Price Three CentsVol. 34. No. 77.What of ItBy SIDNEY HYMANlittle known menOF INDUSTRYJimmy Twohig, the benevolentdespot of Stagg Field, will celebratehis birthday on the fourteenth of thismonth. Some people count the yearsof Jimmy’s nativity as 80, whileAlex, who will ascend to Jimmy’sposition on the latter’s retirement,counts Jimmy’s years in the nineties.But even Alex will agjee that fornearly 40 years, Amos AlonzoStagg’s prime importance in the lifeof Chicago’s athletes was rivaledonly by that of Jimmy. Now withthe Old Man’s retirement, Jimmy’sinfluence over “the boys’’ is para¬mount. It is true that for the firsttime in his life, Jimmy has beenforced by the new athletic admin¬istration to keep a record of everyminute spent on every job, but bar¬ring these minor restrictions, whoseenforcement he turns over to Alex,Jimmy is left free to cut the grassand to sow grass seeds at any timehe desires.Despite this newly won freedom,Jimmy measures his work accordingto the dictates of the Old Man.When Blackfriars approached Jim¬my for the loan of two wooden plat¬forms, he ignored the written permitof the Buildings and Grounds com¬mittee. Reason: Thirty years backStagg had told him never to loananything to Blackfriars, ana sinceMr. Stagg had since taken up hisresidence in California, there was noway of flnding out whether Stagghad changed his mind. Again, whencalled upon to speak at an athleticbanquet early this fall, Jimmy, al¬though he himself cannot read orwrite, exhorted “the boys’’ in themanner of the Old Man to pay at¬tention to their studies—“and to hellwith the girls!’’ Three times duringthat same banquet Jimmy arose onhis own invitation to give additionalemphasis to this theme.• « •Twohig’s intense loyalty to the OldMan was not one sided. When Staggw'as selected to coach the Olympiccross-country runners in 1924, itwas Jimmy Twohig who was taken toStockholm to stand watch over theteam’s equipment. Although Jimmywas introduced to royalty, the triphad one serious drawback. Through¬out his stay in Sweden, Jimmy neverknew what the time was. The “boys’’at Stagg field are aware that Jim¬my does not know how to readtime, and when he draws out hiswatch with the dial face outward,they contribute the information theyknow he desires. A thousand timesJimmy drew out his watch in Swed¬en, and a thousand times he was dis¬appointed. He was too proud to con¬fide to strangers the conditions un¬der which he learns the hour.Taking trips with the University’steams is not an unusual experiencefor Jinuny. He has never in all hisyears of service asked to be takenalong on a trip, but he knows “theboys’’ will arrange for his presenceon the travel list. Last fall he accom¬panied the football team in its tripto Champaign. Sitting on the play¬ers’ bench Jimmy cursed the day theUniversity of Illinois was founded.* * •The pain of Chicago’s defeat wasintensified for Jimmy by his regretthat he had not chased the Illinoisband off Stagg field earlier than hedid the year before, when 110 Illinibandsmen scurried from their form¬ations on Stagg field before thewrath of a 98 pound devil. ThatStagg field was the only place largeenough for the Illini band to get intoformation for a pre-game triparound the Chicago campus carriedno weight with Jimmy. Mr. Stagghad told him to keep the field clearbefore the game.Despite a recent accident in whichhe was run over by an auto; despitea bursting of stitches in his side fromoverstrain, Jimmy’s gospel of life isembodied in the one word “work.’’But ever so often during a hot sum¬mer day, Jimmy will sneak over tothe Home for the Incurables—^to lis¬ten to the baseball game.The amount of work a boy cando is to Jimmy the measure of thatboy’s goodness. By this criterion noone stands higher in Jimmy’s eyesthan Pete Zimmer. “Faith, and itwas a Godsend the day they sent usPete Zimmer. The Lord be praisedfor that man Zimmer. Never have Iseen a lad who could hustle like thatlad can.” And as if to indicate to(Continued on page 3) TWELVE VISITING;PROFESSORS join!SUMMER FACULTY Rapp Names TenSeniors to ClassFund CommitteeTen seniors have been appointedto the Senior Class Fund committeeI University to Offer FullProgram of 623CoursesFour hundred and sixteen mem¬bers of the regular faculty andtwelve visiting professors will com-’ prise the teaching staff at the Uni-'I versity for the forthcoming SummerI quarter which begins June 20, theI newly published schedule discloses.I Enrollment for summer quarterj classes at Chicago totalled slightlyI over 5,000 last year, an increase of200 above the previous year, and the! University is accordingly augmentingI its 1934 program.' Offer 623 Course*, A total of 623 courses will be of-I fered during the summer, 146 in theI biological sciences, 103 in the hu-! manities, 105 in the physical sci¬ences, 118 in the social sciences and151 in the professions. This programrepresents the normal range of of¬ferings during the other three aca-i demic quarters. The University wasthe first to organize summer studyon the same basis as the October-to-June program, and the impendingSummer quarter will be the Univer¬sity’s forty-second such offering.Reopening of A Century of Prog¬ress Exposition, the gates of whichcan be reached in fifteen minutesfrom the University campus, will addan attraction again this year.Visiting ProfessorsAmong the visiting professors willbe Joseph G. de R. Hamilton, KenanProfessor of History at the Univer¬sity of North Carolina; James H.Hanford, specialist in English Lit¬erature at Western Reserve Univer¬sity, who will be the Frederic IvesCarpenter Visiting Professor ofEnglish at Chicago; William S.Cooper, Professor of Botany at theUniversity of Minnesota; W. H.Greaves, Professor of Public Speak¬ing at Yale; William G. Hale, Deanof the University of Southern Cali¬fornia Law School; Roscoe T. Stef¬fen, Professor of Law at Yale; Ed-son Sunderland, Professor of Iaw atthe University of Michigan; and Wil¬liam C. Van Vleck, Dean of the LawSchool at George Washington Uni¬versity.The Quarter is divided into twoterms, the first of which begins June20 and ends July 20 and the secondof which opens July 23 and closesAugust 24. Students register foreither or both terms.SELECT LAURIE’SORCHESTRA FORBENEFIT DANCEPaul Laurie’s six-piece band hasbeen selected by the Student Settle¬ment Board to play for the benefitdance to be held in conjunction withan open house at Ida Noyes hall Fri¬day night from 8 until 12. Tickets,priced at 36 cents, have been placedon sale and may be purchased fromany member of the student board.Howard Schultz and Leonard Olsonare in charge of the ticket sales.Eugene Patrick, chairman of theboard, and Edith McCarthy are su¬pervising the preparations for thedance. Barbara Beverly has arrang¬ed for deck tennis, shuffle-board,and other games which may be play¬ed during the evening. Refreshmentswill be seryed in the Cloister club.The date on which the functionwill be held has been held open bythe University so that the