\ ol. 32. No. 104. Mp inaroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1932 Price Five Cent*rSADmONAL EVENTSPUNNED FOR WEEKOF ALUMNI REUNION;JUNE »-14 IS DATE Cole Again HeadsGeographic SocietyHarry Swanson ChosenChairman ofProgramhold LF sing JUNE IIThf 1932 Alumni Reunion will beheld on campus June 9 to 14, ac-cordinAr to a program announcedyc'^teiday by Harry R. Swanson, '17,Reunion chairman. BefEinninjr withtht annual Alumni-Varsity baseballirame. at 3 on June 9, the alumniwill partfeipate in a six-day round(>;' dinners, class reunions, and cam¬pus tours endinjr on Convocationda.\. June 14.Other tirst-day festivities includethe (' banquet, held annually inHutchinson commons, the Women’s.Athletic association dinner, in Ida.Voyes hall, and the Social Service.Administration dinner, in Judson('ourt..Several .41umni conferences, the.Auies dinner, and the President’s re¬ception to alumni, will be held inthe Reynolds club. The Class ofliM2 will have a party in the St.Clair hotel, at which “Life on the(^uadranjcles”, the campus talkinf;movie, will be shown.The hiifh point of the week’s pro-irram will be reached with the I’ni-ver>ity .Sinjr on Saturday, June 11.S. Kdwin Karle, ’ll, is chairman ofthe sinjf for the twenty-first year.At’ter the sinjf, (' blankets will be!>ie>;ented in a traditional ceremony.The National Intercolle>fiate TrackMeet is also scheduled for Saturday,a well as the annual baseball jfamebetween the clas.ses of ’Ifi and ’17.The Class of 1H97 will hold itsthirty-fifth reunion at this time.I>ean Charles W. (lilkey willpleach the Convocation sermon on.''unday, June 12 (Convocation Sun¬day I; and Phi Beta Kappa initiation\\ill be held Monday, June 13, inJ'nLon court.Convocation will take place onI ues<lay, June 14, in the morninjrand afternoon. The Reunion pro-ci;im will end with the I,»aw .School(Continued on page 4) Fay-Cooper Cole, head of the de¬partment of anthropology, was re¬elected president of the (Jeographic.“ociety of Chicago at a meeting heldTuesday night. Professor CharlesC. Colby of the geography depait-ment and Henry C. Cowles, chair¬man of the Botany department havebeen appointed to the board..Members of the Geographic so¬ciety are people who are interestedin any phase of geography or travel,and geographical research. .Meetingsare held twice a month in Orchestrahall, and during the winter specialscientific lectures are held in Ful-) lerton hall, Art Institute. The Chi¬cago society is one of the four larg¬est in the country.fmenrankFBEST IN MIDWESTDr. Henry EdmundsSpeaks on CampusSunday and TuesdayHr. Henry M. Edmunds, pastor ofHi< Independent Presbyterian‘ hiirch of Birmingham, will apeak atHi(‘ chapel services Sunday morning,and will also give the address atDivinity chapel in Bond Tuesdaynoon."Ho Something About It”—a ser-nion pertaining to the current socialorder—i.s the topic of Dr. Edmunds’addre.ss Sunday morning, while heini' selected “The New Challenge”as his theme for Divinity chapelTuesday.Hi-. Edmunds, according to* Iiarles W. Gilkey, dean of the Uni¬versity chapel, is recognized as anaiitstanding leader in religious, so-vi.-il and civic affairs of the South.He i.s author of four recent books,and has been pastor of the Birming-liiun church for seventeen years,rile church now has a membershipnt more than 1,500, and a half mil-*'"11 dollar edifice. Psychological Exams RateClass 4th in U. S.Freshmen who entered the IJni-ver.‘<ity this fall are the brightestgroup of beginning college studentsin the middle west, an<l the fourthbrightest in the country, accordingto a statistical tabulation of ratingsachieve<l by the freshmen of threehundred and seventy-.sr-ven college.swho took identical psychtd(»gical en¬trance tests in October.The psychological tests—preparedby Professor L. 1.. Thurstoiie of thisI'niversity,—were taken by a totalof 1(>.*),.‘{41 freshmen in colleges anduniversities throughout the countrythis fall. In the current f.ssue of theEducational Record. Profes.sor Thur-stone publishes a tabulation of thegrades achieved by all the enteringgroups. Haverford college, Haver-f(»rd. Pa., led the entire countrywith a medium .score of 241.67;Wells college, of .Aurora, N. Y..ranked second with a score of 213.-H9; Dartmouth’s Freshman class wasthird with. 296.67, while Chicago’sclass achieved a fourth place score, of 202.21.! The examinatrons included a five¬fold test of artificial language,arithmetic, “opposite test”, comple¬tion and analogies test. Profe.s.sorThurstone’s report reveals thatthere is no significant difference be-I tween the scores achieved by menand women on the entire examina-i tion, hut that interesting variancesI are shown on individual tests.I Women ranked slightly higherthan men on the completion test,and were considerably better thanthe men in the artificial languagesection, their median .score here be-(Continued on page 4)CLINICAL MEETINGHr. Franklin McLean, director ofHie University clinics. Dr. A. B.Hastings, lii. C. Miller, Dr. L. Lei-ter, and Dr. Walter Palmer, andHr. A. R. Boor will represent thedepartment of medicine at the twen¬ty-fourth annual meeting of theAmerican Society for Clinical In-vesGc^tion in itlantic City May 2. CONDUCT TOUR TOVISIT CENTERS OFRUSSIAN CULTUREThe same religious ritual now be¬ing performed in thousands of Rus¬sian villages, will be witnessed byparticipants in two reconciliationtrip.s to be held on April 30 andMay 28.