Vol. 36. No. 50. Price 3 Cents UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1936 Member United PressInstruct Lavalto Give FullAid to LeaguePremier Ordered to Co¬operate Fully withGreat Britain.PARIS, Jan. 14—(UP)—TheFrench cabinet today instructed Pre¬mier Pierre Laval to give full sup¬port to the League of Nations inthe Italo-Ethiopian crisis, to cooper¬ate loyally with Great Britain andto continue efforts at conciliation atthe League session opening January20 in Geneva.Meanwhile, belief increasedamong diplomats that AnthonyEden, British foreign secretary andacknowledged leader in the League’sItalo-Ethiopian sanctions program,would not push for oil sanctions atthis session of the League council.The French also insist that Lavaland Eden will go to Geneva withoutany definite peace plans, and with¬out intention of taking any initia¬tive in this respect.Extension of SanctionsExtension of sanctions againstItaly at this time would accomplishlittle good and only endanger fur¬ther ill will, say the French.Present sanctions are pinchingItaly and it will be October beforethe weather permits another reallyserious offensive. Therefore, in viewof Premier Benito Mussolini’s report¬ed pledge to avoid conflict withBritain, and in view of the stale¬mated condition of the war in Ethi¬opia, the French doubt that Edenwill ask further sanctions now.But before any real decisions aremade at Geneva, it is certain thatl.iival will at least hold importantconversations with the Italian chiefdelegate, Baron Pompeo Aloisi.It is believed Aloisi will report il(luce agreeable to the League send¬ing a neutral inquiry commissioninto Ethiopia provided the commis¬sion studies not only Emperor Haile.Selassie’s charges of Italian viola¬tion of rules of war, but also accusa¬tions that Ethiopia has forfeited herjilace among nations by failure toeliminate slavery and bring aboutsocial, legislative and other necessaryreforms.U. S., Britainto ContinueNaval ParleyLONDON, Jan. 14—(UP)—Amer¬ican and British delegations, at atwo-hour meeting today, rejected aJapanese assertion that the navallimitation conference could not legal¬ly be continued after Japan’s intend¬ed withdrawal.The Japanese as.sertion w’as a lasteffort to prevent delegates of theUnited States, British Empire,FVance, and Italy from continuingthe conference when the Japanesego home, refusing to continue be¬cause their bid for naval equality hasnot been conceded.Japan’s delegates were preparingtoday a statement of their claims tonaval equality, intending to deliverit at the next meeting of the con¬ference and then leave for Tokyo.Japan’s notification of its chal¬lenge of the legality of a four-pow¬er conference was made orally. Inthe Japanese view, it was held a fourpower conference would be contraryto the Washington naval treaty, asthat envisaged another five powermeeting.Ras Nassibu DeniesBeheading of ItaliansADDIS ABABA, Jan. 14—(UP)—Ras Nassibu, Ethiopian command¬er on the eastern and southernfronts, in a letter to General RodolfoGraziani, his Italian opponent, deniedcharges today that Ethiopians haddecapitated Italian prisoners.He repeated charges that Italiansbombed civilians and Red Cross hos¬pitals and used poison gas bombs.Italy alleged that its bombingsin the south—which included thebombing of a Swedish Red Crosshospital—were in retaliation for thebeheading of two Italian aviators. See Slim Hope forRecovery of KiplingI LONDON, Wednesday, Jan. 15—I (UP)—Peritonitis has set in andj great anxiety is felt for the life ofI Rudyard Kipling, 70, British poet' and writer famed universally, it wasrevealed at 2 a. m.Kipling was reported fighting: stubbornly for life. His physicianI and a nursing staff were in constant, attendance.. It was learned that the famedpoet of the empire rested fairlyI comfortably all of Tuesday, but wasquite exhausted. He was too weakto speak to his wife, who held herhusband’s hand for hours at a timeing” operation for inestines perfor-while he dozed.It was revealed that when Kiplingarrived at the hospital at 7:30 a. m.Monday his condition was so gravethat surgeons were unable to at¬tempt the customary “short-circuit¬ing operation for intestines perfor¬ated by an ulcer, and were forced toadopt emergency measures.Russia BuildsLarger ArmyCentral Executive Com¬mittee Increases WarBudget.MOSCOW, Jan. 15-(UP)—Thesupreme authorities of Soviet Russiatoday unanimously approved a mili¬tary budget of $2,960,000,000 for1936, an increa.^e of 57 per cent,spurred by fear of war with Japan Honor Society Appoint SeniorPlans Dcincel Class CouncilSkull and Crescent Spon¬sors All-Campus PartyJanuary 31. .Late.st University social event tobe announced is the Skull and Cres¬cent dance to be held in Judsoncourt from 9 to 1 January 31.According to Robert Anderson,president. Rusty Stones and his nine-piece orchestra has been engaged toplay for the event, the first of itskind sponsored by the organizationthis year. The dance will be formal,but the committee in charge has re¬quested that there be no corsages.Representatives for fraternity anddormitory sales will be appointedsoon and tickets, priced at $1.10 percouple, will be available to the stu¬dent body.Along with the general announce-j ment of the dance came the namingI of committee chairmen chosen byj Anderson from members of SkullI and Crescent. James Kahnweiler was\ placed at the head of the group onI business arrangements; Ralph Leach,I tickets; John Eggemeyer, entertain¬ment; Barton Phelps, publicity;I Charles Hoy, refreshments; and Ar-I thur Goes, decorations.The organization of 1935 sponsor-I ed a similar dance in Ida Noyes, butI this year an attempt is being madeto establish the dance as an annualevent for the entire University. Berwanger Names EightStudents to AdvisoryPositions.To assist him in an advisory capac¬ity, Jay Berwanger, president of thesenior class, yesterday appointedeight students as members of theclass council. This body will form¬ulate the policy of the senior classand the program of class activitiesfor the remainder of the year.Berwanger will act as ex-officiochairman of the council, which ismade up of three senior women andfive senior men. The members ap¬pointed are Jeanne Stolte, Edith Mc¬Carthy, Cynthia Grabo, WilliamStapleton, Walter W. Hamburger Jr.,Robert Leach, Ravone Smith, andRichard Adair.The first meeting of the councilwill be held today at 2:30 in SocialScience 108. It will be in the natureof an organization meeting, withquestions of policy and initial plansfor activities this quarter up for dis¬cussion. It is expected that the ma¬jor activity in which the class willparticipate this quarter