Bailp iinaroonVol. 33. No. 83. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1933SENATE RATIFIESABOLITION OF ALLEXAM SCHEOULESOld Plan Students toBe Graded on S,U, R BasisThe Univer.sity Senate abolished;ill quarterly examination period.-!in its reprular meetinR Saturdaymorning. This rulinpr will go into(ifect immediately, which meansthat there will be no examinationsihedule for the winter quarter. Anyexaminations that may be given inthe future will be given entirely atthe discretion of the individual in¬structor, who may not set a.side anyhut regular class hours for examin¬ation purposes.The Senate also abolished the oldidan sy.stem of grading for studentsin all University undergraduate-chools. New plan symbols. S. U.nnd R, will be used exclusively.Crude points have also been elimin-.ited. This system of grading willa!-!o go into effect with all grade:,( nt out for the winter quarter.Certified by DeansOld plan undergraduate studentswill be certified for graduation andtor honors, including Phi Beta Kap-jia. .scholarships, and so forth, by the(leans and the departments withwhich they are affiliated. ''Until grading was made uniformhy the Senate many students within old plan status were not sure oftheir standing in the University. Inthe past two quarters instructorshave used their own discretion in theawarding of grades, with the resultthat a student was likely to find halfhis grade card marked with old planynibols and the other half with thenew.The abolition of regular examina¬tion periods is in line with the gen¬eral plan of the University to cutdown on quarterly examinations andjioint students toward their examin¬ations for degrees. Repeat SymphonyConcert; FridayNight Sold OutBecause of a complete sellout forthe second quarterly concert of theUniversity Symphony Orchestra, tobe given Friday night in Mandelhall, the concert will be repeatedSaturday night. All proceeds will gointo the Student Scholarship Fund.The program for Friday and Sat¬urday nights consists of “Scherzo”by Ladislaus Gamauf, Tschaikow-sky’s “Symphonie Pathotique,” De«bussy’s ‘Danses sacre et profane,”and the Prelude and excerpts from.4ct III of Wagner’s “Die Mei.ster-' singer von Nurnberg.”Alberto Salvi, world-famous harp¬ist, will play the solo parts of theDebussy selection. The UniversityChorus, which has been trained byCecil Michener Smith, will be heard, in the selections from “Die Mei.ster-singer.” A QUALIFIED MAN FOR MAYORCarl Bricken will conduct the pro- ! is a student.The city of Chicago, leaderless and torn by political factions,today faces a most critical period. With debts totalling manymillions of dollars, with unpaid obligations to its public employeesand school teachers, with waste and inefficiency characterizing itsmany municipal departments, this city is threatened with financialbankruptcy and serious governmental disorganization.The moment calls for scientific management and not for politics.1 he situation demands the administrative ability of a trained' expert in the field of political science and city government.The Daily Maroon urges the consideration of Professor Charles, E. Merriam of this Univ’^ersity for the position of Mayor of Chicagoj in this time of crisis. Versed in the theory and science of govern¬ment, Professor Merriam would at the same time bring to thisI executive post the lessons and practical experience of thirty-twoyears of personal contact with Chicago politics and city affairs.A time of crisis demands the trained theorist and not the bigotedpolitician. But the theorist must be a man possessed of practicalI knowledge gained through personal participation in the field of whichgram, with the exception of the“Scherzo,” which will be conductedby the composer^ I.,adislaus Gamauf,a graduate of the Lkszt Conservatoryin Budapest, and former conductorof the opera there. He i.s at presenta graduate student in the depart¬ment of Music.Main Hoor seats are priced at $1,and balcony .seats at 50 cent.s. Tic¬kets are available for Saturdaynight only.BRUMBAUGH STATESQUALIFICATIONS FORHONOR SCHOLARSHIPSlilackfriars AidsTicket Sale forN. U.’s RevueInitiating an unprecedented co¬operation in .student activities, be¬tween this campus andi the North¬western University, Blackfriars ispon.sorsng a ticket .sales for “HatsOff,” a revue presented by theXorthwestem W. A. A. and the-Men’s Union for the first time thisevening at 8:15. The production isthe annual “W. A. A.-M. U.” presen¬tation.Tickets for the Evanston showmay be purchased at the Blackfriarsoffice in the Reynolds club, fromBlackfriar fraternity representa¬tives, and at the office of The Daily-Maroon. They are priced at 75i ent.«, one dollar, and a ckillar and ahalf. Arthur Margolis, a.ssociatejunior manager of Blackfriars, ha.scomplete charge of the campus sales.Prominent men and women com¬pose the cast of “Hats Off,” PugRentner, all-American football star,und Jim Evans ’play leading roles.The revue will be staged at the audi- ' 'torium of the National College of Addition of two new class roomEducation, in Evanston, each night broadcasts next quarter to the UniA, J. Brumbaugh, dean of Stu¬dents in the College and chairmanof the committee on scholarships andfellowships, announced ye.sterday thequalifications for the award of hon¬or scholarships to fir.st year .studentsin the college under the new planand to .students entering the upperdivisions.Each year 40 honor scholarshipsare awarded to first year studentswho have done excellent work in theUniversity. The Scholarship Com¬mittee has agreed on the followingbasis of award for 1933-34: “To beeligible for a scholarship, a studentmust pa.s« at least three comprehen¬sive examinations, one of which isin a general survey course. TheEnglish qualifying examination willnot be counted as a comprehensive.The average of the grades made inthree comprehensives will be com¬puted; in case more than three aretaken the three highest grades willbe averaged for the student. The 40students who rank highest in theseaverages will be eligible to honorscholarships covering tuition for thesecond year.”Nineteen honor scholarships, eachproviding full tuition for one year,will be available to students whocomplete college requirements andenter their first year in a division.To be eligible for one of these schol-(Continucd on page 2) Charles E. Merriam answers that requirement.For thirty-two years this University professor has led the move¬ment in American political science which shifted the emphasis of thatstudy away from the purely descriptive and historical toward inten¬sive research in the practical problems of government.Alderman of the old 7th ward in 1909 and again in 1913, Pro¬fessor Merriam succeeded in reforming the city’s financial procedureand was chosen republican candidate for Mayor in 1911. His prac¬tical contact with Chicago politics, on the constructive side, has beencontinuous since that time.Here is a man who has investigated and stu<^ied the valuesand theories of the city manager plan, the problems of municipalfinance, the personality factor in political leadership, the defects oflocal police organization, and many other aspects of city govern¬ment.Politicians and their horde of dependents have thrust Chicagointo its current predicament. They have proven themselves unableto extricate the city from this situation. It is logical to demand nowthat politics be waived and a trained man be placed in the executivechair to direct the political and financial rehabilitation of this moderncity.We recommend as that trained man Charles E. Merriam.