®|)c ®aUi> illaroon Official me copyCo'b'b 203Vol. 33. No. 69. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1933 Price Three CentsRussia—1932 .and After BILLINGS OPENSCITY'S ONLY PAYISOLATION WABDWill Supplant RecentlyClosed West-SideHospital, r D -• T I ^ contagious disease division forHarper, profe^or of Russian n- , private patients, the only one of its,.uage and Institutions, and author- , now open in theBy DOROTHY LOEB“New factors which have devel¬oped in the last few years are break¬ing the deadlock in the relations be¬tween the United States and Russia,”This is the belief that Samuel N.ity in his field, expressed in an in¬terview yesterday. Before a blazingtire in the library of his home onW'oodlawn Ave., Professor Harper,who has just returned from a twomonths’ trip to Russia, sat and dis-eussed this pressing current problem.A strong factor tending to end theexisting ho.stility, which is the resultof entirely opposing policies in re¬gard to such matters as war debtsand private property, is the situationin the U. S. S. R. Professor Har¬per believes that formal diplomaticrelations between the two countrieswould maintain peace. He stated,“Both countries have the .^ame at¬titude towards China, and the coord¬ination of the policies of Mo.'^cowand Washington would improve thesituation."Drprestion Alto anImportant FactorAnother factor entering in is the(iepression. Professor Harper madethe statement that many people be¬lieve the resumption of diplomaticrelation.s would further trade re¬lations between the two countries,and so are bringing pressure to bearto effect recognition.\ third factor concerns the newndmini.stration in Washington. ‘‘Thechange of administration wi ’ makea change of policy easier,” .said Pro¬fessor Harper, and added that for¬mal relations must be resumed in away that would .save the faces ofboth sides..\n additional factor influencing I Albert Merritt Billings Hospital, asI part of the service of the UniversityClinics, it was announced yesterdayI by officials of the Hospital.Action to open this unit was tak¬en because of the shut-down lastmonth, for financial reasons, of theDurand Hospital, part of the Mc¬Cormick Institute for Infectious Dis¬eases on the west side. While theChicago municipal contagious diseasehospital and the Cook County hos¬pital accept indigent contagious dis¬ease cases, the Durand Hospital hadbeen the only hospital where privatepatient.'^ suffering with contagiousdisease could go.Ten Private Room*Ten private rooms in the Billing<Hospital, in a section which had beenspecially constructed for an isolationdivision, are now open for contagiouscases. Dr. George F. Dick, chairmanof the department of Medicine atthe University since .Tan. 1st, whowas consulting physician at the Du¬rand Hospital, made the announce¬ment yesterday. The Durand Hospi¬tal contained about fiO beds, of whichsome were available for private pa¬tients. If demand for this new serv¬ice at BiPings warrants it, the T’ni-versity will increase tl e number ofbeds available.With the exception of small pox,all types of infectious diseases willbe accepted, including diphtheria,measles, .scarlet fever, whoopingcough and chicken pox. The new iso- Ancient SpartansNot So Valorous,Professor FindsThe ancient Spartans, long heldup to schoolboys as models of brav¬ery and unflinching devotion toduty, were actually one of the mostfearful peoples of classical times, ac¬cording to the author of an articlein the current issue of “ClassicalPhilology,” published by the Univer¬sity Press.Alarm and dismay, treachei’y, re¬luctance to fight, and refusal to fol¬low up a military advantage werefar more typical of Spartan charac¬ter than natural valor or adventur-ousne.ss, according to Preston H,Epps, the author, who quotes ex¬haustively from ancient writers tosupport his contention. Dr. Epps,now professor at Furman Univer¬sity, presents in the article, called“Fear in Spartan Character,” a con¬densed version of his doctoral dis¬sertation at the University.Prof. Epps cites from the wu-itingsof Thucydides, Herodotus, Plutarch,Isocrates, Polybius, Justin, Pau-sanias, Xenophon and Euripides, inwhich the fearfulness of the Spar¬tans is mentioned, and points to aseries of events in which the Spar¬tans were anything but courageous.Spartan leaders built up a military.system by which they sought to sup¬press this fear. News in BriefHutchins Denies PetitionPresident Hutchins yesterday an¬nounced that he backed every wordof Dean William E. Scott's decisionto forbid the National StudentLeague’s use of Mandel Hall for amass meeting. • His statement was inanswer to a petition signed by twohundred students asking for a re¬versal of Dean Scott’s stand.In presenting the petition theLeague said it would hold a massmeeting anyway In the case of anadverse decision. Dean Scott’s ob¬jection to the use of Mandel wasthat the League’s activities wereoutside the interest of the studentgroup. This fact has caused theUniversity to be criticized by thosewho thought the faculty and studentbody endorsed the League.SCIENTISTS DISAGREEWITH BANCROFT ONNEW INSANITY CURE Stevens Leaves UniversityEdward B. Stevens, instructor inGreek, will leave his present posi¬tion at the University to assume asimilar position at Johns HopkinsUniversity in Baltimore. Mr. Stev¬ens has been connected with theUniversity for the last five years.Concert Tickets Go on SaleTickets are now on sale in Cobb202 for the Chicago Symphony Or-che.stra concert, to be held on Tues¬day. February 21, at 4:15 in Man-del hall, under the auspices of theUniversity Orchestral Association. Phoenix Aims to MATHEWSSEEKSNEW STANDARDSIN SDGIAL DRDERPlease with Lotsof “Short StuffWomen interested in sellingcopies of the Phoenix should re¬port to the Phoenix office, Haskell14, at 8 today.The Phoenix is out today!Acceding to popular request, theeditors of the campus monthly haveincluded about a dozen pages of“short stuff”: jokes, cartoons, andthe like. This is one of the severalchanges made in the FebruaryPhoenix with the purpose in viewof pleasing more readers.A swift look at the campus in sa¬tire is provided by Carl Bode in his“Collegiate Cavalcade,” a narrativepoem which tells a tale of severalprominent students on campus.Some of the familiar columns areback again: “Diana to her Diary,”which contains further confessionsof a Foster hall “co-ed”; Milt Olin,directs his “Piffles” this month toJoe Zoline; and Dr. Peterson, ofArm-chair clinic fame, empties hiscarpet-sweeper once again.Probably the most attractive titlein the magazine is Benchler Morri¬son’s “Sex in the University.”