SettlementBoard may receive the greatest pos¬sible support from the student body.Profits will be used for the bene¬fit of the University Settlement.CROSSED CANNONRobert Line'back and John Pullen,two new members of Crossed Can¬non, R. 0. T. C. honor society, willbe initiated at a meeting of the or¬ganization tomorrow night. The elec¬tion of the new members, which tookplace last week, eliminated two ofthe vacancies in the society. Thereremain, however, two more vacan¬cies, to which candidates will beelected in the near future. ! to aid in securing subscriptions toI the Alumni Association, it was an¬nounced yesterday by Wayne Rapp,senior class president. William Kauf¬man is general chairman of the com¬mittee.The committee members in(;ludeEdward Nicholson and William Good-stein, representing the fraternities;Burton Young, the men’s doiTni-tories; Lois Cromwell, the women’sdormitories; Ruth Works, the wom¬en’s clubs; Don Kerr* and EugeneFoster, Law School; Charles Law¬rence, Medical School; and FrankCarr and John Thomson, School ofBusiness.The Senior Class Council willmeet today in Wieboldt 103 at 2:30.Members of the class who are inter¬ested in working with the Fund Com¬mittee are invited to attend.A subscription to the Alumni As¬sociation will take the place of anoutright gift this year. In order thatthe graduate may be enabled to keepin touch with University affairs, eachsubscriber is entitled to receive thealumni magazine and various bulle¬tins and announcements for oneyear. He automatic/illy receives aone-year membership to the AlumniAssociation. The remainder of themoney collected will be contributedto a Class of 1934 scholarship fundfor needy students.OPEN STlENfmEXHIBITION TODAY INIDA NOYES LIBRARYThe Ida Noyes Auxiliary is spon¬soring a student art exhibit whichwill be opened with a lea this after¬noon at 3:30 in the Ida Noyes li¬brary The exhibit will continuethrough March 16.There are approximately 30 con¬tributors and a prize of $5 will beawarded for the best art work ex¬hibited. Other entries will receivehonorable mention in the followingclassifications: water color, oil, blackand white, ink, pottery, and model¬ing.The judges of the exhibit areDaniel Catton Rich, curator at theArt Institute; Edwin Rothschild, act¬ing head of the Art department; andMrs. Henry Gordon Gale, past presi¬dent of the Renaissance ^ciety.Mrs. Daniel C. Rich ,Mrs. EdwinRothschild, Mrs. William G. Whit-ford, Mrs. H. Johnson, and LauraVan Pappelendam will pour at thetea, which is under the direction ofBeatrice Achtenberg, head of theAuxiliary. The members of the IdaNoyes art committee are: Clara Mar¬garet Morley, chairman; AgnesWeed; Pat Weeks; Elizabeth Riddle,and Elizabeth Marriot.The Student Social Committeesponsored the first Student Art Ex¬hibit two years ago. Following theclose of the exhibit at Ida Noyes,the entries will be on exhibitionMarch 19 at the Chicago GalleriesAssociation, 220 North Michigan.Symphony FeaturesSchoenberg Numbersin Today’s ConcertTwo Bach compositions, a Moz¬art symphony, and two numbers byArnold Schoenberg comprise the pro¬gram to be played this afternoon at4:15 in Mandel hall by the ChicagoSymphony Orchestra, under the di¬rection of Frederick Stock.The Bach compositions includeSuite Number 2, in B Minor, forstrings and flute, and Passacagliaand Fugue in C Minor, transcribedfrom the original organ score for or¬chestra by Mr. Stock.Mozart’s Symphony in D Majoris the second composition on today’sprogram. “Verklarte Nacht,” by Ar¬nold Schoenberg, contemporary Aus¬trian musician, and his “Five Piecesfor Orchestra,” should be of espe¬cial interest to the campus, since Mr.Schoenberg recently lectured in Man-del hall on his theory of musical com¬position, which is based on a seriesof twelve tones, rather than the cus¬tomary eight. UNIVERSITY LEADSFIVE SCHDOLS INSCIENTIFIC STUDYBase Rating on Numberof Ph. D. DegreesAwardedThe University ranks first amongthe five universities which are theoutstanding leaders in graduate re¬search in physics, chemistry, andmathematics in this country, accord¬ing to a recent study by the Prince¬ton Alumni Weekly. The other fourranking institutions are Princeton,the University of California, Harv¬ard, and the California Institute ofTechnology.The Statistics are based upon thet list of 427 scientists who have re¬ceived National Research Councilfellowships in these three sciencessince 1919. The fellowships aregranted annually to outstanding sci¬entists to enable them to carry on ad¬vanced research. A Ph. D. degree isvirtually a prerequisite to appoint¬ment.Choice of CollegesEach recipient is permitted tochoose the institution at which hewill carry on his advanced researchwork, subject to the approval of thecommittee of the National ResearchCouncil. The statistics showed thatthe five institutions mentioned ledin the number of Ph. D. students re¬ceiving the fellowships, as well as inthe number of fellowship holdersfrom other institutions who chosethem as their place of study for ad¬vanced work.The five universities which lead asthe place of Ph. D. training for thefellows, with their closest rivals, areas follows: Chicago, 42; Princeton,39; California, 32; Harvard, 31;,California Institute of Technology,27; Johns Hopkins, 25; Yale, 21; Wis¬consin, 20; Cornell, 15; and Co¬lumbia, 14.Chicago FourthAmong the ten universities select¬ed by fellowship recipients for ad¬vanced research, the Universityranks fourth. They are as follows:Princeton, 90; Harvard, 77; Cali¬fornia Tech, 72; Chicago, 51; Cali¬fornia, 34; Massachusetts Tech, 24;Johns Hopkins, 15; Yale, 14; Wis¬consin, 10; Michigan, 8.In a recent issue of the Alumnimagazine of the University, StephenS. Visher, alumnus and professor ofGeography at the University of In¬diana, found that the University hasoutdistanced in faculty strength allcolleges and universities exceptHarvard.REGISTRATION INCOLLEGE OPENSTODAY IN COBBStudents in the College, other thanfreshmen who matriculated in theautumn quarter of 1933 or in thewinter quarter of 1934, are urgedby the Recorder’s office to registertoday for the spring quarter. Ad¬vance registration will be held to¬morrow for students in the Biologi¬cal Sciences and the Humanities di¬visions, while Thursday has been setaside for students in the Social Sci¬ences and Physical Sciences divi¬sions. Professional students registerFriday.The procedure of registration is asfollows: Students are to procure tem¬porary registration slips from theirappropriate deans. Class tickets willthen be given out and fees assignedin Cobb 210 and 211 from 8:45 to11:30 and from 1:30 to 4:30.The Dean of Students in the Col¬lege may be found in Cobb 211 to¬day, but on the following days ofregistration he can be seen in Cobb203.RENTAL LIBRARYA new rental library for womenwill open tomorrow in the office ofIda Noyes Hall. Reading tickets arepriced at 25 cents.Books may be withdrawn for oneday only during the week, but maybe taken home over the weex-end. Acharge of 3 cents