Bail? iHanum cr03 O9Vol. 33. No. 63. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1933 Price Tl OI ntsLookingIntoResearchBy SUE RICHARDSONNoted work in research has al¬ways been one of the University’sgreatest achievements, and the proj¬ects which are now being investigat¬ed are in keeping with the highstandard which has been set. Manyof these problems have been startedrecently as a result of numerousmonetary gifts which have been do¬nated to various departments of theUniversity. The fields of endeavorare many and varied, but all havethe common factor of interest. Theaims of a particular piece of re¬search are necessarily vague, dueto the unexplored condition of thefield, and specific results are oftenhard to predict.Frederick L. Schuman, assistantprofessor of Political Science, was |recently awarded the James-ReweFellowship by the American Acad¬emy of Political and Social Science;carrying a stipend of $2,000. Thisinvolves! a year’s project, in whichProfessor Schuman will spend fromtwo to three quarters abroad instudy of German foreign policy withseveral aurposes in mind.AnalyxM GermanPolitical ProceaaAn analysis will be made of thewhole political process in contem¬porary Germany against its socialand economic background. Thissurvey will reveal the attitudes,values and forces which mold pub¬lic opinion and lead to action in thefield of foreign affairs, it is hoped.In order to attain these objec¬tives, a careful inquiry into the man¬ner in which the Reich handles mat¬ters of foreign policy, as against thetreatment which this .subject receiv¬ed under the Old Empire will bemade. The main positions and of¬fices of the government, including acareful analysis of the departmentswhich especially influence foreign, affairs will also be examined. Asomewhat detailed survey of the de¬velopment of the foreign policy ofthe Republic since 1918, will be an¬other aspect of this study.Treats on Post-WarForeign Policy jThis re.s(iarch will be especially |valuable as post-war German foreign ,policy has not as yet been treated in Iany systematic way, either from the Ihistorical or political point of view.The technique of investigation will jinvolve an exhaustive survey of Ger- jman literature and in.stitutions per- |taining to the field. IAnother interesting project whichi.s now being carried on, is one re¬lating to the factors which make forreadability in materials prepared |for adults of different levels of read- jing efficiency. William S. Gray, pro- Ife.ssor of Education at the Univer- jsity, is directing a series of studieswith the assistance of BerniceTeary of the research, under the au- jspices of the Ready Habits Commit¬tee of the American Adult Educa¬tion Association and the AmericanLibrary A.ssociation, with a subsidyof $2,500 provided by the CarnegieCorporation.LimitMl Education Make*Understanding DifficultThe facts which justify this in¬vestigation may be summarizedbriefly. Evidence .secured duringthe Great War and since revealsnotable differences in the readingachievements of adults. The fact isalso well known that reading ma¬terials for adults are inadequate inmany respects. For example, li¬brarians and other adult workershave pointed out repeatedly thatmuch of the literature now pub¬lished is too difficult for people oflimited education, and that thereare no scientific techniques by whichto classify accurately with respect todifficulty the magazines, books, andother reading materials now avail¬able.Professor Gray is pursuing severallines of investigation in the studyof this situation. He is studyingreading achievements of representa¬tive groups of adults; aiiulyzingreading material for probable diffi¬cult factors; determining the cor¬relation between comprehension dif¬ficulty and the various factors ofexpression involved; studying thevarious factors of readability otherthan those which make for difficul(Continued on peg# 2) FRIARS APPOINTSIXTEEN MEN TOSOPHOMORE JOBSPublicity and ProgramStaffs to Start onWork at Once Paroled PrisonerDescribes Art ofConfidence GameThe Blackfriars Board of Su¬periors. after a meeting with theJunior staff late last night, announc¬ed the names of the sixteen Sopho¬more managers for the 1933 show.The men who have been selected arethe following:In the business department un¬der Burton Young: Thomas Flinn,box office; David Kutner, programadvertising; William O’Donnell, pro¬gram editorial; and Thomas Eadie,.score.Technical DepartmentIn the Technical department un¬der James Henning: Truman Kirk¬patrick, scenery; Robert Samuels,properties; Gifford Mast, lights; andWilliam Traynor, costumes. In thecompany department under WilliamKaufman: Fred Gundrum, ca.st;LeRoy Ayers, chorus; Sidney Hy¬man. music; and William Austin,radio and ushers. In the Publicitydepartment under Robert Sharp:John Barden, high school publicity;Noel Gerson, newspaper publicity;Frank Aldridge. posters; - andCharles Greenleaf, general public¬ity.Meet TuesdayThe newly appointed Sophomoremanagers will meet next Tuesday at1 in the Blackfriars office, thirdfloor of Reynolds Club. Preliminaryplans for the coming show will bediscussed at this time. Selection ofthe book for the new production willprobably be announced next week,and the worjc on mu-’ic will begin.In the meantime, publicity andpreparation of the program will be¬gin at once. The program advertis--ing staff is getting into action im¬mediately to insure the financialsuccess of their particular enter¬prise.The technical department’s workdoes not start until rehearsals forthe show actuallv get under way.That will occur sometime near thebeginning of April, Costumes mustbe arranged for, scenery prepared,and the stage set first for dress re¬hearsal and then for the show itself. Generously sprinkling his lecturewith such underworld phrases as“con,” “heel,” “sucker,” “bit,”“bandhouse,” “fixer,” Mr. “Jones,” aconfidence man now on parole fromLeavenworth penitentiary, relatedmany of his escapades at the meeting of the Sociology Club last night.Stres.sing the fact that an hon¬est man can not be beaten in a con¬fidence game, Mr. “Jones” empha¬sized the point that, since the aboveis true, confidence men do not feelbadly over their illegal activities.He added, “If dishonest people dohave a conscience, it is easily .sooth¬ed.”Mr. “Jones” vividly portrayed thedifference between American justiceand that of the English courts.Summarizing his statements aboutgraft in American law courts hesaid, “Old Bailey in London doesn’t.seem to want any money, but—here there isn’t a municipal or statecourt that can’t be fixed, and eventhe ‘wagon’ drivers want a ‘buck’for letting a man ride to the ‘band-house’.”