tlPht ^ailp iKaroonVol. 31. No. 125. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, JUNE II, 1931 Price Five CentsNAME THREE TO I-MSENIOR CONTROLUNGBOARD FOR 1931-32Channer, Drummond,And Schmidt toHead WorkBANQUET TODAYElect cj'cer. Lynch, andHoward JuniorManagersThree juniors were elected yester¬day to a board which will govern theactivities of the Intramural depart¬ment next year. Frederick Channer,Alpha Delt, Forrest Drummond, PhiKappa Psi, and Lawrence Schmidt,Phi Pi are the men chosen for thesenior offices.In the past a general manager, apromotion manager, and a field man¬ager have held senior positions. Thisyear it was decided to eliminate thethree positions and place a board ofseniors in charge of the I-M depart¬ment. This was done to allow moreflexible management, and to inau¬gurate a period of expansion which isexpected to follow the reorganizationaccording to Ray Vane, generalmanager, Schmidt will be chairmanof the senior board.Choose Three JuniorsThe three junior managers chos¬en in yesterday’s election are: HenrySulcer, Psi Upsilon, F'all manager;Melvin Lynch, .Alpha Tau Omega,Winter manager; and Robert How¬ard, Psi Upsilon, Spring manager.Each of these man will be in chargeof the department’s activities duringone quarter of the year.Ten Sophomore assistants willserve next year. They are: FrankCarr. Phi Kappa Psi; Stanley Con¬nelly, .Alpha Delta ^i;’ Tom Gill,Chi Psi; Meyer Graff, Phi Beta Del¬ta, Joe Edmonds; Robert Hepple,Delta Upsilon; Rufus Reed, Chi Psi;Philip Shanedling, Phi Sigma Delta;Edward Zukow.ski, Phi Pi Phi; andRobert Schoenbrun, Zeta Beta Tau.The Intramural department willhold its annual banquet today atnoon in the Men’s Commons.Results of Tennis TourneyThe complete final results of theI-M tennis tournament played thisweek were announced yesterday. Inthe singles meet Curless, Deke, beatWoodard, Gates hall ti-3, 6-4, 6-3.Greenberg, Kappa Nu, downed Ball,Gamma .Alpha, in three sets to takethird place 5-7, 6-3, 6-3.It took Barta and Ball, GammaAlpha, five sets to win the title inthe major doubles tournament. Theyfinally triumphed over Howley andVerdier, Kappa Sigma, 2-6, 6-4, 3-6,6-3, 6-2. Woodard and Strow, Gateshall, took third place from McGui-gan and Jewell, A. T. O., 6-1, 9-11,8-6.First place in the consolationdoubles tourney went to Greenbergand Rubin, Kappa Nu, who won fromConway and Schroeder, Phi KappaSigma, in the finals. The third placetitle was captured by Sass andDrummond, Phi Psi, while Yarnelland Nicholson, Phi Psi took fourthplace.The winners of the singles anddoubles major tournaments haveeach been awarded a pair of tennisshoes by the Goodrich FootwearCorporation and College Humormagazine. Distribute 1200 Copiesof Cap & Gown TodayFeaturing five new sections,1200 copies of the 1931 Cap andGown will be distributed this af¬ternoon beginning at 2 in the Uni¬versity Bookstore. Students whohave already paid for the yearbook may procure them by pre¬senting their receipts. An addi¬tional one hundred copies haVebeen printed and will be placed onsale for $3.The annual will contain fifteenviews of the University, the namesof twenty-six thousand people,pictures of practically every un¬dergraduate organization, andwill be 506 pages in length. Var¬ious changes have been made inthe general style and makeup ofthe book, including a crimson andblack color scheme throughout.The election of member.s of thestaff of the Cap and Gown for 1932will be conducted tonight at theyearly dinner of the staff. RayV’ance is the retiring editor andWilliam Kinchcioe the retiringbusiness manager. VISITING PROFESSORS ORGANIZE FRESHMANOFFER NEW COURSES ORIENTATION GROUPCilkey AnnouncesChapel ProgramDuring Summer' Regular Religious ServicesI To Be Held NextQuarterAnnouncement of the program forthe Univer.sity chapel during thesummer .quarter w’as made yesterdayby Charles W. Gilkey, dean of thechapel. A regular religious servicewill be held at 11 each Sunday morn¬ing,. featuring faculty membei's as-• speakers. An organ -recital willbe given at 7 each Sunday eveningduring the Summer, a vesper serv¬ice will be held at 7 on Wednesdayevenings, and on Friday noons aUniversity chapel assembly will beheld. On every evening of theweek except Saturday, an organ re¬cital will be given at 7.List SpeakersThe list of speakers at the Sum¬mer quarter services is as follows:June 28, Dean Charles W. Gilkey;July 5, Shailer Mathews,, dean ofthe Divinity School; July 12, Rev¬erend A. FI. Holt, professor of So¬cial Ethics at the Chicago Theolog-icaj Seminary; July 19, Dean CharlesW’. Gilkey; July 26, Reverend FredFlastman, professor of Religious Lit¬erature and Drama at the ChicagoTheological Seminary; August 2,Professor A. E. Haydon, professorof Comparative Religion; August 9,Ernest W. Parsons, of the Colgate-Rochester Divinity school; August16, H. G. Wood, of Birminghapi,F]ngland, and lecturer on ChristianTheology in the summer school ofthe Theological seminary; August 23,Reverend Gaius Glenn Atkins of theAuburn Theological Seminary.HUTCHINS’ CLASSINVOKES AID OFCLASSICS IN EXAMFriars Close SeasonWith Smoker TodayMembers of the cast and of theproduction staff of “Captain Kidd,Junior,” will get together for thelast time at a Blackfriar smoker tobe held in Room A of the Reynoldsclub today between 2:30 and 5. Allmembers of the organization, includ¬ing lay brothers, are urged to at¬tend.Pins will be distributed to newlyinitiated Blackfriar members byFrank Calvin, Abbot of Blackfriars.Selections from the successes of pre¬vious productions will be revived andstars of the shows will entertain.This smoker is the first meeting ofall Blackfriar members since theelection of 1931-32 officers. Chet(Continued on page 2) “Abandon hope, all ye who enterhere”. Such was the inscriptionplaced on the door of Classics 10where twenty freshmen took the“comprehensive” examination at theclose of this year’s work in the Hut-chins-Adler honor course.The written part of the test wasgiven Tuesday evening from 7 to 10and was finished yesterday morning.Yesterday afternoon and this morn¬ing, the oral examinations of onehalf hour each were given beforemembers of the faculty and guestsfrom other universities. A specialquotation from Kipling was placedon the door yesterday. It read:“Lord God of hosts.Be with us yet.Lest we forgetLest we forget.”One of the essay questions was“Starting from Homer, take eachbook in the course, 40 in number,and make a list of all the other bookswhich it has influenced or to whichit is related in some way. Indicate(Continued on page 4) Appoint Ninety-three toSummer