“A Trip to Russia in Chicago”,under the direction of Frank OrmanBeck, will include in its itinerary aCathedral service at the Holy Trin¬ity Russian Orthodox Greek Cath¬olic Cathedral. This service will beenriched with sacred mural paint¬ings ornate vestments, and thegreat central Ekonostas of white im¬paneled ikons within which stand'the altar and incense jars.S. Jesmer vice-president of theAmalgamated Trust and SavingBank and a recent visitor in Rus¬sia will speak at the Northwesternuniversity Settlement at 2:15 on thesubject of “Russia of Today asViewed by an American Traveller”.Dinner will be served at the Rus¬sian Workers' Cooperative Restaur¬ant and at 8:30, a Russian Fete willbe stage'd at the Workers' House. ‘SHORE AORES’ GETS LAUGHSBUT NARY A TEAR IS SHED Friar Stars Sing atBlackhawk SundayBy JANE KESNERThe cocks crow-ed, the horsepranced, but failed to drink, andwaves da.shed up and down Mandelstage la.st night as the Dramaticassociation’s all star cast swung intotheir revival of that mellow melo¬drama, “Shore Acres”, first perpet¬rated on the public forty years agofrom the pen of James A. Herneand received la.st night with unre¬strained hilarity in Mandel hall.The performance culminated somethree week’s effort on the part ofthe production staff (under produc¬tion manager Bob Schoenbrun) —and the cast (under those troupers,•Alice Stinnett and Pat Magee) toattain the savoif faire of stage real¬ism, which was chief objective in thetheatre of the “Naughty Nineties”..And realism they assuredly attain¬ed. Foi- added to the feal food,the real horse, and the real watertrough—the entire production boast¬ed a spontaneity, which Dramatic as¬sociation revivals pos.sess to a de-gi«c*e enjoyed by none of their otherl)rod'iictions.Something in the hilarity of theaudience and the grotesqueness oftheir costumes, a keen appreciationof the mirth which their serious lineswill provoke, fired the cast of“.Shore .Acres” as those of “SecretService” and “Secret Service” and“Uncle Tom’s Gabin” before it; andwhatever they lack in dramatic tech¬nique of a serious nature, they madeup for in enthusiasm..Alice .Stinnett and Pat Magee,who long ago proved their dexterityin Dramatic association vehicles,'brought their four year careers as campus troupers to a close last nightin the roles of Ma Berry and UncleNat, w'ho guide the destinies of theyounger folk through all the thicksand thins of breathtaking “dram-mer”.They are supported by a cast oftwenty-one, many of them new whowill carry on the Dramatic Associa¬tion banner after the old guard hasgone. It is apparent at a glancethat Director Frank O’Hara has am¬ple material with which to build.But in- the lot there is no Alice,adept at jittery ladies, no Pat, atease with mellow old gentlemen orworldly young ones. There is in¬stead George Mann as Martin;Francis Mayer Oakes, who playedthe jaunty Captain Ben; Lois Crom¬well, the demure heroine; FrankSpringer, swanky hero; Jerry Jon-try, the slick villain; to say nothingof the children—Sara Jane Leck-rone, Jeannette Richards, andCharles Tyroller. There are EdithGrossberg, Dorothy LaFold, and Bet¬ty .Saylor.Yes, “the old order changeth”—Pat and .Alice go and with themGeorge Van Derhoef, business man¬ager of the .Association who madehis stage debut as the doty squire.But “the old order changeth” evenfaster in the theater than in per-.sonne*. The production of “ShoreAcres” is conclusive proof. Fortyyears ago it was an opus of signifi¬cance in the theater world. Lastnight “played straight”, it was ariotous farce. The pump, the horse,the turkey dinner were so muchhorse-play on a stage which can be¬come a world of abstraction. The lovely ladies and handsomemen of “Whoa Henry”, currentBlackfriar production, will maketheir first public appearance Sun¬day evening at the Blackhawk res¬taurant, 139 N. Wabash Ave.,where they will participate in thecurrent floor show offered byHerbie Kay and his orchestra.Four of the leading performers in“Whoa Henry”, Donnie Kerr, BobBalsley, Milt Olin and Ernie Brown,will present song hits from theshow, take part in a late broadcastfrom the Blackhawk, and as.sist theregular entertainers with HerbieKay.The Friar .stars will arrive about9:30 and will stay until closing. PUBLICATION HEADSTO CHOOSE JUNIORSAS NOINEES FORSTUDENT PUBUSHERCommittee on StudentAffairs CreatesNew OfficeARMY OFFICIALS TOREVIEW R. 0. T. C.Unit Competes Tuesday forHigh RankingsLocal Crusaders House Dances andSeek Repeal of Teas Planned for18th Amendment Coming Week-end•A battalion of The (husaders, idedicated to the repeal of theeighteenth amendment is being or¬ganized at the University by JeromeJontry, Delta Kappa Epsilon, underthe supervusioit of Colonel Ira L.Reeves, manager of the Midwest di ■ ivision of The (Crusaders. Louis Ri¬denour, Editor of the Daily Maroon,and J. V. Nash, alumnus of the Uni¬versity and secretary of publicityfor the (Chicago branch of The Cru¬saders. will a.ssi.st and advise Jon-try. The local group has petitionedthe Dean of Students’ office for rec¬ognition on campus.The Crusaders believe the prohi¬bition amendment has wasted hugesums of money, corrupted hundredsof thousands of men, and divertedmillions of dollars into an unscrup¬ulous underworld. The organizationis strictly for temperance and willnot accept money or support fromthe liquor interests. Their plan ofattack is to elect to legislativebodies, men who are pledged to theoverthrow of prohibition.College battalions have alreadybeen organized in the East, at Yale,Princeton, and Harvard, as well asat many of the other schools.Membership in The Crusaders re-quire.s a sincere backing of the(Continued on page 4) Nine fraternities and clubs willcelebrate the week-end with house(lances, formal and informal, teasand luncheons. Deltho will start theprograini with a tea to be held inIda Noyes hall Friday afternoon.In the evening Kappa Nu will em- ■ulate SelU Flotu with a spring cir- 'cus at their housE, which will bedecorated to resemble a tent iClowns, pink lemonade and peanutswill create the atmosphere of the"big top”. At the same time, PhiPi Phi will give a spring informalat Judson court, and Alpha KappaPsi, School of Commerce and Ad¬ministration professional fraternity,will celebrate with a formal dinnerdance at the Bismarck hotel.Delta Sigma club will hold a lun¬cheon Saturday noon for members,their mothers, and for alumnae inthe Cloister club of Ida Noyes hall.At nine o’clock in the evening mem¬bers of Phi Kappa Psi will pirate-fashion to the music of Paul Rap-pal and his Buccaneers. A specialCaptain Kidd motif is planned.Delta Upsilon will present its an¬nual formal Rose party, in a housedecorated with roses. Phi Beta Del¬ta will entertain its new memberswith an informal initiation at whichBanjo Allbright and his Cotton-(Continuecl an page 2) United States Army officiahs willconduct the annual review and in-.spection of the University R. O. T.C. Field Artillery unit on Tuesdayand Wednesday of next week. TheChicago unit will be judged in com¬petition with nineteen other univer¬sity units in this area for a ratingof “Excellent”—the highest awardthat is made. The review will befeatured by an exhibition of horse¬manship and drills by Universitycadets, a polo game, and gunnerydemonstrations at the .Armory atCottage Grove and .)2nd Street at1:30 Tuesday.Twenty commissions will beawarded to graduating cadets at theceremonie.s, and the Chicago chap¬ter of the Daughters of the .AmericanRevolution will present medals tothose cadets revealing the greatestskills in horsemanship, and cannon¬eer drills, and to the man rated asthe best all-around student in thedepartment.iLieutenant-Colonel of Field Ar¬tillery, William S. Wood, and Ma¬jor P". J. Webb of the Medical corpswill be the reviewing officers.Other local military officials willattend the two-day inspection.Lieutenant-colonel Wood and Ma¬jor Webb will meet with DeansGale, Boucher, Works and Brum¬baugh for conferences while visit¬ing the campus, and will pay an of¬ficial visit to President Robert May¬nard Hutchins.On Wednesday from 4:30 to 5,there will be an informal receptionat the Officer’s club for visitingguests, and commanding officers ofReserve units. FILL JOB THURSDAYThere will be a new campus of¬fice known as “student publisher”,and by next Thursday he will havebeen selected, the Student Commit¬tee on Student Affairs decided yes¬terday at one of the most importantsessions of its brief career,j The decision to create the officeI of student publisher—who w’ill act‘ as “liason officer between the va-I rious publications, the office of theI Dean of Students, and the StudentI Committee on Student Affairs”—j comes chiefly as the result of a sug-I gestion made in an editorial by; Louis N. Ridenour Jr., editor ofThe Daily Maroon.I Editors and business managers ofI iThe Cap and Gowm, the Phoenix, andThe Daily Maroon will meet 3vithI William E. Scott, director of publi-j cations Monday at 3:30 in his of-j fice to nominate one or more junior} members of their staffs for the do-! sition of student publisher.! Dean Scott will then present theI nominations to the Student Commit¬tee on Student Affairs Thursday at2:30 in his office. The Committeewill select one person to be studentpublisher.Minutes of the meeting yesterdaywere made public by MargaretPlgan, secretary of the Committee.“Be it resolved that the Dean ofStudents charge the director ofPublications:“1. To call together the editorialand business heads of the three ma¬jor publications for purposes of co¬ordination and cooperation in allcampus publications.“2. To supervise the oi-ganizationof these heads into a committee foreffecting any and all improvementsin publications.“3. To cause a chairman of thiscommittee to be chosen in accord¬ance with the following recommend-(Continued on page 2)B. W. O. Holds JointDinner with Women'sCouncil WednesdayEDDY TO DISCUSSCHINESE AFFAIRSAT LOCAL CHURCHNorthwestern University Lays Down Rules toEditors; Tells Them How to Stay in SchoolHow to publish a college newspa-; 2. Margaret Sanger’s name is ta¬per without incurring the displeas- , boo.ure of the administration has final¬ly been discovered.At Northwestern university, thir¬ty rules to guide the editors of theEvanston publications have been laiddown by the board of supervisorsof student activities. Presumably,they are the recipe for a success¬ful college newspaper.Most important of the regulationsare the following:1. No story can be printed inwhich there is reference to birthcontrol. 3. A1 Capone’s and all other gang¬sters’ names are taboo.4. No stories that I'eflect uponthe morals of Northwestern co-edsor co-eds in any other schools maybe used.5. No stories that ridicule theuniversity* administration or theuniversity cunncula may be used.6. No story is to be printed thatreflects upon the inhabitants ofEvanston or their conduct.The regulations follow a recent(Continued on page 4) Sherwood Eddy, social and politi¬cal leader, will discuss the presentsituation in China at the UnitedChurch of Hyde Park, 53rd andBlackstone Avenue, next Sunday, at11.Dr. Eddy comes immediately fromthe war zone in the Orient wherehe had unusual opportunities to in¬terview leaders and obtain personalimpressions of the rights and wrongsof the contending claims betweenJapan and China. In Peiping hewas the guest of the Mayor at an 1official luncheon and was asked to jrepeat for the 300 officials the ad- idress on the weakness and corrup- 'tion of the present regime in Chinawhich he had been giving to his stu- |dent audiences. He was later the jguest of the famous marshal, Chang !Huieh Liang, Governor General ofManchuria, over whose administra- jtion this trouble has arisen. iHe sailed for America just as Ithe Japanese ultimatum was accept- 'ed by the Chinese major, an ac-1(Continued on page 2) Members of the Board of Wom-I en’s organizations are meeting withj the Women’s University council fordinner in the sun parlor of Ida' Noyes hall Wednesday at 6, inorder to discuss plans for orienta¬tion of the Freshman woimen nextfall.Rebecca Hayward will introducemembers of the board who will out¬line the work their organization isplanning to do. Ruth Willard, chair¬man of Federation, and Betty Tress-ler, secretary, will give their sched¬ule for last year’s and this year’sFreshman week. Esther Feutch-wanger, and Esther Weber, presi¬dent and secretary of W. .A. .A. willoutline their program, as willMartha Miller, president, and Elea¬nor Wilson, secretary of Y. W. C. A.Members of the committee incharge of arranging the dinner areGrace Graver, Lois Cromwell andEleanor Wilson.MILUKAN LECTUREProfessor Robert A. Millikan Ph.D., winner of the 1930 Nobel prizein Physics, is to lecture on “ThisChanging World” Monday at 8 inthe Oriental Institute auditorium.The talk is being given under theauspices of the Highland W. ThomasLecture Foundation, and is the lastin the series to be presented. “4•? ■'*>i.■I-f.r*■«;IJi 1 w o THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDA/Y, APRIL 29, 1932iatlij iilanmnFOUNDED a; 1901 ITH* OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Ssturdajr, Sunday and Monday,during the Autumn. Winter and Spring ouarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 Univeraity Ave. Subscription rates $3.00per year: by mail, $1.50 per year extra. Single copies, &ve>centseach.