“It is not looked upon in the bestthieving circles as ethical to stealor cheat in a confidence game fromthose individuals who can not af¬ford to lo.se their money,” stated theparoled prisoner. He expressed thefact that criminals have a moral¬ity of their own. In conclusionConvict “Jones” admitted that theI penitentiary is no deterrant fromcrime.THEATER LEAGUE TOPRESENT “CAMILLE’’ON FEBRUARY 24,2^Dr. Overstreet toSpeak Sunday atChapel ServiceDr. Harry A. Overstreet, head ofthe department of Philosophy at theCity College of New York, willspeak on “Unfinished Business: OurPresent American Concern” in theChapel Sunday morning at 11.Dr. Overstreet was educated atthe University of California, wherehe received an A. B. degree in 1899.In 1901 he received a B. S. degreeat Oxford University. At Californiahe was elected to Phi .Beta Kappa. |Among his books are “Influenc- |ing Human Behavior,” “About Our- jselves—Psychology for Normal Peo- jpie,” and “The Enduring Quest,” his ;latest. For a number of years hehas come to Chicago on an annuallecture tour for the Adult ResearchCouncil.After the sermon Dr. Overstreetwill retire to the chapel office from12 to 12:30 where he will answerany questions which might arise.This practice was initiated twoweeks ago, when Norman Thomasappeared in the Chapel. At thattime one hundred availed themselvesof this opportunity. “Camille” has been selected forthe' second presentation of the In¬ternational House Theater League,which will stage the tragedy byAlexandre Dumas fils February 24and 26 at International House the¬ater. Proceeds from the three per¬formances to be given will be usedto aid students residing in thehouse.A large and experienced cast ofboth professional and amateur ac¬tors will produce the play, underthe direction of Luther Greene.Marian Read will play the part whichBernhardt and Eleanor Du.se madefamous, that of Marguerite Gautier.Miss Read has appeared in motionpictures and had wide experience asleading woman in stock companiesin Chicago and the Middle West.Her most recent appearance in Chi¬cago was in the leading role of“When Chicago Was Young” at theGoodman Theater.“Camille,” was first produced inParis in 1852 and since then hasbeen translated into almost everylanguage and played throughout theworld.Tickets for the two evening per¬formances at 8:30 are priced at 50cents and $1. The scale of pricesfor the Saturday matinee at 2:30 is35 cents and 75 cents. All seats willbe reserved and Special rates maybe made for parties of ten or more. BUSINESS SCHOOLMAKES CHANGE INPLANOFCOURSESOptional ComprehensiveExam to Be GivenThis JuneDivision of the courses of theSchool of Business into major sur¬veys is the most important changethat is being made by the school inthe reorganization process for newplan students, according to an an¬nouncement issued by the profes¬sional school yesterday.These new surveys will includethe basic information that was giv¬en in the old plan courses plus muchadditional data on the various fields.However the new courses will be theequivalent of two years’ work underthe old plan. Syllabi for each ofthe.se fields are now being prepared,and some of these ■<vill go on salenext quarter. The.se outlines will beof much use to students who arecontemplating taking the optionalcomprehensive examination thisJune. Two comprehensives must bepa.s.sed in the professional school be¬fore any student can receive hisbachelor’s degree.List of Surveys.Although the old plan courseswill be consolidated into these largefields, the School of Business reveal¬ed that no change in faculty was be¬ing considered. Some of these fieldswill be surveys of Economics as Ap¬plied to, Busine.ss, of Accounting,Statistics, Production, Marketing,Traffic, Risk and Risk-Bearing, Busi¬ness Finance, Personnel Psychologyas applied to Business, and Law andBusine.ss. These new .surveys willnot be offered until 1934, but newplan students will be able to takecourses that cover territory similarto that which these new fields wdllinclude.Conference CoursesThe conference courses will pro¬vide students with a means of .spe¬cializing in any particular field, andalthough each cour.se will have itsfaculty advisor, .students will do thework entirely under their own timeand will. Some of these conferencesubjects will deal with such specialwork as Life Insurance, Retail StoreManagement, Investment iBank Man¬agement, Market Research, BusinessStatistics, History of Business In¬stitutions, and many others. Have You an8 O’clock ClassMr. Groundhog?The point in question is: does thegroundhog have an eight o’clockclass or not? If he does, then hemust get up by 7:30, at least. Andif he got up at 7:30 yesterday, hedidn’t see his shadow, and springis here!Of course there are some narrow¬minded people with no poetry intheir souls who will call attentionto the bracing breezes that whistledabout our ears yesterday and whopromise six more weeks of winterwith the gloomy satisfaction that theforeteller of bad tidings feels in hiswork.The argument .started becauseFebruary 2 is the day set aside asGroundhog Day. For the benefit ofthe uninitiated it will be explainedthat on that day if the middle-sizedrodent known as the groundhog seeshis shadow’ as he rubs his sleepyeyes and climbs out of bed, he isimmediately seized with a suddenfright and goes right back to bedagain. This exerts a profound in¬fluence on the weather, in someway or other adding six weeks tothe winter season.Now let us recall the state of theweather yesterday morning at 7:30.The day was somewhat murky; it;was impossible for a normal ground¬hog to see his shadow. An owl or acat might have done it, but not agroundhog. But as the day woreon and the bells rang to announcethe hour of 9, the murkiness wasdispelled and the sun -shone merrily.(Continued on page 3) IRON MASK GIVtiJMASKED CHARITYRANGE TONIGHTLevant Furnishes Musicat InternationalHouseTonight in the ballroom of Inter¬national House, Iron Mask defiesprecedent in presenting the firstCharity Ball and the first maskeddance ever to be held at the Uni¬versity. And as well over a hundredcouples begin dancing to the musicof Phil Levant’s orchestra, anotherprecedent w’ill have been shattered,for the Ball tonight will be the firstall-campus affair to be held in thenew International House.Admit Stag* At $1.00Tickets for the affair were soldduring the last two weeks at $1.50a couple JHy members of the* Juniorhonorary%6cibty and by members ofthe Fti^ihiAfelM class. The bids willstill be available at the door tonight,accordjingijto Frank Carr, chairmanof the Ball ‘ for Iron Mask, whilestags will bi admitted for $1.00.The^ will be masked, al¬though not necessarily costume. Anumber of/fbreign student residentsof International house, however,are planning to appear in costume,adding a distinctive note to the af¬fair. ,M£^ks can be obtained at thedoor,'aiiH ite to be worn until mid-night, ^ jfhpn^, a general unmasking:~ 'areALUMNI LECTURERSEES OPPORTUNITYFOR COLLEGE MEN“The men who are finishing col¬lege during this depression have won¬derful opportunities ahead in produc¬tion engineering. They will be start¬ing on the upgrade,” said WilliamOgden Coleman, Jr., president ofthe American Flyer company, in thefifth of a series of vocational guid¬ance lectures, given yesterday inHaskell 208.