JllanionVol. 31. No. 41. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1930 Price Five CentsMAROON CAGE TEAMENCOUNTER CORNELLIN PRACTICE GAME LEAD 1931 WASHINGTON PROMFour Veterans and aSophomore CompriseOpening LineupCAPTAir^rnSH OUTYates and StephensonMay Carry BruntOf BurdenProbable LineupsChicago % CornellYates f. GabrielsonStephenson f. BrandauParsons c. Tucker (c)Ashley K. O’ConnorTemple 8- WarnerReferee: Travnick. Umpire: UNDECRAD COUNaNAMES LEADERS OFWASHINGTON PROMSearcy, Cahill, Letts,And Mahin toLead WingsWINTER FORMALPlace and Date of YearlyAffair Not YetDeterminedGEORGE MAHIN MARJORIE CAHILL—Photograph by Van Schaick. JEAN SEARCY—Photoitraph by Paul Stone Raynor. DALE LETTS—PhotOKraph by Dattuerre.Kearns.Time of game: 8 o’clock.Minus the services of Capt. Mar¬shall Fish, last year’s high scorer andall-around .star, the Maroon basket¬ball teanhs opens its sea.son tomor¬row night in Bartlett gymnasiumagain.st Cornell college. The Ma¬roons will use veterans and onesophomore in their starting combin¬ation, but Coach Nelson Norgrenhopes to be able to try out severalof his promising new men before thegame is over.Cornell will offer satisfactoryopening competition for the Maroonteam, for the lowans, though fastand clever, are net Wg cncngh‘toovertop the Maroons. Coach JuddDean of Cornell will have two let-termen and three sophomores on histeam, although his squad has sevenveterans. Capt. Warner, a big 180pound center, is rated the most dan¬gerous man on the team, and shouldcause Chicago trouble, especially onthe tipoff, for the Maroons as usualare hunting for a center.Parsons, Center HopeKeith Parsons the sophomore whomade good on the football team, isthe hope for the center job. He isfar from a finished player and hiswork in practice has been crude, buthe developed so rapidly in footballthat Coach Norgren has hopes thathe will come through in basketball.Parsons stands 6 feet, 4 inches, buthe has not yet been able to fit intothe floor game.The Chicago short-pass game re¬quires considerable work to get re¬sults, and the men are doing lots ofmispassing in scrimmage. The twosmall forwards, Sidney Yates andPaul Stephenson, have shown goodaccuracy in hitting the hoop andtheir individual cleverness will helpcarry the Maroons in the game. Ash¬ley and Temple are experiencedguards.P' rter Will Get ChanceNorgrep intends to give JamesPorter, a sophomore guard from To¬peka, Kansas, an opportunity in thesecond half, along with BernardWien, the football end. Porter hasbeen the smoothest working sopho¬more addition to the squad. Wienwas promising last season, but be¬came ineligible. Scott Rexinger,E^ubstitute forward and center lastyear, will be worked at the centerposition during part of the game.The next game for Norgren’s teamwill come December 27, against(Continued on page 4)Rockefeller LecturerKnocks Quinine CureThe ineffectiveness of the prover¬bial quinine cure was stressed byDr. L. W. Hackett, Field Directorof the International Health Divisionof the Rockefeller Foundation, whenhe lectured on “Malaria Control inthe Latin Countries,” yesterday inRicketts 1. “The^administration ofquinine will aid the patient in re¬covering but will not prevent re¬lapses or the transmission of the af¬fliction to others,” according to Dr.Hackett.The raising of the standard ofliving, including housing, nutrition,(Continued on page o) OPENING DAY OFWINTER QUARTERCHANGED TO JAN. 5Classes for-winter quarter will be¬gin on Monday, January 5 insteadof Friday, January 2 as announcedin the Time schedule. This changewas made because of the incon¬venience to students going out oftown for the holidaysClosed courses to date are: En^a^lish 101 a, b, c, d, e, 103 a, b, 116;117, 130 a, b, 131 a, b, 132 a, 141a,218, 219; Anatomy 103, 304, 311,Phy. Chemistry 201 a, b, 351a; Path¬ology 301; Physiology 303b; Phys¬ics 102, 112b, c, d; C. & A. 211;History 131a, f, g, b, 1, 380, 386;French 105b, 118; Economics 102a,103a, b, c, d, 210a, b; Political Sci¬ence 101a, 362; General Survey102b; Geography 101; Sociology110a, b; S. A. E. 318, 328; Zoology205.Undergraduates have been regi¬stering according to .schedule allpaiiaid s^uapn^s /(^uouj -JiaaMcourses for next quarter last Mon¬day, while students with less thansix majors of work registered Tues¬day.‘Boycott* IssueOf Phoenix IsOut WednesdayThe Boycott is.sue of the Phoenix,out Wednesday, December 17, is ex¬pected by its editors “to be a completesell-out and one which is schedule<lto be famous in the history of theUniversity.” Besides the cover de¬sign and the main article, both ofwhich deal with the present boycott,there will be additional features ofintere.st in the magazine.Louis Engel, former Daily Maroon46ditr,>r and ^t ao,. en\ployee ofthe University Press, will begin aseries of articles in the BoycottPhoenix entitled, “After the BottomDropped Out.” The series will bocomposed of a number of portraitsof important campus figures whohave graduated. The first victim tohe penned by Mr. Engel will be JackMenzies. ’-30. who is he remembered■«s the Big Ten Champion gymnast.“Engel’s articles are to be a ratiobetween ‘big-shotism’ and success inBabbitism.” according to Julian Jack-son, editor of the Phoenix.Compote Drinking SongMaine has its drinking song, sohave Annapolis and Yale. So thePhoenix publishes a drinking songfor Chicago in its Boycott issue. Inorder to continue the prinking motif,Orin Tovrov has written severalverses of prohibition lyrics.Art Howard, conductor of theTravelling Bazaar, has contributed astory, “Filling Space.” John Bobbitt,editor of the “Circle” has submitteda parody on undergraduate writing,entitled “A Theme for Mr. Wilder.”“My Second Wife’s Ghost,” a short.story, has been written for thePhoenix by Barefield Gordon, a ne¬gro student graduated from the Uni¬versity, who has submitted articlesto numerous negro magazines andto the Chicagoan. MACS CAPTURE l-MWATER CARNIVALPhi Dell. Phi Pi PhiTake Second andThird PlacesThe Macs captured first place bygarnering 45 points in the finals ofthe Intramural Swimming Carnivalheld la.st night in Bartlett pool. PhiDelt was second with 33 points; PhiPi, third with 26; Kappa Sig, fourthwith 22, and Tau Delt and DeltaSig. fifth with 2Q eapb.^^The places and times of the up-perclass and freshman events are:Organization relay—Macs, first;Kappa Sig, second; Chi Psi, third;Phi Delt, fourth; Phi Pi, fifth.Time-—1:33 7-10.Upperclas* 60 yard brea»t stroke—Lauman, Phi Sig, first; Whitney,Phi Delt, second; Goldberg, TauDelt, third; Janclus, Phi Pi, fourth.Time—:47 1-10.Freshman 60 yard breast stroke—Goldman, Pi Lamb, first; Forn-heim, unattached, second; Carr, PhiPsi, third; Portes unattached, fourth.Time—;47 1-10.Upperclass 40 yard free style—Griffin, Delta Sig, first; Ramsay,Kappa Sig, second; Levine, Macs,third; Ching, C. T. S., fourth. Time— :22.Freshman 40 yard free style—Page, Alph^ Delt, first; Pickett,Beta, second; Nicholson, Phi Psi,(Continued on page 5) YALE GLEE CLUB TOGIVE RECITAL DEC. 23Won Second in CollegeGlee ClubContestThe Yale University Glee club,under the direction of Marshall M.Bartholomew, will present a varied iprogram of carols, folk songs andwell known Yale songs Tuesday eve- ining, Dec. 23 at 8:15 in Orchestrahall. Last spring the glee club won jin the Intercollegiate iclub contest held in ^tfarhegie'^haU, New York.7*rior to coming to Chicago forthis program, the club gave jointconcerts with the Princeton Univer¬sity Glee club the night before thePrinceton-Yale football game, andwith the Harvard University Gleeclub on the eve of the Harvard-Yalegame, a concert in Garden City,New York, and one in New Yorkcity at Carnegie hall.Bartholomew DirectsMr. Bartholomew, besides beingdirector of Undergi’aduate music atVale and conductor of the Glee Clubis Director of the Seymour Schoolof Medical Education in New York,Director of Foreign Affiliations ofthe Intercollegiate Glee club coun¬cil of America and Conductor ofthe University Glee Club of NewYork. Under his direction the YaleGlee club made a successful trip(Continued on page 4)Mammoth Christmas Edition toContain Many Special FeaturesNext week the Daily Maroon will present to the campus anaugmented edition which will far surpass any issue of recent yearsboth in size and content. This Christmas edition will consist ofthirty-two pages of news, features, pictures, reviews, and specialsigned articles. The key-note of the issue will be the new educa¬tional plan which will be put into effect at the University next fall.This innovation in the realm of education h'as brought the at¬tention of the world. Public and educators alike are discussing itsmerits and demerits. The Daily