i)(laroonVol. 32. No. 126. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY. JUNE 9. 1932 Price Five CentsHOWARD, LYNCH ANDSULCER SELECTEDTO HEAD ENLARGEDINTRAMURAL BOARD Elect Ries CaptainOf '33 Tennis TeamHerman Ries, Zeta Beta Tau, was Ielected captain of the 1933 tennis Iteam at a meeting of the varsity jsquad yesterday. He succeeds Paul jStagg, captain of this year’s team.Ries, who was recently elected to i WILSON, CLARE IflTRETURN OF SALOON;SPLIT ON SOLUTIONOF UQUOR PROBLEMShanedling, Cm Re«d ESI Cruwd.r Head Urge. Plays at PromChosen as JuniorManagersNAME SOPHOMORES Dispensation byGovernmentStudent managers to pilot the In¬tramural department through the1932-33 season were chosen at ameeting of the board yesterday. Be- ,cause of the increased amount ofwork which will be thrown upon theIntramural department next year by :the abolition of compulsory gym,three Senior chairmen were selected ;instead of the one chairman and two ;assi.'stant senior managers which com- ;prised the Senior board in the past. |F^ach senior will take charge of theaffair for one particular quarter.New ArrangementsUnder this arrangement, Robert |Howard will be chairman for theFall quarter, Henry Sulcer, chair- ,man for the Winter quarter, andMelville Lynch, for the Spring quar¬ter. Howard, Psi U., is a memberof the wrestling team. Men’s Corn- squad for two years. Last year he !played fourth position and teamed |with Stagg in the doubles. This Iyear he played second position un- orr-i ii A'rrrk CAI rtil a strained side forced him to INaLilU r\il.U»vJL./\ 1 iLL)third place. |In his two years of conference | JAMES F. SIMONcompetition, Ries has lost only two i What neither Dr. Clarence Truedual conference matches, one last ■ Wilson, white-haired prohibition ad-year and one this year. Pairing withStagg, he advanced to the thirdround of the Big Ten conferencechampionships this year. He andMax Davidson will be the backboneof next year’s team.ALUMNI NINE PLAYSVARSITYT0DAYAT3Old, Recent Grads DesertBusiness for GameReverting to the days when theywere students and athletes, at leastmLssion, and a junior member of , thirty aluijtii of the University will"■ ’ ' ■ "■" *' forsake law, medicine, bonds, andother pursuits to meet the MaroonBlackfriars. Henry Sulcer, Psi U., isabbott of Blackfriar, a Marshal, andwas treasurer of the Dramatic As¬sociation during the past year. MelLynch is a member of Phi Pi Phiand was admitted to junior mem¬bership of Phi Beta Kappa. Thesemen will succeed the outg.nng Se¬nior Board which consisiea ot Lar¬ry Schmidt, chairman, Fred Chan-ner and F'orrest Drummond.The three Junior Managers, chos¬en at yesterday’s meeting are FrankCarr, Phi Kappa Psi, for the Fallquarter, Rufus Reed, Chi Psi, Spring ball team this afternoon on Green¬wood Field at 3 o’clock.Harold G Moulton, noted econ¬omist who is president of the Brook¬ings Institution, Washington, D. C.,will be in the alumni outfield, alongwith Prof. Frederick Merrifield, anex-captain whose son this year wonhis baseball numerals. Elidor Libon-ati. Dr. A. R. Rudolph, John Boyle,“Skee” Sauer, H. O. Crisler, .PaulHinkle, Fred Walker, Ted Curtis,and a more recent generation ofquarter, and Phil Shanedling, Phi j graduates, Kyle Anderson, Bill Mack-Sigma Delta, Winter quarter.Sophomore ManagersThe men who w’ill be the Sopho¬more managers for 1932-33 are:William Austin, Phi Kappa Psi; A.G. Curtis, Psi Upsilon; ArthurGrossman, Pi Lambda Phi; ArthurHutchison, unattached; Jack Har¬ris, Delta Kappa Ejisilon; ChaunceyHoward, Psi Upsilon; Roy Larson,Chi Psi; Robert LaRue, Beta ThetaPi; Frank Mecher, Tau Kappa Ep¬silon; Wilmot Palmer, Phi KappaPsi; Wallace Solf, Phi Pi Phi;lCharles Smith, Phi Kappa Psi; FrankSmiley, Sigma Nu; F’rank Todd, P.siUp.silon.One other reason for the increas¬ed amount of work for the next sea¬son’s Intramural 'department is thecreation of an Intramural Settle¬ment board which will aid the physi¬cal directors of the settlement intheir athletic program. lind, Marshall Fish, Will Urban, andArt Cahill, are among the other re¬cruits for the alumni team.J. P. Sullivan, ’06, whose brotherpitched for the Sox; Fred Walker,a former Giant pitcher, H. O. Page,baseball coach, Curtis, and Mack-lind are available for slab duty. Thesenior Page will face his son, H. 0.,Jr., for several innings, to settle adispute as to their relative merits.Capt. Frank Howard will directthe varsity team.Hold Trials forN. C. A. A. TrackMeet TomorrowSettlement ManagersUnder the new arrangement forthe student managerial board for thesettlement, Herbert Barnett, KappaNu, will take charge next year a.sSenior Chairman. He succeedsThorvald Holter and will be directlyresponsible for the w'ork of the stu¬dent staff and will form the connect¬ing link between the Intramural de¬partment on campus and the settle¬ment. The other seniors who willcomprise the board with Barnett areTed Haydon, P.«i Upsilon, and JohnRaino, unattached. The men whowere cho.sen as junior managers fornext year are Edward Liedtke, ChiPsi,. Jack Loeb, unattached, Ralph'Tiubin, Kappa Nu. Sophomore posi¬tions will be open to applicants nextfall. Preliminaries in the National Col¬legiate track and field championshipson Stagg Field •tomorrow afternoonwill provide practically a meet inthemselves, jus the large fields bat¬tle for the right to enter the findls.The contestants in twelve of theevents on the program will have toextend themselves to the limit in the |preliminaries, for the class of thecompetition is so high that only out¬standing performances will be goodenough for a place.The hundred yard dash, the 220,the 440, 880, and the 120 yard highhurdles, the 220 yard low hurdles,and the 400 meter hurdles are thetrack events in which there will bepreliminaries. There also will bequalifying trials in the shot, discus,broad jump; hammer, javelin, andhop, step, and jump.Admission to the preliminarieswill be 50 cents. Reserved seats forSaturday’s finals are $1.50, and gen¬eral admission is $1.00. vocate, nor Captain Fred G. Clarke,youthful commander of the Crusad¬ers, want for these United States isa return to the saloon era. Bothsaid so last night in Mandel hall ata debate sponsored by The DailyMaroon to give the campus a chanceto hear both sides of the prohibitionquestion.That students failed to attend thedebate wjus partly due to exams,partly to the short notice on whichthe affair w’as arranged and partlyto that well-known student tend¬ency to neglect a “good thing.” Ap¬proximately five hundred peoplew'ere present including one slightlyintoxicated gentleman up front whomade a feeble attempt to heckleDr. Wilson.- A Moral ExperimentWhat Dr. Wilson wants is “fairtreatment for prohibition as a greatmoral experiment.” Captain Clarkv.