“Portraits in Illusion” offers plen¬ty of fun to those who can identifythe hidden characters in the caseswhich Dr. Bradley diagnoses. Says Individual WorthMust be Object inMoral CodeAmerican Chemical SocietyAwards Medal toDiscovererthe situation is that Russia has ap- ! lation division ha.s modern equip-parently abandoned her world revo¬lution program—at least for the mo¬ment. “During the five-year planthe soviet government has been sopreoccupied with home problems,”l’rofe,><sor Harper .said, “that it haspaid little attention to the spread¬ing of propaganda to promote revo¬lution in other countries.”Ru»*t« Hat SignedNon-Aggrettion Pact“.411 must recognize that during ment and technique for protection ofboth patients and visitors. Roomrates in the new unit will be nohigher than those which prevail forother urivato patients.Dr. Dick and his wife. Dr.Gladys H. Dick recently were award¬ed jointly the 1933 Cameron prizein therapeutics by the University ofEdinburgh. Much of their work inpractical therapeutics was done atthe McCormick Institute. Recogni-the last years, Moscow has worked i tion was given them for their suc-constructively for peace. It is sig- : cessful research on the etiology andnificant that last autumn Rus.sia treatment of .scarlatina. Togethersigned a non-dggre.ssion pact with i Ur. and Mrs. Dick devised the im-France and Poland—two countries j portant Dick Te.st for scarlet fever,with which she has had conflict. |Specifically, in regard to the FarHastern situation, Russia has showna desire for peace.” He explainedRussia’s peace policy as forced onher by problems of internal develop¬ment in connection with the five-year plan.When asked what he thought ofthe five-year plan. Professor Harperreplied that it was a puzzling sit¬uation in which it was difficult tostrike a balance between the variouspositive and negative factors involv¬ed. “The coming years will show ifit is a success,” he commented. Fi¬nally committing himself, he added,"I think that in spite of worse liv¬ing conditions, there has been ma¬terial and cultural progress.” He ex¬plained that Rus.sia had concentrat¬ed on the production of machinery,in.stead of consumption goods—suchas bread and coats—with the re¬sult of a low living .standard. He"ent on to say, “The future holdsa definite promise that the standardof living will be rai.sed.”Induttrial Units AlterAppearance of CountryAs to the material pi ogress, hei^tated that the entire face of thecountry had been changed by thebuilding of enormous factories and ;power stations, and by the use of ,factors and other modern farming !machinery. iProfessor Harper characterized j^be cultural progress as “a new at¬titude toward work,” and said, “there jIS more conscious activity in thema.sses.”His own attitude towards Russia,Professor Harper describe) as “pro¬fessional.” He has a sound basis onwhich to judge Russia’s development,for he has been there three times‘^ince the revolution, in 1926, 1930,and in the last two months of 1932. Consider Hal KempBand Most Popularin College CirclesHal Ivemp and his internationallyfamous orchestra, which wi 1 playat the Washington Prom February21, is the most popular band in thecountry as far as college men andwomen are concerned, Otto Roth,manager of the Blackhawk Cafe, forwhom Kemp is playing at present,stated ye.sterday.Kemp’s orche.stra, Roth claimed,is as popular among college groupsas Waring’s Pennsylvanians andLombardo’s Canadians, and hasplayed at a number of college af¬fairs. His la.st collegiate appear¬ance was at the Junior Prom at theUniversity of Wiscon.sin last week.Hal Kemp’s band became extreme¬ly popular through its playing atthe Blackhawk and regular broad¬casting over WGN and it has provedto be one of the best liked orches¬tras playing over the famous “Mag¬ic Carpet” hour. The orche.stra,was organized by Kemp while hewas at North Carolina University. Wilder C. Bancroft, profe.ssor of |Physical Chemistry at Cornell uni- Iversity, has contributed nothing !new or revolutionary to the field of !psychiatry in his recently announced jcure of insanity, according to sci- Ientists at the University. Dr. Ban- |croft has ju9t been awarded the !William H. Nicholls medal of theNew York section of the AmericanChemical society for 1933.Douglas G. Campbell, assistantprofessor of Psychiatry, declared inan inteiwiew yesterday, “The drugs IDr. Bancroft used in his cases wereknown and used before without last- Iing results. What he has accomplish- !ed is to explain why the drugs act jas they do. His di.scoveries derivetheir value from the fact that it ispossible to make diagnoses from the 'theories expounded.” iDr. Bancroft ha.s declared de- 'mentia and drug addiction are cur- jable chemically. Insanity may be Icured through a chemical agent jwhich has an opposite effect of the iagents causing coagulation. jPercival Bailey, professor of Surg- jery, believed Dr. Bancroft’s theoriesto be “too simple, cut and dried.”Fred C. Koch, professor of Physiol¬ogical Chemistry, .stated, “Our sys¬tems in like experiments in the fieldare not as simple as Dr. Bancroftmight have us believe, and as suchhis announcement is not worth muchto the progress of science.” Socialist Club Meets ^Roy Burt, Socialist candidate in1932 for Governor of Illinois, willaddress the Socialist Club at a lun¬cheon in Ida Noyes cloister, tomor¬row, on the subject “Socialists andIllinois.” Mr. Burt, who holds thetitle of Reverend, is a member ofthe National Methodist EducationalCouncil. Assistant Professor May¬nard C. Krueger of the Economicsdepartment will introduce Mr. Burt.Orchesis Gives ProgramOrchesis, rhythms society, willpresent a program of rhythmic in¬terpretations of various sacred com¬positions under the direction ofMarian Van Tuyl Sunday afternoonat 4:30 in the University chapel.The program will be a part of theregular Vesper service. 