SchoolFacultyNinety-three professors from uni¬versities and colleges throughout thecountry will offer courses this sum¬mer as visiting professors at theUniversity, taking the place of fac¬ulty members who will be tempor¬arily out of residence. They willoffer courses in every department,the majority of them in the Biolog¬ical and Social Science divisions.Each University department willoffer a course by some visiting pro¬fessor, outstanding in his field. Inthe Economics department, a course [will be presented by Professor Her- jbert Joseph Davenport, professor ]emeritus of Political Economy at |Cornell university. |Univertity of Iowa Professor jAnother course in the economies |department will be instructed by IChester Arthur Phillips, professor of jBanking and Finance and dean ofthe College of Commerce at the Uni- Iversity of Iowa.Other authorities in their depart- imental fields will include: James An- jgus Doull, professor of Hygiene and ,Public Health from We.stern Reserve juniversity; Charles Vincent Taylor, |professor of Biology from Stanford; ;Reginald Harvey Griffith, professor iof English at the University ofTexas; Profes.sor Elizabeth Hazel-tine Haight, chairman of the Latindepartment at Vassar.German AuthorityProfessor Bert John Vos, head ofthe department of German Languageand Literature at Indiana, will givea course in the University Germanicsdepartment; Professor Arthur Wes¬ley Browne of Cornell will give in¬structions in organic chemistry; Pi’o-fessor itobert D. W. Conner of* theUniversity of North Carolina, willteach history and government; andEllsworth Huntington, research as¬sociate at Yale, will lecture in theGeography department.The College of Education will haveCharles Edwin Friley, dean of theSchools of Arts and Sciences at A.& M. College, Texas; Social ServiceAdministration, Professor Arthur'^Lawton Beeley of the University ofUtah; Graduate Library school,James Ingersoll Wyer, librarian atNew York State library; Law school,James McCauley Landi.s, professor ofLegislation at Harvard; Physics de¬partment, Karl K. Darrow, researchphy.sicist for the Bell Telephone lab¬oratories. Plan Flexible, PersonalAdvisory ProgramNext YearOrganization of a flexible, personalprogram of orientation for the menof next year’s Freshman class toreplace the complex and unsatisfact¬ory Green cap ritual and activity isbeing started this week by a select¬ed group of junior, senior and fac¬ulty men.An outgrowth of a recent meet¬ing of the Men’s Commission,in which the need for such aprogram was discussed, this ad¬visory board, composed of KennethRouse, Nathaniel Winslow, GilbertWhite, Dean William A. Scott, MaxSchmidt, and Chester Laing, has as¬sumed direction of the formulationof this progrram. They will select amanager before the end of this quar¬ter, and will name twenty studentadvisors, from the junior and seniorclas.ses of next year, who will under¬take the work of counselling theFreshmen men next fall.Will Pick 20 AdvisorsThis board has invited over thirtymen whom it believed interested insuch work to attend a meeting Mon¬day afternoon at 4 in room D of theReynolds club. From this group, thetwenty advisors and the studentmanager will be chosen.It is the hope of the advisory com¬mittee, as expressed at its first meet¬ing yesterday noon, that “prece¬dent, in the preparation of thisprogram, will be disregarded to in¬sure elimination of past dissatisfac¬tions. The Freshmen will be invitedto become members of one of thetw'enty groups which upperclassmenwill lead. Each group, it is hoped,will prove an avenue through whichthe new student may not only be-acquainted with Universityhi.story and institutions, but may fol¬low out his own interests in the va¬rious fields of University and citylife. It will be the responsibility ofthe senior adviser to arrange thosecontacts with University and civicpersonalities which the Freshmendesire, to furnish information re¬garding campus life and activities, toarrange those discussion groupswhich are desired, and to make anysimilar plans to further a flexible,personal and constructive programof Freshman orientation.”Freshmen Will Choose ActivitiesWhether or not the cheering C,an honor society for Freshman men,and other features of past Freshmanprograms are created again will de-(Continued on page 4) Tomorrow’s Maroon isSenior Gift to WorldJust as dawn broke over theChapel this morning, the Seniorsof The Daily Maroon issued a bul¬letin from their editorial office tothe effect that the last issue of theyear, which appears tomorrow,will be entirely in their hands. Inconsequence of this decision, theeditors agreed that it would beonly just to distribute the valedic¬tory number gratis..The entire senior board, EdgarGreenwald, editor, Abe Blinder,business manager, John Hardin,managing editor, Marion White,women’s editor, and Albert Ar-kules, senior editor, will jointlyassume responsibility for the edi¬torial content of the issue. It isbeing whispered in correct cir¬cles that the intellectual pow¬er of Friday’s paper will prob¬ably dislodge the New York Timesfrom its pre-eminent place inAmerican journalism. When ask¬ed to elaborate this rumor, the se¬niors looked mildly surprised butrefused to commit them.selves. PICK MCCARTHY ANDSTINNEn TO HEADUNDERGRAD COUNCILElected Last Night atFinal BanquetOf BodyPLAN YEAR’S WORKWill Consider Abolition ofDiploma Fee forGraduatesFaculty MembersLeave for TripsCovering WorldMarion Talbot TakesPosition as Dean inConstantinopleOnly Three LetterMen Return for ’31-’32 Swimming SquadAlthough only three letter menare returning to forvn a nucleus forCoach E. W. McGillivray’s 1931-1932Maroon swimming team, many cap¬able performers from the first yearsquad will fill the gaps left by thegraduating veterans. In fact Mc-Gillivray is looking forward to re¬building a team equal to those ofpast years which up to several sea¬sons ago had won more dual meets,taken more championships, andscored more points than any otheroutfit in the conference.A resume of the season just com¬pleted shows two wins against threedefeats for the swimming team anda second place in the conference forthe water polo team, having beendefeated by Illinois in an overtij/iegame, the last of the schedule. Theregular officials were unable to bepresent at this contest which neces¬sitated either the postponement ofthe championship game or the selec¬tion of inexperienced men as offi¬cials. Coach McGillivray with thetitle at stake showed true sports¬man’s colors when he accepted thelatter method.In the conference swimming meet,Cornelius