J.003(DQ,i SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON iim Pattp JWaroqn Today’s Weather:Fair, with moderatewinds.Vol. 30. No. 45.CO UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1930 Price Five CentsGREEK COUNCIL DECIDES ON RICE,COWLEY, HERTRAIS, AND FRAIOERIN ELECTIONS, QUIET AS EVER Nomad Scholar Plays Tunes ofGypsies, Dispellers of HumdrumConsiders Zoning BillGoverning WoodlawnProperty *New officers elected last night bythe Interfraternity council are DavidRice, Sigrma Nu, president; ThomasCowley, Phi Delta Theta, vice-presi¬dent; Wesson S. HertVais, Sigma Al¬pha Epsilon, treasurer; and Ken¬neth Fraider, Delta Sigma Phi, sec¬retary.The successful candidates succeedFred Hack as president, Virgil Millsas secretary, Carl Schmidt as vice-president, and Alan G. King as treas¬urer. The elections were transactedin the customary calm.Award Scholarship CupThe council at its meeting decid¬ed to award a silver cup to the frat¬ernity taking first place each quar¬ter in scholarship. The winning ofthe cup for four consecutive timeswill entitle a fraternity to permanentpossession, the council decided. Itwas also voted to consider the im¬plications of the proposal now’ be¬fore the city council to establish azoning ordinance for apartmentbuildings governing the property onWoodlawn avenue between 55th and58th streets.(Continued on page 4) Mirror ElectionApril 17; NameNew MembersInstructors WillDisplace GraduateEnglish TeachersGraduate students are out. .\c- icording to Dean Chauncey S. Bouch- |er, full-time instructors w'ill nowtaech the freshmen composition |course, English 101. This will go Iinto effect fall quarter.Another innovation will be theoffer of an exemption test for Eng¬lish 101 to approximately 150 en¬tering students. They will be ex¬cused from taking tlie course dur¬ing their first (juarter in residencebut mu.st take the examination some¬time during that period. If theyfail they are exp“cted tv register jfor the course during the next twoquarters.A student who receives a grade ofA or B in English 101 may registerfor and take the English 103 Exemp¬tion test. .4 strident who has passedthe English 101 test, has taken Eng¬lish 130, 131, 132, or 141, and isrecommended by his ihstructor inany one of these four courses, maytake the English 103 exemption testin either his .second or third quarterof residence.No student may take the English101 or 103 exemption test more thanonce. Mary Bohnet and Martha Yaegerhave been announced as candidatesfor Production Manager on the 1931Mirror board. Janet Cunninghamand Rosalie Poliak are running forbusiness manager; and three of thefollowing women will be chosen forBoard :—Frances Blodgett, BarbaraCook, Viola De Berrienne, DorothyReiner, and Jean Searcy. Electionswill take place Thursday, .4pril 17,from 9 to 1 in Ida Noyes.The following candidates havebeen elected for membership to Mir¬ror: .\lice Ainbinder, Viola Bowes,Jane Barton. Elizabeth Benthey, Syl¬via Block, Betty Bateson, Mary Ar-t'elia Bowne, Georgia Brantingham,Goldie Breslich, .\vise Dargan, HelenDyer, Helen Eaton, .4iice Edwards,Margaret Egan, Willowmine Epp,Birdie Errant, Florence Fleming,Mary Lou b'orbrich, Dorothy Ford,Margaret Goodman, Natalie Gordon,.Mary Rose Greenstone, HelenGrin^es, .Marjorie Hamilton. BettyHarlan, Rebecca Hayward, CamilleHeineck, Betty Hempelmann, Mil¬dred Hackl, Lucille Hoerr, MarieHowland, .Margaret Hurd.Elizabeth Ito, Helene Johnson,Rena Lipschitz, Janet Lowenthal,F^leanor .Maize, Elizabeth Milchrich,Mary Monij*, EUzabeiiv Paikei, Har¬riet Parker, Grace Plunkett, JeslynRaventos, Dorothy C. Reiner, AldruRiffe, Beatrice Robinson, RosalindRosewater, Ruth Ina Schley, HelenL. Schneller, Virginia Sedgwick,Jeannette Smith. Jeannette Stein,Sarah Stein, Margaret Stephenson,Maureen Tesdell, Ruth Thornton,Frances Tigu, Betty Tressler, VirginiaTroll, .Marjorie J. V'ann, CharlotteWeinberg. These women will be¬come active members upon the pay¬ment of their initiation fee which isthree dollars..4 Mirror tea will be held Wednes-(Continued on page 4> Walter Starkie has lived amongthe gypsies intermittently since hewas eight years old. Last night thestumpy little Irishman flashed vari¬ous views of life among the nomadsof the earth. The rooting character¬istic of the men of this wanderingrace is their ability co <et to chedepth of the .soul of the country m iwhich they live at the time. Theyoutflash the Hungarian in his char-dais, the Bohem'ian in his sensual¬ity. A parasite that exists by ab¬sorbing the life of its environment.Romance of GypsiesPeoples World with FairiesGypsies are dominated by suspi¬cion, by primitive superstition andfear of the novel. Their life ofpromiscuity has identified them with ;the folk-lore and minstrelsy of the jworld. Their indomitable romance Ihas kept the world alive with fairies, |saving themselves from this machine- jage of monotony and boredom, from ’deadening ennui. It is a breath of ' life, a tonic, amidst the squalor ofsameness.They are a solemn lot, motivatedby the thought of death, not life af¬ter death. Their solemnity leadsthem to deeds grotesque in attemptsat propitiation of the opaque. Theirlife in the open makes the primarymotivation the forces of nature.Their music is natural and springsfrom a mood. These people whocannot read a note of music play tophysical passion. They are pagan;again they are solemn.Laments andRibald BacchanlaliaDr. Starkie’s interpretation of thefrypsy folk-tunes on his violinbrought out all the sonorous, rusticforce. Gaudy handwork of arab¬esques, elaborate design, naiveplaints painted with the fantasy ofthe orient struggling through an il¬logical maze of turns and trills. La¬ments and ribald bacchanlalia, cere¬monious Byzantine heritage.