—W. E. T. MacLeish TalksTonight in FourthMoody LectureArchibald MacLeit;h, member ofthe staff of Fortune and frequentcontributor of poems to AtlanticMonthly, New Republic, Yale Re¬view, and several French publica¬tions, will speak in Mandel hall at8:15 tonight on “Poetry and Revo¬lution” in the fourth WilliamVaughan Moody lecture of the sea¬son. Preceding the lecture, Mr. andMrs. MacLeish will be entertainedat a dinner in the home of Mr, andMrs. James M. Stifler.Mr. MacLeish was born at Glen¬coe, Illinois, in 1892—the year theUniversity was founded. His father,Andrew MacLeish, was a Universitytrustee from 1900 to 1924, vice-president of the Board of Tru.steesfor many years, and donor of twodistinguished service professoi-shipsnow held by William E. Dodd,chairman of the department of His¬tory, and Edwin O. Jordan, chair¬man of the department of Hygieneand Bacteriology.Boxholders at the lecture will be:Mr. and Mrs. William /\. Nitze, Mr.and Mrs. Ferdinand Schevill, Dr.and Mrs. A. B. Hasting.s, Mi's. Wil¬liam Rainey Harper, Mr. and Mrs.Carl D. Buck, Frank O’Hara, Mrs.Gordon J. Laing, and Mr. and Mrs.(Continued on page 2)Merriam Boomed for Mayoralty;Election Is Indefinitely DelayedTwo English CoursesAdded to UniversityPrograms Over Airthis week. Friday evening has beendesignated as “Chicago night.’Madrigal SocietySings Musical SatireThe Chicago premiere of the“Americana,” a mu.sical satire byRandall Thompson, was given lastnight by the University Madrigalgroup under the direction of Ce¬cil M. Smith, assistant profe.ssorof Music. The performance, heldat International House, was partof a concert sponsored by theChicago chapter of the Interna¬tional Society for ContemporaryMusic.The “Americana” consists ofa series of five choral settings fortranscripts from the Americanasection of the “American Mer¬cury.” Its composer, Mr. Thomp¬son, was present for last night’sconcert. versity’s radio program, the successof which may forecast a time whencredit for such courses will be giv¬en through the Home Study depart¬ment, was announced yesterday byAllen Miller, radio director.The new courses are EnglishProse Literature, 1832-1900, to begiven by James Weber Linn, profe.s¬sor of Engli.sh, at 10 oyer WJJD,and Contemporary British Litera¬ture, which Fred B. Millett, associ¬ate professor of English will presentover WMAQ at 11.Profe.ssor Linn’s lecture will dealwith British Prose writers fromThomas Carlyle to George BernardShaw.In his course Professor Millettwill cover the major types of literaryactivity, exclusive of the drama andshort story, of modem Britain.An outline of the lectures of bothcourses will be published in thecomplete spring radio programwhich will be mailed from the radiodepartment upon receipt of 35cents. With the selection of a mayor forChicago indefinitely delayed, thecandidacy of Professor Charles E.Merriam was boomed on campusyesterday. • A study of ProfessorMerriam’s achievements in politicalscience reveals the cause of thisfeeling.“The Government of the Metro¬politan Area of Chicago,” a surveyand analysis of the structure andoperation of all governmental unitswithin a fifty-mile radius of the city,is Professor Merriam’s most recentpublication, appearing last month.This study points out that the Chi¬cago metropolitan area, while it hassocial and economic unity, suffersfrom lack of political unity. Morethan 1600 governmental entities op¬erate in the fifty-mile area, many ofthem overlapping to such an extentas to be wasteful and inefficient.This survey was given practicalas well as theoretical value by thefact that Professor Merriam pointedout how consolidation of overlap¬ping governments could be achieved,to a considerable degree, without ad¬ditional legislation.Professor Merriam served as vice-chairman of President Hoover’sCommittee on Social Trends, whichpublished its findings January 1st,and wrote’ the last chapter of thereport, on the future of governmentin America.Due to a split in the Democraticgroup in the council, election of a UNIVERSITY OFFERSSIX NEW SUMMERTEACHERS’ COURSESBecause of the wides'pread inter¬est among educators in its New Col¬lege Plan, the University will offera group of six special courses forteachers and administrative officersof junior and senior colleges duringthe sum.mer quarter.The development and administra¬tion of the plan will be described indetail by those members of the col¬lege faculty who have been mostclosely concerned with its develop¬ment. There will be a course on thegeneral administrative aspects ofthe plan, one on each of the generalintroductory courses in the biologi¬cal sciences, the humanities, thephysical sciences, and the social sci¬ences, and another dealing with theoperation of the comprehensive ex¬amination system.It has been the policy of the Uni¬versity to make the New Plan gen¬erally available to any colleges thatare interested, and several thou¬sand copies of the syllabi and com¬prehensive examinations used in theeducational reorganization at Chi¬cago have been distributed to ad¬ministrators and teachers. Thecourses offered this summer shouldbe of considerable interest to col¬lege and administrative officers, whowill be able to learn not only howthe plan is working, but also whatparts of it may be adapted to theprograms of their own institutions.Charles E. Merriamtemporary mayor was indefinitelydelayed. A sharp debate yesterdayshowed part of the councilmen ofthe opinion that the law empoweredthem to choose a temporary mayorfrom the council, while others point¬ed out that banking interests wouldnot accept tax warrants signed bya mayor so elected.As a result of this impasse, noaction will be taken until the statelegislature prescribes the method ofthe election.SHOW FRENCH FILM ATINTERNATIONAL HOUSE FARIS RETURNS FROMRESEARCH IN AFRICA“M. de Pourceaugnac,” a Frenchmotion picture adapted from Mo-liere’s play of the same title, will beshown at International House todayunder the joint sponsorship of theHouse and the Renaissance Society.The film will be exhibited this af¬ternoon at 4:30 and tonight at 7and 9.Tickets, priced at 40 cents, maybe obtained at the door, at theRenaissance Gallery, Wieboldt 205,and at the International House Ac¬tivities