• '.-.y.pTrr::^ rr.Tj:^.'-, P.\'ol. 32. No. 122. aroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1932 Price Five Centtm, GRAHAM HEADMIRROR; DUNAWAY,WILURD, HAYWARDELEQED TC BOARDCook, Kesner, Stinnett,Parker, SmithRetire Elect Sulcer HeadOf Crossed CannonHenry T. Sulcer was electedcommander of Crossed Cannon,honorary military society, and Ed-g:ar Freidheim, adjutant, at thefinal meetin}? of the year heldTuesday evening in the MilitaryScience office.Sulcer, a member of Psi Up-silon, is the abbot of Blackriars,the treasurer of the Dramaticassociation, and was fall Intra¬mural manager. Freidheim is amember of Alpha Sigma Phi, andwas recently elected captain ofthe polo team.Robert Garen, member ofBlackfriars, and leader of Mili¬tary ball, and Keith Parsons, co¬captain of the basketball team,and football “C” man are theoutgoing olTicers.FROSH WIN‘GRUDGE’BASEBAU CLASSICHOLD BANQUET JUNE 9Lorraine Ade and Margaret Gra¬ham were elected president and vice-president respectively in the Mirrorelections held yesterday betweenthe hours of 9 and 4 at the desks inIda Noyes and Cobb halls. The threemembers-at-Iarge, who complete the ;board for 1932-33, are Dorothy Dun- jaway, Rebecca Hayward, and Ruth :WillardThese undergraduate women re- |place the retiring board which is jcomposed of Barbara Cook, Jane iKesner, Betty Parker, Alice Stin-1nett, and Jackie Smith, who have ' p,. , « / i o t •directed the entire work of Mirror Dereat oophomores 12-7 inthis past year. Annual BattleLorraine Ade, secretary of Sigma, 'is golf representaITve on the W. A. freshmen baseball team wasA. board; she is an uppercla.ss coun-’ yesterday afternoonsellor, a member of Chapel Coun- Greenwood field, and got it bycil, and a.ssisted with the Scholar- ' a‘Jm>n.stering a sound thrashing to.ship Examinations departmental ^2tea.'^. Her dramatic activities havecon.sisted of membership on the Box The game, an annual grudge bat-Office committee for the “All’s tie between the sophomores and theFair’’ .vhew, and acting in the ca- , freshmen closed the season and wa.<]>acity of assistant social chairman the last opportunity for men tryingf.«'- the Dramatic Association. out for numerals to make good. Mc-Margaret Graham .Mahon pitched the entire game for,Mar|!aiM"‘»-a'ham pT^ident ulf “’■■■ ""'y 'NOMINATE THOMAS Party Leaves farFOR PRESIDENT ON Yukon to RenewSECOND BALLOT IN ComptonMe^emchJUinrU r'AMIfrMTIAlT Physicists may die of exposure,mUtl\ tUWVtWlluW apparatus may be lost on the; icy fastnes.s of an Alaskan glacier,but the work must go* on! Anothercosmic ray expedition leaves for FortYukon this morning at 10:30 fromthe Northwestern station to beginagain the mea.surements which AllenCarpe and Theodore Koven are be¬lieved to have started on the Mul-drow glacier before death by expo¬sure and starvation overtool ’ hemin an Arctic crevas.se. Retiring Seniors ChooseWeir, Elam to ManageCap and Gown in 1933Session Is Marked ByHeated FactionalRivalryROGERS IS SECONDSigma, was assistant stage managerof Mirror for the 1932 revue. She isa member of the Federation andJunior Class councils, an upperclasscoun.-ellor, and a.ssisted as a mem-lier uf the promotion committee forthe Scholar.ship Examinations.Dorothy Dunaway, who sang“Someone Who Appreciates Me’’ forthe last Mirror show, was chairmanof the music committee, assistedthat committee in 1931, and wrotemusic for the shows for the last twoyears.Stage Manager in 1932, RebeccaHayward was co-stage manager in1931, and designed scenery for“Yours To Date’’ in 1930. She is an game.hits. He fanned ten batters. Pageand Langford handled the moundwork for the sophomores and allow¬ed a total of 13 hits, mo.st of whichaccounted for runs.In the tirsi inning Lovett was driv-on home from second by a homerover the right center fence by Clark,frosh first ba.seman. In the, sophhalf Zimmer beat out a hit andscored on a pa.ss ball. Then in thesecond frame Page and Geppingerscored on hits by Christie and Rat-ner and Zimmer again .scored in thethird after getting on base by awalk to give the vanquished sophstheir only lead during the entireEsoieric, and chairman of the Boardof Women’s Organization. Her otheractivities have included the co- The frOfh got their big chance inthe fourth inning when Pat Pageweakened and gave five walks andchairmanship of the .Student Relief ^ three hits for a total of six runs.Drive, chairman of promotion for In this inning the Frosh batted allthe Scholarship Exams, secretary of the way around. Langford reliev- 1Chapel council, and member of the i ed Page in the fifth, but the fresh- jFederation Council. She was a men were still swinging away at thesponsor of the Military Ball. old apple and tallied up two more jRuth Willard, chairman of Feder-: runs when Weiskopf and Wehling !(Continued on page 2) I crossed the home plate. |Publisher Describes 1932 Cap andGown as Improved Type of YearbookBy CHARLES NEWTONStudent PublisherCap and Gown is out—a recordof one of the liveliest years in thehistory of the University. It sum¬marizes, briefly and with as littleprejudice as possible, all the activ¬ities of the administrative and stu¬dent bodies. It chronicles the tri¬umphs and defeats of the year, ayear of not wholly peaceful reor¬ganization. It presents local his¬tory.It is called an experiment. Thisis true. But like another move¬ment, it is an exceedingly business¬like experiment. It has an unmis¬takably professional stamp. The aver¬age university year-book is a familiarmonument—a thick tome, full ofmildly eulogistic reviews, elegantsheets of glossy white paper, and ofpleasant color-prints of Indians onhorses or football-men at bay; avolume which presents politely thethings that have been politely pre¬sented the year before, and the yearbefore that; a volume, in brief, that i is as unvarying an institution as thei mail-order catalogue.' The 1932 Cap and Gown breaksI with this tradition. Its motives,there is no denying, are not all thatone might desire; simply, the staffhad to put out a cheaper book. Butit is precisely this stricture whichhas forced them to put out a betterbook. Material is organized. It isnot, as has previously been the case,a.s easy to read Cap and Gown back¬wards as forwards. Instead, there iscoherence and progression.In the front of the volume is plac¬ed the news—tlie main events ofthe year; in the back appear therecords for posterity—the studentwhat-nots whose pictures and high-sounding titles will amuse us fiveyears hence. The end-papers are nolonger decorated with vague wood¬blocks of Gothic towers; instead,there are maps of the campus,thoughtful provisions for the timewhen our memory becomes lessacute.