“While the outstanding produc¬tion men of today are not univer¬sity graduates,” Mr. Coleman con¬tinued. “I am convinced that a dif¬ferent type of college man is emerg¬ing, one who, unlike his 1928 proto¬types, will not beg off from work forfootball games, parties, and dances.With the advantages of their su¬perior training, hard work willbring these men to the top.”Mr. Coleman went on to enumer¬ate college courses of most import¬ance on the study of mathematics,graphing and charting, knowledgeof stock and budget control, and per¬sonnel work.“Of equal importance, however,in production work,” Mr. ColemanThe smaller bells, which produce { went on to explain, “are such per-Operator TellsHo w CarillonCan he PlayedThe carillon can be played entire¬ly by hand, but the feet are moreeffective on the deeper notes, as¬serts Harold Simonds, who has beengiving recitals twice a week in theUniversity chapel, j will take place. RefreshmentsI to be'sbrii^d Muring the evening inj the ref|^p(jOfy pf International house.I Levant. Royce EntertainPhil '^Le^'&nt, whose orchestra willfurnish,., t|^^,rtusic from 9 to 1, iswell know’n in Chicago. He has fill¬ed en^Aj^ierfii^Vits at numerous hotelsand clubs throughout the city, hav¬ing played at the College Inn lastyear and'dt* the South Shore Coun¬try cluji^ 9.n,|^any occasions recently.Robert Royce, featured singer andradio stat^Wlth Vincent Lopez' fam-ou.s orcherirai, has also been secur¬ed to entertain during the evening.Through the cooperation of Her¬bert Richmond and the Student Re¬lief colnmiitee, to whom the entireproceeds the ball will be turnedover, the entire International HouseballrooraM ftlcilities, with all its:unique a;p^ novel lighting effectsand luxurious lounges, have beensecured for the dance.»f > ' « ,Find. Decrease of10% in Students’• I ILiving ExpensesCONSUL SPEAKS TOLE CERCLE FRANCAISRene Weiller, French consul inChicago, was the guest at the meet¬ing of le Cercle Francais yesterday.M. Weiller spoke on “iLes Freres deNapoleon en Amerique” — “thebrothers of Napoleon in America,”Mr. and Mrs. Weiller were theguests of honor at a dinner * at theFrench House after the club’s meet¬ing. This is the first time that theconsul has visited the University. University Band toFeature Soloists inTuesday’s ConcertKenneth Moody will play a sousa-phone solo, and Allen J. Sahler, a ifreshman at the University a saxo- !phone solo at the University Band 'concert next Tuesday evening in ,Mandel hall.The sousaphone is a double B flat |bass, the largest instrument in the |band. Moody will play “Thoughts |of Love” by Arthur Prydr. Thispiece is written for a trombone solo |and it demands a finished technique jto play it on the sousaphone. As an Iencore number Moody, who won all¬city honors on his instrument whilein high school, will play, “Down inthe Deep Cellar.”Sahler, who was a member of theJoliet high school band, which hasheld the national championship fora number of years and is consid¬ered one of the finest bands in theUnited States, has won first placein two state contests. higher tones, can be operated bykeys which are .struck with the fist.Mr. Simonds uses gloves to protecthis hands. The deeper bells are play¬ed by the means of pedals operatedby the feet. The six deepest bells,because of their weight, require me¬chanical assistance in addition to thepressure of the foot.The .strength of each note is de¬termined by the force of each blowon the key. Because this method ofcontrolling sound is used, the caril¬lon keyboard differs from the pianokeyboard. All the selections whichMr. Simonds uses must be rearrang¬ed by him to fit the keyboard. Therearrangements are tested on a prac¬tice keyboard which uses small pipesinstead of bells before being used inthe recitals. sonal attributes as the ability tomeet emergencies, and an inherentengineering sense. The productionmanager must have an open mind.Production engineering is not anexact science, but a planning sub¬ject to adjustment and variation.”CAPELLA CHOIR SINGSIN CHAPEL SUNDAYThe Lawrence college A capellachoir will present a concert in theUniversity chapel Sunday afternoonat 4:30 during the regular Vesperservice. The choir is now enteringits fourth season of successful con¬cert appearances and in preparingthe program for the present season,Dean Waterman has included com¬positions by Russian, English, Ger¬man and American composers. Wilhelm Solzbacher,German Youth Head,to Speak on CampusDr. Wilhelm Solzbacher, leaderof the German Youth Movement, andsecretary of the World league of iCatholic Youth, will be guest speak¬er at a joint meeting of the Univer¬sity and Downtown Calvert clubsin the International House.Dr. Solzbacher, who is only 26,will lecture on “The German YouthMovement—Its Strength and Vig¬or.” For more than 10 years he hasbeen identified with the Internation¬al youth movement. He was broughtto this country by the Speakers’ bu¬reau of the Adult Educational Coun¬cil of Chicago.The Calvert meeting, to which allstudents have been invited will beheld in room D at 7:30. Admissionwill be 25 cents; supper will.be 75icents. Supper reservations may bemade by calling Miss Jean O’Hagan,secretary of the campus club, at Mid¬way 1272. The coat of room, board, laundry,and presshlglhas decreased ten percent, according to a survey conduct¬ed by the DAily Maroon, of the totalexpenses of a student living on cam¬pus this year. The survey also re¬vealed that the cost of books hasremained about the same, amuse¬ment expenses have been materiallylowered, food at the off-campus res¬taurants has decreased in price, andincidental expenses have not changedto any great extent.Room rentals have decreased fourper cent in the past year, revealedWilliam J, Mather, University bur¬sar, whil^ board has gone down ten;per cent. I According to Univer¬sity Commons statistics the aver¬age studc'nt eats $.8628 worth offood each day as compared with$.9615 last year and $1.1118 tw’oyears ago, or a decrease of ten andtwenty-two per cent respectively.Tuition, while nominally the same,has dropped because of the pro¬ration system now in effect. Thisapplies to students taking more or(Continued on page 2)MERRIAM GIVES 2NDMORNING RADIO TALKProfessor’ Charles E. Merriam,chairman of the department of Po¬litical Science, will deliver the sec¬ond and last of his lectures on “The-Government of the Metropolitan Re¬gion of j Cl^cago” at 9 tomorrowmorning ovef WMAQ on the “Pro¬fessor at the Breakfast Table” seriesof radio broadcasts from the Uni-versityJ HiPage Two THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1933Smlg iMarnnuFOUNDED m 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 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 ot publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManageiRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorTOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR.. Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSRobert HerzogDavid C. LevineEdward W. NicholsonEugene PatrickJane BiesenthalMelvin GoldmanWilliam GoodsteinBetty HansenBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. SchallerSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSJohn BardenTom BartonNorman BeckerClaire DanzigerAmoa DorinsonNoel GeraonRobert Hasterlik Richard HookerHoward HudsonDavid KutnerRoy LarsonDorothy LoebDan MacMaater Dugald McDougallRobert OahinsHoward RichSue RichardaonJeanette RifasWilliam TraynorFlorence WiahnickNight Editor: William GoodsteinAssistant: Dugald Me DougallFriday, February 3, 1933TEXTBOOKS, PROFESSOR, DO NOTGROW ON TREES"Large profits at the University bookstore are |a myth," declared Fred Tracht, manager of ourlocal textbook dispensary, in an interview with aDaily Maroon reporter recently. The statementwas quite contrary to the popular conception atlarge on the campus, but nevertheless, we are wilLing to admit that it is probably very true.The prices charged by the bookstore for textsare as high today as in more prosperous years be¬cause publishers of academic works have made noattempt to reduce their wholesale prices. Publish¬ers know that students will have to buy textbooksas long as professors require them to do so, andthey consequently are under no pressure to reducetheir rates. Meanwhile< the retail store is unableto lower its sales price to students.Rather than criticize the management of thebookstore for the high cost students must bear inobtaining study materials, we suggest that someattention be drawn to the instructor or professorwho greatly aggravates the situation by using a |different textbook every time he teaches a givencourse. Here is a practice that, while it may en¬able the instructor tq shop around in experimentalfashion for the very best textbook available inthe field, greatly increases the financial expendi¬tures of those who take his courses. It means thatevery group which registers for the class must buya complete new set of books, being unable tosecure second hand editions for the course. Andit means that the students who finish such coursesfind useless books upon their hands which no onewill buy. IBefore and after—the practice is expensive for jstudents. |We doubt that a professor knows much moreabout the quality of a text after he has used it 'in a class than he did before. We think facultymembers should remember that it is student pock-etbooks with which they are experimenting whenthey use three or four textbooks for a course,over ja period of as many quarters.—W. E. T. |SING SING CULTURE i.All the best known colleges and universities arerepresented in Sing Sing prison, according to An¬thony N. Petersen, Protestant chaplain of the in-f , ' #stitution. In an article appearing in the February |issue of Redbook,'Mr. * Petersen gives an interest-]ing analysis of thesy^biillege men who comprise a |considerable proportion of the prison’s convicts. ,He reports that college prisoners commit larceny ;three times as frequently as others, that forgery jis their most popular crime, and that seldom does |he find a prisoner w{>Q has worked his way throughcollege! iThere are experts in history, literature, journal¬ ism, philosophy, comparative philology, scienceand religion to be found in Sing Sing. The chap¬lain reveals, "We have college-trained lawyers,who usually are glad to give legal advice to the [other prisoners, and doctors who informally pre-1scribe for ailments of fellow-inmates. We once :had a clergyman; a brilliant scholar he was, too."The article states that college men are rarelyconvicted of offenses where either force or imtimi-dation is involved, or even extreme physical exer¬tion. They are not likely to become human flies,or cat burglars, safe-blowers, hold-up men, rack¬eteers, kidnappers, or mail-coach robbers. It isvery rarely that, for any cause whatever, theycommit murder. Only one college man has beenelectrocuted at Sing Sing in the past seventeenyears. The typical college man’s crime is taking ^money which does not belong to him, while the ;owner is not watching, and doing this in what jseems the easiest and safest way. Of all crimes,college m_en seem most addicted to forgery. In ias much as this is one of the easiest crimes to de¬tect and also one of the easiest on which to ob¬tain a conviction, the chaplain is moved to saythat the partiality of college men to it would seemto support the contention of the prisoner whodoubts whether, after all, one gets an educationin college.All in all, we found the chaplain’s article an in¬teresting one indeed, until, that is, we reached his !concluding paragn'^pb. For there we learned to !our great chagrin that there has never been a col- ilege professor arhong th'e prisoners of Sing Sing! |—W. E. T.WHY MR. HEARST!!And as William Randolph Hearst busily con¬tinues his "Buy American" campaign, we learnthat every pound of paper used by his great chainof newspapers throughout the country is pur- ^chased in Canada! 'I The Travelling Bazaar ||I By Jerry Jontry j '7i,iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii!iiii:!iiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiumiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiir:iiiiiiiMiii'!;i!:i:>ii iu:i::.:..i^iuiiiuiimiiiiiiiiiiunwiUHiiiniiiiiiiiiiuiiiiin |BOWDAUIER AND AU REVOIRx * ’ |Harper library is fast gaining a level withthe Union station for affectionate goodbyes. Ad-die Hollab left yesterday for somewhere—I was Iso busy counting the open mouths when she ^kissed Dick Deutsch goodbye (or did he kiss jher?) at 3:00 Wednesday afternoon in the mainreading room, that I forgot to ask her where |she was going. But believe me, I’m going to be |right on hand when she gets back. |» « * IIMOTHER GOOSE UP-TO-DATEDe Lemm for MaryMary woss de honer off a Icttle lemm iWhich itts fliss was so wife like snoe; jWareffer too Mary tnk hirs^lf pleases,De lemm woss dere, fullenvink behint. !