Desk. Ellsworth Faris, chairman of thedepartment of Sociology, will returnto campus next quarter after sixmonths spent in the Belgian Congo,where he has studied the effect ofwestern civilization 'on the cultureof the natives.For seven years a missionary toAfrica, Mr. Faris returned for hisstudy to the region in which hecarried on his missionary worktwenty-five years ago. He was par¬ticularly interested in the languageof the pygmies. Quakes in CaliforniaRock Seismograph inUniversity BasementA tightly locked, pitch-dark room,relieved only by a thin sliver oflight, houses the seismograph in thebasement of Rosenwald hall. Reflec¬tions from a mirror pulsating withthe vibrations of the earth areetched onto sensitized paper wrappedaround a revolving drum. Usuallythe light moves across the paper ina straight line, but Friday it zig¬zagged in peaks an inch wide record¬ing the Los Angeles disaster. Uni¬versity geologists read the record,and calculated that the temblor was1,830 miles away.According to Rollin T. Chamber¬lin, professor of Geology, the gen¬eral region where an earthquakewill take place can be predicted, butneither the time of the quake northe severity can be foreseen. “Theworld-shakers are almost entirelythe result of settling of the subter¬ranean rocks. The rock fall may oc¬cur as far down in the earth as 25miles,” he said.Incidentally, there was also aquake in Nevada this month, moreintense than the one in California,but no lives were lost. O%Price Three Cent*BURSAR ALLOWTWITHDRAWALS ASBANKS RE-OPENIOffice Resumes Normal! Work After 9 DayMoratoriumI With the re-opening of thirty-twoI closed banks in Chicago the OfficeI of the Bursar, after a week dairingwhich no money wa.s disbursed, re¬sumed normal operations yesterdaymorning. In addition to permittingI withdrawals on student accounts,j the office will ca.sh all checks writ-I ten on banks which were permittedI to open yesterday. As other banksi open, their checks will be honored,; according to William J. Mather,Bursar.The University State ‘Bank, whichwas in a sound financial conditionwhen the Illinois banks were closedon March 4 by proclamation ofGovernor Henry Horner, will prob¬ably resume operation this morn¬ing along with several other statebanks.Federal Reserve RulingAlthough the University had 100, percent cash reserves on hand lastweek to meet student demands, theFederal Reserve Bank of Chicagoruled that student deposit accountscame under the provisions of thei proclamation of the President de-j daring a national banking mora¬torium..Payment' was therefore suspend¬ed, but in order to aid studentscoupon books were issued by theBursar’s Office which were acceptedin payment for goods or services atthe various University stores andeating places. The amount ofcredit advanced will be deductedfrom the students accounts thisweek, and arrangements will bemade for payments by students whodid not carry an account with theBursar’s Office, but who were grant¬ed credit.Crossed CannonSponsor QuestBacked by ClubsCrossed Cannon’s Military Ballsponsor selection will be actively sup¬ported by the women of the campus,it was indicated yesterday as a largenumber of women in each of thefourteen clubs made plans to sub¬mit photographs to the judges ofthe selection.Since the naming of previoussponsors has been partial, CrossedCannon, which has conducted eightprevious Military Balls, this year de¬cided to select its ten sponsors ona basis of charm and personality asevidenced in photographs, whichevery woman is invited to submit. Acommittee of three outstanding andunbiased artists—Mrs. Pauline Palm¬er, a judge in the Chicago Tribune’scontest to select , the Century ofProgress court of honor; PaulTrebilcock; and D. Crafts Watson—has been named to choose the wom¬en.Among the clubs who will be rep¬resented in the largest numbers, ac¬cording to present indications, areWyvern, entering fifteen women, andQuadrangler, entering at least tenmembers.Four Vie in Finalsof Poetry ContestNatalie Gordon, Joseph Ham¬burger, Arthur Heim and JaneWeinreb were selected Fridayfrom more than twenty competi¬tors to take part in the finals ofthe Adams Poetry Reading con¬test. Their final readings will beheld Thursday at 4 in HarperM 11.Natalie Gordon read AmyLowell’s “Patterns;” JoseK^ Ham¬burger read excerpts from Ben-et’s “John Brown’s Body;” Ar¬thur Heim read selections from“Tannhauser” and Lovelace’slyric, “To Lucasta on Going tothe Wars;” and Jane Weinrebread “Plaint of Complexities” byEunice Tietjens.The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of ChicsKo, published morninKS except Saturday«Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenueSubscription rates i $2.50 a year ; S4 by mail. Single copies :three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the Uniyersi^y of Chicagofor any statements ap>pearing in The Daily Maroon, or fcr anircontracts entered rnto 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; 1:879,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 ManageiRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherJane BiesenthalWilliam GoodsteinBetty Hansen ASSDCIATE EDITORSt Robert Herzog■ - David 'C.- laevineEdward W- NicholaonEugene FatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. MontgomeryEdward G.. Schaller Vincent NewmanSOPHOMORE EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn Barden Noel Gerson Robert OshinsRobert HastBrlikHovvard Hudi«onDavid Kutner'Dan M'acMaaterDuKald McDougaUTom BartonNorman BeckerClaire DansigerAmoa Dorinson Howard RichSue RichardsonJeanette RifasFlorence WishnickSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman I'red Gundrum William O'DonnellAlbert Ten vek? WiiViam Lesenthal Robert SamuelsNight Editor: hdward NicholsonAssistant: Amos DorinsonTuesday, March 14, 1933Letters to the E^torNote; (The opinions expressed in these commanications arethose of the writers, and not necessarily of The Daily Maroonadministration. All commanications must be signed with the fullname of the rorreapondenv, although only initials: will be pub¬lished. Letters should be restricted to three hundred words or less.'kDear Mr. Thompson:Y ou were recently guilty of writing an editorialon the new plan without sufficient knowledge todo your article or the new plan justice. For thisybu have been answered in your columns by aprofessor and a student. And now you hear froma nearly normal student taking his education ina nearly normal manner under the new plan, whowishes to merely suggest his own reactions and'0:pinlons. ■For me, the new plan is the most marvelouspiece of educational opportunity of which 1 haveknowledge. 