(Continued on page 4) Following a stormy session mark- ied with heated and vociferous rival- !ry between radicals and conserva- Itives, Norman Thomas, Socialist, |was elected a candidate for the jpresidency of the United States by ja majority of 39 votes on the sec¬ond ballot in the multi-partisan Imock presidential convention last |night in Mandel hall. Will Rogers, Iwith 45 votes, was second. Governor !Philip L. Lafollette of Wisconsinwas nominated vice-president by a 'I rising majority vote following thesuspension of rules. iWorking with an efficient organ-I ization, the Socialists further sweptthe convention by adopting the ma¬jority report of the Committee onPlatform and Re.«olutions whichcalled for a program of sweepingreform in a socialistic direction.First Ballot CloseThomas was elected on the sec¬ond ballot with 84 of the 137 votescast when he fell short of the neces¬sary majority by three votes on thefirst ballot. Herbert Hoover re¬ceived five, and “.\lfalfa Bill’’ Mur¬ray three votes in the final poll.Other candidates for the nomina¬tion were: Franklin D. Roosevelt,Philip L. Lafollette, William Z. Fos¬ter, George W. Norri.«, and HueyP. Long, whose votes received on thefirst ballot were later transferred tothe nominee and the California hum¬orist.The afternoon session c f the con¬vention was called to order by Mar¬garet Schmidt, chairman of the Na¬tional Committee, who recommend¬ed the adoption of the temporal.vofficers, with Gene Hagel of the.Ma.ssachusetts delegation as chair¬man. In his “keynote’’ address Ha¬gel called for “a progress that shallknow only change and will know noretrogression or retreat.”Tieken Is ChairmanJohn Farwell of Connecticut,chairman of the Committee on Per¬manent Organization, moved the in¬stallation of Robert Tieken of Illi¬nois as permanent chairman of theconvention. Tieken, a senior in theLaw school, w’as master of all ofthe difficult situations which aroseduring the sessions.Following his opening address, inwhich he asked that able leadersprepare an adequate progress, thechairman called for the presenta¬tion of the candidates for president.Early favor toward Thomas was firstshown when seven states secondednominating speech by Robert Cha¬pel of Virginia, who delivered the(Qontinued on page 2) Daunted by the formidable glacieron Mount McKinley which claimedthe lives of the two intrepid moun¬taineers, the new expedition has se¬lected a less difficult peak on w'hichto make measurements. While Car¬pe and Koven used an airplane toreach their objective and to dropprovisions on the ice, thii secondgroup will travel by train to Van¬couver, by steamer from Vanco^v*erto the Alaskan coast, and by b.-iat upthe Yukon. i i.The pai tj is one unit in Nobelprizeman Arthur Holly *CoiTipt!o4i’sbroad investigation of cosmic rbys,which a score of physicists^ aj'e car¬rying on in odd corners of the w;prldto determine the exact nature ofthis mysterious radiation, which , iseverywhere bombarding the earth’ssurface. The Carnegie Institute 'sfinancing the project. ui- jThe personnel of the expeditionas announced yesterday by thes tle-artment of physics, includes: Dr.Ralph D. Bennet of Maksachu^ttsInstitute of Technobgy; Mr^. ^en-nett; Dr. J. L. Dunham; Mrs. Law'-(Conti.nued on page 2) M Maroon Track TeamWins Normal MeetThe Chicago track team com¬pleted its season’s schedule bydefeating Illinois Normal Col¬lege 82%-57% in a duel meetyesterday afternoon at Normal.Brooks was the individual star ofthe meet with firsts in the cen¬tury, 220 dash, low hurdles andbroad jump. iB'lack took a firstin the high hurdles and Robertswon the high jump and tied forfirst place in the pole vault. Name Galbraith, Armin,Crowley to BoardOf ControlOGBURN DEFENDSMACHINE SOCIETYSociologist Studies InfluenceOf Modern InventionsJ , j|THIS PERSONALITY!ORGANIZE SOCIETYTO INVESTIGATE iITProfessors Burgess, ’ CarrLaunch New Study j diEVEN A UNIVERSITYCAN KICK ABOUT ANENLARGED GAS BILLThe University is complainingabout its gas bill!Joining with housewives and homeowners throughout the city, the Uni¬versity, as a large eonsupier and dis¬satisfied customer of the PeoplesGas Light ang^Coke company, hasoffered its cooperation in a fight be¬fore the Illinois Commerce commis¬sion for lower gas rates.According to George O. Fair-weather, assistant business manager,the University’s gas bill has increas¬ed approximately fifty percent sincethe company introduced natural gaslast fall, in spite ,of a six percentrate reduction ordered at that timeby the commerce commission. j Personality — that elu.^ive some¬thing which makes one girl 4 lead¬er of the Wa-'^hington prom,and herbest friend only a member of W.A. A.