Maroon will bring together in thisspecial issue the opinions of many of the most well known men inthe country.Campus affairs will be completely covered; athletics,;women’sactivities, intramurals, publications, and other undergraduate activ¬ities will be reviewed. In addition the issue will offer dramatic re¬views, and special features. The heads of departments will outlinethe activities in their fields. Pictures will bring news of the quad¬rangles.Forty thousand copies of this thirty-two page edition will rolloff the presses ready for distribution next Wednesday. The ad¬ministration has taken this means to inform its alumni of the newsystem of education to be inaugurated at the University. The DailyMaroon was selected as the best way to inform those interestedin the many angles of the plan, and this publication will again dem¬onstrate its ability for full and accurate coverage of Universityevents.The Christmas edition of The Daily Maroon will be availableto subscribers in the regular manner, and single copies can be hadfor ten cents.i “C” Book HoldersWill Be AdmittedTo Cage Tourney“I am absolutely positive thatstudents will be invited to attendthe Christmas week- tournament fori Illinois high schools,” stated A. A.j Stagg Jr. yesterday afternoon. There! should never have been any doubtabout this at all,” he continued. “Thenice thing about all of our tourna-i ments has been the attendance and1 enthusiasm of undergraduates. AllI of the students who have “C” bookswill be admitted.”> The t<»urnameDt^., which, lev beingconducted by the “Old Man” him¬self, will be an invitational affairfor schools within the State of Illi¬nois, but will in no way ue regardedas an official state, or Cook Countychampionship. Although any Illi¬nois school is eligible to be invited,it is expected the larger number ofthe teams selected will be from theChicago metropolitan district.Whitten Backs TournamentMr. Stagg is being strongly back¬ed in this enterprise by Mr. Whit¬ten, Secretary of the Illinois StateAthletic association, and by the Ath¬letic director of Chicago Public Highschools, J. D. Pritzloff. “My father’sgreatest interest is in co-operatingwith the State Athletic association,”“Lonnie” said, “and no team will beinvited unless it is a member of thestate association.”Thirty-two teams will be invited,and the tournament will run sixdays. Because the Maroon cagersmust practice in the mornings, thehigh school games will be played inthe afternoons and evenings. Whilea national affair, the tournamentdrew capacity crowds at any price,and according to Stagg Jr., Bartlettgym should be packed to capacityover the holidays, since admission(Continued on page 5)DRAMATIC ASS’N.LEARNS FORMULAFOR PLAY WRITINGAlice Gerstenberg leaned back inher chair at the Tower room teayesterday, and musingly told of asnow storm which gave her the in-spiTation to write “Overtones”, aplay that formed the basis for atechnique later developed byO’Neill in his “Great God Brown,”and “Strange Interlude.” She thencontinued by explaining the prob¬lems of the young playwright, whatpoints of dramatic construction hemust observe, and elucidated by ref¬erence to an alphabetic code. “A”stands for action, “B” stands forstage business and on through “Z”stands for zest, she gave her for¬mula for good play writing.“I believe tremendously in a psy¬chic and an unconscious,” Miss Ger¬stenberg said. *ii writing plays sheemphasized the importance of let¬ting the “unconscious” develop ideasmore fully before definitely settingthem into the plot of a play, of med¬itating upon these Ideas, 'seeking thefullest significances which they maycontain, for it is laziness to use un-fContinued on page 4) Leaders for the Grand March ofthe 1931 edition of the Washing¬ton prom, announced yesterday bythe Undergraduate council, are:Right wing, Jean Searcy and DaleLetts; left wing, Marjorie Cahill andGeorge Mahin.Jean Searcy is senior Aide of theUniversity, a member of the Under-gi’aduate council, a member of theChapel council, and holds a positionon the Mirror board. She is headof the Board of Women’s Organiza¬tions, and women’s golf champion ofthe University. She is a member ofEsoteric.Dale Lett is head Marshal, win¬ner of the “C” in track and crosscountry, holder of the Big Ten con¬ference record in the outdoor half-mile. Phi Kappa Psi is his fratern¬ity. He is a member of the Chapelcouncil and of the Men’s Commis¬sion on Social Service and Religion.Cahill, Mahin Head Left WingMarjorie Cahill, who is to headthe left wing with George Mahin, isa member of the Undergraduatecouncil elected from the Senior class.L^st spring she was elected secre¬tary of the council. She is also amember of the Chapel council andof Esoteric. •George Mahin is a Universitymairhal and co-chairman of the1930 annual student Settlementdrive for funds. He was on thefootball squad for two years and isa candidate for the tennis team. Heis a member of Blackfriars and ofBeta Theta Pi.Yearly All-Campus FormalThe Prom, which is an annual all-University formal sponsored by theUndergraduate council, is held eachyear on the eve of Washington’sbirthday. In the past few years, ithas been customary to hold the af¬fair at the South Shore Countryclub, but since Washington’s birth¬day comes on Sunday in 1931, aproblem is presented to the promcommittee.Club dances are held regularlySaturday evenings at South Shore,and the committee will be faced withthe difficulty of changing the siteof the dance or changing its dateit they cannot arrange for the ball¬room on February 21.Bids On Sale Next QuarterGala affair of the winter socialseason, the Washington Prom, to¬gether with the Military ball and theInterfraternity ball, offers to under¬graduates the opportunity of attend¬ing an all-campus formal dance.Last year, for the first time, the man¬agement of the Prom was vested ina business manager, rather thanleaving arrangements in the hands ofa committee. Arrangements arenow being made for the site of thedance, the dinner which will beserved at the function, and the or¬chestra which will furnish the music.Bids will be placed on sale afterthe opening of the winter quarter.Hold Last U DanceIn Ida Noyes TodayThe last U dance of the quarterwill be held today from 3 to 5 inthe theatre of Ida Noyes hall. Musicwill be furnished by a Panatrope,and refreshments will consist of can¬dy bars sold during the intermissionsby members of Y. W. M. C.Due to the success of previous Udances the social program com¬mittee will try to continue themthroughout the quarter. Althoughthe cost is small, it may prove pro¬hibitive, since Ithe Social programcommittee has no financial backing.These dances have been given everyFriday of thjfl quarter.Pasce T wo THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1930iatlg iMaro0UFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the AutumnWinter and Springs quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University Ave.Subecripti.'n rates $3.00 per year; by mail, $1.50 per year extra. Single copies, five-cents each.Entered as second class matter Mai‘ch 18. 1903,Illinois, under the Act of March 8. 1879. at the post office at Chicago,The Dailyappearing in Maroon expressly reserves all rightsthis paper. of publication of any materialMember of the Western Conference Press .AssociationEDGAR A. GREENWALD, Editor-in-ChiefABE L. BLINDER, Business ManagerJOHN H. HARDIN, Managing EditorMARION E. WHITE, Woman s EditorALBERT ARKULES, Senior Editor1 ASSOCIATE EDITORS‘ WALTCR W. BAKERI MARGARET EGAN’ HERBERT H. JOSEPH, Jr.; JANE KESNERi LOUIS N. RIDENOUR. IIMERWIN S. ROSENBERGGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERSROBERT T. McCarthyJAMES J. McMAHONSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSSOPHOMORE EDITORSTOM BIRDRUBE S. FRODINBION B. HOWARDHOWARD R. OGBURNJ. BAYARD POOLEGARLAND ROUTTMILTON SHAPINJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSONSOPHOMOREDOROTHY A. BARCKMANMAXINE CREVISTONMARJORIE GOI.LERJOHN MILLS JOHN CLANCYRICHARD DEUTSCHDAMON FULLEREDGAR GOLDSMITHCHARLES HOWENORMAN JORGENSONCHESTER WARDWOMAN EDITORSALBERTA KILLIEELIZABETH MILLARDINGREI) PETERSENELEANOR WILSONPhotographic EditorNight Editor: Herbert H. Joseph Jr.Assistants: Warren E. Thompson, Bion B. Howard.ONWARDBefore we have fully realized it, the end of the quarter againis looming up before us. A sentimental student could grow philo¬sophical, a th'oughtful student reflective. Perhaps the greatest pe¬riod of change and innovation is now going on in the University.A reorganization has been planned whose far-reaching effectscan at this early date only be mildly appreciated. Chicago hastaken strides which have advanced