®he iHatoonVol. 33. No. 40. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9, 1932 Price Three CentsStudyingLaw inMoot Courts ALUMNI PRESENTSERIES OF TENBUSINESS TALKS Class of ’36 toStage Dance forJudson Tonight News in BriefBy WILLIAM GOODSTEINFor the first time in its history,the University Law school has seri¬ously undertaken the task of estab-ILshin^r a moot court and a lejjalclinic for students. Plans for theformation of these two or^ranizationsarc now being developed by the lawcouncil, instigators of this move¬ment, under the direction of RobertI,. Shapiro, chairman of the group.The present law council should becommended for its action in thiscau.'^, for it is the first group thatthe school has elected that has act¬ually taken its work seriouslyenough to go to the trouble of start¬ing a new movement and the first toattempt to arouse the law studentsfrom the lethargy into which theyhave fallen during the last few years.Laying theFoundationAt the present time the councili.s communicating with many of theoutstanding colleges and universitiesin the country, that have made themoot court an established institution,for the purpose of collecting ma¬terial on the manner in which theirirroup was organized and in whichit is now* being conducted. Thecouncil plans to devi.se some systemfor their new project from the in-ormation received. The resultingmoot court will be formed on thejreneral lines of the courts in suchprominent law schools as that ofHarvard, Princeton, Michigan, andIllinois, and other large universities.The University is the only one ofits size whose law college has nomoot court in which students mayparticipate a.s part of their legaltraining. Partly becau.se studentstire of the present case method ofinstruction, which gradually loses itseffectiveness after a year and a halfor so, and also because the proposedmoot court offers them a better op¬portunity for the appreciation oftheir work, the need for this mockcourt has been especially apparentin the last few years. Though onlya student activity, the work is be¬ing encouraged and recommended byfaculty members, who will lend theirupport w’hen the plan is put intoeffect.Purpose of theMoot CoartThe ipurpo-se of the moot court is Ito acquaint students with the reg-,ular procedure of law courts byhaving them conduct cases as if they ;were practicing attorneys. This jmethod would then include both the jold case system of instruction andalso the knowledge that law schol- jars may glean through their daily ■courses, for all facts concerning law jprocedure and the technique will be iapplied toward the winning of thiii lmock case.The work will be considered an ■honor, and students who pass the ‘har will start practice with a true :conception of what the profession |holds in store for them. !If the plans of the council pan jout successf'ully, then the judges jwho will .preside at these functions jwill be men who sit on the benchevery day, prominent municipaliudges. This moot court will also'orve as a basis for the proposedlegal clinic, similar to the one ;adopted at Northwestern and manyother universitie.s. This clinic will ?not only be an aid to students, but |al.so to the needy who fall into legal idifficulties.The idea behind this move is to i(Continued on page 4) i More than one hundred ticketshave been sold for the Freshman‘ i dance to be held this evening inLeCtur6S Form Part of court from nine to twelve.New Course inVocations i to be held by the yearling class, itj climaxes a series of afternoon mix-I ers and evening get-togethers. Pro-i An opportunity to gain a more ‘thorough understanding of certain i Freshman spring formal jfield* of business will be made avail- I tentatively planned for June.I able to all students during the win- Residents of the men’s residenceI ter quarter when ten eminent alum- i ^o dinner previ-I ni speak as a part of a new course j dance. The lounge andI in Vocations, announced Robert E. I library will be at the disposal ofWoellner, executive secretary of the *i*^^®* evening guests.Board of Vocational Guidance and ; Boyd Raben’s eight piece orches-Placement yesterday. The guest lec- tra will furnish music for the af-j turers will conduct the class each f^ir, which is being planned by the'Thursday of next quarter at 3:30 R''e.shman council. The men havej in room 208, Haskell hall. been given the responsibility fori Mr. Woellner will conduct the ' selling tickets, priced at thirty-six! class on Tuesday afternoons at the i of 36, get it?) and onI same hour. He will discuss the gen-' ■''^1^ doimitoiies and the Uni-j eral problems involved in choosing book.store, while the womenI a vocation. He is preparing for the , (provide the refreshments ofI course a syllabus which will be dis- i P^nch and cookies. Members of allj tributed at the fir.*t meeting on Jan-1 ^'l^sses are welcome.I uary 3. | Chaperons will be Mr. and Mrs.i AdvertUing Talk Fir.t ‘ Harvey B. Lemon, Mr. and Mrs.I . II ! William E. Scott, and Mr. and Mrs.i OptT.ing the senes of talks on „ i.-T r iT ii ni 1 ' Albert B. Hastings.January .'i, V. FIdl Blackett, presi-;dent of Blackett, Semple, and Hum-mert. Inc. will speak on “Advertis¬ing.” Mr. Blackett, who received hisdegree nine years ago, is a memberof Kappa Sigma. He will be fol¬lowed on January 12 by J. R.Ozanne, of the Hardy, Ozanne, andHardy company. He will talk on“Sales Promotion.” Mr Hardy, agraduate of 190.’), is also a memberof Kappa Sigma.