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicago forany statements appearing in TTie Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postotTice at Chicago, Illinois, ur.Jer the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationLOUIS N. RIDENOUR, JR., Editor-in-ChiefMERWIN S. ROSENBERG, Business ManagerMARGARET EGAN, Asst. Btisiness ManagerJANE KESNER, Senior EditorHERBERT H. JOSEPH, Jr., Sports EditorASSOCIATE EDITORSMAXINE CREVISTONRUBE S. FRODIN. JR.BION B. HOWARDJ BAYARD POOLEJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E. THOMPSON^T.EANOR E. WILSON BUSINESS ASSOCIATESJOHN D. CLANCY, JR.EDGAR L GOLDSMITHSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSSTANLEY CONNELLYWM. A. KAUFMANWALTER MONTGOMERYVINCENT NEWMANEDWARD SCHALLER; EDITORSJANE BIESKN '-’ BETTY HANSENMELVIN GOLDMAN ROBERT HERZOGWILLIAM GOODSTEIN DAVID LEVINEEDWARD NICHOLSON EUGENE PATRICKROSEMARY VOLK ROBERT ALVAREZMARGARET MI ILL K. AN JANE WEBERNight editor: Rube S. FrodinAssistant: Melvin GoldmanFriday, April 29, 1932SENIOR BALL?Plans, apparently, are being considered for thesecond Senior ball to be given at the University inrecent years. Last year, such a function was con¬ceived and carried out, and, after several weeksof ballyhoo, enough people were induced to at¬tend so that there was a small profit shown by theaffair. So many social functions have alreadyengrossed the undergraduate attention and de¬flated the undergraduate purse this year, however,that we do not believe that an all-University danceof the usual variety could receive enough supportto pay for itself if it were sponsored by the Seniorclass this spring.There is a Senior class executive council, how¬ever, and a Junior class council has only recentlybeen appointed by the office of the Dean of Stu¬dents, and there is nothing which class councilsprefer to do rather than give a dance; so that itmay be regarded as nearly inevitable that therewill be a social function of some sort sponsoredjointly by these councils on some spring week-end.We do not believe that the councils will have thetemerity to try to give dances seriatim, and wedo not believe that either will want to be leftout of the management of any dance w'hich maybe offered for campus entertanment; so that ajoint dance appears to be the probable solutionof the present situation.There are, however, several cautions to be ob¬served by the sponsors of any spring quarter all-University dance, the most important of which isthat it must offer something novel in the way ofentertainment, and the second is that it must bemoderate in price. It has been a matter of stand¬ing marvel to the campus that no all-campusdance has lost money this year, and it seems thatthis, in a year of economy, is too good a recordto be broken.NORTHWESIERN’S INDEXThe solons who seem to control the affairs ofthe publications at Northwestern university haverecently issued a list of thirty proscriptions; thirtyrules of conduct and decorum which the studenteditors of the publications are absolutely requiredto observe, upon pain of dismissal from office. Ourfirst reaction to such a step is to breathe a ferventprayer of thanks that w'e are blessed with a sanersystem of publication control and an administra¬tion which is not as totally asinine as that re¬sponsible for the index at our sister school to thenorth.So many people have bleated about the free¬dom of the collegiate press that it seems impossi¬ble that our lucubrations could add anything newto the total of invective which has been heapedupon the practice of muzzling the youths who findthemselves with editorial carte blanche before theyhave undergone the sobering experience of tryingto earn a living. We should, however, like todwell briefly upon the utterly unparalleled foolish¬ness and abysmal lack of judgment which, in ouropinion, led the faculty directors of the publica-itons to issue the recently-announced ukase.No doubt, the action was taken in true Meth¬ odist horror at the impugning of the morals ofNorthwestern coeds—as women are called atNorthwestern—recently done by the recentlybroken Jack Leach, late chairman of the editorialboard of the Daily Northwestern, and Methodistfear of another such occurrence. It would seem,however, that any action which tends to bringpublic attention to any unsavory occurrencemerely results in the dissemination of the stench;e. g., the incident of the Phoenix cover.We believe that the action establishing a stu¬dent publisher taken yesterday by the Studentj Committee on Student Affairs will be a definitej step toward the prevention of any such ridiculous; public health measures for our publications, pro¬vided that there is any danger that the admini¬stration here would commit itself in any suchj foolish manner, which we doubt. We’re free.Northwestern; look: Margaret Sanger, Margaret' Sanger, Margaret Sanger.—L. N. R., Jr.1 The Travelling BazaarI BY FRANK HARDINGIn Philosophy this morning T. V. Smithtold about the freshman that had been in oneof his classes several years ago. It seems thatT. V. had been expounding one of his fav¬orite theories, when this frosh pipes up,‘Well, that s all very well, but if the commonpeople got hold of that idea they would runit into the ground. ” 1 guess that sort of gotT. V. mad because this frosh was a smoothlooking guy, sort of, so he says, “Well, whatdo you know about the common people?Have you ever studied them, or have youever really lived with them?” The froshcomes right back at him, “Sure” he says,“Sure, I’ve live with them. For the last twoquarters I’ve been living at the fraternityhouse .... Only he forgot to say whichfraternity.A day or so ago we mentioned the factthat the nocturnal roller skating was beg¬ging to get into Foster’s blood. Late lastnight we saw the same girl that got in troublebefore, out on another jaunt • • • Unless she’scareful we’ll have to expose her and call upthe Hyde Park police Dept. . . . But we didn’tsee the tire man with her this time.V ¥Miss Finn is the auditor of all student ac¬counts for the University, in case you didn’tknow. She went away a little while ago ona short vacation, enjoyed herself we hope,but when she returned she found that she hadoverdrawn her bank account. Tsk Tsk.