in pennies landed at the feetof the various performers while theywere doing their performing, but al¬most without exception they tookthis as a demonstration of the in-(Continued on page 2)Lambda Chi BestsPsi Upsilon; Wins1-F Bridge CrownLambda Chi Alpha by defeatingPsi Upsilon gained the interfratern¬ity bridge crown Thursday night.Teams defeated previously were PhiBeta Delta, and Zeta Beta Tau.Lambda Chi Alpha has remained un¬beaten during the tournament.Psi U was represented in the finalmatch by George Lott and GriffingsBancroft, while Lambda Chi wassupported by Lief Ericson and EarleSpuck. The total score was 1400 to720.The bridge tournament was spon¬sored by the Interfraternity Coun¬cil and was under the direction ofJames Rutter, D. K. E. and PaulBrady, Phi Delta Theta. A cup willbe awarded the winners. Charles P’. Deneen, candidate forUnited States Senator from Illinois,was so well pleased with an articleon his rival, Ruth Hanna McCormick,which appeared in the last issue ofLa Critique, that he ordered 200copies of the campus liberal publi¬cation, presumably for use as cam¬pus literature.The story was brought to his no¬tice in the following manner: JohnHealy, a University student, showedLa Critique and Ralph Lewis’ storyon Mrs. McCormick to his father,who is state treasurer for the De¬neen organization. Mr. Healy calledMr. Deneen on the telephone inWashington, read him the story, andthen ordered the 200 copies whenMr. Deneen expressed his vigorousapproval.Deneen in his political speeches inthe southern part of Illinois also hasmentioned the McCormick meetingand the criticism in La Critique.Wilder SurveysHitchcock; MeetsBoys and PhonesA quiet, demure little man, cladin a somber grey suit was lookingcarefully over a pile of mail in theentrance of Hitchcock hall. Sudden¬ly both the campus and the outsidephones began to ring. A memberof the hall dashed into one boothcrying—-“I wish to aitch that youwould answer that phone!” The lit¬tle man complied. It was ThorntonWilder, the noted novelist, who isteaching at the University duringthe spring quarter.Mr. Wilder was looking over hisquarters in the hall. According toFrank H. O’Hara, master of Hitch¬cock, he was very much pleased withhis quarters and expressed pleasurethat there was no telephone in hisroom.He expects to move into Hitch¬cock a few days before the begin¬ning of the quarter.PUBLISH FINALRESULTS OF I-MTRACK CARNIVALResults of the Carnival trackmeet are as follows:50 yd. Dash Upperclass. Time:05-9 10.1. Moorehouse, Phi Kappa Sig¬ma.2. Tucker, Phi Gamma Delta.3. Power, D. K. E.50 yd. Dash Freshman. Time:05 8-10.1. Jontry, Delta Kappa Eps.2. Lynch, A. T. O.3. Pollyae, Macs.50 yd. Low’ Hurdles Upperclass.Time :05 7-10.1. Schock, Kappa Sigma.2. Golbus, Macs.3. Roberts, D. K. E.50 yd. Low Hurdles Freshman.1. Ashback, Phi Sigma Delta.(Continued on page 4)ORGAN RECITALPorter Heaps’ organ recital todayat 5, in the Upiversity Chapel, willpresent “Prelude and Fugue IV,”from Bach; “Andante from SonataI,” by Borowsky; Brow’ne’s “Con¬trasts”; the “Pilgrim’s Chorus,”from Wagner; and Shelley’s “Fan¬fare d’Orgue.”Carnival Throngs ApplaudSpectacle; Bleachers Full MEN OUTNUMBERWOMEN IN FALLHONOR^GROUPTwelve Juniors AmongThose InitiatedTodayMen students at the Universitycarried off most of the honors in thequarterly elections to Phi Beta Kap¬pa, honorary scholastic fraternity, itwas revealed at the University yes¬terday. Nineteen of the twenty-fourhonored undergraduates are men.All of the group are residents of theChicago region.Maxwell Mason, youngest son offormer president. Max Mason, v'asamong those elected. Having takenhonors in mathematics, he will grad¬uate at the spring Convocation,March 18 th.Twelve of the new Phi Betes at¬tained the unusual distinction ofelection at the end of their thirdyear, an award which is given onlyto those juniors who maintain atleast an “A Minus” average.Juniors elected are Edward G.Bastian, Lester A. Bensema, Abra¬ham A. Charous, Eleanor AnnaDavis, Bernard Drell, Zachary Fel-sher, Edw’ard L. Haenisch, George E.Mahin. Robert B. Mayer, Leon A.Smoler, Mary Morris Van Schaick,and Elizabeth ZelenyGraduating seniors elected * areMax M. Berger, Janet Rees Cook,(Continued on page 2)Women DebatersIn Campus BowThe first Woman’s Intercollegiatedebate ever held at the Universitywill take place this afternoon at 4in Mandel hall, when a team fromHillsdale college, Michigan, and threeUniversity representatives argueon the following subjects: “Resolvedthat the United States Should In¬itiate a Program of Disarmamentwithout awaiting International Ac¬tion.” The University women whowill take the affirmative are Hor-tense Barr, Alice Hamburger, andPhyllis Joseph.They will stress the necessity forone nation taking action on the dis¬armament issue because of the fee¬bleness of other methods, the factthat the United States is logicallythe nation to take this action, andfinally, the beneficial results of suchaction. Each speaker will haveeight minutes and the audience willdecide the winner.The Debating union of whichLeonard Greatwood is chairman, issponsoring this program in an effortto arouse interest in