Batlp iHaroonVol. 33. No.^ o UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY. DECEMBER 6. 1932 Price Three Cent*-otO oA Sen?View oiWar Debts FRESHMEN STAGEINFORMAL DANCEFRIDAY EVENING,n. flowing i. Ihe lert of an of 35 SpOnSOrS,((/(/»•( .s'f« by Jacob Viner, professor of a •Kronomics, delivered last Saturday \ rlTSt AttSir Sthi'forc th€ Chicago Council of For- j LoW PriCCSciyu liclations.) \The Class of ’36 will sponsor itsfirst social function of the yearwhei the Freshman party, open tothe entire University, is staj?ed Fri¬day in Judson Court at the low priceof 36 cents a person. Tickets maybe purchased at the Bookstore, Rey-nolds club, or from any member ofthe Freshman council.It is not impossible to make out aplausible case agrainst any special dis¬play of jrenerosity on the part of theI’nited States in connection with theAllied Debt payments due thismonth. There is no leg'al or moraldaw in our debt claims. Therewarranted disappointment in thiscountry with the behavior of Englandand hVance in connection with di.s-armanvent and the Manchurian prob¬lem. Were it not for our own tariffdebaueh, we w’ould have ju.st causetor rasentment in the growth oftariff barriers, BritLsh preferentialarrangements, import contingentsand quotas, which, not altogether byhazard press with special severityon American foreign trade.We are no longer a prosperous na¬tion; we have the largest budgetdeficit and the largest volume of un¬employment in the world. We can¬not afford lightly to conctnle bil¬lions of dollars to other people.^.simply because they also are in di.s-tiess. There is absolutely no groundfor doubt that the important debtorscan make the next payment in somefa.'hion or other if we insi.st uponIt. There is little reason to fear thatEaigland will default if we demandfull piiyment, although this cannothe said for some of the other debtorcountries. Neverthele.ss, in spite ofall this, it is necessa-y that our gov¬ernment .should be as lenient a.- The purpose of this dance is tocreate some sort of social life in theFreshman cla.ss, which until now hasbeen entirely lacking within thegroup as a unit, .states Jack Allen,chairman of the Freshman council.Boyd Raben’s orche.stra will furnishthe music from 9 until 12 in the din¬ing room of Judson ' Court. Hostsfor the event are the Freshman resi¬dents of Burton and Judson courts..An executive committee, headedby Jack Allen, are completing thearrangements for the party. Othermembers of the committee are: Bar¬bara Vail and Merle Giles, public¬ity; Gladys Curtin, Edith McCarthy,Robert Ebert, and William Wright,refreshments.Settlement Bridge Tea.All Freshman w’omen are invitedto the Settlement Pound Party tobe held December 15 from 3:30 to5:30 in the lounge of Ida Noyes hallto aid the University Settlement.The price of admission to thebridge tea is a pound of food of anyvariety, which will be donated to If Alpha BeltsDidn’t Steal theCups, Who Did?Oil course no one would accusethe Alpha Delts of larceny, but ifthey DIDN’T raid the Deke, Psi U.and Chi Psi houses F'riday night,who did? If they DIDN’T do it, howcome two stuffed owls and an en¬larged photograph of the Old Man,from the Deke house, and severaldozen assorted cups from the Deke,Chi Psi and Psi U houses, were dis¬covered on the Alpha Delt mantlethe next morning?“Sure, it’s a professional job,’’ lo¬cal experts on criminology said wheninterviewed yesterday. “Lookit howthose guys ransacked the Deke housewithout di.sturbing Prince the policedog and the unnamed St. Bernardpup. Lookit how they lifted the PsiU stuffed owls without disturbingthe stuffed shirts.“And don’t forget that this guyHarding, the president of the AlphaDelt hou.se, has considerable of acriminal record. Several weeks agohe was implicated in an attem'pt tosteal a stone owl, also the propertyof Psi U, and he only escaped tak¬ing the rap by swearing he was twoother guys, both named Carl Jeffer¬son.“The crime was committed Fri¬day night, when all the Alpha Delts,(Continued on page 3)American public opinion will permit A^e poor in the back of the yards• di.stncts. Helen Hiett ana valericWebster will pour the tea, whileand more lenient than American pub¬lic opinion will r':*lish if it is to servein an enlightened manner the vital,imthe nation.Iniittence on^“"hrworid'appears at the moment i po.s.sibilities by which theBoard may aid the University Settle¬ment during the winter quarter, oneiTs downward course to economic dis- mo.st pressing i>eriods to. le-Evelyn Carr, Carolyn Brooks, andmTdiaU«’"and"iong-run'intei-.^ts'of ! as hostessesat the affair.An informal discussion will al.sobe held by the group to determinelo be in a pasition of delic:ite bal¬ance, hesitating between resuming FELIX FRANKFURTERGIVES THIRD MOODYLECTURE OF SEASONaster, on the one hand, or begin¬ning the arduous climb to recoveryon the other hand. Event.*’ minor inthem.selves will be deci.ova as towhich course shall be taken. Rightlyor wrongly, the economic world, in¬cluding our own part of it. will takein.si.stence upon the full payment ofthe debts, according to schedule, andwithout alleviating concessions, a.! asign of further economic troubleahead, and will resume its searchfor safe sheltei from an economiccollapse, thus making more probableits occurrence.This is not a safe time for coun¬tries to treat each other only in ac¬cordance with their deserts. Coldjustice is at present an extravagantluxury. If we demand payment andthe Allies pay, the heroic struggleof England to keep its DUfigol inbalance wi’l have proven ur.avaifng,its immed’Oto pro pects will loomdarker than ever, its early return tothe gold standard will become evenmore unlikely.France also is already strugglingunsucces.sfully with a rapidly-grow¬ing budget deficit to which theHoover Moratorium and the Lau¬sanne Agreement have contributed.Our sky-scraping tariff, our subsidiesto American shipping engaged inforeign trade, the fall in worldprices, the depreciation of sterliii*:,the economic depression, have mademany times more difficult today thepayment to us of a given numberof dollars than it was when the debtagreements were originally nego¬tiated.England’s SituationIn 1932In 1923, the dollar value of Eng¬land’s commodity exports to thiscountry was twice the amount pay¬able by her on account of her debtto us. In 1932, wc are taking PJng-lish goods at an annual rate amount-■ ng to only one quarter of the debtpayments scheduled for this coming.\ear. The French situation is notstrikingly better, and the trendof our import trade is stMl down¬ward. The debts cannot under exist¬ing conditions be paid in goods, andmust therefore be paid in gold or bedefaulted.The British Government could(Continued on page 2) lief. Felix Frankfurter, professor ofLaw at Harvard University, will dis¬cuss “Problems of the New Era andthe Law’’ December 15 in Mandelhall. Free tickets will be availableat the Information office December12, 13, 14, and 15.This is the third lecture o^ theWilliam Vaughn Moody series thisyear—its sixteenth .’oasmi on thiscampus. 