REORGANIZATION OFSTAFF OF CAP ANDGOWN lINDQt WAY 'Max Otto HonorsDr. J. H. Tufts AtFarewell BanquetPossible Plan SubmittedTo PublicationsBoard John Dewey and Angell ofYale Send TheirGreetingsSENIORS AT HELMProposal Based on MaroonConstitution AdoptedLast YearUnder the direction of Ray Vane,editor, plans for the complete reor-(ranization of the Cap and Gownstaff have been completed and willbe presented to the Board of Publi¬cations at its next meetinff. If theplan is accepted by the Board it willbe the first time in the history ofthe Cap and Gown that executivepositions will be held by senior menand women.This reorf^anization has been bas¬ed entirely upon the new constitutionof The Daily Maroon which wasdrawn up last Sprinpr by the Boardof Publications.Two DepartmentaUnder the new plan the Cap andGown staff will be orfiranized intoeditorial and business departments.A Board of Control consisting of theEditor, the Business Manager, theWomen’s Editor, the Managing Ed¬itor, and the Assistant Business Man¬ager will have direct control of thepublication. In the editorial divi¬sion there will be two Junior menand two Junior women acting as as¬sistant (rditors. Under these fourJuniors are the Sophomore andFreshmen, editorial assistants. Thebusiness department will be dividedinto circulation and advertising de¬partments with two juniors at thehead of each. Business Sophomoreand Freshmen assistants will be di¬rectly responsible to these juniors.At present the staff consists of:Ray Vane, editor; William Kinche-loe, business manager; Zoe Marhoe-fer, women’s editor; and Jack Jen¬sen, assistant business manager. Anew position, that of the managingeditor, ha.s been initiated to relievethe editor of much routine work.Gilbert White, who has worked onthe publication for three years, hasbeen elected to take this position.Several Positions OpenThere will be several positionsopen to the students when the planis accepted by the Board. Ray Vaneassures the opening of a few jobson the editorial staff, and WilliamKincheloe offers a couple of positionson the business staff to women.Other than these few openings, thestaff of the 1931 Cap and Gown isvery nearly complete, and plans forwinter quarter have been alreadydiscussed and drawn up.The drive for subscriptions to theCap and Gown has closed for thisquarter. However, according toWilliam Kincheloe, “The circulationdrive starts again winter quarter andwe are fully confident that at theend of that time we will have sold1200 copies.”Seek SaleswomenFor Y. W, BazaarWomen interested in helping to•ell at the Y. W. C. A. bazaar Fri¬day mutt aign up today on the bul¬letin board outside the Y. W. officein Ida Noyes hall, and stating thehours which they can work.Japanese articles of all kinds, hand¬made luncheon sets, handkerchiefs,and homemade candy, cake, and jelly,donated by members of the Advis¬ory board, students on campus, andothers in the community interestedin Y. W. C. A., will be on sale from10 to 5 in the Y. W. room.Luncheon will be served from11:30 to 1:30 in the sun-parlor andtickets, priced at fifty cents, shouldbe purchased before tomorrow. Thebazaar is directed by Becky Hay¬ward, who is chairman of a com¬mittee consisting of Lucille Alger,Margaret Hill, Beatrice Roberg andHarriet Ann Trinkie. “You all know about the new sys-j^em of educati'on which is beingput into effect here at your Univer¬sity. I can tell you nothing aboutit. But I wish to congratulate Pro¬fessor James H. Tufts upon beingthe first graduate to be sent outunder the new educational system.”Thus spoke Max Carl Otto, Profes¬sor of Philosophy at the Universityof Wisconsin, who inaugurated theevening of tribute to Professor Tuftsat the farewell banquet given in hishonor last evening at the HotelFlamingo.“As we sit here,” he continued,“we naturally think of the fact thatDr. Tufts is to be free to devotehimself to projects which have longbeen dear to his heart, which he hasbeen anxious to do, but which hisintenseley occupied life has made im¬possible. We wish him well in un¬dertakings he may now enter upon,and we look forward with eager an¬ticipation to the results of his moreleisurely meditation. But we alsothink of the great work done, theimportanit tasks accomplished, andof the rich, humane and noble lifethat has been lived.”Dewey Sends LetterBetween the speeches Mr. Theo¬dore Brameld, toastmaster and pres¬ident of the Philosophy club, readletters and telegrams which had beenreceived from all over the country.John Dewey of Columbia University,Professor T. V. Smith, visiting pro¬fessor at Cornell, President Angellof Yale, and Mjrs. Tufts, who is inCalifornia already, sent messages.Professor George Herbert Mead,who succeeded Professor Tufts thisfall as head of the Philosophy de¬partment, said “there are those longlives which cannot assimilate the ex¬periences that they encounter, whilethere are other personalities whichmerge the meaning of things andconvey the past through the presentto the future. Such a personality isMr. Tufts’. There are many things,”he concluded, “for which I also wouldlike to go out to California; but thegreatest of them would be Mr.Tufts.”(Continued on page 4)STUDENTS MUSTBRING TENTATIVESLIP TO REGISTERNo student has been or will beregistered without presenting his orher registration slip, according to reg¬istration officials. In previous yearsthe department has been lenient inthis regard, but due to the fact thatmany senior college students signedup for courses out of their sequence,and freshmen registered for coursesrequiring more major credits thanthey had earned, it was decided thatno registration would be made with¬out poof that the student had con¬sulted his or her dean. -Fifteen more classes were closedyesterday, making the total numberof full courses thirty-two. Regis¬tration of students whose names be¬gin with N, P, T, X, Y, Z will bemade today from 8:30 until 11:45.From 1:15 until 4:15 students whosenames begin with A, F,* G, J, willregister.Tomorrow E, K, Q, U, V, W, willregister from 8:30 to 11:45 and D,L, M, R, from 1:15 to 4:15. Stu¬dents may register at the time spe¬cified or at any other later day. Ifany students desire to drop coursesand add others after registering, itwill be taken care of Friday.The following courses have beenreported closed: in the Departmentof Anatomy, 311, 303, 304; in theDepartment of History 131, f, g, 