debating among^ the women on campus. ProfessorBertram Nelson of the English de¬partment, is faculty advisor to theDebating union and has been assist¬ing the speakers in their prepar¬ation.iciLKEY GIVES PLANSFOR SPRING VACATIONDean Charles W. Gilkey’s programfor the spring vacation will includeaddresses at four universities, aswell as golf and tennis. Friday,March 21, Dean Gilkey w'ill open astudent conference at Nashville,Tennessee, which will be made up ofmembers of three colleges, the Y. M.C. A. graduate school, the Vander¬bilt school of religion, and Scarrittcollege.Sunday and Monday, 23 and 24,will be spent at the University of(Continued on page 2)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 11, 1930iailg iiar00nFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Saturlny, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 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 post ofTice at Chicago,fllinois, 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 EditorQARLE M. STO€KER, 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 EditorSIDNEY GOLDBERG Day EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF....Day EditorMARGARET EGAN Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVEan'HAL....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 oj student participation in undergraduate campus activities.2 Promotion of student interest in lectures, concerts, exhibits and othercultural opportunities.3. Abolition of grading systm and extension of research principles.4. Cessation of extensive building program.5. Adoption of a plan for supervised, regulated rushing. Official NoticesTuesday, March 11Radio lecture: “American Liter¬ature since 1890,” Professor PercyH. Boynton, of the English depart¬ment, 8:20, Station WMAQ. THIRTY MEN TODIRECT WORK OFCAGE TOURNEY WOODWARD, BISHOPMcConnell attendMETHODIST DINNERDivinity Chapel: Bishop McCon¬nell. Joseph Bond chapel, 11:50,Public lecture: Graduate schoolof Social Service Administration)“Recent Developments in MentalTesting,” Dr. Andrew W. Brown, In¬stitute for Juvenile Research, 2:30,Cobb 311.FESTINA LENTEThis time of year is the one at which the problem of defer¬ment of fraternity rushing can be dealt with sanely and unhurriedly,and it is the hope of The Daily Maroon that it will be so dealt withby the only body at the University which has the power to settleit, the Interfraternity council.The Daily Maroon wishes to suggest to the council a plan underwhich no entering freshman be permitted to pledge himself to afraternity until the beginning of his second quarter in residence atthe University, and pledging is restricted to the first week at thebeginning of each quarter. Under the present scheme, men maybe pledged during the first two weeks of their first quarter in resi¬dence; utter confusion is the result.The arguments in favor of deferred rushing are obvious; itcannot be denied that it would, to a great extent, obviate the harm¬ful practice of "hot-boxing” the green freshman, that it would givethe fraternities an opportunity to select their men in cold bloodand with open eyes, and that it has succeeded in those schools whohave tried it.Green freshmen, as a rule, spend the days during which theyare being rushed in a sort of chaotic half-consciousness. They won¬der which of the many statements pounded into them have founda¬tions in fact; which fraternity is the one they really want to join;which has the men most congenial to them. Worse, they have lit¬tle way of judging; only acquaintance of months enables them totell. As a consequence, only too often the freshman takes the easi¬est way out; he accepts the button of the chapter which seems tohim to produce the most convincing arguments.With his pledging comes the cessation of the maelstrom ofrushing which has been raging about him, and a feeling of genuinerelief that is sometimes mistaken for the satisfaction of correctchoice. It is only after he has lived for a time with the men he hasagreed to live with for four years that the mistake is discovered, andit is then almost too late for the pledge to change his decision. Ofnecessity, it has been made as inconvent as possible for a man tobreak his pledge, but no provision whatever seems to have beenmade for the freshman to take the right step in the first place.Fraternities themselves are inconvenienced as much as theentering freshmen. It is conceded that rushing is a tremendous gam¬ble; in the pressure of the moment, almost any man who speaksgood English can be shoved through a chapter by a desperate rush¬ing chairman. During the past few years, the harmful practices ofmisrepresentation, "throat-cutting," and "hot-boxing” have almostdisappeared, but it is self-evident that our present system of rush¬ing is the one which gave birth to such methods, and is the onlyreason for their continued existence.At Dartmouth, Princeton, Yale, and other great universitieselsewhere, the practice of deferred rushing has been successfullytried. Tradition seems to be the sole reason for the survival hereof the plan of immediate rushing; it is indeed pitiable that a uni¬versity as progressive as ours