1 ’-eceeding lectin er.^ wereFllery Sodswick, ed’te; of the .At-’antic Mon*^hly: and Norman .Angell,journalist, author, economist.Frankfuiter was an :>ttoriiey withthe U. S. War department until 1914.During tlie war ho served in the va¬rious capacities of assistant to theSecretary of War, counsel to thePresident’s Mediation Commission,assistant to the Secretary of Labor,and chairman of the War LaborPolicies Board. SENIDR GDDNCILDEGIDES DN GAPANDGpTDDAYClass Executive Croup toMeet at 3:30 inHarper M11;The new Senior class council willmeet today for the first time and forthe specific purpose of reaching afinal deci.sion on the fate of the Capand Gown. That publication willeither be solemnly buried with alldue rights, or resuscitated and givena new lease on life—if members ofthe council decide to support.its pub¬lication.The council is meeting at 3:30 inHarper M 11. Owing to the import¬ant business on hand Joseph Zoline,chairman of the group, hopes thatthe full membership of thirty willbe present.Zoline is anxious for the continu¬ation of the Cap and Gown, andplans to exert evei*>’ effort to secureits revival. He has several reasonsfor this attitude, the most importantbeing that he believes the campus,and especially the Senior clas.s, wantsa college annual. It is also his opin¬ion that many alumni wish this rec¬ord of the year’s activities of'theiralma mater.Zoline’s AttitudeMoreover, Zoline is of the opinion,together with a sizeable representa¬tion of the Senior class, that a year¬book is, or .should be, an integralpart of undergraduate life.The Student Committee on Stu¬dent Affairs went on record as favor¬ing the publication of the annual pro¬vided a thousand subscriptions couldbe sold. However, it appears that fourhwidred subscriptions will carry thefinancial burden, and five hundred’Subscriptions will certainly insuirethe book’s financial success.If the Council decides to let theCap and Gown live, it will take stepstoward the appointment of a newstaff. Plans concerning the new .staffare as yet nece.ssarily rudimentary,although it is probable that only afew members of the present staff\vi11 be retained. Issue “Comment”Tomorrow; ManyWriters Featured.An array of essays, critical ar¬ticles, poetry .and short stories onlife, art,and thought by both profes¬sional and student authors will bepresented to the campus tomorrowwhen “Comment,” the new literaryquarterly, appears for the first timeas a medium for student expres.sion.Single copies will be sold for fif¬teen cents at both bookstores. Man-del, Cobb, Ida Noyes, Reynolds club,and all convenient spots on campus.As a special courtesy to its sub¬scribers, The Daily Maroon will in¬clude a free copy of “Comment” intomorrow’s issue. Subscription to“Comment” by mail is fifty centsand may be paid today in Eckhart402, the office of the new publica¬tion.In this first issue of the new mag¬azine, the literary lefforts of fivestudent authors will be printed sim¬ultaneously with the contributions ofmany prominent, established authors.Day Perry, assistant editor of thePhoenix, has written a short storycalled “Smashup,” in which he givesi psychological account of an auto¬mobile accident.Margaret Haanel has submitted ashort story entitled “Last SixtyMinutes,” another psychological(Continued on page 2)FIFTY STUDENTS INJAIL! BUT irS ONLYON SOCIOLOGY TRIPChange Hughes DateOriental “ViceSubject of Talkby WoodwardFrederic Woodward, vice presidentof the University, will speak on“ ‘Vice’ in the Orient” at the autumnalumni assembly, tomorrow night inInternational House at 8:15. Theassembly, an annual event, is spon-vsored by the Alumni council of theUniversity.The first number on the programwill be the rendition of four songsby the Russian Balalaika Quartet.They will sing “Down the VolgaRiver,” “Peddler’s Song,” “StenkaRagin,” and “Happy Boys.”Eric Rule, a University studentfrom New Zealand, will give a danceof the Maori Tribe of New Zealand.The dance is one which membei’s ofthe tribe stage before they enterbattle.A folk dance and a folk song of ^the Philippine Lslands will be played i Show “Marius , NewBecause of a change in the speak¬ing schedule of Rupert Hughes inthe Middle West, the Student Lec¬ture Service has changed the dateof the Hughes lecture, the third pre¬sentation of the agency, from Tues¬day, January 10 to Tuesday, January17, announced George Van der Hoefyesterday. All season sponsors willbe informed of the new date by spe¬cial message.As well a.s being a prominent lec¬turer, Mr. Hughes is known as aneditor, a novelist, a journalist, a bi¬ographer, a composer, and a play¬wright.by Rodolfo Cornejo, pianist from theIslands. Preceding Mr. Woodward’saddress, which is the last number onthe program, the Balalaika Quartetwill sing “Polka” and “The ShiningMoon,” a folk .song.After the program an informalreception will be held in the lounge.Tickets for the program are availablein the office of the Alumni council.CAMPUS MEDICS NEEDNO APTITUDE TESTS French Talking Film,Three Times TodayThe Association of American Med¬ical Colleges Aptitude Test to begiven on this campus Friday is notrequired for admission to the Uni-ver.rity Medical Schools, accordingto Basil C. H. Haiwey, dean of Medi¬cal Students. This test is requiredby most medical schools, but a mis¬leading statement from the Record¬er’s office, printed in The Daily Ma¬roon, erroneously indicated that thistest was also a requisite for admis¬sion to the University medicalschools. ‘IMarius,” a .story of the pic¬turesque, sea-going people of OldPort-Marseilles, is to be the third inthe series of foreign motion picturesto be shown by the Renaissance So¬ciety and International House. It willbe exhibited today at 4, 7:15 and9:30 in the International House the¬ater.The French is the Marseilles dia¬lect and the cast is that which orig¬inally produced the film in France.The story is by Marcel Pagnol, theauthor of “Topaze.”“A Nous La Lihierte,” a ReneClair film, never before shown inChicago, will be the next film in theseries. It will be shown Tuesday inthe International House theater at3, 4:30, 7:30 and 9.Tickets for both films, priced at40 cents each, may be obtained atInternational House and at the Ren¬aissance gallery in Wieboldt 205. Registration forWinter QuarterContinues TodayRegistration for the winter quar¬ter, begun yesterday, will continuetoday with registration for NewPlan students whose names beginwith the letters L to Z. Studentsshould register first in the office ofthe dean of students between 8:30and 11:30 or 1:30 and 4:30; enroll¬ment can be completed in Cobb 210.Priority students (those under theold plan who have an average of B orbetter) have received special assign¬ment slips from the Recorder, allow¬ing them to register tomorrow. Otherold plan students will register tomor¬row, Thursday or Friday, the studentsbeing divided alphabetically as fal¬lows: Those whose names begin withN, P, T, X, Y, Z, A, F, G, J, or Iwill regi.ster tomorrow. Those whosenames begin with D, L, R, H, O, orS will register on Thursday. Thosewhose names commence with B, C,M, E, K, U, V, W, or Q will enrollfor courses on Friday.Students in the graduate schoolsand candidates for higher degreesmay register tomorrow, Thursday orFriday. The dean of students in theCollege will be in Cobb 210 today,and thereafter the Social Sciences’dean will be there. . . By CLAIRE DANZIGER“Hurry up and come right in.”This wa.s the greeting extended tofifty students in the Social Sciencecourse by Lieutenant Mills Saturdaymorning at the cell block of the Cen¬tral Police Station at Eleventh andState Street. Louis M. Wirth, as¬sociate profes.sor of Sociology, wasi'e.