Batlp illaroonVol. 32. No. 94. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1932 Price Five Cent*education emergesFROM TEST TUBE INSaENTIFIC SPLENDOROFNEWUBORATORY Belts of CellophaneSported on CampusCellophane, it now appears, canbe used for other and better thingsthan wrapping cigarette packages.Tunis' glo.ssy, tran.sparent material is | SEEaBUCKFRIAR EMBRE TALKS ONPOSTER; COMPLETE i WAYS OF SCIENCEWRITING OF SONGS' IN MOODY LECTURE April 30 Is Dated ofNext E7iglish TestsTake Child MentalityApart to See WhatMakes ’Em Tick now being used for the highly aesthe- H. Allen Stone, Musical Speaker Presents Study.u. purpose of ...akin, hete. Several; Director Writes , Of Relations Betweendr, JUDD IS PIONEERBy WARREN E. THOMPSON.\ machine that measures one’s(■motional re&ctions while writing anexamination, another that records ona Him the motions of a child’s eyeswhile reading, still another whichphotographs one’s voice wave—com-prLses part of the laboratory equip¬ment in the University’s newestbuilding. -And one does not expectto find laboratory equipment, nor thefinest machine shop on the campus,in the headquarters of the GraduateSchool of Education!Today, at 58th and Kimbark, thecampus has a laboratory for an an¬alysis of learning methods that prob¬ably comes nearer than any otherinve.stigating agency in the countryto taking a child’s mentality apartand finding what makes it tick.For research in the field of edu¬cation is a new addition to theworld’s scientific activitiea. CharlesHubbard Judd and his colleagueshave had to invent their laboratorymachines and techniques to demon¬strate to the educational world thatthe abstract profession of teachingcan be analyzed, and can be bestlarried forward with .scientific meth¬ods and devices.With F*iofes.sor Guy T. Buswell,-ecretary of the department of Edu¬cation, I inspected the building, ded¬icated during last Convocation week,which the General Education Boardmade possible by a grant to the Uni¬versity of one and a half million dol-lai-s. The department was foundedin 1909—as an undergraduate proj-»H.‘t for the training of elementaryand high .school teachers. Today itis a graduate school, concerned pri¬marily with the training of univer¬sity teachers, school administrators,and a research program designed toadd to the body of scientific knowl¬edge in the field of education.It was on the fourth floor of thisEducation building that Mr. Buswell.showed me the twenty laboratoryrooms in which students are engagedin this new .scientific research. Thereis an amazing machine that measuresan individual’s aptitude for reading.Seated at one end of the elongated,cameralike apparatus, the subject—(Continued on page 2) purpose of makingdozen of the most prominent menand women on campus are now bothering their friends for the cello-phane from their cigarette packages.The material is then cleverly foldedand re-folded into a wedge, andwoven with other similar wedges.The result is a pretty, silver belt.The wearers of these belt.s, how¬ever, must live in the constant fearthat someone will drop a matchnearby. Arrangements Negroes, WhitesHarold Laufman is winner of the , How “Science Tries To HarnessBlackfriars poster contest, according j Heaven” will be explained by Edwinto announcement made yesterday by j Rogers Embree, president of theBlackfriar Sta rsTo Entertain atSophomore PartyDue t« • misunderttanding, theICabaray Hop was previously an¬nounced as a Formal dance. The par¬ty will be informal.Entertainment for the KabarayHop, the Sophomore informal dancewhich will be given Saturday eve¬ning from 9 to 2 in the Cloisterclub of Ida Noyes hall, will be fea¬tured by stars of the current Black¬friar show ‘‘Whoa Henry” in what Louis Galbraith, publicity manager.The poster was selected from tensubmitted to the judges as the bestfrom the point of view of design,simplicity, and color scheme.The posters will be lithogiaphedimmediately and di.stributed over thecity by the Blackfriar poster com¬mittee, headed by Williston Tuttle. Itis planned to have three thousandcopies lithographed.Announce SongsThe remaining songs for the pro¬duction were announced yesterdayby H. Allen Stone, musical director.The theme song of the show, “Love¬ly Lady”, was written by WilliamCaiToll and Howard Dillenbach. It isto be sung by Robert Balsley, DonaldKerr, and the ensemble. The samemen also cooperated to write,“Broadway Is Calling Me”, whichwill be sung by Milt Olin, andGabriel Almond wrote the music for“Dixie Moore”.“We’re Sorry That W’e Ever MetYou” sung by the trio of Robert Bal-might be termed a premier synopsisof the revue. The dance, the first of i sley, Donald Kerr, and Ernest Brown,its kind to be staged at the Univer- was written by Sacerdote and Hein.sity, includes the gauche lighting ef¬fects of a modern cabaret, individ¬ual table service by the Cloister Cluband music by the ten piece Black¬friar orchestra.Bob Balsley anil Donnie Kerr, whotook the lead parts in the Blackfriarshow last year with Kerr as thecharming “lady”, have been cast to¬gether again in “Whoa Henry” andtheir theme song “Lovely Lady” willtop off the entertainment at the Hop.Milt Olin, another Friar star, singsthe song for which the show wasnamed and admonished “Whoa Hen¬ry”. E. B. Brown Jr., a blues singerfrom the freshman class, (there’s ablues singer in every cabaret) verycharily sings “I Don’t Wan^ YourSoul”.Tickets for the Hojx, which are(Continued on page 4)STUDENTS MUSTOBEY UNIVERSITYPARKING RULES bach. This team also cooperated towrite “Whoa Henry”. Other songsinclude: “Old Fashioned Girl” byHarry Berkover and Shirley Warsaw,“The Whoopee Chorus” by Harry ■* In connection with his studies onJulius Rosenwald fund, when he de¬livers the first William VaughnMoody lecture of the quarter Tues¬day at 8:15 in Mandel hall.M?