* ¥ *^'esterday we mentioned the fact that wewere interested in finding out the name ofthe girl that Jim McMahon meets so regular¬ly. Today Jim came in and gave up in selfdefense. The name is Olive Diehl. PUBUailON HEADSTO CHOOSE JIINOHSAS NOWNEES FOR;STUDENT PUBLISHER >I(Continued from page 1)ations;“That this “publications commit¬tee” meet with the Director of Pub- |lications to nominate one or more j, individual.^ to the office of Student j' Publisher to be chosen from the |Junior representatives on the vari- ;ous staffs. This nomination is to be jsubmitted to the Student Commit- jtee on Student Affairs. \“4. To suggest that the chairman ^shall be responsible for the publica-' tion of the Student Handbook, the iStudent Directory, the Song Book,desk blotters and other* miscellane- 'ous publications that ma>’ from timeto time be required.“5. To indicate that this Student j' Publisher act as executive officer 'of this committee, to act as liason '; officer between the individual pub¬lications, the office of the Dean ofStudents, and the Student Commit¬tee on Student Affairs, and to fur¬ther such policy as will more firmlyunite the various publications."Members of this “PublicationsCommittee" are: for the Cap andGown, Gilbert S. White, editor, andWilliam Custer, business manager;for the Phoenix, June Raff, editor,and James McMahon, “Tiusiness man¬ager; for The Daily Maroon, LouisX. Ridenour Jr., editor and MerwinS. Ro.senberg, business manager.Junior members oi the staffs eli¬gible for the office are: for theCap and Gown, Helen Armin, MaryLou Cotton, John Crowley, JohnElam, Louis Galbraith, F^ileen Hu- ,miston, Cytherea Snyder, John Weir. Iand Ross Whitney; for the Phoenix.Ingred Peterson, Charles XewtonJr., Robert C. Dodson, Josepn T. Zo-line, Carl Bode, Ray Dunne, BettyZiegler and Vic Lorber; for TheDaily Maroon, John D. Clancy Jr.Maxine Creviston, Rube S. FrodinJr., Edgar L. Goldsmith, Bion B. •' Howard. J. Bayard Poole, James F.Simon, Warren E. Thompson andE. Eleanor Wilson. |BUY YOUR THEATRE TICKETSAT THE DAILY MAROON OFFICETennis Rackets RestrungFor $1You may supply th« (fut or we willliroviile it at cost.Hearld’s Tennis Racket Co.Suite .716—108 N. State St.24 Hour ServiceWE CALL AND DELIVERBefore you hiiy a new racket see ua.or phone State 5641-2 Sherwood Eddy toSpeak on ChinaAt Local Church(Continued from page 1)ceptance which did not deter theJapanese attack next day. He wasalso entertained by the President ofChina and several of his Cabinet,hearing their official side of the con¬troversy.Dr. Eddy is convinced in thispresent upheaval in the Orient thatthe fate of the Washington Confer¬ ence agreement between the nir,powers, and the Kellogg Pact are astake, as well as the future iml:,ence of the League of Nations.Plan Dances, TeasFor Coming Week-end(Continued from page 1)Pickers will piay, and Sigma Nu >giving an informal alumni i^an..from nine to one with Dorf and hiNorthwestern Alumni furnishing thmusic.Fraternity Beginsat Sea!Join the merry company who sail the ocean blue to Europe... in the Tourist Oass of Lloyd Express and Cabin Liners.Right gaily you’ll be initiated with dances, deck sports, jol¬lifications, masquerades, Munchenerabends, tournaments, andjust doing as you please. Your club house is an ocean villaof comfortable staterooms, lounges, broad decks, deliciousfood, w'ith genuine Lloyd hospitality and service.ENGLAND • FRANCE • IRELAND • GERMANY*Go abroad to study this summer at one of the foreign uni¬versities. The Lloyd will take you there.32 to 52 Day ToursMarco Polo couldn’t do better! 5 to 7 countries in Europe... great cities and local color of England, France, Germany,Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Holland, Belgium, Czecho-Slo-vakia. Convenient sailings on Lloyd Liners. A remarkablebargain arranged hy Studtnt Pleasure Tours, Inc., and the OpenRo^. The price includes round-trip passage, hotels, meals,sightseeing, transportation, baggage, and other incidentals.$195 up. Sign up now!NORTH GERMANLLOYD130 West Randolph St., Chicago, ill.,Tel. Franlclin 4130, or your local agent.lilfprp 00GOING TO CHURCH IS AN(ESSENTIAL PART OF A |COLLEGE EDUCATION WoroljtpTHE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Avenue at 57th StreetVON OGDEN VOGT. MinisterSUNDAY. MAY 1. 19321 I :00 A. M.—“The Mastery of Complexity ”, Von OgdenVogt.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club Tea. “Mayan-Catholic Cul¬ture by Mr, Charles W. Wisdom.Unitarian Parish HouseSt. Paul’s Church50th and DorchesterParish Office: 4945 DorchesterAvenueTel. Oakland 3185REV. GEORGE H. THOMASSunday Services*Holy Communion, 8:00 A. M.Clhurch School Service, 9:30 A.M.Morning Service, 11:00 A. M.Evening Service, 5:00 P. M.Young People’s Society6:00 P M The Church ofThe Redeemer(EPISCOPAL)56th and BlackstoneRev. E. S. WhiteEpiscopal Student PastorSUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion, 8.00 A. M.Short Sung Eucharist, 9:30 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon,11:00 A. M.Choral Evensong and Sermon,7:30 P. M.Three services every week-day.Church onen dailv for nravor andTieditation. Hyde Park BaptistChurchoGOO Woodlawn Ave.Norris L. TibbettsHolland W. SchloerbMinistersSunday, May 111:00 A. M.—“A Friend to beCast Out”, R. W. Schloerb.6:00 P. M.—Teas.7:00 P. M.—Discussion: “TheBoycott as a Means of Coercion."8:00 P. M.—“The GoodEarth". R. W Schloerb9:00 P. M.—Social Hour.r., ^ WrTyT^>THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1932 Pa^c 1hreeChicago Is Host to Japanese Nine Today at 3:30HEAVY HITTING WISCONSIN TEAM OPPOSES Trackmenmaroons tomorrow at 3; ROY HENSHAW ■Leave to CompeteSLATED TO PITCH SECOND BIG TEN TUT In Drake RelaysPat Page, Jr., to HurlAgainst RikkioOutfit('( minjf back after one day’s resttoll-winpr the eleven inninj; Kanie atNotre Dame Wednesday, Pat Page’sMaroons take the field against thechampion.ship nine of Japan onGiitiiwood field this afternoon at:!:.{() Chicago engages in her sec¬ond conference tilt tomorrow after¬noon at 3, when Wisconsin comes tothe Midway.The opponents this afternoon are ia Lrroup of players from Rikkio Uni- !