* * * IANOTHER TEAM DOCTOR jAt the Interfraternity council meeting Wed- |nesday night, the boys discussed the plausibil- jity of putting up visiting teams at fraternity jhouses. A good idea, but it won’t stand over-w'orking. F’r instance, just before Christmasthe Iowa State Polo team stayed at our house.They were supposed to be there for just oneday—but we didn’t know those boys when wetook them in. They came early Friday and 'stayed until Monday morning and how those boyscould eat. They even wanted to crash the ThreeWay party. Yes, it's a good idea, but* * ♦We play the same outfit Saturday at the 52ndArmory. I don’t know where they are stayingthis time, I only know one place they’re not. If jthe point has been reached where the Univer¬sities cannot support intercollegiate competition, ^then I say go back to intramurals. Don’t putthe burden on the poor fraternity hoys—they’rehaving a hard enough time as it is, especially jhere at Chicago. * j• * * • 'ITonight’s the night of the Iron Mask Ball—at International House, and from what I heara big crowd is going. Several girls are goingwith l>oys they would never go out with before;now that everyone is wearing a mask it won’tmake any difference.♦ * ♦DID YOU KNOW THAT: \At Stanford University the rule for women |says that unchaperoned walking in the hills af¬ter dark in parties of less than six is absolutely ' jprohibited? Well, there’s safety in numbers,anyway. Here at Chicago we don’t have toworry about that —we haven’t any hills.ALL TIME RECORDBurt Gale received his shiny new Deke Pinonly last Monday night. Yesterday KatzyCramer was seen wearing it. Some boy, that ^Gale. * '■ Lettersto theEditor(Note: The opinion! expreezed in theoecommunications are those of the writers,and not neceaaarily of The Daily Maroonadministration. AH communications must besigned with the full name of the correspond¬ent, although only initials will be published.I.etters should be restricted to three hun¬dred words or less.)(Note: The following letter iswritten by the first student to re¬ceive a certificate from the Collegeunder the new plan.)To the Editor of The Daily Maroon:No accurate judgment of theNew Plan can be made until it hasbeen in operation for a longerperiod of time. Up to the presentmoment both the faculty and thestudent body have been strugglingwith the problems that are naturalto the inauguration of such a radi¬cal educational system. Most of thefaults that characterize the NewPlan in its present form ai*e the re¬sults of this necessary confusion andare not due to the educational mis¬conceptions of its originators. Mis¬takes have been made by both thefaculty and the students, but theyare caused by the evils of inex¬perience and are not permanent fea¬tures of the new system.One of the most important re¬forms that should be made by thefaculty is the revision of all the syl¬labi in order to make them containthe fundamental material which isrequired in the comprehensive ex¬aminations. By doing so they wouldlegitimately aid Independent workon the part of the undergraduates.During the first year of the NewPlan the Biological syllabus was theonly one that was remotely sufficientto the needs of the students; butsince that time most of the syllabihave been revised and are betterfitted for student purposes. It maybe argued that the purpose of theseenlarged pamphlets is to point outfield.s of research and not to furnishthe material of the courses, butsince they have all made pretensionsto textbook completeness they shouldendeavor to justify those claims.Possibly the most dangerous forcethat tends to limit the liberal andprogressive elements of the NewPlan is the abjectly conservative at¬titude of certain numerous groupsin the student body. They havemade the Chicago system unpleas¬antly reminiscent of the worst fea¬tures of old style education by whin¬ing for regular quizzes, credit forregular class attendance and otherequally revolting aspects of the lockstep age of American prehistoricuniversities.While such kindergarten heirloomsmay be justified because of theirvalue in aiding the student to achieveindependent powers of study grad¬ually, they are dangerous becausethey may lead back to the evils ofthe old system. Although variouswriters upon the New Plan havestressed with smug satisfaction thefact that classes are attended as reg¬ularly as before, such an attitude,while it may be good advertising, iscertainly not conducive to any in¬telligent advance in the educationalsystems ?nd standards of this uni¬versity. Greater care must be tak¬en to discourage this slavish relianceupon the all-too-usual impedimentaof collegiate education, and thespirit of independence must be fos¬tered in those students who indol¬ently choose to place themselves un¬der the comfortingly mediocre dis¬cipline of the class room. The un¬dergraduate who attends lecturesconsistently is either mentally lazyor intellectually incapable of bene¬fiting fully by the Chicago Plan.The students must further emanci¬pate themselves before the NewPlan shall properly function.Georg MannGLANCING INTORESEARCH WORK(Continued from page 1)ty; and developing criteria for usein preparing new material, or inadapting published material for theuse of adults of different levels ofreading efficiency. It is expectedthat the study will be completed andpublished during the summer.(This review of research prob¬lems now going on at the Universitywill be continued in Tuesday’s issueof The Daily Maroon.)There is an athletic club for theblind in Germany. Several of theirrecords are: 13 seconds in the 100meter run, 35 feet in the shot-put,5 feet in the high jump, and over16 feet in the broad jump. Find Decrease of10% in Students’ iLiving Expenses \I(Continued from page 1)less than three full courses. In thepast a student taking an extra coursewould pay $33.33 extra, w’hereasunder the new proration sy.stem noadditional charge is made. Likewisein the case of students taking lessthan the required number of sub¬jects, tuition is decreased propor¬tionally, at the rate of $33.33 acourse.The reduction in room rentalsnow brings the fees down to thefollowing price range: Snell hall, $44 .to $54; Hitchcock, $44 to $68; the'new Men’s Residence halls, $66 to !$72.Room rents for women are now:Foster, $48 to $72; Green, $49 to$72; Beecher and Kelly. $53 to $72;Blake, $52 to $62; Gates, $40 to$54, while some self-service rooms :cost as low tfs $38. !Board for men during the quarteraverages $77, the figures show,while board for women total.s $82.Laundry and pressing costs havedropped 62 per cent in the pastyear. Text books and supplies have 1shown no material decrease, accord- jing to Fred Tracht, manager of theUniversity bookstore, and V. A.Woodworth, owner of Woodworth’sbookstore. Books publi.shed by theUniversity Press have been loweredin price, but they are so few as toBEWAREYour best friends will beCOURTOCRATSFRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 19Judson Cwirt Dancing, 9-1 have little or no effect upon thegeneral price level.A survey of the price reductions,at the off-campus resta^r».nt& i;rjf-cates an approximate decrease oftwenty-five per cent in averagechecks since last year.General prices for student affairshave been markedly reduced. TheInterfraternity iBall which cost $5in 1931, was $3 in 1932. The tick¬ets for the Washington Prom havebeen reduced from $7.50 to $4.50-lecture tickets have declined inprice, and there have been morefree mixers this year than ever be¬fore. Dramatic Association ticketswere cut last year, and retained thesame price this year; Mirror i.s con¬sidering a cut in their prices.FOR COLLEGE GIRLSMOSBR BVBINBSB COLLBCB/WiMw awAlA ». ^ M114 Zaalk MIsMgaa AvauM.