UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1933 Price Three vVol. 33. No. 112.DIVINITY SCHOOL'SNEW DEAN PLANSREORGANIZATION Replaces Mathewsas Divinity HeadBenjamin M. Squires, professorial‘\turer on Kconomics, has preparedseries of articles revealing, accord¬ing to the Herald and Examiner in\.hich the tii-st of the series appear¬ed yesterday, “the inside story ifyrihe first time of .\1 Capone’s seizure}.nd control of the $25,000,000cleaning and dyeing industry in‘ hicago.”“Professor Squires.” the Herald,.nd Examiner continues, “was for Successor of MathewsUrges Extensive Fieldof ElectivesDr. Shirley .Jackson Case, newlyappointed dean of the DivinitySchool to succeed Dean ShailerMathews, plans to reorganize the Di¬vinity school along the lines of thenew plan. It is his belief that Di¬vinity students should be permitted j•wo years ‘dictator’ of the cleaning | jj ^vide range in electing studies andand dyeing industry in Chicago, and ! should be allowed to specialize in-,> eminently qualified to tell .step by j tensively in the fields of their<tep how racketeei s take a strang ? I ehoice.hold on industry. He resigned last-ummer, following a .series of slug-tings and bombing.s which were cli¬maxed by a murder. He explainedhe could not remain in associationwith per.sons who tolerate such con¬ditions.” According to the Office ofKconomias, Mr. Squires is still amember of the University faculty..Ithough he i.s not at present con¬ducting any cour.se.s nor will he de¬liver any lectures next year.Arbitration in theCleaning IndustryDr. .Squires promises his readersthe story of how he became czar ofthe cleaning industry, only to be dis-I uted in his control by .Al Caponehim.'^elf. The name of H. Millis,professor and chairman of the de¬partment of Economics figures in■Mr. Squires story as the arbitratorwho recommended that Mr. Situire.s,an arbitrator for many years in themen’s clothing and other industrieshe appointed to the position in the(leaning industry similar to that now-held by Judge Landis in baseballand Will 'Hay.** in the motion picture/acket.The idea of establishing a “bo.ss”( t cleaning and dyeing developedafter a series of atrocities which costseveral lives and .several thou.sanddollars as the result of price wars,window* smashings, acid throwingand other form.s of violence.‘ Super MethodPlant Erected”“In 11)2S end 1H21> the union of ,in.side workefs under the leadership 'of Ben A. Abrams proceeded withthe erection of a million dollar .“super method” cleaning plant. 0.^- jten.^ibly the plant was to be used as 1a weaiion of competition to forcecleaners to sign a new agreement,the old agreement having expired.“Whether motivated by the desire |to sell the building at profit, to useit as a weapon of negotiation, or to !(pei ate the plant, .Abrams went lahead rapidly with the construction 'and equipment of the building. ,Money was raised by special as.se.ss- 1ment of union members.“.About this time other cleanersweary of front page publicity and ;( barges of corruption and gangster ,control, appealed to commercial 1bodies for help in correcting the illsof the industry. On the recomrien- !cation of the Association of Com- ;merce a new executive secretarywas employed, an open shop man Twelve courses are now requiredof all Divinity student.s, but if Dr.Case’s plans are carried out, thisnumber might be cut to six or evenle.ss. The entire curriculum of theschool would be built around a groupof “Orientation” cour.'es which stu¬dents would be re(iuired to take be- j1 foie they could specialize.The Orientation courses would ij consist of one general course in di- 11 vinity education and four specific '•j courses; church history; Bible study;the speculative problems of theol¬ogy; and practical theology, with)emphasis on the conducting of pas- ,torate.** Specialization would bedone in one of these courses.Faculty Member Since 1908 jDr. Case came to the University •in 190H as assistant professor ofNew Te.stament interpretation, afterreceiving the Ph. D. degree fromY’ale in HM)(i and 20 NAMED ASPROCTORS FOREXAMS FRIDAY Senior Class HoldsMeeting TornonvwA special meeting of the en¬tire Senior class has been call¬ed for tomorrow morning at 11Two Women, Eighteen jMen Are Selected |Pitcher ibyDr. Shirley J. CasePROVIDENT HOSPIM,UNIVERSITY AFFIIIATE,OPENS NEW QUARTERSPlan to Improve Standardsof Medicine AmongNegro Studentsfaculties of Yale and Bales College.He was made chairman of the de¬partment of ("hurch TIi.story in1923.Dr. Case i.s the outstanding .Amer¬ican authority on the civilization of The Piovident Ho.spital. affiliatedwith the IJniver.sity. opened it.< doorsyesterday to the first patients in thehospital’s new quarters in the build¬ings formerly occupied by the Ly-serving on the ' ing-In Hospital at 51st street andVincennes avenue.The purpose of the hosjiital, as')iitiine(i in the “.Agreement for Co-ojieration,” is to improve the .stand-ard.s of medical practice and nurs¬ing among the Negro race. The resi-Palestine and early Christianity. He I dent staff of the ho.spital will beha.s published nine volumes on : eomposed solely of .Negroes, the con-church history, most widely discuss- | suiting staff will be composed ofed of which is hi.s “Jesu.s—A NewBiography,” puhli.shed by the Uni¬versity Press in 1927.The new Dean has been edi¬tor of “The Journal of Religion”since 1927.Select Freshmenas Charity BallCigarette GirlsTwenty Fi’(;shman women will beselected to act as cigarette girls atthe Senior (’harity Ball to he heldMay 29, the night before DecorationDay, at the Trianon to the music ofB<*rnie Cummins’ orchestra. Thewomen will be selected by a com¬mittee of three women, a.id theirnames announced in tomorrow'.-Daily Maroon. They will he official¬ly greeted by Rernie Cummins oncampus later in the week..Margaretha Moore, secretary-treasurer of Interclub, is chairmanof the committee of selection, andwill be assi.sted by Mary Lou Cotton members of the .staff of the Cniver-' .sity. and the attending staff will he ’<)0 pec cent Negroes.The facilities of the hospital will' include 110 bed.s with all services in¬cluding psychiatry, a .Nurses Train-' ing school and Home, and an Out 'Patient Department connected with ‘the Max Epstein Clinic at the Uni¬versity.U fhe. ho.spital. which has just com-jileted its forty-second year of serv¬ice to the Negro community, has re-eived .$3,000,000 in donations fortjie new quarters. .Among the dona-j tions are $250,000 from the Rosen-wald Fund, $500,000 from the Hu-I bert Fund, $150,000 from two un-i named Chicagoans, and $50,000from .Max Epstein to establish anout-patient department. Selection of 20 proctors, twowomen and 18 men, who will super¬vise the annual high school Scholar¬ship examinations Friday was madeyesterday by William Pitcher, headproctor. The group of proctors was^.elected on a basis of schola.