SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON illaroon Today’ll Weather:Fair and warmer.Vol. 30. No. 47. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1930 Price Five CentsELECT COUNCIL UNDER NEW PLANW. A. A. Makes Tennis and Golf Major Sports$20,300 PROFITIS REPORTED BYCOMMONS DEPT. Sarg Creations toCaper in LiveliestMood on Thursday$2500 Increase OverLast Year’sSurplusBy Harriet Dean HathawayIt is a Universiry policy that theCommons department should make areasonable profit, according to astatement made by Vice-piesidentFrederic Woodward to The DailyMaroon yesterday. Since The DailyMaroon’s first analysis of complaintsdirected toward food served in theresidence halls, students have raiseddoubts conceininK the legitimateprofits of the Commons department.Proht* Lighten TuitionThe president’.-! report for lastyear show.s a net profit of $2U.d04.r)0which IS 5;2,42:!.»m; in excess ofprofits for the piecedin^i: year. Thisamount is turned over to the Uni¬versity for >reneial t-ducational pur-and in an in<lirect wav cnt-sdown the rate of tuition. .Addition¬al statistics show that 1.2:U),t)'.>5meals were served liy the depart¬ment last' year in Hutchinson com¬mons, the Cotfet- .Shop, the Schoolof Kducation, Ida .Noyes commons,the (Jraduati* club, and the residencehalls. Students in the employ ofthe department' earned a total of$55,1.S2.U2.Students are in fio jiosition as yetto judjfe whether the profits are ex-ce.ssive or not. Their existence isin keeping: with the University policythat not only the Commons, but alsothe bookstore, is operated on a profitmaking basis. By Harry T. MooreTony Sarg, internationally famousmanipulator of marionettes, willmake his creations caper in theirliveliest fashion when he appears at' Mandel Hall on Thursday night asspecial high-powered feature enter¬tainer for The Forge; a MidwesternReview.This program will Pe of unusualI local interest, not' only because Tonyj Sarg is one of the greatest living■ comic performers, but also he will in-' troduce many features concerningmembers of the audience. WilliamK. llarshe, popular campus humoristwho is a tn'rsonal friend of the vi.-^i-tor’.--, will introduce him.-A highly energetic and .colorfulfigure, .Sarg is fametl for his amaz¬ing versatility. Besides the high re¬pute brought him by the antics ofhis prancing dolls, he is widelyknown as an illustrator, especiallyof the stories of Sam Heilman andWilliam Slavms .McNutt. His work(t'ontinued on page .’{) Grads Meet Tonight;Discuss Theses AgainDetail* of the finding* on theco*t of publi*hing doctoratethe*e* will be pre*ented to theGraduate council when it hold* a*pecial meeting tonight in theGraduate club hou*e at 6:30.Following the council meeting,the Graduate Board will al*o con¬vene.Action will probably be sug¬gested on the report of the com¬mittee, which found that printingthe*e* would cost up to $830 fora thesi* of 250 typewritten page*.Lith oprinting will be recommend¬ed a* a cheaper method for pub-li*hing the*e*. Sets PrecedentIn IV^dwesternG>llegiate SportsSAMPSON WINSEVENTS CONTESTLeon Baer and CharlesGould Also PlaceHOLD SYMPOSIUMON IMMORTALITYCompton, Matthews, Carlsonand Smith Talk1925 DAILY MAROONSHOWS SUCCESS OFFIRST CADET PROMOn .April 17, ll>2r), three hundredouple.s pas.sed under an arch ofabers and rose.s and wound acrosshe ballroom of tht- South Shore'ountry (Muh to the strains ot theCaisson Song"—it was the Grandlarch of the first Military Ball,estined to place Chicago on a levelith othei' colleges in formal mili-iry functions.Eight sponsors, representing eachlass, had been selected from 160andidaOes to form the arch; andlajor Owen .Albert, Lucy Lamon,ieutenant Hugh Wilson, and EllenIcCracken led the two wings of un-ergraduates who had fought forvery available ticket. The impres-iveness of the scene bore prom-ie for the importance which thiscadet prom" was to attain in Uni-ersity life.The dance cleared $110.00, ex-luding the lo.ss of four Springfieldifles worth $156.00 which myster-)usly disappeared from the prem¬ies and unfortunately were seen no Four views on immortality" willbe presented at the symposium hebl.Sunday at 7 :IU) in Ida Noyes thea¬tre, with Viee-l’resident FredericWoodward presiding.The symposium will be jnecededby a supper held at 6 in the sun par-ior of Ida Noyes for the member-,of the Men’s commi.s.sion, the Chapelcouncil, and the Y. W. C. A. cabiner.Professor .Arthur H. Compton willoutline a scientist’s view; Professor.Anton .1. Carlson will present theview of the physiologist'; Dean Shail-er .Matthews will take a religiousview, and Professor T. V. Smithwill give the essentials of a phil¬osopher’s view.Tickets may be secured free ofcharge all this week at the Chapeloffice, the office of the Men’s com¬mission. and ttie Y. W. office. .Jerome .Samp.son has been award¬ed first prize of $ir)(l and a bronzemedal fur winning the New YorkTin.vInte.'cv>iIo^;ia,.c Cunciitf Eveiu.scontest held at the I'niversity March5. His written examination wasjudged to be the best of the ninecont'estants, on the basis of facts,historical interpretation, and liter¬ary style, as shown in comprehen¬sive answers to sixty questions, an ilengthy essays on five contemporaryproblems. Mr. Sampson took part inthe same conffest last year and wonthird prize. Second and third prizesof .$7.7 and $2.7 were awarded to(Continued on page 4)Prohibition LimerickOffers Thirst-QuencherTo Phoenix ReaderGUIDANCE CENTERHOLDS DINNER 10GAIN RECOGNITIONBOWLING ALLEYSBowling alleys will be open untilthe first two weeks in May, withthe new Spring hours of 10:30 un¬til 7:30 daily and 10 to 4 on Satur¬days. The alleys will ,be in fineshape, since they are being carefullyscrubbed and smoothed down, andthe pins are all being refinished and')li8hed. To call attention to the significant |work accomplished by the South ISide ('hild Guidance center, a din- jner will be given Tuesday, April -29, at 6:30, at the Chicago Women’s |club, 72 East llth Street.The center has done valuable work jin preventing juvenile delinquency |by adjusting family and school 'problems and correcting behavior jdifficulties. Speakers at the dinner Iwill be George E. Vincent, until re- j, cently president of the Rockefeller jI foundation, who will speak on the ji subject of “Children Versus Grown-I ups;” Dr. Clifford R. Shaw, authorI of “Delinquency Areas,” whose sub¬ject will be “Crime PreventionThrough Communit>l Action”; Dr.Paul L. Schroeder, of the Institute! for Juvenile Research, on “TheFunction of a Child Guidance Cen¬ter”; and Rev. Norris L. Tibbettfe,speaking on “The South Side ChildGuidance Center and CommunityResponsibility.”The price of the dinner is $1.50.Reservations should be made bynoon of Monday. April 28, at theChicago iWoman’s clfib. Thirsty’.' The Phoenix presents anopportunity for a st\uient to quenchhis thirst on a free round trip ex¬cursion to Detroit via Windsor, Can¬ada, simply writing the best lastline to a limerick on prohibition. Thelimerick and details of the contestwill appear in the "Travel Number”of the campus humor magazine.(iaily bedecked in a colorful cov¬er and revamped with new and.sprightlier typography, the old birdfeatures •'Dorothy: An Epic of theSea,” a venture into all known verseforms strung with much heart in¬terest, and with emphasis on thephilosophic way of life, written byOrin Tovrov. And Julian J. Jack-son contribute.s some deep materialon the annual trek of college stu¬dents and high school teachers toEurope, in his article, “The BigParade.”To relieve the high mental ten-(Continued on page 4) Tennis and golf are now rec¬ognized as major sports for Univer¬sity women, a move adopted by theWomen’s Athletic association whichoversteps all midwestern precedenf,and initiates a decision unparallel¬ed in the sport history of this partof the country. By advancing theseactivities ’to the status of majors,supported and rewarded as such,,W. .A. A. is setting a lead for allthose institutions, which have eitherrelegated the sports to fhe ignominyof minor” or to a totally unofficialexistance.Tennis Authority Comment*Leo J. Lunn, who i.