—will undergo the Tticioscoi)-ic study of University and other; scientists if present plans for theSociety of Personality Study bearI fruit.' The new society—with member-j ship limited to one hundred of “theI best students of personality in Thi-cago”—has just been organized byi Ernest W. Burgess, profe.ssor of ao-I ciology, and Harvey Carr, professor' and head of the Psychology depart-I meiit. Dr. Meyer Solomon, of theNorthwestern university departmentof neurology, has been selected aspresident of the group, and Profes¬sor Burgess is the newly electedI vice-president. ’i The project is an attempt to in-' tegrate the various branches of sci¬ence in a study of human behavior,“The novelist, biographer ar.d auto¬biographer of the future nlay ^con¬ceivably study personality, in apmesuch way as we are to stu^y it,”Professor Burgess declares. “Weseek intellectual honesty. ‘ Most • bi- jographies and autobiographies as ,now written are anything but intel¬lectually honest.” I By WARREN E. THOMPSONMechanical invention is the dogthat wags the tail of society!This is the conclusion which Pro¬fessor William Ogburn of the So¬ciology department expressed to TheDaily Maroon yesterday in discuss¬ing the research project in sociologywhich has been engaging his atten¬tion for several years. In moreacademic terms. Professor Ogburnis considering the social effects ofmodern inventions. He is studyingthe great significance and power ofthese new devices in changing theinstitutions of society, in affectingthe laws of state, church and family.This particular approach to theunderstanding and solving of theproblems of twentieth century lifeis unique among university sociolog- 'ical studies. Professor Ogburn alonehas turned to the inventor to ac¬count for past anil future .socialchange.Professor Ogburn outlined to thewriter some of the devices whoseeffects will be very significant inour daily lives. He mentioned theinfluence of the moving picture if itis widely introduced into the home, las is now possible. He spoke of theautomatic teletype setter, whoseeconomy of operation makes pos¬sible the printing of a newspaper,with the world’s news, in everysmall hamlet and village throughoutthe country. These newspapersbreak down the isolation of ruralareas.Inventions making possible theutilization of waste products fromthe farm to provide fuel and powerw’ill erentiAlly cause factories to ;leave the city and move their plantsto rural areas, Professor Ogburn |predicts. The relief of urban con- igestion, the significance to current ’housing problems and conditions ofpoverty in the city, involved in such ^a decentralization, is obvious. j(Continued on page 2) | John Weir, as editor, and JohnElam, as business manager, willhead the 1933 Cap and Gown, itwas announced by the retiring Se¬niors on the staff—Gilbert FowlerWhite, editor; Bill Custer, businessmanager; and Dorothy Schulz, wom¬an’s editor, at a banquet last nightin the private dining room of Hut¬chinson Commons.Constitutional changes providingfor the selection of the Board ofControl by vote of the retiring se¬niors instead of the entire staff werealso made known last night. A newsystem for division of profits—in¬cluding the allocation of forty per-! cent to the Publications SinkingI^uftxT—will replace the present tem¬porary arrangement, by which theannual was operated under ^'hc closesurveillance of the Dean of Stu¬dents’ office.Armin Is Woman’s EditorThe complete Board of Controlpicked last night follows: editor,John Weir; managing editor, JohnCrowley; woman’s editor, HelenArmin; business manager, JohnElam; and advertising manager;Louis Galbraith. Other seniors are;Mary Lou Cotton, woman’s businessassociate; Ross Whitney, circula¬tion manager; Aileen Humiston, as¬sistant circulation manager.The new Board of Control fol¬lowed the recommendations of theretiring seniors in. .selecting the fol¬lowing staff, according to the newconstitution: Business a!seOciate(3:Howard Gowdy, Roy Ayers, EugeneBiesel and Helmar Luckhardt; Artassociates: Louis Pflaster and Dor¬othy Johnson.Editorial AssociatesEditorial associates: Frank Carr,Laura Hull, Catherine Reiter, ElsieLevinger, Evelyn Sirus, Emily Kuh,Charles Tyroler, John 'Logan, OlinSethness, Waldemar Solf, PaulHeineck, Burton Gale, WilliamWatson, Lillian Nash, Elsie GayBlack, Betty Comstock, MyrtleLohner, Sue Richardson.The chief provisions of the newconstitution not already mentionedis the power vested in the Board'ofControl to remove any of its ownmemiters by a majority vote. Divi¬sion of profits for next year will beas follows: Sinking fund, forty per¬cent; editor and business manager,fifteen percent each; managing ed¬itor and woman’s editor, five per-(Continued on page 2)Alumni ConferenceTo Discuss FirstYear of New PlanTower Players and vJkGargoyles to ElectGargoyles and Tower Pltyprg^willelect their officers for 198f-8Safternoon at 4 in the Tower room.Presidents and vice-presidents in ad¬dition to three members-at-large will■Jl . i i . V .be named by the respective organ¬izations. ' ‘ ’After the new presidents and’Yice-j presidents are named, thesfr four willI meet with the president. and . vjee-' president of Mirror tq select a chair-^ man of the dramatic board. HINDUSTAN STUDENTSGIVE SPRING DANCEFRIDAY IN IDA NOYESThe Hindustan association willpresent a program of Hindu ritual¬istic temple dances and varied musi¬cal numbers at its annual springdance Friday from 8 to 12 in IdaNoyes hall. The affair is to be afarewell party in honor of Miss Mar¬garet Richards and Jean Smith, fel¬lowship students from Vassar whoare going to India to teach. Dr. andMrs. Carleton Washburne and Mr.and Mrs. Ray Peterson will act aspatrons and patronesses.A group of temple dances will beperformed by Mile. Dumas, who, ac¬cording to Chandra Gooneratne,president of the Hindustan associa¬tion, is an interpreter of Indianrituals and sacred dances. The second annual Alumni Con¬ference will be held Friday and Sat¬urday, June 10 and 11, as part ofthe Alumni week activities. Dele¬gates to this conference will be ap¬pointed by each of the sixty-onealumni clubs. Delegates from unor¬ganized sections of the country willalso attend.The purpose of the conference isto discuss reorganization accomplish¬ments of the past year, and to aidthe alumni in establishing and main¬taining closer contact with the