«tic abil¬ity and activity in student affairs.I The proctors appointed are: Ag¬nes Adair, and Helen Hiett; PeterZimmer, William Sills, Delta Kap¬pa Epsilon; Dexter Fairbank.Charles Merrifield, Alpha Delta Phi;William Wakefield, Sigma Chi; TomAndrews. Tom Barton, Kappa Sig-fna; Philip Mullenbach, Delta Up-dlon; Rufus Reed, William Traynor,Chi P.si; Kant Hughes, Delta TauDelta; F'arell Toombs, Elwyn Wil¬cox. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; RobertEldred. P'ranees Cimral, Phi DeltaTheta; Walter Hamburger, Jr.,^laurice Rosenthal. Zeta Beta Tau;and .Sydney Finkel, Phi Sigma Delta.} 850 RegisteredThe pre.^ent registration for theexaminations indicates that morethan 850 high school students willAssemble P''nday morning to com-^ete for University scholarships..A final coordination of the work ofthe eight committees, who, for morethan two weeks have been arranginga program for the Scholarship ex¬amination day, will be made this af-teinoon by ElisabethpNank Carr, co-chairmenThe examination.^ this year willmark the first step in a revision of"he scholarship examination system.Instead of examining the students ina single subject, this year each ofthe high school contestants will takete.sts in three subjects, selected fromsubjects i nthe regular high schoolcurricula. By 19.35 it is hoped to in Mandel hall.The assembly, which is thefirst mass meeting of the classto be held this year, has beencalled by Joseph Zoline, presi¬dent. All seniors are required toattend, and will be excusedfrom classes that hour.“Every member of the class of1933 is urged to be present inMandel hall Wednesday morn¬ing,” Zoline stated yesterday indiscussing the plans and activ¬ities of the group which will bepresented at the meeting.STUDENTS GIVE UPSCHOOL WORK FORWORLD’S FAIR JOBSUniversities Compromise onCustomary ScholasticRequirementshave the systems arranged .sothat the student.s taking the examin¬ations will select one topic fromeach of three prescribed groups.Raker DiscussesDrama in MoodyLecture May 23GYPPED IN EGYPT’PROVES HIT, BOXOFFICE INDICATESand Helen Hiett. The twenty womenfrom the steel industry. .Apparently j will be selected from recommenda-honorable and honest, the new* sec- tions made by the presidents of theretary did not subscribe to the fourteen women’s clubs, each of.scheming of the in.siders and soon | whom will nominate a candidate, andfrom ireshmen chosen by Helenlittle more than a rubberbecamestamp.Inside WorkersFoster Cleaners War“Another price war got underway in May, 1929. Tailor shops werestolen right and left, and the tail¬ors’ union rapidly disintegrated. Pe¬nally, in late Fall, the time seemedripe to break completely with theunion of inside w'orkers. Giving asa pretext the menace of the unionplant rapidly Hiett from the class at large.Tickets for the Ball are on salethroughout campus at one dollar acouple, and a suit is being given tothe man selling the greatest numberof bids.UNIVERSITY HOST TO828 PREP STUDENTSThe University played host Satur-nearing completion, j day to 828 high-school seniors whoand with the ‘assurance, it is .said,that the drivers would not strike insympathy, the industry closed itsplants to union workers.”Shortly thereafter, the drivers de¬clared a sympathetic .strike in spiteof' assurances to the contrary andthe indu.stry was tied up completely.In this manner, Mr. Squires showshow the germ of the idea of dicta¬torship as a way out penetrated theindustry until his appbintment wasobtained through the recommenda¬tion of Mr. Millis. responded to its invitation to attendIJlackfriars’ matinee performanceand to tour the campu.* under theguidance of 87 undergraduates.The ‘’Day at the University ofChicago” committee took the prepstudents on campus tours. Luncheonwas served at the Commons, theCoffee-shop, the Cloister Club, andthe dorms.The high spot of the program wasthe performance of Blackfriars.Dean Chauncey Boucher addressedthe visitors between the acts. More people saw “Gypped inPlgypt” during the first week-end |than were present at the first week¬end of any previous Blackfriar.sshow. The opening night and mat¬inee were comjiletely sold out, 'while the house was ninety percent 1filled for the Saturday night show.Tickets are selling fast for thisweek’.s iierformances, according toTom P’linn, hox-office manager. Thematinee, the only one open to thepublic, due to the special show givenfor high school seniors last Satur¬day, is almost sold out, althoughgood seats are still available, Flinnpointed out. IMilt Olin, .star of “Gypped in (Egypt,” whose performance at thepremiere was weak due to a sorethroat and the extraction of a wis¬dom tooth, has been declared ingood physical condition by the Stu¬dent Health Service, and will be in ,good voice for the la.st three shows.His u.sually strong singing voicecould not be heard in all parts of thehouse on Friday.Approximately one hundred andtwenty-five scores of “Gypped in iEgypt” music were sold at each of |the three performances under the 'direction of Wallace Crume, head iscore girl. Fifty club women aidedin the sales, and will rotate this com- jing week. George Fierce B’aker, chairman ofthe Yale Drama department, willspeak on “.A Retro.spect of the The¬ater” next Tuesday evening at theWilliam Vaughn Moody lecture.Dr. Baker was director of the 47Workshop at Harvard, one of themost famous drama training schools,where Eugene O’Neill studied underhim. In 1925 he took the director¬ship of the University Theater ofYale. He was the author and direc¬tor of “The Pilgrim Spirit,” theMassachusetts Tercentenary Pageant,in 1929, and has written three bookson drama, its technique, and its edi¬tion. Dr. Baker has also edited“Specimens of Augmentation,”“Forms of Public Address,” theBelles Lettre.s Series, Section III, theunpublished correspondence of Dav¬id Garrick and that of Charles Dick¬ens and Maria Beadnell. Besidesthese, he has edited and compiledvarious Elizabethan plays. Plays ofthe 47 Woi’k.^'hop, Series I-IV, YaleOne-Act Plays I, and four volumesof the Yale Long Plays. JULIETTE ALVINGIVES RECITALIN MANDEL HALLCERCLE FRANCAISE TOGIVE PLAY THURSDAY RULING ON DORMRAID IS ALTEREDON INVESTIGATIONI 10 Men, 25 WomenAsk Further Leniencyby UniversityFive thousand college studentswill have jobs at the Exposition. .ACentury of Progre-.s, according toestimates by World’s P'air officials.The present economic stress hasproved so great that many studentsCason and | quitting school early, regardlessof the continuance of their courses,in order to work for additional fundsto continue their education.