^e JBatlp itflanionVol. 33. No. 122. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1933HOLD ELECTIONSTHIS WEEK FOR3 PIIBUCATIONSDaily Maroon, Phoenix,Cap & Gown SelectStaffs Price Three Cen 'hoName Winner ofContest TomorrowThe winning- short story in TheDaily Maroon-Daily News contestwill be announced in tomorrow’sissue of The Daily Maroon. Fromthe many stories submitted twohave been selected, and the finalchoice will be made today.The winning story will bebought by The Daily News at itsregular rates, and will be publish¬ed in the News. If space permits,the story will also be printed inThe Daily Maroon.A dramatized version of thestory will be presented by TheDaily News on Station WMAQ.Students will be the actors.ORIENTATION GROUPMAKES PREUMINARTPUN FOR NEXT TEARElection of staff members fornext year will be held this week bythe three major campus publica¬tions: The Daily Maroon, the Phoe¬nix, and the Cap and Gown.The Daily Maroon elections willbe conducted according to the pro¬visions of its revised constitution, Iwhich was recently changed to con- iform with the altered status of un- Idergraduates under the new plan. !Under these provisions all staffmembers are eligible to election to ithe Board of Control who have com- ipleted six quarters work, regardless Iof academic standing, with the ex- iception of the class of 1935. who are |eligible this year.Six MembersThe Board of Control will be •composed of the Elditor-in-Chief, the !Business MjStnager, the Managing 'Editor, the Circulation and CoUec-; Members of the men’s Freshmantion Manager, and two Associa^ ' Orientation committee, at a meetingEdilors. At least one member of j yesterday in the Dean of Studentsthe board must be a woman. j office, prepared a preliminary planEditorial candidates for Board ! orientation which will begin withpositions include Jane Biesenthal, | Freshman Week of the fall quarterBetty Hansen, William Goodstein, end with the fraternity pledgingRobert Herzog. David C. Levine, i period during the sixth week of win-Edward W. Nicholson, and Eugene ter quarter. The group responsiblePatrick, of the class of 1934. Soph- | this preliminarv plan is Edwardomore candidates for positions on ' Cullen, chairman; LeRoy Ayres,the Board of Control are John Bar- i John Barden, Charles Greenleaf,den. Tom Barton. Noel Gerson, Rob- j and David Kutner. Meeting withert Hasterlik, Howard Hudson, Dav- | them in an advisory capacity wereProgram Will Extend fromFreshman Week toPledging Professor vs. Capitalist:Two Viewpoints on Wagesid Kutner. Dan MacMaster, HowardRich. Jeanette Rifas and FlorenceWi.shnick.Walter Montgomery, VincentNewman, and Edward G. Schaller,juniors, and William Bergman, Wil¬liam O’l>onnell, and Robert Sam- i Lois Cromwell, chairman of Feder¬ation Council, and Geraldine Smith-wick, secretary of Federation.The plan of the committee whichenvisions personal, friendly con¬tacts by upper-class counsellors willcorrespond to the lorientation pro-uels, sophomores, are candidates for ! gram which Univerity women, underthe positions of Business Managerand Circulation and Collection Man¬ager of the Maroon, and BusinessManager of the Cap and Gown.Phoenix CandidatesMaurice Bame and Milt Olin arethe leading candidates for the posi¬tion of Managing Editor of the IPhoenix. Ray Dunne, present Busi-' -« «■ yy* -aness Manager, and John Neukom 11^/01*111 JVl0ri X ICKare candidates for that position.The Business Manager of Cap andGown will be selected from the pres¬ent business staff of The Maroon.The editorial heads of the Cap andGown have already been appointed.(Continued on page 4)Distinguished SpeakersWill Talk at ChapelServices in Summer the leadership of Federation, havebuilt up in five years of experiment¬ation and change.Each fraternity will be asked dur¬ing the course of this week to selectfour of its members, preferably(Continued on page 4)Queen of Hallsat Spring Dance In the midst of a great businessdepression are the theories of theacademic professor or the policies ofthe captain of industry to be reliedupon?How does the opinion of Univer¬sity social and political economistscompare with that of employers con¬cerning questions of business policy?Material recently gathered by rep¬resentative agencies in Chicago con¬cerning wages now being paid inthis district discloses the fact thatmany workers are receiving only afew cents an hour and are conse¬quently forced to supplement thismeager income with aid from othersources. The employer who desiresto pay living wages is forced tolower wage levels by the competitionof unscrupulous or inefficient man¬agers.Employers Want Wage Laws“Gentlemen’s agreements” haveproved ineffective and many of theablest employers in the country arenow urging minimum wage legisla¬tion in order to protect themselvesagainst the evils of this unrestrainted competition. Some economists,however, feel that wages must beallowed to drop indefinitely in orderto increase demand and thus createadditional employment.The Daily Maroon, in an effort tocompare the opinion of some of thefaculty members with that of em¬ployers concerned with the question,today publishes the first of severalstatements by University men quali¬fied to discuss the matter, togetherwith letters on the subject obtainedfrom industrial managers.The question put to the men in¬terviewed personally or by letterwas: “In a current business depres¬sion such as the present one, whenwages are frequently below the sub-sitence level, would you favor forc¬ing the emplojrer, through some kind of minimum wage legislation, to paysubsistence wages or go out of busi¬ness, thus maintaining the volumeof wage at the expense of volume-of employment, or would you favorthe course of affairs to continuewithout outside interference, thusmaintaining volume of employmentat the expense of volume of wage?”Faculty members interviewed wereProfessors Henry Schultz and FrankH. Knight of Economics; Aaron Di¬rector, instructor in Economics; Ra¬leigh W. Stone, associate professorof Industrial Relations in the Schoolof Business; Dean William H. Spen¬cer of the School of Business; andHenry C. Simons, assistant profes¬sor of Economics.The employers writing letters onthe subject for The Daily Maroonincluide Henry Deninison of theDennison Mfg. Co., South Farming-ham, Mass.; (manufacturers ofcrepe paper, boxes, tags, novelties,etc.); Ernest G. Draper of the HillsBros. Co., (Hills Bros, coffee. Drom¬edary dates, etc); and Henry P.Kendall who owns and operates alarge number of cotton, textile andhospital supply factories in variousparts of the country.Low Wage* Better Than NoneMr. Director asserted that he be¬lieves it is better from a social view¬point to pay the works some wage,even though it is insufficient forsubsistence, than to deprive themof any wage by putting them out ofwork entirely; and that economical¬ly, there is a productive gain by thispolicy not achieved if workers mustbe supported by public funds. Heholds that demand is greater whenlarger numbers of people are em¬ployed, regardless of the amountpaid them in wages.Professor Knight expressed him-(Continued on page 2) Candles Popular asStorm Breaks WiresFraternity men in the 5600block of University avenue revert¬ed to primitive surroundings Sun¬day night during the storm.Just as the disturbance brokeover the South Side a large limb,which was torn from a poplartree in the rear of the Alpha Sighouse, fell across and broke thehigh tension line supplying cur¬rent to residences in the block.A hurried search for ornamen¬tal candles at the Psi U housenetted new plan students a bat¬tery of the tapers with which theycontinued last-minute preparationfor comprehensives.ANNOUNCE SERIES OFLECTURES,CONCERTSFOR SUMMER TERMGive AdditionalScholarships toThirteen Men Hutchins, AdlerHold Exams inHonors Course“Hold Your Horses While theQueen Goes By.” The election of a“Queen Dorm” from the women'sdormitories by residents of Burtonand Judson Courts finally ended inthe coronation of Kotsy Cramer ofFoster at the Spring dance in theA p-oup of ^;^nown ope ers ! Halls Saturday nighty Beat-have been invited to talk at the Uni-1 ‘"If <>“‘ I-;! 