/W Mp illaroon I o ^QI P.'wVVol. 33. No. 84. UNIVERSITY OF-CHlCAap, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15. 1933 Price Three CentsMERRIAM AWAITSDEVELOPMENTS INPOLITICAL KNOTThere is strong reason to believe Cfi irl^^ntcthat the sudden culmination of the; ^aCUITy ^nQ ::>TUaenrSCox ViewsBankingSituationbanking crisis on March 3 has short¬ened the business depression, Gar-held V. Cox, profe.ssor of finance inthe School of Business told the Cityt'lub Forum yesterday noon.“Without confidence in the banks,there was no hope for business re¬covery, and until the weaknesses inthe banking situation were franklytidmitted and adequately met, thehanks could not command that nec¬essary confidence,” he said.Praise* Wisdom andPromptness of President“President Roosevelt acted withcommendable wisdom and gratify¬ing promptne.ss and at a time when Herald Maroon’sSuggestion Einstein Greets POETRY PREDICTSrevolt, statesBy NOEL B. GERSON MOODY LECTURER‘‘Good luck” wa-s the^message that iDr. Albert Einst^in^ fatned phvsicist, ! p. . k . i • a isent to University students "when Poet MuSt LiVe Aheadinterviewed by. a Daily Maroon re- ' Qf Frontiers AverSporter yesterday atclub. The centerof attention in agroup of chatting,g a y 1 y dres.sedpeople, with thefla-he.s of photog¬raphers’ bulbsconstantlv o n StandardCharles E. Mei^iam, Univeiifeityprofessor of Political Science, whowas recommended by The Daily Ma¬roon yesterday in a front page edi¬torial for the office of Mayoi’ of Chi¬cago, deemed it inadvisable to makeany statement as to his position on j him. Dr. Einsteinthe question when approached late I provided a re-yosterday. markable contrastPending the final interpretation with his modest,of the proper procedure to be fol- i unassuming- andlowed in choosing a new executive almost .«hyhead of the city. Mr. Morriam stat¬ed that he preferred to remain si¬lent on the matter. Anything fuith- Mac Leishthe urgenev of the crisis compelled |^. ' «’» that might be conjectured as toconirres.sion.il supiioit. ( onoHieiing , i .• e . . ,u, i„ . . V ..r ! the selection of a new municipalspeed with which ac- i .. i , *executive would simply be one morethe necessaryti-.n had to be taken, the emergency !l ink legislation is a heartening jKhievement. |"Its provision for an assei-securod il'( deral Reserve hank note currencyamounts in effect to a sort of gov-. inmental guarantee of the depos¬it- of thq hanks which are perniitteil:o reopen. The fact that depositorsare assured that they may exchangetheir deposits for a currency withgovernmental backing should elini-imite their de-ire to convert theirii» posits into currency."There is, therefore, nothing di-•ectly inflationary in this measure.One is merely provideil the optionof exchanging deposit currency forpajier currency if he prefers the lat¬ter. The chances for an early ex- Ipansioii in the circulating mediuma whole are better if currency in( in Illation does not increa.se, for ifhank deposits ce-isc to decline thehanks will be readier to expand theirloans.”Roosevelt to AnnounceBank UnificationThe program of permanent bank¬ing legislation which PresidentRoosevelt has promised to announcewithin a month undoubtedly willcall for the unification, under fed¬eral control, of the entire banking>ystem and will permit the develop¬ment of branch banking. ProfessorCox believes.‘‘For the moment bankers and pub¬lic alike appear ready for sound andthoroughgoing reform,” Professor('ox .said. ‘‘If the administration willpush its measures with promptnessit has a great chance to remake ourhanking system in a fashion that willcon.-titutc a substantial reward forthe suffering which the weaknessesof the present system inflicted.‘‘The fact that weak banks arcnot to be allowed to open meanshardship to some communities andindividuals but, like the liquidationof capital in the farm and real es¬tate mortgage, the railroad fields,this means essentially a retreat fromuntenable positions in order the bet¬ter to rally our economic forces forthe real advance.‘‘With confidence in our bankingystem restored, any broad advancein the prices of commodities thathave suffered most in the depressionwould mark, not a bight from a cur-lency in which the people had lostfaith, but returning confidence inthe future of business. Whether thishappy development is soon to be re¬alized will depend not only uponfiscal and other political deveop-ments but also upon the energy andintelligence with which private in¬dustry works to bring prices intobetter alignment.” man¬ner.In almost con-slant conversa¬tion with .Arthur Dr. EinsteinHolly Compton,jirofessor of Phy.-^ics at the Univer--ity, and Nobel Prize winner, andDr. Pre.ston Bradley, noted divineand pa.-^tor of the Peoples Church,Professor Ein.^^tein seemed a bit daz¬zled at tlie great demonstration inhi.-, honor. But not once did he lose(Continued on page 2)factor to complicate the situation,was the opinion of Professor Mer- |riam. ;Faculty Offer* SupportMeanwhile Mr. Merriam express- !ed his appreciation of The Daily j.Maroon’s recommendation, and an |iiuM'easing number of University fac- iulty momheis voiced their desire toendorse Professor Merriam as thetype of man needed to take over;the helm of the city’s government.i\Ir. Meniam’s expert academicknowledge and practical experience 1in the field of municipal government 'was pointed out by faculty membersapproached yesterday as a factorthat would lead to the possible solu- i 7tion of the city’s financial and social SuCCUmbs tO IlfnCSS Sunday;DR. FRANK CHAPMAN,ASSOCIATE PROFESSORAT RUSH, IS DEADprohlem.s.The city’s authorities on corporatelaw were widely divergent late lastnight in their opinions as to theproper and legal method of choos¬ing a new mayor. Corporation Coun¬sel W'illiam H. .Sexton stated thatthe city council has not the legalpower to elect a temporary mayor,but must call a special election.Select Three NewMembers for Schoolof Business CouncilIn order to replace one of thethree members of the Student Coun¬cil of the School of Business whoare graduating this quarter, a gen¬eral election will be hefd Fridayfrom 8:30-3:30. Petitions signed byat least 25 students must be filed inHaskell 207 by tomorrow morning at10. The other two members of thecouncil will be appointed at the be¬ginning of next quarter by AlphaKappa Psi and Comad, the organ¬izations which they will representon the council.The three council members whoreceive their degree at ConvocationTuesday are Marie Tragnitz, Ca¬mille Heineck, and Charles Mat¬thews. They will serve until June.Other present membei’s of theCouncil are Winton Hansen, presi¬dent; Albert Galvani, vice-president;Dorothy Diemer; William Walling;and Einoe Bjorklund. Was Major in MedicalCorps During WarDr. Frank Amos Chapman, associ¬ated with Rush Medical college sincehe received the degree of doctor otmedicine there in 1914, died Sundayin the Washington boulevard hospi¬tal. For the last five years DoctorChapman had been assistant clinicalprofessor at Rush. During theWorld War he was a major in theUnited States army medical corps.After receiving his bachelor ofscience degree at Central College inIndiana in 1896, Professor Chapmanwent to St. Louis University for hismedical .