-=ponsibl9 lor arranging the tour.The cell.s to which the studentswere cordially invited were low,(lark, narrow cubby-holes with wood¬en plank.-j serving as beds. The oc-upants. parti’ularly those who werevvaiting for psychiatric examinationswere crouched in their cells, withdazed expressions on their faces andattired in very shabby clothes. Mo.>tof the other prisoners paraded anair of jauntiness and flippancy asthough they hadn’t a care in the !world. , IAnother object of great interest ’to the sensation-seekers was the Bu¬reau of Identification and Investiga¬tion in which the students eagerlyexiplored dusty, old volumes record¬ing cases from forty years ago, andalso several picture albums depictingunsolved murders showing the scenes [of the crimes and victims just as |they were found. |A flying trip was made to the iSpeeder’s Court, the Boy’s Court, Ithe Woman’s Court, the Social Hy¬giene Center, and the Social Wel¬fare Center.From here interested Universitystudents travelled to the Juvenile jDetention Home, where Superinten-(Continued on page 2) ' FRIARS APPDINTFDUR MANAGERSFDRieSHDWPositions to Kaufman,Young, Sharp,HenningFour men—James Henning, Wil¬liam Kaufman, Robert Sharp, andBurton Young—were appointed lastnight to junior manager.ships inBlackfriars. Henning is technicalmanager, Kaufman is company man¬ager, Sharp is publicity director,and Young is in charge of the busi-ne.ss department.The appointments followed a weekof inteiwiewing the twenty-five ap¬plicants for the four po.sitions, andwere made late yesterday afternoonat a Board of Superiors meeting.The official positions as outlined bythe constitution of Blackfriars arenow filled; but Henry Suleer, abbott,plans to supplement them by the ap¬pointment of two associate managersin each department.The associates will be juniors andwill be fully eligible to compete forsenior positions at the end of theyear. Selection of these supplement¬ary managers will be made from thelist of applicants for junior jobs al¬ready in the hands of the Board ofSuperiors, and will be announced intwo weeks.The Junior ManagersJames Henning is a member ofChi Psi and Iron Mask. He is actingpresident and production manager ofthe University Dramatic Association,and worked in the scenery section ofBlackfriars last year.William Kaufman is a member ofPi Lambda Phi. He did very credit¬able work in Blackfriars last yearas sophomore in charge of music. Healso worked last year on the busi¬ness staff of The Daily Maroon.Robert Sharp is a member of PhiKappa Psi. He had charge of Black¬friars ticket sales last year. At pres¬ent he is chairman of the undergrad¬uate social committee.Burton Young is a member of PsiUpsilon,. and is on the golf team andthe fencing team. He was a memberof the Sophomore class council, andworked in Blackfriars last year, hav¬ing had charge of pro'gram advertis¬ing.• Under the present organization ofBlackfriars the junior managers bearthe responsibility for all of the greatmass of detail which is of such im¬portance to the production of anymusical comedy. It was in recognitionof this fact that the decision wasreached respecting the addition ofeight more juniors.80,000 VISIT ORIENTALINSTITUTE IN YEARDuring the one year since itsopening on December 5, 1931, theOriental Institute has attracted 82,-166 visitors. Dr. Watson Boyes, sec¬retary of the museum, announcedyesterday. The figure, which includesall visitors up to and including Sun¬day, is greatly in excess of expecta¬tions. The museum is open from 10to 5:30 daily and from 11 to 5:30Sundays.Symphony Plays Works of ModernComposers in Mandel Hall TodayCHRISTMAS PAGEANTTO BE HELD DEC. 18The annual University Christmaspageant will be presented in theChapel on Sunday evening, December18, at 7:30, by members of the Uni¬versity Choir and the University Dra¬matic Association.This year the r*’ogram will becomposed of three liturgical playsifrom medieval manuscripts of theFrench Cathedrals of Laon and Li¬moges, called the Prophets, TheShepherds, and The Magi. The w(>rdsand music will be from the originaltexts. By DAVID C. LEVINE jWorks by Rimsky-Korsakow, Gla- ,zounow, Sibelius, and Florence Gala- 'jikian will be heard today in the sec- iond campus concert of the Chicago ;Symphony Orchestra, at 4:15 in Man- idel hall. Frederick Stock will direct, jThe “Carnaval” overture of Gla- ;zounow will open the program. This |overture was compo.sed in 1893, the jsame year in which Glazounow wrotehis “Triumphal March” for the iWorld’s Columbian Fjxposition inChicago. In form it is a rather free !treatment of the conventional sonata Iarrangement. iSibelius’s first symphony, in E .minor, is .scheduled to follow the i“Carnaval.” It was written in 1899. .seven years after Sibelius’s elaboratework “Kullervo,” for solo voices, |chorus and orchestra, had won him ;a life pension from the Finnish gov- |ernment w'hich enabled him to devote i all his time to composition. In thissymphony the sombre temperamentof the Finn will be seen in sharpcontrast to the preceding Pussianmusic.The “Symphonic Intermezzo” isthe work of Florence Galajikian, aresident of Maywood. It was writtenin Maywood in 1931, and won thecontest for original American sym¬phonic works which was sponsoredby the National Broadcasting Com¬pany. The intermezzo has “no realstory,” the composer has .said, but itrecords her impressions of a beauti¬ful dream-country away from the“smoke, noise and bustle” of (pre-sunxably) Maywood.Rim.sky-Korsakow’s familiar “Ca-priccio Espagnol” will conclude theprogram. This piece, without whichno season of the Chicago Symphonyi.-? complete, is, as its name suggests,a fantasy on Spanish themes.