■At present the University in sev¬eral of its departments is consider¬ing night courses for the benefit ofthose .students who have been com¬pelled to droj) out of school with thepreliminary opening of the Centuryof Progress Exposition. Though thefair does not officially open untilMay 27, the preliminary opening re¬quires the presence of many guides,parking space attendants, and re¬freshment vendors. New Plan stu¬dents at the Univer.'ity. who want towork at the Fair, may take their ex¬aminations in Septemlier. They, un¬like other students, will not lose any¬thing by dropping from school..Many .students have encountereddifficulties in procuring jobs at theWorld’s Fair. For guide positions,certain requirements of phy.siqueare nece.s.sary. .Any student whowears glasses will have some difi’i-culty in getting a job, and the firstrequirement for the “bus barkers”is a raucous voice. Following investigation of the in¬cident in which a number of stu-dent.s unlawfully entered .several ofthe women’s residence halls on thenight of May 4, the following ac¬tions have been taken by the admlh-i.^itration:One student ha.< been suspendedtor the remainder of the quarterand placed upon disciplinary proba¬tion for his next quarter in resi¬dence; one student, not in residence,has been forbidoen to reregister ex¬cept with the consent of the Deanof Students; sixteen students havebeen placed upon disciplinary pro¬bation for the period including theremainder of this quarter, and theirnext quarter in residence.Original DecisionTwenty students were originallyplaced on probation and three sus¬pended for their share in the epi¬sode.One hundred and ten residents ofBurton and Judson Courts andtwenty-five women in Foster Hallyesterday signed and sent a peti¬tion to Dean Works asking forfurther leniency. The Burton Courtpetition was as follows:“We, the undersigned residents ofthe Burton Court Dormitories, inthe spirit of fair play, request thata new trial be given the participantsin the escapade of Thursday, May4, 1933.“We feel in unison that verysound reasons exist for granting thisrequest. They are as follows:“1. Dissention, turmoil and mis¬understanding are rife in the dormi¬tories. These feelings must bestopped. These can be quelled onlyif the residents feel satisfied that afair trial has been granted.“2. There is a feeling that pun¬ishment was not equally meted out(Continued on page 2)$5,000 RewardIs Offered forUrn brella-holder“Rosalie,” a comedy by Max Mau-rey, will be given Thursday atFrench House, 5810 Woodlawn av¬enue. Tea will be served at 4:30,before the performance.The play i.s directed by MaryI^Pera; Helen Orvis plays therole of Rosalie; Claudie Dorland,that of Madame Bol; and ErnestLacherman, Monsieur Bol. Frenchclasses of Parker High school willattend. Anyone interested in Frenchis invited and there is no fee.The Cercle Francais will reopenfor Summer students at the begin¬ning of the summer quarter. Juliette Alvin, 'cellist, will beheard in recital tomorrow eveningat 8:15 in Mandel hall. She will beaccompanied by Robert Walenbornat the piano.Tickets for the recital are pricedat 55 cents and $1.10, including tax.1’hey are on sale at the Mandel hallbox office and the office of the de¬partment of Music. 201 Ingle.-ideiiall.Juliette Alvin studied at the Pari.sConservatoire and later with PabloCa.sals. She has made several .suc¬cessful tours of Flurope, and com¬pleted her first American tour in I1932.Madame .Alvin, who is the wife of :William A. Robson, visiting profes- isor at the University, is a membei jof the third generation of a well- jknown European musical family. Her igrandmother was a pupil of Chopiji. |and her mother studied piano with jPaderew.ski.Wednesday night’s program in- ,eludes the “Suite,” by Sammartini, i“Arioso,” by B'ach, “Les Cheruhins,” jby Couperin, “Adagio and Allegro” |and “LaSource,” by Schumann, iBeethoven’s A major sonata, opus =69, “Elegie,” by Faure, “Le petit iane blanc,” by Ibert, “Piece enforme de habanera,” by Ravel, andBoulanger’s “Piece characteris- ;tique.” I With the passing of a week-endwhich brought nothing more event¬ful than a few Blackfriars perform¬ances, the mystery of the missingancient Egyptian lumbz’ella-holdergoes triumphantly into its secondbig week, gtill an enigma.“Although we can ill afford it,”Charles Breasted, executive secre¬tary of the Oriental Institute told aDaily Maroon reporter yesterday,“we are offering a reward of $5,000for the return of the relic, dead oralive and no questions asked. Thisoffer is an outstanding bargain since,due to the depression, we were forc¬ed to mark it down from $50,000.”Aroused by the reward, R.obertBohnen, Scribe of Blackfriars, de¬clared that the whole organizationwould be set to find the kidnappedumbrella-.stand. Gther reactions tothe offer were more sinistei. ror in-.stance, Louis (Looie de Mug) Mine¬strone. notorious underworld char¬acter, has tried to muscle in.Have YOU an ancient, Egyptianumbrella-holder in vour home?SCHOOL OF BUSINESSHOLDS DINNER-DANCEThe School of Business gives itsannual banquet tomorrow nightfrom 6:30 to 1 in Ida Noyes hall.At a committee meeting yesterdayRhoda Bee Wagner. Helene Segal,Warren Bellstrom, and John Daven¬port were appointed to a.ssist withthe banquet; while Jo.seph Arnsteinand Frank Thompson are the stu¬dent assistants for the dance. Pro¬fessor Chafies Merriam. the prin¬cipal speaker, wiB ialk on “The Re¬lation of Government and Business.”Table reservations close at noontoday, and ticket reservations closetomorrow noon./;^LPage 1 wo THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1933imlg iKarnnnFOUNDED IN 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of ChicaRo, published morninRS except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday durinR the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a year ; $4 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the i>08t-office at Chicago, Illinois, under the .4ct of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSJane Biesenthal David C. LevineWilliam Goodstein Edward W. NicholsonBetty HansenRobert Herzog Eugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. SchallerSOPHOMORE EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn Barden Robert Hasterlik Howard RichTom Barton Howard HudsonClaire I'anziger David KutnerNoel Gerson Dan MacMasterDugald McDougall Sue RichardsonJeanette RifasFlorence WishnickSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman Wil’iam O’DonnellRobert SamuelsNight Editor: Howard P. HudsonTuesday, May 16, 1933AN OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENTvs.AN EXAGGERATED RUMORMay 12, 1933.Dean George A. Works,Office of the Dean of StudentsFaculty ExchangeDear Mr. Works:In view of the events of the past week, and thefact that the matter has been prominently re- iported on the front page of this morning’s Trib- |une, I wish to comment about the policy which has jbeen followed in connection with this disciplinaryaction. |Suppression