Oker, undefeated all yearin the 100, was called upon to racethe 40 yard dash event three timesin one night due to a false start andthen, with an insufficient period ofrest after the previous two succes- jsive attempts in this event, failed jto qualify in his specialty, the 100. j^Continued on page 2) j W. A. A. Plans forAnnual Banquet inIda Noyes TonightNinety-five tickets have been soldto date for the annual Women’sAthletic a.ssociation banquet which isto be held tonight at 6:30 in IdaNoyes gymnasium. Those who havenot yet purchased tickets may obtainthem as late as noon today at thedesk in Ida Noyes hall, or at thebooth in front of Cobb hall. Ticketsare priced at one dollar, and all Uni¬versity women are invited to attend.Saleswomen must turn in all salesbooks at the Ida Noyes hall desk by1 this afternoon.Speakers for the banquet are Pro¬fessor Robert Morss Lovett, of thedepartment of English, representingthe faculty, and Miss Mary Courten¬ay, Dean of Women at Lindblom highschool, alumnae speaker.The twenty-two guests of honorwho have accepted invitations are:Miss Edith Ballwebber, Dean andMrs. A. J. Brumbaugh, Miss Mar¬garet Burns, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamBurton, Miss Mary Courtenay, MissGertrude Dudley, Mrs. George S.Goodspeed, Mrs. Adelaide Link, Mr.Robert Lovett, Mr. Harold Swenson,Miss Marion Talbot, Mr. and Mrs.Griffith Taylor, Miss Orsi Thompson,Miss Marian Van Tyle, Miss MarianWarner, Mr. and Mrs. FredericWoodward, and Miss Alma Wylie.The following twenty-four womenw’ere appointed by W. A. A. Board toassist as hostesses: Agnes Adair, Lu¬cille Alger, Marion Badgley, LeoneBaiHy, Mary Budd, Vivian Carlson,(Cuiittnued on page 4i Twenty-five members of the facul¬ty revealed their intentions yester¬day of packing their bags, bookingsteamship passages, and sailing forEurope, Asia and points east. All butone plan to return for the openingof the fall quarter.Three of this number are going“strictly on business”. Miss MarionTalbot, former dean of women at theUniversity, will sail in August forConstantinople where she will imme¬diately assume her duties as Deanof Women at the ConstantinopleWomen’s college. Dean Shailer Mat¬thews, of the Divinity school, willattend a church convention inSwitzerland; and Dr. Max E. Ober-mayer, of the department of Medi¬cine, will represent the University ata medical conve^ntion in Austria.Four Vi»it FranceFour professors will visit Francefor the summer on “purely pleasuretrips.” Pofessor Otto F. Bond of theFrench department. Professor Ed-son S. Bastin, head of the Geologydepartment, .\ssistant ProfessorDurbin Rowland, and Professor Ar¬thur G. Bovee of the School of Edu¬cation, who will take a group of stu¬dents w’ith him. Fourteen membersof a geography class under assist¬ant professor Henry M. Leppard willaccompany him to the. British Isleswhere they will carry on researchOther members of the faculty whoplan to spend the summer on thecontinent are: Dr. Percival Bailey,professor of Surgery; Herbert Blum-(Continued on page 4)NAME TEN MOREHONOR SCHOLARSFOR NEXT YEARTen more two year honor scholar¬ships beginning next fall were an¬nounced by the Scholarship Com¬mittee of the University. The totalnumber of two year awards isnow thirty-five. They are made an¬nually to high school students whohave ranked high in scholarship forfour years and have participated inathletics and activities, and will con¬sist of full tuition payment for sixquarters.Those receiving the awards are:G. Lawrence Brokate of Fremont,Ohio; William Claud Henry of Altus,Oklahoma; Ewald Martin Rosacransof Tecumseh, Michigan; RaymondWhitney of Grand Rapids, Michigan;Robert James Caldwell of KansasCity, Missouri; John William. Eng-berg of Kansas City, Missouri; Al¬bert Francis Beitel of San Antonio,Texas; Robert Bruce Carlton ofLong Beach. California, and DonaldEveieli Ralston ol Argyle, Illinois. Robert McCarthy and Alice Stin¬nett were elected president and sec¬retary, respectively, of the Under¬graduate council for 1931-32, at thebanquet last night attended by theretiring council and the new repre¬sentatives. They fill the offices va¬cated by Bud East and Marjorie Ca¬hill, who have served during the pastyear.McCarthy is a college marshal, ajunior business associate on TheDaily Maroon, a member of the edi¬torial staff of La Critique, of Black¬friars, of the Political Science Coun¬cil and of Sigma Chi. Miss Stinnettis an aide and a member of the Dra¬matic association and the Board ofWomen’s Organizations.Consider Next Year’s PlansBefore dissolving for the year, theretiring Undergraduate council rec¬ommended that the board for nextyear consider immediately on theopening of the fall quarter the possi¬bility of abolishing the ten dollardiploma fee required of each candi¬date for graduation before he isgranted his degree.A motion also was carried that thequestion of abolishing the sinkingfund for publications be referred tothe Board of Publications at its nextmeeting, .and that the...,counc|l exer¬cise its power of review over the de¬cision reached by this body. It w’aspointed out that, according to therevisions made in the constitution ofthe council at the last meeting ofthe student-faculty Board of Stu¬dent Organizations, Exhibitions, andPublications, the Board of Publica¬tions is now a subsidiary body to theUndergraduate council. Since it isunder the direction of the council,its decisions are made subject to theapproval of the council.Treasury In Good ShapeJeannette Smith and GeraldineSmythwick were appointed by Presi¬dent East to replace Sylvia Friede-man on the committee in charge ofthe Big Ten Track Meet, a socialevent conducted for entering fresh¬men during Freshman week in thefall.A financial report made by Mar¬jorie Cahill revealed that the coun¬cil closed the year with a balance of$175.Retiring President Bud East lastnight expressed the hope that thechanges in the constitution whichhave been recently made would en¬able the Undergraduate council ofnext year to regain the respect andpower which the body once enjoyedon campus.The revised constitution will bein effect for one year only, and atthe close of the Spring quarter of1932, a new constitution will beframed which will fit the council tooperate under the reorganizationplan of the University, which will bythen be in full operation.Judge Allen WillNot Speak at ReunionFlorence Ellenwood Allen, judgein the Ohio State Supreme Courtand former student at the Univer¬sity Law school, will not speak atthe Alumni Reunion banquet Satur¬day night in Hutchinson Co'mmons,as erroneously reported in yester¬day’s issue of The Daily Maroon.Judge Allen will attend the ban¬quet, as well as the InterfraternitySing, but she will not speak. How¬ever, she will speak on “Adventuresin Understanding” before the alum¬nae of the University in Ida Noyes at11:30 Saturday.Judge Allen is a graduate of theNew York University Law school,and she is now serving her secondterm on the Ohio bench.