(Continued on page 4) GRADUATE COUNCIL FINDS COSTOF PUBLISHING DOCTORS’ THESES'RANGES FROM ABOUT S22 TO $800The Other SideMiddlewest MathSociety to MeetHere Next WeekFIFTY STUDENTSSIGN PLEDGE TOAID PEACE WORKW. A. A. DelegatesAttend ConferenceAt U. of MichiganMargaret Simon, Margaret Egan,and Margaret Hill, who have beer,elected as W. A. A. representatives,will be sent as delegates to the L4th-letic Conference of American CollegeWomen, which will be held April 24,25, and 26 at the University of Mich¬igan at Ann Arbor.During the conference meetingsfor official representatives, roundtable discussion groups for unofficialmembers will be held, as well as aseries of general open meetings atwhich problems pertaining to wom¬en’s athletics will be discussed. Rep¬resentatives to the conference willstay in the Ann Arbor sororityhouses.Anyone interested in attending theconference as an unofficial represent¬ative, may obtain further informa-tjnn MP*‘g**prp«idoritof the organization. “Believing a.? we do that there canbe no righteous or justifiable war,whatever the nature of the disputeinvolve<l we hereby pledge our will,our allegiance and our work to theabolition of war in all its forms, andthe permanent establishment ofworld peace.” This pledge has beensigned by over fifty students at theUniversity, as a membership require¬ment for the Peace Workers society.This is part of the preamble to theconstitution of the club, recently or¬ganized on campus. A membershipdrive is now under way and an openmeeting will be held Friday evenmg,at 8 in Harper M 11 at which Rev.I^eon Rosser Land and Mrs. I>auraHughes Lunde will speak on Peace,and new members will be recruitedand voted into the organization.The society, whose aim is to ai’ousepublic opinion to the state where itrefuses to countenance another warand thus ensures permanent peace Nearly one hundred middlewest-ern members of the American Math¬ematical society will convene Fridayand Saturday, April 18 and 19* onthe University campus for the 280thregular meeting of the body. Simu¬ltaneously meetings will be held inNew York and on the Pacific coast.The conference will include a sym¬posium, a dinner, and three sectionsat which papers will be read byleading mathematicians of the cen¬tral states.Begins at FridayThe sessions will begin Fridaymorning at 10 with two sections atwhich papers will be read by eigh¬teen men. University professorswho will speak are: E. P. Lane andDr. Lincoln La Paz. Other speakersinclude: Professors A. H. Copelandof Michigan, C. C. MacDuffee ofOhio State, G. Y. Rainich of Mich¬igan, R. E. Langer of Wisconsin,j Or. Lane On Program, Section .4 in Ryerson 37 will dis*j cusa geometry and point sets,[Speakers include: Professors 0. J.I Peterson of Kansas State Teachers, college, Arnold Emch of Illinois, MLL. Ayres of Michigan, Lane of Chi¬cago, Harry Levy; Dr. P. M. Swin-j gle of Ohio State, and C. W. Men-[ del of Chicago.j Section B in Ryerson 32 will hearI papers on analysis. Speakers are:1 Drs. Lincoln La Paz of Chicago, W.1 T. Reid, National Research Fellowfrom the University of Texas, work-I ing at the University, Wilhelm Maierof Chicago, L. M. Blument'hal ofRice institute; and Messrs. W. 0.(Continued on page 4) HOPE YET FORBRITAINJ^HILLIPSGiven Peace, EnglandWill RecoverWith no more international con¬flicts in the near future, with a re¬duction of the high premium rate onunemployment insurance, and withthe increase of the new industries,ftreat Britain will emerge from itseconomic depression, according toHubert Phillip^, economic advisorto the British Liberal party, in ananswer to the query “Is Britain Dy¬ing?” which he gave yesterday af¬ternoon in the Social Science assem¬bly room.Mr. Phillips stated that there isno doubt but that at the presenttime Britain is in a critical economicperiod, in which a depression of thevolume of trade and the lessenedinternal demand for coal and iron,has resulted in strikes that cost Bri¬tain the price of a good sized war.He bases his hope for future eco¬nomic stability largely on the in¬crease of the secondary industries‘ manufacturing semi-luxuries such ar-I tides as silk hosiery. Professor Algernon Coleman,head of the department of French iat the University, gave the follow- jing statement to the Daily Maroon |yesterday when asked for his opinion ;of the effect of the new graduate jthesis requirements. jIn my opinion, the majorityof the theses offered for the iPh. D. degree suffer rather from jbeing too long than from beingtoo short. IThe new requirements for doc- |lorate theses may have a bene- jficia effect on the quality of thedissertations. They may causea condensation which will make |the papers richer and more sub¬stantial. My guess as to thelength of the essential part of ia thesis in my department is thatR would range from 80 to 150printed pages, depending uponthe nature of the subject.Theses which are longer thanthis—I have 1 on my desk whichis 700 printed pages in length—suffer either from a subjectwhich is too extended, or theinsertion of too much casual ma¬terial, such as quotations ver¬batim, and the like.TWENTY COLLEGESSEND ‘DIPLOMATS’TO MODEL LEAGUEOffer Tickets ForTony Sarg’s Show;Sponsored by ForgeCAP AND GOWN PHOTOSCHEDULETODAYOn the Steps of Law School12:00 Phi Alpha Delta.12:10 Phi Delta Phi.12:20 Gamma Eta Gamma.12:30 Delta Theta Phi.FRIDAY, APRIL 11On the Steps of Swift Hall2:30 Anderson club2:40.. Missionary Furlough club.2:50 Church History club. Entertain MembersOf University PressAt Banquet TonightTwo hundred members of the Uni¬versity Press will participate in theirfifth annual dinner dance tonight at7 in Ida Noyes hall. They will dinefrom 7 to 9 in the refectory andthen will play cards or adjourn tothe theatre to dance to the musicof Johnny Mottel’s Joy Jesters.Gordon Laing, dean of the gradu¬ate school of Arts, Literature, andScience will be the toastmaster, andWill Ransom, author of “PrivatePresses” will present an infoi’inalspeech. Miss Edith Berry of thebookstore will entertain the audiencewith a vocal solo, and Joe Moranzand Joe Moskal of the printing de¬partment will play banjo selections.The menu includes fruit cocktail,spring salad, roast veal, potatoes,gTPpn hpnne ice-erpnro cake andcoffee. Reserved and unreserved tickets |for Tony Sarg’s address under the iauspices of the F’orge: A MidwesternReview went on sale yesterday atfifty and seventy-five cents in Man-del hall box-office and at both theI University bookstore and Wood-j worth’s. Posters heralding the ap¬pearance of Mr. Sarg on April 17in Mandel hall at 8:15 were alsoposted yesterday.Mr. Sarg will not give a complete' marionette show, but will demon¬strate several of his most