0PP«"'"F*. A1 Bon-versity chapel Sunday morning serv- ^ ^ ^”*1 3ices during the summer months. ; campa.gn, J.m Sharp was given theDean Shailer Mathews will head “'■'‘>“‘1’ I r It,the list of summer speakers when he j ' ® ® h ’^ronrtierappears in the chapel June 25 to contest sponsored by the Court,er,I , . , . publication of the Mens Halls. Pre¬give his last address before leaving ^' sentation of the awards was madefor ilndia as the Barrows speaker.On July 2, Professor Charles Mer-riam will speak in the chapel. Pro¬fessor A. E. Haydon on July 9, DeanCharles Gilkey on July 16, ProfessorEdward S. Ames on July 23, andProfessor Henry N. Wieman, onJuly 30.On August 6, Dr. C. C. Morrison,editor of the Christian Century, will'be the guest speaker, on August 13,Professor H. F. Hall, visiting profes¬sor at the Chicago Theological Sem¬inary will speak, and President Al¬bert Palmer, of the Chicago Theo¬logical Seminary, will close the sum¬mer session on August 20.SCHEDULE SERIES OFCARILLON RECITALSKamiel Lefevre, carilloneur of theRiverside Church of New York, whodedicated the University chapel car¬illon last Thanksgiving Day, will re¬turn to Chicago to give hour recitalsat 5:30 to 6:30 daily from June 19 toJuly 9, from the tower of the Cha¬pel. Harold Simonds, organist andcarillonerr of St. Chrysostom’sChurch, will give the concerts at5:30 from July 1 to October 1. by Howard Hudson, editor, and Rob¬ert Chapel, publisher of the paper,who are now in hiding after kissingKing Sharp on both cheeks.In a dance contest Dorothy Le-Fold and Olin Sethness were declar¬ed the class of the field by popularacclaim.S. S. A. Alumni GroupHolds Annual DinnerThe Alumni Association of theSchool of Social Service Administra¬tion will hold its annual dinner to¬morrow at 7 in the InternationalHouse. Preceding the dinner, a busi¬ness meeting for the election of of¬ficers will be held at 6:30.Sophonisba P. Breckinridge, Sam¬uel Deutsch professor of Public Wel¬fare Administration will preside atthe dinner, and Miss Edith Abbott,dean of the school of social serviceadministration, will discuss the prog¬ress of the school during the lastyear.Mr. Frank Dane, director of theAmerican Public Welfare Associa¬tion, will speak on “Looking Aheadin Welfare Administration.” Further awards of two-year hon¬or scholarships were announced yes¬terday afternoon by A. J. Brum¬baugh, dean of Students in the Col¬lege and chairman of the Scholar¬ship committee. These scholarshipssupply tuition for two years and areawarded to men on the basis of acad¬emic excellence, athletics and activ¬ities. Thus far six have gone to Chi¬cago boys, four to Michigan highschool students, two to Montana, Il¬linois and Nebraska, and one to eachof eight other states..The following thirteen are the lat¬est winners of these scholarships:Harry Bratsburg, Muskegon, Mich.;Leslie Freeman, Escanaba, Mich.;Daniel A. Heindel Jr., Youngstown,Ohio; Arthur M. Jacobsen, Ovando,Montana; Richard Jones, Chicago;John J. Kirn, Lancaster, Ohio; Rob¬ert F. Lawrason, St. Paul, Minn.;Raymond B. Ramsey, Wichita, Kan.;.Victor Reinholz, Chicago; WilliamH. Rose, St. Alban’s. W. Va.; John(Continued on page 4) Two series of examinations are tobe given this week to members ofthe General Honors course directedby President Robert M. Hutchins andDr. Mortimer Adler. The examina¬tion marks the conclusion of thecourse’s third year of existence.Oral and written sections have beenplanned for both divisions of thecourse, as the high school juniorsare taking the half-hour oral quizduring the afternoons this week andthe University juniors will take thissection tomorrow and Thursday eve¬nings.Excerpts from material read bythe class during the year comprisethe written examination, which wasgiven to both sections of the groupMonday noon. They are allowed aweek in which to work on this part,and may use references and booksin preparation before turning in thecompleted examination next Monday.The class will continue its worknext year with membership remain-i ing as it is at the present time. Six Movies Also IncludedIn Programs for NextQuarterA series of public lectures andconcerts to be given by the Univer¬sity during the summer quarter atthe downtown college and on theQuadrangles was announced ye.ster-day by Carl Huth, professor of His¬tory and dean of the University Col¬lege.Beginning June 23, a group ofsix Friday evening concerts and lec¬tures will be held at Mandel hall at'8. Tickets for the entire coursecosts $3, for half-course. $2, andfor single admission, 75 cents.The concerts will be presented byGuy Maier and Dalies Frantz, duo-pianists, Rose Bampton, contraltowith the Metropolitan Opera Com¬pany, Amy Neill string quartet, andone by Albert Salvi. harpist, andPriola Savini, soprano. ThorntonWilder will lecture July 28 on “Biog¬raphy and Myth” while Bertram GNelson, associate professor of English will present a dramatic read¬ing of McCarthy’s “If I WereKing” in the final otf the series on(Continued on page 4) HUTCHINS PICKS20 JUNIORS ASAIDES,MRSHALSWatson and NicholsonNamed Senior Aide,Head MarshalFinal Number ofPhoenix Goes onSale TomorrowBreasted Finds Ancient Village,Rare Records on Latest TripThrough the streets of a stone agevillage, 5,000 to 6,000 years old, thediscovery of the oldest aqueductknown to man, the finding of thetemple of the Biblical g^)d of writ¬ing, and the uncovering of a massof cuneiform tablets that may tellthe battles of Marathon and. Salamisfrom the Persian point of view—thisis a survey of the recent far easterntrip of James H. Breasted of theOriental Institute.Just a few miles from the ancientpalaces of Persia house walls of thestone age village are still standing,windows, doors, streets, and paintedpottery dishes still filled with thefood meant for that last meal, 5,000years ago, when something wipedout all life.This discover>% Dr. Breasted be¬lieves, indicates the beginning ofhuman development, the developmentthat was to mean the conquest of the near east, to high civilization andhigh art.No longer will we be able