a day per book,with a minimum of 10 cents, willbe made. Books will be available inthe office of Ida Noyes Hall at anyhour of the day except from 6 to 7. Mirror, W.A.A.,Y.W.CA. HoldElections TodayThree woman’s organizations. Mir¬ror, Y. W. C. A., and W. A. A., willelect officers for the coming yeartoday in Ida Noyes hall.Candidates for offices in Y. W. C.A. are: president, Lily Mary Davidand Bettyann Nelson; vice-president,Cleta Olmsted and Eleanor Landon;secretary, Mary Forney and ElnaStrid; and treasurer, Rosemary Nel¬son and Dorothy Norton.W. A. A. candidates are: presi¬dent, Helen Mary Brown and Kath¬erine Hoffer, secretary; CynthiaGrabo and Elizabeth Ham'bleton;treasurer, Jeannette Cordoza andMargaret Goetsch.The nominees for Mirror officesand their activities in Mirror are:president and vice-president; EvelynCarr, stage manager of the 1934 pro¬duction; Sara Gwin, ballet last yearand acting company this year; CletaOlmstead, ballet for the last twoyears. Members-at-large: MargotBoertlein, publicity committee thisyear; Helen de Werthern, box officechairman; Violet Elliot, ballet in1932, box office last year, and pub¬licity chairman this year; PeggyMoore, tap chorus for the last threeyears; and Betty Sayler, propertieslast year, and scenery chairman thisyear.Regarding the eligibility of Mirrormembers for voting, GeraldineSmithwick, president of Mirror, said,“Due to the fact that women that(Continued on page 4)CWA MAKES RRSTWAGE PAYMENT TOSTUDENT WORKERSThe 420 students at the Univer¬sity now working under the CWAwill receive their first pay checks atthe end of this week, according toa bulletin from the Board of Voca¬tional Guidance and Placement sentto all supervisors of projects.The first payroll will run fromFebruary 16 to February 22, con¬tinuing weekly. By Thursday noonthe supervisors are ordered to re¬turn a complete payroll which willbe sent to the Office of the Comp¬troller. The checks will then be sentto the supervisor who will distributethem to the students.Each person in charge of a proj¬ect is required to fill out a specialpayroll voucher each week. Includ¬ed in the information requested onthe voucher is the number of theproject, a detailed description of theproject, the identification number ofthe student, the nature of the workof each student, the hours workedper day and per week, the hourlyrate and the weekly wage for eachstudent. The student is required tosign for his check.On the reverse side of the form,the total amount of the payroll mustbe entered, the timekeeper and thesupervisor of the project must cer¬tify, the Office of the Comptrollercertifies for the total payroll and thecompleted voucher will be signed byPresident Hutchins.Tickets Placed onSale for SymphonyOrchestra ConcertTickets for the winter concert ofthe University Symphony orchestranext Friday were placed on sale to¬day at the Mandel hall box office.The price range is from $.60 to $1.60and the box office will be open from10 a. m. to il:30 p. m. each day thisweek.Jacques Gordon, eminent Chicagoviolin artist, will be the featuredguest soloist with the orchestra Fri¬day evening.. As the final numberof the symphony program, Brahms’violin concerto in D major will beplayed by Mr. (Jordon and the or¬chestra. It has been the policy ofthe University Music Society tobring an outstanding guest artist tothe campus for each of the orches¬tra’s subscription concerts. PaulKerby, noted European conductor,acted as guest conductor for tinenumber in the fall concerto Decem¬ber 8. COMMENT MAKESINITIAL DOW OF!year tomorrowiAdler, Boynton, SchoenContribute toMagazineFeauring outstanding contribu¬tions in fiction, poetry, art, satire,and criticism. Comment, the Univer¬sity literary and critical magazine,will make its first appearance of theyear tomorrow morning. The mag¬azine, priced at 25 cents, will be soldby club women, at the UniversityBookstore, in front of Cobb, and atWoodworth’s.Professor Mortimer Adler’s defin¬itive article, “Art and Aesthetics,”is featured in the issue. Supplement¬ing the story is a portrait of Dr. Ad¬ler by Mrs. Maude Phelps Hutchins.“The Dawn of the New Education”is the subject of an article by MaxSchoen, chairman of the depart¬ments of Education and Psychologyat the Carnegie Institute of Tech¬nology.Write* Remini*cencePercy Holmes Boynton, professorof English at the University, writesa reminiscence of Henry H. Fuller,late Chicago novelist, poet, dramat¬ist, and essayist, which is illustrat¬ed with a bust of Fuller by LoradoTaft, dean of American sculptors.Elder Olson, graduate student at theUniversity, who recently won theJohn Billings Fiske prize xor poet-try, contributes a poem entitled“Madman’s.” Olson has been afrequent contributor to the maga¬zines, Poetry andVanitay Fair.Fritz Leiber, Jr., another graduatestudent, discusses facts and ideas inhis article entitled, “The Formula¬tion of a Dilemma.” Nathan Krevit-sky, who drew the prize-winningMirror poster, illustrates the discus¬sion. “Education Preferred: 1934,” iswritten by John Barden, editor-in-chief of The Daily Maroon. GeorgeVan der Hoef explains the signifi¬cance of a heretofore unpublishedletter from Elizabeth Linley to herfiance, Richard Brinsley Sheridan,famous 18th century playwright.Poem by SkauThe magazines also includes apoem by Carl Skau, a student at theUniversity and former poetry editorof the Crane Junior College liter¬ary magazine. Sidney Hyman, whowrites for The Daily Maroon and forthe Phoenix, contributes a story ofbroken spirit in the slums and Mar¬garet Stone, also an undergraduate,(Continued on page 3)FACULTY, DEBATEUNION MEMBERSVIEW NEW PLANA round table discussion on thenew plan between members of thefaculty and the University DebateUnion will be held tomorrow nightat 7:45 in the Reynolds Club, RoomA. 'The discussion will be open to thepublic. Faculty members participat¬ing in the discussion include MerleC. Coulter, professor of Botany;Philip M. Hauser, instructor in So¬ciology; and Earl S. Johnson, in¬structor in Sociology.Mary MacKenzie, director of theUnion, will preside as chairman. TheUnion members taking part in thediscussion are: Marie Berger, VernonLyon, Everett Parlser, Lewis Dexter,and Wells Burnette.The faculty members taking partin the discussion have been activein the new plan since its inaugura¬tion three years ago; Merle C. Coul¬ter is head of the new plan generalcourse in the Biological Sciences,Philip Hauser is a discussion leaderin Social Sciences I-CLOISTER CLUBAccording to the decision of theIda Noyes Council, the Cloister Clubwill be open evenings from 8 to 11,except Saturday and Sunday, for re¬freshments and dancing. A1 Hough¬ton’s Collegians will play every Wed¬nesday night, and the radio will beused the rest of the week. TheCloister Club has also obtained acigarette license and will sell a largevariety of cigarettes.VIPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1934Batlg iMarnanFOUNDED IN 1901The Daily Maroon ia the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, publiiiied mornings except ^turday,Sundays and Monday during th6 autumns winters and sprinjcquarters by The Daily Maroon Company. 