fourth academicYEAR IS HINDRANCETO LAW STUDENTS,SURVEY INDICATESWm. Eagleton StudiesRecords Made by1000 MenPUBLISHED IN JOURNAL‘‘The fourth year of academictraininjf as preparation for lawschool is more of a hindrance thana help.” This is ifne conclusionreached by William L. Eajjleton, as¬sociate professor in the Law school,who has published results of hisrecent survey in the Illinois LawReview yesterday. He was assist¬ed in the survey by Nelson B. Hen¬ry, associate professor of edma^lon.This finding, which was a con¬siderable surprise to members ot theLaw school faculty, was reached af¬ter an inquiry into the schola.'”<^>«*achievements of more than 1,000students entering the Law scnoolfrom 1924 to 1930. The analysis ofextensive data secured over thisseven-year period shows that stu¬dents with only three years of un¬dergraduate training fared muchbelter in the Law school than thosewith a Bachelor’s degree.Grades VaryOver a period of seven years, theaverage grade of all those who en¬tered with four years of collegework was 65.6, the passing markbeing 60. The average of thosewho entered after three years ofcollege work was 68.6. This differ¬ence amounts to Tifteen percent inthe class standing.The survey shows that sixty-onepercent of the three year studentsobtained their Doctor of Jurispru¬dence degrees, while only forty-seven percent of those with fouryears of pre-legal training finishedthe law school. “If all students withaverages below 64 were eliminatedat the end of the first year (andthis is about what happens),” Pro¬fessor Eagleton says, ‘‘forty out ofevery 100 four-year men wouldhave been dropped, as comparedwith only twenty-six out of every100 ithree-year men.”Records AnalyzedIn an analysis of the records interms of the institution at whichthe law'sludents have received theircollege training, it was shown thatthose from this University scored.somewhat higher than those fromother colleges, but the proportion¬ate scores as between three-yearmen and the four-year men remain-(Continued on page 2)Religion Must BeFlexible—Dr. AmesDr. Edward Scribner Ames, pas¬tor of the University Church of Dis¬ciples of Christ, and chairman of thedojjartment of Philosophy, express¬ed the belief Sunday that religionmust essentially be subject tochange and development, andfurther^ that traSitions of religionshould not interfere with the freeJ'ein ^^hich science must be given.Religion “seeks to unite people inthe service of the highest ideals”;Dr. Ames continued, “these idealsshould never be fixed in the formf>f a creed which will hinder theirdevelopment and growth. Vital re¬ligion must use all that is best inthe modem world. In these days itmust Ke in harmony with the bestscience, must utilize the variousand champion the great causessocial welfare.These hard days of business de¬pression and threatened wars areurning attention to the deeperhmgs of religion an3 religious lead-‘'Js are now confronted with thevwand responsi- Christian Names 23R. O, T, C. Officers !The appointment of twenty- ;three R. O. T. C. officers was an- jnounced last week by Major T. J. IJ. Christian, officer of the United |States army and commander of theUniversity R. O. T. C. unit. The fol¬lowing men were promoted to FirstLieutenancies: James L. Goodnow';Burton H. Doherty, captain of thepolo team; Dan Seifer; and ByronEvans, member of the basketballteam. 1Herman R. Carsten.*? and DanielClark were made Second Lieuten¬ants. E. R. Tracy was made mas¬ter Sergeant of the University post.T. E. Jeffrey, A. F. Goeing, and H.C. Fischer were made technical Ser- ■geants. The newdy appointed staff |Sergeants are B. Benson, W. L. jFill, and E. S. Cieslak. The color iSergeants are Maurice Bame andHUNTRESS REUTES; JUNaE ANECDOTES; ^ro''e'''^s Go 'o CHeney-GoodeMemorial Committee! “Black Kings and Cannibal.s” andjust how they receive white visitorsin the jungle, will be told by MaryHai^tings Bradley, noted author andexplorer, next Monday at 8 in Man-del hall. The talk is for the ben-! efit of the Cheney-Goode Memorialcommittee, formed to perpetuatethe memory of Katherine Hancockj Goode and Flora Sylvester Cheney.I by the erection of a niemorial onthe Midway.I Mrs. Bradley has recently fefurn-; ed from a trip to Africa and willillustrate her lecture with motionpictures. She and her husband,Herbert E. Bradley, Chicago lawyer,have been exploring African jun¬gles for the pa.st ten years, visitingI out-of-the-way places, and bringingI back intimate knowledge of distantI tribes and specimens to add to mu-! seums as well as o1n frophies forI the “African Room” in their Chi-I cago home.j (Continued on page 2)PAUL G. HOFFMAN,AUTOMOBILE HEAD,I TALKS TOMORROWI The last of a series of five lec¬tures acquainting students with; business opportunities will be givenby Paul G. Hoffman, vice-presidentand general sales manager of theStudebaker corporation at 3:30 to-morroA^Tn 108, Haskell hall. Mr.Hoffman was graduated from theUniversity in 1912. While on cam¬pus he was prominent in student ac-tivi^s.He has had long experience inthe selling field, largely in the au-itomotive line. Having become affi¬liated with the Studebaker corpor¬ation in 1911, before his gradua¬tion. Mr. Hoffman spent manyyears in selling Studebakers on thePacific coast, where he was hon¬ored with the Presidency of the LosAngeles Traffic Commission, and aDirectorship in the Los AngelesChamber of Commerce.Mr. Hoffman served in the armyin 1917 and 918. Excepting those(Continued on page 3)COSMOS CLUB MEETSA round-table discussion of theShanghai crisis and the policy forthe United States to adopt towardit will be held this afternoon at4:30 at a meeting of the Cosmosclub in Social Science 301. Themeeting is for members only.The former subject of discussion,“Zionism and Kationalism” hasbeen postponed for another session.The public lecture meetings of theCosmos club are open to all inter¬ested students. INTRODUCING DORIS ROBBINS,RADIO ARTIST, PROM SINGERDoris Robbins, famous for herradio broadcasts over NBC and fea¬tured entertainer with Herbie Kay’sorchestra, has been engaged to ap¬pear at the Washington Prom Feb¬ruary 