^ Bail? iUlmtion Dean of students Offlc®Co'b'b 205Vol. 35. No. 73. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935 Price Three CentsCover PointsOut PriceMovements U. HIGH PLAYERSUSURP UNIVERSITYBARTLEH SPACERetail price movements for 1933 I |r»ak|o 4.^and 1934 in seven selected cities of _ ^ tXSfCiSG inihe United States for 631 commod- Cymn3Sium Dufingities are reported in a study entitled' Retail Price Behavior,” publishedrecently by the University press.•John H. Cover, professor of Statis-1lic-s who directed the project is au¬thor of the report.The orijrinal plan for the investi-ention was developed under the aus-jtices of the committee on Govern¬ment .statistics and Information serv. Afternoon Gertrude Stein toDiscuss Narrativein Lecture SeriesStudy of the narrative will be thetheme of the four lectures and vari¬ous conferences to be held by Ger¬trude Stein, visiting: authoress, whowill begin her series of meetingswith students at a lecture Friday at4 in the International house theater.By GEORGE FELSENTHAL IA sport tor every player! Ade-| ?? ‘“‘'H ‘'J. . _ lArfnrpR on fi. R. jinn IR. will FATHER HUBBARD I Alderman James Cusack WinsCouncil Seat; Defeats Artman,Independent Group Candidatelectures on March 6, 8, and 13, willbe issued to a limited number ofstudents upon presentation of tuitionreceipts at the Information desk inthe Press building starting tomor-quate space provided for all athleticactivities! An hour of exercise foreach student each day! So claimsthe Athletic department. Howeversiausiics ana iniormaiion serv. i Maroon has discovered ,ires. The prices were collected i„ the fioore ,n Bartlett gymnasium | Mimeographed materials and aug-Sew York. Wa..hington, AtlanU, | ' gested readings will be issued toMinneapolis, St. Paul, and Mankato,! *"i tk . .a * . f ^ those attending the lectures. The‘ conferences With small groups ofmg to exercise at that time are nn- l^n ^ .. . VIA field of nan-ative, discussing suchDuring that time he two basket- (Hinp, the difference between bi-ball earns of the University high autobiography, whileschool and the junior and senior gj™ subjectlagg neiu. i ''“T* °J in more general form. It is probable“So much recent discussion has I giving no c ^Mce oi office hours for individual con-been concerned with retail prices in j University students to Ply l>j.sk- arranged,relation to costs and to the gold Plba'I. And it is at this period that; P,.jj as described.lanilard that we tend to overlook r ■! by Gertrude Stein, takes up “The re-,other important factors," Professor | ''»ving classes earlier in the; , literature that is nar-Cover said in commenting on the i w- rative that is how is anything told. Sunny uym’^'^..1^* . ai u • V 11 i The factor which bothers and puz-“Just recently, a hearing was held ' . . . * j • iu *,,, ... »v. MDA ' zJes manv of tho.se interested is thatn Wa.shington on the NRA propo.sal i . , . , . ,. , llio Viio-li str-hnnl nnstspritips n trv’m-Winona, and Hibbing, Minnesota, untier the sponsorship of the FederalInterdepartmental committee on re-liiil prices and were analyzed at theUniversity at the campus headquar¬ters set up in the west stands cf.^tagg field. TU SPEAK IN 4THSTUDENUECTURE‘Glacier Priest’ to TellAlaskan AdventuresMarch 6 Student Groups OpenPeace Conference;Symposium TonightA general symposium against warj will be held tonight at 8 in the In-“The Glacier Priest,” Father Ber- jnard R. Hubbard, S, J., who has'just returned from Alaska, will de-'scribe and show moving pictures ofhis adventures when he presents thefourth in the current series of theUniversity Student lecturers in Man-1 ternational house assembly hall,del hall March 6. ' • .k ^ , o„ ..cxv,rri. J I. A V • I opening the two-day anti-wai con-The adventurous priest, who is -foften called the “Padre of the ference sponsored by many of thesnows,” is a professor of Geology in ! organized student groups on campusSanta Clara university, and each ; and over 15 members of the faculty,year he goes by dog sled and plane i The general aim of the confer Paul Douglas Fails toFile MayoraltyPetitionto eliminate price fixing provisions ] the high school possesses a gym-(rom code.s. Emphasis has been plac-1 *U' o"n with SunnyU(i under the new deal program upon a Plant more modernrai.sing of wages, and thereby in-1 Bartlett. Inurea.sing purcha.sing power. It was , ^.gh .school^ gymnasium there i.shoped that increases in retail prices i can be dividedivould lag behind increases in wages.It is intere.sting, therefore, to ob->erve price movements just beforeand subsequent to the effective oper¬ation of codes.CONTRAST INPRICE MOVEMENTSgood example is found in pricesof men’s clothing in the Borough ofManhattan, New York city. Betweenh'ebruary and June, 1933, 95 perc ent of approximately 2,700 quota-{tions remained unchanged. In con¬trast, by February of 1934 oniy 26pur cent of the quotations remained junchanged. The number of quota¬tions rising 36 or more per cent inthe twelve-month period exceeded thenumber recording no change. More ^than 9 per cent of the quotations in-;t reased 50 per cent or more in price. '“When a composite picture of allI lothing i.s obtained the twelve-,month increase averaged 17 per cent. ]“.\n average increa.se of 9 per centin food prices is recorded for Min¬neapolis and St. Paul.“This contrast in price movements |i> highly significant. Several import- jant explanations may be suggested, jorganization of industry under i to the habit of doing anything andliving which that country has. TheComparison between English liter¬ature and American literature, thecomplete difference in their habitsalthough they u.se the same lan¬guage, and its connection with theirnarrative. to explore the mysterious interiorof Alaska. Father Hubbard is a tall,lean, dark complexioned man and isaccompanied on his expeditions toprobe the secrets of the glaciers andvolcanoes by a group of companionsmade up of carefully selected stu¬dents.With moving pictures which heha.s taken from airplanes, the priesthas been able to prove conclusivelyto the National Geographical societythat there is a close similarity be¬tween the “moon craters” in Alas¬ka and the craters of the moon,which have been observed throughthe most powerful telescopes.Alaska ence will be to pass resolutions ofaction against war at the final meet¬ing tomorrow evening in HarperMil. Seven speakers will presentthe attitudes of various schools ofmodern political thought against warat the symposium tonight. The meet¬ing will be under the chairmanshipof Louis Wirth, associate professorof Sociology.Charles W. Gilkey, dean of theChapel, will discuss the views of thechurch on the peace question, andGrace Abbott, professor of PublicWelfare Administration, will repre¬sent the liberal thinkers. MaynardC. Krueger, assistant professor ofEconomics and member of the na-of theinto two smaller ones, each of which ® discussed “The . Writing about Alaska. Father ' tional executive committeeis large enough to accommodate a between poetry and prose; Hubbard has stated: “Wild, forbid-j Socialist party, Robert Minor, naregulation basketball game and five relation of that difference ; ding, and as yet mainly unexplored, i t>onal committeeman for the Comsmaller floors There is also a stating of events or what hap- j the Alaskan Peninsula presents a munist party, Edward Strong, of the Sweeping into office for anotherterm along with the rest of theDemocratic ticket, Alderman JamesJ. Cusack was reelected yesterday asthe Fifth W’ard representative in theCity Council by a staggering major¬ity of nine thousand votes over hisnearest rival Joseph M. Artman.When reached by The Daily Ma¬roon last evening Alderman Cusackstated, “I am quite pleased with theapproval that the voters of the FifthWard have given to my work in theCouncil during my first quarter. Iwish to tender my fondest thanksto the Democratic Ward Committee¬man, Horace Lindheimer, for hisgreat help throughout my campaigrn.Mr. Lindheimer