will be the“'Leaders for ’40’’ movement, ofwhich Stapleton has already been ap¬pointed chairman.In all probability, the class willalso cooperate with the Fandangothrough which the annual gift to theUniversity scholarship fund is raised.Perry Analyzes Puritan as MoralAthlete Training Will to DominanceBy WILLIAM McNEILLor Germany. iBy comparison, the total military ;' expenditure of the United States in j1935, for army and navy, was $590,- jj 844,112. ■ I' The Central Executive committee, icorresponding to a parliament in }, capitalistic countries, approved the jI staggering military budget without ja dissenting vote after fiery speechesby Premier Viacheslav Molotov, who !charged Germany and Japan withwarlike intentions; and Klementi j' Voroshilov, commissar for Defense,'' who urged great expansion of theRussian military air force.I A large part of the military budg-j et will be spent on increasing theI red army, which already numbersi 940,000 men, according to speechesbefore the council. Additionally, bet-i ter barracks, improved equipmentand additional airplanes will be pro-I vided.Air Force1 Mikhail Kaganovitch, assistant' commis.sar of heavy industry, stress-jj ed the importance of building up the jI air force, particularly modern bomb-1 ers, in view of the unsettled fari eastern situation. He said his depart-i ment has facilities to create whatever1 aviation equipment is considered nec-I essary by Voroshilov.It was explained for purposes ofcomparison with a capitalistic state’sbudget, that all factories and tradein Ru.ssia are state controlled, andtherefore the national expenditureincludes not only normal governmentfunctions, but the amount privateindustry in other states would spendon wages and capital investment.Military expenditures, however, in allcountries is solely a governmentfunction.The entire 1935 Russian budgetwas 68,500,000,000 rubles. Increas¬ed military expenditures account foralmost all of the increase in the newbudget, approved today.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)WAR PRODUCT“You are,’’ he said, “passionless.”Conway answered: “As good aword as most, no doubt. I don’t knowwhether you cla.ssify the people whocome here, but if so, you can labelme 1914-1918.’ That makes me, Ishould think, a unique specimen inyour museum of antiques****! usedup most of my passions and energiesduring the years I’ve mentioned, and*** the chief thing I’ve asked fromthe world since is to leave mealone****”James Hiltoh, Lost Horizons. “The Puritan was a moral athleteconstantly training his will to supremacy over his natural inclini^ jtions.” So did Professor Ralph Bar-1ton Perry, in the first of a seriesof two lectures, explain his title,“Moral Athleticism, an Aspect of thePuritan Code.”Profes.sor Perry was introducedby Richard P. McKeon, dean of the jHumanities division, and opened hisspeech by asserting that the Puritancode was “a complex set of moralideas in some respects true, and inInformation DeskIssues WoollcottTickets Today“Confessions of a Dying NewspaperMan,” what promises to be a “bestseller” campus lecture by the inter¬nationally known reteller of favoritetales, Alexander Woollcott, will beavailable to the campus at large with¬out charge tomorrow afternoon at4:30 in Mandel.To obtain tickets for admission,tuition receipts must be presented atthe Information desk, Press building,starting at 8 this morning. Therewill be a limit of two tickets per per-.son with only 1000 available in all.Last year Woollcott crowded Man-del hall for the Student lecture ser¬vice. Together with an overflowaudience in tht Commons and Rey¬nolds club, it was the largest audi¬ence in the history of the Service.This time he appears as guest of thePresident’s office.James Weber Linn, professor ofEnglish, will introduce the raconteurwho will relate incidents based on hisexperiences as reporter and column¬ist.Compares EconomicSystems at Forum“Comparisons of Economic Sys¬tems. Laissez Faire to Communism”will be made by Eugene A. Staley,associate professor of Economics, atthe Hyde Park YWCA, 53rd streetand Dorchester avenue at 8:15 to¬night, in a lecture of the Hyde Parkforum series.Dr. Staley is the second Universityprofessor to appear in this series, fol¬lowing assistant professor MaynardKreuger as a participant in theforum. He recently returned from aleave of absence in Geneva, Switzer¬land. some false.”For the Puritan, his hierarchy ofvalues, based on the conception ofpredestined salvation, did not coin¬cide with his natural appetites andinclinations. The solution was a con¬trol of inclination by the will, buttoo often, with a sharp line drawnbetween right and wrong, surgeryreplaced hygiene, and complete as¬ceticism—denial of the natural in¬clinations resulted.Harmonious LifeSince morality consists in themaking of an harmonious life outof conflicting inclinations, this con¬stitutes the error of the Puritans; afailure to concede the appetites aplace in the moral life. The resultis an aggravation of natural antag¬onisms within the personality, andcontinual unrest. A second errorlies in the lack of stress on the mind,the will and the letter of the con¬crete moral code replacing reflec¬tion on moral questions.Dr. Perry made the shrewd ob¬servation that the peculiar odiumattached to the Puritan arises fromthe fact that his stern attempt at re¬ducing his personality completely tohis will arouses a responding chordwithin us, which we attempt to hideunder vituperation.“The First Person Plural, or theNorm of Reflective Agreement” isthe title of his second lecture. Pro¬fessor Perry in addition to his lec¬tures is holding conferences with in¬dividual students by appointment.Residence Halls HoldSecond Annual WinterFormal January 25On January 25, the new men’sresidence halls will stage their sec¬ond annual winter dinner-dance, aformal affair to be held in the Jud¬son court dining room with GeorgeFoster’s orchestra supplying musicfor dancing which continues from8:30 to 1.Admission for dormitory men willbe $3.00 with their meal tickets,while outsiders attending will becharged $3.50, which will include asix course dinner.A committee of residents cooperat¬ing with the entry heads on arrange¬ments for the ball will consist of J.Victor Jones, Norris Brookens, Rob¬ert Rushmar, John MeWharter, Mar¬tin Miller, Guenther Baumgart, andRichard Lounsbury.Tickets may be secured in theJudson court office or from committeemen in each entry. The advisorycommittee will also furnish a datebureau for men wishing this service. Famed Chicago PoetHere Next ThursdayList Resultsof Film Poll‘David Copperfield’Wins Campus Prefer¬ence as Best Picture.