wVol. 34. No. 100. ^ Batlp i¥lat:aonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FRIDAY. APRIL 27, 1934 Price Three CentsWHITE ASKS FORTRAINED PERSONSIN PUBLI^SERVICESees Need for CollegeTrained Men andWomen Lead Wfings of Grand March at Crossed Cemnon FormalU'cnard P. White, professor of Po¬litical Science at the University, whorecently left to become a memberof the United States Civil ServiceCommission, said yesterday that gov-(rnnwnt should extend a welcom¬ing hand to college trained men andwomen.Dr. White, an authority on pub¬lic administration, spoke before theconvention of the National I..ea(fue ofWomen Voters. He told those assem-blt*d that it was a matter of highpublic policy that a due proportionof university trained people shouldfind their way into the public serv¬ice. national, state, and municipal.Say* Problam 1* Not Nowlie admitted that the problem wasnot new but that, in fact, universityand college professors had been wor-r>ing about it for twenty years, andyet, said Dr. White, “I hesitate tosuggest that I shall be able to solveit even with the assistance of thevery able staff of the commission."Pointing out that he w’as not con¬cerned with certain technical andprofessional positions in governmentservice which necessarily must be re¬cruited from college ranks, such asstatisticians, botanists, and engi¬neers. he said that there were manycollege men and women who "posses.*no special knowledge in a particularfield, but they do possess brain pow¬er and vital interest in public serv¬ice."British Public ServiceHe showed how the British public.service had met this difficulty bycreating a special administrativeclass and by recruiting young menfrom Oxford ind Cambridge andothe r English universities.The weakne.ss of state govern¬ment in the present crisis. Dr. W’hiteconcluded, is due both to the ab-•stnee of effective leadership and tothe lack of a sound administrativeorganization. ‘‘On the other hand,"hi- said, ‘‘the strength of the nation¬al government in the present emerg¬ency IS due in large part to the factthat It has at its command a largebody of trained and able public'•ervants." Tom Wa*on Lois Cromwell Betty Cason John RiceOECURE MISTRIALWHEN JURY FAILSTO REACH VERDICT Crisp and Flaming MaterialsContrasted in Leaders’ GownsSocialists, NLSStage May DayMeeting TuesdayMay Day will be celebrated by thetwo radical group.s on campus, theSocialist club and the National Student League, in their respectivemode.* of demonstration. The So¬cialists will stage their demonstration on campus, while the Na¬tional Student League will join agroup of workers and students in amass demonstration in Grant Park.The Socialists will gather at theCircle at 11:50 to hear several mem¬bers of the club speak and to singrevolutionary songs. Ted Noss willaddre.ss the students on the signifi¬cance of May Day, Maynard Kreu-ger, a.ssistant professor of economics,'cill speak on the student and So¬cialism, and Arthur McDowell, na¬tional chairman of the Young Peo¬ple’s Socialist League, will discussthe International youth movement.-Members of the National StudentTeague will meet in Social Scienceat 1:00 and will proceed to GrantPark. Every chapter of this organ¬isation throughout the city will berepresented. judge MeSurely PresidesOver Third MootCourt CaseB & G SEEKS AIDThe landscape problem is mostly•au.sed by the negligence and lackcooperation on the part of stu-<i*nUs, according to a statementmade to The Daily Maroon yester-'lay by Lester S. Ries, assistant'superintendent of the departmentof Building and Grounds .Mr. Ries explained that the Uni¬versity’s lack of natural beautynece.ssitates the creating of greenlines and shrubbery effects. A mistrial was declared in thecase of Sears Ward vs. Joe Buchan¬an heard in the University Court ofCook County last night. .Ambro.seCram, recently elected president ofthe Law .school Bar A.ssociation,rendered this decision when the jury,after being out twenty minutes, re¬turned to report that it had no ver¬dict and did not feel that it wouldbe able to arrive at one.The Honorable W. H. MeSurely,judge of the Illinois Appellate Courtpresided over the trial until the juryretired after having heard his in¬structions. When the jury failed toreach a speedy verdict. Judge Me¬Surely had to leave. After twentyminutes. Cram mounted the benchand called the jury in. He heardtheir report, overruled a plea bythe plaintiff for a judgment notwith.rtanding the hung jury, and de¬clared a mistrial.In last night’s trial, the third ofthe quarter sponsored by the Com¬mittee of Trial Practice of the Bar•Association, Sears Ward Companywa.s .seeking to recover the price of acorn planter which they sold to JoeBuchanan. Buchanan an.«wered thisaction with a defense of breach ofwarantee, claiming that the planterfailed to operate in rocky ground a.sSears Ward had said it would.The defense, represented by attor¬neys Burton Sherre and RobertSprague, called two witnesses, Buch¬anan, and his hired hand, a Mr.Burns. They testified that the SearsW’ard salesman had made the claimthat the planter would operate inrocky soil, but that when they at By SUE RICHARDSONAs they lead the Rose and Saberceremony which will climax the Mil¬itary Ball, Lois Cromwell and iBiet-ty Cason, e.scorted by Tommy Wa-son and John Rice, will present abrilliant picture. Though the cos¬tumes of the girls exemplify thespringtime vogue for graceful for¬mal fashions, the soft, flowing linesGUILD PRESENTSCHORAL FESTIVALSERVICE SUNDAYtempted to use it, the machine would ennot work.The counsel for the plaintiff,Brimson Grow and Robert Shapiro,also put two witnesses on the stand.FRENCH THEOLOGIANLECTURES IN BONDCHAPEL NEXT WEEK The annual festival service ofchoral music will be held at theUniversity chapel on Sunday after¬noon at 4:34) under the auspices ofthe Choral Directors’ Guild, collab¬orating with the University Choir,the Illinois chapter of the AmericanGuild of Organists, the Chicago chap¬ter of the National Association ofOrganists, and the Chicago club ofWomen’s Organists.The organ prelude will includeSalmo XIX by Benedetto Marcelloand Meditation by Harvey Grace,played 'by Philip McDermott, repre¬senting the Chicago chapter of theNational Association of Organists.An antiphonal group of anthemswill be sung by the Univei’sity choirunder the direction of Mack Evans,while Clara Gronau, representing theIllinois chapter of the AmericanGuild of Organists, will play on theorgan, ‘‘Allegro Vivace," symphony5, by Widor.The Ebenezer Lutheran choir, un¬der the direction of George Carl¬son, will sing a group of anthems,after which Mary Ruth Craven, rep¬resenting the Chicago club of Wom¬en’s Organists, will play an organ in¬terlude ‘‘Andante Maestoso" and‘‘Allegro Brillante, Sonata 3.”The choral postlude will be giv- of Lois’ own are in striking contrastto the crispness of Betty’s dress.Lois Cromwell has selected cafeau lait colored chiffon to accent herred-gold hair. The deep coffeetoned chiffon which covers the shoul¬ders in frills and which bands thedecolletage in back, is the only dec¬oration of the gown. Inset panelsgiving fullness to the front skirtand a ruffle-edged train are detailswhich give added charm to the cos¬tume.Lois is wearing brown satin san¬dals, and is carrying an old-fashion¬ed bouquet of mixed flowers to takethe place of jewelry.Blue TaffetaBlonde Betty Cason has chosen afrock of midnight blue taffeta,whi^ is, incidentally, one of thesmartest combinations for everting.The high-waisted dress is slim andstraight to the knee with wideflounces of taffeta and white or¬gandy cascading to the floor, andforming a train in back. White or¬gandy which also forms the .shoulderstraps and which edges the decol¬letage gives a note of freshness tothe costume.Betty will wear blue satin sandalsand will also carry a nosegay ofspring flowers. Her knee lengthswagger wrap