WEATHERGenerally fair, colder, mod¬erate northwest winds today.Increasing cloudiness andwarmer tomorrow. Wl)e Bail? iRaro ‘Every word writtenabout little Beverly wastrue.’UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. APRIL 30. 1935 See EditorialOn Page 2Price Three CentsGIVE SCHOLARSHIP Crossed CannonEXAMS FOR HIGHSCHOOLJENIORSSeven Hundred Seek$9,000 AwardsMay 17 Selects May 29for Military BallWednesday evening, May 29, hasbeen selected as the date of the 11thannual Military ball, it was announc¬ed yesterday by members of the ar- |rangements committee of Crossed (Cannon, honorary military society, Iwhich sponsors the affair.May 29, the eve of Memorial day,which is both a University and na¬tional holiday, was chosen by thecommittee in preference to Saturday, May 26. The ball was originallyscheduled for Friday, May 24, but MORE THAN 7000AHENO 2 DAYS OFMIOWAY FANOANOOTo Issue Financial Report,Pay Cro»jo CommissionsThis WeekSeven-hundred outstanding seniorsfi-om high .schools in and near Chi¬cago will take part in the annualcompetitive examinations for prizeFicholarships to be given here on jFriday, May Similar examina-1 was postponed because of a conflictbetween that date and the comprehen.sive examinations in the Business school and the English examination in the College which will begiven Saturday, May 25.Final selection of the place andorchestra for the ball will be madeat a meeting of Crossed Cannon tonight, and will be announced tomorrow in The Daily Maroon. CadetMajor Lineback, student head of theunit, has As.sured the campus thatthe orchestra to be selected will be■“nothing less than Wayne King.” Hesaid that orchestras now under consideration are Fred Waring and hisPennsylvanians, Glen Gray and hisCasa Loma orchestra, and OzzieNelson and his famous band.As previously announced. CrossedCannon will donate all proceeds ofthe ball to the gift fund, raisedtions will be held in nineteen othercities on Saturday, May 11,The examinations will be givenfrom 9 to 12 in the morning, andthe awards, totaling $9,000, will beannounced the same evening. Thethirty entrants who receive the high¬est grades will be presented withscholarships.Plan EntertainmentFollowing the examinations, theUniversity will act as hosts to thecompetitors. Various forms of en¬tertainment are being planned anddirected by the Student Social com¬mittee, and will be announced lat¬er.The academic records of studentswho have received scholarships inprevious years show that the com¬petitive examination group surpa.ssesall others. This was true under theold plan, when achievementmeasured by course marks, and con¬tinues to be true under the new planof measuring achievemnt by compre¬hensive examination.s.Revicr Grouping*This year the Committee onScholarships has revised the group¬ing of related subjects, from whicheach candidate may choose his sub¬jects. From the first group at leastone examination must be taken. Thisncludes Engli.sh composition, worldhi.^tory, mathematics, and languages.One or more subjects in the sec¬ond group al.so must be included inthe examinations. This list includesbotany, zoology, chemistry, andphysics.Each competitor mu.st take a threehour examination covering threehigh school subjects. The te.sts,principally objective, are so framedthat it is impossible for any studentto write a perfect paper. The ex¬aminations are not typical of whati.s required for admission to the Uni-vei'sity, but are designed to discloseclearly the be.st contestants. mainly by the Fandango, which willbe given to the University,State CommissionCancels FERAPositions Today APPOINT NELSON ASCHAIRMAN OF ANNUALY.W.C.A, CONFERENCEBy an order of the Illinois Emerg¬ency Relief Commission, all fundsfor Federal Education Relief Ad¬ministration positions on the Univer¬sity campus will be withdrawn aftertoday.The communication .states that The annual nine-day summer con¬ference of Y. W. C. A. delegatesfrom nine states in the middle westwill be held this year at CollegeCamp, l.ake Geneva, Wisconsin from•June 21 to 29. Bettyann Nelson, whowas president of Y. W. C. A. for thepast year, will be general chairmanof the conference.Every year an elaborate programof study, worship, and recreation ispresented, and leaders in variousfields are invited to lead seminars.This summer seminars will be heldon such topics as economics, religion,and social relationships.Among the leaders who have beenchosen to conduct the seminars forthis conference are: Mrs. Minnie E.Allen of Iowa State college atAmes, who will lead a discussion oninternational relations; Mr. Carl R.Hutchinson, director of the recrea¬tion cooperative for the Farmer’sCooperative movement in Indiana,who will lead a discussion on eco¬nomics; and Esther G. Stamats, di¬rector of the personal service depart¬ment of the Y. W, C .A. of Chicago,who will discu.ss vocations and leis¬ure time.“The R'.ason for Living” will be■•rntil present shortaBO of funds is i Jho 'op|e of a sentmar led by Drrelieved, the commission cannot be Robert R. Wicks dean of the chapelresponsible for reimbursement of at Princeton; and social relationshipscolleRes for student aid beyond : «■'» be discussed by Mrs Ruth Mc-funds already transmitted,” The Uni-; Cam of the I linois Mental HyBieneversity has on hand sufficient funds ! society. Anclher seminar on theto meet the present payroll period ' of Worship wdl be con-which ends this eveninK. However,: ducted by Mr. Howard Thurman ofaccording to Robert C. Woellner, Howard university and Helen Mor-executive secretary of the Board of | Jon, executive secretary of the na-Vocational Guidance and Placement,all FERA students are expected toreport to their supervisors for fur¬ther instructions today.Five hundred seven students, each ,drawing a monthly pay of $15, areaffected by the order. The FERA wase.stablished as part of a plan to in- jduce students financially unable to, jto return to school. The work hasincluded such jobs as research as-1sistant.s, clerical assistants, typists, |stenographers, and draftsmen. | tional student council of the Y. W.C. A.ALUMNI OFFICERSL. C. Shephard, graduate of theSchool of Business in the class of'29, was reelected president of the . iAlumni as.sociation of the Business' Ph. D. candidate in stati.stics, GabrielAward Scholarshipsto Eight Graduatesfor Advanced StudyEight graduate students in the So¬cial Science division were among the26 men awarded doctoral field schol¬arships by the Social Science Re¬search council. These awards, giv¬en this year for the fir.st time, arefor graduate students about to com¬plete the requirements for their de¬grees.The University students receivingthe fellowships are: John K. Rose,school, at a meeting of the officerslast week.Other