Vol. 33. No. 106.I Developj Testsof Cruelty Hatlp iHaroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1933 Price Three Cent*-The possibility that cruelty, as apersonality trait likely to lead tocrimes of violence, can be recogniz¬ed in boys by means of variouste.'ts, is a recent theory of the Psy¬chology department of the Univer¬sity. Recognizing such cruelty traitsin individual cases would be the first,4ep toward correcting them, andthus forestalling incipient killers, itit suggested.The suggestion is contained in thedoctor’s dissertation of Joseph W.Hawthorne, who received the degreela.'t month. Dr. Hawthorne, now amember of the faculty of Washing¬ton University, St. Louis, describes atest which he has prepared and hasgiven to 455 boys a.s a means of de¬termining its validity. His article onthe experiment, “A Group Test forthe Measurement of Cruelty-Com-ptussion: A Proposed Means of Rec¬ognizing Potential Criminality,” willhe published in this month’s issue ofthe “Journal of Social Psychology.”Te»t Consittt of31 Section*Dr, Hawthorne’s te.st contains 31^ections of 5 items each. The boysarc asked to rate their preferences,in order, for each of the five itemsin each section. The questions callfor preference.s in w’atching varioustypes of games or other entertain¬ment, and in reading; for choices inobjects of ownership; and for judge¬ment on the relative worth of vari¬ous activities. Each section containsone question clearly involving cruel¬ty .and if this is rated fifth in eachinstance, the score is 155. The testi.s so devised that those taking it donot sense its purpose.The test was given to 126 high.sehool students, selected at random,ranging between the ages of 10 andL’u. in order to establish a normal.-lore, for purpo.ses of comparison.Thi-s .score was found to be 110.1. Itwa.s then given to four specialgroups: 178 students in a Californiahigh school, made up of disciplinelilacs from other schools, who scoreda median of 108.17; 71 students ina state school for juvenile delin-<iucnts, all court cases, who scored58 students in the Cook(Ounty School for Boys, all courtca-e.', who scored 102.17; and 29 in-niiites of the Kankakee State Hos-liital for the Insane, who scored 119,the same score as the normal group.A score below’ 110 indicates theneed for some mental or emotionalleadjustment. Dr. Hawthorne .states.No correlation was found betweenthe individual’s score and his age orintelligence. The probable error of'he .score wa.s calculated at 6.41Iioint.s plus or minus.Here I* afypical SectionOne of the 31 sections of the testn ads as follows: Suppose thatthrough illness, or for some suchlau.ses, you are confined in such amanner that there is nothing what-ever you can amuse yourself withImt to read, and that the books list¬ed below are the only ones available.Put an ”1” after the one that youwould most like to read and a ”5”nfter the one you would care lea.staliout, and rate the rest according¬ly.ti. “Confessions of a Russianlilueheard.” A Russian criminal,while awaiting execution, writes indetail of how he tortured and mur-<lered fifty-three women and chil¬dren and of how he escaped captureor so many years.•i. “From Forest to Schoolroom.”Phe story of paper and the manyuid interesting processes that itgoes through in coming from thelorest, through the various stages,'intil it ends in the school room in*ho form of a book.0. “The Voyage of the Ajax.”Ihe adventures encountered by a^hip on a voyage to strange partsol the world in the quest for new'Peciniens of plant life for a large(Continued on page 4) SENIOR COUNCILGIVES CHARITYOANGXMAY 29Bernie Cummins’ Band'to Play for Ballat TrianonWith Bernie Cummins and hisNew Yorkers furnishing the musicfor a gala night of dancing and en-.tertainment, the annual SeniorCharity Ball will be held at the Tri¬anon ballroom Monday, May 29, thenight before the Memorial day holi¬day, it wa.s announced yesterday bymembers of the Senior Cla.ss council.Limited exclusively to University.students and alumni, the ball willbenefit equally the Student Relieffund and the University Settlement,according to Carl Bode, Alpha TauOmega, who has been appointedchairman of the affair by Joseph T.Zoline, president of the Senior class.To Be Large AffairThe dance will be informal, andis the fir.st all-University functionof this size given for charity. Man¬agers of the affair have arranged foran impressive program by a numberof radio stars and downtown enter¬tainers.The executive committee and theseparate committees to handle ar¬rangements for the ball will be nam¬ed in tomorrow’s Daily Maroon. Theaffair has been arranged for thenight before a holiday in order notto interfere with examinations andother University functions.Formerly Given a* PromLast year the dance was given asthe Junior-Senior prom, and washeld in the roof garden of the HotelSherry, with Flarl Hoffman and hisband providing the music. Two yearsago the Senior prom was held at theTrianon, where University studentsdanced to the music of Wayne King’sorchestra.Although given by the SeniorGla.ss, the ball will be open to allUniversity students and alumni. Thecommittee in charge will be assistedby members of the Sophomore andJunior classes. The Trianon Ball¬room at 62nd and Cottage Grovewas chosen for its convenient loca¬tion near the campus. Friars AppointWallace CrumeHead Score GirlWallace Crume was selected headscore girl of “Gypped in Egypt” bythe Blackfriars Board of Superiors,at a meeting in the Friars officesyesterday. She was selected fromfive candidates.The choice was made on the basisof rules drawn up by last year’sSuperiors, headed by Chet I..aing.The rules: 1). An average will betaken on the total number of scoressold by the women. The total num¬ber of scores will be divided by thenumber of nights that each girl.sells. 2). TTie girl selling the mostscores will be given a prize, saidprize to be selected by the Boardof Superiors. 