“^tudy. The degree of doc¬tor of medicine was granted him in1899. Rush Medical college con-,ferred on him the doctor’s degree in1914; he had begun practice in Chi¬cago the year before.Having enlisted in the war, afterthe armistice. Dr. Chapman wasgiven charge of the American mili¬tary hospital at Rome. After his re¬turn from overseas, he was advancedto the position of associate in medi¬cine in Rush, and held that postfrom 1918 till 1923, when he wasgiven an instructorship in medicine.From 1924 to 1928, he held a postas clinical instructor in medicine,and then was advanced to the posi¬tion he held until his death.Dr. Chapman’s widow, b.. Kath¬arine Howe Chapman, wuo Sc onetime a volunteer assistant in ophthal¬mology in the University clinics.Three children also suiwive. ‘‘ ‘Poetry and Revolution’ is oneof those titles which recall a worn-out overcoat; it looks well on oneside, but shoddy on the other. Thegood side is poetry, the' shoddy oneis revolution. Poetry has had themisfortune to be worn ‘revolution-side out’,” said Archibald MacLeish.member of the staff of Fortune andcontributor of poems to several othermagazines, last night in Mandel hallin the fourth William Vaughn Moo¬dy f'oundation lecture of the season.Introduced by Gordon JenningsLaing, dean of the Division of theHumanities, who characterized himas ‘‘one of America’s most famouspoets.’’ and de.scribed his career asan athlete and student at Hotchkiss ,college, Yale, and Harvard, Mr. jMacLeish amplified his opening state¬ment regarding poetry and revolu¬tion. He enumerated his reasons for(-oni|)aring ‘‘Poetry and Revolution” ;j to a .-hoddy subject, saying that too ,freciuent use, imperfect material. |and historical fallacies have jiroved i, the truth of his accusation.Poet Needs Peace‘‘Poetry cannot be effective both; as literature and as jiropaganda, es-j pecially when it is wiitten for; express revolutionary purposes,” the! poet continued. “The poet can onlyI write effectively on the frontier towhich society has not yet advanced,! and this is not the political or rev¬olutionary frontier. The poet re-j quires the loneliness and solitude of'one man against the w’ovld, not the' frdnticr from which a minority sets jI itself against the rest of society, ;which is the frontier of revolution.” ;Mr. MacLeish attempted to dein- Ionstrate that the best poems of Irevolution are written in a peaceful 'setting, a generation or more afterthe events eulogized in the poem. Women Pick SixMen to Contestfar Friars Lead(Pictures on Page 2)Six men have been nominated bythe women’s clubs as the ‘‘TypicalCollege Man,” and the man who willhave a lead in the foithcomingBlackfriars show, “Gypped in"Egypt.” The men are: Robert Bal-sley, Don Birney, Jerry Jontry, MiltOlin, Keith Parsons and James I’or-ter.Selection of the “Typical CollegeMan,” will be made tomorrow bythe Board of Superiors of Black-Jliars, and Edgar Schooley, produc¬er of the show, acting in conjunc¬tion with College Humor.“We will choose the "lypical Col-jlege Man’ on the basis of personal- Iity, campus activities, the recoin- |mendstions of the clubs, and the jadaptability of the candidate for our iuse in the show,” Henry Sulccr, ab- ^bot of Blackfriars. said ye.^terday. ;Don Birney is a member of I’hi iKappa Psi fraternity, a member ol iCrossed Cannon and of Owl and 'Serpent, captain of the 1932 foot-liall team. Robert Balsley, pastpresident of Delta Kajipa Fp.silon,is a college marshall, a member of |Owl and Serpent, chairman of the jFreshman Orientation program, a jmember of the Washington Prom |(Continued on page 2) j HUMANITIES PLANFOR PH. B. DEGREEWINSJIPPROVALOther Divisions PrepareRequirements forExaminationsBREASTED REPORTSNEW DISCOVERIES INPERSEPOLIS RUINSFirst-Hand Information ofAncient Capital ofPersia FoundFaculty Members Find DepressionIncreases Difficulties of Marriagemarch issue ofPHOENIX OUT TODAYIn keeping with the mad Marchtemperament, the Phoenix appearson campus today flaunting a typicalcover which depicts a horse-backriding scene, according to editor JoeZoline. Three representative num¬bers in the issue are: ‘‘The CloisterMurder Case,” which is a parody onS. S. Van Dyne mysteries; a ‘‘De¬fense of Innocence” offered by DickBradley; and, incongruously, ‘‘Fem¬inine Anti-Feminism,” by Syd Hy¬man. As is customary campus viromenwill compete in the Phoenix sales. Matrimonial ventures launched indays of depression ”re more likelyto be ship-wrecked than those con¬summated in days of prosperity, sev¬eral members of the University fac¬ulty agreed yesterday. They point¬ed out that the emotional strain re-.•^ulting from uncertain times causedlack of harmony among marriedcouples.“Two can live as cheaply as one—if the one in question is an ele¬phant and the two are people,” stat¬ed Harold A. Swenson, assistant pro¬fessor of Psychology. “Therefore,in these days of depression, whenthe necessities of life are harder toobtain than they used to be, there isless opportunity for marriage. Love,as viewed in the moonlight, changeswhen seen in the light of the amountof beefsteak there is to eat. All ofwhich goes to say that conditions ofstress destroy harmony, and there¬ fore much marital bliss.”Another psychologist, Forrest A.Kingsbury, believes that depressionmakes everything harder, includingmarriage. “A few people thrive onhardships,” he says, “but the major¬ity break under continued strain, iPeople who are fresh from collegehave the hardest time making a suc¬cess of marriage, for they have nobalance wheel of past experience inbusiness with its steadying influence,to help them maintain poise in theface of uncertainty. This worry nat¬urally is reflected in their disposi¬tions, and so their marriage life ismore tempestuous.”