'The Univer¬sity choir will sing. JERRY MITCHELL TOREPRESENT CAMPUSAS BEAUTY QUEENEnters Contest at CharityBall for NorthwesternSettlement AidY. W, Has Guest SpeakersDescribing her experiences as ateacher in China. Pauline Sage willspeak at the meeting of the Y. W.C. A. World Fellowship group at3:30 today at Ida Noyes hall.DEBATE UNION HOLDSTRYOUTS TOMORROW“Government Regulation of Bank¬ing and Guarantee of Depo.sits,” isthe topic to be discussed tonight at7:30 in Reynolds club, room A bythe University Debating union.Speakers to represent the Univer¬sity in the impending debate withCrane college next month will bechosen at tryouts tomorrow night byMarshall M. Knappen, assistant pro¬fessor of history, who is a sponsorof the union. EVEN LIBRARIESHAVE THEIR RUSHHOURS, IT SEEMSThe University libraries daily ac¬commodate their quota of seekers af¬ter knowledge, but The Daily Ma¬roon inquiring reporter yesterdayunearthed the interesting fact thateven these sedate and academic hid¬ing places of the earnest have theirrush hours. Harper, most popularhaunt of both the purposeful andthe sociable, is most crowded be¬tween 2 and 4. The greatest num¬ber of books are drawn from thislibrary between 2:30 and 3:30 atthe peak of the rush period.The College library is always filledwith students upholding the reputa¬tion of the New Plan, but from 9 to10 and from 2:30 to 3:30 every seatis taken.The Classics library enjoys itslargest attendance in the single hourbetween 2 and 3. The Modem Lan¬guage library in Wieboldt and theClassics library are most crowdedbetween 10 and 12 and 2 and 4. Maroon to CampaignAgainst Parking ofCars on QuadranglesApproximately one percent of the \car owners at the University areflagrantly disregarding the rule thatthere is to be no parking in thequadrangles. With the great bulkof the University drivers incon¬veniencing themselves by findingother parking space and keeping thecircle and its subsidiaries free fromtraffic. The Daily Maroon feels itnece.ssary to resume its campaignagainst violators.A list of offenders will be print¬ed in these columns daily in orderto aid in lessening this nuisance.Among yesterday’s culprits were: aBuick, five passenger sedan, statelicense—^1,518, city vehicle taxnumber—A257620; and a Buick,five passenger brougham, state li¬cense—287.844, city vehicle taxnumber—A282699.Wayne Laverty of the departmentof 'Buildings and Grounds yesterdaymade the statement, “There are noexceptions to the no-parking rule.” Jerry Mitchell, class of ’33, hasbeen selected as the beauty queen torepresent the University at North- ;western University’s charity carnival-ball Friday evening from 8:30 to |3 at the Aragon ballroom, on Law- Irence Avenue near Broadway. A 'beauty queen from each of the Big iTen campuses has been selected, and ia committee headed by Ben Bemiewill .select the “Big Ten BeautyQueen” from these representatives.Jerry Mitchell was selected byCollege Humor magazine, local spon¬sors of the contest. Pictures of the iqueens will appear in the March i.s- isue of that magazine. jBernie Cummins and Wayne King jand their orchestras will furnish jthe music for the ball, while Ben iBernie will act as master of cere- ,monies. Two complete stage shows 'during the evening will include such inotables as: Vincent Lopez, LillianReynolds, Robert Royce, Dean |Janis, and Curry and DeSylvia. |Proceeds from the affair will goto the Northw^e.stern University Set- |tlement. William Hennings is serv¬ing as general chairman, and Mrs.Melvin Traylor is general women’schairman. Tickets may be purchas¬ed at the Marshall Field store inChicago or Evanston for $3.50 untilFriday. At the door tickets will be \$5. 'j “Nearly all periods of social dis-! content in the world’s history haveI been caused by the effort to en-force outmoded standards of morals! and ethics.”I Thus did Dean Shailer MathewsI explain the present state of socialturmoil in his lecture last evening inthe Oriental Institute. The lecture,“The Worth of the Individual,” wasthe first of a series to be presentedby Dean Mathews on “Christianityand the Changing Morals” eachTuesday night for the next fourweeks.Morals LagThe morals of a people. DeanMathew’S said, tend to lag behind so¬cial and economic change; hence thediscontent and unhappiness occasion¬ed when the standards of a peoplewill meet the problems of a new or¬der. To exemplify the grief andmisery occasioned by outwoi-n so¬cial mores he pointed to the con¬ditions in England following the In¬dustrial Revolution.He pointed out that a person couldobey the ten commandments as lit¬erally as it would be po.ssible to con¬form to them today and still hardlybe considered respectable.Man Not a MachineThe difficulty with the system ofmores in vogue at present, he con¬tinued, is that a constant effort hasbeen made by philosophers and thebiological scientists of the past gen¬eration to recognize the humangroup as overshadowing in import¬ance the concept of individual worthand personality. Biology, he stress¬ed, has attempted to interest manin the light of a machine, colorlessand soulless; our social system tendsmore and more to treat man as amechanical attendance to the forcesof production.“We’ve been trying to live,” hesaid, “so that the forces of mechan¬ical production overshadow the in¬dividual worth of human lives. Toavoid social chaos and unlimited mis¬ery, we must reorganize our systemso that economic, political, and so¬cial forces are directed to the devel¬opment of individual worth.”“In a word,” Professor Mathewsconcluded, “human value must be¬come an end. not a means.”JAMES W. LINN OPENSSERIES OF LECTURESThe first lecture of a series on“Secrets of the Novelist,” sponsoredby the University college, was de¬livered last night by James WeberLinn at 6:45 at the Art Institute.The topic for the talk was “Secretsof the Scene.”Subsequent lectures will be givenat the same place and time eachTuesday until March 14 by Mr. Linn.The subjects for the remaining fouraddresses will be other “Secrets.”Here’s How the Friars Book WasWritten and What' It’s All AboutA. C. NOE TO SPEAKAT MIUTARY CLUBAdolf C. Noe, associate professorof Paleo-botany and one of the menwho is credited with the organizationof the University’s military unit,will be the speaker at the monthlymeeting of Military Club, tonight at7:30 in Eckhart 133.Mr. Noe will tell the club of thedevelopment of Chicago’s unit, anddiscuss the old Austrio-Hungarianarmy under the monarchy. He wasan officer in that organization. When Charles Newton and JohnHolloway, authors of the recentlyselected 1933 Blackfriars book, .start¬ed to produce the manuscript, theyrealized that they could do one oftwo things: they could work sporad¬ically over a long interval, or theycould put in concentrated effort fora week and achieve practically thesame result.The latter course was the one thatwas most appealing. So, whenChristmas vacation rolled atround,the co-authors buckled down towork. For six solid days they didnothing but write a Blackfriarsbook. Six days meant practicallytwenty-four hours a day, with timeout for only an occasional cup ofcoffee. New Year’s Eve came; butall it meant to Newton and Hollo¬way was December 31. At 12 o’clockthey stood up and stretched: “Hohum, it’s 1933,” and went back towork. As the deadline drew near their efforts became slightly morefrantic. But at last came the finish,glorious relaxation, and the sub¬mitting of the book.The book, according to Holloway,was evolved from four characters.These characters shaped the plot asthey went along. They live, laugh,and love;—and pull fast ones inEgypt, the time-w’orn land of theancient Pharaohs.The plot centers around a tombreputed to contain a valuable