19 at the Drake. The writerlunched with Miss Robbins in herapartment at the Knickerbocker lastFriday.BY MAXINE CREVISTONDoris Robbins sipped her .'offeeand chatted about life, raaio, Her¬bie Kay, television, everything. Itwas hard to realize that here wasthe Doris Robbins, who holds theinterest of a country with her voice,Toys lay scattered on the flour, withtrain tracks in a disjointed heap,and a shiny green pullman cardented, boy-fashion, in the centerof its shiny top, while other carswere abandoned to one side . . . .yes, she has a four-year-old son! •She is a red haired, dark—onemight almost say sloe-eyed creaturewho knows the secret of makingpeople enjoy themselves; and in thepossessfon of that secret she andHerbie Kay have been filling theBlackhawk nightly these fivemonths. Just where or when DorisRobbins achieved the knack of en¬tertaining cannot be known for shehas entertained others since child¬hood, a childhood permeated withthe background of the theatre and“ba^stage atmosphere”, for herparents belonged (to the show world.First as stage actress, then fea¬tured entertainer and radio singer,and now as the holder of a two-year television c\ontract with theMusic Corporation of America, shehas fast become one of the mostimportant personalities in her field.One had only to listen to her sing“River Stay ’Way From "MyDoor” over the Lucky Strike pro¬gram Saturday night (she is thesecond woman ever to sing over the ENTERTAINS AT PROMDoris RobbinsLucky Strike hour), or “Time OnMy Hands” later from the Black-hawk, to understand why.Memories of the luncheon chatreturn in fragments: the story of(Herbie Kay decorating a Christmastree for Tier small son and blowingthe fuse when plugging in to startthe new electric trains; of a “per¬fectly swell” diary that some admir¬er left for her in the Knickerbock¬er lobby at Chri^mas time . . . de¬void of card or name; of the fanletters that wanted to know if shewas equal in size to Mildred B.; ofanother letter addressed to “DearAngel of the Air” and signed by agang of bootleggers; her absorpition(Continued on page 2)Symphony Plays Works alf Rameau,Haydn, Taylor, and GlazunoffBY ALFRED V. FRANKENSTEINSuite from “Dardanus”J. P. Rameau (1683-1764)The opera from which this suiteis drawn is concerned with thefounding of Troy by Dardanus andTeucer, as narrated by Virgil. Themusic was selected and arrangedfor iiTodern orchestra by Eric De-Lamarter and consists of the over¬ture, a minuet, a “rondeau tendre,”and an old French dance known asa “itambourin” because of its tra¬ditional drum accompaniment.Symphony in C Major (“LeMidi”)Franz Josef Haydn (1732-1809)“Le Midi”, one of the earliest ofHaydn’s hundred and four sym¬phonies. An editor grouped threeof the symphonies together underthe titles “Le Matin,” “Le Midi,”and “Le Soir.” (“Morning,”“Noon,” and Night.”)Suite, “Through the LookingGlass ....Deems Taylor 1885- )Taylor’s suite is played in com¬memoration of the hundredth an¬niversary of the birth of Charles Ludwiifge Dodgson, better known asLewis Carroll, the author of “Alicein Wonderland” and “Through theLooking Glass.”The suite begins with a musicalreflection of Carroll’s dedicatoryverse, followed immediately by atone picture of the garden of liveflowers, where Alice found the blos¬soms “talking as well as you canand a great deal louder.”Next comes the Jabberwocky, aminiature tone poem oTT fhat fam¬ous poem which begins with a de¬scription of the brillig day whenI the slithy toves did gyre and gimblein the wabe.The third movement brings us aselection of the insects of the Look¬ing Glass country—the Bee-Ele¬phant, (the Rocking-Horse fly, theBread-and-Butter-fly and otners.The finale is “The White Knight”.Symphony Number Four, E FlatMajor. .Alexander Glazunoff (1865- )Late in the nineteenth centurymusic in Russia was divided into two(Continued on page 2)Harper Needs Larger Staff to SpeedService, Stack Superintendent Claims“If undergraduates knew of theconditions prevailing in Harper li¬brary stacks there would be fewercomplaints about the service rend¬ered by the circulating department”,said F. W. McCluskey, stack super¬intendent of Harper, in a recent in¬terview. According to Mr. McClus¬key, the sitack department is tooshort-handed to render the most ef¬ficient service possible. Even in thebusiest hours of the afternoon,there are only four assistants in thestacks, so that circulation is greatlyslowed up.“As the stacks range from the basement of Social Science to Class¬ics and the second floor of Wie-boldt,” Mr. McCluskey said, “itsometimes takes as Tong as flve min¬ute? to locate a single book. It of¬ten happens that the book, althoughnot charged out. Is" not on the shelf.In these cases the hook is in transit,somewhere in the library where itcannot be reached.“Adequate help is the only wayto speed up stack service,” Mr. Mc¬Cluskey concluded. “Four assistantscannot possibly keep up with the de¬mand to circulate books from stackswhich contain more than a half¬million bound volumes.” Hold Swim Meet inIda Noyes TonightTarpon club will bring to a cli¬max the team competition of theautumn and winter quarters with athree-way meet to be held (tonightat 6:30 in the pool of Ida Noyeshall. There will be races, watergames, form swimming, and divingevents. Felt emblems in the shapeof a frog will be rewarded to mem¬bers of the winning team. PearlFoster, Esther Weber, and JaneVenton are the captains of the com¬peting teams.In addition to the Tarpon meet,W. A. A. is sponsoring two otherevents marking the close of the an¬nual membership campaign. Wed¬nesday night there will be a skat¬ing party for all W. A. A. mem¬bers and their guests at the Mid¬way rink. Friday at 3:30 the W. A.A. Frolic will be held in the IdaNoyes theater.’35 ANSWERS ’34CAGE CHALLENGESettlement Drive CommitteeTo Arrange GameIn an answer to the challengehurled at thefti by the Sophomoreclass last Thursday for an inter¬class basketball game to be playedFriday afternoon in Bartlett gymthe Freshmen yesiterday replied:“The ‘virile’ men of the Sopho¬more class perhaps forget their ig¬nominious defeat at the hands ofthe illustrious Freshmen in thefamed Class Rush last fall.