it far ahead of its more con¬servative colleagues. Its president, its faculty, and its leaders haveexhibited the courage and the foresight to alter a system which hadbeen condemned for years but which had been upheld for such alength of time because no adequate substitute could be found orput into effect. Today it stands eminently alone as the guide andthe herald of a new era in learning. It will be imitated—it shouldbe—it has set the pace.The faculty has as usual supplied students throughout the coun¬try, and even men of their own calibre, the books and the facilitiesnecessary to forge ahead. While many have questioned this type ofbenefit, and held that it befitted a research worker and not a pro¬fessor, nevertheless there is a satisfaction and a degree of confidencein people who can teach first hand what they have gleaned fromthe untouched fields in the realms of academic endeavor. THE TRAVELLINGBAZAARByART HOWARDTuesday of this week, a story ap¬peared in this column telling aboutI how a student here handed in aI story of Mark Twain’s for his ownand got a D- for his efforts. Im¬mediately, Mr. Mac Lean, an oldfriend and a 101 teacher, climbedthe frame of this column and saidthat we had no right to publishthings like that without proof. Tobe sure, at the time we ran it, wehad no proof. However, since thenwe have investigated and found thatthe story was copied and the titletoo! Mr. MacLean explains that theteacher who freceived it doubtlessknew that it was a fake, hence heslipped it a punk grade. That mayI or may not be true.’ * t *I The reason for all the researchreferred to above is that if we werewrong we were to play Mr. Mac-Lean in handball. Mr. MacLean playsa very good brand of handball asmany will testify and would have} liked nothing better than to haveshown this department up. If wewere right, we were to tell the storypublicly and now you have it. All you Seniors are now at lib¬erty to register for the coming »e-njor class elections which are to beheld, if all reports are true, nextTuesday. The candidates as an¬nounced so far are Dave Cochran,Ray Fried, O. T. Hienkle, and ErrettVan Nice. As this column is strict¬ly neutral in all contests of this kindwe won’t even vote. Bmt it is cus¬tomary for each and all of us to tryand pick the correct results. From thelooks of things right now, we cannothelp picking Van Nice to win, Coch¬ran to place, Frie# to show. Alsoran: Henkle.« « *Lester Stone and an unidentifiedfraternity brother of his were stand¬ing in front of the Coffee Shop.“How are a prudish girl and a stringof beads alike?” asked the fratern¬ity brother of Lester. “I don’tknow,” said Lester. “How are a pru¬dish girl and a string of beadsalike?” “Necklace, my boy,” saidhis brother, “Necklace”.* * «The railroad business, like everyother business at present, being onthe bum, is, in spite of all precedent,trying to pick itself up. The leaders of the industry are sending busi¬ness reply cards to all the fratern¬ities asking them to make reserva¬tions now if any of the individualsare going home for Xmas. The ChiPsi boys refused to take it all seri¬ously, sent in a reservation for Broth¬er Jim Porter for California, andstated that Mr. Porter would haveEMILG.HIRSCHCENTE4622 South ParkwayFriday, December 12, 1930Dr. Edward N. Schoolman, “James Joyce, the ModemUlysses.” 8:15.Monday, December 15, 1930Count Felix Von Luckner of Germany, “More Tales of Ad¬venture by the ‘Sea Devil’ .“ Miss So-and-So for hi* guest. Thename of Miis-So-and-So may be hadby sending in a self addressedstamped envelope. ,J« « ♦ «Yesterday, if you will be so kindas to remember, we told how wehappened to catch two charminggirls reading this stuff in front ofCobb Hall. We also, not believingfor one minute that they would takeus up, offered a ticket to the CinemaArt Theatre to each of them if theywould come in and identify them¬selves. Lo, and behold, this after¬noon in they came. One of the girl’snames was Mary Ellison. Sorry, we didn’t get the other name. But bothof them got a ticket all right, allright.« « «The circulation staff of the Phoe¬nix w'hich consists of J. J. J. madethe rounds of the campus the otherday and posted posters telling aboutthe next issue. Not long afterwardsall the posters were taken down.The Phoenix staff says that theydon’t know who took them down anddon’t want to accuse anybody, butif the club girls will please bringthem back, they will receive fivecents per each.Something To Think AboutNew Year’s EveGIGANTIC FLOOR SHOWDINE AND DANCE$5.00 per plateNo Cover ChargeFairfax 6462For ReservationsCASINO-MODERNE913 Elast 63rd StreetPublic Dancing Every Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday,Sunday and Sunday AfternoonUNIVERSITY CHURCH OF DISCIPLESOF CHRIST5 7th and UniversityMinisters: Edward Scribner Ames and Wayne LeysDirector of Music and Education, Basil F. WiseSUNDAY, DECEMBER 14, 19301 I :00—Sermon Topic “Things Learned By Talking,” Dr.Leys.Wranglers—“Some Basic Principles Underlying the NewEducational Plan it the Unversity.” Prof. A. J.Brumbaugh, Associate Dean of the College of Arts,Literature and Science. linrslftpTHE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Avenue and 57th StreetVon Ogden Vogt—MinisterSUNDAY. DECEMBER 14. 193010:00 A. M.—Church School.1 1:00 A. M.—The Law and The Gospel, Von Ogden Vogt,Minister.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club Tea. Presentation of Sir JamesBarries “Half an Hour." The cast formed frommembers of Channing Club. Visitors cordially in¬vited.A building program is under way. The battelcmented towerscontinue to rise uniformly and gradually, and bit by bit the boundsof the University’s sphere are enlarged. New dormitories, adequateand roomy, are in the process of erection across the Midway, theHospital group is covering the second block, an International housesite is ready for preliminary work, a Field house answers the prayersof those who objected to being squeezed into inconvenient comersat athletic demonstrations, and an immense Oriental institute hasprovided room for everything connected with the line of the Ram-eses including their gigantic stone bull.Undergraduate activities have been revised. Saner constitu¬tions have been formulated which give everyone a chance to do hisbest and take away from the heads the temptation to travel to Eu¬rope with the funds provided to pay printers’ bills. Blackfriars andthe Cap and Gown, beset by financial distress and agitated overthe formulation of policies, have had their difficulties smoothed outand are turning over a new leaf with high hopes and the promise totravel new paths. *Athletics, characteristically, continue to show promises andbarely advance beyond that stage. After a football season unpre¬cedented for student enthusiasm, hard luck, and poor football, thebasketball team promises to surprise its followers in the way ofvictories and really prove itself a credit to any university. The trackteam, the cross country team, the wrestling squads, and CoachHoffer’s acrobats have already hung up a number of preliminarytrophies as an indication of what they expect to accomplish duringthe remainder of the season. The fencing team, always a first divisionoutfit, will be there again this season.Revisions and revisals have greeted us on every side. TheUniversity must be built into a harmonious whole, every phase ofits endeavor must be dovetailed into a unit. Otherwise its progresswould he hampered by outworn forms and hindered by decrepit sys¬tems.Chicago stride* onward. Another quarter of its progress is be¬hind us. Its future rests with the ability and the determination ofthe individuals lo comply . . . E A. G. The Church ofThe Redeemer(EPISCOPAL)56th and BlackstoneRev. E. S. WhiteUniversity Student PastorRev. W. W. HorstickAssistantSUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion, 8.00 A. M.Short Sung Eucharist, 9:30 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon,11:00 A. M.Choral Evensong and Sermon,7:30 P. M.Three services every week-day.Church open daily for prayer andmeditation. Hyde Park BaptistChurch5600 Woodlawn Ave.Norris L TibbettsRolland W. SchloerbMinisters11:00 A. M.—“The Self-Re¬specting God,” Rolland W.Schloerb.Young Peoples’ Church club.7:00 P. M.—Discussion Groups.8:00 P. M.—“Finding HelpThrough Symbols,” R. W.Schloerb.8:45 P. M.—Social Hour.St. Paul’s Church50th and DorchesterParish Office: 4945 DorchesterAvenueTel. Oakland 3185REV. GEORGE H. THOMASREV. OTIS G. JACKSONSunday Services:Holy Communion, 8:00 A. M.Church School Service, 9:30 A.M.Morning Service, 11:00 A. M.Evening Service, 7:45 P. M.Young Peoples’ Society, «:30 P.M.KEHILATH ANSHE MAYRIVDrexel Blvd. at 30th St.Dr. Solomon B. Freehof, Rabbi.SATURDAY. DECEMBER 13, 193010:30 A. M.