3). The highest fivegirls will be considered eligible forthe position of head score girl. Oneof these women will be chosen bythe Superiors for the position.Miss Crume is a member of Quad-rangler and Federation, and was arepresentative of the Sophomoreclass council last year.The scores themselves willpriced at fifty cents each. bePRESENT FESTIVALFRIDAY, SATURDAY ATINTERNATIONAL HOUSEJuliette AlvinPresents ’CelloRecital May 17’Cello music ranging from theseventeenth century to the presentday will be played by Juliette Al¬vin in a recital Wednesday evening,.May 17, in Mandel hall. Robert Wal-lenborn is the accompanist.Mi.ss Alvin’s first group consistsof a suite by Sammartini, “Ariosos”by Bach, and Couperin’s “Les Cher-ubins.” Beethoven’s sonata in A ma¬jor, opus 69, will follow. Two selec¬tions by Schubert, “Adagio and Al¬legro” and “La .Source,” make upthe third group. “Elegie,” by Faure,“Le Petit Ane Blanc,” by Ibert,“Piece en Forme de Habanera,” byRavel, and “Piece Caracteristique”by Boulanger will conclude the pro¬gram.Tickets for the recital are on saleat the office of the department ofMusic, 201 Ingleside hall. They arepriced at 55 cents and $1.10, includ¬ing tax.DARROW, SMITH TALKAT HITCHCOCK HALLClarence Harrow, noted lawyerand champion of minority socialrights, and Profe.«sor T. V. Smith ofthe Philosophy Department will bethe guests of Hitchcock Hall, Sun¬day evening, in the second of the.quarter’s series of informal discus¬sions sponsored for residents by theHouse Committee of the Hall. MarkVan Doren, visiting lecturer at thefjniversity, was the guest last week. A gala fe.stival of music anddancing will be presented by Inter¬national House Friday and Satur¬day nights at 8:30 in the second an¬nual International Night program tobe presented in the House.Among the artists who will par¬ticipate in the entertainment areRodolfo Cornejo, a Filipino com¬poser-pianist; Bohuslav Balca.r, ofCzechoslovakia, who will play hisown compositions; the (Balalaika Or¬chestra, ’ presenting Russian mel¬odies: Vera Mirova, a Russian danc¬er, who will be accompanied by Eu-ginia Rydnik; Erik Ruje of NewZealand, interpreting the Maori Hakadance; Messrs. Mathuramuthu andBhatodekar, in a program of IndianRhythms; the Bulgarian MaleChorus and the German MaleChorus.Dimiter Spassof, of Bulgaria, andPedro Maninga.s, of the PhilippineIslands will |>i'esent a Jiu Jitsu dem-gmstratioq; Delores Gomex will exe¬cute a Mexican dance; and the FolkDancing group of InternationalHouse, composed of many national¬ities, will give a medley of Bulgarian,Scotch, Lithuanian, German, Amer¬ican and Russian Folk dances. Alsofeaturingi on the program will beKwesi Nyamike Kuntu, a nativeAfrican and former .student in Chi¬cago, who has just returned fromAfrica.Students ProtestGideonse LockoutWe, a group of twenty stu¬dents, having been forcibly pre¬vented from attending a legitim¬ate lecture by F. H. Knight in thesecond year social science se¬quence under the NEW PLAN,wish to register a strenuous ob¬jection against the person of Har¬ry D. Gideonse, who has evident¬ly felt the economic crisis andhas now become an over-con¬scientious watch-dog.Committee of Spokesmen:Joseph VarkalaRudolf BretzG. SchwaegermanRobert OshinsBill PalmerRobert SmithW. FlodinH. Samuelson FIFTY FACULRMEMBERS SIGNPOLLJN WARDaily Maroon ConcJuctsVoting Booth atCobb, MandelApproximately fifty faculty mem¬bers have added their names to TheDaily Maroon poll of campus opin¬ion on the question of participationin war, swelling the total numberof signers to nearly one thousand,a preliminary check indicated yes¬terday. Petitions, giving signers anopportunity to express varyingshades of opinion on the question,will be circulated by members ofThe Daily Maroon staff today andtomorrow in the last two days ofballotting.During class hours today and to¬morrow a booth will be placed infront of Cobb hall, where studentsand faculty members who have notyet signed a section of the petitionwill be given an opportunity to takepart in the poll. During the noonhour the booth will be moved toMandel cloisters.Results of the ballotting will betabulated over the week-end, andwill be published in Tuesday’s Ma¬roon. The petitions will be collect¬ed and sent to the President andCongress of the United States.Conduct SymposiumTuesday evening three facultymembers and a prominent Chicagoattorney will take part in a publicsympo.sium on the theme “War orPeace?” as a concluding feature ofthe poll. The speakers will includein their remarks an interpretationof the results of the campus poll.The symposium is being arranged byThe Daily Maroon and the Socialistclub.The discussion Tuesday night willinvolve the social and human, aswell as the political and economicaspects of peace and war. Dr.Charles W. Gilkey, dean of the Uni¬versity chapel, will analyze the hu¬man side, while Clarence Harrow,well known defense attorney, willpoint out the social aspects. May¬nard C. Krueger and Harry D. Gid¬eonse, associate professors of Eco(Continued on page 4) Hair on End asSenior ThrowsSenior in PondBULLETIN: Charles New¬ton, non-mustache-grower, wasdiscovered by a Daily Maroonreporter late yesterday after¬noon in front of Harper dis¬guised as a Ford car.Open warfare broke out yesterdaybetween two militant factions as thesenior mustache race turned fromquiet skirmishing and local foraysinto a battle, all-campus in itsscope. The splashes of falling bodiesbroke the stillness surrounding theBotany pond nine times during thenoon and afternoon.The battle, raging between themustache-growers and the non-mus¬tache-growers, began at noon whenthe growers met by appointment tothoroughly subdue the insurgentforces. Finding, however, that theirnumbers amounted to but three stal¬warts, Don Birney, Ross Whitney,and Jerry Jontry, and that the reb¬els boasted a force of ten, a hastyconsultation resulted in the retreat(Continued on page 4)FIVE PSYCHOLOGISTSTO ATTEND MEETINGOF MIDWEST GROUPThe above statement was sent to..he office of The Daily Maroon afterassociate professor Harry D. Gid¬eonse had barred frqm entrance alllate comers to the second year so¬cial science class, at 8 yesterday. Eight SummerCourses Added;Change OthersThe President’s office yesterdayannounced the addition of eightcourses and changes in severalcourses to be offered during thesummer quarter.In the Biological Sciences