5831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.60 a year; $4.00 by mail. Single copiethree cents.No responsibility is assumed by the_ University oi Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Sintered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post-uilice at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly rwerves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLJOHN P. BARDEN, Editor-in-ChiefVINCENT NEWMAN, Business ManagerWILLIAM GOODSTEIN, Managing EditorWALTER L. MONTGOMERY, Cir ulationJANE I. BIESENTHAL, Associate Ed’torBETTY HANSEN, Associate EditorTom BartonNoel B. Gerson EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSHoward P. Hudaon Howard M. RichDavid H. Kutner Florence WiahnickBUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilHam Bergman William O'Donnell Robert SamuelaSOPHOMORE REPORTERSCharlotte FiahmanEdgar GreenebawmRuth GreenebaumCarles Hoerr Henry KelleyRaymond LahrJ anet LewyCurtia MelnickDonald Morria Ralph Nicbolaonlean PrusaingJeanne StolteWilliam WataonSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSRod Chapin Zalmon Goldamith Gerald StemFrank Davia Edward Schaar Everett StoreyMarie BergerGeorg Mann EDITORIAL COMMI'TTEELouise Craver Preaton CutlerLinton J. KeithNight Exlitor: Howard M. RichAssistant: William WatsonTuesday, March 6, 1934A Guest EditorialBy Max Schoen, Ph.D., Chairman otDepartments of Education andPsychology, Carnegie TechCOLLEGES ANDEDUCATIONThe active participation of a student body inthe formulation of educational policy and pro¬cedure, even when such participation expresses it¬self in protests and revolts against traditional acad¬emic dignity, is a sign of sound health, and anyinstitution of higher learning that not only per¬mits, but invites and encourages such participa¬tion, is taking a significant step in educationalprogress. Fear of criticism is invariably a con¬fession of weakness, an admission that the concernof those in power is not so much with truth as withselfish interests and purposes.College professors are as apt to mistakeprejudices for disinterested truth, and private in¬terests for general welfare, as are other mortals,with the significant difference that in no otherfield is dogmatism as dangerous as in education.Tbe teacher deals daily with lives in the making.He owes allegiance not to subjects, procedures,administrators, trustees, but to the human ma¬terial entrusted to him. The human personalityis the supreme value in the universe, and it isthis supreme value that is being shaped andformed in the class-room, laboratory, and lecturehall. A college therefore belongs to students,not to professors, deans, and presidents. For agreat many teachers a school is mostly a place formaking a living. For students it is a place forthe making of a life.7Te claim that students do not know what isgood for them, and therefore must yield to thedirection of faculties may be sound. But it is easyto mistake dictation for direction. The character¬istic of direction is that the process of directingis determined by the nature of the material to bedirected. If the student is to be directed he musthave a voice in the directing process. But it iseasier to dictate than to direct. And the conten¬tion that faculties must determine the way stu¬dents should travel springs mainly from the de¬sire to follow the easier course of dictation.We know of the havoc wrought throughout his¬tory by irresponsible authoritarianism in thesphere of morality and religion. We know ofthe distortion of personality resulting from parent¬al self-righteousness. The greatest tribute to the in¬herent, indestructible strength of the human per¬sonality, is that it has maintained its integritythroughout the ages in the face of the distortingauthoritarianism of church, state, home, andschool. The authoritarian, no matter where hefunctions, is an obstructionist and obscurantist. Heis never concerned with human welfare, but withthe satisfaction of his own insatiable appetite for power.A college, as an educational institution, is leastjustified in assuming the attitude of dictation inthe name of direction. Prior to the college yearsthe student is mostly concerned with the acquisi¬tion of the tools of living. On the college cam¬pus he should begin to live; to use the acquiredtools for self-discovery. And self-discovery must Lettersto theEditorin theseandcommunicationa nnat be aiirned with the fallname of the correspondent, although onlyinitiala will be published. Letters ehould berestricted to 250 words or leas.)(Note: The opinions expressed, , , f 11 i communications are those of the writers, andbe through free, spontaneous activity. Ine college > not necMsariiy of The Daiir Mvoon. a;iyears are the years of the blossoming forth of self-consciousness, the consciousness of individuality,of selfhood, of personality. It is during the col¬lege years that the youth should grow into life,into an awareness and the proper use of his pow¬ers. He cannot do so by being driven from theoutside, by having others decide for him what heis to do, when and how, where he should be atthis or that hour, how much time he is to devoteto this or to that, or at what date he is to give an I Editor, The Daily Maroon,Dear Sir:The editorials appearing in theissues of the Maroon for February15th and 16th represent a fair andan inquiring turn of mind. They areto be especially commended for anattitude all too rare, an attitude thatrecog^nizes that a very considerabler-ij I number of men and women of longaccount of what he has accomplished or failed to | experience have been wrestling withaccomplish. | these problems for several years. ThisLife yields to compulsion only at the price of ; would be the last to entertain. , the idea that their problems have yetdistortion. Any arbitrary assumption as to howfar growth should have progressed within agiven time, whether physical or mental, must havea distorting influence. An educational institutionwith set curricula of courses, hours, credits, se¬mesters, examinations, can have no other effectthan to kill its students mentally. Those whosurvive do so not because of set programs, but inspite of them. It is fortunate that youth possessesgreat powers of resistance. It persists in livingin spite of the academic obstruction placed in itspath of growth. But it is only the strongest thatsurvive. Mostly our colleges turn out robots andpuppets, cogs for the wheels of industry, ratherthan personalities. The colleges are more oftenthan not mills for grinding out uniform, standard¬ized products. It is most noticeable that as youngmen and young women progress from year toyear in their college career, they grow increas¬ingly more stolid, placid, indifferent, routine-mind- been solved in a satisfactory mannei-in all details.The question of teaching sciencewithout laboratory was the very firstone to be faced. It had never beforebeen supposed that to do this wasat all possible. Lectures that arelargely demonstration in character,museums of simple automatic orsemiautomatic devices, and motionpictures, can be made to carry alarge part of the burden formerlyput on beginning laboratory coursesif they are properly used. As long,however, as museum experiments areregarded as toys, “push-the-button-and-watch-themigo mechanicals do-dads,” the museum fails of its pur¬pose. The physics museum containsexpositions of principles both in type¬written form and in illustratedcharts. The toy-hunter has not yetgrown up enough to read. For thisreason high-school students are notadmitted to the museums, except comprise tJie method from the fintcourse to the last. Only by thisroute may you proceed. Can youtake it?Very sincerely yours,Harvey B. Lemon.We do not direct our editorials atphysics or mathematics, but atphysicists and mathematicians in sofar as they administrate our educa¬tion.—ed. DREXEL theatrb858 K. UrdTue«. A Wed., Mnr. ith & 7tli‘‘HOOPLA”withCLARA BOW,Preaton Foster. Richard Cromwell.Mat. Daily—ISc to 6:30 P. M.INTENSIVEI Sfenoof^phic COURSEji,., J , ,, , ,! with their instructors, who at timesed, looking forward eagerly to the day when their j conduct regular classes there.diploma will free them from the grinding, killing i A not inconsiderable portion of ourroutine of academic prison walls. Por CoHese trained Men and Women.lOOwords a minute in 100 days. A$tured /qrone /<«. Day classes begin April 2nd.Visit, write or phone HASdolph 1575BBYANMAnON18 SO MICHIGAN AVE . CHICAGOThe Travelling Bazaar!BY CHARLES (“Scriblerua”) TYROLER |ANOTHER ONEAnd there was Saturday when Benson xook adate to watch him play polo up north somewhere.The time was just before the game and the datewas Sue Richardson, She was supposed to sit inhis private box. Benson paraded up to it on hishorse and in full glory, but where was Sue? Helooked around, but still no Sue. And there hehad wasted all that time combing his hair andthings .... tch tch tch.So he beat it out fiercely and heroized himself,altho fearful that the best part of his audiencewas lost. So he had the announcer boom forththrough a megaphone.. ."Captain Benson has losthis girl. Will Miss Sue Richardson please cometo the player’s bench.” Well, Sue finally turnedup, but she was with Ben Mann. Benson gave herglamour but Mann gave her... .oh well... .let itpass....COMMENT..>w.... two bits. . swell magazine.... out tomor-ALPHA BELT HUTCHINS TELLS ONE ON THEDEKESThis is one that President Hutchins, nationalpresident of Alpha Delta Phi, told the new A. D.pledges the other day at pledging ceremony.It was back in the early days at Yale. One of ^the founders of Deke had just returned from atrip abroad. He walked up to the old Deke houseand noticed a man sitting on the steps in a rest¬ful pose. It was good to see a fraternity brother !after all these years. So he rushed up with openhand foremost and exclaimed: "BROTHER!”...,"Brother, hell,” replied the man, "I’m the sheriff.”» « «P. S.Jerry Jontry says just dropped in and saidHutchins’ story has whiskers on it and wonderswhether we’re running re-prints from old jokebooks and besides, says he, he heard that samestory about the Chicago Psi U’s.... So there saysJ. J... .and adds Jontry if you and Hansen don’tquit bummlmg cigarettes off me I’ll have to giveup the filthy weed.,. .to which reply; got a light,jerry?... .save it, says hansen....* » *AFTERTHOUGHTSmirror was swell and jayne paulman had a lotof the mob thinking she was a man....the threelittle mice number was the best thing done in thatline around here ever said nels fuqua.. .the danc¬ing was keen the tappers ever good...jontry’snumber showing them off to swell advantage....lorraine donkle’s high kickers well-trained.... lot-sa credit to her... .good show... .too bad in thehoop game Saturday a. d. party made up forit after.. .tommie flinn keeping track of the fleet¬ing moments with his alarm clock... .hyman hasa soft bed at hitchcock... .we fell asleep and thenext morning huntington harris left for Newyork on some project or other, but he’ll be backfor Blackfriar’s.... I students, and an increasing number■ each year, get the museum idea anduse it for what it is—a reference li¬brary where phenomena as well asbooks may be consulted and observ¬ed. Such students attend the museumnot once or twice but often, theyconfine themselves on each trip to afew experiments which they watchand operate usually after reading allthat is said about them, not only inmuseum charts and labels, but insyllabi and text-books. With this sortof use museum work can in greatpart take the place of laboratorywork—but it must be WORK andnot play.With regard to the incompletenessof the scientific training of our stu¬dents in the physical sciences gen¬eral course we would go even furth¬er than does your editorial—we donot regard this training as at allcomplete—indeed we do not regardit as having yet begun. Thesecourses do not aim to give technicaltraining. The gateway to technicaltraining in the physical sciences isindeed the portal of Eckhart hall.We wonder how many of the stu¬dents who pass through it daily havereflected on the force of the inscrip¬tion above it which reads: THEMATHEMATICAL SCIENCES.We suggest that our thoughtfulyoung critics, who by being criticalhave already achieved the first badgeof scientific worthiness, watch thereactions of their companions andthemselves as mathematics, thequeen of all the sciences, advancesto the footlights and makes her bowEveryone has met her before. Thenumbers are her pages, geometricalgroupings of lines form her attend¬ants, algebra is the name of herlady-in-waiting and the calculus hercrown. Her laws take the form ofequations, and her thoughts are theultimate in logic.Only in her company can thestraight and narrow path of techni¬cal scientific study be pursued. Thesecond year sequences in the physi¬cal sciences follow such paths.Measurements, made in laboratories,are the first step, systematically ar¬ranged pages of data, the second.Equations that describe phenomena,and their solutions, that representthe unknown in terms of the known Editor, The Daily Maroon,Dear Sir:If I may be permitted to do so, Iwould like to voice a sentiment con¬cerning the Social Science depart¬ment which I feel I am not alone inharboring; namely, that too manycontroversial issues are being dealtwith from an extremely one-sidedand dogmatic point of view. Let medraw only two illustrations from thepresent survey course.Professor Wirth recently, in in¬troducing the study of culture, cau¬tioned us that the opinions to be ex¬pressed should not taken as axio¬matic'but were rather presented forour consideration in the hope thatthey would assist us in forming in¬telligent opinions of our own. That,of course, was well and good, butit soon became apparent, at leastto many of us, that only one pointof