—representative of an organizationwhich has been somewhat misunder¬stood on campus—believes that thereare three sides to the prohibitionquestion: the dry side, the wet sideand the right side.“We advocate government controlof intoxicating beverages,” he de-clarfid. '“Bhe sytelem of regulated.sale in Great Britain reduced thearrests for drunkenness and cutdown the prison population duringthe same period that the UnitedStates, Finland, Russia, Norway andCanada were showing increased fordrunkenness under prohibition.”Pleads For ProhibitionDr. Wilson, silver-tongued Meth¬odist orator, snorted at Mr. Clarke’sstatistics, as he waved his hands,thundered, pleaded and coaxed agamut of emotion from his audi¬ences. “The man who quotes the beststatistics,” he said, “is usually thebiggest liar.”“I do not claim,” he continued,“that prohibition has preventedliquor from intoxicating, or that ithas been well observed or enforced.I do not even think the Ten Com¬mandments are enforced or observ¬ed one hundred percent in Chicago.The law-breaker is responsible, notthe law maker.“In twelve years prohibition hasoutlawed the liquor traffic in theUnited States and broken the powerof the liquor trust. It has removedthe licen.^e system—that covenantwith death and agreement with hell.It has made news of drunkenness.The 7800 saloons in Chicago didn’t(Continued on page 2) Reinaissance Show'< Includes Ceramics,Faggi SculptorsIj A varied collection, featuring aI number of paintings and ceramicsi by students of the Hull House artI school and including a group ofI sculptures by Alfeo Faggi, comprisesI the current Renaissance Society ex-I hibit, arranged specially for AlumniI Week. The exhibit opens today inI the Renaissance Gallery, WieboldtI 205, and will be open daily from 2to 5 until June 24. In addition,there are several pieces of Africanart lent by Northwestern Univer¬sity, Mrs. Walter S. Brewster, Mrs.George Harding, and Mrs. AlexanderWhite.Children’s ExhibitsOf particular interest are the ar¬ticles made by Mexican, Italian andGreek children in the Hull Houseart school. Some of them I'eflectI unusual talent, and all indicate nat-I ural ability and a ready response toj the excellent work of the Hull House; art teachers. The w'ork exhibitedI by the students holds especial in¬terest to the University district; since the application of such talent' has been made possible by the ef-forts of Jane Adams who was long; affiliated with Social S^jrvice ad-; ministration of the University.African art is represented in thisshowing by masks, ivory sculpturesand mfscellaneous pieces. The Uni¬versity Art department is consider-,ing the purchase of several of these |for its permanent collection. Some | Banquet at Blaclchawk Endsof the African art has previously Activities of Yearbeen exhibited by the Renaissance Earl Hoffman EntertainsAt First Junior-SeniorProm Tomorrow NightSupper Dance to be HeldAt Beach view RoofFrom 9-2EARL HOFFMANMAROON TO CHOOSENEW STAFF TONIGHTI Society, but it is being shown again; to supplement the program of negro Tomorrow evening at 9 the Ju¬nior-Senior Prom swings under wayat the Beachview roof atop the Ho¬tel Sherry, 53rd and the lake, withEarl Hoffman’s orchestra entertain¬ing until 2. The Prom winds upthe University social season in anight of frolic dedicated *to grad¬uating seniors. The dance has beenmanaged by the Junior Class coun¬cil with Edgar Goldsmith and JohnHolloway as acting co-chairmen.A Supper DanceThe affair will be a summer for¬mal supper dance; supper to be serv¬ed at midnight on the promenadewhich surrounds the ballroom andoverlooks Lake Michigan. MaurieSherman will drop in on the partyabout 12 to direct some specialtynumbers and he has, in addition,loaned Joe Plotke, known as thefunny man among radio crooners,to the Prom committee for the eve¬ning.Broadcasting over station P. R.O. M. from the fourth floor of Cobbwill continue today and tomorrowin between morning classes. LouisRidenour, Frank Harding and Bay¬ard Poole will alternate at the mike,in directing the morning programof recordings by Earl Hoffman’s or¬chestra. iBids for the dance, whichhas been thrown open to the Uni¬versity at large, are priced at $3.50Members of The Daily Maroonstaff will elect the 1932-33 Board ofspirituals and African tribal songs Control and thirteen juniors and an and may be purchased all during theto be presented at 8:30 tonight ir ! undetermined number of sophomores ; day at the canopy which is erectedI Mandel hall by Prince Modupe Pans i spring banquet tonight in the I in front of Cobb.Blackhawk restaurant. Results will ! 100 Tickets Soldappear in the final issue tomorrow. ' Advance ticket sales reached 100yesterday afternoon following aCandidates for four editorial poand the World’s Fair Afro-AmericanJubilee Singers.The exhibit is the last which willbe sponsored by the Renaissancej Society this quarter. The past year] has been marked by exhibits of un-j usual distinction including that of ji religious and liturgical paintings ii which combined both the sacred and |the ‘profane’ in portraying life in !i all its aspects. A contrasting ex-! hibit of representative moderns in: water colors depicting the ‘spirit’; of today was held following this. Ma-I dame Galka Scheyer contributed tothis exhibit with a critical analyasisof the water colors of today andyesterday.Phoenix to SeekSupport of ClubMembers AgainA Phoenix emulating the maga¬zine of the past two months, whichbecause of its conservative policyhas been unanimously approved bythe faculty, B. W. O., and the worn- i ants are candidates for positions assitions on the Board of Control are:Maxine (Treviston, Rube S. FrodinJr., Bion S. Howard, J. BayardPoole, James F. Simon, Warren E.Thompson, and Eleanor E. Wilson.At least one must be a woman, ac¬cording to the constitution. The po¬sitions to be filled are: editor-in-chief, managing editor, and two se¬nior editors.In the business department, JohnD. Clancy Jr. and Edgar L. Gold¬smith are candidates for t^'o posi¬tions: business manager and circul¬ation manager.Eight junior editorial positionsare available for Sophomore men andwomen. Candidates are: Jane Bie-senthal, Melvin Goldman, WilliamGoodstein, Edward Nicholson, Rose¬mary Volk, Margaret Mulligan, Bet¬ty Hansen, Robert Herzog, David C.Levine, Eugene Patrick, Robert Al¬varez and Jane Weber.Five Sophomore business' assist-SENIORS PLEDGETO ALUMNI GIFTFUND NET $1,000204 Take Physical Sciences Exam;Only 203 Registered in CourseTwo hundred and three freshmentook the Physical Sciences surveycourse during the last three quar¬ters, but two hundred and four tookthe comprehensive examination forthe course, which was given yester¬day from 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 in Kenttheatre. Eckhart lecture hall, andHarper