un¬dergraduate departments of theUniversity. According to CharltonBeck, Secretary of the AlumniCouncil, the conference will enablealumni in lui parts of the countryto get a complete and accurate pic¬ture of the New Plan as it has un¬folded thus far. As a feature ofthe conference, bound copies of theComprehensive examinations will bepresented to all delegates.Out-of-town delegates will be ac¬commodated in the Men’s Residencehalls.riSiiiiAiliit t "yr ^ ' “-r?' “ -v^. iPiigc Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JUNE 2, 1932®atlg ilarannFOUNDED IW 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO -Publiihed morning*, except Saturd»y, Sunday'’and MondVtduring the Autumn, Winter and Spring Quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University Ave. Subscription rates $3.00per year: by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single copies, five-ccntaeach.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicago forany statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or tor anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postoffice 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. ROSENBEIRG, Business ManagerMARGARET EGAN, Asst. Business ManagerJANE KESNER, Senior EditorHERBERT H. JOSEPH, Jr., Sports EditorASSOCIATE EDITORS BUSINESS ASSOCIATESMAXIN'E CREVISTONRUBE S. FRODIN. JR.BION B. HOWARDJ. BAYARD POOLEJAMES F. SIMONWARREN E THOMPSONELEANOR E. WILSON JOHN D. CLANCY. JREDGAR L. GOLDSMITHSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSSTANLEY CONNELLYWM. A. KAUFMANWALTER MONTGOMERYVINCENT NEWMANEDWARD 8CHALLERSOPHOMORE EDITORSJANE BIESENTH'IMELVIN GOLDMANWILLIAM GOOD6TEINEDWARD NICHOLSONROSEMARY VOLKMARGARET MULLIGAN BETTY HANSENROBERT HERZOGDAVID LEVINEEUGENE PATRICKROBERT ALVAREZJANE WEBERNight Editor: John Bayard PooleAssistant: Robert AlvarezThursday, June 2, 1932.TO THE NEW CAP AND GOWN STAFFTTie election of a staff to edit the 1933 Capand Gown gives rise to the question: “Will therebe a Cap and Gown next year?” Several monthsago there would have been any number of stu¬dents and faculty men who would have venturedthe statement, “There no longer seems to be aneed for the ‘arty’ annual of the past decade.”Today we can say, ‘‘yes”.Yesterday, the 1932 Cap and Gown put forthits appearance on campus. Immediately the exist¬ing attitude against yearbooks on the Midway haschanged. The 1932 Cap and Gown proved thata yearbook of a new type can be satisfactorilyfinanced with a greater appeal to the student bodyat large than ever before. Under the leadershipof Gilbert White and William Custer a greatlyenlarged Cap and Gown staff efficiently workedto produce this book. Hitherto an advertisingagency had been used as a medium of polite black¬mail to secure ads for the book. This year astudent staff has worked diligently to get theads which help to pay for the book.In past years art work has been done by pro¬fessionals which, together with the necessary en¬graving and color printing, have cost far in ex¬cess of the value contributed to the book. The oldidea of illustrating a yearbook with pictures de¬picting the landing of Columbus, etc., has falleninto disrepute, and a new type of college annualhas emerged.The execution of a new type of annual is theheritage handed down to the 1933 staff at thehands of the outgoing group. The 1932 staffhas shown that it can be done. With the impetusgiven to the movement for a new and better Capand Gown this year the new staff should havelittle difficulty in producing a book next yearwhich will again place a University yearbook onthe list of the things that every student wantsto own.In addition to publishing the Cap and Gown—the new and enl'arged Cap and Gown staff ischarged with the putting out of the two minorpublications on campus, namely, the Undergrad¬uate Directory and the Student Handbook.The task of editing the minor publications can¬not be overlooked. The Handbook and Directoryoccupy a necessary place among the handy refer¬ence books in student hands. This year’s direc¬tory was lacking in several of the points necessaryto make a successful directory. Next year’s edi¬tion should contain, in addition to name of eachstudent and his or her organization, both homeand University addresses and telephone numbers.Advertised as a student baedeker and filling adefinite place in a majority of the students’ pock¬ets, the Student Handbook this year sold 1600copies. There is no reason why just as success¬ful a Handbook cannot be published to be readyin September.Thus, the work for the new staff of the Capand Gown is cut out. The work on the Hand¬book has to be done, in part, during the remaind¬er of this month, and in part, during the summer.\ The advertising in the Directory must be securedI during the summer and the editorial work on thej pamphlet must be completed during October, so1 that the book can come out early in November.With this done, the entire efforts of the staff canhe concentrated on the publication of the Capand Gown.A HANDFUL OF CATCALLERSThe delegates to the mock nominating conven¬tion held in Mande] hall yesterday afternoon andevening seem to have been possessed with theidea that chaos is the only order of procedurenecessary to the running off of a political meet¬ing. At least, it seemed evident at the afternoonmeeting that the handful of students present show¬ed no desire to hear what the speakers had tosay. Each new speaker on the platform wasgreeted with noise—which continued and punct¬uated each clause. Only the chairman of the con¬vention displayed enough lung power to continuein spite of the bedlam.It seems to the writer that whatever effort wasempl'oyed in staging the convention was wasted.There is no indication that the students participat¬ing gained anything by the experience: either inthe method of procedure, or in content of mostof the speeches.Cannot the students show an intellectual in¬terest?