1 should like to attempt an explan¬ation of this feeling.First, and foremost—contrary to ballyhoo andcollege advertising—I value the courses, the edu¬cation itself. The four survey courses introducedlast year, which completely revolutionized the oldcurriculum, are, taken together, a brief yet com¬prehensive survey of man’s knowledge and culture.Aspects of life which never would have been opento me have drawn their doors of darkness—sub¬jects being discussed which 1 never would havetaken, but which are invaluable to me now., The second factor, which might be called acatalyst to the first, lies in the pedagogical staffdevoted to the new plan. The planners and thelecturers in the Freshman and Sophomore coursesare dominant men in their fields, heads of de¬partments, all eager and interested, and compar¬able to a number of scientists engaged in a newand important experiment. The opportunity forthe student to rub elbows with great personalitiesin every field is almost limitless, for these menare all available for private conference and dis¬cussion: friendly, encouraging and inspiring. Thefact that few students avail themselves of this op¬portunity suggests a criticism of themselves, latherthan of the new plan. Steeped in old habits andideas, the majority of the new plan body is afraidto seek advice;-here, with .the result that in thesecond year of operation,' special interest honordiscussion groups were created to bring studentsand leaders together. *'Next in line of adv'^antages I place"'the freedom,the individual control, of the new plan. This issomething that' has come in for a great deal ofcriticism from many .who misinterpret what theyhear. In general,^ there is nothing under the planwhich is specifically required, that must be done,with the exception, of course, of the comprehen¬sive examinations. , Class attendance is entirely■ voluntary: term papers, assigned work, and spe¬cial trips are in the same class. ,.But, as in thecase of private discussions, the student is relyingon antiquated, high school tech'nique and disre¬garding the voluntary basis. That is, the majority 4r nSsv,"HA’IiRDAlfY^ ‘ sit'are. They think and speak in tef^stather than should, and give a f^lse in^iri^ssion^tb^S'their auditors. Why? Because jhi^ Initr^jfi^ef#ifs to measure up jto the standards dennRnd^'^ofit and they make themselves believe this work isrequired in order that they will do it. Is this, then,development of initiative, or is it the car,ry-oyerof high school methods without the actual com¬pulsion coming from the University? It is not thefault of the new plan, unless it is a mistake tomake any advance in the tech'nique of educatibn.In the matter of quarterly exams and weeklyquizzes, the faculty has already received a shock.They were under the impression that exams werethe bane of an undergraduate's existence andshould, therefore, be done away with during ,theyear. Result? Those students who were util¬izing the new freedom to follow their own lineand method of work found it necessary to havesome yardstick with which to measure their prog-gress in the eyes of their instructors. And so theyfrankly asked for exams and quizzes. ...Lastly, the University’s attitude toward the newplan and the new plan student is deserving ofcommendation. It is apparent to us that its methodis one of open-minded enterprise: ,inviting criti¬cisms and suggestions and willing to cooperatefully with the students. i:The new plan is more than a change in “termino¬logy alone, ” as you have suggested in your edi¬torial column. It is exactly what it professes tohe: A NEW PLAN. It is a significant advancein educational methods, blazing the way to wide-spread new plan education.1 wonder if some introductory course in thepurpose of the new plan freedom, the develop¬ment of initiative and the utilization of time,might not be feasible for entering students. Ithas been a persistent criticism of the University . Til* DailyNight editor next issue:William Assistimt: Du-gald McDoiyrliL/ SerrieWDivinity 12 in JosephBond '‘Faith/and Principle,”ProfepSpr WilhelpL Pauck, The Chi¬cago iFfidologicid ^mihary.Organ music, at 5 in the Univer¬sity chapel. Pprtejr .Heaps.Saveli Walevitg% 1fi|ssian FolkSongs and Gypsy R^aHkds, at 4:15in Mandel hali.Undergraduate OrganizationsW. A. A. meeting, at 12 in IdaNoyes hall.Freshman women’s club, at 12 inIda Noyes hall.Federation meeting, at 2:30 inIda Noyes hall.Cosmos club tea, at 4:30 in IdaNoyes Library.Public LecturesDivision of the Social Sciences:“Law in Pre-literate Societies. Con¬clusions.” Professor Arthur R. Rad-cliff-Brown, at 3:30 in Social Sci¬ence Assembly room.Downtown; “Secrets of the Nov¬elist. Secrets of Style.” ProfessorJames Weber Linn, at 6:45 in Full¬erton hall, the Art Institute.William Vaughan Moody Founda¬tion Lecture: “Poetry and Revolu¬tion.” Archibald MacLeish, poet anddramatist, at 8:15 in Mandel hall.Extension lecture in religion:“Christianity and Our ChangingMorals: Moral Strains of the Pres¬ent.” Dean Shailer Mathews, ai7:30 in the Oriental Institute Lec¬ture hall.MiscellaneousMaison Francaise, Gomedie d’A.that the new plan represents too radical and too Musset, at 4 at 5810 Woodlawnsudden a step from the older educational methods—this mainly from the students themselves. Issuch a course possible, and, more pertinent, wouldit accomplish any good?Harold F. Simon.iliniilluiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiniiiniiDiiiiifiiiii ii' ii' iiii'iiiiiiiuiini aThe Travelling BazaarBy Jerry Jon tryJUST WAITYou may think that fraternities won’t be miss-'ed on this campus, hut wait until there aren’tany fraternity parties to go to; just wait untilyou can’t spend several days looking for your coatand hat after a fraternal frolic; just wait untilyou can’t get rid of the girl you cut in on by mis- •take; or till you can’t have any more of that punchwith a whallopp; or until you can’t swipe yourhosts’ best loving cups and come back to your’house and brag about it; or until you can’t come' in with a bunch of stags and ruin the party—thenyou’ll sigh and say, “God, I wish I had paid mybill and kept the fraternity going!”• * *WIEBOLDT WINNIE SAYS:' Most students will have only time to spend thisspring vacation.’ v. * * * ■A butch from Burton Court was said to havehad a grand time yesterday morning when he went ,downtown early to watch the banks reopen.Saw Gerry Mitchell Saturday night at the A.D. party- While a co-ed, she was very good copyfor this column—and she still is for advertisingphotographers. Asked her what she was doingwith her spare time and learned she is conduct¬ing a sewing circle—yes, actually! Asked herhow it was going, and she said “Oh, just sew-sew.” Good girl, Gerry—wish you were back.- ' ’ ♦ ♦ *BUT ave»u«.French talking picture, “Me. dePourceaugnac,” at 4:30, 7:30, and 9at International House theater.Medical Seminar, “Effect of Liv¬er Therapy ^ in the NeurologicalManifestations of Pernicious An¬emia.” Mr, Roy R. Grinker, MissErnestine Kandel, at 4:30 in Bill¬ings M443.Christian Science Organization, at7:30 at 1150 East 58th street.Leadership Training classes: I.