popularscenes. These will be supplementedby a short talk on how the marion¬ettes work, and with drawings ofmodels chosen from the audience.William Reade Harshe, a personalfriend of the artist, will introducehim. < University students will enter theinternational arena with politicalcandidates in discussing the entranceof the United States into the worldcourt, the disarmament issue, andother world problems at the I^eagueof Nations Model assembly to beheld May 28 and 29 at Mandel hall.Professor Jerome Kerwin and othermemlHiis of the political science de¬partment are sponsoring the confer¬ence, which is similar to the one heldlast year, and about twenty collegesfrom all over the country will berepre.sented. Each school will takethe part of one nation at the leagueand procedure will be exactly in themanner of the real international as¬sembly at Geneva.The only part of procedure whichwill deviate from that of the I^eagueat Geneva, is the banquet and dancefor all delegates to be held the eve¬ning of th first day of the confer¬ence. Robbins is in charge of the en¬tertainment of the visiting schools..41bert Arkules is chairman of thepublicity committee of this organ¬ization.Last year more than one hundredstudents debated international issuesat the sessions of the model Leagueof Nations. Present Report NextTuesday atMeetingIn a report adopted at its lastmeeting, the Graduate Student coun¬cil has questioned the statementmade recently by the University re¬corder, to the effect that publicationof Ph. D. theses under the new re¬quirements would place no, burdenof additional cost on the students.Under the old requirements, thestudent had merely to publish twocomplete typewritten copies of histhesis, and ninety-eight copies of anabstract of his conclusions, not ttoexceed 3,000 words. The new regu¬lation requires that the students pub¬lish, in one of five possible manners,one hundred copies of his completethesis. Two of these must be boundin cloth, for presefltation tto the li¬brary, and the otners are to be boundin paper.Graduates Make EstimatesEstimation of the cost of publish¬ing theses by each n.ethod have beenmade by the Graduate council.These estimates are based upontheses of 125 printed pages, or 250typewritten pages.Printing is the most expensivemethod. The cost of printing rangesfrom $3 to $25 per page, footnotes,diagrams, charts and tables entail-iny etra expenditure. The averagecost has been taken as $6 per page.Added to this is the cost of having250 pages typed at $.15 per page,the cost of binding two copies incloth ($2), and ninety-eight in paper($10). The total cost of printing a125 page thesis is then about $800.250 Pages—$430Lithoprinting, a method of photo¬graphic reproduction of a typewrit¬ten page, costs $1.50 per page. Thecost of typing is higher, since thecopy must be flawless, and is estim¬ated as $.20 per page. The bind¬ing costs are the same as thosequoted for printing. The cost ofproducing a thesis of 250 typewrit¬ten pages by the lithoprinting meth¬od is about $430.May Be In JournalsAccording to the new require¬ments the thesis may be publishedin a technical journal. The only ex¬pense to the student, if his disserta¬tion is so published, is about $10for 100 reprints, and the usual $12for binding. This means is open,however, only to those students whoare taking their degree in the exactsciences, for these running over 25or 30 pages are rarely printed injournals. Only half of the graduatestudents can have their dissertationspublished in this manner, therefor.Dr. Lee AnalyzesPre-School ChildDr. Mary Lee, a member of the ipsychology and educational depart¬ments, will lecture on “The Psycho¬logy of the Pre-school Child” at theregular meeting of the Dames clubSaturday at 3 in Ida Noyes hall.The Dames .chorus of ten voices un¬der the direction of Mrs. BillingsbyI will make its second appearance at! this time. Stagecrafters ofAlpha Delta PhiRehearse PlayfestAt the suggestion of Thornton ;Wilder, Alpha Delta Phi’s “Stage- jcrafters” have selected “The Drums jof ( od,” by Lord Dunsany, as one of !thi’ee one-act plays they are goingto present next month. ThorntonWilder is an Alpha Delt, and hissuggestion is going to be acted uponby the chapter when they presenttheir fifth consecutive annual dra¬matic performance in honor of thealumni members.May 2 and 3 are the dates onwhich the plays are to be given inthe Reynolds club theatre, invitedcampus guests to attend on the firstevening, and alumni on the second.A dance at the house will follow Fri¬day’s performance, while a receptionis planned for Saturday evening.The other two one-act plays that thefraternitv cast will present this yearhave not as yet been selected. Publish ^‘Elssential Part*The new plan provides also thatthe “essential portion” only of thethesis need be published, if twotypewritten copies of the completethesis are dpositd with the Univer¬sity librai-y. This “essential por¬tion” is evidently an indeterminatequantity, the length of which mustbe set for each individual thesis.The cost, therefore, cannot be close¬ly estimated, but the price for twocomplete copies and binding wouldbe about $52. To this must beadded the cost of reproducing theessential part, which would be $6per page for printing, or $1.50 perpage for lithoprintfVig.For the fifth alternative, it hasbeen recommended that a series ofdepartmental monographs be publish¬ed yearly, in which the best half ofthe year’s crop of dissertations wouldappear There are several financialrp«prvatinTi<! nn pvpn this sphcrr^ip^(Continued on page 2)f*agc Twoiatlg iiarnnnFOUNDED IN l&OlTHE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninm. except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University Aye. Sub¬scription rates $3.00 per year ; by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single copies, 5 cents each.— cEntered as second class matter March 18, 1903. at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressely reserves all rights of publication of any materialap[>earing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationEDWIN LEVIN, Managing EditorEARLE M. STOCKER, Business ManagerROBERT L. NICHOLSON, Assistant Business ManagerHARRIET DEAN HATHAWAY, Woman’s EditorHENRY D. FISHER, Sports EditorARNOLD SCHLACHET, Chairman of Editorial BoardEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTEDWARD G. BASTIAN News EditorEDGAR GREENWALD News EditorJOHN HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Ju..ior EditorWILLIAM R. HARSHE Whistle EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF....Day EditorM.