to ac¬cept the story of the Persian warsas now recorded in the historybooks, if Dr. Breasted's tablets arereally writings of Darius and Xerxesas he believes. “We may hear anyday of the discovery of historicalsources produced by the Persiankings,” says Dr. Breasted,. “The viewthat the Greeks saved Persia frombarbarism is silly.”In commenting on the discoveries.Dr. Breasted said, “Step by step, ageafter age, we are getting the storyof how we became what we are fromthis chain of ancient ruins which weare excavating in the near east, thecradle of civilization.”Dr. Breasted is making prepara¬tions for a motion picture which theOriental Institute is to produce inthe fall. Club women telling the Phoe¬nix will report at the Phoenixoffice between 8 and 9 tomor-The final issue of this year’s Phoe¬nix will go on sale tomorrow oncampus, Joe Zoline, editor-in-chiefannounced yesterday. Because thequarter ends with the second weekthis month, the publication date hasbeen moved ahead one week.Although copies of the currentissue are not yet available, someintimation of its contents has beengiven by staff members. The lastsection of Harry Morrison’s serieswill appear as “Third Date.” DickBradley has written “Campus Fug-it,” while Sid Hyman has contribu¬ted an article satiring graduate stu¬dents. Short features and jokescomprise most of the valedictorynumber.Banquet on ThursdayEnds W.A.A. Activities Lorraine Watson and Edward W.Nicholson were named Senior Aideand Student Head Marshal as Presi¬dent Robert Maynard Hutchins se¬lected twenty members of theJunior class to serve as aides andmarshals for next year. The cere¬mony of investiture will take placeSaturday at the InterfratemitySing.The other marshals are Frank D.Carr, Edward R. Cullen, EugeneFoster, James L. Henning, Donald R.Kerr, David C. 'Levine, Vincent C.Newman, Henry Eugene Patrick,and Wayne E. Rapp. The aides areElisabeth E. Cason, Lois P. Crom¬well, Rita M. Dukette, Mary Elli¬son, Geraldine Smithwick, Made¬line F. Strong, Rosemary Volk,Esther L. Weber, and Ruth M.Works.The aides and marshals are select¬ed annually by the President throughthe recommendations of the retiringaides and marshals, and servethroughout the year as the Presi¬dent’s assistants at all Universityfunctions. The induction, duringwhich the incoming group is givenits caps and gowns by the retiringaides and marshals, is directed byRobert V. Merrill, University Mar¬shal, and will take place at 10, fol¬lowing the Sing.Many ActivitiesOf the marshals: Nicholson, PhiKappa Psi and Owl and Serpent, isan Associate Editor of The DailyMaroon, and track man; Carr. PhiKappa Psi and Owl and Serpent, isa junior Intramural manager; Cul¬len is Chairman of the OrientationCommittee, a “C” man in track, anda member of Psi Upsilon and Owland Serpent; Foster, Deke, is amember of the Student Committeeon Student Affairs; Henning is Ab¬bott of Blackfriars, and memberof Chi Psi and Owl and Serpent;Kerr has had leads in the last Black¬friars shows and is an Alpha Deltand Owl and Serpent member; Le¬vine is an Associate editor of TheDaily Maroon; Newman, Chi Psi andOwl and Serpent, is an AssociateBusiness Manager of The DailyMaroon; Patrick is an Associate Ed¬itor of the Maroon and a member of(Continued on page 4)Members of W. A. A. will concludethe year’s activities with the an¬nual spring banquet Thursday at6:30 in Ida Noyes Cloister Club.In addition to athletic awards, theprogram of the evening will includespeeches by Thornton Wilder, lec¬turer in English, Mrs. Edith FosterFlint professor otf English, andLeon P. Smith, instructor in French,Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey will serveas alumnae toast-mistress and EstherFeutchwanger as undergraduatetoastmistress.The banquet is open to the public,and tickets, priced at 75 cents, maybe procured from W. A. A. membersat the desk in Ida Noyes hall, andin the locker room of the building. Renaissance SocietyOpens Exhibit of 45, Paintings ThursdayForty-five paintings by the finestof modern American and Europeanpainters comprise the summer ex¬hibit of the Renaissance society. Theexhibit, which has for its theme,“City Streets and Landscapes,”opens Thursday in 205 Wieboldthall, and will remain open everyweek day until August 31.A Chinese ink landscape of theSung period by Hsia Kuei titled, “ALandscape in Storm,” furnished thekeynote of the exhibit. Rousseau,Ryder, Georgia O’Keeffe. Kent, Ber-ain, and Bonnard are some of thepainters shown. A Whistler paint¬ing, “Battersea Beach,” comes fromthe Potter Palmer collection.Because of the success of the for¬eign moving pictures sponsored bythe society, six French and Germancinemas will be repeated at Interna¬tional House every Monday andTuesday beginning July 3 and 4 andcontinuing for six weeks.ALUMNAE CLUB TOGIVE BREAKFASTProfessor Bernard Fay, who holdsthe chair of American Civilizationin the College de France, and is vis¬iting professor at the University thissummer, will be the guest speaker atthe Alumnae clnb reunion breakfastSaturday at 11:30 in Ida Noyes hall.The Alumnae club is this year of¬fering a year’s membership for $1instead of the customary $2 to allsenior women who attend.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1933Sailg iiarnnnPOUNDED IN 1901Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings ' except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during 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 poet-office at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSJane Bieaenthal David C. LevineWilliam Goodstein Edward W. NicholsonBetty HansenRobert Herzog Eugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWaltw L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. SchallerSOPHOMORE EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJohn Barden Robert Hasterlik Howard RichTom Barton Howard HudsonClaire I>anziger David KutnerNoel Gerson Dan MacMaster Sue RichardsonJeanette RifasFlorence WishnickSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman William O’DonnellRobert Samuels that has passed, although at the titne, we weregladly a partner to its practices.The Morgan investigation is a remarkable th'er-apy for a people who seem to delight in contem¬plating their own misdeeds of a brief time ago, forits newspaper stories provide outlet for tensionsand emotions generated by conditions of the pres¬ent.Were nothing more accomplished for the Amer-!ican people. Senator Pecora has spent his time ' selfwell. W. E. T. ProfessorversusCapitalistNight Editor: Howard M. RichTuesday, June 6, 1933MR. MORGAN PI^OVIDES SOCIETY WITH AHEALTHY EXPERIENCEThere is something of more luimamental inter¬est in the present Senate investigation of the J.Pierpont Morgan company than simply the dis¬closures of questionable policies and dubious activ¬ities. As the senators continue to prowl in thehouse of Morgan, discovering a structure of hugepaper profits, strange partnership agreements, spe-ciaf privilege lists, and similar phenomena char¬acteristic of great financial institutions in pre-de¬pression years, and as public interest