“Traffic Management" will be thesubject of the next lecturer, Howard Register TodayAdvance registration for the win¬ter quarter .cill close today.Students whose names begin withthe initials B, C, or M will registerthis morning between 8:30 and11:30, while those having names be¬ginning with E, K, U, V, W, or Qregister this afternoon between 1:30and 4:30, in Cobb 210, temporaryregistration headquarters.CHILDREN SELLOWN WORK ATANNUAL BAZAAR Comment Office LootedDisappearance of sixty dollarsworth of postage stamps receivedby Comment in payment for sub-.scriptions was revealed yesterdaywhen Veronica Ryan, co-editor ofthe literary quarterly, charged Uni¬versity officials with carelessness.The stamps were placed in a deskdrawer in Cobb 209, the office ofthe publication, Friday night, Be-cau.se of the changes involved byregistration, the room was left openover the week-end, she asserted.Rjconciliatiorf TripA tour through China town anda study of Chine.se culture are theprojects of the Reconciliation tripwhich will be conducted Saturday.At 2:30 all who are interested areinvited to meet at the Field Museumwhere a guide-lecturer will take themthrough the Chinese section of theMuseum and discuss the historicaland anthropological background ofthe ancient Chinese civilization. ‘Pay Your Share,Girls, It’s OnlyFair, ’ Say DatersBy JANE BIESENTHAL“It’s the man who pays.” In spiteof all the claims Lor equality ofsexes, the expense of dates has neverbeen equalized, said four campuswomen and five men when inter¬viewed yesterday.But six women and strange to j.say two men had a very different | in respect to the memory of Ernstview of the matter. The man may j Freund, late John P. Wilson profes-foot the bills they agree, but oh ; gor of Law, who had been a.ssociat-those bills lor clothes, accessories, ed with the University since 1894THREE SPEAKERSHUNORFREUND ATSUNDAHERVICEWormser, Jane Addams,Woodward to Speakin Chapeland beauty parlor treatments.“But we mu.st have clothes too,”say the men. The pressing of a suit,a necessary prerequisite to any date,balances the expense of the mani¬cure, they claim. “And what ismore,” said one indignant man afterlistening to the opinion of the wom¬en that man had no expense fortheir clothes, “who ever heard of aman appearing on a date clad onlyin B. V. D.’s?”Girls Side With MenThe girls who sympathized withthe men either took this side of thequestion because of the stories theyhad heard from their brothers aboutwomen, or because they felt thatwomen needed clothes whether they(Continued on page 2)DRAMATIC GROUPPRESENTS PLAYFOR DAMES CLUBFifty-three patients in the Ortho-fH-dic hospital, r)9th and Ellis, soldthe products of months of hand workyesterday, at the hospital’s annualbazaar. “Welcome Home” by Elizabeth R.Bills will be given by the Dramagroup of the .Settlement league inInternational House DanceInternational House and the Grad- | Ida Noye.s Hall at 3 Saturday foruate council are co-sponsors of a xhe Dames Club Guest day program. !Yesterday the hospital was making j to be given tomorrow night Christma.s music will be sung by the ■a fietermined and successful effort i the International House. AdmLs- Dames Club Choii'. The player’s areL. Willett, who speaks on January to put its best foot forward. All the ' 25 cents, for \ii-s. Ruth Fr eeman, Mrs. Grace19, A member' of the class of 1906, childr’en, r’anging in age from three ' their guests, one dollar. Arrange- Cr’aven, and Mrs, Rachel Stephen-and Psi Up.silon, Mr-. Willett is now tifteen, were dr-e.ssed in their ' *"e“ts for guests must be made be ■ : .son.connected with the Willett Com-pan.v. On January 26 William OgdenColeman, pr-esident of the AmericanFlyer company, will si>eak on “Pro¬duction.” He was a member of theclass of 1911 and is one of the alum¬ni of Alpha Delta Phi,DtkCUMO Banking were“swellest” clothes. Those who canwalk wandered around the rooms onthe lifth floor of the hospital wherethe bazaar was held. The others satin their wheelchair's and smiled asthey watched their creations beingsold to enthusiastic purchaser's.It is probably safe to ascribe the for-e six o’clock tomorr'ow. Tickets The Settlement Gr oup’s first meet-for graduate students of the Uni- i jngs were held in the home.s of thever'sit.v ar’e available at the Activ-^ faculty wives but us the league grew’ities Desk of Inter'national House. larger’, with the inclusion of members and was a pioneer member of theLaw school faculty,a commemorativeservice will be held in the Univer¬sity chapel at 4:30 Sunday after¬noon.Professor Harry A. Bigelow, deanof the Law school, will preside, andwill be a.ssisted by the ReverendCharles W. Gilkey, dean of theChapel. The service will be openedwith Brahms’ Fir.st Requiem.Three SpeakersVarious phases of ProfessorFreund’s life will be discussed bythree speakers. They are: Vice-presi¬dent Frederic Woodward, Miss JaneAddams, head resident of HullHouse, and Leo Wormser, Chicagolawyer and former pupil of Dr.Freund.Professor Freund was the fore¬most authority on public law in theUnited States. His death on October20 marked the end of a distinguishedcareer begun a half-century ago. Hewas a .specialist in the field of ad-ministi’ative law; many Illinoisstatutes are the result of his per¬sonal draftsmanship. Dr. Freund wasan eminent scholar well versed inancient Roman law.Gilkey to PreachDean Gilkey will preach at theweekly religious service Sundaymorning at 11 in the Chapel. Hissubject will be “Education as Ap¬preciation.” A half-hour of organmusic by Frederick Marriott, begin¬ning at 10:30, will precede the reg-Elects New Officers . , . TT 11 I service. At 3:30 Sunday after-iot the C^^ommunity, Lexington Hall Ihei ame headquarters. | Harold Simonds will be played.op 1 f 1 ’ given in 1 oj annual Christmas pageant bvBruce Benson wa.s^elected pres^^^^ a benefit Lor the Settlement. Seats j University choir and the Dra-at the first meeting of the organiza- ^ misgivings of the promoters, and (Continued on page 2)lion in Eckhart 202. At the same liox .seats—chairs roped off withtime Arthur Goering was elected i cheese cloth—were .>old at twentyvice-president and Robert Lineback, : dollars to the trustees of UniversityHoward W. Murray, vice-president success of both the childrens’ work of the Military Club last night sold at two dollars, regaidless ot theof the A. G. Becker company, will and bazaar as a whole to the ef-appear belore those who desire in- forts of Miss Lillian Spencer. Mis.sformation on “Investment Banking” Spencer has been with the institu-on February 2. Mr. Murray received tion tor ten year.