depart¬ment, Psychology, previously num¬bered 101, will be changed to 201,a second year course. In the way ofaddition to this department there isto be added a course 204 on WardManagement and Teaching.The Division of the Humanities isintroducing five new courses num¬bering: 211, 232, 370, 337, and 436and named English Composition:Advanced Course; Masterpieces ofthe Middle Ages and the Renais-.sance; Palatine Anthology; Franco-American Relations; and Problemsin Modern French History respec¬tively.In the Social Sciences department(Continued on page 4) Five members of the departmentof Psychologry will attend the eighthannual meeting of the MidwesternAssociation of Psychologists, to beheld at Iowa State College, AmesIowa, on May 18, 19, and 20. Har¬vey A. Carr, professor of experi¬mental psychology and head of thedepartment, will deliver the openingaddress, “The Quests for Con¬stants,” on May 18 and on Fridaywill conduct one of the sections inwhich papers will be read and dis¬cussed.Helen L. Koch, associate professorof Child Psychology, will read a pa¬per entitled “Popularity in Pre-School Children: a Technique for itsMeasurement and Some Related Fac¬tors,” at one section. In anothersection Hilding B. Carlson, assistantin Psychology, will present a paperon ‘Intelligence and Students’ Atti¬tudes.”On Saturday, May 20, synoptic re¬ports from the laboratories will bepresented. A report from the Uni¬versity will be given bv Arthur G.Bills, assistant professor of Psychol¬ogy.There will also be a symposium onIndustrial Psychology in which theUniversity will be represented byForrest A. Kingsbui’y, associate pro¬fessor of Psychology, who will speakon “The Analytical Method of Job-Grading.” PROPOSE PLAN OFAPPOINTING l-FCOUN^ HEADSfraternity Men MeetTonight toRatifyNine resolutions completely chang¬ing the method of choosing new of¬ficers for the Interfraternity Coun¬cil have been drawn up by the re¬organization committee in a seriesof meetings this week. The resolu¬tions will be recommended to theentire council at its meeting tonightat 8 in the Reynolds Club.The members of the committeeare: William Wallinig, Phi KappaPsi; chairman; Bruce Benson, DeltaKappa Epsilon; Edgar Goldsmith,Zeta Beta Tau; William Pitcher,Sigma Alpha Epsilon; and BurtonYoung, Psi Upsilon.In its recommendations the com¬mittee resolved: (1) Each fraternityshall recommend two men, prefer¬ably juniors, to comprise a list forInterfraternity appointments, (2)The Interfraternity Committee shallbe comprised of five men selectedfrom this list by the Office of theDean of Students, and there shallnot be more than one representativefrom any fraternity on the commit- ’tee; these men shall hold office forone year.(3) The committee shall electits own chairman and secretary-treasurer, and these officers willserve in the same capacity for the'Interfraternity council. (4) The In-terfraternity committee shall meeton the first Wednesday of eachmonth. (5) The Interfraternitycouncil shall 'meet on the secondWednesday of each month. (6) Anyfraternity may petition for a spe¬cial meeting of the Interfi’aternitycommittee.(7) All business must be pre¬sented first to the_ Interfraternitycommittee. All business must be re¬ported back to the Interfratemitycouncil, with recommendations ex¬cept where the committee shall havefinal power and authority over thefollowing matters: (a) the commit¬tee shall appoint all subordinatecommittees; (b) they shall sit with(Continued on page 4)SOCIAL COMMITTEEHOLDS LAST MIXERThe Student Social committee willhold its last mixer of the year to¬morrow in Ida Noyes hall from 3:30to 5:30. The affair will be given inhonor of Blackfriars, the cast,chorus and business staffs being in¬vited to attend.A crowd larger than that at anyprevious mixer is expected.“Humanist Manifesto" Defines NewIntellectual, Religious MovementsORGANIZE NEW PAPERIN RESIDENCE HALLSThe Courtmouse Press associationhas been organized by the publica¬tions of the men’s and women’s res¬idence halls, to raise the caliber oftheir respective publications.Eleanor Hall, editor of the Dorm-mouse, and Howard Hudson andRobert Chapel, editors of the Bur¬ton Courtier, plan to publish thebetter features of both publications.Plans are now being formulated. Seeking to shape a religion whichwill be suited to the needs of thisage, and attempting to establish anew basis for the quest of a goodlife, forty educators and religiousleaders, among them Dr. A. EustaceHaydon, professor of ComparativeReligion at the University, recentlymade public a “Humanist Mani¬festo,” predicting what they believ¬ed to be in the offing for religion.“This Is not a new religious move¬ment or group,” stated Dr. Haydon,“it is simply an attempt to define anew intellectual and religrious cli¬mate that is coming over the world.Men who represent and stand forthis ‘humanism’ are members of allthe religious groups of the world, notonly in Christianity but in Hinduismand Confucianism a.s well. It definesthe new world view and the newworld program of religion.”The Manifesto, as formulated sev¬eral months ago by Professor RoyW. Sellers of the University ofMichigan, departs from the orthodoxbiblical account basically, in regard¬ ing the universe as self-existing andnot created. It further states thatman is a part of nature and, since^he has emerged as the result of acontinuous process, the traditionaldualism of mind and body must berejected.The Manifesto defines religion as“these actions, purposes, and experi¬ences which are humanly signifi¬cant. Nothing human -is alien tothe religious,” continues the newcreed. “It includes labor, art, sc’-ence, philosophy, love, friendship,recreation—all that is in its degreeexpressive of intelligently satisfyinghuman living. The distinction be¬tween the sacred and the secularcan no longer be maintained.”In concluding the statement of theaims and beliefs of the humanists,the Manifesto asserts, ‘that human¬ism will (a) affirm life rather thandeny it; and (b) seek to elicit thepossibilities of life, not flee from it;and (c) endeavor to establish theconditions of a satisfactory life fornot merely for a few.”Vote in The Daily Maroon War Foil at Cobb Today!Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. MAY 4, 1933ia% Iiar00ftFOUNDED IN 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of ChicaKO. published mornintts except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company. 6831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18. 1903. at the post'office at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publication Iof any material appearing in this paper. |BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherJane BieeenthalWilliam GoodsteinBetty HansenRobert Herzog ASSOCIATE EDITORSDavid C. LevineEdward W. NicholsonEugene PatrickBUSINESS .\SSOCIATESWalter L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. SchallerSOPHOMORE EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn Barden Robert Hasterlik Howard RichTom Barton Howard Hudson Sue RichardsonClaire Danziger David Kutner Jeanette RifaaNoel Gerson Dan MacMaster Florence WishnickDugald McDougallSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman William O’DonnellGundrum Robert SamuelsNight Editor: William GoodsteinAssistant: Dugald McDougall poses will certainly be a commendable contribu¬tion to the war on present conditions.John Dewey, in emphasizing the feasibility ofsuch a movement, points out: “Illiteracy is stillabroad in this land, and so teachers are stillneeded. Men still need physicians and lawyersbut are too poor to call upon them. Houses, roads,bridges, dams, schools, tunnels, and libraries stillcan be built aplenty. In other words, unemploy¬ment among professional people can be eradi¬cated if someone were to bear down upon theagencies that should be active in this crisis. . . .Municipalities, states and Federal government canbe persuaded to undertake those public worksprojects which are so necessary if we are to havecommunities of happy and employed citizens; andprofessional organizations such as Bar, Medicaland Pharmaceutical associations can be prevailedupon to work for reorganization.“But none of these things will be done unlessthe persons most directly concerned organizepressure groups. Unemployed college alumnishould be one such group. Rather than being agesture of futility, it should be one of farsight¬edness for seniors to join the Association of Un¬employed College Alumni,” the noted philosopherconcludes.We sincerely hope that we shall never have tobecome an-active member of the association. Yetwe feel the organization to be one of the mostimportant and forward-looking student move¬ments that has ever come to our attention. It re¬veals that the youth of the land is growing moreand more tired of conditions that can be remediedif they will but take the matter into their ownhands—sanely, constructively.—W. E. T.Thursday, May 4, 1933LET US HAVE A CHICAGO CHAPTERThe unemployed college graduates are organ¬izing!University and college alumni from all partsof the country have formed an Association of Un¬employed College Alumni, under the leadership ofJohn Dewey, Morris Cohen, Reinhold Niebuhr,Norman Thomas, and other prominent liberals. ,Already there are twenty chapters of the associ- iation in various cities of the country, and the di¬rectors of the new “union” predict that ten thou¬sand graduates of America’s universities who have |been unable to find employment will soon be regi-1stered as members. ,Why not?Conservative estimates place the number of un¬employed college-trained engineers in New YorkCity alone at 5,000. Unemployed teachers makeup another 75,000 college graduates in the entire^country. Hundreds of trained doctors and lawyersare prolonging their internships and their studiesBecause they can find no foothold or opportunityto begin their practice. The American LibraryAssociation estimates that there are fourteen un¬employed librarians for every position in the pro¬fession. These conditions are nation-wide intheir extent, and with the arrival of June com¬mencements, still more graduates will be tumbledout of hundreds of colleges and universities toswell the ranks of the trained whose services no¬body wants.Leaders of the new Association point out: “Un¬employment has caught the college graduate un¬organized and with no technique for combatingthe organized agencies of retrenchment. The col¬lege alumnus until now has neglected associations“We’ve written to eleven millionaires who gave ; 1liberally to colleges. We’ve put it righdit^' t<> < 1them—‘You helped us win our education; jnowwhat are you going to do about us? ^'Let us]starve, join the breadlines? We never had a ;chance, never could get a start at our professions, jWe were just dumped upon the world, trained, but jwith no call for our training.’ ” |The picture is essentially a true one and the jproblem it outlines certainly of considerable in¬terest to the college student who will after Juneprobably be an eligible candidate for the newassociation.However, during the present convention of theassociation now being held in Washington, andthroughout all future activities of the body, it ishoped that the leaders make of the movement not piiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiituiiiiiiniiiiiiiiuiiiiuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniini!iiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiii!iuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;iiiiiuiiiiHiimiiii!i!imiiiiiiMMHiwiiuii"'ij The Travelling Bazaar|1 By Jerry Jontry |'iiiiiiiiiiii:iuiiiwiiiii:iiii!iiiiiiiiiii!ii:iiii: i i.ii 'iir.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiii'niininiiiMMiniiHiiiiijjiCOXTRIBUTOR’S DAYBALLAD OF YOUNG BENNIE KANEYoung Bennie Kane was a lad of ambitionTold gals in each hall of a romantic mission.“Darling, I love you, do say you’ll marry m-e.”But young Bennie Kane should have traveled atseaAnd learned from the sailors how women arefooledBy keeping them sep’rate; for Bennie’s gals ^pooledTheir numerous notes; then laid a campaignTo obtain their revenge on young Bennie Kane.They wrote to their brothers, and laid theirhearts bare.Told how Bennie had wooed them with words ofhot air. jEach day came a brother with knuckles of brass.Now poor little Bennie sleeps under the grass.R. L. K.