\ Embree has made severalstudies during the past six years ofconditions in the Far East and inEurope and has been especially in¬terested in the relations between thenegroes and the whites. In this in¬terest, he has specialized in the studyof negro education and secondaryeducation in America.Reporter 'For Sun ^Fiom 1906 to 1907, Mi'. Embreewas a reporter on the New YorkSun; and then, for four years, wasthe alumni editor of the Yale alumniweekly. He spent eight years as theorganizer and director of the ClassSecretarial Bureau of Yale and forsix years was Alumni Registrar atYale. He was next made secretaryof the bureau of appointments, inwhich capacity he served for threeyears.He has been connected with theRockefeller foundation; from 1917to 19211 as secretary; from 1924 toI 1927, as director of the division of! studies; and in 1927, as vice-presi-i dent. His next position was presi-! dent of the Julius Rosenwald fund. I The English Placement and Quali¬fying Tests w'ill be given on April50. All undergraduates are eligible! to take this test and those who wishto do so must register in the Bureauof Records, Cobb 102, before Aprilj 23. All new plan students must pas.-this test with a grade of “B” as aI requirement for the College Cei tifii cate. The te.st is not required of1 ' Id plan students, but a grade o^'“B” on it fulfills the English re-. quirement for the Bachelor’s de¬gree. Students who fail the test on.April 30 or on any subsequent datemust pay $5 for the second attempt; and $10 for all other attempts. Nfee will be charged this quaiter.Haresfoot ClubPresents AnnualIShow Tomorrow MAROONSTURN BACKUKE FOREST NINE INSEASON OPENER, 3-1;TEAM SHOWS CLASSCold Weather HampersBatters; HenshawGoes RouteROOKIES LOOK GOODCOLLEGE BASEBALL’Purdue 10; Waba»h 1Chicago 3; Lake Forest 1Berkover, and the Prologue by Jer¬ome Mautner.Arrangements of all the musicalnumbers for the orchestra are nowbeing written by Mr. Stone. It is ex-(Continued on page 4) .secondary education and relationsbetween the negroes and whites, hehas contributed .several ai ticle.s toscientific magazines. He has justpublished a book, “Brown America”,which relates slave history.Henry Ford’s Five Day Week PlanWas Used Four Thousand Years AgoRenaissance SocietyIncludes Wilder BustIn Current Exhibitionl>u-i.s of Thornton ildi*r and•bilin Alden Carpenter, (,'hicago mn-'ii ian, a n'lmber of Lena cotta"I'lilptures, and brush and ink draw¬ings in the traditional Japane.semanner, compose the exhibit of"modern primitives” by Isamu No-giuhi now on exbtTiTiion in the Gal-of the Renaissance Society inWieholdt 205.Mr. Noguchi, who has siicnt thegreater jiart of his life in the Occi¬dent, combines in his art a herit-:3ge of the traditional • Japanese artlorms witb the impressionistic forms‘d mouern Europe. His drawing;;R>e done in the old style of the( hincse w'lth brush and ink on white‘•‘•I'oll paper bordered with fine silk.Yhe movement and po.sture of thefigures i.s sTuffg^ed hy means ofpowerful but .sensitive lines and the^'hadows are indicated by tones wash-^’d on sparingly. They are sugge^t-^d instead of boldly represented as<hey appear to the artist’s eye.The current exhibit will continueuntil April 15. The Gallei-y is open ’daily to visitors from 11 to 5. Pointing out that street trafficin the vicinity of the University hasbecome increasingly dangerou.s topedestrians and has resulted in sev¬eral injuries to students in the past !lew weeks, l.yman H. Flook, super¬intendent of the Building and(Jrounds department, asks studentob.servation of the following parking rules:Parking i.s jirohibited in the fol¬lowing areas:(1) Fifty-ninth Street, north sideof street, between Maryland Avenueand Woodlawn .■A venue, ami be¬tween Black.'lone .Ave. and Dorches- ^ter Ave.(2) Ellis Ave., both sides ofFifty-eighth Street between the“No Parking” sign.s opposite ('obbHall and Jones laboratory. i(3) Sixtieth Street, south side be¬tween Kllis Ave. and GreenwoodAve.(4) University Ave., cast side ofstreet approximately 100 feet northof Fifty-ninth Street opposite the *President’s House. |(5) No parking is permitted onthe drive's of the main quadrangles.The University provides free Henry Ford wasn’t the first, oreven one of the first, to use the fiveday week. This ciiallenge to thepresent, like many others, came fromone of the Oriental Institute’s far-flung expeditions in the Near Eastin the form of a four thousand yearold tablet unearthed several monthsago by Dr. H. H. von der Osten, di¬rector of the Hittite expedition atAlishar. The tablets which disclo.sedthe usage of the five day weekamong the Hittites and the .-Assy¬rians were brought to the Institutefor translation at the hands of Dr.1, J. Gelb.Dates on the documents show thatthe calendar in use was in the epony¬mous style, the weeks and years be¬ing named for officials, much as theRomans later named their years forthe con.suls. The five-day week ofthe A.ssyrians did not follow the cal¬endar of the Babylonians, the othergreat contemporaneous civilization,which had a .seven-day week.This gi'oup of so-called Cappa¬docian tablets give considerable in¬formation as to the business meth¬ods of the Assyrian merchants and money lendei-s in the important Hit¬tite city of 2200 B. C. Some sixtyof the tablets, many still with theclay envelopes in which they werej forwarded, were found in a building' excavated by the expedition.In the tablets is found the firstmention of the capital of the Hit¬tite empire, Hattusas, now modernBoghaz Koi. The tablets also dis¬close that the word Habiru, which! scholars have i-egarded as meaning, “Hebrew,” was not a designation ofthat people, but was a generic term' for foreignei-s.I The Assyrians, venturesome trad-‘ ers in the land, were apparently' somew hat unceidain as to the abilityof the Hittites to repay loans, de¬manding, and getting, high rates ofinterest. Their customary rates werefrom 50 to 60 per cent, and in onecase recorded in the tablets, the ratewas fixed at 180 per cent and abonus in honey. All of the loans werefor short terms, not exceeding sixmonths. Between themselve.s, how¬ever, the Assyrians loaned money atthe moderate rate of 20 to 30 percent. The debtor had to pay up, forif he failed he was sold into slavery “imeky Breaks”, a satire on col¬lege life and the jazz age, and thisyear’s annual all male musical revueof the Haresfoot Club at the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin, comes to Chicagotomorrow evening for one perform¬ance at the Eighth Street theater.For the thirty-fourth successive yearthe revue has taken a two weekroad trip which includes Chicago inan itinery of six to ten cities.The .show carries a cast of eighty-five, again with the traditional boa.stthat “all our girls are