*—since the time ithus degree in 1914 and he is a mem- was the Home for Destitute Crip-ber of Chi Psi. A lecture on “Com- pied Children, at Wa.shington boule-mercial Banking.” will follow by vard and Paulina street.George McHenry, who received his In a room separate from that inJ. I), degree in 1906, Mr. McHenry which the sale was conducted tea(Continued on page 4) ^ (Continued on page 4) secretary.After the election Major T, J. J.Christian spoke to the group on the“Philipine Islands.” Lieutenants A.L. Price and N. F. Galbraith alsogave short addres.ses. College. By the light o' one sputter¬ing calcium tank which often leftthe players in the dark at crucialmoments, and w'ith the help of Piesi-ient Harper, the Lir.st Drama groupbegan production.Compton and Millikan Will Discuss Two ConflictingTheories of Cosmic Rays m Symposium of Scientistsbal tabarin issuesNEW COURTESY CARDSThe B'al Tabarin, well known Sat- !urday night club of the Sherman Ho- |Litl, is issuing courtesy cards to Uni¬versity students for the three Sat- |urdays of the Christmas season.These cards are good December 10,17, and 24, and entitle the bearerto a 50 percent reduction in covercharge.The cover charge Ls thus reducedto two dollars a couple. Dress isformal at the Bal Tabarin, heralded‘‘s “America’s • Smartest SupperClub.” The orchestra is Ivan Bpin-off’s. Only one ticket for a couplewill be given each student. The relative merits of the twooutstanding theories on cosmic rayswill be scrutinized with utmost carewhen Dr. Arthur Compton and Dr.Robert Millikan meet at the annualconvention of the American Associa¬tion for the Advancement of Sci¬ence, to be held in Atlantic City dur¬ing the last week of the year. Theyare scheduled, along with other em¬inent physicists, to take part in asymposium on cosmic rays sponsoredby the A. A. A. S.Both Dr. Compton and Dr. Mil¬likan are disciples of the late Al¬bert A. Michelson, and both, liketheir teacher, have received the No¬bel Prize for research in science.Dr. Compton is at present a facultymember of the University, while Dr.Millikan is connected with the Cali¬fornia Institute of Technology.From Earth’s AtmosphereUntil a few days ago there waslittle cfpposition to the prevailingthought that cosmic rays entered theearth’s atmosphere from interstellarspace. Recently, however. Dr. Comp¬ton announced before a meeting ofthe National Academy of Sciencehis belief that cosmic rays were notreally “cosmic,” but that they orig¬inated in the earth’s atmosphere.Dr. Millikan’s theory is related tothe theory of Dr. William MacMil¬lan of the University, which postul¬ates that matter is converted intoenergy in the interior of stars, andenergy radiated by the stars is re¬converted into atoms in interstellar(Continued on page 4) Maroon TrainingSchool StudentsTake Exam Today'The last discussion session ofThe Daily Maroon training schoolfor freshmen will be held today at4 in Eckhart 202. A final examina¬tion will be given to the membersof the class Tuesday at 4 in thesame room.All students in the course mustbe present for the final examinationif they expect to secure positions onThe Daily Maroon staff. Successfulcandidates will be selected on thebasis of their work during the quar¬ter and the final examination. Thir¬ty freshmen out of the class of morethan fifty will receive staff positions.I This journalism course, which isI sponsored by The Daily Maroon eachquarter to train freshmen in news-■ paper work, was conducted for fiveI weeks. Through a series of formal' lectures each Tuesday, and four dis-; cussion groups led by four mem-: bers of the Board of Control, thegroup was taught general newswrit¬ing and information about campus,j The freshmen w’ho are selected forI positions on the staff will commenceI actual w’ork on The Daily Maroonat the beginning of the winter quar¬ter.SELL 1300 COPIES OFLITERARY QUARTERLYSales for “Comment,” the newliterary quarterly, which made itsinitial appearance on camipus Wed¬nesday, totalled thirteen hundredcopies out of two thousand printed.Of these seven hundred and fiftywere purchased by The Daily Ma¬roon lor its subscribers. Three hun-i dred were sold Wednesday, and twohundred and fifty yesterday.The remaining four hundred copieswill go on sale today. At the pres¬ent time no report has been receiv¬ed on the amount of sales at eitherthe campus or downtown book¬stores.T wo THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9. 1932iatly iEarnottFOUNDED W 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: S2.60 a year; $4 by mail. Single copiesthree cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing 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 CONTROLW.ARRKX 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 NewmanJohn Barden SOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSRobert Hasterlik Dugald McDougallTom Barton Morton Hecht Mary Louise MillerNorman Becker Helen Hiett Robert OshinsRuth Bell Richard Hooker Howard RichDavid Cook Howard Hudson Sue RichardsonClaire Danziirtr David Kutner Jeanette RifasGeorge Daubach Dorothy Loeb Jeannette SteinAmos Dorinson Dan MacMaster William Tray norNoel Gerson Florence Wishnick generation of young people that has assumed con¬trol of the reins.Youth has learned much from this depression.Youth alone will adequately and sincerely at¬tack the fundamental conditions that havc> cre¬ated it.