“Some Bible Lands and Their Peo¬ples; 5. Later Ba’^ylonia and theJewish Exiles.” Professor I. M.Price. II. “Egyptian, Assyro-Baby-lonian, and Palestinian Antiquities:5. Palestine, a Glimpse at Meggido.”Dr. Watson Boyes, at 8:15 in Orien¬tal Institute Lecture hall.HONOR SCHOLARSHIPS(Continued from pege 1)arships a student must he one of19 who rank highest in the averageof six comprehensive examinationsexclusive of the English qualifyingexamination;.MacLEISH TO TALK(Continued from page 1}William E. Scott.Mr. MacLeish is not editor ot“Time” as was erroneously announc¬ed last Friday in The Daily Ma¬roon. Henry Luce, who holds thatposition will speak at a Moody lec¬ture on April 19.Women^ women,>. ■ ' ' . Things to love,... / Must be handled%vitk a glove. ' ’-11! *, ■ .YOU REALLY SHOULDmeet the girl who sat behind me at the Intra¬mural Carnival last Thursday night taking in the -boxing and the running with great interest. Whenthe Jiu Jitsu wrestling exhibition was announcedshe wanted to know if it were like tennis? Thenwhen the boys ran for the girls in the annual clubrelay, she asked, “Why, those beys aren’t'MortarBoards, are th‘"y?” And when Frank and Steinof Z. B, T. came out to play their duet, she thoughtthey had changed into Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,and she was so disappointed.I saw the same girl at the Big Ten track meetSaturday night and upon asking her how she likedthe meet, I was startled to hear her reply, “Oh it’sj all ]*ight, but I don’t think there is as much spirit, here as there w'as at the Carnival—why Tve l>eenj here all evening and there hasn’t been a single! fight!*^■ m. ♦ .»j HORACE GREELY-^MOVE OVERI ^ Auguste Piccard says to modem youth “Go up—young man—go up.” FOR C10E.LE0B GIRLSft tknft ■Mithf* ifttftodfy■sftift 'AftV''ift 'iftMly* Sfts4^'4ft4i9''' ftfiii Mu* Quifcit JMOtBB BtrSlFTBSS COLLBBB••IV iUiUiwOilhii » CUU—» i11« tMlh KkUin A^um-, <Ph—■—gulpfc 4>4TRENT Al’TOMOBILES DIRECT FROMOWNERSNr> red tape. R^TF.S AS LOW AS $1.00.No miloaRG oharKe,AUTO RENTAL BUREAUMidwa)' 289.9 6418 S:tony Island Ave.Mr''' ^ CARTOONINGETCHINGrlvr.TTi;s\ DRAWINGSRI PAINTINGWe carry a completeline of art material.1546-50 E. 57TH ST.Phone Plaza 2536Are you in the Swim? Jointhe ever increasing number ofthose who trek daily to thePURPLE COWTea Room1129 E. 55th StreetComplete ^ HeartyLuncheons Dinners25c 40cOUR DAILY SPECIALSWILL APPEAL TO YOU foY yoiarTE'^1NITV% not consider the advants|;'(M;v6f ,SHOT-HALL? It is conventeht, attractively furnished,fikHdUhe rentaU are very moderate tor either'^the,,.Jerge or8iti4ll hall . . . :/For information or inspection, please call. at . Room 12,Shotwell buriding, or Phone Dorchester ,620,0. . >SWAN, LORISH AND CASPERS, AgehUMaiden Form’s clever adaptation of fulhfashioning to brassieresmeans ju«t as great a fonmrd step in braMiiere design as it did instocking development! It means 7**^. in-smoothness” and perfection of- natural contours by skillful seom/ess shaping. If your local shopscannotsujinlyyou, write Dept. C for descrintive booklet of this wonderful newiill-l’ashion” brassiere and otherMaiden Form foundation garmentslOOK FOk THE NAME *bc p. s. Of. ■I'MAIDEN FORMBRASSIERE CO.. INC 24S FIFTH AVENUE.NEW YORK. N. T.eis.»itt.c*i^Tis. siiTiP. O. 4221 Collegiate .4d No. 2"Vm'^ 'Iswm.It takesresourcefulness ,. •Time and again, Bell System engineers havedemonstrated their pioneering bent in working outunusual telephone construction problems.‘ For example, they laid a huge conduit under theHarlem River- They dredged a trench in the riverbottom, lowered enormous sections of iron pipe,sent down divers to join the sections, encased thefinished tube in concrete. Through this they rantelephone cables forming one of New York’s mainlines of communication. Across the Gila River inArizona they constructed a catenary span 2373 feetlong. To bridge oceans, they developed radio tele¬phony. They have built telephone lines over moun¬tains, across deserts, through swamps.Their resourcefulness in getting through, over orunder natural barriers makes possible telephone ser¬vice that is practically world wide in reach.BELL SYSTEM IfSAY “HELLO” TO MOTHER AND DAD...RATES ARE LOWEST AFTER.8:30 P. M.^4/DAILY MAROON SPORTSTUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1933 Page ThreeINDIANA TAKES FIVETITLES TO WIN BIGTEN WRESTLING MEETMaroons Fourth; Bargeman,Bedrava, BernsteinHeide Place Indiana UpsetsMichigan for BigTen Track TitleIndiana retained its Big Tenwrestling title last Saturday by cap¬turing five championships and twosecond place medals, to score 31points. Illinois with two firsts, a sec¬ond, and two thirds took secondplace in the meet with 18 points.Northwestern just nosed out Chi¬cago for third place, 10 to 7.The Hoosier aggregation, nowfavorites for the national title, wonthe 135, 145, 156, and 165 ipoundtitles, just losing the 175-pound titlewhen Wes Brown of Northwesternwon a close decision over Voliva ofIndiana. Indiana won their fifthchampionship of the evening whenBob Jones of Indiana pinned EdCrum, mini heavyweight.Four Men PlaceEach of Chicago’s contingent offour grapplers placed in the meet.Ed Bedrava, Maroon sophomore.ensation, took second in the 165-pound division, when Ollie Gillum,the champion, earned a five-minutetime advantage over the Chicagowrestler. Max Bernstein, Chicago118-poundier, won third place in hisweight, with John Heide capturinga third in the 155t-pound division.Marvin Bargeman, Maroon 145pounder, placed fourth.Heide seemed assured of the 155title until his old knee-injury recurred in the semi-final bout, foreing him to default to Glen Drownof Indiana. Heide is confined to Billitigs but will be up in a few daysMax Bernstein lost a decision toJack Orth, new 118-lb. championBargeman lost to Dale Goings, thechampion, on a time advantage, andwrestled McDermith of Illinois forthird place, losing another close de¬cision.Summaries :US-lb. class -Woir bjr Orth, Illinois;* s«c<und, Felix, Minnesota; third, Bernstein, Chi>cHgu; fourth, Nichols, Wisconsin.I2i>-Ib. class Won by Emmons. Illinoios;second, Cellini, Indiana; third. Oakley, Mich*igan; fourth, Uoualas, Purdue. >135*lb. class—Won by Devine, Indiana;!second. Tiffany; Ohio: third. Thomas, Mich- ■igan; fourth, Minkel, Iowa.14.3-lb. class-Won by Goinirs, Indiana; sec-:onil, McDermith, Illinois; third, Spencer,.Northwestern; fourth. Bargeman, Chicago.155-lb. class—Won by Brown, Indiana; sec¬ond, .Mosier, Michigan ; third, Heide, Chicago ; \fourth, Downes, Ohio.165-lb. class -Won by Gilium, Indiana; sec¬ond, Bedrava, Chicago; third, Ahlstrand,.Minnesota ; fourth, Johnson, Iowa.lT6-class- Won by Brown, Northwestern;■itvond, Voliva, Indiana; third, O'Leary, Iowa;Fredericks, Illinois.Heavyweight class—Won by Jones, Indiana;f^econd, Dilley, Northwestern; third, Crum,Illinois; fourth, Spoden, Michigan. Don NeeseCliff WataonLIVE in frenchResidential