view was being presented. Wewere told, for instance, that therewas no correlation between race andculture. Boaz was assigned as in*dispensible reading, along with sevenvolumes of optional reading, all rep¬resenting the same viewpoint. Nowthere would be no objection to ourmaking this approach to race-cul¬ture questions, if it were an ap¬proach fairly definitely agreed uponin scholarly circles. You have onlyto question our own Biology depart¬ment to discover the opposition. Lackof space prevents me from giving theline of reasoning that Dr. Newmangave me last week, and which I amsure practically the entire Biologydepartment would support.To mention the other example, lastweek in discussion class one of us :dared to suggest that there might be |in man an inherent sense of appre- !elation for form and balance in art !that would express itself in all cul- jtures. Instead of presenting this by jno means new controversy to the ^class for an interesting discussion, ,the instructor promptly tabooed it, |and, in fact, treated it exactly as |though it were a question not even |worthy of consideration. “Every- Ithing is in the folkways” was all our ;instructor seemed to understand, al- jthough he did admit that rhythm in Imusic might have a physiological ba- ■sis. Harmony was another thing to ;consider, and when we pointed out ■that hymony a matter of; ^ew York March 24lhphyaics instead of the mores, our m- g-oo p. M. on SS ROTTERDAM-eixstructor said he knew nothing about cruise threeBEMINETONIGHT• • •A British Talkie—TODAYMarch 6at 4:30 & 8:30 p.m.• • •International HouseTheatreMatinee 25c—Evening 35cThe RETAIL SALESSEMINARtrains women for specialty shopand department store work.Placement for experience willbe made when desirable andpermanent employment foundin every possible case.For Information WriteAnn Douglas310 South Michigan Ave.Or Call Wabash 3499for InterviewAttractive Gulf StreamCruise Offered Duringthe Easter VacationMISS LINDQUISTCAFE5540 Hyde Park Blvd.In Broadview Hoteland1464 E. 67th St.SpecialSwedish Buffet LuncheonAll you can eat—50cSpecial Sandwich Luncheon—35cDinner 60 and 75cSunday Dinner—75 and 90c physics, and so that was that. Itmight be significant to mention herethe fact that in a recent survey, onlyin anthropology did Chicago fail torank high in faculty strength.At this point, let me make clearthat I do not wish to debate the val¬idity of departmental viewpoints. Iam only suggesting that when stu¬dents of the social sciences feel andtalk as though these viewpoints areunequivocal facts which no saneintellectual would deny, there mustbe something wrong with the modeof their presentation.Although the prejudices of thedepartment which permeate the en¬tire structure of the survey courses(Continued on p«fO 3)PAY AS YOU USE IT!SUCCESSSECRETIROYALPORTABLE*33“ cruise—three days in BER¬MUDA (accommodations provided onboard ship during stay in Bermuda)RATE—including minimum roundtrip steamer—meals and berth in¬cluded—round trip rail to New York,lower berth each way, United Statesand Bermuda taxes $160.55No passport requiredFor further information, reserva-tiona, see John Stocks Travel Serv-ic**Fress Buildinff, 5758 Ellia Avenue.Precisely the model yooneed! Latest design..low¬est price! Complete! Easyto me., tvtn if you’ve nevertyped before! Built for a life¬time of writing conveni¬ence! A small initial pay¬ment, and it is yours! Paythe bshmee oo easy terms.University ofChicago Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.Roral Typewriter Company, Inc.2 Park ATcnue, New York City DANCE AT THEHANGER OFTHE HOTELLA SALLESunday Evening,March 111ST ANNUALJEWISHSTUDENTSFOUNDATIONDANCE•Dave Cunningham’sBroadcastingOrchestra — Radioand ’ Stage Enter¬tainment.INFORMAL$1.50 per couple - 9-1LETTERS TO THEEDITOR(Continued from page 2)are never asserted to be dogma, jnevertheless they are so skillfully in- jterwoven with other material thatninety-nine percent of the gullibleundergraduates accept them as dog¬ma. Old catechisms may be destroy¬ed, only to be replaced by a new setof answers just as tenacious.In summary, if the purpose of ageneral education at the Universityis to give students sweeping glimpsesof the history of thought and of thepresent world and its problems, then jit is indeed regretable that the jglimpses too often have to be made Ithrough specially fitted maroon-tint- jed glasses. ISincerely yours, 'Martin Gardner. jYou state a well-nigh universal !opinion.—ed. iCOMMENT MAKESDEBUT TOMORROW |(Continued from page 1) |submits a sonnet. |Arista Fisher, a student at Car- ;negie, writes a character study of !residents of a small town; the title,:appropriately enough, is “The Talk |of the town.” Also included is a son- inet by Inigo Pavlov, a Russian-Ser- ibian student at the University. iWhy didn't Ilearn of thisbefore!Best onthe shipatTOURISTCLASS FARESto Europe via Red StarYou sail high (top of the ship)and you pay low on these large,comfortable Red Star liners. TouristQass is top class; that means thatyou get the 6nest cabins, the broad¬est decks, the best on the ship at lowTourist Qass fares. Regular sailings toSouthampton, Havre and Antwerp.Minimum fares:TouristQassOne Way, ^212 Round Trip; ThirdClass ^82 One Way, ^144.^0Round Trip.S. $. MINNIWASKA S. S. MINNITONKA22,000 gr0»m tmmmS. S.WISTIRNLAND S. S. KNNLANDtO.SOO groom tomoSot your local agtnt. His servicts art frtt.RED STAR LINEIffTEIINATIONAL MERCANTILEMARINE CO.tie No. Michlfan Ave., ChicacoBandolph i840Afents Everywhere TUESDAY. MARCH 6, 1934UNIVEISirr COLLEGEPRESENTS GROUP OFCHEMISTRY COURSESThe University College in coopera¬tion with the Chicago Section of theAmerican Chemical Society will pre¬sent a grroup of five courses in chem¬istry for the Spring quarter accord¬ing to an announcement yesterdayby the University College office.Also in the physical science field twocourses in physics and one in physi¬ological chemistry will be offeredduring the spring.The first of the chemistry courses,“The History of Chemistry sinceDalton,” dealing with the large andrapid extension of the field of chem¬istry during the nineteenth and twen¬tieth centuries will be given by Pro¬fessor B. B. Freud on Thursday eve¬nings. The course, “Hydrocarbons”will consider the various chemicalchanges of hydrocarbons from thescientific and industrial viewpoints.Mr. Egloff will conduct the coursewhich will meet Tuesday nights.Other Three CoursesThe other three chemical coursesare “Newer Problems in the Chemis¬try of Coal and Oil” presented byHans Tropsch on Wednesdays; “TheStructure of the Atom and Valence”by Professor W. D. Harkins, meetingMondays; and “Elementary OrganicChemistry I” under Kenneth H.Adams, which will meet in Kent lab¬oratory on the quadrangles, Mon¬days and Tuesdays with a laboratoryWednesdays.