—W. E. T. SOCIETYNote; The second editorial of this series, pub¬lished yesterday, contained a sentence to the ef¬fect that "science has exhausted its fields of re¬search and civilization has far to go if it is to ap¬proach perfection." There was an obvious typo¬graphical error in this statement, which shouldhave read: "We know that science has not ex¬hausted its fields of research and that civilizationhas far to go if it is to approach perfection.”Night Editor: Robert E. HerzogAssistants: Dasbach and KutnerFriday, December 9, 1932 The point w'as made in reference to the fact thatone of the most significant effects of the depressionhas been its revelation to students that many ofthe teachings of an older generation may havesomething wrong with them. The paragraph as awhole declared: "The three years just passed havecertainly indicated to the younger group that theworld’s knowledge rests upon a flimsy basis, atbest. We know now that governmental proceduresare far from perfect, and that there is much tobe done if they are to be made adequate andjust. We know that our social system, rather thanto be revered and its tenets memorized, should berenovated and its principles re-written. We knowthat science has not exhausted its fields of researchand that civilization has far to go if it is to ap¬proach perfection. These things the contempo’^aryupheaval in social tranquility has shown to youth.TTiese things are the inviting problems and thechallenging situations that entice the younger gen¬eration of Americans to obtain a college educa¬tion today in spite of whatever great difficultiesconfront many of them in so doing.” byElizabeth ‘PAY YOUR SHAREGIRLS. IT’S ONLYFAIR.’ SAY DATERSYOUTH LOOKS AT THE DEPRESSION(This is the last of a series of three editorials u'hieh\comprise a rejrroduetion of an article by th^ editor ofThe Daily Maroon which appears in the cui'rent issueof The Xew Outlook, i The Travelling BazaarBy Charles Newton, Jr. and John HollowayWe have discussed the tremendous change thisdepression has wrought in the attitude of the col¬lege student toward the education which he is se¬curing; we have pointed out that this depressionhas, more than any other single factor, revealed tothe college student that the teachings of an oldergeneration and the principles of the society builtby this older generation may both have somethingradically wrong with them.These have been the major effects of the de¬pression upon the college student. It is in these ef¬fects that there can be seen the answer to the writ¬er’s main thesis: the real significance of this depres¬sion lies in the hands of the present students ofAmerica.If this overproduction of goods, which nowtends to pauperize those connected with such pro¬duction, is to be diverted to provide ample neces¬saries for all, it will be because a new generationwill have adopted some of the features of aplanned economy, and some of the ideals o f So¬cialism, if not its methods.The depression of the I930’s, with its greatweakening of the social structure, is providing itsown remedy in the challenge that it has issued toyouth and which youth has answered and will con¬tinue to answer in increasing degree as the politi¬cal and business responsibilities of the w'orld arearsumed by the new generation.It is a generation that is training itself at greatcost of personal effort and initiative during aperiod of curtailed financial resources available foreducation. It is a generation that is living in theurban cities of America and which can see fromits classroom perspective the tragic waste, the un¬fortunate mismanagement, the apparent weak¬nesses of the social structure it is inheriting.It is a generation that will not be sotted in politi¬cal tradition, nor immersed in business enterprisesvhose existence would be threatened by socialchange. It will not be a generation whose menand women have long since been dominated andsubmerged by personal desires.\X hat is the basis for these predictions?'I’oung people today are being treated to a vi¬sion of .society in one of its weaker, unsuccessful . THE FLESH .\.\D THE DEVIL . . .You probably know about this Mars Ball theartists are going to give at the Stevens. And ifyou read the papers, cr have ever been to an.Artists’ and Models’ Ball, you know that the af¬fair will be a regular stinger. This one bids fairto hang up a record. The artists are really put¬ting their soul.« into the decorations. One of theprops is a panel nine feet long filled with nakedladies dancing—a jolly and an artistic subject.The creators of this panel finished it the otherday, and rather than leave it to dry where itmight be kicked or rubbed against, they decidedto hang it from the balcony of the ballroom theywere going to use. ,They forgot about the convention. It was tol>e held that night in the same room. It was aMethodist convention—in fact, a convention ofMethodist ministers. Came time for the meeting,and the first delegates walked in and found them¬selves looking a bunch of naked ladies right inthe face. A panicky conference was held; threeMethodist ministers, and the manager of the hotel.scurried up into the balcony to remove it. It may be Christmas, and it maybe finals approaching; but there’sbeen a real epidemic of weddingsaround here lately. Saturday sawtwo ceremonies: that of Marge Crow¬ley. a Wyvern hereabouts, toPaul Frank; and of Horten.se F'uqua,cousin of the well-known Nels, toWally Merriam. Hortense is a Quad-rangler of years past, and Wally isPsi U.Then Nancy .4nne Clark andGeorge W. Rust, both of the Geol¬ogy department, were married Tues¬day, the twenty-second, Mi.ss Clark,who is the daughter of the prom¬inent architect, came here fromSmith last year. And finally PegPringle, Dean Scott’s ex-.secretaryand Wyvern, married Carl Mygdal,Beta. Two days after the wedding,they left for Venezuela for a three-year stay.Friday night the ELsoterics atidQuadranglers are giving parties,which will probably mean a bu.synight lor the stags. The Quadrang-ler affair is a dinner-party, and willbe given in the Tropical Room ofMedinah; the Esoteric party will bea suipper-party at the Stevens. Thesame night, the Freshman class isgiving a dance at Judson Court, andSaturday wall be the occasion of fourdances.The Phi Psis are giving a closedparty in conjunction with the North¬western chapter, Boyd Raben’s or¬chestra will play. The Chi Psis arei giving a party at the Powhatan, theI Phi Sigma Deltas are giving a fire-side party, and the Delta Sigma clubis giving a supper dance.Sunday, there’s a Deke tea, a P.sil.’p.