“David Copperfield” easily won thepreference of students and faculty inthe film poll held by The Daily Ma¬roon last w'eek. With 24 more votesthan its nearest competitor, “Mutinyon the Bounty,” the picture definitelymarked the opinion of campusites asto which of 1935’s films was the best.Of the 500 ballots sent out, 112were returned, marked with the vot¬er’s 10 “bests” of the year. “DavidCopperfield” totaled 75 votes, while“Mutiny on the Bounty’ just edgedout “The Informer” 51-50. Five pointslower came the vivid “Lives of a Ben¬gal Lancer,’ followed at the 40-markby “Ruggles of Red Gap.”More Men VoteMen voters outnumbered womenvoters at least three to two. Womenstudents and faculty members werefar more preferential to foreign filmsthan other groups. Fraternity andclub members, contrary to the ex¬pectation of those supposing theywould favor lighter film fare, follow¬ed a norm close to the average.“David Copperfield” unquestionablyled each group (faculty, students,fraternity and club members, classesand graduate students). Althoughthe women’s votes were not so fav¬orable to action films, atmosphere' and psychological films such as “TheInformer” were highly rated.Votes garnered by leading films areas follows:“David Copperfield”—75.“Mutiny on the Bounty”—51.“The Informer”—50.“Lives of a Bengal Lancer”—45.“Ruggles of Red Gap”—40.“Top Hat”—37.“Naughty Marietta”—33.“Roberta”—31.“The Scarlet Pimpernel”—25.“A Midsummer Night’s Dream”—24.“Escape Me Never”—20.“Anna Karenina”—20.“Crime et Chatiment”—19.“Alice Adams”—16.“A Tale of Two Cities”—15.Blackfriars to HoldInitiation into OrderPlans to initiate men who haveworked on the staff of Blackfriars,I but who have not as yet becomemembers of the organization, w’ereannounced yesterday by GeorgeKendall, abbot of the Order ofBlackfriars.A meeting of all students interest¬ed in being initiated into the orderwill be held tomorrow from 1 to1:30 in the Blackfriars office, thirdfloor of the Reynolds club. The in¬itiation fee, which is $3.50, includesthe price of the pin and the annualbanquet, held late in the springquarter. The date for the initiationj ceremony will be set later.Kendall stated that new sopho¬more managers will be selected laterin the quarter, and that applicantsfor the positions must be membersof the organization to be eligible. I Carl Sandburgi to Give Recitedin Mandel HeJlNative Poet Will PresentSongs from “Amer¬ican Songbag.”Carl Sandburg, designated as“America’s most truly native poet,”will lecture in Mandel hall nextThursday evening at 8:30 under theauspices of Comment, campus lit¬erary bi-quarterly magazine. Thetitle of his lecture will be “An Eve¬ning with Carl Sandburg.”He will be introduced by Fred B.Millett, associate professor of Eng¬lish, and during the course of theprogram will recite selections fromhis own verse and sing numbers fromhis “American Songbag,” playing hisaccompaniment on his guitar.Born of Swedish parents in Gales¬burg, Illinois in 1878, Mr. Sandburgleft school at the age of thirteenand traveled extensively throughoutthe middle western states. At theoutbreak of the Spanish-Americanwar he enlisted in the Sixth Illinoisinfantry and was sent to Puerto Ricowhere he remained for eight months.Serves as ReporterAfter his return from the war heworked his way through Lombardcollege at Galesburg. The years fol¬lowing his graduation found him en¬gaging in various occupations rang¬ing from secretary to the mayor OfMilwaukee to a magazine reporter.In 1917 he joined the staff of theChicago Daily News and during theWorld War represented a newspapersyndicate in the Scandinavian coun¬tries. Upon his return he rejoinOdthe Daily News as an editorial writ¬er.Mr. Sandburg was awarded theLevinson prize by the magazine,“Poetry,” for his poem, “Chicago,” in1914 and two years later he publish¬ed his first volume, “Chicago Poemg.’^In 1919 and 1921 he shared half theaward of the poetry society ofAmerica.Among Ml*. Sandburg’s best-knownworks are “Potato Face,” “Smokeand Steel,” and his “Abraham Lin¬coln—The Prairie Years,” the first-volume of his comprehensive study'of Lincoln.Tickets for the lecture, priced at55 cents, are now on sale at thebookstore. Information office. Inter¬national House, and the box officein Mandel. No seats are reserved.*Mirror RennieTryouts DrawLarge TurnoutOver 120 candidates for positionsin the choruses and cast of the 1936Mirror Revue reported at the tryoutsyesterday, according to the Mirrorboard. The tryouts were conductedunder the supervision of Frank Hur-burt O’Hara, director of dramaticproductions, D. W. Youngmeyer,musical director of Mirror, and theMirror board.Women selected to take part in thedancing choruses will be notified im¬mediately by mail. All those who atechosen should report in Mandel hallSaturday at 10 to the first rehearsaLThere will be no more tryouts for tM*choruses. 'The board reported an exceptional¬ly fine turnout of specialty numbe™.However, men or women who failsdto appear at the tryouts and wouldlike to sing in the show or presentspecialty numbers, may still particjl-pate by reporting to the Mirror boaifdimmediately.The board also announced thitthere will be a meeting of all Mitr^rcommittee chairmen this afternoon at3:30 in Mitchell Tower.T ’ iAnnounce Meeting of i“Leaders” Committe<;A meeting of all recently appoin :-ed committee heads and members (fthe advisory council of the “Leadeisfor ’40” organization has been calle dby William Stapleton, chairman. Tlameeting will be held tomorrow at 3in the office of Keith Parsons, Ubversity promotional director. Cot b107.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 15. 1936Senate ShowsNew Angle toWar InquiryClaim Wilson SubmittedProposal to Ententeto Hush Resentment.WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—(UP)—The Senate munitions committeesought today to show that PresidentWilson accepted a proposal by Rob-Lansing, then State Departmentxounsellor, designed to prevent un¬favorable American reaction againstthe allied powers early in the WorldWar.In formulating a new policy onarminpT merchant vessels againstGermany’s submarine warfare, Lans¬ing advised Mr. Wilson to submit itto the Entente alone so that if theallies turned it down news would notleak out through the German andAustrian embassies to cause resent¬ment against the allies.The committee temporarily suc-pendecf its questioning of John Pier-pont Morgan and his partners ontheir wartime financing operationswhile Senator Bennett Champ Clarkread the story into the record.Reads DiaryClark read a hitherto unpublishedpage from the diary of Colonel E.M. House, Mr. Wilson’s adviser. Theentry was made October 2, 1915,after a private conversation withLord Reading of Great Britain.