of deep blue taffetawith full sleeves frames the facewith a .stiffened ruffle collar. JUSTIN NIXOH, NOTEDTHE0L06IAN, SPEAKSIN CHAPEL SUNDAYby the massed choirs of theChoral Directors’ Guild, with AllenBogen at the organ. The numbersto be sung include ‘‘Hallelujahchorus" 'by iBeethoven.BLACKFRIAR TICKETSPLACED ON SALE ATBOX OFFICE MONDAYDistinguished as a writer andtheologian. Dr. Victor Monod, pro¬fessor in the Protestant TheologicalFaculty of the University of Stras¬bourg, France, will speak in Bondchapel next Wednesday and Thurs¬day at 4:30. His lectures will con¬cern ‘‘Relations between the Chris¬tians of France and Germany,” andthe ‘‘Present Trends in FrenchTheological and PhilosophicalThought."According to his host, Shirley J.Case, dean of the Divinity school ofthe University, Dr. Monod is ‘‘oneof the most noted European schol¬ars.” He is the author of a num¬ber of books including ‘‘The Forcesof American Protestantism" and‘‘God and the Universe.” For sev¬eral years he was a weekly contrib¬utor to the “Conbinent,” a IVes-byterian paper published in Chicago.This is the second visit Dr. Monodhas made to this campus, his firstbeing in 191S. Tickets for the thirtieth annualBlackfriars production will go onsale Monday in the Mandel hall boxoffice according to an announce¬ment yesterday by Tom Flinn,junior in charge of the Blackfriarbox office.The tickets range from $.50 to$1.65 for the evening performancesand from $.25 to $1 for matinees.The show, ‘‘Merger for Millions,"will be given May 11, 12, 18, and19. Afternoon performances will beheld May 12 and 19 in addition tothe regular evening shows. Blocksfor fraternities are now available.Fraternity salesmen will be ap¬pointed in the near future and thatsales from that source would prob¬ably further accelerate the skimmingoff of the better seats for all per¬formances was the opinion of thebusiness department of the Order.The office in the Mandel hallcloister will be open, starting Mon¬day, from 9.’0 until 3:30. Notables AttendShorey FuneralServices TodayFuneral services for ProfessorPaul Shorey, University classicalscholar who died Tuesday, will beattended today by representatives ofthe societies of which Dr. Shorey wasan honored member, by colleaguesand former students at the Midway,and by the classics faculty of North¬western university. The services willbe held at 3 p. m. in the Joseph Bondchapel, on the campus.Hamlin Garland, novelist, will rep¬resent the American Academy ofArts and Letters. The National In¬stitute of Arts and Letters will berepresented by Ralph Clarkson,painter; Irving J. Pond, architect;and Robert Morss Lovett, critic.Dr. George Norlin, I^resident ofthe University of Colorado and aformer student of Professor Shorey,and Dr. Gordon Jennings Laing,Dean of the'Humanities Division atthe University, will speak at theservices. Frederic Woodward, vice-president of the University, will pre¬side. Westminster Foundations,Students Cooperate inMorning ServicesThe Reverend Justin Wroe Nixon,D. D., pastor of the Brick Presby¬terian church in Rochester, N. Y.,will he the speaker at the Universitychapel Sunday morning at 11. Con¬ducting the service will be the Rev¬erend William S. Minor, assistant tothe dean of the chapel.Members of the We.stminst€rFoundation will cooperate with theChapel Council in the service, withBetty Jane Matson and Chester Si-dell presenting the offering andConnie Fish and Kenneth Smith as¬sisting the ushers. Dorothy Nortonwill read the lesson.GiHcey Speaks in MadisonAt the same time Dean Charles W.Gilkey will be speaking at the FirstCongregational church in Madison,Wisconsin, where he is spending theweek-end in conference with stu¬dents at the University of Wiscon¬sin.The guest speaker, as well as beinga prominent Eastern minister andphilosopher of religion, has been pro¬fessor of English Bible and ChristianSociology at Rochester Theologicalseminary, which post he held from1919 until 1924, and lecturer onChristian ethics at the Union Theo¬logical seminary in 1924. He is alsoauthor of ‘‘An Emerging ChristianFaith,” which was published in 1930by Harper and Bros.Dr. Nixon was also the first Raus-chenbusch lecturer at the ColgateRochester divinity school in 1930.His lectures have been published byHarper in a volume entitled ‘‘TheMoral Crisis in Christianity.” Thesetalks, in their social expression andapplication of Christianty are trueto the spirit of the late ProfessorWalter Rauschenbusch, colleague ofDr. Nixon. MILITARY BALLCLIMAXES SOCIALSEASONTONICHTExpect 250 Couples atTenth AnnualAffairTwo hundred and fifty coupleswill gather at the South Shorecountry club tonight at 10 for thetenth annual Military ball, the out¬standing all-University social eventof the spring quarter. LawrenceSalerno and his orchestra will playfor the colorful function sponsoredby Crossed Cannon, the honor mili¬tary society, which has created themany traditions for which the ballis famous.The presentation of the colorswill take place at 11:20 and will beimmediately folowed by the grandmarch, the right wing of which willbe led by Lois Cromwell and TomWason, commander of Crossed Can¬non. The other wing will be led byElizabeth Cason and John Rice,cadet major of the R. 0. T. C. unit.At the conclusion of the promenadethe members of Crossed Cannon, to¬gether with the ten campus womenselected as sponsors for the ball,will form the traditional Rose andSaber arch, through which the col¬umn will pass . The sponsors includeRuth Works, Geraldine Smithwick,Lorraine W a t s o n, MargarethaMoore, Mary Ellison, Sue Richard¬son, Evelyn Carr, Virginia Eysell,Betty Saylor, and Peggy Ritten-house.Honor Pre«ton BrownMajor General Preston Brown,commander of the Sixth Corps Area,will be the guest of honor and oneof the 35 patrons and patronesses,who also include President and Mrs.Robert Maynard Hutchins, Vice-president and Mrs. Frederic Wood¬ward, Dean and Mrs. George AllanWorks, Dean and Mrs. Chauncey S,Boucher, and Dean and Mrs. Wil¬liam E. Scott.Lawrence Salerno’s orchestra,which will play from 10 until 2, ismaking its first appearance in Chi¬cago. It recently completed a sixweek’s stay in St. Louis. The band,which only a short time ago cameunder the leadership of Salerno, wasformerly directed by Carl Moore.John Rice, who is in charge ofticket sales, announced that bids,priced at $4, are still on sale.Y.W.C.A. MUSIC GROUPHOLDS TEA IN IDANOYES HALL MONDAYCAMPUS PARTYFraternity men who desire to at¬tend the Spring Campus party foroutstanding high school seniors, haveuntil tomorrow noon to make ticketreservations with Frank Carr, whomay be reached at the Phi Kappa Psihouse. Tickets which have not beenreserved up to the closing time limitby fraternities who have not yetmade reservations will be allotted toother fraternities who desire moreplaces. Under the auspices of the Y. W.C. A. music group, a Russian tea willbe given Monday at 2:30 in thelounge at Ida Noyes hall. The pro¬gram is in charge of Miss RobertaBurgess who will introduce the guestentertainers, Mrs. Alena Alexanderand Mrs. J. F, Menaul. Blanche Jan-ecek is the student chairman of themusic group.Miss Burgess, who, with her broth¬er, Ernest Burgess, professor of So¬ciology, spent last summer in a Rus¬sian communist home, will exhibitthe new children’s primers, posters,embroidered linen, and peasant lac¬quer ware. Mrs. Menaul will offertwo piano numbers, ‘‘Song of theDnieper” by Dzerzhinsky, a newsoviet composition illustrating theRussian present method of employingindu.strial themes in their art, and anumber by Rachmaninoff. Mrs. Alex¬ander will contribute a group of Rus¬sian songs.Russian food and tea will be serv-,ed. University NotInvolved in WageFight—HutchinsPresident Robert M. Hutchins stat¬ed yesterday in an interview withThe Daily Maroon concerning thecharges of low wages paid employeesat International House, ‘‘It must beunderstood that International Houseis a separate institution with its ownBoard of Trustees; it is not connect¬ed with the University. I have re¬ferred the matter to the Internation¬al House Board of Trustees."Several anonymous letters to theMaroon and an anonymous letter inthe Chicago Daily News demandedthat President Hutchins as chairmanof the NRA Labor Board shouldremedy this situation or not continuein his position. The letter in theDaily News, signed ‘‘Lovers of Ju.s-tice,” asserted that two elevatoroperators in International House,working twelve hours a day, receive$40 per month and a clerk $20 permonth for eight hours a day. Thesecharges have not been denied by In¬ternational House authorities. Neith¬er the University nor InternationalHouse are under the NRA.FERS CHECKS READYThe Comptroller’s office announc¬ed yesterday that checks for FERSworkers would be ready for deliveryat the various project points May 1.Students doing this work are urgedto call either Tuesday afternoon orWednesday and sign for their checks.It is important that this be donepromptly, as the project supervisormust return the signed payroll to thecomptroller’s office before fundsmay be obtained.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934ilarnauFOUNDED IN 190iThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, publuhed mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company. 6831 University avenue.Subscription rates: «2.69 a year; 14.00 by mail. Single copies;three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University or Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18. 1008, at the post-office at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3. 1873.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLJOHN P. BARDEN, Editor-in-C hiefVINCENT NEWMAN, Business ManairerWILLIAM GOODSTEIN, Managing EditorWALTER L. MONTGOMERY, Cir alationJANE I. BIESENTHAL, Associate Ed’torBETTY HANSEN, Associate EditorEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSTwn Barton Howard P. Hudson Howard M. RichNoel B. Gerson David H. Kutner Florenea WiahnlckBUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman William O’Donnell hohert SamuelsSOPHOMORE REPORTERSCharlotte Fishman Henry Kelley Donald MorrisEdgar Greenebaum Raymond Lahr Ralph NicholsonRuth Greenebaum Janet Lewy leanne StolteCharles Ho«»rr Curtis Melnick William WatsonSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSRod Chapin Howard Gottschalk Robert McQuilkJnFrank Da via Thomas Karats Gerald SternZalmon Goldsmith Everett StoreyEDITORIAL COMMITTEEPreston Cutler Huntington Harris Linton J. KeithMartin Gardiner Sidney Hyman Georg MannNight Editor: Ralph NicholsonFriday, April 27, 1934PAUL SHOREY, MEMBER,THE SOCIETY OF THE BESTThe passing of Dr. Paul Shorey, one of the lastof the brilliant faculty originally assembled underPresident William Rainey Harper, has strickenedthe University community. Dr. Shorey was a greatscholar, great thinker, and great man. His workand teaching did much to bring the Universitythrough its eminent years as one of the finest in¬stitutions of cultured higher learning in the coun-try.A man of the deepest insight into intellectual,literary, and cultural achievements of the world,Paul Shorey was an able scholar in the truestsense of the word. He was indeed a memberof “Synessia AgathonSociety of the Best. Hecaught more than occasional glimpses of the high¬est intellectual possibilities of mankind.From “Tbe Unity of the Human Spirit” by Dr.Shorey, we have taken a passage which seemsto interpret the broad plane of his perspective andthe fathomless depth of his understanding:“There is one great society alone on earth, thenoble living and the noble dead. That societyis and always Mfill be an aristocracy. But the doorof opportunity that gives access to it opens easilyto the keys of a sound culture, and is closed onlyto the ignorance and prejudice that fixes our hyp¬notized vision on the passing phantasmagoria. . .Those books only will never grow obsolete andout of date, whose fashion, like the unwrittenlaw to which Antigone appealed, is not of todaynor yesterday, but of all time. They can onlydiffuse through the college life that gracious andserene atmosphere of beauty and right reason inwhich the young soul can attain its fullest stature.TTie literature of the hour and the place may titil¬late and entertain, but only the timeless literatureof the world can elevate, refine, amd console. . . . ”“Those who can listen to the lordly music flow¬ing from the illimitable years, those whose soulsa culture which it is now the fashion to call oldfashioned has keyed to receive the far, faint vib¬rations of the past, for them those soft pipes play,not on the sensual ear, but, more endeared, pipeto the spirit ditties of no tone.”University academic tradition has been builtby Paul Shorey and men like him. They did nothold authorities of the present day in reverentcontemplation. They realized that such narrow,hypnotic worship induced only confusion, bewild¬erment, and skepticism. Only by taking thegreatest intellectual and literary triumphs of thepast can man entertain some hope for the future.Only from the comparatively small intellectualheritage of literature, philosophy, and science canmen perceive some order in the apparent chaos ofthe world today.But that intellectual appreciation does not meana return to medieval theology. It does not meanthat intellectuality is dogmatic. Nor does it meanan absolutistic, rigid formulation of thought, con¬ jured out of the ancient past and imposed onyoung intellects of the present. Without muchexaggeration it can be asserted that most of thegreatest ideas that form a basis for all human en¬deavor were first made coherent in Grecian times.But realization and admission of apparent trivial¬ity of modern thought takes an infinitely broad¬er mind than irrational, pedantic skepticism ofscoffers who profess broad minds. That lattertype of broad mind has sometimes been calledanti-intellectual and has, on many occasions, beenfound absurdly vacant as well as broad.Only by an intellectual aristocracy—a Societyof the Best—of men like Paul Shorey will thegreatest accomplishments of mankind be pre¬served — perhaps preserved for use when thataristocracy becomes supreme.—J. P. B.I The Travelling Bazaar II By MILT OUN |THE ANTI-MILITARISTS BRAWLMost of you know Barney Kleinschmidt. He'sthe guy that prances before the band betweenhalves at the football game. You know—thedrum-major. He’s also pretty much in chargeof arrangements for the Military Ball tonight.He came in today and told us something abouthow things were getting on, but he talks so fastwe had to write fast and became terribly care¬less, but this is the gist of it all;‘’They all gathered at ida noyes for their pic¬tures the twelve girls constituting the leadersand sponsors and the twelve crossed cannon ladsall were to have sabers that is all the boys buteven a thorough search of the girls’ gym re¬vealed only six sabers so six sabers there wereand six scabards held with the assr.rance of ex¬pert swordsmen well here we are all 24 of ushere are the five cameramen (puzzled lookingfellows) so what’s keeping us?“The camera boys are thinking trying to thinkup something new in the line of mil ball pixthey frown and talk one runs out and comesback with a table and a triumphant leer he’llshow ’em but no miss dudley won’t let the manput his old camera on her table the lad from thetimes was the next inspired he said how’s aboutan overhead shot in the gym swell so off to thegym we go but no miss dudley again put thedamper on it the girls’ archery class was in thegym they wouldn’t be thru for about an hourand we couldn’t disturb them back to the libraryand the old stuff on the stairs the crossed sabersand scabards the girls not so secure under thewobbling swords but brave neverthemost onetwo three said the cameramen we all shut oureyes and the lights flashed fifteen of these opera¬tions and the boys went back to the papers dugup last year’s mil ball pix and shot them thruthis morning.“Last year particular pains were taken to keepcrashers out of the ball but lo and behold upshowed spearing a silly smile on his map andbottle in his pocket lord knows how he got inbut the first thing he did was to annex doolittle’sgirl (and doolittle paid good money to bring her)then he wobbled over to kvale’s orchestra andpromptly walked on mr. kvale’s flute-player’sflute the flutist was playing an oboe solo hesaw spearing’s foot come down with 200pounds of spearing on top of it right on his flutehe started a squaw’k his oboe squeaked kvalelooked a look and the poor lad went playing whilehis flute took it on the chin tiring of wreckinginstruments spearing dragged about the prop(tho darn heavy) machine gun around the flooran inch gouge in the floor marked his trail thesouth shore manager marked the crossed can¬non trail and mil boys paid and paid jflenty.“The dance is always the nuts tho with slowmusic fast music swell marches and the constantrending of fragile gowns with awkward spursthen the grand march with captain whatsis try¬ing to explain to his girl why he isn’t leading thegrand march didn’t he tell her that he and majorbrown were just like that i gotta go now.’’So after all that, we’ll probably .see you at theparty tonight.♦ * +WONDERMENTSJoe Reed is going back to Kansas, via SouthDakota and other places. Wonder why set upfolks leave college in the midst of a nice junioryear Wonder how Tom Coleman will lookwhen he’s eighty, which is probably a laugh.(Ted Beatty, who used to have a much-visitedplace of his own on Drexel, greets Tom’s patronsnovf)... .Natalie Panes, Vassar product andCherry Abbott's roommie at Blake, is labeled“intellectual’’ by all who give information abouther. She’s been around, apparently. She runs,now, with Arnold Friedman, of Burton Court.W’onder how it feels to be labeled like that....“Alabama” was the nuts. Wonder why it didn’tgo two nights.... The trouble with this under¬grad writing his thoughts every day is thatpeople find out how dumb he is. Wonder whyhe took the dern job. Lettersto theEditorEditor of The Daily Maroon,Dear Mr. Barden.Many times this year the editorialcolumns of The Daily Maroon havebeen properly indignant about (toquote from one of your recent edi¬torials) ‘doubtful veracity, incom¬plete information, and faulty reason¬ing.” It would be hard to conceive ofa more exact exemplification of theseterms than your editorial of April26 headed “Just An Old BlackfriarCustom.”In that editorial you constructed,more or less out of thin air, a setof theoretical principles by whichBlackfriar books are presumablyrewritten. You finished by stating,not that you had heard that thisyear’s book was being mutilated ac¬cording to these “principles of revi¬sion,” but only that you had heard“pitiful reports” about the fate of“Merger for Millions.” The obviousimplication of the editoral was thatBlackfriars had taken over the au¬thor’s book and were gleefully andstupidly butchering it.You should not have printed aneditorial so injurious to the Black¬friars organization without investi-gatng the “pitiful reports” whichyou claim to have heard. You werecompletely unjustified in allowingyour imagination to create a seriesof statements which are unsubstan¬tiated by facts. If you have specificcharges to make against Blackfriarsor those who are implicated in theproduction of this year’s show, weshall be only too glad to hear them,and to admit or disprove the accusa¬tions according to the facts in thecase. Until you wish to do so, in fair¬ness to Blackfriars, to yourself, and •to Aristotle, whose disciple you pro¬fess to be, please refrain from anymore criticism of the highly imagin¬ative, “wishful thinking,” variety. IYours truly, jJames Henninf, Abbot. 'Bill Kaufman, Prior. IWe based that editorial on the ' wistful reflections of Author Hunt¬ington Harris, but he, of course,knows nothing about it; so we furth¬er based the editorial on casual in¬terviews with Arbitrators William V.I Morganstern and Nelson Fuqua. ItI was self-evident that Abbot Henningj and Prior Kaufman would not ap-j prove.—ed.I Editor, The Daily Maroon,I Dear Sir:I Messrs. Tyroler and Kalven, in TheDaily Maroon for Friday 20th., seem¬ed extremely unhappy about the re¬cent visits of Alfred North White-head and Sir Arthur Eddington; andas those same visits produced in mean exactly opposite state of mind, Ifeel obliged to say something, in theeffort to correct what I believe to bea mistaken attitude. It may also besignificant that my opinions on thissubject are concurred in by a largenumber of personal acquaintances.In the first place, the two compon¬ents of sweetness and light (onewonders at times who is which)vseem to me sadly mistaken as to thepurpose of the two visits under dis¬cussion. university community isnot made up wholly of students, andcertainly the students here saw onlya small part of the activities of ourtwo distinguished visitors. There aremore than a few of our facultymembers entirely capable of meet¬ing such minds on their ownground, to the greatest mutual ben¬efit, and much of the time of ourguests was spent in just that manner.I do not mean, however, to begthe question of the benefits to stu¬dents of the visits of Mr. Whiteheadand Sir Arthur. It is certainly im¬possible to please everyone, andthere are no doubt some who feltdisappointed in what they saw andheard; but that is not safe groundon which to generalize about thecommunity as a whole, as there werequite as certainly many studentswho felt that they had profitedgreatly by their experiences. As forthe four public lectures, I shouldvery much like to meet the gentle¬men who “expected” Mr. W’hitehead“to impart the cream of philosophicdoctrines from Plato to himself ina hundred and twenty minutes,” orwho had similar hopes with regardto Sir Arthur. It seems a shame thatsuch great expectations .should go unrewarded, particularly when oneconsiders the priceless amount ofgenius which must have been ex-pended in reading so ambitious a pro¬gram into the simple titles of the lec¬tures themselves.If there was anything which wascharacteristic of the two group dis¬cussions which were held here inJudson Court, it was-the intensity ofinterest on the part of the students: during the talks and the discussionj which followed, and the genuine re-j gret felt in each case as the end ofI the evening approached. If that is aj symptom of futility, I am very muchI mistaken. There were probably some, persons who felt that they had gain-j ed nothing for the evenings’ time,I but from my own experience, I be¬lieve that they were a very .smallminority; and the great intellectualstimulus imparted to this small com¬munity at the Residence HalKs was; much in evidence for a long time af-j ter the departure of our guests. Dur¬ing each evening there were ques¬tions and answers in plenty; and if' at times the questions seemed .shal¬low, it was not due to faulty plan¬ning, but to a certain mental inar¬ticulateness which seems typical ofthe so-called “average student”—thesame trait which makes it improbable! that any one of them would read,! in preparation for such a visit, bookslike “Process and Reality,” “.\dvon-I tures of Ideas,” “The Nature of the1 Physical World,” and “Space, Time,I and Gravitation.”Concerning the personal mter-(Continued on page 3)BE MINE TONIGHTApril 30 and May 14:30 and 8:30 p. m.INTERNATIONAL HOUSEComing Moy 7 and 8EMIL UNO DIE DETEKTIVEAlso 2 Mkhoy Mowso PicturetToniteWhen the bugler sounds tapsat the Military Ball at theSouth Shore Country Clubget your “date” and RUN,(don’t walk), to the PalmGrove Inn for a night-cap ora barbecued chicken sand¬wich.PALM GROVE INN56m ST. AND LAKE MICHIGANTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 27. 1934 Page Thr^SOCIETYfcjSUZANNEAn assortment of tasty dishes willtempt the jaded appetite of campuscotiples who seek divertisement thisweek-end. On out bill of fare wefind a Ball, two local dances, andassorted teas to top off this festivepro ram.What can you say about the Mil¬itary Ball except that it will besomething that you shouldn’t miss...There'll even be room to dance, andyou’ll ibe properly impressed by theswank uniforms.Tomorrow night you can relax andforget your formality by going tothe PHI PSI or KAPPA NU par¬ties.. .Though ewefy normal littlegirl wants to go to the former, it’sto be a closed dance in collaWa-tion with their Northwestern chap¬ter.At last people are realizing thatSunday is no day to study, so thatteas are rapidly becoming the pop¬ular thing to do...This week, forinstance, the ALPHA DELTS andDEKES are each planning to be cam-pu.s centers of bridge and cookies,and the PHI DELTS are being evenmore hospitable with a tea dance.And that, my children, ought to keepyou from seeing your family!LETTERS TO THEEDITOR(Continved from page 2)views, I would say that no “averagestudent’’ asked for one—and if anyone of them had, he would probablyhave been astounded at the amountof Stimulus he received. For if thereis a characteristic that is typical of atruly great mind, it ia simplicity anddirectness, and these qualities areetched in the memories of many ofus who met Whitehead and Edding¬ton. Most of the students who ask¬ed for personal interviews were oftwo types, neither of them “aver¬age.” First, the sort of glorified au¬tograph hound, who goes to see, tosmell, to hear, and perhaps to feel,if he can wangle a handshake; andI am not concerned with this type.The other group was made up wf sin¬cere, earnest students who, in thecourse of their own study andthought, had encountered questionsand ideas on which the opinions ofth*‘ two distinguished men would beinvaluable. Such persons knew inadvance what they wanted to talkabout, and although fifteen minutesis short, it was found by most that inthat time they had been given morethan they could possibly hope to ab¬sorb. There are many such, and eachone will bear witness to the inspira¬tion and delight which for themmarked the two visits. Not being thewhole community, they cannot talkabout the profit to the community,or the lack of it; The point is, theydo not attempt to.Very sincerely yours,Willian N. Simonds, Jr.You are right that “value of thevisits to the community” cannot bepreci.sely determined. Whether theywore or not is a matter of opinion.Sweetness and Light does not neces¬sarily express the opinion of TheIhiily Maroon. We feel it is fittingan<l proper to have both sides of thequestion so admirably pre.sented inThe Daily Maroon.—ed.Editor, The Daily Maroon,Dear Sir:A.S you may or may not know,one of the by-words in the SovietUnion today is “socialist self-critic-ism,” a phrase indicative of open-nes.s to both internal and externalvnticism. We “party radicals” asWell as yourself probably agree thatyour criticism is of the external va¬riety.Eut, don’t you think, granting thevalidity of criticism, that it is hightime that some one attacked us on amore vital spot than our methods,tactics, or a “young revolutionary en¬thusiast’s unesthetic crop of hair, ora young lass’s amorphic qualities,”such as—forgive the mention—thecontent of our ideas. Does not yourscratching away at these trappingsof politics reveal a superficiality, aprejudice, that does not dare to ven¬ture into any deep, genuinely con¬troversial issue—or, perhaps, simplyIgnorance of these ideas (they doexist) and timidity.Critics of this type expose them¬selves as cowards, when they placea finger on vulnerable, relatively un¬important aspects of a political move-ment, and when it comes to the rest,mutter to themselves: “I hear not. Isee not. I know not”Incidentally, the lament in Fri-'lay’s editorial over the difficulty en¬countered by radicals in an atmo-^here of t^eranee, was^ not in vain,he organised heckling* of a group 'Alahama*' Recaptures Dixie Glamorin Revival by Dramatic AssociationBy BETTY HANSENAll the glamor of the old South—where women were fair flowers andmen strove for the honor of payingtheir addresses to them—was reviv¬ed last night in the Dramatic As¬sociation’s revival of AugustusThomas’ quaint little drama, “Ala¬bama.” Magnolia blossoms, frogs inthe bayou, an affair of honor atsunrise all contributed to the at¬mosphere. Only a mint julep waslacking to convince the audience thatthe land south of the Mason-Dixonwas reborn.But sentimental phraseology tothe contrary, “Alabama” was reallya delightful portrayal of the sort ofplays which delighted our grand¬parents and warmed the cockles oftheir romantic hearts. And even weare not immune to the charm of theplay and the half^forgotten typesof people it concerned. A capablecast handled the play deftly, sen¬sitive to its very real humor but notderisive of its delicate charm. Thosein the audience who expected an op-of fraternity men last Friday nightat the opening session of the Anti-War Conference bears ample, and,shall I say, hopeful witness to ourgrowing strength.L. S.We cannot disagree with yourideas, but your methods are often in¬consistent with your ideas.—ed.Have your silhouette cut by Lon-zo Cox, artist of Mount Vernon, Vir¬ginia, at the University of Chicagobookstore, 5802 Ellis Avenue—adv. portunity to cheer and jeer wereslightly disappointed, for there wereno exciting high spots and even thevillain accepted defeat more like aSouthern gentleman than the usualdespicable melodrama cur.Acting honors should be distribut¬ed equally to the cast, for indeed alldid very well with their parts. DripMasterson was articularly memor¬able in the role of the Southern Col¬onel whose kind heart finally wonout over some rather pecuniary con¬siderations. Barbara Vail was suf¬ficiently fragile and equally charm¬ing as Carry, one of the fairest blos¬soms of the Old South, and LoisCromwell did her usual capable bestas Mrs. Page .Frank Springer was rather toomild-mannered as Harry Preston, butthis interpretation was not out ofkeeping with the play. Flip Ebert isto be complimented in not attempt-(Continued on page 6)’RAINING,YOU CAN sell;Train for business leadership at this schoolof successful grradustes. Business Ad*ministration. Executive Secretarial, Steno-typx, Accounting, etc. Day or Eve. classes.Coeducational. Call, write or phone Ran.1575 for bulletin.BiT'an^StiattonCOij^EGE18 SOUTH MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO Today on the(QuadranglesThe Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:Henry Kelley.Religion“Confession in the MedievalChurch.” Professor John T. McNeill.Joseph Bond chapel at 12.Lectures“Medieval Political Thought.” As¬sociate professor Einar Joranson inHarper M 11 at 4:45.“Models of the Atoms,” Associateprofessor Carl Eckart in the Art In¬stitute, at Fullerton hall at 6:45.Avukah. “History and Achieve¬ ments of Zionism from Herzl to SanRemo.” Dr. A. E. Abramow-itz, inEckhart 203 at 3:30.MiscellaneousW. A. A. cozy in Ida Noyes hallat 3:30.British club, Ida Noyes hall at 8.International Nights, InternationalHouse at :30. All seats reserved.Also Saturday at 2:30 and 8:30,SocialMilitary Ball. This evening from10 to 2 at the South Shore CountryClub.SUNDAYReverend Justin W. Nixon, ofRochester, New York. University cha¬pel at 11.Calvert club, Y. W. C. A, room ofIda Noyes, 7 to 9. “The Sacramentof Marriage,” Reverend Arthur H.O’Brien of the Quigley Seminary,.-WL.STRONG.A,Xj£j Jniotels Windermereinvite you for any party, of any size.No matter what the occasion, hereyou will find everything you need forperfect enjoyment. For large gather¬ings— fraternity or sorority demces,entertainments, balls—the bedlroomis complete. For smaller gatherings,private dining rooms are available.Or, if there are just a few dining to¬gether, there is a la carte and tabled'hote service. Important, too, is thefact that it costs surprisingly little toentertain here.Qtnada’s Tride ^ince i8^yNOW BREWED IN THE U. S. A.THE DBBWBTS UD./I8O N. Mtohlgon Av». CHICAGO, ILLINOtf indermereS6th Street at lackeon Park • ChicagoPATRONIZE ‘THE DAILYMAROON ADVEP7TSERSYOUARE9Jangled nervesshow in your faceOf course you don’t want to lookolder than you are. That’s onereason it’s so important to watchyour nerves.For remember, jangled nervescan mark your face indeliblywith lines. It doesn’t pay to take chanceswith your nerves. Get enoughsleep—fresh air—recreation. Andmake Camels your cigarette.Smoke all the Camels you want.Their costlier tobaccos neverjangle your nerves.COSTLIER TOBACCOSCamels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVETOBACCOS than any other popular brand of cigarettes! NEW GAME BOOK SENTFREE! Icaasw'sgaieiCa3gW'«®(SC!wsamsM MWNHM VtfVt-MMIMrMV // f M 4f MVNew^-'illastrated book of 20ways to test nerves... Fas¬cinating ! Amazing! ‘ ‘ Showup” your friends. See ifym. have healthy nerves.Send fronts from 2 pack¬ages of Camels with order-blank below. Free book issent postpaid. CaiMtl NtVW Mf OM VOMCUP HERE...MAIL NOWR. J. Reynold* Tobeeeo ConipeoyDept. 76-D, Wineton-Selem, N. C.I eneloae fronts fiomZ itBcks of CamelsSend me book of nerve tests postpaidAunmStreetStefs....OS«.e»irMDwMaibwU, UM iCUvCopyrlfbt. 1934, B. I. Reynold* Tobacco CompanySMOKE AS MANY AS YOU WANT...THEY NEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES!Til Mr IMI CAMEL CARAVAN with Ca»a Loma Oreheatra, Stoopnagle and Budd, Connie BoRWell, Every Tueaday andT U N t 111! Thuraday at 10 P. M., E.S, T,—9 P, ilf., C.5. F.—« P, M., M.S. T.-7 P. M., P.S. T., over WABC-Columhia Network(1DAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934MAROON NINE OPENS010 TEN SEASON ATIOWA CITY TODAY Netmen Meet Wisconsin Today;Seek 6th Straight 'Big Ten WinChicagoWehling, IfBerkson, rfLcTin, cfHaarlow, ssComerford, 3bThompson, lbCochran, 2bOffiU (c), cLangford, p IowaStephens, 3bDrager, cfBlackman, IfSchult’rich (c) 2bSchmidt, cG.Baker, lbMason, ssMcEwan, rfFrohwein,pWith better prospects than forseveral years, the Maroon baseballteam opens its conference seasonaifainst Iowa at Iowa City this af¬ternoon in the first of a tw'o-gameseries. Long Bob Langford, the onlyletterman pitcher on the squad, willdraw the opening assignment andwil probably be opposed by HarryFrohwein.With pitchers Ed Novak, ConLaird, and Bill Sherwin also mak¬ing the trip, and Johnny Baker, BillHaarlow, and Ed Thompson, infield¬ers who could be pressed into moundservice if it were necessary, it islikely that Coach Anderson will usehis pitchers as freely as the situa¬tion warrants .The stai-ting pitcherfor the second game tomorrow willdepend on who is called on to hurlthis afternoon.The only other team in the con¬ference which has not yet opened itsBig Ten sea.son, the Hawkeyes havewon their last nine games w'hiJeclipping the offerings of oppos¬ing pitchers at a better than .300team average. Glenn Baker, slug¬ging first baseman, who is a firstcousin of John Baker, Chicago firstbaseman, leads the hitters with amark of .413, while four of the otherregulars are batting well over .300.Red Faber PitchesIn the event that Mau, sensation¬al Hawkeye southpaw, is in the boxfor the home club, Freddy Lauerman The Maroon tennis team will gunfor its fourth victory of the seasonand its first fiig Ten dual meet tri¬umph when the boys face Wisconsintoday at 2:30 on the varsity courts.The netmen went through last year’sConference dual meet season unde¬feated while rolling up a string offive consecutive wins. A victory overthe Badgers today would, by simplemathematics, make it six straight,which is a record not to be scoffedat by any other Big Ten school withthe possible exception of Minnesota.By virtue of early season per¬formances the Maroons figure tohave a rather easy time today. Theteam has looked good in practicematches all this week and is grad¬ually rounding into mid-season form.Double* Duo StrongYesterday Captain Max Davidsonand Trev Weiss, the Maroon stellardoubles combination, continued todemonstrate why they are the de¬fending champs, when they trimmedCoach Lonnie Stagg and John Mc-Diarmid, 6-1, 6-3. Coach Stagg is aplayer of no mean ability himself,while McDiarmid has been highlytouted as the sixteenth rackingmen’s player in the United States.So it can be seen that the ChicagoNo. 1 duo is not so bad at that.Badger Coach UndecidedCaptain Bob Howes and RoyBlack, Badger No. 1 and 2 men, arewill take Marv Berkson’s place inright and Johnny Baker will playfirst. Although both are excellentfielders, they do not compare withBerkson and Thompson, who are bothleft-handed hitters, in smackingright-handed pitching.Before leaving for Iowa yesterdaythe boys underwent a little battingdrill. Red Faber, former White Soxpitcher, threw to the hitters.While the 'egulars are aw’ay, thescrubs w’ill play the freshmen todayand the Baby Ruths tomorrow atGreenwood field. returning veterans from last year’sWisconsin team and are the twomen who would be likely to give theMaroons the most trouble. However,Black was easily defeated last yearby Davidson in the Conferencesingles and so should not be diffi¬cult to beat this year. Coach A. L.Masley of the Badgers had not de¬termined the rest of the Badgerlineup yesterday .since four men arefighting for the third and fourthpositions on the team.The local netsters should not ex¬perience the least difficulty in beat¬ing the Badger doubles teams as theMadison squad is noticeably weak inthat department. Howes and Blackare the best duo and they do notseem to play well together. SportFlashesThe National Pastim<Champion 'Coach—The Fastest Human—-By TOM BARTON-Since baseball is the “nationalpastime’’ it has always amused us,the relative importance of collegiateba.seball and coJlegiate football.Baseball at some colleges and uni¬versities has even been di-opped fromthe sport program. With the largeattendance at major league ba.seballgames, national interest in the sportdoes not appear to have declined.And the “kids’’ still chase fly balls down on the corner lot .Perhaps the rising interest in golfand tennis may account for some ofthe declining interest in the diamondamusement. At any rate the num¬ber of college men in professionalbaseball is not large in comparisonto the numbt'r of the sandlot prod¬uct playing in the major leagues.With all the much-heralded value ofa college education this is probablyas it should be.On the other hand every man,save one, sailing with the WalkerCup golf team has at one time at¬tended some college or university.Most of them graduated from a col¬lege .All but three of last year’sDavis Cup tennis team were collegemen.• * *Coach Bill Thom of Indiana’schampionship mat team, will defendhis junior middleweight w’restlingtitle next Wednesday against “W'ild-cat” McGann. Thom is one of the outstanding professional grapplersbut finds time to develop wi ’mat teams for Indiana. 'inningMichigan’s one man track teamWillis Ward, and the Marquettemenace, Ralph Metcalfe, will finallytangle at the Drake Relays to de¬cide who is the fastest human. Withthe retirement of Eddie Tolan, Met¬calfe has been accorded that title.Buy Your CorsagesatJOHNSON & JENSONFLORISTS2313 E. 71tt St.H. P. 1295Where to WorshipWORLD BROTHERHOOD SUNDAYUNIVERSITY CHURCH OFDISCIPLK OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueDr. Edward Scribner .4mes, MinisterSUNDAY, APRIL 29, 193410:30 A. M.—Communion Service.1 1 :00 A. M.—Sermon Subject: “The Won¬der of our Moods,” Dr. Ames. Specialmusic by quartette and choir.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers. Tea. Program. The Church ofThe Redeemer. (EPISCOPAL)56th and BlackstoneRev. E. S. WhiteEpiscopal Student PastorSUNDAY SERVICESHoly Communion, 8:00 and9:30 A. M.Choral Eucharist, 11:00 A. M.Evensong, 5:00 P. M.Three services every week-day.Church open daily for prayer andmeditation. THE FIRST UNITARIANCHURCHWoodlawn Avenue and East 57th StreetOGDEN VOGT, D.D., MinisterSUNDAY. APRIL 29. 1934(World Brotherhood Sunday)1 1 :00 A. M.—“Idealism in a ChangingWorld.” Rabbi George Fox of SouthShore Temple.4 :00 P. M.—Channing Club Tea. Transi¬ent Boys.” discussed by Professor W. A.McMillen.Tonight’s The NightMILITARY BALLSouth Shore Country ClubLawrence SalernoFormal $4.00 10 to 2Here is the best time you can have.When there is something (differentgoing on every few minutes it is hardto have a dull time. You will enjoydancing to an orchestra like LawrenceSalerno’s. You will like the changingtempo of moving Interest whendreamy waltzes change to martialairs, and the dimly lighted Ballroomflares into the brilliance of the beau¬tiful arch of roses. People have al¬ways liked to see who’s who and whatthey are bringing; that long lounge Isjust the place where you seeeverybody and everybody seesyou. Don’t forget you always look betterin a tux, and your date knows it; itseems the way she holds your arm justa little bit tighter when she is reallyhaving a good time would be reasonenough for you to lay down this paperand — get a date and a ticket. Whereyou can get your ticket. The book¬stores, Woodworth’s or the Univer¬sity of Chicago Bookstore have ticketson sale. If you are in a fraternityhouse our men will be around dallyto take care of you. You can get tick¬ets from members of Crossed Cannonor the Military Office, Ryerson 35.The charge is $4.00.Lawrence SalernoTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934 Page FiveAllan Marver Is Outstanding Playerin Intramural Athletic CompetitionBy JAMES BERNARDIn recent years many athleteshave become ^outstanding in intra¬mural competition. Some have suc¬ceeded in one sport alone. Othersin two or more sports and someparticipants have achieved outstand¬ing recognition in all. By far themost versatile Intramural man in re¬cent years is Allan Marver of thePhi Beta Deltas.Marver, the winner of the all-around Participation Trophy, 1932-33, has achieved fame in six intra¬mural sports. Star of the champion-pionship toochball team last fall andthe previous one as well, he was se¬lected on the all star teams in thoseyears. He is considered by many asan outstanding pass receiver andtouchball tactition. Last spring hetook second place with J. Weiss inthe fraternity tennis doubles andpicked up many points in track.Fine PitcherXast quarter he continued his out¬standing record with a second inhandball. Phi Beta Delta won theUniversity basketball championshipand Marver held a regular positionby showing coolness and ability as along shot. By far his most outstand¬ing performance is on the pitching mound where he achieved the honorof being undefeated leader of hisfraternity’s nine. Walter Hebert,faculty adviser of Intramural events,calls Marver; “The best hitter in thehistory of Intramural playgroundball, and, I think, one of the bestsoft ball players in the city.”Kerr Fine AthleteIntramural star number two isDonald Kerr of the Alpha Delts.Kerr has received at least honorablemention in four years of touchballand playground ball. In the formersport he is a consistent shifty ballcarrier while in the latter sport heis both a good defensive and offen¬sive man. In basketball Don was onthe second all star team last winter;in ping pong, second in doubles andsingles; in tennis and track, a con¬sistent point scorer.Norman How’ard of Delta KappaEpsilon is next in the list of out¬standing I-M men. As a result ofhis shifty running last season, How¬ard was chosen on the all startouchball team, his team takingthird place in the league. Since hebecame a varsity wrestler last win¬ter, he did not play with the Dekebasketeers but the year before Norm(Continued on page 6) SHAUGHNESSY ILLAS TEAMS GIRD FORFINAL SCRIMMAGESLINEUPSMaroons WhitesRiley le B. PetersonWright It WhittierJordan Ig GoldKelly c WhitesideScruby rg ThomasMeigsGillerlain, rt Wolfenson,LindahlCutter re G. PetersonRunyan qb MartinSchuessler Ih NaceyWhitney rh BalfanzSkoning fb Channon,Hartwell“Cubs” “White Sox”Manske le PerretzMarymowski It GrossmanFriedman Ig DeemPatterson c ShawKendall Tg SpearingHoyt r t Bush, GilesWomer re LaFevreCullen qb ShipwayBartlett Ih WebsterWells rh BartronNyquist fb Harrison,Bosworth\I A Grand Thought!Ipi DancingTonighttoJan Garber*‘ldol of the Airlanes**featured at the IIIjII:I TRIANON62nd and Cottage Grove• Dancing Saturdays 'til 2«^ Sundays from 3 'til 12:30That Made Milwaukee FamousCarTCwn.. am-m-m-nta. tott£cuow] With Coach Shaughnessy tempo¬rarily out of service with a case ofwhat might be the flu, the assistantcoaching staff yesterday put the; football men through their last drillsbefore the beginning of their seriesof scrimmages.This afternoon the Maroon teamwill meet the Whites and the “WhiteSox” will battle the “Cubs.” Theseveral teams were selected with aneye to equality, so that the gamesshould be fairly close. On Mondaythe “Cubs” and “Sox” play, respec¬tively the Maroons and Whites. Tues¬day’s games will find “Sox” battlingMaroons and “Cubs” opposing theWhites.Entertain High School StudentsOn Friday, in connection with theentertainment by the Chicago Alum¬ni club, high school seniors of near¬by schools, will be entertained at aregular game.Although they have been develop¬ing a good many running and passplays, kick plays have been conspicu¬ous by their absence.Jay Berwanger, the local decathlonteam, has been taking occasionaltimes out from heaving javelins andother implements of athletic warfareto work out for a while in the field-house enclosure passing a football.Next Wednesday the football teamwill not practice. These rests weredesigned to give the boys a littletime to get some studying done.What with hell weeks in the air andother distractions prevailing,Shaughnessy feels that it is a goodidea to try to keep the boys some¬where near eligible.(jolfers FaceArmour Tuesdayin First MeetChicago’s golfers will do some in¬tensive practice work over the week¬end in preparation for their open¬ing meet with Armour Tuesday. Highscores, which featured the qualify¬ing round last week-end, did not en¬courage the team. Mauermann’s 80has been the lowest score to date,with the majority of the scores inthe high eighties.Ed Mauermann will be the number1 man to face Armour, with HarryBaker tentatively slated for the num¬ber 2 spot. Bob Howe will most like¬ly see action at the third position,with Burt Young, more recentlynotable as a fencer, at the fourthposition.Mauermann OutstandingMauermann is the outstandinggolfer on the team. Ed led the BigTen golfers for the first round lastyear, but cracked' in the followingrounds and finished far behind theleaders. This year he has been hit¬ting the ball as well as he did lastyear, and with a few weeks of com¬petition, Mauermann should be anoutstanding threat for the Big Tencrown late next | month. JohnnyFischer, Michigan ace, and defend¬ing champion has left with the Walk¬er Cup golf team sailing for Eng¬land.The first three men are veteransof last season, but Young, althougha senior, will get his first taste ofthe links competition.Baker, number2 last year, did not play much golfand was in poor form when the pre¬liminary qualifying round was play-after the season ended last yeared. Smith did not have a round un¬der 90. TENNIS TOURNEYAll singles matches in the I-MI tennis tourney must be played by to-I day. Those who fail to turn ini scores by this evening will bedropped from the pairings. The ex¬tra time is being allowed becauseof the inclement weather. Play willstart in the singles division of thePing-Pong Entries closed yesterday.WRESTUNG TRIALSCoach Vorres will stage his week¬ly wrestling tournament in Bartlettgym at 12:30 today. SPECIAL!!For the MILITARY BALLShoulder Corsages atSpecial PricesORCHIDS GARDENIASOberg’s Flower Shop1416 E. 57th St. Fairfax 3670THE STORE FOR MENFor YourMid-TermExams inPersonalAppearanceYou CAN’T neglect the old personal appearance, if you’re plan¬ning on doing big things this Spring and when you’re thinkingof suits you’ll do wise to choose from among these hundreds of newspring suits that Field’s Store for Men is offering in a special sellingfor college men. There is every conceivable fabric, pattern, andcut—Freesway, single or double-breasted models. Everything aboutthem is brand new except their traditionally famous quality. Whetheryou’re a smoothie or a scholar, an athlete or a big man about campusyou’ll find these are suits for accomplishment!Imagine yourself dashing about the campus in one of thesebeautiful new outfits.Soft Shetlands, sturdy Field twists, rugged tweeds and smartworsteds. Each suit has a pair of plain trousers and a pair ofslacks to match.THIRD FLOORSTORE FOR MENPage Six THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1934“ALABAMA” REFLECTSCHARM OF OLD SOUTH(Continued from page 3)ing to instill ranting melodrama intoa part which might easily have in¬spired it and Edward Day did very■well as Mr. Armstrong, although hewas occasionally rather stiff. AlecKehoe, as the old Southern aristo¬crat who could not forget the prej¬udices of wartime, played his partwith a gentleness and understandingmuch to his credit. Edith Grossbergand Ethel Ann Gordon, whom wehave not always praised in thesecolumns, -were w’holly pleasing in their parts, and our chief complaintis that the play did not permit theirhaving more to do.But the characterization whichmost delighted us was that of Hal.>ames as the Squire, a rough dia¬mond w’ith a heart of gold, if wemay be permitted to get geological.“Alabama” does credit to the re¬vival tradition, a tradition which al¬ways brings sympathetic audiencesto the spring showing in Mandelhall. It was a pleasant play, nicely.‘■•taged, very well acted, and wholly(irlightfiil to see.ATTEND THE MILITARY BALLHow’s Tricks?What’s New?A new barA new atmosphereSoft lights, lounges, ancJ qpusic bySeymour SimonsDrop in this week-endA bar it’s ‘smart’ to be seen atCheer is Cornerat theBLACKHAWKWabash af Randolph Roesing Holds Z. B. T. Hitless,Phi Sigs Score 5 Runs to WinAlpha Sigma Phi RemainsUndefeated with WinOver Pi LamRising to the no-hit, no-run pin¬nacle of intramural playgroundball’s hall of fame, Bob Roesingpitched Phi Sigrna Delta to a 5-0victory over Zeta Beta Tau in theoutstanding game of yesterday’s I-M schedule. Five other wins wereturned in during the afternoon’s playby Alpha Sigma Phi, Kappa Nu, PsiUpsilon, Delta Kappa Epsilon, andDelta Upsilon.Hitlet* Gamec Till 6thLivingston, Zeta Bete pitcher,kept pace with Roesing holding thePhi Sigs hitless for six and one-third innings, after which the win¬ners slugged out the only two safeblows of the game. Roesing addedfurther glory to his day’s perform¬ance by contributing one of these.The Phi Sigs scored two of their runsin the fifth inning without the aidof any hits and added the remainingtallies their next time at bat.Doing Lou Warn eke of the Cubsone better. Roesing added yester¬day’s record to a one-hit tilt that hepitched the opening day of the sea¬son, when Phi Sig swamped D. U.,I 22-0. The Phi Sigs have yet to bedefeated, having won their secondgame from Beta by forfeit, and ledby Roesing on the mound, they loomas a formidable contender for thisyear’s championship.Three One-Point Win*The Alpha Sigs also stayed in theundefeated column, dropping Pi Lamby a one-point margin, 5-4. Holdersof third place last year, the AlphaSigs are fortified again by po.ssessingthe same battery that assisted inwinning their 1933 position. Theother two contests actually playedwere equally close, both Kappa Nuand Psi U. staging last inning rallies TODAY’S l-M SCHEDULE3:15Palliteers v*. Burette and Balance.Band vs. Optimists.4:15C. T. S. vs. Chess Club.Ponies vs. Disciples.Jones vs. Chiselers.to snatch hotly fought frays fromSigma Chi and Sigma Alpha Epsilon,7-6 and 8-7, respectively.In winning their first game outof three played thus far, the KappaNus, runners-up last season, turnedtheir 12 hits to more account thantheir opponents did with 17. Green-burg, with three hits to his credit,and Strauch, Goldberg, and Abrams,with two each led their team matesin overcoming a three-run lead thatSigma Chi established in the firstinning. The Sigma Chis were pacedin hitting by Montgomery and Jacob¬son, each of whom accounted forthree safeties.Other Games ForfeitedThe Dekes and D. U.’s were victorsin the other two games scheduled,receiving forfeits from Alpha TauOmega and Beta Theta Pi. Fivegames in the independent-dormitorydivision tomorrow will complete thisweek’s playground hall card. TRACKSTERS SPLITUP: GO TO DRAKEAND NAPERVILLECoach Ned Merriam left yester¬day noon with a mile relay teamfor the Drake Relays. Though thequartet of Sam Perils, Bart Smith,Bill Sills, and Quentin Johnstone hasnever run together before, if every¬thing goes smoothly it is quite pos¬sible that the team will turn in amark close to 3:20. The field in themile relay is one of the strongest inthe history of the meet. Teamsfrom every Big Ten school exceptIndiana have at least a few menentered in this year’s Drake Relays.Jay Berwanger is entered in sixevents and should wdn high scoringhonors. His best chance of victoryappears to be in the 220 lows wherehe has a chance to display some ofthe speed that he flashed in the Kan¬sas Relays last week. THRU MONTHS* COUtSI•TVMNTS AMt •■AMAMImoserSUSINSSS COLLSOIMM MOtU,1JVM JMmII#ii9 MmMql AiPwu—MwO—1114INTRAMURAL ATHLETESLonzo Cox, artist of .Mount Ver¬non, Virginia, will cut your silhou¬ette in one minute at the Universityof Chicago Bookstore, 5802 EllisAvenue.—adv.CLASSinED ADSFOK RENT—8 rm. summer cot¬tage on Crystal Lake nr. Frankfort,Mich. Electricity. H. & C. baths.Good fishing. Nr. golf course &Congregational assembly. Mrs. L. L.Hyde, 6136 Blackstone. H. P. 5287. (Continued from page 5)made the second select team.Following Howard on the list ofall around athletes comes PhilipMalmsteadt, an Alpha Sigma Phi andthe leading Intramural enthusiast athis house. .-Kmong his achievementsare: all star baseball player, 1933,outstanding touchball star, regrularon the well rounded Alpha Sig bask¬etball team, and better than aver¬age net man. SOUTH SEA CRUISEOffered during the summervacation season at reasonablerates.Steamer City of Los Angelessails from San Francisco June26th, Los Angeles June 27th.PORTS OF CALL, Nukahiva,Tahiti, Rarotonga, Nukualofa,Noumea, Suva, Pago Pago, Hilo,Honolulu.Returns to Los Angeles August8th, San Francisco August 9th.Arrangements can be made to stopover in Honlulu, returning by lat¬er steamer.Minimum rate $400.00For complete information book¬lets and reaarvationa sae JohnStocks Travel Service r*reM Bnild*ing, 5758 Ellis A venae.2050 East 71st St.Phone Dorchester 4455WE DELIVER oM CORSAGESofTwo “Cymbidium” OrchidsorThree Lovely Gardeniasat$1.00The way tobacco is cut has alot to do with the way Chesterfieldburns and tastes(£) 1934, I.IGGFTT & Myfrs ToB\f.CO Co. Th,.here are many different waysof cutting tobacco.A long time ago, it used to becut on what was known as aPease Cutter, but this dark¬ened the tobacco, and it wasnot uniform.The cutters today are themost improved, modern, up-to-the-minute type. They cut uni¬formly, and cut in long shreds.The tobacco in Chesterfieldis cut right—you can judge foryourself how Chesterfields bumand how they taste.Everything that science knowsis used to make Chesterfieldthe cigarette thaCs milder . . .the cigarette that tastes better.nesterfieldthe cigarette that’s MILDERthe cigarette that TASTES BETTER