\ei-ity. who won the title by virtueof a .series of victories over Wa.sedaI niversity. They arrived on thewot coast on their trip, which issponsored by the Episcopal Church,ia-t week and captured a 1 to 0 ,v'anie from the University of Wash-mjrton after twelve innings of play.Tht y will play Michigan and Ohio.<tate after Chicago, and then face-ovoral opponents in the K4sternInti t collegiate League, includingVal-. ‘ iArrive From Co«»t IArriving over the .MilwaukeeKoad yesterday, the Rikkio s(|uadwa- taken to the Edgewater Beachhotfl, where they will stay. They 1woro entertained at a luncheon at ith« Hotel Sherman by the Church 'CUil. of Chicago. Coach .\. A. ^.''tagg welcomed the Japanese to the,i! in behalf of the University.!»,..uh H. O. Page of ('hicago and.( ..a. h Dick Hanley of .Northwestern Iu.ri- among those present at theluncheon. The Nipponese were guests |(if ?. K. Wrigley at the Cubs-St.;l.uur- game yesterday afternoon.I’resident Robert .Maynard Hutch- ;n has been a.sked to pitch the first :hall in the game this afternoon. If-1 lapanese Consul Muto will be onhand to receive it.The BatteriesThe batteries for the game todaycill lie: for Rikkio—Tsuji, pitch,ltd .Momose, catch; for Chicago—1‘agc, pitch, and Howard, catch.I‘at Page, Jr., pitched for four 'innings against Notre Dame Wednes- Ia,, but was replaced in the fifth:ail. n Henshaw went in as a pinchh ’» r. Coach Pat Page said yester- idi that Bob l,angford, another |< . hoinore. will probably see serv- .< for part of the game.1 he Maroon outfield, consisting' ' lolinny Lynch, Hal Wilkins and Ilie Buzzell, will all bat left-hand-' against the right-hunde<l offer-a of Tsuji, the star Japane.se ■ j1 Probable Lineup |jCHICAGO RIKKIOBuzzell, rf Nakagima, cfj Johnson, ss Kunitomo, rfWilkin.s, cf Yamashiro, lbLynch, If Mirua, If.Mahoney, 2b .Momose, cLewis, 3b T.suji, pOffil, lb Hatanaka, 2bHoward, c Sawamoto, 3b j' Page, p Sekiguchi, ss ■pitcher. Ashley Offil, who will beon first for Chicago, also bats left-handed. George .Mahoney will playsecond and Claire Johnson will beseen on short. Jim Lewis, one of 1Page’s promising sophomores, will (get a chance on third in today’s en- *gagement.Henshaw will pitch against M'is-consin tomorrow a.s the .Maroons.seek their second Conference win. .Badgers Are HittersMadison, M’is., .\pr. 2H. (Special)—Coach Guy Lowman’s Badgerstook an easy workout today inpreparation for their game at Chi¬cago Saturday. A 4 to 0 victoryover a local Checker Cab nine con¬stituted yesterday’s activities in the('ardinal camp.Jake Sommerfield, co-captain ofthe Wisconsin baseball team will beused on the mound against the Ma¬roons Saturday. Last .Saturday heset the Mildcats down with eightscattered hits as his teammatesscored a I’J-.') victory in their open¬ing Big Ten tilt. In addition to hiswork as a pitcher .Sommerfield leadsthe W isconsin squad in hitting. Inthirteen times at bat this season heha.s collected six Ihits, having anaverage of.4fi2.Herman Schendel, Badger short¬stop, is next on the list, with anaverage of .421. Harvey Schneider,first baseman, is batting .409; Jim¬my Smilgoff, right fielder, is bat-(Continued on page 4) Eleven Maroon track men, un¬daunted by their overwhelming de¬feat by Michigan State Normal lastweek, left yesterday at noon by au¬tomobile and train for the DrakeRelays at DesMoines, Iowa. CoachNed Merriam accompanied thesquad.John Brooks, hurler, broad jump¬er and sprint star, has the bestchance to break into the scoring col-qmn. I^st week at Ypsilanti, he seta local record with a leap of 23feet 6 Vi inches, although he wasforced to run around a slight curvein gathering speed for the take-off.The fr^ak conditions caused himto miss the board at the takeoff,and to step backward at the endof the jump. With perfect equip¬ment, Brooks would probably haveset a mark of 2.'> feet or better.Roy Black, captain of the team,will try his luck in the 120 yardhigh hurdles against such stars asSaling of Iowa and Keller of OhioSlate. Ted Hayden, also a hurdler,and Tommy Goodrich will competein the hammer throw, Goodrich hasbeen practicing in this event allwinter and may be able to breakinto the scoring.In the half mile relay, Jerry Jon-try, Colville, George Cameron andBrooks are entered. Their beMmark in practice has been 1:29.3.but they will have to better this byseveral seconds to be in the money,Jontry, Sam Perliss, M’aldenfels andCameron are running in the milerelay. Their best aggregate timefrom standing starts is 3:24.4, tenseconds .dower than the intercolle¬giate record. Jontry has been tim¬ed in 50.2 for the quarter, Cameronin 50.3, and M’aldeiifels in 51.5.Perlis.s’ best time outdoors has been52.4, but he should be able to knockat least one second from this markwith practice.Don Biiney is entered in the polevault, but he has only a remotechance of scoring.Black, Cameron and Jontry aremaking the trip by train, while theothers will use the usual vehicle forMaroon track trips, the automobile. TENNIS TEAM OPENSCONFERENCE SEASONWITH IOWA TODAYRies, Davidson,Schmidt MakeUp TeamThe Maroon tennis team will openits conference season today whenit meets Iowa on the Varsity courtsat 2 o’clock. The outcome of thismatch is expected to indicate Chi¬cago’s chances for another confer¬ence championship.Wednesday the Chicago netsteredecisively beat Loyola in a practicematch, making a clean sweep of allthe singles and doubles encounters.The Hawkeyes have also shown wellin their pre-conference meets, hav¬ing defeated Coe College twice andGrinnell once.The Iowa squad is composed ofCaptain Ronald Reddig, who has lostonly three games in the preliminarymatches; Walter Theiss, no. 2, an¬other veteran; John Beckner, no. 3,and John Kinneman, no. 4.Captain Paul Stagg will play asfirst man for Chicago; while Her¬man Ries, no. 2, Max Davidson, no.3, and Lawrence Schmidt, no. 4,will complete the Maroon team. Maroon GolfersMeet Loyola atOlympia FieldsMaroon golfers will engage intheir first regular meet of the sea¬son, when they meet Loyola univer¬sity today at 9 at Olympia Fields.Captain Robert Bohnen will beplaying number one position, andthe other members of the team willcome in the'following order: Ed¬ward Mauerman, number two; JackSmucker, number three; Baker, jnumber four and Paul Smith, al¬ternate.The teams will divide into four¬somes for a round of eighteen holesin the morning, and will completethe play with four singles matchesin the afternoon over eighteenholes.In a practice meet last Friday,the Maroons defeated the alumni byan 11^ to 6^/4 score. Bohnen andBaker paired off to win three pointsfrom their opponents in the doubles,and in the singles Bohnen took onepoint while Baker won three. In theother doubles match, Mauerman andSmucker could only win one point.In the singles Mauerman gatheredtwo and one-half points, whileSmucker won one point.The first conference meet of theseason is scheduled for Monday withIowa at Iowa City. GEORGE WRIGHTE ISEEQED CAPTAIN OF1933 GYMNAST TEAMWins Captaincy fromScherubel AfterTwo BallotsGeorge Wrighte was elected cap¬tain of the 1933 gym team at theirannual banquet last night. SumnerScherubel, the only other “C” menon the team who will be back nextyear, was elected captain on thefirst ballot,, but Coach Hoffer calledfor a revote on the ground that thefirst was only a nominating ballot.Wrighte won out the second timeby one vote.Wrighte will be a junior nextyear and has two more years on thesquad. His election is similar tothat of two years ago when EverettOlson was elected captain in hissophomore year.ALPHA DELTS DEFEATLAMBDA CHIS 9 TO 8i It took nine innings before the j! Alpha Delts finally defeated Lamb- |j da Chi Alpha yesterday, 9 to 8.j Going into the seventh inning with >I an eight run lead, Macintosh, the II Alpha Delt pitcher w'eakened and al- 'j lowed Lambda Chi to score four ■runs in each of the sixth and sev- j enth innings. The Alpha Delts push¬ed across the deciding tally in theninth on a triple by Riddel (whowas aided by some sloppy fieldingby Winning) an infield single by Ri-derjiur, and a fielder’s choice onMacintosh. Reul hit a home runwith none on in the third for thewinners. Nibel and Taylor eachstruck out three Alpha Delts, whichtotal was one less than Macintoshfanned. Warner Bros.FROLICTheatre — 55th &. Ellis Ave.STUDENT CUT-RATETICKETTHIS COUPON AND 25cPRESENTED AT THEBOX OFFICEFrolic TheatreEntitles bearer to one admission anyday includinit Saturdays and Sundays.Good until May 1.Fri. and Sat. Apr. 29 & 30Jack Holt in “BEHIND THE MASK”Walter Huston in“A HOUSE DIVIDED”Sun., Mon., & Tues.. May I, 2 A 3John and Lionel Barrymore in“ARSENE LUPIN”Joe E. Brown in“FIREMAN. SAVE MY CHILD”When You Entertainbe Smart and ModernIn your Economy IWhen you give a party—youcan’t economize on standards.Your standing demands on en-I vironment of prestige. EconomyI suggests you give your gueststhe most in enjoyment—withoutcheap extravagance.Give your dinner, dance, lunch¬eon or wedding where you ob¬tain desired value for your outlayj ^where everything is provided: to moke your party effective andI outstanding—without a conces¬sion to your own social standards,j We appreciate your problem—, ond realize that today economyj fDust be considered.Hotel ShorelandSSth St. at Hi# Uke Mazo 1000.! *Our ntw dining room—onthutiattkaUyI ^^(loimod—provldos a uniquo and un-I ^»oo/ totting with lunchoon and dinnor[ innovoHon, in both choractor and prko. StevensAn S. V. P. Sensation for Co-EdsLONG WOOL COAT-PRINT FROCK—GAY SCARFYou’ll want to dasb right downfor this S. \’. I’, bargain! Yoncan wear this Coat with anyFrock. Its Print Frock withlong sleeves is perfect alone!The scarf is a gay addition'MakeShop a bee-line for onr S. P.tomorrow while we haveand colors in thisValue-Price Sensation!14 to 20. .\lso your choiceother styles, notsizesle -allStySizeofsketched.s. v. P. SHOP—FOURTH FLOORChas. A, Stevens & Bros.Store Open 9:30-619-25 N. State St. Thirty Eight Days of Glorious TravelEkjualsA Life Time of Happy MemoriesYou don’t have to be amath shark to solve this. Just see TedCurtiss who will tell you all about theCampus Trip to Europe — 38 Days—$340.00 (New reduced prices includ¬ing all expenses).Fourteen days on boardship — the Big Ten Group gets intoaction and it’s one grand round ofhilarious fun — deck games, tea, danc¬ing, bridge, special entertainment . . .romance.Eight days in London —historic sights you’ll always remem¬ber, trips through rural England, thepicturesque English countryside. Oxford University filled with cen¬tury old tradition.Nine days in Paris — how can anyone ever forget theBoulevards, the Latin Quarter, shrouded in mystery, the Cafes, andplaces such as Notre Dame, the Louvre, etc., which have been famous forcenturies?See Ted Curtiss at theDaily Maroon OfficeHours, 12-1 P.M., 3-4 P.M.or send coupon to Lexington HallCampus Tours, Inc. 310 S. Michigan Ave.Harrison 8633Please send me Illustrated Booklet and Jack Child’s latest issue of “Hittin’ the High C s(Campus Tours’ Publication).Name . .AddressCity . . .Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1932... A long established eo-eduralioiial^hool with mn alumiii of sncceMlul busineM menlarge enough to give you your chance*Pmctiral, intensive training; college grade andplan. 16 enurM^ including: Business Administra*rion^ Executive Secretarial^ etc. • • • . Special classin French and Spanish. • • • • Catalog on request*yUUy tcrite or phone Randolph J57S»IS SOUTH MICHIGAN AVENUETRY OUR SPECIALSUNDAY DINNERSi)ecial Middlc-nitc LuncheonsSelected Quality FoodJ. & C. Restaurant1527 E. 55th St. Dor. 10361FOR €:OLFFGE GIRESGraduates or Unoerirraoustes Sis"“•tr • • • months of thorouifh traininir — potinto a three months* intensive course for jrrls %rkeknow kow to »tudy. Send today for RulletinCanrses start Oetober 1, January l«April 1. JqIt 1Mover Bi vi.vevv <'oi.leoe116 South Michigan .4venue. ( hiragoPhone Randolph 4>347WRIGHT HAND LAUNDRYREDUCED PRICES1315 East Fifty Seventh StreetPhone Midway 2073LIVE in FRENCHResidential Summer School <co-educationalt June 27-July 30—Only F'rench spoken. Fee $440Inclusive - Elementary, Inter-mediate. Advanced. Write forrireular to Secretary, Residen¬tial French Summer School.McGILL UNIVERSITYB-32 Montreal, CanadaHILL’S CAFETERIA63rd and Woodlawn Ave.Always Reliable for your Breakfast.Lunch or Dinner.General Price Reduction inkeeping with the times.CLUBWOMEN! I.\n opportunity to travel abroad jwithout cost is offered to a few 11club women who have unusual¬ly good contacts on Campus.The details of how you can ob¬tain this trip can be gotten fromTed Curti.