«FREDDIE THE FRESHMAN SAYS:I see where the Planetarium is closed tempor¬arily—the fish must be sick. 1Bill Sills rescued a prof’s small son the other ^day. The little felloiw had run off and Bill foundhim crying loudly for his daddy. Bill held himtill the mother found him—then he said, “Nowstop crying and thank the man”. The little rascal |stopped at once and said “Thank you—man”. '♦ ♦ * IDEAR JERRY: J,{Editors’ note: Dear Colonel: I don’t approve'^of this mud throwing at all—but there is good\rhythm in yoxvr lyric. You should choose a more ^high-minded theme.)What is it that four out of five have? A Phi r-Psi pledge button, of course. If you don’t believeit, just read:The man in the street,The cop on the beat, jThe gambler discreet *Are all Phi Psis.The garbage collector.The criminal detector.The gas inspector.Are all Phi Psis. ,They tri^d to get the creamBut they got the whole blame crop.When once they started placing pinsIt seemed they couldn’t stop.So xvith proud discriminationThey’ve pledged one-half the nation.Oh the farmer in the corn.The lover left forlorn.And the baby still unborn.Are all Phi PsisPhi Psis, blu-p - p.This is not sour grapes.Colonel Byrd.a more or less noisy, communistic, and youthfulprotest which such activities usually become. Ifthe association can plan and consummate its pro¬gram so that a constructive, serious approach ismade to the problems faced, including attemptsto influence social legislation, win industrialistsover to a program of planned production, forcethe government to provide adequate controls overindustry and banking, the organization and its pur- DEAR T. B. :In speaking over the air the other day Profes¬sor Linn used the expression—“But he didn’thave the guts to ruin the girl.”—which,- as youcan guess, drew some comments from his radioaudience. But to show you how people havechanged, the big objection came not from the ipossibilities of the statement, but from the factthat he used the word “guts”. ; MUSICi ByDAVID C. LEVINEJOHANNES BRAHMS (1833-1897)(Reprinted from a brochureon the Brahms 1* estival, pre¬pared by Warren E. Thompsonand David C. Levine.)He belonged to no school, identi¬fied himself with no group, carednothing for cults. He lived quietly—no composer ever had a more un¬eventful life—and devoted all hisenergy to creating music which manyof his contemporaries found harsh,austere and incomprehensible.At the end of his life his musicwas appreciated only by a compar¬ative few: and even those criticsfailed to see the universal appeallatent in Brahms’ art, for again andagain they declared that only a fewwould ever understand him. “Histopmost peaks are tremendously re¬mote, and glitter and gleam in anatmosphere almost too thin fordwellers of the plains,” wrote JamesHuneker in 1905 (Mezzotints inModem Music). And even as recent¬ly as 1916 Markham Lee declared,in his book on Brahms, that he is not,“even in the best sense of the word,a ‘popular’ composer.”These writers and others likethem, ardent Brahn^ns that theywere, would have yielded to none intheir homage to the master. To themhe was eternally silhouetted againstthe soft romanticism of the nine¬teenth century, and appearing thusin silhouette, he seemed very remoteand unapproachable. .And so theyworshipped from afar, refusing tobelieve that Brahms would ever ap¬proach the multitude, or that themultitude ever could approach the iremote fastne.«ses of Brahms. jYet 'Brahms refused to remain on ;the lonely heights where those de- ■vout, if mistaken, worshippers wish- jed to place him. The present Festi- jval is abundant testimony to the 'fact that today it is no “select few” 'who respond to the glories ofBrahms. Music au.stere and repel- ilent in 1900 has become, in 1933, jHILL’S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 36cSunday Dinner 60cServed on 2nd Floor finely appealing to the “dwellers oithe plains.”Cla.ssic or romantic? Somehow onehas no desire to classify Brahms,himself so sturdily independent. Hewas master of all forms he attempt¬ed, and the simple frankness of hissongs is as finely wrought as theprofound and eloquent reticence ofhis symphonies. And then there arethe great choral works, and thechamber music, and the double con¬certo, and all the piano pieces!Present-day music lovers find ithard to understand how the Brahms they know so well could possiblyhave been an enigma to the audi-ences of thirty years ago. In the fewdecades that have passed since thedeath of Brahms, all the “romanticinflation” of the nineteenth centurvhas worn away: but the gold ofBrahms only shines more brightlywith the passing of time.Representatives of ten traternitiej,and two sororities at. DePauw Uni¬versity recently withdrew from thenewly elected senate following a hec¬tic meeting.Mother’s Day.. . IS SUNDAY MAY 14th ...why not give her a box ofNew colors and sizes only 55c a boxU. of C. B(X)K STORF.5802 EUlis Ave.WAR? PEACERegister your opinion in The Daily Maroon Survey nowbeing conducted by staff members.Hear four prominent speakers discuss this topic and thefindings of the Survey in a Public SymposiumTuesday, May 9, at 8 P.M.CLARENCE DARROWDEAN CHARLES W. CILKEYHARRY D. CIDEONSEMAYNARD C. KRUEGERRobert Morss Lovett, ChairmanUniversity Church of the Disciples of ChristAdmission 15cSponsored by The Daily Maroon and the Socialist ClubAnn How.DAILY MAROON SPORTSTHURSDAY, MAY 4, 1933 Page Three[WILL AIG€NTL€V)AWPLCASE ST€PUPONW€stagcamd ISIT DOWN! ? ITHANK you. J WHY, SIP,PO YOU GOAROUNDWITH A :PUCK IN¬SIDE YOURCOAT ? I DON'T/LET M€OUT OfHERE IALL RIGHT-.lUDITE.HERE’S A FUNNY ONETHAT HAPPENED TOME LAST NIGHT AT AMAGIC SHOW.CAMVASBAGQUIT KIDDING YOURSELF.CAMCIS ARE MILDER.TRYONE AND SEE. GOSH. 1 GUESS YOU'RERIGHT. CAMELS DO SEEMMILDER AND TASTE BETTER TOO.THERE'S NOFOOLIN'ABOUT THATLIN£."ITSTHETOBACCO .O.K. ^I'LL TAKEA CHANCE I T-H AT counts! HAVE ACIGARETTE ?NOT ONE OfTHOSE.THANKS.( HAD THE 1/IDEA THESE ttVWERE PMILDER. 