“What the British government de¬sires is that on the one hand we shalldemand of Germany that no mer¬chantmen shall be sunk without warn¬ing, and on the other hand, thatmerchantmen shall, as in times gonehy, have the right to arm.’’On October 4, Mr. Wilson replied:“The matter of armed merchant-ment is not so simple as Balfour(Lord Balfour of Great Britain)would make it. It is hardly fair toask submarine commanders to givewarnings by summons if, when theyapproach as near as they must forthe purpose, they are to be firedupon as Balfour would evidentlyhave them fired upon.”Regulates ArmamentsOn January 17, 1916, Lansingauggested to Mr. Wilson a new for¬mula for regulating armaments onnerchant vessels.“My first inclination,” he wrote,■“was to send letters to the Germanambassador and Austrian charge buttwo reasons prevented: first, I was^on’vinced that the German , andAustrian governments would assentto the proposal as it only requiredthem to conform to the rules of in¬ternational law, while it "requiredtheir enemies to modify a presentpractice which might be construedinto the relinquishment of a legalright.“And, second, if Germany andAustria acceded promptly to the sug¬gestion, any demur by Great Britain,Prance, Italy or Belgium would, if itbecame known (as it would undoubt¬edly through the German or Austrianembassies) arouse adverse criticismin the press of this country and ex¬cite public resentment against theEntente powers, which appeal’s to beincreasing from day to day,”iatlij illaraottFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegixte PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of ChicaKO,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during; the autumn,winter, and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 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 ■ $2.75 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 repro-sentative National Advertiaing Barvl^Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New 'York; 400 M.Michigan Ave., CMcago.MALPH NICHOLSON. Editor-in-Chief.ROBHRT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.RAYMOND LAHR. Managing Editor.HENRY f KELLEY. Desk Editor.JEANNE r. STOLTE, News Editor.Business associates; James Bernard,Don Elliott, Don Patterson, Roy War-•hawsky.Editorial associates: Wells Burnette,Gaorge Felsenthal, Julian Kiser, JohnVorris, James Snyder, Edward Stern.Night Editor: Edward S. SternAssistant: Cody Pfanstiehl Survey Shows Africa Fails toAbsorb Europe’s Excess MillionsLONDON, Jan. 14—(UP)—Ethi¬opia may not be the promised landfor Italy’s surplus population thatBenito Mussolini think it would be,according to statistics publishedhere.These show that despite its fertil¬ity, healthiness and richness in re¬sources, European nations have nothad the success opening Africa tocolonization that they might havehad.Accordfng to statistics, the pres¬ent European population of colonialAfrica is just under three personsper square mile. It is estimated thatthere are 3,500,000 Europeans in the10,000,000 square miles of colonialAfrica, which means that in thewhole of its history it has acquireda European population no greaterthan the increase in the populationof Italy in the last 10 years.South Africa LeadsWhat is more, of these 3,500,000,approximately 2,000,000 are domi¬ciled in the Union of South Africa,including Southwest Africa, andanother 1,200,000 along the Medi¬terranean littoral in Tunis, Algeriaand Morocco. The remaining 300,-000 are distributed over an area ofabout 9,000,000 square miles, or oneEuropean in every 30 square miles.It was in the 1880’s that Euro¬ peans first began to recognize thepossibilities of Africa. Britain gota head start in the scramble forterritory, but France was a closesecond, and Germany was not far be¬hind.German Figures ShownWhat these countries have donewith territory acquired is shownby statistics. Germany, for instance,obtained German East Africa, Ger¬man Southwest Africa, Cameroonsand Togoland, comprising nearly3,000,000 square miles. Yet after aquarter of a century, in 1911, Ger¬many’s great African empire con¬tained only 15,891 Germans.Italy’s case is even more illumin¬ating. The northern part of Eritreaincludes a considerable area whichis similar to the Ethiopian highlands.It might be supposed that if Italywere going to colonize these high¬lands, the nation would, in the courseof the past 50 years, have beganwith a rehearsal in the Eritrean up¬lands.InternationalHouse Presents“Marine Ball”CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT. Beautifully furnish¬ed 5 rm. apt. Will accommodate 5 ormore. 5501 University Ave. HydePark 2215.FOR RENT. Room for one per¬son. Pi’eferably a woman. 2 blocksfrom Cobb. 824 E. 58th St. Mid.5987.FOR RENT. Beautifully furnish¬ed 5 rm. apt. Will accommodate 5 ormore. 5501 University Ave. HydePark 2215.FOR RENT. Furnished 2ndapartment. 5505 University Avenue.5 light rooms near U. of C. Excel¬lently furnished. Can be rented to 2or more parties, for inspection seeC. W. Hoff and Co. 1348 E. 55th St.H. P. 2215.6208 University Ave. Well furnish¬ed large room. Twin beds. Goodhome cooking. 3 meals just likehome. $8.00 each. Fairfax 0507. Although it is not clear as towhether dancers are supposed towear swimming suits or streetclothes, the facts seem to be thatInternational House is to hold a“Marine Ball,” Friday eveningfrom 9:30 to 1.The assembly hall will be con¬verted into a scene from one of theseven seas for the occasion, and thestage will make its debut as a hugetank full of tropical fish. LouiseLucano will cavort in a specialtymermaid number, and Arthur Gold¬smith and his Casino orchestra willsupply rhythm.Sunday evening at 6, W. H. Os¬good, curator of zoology at the Fieldmuseum, and leader of an expedi¬tion to Ethiopia a short time ago,will make a supper speech at Inter¬national House on “Ethiopia, HerPeople and Resources.” This will befollowed by a debate in the Oxfordmanner, in which the proposition,“Resolved, That this house deploresthe emancipation of women.” will bedefended by D. N. Chester andAdele Sandman, and opposed byW'arner Wick and Leonard Great-wood. You May Call This TreasonIn the face of the continued high price of good food andthe excellent service always maintained at The Maid-Rite Grill and Sandwich Shop, we start this evening, serv¬ing aFull Course Dinner for40cincluding, steaks, chops, omelettes, home-made hot rolls,home-made deserts and drinks.We do this to attract new customers, increase our vol¬ume and maintain our reputation of serving the best foodon campus.The Maid-Rite Sandwich ShopThe Maid-Rite GrillWhere University Students Meet and Eat1309 E. 57th St. 1320 E. 57th St.