men, butevery one’s a lady”, and includesmore than twenty-five individualskits. In one number, “All in aRush”, the old expose of high pres¬sure fraternity rushing is outdone byi an original portrayal of the foul'means u.sed to beguile innocentfreshmen into joining college eatingclubs. The typical wfise-crackingsophomores as well as the beautifulbut dumb co-eds conie in for their1 bit of satire and for the first timethe Haresfoot Club shows why col¬lege football coaches act that wayat home.The revue carries with it the rec¬ord of thirty-three successful showsbefore it. Tickets may be securedat the box office of the Eighth Street! Theater and are priced from $.50 to: $2.50."HINDENBURG” TOPIC OF CLEAR $150 PROFITDIVINITY CHAPEL TALK AT JAMBOREE FRIDAY“The tremendous popularity thatPresklent Paul von Hindenburg en¬joys in Germany is due to his un¬ceasing adherence and devotion toduty,” said Professor Pauck, of theChicago Theological Seminary, in alectuie given in the Divinity Chapelparking areas on Fifty-eighth Street yesterday. His work in the warwest of Ingleside hall, and on Ellisavefiue, south of Sixtieth street,just w'est of the Men’s Re.sidencehalls. These parlTing areas are avail¬able to students and faculty.The Buildings and Grounds depart-(Continued on page 4) The University Jamboree, givenFriday night in Bartlett gymnasiumfor the benefit of the Settlement,cleared one hundred and fifty dol¬lars profit from the concession andticket .':ales.Six hundred and fifty dollars was* taken in and the expenses for boothsand supplies was five hundred dol¬lars. Four hundred dollars worth ofbrought fame.! In the elections held last Sundaythe German republic showed “even ' script was sold, the medium throng’if embroiled in communistic and which merchandise was purchased,fascist agitation, its willingness to I and two hundred, and fifty dollars. be lead for seven more years by i \v^s netted through ticket and tag( von Hindenburg.” | sales. BIGELOW RETURNSFROM CONFERENCEOF LAW INSTITUTEDean Hany A. Bigelow of theLaw school has leturned from aweek’s meeting of the real propertycommittee of the American Law In¬stitute of which he was an advisor,i The committee met fiom Sunday toThursday in Philadelphia to jiass onI the reformulation of the law of fu¬ture interest as drawn up by the re¬porter of the committee, Richard R.Powell, profes.«or of Law at Co¬lumbia university.Other advisors on the commilteeincluded: Honorable Henry U. Simsof Birmingham, president of theAmerican Bar association in 1931,Dean Everett Fraiser, University ofMinnesota, Dean Charles C. Clark,Yale university; Professor OliverRundell; Profe.ssor Walter B. Leach,Harvard; and Professor Louts M.Simes, Ohio State.Dean Bigelow was the former re¬porter of this committee, but relin¬quished his position when appointeddean of the Law school. The law offuture interests which was beingpassed on by the committee is oneof the most difficult and complicat¬ed branches of law. The committeewill meet on it again during the sum¬mer or early fall.After the reformulation of thelaw has been placed by the commit¬tee, it is passed on by the council ofthe American Law institute which ismade up of twenty-five of the mostprominent lawyers and judges of thecountry. The 1932 edition of the Maroonbaseball team showed a crowd of1500 that they are going to be hardto beat this year as they appearedin the season opener on Greenwood' field yesterday afternoon. Lake For¬est college was the victim and thescore was 3 to 1. Cold weather anda shifting wind handicapped bothteams, but from the start the Page-I men had the edge on the nine from' the north shore.The Maroons play today againstDavenport of the Mississippi Valleyleague. I.,angford, Beeks and Pagewill do the pitching.Roy Henshaw, star southpaw oflast year’s season, pitched the Ma-1 roons to their first triumph yester¬day. He allowed the Lake ForestI team five hiLs, the same number asthe Maroons gathered off Skopec,the visiting hurler. Henshaw struck; out eight Lake Forest batsmen while' three Maroons fanned Skopec’scurves.Although there was no base hitsj to spare. Coach Pat Page pointed outthat the cold weather didn’t help theboys at the plate. The Maroons hits, came when they were needed to; bring in the runs. Gene Buzzell’ssingle in the third scored Howardj and Ashley Offil’s single in the' fourth scored Lynch and Temple., Lynch opened the inning by pound-j ing out a double. Two singles by Pati Page, Jr., one in the sixth and onein the eighth, completed the numberof safe blows collected by the (’hi-cago team.An easy infield out and a doubleplay retired the visitors in the open¬ing frame. Skopec didn’t give theMaroons anything like a hit in thelast half of the inning. Maske open¬ed the second inning for Lake For¬est with a single but died on firstwhen Henshaw struck out Orr andSkopec and Parsons flied to Page.Lynch, Temple and Offil went outone, two, three in the second. Chi¬cago came through in the third witba run and again in the fourth with(Continued on page 4)Students, FacultyHold DepartmentalTea Today at 3:30iThe first of a series of four de¬partmental teas, planned by the Uni¬versity students social committee forthis quarter, will he held today from3:30 to 5:30 in the library andlounge of Ida Noyes hall for facultyand students in the Romance, Math¬ematics, Sociology, ComparativePhilology and Oriental Languagesdepartments.Those who have been asked topour are: Mrs. Carl D. Buck, wifeof Profe.s.sor Buck, head of the de¬partment of Comparative Philology;' Mrs. Leonard E. Dickson, wife ofProfessor Dickson of the mathemat¬ics department; Mrs. Ellsworth Faris,wife of Professor Faris, head of thedepartment of sociology; Mrs. JamesH. Breasted, wife of ProfessorBreasted, chairman of the depart¬ment of Oriental languages; Mrs.Mayme Logsdon, professor of mathe¬matics and head of Kelly hall; Mrs.Eliakim H. Moore, wife of ProfessorMoore of the mathematics depart¬ment; Mrs. William A. Nitze, wifeof Professor Nitze, head of the de-(Continued on page 4)YI .L DA.LY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 13, 1932u iiianuiuKOl Nhh. I .THB. OhTlCIAL STL’DENT NEWSPAPER OP' THEI N.\ KKS '! \ 'li L (i;p \<.