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1932iatlg i®ar00ttFOUNDED m 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements api)earing in The Daily Maroon, or fcr anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post-office at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherJane BiesenthalMelvin GoldmanWilliam GoodsteinBetty Hansen ASSOCIATE EDITORSRobert HerzogDavid C. LevineEdward W. NicholsonEugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. MontgomeryEdward G. Schaller Vincent NewmanSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSJohn BardenTom BartonNorman BeckerRuth Belllola ChaasonDavid CookClaire DanzigerGeorge DasbachAmos Dorinson Noel GersonRobert HasterlikMorton HechtHelen HiettRichard HookerHoward HudsonDavid KutnerDorothy LoebDan MacMaster Dugald McDougallMary Louise MillerRobert OshinsHoward RichSue RichardsonJeanette RifasJeannette SteinWilliam TraynorFlorence WishnickNight Editor: Melvin GoldmanAssistants: Barden and BeckerTuesday, December 6, 1932OUR INFANT-PRODUCING COLLEGES!At stated intervals it is the fate of the Amer¬ican college and university to be attacked upon onebasis or another for its harmful influences and de¬structive effects upon the youth which fills its class¬rooms. A Mr, Horace M. Kallen—of whom, itmust be confessed, we have never heard—is themost recent individual to publish a diatribe ofthis sort. His pamphlet has as its title and theme,“College Prolongs Infancy” and its pages are in¬teresting reading to students who are spending sev¬eral thousand dollars to secure the college train¬ing which is so lightly regarded and thoroughlycondemned by Mr. Kallen.In very general terms and with great disregardfor many elements of the situation, Mr. Kallen en¬deavors to say that, "Colleges are for the mostpart resorts where the well-to-do keep their physi¬ologically mature young in a state of personal ir¬responsibility and social-economic dependence. . .college is considered to be an advantage; the es¬sence of the advantage is a social infantalism im¬posed upon a biological maturity.”It is the thesis of Mr. Kallen that although edu¬cation is customarily described as preparation for“life”, the ways and works of colleges are so ir¬relevant to life that their prime achievement re¬mains, perforce, the prolongation of infancy. Col¬lege makes adulthood harder to reach, not easier,he says.We cannot accept such a generalization norsuch a sweeping criticism that ignores so manyelements of the college experience. However,there is little question that a great share of thecollege education we secure today still has char¬acteristics that are unabsorbed survivals from apre-industrial past existing in an industrial age. Weare taught a multitude of subjects, but seldom arewe taught to apply them. Many is the collegegraduate who finds the everyday task of earninga living a problem for which he seems surprisingly.unprepared. Too many of us are wholly untrainedfor efficiency and before we succeed in life weshall have to unlearn a great many rules for be¬ing scholars and acquire some new principles thatwill make us successful men in a very materialworld.There is truth, therefore, in Mr. Kallen’s claimthat the subject matter of our curricula is irrele¬vant to much that is dynamic within us, that itlacks vital links with the passions of the heart of3'outh, and that it is too frequently far removedfrom the actual world, where, after college, wemust live and have our being.But when an individual attempts to prove thatmerely for these reasons college men and womenas a whole are characterized by “the irresponsib¬ility of infancy. . . . that they are self-centered andselfish, absorbed in trivialities, comfort loving, re¬actionary and irresponsible—in a word, infantile.... , that individual is looking at the small pro¬ portion of American youth' that has decided todedicate its life to having a good time, and is ig¬noring the greater share of that youth which is de¬termined to achieve adult success in the fewestpossible number of years.With fifty percent of the American undergrad¬uates today partially or entirely supporting them¬selves, with American youth assuming a greaterinterest and active particip.ition in political affairsand social problems than ever before in the his¬tory of this country, with university after univer¬sity adding social and political science departmentsto its curriculum, developing its schools of businessand enlarging its scope of service to the commun¬ity, we cannot see the justice or accuracy of acriticism that accuses colleges of prolonging in¬fancy.It is true, as we have granted, that there is agroup of economical parasites, socially over-de¬veloped, intellectually short-sighted, family-pam¬pered, kept, college students in this country. Ofthese it can be justly said that the college experi¬ence is merely prolonging an infancy that wouldprobably persist in any event.But no one is entitled to say that such individ¬uals are the product of colleges. They are simplyattracted to colleges by the glamors of some phasesof collegiate life. They are not the total picture.The critics of American educational institutionsI must also take into consideration the student who.I by working while attending college, is showingj greater personal discipline and adult characteristics] and abilities than many an older person, the stu-j dent who is consciously preparing for a profes-j sional career, the student who is a business manj among student activity managers, w’ho is a leaderI among student enterprises.We have seen some characteristics of allegedlysuccessful adults that strike us as being more in¬fantile in nature than the majority of traits re¬vealed by the representative college student whomMr. Kallen and other critics seem never to havemet.—W. E. T. A SensibleView ofWar Debts FIFTY STUDENTS INJAIL! BUT ITS ONLYON SOCIOLOGY TRIP(Continu«d from page 1)borrow sufficient gold from the Bankof England for a payment or two,but not more, and not even thiswithout an impairment of her cur¬rency reserves which most English¬men would regard as dangerous andwhich they would endeavor to re¬store as quickly as possible. iBut theonly means for such restorationwhich would be likely to seem avail¬able would be further increases oftheir tariff and further deflation oftheir price levels. France wouldprobably act in f. similar manner. (Continued from page 1)i dent Barry show’ed the group aroundand made a short speech. The large,airy dormitories, the lack of any ap¬pearance of a jail, except for thehigh walls around the building, werea complete revelation to the students,who expected to see a regular jail.Across the yard w'as located theJuvenile Court, the last point of thetour. Here Deputy Chief ProbationOfficer Kawin explained the mechan¬ics of the organization, stressing thefact that boys and girls were treatedas problem children requiring special,individualized treatment, rather thanas hardened criminals.The Travelling BazaarBy Charles Newton, Jr. and John Holloway Would PaymentBe Detrimental?But measures of this character,under the existing circumstances,not only would involve direct andimmediate injury to us, but by theirgeneral repercussions on the worldeconomy would tend to make stillless probable an early recoveryfrom the world depression. Oneyear’s (prolongation of the depressionwould cost us more than the totalcapitalized value of all the Alliedindebtedness to us. Complete remis¬sion of this year’s payments wouldmean a sacrifice of less than $2 percapita, on our part as a Contributionto the forces working for restora¬tion