- chairman ofthe tennis ranking committees forthe west and for the city as well a;chairman of all local umpires, saidof W. A. A.’s stand, "It’s a fineidea I There is no doubt but whatit will eventually be done for men|all over the country, and certainlyshould be done for women,” Mr.Lunn said that a few of the easterncolleges have made tennis major.-for men, but, to his knowledge, noother.s have put the racquet on ajiar with the football.Advocate IndividualismNation-wide institutions have al¬ways given precedent to teamsport’.-, to the detriment of individ¬ual games. It is only recently thatthe “carry-over” value of tennis andgolf into after college life, and too,their intrinsic value in the buildingup of health and sportsmanship of alevel with football and basketballhave been recognized. Until now,however, no college west of the Al-leganies, and no known woman’s or¬ganizations, has definitely inaugur¬ated a program which sets thesesports on a par with the traditional•'major sports,”It is the hope of''W. .A. A. thatits adoption will lead to a generalrise in the calibre of local tennisand golf and do something to build(Continued on page 4) Yearbook CompletesPhotograph ScheduleThe following picture* will betaken if it doe* not rain. In ca*eof rain they will be taken at the*ame time the following day.Tue*day, April 155:30 Greenwood Hall5:45 Kelly Hall6:00 Fo*ter HallThe*e pictures will be taken atthe halls and are the last picture*to be taken and the bulk of thebook will thus be able to go to theprinter*. EACH CANDIDATEREQUIRED TO AIDCAMPUS SURVEYWill Issue AssignmentsTomorrow; PetitionUnnecessaryA. AND P. SEEKSJUNE GRADUATESPhiladelphia InsuranceMan Here in MayTARPON CLUB HOLDSOLYMPIC GAMES INSPRING SHOW, MAY 23Mirror Will IntroduceNew Members at Tea France, Spain, Denmark and Ger¬many will be represented in com¬petitive encounters in the Olympicgames of the annual Spring exhibi¬tion of Tarpon club on Friday, May23. at 7:30, in Ida Noyes pool. Theclosing feature will be exhibitionswimming and diving offered by the“American” team for the entertain¬ment of the “foreign” beams,Lillian Egerton, Harriet Gerber,Marjorie Tolman, and VirginiaSecigewick are in charge of the Dan¬ish, French, German and Spanishteams, respectively,Mary Eleanor Tompkins will han¬dle the costumes; Harriet Ann Trin-kle, scenery; H'elen Stoll, publicity;and Lillian Peterson, properties. I Men for office and store work willI be recruited from the ranks of June, graduates by the Great Atlantic andPacific Tea company, according to anannouncement received yesterdayfrom Mr. J. C. Kennan. Their per-, sonnel representative, Mr. W. J.'Thomas, will be at the " UniversityI'T-iday, April 25, and seniors wish-j ing interviews may arrange for themat the bureau of vocational guidanceand placement, Cobb 215.Mr. Thomas will also address thestudents in the Instittue of MeatPacking, dining his visit. It «splanned to incorporate meat marketsI in the chain of A & P .stores, andthis new field will offer opportun¬ities to a great number of men.Risk Man Here May 5.Malcolm L. Williams, repre.sentingthe Provident Mutual Life Insurancecompany of Philadelphia, will inter¬view graduating seniors on Monday,.May 5. I.Appointments may l)e madewith Mr. Kennan, placement coun¬selor. The Provident offers oppor¬tunities as underwriteis, generalagents, supervisors, and home officeexecutives to the men .selected.Men Trained Carefu llyThe men chosen will undergo acareful coui'se of training and super-I vision, calculated to fit them for thepositions named above. Three meth¬ods of compensation are offered toemployees of the firm: they may beplaced on a straight commission; basis, be given a drawing account,j to be repaid out of later commissionI earnings or be paid a regular salaryuntil such time as they feel readyto transfer to a commission basis.(Continued on page 4) Candidate* for nomination to theUndergraduate council will reporttomorrow at noon in Cobb lOS fora**ignment*. Anyone not present atthat time cannot be considered acandidate unless be make* arrange¬ment* beforehand wit Louis H. En¬gel, Jr., president of the council.Prospective nominees to the Un¬dergraduate council will be requiredto complete assignments during atwo week period, working in con¬junction with the council in its -'ui-vey of various campus institutior:s.These assignments will be issued to¬morrow at noon in Cobb 108. Nopetition or other form of backing isrequired for a candidate who v ishesto compete for nomination.Registration May 1P’ollowing the beginning of thecompetition tomorrow, the candi¬dates will be allowed a two weekperiod, terminating with a meetingof the council on April 30, in whicht'> complete their assignments. Registration for the campus election ofnominees selected by the council atthis meeting will take place May 1.The election is scheduled for MayS.Posts to be FilledFour delegates from the seniorclass, including two men and two' women, from whom the council will, select a class president and secre-' tary. Nominees must have betweeni 21 and 27 majors completed to datej to be eligible for nomination.Two delegates from the juniorclass, including one man and onewoman. Between 12 and 21 majorscompleted to date are required foreligibility.Two delegates from the sopho¬more class, including one man andone woman. Nominees must havecompleted to date between 3 and 12majors.This is the first time the electionhas been held in this manner and inthe sjjring quarter, under the newconstitution. Elections were former¬ly held in the fall. Newly elected del¬egates will sit on the council as non¬voting members until the last meet¬ing in June, in order to become fa¬miliar with tlie operation of thebody.Frederic Stock Features WagnerIn Last Two Concerts of SeasonFrederic Stock will conduct the |two remaining concerts of the Chi- Icago Symphony orchestra, today’s |program being given at 4:15 in Man- iMirror will hold a tea tomorrow at4 in the Tower room to welcomeits new members into the associa¬tion. Candidates for the election tobe held Thursday from 9 to 4 in IdaNoyes hall will be introduced. Theyare as follows: for production man¬ager, Mary Bohnet and MarthaYaeger; for business manager, JanetCunningham and Rosalia Poliak; forMirror board, three of the following:Prances Blodgett, Barbara Cook, Vi¬ola De Berriennc, Dorothy Reiner,and Jean Searcy. PAIGE KELLYH. O. Crisler, new Minne*otagrid mentor, has left the Univer¬sity, leaving behind him a con¬crete memento in the shape of awheezing Paige coupe, vintagecirca 1920, which he told to PatKelly, ex-captain of the Maroonfootball team for ten dollars.Kelly, having made the bargainin haste, is reported to be repent¬ing in leisure. del hall and the last concert of theseason next Tuesday, April 22. In¬dividual tickets may still be obtain¬ed at the office of the UniversityOrchestral association in Cobb 202,or at the Mandel box office just be¬fore the concerts. Tickets sell for$1, $1.50, and $2.Plans for the next season’s pro¬grams will not be made until themeeting of the association the firstweek in May, when new officers willbe elected and directors appointed.Today’s Progrsun Will PresentSerenade, D major, “Haffner”. ...MozartSymphony No. 1, B Minor. AtterbergSiegfried Idyl Wagner “The Waltz”, a choreographic poemRavelThe program for April 22, forwhich no special postcard announce¬ments will be mailed to subscribers,will include:Concerto No. 3, G Major BachSymphony No. 5, E Minor, “Fromthe New World” DvorakIntroduction to Act 2, and “Ride ofthe Valkyries” WagnerSiegfried’s Wedding Journey and Fi¬nale, from “Twilight of the Gods”WagnerIt is the request of the associationthat the observations customary atthe previous concerts be regarded.No one is to be admitted during theplaying of a number. Those hold¬ing season tickets who will not beable to attend either of the concertsmay turn them in so that the ticketsmay be sold.AvI*ai;e Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. APRIL 15, 1930SJltf Satlg J®,ar00«FOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITT' OF CHICAGO^ Published morninKS, except Saturdny. Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Sprint; quarter^ by The Daily Maroon Company. 5H:il University Ave. Sub¬scription rates $3.n0 i)er year; by mail. $1.50 per year extra. Sintjle copies, 5 cents each.Entered as second class matter March Ih. 1003, at the post office at Chicago,Tlinois. under the .Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressely resertes all nahts of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationEDWIN LEV'IN, 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. BASTTAN Newt EditorEDGAR GREENWALD News EditorJOHN H. HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Junior EditorWILLIAM R. HARSHE Whistle EditorLOUIS RIDENOUR Day EditorMERW’IN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF . Day EditorMARG.ARET EGAN Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE W'ERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER .Advertising ManagerLEE LOVBNTHAL ..Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH . Circulation ManagerGEORGE GRIEWANK Circulation Assist.ROBERT McCarthy ...Sophomore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH _..Sophomore AsstSPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULES .Asst. Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EditorMARJORIE TOL.MANWoman's Sports Edit.ir Official Notices que.” Professor James Weber Linn,of the English department, 6:45, ArtInstitute.Tuesday, April 5lecture: “American Philo-Edwards and American-Comparison with Bishop’ Professor T. V. Smith ofthe Philosophy department. StationWMAQ, 8.Radiosophy:IdealismBerkeley Graduate council: 6, Graduateclubhouse. Wednesday, April 16Radio lectures: “American Philo¬sophy: Religious Variety of ColonialLife: Common Assumptions.” Pro¬fessor T. V. Smith. 8, StationW'MAQ.Divinity chapel, Joseph Bondchapel: Profe.ssor J. M. P. Smith ofthe Divinity school, 11:50. Open Forum on the ProhibitionI Problem (Liberal club) : Prohibition¬ists led by Dr. George B. Safford,; State Superintendent, Illinois Anti-i Saloon I,eague. 7:30, Ida Noyes hall.Analytic lecture (on the programof the Chicago Symphony Orchestra).Mr. Cecil M. Smith, 3:15, ChicagoTheological Seminary, 439. Graduate Political Science club:“Some .Applications of Methods ofSocial Science to the I>aw.” ProfessorDonald Slessinger of the Law-School. 7:30, Social Science 302.Radio lecture: “Intermediate Span¬ish,” Mr. Herbert Bechtolt of thedepartment. 4:15, Station WMAQ. Public lecture: (Biology club)“The Senses and Language of theBees” (illustrated). Professor Karlvon Frisch, University of Munich. 8, jPathology 117. University of Munich. 8, Pathology117.“Readings of Modern Verse.” .As¬sociate Professor B. G. Nelson ofthe English department. 11:35 Sta-jtion WMAQ. |Divinity chapel, Joseph Bond |chapel: Re'erend Ozora Davis of the jDivinity school. 11:50.Public lecture (Graduate Libraryschool) : “The Newl)erry Library.”George B. Utley, Librarian, New¬berry Library. 4:30, Harper MI6. Mathematical club: “Infinite Sys¬tems of Linear Differential Equa¬tions.” Dr. W. T. Reid, of theMathematics department. 4:30, Ry-erson 37.Organ music: Frederick Marriott,j .■):30, University chapH*!.i Religious F^ducation club: “New1 Developments in Leadership Train-! ing.” Dr. Forrest Knapp, DirectorI of lA’adership Training. Internation¬al Council of Religious Education.! 7, Common room. Swift hall.Chicago Symphony Orchestra con¬cert (University Orchestral Asso¬ciation). 4:15, Leon Mandel Assem-blv hall.Organ music: 5:30,chapel. Porter Heaps. UniversityPublic lecture( Downtown) :“Ulysses: The Triumph of Techni-THE THESIS PROBLEM AGAIN GREGG COLLEGEHome of Gregg ShorthandThirty-fourth YearThe injustice of the new thesis requirements for graduate stu¬dents resolves itself primarily into a question of unfair and un- jreasonable discrimination. In a previous editorial The Daily Ma-!^oon has taken a stand against the new requirement on the basis ithat it means discrimination against the student in point of ability jto pay without consideration for ability in scholarship. More thanthat, the report on costs under the new ruling as adopted by the |graduate council shows that the financial burden of requirements |will fall unequally both upon students in different departments andupon different students in the same department..-According to the report of the graduate council the most ex- ipensive means of printing dissertations will cost approximately$781.50, and the cheapest will amount to about $429.00. How-jever, by the plan one half of the theses in each department will .be selected for the departmental series, the student being requiredto make up about one half of the expense in printing Hs thesis in theseries for the first hundred pages, and assuming full expense forthe pages exceeding that limit.The most unreasonable discrimination is quite apparent in Ithis regulation. In the first place there is discrimination between 'regulations of different lengths, and between those .equiring differ¬ent types of publication. In a situation where topics are assignedby the departments it is natural that the dissertations should be un¬equal in amount of worth while material and intrinsic value regard¬less of the ability and industry of the author. But by this inflexibleruling, regardless of the fact that any accepted thesis must be con¬sidered an acceptable contribution to knowledge or it would not jbe accepted at the outset, one half of the most palatable are to be jin effect purchased by the library while the other half of the candi- jdates in any department are forced to donate their dissertations jfree.IIt is inevitable that the value of theses in any department will :vary from year to year, so that an inflexible rule not only discrim¬inates against certain kinds of work but also makes it likely that at itimes in some departments good theses will not receive recognitionbecause of general excellence in the departments while in othersthe general run of even the upper half will be fairly bad.Secondly there is the injustice of applying the new ruling in¬discriminately both to new graduate students and to those admitted ,to candidacy before July 1, 1930. Meeting the new requirementsis going to require longer time for students to acquire sufficient fundsto complete their graduate work, and it is only reasonable that stu- ^dents should be aware of these conditions. In all justice studentsadmitted to candidacy before the inauguration of the ruling shouldbe allowed to complete their work under the old requirements.TTe most rabid discrimination is that resulting from differencesbetween the departments. The immense burden of publication in¬evitably falls upon the social sciences and the humanities since inthe natural sciences thesis tend to be shorter and receive publicationin the various departmental journals. It is worthy of note thatthese journals are largely subsidized by the university, whichmeans that while in the humanities students are assuming the ex¬pense themselves, in the sciences the expense for publishing thesesis being assumed by the University.Thus, on its face, whatever the motives behind it, the rulingoperates unfairly in discriminating both between the various fieldsof study and between students in the same department. Theseobjections are serious enough to warrant a reconsideration of the !entire policy of thesis publication. i lliiia^rine how much easier it would btI to take all your class notes in shorthand. It is easily ;ind Quiekly masjtered at Gre(fg College ... in eon[venlent spare time, special ('ollegiatiI classes, nuH*ting days or evenings,I .Ask for partieulars and FREE ROOK, OF F.A('T.