Summer School (co¬educational) June 26—July 29.Only French spoken. Fee $150.Board and Tuition. Elementary,Intermediate, Advanced. Writefor circular to Secretary, Resi¬dential FYench Summer School.McGILL UNIVERSITYMONTREAL, CANADAMiss LindquistCAFEin theBROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.Luncheon 35c, 50c, & 60cDinner 55c and 75c-Swedish Buffet our specialty, con¬sisting of from 20-25 varieties ofdelicious salads and relishes on ice,from which you make your ownchoice. They figured that Michigan wouldwin the Conference meet in thefieldhouse Saturday night, not be¬cause Indiana didin’t have good men,but because the Wolverines had alarger team. If every one of theHoosiers couldcome through withhis best possibleperformance, ab i g enough as¬signment, Indianawas a 11 ow e d aipossibility of 27)oints. But Indi¬ana won the meetvith 32 points,leaving theWolves fourpoints behind.They had saidthat Ivan Fuquawould win the quarter, and he dio,missing the Conference record byonly two-tenths of a second. Fuquahad been given a possibility of apoint in the dash; he didn’t get it,but Crouch of the Hoosiers got itinstead. D i v ic hwas conceded athird in the pole-vault, which heearned, as Cap¬tain Lenningtonof the mini set anew Conferencemark at 13 feet,10 inches. CharlesHornbostel wasassigned the diffi¬cult task of run¬ning prelims inboth the mile andthe half, and thencoming through with a win in tht880 and a second in the mile, bothagainst tough fields, the followingnight. Hornbostel ran heroically tocarry out his assignment, adding toit a Dig Ten record in the half at1:53.9.The Hoosiers weren’t figured cr.for a point in the highs, the eventin which the Maroons picked uptheir lone point as Captain Ted Hay-don w^on a runoff for fourth place.Biddinger was supposed to finishsecond in the shot, and although hefailed to get better than a fourth,Busbee rose to the occasion to takethe necessary place.Cliff Watson was generally con¬ceded first place in the two-mile,which he took easily in 9:26.1, butthree of the Hoosiers’ unexpectedpoints came when Don Neese camethrough for second place. Neese hadbeen looked to for a point in themile, hut he was beaten out in thepreliminaries by Bob Milow of theMaroons, a sophomore and the bestmiler Chicago has had since DaleLetts graduated. The other twopoints the Hoosiers hadn’t been con¬ceded before the meet came as IvanFuqua, running a beautiful anchorlap in the mile relay, passed up theOhio and Illinois teams t.o win thefirst heat of the relay in time fastenough to place them third in thefinal tabulations. It was in the re¬lay that the third Conference recordwent by the boards. The Wolverineswon the event in the exceptionaltime of 3:20.6, each of the four menaveraging faster time than thatwhich won the individual quarter-mile. JIMMY TWOHIG IGNORESBIRTHDAY; PREFERS WORKMarch 14 may be just anotherday to some people, but it’s a birth¬day to Jimmy Twohig, the athleticdepartment’s grand old man of allwork. Jimmy is seventy-nine yearsold today, but to hear his stentorianblasts one would think him still ayoungster.It seems that Jimmy is a littlesensitive about his age, for he re¬fused to tell a Daily Maroon report¬er his health rules for long living.In fact, with his usual vigor, he at¬tempted to throw said reporter outof the fieldhouse. “I’m a workin’man engaged in earnin’ an honestlivin’, and don’t want nothin’ aboutme in any paper,” he shouted.In the service of the Universitysince March^ 1900, Jimmy plans nocelebration for his seventy-ninthbirthday and Jthirty-third year ofwork with athletes.Although the records of the athlet¬ic department say in black andwhite that the self-appointed benchmanager is seventy-nine, the recordsI and Jimmy’s memory do not agree:he says he is younger.In over three decades Jimmy has“been the most faithful supporter ofMaroon teams. The first to praise,and the first to criticize, his staunchand unwavering backing of Univer- Chicago Polo Trio* Defeats Oliio 6^2-5for Big Ten TitleChicago’s polo team nosed outOhio State 61^ to 5 for the confer¬ence championship at the ArmorySaturday evening. Captain BurtDoherty, playing at Number 3 po¬sition, rode in three goals to lead theMaroon team to its first Big Tenpolo title.This is the first conference cham¬pionship to be annexed by a Ma¬roon team yet this year.The Chicago victory over theBuckeyes was the Maroon team’seighth win of the season, and theMaroons’ fifth conference win of theyear. They lost only to Culver andOklahoma Military Academy.CHICAGO (6Me) OHIO STATE (5)Benson No. 1 ThompsonFriedheim No. 2 D. SmithDoherty No. 3 SiriloGoals—Benson (2), Friedheim (2), Doherty(3).D. Smith (2), Sirilo (2), Thompson. (One-half Koal off Friedheim for foul.Substitutes: Chicago: Wason, Hepple; OhioState; T. Smith.sity athletes has made him one ofthe best known and most belovedfig’jres on the quadrangles.FAVOR MICHIGAN ! MAROON FENCERSTO WIN BIG TEN I LOSE MATCH TOSWIMMING TITLE WISCONSIN 8-7Yale students are paid the sum of$2 to act as pallbearers. And Harv¬ard men who desire emiployment areenrolled on a social register whosebusiness it is to furnish male es¬corts for “deb” parties.50% REDUCTIONin RAILROAD FARESfor Students’ Spring VacationONE FARE FOR ROUND TRIPin coaches only kTickets may be purchased to many points in the UnitedStates good going and returning on dates conforming toclosing and opening of College. j tFor Further Particulars Consult Railroad Ticket Agents ' <SAVE TIME ITRAVEL BY TRAIN i'IN SAFETY AND COMFORT Michigan, which took the Confer¬ence swimming title last year, issending an even stronger team tothe Conference meet at Bartlett na-tatorium Friday and Saturday thisyear. The Wolverines will be ledby Captain Schmieler, holder of the[ Conference 220-yard breast-strokei record. Christie of Michigan, placedj third in 300-meter free-style in' theOlympics. He broke the Conferencequarter-mile free-style record byseveral seconds last year and maycrack the record in the Big Tensplash Saturday.Coach McGillivray figures CaptainBud Marron for a second in thediving, with Stan Connelly predict¬ed for a pla.ee in the 440. JohnBarden and Frank Nahser may gath¬er some points for the Maroons inthe 220 free-style. Dannie Glomsetshould place in the 220-yard breast.Chicago will present a strong relayteam in both the 100-yard and themedley relays.The mini water polo team cap¬tured its second consecutive Confer¬ence championship Saturday, defeat¬ing a weak Hawkeye team 6-2 inthe new ipool at Champaign, Thegame was wild, with rough playfeaturing throughout. With the Conference meet justaround the corner, the Maroonfencers lost to Wisconsin Fridaynight at Bartlett, 8 bouts to 7. Theencounter was marked by the con¬tinuance of the slump which hasbeen with the bladesmen for the lastfew weeks.The foilsmen especially showedlack of power, losing two-thirds oftheir bouts. They