in the inves¬tigation remains at an unusually high level, we be¬gin to see that the really interesting aspect of thissituation lies in the fact that here are years oframpant American prosperity on trial, with yearsof American depression sitting as observer andjudge._American citizens, troubled with economic wor¬ries, concerned about low wages, deprived of smallluxuries that were formerly available to middle-class folk, are having spread before them, at amost psychologically timely moment, the story andevidence of some of the activities and policiespracticed by their nation’s financiers in recentyears of prosperity—many of them activities andpolicies which contributed to present economicdifficulties.We are seeing, objectively, now, in this andsimilar investigations, what sort of thing was donefive years ago. \X^e knew, vaguely, about it then.But it is more interesting, it strikes us more im¬pressively and directly, this display of evidenceupon the Senate committee tllble, when there isno prosperity to dull our faculties.Such an investigation would have attracted, dur¬ing a period of rising fortunes, very little of theattention now being paid it. In times of prosper¬ity everyone with sufficient wit and intelligencestrives to obtain as much from society as possible.Little man and big man ignore each other’s tacticsand methods because each is too busy followinghis own. Codes are observed less rigidly in timesof prosperity. Contracts are made more lightlyand observed less carefully. Business agreementsare consummated hurriedly in the rush of risingtides of profits and hold less significance to eitherpartner. Everyone has a greater amount of moneywith which to purchase exemption for violations oflaws or more.Quite different is public preoccupation and pub¬lic conscience in a time of depression. Mass actionis more noticeable. An entire country watcheswith interest when a single capitalist is singledout and questioned for practices that were accept¬ed without query a few years before.We are, when less h’appy and less well fed, moreo‘^rict and more critical. We are more apt to dis¬like the sight of another’s great wealth. We thinkin a different vein. We place on trial the decade WE SHOULD HAVE TRIED ITIt will probably not be reported in the newscolumns, so we shall record it here.For years the three men’s honor societies havecharged their new members initiation fees unrea¬sonably and unnecessarily high. Last week theentire group of initiates to the junior society. IronMask, for some mysterious reason only slightly im¬pressed with the great honor bestowed upon them,refused to enter the organization unless the $ 15fee was reduced to $8!When the incredulous juniors recovered fromtheir shock of it, a compromise was finally reachedat $ 101Our hat is off to the courageous and crusadingsophomores.—W. E. T.In order to provide government aid for youngpeople who wish to marry. Chancellor Hitler pro¬poses to levy a tax upon bachelors and spinsters.That is our idea of adding insult to injury.IWIHHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIiHllllllllllllllltlllHIHIIIIIUUIIIIIHI)IIIUHIi<.imiltllllllHlllllllimnimunilllinilllllllllllllll.ll!llliuilKi:llllil':i'llllill!lillll!UllirThe Travelling BazaarII By Jerry JontryMiiuiiiiiiiuiiHi.iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinittnwMiiuniuiiiiininumiiuini«witiiMi(iitiii!miiHERE WE GO—into the final stretch. All the new planstudents are sweating away over the compre-hensives and those who didn't have the courageare working down at the Fair. I worked forGeorge Watrous a few day§, developing my ton¬sils in front of Byrd’s ship, and it is almost likeOld Home Week. Recent news notes of the Fair:Bemie Wein has been promoted and is now acorporal of the guides.Gene Foster has the best hot dog stand on thegrounds, leading all others in sales.Bang Baker is in another stand at an out ofthe way spot that is losing money.Rosemary Volk is wearing a cute costume andworking in a booth in the A & P carnival.George Cameron is a boat starter.Fred Gundrum, Howie Young and Harry Ash¬ley march by every once in a while doing squadsright with the rest of the guides.Pon Bimey, Bill Austin and a couple of otherPhi Psis are scheduled to pull the rickshaws, butthey’re not starting until July 1st.Nancy Clark Rust is one of the prettier infor¬mation lassies, wearing a natty blue and reduniform.Most of the cashiers are better looking girlsthan the Queens of the Fair that some of usdragged out one nite.One of the funnier things to look for at Fairis the sign that reads “TOILETS”—and rightunder that is a red sign “FIRE ALARM.”* « *CHICAGO JOE SAYS:At IcLst polo is a recognized sport. A majorC has been awarded to Bruce Benson. All verywell—but now that Bruce is graduating, he oughtto give his C blanket to the horse.* * ♦IMAGINEwhat was said by the boys of the Military de¬partment when some young lady invaded theirtruck one day last week and attempted to sellthem each a copy of Upsurge—the Communisticmagazine — or some times known as the pinksheet.REMEMBER WAY BACK WHENJim Porter whs president of the Green Capclub?John Hardin was an undergraduate in shorttrousers?Luke Galbraith was known as “Greeter iGaw.”Dan Gloms^ found “the answer to nude bath¬ing” during a water polo match?Harding filled up space in this colm withblackouts? (Not a bad idea—might try it some¬time).Mr. and Mrs. Stagg sat on the tennis bleach¬ers to prevent their being burned by last year’srioters?There used to be an exam schedule and NOcomprehensives—? Them were the days!* * *BY THE WAY^WE REPEATIf any of youse guys (or youse gals—why not?)have a yen to pilot the Travelling Bazaar nextyear, send in a sample column to me at the Ma¬roon office. There’s nothing to it—the Bazaarprints everything that doesn’t get into the restof the paper, or College Humor, or Linn's Line,or the New Yorker or thie Police Gazette. Sodash off a column—do you stuff—and maybeyou'll Inherit our job. (Continued from page 1)to the effect that because theMaroon-reading public wouldbe unqualified to understand thequestions relating to minimum wage,he preferred not to be quoted furth¬er than to say. “No such questioncan be answered ‘yes’ or ‘no’ or ingeneral terms.”Professor Schultz, on the con¬trary, quite willingly stated: “I be¬lieve in the present situation thebetter policy is to maintain thetotal amount paid in wages, ratherto maintain a specific wage rate;that it is also better to cut wagesI and increase the staff than to main¬tain a limited staff at higher w’ages.I am not in favor of state establish¬ment of schedule of rate of wages,but rather in the state e.stablishingconditions of work, such as lawsagainst child labor, woman labor un¬der certain conditions, and so forth.Most of all, I am in favor of thestate subsidizing manufacturers be¬cause such leads to unfair advan¬tage by manufacturers. A dole isbetter than a starvation wage if thecompany gets to the point of inabil¬ity to pay more than 5 or 10 centsper hour; when a company dotesthis sort of things it should closedown, but it doesn’t need a mini¬mum wage law to do it, for it willfail in the natural course of eventsif the state is not allowed to sub¬sidize.”The following paragraphs arequoted from Henry Dennison’s let¬ter, representing the attitude of thebusiness manager:“The classical economists start toanalyze the ‘economic man’ whichSmith carefully recognized was onlyan aspect of the true ‘homo sapiens’.Then they forget the arbitrarybounds they had set for themselvesand draw conclusions from a partto the whole. What’s worse, they getto thinking of sociiU relations as ifthey were solely economic relations.