—R. S. F., Jr.IMlnliiliil!iliiliiliiliiliiliilill'i|iillilii|!itiiliilii|ntiil!ilii|iiliil:il I'lliiliiliiliiliiliifutiKnI The Travelling Bazaar]I BY FRANK HARDING |This column by BAYARD POOLE.We were surprised to see Millie Hackl’spicture plastered all over the sport section ofthe Tribune one day last week. At first wethought we had gotten the society section bymistake, but on looking closer we saw thatthe charming Miss Hack! was in the act of'nswinging a golf chib. The reason we didn’t^see the golf club at first was because Millietwas looking right at the camera and wethought all good golfers were supposed tokeep their heads down. Tut! Tut! Millie!We really didn't expect to write thiscolumn today. In fact Frank had alreadysat himself down at his mill (typewriter) andwas staring into space waiting for inspirationto arrive. Just then Bob Wallace breezedinto the office and sort of sidled up to Frank.On account of how we were not sitting veryclose to Frank all we could hear was some¬thing about “opening up the seend batch”. . . “be gone in a little while”. Anywaywhat ever it was it must have been awfullyimportant because Frank jerked out of hischair and rushed out of the office yelling _that somebody else had to write his column,so here we are.We really can’t understand why anyonewould want to grind out this column every ^day next year. We asked Frank who hethought ought to get the job and he said hecouldn’t figure out who he disliked the mostyet. We would like to recommend severalpeople. First of a)l there is this guy over atthe dorms who has been going around dig¬ging up a lot of old dirt on all our prominentmen on campus and then demanding bigdough to keep it quite. While we have neverdone anything we could not tell our mother,we had to lend Jack Test five bucks theother day so he could keep a certain LakeGeneva outing in a sailboat a deep, darksecret. While we are glad that everyone stillthinks that Jack is an‘awfully nice boy, itlooks like we are not^ going to get our fivebucks back and we wish to state that we areplenty griped.Hadn’t you better reef your sails. Jack?* ^5 ¥Up at Evanston when the special editionof the Maroon was being put out, one of thejhead setters got all mixed up on the Black- .friar story and when Ridenour started read- jing proof he was startled to find something iabout a ‘‘Campfire show, ‘Who Henry’ ” thatwas winning campus approval. t ELEa THOMAS ATnoon session.The hot point of the evening ses¬sion came with the motion to adoptthe minority platform, which modi¬fied, rather than opposed that pro¬posed by the maj’ority of the com¬mittee. Thompson of Vermont,floor leader of the majority, madean eloquent appeal for social changeand improvement as set forth bythe platform. Backing Thompson’splatform, Kaplan of Vermont warn¬ed that “civilization itself is indanger, and upon the masses wemust base the fundamental recon¬struction of society.” Abbott Lip-sky of Washington, speaking for theminority, exploded the idealistic pro¬posals of the upholders of the min¬ority report, and stated that theconvention should “deal with actual¬ity, not construct a philosophy.” Themotion was defeated.The convention was sponsored byThe Daily Maroon and the HonorsCourse in Political Science. HaroldF. Gosnell, assistant professor of Po¬litical Science w^as in charge of theassembly.SPEEDWRITINGEndorsed by leadinK educators. Nota fad. Especially adapted to technicalterminolotry. A valuable time saver inall lines of work. You take rapid dicta¬tion in 6 weeks. Special summer coursesfor University Students. Both sexes.Special free class demonstration 2:30 or6:30 P. M. every Tuesday and Thursday.Ix>w cost. The Kenuine Speedwriting astaught in leading high schools and caLleges throughout the United States.CHICAGO BUSINESSCOLLEGEWalter Harris, B.8.M.A., Rrea.190 N. State St. Franklin 4122-3-4-5NOTICEAll Crew Members, Supervisors, TeamCaptains and Student subscription sales¬people who wish to avail themselve* ofthe opportunity for free scholarships, madepoasible through the courtesy of theLeading Magazine Publishers again thisyear, arc requested t« apply to thenational organizer, M. Anthony Steele.Jr., Box 244, San Juan, Porto Rico, stat¬ing qualifications fully. Party Leaves forYukon to RenewCompton Research OGBDRN DEFENDS'MACmNFSOaETY(Continued from page 1)most forceful address of the after- (Continued from page 1)rence Dunham, his mother; ErvinBramhall of Cambridge university;Phillip Allen of Yale; and MarvinEggleston of Massachusetts Instituteof Technology. Bennett and Dun¬ham are leaders of the party.From Fort Yukon the group willjog to Kennecott in southern Alas¬ka, Mount Ranier in Washington,Tioga Pass in Yosemite Park, Cali¬fornia, Pasadena, California, andMount Evans, Colorado.ADE, GRAHAM HEADNEW MIRROR BOARD (Continued from page 1)Perhaps more startling than anyof these—this sociologist is consid¬ering whC't it will mean to mankindwhen science has found an inexpen¬sive way of controlling climate.This phenomenon is aljeady pos¬sible. The cost of controlling tem¬perature and moisture over a largearea is the only inhibiting factorthat prevents the transformation ofsouthern climes into areas more con-dusive to modern, healthy and ef¬ficient life.(Continued from page 1)ation, was co-stage manager ofMirror in 1931. She is a memberof B. W. O., W. A. A., and Y. W.C. A., and won the tennis cup herein 1930. On the Scholarship Exam¬inations committees, she was co-chairman of tours.These women officially assumeoffice on the eve of the annual Dra¬matic Association banquet June 9. “You can never stop this ‘me¬chanical society’ of ours now”, saysProfessor Ogburn. It would be im¬possible to bring back the “good olddays”. Students of society may justas well accept this new order ofthings, adjust to it, and build anew philosophy and ethics to con¬trol it. Put your brains to theproblem of adjustment—not to lam¬enting the passing of the old society.The power of the machine cannotnow be stopped.”WEIR, ELAM TO HEAD1932 CAP AND GOWN(Continued from page 1)cent each; other associates, twentypercent. Only ten percent of theprofits^ were placed in the sinkingfund last year.William E. Scott, director of pub¬lications, removed the doubts whichhave been raised as to the continuedpublication of the yearbook when hedeclared, “As far as the Dean ofStudents’ office is concerned, thereis no question that there will be aCap and Gown next year.