Mil. Several freshmen were^interviewed by The Daily Maroon,and they were found to be unanim¬ously of the opinion that the exam¬ination was—well, “just about thestiffeat thing wc ever saw.”The examination was divided intofour pai’ts, with one and one-halfhours allowed for each pait. All to¬gether, forty pages were coveredwith questions. The first thirty-sixpages were concerned with specificquestions covering astronomy, math¬ematics, physics, chemistry, and^ ge¬ology, Section four contained fif¬teen essa.v-type question'^, of whichfix were to be answered. This question is fairly typical ofthose in the astronomy section:“The heliocentric interpretation ofthe solar system is considered pref¬erable to the geocentric interpreta¬tion because:....it is true that the sun doesnot move, but the earth does.....it is impossible to explainthe observed planetary motions bythe geocentric system.....the heliocentric system ac¬counts for the apparent eastward Pledges totalling more than $1000have been received from 182 seniorsby the Alumni Gift Fund, StillmanM. Frankland, president of the class,declared yesterday. At this timelast year 200 pledges had been re¬ceived.Frankland, who interpreted theslight decrease in the number ofpledges as a result of the depression,feels that the campaign has been“relatively successful”. Those seniorswho have not pledged five dollarsto the Alumni Fund may still sub¬scribe, and it is possible to makepledges payable in one or two years,instead of immediately. Pledges en¬title the holder to membership inthe Alumni Council and include asubscription to the Alumni mag¬azine, monthly publication of thecouncil. en’s clubs, will^be the aim of In-gred Petersen. ,i Next year’s Phoenix will combinei literary and humorous endeavor and^ will deal more particularly with thevarious personalities on campus.Two pages of each issue will be de¬voted solely to club women, theiri achievements, and the pictures of! the more prominent members, whohave figured in the month’s activ¬ities.A board composed of club wom¬en, who will work in the main oncirculation, and perhaps on the edi¬torial staff also, will be appointed bythe Phoenix staff in the fall. Eachclub has the power of choosing amember as a candidate, and fromthese, the Phoenix will select itsboard. Junior business asociates. They are:Stanley Connelly, William A. Kauf¬man, Walter Montgomery, VincentNewman, and Edmund Schaller.INTERCLUB COUNCILMAKES $77 PROFITA total amount of $77 was takenin as proceeds for the showing ofmotion ''f +ho enn nmnng- thp stars thp mnviP Will Rnp-prs in “A Con. SENIORS TO MEETFOR BREAKFASTAT IDA NOYES checkup by Edgar Goldsmith andJohn Holloway. Bids may be purjchased at the University and Wood-worth Bookstores, at the office ofthe Daily Maroon and from individ¬ual solicitors in all fraternityhouses. Proceeds of the Prom v.illbe turned over to the University so¬cial committee to help defray ex-penstes and make possible weeklymixers, tea dances and exhibits dur¬ing the next year. It was recom¬mended by the joint Junior and Se¬nior class councils that the dancecommittee should annually turn overits surplus to the Social committee.The Prom committee which hasmade the arrangements for the par¬ty is composed of Eleanor Wilson,Margaret Graham, Mary Lou Cot¬ton, John Holloway, Ross Whitney,Jim Porter, Edgar Goldsmith andBayard Poole. The committee hasworked jointly with the Senior ClassCouncil in carrying out details forthe party.Junior Class Council^There will be a meeting of theJunior council this afternoon at2:30 in Cobb 212. Final arrange¬ments for the Prom will be made atthis time and the present financialreport will be submitted by John Hol-low'ay and Edgar Goldsmith, jointchairmen of the dance.Graduating seniors will have their ilast opportunity to meet their class- jmates as undergraduates at the Se- jnior breakfast which will be held i Recommendations for members ofnext year’s council will be made atthe meeting today and a list of can-^ * 11 QA • dj'dates wnll be selected and laterMonday at 1 :30 m the Cloisters of^ submitted to the Dean of Studentsa oyes a . i Qffjpg Announcement of the coun-Members of the Senior executive I members for next year will beSix Majors or More!Students Stake CreditOn Results of Exam....the' heliocentric system issimpler.”The mathematics section includedproblems in algebra and trigonom¬etry. True-false questions were alsoasked. One was “There is no form¬ula for the solution of a generalfifth ‘degree equation in one un¬known.” Is it true or false? Well,perhaps the freshmen knew.(Continued on pagre 4) necticut Yankee in King Arthur’sCourt”, which was sponsored by theInterclub council a week ago inMandel hall.Out of these gate receipts, $41 ex¬penses for the movie, its fire-proofcage, and ticket printing must betaken out. The proceeds will thengo to the Chapel council relief fundfor the benefit of students needingfinancial assi-stance. After all, it was a comprehen¬sive exam in Hutchins’ honorscourse; and it meant the differencebetween six majors or no majors.Inquiries about the exam after itwas over disclosed that MarionKeane believed “The examinationsrequire better organization of ma¬terial with not so much emphasis ontrivial detail.” Personally, though,she “prefers a written examinationto one that’s oral.”Ruth Young, interrupted in ther'Aursp of stndyino" for an oral examat 6, remarked that since most ofthe good ideas she wrote down werethose of Professor Adler, she frank¬ly made a note of thanks to him council, the aides and marshals thegraduating members of the studentcommittee on student affairs, andthe stars of Blackfriars are amongI the seniors who are planning to at¬tend the traditional breakfast.Dean Gordon J. Laing, dean ofthe Humanities division who was theunanimous choice of the alumnicouncil to replace President RobertM. Hutchins at the alumni meetingwill be the principle speaker.Tickets, priced at $.50 are beingsold by all members of the SeniorExecutive committee, at the Book¬store, and at Ida Noyes hall. made sometime next fall by DeanWilliam E. Scott. The meeting to¬day will be the last of the year.Paris to InvestigateProgress of TribalCulture in Africa‘LOVELY LADY’ WILL BEBROADCAST OVER KYW“Lovely Lady” theme song of therecent Blackfriars’ production,“Whoa Henry” will be ?ung over KY. W. this evening at 10:10 by EarleTanner, tenor soloist. The song was ^^oups, in an effort to discover Nvhatfeatured by Bob Balsley and Don- changes in their customs and civil-A sociological study of primitivepeoples in central Africa will bemade by Dr. Ellsworth Faris, pro¬fessor of Sociology, this summer andwinter. Dr. Faris plans to leave forAfrica on August 15, not returningto the University until Spring quar¬ter of next year.Twenty