had maintainedthemselves on the winning side inall previous meets. The epee andsahermen perked wp a little, win¬ning four bouts out of six.The only bright spots of the eve¬ning were the -improvement ofBurt Young and Captain Bob Eiger.Young won his two bouts in epee andEiger took the one saber bout hefenced. Maroon GymnastsDefeat Badgers;Wrighte StarsTaking first and second in everyevent, Maroon gymnasts turned ina win over their fifth conferenceopponent when they defeated Wis¬consin Friday in Bartlett gym by apoint score of 541.25 to 478.85.George Wrighte was the outstand¬ing performer of the meet, winningthe horizontal bar, side horse, andparallel bars and placing second onthe flying rings. Dan Hoffer expectshim to win the all-around competi¬tion when the conference gym meetis held here next Saturday. Murphyof Chicago turned in creditable per¬formances on the rings and parallelbars, beating Wrighte in the formerevent. Ed Nordhaus, who scoredfirst in tumbling, completes the listof Chicago’s winners.Officially points were awardedto the two best performers fromeach team, yet Chicago’s third manwas ahead of Wisconsin’s best inthree of the five events.Summaries:Horizontal bar—Won by WriKhte (Cl ; sec¬ond, Savich (Cl; third, Anderson (W).Side horse—Won by Wrighte (Cl ; second,Hanley (Cl; third, Atwood (Wl.Flying rings—Won by Murphy (C| ; sec¬ond, Wrighte (Cl ; third, Gulbrandson (Wl.Parallel bars—Won by Wrighte (Cl; sec¬ond, Murphy (C) ; third, Atwood (Wl.Tumbling—Won by Nordhaus (Cl ; second,Scherubel (C) ; third, Gulbrandson (Wl. AWARD FIVE MAJOR,FIVE OLD ENGLISHGAGE LETTERSEvans, Flinn, Porter, Parsonsand Wegner Rewardedfor Season’s PlayFive major “C’s” and five majorOld English letters have been award¬ed to members of the 1933 Maroonbasketball team. Byron D. Evans,and Thomas E. Flinn, forwards; Co¬captain Keith I. Parsons, center; Co¬captain James W. Porter, and HaroldWegner, guards, were given the ma¬jor letter. Wegner and Flinn werethe only new winners of the letter.Robert W. Eldred, Charles Meni-field, forwards; Robert Langford,center; Harold' Johnson and AshleyW. Offil, guards, received the minorawards. Parsons and Porter are theonly “C” men graduating.Election of a captain for the 1933-1934 season will be held before theend of the quarter at the time thesquad picture is taken. The field ofcandidates probably is limited to thethree returning major letter winners,Evans, Wegner, and Flinn.The conference cage title this sea¬son was taken jointly by Ohio Stateand Northwestern, each winning tengames and losing two.The seniors at Wellesley Collegehave elected Will Rogers as honor¬ary member of their class.PATRONIZE THEDAILY MAROONADVERTISERS HILL’S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 35cSunday Dinner 50cServed on 2nd FloorHoNf1o4vQ,D Ronert'Results of a survey at the Univer¬sity of Washington prove that theaverage student carries more moneyin his pocket than the average pro¬fessor. At the same time, the pro¬fessor’s secretary carries more thanthe two combined.When students fell asleep day af¬ter day in his classroom, a Univer¬sity of Minnesota professor Intro¬duced an alarm clock during a lec¬ture.Razzing Michigan’s “collegiatecork-sniffers,” the Gargoyle, univer¬sity humor publication, has selectedfor its “preposterous people” pagethe assistant to the dean, chief ban-enforcer, etc. Appropriate decora¬tions are provided along with a labelfrom a bottle of fire-water.At a recent dance at OregonState college it was computed thatthere were 9,032 pounds of brunettegirls attending as compared to 7,837pounds of blondes and 373 poundsof redheads. Afternoon and EveningClasses inGREGG SHORTHANDFor the convenience of universitystudents, Gresir ColICKe offers after¬noon and Monday and Thursday eve-ninK classes in GREGG SHORT¬HAND. Course is arrsnyed for maxi¬mum proKress, with minimum ex¬penditure of time and effort. Call,write, or telephone State 1881 forparticulars.The GREGG COLLEGE6 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. A CATARACT isA TRAINED CATAND still they let him live! EvenXA. alter he said a refugee was aman who took charge of prize fights!There’s just one thing to do—andhigh time somebody did it. Intro¬duce Bill Boner to a good pipe andgood tobacco. A pipe helps a manget down to straight thinking. Col¬lege men know, too, that there’s onesmoking tobacco without a rival.That’s Edgeworth.*Here’s an idea. Fill your pipewith Edgeworth Smoking Tobaccoand light up. Now—take a good longpuff. Ever try anything like thatbefore? Of course not, for Edge-worth is a distinctive and differentblend of fine old hurleys.Buy Edgeworth anywhere in two forms — Edgeworth Ready-Rubbedand Edgeworth Plug Slice. All sizes—15|f pocket package to pound humi¬dor tin. If you’d like to try beforeyou buy, write for a free samplepacket. Address Larus & Bro. Co.,120 S. 22d St., Richmond, Va.♦A recent investigationshowed Edgeworth to bethe favorite smoking to¬bacco at 42 out of 54leading colleges.EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO1449 East 57th StreetWhere the Best of Food, Properly CookedIs Neatly ServedOpen from 7 a. m. Until 10 p. m.Ootne Once and You Will Come AgainModerate Prices F. P. RODGERS, Prop. DID rOD EVER STOP TO BUIEWHAT rOD'RE MISSING?You who have, for some reason or other, neg¬lected to subscribe to The Daily Maroon, have youever stopped to consider that you’re missing, amongother things, the only official record of Universityevents, clearly, concisely and accurately reported,news of the very latest developments in the labora¬tory—the lecture room or the fieldhouse as well asthose interesting bits of current campus gossip whichadd color and spice to the lighter side of student life.ALL THESE AND MORE ARE YOURS FORTHE ENTIRE SPRING QUARTERFOR ONLY $1.VPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1933Presents Russian Folk Songs J Fraternities at ChicagoU By MELVIN GOLDMAN ||By MELVIN GOLDMANPHI PI PHIPortrait by Henri de \olacSaveli Walevitch, tenor, who brings Russian folk-music to the Universitycommuvity in a song recital today. Beta Chapterof Phi Pi Phiwas establishedon the campusof the Univer¬sity in Septem¬ber, 1923, andin the ten yearsof its existenceit has built upa record of ac¬complish m e n tand success thatis a sure indica¬tion of excellentpersonnel andwise administra¬tion.Phi Pi Phi hasbeen the frater¬nity most out¬standing f 0 rscholarship o nthis campus for the past five years.V.'hen-the Interfraternity council of¬fered a beautiful silver loving cupin 1929 for the fraternity leadingthe University in scholarship. Phi PiPhi won the cup each quarter forfour successive quarters, therebyearning the permanent possessionof the trophy. In Phi Pi’s class of’35 not a single F was recordedLast Year’s Active Chapteragainst any of the group of seven.Furthermore two of the men in thefraternity’s group of freshmen