and I shall continueto give the people of the ward thesame service we have given to themin the past.”7 Precincts to ArtmanAlthough granting his defeat evenbefore the polls closed, Artman, in¬dependent candidate, was pleasedwith the support given him by theUniversity community and for itsrealization that independence in civ¬ic affairs is essental to good govern¬ment. In the most complete returns,wth 72 of the 92 precincts report¬ing, Artman had carried only sevenmunist pariy, izxuwaiu - i precincts; and from all indicationsregulation uasKcioaii game, anu iivu stating of events or what hap- j the Alaskan Peninsula ^ I Y. M. C. A. college, Harry Shaw, j the final tabulations would grive A1smaller floors. There is also a, ^ Knowing thoroughly the dif-1 weird spectacle of scenic effects that Unity News, | German Cusack a largerregulation swimming pool and ade-: between poetry and prose seem so unreal, so different iromeffect of this upon narrative inprose and narrative in poetry andhow can either of them be donenow.”quate locker spaceWhy, then, should the facilities ofthe University be taken away fromthe college students? When queriedby this reporter T. Nelson Metcalf,director of Athletics, stated that thepolicy of admitting junior and seniorUniversity high school students toBartlett gymnasium is not determin¬ed by the athletic department andha.s been done in an effort to furth¬er orient high .school students to theUniversity, since many of them arcalready taking courses in the (\)l-lege. This, coupled with other fac¬tors, such as the overtaxing of facil¬ities in Sunny gymnasium, has re-'suited in this policy. , .second major intercollegiate"T*******'°” . c- debate of the season, Carl ThomasAftoi; siwiiilini; an hour lu Sunny : Burnutte, members of the(rymnasiuii. iiivestiKatinKthe overtax-, ^.,1ed facilities I found out the follow- pens. Knowing 'inorougniy me au-| weird spectacle oi scenic eneers mat i - — - Railway Unity News, I derman* Cusack a larger majorityference between poetry and prose, seem so unreal, so different , , Alexander Hamilton, national | than he received in the election ofand its connection with vocabulary j anything else on earth, that attei i , . the Student League for { 1932and grammar, what is ! returning from this Alice-injWon- | Democracy, will also [ RjTHOMAS, BURNETTEDEBATE ON MARCH 7AGAINST ALABAMA derland region of terrible beauty ! Industrial Democracy, willone wonders whether one may have ' speak.been dreaming of another planet in- Thirty Organizationsstead of seeing the one inhabited by , More than 30 campus organiza-mortal man.” , tions will send delegates to the con-Tickets for the lecture, priced at ! ference. They include: the SUAFW55 and 85 cents, have already been { and its constituent groups, Tau Kap-‘ ... —,x... i>v.; oing facts. In theory the high schoolschedule calls for freshman andsophomore gym clases.s until 3:30.After 3:30 Intramural games in theThe organization of indusiry unuei i • ,unde authorities was a development' high .school andof the post-June 1933 period. There¬after, business became price con¬scious; manufacturers were raisingwage.s, therefore costs.“Retail stocks were low, and newmerchandise for future delivery wasquoted at heavy advances in price.•Many retailers foresaw, on the onehand, difficulty in di.sposing of high-I'riced commodities, and, on theother hand, an opportunity to ad¬vance low cost stock with the arrivalof high cost merchandise. A generaladvance resulted.DISTRIBUTION OFPRICE QUOTATIONS“Another interesting type of dif mentary grades lake up the sixfloor.s. The classes are supposed tocontain, between thirty and fortyboys apiece, but during the hour Ivisited the plant, from 2:30 to 3:30(Continued on page 4)GILSON SPEAKSTO CLUB WOMENMEETING TODAYAddressing the group of assem¬bled club women at the Conferenceon Current Problems, held at thennuiner inieiesmijf g-x x,.. Palmer Hou.se under the auspices ofference in prices is their distribu- j the Chicago Tribune, Mary B. Gilson,’ ' ----X—t xxf l<!f*nnnmics. istion in accordance with the numberof times quotations for a given com¬modity occur. Quotations of fooditems sold in bulk tend to grouparound one price, all other priceshaving fewer quotations. Prices ofarticle.s sold in drug stores, however,tend to clu.ster about two prices.Other commodities are grouped sothat a number of prices are quotedfrequently.“It is i^robable that the concentra¬tion of food prices is due to compe¬tition, to rapid depreciation. In thedrug store field, the double groupingof prices is due both to the offeringof certain commodities called ‘lead¬ers’ to entice customers into stores,(Continued on page 2) assistant professor of Economics, isspeaking on “Our Pet Prejudices”at the session opening this morningat 10.Stressing the point that “prej¬udices are not born in us but weare born into our prejudices,” MissGilson states that “women club-members have a responsibility forcultivating intellectual sobriety andfor refusing to be victimized by tUspromotion of mass hysteria which Isprevalent in several European coun¬tries today. Only by maintainingfreedom of thought and speech canwe subject our pet prejudices form¬ed by the milieu into which we hap¬pen to be born to the crucible ofhonest inquiry.“It is a matter of interest thatthe press is concerned on the onehand with maintaining its own free¬dom and on the other with abolish¬ing academic freedom. This agentof almost limitless power is todayactively engaged with a few nobleexceptions in trying to undermineconstitutional liberties in our col¬leges.” University Debate union, will meetthe University of Alabama on theMidway Thursday, March 7. Theverbal encounter will center aroundthe practicability of the Federal pi'o-grani of subsistance homesteads.The .subject was chosen, accord¬ing to John Stoner, director of de¬bate, more for informative Valuethan for contest appeal. Federal sub¬sistence homesteads are now beingset up throughout the country un¬der the direction of Harry Hopkins,P’ederal Relief administrator, in or¬der to aid low wage and strandedgroups in overpopulated centers andfarming areas. In a recent reportit was stated that 85,000 familieshave been accepted for these homeswith several hundred thousand un¬der consideration. Individuals re¬ceive small plots of land and equip¬ment for household fanning fromthe government under a long-termpayment plan.Burnette and Thomas met KentCollege of law on the same questionover station WLS in January. Thisafternoon at 3:30 Marion Wagnerand Kenyon Lewis of the Union willmeet Mundelein colleeg in a debateon Munitions.Award Prize in ArtShow to BrombergGeorge Bromberg, a freshman,was awarded grand prize for a wa¬ter color, and honorable mention fora group of oil paintings in the IdaNoyes Auxiliary annual art exhibit.Honorable mention was also givento Astrid Breasted for a woodcarv¬ing.Judges in the contest were AgnesGale, prominent member of theRenaissance society, Sallie Gillespie,graduate student in art, and CharlesFabans Kelly, of the Art institute.The pictures will be hung at theall-University tea to be given by theAuxiliary today from 3:30 to 6. placed on sale at the Informationoffice, the University bookstore,Woodworth’s book.store, the Univer pa Epsilon fraternity, Zeta Phi, ascience fraternity, the Professionalalso I Happy in defeat was MaynardKrueger, assistant professor of Eco¬nomics, the Socialist candidate whosaid: “We got what we went into thecampaign for—an organization inthe Fifth ward. This group, com¬posed of fifty young people, has hadicampaign -experience and will beable to form a basis for the future' Standards "cTub,* Chess club, " the organization.”Independents DefeatedUV/WrVriLV/i v;, y » V. • . XX---sity college, and at the box office | ate Political Science club. Sociologyin Mandel hall. The latter will be I club. International house Socialopen tomorrow and Friday from 1 0 | Problems club. Research union, Med-to 2 and on Saturday from 9 to 12. i ical Discussion group. Women’s fed-Father Hubbard ha.s been preced- | eration, Y. W’. C. A., Friends ofed in the lecture series this year by j India, Social Service AdministrationRuth Bryan Owen, ambas.sador to | club, Public Policy association, Snell, I Xwenti’pthDenmark; the late Richard Wash-1 Hitchcock, Gates, and Goodspeed j thousand votes' ^ than aburn Child, former ambassador to j dormitories, several classes and dis-} -incumbent Aldpr ^Italy; and Louis Untermyer, literary j cussion sections, and four independ-' . . . .’ .. Pacalli, wascritic. ent delegates. Another heavy blow was dealt theindependent forces where John. Van-der Veldt, student at the Universityand varsity baseball pitcher, ran apoor fourth for alderman of theWhitteniore Discusses Uncovering ofSanta Sofia 6th Century MosaicsBy RUBY HOWELLWhitteniore, I mosaics only mechanical means are reelected by the same overwhelmingDemocratic majority.Another indication of the successof the machine in politics was evi¬dent when it was announced thatPaul H. Douglas, professor of Eco¬nomics, would not file his petitionfor a place on the ballot as a mayor¬alty candidate in the coming elec¬tion.Professor ThomasIstanbul field director for the Byz¬antine institute, discussed '‘Uncov¬ering the Mo.saics of Santa Sofia”Yesterday evening in the newlynamed James H. Breasted hall ofthe Oriental In.stitute in a lectureillustrated with slides of his workand of the mosaics.For two seasons Professor Whitte-more has been at work in Constan¬tinople uncovering the sixth-centurypictures which, since the fall ofConstantinople in 1453, have beencovered with matting and plaster.Every inch of the walls of thechurch is being tested for mosaics.The noted archeologist stated,“We are intending to do no restora¬tion whatsoever; we merely intendto conserve these mosaics.” This isbeing done by the use of metals, asthat method was often used by theByzantines themselves. In removingthe paint and plaster covering the used since liquids would damagethem.The movement of light on themosaics that have been uncoveredis especially noteworthy. Althoughthe artists are unknown, the paint¬ings are assuredly the works of thegreatest artists of the time. The por¬trait of Leo VI is the most excel¬lent portrait that has come down un¬touched from the sixth century.As a result of the labors of Pro¬fessor Whittemore, the Turkish gov¬ernment has made Santa Sofia a na¬tional monument, and he is to bepermitted to complete the uncover¬ing of the.se works of early Chris¬tian art. He is in this country foronly a limited period, and in a fewweeks will return to Constantinopleto continue his work.WITTE TO SPEAKSpeaking before the members ofthe Graduate club in Business andEconomics at their winter dinnermeeting tomorrow evening, Dr. Ed¬win E. Witte, professor of PoliticalScience at the University of Wis¬consin and executive director of theCommittee on Economic Security,will discuss the “Role of Govern¬ment in Economic Stability.” He willexplain and comment on the gov¬ernment social security program. Ward Rogers TalksBefore SocialistsWard Rogers, minister from Ar¬kansas and organizer of the Tenant-Farmers union, will speak before themembers of the Socialist club at3:39 today in Social Science 302.The lecture is open to the public withno admission charge.Rogers represents the Arkansastenant-farmers, one of the most ex¬ploited labor groups in the south,and was in.strumental in organizingthem into a union to fight for theireconomic rights. He is at presentout of jail on bail with a charge ofanarchy pending against him. BOUCHER’S BOOKGIVES OFFICIALREPORT OF PLAN“The Chicago College Plan,” thefirst official report of the Univer¬sity’s new plan of college education,by Chauncey S. Boucher, dean ofthe College, was published this weekby the University Press.The book, including both DeanBoucher’s report and several appen¬dices presenting additional data,contains over 300 pages and sellsfor $3. In his report, Dean Bouch¬er expresses the general satisfactionof the administration with the basicprinciples and operation of the newplan, and discusses its development,philosophy, content, and organiza¬tion, its examination .system and re¬sults, special instructional methodsused, student-faculty relations andstudent guidance under the newplan, and the newest development,the four-year junior college.In the appendices are includeddocuments relating to the collegecurriculum, sample student programsof courses and examinations, exam¬ination results, reports by severalfaculty members and other relateddata.The dedication of the book reads,“to. the members of the College fac¬ulty, whose imagination, courage,and labors have made possible thedesig:n and administration of thiseducational adventure.”- ■' ■ ..iG,.- .. ‘^iMkriil 4a ti irfai^lVirt ■ r i iP»ge Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935(Fltf iatlg iiarnouFOUNDED IN 1901^sociatca gbUegiate1935 e-•WilUOM MISCOMSMThe Daily Maro<m is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chieatro, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarter by The Daily Maroon Company, 6881 University Avenue.Editorial office: Lexington hall. Room 16: business office:Room ISA. Telephones; Local 46 and Hyde Park 9221.Subscription rates: S2.50 a year; $4.00 by mail. Singlecopies; three cents.TTie University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in TheDaily Maroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily theviews of the University administration.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the postoffice at Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March $, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publica¬tion of any material appearing in this paper. The Daily Maroonwill not be responsible for returning any unsolicited manuscripts.Public letters should be addressed to the Editw, The DailyMaroon, Lexington hall. University of Chicago. Letters shouldbe limited to 200 words in length, and should bear the author’ssignature and address, which •dll be withheld if requestad.Anonymous letters will be disregarded.BOARD OF CONTROLHOWARD P. HUDSON, Editor-in-ChiefWILLIAM S. O’DONNELL, Business ManagerCHARLES W'. HOERR, Managing EditorWILLIAM H. BERGMAN, Advertising ManagerHOWARD M. RICH, News EditorDAVID H. KUTNER, News EditorEDITORIAL ASSOOATBSRuth Greenebaum Raymond Lahr Jeanne StokeHenry P. Kelley Janet Lewy William W. WatsonRalph W. NienolsonBUSINESS ASSOCIATESZalmon Goldsmith Robert McQuilkin Everett StoreyEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJack Bracken Ruby Howell James SnyderWells D. Burnette Julian A. Kiser Ekiward S. SternGeorge Felaenthal Godfrey Lehman Elinor TaylorZenia Goldberg June Rappaport Mary WalterGeorge ^bustekBUSINESS ASSISTANTSDonald ESliott Allen Rosenbaum Richard SmithHarold SiegelNight Editor: Raymond LahrWednesday, February 27, 1935BARTLETT BUGLESOstensibly for the purpose of cutting down ithe congestion in Sunny gymnasium, the Univer¬sity h2t8 moved the high school juniors and seniorsinto Bartlett gymnasium during the afternoonhours. University students, for wh'om Bartlettwas built, find themselves without a suitable placeto exercise. Surely this imposition on the rightfulusers of the gymnasium is far from consistent withthe broad intramural program in effect at the Uni-verwty. exercise, or perhaps the ballroom of Ida Noyesmight be provided. We are sure the average stu¬dents would not be adverse to walking a few ex¬tra blocks if they might be allowed to play bask¬etball for an hour in the afternoon.We heartily sympathize with those who arenot allowed the use of the gymnasium in the af¬ternoon, and are hopeful that a reform in the sys¬tem may be formed in the near future. To thatend, The Daily Maroon pledges its complete sup¬port.We shall be glad to entertain any reason whystudents are denied the use of the gym in thie af¬ternoon, but our investigation of the facts showsus nothing valid. The Daily Maroon will con¬tinue to wage a campaign on the issue until thesituation is remedied.