years ago. Professor Far¬is visited a group of African tribeslocated near the equator, on theCongo river, about 800 miles inlandfrom the coast. He lived with themfor seven years at that time. Henow’ plans to return to these sameat the end of her paper, with an oc- ; aid Kerr in the Blackfriars perform-ca.sional “Hurrah for Adler!” at theend of a paragraph.Geraldine Smithwick did not con¬sider the exams to be very differentexcept that they were more difficultthan usual and require more thought. ance. Howard Dillenback wrote thelyric and William Carroll the musicfor the selection. They also com¬posed several other melodies for theproduction, among which was“Broadway’s Calling Me.” ization have resulted from the mod¬ern influences and inventions whichhave penetrated these isolated areas.He stated to The Daily Maroon thathe expects to find an enormouschange in their culture since his pre¬vious visit two decades ago.Ptige 1 wo THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1932FOUNDED 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morningrs, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday,durtnic the Autumn, Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University Ave. Subscription rates $3.00paf year: by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single copies, five-centseach.No responsibility is assumed by the L^niversity of Chicago forany statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postoffice nf rhiratro. Illinois. ur.,>r '^he .Act of March 1879GIFTSfor theGRADUATEBOOKS are always as permanent, satis¬factory and inexpnesive gifts as one can thinkof. And our special wrapping service is freewith all book purchases.Late FictionReadable BiographiesLeather Bindings$1.00 Non-FictionPocket-size EditionsAtlases, Globes. DictionariesNew PoetryFascinating Travel BooksBAGS — What girl doesn’t just dote on anew’ purse? \X e have in a new supply of thoselovely Moroccan ones - some all white at $ 1.00.HOW ABOUT THESE?A Mantle Radio or BedsideFanPetite Pen SetKodakHome-made HankiesItalian Book EndsUniversity CompactsSong BookDO YOUR GIFT SHOPPINGthis weekat theU. of C. Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.Secretarial TrainingPrivate lessons combined with group competition—Effi¬cient instructors devote unlimited time to each pupil’sparticular needs — English, Shorthand, Typewriting,Bookkeeping, Commercial Law and Legal Stenographyand Intensive Review, Spanish Secretarial Courses.Day and evening classes - Moderate tuition - Privatelessons > Write or phone HARrison 7849TUOHEY SECRETARIAL SCHOOL310 S. MICHIGAN AVE. SUITE 706, Straus Bldg.Josefina de Vargas - School of SpanishShorthandSpanish Language - TypewritingCommercial Letters310 So. Michigan Harrison 7849— Perfect Homes —Reduced Rates for StudentsKitchenette Apts.Beautiful new’ building.Free gas, light, refriger¬ation. In-a-dor beds.Baths with showers Lux¬uriously furnished. Per¬fectly serviced.Blackstone Mansions5514 Blackstone Ave.Plaza 222 3 Hotel RoomsChicago’s greatest hotelvalue. Luxuriously fur¬nished rooms. Large,light and airy. In-a-dorbeds — private bath withbath tub and shower.Harper Surf Hotel5426 Harper Ave.Plaza 3900 Iji'll 'l' I I II I • |IJ • I I ||l| l|l'|ll•ll|'>|'|■U|.J; The Travelling I: Bazaar iZ BY FRANK HARDING 1Whoops, was that you I touched?. . . .Now the parade has started; orshall we say ha.s almost reached itsconclusion? Everyone is having aswell time watching all the big shotsof next year hatch out of the eggsthey have been pecking at all thetime and then there are all thosethat somehow couldn’t get out ofthe shell and we have a hunch itmust smell pretty bad insideThere’s Jontry, but how many ofus didn’t know the genial Jerry withhis Jottings, and Crusading?.4nd then the big shot athletes areParsons, Porter, Birney. . .And thenthere is the Track job, with Hay-don and Baseball for Mahoney. Ormaybe Jontry? Who is this guy Jon¬try anyway? .... And if you peoplewould like to see something funnyyou should see all the Kappa Alphasand stilleto arti.'^ts there are in thisMaroon office. Personally we thinkthat for the good of all concernedthey might as well give the job ofEditor-in-Chief to Jontry AndJohn Wier has the thankless job ofediting the Cap and Gown. . . .Whowill take the place of Sylvia? Andhow about the smart girls that mustfit into the ?hoes of Margaret Eganand Jane Kesner. . . . And who willbe president of Tarpon. . . .And howabout the Job of Senior Class Presi¬dent? Certainly next year all thestudents in Astronomy will band to¬gether and elect their man .... Andthat reminds us that there is somesort of a Junior-Senior affair com¬ing off which we are supposed toballyhoo. We think, however, thatwe will be honest with ourselves to¬day. We have always been of theopinion that everything we ballyhoois hardly worth ballyhooing. Wehave however alway- ballyhooed be¬cause so many people would thinkus what we really are if we didn’t..\nd then, of course we get freetickets which we are able to par¬tition off among our friends so wewill be sure of having their voteswhen we run for Assistant DogCatcher.... (W’hat innate modestyyou have Mr. Columnist!).... .4ndthe old school won’t be what it usedto be when we come back next year(No, dammit, we are not seniors andwe would like to make a public state¬ment to that effect so we will nothave to go into detailed explanationswhen you see our shining faces backhere next year.... And anotherthing that gripes us is that we arealways considering ourselves as anynumber in the plural from two tofive. Whenever I sit down at thismill I look around to make sure thatall the rest of me is around.... Ormaybe I’m crazy.) . . . .Yes what willit be like without the Psi U delega¬tion to make faces on the “C”bench, and the hjrJ from the Pan¬sy, and the two greeters? Why itwill be exactly the same for therewill be more Psi LTs to make facesand there will be more greeters, andmore Pansies....♦ ♦ * * ♦Two .41pha Delts called up theChi Psi house at California on thenight of their big foi’mal. “This isthe lady next door; my husband isvery sick and is expected to die anyminute. Would you mind keepingquiet for a few minutes to let himdie in peace. The Chi Psis said theywould, so the expensive orchestrawent to waste and everyone talkedin whispers, until 12 o’clock whenthe Alpha Delts called again, “Theold man’s kicked off,—on with thedance.”TOD A Yon theQUADRANGLESTHURSDAY, JUNE 9Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, at 12 in JosephBond chapel. “Tradition and Prog¬ress.” Profes.sor B. W. Robinson,Chicago Theological Seminary.Concert of Native African Songsand Negro Spirituals, by Prince Mo-dupe Paris, baritone. 