'Camels are made from gfiner, more expensive Itobaccos than any jPIother popular brand.Try Camels and giveyour taste a chance to 5k,..appreciate those cost- ^lier tobaccos.Copyricht. ltS3, R. J. lUynold* TobMCO Comptnpl»0 IN fflMElS—COSTUEg TOBACC<fiENGLER, STAFFORD,BOSEN LEAD SPRINGHANDICAP CUE PLAYI.arry Enjrler, with 75- points, C.A. Stafford, with 70 points, and.Iuliu< Bo.sen, with 65 points, leadt.hc spring” handicap billiard tourna¬ment sponsored by the Reynoldselut'. Play in the .straight rail divi->ion of the tourney wa.s completedwith Stafford defeating Engler inth'' final match of this section yes-• < rday, establishing the high runi.iark of 19.The three-cushion division has al¬ready gotten under way with mostI:: t round matches completed. Afew cueist.s, including Rosen, Engler,and Rufu.s Reed, who ran off a con-ecntive .string of four, high run todale, have progressed to the secondlound. .May 18 should see the clo.s-i.'a^ matches of this section played,aeeording to an announcement byK. tmeth Mort, who is in charge ofAe tournament.HotekWINDERMEREarejust aGrandOldMidwayCustom The place that gradsand Dads hold dear—the favored park¬ing place for visitingteams and parents.Not too near, nor yettoo far, the clo.sestfine hotel—and notin the Scotch senseeither! For parentsor parties, terms areas liberal as a poli¬tician’s promises.Just a grand oldMidway custom that’sbeen kept thoroughlyup to date.lifotels Hindermere^hicago56lh St. at Hyde Park BoulevardTelepl lone FAIrfax 6000Ward B. James, Managing DirectorPurdue Gives MaroonsSecond Big Ten LickingTally in Ninth InningBeat Pagemen by7-6 ScoreLafayette, Ind., May 3.—Chicagolo.'t its second conference baseballgame yesterday to Purdue at La¬fayette in one of the closest andmo.'it exciting games played so farthi.' season. The final score was 7to (’> and the winning tally wasn’tmade until two were out in the lasthalf of the ninth inning. The Ma¬roons led until the seventh.It was weak hitting in the pinchesill the later innings which lost thegame for the Midway team, as itplayed well in the field, committingImt two bobbles. Seventeen of theouts were supplied via the strikeoutroute. Chicago made eleven hits toI’ui'due’s ten.Langford was the starting pitcher(or the Maroons but gave way toStraske in the seventh after thefirst two Purdue men had nickedhim for a w'alk and a hit respective-1\. Hartman was the winning pitch-11 for the Black and Gold.Chicago started off its scoring at¬tack auspiciously enough in the firstinning. After Levin had fanned,Ih (ker and Offill hit and both scor¬ed on Ed Beeks’ long double to cen¬ter field. Munn and Lewis suppliedtht final outs. In the second. Bakerhi’ to left and scored on Levin’stii|de to deep left-center. LevinC' red a minute later on Docker’sMcorid hit in as many inning.s. Trailing by four runs, Purduescored its first marker in its half ofthe third on two consecutive freepassf/ followed by a hit. The Page-men came back in the fifth to scoretheir final two runs with the aid ofbut one hit. After Levin had walked.Decker forced him at second. 01-fill singled and went to third on thecatcher’s error and home on thecenter fielder’s poor throw. Deckerscoring in the meantime. Purduegave notice that it was still in theball game in the last half of thesame inning when two hits and asmany bases on balls added threeruns to their total. But some of theChicago boys objected vehementlyto the way the umpire was callingsupposedly good strikes the worstkind of balls.Two hits by Ivevin and Deckerputting men on first and third withno outs in the seventh couldn’t pro¬duce results as the next three menfanned in order. Purdue scoredtwice in its half of the inning.Straske, entering the game withmen perched on first and secondcouldn’t get through the frame un¬til they had both scored on a long(Continued on page 4) TRACKinEN FAVOREDIN DUAL MEET WITHWILDCATS SATURDAYWith '"our events practically as¬sured, the Maroon track team’schances of defeating Northwesternin a dual meet to be held at DycheStadium Saturday are consideredvery favorable.Victories in the sprints are vir¬tually certain what with Brooks,Block. Jontry, and perhaps Zimmerand Cullen all competing. Cullen,Jontry, Perlis, and Waldenfals,quarter-milers, will run up againstsome stiff competition in the formof Duggins, Wildcat flier. Duggins isalso the obstacle for the low andhigh hurdlers to overcomeIn the field events Brooks willfind little competition in his special¬ty, the broad jump, while Block,Smith, and Roberts are also count¬ed on to add to the local total. Ov-son, who has not been defeated in! (Inal meets, should find it easy tocapture the shot-put title. Roberts.! who is doing exceptional work in thepole vault, has little to fear from, Wildcat opposition.Milow and Groebe should lead thefield to the tape in the mile runwhite Nicholson, Fairbank, Bart DRDER LONG DRILLAS SPRING FOOTBALLCLOSES TOMORROW Tau Delts, Ramblers, PhiDelts Win I-M GamesA long, hard practice in funda¬mentals was the order of the day, asspring football training entered itsfinal stage yesterday. After Tues¬day’s game, which was held as aj special feature designed to entertainvisiting high school students. CoachShaughnessy prepared to wind uptraining with scrimmage today andtomorrow.Some of the men who playedthrough the entire game on Tues¬day weie excused from training yes¬terday. The rest of the squad wentthrough blocking and tackling prac¬tice for over an hour, after a shortblackboard talk. Harry Nacey, whowas hurt slightly in Tuesday’s scrim¬mage, is getting along nicely, andwill possibly practice today.Coach SIhaughnessy, enthusiasticover the showing of the squad, said,“The boys are coming along nicely.The squad is in excellent condition,and has shown considerable progressin the outlined style of play.’’ Kappa Sigs, Alpha SigsCapture LaterGamesSmith, and Moore will prove stiff op¬position to the Northwestern half-milers. Tau Delta Phi, Kappa Sigma, PhiDelta Theta, Alpha Sigma Phi, andthe RamWers defeated the Ponies,Sigma Alpha Epsilon, the HydeParkers, Phi Gamma Delta, andLambda Chj Alpha, respectively inyesterday’s I-M baseball games. PsiUpsilon won from Delta Tau Deltaon a forfeit.The Tau Delta Phi game with thePonies was the most exciting gameof the day, ending 8-4 in favor ofthe former. The game came nearbreaking up several times by fightsand arguments, but gradually set¬tled down to a good ball game. ThePonies got all four runs in the thirdinning, while Tau Delts scored inall but first inning. The game wasclimaxed by a beautiful play in thelast inning when Pomerance, TauDelt shortstop threw his man out ly¬ing on his stomach.The Kappa Sig game was anotherthriller. The Kappas’ fir.st-baseman,was the leading scorer, making threeruns. McDermott starred at second i base for the Kappas.The Phi Delts won their gamefrom the Hyde Parkers by the slightmargin of 4-3. The game was tied3-3 until the last inning when Cim-ral, the Phi Delts’ second-baseman,scored on his team-mate Danen-hauer’s double. Cimral starred forthe Phi Delts by making two runs,while Zimmerman was the outstand¬ing player for the Hyde Parkers.The Alpha Sigs won from the PhiGams 6-3 in a fairly even game.Mahmstedt, the Alpha Sigs’ pitcher,kept the Phi Gams puzzled with hispitching and played a brilliantgame. The Phi (jams, trailing 2-6 inthe last inning, attempted to tie thescore but managed to get only onerun.The Lambda Chi Alpha win of14-8 over the Ramblers was featuredby some wild hitting. Both pitchersput the ball where all the playerscould hit it.Shorthand, Typing and Business Sub¬jects for BeRinners and Brush-up Stu¬dents. Summer classes now forming atreduced rates.VOSS BUSINESS COLLEGE“Home of Individual Instruction”6 N. Michigan Blvd. State 3082SHOWING TODAYq/" ybur Coaf1iV}■Page FourToday on theQuadrangles !1The Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:David C. Levine. Assistant: DavidKutner. jMuaic and Religious ServicesDivinity Chapel, readings by as¬sociate professor Davis Edwards. At12 in the Joseph Bond Chapel.Organ Music. Frederick Marriott.At 5 in the University Chapel.Disciples Club. “^England and In¬ternationalism.” Assistant professorMarshall M. Knappen. At 6, 1156East 57th street.Phonograph Concert. “Concertofor Violin and Orchestra, D Major,Opus 77. Fritz Kreiisl-er, violinist,Berlin State Opera Orchestra underdirection of Leo Blech. At 12 in theSocial Science Assembly room.Departmental OrganizationsSurgical Seminar, “DifferentialDiagnosis of Conus and Cauda Tu¬mors.” Dr. Henry Harkins. At 8 inBillings S. 437.The University of Chicago Physi¬cal Science Talking Motion Pictures,“Energy and Its Transformationsand Electrostatics.” At 4:30 in theOriental Institute.Public LecturesDivision of the Social Sciences,“Russia and Bolshevism. The Febru¬ary, 1917 Revolution.” ProfessorSamuel N. Harper. At 3:30 in theSocial Science Assembly room.Undergradu:»le Organizations jMeeting of the Inter-Club Council jin the north room of Ida Noyes. At12. 1Dame-, in the south reception jroom of Ida Noyes. At 3:30. jDeltho, in the Alumni room of Ida INoyes. At 3 :30.Meeting of Senior Cla o council,at 3:3C in C.bb 109. Discu.ssion ofclass gift.MiscellaneousGraduate Club of Economics andBusiness, Round Table. ProfessorJacob Viner. In the Ha.skell Com¬mon room. At 4 :30.Sociology Club, “What the Unem¬ployed Are Thinking.” Kari Bor¬ders. In the Social Science Assemblyroom. At 7 :30.Nu Beta Epsilon, law fraternity ,luncheon. Judson Court, at 12:45. jCharles S. Aschur speaks on “StatePlanning in New York,” at 7:30 in |the Social Science Assembly. |Blackfrlar* ;Chorus rehearsal at 2:30 in Man-del hall. Cast rehearsal at 7:30 inthe Reynolds Club theater.PSYCHOLOGIST FINDSTESTS FOR CRUELTY(Continued from page 1)museum.d. “Pioneer Days.” The story ofa covered wagon caravan making thetrip to California in the days of thegold rush and a boy who afterwardsbecame the governor of California.c. “The Life and Work of Eu¬gene Thomas.”, The story of a greatscientist who |fave his life to thestudy of humafe disease and by hiscareful and painstaking work savedthe lives of millions although he losthis own.■Each Noon the thots ofboth young men andwomen turn to seasonablelunchoonihr Our menusyield innumerable daintyand delightful dishes for 9.dull appetite and warmerweather, IjM^ce we suggestyou lunch today at—THE GREEN SHUnERTEA SHOP5650 Kenwood AvenueIt*8 different THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY," MAY 4, 1933 IRENAISSANCE GROUPTO PRESENT SERIESOF LECTURES ON ARTStarting anew after the electionof officers next Monday night, theRenaissance society will begin aseries of half-hour lectures on art,in its Wieboldt hall gallery, everyTuesday in May at 3.Edward F. Rothschild, assistantprofessor of the History of Art, willstart the series with the lecture“The Tradition of Abstraction.”Mrs. Henry Grordon Gale, wife of theDean of the Physical Sciences divi¬sion, will follow with “Impression¬ism and Post-Impressionism.” “LateRenaissance in Venice and France”will be presented by Morton Zabel,and Edmund Giesbert, instructor inthe department of Art, will concludethe series with “Delacroix to Mon¬et.”The lectures are presented in con¬nection with the photographic ex¬hibit of forty Century of Progresspaintings, open to the public from2 to 5 every day until May 31.Eight Courses AreAdded for Summer(Continued from page 1)two courses are to be added: 342,The American Executive, and 337,Technology and Social Change.The list of new summer quarterprofessors which appeared in yes¬terday’s Daily Maroon will also in¬clude Lon L. Feller from the DukeT'^niversity Law school. MauriceWalk, who was announced as sum¬mer quarter lecturer in Law, willnot be here this summer.Members of FacultySign Poll on War(Continued from page 1)ncmics, will analyze the politTcaland •economic implications of thequestion.The symposium will be held Tues¬day evening at 8 in the auditoriumof the University Church of the Di.