—“The Weekly Portion.”SUNDAY, DECEMBER 14. 1930> 1 1:00 A. M.—Sermon by Dr, Freehof: “IS ANTISEMITISMINCREIASING?”—In America and Abroad.ATTEND THE CHURCHESTHEY ARE INTERESTEDIN YOU CHRIST CHURCH(Episcopal)65th and Woodlawn Ave.The Rev. Walter C. Bihler, M. A., Rector.SUNDAY SERVICESUNDAY. DECEMBER 14. 1930I 1:00 A. M.—Morning Prayer.5:00—Young People’s Fellowship Club.8:00—Evensong^-^uest preacher, Rev. David E. Gibson.ST. JAMES METHODIST EPISCOPALCHURCH46th and Ellis Avenue11 ;00 A. M.—Sermon .by Dr. Gardiner, “Spiritual Retreatsin Literature.’’8:00 P. M.-—Robert La Mar, “The Caruso of Gospel Sing-' ers.”A Cordial Wdcome to All.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1930Christmas ReadingsAssociate Professor Bertrand G.Nelson of the English department,will read “The Fourth Wise Man,” byHenry Van Dyke over radio stationWMAQ Christmas day at 4:30. Hewill also read “The Third FloorBack” at the same time on NewYear’s Day.WANTEDPaMenKers to Drive to Philadelphia orNew York and Return for Xmaa Holidays.WM. N. TANNER. Jr.. Midway 3717BEAUTIFUL TYPINGSarah TaylorWork Called For and Delivered1434 Plaisance Crt. Plaza 5346(Blackstone south of 60th) Wabash 6360Hotel HayesCafeteriaUniversity Avenue at 64thStreetThis Sunday and EverySunday.45cRoast Young TurkeyCelery and Walnut DressingHours: 12:00 to 2:00 P. M.5:15 to 8:00 P. M.Every night a 25c meatspecial.Friday night old fashionedOyster Stew 15c500 Rooms—Rates $8.00to $20.00 per week.Our lounge is at yourservice for meeting yourfriends and keepingappointments. STANDARD OILMEN TO INTERVIEWSENIOR JOBSEEKERSRepresentatives of the StandardOil company of New York will visitthe campus on February 24 to inter¬view senior men who are interestedin accepting permanent businesspositions in the petroleum industryfollowing graduation. This firm isengaged in the distribution andmarketing of petroleum products inthe New England states and in. theFar East. This will be the first ofa series of interviews to be arrangedby the Board of Vocational Guidanceand Placement for students with per¬sonnel managers of business firms.All .students interested in obtain¬ing an interview with the StandardOil representative should registerwith John C, Kennan in the office ofthe Board.Positions Open to BachelorsJunior positions, with the expecta¬tion of promotion according to abil¬ity, are open as the result of vacan¬cies caused by promotion and expan¬sion, to unmarried applicants betweenthe ages of 21 and 25. Preferencewill be made on the basis of scholar¬ship, summer employment and ex¬tra curricular activities.Qualified candidates will t>e ad¬mitted to a training school in NewYork City to acquaint them with thebusiness and to verify their appoint¬ments. Thic course will consumethree months time, during which thebackground of business, transporta¬tion facilities, manufacturing proces¬ses of testing and lubrication, will bestudied, as well as methods of mar¬keting and accounting u.sed by theCompany. During this time an al¬lowance of twenty-five dollars aweek, will be given the men for liv¬ing expenses. Salaried will begin whenthe men are assigned to stations.Opportunity in EastOpportunities for work in the FarEast consist of office work, salesmanagement, and organizing agen¬cies, in one of the four geographicaldivisions, India, South China, NorthChina or India. Salaries will be $200a month. Men must remain abroadfor two and a half or three years, atthe end of which they may have afm»r or five months furlough withfull salary and transportation fare.Social Science TeaSunday afternoon the faculty, fel¬low and gradute students in the so¬cial Science department of the Uni¬versity will be guests at an openhouse tea to be held from 3:30 until6:30 at Ida Noyes hall.IIke,GRUEI\IYOU’VL wanted a smallernarrower more grace!ul wristwatch. It’s here! But you ve hopedthat It would be a reliable timeteller as well It isThe new Gruen Baguette is thelatest triumph ol this famous guildof watchmakers Within its gracefully slender case is a movementol the same celebrated accuracythat has made all Gruen Watchesfamous. Cased onl\ in solid goldof course . , and priced from $85‘‘Charge Purchases Payable Feb. 10th.**’ 1225 £. 63rd Street Survey Denounces Compulsory MilitaryTraining as Needless Burden on TaxpayersDenunciation of the compulsorymilitary training system in Ameri¬can colleges as a needless burden tothe tax-payer with no compensationin military preparedness, is the sub¬stance of a report issued this weekby a committee on militarism in edu¬cation of New York city.In the school year 1928-1929,142,260 students were enrolled in themilitary science departments of 314schools, the report shows. That year6,271 persons completed the four-yearcourse in drill.The course is conducted to trainofficers for the reserve corps, thecommittee report states. Since it re¬quires four years to qualify for thecorps the investigation indicates pre-v'alence of a great waste, drill op¬ponents declare.The United States War departmentrecords show that approximately 50per cent of the per.sons who qualifyfor commissions become officers inthe organized reserves of the army. Summarizing the facts, the reportdeclares that of the 142,260 men en-rollq^ for drill at a cost to the Wardepartment of $10,696,560 under thetutelage of 1,718 officers, only 3,113men are provided for the army re¬serves. *A study made in 1927 shows thatin colleges of compulsory militarytraining 17 per cent of the men goon to advanced drill, while in schoolswhere drill is elective, 32 per cent ofthe basic students take advanceddrill.The committee made a check-upon .schools in which compulsory drillhad been dropped. Following theabolishment of compulsory militarytraining at Boston university 80 percent of the men elected to take drill.The cost of military drill in thevarious schools was included in thereport. At Penn.sylvania State col¬lege it took $51,416.24 to graduate46 cadets, and at the University ofPennsylvania it took $25,473.89 tograduate 92 men. : from the list are C. & A. 536 at 2:30,[and Practical Theology S336 at 3:30.I Practical Theology S301 is to be! given at 10 instead of 11, and it is toI be taught by President Albert PalmerI of the Chicago Theological School in-flAf 1? AI? Dl?! IF'IAN ! stead of by Ozora Davis, PresidentiVULE Ur iVLLllllUn I Emeritus of the School.STUDENTS, FACOITYWILL MEH; SEEKLAMBERT LOOKS I Dramatic Ass’n.FOR BACK GUARD Learn FormulaON PURDUE FIVE For Play WritingLafayette, Ind., Dec. 11.—Searchfor a back guard who will be cap¬able of filling the shoes of the longline of outstanding Purdue back-board defenders is occupying mostof the time of Ward Lambert, Pur¬due hardwood genius. a.s he prepareshis Big Ten champions for the sea¬son’s opener against Notre Damehere December 1.5.Graduation has removed from theranks of the Boilermakers HermanBoots, steady hack guard, along withCharles “Stretch” Murphy, center,and Glen Harmeson, forward, thetrio that was the main factor inbringing Purdue one undisputed ti¬tle, one shared title, and runneruphonors in three years.of competi¬tion.Sophomores Look LikelyAlthough Murphys and Harme-sons do not grow on every basketballtree, Lambert already has his eyeon men who should fill the vacatedcenter and forward posts in a cap¬able manner, but when he looks fora back guard, he is far from sat)is-fied.