\RGARET EGAN Sophomore MiterJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL. ..Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH... Circulation ManagerGEORtiE GRIEWANK ..Circulation Assist.ROBERT McCarthy ... Sophomore Asst.J.\MES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH ...Sophomore Asst.SPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULEIS Asst. Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EditorMARJORIE TOLMANWoman’s Sports EditorOUR STAND ON THE THESIS RULEToday’s issue of the Daily Maroon carries the news of a re¬port adopted by the gradaute council on the question of the costof thesis publication under the new regulations for graduate stu- idents. This report refutes with substantial facts and figures the |statement made by Walter A. Payne, the University recorder, to jthe effect that the new requirements will not materially increasethe cost of degrees. It is estimated that of the I 60 candidates for idegrees each year 80 are working in the natural sciences where theirtheses will find publication in a journal. Of the remaining candi¬dates half will have work of sufficient merit to be published as Uni¬versity monographs at a cost of $6,000 to the students, and theremainder will be forced to find publication themselves at the |cost of another $6,000.These figures represent a marked increase in the cost of de¬grees at the University of Chicago. According to statements madeby faculty members at the time this change was first announced,the revision of thesis regulations is designed to benefit the Uni¬versity by raising the level of graduate work in the first place, andthen advertize the institution by giving greater circulation to thequality of scholarship turned out.Whether the change will actually accomplish these results is to ibe seriously questioned on consideration of the graduate council sreport. The tendency in education today is entirely in the directionof raising the costs. Since the majority of students come fromfamilies of moderate and even slender means this makes the costof a graduate degree increasingly difficult to bear. When he hascompleted his undergraduate work, and student still has four yearsin the university to arrive at his Ph. D., not counting the time h'e ;may have to spend at work sasving enough money to put him jthrough. The prospect of an added expense at the end discour- 'ages him, and increases his difficulties regardless of his ability. ;The new requirement means putting educational selection on 'a cash basis. Students best able to assume the increased financialburden are not necessarily the best; many of the ablest men and \women in universities have the slenderest means. Instead of beingpromoted the level of scholarship will be lowered by the loss of jmany worth while students. At the same time it is doubtful wheth¬er any inducement to scholarship will be added by the prospect of |publication. It is likely that the better class of students by the very ^nature of their makeup will do the best work they know how re¬gardless of whether they expect the thesis to be published or not. IFinally the evident intention of the University to acquire pres¬tige through the publicity given to the excellence of Universityscholarship is open to some debate. If you publish all the thesesyou are bound to publish some bad ones and a great many thatcontribute very little to scholarship. If anything work of thiskind only tends to lower the reputation of the university, and thisis certainly the case at Columbia University where the publicationof all theses has been required for some time.Without question the new theses requirements will defeat thevery purposes for which they are established. They aid the in¬creasing cost of education in placing scholarship selection on acash basis, thereby discouraging high educational standards by in¬creasing the burden on good students of slender means, they offerno material inducement to the better class of students to do betterwork on the prospect of publication, and the damage rather thanincrease the prestige of the University in scholarship. THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. APRIL 10. 1930Railroad WanUName for Train;First Prize $100Collegiate America is being askedto create a name for a new crackpassenger train tx) be operated be¬tween Chicago and St. Louis, Mis¬souri by the Chicago Eastern Illi¬nois Railway. E. H. Batchelder,General Passenger Agent of the rail¬road, will award prizes totalling^I'lO.OO to the persons who sub¬mit the two best suggestions.The contest will close April 30th,and winners will be announcedabout May 15th. Address sugges¬tions to E. H. Batchelder, GeneralPassenger Agent, Chicago & EasternIllinois Railway, 922 McCormickBuilding, Chicago, Illinois.The new train will leave Chicagoabout 3 p. m. daily and arrive in St.Louis before 10 p. m. The eastbounotrain will leave St. Louis at 8:45 a.m. and will arrive in Chicago earlythe same afternoon.Cost of PublishingTheses EstimatedBy Grad Council(Continued from page 1)however, the student himself mustcontribute the cost of production bythe cheapest method ($1.50 perpage), and the University guaran¬tees to help with the cost of publi¬cation of only the first hundred pages.The full cost of printing must thenbe paid by the student for the num¬ber of pages exceeding 100. Thisplan has as yet been only tentativelysuggested, and has by no meansbeen adopted.This report will be presented tothe Graduate Student council rep¬resentatives at their meeting Tues¬day. These representatives will thentake the report to the various grad¬uate organizations from which theycome, and student opinion on thenew requirements will be solicited. Romantisme,” Associate Professor H.E. David of the Romance department,4.30 at 5810 Woodlawn Avenue.Bacteriology club: “Cutaneous Sen¬sitivity in Parasitic Infections,” Pro¬fessor W. Taliaferro of the Bacteriol¬ogy department, 4:30, Ricketts 1.Organ music: 5:30, Porter Heaps.Radio lecture: “The Over ActiveMan,” Dr. E. Jacobson of the Phy--iolmy department, 6:00, WMAQ.