SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON ^6VoL 30. No. 44,COLLEGE SHOULDTEACH SCIENTIFICATTITU^FRANKLast Test of Educationk Quality ofThoughtThe fittest offering a student cancarry from the class room to the com¬monwealth is the temper and techniqueot the scientist, President Glenn Frankof the University of Wisconsin toldthe undergraduates of the Universityat a special assembly yesterday. Classesat II were dismissed to enable all un¬dergraduates to hear the Wisconsinpresident."The nltimate test of the educationaleffectiveness of your years at the uni¬versity will be the quality of thoughtand action you later bring to the affairsof state or nation you may serve ascitizens,” President Frank said. ‘‘Whenthe printing press was invented thecollege lost its justification as a mer¬chandising agency for knowledge,riiere are today a thousand ways oflearning information that are less ex¬pensive than going to college. Themain business of schools is to help mento achieve the temper and the tech¬nique of the explorer.“Blessed are Meek""1 offer you as the statement ofscientific temper a text from the Bookof Matthew—‘Blessed the the meek,for they shall inherit the earth.’ The‘meek’ of this text I apply to thosewho put their trust in the power ofscientific inquiry rather than the powerof dogmatic assumption or wishfulthinking.“One of the puzzles of .ci.ilization isthat, in the face of history, modernmen will still embrace the cult of vio¬lence and actually believe that mankindmay be saved by force. The verdictof natural and of social history isagaiast the api)stles of violence. Vio¬lence cannot protect institutions; vio¬lence cannot kill ideas; violence cannotterrify men into agreement; violencecannot destroy the morale of the de¬termined.War No Solution‘‘Today we arc beginning to realizethat, aside from meeting the immediatemenace of military power gone mad,there is hardly one of the major prob¬lems of the world’s tangled politics andeconomics that we have really solvedas a result of the war. I am notpleading for an undiluted pacifism oran uncompromising non-resistance. 1know that in this imperfect civilizationforce will continue to figure in the af¬fairs of men. But unless the \’ersaillesof the world supplement the \’erduns(Continued on page 2) Today’* Weather:Fair, with moderatewinds.UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 9. 1930 Price Five CentsEleven OrganizationsDeclared Elxtinct“At the meeting of the Boardof Student Organizations, Publi¬cations and Exhibitions held Sat¬urday, April 5, the University Re¬corder reported that the follow¬ing organizations previously rec¬ognized by the Board are, so faras he can ascertain, no longeractive:Fellows club, Romans, ThetaKappa Psi (Medical), Congrega¬tional club, Dunker club. GeologyJournal club. University Sym¬phony orchestra. Art club. DeltaSigma Rho (Debating), JapaneseStudents club, Korean Studentsclub. 'Unless evidence ot renewedactivity is presented these organ¬izations will be automatically re¬moved from the list ot recog¬nized organizations October 1,1930.“Walter A. Payne,Recorder and Examiner ” Levitzki Believes Audience Wants OnlyEntertainment; Plays with That in MindPRESENT PHASESOF WOI^LD PEACECampus Unit Hears TwoPacifist Leaders By Alfred V. FrankensteinIn the matter of choice of programMi.scha Levit.ski, who gave a piano re¬cital at Maiulel hall yesterday after¬noon, was far different from most ofthe recitalists who visit this Univer¬sity. The bulk of these ladies andgentlemen seem to believe that Uni¬versity audiences demand programsmade up of compositions one can findin the Sears-Roebuck catalog. Mr.Levitski gave us a concert which, whileentirely traditional in its makeup,showed that its author did not feel thathis hearers needed elucidation ratherthan enjoyment.The nnintelligence that ruled yester¬day afternoon in Mandel hall, and re¬fused to admit latecomers until the en¬tire first group had been played, pre¬vented the writer from hearing any ofLevitski’s classical offerings, and sothe artistic crux of the program, the“.•\ppassionata,” had to be foregone.I'hc second group was Chopin and atits opening Levitski was treated to aconcert hall phenomenon that must tellrecitalists a more convincing storythan volumes of applause. The audi¬ence, dumb before the program nota¬tion "Nocturne in F sharp major,”l)rokc into the success-sigh, the wavelike “ah" that greets familiar Chopinl)eautifully played. This and the rest of the group presented a Chopin quiteunlike the picture painted by Prof.Dent, of a pianist improvising whilethe tunes of Bellini clang sweetlythrough the absinthe fumes; it sugges¬ted rather the Chopin raptures ofJames Gibbons Huneker. And for theright words to hit off Levitski’s play-ing go to Huneker also—his favorite“ncarls on hot velvet’’ might do for theevolutions of Levitski’s fingers, eventhough the temperature of the velvetmight not reach the point on theFahrenheit scale attained by certainothers. But the expressive poetry inLevitski’s performance of the firstarabesque of Debussy is not surpassed.The success-sigh was repeated, andat this writing apparently the recitalachieved a success beyond most oftliose presented here. 1 tied before theSdinlz-Kvler transcription of the‘(Blue Danube,’’ which is one of thethings (along with the “MephistoW'altz,” the opera ‘‘Tannhaueser,’’ thefairy plays of Strindberg, and bridge)nobody can play for my money, and atthis writing, long after the concertshould have been over, the crowd isnot apiwaring on the Mandel hall steps.That means encores—which is a hopeon my part as well as a fact onI.evitski’s. Name AdditionalSponsors for BallTwo additional sponsors werenamed for the Military ball yes¬terday by the committee incharge, Dorothy Reiner, a mem¬ber of Quadrangular, and FrancesBlodgett, Pi Delta Phi. This com-plieites the twelve ^ponjsors t«j|rthe ball. Tickets for the ball arenow on sale at the Universitybookstore. University Pharmacy,and the R. O. T. C. office in Lex¬ington hall.Crossed Cannon, honor societyof the military department, willinitiate three men tomorrow atnoon. The three are HerbertLicht, Ned Veatch, and RobertGaren.Peg Russell’s name was yester¬day misquoted as "Margaret”Russell.SPEIGHT AUTHOROF NEW COURSEOutlines Novel StudiesIn PersonalitiesProfessor Harold E. B. Speight,chairman of the department of biog-j raphy at Dartmouth college, who isFRANCISCAN MONKWILL DO RESEARCHIN ANTHROPOLOGYFather Berard Haile, a Franciscanmonk of the order’s missionary head¬quarters at St. Michael, .Arizona, hasbeen appointed Research associate intlie department of .Anthropology.Father Haile, who is the first Cath¬olic priest to have academic status onthe University staff, will continue hisresearch in Arizmia on Indian lore un¬der the Anthroiiology department..