“There are fewer divorces butmore postponements of marriagestoday because of the depression,”Louis Wirth, associate professor ofSociology, said. “Marriage and di¬vorce rates are closely correlated(Continued on page 4) Meech to OfferSeries of RadioTalks on MoneyStuart P. Meech, associate pro¬fessor of Finance in the School ofBusiness, who has built up a largeradio audience through his part inthe Round Table program this year,will inaugurate a new series of broad¬casts next quarter to be called“Money Talks.” This will be a week¬ly feature over WJJD each Thurs¬day at 6:45.Profe.ssor Meech, who will at¬tempt to answer such questions as“What is money?” “How does itserve us?” “What are its disservicesand w'hat can be done about them?”—makes this comment on the time¬liness of his feature: “At no timsin the last twenty years has moneybeen the subject of popular discus¬sion as generally as today. The hallsof Congress ring - with oratory insupport of this or that plan for al¬tering the measui-e of value andmedium of exchange. Business andthe public are on tenterhooks won¬dering about the consequences of allthese pro’posals.”Professor Meech has had a variedcareer as a teacher, author, businessman, and speaker. He is at presenteducational adviser to the AmericanInstitute of Banking, a director ofthree corporations, and the vice-president of a finance corporation.FRIARS HOLD SMOKERIN REYNOLDS TODAYBlackfriars will hold a smokerthis afternoon at 3:30 in room A.Reynolds club for all men intere.st-ed in cast and chorus work for theforthcoming show, “Gypped inEgypt.”Frederick Donaghey, head of theDramatic League of Chicago andformer dramatic critic for the Chi¬cago Tribune, will address the groupon “The Lure of the Stage.” Sev¬eral stars of last year’s show, in¬cluding Milt Olin and Bob Balsley,will sing, and Herman Stein willplay the piano. Jame.«( H. Breasted, director of the ;Oriental Institute, reported new and jsensational discoveries at Persep- ioils, capital of ancient Persia, in iwireless communications I'eceived jSaturday by the Oriental In.stituteand the New York Times. 1Hundreds of cuneiform tablets }containing business records have jbeen discovered, giving access tofirst hand information regarding thePersian civilization. Knowledge ofancient Persia has previously beendrawn almost entirely from recordsof other civilizations.Dr. Breasted reports that newlydiscovered relief sculptures from twomonumental stairways far surpassexpectations in beauty and refine¬ment and should take their placewith the greatest works of art of theancient world.The tablets, which are in theElamite language, were found in theruins of the tremendous palace.s builtby Darius^ and Xerxes, two of themost famous of the Persian em¬perors.Dr. Breasted’s expedition expectsto find many other cuneiform tabletscontainir/ state and war records inthe yet unexplored ruins of the pal¬aces at Persepolis.Dr. Breasted has been gone fromthe United States since February 4,when he and Mrs. Breasted sailedfor the Mediterranean to visitEgypt, Mesopotamia, and Persia. The Division of the Humanitiesbecame the fiivt division to have anaccepted plan for bachelor’s degreecomprehensive examin.ations whenthe University Senate approved itsproposals at the Senate meetingSaturday. The other three divisionswill also soon be prepared to giveexaminations for bachelor’s degreesto new plan students in June.Although each of the divisions hasits requirements for a degree listedin its announcements, the Human¬ities division, is the first of the upperdivisions to draw up the completeplans and mechanism for giving theexaminations under the new plan,('ommittees in the Divisions of thePhysical Sciences, Social Sciences,and Biological Sciences are at (Vs-ent working on and drawing upplans for bachelor’s degree.^ TTi thosedivisions.Affects New Plan StudentsThe new bachelor's degree exam¬inations will be given only to newplan students, those under the oldplan following the old procedure ofsecuring sufficient majors to receivethe degree. Since the new plan willonly have been in operation for twoyears when the first bachelor’s de¬gree examinations are given, therewill be a small number of candi¬dates, all of whom will be transfer.'tudents who have been in residencein the University at least a year.According to the plan of tde Hu¬manities division, examinations willbe given twice a year, in the autumnand .spring quarters, in the fields forwhich the candidates present them¬selves. The examinations will beheld in a period of five workingdays, of -which the last day shall bethe fifteenth before Convocation.(Continued on page 2)Shailer Mathews toDeliver Address atConvocation TuesdayShailer Mathews, dean of the Di¬vinity School, w’ill deliver the ad¬dress at the 170th convocation inthe University chapel on Tuesday.His topic will be “The Universityand the Reconstruction of Democ¬racy.”Dean Mathews has been head ofthe Divinity School since 1908. Hisretirement was announced recently.There will be 317 candidates fordegrees. Of this number 144 are tobe awarded the Bachelor’s degree, 51the Master’s and 19 the degree ofDoctor of Philosophy. In Law thereare eight candidates for the degreeof Doctor of Law and one for Doc¬tor of Jurisprudence. 