claims to be has allowed itself tolag behind in thi. Wherever it has been instituted, the deferment ofrushing has resulted in less dissatifaction and fewer broken pledges.The Interfraternity council has already setttled one problem,of the many besetting fraternities here, to the apparent satisfactionof the administration; viz, that of the regulation of Hell Week. It isto be hoped that, before the conclusion of the present school year,they will raise a quorum and come to some conclusion regarding thislong-neglected question. —L.N.R. Beta of Illinois Chapter of PhiBeta Kappa: Initiation of new mem¬bers, 4, Swift hall.Rac^ lectui^: “IntermediateSpanish,” Mr. ‘Arthur Bechtolt ofthe Spanish department, 4:15, Sta¬tion WMAQ.Organ Music: Porter Heaps, 5,University chapel.Public lecture: (Downtown) “DonJuan the Rake,” Professor Keniston,6:45, Art Institute. (Continued from page 1)Everett Olson, Allen Summers, andAlfred Jacobson.The program committee of threehas Chester Laing at its head andis completed by Robert Calwell andRobert Balsley. Sidney Yates willhave charge of the accommodationsfor the participants as head of theHousing committee. His associatesare Harry Ashley, Bernard Wienand Keith Parsons. The committeesare completed by the selection ofLawrence B. Smith and Wilbur Ur¬ban as co-chairman of the rushingcommittee.The advisory seniors named forthe tournament are Pat Kelly, Hay-din Wingate, Maurie Halohan,Harold Haydon, Norman Root andJames Rutter. Three invitationshave already been accepted fromstate champions and as soon as theother state and district meets arefinished the winners will be asked tocompete here.Gradaute Political Science club:“Education and Jungle Politics inChicago,” Mr. C. C. Willard, Poli¬tical Action Committee, Principals’league, Chicago. 7:30, Social Sci¬ence 302. HINDU PROGRAMSET FOR FRIDAYGradaute Classical club: “RomanCloaks,” Miss Lillian M. Wilson, 8,(Classics 20.Sociology club: “Is It Useful toDistinguish ‘Civilization’ from ‘Cul¬ture’??” Professor Edward Sapir, ofthe Anthropology department, 8, jSocial Science Assembly room. IWednesday, March 12Radio lecture: “American Litera¬ture since 1890.” Professor Percy H.Boynton, of the English department,8:20, Station WMAQ. (Continued from page 1)the Vedas, with accompaniement inthe tabola, an instrument over 5000years old, which has never beenplayed in this country before. Theesrap, another ancient instrument hasnever been shown in this countrybefore. The Sw’ami is a Hindu mis¬sionary to Chicago.There will be two presentationsof Hindu magic, and songs, recita¬tions, and dances by Hindu studentsin native costumes. The programwill end with an illustrated talk on“The Past of India,” by H. K. Mon-dol of Northwestern University.Divinity Chapel: Bishop McCon¬nell, 11:50, Joseph Bond chapel.Celebration of the Holy Commun¬ion (For Episcopal students): 12,Thorndike Hilton Memorial chapel. FRATERNITYJEWELRY STATIONERYDANCE FAVORSSpies Brothers, Inc.27 E. Monroe StAt Wabash 5th Floor (Continued from page 1)er of the country, and as presidentof the Federal Council of Churcheshe is at the head of all the Protest¬ant churches of America. From 1909until his election as bishop in 1912he was president of De Pauw Uni¬versity.Bishop McConnell received his A.B. from Ohio Weslyan in 1894, anS. T. B. from Boston University in1897, and a Ph. D. from the sameschool in 1899. Ohio Weslyan madehim a D. 1). in 1905, and HanoverCollege and Weslyan university hon¬ored him with the de gree of LL. D.in 1909. He is also the author t)fmore than a dozen volumes of essaysand addresses.During the great steel strike of1920 Bishop McConnell was instru¬mental as a result of his report onthe situation, in having the twelvehours working day reduced to eighthours.GILKEY GIVES PLANSFOR SPRING VACATION(Continued from page 1)Texas, in Austin, Texas. After a'stopofT at the Texas Christian uni¬versity on the 26, Dr. Gilkey willproceed to Princeton university andthen home.Dr. Gilkey will return Wednesdayfrom a trip east during which hespoke at Yale, and Choate prepschool for boys.I GREGG COLLEGE !I Home of Gregg Shorthand ?? Thirty-fourth Year |B Iniai;ln<> how much easier it would be =? to take all your claaa notea In abort- ■I hand. It la enally and quickly uiaa- =■ tered at Gregg College ... in con- s“ venlent spare time, special Collegiate 5B cla.aaes, meeting days or evenings. ?= Ask for partlculsra and FRKE BtlOK ra OF FACTK Is 225 Wabash Avenue, North |I Phone State 1881* Chicago, Ill. |USIIIIItillllStlSltSIIII)lllli>Sl<tii(Mliitillii|iifiillltii|iililfii(t'|iilJunior Mathematical club: “Elem¬entary Theory of Waves,” Mr. R.G. Sanger, of the Mathematics de¬partment. 4, Ryerson Library.Organ Music: Porter Heaps, 5,University chapel.Graduate club of Economics andBusiness: “Observing the BritishLabor Government at Work,” 'As¬sistant professor Frances E. Gille¬spie of the History department. 