“This year’s book”, he added, “ismore truly a correct record of un¬dergraduate careers than any in thepast. It is a straightforward recorddont in reportorihl Ityle—exactlywhat an annual should be—and freefrom artistic embellishments.”The supply of copies on campusyesterday, the first day the year¬book was placed on sale, was com¬pletely exhausted by eleven o’clock.Additional copies will be on sale to¬day at 11 in the University book¬store. PERMANENTSfor Every TypewiiTmWi'-'■JSif i' Possibly your features demand * soft,fluffy coiffure. Then strain, more ric'd wavesmay best become you. Our experts willknow.There are many shades of hair — blonde,brunette, titian. irolden blonde, silvery yrsy—and as many different types!So. it is but reasonable to believe that inpermanent wavinv eaeh presents i n indi¬vidual problem.We study the requirements in each par¬ticular case and adopt the proper methodsto assure s perfect, beautiful permanentwave. Thus you are assured a permanentwith i>ersonality.Phone U* For an Appointment . . . TodayTacaday, Friday aad Saturday9 A.M. ta 9 P.M.Del-Ores Beauty SalonMrs. Frederick E. Havill5«6$ KENWOOD AVENUETelephone Dorchester 1976EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIESoffer to Americans intending studyabroad complete courses leading to onACADEMICDEGREEAlso, JUNIOR YEAR with full creditupon return, and SUMMER COURSES.Admission secured freeExpert on European Universitieswill be at our Branch Office inCHICAGO June16to 23FOR DISCUSSION OF YOUR STUDYPROBLEM.Guide Books and other Literature AvailableThe Daily Maroon TheatreBureau Service Will beDiscontinued AfterFriday, June 10Tickets for loop playhouses may be obtained now at the office ofthe Daily Maroon.L -‘•‘r-Ji.Page Three mTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. JUNE 2. 1932REVISED Y. W. C. A.BUDGET FINANCES Ida Noyes Advisory •Council AchievesMany Innovations in Conduct of HallLARGER PROGRAMPlan Aquatic Theme forW. A. A. BanquetJune 9Y. w. c. A.A budget, designed to carry for¬ward the work of Y. W. C. A. oncampus, in addition to enlarging thescope of the association’s programaway from the campus, was passedat a meeting held yesterday in theY. W. C. A. room of Ida Noyes hallat 4:30. The following items wereincluded in the budget: One schol¬arship to be granted to a high schoolgirl, the scholarship to be giventhrough the University Settlement.Contributions to be given to theCouncil of National Students of theY. W. C. A., to the Y. W. C. A. inChina, and to the Margaret GreenIx)an Fund. The remainder of thefunds will be used for running ex¬penses.W. A. A.The theme of the annual W. A.A. banquet, which is to be givenThursday night in Ida Noyes hall,will be swimming, Ruth Lyman, an¬nounced yesterday. Women whoplan to attend the banquet maybring their mothers and fathers.Miss Ethel Preston and Miss MaryMurphy are the toastmistresses.Miss Marion Talbot will be one ofthe alumni speakers.Tickets, priced at $1.00, are onsale.Tomorrow night “C” club holdsits annual initiation, this time usinga splash party in the Ida Noyes poolas the first feature of the program.After the swim a bridge will beheld from 8:30 to 11 in the wickerroom and sunparlor of Ida Noyeshall. Ruth .Moss is president of theclub.BaseballThe honor baseball team,. whichwill play a team composed of alum¬ni players today has been chosenby the instructors of the women’sphysical education department.They are: pitcher, Kathryn Mc¬Daniel, catcher, Adele Fricke, firstbase, Ruth Lyman, second base,Laura Lieberman, short stop, HelenDaVts, third ba.se, Catherine Do-heny, left field, Gladyola -Engel,center field, Ada Espenshade, rightfield, Vivian Carlson. The substi¬tutes are: Roberta Fenzel, Ruth A.Fletcher, Dorothy May Johnson,Frances Loeb, Dorothy Mohr, andKirsten Vennesland.ComadThe annual alumni luncheon giv¬en by Comad club, for women grad-(Continued on page 4) Among the many innovations andimprovements inaugurated in IdaNoyes hall under the auspices of theIda Noyes Advisory Council duringpast three quarters are the changedlighting and furniture arrangement |in the lounges and club-rooms and Jthe more extended and informal use jof these rooms by the women of the :University for all social purposes. ,Noticeable among the efforts of the !council to widen the use of the roomsis the permission granted to thewomen to prepare their own lun- Icheons in the kitchen on the third !floor even when organization meet- ;ings are being held in the sun-par- |lor. Previously, whenever the par- ilor was occupied, the girls who us¬ually made use of the kitchen at ;noon were forced to seek their noon- iday meal elsewhere.At the beginning of the fall jquarter several changes were made iin the curriculum, such as subscrib- iing to the New York Times for a ;few months as a trial experimentto see if it was more popular a.sreading material than the previousperiodicals provided in the lounges and reading rooms. A most import¬ant change in policy was the decisionallowing smoking in the refectory.Cards announcing what organiza¬tions were going to use those roomsfor the day were hung upon the doorsof the rooms. The lights over theping-pong table were brightened andthose over several study tables werechanged so as to facilitate readingwithout destroying the apearance ofthe room. Efforts