<ilon luncheon, a tea for staff-I members of the Maroon at Ida! Noyes, and a Phi Beta Delta Mbth-er’.s Club open house tea held at theFraternity house. ^Now for cozies, literary teas, andwhat-not.Last Monday there was a MortarBoard literary meeting at PattyVail’s; yesterday Mrs. Charles Brook,of the Advisory Council and theAuxiliary of Ida Noyes, gave aChristmas Tea at Ida; and todayWyvern gave a cozy at the home ofI Mary Helen Cornelissen.p-requenters of night-club.s andsundry bright spots will be glad tohear of Milt Olin’s latest hangout.He’s now master o. ceremonies at A1Quodbach’s Granada cafe, and Lsteamed with H;‘'nri Gendron’s or¬chestra, which >ou will remember asa pretty smooth bunch. They willspecialize in student compositions—Mirror and Blackfriais hits—and itlooks as if they’re going to attracta lot of the boys and girls fromschool, especially on their FridayCollege Night.It seems sort of futile to counselyou to study after that, but anyway—study!One night, at least. (Continued from page 1)dated or not, and therefore the' ex¬pense of the wardrobe could not beattributed to the date.The men who said that the fair !sex .spent more in preparation for ,dates than the men spent immediate¬ly qualified their remarks by sayingthat the woman’s expense was herown fault.“They spend too much for clothes,failing to realize that personality Is Iall that counts,’’ said one man. But ,the remark was immediately caught Iup by the women, who declared that ,“maybe the poor dears didn’t know ithat personality is nine tenths jclothes.’’ iShould Share Expense |.Another' man said that while he ithought men had greater financial jrespon'ibilities. if the story some ;women tell that ever>’ formal date Irequires a new evening gown is true, |the result might be different. I“I never notice a girl’s clothes,’’ jdeclared one young man, thus serv- !ing notice to his best girl to cut down 1on the wardrobe expenses. Moreover, ithis same young man declared that jsince a girl receives the .same !pleasure from a date that a mandoes, she should pay her sh:ire, .And ;that, needless to say, aroused another istorm of comment. 'But the final word has certainly inot l>een said :ind the question of jwhether clothe.s are the essence ofpersonality, whether men noticewomen’s apparel, whether the menor the women pay most for thepleasures they enjoy remains to besettled. more portable thanMary*s lambInternationalRADIOEither DC or AC>25Complete with TubesIdeal forChristmas Giving.Also numerous other sugges¬tions in musical gifts at—LYON & HEALY870 East 63rd Streetin WoodlawnOPEN EVENINGSALWAYS GOOD FOODPhelps & Phelps Colonial Tea RoomWOODLAWNThe Best Siind:3y (’hicken Dinner with .All the Trimmings. 7oc12 to 9 p. ni.WithinThree MonthYou Can Go Into the Business WorULEquipped to Fill Its Fine Positions!You are a college girl. When you enter the BusinessWorld, you sliAuld 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. Our Bulletin will be sent you withoutobligation. Write for it today.CouTMf start October 1, January 1, April 1 and July 1.HONOR ERNST FREUNDThey weren’t very quick, being inexperienced•and all, and the convention-room filled very rapid¬ly. Finally they got it out of sight, and thing.ssettled into the Methedist routine.Still, it will be a long time before the mini.ster.swill forget the sight of three cf their brethrenvery visibly wre.stling with sin. (Continued from page 1)matic a.ssociation, under the direc¬tion of Mack Evans and Frank Hur-burt O’Hara, will be presented onSunday evening, December 18, at7:30. Three liturgical plays frommedieval manuscripts of French ca¬thedrals will be enacted. MOSER BUSINESS COLLEGE' **The BusinetM College with the Vnivenity Atmoephere"116 South Michigan Ave., Chicago • Randolph 4347perif) r!s. We are catching this glimpse at a time . . SO GOOD CHAFE ROSS BUT DEADCHAPEROSS . . .People going to parties like the Three-Wayparty think they’re all just fun, but behind thescenes there’s work, and make no mistake. Thisbusiness of getting chaperons, for example. Oneof the Psi U’s 'had that chore. The Universitycalled him up to ask who was to chaperon. Hewas not at the hou.«e, but Bob Howard, who knewwhom had been chosen, said that the chaperonswere to be El Ratcliffe and Charlie Hoerger. Onlieing asked what the addresses were, he consultedthe phone-book and passed on what he found.'I'he University thanked him, and said that let¬ters would go off to Hoerger and Ratcliffe atonce. SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON NOW PLAYINGfBLACKHAWKWabash near Randolph“THE BIG TEN MUSICALCHAMPS”FINGER WAVE THAT COMBSWITH SHAMPOO50c MUSIC CORPORATION OF AMERICAPresentsKennedy Beauty Shop6351 Cottage Grove Plaza 1060 !1455 E. 63rd St. Dorchester 3755 iwhen we are forming political and social ideals—the time of our youth. We are not being usheredinto the social and economic affairs of this coun¬try at a time when these affairs are functioning jproperly and when there is a layer of prosperous 1velvet covering its roughness and its fallacies We ;are leaving college and entering this social andeconomic world during a period when it is fund¬amentally ill. We are entering it, therefore, with 'a critical point of view unlike that of any other ' A little later the lad who’d chosen the chap¬erons came back to the house. Bob Howard toldhim what had been done. The Psi U then re¬membered that he hadn’t invited Hoerger. Sohe took the address Howard had found, and call¬ed the number, “Hello,” he said, ‘‘is Charlie in?”“Charlie? There’s no one here by that name.”“No one by the name of Charles Hoerger?”