stone.Representatives of the Universityare trying to get possession of thejewel. But of course the villain—arepresentative of another univer¬sity, also with dark desigrns on thetomb’s contents—oppose them.The show will contain memnonsand mummy cases; and its audiencewill see a battle between agents ofthe rival colleges staged within thetomb, while the ghosts of long-dead(Continued on page 2)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1933iailg Hlarnnn >FOUNDED m 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published morninga except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springauarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a yearthree cents. $4 by mail. Single copies: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 EditorTOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSJane Bieeenthal Robert HerzogMelvin Goldman David C. LevineWilliam Goodstein Eklward W. NichoUonBetty Hanaen Eugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. Montgomery Vincent MewmaaEld ward G. SehallcrSOPHOMORE EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn Barden Robert Hasterlik Robert OshinsHoward HudsonDavid KutnerRoy LarsonDorothy LoebDan MacMaaterDugald McDougallTom BartonNorman BeckerClaire DanzigerAmoa DtM'insonNoel Gerson Howard RichSue KichardaonJeanette RifasWilliam TraynorFlorence WiahnickSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman Fred Gundrom William O'DonnellAlbert Ten Eycke William Loienthal Robert SamuelsNight Editor: Eugene PatrickAssistant: Howard P. HudsonWednesday. February 15, 1933THIS BUSINESS OF PUBLISHING ANEWSPAPERPrompted by occasional inquiries from appar¬ently interested and sometimes skeptical friendsor readers of this newspaper concerning the innerworkings of The Daily Maroon office, or aboutthe amount of time Daily Maroon staff membersdevote to their tasks, the writer wishes to outlinein this issue what happens in Lexington hall eachday in order that there may be a copy of TheDaily Maroon in your hands at 8 every morning.This is not written to boast of hard labors, nor toexcuse mistakes that are inevitably made. It isoffered for purposes of information.There is no other student activity on this cam- !pus that requires of its participants the continu- ious routine work and attention to detail that is |demanded of those on the staff of The Daily Ma- Iroon. There is no other activity on this campus 'that necessitates the presence of five students at aprinting shop until 3 a. m. every morning a Ma- 'roon is published. There is no other student activ¬ity that offers its product to the campus one hun-;dred and twenty-five times a year—every edition jbeing a completely new expression of student tal- 'ent and effort. jThat is the task performed four times a week Ithroughout the year by a staff that at present jnumbers nearly fifty students. Of these, six are !seniors, fourteen are juniors, and the balance aresophomores and freshmen. Twenty-five of thejuniors and sophomores are engaged every dayin writing the thirty or thirty-five articles and fea¬tures which appear in the Maroon’s columns withevery issue. Eight of them arc special writersassigned to definite beats—the President’s office.Dean of Student’s office, concerts and lectures, etc.—which must be covered daily in order to securefor subscribers the constant items of informationabout University life, administratfon and progress.In the editorial office of the Maroon, four of theseniors work from four to six hours a day—oneacting as executfi^e director of the entire organiza¬tion, another as a managing editor who makes upthe front page and decides what stories shall gointo the paper, a third whose responsibility is toedit and correct all material that is to appear, anda fourth whose task is to direct the twenty-fivewriters who must be carefully assigned to cover thehundreds of stories which are the news of the quad¬rangles each week.In the business office, there are two other seniorsdirecting the solicitation of advertising from sev¬eral hundred merchants and firms throughout thecity, and caring for the circulation of the paper.Ten or twelve students are working under them,making financially secure a newspaper that costs$7,000 a year to publish and that for thirty yearshas been successfully maintained by student enter¬ prise, and student enterprise alone. In this businessoffice there is transacted as great an amount of de¬tail as in the editorial department. There is “adcopy” to write, cuts to secure, accounts to solicit,want ads to handle, books to be kept and billsto be mailed.At 6 every day, practically all this editorial ma¬terial and advertising matter has been sent to theprinter, and the majority of the staff is dismissed, jThe material they have prepared, in its aggregate !totals over seven thousand words every day—one ;hundred and twenty-five term papers a yearlBut several students still have their night shiftto perform. One of them will probably cover anevening event—providing a report of a lecture or |a review of some play for your morning reading, |although the article will not be completed until :after midnight. Four others work at the printing -shop each night until about 2 a. m., reading proof, |making up pages, and supervising productioiT of jthe paper in its last stages. IThe next morning, there will be two members jof the circulation staff coming on duty at 6:45 to idistribute the paper in campus mail boxes and 'throughout the University neighborhood. iThis, then, is a brief outline of the task that |The Daily Maroon staff performs every twenty- ;four hours Other organizations call upon the time ;and energy of their students during seasonal *periods, only. The Maroon staff works the year ^’round.We have not mentioned a number of “extra- ,curricular’’ tasks performed by various divisionsof the Maroon organization. Among them wouldbe included the Theater Ticket Bureau, member¬ship in and contribution to a college press newsservice, promotion of various campus eventsthrough Maroon facilities, and the sponsoring ofsuch University features as the straw presidentialpoll this fall and the recent concert for the benefitof the Student Relief Fund.Such is the business of publishing a studentnewspaper.