'Two are ex¬pected to receive the bachelor’s de¬gree in Law.The Rush Medical School will is¬sue 63 certificates; the BiologicalSciences division will give five. OneMaster’s degree will be conferred inthe Medical school and 23 in Rush.Walevitch Interprets Russian Songswith Understanding and PowerBy DAVID C. LEVINEDecidedly a new experience formost of the audience was the sing¬ing of Saveli Walevitch yesterdayafternoon. Perhaps for the firsttime, Mandel hall heard the musicof old Russia sung as only a Rus¬sian could sing it.One could take no temperatecourse toward this music. It waseither splendid or disappointing—and few of the audience were disap¬pointed.It may seem trite, or ironic, orfrankly unbelievable, but the mostimpressive piece heard during theafternoon was the much-abused Vol¬ga Boat song. Into “Eh Ouchnem,”the labor chantey of the Volga,Walevitch put more of the sweat andtoil of the Volga laborers than any¬one but a native Russian possiblycould. It was the most powerful,most moving music I have ever heard.Humor, sorrow, joy, anger—theseelemental passions may be derided,but they are still the foundation ofall music, and especially the simplemusic of the Russian peasants, whosing merely to express what is intheir hearts. The village peddler,entering a town, sings his joyous“Haida,” inviting all the villagers tocome and buy. A peasant lad, goingin the early morning to work withthe harvesters, puts into spontaneoussong the sunrise dispelling the mistin the valley, in “Dolina Dolinush-ka.”Criminals, loaded with chains,waiting on the wharf of Odessa forthe convict ship, dance and sing tothe clanking of their chains. AndWalevitch sang “Bevali” with thestrange abandon of hard men, brok¬en men, who have lost everythingfine in the world—except song.\Page Two T1 E DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1933iatly i®arn0nFOUNDED W 1901The Daily Maroon is the otTicial student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday.Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and spring,quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenueSubscription rates: $3.50 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies;three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or fpr anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post-oiTice at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right ot publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business Manage:RUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorlOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSJane Biesenthal Robert HerzogWilliam Goodatein David C. LevineBelly Hansen Edward W. NicholaonEugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWaller L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. Sc ha HerSOPHOMORE EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn Barden Robert Haslerlik Dugald McDougallTom Barton Howard Hudson Howard RichClaire Danziger David Kutner Sue RichardsonAmos Dorinson Dan MacMaster Jeanette RifasNoel Gerson Florence WishnickSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman h rui Gunilrum William O’DonnellAlbert Ten Eyck*' William Lo.enthal Robert Samuels MUWIIIIHIIIIIIimillllilllllMlllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllMlllllllllllillllllllllini.llllllllllllllllilllllHllllllilllllHHIIIfflniMHlHllI The Travelling Bazaar|By Jerry Jontry'>iiiiiiiiuiiiii";iiiiiiiui '1 i :u.. ;i '.h.i;:i:!iimiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiuiiHiaiiiJONTRY WILL WIN IN A WALK Here’s the Women’s ‘(God Bless ’em) Ideaof What a Real College Man Ought to BeNight Editor: William GoodsteinAssistant: Dugald McDougallWednesday, March 13, 1933DO WE VAINLY SEEK HUMAN ULTIMATES?To establish a Single Law of the Universe—alaw so comprehending as to include all rules whichgovern natural events, on the greatest cosmic, aswell as the smallest atomic, scale!That is what Dr. Albert Einstein, eminent scient¬ist, has expressed to a newspaper reporter as beingthe great ambition that motivates his work.It is a goal typical of the natural scientist. Per¬fection, singleness, certainity, absoluteness. Allthings of the natural world must be reduced tofact, to rigidly defined law. The energies and thepowers of the universe must be found and measur¬ed. The quirks and the movements of its everybody must be plotted and predicted—once andfor all.Physical science is well on the way to achievethis Single Law of the universe.Is there any hope for rambling philosophers,groping social scientists, bickering theologians, ag¬gressive nationalists and defensive pacifists, to ar¬rive at ultimate law, final perfection, in the realmsof non-physical human concerns? Is there any pos¬sibility that man’s emotional infantilism, social tur¬moil, and religious and philosophical conflicts willever be stilled by ultimate, perfected law, so com¬prehensive that it will guide all human beings alongways of absolute right?The natural scientist is working with bodies andenergies beyond his control and sight. The socialscientist and philosopher has his materials close athand.Yet, we fear most for the success of the latter,and we deplore the great wastefulness of humanlife, and the terrible sacrifice of human happinessgeneration after generation, while ineffective be¬ings grope in never ending circles, seeking a per¬fected rule for mankind’s human relations.—W.E. T. See column six for picture of your columnist atthe start of the silliest contest to date. A x>eti-tion has already been started to stop me fromrunning saying that my long nose gives me a headstart; but don’t •worry, my dears—this thing wasstarted against my will, and I will not allow itto go on. Already I have offers of bribes frontthe other contestants and starting today I amtaking them, in hopes of being disqualified.« • •Where can you put one hand that you can't touchit ivith the other?’sadop nod—anoqp unod uo* * «SHORTS:The Simon boys of Z. B. T. live in Buffalo, NewYork and they have never been to N. Y. City,which believe it or not, is only some 60 miles'closer to Buffalo than it is to Chicago.The following was seen written on a mirror inthe Alpha Sig house; “We’re glad it was us in¬stead of you”.The best stuff (.?) in this column is contribut¬ed—s'help me.Eleanor Scheel entertained the Friday after¬noon club last week at her farm. I hear theyhad a good time hunting eggs, but I still can’t seewhy they left the campus.If certain members of the faculty don’t keeptheir fingers out of the rushing pie, I am going toexpose them—then they’ll be sorry.I nominate N. Y. Jim for mayor on a pure oakplatform. If we can’t have him let’s have JimmyTwohig.This rushing business is going too far. Thismorning someone rushed off with Holloway’s hat.I know you all get tired of school, but if youdon’t mind, Betty Sayler would like to have thoseeight gilt chairs from Mirror that you told herwould be returned for her.An attempt was made all afternoon yesterdayto reach Joe Zoline at the Mayflower Hotel. Final¬ly :he riddle was solved — Joe must have beenliving there under an assumed name.