-’age Twoiatlg MaroonFOUNDED /N 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninKS. except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the AatuinnWinter and Springs quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, SbSl University Ave.Subscription rates $3.00 per year; by mail, $1.60 iier year extra. Single copies, five-oents each. .Entered as second class matter March Its. 1903, at the poet office at Chicago,Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of puolication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the W-«tem Conference Press AssociationEDGAR A. GREENWALD. Editor-in-ChiefABE L. BLINDER, Business ManagerJOHN E. HARDIN, Managing EditorMARION E. WHITE, Woman’s EditorALBERT ARKULES, Senior Editori ASSOCIATE EDITORSI MARGARET EGAN> HERBERT H. JOSEPH. Jr. ., JANE KESNER' LOUIS N. RIDENOUR, IIMERWIN S. ROSENBERGGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEFSOPHOMORE EDITORSI RUBE S. FRODINBION B. HOWARDJ. BAYARD POOLEGARLAND ROUTTJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSON ASSOCIATF BUSINESS MANAGERSROBERT T. McCarthy.lAMES J. McMAHONSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTS.(OHN CLANCYEDGAR GOLDSMITH0HE.STER WARDSOPHOMORE WOMAN EDITORSDOROTHY A. BARGEMAN . IN’GRED PETERSENMAXINE CREVISTON ELEANOR WILSONNight Editor: Louis N. RidenourAssistant: Warren EL ThompsonTHE LAST BLOTCH OF INKThe pride of every successive editor invariably is to write aswan song at the end of his term of office. The proper time has nowcome for us to remove ourselves to more propitious regions; hencewe take the liberty to develop a case of catharsis and utilize the lastpenful of ink in giving our sincere estimate of the University:The educational structure of the country is such that everyuniversity necessarily includes in its student ^body a predominantminority of those who do not get an education, do not want an edu¬cation, and do not deserve an education. They lead a shelteredlife in a halo of mellow experiences, attending classes now and then,attending parties oftener, and almost never attending anything seri¬ous or worthwhile. Their efforts in behalf of the ideal existence,which are usually backed by the funds of doting parents, haveearned a great many institutions the somewhat questionable reputa¬tion of educational country clubs.For some reason or reasons, perhaps found in the great numberof graduate students and the consciously high scholastic ideals, theUniversity has failed to conform. The student’s money, clothes, ap¬pearance, and social standing are forfeited to mental resourcefulness.The few who try to escape this circumscribed field are regarded inthe same light as additions to the local zoo—they are curiosities whohave no other value than that attributed to museum pieces.On the other hand, the persistent burrowing in what is arbitra¬rily assumed to be the best that has been achieved, has developed atype of cynicism on the quadrangles that is more artificial thannatural. We pride ourselves on laughing at such serious mishaps asathletic defeats; on being able to analyze individual moral codes;on being able to enjoy “Strange Interlude” or sit through one ofBertrand Russell’s lectures without getting a headache; or even onbeing able to pass hard examinations requiring more intelligencethan memory.While all this adolescent mimicry of the intelligentsia has itsown value, it is surpassed by other features. The University itselfis awfully sincere and thereby comes close to life. It takes itsstudent body to the top of the high mountain, shows it all the gloriesof the world, and then casually remarks that this is attainable byhard work, and that only. Hard work is preached as educationalsalvation, as the cure-all for everything. Its methods are conceivedin consistent grinding and its geniuses are born of hard labor. Atleast it gives its students a decent start.The activities and the social affairs are perpetually in a plightas actual as the present financial situation. One year marks an apex,the next a new low. Year in, year out, they fluctuate with theambitions and willingness of their leaders and the whims of an un¬stable student body. A good editor is a genius elsewhere; a goodbusiness manager a financial wizard. Even a mediocre person hasa distinct claim to fame.This unpitying, mature, and hard aspect of the quadrangles andeverything connected with them invariably causes the newcomer toregard them in bitterness for some time. High school idealists findit a bit difficult to erase the slate and begin over. But they do it.And after they get accusomed to the new turn of affairs, they feelimmensely superior and assure Chicago of a perpetual student body.The University has the peculiar tendency of making its studentsfight hard for an education by wilfully antagonizing them first. Thepsychology has proved its value by the results of practice.In accord with its principles of strict procedure, the University jhas stood for progress. It has in the brief period of forty years jliterally pulled itself by its own boot straps out of the mire of a |one-horse institution vith plenty of promises and no money, into jthe foremost class. It does not remain there. Next year it plods jfearlessly on.An institution of this type does not, and does not care to, in- Jepiie emotionalisni. ]t commands admiration . .. E. A. G. | THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. JUNE 11 . 1931—— — .is, — , , . , — ITHETRAVELUNGBAZAARByART HOWARDIntroducing once again DoctorsPeterson and Allen who are, forthe second time, writing in an ef¬fort to obtain this large whiteelephant. As has been said, per¬haps the winner will be announc¬ed. As Joe Cook says, '‘What?You aren’t kind to dumb animals?You wouldn’t have the birdiesthrow boys at the little stones,would you?”By Doctors Allen and PetersonOur Scotty Rexinger became achampion again last week-end. as youall know. Tuesday Scott received aletter from a little town out in Kan¬sas. The writer said his name wasRexinger, and he’d heard tell thatour Scotty was a pretty durn g^nxltennis player, and seeing as how heplayed a right snappy game himselfhe wondered if they were related. Onthe stationery was printed in largeletters ‘’Rex Hotel,” and under that.