“Absolutely fundamental to a self-consistent laissez-faire economics isperfect freedom for the unsuccess¬ful to starve to death. If from mo¬tives of sentiment or estimate ofpolitical security, you decide youcan’t let them starve, there is nolonger any laissez-faire and so nocoherence or consistency to itstheories when applied to actual sit¬uations."Economics doesn’t make practi¬cal sense except as one of severalsocial sciences. Political science mayeven be claimed to come ahead ofit, since outside of an organized andrelatively stablized community there is little significant economics. Politi¬cal science says that today in theUnited States we cannot ‘let themstarve' and hope to survive. Almostas surely it would say we cannot paythem a cent an hour and survive. Sowhy theorize about it? As well askif I had a brother, would he likecream-cakes?“From an exclusively economicpoint of view I don’t see why youcan’t build a system on a cent anhour or thirty dollars an hour, ifyou have time to spare. But if yourconcern is with Chicago, Illinois atthe present moment, you have gotto be realistic and hence take moreinto account than the basic theoreti¬cal abstraction of classical eco¬nomics.“Moreover, if you are to consideranything more than political safetyand the production of goods whichcan command a price,—.say physicalhealth or psychological well being,or advance in intelligence of thepeople,—you have to ask whetherwage rates at subsidized levels can’ttend to set up a situation whichstarts in the psychological realm andextends to the purely material.”(The Daily Maroon will publishfurther opinions in this survey intomorrow’s issue.) THE BEST PLACETO EATOn the South SidePhelps & PhelpsColonial Tea Room6324 Woodlawn Avenuefor reservations call H. P. 6324Books About Chicago andCentury of ProgressGraduation gifts and suggestions to take home for thoseplanning to come to the great Century of ProgrtOld Chicago—4 Vol. Boxed $5.00The Fort—ChicsKo s FVontler.The Duel— Chiesfro s Town.Debt of Honor — Chicago Be¬comes a city.MetrotHilis—Chicsiro. the Eyeeof the World.ChicsKo Welcomes You, Granirer. Price11.00—Guide and Description forChicsKo visitors.Chccairou 1673-1835 Price 11.00By Milo M. Quaife.A wonderfully clear picture of theearly days of ChicaKo. An intereating iruida to the manyplaces to eat.Nayka—The Indian Boy. . Price tt.OOBy Johanna K. M. Lybaek.The fascinating story of an Indianboy and his friendahipa with arhiteboys during the early aettlement afChicago.The Children's Story of early Chi¬cago.The Epic of Chicago Price $3.00By Harry Raymond Hamilton.As Others See Chicago Price $3.00By Bessie Louise Pierce.Impreasions of visitors and residents1673-1933 -showing different view¬point! and epochs of the city lifeand groarth.Dining in Chicago Price $2.50By John Drury. Chicago—New Edition $1.00By Lloyd Lewis and Henry JustinSmith.Official Guide Books — Century ofProgress Price 25cPicture fulders and booklets lOe to$1.00, showing in Picture and Colorthe city,-and the wonderful Centuryof ProgTcas.Woodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsPhone Dorchester 4800We have the pleasure ofannouncing the engagementMILTOLINto head the features on ourbill of sparkling entertain¬ment. Mr. Olin will appearevery night from 7:30 untilclosing.Bring your World’s Fair guests to visit him and theCAFE DE ALEX80 WEST RANDOLPHMusic by Earl Hoffman and his Gay Caballeros70° Cool Always Leave Your Car With Doormanrri^qpnimrpviRii.wmj..u[ h,jiniiiiipiiif iiiijiDAILY MAROON SPORTSTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, JUNE 6. 1933 Page ThreeName Twenty-five Maroons as Winners of “C”pagemen finish big tenSEASON WITH 7 TO 0 LOSSBob Langford Holds BadgerSluggers; Alumni PlayHere ThursdayWaiting until the last game of the.<?eason, the Pagemen (and this is thelast time we will be able to use thismonicker) finally played nine fullinnings of baseball without havingone error chalked up against them.This accomplishment, however, wassomewhat tainted by the fact that theWisconsin sluggers didn’t wait forMaroon bobbles, but stepped rightout and collected nine hits for sev- ien runs in three innings before Bob[.angford could come to the rescueof Straske. For the last five inn¬ings, Bob displayed brilliant talent,allowing only three scattered singles 'and one walk, only one enemy run¬ner progressing as far as second ibase, and that being on a theft.Rate NinthBut the damage had been done, ,and the scattered four Maroon sin¬gles off the slants of Frank Pacetticouldn’t produce anything in theway of runs for Chicago, so thePagemen ended the season in ninthplace with one win and ten defeats.Dave Levin was the offensivehero, if there was one, for Chicago.He collected a single and a walk inthree times up, and also stole threebases. Red Ratner, Bill Comerford.and Ned Munn got the other hits.Meet AlumniThursday afternoon those of theteam who are not tied> up with com-prehensives will play a double head¬er against the alumni. The firstgame will be against recent grad¬uates, some of whom are Gene Buz-zell, Joe Temple, Hal Wilkins, FrankHoward, Art Cahill, Hill Urban, andMarshall Fish. The night-cap willsee the real old-timers in action.Their line-up at present is an un- iknown quantity, but they always 'show up. Coach Pat Page ConsidersDave Levin Best* TeamMemberCoach H. O. PageThat Dave Levin, a sophomore,was the outstanding player on the1933 Maroon baseball team, is theopinion, not only of observers, butalso of Coach H. O. Page, now com¬pleting his term as head-baseballcoach at the University. The onlyoutfielder to win a major letter,Dave finished the conference seasonwith a batting mark of .456, havinghit safely 21 times for 46 times atbat. He struck out only once, in thefirst Purdue game, and his speed wasmuch in evidence, not only in thefield, but on the bases. His throwsfrom the outfield have been, on thewhole, accurate.The team on which Levin starredwas built up this year from practi¬cally nothing. Page having only two(Continued on page 4)NORTH AMERICAN TRAVEL SERVICE407 So. Wabash Ave. Harrison 67T4BUSES EVERYWHEREALL LINESExcursion RatesCLEAN COOL FASTU. of C. RepresentativeDICK WHITE — MAROON OFFICE PREP NETMEN PUTIN FINALS OF TENNISTOURNAMENT TODAYJohnny Shostrum, Parker highflash wh > is defending champion,will meet Ross of Oak Park todayat 4:15 in the final match of thesingles division of the 29th inter-scholastic tennis tourney, while hewill also team up with his youngerbrother, Charles, to face Armourand