-clples of Christ, 57th street andUniversity avenue. Tickets, priced at15 cents, are on sale at the. boothin front of Cobb and in Mandelcloisters and at the door Tuesday. Traditions Topple;Mustache-growersThrown in Pond(Continued from page 1)of the defenders of tradition.Marching and counller>-maTching,the rebels overtook the Union menthree furlongs to the left of the his¬toric Botany Pond and began thecharge The first casualty occurredwhen 3irney, trousers in hand andpreparing to meet his fate, execut¬ed a coup d’ etat when he jumpedinto the murky waters with insur¬gent Schnur undel- one arm ^nd in¬surgent Wallace under the other.Following Birney’s shining example,Whitney entered the pool with aterrific dive, dragging rebel Ruel inhis wake. As a disciplinary measure,and in order to follow precede'St ofyears, Birney, Whitney and Jontry\ere each tossed in after the regula¬tion procedure.Marshalling their .nain troops inthe afternoon, the growers occupiedthe campus, driving the non-gi'owersbefore them, and inflicting casual¬ties wherever they could or couldnot find them. An invasion of theAlpha Delt garrison resulted in bathsfor Garrison-Commander Newmanand Cassels of the Confederatetroops, and later skirmishes provedfatal to Brute Maneikis.Jontry, one of the commanders ofthe left wing, declared in a stirringspeech to his constituents, “We willcany on along these coasts if ittakes all summer.”The battle will be continued atnoon today between the remnants ofboth armies.PLAN TO APPOINTI-F COUNCIL HEADS(Continued from page 1)the Dean of Student’s representa¬tive on all matters pertaining torushing discipline and infractions ofthe rushing rules.(8) That the InterfPaternitycouncil shall consist of one delegatedesignated by^ each fraternity, andeach fraternity shall have but onevote. (9) All meetings shall be hand¬led according to Robert’s Rules ofOrder.WHY NOT ATTEND THE INTERCLUBBALL IN A NEW 1933 CHEVROLET14c Per Mile Under 25 Miles Per Day13c Per Mile 25 to 50 Miles Per Day12' Pe'- Mile 50 to 75 Miles Per Day11c Per Mile 75 to 100 Miles Per Day10c Per Mile 100 to 125 Miles Per Dayand as low as 6c per mile on longer distances. All ratesinclude gasoline, oil and service expense.Fortin Car Rental System6324 Cottage Grove AvenueMIDWAY 9891IRENE CASTLEMcLaughlin- - in - -“RETURN TO FOLLY”- - with - -Rankin Roberts IV and G. Stuart Baileyat COHN’S GRANDFRIDAY, MAY 5 8:30 P. M.50c-75c.$ 1.00-$ 1.50THINK THIS OVERThere is this to be said for newspaper ad¬vertising: It doesn’t shout at you when you aretrying to concentrate on something else, itdoesn’t obscure the view and mar the landscape,it doesn’t interrupt your enjoyment of a good,grand opera program, it doesn’t clutter up yourmail and your waste basket, it doesn’t makeyou turn to page 7 and then shuffle through 18more pages to finish your story, it doesn’t clut¬ter up your front yard or obtrude itself onto theseat of your motor car on Saturday afternoons.It is like a well trained servant—never intrud¬ing or making itself obnoxious, but alwaysquietly at hand ready to give service when calledupon.—Bangor (Mich.) Advance. I SOCIALIST CLUB TOSEND DELEGATES TOWORKERS’ CONGRESSI * f.A body of delegates from the So¬cialist jClub will leave today to at¬tend Continental Congress ofWork^-and Partners for EconomicReconsj^ruction, to be held in theWashl(fl[Hott Auditorium in Wash¬ington, G. Saturday and Sunday.The purpose oi the convention, ac¬cording to the official statement, is‘to “effect a complete mobilizationof farmers and industrial workers,and others interested in their wel¬fare, to’ draw up a program to rightthe grevious wrongs we have suffer¬ed and set up a national council ofthe people who work for a living toensure {its realization.”Purdue Rally BeatsMaroon Nine, 7-6(Continued from page 3)hit by Craig, Purdue outfielder.The final tally, as previouslymentioned, was rung up in the lasthalf of. the ninth. After the first t vomen were out, a walk and two con¬secutive hits ended the ball game.The summary:Chicago ‘2110 020 000—6 11 2Purdue 001 030 201—7 10 2Batteries: Langford, Straske andOffill; Huml, Hartman and Duff. School of BusinessQuarterly to MakeAppearance May ISThe* ^Balance Sheet Jr.”, pub¬lished' by the School of Business,will make its quarterly appearanceMay 16. Sponsored by the StudentCouncil of the School of Business,it is designed to .strike a balancebetween the students and professorsof that school.The publication will contain news,humor, society, and articles aboutthe various School of iBusiness or¬ganizations. It is edited by DorothyDiemer and Sanford Maus, with theassistance of Bertie Errant, AlbertGalvani, Aubrey Lyon, Marie Trag-Itz, Einor Bjorklund, Albert Hel-land, Isobel Kennedy, and Carl Gep-pinger.The paper will be sold in Haskellhall on the fifteenth at five centsper copy. It will also be sold by theCouncil at the annual banquet.PLEDGINGPhi Kappa Sigma announces thepledging of Arthur Hansen of Chi¬cago.CLASSIFIED ADSWill share apartment with twoother congenial students. Box 0.Faculty Exchange. HARRIET MONROE TOPRESENT READINGFOR LITERARY CLUBHarriet Monroe, editor of “Poet,ry: A Magazine of Verse,” will i-padsome of her own verse and commenton modern trends in the art, at thenext meeting of the Literary dubMonday evening, at 8:30 in roomC-E in International House.Mies Monroe has written numer¬ous collections of poems, including“Valeria and Other Poems,” “Youand I,” and “The Difference andOther Poems.”Requested by the committee onceremonies of the World’s (Colum¬bian Exposition to write a poem onthe dedication, she wrote “Colum¬bian Ode” which was read and sungat dedicatory ceremonies on October21, 1892.The captain of the University ofOklahoma track team was put in jailfor hitch-hiking.Bi^'an^Stiatton^]COLLEGE ^18 S. Mirhifran A»e. Tel. j | 1Rand. 1575. Busineas traininK- { 11practical complete. Teacheri< | Iroutined in busineee technique. n 11Student body of hiirh calilter Ulijl****Day or Eve. Co-cd. 16 eouretn. ’Viait, phone or write for cat-aloK. Enter now. Summerrlansra start June 5lh and July5th.GOING ON A CENTURYOF PROGRESSONE DOLLARIS ALL YOU NEED TO SPENDFOR A PERFECT EVENINGFREE DRINKSOpenimg IVight tmd Erery IVightDeiightful CuisineThrilling Musicto the Strains ofPAUL ASHAND HIS WORLDFAMOUS ORCHESTRACome and chase those depression bluesaway . . . dine, dance and be merry.You’ll find everything to your satis¬faction.Finest Drinks . . . Best FoodSuperior MusicGRAND OPENINGMUSIC BOXCottage drove Ave.at 64th St.New ManagementNEW POLICY 100% AMERICAN All Brandsof FamousBrowsServedJoin the Throngs ofMorrymalcersfor tho Best TimeYou Ever HadSATURDAY. MAY 6thof Chicago'sNEWEST AND MOSTBEAUTIFULCAFE