\V. C. Friendship dinner: Vicc-1’resident F. C. Woodward, 6:00 IdaNoyes hall.Public lecture: (downtown) “TheFear of Sin,” Professor E. Sapir of.Anthropology department, 6:45, ArtInstitute.Friday, April 11Public lecture School of Educa¬ tion : “The Organization of Re¬searches Dealing with the Mental De¬velopment of Children,” ProfessorBott, University of Toronto, Canada,11, Blaine 210.University chapel service. Dr.Harold E. B. Speight of Dartmouthcollege, 11:05, University chapel.Meeting of University ruling body: Faculty of the Graduate schoolof Social Service Administration,4:30, Cobb 112.Organ music. Porter Heaps, 5,University chapel.Public lecture, Downtowa: “WhyBusiness Fluctuates,” AssociateProfessor Garfield B. Cox, 6:45, ArtInstitute.THEBLAKEMORE TEA ROOM6230 Kimbark Avenue Phone Dorchester 3458Featuring Home CookingLunch, 11 a. m. till 2 p. m., 40c. Evening Dinner,5 to 8 p. m., 75cSunday Dinner, 12 Noon till 8 p. m., $1.00THE TENNIS SEASON IS ON!Equipped yourself now withRACKETSBALLS (colored or plain)EyeshadesShoes—fromThe University of Chicago Bookstores5802 ELLIS AVE.—ADVANTAGE HERE—BOYNTON LECTURESAT KANSAS COLLEGEProfessor Percy H. Boynton o’fthe English department, will speakFriday before the Kansas collegeteachers of English convention, tobe held at Lawrence, Kansas.In the afternoon Mr. Boynton willdiscuss “Contemporary AmericanPoetry” before both the students atthe State university at Lawrence, andthe delegates to the convention. Inthe evening he will talk before ageneral assembly consisting of thestudent body, the convention, andthe people of Lawrence on “TheChallenge of Modern Criticism.”Offici2J NoticesThursday, April 10Radio Lecture: “.American Philoso-pby” and "Jonathan I-ldwards as aFounding Father- a .Spiritual hhniiire,”Iiy Professor T. V. Sniitli of the filiil-osophy department, 8:00, WM.AQ.Divinity chapel: Dr. H. Spciglit ofDartmouth, at 11:50 Bond chapel.Celebration of the Holy ('oinninnion:I for Eiiiscopal students), 12;ii0, Thorn¬dike Memorial chapel.Panatrope concert: symphony rec¬ords, 12:45-1:15, Reynolds Clr.lilunise.Le Cercle Francais: “Centenaire du9 myouve ^\jt^ei\astedNISTLEkMILK CHOCOLATE “A Hotel That’s a Real Home”Hotel Waldorf is a new and thoroughly modern hotelbuilding - - - - it contains 1 09 single rooms, all beautifullyfurnished, each one equipped with shower and bath. Thewalls are canvassed throughout - - - - an electric elevatorpromises you swift service - - - - and every modern con¬venience is embodied in the building! It is convenient tothe university — to all transportation. The 63rd StreetI. C. is near by - - - - the bus is at the corner - - - - and thestreet car and elevated are just a step.- Rates $10 and up -Attractive Special Rates to StudentsHOTEL WALDORF6139 ELLIS AVENUETHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 1930 Page Threeh Between the Twoof UsBrAlbert ArkulesandWilliam HarsuaHaTingr listened to the frequent^rglings of the minor prophets whohave waxed eloquent over the talk-in>f picttures as the newest of ourarts I decided to find out things formyself during the week of grace thatinterveaed between the quarters lastmonth.I »aw three shows. The first was“Seven Keys to Baldpate” with themasniline Richard Dix, the secondwas “The Taming of the Shrew”with the Fairbanks duo, and the thirdwa.s ‘The Green Goddess” with theeminent Arliss as the very wickedRajah of Rukh.“Seven Keys” of course was oneof George Cohan’s big hits and for¬tunately the screen version wasquite faittiful to the stage presen¬tation. The comedy was, on thewhole, well handled, thanks to thefact that the director had senseenough not to tamper with Cohan’slines. I tihink Cohan, who has noespecial love for the kino, must havebeen quite pleased with the treat¬ment accorded his play.The Fairbanks version of Shake¬speare’s comedy was quite in keep¬ing with the technique now' employ¬ed in the talking pictures. The stageplay was so badly cut when trans¬cribed to the screen that whateverenjoyment might have been derivedfrom the magnificent sets and theagreeable acting of Douglas Fair¬banks was obviated.As I followed the technique usedin transcribing the play to thescreen, it was absolutely necessary,for the sake of continuity, to elimin¬ate the splendid comedy scenes whichPetruchio’s valet has with the othersuitors for Kate’s hand. The rich¬ness of this part, and it is reallyone of the good things in the play,was absolutely neglected in the film,and what humor did fall to the lotof Clyde Cook, who played the role,was terribly bald and ineffective.As for the “The Green Goddess,”which I .saw in its first version asa silenk picture, I was sadly di.sap-pointed, although the acting of Ar-li.ss wa.'i what I primarily went tosee. His acting, of course, was thecompensating feature of this great“adventure drama,” if we are to be¬lieve the advertisements. It wasnothing more than melodrama, andbad melodrama. .And when melo¬drama is bad in the films, there isn’tmuch more to go.Acting, in more than one instance,has made melodrama on the stagepalatable. But where it succeeds onthe stage, it is another matter in themotion pictures. “The Green God¬dess” or the stage was a sensation.The acting of Arliss was no doubt soconvincing that Archer’s play wasn’tevea considered in the realm of melo-(Continued on page 4) )CHICAGO TO MEETMICHIGAN STATE INBASEBALL OPENERRegulars In Fine Shape ForInitial TiltI Maroon ball players will open the■ longest .season in the Big Ten Satur¬day when they engage in their firstI game meeting Michigan StJate at! Lansin in a practice engagement.Before Nels Norgren and his menI put their gloves away, it will be themiddle of October and the team willI have been to Japan and back on ii their quadrennial trip to the islands. | Golf Candidates toMeet at BartlettThere will be a short meetingof varsity golf candidates todayat 1 o’clock. All candidates areurged to be in attendance in theTrophy Room of Bartlett Gymna¬sium at the time mentionedabove. The