^Glen Overman, reserve backguard last season, is again available,but it seems more likely that thepermanent choice will come from agroup of sophomores. Lambert hadbeen planning on John Husar, of Chi¬cago, who showed great promise asa freshman last year, but Husar frac¬tured his ankle in football and willbe unable to play until the secondsemester at least.Paul Moss, another football man,will probably be given a chance atthe i)ost, along with Holm, Parmen-ter, and Snyder.Harry Kellar will be a perman¬ent fixture at forw'ard, and JohnnyWooden, All-American floor guard,has shown no disposition to give uphis berth. The other forward findsEddy, Dornten and Porter leadingthe race, while Stewart and Minorlook like the class of the centers. (CoMfiinied from paaic 1 )neces.sary lines.Miss Gerstenberg does not believein taking an incident exactly as itoccurred in real life and incorpor-ing it into a play, for then “wearen’t creating.” Her illustrationconcerned a gray-haired womanwhom she had seen wearing fourrings each with a diamond solitaire.Curious, she inquired why thesestones were not combined into a sin¬gle mounting, only to learn thatthree were trea.sured in memory ofher dead financees, and the fourthwas her husirand’s gift. The playwhich Miss Gerstenberg wrotearound this incident submitted fourgraduated .strands of pearls for thediamond solitaires.Maroon Cage TeamEncounters CornellIn Practice Game(Continued from page 1 )Bradley. By that time Capt, Fishand Arthur Cahill, who are not inschool this quarter because of thebasketballl ttrip to Japan, will beeligible for competition.Yesterday Coach Norgren’s menunderwent an inten.sive scrimmageagainst a picked freshman squad.The Chicago mentor stressed thefast-breaking game during the prac¬tice. Dzuibaniuk, sophomore for-wai’d, suffered a minor leg injury,and will not be used for the gametomorrow.Yale Glee Club ToGive Recital Dec. 23 Members of the faculties and stu- 1dent bodies of the leading univer- jsities and colleges of the country will ‘gather in Detroit from December 27to 31 for a conference to determinethe place which religion holds inmodern educational systems. Thedelegation from each institution willconsist of an equal number of facultyand students. The meeting, fir.st ofits kind to be held in this country,will hear the reports of .seven com¬missions which have been gatheringmaterial of interest to the confer¬ence.Dean Charles W. Gilkey is head of jone of these commissions, and has jbeen collecting information for a pe¬riod of six months which may aid indeciding the role of religion in thepresent institutions of higher learn¬ing. The group will prepare a reportof its findings to be submitted to thegeneral assembly.The delegation from the Univer¬sity will number fourteen, includingstudents and faculty. Six are regu¬larly appointed members of the con¬ference, two will be chosen by theMen’s Commission, two by the Y.W, C. A., and four from the faculty.Those already chosen to represent jthe University are Dr. Kelly, of the iSchool of Education, who will make ^one of the leading addressees; Marga- jret Clark, national secretary of theY. \V. C. A.; Mrs. Charles'W. Gil-ikey, national president of the Y. W.C. A., and Dr. Towner of the school jof Education. i THE YALEGLEE CLUBOrchestra Hall ConcertDecember 23, at 8:15Tickets 25c to $3.00ON SALE NOWDUKE UNIVERSITYSCHOOL OF MEDICINEDurham, N. C.Oil October 1, 1931, carefully se¬lected first and third year studentswill be admitted. Applications maybe sent at any time and will beconsidered in the order of receipt.Catalogues and application formsnay be obtained from the Dean.Fraternity and SororityBadKes and KeyaSpecial designs furnishedChas. A. Winship& Co.Manufacturing JewelersRoom 7131S9 N. State StreetAnnounce WinterQuarter CourseSchedule ChangesVarious changes have been an¬nounced in the schedule of courses forWinter Quarter. In the History de¬partment Prof. William Dodd willgive History 391, “The Old South,”at 1:30 instead of History 392, “TheLower South,” which was scheduledfor the same hour. He will also givea new course entitled “Suffrage andRepresentation in the Old South”(Hist. 485) at 4:30, in.stead of Hist.494 as announced. Professor Ci'avenhas withdrawn his Histories 380 and386, and he will give them duringSpring Quarter instead.Oriental Languages 322 is to beadded at 10, Political Science 236will be taught by professor NormanBeck instead of by Professor Gosnell;and Political Science 362 has beenwithdrawn. Other courses removed THE STUDENTSTYPING SERVICEManaged by Frances A. Mullen, A.M.EXPERT WORK ON THESES ORSHORT PAPERS.1326 E. 57tli St. Dor. 2896J.o.Established 1900CLASS RINGS-PINSMEDALS-TROPHIESANNOUNCEMENTSDANCE FAVORSFRATERNITY JEWELRYCatalogue on Reqaett7 W. Madison - at State9th Floor CEN tral tUtTickets tor the Showsat the Maroon Office (Continued from page 1)abroad, winning the applause of Eu¬ropean critics.Forty-eight men, representing allphases of college life and achieve¬ment, were selcted out of a groupof four hundred candidates to formthe club.Tickets are priced from $.25 to$3.00 and were placed on sale atOrchestra hall yesterday.'r/f/cisoMilwaukee^ST. PAUL1 Fares SlashedV for theHOLIDAYSIFareA RealBargain for the Round Trip between stations onThe Milwaukee Road.Tickets on sale Deceinoer iy to 24, 1930, in¬clusive. Final return limit January 6, 1931.Good in sleeping and parlor cars upon paymentfor space occupied.With splendid trains on convenientschedules—The Milwaukee Road willserve you well.Full information, reservations, tickets atCity Ticket Office Union StationClark and Monroe Sts. Canal and Adams Sts.Tel. Central 7600 Tel. Franklin 6700Chicago, 111.one MilwaukeeROADFAST—DEPENDABLE SERVICE A TEA ROOM ANDRESTAURANT OF THEHIGHEST CLASS, OFFERSTABLE D HOTE SERVICELuncheon - -Afternoon TeaDinner - - - 1 1 :30 - 2:302:30 - 5:30- 5:30 - 7:30and a la carte servicecontinuously from11:30-7:30The patronage of the Universityof Chicago students is earnestlysolicited.Arrangements may be made forspecial Luncheons and Dinners.Telephone: Har. 1975Jiitu MHr410THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 12, 1930 Page HirMFRATERNITYJEWELRY STATIONERYDANCE FAVORSSpies Brothers, Inc .27 E. Monroe St.At Wabash - Randolph 4159 • 5th FloorAristophanes 'Has a Hit!Gilbert Seldes Adaptationof the Famous Comedy“L Y S I S T R A T A”Stared by Norman Bel GeddesDistinraished Cast of 70MAJESTICa CHICAGO AVE..LlilbMA^**’"*’**^ MICHIGAN BLVD.‘WHITE HELLOf Pitz Palu*The miracle of picture making“An adventu~tus experience—different andbeautiful.”—liberty ••••Mat". .'50c—Eveninsrs 7i5c1 P. M.—Continuous—11 P. M.The Food atMitzi's ChateauIB-EXCELLENTANDTEMPTINGCome over and enjoy a realhome cooked meal for $0.75.Special Attention Given toGroup Parties.1342 E. 53rci St.-1: J: SA SPECIAL REDUCTION FORCHRISTMAS GIFTSTrunks and Leather Novelties, BriefCases Our SperialtyALL REPAIR WORK DONEHYDE PARK TRUNK CO.1117 E. 55th H. P. 095UGOODMAN THEATRELake Front at Monroe Central 4030Tonirht: Four We«‘k.s • Until Jan. 4:“HAY FEVER”Noel Coward’s Hilarious ComedyNiKhts Except Monday ; Matinee FridaySpecial Mat. Thursday Dec. 11Seats $2; $1.50; 76cApply to Daily Maroon for Special Rates MANHATTAN THEATREMy most recent count of the showsl>taying in Xew York reaches aneven 40. Ray Goetz’s revue “TheNew Yorkers,” which opened thisweek bring the number to 41. Thisis below the nuni'uer playing at thesame time la.^Jt year, but the success¬es this year are more numerous.The sma.sh hits are, as usual, fewand far between. “Once in a Life¬time,” the superb satire on Holly¬wood by an enterprising youngsterMoss Hart and the venerable GeorgeKaufman has been playing to stand¬ing room since it opened ten weeksago. It will go on like that for along time, too, if I know anythingof plays in which George Kaufmanhas a hand.The Guild seems to be well setfor the remainder of the season with“Roar China” and “Elizabeth theQueen.” The stage setting for theformer, created by Lee Simonson,who has designed the sets for morethan half of all the plays producedby the Guild, is the high spot ofinterest for theatre-goers. The deckof a British battleship provides thescene of action. And the Guild hasa cast of Chinese large enough tomake it all very convincing, not tosay realistic. “Elizabeth the Queen”seems to be mostly an acting tri¬umph for Lynn Fontanne, and, on asmaller scale, for her husband, Al¬fred Lunt. Which is not, if youknow the Lunts and their fruitfulassociation with the Theatre Guild,unusual!Jane Cowl is doing extremely wellwith repertoire. Her production of“Twelfth Night” w’as enthusiastical¬ly received. Eve LeGallienne andher capable repertory group havebeen performing with distinctionalso., David Belasco, who is old enoughto belong in a museum, still canwave the fairy wand called successwith a deft hand. This sea.son it is“Tonight or Never,” a continentalplay MTitten by Lili Havatny. Ithas to do with an opera singer andas luck would have it, Belasco se¬cured Helen Gahagan who has beenpreparing for an operatic career inEurope for the leading role. Thatauthentic touch, of course, helpedthe play considerably.Of the older hits, “Strictly Dis¬honorable,” “The Green Pastures,”and “Lysistrata,” carry on. Thecharming pastiche about the south¬ern girl who finds out about menIs now' in its second year, while“Green Pa.stures,” Marc Connelly’sbeautifully moving tale of Negroes,is coming close to it. The popular¬ity of this epic has not receded per¬ceptibly and may go on forever,which is the dream of every pro-I ducer.j In music, Joe Cook, the fifth Ha¬waiian (Joe Cook is the other four,too) is doing exceedingly well inj “Fine and Dandy” which has a bookI by Donald Ogden Stewart. “Nina Rosa,” a Shubert show wrhich washere last season is liked in Manhat- itan. “Brown Buddies.” a negro jmusical is liked, too, chiefly becauseBill Robinson, the