-s—Daily Maroon officeLexington Hall—12-1 P. M. daily(until May 2 only).NOTICEAll Crew Members, Supervisors. TeamCaptains and Student subscription sales¬people who wish to avail themselves ofthe opportunity for free scholarships, madepossible through the courtesy of theLeading Magazine Publishers again thisyear, are requested to apply to thenational organizer, M. .\nthony Steele,Jr., Box 244, San Juan, Porto Rico, stat¬ing qualifications fully. TODAYon theQUADRANGLESFRIDAY, APRIL 29The Daily MaroonDaily Maroon editorial staff meet¬ing. At noon in the Maroon office.Undergraduate OrganizationsThe Senior Class Executive Coun¬cil will meet at 2:30 in Ida NoyesHall.Social ActivitiesBlackfriars rehearsal, 2-5:30, inMandel Hall.W. A. A. Cozy, Ida Noyes Hall,from 3-5.Scandinavian Club meets at 7:30in Ida Noyes Hall for a dinner andprogram.Phi Pi Phi, informal dance. 0-1, |Judson Court Lounge. ’Kappa Nu, house dance, 9-1.Deltho Tea, Ida Noyes Hall, 0.Miscellaneous ^Professor Paris will not meet hisclass in Sociology 2 10 at 9.Tennis match, the University ofChicago vs. Iowa; 2, at the V'^arsityCourt.University baseball game, the Uni¬versity of Chicago vs. Rikkio (Jap¬an). 3:30, at Greenwood field.Avukah meets at 3:30 in IdaNoyes hall.Radio lecture: "United StatesHistory.” Associate Professor Wil¬liam Hutchinson. 8 A. M., on WMAQ.Public lecture: “Washington andthe Rise of .\merican Nationality.”Pi'ofessor Marcus Jernegan. 6:45, inthe Art Institute.SATURDAY, APRIL 30Social ActivitiesPhi Kappa Psi, house dance, 9-1.Sigma Nu, house dance, 10-3.Delta Upsilon, house dance, 9-1.Phi Beta Delta, house dance, 9-1.Delta Sigma, luncheon, Ida Noyeshall, 12.Dames Club, program Ida Noyeshall, 7:30..4stratro dance, Ida Noyes hall,8-12.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, at 12 in JosephBond chapel. “Our Stewardship ofthe Christian Heritage: Art.” TheReverend Von Ogden Vogt, FirstUnitarian Church.Victrola Record concert, at 12:30in the Social Science Assemblyroom.’ Departmental ClubsThe Graduate Club of Economicsand Busine.ss dinner, at 6:30 in IdaNoyes hall. Symposium: “The Nex¬us between Law and Economics.”The Scandinavian club, 8 P. M.in Ida Noyes hall. All Scandinaviannight.MiscellaneousRadio lecture, at 8:30 P. M. Sta¬tion WMAQ. “News from the Quad¬rangles.” Mr. William V. Morgen-stern.University baseball game, 3:00 P.M., Sixtieth Street and GreenwoodAvenue. The University of Chicagovs. Wisconsin.Graduate Students supper, IdaNoyes hall, at 6.Plan TraditionalEvents for Alumni(Continued from page 1)association dinner Tuesday evening,in the Florentine room of the Con¬gress hotel.The annual Rush Clinics will beheld daily from Thursday, June 9,to Wednesday, June 15.Information regarding any phaseof the reunion program may be se¬cured from Charlton Beck of theAlumni council, or from Mr. Swan¬son.WANTED—Women students toact as representatives for an auto¬mobile cleaninK and tinishinsr ser¬vice. Miss Robinson.WANTED- Girl to do 3 hours ofhousework in exchantre for roomand board in private home onSouth Side. Miss Robinson.WANTED - University womanover 25 for hostess position innurses’ dininK hall of South Sidehospital. Hours 4 to 8 P. M.Compensation room and board. WANTED — University womanover 25 to operate elevator andswitchboard in South Side hospi¬tal from 9 P. M. to 1 P. M. forroom and board. Experience un¬necessary. Miss Robinson.WANTED—Student to act asrepresentative for novelty silverbracelet company. Miss Robinson.WANTED — University studentto (to to Summer home near Mich-ixan City to take charge of 3. yearold girl. Kindergarten-Primary-t>*drr.t x-rsfi.rcd. Miso Robinson. MAROONS BATTLEJAPANESE TODAY,CARDS TOMORROW(Continued from page 3)ting .333; and both Harry Griswold,catcher, and Don Olson, left field¬er, are batting over three hundred.The rest of the lineup will seeArt Cuisinier at third, Ray Wick-man is center, and Jimmy Plankeyat second.I NORTHWESTERN LAYSI DOWN PRESS RULES(Continued from page 1)I conflict between the university ad-j ministration and the editor of thei Daily Northwestern, caused by an! editorial which was alleged to re-: fleet on the conduct of Northwest¬ern students. LOCAL CRUSADERSSEEK REPEAL OFPROHIBITION LAW(Continued from page 1)ideals of the organization, and duesof one dollar (more if you wish)j per year.If Jontry is successful in gettingthis movement started on campus,: Col. Reeves will come out to ad-j dress the U. of C. battalion, whichwill be the first of its kind west ofthe .\lleghenies..Freshmen Rank 4thOn Psychology Test(Continued from page 1)ing 10:5 higher than that of themen.But the men students were 9j points better than the women in the• arithmetic test; in the analogies test,I women were once more slightly inthe lead. NEW IN LOOPCAFE de ALEX80 West Randolph St.Everything is so different—the food, entertainment,Dance Orchestra.We feel sure you will like this unusual cafe.Evening Dinners to 9:30 — $1.50No Cover or Minimum Charge at Any TimeCafe de Alex OrchestraFriday night is Cuban Carnival Night.Tango Contest, Prizes. Souvenirs, andMiniature Horse Races.Dancing 6:30 onFloor Shows 7:30 - 9:30 - 11:30 - 12:30 - 1:30Telephone Andover 2438Management Daniel AlexanderLive, Loaf and Relax in theseComfortable New Sport ClothesA Pair of Gray Flannel Slacks and a SportSweater, Make An Ideal Spring Outfit —These warm days crowded full ofstudy, golf, tennis and baseball call forsporty, serviceable and comfortableclothes.You will always be ready for action inan outfit of slacks and sweater fromfrom Field’s fine assortment. rant your special attention. Soft material,firmly knit and in popular colors, thesesweaters fit well and look well. Withsleeves, or without, as you prefer, thesemodels will fulfill your desire for a com¬fortable, serviceable, good-looking sweat¬er.The new plain color pull-overs war- And here is the good news—The sleeveless model is only $3.95or with sleeves the price is $4.95Slacks, those full-cut gray flanneltrousers, are the perfect base for asweater. These new numbers are the bestgrade of all wool flannel. Tailored in the popular style with side buckles andeverything.For freedom, comfort and relaxationwe advocate slacks every time.A very complete assortment at $8.50Sportsman’s Floor — the FifthTHE STORE FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY