/®fic 30attj> iBaroon p*oor-*ScuVol. 33. No. 46. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 5, 1933 Price Three CentsGovernmentandSocietyEditor’s note: This is the firstof a series of articles dealing withchapters written by members of theUniversity for the report of thePresident’s Research Committee onSocial Trends, which has just beenpublished. Professor William Og-burn acted as research director forthe entire project.) RUPERT HUGHESWILL GIVE TALKIN MANUEL HALLFamous Biographer WillAppear on CampusJanuary 17Rupert Huphes, eminent authorand biopfi-Eipher, will addre.ss thecampus on “Some New I^itjhts on thePounder of Our Country,’’ in Man-del hall Tuesday evening:, .lanuary17. at 8:30. He will be the thirdspeaker to appear on the .scheduleof the Student Lecture Service andthe first of two speakers during: thisquarter.Individual ticket .‘^ales for his cam¬pus appearance will begrin tomorrowand will continue until the date ofthe lecture. Rox seat.s and seat's inthe center ai'les of the main floormay he purchased for eig:hty-fivecents; all other seats may he .=ecuredBy HOWARD P. HUDSONThe two volume, 1500 paigcHoover study points out the socialand economic ills of America, Thecapacity of K<"<‘*'nment to effect acure is the question considered hyCharle.s K. Merriam, profe.ssor andehairm..n of the University depart¬ment of F\»litical Science in hischapter of the report, “Recent SocialTrend.s.’’When the social and economicmovements in .America have been | f^^,. (.fntstraced, and when the ills and ail¬ments of our machine ag:c have beenpointed out, the {government assumesa more and more important role inthe utilization of the knowledgre andthe finding of .«olutions to the prob¬lems, I’rofessor Merriam believes.Following: i- the summary made byI’lofe.'sor Merriam of the difficultiesinvolved in improvinjr the govern¬ment. “It would be a shortsig:htedjud>rment,’’ he say.s, “to concluile .1that our Usk is a.s .siuiplo h.s that of j » '•“I’t""' "'>■ bo, dor sorv-ridding: the government of coarse Versatile FigureMr. Fluerhes i.s recognized as a vei--atile fig:ure thr()ug:h his work as edi¬tor, journalist, composer, and play-wrijrht. .As an author he is famous;for these novels; “Within TheseWalls,” “The Golden Ladder,” “TheThirteenth Commandment,” and“What’s the World Cominir To?”Mr IIuKhes ha.< also seen actionin the military field. In 1910 he was Begin Activitiesat InternationalHouse TonightA program strictly German incharacter and content inauguratesthe winter quarter activities of In¬ternational House with the presenta¬tion of “German Night” this eve¬ning at 8:30 in the theater. “Toten-tanz,” a medieval mystery play byJohannes Lippi, will be presented bya group of twelve German studentsnow on a tour of the world“Totentanz,” or “The Dance ofDeath,” portrays a series of atti¬tudes toward death as depicted in thewoodcarvings of Hans Holbein, Theplay will be given in German butthe program will contain .a briefsynop.sis in Englis'h.A number of dances representa¬tive of those performed by MaryW’igman and the modern German in¬terpreters of the dance will be givenby Erika Thimey and a group offive dancers. Fraulein Thimey wasintroduced to Chicago la.st spring ina recital at the Goodnr^i theater andfor the past six months she has beenteaching dancing in the city. Her ap¬pearance at International House willbe her last in Amei f a, since sheleaves for Germany in February.Tickets, priced at 25 cents formembers and one dollar for non¬members, may be obtained at Inter¬national House. PROFESSORS TOLAUNGH AHAGKONTEGHNOCRAGYCideonse, Ogburn, andMeech Air ViewsTomorrowprofessor ofStuart P.of Business,graft, crude incompetence and dis¬tressing disorganization.”The real problem is immea'-ure-ably more complicated at:d difficult,for it goes down to the depths and ice. and during the World Wrr hebecame an assistant to the Adjutant.Hughes ultimately attained the rankof major in the Reserve Corps. Asa con.sequence of this he is common¬ly known as “Major” to his close FRESHMAN DEBATETEAM TO SELECTOFFICERS TONIGHTup to the heights of modern social I f''‘’nds.and economic life. Our governmental i Studied Movies<vil.s are in great measure a symp- Unique among authors, Mr.tom of an underlying and tragic I Hughes has ventured behind the setsdisunity in social interests, with theinevitable crumbling of standaialsand wide.4nread apathy.Future Demands WiseBut Bold Experimentation“First, we cannot ignore the in¬terpenetration of the large social andeconomic units with the more spe¬cifically political agencies. The wholedelicate structure of modern industryis increasingly intertwined with gov¬ernmental functions, and will con¬tinue to be so in the future, not asthe result of any theory whatever,but as the inevitable consequence ofthe closer integration of social andpolitical life. Gunvr.cy and banking,shipping, international loans, taxa¬tion, Uiriffs, unemployment, are onlya part of the great mass of relationswhich Lend to come within the circleof goveiTimental influence and con¬trol ; and the inexorable trend con¬tinues. No theory or practice,—in¬dividualism, collectivism, fascism,—has yet shown a clear way to dealeffectively with this new situation,and the future will call for wise but in the motion picture world. Insteadof criticizing th(' attempts of thepioneers of this industry as mo.st au¬thors were prone to do, he .studiedtheir selection of stories. He actednot only as an advisor to directors(Continued on page 2)Illustrated GreekBible TranslationWill be PublishedPublication of the (ii’st Greekmanuscript of Revelation, fully il¬lustrated with miniatures, has beenentrusted to tbe New Testament de¬partment of the University, it wasannounced at the meeting of the So¬ciety of Biblical Literature and Ex¬egesis at the Oriental In.-titute ofthe University last week by .Associ¬ate Professor of New TestamentHarold R. \Villoughl)y and .As.sistantPi'ofessor E. C. Uohvell. The man-bold experimentation, looking for- j n.script w'a.^ found in Pari.< last Marchward rather than back. Nor will the 1 hy Miss IHizabeth Day Mc( ormick,problem be solved by one nation ^ of Chicago, who purcha.sed it andalone. | recently brought it to the attention“St*cond, the developing science of ; of Protessor Edgar J. Good.speed,human behavior is multiplying manyfold the possibilities and problem.sof governmental end social control,and in the not distant future the newtechniiques may perplex us morethan have the moralists in the past. |The jihysician, the p.eychiatri.''t. thebiologist, the social scientist are dis¬covering fundamental tacts regard-(Continued on page 2)Reports Finding chairman of the’New Testament de¬partment.The manuscript, written near theend of the sixteenth century, prob¬ably in the Balkan region, containsthe Book of Revelation translatedinto modein Greek by Maximus thePeloponnesian, and is accompaniedby a commentary.The remarkable feature of themanuscript is its .-ixty-nine paintedmi.\ itures illustrating almost everyscene in the hook of Revelation. Thep’our Hor.semen, the Scarlet Wom-:4n, the beast with seven heads, thetree of life, and the angels withtheir trumpets, are all represented inthe miniatures, which are predomin¬antly Byzantine in style. The P^reshman Debating Societywill meet tonight at 8 in Room Aof the Reynolds club to elect officersand adopt a constitution.Originally organized as a branchof the Debating Union, the Fresh¬man Debating Swiety has grownlarger and more active than the par¬ent body, and bids fair to be recog¬nized in tbe future as the officialdebating club of the Uriivei*sity. TheFreshman debaters were organizedfor the first time early in the au¬tumn (luarter through the efforts ofClaude Hawley and Shepard Holland¬er. This action was taken as a re¬sult of the dissatisfaction on thepart of the freshmen with the De¬bating IHiion.Nine debates were held last quar¬ter between e'arious members of theclub, and tentative arrangementshave been made to meet Crane Col¬lege in a debate in the near future.In this way the society is moving to»waid its immediate goal, which i.-active participation in intercollegiatedebating.P’our faculty sponsors have beensecured by the P’reshman DebatingSociety. They are Maynard C.Kreugei-, assistant profe.ssor of Eco¬nomics; .A. p]ugenie Staley, assistantprofes-;or of Plconomics; Harold G.Shields, a.ssistant dean of the Schoolof Business; and Marshall M. Knap-pen, assistant professoi’ of Histoiy. “Technocracy,” in its social andeconomic aspects, will be subjectedto critical analysis by three mem¬bers of the University faculty at apublic symposium to be presentedtomorrow evening at 6:45 in theGoodman theater.Harry D. Gideonse,Economics, ProfessorMeech of the Schooland William F. Ogburn, profes.=or ofSociology, will present their viewsof this much-di.scussed catch-word.Vary in DisapprovalThe three professors agree thatthe idea is hardly practical, but varyconsiderably in the degree of di.s-ppproval with which they view it.Profe.ssors Ogburn and Meech, forinstance, consider technocracy animpractical dream, which, having afew .'■ound facts for a basks, is ex¬panded and extended far beyond thedictates of sound logic and scientificprinciples.Professor Ogburn characterizestechnociacy as a “pyramid built up-.'■ide down” in referring to the ex¬pansion of facts employed in thetechnocrats’ presentation of the case.Profe.ssor Meech feels that the pro¬ponents of the idea could have re¬ceived a much better reception atthe hands of scientific men had theypresented their material clearly in ascientific journal rather than givingit the obscure and bemuddled treat¬ment it has received in the daily pa¬pers.Gideonse Ridicules IdeaProfessor Gideonse, on the otherhand, ridicules the idea in no uncer¬tain language. When interviewedyesterday by a Daily Maroon report- Dunkel, StudentSettlement Head,Resigns PositionI Harold Dunkel, chairman of theI Student Settlement Board for thei past four quarters, submitted hisj resignation at a meeting of the boardyesterday. If his resignation as! chair-man is accepted, he will stillI continue as a member of the board.He gave as his i-eason for relin-i quishing his leadership of the groupI that his graduation at the end ofj the autumn quarter renders himI ineligible for office.; A committee of two, consisting of THREE NAMEOAS WASHINGTONPROM PAGERSSharp Appoints Baisley,Goldsmith, and*ThompsonRobert Baisley, Warren Thomp¬son, and Edgar Goldsmith have beenadded to the Student Social Commit¬tee as temporary members to man-, age the Washington Prom, accordingEugene Patrnck and Valerie \\ eb- i gj, announcement made yesterdayster, was appointed to consider his ^ Robert Sharp, chair-man of ther-esignation and r-eport at the regular committee.weekly meeting Wednesday. -phej-g ^hree men who have direct-Pian Entertainment : ed several other University social af-Two committees wer-e appointed to , fairs, will be assisted by the mem-consider the holding of a dance or bers of the Social committee as anjamboree during the winter quarter ' advisory body. Robert Sharp will actfor the benefit of the University Set- ; as gener-al chairman of the affair,tlement. The jamboree committee j Baisley in Charge of Ticketsconsists of Dan McGuigan, director 1 Baisley, who will be in charge ofof last years jamboree; Rosemary distribution and =a1es, is aVolk and Joe Zoline. LeRoy Ayers j member of Delta Kappa Epsilon andand Joe Zoline compose the dance ; QwI and Sernent. He is also a Col-committee.Warren Askew was appointed tofill the vacancy left by the resigna¬tion of Betty Patterson. The boardis now made up of fifteen membersand has as its main purpo.se the rais¬ing of funds for use in the workof the Settlement.SERIES OF SOCIALSCIENCE LECTURESTO BEGIN TUESDAYThe first of five series of lecturesin the Division of Social Sciencesfor winter quarter will be begunne.xt Tuesday by Alfred R. Radcliffe-Brown, professor of Anthropology.These series, designed to interestei-. he said, “The Technocrats have gi-aduate students, were inauguratedbased their conclusions on a mass of ! i^st winter.enormously exaggerated and inaccur-(Continued on page 4)Palmer Talks onChurch Tasks inModem AmericaPHOENIX PRIZEProfeMor Charles E. Merriam, chair¬man of the department of Political Sci¬ence, who has written a section of thereport on social trends’ recently published. .A ten dollar prizf' for the women’sclub selling the greatest number ofcopies of Phoenix, campus humormagazine, during the autumn quar¬ter was recently awarded to MortarBoard. Sales for the club were un¬der the direction of MargarethaMoore, who is on the circulationboard of the Phoenix.A similar prize will be awarded atthe end of the winter quarter, andin the spring a /cup will be given tothe club which has sold the largestnumber for the entire year. Russian FraternitySponsors Dance andConcert SaturdayRho Sigma Phi, Russian scientificcultural fraternity will present aconcert, program and dance Satur¬day at 8 in the International Housetheater. Mr. Vldimir Dubinsky.formerly of the Moscow ImperialGrand theater will sing a group ofsongs selected from Russian classicaland folk music..A balalaika quartet under the di¬rection of Peter Hudiakovsky is toplay popular Russian folk music andthe Andreef trio will dance severalRussian-Gyp.sy and folk dances. Chil¬dren from the Russian iBallet school,instructed by M. Darkovich will per¬form dances typically Russian incharacter.Following the program there willbe social dancing accompanied by thebalalaika orchestra and an Ameri¬can dance orchestra.Students may obtain tickets at 50cents, while general admission is one :dollar. Tickets are available at theCashier’s Desk 'at International House |or through Mr. Pushkin, Mr. Komar iand Mr. Sirelschikov, membei-s of thefraternity. “Religion in .America will have le.ssmoney in 1933,” said Dr. .Albert W.Palmer, president of the ChicagoTheological Seminary, speaking atthe Joseph Bond chapel yesterdaynoon on “Religion in .America in1933.” “This will not be wholly badif it induces more simple ways ofliving and shows that money is nothe only thing of value,” he pointedout.“The church must reconsider thealcohol problem,” continued DiPalmer, “for whatever happens toprohibition, alcohol remains as a ra¬cial and individual pioblem. It alsohas the task in 1933 to promote andabsorb a revolution, and finally itmust develop its inner life, its senseof God as a contemporary.”President Palmer’s address was thesecond of a series given in Bondchapel. The fir-t, “Religion in Chi¬cago in 1933,” was given by DeanShailer Matthews. Tomorrow Profes¬sor Charles S. Eraden, NorthwesternUniversity, will speak on “Religion inthe World in 1933.”Friday the noon chapel servicesstart a new series, “The Symbolismof Joseph Bond Chapql.” AssociateProfessor Willoughby will open the=eries by discussing the architectureof Bond chapel. Other speakers inthe series will talk on similar aspectsof the chapel.BAND AWARDSFourteen members of the Univer¬sity football band were awarded goldmedals yesterday for having com¬pleted three years of seiwice in theorganization.Men receiving the awards are: Ho¬bart W. Gunning, James 1. Brown.Albert E. Noll, Taylor Whittier,Alan E. Pierce, Carroll Johnson, Eu¬gene Patrick. Marshall E. Newberg,Herbert Portes, Isadore Aaroqs,Charles B. Frost, Joseph F. McCaf-ferty, Bert McParlane, and R. C.Woodward. Seats may be obLiined in the of¬fice of the Social Science Researchbuilding up to the seating capacityof the assembly room. Candidatesfor the Doctor’s or Master’s degreewill be accommodated first.Radcliffe-Brown Lectures“Law in Pre-literate Societies,” isthe .-'ubject of Profe.ssor Radcliffe-Brown’s series. He will continue thelectures at 3:30 on nine successiveTuesdays.On Wednesdays at 3:30 CharlesHubbard Judd, head of the depart¬ment of Eduoation, will give tenlectures on “Social Psychology andSocial Institutions.” The first onewill be delivered January 12.Ten on ManagementTen lectures on “The Trend inPublic Management” will be givenby Louis Brownlow, lecturer in Po- lege Marshal, Ho.spitaller of Black-friars, and a member of the Seniorclass Executive committee. Thomp¬son, publicity manager of the Prom,is also a College Marshal, memberof Owl and Serpent, and of the Exe¬cutive committee of the Senior class.He is Editor-in-chief of The DailyMaroon, and was editor of the Stu¬dent Handbook. Goldsmith, businessmanager of The Daily Maroon, amember of the Student Relief com¬mittee, and a member of Zeta BetaTau, will be in charge of general ar-i rangements, which will include se-I lecting the orchestra and place for' the dance.Committee to MeetA meeting of all the members ofthe Soci V committee, including themen recently added, will be heldTuesday at 2 in order to begin ar¬rangements for the annual affair. TheProm will be held near the tradi¬tional date of Feb. 21, the eve ofWashington’s birthday, but will notbe held at the South Shore Countryclub, until last year the traditionalscene of the dance.Blackett Speaks onAdvertising Today\‘. Hill Blackett, president ofBlackett, Semple, and Hummert com¬pany, will open a series of aJumnilectures on “Vocations in Business”when he speaks on advertising at2:30 this afternoon in Haskell 208.These talks, which are open tothe entire Univereity, are brought tothe campus each week through theefforts of Robert C. Woellner, execu¬tive secretary of the Board of Vo¬cational Guidance and Placement, as¬sisted by the Alumni Council, to helpstudents select their future voca¬tions.litical Science on Thursday at 3:30“Social Change and the Public In outlining the various fields ofHealth” is the title of the course of business, these speakers will describesix lectures that Michael Davis, pro- | opportunities for college students asfessorial lecturer in Sociology, will well as the ways of making contacts(Continued on page 2) with business leaders.Cottrell Believes Marriage PartnersPlay Roles Evolved! in ChildhoodMarriage partners tend to play thehabitual roles they evolved in theirchildhood and adolescence, and thekinds of roles that they bring tomarriage will determine the natureof their marriage relationship andthe degree of adjustment they willachieve, Leonard S. Cottrell. Instruc¬tor in Sociolog.v, states as the re¬sults of his recent research in thisfield. Mr. Cottrell has been .studyingthe family and familial relations forseveral years.Maladjusted marriages may be re¬garded as results of the failure ofthe marriage to provide the s.vstemof relationships called for by theroles which the partners bring to themarriage, Mr. Cottrell feels..A considerable number of thecases of marital difficulty seem cap¬able of analysis in terms of the in¬ability of one mate to fit into the ex¬pected “response pattern” called forby the other. Dr. Cottrell sa.vs. Thehusband who as a child and adoles¬cent was protected, indulged, andrelieved of any re.sponsibility, is like¬ly to look for a solicitious, protect¬ ing, decisive, parent environmentfrom his wife, and should her owntraining and family background makeher be dependent, the response pat-terji is likely to be unsati.sfactory,the Chicago sociologi.st said in a dis-cu.ssion of a case history.“Mariiage partners do not playsingle roles with respect to one an¬other, although a single role may bemost characteristic of a given per¬son in his marriage relations,” Dr.Cottrell feels. “Cases seem to indicatea multiplicity of roles. For example,a wife may play a much dependedupon mother role, a hated sisterrole, and a loved brother role atdiffei’cnt times for her husband.“The husband in turn may be forhis wife her distantly respected fa¬ther, her hated younger brother, andher loved older sister.“The startling ambivalence fre¬quently displayed by married per¬sons for one another may not be trueambivalence in the strict Freudiansense. It actuall.v may be the re.sult(Continued on page 2)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. JANUARY 5. 1933iatlg MarnnnFOUNDED m 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, pub!ish<;d nnornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 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 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 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 OoodsteinBetty Hansen ASSOCIATE EDITORSRobert HerzogDavid C. LevineEdward W. NicholsonEugene PatrickBUSINES.S ASSOCIATESWalter L. MontgomeryEdward G. Schaller Vincent NewmanSOPHOMORE assistantsJohn BardenTom BartonNorman BeckerRuth BellClaire DanzigerGeorge DasbaohAmos DorinsonNoel Gerson Robert HasterlikMorton HcchtRichard H<x)kerHoward HudsonDavid KutnerDorothy LoebDan MacMasterDugald .McDougall Marj’ Louise MillerRobert OshinsHoward RichSue RichardsonJeanette Rif asJeannette SteinWilliam TraynorFlorence Wishnick livion for the classics, it is not surprising to finddegrees being awarded for research into dish¬washing methods or the duties of janitors. Thepresent trend seems to indicate that the Americanuniversity will eventually become a pragmaticUtopia.Night Editor: Eugene Patrick.Assistants: Hooker and Oshins TWENTIETH CENTURY AMBITIONBooth Tarkington, prominent author, in a in¬terview given to the Daily Princetonian recently,made the statement: “It is a mystery to me; as analumnus thirty-nine years out of Princeton, howthe undergraduates of today manage to do so muchmore work than we did when we were in college.“You work twenty times as much as we didwhen we were in college, and when we come backin after years it almost seems as if you were work¬ing too much,” added the author. Saying that theundergraduates of his day never worked at all butloafed a great deal, Mr. Tarkington added that, “Ithink, perhaps, we were happier, gayer, and morecheerful than undergraduates are today, but thiswas because we were lazier; we enjoyed ourselvesmore.”Mr. Tarkington’s comments are probably quitetrue, but the phenomenon to which he refers is alsoquite in keeping with the trend of all society duringthe forty-year period he surveys. Human capacityfor both work and learning has increased tremend-cus’y during these years; the tempo of life is morerapid—and the time available for being happy,gay and cheerful, seems to be, strangely enough,far shorter.And the college campus with its undergraduatebody has properly enough followed this trend bothn its good and bad particulars. GovernmentandSociety MARRIAGE PARTNERSPLAY VARIED ROLES,COTTRELL DECLARESThursday, January 5, 1933LOST—A COLLEGE EDUCATIONVve were witness to a tragic event at the Con¬vocation exercises winter quarter. Upon arisingfrom his seat at the conclusion of the rites, onegraduate departed from the Chapel and left be¬hind him the degree which he had worked somany years to attain. In a moment he had hur¬ried back, hut someone had already appropriatedthe document; it could not be found.We could understand the anguish spread uponthe gentieman’s countenance. Had he not studiedfor four years—and then, in a mornent’s careless¬ness, lost all proof of the fact? Who was to knownow that he had truly obtained a college educa-I tion ? How would he ever convince his childrenI that daddy had really graduated from a greatuniversity? The event, we repeat, was a tragicI I one indeed: $1,200 in tuition, four years of time,many hours of application—and then to lose one’sdegree and have no evidence of it all—! The Travelling BazaarBy Jerry JontryAmong the high lights at the Anti-War Con¬gress held last week in Mandel hall was a danceat which not a single toe was stepped upon. Theprogram called for the convention to end at 6 P.M, on Thursday, to be followed by a dinner hourfrom six till eight. .\t eight o’clock the delegateswere to reassemble in the Reynolds club for thedance where a colored band was to furnish snap¬py music until twelve.Six o’clock came but no me noticed. At seventhings were l.eginning to warm up and the dele¬gate from St. Louis took up the argument againstthe delegate from Buffalo. At eight the orches¬tra came and the delegate from Cincinnati ob¬tained the floor. The orchestra waked and thearguments grew. Nine, ten, and eleven o’clocksailed by. Twelve came and the orchestra w-enthome; and at one o’clock A. M. Howard Mort hadto call all the night watchmen on the campus tobring this unconventional meeting to a close. Nowthat’s a convention that was a convention.CHICAGO, COLUMBIA, NEAR THEMILLENIUM(Reprinted from the Daily Tar Heel, Universityof North Carolina.).Awakening from their erudite slumbers, two of !our largest American universities have apparentlygone materialist in keeping with the demands formodern, “practical, ” education. The University ofChicago, for one, recently granted a Master of ’Science degree to a candidate (presumably a wom¬an) who wrote a thesis on “Four Methods ofWashing Dishes.” And Columbia, renowned as acenter of liberal thought, has conferred a Doc- ,torate cf Philosophy on a student whose disserta- ition war, on “The Duties of School Janitors! ”But why go to college to learn how to washdishes or fire furnaces? First-hand information 'about either of the subjects is available without theexpense of tuition, and four years’ time can bespent much more profitably in washing dishes than ^in enumerating the methods involved. By no !means possible can we conceive that such a thesisis either a contribution to higher learning or a boon ;to housewives. And as for the doctor of janitorialphil osophy, he could be of much more service tohumanity by following the profession to which he |seems to be inclined.But if Columbia and the University of Chicagomust hand out degrees for such elevated nonsense,why limit it to their graduate schools? Why not jmodify their curricula to the standards set by these jresearch papers? Surely it would be much more |advantageous to equip the greater number ofundergraduates with practical training in the littlethings of life. They might institute a few newcourses, such as “Elementary Concepts of Lawn¬mowing, ” or “Cultural and Aesthetic Values ofCrrk-ng Cabbage. ”Now that modern education has decreed ob- Something ought to be done about New YorkJim, who sells Maroons in front of Cobb hall. 1walked by Cobb hall yesterday morning and Jimsaid to me, ‘’Here buddy, buy a Maroon and readJontry’s new Bazaar!” I 'bought one and hur¬ried on to cover up that utter humiliation. (Continued from page 1)ing types and characteri.stics of hu¬man behavior. They are approachingfeasible form.s both of social controlarjd of emancipations through educa¬tion, preventive medicine, mental hy¬giene, medical treatment, socialwork, guidance of leisure time, eu¬genics, semi-custodial care, that arefar reaching in their implications forthe social and political order. Amodern government must be preparedto deal intelligently and judiciouslywith these new controls and releasesas they are perfected and under-st’and how to utilize them for the en¬richment of the lives of its citizensin the commonwealth to come.An Unavoidable Problemof Modern Social Life‘‘We face then a major and un¬avoidable problem of modern sociallife in the further development of.\merican government, ard in theperiod immediately before us wemust deal with these fateful ques-tion-s:‘‘How shall we establi h types ofsocial control (by whatever nameknown) with power, prestige* andwisdom enough to maintain the in¬dispensable inner structure of politi¬cal cohesion and authority withoutwhich no nation can survive?‘‘How sh,all we blerd the skills ofgovernment, industrial and financialmanagement, agriculture, labor andscience in a new synthesis of author¬ity, uniting power and responsibility,with a vivid appeal to the vitalinterest of the day, able to deal ef¬fectively with the revolutionary de¬velopments of our social, economic.ird scientific life, yet without stifl¬ing liberty, justice and progress?‘‘.\nd how shall w'e make use of'Uch a .government in the interjire-tation and application of the new so¬cial ideals and attitudes which areon the way toward the transfornxi-tion of our civilization into .“omethlngwe can now only dimly di.scern?”.■Xnd so rrofe..«sor Merriam con¬cludes by asking this question, forit is the purpose of the repoil toindicate only the problems withoutsetting forth any recommendations.Eminent Biographerto Give Lecture onFounder of NationGetting off the train in Oshkosh I overhearda woman say to a man waiting for her, ‘‘Hello,George; how’s papa?” ‘‘Oh, he’s fine,” repliedthe man, ‘‘he’s letting his beard grow.”—Andthat, I realized, is one of the reasons why thiscountry doesnt I'ecover more rapidly.Speaking of campus queens, ‘‘Mona,” the D. U.’sGerman Policewoman is certainly the sheba oflocal dogdom; but like all her kind she is fickle—loving both ‘‘Gus” of Alpha Delta Phi and“Prince” of I). K. E.; and they tell me thatamong the better club girls, that sort of thingjust isn’t done.Univers'ity of Arkansas students got a threeand one half week vacation at Christmas becauseof a scarlet fever epidemic. Why can’t our ownprofessors start a little mump club just amongthemselves? That would keep them at home, and,well, they wouldn’t need to worry about us.Some of the I>oys are out gunning for the girlwho, upon seeing the tepees set up by the citywater-main workers on University Ave. Tuesday,said, “Tsch, t.sch, isn’t it just too bad. Times aregetting so bad that the fraternity 'ooys have tolive in tents in the streets.” /Continued from page 1)but as a director of his own stories.He is at present a full-fledged direc¬tor.In his work as a biographer, Mr.Hughes has gained special fame.After a thorough study of the inci¬dental activities of the fir.st presi¬dent, he prepared a biography ofGeorge Washington which is recog¬nized as the most authoritativesource of itn kind.The two previous presentations ofthe Student Lecture Service, the firststudent agency on this campus,were Stuart Chase, economist, whospoke on November 8, and JulianHuxley, author, who made his onlyChicago appearance on November 16.SOCIAL SCIENCELECTURE SERIESBEGINS TUESDAY(Continued from page 1)give beginning Thursday at 4:30.T. V. Smith, professor of Phil-o.sophy, will deliver a ten-lecturecourse on Friday afternoons at 3:30,concerning “Individual Con.sicjenceand Social Order.” The fii'st lecturewill be given Friday.The real west is no more. The Eastern short-hair cuts are invading the campus. El Patter¬son and Honest John Womer are among the first.Don’t mistake Bud Bell.S'trom for having one how¬ever: Bud’s hair is coming out a-naturally. Some¬day he’ll be a natural bald.For the first time in local history Teddy Linn’sclass hours have been changed. Ordinarily hestarts for home after his ten o’clock, and Tuesdaymorning found him starting along the old fami¬liar route, but then he remembered and came tear¬ing back. Not bad for a professor without astring around his finger, eh? HILL S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.We P’eature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 35cSunday Dinner 50cServed on 2nd FloorVISIT THE FIRESIDEINNKNOWN FOR ITS FINE FOODSSpecial Club Breakfast 15c to 25cLuncheon 5 course .^OcDinner 40c and 45cAil pastries are baked in our ownkitchenFIRESIDE INN5718 Kimbark Ave. (Continued from page 1)of corresponding attitudes for dif¬ferent role patterns derived fromearly family relations. Thus a hus¬band may call out affectionate as wellas hostile responses from his wifeby playing roles of members of herfamily who earlier called out the dif¬ferent responses. Of course it is notat *811 necessary nor even likely thateither husband or wife will be awarethat he is playing such roles.” FINGER WAVE THAT COMBSWITH SHAMPOO50cKennedy Beauty Shop6351 Cottage Grove Plaza 10601455 E. 63rd St. Dorchester 3755RAISE YOUR GRADES!by havinz your term papers, compositioni.theses, briefs and all school papers neatlyand accurately typed. Work <>jne by spr-cialists in school work. Lowest possiblerates. Satisfaction zuaranteed.ETHEL WITT .5452 Ellis Ave.Phone Hyde Park 1958We have theBOOKSyou need——either used or new—for all coursesStudent supplies of all kindsalso Law and Medical Books.Use our Typewriter Department forrepairs. Now is a good itme to ex¬change your old portable for a newmodel at reduced prices.You’ll find our post station convenient.Woodworth’s Book Store1311 East 57th St.near Kimbark ,Ave. Dorchester 4800Open Evenings6 o'clock means nothingto telephone service!Bell System service must go on all the time. Dayand night, Sundays and holidays, it must handl-*with speed and accuracy not only the usual traffahut also the unexpected rush of calls.To meet this obligation. Bell System men tackleproblems of many kinds. At Bell TelephoneLaboratories, scientists develop new kinds ofapparatus. At Western h.Iectric, engineers findways to make telephones, switchboards and cablemore and more reliable. In the telephone com¬panies, traffic engineers devise improved operatingmethods that make service faster, more accurate,more dependable.Result: at noon or in the dead of night, thepublic reaches confidently for the telephone,knowing that Bell System service never stops.BELL SYSTEMTELEPHONE HOME ONE NIGHT EACH WEEK. . . LOWEST RATES AFTER EIGHT-THIRTY h-JHt DAIL.Y MAROON, THUI^AY, JANUARY 5, 1933 rage IhreeTHE UNIVERSITY WOMAN“Big Women on Campus” Led a Hectic LifeWay Back in Year Nineteen Hundred FourTwenty-nine year* ago Universityfaculty sponsored and Universitywomen supported campus organiza¬tions which are playing important |roles in campus life today.The following are excerpts fromThe Daily Maroon of 1904.Wednesday, January 13, 1904“The executive council of the.Reynolds- Club ha.s designated nextp’liday night as “Ladies’ Night.”Members are urged to invite theirfriend to vi.sit the club and enjoy Iits privileges for the evening. Pianomusic will be furnished for dancingdll the theater floor, the second floorlieing reserved for games, etc. Thehilliard room will be kept open and:iri opportunity will be given for it.«11-e by the ladies.”Thursday, January 21, 1904The annual business meeting of•.lu Woman’s Union was held yester-‘;iy afternoon. The following officerswere suggested by the nominatingcommittee and unanimously elected;President, Mi.ss Talbot; F’irst VicePresident, Miss Anne E. Allen; Sec-diid Vice President, Miss Lena Har-II-: Third Vice President, Miss Ver¬na .Moyer; Secretary, Miss EthelIiynes; Treasurer, Miss Anne Mar¬tin.Chairman of the House committee.Mi.<s Dudley; Chairman of the Ho.--nitality committee, Mi.ss Woods;( hairman of the Membership com¬mittee. Mi.s.s Breckenridge; Chair-1man of the B^ntertainment commit- ‘tec, .Miss Seton-Thompson; (’hairman I of the Music committee, Miss Larra-bee. Chairman of the Lunchroomcommittee. Miss Just.Thursday, June 16, 1904The various woman’s organizationsof the Univereity, which helped tomake the campus fete such a success,have elected twenty-three of theirmembers to rpresent them at the Stu¬dent Conference of the Young Wom¬an’s Christian League to be held atLake Geneva the first week in Sep¬tember.Representatives have been chosenby Mortar Board, Esoteric, Wyvern,Quadranglers, Phi Beta Delta, ChiRho Sigma, Englewood House, Ka-lulu. Woman’s Union, SpelmanHouse, Athletic, Off Campus Girbs,Beecher, Green, Kelly, F'oster, Schoolof Education, Sigma, and Y. W. C.A.WELFARE WORKERIS NEWCOMER ONUNIVERSITY FACULTYMargaret Creech, who formerlytaught at the University of Oregon,i.-; a newcomer on the faculty of theCniversit.v this quarter. She is teach¬ing “Introduction to Public WelfareAdministration.” a course given inthe school of Social Service Admin¬istration.-Miss Creech has had wide experi¬ence in social welfare work. Aftergraduating from Reed college, shewas a visitor for the Social Welfare.Association at Grand Rapids, Mich.Keith ParsonsCalled it“The Gallery^ ^(and rightly too!)That’s the famous room at Yankee Doodlewhere all the "big shots" are caricatured onthe walls of fame. Keith named the roomin a contest. He’s christening "The Gal¬lery" Friday and instead of the proverbialchampagne, he’s going to spray the door¬way with some water taken from ye oldeBotany Pond.Yankee Doodle Inn1171 Blast 55th Street Fairfax 1 776 W. A. A. to ShowStyles of Todayand YesterdayEach Croup Club to ElectRepresentatives to Modelin Fashion Pageant.Comparing old fashions with newin a style pageant, members of W.A. A. will give campus women twoopportunities to attend a revue onFebruary 16 in the theater of IdaNoyes hall. Shows w'ill be presentedat 12 noon and at 3:30, according topre.sent plans announced by EstherB'euchtwanger. president.Mary Lou Forbrich, social chair¬man of W. A. A., has been appoint¬ed to supervise arrar.gements for thepageant, and will select a committeeto assist her. Each club of the or¬ganization will elect one or two mod¬els according to the qualificationsto be suggested by the committee incharge.Various CostumesCostumes for the show will be sup¬plied from vaiious sources. Mrs.Minna Schmidt, lecturer on Kostum-kunde, is expected to help in thepreparation of old-fashioned outfits, jwhile modern clothe.s will be fi.rni.sh- ied from department efories and spe- |cialty shop.s of the city. In addition, ;W. .A. A. will seek the cooperationof IMis.' M. .AUyr Eilert, instructor iin home economics, and hopes to re- jeeive assistance from members of herclasses in the Uni\ersit>'..All members are invited to the jregular open luncheon meeting of Ithe a.ssociation to be held Tuesday jat 12 in the sunparlor of Ida Noyes. 1Vivian Carlson announces that Pe¬gasus, under the direction of PeggyWillis and Agnes Adair, will be incharge of the luncheon, and will di¬rect ticket sales.Complete Schedule.A complete schedule of W. A. A.activities for winter quarter, edited’ny Roberta Fenztd. is nearing com¬pletion. a".d should be ready for dis¬tribution lit the Tuesday open meet¬ing. Club presidents will be respon-.dble for disiribution of the calendarsto members of their groups, replac¬ing the former method of iuailingthe programs directly to individuals.Last quarter the organizationcompleted a varied program of ac¬tivities, under the direction of thepresident and members of the board,and plans for the coming quartersindicate that the future schedulewill continue to win the support andinterest of association members. SOCIETYbyElizabeth Y. W. C. A. CABINETPLANS EXTENSIVELIST OF EVENTSWOMAN’S PACE STAFFJanuary managing editor: JaneBiesenthal. Sophomore assistants:Marylouise Miller, Sue Richardson,Jeanette Rifas, Dorothy Loeb,Florence Wishnick, Claire Dan-ziger, Jeannette Stein. Now that you have written thosethank you notes to Aunt Effie andto Aunt Claribel for the exquisitelittle frilled whatnots, made all yourduty calls, and sent the One-and-Qnly back to school; let me tellyou some of the news I picked up—j and may I add, some of it is good,j First of all, weddings. Duririig theI holidays, Margaret Graham of Sig-' ma announced her marriage to KentI Parker. The ceremony took placej last summer and I think Marny de-.serves this week’s Hero Award forkeeping the secret -o long aroundI this columnist-studded campus. Mr,and Mrs. Parker are planning to livenear the campus .so Mi-s. Parker cancomplete her Univer.'^ity course.Then Gordon Chissom and GeneneScott were married Tuesday, thetwentieth, following Gordon’s con¬vocation. Genene is from Rensselaer,Indiana, and was graduated from DePauw Univer.sity. Gordon is a PhiGam fiom our own institution. Theyare living 'at the Gladstone hotelwhile he continues his studies in theMedical school.And the la.^'t weddiriig wo have tooffei- is that of Marie Yoeman andthe Reverend Wunzer Hull Bninelle,at Bond chapel on tlie twenty-sixthof December. Dean Charle.s W. Gil-key officiated. Tlie bride wore whitecrej)S and carried white roses. Thebridesmaids wore white gowns withred sashes and carried boughs of hol¬ly. Miss Yoenvan was in her Sopho¬more year and the Reverend Brun-elle was a Della Upsilon of the classof 11)30. Franklin Kunz was bestman. The ushers were fraternitybrothers; Ernie Stevens, class of’30; Bob McKinley, ’21); Bob Pur¬cell, ’31; and Jim James, ’30. TheBiur.elles have gene to Columbus,'Ohio .where Wanzer is taking the |pq-ition of Chaplain of students inthe Piesbytevian churrh on ihe OhioState lampu*!”Now for engagements. Did youl:now about Jane Sewer'’ ’nnouncingher engagement to John Collman atthe Wyvern p:nty tlie S;itiirday be¬fore examinations? Jane is a junior,and John is a senior and a memberof Phi Kappa Psi. .And HubertaBrown, a Si^nia, announecd her en¬gagement to Lief flrickson, a Lamb¬da Chi in the Law school, at a teain her home last Friday. Lief wasR. (>. T, C. Cadet Major last yearard halls from North Dakota, wherethe couple are planning to live fol¬lowing the wedding in June.Janet Johns ‘announced her en¬gagement to Frank Warren at a teaat her home December twenty-third.Janet was a Mortar Board of thecla.ss of ’32; Frank attended Cornelluniversity and is a member of Kap¬pa Alpha.And Debuts! Cornelia. Scandrettand Katherine Oher, Esotericpledges, made their bows to Societytogether at a tea dance given by their(Continued! on page 4) A vesper sendee will be given bythe second cabinet at five o’clockone day each week this quarter a.spart of an extensive program beingplanned by Y. W. C. .A. It will be aworship service in the Thornlike Hil¬ton chapel given for the first andsecond cabinets and the Advisoryboard.Other plans include a meeting withMiss Mary Gilson, instructor in Eco¬nomics, on March 1. Her subject willbe “Recent Development- in Ger¬many.”Plan Supper PartyThe fir.st and second caliinets areplanning a joint supper party soon.No definite plans have been made asyet. Madelaine Strong, chairman ofthe transfer group, is })lanning anevent for new students with advanc¬ed standing.The first cabinet of the Y. W. C.A. of Northwestern University hasinvited the first cabinet of the Uni-ver.«ity here for a meeting • n theXorthwe.stern campus. This meelingIs in return foi’ a similar meetinggiven by the Univer.sity for North¬western several years ago.To Meet FreshmenPlans for Y. W. to meet the en¬tering fie-hmen are under way. Peg¬gy Willis is chiinnan of the Fresh¬man group and supeivising the par¬ty.Included in the progiam of Y. W.is the work at the hospital- and thesettlement. Two girls are needed to(Continued on page 4) Book by Alumnaof University IsHighly Praisedj Elizabeth Madox Roberts, an alum¬na of the University and the authorof “The Great Meadow,” recentlypublished a group of short stories en¬titled “The Haunted Mirror.” MissRoberts was graduated from theUniversity in 1921 and won theFiske Poetry Prize in that year. Shewas also a member of Phi Beta Kap¬pa and the Poetry Club.“The Haunted Mirror,” whichcontains seven short stories, has re¬ceived much favorable notice fromliterary critics. A recent article inthe New York Times Book Reviewcharacterizes three of her stories as“work of the highest order, storieswhich a Tchekhov could have beenproud to sign.” It further commendsher technique and originality.SELECT CHAPERONEFOR CATES. BLAKEBeginning this week, residents ofGates and Blake halls will employthe method used in Foster, Kelly,Green and Beecher halls to secure ad¬mittance after 10:15. Mrs. W. E.Morley has been appointed night-chaperone to admit late arrivals from10 until 8 in the morning. Formerlywomen in Gates and Blake were al¬lowed to use individual keys for en¬trance at all hours.HoMflb^VO/D Bohers*BACCHUS WASA FAMOUS GREEKBOOTLEGGER.Try to forgive him. Poor chap,he really means well, even if hedoes think his posterity is the thingbe sits on!If you’re really sorry for Bill Boner,give him a pipe and some good to¬bacco. That will straighten him out— for a pipe filled with EdgeworthSmoking Tobacco clears the brainfor straight thinking. As you know,Edgeworth was proved by a recentinvestigation to be the favorite smok¬ing tobacco at 42 out of 54 leadingcolleges.The college man likes that distinc¬tive flavor that comes only from thisblend of fine old hurleys. It’s differ¬ent, It’s a soothing, relaxing sort ofsmoke that makes the job in handjust a little easier. ^ You can buy Edgeworth anywherein two forms—Edgeworth Ready-Rubbed and Edgeworth Plug Slice.All sizes—15^ pocket package topound humidor tin. Or—perhapsyou’d like to try before you buy.Then write for a free sample packet.Address Larus & Bro.Co., 120 S. 22d St.,Richmond, Va.EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCONow that the new year is here, come thoughts of newwardrobes, new places to eat, new plays—thoughts foranything that’s new.Why Not?And here the Daily Maroon advertsiers once more justifythemselves with announcements of “the new”. Find outwhere you can obtain the latest creations, and what isThe thing to do in 1933, read the ads and patronize theadvertisers.Why Not?Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. JANUARY 5. 1933Today on theQuadrangles Compton and Millikan Set ForthContrasting Cosmic Ray TheoriesThe Daily MaroonXigrht editor for the next issue:Willi ni Goodstein. A.ssistants: Mc-Doufrall and Barton.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, at 12 in JosephBond chapel. “Reliprion in the Worldin Profe.ssor Charles S. Bra¬den. Northwestern University.Oryan recital, at 5 in the Univer¬sity chapel.Undergraduate OrganizationsFreshman Debating: club, at 7 ;30in Reynolds club, room A.W. A. cozy, at 3:30 in the Y.W. C. A. room Ida Noyes hall.Interclub council at 12 in IdaNoyes hall.Le Cercle Francais, at 4:30, 7)810Woodlawn .Avenue, .Associate Pro¬fessor Henri C. E. David.Public LecturesRadio lecture: “Expansion of Eu¬rope.” .Associate Professor .A. P.Scott, at 11 over station WM.AQ.Public lecture (.Alumni Commit¬tee on Vocations) : “Vocations inBusiness. .Advertisinigr,” Hill Black¬ett, President, Blackett, .Sample,Hummert, Inc., at 2:20 in Haskell208.MiscellaneousSurprery seminar. “Detailed Studiesof a Series of Gall Bladder Cases.”Dr. Edmund .Andrews, at 8 in Bill¬ing’s S. 437.Tryouts for winter productions ofDramatic association, including Mir¬ror, at 3:30 in the Tower room.Delta Sigma Pi, business fraterni¬ty. at 12:47) in Revnolds club, I’oomC..Alpha Kappa Psi. medical fraterni¬ty. at 11 :50 in Revnolds club, roomD. The fervor and enthusiasm withwhich savants are willing to defendtheir theories on occasion was welldemonstrated last week when Pro¬fessor Arthur H. Compton of theUniversity and Professor Robert .A.Millikan earided on a heated debateregarding the nature of cosmic rays.The argument, staged before the.American .Association for the Ad¬vancement of Science, lo.st the at¬mosphere of cold, scientific discus¬sion and assumed a distinctly per¬sonal tenor as the professors pre¬sented their contrasting views.Here Is the IssueIt all arose because Millikan be¬lieves his data gathered from yearsof research indicate that cosmicrays are true electro-magnetic radia¬tions. similar in nature to light butenormously higher in frequency.Compton, on the other hand, believesthe mystifying rays from interstellarspace to consist of a .stream of elec¬trons traveling at a speed approach¬ing that of light.Both scientists admit that the raysat the earth’s surface are a mixtureof photons and electrons. But theydisagree as to which phenomenon isprimary in nature.Professor Compton, for instance,explains the photons by showing thatthe electronic stream from outer-pace strikes the atoms on the out¬er layei's of the earth’s atmo.-phereand the resulting atomic commotiongives rise to the ultra-high-frequencywaves which Millikan asserts are thetrue cosmic rays.Millikan’s explanation of the pres¬ence of the electrons is almost an Defends TheoryProfrasibr Arthur H. Compton, who de¬bated cosmic ray theory before scientifir’ body.exact reverse of the Compton argu¬ment. He .">3ys that the stream ofphotons strikes the atmosphere withsuch force that the impact knockselectrons off the atoms in the outerlayers of air, carrying them alongto the surface of the earth and giv¬ing rise to the effects which Comp¬ton noted.i Compton further substantiates his' theory by his research which indic¬ates that the rays are stronger nearthe earth’s magnetic poles than else-I where on the earth’s surface. Thi.s' fact, of cour.se, tends to show thatthe rays are electrically charged, asCompton asserts.PROFESSORS TOLAUNCH ATTACKON TECHNOCRACYELECT STUART RICENEW PRESIDENT OFSTATISTICAL GROUPStuart A. Rice, professor of So¬ciology’, has just been elected presi¬dent of the .American Statistical as¬sociation for this year*. Henr-ySchultz, professor of Economics isthe new vice-president.Ernest Burgess, professor of So¬ciology, was made vice-president ofthe .American Sociological societyand .Associate Professor HerbertBlumer, also in the Sociology depart¬ment, has been made secretary-treas¬urer and managing editor of thepublications of the same organiza¬tion.CLASSIFIED ADSLARGE, COMFORTABLE ROOM:single or double; very reasonable..580.") Dorchester .Ave. Hyde Park7321 after 7 P. M..7703 BLACKSTONE AVE. 7rooms. 2 baths. Homelike and roomy.Parker Holsman and Leigh, 1500 E.57th St. Hyde Park 2525.Lge. light, rm., for two. Quiet.Reas. With or without meals. Jewishcooking. 1142 55th St. H. P. 5126.Call before 9:00 A. M. Miss Broon. (Continued from page 1)ate figures regarding industrial pro¬duction. Articles on the subjecthave been designed to confuse by the, use of big Avords and obscure phrases,j As a result few have any understand¬ing of the thing: in its unwilling-j ne.ss to admit its ignorance, the pub-i lie indicates that it is greatly im-I pressed by the plan.“I can’t understand all of whatthey say myself, and I don’t believe. anyone else can. The part I can un-I derstand, however, I can prove to be' pure, unadulterated balderdash.”Professor Gideonse pointed outi that the Technocrats assert that weI have an unsatisfactory, unstablemoney system. “That,” he said, “anyI economist will admit.” The remedythey propose, however,—a system ofexchange based on “energy deter¬minants”—he ridiculed as being farworse than the present arrangement.The price of energy production, hepointed out, is far more unstablethan the price of money; and insti¬tuting the proposed plan would“only substitute an untried, unstablemethod for a tried, unstablemethod.”Y. W. C. A. PLANS SOCIETY(Continued from page 3)parents at the Minne.sota Club in St.P ul, the twenty-seventh. And Vir¬ginia Chapman, Quadrangler, waspresented at a dinner dance given byher parents at the Casino on the■ twenty-ninth.I Now that convocation’s over, weIsay good-bye to Gei-ry Mitchell!■ What will the columnists do withouti you? This will have to hold you un-; til Wedne.'day so, goodby now.BAL TABARIN CARDSThe Bal Tabarin, nightclub of theSherman Hotel, has again prepared anumber of courtesy cards for Uni¬versity undergraduates. These cards,which are good on Thursday eve¬nings, will reduce the cover chargeone-half, making it only two dollarsper couple. The cards will be avail¬able to any undergraduate at thebusiness office of The Daily Maroonin Lexirgton Hall.Ivan Epinoff’s orchestra is fumish-ing the music at Bal Tabarin, whichhas been heralded as “America’sSmartest Supper Club.”ROOM FOR RENT—Use of gasrange and kitchen utensils, $2.50 perweek. Fairfax 2475. 6315 MarylandAve. Hrs. 6-10 P. M. (Continued from page 3)take over gym classes at the settle¬ment on Monday and Tuesday after¬noons.The Drama Group is meeting withMrs. A. J. Brumbaugh at her homeon Wednesday afternoons at threethirty.hal kempwants to see youFRIDAY, JANUARY 6• • Special entertainment byNORTHWESTERN STUDENTS.• •• • Also the regular Blackhawk floor show.And you can have a real good dinner, danceall evening to music by HAL KEMP and hisORCHESTRA from the University of NorthCarolina.• • You need spend only ONE DOLLAR perperson.BLACKHAWKWABASH AT RANDOLPH forPARTIESandPARENTSRemember, always, thatHotels Windermere are atyour service as they havebeen for many generationsof Midway students. Longexperience 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.}j[otels Hindermere^hicago56th St. at Hyde Park BoulevardWard B. James, Managing DirectorTelephone FAIrfax 6000 the woman’s pagefeaturingthe society columnfor men and womenthe famous woman’s articleswith hints for successthe every day events and activitieswe’re all interested inappears each Wednesdaysubscribe now for $1.75and watch the university woman\