re¬ceived straight A marks on the com-prehensives taken last June.Enter Many ActivitiesWhile the record for scholar.shiphas indeed been enviable, the mem¬bers of the fraternity have by nomeans been unrepresented in campu.s ; ctivities. Some of the outstandingmen of past years are: Norm Root,captain of the track team, C man,and Senior head of Intramurals; BillNash, outstanding fencer and win¬ner of a Rhodes Scholarship; BoydBurnside, secretary of the Intra¬mural department; I.4iwrence J.Schmidt, Senior head of Intramurals,Business Manager of “Circle,” var¬sity tennis man. Owl and Serpent,and chairman of la.st year’s StudentCommittee on Student Affairs;(Since his graduation last JuneSchmidt has been appointed privatesecretary to President Hutchins;)Nate Winslow, of the class of ’32,wa.s president, of the Men’s Commis¬sion, and a Phi Beta Kappa. Of theclass of ’32 three Phi Pi’s were PhiBetes, and Bill Graham was electedto Sigma Xi and graduated cumlaude.In the chapter at present are Mel¬ville Lynch, senior head of the In¬tramural department; WaldemarSolf, an editorial associate of thedefunct Cap and Gown, a staff mem¬ber of the Intramural department, ac-det ofTicer in the Univeisity R. O.T. C., and a member of the Inter¬fraternity council committee onPublicity; Dugald McDougall, asophomore editor on the staff ofThe Daily Maroon; Edwin Zukowski,varsity wrestler; and Hans Eisen-lohr, who is well-known for his ac¬tivities in the Dramatic Association.Jerome Kloucek is a member of theUniversity Student Settlement board.Phi Pi Phi’s activities record has been especially outstanding in theIntramural department. In factthree out of the last four seniorchairmen have been .members of PhiPi Phi.Phi Pi Phi is a national organiza.tion of twenty chapters, located inrecognized colleges and universitiesfrom New York to Oregon. The na¬tional office has been extremely se¬lect in choosing its chapters, anda result the fraternity has a veryhigh national standing.When the new men’s residencehalls were built, the fraternity wasoffered a reserved section in thehalls to take the place of the houseit had been occupying up to th.attime. The far-sighted chapter of¬ficers realized that the depres.sionwhich was bearing down upon thecountry could be far better weather¬ed by the chapter if it were relievedfrom the pressing duties of hou.emaintenance. As a result the chaji-ter is now securely housed in ir-owii section of the new halls, whereit has its own common loungirooms, excellently equipped withthe fraternity’s own furniture, amia number of large, comfortaliUrooms for the accommodation of itsmembei's who live on campus.(This it the last of the series of26 fraternity articles published byThe Daily Maroon.)The authorities at Cambridge uni¬versity, England, recently announe-ed that women would be allowed tovisit men students in their rooni-Walevitch Sings inMandel Hall TodaySaveli Walevitch will present aprogram of Russian and gypsy folksongs at 4:15 this afternoon in Man-del hall. In this recital, which ispart of the regular series of theUniversity Orchestral Association,the primitive music of old Russiawill be heard.Mr. Walevitch’s picture, whichappears-above, was run with an in¬correct caption in Friday’s issue ofThe Daily Maroon.Students Who SleepLess; Smoke More,in Better Health(Reprinted from Chicago SundayTribune)Ithaca, N. Y.—Cornell universitystudents who rid themselves ofchronic ailments smoke more, sleepless, and take less exercise, yet infour years their health tends to be¬come better than that of theif fel¬lows who observe the strictest smok¬ing, sleeping, and exercise rules.The law of the survival of the fit¬test and also the fact that the slightdrag of chronic troubles has a big¬ger cumulative effect than most per¬sons realize figure in these Cornellhealth statistics. The records weremade public by Dr. Dean F. Smiley,head of the medical adviser’s de¬partment.Wh«t Chart ShowsThe charts show that “the exces¬sive use of tobacco” among fresh¬men is 5.1 per cent, but for seniors17.9 per cent. Insufficient sleep:freshmen, 5.5; seniors, 16.9. Insuf¬ficient exercise: freshmen, 8.9;seniors, 20.4.In the last graduating class, 1932,only 35.7 were free from anychronic ailment or any faulty healthhabit when they entered as fresh¬men. As seniors 47.2 per rated ^entirely free from any chronic ail¬ment.The survival of the fittest, asbrought into the situation by astatement of the departnient of pub¬lic information, deals with the factthat out of average classes in these.statistics of 800 freshmen only 600graduate. Among those falling bythe wayside are some stricken be¬cause of their chronic ailments andbad health habits.Oberlin co-eds may smoke in theirrooms if they have with them fireextinguishers rented from the school.TERESA DOLAN’S DANCESSaturday Eve’s — Midway TempleFriday Eve’s — Pershintt BallroomAdmission 3S CentsPrivate Lessons day or evening at Studio | IS332 CottsKe Grove Tel. Hyde Park 3080 I |RAISE YOUR GRADES!iEXPERT TYPING of Term Papers, jCompositions, Theses, etc., at ilowest possible rates. jETHEL WITT 5452 Ellis Ave. |Phone Hyde Park 1958 form. A young woman climbs into the box. Head,hands and feet protrude, and are held by specta¬tors while the magician takes a crosscut saw and,with the help of an assistant, saws through thecenter of the box and apparently through the wo¬man.ixplanatioNiThere are Inhhy explanations for this illusion. Onemethod of performing this illusion requires thepresence of tv:o girls in the box. One girl curls upin the left half of the box with her head and handsprotruding, giving the effect you see illustratedabove. The other girl is doubled up in the righthalf of the box, with only her feet showing. Nobodyis sawed in half. It’s fun to be fooled...it’s more fun to KNOWCigarette advertising, too, has its tricks.Consider the illusion that “Flavor” can beachieved by some kind of magical hocus-pocus in manufacturing.EXPLANATION: Just three factors controlthe flavor of a cigarette. The addition of arti¬ficial flavoring. The blending of various to¬baccos. And the quality of the tobaccos them-..JUST COSTLIERTOBACCOSIN A MATCHLESS BLEND selves. Quality is by far the most important.Domestic cigarette tobaccos vary in pricefrom 5^ a pound up to 40^ a pound. Importedtobaccos vary from 5(¥ a pound to $1.15.No wonder, then, that cigarettes differ intaste—since distinctive, pleasing flavor de¬pends so largely upon the blending of the cost*Her tobaccos.It Is n fact, well knoum by leoftobacco experts, that Camelsore made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVEtobaccos than any other popular brand-Try Camels. Give your taste a chance to sensethe subtle difference that lies in costlier to¬baccos ... a difference that means all theworld in smoking pleasure... in pure, un¬alloyed satisfaction.Copyrlcht, 1933, B. J. Beynolds Tob*<«o CompanyNO TRICKS