1,h; 380, 386; in the Department ofEconomics, 102a, 103 b, c,; in theDepartment of Political Science,362, 101a; in the General SurveyDepartment;, 192b, in the Depart¬ment of Geography, 101, in the De¬partment of Sociology, 110 a, b; in(Continued on page 4) OUR CHRISTMAS EDITIONThe annual Christmas edition of The Daily Maroon willappear Wednesday, December 17, embodying twenty-eightpages of news and rotogravure pictorials. This mammoth edi¬tion will be printed in four complete sections. It will offerto the student body the most comprehensive symposium andthe most authoritative estimate so far published concerning thereorganization of the University«under the new educationalplan. Work in the various departments of the Universityduring the past year will be reviewed by the heads of the«respective departments. ^Educators all over the country have been discussing thenew scheme of reorganization under which the University willoperate. Athletic mentors have been considering the effect theplan will have on the status of Big Ten eligibility of stu¬dents at the University. Many other phases of the schemeare being praised, considered, criticized. A complete resumeof present opinion and comment \vill be presented to readers.In addition to the regular news material carried by TheDaily Maroon, this Christmas issue will offer a dramatic re¬view, and summaries of the year’s events in the field of under¬graduate activities: athletics, intramurals, women s activities,and publications.Thirty-five thousand copies of this edition will be printedon a special cylinder press for mailing by the University to allthe alumni of the institution. An estimate made by the printershows that four and a half tons of newsprint paper will be usedin the printing of this edition alone, in which will appear oversixty thousand words of reading matter. Sixty pictures willportray the news in a graphic manner.This is by far the largest, liveliest, and most interestingChristmas issue which The Daily Maroon has offered its sub¬scribers in recent years. Its publication is merely another in¬stance of the policy which The Daily Maroon has followedthis year: to give its readers most accurate and most completecoverage of campus news in an. re8t;ing fori\y.All regular subscribers will receive this edition in theregular manner. Single copies will sell for ten cents. Many Articles in NEW CHRISTMASLa Critique AreLadking in Gusto WEE PREP CAGEMET ANNOUNCEDCAGE TEAM OPENSSEASON SATURDAYCornell College MeetsMaroons in FirstOfficial TestA regular guard and a leadingcandidate for the center positionwill not be in the Maroon basketballlineup when Chicago inauguratesthe cage season Saturday night inBartlett with the Cornell collegequintet from Mt. Vernon, Iowa fur¬nishing the competition.Coach Norgren will not be able toplay Captain Marshall Fish, guard,nor Arthur Cahill, a center aspirant,because the two men are not. in resi¬dence this quarter as a result oftheir trip to Japan with the baseballteam.Passing Game Needs PracticeThe probable starting lineup willhave Sidney Yates and Paul Stephen¬son at forward positions, Keith Par¬sons at center and Harry Ashley andJoe Temple at the guards. ScottRexinger substitute forward of lastyear, will be tried at center andWien, Fraider, Schlifke, Casselsand Porter may replace the two reg¬ular guards during the course of thetilt.At the present time the Maroonshort passing game needs consider¬able development, and Coach Nor¬gren will not be greatly surprisedif the teamwork is somewhat rag¬ged. Yates and Stephenson havebeen shooting well, and are ex¬pected to carry the team.Have Pledged Two GamesThe Maroon five has had two un¬official practice engagements withthe Y. M. C. A. college and ArmourTech. Both games revealed thatwhile the marksmanship of the play¬ers is well above the average, yetthe team found difficulty in pene¬trating the strong defense of theopponents to get within shooting dis¬tance.Coach Norgren expects to use thegame to try out several combina¬tions in the hope that the Maroonteam will,develop into a lubricatedmachine. He will be watching Par-Continued on page 3) HOLD FINALS IN l-MSWIM MEET TONIGHT Attacks on Civic Opera, iPolice Offer Food ; Tourney Takes Place ofFor Thought Annual NationalBy Rube S. Frodin, Jr. ; InterScllolaStlCThe December issue of the cam- I —pus political science mouthpiece, I INVITE 32 TEAMS“La Critique”, came out yesterday, Iand offered several articles that j ^proved to be food for thought. Wal-1 U*antes i>tart L/ecember ZV,ienborn’s attack upon the Chicago ! Play AfternoonCivic Opera company was perhapsthe most interesting. The issue show- ied a nice variety of material and |the articles were generally well writ¬ten. And EveningFollowing closely upon the deci¬sion of Coach A. A, Stagg to discon-The featured and much-heralded i tinue the national interseholastic bas-article of the issue which might eas- j |<etball tournament of the Univers-ily have been called ‘the “civic” ' comes the announcement thatnumber was Judge McGoorty’s | the University will hold a Christmas“Crime in Chicago”. This subject, | week interscholastic tourney whichunlimited in scope, was not reveal- j wi^^ he open to all high schools with-ing to a person at all acanainted the state of Illinois,with affairs in Chicago, but it was a \ The details of the new tourna-very adequate expression for a Chief j ment have not been revealed, exceptJustice of Cook County. that play will start Monday after-Hits Police Mildly noon, December 29 and will continueHidden in the bulk of his article each afternoon and evening through-Judge McGoorty probably bringsout some or the thoughts innermostin his mind. He says: “Notwithstand¬ing the present gratifying activityof the Police Department, it is man¬ifest that organized crime could notflourish in Chicago without protec¬tion from authorities of the law.”This, it seems, appears in the samearticle with a commendation of Al- out the week. A sanction for thisinnovation has been received, and in¬vitations will be mailed to thirty-two teams as soon as the form let¬ters are completed.State Meet Replaces NationalThis new tournament is in accord¬ance with the statement of DirectorStagg, recently published in thecock and Norton. These men, as Maroon. When announcingPhi Pi Phi, Phi DeltaTheta Lead inQualifiersTime Schedule anyone with some