—G. F.The Travelling BazaarBy RABELAISOUR GRATEFUL THANKSTO ART HOWARD FOR YESTERDAY’SCOLUMN. When a business man can take timeoff to toss off a Bazaar he should have a bustof him placed in the Hall of Fame.« * *A BIT OF BIOGRAPHYTo the few of you who don’t know Art Howard,and don’t know who he is, a word of explanation.Howard was a member of the class of 1931. Heis a member of Alpha Delta Phi. Since his earli¬est days he had an interest in writing. Then hecame to the University of Chicago. He joinedthe literary circle on the campus. Soon he wasone of the disciples of Thornton Wilder. Andthen, in the summer-of 1930 he had an idea. Hedecided he’d like to write a column for the DailyMaroon and call it the Travelling Bazaar. Hespoke about it to Editor Greenwald and BusinessManager Blinder.They thought it was a good idea. Previouscolumns had run largely on the front page, andwere more or less news commentaries of an editor¬ial nature. Gossip columns had been very rankup to this time. And literary columns were al¬most unknown. Howard thought he could com¬bine all three and make them into a permanentcolumn that would be as much a part of the paperas the editorials and the mast-head and the pro-motionals.Thus the Travelling Bazaar was born. Itcreated a sensation in its first year. And ArtHoward, the pioneer, the literateur, the wit,—in fact—Art Howard the columnist came into hisown.That’s why we feel pretty grateful to Art forwriting for us. He’s become a University tradi¬tion, like the Mandel hall seal, or like the OldMan he writes about. Thanks, Art, thanks,—alot.We have been informed that it is impossible tohandle the entire high school in Sunny gymnas¬ium. But what has not been explained to us ishow the high school and the elementary gradeswere all handled in Sunny gymnasium before theadvent of the new policy two years ago. Andalso what we do not understand is why the Uni¬versity should be burdened with these high schoolboys whether there is room for them or not intheir own plant. The facilities of the Universityshould he reserved entirely for the use of regi¬stered University students. It is all right to cor¬relate the last two years of the high school withthe Colle:ge as long as it does not infringe on therights of the University students, but when 40sixteen-year-olds tread on the toes of the studentsenrolled in the University, it is time to take action.W’e have been told that not enough studentsuse the gymnasium to warrant giving them thepreference over the high school classes. But fromthe many complaints made by irritated studentswe are sure that if all of the complainers attend¬ed in the afternoons they would outnumber thehigh school classes. No doubt a great many stu¬dents have given up in disgust and do not try toget in some exercise in the gymnasium becausethey are afraid they will not get a chance to usethe floor.We have been told that economy was not oneof the major reasons for inaugurating the newpolicy. Then why were most of the membersof the athletic department in the high school dis¬missed and their places taken by members of theUniversity athletic department? These men arenow doing double work, having the burden ofthe high school boys on their shoulders besidesthat of the University teams. If these men h^ivetime to carry both jobs, then they can easilywalk over to Sunny Gym at the times they wouldbe needed there, and thus the high school teamscould be taught in their o^n building.Perhaps University students are not entitledto the use of their own buildings. In this case,the administration might find thtem some space inth»» of Sunny gyr4*'»**tim in which to STORIES, STORIES EVERYWHEREThere are all kinds of swell stories floatingaround about Howard, In one of the better yamswe hear that he nearly broke the bank at MonteCarlo once with Gus Babson (attention JaneHempleman), but the shock was too much and hehad to take a rest cure of pure dissipation fora couple of weeks at Nice. Go to the Universityof Chicago, w'rite the Travelling Bazaar, and seethe world,* * irTHE WAY OF AN EDITORAt one time Art edited the Maywood Herald.This is a nice, homey, little neighborhood paperwith a circulation of twenty-five thousand. Hehad a present undergraduate at the Universityw'orking for him. This undergraduate is a niceguy, but he has a lot of enthu.siasm that oftenleads him astray. The reporter was covering ^politics. The results were horrible. More thanthat, they were pure chaos. Each week, afterthe appearance of the copy, How’ard was delugedwith complaints. Something had to be done. Sohe changed the reporter’s stories to the exact op¬posite. And peace ensued.* ♦ *THE LIFE OF A REPORTERArt decided to write a feature story. Oak Park(his home) to Washington and back in twenty-four hours. A pal got him a pass on an air¬line. The plane was forced down in a small townin Pennsylvania. Art arrived in Washington at3:30 on a milk train. Was rapidly thrown out ofthe White House; got into the Senate chambers—the Senate was adjourned; he barged into thethen sacred precints of Hugh Johnson’s office—the General was off on a vacation.Because of inclement weather, no planes wererunning, and Art had to wire home for money.On his return to Oak Park the disappointed butundaunted reporter declared that Washington,Roosevelt, Johnson, and Huey Long were all mythsperpetrated on a susceptible public by a jingopress.Howard is a hay fever victim, and carries onan unremitting campaign against hay fever“cures” in his column “The Stroller.”He is on the wagon, and his firm has now givenhim all the liquor accounts.« * «ONCE AGAIN. THANKS, MR. ART HOW^ARD. WE’RE GLAD TO JOIN YOUR RANKSOF ALUMNf OF THE TRAVELLING BAZAAR. Today on theQuadranglesMusicCarillon recital. Frederick Mar-riot, carillonneur. University chapelat 4:30.Phonograph concert. Social sci¬ence assembly at 12:30.Lectures“.4spects of Bolshevism. Adminis¬tration under Planned Economy.”Professor Samuel N. Harper. Full¬erton hall. Art institute at 6:45.“Development of Baict/jriologyj”Professor N. Paul Hudson. HarperMil at 4:30.MeetingsAll-campu.s anti-war conference.International house at 8.Book review section of Settlementleague, Ida Noyes library and loungeat 10.Music section of Settlementleague. Ida Noyes library andlounge at 8.B. W. O. Ida Noyes lounge at 12.Phi Delta Phi. Wicker room ofIda Noyes hall at 3:30.S. S. A. public welfare discussiongroup. “Riots and Complaint Com¬mittees in Your Office.” E. J.Cleary, director of public relations.service C. P. W. Ida Noyes hall at3:30.Editorial and business staffs ofPhoenix. Lexington 15B at 3:45.Auxiliary art tea. Ida Noyeslounge at 3:30.MiscellaneousSocial dancing. Ida Noyes theaterat 7:30. PriceMovements(Continued from page 1)and to differing policies of chain andindependent stores.“Just as certain commodities tendto conform to types of price group¬ings, certain cities show similar tend¬encies. In drug store items, for in¬stance, quotations tend to concen¬trate at the higher prices in St. Pauland at the lower prices in Washing¬ton. In Manhattan borough of NewYork city, the concentration is to¬ward central prices. There was atendency for drug store quotationsto concentrate on lower prices in1934 than in 1933. In general, ar¬ticles sold in drug stores formed theonly group that tended toward low¬er prices in 1934 than in 1933.(Continued tomorrow)|\D1?Y17T THEATRE1/1LliA£iL *•WEDNESDAY^COLLEGE RHYTHM”Joe Poiiner - Jack OakieHARPER THEATRE5236 HarperWEDNESDAY‘ GIFT OF CAB”with EDMUND LOWEMatinee Deity—ISc 25c etter 6:30 EVERYFRIDAYWITH THEeoLD-eoAsmsCHICAGO’SOWN ORCHESTRAUnder Direction ofNoble and DonnellyAND ASNAPPYCOLLEGEPROGRAMwithZ)OROTHY?AOEIn PersonSantoro Cr PolitaSensational Sla^v Dance, Mijsic Hall BoysSpecial Privilege Cardsmay be had at office ofDaily MaroonHe may be slow . . .He may not know his chemistry or Greek,but when it comes to making the grade with thegirl friend, he knows that one evening at the Mir¬ror Revue is worth ten at the books. No, he maynot be a Phi Bete or a “C” man, but you can betyour boots that you won’t find him in a dull lab¬oratory.No sir, he s smart, he s going to enjoy himself bygetting into the social swim and mixing with thecampus cream. And to this smart lad there’s butone way of doing just that — by attending theMIRROR REVUETICKETS $.55-$1.10FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MANDEL HALL/THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935 Page ThreeMIRROREdited by Jeanne StolteVarying Themesin Skits DepictCctmpus Scenes MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANYAnnual Revue Also SatirizesNational Personalities andEvents.The themes of the eijfht skits inthe tenth annual Mirror Revue arewidely varied and will appeal tothe taabe of everyone. The writershave worked up scenes and situa¬tions of campus events as well astake-offs on national personalities.High society at a country houseis cleverly involved in a skit by Vin¬cent Quinn called, “Murder in the.\fternoon.” The acting company in-clodes four women, MargaretThompson, Mary Paul Rix, AdeleSandman, and Leslie Wilson; andfive men, Paul Wagner, Phil White,Norman Masterson, Ted Wallowerand Irving Richardson.Robert Ebert has laid the sceneof his skit in an Italian art galleryand the plajrers who meet there are:Helen Hjirtenfeld, Phil White, Rita('usack, Lillian Schoen, Alec Kehoe,('Larissa Paltzer, and Helen Rosen¬berg.Other Skits“The King, the Queen, and the( aptain of the Guards," is present-ted by Barbara Vail, Hal James, andRobert Ebert. Harvey Ellerd hascontributed thus skit of a perplexedtrio. A scene in an office of a Uni¬versity examiner has been used byHoward Hudson for the backgroundof his skit. The characters are in¬terpreted by Hal James, Betty Say-ler, Ed Day, 'Frances Bezdek, and.Mec Kehoe.A part of the show will be center¬ed around a .skit by Merrill May, in¬volving eleven people attending adebutantes debut. “The BrightSide,” written by Norman Eaton,will show how the best of peoplemeet adversity, and a skit by Mar-geurette Harmen Bro entitledPerfect Day,” will be presented bySara Gwin and Robert Wagoner.The eighth skit is by Ruth Sepan-1ski and Everette Meisenbrink called,'“Five Doors.” The acting companyinehidM, Irving Richardson, FrancesKeadek, Ijeslie Wilson, Hal James,•Mary Paul Rix, and Paul Wagner. Reading from left to right:Lorraine Donlde, Marion Kuehn, Gertrude Senn, Elizabeth McCackey,Mary Johnstone.Original Dances of Choruses Addto Gaiety of 10th Mirror RevueA third of the Mirror show, pre¬sented Friday and Saturday nightsin Mandel hall, will be made up ofthe dancing of the Tapper, Stepper,and Ballet choruses. The tappersand steppers will arrange their!dances to original Mirror songs.Norman Panama and Herman |Stein wrote the lyrics and music of !“Cutest Little Girls” which will berhythmically interpreted by the Tap¬pers chorus.The Steppers chorus consisting ofLorraine Donkle, director, BettyCroft, Marion Kuehn, Donna Don¬kle, Gertrude Senn, Mary Johnstone,and Mary Paul Rix, will .step to themusic of “The Best Sellers,” uTit- \ten by Edith Grossberg.The Steppers, Tappers and Balletchoru.ses will all dance to the musicof the “Princess Song,” written byLeonore Wirtheimer.“Nature’s Quite the Thing,” an¬ other Norman Panama and HermanStein .song, promises to be the hitnumber of the revue. The Tapperschorus, consisting of Peggy Moore,Virginia New, Frances Burns, HelenAnn Leventhal, Louise Acker, Nan¬cy Nimmons, Hope Peterson, andLois Peterson will tap to its catchyrhythm.The tappers will al.so appear in afull stage feature number, “Tappersin the Far North.” The feature num¬ber of the steppers will be an in¬terpretation of “Swanee.”The ballet directed by Berta Ochs-ner, internationally famous dan-seuse, will present four numbers inwide contrast of moods. A back¬ground of dramatic and lyric con¬tent in one will be startling in com¬parison to a second number entirelywitty and gay. Two of the numberswill be accompanied by sound ef¬fects and two by complete orchestra.The members of Ballet chorus areRuth Walters, Molly Hecht, EloiseMoore, assistant director, Cleta 01m-stead, Eleanor Sharts, Margaret Cal-lanan, Orleans Archambault, MaryLouise Coolidge, Ro.se Dunn, Char¬lotte Marshak and Lorna Lee Mc-Dougall.TEN MIRROR SHOWSPORTRAY “COLLEGEGIRL AS SHE' IS"Reading from left to right:Frank O’Hara. D. W. Youngmeyer, Berta Ochcner,HONOR MIRROR STAFFAT SPEGIAL PARTIESMembers of the Mirror organiza¬tion will be feted at two functionsat least during the period shortlyfollowing the production of thetenth annual show it was learnedyesterday.The board, cast, chorus, and pro¬duction workers, will be the guestsof honor at a formal party givenfollowing the first night perform¬ance by the Phi Kappa Psi fraterni¬ty. The acting staff will be the spe¬cial guests at the next of a seriesof Sanday afternoon entertainmentsat the Joseph Ui’ban room of thehotelThe fraternity^ party, which will be given at the chapter house, in ad¬dition to honoring the Mirror group,is open to the campus by invita¬tion.The Sunday afternoon Urban roomseries was begun February 17 whenthe Chicago Civic Opera ballet to¬gether with Bethany Stone and RuthPryor presented an afternoon ofdance. The next entertainment isscheduled for March 13, and willprobably take the form of a collegi¬ate afternoon with the Mirror or¬ganization being invited.The series of afternoons that isplanning to fete Mirror, has otherprograms scheduled for March 21,a syncopated afternoon; and April14, a dance program. There is a$1.25 Admission charge, 86 cents for. for thp collegiate afier-noon. \ The portrayal of the “collegegirl as she is” was the original in¬tention of the Mirror revue whenit was founded in 1926. Prior tothis the women in dramatics had justbeen members of the Gargoyles, butin this year they broke away andpetitioned to “present a fine and |beautiful production which should Irepre.sent and interpret the spirit ofcollege women.”“Where Are We Going” was thetitle of the first Mirror Revue. Theroles of men were taken by thewomen and the entire productionexecuted by them. Frank HurburtO’Hara has directed the Mirrorshows in all the ten years of itsexistence. It is because to his greatingenuity that Mirror has becomesuch a successful all-university activ¬ity.In 1931, the executive board de-cic^ed to invite men to be the guestsof Mirror, and thus make the revuemore adequately representative ofcollege life. The Steppers choruswas introduced to the show last yearand the newest break from the orig¬inal plan was made this year in giv¬ing the show no other name thanthat of THE TENTH ANNUALMIRROR REVUE.Only one out of 1,551 students en-tei’ing this term at the College ofthe City of New York were deniedadmission after examinations be¬cause of physical defects.Approximately 86 per cent of themembers of the Columbia university(New York City) graduating classhave obtained positions. . . . Mirror choruses . . . and Fashion houndsecho the same theme at Field’s. You will, too,when you see their colorful array of accessories.Surprising . . . ingenious . . . they’re fun to wear.Every one of them is clever by itself, but together. . . they're the smartest little things we’ve found.Chamois is one of the smartest accents you can wearthis Spring. Boutonniere, SIEnvelope purse . . . enlivened with an impudent crys¬tal clip partly covered with a gay knob of wood. .S.5Gauntlets of Van Kaalte Fauntex—a light, ribbed silk—can stand hard wear. Blue, brown, white, black. SI“Matched Accessories” —First Floor, StateNavy gabardine and dashes of white step into theforeground of shoe fashions. Patent leather heels addmore trim. S6..t0. Also in brown.Imagine this Scotty scarf on your favorite dress. Inbright spring colors with contrasting dogs. SI.“Matched Accessories”—First Floor, StateCoachman’s cap—jaunty and daring—is trimmedwith the increasingly popular chamois at the bow andunder the brim. Hand-made, from Field’s own work¬room. Navy, black, brown. $8.75.Debutante Room—Fifth FloorTHEY DANCETHEY DIRECT^ jDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four . WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1935 Sports Editor: Henry KelleyGET IT ATREADERS1001 E. 61st St.The “Pipe Center” of theCampusKaywoodie Special at $2.98SPECIALS AT OURFOUNTAINWednesday—Chinese Egg Foo Yongwith Steamed Rice andNoodlesHot Rolls — CoffeeFruit Jello25cCome and Get It!Thursday—Hamburger on BunwithHot Chocolate15cFresh Strawberry Short Cake10cFRIDAY—Fresh Shrimp a la Kingon ToastCoffee or Milk25cFresh Strawberry Sundae )10c You know I like that cigarette...I like the way it tastes... there’splenty of taste there.Chesterfield is mild, not strong. . . and that’s another thing Ilike in a cigarette.What’s more, They Satisfy . . .and that’s what I like a cigaretteto do.I get a lot of pleasure out ofChesterfield . . . you know I likethat cigarette. ^ aVi.—MONDAYLUCREZIABORI WEDNESDAYLILYPONS SATURDAYRICHARDBONELLIKOSTELANETZ ORCHESTRA AND CHORUS8 P. M. (C. S. T.) — COLUMBIA NETWORK193), UOGITT & MYIU TOfMOOO Co.Morton Club Battles Psi Ufor I-M Basketball TrophySinking the winning basket in thelast minute of play, Morton club de¬feated the Chiselers 20-19 to winthe Independent league basketballtrophy last night at Bartlett gym.The Chiselers, last year’s Intra¬mural champs, had long been thefavorites to repeat, and the gamewas a decided upset. The Mortonclub was off to a fast start and helda slim lead through the first half.The Chiselers found their stride inthe second period and rapidly jump¬ed into the lead. The Mortonitesmanaged to sink enough shots tokeep in the running and in the lastfew minutes, with both teams play¬ing desperately they slipped ip thewinning baskets.The Chiselers were decidedly offtheir game and muffed plenty ofshots which would have given themthe game. Both teams play a brandof ball that is seldom seen in intra¬mural contests. They have fast,smooth working, clean guardingcombinations w’hich play basketball,not football. Peterson of the Chis¬elers and Grau of Morton club werethe high point men with six each.Psi Upsilon downed Phi SigmaDelta 20-15 in the fraternity final.The score stood at 8-5 at the halfand at no time was the game in thebag although the Psi U’s seemed tohave the upper hand throughoutmost of the game. Cochrane of the victors played a fine game as he ranup eight points to be the high pointman. Zacharias of Phi Sig was rightbehind with seven. Psi U will meetMorton club for the University cham¬pionship.The Deke Footballers, using a fly¬ing wedge, plowed through the PhiSig “B” team to win the “B” leaguechampionship 30-16.Dudley Entertainedby Women’s GroupsMiss Gertrude Dudley, head ofthe Women’s Athletic departmentof the University, was entertained bythe women’s basketball teams at adinner in the Y room of Ida NoyesMonday at 6:30.This was the first dinner to begiven by any of the teams since thebasketball season began. The fourteams and their captains are: firstyear college, 'Leona Woods ;secondyear college, Irene Buckley; firstyear division, Helen Kotas; secondyear division, Ruth Wright. Follow¬ing the dinner, a skit was presented. |BARTLETT GYM Haarlow RetainsConference Leadin Scoring RaceWith only more game in which toplay. Bill Haarlow still leads theconference scorers with a margin of15 points over hisnearest rival, Kess-ler of P u r d u e .However Kesslerstill has two game.sto play, and by the i ■w'ay he has been jshooting in his last !few games, still , , ^has a chance to ^catch up with Bill. 'weekend of games, --the Big Ten raceseems pretty wellsettled. Wisconsinpossession of first place, while threeteams, Purdue, Illinois, and Indiana, 'find themselves tied for second place, jThe Maroons, with one victory ineleven conference starts, w’ill tacklethe league-leading Badgers Saturday,night in the fieldhouse, and althoughthey only lost by two points in Madi¬son, can hardly be reckoned as adanger to Wisconsin’s chances. INDOOR TRACK TEAMSUBMERGES LOYOLA,WINNING TEN EVENTS Dekes Tie Phi Delts I SCHEDULE FIGHTSin Prelims of I-M FOR DORMITORYGrappling Tourney SMOKER TONIGHTBill Haarlowhas undisputedtalking shophyjane and belleIn line for book supplies—paper—index cards? FOSTER’S BOOK- jSTORE, 5523 Kenwood, has every-1thing in this line. The rental library ■is one of the most complete and up- Ito-date ones you’ll find on the south j.side. Stop in and verify this for:yourself. |Snowing!! yes, but it won’t lastand spring willsoon be here andyou really need aprint to make yourwardrobe complete.You can get con¬ventional and floralprints trimmed ,with taffeta, fluffyribbons and what;lot at the MIDWAY FROCK IJHOPPE, 1415 E. 59th St. The jirices range from $7.75 to $16.75. j♦ >“All’s well that ends well’’—andlow could one end a dinner morelerfectly than with a lucious indi-idual caramel-fudge cake? At the5REEN SHUTTER TEA ROOM all)egins well too—you’ll think so af-er you’ve had some of the delicious;ream of tomato soup topped withvhipped cream. The address is 5650Cenwood Ave. (Continued from page 1)not more than twenty boys were oc¬cupying the entire large gymnasium,which at that time was divided intotwo floors.Dan Hoffer, coach of basketballof U High, and custodian of theBartlett floor, claimed yesterdaythat it is only a limited period dur¬ing the year when the floor is in de¬mand, namely during the intramuralseason. He also stated that he oftenleft one end of the floor free, andthat the gym was open the daysthe high school had games. BIG TEN STANDINGWisconsin W8 12 pet..800 t.p.291 o.p.235Purdue 7 3 .700 370 329Illinois 7 3 .700 362 325Indiana 7 3 .700 361 323Ohio State 7 4 .636 380 357Minnesota 5 5 .500 321 335Iowa 5 6 .455 376 365Northwest’n 2 7 .222 228 259Michigan 2 8 .200 230 295Chicago 1 10 .091 329 425 Taking ten first places out ofeleven events and tying for first inthe other event. Coach Ned Mer-riam’s varsity indoor track team sub¬merged the Loyola university aggre¬gation last night in the fieldhouse by74 2-3 to 20 1-3. John Beal, sopho¬more of Chicago was high point manof the meet with 10 points.The summaries:60 yard dash: Block (C) first,Drousf (C) second, Rafferty (L)third. Time :06.4.440 yard dash: Dy.strup (C) first,Lindberg (C) second, McGinnis (L)third. 'Time :52.8.Mile: Rapp (C) first. Webster(C) second, Tryon (C) third. Time4:46.5.70 yard high hurdles: Beal (C)first, Starrett (L) second, NewTnan(C) third. Time :09.3.880 yard run: Smith (C) first.Schott (L) second, Tryon (C) third.Time 2:04.3.70 yard low’ hurdles: Newman (C)first, Nurnberger (L) second, Bal-lenger (S) third. 'Time :8.1.2 mile run: Rapp (C) first. D.Smith (C> second. Hill (L) third.Time 10:55.2.Shot put: Berwanger (C) first,Scruby (C) second, Reimann (L)third. Distance 43 feet 11 inches.High jump: Beal (C) first, Runtz(L) second. Hill (L), Block (C),and Devereaux (C) all tied forthird. Heighth 5 feet 8 inches.Pole vault Able (C) and Rafferty(L) tie for first, Ballenger (C)third. Heighth 12 feet 2 inches.800 yai’d relay: Won by Chicago.Johnstone, Newman, Archipley, andBlock. In the preliminary Intramuralwrestling bouts yesterday, Deke andPhi Delts are tied for first place with15 points each, and Chi Psi ranksa close second with 13 points to itscredit. The finals will be held thisafternoon in Bartlett.In the first contest, Mosenfelder,Zeta Beta Tau, pinned Walters,Kappa Sigma, entering the 118-pound class finals to wrestle Tinker,Phi Delta Theta. The 126-poundfinalists will be Goldstein, Phi Sig¬ma Delta, and Winter, unattached.In the 135-pound class McManus,lambda Chi Alpha, will wrestle Ul-brick, Chi P.si. Lion of Meadvillevictor over Dacy, Chi Psi, is to ap¬pear against Hoffman, unattached,who succeeded in throwing bothCook, S. A. E., and Kessel, Phi B. D.Other finalists are Allen, Deke,and Barnhart, Phi Delt; Ballou, Kap¬pa Sig, and Jacobson, Sigma Chi;Harrington, Meadville, and Ely, PhiPsi; and Thomas, unattached will 1battle Wheeler. The annual Burton court smokerwill be held tonight at 8 in the Bur¬ton court dining room. Admissionis free to residents of the courts. T.N. Metcalf, Director of Athleticsand several members of the athleticdepartment have been invited.Three boxing matches and fourwrestling bouts have been schedul¬ed. S. K. Vorres, coach of the wre.st-ing team will referee the fights. Pair¬ings W’ill be made on Uie basis ofthe agreement of the contestants,rather than on the basis of definitew’eights.Prizes for the w’inners have beenprovided by several local merchants.Woodlawn Cafeteria1165 East 63rd StreetSECOND FLOOR“You can have an extra dateeach w’eek with the money yousave eating the Woodlawn way.’’STINEWAY DRUGSPRECISE PRESCRIPTIONISTS57fh at KenwoodWhen you phone Stineway!Your order is on the wayWhether you want our soda fountain service, cosmetica.drugs, prescriptions, or a box of candy—Stineway willgive you prompt delivery service.PHONE DORCHESTER 2844Take a cigarette ^ like CHESTERFIELDaSECTION**Nntional Collegiate News in Picture and Paragraph**U* S. THAOCMAMK SCItlAt. NUMMIV 31J4I2OF LEARNING » A view across the Yale University (New Hav^n, Conn.) quadranglethe Harltness Tower. Among the barren trees, the buildings have a truly medievaldnee KEYSTONE PHOTOSHE INSPIRED ALABAMA’S ROSE BOWL VICORY . Andnow Gail Patrick, Hollywood star, presents the new Alabama auto¬mobile license. She is a graduate of Howard College (Birmingham,Ala.).Ri^htCROSS-COUN-TRY riding is oneof the favoritesports of theChristian College(Columbia, Mo.)horsewomen.^ERN coaches discuss RULES . Ted Cok ofUniversity (New Orleans), and Harry Mehre, of the Uni-jf Georgia (Athens), jpieet at the convention of the AmericanI Coaches' Associatifii. kkystone photo SmiHO class • Charles Parker, noted ski expert, is shown with a group of Mt. Holyoke College(^uth Hadley. Mass.) students who are taking a course iif winter sports, including skiing, snow-shoeing, and skating.S THAT SHINE in the daytime may not be visible through'('Scope, but these Arizona State College (Tempe) students RightIT’S THE TAKE OFF . Andthese Washington State Col¬lege (Pullman) co-eds haveperfect skiing hills right ontheir campus.RightHALL OF FAME » One hundredleading U. S. citizens will makenominations for the eighth quin¬quennial election of distinguishedAmericans to the New York Univer¬sity (New York City) Hall of Fame.THE GIRL ON THE FLYING TRAPEZEis Jeanne St. Pierre, of Butler University(Indianapolis, Ind ), who also plays basket¬ball, volleyball, tennis, archery, ping-pongRightGIRL AND TEA CUP » A beautifulphotographic study in black and white ofold lace and egg-shell china.BelowSTUDENT FLIERS CRASH » The PurdueUniversity (Lafayette, Ind ) Flying Club wasdisbanded after Pilot Henry F. Hill crackedup the club’s ship recently.TO EXPLORE UNKNOWN ACROPOLIS » University of Chicac(Illinois) anthropologists will soon begin work again on a truncate^ected in Southern Illinois by an unknown race. PILED UP » An exciting bit of action during the basketball game betweeri Creigbtc(Omaha) and the Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College (Stillwater). Cre30 to 22. 1 KCYIBEAUTY AND BRAINS go together atthe University of Southern California (LosAngeles), where Jean Williams is a co-edPhi Beta Kappa.HIS NOSE KNOWS . W. C Fields plays thbuyer and little Freddie Bartholomew the beDavid Copperfield**STtlDIES ARE HARDER than they used to be,” says Bissett, '35. "Competitionin all ouuide activities is keener. I’m studying law myself—insurance law. Theprospect of combing over old case histories at night—reading up on dry prece¬dents and decisions—is pretty heavy going—especially as I’m tired to begin with!But Camels help me through. If I feel too tired to concentrate, I sit back and lighta Camel. Soon 1 feel refreshed. I can renew my studies with fresh energy. As Camelstaste so grand, 1 smoke a lot. But 1 have never had Camels bother my nerves.”(SiciM4> WMXIAM F. MSSCTT. >95HIT SHOWOF THE AIR!TUNE IN ONTHE CAMELCARAVANfeaturingWALTER O’KEEFEANNETTE HANSHAWGLEN GRAY’SCASA LOMA ORCHESTRAANNETTE HANSHAW^nUERE ARE PLENTYof tiroes when I get tired.ThenI smoke a Camel. For I havealways notieed that Camelshelpa lotin easingthestrsinand renewing my *pep.’ Ismoke Camels a lot. Theytaste so good, and neveraffect my nerves.” (Signed)E. H. PARKER, Ckkr PilotEartem Ak Linee«*WHEN *BLUE’ speUscome on or I’m tired and jit¬tery from a busy day, I tornto Casoels. In no time aftersmoking a Camel, fatigueslips away. I have the energyto face the next task. Andwhat a delightful flavorCamels have! I never seemto tire of them.” (Signed)EUZABBTH CAGNEY. ’39TUESDAY THURSDAY10:00 P.M. E.S.T. 9K)0 P.M. E.S.T.9:00 P.M. CS.T. 8:00 P.M. CS.T.8:00 P.M. M.S.T. 9:30 P.M. M.S.T.7:00 P.M. P.S.T. 8:30 P.M. P.S.T.OVER COAST-TCMX3AST WABOCOLUMBIANBTWORKCamels are made fromfiner, MORE EXPENSIVEtobaccos — Turkish andDomes t i c — than anyOther popular brand."R J RtVNOlOS TOBACCO COMPANYWiiibton Sdlcfii, Noith C«trolin.»CAMEL’S COSTLIER TOBACCOSNEVER GET ON YOUR NERVES! 'MNEW INVENTIONLeonard Carmichael,oped this apparatushuman brain.SHE SMASHED Athree successive yearvilic), believes she atLeftGUESTS . Dele*gates to the SmithCollege alumnaeassociatfon con¬vention call at theWhite House topay their respectsto Mrs. Roosevelt.They were ac¬companied by W.A. Neiison, pres¬ident of the col¬lege.keystone photoIT’S AN UPSIDE-DOWN WORLD for Dick Durrance, Dartmouth College (Hanover,N H ), who was caught turning a somersault on skis by the cameraman He is easterndownhill skiing champion. TRACK SPEEDSTER . Harry Will iamson, Uni¬versity of North Carolina (Chapel Hill) run¬ning star, works out on that institution’spractice track in preparation for a heavyschedule of competitive meets.KCYSTONC PHOTO2' ^#EES.CAMI?0SCCRQJ-r^ '^FLEES CAMPUS CROWD iii^^Nathan yagol,'* Emory'Id Jean Burke when they arrive ajt thcXriighiow versity (Atlanta) student, was chased off the.Oglethcerne over all military functions at their university. University campus when he went there to speak.vv^ KeVSTONC PHIWINS AWARD . C. W. Bracken, University of INDIANA'S SPEEDSTER . Charles Horn-Washinston (Seattle) graduate, with his prize-winning bostel, Indiana University (Bloomington), winshome exposition poster. wipe would pttoTo 1,000-yard run at Boston meet.KEYSTONE PHOTOs’ M^jry Joe Matthews, forJnive sity of Virsinia (ChaHottcs-dftkinq ioolcin9 3lasscs.COACHES DISCUSS RUUS . These «iddle-west coaches gathered in New Yodc to atterxjthe football coaches’ conventionKZYSTOMC PHOTO BEST SOLDIER » Otto N. Raths, Jr., is the cadetcolonel of the College of St. Tr>omas (St. Paul, Minn.)corps.• I he cosmic ray detector, or hodoscope, wasthe ftrii time at the Franklin Institute (Philadelphia). Theholes indicate the paths of the cosmic rays whidi pass^nt. ^ wioc womo photo HE COACH RDES while the other -ei-bprs of the Magdalen (England) eight carry their oars to theKMthouse for an afternoon’s practice in preparation for the O. U. Torpids. MYaTOHe photoNAVY TAKES TO THE POOL • The varsity nKsniomen went through tne»r pacesin the 'nooor tank when Coach Buck Wafsh caliec :*'cr» Cut ior their first practicesession at tt»e Unitett States Naval Acaaerr. (Arnapoits). wioe womo photoRi^htTESTS BARGESProf. Martin E.Johnson, of theUn iversi ty of !o w a(Iowa City), fStesting a minia¬ture barge on amodel of t**e Ten-nessee Valleypcwe' project aspart of e:vten-sjve r«earch hers do<ng for thaTV'ABR^» Dr Herbert Jasper and Dr.)wn®rovidenc€, R I ), have devel-)t35!«on currents" given off by theI KCYSTOHC PHOTOCO^ COLONEL . Natalie R ing has per-chosen as the honorary cadet co*or*el of thaUniversity of Wichita (Kan ) Reserve Officers’Training Corps She will act as the organiza¬tion’s sponsor at the annual military ball.“rm tired. I bet youwere out late last nishtl"—OwlALL RIGHT. WISE GUY.HOW DO I GET ITBACK ON?”“I thought I was taking her onthe date, but she took me,”wailed the Phi Psi. as hecounted his bank-roll.—Dodo"What? You'll rai»e that 'scholarship'to five hunnert? Ya too lata! —I jus'closed wit Sigma Nu ter four hunnertan' fifty!" —Furplc Parrotit UMM loaded!**—Pointer. SMART ACCESSORIES F OR MEAny Fashionable preview of the fashionable men’s accessories material as the shirt itself. The smartest models come >Blue ribbon riding fashion winners of the 1880s and the 1930s —well, at least these riding costumes were the "winners” atWheaton College (Norton, Mass.) during these decades. You will notice that the gav co-ed of the ’80s really couldn’thave been riding foi the sport in it, aqd it s our guess ththe fashionable, not the spiorty, thing to do.must include stripes and plaids in every form and variety, that isexcept in sweater-shirts and sports pants. With the striped shirtsyou may wear either the plain white collar or a collar of the same negligee button-down collars or the wide Prince of Wale!For information on what is correct men’s wear write:Editor, Collegiate Digest, P.O. Box 472, Madison, WisCOURTKSY ARflOW AND CHAfITEIGERMAN 2>ie jcf)dn^te Jungfrau fi^Cort oben wunberbar,qotbnes detd)meibe blivet.BATTER UP I » Coach Joe Wood givesthe Yale University (New Haven, Conn.)baseball squad its first pep talk.KEYSTONE PHOTO RightAHEND CELEBRATION • These Eng¬lish notables are headed for the anni¬versary debate at Aberdeen University(Scotland). keystone photoC R O S S W O liMimi 1z zBY ROBERT McCLOUDSlate Tsschsn Collsgs(l^|nCoii, Tsxss)FIVE DOIXARS will be paid for collegiate cross word pussiessuitable for pt'hlimtion in this snrtion. No money will be paid forpussies not used and no pui^es will be returned unless return post¬age is included. Collegiate Clgest. P. O. Box 472, IkCadison, Wis. Horizontal1.University noted for Its college ofmedicine.S. University In Indians.11. Holds keys to Heaven.14. Eleven (Romani.16. Hot.17. New York.18. Part of to be.20. Kansas City.21. Definite article (Scot.i.22. Oerman (slang).23. Mineral.25. Small.28. Urged.29. To preserve.31. Toward.32. Nude.33. Petrol.34. 104 (Roman).35. Boy's name.38.Part of to be.38. Rodent.40. Without (French).41. Mexican (slang).43. Stage curtain.45. High In pitch.48. Father.47. His Majesty (abbr.).40. Day (SiMinlsh).50. Ught.51. Wages.55. Suffix.58. Pacific state.58. University In Macon. Georgia.59. University in Indiana.Vertical1. Southwestern state.2. Letter sign.3. Academlae Amerlcanae Socius.4. Boy's nickname.5. Perform.8. Ood.7. Volcano in Sicily.8. Small stake.9. Academle Royale.10.University in Michigan,tt CSimnisal symbo)IS. Paid.15. Country in Asia.17. Bare. 19.Polished.32. Oldest university In U. S.24.Group of football players.28. Pronoun.27. Negative.28. Onetime secretary of SmithsonianInstitution.30.Postscript.33. Before Christ.35. Sodium chloride.38. Associated Press.37. Musical note.39. Labor.40. College in North Carolina.41. To leave (Spanish).43. Chirrup.44. Author of "Home, Sweet Home."48. Wan.48. Food list.51. Cul-de- ....53.Prefix.53. Gypsy.54. Poitn of masculine address.55. Credit.58. Advertisement.Antwcf To LiftWttk't Puzilifram J. MowttowtryUnivinity of Mlnnotote CourtPlaster ByMargaret SimpsonCollege for WomenDenton, TexasCurtis Hall, curly-haired idol ofthe co-eds at small Sweet GumCollege away back in the nineties,‘could hardly wait for the breakfastbell. “I’ll be sure to know her," heearnestly told his confidante andfriend. Johnny King. “She’s boundto have a big. purplish stain rightin the middle of her left cheek.I’ve made too many of these blood-bruises on Sis not to know how.We’ll see all the girls as they comeIn. and if there’s any vacancies I’llknow who to l<x)k for.”He walked up and down the roomin impatience. Johnny looked athim rather curiously. “Hard hit,old man. aren’t you?” he saidsympathetically. “Would you mindbeginning at the beginning andtelling me what this is all about?’’Curtis waved his hands hope¬lessly. “I don’t know whether Iknow or not. All I can say is thatI woke up in the night and heardsomeone walking in the hall. Ididn’t pay any especial attention,until the footsteps stopped right infront of my door, and then I heardanother sound that scared meplenty. It was old Grundy, thenight matron, coming down thehalls on one of her surprise visitsto our end of the dormitory. Thenall at once my door opens and thenight prowler was right there inmy room.“What was I to do? I lay thereafraid to move. If I let her knowthat I knew she was there, she waslikely to run out right in the faceof Mrs. Grundy, and then therewould be the deuce to pay.“But nothing happened. OldGrundy came on, passed the d(X)r.went on down the hall. I couldhear the girl getting her breath,but she didn’t make any motion togo. Just stood still. Scared tomove, I reckon. ‘Who’s there?’whispered.“At that she made a dive for thedoor. But I was t(X) quick for her.'Curtis grinned rather sheepishly.“Somehow I was determined to findout who she was. I got betweenher and the door. I could hear herheart hammering like it was try¬ing to get out of her body, but shewouldn’t say a word. Just strug¬gled to get by.“ ‘Tell me who you are, and Tillet you go,’ I told her. "Iliere’s nouse to be afraid, but I want toknow who my company is at thistime of night’.’’Johnny was listening wiUi hismouth wide open. “Great Jehoso-phat," he said, “what if she had ofscreeched on you.”“Not her,” proudly answered Cur¬tis, “that little girl had courage.That’s why I am so anxious toknow more about her. She wouldn’tsay a word. Just held tight to abowl in her hands—not one soundcould I get out Qf her. When shesaw that she ebUld not pass, shequit struggling and then I knewI’d have to dO' something if I wasto find out. You remember thatold trick I had of making bluespots on Sis by sucking up the skinbetween my lips. Well, I don’tknow what made me do it,” and tohis credit Curtis looked stuune-faced, “but I grabbed her all atonce and sucked up the sidn on herface in my lips right where I knewit would leave a stain that I couldtell her by today. Then, she wasgone—just like that. And I neverslept another wink. And now—Oh Mthere’s the bell. Let’s go.”The boys entered the breakfastroom decorously, stood respectfullybehind their chairs with the otherboys while the girls filed in fromthe other door to the opposite sideof the table. Curtis’ gaze rovedhastily up and down the lines.There was a simultaneous gaspfrom all the boys in the room.Ehrery girl had a small piece ofcourt-plaster right in the middleof her left cheek. Curtis had notcounted on the courage of the littlegirl to tell the Dean what had hap-pmed or the Dean’s resourcefulnessin meeting the emergency that con¬fronted her.COLLEGIATE DIGEST Sec-tioa is lookliif for Short Shortstories. Manuscripts must beaccompanied by return poatace.Payment at rcfular rates ttponacceptance. Address: Story Edi¬tor. COLLEGIATE DIGESTSection, P. O. Boa 472, MadiWia.LeftWATERYDEATH is metedout to SisterJane by Liver-px)ol Universitystudents duringtheir "rag”KEYSTONE PHOTORightOBSERVA¬TORY HILL .This IS a daytimeview of the spxjton the Universityof Wisconsi n(Madison) cam¬pus made so fa¬mous by When It'sDark On Observ¬atory HillFREDERICKKAESER IIPHOTOSNON/TIME IN LOUISIANA » These co-eds at Louisiana State Normal College(Natchitoches) take time out from their daily plunge to enjoy the first snow in thePelican state in five yearsOPEN CELEBRA-TION » 1935 is the50th year in the historyRESEARCH CENTER » The Institute of Human Relationships at Yale University of RollinsCollege(Win-(New Haven,Conn.)is the foremost research center on human relationships problems. p|^ ^A DEAN RELAXES » C. Horton-Talley,Nebraska Wesleyan University (Lincoln),wields a swift paddle in a University of IowaTlowa City) tourm MIRROR COACHING is the latest aid to collegiate rowersin England. Here is a member of the Oxford Universitycrew learning about the new device. ^T THE PEAK of a perfect iack-kmfe dive,Kreinheder, of Buffalo State ^achers College ^shows the spectators at a recent meet how itKEYSTONE PHOTO