8:30 P. M.,in Mandel hall.Department ClubsBacteriology club meets at 4:30in Ricketts N. 1. “Antony Leeuwen¬hoek.” Dr. William Bloom.MiscellaneousCollege Examinations in the Bi¬ological Science.*, 9-12, 2-5.Women’s Athletic Association An¬nual Dinner, at 7 in Ida Noyes hall.“C” Banquet, at 6 in HutchinsonCommons.NOTICEAll Crew Members, Supervisors. TeamCaptains and Student subscription sales¬people who wish to avail themselves ofthe opportunity for free scholarships, madepossible throuifh the courtesy of theLeadimr Magazine Publishers attain thisyear, are requested to apply to thenational organizer, .M. Anthony Steele,•fr.. Box 244, San Juan. Porto Rico, st it-intt qualifleations fully. Wilson, Clark HitReturn of Saloon(Continued from page 1)make as much stir as one boy witha flask on his hip at a dance. Pro¬hibition gave us ten years of thegreatest prosperity hi.-tory has everseen.Capt. Clarke declared that he wasspeaking against a statute he hadhoped would succeed listing prom¬ises” of prohibition, he cited stat¬istics to show that these have notbeen fulfilled, that “we must comeout of the clouds of ideali.-m.” THE MUSIC BOXCottage Grove at 64thChinese - .\nierican RestaurantDINE and DANCE. Music byCarl Schreiber and HisRoyal TroubadoursFull Course Dinner, $1.00NO COVER.CHARGEFor Reservations PhoneFAIrfax 53220 utstandingThe FinestBeauty Workin ChicagoCampus Shop1215 E. 63rd St.Fairfax 8822Loop Shop58 E. Washington St.Franklin 9801Restful surroundings of dignifiedbeauty, alert, well-trained operatorsand the most modern equipment sci¬ence has designed for enhancingyour loveliness.Our two locations provide foryour utmost convenience — one ashort three blocks from ceimpus—andthe other in the heeirt of the Loop.Remember — individuality makesbeauty —and Condos treats you asan individual.THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. JUNE 9, 1932 Page ThreeI The University Woman—Her PageFACULTY FIX ^3Si Tea, Frolic forON CAMPUS WOMAN- Freshmen OpensNEW PLAN, AND OLD Fall Y^. WorkMajority Feels GroupMore IntegratedThan BeforeWomen faculty members obtaina perspective on the undergraduatewoman which few others have theopportunity to perceive; the resulti< a viewpoint that is individual andsignificant. A number of womenfaculty members were interviewedfor their opinions on the campuswoman of today, especially the newplan Freshman student, in compari¬son with those of former years.Damaris Ames, assitant to theDean of Students, replied: “Thecampus seemed to be more integrat-I'd and unified socially several yearsago. There were three Freshmanwomen s clubs, with names such asthe “Blue Bottle,” and “Yellow Jac¬ket”, which had regular initiationfeats and strong interconrpetition.The girls attended the Spring Inter-Class dance every year, and every¬one had a good time. Distinctionsbetween freshmen, sophomores, andjuniors and seniors were very rig¬idly preserved. Many student danceswere held in Rosalie hall, which hasbeen removed, and it was here es¬pecially that the social groups con¬gregated, rather than down in theloop and out on the north side asthey tend to do now.”Mrs. Logsdon.Mr^. Mayme I. Log-don, head ofKelly hall and associate professor ofmathematics, says of her contJV-t-he has had with women students,“They have more thought for thefuture, ami seem to be working to¬wards definite ends in professionalfields, rather than merely attendingclasses aimlessly from day to day.Women make very good mathema¬ticians” she added, “an<l are oftenmore proficient than the men, butthat is usually more because of ap-(ilication than of innate ability.”.'>he cited her present Freshmancla-s as an example where severalwoir;en out-dLstanced the men.Mrs. GilkeyTo Mrs. (lilkey, with her manycontacts among the University wom¬en whom she has so frequently en¬tertained in her home: “The moderngirl is the same now as she alwayswas; the college woman is stillsweet, unaffected, and interested inthe same things."Miss Clarke.Margaret Logan Clark, secretaryof the University Y. W. C. A.,treats the undergraduate of todayfrom another aspect, viewing her a.sshe is about to enter the businessworld after graduation:“Significant among the character¬istics of the academT? year of 1931-32 is the penetration of unemploy¬ment to the immediate world of theUniversity student. Financial un¬certainty has come to students whosefathers and mothers have lost theirjobs or their bank accounts or in¬vestments. The courage with whichmany students have undertaken toreorganize their present plans andtheir future possibilities speaks wellfor their ability to become self-di¬recting, and their identification oftheir own situation with the uncer¬tainty of the unemployed every¬where indicates a realistic and un¬academic approach to the problemof living n the world today."Miss Ver NooyMiss Winifred Ver Nooy, refer¬ence librarian in Harper, sees under-ANOTHERHIT!This smart summer shoe forstreet, beach or home wear.Uppers of ribbed cloth, sol'esof crepe rubber.$1.50 pairWoodworth^sI Bookstore1311 E. 57th St.I Near Kimbark Ave.I OPEN EVENINGS Y. W. C. A. Fall activities will be1 initiated with a tea for FreshmanI women, September 27 at Ida Noyes !hall at which the entering students! W'ill have an opportunity to meetJ women who are prominent in the so-: cial service field at the university.Mrs. Gilkey, Miss Mollie Ray Car- |1 roll, head of the Chicago Settlement, jI Miss Ruth Emerson, associate pro- i: fessor of Medical Social work, and jj Miss Mary Gilson, instructor in eco- II nomics, will be guests of, honor. The |, tea will be followed by the Fresh- |1 man Frolic under the chairmanshipof Margaret Willis of the FreshmanGroup at which the Dramatic sec¬tion will present Alice Gerstenberg’splay, “Opera Matinee", under the jsupervision of Sally Fisher. ■Among the other activities whichwill be sponsored during the quar¬ter is the trip to the Philippine cen-I ter under the auspices of the World jFellowship Group of which Rita Du- jkette is chairman, and the parties j; for transfer students engineered bythe Inter-Collegiate Group withMadelaine Strong as chairman. Vol¬unteer service work at the hospitalconsisting of making surgical band¬ages and assisting during visitinghours will be directed by ElizabethMilchrLst and Agnes Adair, respec-, tively. A series of AssociationMeetings at which Miss Mary Gil.