- • t444TGOOFUSUNIVERSITY BANDMANGEL HALLNEXT TUESDAYEVENINGBLACKHAWKPresents another college showat about 11 o’clock.Three acts from Northwestern.FRIDAY — FEB. 3Dancing and EnfertainmenfNOCOVERCHARGEANY TIME DOLiJVR DINNER BEFORE 8:30BLACKHAWKWabash at RandolphIn the Lyon & Healy •MIDGET RADIODEPARTMENTIdeal for—GUEST ROOMSBEDROOMSDINING HALLSSUN ROOMSSCHOOL ROOMSDORMITORIESTHE OFFICEThe Fiver Book CaseC R O S L E YClosed, it looks like aleather-bound set offavorite volumes;opened, a real musicalinstrument. Made upfor AC or for DC.The “KADETTE” InternationalMost accommodating, compact radioyou ever saw; will operate on anylight circuit whether AC or DC. ’25Also other Midget Radios including Majestic, RCA,and Emerson, $18.45 and np.MIDGET RADIO DEPARTMENT—FIRST FLOORLYON & HEALYWabash Avenue at Jackson Boulevard '25 ♦•f♦♦with ♦♦tubes t-f>4-with 1* tubes ■fTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1933 Page ThreeWRIGHT HANDLAUNDRYREDUCED PRICES1315 East Fifty Seventh StreetPhone Midway 2073 ci^are^ ~iAcUs Afc/{iir-iJit oi^arMc -i/uUr Tasies JBeUe^e 193). Liccirr a MymiI(Continued from page 1)Shadows were formed.But then, even if we do have sixmore weeks of winter like we’vebeen having;, it won’t be so bad.The origrin of Ground hog day onFebruary 2 refers to the ancientCandlemas celebration, a festival ofthe Purification of the Virgin, Prog¬nostics, on that holiday, believedthat excellent weather foretold a#ieries of unseasonably cold days.Thus the German tradition, thatthe badger coming out on this dayforetells bad weather, if there issnow on the ground, had its founda¬tion. The Germans brought thistradition to America but transferredthe fable to the woodchuck orgroundhog, since the badger is notknown east of the Mississippi.HILL’S CAFETERIA116S-75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 35cSunday Dinner 50cServed on 2nd FloorQuadranglesUndergraduate OrganizationsStudent Committee on Student\ (Fairs, 4 in the Dean of Students’otfice.The Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue;Kilward W. Nicholson. Assistant:Hoy I>arson.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel service of wor¬ship. Associate professor DonaldKiddle. .At 12 in Joseph Bond cha¬pel.Organ recital. At 5 in the Uni¬versity chapel.Student Settlement board meet¬ing. At 2:30 in the Chapel office.Departmental OrganizationsThe Graduate Club of Economicsand Business, “Factors in Personaland Business Bankruptcies,’’ Pro¬fessor John Cover. At 4:30 in Has¬kell common room.Public LecturesRadio lecture, “Expansion ofEurope,’’ Associate profe.s.sor Ar¬thur P. Scott. At 11 over stationWMAQ.Division of the Social Sciences,“The Sociological Implementationof Conscience,” Professor T. V.Smith. At 3:30 in Social Sciencea.ssembly room. ISchool of Social Service Admin- Iistration, “The Court of Domestic IRelations,” Edith R. McDowell, di- Irector of social work. Municipal i('ourt. At 3:30 in Law north,I.^cture-recital, Jan Chiapuaso. At4:30 in Social Science assemblyroom.Downtown lecture, “The Cultural jSystem of Soviet Russia,” Professor iSamuel N, Harper. At 6:45 in Full-|erton hall of the Art Institute.Social Evanta |Iron Ma.'k ball. At 9 in Interna¬tional House.MiacellanaouaTrack meet, Chicago vs. Purdue..At 7:30 in the Fieldhouse.Walther league meeting. At 7:30in Ida Noyes library. Extra—CmTicular Activities Tend. to Produce Higher Paid EmployeesExtra-curricular activities in col¬lege tend to produce more highly-paid individuals in industry, accord¬ing to James Floyd Infelt, who re¬cently wrote his master’s thesis ineducation at the University on“Participation in Extra-CurricularActivities in Relation to Success inIndustry As Measured by Salary.”Mr. Infelt arrived at this conclu¬sion after makinsg an extensive studyof the backgrounds of 263 collegegraduates employed by a manufac¬turing company in Chicago.His research was effected by theuse of this company’s employee per¬sonnel records, which revealed theamount of extra-curricular activitieseach person had entered in Univer¬sity. Next, he devided these amountsinto five groups: none, one, two,three, and four to fourteen activ¬ities. Examining the average salariesfor these groups over the five yearperiod from 1921-26, when priceswere fairly constant, he discoveredthat the igroup with no activities hadthe highest average salaries. Thefour to fourteen group followed asa close second with the three, two,and one, trailing behind.Engineers PredominateAccording ta Mr. Infelt, however,the group with no activities wascomposed primarily of engineers, whousually had no time for extra-cur¬ricular work. As a conclusion, hestates: “It appears that those em¬ployees who were not active at allin campus activities, or, on the otherhand, those who were active in agreat number of activities, seem tobe most successful in this company,while those who took part in onlyone activity are least successful.” Continuinig his re.search, he divid¬ed the gi oup of activities into a c’as-silication of types. In this he in¬cluded editorial, oratory and debate,dramatical, musical, religious socialservice, social, athletic, military, lead¬ership, honorary club, and class club.He discovered that the .salaries ofthese groups are more or less homo¬geneous and consequently, participa¬tion in specific activities is unneces¬sary. However, after a considerationof the difference.s, he concludes: “Itappears that participation in classclub, dramatical, editorial, and musi¬cal activities is a decided a.sset bothin increasinig the average salary overa period of five years and in increas¬ing the possibility of finding oneselfin the group demanding the highestsalaries. Social service activities, onthe other hand, appear to contributethe least to success in industry.”There It Hope for LowestMr. Infelt finds consolation forthose who are least successful in in¬dustry in that as a rule this groupwill increase its salary more readilythan those w'ho are more successfulin industry.Other discoveries in the thesisshow that those college graduateswho are in the middle of their class.scholastically are more successful inindustry than those in the upperthird, who are in turn more success¬ful than those in th| lower third ofthe graduating cla.ss. The paper alsoshowed that non-recruited collegegraduates who were employed in thiscompany two to ten years after theirgraduation were more successful thannon-recruited college graduates whowere employed immediately aftergraduation. SOCIETYbyElizabethThe week-end is descending again,so I suppose you want to knowwhat’s going on.For tonight, there’s the Iron MaskStudent Relief Benefit Ball, theBeecher hall formal party, and aPhi Delta Upsilon party. The IronMask affair is a masquerade to beheld in International House, withMr. and Mrs. William E. Scott, Dr.and Mrs. Albert Hastings, Mr. andMrs. Merrifield, Mr. and Mrs. Ken¬neth Rouse, Mr. and Mrs. Maclean,Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Smith and Mr.and Mrs. R. C. Woellner as patronsand patronesses. I don’t know wheth¬er the Iron Mask guarantees thatyou will meet your dream man, orgirl, just before unmasking, as inthe movies, or not; but they seempretty sure it will be a brilliant af¬fair and well worth your while.The Beecher hall girls are expect¬ing 35 couples, including alumnaeand former residents of the hall, attheir party. The music will be fur¬nished by Boyd Raben; the hall willbe decorated with spring flowers andpalms; and Miss Margaret Clark.Miss Beulah Smith and Dean andMrs. A. J. Brumbaugh will act aschaperones.The Phi Delta Upsilon’s are hold¬ing their winter quarter party at theTERESA DOLAN’S DANCESSaturday Eve’s — Midway TempleFriday Evr's -• Perahing BallroomAdmlaaioii 35 CentsPrivate Lessons day or evening at Studio6332 Cottage Grove Tel. Hyde Park 3086 Drake Hotel.Then tomorrow night, the PhiPsis and the Kappa Nu’s are havingclosed winter formal parties; theBetas, another bridge dance; andthe Alpha Sigs and Phi Kaps, housedances. Phi Psi’s affair will be the jannual cabaret party with Jimmy |Garrigan’s orchestra and entertain- iers from the Cafe de Alex, the Chez jParee, the Urban Room, College | Inn, and, they tell me, other placestoo. The boys have been workingindustriously on the decorationswhich are black and white and gold,and they have even built an orches¬tra pit, no less.Now that’s all there is on thebooks right now, but come backWednesday and I’ll see what else Ican find over the week-end to tellyou about.After the Ball Is Over—and when the music has stoppedcome to the Yankee Doodle for that“after the party” bite. The crowd al¬ways gathers here to talk over the eve¬ning’s festivities while they eat ourdelicious sandwiches, waffles, or lateevening lunches.Drop in at noon and try our famous35c lunches which are the finest thatmoney can buy.Yankee Doodle Inn1171 East 55th Street Fairfax 1776SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1933Public Lecture*“News From the Quadrangles,”William V. Morgenstern. At 8:30over station WMAQ.Miacelleueeu*Polo game. Chicago vs. IowaState. At 7:30 in the 124th FieldArtillery armory, 62nd street andCottage Grove avenue.Basketball game, Chicago v.«.Notre Dame. At 8 in the Field-house.Wrestling match, Chicago va. Il¬linois. At 9 in Bartlett gym.^sium.Meeting of the faculty of ine Di¬vinity .school and the Divinity con¬ference. .At 9 in Swift 100. don’t spend Terr mudionSUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1933Music and Relifious ServicesUniversity religiou.s service, Har-y A. Overstreet, professor of Phil-sophy at the College of the Cityf New York. At 11 in the Univer-ity chapel.Carillon recital. Harold Simonds..t 3 from the University chapel.DO YOU HAVE AN8 O’CLOCK CLASS,MR. GROUNDHOG? But, believe ME, whenit comes to what I smoke,I want it right!You know how it is when afellow is accustcxned to smokinga good cigarette and he gets holdof one that isnY right. He’slikely to get in a bad humor.I am a great believer in theold saying that ’’quality willtell,” and 1 have noticed that thethings which come to stay aregood things. You can buy a package of goodcigarettes for 15c. Six cents ofthis goes to the Government. So ’'that outside of the 6c paid tothe Government, you get a littleover two cigarettes for one cent. >The right kind of tobacco, tho* ^ ^right sort of paper—a cigarette athat’s pure and good-tasting andmild—that’s the kind I want.I have been smoking CHEST¬ERFIELDS for a long time. Theyare mild and yet they satisfy.dwDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3. 1933Burton, 300, 500, 700Gagers Win I-M GamesNine Leagues to BeginFinal Round NextMondayIn the three Intramural basket¬ball games played yesterday, all inthe dormitory league, the 700, 500and 300 teams of Burton court wonover the 600 and 800 entries, andSnell hall, respectively.“Tarzan” Deems and Lloyd Bush,four hundred pounds of Freshmanfootball team, lent their bulk to the700 outfit, which won, 15-10, andRENDEZVOUS AT MITZI’S1342 E. 53rd St.Have you tried those deliciousPecan and Black WalnutWaffles?Dancing 9-1 — Complete Dinner 7-Man Team FencesPurdue TomorrowA seven-man Chicago fencingteam will meet Purdue at Lafay¬ette in a dual meet tomorrow.Coach R. V. Merrill’s Maroonteam, which last week won ameet conducted by the Illinois di¬vision of the Amateur Fencer’sLeague, is favored to beat theBoilermakers.Captain Bob Eiger and GeorgMann will fight saber bouts. Bur¬ton Young and Laurel Carr arethe epee men who will make thetrip, and Ormond Julian, LaurelCarr, Amos Dorinson, and NoahLevin will fight the foils bouts. CHICAGO AND PURDUE | FAVOR MAROONS TOHAVE EVEN CHANCES WIN OVER HAWKEYEON TRACK TONIGHT! TANKMEN TOMORROW Maroon Quintet Set forStubborn Tilt with Irish“PHEORE"UNIVERSITY BANDitMANDEL HALLNEXT TUESDAYEVENING although they failed to break intothe scoring column, they seemed tobe enjoying themselves. Waldoscored fo”r baskets and four per¬sonal fouls in the first half for thewinners.It required a ttve-minute over¬time period for the 500 team to3#in over their 300 entry neighbors.Nelson scored the winning point af¬ter the score had been tied 14-allat the end of the regulation time.Laird made ten points for the los¬ers.SenfT scored .seven baskets forBurton 300 as they ran over Snell,23 to 17. Pompeo Toigo providedthe biggest surprise of the after¬noon. playing almost five minuteswithout committing a single foul.With only one week more to playin the round-robin schedule, win¬ners in five of the nine leagues arepractically decided. The Ramblersand Phi Beta Delta are out in frontVINCENT LOPEZan^his orchestra'featuringRQBT. ROYCEthe sensational singer, will be in theJOSEHl URBAN ROOM-ta-,Sunday Night, Feb. 5thmUIE ^RING,Lopez’s versatile pianist, has several newspeciality numbers which he is going topresent this week-end.Remember the liberal privileges thatare available Friday nights are now alsooffered to the Varsity Club on Sundaynights. -vThe Congress Hotel Purdue meets the Maroon trackteam tonight in the fieldhouse hop¬ing to avenge the one point defeatthe Chicago squad gave them lastyear indoors. From all indications,the