new officers are AlbertOalvoni, '33, vice-president; J. Ken¬neth Smith, '33, treasurer; and Mrs. Almond, political science; Hymen E.Cohen, research assistant in Politi¬cal Science; Milton Friedman, eco¬nomics j Edward Y. Hartshorne, so¬ciology; John H. Marion, political All Fandango salesmen whohold outstanding tickets havebeen requested to turn them intoday to John Dille at the Fan¬dango office between 5 and 6or to communicate with him im¬mediately.Nearly 7,500 people attended theMidway Fandango it was shown yes¬terday when the official count was-evealed. The total shows that 7,455were present at the two-day pro¬gram of the carnival.No official report on the net earn¬ings for the carnival will be avail¬able before the latter part of theweek. Those organizations whichsponsored concessions that did notpurchase merchandise through theFandango will receive their commis¬sions tomorrow. The percentages forthe others will not be determined un¬til the invoices have been receivedfrom the Barnes Carruthers com¬pany.Cusack Crowned QueenRita Cusack was crowned Queenof the Midw’ay after the election re¬turns were counted late Saturdaynight. She was followed by PatriciaFlood, Peggy Tillinghast, and PhilBaker respectively. Frank Todd waselected May King, and Wilmot Palm¬er was runner-up.The gland prize was won by Peg¬gy Wilson, a sophomore at the Uni¬versity. She will be awarded a nine-day trip to Canadian Pacific’s Banffand Lake Louise resorts in the Can¬adian Rockies sometime next sum¬mer.All ticket salesmen have been re¬quested to turn in remaining ticketsand money immedaitely to JohnDille in Lexington 16. No final checkon the net earnings of the carnivalwill be possible until this has beendone. UW SCHOOL PROGRAMTOMORROW INCIODESBANQUET AND PLAYTicket Sales for AnnualDinner Approaches400th MarkWtih two days remaining beforethe annual Law school banquet to¬morrow evening at 7 at laternation-al house, over 200 student and 100alumni tickets have been sold, EdwinP. Davis, newly elected president ofthe Law school Bar association an- Pond Awakens asAnnual MustacheContest BeginsBy RALPH W. NICHOLSONFuzz come, fuzz served is the mot¬to today at the C bench where allseniors who have waited four yearsbefore venturing to push forth amustache will come to check in atnoon for the two-week growingperiod allowed in the annual Black-friars contest.E. N. Bradford, the operator ofthe Reynolds club barber shop, willsee to it that all the participants get joff to a clean (shaven) start for the l-F COMMITTEEBEGINS STUDY OFRUSHINGJOLICYSubmit Questionnaireto Fraternities onPreferencesnounced yesterday. , ,The number of tickets already j fsold is considerably higher than thosefor last year’s banquet, at whichthere was an attendance of 175 stu¬dents, alumni, and faculty members.Officers of the Bar association,which is sponsoring the banquet, in¬dicated that they are anticipating alarge number of additional sales.Oscar Carlstrom, former attor¬ney-general of Illinois and alsoformer candidate for governor, willbe the principal speaker at the ban¬quet. Don Rogers, senior in the Lawschool, will act as toastmaster. Theprogram also features a play, “Mur¬der the Faculty,” in the nature of asatire on various members of theLaw school faculty. The play willbe performed by students in theschool, and was written by JeromeRosenthal, David Livingston, GeorgeKempf ,and Burdell Backtenkircher,Install New OfficersInstallation of the new officers ofthe Bar association was held yester¬day afternoon. Other new officers,besides Davis, are Peter Kelliher,vice-president; David Jadwin, secre¬tary; and Harry Hensel, treasurer.By a unanimous vote, Louis Groebeand Raymond Powers, retiring presi¬dent and treasurer, respectively,were selected to fill the two posi¬tions on the senior council left va¬cant by the graduation of PaulTreusch and Thomas Doyle.Davis also announced the selectionof Sidney Hyman to have charge ofananging the program for the ban¬quet, and of Kelliher as head usher. final judgings that will be heldThursday, May 9, the day beforethe first performance of “In BrainsWe Trust.”The possessor of the most obvious Desirous of discovering the atti¬tude of fraternities on deferredrushing, the Interfraternity commit¬tee is mailing today to each fra¬ternity a questionnaire on the sub¬ject.The explanation accompanying thelist of questions states, “The Officeof the Dean of Students is desirousof doing that which is of greatestadvantage to the fraternity system.growth at the end of the hair-raising' conductedPaul Douglas Offers Solutionfor Depression in Latest BookI'jorothy Diemer Thompson, ’33, sec-' science, Philleo Nash, anthropology;rtVary. and Leo Rosenberg, political science. “Controlling Depressions — thetitle of Professor Paul H. Douglas’latest book—is a subject predomin¬ant in the economic thought of theday. The most significant manifes¬tation of this thought can be foundin President Roosevelt’s New Dealpolicies.In his book. Professor Douglas dis¬agrees with those members of hisprofession that believe that there isa single explanation of the rise andfall in the business cycle. Dividingthe causes into two parts, initiatingcauses and cumulative causes, Mr.Douglas says that “the first leadbusiness to get out of balanced equi¬librium: the second make mattersprogressiv'ely worse once di.sequili-brium has started. Most of our ef¬fort in the past has been spent intrying to find out what the initiat-ng and generating causes might be,and indeed in seeking some onecau.se which would explain the wholecomplicated process of breakdown.”Production RestrictedWhile basing his explanation ofthe cumulative causes of the depres¬sion on the intricate interdepend¬ence of industry, Proifessor Douglasstates that the generating causesmay be found in “the failure of in¬dustry, because of ‘friction,’ monop¬oly and quasi-monopoly, to reduceprices commensurately with the re¬duction in costs so that undue profitswere piled up and undue investmentsmade. At the same time, productionwas restricted in some industriesand hence unemployment was creat¬ed and purchasing power was re¬duced.”Furthermore, it is found, accord¬ing to Mr. Douglas, that anothercause which aided the bringing aboutof the business depressions is “thefailure of industry and society toincrease farm incomes commensur¬ately with the increase in output inthe mass production industines. Thisgave rise to large profits and to theinvestment of large amounts of cap¬ital which in turn increased actualand potential production. Since theproduction power in the pockets ofthe buyers of mass production goods and services was insufficient to pur¬chase t\iese goods at the existingprice level, prices had to be reducedsharply in order to move the goods.This reduction in prices tended tosweep away the margin of profitsand hence helped to precipitate thedepression.”12-point ProgramNevertheless, all this striving afterthe causes of the depre.ssion is mere¬ly a post-mortem of things that havealready taken place. What is essen¬tial at the present time is a solutionto the problem of how to get out ofthe depression. Mr. Douglas offers hissolution in a twelve-point 'programwhich places most of the burden onthe hands of the Federal govern¬ment.Headed by a public-works pro¬gram concentiated upon housing,these points include (1) q flexiblegovernmental budget approximatelybalanced over a ten-year period,(2) a nationally managd system ofcurrency, (3) the creation of a cen¬tral bank to act'as the manufacturerand wholesaler of credit while theprivate banks acts as retailers, (4)a regulated wage policy, (5) restora¬tion of competition in industrieswith small invested capital and thesocialization of Idrge-scale industry,and (6) a social dividend to consum¬ers or an increased expenditure uponcultural services if the amounts dis¬tributed to the purchasers of massproduction goods are not sufficientto consume at a profit to industryand under competitive prices themass production goods and serviceswhich are turned out by industry. period will be awarded a diminutiveloving cup and will be immortalizedby the addition of his name to thepermanent plaque in the Reynoldsclub barber shop.That the announcement of the an¬nual spring contest caused notice¬able confusion to the Botany pondwas apparent when the spot was vis¬ited by a Daily Maroon reporter.The dank tarn that it is was quiver¬ing in expectation of the dreadfulonslaught that annually violates itslong winter chastity. The thought ofsemi-nude, mustacheless bodies strik¬ing in shock of spray upon its longreserved surface has sent w^ater-lily-white hands creeping to hide thedarkening blush.NAME 9 MEMBERS TOSERVE ON STUDENTSETTLEMENT BOARDBAND CONCERTSEvery Thursday evening at 6:30for the remainder of the quarter theUniversity band will give a series ofpopular outdoor concerts in Hutch¬inson court. The program, sponsor¬ed by the Commons department willbegin May 9, and will be an hourlong.Mr. Mort will conduct the band,compo.sed largely of members whoplayed during the concerts last fall. The new members of the StudentSettlement board were announcedyesterday by Leonard Olson, the re¬cently elected chairman of theboai’d. Nine students were electedby the old board and approv'ed bythe board of Social Service and Re¬ligion.Elizabeth Barden,, Ray Danow,Mary Letty Green, (ieorge Halcrow',William McNeill, Florence Miller,John Morris, Aileen Wilson, andElrner Youmans are the new mem¬bers. The old members reappointedto the board are: Ruth Baldei^ton,Betty Davis, Eleanor Graham, EdithMcCarthy, Anne Palmer, Dan Smith,Evelyn Smith, Floyd Stauffer, andBarbara Vail. Edith McCarthy isthe new secretary.The first meeting for the newmembers will be held Sunday, May 5,at Camp Farr in the Sand Dunes.The .speaker for the conference willbe Miss Vittum, head of Northwest¬ern. university Settlement board.Tentatively, another speaker will beShailer Mathews, dean emeritus ofthe Divinity school.The University Settlement boardgoverns and cooperates with the ac¬tivities and plans of the UniversitySettlement, a case center for stu¬dents in the field of sociology. Thesettlement is located itl the heart ofthe Polish-Mexican district near thestockyards. It derives part of itsfunds from the sponsorship of pro¬grams carried on by persons w'hodevote their time and effort to theworthy cause. which indicate that the scholarshipI standing of the fraternity mencompares unfavorably with that ofother groups. The administration iswilling to make concessions to thej fraternities if it is convinced by anI objective study that a modified sys¬tem will make the fraternities anI even greater asset to their members, and to the University than they areat present.Desire Accuracy“Consequently, it is essential thatall answers to the following ques¬tionnaire be made accurately, spec¬ifically, and promptly. Obviouslysome of the questions must be an¬swered by estimates; but those es¬timates should be as free from er¬ror and opinion as possible. Con¬sultation with recent unprejudicedalumni mav be helpful.”Classified under ten subdivisionsthe ouestions asked by the Office ofthe Dean of Students deal with thesize of pledge groups during the pastsix years, the number of pledges in¬itiated, the number returning in thesophomore year, rushing expenses,and reductions in income, if any, be¬cause of the present system.Effect on StudiesOther questions relate to whetherextended rushing has affected ma¬terially the studies of the activemembers, the amount of time theymust devote per week to rushing,whether rushing outside the houseshould be permitted, and the interestof the freshmen in campus activitiessince the introducton of deferredrushing.All in all the questions asked arecomprehensive and deal with everyangle of the problem which the com¬mittee hopes to clear up in the nearfuture.Rockefeller GiftEstablishes NewMedical DivisionElect New OfficersToday for ChicagoProgressive UnionElection of officers of the Chi¬cago Progressive union will takeplace today at 3:30 in Classics 10according to an announcement madeby Jack Light, temporary chairmanof the recently organized liberalgroup.At the same time a definite or¬ganization program will be formulat¬ed, together with the membershiprostrum and future speakers formeetings. The Union is composedof a group of students who startedout under the Liberal club and Pub¬lic Policy association. After the lat¬ter’s disbandonment, the membersjoined with the Liberals to establishdiscussion groups with an aim to¬ward setting up a social programalong traditional lines of approach. Two gifts, totalling $243,000,have been made to the Universityby The Rockefeller Foundation,President Robert Maynard Hutchinsannounced yesterday. The largergift, of $168,000, is to assist in es¬tablishing a department of psychia¬try and the second gift, of $75,000,is for support of research in the hu¬manities.The new psychiatric division willmaintain twelve beds in a specialunit of the University Clinics, andemphasis will be laid on research inthe causes and cure of mental dis¬ease. The unit will be of value notonly to the Biological Sciences divi¬sion but to the Social Sciences divi¬sion as well.Appointment of a psychiatrist tohead the department will be madebefore July 1, when the new unit isto be established.The giant for research in human¬ities is not allocated to any specificproject. President Hutchins said, butmay be used for support of anystudies in the field.FEDERATIONThe training meeting for all up-perclass counsellors will be heldtoday at 3:30 in Ida Noyes the¬ater. All advisors who are notpresent and who have not beenexcused by Louise Hoyt will beautomatically dropped. The coun¬sellors on the reserve list will beappointed to take their places.. Pa44<; Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, APRIL 30, 1935Slip Satlg marflotiFOUNDED 1901M o^sociaui;! gbUggiatt(EolIj^fDia«t 1935 *-rUOUiON WISCOMSMThe Daily Maioon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springqiuirter by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University Avenue.Editorial office; Lexington hail. Room 15. Telephones: Local46 and HYDe Park 9221. Business office: Lexington hall,Room 15.\. Telephone: HYDe Park 9222.Subscription rates: 32.50 a year; $4.00 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.The University )f Chicago as.sumes no responsibility for anystatements apivearing 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 seco.id class matter March 18, 1903, at the post 'office at Chicago. Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.The Daily Manvon expressly reserves all rights of publica¬tion of any material appearing in this paper. The Daily Maroonwill not be responsil le for returning any unsolicited manuscripts. |Public letters should be addressed to the Elditor, The DailyMaroon, Lexington hall. University of Chicago. Letters shouldbe limited to 200 words in length,^ and should bear the author’ssignature and address, which will he will 'leld if requested.Anonymous letters will be disregarded.dOARD OF CONTROLHOWARD F. HUDSON, Editor-in-CniefWILLIAM S. O’DONNELL, Business ManagerCHARLES W. HOERR, Managing EditorHOWARD M. RICH, News EditorW'lLLIAM Fs. BERGMAN, Advertising ManagerDAVID H. KUTNER, News EditorEulTOrtjAL ASSOCIATESHenry F. KelleyRaymrnd Lahr ^anet LewyRalph W. Nicholson Jeanne StolteWilliam W. WatsonBUSINESS ASSOCIATESZaimon Goldsmith Robert McQuilkin Everett StoreyEDITORIAL assistantsW'ells D. BurnetteEulah DetweiierGeorge F'elsenthalZenia Goldberg Ruby HowellJulian A. KiserGeorge Schustek James SnyderEdward S. SternElinor TaylorMary WalterBUSINESS ASSISTANTSRobert AlbrechtJames BernardHenry CubbonDon Elliott A1 FrankelDon I’attersonAllan RosenbaumMax Sehiff Harold B. SiegelEvlwin SibleyDick SmithRoy Warsha'vskyNight Editor: George FelsenthalTuesday, April 30, 1935EXPLAINING LITTLE BEVERLYFriday we presented what we thought to be ithe scoop of the year, the story of Little Beverly, jthe girl reporter who tried to make a killing at,the University. ,For nearly a week we carried on an invest.ga- jtion gathering the facts, checking and recheck¬ing in order that we should be perfectly accurate, jWe had in mind what had happened at Syracuse |and Columbia this year when Hearst reporters Iprecipitated unwarranted trouble and plungedthese two schools into the throes of a red scare.Since those episodes we had been expecting asimilar occurence on campus and wanted to doeverything to prevent it if possible. ,And when it finally came about the circum¬stances were so different from the other cases, the ■investigating was so clumsy and so apparent tothe residents of International house, that we de¬cided to give it appropriate treatment. There was ^no point in screaming hysterically to high heavenand arousing all the primitive emotions. Beverlyhad been exposed, the danger was past, the re¬sults were negligible. The best thing was to pokefun at what had happened.This campus is considered to be extremely isophisticated and intelligent. What better meth¬od, then, but to treat the episode in a light satir¬ical vein and let the campus enjoy the story? Butunfortunately we announced the opening of theFandango in the same issue.And so our sophisticated campus, capable ofdiscerning everything immediately decided thatthis was a grand hoax to afford more publicityfor Fandango. Of course where the documentaryevidence that Beverly was a Hearst reporter camein they could not say. That there was not onetie between Fandango and Beverly, that the casehad not the slightest advertising value for it, wasimmaterial. They knew. You can’t fool thiscampus.For the benefit of these sophisticates, then, maywe point out:1. Every word written about little Beverly was.true. She has had experience with Hearst papers,she entered international house with the avowedpurpose of getting a story on the reds, and shefailed.2. She had absolutely no connection with theMidway Fandango.3. The Midway Fandango had absolutely noconnection with her.4. The picture that appeared was Beverly and not a cut of some burlesque queen that we foundin our files. j5. We broke our story when we did to coun¬teract anything she might write.6. We presented the story as we did becausewe thought it was a good joke on the red bait¬ers, and not because (1) we made it up, (2) we Ihad nothing else to put in the paper, (3) we liketo work all night at the printers planning “sensa¬tional” issues.7. When we print a purely burlesque issue wepromise ample warning beforehand.8. Our only purpose in emphasizing the epi¬sode is to put the campus on the alert against pos¬sible encroachments of the Hearst press on cam¬pus.9. The Daily Maroon has no intention of be¬coming a picture scandal sheet.10. We do believe in fighting fire with fire. j11. We think that our action prevented what ■happened at Syracuse and Columbia.These points, then, explain our position. And inow we trust that Beverly will disappear into jlegend where she belongs.—H. P. H. iThe Travelling BazaarBy SAM HAIRCONTRIBUTORS’ DAYoh you will have a fandango will yougreenleaf and laird picking up all the enfh reg¬isters wilma watrous is a shill there wasno elephant... .no bez't lahr. .. .no ray bolger...but they did have a fandango the merry-go-round wa.sn’t thrilling enough they sayfrankel wanted flood to be midway queen andthreatened to resort to violence dean scottdrew dean Ix umbaugh’s winning raffle ticket outof the box....well? thornton wilder has a year’sleave of absence... .when asked what he intendedto do he replied oh I may decide to become a'vii,er hurray for the new plan whenwe’re about halfway through a course we take afinal examination in it... .hurray....rita cusackis the winner of the midway queen contest....noel gerson was general manager of the midwayfandango... .she wins a contract for life beginsat 8:40... .she will walk on the .stage in the mid¬dle of act two and say here comes johnny nowand walk off...,a big banquet to trevor weisswho in spite of his stomach plays goed tennis andbeat mcininch... .peer gynt was a selloutthey even turned people away... .c’hara doesn’tusually beam but he beamed after the show wasover....and he was the one who had to be con¬vinced... .hal James wanted peer gyn: a longtime ago. ...hyman went there to heckle it andthen applauded all the way through it and talkedabout it for three hours afterwards... .peer gyntis the biggest thing since uncle tom’s cabin....maybe they will send it downtown why notput it on the road?... .the midway fandango isthe biggest thing since tyroler got thrown in thebotany pend... .ebart said after the show w’ellmaybe we ought to have peer gynt after all....tillinghast is disillusioned... .the ferris wheel istoo sw’ingy and the whip is too rough... .art goeswon a case of ale on a raftle ticket and no¬body helped him drink it either... .bill palmerwas given a ham fer being second in the greatmay king contest which every man cn campuswanted to win, .andrew’ hoyt had a twelve-year-old kid shilling for him on that punching bag....yes the midway fandango is an auspiciousthing for a delirious spring quarter,.. .we hopeit becomes a tradition,.. .the senior class giftfor the year 1903 was the c bench in front ofcebb hall....the class collected some money bypassing a hat and work started on the bench...the result was five hundred dollars contributedby the class and a bill for the bench for fifteenhundred... .senior class gift... .the midway fan¬dango is a painless (if not almost pleasurable)tax for a worthy cause.... perhaps it is becausethe whole affair is the swellest punch of bally¬hoo ever seen about campus but no matterwhat the reason it ought to become a tradition.... the committee does handle this job certainlymore enthusiastically and therefore more suc¬cessfully than any other student enterprise....the great midway fandango almost out rah-rahs northwestern but maybe it's about time, ehmr. hutchins? anyway the idea has a certainmerit and anyway the university is becomingcynical to everything but beer.,. .it is not a signof healthy mental balance when a campus breaks faway from stuffy libraries and racking sympos¬iums to play hard and long? tomorrow’s mytough day gotta shave yes the contest forthe midway queen is a fine thing too.... thecolonel’s lady and judy o’grady are sisters underthe skin....dr. carlson came into class one timewith a package in which he announced there weresome fine specimens of dissected frogs heopened it and out fell some sandwiches and abottle of milk,...well go it while you’re youngeverybody,. .wonders are many and none is morewonderful than man without resource hemeets nothing that must come.,..only againstdeath shall he call for aid in vain.... sophocles. .the fandango committee all went down to theclub ivanhoe after it wias all over so they couldhave .some fun...,like a mailman going for awalk on his day off, .piccard evidently doesn’t likeghosts... Today on theQuadranglesMutic and Religion“The Sanity of the Saints.” JohnT. McNeill. Joseph Bond chapel at12.Lecture*“Social Research in the ChicagoRegion. Social Organization.” Asso¬ciate professor Louis Wirth. SocialScience 122 at 3:30.“Recent Trends of Linguistic Sci¬ence.” Professor 'L. Bloomfield. Har¬per Mil at 4:30.“Five Makers of English Ihrose,Huxley the Scientist.” ProfessorJanies Linn. Fullerton hall, the Artinstitute at 6:45.“A Clinical and ExperimentalStudy of the Macrophage System ofthe Lungs in Relation to RecoveryDRY-COLD AIRFUR STORAGEon our own premises |Avail iyourself ofour “Frigid jAir-Cooled” 'scientific !modernvaultsto assureutmostprotection. j•MinimumchargeFur Coats j$3.00 iCloth Coats$2.00•RepairingandRemodelingat LowSummerRatesCHAS. BOBINSKY, Inc.FURRIER1029-1031 E. 63rd St.Since 1905 'All Phones MIDway 5000 LI i from Lobar Pneumonia.” Dr. C. H. iRobertson and Dr. L, T, Coggeshall. iMedicine 443 at 4:30.Meeting* iBiology club. Pathology 117 at 8.Chicago Progressive Union. Class-;ics 10 at 3:30.“Roman Rites of Sacrifice,” il-!lustrated. Dean Laing. GraduateClassics club. Classics 20 at 8. jMissionary Furlough club. Ida'Noyes at 7:30. 'W. A. A. board. Alumni room at12.Interclub. Student lounge at 12. :Deltho. Wicker room at 12:30.Wyvern. Green room at 12:30.Federation counsellor meeting. IdaNoyes theater at 3:30. DREXEL I“CUVE OF INDIA”withRonald Coleman-Loretta YoungWoodlawn Cafetcrij1165 East 63rd StreetSECOND Floor“You can have an extra dateeach week with the money yousave eating the Woodlawn way,”GOING TRAVELING?Here’s some books to make ycur trip moreinteresting—picturesque America, Kain $2.98Roaming American Playgrounds, Faris 3.00South West, Armers 3.00Romantic and Historic Florida, Verill 3.00Los Angeles in 7 Days, Bartlett 2.50N by E, Kent l.OOLeaves from a Greenland Diary, Owen . 2.(,0Renascent Mexico 2.50Gringa, Squier 3.50Conquest of the Maya, Mitchell 3.75High Spots in the Andes, Woods 2.75Stories of the Latin American States, Sanchez 2.50English Journey, Priestly 3.00Below London Bridge, Tomlinson 2.50Afoot in England, Hudson 1.00So You’re Going to Ireland and Scotland 3.50India, Land of the Black Pagoda, Thomas 1.00Let’s Do the Mediterranean, Wells 1.00So You’re Going to the Mediterranean 3.00In the Steps of the Master, Morton 3.00The Native’s Return, Adamic 2,75True Adventures 1.00Footsteps in the Sea, Fleischman 3.50Vanished Fleets, Villiers 1.00U. «rf C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avc.Our Own - - - -Department of MusicPresents their - - - -Spring Quarterly ConcertFriday Evening, May 3 at8:15 P. M.By the - - - -University of Chicago Sym¬phony OrchestraConducted by - - - -Carl BrickenProgram - - - -Prelude to Hansel und Oretel . . HumperdinckG Minor Symphony, No. 40 . . .MozartFour Songs Ernst BaconWinifred Stracke—BaritonePrelude to “Die Meistersinger” WagnerTickets Obtainable - - - -Dept, of Music—5727 Univ. Ave.Mandel Hall Box OfficeTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. APRIL 30, 1935 Page ThreeDiscussion of Propaganda EffectFeatures Students’ ConferenceTwenty-two nationalities, repre-;sentinjr twelve universities took part jin the discussions of the effect of'propaganda on world understandingat the second Mid-West Studentsconference ,iield at Internationalhouse last week-end. The conferencedealt mainly with a preliminary studyof subject, consequently, little in theway of concrete results or conclu¬sions was arrived at. Next year’sconference will be held at OhioState.The meeting, which was under thesupervision of John Adams and Her¬bert Woodward, members of theHouse student council, included bothlectures and discussions with suchmen as Clifton Utley, Paul Mowrer,Herman Finer, Harold Lasswell, andQuincy W’right taking part. An eve¬ning dinner Saturday ended theconference. At this time HerbertWoodward gave a summation of theconference. His conclusion was thatpropaganda is here to stay and thatit will become more and more ef¬fective by becoming stable and or¬ganized. ‘‘Because propaganda is a Idangerous tool,” he said, ‘‘we must |recognize and become aware of itsexistence.”Starting in from the individual’s-tandpoint, Utley, who is director of Ithe Chicago Council on Foreign Re-1lations, howed the necessity for an jobjective outlook in order that those |studying propaganda and events to Ibecome historians of the moment.,—1935 MODELS—Ceo. Lott Autograph, Cold Star, TopFlite, Mercer Beasley Princess (de¬signed especially for women), andothers, strung to order with selectedsplit gut for only $10.00. Expertracket restringing to measured tensionRYBICK BROS. TENNIS SHOP1544 East 64th St.Hyde Park 7473Work Called For and Delivered An individual, according to theCouncil representative, must first beassured of himself before he canread a newspaper account and knowwhat really has occured.A roundtable under the directionof Paul Mowrer, former foreigncorrespondent, reviewed the possi¬bilities of getting the truth frompropaganda controled countries.Mowrer stated that it was fairly easyto obtain news dispatches from for¬eign countries—by both telephoneand telegraph—although censureshipdid take place. At the same time hepointed out that reporters used dis¬cretion to maintain their status.Dr. Herman Finer, visiting pro¬fessor from the London School ofEconomics, took Fascism for a ridein pointing out that distortion andinternal misunderstanding was thebest means of propaganda. Distrac¬tion is their best method of approachin the opinion of the professor.DIVINITY SCHOOL TOOPEN OFF-CAMPUSSTUDY IN SUMMERAlthough home-study courses havepreviously been available in the Di¬vinity school, the summer quarterwill mark the beginning a new.system of off-campus study for Di¬vinity students.Previously courses with definiteassignments and lessons have betnavailable for credit, and ‘‘specialreading courses” were offered whichgave no credit. This new plan willenable the student to get his credit'by merely taking the final examina- Ition. He will be provided with read-1ing assignments and suggestions, but ;no definite lesson assignments will.be required for credit. It is the be- Ilief that this new system is more in !keeping with the n*w plan at theUniversity. This is of particular ad¬vantage to Divinity students becausethere are many who are desirous oftaking University work but cannot |be in residence.TWO TEARFUL DOLPHINSWHO CAN’T GO S.T.C.A.They have to swim to Europe . . you cango on the famous liners of the Holland-America Line and have fun all the wayover. The S.T.C.A. way is the college wayand costs as little as $144.50 (Third Class),$191.00 (Tourist Class) over and back IS. S. STATENDAMJUNE 4; JUNE 25;JULY 16.S. S. VEENDAMJUNE 15; JULY 13. S.T.C.A. COLLEGE TOURSare planned so you can seeEurope with college people.30 days .... $435.40 days .... 625.63 days .... 795.Full dutallt from your local Agont orHOLLAND-AMERICA LINEI 40 NORTH DEARBORN STREET, CHICAGOSTCA SrUCtE TO APPEARAS GUEST ARTIST AT; SYMPHONY CONCERTWinfred Stracke, Chicago bari¬tone, will present three songs byErnst Bacon entitled, ‘‘Low Bridgeor The Eh’ie Canal,” ‘‘The ColoradoTrail,” and ‘‘Brady” when he ap¬pears as guest artist at the springquarter concert of the Universitysymphony orchestra F'riday evening.These songs are in a popular veinand the: material for them was tak¬en from ‘‘The American Song Bag”by Carl Sandburg.In the first of these a mule-driveris telling about his faithful Sal whohas been ‘‘hauling barges from Al¬bany to Buffalo” for so many years.The most striking feature is thechorus which is repeated severaltimes; ‘‘Low bridge, ev’ry body down.Low bridge, we’re cornin’ to town.”‘‘The Colorado Trail” is more ofa plaintive western melody in whichthe line, ‘‘Laura was a pretty girl,God Almighty knows,” is repeatedevery other line. The third song Isof another type. It is a ballad of aSt. Louis bartender named BillBrady.Ernst Bacon, the composer, wonthe Pulitzer Prize in music two jyears ago and at present is teaching |at the Conservatory of Music in San iFranci.sco. He formerly was on thefaculty of the Eastman School ofMusic at Rochester. Winfred Strac¬ke is a former radio star and atpresent is bass soloist at the FourthPresbyterian church here.‘^FLOATING UNIVERSITY ” iCRUISEDuring July and August to the |MEDITERRANEAN IHere is the ideal trip for students—asplendid opportunity to derive thegreatest benefits from your summervacation and enjoy a wonderful traveladventure. Visit Egypt, the Holy Land,Russia-17countries and islands in the"cradle of civilization" with the lux¬urious tropical cruiser S.S. SLAMATas your floating campus. Return onthe magnificent S.S. BERENGARIA.EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMProminent professors will give stand¬ard university summer courses inArt,Economics, Government, History,Literature and other sub¬jects studied in connectionwith countries visited.Credit for these coursesmay be arranged.1 Travel arrangementsare in charge of theJames Boring Co.,known for thecompleteness ofits itineraries.Ra/es from Sew Yorkto Sew York includ¬ing shore excursions616 upVI'rite now /or descriptive literature toUNIVERSITY TRAVEL ASSOCIATION66 Fifth Avanu* Naw York City193$-6 UniversityWorld Cruise Sails Oct. 24.PATRONIZETHE DAILY MAROONADVERTISERS Business SchoolHolds Course inAppraisal WorkAnnouncement of a summer ses¬sion devoted to courses in Real Es¬tate Appraisal, which will be held oncampus August 5 to 31, was madeyesterday by William A. Spencer,(lean of the School of Business. Thecourses will be sponsored by theSchool of Business in cooperationwith the American Institute of RealEstate Appraisers.George L. Schmutz, M. A. L, ofLos Angeles, Calitornia, will be deanof the summer session. The facultywill be composed of members of theAmerican Institute with nationalreputations in the field of real es¬tate appraisal., The session will be divided intotwo terms, the first comprising atwo weeks’ course opening August 5,which will cover the fields of apprais¬al of vacant land and of single fam¬ily homes. The second course willcover a four weeks’ term, includingthe two weeks of the first course |and two additional weeks starting |August 19. The subjects covered in ,the final period will include the ap- ’praisal of retail commercial property. I GROUP WRITESMANUSCRIPT ONMODERN CHURCHEight professors of the Di\dnityschool are collaborating in the writ¬ing of a book entitled ‘‘The Churchat Work in the Modern World.” Dr.William Clayton, Bower, one of thewriters, is acting as editor. The bookwill be ready for the press aboutJune 1.Each chapter is being written bya different professor. These who areworking on the publication, in addi¬tion to Dr. Bower; include Dr. Sam¬uel C. Klnchloe; Dr. Shailer Mat¬hew's, dean, emeritus of the Divin¬ity school; Dr. Shii-ley JacksonCase, the present dean 'of the Di-THREE MONTHS'COURSEN>t COLieOe SrUDtNTS AHO 66A»«Am IA MofowrA, MUnutM;gtmrtmg Jamtary 1, April!, Jmkl, OMrfv’J.bUmttinM BooUtt mtifim, mitmmt ttUggllm—writ$ or phono. No ooUdton ooipPieoAm o s e rBUSINESS COLLIOIfARK MOtIR,Mite omty, mnty ho otortodony UomMgL Dnyand Evaning. Evaning Cottrta epan to mom.Y16 S. Michigan Ave.,Chicago,ftondo/pk 434P vinity school. Dr. Edward S. Ames,Dr. Charles T. Holman, Dr. Archi¬bald G. Baker, and Dr. Winfred E.Garrison.The book according to Dr. Boweris a ‘‘w'e” book since it is being writ¬ten in conference. ‘‘It is an out¬growth of the orientation in the fieldof practical Christianity and willserve as an introduction to the fieldof practical Christianity.” The audi¬ence which the authors have kept inmind are students in the Orienta¬tion course, mini.sters, religious edu¬cators, missionaries, and othersengaged professionally in religiouswork.Miss LindnuistCAFEIn Broadview Hotel5540 Hyde Park Bird,and at1464 E. 67th St.Breakfa it. Luncheon and Dinner‘‘Swedish Smorgasbord”Our SpecialtyJUST GOOD FOODAt Moderate PricesSoerial Buffet SupperSunday evening 7I! j .5 to * •Special Attention to Luncheon andDinner GroupsTo Our Advertisers ..The truly smart merchant is the one, that on con¬sidering advertising, realizes that he is confronted withhis most serious problem. For through this medium hecan go out and get his business rather than wait and letit come to him. He can either make or break his businessenterprise.There should be no question in his mind as to wheth¬er or not advertising is a profitable adventure. Advertis¬ing speaks for itself: it is continually increasing.TTierefore, his only real problem should be, whereshall I advertise? How can I spend my money mostwisely? To this question, THE DAILY MARCXDN sug¬ gests that he consider the following facts.1. The Daily Maroon points to its complete cam¬pus coverage.2. The readers of the Daily Maroon are of a uniquegroup, in that, the largest number of them are,for the first time, doing their own buying. It ishere that their buying habits are being formed.%3. The Daily Maroon is fundamentally a localized /cultural group publication. It is read by peoplehaving similar tastes and desires and can there¬fore offer better results in certain products de¬manded by this group.Call the Daily Maroon Business Office and have one ofour representatives suggest proved methods forincreasing your business.—Hyde Park 9222.'i iittiNMi mu intiw 1 ■i PATRONIZE OURJ ' ADVERTISERSTRY A Smooth, OLD GOLDAT TRYING TIMESf^age r our TUESDAY. APRIL 30. 1935REYNOIOS CLUB PINGPONG TOURNEY GOESINTOQUARTER-FINBIS Maroon Tennis SquadTrims Illinois forFirst Conference Win TRACKMEN OEFEATNORTH CENTRAL INNAPERVILLE MEET Maroon Nine FacesNotre Dame; DividesTwin Bill with Purdue Dekes Whip Chi Psis; BarristersBeat Chiselers in I-M BallFeatured- by a number of start¬ling: upsets, the Reynolds club springquarter table tennis tournament hastaken an interesting turn as it goesinto the quarter-final play-offs.Gordon McNeil, winner of the re¬cent ladder contest, the winter quarter tournament, and runner up inthe fall quarter meet, met defeat atthe hands of Oscar Entin on Friday,n-21, 21-13, and 10-21. McNeilwas the heavy favorite to take thecurrent tournament, and his elimin¬ation leaves an open field of possiblewinners, including Russell Baird,runner-up in the winter quartertournament, Edward Cannon, andSteven Scace. Finals will be playedoff May 10.The consolation match for '.hoseeliminated in the first round of playis now under way. First bracketmatches must be played off some¬time today.OLD GOLDCONTEST4 Following are the standingsini the Old Gold Cigarettecontest at the three quartermark: -J-v-'., .v;.-‘ ,FRATERNITIESKappa Nu .....;Phi Delta Theta ;Phi Kappa SigmaPhi Kappa Psi . . .Alpha Delta Phi .Chi Psi ... . . . . . .383. 101. 76. 65. .47. 39Psi Upsilon . . . ... . . . . . 36Delta Kappa EpsilonTau Delta Phi '. . ... . / . .Alpha Tau OmegaZeta Beta Tau : . . / . . . V>Lambda Chi AlphaINDIVIDUALS, - MEN^lf % .Henry Zie . .L. Lis, ...rr-:^v;::-..l22Joe Kesselson ... 1 . .A. Joseph ‘E. A.-■.4'^A,151B.I Shed r offA.-- SchmidtE. Weis .Paul JamesoirR. LeighGordon ■mm 3l12Townsend,-. WOMENBernice Halley';^^i^-.‘.i!Alice J. Boler V -ir- 34REMEMBER the Contestends midnight ' May' 5—De¬posit your wrappers in* theconvenient ballot boxes NOW.There is still plenty, of time foranybody to win. game, thepotentiali-champion-Playing a hard, cleanMaroon netmen showedties for another Big Tenship last Friday as they won 5-1 overa strong Illinois aggregation in amatch on the University courts. Thenext day the Chicago seconds sub¬dued a team from Northern IllinoisState Teacher’s college, 4-3.Mclnich, one of the outstandingplayers in the conference, fell be¬fore the canny driving attack ofTrev'or Weiss. The Maroon No. iman put on the outstanding gameof the year here as he outplayed themini star to win 6-3, 7-5.Drop Only One I Coach Merriam’s varsity trackj team came from behind Saturday,;! .scoring heavily in the last two |! events, to win ea.sily over the North .Central team at Naperville by a.score of 72 2-3 to 58 1-3. jBerwapger took individual scor¬ing honor.s with three first places*. Heput the shot 43 feet 4 inches, tossedthe javelin 160 feet 9 inches, andwon the discu.s throw at 127 feet 6inches. But Captain Hal Block madethe best showing of the afternoonwhen, with the score tied, he dashedoff the 220 yard event in :22.2 to > a^ ^ i. beat John Dieber, the North CentralThe only defeat the Maroons ^sui- j undefeated dash star.Eight First PlacesChicago took eight fir.st places, in¬cluding a slam in. the discus whenJay Berwanger, John Scruby, andBai*t Smith finished in that order.fered was the match in which Mollof Illinois turned back Burge.ss’ ef- jforts to win but took his match at i6-2, 8-6. Mertz’s win over Lewersjby a score of 6-4, 6-4 and the 6-3, j6-4 defeat that Hicks received from !EH Patterson insured a tie at leastfor Chicago before the doubles evenstarted. ■ .In the only match that went to |three sets, Weiss and Patterson play-1ing No. 1 for Chicago, overcameMclnich and Moll . 9-7, 3-6, 6-4. The |No. 2 doubles ended wdth Mertz and ‘Burgess having a fairly easy job in jwinning 6-4, 6-4 from Hicks and (Lewers. iIn the match Saturday all but Fac- jtor won their singles matches, butthe Maroons lost ..both doubles. Thescore was 4 to 3.With the Northwes'tern-IHinois tiej last Saturday, the dopesters will be-! gin debating with renewed hopeChicago’.s chances for a repetition oflast year. While this will be a dif¬ficult job with the material on the.squad this year, the victory Fridaynot only heightens the morale of thesquad but points to an unexpectedstrength in conference competition. After splitting the double-header!asatart Purdue iust Saturday, the|baseball team meets Notre Dame atSouth Bend this afternoon in an at- |tempt to make up in a measure for Ithe 12-6 defeat suffered at its hands!week ago Saturday. At Purdue;the Maroons won the first game, 14 }to 5, and lost the second, 3 to 1.Bus Yedor went the route on themound for the Maroons in the firstgame, allowing nine hits and sixwalk.s. The Boilermakers scored tworuns in the seventh to tie the scoreat five all, but the Maroons put ona burst of hitting in the eighth, send¬ing six men across the plate.Summary, first game:Chicago ....020 012 063—14 16 0Purdue ....200 010 200— 5 9 3Batteries—Yedor and Shipway;Shuttleworth and Game* Today3:15—Delta Kappa Epsilon ▼*.Sigma ChiSigma Alpha Epsilon vs.Chi PsiPi Lambda Phi vs. PhiDelta Theta4:15—Phi Beta Delta I v*..Lambda Chi AlphaTau Delta Phi v*. AlphaTau OmegaKappa Nu vs. Alpha Del¬ta Phi i tie dizzy and made an out. A fewj more runs and Goes and Don How-j ard ended the circus with their outs,I After a while scorekeeper Eldred fig-ujfd that 18 men had come in,Schulz took over the Chi Psi hurk|ing job but gave it back to Abva-haiTTs after one Inning. Only two j:home runs, however, both by Phem-ister, Deke, are all the festivitiescan boast, Chi Psi playing was s'!rather liberally saturated with cr--rors..001Purdue ....Batteries—Laird and Curtis, Shipway; Elrod and Cherieo.Cameron Dystrup and Quintin John- istone pulled up in a dead heat in ithe 410 yard run in :53.3 to give! Second game:Chicago a first and second place in Chicago 000that event. North Central took themile, and Ed Krause and Bart Smithgot a first and second in the 100yard dash. North Central took thehigh jump, the 120 yard high hurd¬les, the 880 yard run, and the polevault, leaving the score tied untilBlock made his .sensational run itithe 220.North Central tallie<l a slam inthe 2 mile run, but Berwanger withhis victories in the javelin and dis¬cus again put Chicago in the lead. 100001 000-lOx- 4 43 2 Delta Kappa Ep.silon and Chi Psi jdecided to call it off in the fifthinning of their Intramural baseballfrolic yesterday when the Dekesquad reached 32 runs. The men ^from the Lodge didn’t see much jchance of getting 26 more tallies)to add to their 6 to tie the score.In the only other game scheduled 1the Barristers came through with jtwo runs in the -sixth to beat the {Chiselers 3 to 2 in a close contest.The Dekes didn’t waste much timegetting started. In the initial inn¬ing with five men as an openingteam they formed a line and march¬ed around the bases, each stoppingat home plate for Abrahams to throw .the ball at the bat.When they had all gone around,three times Norm Howard got a Jit-; Eat Well at Low PricesBirch RestaurantR76 E, 63rd StreetSpecial Plate Luncheonsith Coffee ........... 25c• UARN TO DANCE CORRECTI.Y «TAKE A FEW PRIVATE LESSONSTERESA DOLANDANCE STUDIO1S45 E. 63rd St. — Near Stony IslandHOURS to A M. to 11 P.M.• TELEPHONE HYDE PARK 3030 •OFFER AWARDS FORBOXING, WRESTLINGGolfers Split withIrish and ArmourThe Maroon 'golf squad openedthe season with a 14-4 win over Ar-: mour Tech last Friday and a■ 16-12 loss yesterday to a crackNotre Dame ' team.' ’Both matchesj.were played on the Olympia fields' course, ■ S "''sHampered by an' exceptionallystrong wind, the ■ golfers turned ini fairly good score.s in the Armourmatch with Chicago-suffering only- one defeat, that of Hi Lewis by Dav-id.son, playing No. . l --for Armour.! The Irish,"'- undefeated ' in threeyears, were lead yesterday by Banks,ex. middle western jr, champion, whoI rounded the difficult Olympia course! in 69. f, - PUBLISH ANNUALMUNICIPAL YEARBOOK ON MAY 3 Coach S. K. Vorpes is now teach¬ing both upper and classmen andfreshmen the arts of self defense inwrestling and boxing. Many newmen answered his first call for theactivities down in the Bartlett gym¬nasium basement, and for the ben¬efit of any others, he again offer.snumeral awards to men who comedown, and .show honest, conscientiouseffort.‘ 3 Months’ ShorthandCoursefor College Graduatesand UndergraduatesIdeal for taking,;notes at college orfor spare-time or full-time positions.Classes start the first of July, Octo¬ber, January and April.Call, twite, or telephone Stole 1831for complete facts.The GREGG COLLEGE; 6 N. Michigan .Ave; Chicag< “The Municipal Year Book 1935,”«‘<lited by Orin F, Nolting and Clai-ence E. Ridley, associate professorof Political Science, will be publish¬ed on May 3, under the auspices ofthe International City Managers’ a.-i-.sociation.The book, issued annually, is acomprehensive volume of factualdata on American city government.It includes articles by representativemen in their respective fields. Amongthese are one by Simeon E. Leland,professor of Political Science, on mu¬nicipal revenues; one by Mar.shallE, Dimock, associate professor ofPublic Administration, on adminis¬trative law; and ore by Albert Le-paws.ky, research as.sociate in Politi¬cal Science, on metropolitan districts.In a chapter entitled “Highlightsand Forecasts,” Louis Brownlow, lec¬turer in Political Science, gives asummary of the conclusions reachedby the other contributors, ■ /Frank Bane, director of the Pub¬lic Welfare association and lecturerin Public Welfare Administration atthe Universty, has written a chapterabout his field while George Benson,of the department of Sociology, col¬laborates in an article entitled “Le¬gal Cla-^^sification of Cities by States.”Included in the book is a sectiondevoted to lists of selected pamph¬lets, periodicals, and books for mu¬nicipal officials. The volume willserve as a handbook of informationand its sources on city government. A boxing tournament is to be run ■off in about three weeks. Those whoregister with Vorres are required toput in at least two weeks trainingbefoi-e they can enter the actual,comi>etition. DRUC STOnVMcise 'Ttte^oiipti&nistsLUNCHES AT A DISCOUNTCome in and get acquainted with our store manager, Mr. OreseWer.how you can get lunches at a discount.STINEWAY DRUG STORE57th at Kenwood-THE STUDENTS’ DRUG STORE" Ask himShelved by a Sheba?... 'You know the old story, but we just thoughtwe’d|ihform>you that the Box Office opened yester-lay^fdf this year’s Blackfriar Show. \telhl Brains We TrustTickets $.75 to $2.00 Evenings'c l ^ ^ $.50 to $1.00 Matinees... Tax Included1. SMART PEOPLE BUY NOW. When a silky siren snitches yourescort, there’s no consolation in saying what you think ofher... Brighten up by lightin’ up a sunny-smooth OldGold. It has a positive genius for raising your morale.