are being madeto make Ida Noyes a social centerduring Freshman week and through¬out the year by having open houseteas, bridge and games in progressat all times in the various rooms,sponsored by the different women’sorganizations.Among the most important activ¬ities which took place in Ida Noyesduring the year are the Student ArtExhibit, sponsored by the SocialCommittee, the faculty teas, thedaily afternoon teas for studentssponsored by the Ida Noyes Auxil¬iary, and all the usual women’s or¬ganization luncheons and meetings,including Y. W. C. A. and W. A. A.activities.PICK USHERS FORANNUAL ORCHESISPROGRAM JUNE 7Miss Marian Van Tuyl, rhythmsinstructor, today appointed fourwomen to act as ushers at the an¬nual rhythms exhibition to be giv¬en by Orchesis and the rhythmsclasses Tuesday night at 8 in Man-del hall. The women appointed areGwendolyn Rauch, Marie Yeoman,Gertrude Lawton and MargaretWilli.<, ..jembers of the beginningrhythms clas.s.The program this year will in¬clude approximately seventeen num¬bers, performed to the accompani¬ment of the piano in .some cases andof gongs, drums, and percussion in¬struments in others. Jean Williams"will play the piano accompanimentsand two solo numbers during theprogram.Costumes, designed by a memberof Orche'sia and a graduate of theArt Institute, Ruth Johnson, are be¬ing constructed by a committeeworking with Miss Johnson and MissVan Tuyl. A few of the costumesare being made in Mrs. MinnaSchmidt’s costume workshop.Invitations have been senj out toa number of faculty members andothers in the University community. OFFER SUMMERINSTRUCTION FORSTUDENT NURSES FACULH WOMENTO AID FRESHMANORIENTATION WORK Marion Talbot ReturpsFrom ConstantinopleThirty-five Volunteer toAssist SmallGroupsDuring the first term of the sum¬mer quarter, June 20 to July 22the University wiR offer to gradu-1ate nurses and to a limited numberof .senior students in nursing schoolsspecial courses in nursing.These courses aife planned pri¬marily for administrators, instruc¬tors and supervisors of nursingschools and also, for nurses in thefield of public health service. Includ¬ed in this special summer sessionare the courses: “Teaching the Prin¬ciples and Practice of Nursing’’,“Supervision in Schools of Nursing’’,“Field of Public-Health Nursing’’,“Supervision of Public-Health Nurs¬ing’’, and a number of relatedcourses.'-The officers of instruction of thedepartment of Nursing to be in residence during the summer quarterare Katherine J. Densford A. M.of the University of Minnesota,Harriet Frost of Philadelphia, andDeborah MacLurg Jensen S. B. ofWashington University at St. Louis.but all interested are cordially invit¬ed to attend. There is no chargefor admi.ssion. Thirty-five women faculty mem¬bers and faculty wives have consent¬ed to cooperate with the Federationcouncil in pushing its new “smallgroup system’’ for the better orient¬ation of Freshman women* Thisplan consists of securing such wom¬en to act as members of these small¬er groups, entertaining the newcom¬ers in their homes, and assisting in anadvisory capacity. The list is notfinal, and more faculty women willbe invited to join the Federationcouncil in this new movement.Ruth Willard, chairman, statedyesterday, “Federation has been ex¬ceedingly gratified by the willing¬ness with which the women of thefaculty have offered their coopera¬tion in this project. We feel thatthis informal contact between fac¬ulty and student, always an import-a.'.t phase of the social side of un¬dergraduate life in any University,may prove especially effective underthis new arrangement.’’ She is di¬recting the undergraduate groupleaders in securing conferences withthese faculty advisors so as to maketentative plans for Freshman Week.' Thirty-five in ListWomen who have thus far agi’eedto assist this program are: MissEdith Ballwebber, Mrs. Edson S.Fastin, Mrs. Donald Bond, Mrs.Chauncey Boucher, Mrs. Alma P.Brook, Mrs. A. J. Brumbaugh, Miss(Continued on page 4) Marion Talbot, former dean ofwomen at the University, has justreturned from Constantinople whereshe has been, for the past year,president of Ihe Constantinople Wom¬an’s College. Miss Talbot had beenat this college in 1930 for one se¬mester and this fall was recalled.Last year she published a book aboutthe Association of College Womenof which she was founder. This eve¬ning Miss Talbot will be a guest atthe faculty dinner at Kelly Hall.An engineering student at OhioState plans a trip to the moon in arocket plane of his own invention. MARYLAND CAFEFood Excellent - Prices LowChinese - American Restaurant846 E. 63RD STREETCompleteBreakfast 16c - upLuncheon 26c - upDinner 36c - upTHESESWe are thoroughly familiar with rulesfor both old and new style theses.Open day or evening.MULLEN TYPING SERVICE1326 E. 57th St. Dor. 2896Mrs. A. B. Coakley Phone Hid. 2324A. B. C.5504 WOODLAWN AYE.AMERICA’S BEST CLEANERSWhen You Iliink of CleaninK—Think ofQualityPrices Reasonable We Call and DeliverCAFE de ALEX80 West Randolph St.Everything is so different—the food, entertainment.Dance Orchestra.We feel sure you will like this unusual cafe.IDEAL PLACE FOR YOUR GRADUATION PARTYEvening Dinner to 9:30 — $1.00No 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 AlexanderIN COD^S COUNTRYDown Come VacationPrices Out WestCheapest In YearsConsider ThisYOUR HOTELPVERYONE here—from door-^ man to manager—always has alearty welcome for University ofrhicago students. For generationsve’ve lieen friends. Years of ex-Krrience enable us to arrange yourlinners, luncheons, dances and)arties just the way you want themind at prices to fit your budget, too.P. S. A convenient place to parkyour parents, also—not too near—yet not too far.