* « «DEAR T. B.:I am a beautiful young thing and I should liketo enter my picture in the Crossed Cannon’s con¬test, but I take such horrible pictures. W’hat doyou suggest I do?Baby Blue.Well, Baby, I suggest you enter one of Joan^^Crawford with a note of explanation. The judgesare good guys—yeah—they’ll understand. fr‘i/ ffMilt OHn Robert BaUleyJerry JontryRAISE YOUR GRADES!EXPERT TYPING of Term Papers.Compositions, Theses, etc., atlowest possible rates.ETHEL WITT 5452 Ellis Ave.Phone Hyde Park 1958Here's the 1933 vraytoEUROPEBest on the shipforlSO (up) roundtripDon BirneyLetters to the ExiitorNote: (The opinions expressed in these communirations arethose of the writers, and not necessarily of The Daily Maroonadm.nistration. All rommunicatinns must be signed with the fullnnme of the correspondent, although only initials will be pub-li.shed. Letters should be restricted to three hundred words or less.)“Beer by Easter ”—the new slogan of the wetforces—is to our way of thinking one of the mostinapt an<J antagonizing expressions for public prop¬aganda purposes that has ever come to our atten¬tion.We find it difficult to understand the wisdomand reason for the hill just introduced in theSpringfield legislature to spend $25,000 for amemorial to Anton J. Cermak. When the state canadequately care for the privation and need of itsunemployed people, it will be time to spend sucha vast sum on a memorial to one of its mayors.We are waiting for someone to explain to uswhat honor there is in being selected as the Uni¬versity’s most “typical man.” Personally, we arefar more inclined to laud the least typical. j March 8, 1933.I Dear Mr. Thompson:Although I am heartily in accord with the purposeof the Maroon’s recently conducted fraternity survey toend false rumors and to furnish the freshmen with areliable basis of judgment in considering the financialstability and fees of the fraternities on this campus,I am apprehensive of the final result of your survey,at least insofar as the recently published chart is con¬cerned.I refer specifically to the column headed, "Net earn¬ings for the year ending Dec., 1932,” and to the notesat the bottom of the chart.1) The column headed “Net earnings” apparently wasintended to indicate profits. These two concepts arenot the same. The item of net earnings may not meanprofits, yet the chart probably conveyed the idea ofprofits to freshmen. In this same column two items aremarked loss, although this concept of “loss” is not theopposite of net earnings in accounting. However, the ichart tends to convey this erroneous impression.2) Another factor leading to a doubt as to the re¬liability of the survey is the fact that in this columnfourteen out of twenty-four figures end in full dollars,($1800.00, $1100.00, $450.00, $794.00, $343.00, $157.00,$917.00, $750.00, $332.00, $565.00, $671.00, $1175.00,$301.00). Few accountants w'ould trust the validity ofany figures ending in this way. If these figures areerroneous, again the freshman is deceived.3) The pro'bability of juggled statements becomesapparent when one considers the fact that a fraternitywhich pledged and initiated as many freshmen last yearas any other fraternity on campus operated at a slightloss, while fraternities with relatively small active chap¬ters and very few members in the class of ’35 professto have operated with profits approaching $1000.00.4) In the notes, several houses make mention of sur¬plus reserves in addition to net earnings. Here againaccountants will know that there is a danger of deceit,since profits (not net earnings) become a part of sur- 1plus on closing the books. Although this Is true it |does not follow that reputed surplus reserves are reallycash. Surplus is a liability in accounting.Since the operating figures appearing in the surveyare said to have been checked with the records in theDean’s office, one may conclude from the above argu¬ment that the records may have been padded beforethey were submitted to the Dean of Students. That thisconclusion may be true is evidenced by the rumor cir¬culating on campus that only those fraternities whichreported losses or negligible profits submitted honestreports.—W. A. S. CLUB WOMEN SELECTSIX MEN TO VIE FORBLACKFRIARS LEADKeith Parsons' Approve HumanitiesPlan for Degrees (Continued from page 1)committee, and Hospitaller of Friars.Jerry Jontry, also a member ofDelta Kappa Epsilon and Owl and iSerpent, is chairman of the Dra- :matic association, a “C” man in ^track. Daily Maroon columnist, headcheerleader, and at present conduc- 1tor of a booking agency for orches- Itras. Milt Olin is a member of Phi iKappa Psi, the Phoenix staff, the 1Dramatic association, and has beena Blackfriars star for two years. Heplayed the title role in last year’s ;production, “Whoa Henry!”Keith Parsons is co-captain of the 'basketball team, a member of PsiUpsilon, head marshall, a football“(I!” man, a member of Owl andSerpent and of Crossed Cannon, ^James Porter is a member of ChiPsi, a co-captain of basketball, amember of the cast of Blackfriar.s |for two years, and a marshall. $106.50 <up> one wtrYes, sir —here’s a way to Europe thatranks with 1933’s best bargains! Pay onlythe low Tourist Class rate and enjoy"top class” on the Red Star linersPtnnlanJ, WtsternlanJ, MimmewMka andMinnttonka. The former two were Cabinships and the latter two recently carriedpassengers only in First Class.And now their best suterooins, broadestdecks, loveliest public rooms, are yoursat a fraction of the former cost. No wonder travelers who are "in the know" aresaying"This is the new-dayTouristClass."To Southampton, Havre, AntwerpApply I* yur Ucslmtent—tht trsttlsuthtrity in y*mr ctmmtimity, tr itRED STAR LINEInternational Marcantilo Marina Co.216 No. MichlKon Ave.,('hiraio. III.(Continued from page 1)Written examinations will be held onthree non-consecutive days withinthis period; each day of written ex¬aminations consisting of two threehour periods. The average length oiwritten examinations will be twelveto fourteen hours, and oral or otherindividual examinations may be heldat appropriate times within tnu nve-day period.Department Prepares ExamsExaminations in a departmentalfield will be prepared and directedthroughout by the* directing depart¬ment, while those in an interdepart¬mental field will be prepared andjudged by the directing interdepart- imental committee. Any candidate |taking the examination will bedeemed to pass or fail it as a whole ^with no privilege of making up apartial deficiency by taking a par¬tial examination. It is • immaterial iwhether a candidate fulfill the divi- *sional requirement of six grades of j“S” in elective courses before or jafter his examination. ! Rent a 1933 Chevrolet“DRIVE IT YOURSELF”Mileage Rates14c Per Mile Under 2.5 .Mileti Per Day lOo Per Mile 100 Miles Per Day13c I*er Mile 25 Miles Per Ilay Sc Per Mile 150 Miles Per Day12c Per Mile . 