“J. Rexinger, Prop.” As far as Scottyknows, J. is no relative of his.* * «‘Way back to last summer and arather funny incident, especially ifyou know Hugh Riddle. Hugh spenthours installing one of those push-it-in-take-it-off cigarette lighters inhis yacht. The first day thereafterHugh used it to light a cigarette,shook it. and threw it overboard.Which is one of those things you readabout.* * *The other A, M. we wandered into jHarper (professors please notice!! ito find an angry mob muttering omin- ^ously in front of the elevator shaft. |Ten minutes passed and still no eleva- jtor showed up. Every now and thensome stroiig soul clambered up thestairway with much bumping of brief¬case. Other individuals sauntered offoccasionally with the smug smile ofone whose wavering conscience hasbeen bolstered up by a good alibi.Later, from our vantage point inthe Coffee Shop, we counted no lessthan ten of the almost-students. Theprexy was in Berea, and we couldn’tfind the butler to confirm the rumor,but our operatives report that theelevators aren’t allowed to run untila certain number of cokes per diemhave been rung up on the Coffee Shopregister. Bearing us out in this, thebalance-sheet last year showed the“take” as thirty-three grand. Whosaid our elevators weren’t run on asystem?* * *It’s a question whether the piesentdepression is hurting the endowmentbusiness or whether the Universityis going aesthetic. Except for thedebris being carried out of Haskelland piled about, there is no con-ordestruction work going on about themain quadrangles, lilac bushes havebeen blooming, and all is green andwholesome-like. This is not the cam¬pus we used to know. Come,come, Mr.Hutchins, some buildings—please! '• • ♦ jIf you want the low-down on the 'Kampus Kouples these days, don’tLowestCost Only Three LetterMen Return for ’31-’32 Swimming SquadI (Continued from page 1;I The following night, although ill, heI placed second in the finals of the40 yard dash. The finish of the firstfive men in this event was separatedby a matter of split seconds and thedecisions were generally questionedby the coaches present. Oker hasI equalled the world’s record of 18 2-5; seconds in the 40.Water Polo TeamThere are eight experienced swim¬mers returning to next season’s wa¬ter polo team with Gordon Ritten-house, the captain; James McMahon,and Ralph Earlandson, captain of theswimming team, the outstandingperformers. Laufman, goal; Elam,East, Goodnow, and Chalex will helpfill the places left by Captain DonMacMillan, Don Moore, Andy Bris»-len, and Oker. In addition, Bells-trom, Bud and Jim Marron, Connol¬ly, Liptke, Nahser, Larber, Sachs,Stein, and Levy will all serve to bol¬ster the team. Kaufman, Riel, Jacob¬son, Hatch, Robinson, Coulson, andSchoenbrun round out the squad.With McGillivTay, the polo teamshows great promise and is recogniz¬ed as one of the favorites in the con¬ference. The outfit intends to try outfor the Olympics in water polo nextyear and has an even chance ofqualifying.. Driving DivisionEarlandson, captain of the swim¬ming division of the squad, is thefastest da.sh man left on the team.He will also be the main stay of the440 yard relay team together withConnolly, Levy, and Goodnow orSachs. The breast stroke events willbe handled by McMahon and Ritten-house. Rittenhouse will swim theback stroke in which event Chalex,Stein and Bellstrom a’lso enter- jed are showing up well. Con- jnolly who won the river race twoyears ago and fini.shed second lastyear, is the outstanding performer Iin the 440. Lorber will probably behis team mate in this event. Sachs 'show's up well in the 220, the most jgruelling of the races, while Earland- |son, Goodnow, and Elam may also beused. Iask us. There are too darned many ofthem! The best way to do is to takeyour car, or your friend’s car, ormost anybody’s car, and go for a ride iin Jackson Park. On a Sunday after- ,noon you can thus get all the low-down you want. Just remember,though, that it’s spring and most ofthese arrangements are, we’re afraid,only temporary. And if you see us,don’t tell anybody! j* * *We nominate for today’s lousiest— IThe Hat Song: Chapeaux I had never jmet you! | Graduation GiftSuggestions!U. of C. Book Ends, Brass andBronze $ 1.90 to $ 10.00U. of C. Desk Accessories . . . 60c to $3.50U. of C. Compacts $ 1.50 to $ 10.00U. of C. Rings, Pins, Charms, etc.Fine Stationery, Roycraft Copperware,Brass Ware, Leather Goods.BOOKS — Poetry, Fiction, Non-FictionFine Bindings, Limited Editions. TheBest of the Recent Books.Woodworth’sBook Store1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsThe Largest Book Store Outside the LoopFINCHLEYFeaturesThursday, Friday and Saturday OnlyHome!DURING these last hectic days,some of u.s are badly in need ofa good dollar-stretcher. Whatwith “farew’ell” parties and“home-coming” parties, a rig¬orous economy must be prac¬ticed someplace in between.You can save a sizeable sum bygoing home the Greyhound \vay.Best of all you’ll have morefun.Campus AgentsLESTER" F. BLAIRUniversity of Chicago5758 Ellis Ave.Phone Plaza 3858LAWRENCE J. SCHMIDT5643 Dorchester Ave.Phone Fairfax 8976* ' orPhone Wabash 7700, UNION BUS DEPOTRoosevelt Rd. at Wabash Ave.GREYHOUND DEPOT6Srd and Stony IslandGRE^^VNP FOULARD TIES Regularly $2.00 to $2.50 *1^5SWEATERS Regularly $7.50 to $10.00 $A .35GOLF HOSE Regularly $3.00 $1 .95HANDKERCHIEFSLil;'”Regularly $12.00 dozen 5e.85T//EJackson Boulevard East of StateTHE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1931 Page Three/4hi Alumni Return to Campus for Reunion DayCARL DEFEBAUGH TOHEAD ALUPI FETEALUMNAE PLAN FORANNUAL BREAKFAST DIRECTOR OF SINGJudge Allen WillGuest of HonorAt Event beJudp:e Florence Allen, the onlywoman justice in the United States,will be the guest of honor and prin¬cipal speaker at the annual Junebreakfast Saturday at 11:30 in IdaNoyes. The event is sponsored by theChicago Alumnae club.Other guests of honor include Mrs.'George S. Goodspeed, retiring direc¬tor of Ida Noyes “Mrs. William Ran¬ey Harper, wife of President Harper;Mrs. E. n. Burton, wife of PresidentBurton; Mrs Edith Foster Flint, re¬tiring chairman of the Woman’s Uni¬versity council; and Mrs. AdelineLink, new chairman of the Woman’sUniversity council.Searcy Responds For SeniorsMrs. Flint and Mrs. Link will re¬present the University in welcomingthe graduating women, who have re¬ceived special invitations to the ranksof the alumnae. Jean Searcy, chair¬man of the Board of Women’s Organ¬izations, will respond for the .seniors.Tables have been reserved for theclasses of 1906, 1911 and 1916. Addi¬tional reservations should be sent toMiss Gladys Finn, treasurer of theChicago Alumnae Club, in Cobb 300.Officers of the Club are Mrs. F.H. Lane,‘OK, president; Mrs. ThurberG. Essington, ‘08, vice-president; Mrs.James M. Evans secretary; and Miss;Gladys L. Finn, ‘24, treasurer. Ar¬rangements for the breakfast are inthe hands of Miss Finn and Mrs.George N. Simpson, ‘18. S. Edwin Earle, who has directedthe Interfraternity Sing for the pasttwenty years. Mr. Earle again rep¬resents the alumni in the arrange¬ments for this year’s sing, workingwith the student chairman, GeorgeVan der Hoef. Mr. Earle is a mem¬ber of the class of 1911.Senior Gift Fund toSurpass Last Year’sThe Senior gift fund, with 208 sub-.scriptions of $5 or more already re-C'iived, will probably surpass that oflast year. On the basis of last year’sreturns, the fund should number ap¬proximately 500. Errett Van Nice,ex-captain of the football team, andpresident of the Senior class, was incharge of the fund.All money received will be turnedover to the Alumni Gift fund, as thefirst payment of an annual aub.scrip-tion. All subscribers get the Univer¬sity of Chicago Magazine.What is being wornin sports wearby WintersGOLFsuit is main-Onc of the most favored styles of thissummer is the sport coat. The gabar¬dine sport jacket or the single breastedjackets of natural camel hair, or theblue or brown flannel, has proved pop¬ular. These coats are not only muchin evidence at sporting affairs, but alsoat summer resorts, and the clubs.Linen suits, with vest, are becomingmore the young man’s fashion.These are especially comfort¬able and smart at social events -w-, ,, , -t-l I n* rour-pieceof the summer season. 1 he ^ ,Linen vest can be worn with popularity it haddark suits, or in a summer for- last year. The rougher fabricsmal combination. Worn with are the most favored. Whilethe two- tone shoe they present middle western colleges, very pleasing appearance.Their has been a noticeable in¬crease in the demands for the Pockets has not been seen sowhite buckskin shoe, that has much as in the Elast, many ofbeen worn so much at Prince- the best dressed men are turn-ton. The brown and white garment. The longwing tippe ox or s ave een jj either in flannel ormore popular than the black • i • i •and white. The demands of ‘^e harder materials is beingfashion almost necessitate at seen often at the better clubs,least one pair of these shoes. Flannel knickers are beingGolf shoes also are showing ^Qrn for not only their style,thi. trend. The moccasin or comfort,tip shoe are in two-tonealso with ^ore dura b 1 e sweater and hose sets orleathers. Ties are getting i, .If 1 • the separate items are general-away from the former plain- i • i jness. The new rough weaves, *y worn in the plain shades.striped linen, and the pastel This year the color harmony ofshades in neatfigures and de¬signs to contrastand match theensemble fit wellin with thebrightness o frlress this season.For sportswearthe collar pinand tie clasp areworn to keep thecravat out ofthe way andlooking neat. Sport Coats$10.00 • $15.00Flannels$7.50 - $10.00Knickers$6.00 - $10.00Golf ShoesSpikes$7.50Linen SuitsWith Vest$16.50 these accessoriesis contrasted tothe outfit, ratherthan the mono-tcolor combina¬tions of lastyear. The pastelshades are thesmartest. Withthe bright color¬ed neckwear thisseason, allsweaters areshown in the V-neck.The College Shop1357 East 55th Street Invite Class o f *31 to ReunionBy Charleton T. Beck, Chairman of the Alumni CouncilTo you who are about to be awarded degrees, the AlumniCouncil extends salutations and congratulations—And a welcome to the ranks of the alumni—And an invitation to join with the alumni of formeryears in celebrating Reunion Day on Saturday, June 1 3.A program ranging from the innocuously infantile to theinspiringly intellectual will be staged on the campus throughoutthe afternoon and evening.You are invited most cordially to join in the festivities.You may enter the Scooter Races, the Pingpong Tournament,the Can-Opening Contest or the Rolling-Pin Throw for Dis¬tance,—You may listen to the President and Dean Boucherat the assembly,—You may join in the dance at Bartlett—You may engage in countless other activities,—OR you areprivileged to stand on the side-lines and get material for adoctor’s thesis on the Mental Coefficient of Bachelors of Philo¬sophy in the Early Twentieth Century.In brief, as active participant or as objective observer, youare invited to attend the Reunion!PAST YEAR BRINGSHIGH DISTINCTIONSTO FOUR ALUMNFA builder of ports, a member ofthe Federal Re.serve Board, KnuteRockne’s successor, and the newpresident of the Chicago Stock Ex¬change are four University alumniwho have earned distinction in thepast year.Colonel Benjamin C. Allin, ex ’08,has contributed to the constructionof the harbors of Houston, Texas,Stockton, California, and Bhavnagar,India, his latest project. On his re¬turn journey he will speak at the In¬ternational Congress of Engineers inRome.Wayland Wells Magee, recentlyappointed agricultural representativeon the Federal Reserve Board, is abreeder of live stock and certifiedfield seeds in his spare time, ownerof the Wyoming ranch, and presi¬dent of the Nebraska Crop-Growersa.ssociation.Jesse Harper, selected to carry on !the work of the late Knute Rockne !in turning out national championshipfootball teams year after year, lefthis post as manager of a huge ranchin Clark County, Kansas, to becomedirector of athletics at Notre Dame.He is credited with having taught PLANS COMPLETEDFOR TWENTY-FIRSTANNUAL I-F SINGS. Edwin Earle, ’ll, in charge ofthe twenty-first Interfraternity singunder his management, has predict¬ed fair weather for the annualevent, which is to be held Saturdayat 7:30 in Hutchinson court. Notonce in the twenty years has it rained on the evening of the Sing.Twenty-eight fraternities will singtwo songs each, beginning at 7:30.The program will be broadcast overW.MAQ from 9 till 9:30. After thelast of the fraternities has sung, “C”blankets will be presented to thegraduating “C” men, and the newmarshals and aides will be installed.The three cups given in the past,for quality of singing, greatest totalnumber of participants, and greatestnumber of Chicago alumni, will notbe awarded this year. George Vander Hoef has been appointed by theInterfraternity council to act as stu¬dent chairman of the sing.Rockne the fundamentals of hisfamous style of play.Paul H. Davis, ’ll, the first manto win his “C” in gymnastics, was re¬cently elected president of the Chi¬cago Stock Exchange to succeed R.Arthur Wood.44/9f'That was takenin 1931when I graduated.5. 