^otels HindermepeRhicago>6th Street et Hyde Park BoulevardWard B. James, ManagerFairfax 6000 • 1Page FourTHE MUSIC BOXCottage Grove at 64thChinese - American RestaurantDINE and DANCEMusic byCarl Schreiber and HisRoyal TroubadoursFull Course Dinner, $1.00NO COVER CHARGEFor Reservations PhoneFAIrfax 5322 THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. JUNE 2, 1932 ,Follow the lead ofMamie and SylviaSylvia Friedman of llicior KxtH'ulive coiiiicil, rlnxistsf blue organdie triiuintMl in pinkand lM)asting the new sliorl jack¬et. Sizes 11-17. Pastel shades.*27.50Margafpt Graham... of theJunior council, wears close-fit¬ting white crepe moulded intothe smart silhouette by long,ffreen streamers. In sizes 16-20.— Written by Leone BaileymRSHALL FIELD & COMPANYfm On June 10 . . . the night before Interfraternity Sing and theweek-end before Convocation . . . the Seniors take their lastfling at their last campus formal. Follow the lead of Mamieand Sylvia . . . select the newest in Summer Fashions fromField’s and go to the Prom for a good time!WANTED—Man with switch-hoard experience to ,work from Sto 6 P. M. in exchanitc for room.Mr. Kennan.UNIVERSITY WOMAN wanUjob as tutor or governess. Roomand small salary desired. Box O,Faculty E.xchanite.WANTED--Girl to cook lijfhtbreakfast and assist with dinner.7-8 A. M. and 5 P. M. to 7:30P. M. Salary th per week. MissRobinson.WANTED—Students to .sell icecream bars. Store will buv backunsold bars. Carfare paid andcommission paid on each bar sold.Mr. Kennan.WANTED—Children’s swimmingteacher for summer camp in Illi¬nois. Compensation : RiM)m, Isjardand laundry. Miss Robinson.FOR RENT—Entirely privatesummer home 100 feet woodedLake Michitran front 75 miles$830. Lonif i>easun or less. Beverly6800.LOST .\ very fine chocolatebrown tr)p coat. LE.XTHER LUT-TONS. FRANK HARDING, AlphaDelta f’hi House.FOR RENT—Modern 5 roomapt. furn. Near lake and park.From .lune to Sept. 1.5. Reason¬able. Fairfax 8491.CABIN TO RENT for Sept. $35■on Lake Michiiran 240 milesnorth. Dear. 0077 morninus.LEASE for Summer. 4 ri-omfurnished apt. at 1032 unfurnishedrental. 12:30 to 1. Fairfax 5185.FOR RENT —Cottaire on Lake.Shore norrn of Lakeside, Michi-xan. 5 room.s. 2 l(t. porches,sleepinx for 8. Completely furn..silver, beddinx. Private beach,xaraxe. Aux. 15 to Oct. 1, <100.For Sept. $60. Phone Mid. 8.(18.W.ANTED Girl to do fourhours of typinx per day hospitalin exchanxe for room, board andlaundry in South Side hospital.Hours; Any time except 9 A. Mto 6 P. M Private Room. MissRobinson.TODAYon theQUADRANGLESDai/y MaroonNight editor for the next issue:Rube S. P'rodin; assistants: EdwardNicholson.Cap and Gown193’2 Cap and Gowns are on saleat 12 in the University Bookstore.Subscription receipts will he re¬deemed.M usic and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, at 12 in JosephBond chapel. “What Religion HasMeant to Me." Professor Basil Har-vey.Organ music, at .3 in the Univer¬sity chapel.Departmental ClubsThe Physics club meets at 4:30 jin Ryerson 32. ‘‘.Measurement of ■Small Currents." .A.. E. Shaw. “Hy- idrogen Isotope." Professor Arthur 'Dempster. iThe Sociology club meets at 7:30in the Social Science Assemblyroom. “Sociology and the FutureNation." Professor Ellsworth Faris.MiscellaneousRadio lecture: “United StatesHistory." Associate Professor Wil¬liam Hutchinson. 8 X. M. on WMAQ. I“Readings." .■\llen Mi|ler. 10:45,on WM.4Q,Faculty WomenTo Aid FreshmanOrientation Work(Continued from page 3)Margaret Burns, Mrs. Nathaniel But¬ler, Mrs. Harvey Carr, Miss MarianClark, Mrs. Carey Croneis, Miss ^Gertrude Dudley, and Miss RuthEmerson.Mrs. Emery T. Filbey, Mrs. Jer¬ry Fisher, .Mrs. Edith Foster Flint, |Dr. Margaret Gerard. Mrs. John W. •E. Glattfeld. Mrs. Basil Harvey, Mrs.Eustace HaytTon. Mrs. HaywardKeniston, Mrs. Mayme Logsdon,.Miss MacDougall, Mrs. William J.■Mather, Mrs. Robert V. Merrill, Mrs.Dallas Phemister, Mrs. .Arthur P.Scott, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Miss Ger¬trude Smith, Miss Elva Staud, MissOrsie Thompson. Miss Marian VanTyle. Miss Winifred Ver Nooy, Miss jMarian Warner, and Miss .AlmaWylie.•Additions to this list will be madeas the plans are more fully develop¬ed. and as more acceptances are re- ,ceived. 'PUBLISHER REVIEWS1932 CAP AND GOWN(Continued from page 1)One misses some features. The un¬official who’s who, w’hich presentsthe nobodies who are the real some¬bodies. is absent; and the Rap andPound section is also omitted. Buthere again, efficiency has got in itslicks, and Frank Harding’s Travel¬ing Bazaar names, economically andwith unimpaired good-humor, all thenames that are fit to name.Compre^ion—this is the domin¬ant note of the new Cap and Gown.But one feels it is an intelligent andnecessary compression. In a bookwhich is little more than half thesize of previous issues, it presentsthe whole of the campus, and itachieves this end mainly by carefularrangement rather than by elim¬ination of essential matter.As an editorial experiment, then,it is a success, qualified only by acertain matter-of-factness in stylewhich is inevitable in a true history.But as an experiment in student-interest it is not wholly an accom¬plished fact. Upon its reception thisyear depends its chance for reap¬pearance next year. It will be in- 'teresting to watch the student reac¬tion to the improved form of a nec¬essary campus institution. Today willvery probably show' what that re¬action w’ill be.Revised Y.W.C.A.Budget FinancesLarger Program(Continued from page 3)uates of the Commerce and .Admin¬istration school and for the mem-mers of Comad club will be heldSaturday at 1:45 at the Collegeclub. Charlotte Sutherland is in ^charge of arrangements for the lun¬cheon.Tennis TournamentThe finals of the tennis tourna¬ment which is conducted by W. A..A. must be played by next Wednes¬day. The cup will be presented tothe winner at the annual W. .A, .A.dinner on June 9.LEARN TO DANCE NOWAttend Classes atTERESA DOLAN STUDIO6307 Cottage Grove Avenue■Mon. & Wed. Evenings at 8:00 o’clock.Admission 50c Phone Hyde Park 3080Private Lessons .Any Day or Evening