“The rugged men of ’35—greatin the social, athletic, and academiclife of tKe Tlniversity* will delight inthe opportunity to prove their met¬tle on the puny Sophomore class ina basketball game at Bartlett gym,February 5.”“Signed with a sneer,”THE FRESHMAN CLASS.Admission to the game will betwenty'-five cents and all receiptswill go to the benefit of the Univer¬sity Settlement. All arrangementsfor the game are in the hands of(Continued on page 3)WOMEN’S CLUBSREDUCE RUSHINGEXPENSES $3036Deferred rushing, imposed by theUniversity to go into effect in theAutumn quarter, 1932, and put intoeffect voluntarily by the fourteenwomen’s clubs this year, has result¬ed in a decrease in rushing expensesfrom $3898.04, the 1930 total, to$862.71, the total for 1931. Ti^'sefigures, compiled by Miss GladysFinn, University auditor, were bas¬ed upon the reports submitted bythe women’s clubs, which now totalfourteen with the recently organizedAvukah and Arrian. The averageexpenses for the twelve clubs in1930 was $324.84, as comparedwith an average of $61.82 for thefourteen clubs now in existence.Miss Finn’s statistics further re¬vealed that the average cost ofmembership, including dues, initia¬tion fees, social assessments, con-tribuftons to the student relieffund, and special charges amountedto $11.12 per member in the Au¬tumn quarter, 1931.NEW REPUBLIC CONTESTThe New Republic announces awriting contest open to undergrad¬uates of American colleges and uni¬versities and offering four prizes of$50 each for the best editorial,article, short sketch, and book re¬view. The winning manuscriptswill be published in the New Re¬public. Competitors may submitmanuscripts in more (than one clas¬sification and must mail their con¬tributions to the Contest Editor,421 W. 21st Street, New York. IMPROVED MOVIE OF *CAMPUS LIFE WILLFLASH ON SCREENIN MANDEL TONIGHTDaily Maroon SponsorsShowing of Three-Reel FilmADMISSION 25 CENTSTickets will go on sale at the boxoffice today from 4 to 5, and 7 to8.Thirty thousand persons alreadyhave seen “Life on the Quadrang¬les” the three-reel sound picture ofstudent fife at the University, whichis to be shown under the auspices ofThe Daily Maroon tonight in Man-del Hall at 8 o’clock. By the first ofJune, it is expected that more than150,000 high schools students in thecountry will have seen the picture.“Life on the Quadrangles” is theonly sound picture of college activ¬ities so far produced, but the in¬terest created by the film alreadyhas led several neighboring univer¬sities to plan similar productions.Demand for showings has su great¬ly increased as a result oi early re¬ports that Kenneth Rouse, who ex¬hibits the picture, will spend thenext four months travelling in themiddle-west, making two and threeshowings a day.Shows NorthShown recently at Highland Park,where twenty-seven other collegesand universities had field represen¬tatives, the picture was the featureof the “College Nl^t” program atDeerfield-Shields high school. Thenumber of high school seniors whomake appointments to discuss theUniversity with Mr. Rouse followingthe showing at the high scnools hasincreased greatly over the total atthe same schools last year beforethe picture was used.Wherever possible, the picture isscheduled for alumni showings outof town, and a dozen alumni clubshave already seen the picture. Lo¬cal showings of the film for alumnihave been arranged, at Evanston,Morgan Park, and Hinsdale, and therest of the metropolitan area will becovered in the near future. Alumniresponse has been so enthusiasticthat reduction of the film to 16 mil¬limeter sound-on-disc for use oneasily portable equipment is now be¬ing planned. The film was shownlast Wednesday night in KansasCity and in Philadelphia last night,an extra print having been made fordistant points.Two Months in MakingThe picture took two months to(Continued on page 3)L. M. Wirth Speaks atPhilosophy Meeting“Presuppositions in ScientificMethod” with particular emphasison the field of social science re¬search will he the subject of a talkby Louis M. Wirth, associate pro¬fessor of Sociology at a meeting ofthe Philosophy club tonight at 8 inClassics 20.Professor Wirth will show howthe “subjective” method of ap¬proach, which has hitherto been at¬tributed (to the social sciences in¬stead of the “objective” method em¬ployed in the field of the physicalsciences, is in reality common toboth; but that the sociologist hasthe advantage of working “from theinside out”, while the chemist mustjudge by the exterior alone. The so¬ciologist can understand and appro¬priately estimate his fellow-beingsbecause he fs one of them. He canenter their homes, Jearn theu hab¬its, eccentricities and aversions, oe-come intimately acquainted withtheir problems, and so arrive at aI more thorough and accurate solu¬tion of his particular problemsI than can the physicist.Page 1 vvo THE DAILY MAROON. TUE3DAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1932altr iatU| iiuirnimroUNDEu 11.' li)01 'THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THEI N^V.ERSITV OK CHIC.VCOPublished morninBS. except Saturday. Sunday and Monday,Hiring the Auiunjii. VViniei and SprinK quarters by The Dailydaroon Company. aSdl l.niversity Ave. Subscription rates $3.0(iper year: by mail, $1.60 per year extra. SinKle copies, five-centaach.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Cnicaao forany stat^ nients uppeariim in The Daily Maroon, or for any(ontructs entered into by T'.ie Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18. 19(13, at the post• dice a! Chicauo. Illimiis. under the Act of March 3, 1879.1 he Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press Associatioi.LOVIS N. RIDENOUR, JR., Editor-in-ChiefMERWIX S. ROSENBERG. Buxines? Manap:erMAR(]ARET EGAN, Senior EditorJ.VNE KESXER, Senior EditorHERBERT H. JOSEPH. Jr., Sports Editorj AS.SOCIATE EDITOR.SMAXINE CREVISTONi RUDE S. FRODIN. JR.I BION B. HOWARDj '. BAYARD POOLE! 