5'J Miles Per Day 6c Per Mile 260 Miles Per DayAll Gaanline, Oil and Service Expenae IncludedPHONE US FOR SPECIAL VACATION TRIP RATESFortin Car Rental System6324 Cottage Grove Avenue.MIDWAY 9891EINSTEIN GREETSGAY CROWD WITHUSUAL MODESTY(Continued from page 1)his smile nor did his soft vuice use.He spoke in German, but ourmeager knowledge of that languagefailed in the crisis, and we wereforced to use the aid of an inter¬preter in understanding him.Dr. Compton, Ferdinand Schevill,Sophonisba Breckinridge, Arno B.Luckhardt, Frank Lillie and CharlesW. Gilkey were among the Univer¬sity notables present at the lun¬cheon. GIFTS for the GRADUATEU. of C. JewelryBook EndsCommemorative PlatesCocktail and Beverage glassesRobeHammered Brass desk acces¬soriesChapel EtchingsFountain Pen SetsLatest Fiction and General Booksat theU. of C. BOOK STORE5802 Ellis Ave.THE DAILY MARCXJN, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1933 Page ThreeTHE UNIVERSITY WOMANW.A.A. to EndWinter Schedulewith 8 EventsSplash Party, Installations,Basketball Meet Are onWeek’s Calendar.Completing the quarter’s activ¬ities with a full schedule of socialand athletic events, members of W.A. A. will gather at eight meetings,this week, for affairs ranging frominstallation dinners to swimmingparties.Four new committee chairmenwere chosen at a meeting yesterdaynoon; alumnae and honor basketballteams held a dinner and basketballgame last night; the W. A. A. boardmeets in the’ i. C. A. room ofIda Noyes this noon, and tonightthree swimming teams will vie forhonors. New officers of “C” clubwill be installed at a dinner tomor¬row evening. Bowling club stars willreceive awards at the weekly W. A.A. cozy on Friday, and Racquet clubinstalls its new officers at a dinnerFriday. The Association invites allmembers to a “splash party” Fridaynight.Pederaon la Publicity HeadMarion Pederson was chosen tohead the publicity division of thegroup for the coming year at anopen meeting yesterday noon. Atthe same time the Association se¬lected Mary Ellison as golf chairman,Bettyann Nelson as social director,and Beryl Brewer as head of theOuting club.Three groups of swimmers—alumnae, unattached individuals, andthe honor team—will engage in ameet this evening at 7:45.Vivian Carlson will be installed as“C” club president at the dinner to¬morrow night at 6 in Ida Noyes hall.Ruth Camp as vk?p-presldent andDorothy Johnson as secretary-treas¬urer will also take office at thistime. Winners in the Bowling clubwinter-quarter tournament, in which30 were enrolled, will be awardedemblems of victory at the cozy Fri¬day afternoon at 3:30.Miss Marian Warner, instructor inPhysical Education, installs KayHoffer as president, Anne Baker asvice-president, and Pearl Morson assecretary^treasurer following thefirst Racquet club installation din¬ner Friday at 6.W. A. A. sponsors a “splash par¬ty” Friday evening from 8 to 12.Members should register for ticketstoday or tomorrow at noon in IdaNoyes lobby. Tickets, priced at 60cents, cover the evening’s entertain¬ment of swimming, dancing, andcards for a member and her escort.WOMEN PRACTICEWINDOW WASHINGTO WIN DECREEIt is taken for granted that auniversity turns out sociologists,lawyers, physicists and social butter¬flies, but when it trains women tobe home-makers, that’s news! Homeeconomics 246, at this University,for example gives practical instruc¬tion in such tasks as polishing furni¬ture and washing windows.Mrs. Mary K. Heiner, who is theinstructor in the course, believesthat the home should be run as sci¬entifically as any other unit of pro¬duction. The necessary work of thehousehold can be accomplished muchmore efficiently and easily if an or¬ganized routine is followed. There¬fore effective policies for the mostefficient control of time, money andenergy are established.Time studies in washing windows,polishing furniture, cleaning silver,making out household schedules, re¬organizing kitchens so that the min¬imum of footsteps and the maxi¬mum of conveniences are given, test¬ing commercial devices such as mopsand can-openers in order to find outwhich ones are the best for the workrequired of them; all these problemsare included in the course.BOOKS FOR RENTFiction and non-fiction.Minimum charge of 10c for books upto $.3.00. 3c per day thereafter:Also larfre assortment of JiK Saw puz¬zles for rent and sale.WOODWORTH’S BOOK STORE1311 East 57th St. INTERCLUB MEETS .TOMORROW; PLANSPLEDGING EVENTSInterclub Council will meet to¬morrow at noon in Ida Noyes hallto discuss plans for pledging andfor the election of the officers of allthe clubs at one time and accordingto a uniform system.This year, the second year inwhich deferred rushing has been ineffect, definite rushing rules havebeen formulated, to regif^late andrestrict rushing activities. Violationof these rules will result in the sus¬pension of all pledging privileges forthe offending club for one quarter.During the rushing period, whichwill begin April 3 and continuethrough April 15, each club will beallowed four social events for itsprospective pledges. These eventswill include two cozies, one danceand a buffet supper or tea. One ofthe parties is to be held at the endof the first week; and the other dur¬ing the second week of rushing. !The series of social events willculminate April 15 with a pref^^--ential dinner for each club. Thisdinner will be attended only by theactive members and the rushees whohave definitely decided to pledgethat club. The silence period willbegin at midnight Saturday, April j15 and continue until the following jafternoon when pledging will takeplace in the Ida Noyes theater. Book DescribesNoted Visitorsto City, CampusImpressions of the campus voicedby distinguished visitors to Chicagoare included in a volume called “AsVisitors See Chicago,” written byBessie Pierce, associate professor ofHistory at the University, and nowbeing published by the UniversityPress.The book, which will introducea four volume history of Chicagonow being written by ProfessorPierce, contains an autobiographi¬cal sketch of each visitor and quota¬tions from books and letters writ¬ten by the visitors to Chicago.Count Vay de Va and Luskod, whowas impressed by Cobb hall in hisvisit to the young University, is anHungarian noble and author of “In¬ner Life of the United States.” SirArthur Shipley found Ida Noyes dif¬ficult to confer in because of itsbeautiful frescoes in 1918, andpraised the “general oneness of thecampus.” Mary Borden, New Yorksociety leader, thought the youth ofthe University’s president the moststriking feature of the campus whenshe was here two years ago.