— W. E. T. Authors Explain How1933 Friars Book WasWritten in Six Days(ContinuMl from p*ge 1)Egyptians hold up their mummifiedhands in shocked horror. In fact,their bodies probably turn aroundin their graves so fast that werepulleys attached, kilowatts wpuld bedeveloped! (Page the technocrats).Thus in the name of Blackfriarssacrilege is committed: the buryinggrounds of a past civilization areused as the .scene for a musical com¬edy in which men are men and soare women. MODEIIN ADVERTISEililEVIVES IGE-OLDINTEIIEST IN MtGIC AnnouncingI TTie Travelling BazaarlI By Jerry Jontry |m!iiiuiiiiiiHi!iiHiiiHiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiii!HiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiii«iiHiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiniiniiiiii!iiiiiiiuiiiH(iiiii:iHiiii/ SEEWalking home with Leonard Coulson of SigmaChi we met two men attempting to push a big carout of the circle. “C’mon”, says Coulson, “We’llhelp ’em”. So we waded out in the snow andpushed but no go. “I’m going home,” I said fin¬ally, but Coulson stayed. Two blocks later hecaught up again, “What did you stay for?” “Ihad to,” Coulson replied, “that was my prof.”♦ ♦ ♦SAY PRUNESMrs. Dorothy ChajAine Hall didn’t know whatto have for breakfast. Her mother suggestedprunes but cautioned her to soak them over night.Next day Mrs. Chapline asked how the prunes hadtasted. “Oh, they weren’t so good,*' replied Doro¬thy, “I don’t think soaking helps much.’’ “But—didn’t—a—you cook them?’’ inquired her mother.The late coed looked surprised and said, “No, areyou supposed to?’’ i'♦ * ♦DID YOU KNOW THATTnere is a girl in Blackstone Hall with a coatof purple Lapin that is really purple? Some onesaid, “She dyed it”. And someone else said,“Then she ought to bury it.” But I hope shedoesn’t, ’cause I like it; color is what we needon this campus—I’m sick of white.A boy on campus received the following tele¬gram? “Am worried about the weather—are youcomfortable dear,”—signed “Mother”. Of coursehe’s comfortable—every child a happy child atChicago.Gerry Manaster is a nice girl who went westto Lewis first and then to Chicago and she is nowcarrying four subjects? Most of us go here firstand then to Lewis—and then only carry one ortwo.The Washington Prom band wagon went byBentley’s 11 o’clock midterm yesterday? Ben^’eystopped writing on the board, stepped to the win¬dow, and then said to the class—“That’s civiliza¬tion”.Mary Schultz wears open-work sandals whenit snows so her feet will dry out faster? Smartgirl—comes from Beardstown, Ill.President Hutchins was not the man at theMike of the loud speaker either in the Washing¬ton Prom wagon or at Cobb Hall, yesterday?* * *A new racket is taking license numbers of stuckcars and then calling up owners and offering topull them out for a nominal fee. Jack Harris lefthis car out in the snow for three days and didn’ttell his father. The third day a man called Mr.Harris and offered to pull his car out, “Pull mycar out—why it’s in the garage,” said Mr. Harris.“Oh, no it isn't,” said the nasty man, “it’s parkedunder two feet of snow in front of 5725 Wood-lawn.” Jack was last seen buying a shotgun anda pair of blood hounds. SECOND STRINGTRACKMEN LOSETO ARMOUR TECHThe second contingent of the Ma¬roon track team received a workoutand, incidentally, a trimming at thehands of the trackmen from ArmourTech yesterday afternoon in thefieldhouse. Armour, winning by a jscore of 5'6 to 39, placed first in six jof the nine events. Three first Istring men who participated for the jUniversity, Milo, Varkala, and Fair¬banks, won their respective events, ihowever. jThe firsts and seconds for theMaroons were as follows: Milo, firstin the mile run; Varkala, first in thetwo mile run; Fairbanks, first in the880 yard run. Howard, second inthe 100 yard dash; Rudolf, second inhigh and low hurdles; Groebe, sec¬ond in the two mile run; Jackson,second in the broad jump; and Wal-denfels, second in the 880 yard run. Our age-old interest in magic hasI been revived recently in the news-I papers.The earliest human records showI that our ancestors stood in awe ofj the high prie.sts of magic who1 claimed to make it rain or shine, orI cure disea.se, or produce boy babies,j through their magic control 'ofsecret forces in nature.In our own day, people still de¬light to hear the skillful patter-talkof the stage magician or conjurer,and watch him as he pretends todefy nature in performing his as¬tonishing trick.s.This interest in magic tricks andtheir expanation is utilized as thebackground of a new advertisingcampaign just released by a cigar¬ette manufacturer.Featuring the fact that “It’s Funto be Fooled . , . It’s More Fun toKnow” the advertiser deplores theuse of “trick” claims in modern ad¬vertising and discusses the import^ance of making a high quality prod¬uct.You have doubtless seen many ofthese magic tricks performed on thestage. Their names are colorful.“Houdini’s Milk-Can Escape,” the“Three Headed Woman,” “The Hu¬man Cricket.’ and the famous “Saw¬ing Woman in Half,” are only a fewwhich are being dramatized in thenewspapers. BUFFETDINNERDANCES!Every Wednesday night (begin¬ning February 15th) HotelsWindermere will hold a delight¬ful Buffet Dinner Dance in theMain Dining Room of Winder-mere Ea.st. Help yourself to allthe grand food you want from6:00 to 9:30 P. M.—and danceto the strains ofWaddy Wadworfh*sOrchestraAll for only1 perpersonThe student dramatic group at theUniversity of Michigan, “Mimes,”has been discontinued owing to lackof funds. PLEDGINGSigma announces the pledging ofDorothy Grimes. Please telephone your reservationFairfax 6000Ifotels ‘||indermere^hicogo56th St. at Hyda Park BoulevardTelephone FAIrfax 6000Ward B. James, Managing DirectorCOME TO THE PROM!It Is Less Than One Week Away!THE WASHINGTON PROM.IT’S ONLY SIX DAYS AWAY.GET A BID — GET A DATE.REMEMBER — HAL KEMP,CONGRESS, A MIDNIGHTSUPPER, FLOOR SHOW. ANDVINCENT LOPEZ.$4.50 IS THE PRICE OF A BIDON SALE AT THE BOOK STORES,INFORMATION OFFICE,AND FRATERNITIES.THE WASHINGTON PROMTUESDAY, FEB. 21EVER YBOD TS GOING!f cTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15. 1933 Page ThreeTHE UNIVERSITY WOMANW.A.A. PresentsRevue of FashionTwice TomorrowModels Display Styles fromCostume Workshop. 3Loop Stores.ftOld fashions and new, rare oldcostumes and the most modern ofevening gowns, sport clothes, andafternoon frocks will be displayed atthe W. k. A. style show tomorrowin Ida Noyes hall, at 12 and 3:30.Afternoon and evening gowns arebeing e.xhibited by the Aimee shop;Field’s is showing sports apparel;and Carson’s is cooperating in fur¬nishing riding habits, .swimmingsuits, and beach pajamas. The co.s-lumes are being modeled by PeggyWillis. .Agnes Adair, Barbara Bell,Helen Randall. Katharine Uierssen,Molly Mason, Kay Wendt, AudreyWest berg, Bettyann Nelson, EleanorPorter, Betty Buckley, Jean Graves,Alice Johnson, Marianne Garlick,Agnes Weed, Gertrude Fox, PearlFo'ter, Margaret Washburne, andKliiabeth Lansburgh. These modelswere chosen by the W. A. A. Advis¬ory board upon the suggestions ofth( various W. A. A. organizations.A special feature of the show willhe the di.splay of old-fashionedgowns of all types, most of themfrom the workshop of Mrs. Minna.Schmidt, instructor in Costumology.Mr>. Schmidt and Lou Williamshavt cooperated with Robert Fenzelin securing these costumes, whileAnn .Meyer assisted in preparingthe modern di.splay.Eleanor Wilson will furnish theinu.sic during the performance. TheW. A. A. Fre.shman committee,headed by Ann Meyer, will serve teaafter the afternoon show. Ticketsare 20 cents and are on sale in thewomen’s dormitories. SOCIETYhyElizabethAnd so, what with yesterday be¬ing Valentine day, we .suppose you(yes, and you too,) have been dulyvalentined already. However, happyvalentines, or whatever it is, to allyou nice children who go places .sothe Society editor ha.s something towrite about. That includes:Edd.v Geagan and Camille Heineckand Bill Peter.