1 AMES F. SIMON' WMIUEN E THOMPSON: (II.F.ANOR E. WII.SON BUSINESS ASSOCI.ATESJOHN D. CLANCY. JR.EDOAR L. COLDSMITH'OPHOMORK ASSISTANTSUM. A. KAUFMANWAITER MONTGOMERYVINCENT NEWMANEDWARD SCHALI.ERR.CHAKD J. YO( N .SOPHOMORE EDITORSJANE BIESKM " 'UKI.VIN GOLDMANWILLIAM GOODSTEINEDWARD NICHOLSON-TASUI.A PETRAKISKOSKMAKY V-OI.K-MARGARET MULLIGAN HOBAItl GUN.MNGHK'I'ID h NSKNROBERT HERZOGDAVID LEVINEEUGENE PATRICKWILLIAM WAKEFIELDJANE WEBERNigfit E(ditor: Bion B. Howartd.Assistants: Levine and Gunning j.Lenance of a navy and a standing army sulficient'onty to protect our country from invasion, legard-j .ng the maintenance of greater arrnaments ancJ tireIndulgence in greater “preparation” as beingiiiereiy the signal for a cruiser-building race amongthe powers, as well as a temptation to aggression..A strong man is frequently tempted to be a bully.^ outh has voted for peace. Youth is tremend-...usly interested in securing peace and permanentpeace, but is not sure tnat it knows just hew- togo about it. Disarmament appeals to youth asbeing perhaps the most practical means of insur¬ing as permanent peace as is possible in a scciet>made up of present-day individuals, and is there-iore seized on by youth; thus may the results ofihe disarmament poll be explained.It remains to be seen whether today’s youth,vhich is to be tomorrow s nation, will merely pas;ively desire peace, will forget about the wholematter, or will actively assist in any sane meansw’hich are offered for the insuring of peace. It i.spretty obvious that the attempts w'hich have'beermade to promote amity and international under¬standing have fallen far short of being sufficient’:o prevent or “outlaw” war. Further measures•/ill have to be taken, and it will fall to the lotof today’s youth to take them.—L. N. R., Jr.Tuesday, February 2, 1932YOUTH WANTS PEACEThe grisly fact that war, and perhaps war in-voiving the United States, which has shown aninc.ination to consider the world’s business as itsbusiness, may be lurking in the vicinty of Shang¬hai is one which lends a new interest to the de¬cisions reached bj' the inteicoliegiate Disarma¬ment council held this year in seventy universitiesand colleges, as well a.s to the symposium ondisarmament to be heid at the University nextSunday.Under the captain outh V'otes for Peace”,The Nation says of the Intercollegiate Disarma¬ment council: "In the long vista of warrentablegloom, this is indeed a cause of cheer. For notonly have 92 per cent of the 24,345 studentsdeclared, in general terms, for the reduction ofarmament; no fewer than 63 per cent have urgedindependent disarmament by the United Stateswithout waiting for other countries. On this issue,at least, when an opportunity is offered for theexpression of opinion, our college students arenot only thinking, but thinking boldly.”Now the fact that college students have shownthemselves to be in favor of the reduction of arm¬aments cannot, by any stretch of the imagination,be deemed to be due to the mass of anti-war anddisarmament propaganda which has flooded thecountry within recent years. Rather, perhaps, isit due to the fact that the present generation ofcollege students, because of its age, remembersthe return of maimed veterans from Prance, thecasualty lists in the newspapers, and Gold StarN'lothers in connection with the last war, ratherthan the public indignation at the sinking of theLusitania and the patriotic fervor preceding en¬listment. >College students of today are not waiting in awelter of anticipation foi an opportunity to takeup arms in the next war in which the country is tobe embroiled. A large proportion of them, weventure, would not fight until Uncle Sam askedthem to, unless an invasion of the United Statesproper were imminent. This feeling is at the basisof the outcome of the poll of the country s collegestudents on the subject of disarmament.A.s Charles A. Beard has Indicated in the cur¬rent number of Harper’s magazine, the averageman—and the average college student, too—isprimarily interested in the protection of his home¬land. War and its attendant horrors, war madedoubly horrible by the development of modernscience, he disapproves of in principle, but he isskeptic enough to suspect that no League of Na¬tions, no World Court, no Kellogg pact has todaysucceeded in removing the ptTssibility of war. Dis¬armament our aA'crage man sees as a means ofmaking the prosecution of war more difficult, thepreparation for premeditated offense impossiblebeyond a certain point; and, viewing it in thislight, he favors it.Our average man is likely to favor the main- I The Travelling Bazaar’I ' BY FRANK HARDING IThe department of Economics asserts thatit is in need of help so here’s where they getit.Barter . . . DoughBills. . .Things that ring in ChurchPension. . . Squeeze. with ■ the fingersRent. . .Rave Si.. 44Saving. . .Cuttinglax... Soup andGoods . . . Entrails. \U Oman necromancer. Strong vegetable FOURTH PRE-LEGALYEAR RETARDS UWWORK, STUDY SHOWS—m(Continued from page 1)eJ the same. Even when the.-sciiolastif records of the men incollege were Considered, the superi¬ority of the three-year men was notexplained.Age Must Be Considered7(ie age of the student probably(ioes not have some bearing on theresults of the study, according toProfessor Eagleton. Whereas it hadbeen believed that more matureminds were belter suited to thestudy of law, Professor Eagletonfound that younger men made re¬markably Fetter records than oldermen. the drop in grades from eigh¬teen years on being almost uniform."Younger men wno reach theLaw school are naturally somewhatmore intelligent, or they would nothave advanced so rapidly,” ProfessorEagleton points out in his study."But this is not enough to ex-I plain the difference, especially fromI twenty-one years up. A four-yearI reiiuirement foi- admission to theI Law school cannot lie justified onj the gro'und that the lesulting in¬crease in age is needed for the suc-i ce.ssful pursuit of the Law schoolcourse.”