10, 15years from now, willyou be able to bringback time?Place yourself in the future. Realize the valueof a likeness which a Daguerre Photographgives, and its worth as you look back over whathas been one of your best experiences, your lifeat college.As a gift to a mother, a sweetheart or to a dearfriend, a picture is not only in good taste, butlends itself to a sentimental attachment whichno other thing can give so beautifully or durably.t'or graduation pictures, theDaguerre Studios will furnishthe caps and gowns, free ofcharge.The usual discount of 33 1-3 percent off studio rates u'ill begiven.DaguerreStudiosTelephone Wabash 0526 for appointments.213 So. Wabash Ave, , ! HEADS PROGRAMProgram PlannedEntire Day forCarl W. Defebaugh52 Alumni ClubsTo Send DelegatesDelegates of alumni clubs fromNanking, China and Ogden, Utah, toSalem, Massachusetts, will attend thefirst annual conference of Alumniclubs in the Quadrangle club Satur¬day at 9:30. Breakfast will be servedfrom‘8 until 9:30.Although invitations to the confer¬ence were sent out by wire only Sat¬urday, 52 acceptances have been re¬ceived to date by Charlton T. Beck,secretary of the .41umni Council.-President Robert Maynard Hutchinsand Harold H. Swift, chairman ofthe 'ocarJ of trustees, will speak. Carl W. Defebaugh, Jr., ’16, ischairman of the reunion committeefor the annual Alumni programwhich begins Saturday morning at9:30 with a conference of AlumniClub delegates and ends in the eve¬ning with the traditional Interfrat¬ernity Sing and the Alumni Dance.Among the events of the day area baseball game between the classesof ’16 and ’17, a pingpong match,an archery exhibition, a revue inMandel, and the National Interschol¬astic Track meet. The program fol¬lows:9 A. M. — CONFERENCE OFALUMNI CLUB DELEGATES —THE QUADRANGLE CLUB.11 A. M.—Traditional 1916-1917Ball Game—The Circle.11 A. M.—ALUMNAE BREAK¬FAST—IDA NOYES HALL. Guestspeaker—Judge Florence E. Allen,ex. ’12, Law, Columbus, Ohio.1 P. M.—1916-1917 Luncheon—Hutchinson Court.1-4:30 P. M.—REGISTRATION-REGISTRATION BOOTH, THECIRCLE.1-4 P. M.—Inspection of Men’sNew Dormitories—Take the Busfrom The Circle.1-4 P. M.—Oriental Institute, TheUniversity Clinics, and Chapel opento Alumni.1:30 P. M.—National Interscholas¬tic Track Meet—Stagg Field.2-4 P. M.—FIELD ACTIVITIES—ADJACENT TO THE CIRCLE.Indoor Base-ball, Horse-shoePitching, Golf, Pingpong, ScooterRaces, Can-openir|f Contest, Roll¬ing Pin Contest, Croquet, Arch¬ery exhibition.3:30 P. M.—FINALS,—ALUMNI(Continued on page 4)lor araJudtigraoif loa. I/>re/ereM^E LG INMoments that count shouldbe marked by gifts thatcount. There is no finer way ofsaying congratulations than with anElgin. An accurate, dependabletimepiece that will tick your bestwishes for a lifetime.The girl graduate will appreciate this exqui¬site engraved Lady Elgin. An accurate depend¬able timepiece that will be a lasting reminderof the giver’s good iudgmentThis Elgin would surely please the mostpanicular graduate. 15 jewel Elgin movementin popular shape case with attractive wristband to matchOther ELGINS <15 to <650THK HAWK QW QUAUT'V1225 E. 63rd Streett i LPage Fou THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. JUNE 11, 1931THE STORE FOR MENMARSHALLFIELD &COMPANY/t’s goingto b// lack a//seasonfor Qolf!No need for a belt—tfghteD or loosenthe side buckles.Plenty of spacearound the bottoms—the cuffs come tothe ankles, allowingthe air to circulateinto the trousers.—and because all indi-cations point to a'^slack season” you’llnow find on The Sports¬man’s Floor a completecollection of this newcomfortable type ofgarment. Prices andfabrics range fromLINENSAT *5^* TOIMPORTEDWORSTEDFLANNELSAT *15The Sportsman'*s FloorThe FifthFull Munhull Field QualityAt Today's New Low Prices UNIVERSITY BULLETIN:8- Thursday, June 11-Radio lecture, “Modern Trends in World-Religions,” ProfessorA. Eustace Haydon, department of Comparative Religion,Station WMAQ.12—Divinity chapel, “The Ministry of Poetry, 111,^’ Associate Pro-' fessor Davis Edwards, Department of Public Speaking,Joseph Bond chapel.2:30—Blackfriar Smoker, Reynolds club.3—Alumni-varsity baseball game. Greenwood held.114:30—Physics club, “Magnetic Rotation Spectra of the Alkali Mole¬cules,” Professor Wheeler Loomis, the University of Illinois,Ryerson 32.I 4:30—Tea, Divinity school. Swift Commons. •!4:30—Public lecture, “Social Changes in China,” Dr. Leonard S.Hsu, Professor of Sociology, Yen Ching University, Peking,China, Harper Mil. ^6—“C” banquet, Hutchinson Cafe. Faculty MembersLeave for TripsCovering World(Continued from page 1)er, instructor in the Sociology depart¬ment; Dr. E. E. Irons; professorThomas Young of the department ofBiology; professor Douglas Waples,of the School of Education; MissWinifred VerNooy, of the UniversityLibrary; associate professor Ger¬trude Smith; William MacClintock,professor emeritus of the English de¬partment; James R. Hulbert, of thedepartment of English; Sir William ‘Craigie, professor in the English de-1partment; assistant professor Fred iB. Millett of the English department^ }Dr. C. M. Childs of the Biology de- {partment; professor Samuel Allisonof the Physics department; andRalph Sanger, instructor of Mathe¬matics.W. A. A. Plans forAnnual Banquet inIda Noyes Tonight(Continued from page 1)Barbara Cook, Helen Dempster, Ger¬trude Fenema, Esther Feuchtwanger,Mary Lou Forbrich, Sylvia Friede-man, Margaret Hill, Jeanne Hyde,Ruth Lyman, Mary Ellen Malloy,Elizabeth Merriam, Martha Miller,Isabel Petersen, Mary Virginia Rock¬well, Jean Searcy, Dean Seymour,Harriet Ann Trinkle, and EstherW eber.Baseball has been chosen as thetheme for the evening, and Vice-president Frederic Woodward willdeliver the opening welcome entit¬led “Play Ball.” Professor Lovettwill follow with “Over the Plate,”while Harriet .4nn Trinklt will call“Safe at First.” Margaret Hill, pres- jident of the organization, presents“Double Play,” and Miss GertrudeDudley, Director of the Women’sdepartment of Physical Education,concludes the game with “HomeRun.” The singing of the “AlmaMater”, closes the evening’s pro¬gram.During dinner silver loving cupswill be awarded by Margaret Hill toMildred Hackl, winner of thewomen’s golf tournament, and tothe winner of the annual ten-his tournament. Harriet Ann Trin¬kle is to present banners to classchampions, and Miss Gertrude Dud¬ley the honor pins to members of W.A. A. for athletic achievements forthe past year.Barbara Cook, toastmistress of thebanquet, and Mary Budd have beenco-chairmen for all arrangements.Ticket sales have been conductedunder Esther Fuechtwanger. andHarriet Ann Trinkle is in charge ofdecorations. Carl Defebaugh ToHead Alumni Fete Hutchins’ ClassInvokes Aid ofClassics in Exam(Continued from page 3)TENNIS CLUB TOURNAMENTVarsity Tennis Courts3 :30 P. M.