peer of tap-dancers, is in it. I don’t know howyou feel Shout it, but I could si* forhours w'atching Bill Robinson tap-dance. He taught the late lamentedJack Donahue a lot about tap>dancing and Jack Donahue, they say,w'as pretty good, too.In revue, “Three’s a Crowd” isthe 1930 edition of what “The Lit¬tle Show” was last year. Libby Hol¬man is in it, singing “Body andSoul.” There is Clifton Webb andnot the least important of come¬dians; the garrulous Fred Allen. Itis he who remarks that business isso had in Chicago that the bootleg¬gers have been forced to lay off 200policemen.F'lorenz Ziegfeld w'as supposed tobe the little Santa Claus in disguisethis year with the pretentiously bal-ly-hooed “Smiles.” Ziegrfeld almostcornered the market on the dancingstars for besides Marilyn Miller, hehas gathered under his managerialwings Adele and Fred Astaire. Themain trouble with “Smiles” is thatthere is so much superb dancing init that it’s not very easy to disgest.Unfortunately, without the Astairesand Marilyn Miller, the show isn’tfunny or tuneful. A lot of thecritics are mildly angry at Ziegfeldw'ith the w'ay “Smiles” was press-agented. William Randolph Hearstsold himself to Ziegfeld body andsoul and for days his New YorkAmerican ran reanus and reams ofpublicity about the show while itwas still in the throes of produc¬tion. The great American thinker,Brisbane, w’rote a piece about it.Worst of all, Mr. Hearst tried tocoerce Walter Winchell, who gets$75,000 a year from Mr. Hearst forwriting what he pleases, and Win¬chell, just to show that he isn’t thesort of fellow who can be muzzled,sat dow'n at his typewriter and wrotethis inimitable review of the show:“The greatest and most marvelousand gi’andest and stupendous andmost beautiful and most thrilling andmost colossal and most wonderfulshow that ever has been produced inthe whole, wide world is “Smiles”which Flo Ziegfeld brought to thebeautifully appointed Ziegfeld The¬atre on 6th .\ve. near 54th St. lastnight.”■ Say* what you will, Mr. Winchellis worth his weight in gold!'4. * ' ^Formal or Informal—Why not givea smart party?RE headquarters forUniversity affairs —luncheons, dances, teas,dinners, banquets. We’rebest equipped to help youmake every party a trium¬phant success. Large orsmall — formal or informal—you’ll find a real wel¬come here—a spirit of loyalcooperation — and pricesthat prove we appreciateUniversity Patronage.HOTELSHORELANDFifty-fifth Street at the Lake’Phone Plazr iOOO you are going to graduete ... or if,for that matter, you aren't ... if youhave disappointed someone in love ... or ifperchance someone has disappointed you ... if studyhas impaired your health or if it hasn't... if you'venever seen a whale or if a whale has never seen you... if you've never driven through the Bois at dawn... if you've never tamed the lions at Trafalgar Square... if your feet hurt or if your back aches... or if you'realive at all . . . it's an SICA passage abroad and backyou need and incidentally, a stopover in EUROPE . . .about $200 Round Trip... up-to-the-minute accommo¬dations . . . careful cuisine . . . college orchestras . . .lecturers . . . the only modern loan libraries ... allmaintained entirely for college people and their friends... more than 5000 college people insisted upon STCAfor their crossing last summer . . . nowit's your turn . . .don't be left on the wrong end of the gangplank sec ...LESTER BLAIRor 5758 Ellis Avenue Chica^fo, IllinoisSTUDENT THIRD CABINASSOCIATIONHOLLAND-AMERICA LINE40 N. Dearborn St,Chicago "RESURRECnor ISREVIVED THIS WEEKIN OPERA PROGRAMThe novelties in the coming weekof the Chicago Civic Opera companyare the revival of “Resurrection” andthe first performance this season of“II Trovatore.”“Resurrection” will be given onThursday evening, “II Trovatore”next Saturday afternoon. In the lat¬ter opera, Mario Laurence, tenor,will make his Chicago debut as Man-rico.“Resurrection” by Alfano had itsAmerican premiere in Chicago, whereit was given by the Chicago CivicOpera Company in 1926. It was sungagain in the season of 1927-28, butsince that time has been absent fromthe repertory. On Thursday evtaing,Mary Garden will sing the role ofKatiusha, which she sang at theAmerican premiere four years ago.Others in the cast of “Resurrec¬tion” will be Rene Maison as Dmitriand Cesare Formichi as Simonson.Roberto Moranzoni will conduct.Details the PlotThe plot of the opera “Resurrec¬tion” differs somewhat from that ofthe novel. The librettist was Hanau,who eliminated the didactic elementsin Tolstoi’s novel and made the plotmore dramatic.Katiusha is a girl of illegitimatebirth, who has been adopted by themaiden aunt of the young PrinceDmitri. The Prince, during a sojournat his aunt’s country-house, seducesKatiusha. who is then turned out onthe world by an indignant old lady.She tries to find her lover, to ap¬peal to his honor, but she misses himin a railway station, and is forcedto turn to a life of debauchery tolive. She is falsely accused ofmurdering a drunken admirer. Dmit¬ri, conscience-stricken at last, visitsher in her cell, but she takes a justi¬fiably friv’olous attitude toward hisannouncement that he has come toredeem her from a life of profligacy.He follows her, however, when shehas been convicted and sent with the convict-gang to Siberia. They fall inlove with each other again, and whenKatiusha is pardoned, Dmitri begsher to marry him. But she, havinglearned from him to pity the otherconvicts, feels it her duty to marryone of them, who has also fallen inlove with her. She takes her lastfarewell of Dmitri on Easter morn¬ing, giving him the three Orthodoxkisses of peace w'hile the convictssing “Christ is risen.”“II Trovatore” CaetIn the cast for “II Trovatore” areClaudia Muzio as Ivconora, CyrenaVan Gordon as Azucena, Mario Lau¬rence (debut) as Manrico, CesareFormichi as the Count of Luna andVlrgilio Lazzari as F'errando. Theballet will take part, and RobertoMoranzoni will conduct.“La Traviata” will be sung onMonday evening. Claudia Muzio willbe heard as Violetta, Alice d’her-manoy as Flora, Charles Hackett asAlfredo, and Richard Bonelli as Ger-mont. The ballet will take part, andRoberto Moranzoni w’ill conduct.“Camille” will be given its secondperformance on Tuesday evening. In¬cluded in the cast are Mary Gardenas Camille, Maria Glaessens as Pru¬dence, Coe Glade as Julie, CharlesHackett as Armand and Chase Baro-meo as Duval. There will be inci¬dental dances by the ballet, and EmilCooper will conduct.The final performance of “Tann-haeuser” will be given on Wednesdayevening. Emma Redell will singElizabeth; Cyrena Van Gordon, Ve¬nus; Theodore Strack, Tannhaeuser;Hans Hermann Nissen, Wolfram, andChase Baromeo, Herman. The balletwill take part, and Egon Poliak willconduct.On Saturday evening, the doublebill, “Cavalleria Rusticana” and “IPagliacci,” is being offered. In theformer, Rosa Rai.sa will be heard asSantuzza and Antonio Cortis as Turi-(ddu. Roberto Moranzoni will con¬duct. In “I Pagliacci,” the cast in¬cludes Hilda Burke as Nedda, CharlesMarshall as Canio and Richard Bon¬elli as Tonio. Frank St. I^egor willconduct.The role of Santuzza, to be taken atthis performance by Mme. Raisa, hasbeen sung formery this season byMme. Muzio.Gilkey Will PreachIn New York CityDean Charles W. Gilkey will leavefor New York City today, w’here hewill deliver the sermon at the River¬side Church, on Sunday. Dr. HarryEmerson Fosdick, who is pastor ofthe church, w'ill preach at HarvardUniversity, and has asked Dr. Gil¬key to take his pulpit.The church, located in ColumbiaHeights, was recently completed andwas dedicated in October. Its towerrises to a height of 400 feet, and thebuilding seats 2500.JACKSON - BELLMidget Radio . . .the Perfect Christmas Gift!is a complete, all-electricscreen-grid receiver that com¬bines all the volume and selectivity ofthe finest full-size radios . . . with ailthe convenience of small size andportability. You’ll be amazed at therich, full tone of the Jackson-Bell. Justthe thing for your room.$only 59 .50With Tubes. SmallDown Paymentand ConvenientMonthly Terms.In Woodlawn:870 East 63rd StreetLyonOpen Evenings Buy yourOhristmas CardsNow!Our cards are od di^laynow for your inspection.For variety, originality,beauty of design and colorit will be difficult to findtheir equal.Gifts u.