^ion. Jones (Bobby)and Peggy Moore, Julian Jacksonand Marie Connors, and Bill Harsheand Evelyn Schultz at the Cafe deAlex Friday. (Bill, as everyoneknows, is publicity manager for thecafe; and it’s one of our most cher¬ished ambitions to catch him some¬where else, just so we can use thegag about the restaurant man whowent out to dinner.)Also at the Cafe were Roy James,the old roisterer, Milt Olin and Bet¬ty Robinson, Rudy Bretz and HelenHiett. W'ally Montgomery and IsabelKennedy, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Adams—Mrs. Adams used to be DorothyDunaway—Warren Martinson andJean Jordan. Maxine Nowak andJohn T. Holloway. And there wasa waltz contest and a fox-trot con¬test, and John and Maxine and Miltwere judges. Jack Dille got a won¬derful (adv.) bonbon box out ofthe waltz race, Wally Montgv,.iierywon some hand.some vv^.^e irons forfox-trotting and Ernie Brown pulleddown a bottle of perfume.At the Urban room the .same nightoccurred the urbane Phi Beta Deltaformal. Also at the Urban room,Phil White and Lorraine Watson,Haydon Wingate and Betty Schmidt,Bill Dee and Ruth Thompson, RalphWeb.ster and Harriet Henneberry,Fred Gundrum and Jane Bradley,Gene Foster and Lizzy Walker, RayZenner and Dorothy Trude, BobSchmidts and Betty Patterson. Ham(Continued OB pago 4) W.A.A.—^MirrorFeature StyleNotes of Past WOMEN’S READING HABITS REVEALHOMEMAKINC IS CENTER OF INTERESTThe Mirror, tracing its past fromthe seven years after its inceptionunder W. A. A., presents a displayof costume accessories from thoseannual revues this afternoon at thestyle show. One or two articlesfrom each production are being ar¬ranged with appropriate placardswhich indicate the particular numberand year of the Mirror from whichit was taken.To represent the 1926 revue, apair of spats, a cane and derby hat,typical of accessories the womenwore in playing men’s roles, havebeen selected. These are reminis¬cent of th song “Men of the Cam¬pus.’’'Barbaric jewelry, typical of the“Africa’’ number remembered fromthe “What Ho!’’ of 1931, is like¬wise on display. In high contrast,the most appropriate accessory fromla.st year’s “All’s Fair,’’ was thebaby bonnet Pat Magee wore as theinfant son in “A Theater Guild Pro¬duction,’’ the O’Neill satire. Woman’s chief interest is still herjob as homemaker, according to1400 Chicago women, whose news¬paper reading habits have beenstudied by James F. Palmer, profes¬sor of Marketing, in cooperation withThe Chicago Daily News.This conclusion was reached byProfe.ssor Palmer, after he had in¬terviewed 1400 middle-class house¬wives chosen at random throughoutthe city as to what articles they hadactually read in the last issue ofone of both leading Chicago news¬papers. Professor Palmer found thatthe most frequently read articleswere not those with the biggestheadlines, but those which touched ;women’s home interests.The most popular articles in theorder of mention were as follows:household hints; a health column; asyndicated article on child training;a column of reader’s comment onnews; a foreign correspondent; asyndicated column of personal ad¬vice; a cooking column; a beautyfeature; home decoration; and a hu¬morous column written by a woman.The position of the articles in thepaper was no indication of theirpopularity with women readers, ac¬ cording to Professor Palmer. “Wom¬en read what interests them, no mat¬ter where it may be placed in thepaper,’’ he stated.While a front page cartoon caughtthe eye of the greatest number ofreaders—83 per cent of those whosaw the paper—the most frequentlyread section of the newspapersstudied were those devoted to wom¬en’s home, fashion, and social inter¬est in the Daily News, and it isplaced rather far back in the paper.Moreover, a small column of house¬hold hints, brief notes contributedby the reader, was the most fre¬quently read feature of the section.Women are inclined to devote agreat deal of time to newspaperreading, it appears from the survey.More than half the News readerssaid they spent one hour or more aday on its pages, while 45 per centof the Tribune readers said theyspent the same amount of time inits perusal. Only about 15 per centof the readers of both journals spentless than half an hour, thus placingabout 85 per cent in the groupspending one-half hour or more dailyon their favorite Chicago papers. Business OffersNewChancesforCollege Women“Women with training and abilityare going to have more opportunityin business than ever before,’’ stat¬ed Anne Brewington, assistant pro¬fessor of Secretarial Training in theSchool of Busine.ss, in a recent in¬terview concerning busine.ss as a vo¬cation for women.She discussed the results of threesurveys of women in business, madein the last few years, which showthat the more training women have,the greater are the responsibilitiesthey can take and the higher are thesalaries they leceiv^. One surveywas made of women graduates ofthe School of Business here, anotherwas made at the University of Mich¬igan, and the third was made in con¬nection with the Hoover Report onSocial Trends.Professor Brewington is making astudy of the particular duties ofwomen in business positions. She hasbeen instrumental in the developmentof the direct method of teaching.ehorthand, and is now preparing abook on the subject.DOLLAR SALEofBOOKS and STATIONERYat Woodwind’sriA. -.ASee what $1.00 will buy here.If you are looking for real bargains-herethey are!Just to mention a few bargain tables—DOLLAR BARGAIN TAUENo. 175c—2 for $1.00. 500 PopularCopyrights — Burt Home Library—Fiction and Miscellaneous Books.Val. to $2.50. For this sale—75c each 2 for $1*00DOLLAR BARGAIN TABLENo. 2Pocket Classics — Fiction — Mis¬cellaneous gift books. Speciallypriced for this sale at—50c each 3 for $1.00 ^DOLLAR BARGAIN TABLENo. 