> Doris Robbins toEntertain at Prom Works of Glazunoff jAnd Hayden PlayedIn Symphony Concert;^ -- ^ I(Continued from page 1) icamps, paradoxically situated. St.Petersburg, the westernized capital |of a weternized Czar, was the home jof a school of composers, led by jRimsky-Korsakoff and Musorgsky. jThe musical school of Moscow, was \led by Tschaikowsky and Rubin- istein, whose artistic ideals hadbeen borrowed from western Eu¬rope. In (Jlazunoff the two schools .came together. He was trained asa nationalist of the Rim.'<ky-Kor.«a-koff pattern, and has practiced as asymphonist and composer of abso¬lute music like that cultivated by theMuscovites. E. H. Gubser, W. W. Severin. \V.Philbrook, C. H. Vette, C, E. Huieand J. H. Kleinschmidt.These appointments ar^ niadequarterly and are effective until su¬perseded by another announcenun^by Major Christian.FtiK <aKi,sOnIV. Ur^duates or UnderKra.iimt-, Sn• • • month* of thopough trainiiuinto a thret? montha intonaive cour^r for if-rU .tjLknow kow to afMdy. Send today for Bullettr, ^ia>urara tUrl Orlot>rr 1, January IApril l,July 1.MOSKII ni KlIVKsiK I'OI.I.Luk116 S^oulh Mirkififtn < hira^.il*hon«* Randolph 4347HUNTRESS RELATESJUNGLE ANECDOTESWage.L nion .Labor. . What the seamari' thinks the lands-I (t (Continued from page 1)' in reading "The Good Earth”; herson’s picture; of condition.s "back■ of the yards”; of war; of plans for! the Prom, when she’ll sing with "thei boys”, then some singles . . . solos' to you . . . and, maybe, some spe¬cialties; and. above all. her smilei when told theie’d be a big mob atthe Prom waiting for her and forHerbie Kay’s music.See her there! (Continued from page 1)In 1921-22 Mr. and Mrs. Brad¬ley were members of the Carl Ake-ley expedition which went into thegorilla territory and Mrs. Bradleyand Mrs. Martha Miller Gliven ofNew York wei;e the first white wom¬en 'to see tlie creature in his nativehaunts.Mr. and Mrs. Bradley accom¬panied Harry A. Bigelow, dean ofthe Law school and Professor .Ar¬thur P. Scott of the History depart¬ment when they made their expedi¬tion into the country west of LakeEdward in 1924-2.'). On their lasttrip Tn nUIO-.H, the Bradleys wentoverland from the East coast of.Africa, through the I'lench Cam-eroun, the French Congo and theBelgian Congo.Tickets, which are priced at fiftycents, may be obtained in u'c cloakroom of Ida Noyes and ai ihc In¬formation office in the Press build¬ing. Boxes seating six, are $r)..')0.NAME OFFICERS(Continued from page 1)F!(lwanl Pettit. The line Sergeantsare .Arthur .Margolis, IL R. Molton. Consider ThisYOUR HOTELL"" \ KI'Ci’( )N 1'! here —troinman to manager -alw;i> > ; ,i- ,heart) welcome for I’nivorMty('liicago students, l-'or geiurat :we've Ikvii friends. Years \.jh-rience enable us to arraiu’c . .dinners, luncheons. dance> .in!parties just the way you want t;u"aiKl at prices to fit your InidkL ' *P. S. A convenient place t.i ,your jrarent.s, also—not to<- i v.c)ct not tiX) far.]j[i)tcls||jin(le rinere^hicugo56th Street at Hyde Park BoulevardVC’ard B. James. ManagerFairfax 6000man isTrade. . .Made an attemptIO(i l|Someone just came in with a lot of badnews. The thing is thatnthe Bursar’s officehas just run out of money'again. Don’t knowwhat will happen next. ,what with the thirdmortgage they just put on the chapel.¥ ¥ ' V'»' t I IIf anyone that readd'this goes to the mov¬ies they will perhaps' remember the knittedcaps that the News Reels avowed were beingworn in the South. Tl^eTii seem to be a lotof people that belieyp^eywrything, for all thegirls in Foster and the (environs have boughtthemselves knitting needlqs and are plyingthem for all they are wdrth.* ,,Oh, how we like to exL^nd a helping handto the Phoney! Wei just must tell somethingthat happened in Mr: Swenson’s Class, theeternal Mr. Swenson, the fellow that teachesPsychology, you know^ who we mean. Mr.Swenson commented on the picture of Wat¬son that the Phoney ran last month with acaption saying that the Sike department ofthe University had flayed his soul. “In thefirst place,” Mr. Swenson said, “we nevercredited Watson with,a ^oul and he didn’tclaim to have one^jhimself. In the secondplace, he was a professor *at Johns Hopkinsand not at Clark University. Aside from,that, the Phoney was alrfi'dst right. ”ti: 'ij'• « 1.1The revised version of the Campus Movie isabout to have a showing and this time it willreally be worth the price admission. QuinRyan is the barker and his wise cracks aren’tso bad. Furthermore,^ thty have cut out allthe lovely conversation which the campusathletes and the school beauties indulged inaround the tables in the coffee shop. Wecan’t make up our minds whether the cut wasjustified for that was hy far the best humaninterest shot in the whole works and the con¬versation was delicioul^”ONLYGIRISI FOURTEEN^ MOREJ, I*? .1^ ■( . tUIlJ DAYS, Here is SomethingWorth Winning!Who wouldn’t want to sit down to such a complete¬ly delightful job as eating the special evening dinner atthe Maid-Rite Grill? And when you learn that fifty centsis the cost, well then and there you will decide that here iswhat you’ve been wanting right along—a really fine din¬ner for fifty cents.And with the free meal tickets the Maid-Rite is giv¬ing away twice each month, there is even more reason fordropping in at either of the shops for a full meal or a tastysnack. One $3.00 ticket, and one $2.00 ticket, and three$1.00 tickets are being presented at each shop. All youdo is drop a card with your name upon it in the drawingbox, and your job is done. Then keep your eyes open forthat free meal ticket.These are the lucky onesThe Maid-Rite The Maid-RiteSandwich Shop GrillGeorge Hayes $3.00 Bob WilliamsWarren Keith $2.00 AI MaddenF. Jones $1.00 W. C. MeSurelyW. b. Dunkel $1.00 Wallace MacCauleyLouise Walten1 ' $1.00 Rosemary LivingstonThe Maid-Rite Shops1309 East 57th Street 1324 East 57th StreetTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 2, 1932 Page ITireeri)eS a Soonl-MCAGESCHEDEEFEATURES PASSINGIN TWO SLOW GAMESMedics Wallop King’sHorses; Phi ChiTakes C.T.S.The schedule of intramural bas-kithall prames was resumed lastniirbt with two games—between theModics and King’s Horses, and Phi( lii, and C. T. S. The score of thefoi-mer game was 24 to 15, and oftin latter game 21 to 11. Hellerand Eliott starred for the Medics,and Jerry Moss starred for theKing’s Horses. Poor playing, how¬ever. marked both games, and muchshooting by both sides. The latteriTame was a remarkably uninterest-:nir one. It produced no outstand¬ing players.Medics, 24; King’s Horses, 15This game was the most thrillingof last night’s intramural program.Heller and Eliott starred, scoring 14points between them. The Medics’.