of pro.sperity—the price of aticket in a lottery, but the prize cer-tainlv greater and the prospects ofwinning it r.ot clearly less than inthe u.sual lottery.Our debtors may default. Thatwould not l>e an unmixed evil, butit would be an evil. France and Eng¬land—and especially England—areproud of their financial records, andif. as they would unquestionably seeit, they had been unjustifiably forcedto mar these records, they wouldcompensate for the injury to theirpride by a deep and lasting resent¬ment again.st the country responsiblefor it.. . WEEKLY REPORT . . .Well, now that Professor Linn has let it outthat we are bored and sophisticated and all, wesuppose there is no use making any more bonesabout it; we’ll have tb just come right out andstate that it was a vei-y tiresome week last week.Imagine four people at the Urban Room—peopleyou know, people whose names have appeared onlytoo often in this rag—going around looking for athermometer; one which they had actually lost.Imagine them going to the stock-yards a littlelater on (at four in the morning, to be exact) andleading prize cattle around madly until ejected.Imagine! How very stupid; how dull! Ho hum. . .That was in the early part of the week. The lat¬ter end was no better. We suppose we had bettermention the Three-Way party which came off Fri¬day. You know, it’s funny, but the better a partyis the less we have to tell you about it. On thislast one, we are practically devoid of information.We do know that Deb Libby said it was a stinger;that a bunch of alumni played musical chainsaround their table; that Frank Harding wentaround testing reactions by dropping balls ofice-cream in peoples’ hands; that Maurice Cheva¬lier was down in the Urban Room, and that GerryMitchell and Ralph Webster went down and wereintroduced and tried to lure him upstairs, with nosuccess; that Dexter Fairbank, who had had tire-trouble on the way down, went around holleringthat he had a flat tire, and was reproved by Max¬ine Nowak for talking slanderously about hisdate; that Madelaine Rummler showed up in anew dress; that — oh, dear; we just can’t go on.This ennui is terrible.The next night was the occasion of the D. U.costume party. It was announced as a party toend parties; and so we, wishing to help things outas much as possible, stayed away entirely.Ho hum. Ho ... . hum. . .Hya-a-ah. . . Will you please lower that shade a trifleas you go out?. RANDOM . . .There’s a lad at the International House whowas private secretary to the Kaiser at Doom fortwo yeai's. , . . Maxine Nowak, graduate ofMichigan, freshman in the Law School, andMortar Board, is Secretary of the Law Schoolfreshmen . . . The first in histoi’y. Reason, .she’scalled the “Law School Princess.’’ .... Hello,Mary Yanochowski. Stop being snooty and sayhello once . . . Hello. . . . Millie Hackl, whowas Robin Hood in her Robin Hood club ohy’ars and y’ars ago, wants us to run a columnon Silence . . . Na.sty! . . .Mildred Liberty Bell Ickel Hackl added an¬other nickname to her string when she appearedat the Mortar Board party (but yes!) in a greendress with a profuse arrangement of rooster-feathers about the neck and shoulders. . . . Thename, of course, is Horsefedders. Our .style ad¬viser cautions us not to describe the effect toorhapsodically; for although it looked swell onLib, she is probably the only girl on campus whocould get away with it . . . International Cooperationj Is NecessaryI There is little ground for hope of[ early economic recovery unless inthe near future there is substantialj international cooperation in restor-I ing confidence, in lowering the bar-I riers to trade in expanding credit, inI .stabilizing currencies, in modei-atingI armament expenditure^, in reducingI to a level consi.'-tent with prevailingprices and incomes the crushing loadof international indebtedne.ss. If we. re II e to grant reduction or post¬ponement of the December debt pay-^ nients and do not at lea.st .soften the' blow by making clear that we are!eady to discuss in a conciliatorymood the que-tion of the scale of] future payments, there will not besuch cooperation—at least not withus.We cannot afford to insist uponour rights. There is an emergencyneed for the exercise of state.sman-ship at Washington—for a displayof courage in going beyond publicopinion, in the confidence that pub¬lic opinion will later discover thenecessities of the situation. I amfairly confident that, in spite of theclatter of Senatorial tongues, notyet recovered from their recent over-exerci.se, the need will be met. VISIT THE FIRESIDEINNKNOWN FOR ITS FINE FOODSSpecial Club Breakfast 15c to 25cLuncheon 5 course 30cDinner 40c and 45cAll pastries are baked in our ownkitchenFIRESIDE INN5718 Kimbark Ave.“Comment” Goes onSale Tomorrow(Continued from page 1)study, this time of a man’s last hourof sanity. Louis Riendeau presentshis version of “Stool Pigeon,’’ an¬other short feature.Alfred Franken.stein, assi.stant inthe department of Music, lias writ¬ten a film comment in which he dis-cus.ses “Goona-Goona,” “Le Million,’’and other recent screen productions. WHY NOT?THE BEST FORLESS MONEY!Mo.(Special Student Rate)HOTEL WALDORF6139 Ellis Ave.Plaza 5010109 outside rooms, eachwith tub and shower. Full24 hour Hotel service.♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦•»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦>♦•»1449 East 57th StreetWhere the Best of Food, Properly CookedIs Neatly ServedOpen from 7 a. m. Until MidnightCotne Once and You Will Come AgainModerate Prices F. P. RODGERS, Prop.♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦WithinThree Months!You Can Go Into the Business WorldsEquipped to Fill Its Fine Positions!CLASSIFIED ADS You are a college girl. When you enter the BusinessWorld, you sheuld and can step at once into a posi¬tion of dignity, responsibility and good remuneration.Equip yourself to do just that by taking this intensive3 months course in Business Training. It is openonly to girls who have attended college. It isthe equivalent of six months of thorough training.Business executives recognize this course, and preferits graduates. Giu: Bulletin will be sent you withoutobligation. Write for it today.Counet $tart October If January 1, April 1 and July 1.LARGE, LIGHT ROOM For Rent.In a family re.sidence. To Post Grad¬uate Male Student for Winter, Jan¬uary 1. Apply 5708 Kenwood Ave. MOSER BUSINESS COLLEGE"The Bmineu College with the Univenity AtmoBphere"116 South Michigan Ave., Chicago • Randolph 4347BEAUTIFUL GIFTS AT »!•There are hundreds of volumes to select from in ourDOLLAR BOOK DEPARTMENT10 Fanums Ela.'t.sirgAnna Karenina. .Paiftrave'a f^olden TreaauryIjr.ayea of Graaa.. .... hitrruinThe Travels of Mareo PoloAutobiography of lienvrniitoOlliniGreen Mansions.. If's //. HudsonWay of All Flesh.David i^>pi>erfiel<lGandideMadame Bovary. 