(>Ponhshfcl nioriiin«9, except Satiiiday, Sunday and ^ Monday,il.. !i: In- V'v ii'.ci a'i 1 > 1 1 1,; uua-U: I'y i oe i^aii>X' • \ ; 1 .V \... Suli^cription rales So.tt"per year: by mail. i>er year extra. Sinule copiea, five-centaNil responsiliil t> i> a.-isuaied b 'he I nivers.ty ot Cniraao forhi \ thl iiient.^ ap, ariiie ii> I'lit liai.y Miimon or for any■i II 'net- O’ iir ;i o to b.v Tlv ita.i.i Va.'ooiiI ' IT JI' s, I :i.t eliin matte' Maitii 1'. at the post■ '^I ’l a t'li. ai.o. iilin. IS, iin.it':' me .‘\;'t of March d, lt*iVr‘1 I'nd.N M . iM.n exoiesslv le- 'ries all rittht of publication' a-". o!i.eM:,| 11'Ill a 'I'l e .1. in.- liai'et'l. roi.er i' 'he W 'Siein I i nf‘Teiu'e Pres- .AssoeiatioiI,0*’IS y. niDEN’OrR. JR.. ’•'.’itor-in ThiefMERWiy ROSEMIERT. Ruvims? ManafrerM.ARGARKI’ EJRW .\v-- R-psincsc lyiappo-er1A\E KESNER. Senior E.li* oHERBERT H. -TOSErH. .ir.. Sport? EtiitorASSOCIATE EDITORSM'N'NP (REVISIONRI RK S EROi'IN .1RRtON H nOW'XRnP. iVARI' POOI.K■ '•'^S F SIMO X• "l:Fx E T H iVl'isON' t \ nC)R E a .1 SON la’SlXESS ASSOCIATESt)H\ I) (T..\NCV. .IRFl't.XR I. COI.nSMITTlt: noMORK 'assistants.> r \M.KV (. ONNK. I \p' \\ h ' I x;' I I FR MONTCOMEKXVINCENT NEWMANFnw'Rii snni.i.F.RSpH'HOMORE editorsj A.NF i: I'?'MELMN GOLDMANWILLIAM GOODSTEINEDWARD NICHOI.SONiRiSKMiRV oOl.KMARt..\RET MLLLlv.AN PETl'V HWsENRORERT HERZOGDWIl) LEVINEEEGENE PATRICKROBERT ALVAREZ.1 NE WEBERNight editor: Rube S. Frodin.Assistant: Robert Alv'arezV, ednesday. .April 13. 19 32AMERICAN EDUCATION LACKSENGLISH EXCELLENCE(The Minnesota Daily)' /•/■ -.'ll! thl rditor iJ I III limns of thr .\lInnrsotii‘ady. irn aitrinf' ."■'i/r' ■ til th, r northii rst. romesh;-- ■nr i ,;:a (■ SC'T' li n aid 'innaiion of prrsrnt-day. : m i 1 I'l. 1. i '// ;/. an thr s-and point of mo.^t.hr r.d. (/. . ^ und if li nn rrs:. r. s of our i/rrat land.hi pi ■ in (i h.'rr IS li li take n: for thi.i 1 nii'rr-SI- V. ' ■ ir pi ■in. man, hrrr i 's mrrtiy nnr titrlhrr rrroa-of thr r.rr Hi ■ili e 1 f thr aims thr nrii planstri rini; in iii'n in 1 . 7 iir appi •aranrr I'-f thr littlr-.i-ikii ot sr ■mph- r .Viiininat Ion ijio stions pnhHshrd' .'(■( nt iy i thr Itoa.' li III 1 ..rami nrrs shoidd torrvrrri’iiio:\ liny siis'iinni Ihtil the ( nirers:! y s f'ltmi i-iu rntrd (--• rr p// primarily, laith whatrare /■. an raHi'd the "pli hian rirtiir.s'" cf mrmary andawurai y. I.hiiar s note, iOn paging through the Cambridge Univ'ersityExamination Paper.s for the English Eripos, onecannot hut be impressed with two peculiar ctiar-acterist.es of tnese examination questions: they arequestions that ask. not for facts hut for thought,and they are que. tions that establish and demandhigh standards cf scholarship. .Almost any ran¬dom sampling of these papers will illustrate theirsingular excellence:Give some account of any notable formsiii contemporary literature which were not jattempted by Chaucer.W hat editorial principles would >ou adoptif you were edi ing some ot the old ballads?About the year 1-392 a young dramat.stasks you frem which writer he has most tolearn. Kyd or .Marlowe. W hat advice wouldyou give him?W rite an imaginary dialogue betweenWordsworth and Johnson on this subject:’W'orris too familiar, or to remote, !defeat the purpose of a poet. (John- json)“1 haA-* taken as much pains to avoidw’r,;; l.« c^-jled Poetic Diction as is ordi-naruy taken t.) produce it.” (Words¬worth )Contrast the contemporary applicability ofRuskin s social preaching with Carlyle’s.V rne who ‘majors’ in English literatureat :i I i :.A-- r ity of Minnesota can testify that thiskind or quality of question is rarely asked in orout of examinations, and even the person who hastake no more than freshman courses can see thatS i f’rostior.i offer an iniellectual challenge to1 :n t’ : eyaijjiner and the examinee.\'2hy i.s it that in American universities students. .. rr-' trained tc think; to analyze; to criticize'i. 'i anrireci-ate the larger aspects and relationps of their particular subjects, as are the stu¬dents in foreign universities? W''hy is it that thequality of American education is so inferior?These are questions the student might well makehis professors uncomfortable by asking.Put before he contemnlates such unconventionalcneriet:. the student mi<’'ht uko ask himself wheth- . . tne ic.u . lies in our professors or in ourselves,.a. I'.e ..le lact absoiiaeis. Eciucation cannot byn> pxs ..-lie dennition be consiuered a one-sided.,nd u fecimes theieiore not only what. ... md.xC but a.so what the educatees ds-!'> n ;. be a .ag lus he evidences an interest merelyocalj. ileg.ees and good maiks. tile studentv'vi j i ind himse;!' to learn facis; but when heTaaecencs these requirements and becomes inter-esisd in t.aininif his mind as well as his memory:cultivating a taste for the best that is knowm:;i thought, ” instead of a facile efficiency in re-..Ating facts; in selecting what heightens the qual-cf his learring, he -vill enter upon a new stageof development.It wculd seem that here is a field of endeavorr. v’hich any ambitious student and w’ould-be i•c.Tcher or 'vriter might well distinguish himself.; The Travelling Bazaar:I BY FRANK HARDINGHere one for Mr. Swenson to try Iiis luck.A piece of rope weighs four ounces perloot. It is passed over a pulley and o,^ oneend is suspended a weight and on the otherend a monkejv The whole system is in equil¬ibrium. The weight of the monkey in lbs. isequal to the age of the monkey’s mother inyears. 1 he age of the monkey s mother addedto the age of the monkey is four years. 1 hemonkey’s mother is twice as old as the mon¬key was when the monkey’s mother was halfa.s old es the monkey will be when the mon¬key is three times as old as the monkey smother was when the monkey s mother wasthree times as old as the monkey. I heweight of the rope or the weight at the endis half as much again as the difference inweight between the weight and the weightplus the weight of the monkey. How longis the rope?Send your answers in by w'ay of the Fac¬ulty Exchange and we li see what we can doabout it. But send a complete proof too./\ncl fer the benefit of all the people thatare running around school yelling o a(every opportunitv. as a salutation, th'^y areusing it in the wrong sense. o is a dis¬tinguished \iddi.sh word ol disapprobationmeaning ”1 doubt it”. Everytime the wordis uttered it should be accompanied with theIndian ‘How sign. . . .