«<I 225 Wab<r«h Avenue, North■ Phone State 1881 Chicago, III STOPILOOKIUSTEN!We have private roomsfor card luncheons, dinnerparties, committee meet¬ings, etc.Luncheon 40c, 1 1 to 2Dinner 75c, 5 to 8Sunday Dinner $1, 1 2 to 8A la Carte Service 1 1 to 8WITCH KITCH INN6325 Woodlawn Ave.Fairfax 9153 F’ublic lecture (Zoology’ clubi :“The Sense of Hearing in Fishes”(illustrated). Dr. Karl von Frisch. Socialist club: “Political Factionsin Chicago." Assistant ProfessorHarold F. Gosnell, of the PoliticalScience department. 7:30, Graduateclubhouse.Tennis Days A re Here!Tennis RacketsTennis ShoesTiennis BallsEye ShadesExpert RestringingWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th—near Kimbark Ave.Open Evenings Phone Hyde Park 1690.. .on the bank it's Nerve/.. in a cigarette it's"The PROOF of the pudding is in the eating”...it’s /as/e that makes a cigarette.How about cigarette—is it fragrant andaromatic.^ Is it smooth and mild? Has it "char¬acter”? Most important of all—does it sa/isfy?Then you’re smoking Chesterfield — whichmeans you certainly are getting good taste —“TASTE above everything" Taste /MILD . . . and yetTHEY SATISFYOiesterfleldFINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDEDO 19W. Liccbtt ft Mvnts Tobacco Co.THE DAILY MARCX)N, TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1930 Page ThreeiWaroonKNOWLES WHIFFS FOURTEEN ASMAROONS SHIVE THROUGH NINEINNINGS TO TIE IN FIRST GAME SARG CREATIONS TOCAPER IN LIVELIESTROOD ON THURSDAY('hicapo’s Maroons inauguratedtheir home season yesterday after¬noon by shiverinji: throujrh a nine-inninjr tie. 6 to 6, with WesternState Teachers’ College, of Kalama¬zoo, Michig^an. The (fame was play¬ed in an Arctic breeze tihat chilledfans and performers alike.The Maroons g'ot off to a poorstart, clubbed into the lead at mid-ifame, then sa^rKed, an<l the mostthey could rate was a <lraw. It wasa srood work-out for Nor^ren’s tos-•sers, however, for it enabled him tospot some weaknesses in the hittinjjattack and ii must have Ktaddenedhis heart t see forkhander Knowlespitch championship ball. Lefty hada curve that streake<l and cracked;mixed with a straiifht. his deliverywas m>:hty effective yesttr<lay. Hewhiffed fourteen ()f Phe visitors’ bats¬men, five (»f whom were left-handswinpers which by rijrhts shouldhave made his task somewhat easierthan if they had all struck from thenormal side of the plate. Knowleshad three bad inninirs. the first, thirdand fifth, and it was in these framesthat all the scoring was done. Dur-injf the last foui stanza> he submciTr-e<l the Western State hitters in abucket of chloroform.The crisis of the array came inthe last <if the sixth with two down.It was then the Man)ons flashed upand shot across the run that tiedthe score, and they mi^ht have (ronefurther had not .Joe Temple donethe sbepin(r beauty on the sweet,soft initial pillow. Captain Holo-han, who scampered all over the lotin (rre;»t fashion all durin(r the con¬flict, pded a hefty trple to ri(rhtafter two of his team mates hadbeen (rbliterated by a rapid double¬play. .loe Temple was inserte<l to^wat for Tipler, and complied y on-leashing' one at Krtmdt, the visit-in(r shortstop, who muired it. Holo-han scoiin^. Then, with the heavyartillery comin(r up, the coach atfirst base let .loe do the Rip V'anWinkle Tem()le stepped off the has¬sock and the ball was Jabbed nto hisribs. For the rest' of the encounterthe Maroons were as helpless andcoven !. with as much kalsomine astheir opponents.CLASSIFIED ADSTYPINd: .MSS. and Thesis. Ex¬pert) work; reasonable rates. Roughdraft .^c a page. Call Stewart 7948.10 a. m. to 4 p. m.TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1208 East 63rd StreetYoung and old taught to dance..Adults' lessons strictly private Noone t(v watch or embarrass you.Day or EveningTelephone Hyde Park 3080omarniCon^roVTEBNITTcJewelofIJOTKN PlPKfi AOO11 H. State St.. Cilieftfft BOX SCOREChicafoHolohan, 2b 5Tipler, 3b 3Temple, <3b 3Olson, ss. TyWingate, c.P^ish, lb. 4Urban, If. 3Cahill, cf. 3Howard, cf. 1Gray, rf. 3Johnson, rf. 0Knowles, p. 438Weitern StateBlackney, rf.Frendt, ss.Johnsen, c.Swafford, 1 h.Wintinko, 2b.Mackay, If.Denner, 3b.Stilece, 3b.Decker, cf.Black, cf.Pray, p. 45.34.52131435l' )|\ K !• N r I’ic.in. trt. rtn. for 2jon lit floor overlooking entire parkand lak' I’riv. adjoining shower bath,twin In .i' Kt'fcrencc' rc(|uircd. Pri-v.Tt. r;.nid:.. Hyde I’k. 082^).\ k : colored giri wants to workinori ing^ Kenwood 5223.To RPiNT .oTOS Dorchester Ave.,9 rm. frame hou.se furn. May 1 toOct. 1. Can be seen by appointment, i.Austin H. Parker, 1500 E, 57th St., ;Hyde Park 0130.Larus & Brr>. Co., Riclwnond, Va.I’ll try your Edgcwoitli. And I’ll tryit in a good pipe."(Wur. esH tr\y s *{and iny scat of l".nninn,(and my postufITcr and xfute)Now let the Edgeworth cornel V (Continued from page 1)has appeared consistently in The Sat- ,urday Evening Post for almost ten |years. jI Sarg’s marionettes are among the j' high-lighis of the American ttheatre. !He has made the puppet-show in- jj credibly successful, and draws big j! crowds whenever he and his ani- I!, mated dwarfs appear at a Broadway; theatre. He has also let his handi-i work be felt in Chicago, where hepersonally /painted tli(e Old TownCoffee Shop in the Hotel Sherman.He also designed some barber chairsdowntown for children, replete withanimal designs, veritable Noah’s i.Arks of rtie tonsorial trade, butI these were so well conceived that. they were hardly successful, inas-i much as the children would keep' s(]uirming in them to get better ;looks at the funny animals. At abenefit for the local hospital at Nan-: tucket, .Massachusetts, Sarg execut-' ed personal portraits at five dollarsapiece and was kept busy as longas fourteen hours one day; he wascompelled to give up work at hisNew York studio for a week to fillthe demands of charity-patrons whowanted Sarg caricatures of them- Rexinger CaptainsTennis Team; FirstMeet With PurdueAt a meeting of the V'arsity tennisteam held Friday afternoon, ScottRexinger was elected to captain the1930 netmen. Rexinger played lastyeai on the Maroon team and wasrunner-up in the Conference meet.He was beaten only by his team- ,mate, George Lott, who won the BigTen Title.Rexinger was chosen to take the 'captaincy vacated by Lott and will |in addition Iv* counted on heavily to ibring another championship to Chi¬cago. He was No. 2 man last yearand probably will be able to hold .the .\o. 1 position this season.The s(iuad practiced yesterday un¬der rather adver.se conditions. .A ,strong wind, little short of a gale. |was blowing from the north which icarried the balls in rather uncertaincourses. The first conference meetis scheduled for the 26th of Aprilat Lafayette, Ind. The Purdue tear-,is usually a strong one and will offeiplenty of competition for the Ma- 'roons in the season opener. CHICAGO RELAY TEAM TRAVELSTO KANSAS RELAY CARNIVAL ATOWN EXPENSE; HAVE GOOD CHANCEselves. He is so full of energy anddetermination that he can commutedaily between New York City andNew England and still keep cheer¬ful. Because the University hasn’t thewherewithal with which to send a!Maroon track team to the KansasRelays this Saturday, about five Vars¬ity runners have decided to defendMaroon laurels at their own expense. 'r>ast year the Chicago team perform- 'ed creditably at this carnival, win- 'ning the two mile relay and takingthirds in both Distance medley andmile. i880 Team To KansasWhen Coach Merriam announcedthat Chicago would not be repre-.sented at this national meet, themembers of the squad put their headstogether and members of the 880relay decided to finance the cost ofthe journey. They are Captain Root,Bud East, Hal Haydon, Robert Col¬ville and Ia?s Freudenthal. Not ^even the Chicago mentor will be al¬lowed to make the trip. The expensewill amount to far more than a bid ito the Military Ball, but it is be-:lieved that the men will be partly;recompensed by the University ofKan.sas which usually provides partof the railroad cost. Root Wins TrialsLast Friday Coach Merriam helda time trial for candidates for the880 relay. In the 220 yard dashCaptain Root took first. Bud Eastsecond. Dale Letts third, Hal Hay¬don fourth and I^es Freudenthalfifth. The winning time for the fur¬long was 21.4 and the aggregate timefor the first four must have beenvery gratifying to Coach Merriamfor it was faster than the best timethat the 880 team of Illinois hasmade this year. The University ofIllinois has one of the best 880 teamsin the field.Team Has Good ChanceDale Ijetts will not make thi.s un¬official journey and therefore theteam going to I^awrence, Kansas willprobably be a fraction slower thanthe best Chicago has. But the am¬bitious trackmen have a good chanceto rank high in their event and meritthe good will of the student bodyfor their undertaking.The men leave Friday and expectto arrive at the scene of the meetSaturday morning.Pipes save nomidnight oilIF PIPES made the man, anybodyat all could rise in the world justby smoking a few pounds of Edge-worth. But pipes do not make the man.Men make the pipe—most men do.Somewhat depends on the individual,more on the pipe, and the tobacco ismost important of all. Things mustbe congenial.Edgeworth is a congenial tobacco,cool, slow-burning, fully flavored.Edgeworth has poise, kindly goodnature, real tobacco personality —Edgeworth welcomes new friends.Many a good man has been pledgedto pipes by Edgeworth alone.Like to meet Edgeworth? Just askwith the coupon—and the postmanwill bring your first few pipefuls ofthe genuine, three years seasoned ifit’s a day. Our treat, if you please.Others have found Edgeworth andquit their discontent.So may it be with you!EDGEWORTHEdgewor'h is a careful bieiivlof good tobacio* — se'.c.'tt Jespecially for pipe-sinokiiiti. iLaquality aiiJ Hjvor ti'vprchange. Buy it anywliero— “ Ready Rubted" or“Plug Slice” — 15e pocketpackage to pound liunii-dur tin.Page Four THE DAILY MARCX)N, TUESDAY, APRIL 15. 1930C AND A NEWSW, H. Spencer, the Dean of theSchool of Commerce, is among thosemissing this week. He has respoijd-ed to the call of the sunny south,his ultimate destination being Ath¬ens, Georgia, where he will speakto the student body of the Univer¬sity of Georgia on “I>aw as an Agen¬cy of Social Control in Modern Bus-•iness.” The lucky stiff IDelta Sigma Pi will hold a smokerWednesday evening, April 16, in theReynolds Club. They will meetagain at a luncheon on Friday atthe Plaisance Hotel.We have ju.st discovered what it isthat calls John H. Cover, Professorof Marketing and Statistics, awayfrom his duties as chief tormenterof the statistics classes for a dayor two each month. Mr. Cover isthe Director of the Bureau of Bus¬iness Research at the University ofPittsburgh, which is making a studyof the economic and social welfareof the Pittsburgh region in compar¬ison with other regions. The work isdivided into a study of the diversi¬fication of industry, Pittsburgh fin¬ance, trade and transportation, em¬ployment and unemployment and thelabor market, and griculture. Thisstudy is aided by the gift of a foun¬dation and is carried on by eighteenworkers under the supervision ofMr. Cover.A handsome engraved wall plaque,engraved with the names of all stu-ents who have won the Delta Sig¬ma Pi Scholarship key, will be pre¬sented to the C. & A. School at theannual C. & A. banquet by the DeltaSigma Pi fraternity. This key ispre.sented at the end of every yearto the Commerce .student having the highest average for his four years’college work.Watch for the first edition of thenew School of Commerce publication,in which the Commerce Cats bare' all. We promise to expose the truthabout the faculty and how they gotthat way, and what makes C. & A.students “different.”Prohibition LimerickOffers Thirst-QuenchersTo Phoenix Readers(Continued from page 1)sion engendered by all this moral¬izing and heart interest, Sam VanDyne hacked away all day Sundayand got a fist full of blisters to pro¬duce a full page w'oodcut.Ballots for the annual springbeauty contest will be published inthe travel number. The winner ofthe contest will have her portraitdone in oil for the Phoenix cover,and she w’ill be presented with theoriginal. This year, for the firsttime, the winner will also receiveher choice of any dress in the Palm¬er Apparel shop, 63rd street division.SAMPSON WINSEJVENTS CONTEST(.Continued irom page 1)Leon Baer and Charles Gould, re¬spectively. All three of the win¬ning contestants are students of theLIGHT OF ASIADramatization of the Life and Workof (luatamma BuddhaI’riKluced by the Famed Cii.-t ofSHIRAZThe Art TheatreCinema of Shadow SilenceChicago Ave., Just East of MichiganContinuous from 1 to 11 P.M.Matinees, .'>(lc Evenintrs, T.^o College of Arts, Literature, and sci¬ence.Judges for the contest held at theUniversity were Professor Quincy iWright and Assistant Professors jI Carroll Wooddy, Jerome Kerwin, jI Harold Lasswell, and Harold Gosnellof the Political Science department.Professor Gosnell is the Universitymember on the Academic council ofthe New York Times Current EventsContest.The purpose of this competitiveexamination is to encourage an in¬telligent following of hhe dailyevents and current history amongundergraduates. Twenty colleges allover the East and Middle West will.^end the papers of their first) prizewinners tP the National contest atNew York, and a National wdnnerwill be selected. Mr. Sampson’s pa¬per has been sent on and he is now eligible for winning the $500 national |prize.SETS PRECEDENTIN MIDWESTERNCOLLEGIATE SPORTS(Continued from page 1)up the west’s reputation in theselines.Plan Interclas* CompetitionOf local concern, W, A. A. is plan-I ning programs which will make ten¬nis and golf year-round activities,and which will lead to interclasscompetition of the sort that hockeyand basketball now enjoy. Numeralswill then be awarded to class teamsand letters to honor teams: thisyear calls only for the individualtournaments, the winners of whichwill be given major awards.Ii in clothes it's TWEEDstras it's'TWEET //*soft crooning numbershot blaring jazzsmooth singing syncopationDancing Every Evening (Sundaya excepted)TWFPT HOf'lAM Nitlhta—informal—10.2I TVLL.I XHmisaion—$I.2.v per personAND HIS ORCHESTR-A Saturday*—Formal—10-3litfllliUnil \dmis*ion $2.,.« per person I A. AND P. SEEKSJUNE GRADUATES(Continued from page 1)Home office employees, of course,receive a fixed salary.Many of the most successful em¬ployees of the firm have been college men, and a college education is con¬sidered a great asset in the life in¬surance business.Mr. Kennan invites all seniors whohave not yet accepted positions tosee him at once, since the time remaining before graduation is grow¬ing short.aboard■ SV ‘DAW *«"■-vr cveryoncuf'ftbovit . • • in (onnv"-"•••T: . coUcc';u I-the rWS. . VW sa.UnSS--rT r A’s Special.wo of BLAm.«.e of Uo.ve.»..y r-vOfOfItEncouraging the longdistance habitAn interesting example of organization isthe development of long distance telephonebusiness. .Men and women of the BellSystem made this service worthy, and thepublic has recognized this by its greatly in¬creased usage.The Bell 1 .aborarones improved the (Qualityof sound tr.tnsmission bv modifying existingapparatus and designing new. \\ estern Elec¬tric manufactured the necessary equipment of the highest standards. Operating telephonecompanies; working with the American Tele¬phone and Telegraph Company, shortenedthe time for completing calls and reducedthe rates.In all a coordinated w'ork, bringing to¬gether many and varied activities, and tvpicalof the wav in which telephone service isconstantly being made a better tool for thenation’s needs.BELL SYSTEMi/f naltbu-zi; me sjitem of m ter-connect ir.g telephonesIn,/ro t ing transviission Reducing ratesPIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN’ The telephone looks aheadEven as you are putting through your dailytelephone calls, groups of Bell 'Telephone ex¬perts are calculating your telephone needs forfive years, ten years, twenty years from now.It is their work to discover from all avail¬able facts—not fancies—how each state, cityand community will probably grow. 'Thesefacts are reduced to forecast charts, preciselyas an astronomer plots the course of a comet. Thus central offices are plan net! years be¬fore they are actually built. I lulergroundand overhead lines are laid out to fit futureas well as present needs. Expansior of ser¬vice is provided for.Bell System planners virtually live in thecities of the future. They play a vital part inproviding the l)est possible telephone servicefor the least possible cost.BELL SYSTEMnation-tutde jyjtem of tnter-connecttng telephones•OUR PIONEER! N GOUR WORK HAS JUST BEGUN"SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON Patlp Jllaroon Today’s Weather:Showers and some¬what colder.Vol. 30. No. 48. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 16, 1930 Price Five CentsNAME CAST OF “SMART ALEC”WYVERiqAND PHIPI PHI LEAD INWINTER_GRADESSeven Clubs and ThreeFraternities MakeB- Average I- - iSeven out of the twelve women’s :Clubs held a B- avaraj?e during the ;winter quarter, while butf three of ‘the twenty-nine fraternities had a !B- average. Wyvern led the Club jlist with a 3.72 average for mem- ibers and a 3.49 average for pledgesand members combined. Phi Pi Phi .leads the fraternities with a 3.80 |standing. Delta Sigma Phi and Al- ;pha Epsilon Pi, with C- averages, Iare both ineligible, and are com¬pelled bo forfeit their social andrushing privileges.After Wyvern, Deltho, Phi Delta •Upsilon, Sigma, Esoteric, Pi DeltaPhi, Delta Sigma follow with B-averages. Phi Beta Delta, Chi Rho jSigma. Achoth, Mortar Board, Quad- |rangier received C averages, in thesame order.Phi Sigma Delta and Phi Beta 'Delta also received B- averages.The standing of the remainingfraternities follows, in order of scho- ,lastic standing: 4. Lambda Chi Al- ipha. 6. Sigma .\lpha Epsilon, 6. Al- 'pha Tau Omega, 7. Pi Lambda Phi,S. Phi Kappa Psi, 9. Chi Psi, 10.Zeta Beta Tau, 11. Delta KappaEpsilon, 12. Kappa Nu, 13. Phi Kap¬pa Psi. 14. Acacia, 15. Psi Upsilon,16. Beta Theta Pi, 17. Kappa Sig¬ma. 18. Phi Delta Theta, 19. Al¬pha Sigma Phi, 20. Delta Upsilon,21. Alpha Delta Phi, 22. Tau Kappa(Continued on page 4)Eistablish BureauFor Wilder FansBecause an average of four peoplea day have called the informationoffice and asked where they shouldgo to have their books autographedby Thornton Wilder, a system hasbeen established whereby these en¬thusiast.*; and autograph collectorswill be satisfied.Mr. W’ilder will sign all books ;which are left with the operator atthe switch board in the President’s joffice or those which are sent to himthrough the mail. 'The bookstore is sponsoring a"‘Woman of Andros” contest, a prize ;being given for the best essay of ;two hundred words on the personalimpression given by Thornton Wil- ,der’s late.nt novel. Prizes ai’e five ,and three dollars and the entriesshould be in before May 1. |Forty-Six StudentsSign Peace PetitionForty-six students have signed thefollowing resolution to be sent tothe Senate committee on the WorldCourt and the Frazier amendment:“That they are firmly resolved thsupport entry of the United Statesinto the World Court.That they will do all in their pow¬er to assist those Senators and Con¬gressmen who favor the Frazieramendment proposing that the powerto declare war be taken from theUnited States g''vernment by Con¬stitutional amendment.”They believe United States entryinto the World Court, and modifica¬tion of th) Constitution so as toabolish legA^ recognition of war, arenecessary steps in pursuance of theKellogg Peace Pact, which, accord¬ing to the constitution is part of thesupreme law of the land. Recorder AnnouncesSpring EnrollmentDuring the first week of tSie Springquarter, registrati<>n.s at the Univer¬sity totaled 6,271, according to thereport of the Recorder’s office. This |figure shows a gain of 232 over the 'Spring quarter of 1929.By far the largest group is Chatin the senior and junior colleges,totaling 2,504. In the graduate :schools of Arts, Literature and Sci- 'ence there are 1,277 students.The profes.sional schools have 140 'divinity students, 443 medical stu- |dents (209 in the Ogden Graduate |school of science and 234 in Rush iMedical college), 365 Law students, j(Continued on page 4) iCommons ProfitIs Very Slight—Reports MouldsReports from the Commons De¬partment show a profit of only fiveper cent on the total amount of bus¬iness, a minimum safety margin, ac¬cording to .John Moulds, assistantbusiness manager of the quadranglesand secretary of the Board of Trus¬tees.Mr. Moulds pointed out in an in¬terview yesterday that even thissmall margin of profit is somewhatfictitious since no interest is beingcharged on the investment in land,no interest on the building invest¬ment, no amount for depreciation !of buildings, and no rental chargeof any sort. If all of these factorswhich are now being carried by theUniversity were assessed against theOperation of the Commons theywould probably fully offset any profit'showing.The figures quoted in The Daily ^Maroon yesterday were for twoyears ago, not last year as errone¬ously stated. Last year without in¬cluding the changes mentionedabove, the Commons made a profitof $18,425.85, or $1,878.65 lessthan the preceding year.CHICAGO GERMANSPRESENT PROGRAMIN MANDEL HALLGermans of the Chicago area whoare interested in the modern youthof their native land will have theirevening at the University when the iGerman group of the Chicago Inter¬national Student’.4 Association stages jits annual "German Night” April |25th in Mandel hall.Over thirty Germans, students in ]Chicago’s institutions of higher edu- ication or graduates of Germanschools who are getting industrial ex- Jperience in this country under a co- |opei’ative agreement between the jUnited States and the government iat Berlin, will participate in the |program, which is open to the public.The cast is an "all-men” affair, |but the evening will not' be without jits feminine element. Dancing will ifollow the entertainment, in theReynolds Club.Dr. H. S. Simon, Consul-Generalof Germany for the niddle west, will(Continued on page 4)ORGAN PROGRAM PERMANENCE OPART ESSENCEOF MUSIC CRITICS REFLECTIONSBy Alfred V. FrankensteinSeveral reflections on the passingof people and the relative perman¬ence of art are possible in reviewingF’rederick Stock’s Symphony pro¬gram played at' Mandel hall yester¬day afternoon. In the first placethe concert opened with five move¬ments from the so called "Haffner”serenade of Mozart. About 150 yearsago a wealthy Austrian family nam¬ed Haffner commissioned the promis¬ing society composer Mozart to writea suite of pieces for rtie wedding ofone of the daughters of the clan. Itadded to the ostentation of the oc¬casion; it confirmed the glory of thename of Haffner. Today the nameof Haffner is remembered solely be¬cause of the music written for thisfestival by the hired help, Mozart.It is a fashion set by nineteenthcentury criticism to depreciate occa¬sional works. Music written to or¬der is not supposed to reflect geniusto the same extent as music writtenby the promptings of “inspiration.”A thousand compositions might becited against this view, but theHaffner serenade, in the judgmentof at least one listener, is not amongthese. It contains snip^*i*ts andsnatches of other Mozart worKs, ex¬amples of the amiable process ofself-plagiarism which made possiblea catalog of the works of Mozartrunning to nearly 700 numbers.What is more important, it contains long stretches suggesting not selfplagiarism but mannerism and cliche.The other work giving rise to thereflection of the opening sentencewas the “Siegfried Idyl,” the de¬licious serenade combining motivesfrom the Ring with German nurserytunes, and written by Wagner to cel¬ebrate the first birthday of his son,Siegfried; wherefore Max Mason Jr.suggests it be called "Li’l Siegfried.”Cosima, the mother of Siegfried, diedlast week at a Methuselan age. Thereare those who have been known tosuggest that Siegfried Wagner isnot as young in idea as he mightbe. The freshness of tfie Idyl aloneremains.Other works of the program werethe Strauss tone poem ‘‘Also SprachZarathustra,” with which this writerhas often enough sported in thesecolumns, and w’hich H. L. Menckendestroyed utterly in his "Book ofBurlesques,” and "La Valse,” byRavel. When Maurice Ravel comesto die they may put on his head-(Continued on page 4)HARSHE BEREFTOF CLOTHES; SARGLENDS A HANDHumorist Misses Boat,' Baggage Doesn’t ButFOUR TO ATTENDY W COr^ERENCEDelegates Leave ForDetroit April 24Ruth Abells, Frances Carr, LuciaDowning and Elizabeth Merriamhave been chosen as delegates to theNational Biennial convention of theYoung Women’s Christian associationand will leave for Detroit, wherethq convention will be held, on April24. Miss Margaret Clark, secretoryof the association here, and Mrs.Charles W. Gilkey, vice-president ofthe National organization, will ac¬company the students.The delegates to the conventionwho will represent universities andcolleges throughout Hie country willcompose the Legislative body of the(Continued on page 4) Greater love hath no man thanj this—that he give up his underweari for a friend.1 Last summer, when William ReadI Harshe, eampus humorist, was on theI eve of his departure for Europe, hej arrived in New York City (TonySarg’s native heath), checked hisbaggage for the boat on which heexpected to leave, and ascertainedthe sailing time of the vessel. Thesailing time was incorrect.Picture Mr. Harshe’s agitation onarriving at the dock and seeing, inthe distance, the faint pall of smokewhich marked the fast-receding lin-(Continued on page 4)HUTCHINS RECEIVEAT TWO TEAS FORFACULTY MEMBERSMcDonald RequestsOnlookers To GoElsewhere For FunAll onlookers are requested tokeep away from the Blackfriar re¬hearsals by Donald McDonald, di¬rector, because they only distract theplayers and waste time. He alsoasks when men are called forrehearsals, that they don’t come be¬fore the appointed time, because heneeds all the time he can get togive to the show. Rehearsals willbe held today, both this afternoonand this evening, in Mandel hall. President and Mrs. Robert May-i nard Hutchin.s are holding a seriesof two receptions yesterday and to¬day for faculty members. Yester¬day’s guests were members of thecolleges of Arts, Literature and Sci¬ence, while those who will be enter¬tained today are members of thefaculties of other colleges of theUniversity. Fewer people than wereexpected attended yesterday, be¬cause of the bad weather.Mrs. Hutchins wore a muslin dress,patterned in colored circles, accord¬ing to the butler. The house wasdecorated witti snap dragons androses, and eight caterers prepared thefood.Several trustees of the Universityattended, according to the butler,but Mr. Harold Swift was unableto attend because of illness.PROHIBITION EFFECTIVE,” SAYSSAFFORD; ‘ROT” CRY HECKLERSPorter Heaps, University organist,who alternates with Frederick Mar¬riott at the daily organ recitals willplay the following selections today,at 5 in the chapel: ‘‘Prelude andFugue in G minor” by Bach; "Can-tabile from Sonata VTI” by Guil-mant; “Suite in F” by Corelli;‘‘From ttie High Heavens” by Karg-Elert; and “Chorale in B minor” bytYanck. “We may look young and may talkyoung, but we have had lots of ex¬perience,” thus Ray Budinger, a lawstudent, replied to George Safford,State Superintendent of the Anti-Saloon League who spoke before agroup of twenty law students lastnight in the Ida Noyes theatre underthe auspices of the Liberal Club.Mr. Safford, who was introducedby M. P. Boynton of the Woodlawn Baptist Church, made the follow¬ing statement: “In 1920 an immov¬able barrier was placed in the pathof the liquor traffic—^the prohibitionlaw. Since then there has been greatcommotion, more than ever before,opportunity that they stayed until 10,If the law were not in a considerablemeasure accomplishing its purposeno such uproar would exist. Difficulty((Continued on page 4) Tennis Fans PlanTo Organize ClubAs a step in support of the ad¬vance of tennis among UniversityI women, a meeting will be held Fri¬day at 12, in the corrective gym atIda Noyes hall for all those inter-! ested in tennis and its improvement.There are no qualifications otherthan interest. Plans for the forma-I tion of a tennis club will be dis-j cussed and voted on.Such a club would form a nucleus; for class teams next season, andwould be active throughout theyear, devising methods of assistingI its members in the development ofI strokes and technique.Dramatics GroupShows Movies InMandel CloisterFree motion pictures depictingscenes of the Civil war will be pre¬sented in Mandel cloisters daily from12 until 12:30. These movies aresponsored by the Dramatic associa¬tion in conjunction with the play,"Secret Service,” to be presented.•\pnl 24 in Mandel.i^mall-Arms h.xhibit.A.n exhibition of Civil war small-i arms is also on display in the cloist-i ers of Mandel. There is a pair ofi dueling pistols used by a Southi Carolinian named Courtney, who1 fought for the Confederacy and sub-! sequenCly became a soldier of for¬tune, engaged in the campaignagainst Emperor Maxmilian of Mex¬ico.The derringer on exhibition be-i longed to a Mississippi river gamblerI Montague Ravensford, who is re-i ported to have killed a man with it.i It was loaned by Jackson Durant,jI of Memphis, Tenn.The .?<S calibre Colt six-shooterbelonged to a Union army officerwho served in the northwest withSheridan and Custer after the Civilwar.Guns Are AuthenticI The arms for the entire play areauthentic, having been secured fromFrancis Bannerman and Sons, of NewYork City. Research work at theChicago Historical Society is being(Continued on page 4)Invite Catholics toJoin Social GroupTo Discuss ReligionCatholics interested in discussionson Catholicism are invited to attenda meeting of the Calvert club to beheld today at 4 in the Y. W. C. A.room of Ida Noyes hall. ProfessorJerome Kerwin, of the Political Sci¬ence department jwill explain thepurpose of the club which is tointerest all Catho|ics on campus.Members will be divided into smallgroups to discuss current ecclesias¬tical literature of Catholic interest.The Calvert club is to furnish bothintellectual and social interest. Teawill follow’ the meeting this after¬noon.The officers of the club ai’e BettyDucey, president; and Robert Mc¬Carthy, secretary.UBRARY LECTURE"The Newberry Library” will bethe subject of an address to be giv¬en today by Mr. George B. Utley,the librarian, at 4:30 in Harper M16. Mr. Utley has been librarianof the Newberry Library since 1920previous to which he was secretaryof the American library association.This afternoon’s lecture is underfJhe auspices of the Graduate Libraryschool. FIVE MEN GIVENFEMININE LEADSBY M(^NALDEleven M2i8culine PartsRehearsed DailyIn MandelFive men have been named to playj the leading feminine roles and eleven' to take the leading masculine parts; in the 1930 Blackfriars show, “Smart' Alec” by Donald McDonald III, di-rector of the show. Bettina, thebeautiful but cruel girl with whomj the w'hole male population of thei school falls in love, is played by Rob¬ert Balsley. The other leading girlsj are played by John Link, Williami Gartside, Phil Smith, and John Wier.About the HeroAlec, hero and son of founder of' the college is played by James Rutter.The other boys about the campusI are played by Lawrence Goodnow,[ Stanley Korshak, Paul Rosenfels,i James Parker, Hugh Riddle, andJames Couplin. Justin Komiss playsthe part of Mr. Danby, the founderof the college, while Professor Mac¬intosh, a professor of t'he old schooli is played by Wilfred Davis. George; Cameron has been named as Pro-i fessor Macintire, who was formerlyI a gangster, while the other gang-' ster part has not as yet been filled,* and George Griewank fills the posi¬tion of Miss Primrose, the dean of‘ women.; Russell Wilder announces over theradio the football game between! dear old Danby and t'he rival college,; Walton. Other cast parts are held! by Arthur Resnick, Archie Winning,I Wilfred Davis, Winfield Lowe, andI Richard Fletcher.I (Continued on page 4)IjMbniorial VolumeFor Karl PietschI!' A memorial volume for Dr. KarlPietsch, Professor Emeritus of Ro-, mance Philology at the University,' who died recently, is to be publishedby the University in May. The con-tributors to this memorial will beI scholars from American and Euro-i pean universities, two of whom areI his former students, George North-I up. Professor of Spanish Literatureat the University, and Milton Buch¬anan, professor at the University ofj Toronto.' Professor Pietsch, who wasbrought to the University in 1896j by President William Rainey Har-; per, received his Doctor’s degreeI from the University of Halle. HeI specialized in Old Spanish philology,i and his best known book, Spanish; Grail Fragments, a two volume work,is a classic in the field. At the timej of his seventieth birthday, Profes-: sor Pietsch received honors from' many European universities, his old, school, the University of Halle, send¬ing him a special diploma. The fu¬neral .service was held in Bond Cha¬pel on the University quadrangles.Pauling AddressesScientists TodayDr. Linus Pauling of the Califor-; nia Institute of Technology will ad-I dress students in physics, geology,j biochemists, biologists and chemistsi Friday evening in Kent theatre at8, it was announced by Julius Stieg-liOz, chairman of the department ofchemistry, yesterday. The subjectof Dr. Pauling’s lecture will bej "The rotational motion of moleculesI in crystals with a special emphasisI on the entropy of hydrogen.”Page Four THE DAILY MARCX)N, TUESDAY. APRIL 15, 1930C AND A NEWSW. H. Spencer, the Dean of theSchool of Commerce, is among thosemissing this week. He has respond¬ed to the call of the sunny south,his ultimate destination being Ath¬ens, Georgia, where he will speakto the student body of the Univer¬sity of Georgia on “I.^w as an Agen¬cy of Social Control in Modern Bus¬iness.” The lucky stiff!Delta Sigma Pi will hold a smokerWednesday evening, April 16, in theReynolds Club. They will meetagain at a luncheon on Friday atthe Plaisance Hotel.We have just discovered what it isthat calls John H. Cover, Professorof Marketing and Statistics, awayfrom his duties as chief tormenterof the statistics classes for a dayor two each month. Mr. Cover isthe Director of the Bureau of Bus¬iness Research at the University ofPittsburgh, which is making a studyof the economic and social welfareof the Pittsburgh region in compar¬ison with other regions. The work isdivided into a study of the diversi¬fication of industry, Pittsburgh fin¬ance, trade and transportation, em¬ployment and unemployment and thelabor market, and griculture. Thisstudy is aided by the gift of a foun¬dation and is carried on by eighteenworkers under the supervision ofMr. Cover.handsome engraved wall plaque,engraved with the names of all stu-ents who have won the Delta Sig¬ma Pi Scholarship key, will be pre¬sented to the C. & A. School at theannual C. & A. banquet by the DeltaSigma Pi fraternity. This key ispresented at the end of every yearto the Commerce student having the highest average for his four years’college work.Watch for the first edition of thenew School of Commerce publication,in which the Commerce Cats bareall. We promise to expose the truthabout the faculty and how they gotthat way, and what makes C. & A.students “ditferent.”Prohibition LimerickOffers Thirst-QuenchersTo Phoenix Readers(Continued from page 1)sion engendered by all this moral¬izing and heart interest, Sam VanDyne hacked away all day Sundayand got a fist full of blisters to pro¬duce a full page woodcut.Ballots for the annual springbeauty contest will be published inthe tvavel number. The winner ofthe contest will have her portraitdone in oil for the Phoenix cover,and she will be presented with theoriginal. This year, for the firsttime, the winner will also receiveher choice of any dress in the Palm¬er Apparel shop, 63rd street division.SAMPSON WINSQVENTS CONTEST(.Continued ironi page 1)Leon Baer and Charles Gould, re¬spectively. All three of the win¬ning contestants are students of tneLIGHT OF ASIAA Drarriatization of the Life and Workof (tiiatamma BuddhaI’riKluced by the Famed Ca^t ofSHIRAZThe Art TheatreCinema of Shadow SilenceChicago Ave., Just East of MichiganContinuous from 1 to 11 P.M.Matinees. 5llc Eveninys. 7.5c College of Arts, Literature, and sci¬ence.Judges for the contest held at theUniversity were Professor QuincyW’right and Assistant Professors1 Carroll Wooddy, Jerome Kerwin,I Harold Lasswell, and Harold Gosnellof the Political Science department.Professor Gosnell is the Universitymember on the Academic council ofthe New York Times Current EventsContest.The purpose of this competitiveexamination is to encourage an in¬telligent following of the dailyevents and current history amongI undergraduates. Twenty colleges all; over the East and Middle West will’ >end the papers of their first) prize Iwinners tP the National contest atNew York, and a National winnerwill be selected. Mr. Sampson’s pa¬per has been sent on and he is now eligible for winning the $500 national |prize. ISETS PRECEDENTIN MIDWEISTERNCOLLEGIATE SPORTS(Continued from page 1)up the west’s reputat)ion in theselines.Plan Interclas* CompetitionOf local concern, W’. A. A. is plan¬ning programs which will make ten¬nis and golf year-round activities,and which will lead to interclasscompetition of the sort that hockeyand basketball now enjoy. Numeralswill then be awarded to class teamsand letters to honor teams: thisyear calls only for the individualtournaments, the winners of whichwill be given major awards.Ii in clothes it's TWEEDstras it's'TWEET //*soft crooning numbershot blaring jazzsmooth singing syncopationDancing Kverv EvpninK (Sundays excepted*'TWFFT HnriAM Nilfhts-Inforinal-10-2• I VHmission—$1.2.5 per peraonAND HIS OR.CHESTR..A Saturday*—Formal—l(t-3.4 khumuaij attnution. Ke^-^iimrs^i^lr 22^^:""" A. AND P. SEEKSJUNE GRADUATES(Continued from page 1)Home office employees, of course,receive a fixed salary.Many of the most successful em¬ployees of the firm have been college men, and a college education is con¬sidered a great asset in the life in¬surance business.Mr. Kennan invites all seniors whohave not yet accepted positions toI see him at once, since the time reI maining before graduation is grow-! ing short.aboardf "f ■ ■ ;? ’,chcstr.v . . •lc->i • • • " etc. . . ■ lr«nayou -'f ^.„pe-c Ike 0AMbeWtcnlhe,,ee oi Uu.ver»..y 1.—-ivTt TWIRDEncouraging the longdistance habitAn interestinq; example of orj^anization isthe dev'elopment of lon^ distance telephonebusiness. Men and women of the BellSystem made this service worthy, anti thepuidic has recognized this by its greatly in¬creased usage.d'he Bell Laboratories improved the cjvialityof sound traiwmission bv modifying existingapparatus and designing new. Western Llec-tric manufactured the necessary equipment of the highest standards. Operating telephonecompanies; working with the American Tele¬phone and Telegraph Company, shortenedthe time for completing calls and reducedthe rates.in all a coordinated work, bringing to¬gether many and varied activities, and typicalof the wav in which telephone service isconstantly being made a better tool for thenation’s needs.bell' SYSTEMnuttbti--u;id( system of m ter-connect ing telephonttPIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN’ !I— The telephone looks aheadEven as you are putting through vour dailytelephone calls, groups of Bell Telephone ex¬perts are calculating your telephone needs forlive years, ten years, twenty vears from now .It is their work to discover from all avail¬able facts—not fancies how each state, cityand community will probably grow. 'Thesefacts are reduced to forecast charts, preciselyas an astronomer plots the course of a comet. Thus central offices are planned years be¬fore they are actually built. Undergroundand overhead lines are laid out to fit futureas well as present needs. E^xpansior of ser¬vice is provitled for.Bell System })lanners virtually live in thecities of the future. T hey play a vital part inproviding the best possible telephone servicefor the least possible cost.BELL SYSTEM%A Hation-wtde system of in ter-conn e ct ing t e lephtntiliOUR ‘OUR PIONEERING WORK HAS JUST BEGUN**