**YouMI Be Clad You Came Over**The MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAEUGENE ORMANDY—Conductor Soloist: RUDOLPH CANZ, PianistPROGRAMLisztZador5. Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 2, in A Major(Commemorating the 50th Anniversary of Liszt’s Death)(First Time in Chicago)Suite from the Ballet. “The Machine Man” . . . .I IntermezzoII Automobile RideMi WaltzIV Dance of the Machines'First time in Chicago)Moto Perpetuo, Op. 1 1 (Solo for all the first violins) Paganini/- - Ormandy 6.2. Tango for Orchestra(First time in Chicago)Passacaglia and Fugue in C Minor - . . _(Orchestrated by Herman Boessenroth!(First time in Chicago)Symphony No. 5 in C Minor, (Op. 67)I Allegro con brio11 Andante con motoIII AllegroIV Allegro-Presto SonzognoBachBeethovenTickets: 55c, 83c. $1.10, $1.65, $2.20, $2.75 (with tax)CIVIC OPERA HOUSE8:30 Wednesday Evening, January 22ndI THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1936 Page ThreeGulliverReappears and Explains theReason WhySo it’s up to the public.Three freshmen wrote the “Travel¬ling Bar” yesterday, Gulliver writestoday. Tomorrow the Bar again.Then your letters to see which youwant. Gulliver asks no favors, he’shaving a lot of fun while it lasts.* * #Haydon frothed Friday, and nowevery noon sneaks into the Coffeeshop early to hide behind the coat-rack where Cotty can’t find him.<>ONE OF THE BETA faculty mem¬bers was due for a birthday. Theactives, always ready, evolved a sur¬prise party. Trouble was, they did¬n't have an innocent excuse to getNorm Maclean over to the house to.surprise him. Came the day, andhappily someone remembered a fel¬low named Neal once loaned Normsome money, and that Norm was,,,well, looking for him.“Hello,” said Maclean's telephone.“Could you drop over to the house.... there’s a man here wants toborrow some money says hisname’s Neal. ...”Norm came—and it took the wholechapter to administer the spanks.s s sDEAR GULLIVER:What couple rather dumbfoundedeverybody Friday night by dashingout of Diana Court sans any wraps,taxied to Club Alabam, to the Col¬lege Inn, and finally back to Vas-sar House to see the evening out?Stooge 199.* « *ONCE UPON a time the Daily Ma¬roon, campus grind organ, almostprinted a promotional proclaiming onlarge type “Everyone attend the OR¬GANIC PEP SESSION in the circleat noon.” They caught it, though;changed to “GIGANTIC" as original¬ly planned.That WOULD be fun* * *.\ND ONCE a headline almost gotthrough that proclaimed “Twenty-Tight Member* Prevent Play”changed to “Twenty-Eight.”* * *Dave Saxe with unidentified girlyesterday afternoon walking behindRyerson, girl gigglingly singing “Ilove you I love you I love you I loveyou I doooooo.”« * *His Chinese laundryman sus¬piciously, ominously, sniffed StanHaye*’ imported oriental tea a fewdays ago. Stan is certain there willbe a Tong war.* V *“AND WHY go to business.school” queries Roy Larson “Whenyou can play Monopoly?”The Alpha Delt* stayed up till 7one morning doing it.Voter's’ LeagueInvites Studentsto Elliott ForumDr. William Yandell Elliott, headof the School of Government atHarvard university, will addre.ss theforum of the Cook county League ofWomen Voters in the Grand Ball¬room of the Palmer House Saturdayut 2, and arrangements have beenmade to provide complimentary tick¬ets to University students.Dr. Elliott’s subject “A Challengeto Democracy: Can It Survive un¬der the Spoils System?” reflects ef¬forts of the League of Women Vot¬ers to arouse public opinion to thenecessity for abolition of the spoilssystem in government and establish¬ment of the merit principle in po¬litical appointments.Though not yet forty years old.Dr. Elliott is a recognized author¬ity on ways to social progress with¬out revolutionizing our present so¬cial order. He has produced severalbooks, including “The Need for Con¬stitutional Reform” and “The Prag¬matic Revolt in Politics.”Any .student wishing a compli¬mentary ticket to Dr. Elliott’s lec¬ture should call League headquar¬ters, Central 0317.Ideal accommoda¬tions for studentsand faculty.NAmRD HOm“24-Hour Service”5714 Blacksfone Ave. Wirth Publishes Translation ofMannheim’s ‘Tdealogy/and Utopia”An English translation of KarlMannheim’s “Ideology and Utopia”by Louis Wirth, associate professorof Sociology, will be published thismonth, according to an announce¬ment made yesterday by Dr. Wirth.Called “one of the three greatestbooks of the twentieth century,”Karl Mannheim’s work is explainedby Dr. Wirth in his introduction tobe an attempt to “analyze the soci¬ology of intellectual life.”Mannheim’s work is not a historyof ideas; it analyzes the factorscausing the emergence of ideas. Ac¬cording to associate professor Wirthit deals with the questions: “Whatare the social factors conditioningthe development of ideas? Who arethe propagators of ideas in a givensociety? In what societies do wehave freedom of thought? In whichsocieties are men content; in whichdo they meet reality and when dothey seek escape in the realm ofUtopias?”That Dr. Mannheim’s work has im¬portant implications in the theory ofpropaganda and political power wasgiven by associate professor Wirthas an important reason for bringingit before an English speaking audi¬ence. It bears out Wirth’s conten¬tion that no knowledge is objective,and that all must be judged by refer¬ence to the motives of its propon¬ents.Dr. Mannheim formerly heldDebate Union PlansRound Table AfterTonight’s DiscussionAs a follow up to tonight’s discus¬sion on “Congress, Constitution orSuprtme Court,” the Debate unionwill hold a round table discussion to¬morrow in Social Science 108 at 8.The round table will be led by JohnStoner, adviser to the union.Tonight at the same hour Profes-■sors Andrew C. McLaughlin and Mar¬shall E. Dimock will present theirviews on the Supreme Court and theother branches of government, inRoom A of the Reynolds club. Bothare widely known scholars in thefield of governmental history and ad¬ministration, and the timeliness ofthe topic adds to the interest of thediscussion.Both round table and discussion areopen to the public.The University debate team hasbeen chosen to meet Marquette nextweek in a debate for publication inthe University Debaters Arnual onthe question of the socialization ofmedicine. Irving Axelrad and George•Messmer will represent the Univer¬sity in Milwaukee.The book serves as a reference vol-umn for debating teams all over thecountry. chairs in sociology at the Univer¬sities of Heidelberg and Frankfurt.Exiled by the Nazi dictatorship, henow is Hobhouse professor at theLondon School of Economics.Name Two NewProfessors toArt DepartmentTwo new members have been add¬ed to the faculty of the University.They are Dr. Ludwig Bachhofer, for¬merly of the University of Munich,and Dr. Ulrich Middledorf of the In¬stitute of Art Research in Florence,Italy.Both men have assumed the dutiesof assistant professors of art. Theyhave written books on art that arewidely read and consulted. “EarlyIndian Sculpture,” Dr. Bachhofer’svolume, is generally accepted as theforemost authority on the subjectthroughout the world.Dr. Middledorf, formerly curatorat the Institute in Florence, will lec¬ture on Italian sculpture during therenaissance period.Dr. Bachhofer will lecture on Chin¬ese art. After leaving the Univer¬sity of Munich at the end of theautumn quarter, he stopped in Lon¬don, where he was called to the Chin¬ese exhibition at Burlington house towrite some articles in his field ofstudy.