plans of procedure ofthe spring quarter’s work will beoutlined. The meeting is import¬ant. Attendance is urged.Women’s SpringRiding ClassesWell Under WayHorseback«riding classes sponsoredby W. A. A. are already w'ell underDespite the interruption to out-, door practice caused by the blizzard,I Coach Norgi'en has his men in goodshape. How' well they will play un¬der game conditions remains to bei seen, however. Hitting in batting' practice has been good, but the lield-' ing pitching is still somewhat wab¬bly.1Ten Make Fir»t Trip way this quarter. Only one sectionhas not yet begun meeting. Sevenwomen are now signed up ♦’or lhatclass, which meets on Tuesdays at 3.F'ifteen must register before theclass can begin instruction.The only beginning class which isoffered meets at 10 on Saturday.The rest of the cla.sses will be madeAs yet the squad to make the tripis unannounced, but as usual, prob¬ably only veterans witl make thetrip. This list would include Urban,Knowles, and Cahill, pitchers; Win-gate, catcher; Fish, first base; Cap-! tain Holahan, second base; Tipler,! third; Lawler, short; and Van Dyne,I andGray, fielders.Although three hurlers are in-I eluded in this list. Urban is the onlyi veteran mound man. Cahill andKnowles worked behind the bat lastyear, but a scarcity on the pitchingi staff has this season forced them tobe shifted. Pitching will be theweakest feathre of the Maroon nine,' and Urban will probably be muchoverworked.Regular Sopht On TeamWestern State Normal, of Kala¬mazoo, Michigan, comes to the Mid¬way Monday for a practice engage¬ment. This will give Coach Nor¬gren to see his sophomores in ac-I tion. Tilton and Williams weer re-I liable pitchers on the freshman team.Omeare, Smith, Feldstein, and How¬ard are second year catphers. Zah-orick, W’ilkins, Post, and Brand areworking with Fish at first, andCrowder and Kinebeloe are workingwith Holahan at second, Buzzelland Temple are sophomore candi¬dates at third, Olson and Howard arenew men at short, and Bluhm, Sav¬itsky, Johnson, and Crane are newin the outfield. All of these named up of women who have had the be¬ginning instruction. Sections w.llmeet on Thursday at 4, Tuesday at3 and Saturday at ‘J and 3. Classesare held at the Midway Riding Acad¬emy at 60th street and Dreel av¬enue.Women interested in the classesmay sign^ up for them on the po.sterin the basement of Ida Noyes hall.The fee for the series of ten les¬sons is $9 if paid in advance and $1a lesson if they are taken singly.Tickete which are good only for thisquarter may be purchased fromJeanne Alvord, W. A, A. representa¬tive in charge of horseback riding.Further information regarding thele.ssons and the plans being ntade fora horseback riding club may be se¬cured from Jeanne Alvord at Mid¬way 2,598.will probably face Western StateMonday.ScheduleApril 19—Indiana at Indiana.April 25—Wisconsin at Chicago.April 30—Michigan at Michigan.May 3—Indiana at Chicago.May 6—Michigan at Chicago.-May 10—Ohio at Chicago.May 14—Illinois at Illinois.May 17—Wisconsin at Wisconsin.May 23—Illinois at Chicago.May 28—Ohio at Ohio.June 4—Minnesota at Minnesota. [PLAYGROUND BALLSTARTS NEXT WEEKIISix Leagues Swing IntoAction Apr. 16th or 17thThe entries for the 1930 Intra¬mural Playground Ball tournamentclose tomorrow. The play is sched¬uled to begin on the 16th or 18thof this month—just after the Bigleaguers get into action.The tournament will consist of sixeagues of six teams each. Theleague winners will receive a silvercup. The winners and runners-upof each league will enter the elim¬ination tournament to determine theUniversity champ. To the victor ofI the elimination contests will be' awarded a large trophy in the formi of a silver stiatuette. Second and! third place winners will be present-\ ed with larger silver cups.The ball meet last year was won^ by the Mac ball tossers. They beatj the Z. B. T’s, in the final game totake the championship. Phi Sigma1 Delta finished in 3rd place, and Phij Kappa Sigma was fourth,iI Playground ball is the most popu-i lar spring sport. Last season 428men participated in the local por-I tion of the National sport. The, games will be played on Monday,' Tuesday and Thursday of each week.Three fields will be available for useat 59th and Cottage Grove, and twoadditional diamonds at 60th andUniversity. A sixteen inch ball willbe used.Competition is expected to be asclose as usual. Many of the havetheir old aggregations back, and arebusy working into shape for a stren¬uous season.Kyle Anderson ToCoach Frosh BallKyle Anderson, captain of theVarsity Baseball team in 1928, hasbeen appointed freshman baseballcoach. He has already assumed hisduties. Anderson succeeds to thepost vacated by Nels Norgren, whois in charge of the Varsity squad,Kyle will be remembered also forhis prowess on Coach Stagg’s grid¬iron squads as a regular halfback.As shortstop on the Maroon nine,Anderson showed terrific hittingskill, and upon graduation went intoprofessional baseball for a time.Anderson is a member of the AlphaTau Omega fraternity. Tennis, Golf, TrackOn I-M ScheduleThe Intramural office an-, nounces that the spring menu of iI sports will consist of playgi'ound ,ball, tennis, golf, and track. All ’men of the University are invitedto participate in these events. Un- Iattached men should get in touchwith the I-M office, on the third jfloor of Bartlett, or see P^ed jChanner, the new Promotion man- jager. jII INet Candidates ’Meet Friday ToI Select CaptainThe varsity tennis squad, had its |first work-out yesterday on the clay 1courts. Rexinger, Kaplan, Stagg, [1 Shelden and Hawley were on handi to try out the renovated courts. The ij form was a little sloppy but that is 'I expected early in the season.I The Maroons swept through theconference finals last year and took :a first and second in the singles andfirst in doubles. Lott annexed the !singles title and Rexinger was run¬ner-up, while Lott and Calohan wereundefeated in the doubles tourna-I ment. Lott will not be with the i' team this year, so the sledding willbe a good deal harder.The net candidates w'ill meet Fri- :, day at which time arrangements' w'illbe made, and a cap.tain selected, iGeorge Lott was due to pilto the ■i Maroons, but