«onwill speak o". current political topicswill be inaugurated early in thequarter. The summer activities ofY. W. C. A. will continue until July1st. The social program will consistof trips to the Settlement and cluband playroom activities there andtaking charge of the SettlementLeague Dances held Saturday eve¬nings, at Ida Noyes Hall.graduates from another perspective,and says, “The students as a wholeseem mo’io studious, but I can onlytell from a rather uncertain oberva-tion."Mrs. FlintMrs. Edith Foster Flint, herselfonce an undergraduate on campus,and now head of Composition inthe College curriculum, writes as ,* follows:“The two New Plan students I! have had this year were sturdy ma- |terial, but they would hardly suffice |to rear a generalization on regardingthe difference between old and new. :■ I did, however, spend one week-end,i seventeen hours, to be precise, ini reading English placement and qual¬ifying examinations in which pa¬pers from 239 New Plan studentsfigured. On that examination wasone question which called for cere¬bration on the subject of a student’s' conception of ‘a meaning in life.’And both my colleagues and I wereimpressed by the way in which thepapers showed the students’ ability ito bring to bear on the questionknowledge gained through the four; general courses and, what is more,I to scrutinize that knowledge in thelight of personal experience. It wasa genuine process of integration, ofi weaving educational strands into ai firm fabric. I am bound to say thatI I have seen the phenomenon before,j in English 130, Introduction toj Poetry, for example, where a coursein Psychology would be brought tobear on, say, Blake’s ‘Poison Tree’.But never have I seen it displayedby so many students at once, or by Iyoung ones, or, if I may say so, by' students who showed in other partsI of their papers so little superiorityI to their predecessors. The conclu- i! sion was inescapable that the gen-j eral courses had stimulated thought' and widened knowledge in a vital• way. And as for the vocabulariesdisplayed—they sent the readers |scurrying for a dictionary, and a bigone."Mrs. Mina SchmidtMrs. Mina Schmidt, whose Cos¬tume Workshop has been one of thenewest innovations which have ap- ipealed to women in recent years saysthat in her opinion, “the presentcollege woman is more practical-minded than she ever was. The richman’s daughter learns the practicaland necessary thing along with ev¬eryone else, and is more democraticin her attitude towards life.”Miss Frances Gillespie of the de-(Continued on page 4)SPEEDWRITING jtou Take Rapid Dictation in K ^eekaEndorsed by leadinir educators. Nota fad. Especially adapted to technicalterminoloKy. A valuable time saver inall lines of work. S|)ecial summer coursesfor University Students. Both sexes.Special free class demonstration 2:30 or6:30 P. M. every Tuesday and Thursday.Low cost. The grenuine Speedwritinir astauKht in many hi^h schools and col-leKes throUKhout the United States.CHICAGO BUSINESSCOLLEGEWaiter Harria. B.8.M.A.. PTca.190 N. State St. Franklin 4122-S-4-S Maude Phelps HutchinsFinds Today’s Student A‘CompleteFeels Women Are RealPeople After AllIs ConsideredMias Maxine Creviston,Woman’s Page ’’EditorThe Daily MaroonDear Miss Creviston:I have been asked to tell whatI “think of the U. of C. woman—what I see her doing" — what I“wish she would do.” This is diffi¬cult. My acquaintance with her isslight—my general observation ofher is mostly hearsay. I cannottherefore think of her as an individ¬ual—nor even consider her in gen¬eral with assurance. I do not believeshe bears any particular stamp asa U. of C. woman and so I cannotrecognize her as such—criticize heror praise her. If she can find herplace in the world with the Univer¬sity’s assistance—very good. If shecannot, perhaps better. Of whatuse she believes her four or three ortwo years here I cannot imagine.It is a small part of her life andshould not be overestimated.The present spotlight is upon herand her brother. Her elder brotherand sister have not made any par¬ticular contribution—I do not be¬lieve that it was entirely the faultof their college education—nor ifthis generation of students improvesthe general situation do I believe itcan be credited to the new plan.The new plan is a beginning whichtheir grandchildren may find profitin. The present student is of the“old school”—a complete conserva¬tive. They are their own ancestors.Their years at college are their yearsof procrastination and very littleelse. Ask me to judge them fifteenyears from now when each smallcycle is more advanced. They aretoo young to change. They wanttomorrow to be as pleasant as yes¬terday—their parents often fright¬en them by their radical ideas—from clothes to politics.Is there anything more depressing—or is it safe and Heartening—thanthe published accounts which appearyearly of the “favorite poems, act¬resses, plays, and novels” of the Se¬nior class of a great college? Fouryears—and in the end his favoritepoem is Kipling’s “If”. Of coursein the meantime he has kept hisfather’s money in circulation—andhis professors have kept from go¬ing mad by considering their teach¬ing a kind of occupational therapy Conservative’Mrs. Robert Maynard Hutchins—I cannot believe however that hehasn’t improved his mind.—the stu¬dent. I can only explain it by be- jlieving that he considers his educa- |tion as a matter of form and it 'doesn’t enter his hfl^ad to make use jof it—even in conversation. He ac-I cepts it as he accepts church with-; out believing in God, the only dif-I ference being that he gets no realI aesthetic pleasure from it—but con¬siders himself a dupe of the profes-; sors who are teasing and fretting himi into learning against his will. They: ask him questions with anticipatedanswers. If the answer is the pro-i fessor’ expectation it is right—ifI not it becomes the student’s question! rather than the professor’s and how! disturbing all that would be if noti discouraged at once. But the stu¬dent does not see how unfair andeven ridiculous this system is—I amnot sorry for him because he does,not care—he even likes it. It iseasy. Get the professor’s mind by jheart and present it to him with apretty corhpliment. And the othersless glib and who care even less jdon’t gain P. B. K. keys that swingso heavily on their watch chain and 1give one such a pleasant final status.I find myself calling the “U. ofC. woman” he and him. It is sim- jply the editorial he and him. Goodor bad her education and his is aboutthe same. There is no need to sepa- jrate one’s critici.sms of each then.Women are people—at least I thinkthey are.Very truly youre,Maude Phelps Hutchins.Senior Women Look Upon Campus inFarewell, and Alumnae Mourn ApartSeven departing Senior womenand five mournful alumnae were re- jcently confronted for some of those 1famous “last lines” the Phoenix was jsupposed to express yesterday, andfrom the replies the seven departersand the five mourners gave, onemight conclude .... “It’s all inthe point-of-view.” Some talkedabout the New Plan Freshman wom¬en, and some didn’t bother, but atleast here’s what they did say:Ruth Abells “has had a grand timein school and so hates to leave, butis one of the lucky people who havea job.”Nothing to Do!Viola Bower states, “I should liketo come back for more work. It isawful getting out now, when thereis nothing to do.”