of the news of such an event as jthe dismissal or probation of a large group of stu¬dents is utterly impossible. Any attempts at suchsuppression as were made in connection with thisevent inevitably result in a far wider spread ofinaccurate, exaggerated stories. When the headof the residence halls hangs up the telephone re¬ceiver the moment he realizes he is talking to anewspaper reporter who is seeking an accurate,official statement about a rumor, that rumor in¬evitably goes on the front page, rather than onan inside page.When the entire story is widely circulated aboutthe campus, but the student newspaper is permit¬ted to carry no word concerning it, still additionalunfortunate color is added to the affair.It seems to me that far more harm has beendone by attempting to suppress this informationthan would have been the case had a short, ex¬planatory statement furnishing the facts and thereasons of the matter been supplied to the campusnewspaper and to such other newspapers as de¬sired it.In accordance with the wish of Mr. Scott, TheDaily Maroon has nothing in it today about this ;matter, although the story was known yesterday |by most of the campus, and in spite of the fact jthat last night anyone on our staff would have ^wagered a large sum that this news would be inthe downtown papers today.The official student newspaper of the Univer¬sity bows to the Chicago Tribune as the organ forsuch announcements.Sincerely yours,Warren E. Thompson,Editor-in-chief. knowledge have never been called in and questionedabout their part in the incident. As a result the officehas been forced to rescind its action as to five of thetwenty-three. I also understand another case is pendingof an innocent by-stander who is on probation for do¬ing nothing more than standing in University avenueand watching the fun.The Dean’s Office apparently placed on probation allthose whose names appeared on a list it requested astudent employee of that office to prepare. It wrote tothe parents of those named, referring to “the unlaw’fulentry into the women’s dormitories’’ by their sons. Asa result of this in some cases students were forced togo home over the week-end to explain the situation, andin other cases families came as far as two hundred andfifty miles to find out what kind of criminals their sonshad become. To further illustrate the effect of this refer¬ence to the midnight prank it is only necessary to quotethe remark made by the father of one of the students,which was as follows, “My reaction is of course to re¬move my boy from the dormitories. I had believed theinfluence at the dormitories was good but it seems to bebad.’’Today four of the men, who had had no part in theescapade and had not been called in and questionedabout their possible participation, received letters fromthe Dean’s office, four days after being placed on pro¬bation, which said in part, “I regret that the circum¬stances of the case seem to indicate beyond a reason¬able doubt that you were implicated, but I am pleasedto learn of your innocence.’’ No student will be returnedto the good graces of his family so long as the infer¬ence remains that the Dean’s office had once determined“beyond a reasonable doubt’’ that tho.se put on proba¬tion were guilty of “unlawful entry into the women’sdormitories.’’The standing of the University is injured less bystudents who create traditional disturbances at FosterHall than by administration officials who act hastilywithout proper investigation. The men at the dormi¬tories, the girls in the halls and the heads at the dormi¬tories are all in favor of the Dean’s office rescindingits action. In light of these facts the Dean would dowell to consider the participants relenting mood andgive them another chance. If the “unlawful entry intothe women’s dormitories’’ had been made by one or twcstudents the action taken would have been justified butit certainly was not in the present case.Very truly yours,W. F. P. THEATERMAXINE CREVISTONS. Hurok’s presentationof “THE PICCOLI”at the ErlangerKnown, frequently, as The Ro¬man Piccoli, this European enter¬tainment now at the Erlanger bringsa new atmosphere, highly flavoredand brilliantly satirical, to Chicagoaudiences. It is bright, fast, and fullof a certain vivre that Americanscan seldom unbend to attain. It isludicrous, yet so utterly captivat¬ing that any spectatoi’s, catching itsspirit, must find it irresistable!Few will believe at first that pup¬pets and puppeteers can give chil¬dren, from the conventional 3 to 93,a program equal to adult intellect.But this is exactly the case, for onlyin view of a lamiliarity with thetraditions of opera, musical comedy,circus and clowning techniques, canthe sly mimicry of the performancebe fully appreciated.Divided into three parts and in¬ternational in scope, the puppets’ of¬ferings include almost everythingfrom our own well-known “TheGeisha’’ and the musical comedy re¬vue which featured “Singing in theRain,’’ to Chinese acrobats, Frenchconcert-hall singers, Spanish bull¬fights, and the Italian’s favorite di-vertisement, clowns.All the tricks of actors and ac¬tresses, sopranos, operatic baritones,and vodvil sister acts are there, ex¬aggerated and heightened to a farcetone. Each trill results in a quiver¬ing bosom, every comic caper of theChinese clown in “The Geisha’’ re¬minds one of nothing so much as DeWolf Hopper’s liberties with the“Mikado’’ last fall, and the hip-shakings of native dancers on the Alter Ruling on DormRaid Following NewInquiry by University(Continued from page 1)among the offenders. An appealwould be only just.“3. Other occurrences of prac¬tically equal severity have been metwith no action or warnings. Underthese circumstances we feel that thepunishment was too severe in thepresent case.“4. In view of the fact that nohearing was given the participantsbefore the body meting out the judg¬ment, we sincerely suggest this be :given consideration. j“The Heads of the dormitories are ibearing the brunt of severe critic¬ism over the incident. It is of theutmost importance that the friendlyrelations that have been establishedin the past between the Heads andthe residents be maintained. Wepledge full cooperation to do all pos¬sible to prevent any recurrence ofthe unhappy incidents of May 4.’’ CLASSIFIED ADSTO EXCHANGE. Michigan Cop¬per Country. Owner obliged to livein Chicago June, July, August,September. Will swap three bed¬rooms, usual dining, living roomapartment. Completely furnished.Houghton, Michigan for Chicagoapartment. Thirty minutes fromtrout stream, five from golf links.Coolest spot in America. Call J. y.Moulds, Local 123.There are three type.s of men whogo to college, said Newton D. Baker,in a recent addre.ss to some Prince¬ton students. “Those who want to beeducated; those who are willing tobe educated, and those who are de¬termined to be educated.”stage are only too common for furth¬er comment.Worth the entire show is the finalnumber in which the white-hairedconcert maestro gives a rigorous,violent “rendition” on the piano—it is so perfectly in character, withjust the proper accent on each dif¬ficult execution, the right flip of thecoat tails, the extra gesture ofhands, as to cause the dignified first-nighters to lose control completelyof their laughter.Seldom ha.s there been excuse thisseason for innumerable curtain callsand shouts of “bravo!” to the man¬agers, but seldom has an audiencebeen thus thoroughly entertained bya troupe ot artists!Letters to the EditorNote: (The opinions expressed in these communirations arethose of the writers, and not necessarily of The Daily Maroonadministration. All communications must be siirned with the fullname of the correspondent, althouirh only initials will be pub- jlished. Letters should be restr'''*eH to three hundred words or less.)May 15, 1933, jDear Editor: jThe most unjust outrage of the school year has been !the manner in which the May 4 incident at Foster Hall ihas been handled by the office of the Dean of Students.A w-eek after the episode twenty-three men were plac- jed on probation and three were su.spended from theUniversity. It is a fact that ten of these men to my\ I The Travelling Bazaar!I By Jerry Jontry |.•iili:iillililHliyilllllllllli:imilUlllllllin. .i. i.:. c. iik<! li,; n . :.i: 1^11' .i lliliUllilllimilllllliHMUHlWHHUItlluKFOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE—said two of our better known aiumni lastSaturday night when Jane Blocki became Mrs.Bud Trude. Joe Temple (who is also a husband,now) and Jimmy Sheldon, still another, wereushers in charge of rolling up the aisle rug afterthe bride had gone out. Instead of pulling onehalf of it out and then the other half—in theold conventional way—they started rolling it up.Before they got half way the roll was so big theycouldn’t carry it; and they say even the preach¬er laughed.ilt * *THOSE PANTS AGAINEd Cullen bought a new pair of plaid trousers.In fact they were so new that Ed was a bit bash¬ful about wearing them—so he finally persuadedEl Patterson to wear them for him and make thetest case. I hope Ed gets over that before he getsmarried.* * »Dexter Fitirbank—of the Kellogg Fairbanks—not the Hollywood Fairbanks—is a very observ¬ing fellow. Only last week he told me that a cer¬tain boy has been that way about a cer¬tain girl in Am. History 173—and says Dex—ithas taken him from the inangiiratian of Pres.Garfield clear through Harrison’s term and upto the farewell address of Cleveland before he gother phone number.>K ♦ ♦NEW TERMS FOR OLDTo talk about the depression is to “poor-mouth”—according to our correspondent in the 400.A “true love” is a steady on campus who willtake you to all the parties.“Keep in the shade”—is the latest for “keep¬ing cool” and was devised by that up and com¬ing sprinter, Harold Block.“The High School Girl’s Hero” —is now BangBaker. He was all the girls could talk aboutafter the Blackfriar’s show Saturday afternoon.» • ♦The track team tangled with Wisconsin andNorthwestern Saturday at Madison and JohnnyBrooks, national broad jump champion, took abrisk workout in winning 4 events. In the broadjump he had some difficulty in overcoming a Car¬dinal man who insisted on jumping a few inchesfarther than John on each jump. F'inally John«ritted his teeth and said, “Well if he jumps 26feet I’ll jump 27”—but John finally beat himaround 24 feet—and then took a nice cool shower.He got two or three lines in the paper—but hadhe been beaten, the whole story would have beenin the headlines. P'unny thing, the press.♦ ♦ ♦AND NOW SENIORS, HERE’S YOUR ONEAND ONLY CHANCE TO GET ACQUAINTEDWITH THE OTHER MEMBERS OF YOURCLASS IN THE SENIOR MEETING TOMOR¬ROW AT 11. YOU MAY FIND SOME OLDFRIENDS THERE—AND MAYBE COLLECTSOME DEBTS—TO SAY NOTHING OFSKIPPIhTG CLASS. THEPURPLE cowTE.A ROOM1129 E. 55 th StreetOne visit will convince youthat this is the place for whichyou have been looking.LUNCHEON DINNER25c 40c SHORTHANDfor UniversitystudentsImacin* how imirh easior it woaldbo to take claaa notoa in ahorthand.Greet Collere offert aperial riaaaeafor univrraity atudenta. ntertine after¬noon* or Monday and Thuradayeveninea. Write, call, or telephoneState 1881 for partieolara.The GREGG COLLEGEC N. Michigan Are., Chiragti. III. forI PARTIESI and! PARENTSRemember, always, thatHotels Windermere are atyour service as they havebeen for many generationsof Midway students. Longexperience has made usadept at arranging Univer¬sity dances, luncheons, din¬ners and parties.And when Mother and Fa¬ther v'isit you in Chicago,arrange to have them stayhere, conveniently, in apleasant room or suite, at—this year especially—veryreasonable price.^oteLs Hjindermere^hicago56th St. at Hyde Park BoulevardWard B. James, Managing DirectorSix Timely QuestionsWith But OneAnswerWHERE can I find news of scho¬lastic interest?WHERE can I find the MidwaySports News?WHERE can I find news of lectureengagements and socialevents?WHERE can I find a review of theTheatre or other importantoff-campus entertainment?WHERE can I freely express myopinion on campus topics?WHERE can I find a receptive audi-ience for my product or ser¬vice? THEDAILYMAROONTHE daily'MAROON, TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1933 Page TlireeFOR STUDENT TRAVELLERS ABROADGermany’s “Romantic” UniversitiesAre Student Centers of the WorldBerlin, Heidelberg and JenaDraw Students fromMany LandsThe high repute of German uni¬versities has for generations attract¬ed students from all over the world.Many toreign seekers after knowl¬edge came to the “romantic” uni¬versities—Heidelberg, Jena, Bonn,etc. but the great majoi<ity stiillcome to Berlin, with the largest uni¬versity and other institutions ofhigher learning. Here, some hun¬dred years ago they found instruc¬tors whose names are immortal: thephilosophers Fichte, Hegel andSchopenhauer; the Humboldt broth¬ers; Helmholtz; and, later, the his¬torians Momm.sen and Treitschke.The Prussian Ministry of Educa¬tion. faithful to high traditions, hasalways tried to bring to Berlin, thebest intellects of the country. Suchnien as Virchow and Koch in medi¬cine. the theologian Adolf von Har-iiack. and Wilamowitz-Moellendorf,the philologist of classic antiquity,found worthy successors in Planck,Nobel prize winner; Haber, duscov-erer of the method of winning nitro¬gen from the air; Nernst, the physi-cLst, inventor of the Nernst lamp;and many more..Authorities of such rank continueto draw foreign students to the Ger¬man capital. Of the nearly 24,000.