‘‘Public Management”Prints Ogburn ArticleContrary to the statement publish¬ed in Wednesday’s Daily Maroon,William Ogburn’s article, “SocialCharacteristics of Cities,” will not ap¬pear in the Journal of Social Forces,but is contained in the January issueof Public Management, the organ oftht City Managers association.The City Managers association, amember of the national governmentalorganization located at 850 East 58thstreet, will be the sole handler’s ofProfessor Ogburn’s article whichdeals with the characteristic popula¬tion differences in large and smallcities.Jernegan Reports onHistorical AssociationReports from the Christmas vaca¬tion meeting of the American Histor¬ical association will be presented attonight’s meeting of the GraduateHistory club by Marcus W. Jernegan,professor of American History, andWilliam Lauman in Social Science122 at 7:30. Officers will be electedfor the coming quarter.Debate UnionTonight“Congress, Constitution,or the Supreme Court?”DR. ANDREW C. McLAUGHLINProfessor Emeritus of HistoryDR. MARSHALL E. DIMOCKProfessor of Public AdministrationReynolds ClubROOM “A”8 P.M. 5th RowCenterBy C. SHARPLESS HICKMANThe borderline between a mere'production and a production whichhas become an institution is optional.Unquestionably such a play as“Abie’s Irish Rose” (despite RobertBenchley’s five years of hammeringaway at its underpinnings in “Life”)became an institution. Also “TheStudent Prince” was an institution.But length of run is not always astable qualification in such a matter.The thing really depends upon themood of public reception. Despiteits cliches, the American public tookto “Abie’s Irish Rose” like WalterHampden to HAMlet. On the otherhand, many plays with tbe sameamount of human feeling, the sameamount of friendly hokum and thesame simplicity failed utterly.“Great Waltz” an InstitutionTherefore, it is not because of itsone year run that I would consider“The Great Waltz” an institution.“Tobacco Road,” to cite a currentinstance, is a play which has beenconsistently swearing at its publicfor three years. But, “TobaccoRoad” is not, in my estimation, aninstitution. It is a fine play whichhas been, to a great degree, aided inits lengthly stay by its controversialcontent and the vivid manner of itsstatement of that content.“The Great Waltz” is an operetta.Operetta, it would seem, usually iseither very good or very bad. “TheGreat Waltz” is very good. It hasall the necessary qualities that go tomake up not only a popular but alasting success. It has music whichhas been proven for almost one hun¬dred years. It has a libretto builtaround the romantic and littleknown characters who wrote that music, the Johann Strausses, father)and son. It has in its cast one ofAmerica’s most beautiful singers:vocally, facially and histrionically—Marion Claire. It has spectacular andexquisite staging by one of America’smost progressive designers, AlbertJohnson. Johnson is a man who hascontinually shown himself to be adesigner who has the uncanny abilityto cope with the problem in hand,rather than going off into the realmsof imaginary stagecraft which in thecommercial theater of today are, un¬fortunately, impractical. It has lighthearted comedy, the usual run ofmusical romance—“tender” is theapproved word, I think—and singingthat is A-1 plus. The production, ad¬mirably staged by a genius electri-ician, Hassard Short, is not builtaround Miss Claire, though it mightwell be. It is coherent, and its co¬herency uses not one fine voice, butseveral, including, notably, GuyRobertson.Above all, “The Great Waltz” hasthat most indispensable thing in alloperetta: timing. It moves zestfully,never lagging for a song that mightbe felt out of place. With unpar¬alleled thematic foundation — thewaltz music of the Strausses—itswings along in sparkling, gay Vien¬nese rhythm, rightfully earning itstitle of No. 1 musical institution ofthe country.f^Dli YITI theatreTODAY“MUSIC IS MAGIC” Today on theQuadranglesLecture*Public lecture (Division of the So¬cial Sciences): “The Shifting Bor-Business. Concentration and Con-derline between Government andsumers.” Professor John H. Cover.Social Science 122 at 3:30.Public lecture (History of Sci¬ence): “The Theory of the Cell.”Professor George K. K. Link. Har¬per Mil at 4:30.MeetingsPhi Delta Upsilon. Green room ofIda Noyes at 12.Avukah. Y room of Ida Noyes at3,Fandango sophomores. Lexington16 at 3.Sigma Delta Epsilon. Library ofIda Noyes at 8.S. S. A. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Debate union: “Congress, the Con¬stitution, and the Supreme Court.”Reynolds club at 8.MiscellaneousCarillon recital. University chapelat 4:30.Basketball game, Chicago vs.Loyola. Fieldhouse at 8.YWCA cabinet dinner. Y roomof Ida Noyes at 6.ONLY 37 MOREDAYS TILLTHEWASHINGTON PROMwithALICE FAYE— YOU’LL NEVER GET WRITER’S CRAMP —from thinking about that story.Personal Conferences only, under unique Working Plan. Callafternoons for appointment—first story gladly criticized free.HENRY E. FRITSCH—Literary Agent30 W. WASHINGTON DEArborn 2252I VA What makes a pipe chummy? Half & Half . . . andho-w! Cool as the news: **We’ve got a flat tire!”Sweet as the sign: ”Garage just ahead.” Fragrant,full-bodied tobacco that won’t bite the tongue—in a tin that won’t bite the fingers. Made byour exclusive modern process including patentNo. 1,770,920. Smells good. Makes your pipe welcomeanywhere. Tastes good. Your password to pleasure!Nftt a bn of btto In tho tobacco or tho Tdoscope Tin, which gets smaller and smallerat you usoMip tho tobacco. No bitton fingers as you roach for a load, oven tho last ono.OopyrUbt 1936, The Ameriesn Tobscco CompsnyHALF HALFHALF t HALF MAKESOHE SWELL SMOKE!DAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four J WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 15, 1936TheTip-OffBy James Snyder Maroon CageSquad FacesLoyola Five D. U., Phi Gzun, Phi Sig Take I-MTourney Games by Wide MarginsHaarlow Pushes BuckeyeStar for Scoring HonorsAfter tossing in eight countersand an odd free throw in the Hoosierencounter at Bloomington Mondaynight, Captain Bill Haarlow, Maroonscoring ace, again became a strongthreat to the conference scoringsupremacy of Warren Whitlinger,Ohio State’s stellar forward, and aneven contender to repeat for indi¬vidual scoring honors in the BigTen. He jumped to second berth inthe ratings after an unimpressiveshowing in the Purdue meeting theprevious week. Whitlinger, confer¬ence scoring leader, garnered onlyfour points in the Buckeye-Illini bat¬tle, but managed to retain a twopoint lead over Haarlow.Leaders in the conference raceare:Whitlinger, Ohio State 41HAARLOW, CHICAGO 39Young, Purdue 31Kessler, Purdue 31Campbell ^^son Selectedon Olympic Fencing SquadWhen the American fencers go toBerlin next summer, they may beaided by the services of CampbellWilson, ace Maroon fencer and oneof the most feared swordsmen inconference fencing. Wilson was oneof five middle-western stars selectedon a practically all-eastern team,from which the United States Olym¬pic fencers will be drawn. The Chi¬cago fencers, taking their initialpre-conference bout from ArmourInstitute, open conference competi¬tion early next month, facing OhioState and Purdue.Lang Ranks High inConference ShowingBill Lang, Chicago workhorse, hascarried a good share of a persistentMaroon offense during the confer¬ence openers in the last two weeks.In the Badger opener, Lang, duringthe last minutes of play, evened thescore with a scoring toss and a con¬version and during the Indiana tilt,Lang, in the second half, backed uphigh scorer Haarlow with a coupleof tosses to bring the Maroons upwithin striking distance of a win.Amundsen, and Fitzgerald, sopho¬mores, added two more buckets tobring the score up to 33-30 beforethe second period ended. Chicago Works Out onOffense for BattleTonight.PROBABLE LINE-UPLoyolaWinklerCallihanMurrayColenBrennan ChicagoHaarlowLangG. PetersenFitzgeraldK. PetersenBadger RegentsDeny MeanwelVsRequest of Power Again the Maroon cage quintetwill face speed and fast breaks whenLoyola’s experienced hardwood teamdribbles down the Fieldhouse floortonight at 8.Although holding a slight advan¬tage in comparative scores, Chicagoworked seriously yesterday to per¬fect means of stopping the star Loy¬ola marksmen, especially Colen andBrennan, the guards. The Maroonsalso practiced offense, since CoachNelson Norgren desires to improvethe shooting ability of Fitzgeraldand Petersen. Norgren sees the lowscoring of the guards as an outstand¬ing weakness, since it enables theopposition to concentrate on cover¬ing Maroon forwards.Speed on OffenseBlock plays and clever ball hand¬ling, especially by Marve Colen,who is a master at the art, will sup¬plement speed in Loyola’s offense,the Midway mentor predicts. Mur¬ray, the tall Loyola center, is a goodshot, and Callihan and Winkler arefast and dangerous forwards.However, Haarlow, Amundsen,Lang, and Gordon Petersen comprisea strong list for the Maroon for¬ward attack. Haarlow made a swiftreturn to his accurate sniping with17 points in the Indiana game Mon¬day, and Amundsen broke throughwith two field goals, while Lang play¬ed his usual good game and Petersenwas valuable against the ruggedHoosiers.Loyola LossIn a game with Indiana, Loyolalost by about ten points earlier inthe season, thus the Maroons look alittle better on paper. But CoachLeonard Sachs’ five has had a goodrecord this season, and the gamemay be not a breathing spell for Chi¬cago.Norgren permitted a compara¬tively lighter practice session yes¬terday, since the team was a littletired after the Hoosier tilt. Every¬body is in good condition for to¬night’s scuffle. Norgren was notpositive about the starting line-up. LAST NIGHT’S I-M SCORESPsi U “B”, 41; Alpha Delt “B”,8Delta Upsilon, 16; Alpha Belts,4Phi Belts, 47; ATO, 12Chi Psi “B”, 15; Sigma Chi“B”, 10Psi U, 41; Phi Kappa Sigma, 11Chi Psi, 29; Zeta Betes, 7Phi Sig, 27; Beta, 12Phi Sig “B”, 13; Phi B. D. “B”13Phi Psi, 31; Kappa Sig, 14Pi Lam, 13; Phi Gam, 22Phi Psi “B”, 16; D. U. “B”, 6 “B” aggregation was following inthe footsteps of the regulars byswamping the Alpha Delt “B”, 41 to8.Two Chi Psi teams scored victoriesat the same time, the regulars over- Seventeen Reportfor Hockey VarsityFor the first time in the history ofMaroon sport, according to CoachDan Hoffer, the University will havean ice hockey team. At present hehas aspirants for berths on the squadpracticing in the rink in the northstands.Since not all of the candidates have had ample “warming up,’’ Hoffer hasnot yet named a team. The followingmen are aiming for the varsitysquad: Campbell, L. Cook, Glassford,Howe, Leach, Levine, Marks, Master-son, Mottl, Roden, Somerville, TancigWagner, and Youmans. Meigs andSkoning of the 1935 football squadare also expected to report.No schedule will be made until Hof.fer has lined up all the men andwhipped together a ttam.TONIGHT’S I-M GAMES7:30Phi Alpha Delta vs. BarbariansQuacks vs. Hoffer’s RedsChiselers vs. BarristersChi. Theo. Sem. vs. Broadmen8:15Psi U “C’’ vs. Phi Sig “C’’Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. Sigma ChiMorton Club vs. ElectronsA much improved, although stilldecidedly uneven, brand of basket¬ball featured last night’s intramuralbasketball games in Bartlett gym asthe second round of matches in thewinter quarter tourney showed theseries getting up steam in a realway.Lopsided scores featured a largeportion of the games, and at leastthree teams loomed as definite con¬tenders for high rankings in the1936 fraternity league. The PhiBelts, continuing in the same stylethat they showed last Tuesday, rolledup a 47 to 12 score on the ATO’s.The Phi Psis showed a compara¬tively remarkably smooth-workingoffensive as Masterson and Meigs ledthem to a 31 and 14 triumph overKappa Sig, for whom Barton starredwith 4 markers and a free toss.Psi Upsilon, last year’s Universitychampions, smothered Phi KappaSigma with a count of 41 to 11, aid¬ed chiefly by points piled up byUpton, Bell, and Stapleton; whilePhi Gamma Delta, who just nosedout the Dekes in the first round ofI-M games, showed up well by sink¬ing Pi Lambda Phi, 22-13. LeBoyheaded the Phi Gam scorers, andDuhl led the Pi Lams.D. U. Crushes Alpha DeltsAt the beginning of the evening,in a low-scoring game, Delta Upsil¬on came out on top of the