‘‘Dh, 'himI He’s been dead three years.”Rob Howard had picked the wrong Hoergercut of the phene-book. Still and all, it’s nota bad idea for a chaperon . . .. TOAST . . .Here’s to the happiest days of my life.Spent in the arms of another man’s wife—My mammy!—Strother Cary. WHY NOT?THE BEST FORLESS MONEY! .$ 25^ Mo.(Special Student Rate)HOTEL WALDORF6139 Ellis Ave.Plaza 5010109 outside rooms, eachwith tub and shower. Full24 hour Hotel service. Famous in Europe—Celebrated inU. S. A.—The One Big Radio Or-*chestra You Have Been Waiting toF;ar and See in Action.- - - AND - - -A GREAT FLOOR SH9WHilh MISS DEANE JANIS, Radio Star (in Person)NO COVER CHARGE AT ANY TIME$1 Course Dinner $] Course DinnerBlackhawk RestaurantWabash at RandolphA /X •Phi Delta PhiWins AnnualSplash CarnivalScoring 24 points to le;id all,,.hor entries, fhi Delta Phi, legalfraternity, splashed their way to vie-t„iy in the annual Intramural Swim¬ming Carnival last night. JamesSharp and Richard Lindland werejhe outstanding point winners fortlii^ group, taking first places in theforty yard Iree style and breast-tioke races, the lOO-yard free.tyle. and the divine: event-;, 5is well;i- swimming on the Phi Delta I’hilolay team.Delta Kappa Kpsilon scored tenpoints to win second place in th“inoet. and Phi Delta Theta capturedthiiil place with six points.The aggregate of unattached menlota’led 29 points—more than anyorganization. Icke.s, McDonald, andllthen-treet were outstanding unor-o-anized swimmers.Tilden Win* RelayA six man high school invitationalrelay race wa won by Tilden Tech,uiu) took only 2:02.2 to cover the•JIO yards.Individual scoring was as follows;10-yil. free .tyle: won by Sharp. PhiDelta Phi; Kastman., unatta.hed.second; Schroeder, D. K. K.. third.4(1 >d. back stioke: won by McDon-.aid. unattached; Mi Neil. Rambler-;, jecond; Clark. D. K, K. think 100-vd. tree .';t>le; won by Lindland. Phii)elta Phi; lleben.street. unattached.>eiond; Steven.-, unattached, third.l((-yd. brea-st stroke; won by Sharp,Phi Delta Phi: Decker. Zeta Beta,Tall, .second, Kichberg. unattached,third. 220-yd. free style: won bylike, unattached; Hebemstveet, un-;at’.ached. .e-ond; Bern iein, un it jt.iched, third, F.incy diving; won by ;I.indland. Phi Delta Phi; Andci.om,iinattacheil, second; Christy, P.-^i1]; ilon, third. 160-yd relay: won,l>y Phi I>elta Phi, Delta Kappa Ep-.j<ilon. second; Phi Dtdta Theta, third.JIU-JITSU STARS \GIVE EXHIBITION \IN CAMPUS MEET.An exhitiition of jiu-jitsu, the his- itoric Japanese .-tyle of wrestling, iw ill .eature the invitational meet to ibe held in Bartlett gymnasium today ;and tomorrow. Two other styles Of Iwre-tling will •aDo be shown, withbouts in catch-as-catch-can and ;Cracco-Roman. Preliminaries will 'take place Kiiday e vening at 8. with .the finalj= on Saturday at 8. ,This will be the only meet in the :Middle VVe.-:t thowing the Japanese Istyle of wrestling and will attract inumerous Japanese and Chine.sewrestler.s in and around Chicago.Several Oriental stars who wrestledin thi.s dangerous style in their na¬tive countries will compete.Jiu-jitsu is a mod hazardous .sport,the peculiar method of wrestling.-omotimec causing permanent par-aly.-is. The wrestlers wear long capes,to afford a holil for the competitors..Strangulation, which is permitted, iscaused 1 v gia.sping the long collarsof the capes and twf-ting about theneck to cau.-Ne momentary stunningand mu cular paralysis.The Japanese have perfected thiswrc.tling style, studying carefullyth(> .scientific afiplication of pres.sureami balance until jiu-jitsu has bc-cDine alnio t a .science. The JuiloSchool o. Chicago, proliably the-'trangest school of physical cultureII the world, teaching the gentle artof .strangulation, scientific bone-ciU'hing and mi.scellaneou.s mayhem,has entered a full team.Wrestling will be in nine weightsin the catch-as-catch-can, the .Amer-can collegiate style of wrestling: 118His.. 12G, i:}5, 145, 155, IG.o, 175,IHl, and heavyweight. Graeco-Ro¬man. another ancient style ot wrest¬ling. will have competition in three |weights; 135, 155, and heavyweight. ;Kntiies in these latter two types'of v\re-:tling have already been re¬ceived from .-everal of the ChicagoV, M. C. A’.-, the South Parks, anda team from Northwestein llniver--ity is expected. “Y” College and<'rane College will enter men. Sev- 'cral of the regional champions and ;candidates for the recent 01ym|)icwrestling squad have already enter¬ed.Sonderby, Ferris and several otherold Maroon stars will w'cestle. Heide,Redrava, Hubbard, Dooley, Igert,Bargeman, White, Barton, Hauser,Spearing, and Zukowski, varsitywrestler.s, will compete, as well asGoncher, Glas.sford, Danenhour, Uh-ler, Nelken, Portes, Giles, and Pesekof the Freshman team. DAILY MAROON SPORTSFRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1932 Page ThreeMIROON QUINTET TOMEET LAKE FORESTTOMORROW EVENINGSqu^id Lacks Scoring PowerBut Displays Speed inFinal Practice the hoop since hi > football .".ctivitie:;prevoiripj h'm from practicing uniPrecently. Jim Potter, co-captai.iwith Par o’.i , and Harold Wegnera junior who was used frequently iiithe second half of the bust sea.so,i,are the best guards at present.Xoigren, specializing on the lastbreaking olFen-e hecause of theteam’s 1; ck of height, ha • hadcon ideraldo trouble with the tim¬ing of pa.sses. Plenty of polishingwill be n(>ce;-ary before a smooth¬working team evolves. Varsity Water PoloSquad B^-ats AlumnUnconditioned alumni water j'olcn':;yer;s lost t.) a vig.orous var-i.-■quad 4-1 in a regular tw’enty m'nuic.s game after the Intramuni]swimming meet last night.Two complete varsity teams altei--nated again-jt the exhausted alumni,who had few sub titute.s and no tim^'for recuperating. The alumni teamwa.- made up o. former water polo .■<tars of the Univer.sity. Among themwere: Rittenhouse. Szold, McMillen.McMnhtm, McNeil, Moore, Chalix,I Earlandson, and 'Brislen.; One vai'sity team, organized by; Captain Searing Ea.st, played the! linst half of the game, and another! under Bud Marron, captain of theI .