\Ae know a lot ofother choice 'l iddish words too, i i case youmight Want to use them.This Blackfriars song “1 want your body■without your soul thrown in’ is causing somelumpiis, for at the recenf broadcast severalpeople thought the announcer said “1 wantyoi'i IrodA' without your clothes thrown on ,and they were shocke:i into writing lettersabout it. education emergesFROM TEST TUBE INSCIENTIFIC SPLENDOROF NEW LABORATORYRut. I thought we cl talked that all over before.%'• *;*Stan Hamberg and Virginia Boone ate theare ctmiing in for the concentratedbird ol late. And to think that it was ,Stanthat recently .^tood on the steps of Rosie anrlgave all people in a similar position the gen-l.e burble. . . . I hen to Mary Mawicke goessomething cr other for amusing everyone bysilting in front of the rriinor making faces athorse f. W heir asked what was the matter.«ive s. rrowfully replied that she, “just could-n t register! And w^e musi record thecase of another male student who in someW’ay enrobed himself in the Home FxonomicsDept. Ffe, along with the rest of the girls,is new busy making a pair of beach pajamas.Wonder what he will do when they get tothe unmentionables? (Con 'niied from oipe t''lirild or adult—place.? his head intoan instiuinent similar to ihat foundin an oculist’s office. The subjectread? the typed matter on a plateliefore his e.ves as they traverse thelines. When a child is discoveiedwhose e.ves make a series of manyxiioi : Jumps, it is possible to correctthe default and materially improvehis readin.g abilities. The project hasl>een a pioneer one in improvingmethods of reading among schooleliildien by instruction in the propergrouping of words.Ne.xt door to this (aboiatory roomi? another—iii which a device meas¬ures the emotional reai tion of aeiiild, recoiding hi? heart beats andblood pie-sure upon a strip ot paiu'r.(iemonslrating the amount of exeite-ment undergone during a class »*xer-eise or written e.xaminalimi.Tlien there is the totioseope, whichlooKs like a phonograph and whichaccurately gauges the range of yourvoice—right before youv eyes! Itleaches one to exercise his vocalcords in order to improve u monototievoice.On the second floor of the newTRY OUK SPECIAL |SUNDAY DINNER I,''lice!;i .M (Idlv-noi I iiiieln ■.ii: - j. 1 '- t. .1 I 1 • mi'J. & C. Restaurant i1527 E. 55th St. Dor. 10361 I building is the largest deuartmcntal' library on the caiipus, a statisticallaboratory, and editorial rooms in' which at e published the LlomentarySchool .lournal and the School Re¬view-two of the earliest journals inthe educational field. In the base¬ment is a machine shop — wheie afulltime mechanic is kept busy pro¬ducing the equipment and toolswhich the laboratory work on tlieupper floors requires.Mr. Buswell spoke of one otherdivision of the departmeiiT.s work—the University Elementary and Highschool—which he referred to a.-“laboratory schools.” Here it is tlialthe department tries out and tests itsmethods and materials. Here it isthat there are to he found the great¬est array of progressive and uniiiuetechnique in primary education. Out¬standing among these has been the scheme of reducing the grammarschool jteriod to six years, and es¬tablishing a high school course of five.vear.s—giaduating the student fromhigh school after only eleven yearsof training. The practice has beencurrent there for fifteen years, andthe students are received into anyuniversity in the country. Detailedrceords of pupils in the.se schools arckejTt, and serve as source materialsfor University students in the departmeiit of Education.(This is one in a series of articlescn the work of outstanding; Univer¬sity departments. Another will ap¬pear next Wednesday).WED., AI'KII. 13. s:()il 1*. M.“(i<*rman> and Tho German Voulb |Movement*’ Ily Mr>. Otto Kmhler !A infmlnr cf the (i. Y. M jUnitarian Parish Hall I!1L K. 6*th Street VHmiK.sion 'dr [ CULBERTSONAdvice On ContractFREE'fhe foremost hridee authoritywill an.-wer yeur contract ipies-tions iiersonall.v. Mr. Uulheitsonhas agi eed to i xteml this ser\ iei-to all reade' of hi- new lionk“(“ontract Bridge tor AuctionFlayers.’’You don’t hrive to be an expi'r:to understand this k -theauthor particularly designed it tomeet the requiremenis of allclasse.? i f player? - heginiiers,averag^e. and advanced.IncluiK'd in the hook i,- a handy,detachahli*. 'ocket ?ummar.v f"(piick re*‘ereiice.Contract Bridgefor Auction PlayersbyEly Culbertson$1.00U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue Phelps & PhelpsCOLONIALTEA ROOM6324 Woodlawn Ave.|| \l here a thrill awaits the uew-!j coiner and our old I riends are! always salishedI!l ./ onderfully goorl food .served; in a disfinctiv’e F.arly .Americanil environment. ( ome toda\you’ll Ire a frequent guestU. of C. LUNCHEON 35cWaffles, Sandwiches. HomeMade Ice Creams.6324 Woodlawn Ave.For Large Party ReservationsCall Hyde Park 6324t •" Jll> wtThe Ball that alwayshas a good orchestra29Ted Fiorita —Wayne King —Art Kassel —Paul Speclit 303132When you go to the Military Ballyou always enjoy the dancingThe ve.il recipe for a good dance is an or¬chestra that you like. An orchestra thatcan get hot, get dreamy, or just be good,has al'ways been on that platform at theSouth .Shore Country Club during the Mili¬tary Ball. Paul Specht, and his Internation¬al orchestra, are no exception, and we knowthey are going to play in tune with yourmood. I eople come to the Ball f)ecause they wanta rood time, and the attendance the last^hree years makes us believe that people! ave that good lime.$4 3() is the price, or the cost of a ’’gooddate, .April 22nd. We suggest that you callup for your date now: when Paul Specht isplaying you won t have any trouble, butc; mpetition is competition, so gel the phonebuz.dng.I April 22nd iA.soThe Military BallTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1932 1 :.rr <»i Men Will Be Disenfranchised Long Before Women Will.. ^ Charles Edward Merriam•••••••••••••••••WOMEN’S ACTIVITIES City High School 250 VISIT FRENCHSCHEDULE EVENTS Girls Are Guests HOUSE AS GUESTS,FOR COMING WEEK At Alumnae Tea AT 5TH ANNUAL TEAIcct 125 UpperclassCounsellors byWednesday1)’- artivitifs have .submitted,, I of announcements ofI II tin (uminiT week ;Fedoratior,.r of couii'^f-Iinrs from li.'t-i to Mii-mbeis of the Ked-■iim il arni t" Ituth Willard,of the o'-L'nni/a! ion, willafii '1011.11 .