his dropping out of ;' school necessitates the chosing of iI another captain. ,I ;PRINCETON NETSTERSIMPROVE VIA MOVIES j! If a novel way of training for aj sport counts for anything the Prince-, ton Tennis Team may develop into’a championship group. The membersof the Tiger racquet wielders teamwill be shown a series of slow mo¬tion picture analyses of the game byprominent court stars. Among thosewhose performances wil be picturedfor the instl'uction of the Varsityteam are Tilden, Johnston, Williams,Lacoste, Cochet, Borotra and HelenWills.The pictures will be stopped at jvarious points in order to permit the 'audience to make a close study of jthe filayers’ strokes. Furthermore, ■dotted lines which follow the motion if the recquet from start to finish jin the pictures will make possible a 'complete understanding of enc’/' istroke. i MAROON TRACKMENSTART DRILL FOROUTDOOR SEASONCoach Merriam To HoldTrials for RelaysThe Maroon track team will un¬dergo a three week preparationperiod before it resumes the inva¬sion of foreign cinder paths whichits schedule calls for. Coach NedMerriam believes that his protegeswill snap out of their winter leth¬argy and will really show its truestrength. On April 26th one sectionof the Chicago squad will partici¬pate in the annual Drake Relays atDes Moines while another group ofMidway thinclads will attempt togarner a bit of honor at the Penn¬sylvania Relays at Philadelphia.Relay Trials To Be HeldTo make his team function like achampionship aggregation, “Ned”will hold time rivals for all thosecaring to try their chances in thevarious relay combinations. Theseries of preliminary trials will beinaugurated this Friday afternoonat 3:30 when the Track mentor willclock candidates for the 880 relaywhich in all likelihood will go thePenn Classic. An octette of exper¬ienced men are available for this runwhich requires four 220 dashmen.They are as follows: Harold Haydonwho also excels in the hurdles. DaleLetts, a trackmen with enough speedand endurance to shine in any eventfrom the 100 yard dash to Crosscountry. “Bud” East, a stellarsprinter who has been placing con¬sistently in recent meets. CaptainRoot, a man who is to be feared inboth the 100 and 220. The otherprincipal contenders for positions onthe sprint' team are Robert Colville,a good 440 man, Les Freudenthal,also a 440 runner and Everett Ram¬say, sophomore sprinter of promis¬ing ability. Unfortuntely Les Cot¬ton who is a flash of lightning es¬pecially in the longer sprints pulleda tendon yesterday and wil not beready for this trial, nor will EdSchulz whose underpinning has beenailing ever since he turned his legat the Illinois Relays.Ineligibility Weakens TeamOld Man Scholarship has beenplaying pranks w’ith some membersof the team and at this date it seemsas though the trackmen have emerg¬ed second best, Buck Weaver long amainstay on the Maroon team and areliable point winner in the shot putmay be out of outdoor competition.(Continued on page 4)) ■ MOoIEoIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOIEOB SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTSCome Folks toSWIDLERS KOSHE RESTAVRAKIAND LUNCH ROOMYou’ll Enjoy the Inviting Atmosphere and ExcellentServicePhone Plaza 6672 1105 East 55th StreetDON’T FORGET TO GET A TICKETFRE£—10 Shines—FREIEWith every pair of Shoes Soled and Heeled—REDUCED PRICES—Men’s Half Soles withGoodyear RubberHeels $1.50Men’s Half Soles $1.00Men’s Heels, Leatheror Rubber 50c Ladies Half Solesand Heels $1.25Ladies’ Half Soles 90cLadies’ Leather Heels ...30cLadies’ Composition 35cLadies’ Goodyear RubberHeels 40cWOODLAWN1203 E. SSth StBest Material Used SHOE REPAIR SHOPWe Call and DeliverWorkmanship Guaranteedl<Iil SHOP ON 55TH ST.TRY IT TODAYMASSEY’S CAFETERIAWalk, over for a good home-cooked meal . . . .home-baked pastries, real fried chicken.Largest assortment of vegetables and foods on55 th Street.SPECIAL T-BONE STEAKSOc.... the best in town! How does your oldhat look for Easter?A new spring hat ineither the snap brimor rolled edge is adistinctive mark ofthe well dressedman.COWHEYS MEN’S SHOP55th Street at Ellis Ave.mm HOd]OdlOdlO(HodlOd]OHodlOHod]OdlOd]OdlO(Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. APRIL 10. 1930Maroon Trackmen Start DrillFor Outdoor Season(Continued from sports^ page)A committee of faculty members willdecide his fate with respeet ti' ath¬letic eligibility. Roy Black whooutside of Ua! Haydon is the besthigh hurdler in seho.-I al>>! has tak¬en one at the hands of scholarship.'.But the relay candiiiate'; ate 'feefrom scholastic worries ami t'i>achMerriam may spring a surprise onthose who beliite that {lie .’via: uithinclads are mediocre. flash ‘that surprise wo' ui played at theSouthern .Methc-dist Re.ays whenChicago forced Kansas to remark¬able time in the SSu lelay and lostby inches.A number of meets remain on thetrack schedule in which local run¬ners can stage their comeback. .Af¬ter Penn and Drake, come the Tri¬angular meet with Purdue and Indi¬ana at Chicago, then :i Quadrangu¬lar with Northwestern. Ohio Stateand Wisconsin at Ohio State, andlastly the Outdoor Conference meetat Northwestern. NOMAD SCHOLAR PLAYSoyspsy tunes lastNIGHT IN MANDEL. t'oiitiiiucd trom page 1)The gypsy was the lord of nature.We need his life of wandering toneutralize the humdrum of subur¬ban life. It did not matter how, tothe gyp-^y; he kept young by keep¬ing going. The gypsy is not bored.Dr. Starkie will teach courses inSpanish literature in the RomanceLanguages department at the Uni¬versity' this summer. lie will alsodeliver several public lectures andtalk at University College downtownon the arts and literature of Spain jand Italy of the eighteenth century iand on the outstanding Irish con- ■temporaries. jGreek Council ElectsRice, Cowley, HertraisAnd Fraider, QuietlyCLASSIFIED ADSNEATLY furnished rooms for 2or more. Every convenience. Homecomforts. Call at 5460 UniversityAve. I Continued from page 1)It was stated after the councilmeeting that Edgar N. Johnson, in¬structor in the history department,had sent a communication complain¬ing that four freshmen had fallenasleep in his class during Hell weeklast quarter. What the council plansto do is speculative.FOR RF.N'I'—Beau. frt. rni. for 2on 11th floor ovcrlo<iking entire jvarkand lake. I’riv. adjevining sliowcr hath,twin beds. References required. Pri¬vate family. Hyde Pk. d82d.NE.AT colored girl wants to workmorning.s. Kenwood 522.1. MIRROR ELECTIONAPRIL 17; NAMENEW MEMBERSTO RENT—5708 Dorehester .Ave..9 rm. frame house furn. May 1 toOct. 