Finley, also of Oak Park, in thefinal doubles match at 5:30.The prep flash won his way intothe finals by defeating Zukas of Til-den, 6-3, 6‘2. In a previous quarter¬final match Shostrum had littletrouble in conquering Dilley ofMorton, 61, 6-1. Zukas earned theright to play Shostrum by beatingBurges of Oak Park, 6-2, 6-4. Theother finalist. Ross, fought his wayto victory over Walker, of HydePark in a semi-match, 6-4, 6-3. Rossreached the semi-finals brackets bydefeating his team-mate, Bickel, ina surprise triumph, 6-3, 6-2, whileRoss’ opponent, Walker, was takingDean of Morgan Park into camp,6-4, 6-0.Brothers WinIn the doubles brackets, the Shos¬trum brothers, who had swamped theOak Park duo, Bickel and Burgess,6-2, 6-4. oVerwheJmed Kemp andCraig, of Oak Park in a semi-finalmatch, 6-1, 6-0.The Oak Park duo reached thesemi-finals, after winning handilyfrom Lannert and Zajaczkowski ofLane, 6-2, 7-5. Armour and Finley,in a hard-fought match, were award¬ed the other final position overDean and Rich, 6-4, i5-7, 6-4, aftervanquishing the second Parkerdoubles team, Norris and Jorganson,3-6, 6-0, 6-4, in a quarter-finalmatch. Dean and Rich managed toget to the semi-finals by defeat¬ing Clover and Bartelman of NewTrier, 2-6, 6-2, 6-3. 'Summaries ofthird round singles matches:—Boss,Oak Park, defeated Jorganson, Par¬ker, 6-4, 5-7, 6-2. Walker, HydePark, defeated McCoy, Tilden, 6-2,6-3. J. Shostrum, Parker, defeatedNorris, Parker, 6-1, 6-1. Zukas, Til¬den, defeated, C. Shostrum, Parker,6-3, 7^6. NETSTERS CONCLUDESEASON BY DOWNINGWHEATON TEAM, 6-0SPEEDWRITINCTHE WONDER SHORTHANDIn 6 weeks you t*ke rapid dictation andtranscribe notes accurately^th sexes. Adults only.Many college gradiiates.FREE DEMONSTRATIONSCHICAGO BUSINESS COLLEGE.4th Floor. 190 N. State. Franklin 4122(Walter Harris. B. S.. M. A.. Pres.)Not a machine.Very low cost. The Maroon netmen concluded avictorious season, by turning in theirusual sterling performance, thistime for the 17th triumph in 19starts against Wheaton. In the lastof four meets with Wheaton playedat the latter’s home courts last Fri¬day, the local racqu^-wielderswhitewashed the Illinois college, 6-0.Max Davidson, captain-elect andNo. 1 man, trounced Carlson ofWheaton, 6-1, 6-1, while Trev Weissclimaxed a year of outstanding playby overwhelming Newsome of Whea¬ton in two straight love sets. SidWeiss had little trouble in trimmingChamberlain. Wheaton No. 3, 6-0,6-2, as Charles Tyroler, playing atNo. 4 position, was forced to go tothree sets in order to down Corell,6-3, 5-7, 6-2.In the doubles match, Davidsonand Trev Weiss once again demon¬strated their superior ability inplaying together as a unit by con¬quering Carlson and Newsome. 6-4,6-1. Sid Weiss and Tyroler turned inthe sixth victory of the day, after ahard-fought match, by beatingChamberlain and Greely, 4-6, 6-4,6-2. STAGG MAKES LAST TRACK,BASEBALL, TENNIS AWARDSMajor Letters Are Givento Polo Team forFirst TimiiThe athletic department announc¬ed over (the week-end major andminor awards in four spring sports—^track, tennis, baseball, and polo.Three major “C’s” were given inpolo, and are the first major lettersever given in that sport at the Uni¬versity. Four received the big “C”in tennis, seven in track, and 11 inbaseball. 25 major awards in allpassed the approval of A. A. Stagg,retiring director of athletics.Winners of the major letter inbaseball were: John Bak^r, EdwardBeeks, William Comerford, Theo¬dore Decker, Carl Geppinger, Rob¬ert Langford, David Levin, JamesLewis, Capt. George Mahoney, Ash¬ley Offill, and Stephen Straske.Those receiving the major OldEnglish “C” were: Marvin Berkson,Ned Munn, Gerald Ratner, and'Ralph Wehling.Winners of the Major Old Eng¬ lish “C” in track were: HaroldBlock, Dexter Fairbank Jr., RichardJackson, John Moore, Edward Nich¬olson, Sam Perlis, Joseph Varkala,and Peter Zimmer, wftiile iGibson,Harris, Rudolph and Smith receivedminor Old English “C’s”. Groebe,Hatter, Holtsberg, Kelly, Sills, andSchnur got plain garments.Tennis “C” MenWinners of the major “C” in ten¬nis were: Max Davidson, EllmorePatterson, Capt. Herman Ries Jr.,and Trevor • Weiss, Wiliam Dee,Charles Tyroler II, and SidneyWeiss received major Old English“C’s”; Nathaniel Glickman andGraves Holbrook were given minorOld English “C’s”, and M. Ries,Schindler, Zoline, and Weinberghave plain garments.The first big “C’s” ever given inpolo have gone to: 'Bruce Benson,Burton Doherty, and Capt. EdgarFreidheim, John Dinsmore, RobertHepple, and Thomas Wason receivedmajor Old English “C’s”.Golf awards have not yet beenmade.HohfIo^vcvd fioNCRrFencers Elect ’34Captain at BanquetThe Maroon Fencing team willconclude its activities this eveningat the annual banquet, announcedProfessor Robert Merrill, coach ofthe squad. The feature of the eve¬ning will be the election of the 1934captain. Robert I. Eiger, who grad¬uates next week is the retiring cap¬tain.After the ■dinner awards will bemade to winners in Intramural fenc¬ing. Members of the fencing squadare requested to meet in the fenc¬ing room at 5:30.THEPURPLE cowTEA ROOM1129 E. 55th StreetOne visit will convince youthat this is the place for whichyou have been looking.LUNCHEON DINNER25c 40c A GOITER ISA MUSICALINSTRUMENTThere ought to be a law againstpeople like Bill Boner! He eventhinks an escapade is a staircaseoutside a houseStill—he might be cured, if some¬body would convert him to pipesmoking. Tor a good pipe with theright tobacco is man’s first aid toclear thinking and wisdom. As forthe “right tobacco,” that’s easy. Arecent investigation showed Edge-worth Smoking Tobacco to be the fa¬vorite at 42 out of 54 leading colleges.Just one puff will tell you why. It’sthat truly individual blend of fineold hurleys—a blend you find onlyin Edgeworth Smoking Tobacco. Onceyou try Edgeworth, you’ll neveragain be satisfied with less. Buy Edgeworth anywhere in twoforms — Edgeworth Ready - Rubbedand Edgeworth Plug Slice. All sizes—15^ pocket package to pound hu¬midor tin. If you’d like to try beforeyou buy, write tor free sample packet.Address Larus &Bro. Co., 120 S. 22dSt., Richmond, Va.CDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCOl!l11IIIIII1111DIIII1111S1)SIIsIIaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa Twenty-Five Hundred UniversitySalesmen!Few corporations have asmany.That is the number of under¬graduates which the Universitysends home this June.Every member of the groupis a potential University salesman.Every member of the groupshould realize the importance offurthering the interests and thename of the University of Chicagowithin his local community.It is a peculiar service the un¬dergraduate can render the insti¬tution of which he is a member. Talk Chicago.No institution of higher edu¬cation in the country is its equal inmany respects.You have something to sell,Undergraduate, when you sell theidea of the University of Chicagoas a place for high school studentsto complete their education.The University needs yourassistance in the stupendous taskof interpreting and promoting itsfacilities and standards among thousands of high school graduatesthe country over.Its students are the Univer¬sity’s most impelling and impres¬sive advertisement.As those students we can beextremely effective during thesummer months in bringing newmen and women to a campus dailygrowing in prestige and achieve¬ment.Talk Chicago!Become one of those twenty-five hundred University salesmen! [>]1111m1111m(1II1111a(11]m11IIII11m11(11111m11m1]1111Page Four TUESDAY, JUNE 6, 1933 3Night editor for the next issue:Edward W. Nicholson. Assistant:Robert J. Hasterlik.