-'t the weeklyMore limn five hundred,i hi on >uvri,e'teil at the■III . and adititienal li-t areI I ■, 1 be re.'ei\'ed.' . t i I If II undi i iri adiiat or, ■ ulio !.> illHre Le i ill bi iiiv.1 , :..r. a’ul to ii^-i'-t with the• I \\ ( I k lo ojjTani next year,I it bei name to any council.i- to tbe < biiiiTiian. < Hu- bun-■ I t;t_\ .'ivi u • ineti will be i-e• r the ’ ]'0 llioll b\ lieXt■ ! '.ly.toard of Woinro'* OrtJ.i oi/ation.U. (>. nieiiil»er> \\i!l I tliithe A liin Mae I'o, III I ; I.laa'l.W. A. A.1W. A. .A. bridi;e tout naiin litl iiday do.iiijj the \veikl,\;i fid till -■> in the ^ . V\*lea \o\ t ball. .\n\ I ’ni. .■ I-,. 'I \\ 1.0 ■ i: tel i-'led iiia.\■■, ri". aidle.,- of whi ther ora memlier of the oiycani/.u■ n l td ran' i required to■ me . laeuliv memiMioflull n if I 'L \ , 1 Kdiieairuitud t j. in in ti e tour^ia' (b- ii'eii, tatib- of . !a> iiia\r , ■ li bx epa r:.' • c "iqi; o|Tarpon1.' an iqe ii meet iie. of . fie• ' ■ aifi tfii .'it 'ei noon at t in.■L • . i|, ee ati\ I'fiaiixTe'I*' ef't fii of fi.-reii' to the eluli,■ an ti > . Ui f..i ineii-in r-fiiii.'oiip will lie lonlinueii iin-aia\, and tloe-e ib -irinv; to lakee -lioubl M.n up on the elul.Ml lioaid lietoii- J.l’.d of tile■ e w i.- lie- 11 a \ (Hit.ition of all new meiiiliei- j.-, to1 in'day exin.iiir under thei nieiit ot lfie.-,e woiii.r: Helenml (ifua Niekobtcfi. in chartre■I on inutd on p'-,;. 4)TENNISSUPPLIES' ijb'te vestrinttin^j and re iivice $1.73 to $8.00.V. I use Armour s string'’ fexclusively. i|■I t Dit.son, Spalding;, |\V il.son, Dayton, Ma^uan 'other rackets ii$1.90 to $15,00'-'est stock of rackets and' 'hies, on the south side.pants, shoes, sox. shirts,'s and fresh tennis balls.Woodworth^sBook Store1311 E. 57lh St.OPEN EVENINGSPhone Hyde Park 1690 This eomin;: Sunday afternoon, theCliicajro .Mumnae cliil) pie>enls lliethird ot a series of teas for liijih-chool pills ill the eity, in Ida Xoyeshall, under tfie pi'neral ehairman.'hipof .Miss Vcrnoti Liles Horn. Follow-inp tlie tea, the younp womon arctaken on a short tour of the I’tii-versity campusXortli side iiipfi schools, includ-inp Lake View, Selnirz, Tuley, lioo-e-veli. Selin and Waller are represent¬ed l>> the pi'e-ls who \sill lie piesentat that time..•\rranpemerits for puides who willconduct the tour'. ha\e been incbaipe of I.ydabctli ■||c'>lei'. .Mis'' o( ' . ( f the club, i eliairman o!tb'- te;. cniiii: ilt<'e, al'd .fetin Svarcyi' meinht . -hip (bai! ni;it' of the club,Tbi i- ■ I (■ tl'ii (I (.! a .'iH h:; ,,f'i\ tea- wbieli tbi- 'o ni/at ioii p-c'•■lit- annually io acquaint pradnaiinp .' I'O.I bipli -cbool pi'l' with the(’niver ity. ('n .\piil m iiil)i'i •of p! ..'Hi "liool will III' eiiH'itaiiicii: .May >. Ill' .'ubueban m.i lliatm w’l t pioiq ; mi .May fifteenth,the .'Oiith Mile u bu i htiti .-iIk.oI.-. wiloe 1 ( pri'cntcd. .Additional arrani’emen!' tor piiidc' on two of these oc-la ion ;n c t '. be made by .MaitbaMiller. (^pen House FunctionProves UnusualSuccessKelly Holds DinnerI'li 'tunan nit'inbers of Kell\ bailate entertaininp .Mf'. .Alnm f’.IIiio,,. IicmI Ilf Ida .Noje.s fiall, and.\Ii" Hanuiris Ames. a"i'taii: to theI lean of .Students, at '.be tit-t of aeiic- of .ai'ii'iy dinrii r.' toiiiplit at6.(>f all till woineii' ilormitoi il',-.K. ll> bail ; probably liesi known for'be fri'ipient faculty dinners whicliit' < llicers spon-mr. Thi.s plan, bow-(-v I r. with the fre-bmaii wonu'n I's-pecially takimp I'luiipi' of tin affair.. ii i'|o I'ccdeti: <1.Pl.KDGINC\\>.'cin antimiiic. be .di'dpinpif I 'oi !. 1 • . .1 ! UK ( i. ecu w 1.0(1 .\ \iiue.. , ouithelBeaAilyof Your Figure withThe charming accented sil-“Lo-Bak”—daln-tv, exquisitelyfitting—tiiis new-brassiere withkack and sidesreduced to atnini-nium, gives mar-velous“iiplift”tothe slim figure. houetre that fashion makesso much of nowadays — bustsubtly uplifted — waistlineslender, hips smoothly round¬ed, makes essential the selec¬tion of the proper foundations.Maiden Form, accomplishesall these lovely accents and atthe same time gives you thecorrect support health authoritiesrecommend. See Maiden FormFoundations at your dealer orwrite direct for style booklet.Maiden Form Brassiere Co., Inc.Dept. —245 Fifth Ave.,N.Y.Stunning new girdle of mesh(marquisette lined) withside panels of Ever-shecr elas¬tic —cool, comfortable, slimsthe waist and rounds thehips with exceptional ease.• Tbtre is s Maiden Form for every type offisure.Brassieres$1.00 to $2.95Cirdtes$2.95 to $12.50Carter Belts$1.00 to $2.95LOOK FOR THE NAMERcg.U.S.Pit.Of.GIRDLES » GARTER. BELTS “Non-A-Lastic”(front) —• a newgirdlewithspccialnon - stretchablecenter front forabdomen control.“Grecian Moon"brassiere hasclever clastic in¬sert between “uplift”bust sections. “MaidcncttcSeamless” a new“wisp of a bras¬siere , for slightfigurcs,withscamsso tiny that theyarc practical Ivinvisible. Thedainty garter beltis of net trimmed Cloister Club Is Host to CampusWith Tea Dance Friday Afternoon FOUR-WAY PARTYIS FRIDAY NIGHT■A traditimi of fiv(' yoai's' stand-up. till' annual open liouso t(*a piv-('n by Mad(‘nini''oll(' Dorcas .1. Per-|■»'noud ;ind the mombois of theF I'onch Ikiu.'C. .'^itiiday aflci iiooii.proved one of the larposl and mostclitinninp aftornoon social functionsof the year. .ApproNimati'ly twobuti(!i-cd .ami lift.x" persons were re-ceivi'd (lurinp the period betweenthree and 'ix o'clock.La.'h o'' in umb rpraduate wornell will: I ('side in 1 .-i .Maisoii Kiaii-I ai I wa- pi'i'iiptti (i to inviti' two ofIn. pi nfe"iir.'. lepardb'ss of ileiiart-ii>- ft . ami |i; r famil.x. .Maii.\’ of theL'Ui'st were per . I' li fi iends of .Mine.I’ei i ei! uni. ami seMo ai iiicmliers ofI.e ('(fl ic Piar ai ■ d" ('hieapn werepri'senl.Aiiionp' tin faeu! ,v win. attendedWell' 111. ami .Mr-, .lau "'- 11. P.ieast-eil; Profo'-ef .AIpi i non (’(^li'nian oftin l''ieiiiTi departim'iil : ,\li-. LdwinI’. iLirpan. wbo-i' lui band is a pro¬fessor of I'lencli I .it Cl Mt ti 11 : .Ml. .1..''peini'r Dicker-on win. i' ('orre-.'pomlinp secretary of tiie Ibiard of'I’ruslei's; .Mrs. Cliarles W. Gilkey;Prol'es.'or ami Mi's, llaywani Ki'tiis-lon. of the .Spanish departmi'nt ; .Mr.ami .Mr-. Williair .1. .Mather, the'foimei' (if whom i l.ursar of th('riiivi'i sit \ ; and Profe-sor ami .Mrs.