-harp-shooters, trained by the closework required in bacteriology, mi-I roscopy, trepanning and bloodlet¬ting. easily applied the curb-rein to:he King’s Horses. The best pT«yeron the latter team was Jerry Moss,:i high school star of no small merit,and a good man in any aggregation.111.' three basket? undoubtedly savedhi' team from a much worse defeat.Phi Chi. 21; C. T. S., 11Phi Chi beat the future preachersn a rather dull game. The score isa hit deceptive, because both teamswore almost equally bad. This game,liowever, was featured by some spec-’aoular passes, only a few of whichvvre successful.U'hrti u'intry breeze hloir,\n(I Jack Frost paints withire and snoir;hitn't mind the penetratingcold,Hinidlc lip and strike out boldTo Phelps and Phelps wheredishes warm, ward offthe chills thatl>o most harm!Phelps and PhelpsColonial Tea Roomi).‘)24 Woodlavvn Ave.Special U. of C. Luncheon350U'afrie.s and Sandwiches Gophers DefeatChicago 40r28j^MtnneappltsAlthough trailing Minnesotathroughout the entire game, at Min¬neapolis last Saturday, the Maroonsthreatened to overtake the Gophersin the final minutes of play only towilt before a barrage of ’shots thatfound the basket with discoui’agingaccuracy. The game was the sec¬ond that Chicaga has lost to Minne¬sota when last half rallies sent theGophers soaring into the lead. Thefinal score 40-28, is not fairly indic¬ative of a game which was closelycontested throughout with ideht,Minnesota guard, making an uncan¬ny percentage of long shots. Hescored six times from the field an<lonce from the free throw line tomake thirteen of his team’s pointsand place him fourth among the in¬dividual scorers in the Gig Ten.Play Unusually RoughPlay was marked by an unusualnumber of fouls' calUM? for rough¬ing under the basket. B(>,,h teamsfollowed the ball viciously and thepileups under the hoop were of foot¬ball proportions, Minnesota was pen¬alized seventeen times and ('hicagofifteen, the Gophers making goodten of their chances and the Ma¬roons twelve. From the start Min¬nesota relied upon the famous“Hoosier” fast break and longshot game. Licht in the first halfmade thirty percent of his shot?good and his ten points supplied themargin of victory to which theGophers clung throughout the en¬tire game, Stephenson was highscorer for Chicago dropping in threefield goals and six free throw's.. Hislack of height handicapped him ingetting free shots and he was fouled !repeatedly us he went into the ;basket. jTie for Last Place in ConferenceThe defeat, the fourth the Ma¬roons have suffered in as manygames, places them with Iowa ina tie for last place in Conferencestandings. Because of semesiter ex¬aminations at other Big Ten schools,all cage teams will be inactive nextweek end with the exception of Chi¬cago and Iowa who meet P^riday todecide the cellar championship.T.P.announces:YOUNG WOMAN to sell provenneeded article to students. Nomoney reguired. Briggs, 6140 N.Rockwell St., Chicago.ROOM & BOARD. Lge. frontrm. priv. bath. Real home, not awarding house. Plar.a 0843. 620oUniversity Ave.TUTORING — English andrrenah. Call Buckingham 0206.Room 220 between 4-7 P, M. ROOMS for rent at inexpensiverates; a private club atmosphere,ottering use of lounges, radio andcard room. 6616 University Ave.WANTED —• Girl to stay withelderly woman at night and pre¬pare breakfast for her in exchangefor room, breakfast and smallsalary. Miss Robinson.WANTED-TJirl to wait tables inSouth Side tea room from 6 to8 P. M., daily. Compensation:Dinner, $.20 per hour and tips.Mias ^binson.’35 ANSWERS ’34CAGE CHALLENGE(Continued from page 1)the P’reshman and Sophomore rep¬resentatives on the Univer.sity Set¬tlement drive committee of which iDan McGuigan is the chairman.Those include: Herbent Richmondand Lorraine Watson of the Soph¬omore cla.ss and John Barden andHelen Hiett of the Freshman class.Candy will he sold at the gameby w’omen of the two classes.INSIDE DOPE ON THE “W. G. D.”A letter from the man in charge ofthe W. G. D. (World’s Greatest De¬pression, to you) admits defeat at thehands of The Trading Post! How canthere be a depression with T. P. ever¬lastingly on the job—snooping aroundamong 6000 students to find buyers forthe things you want to sell. T. P. isalways at your beck and call—why notlet him show you what he did to theW. G. D.? Tonight’s I-M ScheduleGames scheduled in fTie Intra¬mural basketball tournament fortonight are:7:30Wildcats-400 vs. Gophers, 600“A”Phi Kappa Psi vs. Barbarians“B”Zeta Beta Tau vs. Phi SigmaDelta “B”8:15Wolverines-300 vs. Hawkeyes-700 “A”Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. DeltaUpsilon “B”Psi Up.silon I vs. Tau DeltaPhi “B”9:00CRT Psi vs. Alpha Delta Phi“B”Phi Delta Theta vs. Psi Up¬silon II “B”Show Campus MovieIn Mandel Tonight(Continued from page 1)produce, and the present 3,(T00 feetwa.s selected from 14,000 feet re¬corded. Variou.s of the p eminentpersonalities of the University, in¬cluding President Hutchins, Coach.A, A. Stagg, Prof. James WeberLinn, Dean C. S. Boucher, andThornton W’ilder are shown in thepicture. Various views of the quad¬rangles, including a shot from theair, a panorama of the Midwayfront, and a selected group of cam¬pus activities, are also piesentert.The present version of the film is animproved version of the pictureshown last quarter in iVTan ^el ITall.with a voice continuity i>.v v^uinRvan added. Varsity TrackmenBeat Alumni andFreshman SquadIn preparation for Big Ten in¬door track competition, Chicagovarsity badly defeated the combinedforces of the alumni and freshmenin a three way meet at the newfieldhouse last Saturday. The Var¬sity rolled up 86 points, the fresh¬men 28 and the alumni 11. Varsitymen won first places in every eventbut the high jump, two mile runand the shot put which w'ent tofreshmen.Brooks, sophomore