meet should be as close this sea¬son as last, with the margin of vic¬tory hinging on the results of anyof the events.The Maroons, with Captain Hay-don, Brooks, Cullen and Zimmer,again have a decided superiority inthe dash and hurdles, although theBoilermakers are bringing up aSophomore low hurdler who willgive Brooks a race. The quarterwill be a toss-up with points splitfairly evenly; the re.sult dependingon whether Cullen, new Maroonflash, can outsmart Miller, whotook the event last year. Purduewill show its principal strength inthe distances. Sears Kenney, andPopejoy, Boilermakers stars, ail hav¬ing been American finalises in theOlympic tryouts last summer. Be¬tween the three of them, they shouldaccount for the first two places ineach of the half, mile, and two-mile,although Fail-bank, another Maroonsophomore star, may break up thecombination in the 880.In the field events, points shouldbe fairly well divided, with the mar¬gin going to the Maroons. Ovson inthe shot, Jackson and Roberts in thepole vault, and Roberts in the highjump will probably aaeu^e the Chi¬cago superiority.The entire outcome of the meetmay very likely depend on the re¬lay, victory in which event ga^-ethe Maroons the 52 1-2 to 51 1-2win last year.in the Alpha and >Beta leagues, re¬spectively. D. K. E. is uadcfeatedin the Delta league ,one game aheadof Alpha Delt and ^ai U. TheMedics, last year’s champions, leadthe Epsilon ioi^ue, and €hi Psi, highscorers of the season so far, are as¬sured of first place in the Zetaleague.in the other four divisions, apir-,ited battles are still going on for thetitles. The Ponies and Phi DeltaTheta; the Hoffers and the Inde¬pendents; Burton 300 and 500; andMeadville and C. T; S. are still dead¬locked. With the news that McGuire ofthe Hawkeye swim squad is ineli¬gible, the odds swing to the Ma¬roons to win both swimming and wa¬ter polo in the meet tomorrow after¬noon in the Bartlett natatorium.A tentative line-up announcedby Coach E. W. McGillivray indi¬cates that Helland, Connelly, Sachs,and Barden will be the 400 yard re¬lay team; Glomset and Dwyer in the200 yard breast stroke; Bellstromand Nicoll in the 150 yard backstroke; Connelly in the 440 yard; freestyle; Helland and Barden in' the 100 yard freestyle; John andJames Marron in the diving; Con¬nelly and Barden in the 220 yard; freestyle; Nicoll, Glomset, and Hel¬land in the 300 yard medley.Captain Searing Ea.st, Elam.Stein, Silverstein, Plimpton, and; Levi, along with other men amongthe swimmers will form the wateri polo team which has defeatedI Northwestern once and tied themI once, and expects to win this firsti Conference game against Iowa.Coach McGillivray has drilled thesquad for the entire week on ac-, curate passing and the “break” im¬mediately after the pass, which hasbeen the Maroon’s chief difficultyI in former games. Each day twoI teams have scrimmaged for an hour,though games are only of twenty-minute length, to develop the wind, and sen.se of teamwork. Parsons, Porter, FI innSure to StartCameAfter the last heavy scrimmageyesterday. Coach Nels Norgren’sMaroon quintet is set to give theNotre Dame five a .stubborn battlein the field house tomorrow night,though the odds are against them.Co-Captains Parsons and Porterwith Tomniv Flinn are sure to bein the starting line-up, while Eld-red and Merrifield are under con¬sideration for tte other forward po¬sition with Wagner and Offil con¬tending for guard.Show* ImprovementPractice during the earlier daysof the week was discouraging be¬cause the team persisted in theirfumbling and mispassing. However,during scrimmage Wednesday andyesterday Coach Norgren declaredthat his squad had shown a verynoticeable improvement in this de¬partment.Honors for the best work in theweek’s practice, according to CoachNorgren, go to Keith Pai-sons, whohas improved greatly in his passingand work under the basket, and toAshley Offil, who is working splen¬didly at his new guard po.sition. Of-fil’s superior speed and fight should keep a good many Notre Dame shotsoff the backboard and will adequate¬ly replace Page Jr., now enrolledat Oklahoma. Parsons will prob¬ably be assigned the difficult task ofguarding the Irish star and pivotman, Ed Krause.Rated One of BestNotre Dame started the sea.>onrated as one of the best teams in thecountry, but has been defeated sev¬eral times in the face of hard com¬petition from such teams as North¬western, Pitt, and Indiana. In thenlast game—Carnegie Tech — theyeked out a 37-25 victory mainlythrough the efforts of Big KdKrause.Join the NewFrhattmityatGEORGESMENS SHOP1003 E. 55th St.‘'Meet me at Georges'Wrestlers Meet lllmiTomorrow in Qiirtlett ATTENTION! Fraternities, lodges and clubs. We specializein novelties to be used for all occasions at prices below whole¬sale. Committee chairmen consult us and we will gladly helpyou solve your problems.M. L. &. R. NOVELTY CO., 6222 Cottage Grove Ave., R. 202Coach Vorrse’ wrestlerd will havea light work-out today to finishtraining for tomojrrow’s meet withthe mini, which will be held in Bart¬lett after the basketball game.Although they lost- a previou.smatch to Illinois, the grapplers ex¬pect to win tomorrow, because thereare no injuries and each man willwrestle in his own weight. Heide,who was second in the Conferencelast year, will switch from 165 lbs.t4 155 lbs. and Bedrava will changefrom the heavyweight class to the165 lb. division. Captain Bion How¬ard, who earlier in the season was.slowed up by an attack of flu, isin shape again, and will wrestle at135 pounds.SYMPOSIUM ..TechnocracyAuthoritative and Enlightening Discuasion of thiaMuch Debated SubjectbyTwo of America’s Foremoat Economic Thinkers“IS TECHNOCRACY A HOPE?"STUART CHASE“IS TECHNOCRACY A DELUSION?”PAUL H. DOUGLASProfessor at the University of ChicagoSunday, February 5th, 1933, at 8:15 P. M. ;1atSINAI TEMPLE4622 South ParkwayADMISSION TO STUDENTS - 50 CENTSbm SoTHE FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Avenue at 57th Street ^VON OGDEN VOGT. MinisterSUNDAY. FEBRUARY 3. 1933I 1 :00 A. M.—Young People’s Service — Sermon by Mr.Joseph Barthe.L4:00 P. M.—CHANNING CLUB TEA. Young People’sWeek. Address by Mr. Robert A. Storer, FieldSecretary for the Y. P. R. U. The Church ofTHE REDEEMER(EPISCOPAL)56th and BlackstoneRev. E. S. White, Episcopal Student PastorSUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion, 8:00 A. M.Choral Eucharist and Sermon. I 1:00 A. M. *Evensong and Sermon, 5:00 P. M.Tliree services every week-day. Church open daUy for prayerand meditation.mil iii> ■SP If you miss it,You’ll regret it—The Iron Mask BallTonight!Syncopated Music ofPhil Levant’s Orchestra,Sensational Singing ofRobert Royceat theInternational HouseTickets may be secured atU. OF C. BOOKSTOREREYNOLDS CLUBALL FRATERNITIESDORMITORIESBids $1.50 Stags $1.00