10 Great Nat'oJs of To-dayI»r. SrxtM oltl Helen AahtnnThe F«lwMr<iiana SarktHle-ff'emtA Farewell to Armu UentlngteayThe Old H ivea’ Tale... .liannettiuTf^e.n... .Jatnea ttranch CabellSwan Song... .John OabneorthyPoint (Tounterpuint HuxleyOf Human BnndaKe. .AlaughamPower lAon FenchtuxtngerBridite of San LuU Rey.,. ff 'ilderSee Our Interesting Fiction for ChristmasUniversity of Chicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenuea l/DAILY MAROON SPORTSTUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1932 Peige ThreeChicago Continues Full FIFTEEN TEAMS TOProgram of Minor Sports COMPETE TODAY INi-M SWIM PRELIMS Cage Squad in Good Shape METCALF REMOVESfor Game with Lake ForestAn extensive and (practically un-cui-tailed minor sports program forip;’).! has made the University almostunique amon^r (Big Ten schools, itappeared Saturday as plans for nextsoa.'on’s minor sports at theseschools were outlined at the meetingof the Big Ten faculty committeehold at the University club. OnlyNorthwestern plans a season nearly;.o extensive as that projected at theI’r.iversity.The financial situation of minor<])orts was considerably improved bythe action of the committee in al¬lowing Big Ten universities to sched¬ule games with schools which do notobserve the one year, or freshman,(■Iigil)ility rule for all sports exceptfootball. This w’ill permit the sched¬uling of games much closer home,and will reduce traveling expensesconsiderably. Coach A. A. SUigg sug¬gested this action; it was seized eag¬erly as a possible solution for theproblem of how to maintain the non¬paying sports in this year of smallliudgets.Use Automobiles :I’at Page, University ba.seballcoach, still further improved theca-se for minor sports by suggesting |that automobiles be used for trans- jportation, gas being paid for by sub- iscription of the team members if Inecessary.“We’ll get the cars wherever we 'can.” he commented, “and we’ll get ■by in a great big way. We can takefour or five automobiles and playtwo or three games along our route.We tried the plan on a Michigan triplast year and it was great.”Because of the various plans forincreased economy, all the minorsports have been retained at the Uni¬versity with very little cut in sched¬ules. Two Big Ten conference meetsare to be held at Chicago, the in¬door track meet on March 10 and11. and the conference swimmingmeet March 17 and 18. The com¬plete baseball schedule has beendrawn up, but has not been relea.sedas yet. An extensive swimmingschc‘dule is to be retained, althoughseveral Big Ten universities, includ¬ing Wisconsin, Indiana, Ohio State,and Purdue, have eliminated swim¬ming altogether as an interscholastic.-jioit.Complete Track SchedulePlans for track at the Universityinvolve a more complete .schedulethan that projected by any otherBig Ten .school. Ten meets areplanned in addition to the confer¬ence tournaments. *‘No Minor SportsHere, ” Says HofferThere is no such thing as a min¬or sport at the University and atmany other schools, Dan Hoffer,gymnastics coach, told a DailyMaroon reporter yesterday.“When I came to the Univers¬ity as a coach several years ago,letter awards here, as at other.schools, were ba.sed on the re¬ceipts which the particular sportbrought in,” Hoffer stated. Afterconsiderable agitation the statusof athletics other than football,ba.seball, and basketball was'changed, so that awards weremade on the same basis as thoseof “major” sports. Coaches nowrecognize that amount of worknecessary, comparative danger,skill, and endurance should be tak¬en into consideration in all athlet-ic.s when making awards.Today on theOnadran||Ies With fifteen teams already en¬tered, the annual Intramural Fallwater carnival today, tomorrow andThursday promises to be an evenbigger affair than last year. Newrules will be in force, and for thefirst time there will be no separateevents for freshman and upperclass¬men.The modified races, which havebeen made to comply with the stand¬ard high school distances, include the40, 100, and 220 yard free styleand 40 yard races in the back andbreast strokes. There will also be anorganization relay and an exhibitionrelay race between leading highschool teams of the area, four ofwhich are already entered.Today and tomorrow at 3:30 thepreliminaries will be run off. Thefinals will be Thursday evening at7:30 and all of the intramuralawards of the quarter will be pre¬sented at this time. As an added fea¬ture there will be a water polo gamebetween the alumni and varsity.The meet is in charge of Chaun-cey Howard, Psi U., and entries arestill being received.The Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:Edward Nicholson. Assistants: How¬ard Hudson and Howard Rich.Music and Religious ServicesI Chri.stian Science Organization,1150 East 58th Street, at 7:30.Extension lectures in Religion andj Leadership Training cla.sses: “WillI Chri.stianity Go Pacifist?” Albert W.j Palmer, President of The Chicago! Theological Seminary. Joseph Bond! chapel at 7:45. “Interpretation of Se-! lected Visions.” Assistant Professori Colwell. Swift 106, at 8:30. “WhatReligion May Mean to an Eleven-i Year-Old.” A.s.sociate Professor1 Chave. Swift 201, at 8:30.Minister’s club. Swift Common^ room, at 8. “The Contemporary Min-' istry” Rabbi S. B. Freehof.I Public LecturesRadio lecture; “International Re¬lations. Great Power Politics.” As-si.stant Professor Schuman. StationWHO STOLE THEDEKES’ SHINY CUPS? WMAQ. at 11.Public lecture: “Division of Char¬ities in the Illinois Department ofPublic Welfare.” Mr. A. L. Bowen.Law South at 2:30.Public lecture (Ekiwntown) : “Mod¬ernism in Literature. Chaos in Poet¬ry.” Associate Professor Millett. Ful¬lerton hall. Art Institute, at 6:45.Departmental OrganizationsMeeting of the faculty of the Di-I vision of the Physical Sciences, Ry-! erson 32, at 4.Medical seminar, Billings 443, at4:30. “Clinical and Laboratory Di-; agnosis of Botulism.” Dr. WilliamE. Cary.Undergraduate OrganizationsFederation meeting, Ida Noyesj hall, at 12.I Meeting of the Freshman council,Ida Noyes hall, at 12:15.I Y. W. C. A. luncheon, Ida NoyesI hall. 11:30-2.MiscellaneousUniversity Settlement Leaguej Bridge, Ida Noyes hall, at 2.Meeting of the General Adminis- Elect Two CrossCountry CaptainsJim Simon was elected captainof this year’s cross country teamand George Richardson, captainof next season’s harriers at a meet¬ing of the seven letter men heldin the fieldhouse Friday.Simon who is a senior and mem¬ber of Zeta Beta Tau led the Ma¬roon harriers in every meet ex¬cept the one with Illinois StateNormal. He came in first in theLoyola contest and concluded histhree years of varsity competitionby placing twenty-first in the con¬ference meet held at Purdue No¬vember 19.Richardson, junior, and mem¬ber of Psi Upsilon, pressed Simonall season, continually taking sec¬ond place on the team, and wasawarded his first major old Eng¬lish “C” last week. He placedtwenty-seventh in the conferencemeet.POLO TEAM WINSWEEK-END GAMESPlaying last Friday and Saturdayat the stockyard’s stadium, the Uni¬versity Polo team won two gamesfrom Iowa state before crowds of6,000 and 12,000 