3Over 600 titles. New books already specially priced! Lach titleis now reduced 25% during this sale only! Includes Biography,History, 4'ravel, Classics, Arts. Includes many beautiful bindingsthe book lover will treasure. An opportunity to build a library atvery low cost.Just a few of the bargains—Williams—The Great AstronomersArabian Nights—Complete—Lane Trans.•Smith—Human History•Sliakespeare—V^eiius and Adonis ^Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam(-oronados ChildrenWritings of Anatole FranceBaker—Woodrow Wilson—2 volWoodworth’s Book StorePrice SpecialList Sale...$6.00 $1.50... 7.50 1.88... 5.00 1.88... 5.00 1.88... 4.00 1.50... 3.00 1.00... 5.00 1.68... 10.00 3.351311 S7th St.near Kimbark Ave. Dorchester 4800Open EveningsWE DELIVER Now You Wouldn't Tell A Lie!You DO Want to Be SMARTClothes Perfectfor THE WASH NGTON PROMAs You Are! — inthis Rough CrepeEveningFrock. . . with mousseline desoie collar—and sleevesthat are almost angelic—(except for the hugeblack dots!) This stun¬ning waistline fn^tck isstrictly silhouette—richblack rough crepe. Adramatic new fashion.Fifth floor, Chicago Store—and Eiwuton IVomen’s Shopm 50★Lovely, SheerHosieryfor theWASHINGTON PROMMcCallum Hose of beau¬tifully sheer, 2 threadtissue chiffon—the smartnew “turf tan” shade.79c 3 pr,$Z25Rollins Lace Top withrunstop feature. Sheerchiffon from top to toe.A new color—ocrebeige.15 pair ALL 4 HUB STORES OPENSATURDAY EVENINGS.THE(!®p)HUB Smart Single orDouble BreastedTuxedos{Coats and Trousers)Correct in every line,expertly tailored of finefabrics. The trousers arepleated or without pleats.An honest super value!$295®Full Dress *39★Men’s FormalFurnishingsfor theWASHINGTON PROMDress Shirts 5Pique bosom, CSA1 or 2 studs,Dress TiesButterfly withpointed ends, XDress Sets *White or smc4cedpearl links, studs, ^Dress Scarfs *Plain white or QC|[black and white,Dress Gloves*3.50Gray Suede--and White Kid.Henry C. Lytton & SonsState and Jackson:CHICAGO Orrington and ChurchEVANSTON Marion and LakeOAK PARK Broadway and FifthGARYDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1933(Advertisement)THE SOCIALWHIRL(By Doctor Elizabeth Peterson) ALPHA BELT, $. A. E.,PHI BELT, B. HIGHWIN l-M CAGE TILTS Today on theQuadrangles Fencers Out for Revenge in DualMeet with Northwestern TonightOh. my dears, last Friday eveningat the CAFE de ALEX was too jducky for words. Simply everyone jwas there; just everyone and a Mor- !tar Board, too. Jeannie Jordan and !Warren Martinson, Eddie Geaganand Camille Heineck, Julian Jack- json and Marie Connor, Isabel Ken- Inedy and Walter Montgomery, !Bobby Jones and Peggy Moore, |Helen Heitt and Rudolph Bretz, Mr. jand Mrs. Fred Adams, Evelyn jSchultz and Doctor Harshe, MaxineNowak and John Holloway, BettyZeigler and Charles Newton, RoyJames, and the ladies of the ensem- !ble, all partook of the fun offered ;by the genial Mr. Alexander. Yousimply have no idea!And then the entertainment: Af- iter the new floor show which has as jits theme the Old World’s Fair (with !a Florodora Sextette and every-!thing), the campus celebrities tookcharge. Milt Olin mastered the cere- ^monies, and although Gerry Mitchellsays he screws his mouth about too ^much when announcing, we thought'it was swell. And as fast as WaltMontgomery knocked them downwith his agile footsies, Dorothy 'Dunaway would burn them up with .a torrid blues song or twu ai' three. |Efrnie Brown, the old southern maes- |tro, sang a coupla numbers, amongthem “Mv <>.d Fraternity Pin.” Did |Izzy Kennedy blush? How unfortun- iate. And the jolly old Operatic jQuartette performed as always, and ,Alfredo and Dolores have changed |their rhumba to a tango, besides :giving an Apache interpretationthat is nobody’s business.Next week end will see the merry- ,mad play boys and their pals back 'at the Cafe de Alex at 80 W. Ran- :dolph for fun and stuff. The same ioffer of a fifteen percent reduction jby the management by presenting Iyour tuition receipt still holds good.All the Haute Monde (a corruption Iof the old Scotch ‘Hoot Mon’) will ,be there. And A1 TenEyck of Chi :Psi has been added to the former ibill and will sing if his laryngitis |gets better. Otherwise he will crohn. jCome on down. Earl Hoffman (The |Old Punster) and his Columbia chaingang provide the music. Some fun, jhey, kid? Tonight’s Games8:15 Phi Sigma Delta vs. Ponies9:00 Medics vs. Burton 300Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta,Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and UniversityHigh were victors in the Intramuralbasketball games played yesterdayin Bartlett gym. ^By virtue of theirvictories, these teams came one stepnearer the championship.The Alpha Delts defeated ChicagoTheological Seminary 14-10 in thefirst game of the day. Play was closewith Bill Cassels and McGee play¬ing outstanding games for the AlphaDelts.Phi Delta Theta overwhelmed theBurton 500 team by the one-sidedscore of 47-7 in the first game ofthe evening. The game was a routfrom the opening bell with the PhiDelts leading 29-2 at the half. Peter¬sen scored 16 points, Cimral rangup 12, and Aufdenspring accountedfor 10 in the victors’ scoring column.Sigma Alpha Epsilon put on asecond half rally to gain a 24 to9 victory over Phi Beta Delta. Playwas even during the first half, butin the last period the S. A. E.’seasily outplayed their opponents. A1Pitcher starred for S. A. E. with 10points.The Dekes w’ere trimmed by thefast-moving University High teamin the last game bv the count of23-13.HILL’S CAFETERIAil65>75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 35cSunday Dinner 50cServed on 2nd Floor Shaughnessy toRetain FootballCoaching SquadClark D. Shaughnessy, newly ap¬pointed Maroon football coach, willretain all the present assistantcoaches in football for next year atleast, he disclosed recently.Mr. Shaughnessy was officiallynamed as head coach by the Boardof Trustees and given the title ofassistant professor of Physical Cul¬ture and athletics after its monthlymeeting Thursday. He was chosenby athletic director Thomas N.Metcalf after an extensive survey ofthe coaching field.In deciding to keep the presentcoaches, Mr. Shaughnessy figuredthat their knowledge of players’ per¬sonalities and abilities would helphim to a great extent in gettingstarted at the University and in mak¬ing his first year a success. The stallTincludes Pat Page, who was CoachStagg’s assistant and head linecoach; Nels Norgren, backfieldcoach; and Otto Strohmeir, endcoach. Coach Shaughnessy willprobably be in Chicago within thenext week in order to make arrange¬ments for spring practice April 3. The Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:Melvin L. Goldman. Assistant: DanMacMaster.