‘Swimming team, carried on in theI second half.j Goals tor the vai*sity were made1 by Stolai'. Dwyer, Connelly, and! Barden, while Szold of the ahininiaccounted for their .succes.-;ful shot. OPEN BARTLETT FORI-M CAGE PRACTICEI The ba.sketball floor -of Bartlettgym will be available to Intramural; teams for practice during the next, week. Arrangements mu.st be madewith the Intramural department forthe u.-^e of the courts, which will beopen from 7 to 10 on Monday andWednesday evenings. Intramural ba-ketball will get under way with thebeginning of winter quarter.Starting lineups;ChicagoOffil fKerr fP.irsons cWegner g;Porler or Lake ForestPiehl ,Spreyer ;Katzenmaier 'DyerWaidner |Officials: Referee—Warren; L^m-jiire—Strohmeier.•Maroon fan- will get their firstglimp.^ie of the new liming rules'\Jien a Chicago ba-^kethall team thathas speed hut uncertain scoringpower makes its fir-t public appear¬ance tomorrow night in the fieldhouse, playing Lake Forest College,in part preiiaration for it.s first con-eience game with Wi.sconsin onJanuary 7. .Although the Chicagoteam had -(/me experience in an’nformal game Wedno-day right, themeeting with Lake Foie.st will bethe first real te^t.Lack* Experienced Forward*Chicago’s main trouble is a pro¬nounced lack of forwards who canhit the basket. Paul Stephenson,Scott Rexinger, Loui.s Schlifke, andKenneth Fraidei. of last year’s reg¬ulars, have graduated, and ByronEvans, the only remaining veteranoMvaid, will not be eligible untilJanuary 1.Donald Keir and .A-hley Offil, twomidget forwards, have a slight edgeat present, with William Pitcher, a-ix-fouter, as a po-^sibility. All threewill ivrohably get a chance to show:hei; waie be cie the evening en-tertainm''nt is concluded. None ofthe trio ha.; -hown any particularadeptness at hitting the ling, butthey handle* themselves fairly wellin the floor game. Keith Parsons, co-captiiin and veteran center of two■eu-sons, will start at his regular posi¬tion against the North Shoie school,hut he has had little time to locateTHEGRANADA- - - Presents - - -HENRI CENDRON• - • and hi* - • -Ambassadors- - - Featuring - - -SALLY RANDWarn pas StarBUD and BETTYDance Team- - - and an - - -All Star Show- - with - -MILT OLIN.Master cf Ceremonies$1.00 per person(Including Ginger Ale)Special attention given to Univer¬sity students Friday and Saturday.GRANADACAFE6800 Cottage Grove Ave.Phones H. P. 0645-46 fleyreEverywhere I go, I have to listen to thesame thing. ^Try Chesterfields. Honestly,they are milder, and you simply must try them!’"Me . . . try Chesterfields! Why, I haven’tsmoked anything else. That’s how importantmildness and better taste are to me!"No wonder Chesterfield smokers are so en¬thusiastic.” THEY’RE MILDERTHEY TASTE BETTERCHESTERFIELD RADIO PROGRAM^very night except Sunday, Columbia ^Coast-to-Coast Network.© 1932, Lkxiett & Myers Tobacco Co.hm 00 WnralftiiTHE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Avenue at 5 7th StreetVON OGDFN VOGT, MinisterSUND.AY, DECEMBER 11. 19321 1 :00 A. M.—“Ancient Hopes,” Dr. Vogt.4:00 P., M.—CHANNING CLUB TEA. Unitarian ParishHouse. Election of 1933 Officers. St, Paul’s Church The Church of50th and Dorenester The Redeemer. GtwEPlSCOPAHRev. George H. ThomasRev. Donald W. Crawford .^.6th and BlackstoneRev. E. S. White i1 Sunday Service.® • Episcopal Student PastorSUNDAY SERVICES !Holy Communion, 8:00 A. M. Holy Communion, 8.00 A. M.jhurch School Service, 9:30 A.M Choral Eucharist and Sermon,Mon.ing Service, 11:00 A. M. 11:00\.. M.Evening Service, 5:00 P. M. Evensong and Sermon, 5:00 P.Young People’s Society M.6:00 P. M. Three services every week-dayChurch open daily for prayer andneditation. Church of DisciplesUniversity Ave.-Fifty-seventh St.Edward Scribner Ames, MinisterBasil Fred Wise, Director ofMusic •Sunday, December 11, 1932] 1 :0C .A. M.—Sermon Topic:“John Locke—.After 300 Y'ears,”Dr. Ames.12:20 P. M.—“War Debts.’’Leader—Prof. Eugene Staley.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers: Tea.Progi'am: Prof. E. E. Aubrey,“The Place of Theology in Con¬temporary Religion.’’Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1932CHILDREN SELLOWN WORK ATANNUAL BAZAAR^Continued from page 1)and cake were served to all comers.White linen and yellow candles, andpatrons of the bazaar drinking teawith little cripples who alwao'ssmile—that scene, outlined againstwindows that ptermitted a view’ ofgray, swirling snow, struck the key¬note of the entire institution. It isa place of hope and charity; of hap¬piness in spite of insurmountablemisfortunes. And at no time, per¬haps, is the essence of the spirit ofthe Orthopedic Hospital so clearlyvisible as during the annual bazaar. Today on the■ QnadranglesSCIENTISTS PRESENTDIFFERENT I'HEORIES(Continued from page 1)space. Both Millikan and MacMillanbelieve *hat cosmic rays are the“birth cries” of atoms being formedin the far reaches of inter.stellarspace.Probably Speeding ElectronsHowever, Dr. Compton, after mak¬ing a 50,000 mile journey to studythe rays on the mountain tops of fivecountries, is convinced that the raysare swiftly moving particles, prob¬ably high-speed electrons. Theseelectrons, rushing through the up¬per atmosphere, generate very pen¬etrating X-rays as a secondary ef¬fect, Dr. Conupton believes.He also thinks that the rays maybe in some way the result of thesun’s influence upon the earth’s at¬mosphere, just as the aurora borealisor “northern lights” are.HILL’S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63r<l St.Woodlaw7i*s Leading CafeteriaDining Rooms - First and SecondFloorsGood Food at very ModeratePricesDollar BooksGalore!THECI4NCE’•OF IIFC-HAVELOCK* CUISI uWe carry more than five hun¬dred different titles of the nowfamous Dollar books. Many ofthese books contain more than500 pages. They are printed infull from the original plates. Thebindings are attractive and dur¬able.These books are wonderfulvalues and make splendidChristmas gifts. You can secureseveral of your own selection tiedtogether with attractive gift rib¬bon if you wish.Here are .some sugge.sted titles:GENERALThe Book Nobody Knows—BartonThis Believing World—BrowneA Second book of operas—Kreh-bielStory of the World’s Literature—MacyFICTIONDaughter of the Middle Border—GarlandGreen Mansions*—Hud.sonPoint Counterpoint — Huxley,AldousWhere the Blue Begins—MorleyThe Young Enchanted—WalpoleUp the Years from Bloom.sbury—ArlissTRAVEL and ADVENTURELog of a Cowboy—.