star, was highpoint man of the day with victoriesin the 60 yard dash, broad jumpand low hurdles. Roy Black, cap¬tain of the team, was second highscorer with a victory in the highhurdles and a close second toBrooks in the low hurdles. Jontry, ajunior, took the 440 run with i.ttlecompetition from the rest of thefield. The 880 was won by anothersophomore, Nicholson, who edgedout his team mate Laurie to win.Johnson and Simon took first andsecond respectively in the mile andVarlaka a freshman took the twomile event. Don Birney, footballcaptain, won the pole vault with avault of eleven feet six inches. Yar-nair, competing with the freshmenbecause of ineligibility, won the TiTghjump and Ovson, another freshmanput the shot an inch over forty-threefeet to win the event.Color blind students at LehighUniversity are barred from R. 0T. C. courses. VOCATIONAL SPEAKER(Continued from page 1)two years he has been continuouslyengaged in the business. Gaining awide exjierience with which he isable to present a picture of busi¬ness in general and selling partic¬ularly. HOLD OPEN TRACKMEET TODAY AT 2:30,IN NEW HELD HOUSEBlack, Jontry, Brooks,Kadin DeclaredIneligibleSponsored by the I-M department,in collaboration with Ned Merriam.track coach, an All-UniversTty trackmeet will be held today at 2:30 inthe new field house. Although noI.-M. points will be given in themeet, organizations’ standings are tobe determined by points earned byall men, whether Varsity men ornot. Events are scheduled as fol¬lows :2:30—60-yard dash trials and semi¬finals if neces.sary.Pole vault and shot put.2:45—Mile run.2 :55—GO-yd. dash finals.3:05—70-yd. high hurdles trials.3:15—440-yd. run.High Jump.3:25—70-yd. high hurdles finals.3:30—70-.vd. low hurdles trials.3 :35—880-yd. run.3:45—70-yd. low hurdles finals.3:50—4 lap relay.Entries will be handled by theclerk of the course, who will entermen for each event until fifteenminutes before the meet is sched¬uled. Relay teams should be pres¬ent by 3 :30.All University students are elig¬ible for the meet, with the excep¬tion of Roy Black, captain of thetrack team and the only C- man onthe squad, John Brooks, sophomoredash and hurdle man, Jerry Jontry,quarter miler, and Maurice Kadin.distance runner.The ONLY genuine Lifetime’fLuarantee isSheaffer’s: do not be deceived! Other pens maybe jl^uaranteed against defect, but Sheaffer's Life¬time’ is {guaranteed against everythinj^ exceptingloss for your lifetime. Sheaffer's Lifetime pen«from ST; She.iffer's Feathertouch Lifetime’ pensfrom $8; Sheaffer's Autograph Lifetime’ with 14-karat solid i^old band suitable for duplicate of youractual siw^nature i servinj^ for identification) from$13.50. Autograph pencils from $9. Other Sheafferpens from S3, pencils from $2.50.Here’s a real news flash from Sheaffer to the college world... annouiil'ili^ the new Feathertouch point! Speeds class¬room notesi^Fast as greased li^htnin^ in action... as softas a feather in its silk-smooth stroke! Sheaffer designersachieved Double-Control Flow for the first time in any pen!Specially treated upper ^old section retards the flow toheart pierce, forming reservoir, while platinum-glazedchannel H^ht flow to iridium point. Withincredible* ease Feathertouch flashes your written workto a qii^<}k ^Tiish! Now available in all Lifetime® pens.SheaflFer First in American CollegesA disinterested survey shows Sheaffer first in fountain pen sales in 73 out of the100 leading American Colleges havinj^ a re4,istration of 1700 or more.SAFETY SKRIP. SKRIP-FILLED, 5Cc up. Ctrry non-Uskabl* Safety Skrip in yourpocket or ba4 to cleia—protect*clothes, linens. Furniture-keepsfluid fresh, niakink all panswrite batter. PENS PENCILS OESK SETS SKRIPW. A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY FORT MADISON, IOWA.U.S. A.And All Principal Cities of the World•B^.0.8. P«.OB. w A. s. P Co.. i». aWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th STREET, near Kimbark Ave.SHEAFFER FOUTAIN PENS, PENCILS AND SETS Thousandsof BooksatBargainPricesNew and Recent Books Re¬duced from 15 L to 60 L ofRegular Prices.If you enjoy the popular in¬door pastime of book brows¬ing—and who doesn’t—whynot indulge yourself v/ith ahalf hour’s mental feast atWoodworth’s?Several hundred differenttitles of English and Americanbooks have just arrived. Thisunusual array of tempting lit¬erature, much of it by wellknown authors, will thrill booklovers. The prices are amaz¬ingly low.Publisher'!*Price1. Dorsey, Man's Own Show .$,5.002. Major. Domestic Architec¬ture of the Early Amer¬ican Republic:5. Corey. House of MoryariSocial Bioftraphy ofMasters of Money4. Frank, Tales from theArKentine5. Cunninyham-Graham.Thirty Tales andSketches0. Baumann, The LastVictorians7. Miller, The Child inPrimitive SocietyS. Nowak, Versailles OurPrice$2..5015.00 6.005.003..503.00">.003.005.00 2..501.001 001.251.001.606.005.001.253.001.952.004.755.004.r>01.253.00 1..503.00 1..5020.00 9.009. Wandell and Minnijrerode,Aaron Burr 2 vol. 10.0010. Nevins, Life of Fremont2 vol. 10.0011. Darrow. The New Worldof Physical Discovery 3.6012. Ford, Letters of HenryAdams 5.0013. Sedywick. La h'ayette 5.0014. Sedywick, Cortes 5.0015. Tales and Novels of DeLa Fontaine 2 vol. 10.0016. Bolsche, Love of Life inNature 2 vol. 10.0017. Baker. Life and I.K?ttersof Wotxlrow Wilson2 vol. 10.0018. Whyte, Critique of Physics 3.0019. Bertrand Russell,Mysticism and ly)yic20. Bertrand Russell, OurKnowledye of ExternalWorld21. Geo. Moore. Story Teller'sHoliday 2 vol. Limitetland Siyned22. Winylield. Stratford -History of British Civil¬ization 2 vol. 10.00 5.0023. The Greville Diary 2 vol. 10.00 3.5021. Schautficr, I.ife of Beet¬hoven 2 vol. 10.00 5.0025. Wells, World of Wm.Clissold 2 vol. 5.00 2.0026. Shay. Elbert Hubbardof East .Xurora 3.50 1.6027. .McKeon, I’hilost phy ofSpinoza 5.00 2.5028. Sorley, History of BritishPhilosoivhy 5.00 2.5029. Cycle of Adams Letters2 vol. 10.00 2.5030. Guinbert, Short Historyof French People 2 vol. 15.00 10.0031. Walsh, Makiny of BuffaloBill 5.00 2.MO32. Cinsbury, Adventures ofScience 5.00 2.0033. Neitzehe, Works tCon¬tains 5 complete B<M>ksl 4.00 2.0034. Melville. Romances of 7.50 3.5035. Senoourt, Life of GeoryeMeredith 3.50 1.0036. Seliyman. Essays inTaxation 4.00 2.0037. Shepard. Sea Power In.Ancient Histetry 5.00 2.0038. Wexl)ery, IndividualPsycholoyy 3.00 1.25it. Clyden, Meaniny ofPsycholoyy 3.00 1.0040. Pell. I.ife of Ethan Allen 5.00 2.5041.