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel. “The Power ofPoverty,” Professor J. T. McNeill.At 12 in Joseph Bond chapel.Phonograph concert. Choral selec¬tions from Bach’s Mass in B Minor.At 12:30 in Social Science assemblyhall.Vesper service, Clara Schevill,contralto soloist. At 5 in the Univer¬sity chapel.Religious Education club, “Char¬acter Education in the PublicSchools,” Principal Gilbert H.Wilkerson, Fort Dearborn school..4t 7:30 in Swift Common room.Undergraduate OrganizationsEl Circulo Espanol, musical pro¬gram. At 4 in Ida Noyes hall.University Debating union. At 7in room A of Reynolds club.Freshman Executive council. At12:30 in North room of Ida Noyeshall.Phi Delta Upsilon. At 12 in theAlumni room of Ida Noyes hall.Astratro. At 2:30 in Ida Noyeshall.Y. W. C. A. World Fellow’shipgroup. At 3 :30 in Ida Noyes hall.Y. W. C. A. Intercollegiate group.At 3:30 in the North room of IdaNoyes hall.Arrian. At 3:30 in Ida Noyes Wic¬ker room.Public LecturesDivision of the Social Science.'.“Social Psychology and Social In¬stitutions. The Incoordination Be¬tween Individual Emotional Drive.sand Social Institutions,” ProfessorCharles H. Judd. At 3:30 in the So¬cial Science assembly ha.i.“Our Physical World. Surface.sand Life.” Associate Profes.sor R. W.Gerard. At 7:30 in Eckhart hall.(Part of downtown lecture series.)Departmental OrganizationsGraduate Club of Economics andBusiness, Dinner. “Some Aspects ofthe Transportation Problem.” Pro¬fessor Lew’is C. Sorrell. At 6:30 inIda Noyes.Junior Mathematical Club. “TheDetermination of Sets of Integersof a Certain Rational Division Al¬gebra.” Mr. G. C. Weber. At 4:30in Eckhart 209.MiscellaneousFaculty W’omen’s luncheon. At 12in Ida Noyes hall.Chess Exhibition. Samuel Reshev-sky, national ranking chess player.At 7:15 in North Lounge, Reynoldsclub.SOCIETY44 QUALIFY FOR FREETHROW SECOND ROUNDTOURISTis '"High Hat" on thesegreat ships to EUROPEHigh hat? Yes! It’s the top class nowon the famous Minnewdska, Minnetonka,Pennldnd and fVestemland. The formertwo were, until recently, restricted exclu¬sively to First Qass passengers, and thelatter were Cabin ships.Now, you pay the low Tourist Qass rateand have the run of the ship—the beststaterooms, the finest public rooms, thebroadest decks, all unchanged, just asthey were before. Rates from ^106.50,one way 1^189 up, round trip), and, ifyou act quickly, for ^lo or ^15 pier per¬son over the minimum rate you can havea private bath! Regular weekly sailingsto Southampton, Havre and Antwerp.^pply to your I'tcal agent—the travel authority in your communityRED STAR LINEInlonurtlonal Morcantlla Marina Company Only 44 of the more than 200university men trying out in the In¬tramural free-throw contest havemanaged to sink the fifteen out oftwenty-five shots necessary to quali¬fy for the second round. The tenmen making the best scores in thistwenty-five-shot second round willmake up the final bracket, and willbe entered in the similar city-widecontest being sponsored by the DailyTimes.Trevor Weiss of Phi Beta Delta,and M. Lynch of Phi Pi Phi eachsank 21 out of 25 free-throws tolead the first-round scoring. Phi BetaDelta is favored to cop the teamtrophy.SUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROON (Continued from page 3)Abrams and Jane Hempleman, BillTraynor and Sue Richardson, BillHeitman and Sooky Wegner, FranWilson and Barbara Graf, and RoyAyres and Sara Gwin were in andout during the course of the even¬ing.For lots of good, wholesome fun,try giving a progressive party dur¬ing a cold wave, as Nu Sigma Nudid last Saturday. Think of DeborahLibby, getting in and out of carriageboots fifty times during the evening...Betty Patterson doing the samewith long gloves. .. .and they allended up at the Tropical room ofthe Medinah Athletic Club fordancing.And yesterday had a tea, givenby Mrs. Charles Brook and the Ad¬visory Council of Ida Noyes.The thought for today is, “Whatwould old Saint Valentine say if hecould see the one Maxine Crevlstonsent to Edgie Goldsmith?”RAISE YOUR GRADES! jEXPERT TYPING of Term Papers, |Compositions, Theses, etc., at |lowest possible rates. |ETHEL WITT 5452 Ellis Ave.Phone Hyde Park 1958We invite you toThe Birch Tavern876 East 63rcl StreetThe Restaurant with the North Woods AtmosphereLANTERN LIGHT-COZY BOOTHSClub Breakfast, 20c to 25cLuncheon Served from 11 to 5 P. M., 35c up—From Soup to NutsA 7 Course Dinner Served from 5 to 9 P. M., 50c to 70c The Chicago fencing team will beout to avenge a previous defeatwhen Northwestern invades Bartlett Igym tonight. Earlier in the year the IPurple won from the Maroons,10 1-2-6 1-2, but Coach R. V. Mer¬rill believes that the team has im- ,proved enough since then to beatNorthwestern. iThe fencers are one of the few ;Chicago teams to win consistently. 'For several .vears Maroon fencingteams have finished well up in theconference standings, and this year iare conceded to be title contenders. 'At present the fencers have several wins in dual meets to their credit,the defeat by Northwestern being 1the only serious setback received todate. I“The meet with Illinois, scheduled 'for February 25, will give us a lineon the possibilities of a win in the !conference meet.” ' Coach Merrillsaid yesterday. “Although it is too 'early to predict a victory for Chi- jcago, our chance.s are reasonably jgood.” The Big Ten meet will beheld March 18. |Included among the victories ofthe fencing team is the foil meetof the Amateur Fencers League of America, held January 28. BurtonYoung took first place with Carr andDorinson placing second. Last Sat¬urday, in the Junior Foil champion¬ship meet. Young placed second andCarr and Dorinson reached the finalround.Next Saturday the Junior Epeeand Saber chmpionship meet will beheld at the Lawson Y. M. C. A. Carris entered in the epee event, withYoung and Mann in the saber. Inaddition to the Northw'estern meettonight and the Illinois meet on the28, the fencers are scheduled totake on Washington university ofSt. Louis, traditional opponents ofthe Maroons, March 4 at St. Louis.The only man hurt at the Illinois-Indiana game last year was a cheerleader.by RUTH WILLARDLITTLE THINGSIN A BIG WAYIf you, too, are doing adroit things with a budget, you’ll be particularlyinterested in this shoulder wrap which Lois Cromwell is showing—to thedistinct advantage of a not-too-new formal. It’s not exactly a wrap. . .nor is it a jacket. . .it’s as in-between as the season. This one is ofwhite taffeta and only $6.75. Others—with pert sleeves and brief, mil¬itary fitting backs—come in velvet. Top price, $10.75. We suggest onefor the Pompeian room next Tuesday. We suggest, too, that you selecta color that creates a contrast with your gown.Accessories in general haven’t changed much. . .gloves are still long, ear¬rings, braclets and clips are still right, and bags are still put in your es¬cort’s pocket anyway.MARSHALL FIELD & COMB\Ny