^fc.Many gifts withU. of C. Crest,JewelryBook EndsPaper KnifesPennants, Pillow TopsTable CoversLeather GiftsPocket Books,Diaries,Line a Day Books,Brief Cases,Book Covers,Gifts Miscellaneous,suitable and variousof |>rice.Fine StationeryU. of C. StationeryImported StationeryRoycreft Gifts in Brassand LeatherGames, Camelot, Back>gammon, Foot Ball andPing PongChristmas Wn^ipuigs,Christmas Cards,Christmas Seals.ATWoodworth’sBook Store1311 EmI 57th StNear Kimbark Ave.The Largest Book StoreOutside the LoopGIVE BOOKS THISCHRISTMAS!New Books Now onDisplayAll Gifts and Books wrap¬ped for mailing and can besent from our Postal Sta¬tion. .MAIL EARLY!OPEN EVERY EVENINGirBADGERS DEDICATENEW HELD HOUSEON DECEMBER 18Madison, Wis.—Thursday, Decem¬ber 18, will be a memorable date inthe chronicles of University of Wis¬consin athletics.That night the University of Wis¬consin will formally dedicate its newfield house, future home of Wiscon¬sin basketball and the indoor train¬ing activities of its football, baseballand track squads.The dedication game will be playedagainst the crack University ofPennsylvania squad but the basket¬ball game will be only a part of theattraction which will draw severalhundred—possibly several thousand—people to Madison that day.One of the features will be around-up of former Wisconsin bask¬etball stars, who learned the gamefrom Dr. Walter E. Meanwell, Bad¬ger basketball coach since 1911-1912.All of “Doc’s” former players willreceive special invitations to returnfor the dedication and will be guestsof honor.They will be tendered a luncheonat the Memorial Union on the dayof the game and will also be guestsat the “All Sports Banquet” whichis being sponsored by the MadisonAssociation of Commerce and alumniof the university that night.In his eighteen years of coachingBadger basketball teams, in additionto turning out eight Big Ten cham¬pionship fives, Dr. Meanwell has de¬veloped more stars and more menwho have been placed on recognizedall-Western honor teams than anybasketball coach in America.These stars will also be honoredin a special souvenir program whichis to be published for the dedicationgame. This book will contain a com¬plete record of Wisconsin basketball.Dr. Meanwell will contribute a fea¬ture article and there will be specialarticles by George Little, director ofWi.sconsin athletics, George W.Lewis, business manager of athletics,who was a star under Meanwell andfor two years, high scorer in Big Tenbasketball, and by George F. Dow¬ner, director of Wisconsin sportspublicity.Alumni from all over Wis*consinare planning to attend the “Allsports banquet” and the dedicationgame. The committee in charge ofthe banquet, headed by AdjutantGeneral Ralph Immel, has its planswell advanced and has already soldhundreds of tickets throughout Wis¬consin.Rockefeller LecturerKnocks Quinine Cure(Continued from page Hsocial and hygenic conditions willprove the most important remediesin the treatment of malaria. TheRockefeller malaria station, situatedin Italy, has instituted these meas¬ures into a number of homes and re¬port the fever has wholly disappear¬ed in these places. Book HoldersWill Be AdmittedTo Cage Tourney(Continued from page 1)will be only thirty-five and fiftycents.Varsity Play* in Conjuncti>>nOn two nights of the week, De¬cember 30 and January 3, the tourn¬ament will be conducted in conjunc¬tion with the University gamesagainst Brigham Young and OhioWesleyan respectively. On thesetwo nights, the varsity game will besandwiched in between two highschool contests.Four prizes will be awarded, as wasthe custom in the National Inter¬scholastics, but contrary to the prec¬edent established in these tourna¬ments, there will be no consolationgames among the defeated teams.The first invitations will be sent outtoday, and final arrangements areexpected to be completed early nextweek, “Lonnie” said.CARNEGIE TECH ONPURDUE GRIDIRONSCHEDULE FOR ’21tLaFayette, Ind.—With the addi¬tion of Carnegie Tech for an inter¬sectional game on October 24 atPittsburgh, and Western Reserveand Coe slated for a double headerhere October 3 as the season’s open¬er, Purdue’s 1931 football schedulehas been virtuality jcomp^eted andgives promise of being one of thebest balanced in.years. In additionto meeting the three non-conferencefoes, the Boilermakers, champions in1929 and runners-up this season, willmeet Illinois, Wisconsin, Chicago,Iowa and Indiana in Big Ten en¬counters. Negotiations to fill theNovember 7 date are still in prog¬ress.Addition of Carnegie Tech adds alot of color to the schedule, forCoach Waly Steffen’s gridders haveearned a firm resting place amongthe top-notch football combinationsof the country, and the game is ex¬pected to be one of the leading in¬tersectional encounters of the sea¬son.Coe, one of the two foes that theBoilermakers will meet in the doubleheader that opens the season, wonthe Midwest conference title for thethird successive year this season, andis expected to provide plenty of com¬petition while Western Reserve willcomplete the afternoon’s footballentertainment.The 1931 Purdue schedule as com¬pleted to date follows:Oct. 3—Coe and Western Reserveat Purdue.Oct. 10—Illinois at Purdue.Oct. 24—Purdue at Carnegie Tech.Oct. 31—Purdue at Chicago.Nov. 7—Open.Nov. 14—Iowa at Purdue.Nov. 21—Purdue at Indiana.SPECIALHOLIDAY FARESalmostevcrv>^ Burlingtonhere RouteRound trip tickets at only one-third more than the one-wayfare, between all points on The Burlington, and to manypoints on connecting roads throughout the West. Tickets onsale Dec. 19th to 24th inclusive. Return limit Jan. 6th.Round trip also to California or the Pacific Northwest for one-third •more than the one-way fare. Going and returning via different routesif desired. Tickets on sale Dec. 16th to 22nd inclusive; and again(to California) on Dec. 26th. Return limit Jan. 15th.Still Lower —Round trip to California at one-uxiy fare plus 50c. . . going and returning via same route. Tickets on sale Dec. 16thto 22nd inclusive, and on Dec. 26th. Return limit Jan. 15th.Tickets are first class and are good in sleeping cars upon paymentof regular Pullman fare.Special low one-way rates to California for tickets good only incoaches or chair cars. Tickets on sale now and daily during Decembei.FOR FULL PARTICULARSPHONE. WRITE OR SEEBURLINGTON TRAVEL BUREAUS179 West Jackson Phone Wabash 4600S. J. Owens, General Agentor UNION STATIONJeckfon 6 Cen«| Phone Franklin 6700 THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12. 1930 Page FiyeiSENIOItS ESTABLISHREGISTRAnON MAKE%One Hundred and FortyStudents Sign UpFor ElectionA record number of one hundredforty Seniors registered during thefirst day of the Senior class regis¬tration for the election of their classpresident. This number is justdouble that registered for the Se¬nior class election last year, and sinceregistration is to continue today thetwo hundred mark will probably bepassed. Booths are located in Cobbhall, Mandel hall, the Law building,and Ida Noyes hall, and are openbetween the hours of 9 and 12:15.The election is scheduled to takeplace Tuesday. Voting booths willbe located in Cobb hall and probab¬ly in the Law building and Mandelhall.Candidates for the Senior classpresident are David Cochran, Ray¬mond Fried, Orvis Henkle, and Er-ret Van Nice. Cochran is a memberof Sigma Chi fraternity. Fried isformer editor of the Cap and Gown,a University Marshal, a member ofthe Men’s commission, a member ofthe Undergraduate council and thevfarsfty track teanv Henkle is amember of Phi Gamma Delta, cap¬tain of the polo team, and an adju¬tant in the R. 0. T. C. Van Nice isa member of Delta Kappa Epsilon,a member of the Men’s commission,and of the Honor commission. He isalso" a University Marshal and wascaptain of the 1930 University foot¬ball team.CLASSIFIED ADSENGLISHMAN teaches Latin,Italian. P. R. Irvine, 5143 HarperAve., Plaza 8692.TO RENT—2 conn. frt. rnis. 4wind. $32 a mo. Sgl. rm. $4 a wk.Hskp. S527 Maryland Ave.FOR RENT—Furn. 2 & 3 rm. apts.Real kitchen. Priv. bath. Wall beds.Very reas. 5704 Kenwood Ave.Dorch. 