“Experimental Physics: MolecularPhysics and Heat” will be presentedon Saturday afternoons from 1 to 6in Ryerson laboratory under AlbertE. Shaw. The second physics course,“Electron Theory I,' which takes upsuch topics as cathode rays, radio¬activity and x-rays, will meet Wed¬nesdays with assistant professor J. B.Hoag. The physiological chemistrycourse, “Chemistry of Digestion, Met¬abolism and Excretion,” will be con¬ducted by Professors F. C. Koch andM. C. Hanke. Hours will be arrangedat the first meeting Monday, April 2,in the Physiological Chemistry Buiiu-1 Today on theThe Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:Howard Hudson. Assistant: HenryKelley.Lectures“The Poetry of the Literati andIts Patterns,” Dr. Chiah-Wei Luh,Dean of Yenching University. Inter¬national House at 8:15.Music and Religion“The Psychological Basis of Mys¬ticism,” Professor Edward ScribnerAmes, Joseph Bond Chapel at 12.“Adoniram Judson and the EarlyNineteenth Century MissionaryHeroes,” Professor William Sweet.Joseph Bond Chapel at 7:30.“Building an Educational Pro¬gram for the Local Church,” Associ¬ate Professor Clara Powell, Swift201 at 8:16.“Religion and Mental Health,” Mr.Boisen. Associate Professor CharlesT. Holman, Swift 106 at 8:15.Concert by the University Sym¬phony Orchestra, Mandel Hall at8:15.MiscellaneousMeeting of United Anti-War Asso¬ciation, Social Science 10(5 at 12:30.Movies: “Be Mine Tonight” and“Sicilian Sunshine,” InternationalHouse Theater, 4:30 and 8:30.Advanced registration for the Col¬lege, Cobb 210 and 211, MICHIGAN TRACKMENBEAT MAROONS, N. U.IN TRIANGULAR MEETWinning all but two of the elevenevents, Michigan’s powerful trackteam ran up 64 points to defeat Chi¬cago and Northwestern in the field-house Saturday. As was expected,Willis Ward won every event he en¬tered: the high jump at 6'3%", the'60 in :06. 3, and the high hurdlesin :08.8.Jay Berwanger scored nine of histeam’s 29 points, while Jack Flem¬ing won the 440 and placed secondin the half for eight of the Wildcat’stotal of 24. Berwanger captured asurprise victory in the shot, came inthird in the highs and fourth in boththe dash and the lows.Though Chicago garnered only onefirst place, several good perform¬ances by Maroon athletes were turn¬ed in. Bob Milow ran the best raceof his career in the two mile onlyto finish twenty yards behind NereeAlix of the Wolverines who wastimed in 9:33.6. Berwanger’s win¬winning distance in the shot was45'4", almost a foot further than therunnerup, A1 Blumenfeld of Michi¬gan.Favor WolverinesLea Yarnall jumped 6'2%" for an¬other Chicago second place, andJohn Roberts, staying out of the highFOR SPRINGStetson HatsArrow Mi toga ShirtsThe tailored shirt that is built to fit the form,atWINTER’S MEN’S SHOP1357 E. 55th Street H. P. 5160ng.WHAT OF IT(Continued from page 1)Pete his high regard for his abilities,he gives him the hardest back-strain- jing jobs.At the other end of Jimmy’svalues there is John Womer, whomJiiRmy calls Omar. Jimmy cannotappreciate the fact that John doeshis work thoroughly and neatly, andthe quadrangles have resounded withJimmy’s condemnation, “The Lordhelp ye, Omar. No good ’1 come ofye wasting like that. Mon, look atthat lad, Zimmer!”Should you ever meet Jimmy, thesurest way of telling how he regardsyou is the number of fingers he ex¬tends. Shaking two of his fingerspoints to your being “just anotherboy.” But when he extends threefingers, he has placed you amongstthe angels, and surely among thesaints. A Better PositionYou can get itHundreds of teachers, students and college graduateswill earn two hundred dollars or more this summer, SOCAN YOU. Hundreds of others will secure a betterposition and a larger salary for next year. YOU CANBE ONE OF THEM, Complete information and helpfulsuggestions will be mailed on receipt of a three centstamp. Good positions are available now in every state.TTiey will soon be filled. (Teachers addressed Dept. T. Allothers address Dept. S.)Continental Teachers Agency, Inc.1850 Downing Street Denver, Colo.Covers the ENTIRE United StatesSchool Officials! You may wire us your vacancies atour expense, if speed is urgent. You will receive com¬plete, free confidential reports by air mail within 36hours. jump, vaulted 13'2" behind theMichigan sophomore star, DaveHunn. The four Maroon athletes justmentioned are the only ones withany chance of placing for the hometeam in the Big Ten track and fieldchampionships which will be held inthe fieldhouse Saturday afternoonand evening.Providing Willis Ward comesthrough as expected, Michigan,though it has lost nine of its point Page Threemen in last year’s meet, should winits sixth indoor championship. Nev¬ertheless the Wolverines will have noeasy time of it and will he fortunateto beat Indiana by more than twoor three points. These two teams areobvious standouts in a year with bet¬ter than average performers. The II-lini should come in third Saturday,though it is almost impossible to pre¬dict the finishing order of the otherseven teams.**Shec—/ lot* you Arrow Shirtswouldn't shrink'*• “In Vino Veritas”—Arrow shirts will notshrink — because they are Sanforized. Theykeep that precise fit, that swagger styling,which is every ARROW’S birthright.Stop by at your local Arrowdealer today and look over thenew Arrow line. Priced from $1.95 ARR(DWSANrRRtfte >NRUNK* ISL.ook lor this LabelARROW SHIRTS% SANFORIZED SHRUNKmu/ shirt if one e/uer shrinks 1ARROW HEADQUARTERS IN CHICAGOTHEC#)HUBHenry C. Lytton & SonsState and Jackson—CHICAGOEVANSTON OAK PARKCOMMENTThe University of Chicago Literary and Critical Quarterly— in this issue “MORTIMER ADLERMAUDE PHELPS HUTCHINSLORADO TAFTMAX SCHOENPERCY HOLMES BOYNTON— AND —Elder OlsonFritz Leiber, |r.Art . Fiction . CriticismOn sale Wednesdays—^twenty-five cents per copyJohn BardenGeorge Van der HoefCarl SkauSidney HymanMargaret StoneArista FisherIngo PavlovSatire . PoetryS,'-y,!i' *■ ■ .r V■ ''■• ■*■. ' ' '■' ■ ' *■'-■■.■ ■’ ■ ■ ■ '.•■'^irirTyrrfPage F6ur THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, M^^RCH 6,, 1934.,DAILY r 'f i "■nil B, 0, OPPOSESCHISELEBS TONIGHT Chicago Cagers End Season with I f RESHMAN FOOTBALL30-22 Loss to Northwestern \ PRACTICE BEGINS; 25IN l-M CAGE FINALSPlan All-University SwimMeet for Thursdayin Bartlett Defeat Leaves Maroons inConference Cellar withOnly 2 WinsThe 1934 all-University intramuralbasketball championship will be de¬cided tonight in a battle between thefraterjiity title holders, Phi B. D.,and the independent-dormitorychamps, the Chiselers. The game be¬gins at 8:30 in Bartlett gym.Both teams enter the final tilt byvirtue of one point wins in the semi¬final round last week. The Chise¬lers downed the “37” club, 11 to 10,and Phi B. D. put on a last minutespurt to overcome Phi Delt, 15 to 14.If Phi B. D. wins the title, it willbe their third consecutive major in¬tramural sport championship, and itwill practically assure them of theorganization point lead for the year.Phi B. D. also led all organizationslast year.Runner-Up MatchesThe Chiselers are a pick-up groupof out of town boys from the Schoolof Business. Their members hailfrom Utah, Iowa, New Mexico, andKansas, None of them ever playedtogether before, but they weldedthemselves into a unit and haveswept through this tourney, defeat¬ing one of the pre-season favoritesand last year’s second place winner,Hoffer’s Reds, in the quarter finals,30 to 11.Two games for runner-up positionswill also be played tonight. At 7:30the Medics meet Hoffer’s Reds forthird place independent honors, andAlpha Sig faces Alpha Delt at 9:30for third place among the fraterni¬ties.Stage Swimming MeetThe intramural program will becontinued Thursday aftemoon witha swimming meet to select the bestall-University team, exclusive of var¬sity and freshman tankmen. Thesquad chosen will engrage the yearl¬ing swimmers in a dual meet earlynext quarter. As the freshmen arereported to be strong this year, thebest the University has to offer willprobably be none too good.Events will include 100-yd. breast,40-yd. free, 100-yd. free, 220-yd.free, 100-yd. back, and fancy diving.The intramural department hasalso announced that all free throwentries must be turned in by Friday. Chicago’s cage team closed its BigTen season with a defeat by North¬western last Saturday at the field-house, 30 to 22, in a rough combatwhich featured 29 personal fouls. ^Inability to sink either field goalsor free throws in the first half werethe main reasons for the Chicago loss.Pi'om the opening whistle to the clos¬ing gun, Northwestern held the leaddespite the fact that the Maroonsoutscored the Wildcats in the secondperiod. Two regulars from eachside, Peterson and Oppenheim of thehome team and Manske and Fisherof the Purple, were ejected on per¬sonals. FINAL BIG TENSTANDINGS CANDIDATES REPORTPurdueNorthwesternWisconsinIllinoisIowaIndianaMinnesotaOhio StateMichiganChicago W1088766544 L Pet.2 .8334 .6674 .6675 .5836 .5006 .5007 .4178 .3338 .3332 10 .167 TP OP512 324389 348374 333324 334 !397 383 I353 368 :363 398 I356 406 I319 412 I318 399 ! Freshman spring football practiceopened yesterday for all freshmen,and for upper clas.'?men who werenot out last fall. Twenty-five candi¬dates reported for the first session.According to Coach Shaughnessy,the squad will work out five days aweek for two weeks. If the weatherAlthough the first game withNorthwestern and a contest w’ithMichigan were the only conferencetilts they won this year, Chicago cag¬ers have high hopes of a more suc¬cessful season next season since HalWegner is the only player on thesquad who graduates with Haarlow,Oppenheim, Flinn, Pyle, Lang, andPeterson of the regular team havinghad a full season of Big Ten basket¬ball, the Maroons should go places. Norm Cottom, flashy forward ofthe championship Purdue team sankfive points last night to lead the BigTen in scoring. Second in scoring islanky Lyle Fisher of Northwesternwho is followed by Bill Haarlow ofChicago. Haarlow’s performance ismore remarkable than that of eitherCottom or Fisher as Bill is only asophomore and played in two lessgames. A list of those who scored100 points or more follows: permits, uniforms will be issued andthey will go outside on the practicefield. Otherwise practice will be con¬fined to the basketball floor in thefieldhouse.Marchie Schwartz, new backfieldcoach from Notre Dame, was onhand to assist in the practice. Afterchalk talk by Shaughnessy, the squadwas dividid into two groups, Schwartzworking with the backfield men, andShaughnessy, Sam Horwitz, and KyleAnderson helping with the line can¬didates.Hold Elections forOrganizations Today(Continued from page 1)worked in Mirror for the first timethis year have not yet been invited Cottom, Purdue—120.Fisher, N. U.—118.Haarlow, Chicago—109.Froschauer, Ill.—107.Lowery, Purdue—103.Norman, Minn.—101. THtlE MONTHS' COURSEK>l COUMI tTODIHTS AND OtAOUATOItartiNif/mmo i. OcOIt JLMtmmllHg B$0kUt tamifim, Miaahmto join the Dramatic Association, 1they will be eligible to vote without *paying the $3 dues. However, thosewho w'orked in Mirror before will not {be eligible until they pay theirdues.” moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUl MOtIR,IUgmkirCmnm.t^m$t^gkSdtootGrm4‘ Laft—The first floor, showing the winding staircase and other earlyAmerican decorations. Right—The second floor, an ideal spot for parties.Wliere dining is ever a deligkt!6324 Woodlawa A venaeGood food—of courtel... buf fhii cheery fee room offersyou ever so much morel You'll enjoy its pleasant atmos¬phere ... its early American decorations ... its friendlyspiriti And there's two things more: EXTRA good food idREASONABLE pricesi Come — and bring your guosti.Sandey Dinacre, 7Bc, SBc, $1Weekday Lnnekeon, 35c io 60cWeekday Dinners, 60c to 75eWt fmtwt a la carta spaeiaU on taaak dayt—JOe, 25e, 30e and a Blue Plata Dinnar, 50eI orntf, mofmatarttdmmrUcnday. DoramdEaamiaa- EamdmgCmtr^ optm to man.na S. MicMfw Aeu, Odcoge. iMdelpa 4Mr **Tke Soatk Side’s Finest Restaarantf**COACU COMMENT-(A Series of Sketchesof less widely-publicized members ofthe Athletic Department. Others willfollow at intervals.)HERMANSON—By BERNARD KLEINTalk of your versatile all-aroundathletes! See if you can tie this one.Alvar Bade Hermanson who is coach¬ing the fencing team this year in theabsence of Professor Merrill, is allthat any coach could ask for.Born in Stockholm, Sweden, Her-manson attended North Latin collegeand the Royal Gymnastics CentralInstitute of that city. He came tothe United States in 1922 and be¬came an instructor at the Universityin 192*6.All-Round AthleteWhile at North Latin college,which is the largest college in Swed¬en, Hermanson excelled at practical¬ly every sport under the sun. He cap¬tained the soccer, swimming, bandyor ice hockey, track, and water poloteams. His soccer and swimmingteams were amateur champions ofSweden. He also seems to have put¬tered about in the manly art of selfdefense, at one time holding theamateur boxing championship ofSweden.Hermanson also fenced a bit whileat college. He was intercollegiatefencing champion of Sweden andholds innumerable trophies and med¬als in this sport, most of which he istoo modest to speak of. In fact, theabove information was obtained onlyvia the tooth pulling process.Thus far, under Hermanson’s•coaching, the fencing team has re¬mained undefeated, the only mar onits record being a tie with Wiscon¬sin. This speaks well for a man whois coaching his first varsity team.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Serge master’s gownfor woman. Size 16. Eucil 7908. the pipe tobacco thats MILDthe pipe tobacco that's COOLThe method of preparing GrangerTobacco for pipe smoking is notlike any other method now in use.So far as we know, it isthe best way ever found oftaking out of tobaccos theoils that don’t smoke rightor taste right in a pipe.Granger owes its extra fragrance and mildness toWellman’s Method.The way Granger Tobac¬co is cut—in big flakes —helps it to smoke cool andlast longer. Try it.—mMs seeiu"hx dAe itJust about the nearestthing to a pouch that apackage could be—it keepsthe tobacco the way youwant it.A sensible package—10c.© I9i4, Liggett & Mybm Toeacco Co,.... 1