respectively.In Friday’s contest Chicago won atwo chukker game by a score of6-4%. In this game Benson playednumber 1, Freidheim number 2, andIckes number 3 position. Played ona smaller than regulation field, thegame was slow and ragged.The game Saturday was a muchfaster and better played game, andwas again won by Chicago by ascore of 6-5%. Two substitutionswere made: Hepple for Freidheim,and Wason for Ickes. Last year’scaptain. Burton Doherty, was ineli¬gible for play. With continuous coaching on thefundamentals of passing, floor play,shooting and defense, Coach NelsNorgren continues to pi’ime his squadfor the opening game against 'LakeForest next Saturday. Practice indefense took up the greater part ofyesterday’s workout.Coach Norgren announced yester¬day that Hugh Mendenhall’s anklehas been bothering him to such anextent that he will probably haveto give up basketball for the season.As a whole, however, the varsitysquad is in good condition for nextSaturday’s game. Those who havebeen playing football. Page, Parsons,and Flinn, while not in as good shapeas the others, are uninjured.Sophomores Practise.4ware that Sophomore varsitycandidates will have little chance forcompetitive practice in the four pre¬conference games scheduled. CoachNorgren has been finding outsidegames for a group of sophomores,among whom are Merrifield, Wilson,Levin, Seeks, Eldred, Johnson, Wehl-ing, Breen and Sterret. Last Satur¬day the sophomores lost to the OakPark Y. M. C. A. squad. Tonight at8, the sophomores are playing theArmour Institute team at the field-house.Next Saturday will probably findPitcher, Offil and Kerr, forwards;Parsons and Langford, centers; Por¬ter, Wagner, Page and Carr, guards;Flinn and Merrifield, forwards, arefast, light and shifty sophomoreswho are handicapped by lack of sizeand collegiate competition. STA6G FROM LISTOF POSSIBLE COACHESj Seventy years old, and today thei Old Man is “looking for a job.”' In a statement made at Ames,i Iowa, the University’s new directori of athletics, Thomas N. Metcalf,I knocked the last prop from under} Coach Stagg’s professed hoipe thatI he would be back to lead his forty-second football team next season.Stagg had figured on being appointedto succeed himself as football coach,although the faculty announced hisj retirement as athletic director onI Oct. 13, to become effective the firstI of July.I Old Man “Out”In his statement, Metcalf declaredj that, although he had no idea what-i soever as to w’ho would be the nexti Maroon football coach, the Old Man' would not be recommended for re-! appointment.Metcalf’s statement continued, “Atpresent I am still in the preliminary-stage of receiving applications andgathering information. I have beengiven a free rein without pressure ordictation from any outside source,and hope to have a successor signedby February.”Stagg, to whom his successor’s de¬cision came as a surprise, said hehad no arrangements for relinquish¬ing the position he has held for 41years. Intimating that he had re¬ceived offers from several schools,he declared that they were not po¬sitions he would care to accept, andthat he is “looking for a job.”HOW TO AVOID BONERStrative Board, Cobb 115, at 4:30.New Theater of Internationalhouse, at 4:30, 7:30, and 9:15. Talk¬ing Motion Picture. “Marius.”Anderson society, Brent house,dinner at 6:15. THE UNITED STATESIS LOCATED IN THETEMPERANCE ZONE(Continued from page 1)ekes and Psi U’s were supposed to! at the three-way party at theingress. Evidently Harding sneakedI'ay from the party, dashed out to,mpus, carried out his nefarious de-fn, and returned before his ab-nce wa.s noticed.”CfjngtmasiiftommgIT’S almost here. And somany friends will expecta Greeting Card from youto make their ChristmasD?:/ brighter.Have you ordered yourChristmas Greeting Cards?We have just the sort youwill like—gay cards, formalcards, cheery ones — cardsof sentiment and beauty.Come in and select yoursnow, while you can takeplenty of time in choosing.Mail Xmaa cards for IViiC insteadof 3c in unsealed envelopes.WTTODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 East 57th St.Open Eveninzs Dor. 4800 The Maid-Rite Sandwich Shops, Inc.An InnovationAround our board gathers a variety ofappetites — the epicure — the dietic miss — thevoracious athlete.All Are PleasedFor from our kitchen comes that widechoice of foods which satisfy.ALSO COMPLETE FOUNTAIN SERVICEThe Maid-Rite Sandwich Shops, Inc.13241/2 E. 57th St.Between Kenwood and KimbarkThis is a reprint of an “ad” that ran In the Daily Maroon of November16, 1928. The only change is that the addresses are now1309 and 1320 E. 57th St. POOR BILL BONER-he justcan’t think straight. He thinksa person is safe from contagiousdisease if he is intoxicated!But no college man ever pullsboners with a good pipe between histeeth. There’s something about apipe and tobacco that soothes a man,helps him think straight. That is, ofcourse, if he uses the right tobacco.A recent investigation showed Edge-worth to be the favorite tobacco atout of 51, leading colleges.If you’re not already an Edgeworthsmoker, there’s new smoking satis¬faction waiting for you. Edgeworth’sblend of fine old hurleys is distinc¬tive, different. You’ll inoMi —afterthe first puff. You can buy Edgeworth tobaccoanywhere in two forms—EdgeworthReady-Rubbed and Edgeworth PlugSlice. All sizes—15^ pocket packageto pound humidor tin. Or, if youwould like to try before you buy,write for afree sample packet. AddressLarus & Bro. Com¬pany, 120 S. 22dSt., Richmond, Va.EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCODid you ever stand in line’for half anhour and then find that all the ticketswere sold for the performance youwished to attend?Avoid that situation by calling at theMaroon Theater Bureau for yourtickets for any Shubert Theater.Maroon TheaterBureauROOM 7 - LEXINGTON HALLPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1932 ?Scott, Whitney, andZoline Favor Cutsin Fraternity CostsCampus opinion today appeareduniversally favorable in its reactiontoward the results of The Daily Ma¬roon’s survey of reductions in fra¬ternity budgets. This survey broughtout the fact that cuts in budgets aregeneral, and range from 10 percentto 35 percent.William E. Scott, adviser in thecollege, stated that “the cutting ofliving costs in fi'aternities, as re¬ported in The Daily Maroon, is a de-Delt houses. Benjamin Harrison,pre.sident of the United States, car¬ried the fraternity’s badge into theWhite House. Rear-.4dmiral Cluv-erius (perhaps in anticipation of thischapter’s nautical tendency) sailedthe seven seas with a Phi Delt pinon hi.s chest.Dwight F. Davis, Eugene Field,William Allen White, and ElmerDavis, were all initiated into thefraternity. Grantland Rice is a PhiDelt. Lou Gehrig bats out homers forthe old fraternity. Chic Evans canshoot a fifty-yard approach shot anddrop it square on a Phi Delt pin.Wally Steffen and Harvey T. (HelpHelp) Woodruff are brothers of thetwenty-five members of thus chapter.So is Erne.st