“As Visitors See Chicago,” willbe out within the next few weeks. SOCIETYbyElizabethHello Harding! Hello Rummler!Old runner-outers or something. OKwell, the whole week-end was justfull of people running in and outof places.There was the Quad party Fri¬day—^no end of people drifted in andout of the Lake Shore Athletic club—all having fun. Some dropped inat the Lamb’s Gambol'. Wayne Rappand Bobie Storms, Doc Pelton andBetty Croft, Billy Sills and DorothyTrude, and Freddy Sills and Arlene^Martelle did their dropping in andout at the Urban Room; and OliniSethness and Dorothy LeFold, FrankDavis and Ruth Rai5ey, Larry Heideand Jane Robinson, A1 Summers andLois Swigart, Fred Whfeeler andMarie Baker, A1 Ten Eyck andMarion Dickson, LeRoy Ayres andJane Dee and Archie Hibbard,Ernie Brown and Wally Montgom¬ery did theirs at the Blackhawk; andJim Porter and Eleanor Scheel, BudFriedeman and Betty Kreutcher, VinNewman and Gwen Evans, JittersMahoney and Ruth Walters, andHam Abrams and Jane Hempleniandropped in at the Scheel farm for apicnic.Saturday night saw just about every one who wasn’t having fun atthe Ka/ppa Sig, Phi Delt or Pi Lamb¬da Phi parties at the Alpha Delt orZeta Bete parties. The Pi Lam af¬fair was closed and formal—theAlpha Delt party was one of thosegay businesses where throngs ofpeople mill in and out and see every¬ body else milling out and in.Last night there was a little gath¬ering of Chicago girls and boys upat the Northwestern “WAA-MU”show. A nice idea about Blackfriarsand this organization helping eachother with the ticket sales. The(Continued on page 4)DINE AND DANCEThursday Evening Dansants75cPer PersonIncludes Dancing, Special 4 Course Dinner served in ourMain Dining Room, Free Checking, Unlimited Parking.Every Thursday Evening 9:30 to ? ?U. OF C. STUDENTS ALWAYS WELCOMEReservations for 2, 4, 6 or morephoneC. K. BARBER, MAITRE D’HOTELMEDINAH ATHLETIC CLUBWhitehall 4100I© 1933. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co.esteriield(J^este^eM aremae/e^Ri^fCHESTERFIELD’S Milder, Better Tasteand aroma couldn’t come from justone tobacco.It takes several different kinds of mild.Domestic tobaccos and just enough choiceTurkish... all blended together in justthe right proportions... to give CHESTER¬FIELDS a good flavor.There is another thing about CHESTER¬FIELDS. They are well-filled and they arethe right size, which means a slow, even¬burning smoke.The paper used on CHESTERFIELDS ispure and is as good as can be made.Even the CHESTERFIELD package playsits part. The inside paper, the foil, thelabel, the cellophane — all help; so thatCHESTERFIELDS reach you just as freshas if you came by the factory door.People know CHESTERFIELDS are maderight because “They Satisfy.”THEY’RE MILDER —THEY TASTE BETTERPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1933WOLVERINES BEGINFIGHT FOR BIG TENSWIM TITLE FRIDAYHold Finals of Annual Meetin Bartlett PoolSaturdayMichigran loom."; as the outstand¬ing' favorite to win the Big Ten in¬tercollegiate swimming meet atBartlett natatorium Friday evening,according to Coach McGillivray ofthe Maroon team.The Wolverines are outstandingbecause of the well-balanced teamthey have lined up. While theyhave, of course, two or three outstanding stars, their team is strongin every respect, and there will be noevent Friday night in which at leastme man from Michigan will not becontending for honors. Outstandingamong the Wolverines i> JohnnySchmieler. one of the most versa¬tile performers in intercollegiateswimming.Purple Should Finish SecondOn a b:i.- i.- of pas t ])fcr formaiiceXd-thwi' .-torn figui'o to tinish sec-md. wit h Hi ighiand ii > the 100 yara; Hom. an i-utsi an dm kT lu'ea.'t--tvok('. ; :.’nd H hn. who i a;'- been-how ' : g g' 0 •i; inu'io’ ia nif n t in thenii'k ■ ro ki . a!' ne:t;' !y cc rtain tovip uv infs the Wildcats.The K. an t( ui t'nkir •on a Iso h'rtve,w u.- -:nd -.onoti- fonc\ (livers.Wi’lar.^’ ■and Wilke.Any ; a'toiujit to (• oneed ;■ second•lao.’ to ■ ihw e-.o i’ wo u’d meetwith protest f rom Illinoi.s.'..owet’ei* - the IlHoi h'‘vo some ex-celh-nt c rtant to di-pute honors-vith X. r. and the Wolv(‘rines.Fl.'ckniaT-n. a - ter ophomer'. will)! ('v;(lc plenty ■■f ; om. e'ition in the100 yai'd e- tyt*. while Brock andiiewi.t w'ii hi right u]' theie in theirrespective event: . the 2211 yard end:hc (iua’*ti i mile fiiC style. Both Illi-n-ii.' relay t> ’Mns. in-i - tyle and med-ey .'hould place in th money; andHines, mini tankmen, wil be ])ress-'•ng Johnny Schmieb r foi backstrokeMoints.I-M FENCINGEntries for the Intramural fenc¬ing tournament should be nrede assoon as po.s.-ible in th(' fenciny roomin the basement of Bartlett gymany day ,-this week after 4:30. Allstudents tit "the Tmivei'sity are quali¬fied to enter unless they have wontheir numerals in fencing or havebeen a member of the varsity fenc¬ing team, (’hailes Lawrence is man¬ager thi.s year.Comad Will ElectNew Heads FridayComad, the woman’s club of the ,School of Business, will hold anelection of officers Friday noon in :the Haskell commons room. Thiswill be necessary because of the im¬minent graduation of the present jhead of the organization, MarieTragnitz. The off ces of vice-presi¬dent and secreta y-treasurer will :also be filled at thi; special election.The meeting of ihe club will beheld after the reguiar weekly lun¬cheon. Anyone inten sted in Comadmay attend the sessio '.SOCIETY(Continued frem page .3)Northwestern show will be givenevery night this week and Fridaynight is designated as Chicago night.You might go up if you can tearaway from the books.And books mean exams; andexams, spring holidays; and holidays,lucky people planning trips; alreadyBen E. Mann is hoping about Ber¬muda; Maxine Nowak, Bob Wallaceand George Schnur are giving Flor¬ida wistful thoughts; and MushNewman is giving up Canada forAnthropology in southern Illinois.Oh well, maybe somone else willhave to stay in the city. Anyhow',study hard now, Children, so you canfeel you ought to relax and teararound next week-end.CLASSIFIED ADSRooms for students. Single or dbl.with or without sleeping porch.6152 Ellis Ave.FREE RENT to family desiringa vacation or chance to study nextsummer at Iowa State College in ex¬change for their own apartment inChicago. C. L. Fitch, 420 Ash Ave.,Ames, Iowa. Today on theQuadranglesThe Daily Maroon[ Night editor for the next issue:Robert E. Herzog. Assistant: TomBarton.