\dam.sBeneath Tropic Seas—BeebeCamera Trails in Africa—John¬sonHigh Adventure—HailSCIENCEExploring your mind—WiggamMicrobe Hunters—De KruifCreative Chemistry—SlossonYou’ll enjoy looking over ourwell-filled book tables. Christmasshopping is a pleasure here.Woodworth^sBook Store1311 East 57th St.near Kimtark Ave.Doichester 4800 Night editor for the next issue:David C. Levine. .Assistants: Tray-nor and Hooker.Editorial staff meeting at 3:30 inthe Maroon office.Departmental OrganizationsSlavonic Club, at 8 in Ida Noyes |hall; Alexander Sushko, “Slavic .Art jand Civilization.” |Scandinavian Club, at 4 in Ida ;Noyes hall; Mrs. Kirby-Miller, “.Au- }'^u.st Stiindberg.”Public LecturesRadio Lecture; “International Re¬lation;. Internationa! .Anarchy Ver- ;sus International •Government.” .As¬sistant Professor Schuman at 11 overStation WMAQ.Public Lecture (The DivinitySchool) : “The Latin Bible.” Dr.Souter at 4:30 in Joseph Bond cha¬pel.Public Lecture (School of SocialService .Administration) : “Di-ciplineand Management of Girls.” MissFlorence Monahan at 4:30 in Cobbno.Public Lecture (Downtown) ;“Banking Re orm: Managed Moneynd Credit.” Piofessor Cox at ():15in Fullerton Hall, The .Art Institute.Religious ServicesDivinity Chapel: “What ReligionMeans to Me.” .Associate ProfessorGarrison at 12 in Joseph Bond cha¬pel.Miscellaneous' Scapigliati presents “Scampolo” at8 in the Reynolds Club theatre.University Open InvitationalWrestling preliminary at 8 in Bart¬lett..Advance Registration, 8:30 to11:30. 1:30 to 4:30. Cobb 211.Freshman Dance from 9 to 12 inI Judson Court.Esoteric supper dance, 9:30 to 1 at! the Stevens Hotel.Quadrangle Party, 7:30 to 1 atthe Medinah Athletic Club.SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10Departmental OrganizationsMeeting of the faculty and con-I erence of the Divinity School:I Swift 100, 9:00 A. M.The Dames Club, Ida Noyes Hall,I at 3. Plays by the Settlement; League Drama Group; Mrs. A. J.( Brumbaugh, Director. ChristmasMusic; Dames Club Chorus; Mrs. C.Holley, Director.Public LectureRadio Talks: “News from theI Quadrangles.” Mr. William V. Mor-' gen.stern at 8:30 a. m. over StationWMAQ.The Professor at the BreakfastTable. Readings from Admiral Ts’aiT’ing-kan, Chinese Poems in Eng¬lish Rhyme, at 9 a. m. over StationWMAQ.MiscellaneousBasketball game. Chicago vs. LakeH •1 H ■ ll"'i▲1^131UE5TUR:aiai^TheMonte"Style No. 223An outstanding favorite!The "Monte" is made offinest quality calfskin withthe popular French toe.Rubber heel. Sizes 5 to14 — widths AAA to EBlack O'" brown.WOODLAWNB 0 O T E R Y63rd Street at Wood lawn“At the Sign of Floraheim” Forest, at 8 in the Field House.University .Open InvitationalWrestling semi-finals and finals at] -'n Bartlett.Graduate Council Dance, irom 810 12 at the International House.Reconciliation Trip, “Chinese Cul¬ture and Chinatown in Chicago,” at2:30 at the Field Museum.Midwest College Committee dance,from 8 to 1 in Ida Noyes hall.Phi Sigma Delta house party,from 9 to 1.Delta Sigma supper dance, from.) to 1. at the Bismarck Hotel.Chi Psi formal, irom 9 to 1, atthe Povvhatar .Apts.SUNDAY, DECEMBER 11 .The Daily MaroonThe Daily Maroon staff tea, at 4in Ida Noyes hall. LAW SCHOOL PLANSf ETTING UP OF MOOTCOURTS, LEGAL CLINIC A I I TMNI PRF^FNX McDaniel, who will outline the “Op-T* A I ir o i Women” in busi-BLJSINESS 1 AlLKS ness.(Continued from page 1)have law scholars prepai'e the entirecase for needy individuals, from giv¬ing advice to clients to 'ijvief'ing it. for final pleading. However the ac-i tual pleading of these cases will be' assigned to authorized attorneys,; who will take care of all the court ij letails, and ju.?t as people in finan-j !•:; stv’its come to the University, llnios for medical aid, so too on thej I’.ccess of the present plans, willj hey be able to come to the Univer-! irv law c’inic lor help in legal'man-' ters. (Continued from page 1)is an alumnus of Alpha Delta Phi.The next speaker on the series |is not as yet determined. The sub- jject, however, is “Personnel.” On IFebruary 23, L. R. Northrup. of the jErwin Wa.sey Company, will address !the class on “Business Research.” Amember of .Alpha Delta Phi, he is ;also a member of the class of 1913. |James O. McKinscy, of James O. !McKinsey and company, will con- ,tinue the series on March 2. He willspeak on “Accounting.” Mr. McKin- ^sey is a member of Phi Kappa Sig¬ma. The only women to appear inthe series will be Mrs. Maiguerite' Learn to Dance Correctly—Takea Few Private LeMontTeresa Dolan Dancing School6307 Cottage GroveTel. Hyde Park 3080 •Hours 10 a. m. to 12 midnightWRIGHT HANDLAUNDRYREDUCED PRICES1315 East Fifty Seventh StreetPhone Midway 2073PRESENTING TWOPRE-HOLIDAYFASHIONSNEGLIGEES — FIFTH FLOORChecked robe in navy, red, brown or green.12 to 40.Jersey pajamas in green, red or blue. 12 to 20,^^HECKINC in at 10:15 becomes a pleasure if you get into a checked silk-and-woolrobe before reaching for a notebook. And these jersey pajamas are not only com¬fortable but becoming enough to make your roommate just pleasantly envious. Yourpeace of mind can’t possibly be perfect just before exams, but these two costumes forevenings at home will be distinct aids to your point of view. Chosen from the collec¬tion of undergraduate fashions on the Fifth Floor.Main Store Hours Until Christmas: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m.THE STORE OF THE qHRISTMAS’ SPIRIT■fe'MARSHALL FIELD a COMPANY