1. Can be seen by appointment..Austin H. Parker, 1500 E. .ITth St.,Hyde Park 0136. (Continued from page 1)day at 3:30 in Ida Noyes hall to ac¬quaint the members with the candi¬dates. Members are chosen everyyear according to t'heir degree of ac¬tive participation in past Mirrorproductions. The w’ork of the wom¬en does not necessarily entail par¬taking in the actual performances,but participation in the productionline is acceptable.FOR S.ALE—New set Wester-marck History of Human Marriage.3 Vol. Reduced to $7.50. Wood-w'orth’s Book Store, 1311 E. 57th.Col2€;JlfQLTEeNifreJeweirv31 N. State St., Chicagi THIRD W'EEKCINEMAChicago Ave., Just East of MichiganED.MOND ROSTAND’S ROMANTICCLASSICCYRANO DE BERGERACMAI-; TiN'i;i-; • • • •The Lo7'e Story Made Tnmouson the Stof/e byMansfield - Uoqueliii - HampdenMUSIC, ART EXHIBIT, BOOK REVIEWContinuous from I to 11 P.M.Usual PricesLow Cost Student ServiceTO AND FROM THEOrientGo the short, fast, luxurious way, at noextra cost. Only 10 days to Japan, 14 toShanghai, 17 to Hong Kong, 21 to Manila■—on }Vhite Empress liners from Vancouver.Opportunity to see the Canadian Rockiesand Hawaii enroute. Fares as low as $190Second Class. Ask your local agent orWHITE EMPRESSESCanadian PacificWORLD’S GREATEST TRAVEL SYSTEMCarry Canadian Pacific Express Travellers Cheques — Qood the World OverE. A. Kenny, .Steamship General .Agent, 71 East Jackson Blvd.Tel. Wab. 1904, Chicago, Ill.THEHARESFOOT- CLUBUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSINPRESENTSBUTTONBUTTONA MODERN MUSICAL COMEDYCOMPANY OF 85 PEOPLE••ALL OURGIRLS AKE^ / MEN/ / YETEVERY ONE SLADY’* FAMOUS HARESFOOTORCHESTRA OFWENTY PIECESAMIRJHQUAICEOF MUSICALMERRIMENTPRICES $1-50, $2, $2.50, and $3 NO TAX Mathematical SocietyTo Meet April 16-17(Continued from page 1)Pennell, of the Southwestern BellTelephone Co., 1. S. Sokolnikoff ofWisconsin and G. W. Starcher ofIllinois.Another general section will meetat 2:30 in Ry^erson 2, at which Pro¬fessor Harry Blumberg of Wiscon¬sin will speak for several hours on‘‘Methods in Point Sets and the The¬ory of Real F''uncrions.”The following will speak at thelast session on Saturday at 10 inRyerson 2: Professors K. P. Wil¬liams of Indiana University, V. G.Grove of Michigan State, Levy; Drs.W. D. Baten of Michigan, M. G.Boyce of Western Reserve; Messrs.E. W. Miller, of Michigan, E. J.Finan of Ohio State, E. B. Escottof Oak Park, G. C. Munroe of Mich¬igan; and Miss E. T. Stafford ofWisconsin.Reservations for the banquet onFriday at 6:30 mu.st be in by Tues¬day. April 15. Professor L. W.Graves is in charge of arrangementsfor this function. Nearly 100 math¬ematicians are expected at the con¬ference. BETWEEN THE TWO OF,US i(Continued from sports page) jdrama. That, of ocurse, was a flat¬tering tributte to the actor and per¬haps to the author.Arliss was still Arliss on thescreen. A splendid characterization.But The Green Goddess as a playwas so reminiscent of the hooie pop¬ular in this country in the nine¬teenth century that if I hadn’t knownthat Archer, the respectable and em-iment .Archer, had written the play,I would have honestly belived that itwas another of .Augustin Daly’sthrillers. Theological Seminary Thursday eve¬ning.From the address of welcome,which was given in Japanese byYasuo Mizoguchi and interpreted byMinoru Tabuchi, to the serving ofJapanese tea and sweetmeats at theclose of the program, the hour wasfilled with pleasant surprises. MasaoMorikawa and Kensuke Kawachi, asco-chairmen, introduced their guest-friends.Misses Francis and Lillian Matsuk-awa entertained with Americanmusic on the violin and piano butthe rest of the program was more dis¬ tinctly Japanese. A folk dance,“Harusame” (Spring) was presentedby Mrs. Sadao Arai, and two folksongs were sung by Helen K. Ide.The most unusual offering proved tobe a koto selection by Mrs. Maeyama,the harp played on the floor.Mr. Morikawa displayed tihe curiosand explained the use of the lunchI baskets and wine buckets of wood,I soup bowls, the koto, the dolls, theI cake box. Two swords which hadi been given to Dean Matthews whenj he was on a church mission to Japan; a decade ago created considerableI comment.Lanterns, CuriosMix at Jap PartyThe delicatte pink of Japanesecherry blossoms, oriental colors ofJapanese kimonos, paper lanterns,and curios of various sorts attractedthe big crowd which enjoyed an in¬ternational night at the Chicago ► Look for the Venetian Star TElighth Street Theater—Mon. Eve. April 14th Only PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERS TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1298 East 63rd StreetYoung and old taught to dance..Adults’ lessons strictly private Noone to watch or embarrass you.Day or EveningTelephone Hyde Park 3089 OPEN FROMELEVENTOELEVEN studioteashop NOW—AFAVORITECAMPUSRENDEZVOUSBETWEEN KENWOOD AND DORCHESTER NUMBER 1359 EAST 57th STREETThe finest ofPhotographicPortraitureStudios: 218 So. Wabash Ave.Tel: Wab. 0527 for AppointmentsOfficial Photographers for Cap and Gown Tennis RacketsTennis BallsRacket RestringingWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th—near Kimbark Ave.Open Evenings Phone Hyde Park 1690Advertising—The Salesman in PrintIt has been truly said by many persons who havemade a study of the problem that business men oftenmake the grave mistake of reducing advertising whenthey need it the most.If business is bad, salesmen redouble their efforts toincrease it. Yet, many business men reduce the efforts ofadvertising—their salesman in print.For some time now business heis been in a so-calledslump. In the opinion of industrial leaders it is due fora sharp upswing within the next few weeks.Now with the change of seasons there can be no morepropitious time for advertising. College students as wellas people in general are in a buying mood.You can reach them in no better way than thru thecolumns ofThe Daily Maroon