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel. President SidneyB. Snow, Meadville TheologicalSchool, at 12 in Joseph iBond cha¬pel.Concert of noontime melodies, at12 in the Reynolds club.Organ music. Porter Heaps, at 7in the University chapel.Christian Science organization, at7:30, 1150 East 58th street.Phonograph concert, at 12:15 inthe Social Science assembly room.Departmental OrganizationsGraduate Classical club. “Idiomsand Idiotisms,” Professor PaulShorey, at 8 in Classics 10.Public LecturesDivision of the Social Sciences.“War and Conflict,” ProfessorQuincy Wright, at 3:30 in SocialScience assembly room.Undergraduate OrganizationsMeeting of W. A. A., at 12 in theAlumnae room of Ida Noyes.Achoth, at 3:30 in the Wickerroom of Ida Noyes.Y. W'. C. A. drama group, from 4to 5 in the theater.ORIENTATION GROUP(Continued from page 1)those who will be’ sophomores andjuniors next year, to act as coi\n-sellors for freshman men. It is ex¬pected that fraternity rushing dur¬ing the fall quarter will aid theorientation program.THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOMimeographingandTypewriting OfficeTERM PAPERS — THESESLexington Hall, 5835 University Ave.Phone Midway 0800 — Local 46M iss LindquistCAFEin theBROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.Luncheon 35c, 50c, & 60cDinner 55c and 75cSwedish Buffet our specialty, con¬sisting of from 20-25 varieties ofdelicious salads and relishes on ice,from which you make your ownchoice.VACATIOKfoneCHlAPf R(and so are business trips)Now*s the time to go byGREYHOUND• EXCURSION FARES LOWEST EVER• GOOD EVERY DAY, EVERY BUS• COOL, COMFORTABLE TRAVEL• MOST FREQUENT SCHEDULES• SERVICE TO ALL AMERICAHundreds of Savings Like TheseSample One-Way Fares ANNOUNCE SEIIES OFLECtUIIES,CONCEIiTSFOR SUMMER TERM Fair Exhibit Will Picture Prepressin Social Service Administration(Continued from page 1)August 18.In the two lectiire series to 'begiven at 4:30 every Friday after¬noon, Avery Craven, professor ofAmerican History, will reveal the“Contributing Factors to AmericanLife” and Robert Redfield, associateprofessor of Anthropology, will de¬liver his four illustrated lectures on“Indian Civilizations of MiddleAmerica.” Tickets for each seriesare $1.50; single admission is 50cents.As an added novelty, six greatEuropean movies will be shown atthe International House between 4and 8 on Mondays and Tuesdays.These pictures include: A Nous laLiberte, Maedchen in Uniform, DerKongress Tanzt, Le Million, Sous lesToits de Paris, L’Opera de Quat’Sous. The price for all six is $1.50;single admission is 35 cents.Seven lecture courses are beingoffered by the downtown College, tobe presented Tuesdays and Thurs-(dayis. Two afnthropology lectureseries are being offei’ed at 4:45 onTuesdays, one by Robert Redfield on“Indian Civilizations of MiddleAmerica,” and one by Fay-CooperCole, professor of Anthropology, on“Our American Indian.” At 6:45Thornton Wilder will discussShakespeare’s comedies and RobertM. Lovett, professor of English,will conduct a lecture series on“Contemporary Novelists.”The Thursday lectures will in¬clude one series by 'Bessie L. Pierce,associate professor of History on the“History of Chicago” at 4:45, one byEustace Haydon, professor of Com¬parative Religion, on “MiodernTrends in World Religions” at 6:45,and one by Bertram G. Nelson, on“Dramatic Readings from RecentLiterature.” A course ticket for aseries of five lectures is $1.50; sin¬gle admission is 50 cents.HUTCHINS APPOINTSAIDES AND MARSHALS(Continued from page 1)Psi Upsilon; and Rapp, a Deke anda member of Owl and Serpent, is a“C” man in football.Lorraine Watson, Quadrangler, isChairman of B. W. 0.; ElisabethCason is a Quadrangler and was Co-Chairman of the Scholarship Dayprogram; Lois Cromwell is Chair¬man of Federation; Rita Dukette,Pi Delta Phi, is an active memberof Y. W. C. A.; Mary Ellison. PhiBeta Delta, is a member of Mirrorand W. A. A.; Geraldine Smithwick,Wyvem, is president of the MirrorBoard; Madelainc Strong is presi¬dent of Y. W. C. A.; Rosemary Volkis a member of the Student Com¬mittee on Student Affairs; EstherWeber has held offices in W. A. A.;and Ruth Works, Esoteric, is Presi¬dent of Interclub.AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS(Continued from page 1)E, Scruby, Beverly Hills, Cal.; War¬ren 'G. Skoning, Elgin, Illinois; andClarence A. Wright, Clinton, Iowa.In the 23 awards that have beenmade of two-year honor scholarshipsso far Calumet has had 2 awards,while one has been given to Bowen,Hyde Park, Morgan Park, and OakPark.HOLD ELECTIONSLxw Anzelc-s $34.50 Minneapolis . ...$ 5.00New York ....15.00 Cleveland ... 7.00Detroit .. 4.00 Buffalo ... 10.50Milwaukee .. 1.5(1 Madison ... 3.50Ft. Wayne 4.00 Gr’d Rapids . .. 4.00Pittsburgh .... .. 9.00 Duluth ... 8.00Boston .. 17.00 Philadelphia . . . 14.00For ALL travel informationPHONE WABash 7700Union Bus Depot 1157 S. W'abas*-Greyhound Loop Depot 170 N. StateSouth Side 6302 Stony IslandPhone Hyde Park 5170CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVEJOHN C. NEUKOM5733 University Ave.Hyde Park 2953GREl^OUND (Continued from page 1)They are Everett Parker, WaldemarSolf and William Watson. All threeare sophomores. They were selectedby Dean William E. Scott andCharles Newton, Student Publisher,April 10. after presenting adequateplans for next year’s book.HILL’S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.We Feature Noonday Luncheon25cEvening Dinner 50cSunday Dinner 75cServed on 2nd Floor A vivid and dramatic picture ofthe progress made in the last hun¬dred years in social service formen, women and children will bedepicted at the social work exhibitof A Century of Progress. The ex¬hibit is being prepared by a com¬mittee on which are Edith Abbott,dean of the School of Social Serv¬ice Administration; Donald Slesing-er, associate dean of the Division ofthe Social Sciences; and HarrisonA. Dobbs, associate professor of So¬cial Economy. The chairman of thecommittee. Miss Elizabeth Webster,is a graduate of the University.The exhibit will illustrate thechange which has taken place sincethe day when orphaned childrenwere bound out for service with in¬denture paper? which meant virtualslavery until they w'ere twenty-oneyears old, since the time when de¬linquent children were “flogged andtaught the Scriptures.” The changethat has taken place since the erahas been a gi’adual one, and onewhich the community hardly real¬izes has occurred, but the exhibitwill show this change in our com¬munity thinking and our communityaction as it transpired from thatperiod until the present.The