-tudents attending the various high¬er in.stitutions in the German capitalin the last winter .semester (ofwhom 18,822 were matriculated),2,707 were foreigners, of whom2,120 were duly matriculated, rep¬resenting 39 different countries.p'oreigners who desire to study at a Berlin university must sendtheir application for admission to therector of the university in questionat least four weeks before the semes¬ter begins. The winter semester lastsfrom the middle of October to theend of February, the summer semes¬ter from the middle of April to theend of July. The application muststate the course which it is desiredto pursue, and also the nationalityof the applicant. It must be accompanied by a personal sketch, written in German, setting forth the extent of the applicant’s education; bya diploma or other original docu¬ment entitling the applicant to entera university in his own country, withduly certified German translation;and by any diplomas or other finalpapers from higher institutions oflearning.Tourists See SovietRussia as Lancd ofNumerous ContrastsNORWAY THIS YEAR!Travel byNorwegian America Line"The Scenic Routeto Europe’*FAST—MODERNCOMFORTABLE SHIPSS. S. "STAVANCERFIORO”S. S. "BERCENSFIORD”NEW YORK TONORWAY DIRECTIN 7V2 daysDaily connections between Norwayand Continental Europe by train.S}tlendid Cabin Class $131Popular Tourist Class $113Comfortable Third Class $90Excellent Cuisine includingour famous “Smorgasbord”Sailings from New York;JUNE 7JUNE 24JULY 5VISIT NORWAY—“Land of theMidnight Sun” enroute to the Con¬tinent. A delightful different experi¬ence.Midnight SunCruiseVisiting Norway’s FamousFjords and North Cape—as low as$310 for 37 Daysincluding all shore excursionsFor further particulars regarding ourservice, please see your local agentor write to:Norwegian America LineAgency* Inc.333 No. Michigan Ave.Chicago, III.Phone Central 2737 Vusitors to the Soviet Union willhave the opportunity of viewing thecontra.st.s which abound in Ru.ssiatoday, contra.‘!ts con.sisting of theremnant.s of the old order and ofthe basis of a new structure whichis being built in U. S. S. R.Standard itineraries are designedto give the tourist a choice of tripsto suit any interest. The tours rangefrom a stay of five day.s in any oneof the large cities to a grand tourof 31 days which includes all im¬portant points of interest. Tripsmay be restricted to the larger in¬dustrial centers, or, on the otherhand, to state and collective farmareas.The V’olga tour begins with fourdays in .Moscow. An over-night tripto Gorki precedes a four-day jour¬ney down the Volga, and is follow¬ed by arrival at Stalingrad. Thetwelve-day tour ends with a trainjourney back to Moscow.The Grand Tour is similar up toStalingrad, from which the touristcontinues on to Rostov and to Ordz¬honikidze, where a motor car takesthe tourist over the Georgian mili¬tary highway to Tiflis, capital ofGeorgia. Two days later the travel¬ler goes to Batum, on the BlackSea, and begins a steamer trip toYalta. A motor trip to Sevastopol, asteamer journey to Odessa, and atrain trip to Kiev conclude the 31days of Russian travel.At the University of California atLos Angeles, there are 584 womenI students working their way throughi .school. Eighty-six of them pay all' their own expenses. STUDENT TOURSINCLUDE GREATBRITAIN, FRANCE A View of Norway’s 'Natural BeautyTh< summer’s trip holdingperhaps the greatest interestfor American university stu¬dents will include a tour ofFrance and the British Isles.Students of literature, art,and architecture will find awealth of example from wellknown centers in Ireland, Scot¬land, England, Wales, as wellas all provinces in France.Interest, of course, is con¬centrated in the capitals andscholarly centers, especially inLondon and Paris. The Univer¬sities of Londoii, Oxford, andCambridge, as well as Paris andthe Sorbonne are spots of inter¬est to all.MediterraneanCruise Is One ofGreatest InterestOne of the most comprehensivetrips available to the Americansummer tourist is a Mediterraneancruise, which takes in all importantcountries and points of interest onthe shores of the famed inland sea.Leaving New York on July 1, oneof the most popular cruises makes66 .stops from Madeira to the BlackSea and return along northern ports,reaching America September 2.From Gibraltar the Dollar cruise onthe S. S. President Johnson visitsAlgecira.s across the bay, andtouches at Granada with an in.spec-tion of the Alhambra in Spain.Algiers, Tunis, and the ancientcity of Carthage are included in theitinerary, which proceeds to Crete,Port Said, and the Israelite Land ofGoshen. Plenty of time is given fora thorough visit in Egypt, fromwhence the Suez Canal, and Jeru¬salem, Bethlehem, and other pointsof Biblical interest are ports of call.Through the Dardanelles, the shiptouches at Odessa and other portson the Black Sea, and makes the re¬turn trip along the coast of Greece,with stopovers at Athens and someof the Aegean islands. An extendedvisit is made at Rome, with a sideexcursion to Pompeii, while the |vessel touches at Nice and the Ri- iviera on the final stretch of the re- jturn trip. Painters have pliedtheir brushes in vain,the songs of poetshave failed to pic¬ture even in theworld of imagina¬tion the depths ofthe wonders of Nor¬way’s far famedMidnight Sun. Itmay be seen by visi¬tors to the northernpart of the Scandi-n a V i a n peninsuladuring the summer.The Midnight Suncruise on the pleas¬ure cruiser StellaPolaris of the B. &N. line will visitthe fjords, NorthCape, and Spitsber¬gen.“Carlton Teestube,” Famed MunichTea Room, Is Only One of Its KindMunich, along with its many othernoteworthy sights, has a tea roomwhich has become so well knowneven outside Germany that it has be¬come almost a matter of course thatthe visitor to the Bavarian capital does not leave the city without see¬ing the “Carlton Teestube.”No other city in Germany has atea room like this one, which Frauvon Siebert, widow of a well known(Continued on page 4) Study of RussiaWill be Made bySchuman, PartyProfessor and Mrs. LouisGottschalk AccompanyCroup.Frederick L. Schuman, assistantprofessor of Political Science, willaccompany a group of visitors on atour of Soviet Russia tor four weeksthis summer, from July 15 to Au¬gust 11. Mr. Schuman, long recog¬nized as one of the leading Amer¬ican authorities on Soviet Russia,will endeavor to explain, interpret,and evaluate all that is seen in thelight of his knowledge of Soviet his¬tory and institutions.To further the aim of study anddiscussion of the Soviet Union, Pro¬fessor and Mrs. Louis Gottschalkwill accompany the tourists. Mr.Gottschalk, associate professor ofHistory, is a specialist on theFrench Revolution and on Revolu¬tionary movements in general,while Mrs. Gottschalk is a native ofRussia, and is familiar with the Rus¬sian language, culture, history, andgeography.Prolessor Schuman is well ac¬quainted with Soviet foreign policy(Continued on page 4)HontIo^VCVD ftONERj*A MAYOR. IS AFEMALE HORSENorway Trip HoldsColorful Interest.wSTC^TimeWAKE UP and sail...or'atleast get ready to . . . plannow to hop aboard any“dam” ship ... that’s whereyou'll find STCA . .. whichmeans all your friends andall the fun ... don’t wait toget to Europe before yourfun begins ... sail STCA intourist class . . . round trip$170 up ...all former secondclass accommodations . . .WAKE UP ... count yourpennies and if you can t af¬ford STCA, sail third classfor $131.50 up round trip... why stay at home?A»k *6001 our STCA Hand-Me-Down . . .Drive Youraelf aervice . . . Parii ihopping•ervice . . . and other apecial featurea.See . . Your Travel AgentOrStudent TouristClass AssociationHOLLAND-AMERICA LINE40 N. Dearborn St.,Chicago, III. A summer’s cruise to Norway 'holds in store for its members fas-inating glimpses of blue and silverfjords, as well as myriad-colored,ever-changing skies and waters.Among the unforgettable memoriesot the trip will be those left by thesight of the falls, ranging from greatcascades to thin, gossamer wispscalled “widow’s tears” by the na¬tives because they dry up so quick¬ly. THE MODERN MODETO EUROPE'TOURIST CLASS IS TOP CLASS"Alert college folk have made a disc. verj’— they have found out that on theMinnewaska, Minnetonka, Pennland andIVestemland, Tourist is “top o’ the world”. . . and in the mode of 1933, they areoffered at the low Tourist Qass rate, forgay, lively, interesting Tourist Qass isthe highest class on the ship!It’s the modern idea . . . the low Touristrate for the finest on the ship—the beststaterooms, the broadest decks, the runof the ship. Just notice these rates:From ^106.50, one way; from ^189,round trip. ^MINNEWASKA • PENNLANDMINNETONKA WESTERNLANDUTttOSTOCiAW SltVKIthrough your ^^Mol ogon^IVeekly sailings lo Southampton, Havreand Antwerp. Jot down the names of theseships—then apply to your local agent,the travel authority in your community.RED STAR LINEInternational Mercantile Marine Company260 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. AND you haven’t heard the halfJ\. of it! The other day Bill Bonersaid the Sphinx were a tribe of peo¬ple living in Egypt!Won’t some kind friend tell himwhat to do before it’s too late? Whathe needs is a good pipe and good to¬bacco. Of course, the right tobacco isnecessary—but that’s easy. A recentinvestigation showed Edgeworth tobe the favorite smoking tobacco at42 out of 54 leading colleges.And here’s why: Edgeworth isn’tjust another smoking tobacco. It’san individual blend of fine old bur-leys. And you’ll know that differencewith the first cool puff of Edgeworth.Want proof before you buy? Thenwrite for a free sample packet. Ad¬ dress Larus & Bro. Co., 120 S. 22dSt., Richmond, Va. Edgeworth isavailable everywhere in two forma—Edgeworth Ready-Rubbed and Edge-worth Plug Slice. Allsizes — Ibi pocketpackage to poundhumidor tin.EDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCOIlKHLSITOUR SOVIET RUSSIAUnder the Personal Leadership of One of theFOREMOST AMERICAN AUTHORITIES ON THE U. S. S. R.Prof. FREDERICK L. SCHUMANOf The Department of Political ScienceOf the University of Chicago and AuthorOf the Book “AMERICAN POLICY TOWARDS RUSSIA SINCE 1917”He visited the U. S. S. R.in 1928 and interviewedthe heads of various gov-'ernment departments. HEI S PARTICULARLYQUALIFIED ON HISRETURN VISIT to eval¬uate the results of theFive Year Plan and theprospects of the second 28 Days Under the SovietsSail in any of the Cunard LineSteamers and join Prof. Schuman’sgroup on the follow’ing dates:In Berlin July 14. In Leningrad July 19In Hamburg July 15. In Moscow July 22LESS THAN $10.00 A DAYplan.ENTIRE TOUR—Tourist Class $279.00. First Class $510.00AMALGAMATED TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK111 WEST JACKSON BLVD — CHICAGOIn Cooperation with Intourist andCUNARD LINE CHICAGOS. S. Aquitania Leaving New York on July 5th Offers Our Party PromptConnection with the Soviet Steamer Leaving London on July 12th For relaxation and education*too* read The Daily Maroon.You'll find news of the campus*notic s and scandal. Today onthe Quadrangles is for YOUR in¬formation. The Travelling Ba¬zaar is for YOUR amusement.Your education cannot becomplete without a knowledgeof the happenings of the cam¬pus. They are all recorded inyour copy ofTHE DAILY MAROON fI i.■iA:rj'..I'-'v'-V" --r«--Tr7-\ DAILY /'if^dge hour TUESDAY, MAY 16, 1933SCHUMAN AND PARTYTO MAKE STUDY OFRUSSIAN INSTITUTIONS(Continued from page 3)and with the general po.'ilion of theSoviet Union in fontemp;)rary worldpolitics. Hi' first hook, ’•AmericanPolicy Toward.' Ru. .'ia Since 1917,”is an authoritative treatment ofRussian-American relations sincethe Revolution. ha.'Cd on his visit toRussia in 19’28 on the eve of thefirst Five Year Plan, when he inter¬viewed the heads of the governmen¬tal departments. Since 1928. he hastravelled and studied in France.Germany, Italy, and Great Britain,as well as in the Soviet Union. BADGERS TAKE3-WAYTRACKMEETi BROOKSCOPS FOUR EVENTS Maroons Lose Twice to Gophers;Defeats Leave Pagemen in CellarA regulation at Denison Univer¬sity says, ‘‘A student may be rein¬stated only if the absence is causedbv illness or death.”Miss LindquistCAFEin theBROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.Luncheon 35c, 50c, & 60cDinner 5 5c and 75cSwedish Buti’et our specialty, con¬sisting of from 20-25 varieties ofdelicious salads and relishes on ice,from whicli make your ownthoice.BiT'dnt&StrattonCCi^EGE18 S. Mirhiiran Ave. Tel.Rand. 1575. Business training—practical, complete. Teachersroutined in business technique.Student body of hiph caliber.Day or Eve. Co-ed. 16 courses.Visit, phone or write for cat-aloK. Enter now. Summerclasses start June 5th and Julv5th.GOING ON A CENTURYOF PROGRESSOverheard enMi I. Ce Train John Brooks won four events toaccount for 20 of the 54 t/ pointsthat placed the Maroon track teamsecond in the tenth annual triangu¬lar meet at Wisconsin Saturday.Wisconsin won the meet with Toi/jpoints and Northwestern trailedwith 46. This is the second defeatin eleven starts at dual, triangularand quadrangular meets for Chicagothis season.Brooks recorded his victories inthe 100 and 220 yard dashes, the220 yard low' hurdles, and the broadjump. The first win came in the 100when Johnny stepped the distance inthe Camp Randall record time of 9.8seconds. He took the 220 a bit lat- Ier in 22.2 seconds, and toward theend of the afternoon squeezed aflight of low hurdles in between hisbroad jump trials and broke another 'track record for the race aroundone curve.Chicago and Wisconsin each wonfive events and had an equal shareto a sixth since Pacetti of the Car¬dinal team was able to tie Ovson in 'the shot with a heave of 48 feet 4'4 |inches. Ted Haydon registered theonly Chicago first place not attrib¬uted to