AlphaDelts, 16 to 4. The D. U.’s wereheaded in scoring by Dick Adair;while at the same time, the Psi UGymnastic SqtuidPoints TowardBig Ten Crown whelming Zeta Beta Tau, 29-7; while,on another court, the “B’’ squadovercame Sigma Chi “B’’ 15-10.Schmitz and Finson topped the reg¬ulars, and Wilson and Kendall ledthe “B’s.’’MADISON, Wis., Jan. 14—(UP)University of Wisconsin regents as¬serted their authority over the fac¬ulty-controlled athletic board to¬night, denied its request for morepower for Dr. Walter E. Meanwellas athletic director, and plunged intotheir own investigation of difficul¬ties in the athletic department.The board recently completed anextensive investigation of the athlet¬ic department situation after foot¬ball captain-elect John Golemgeskeaccused Meanwell of prompting himto circulate a petition to oust Dr.Clarence W. Spears as head footballcoach among the players.Spears was a candidate for athlet¬ic director in 1934 when PresidentGlenn Frank cast a deciding vote forMeanwell, former basketball coach,after the regents split evenly in fav¬or of the two men.Major recommendations made bythe board to the regents today onthe basis of its investigation weredenied by the regents tonight. Find¬ings upon which the faculty boardbased its action were questioned bythe regents pending completion oftheir own inquiry, to be pushed to¬morrow.To the athletic board’s inferencethat We.stern Conference rules re¬quired placing supreme power inathletic matters within faculty juris¬diction to the apparent exclusion ofthe regents, the regents made a sharpreply. When this reply was adopt¬ed President Frank and others con¬ferred with Professor Andrew T.Weaver, chairman of the athleticboard, and reported back that al¬though the board’s report did seemto infer differently, the board reallyrecognized the regents’ final author¬ity in athletic matters. Chicago WrestlersMeet Armour MatTeam Here TodayThe second victory of the year willbe the goal of the Maroon wrestlersas they tangle with the squad fromArmour Tech at four this afternoonin Bartlett. The meet will be free tothe public and the next to last of thepreparatory matches before Big Tencompetition opens with MinnesotaJanuary 25.The “main events’’ of the after¬noon will probably be in the 145 and155 lb. classes when Schultz tries todown Chicago’s sophomore Bob Fin-wal and when Charles Butler meetsSumner whom Maroon wrestling fansremember as one of Armour’s out¬standing matmen last year.As Coach Spyrose K. Vorres ex¬pects the technical men to bring morethan one complete squad it is prob¬able that a number of Maroon mat-men will see action in the ring to¬day. Mike Brosil, mainstay of the135 pounders who has not yet beenon the lineup may be in condition to,wrestle. The return of Dick Ander¬son to the eligibility list has strength¬ened the 165 lb.Begin Winter SportsProgram at U HighUniversity high school interschol¬astic and intramural athletes are be¬ginning an intensive program of win¬ter sports, with basketball, indoortrack, and swimming predominating,Phy.sical Education Director Erwindetailed yesterday.The indoor track and swimmingvarsity teams, consistently aboveaverage at U high, are relying onnew blood to maintain their recordsset last year. Although the Maroon gymnastsdid not win the conference cham¬pionship last year, there seems tobe a strong possibility that CoachDan Hoffer’s tumblers will be sched¬uled for a place in championshipratings this year. Last year was the! first time that the gym team fin-I ished below second place in twenty-! four years, and out of the last nine-teen Big Ten meets, Chicago has won■ fifteen.i This year’s prospects, accordingj to Hoffer, are much better, sincethe team got a very early start, andhas been practicing since the first' of October. The Maroons have al-! ready taken two meets. The first: was with Milwaukee College at Mil¬waukee and the other with the Uni- jver.sity of Nebraska here.Most of this year’s team is inex-: perienced since only two lettermen,i co-captains Emery Fair and PeteSchneider, returned. Fair is an all-I around man entering the tumblingj events, the parallel bars, the hori¬zontal bars, the side horse and therings. Schneider enters all but tumb¬ling events.Other prospects for this year in¬clude: Scanlan, Kolb, and Beard intumbling events, Stein who is atumbler and works on the rings,Wetherell who enters four of thefive events, Schaeffer who enters allbut the side horse, Indritz, and Gas-kill who perform on the horse.Park Ridge DownsWater Polo Squadi In the water polo game which tookplace Monday night. Park Ridgesplashed its way to a 3 to 2 victory jover the local Maroon .squad. This isquad consisting of men below varsity icaliber were as follows: Zoll, Will,McNeill, Stolar, Weir, German, and iMcDonald. The game was part of a \series with city YMCA and othergroups.The varsity squad will engage theI. C.’s in a practice game tomorrow.The Maroon tankmen will meet aNorthwestern squad in their first con¬ference meet on Saturday.i Duke UniversitySCHOOL OF MEDICINEDurham, N. C.Four terms of eleven weeks aregiven each year. These may betaken consecutively (graduationin three years) or three termsmay be taken each year (grad¬uation in four years.) The en¬trance requirements are intelli¬gence, character and at leasttwo years of college work, in¬cluding the subjects specifiedfor Grade A Medical Schools.Catalogues and applicationforms may be obtained from theDean. A tearoom thatentirely different!Good food, of course!-—andserved in an Early Americanenvironment you are sure to enjoy.Quaint gifts, spinning wheels,Colonial staircases and fireplaces.Delicious Steaks, Fish and ChickenDinners — served by attractive col¬lege girls.Many say it is the nicestplace to dine in all Chi¬cago. Compare!Breakfast, 25c to 40cLuncheon • - 35c upDINNERS from 55cContinuous service, 7 a. m.until 10 p. m. every dayColonial Te aroom6324 Woodlawn Ave.We cater to parties—Phone Hyde Park 632444 a new year’s resolution 99the PHOENIX does hereby solemnly state that fromthis date, the souls of this campus will again tinglewith joy and merriment—they’ll praise the finest col¬lection of humor, wit, and rhyme—they’ll be happyto the tune of gay and well done cartoons—they’llthrill to the fine writings of famed campus authors-so be it.and what could be a better start than anEsquire Editionof thePHOENIX• a national institution in your own campus style—thehumor that has swept the country enveloped in anissue that will rival the original—the number that nocampusite will want to miss—well, you’ll see.SOPHISTICATION IN HUMORorHUMOR IN SOPHISTICATIONOUT JANUARY 22ndi