Quantrell, one of theUniversity Trustees.Thirty-Five Year CareerThe chapter is thirty-five yearsold, and those thirty-five years havebeen devoted to fulfilling the idealsof the founders both of the nationalfraternity and of this chapter. Aspirit of real friendship and loyaltyis met with in the Phi Delt house—a fspirit which extends beyond thewalls of the chapter’s home, and in¬cludes a wide acquaintance.shipamong other fraternities.The Phi Delt friend.ship does notdie with college day.s. It marches onthrough the succeeding years, grow¬ing stronger and stronger. The PhiDelts are fraternity brothers in spiritas well as in name, and in the fullimplication of the term.COMMENTCOMMENT ON: COMMENT BY:CRITICAL VIOLENCE OR PHYSI- EDWARD PRICE BELL, world famousCAL: WHICH? journalist.THREE LITTLE MEN, a study in KAY BOYLE, expatriot author of yearpettiness. before last.Psychological reactions to a SMASHUP DAY ALAN PERRY.Love, in a SONNET. COUNTEE CULLEN, the negro poet.What a man does in his LAST SIXTYMINUTES of sanity .... MARGARET HAANEL.How a STOOL-PIGEON feels. . . . LOUIS RIENDEAU.On pangs of FAREWELL. ELDER OLSON, contributor to PoetryThe Films: Le MILLION, GOONA-GOONA, and MAICHDEN IN and Vanity Fair.ALFRED FRANKENSTEIN, contributorUNIFORM. to American Mercury.Aldous Huxley. RICKER VAN METRE, JR.AND OTHERSON SALE DEC 71 DCFree to Daily Maroon SubscribersFraternities at ChicagoBy MELVIN GOLDMANPHI DELTA THETAPhi Delta The¬ta, that fine nau¬tical fraiternity,occupies the im¬posing greystonehouse at 5737Woodlawn .\ve-nue. To charact¬erize Phi DeltaTheta as nauti¬cal i.< ju.^tifiableon the basis ofits app<.-ararii.e afew Saturdaysago. ship(lanct was inprogress; a lifeboat swung fromdavits on the sec¬ond floor bal¬cony. and insidethe house an¬chors and ropes.spars and battens, graced the state- members and three pledges. Their5737 Woodlawn Ave.ly halls of Phi Delt.For many years successive gen¬erations of Phi Delts have occupiedthis roomy and comfortable house.The upstairs hall and the staircaseare hung with pictures of famousPhi Delts. past and present; and thewhole picture.sque effect is known asthe Hall of Fame.Twenty-five ActivesThe present chapter is a strongone. There are twenty-five active activities i-ange from intramurals toPhi Beta Kappa, and from footballto Blackfriars. There are now threemajor “C’’ men in football in thehouse; Warren Bellstrom. FrankThomson, and Bernie Johnson.Frank Springer is treasurer of theDramatic Association and a memberof Iron Mask. Eli Messenger, DamonFuller, and Ross Whitney are inBlackfriars. Whitney, 'Loomis, andDanenhouer were members of the% Souvenir Given with Every PurchaseUniversity Specialty Shop1007 E. 63rd St. Phone Hyde Park 4914OPEN EVENINGS TILL XMAS staff of the now defunct Cap andGown. Edward Schaller is an associ¬ate business manager of The Daily ,Maroon, while Francis Cimrall is a jmember of the business staff of the iPhoenix. 'Ross Whitney, the president of the .chapter, is the possessor of a well |deserv’ed place among campus lead¬ers. He is a member of Owl andSerpent, Senior men’s honor society,a member of the Student Committeeon Student Affairs, president of theIntei-fraternity Council, and mem¬bers of the Dramatic Association. Aspresident of the Interfraternity Coun¬cil. Whitney is accomplishing one ofthe most praiseworthy jobs in the en¬tire sphere of undergraduate activ¬ity, lor the organization under hi.-^guidance has been unusually wellrun.The chapter, on the whole, is jstrong in emulation of the fraterni- jty’s position on other campuses, iThere is a total of one hundred andfive active chapters, well distributed ;all over the country. The fraternity 'is especially strong in the Big Ten.schools.bounded in 1848It was founded at Miami Univer¬sity, in Oxford, Ohio, on December26, 1848, and was one of the famous ,Miami triad of fraternities, A chap- iter was establi.shed at the old Chi¬cago University in 1868, and re-es-tabli.shed at the new University ofChicago in 1897—the seventh repre¬sentative of a national fraternity toappear on this campus.In eighty-four years many prom¬inent men in all walks of life have 1emerged from the portals of PhiK ■ ■ • C?Christmas shoppers will be pleased with our delight- ^ful selections of “Maiden Form” products, and our ^other fine merchandise. >K Learn to Dance Correctly—Takea Few Private LetaontTeresa Dolan Dancing School6307 Cottage GroveTel. Hyde Park 3080Hours 10 a. m. to 12 midnight(CM FINGER WAVE THAT COMBSWITH SHAMPOO50cKennedy Beauty Shop6351 Cottage Grove Plaza 10601455 E. 63rd St. Dorchester 3755 sirable and logical procedure. Sucheconomies as can be effected in rou¬tine operation should be passed onto residents. During these timesalumni ought to be called upon toassume a minimum burden.”Cut Salaries of HousemenRoss Whitney, president of theInterfraternity Council and a mem¬ber of Phi Delta Theta, said that inhis opinion even greater economiescould be made by cutting housemens’salaries, taking out extra telephones,and other minor measures. Moneyowing to fraternities can and shouldbe collected by the exertion of ex¬traordinary efforts.Joseph Zoline, (president of thesenior class, mentioned the fact thatsuch a reduction procedure was es¬pecially desirable in a metropolitanschool such as this. Only by thesemeans can fraternities continue toexist.Nationwide MovementHouses on our rumpus are not theonly ones to make cuts in theirbudgets. College papers from all overthe country indicate that the move¬ment is nationwide. In most cases thereductions are on about the .samescale as has appeared here. Initiationfees, meals, room rent, social ex¬penses, and chapter dues are beinglowered to a greater or less degreein practically every case.SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROONHILL*S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.Woodlau'n's Leading CafeteriaDining Rooms - First and SecondFloorsGood Food at very ModeratePrices Afternoon and EveningClasses inGREGG SHORTHANDFor the renvenience of uniTersitystudent*. Rrevir College offer* after¬noon ond Monday and Thursday cve-ninK rlassrs in GRKGG SHOKT-llANI). Course is arraniced for maxi¬mum proitresB, with minimum ex¬penditure of time and effort. Call,write, or tHephone State 1H8I forparticulars.The GREGG COLLEGE6 N. Mirhiiran Ave., ('hiraxo, III.RAISE YOUR GRADES!EXPERT TYPING of Term Papers,Compositions, Theses, etc., atlowest possible rates.ETHEL WITT 5452 Ellis Ave.Phone Hyde Park 1958 forPARTIESand .PARENTSRemember, always, thatHotels Windermere arc atyour service as they havebeen for many generationsof Midway students. L^ongexperience has made usadept at arranging Univer¬sity dances, luncheons, din¬ners and parties.And when Mother and Fa¬ther visit you in Chicago,arrange to have them stayhere, conveniently, in apleasant room or suite, at—this year especially—a veryreasonable price.^otels |j|indepmere^hicago56th St. at Hyde Park BoulevardWard B. Jame.s, Managing DirectorTelephone FAIrfax 6000