Brooks when he threw thehammer out a distance of 187 feet.Bob Milow did a remarkable af¬ternoon’s work in placing second toFarley of Northwestern in the mile ,with the good time of 4:28 and then ,coming back to keep the Badgers ■from a slam by placing third in the itwo-mile. Farley, a coming star. ;turned in a 4:27.4 mile and a 1 :59 jhalf during the afternoon. ? The Chicago Maroons just can’t ,get away from the evil influence of ■losing ball games. They lost two lastSaturday afternoon to Minnesota :and with a break of any kind either ;one of them might have been a Chi- icago victory. The final scores were i10 to 8 and 5 to 4 and the defeats ;left the Pagemen in undisputed pos- |session of the Big Ten cellar. The \second game went eleven innings.It is slight solace to point out thatthe Gophers’ 35 hits in comparisonwith the home team’s 22 safe blowscould produce hut a three run dif¬ference in total runs scored in thetwo games by each team. Minnesotahad 21 men left on bases while 18of the Maroons were left stranded. Three double plays by Chicago pre¬vented more scoring.The opener was a .see-saw affair.The Maroons forged ahead twiceduring the game only to be headedeach time by the Minnesotans. Bak¬er was the starting pitcher for Chi¬cago and allowed 18 hits in eightinnings. Reul retired the side in or¬der in the ninth. Gallivan pitched forthe Gophers and was touched for 13safe blows. Minnesota won the gamein the eighth inning at which timethe home team was leading, 8 to 5.Two doubles, three singles, an error,and a walk combined to give thevisitors five runs and the ball game. RACQUET MEN DOWNWHEATON SQUAD FORSECOND TIME, 5-1 Coleman 6-1, 6-2.Davidson and Trev Weis- ha,! ^hard time .stopping Carlson and Now-son, but took the match 6-4, 8-6Dee and Tyroler had little ■.'ouhloswamping Chamberlain and C6-2, 6-3. anMUNICH’S TEA ROOMATTRACTS TOURISTS The Maroon netmen at last got in ia meet between rains yesterday jwhen they trounced Wheaton Col- Ilege 5-1 for their thirteenth win this |season. The Maroons were unable toplay Illinois last Friday on accountof rain.H. Ries, playing No. 1 for the jMaroons, downed Carlson in a slow ;match, 6-1, 3-6, 6-3. Patterson lost !the only match of the day for the !Maroons to Newson 4-6, 4-6. Dee jplayed better than he has this sea- }son to win from Chamberlain 4-6,6-4, 6-0 after a slow- start. Sid Weissplayed as well as usual to down 14 Years U. of C. Expener;EXPERT TYPEWRITINGDoctors’ and Masters' Disserla^'o-a SpecialtyLowest RatesLOUISE B. SNOW5658 Ellis AvenuePhone Dorchester 4691FOR COLLEGE OIRMCiBnii out Oisitii 1,1—^ L.ApKRl.J.^tMtk MtalRyM ATodav on the9QuiaclranglesDe Paul TeemenThrash MaroonGolf Team, 16-2Phelps & PhelpsCOLONIAL TEA ROOM97124 WoodiawB .4vf.RESTAURANT142.*! E. 63rd (I. C.Home Cooling—Low Prices The Maroon golfers invaded for¬eign territory for the fir.'t time last |Friday at Kildeer country club and jwere severely chasti-ed by a crack |DePaul squad, when they took a 16 |to 2 whipping for their third loss of .the season. The local tee-men did Inot win a match and succeeded in |gaining their two points in fractions |of Vii and 1 points. ;.Although Ed Mauermann shot a i76 for the best round he has scoredin competition this year, he and Boh iHowe with 83 bowed before GeorgeThomas, who touied the course in 74for the low medal score of the dayand Joe Carney with 84, 2 1-2 to 1-2.One-half marker contributed bySmith and one point taken by Bak¬er completed the Maroon total.SPEEDWRITINCTHE WONDER SHORTH.ANDin ^ weeks you take' rapiil dictation andtranscribe notes accurately. Not a marh nBoth sexes. Adults only. Very low co-stI Many colleKe Kraduates.' FREE DEMONSTRATIONSCHIC.iGO BUSINESS COLLEGE.' tth Floor. 190 N. State. Franklin 4122I (Walter Harris, B. S., M. .4.. Pres, t j The Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:f]dward Nicholson. A.ssistant: How¬ard Rich.Music and Religious Services‘‘Stevenson at Mass.” AssociateProfessor Harold Willoughby. In theJoseph 'Bond Chapel, at 12.Christian Science Organization..At 1150 East .58th street, at 7:30.Oriran music. Porter Heaps. Inthe University Chapel at 5.Departmental OrganizationsMedical Seminar, ‘‘.4 Study of Re¬peated .Attacks of ExperimentalPneumococcus Lobar Pneumonia inDog.-.” Dr. Coggeshall. “The Occur¬rence of Mononuclear Phagocytes inthe Inflammatory Exudate in LobarPneumonia and Their Relation toResolution.” Dr. Robertson. In Bill¬ings .M 433 at 4:30.The Biology Club, “The .AncientSystem of (^hinese Medicine.” Dr.Houghton. In Pathology 117, at 8.Undergraduate OrganizationsW. .A. .A. in the .\lumni Room ofIda Noyes at 12. F'ederation of Uni¬versity Women. In the North Roomof Ida Noyes at 12. .Achoth. In theWicker Room of Ida Noyes at 3:30.A'. W. C. A. In the A’. W. C. .A. Roomof Ida Noyes at 3. German Club. Inthe Ida Noyes Theater at 1:30. B.W. 0. In the A'. W. C. A. Room ofIda Noyes at 6:00. The MissionaryFurlough Club. In the Ida NoyesIJbrary at 7.•fULL-FASH/Oiv (Continued from page 3)diplomat, and herself a member of'the highest society, has establishedin the Bl’ienner.strasse, a streetwidely known since the “BrownHouse,” the headquarters of the Na¬tional Socialist party, was builtthere.Tcmiorrow’s Maroon Features—A SPECIAL WOMEN’S PACECONTAINING—The new fashions of springImportant Club announcementsThe Womans Pageappears each Wednesday inThe Daily Maroon Zhe QlU.OfiertiBRASS IE R Efof ilie ^llodevnTiny “fashion-points” like those usedin ^lapin^ fine silk stiK-kings giveMaiden form's “Full-Fashion” bras¬siere its lovely uplift contours and atthe same time make it flawlessly “skinsmooth” through the breast section*..As far as feeling and appearance go, youmight be wearing nu-Drassiere-at-all!But with ail this effvet of freedom,“Full-Fashion” is skillfully constructedto give perfect bust conlrol and per¬manently blocked to keen its smartshapeliness, even throiign long, hardwear and frequent washings.“Full-Fashion” is only one chapter inthe fascinating tale of .Maiden Formfoundation garments. Send for freebooklet telling the complete story —Dept. C, .Maiden Form Brassiere (To.,Inc. 245 Fifth Ave., N. Y.AT DEALiRS EVERYWHERElOO* so* rMf NAMi uc V t ta otr- CALTIL. SliTIP. a 4221 College Campai^ Zm? AERIEWILDERNESS CAMPBoys - Young MenWrite for Circular'HILL'S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Lun‘ne<T25cEvening Dinner 50cSunday Dinner 75cServed on 2nd Floor 1449 East 57th StreetWhere the Best of Food, Properly CookedIs Neatly ServedOpen from 7 a. m. Until 10 p. m.Come Once and You Will Come AgainModerate Prices F. P. RODGERS. PropCritics Unanimously AcclaimGYPPEDinEGYPTAS ONE OF THE BIGGEST HITS IN BLACKFRIARHISTORYYOUR LAST CHANCE TO SEE THIS GREAT SHOW ISTHIS WEEK-END.See a Show Now Possessed of the Finish and PolishAcquired Through 3 Big Performances.