\\'illi;im .A. .\'it/.e of the di'partmentof b’oiiian..' l aiipuauis and Litera-t UK s.The M('W Consul (le I'lance and•Mmi'. K('\e W ('ib'r, who have onlybiM'ii in Cliicapo diose last twomoiitlis. were pin .-t' of .Mnu'. Perre-noiid. .A few of llu' other puestsr('(eived includi'd I>r. D. .Mornet oftin' SorlioniK'; .Mr. and .Mrs. DanielTaxioi'; .Mr. ttnd .Mrs. .A. L. .Allard;.Mi.ss .linlitl' Waliir; DV. and .Mrs.II. P.rowM of .lolii'lti'; Mile. A’illere,.Mr. and .Mt'. .Montapue Kerry, andMI - !■ ( 11 \, of I.ak(' Kori's:. The Cloister club, new eatinp es¬tablishment replacinp the old IdaXoyes refectory, in the hall, formal¬ly opeiis Friday afternoon with a teadance for the entire campus, from.T till .') or .");.30. The Blackfriars’ or-che.stra, which played for the Jam-borec la.'t week-end. lias been en¬gaged to turnish a continuous jtro-prani of dances during the after¬noon.Ail men and women undergradu¬ates or graduates - are cordially in¬vited to attend, and ’‘dates” are notnecessaiy. The entire progi'am haslii'en iilaiiiu'd to !•(' as informal aspo.'silile. so as to givi' tlie campus anoppoi t uiiitx' to lu'eomi' acquainted with the new “atmosphere” of theclub. Guest.s do not need to feel thatthey must order any of the fifteento thirty or forty cent tea menu un¬less they so desire, for the jturposeof the tea is simply to give the stu¬dents a chance to start a tea-dancinghabit.Duiing the dancing F’riday after¬noon, tallies will lie placed along thewall for the use of those who do notcare to dance all the time.Mi.ss Damaris Ames, assistant tothe Dean of Students, is in charge ofsocial arrangements for the tea(ianc(*, and Mrs. Alma P. Bi'ook, headof Ida .X’oyes hall, is hostess for the; atfair. with FLmnie Morse and X'at-alie (Jordon assisting her. The social spot-light swings to theTower-room of the Stevens hotelF’riday iiight, where the “Four-WayParty”, the first to be held by wom¬en’s clubs of the University, is beinggiven by E.soteric, Mortar Board,Quadrangler, and Sigma.The “party” is in the form of asupjter dance between 9:30 and 2:30,and is the only joint affair of itstype scheduled. No other formaldances will be held by these fourclubs during the remainder of the(luarter, according to arrangementswhich were made at the close of thewinter se.s.sion.Harold Motherway’s orchestra haslieen secured to play for the dance.JUST THINK FRESH NAPKINS DAILYWail' of [irotest ai'osi' for a fewiiioiiu'iiI' ii'st('I'dav noon ami con-sti'iiiation I'eipned: it. was lunch¬time in Bi'i'clier hall. 'I'tie dinerswho had finislied their meals were in¬dignant that tlieii' napkins should hetaki'ii away from them, to he dis-ctirdi'd upon the floor by the busymaid' . . . lu'ie it wa.s only Tuesdtiynoon, and m. dean napkins could hiobtained till W’edtiesday eveninglPamleimuiium; wh.v. what’s theidea, how are we gonna have naj)-kiri' tor the r(*st of our tneals’.’ Ques¬tion' innired down on the heads oftile maid-;.'Pile aiiswi'i' came blandly, simidy,with a touch of aimisemetU: thei'e aregonna be clean nafikins every day in B 'ceber from now on!Incredulity: but bow come'.’Well, rumor has it that MissBreckiiii idp'(*. head ot Green hall,didn’t think it vei'y sanitary for awoman to have to use someone else’snapkin when places at table gotmi.xed up. .So now. Green andP.(.'ecber. balls are having fresh nap¬kins (‘vei'v day..And Ripley might add ; “believe itor not.”ROSALYN’S PLACECOMPLETE LUNCH 35c58th at Cottage Grove Warner Bros.FROLICTheatre — 55th & Ellis Ave.STUDENT CUT-RATETICKETTHIS COUPON AND 25cPRESENTED AT THEBOX OFFICEFrolic TheatreKiititlis hiiirer to one admis.sion anyliay i!iclu(Iin;r S-itunlays ami Sunday.',r.ood until .A|)ril 17.Wed. & Thum., .April 1.3-14'TK.4PPEI) IN A SIB.MARINE”.lean Harlow "I! Wise Giil.s"Ruth Chatterlon“TO.MOKKOW—TOMORROW ••All on One rrognnnTHINK THIS OVER!\ ■ ' In College w^e have comparativelyfew responsibilities. College days arecarefree days. But these days are veryfleeting, and before we realize, theyare over. Hence, it is our duty to makethe most of college years, and to gainas much as we can culturaly and edu¬cationally.No wonder college students yearnfor the thrill and experience of a tripto Europe. 1 here is so much to begained in art, in literature, in history,etc. which only a trip abroad gives, itis a real thrill to stand before theplaces we have read about or to livefor just an hour at an inn made famousby the great men who met there in by¬gone days.Depression, hard times- -j^st are¬n’t when you talk about a trip toEurope. And the trip that is plannedis extremely reasonable. 38 days—$353.00 (all expenses).Talk it over with Ted CurtissDaily Maroon Office Lexington HallHours, 12-1 P. M., 3-4 P. M.If you are not getting Campus Tours publ'cation, “Hitting the High C‘s“ askTed to send it to you as you will enjoy it r« great deal.CAMPUS TOURS INC. 310 So. Michigan AvenueHarrison 8633with narrow !acc.rrlii II '''rtiir'BHyjd IBadMliiBi Eiitii APage Four THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13. 1932MAROONS TURN BAaLAKE FOREST NINE INSEASON OPENER, 3-1;TEAM SHOWS CLASS TODAYon theQUADRANGLES WOMEN SCHEDULEEVENTS OF WEEK Blackfriar Poster(Continued from page 3)(Continued from page 1)two more.The Lake Forest scoring was ac¬complished in the sixth. After Katz-mayer was thrown out, Johnson toOffil, Maske singled to center. Maskestole second and went to third onOrr’s single. Ma.'ke came home af¬ter Skopec flied to Lynch, but Orrwas trapped between first and sec¬ond for the third out.Coach Page tried his sophomoretalent in the game yesterday withmore than satisfactory results. Offilplayed a good game at first, whilePage and Lynch performed satisfac¬torily in the field. The three ofthem got four of the five Maroonhits. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13The Daily MaroonXight editor for the next issue: J.Bayard Poole. .4ssistant: David C.Levine.Undergraduate Organi,:ationsBlackfriars rehearsals: chorus,2:30 in Mandel hall; cast, 7 in theReynolds club theatre.The Freshman Executive councilmeets at 12:30 in Ida Noyes hall.Pi Delta Phi meets at 3 in thewicker room, Ida Noyes hall.Delta Sigma Pi meets at 12 inroom D, the Reynolds club.Tarpon meets at 3 in the Y. W.Box Score:CHICAGOAB R H. . . . 