“I am sorry,” echoes Sylvia Fried-eman, “but you don’t realize youare through.From Jerry Mitchell we hear sheis “terribly sorry to be leaving, forwhen you’re a senior all the officesare open to you and you know ev¬erybody Lots of fun!”Elizabeth Merriam says “In a wayI am glad to be through. But I willprobably take one course on cam¬pus.” Betty Parker feels “The New Planis grand, but it will eliminate lotsof social people who would be goodfor University life.”Of the alumnae, the bottom didn’treally drop out of life for MargeCahill after giaduating, and, fromthe Information Desk in the Pressbuilding, she paused to say, “It’sgrand having a job on campus likethis.A Spectator NowMarion White, replying from thePresident’s Office, answters she is“having a grand time watching theactivities in which I was so tremend¬ously interested last year.”Nancy Jane Kennedy, off campusnow, observes of this year’s Fresh¬man women, “There is practically nochange. .. .the girls are just aslight-headed, girlish and coy as theyever were.”Ruth Earnshaw slowed her busysteps in the Alumnae office recent- |ly and said, “The new system will jprobably change the type of girl ithat will come.”And Jean Searcy, bewailing heroutcast state, waxed poetic about ithe subject, and then reflected orfji exams.PERMANENTSfor Every TypePoesibiy your featuree demand a soft,fluffy coiffure. Then axain, more rigid wavesmay best become you. ‘Our experts willknow.There are many shades of hair — blonde,brunette, titian, golden blonde, silvery gray—and as many different types!So, it is but reasonable to believe that inIJeriiMiiMnt waviitc rack prcMiitt i n Individual problem.We study the requirements in each par¬ticular case and adopt the proper methodsto assure a perfect, beautiful permanentwave. Thus you are assured a permanentwith personality.Phone Us For an Appointment . . . TodayTuesday, Friday and Saturday9 A.M. to 9 P.M.Del-Ores Beauty SalonMrs. Frederick E. HavillSSSa KENWOOD AVENUETelephone Dorchester 1976 Here Is News ofWomen at OtherBig Ten SchoolsAs a special feature for thisWoman’s Page, news letters havebeen obtained from several of theBig Ten schools, describing the ac¬tivities of Big Ten women, and of¬fering an interesting divergencefrom our own “local” organization,life, and events. We reprint hereletters from the Universities ofMichigan, Indiana, and Illinois.News From MichiganMargaret M. Thompson, women’seditor of The Michigan Daily, writesus from Ann Arbor:“Activities for women at the Uni¬versity of Michigan are sponsoredby the Women’s League Organiza¬tion and the Women’s Athletic As¬sociation. The Women’s League ha.«a million and a quarter-dollar clubhouse, completed four years ago, inwhich most of the activities are cen¬tered. ISPRING BANQUET OFW. A. A. CONVENES INIDA NOYES TONIGifrII Miss Dudley to Presentj Chicago “C’s” and' Honor PinsTonight W. A, A. holds its annualI spring banquet for all members,I alumnae, and faculty guests in theI gymnasium of Ida Noyes hall,—a! gymnasium that has been decorated,I under the committee headed by Lor-j raine Ade to carry out the swimmingmotif, theme of the evening.The scene is a veritable tropicisland, with its palm trees, sand, anda blue horizon. The table which isC shaped, is screened in by a can¬opy and drop of streamers in orangeand green. The place-cards thatEstlier Weber is designing for eachguest at the banquet are embellishedwith palm trees hand-painted on thej card.“In this building are given the |annual Junior Girl’s Play, the Se- jnior suppev the Women’s LeagueBazaar, the Sophomore Cabaret, thePan-Hellenic Ball, the Spring Sup¬per-Dance, and many other partiesunder the auspices of various so¬cieties.“The Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion also has a new building, thePalmer Field House, excellentlyequipped for the interclass and in¬tramural sports sponsored by theorganization. Other of its activitiesare the Penny Carnival, the Fresh¬man Pageant, and Lantern Night.”The two occasions last named are“foremost among the activities de¬manding the interest of the womenthis spring. One hundred and fiftyfreshman women w'll stage their an¬nual presentation, the History ofMusic, interpreted by period dances,in honor of the graduating class.“Coincidental is the ceremony ofLantern Night, in which the march¬ing files of senior women presentsymbolic lamps to the juniors, whoin turn pass on tv.eir class hoopsto the sophomores. The ceremony,held at dusk, is this year supple¬mented by appropriate lighting ef¬fects and by the University of Mich¬igan orchestra,” Miss Dudley will SpeakMiss Gertrude Dudley, who pre¬sents the honor pins and the Chi¬cago “C’s” will be introduced byLeone Bailey, undergraduates toast-mistress. Esther Feuchtwanger,president of W. A. A., will give thegolf cup to Mildred Hackle who wonI the annual W. A. A. golf tourna¬ment for the second consecutivetime, the tennis cup to the winnerof the tennis tournament now inprogress, and award the class cham¬pionship banners. A representativeof President Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins will extend a greeting of wel¬come to the guests on behalf of theUniversity.Miss Esther Preston, alumnatoastmistress, introduces the alumnaspeaker of the evening. Miss MaryMurphy, ’06, chairman of the Eliza¬beth McCormic Fund, who was thefirst secretary of W, A. A. Thefaculty speaker is Miss* Marion Tal¬bot, former dean of women at theUniversity, who has just returnedfrom Turkey.A committee of hostesses underthe direction of Mary Lou Forbrich,social chairman, have been selectedto receive the faculty members, inan effort to make these guests ofhonor especially welcome.We Hear At IndianaMary D. Johnston, woman’s editorof The Indiana Daily Student, sendsus this information from the Kap¬pa Kappa Gamma house there:“Whee-e-e-e-e!“Buzz-z-z-z-z!“That, readers, is a sample of theprogram which was broadcast re¬cently by the Theta Sigma Phis ofIndiana University at their annualformal razz fest. At that time,Welda Winshel, feminine bard ofthe bored walk, speaking for the sobscribblers, gave special recognition inthe form of the good old razzberryto Prunella Prunejuice and otheroutstanding women of the Univer¬sity of Indiana.