7:30Graduate clubhouse.Socialist club: “The Story ofCommonwealth College,” Mr. WilliamE. Zeuch, 7:30, Gradaute clubhouse.Graduate History club: “A CentralTheme in Recent American History1870-1914,” Mr. Chester Destler,' Fel¬low of the History department, 7:30,Ida Noyes hall.MEN OUTNUMBERWOMEN IN FALLHONORS GROUP(Continued from page 1)Norman B. Eaton, Walter M. Gibb,Joseph Halpern, Evan Johnson, Jr.,Maxwell Mason, George K. Neu¬mann, Robert L. Nicholson, JuliusD. Porsche, Arthur H. Rosenblum,and Frances Swineford.The group will be initiated thisafternoon at 4 in the Common Roomof the Divinity School under thedirection of a faculty committee.CINEMAChicago Ave., Just East of MichiganThe Art Theatre of Shadow ScienceDRAMA OF NEW RUSSIA“VILLAGE OF SIN”STARRING THE MOSCOW ARTPLAYERSMae Tinee; “It is pictorially fascinating."Rob Reel: “Breathtakingly exquisite."Fanny Butcher Reviewing “The CrystalIcicle” by K. Ke$th (Adler)Continued 1 P. M..-11 P. M.Matinee 50c - Evening 75cdwiki *100 SALEA spiecial sale of timely items for $1.00. All aresplendid value—the quantities are limited, andare offered for this week only.TYPEWRITER PAPER. Good ^ ^grade, standard size, 2 reams ^ |( 1000 sheets) for ^ 1^•*STATIONERY, modernistic a alinings in envelopes, latest fin- ▼ |ishes and sizes. 2 boxes for. ... “ [MBILL FOLDS, for new currency. a aFor men and women. Real lea- ▼ 1ther, assorted styles and leathers ^ 1^125 SHEETS, 25 ENVELOPESl * ..t semi-business size Eaton’s sta-l ^Jtionery, all complete for . .. . . j ^BEAUTIFUL LITTLE mechanical ^ apencil for vest pocket and hand bag, V jnon-breakable, assorted colors . . ■ 1^DAINTY BOOK ENDS, mount- a ated with colored “GODEY”(prints. Many colors, per pair. . ^ \MThese are only a few of the many bargain we haveWOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 EL 57th St. Phone Hyde Park 1690 CARNIVAL THRONGSAPPLAUD SPECTALE;BLEACHERS FULL(Continued from page 1)formal spirit which marked thewhole affair, rather than as a sluron their talents. Jack Gray, who as¬sisted Adolph Rubinson, carnivalmanager, in his magician’s act,stood a good chance of winning thecup offered for the best vaudevilleentertainment, but was disqualifiedby the announcer, Ted Canty, on thegrounds that he had not preparedhis skit.The boxing matches were bloody,for the most part. Two towels werethrown into the ring during theseven matches. The crowd whoopedfor their favorites and booed bumdecisions. W’restling went on in¬termittently throughout the evening;sometimes people watched it andsometimes they didn’t. It was usual¬ly worth watching.About ten-thirty, after the lastblack eye had stopped swelling andthe last blister begun to heal, JerryConley and her Shoreland Hotel or¬chestra unpacked their instrumentsand supplied the customers withdance mu.sic until the carnivalclosed, at midnight.8HUBERTGreat NorthernNow FlayinirPrior to New York OpeningTile Meeare. ShubertpreaentThe Seaaon’a Greateat Muaieal Play“NINA ROSA”By OTTO HARBACHAuthor of “Roae Marie.*' “No, No, Nanette"Music by SIGMUND ROMBERGeompoaer of'The Student Prince." "The Deaert Song”Lyrics by IRVING CAESARwithGUY ROBERTSONand caat of 126Good tobaccoin a pipeThat’s what you want!WHY do you hunt high and lowand everywhere, when all thetime here is good tobacco waiting to besmoked in your pipe? Why not dis¬cover Edgeworth and be done withyour hunting?Light a pipeful of Edgeworth. Rollon your tongue the full-bodied smokethat never bites and is always cool.Taste the Edgeworth flavor—the flavorthat never changes. Learn for yourselfwhy Edgeworth is the choice of so manycritical smokers all around the world.You simply must meet Edgeworthsomehow. Buy a can of it. or borrowtome, or let us send you several pipe¬fuls, free, just to taste. Use first thecoupon and then restraint until thepostman comes with the Edgeworth.You’ll bless the day, for good tobaccoin a pipe is what you want.Edgeworth is a carefulblend of good tobaccos—selected especially forpipe-smoking. Its qualityand flavor nmrorc/imng*.Buy Edgeworth any¬where in two forms—"Ready Rubbed" and“Plug Slice’’—15* pock¬et package to pound hu¬midor tin.EDGEWORTDSMOKING TOBACCOLARUS (k BRO. CO.100 S. 22d St., Richmond, Va.ITl try your Edgeworth. And I’ll tryit in a good pipe.NameStreet.Town and Statc-Now M the Edgeworth come! V21THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, MARCH II, 1930 Page ThreeI have just read one of the reallygreat epics about the World War, amasterpiece that moved me as in¬tensely as Philip Gibbs’ “Now ItCan Be Told” did when I was onlyfourteen or fifteen. It is RichardAldington’s “Death Of A Hero,” anepic written by a poet, a man filledwith Beauty, a man who worshipsTruth.It is an autobiography. The waralmost killed Aldington. As he saysin his preface, he started to writethe book soon after the Armisticewas declared, but the war had somutilated him, had so thoroughlydestroyed the spark of life, that forten years the manuscript lay idle.It took ten years for the litera¬ture of the war to appear. In thedeluge has come “Death Of A Hero.”And it has not suffered one bit inits decade’s sleep. It is so magni¬ficently alive, so terribly real evenPart One, Vivace, which goes backto the England of the 1890’s, thatfrankly you grasp at the nearestthing around you, anything that as¬sures you that you luckily neverwent through that holocaust of hellwhich not only made cannon foddersof hundreds of thousands but whichruined the spiritual lives of poets,artists, writers,—men who were su¬premely alive in 1914 and greyghosts in 1918.I only wish Rupert Brooks hadlived through the war. What amasterpiece he would have written!But Brooks is dead in FlandersField. And Aldington has writtenthe epic.The book if vivid. Terseness likethis: “Lady Carter took in Georgeat a glance—shabby clothes, old tiecarelessly ](notted, hair too kong,abstracted gaze, poor, too younganyway—and was politely insolent.”Or a description of the feelingwhich comes to George Winter¬bourne, the hero, as the reality ofkilling men dawns on his conscious¬ness. “The fighting was so imper¬sonal a.s a rule that it seemed rathera conflict with dreadful hostileforces of Nature than with othermen. You did not see the men whofired the ceaseless hail of shells onyou, nor the machine gunners whoswept away twenty men to death inone zip of their murderous bullets,nor the hands which projectedtrench-mortars that shook the earthwith awful detonations, nor eventhe invisible sniper who picked youoff mysteriously with the sudden im¬personal “ping!”And then this protest, the pro¬tests of the Captain Flaggs, the Cap¬tain Tanhopes, the Captain GeorgeWinterbournes, the dead RupertBrookes.“After all, did it matter so much?Yes, did it matter? What were a fewmillions human animals more or less?Why agonize about it? The most hecould do was die. Well, die then.But O God, O God, is that all? Tobe born against your will, to feelthat life might in its brief passingbe so lovely and divine, and yet tohave nothing but opposition and be¬trayal and hatred and death forcedupon you! To be born for the slaugh¬ter like a calf or a pig! To be vio¬lently cast back into nothing—forwhat? My God, for what? Is lifevain, beauty vain, love vain, hopevain, happiness vain? ’The war toend wars’!”We who live in our .smug littleUniversity world have forgotten veryeasily the Great Conflict. We werethe lucky ones, the children who hadto stay at home and go to schoolwhile those who were old enoughwere sent across the sea to make ex¬cellent fodder.It was such a pretty war, wasn’tit? We children were strangely ex¬cited. We couldn’t fight, of course,but we went to the “nickel” showand cheered when the Allies knock¬ed the stuffings out of the Germans,who did nothing else in the war ex¬cept bomb hospitals, kill children,and rape women.There were a lot of memories forsome of us . . . Liberty Bond Drives(Continued on page 4) Spring Grid DrillTo Start EarlyIn Next QuarterSpring football practice will be¬gin immediately after the Springvacation is over according to CoachA. A. Stagg. Mr. Stagg said thathe intended to stand the grid drill offas soon as the next quarter starts,although he has not definitely pickedhis staff or made final arrangements.The head coach will be assisted byAlonzo Stagg Jr., and probably SaulWeislow and Lawrence Apitz. Weis-low was tackle on the Maroon squadfor three years and captain in 1928,although he was not able to playmost of his last year because of aleg injury. Apitz was a star endon the team for three seasons. Heplayed his last year in 1927.Mr. Stagg will select his staff def¬initely when he finds out the num¬ber of gridders who turn out for thelapning training period. The pro¬gram will consist mostly of funda¬mentals, but the "Director” hopesto include more advanced drills iftime permits.“Bub” Henderson, who has beenline coach for the last few seasonshas been in California and has notbeen communicated with concerningthe spring quarter. If he does notreturn, Weislow will probably takeover the job of instructing the line,while Apitz will work with the ends.WOMEN BOWLERSMAKE HIGH SCORESThe scores of graduate womenbowlers in regular bowling classesheld this quarter and Fall quarterappear among the highest made dur¬ing that time.The tournament held March 7 formembers of bowling classes of Falland Winter .quarters was won byMary Zabrosky, a graduate studentin Social Science, with a score of143. Mona Hodges came in secondwith 141. The next highest scoreof the 24 entrants was 111 and wa.imade by Virginia Oelschlager.The highest score made during BIG TEN FENCING,GYM TEAMS MEETHERE FOR TITLEHoffer’s Varsity GymnastsLoom As MeetFavoriteBartlett gymnasium will be thescene of great activity this week¬end when the Big Ten gym and fenc¬ing teams assemble to fight it out forthe Conference championships. Thegym finals will be held on Saturdayevening, while the fencers will startwork Friday night and continuebouts during Saturday afternoon.The dueling finals will be staged onSaturday evening.The gymnasts have come throughthe various dual meets without a de¬feat. They dow'ned the Illinois ag¬gregation by a neat margin. Themini were conference champs lastyear, and, consequently, the Ma¬roons enter the final contest with aslight edge.The Chicago gym teams have madea habit of being conference leadersfor a good many years. Under theconstant drilling of Coach Hoffer theMaroon turners have become extre¬mely proficient in the various events.The dope has t that another cham¬pionship is on its way.Th fencers will have as their maincompetition the Illinois squad whichis the present title holder. The Ma¬roons beat Illnois in a dual meet,and shoud give a good batte for fii’st,although other conference outfitshave been improving steadily and of¬fer plenty of competition.the two quarters was 154. FlossieWarner, graduate student in SocialScience and Mary E. Neblick, grad¬uate in Education both turned inthis score as their highest. IsabelMacLeod, undergraduate made thesame score.AND NOW A DISTINCTLY NEW ONE—THE- POST PAID -“THE HORN WITH A SMILE”“IT SPEAKS FOR ITSELF”NOT INTENDED AS A WARNING S1GN.AL BUT AS AJOLLY LITTLE GREETER—MADE OF WOOD ANDHAVING THE MUSICALLY MELLOW NOTE OF THECUCKOO BIRD-INSTALL ONE ON YOUR CAR AND HAVE A LOT OFFUN SERENADING THE JAYWLKERS, ETC.- DISTRIBUTED BY -HORNS “A Specialty* COMPANY- NOT INC. -2977 COTTAGE GROVE AVE.CHICAGOPHONE VICTORY 6622 MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTEDDESMOND “HELLS BELLS” AUTO CHIMES $55BUELL TROMBONE AIR HORNS $55 FAVOR WOLVERINES,WILDCATS IN BATTLE. FOR SWIMMING TITLEEvanston, Ill., March 11.—Newrecords in nearly all events are ex¬pected to be hung up when swim¬mers of the Big Ten assemble atEvanston March 14 and 15 for theannual Western Conference cham¬pionships. h'ive of the eight exist¬ing records have been lowered indual meets this season and the boysare e.xpected to set them officially inthe coming meet. The races will beheld in Patten pool at Northwesernuniversity.The battle for first place shouldbe a lively one with Michigan andNorthwestern regarded as outstand¬ing favorites. The Wolverines up¬set the Purple 40 to 35 in a dualmeet and hope to repeat in the titlemeet. Northwestern has an edge onfirst place winners bu the Wolver¬ines will count heavily in the otherpositions, a factor which won themthe championship last year.Other teams which wMll figure inthe point column are Wisconsin,Minnesota, Iowa and Illinois. How¬ever, these squads do not possesssufficient all around strength tomake a bid for the championship.Both Northwestern and Michiganhave a number of stellar perfom-ers who are amost cetain to cracksevearl marks. Capt. Ault of Michi¬gan set a new' record of 5 :04 in the440 last year and will be out to bet¬ter that mark in this his last sea¬son. A1 Schw’arz of Northwesternhas repeatedly bettered all free stylerecords in meets this year and is justabout a cinch to lowe rwhat evertwo events he enters. He will swimthe 100 yard dash and either the40 or 220 yard swims besides themedley relay.Besides Ault, Michigan has Walk¬er in the sprints; Goldsmith in thebreast stroke Walaitis in the fancydiving and a number of other cap¬able men sprinkled throughout allevents. ,Northwestern appears to have anedge over, the Wolverines in firstplace w’inncrs but does not have(Continued on page 4) WATER POLO TEAM WINS CONFERENCECHAMPIONSHIP; CAGERS LOSE TOPURDUE IN SEASON’S FINAL GAMETank Team Bests Hoosiers; Gymnasts Down MilwaukeeAggreagtion; Grapplers Defeated; TrackTeam Eighth in Big TenDuring the last week-end butthree of the Maroon athletic teamsemerged victorious, the water poloteam with a 14 to 1 score againstthe Indiana water dogs, the gymteam with a win over the MilwaukeeY. M. C. A. and the swimmers tak¬ing Indiana 39 to 35. Coach Mer¬rill’s hitherto undefeated fencingteam got one on the nose from theMichigan squad, the Chicago teamlosing by a wide margin. The Ma¬roon track team at the Big Ten In¬door conference could do no betterthan tie for eighth place with 7points, Wisconsin winning the cin¬der championship.Purdue became the first school tohave an undefeated basketball teamsince 1919 by trouncing the Maroonfive to the tune of 32 to 20. TheChicago wrestlers lost a close meetto Northwestern the final result be¬ing Northwestern 16, Chicago 12.Poloists Beat HoosiersBy defeating the Hoosiers theChicago w'aterpolo team became theconference champ. The game wasa literal walkaway with the Maroonmen almost scoring at will. Six menplayed their last game for Chicago.They are Captain Bartoli, WendellStephenson, John McNeil, Silver-stein, Plimpton and Ladanyi. Theother men who composed the cham¬pionship team and who will returnnext year are McMahon, Brislen,Moore, and Rittenhouse. McGilliv-ray’s men won five conferencegames and lost none to claim thetitle. The only other aggregationthat is undefeated is Northwesternwith three wins but the Maroons,with five victories, have a betterclaim.Nothing remains for Coach Dan Hoffer’s gym team in the field ofaccomplishments than to walk awaywith the Big Ten title next week.Last Saturday the Maroon gymnastsadministered another beating to theMilwaukee Y. M. C. A, group by adecisive score. The Maroon turn¬ers under the capable leadership ofthe versatile Menzies have undertheir belts the scalps of Ohio State,Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin and Min¬nesota. Incidentally Illinois waslast year’s conference champ and soit looks as though everything pointsto a conference title in gym forChicago w’hen the Htular battle getsunder way this Saturday evening atBartlett gymnasium.Tank Team VictoriousAfter somewhat of a mediocreseason, the Swimming team closedthis year’s dual meet competition bybettering Indiana 39 to 35.Those who held hopes for a Ma¬roon championship in track weresorely disappointed when the resultsat Minnesota showed the Chicagoteam way back in eight place orrather tied for eighth. However thissounds twice as bad as it really wasfor the teams were so closely bunch¬ed that three more points wouldhave placed the local team in fiftnplace. A lot of hard luck trailedCoach Merriam’s men but despitethat, it seems as though the 1930Maroon is quite inferior to the onelast year. Haydon tripped over thelast hurdle in the semi-finals andthat ended his hopes of defendinghis title. Weaver was off form sohe had to be content with a thirdplace in the shot. Dale Letts ran abeauiful race in the half mile tofinish a yard in back of the superb(Continued on page 4)The only medium for the publication of campus affairs.Complete information on intramural and inter¬collegiate competition — witty j columnsforceful editorials—social news—theday’s celebrities—and the latest ^stories of the campus.Without which your knowledgeof college is meager.THE DAILYMAROONPage Four THE DAILY MAR(X>N, TUESDAY, MARCH 11. 1930WATER POLO TEAMWINS CHAMPIONSHIP(Continued from sports page)Boilermaker Orval Marvin wno ranthe 880 in 1:55 7-10 thereby break¬ing the meet record. Martin, thebest middle distance runner to breakinto Big Ten circles in a long timemight have smashed the former rec¬ord to smithereens but he had wonthe mile run shortly before andwasn’t in the best of condition foranother greulling race. Kelly of Chi¬cago accounted for a Mai'oon pointby taking fourth in the two mile.Bud East concluded the Maroonscoring by copping a fourth in the60 yard dash.In the team scoring Wisconsinwas first, Illinois second, Indianathird, Michigan fourth and Purduefifth. Iowa the defending champtook seventh place with 8 markers.Both teams displaying an airtight defense, the championshipPurdue five whipped the Maroonteam in the final game of the sea¬son. Rough playing featured thegame. Boesel did well in holdingMurphy down to nine points al¬though the lanky Boilermaker washigh scorer in the game. Boots andKellar accounted for the other Pur¬due points. The final score thatlowered the curtain to Big Ten bas¬ketball was Purdue 32, Chicago 20.BETWEEN THE TWO OFUS(Continued from sports page). . . big posters which emphatically Ideclared that we were going to make jthe AVorld Safe for Democracy • • • |newspapers with big black headlinesnd long stories which had to do with |battles ... I can remember reading jevery day a double column list ofnames, the title of which said, jKilled and Injured in Battle. jIt is all very strange now. And jit is even stranger every Armistice IDay when for two minutes all of us |face the east. It does seem hard to |believe while I look at the pale sun- 'light outside that millions no longer !see it. jThat is why there is an epilogue jto “Death of a Hero’’ with a fewlines:“And I thought of the graves bydesolate TroyAnd the beauty of many young mennow dust.And the long agony, and how use¬less it all was.And the talk still clashed about meLike the meeting of blade and blade, i“And I looked at the hollow cheeksAnd the weary eyes and the grey- |streaked headsOf the old men . . . nearly forty . . .about meAnd I too walked awayIn any agony of helpless grief andpity.’’ A. A.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR 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.WANTED—Double decked bedsfor fraternity house. Call WalterYates at Midway 1119 any noon.SPEND your vacations and week¬ends at the Michigan Dunes. Lot-ana Hill Cottage open all the yeararound. Good table, modern con¬veniences. Write or telephone forterms. Tel. Baroda, 36-F-ll, C. A.Schrader, Bridgman, Michigan. EDWARD G. BASTIANElected to Phi Beta Kappa,National Honorary Scholastic frat¬ernity, having earned an “A-’’ aver¬age at the end of his Junior year.PUBLISH FINALRESULTS OF I-MTRACK CARNIVAL(Continued from page 1)2. Haydon, Psi U.3. McComb, D. K. E.Mile Run Upperclass. Time 5:03-3-5.1. Goodrich, Ponies.2. Schubel, Ponies.3. Cooperider, D. U.Mile Run Freshman. Time 4:53 1-5.1. Macharg, Unatt.2. More, A. T. 0.3. Cohen, Unatt.300 yd. Run. Time :36 2-5.1. Moorehouse, Phi Kappa Sig.2. Tucker, Phi Gamma Delta.3. Beardsley, Phi Pi Phi.600 yd. Run. Time 1:28.1. Cohn, Macs.2. Schlessinger, D. TT.3. Schubel, Ponies.440 yd. Run (Freshmen) Time57 2-5.1. Jontry, D. K. E.2. Waldenfels, Unatt.3. Offil, Kappa Sigma.880 yd. Run (Freshmen) Time2:17 1-5.1. Hinchliff, Sigma Nu.2. Galvanni, T. K. E.3. Alexander, H. Unatt.Relay.1. Phi Pi Phi. Time 2:15.2. Delta Kappa Eps.3. Phi Delta Theta.Shot Put (Frosh) 38 feet 9 inches.1. Maneikis, Delta Sig.Shot Put (Upperclass) 41 feet10 inches.1. Van Nice, D. K. E.High Jump 5 feet 3 inches, Up¬perclass.1. Knudson, Phi Kappa Sigma.High Jump 5 feet 5 inches, Fresh¬man.1. Ashback, Phi Sigma Delta.MENTION THEDAILY MAROONTO THEADVERTISERSTOP! LOOK! LISTEN!We have private rooms for card luncheons, dinner parties,committee meetings, etc.Luncheon 40c, II to 2. - Dinner 75c, 5 to 8A la Carte Service I I to 8Sunday Dinner $ 1, 12 to 8Witch Kitch