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel. At 12 in JosephBond chapel. “Recovering Lost En¬thusiasms.’’ The Reverend Norris L.Tibbett.s, Hyde Park Baptist Church.Anderson Society, Holy Com¬munion. At 12 in Thorndike Hiltonchapel.Organ music. At 5 in the Univer-.<ity chapel. Porter Heaps.Undergraduate OrganizationsW. A. A. meeting. At 12 in IdaNo.ves hall, Y. W. C. A. room. * ,Freshman Executive Council. At j12 in the .\lumni room. Ida Novesball.Student Settlement Board. At3:.30 in the Ch'pel office.National Student League. At 1:15in Social Science 302.PubI ic Lectures IDivision of the Social Sciences:“Social P.-ychology and Social In-.'titution.'-. Social P.-ychology and theSocial Sciences.” Profe.ssor Ch rle-11. Judd. At .3:30 in the Social Sci-• nce a.'sembl.v room.Fniver-ity ColleL>'e: "Oui' Physi¬cal World. The Electrical .‘'ti'ucturcof M.'itter.” Piofe-^soi- Henry Goi'<]onGale. At 7:30 in Eckhait hall.Departmental OrganizationsJunior Matheinatic.'d club. “Cor¬relations and Null-.-y terns." C. H.Graves. At 4:30 in Eckhait 2(H).Zoologic.-il club. “Oxygen Con--•'Unvption in Metamorphosis.” Wil¬li in Etkin. .At 4:30 in Zoology 29.M iscellaneousFacuty Women’s luncheon. .At 12in Ida Noyes hall.Religious Education club. “Rela- jtions of .Scouting to Character Edu- |cation.” Hari.v K. Ebby. Executive |for Education, Boy Scouts of .Anier- ^ica, Chicago Council. .At 7 in Swift jCommon room.Military club. Captain K. C. Flein- Iing. former military attac he to the ;.Argentine. .At 7:30 in Rvei'Min 32. WEISS BROTHERSWIN INTRAMURALPING-PONG TITLEJulian and Trevor Weiss, PhiBeta Delta, captured the Reynoldsclub-Intramural ping-pong doubleschampionship yesterday by defeat¬ing Richard Nelson and Lman Huff.Burton court, in straight sets, 21-10. 21-11, and 21-18. The twoWeisses reached the final by easilyt'aking Milton Ries and Carroll John¬son. Burton court, also in threestraight sets..Nelson and Huff entered the finalby beating Curtis' Melnick and Irwin.Askow. unattached, in three sets.The fourth of the afternoon'smatches pla.ved at the Reynolds club-aw Melnick and .Askow come frombehind to win over Max Davidson,and Irving Strauch, Kappa Nu, ina quarter-final which extended tofive sets..A ping-jiong ladder has been setup in the Reynolds club on which theleading Cniversity players havebeen ranked according to their per¬formances in the .-ingles tournamentheld last month. In order to ad¬vance up the laddei' may challengeany one who is within four rungsabove him.Juli:)n Weiss, who is also Univer¬sity -incles chaminon. and HenryCragg. runnor-u]i. i)laying as adoubles team, reached the thirdround of the N tional doubles toui-ncy iilayed last" week-end in thePalmer House, and were eliminatedin a closely played match by twoNew Yorkers who later went on t-reach the final.DEPRESSION ADDS TOHAZARDS OF MARRIEDLIFE, ASSERT FACULTY(Continued from page 1)with the pi'osperity of business. Insuch times as these, there is lessstrife between married couples be¬cause there is no longer the neces¬sity of ‘keeping up with the Joneses’,Also there is not enough money fordivorces nowadays, so that the hus¬band and wife must bear with eachother.”Mary B. Gilson, instructor in Eco¬nomics, thinks that only the most :daring should venture into marriage *when times are so uncertain. “Thereshould be something in the cupboardof the rose-covered cottage about iwhich lovers dream. Couples are in- !dined to be more critical and impa- ^tient with one another during timesof stress.” I Sociology StudentsConduct Survey ofUnemployment Cases.A .'urvoy of 1000 typical familyunemployment cases in Chicago i.-being conducted by a group of grad¬uate .-tudent.- in the Social Service.Admini.^tration school under the di¬rection of Helen Wright, associateprofe.ssor of Social Economy, aspart of the research sponsored bythe Social Science Research Com¬mittee.The purpose of the survey is tofind out how the experience of un¬employment has affected families,and what types of hardships haveresulted. The cases were picked byrandom selection from districts withhigh unemployment rates. Ai>pToxi-mately one tnlTd are receiving andfrom the Unemployment Relief Serv¬ice or from private agencies, whilethe remaining two thirds are livingentirely without relief. Interesting^statistics about low labor standardsand wages have already beenbrought out.HILL S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 35cSunday Dinner 50cServed on 2nd FloorTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMimeographing and Typewriting OfficeLOW RATESonTERM PAPERSExperienced TypistsLexington 15 Phone Midway 0800 Local 435835 University Ave.50% REDUCTIONm RAILROAD FARESfor Students’ Spring VacationONE FARE FOR ROUND TRIPin coaches onlyTickets may be purchased to many points in the UnitedStates good going and returning on dates conforming toclosing and opening of College.For Further Particulars Consult Railroad Ticket AgentsSAVE TIMETRAVEL BY TRAININ SAFETY AND COMFORT TIGHT FISTSAren’t the OnlyEnthusiasts forFreeCheck-A-WordsThis Newest of GamesWill Appeal to Anyone Having:1. Brains2. A Feeling For Fun3. A Taste For The Unusual4. A Good Vocabulary5. BrainsBanks Are Open ButCHECK-A-WORDSAre StiU FREESanta Claus Won’tStay ForeverGrab While the Grabbing Is Good1 1 1 1Here’s how to get Check-A-WordsPresent a sales slip for 25c or more show¬ing the purchase of any article from anyadvertiser who has advertised in The DailyMaroon since February 27.Fill in the attached coupon. Present bothcoupon and sales slip at the office of TheDaily Maroon and receive absolutely FREEone of these interesting “Check-A-Words”Games. FREE!NameAddressArticle PurchasedFrom (store)