almshouse which one hundredyears ago quartered together thenormal children, the paupers, thecriminally degenerate, the old peopleand the insane, will be erected atthe exhibit. With this bleak, drearybuilding as a starting point, the ex¬hibit will show how, step by step,these different types of dependentpeople left the almshouse. It willpicture the children going into thefirst orphanages, with their uni¬forms, severe treatment and massdiscipline, and then in comparisonwill depict the child-caring institu¬tions of today where the youngstersare treated as individuals.The insane will be shown leavingthe almshouse, moving into paddedcells where they were chained to thewalls, where they wore raggedclothing, and where their heads wereshaved. The change in thought fromthat day to this, when we have be¬gun to think of the insane as men¬tally sick people, cared for by doc¬tors and psychiatrists, will be dem¬onstrated.Another dependent class portray¬ed will be the aged. The exhibit willcontract the barren, ugly, old peo¬ple’s homes of yesterday with thecomfortable and beautiful placeswhere they live today, and will lookforward to the era when Illinois,like nineteen other states, will haveold age pensions allowing elderlycouples to live together, at no in¬creased cost to the state.In addition to demonstrating thechange in treatment of the variousForALMA MATERand PATER dependent classes, the exhibit willshow the evolution which has takenplace in the last one hundred year*in the conception of charity. Thebeggars will be shown standing atthe cathedral door with the rich peo¬ple dropping alms into their hand.s,—for the good of the givers’ soul.The change that took place throughthe years from this time will be pic¬tured—the selection coming togeth¬er on Saturday night to dispose ofhuman beings who needed care,shipping the able-bodied men out tosea, auctioning off the women to thehighest bidder (to work for per¬haps a dollar a week), boarding anold lady who had no money aroundin the community, two weeks witheach family in the village.From these scenes the change towhat we now think of as social serv¬ice is shown. Today the trained caseworker can draw on a hundred re¬sources of health, recreation, em¬ployment, or legal aid, and canbring these things directly to thefamilies who need them, not for the“good of the givers’ souls,” but be¬cause it is now believed that whathappens to any part of the com¬munity is the responsibility of thewhole jcommunity.The deaf, the blind and the crip¬pled will be pictured as coming outof the dark and limited world wherethey lived a hundred years ago, intothe light of today, when social serv’-ice opens up numberless channels :O'! communication between them andtheir fellow men.The change which has taken placein our ideas about prisons, parole, ■and probation is exhibited, and oncemore with the hope that the accom¬plishment of the last hundred yearsmay serve to stimulate the idea that ,punishment for a crime works nomiracle in the criminal.And finally the exhibit will showthat the barriers of ignorance andprejudice are being broken down—for speial service has no color line,no line to mark off creed from creedor race from race. LONDON PROFESSORJOINS UNIVERSITYPSYCHOLOGY STAFFDr. Charles E. Spearman, pro¬fessor of Psychology at the Univer¬sity of London, is now at the Uni¬versity conducting a research proj¬ect in collaboration with Dr. Karl J.Holzinger, professor of Education atthe University. Dr. Spearman is in¬ternationally famous as a scientistand teacher, and has made many im¬portant contributions to both educa¬tion and psychology.The research project which Dr.Spearman is directing with Dr. Hol¬zinger is an investigation to deter¬mine if it is possible to measure per¬sonality in terms of unitary traits.It is part of a larger investigationof personality being carried on bya group of psychologists and edu¬cators.In addition to his work at the Uni¬versity, Dr. Spearman will givethree addresses during A Centuryof Progress, The titles of the lec¬tures, which Dr. Spearman was in¬vited to deliver by the American As¬sociation for the Advancement of Science, are: “Recent Advances inOur Knowledge of Human Person¬ality,” “New Conceptions and Testsof Intelligence,” and “Recent Ex¬periments in Factor Analysis.” Theywill probably be given late in June.His visit to A Century of PTog.ress marks Dr. Spearman’s seventhtrip to the United States and histhird visit to Chicago. During hisstay in the city, which will continueuntil the close of the exposition. Dr.Spearman will live at InternationalHouse.PREP TRACK MEETDRAWS LARGE ENTRYEntries to the National Collegiatetrack championships totalled 34teams and 146 individual competi¬tors yesterday, and the Universitynational interscholastic total mount¬ed to 115 schools and 325 individ¬uals. The two meets, which bring thecountry’s star colleges and prepathU^es into competition, will becombined in the year’s biggest trackevent on Soldier Field, June 16 and17.Practically every man who hasmade the best record in collegecompetition this year wdll be repre¬sented in the National meet, rang¬ing from Rhode Island to California.LEVIN IS OUTSTANDINGMAN ON TEAM—PAGE(Continued from page 3)lettermen as a nucleus. In spite of Itheir apparently poor showing in theconference standings, they had a ,fair season, beating Notre Dame jtwice, and also the Little Nineteen jchampions. Lake Forest and Whea- |ton, twice each. Injuries to CaptainMahoney, Carl Geppinger. and Roy 'Walter, the ineligribility of Jimmy iLewis, and outside jobs of Ash Of- (fill and Bob Weiskopf prevented the |team from ever exhibiting its full 'strength at one time. Added to thisfact. Page had to develop a newpitching staff to replace Roy Hen-shaw, who forewent his final yearof collegiate competition for thelure of the big leagues. WEDDINGANNOUNCEMENTS43.95 per 100Engraved on the new smooth finish ivory paper whichgoes into envelope without folding. Price includes en¬graving of plate and double envelopes.Engraved cards to match, $2.50 per 100 (includingplate).These special prices for limited time only.Woodworth’s Bookstore1311 E. 57th St.(Near Kimbark Ave.) Open EveningsPhone Dorchester 480014 Years U. of C. ExperienceEXPERT TYPEWRITINGDoctors’ and Masters’ Dissertationsa SpecialtyLowest RatesLOUISE B. SNOW5658 Ellis AvenuePhone Dorchester 4691 The proper parking place forvisiting parents. Figurativelyspeaking, there are now forty-two stars on our blanket. Gen¬erations of Chicago grads anddads have come and gone,and come back again. Nottoo near — not too far—Hotels Windermere are justa grand old Midway custom.The “mere” in the name re¬fers to the small cost. “Big¬ger and Better Dinners andDances for the same money”is our motto.^otels lllindermere^hicago56th St. at Hyde Park BoulevardWard B. James, Managing DirectorTelephone FAIrfax 6000 The Womans PageOf Tomorrows IssueFeatures a special symposium of opinion amongSenior women who look ahead to business andprofessional opportunities for which a Univer¬sity training has prepared them.A Final Page ofInterest to Women