“Four hundred coeds, the elite ofAlma Mater, were invited to be inon the ‘hear’ and the ‘why’ whentheir sisters toed the mark. Loudspeakers and fadeouts were selectedin preparation for the affair, and,“the caution was, ‘if you don’t lookout, these Hoosier Theta Sig gossip-(Continued on page 4) Tickets $1.00Twenty-two campus women, rep¬resenting all the W. A. A. activities,clubs, and halls are selling the tic¬kets which are priced at $1.00, andwhich are also being sold in IdaNoyes hall today from 11 to 5. Pre¬ferences for seating location can beindicated at the TTme the ticket ispurchased. Laura Cook is in chargeof ticket sales. Notices of the ban¬quet have been sent to all alumnaein a special effort to reunite them.OLGA NIKOUCH WINSSPRING TENNIS MEETOlga Nikolich, president of Rac¬quet, women’s tennis club, is win¬ner of the annual women’s tennistournament sponsored by W. A. A.and Racquet. She won the cup lastyear and this evening at the AnnualW. A. A. banquet it will again beawarded to her. In order to per¬manently retain the cup it must bewon three years in succession.GRADUATION GIFTSFOR THE UNlVERSrTY STUDENTThe following have U. of C. seal or crestl{«H>k Ends $1.25 to $10.00 Blotters 1.50 to 1.T5Wall Shields 1.00 to 5.00 StationeryCalen<lars 60 to 1.75 Holders 1.00 to 2.25Memo Pads 1.00 to 2.25 Ash Trays .76 to 2.00Pen Trays 1.00 to 1.30 Rin^s 3.00 to 19.00Pai>er Knives l.OO to 1.50 Pins 1.00 to 8.00Pai)er W'eitrhts 1.45 to 1.75 Vanity Cases 1.00 to 9.00Pocket Knives 1.50 to 3.00 Charms 2.00 to 4.00University Etchings, Pennants, Pillows, Banners, WallSkins, Stationery and Hundreds of OtherGift ItemsWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57lh St. Open EveningsNear Kimbark Ave. Phone Hyde Park 1690 ' -I'Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, JUNE 9. 1932MARYLAND CAFEFood Excellent • Price* LowChinese - American Reatanrant84C E. S3RD STREETCompleteBreakfast 15c • upLuncheon 25c - upDinner 35c - upTERM PAPERSRUSH WORKDay or EveningMULLEN TYPING SERVICE1326 E. 57th St. Dor. 2896SAVE YOUR MONEY ONTHAT TRIP BACKHOMETravel by AutoOur share expense plan brinsrs 1 ravelrates far below what you expect to spend.Cars Going Everywhere—See UsTRANS - AMERICANTRANSPORT BUREAU205 W. Wacker Dr.Franklin 4400Hours M A. M. to 5 F. M. Monday toFridayMrs. A. B. Coakley Phone Mid. 2324A. B. C.5504 WOODLAWN AVE.AMERICA'S BEST CLEANERSWhen You Think of Cleaning—Think ofQualityPrices Reasonable We Call and DeliverLEARN TO DANCE NOWAttend Classes atTERESA DOLAN STUDIO6307 Cottage Grove AvenueMon. & Wed. Evenings at 8:00 o’clock■Admission 50c Phone Hyde Park 3080Private Lessons .Any Day or EveningPARTIESandPARENTSRemember, always, that HotelsWindermere are at your serviceas they have been for gener¬ations of Midway students.Long experience has made usadept at arranging Universitydances, luncheons, dinners andparties.And when Mother and Fathervisit you in Chicago, arrange tohave them stay here, conven¬iently, in a pleasant room orsuite, at a reasonable price.]^otels Hindermere^hicago56th Street at Hyde Park BoulevardWard B. James, ManagerFairfax 6000 FACUin nx GAZEON CAMPUS WOMAN-NEW PLAN, AND AU(Continued from page 3)partment of History observes atransition in attitude, a sort of so¬cial process, and change, in thosewho are working on higher degrees,for she states, “The graduate wom¬en used to be more interested intheir w’ork; their whole attitude to¬wards life was a result of theirstudies. The graduate Avomen todaytend to be younger and less absorb¬ed in their work. They seem to re¬alize that they should divide theirtime and take an interest in out¬side social contacts. All in all, theyseem now to be well-developed, in¬tellectual w'omen.”Mrs. Dickson .Mrs. Bruce W. Dickson was in¬terrupted in fhe midst of packingfor a recent trip to New York wdthMr. Dickson, whei’e they were to in¬spect an International Studentshouse, and she spoke as one whoknows intimately the problems ofadjustment in the lives of our for¬eign women students:“Well, I think the present day col¬lege woman is just fine! I think sheknows more where she is going andwhat she is planning for than wedid. I know when I was in college,I rather drifted, from a vocationaltraining standpoint, and didn’t giveit much thought one way or theother.”Here Is News ofWomen at OtherBig Ten SchoolsI(Continued from page 3)mongers will get you. and you, andyou’!”Illinois Co-edsAnd down at the University ofIllinois, the woman’s editor of theDaily Illini, tells us:“A year’s activities of the Wom¬an’s Group system of the Universityof Illinois was officially ended witha banquet in honor of all Group sys¬tem seniors.“Woman’s Group System, of W.G S., as it is known on the cam¬pus ,is unique in women’s activitiesat the University. Every non¬sorority w’oman belongs, and is as¬signed to a group. These groupshold regular meetings, and servepractically the same purpose a.s sor¬orities, furnishing social life fortheir members and contacts withother women. Stunt shows, parties,awards, banquets, and dances are afew of the activities of the system.”204 Take Exam inPhysical Science Survey(Continued from page 1)Questions of this sort were askedin the section devoted to phyics:“An organ pipe and a tuning forkof frequency 400 produced 4 beatsper second when sounded together.The organ pipe might have a fre¬quency of either....or Whenthe air in the organ pipe was w'arm-ed slightly, the number of beats persecond decreased. Does this enableone to tell which frequency was cor¬rect for the unwarmed pipe?If so, which was it? ”CAFE 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 AlexanderfmFOR HEN'r .Modern cottaire onRke fronlavte. 3 liedroorntt ; -ileep-irur pori-htn. Inquire of .Mri-. Wil-!ian.-in. Lakehide. .Michiiran.lOR HE.NT Home to bare.‘h i.iniversity -tiidentf- Laryeit.a m witii kit'-ben and a .-an yi-.■ l.'p Huri)er .Vve. ' ^11 .Sh '4‘*'’. EXPERT TYPING at reasonableratex. Term papers a specialty.Apply to riHjm 7, Lexinirton Hallbetween 2 and 6 p. m. daily.I'NIVERSITY WOMAN want*job as tutor or trovernes*. Roomand ^mall salary desireil. Box O,Faculty Exchanye. Again theSENIORSdo the inevitable to perfection! They have dis¬covered just the thing that most strikingly setsoff a cap and gown, that most graciously shakeshands with the F^resident, that most artisticallywill carry through a summer of sports activity.W ritteri byRuth WillardJune Ke.sner choo.xcs I heiiPMest in wliilp crepr. 'riicMiiart slip-()VPr vest conicsin niar(K>ii. hrowii. hliic andvcllou. Sizes 11-20 . $15Misses' SfutrlsHiflht —.Hire Stinnett ucars thencM Olyinjiir sports dress ...cspcciallv fashi<»ncd forField’s.Tills dress if of whitesilk Pr^>e trimmed in ilarkhliie. 'File Olympic insigniais woven into the belt. Sizes14-20 .... $18.75Mi sses' SportsMargaret Hill selects theOlympic ensemhle ... thedress of white rihhed silk anflthe smartly tailored jacketof dark fdue crepe. Sizes I Ito 20 .... $22.50Misses' SportsMARSHALLFIELD &COMPANY l iota Hou'er models theoutstanding in SummerSjMirts ensemhies ...aw hitesilk sport dress and thejauntiest of Swagger coals.The ensemhle also comes inI link. |M»wder hliie ami \el-ou. Sizes 11-17 $12.75Junior ami l*etite Mtss