\ccording to Professor EdwardSapir, acting head of tlie anthropologydepartment, “Father Berard’s positionis unique in tliat he lias spent manyyears among the Navaho and is muchbeloved of them. We were very for¬tunate to get him since he is unques¬tionably the outstanding scholar in thecountry on their language and ances¬tral customs. His religious backgroundhas further given ^him a keen insightinto the involved ritualry of the Indianculture.”Father Haile is now' working atChinllee, Arizona, and has gathered3,690 pages of material on the ancientchants, ceremonials, and legends of theNavahos by daily interviews. Thissummer he will tent among theApaches of New Mexico, using the;amc method plu® a r«*rording phnnn- "New Phases of World Peace”will be discussed by Rev. LeonRosser Land, founder of the N. Y.Bronx Free Fellowship, and by Mrs.Laura Hughes Lunde, expert on the•Armament Trust, Friday evening at8 in Harper M 11 at an open meet¬ing of the Peace Workers society.Dr: Land 1:' a-prominent member ofthe New York War Resisters LeagueExecutive committee, and is a lead¬er in liberal movements. He is aChicago man and graduated fromMeadville Theological seminary in1920. He then studied at the UnionTheological school in New York, andbecame preacher at the Labor Tem¬ple. For several years after this hewa.s pa.stor of the Third Unitarianchurch in Brooklyn.Started Liberal ChurchIn 1925, Dr. Land started what isknown as the Bronx Free Fellowship,an experiment of his own which hasproved unusually successful. Hewent into the New York Bronxwhere the working people live, andthere built up a liberal church amongthe young people of all denomina¬tions in the working classes. Theproject has been going for five years,and there are now several hundredmembers, Christians and Jews, whoattend the liberal services and takepart in the free-(fiscussion forumafter churdh. The entire note ofthis institution is of progressivethinking and acting, and Dr. Landhas a reputation for dynamic liberal¬ism.Studied Armament . .Mrs. Laura Hughes Lunde is the(Continued on page 2)Friars on LookoutFor Leading Lady;Tryouts ContinueSomeone to play the part of Bettina,the leading lady in the coming Black-friars show, is still being sought byDonald McDonald III, director of theshow. All those men who have not asyet tried out for this part may do so,previous experience not being neces¬sary.“The spirit and enthusiasm shownso far in rehearsals has been fine andI hope that it will keep up, said Dinnyat yesterday afternoon’s tryouts. Try¬outs for speaking parts were held yes¬terday afternoon in the Reynolds clubtheater, and a rehearsal of the polkaand the three songs that have beenlearned thus far. was held yesterdayevening in Mandel hall. Today’s re¬hearsal will be at 2:30 in Mandel.At 7 a general rehearsal will beheld in Reynolds club theater. Theafternoon rehearsal will be con- DEAN ADVOCATESKINDERGARTEN FORNON - INTELLIGENTS.Advocating a super-kindergarten forlion-intcllcctual college men, C. M.McConn, Dean at Lehigh University,declared that “there should he a sep¬arate institution for those who considerj hooks a bore, and a real college, inI the old-fashioned sense, a place pri-I inarily for studies, for the intellectuallyi gifted,’’ according to the Daily Prince-i tonian.I‘‘riie kindergarten i)roper is theI place where young children, not yetI at the stage of using hot>ks are ad-I mirahly taken care of and very skil-I fully educated, by means of variousI pleasant games and ‘occupations.’ f.x-lactly similar training at a higher levelI is needed for those of 18 and 19 years,i "With the super-kindergarteners' thus sensibly and humanely taken carej of, the intellectually gifted studentsleft behind in the real college could re¬ceive cultural and professional train¬ing which none of them would despise,j 'I'he lockstep would he abandoned,j Daily recitations, weekly quizzes,j monthly grades, and ‘cut’ systems,—j devises of the lower schools, unknownj in institutions of higher learning, couldI lie discarded. Professors could heconieI teachers in.-tead of policemen andj deans would become obsolete."'I'hen perhaps our colleges and uni-i versities could liegin to send fortli ad¬equately trained workers into the pro-I fessions, into literature, art, science,I polities and social service, to Iniild anew American civilization with respectto which .Americans could cease to beapolegetic,’’ said Mr. McConn,Dean McConn’s sarcastic solutioncomes as the Answer to a problempresenting the gravest appearance tomodern educators. “GREEK AND ARTYIELD HIGHESTGRADES”—PAYNE-Accordin r.o a thesis written byJohn William Payne, Fxonomics isthe most severly graded subject and^rcek and Art the easiest in which toget the coveted six grade points. Thebasis for this statement is found in thetable which Mr. Payne has draw'ii upand which is based on the standpointof severity qf grading in all undergrad¬uate courses in the years 1925-1928..Subjects in the order of their diffi¬culty are as follows; Economics,Political Science, History, Geography, visiting the University this week aschapel slpeaker, is offering a uniquecourse in biographies at his school. Dr.Speight will address a group Sundayat 8 in the breakfast room of Hitchcockhall. “The department of biographyat Dartmouth college offers coursesdesigned to overcome the extreme spe¬cialization of our modern curricula,”said Mr. Speight yesterday. What fol¬lows is taken from a letter fromProf. Speight to the Daily Maroon:Consider Personalities“The purpo.se is to study intensivelysignificant personalities of the ancient,mediaevel and iiKKlern worlds. In thecourse of such studies there is an oppor¬tunity to form .some impression of im¬portant epoch); like the Periclean age. theElizaliethan Fhigland and the nine¬teenth century. At the same timethere is a demand for analysis of mo-(Continued on page 2)Commerce and Administration, Chem¬istry, Psychology, Sociology, Mathe- | “i' i'»I>erial Rome, the Renaisance,inatics, English, Military .Science,Physiology, Biblical Literature, Geol¬ogy, Philosophy, Romance Languages, !Zoology, Astronomy, I’hysics, Bacteri- iology, Pathology, Home F.conomics, |(jeiunanics, .Anatomy. Social Science•Administration, Botany, Latin, F'duca-tion, Art. Greek, and General Liter- ,ature. !The grade points average of allgrades in all undergraduate courseswas found to he “3,” and in general,the grading in the social sciences ismuch more rigid than in the other de¬partments of the Lhiiversity. FRESHMEN PLANSOCIAL EVENINGFOR APRIL 16Y. W. C. A. INSTALLSNEJW CABINET ANDGATHERS FOR DINNERgraph for songs and language sounds, fined to those seeking female parts. Federation ChoosesCounsellors TonightFederation council will meet tonightat 6 in Ida Noyes hall to elect a newcouncil member to replace LuciaDowning, who has resigned after herelection to the presidency of the Y. W.C. A. The council will also choosethe upperclass counsellors for nextyear at this meeting.Miss Edith Foster Flint is meetingall incoming freshman women and theircounsellors every day except Mondayfrom 9:45 to 10:45 and from 12 to12:45 in her office in Cobb hall. Mrs.Flint holds these office hours everyautumn and spring quarters that shemay personally meet the incomingwomen and di.scu'ss with them anyproblems which they may have. Y.W.C.A. announces the installa¬tion of the following women as sec¬ond cabinet members: Ruth Abells,Florence Andrews, Edith Brown,Dorothy Carr, Gladis Castle, Rebec¬ca Hayward, Margaret Hill, MarionLaird, Elizabeth Milchrist, GertrudeNorris, Audrey Pierce, Andrea Rad-cliffe, Louise Richards, Mary Ric¬hards, and Florence Ruch. The dutyand the purpose of the second cab¬inet is to assist the first cabinet inofficial association work and to havecharge of special functions.The Y. W. C. A. Friendship dia-ner will immediately follow the in¬stallation which takes place April10 at 5:45 in the sun-parlor of IdaNoyes hall. Tickets for the eventwill be available until noon Wed¬nesday for 60 cents. 'I'he “Meeting of the ’33,’’ the fir.stsocial get-together of the men of thefreshman class, will he held Wednes¬day evening, April 16. in the Reynoldsclnl). The event will serve tlie pur¬pose of furthering acquaintanceshipsamong the entire class of 1933, and wel¬coming the men entering at the be¬ginning of the winter and spring quar¬ters.Ralph Earlandson, Kappa Sigma, isin charge of the affair, and a commit¬tee composed of Harold Murphy, CarlBode and .Allen Rudy, all freshmen,are making arrangements for an eve¬ning of informal and unique entertain¬ment, according to their reports.It has been planned to have asnearly as possible one hundred percent attendance of freshmen from eachfraternity, a delegate from each househaving attended the meeting in theReynolds club yesterday afternoon toplan the details of the event. STARKIE SPEAKSAND FIDDLES INl/IANDELJONIGHTLectures on History andFolk Music ofG3rpsy RaceIllustrating his remarks with' slides and violin music, Dr. Walterj Starkie will speak in Mandel hall to¬night at 8:15 on the history andlore of the gypsy race in Europe.Folk music and tales, combined intoa lecture-concert, will comprise Dr.Starkie’s presentation, tickets forwhich may be obtained free ofcharge in Harper M12 throughoutthe day.Wandering FiddlerDr. Starkie’s lecture will be founded on his own wanderings as a fiddleramong the gypsies. ^ He discussesthe origin of the gypsies, their mi¬grations through Europe, and theirinfluence upon the music of the vari¬ous countries there. The talk iscolored with his personal experi¬ences with these tribes, and he playsmany gypsy melodies as part of hislecture-concert. 'Termed one of the most pictures-I que figures in present day Ireland,i Dr. Starkie is known as professor‘ of Spanish language and literatureI at the University of Dublin and di-j rector of the Abbey Theatre inI Dublin. He is a noted scholar, bo-j hemian at heart, a versatile violin-j ist, a director of the Irish NationalI Theatre which produces only IrishI plays, and he is the greatest foreignj authority on the Spanish and ItalianI drama. Further, Dr. Starkie hasj been knighted by the king of Spain!I Second Tour of U. S.I The William Vaughn Moody Lec¬ture foundation is sponsoring theappearance of Dr. Starkie this eve¬ning, and information concerningthe lecture from the foundation re¬marks upon the charm, wit and af¬fability of this speaker which has re¬sulted in this second tour of thecountry he is now making. Whilehere last year, Dr. Starkie visitedHarvard, Princeton, Columbia,Smith, Hamilten, Northwestern anda number of other universities aboutthe country.Dr. Starkie is the author of “LuigiPirandello,” “Jacinto Benavente,”"Literary Personalities in modernSpain,” “The One Act Play inSpain,” and other works.44 BUCKNELL COEDSARE PENAUZED FORSMOKING IN ROOMSGREEK COUNCILThe Interfraternity Councilwill meet for the election of offi¬cers in Room D, Reynolds club¬house this evening at 7:15,Virgil Mills, president, announcedyesterday. Mr. and Mrs. HutchinsVacationing in SouthPresident and Mrs. Robert MaynardHutchins are spending a ten day springvacation in Charleston, South Carolina.They left home about a week ago, andare expected back on Saturday. Theyare enjoying the plea.sant weather, andthe relief from official duties and un¬official social obligations.Frances Hutchins, the dark-eyed,four-year-old daughter of the president,accompanied by her nurse, left hometoday for Kentucky. She is visitingher grandmother, Mrs. WilliamHutchins, Sr. j For the next six weeks there willj be a void in the social affairs at! Bucknell University of Lewisburg,I Pennsylvania. Forty-four co-edsI were caught smoking in dormitoryI rooms. So, to penalize them forI violating the university ruling, thej guilty are not allowed to leave thej college grounds, speak to anyone, orI go out on dates.Because of the shortage of wom-I en, several campus dances have al¬ready been cancelled. This tyran¬nical punishment was meted out bythe women’s student senate of whichFrances Kernohan of Chicago isI president.In the Bucknell colloquial, thepenalty is known as the “day, night,and man ‘campus.’ ” It is consider¬ed the most severe penalty that canbe levied, and is the first time in thehistory of the school that the wom¬en’s senate has exercised their rightto inflict it on erring co-eds.UNDERGRAD COUNCILA meeting of the Undergraduate Stu¬dent council will be held Friday atnoon at the Studio Tea Shop, 1369 E.57th Street. During the luncheon,which will be served, the council willdiscuss the matter of the schedule ofelections for next vear’s council.1Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 9, 1930iatig if arantiFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninKS. except Saturday, 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 office at Chicago,*11iBnis, 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, Managring EditorEW^RLE M. STOCKER, Business ManagerROBERT L. NICHOLSON, Assistant Business ManagerHARRIET DEAN HATHAWAY, Woman’s EditorHENRY D. FISHER, Sports EditorARNOLD SCHLACHET, Chairman of Editorial BoardEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTEDWARD G. BASTIAN News EditorEDGAR GREENWALD News EditorJOHN H. HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Junior EditorWILLIAM R. H.ARSHE Whistle EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMBRWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF....Day EMitorMARGARET EGAN Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL....Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORRRICH Circulation ManagerGEORGE GRIEWANK Circulation Assist.ROBERT McCarthy —Sophomore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH Sophomore Asst.SPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULES Asst. Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EditorMARJORIE TOLMANWoman’s Sports Exlitor I cula were reformed by scientific-minded dissenters from the acad-j emic theocracy. Slowly the scientific technique began to penetrateI every department of knowledge and research. The classics, which! even Jefferson wanted his young Virginians to read “with ease,I thorough understanding, and just quantity,” were eclipsed by the1 laboratory studies.The digestion of the scientific technique is nearly complete.Now the university wants its students to scrutinize what has beforebeen inscrutable, with a view to valid interpretations of known facts.The curriculum has been made scientific. Now all activity mustbe made so. We believe we are at the touching point of two erasin the history of American universities. President Frank’s addresssounded the hopes of the new one yesterday.—E. G. B.Official NoticesWednesday, April 9Divinity chapel. Dr. HaroldSpeight, 11:50, Joseph Bond chapel.Faculty Women’s luncheon, 12.Ida Noyes hall.Zoology club, “Glimpses of theLife of the Pacific Islands,’’ Mr. KarlP. Schmidt, 4:30, Zoology 29. I)y Professor T. Smith of the phil¬osophy department, 8:(K). WM.AQ.Divinity chapel: Dr. 11. Speight ofDartmouth, at 11:50 Bond chapel.Celebration of the Holy Communion:(for Episcopal students), 12:00, I'horn-dike Memorial chapel.I’anatrope concert: symphony rec¬ords, 12:45-1:15, Reynolds Clubhouse.A MATTER OF SPACEThe rush to reserve Mandel Hall for various nights in April,a scramble in which Blackfriars, The Forge, and The DramaticAssociation were the chief participants, and the cramped conditionsunder which the Basketball Interscholastics were run off, leave asa residuum the feeling that the campus might do well with moreadequate quarters for public performances. Mandel Hall, while ityet serves its purpose nobly, is the only structure of its kind we have,and Bartlett Gymnasium is ridiculously small when compared withthe athletic buildings of many modern high schools. Mandel Halland Bartlett together might ’be put comfortably inside the Univer¬sity of Illinois Armory.With Mandel, it is a matter of convenience. Mandel is in con¬stant use; and organizations like The Dramatic Association, Mirror,and Blackfriars often find themselves at a loss for a suitable placein which to rehearse. Blackfriars, kindly enough, gave precedenceto The Forge for Thursday night, April seventeenth, for Tony Sarg smarionettes, but only at an inconvenience to themselves. As longas Mandel has the only proscenium on campus, confleits of this kindare bound to occur. It might also be said that the Mandel dressing-rooms and apparati of illusion are woefully outdated. A new the¬atre, with up-to-date facilities, would surely not be amiss.With Bartlett, on the other hand, it is a matter of safety. If !a fire had occurred last Saturday night—and the cigars and cigar¬ettes surreptitiously lighted might have been conducive to a con- ,flagration—there is no telling what would have happened to the avid 'multitude that crammed its walls. The number of exits is too smallto accomodate so large a crowd on its way out, particularly when |it is in a hurry. Bartlett, like Mandel, has seen its day. It was !never intended for so expensive an institution as this has become,just as Stagg Field, in the older days, did not seem so like a back jyard as it now does. 'While the advisability of building a new gymnasium is tied up iin a measure with the future of intercollegiate athletics and inter- !scholastic tournaments, the unsatisfactory housing of dramatic pro¬ductions is, and will increasingly continue to be under present con¬ditions, a distressing problem. A center of the arts, the University !of Chicago must surely provide adequate facilities for that of the :drama. And it might incidentally watch the fire regulations. Socialist club: “The Naval Confer-I ence and After—A Problem forSocialists,” Mr. Clifton Utley, 7:30Graduate clubhouse.IRadio lectures: “American Philos-;^ophy: The Transplantation of Pir-j itanism.” Professor T, V. Smith ofj ;he philosophy department. 8, sta-'' tion WMAQ. “Readings of Moderni Verse,” Associate Professor BertramG. Nelson, 11:35, station WM.AQ. Ec Cerclc Francais: “Centenaire duRtnnantisinc,” .Associate Professor H.I'.. David of the Romance department,4.50 at 5810 W'oodlawn .Avenue.Bacteriology club: 'Cutaneous Sen-■litivity ill Parasitic Infectious.” Pro-lessor \V. Taliaferro of the Bactcriol-i«gy (lepartiuent. 4:30, Ricketts 1. COLLEGE SHOULDTEACH SCIENTinCATTITUDE—FRANK(Continued from page 1)of the v/orld, unless the statesman sup¬plements the soldier, unless construc¬tive policy follows destructive force,the last state of affairs may be littlebetter than the first. Unless the his¬torians have played us false by keep¬ing the facts from us, force is a last-resort weapon with a limited function.Militarism oi Mind“Dogmati.-^m may be described asthe militarism of the mind. Its objec¬tive is to Iiring men to its conclusions.Its method is coercion rather thancotagion. Scientific thinking is theexact opposite of dogmatism. Its ob¬jective is less to bring men to its con¬clusions than to win them to its wayof arriving at conclusions and its wayof holding conclusions. It seeks toconvince men rather than to compelthem. 'I'he scientific mind knows thatmen may he won to conclusions hutthey cannot be compelled.“If you want peace of mind, don’ttry to liring the scientific spirit to theaffairs of your time. Join a gang andcarry its banner, refusing to acknowl¬edge any tact that disturbs the sym-1metry of your platform. But 1 liopeyou will count some things more jprecious than either peace of mind or 'popularity.” ■ PRESENT PHASESOF WORLD PEACE(Continued from page 1)other speaker on Friday’s program,and has had years of experience asa lecturer on Peace, She has madea special study of the ArmamentTrust, and will discuss the currentdisarmament problem. She has beena worker in anti-war movements allher life. Her husband, Mr. ErieLunde, was a conscientious objectorduring the war.<<Organ music: 5:.)(), Porter Heaps. SPEIGHT SPONSOROF NEW COURSEOigan Music. Porter Heaps, 5:3(1.University chapel. • Radio lecture: "'rhe Over .Active.Man," Dr. K. Jacobson of the Pliy--iolmy department, h:0(), WM.AQ.Joint inerting of the Philosophyclub and the Theology club: “Whati' A'.tlue?” Professor Wieman, 7:4o.('’onimon room. Swift hall. A’. W . U. .\. Frienrlsliip dinner: \'icc-I‘resident F. C. Woodward, 6:00 Ida.Voves hail.Philological society (membersonly) : "Survivals of Roman Re¬ligion,” Professor Laing, 8, Classics20. I’ulilic lecture: (downtown) "'rheI''ear of Sin." I’rofessor F. Sapir ofAnthropology deiiartment, 6:45, ArtInstitute.ORGAN RECITALWilliam Vaughn Moody lecture:“The Gypsies and Their Music.” (il¬lustrated), Walter Starkie, profet.^rof Spanish language and literature.University of Dublin, director of the.Abbey theater, Dublin, 8:15, LeonMandel assembly hall. Tickets maybe obtained without charge in HarperMl2, April 8, 9.Thursday, April 10Radio Lecture: ".American I’hiloso-phy" and "Jonathan h'dwards as aFounding Father—a Spiritual l-lmi)irc,” Porter Heaps will play: "Toccatain F Major” by J. S. Bach, "SpringSong” by Macfarlane, “Uarda”, anoriental sketch, by Gillette, “To theEvening Star” by Wagner, and ‘Ein’Feste Burg” by F'aulkes, today at 5in the University Chapel. (Continued from page 1)tives, for the tracing of mental devel¬opment, for the comparison of tem¬peramental factor^, and in general forIisychological interpretation'. I'urther.the literary forms cliaractcristic ofvarious kinds of biography and auto¬biography present interesting prob¬lems for inve'tigation," said I’rofessorSpeight.Offered to Sophomores i"Courses offered at prc'ent are: an |introductory course for sophomores inwhich each week a single l>iograpliicalessay is stiidie*!, a conr.'»i‘ (»n Repre¬sentative Men of .Antiquity, one onRepresentative Men the Middle•Ages and Modern Fra, Rei)resentativeModern .Americans, RepresentativeMen of Fiigland, and a Seminar year-course in Types of Biography."(Signed) Prof. E. Speight. Kolpak Must Dance’In U. S. PremiereAt Goodman Now“Kolpak Must Dam-e,” a melo¬drama which has created a great stirabroad, is being given for the firsttime in America by the Goodmantheater. The play was written byHellmuth Unger, and it will be di¬rected by Hubert Osborne, who ha.sto his credit! such plays as “Holiday”and “The Makropolous Secret.” Thescenes are laid in a large continentalcit^ and the time is contemporane¬ous. “Kolpak” a cabaret musician,a mo.st dramatic character, is play¬ed by Neal Caldwell; “La Serena,”the brilliant, colorful Spanish cab¬aret singer, is played by Ellen Root;the “clown,” by Harry Mervis; the“Bareback Rider,” by Blair Baird;“Lautenschlag,” by Whitford Kane;and the F^ire Eater” by Roman Bo-hnen.O’HARA BACK AFTERILLNESS; DIRECTSSECRET SERVICEMr. Frank H. O’Hara, director ofstudent activities, has resumed hisduties after a bad attack of lumba¬go. According to Mrs. Thomas O’¬Hara, “He has been under doctor’scare for more than a week andshould not be out even yet.”Rehearsals for ‘Secret Service”started yesWrday afternoon. Nor¬man Flaton is a.ssisting Mr. O’Harain the production, which is also un¬der the sponsorship of Mr. NapierWilt’s .American drama cla.ss. MissMinna .Schmidt is tmstuming theplay.' ^J Delicious and Refreshing: Go GratJe Atourist thireJTHE MEANING OF PRESIDENT FRANK’S ADDRESSPresident Frank’s address yesterday was a vigorous precis of ^an epochal idea—the idea that the American university should |evangelize the scientific credo. Since 1859 the scientific techniquehas encroached on the areas where angels and theologians feared totread. The university has digested what science means; it is so |sure the scientific mind is the effective, alleviating mind that it isready to abandon the “aloof places” of the Lucretian philosopher :and to direct meek scepticism on political and social issues of the jday.What an academic perspective stretches from our day andPresident Frank s to that inditer of Hebraic epics, Dr. Timothy IDwight, president of Yale in 1800, who read not to weigh andconsider, but to refute and controvert, and whose Calvinistic rigid¬ity governed both the curriculum and opinions of his students! Orstill farther back—to that castigator morum, Increase Mather, presi¬dent of Harvard in the late seventeenth century, whose lack of sci¬entific temper was so betrayed in his work on “illustrious provi¬dences.”In fact, the narrow tradition of Dr. Dwight, not the liberal oneof the founder of the University of Virginia, Thomas Jefferson, per¬sisted with abating vigor until the third quarter of the last century.Then with the fast growth of industry and industrial science, busi-di«plared th** rl^riru or> th<» boardf of trustees. Curri( ca binLEVIATHAN Your good deedfor todayThis season, brand new Tourist JThirdCabinontheLEVIATHAN, ifWorld’s Largest Ship.,, the entire ★second cabin assigned to "Tourist ^Third”... all its beautiful public itrooms and staterooms... its ele- ★J gant, open upper deck social hall Jif which gives you a full sweep of ^^ the sea... its charming cloistered^ smoking hall... its vast open and ^if enclosed decks for play and prom- ifenades... luxuries and spacious- ifJ ness exceeding former standards Jif for this class. Second Class, as aif class, abolished . .. new Tourist if1 Third Cabin rated "Grade A” and Jit the LEVIATHAN the only liner it★ to offer this peerless rating! Make ★J haste in booking this new, luxu- iit riousw^ontbemightiestfiveday ^if fly er to Cherbourg and Southamp- 'A'J ton. Rates low. JJ Excellent Touritt Third Cabitt ^2 Accommodationt aUo on United w^ States Cabin Liners . . . for atw little as $10.25 a daytOFRCIAL FLEET OF 103 COLLEGEALUMNI ORGANIZATIONS FOREUROPEAN TRAVEL^ Consult your local steamship agent or $I UNITED STATES I★★ LINESCherlea Krcilek. Gen. Art., $1-63*'’W. Jackson Bird., Chicaro.Phone Wabash 2460 1 fSj %LISTEN INGranlland Rice FamousSports Chsmpions '•'Coca-ColaOrchestra -•'Wednesday 10:30to 11 p. m. E. S. T. Coast toCeast NBC Network the Pfgfgggthat refreshesNo matter how busy you are—how b ard youwork or play—don’t forget you owe your¬self that refreshing pause with Coca-Cola.You can always find a minute, here andthere, and you don’t have to look far orwait long for Coca-Cola. A pure drink ofnatural flavors—always ready for you —ice-cold—around the corner from any¬where. Along with millions of people everyday, you’ll nnd in Coca-Cola’s wnolesomerefreshment a delightful way to well-being.Tho CAni|Nifiy« AtlantE, Ga.9 MILLION A DAY-IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GEi WHERE cw-«IT ISPage Three4 ’ ^1Vft* ft' 144* THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 9. 1930Between the Twoof UsBtAlbert ArkuleeandWilliam Har»u«Doctor Harshe, who returns to thiscolumn after an absence of some weeks,or hadcn’t you noticed- offers profuseand profound apolopies for same..\nd there is a reason for his returnwhich I KNOW you will hope will hepermanent. .\nd the reason hein>^ thatI think you ought to know somethingabout a friend of mine, sez he blushingmodestly, Tonj’ Sarg. Tony is a goodguy. He has been doing popular maga¬zine illustrations for years. I can’tthink of an issue of the Sat. Eve. I'ostthat hasn’t had something of his in it.And his marionettes are world famous.Who hasnt' seem them i)erform Riji\’an Winkle, or .\li Haba, (>r DonQuixote? Awfully clever and very in¬tricate those puppets. Some of ’emhave over a hundred parts and almostan etpial number of strings to workthem. And then Tony’s novelties aresold in tea shop|)es all over the coun¬try, Hand painted cigarette boxes andthose kinds of things. Uut don’t gel>ne wrong. He isn’t at all a handpainted sort ni guv.Quite the oi)posite. He’> .i swell gu\.One of the funniest that it has everbeen my i>leasiiri' to meet. Whyvhotildn’t he be; he knows soine of theworld’s biggest clowns. He ha.s al¬ways illustrated .Sam Heilman’s yarns,and he knows I’ercy ('r >sb\ . and Rob¬ert Henchley and a hundred others..\nd he can tell some of the best yarnsof anyone I know.Anil he knows In' publicity too. HeUsed Dicken s Old • iiriosity Shop fora studio once. He must really enjoylife he sees so imn h of it. He spendshis summers commuting between NewYork and Nantucket Island. Therewas a time when he lived out in Hast(Continued on page 4> ROBERT BIBB WINSCHAMPIONSHIP INFRESHMAN TRACKHerrick, Randolph LandSecond and ThirdPlaces InRobert Bibb of Psi Upsilon wonthe Freshman Indoor Track Champ¬ionship of 1930 with 5020 points, itwas announced by the Athletic De-paitment yesterday. For his sterl¬ing performances in the five trackevents he will be awarded a beauti¬ful marble base .statuette of anarcher. Second place in this pop¬ular conte.st which brought outeighty seven participants went toWalter Herrick, also of Psi Upsilon,who accumulated 5240 markers dur¬ing the winter quarter trac'k com¬petition. .Julius Rudolph, unat¬tached copped third position bychalking up 5220 points and secureda position for himself in this selecttrio of 5,000 pointers or better.How«‘ver, close behind them inscores was .Mauric-e Kaden of Kap¬pa .\u with a total of 4970. .41vinJack.son, unattached, showed his ver¬satility by landing in the fifth berthwith 4470, while George Cameronof .Sigma Chi placed sixth by pilingup 4232 markers. Fred Wheeler, afraternity brother of the latterplaced seventh with a score of 4112and Waldenfels unattached was se-(Continued on page 4) Jimmy Kitts GivesThe Lowdown OnHis Athens BoysHaving won their second nationall)a,skctball champion>hip, the longlanky rexans from Athens have putaside their basketball togs for the irrcs-ent and arc enjoying the sundry sightsthat the city of Chicago has to offer.riie 1930 tournament champions, un¬der the watchful eye of Coach JimmyKitts, will remain in the city untdtoday, when they will pull out for thereturn trip home. Coach Kitts re¬ports that a state-wide celebrationawaits his boys.In a talk that a .Maroon reporter iiadwith Kitts the other evening, not afew interesting , facts were gleanedabout the Athens team. .Mthough itwas the general concensus of opinionthat the jiresent team was about astine a team as has ever been seen ona hardwood floor, the .Athens coachsa.\ s he has a couple of boys downI home who handle the ball even betterthan Captain Benny Tom()kins and■ brother Freddy. Jimmie said that they, were pretty young, sore of growing, as'they have a habit of doing in the stateof Tcx;i' in fact, Kitts actuallyowned up to the fact that the boysweren’t sixti'cn yet, 'o the\' could af¬ford to wait awhile..\thens lo^t one game all season, andthat was to Denton, the state cham¬pions. who also came up to the tour-naineiit ;md were defeated b\ St. Johns.^ Kitts dccl.ired that his !)i«ys wouldi never have lost even th.it tilt, but theymade only two out of thirteen free' throws, and lost by five points. On(Continued on page 4) PHI DELTS KEEPHRST PLACE INI-M TEAM RATINGSBeardsley, Phi Pi Phi, HasBig Lead in IndmdualPoint CompetitionPhi Delta Theta retained firstplace in organization .standings atthe end of the wTnter quarter, fig¬ures from the I-M office releasedyesterday revealed. The Phi Deltshold a margin of forty points overthe runner-ups, Phi Sigma Delta andTau Delta Phi, both of whom aretied at 370 points.Beardsley of Phi Pi Phi leads inthe Individual Point standing witha total of 331 points. Beardsleyhas a substanial lead over his near¬est competitor, Lee of Phi DeltaTheta, who has garnered 270 points.The place standings in the Or¬ganization group of the ten highestteam.s arc as follows: Phi Delta The¬ta, Phi Sigma Deltfa and Tau DeltaPhi, Kappa Sigma, Phi Pi Phi, DeltaKappa Epsilon, Phi Psi, Delta Up¬silon, and the Macs.The ten highest in the Individualstandings are Beardsley, Phi Pi Phi,Lee, Phi Delta Theta, Kaufman, PhiSigma Delta, Ritz, Phi Delta Theta,Power, Dekes, Sheer, Macs, Priess,Phi Sigs, Scheid, Phi Delta Theta,Cooperider, Delta Upsilon, andLynch, A. T. 0. Tarpon Club ToHold MembershipTests This Week'I'he (inarterly tryouts for member¬ship in Tarpon club will be held duringopen hour swimming periods this weekand next in the pool of Ida Noyes hall.The two-week period of judging, end¬ing .Ai)ril 21. will be followed by initia¬tion of new' members Tuesday evening,.April 22, at 7:30.Requirements for entrance to farponare not difficult. Women desiring tobecome members must be able to dem¬onstrate the crawl, resting back stroke,side stroke and the preliminary stand¬ing front dive. The Tadpole, or en¬trance test must be followed by theFrog test within one year, or the mem¬ber is automatically dropped frommembership. By means of this time(Continued on page 4) NETSTERS STARTDRILLS WITHOUTLOn IN LINEUPRexinger, Cailohan, Stagg»Heyman, KaplanOn SquadHold Tryouts ForNew Women’s ClubTryouts for Orchesis, Hie newwomen’s rythms club formed lastfall, will be held this afternoon andThursday, April 1 7 at 5 in the lowergymnasium of Ida Noyes hall.Women who desire to try out musthave had at lea.st one quarter ofrhythms work here or at some otheruniversity. Further informationabout tryouts or about the work ofthe club may be secured from MissMarian Van Tuyl, rhythms instruc¬tor in the Women’s Department ofPhysical Education and Harriet AnnTrinkle, rhythms representation toW. A. A. Advisory Board. The Maroon tennis squad has al¬ready got under way in its campaignfor the 1930 conference title. Theteam may not have such an easytime of it this year for the reasonthat George Lott has dropped outof school and will not be under theMaroon colors this season. Lott is atpresent in training in Miami, Florida,for various championship tourna¬ments to be played throughout thecountry.Three of last year’s regulars willbe on hand for competition. Rex-inger will be counted on for plentyof work. He was runner up in theBig Ten last year and No. 2 manon the ..squad. Callahan was captainlast year and will be one of themainstays. Heyman who was No.4 man on last year’s squad, is an¬other veteran net man.Kaplan should be in good formthis year and may see a good dealof action. He was No. 6 man lastseason. Several first year men showpromise. Paul Stagg has done goodwork as a freshman and may find aplace on the varsity. Sheldon andSchmidt have both reported for(Continued on page 4)14r Society Mran dSuits and TopcoatsStetson Hats Bostonian ShoesWinter’s Men’s ShopIn our new location at1346 East 55th StreetVMiily[k:i --1Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 9. 1930PRETTY POLLYShe’s a very pretty blondWith scarlet lacquered lipsOn a pale powdered face.She has two pretty eyesOf bright china blue,But 1 am sure that we wishShe wouldn’t always chew.She may thinkShe is staving offA second rounded chin . . .I might tell her howShe is coaxingLittle wrinkly foldsThat really, I am sure,Have never, never beenThere before beneathHer powered pretty chin.LAPIS LAZULI IOn second thought this seems to be ja stray from the Annette Donnelly |column. !They tell me that Chic Sale’s “Spe-1cialist” is to be dramatised. A “closet |drama” no doubtless. |SIMILE DEPARTMENTAs useless as a vice-president.“The good die young.’’stiffs. The luckv \A lyric inspired by Frederick B. |Millett’s lecture on May Sinclair’s inovel, “The Life and Death of Har- iriett Frean.” A novel ofThe Life of Harriett FreanWho never used her bean. |She did nothing good or badThe novel is short but very sadShe died of a swollen spleen.SEZ EARLE STOCKERor was it Louis Engel, “W hosays there isn’t a drinking problemaround this campus? What about thedrinking fountains in Cobb?’’A scientist has discovered a hrachio- jped that hasn’t changcfl in 100,000.000 ,years. He is taking it down to Con- !gress with him to meet Senator Smoot. !FIJI IBETWEEN THE TWO OFUS(Continued from sports page) ;Orange. N. J.. and stayed in the BigMetropolis ’till the wee snia hours for jhis marionette rehearsals and then jwent home. He lives in The \ illagcnow. It’s less arduous. But lack ofsleep has never daniiiened an enthusi- jasm that journalists love to call “boy- jish.”.■\nd so. customer^, I take much de- jlight in telling you that the Mandel iHall box office oiiens today and thatThe Forge announces “Tony Sarg” ap- !pearing for tlie tir.'.t time at [K^pularprices..-\nd some time I'll tell you about hisbee-u-tif-ul red-headed daughter and allabout how I went to Kurope dressedin Tc>ny's clothes. Honest I did..\nd in the meantime come aroundand get a ticket to his performance onApril 17th.IntcnslTe 3*Months’ ^urscIn StenographyOpen Only to College Studentsfor Bulletin — No Solieitori Employed ilife •. Michigan ATcnac, lath Floorl*hone Randolph 4347 Chicago. Illinois jSAWYERSRAINWEARYORKTO'WN COATThe Yorktown Coat is the latest•ddition to the Fro^ Brand family.This smart wet-weather coat has aconvertible military collar—ra^hm shoulders and is a serviceablegarment ligdit in wei^t & flexible.A Pennine oiled Frc^ BrandSlicker is the leading wetoweatherprotection for college men andwomen.See theee garments at yonr dealers*.H.M. SAWYER & SONEaat Cambrldle n s Maas. ROBERT BIBBS WINSCHAMPIONSHIP INFRESHMAN TRACK(Continued from sports page)cure in eighth place with 4020points accredited him. 3966 pointswas sufficient to give Thomas Good¬rich unattached ninth place. JohnH. Moore copped tenth with 3940.Fifteen men will receive cups fortheir work while all those scoringmore than 2500 points will be re¬warded with medalettes. The otherplacers are as follows.11—Bernard Cohen, unattached,3908.12—Frank Shubel, unattached,3842.13—Albert Galvani, Tau KappaEpsilon, 3755.14—Lawrence Offil, Kappa Sigma,3748.15—Edward Haydon, Psi Upsilon,3700.The awards are to be presentedto the yearling trackmen at theFreshman banquet Friday evening,April nineteenth. Assistant CoachLonny Stagg considers this contestthe most successful ever to be heldat Chicago both from the standpointof numbers of participants and re¬markable times turned in. From theway some of the freshmen steppedthe various distances in this com¬petition, it is belieVed that CoachMerriam wdll have a number ofsophomore regulars on the 1931Track team.NETSTERS STARTDRILLS WITHOUTLOTT IN UNEUP(Continued from sports page)practice. These men are expectedto show real skill on the courts.The coaching this year will be inthe hands of A. A. Stagg, Jr., Dr.Reed has been in charge for a num¬ber of years, but work in connectionwith Billings Hospital has made itimpossible to take the netsters thisyear.CLASSIFIED ADSNEATLY furnished rooms for 2or more. Every convenience. Homecomforts. Call at 5460 UniversityAve.FOR RENT—Beau. frt. rm. for 2on 11th floor overlooking entire parkand lake. Priv. adjoining shower hath,twin beds. References required. Pri¬vate family. Hyde Pk. 0829.NEAT colored girl wants to workmornings. Kenwood 5223. Jimmy Kitts GivesThe Lowdown OnHis Athens BoysI (Continued from sports page)I the other three occasions that Athensplayed Denton, the champions soundlytrounced the state winners. Kitts, how¬ever, figured that the Athens defeat inthe state tournament w'as good medi¬cine for his team, because the boys be¬gan to take quite seriously the exuber¬ant praise of the newspapers whichsaid that Athens was a wonder team.After the Denton defeat, the boyssnapped hack again to a normal pointof view and from that time on, neveronce tasted defeat.Unquestionably, much of the successof the Athens team is directly due toKitts. Both as a coach and as a man,he has been a wholesome influence onhis team, many of whom were prettynaive until Jimmy took them in hand.One of the reasons why Kitts is sostrongly in favor of the tournament isthe benefit his boys have derived fromthe annual trip to Chicago. Like somany of the other teams, Athens repre¬sents a very small town, and most ofthe boys never have an opportunity toI see a city. Kitts says that when helirought his first team to the tourna¬ment about four years ago, his boyswere so frightened and embarrassed: that they were afraid to speak toj people, l.ast year, after winning thej tournament, Kitts gave his boys an op-j portunity to see something of America.' It goes without saying that that tripwas equivalent to a four years’ education. Kitts appreciated that fact andthis year repeated the experience.In commenting about the enthusiasmj and interest in basketball down south,1 Coach Kitts substantiated a fact whichI has made itself quite evident in theI last three tournaments, namely, thatI southern teams are playing about ttu-I best brand of basketball to be seen any-j where in the country. For three yearsj now, southern teams have won theI Stagg tournaments, and on a compari-I son with other sections which haveI sent teams here, the south stands welli above all of them.In the case of Athens, and this hasbeen noticeable among southern teamsin general, the height of the boys is tarabove the average. Of course, justwhat is average height for a high schoolplayer is hard to say. In the middlewest, the boys seem to average aroundfive feet, nine inches. Down south,it is nothing unusual to find at least! two or three six-footers on a squad.This, together with the improvementin coaching, has been responsible forthe excellent basketball that the Dixiehigli school quintets play.ALL COTVODFURS $1.00LESPOUDRES'CODISTINGUISHING ALLCHE LOVELIEST PAGESExquisitely, scientificdllypure, Goty Fdce Pbwdersgive essential protectiondswell as beauty to fresh,young complexions.conrvPlace veNooME .— pams I Utely to DiscussDisarmament BeforeSocialists Tonight“The Disarmament Conferenceand After: A Problem for Social¬ists,” will be presented by Mr. Clif¬ton Utely, Research Assistant in Po¬litical Science before members ofthe Socialist club this evening at7:30 in the Graduate clubhouse. Be-; sides his position at the University,I Mr. Utely is editor of Foreign Notes,i a weekly newspaper of world currentI events which attempts to have ac-I curate facts, unbiased presentation,I and intelligently critical evaluations.Mr. Utely will discuss the history: of the disarmament movement, asI ilustrated by previous internationalaction; he will analyze the presentsituation at the London conference;and he will predict the future of thearmament reduction problem. HeI will state the attitude of SocialistsI on this issue, in view of their econ-I omie and pacifistic principles, and! will offer suggestions as to whateffective action may be taken bythose who desire disarmament.Eugene Link, president of the So- 1! cialist club, urges anyone who is in- Iterested to attend. Elections forthis quarter’s officers will be heldafter the lecture, so all members areasked to be present. The club is jat present carrying out various ac- ;tivities, such as their Bureau f:?r !Municipal Research which is study¬ing Chicago conditions and how tobetter them. The club plans to co¬operate with (Other liberal grtuipson campus and in the city for a largeI celebration on ’May 1st. w’hich will, probably be held in Mandel hall.This is a universal holiday for work¬ers. with speeches and demonstra¬tions.I “COLLEGE STUDENTNO ATHEIST’, SAYSSHAILER MATHEWSI Asserting that the average collegeI student of the fraternity or sororityvariety is not losing his religion, as! alarmists in the pulpit state. Dean Shailer Mathews of the divinityschool, opened his class in the evol¬ution of Christian thought at OhioStiate University where he-is actingas guest professor of the Philosophydepartment for the spring quarter.Dean Mathews stated that insteadof losing his religion the average^udent is acquiring religion.Among the large crowd of stu¬dents, faculty members, and clergy¬men who flocked to hear Dean Mat¬hews’ first lecture was his son, Mr.Robert E. Mathews, who is a profes¬sor of law at Ohio State.PHILIPPINE NIGHTTO TAKE PLACE INMANDEL SATURDAY“Akoy Isang Ibong Sawi,” a na¬tive PhilipiTone song will offer atempting invitation to dashing Span¬iards and coy Filipino girls in theirwide-sleeved sea-grass blouses, whenPhilippine night comes to Mandelhall Saturday at 8, under the au¬spices of the International Students’association.Eighteen Filipino students willpresent the annual program consist¬ing of folk songs, folk dances, mus¬ical selections, and slide exhibits.Festivities will open with a stringcircle rendering “Palomita” and willcontinue through nine numbers,ending on a typically Universitynote, dancing in the Reynolds club.TARPON CLUB TOHOLD MEMBERSHIPTESTS THIS WEEK(Continued from sports page)limit on remaining a Tadpole, thestandard of ability of the members iskept np to the level of the second test.The test is administered and judgedi !)>• nienil)ers of Tarp(»n who haveI passed the Frog test. Judges will be; present in every swimming oi)en hour., Women who wish to take the test mayi sign iq) opposite a date on the posterin the swimming bulletin hoard in the. hasenient of Ida Noyes hall. KlcaiuvrI'atge is in charge of judges and judg-! ing. C AND A NEWSThis column appearing for thefirst time, inaugurates the work ofthe C. & A. council. Arrangementshave been made for the weekly ap¬pearance of the C. & A. News. Con¬tributions will be welcomed by allmembers of the Council.Delta Sigma Pi will meet Wed¬nesday noon and there is to be aluncheon on Friday.Frobus, the Fraternity ef Busi¬ness, will meet Friday, at 12:80 inroom C at the Reynolds chib.Have you heard of the coming C.& A. banquet? FVom all indica¬tions, it gives promise of being ahuge success. Some prominentspeakers have already been obtain¬ed and the date has been set forthe early part of May.Alpha Kappa Psi meets Wednes¬day evening at the Reynolds elub.The Journal of Business, edited byMr. E. A. Dudley, welcomes con¬tributions from students on originaltopics.Professor Douglas is on a sixmonths leave of absence at Swarth-more. He is establishing an insti¬tution which will deal with unem¬ployment. Professor Douglas willresume teaching here the fall quar¬ter.Mr. Yntema is now’ teaching stat¬istics at? the University of Stanfordand will be back for the summerquarter.As.sociate Professor Cox will openhis series of five lectures to begiven at the Art Institute by an ad¬dress on “Why Bu.siness Fluctuates.”The first talk wdll be given Friday at6:45 p. m.Thirty new students have enrolledat the Commerce school this quar¬ter, the number being equally di¬vided between transfers and matri¬culates.pfeXTEBNlfrJewellerAOn81 N. State SL. Chicago—IFood Does Count:In order for any person to do their bestwork, they must be properly nourished with theright kind of food.Coach Jimmy Kitts and his bunch of “sixfoot athletes’* from Athens, Texas, demon¬strated this to everyone by winning the NationalInterscholastic Basketball Tournament lastweek at Bartlett Gym.Every meal this fine lot of athletes had inChicago was prepared in The Maid-Rite Shops—furnishing them with the Vim, Vigor andVitality to carry them through to a GloriousVictory.A WORD TO THE WISE IS SUFFICIENTTHE MAID-RITE SHOPSWhere good foods always prevail 991309 E. 57th St. 1324 E. 57th St.Mi .r.-Aaffc,, / r- "■l r'4 ^