3761. MACS CAPTURE I-MWATER CARNIVAL(Continued from page 1)third; Horn, Chi Psi, fourth. Time— :20 4-5.Fancy DivingUpperclass fancy diving—Griffin,Delta Sig, first; Rafelson, Macs, sec¬ond.Freshman fancy ^ving—Robert,Deke, first; second, vacant; Seder,Phi Beta Delta, third.Upperclass 160 yard free style—Grossman, Macs, first; Levine, Macs,second; Geppinger, Phi Delt, third;Borst, D. U., fourth. Time—2:08 3-5.Freshman 160 yard free style—Connelly, Phi Pi, first; Lerber, unat¬tached, second; Horn, Chi Psi, third;Breen, Phi Delt, fourth. Time—1:50.Upperclass 60 yard back stroke—Borst, D. U., first; Sharnborg, C. T.S., second; Harris, Phi Pi, third.Time—:42 1-5.Freshman 60 yard back stroke—Bellstrom, unattached, first; Pickett,Beta, second; Stein, Macs, third;Zacharias, Phi Sig, fourth. Time—:42 1-5.Upperclass 100 yard free style—Geppinger, Phi Delt, first; Behr-stock Tau_Delt, second; OfTill, Kap¬pa Sig, third; Woodruff, Phi Pi,fourth. Time—1:18 4-10.Freshman 100 yard free style—Connelly, Phi Pi, first; Lerbeer, un¬attached, second; Page, Alpha Delt,third; Nicholson, Phi Psi, fourth.Time—1:02 1-10.Englewood Wins RelayThe High School relay was an add¬ed event run off between Calumet,Englewood, Hyde Park and Tilden.Englewood was first by half a length.Calumet, second, Tilden, third, andHyde Park, fourth. Trophies wereawarded to the winners.Medalettes were given to the plac¬ers in the Intramural events and thefirst three organizations were pre¬sented with cups. The races wereaccompanied by a small orchestra,which, along with varied decorationsmade the swimming meet a carnival.The wind-up on the program wasan exhibition water polo game be¬tween the Chicago Athletic club and1-2! encounter 8 to 4. The Maroons ledat the half by a 2 to 1 score. Mc¬Millan and Moore having accountedfor the tallies for Chicago and How¬ell for the visitors.A. A. Shows ClassDuring the second half, with thehome aggregation guarding the deepend the A. A. team forged ahead,making seven additional goals tothe Maroons’ two. The invadersworked smoothly and showed a su¬perior class of ball, but found plen¬ty of opposition in Coach McGilliv-ray’s men.The Cherry Circle squad is com¬posed of ex-stars and ex-olympicplayers for the most part. They wereable to pile a 13 to 0 victory overthe Northwestern team Wednesdaynight, and Northwestern lost nogames last year although they played .but three Conference engagement. IThe play last night was not of the 'most gentle variety, and the Chicago jteam showed that it is in need of 'further polishing before the Big Ten Jseason gets under way if it intends 'in recapture the circuit title. ^ JORDAN TAKES LEAVEFOR WINTER QUARTERProfessor E. O. Jordan, of the de¬partment of Bacteriolog;y, is secur¬ing leave of absence for winter quar¬ter to continue work in research atthe Gorgras Institute in Panama.It has been his custom for sometime to spend a part of each -yearin some research study. He is leavingthe University at the end of the fallquarter and will return in time toresume classroom instruction in thespring.CHRISTMASISSUEOUTWEDNESDAYWithinThree Months!You Can Go Into the Business Wbrld^Equipped to Fill Its Fine Positions!You are a college girl. When you enter the BusinessWorld, you should and can step at once into a posi¬tion of dignity, responsibility and good remuneration.Equip yourself to do just that by taking this intensive3 months course in Business Training. It is openonly to girls who have attended college. It isthe equivalent of six months of thorough training.Business executives recognize this course, and preferits graduates. Our Bulletin will be sent you withoutobligation. Write for it today.CoursBM start October 1, January 1, April 1 and July 1.MOSER BlJSIBnEISS COLLEGE^The Btuine»» College with the Univenity Atmotphere**116 South Michigan Ave., Chicago • Randolph 4347iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiAnnouncingthe opening ofTheBlackstoneHallTeaRoom#for the convenience of guests and friendsSaturday, December 13The 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“. ’ Bidll $2*50 per couple.Utah University Singing Or¬chestra will furnish the dancemusic from 7:30 to 12 p. m.The Blackstoiie Hall Tea Room“A Modern Tea Room*’FIVE SEVEN FOUR EIGHT BLACKSTONE AVENUEPage Six THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1930WOMEN PLAN TORECAST CAMPUSSOCIAL PROGRAM UNIVERSITY BULLETINFriday, December 128:30—Radio lecture; ‘‘Current Economic Problems, AssociateProfessor Harry Gideonse, Station WMAQ.IAn entire reorganization of the so¬cial program of the University wasthe topic under consideration at theBoard of Women’s Organizationsmeeting which took place last eveningat Ida Noyes hall.Mrs. Edith Foster Flint, chairmanof the University Women’s Council,announced the appointment of threemembers of the faculty, Miss Wolf,Miss Logsdon and Miss Smith, as acommittee on the investigation of thepresent social program. They willexamine the conditions as they are,with a special reference to the rela¬tion of Ida Noyes hall and the Rey¬nolds club to the campus as a whole.As an initial step in this examinationthey have already sent letters tovarious women’s colleges to inquireabout the kinds'of activities for whichtheir gymnasiums and club-rooms areused. I 10-5—Y. W, C. A. Christmas Bazaar, Ida Noyes hall.1 1:50—Divinity chapel, Joseph Bond chapel, special music andliturgical service.12—Y. W. C. A. Luncheon, Sun parlor, Ida Noyes hall.3:30—U Dance, Ida Noyes hall.5—Organ recital, the University chapel.6:45—Public lecture (Downtown): “Public Regulation of Business:The Problem of Marketing,” Professor William H. Spencer,the Art Institute.)7:30—Poetry club meeting, Ida Noyes hall.7:30—Walther league meeting, Y. W. C. A. room, Ida Noyes halL9—Pi Delta Phi formal. Gold room, Chicago Beach hotel.Saturday, December 138:30—Radio lecture: "Current Economic. Problems,” AssociateIda Noyes Social DirectorFor the direction of activities in iIda Noyes hall Ruth Willard sug- |gested an election by the students of ;a student advisory council. “Thereseems to be little response to the freedinners, holiday meals and openhouses which are held in the hall.’’she said. “I think that students arenot sufficiently conscious of the factthat Ida Noyes is their building andclub-house. It is possible that stu¬dent direction of the hall, or at leastthe election of a student director towork in conjunction with the presentdirector, would do a great deal to ^make for this consciousness.” I“Department of Social Education” jA full-fledged Department of So- Icial Education was proposed by RuthEarnshaw. Students found deficientin their social abilities and tenden¬cies would perhaps be required tocomplete a certain social program,designated by this department, be¬fore permission would be given themto graduate; and to cover the cost jof maintainance of a department such ^as this she suggested the addition of j$5 to the tuition bill of each student.Marion White counseled a tempo- ;rary arrangement to take care of the jimmediate problem at hand. Using ,the U dance committee as a basis, |she advised the organization of agroup of students who would arrange {a social program to appeal to thevaried interests of different groups.SUBSCRIBE TODAY FORTHE DAILY MAROON Professor Harry Gideonse, Station WMAQ.9—Faculty of the Divinity School and the Divinity Conference,Swift 100.10—^-Executive Board of the Graduate Facuity of Arts Literatureand Science, Cobb 115.1 1—Graduate Faculty, Harper M 11.11:33—Radio lecture: “Elementary German,” by Mr. WilliamKurth.12:45—Radio lecture: “Intermedate Spanish, Station WMAQ.Arthur Bechtolt. Station WMAQ.3—Dames club. Christmas carols, Mr. Vial and chorus, Ida Noyeshall.5:30—Radio lecture: “Elementary Spanish”. Mr. Arthur Bechtolt.Station WMAQ.1 0—Quadrangler dance, Blackstone hotel.Y. W. Asks Clothes iFor Aid of Strikers jUniversity women are requested tobring any old clothing they have anddeposit it in a box which will beplaced in the foyer of Ida Noyes hallMonday in an effort sponsored bythe Y. W’. C. A. to bring relief totfie strikers of the textile mills ofDanville, Virginia. Many of theformer employees of the mills were Y. W. C. A. members, and their onlymeans of support comes from outsidesources.Families can be adopted for $2.50a week, and monetary contributionsshould be sent to W. B. Spoiled,287 4th Ave., New York city.The workers in the South as awhole are unorganized and if thisstrike goes through it will be a defi¬nite step in the direction of the or¬ganization of labor. The strike ise non-violent attempt—the first of itskind in that district.Blowthe Whistlethat refreshesWhen you suffer from large and undiluteddoses of your fellows. When the milk ofhuman kindness seems to tour. Blow thewhistle for a minute's ”time out” on yourown account, to pause and refresh yourself.DrinKand Refreshing—/or the Pause-'—-LISTEN IN-.*-*.,Grandand Bice —*'**--FaiBOMSpatta ChaaqMoaa —Coca-ColaOreheatra Evety Wedncadaj10:30 to 11 p. aa. E. S. T.-*-*-Coaal to Coaat NBC Network In other words, go into a huddle with aglass or bottle of refreshing, deliciousCoca-Cola. It will make you captain ofyour soul again, ready to live—or die—for the dear old alma mater.Tka Coca-Cola CoBpaay, Atlaata, G*.Million GOOD TO GET WHERE IT ISy- THE STOREMARSHALL FIELCUp-to-the-minute in every oetail. Smart, peaklapels. Natty, wide shoulders. Slightly fitted atthe waist. Swagger, 19-inch trousers. Well tai¬lored. Trim style at prices that fit your allowance.YOUNG MEN‘S ROOM • THIRD FLOORCertainly—wi th all the winter pcoming along you could stand a newTUXEDO