Inn6325 Woodlawn Av«. Fairfax 9153 FAVOR WOLVERINESWILDCATS IN BATTLEFOR SWIMMING TITLE(Continued from sports page)quite the well balanced aggregationas possessed by Michigan. Outside ofSchwartz, the Purple’s best bets arePetersen and Hewlett, breast stroke;Ddck Hinch, bacl^troke; O’Keefe,diving and Wilson, 440. Petersenand Hinch hold the Big Ten recordsin their specialties.In the battle for third place anyone of three or four teams has agood chance of winning. Iowa withone of its best teams in years willfight it out with Wisconsin, Minne¬sota and Illinois.Wentworth Lobdell, the Hawkeyesfancy diver, is about an equal betto win the diving along with Walai-tis of Michigan and O’Keefe ofNorthwestern. Other Iowa stars areCrookham, Petersen and McCulleyin th ecrawl events and Mohl andLloyd in the backstroke.Wisconsin’s leading entry will beMeyers, breast stroke star, who willgive other competitors in this eventa tough race. He placed second toPetersen of Northwestern in lastyear’s meet and forced the Purpleace to set a new record. Chizek andLango, Badger sprinters shouldcount in the 40.Marsh of Minnesota will forceHinch of Northwestern all of theway in the backstroke. They finish¬ed first and second in the meet ayear ago. This race should be nipand tuck with the edge going to the jNorthwestern entry. iOnly 300 tickets are available for ihe meet and they will be placed on isale at the Northwestern ticket or- jfice Thursday, March 6. jIPATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERS RUTH H. McCORMICKHer campus political backers havebeen challenged to a debate by theDeneen Club at the University.“Plain politics,’’ says the old timer.ILLINOIS RELAYS TOBE RUN OFF MAR. 15Urbana, Ill.— Approximately 800athletes from 80 universities, col¬leges, and high schools will be en¬tered in the classic University ofIllinois relay carnival on March 15,when almost every institution fromthe Big Ten, Missouri Valley, LittleNineteen, and the Mid-west confer¬ence, as well as a few from the east, ,will send their foremost track and 1field artists. iIt w'ill be the thirteenth annual irevival of the competition which is ‘Jewell^P!PE»AOn81 N. State St.. Chicago recognized as the outstanding in¬door collegiate track event of theyear. Four university relays, threefor colleges, a high school relay, anopen relay, the all-around, and tenspecial events comprise the programwhich is likely to furnish many newrecords, some of which may eclipseAmerican indoor and even worldmarks.The East is sending two athletesto compete in the all-around, lastyear won by Barney BerMnger ofPennsylvania, Olympic star in 1928.Bellinger captured the title with arecord smashing effort which netteuhim a total of 6070 points, and sur¬passed the previous mark of 5603points hung up in 1925 by EmersonNorton of Georgetown.Everett Utterback of Pittsburgh,will attempt to defeat the Penn ath¬lete, while three others who placedlast year will again oempete, Toddof Indiana and McDermont and Har¬per of Illinois.A new mark seems likely in theuniversity medley relay with manyteams sending fast squads. Indiana,Purdue, Chicago, Miami, and OhioState, are expected to be in thethick of the battle. Each one has amiddle distance man of extraordin¬ary ability to run the anchor milein this race.The college division will see everyone of last year’s winners return¬ing to defend their titles. KansasState Teachers college, with a vet¬eran team, may retain the two milerelay championl^hip and possiblyclaim the mile and two mile and ti¬tles as well. DePauw’s mile team.TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1208 East 63rd Street IYoung and old taught to dance. |Adults’ lessons strictly private No ione to watch or embarrass you. |Day or EveningTelephone Hyde Park 3080 | which ran off with first place in 1929is practically intact, while MichiganState Normal has two men left fromits winning outfit in he medley.The main mee will be held Satur¬day night, Marh 15, when the uni¬versity relays and special events willbe run off. In the afternoon the col¬lege and high school relays, all-around championship and prelimin¬aries in the special events will becontested.Prominent StudentsContribute to NewMonthly PublicationSterling North, Nicholas Matsou-kas, Stanley Newman, FroelichRainey, and Dan Fogle formerly ofthe University, have contributedshort stories, articles, poems and bookreviews to “Earth,’’ a literary month¬ly, which is being put on sale for thefirst time March 16. In additionthere will be material by oth^r au¬thors.KENWOOD TEAROOMEvening Dinner 65c4:30 to 8:00Luncheon 40c11 to 2:00Sunday Dinner 90c12 to 8:006220 Koowood Arm.MlDway 2774...on the screen it's Charm/...in a cigarette it's Taste /MLeRIT is sure to rise.” Make a cigarette ofbetter quality, of richer aroma and finer fra¬grance — and all the world will find it out.Witness Chesterfield’s popularity, growingevery day. No flash in the pan, but enduringpopularity — earned by giving smokers theone thing they want:“TASTE a6ove everything” MILD . . . and Yv.tTHEY SATJ'jryOhesterfieldFINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDZ J10?<) T tnnrrr a Tnairrw, C0.f