*McElroy, Grover Cleveland 5.00 1.7542. Westermarch, ShdrtHistory of Marriaye 3.50 1.7543. Ward. Thobbiny 3.50 1.0044. Martin, I.iberty 3.00 1.0045. Parmalee, Oriental andOccidental Culture 4.00 1.5046. Goethe's Faust PayonyIllustratiod 6.50 3.0047. Clark, Hidden Illusionsof Shakespeare's Flays 7.50 5.0048. Stendhal, On Love ;!,50 .95Woodworth’sBook Store1311 E. 57th St.CNear Kimbark Ave.'Open Evenings“The Largest Book StoreOutside of the Loop.*’tAMMMUrn1.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 2. 1932LIND’S TEA ROOM6252 University Ave.Special Luncheon 40cDinners 50c and 60cSHORTHANDfor UniversifyStudentsImagine how much easier it would beto take class notes in Shorthand.Gregg College offers special classes foruniversity students, meeting late aft¬ernoons or Monday and Thursday eve¬nings. Write, call, or telephone State1881 for particulars.THE CRECC COLLEGE225 N. Wabash Ave., Chicago, III.RUTHShe prefersA PIPE(For you)Her name is Ruth. She’s a popularco-ed on a famous campus. Yes,she’ll have a cigarette, thank you (andsmoke it very prettily). But for you shelikes a pipe.That’s one smoke that’s still a man’ssmoke. (And that’s why she likes to seeYOU smoke a pipe.)There’s somethingcompanionableabout a pipe. Friend-ly, cool, mellow ...it clears your mind,puts a keen edge onyour thinking.And you soundthe depths of truesmoking satisfactionwhen you fill up itsbowl with Eidgeworth.There, men, is a REAL smoke. Choicemellow hurleys, cut espiedally for pipes—blended for the man who knows hisfine tobaccos. It’s cool, dry, satisfying—and you’ll find itfirst in sales, firstchoice of smokers,in 42 out of 54 lead¬ing colleges.We’d like nothingbetter than todrop in tonightand toss our ownprivate tin acrossyour study table.But since that can’tbe, just rememberthat you can getEdgeworth at your dealer’s—or sendfor free sample if you wish. AddressLarus & Bro. Co., 105 S. 22d St.Richmond, Va.EDGEWORTHSMOKING TOBACCOEdgeworth is a blend of fine old burleys.«vith its natural savor enhanced by Edge¬worth’s distinctiveand exclusive elev¬enth process. BuyEdgeworth any¬where in two forms—EdgeworthReady-Rubbed and Edge-worth Plug Slice. Allsizes, pocketpackage to ^i.;opound humidor dn. YOUR smoke—a pipe I TODAYon theQUADRANGLESThe Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:James F. Simon. Assistant: MelvinGoldman.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, Joseph Bondchapel, at 12. “The Shelter,” R. W.Beasley, Director, Clearing Housefor Unemployed Men.Victrola concert, at 12:30 in theReynolds club. “Stornelli E. Bal-late” by Malipiero, “Entrance of TheLittle Fauns” by Pierne, and “LePeri” by Dukas.I Lectulre-recital, on the programof the Chicago Symphony orchestra.I .4ssistant Professor Cecil MichenerI Smith. At 3, in Theological Semin-j ary 439.I Concert by the Chicago Sym! phony orchestra, at 4:15 in Mandelhall. Suite from “Dardanus”,I Rameau; “Symphony in C major”,! Haydn; “Through the LookingGlass”, Deems Taylor; “FourthSymphony”, Glazounow’.Organ music, at 5 in the Uni¬versity chapel.Extension Lectures in Religion:“Early Egyptian Archaeology”.Visiting Assistant Professor John A.Wilson, 7:30, in the Oriental In¬stitute. “When Are Beliefs Re¬ligious?” Professor Edwin E. Au¬brey. 8:30, in the Oriental Institute.“The Business Managemenit of theChurch”. Robert Cashman. 8:30, inthe Oriental Institute.Undergraduate OrganizationsUndergraduate Council meeting at7:00 in the Alumni room, Ida Noyeshall.Departmental Organizations ISocial Science lecture—Prof. W.E. Dodd will continue his series on“Reconstruction, North and South:Social Disintegration and SectionalSolidarity” at 3:30 in the Social Sci¬ence Assembly Room.The Medical Journal club meetsat 4:30 in Billings M. 301.The Graduate Political scienceclub meets at 7:30 in Social Science302. J. A. Morrison of the Geog¬raphy department speaks on “Poli¬tical Economic Regionalism in theSoviet Union.^’The Philosophy club: “Presuppo¬sitions in Scientific Method”. As¬sistant Professor Louis Wirth. 8 P.M., in Classics 20.MiscellaneousMotion picture: “Life on theQuadrangles,” in sound. 8 P. M., inMandel hall.Radio lectures: “Colonial Liter¬ature”, Professor Percy Boynton. 8A. M., on WMAQ. “Readings”, Al¬len Miller. 10:45, on WMAQ. “Ele¬mentary Spanish”, Associate Pro¬fessor Carlos Castillo. 4:30, onWMAQ.Public lecture, downtown. Dram¬atic readings: “The Rising of theMoon” and “The Land of Heart’sDesire.” Associate Professor Ber¬tram Nelson. 6:45, in the Art In¬stitute.Social Science Tea at 4 in SocialScience Common Room.Modern Langue Tea at 4 in Wie-boldt Commons Room.25cSpecial Luncheon TodayThe Green SpotHot Roast Beef SandwichCreamy Mashed PotatoesWith Gravy — CoffeeA big bargain in good food—our 25c SupperSpecials and 65c Sunday Dinners (4:30 to 8:30p. m.) At this new oasis in Campustown stu¬dents are finding substantial, home-cooked food.Opposite Men’s New Dormitories1025 Blast Gist Street An Epic of the University-The varied life of the quadrangles, its socialevents, its athletic contests, its extra-curricular activitiesare skillfully woven into a unified whole in “Life on theQuadrangles”, the University’s own idea of what it is andwhat it stands for.TTiree complete reels in sound, with the voice con¬tinuity by Quin Ryan, well-known radio announcer, willbe presented to the University community tonight at 8 inMandel hall. Admission will be twenty-five cents.For this special showing the film has been com¬pletely revised and the voice sections synchronized andmodulated. Lighting effects have been recast and im¬proved.See yourself in the talkies! See the premier show¬ing of the revised version of “Life on the Quadrangles”tonight in Mandel hall.‘ life on the Quadrangles”The University in SoundTONIGHTMANDEL HALL TWENTY-FIVE CENTSADMISSION