knowledge of theChicago Police Department can af¬firm, are virtually unable to make■«ny-«ppreciable-dents into-crime, de¬spite their wide changes in person¬nel.One of the most valid suggestionsthat Judge McGoorty offers is amore careful scrutiny on the part ofthe Department of State in thegranting of charters to some laborunions. Well-known criminals eas¬ily gain these charters and thus haveso-called awful occupations.Is Our Opera Civic?Robert Wallenbbrn, who writes onthe opera situation in Chicago, is agraduate student in the University,and was formerly a student of musicat the University of Berlin. Hedeftly puts the “diamond horse¬shoe” where it belongs and right-(Continued on page 3)7; 15—Orchestra7:30—Intramual Relay7:35—60-yarcl breast, Frosh60-yard breast, Upper-class7:45—40-yard free style, Frosh40-yard free style U.Class7:52—Fancy diving8:10—100-yard free style,Frosh100-yard free style, U.Class8:18—60-yard back, Frosh60-yard back, U. Class8:27—160-yard free style,Frosh160-yard free style, U.Class8:40—Invitation High SchoolRace1. Calumet High2. Englewood High3. Hyde Park High4. Lindblom High5. Tilden Tech.0:00—WaSer Polo—Universityvs. Chicago Athletic Association.Placing six men and a relay team.Phi Pi Phi and Phi Delta Theta ledall other organizations in the num¬ber of men qualified for the Sev¬enth Annual Intramural Swimmingcarnival being held tonight at 7:30in Bartlett gym.Six preliminary events were runoff yesterday in the. second day ofthe qualifying round. Connelly, PhiPi Phi freshman who won the onehundred yard free style the first dayof the qualifying round, yesterdaywon the Freshman one hundredsixty yard event. Both the Macsand Phi Delta Theta placed two men'.piece in the Upperclass 150 yardfree style, while Ross Whitney, an-(Continued on page 4) his decision concerning the discon¬tinuance of the national meet. Di¬rector Stagg stated that “There nowseems to be a widespread feelingamong those in charge of secundaryschools that each state furnishes suf¬ficient stimulus and organization forthe proper conduct of basketball andthat a national tournament is there¬fore unnecessary.”While the new tournament will notmatch the national competition inimportance or class of play, it willprovide teams an opportunity to g^ready for their regular schedules andis expected to result in interestingstruggles.Award Team TrophiesTeam trophies consisting of fullsize silver and gold bronze basket¬balls will be awarded to the winningand second place teams, and individ¬ual prizes will be given to ten mem¬bers of the four best teams. In ad¬dition to the prizes, the Universitywill prorate a guarantee of $2000to the competing teams for ex¬penses.^ Miss Geisinger, assistant secre-Members of the Senior class will | ta^y to Director Stagg, when askedregister today and tomorrow for the | whether or not “C ’ books would becoming election of the president of for admission to the tourna-the class. Registration will be made ' i^ient, declared that no decision hasat booths located in Cobb hall, Man- j been reached as yet by Mr. Stagg.del hall, the Law building, and Ida i The Autumn quarter books have in aNoyes hall between the hours of 9 ! large measure been destroyed by theand 12:15, and 1 and 3 today, and ! student body and the winter quarterfrom 9 to 12:15 only, tomorrow. j books will not be printed for quiteThe candidates for office are: Dav- a while. A. A. Stagg, who is out ofid Cochran, Raymond Fried, Orvis : town at present, will probably haveHenkle, and Errett Van Nice. Coch- a definite announcement to make inran is a member of Sigma Chi frater- | regard to admissions as soon as henity. Fried is former editor of the returns.Cap and Gown, a Univesity Marshal,and a member of the Men’s Commis¬sion and the Undergraduate council.Henkle is Adjutant in the R. O. T.C., captain of the Polo team, and amember of Phi Gamma Delta. VanNice, Delta Kappa Epsilon, is a mem¬ber of the Men’s commission and theSENIORS REGISTERTODAY FOR CLASSPRESIDENT RACEExhibition Water PoloAt Carnival TonightAn exhibition water polo matchbetween the Varsity team and theC. A. A. swimmers will be an addedHonor commission. He is a University | attraction in the Intramural Swim-Marshal and was captain of the 1930 Iniing carnival tonight at 9:00 in thefootball team. ‘ Bartlett pool,A proposed system of mailing bal- j ^he Cherry Circle squad thatlots to each member of the Senior ^^^^s Coach McGillivray’s confer-class was rejected earlier in the weekby the class election committee, sincesuch an undertaking would involvetoo much expense, time and labor.The old method of registration wasapproved by the committee which iscomposed of Jean Searcy, RobertKlove, Adolph Rubinson and RayVane.The election will take nlaca Tues¬day, December ’6, The date for the ence champs include Ed Blinks, oneman swimming team for Chicago in1921, Dick Howell and Ralph Breyer,v/ell known Northwestern swimmingstars in 1925, Harry Daniels, threeties Olympic goal tender on theUnited States water polo team, Dickand Walter Greenberg, Fred Spring¬er, Herbert Topp, John Norton andBayrd McClanahan who were alsomembers of the United States Olvm-election was set and the system of pje team.election adopted as a result of a rec- j Among the Chicago players are:ommendation by the Undergraduate | Ppotain Don McMillan. James Mc-council that the election be held dur- | Mahon. Andv Brislen. Donald Moore,ing the fall quarter in order that ! ror«oi;nB nvor Gordon Rittcrhouscclass organization may begin. ' av^d Paul Chalex.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. DECEMBER 11. 1930imlg iHarnnnFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninKs, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the AutumnWinter and Springs quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University Ave.Subscription rates $3.00 per year; by mail, $1.50 per year extra. Single copies, five-oents each.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,j Ulinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of th« Western Conference Press AssociationEDGAR A. GREENWALD, Editor-in-ChiefABE L. BLINDER, Business ManagerJOHN H. HARDIN, Managing EditorMARION E. WHITE, Woman’s EditorALBERT ARKULES, Senior EditorASSOCIATE EDITORSWALTER W. BAKERMARGARET EGANHERBERT H. JOSEPH. Jr.JANE KESNERLOUIS N. RIDENOUR, IIMERWIN S. ROSENBERGGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEFSOPHOMORE EDITORSTOM BIRDRUBE S. FRODINBION B. HOWARDHOWARD R. OGBURN -J. BAYARD POOLEGARLAND ROUTTMILTON SHAPINJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSON ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERSROBERT T. McCarthyJAMES J. McMAHONNED P. VEATCHSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSJOHN CLANCYRICHARD DEUTSCHDAMON FULLEREDGAR GOLDSMITHCHARLES HOWENORMAN JORGENSONCHESTER WARDSOPHOMORE WOMAN EDITORSDOROTHY A. BARCKMAN ALBERTA KILLIEMAXINE CREVISTON ELIZABETH MILLARDMARJORIE GOLLER INGRBD PETERSENELEANOR WILSONJOHN MILLS, Photographic ElditorNight Editor: George T. Van der HoefAssistants: Garland Routt, Rube FrodinA PROOF!The day after President Hutchins explained the reorganiza¬tion of the University to the student body, we expressed the opinionthat the need for such an education and especially the obvious faultsof the present system had agitated the college press considerably.The fact that this was the case, and still is the case, is clearly dem¬onstrated by the following editorial taken from the “Harvard Bul¬letin.” Again the “veneer” phase of education is solemnly at¬tacked and the superficial aspects pointed out. We repeat, theUniversity has tackled a weak spot in a weak system:Some years ago an anonymous writer in the Saturday EveningPost remarked that it was easier to get educated than to stay edu¬cated. His opinion was based on what he saw of college graduatesin after life. As regards their intellectual or cultural interests, theydid not, he said, appear to be very different from their less favoredcontemporaries who had never enjoyed an opportunity of ‘higher *education. A Princeton graduate has recently written a vigorouscommunication to the Princeton Alumni Weekly, stating that acollege education is a ‘thin veneer’ which soon wears off when agraduate is thrown into the ‘maelstrom of acquisitiveness.’ Hegoes on to suggest that graduates be encouraged to continue theirstudies by the award of the degree of Master of Arts after a periodof three or five years. Standing in the corridors of CobbHall yesterday, this department wascarrying on a polite conversationwith Helen O’Brien. Suddenly wefelt repeated stings in the back ofthe neck much akin to the stingfelt from an air rifle. The sourceof the discomfiture seemed to comefrom no place. After a little re-se*arch it was discovered that JoeTemple and Bud Trude were stand¬ing behind a door and shooting witha bean shooter all the people as theycame out of their one-thirty classes.If it has come to the point wherewe start bringing the teachers ap¬ples and have the teachers recipro¬cate by taking away our jackknives, w’ater pistols, etc.After the hockey game Tuesdaynight, Ferris White, one time Uni¬versity student and now with theHarris Trust, gave an open house,and when Ferris gives an open houseit is really an open house. There wasa goodly representation of the boys“from the office’’. However, Ferrisdid not neglect his old friends forJanet Johns, Helen O’Brien, JimmieShelden, Bob Cunningham, and Or-vis Henkle were all very much there.At last the mystery has beensolved. Some time ago this depart¬ment ran parts of a letter fromsomeone who called herself Curly ofKelly. After a couple of weeks ofresearch, it has been discovered thatCurly of Kelly is none other thanRovina Saranov. (That may not bejust the way to spell it, but it’s pro¬nounced something like that) MissSaranov, when confronted with thequestion as to whether she was Cur¬ly of Kelly or not, graciously admit¬ted that she was, promised to con¬tribute more which, by the way, isthe proper attitude. NEW BLACKSTONEHALL TEA-ROOM TOOPEN TOMORROWBlackstone hall’s new tea-roomwill open tomorrow morning at 7,offering the latest cuisine for menand women patrons. Among the in¬novations in appointments for tea¬room establishments are the hard¬wood floor for dancing, soundproofceilings, and soft pine panellingaround the walls. The modernisticatmosphere is achieved through theblack and silver tables with appro¬priate crystal, silver service, andlinens, and a bizarre note is reflectedin the gay orange and grey drapes.Meals may be obtained between 7in the morning and 8:30 at night, af¬ternoon tea between 3 and 5, andfountain service will continue until10 at night.The official opening will be mark¬ed by a formal dinner-dance Mondayevening, for which the Utah Univer¬sity singing orchestra, now in Chi¬cago for Brunswick recordings, hasbeen obtained to play a program ofdances from 7:30 till 12. Reserva¬tions for the turkey dinner may bemade not later than Monday noon,tickets are $2..')0. French Students GivePlay in Blaine TheaterFrench students under Miss HildaNorman, professor in the French de¬partment, are presenting “La Sour-iante Madame Beudet’’ by Fremiettonight at 8 in the theatre of Blainehall. It is a French drama in twoacts and is the story of a wife whosehusband does not understand her.She attempts to kill him by loadinghis revolver which he is continuallythreatening to shoot himself with butwhich he is sure is never loaded. Theclimax comes when he fires the gunat her, misses her, and then is filledwith remorse because he thinks shehas loaded it to kill herself.The cast includes Margaret Burns,M. Dolnay, Martha Miller, FrancisMayer-Oakes, Erik Wahlgren andEleanor Wilson.PLEDGINGDeltho announces the pledging ofRose MRry' Parsons, Berthe Ritt-schof and Elsie Levenger.Also Tuesday night, a man ^-tered the Beta house about eight inthe evening and made a speech tothe boys concerning the product thathe was selling—water fillers. Theman explained that he was deaf sothat it would be of no use to inter¬rupt him and brought an ear trum¬pet as evidence of the same Duringhis talk he laid the trumpet on thetable. After the speech was well un¬der way, one joker came runningdown the stairs yelling, “Fire! Fire!’’The deaf salesman picked up hisear trumpet, water fillers, and ranhurriedly out.At the Zeta Bete house dance lastSaturday night, proud freshman JohnFrankel walked in very late withDorothy Appleby, feminine star ofthe downtown attaction, “YoungSinners’’. Everyone took turns danc¬ing with her except John Frankel.But John Frankel took her home. Anderson Club WillGive Benefit BridgeThe Anderson club, an organiza¬tion for Episcopal students on cam¬pus, will give a scholarship benefitbridge tonight at 8 in the parishhouse of the Church of the Redeem¬er, 56th and Blackstone. Ticketsmay be purchased for seventy-fivecents at the door.Marion White, president of t|ieclub, will have charge of the bridge.Refreshements will be served and aprize will be offered at each table.The proceeds of the evening willgo towards the newly instituted scho¬larship fund of the club, which plansto send worthy Episcopal studentsthrough the University.Mrs. George Biller, hostess of theEpiscopal Conference Center in Chi¬cago. has invited all members of theAnderson club to attend a tea onSunday from 3 to 5 in the home ofthe new Conference center, the oldPhi Gamma Delta house. Today!you arc looking for aGood place to eattryPhelps and Phelpsnew“The question is evidently a live one. A recent article in theJournal of the Association of University Women summarizes theattempts which have been made to meet it. As long ago as 1916,President Hopkins of Dartmouth inaugurated the sending out ofreading-lists, which have aroused considerable interest amongalumni. Amherst followed in 1922. Last autumn Columbia or¬ganized an eight-weeks evening course for graduates, with so largean enrollment that a second series was immediately started, with apromise of further developments next year. At Lafayette a specialsession for graduates was held last June immediatly following Cbm-mencement, with an enrollment of sixty-five. The alumnae of thewomen’s colleges seem to be more eagerly interested than their malecontemporaries. The Smith reading-lists, which have been issuedsince 1925, were applied for last year by 1,475 graduates. Smithgraduates may also apply for guidance by some member of theFaculty in a special field of study. Last year thirty Seniors chosesuch fields and announced their intention of undertaking the work.Radcliffe, Vassal, Mt. Holyoke, and Mills have held successfulalumnae conferences on literary, historical, and educational topics, i“In other words, adult education for college graduates is anexperimental phase. Many plans are being tried and evidenceof their success and failure is doubtless available. What is Harvardgoing to do about it? The first question to determine is the ex¬tent to which Harvard graduates are interested in the matter. Grant¬ed that the interest justifies the effort, suggestions are in order.One thing seems reasonably clear, namly, that any Harvard planwould naturally take the concentration and tutorial system as itspoint of departure. It is, or should be, one of the merits of thissystem that it implants an intellectual interest, rather than appliesa veneer, and the simplest procedure would be to nourish this in¬terest so that it will continue to live and bear fruit in later years.” The other evening Fred Sills,Deke, was crossing Woodlawn Av¬enue in his car with but a moment’shesitation at the stop street. Form¬er student here Dr. Brown who, inhis car, was very nearly hit said,“Can you read English?’’ Said Sills,“I didn’t do anything and what’s itto you?’’ “I just wanted to Know ifyou could read English?’’ said thedoctor. There was some talk beforethe doctor asked, “What is youiname? You look like a Universityboy.’’ “Sills” was the answer. Andfor five minutes afterwards. Dr.Brown canvassed the fraternityhouses to make sure that Fred didnot beong to his. The doctor, wefeel sure, must be over it by now.Yesterday at approximately one-ten in the afternoon, we happenedto catch two girls, unknown to us,standing in front of Cobb Hall read¬ing this column and seemingly en¬joying it. First they would readsomething, then turn to each other,and laugh. Now it might be saidthat it is not the intention of thisdepartment to throw anyone intofits of laughter. However, if itstrikes you funny, that’s all right.Just to show you that our heart’s inthe right place, if the two girls whoread this yesterday are reading thistoday they may come around to theMaroon office this afternoon and,/ ifwe can identify them, they will re¬ceive two nice fresh tickets to theCinema Art Theatre. Announce Season’sBasketball ScheduleAt HomeDec. 13—Cornell College27—Bradley30—Brigham Young ‘Jan. 3—Ohio Wesleyan17—Minnesota24—MichiganFeb. 14—Northwestern28—MichiganMar. 2—Illinois7—Ohio StateJan. 6—Marquette at Milwaukee10—Indiana at Biloomington31—Minnesota at MinneapolisFeb. 7—Northwestern at Evanston16—Ohio State at Columbus21—Illinois at UrbanaMar. 9—Michigan at Ann Arbor ' t Colonial Tearoom6324 Woodlawn Ave.Serving thebest foodon theSouth Side.Cowpan!During the Wedr:f^neheon 86e to 60eDinner 78eniioniiiiyiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiyiiMiiimiiMiiwMiiiiuiii'i'iiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiiuiffiiiiiiii^^NowFor College NightThe FamousTED FIO-RITOand His Orchestrawith the InimitableDUSTY RHODESALSO“Broadway’s Songstress”YVETTE RUGELFrom Club Richmond, N. Y. C.MOORE and REVELInternational “Comedy Dancers”GLADYS DEFOE“Premier Danseuse”DANCING6:30 P. M. Till ClosingBLACKHAWKRESTAURANTOn Wabash AvenueJust South of Randolph St.mm BOOKSGIVE BOOKS THISCHRISTMAS!We recommend the fol¬lowingNEW FICTION:Canfield—The Deepeni.igStream $2.00Barnes—Years of Grace 2.50Fairbanks—The Lion’sDen 2.50Feuchtwanger—Success 3.00Bromfield—24 Hours. . 2.50Hansum—Vagabonds . 3.00Herbert—Water Gypsies 2.50Fineman—This Rare YoungMan 2.00Lawrence—Virgin and theGypsyOssorgin—Quiet Street. 2.50Maughan—Cakes andAle 2.00Priestly—Angel Pave¬ment 3.00Wharton—CertainPeople 2.00Sackville West—Edwardians 2.50SHORT STORIES:O’Brien Best ShprtStories 1930 2.50O’Henry Award PrizeStories 1930 2.50Merrick—The Little DogLaughed 2.50Omnibus of Adventure. 3.50Saki Short Stories .... 3.00HUMOUR:Laugh with Leacock ... 3.00Cross—He Done HerWrong 2.50Fishbein—Doctors andSpecialists 1.00Chapell—Thru theAlimentary Canals withGun and Camera . . $2.00Complete Lines ofother New Books:Poetry and ArtHistory and TravelPhilosophy and Miscel¬laneous Non FictionBiographyIllustrated and Gift BooksChildren’s BooksATWoodworth’sBook Store1311 EmI 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave.The Largest Book StoreOutside the LoopBUY YOURCHRISTMAS CARDSNOWAll Gifts and Books wrap¬ped for mailing and can besent from our Postal Sta¬tion.MAIL EARLY!OPEN EVERY EVENING/THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1930 Page ThretMANY ARTICLES INLA CRITIQUE ARELACKING IN GUSTO THEATREbyAlbert Arkules“HAY FEVER”—Goodman(Continued from page 1)fully accredits the condition of theChicago opera company to “bigbusiness” and Sam InsuII. He pointswith pride and suggestion to theopera situation in Germany.Here is the rub. America andChicago are not fitted for presenta¬tions of opera by “wandering min¬strels” in any old barn, to use avery loose figfure of speech. We musthave spacious buildings in which topresent our opera, as we must haveGothic towers in which to secure aneducation. With the economic stat¬us of the United States today as itis, we must look to the classes to sup¬port the arts, and therefore theirwhims must be .satisfied. Thereforewe must pay high prices for seats inorder to pay off first mortgages. Butthis is far aside from the rest of“La Critique”.The EditorialsEditor Quinlan wrote a ratherweak plea that University studentshold tneir liquor like gentlemen—and ladies, we must add. In addi¬tion, the Phoenix is “panned” andthe Circle lauded, while Bob Mc¬Carthy offers a plea for better light¬ing in Harper, and Quinlan mildlysupports Merriam for mayor.Ken Mulligan spent a good ha’fof his article telling his readers thatthey should not “pooh-pooh” theLeague for Civic Action, but failedto tell us very much about what theorganization plans to do. The onebright spot of the article relateswhat an alumnus has said aboutuniversity life and the outside world.This man calls “university life awhirling mechanism in the midst ofan otherwise .sane world.” Wheth¬er he is right, we do not know.Election ReturnsMoney Mosk runs briefly over theelection results of November 4, butfails to offer many profound ob¬servations. However, it is a veryadequate survey and is worth thereading time of the ordinary stu¬dent who only follows politics fromnewspaper headlines.Robert McCarthy writes an ar¬ticle which is called “SupervisedRackets”. He suggests that ‘theBoard of Vocational Guidance andPlacement create a bureau to dosome research work in studentagencies, with the ultimate aim ofinstituting such a system here at theUniversity. Certainly the suggestionis very valid.The new' educational sy.stem of theUniversity is the subject of AdolphRubinson’s article. He discusses thesystem with common sense and littlepadding. ,Moore On the TheatreThe Chicago theatre season iswritten by Harry T. Moore with onlya mild degree of perception. Heseems to like Mr. Leiber’s companya great deal. “Macbeth” is his first ,choice of the repertoire. “Lysistr-ta” is bawdy and “The Old Rascal”of William Hodge is given credit forbeing clever and funny.STAGG OPPOSESNIGHT FOOTBALL“Night football jseems an abor¬tion of the general spirit of inter¬collegiate athletics. Personally, Iw'ould be unwilling to have a teamof which I was in charge play thenight game.”Thus does A. Alonzo Stagg, famedveteran football coach of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, express his re¬actions to nocturnal grid con¬flicts. His complete sentiments, es¬pecially expressed, together withthose, of six other noted gridironstrategists including Grantland Rice,appear in the Football Number of“The Owl”, which makes its appear¬ance on the campus tomorrow.—Temple U. (Phila.)Cox Chosen HeadOf Quaker Society j “Hay Fever” is the kind of playj critics spend sleepless nights aboutI and get nothing for their pains. NoelCoward makes you laugh a greatI deal. He makes you laugh, in fact, aI gread deal more you should. YourI misgivings about “Hay Fever” arei many and you keep on telling your-j self that “Hay Fever” is both child¬ish and trifling. All of which beingtrue, you find yourself enjoyingI “Hay Fever” most of the evening.I Mr. Coward is not as naive as hisplay would indicate. I have my gen¬uine suspicions that he knows thatpost-mortems on a play like “HayFever” would lead to nothing butfutile conclusions, most of which' agree that “Hay Fever” is too slight¬ly constructed to deserve thoughtfulcdnsideration. Mr. Coward I amsure will agree with you that thei play is badinage and redundant withI triteness; he will agree that the long-I er you think about it, the more curi-I ous you become how “Hay Fever”i manages to spread itself into a fab-I ric of three acts. But how, on theI other hand, are you going to account; for the fact that Mr. Coward con-j trives to be very funny. I can see' Mr. Coward with an impish look inj his eye, and who can blame him;I for what is more disturbing than an. enjoyable play which you know isfluffy and trivial. I refuse to sayI more.r am afraid you will think thati merely because Mr. Coward has writ-i ten froth, he is. ipso facto, a clum-I sy and amateurish craftsman. In aplay of this sort, craftsmanship! counts for a great deal; charactersI must be maneuvered about the stagej convincingly. This Mr. Coward does.! And he dispatches the task with skillI and ea.se. What 1 like about him is‘ that he never makes you feel thatthere are too many people on the1 stage. Perhaps, this counts little in; your estimation but I have seen too' many plays where I was distinctlyself-conscious of characters who sim¬ply floated about. I keep watchingall the time for their entrances and^ exits and frequently enough I haveI spent the entire evening just watch-: ing characters come and go. Nor didI it make much difference. Technicalskill isn’t everything in a play butMr. Coward gives just the right shadeof importance to his characters with¬out becoming wearisome. It is that ’neatness in Mr. Coward’s jigglingwhich enables the play to movealong pleasantly.And while we are on this businessof examples, the versatile youngEnglish playwright al.so furnishes aninspiring lesson to aspiring play¬wrights that inconsequential as aplay may be, one or two “meaty”, characters will turn the trick. Tworoles in “Hay Fever” are of the kindactors mumble about in their sleep,and the remaining five or six parts, almost beg to be acted.Margaret Wycherly, the gueststar, has the fattest role, that ofJudith Bliss, the mother who cannever forget that she was once afavorite actress on the London stage.The part is so “actor-proof” that inthe hands of a professional like MissWycherly it is almost an evening’sentertainment in itself. Miss Wy¬cherly is the sustaining force of thecomedy.The regulars of the repertorycompany give their customary pleas¬ant performance. Earl McDonald ismore at home in the role of DavidBliss, after his ranting in “HotelUniverse.” Kent Smith, a newcom¬er, looks very much his part andacts it. Harry Mervis is, as usual,beyond reproach.The one glaring note in the act¬ing is William Brenton. I do notknow, frankly, how young English¬men, from decent families, behaveespecially over week-ends. But whileI have never spent a week-end inEngland, I am quite certain thatyoung Englishmen do not disportthemselves as Mr. Brenton does in“Hay Fever.” Either that, or mymother has been keeping the truthfrom me.Dr. Garfield V. Cox, professor ofetonomics at the University waschosen as presiding clerk of a groupof members of the Society ofFriends when they met to form apermament organization last Friday.On January 4, the Society will in¬itiate public meetings for worshipafter the manner of the Friends inJohn Woolman hall, 1174 E. 57thstreet. Following the. meetings, therewill be a Friends Religious forum,whert some present day social impli¬cations of religrion will be presentedand discussed.Tickets tor the Showsat the Maroon Office Cage Team OpensSeason Saturday(Continued from page 1)son’s performance at center, the po¬sition which causes him the greatestconcern. Parsons cannot be expect¬ed to handle the ball like a dyed-in-the-wool veteran since the rangycenter had no basketball experiencein high school.Cornell’s team is reported to belight and fast and Coach Judd Deanexpects to start a combination thati presents three sophomores and two' veterans. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiiiiimiiiiiiAnnouncingthe opening ofThe Blackstone HallTea Roomfor the convenience of guests and friendsThe tea room will serve threecomplete meals a day. After¬noon tea and evening service8:30 to 10.On Monday, December fifteentha formal dinner dance willformally open the “modern tearoom”. Bids $2.50 per couple.Utah University Singing Or¬chestra will furnish the dancemusic from 7:30 to 12 p. m.The Blackstone Hall Tea Room“A Modern Tea Room"FIVE SEVEN FOUR EIGHT BLACKSTONE AVENUEIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllilllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllilllllllllilllllllllllilllillllllUllllllllllllllillllliliOnly 40,000!That is the number of Daily Maroons that willroll off the presses for our Christmas Issue.What a paper this will be—28 to 32 pages anda rotogravure section: features, news, and asurvey of Hutchins* plan. A paper of realinterest — On the campus■ i!DEC. 17IIiI I iChristmas issue — Daily Maroon■f1Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1930HOLD FINALS IN I MSWIM MEET TONIGHT UNIVERSITY BULLETIN(Continued from page 1)other Phi Delt man placed in the Up-perclass 60 yard breast stroke.Added AttractionsBecause only two men were en¬tered in the Freshman fancy divingevent, no qualifying round was heldand these two men, Roberts, Deke,and Pyott, Alpha Delt, will meetin the finals tonight. Rafelson, Mac,and Griffin, Delta Sigma Phi, placedin the Upperclass fancy diving event.Added attractions at the carnivaltonight will be an invitation highschool relay race with Calumet, En¬glewood, Hyde Park, Lindblom, and ITilden as the participants, and a ,water polo game between the Uni- iversity team and the Chicago Ath- iletic association team, made up of |former Olympic stars. |Men QualifyingThe preliminary summaries forthe qualifying events follow:Freshman 40 yard dash—Quali- |fiers: Page, Alpha Delt; Pickett, Beta 'Theta Pi; Horn, Chi Psi; Nicholson, |Phi Psi; Marks, Phi Delta Theta. jUpperclass 40 yard dash—Quali- jfiers: Griffith, Delta Sigma Phi; 'Ramsay, Kappa Sigma; Levine,Macs; Ching, C. T. S.; Shornborg,C. T. S.Freshman 100 yard dash—Quali¬fiers: Connelly, Phi Pi Phi; Page, ■Alpha Delta Phi; Berber, unattached; |Nicholson, Phi Psi; Lawrence, Pi ^Lambda Phi. ;Upperclass 100 yard free style— |Qualifiers Geppinger, Phi Delta The- jta; Woodruff, Phi Pi Phi; Offil, Kap- ‘pa Sigma; Behrstock, Tau Delta Phi;Greeenberg, Kappa Nu.F?'eshman 60 yard backstroke—Qualifiers: Bellstrom unattached;Stein, Macs; Pickett, Beta Theta Pi;Zacharias, Phi Sigma Delta; Zuch-owski. Phi Pi Phi.Upperclass 60 yard back stroke—Qualifiers: Harris, Phi Pi Phi; Borst,Delta Upsilon; Ching, C. T. S.;Shainborg, C. T. S.; Ingalls, PhiPsi.Freshman 160 yard free style—Qualifiers: Connelly, Phi Pi Phi;Lorber, unattached; Horn, Chi Psi;W^atts, Delta Tau Delta; Breen, PhiDelta Theta.Uppe)'class 160 yard free style—Qualifiers: Grossman, Macs; Levine,Macs; (]leppinger. Phi Delta The^;Borst, Delta Upsilon; Thomson, PhiDelta Theta.Freshman 60 yard breast stroke—Qualifiers: Goldman, Pi LambdaPhi; Forheim, unattached; Carr, PhiPsi; Sheenbrum, Zeta Beta Tau;Portes, unattached.r Upperclass 60 yard breast stroke—Qualifiers Lauman, Phi SigmaDelta; Hassen, Kappa Nu; Gold¬berg, Tau Delta Phi; Whitney, PhiDelta Theta; Jancis, Phi Pi Phi.Freshman fancy diving—Quali¬fiers: Roberts, Delta Kappa Epsilon;Pyott, Alpha Delta Phi.Upperclass fancy diving—Quali¬fiers: Rafelson, Mac; Griffin, DeltaSigma Phi.Relay—Qualifiers: Macs, Chi Psi,Kappa Sigma, Phi Pi Phi, Phi Del¬ta Theta. :50-:30- Thursday, December 11—Divinity chapel, Joseph Bond chapel. Professor EdwardChiera.Public lecture (The Dramatic Association), "Plays andPlaywriting," Alice Gerstenberg.:30—The Bacteriology club, Ricketts North 1, "Malaria Control,"Dr. L. W. Hackett, Field Director, International Health Di¬vision of the Rockefeller Foundation.:30—The Physics club, Ryerson 32, "The Raman Effect in Gases,Mr. J. L. Durham.—Organ recital, University chapel.30—Achoth supper, sunparlor, Ida Noyes hall.30—Chicago Library club, dinner and meeting, Ida Noyes.45—Public lecture (Downtown), Fullerton hall. Art Institute,"Specific Remedies for Infectious Diseases: Quinine andQuinine Derivatives," Professor Harry Benjamin Van Dyke.Debating Union, Reynolds club, room D.The Humanities club, Classics 20, "Conrad’s Polish Back¬ground," Mr. Krzyanowski.00—Anderson club, Scholarship benefit bridge, prizes and re¬freshment. Admission 75 cents. Church of the Redeemer,56th and Blackstone.:30-:45- Reynolds Club ChessTeam Defeats BellTelephone PlayersMembers of the Reynolds clubchess team won seven of the eightmatch*is play*, d with the Illinois BellTeephone company chess club Tues¬day evening in the Bell Telephonebuilding.The victors of the seven matcheswere R. W. Wilson, L. C. Knight,Fritz Leiber, T. L. Smith, DavidBlumenstock, Orville Rosenthal, andAllen Miler. C. C. Van Vechten, theeighth member of the Ryenolds clubteam, lost his match to Albin, of thetelephone club. The losers of thematches were Harrington, Bates,Goldberg, Rook, Bell, Riskrase, andGallagher, all employees of the Illi¬nois Btell Telephone company.The Reynolds club chess team isdistinguished from the Universitychess club in that fonner studentsmay compete with the Reynoldsgroup.Reconciliation TripMembers to SeekChristmas SpiritThis week’s Reconciliation trip in¬augurates the spirit of ChristmasSaturday with an all-day considera¬tion of peace past, present and fu¬ture, and of the customs which havegrown up about this most peacefultime of the year—Christmas. Theitinerary will encompass such vary¬ing points as the B'nair Israel Syna¬gogue, the oldest synagogue in Chi¬cago, and the fourth floor of Mar¬shall Field and company.The first stop will be at theB'nair Israel Synagogue, 1363 Sedgewick Street, at 10:30. Here RabbiEinstein, Shamosh Gordy and Prin¬ciple Rubin of the Talmund TorahSchool wil interpret the ancient rit¬ual and make vivid a morning withthe young Jesus in the ancient syna¬gogue. Next the tourists will treksouthward for a look-in on the Mer¬chandise Mart, at noon which costover $32,000,000 and is the larg¬est building in the world.Visit Friend’s MeetingLunch at the Y. M. C. A. cafe¬teria, 19 S. LaSalle Street, will di¬vide the morning and afternoon ses¬sions. At 1:30 the Rev. ArnoldB. Vaight, Pastoral Secretary of the Chicago Friend’s Meeting, willdiscuss “Peaece on Earth”; and hewill describe how the Quakers takeseriousy and somewhat literally thewords of Jesus. At this time alsoMaj. Arthur Lee Hayward, a dis-bled army officer, will speak fromexperience on “An Ex-Service Man’sPoint of View”, and the group willpause for a consideration of non¬violence, conscientious objectors, etc..4t 2:30 comes a brief review oftypes of literature issued by theChurch during the World War, and afree discussion; at 3 the group willdraw away from the noisy commer¬cialism of the Loop to meditate atthe Temple, at Clark and Washing-tn Streets. Next on the schedule isthe Toy department of MarshallField and company, where the Christ¬mas customs and lore of the yearswill be under investigation, andwhere the Field Minstrels will givea program of carols of all lands.Hear Talk on PeaceAt the headquarters of the Wom¬en’s International League for Peaceand Freedom, Room 900, 6 N. Mich¬igan Blvd., Mrs. Laura Hugh^i Lunde, daughter of the Minister ofMilitia in Canada, deliver anaddress on “Roads to Peace.” Thisoccurs at 4:30 and at 5:30 the finalevent of the afternoon takes placej in the form of an open discussion on“The Future of Peace”. Channing Club BeginsLittle Theatre MoveAs the first step in a little theatremovement, members of the Chan¬ning club are presenting “Half anHour” by Sir James Barrie Sundayat 4 in the First Unitarian church,1176 E. 57th Street. Tea will beserved from 4 until 6 and the playwill be given at 6:30 and 8:30. Def¬inite plans for further work in dra¬matics will be discussed, followingthe .play and manuscripts which willbe considereed as future material forpresentation are acceptable at thistime.The Unitarian church of which theReverend Von Ogden Vogt is thepastor will sustain the expenses ofthe production which is sponsoredby the Channing club. Membershipin the club is not required for at¬tendance at the play.“Half an Hour” is under the di¬rection of Louis E. Hosch, who ismanager of the sudio and is enrolledat the University. Zelda Shapiro,Eric Grimwade, Louise Murphy, JeanRhys, John Menninger and HansGraven comprise the cast.SUBSCRIBE TODAY FORTHE DAILY MAROON Y In. ♦KM. ^53rd Street at Dorchester ♦-444A 40c Lunch at Noon 4•44A 65c Spiecial Dinner 4'4-4Serving Hours 4•fBreakfast 6:30—9:00 4-Lunch 1 1:30—2:00 4-■4Dinner 5:30—7:45 4-4Sunday 4>tBreakfast 8:30—9:30 •4Dinner 12:00—2:00 XWe Invite Both Men and WomenMax Otto HonorsDr. J. H. Tufts AtFarewell Banquet(Continued from page 1)of us have worked together in thedepartment” said Professor EdwardAmes, “have been wonderful years.They have witnessed the remark¬able growth of the University, ofthe city of Chicago, and of philoso¬phical inquiry and achievement here,and throughout the country. In allof these rich concerns of a widen¬ing} and deepfening life. ProfessorTufts has made substantial and en¬during contributions.”Other speakers of the eveningwere Mr^ C. P. Osborn and Mr. Al¬fred Tonness, graduate students,who represented the students of thePhilosophy club.Students MustBring TentativeSlip to Register(Continued from page 1 )the Department of English, 116, 101a, b, c, d, e; 130 a, b; 131 a, b, inthe Department of Physics, 102; inthe Department of Phy. Chemistry,201 a, 351 a; in the Department ofPathology, 301; and in the Depart¬ment of Physiology 303b.DANCINGTues., Thurs., Sat. & Sun. Evntf. 8:30-1:00(Just a Little DifferentiGENTS 75c LADIES 50cTERESA DOLAN DANCINGSCHOOL1208 E. 63rd St. (Nr. Waodlawn Ave.)PRIVATE LESSONS ANY TIMEPhone Hyde Park 3080 GRUEI\Ijile/nd£7c<zy7 Jiefd. i:un£le£eJtm^And now, madam, skilled craftsmen of theGruen Guild have fulfilled another ofyour wishes. The watch you’ve always hopedfor is here!Narrow . . . tiny . . . gracefully slender .. . butwithal, a splendid time-keeper. It’s called theGruen Baguette — and like all watches bythis famous Guild, it reflects the highest tradi¬tions of watchmaking. Cased, of course, innothing but solid gold . . . priced from $85 to$500, many diamond-set. See them t<xiay.**Charge Purchases Payable Feb. lOth.’**THK MARK or QUAUITV;*1225 E. 63rd Street THE PHOENIX BOYCOTT:The term boycott was coined from the nameof a Capt. Boycott, an agent in Ireland of LordErne s Lough Mask estate, who in 1880 evicteda large number of tenants .... When the com¬bination amounts to a conspiracy or to restrainanother from carrying on a legitimate business,.... it is a criminal offense.^Among the famous boycotts of history, there isthe Boston Tea Party, Jeffersonian EmbargoActs, the Chinese boycott of Japanese goods,and the recent Indian boycott of English goods,and speaking of boycotts, there’s Dan Beard—Today, history repeats itself with THEPHOENIX BOYCOTT. So to celebrate theevent THE PHOENIX presents its BOYCOTTNUMBER to the campus WEDNESDAY,.DECEMBER I 7—25c.—THE PHOENIX STAFF.^Johnson’s Universal Encyclopedia, Vol. I, A-Calculus.