—PINGPONG EXHIBI¬TION—ROSENWALD HALLLeininger, ’30.Coleman Clark ’20, Robert Clark’15, J. Stevens Tolman, ’15, J. H.Leininger, ’30.3-4 P. M. — DEPARTMENTALTEAS: Humanities and Social Sci¬ences—Swift Commons Room; Phys¬ical and Biological Sciences—Eck-hart Commons Room.4 P. M.—Twentieth Annual In¬formal Class Meeting of Class of1911 at the Dean’s House, 5802Woodlawn Avenue.4 :30 P. M.—REUNION REVUE—Mandel Hall.5:45 P. M.—REUNION DINNER:Hutchinson Commons; Class of 1911is dining in Hutchinson Cafe.5:45-10 P. M.—REGISTRATION—Reyjiolds Club Cloister7 P. M.—ALUMNI ASSEMBLY—Mandel Hall :Speakers: PresidentRobert Maynard Hutchins, DeanChauncey S. Boucher.8 P. M.—THE INTERFRATERNI¬TY SING—Hutchinson Court: Induc¬tion of Aides and Marshalls—Presen¬tation of C Blankets. Alma Mater.10-12 P. M.—ALUMNI DANCE—Bartlett Gymnasium. (Continued from page 1)by a word or phrase in each case thenature of the influence or the rela¬tion.” Another was “Discus Hom¬er, Herodotus, Thucydides, Plutarchand the New Testament as histories,as biographies and as literature,” oragain, “Write the table of contentsand the preface for a book entitled‘Orthodoxy and Heresy from Augus¬tine to Aquinas’.”CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT—Attractive furnishedbungalow. Reasonable. Sag. 3807.7321 Paxton Ave.WANTED — Congenial girl toshare apt. with student fall quarteretc. 1931-32. Call Mid. 1584. J.Norton.TO^ RENT—5 rm. summer cottagein Onekama, Mich. Running water,bath, screened porches, elec. Midway0681.M.A.ID—Leaving town; would liketo find place for maid, honest andtrustworthy. Phone Hyde Park4352.LOST — During Blackfriars, 45Colt revolver. Valuable as keep¬sake only. Reward $15. No questionsasked. Call H. P. 3250.Jean Rhys ElectedChanning Club HeadChanning club officers elected forthe coming year are President, JeanRhys; Vice-president, Byron Dun¬ham; and Secretary-treasurer, E.Willys Andrews. The new officersare planning a program of dramaticsfor the coming season in continuationof the little theatre movement whichwas initiated this year.The club will continue its sessionsduring the summer quarter on Sun¬day afternoons at the First Unitar¬ian parish house. One summer fea¬ture will be the Dunes conferencefrom June 18 to June 21.The organization is sponsored bythe First Unitarian church and iscomposed of students front the Uni¬versity and Meadville TheologicalSeminary. Organize FreshmanOrientation Group(Continued from page 1)pend on the desire and interest thatis expressed by the Freshmen them¬selves, for the entire program willbe based on those activities aboutwhich they express a curiosity andinterest.The group of students which willmeet Monday to discuss the natureof this program, and from which thestudent manager and twenty advis¬ers will be selected, is composed ofRay Vane, John Bobbitt, JosephSherry, Max Schmidt, Merwin Ros¬enberg, Louis Ridenour, GilbertWhite, Nathaniel Winslow, I^enryMascal, Everett Olson, Kenneth. Mul¬ligan, Laurence Apitz, Carl Ander¬son, Errett Van Nice, Louis Engel,Morris Brookens, George Van derHoef, Fred Channer, Enos Troyer,Harry Ashley, Stoddard Small, Wil¬liam Custer, Robert Howard, KeithParsons, James Porter, WarrenThompson, Ray Zenner, Jerome Jon-try, Newton Todhunter, and ScottRexinger. FOR RENT—For Professor’s fam¬ily for July and August. 7 room cor¬ner home in Beverly Hills. Beauti¬ful grounds. Completely furnished.Oil heat. Frigidaire. Grand piano.Radio. Sleeping porch. Garage. Neargolf, transportation. Reasonable. Tel.Beverly 2501. EDCEWATER BEACH HOTEL5300 Block Sheridan Road ChicagoMARINE DINING ROOMPAUL WHITEMAN S ORCHESTRADancing Every Night Except SundaySUNDAYSDinner Concert till ten in the Marine Dining RoomSaturday, June 13thFORMAL OPENING OF BEACH WALK2t)0-C»r Garane in the Hotel, is available for your car.Telephone Longrbeach 6000Get Out the Blue Pencil—The seniors of The Daily Maroon, those sim¬ple, wistful and decrepit figures, whose soulshave gradually wasted away wielding the bluepencil in the highly intellectualixed atmosphereof their editorial sanctums, will emerge from thelengthening shadows tomorrow long enough toput out the last issue. It will be an exclusivesenior issue from first page to last, and althoughit is certain that the editors will be unable tosurvive the strain, they want posterity to remem¬ber them as martyrs to Service.As newspapers go, it is generally admittedthat the New York Times is one of the best. Butthen you haven’t read tomorrow's issue. Theseniors, knowing the terrific odds against them,are putting in their full varsity line-up, and thatalso means Art Howard and a valedictory Travel¬ing Bazaar which Walter Winchell is going totake time off to read.The varsity lineup for that last issue readsfrom left to right: Edgar Creenwald, editor, whowill write Editorial No. 119 and some scintillat¬ing front page features; Abe Blinder, THE bus¬iness manager, who has been saving his journal¬ism all year for this special occasion, John Hard¬in, the witty and saturnine managing editor,whose highly sophisticated countenance con¬ceals a heart of gold, Marion White, the wom¬an's editor who knows a lot more than is cus¬tomarily taught in classrooms, and Albert Ar-kules, the senior editor, who not only believes inthe better things in life but also in such fine in¬stitutions as. women, the drama. Boy Scouts,President Hoover, and the Oriental Institute.P. S. The issue will be distributed gratis. Theeditors will write in English, although Mr. Green-wald reserves the privilege to end his editorialwith a classic Creek proverb.Y .M.C.A. Cafeteria53rcl Street at Dorchester* A 40c Lunch at Noon* A 65c Special Dinner** Serving HoursX Breakfast 6:30—9:00Lunch 11:30—2:002 Dinner 5:30—7:45I SundayBreakfast 8:30—9:30V Dinner 12:00—2:00We Invite Both Men and Women BASKIN 133 S State Street336 N Michigan63r<l Streetat Maryland Lake at MarionOak Park5THE 1931 ‘LAKE DRIVE’ STRAWYOU’LL LIKE ITS STYLE, the smart effect ofits narrow brim and belled high crown. You'lllike the easy way it fits, its cool comfort andabove all its superb value, by Knapp^felt, ’5THE HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER ft MARX CLOTHESwm li- '■ 'l ..’'I .S'’ '' ■ ■: