ttP!)e BaCip illaroonVol. 36. No. 47. Price 3 Cents UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. THURSDAY, JANUARY 9. 1936 Member United PressDefines Issuefor Campaignin Radio TalkRoosevelt Accuses Op¬ponents of DistortingFacts.WASHINGTON, Jan. 8—(UP)—President Roosevelt tonight definedthe impending election campaign asa fight for retention of popular gov¬ernment and appealed to all citizensfor aid in spreading factual inform¬ation to combat “an opposition benton hiding and distorting facts.”The president addressed some•J.dOO Democrats who attended themain dinner of a nation-wide celebra¬tion of Jackson day. By radio hiswords were carried to an estimatedquarter of a million party membersattending similar dinners in othercities, and to millions of Americansin their homes.The President’s only reference tothe sweeping set-back he sufferedwhen the Supreme Court killed theNew Deal farm program was towardthe end of the speech when he said:Reticent on AAA Decision“1 know you will not be surprisedby lack of comment on my part to¬night on the decision by the SupremeCourt two days ago. I cannot ren¬der offhand judgment without study¬ing, with the utmost care, two of themost momentous opinions ever ren¬dered in a case before the SupremeCourt of the United States."The ultimate results of the lan¬guage of these opinions will pro¬foundly affect the lives of Ameri- House AgricultureCommittee Workson AAA Substitute Temple Asserts Personality IsMan’s Distinguishing FeatureWASHINGTON, Jan. 8—(UP) —The House agriculture committee,headed by Rep. Marvin Jones, (D.,Tex.,) started work today on pro¬posed substitute for control plans toreplace the unconstitutional Agricul¬tural Adjustment Administration.New Deal leaders outside congress,meanwhile, maintained silence oncrop plans, preferring to wait forsuggestions from the farmers them¬selves when they meet here Fridayand Saturday. Scretary of Agricul¬ture Henry A. Wallace cancelled hisregular press conference scneduledfor today.He conferred with PresidentRoosevelt in mid-afternoon, and saidon emerging that no definite planhad been evolved yet.“We are considering everything,”he said.Meanwhile, the department ofjustice ordered its district attorneys(Continued on pngo 2)Prospects forPeace ImproveRecall of British Battle¬ships Eases Tensionwith Italy.ROME, Jan. 8—(UP)—Diplomat¬ic quarters tonight appeared slight¬ly more optimistic over prospects forearly peace and settlement of theEthiopian situation, which generallyans for years to come. It is enough I is cpnsidered here to be primarily ato say that the attainment of justice j matter between Italy and Greatand prosperity for American agri- j Britain.culture remains an immediate and I Reasons for this eased feeling ap-constant objective of my adminis-i peared to be:tration.” , 1. Reported withdrawal of severalComparison with Jackson ; British battleships from the Medit-The President pictured himself as i erranean, even if only temporarily,inheriting the same problems that ! since this was interpreted as aidingfaced Andrew Jackson and Thomas the possibility of a new solution to “The billiard ball goes where it ispushed—This may cause reflectionon some of us.”General laughter spread through¬out Mandel hall last night when theArchbishop of York, William Tem¬ple, made this statement in a lectureon the subject of “Personality inTheology and Ethics.” The implica¬tions of the statement were bared,however, when the noted Englishprelate explained that whereas thebilliard ball lacks personality andindividuality and “goes where it ispushed,” man usually acts con¬sciously with his personality, whichis divorced from temporal control,forcing him to react as an individualbeing. Such a condition marks manas more advanced than material orlower animate forms, he implied.Continuing his discussion fromTuesday night, advocating that trueknowledge is obtained from a con¬sideration only of all views, he sug¬gested the “thesis, antithesis, andsynthesis method of Hegel. “A syn¬thesis, he added, “is never reached,for in the true search of truth eachnew synthesis is a new thesis.”“I believe that political problemsin our generation and in those thatfollow are problems primarily oftheology. If it is true that the per¬sonality of man is divorced fromearthly things because it is affiliatedwith the personality of God, our so¬cial institutions in the future will re¬flect this arrangement. Russia hasadopted an opposite view and cer-Fandango StaffMeets to FormPlans Tomorrowthe East African conflict being pre¬sented during the forthcoming Gen-Jetferson. Both tnese figures in.■\inerican history, he said, fought toestablish “the broad philosophy that ; eva ses-sion opening January 20.decisions made by the average of the | Withdraw Egyptian Outpostsvoters would be more greatly endur- i 2. England is reported to haveing for, and helpful to, the nation” ; withdrawn Egyptian outposts somethan decisions by special classes en-ilOO miles further away from the(lowed with great social and econom- Lybian border, while Italy is said1C power."Jackson sought social justice and to have transferred an army divi-from Lybian posts to eastfought for human rights in his many Africa.liattles to protect the people against ! 3. European statesmen, who wereautocratic or oligarchic aggression,”.Mr. Roosevelt said."Hacked not only by his party butby thousands who had belonged toother parties or belonged to no par¬ty at all, Andrew Jackson was com-Iielled to fight every inch for theideals and policies of the Democraticrepublic in which he believed. Anoverwhelming proportion of the ma¬terial power of the country was ar¬rayed against him. The great mediafor the dissemination of informationand the moulding of public opinionfought him. Haughty and sterile in-tellectualism opposed him. Musty re¬action disapproved him. Hollow andoutworn traditionalism shook atrembling finger at him. It seemedsometimes that all were against himall but the people of the UnitedStates.History repeats—I am becomingdimly conscious of the fact that thisyear we are to have a national elec¬tion.”Recalling that Jackson had foughthis opponents by asking his support¬ers to create informal committees to^tet the facts and spread themabroad, Mr. Roosevelt said:‘To most of us Andrew Jacksonappropriately has become the sym¬bol of certain great ideals. I like best 1(Continued on page 2) worn out physically following ayear’s strain caused by the Italo-Ethiopian conflict and related mat¬ters, now are rested after the Christ¬mas holidays.4. There are no widespread re¬ports current in the internationalpress pertaining to some contemplat¬ed peace formula. •5. The jjroposed United Statesneutrality act is beginning to makethe nations realize it w'ould be most(Continued from page 2)THE ABCs{Contribu'.iona to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)•N RE: ROOSEVELT'S WEBAll history is but a seamless web;and he who endeavors to tell but apiece of it must feel that his firstsentence tears the fabric,* « *Sir Frederick Maitland as quotedSchuman, InternationalPolitics. Landon AdvocatesReplacement of AAATOPEKA, Kans., Jan. 8—(UP) —A farm program based on the longtime needs of agriculture as well ason the welfare of the entire countryshould be sought as replacement forthe fallen AAA., Governor Alf M.Landon said tonight.Landon advocated a programwhich would put “the Americanfarmer on a basis of complete domes¬tic euqality with the industrialist, soas to permit the free exchange ofgoods and services to their commonadvantage.”He spoke sympathetically of thelate AAA:“The AAA, sound or unsound as itmay have been in some of its longtime, permanent implications, never¬theless, was the only major agencyoperating to meet the admitted farmemergency.”‘The situation today emphasizesthe urgent need for a sound nationalland use policy. Our soil must notbe exhausted by wasteful methods.The farmer is entitled to expect forh^s crops a fair price comparable tothe prices of other commodities. Apolicy that places less emphasis onimmediate cash returns rebuilds thefertility of the soil and meets theproblems of flood control and oil con¬servation is impressed with nationalinterest.” Initial plans will be formulated forthe 1936 Midway Fandango at ameeting of the entire staff to be heldtomorrow at 3 in the Fandango of¬fice, Room 16, Lexington hall, Con¬nor I^aird, general manager, an¬nounced yesterday.This will be the first meeting ofthe staff following a poll of campusorganizations late last quarter on thequestion of the retention of the Fan¬dango as an annual activity. Resultsof this poll, according to Laird, werealmost unanimously in favor of hold¬ing the carnival again this year.One of the major changes in theplans for this year will be the length¬ening of the Fandango from two tothree days, Thursday, Friday, andSaturday, April 16, 17, and 18. Ten¬tatively scheduled as a feature of theopening evening’s program is a city¬wide bathing beauty contest, forwhich an indoor tank will be erect¬ed in the fieldhouse.All proceeds of the Fandango aredevoted to scholarship awards to de¬serving students in the University.Recipients of these scholarships willbe picked by the board of student di¬rectors of the Fandango, possibly onsome competitive basis.Laborite Talks atInternational HouseWith more than fifty new mem¬bers, International house is alreadywell under way on its winter quarterprogram of activities. At the regu¬lar supper next Sunday at 6, HowardY. Williams of the Farmer-Laborparty will discuss the question, “Isa Third Party Necessary?” RuthConant and Kenneth White will givea short program of viola and pianomusic.The occupant-of-the-week in theInternational house guest suite isChinese general Fang Chen-Wu, whorecently visited the Institute ofPacific Relations.Winter RegistrationShows Small IncreaseOver five thousand students haveregistered on the quadrangles to datethis quarter, with an increase of 5.25percent over last year for the sameperiod. The total so far is 5753,which does not include registrationfor the University College. Studentswho have not yet paid their tuitionmay still do so as the period for registration has not yet ended. tainly her institutions reflect the be¬lief.”“Man is so insignificant that theconnection he has with God makeshim seem to play'a greater part inthe world,” he pointed out showingthat the concept of God increaess theprestige of an individual’s personal¬ity even if it be necessary to “die tolive.”Leaving room for doubt and forindividual expression in man, HisGrace undertook a discussion ofethics in brief. “I do not believe thatthere are any strict rules of conductwhich do not have possible occasionto be broken,” he said in defense ofcertain killings which do not consti¬tute criminal murder as against theold “Thou Shalt not kill.”“Treat humanity in ourselves andin others always as an end, not ameans, the former Oxford scholaradvised. “Any system that treatslabor as a commodity, as somethingto be bought cheaply and sold dear¬ly is a vicious one.”One lecture remains to be given bythe Archbishop. Tonight at 8:15 inMandel he will conclude with a talkon “Christian Ethics in Applicationto Individuals and to Groups.”Temple UndogmaticBy WELLS D. BURNETTEQuite different from what onemight expect is this scholarly andcongenial high church dignatary whohas selected the University as theplace to deliver his foremost seriesof American lectures. He is a lib¬eral in thought, open to ideas andconviction with no assurance that heis “right” or his refigion the lastword.Such an impression was obtainedin an interview by the Daily Maroonlast night with the current Moodylecturer. “What did His Grace thinkof modern youth, its standards ofvalues, morality, and its future pos¬sibilities?” was the question pro¬posed.If the reporter had expected viewsbiased by narrow theology, he wouldhave been disappointd, for here arethe words as they came forth, fromthe stout, jolly-faced gentlemanfrom York:“I think that modern youth hashigh ideals—higher perhaps than tenyears ago. Young men and womenmay not accept the same moral,ethical, or religious customs as be-(Continued on page 2) Mirror Board HoldsTryouts for EleventhAnnual Presen tationGeneral tryouts for the 1936 Mir¬ror revue will be held Tuesday inMandel hall at 3:30, it was announc¬ed yesterday by the Mirror board.At this time all women who are in¬terested in dancing in the chorus,and men and women interested insinging or acting in the cast will begiven an opportunity to try out. Noexperience is necessary.The tryouts will be conducted bythe Mirror board, Frank H. O’Hara,and the new dance instructor whowill be announced later.It was also announced that allthose who wish to contribute skitsfor the show should hand them in tothe Mirror board immediately.This year’s production will be theeleventh show to be given by Mirror.The musical revue is presented an¬nually during the winter quarter bythe women of the University withthe assistance of a few selected men.The show will be held this year onMarch 6 and 7. I-F CommitteeAlters RushingDate ScheduleEndow NewProfessorshipPam Estate Gives Funidto Establish Chair inLaw School.Customs DelayOrchestra Music;Opera PostponedRevival of Gluck’s “Iphigenia inTauris” originally scheduled forJanuary 24 and 25 has been post¬poned until February 7 and 8, be¬cause orchestral scores ordered fromLeipzig have been held over in theNew York customs house.Starring many singers who haveappeared in former University pro¬ductions, the cast includes Mary AnnKaufman, Chicago concert singer, asIphigenia; Paul Pence and RobertLong, of the Chicago City * Operacompany as Orestes and Pylades;Earie Wilkie as Thoas, king ofTauris, and Alice Mary Baenziger asDiana.Miss Baenziger recently sang inthe American premiere of Respigli’s“La Fiauna” presented at the CivicOpera house in December. She alsoappeared in the University’s present¬ation of “Xerxes.” Mr. Wilkie wasthe baritone soloist in the UniversityBrahms Festival in 1933.Student Union HoldsOrganization Meeting Trustees of the estate of MaxPam, distinguished Chicago corpora¬tion lawyer who died in 1925, haveturned over to the University thesum of $85,000 for the use of theLaw school, it was announced yes¬terday by the President’s office.The fund will be used in setting upthe “Max Pam Professorship of Com¬parative Law.”Allocation of this sum to the Uni¬versity completes the distribution ofapproximately $350,000 which Mr.Pam’s will provided should be setaside for such educational and phil¬anthropic purposes as his trusteesmight designate.Rheinstein Fills ChairProfessor Max Rheinstein, of Ger¬many, brilliant young scholar ofcomparative law formerly on thefaculty of the University of Berlin,has been named by the Universityto the Pam chair. Professor Rhein¬stein has been on the University’slaw faculty since October, 1934, ona temporary basis. The Pam fundenables the University to make hima regular member of the law facul¬ty.In accepting the bequest the Uni-* (Continued on page 3) Change Affects LaterWeeks of RushingPeriod Only.Because the Interfraternity coun¬cil voted Tuesday evening to holdthe week of intensive rushing fromFebruary 4 to February 11, the ex¬ecutive committee of the council yes¬terday issued a revised list of lun¬cheons to which fraternities mayinvite freshmen prior to the rushingperiod.Since four fraternities. Alpha Del¬ta Phi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Alpha TauOmega, and Phi Delta Theta, hadalready held their first luncheons be¬fore the council’s decision was made,the changes will not affect them un¬til their second dates are reached.The revised schdule follows:Tuesday, January 14—Kappa Sig¬ma, Chi Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, PhiSigma Delta.Tuesday, January 16—Delta Kap¬pa Epsilon, Delta Upsilon, Phi BetaDelta, Phi Gamma Delta.Monday, January 20—Psi Upsil¬on, Sigma Chi, and Pi Lambda Phi.Wednesday, January 22—PhiKappa Psi, Beta Theta Pi, Zeta BetaTau.Friday, January 24—same as forJanuary 7.Tuesday, January 28—same as forJanuary 14.Wednesday, January 29—same asfor January 16.Thursday, January 30—same asfor January 20.Friday, January 31—same as forJanuary 22.It will be noted that the first lun¬cheon date of the second group isalso unchanged, for the committeebelieved that invitations for theseluncheons may have already beensent out. In his announcement, Wil¬liam Stapleton, president of thegroup, reiterated the fact that fresh¬men can be invited by a fraternityto only one of the two luncheons tobe held prior to the intensive rush¬ing week".In that connection, Stapleton saidthat a freshman can only be enter¬tained by a fraternity during one ofthe three periods during each dayof the intensive rushing week. An¬nouncement will be forthcoming asto the earliest date that the fraterni¬ties may send out invitations for theintensive period.English DepartmentAnnounces ContestsArrangements for establishing alocal chapter of the recently organ¬ized American Student union will bemade today at a meeting in HarperMU at 12:30. The proposed groupwill supplant the former SLID andNSL.Ralph W. Nicholson, editor of TheDaily Maroon, will be^ chairman ofthe first meeting. Quentin Ogren,member of the national executivecommittee of the ASU, will give areport of the December convention.Following the meeting a formal ap¬plication for recognition will be filedwith the Dean of Students.-I pluI wit Two annual writing contests, theJohn Billings Fiske in poetry andthe David Blair McLaughlin in crit¬ical essays, each carrying a $50 prize,will be held again this year, the Eng¬lish department has announced.Competition for the Fiske prize inpoetry is open to all students in anyschool or college of the University,although persons who have previous¬ly won the prize may not compete.No limitations as to length, subject,or form have been made. Entriesmust be submitted by April 1.The David Blair McLaughlin con¬test is open to students in the Col¬lege only and the award is given onthe basis of a critical essay of notmore than 30^0 or less than 1500words on some subject pertaining tohe Humanities or Social Sciences,he essay should be submitted to thenglish office, Ingleside 304, notlater than May 1. SAE WithdrawsLocal Chapter’sNational CharterJSF Holds Dancein Ida Noyes TodayDancing and refreshments are theprogram scheduled today by theJewish Student Foundation for agathering to be held in Ida Noyestheater. An orchestra will supply themusic for the dance which will startat 3:30. Admission is free and allstudents are invited to attend.Final plans are being made by theFoundation for its annual winterdance which will be held at the endof this month. Official information was receivedyesterday by William E. Scott, as¬sistant dean of Students, that thesupreme council of Sigma Alpha Ep¬silon fraternity had voted to with¬draw the charter of its chapter atthe University. However, the fra¬ternity asked permission to retainthe right to re-charter a chapter atthe University when and if condi¬tions were found to be favorable.Permission to retain this right hasbeen granted to SAE as it has beenin the past to fraternities withdraw¬ing charters from chapters at theUniversity.Lambda Chi Alpha and Tau DeltaPhi, which also became inactive earlythis year, still retain their nationalcharters. The chapter house of theformer has become a rooming housewhile that of the latter has beentaken over by the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary.Schmidt DescribesZoological ExpeditionThe experiences of years spent incollecting zoological material in Cen¬tral America will be the subject ofa talk today by Mr. Karl P. Schmidtof the Field museum. Mr. Schmidtis an authority on reptiles andamphibians in particular. He willtalk in room 14, Zoology building at8 and will illustrate his address withlantern slides.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1936Defines Issue \ England Recallsfor Campaign i as Peace*n Rcidio Ts-lk ItnpvovcsRoosevelt Accuses Op¬ponents of Distorting! shut off,p . ° I 6. The BritishrdCTS. I naval (Continued from page 1)difficult to carry on a prolonged warwith supplies from the United States(Continued from page 1)to think of him as a man whom theaverage American deeply and fund¬amentally understood. To the massesof his countrymen his purposes andhis character were an open book.They loved him well because theyunderstood him well—his passion forjustice, his championship of thecause of the exploited and the down¬trodden, his ardent and flaming pa¬triotism.Like Jacksonian Struggle“Because history so often repeats French and Italiandelegations in London aresaid to be working sympathetically.Personalities of WarAgainst these factors, regarded asfavorable in most diplomatic circles,is the formidable probleni of pre¬senting a solution to such differingpersonalities as Premier Benito Mus¬solini, British foreign secretaryAnthony Eden, Premier Pierre Lavaland Emperor Haile Selassie. Theopposite personalities of these states-makes presentation and approval ofa diplomatic peace plan highly dif¬ficult.Italian officials remain defiant anditself, let me analyze further. An- i certain of their positions, since theydrew Jackson stands out as a greatAmerican, not merely because he wastwo-fisted and fought for the people’srights but because, through his ca¬reer, he did as much as any man inour history to increase, on the partof the voters, knowledge of publicproblems and interest in their solu¬tion. Following the fundamentals ofJefferson he adhered to the broadphilosophy that decisions made bythe average of the voters would bemore greatly enduring for, and help¬ful to, the nation than decisionsmade by small segments of the elec¬torate representing small or specialclasses endowed with gi-eater advan¬tages of social or economic power.“History repeats—in these crowd¬ed monthsj as in the days of Jack-son, two great achievements standforth—the rebirth of the interestand understanding of a great citi¬zenry in the problems of the nationand an established government whichby positive action has proved its de¬votion to the recovery and well-beingof that citizenry.”EditoriaSurvey of Favorite MoviesReflect Campus TasteArchbishop of YorkProves Congenial,Liberal DignitaryThe Daily Maroon today polls itsreaders on their opinion of the bestmovies of the year. You may findthe list of 200 pictures of interest,and we hope that you will want tomake the appropriate checks and de¬posit the sheets in ballot boxes scat¬tered over the campus. , ,At best the survey will give us agood idea of the tastes of the Univer¬sity audience as compared with the“best” selections made by the pub¬lic at large. A full report of thefindings and comments on them willbe found in Fifth Row Center. Atworst the poll will leave you with asummary of the pictures of the year,and a convenient list of productions j (Continued from page 1)to keep. Had we the faith that one , j j j imetropolitan paper assumes, „e jwould say you could put it in your ‘"K. ""“S’ “> >■'-scrapbook. But, of course, you do |same.not have a scrapbook.—R. W. Nichol-j “Above all, they are sincere—son. f ! they have definite aims and interestswhich may be more than can be saidfor many of the helter-skelter gen¬erations before. The University isthe important thing for it will en¬able them to go far. The world canstill use these people.”Of course the religious visitorcould not be left without a questionon the future of political structures.He raised ’his hickory cane and rest¬ed his chin upon it, then continuedwith his Oxford accent, “Fascism hassucceeded corrupt or unstable gov¬ernments in order to straightenthem out for the time being. TheRussia of tomorrow will be totallydifferent from today. The Commun¬ist party is in power, but they do nothave Communism as yet ... . Re¬ligion is too deeply imbedded'in thepeople to expect Russia to ; continuewithout it.” Gideonse FlaysTheories BehindNeutrality BillsWith unequivocal scorn, Harry D.Gideonse, associate professor of Eco¬nomics, vigorously lashed presentcongressional proposals for neutral¬ity legislation before the K. A. M.temple at 50th street and Drexelboulevard last night in an addressentitled “Can America Remain Neu¬tral in Case of Another War?”“The present neutrality bills arein my judgment the worst jumble ofamateurish, ill-conceived, and im-1 practical proposals that has come outof Congress since the depression be-yan,” Gideonse said. “1 have nomen, especially Mussolini and Eden, j great admiration for the policy of‘leaving things as they were,’ but ifthe choice is between this and eitherthe Nye or the administration bill.I firmly believe in the wisdom ofleaving things alone.Encourage Aggression“The mischievous legislation nowproposed is based on the philosophyof ‘peace at any price.’ When didAmerican public opinion declare it¬self in favor of such a policy? Nogreat nation can possibly announcethis as its program without encour¬aging aggression. The policy canbest be characterized as ‘making theworld safe foj’ aggression.’ We aretelling Italy, Japan, Germany thatin case they choose to commit inter¬national crimes, we will officiallyoblige them by refusing to aid or sellanything to their victims that mightbe helpful in their hour of need.“This policy will encourage theforces plotting for war. It will al¬most certainly drive nations into re-new’ed pressure toward economicnationalism in an effort to becomeself-sufficient in those fields in whichare now dependent on tradefrom the United States. It will,therefore, result in permanent dam¬age to our export trade in peace aswell as war.Bills Will Collapse“We might console ourselves in thereflection that these bills will neverstand up under the strain of a prac¬tical emeigency. In my judgment,that is correct; they are fair-weath¬er’ pacificism.“If—to put things realistically—Germany gets around to that bom¬bardment of Ix)ndon for which theNazis are so industriously preparing,we may decide after all that we donot know the difference between sell¬ing oil or selling airplanes to the vic¬tim or to the aggressor.“Meanwhile the statute will havedone its evil work in decreasing theprestige of this country, in encour¬aging nationalism everywhere, andmisleading people as to the ultimateposition of this country in such con¬flicts as may arise.” ,believe many developments since theoutbreak of war in Ethiopia havebeen in Italy’s favor.They point out that even Eng¬land’s formidable threat of anchor¬ing a half-million tons of battleshipsin the Mediterranean, followed by theLeague of Nations adoption of sanc¬tions against Italy on tbe economicfront failed to cause Mussolini tohesitate in the Ethiopian campaign.Italy Equippedfor Long Siegein East AfricaNEW YORK, Jan. 8—(UH —Italian armies are prepared for aruthless war of two or three years topenetrate the center of Ethiopio in ' theyforce, Webb Miller, chief UnitedPress correspondent with the Italianexpeditionary force, said today.From a military standpoint. Mil¬ler said, the Italian army is equippedto wage a successful war. Althoughfighting almost unprecedented bat¬tles with climate and terrain. He sawthe greatest danger to the Italiancause in political and diplomaticconditions in Europe.Barring political imponderableshe said, the Italo-Ethiopian war maylast thre years.Miller saw the approaching sum¬mer rains. Due to begin in force inJune, as the test of the Italian mil¬itary machine that may decide theresult of the war.“Even the Italians’ superior mili¬tary equipment may not not beenough to overcome the Ethiopians,”he said.(Hijr iailg iKaraanFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,publish^ morningrs except ^turday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,winter, and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Telephones: Local 46 and Hyde Park 9221and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.All opinions in The Daily Maroon arestudent opinions, and are not necessarilythe views of the University administra-tion.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. / Subscriptionrates- $2.76 a year; $4 by-mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising repr^sentative National AdvertisingInc., 420 Madison Ave., New York; 400 N.Michigan Ave., ChiogpwRALPH NICHOLSON, Editor-in-Chief.ROBLAT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.RAYMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.HENRY f KELLEY, Desk Editor,JEANNE /. STOLTE, News Editor.Business associates; James Bernard,Don Elliott. Don Patterson. Roy War-shawsky.Editorial associates: Wells * Burnette.George Felsenthal, Julian Kiser, JohnMorris, James Snyder, Edward Stern.Night Editor: James SnyderAssistant: William McNeill Mt. Wilson Scientist ■Finds Smallest Star> MT. WILSON, Cal., Jan. 8—(UP)—Discovery of the smallest star yetknown, only 4,000 miles in diameter,was reported today. Surprised as¬tronomers found it weighs 620 tonsper cubic inch, has a gravity pull3,400,000 times stronger than theearth’s, and is enveloped in an at¬mosphere only 12 feet thick.Dr. G. P. Kuiper, who sighted thefaint white speck in the outer sky,said it was a rare “white dwarf”star. Out of the millions of visiblestars, only four or five white dwarfshave been seen with the Carnegie ob-Mrvatory’i 100-inch tel»Bcop* h**rpt AAAHouse AgricultureCommittee Workson AAA Substitute(Continued from page 1)to hold up all processing taxes tiedup by injunction suits until the Su¬preme Court had ruled on the RiceMillers case. The telegp-ams said theHoosac case, in which the court heldthe AAA was unconstitutional wasnot an injunction suit, and thereforethat the “distinct questions peculiarto injunction cases” be settled be¬fore the funds are released.The AAA notified <ts field agentsthat, the Supreme Court opinion didnot affect marketing agreements, or¬ders and licensing provisions.Five different plans were underconsideration by the house commit¬tee: ■1. A domestic allotment proposal.2. An export debenture plan.3. Appropriations to various statesif they establish adjustment pro¬grams.^ 4. Appropriations for land leasingfor soil conservation and other/pur¬poses.' 5. Appropriations' for conditionalpayments to individuals upon evi¬dence of compliance with a reductionprogram. , ;•Propose Amendment, Representative Vito Marcantonio,(Rep., N. Y.) introduced a proposedconstitutional amendment to givethe federal government power to es-tabli.sh uniform laws for regulationof agriculture and industry.Administration leaders, however,apparently have put aside considera¬tion of the constitution amendmentidea, at least temporarily.Meanwhile, officials said that corn,cotton and other commodity loansamounting to $269,709,894 made bythe commodity credit corporationand not been affected by the Su¬preme Court decision killing the Gosnell AnalyzesPolitical Viewsof City's VotersThe unemployed, foreign born Cath¬olics, people paying low rents, andI poor people generally in the Chicagoregion voted for Senator JamesI Hamilton Lewis in 1930 and Presi-j dent Roosevelt in 1932, while men ofI wealth, scions of old Protestant fam¬ilies, women with money and leisurevoted Republican, according to anarticle by Dr. Harold F. Gosnell, as¬sociate professor of Political Sci¬ence, and his assistant, Norman N.Gill, in the current issue of theAmerican Political Science review.“I am convinced that the same peo¬ple will support President Rooseveltand the New Deal again in 1936,”said Dr. Gosnell yesterday, “andthe same line-up as 1932 and beforewill hold for the Republicans.”Status Affects VoteDr. Gosnell and Mr. Gill foundpositive statistical relationshipamong the following factors: Roose¬velt vote, 1932; I^ewis vote, 1930;Smith vote, 1928; Catholic origins,foreign birth, unemployment, lowrental areas, and straightticket vot¬ing. The article is the result ofmore than a year’s research.The article states: “In the pasttwo decades, the political behaviorof the citizens of Chicago in nation¬al elections has been similar to thatof the entire American electorate.Except for the election of 1916, whenHughes carried the city by a narrowmargin, the presidential candidatewho carried Chicago also carried theelectoral college. In many waysChicago is typical of the UnitedStates as a whole in the twentiethcentury. It is a cross-section of themixture of races, religions, sects, lin¬guistic groups, and economic classesthat make up modern .America.Underdog Attracts Lower Classes“Looking at the figures from abroad point of view, the party whichenjoys least success over a period ofyears tends to attract to it those ele¬ments which have the least socialprestige and economic security.”The long period of Republicansupremacy resulted in the tradition¬al northern Democratic vote beingpersons of Catholic origin, of foreignbirth, and the unemployed . Thesegroups voted strongly for A1 Smithin 1928, Lewis in 1930, and Rooseveltin 1932.“There were many exceptions tothe general tendency for poor peopleto .swing more decidedly than therich in the direction of the Demo¬ cratic party in 1932. The areaswhere unemployment hit the hardestwere those which wer^ alreadystrongly Democratic in 1928. To in¬crease the Democratic vote in theseareas was a difficult task, since therewere some Republicans who could notbe moved from their party allegi¬ance even by economic adversity. Alleconomic groups were affected ad¬versely by the economic crisis whichstarted in 1929. All levels relieved some of their tensions by votingagainst the party in power.” ^DREXEL theatreSS8 E. IlrdTHURSDAY & FRIDAY‘‘GRAND EXIT”withEdmund Lowe - Anne SouthernOnCLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE. $110 Saxophone for$50. E flat just cleaned, repadded,like new, guaranteed. HitchcockHall, Rm. 6.FOR RENT—Half of double room.Man student. $2.50. With dinners$4.50. Fairfax 3741. 6040* Elli.sAvenue.LOST. Green Shaeffer fountain 1pen. Reward. Call Richard A. Ma- 1loney. 410 Judson Court. | speaking termswith the skyFar above the clouds, on all the leading airlines, yourpilot is always within hearing and speaking distanceof airports—via Western Electric radio telephone.This equipment, made by the manufacturing unit of theBell System, is helping the airlines to set a notable recordfor fast, safe transportation. Teletype—another Bell Systemservice — speeds printed weather information to airports.Long Distance and local telephone facilities, too, playimportant parts in airline operations.Bell System services reach out in many directions tothe benefit of industry and commerce.You can **fly** home by telephone, ina couple of minutes. Why not do it ktonight? Station^to-Station rates arelowest after 7 P. M,IIKLL TKI.I<:i»ll4L\l<: >iVSTI<:.>lIJ If You Want.... up to the minute information on campus affairs . . .complete Information on Intramural and Inter collegiatecompetition . . . witty columns . . i forceful editorials . . .graduate, fraternity, society news . . . the latest news ofthe campus . . .READTHE DAILY MAROONSubscription for the Winter and Spring Quarters$2.00 '.K' '-sk-a,'fSTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1936 Page ThreeGulliverfay Stops Faculty Mindsfor No Gainyesterday Gulliver said Ber-wanger should succeed PresidentHutchins. Then stooge no. 49, faith¬ful Nell Fuqua, after sneaking frombehind the sofa in Dean Gilkey’shouse, reported the following, andGulliver is even more sure that greatthings will come of Jay.After the Wisconsin basketballjrame a group of faculty membersjrathered at the Dean’s residence—and with them was the All All-Amer¬ican. Conversation swung to parlortricks, puzzles, enigmas, and Jaymodestly kept out of the picture. Afootball player could hardly stand achance against University of ChicagoMinds. But the professors pleaded,so Jay took the floor. lie startedwith a simple one involving threetumblers on a table, and held DeanGilkey at scrimmage for fifteen min¬utes. Then he reversed his field andtried a verbal mental test on profes¬sor A. H. Compton. The professor,winner of the Nobel Prize in physics,flunked. President Hutchins willprobably take another trip to Ha¬waii.* * *Gulliver won’t say whether or not |nicknames are an indication of char¬acter, but some fascinate him:John Egemejrer—BoxheadHoward Durbin—PunjabBill Rots—Wholesale, or WoombaCharley Hoy—Pretty boyClarence Wright—ClaraGraham Fairbank—Weasel iDick Wassem—PossumJohn Dudgeon—Bottle !Hiram Kennicott—Harum |Dave LeFevre—GoonMerritt Bush—Merry IJack Woolams—Buffalo |..But this is practically sexless... ;Do YOU know a good GIRL’S nick- [name—that Gulliver can print? Send ;it in...and Gulliver will award a!nice shiny chrome-plated new one to !YOU for your very own. ;* * *Howie Vernon gave Marie Wolfan engagement ring, with all appro- |priate sentiment attached, for iChristmas. Both are juniors, and jprobably know what they’re doing..4nd in feminine handwriting comesthe following: “Hey! This is leap |year! Harriet Nightingale is the Ilucky girl. She just got Marcus Co- |hen’s pin! Congrats to her!’’ j* * *GULLIVER WISHES he were a !little club girl so he could drive his !car into the circle and shout andthrow snowballs and things.. .Gladyou have decided to stop drinkingyour lunch, Milt McKay. . .and if thefraternity man can keep the rushing !dates straight they will be lucky... |or did we have pledging last week,Interfraternity Council?vs*FOR THE INTERCLUB ball Gul¬liver has added ten fine new stoogesto his payroll... and who did AnitaHoms ask.... or who asked you,Heindel?.. .Oh yes, the Ball shouldbe a success. The Mortar Boardsdon’t like the time or place, but theyhave doggedly decided to put itacross anyway. i* V V IFairbank—Fight off Mary Anne ^Mathews. i Colby Speaks onSpacing of Citiesin Lecture TodayThe conclusions of an unprece¬dented study in the spacing of largecities will be presented today byCharles C. Colby, professor of Geog¬raphy, when he lectures on '‘WorldDistribution of Urbanization’’ in So¬cial Science 122 at 3:30. Dr. Colby’slecture, the first, of a series of sixhe will deliver during the quarter,will be illustrated with lanternslides.Dr. Colby’s study, in which he hasbeen engaged for the past two years,is one in the “measurement withemphasis on spacing’’ throughout theworld of cities of over 100,000 pop¬ulation. Indicating that his majordifficulty was in securing statisticsfrom the sixty-odd nations of theworld. Dr. Colby indicated that thereare now 626 cities coming into hiscategory of major cities.By spotting these 626 cities onmaps. Dr. Colby has revealed a num¬ber of interesting and significantfacts with regard to urban distribu¬tion. While large cities of Asia areconcentrated between the thirtiethand fortieth parallels of latitude, themetropolitan belt in North Americais concentrated just north of latitude40 degrees, and major cities of Eu¬rope lie close to the fiftieth parallel.A great majority of major cities arein the northern hemisphere whileover two-thirds are within 200 milesof a sea coast.The honor of being the most iso¬lated American city of over 100,000falls to El Paso, Texas which is over500 miles distant from any other ma¬jor city. Of major cities east of theMississippi, New Orleans is most iso¬lated, being over 300 miles fromcompetitors.Dr. Colby’s lecture today is close¬ly related to his next two lectureson “Urban Spacing in Distinctive Re¬gions of the United States’’ and“Comparative Analysis of SelectedUrban Patterns’’ which will be givenon following Thursdays.Local LiteratiBy MARTIN GARDNERThe University press recently re¬leased an edition of Gertrude Stein’*“Narration,’’ a collection of the fourlectures which she delivered on thecampus last March. “These lecturesin their method and in their contentare brilliant examples of the breadthand movement of energy that theperspective of time will reveal tohave been our characteristic,’’ wroteThornton Wilder in his introduction.In connection with the publicationof this book, the feature article inthe January Real America magazineis creating no small furore of inter¬est in certain circles of the city. Inthe article Rousseau Voorhies, agentfor an eastern publishing firm, ex¬plains how he and Miss Stein appar¬ently managed to hoodwink a gul¬lible American public. Voorhies andBernard Fay, French historian,formed part of Stein’s inner circleat Paris; and according to the ar¬ticle the three of them—Fay, Stein,and Voorhies—were responsible forCharley Hoy, a girl from Free¬port, and a pin. Denial tomorrow.Berwanger—“Stop it, Judy.’’Today on theQuadranglesLecture*William Vaughn Moody Founda¬tion lecture: “Christian Ethics inApplication to Individuals and toGroups.’’ The Most Reverend theArchbishop of York, William Tem¬ple. Mandel hall, 8:15.Social Science lecture. “World Dis¬tribution of Urbanization.’’ Profes¬sor Charles C. Colby. Social Science122 at 3:30.Meeting*Sociology club. “Individualizationand the Classification and Treatmentof Criminals.’’ Dr. Paul L. Schroe-der. State Criminologist, Illinois De¬partment of Public Welfare. SocialScience 122, at 7:30.American Student union. HarperMil at 12:20.Interclub. Ida Noyes sun parlor at12.Pi Delta Phi. YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 12.Dames. South recreation room ofIda Noyes at 2.Jewish Student foundation. IdaNoyes theater at 2:30.Outing club. Reynolds club. RoomC. 2:30 to 4:30. planning and executing as a literaryhoax the notorious “Four Saints’’opera. Several references are madeto Wilder whose enthusiastic cham¬pioning of Miss Stein has become amuch discussed literary phenomenon.A closing blurb about another in¬stallment suggests that the Univer¬sity is due for a rap next month.tl should be needless to say thatarticles in Real America must beread cautiously. Editor Edwin Baird(who used to edit Real DetectiveTales) boosts his circulation bymuckraking such things as can beeasily and harmlessly muckraked,and a nice little Real America ar¬ticle could be written about it.Schmitt DiscussesU. S. Foreign PolicyBernadette Schmitt, chairman ofthe department of History, will ad¬dress the Chicago Council on ForeignRelations at a luncheon meeting inthe Palmer House Saturday on thesubject, “American Foreign PolicySeen from Abroad.’’Profesor Schmitt recently return¬ed from a seven months’ trip toEurope and the Far East, one of theprincipal purposes of which was tocheck the reaction of governmentand industrial centers toward Amer¬ican foreign policy. He is the authorof numerous books and articles oninternational affairs, of which thebest known is “The Coming of theWar—1914,’’ winner of the Pulitzerprize in 1931. Fraternity Row. By George FelsenthalFounded at theUniversity ofPennsylvania i n1850, Phi KappaSigma charteredits Chicago chap¬ter in 1905. Scat¬tered throughoutthe country thereare now 37 activechapters.At present thereare 14 active mem¬bers and 5 pledgesin the locai chap¬ter. The house,which is located at5 7 3 3 Universityavenue, is one ofthe largest on thecampus, and isrented by thealumni to the chapter. The fraterni¬ty has three chapters in the Chicagometropolitan area, at Chicago,Debate UnionMeets NotreDame UniversityContinuing its extensive prepara¬tions for the coming national andregional tourneys, the University De¬bate union met Notre Dame univer¬sity at Mishawaka high srhool nearSouth Bend last night. Irving Axel-rad and Victor Lipsman composedthe team which defended the affirm¬ative of the question, “Resolved, Thatthe several states should provide com¬plete medical care to all per¬sons at public expense.’’Tuesday night Jacob Ochstein andLipsman held a round table discus¬sion with Rockford college in theWestmont high school. This was giv-I en as a unit of the national forumI and to the best of Debate coach JohnI Stoner’s knowledge this was the firstj time that such a roundtable had beenconducted by college teams.A meet will take place Mondaynight at the Michigan City highI school with Northwestern universityj on the proposition of whether theSupreme court should have the rightto nullify acts of Congress. ByronI Kabot and Jacob Ochstein will ap-! pear for the University. PHI KAPPA SIGMANorthwestern and Armour; and thecombined alumni total almost 900.In activities, there are two menon the debating team, two in theband, and one in the orchestra. Fourmen are members of Blackfriars, oneworks pn The Daily MarotJn staff,and five men, including the buildingsand grounds manager, are membersof Fandango. In athletics two menare on the golf team, two are out forbaseball, two are on the track team,and one member is cocaptain of thegym team. There are two membersof Phi Beta Kappa and a Rhodesscholar in the house.As for finances, the initiation feeis $50. Active men living in the housepay $40 a month for room and board,while members Jiving elsewhere pay$115 a month. Pledges pay $10 amonth.Officers of the house are LarryGrandall, Paul Brown, Elmer Ness-ler, and Arthur Hansen. Members inthe faculty include Charles Colbyand James McKinsey.Max Pam TrusteesEndow New Chairof Comparative Law(Continued from page 1)i versity’s Board of Trustees states:“Mr. Pam was not only a distinguish¬ed member of the Chicago bar but asocially-minded citizen, sincerely in¬terested in the improvement of thelaw. It is fitting, therefore, that hismemory should be perpetuatedthrough the instrumentality of aa professorship devoted to the com¬parative study of the principal legalinstitutions and systems of the worldwith a view to the improvement ofour own.’’Found* Journali*m SchoolDuring his lifetime Mr. Pam, im¬bued with a conviction of the im¬portance of the press in the develop¬ment of an intelligent public opin¬ion, and the importance of maintain¬ing high journalistic ideals, foundedthe School of Journalism at NotreDame university in 1912. Among hismany other benefactions were theestablishment of social science schol¬arships at Catholic university,Washington, D. C.; contributions tothe New Hebrew university on Mt.Scopus in Jerusalem; and a $50,006gift for the industrial upbuilding ofPalestine.Among previous beneficiajries ofhis estate have been the MichaelReese Hospital, to which the trusteesallocated $150,000 for the Max PamMetabolic clinic which was opened in1933, the scholarship association forJewish children, the United charitiesof Chicago, and the Associated Jew¬ish charities of Chicago. Contribu¬tion was also made to the building ofthe bandshell in Grant park.' Professor Rheinstein, first incum¬bent of the Pam chair, is 37 yearsold. He graduated at the Universityof Munich, has served for sevenyears on the Comparative Law Re¬search institute of Munich and Ber¬lin, and has been co-editor of theyearbook of the Italian institute ofcomparative law. His most import¬ant publication is a volume on theAnglo-American law of contracts.The gift is one of the largest theUniversity has received from an in¬dividual source this year. The Lawschool has one other especially en¬dowed chair, named for John P.Wilson. Interclub CouncilSelects Chaperonesfor Dance TomorrowChaperones for the third annual In-tercFub dance to be held tomorrownight at Vassar house have been an¬nounced by the Interclub council.They are as follows: Dr. and Mrs.Fred Adair, Mr. and Mrs. H. A.Basilius, Dr. and Mrs. William E.Carey, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Carr,Mr. and Mrs. Charles Elander, Mr.and Mrs. B. F. Ellis, Mr. and Mrs.George Fairweather, Mr. and Mrs.W. J. Graham, Mr. and Mrs. WilliamT. Hutchinson, Dr. and Mrs. H. B.Lemon, and Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Luck-hardt.Also included are: Mr. and Mrs.William B. Mather, Mr. and Mrs.T. Nelson Metcalf, Mr. and Mrs.John V. Nef, Mr. and Mrs. M. S.Pittman, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Raney,Mr. and Mrs. William Scott, Mr. andMrs. F. E. Stolte, Miss Mary JoShelley, Mr. and Mrs. Herman I.Schlesinger, Dr. and Mrs. William A.Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. H. G.Thompson, and Mr. and Mrs. AaronJ. Brumbaugh.Schroeder Speaksat Sociology Club“Individualization in the Classifi¬cation and Treatment of Criminals’’will be discussed by Dr. Paul L.Schroeder, state criminologist of theIllinois department of Public Wel¬fare and director of the Institute forJuvenile Research, at a public meet¬ing of the Sociology club, tonight at7:30 in Social Science 122. Afterthe meeting tea for members of theSociology club will be served in theSocial Science tea room. jDr. Schroeder is a nationallyknown psychiatrist and an expert onsocial and psychological factors injuvenile delinquency. Press Releases Bookby Bernard J. Tobin“What Becomes of the Consumer’sMeat Dollar?,’’ a study by BernardJ. Tobin, released recently by theUniversity press, bears an introduc¬tion by Howard C. Greer, directorof the Institute of Meat Packingshere.Mr. Tobin’s analysis covers the tenyear period from 1925 to 1934, andindicates that the producers of meatanimals receive half of the consum¬er’s dollar, while the remainder is di¬vided in varying proportions amongretailers, wholesalers, processors, andagencies.The study quotes detailed figureson the above, finds differences in therelation of the values of inedible toedible by-products, and includes ananalysis of the divisions of the mar¬gins of distributors and processorsas between various types of expens¬es and profits.Cox Leaves City toParticipate in ForumBecause he is assisting in a city¬wide forum in Des Moines, Iowa,Garfield V. Cox, profesor of finance,will not be in residence for the win¬ter quarter.Professor Cox, for 15 years a stu¬dent of cycles, booms, and depres¬sions, will deliver a series of lec¬tures on “Can Business DepressionsBe Prevented?’’Ideal accommoda¬tions for studentsand faculty.HARVARD HOTEL“24-Hour Service”5714 Blackstone Ave.Have You BoughtYour DecemberCOMMENT?SCHOLASTICISM — OLD AND NEW—David RobbinsTHE SPECTRE — Georg MannOMPHALOS— Donald MorrisAMERICAN ART — V. P. QuinnFICTION — VERSE — SATIRE15c at Cobb Standand BookstoreDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1936Phi Delts, Psi U, Dekes Wirtin Opening Round of I-M MeetThere will be no Intramuralbasketball games scheduled untilnext Tuesday.In games generally characterizedby pretty ragged playing with a fewflashes of mid-season form, the win¬ter quarter Intramural basketballtourney got under way in Bartlettgym last night with twelve games inthe fraternity leagues, with fouroutstanding games attracting themajor portion of attention.On the first card. Phi Delta Theta,“doped” to earn a piece of I-M cagehonors, took an Alpha Delt five intocamp, 32-15, leading by a safe mar¬gin at the half. Kacena and Gran-ert topped the scoring column forthe winners with six tosses each; Hoyand Beverly leading the losers.Psi U WinsThe Psi U five, winners of lastyear’s fraternity and Universitychampionships and considered bycampus dopesters as one of the topprospects to take a good share inthe championships again, swampedthe Zeta Bete quintet, 47 to 6. Staple-ton, Button, Bickel, and Upton leadthe Psi U quint while Perretz tookZ. B. T. scoring honors.The Dekes split honors for the eve¬ning; the the “B” squad was nosedout by the Phi B. D. “B” team, 20-15 and the regulars shutting out PhiGamma Delta, 16-15 in one overtimeperiod. Ware and Jones led the “B”squad for the Dekes and Howard andNelson led the regulars. Lotka andNelson led the Phi B. D. “B” boysand Englehart and Le Boy the PhiGams.Beta Five LosesMeanwhile, Chi Psi rolled up a17-11 score over the Beta squadwith Schmitz and Groassamn lead- , lengberger led the top flight men* for the D. U.’s and Michna and Op-j perman for the Kappa Sigs. On theI long end of a 38-12 score, the PhiSigs won over a Phi Kappa Sig or¬ganization, leading the play allthrough the tilt. Krause and Spit-zer led .the Phi Sigs and Nessler ledthe Phi Kappa Sig boys.In the first of the evening’s “B”team games, the Phi Delts ran overthe Alpha Delt “B” boys, 30-11. Heldto a fairly close margin of 8-2 ^t theend of the half. Phi Delta Thetastepped out and rolled up twenty-twopoints. Soderlind and Delaney tookscoring honors for the Phi Dejj;s andOlsen for the Alpha Delt five. Inthe other “B” team game scheduledon this bill, Sigma Chi “B” default¬ed to the Psi U “B” squad.Sigma Chi. leading all through thegame, upset the Phi B. D. outfit tothe tune of 27-31, with Wehling andSivering and Cornish leading thescoring column. The final gameon the card went to the Phi Sig “B”quintet by a score of 26-5. Coach NamesPromising FirstY eeir Trackmen Maroon Gigemen Emphasize Speed Alumni Judgesin Pre-Game Workouts for Purdue Poll All-TimeMaroon TearNetherton and BergmanLead in Quarter MileEvent.Tennis ProspectsTake Upturn asPractice OpensHopes for another Big Ten ten¬nis crown look up as three veteranlettermen and three of the outstand¬ing freshman last year reported forwinter practice in the field house.The squad will practice daily at 11.Although the postion of TrevorWeiss, captain of last year’s squad,will be hard to fill, either CaptainNorman Bickel or Norbert Burgessshould show the Minnesota, andNorthwestern squads a fight for top re-Several good prospects haveported to Coach Norman Root, fresh¬man track mentor, with Lawson andBergman outstanding in the dashesand quarter mile alopg with Nether¬ton in the latter event. Nethertonalso shows possibilities in the hurd¬les, where at present, he is the lead¬ing prospect.In the field events. Max Hawkins,a transfer student from a Californiajunior college, is showing to advan¬tage in the pole vault where he isalready clearing 12 feet. Mort Good-stein in the discuss and shot andLew Hamity in the shot are the lead¬ing candidates in these events.Event ChampionshipCoach Root wants all men who in¬tend to report to do so by the endof this vNek, when he plans to startweekly competition among the can¬didates with the view to crowning achampion in each event.Also of interest to track fans isthe news that Ray Ellinwood, vars¬ity runner, yesterday ran a quartermile in 48.8, conference champion¬ship time. If he maintains nis rec¬ord EHinwood wUl be a favorite towin conference honors. At presenting the scoring for the Lodge boys j places. Mike buhl, second stringand Hench and Davis for the Betas.On the same bill, a strong Phi Psiaggregation overwhelmed the ATOorganization, coming out on the longend of a 35-5 score. Hathaway, astar in last year’s I-M play, led thePhi Psi’s with Murphy leading theATO’s.A fast working D. U. outfit tookthe Kappa Sig boys by a score of28-8. Lester, Dick Adair, and Shal-Ball Squad’s ChancesAppear Brighter asEight Veterans ReturnWith more than twenty men re¬porting to open the 1936 campaignof the Maroon baseball squad. CoachKyle Anderson is optimistic over histoam’s chances in the light of the re¬turn of several veterans from thesuccessful 1935 squad and the addi¬tion of several promising sophmores.Veterans returning are Laird,Kacena, Kurk, Vaneck, Yeddor, Nes-slor, Bernard, and Shipway. Out¬standing among the new men areWhite. Trojka, Edwards, Gold, Nie-man, Dean and Mastrofski, Admund-sen, Gordon, and Haarlow, who areat present on the basketball squad,will bolster up the squad next spring.The team is lacking in sufficientoutfield strength, and reserve catch¬ing material, with all positions openat present. The infield will be strongdue to fine sophomore material anda veteran combination, but at pres¬ent there are at least two weak spotsin the outfield.A one week spring training tripduring spring vacation is being plan¬ned and in addition, the schedulemay feature some games with Wa-•seda. University of Japan.Ice Hockey TeamsReport for PracticesWith fifteen men reporting at theTuesday meeting. Coach Dan Hofferannounced yesterday that hockeypractice will be held each afternoonat the rink from 3 to 4:30 with eve¬ning practice periods at 7:30 forthose students unable to make theafternoon periods.Plans are being made for intra¬mural, freshmen and varsity com¬petition with the possibility that theteams may play various other ama¬teur squads throughout the city.According to Hoifer, freshmanprospects in ice hockey are shapingup as well as varsity material.Since more players are expectedto turn out before the end of theweek, there will be no definite plansmade until all the players are linedup. V last year, will be fighting for a var¬sity berth and is a factor to be con¬sidered when the final four arepicked in the spring.Freshmen Bolster SquadJohn Shostrum, Russ Baird, andSoi Friedman, outstanding freshmannetmen last year, will bolster thesquad materially. Shostrum was oneof the ‘ outstanding players in thecity two years ago, but seems to haveslipped a little in 1935. However,he should have an excellent chancefor a varsity position althougheither Baird or Friedman may showphenomenal improvement. RussBaird was an Oak Park star whoshowed up well in yearling practice.He is a consistent player, but lacksthe essential height.Bickel Big Ten WinnerCaptain Norman Bickel was win¬ner in the second section of the BigTen meet last spring and will be oneof the conference leaders again thisyear. With Norbert Burgess heforms one of the smoothest workingdoubles teams in the Mid-west, beingranked as first in the city last sum¬mer.Norbert Burgess, playing no. 4man in the matches at Northwestern ilast spring, came through stiff op¬position to win that section of con¬ference play. He will probably ad¬vance to no. 2 man this year. Chicago has an excellent chance ofsweeping the quarter in its meetsdue to the presence of three goodmen on the squad, Ellinwood, Hal-crow and Tipshus. Dazzling speed will be the key¬note when Purdue’s flashing team offive “forwards” attempts to burnout the Maroon defence in the Field-house Saturday night at 8. The con¬test is the second conference tiit foreach team.Speed will zip from the herfs ofBob Kessler, all-American hoop shotartist, and Jewell Young, giant free-shooting sophomore, as they attemptto leap past Bob Fitzgerald and Ken¬dall Petersen, the Midway’s fastestguards.Haarlow vs. KesslerSpeed will also whirl behind BillHaarlow as he again challenges Kess¬ler to a struggle for scoring and all-American honors. But the entireMaroon line-up will have to cut theair to keep up with what assistantcoach Kyle Anderson, who scoutedthe Purdue-Ohio State tilt, aptlyterms “the five-forward Boilermakerteam.”Seward, six-foot nine-inch center,and Lambert, rushing guard, will addmore height to Purdue’s speed. Onthe other hand, Paul Malaska, theother guard who starred againstOhio State in the conference open¬er, relies solely on his rapidity andball-handling, since he stands a di¬minutive five-feet ten inches, almostdwarfish for Big Ten cagers.The Boilermakers boast a strongadvantage in comparative scores,having quelled Ohio Statewhile Chicago lost to Wisconsin, adecisive victim of the Bucxeyes.However, Coach Nelson Norgrenexpects his rapidly-improving Ma¬roon quintet to present a surprisingresistance against the third succes¬sive championship dash of Purdue.The entire University squad yes¬ terday worked strenuously on floorplays and defense in preparation forthe fast-breaking Purdue system.Every man is in good condition.Start Same TeamCoach Norgren yesterday plannedto start the same team which Sat¬urday night almost surpassed Wis¬consin, which tied the Boilermakersand the Illini for the conferencecrown last year.The Badgers played an entirelydifferent game from that whichCoach Lambert has devised for Pur¬due. The former advance deliberate¬ly, and often rely upon long shots.The latter try to free Kessler or anyof the other five somewhere near thebasket. It remains to be seenwhether Chicago can again maintaina close score to the end.Rapid ImprovementBecause of the rapid jAII Pick BerwangeLarge Majority LiWalter Eckersall.ment of the Maroons who did notcommence basketball practice untilafter the football season, the teamwill probably surpass last week’s per¬formance. Gordon Petersen willprobably see action at center, espe¬cially when Elliott replaces Sewardfor Purdue. The latest escapade of those vare so fond of tabulating facts sopinions is the choosing of an PTime Chicago football team in 1Alumni magazine for DecembOver 57 players are recommended10 “serious minded” judgesconsideration.These gridiron savants, who sbbe known by their pen-names of EQuixote, a Poor Judge, Walter CaiII, pro Bono Publico, etc. agreion only one point—Berwanger! E; they also gave a pretty large rimprove-1 votes to Walter EckersjAnother Maroon wnom Norgrenexpects to break into the game Sat¬urday is John Eggemeyer, swiftsophomore forward. Purdue replace-36-27, • ments, practically as strong as thestarters, will probably includeDowney at forward and Smith atguard.If the Chicago quintet is “hot,”and if Haarlow continues to outscoreKessler as he has so far this season,the Boilermaker speed may cOme tonaught. proponent of a lost art—dropkickiiPoll Result!Results of the Poll are:Rouse and Des ^aipdien at centPondelik. Ahlswede, Meigs, aMaxwell at guards; McGuire, ShiFarr, and Higgins at tackles; Clin, Crisler, Page, and Schommerends; and Berwanger, EckersiHerschberger, J. Thomas, SteffKennedy, Hamill, and Norgjenbacks.Personally, Don Quixote selectWilliam Rainey Harper at centThomas C. Chamberlin and RolD. Salisbury at guards, Harry PrJudson and Paul Shorey at tacklMax Mason and Robert M. Hutchat ends; Thomas W. Goodspeed, 1nest D. Burton, Albert A. Michson, and Frederick Starr in \backfield.Drop Golf PracticesUntil Spring QuarterAs.sistant Coach Kyle Andersonrecently announced the suspensionof winter golf activities due to thelack of attendance at classes.Golf will officially begin in theSpring Quarter when the Freshmenand Varsity Squads begin practicefor the Spring competition. At pres¬ent, the driving net under the weststand is open to anyone wishing touse it during the winter months.Sign Up Today forWAA Toboggan PartyAll men or women interested ingoing on a toboggan party to beheld at Palos park Saturday after¬noon are asked to sign up either inCobb library or the Ida Noyes lockerroom before 6 today.The group will leave Ida Noyes at1 Saturday and will return ix) IdaNoyes for refreshments afterwards.The party is sponsored by the WAAand the expense will amount to ap¬proximately thirty cents a person. CONTEST EXTENDED!UNTILNoon, January 17tliWhen this billiard table will be given to the FRATER¬NITY which has sold the greatest number of subscrip¬tions to the1936 CAP and gownA Larger and More Complete Record of YourUniversity Year.TIiE TAILY ?/AROONfirst annuaTj film fill(films released January let to DeceinVer ^Ist, IQ^S, ind.)V, maior filir^ released durin? the past year are given in the following•r, voters iro aeked to check ten filioE which they consider to have teen the'•- j ,iMr-incT I'^ ie not necessary to arrange these choices in order,h::- rucr: checi"o t^^left of the ten pictures you choose. Hecultc of the''T -.-m bo nublishod next v;ook in The Daily Aaroon.^Ballots my he dopoeited in hoxes placed in the following locations:Mandel Hall CloistersInternational House Information DeskCchh Hall Library "Daily JAaroon" ffficeIda Noyes Hall Check RoomHarper Library Main Reading RoomAccent on Youth\fter Office HoursAh ’VildornessAl'.'i IkeAlice Adams _Alte und der Junre Hoenitr, Der iv*;Anna KareninaAnnarolis FarewellAnnie Onklevtaloona^-ar^ary Coast^ecky SharpBic Broadcast ofl9^6^iov^raphy of a Bachelor Jirl^^ishcr Misbehaves, TheBlack FurvBordertownBreak of HeartsBride Comes Horn, The'■•ride FrankensteinBricht LightsB r oa way C end c 1 i e r^roadway Melody of 10^6Call of the WildCa''tain Bl^odCardinal RichelieuChina 3oasCla: rvo'/ant, TheChaeayev (3)Clive of IndiaCol 1 of’iateCountv Chairman, TheCrime et Chatimont (F)Crime and PunishmentCrise et Finio, La (F)Crusades, TheCurly TonDame aux Came lias, La (f)Dan+o’s InfernoDark Anoel, The David CopperfieldDernier Millardaire, Lo (r)Devil D^f?6 of the .A.irDevil is a '.Yoraan, TheDiaincnd JimTon Quichotte (F)Dr. SocratesEast of JavaEs capadeEscape Me i^ever (R)Every Niffht at EichtFarmer Takes a V/ife, TheFather Brown, DetectiveFeather in Her Hat, AFoliee Bergere de ParisFour Hours to KillFrisco KidFront Parc WomanFrontier (3^fr'Schichten aus dom Wiener (ValdCav DecentionGeorge ';:!iite’£ 1955 ScandalsGilded LilyGingerGirl fron Tenth Aven’ieGo Into Your DanceGoin’ To TownGold Dir'-ers of 1*^55Good Fairy, TheGoose and the Gander, TheGruen let Die Heide (G)Hands Across the TableHoi Tiki (P)Here's To RomanceI Dream Too MuchI Live My LifeIn Caliante(con’t.)Questionnaire on United Press News in the Daily MaroonSection 1—How much UP news doyou read iu the Maroon?— 1. Practically all that is printeddaily.—2. Much of that printed daily.—3. Ix-ading foreign articles on vari¬ous days.—4. Never any foreign news on sec¬ond i)age.—5. Seldom any foreign news on firsttwo pages.—6. Only sports dispatches.—7. No UP news whatsoever.Space for comments (Check the proper phrase).Section II -Opinion of use of UPnews in Maroon.— 1. .\ worth-while addition.—2. A good idea, but foreign news re¬ceives too much space.—.3. No foreign news should be run;only UP sports news.—4. No UP news should lx- run. .Section 111—Criticism.1. The policy should continue, withpresent balance of space.2. Another press service should besubstituted.—3. Not enough space is devoted tocampus news.4. UP news should not be permittedto decrease space for editorial col¬umn and other features.5. The foreign news is not suffi¬ciently variegated.6. The foreign news does not helpthe peace movement.7. The foreign news is harniful.(Signature)Informer, TheIn Ter&onIn Old Xent-uc’KyIrieh In UsIron The (b)JalnaJ ava Head (E)LaddieLand of Promiee (Pal)Last Days of PompeiiLast 0; it poetLerons (p)Lee ?IieeratloBLet 'Em Have ItLet's Live Tonir^htLife Bering at FortyLilicn (F)Little America (P)Little BiF ShotLittle ColonelLittle MinisterLittlest RehelLives of a Fen^^al LancerLove Me ForeverIjOve ^f Ncrah O'Neill (l)Loves of a Dictator (B)Mad LoveMagnificent OFsessionMan cn the Flyinr Trf'.pezeMan Tno Broke the Bank at Monte CarloMan ’mo^o Knew Too Much, The (^)Maria Chapdelaine (F)Marv Burns, f’lvitiveMat^rnelle, La (F)''elodyLinrers OnMen Tithcut NamesMetrone11 tanMidsummer Nimht's Drea:n, AMiI1ions in the AirMis'^er rioBoM.rier Man'■hi n'on the ou nt v9onr For YouMvstory ''f Edwin Dr cod'la' irhty Mar 1 ettaNell C'r/n (B)'lew Culliver, The (3)liioht is Youno, TheNi.oht at the Opera, AN'^ More LadiesC'9hauFhne s sv'» P oyOil for the Lamr s of ChinaOld Curiosity Shoe, The (B)Old Ladv, The (it)One Tav TicketO'lr Lit'I'le CirlPare ?viis£' ClorvParis in SrrinrPayoff, ThePeasants(3)Popr (9)Per fee*: Centleinan 'Peter IbtetscnPrivate iVorldsPut'lic Hero No. 1 Reckles sRed SaluteRemember Last NightRendezvousReturn of Peter GriimnRhumbaRobertaRomance in ManhattanRose of the RanchoRufflee of Red GapSanders of the River (B)Sans Faraille (F)Scarlet Pimpernel (B)Schwartzwaldmaodel (G)Scoundrel, TheScrooge (3)SequoiaShanghaiSheShe Married Her BoseShipmates ForeverShow Them No Merc|7So Red the RoseSpecial AgentSplendorS tar nf MidnightStars Over BroadwaySteamboat 'Round the BondStrandedTale cf Two Cities, AThanks a Mi11ionThirty-Nine Steps, The (B)This is the LifeThree Kids and a QueenThroe Mu e ke te e r eTop HatTransatlantic Tunnel (B)Twe For TonightUnfinished Symphony (B)Vanessa: Her Love StoryTalt.z Time in Vieniaa (G)'■’an'*erinF few. The (3)’.Vay Down East'.Vedding Ni^ht, TheWerewolf of LondonWest Point of the Air'rVhipsawWhole Town's TalkinrWilliaia Toll (B)WiriFS in the DarkWinms Over Ethiopia (HP)Youth of Maxim (S)NOTE: THIS LIST IS BY NO MEAlS COMPLET E,ALT} T-'Ces ?rHO WISH TO IVRITE IN FILlS NOT'i^E’U'TONED ARE .tSKED TO DO SO.Initials indicate: B) British - F) FrenchS) Soviet - g) Ger'nan - P) Private film# -I) Irish - It) Italian - Pal) PalestinianH) Swiss; all others are Ainerican filmJ.P'LlAOr cm-xi:: ClaojFaculty iTaternity or ClueMan 1 WomanY SONG QUEEN TURNS PROFESSOR " The candid camerahis unusual study of Aunt Molly Jackson, famous Kentucky hill-billyshe taught a New York University class m “The ular Ballad inAmerica,' pausing between choruses to take a few puffs on her corncob )uolle 6iate Di6estNATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS IN PICTURE A A■A VIATRIX Amelia Ear-•^hart is the new consult-tant on careers for women atPurdue University, whereshe also serves as adviser tothe department of aero¬dynamics. She is shown get¬ting acquainted with a groupof the women on the Boiler¬maker campus. INVENTOR OF BASKETBALL and University of^ Kansas professor of physical education, Dr. JamesNaismith recently celebrated his 74th birthday. He de¬vised the game of basketball in while a member ofthe faculty at Springfield, Mass., Y. M. C. A. College.: HOW TO RUN A HOTEL is no snap job, as student chef John CHE'S DOING HER HOMEWORK! - - Charlotte Prescott does her “lessons'1 tell you after he finished managing the kitchen of the New York for the new course in make-up in the grooming department of Stevens Collegeas taken over for several days by his class in hotel management at for Women (Columbia, Mo.) while roommate Dorothy Boenicke offers a bit ofrsity. advice.\ /jORE than looUniversity ofMichigan studentsare trainit^ this yearfor the profession ofradio broadcastingThe class shownabove IS gaining prac¬tical ex^'ierience inradio dramatizationin the campus studioof a Detroit station.ThorntonWILDER, famedUniversity of Chi¬cago author, returnedfrom Europe recentlywith the report thatGertrude; Stein is“one ^of the mostdistinguished of ourliving thinkers, butthere are many thingsin her writing 1 donot understand my sT AURA WINSLOW led the grand march at the Uni-/ versity of Georgia's Pan-hellenic Ball, outstanding socialevent at the southern university. ■ '\WHEN brother Delta Tau Deltas from thversity of Florida visit Sam Byrd in Nevthey still find him playing Dude Lester in_____ Road—now going on al>900^1^ performance - onemost cussed sons in a ;/ world—a tough, blaspl4 ^ ^Grad^er adolescent onuOffstage Dude is aex-collegian awhoH journalism and wrotcjone-act plays before getiflB Broadway. Now he 1battle to keep from sounding like the half-^nasty Dude when he's not being Dude, andihard, because it looks as though he's going tO|libeing Dude until Tobacco Rood runs as long asIrish Rose.C TUDENTS in Stanford University-s nbn^credit classes for training in reading skills average an increase ofV per cent ih speed and at substantialfgai'n- in comprehension;; with top-ranking scholars sharing improvementalong with average and slow readers..,. A meeting of the class is shown above, with Prof. W. M. Danner, Jr.,operating his unique timing and pacing device for improving reading, wf ile the eye-movement camera is shown Dartmouth's Handsorr; A S handsome a man as Dartmouth ever offethe movies. Bob Allen seemed destined tothe obscurity of another Dartmouth son in|wood/Charles Starrett. Allenknocked about in bit parts forseveral years and could con-vince no one that his football 4 {and college stage training meantanything. F 'Then he was cast as the Hryoung man Grace Moore gave ”up recently in Love Me Forever,In the opening snow sportsscenes. Bob felt much at home,having been prominent in Dartmouth winter caof five years ago. Now he has a Columbia b'HE annual-inter^lub' touchball contests are the chief intramural athletic events at the St. Petersburg(Flan) Junior College,* with the games being played on nearby beaches. . v “ = " ' .. ;Another Christmas special—four boxes ofCamels in "flat fifties"—wrapped ^in a gay Christmas package. FROMR-J-REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANYMAKERS OF CAMEL CIGARETTES ANDPRINCE ALBERT SMOKING TOBACCOmice AlbertFine tobacco for Christmas. For more than aquarter of a century, the mellow fragranceof Prince Albert has been as much a part ofChristmas as mistletoe and holly. So to thepipe smokers on your Christmas list givePrince Albert, ’’The National Joy Smoke.”It’s the welcome gift. For more men choosePrince Albert for themselves than any otherpipe tobacco. Let every pipeful of PrinceAlbert repeat "Merry Christmas” for you.At your nearest dealer’s you’llfind this gay package—the Camel car¬ton—ten packs of "20’s’’—200 cigarettes.Of course you’ll give cigarettes for Christ¬mas. They’re such an acceptable gift—such aneasy solution of your problem. And Camelsfill the bill so perfectly. They’re made fromfiner, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOSthan any other popular brand. They arethe accepted cigarette of the social andathletic worlds. Their finer tobaccos give thatpleasant "lift”—that sense of well-beingso appropriate to the spirit of Christmas.L full pound of mild, mellow PrinceJhert—packed in the cheerful red tinnd placed in an at-ractive Christmasift package.Here’s a full pound of Prince Albert, luxur¬iously packed in a real glass humidor thatkeeps Prince Albert in perfect condition.ATHERINE STONE, Arizona State Teachers* ^ College (Flagstaff) freshman, won first place in thehobby class for sculpturing at the Pacific Exposition. DADGER BEAUTIES ^^ beauttful” were caughtqueen contest.A WORLD WIDE SURVEYsource of the rays, has just KBennett, Massachusetts Institutray intensity meters which willpPRANCES LANGFORD, radio and screen^ singer, was the sponsor for the University ofFlorida's footKill capt;un at a recent game playedat Gainesville. She was escorted by W. A. Stark,former Alligator grid playerPROBLEMS OF URBAN UNIVERSITIES were discussed at^ the recent Boston meeting of the Association of Urban Cobleges. Prominent speakers at the sessions were (above) PresRaymond Walters, University of Cincinnati; Pres. James B.Conant, Harvard; and Pres. Daniel Marsh, Boston University. r^R. F. C. SCHMIDT,Union College chemist,has introduced a new fieldof research with the per'fection of this liquid am¬monia calorimeter by whichIt will be possible to de¬termine more exactly theproperties of solutions.pLlZABETH KEELER was voted to be the "most stylish " of^ all the students at the Mississippi State Clollege for Womenin a recent campus ballot.P^EA REA, former Drake University student and now astar radio network songstress, was feted by her KappaKappa Gamma sorority sisters when she visited them on thecampus of the Des Moines, la., institution.HTHROUGH a recently perfected photographic technique made possible by ^ ^ of a “Magic^ Eye” camera, the photos below show Mil» Calvert, Urnast, in a back somersault with a full twist.TOE MURPHY, Manhattan College, flashed to a sur-J prise first-place .finish in the Van Cortlandt Parkcross-country meet, while Ed Bechtold (inset), MichiganState, out-sprinted Penn’s Gene Venzke to win the five-mile race.to determine, if possible, theiriH-^ie Institution. Prof. R. D.shown with one of the cosmicy iitJ which he helped design. X^ORE than athousand per¬sons paid tributeto the Most Rev.James H. Ryan,bishop-elect ofOmaha and retiringrector of CatholicUniversity, at afarewell receptionfor him in Wash¬ington. Shown hereare PostmasterJames A. Farley,Bishop Ryan andArchbishop CurleyA VIGOROUS denunciation of the over-emphasization of intercollegiate< athletics was delivered by Dr. Alan Valentine (right) after his induction asthe president of the University of Rochester. He is shown after the ceremonieschatting with P. D. Ov-iatt, alumni association president, and J. H. Brinker, jr.,student body president. pihLD HOCKEY^ IS the chief worn-cn's intramural sportat Kansas StateTeachers Collegeat Emixiria.'"THE VARSITY SHOW at Dana College, now merged with the University ofNewark, w'lll have as its featured entertainers this quintet of leading campussongsters, caught in this unusual pose during a iehears.il session. [ ON ETA BROWN is the new honorary cadet colonel ot^the University of Wichita's R. O. T. C. unit.pRANK LLOYD WRIGHT, world famed architect, has raised con-*■ siderable furore with his Bro<idacre City plan for the ideal mcxJernmetropolis, wherein every family would have an acre of land, perfect(or near^perfect) living conditions, and dwell in an atmosphere attunedto modern science and invention. In this city is a college that teachesBroadacre's citizens how to utilize their new freedom a college withbuildings composed mostly of glass and of courses in those subjects thatare nearest to nature. At the left is a photo of the college grounds, abovethe gigantic stadium equipped for all sports, and at the right ArchitectWright and a few of his Taliesen Fellowship students students wholive, work and study with Mr. Wright on his estate near rural SpringGreen, Wis.University of the FutureSWEEPING MONEY-BACK OFFER TO PIPESMOKERS SETS WHOLE CAMPUS TALKING!OUR OFFER TO PIPE SMOKERS:.moke 20 fragrant pipefuls of Prince Albert. If you don’t find it the mellowest,I istiest pipe tobacco you ever smoked, return the tin frith the test of the(.>bacco in it, and we will refund full purchase price, plus postage.(Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.if you are a pipe smoker whowould enjoy a better smoke, thisremarkable you-must-be-pleasedoffer is right down your alley!Get a tin of Prince Albert at yourdealer’s. Smoke 20 pipefuls. If youdon’t say P. A. is the mildest andchoicest-tasting smoking tobaccoyou ever had, return the tin with and we make good, as told above.You Be the Judge! The risk isall on us. Prince Albert has tosatisfy you. And we believe it will.For we use only choice, ripe, mildtobacco. Then it is "crimp cut’’for slow burning and cool smoking.The “bite" is removed to makeit absolutely certain that Princep the rest of the tobacco in it Albert is mild and delicate in taste.Prince AlbertTHE NATIONAL JOY SMOKE T AST New Year's Day Jimmy Priest helped the University^ of Alabama gridmen down Stanford’s Indians in the RoseBowl classic. Now he’s working as a “standdn” for FilmstarDouglas Dumbrille—and Ann Sothern is his make-up tutor.’There’s no skimping on quantity,either. We pack around 60 pipe¬fuls of choice tobacco in the big2-ounce economy tin of P. A. It’sat your nearest campus dealer’s!pipefiik of swell tobac¬co in every two-ouncetin of Prince Albertt 1985S. J.IUrnoldflTob.Co.prLORENCE COOK is the ruling co^d at the Superior^ (Wis.) State Teachers Cx)llege, where she was sponsorof the foothill dance that celebrated her alma mater’sconference championship. U^ITH press'time only a few minutesaway, staff members of the SimmonsCollege Heius hurry to “lock up’’ the lastforms for their weekly newspaper.ARGARET MEES, women’s social leader at Capital University (C^olumbus, O.), gives a singing^ lesson to a quintet of football players who now have little to do but sing since the close of thegrid season. ^HERE’S ALWAYS A HAY AT BROWN ^ ^ William W.^ Hay, Jr., a freshman at the Providence, R. I., university, ad-mires a bust of John Hay, Brown ’58, which is in John Hay Li'brary. Young Hay is a descendent of Roger Williams, founder ofRhode Island, and of four Rhode Island governors, two of whomwere Brown alumni.PREMIER Benito Mus-^solini made a tour of in-spcction of the new Uni'vcrsity City in Rome whenthe University of Romemoved to the new quartershe constructed for it, mak'ing it one of the mostm^em educational institu¬tions on the Continent.pHI DELTA sorcffity at Connecticut State College (Storrs) made Comedians^ Olson and Johnson honorary “sisters" when the two stage stars paid avisit to their campus.“PILLIE*’ VTh^ CENT, vice predent of the OccidentCollege (Los Angelestudent governmeiassociation, is the olcial hostess at undfgraduate socul turtions.pROF. H. S. BOOTH, Western Reserve University^scientist, has succeeded in accomplishing what wasthought to be the impossible by making six differentcompounds of argon gas, a gas that hitherto was believedwould not enter into chemical compounds. Chemistrytextbooks of all kinds were made out of date by his dis'covery. is Box 471, Madison, Wis,r■I