2 0Buzzell, rf 2John.son, ss 2Mahoney, 2b ... 4Lynch, cf 3Temple. 3b 4 1Offil, lb 4 0Page, If 3 0Howard, c 4 1Henshaw, p 3 10 00 01 1 ro01o111100 029 3 5LAKE FOREST The Inter-fraternity council meetsat 7 in room D, the Reynolds club.B. W. 0. meets at 12 in the alum¬ni room, Ida Noyes hall.The Poetry club will meet at 8 at5039 Ellis Avenue.Departmental OrganizationsEl Circulo Espanol meets at 4 inIda Noyes hall. “Colombia." SenorLibardo Rodriquez, Chicago Span¬ish .Academy.The Junior Mathematical club;“Models for Skew Curve Projec¬tion.” Professor S. Pollock, IndianaState Teachers coFlege. 4:30, in Eck-hart 206.Tea for the faculties of the de-partment.-i of Romance Languages,Mathematics, Sociology, Compara¬tive Philology, and Oriental Lang¬uages, at 3:30 in Ida Noyes hall. of stunts; Roberta Fenzel, refresh¬ments; and Angelina Williams, chair¬man of judging.Y. W. C. A.The Advisory board meets thismorning at 9:30, with members ofthe Hyde Park Y. W. C. A. Advisoryboard as guests. The first cabinet oncampus is also invited to attend.Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey, president ofthe national association, is to speakon the national convention plans.Drama GroupThis afternoon at 3:30, all mem¬bers of the drama group of Y. W.will meet with Sally Fisher, newchairman of the club, Martha Mil¬ler, president of Y. WL, and Mrs. A.J. Brumbaugh club advisor, to com¬plete a plan of activity for the re¬mainder of the spring quarter andfor the coming year. The group (Continued from page 1)pected that they will be completed intime for the orchestra to start reg¬ular rehearsals early next week.Edgar I. Schooley will introduce thenumbers to the entire company bythe end of the week.aims to provide opportunity for in¬terested students to appear in playsand to become acquainted with pro¬duction.The women’s riding club has post¬poned the dinner scheduled for to¬morrow night, until Thursday. April21HILL’S CAFETERIA63rcl and Woodla%vn Ave.Always Reliable for your Breakfast,Luneh or Dinner.General Price Reduction inkeeping with the times. TypewriterSpecialsCorona 4 Late Model $29.50Remington Portable Late Model 33.50Standard Underwood Like New 39.50Ribbons 50 and 75 CentsREPAIRS FOR ALL MACHINESGUARANTEEDMAJESTICTYPEWRITER SALES AND SERVICE1202 E. 55th St. Hyde Park 3974AB R H PO A •All undergraduates are invited.Collins, cf . . . . . . 4 0 0 2 0 The Zoological club, at 4:30 inFitzgerald cf . . . 4 0 1 1 1 Zoology 29; “Lygue Piatensis (L) :Katzmeyer, ss . . 4 0 0 3 2 i Its Relation to the Setting of Alfal-Maske, If . . 4 1 2 5 0 * fa Seed.” L. Floyd Clarke.Orr, lb . . 3 0 1 7 0 Departmental teas, 3:30-5:30 inSkopec, p . . 3 0 0 0 0 the library and lounge, Ida NoyesParsons, c .... . . 3 0 0 5 2 hall.Lutz, 2b . . 4 0 1 1 2 Music and Religious ServicesBratze, rf .... . . 3 0 0 0 0 Divinity chapel, at 12 in JosephBond chapel. “Lives of Power:32 1 0 'J4 Three Men I Have Known,” Profes-Chicago .... 001 200 OOx— 3 5 2 sor William Bower.Lake Forest 000 001 000— 1 5 3 (Dgan music, at 5 in the Univer-sity chapel.Errors: Katzmeyer Maske, Fitz- The Religious Education club:gerald, Johnson, Temple. Twc » base "Thie Cooperation between thehits: Lynch. Hit by pitched ball: Home and the Church for ReligiousOrr (Henshaw). Struck out; Hen- Training.” TJean Charles H. Gilkev.shaw, 8; Skopec, 3. Bases on balls; 7, in Swift Common room.Off Henshaw, 4; off Skope c, 5. MiscellaneousUmpire: Naperstek.Students, FacultyHold DepartmentalTea Today at 3:30 Radio lecture.s; “United StatesHi.stoiy—Recent Period. 1865-80."Associate Professor William Hutchin¬son. 8 A. .M.. on WM.4Q. “March¬ing Events.” Associate ProfessorHarry Gideonse. 9:15 P. M., onWMAQ.(Continued from page 1)p^rtment of Romance Languages;Mrs. J. M. P. Smith, wife of Profes¬sor Smith, vice-chairman of the de¬partment of Oriental Languages andLiterature.The second tea, which will be heldOhe week from today will be givenfor the faculty of the departmentsof history, education, religion andnew testament. STUDENTS MUSTOBEY UNIVERSITYPARKING RULESBLACKFRIAR STARSTO ENTERTAIN ATSOPHOMORE PARTY(Continued from page 1)priced at $1.50 a couple may be pur¬chased at the University Bookstore,the Daily Maroon office, at any fra¬ternity house or from members of theSophomore Class Council. The danceis .sponsored by Miss Damaris Ames,University Social Director, Mr. andMrs. William Scott and Mr. HaroldSwenson, ((Continued from pagement has, dui’ing the past month,placed warning tickets on manycars and has written letters to manyof the car owners, frequently thepaicnt> of studentsA careful record of the ticketsplaced on cars is made. The firstticket is a warnrh^l^irecting atten¬tion to the rule which is violated.The second ticket on the same cari(‘sults in a letter to the ownei-.written notice that upon the thirdste))s will be taken to prevent furth¬er violation.MARYLAND CAFEFrxid Exrellent - PricM LowC'hineHf - American RestaurantS46 E. 6.3RD STREETCompleteHreakfii-^t loo - tipl.unoheon 2.oo - upDinner U.oc - upfmWANTED Cirl to do 3 hours ofhousework in e:;chani:e for loomand l«,ard in private home on.South Side. Miss Robinson. WANTED Man to work fourhours fier ni^ht as night watch¬man in e^change for meals. Mustrent room in hotel. Mr. Kennan.FOR RENTALL H.M.S. $:3..>0 a wk. 2 rm.-uites ST.OO. First callers getschoice on this new plan. 3 sm.rms. $3.00 a wk. 0026 InglesideAve. W.ANTED—Girl to wait tablesin neighborhood restaurant from12 to 1 and 6 to 7 in exchange formeals. Miss Robinson.I IDA NOYES A NIGHT CLUB?Impossible, everyone said.It shall be done, thundered theSophomore class cotincilAnd so they present, for yourapproval and entertainment - - -THE KABARAY HOPStrictly and Positively InformalSATURDAY, APRIL 16 — 9:30 to 2Soft lights — in the Cloister club of Ida Noyes hall.Sweet music — by the versatile twelve-piece Blackfriarorchestra.And a good time for all present.All for $1.50Bids are on sale atTHE INFORMATION OFFICE - THE UNIVERSITYBOOKSTORE - THE DAILY MAROON OFFICE - ANYFRATERNITY HOUSE AND FROM ANY OF THEFOLLOWING MEMBERS OF THE SOPHOMORECLASS COUNCILBurton YoungCharles TresslerEugene FosterHoward Young Frank NahserHerbert RichmondMargaret HolahanJean Jordan Ruth WorksWally CrumeMary VoehlGeraldine Smitbwick