Batlp illaroonVol. 36. No. 70. Price 3 Cents. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1936 Member United PressFrance VetoesTwo EthiopianPeace PactsRejects British, ItalianOffers as Hindrance toFrench Unity.PARIS, Feb. 20—(UP)—Two ap¬parently independent trial balloonsfor Italo-Ethiopian peace—releasedsimultaneously from London andRome yesterday—exploded tonightwhen the French government madeit clear that even if Britain wants toalter the abortive Hoare-Laval plan asa basis for negotiation, France willrefuse.The French government will insistthat all peace overtures be madethrough Geneva and preferably be ofItalian origin.For the time being, France's inter¬est in Italy does not concern an earlyending of the Italo-Ethiopian war,but consist of watching the suspiciousrtirtation between Rome and Berlinwhich threatens to disrupt France'sgeneral scheme of consolidation.The .status quo and peace of Cen¬tral Europe was discus.sed at greatlength during the recent two-weekconference of European statesmen atPari.s.Statisticians ReportAt the .same time, French govern¬ment .statisticians have discoveredthat sanctions have cut French ex¬ports to Italy by more than one-halfwhile imports from Italy have all butdisappeared.With French legislative electionsonly two months away, Premier Al¬bert Sarraut's government is anxiousto avoid taking a position in theItalo-Ethiopian conflict which mightb«> criticized at the polls. Inasmucha> Pierre Laval's cabinet was over-(('ontinued on page 2)Radicals StageAnti - CatholicRiots in Spain.MADRID, Feb. 20—(UP)—Riotingradicals burned churches, destroyedcrosses and trampled holy images inthe streets tonight in Spain, age-olddefender of the Catholic faith.The Reds, intoxicated by politicalpower won in Sunday's election, firedon troops and Catholic youths whoattempted to protect churches, news¬paper offices and political headquar¬ters of the defeated right-wing parties.Inflamed members of the popularfront parties—Socialists, Communistsand Syndicalist—rioted at Ponteve-dra, Cartagena, Bejar, Barcelona,Ca.strogenis and Alicante.The violence spread from the main¬land to the Canary Islands, wheremartial law’ was proclaimed after rad¬icals began a general strike.It was impossible to estimate totalcasualties since the nation went tothe polls Sunday, but it was certainmore than a dozen persons have beenkilled and several hundred woundedor injured.Refuses to SaluteOne of those killed today was awoman who was stabbed to death ina clash when a butcher's sons refusedto salute a red flag in a processionof radicals. The marchers boxed theboys' ears and their father, enraged,stabbed at paraders. The butcher,Antonio Depablo, and seven of hisrelatives were arrested.At Gijon, where there were bloodyriots yesterday, the celebrating radi¬cals, impatiently awaiting release ofpolitical prisoners, freed all inmatesof two jails, irrespective of their of¬fenses.At Cordova six members of the gov¬ernment commission of the village ofRambla were wounded in a demon-.stration. At Coruna, a mob of 20,000marched to the jail. They were haltedby guards, but a deputation was al¬lowed to bring out 17 prisoners whowere freed and carried away on theshoulders of the crowd.Inflamed members of the popularfront parties rioted at Pontevedrafollowing the arrest of Emiliano Igle-sias, former ambassador to Mexico,and Julio Otero, both radicals, oncharges of election fraud.The mob first demonstrated in frontof the government offices and thenraided the headquarters of the Accion(Continu^ on page 2) Epidemics SweepEthiopian Forces;Threaten ItaliansFIELD HEADQUARTERS of theItalian Army at Makale, via courierand airplane to Asmara, Eritrea,Tuesday, Feb. 18—(UP)—Epidemicsof smallpox, typhus and dysenteryare sweeping the shattered remnantsof Ethiopian War Minister Ras MuluGetta's army, defeated in the recentbattles of Enderta and Amba Ara-dam, according to information re¬ceived by the Italian command today.This information was brought byDr. Maximilian Stanislau Belau, 36,and Tadeusz Medyusky, Polish RedCross workers with the Ethiopianarmy, who were captured by theItalians after the battle of AmbaAradam.Dr. Belau said there is great dan¬ger of the diseases spreading—evento the Italians—as a majority of theEthiopians have no knowledge of con¬tagious diseases.Ethiopian medical supplies are verylimited and entirely inadequate todeal with epidemics. Their armies,for the most part, are without sanita¬tion facilities.The two .said Ras Mulu Getta triedto halt desertions by cruelly brand¬ing the faces of all those caught. Theysaid the branding iron consisted ofan iron circle around a coptic cross,which fits tightly over the face, sear¬ing, chin, cheeks, forehead, nose andmouth.Senate TerminatesArms Inquiry withGardner DisclosureWASHINGTON, Feb. 19—(UP)—The Senate Munitions committeeclosed its stormy, two year arms in¬quiry today with disclosure of a let¬ter dated last year recommending thatairlines retain former DemocraticGovernor Max. 0. Gardner of NorthCarolina to infiuence new airmaillegislation because he is a “politicianof the first water.’’The letter, written by James P.Murray, eastern representative ofBoeing Aircraft Corpn., to C. L. Ev-tvedt, president of the company, dis¬closed that Gardner was paid $75,000as special counsel for the Aeronauti¬cal chamber of commerce after Post¬master General James A. Farley can¬celled all airmail contracts in 1934.Murray urged that Gardner be re¬tained at a fee of $25,000 for 1935saying:“Personally, I feel that Gardner canbe of more help during this sessionof Congress in order to get properairmail legislation than he has beento the industry during the past 10or 12 months. He is a- politician ofthe first water and my observationstell me that in this administration, inorder to get things done, resort sim¬ply has to be made to the use ofpolitics.’’Murray acknowledged the letter to¬day. He said Gardner severed hisconnections with the Association.Shortly after the letter had beenread. Chairman Gerald P. Nye formallydeclared the investigation ended. Heemphasized that the inquiry was notcomplete as each new phase of theinvestigation opened a new line whichshould be developed. The lack of timeand money, he lamented, made it nec¬essary to abandon the survey now.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)BOLSHEVIK PHILOSOPHYIn my first direct meeting withthe Bolshevik philosophy in action(even in rather circumscribed action),I was disturbed by the precision withwhich it answered the questions I hadbegun to think unanswerable—thequestions of a sensible relationshipbetween one life and many. Whetherthe Bolshevik solutions were the cor¬rect ones was another matter, whichmight take a long time to determine,but they were at least solutions, andrepresented the effort of humanthought to bring order into the chaosthat on every side oppressed and apMpalled the imagination. I—Vincent Sheean, Personal Historm Sharp ReturnsFinal Decisionin Moot CourtArgue Points of Law In¬volved in Contract andTort Cases.With the rendering of his decisionon the final moot court case yester¬day morning, Malcolm P. Sharp, as¬sociate professor of Law, gave thefinishing touches to this quarter’smoot court work at the Law school.Altogether there were four cases pre¬sented this quarter.In the first case last ThursdayMarcus Cohn and Finney Indritz de¬feated George Schwaegerman andHarker Stanton; in the second argu¬ment Henry O. Kavina defeated Shel¬don Bernstein and Robert Crane lastFriday. Monday Thomas Megan andWilliam Tucker defeated Marie Ber¬ger and John Simpson, and Wednes¬day’s final, with a decision delayeduntil yesterday, was won by MelvinCohen and Jerome Sterling from LeeShaw and George Fairweather. Thiscase was the closest of all, accordingto Mr, Sharp; this closeness caused adelay in his decision.The subjects for these cases weredivided between contracts and torts.The case dealing with a “misstatementabout land occasioning a sale’’ waswon by Kavina. One dealing with the“rights of an innocent purchaser ofan automobile from one who had beenentrusted with its possession’’ waswon by Megan-Tucker. The case deal¬ing with a “puzzling succession ofcommunications which one corre¬spondent thought a contract, and theother thought not a contract’’ waswon by Cohn-Indritz. Cohen-Sterlingwon the case dealing with the “rightsof a person asked to undertake the in¬vestigation of a crime, who began theinvestigation without any undertakingto carry it on.’’Mr. Sharp said yesterday that thecases were on “arguments on pointsof law as though on an appeal to theSupreme court.’’ He further pointedout that “in each case the decision onthe law was kept separate from thedecision on the merits of the workdone by the contestants. Unsettledproblems of law were raised by thequestions set for argument. The judgegave an opinion on the law in eachcase.’’Mr. Sharp presided as judge for thecases on contracts, and he and KurtBourchardt, research assistant, wereCO-judges in the cases on torts.A S U ProtestResults in BanofHearstNews ■r(Left to right, first row: Barbara Vail, Jeanne Stolte, Cynthia Grabo;second row, Robert Ebert, Jay Berwanger, Ralph Nicholson.French Film ^Don Quixote’ StarsFeodor Chaliapin, Russian BassoBy C. SHARPLESS HICKMANAt the request of an American Student Union anti-Hearst committee, theMidway theater has decided to banHearst Metrotone news, it was an¬nounced by Bernard Brandshaft, anti-Hearst committee chairman, at theASU meeting held yesterday. Thecommittee is planning to requestother theaters in the vicinity of theUniversity to follow the Midway’s ex¬ample.The ASU is planning to hold a par¬liament to be open to the entire cam¬pus on Friday, February 28, at 3:30.The committee appointed to make ar¬rangements for the parliament consistsof Frank Meyer, A1 Cooper, RobertMarks, Joseph Witherspoon, DavidFrench, Lawrence Harris, CharlesCorcoran, and William Lewis. Thesubject and place of meeting of theparliament is to be announced later.A flexible committee is to functionwithin the executive committee to actin case of disagreement within thatgroup, it was decided after a dis¬cussion of the organization of theASU.The ASU adopted a resolution tosupport the American Youth act whichis at present before Congress, andwhich is to provide employment forstudents of any race or color, whetheror not they are'of unemployed fami¬lies or families on relief.The Student Advocate, officialmonthly publication of the ASU, wenton sale yesterday for five cents. Itcontains articles written by JosephP. Lash, national secretary of theASU, Nancy Beatty, a YWCA offi¬cer at Ohio State university, and AdF. Rheinhardt, former editor of theColumbia Jester. The old adage that too many cooksspoil the broth was never more clearlydemonstrated than in “Don Quixote’’,the French film starring Chaliapin,which will be shown tonight at In¬ternational House.Beautifully photographed, welladapted from the Cervantes story, ex¬cellently acted, the film neverthelessfails because of the cutting and mon-;age of one Hans Oser, and the num-irous interferences which director G.Pabst suffered during the makingthe film.“Don Quixote’’ was produced byTickets for MirrorRevue Put on SaleTickets for the eleventh annual Mir¬ror revue will be put on sale in theMandel hall box office Tuesday atnoon, it was announced yesterday bythe Mirror board.All clubs, fraternities, and organi¬zations wishing to reserve boxes orblocks of seats for the performancesshould get in touch with Jayne Paul-man, in charge of box office and ticketsales, by Thursday.March 6 and 7 are the dates set forthe revue. Tickets will be sold for$1.10 on the main floor and 55 centsin the balcony. The cast for the showw’ill be announced in a forthcomingissue of the Daily Maroon by the Mir¬ror board.Anti-War CommitteeHolds Meeting TodayA meeting of the provisional com¬mittee of the second annual studentanti-war conference is to be held thisafternoon at 3:30 in Social Science302. A poll for the conference willbe approved, and further additions tothe committee already elected will bemade. A tentative program will bediscussed.The committee is to be divided intofour sections, to include a programcommittee, an organizational commit¬tee to secure delegates from organi¬zations and dormitories, a publicitycommittee to draw up and present apoll, and a finance committee. Pabst in 1932 in two versions: Frenchand English. The English version hasalready been shown here; tonight’sshowing is the Chicago premiere of theFrench version. Harry Rappaport,Pabst’s assistant, has told me thatthroughout the filming Pabst washindered by the necessity of makingthe two versions, both of them in alanguage and mode of acting withwhich he w’as unfamiliar. Not onlythese difficulties, but illness on thepart of Chaliapin and others was themeans of interrupting the continuityof production. The film was not cut byPabst. He was working with techni¬cians who were unfamiliar with hismethods of direction. The man whowith the aid of cameraman FritzArno Wagner made some of the great¬est of German films was in this pic¬ture plunged into a situation beyondhis own control. Pabst has repeatedlyendeavored to have his name removedfrom the credit sheets of the film. Tomention the picture to him is a sureway to start a verbal explosion.Attains Rare HeightsDespite these unfavorable circum¬stances, “Don Quixote’’ in its finalportions attains rare heights of cine¬matic and dramatic beauty. The entireaction from the attack upon the wind¬mills by the bewildered Don (whichin the film is his last exploit, ratherthan his first) to the burning of thebooks and the subsequent death ofQuixote is as well timed, and asmoving as any climax I have everseen on the screen.Chaliapin as the Don towers abovethe film throughout. In his singing ofJacques Ibert’s music, in his unfor¬gettable acting, it is his personalitywhich shines through, raising the tat¬tered earlier portions to magnificencesheerly because of his performance.His is almost too gargantuan a per¬sonality to be contained in the vir¬tually small limits of a film. And thegenius of Pabst, the exquisite beautyof Nicolas Farkas’ lens, and the sen¬sitive support given by Dorville asSancho Panza still leave him aloneand magnificently beyond the cine¬matic touch.Lead Grand March GoodmanPlaysforW ashingtonProm TonightCommittee Stages SledRace in Circle at NoonToday.Smooth dance music and hot“swing’’ rhythms by two noted orches¬tras, one of the large.st and mostbeautiful ballrooms in the city, andthe longest hours for any social affairin University history are the combin¬ation offered the campus tonight atthe 32nd annual Washington Prom,traditionally held on the eve of Wash¬ington’s birthday.The two orchestras in question arethose of Charles Gaylord and BennyGoodman, the place is the ballroom ofthe Lake Shore athletic club, 850North Lake Shore drive, and thehours of the prom are from 10 to3:30. Gaylord will play during thefirst half of the dance, from 10 to1:15, and Goodman from 1:15 to 3:30.The Che.stnut street entrance of theclub will be used for the Prom.Sled Race TodayA Washington Prom sled racearound the circle this noon, with fresh¬men furnishing the horse power andseveral campus women being taken fora ride, will wind up the campus ac¬tivities preceding the Prom.The grand march, impressive cere¬mony which is the highlight of theProm each year, will take place thisevening at 1:30, with Benny Good¬man and his orchestra providing themartial air. Following the precedentset by the Interfraternity ball, thegrand march will have three wingsthis year for the first time in the his¬tory of the Prom.Leaders of PromSix students named by the StudentSocial committee because of their out¬standing record in campus activities,will lead the march. Jay Berwangerwill pair with Barbara Vail, RobertEbert with Jeanne Stolte, and RalphNicholson with Cynthia (irabo.Bids for the prom are priced at $5.They will continue to be sold oncampus today and also at the door ofthe Lake Shore athletic club tonight.Bids can be obtained on campus todayat tables .set up in Cobb and Mandel,the information desk in the Pressbuilding, the bookstore, Reynolds club.International House desk, and fromTailor Tom and from fraternity anddormitory representatives. RobertBethke, ticket chairman, has request¬ed that all salesmen report to him by6 today.Kagawa, CoffinSpeak at ChapelServices SundayHenry Sloane Coffin, president ofthe Theological seminary of New City,will be the speaker at the regularChapel service Sunday at 11. His sub¬ject will be, “Whence Cometh Tempta¬tion.’’It was also announced that Toyo-hiko Kagawa, prominent Japanesemissionary, will speak at a specialservice in the Chapel at 3 Sundayafternoon. Dr. Kagawa will at thistime present his views on the prac¬tical aspects of Christianity and whathe considers the basic Christian ideal.This service will be open to the pub¬lic.The University choir, directed byMack Evans, and Orchesis, directedby Marian Van Tuyl, will present aGregorian liturgical service at 4:30.Adler Speaks BeforeChapel Council MeetingEntering upon the second phase ofits inquiry into the nature of religion,the Chapel council will meet for thefirst of a series of discussions withMortimer Adler, associate professorof the Philosophy of Law, Sundayevening at 7:30 in the home of Deanand Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey.At the beginning of the autumnquarter the Council decided to for¬sake the discussions of random sub¬jects which it has held in the pastyears in order to pursue a more order¬ly inquiry into the nature of religicn.Up to the present time the discus¬sions have been conducted by membersof the Divinity school.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1936Page TwoHouse Approves Farm Bill;Raises Question ot Financing Discuss French,American NavalTonnage LimitsWASHINGTON, Feb. 19—(UP)—The House tonight ended general de¬bate on the New Deal farm bill andexpects to pass it tomorrow. Mean¬time majority leader William B. Bank-head indicated a tax bill to raise halfa billion dollars to finance the pro¬gram would be forthcoming next week.This indication came as Rep. AllenT. Treadway, R., Mass,, combined anattack on the bill with a predictionthat a tax bill would be dumped onCongress about the time it was get¬ting ready to adjourn.Bankhead interrupted to inquirewhat led Treadway to make such aprediction. The white-haired Republi¬can replied that that was the strategythe New Deal had used in the past.“Would it surprise you if we hada tax bill under consideration nextweek?" inquired Bankhead.“Yes it would,” Treadway replied,“.A.nd I’d be delighted. It would bea harbinger of adjournment."“Oh, we’re full of surprises likethat,” Bankhead said.Treadway objected to the admini¬stration farm bill on two grounds;first that no general hearings wereheld and second that it “discrimin¬ated" against the dairy industry.Che Satlu ^MaroonFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicairo,publish^ morninKs except Saturday. 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: 32.75 a year; 34 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 repre¬sentative National Advertising Service,Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York; 400 N.Michigan Ave., Chicago.RALPH NICHOLSON. Editor-in-Chief.ROBERT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.RAYMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.HENRY F. KELLEY, Desk Editor.JEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Business associates; James Bernard,Don Elliott, Don Patterson, Roy War-shawsky.Editorial associates; Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell, Julian Kiser, John Morris.James Snyder, Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: Cody PfanstiehlAssistant: James MichnaBertha Ott AnnouncesA Hilarious NoveltyH "The Cfuirlie Chaplinof the Stage*’Trudi Schoopand her COMIC BALLETSTUDEBAKERTHEATERSunday, Feb. 23rd•Matinee at 3:30—Evening at 8:.30Seats 83c - $2,75Tickets at Information Office But a slim tall young Republicanfrom Kansas—Rep. Clifford R. Hope— put aside political considerationsand urged the House to pass the NewDeal bill although he does not con¬sider it perfect.The spectacle of a Republican sup¬porting a Democratic bill is nothingnew in farm debate. But what madeHope’s position unique is that he isthe ranking Republican on the HouseAgriculture committee. If his partywere in power, the House would beconsidering his tariff equalization billinstead of Chairman Marvin Jones’measure to continue regulation offarm production through benefit pay¬ments to farmers who retire certainparts of their land for soil conserva¬tion.Later Jones spoke for the bill, say¬ing it would correct “some of the dis¬parity between farmers and industry."He explained that in addition to soilconservation, the bill embraced adomestic allotment plan to pay premi¬ums on that portion of the crops con¬sumed domestically and provided forexpansion and creation of new mar¬kets.After debate ended the Houseadopted an amendment limiting thefarm program to $500,000,000 a year,and Chairman Jones substituted theHouse bill for the bill the Senatepassed, which was under considera¬tion.The two bills are very much alike,but the Senate added the protectionof rivers and harbors as one of thepolicies of the bill, and made it p6s-sible for states to set up AAA unitsbefore the expiration of the soil pro¬gram to not more than $500,000,000 ayear. The amount asked for the firstyear is $440,000,000.Spanish RadicalsAttack Catholics(Continued from page 1)Popular and Fascist parties. It thenproceeded to the Hotel Progreso, car¬ried furniture and hostelry to thestreet and set them afire.The government charged that Igle-sias and Otero engineered a plot bywhich unknown persons claimed torepresent the provincial board incharge of examining ballots at thetown of Lalin, and in that capacityallegedly substituted false ballots.Iglesias and several friends were ar¬rested in their hotel rooms.At Santiago De Compestalla left¬wingers raided Fascist, Accion Popu¬lar and Radical centers, damagingfurniture and buildings heavily andtaking several leaders in custody.At Barcelona shooting broke outbetween Catholic youths, protectinga church, and extremists who attempt¬ed to raid the building and set it afire.Six were arrested.The left-wing governor of Orenseresigned tonight in protest againstalleged irregularities in balloting byright-wingers, which purportedly pre¬vented a left-wing victory. The ex¬governor led a demonstration.Eliot and MerriamLecture on PlanningStarting February 25, and continu¬ing for three days, Mr. Charles W.Eliot, II, an executive of the NationalResources committee of Washington,D. C., and Professor Charles Mer¬riam, of the Political Science depart¬ment, will offer a series of four lec¬tures on “National Planning in Prac¬tice,’ ’at 3:30 in Social Science 122.On February 25, Mr. Eliot willspeak on “The Planning of Land Re¬sources," while Professor Merriamwill offer “Nature of National Plan¬ning’’ on February 26. Continuingon February 27 and 28, Mr. Eliot usesas his topics, “Planning of Water Re¬sources," and “State and RegionalPlanning."Goodspeed Speaks atInternational HouseAt the regular supper program atInternational House, Sunday night at6, Edgar J. Goodspeed, chairman ofthe department of New 'Testament andEarly Christian Literature, will talkon “400 Years of the Bible," As asecond feature, Tagore’s play, “TheSacrifice," which was recently per¬formed at International House on theoccasion of India night, will be re¬peated by request.Following the supper, a debate inthe Oxford manner will be held in theHome room of the House. The pro¬position, “This Hou.se oppose.s in¬creased governmental regulation ofeconomic enterprise," will be movedby Michael Hoffman and Harold Spie¬gel, and opposed by John Yander Zeeand George Stigler, with Leslie Lipsonacting as chairman. WASHINGTON, Feb. 20—(UP) —The State Department was under¬stood today to have plainly indicatedto French Ambassador Andre DeLaboulaye that the London NavalConference rather than Washingtonis the proper place to discuss hisgovernment’s desire for a lower limiton battleship tonnage.The Ambassador had gone over theheads of the American delegates tothe Naval Conference and, on instruc¬tions from his government, asked thestate department to consider a ton¬nage limit of around 27,000 tons, in¬stead of the 35,000 tons to which theUnited States and Great Britain hadagreed tentatively.Both the Undersecretary and theAmbassador declined to comment, butfrom a well-informed source it waslearned that Phillips, while concilia¬tory and willing to approve the dis¬cussion of the French suggestion inLondon, made it quite plain that thematter should not be brought up hereas a separate issue.La Follette UrgesReconsideration forPropaganda MeasureWASHINGTON, Feb. 20—(UP) —Sen. Robert M. La Follette, Prog.,Wis., announced today that as ameans of protecting freedom of thepress and freedom of speech, he wouldmove for reconsideration of the sub¬versive propaganda bill which passedthe Senate last year.The bill, now pending in the House,was designed to punish those whospread subversive propaganda in thearmy and navy.“While the bill has a laudable pur¬pose," La Follette said, “it is so loose¬ly drawn that it might endanger thefreedom of the press and the freedomof speech.”Open Lecture Serieson Church and StateMarshall E. Dimock, a.ssociate pro¬fessor of Public Administration, willpresent the first of three addresses onthe “Church and the State" Sundayat the First Unitarian church, 57thstreet and Woodlawn avenue. Histopic will be “The Ends of the State”.The other two lectures, made on suc¬cessive Sundays, will be by Profes¬sor Augustus R. Hatton of North¬western university and Reverend VonOgden Vogt of the church.Frank H. Knight, professor of Eco¬nomics will also speak on “Ethics andCompetition" in a lecture sponsoredby the Society of Friends at the FirstUnitarian church on Sunday.Paul Douglas Returnsfrom European TravelsPaul Douglas, professor of Eco¬nomics, returns to the campus todayfrom a sabbatical tour of Europe andthe East. Since leaving the Univer¬sity in September, Professor Douglashas visited numerous Italian cities,Rome, Sienna, Venice, and Milan. Histour also included stops in Paris andLondon.Professor Dougla.s will be in Chi¬cago over the week-end and will re¬turn next week-end. During the re¬mainder of the quarter, he will tourchiefly in Southern California, andwill be back in residence on the Uni¬versity campus during the springquarter.i' ‘I Found Pole’Asserts CookFamous Explorer ClaimsDiscovery on Basis of1909 Expedition.i{By United Press) iDr. Frederick Cook, whose polar |expedition 28 years ago threw a huge jquestion mark across the pages of 1history, today demanded that the jworld recognize his claim as discov- jerer of the north pole in 1909. iHe wrote to Roland L. Redmond, |president of the American Geograph¬ical Society, asking that the inves¬tigation be reopened.Bent and feeble at 70 after a life jwhich led him through both the Arcticand Antarctic, around the world and jfinally into prison for an oil fraud, jthe explorer said he had asked the,Geographical Society to sponsor theinvestigation because of its reputa-!tion for “fairness and accuracy.”Center of Controversy 'Center of a controversy whichshook the scientific world shortly af-'ter his return from the Arctic re¬gions, Cook still holds the gold medal iawarded him by the Danish govern-!ment. IThe university degree was con- jferred on him immediately on hisreturn and a scant few days before;the claim advanced by Admiral Rob-;ert E. Peary threw the world into con¬fusion and resulted in his own dis¬grace.“I was a target of the most viciou.<»;campaign of calumny and vitupera- jtion in history," he said in his letter ito the Geographical Society,“I stand then as I do today thatthe sound decision of history wouldbe based on the full narrative of theexplorer and not on superficial judg¬ment of the time.“For that reason I abstained fromattacking the claims of my rival andhave left my original story stand as apermanent record of the journey."Society to InvestigateNEW YORK, Feb. 19—(UP)—Dr.Frederick Cook’s renewed claim forrecognition as discoverer of the northpole will be placed before the councilof the American Geographical Societyat its next meeting on or about April8, Roland L. Redmond, president ofthe society said today.Redmond said he received Cook’sletter citing reasons why his claimshould be recognized and immediatelyacknowledged it.Issue Ransom Ticketsat Information DeskTickets for the John Crowe Ransomlecture under the Moody foundationThursday will be available withoutcharge starting Monday at the In¬formation desk, F’ress building, ac¬cording to an announcement by theMoody committee.Ransom, author of several volumesof poetry and professor at Vander¬bilt university will speak on “Poetryas a Form of Knowledge” in additionto reading some original selections,Thursday in Mandel hall at 8:16.The former Oxford scholar was in¬vited to the University as a result ofa petition presented to the committeeby a group of interested Universitystudents.Six Italian FliersKilled by EthiopiansROME, Feb. 21—(UP)—Six Ital- |ian fliers were killed and another ismi.ssing from the crew of a tri-motorbombing plane which crashed afterbeing struck by an anti-aircraft shellwhile raiding retreating Ethiopianforces, dispatches from Asmara, Eri¬trea, said today. Report Flier LostNine Years, LivesPARAMARIBO, DUTCH GUIANA,Feb. 20—(UP)—Alfred Harrod, anewspaper man now employed by thecommission defining the boundary be¬tween Dutch and British Guiana andBrazil, was quoted in a local news¬paper today as saying he had talkedto Paul Redfern, lost American avia¬tor, in the Brazilian jungle.His story was as follows:He flew on a search for Redfernwith Art Williams, American flier,guided by an Indian. They reached anIndian village inhabited by nudeAborigines.They saw Redfern’s plane wreckedin a tree and Redfern himself on theground, with a group of Indians. Red¬fern wore little more than the sav¬ages.“Redfern told us he crashed in 1929(the flier was lost in 1927) becauseof a leak in his fuel tank," Harrodwas quoted as saying. “The plane re¬mained in a tree and is called by theIndians ‘The House of God.’ ’’Advance Registrationwith Deans ContinuesAdvance registration for the springquarter, which started February 17,is continuing in all departments of theUniversity until March 14. Mimeo¬graphed copies of the schedules are onall the bulletin boards.The offices of the Dean are takingcare of all the students in residencethis quarter, by appointment. Afterregistering in the Dean’s office regis¬tration is complete, eliminating thenecessity of going to the office of theRegistrar. Students registering forthe first time, however, those wish¬ing to change their registration, andthose who register the first day ofthe quarter, follow the usual pro¬cedure,Mrs. Minna SchmidtSpeaks Next SundayMrs. Minna Schmidt, director of theUniversity costume workshop, will ad¬dress the Chicago Historical Societyon “Ladies of the White House." Sun¬day at 3.Mrs. Schmidt will present her sub¬ject in chronological order, )begin-ning with the mother of George Wash¬ington and concluding with Mrs.Franklin Roosevelt.The Chicago Historical societybuilding is located at Clark street andNorth avenue. The doors will be open¬ed early, in order that the publicmay see the exhibits which will in¬clude miniatures of internationallyprominent women, attired in the cos¬tumes of their times. France VetoesTwo EthiopianPeace Pacts(Continued from page 1)thrown and Laval driven from theforeign office by Radical-Sociali.st de¬fection based on disagreement withhis foreign policy and particularly theHoare-Laval peace plan, it is impos¬sible for the Sarraut government toaccept that plan as basis for negotia¬tion.It is understood that foreign minis¬ter Pierre-Etienne Flandin has de¬cided that France will make no fur¬ther peace gesture.Professor Gould Talksto Scandinavian ClubAssociate professor Chester Gouldof the department of Germanics willaddress the Scandinavian club todaywhen the organization holds its secondmeeting at Ida Noyes hall at 3:30.His subject is entitled, “The Relationof the Geography of the ScandinavianCountries to the Characteristics of thePeople." Following his talk Mrs. Ks-peland will read some Norwegianpoems.At the last meeting of the club,Mrs. Korber was elected president.Mrs. Espeland secretary, RichardWickum treasurer, and George John¬son student advisor.PICCADILLY.list and RIackstoneTODAY7 DREAM TOO MUCWSat., Sun., Mon., and Tues.“WHIPSAW”Myrna Loy — Spencer Trar>|| A *’*’■'* H»rv)«rll/MXr CK Matine<> D«ilyFriday and Saturday'Transatlantic Tunnel”withRichard Dtx — Leslie Bank.sHYDE PARKFriday and Saturday“In Old Kentucky”withWill RogersliMHKHI****** * ***«ART JARRETTBodio liar ond ringw •xtroordinonr • • • l«€Rilnghit rhythmic donct Ixmd... mulA dif, AU^Sta%> noo%> SUmBiORRiSON BOTELTERRACE R O ON0 Cmmmr ChmrgmTED LEWISand his sensational bandI Con" ************4*******«♦******»*If*If4'44444444444444444444444444uWlfm So WmrBfautUNIVERSITY CHURCH OF Si. Paul’s Church The First UnitarianDISCIPLES OF CHRIST 50th and Dorchester Church.5655 University AvenueDr. Edward Scribner Ames, Minister Woodlawn Ave. andE. 57th St.Parish Office; Von Ogden Vogt,4946 Dorchester Avenue D.D., MinisterSunday, February 23, 1936 Tel. Oakland 3185 SUNDAY, FEB. 23, 193610:20 A. M.—Communion Service. F. C. Benson Beiliss, Rector 11:00 A. M.—“The Ends ofthe State," Professor Mar-11:00 A. M.—Sermon. shall Dimock, University12:20 P. M.—Forum. SUNDAY SERVICE: of Chicago.12:20 P. M.—Wranglers’ Forum. Topic:“Christian Tolerance and theNew Morality." Leader; IrvinE. Lunger.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers Meetings. Tea and Holy Communion, 8:00 A. M,Church School Service, 9:30A. M. 4:00 P. M.—Channing ClubTea and Discussion,“Rethinking Chicago,’’ Dr.Arthur Holt of the Chica-Morning Services 11:00 A. M, go Theological Seminary.Students cordially invited toProgram. Young People’s Society, 6:30. attend and participate.tuimrnJ >».THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 21, 1936 Page ThreeGuiliveCleans Up in a Few Last WordsAbout the PromYOU’VE BEEN HUMORED, ca¬joled and beseeched, told, commandedand ordered to go to the WashingtonProm tonight. Some of you will, andsome of you won’t. Those who will arethe people who go to club parties, theI.F. dance, and the Skull and Cres¬cent formal—in general, the peoplewho are “in activities”. Those whowon’t are the people who haven't themoney, carry brief-cases, and just“never go out much”.There’s been shady publicity andclean publicity. Neatest scoop wasHelen Ward’s appearance underfreshman supervision; shadiest actwas Connor Laird announcing thatHutchins would start the pie-eatingcontest yesterday noon.And although it’s been advertisedas the 32nd Annual Prom, it’s reallythe 41st. “Someone got mixed up afew years ago,” says Julian Kiser, whoholds, and has held well, the most im-l>ortant job of publicity director.The Prom is the top of the socialseu'on, and steeped in tradition. No-bniy cares much about the tradition.CHARLES TYROLER, associatewriter of a past Maroon column, wrotea letter last December to RudyardKipling conveying birthday greetingsand criticizing the pre.ss for its han¬dling of the Lindbergh ca.se.Wrote back Kipling, in what is be¬lieved to be his last letter to Amer¬ica :“Many thanks for your letterof the 3()th December.“.As to the question you rai.sed,1 suppose that, as with an indi¬vidual, no one ‘writes down’ anation except itself—that is whatmakes me a little ‘fatigued’ tosee a people so multitudinouslymisrepresented as are the UnitedStates by their press. You see, Ilived there once and have there¬fore watched the process.”Said Noel Gerson, ’35, “I alwaysknew the lesser half of Rabelaiswould be a great man .some day—Cod bless you, little man.”* * *A DAILY MAROON reporter tele¬phoned Garfield V. Cox at his home,intending to get a statement on theTV.A (iecision.“Is Mr. Cox there?”A child’s voice answered:“No. He’s at his dancing le.sson.”* « «.Asked what he would speak aboutat a recent business school alumnimeeting, Jay Berwanger answered“Well, 1 haven’t given it much thought—football, I guess”.« « •WE REMEMBER a night last Dec¬ember when we walked in the city.Walked and walked in mist and nightfor forty blocks, just absorbing life.There was “Jesus Saves” in neonlights with speaker rasping broad¬cast love of God and man’s salvation.There was 5 cent beer and “FamilyEntrance,” “Open Evenings—6 till 2.”Red and green in Christmas windows,shirts today for 98. Accelerandostreet car’s whine then steely screechof steel on wheel and stop. Peoplein an end and out another. “FloorShows Nightly” restaurant with breadpotatoes foodly warm displacing dampnight air. Mostly downwards lines onfaces, mostly furrowed unbecoming,mostly purely useful faces just tohold a mouth and nose and eyes withwrinkles under. Figures moving intheir own lives existing out the city’swhole.Another neon sign said “Undertak¬er’’ and then below in painted letters:“When the inevitable comes, let us'houlder your burden.”* * *they were taking pictures forthe downtown papers of some of thegirls in the Cap and Gown beautycontest. One photographer got every¬one to smile naturally but Jean Gay-ton.“Say,” he said, “You look like youWere scared!”“I am,” said Jean.* « «ATTENDING HIS physicalscience class for the first time thisquarter made Fred Collins feelPfotty good—until he ran acrosshis old high school science teach¬er.THREB MONTHS' COURSE^ COUIOI STUOfHTS AND OtAOUAmfcttlwriaA itmttimtkit etmn$AjrUl. Jmhl. Oiitbml.w Hilg Bookkt mmtfrm, wiHmmt-wtiNarMMM. aNKotorsmoseriUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSII. J.O..m.l.*m^Comrui.0pmt$HighSdtO9tOmd^IIMQr stafMMUf lAwMlayi. Avaaa rowwif. JWatar Cmr— nfm If mtm.m S.MIdtlQo» Ay.. gicoQo. taadolpk 4347 Circling the CircleII. Charles ReidBarnes LaboratoryNot within sight of the quad¬rangles; but, nevertheless, an integralpart of the University’s botany de¬partment is the Charles Reid Barneslaboratory and the botany green¬houses on Ingleside avenue near 57thstreet.The group, one of the newest on thecampus, was first occupied in 1929,and filled a definite need in the Bot¬any department which before thattime had been confined to the old Bot¬any building near Hull gate and partof Culver hall. The previous green¬houses had been on Ellis avenue nextto Billings hospital, which had soshaded them 'that satisfactory plantgrowth was impossible. The comple¬tion of the new buildings, however hasgiven the University one of the larg¬est groups of college-owned green¬houses in the country, covering over35,000 square feet and costing$319,000.Name For ProfessorThe Barnes laboratory, named afterthe first professor of Plant Physiologyin the University, is well supplied withgeneral laboratories In Plant Physiolo¬gy and Pathology, Biophysics and Bio¬chemistry. In the basement it hasLetters tothe EditorLAW' SCHOOL IN RUTEditor Daily MaroonDear Mr. Nicholson,Several years ago Law 211, acourse in logic for pre-professionalstudents given in the spring, wasshifted from 2:30 to 12 to accomodatea number of members of the baseballsquad. At this time Professor Morti¬mer Adler, who could not meet class¬es in the morning, gave the lecturesin the course. Now however. Profes¬sor Adler has given up teaching thecourse and his assistant, Mr. Rubin,has taken his place.Still the University, or more exactlythe Law school, refuses to shift thetime of the class to a morning period.The chief reason for this refusal isthat there w'ould be many conflicts.This statement is ridiculous since thepre-professional students who takethe course are not required to takeany other course in the school, andso they can easily adjust their sched¬ules to include Law 211 at a morninghour. At least they are able to ar¬range for the required Law 210 andHistory 264 in the fall and winterquarters respectively, and Law 211would be no different in the spring.The only explanation for the Lawschool’s policy is that its administra¬tion has struck a rut. Seemingly pro¬gressive in education, the school isapparently set in its ways as far itsadministration goes. Yet it is not toolate for a change to be made sinceonly a very few pre-professional stu¬dents have registered. But even ifthere is no change now, the Lawschool should arrange to give thecourse at a more convenient time inthe spring quarter of 1937. —E. S. S.Change Deadlines onWork for ExhibitThe deadline for submitting workfor the Ida Noyes art exhibit sponsoredby the Ida Noyes auxiliary has beenchanged from Monday to Thursday.The judging of the contributions willtake place on the following Fridayand the exhibit will open 'Tuesday,March 3. Paintings, handicrafts, orart pieces done by students, employees,and alumni of the University may beentered in the contest. So far, Dr.Ludwig Bachhofer, member of the Artstaff, William Whitford, associate pro¬fessor of Art Education, and CharlotteMillis, an alumna and former art stu¬dent of the University have been sel¬ected to serve on the jury for the ex¬hibition.Audry Neff heads the committee forsetting up the work, Irene Buckley,for publicity, and Helen Woodrich willbe in charge of the tea several chambers in which by meansof large liquid ammonia pumps a con¬tinuous temperature of 53 degreesFahrenheit can be maintained. Withthis equipment plants may be studiedunder a very large range of tempera¬ture conditions. For example the keep¬ing properties of peaches in northerncountries can be tested by exposureto extreme cold in these chambers.In one of the chambers plants arebeing grown entirely under controlledartificial light. 'The object of this ex¬periment is to study the fundament¬al relationships between nitrogensupply and photosynthesis in plants.The photosynthesis is measured bythe amount of carbon dioxide absorbedand given off, and the nitrogen ismeasured after decomposing the plantmaterial at high temperature.Among other ingenious devices isone for quickly measuring leaf areasin studies of plant growth. The in¬strument consists of light falling upona photoelectric cell, and area of theleaf may be measured by the amountof light it intercepts when placed inthe path of the light.Of special interest in the green¬houses is the valuable collection of cy-cads at the southern end. These largefern-like Gymnosperms were collect¬ed by Professor emeritus C, J.Chamberlain from tropical countriesall over the world, and constitute oneof the finest collections in existence.Dr. Chamberlain has also succeededin producing the first known hybridsof these plants.TTie seed laboratory on the secondfloor is also being used for a num¬ber of interesting experiments. Heresmall samples of various soils aretested for the ability to hold moistureby exposing them to drying agents.This property is important in thestudy of the fertility of soil and isthus far the least-explored aspect ofthis study.Today on theQuadranglesFRIDAYLecturesPublic lecture (downtown): “In¬flation: Is It Impending?” HowardWood, financial adviser, the ChicagoTribune. Fullerton hall, the Art In¬stitute at 6:45.MeetingsArrian. Alumnae room of Ida Noyesat 12:15.Federation. Student lounge of IdaNoyes at 12.WAA. Y room of Ida Noyes at 3:30.Scandinavian club. Library of IdaNoyes at 4.Pi Lambda Theta. Student loungeof Ida Noyes at 6:30.Nursing Education group. Y roomof Ida Noyes at 12.MiscellaneousPhonograph concert. Social Science122 at 12:30.Social dancing. Theater of IdaNoyes at 2:30.Swimming meet. Chicago vs. North¬western. Bartlett pool at 4.Motion picture (Renaissance societyand International House).“Don Quixote” (French version);“Rhythm in Light” (French); “Sor¬cerer’s Apprentice” (French). Inter¬national House theater at 8,Washington Prom. Lake Shoreathletic club from 10 to 3:30.SATURDAYBasketball game. Chicago vs. NorthCentral college. Fieldhouse at 8.SUNDAYUniversity religious service. HenrySloane Coffin. University chapel at11.Carillon recital. Frederick Marriott.University chapel at 4.Gregorian liturgical service. Uni¬versity chapel at 4:30 .MONDAYMeetingsWAA. Alumnae room of Ida Noyesat 12:30,Avukah. South reception room ofIda Noyes from 3 to 5,Lutheran opera club. Ida Noyestheater at 7:30.Join the Crowd atHANLEY’SBUFFET1S12 East 55th St Hutchins AnswersAlumni Questionsat Annual DinnerFrom 600 to 1000 alumni will as¬semble Wednesday to attend the sixthannual Midwinter alumni dinner, andto hear President Hutchins answerquestions submitted by them as tothe status of the University. The din¬ner will be held in the Red Lacquerroom of the Palmer house, and willbegin at 6.Mr. Paul Hoffman, president of theStudebaker corporation, and an alum¬nus of the class of 1912, will act astoastmaster for the dinner. Otherspeakers on the program in additionto the president are Mr. Donald S.Trumbull, chairman of the Alumnicouncil, who will give a short addressof welcome, and James Weber Linn,professor of English, who will intro¬duce Jay Berwanger, who is to bepresented with the alumni award forextra-curricular activity.Both students and members of thefaculty are invited to attend the din¬ner. Tickets are two dollars and maybe obtained at the Alumni office, Cobbhall.Begin Radio Exchangewith NorthwesternA new policy of exchanging thebest professorial radio talent betweenthe University and Northwestern hasbeen adopted by the UniversityBroadcasting council, it was an¬nounced yesterday.The first “exchange program” willbe Northwestern’s Reviewing Stand,broadcast over WGN and the MutualBroadcasting system Sunday morningat 10, when Associate Professor of Fi¬nance Stuart P. Meech, a veteran ofthe University roundtable programwill discuss “The Rising Level of Tax¬ation” with Professor Ernest H.Hahne of Northwestern, at Evanston.“The TVA Decision” will be dis¬cussed on the weekly roundtable fea¬ture over WMAQ and NBC Sundaymorning at 11:30. Those who will givetheir views on the latest Supremecourt case are William H. Spencer,dean of the School of Business; JamesWeber Linn, journalist and professorof English; and Charles S. Ascher, di¬rector of the Public AdministrationClearing house. Tree Ring Dating Helps Studyof Ancient Culture in Near EastBy BYRONTree ring dating, first developedand intensively employed in delvinginto the history of SouthwesternUnited States, will find a tremen¬dously richer and broader field of ap¬plication in the study of ancient NearEastern culture according to Dr. Mar¬tin Sprengling, chairman of the de¬partment of Oriental Languages andLiteratures. In addition to establish¬ing a definite chronology, the researchwill enable students to link climaticcause with historical effect.Men at work in Near Eastern digsare hearing the call for wood frag¬ments which until but recently wereconsidered valueless. They are be¬ing asked for “wood that is carbon¬ized, water-soaked, deteriorated, orcrumbling, as well as in good condi¬tion”—for each fragment may con¬tain a valuable record.“We would have over a small area,”said Dr. Sprengling, “wood derivingfrom a small area, for all of whichthe same climatic conditions wouldhold true and from all of which an un¬broken succession or a set of unbrokensuccessions of tree rings could be ob¬tained. These would furnish a true MILLERrecord of rainfall and drought in themountains of Syria and a fine seriesof dated records all over the NearEast at one and the same time.”All excavations, tombs, and palaceswill help to weave the climatic his¬tory of Syria, where the bulk of thewood originated, while the woods ofother sections will serve to correlatethe climatic and historical data of theentire region.Although the reception at the pres¬ent time of very few samples evi¬dences the slow character of the work,within a half century a reliable rec¬ord of several thousand-year periodsshould have been acquired.Education Sorority toInitiate New MembersPi Lambda Theta, national honoraryeducation sorority. Lambda Chapter, isinitiating four new members tonightat Ida Noyes hall at 6:00. The ini¬tiates are: Catherine T. Bach, WilmaFisher, Helen Robinson, and HelenDrueck.COnriRCIITALRoomolxxrocCn^HARRY SOSNIK AND HIS ORCHESTRALARRY BLAKE SON YA AN D ROMEROTHE TWO EILEENSSTEVENS HOTELNOT THIS BUT THISTHEWASHINGTONPROM• BENNY GOODMAN• CHARLES GAYLORDLAKE SHORE A. C. (f/«e Chestnut St. entrance)FREE PARKINGIf you haven’t time to purchaseyour BIDS on Campus,they will be obtainableat the Door tonight!You will find the wholeCampus at the PromTonight!! Buy Corsages at-CHICAGOeSTABLlSHCOjaesFLOWERSPhones: Plaza 6444(64451631 East 55th StreetDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1936Alpha Belts Capture I-M TrackMeet; D.K.E. Takes Second PlaceFor the second time in as manyyears, Alpha Delta Phi swept the an¬nual winter quarter intramural trackmeet to more than double the scoreover their nearest opponents, theDekes, and win with a total of 45points.Second in the meet was Delta Kap¬pa Epsilon with a total of 20 points;third place went to the Psi U’s with13; and Phi Delt, C.T.S., Phi Psi, andBurton court followed in the ordernamed.Breaks Dash MarkThe intramural record in the 60yard dash was broken when Owens,flashy Burton court sprinter, wentover the course in 6.5 to better the oldrecord of 6.6 by a tenth of a second.Another record almost toppled whenMarshall Burch, former Indiana statechampion, ran the 440 in 54.8—justone-tenth of a second short of theintramural time.It was by winning three firsts (inthe mile, the 70 yard high hurdles,and the relay) and consistently plac¬ing men in other events that the Al¬pha Delts forged ahead. Led by James,Meyer, and Fairbank they completelydominated the track events. TheDekes walked away with the fieldevents to establish their second place.SummariesSummaries: Mile run. Won byJames, Alpha Delt; second Valorz,Phi Delt; third, Fairbank, Alpha Delt;time 5:08. 60 yard dash, won byOwens, Burton court; second, Olsen,Alpha Delt; third, McCall; time 6.5(new record). 70 yard high hurdles,won by Meyer, Alpha Delt; second.Works, C.T.S.; third, Libby, Psi U;time 9.6. 440 yard run, won by Burch,Phi Psi; second, Beverly, Alpha Delt;third, Frick, Phi Delt; time 54.8. 70yard low hurdles, won by Works,C.T.S.; second, Yedor, Phi B.D.; third,Loeb, ZB.T.; time 8.7. 880 yard run,won by Foster, Beta; Herschel, Al¬pha Delt; third, James, Alpha Delt;time 2:04.8. Relay won by Alpha Delt(Olsen, Runyon, Alt, and Beverly). Hardwood Five SeeksVictory in Meetingwith North CentralPROBABLE LINE-UPNorth Central ChicagoYuknis .fKeith .f . EggemeyerThumleyYoung •g . K. PetersenSpiegel g RossinChicago basketeers hope for a vie-tory tomorrow night when NorthCentral’s experienced quintet tries toutilize its swift offensive on the field-house hardcourt at 8. Undefeated FencersMeet Toughest FoeIn Badgers TomorrowPsi U, Phi DeltsTake I-M Gamesin Semi-Final Tilts Bob Fitzgerald injured an ankle inscrimmage and will not be able tostart the game. In his place will beMorris Rossin, who played an excel¬lent game against Iowa Saturday. Al¬though not seeing much action thisyear, Rossin has been improvingsteadily, and will probably show theflashy Naperville forwards a fewthings about fast guarding.Three sophomores will start, asusual. Johnny Eggemeyer at forwardwill be the Maroon’s chief hope forscores to supplement the large num¬ber of baskets expected from BillHaarlow. Paul Amundsen will have aninch height advantage in height overThumley, sharpshooting North Cen¬tral forward. Ken Petersen is readyfor his usual steady game at guard.TankmenEngageStrong WildcatSquad Tomorrow The undefeated Maroon fencingteam will meet its stiffest opponent sofar this season when Wisconsin stepsupon the fieldhouse dueling mat to¬morrow afternoon at 2:30.Fresh from a 14-3 shellacking ofNorthwestern, Wednesday night, theChicago swordsmen are determined tomaintain tlheir Big Ten lead overIllinois, last year’s champions.Captain Campbell Wilson will at¬tempt to stretch his consecutive win¬ning streak to twelve foil bouts bymuffling the attacks of Polansky andUmhoefer, Badger foilsmen. Thesemen won five bouts when Wisconsinsweated out a 9-8 victory over North¬western last week.In comparative scores againstNorthwestern, the Maroons have anedge over Wisconsin in all weapons,especially epee, where the Badgerslost all four bouts to the Wildcats,Chicago winning three. In sabre, bothChicago and Wisconsin white-washedNorthwestern, but the victories ofLouis Marks, Maroon star, were bymore impressive margins.However, it is a commonplace thatcomparative scores, especially in BigTen fencing, mean little.Other Maroon fencers are Lee Win¬ter and Jim Walters, who each wontwo of three foil bouts Wednesday;George Gelman and Henry Lemon,who both defeated Harry Gillies, lastyear’s conference champion; and Irv¬ing Richardson and Ned Fritz, whowon their sabre bouts.Winter has won seven of his nineconference bouts against Purdue, OhioState, and Northwestern. Walters haswon five and lost four; Gelman, fourand one (tied one); Lemon, five andand one; Marks, four and two; Rich¬ardson, three and two.LAST NIGHT’S RESULTSPsi Upsilon, 40; Phi Kappa Psi, 6Phi Delt, “B”, 21; Phi Psi “B”, 17Psi U “B”, 17; Phi B. D. “B”, 11In the one quarter final game of the“A” fraternity league, Psi Upsilonoverwhelmed a slow Phi Psi team bythe score of 40-6. In the semi-finalmatches in the “B” league the gameswere both decided in the last threeminutes of play. Psi U pulled out a17-11 win over Phi B. D. and in thenight cap which proved to be thrillerall the way. Phi Delt pulled out a 21-17 victory.In the first half of their game withPhi Delt, the Phi Psi men out-playedtheir opponents and dominated theplay. But at the end of the half, theywere only one field goal ahead, 9-7.Displaying the same sort of attackin the last half, they piled up theirscore to thirteen points and thenwent to pieces. With shots from allparts of the floor, the Phi Deltsstaged a rally pulling up to 13-13.Another basket by the Phi Psis andthe lead went back to them. Two moreshots from the fioor and the victorspulled up to 17-13. In a last vaineffort, the Phi Psis tied the scoreagain. In the last minute of play,the Delts sank two more baskets towin.In the other “B” league game, PsiU had little tiouble in the first half,piling up an 11-3 score However,in the last half. Phi B. D. came tolife and out-scored the Psi U men.But the margin made at the beginningwas too much to overcome. Burgess’flashy playing for the Psi U was themain cog in the winner’s play.In the one “A” league match, PsiUpsilon ran away with the game.Upton’s and Stapleton’s shots featuredthe game as the winners piled up a40-6 score.Cancel Mat MeetsCold and the heavy snowfall haveforced the cancellation of two wrest¬ling meets to have been held withMichigan a(nd Michigan State thisweek-end. The Maroon squad, in con¬dition for the road trip, will not havea. match this week-end, but will meetIllinois at Urbana the week of March1. Facing a strong Wildcat tank squadin Bartlett pool tomorrow. Maroonswimmers are out to hang up a winfrom the Purple swimmers. In thelast meeting of the two squads, Chi¬cago succumbed to Northwestern,47-37. On the other hand. Maroonwater poloists downed the Wildcatteam, keeping them to three goalswhile the home group ran the scoreup to four on the home tally sheet.The first event in last month’s meetresulted in a dead heat between thetwo relay teams but the Wildcatsquad finally pulled ahead to nose outthe Maroons by a split second with theofficial timing of the event 3:40.5.Since that time the relay men con¬sisting of Brown, Lewis, Erhart andWilson, have twice bettered thistime. In view of the fact that theMaroon relay tankmen swam the eventat Illinois last week in 3:40.1, it seemsthat the Wildcats tomorrow will beforced to speed up their time in orderto take the event.The 440 yd. event in the last meetsaw the Olympic champ, Danny Zehrdefeat Maroon freestyle ace. CaptainWilson in 5:08.6. Since then Wilson,in competition, has rung up a 5:03in the timing.Seeking their fourth victory of theseason, the poloists, led by CaptainBush, will tear into the Wildcats withthe hope of defeating their opponentsby a greater margin than in the lastmeeting. The remaining six, Bethke,Bush, Trinary, Brown, Bernstein andStapleton are in good condition forthe oncoming Wildcat meet, with BobAnderson out of competition with astrained muscle. Runyan Turns in 68Score to Lead Fieldin Golfing TourneyST. PETERSBURG, Fla., Feb. 20— (UP)—Paul Runyan smashed theLakewood course record for competi¬tive play when he posted a 68 todayto lead some of America’s best pro¬fessionals in the first round of the$2,500 St. Petersburg open. His 68was three under par and two underthe course record for tournamentplay.He was one stroke ahead of JohnnyRevolta and Johnny Hines, who tiedfor second with 69’s. Revolta, nationalPGA champ, was fresh from his vic¬tory in the $3,000 Thomasville, Geor¬gia open last Sunday.Other leaders in the first 18 were:71—Herman Barron, Wiffey Cox, andByron Nelson; 72—Bill Kaiser, Louis¬ville; Ed Kerby, St. Petersburg, Leon¬ard Dodson, Pembine, Wis.; HarryCooper, Chicago; Horton Smith 73,and Sam Parkes, Pittsburgh, Na¬tional Open title holder, 74. BabeRuth was down among the tail enderswith an 82.The Collegians* Favorite PartyTHE BLACKHAWK’S“CAMPUS CABARET”Every Friday night at 11 P. M.withWill Osborne and His Versatile Musiciansas the Musical Hosts• Enjoy the really great singing of Dick and Dorothy Rogers,stars of the musical stage—and the sensational dancing ofNita and Jack Carleton.itiiu <jacK ^^arieion.• Thrill to the singing and dancing of stars from your owncampus.Make Friday Night Date Night at theBLACKHAWKWABASH AT RANDOLPH Maroon GymnastsFace Gophers MondayIn their last inter-collegiate meetbefore the conference matches inMarch, the Maroon gym men take onthe Minnesota Gophers Monday nightbeginning at 7:45. Chicago will beout to avenge its loss in a dual meetto the Northerners last year and itsdefeat by the same team in the con¬ference meet, which resulted in the Gophers coming in second and theMaroons fourth. Student athleticbooks are good for admission.Although the Gophers beat theHawkeyes by 90 points while the Chi¬cago men registered a win over theIowa team by only 60 points. CoachDan Hoffer stated that the Maroonsfaced a stronger aggregation ofHawkeyes than did Minnesota.The outstanding pointgettera forthe Maroons have been Co-captainsFair and Schneider. Fair is the onlyFencing: 1Purdue vs. Wisconsin iiWisconsin swordsmen will meetthe fencing squad from Purdue inthe fieldhouse at 7:30 tonight. TheMaroon fencers will face the Bad-ger team in the fieldhouse tomor-row afternoon at 2:30. The Boiler-maker squad has been defeated incompetition with the Maroons,13)^2 to 314 in an earlier confer-ence meet. : MARSHALL FIELD & CField’s Good Suit FiAnnounces the pledginglalesl styles to suit youiWhen you come in to Fields’ Store for Men,;around at your leisure and inspect ourof what the well-dressed University of Chiwear on and off Campus. Inspect our corof tails which have just that touch of sonecessary as you dance with her. You’ll feeand assured that yours is the best there is if ]Marshall Field and Company.kUaUUAUAUAUUUU|UiiJAAU!Uii^UyJ;• >k -TJCOMPANY :IIIIIIIIIwm'raternityIIof theI■ir taste /CHICAGO’S famed one man grid team. Jay Berwangpr, has^ turned his efforts to track, amJ is now practicing for a placeon the Olympic decathlon team. He s co<aptain of the Marooncinder team.- JLRBKRT HOOVER'S farm program, asoutlined in a speech at the University ofs'ehr.tska, calls for the administration ofarm projects by the nation's land grant cohc^es and universities “to free agriculture ofHilitics and the vast bureaucracy now loadedlown upon the farmer." He is shown withMebra.ska's republican chairman. Nil «File Copy ^Cobb Hall 203• NATIONAL COLLEVolume IVall-around player on the Maroonsquad, participating in the horse, hor-izontal bars, parallel bars, flyingrings, and tumbling. Schneider is inevery event except tumbling.le("'ENE BULLOCK is Crooner BingCrosby’s choice as the prettiestco^ at the University of Mississippi.ISl.S Special Student RatesWASHINGTON PARKSERVICE STATIONLubrication - Tireo . Batteric!!Towinc Sarrice5601-07 Cottage Grove AveChicagoPhone Darchcater 7113pu can browsefine selectionspago man willIplete showingbhistication soplenty smoothbu purchase at \\/HEN EGYPTIAN STU'^ DENTS RIOT they stopat nothing, as this photo o(University students in Cairoattacking CaWnct Chief AlyMaher PSisha proves. PLAYERS AND SPECTA'^TORS mixed it freely duringthe fight in the middle of theManhattan College—St. Johnsbasketball game.mgOIG HANDS 'HH W isconsin’s ^!■ Gordon Fuller. IkCharles Jones and ^^ Ed Stege (front to ^^ budO demonstrate / ^m why they can hangH on to the ball dur' |HH ing the exciting HH moments of the^|H big game.mi yWHILE SEARCHING the Jesuit General^ Rome, the Rev. G. J. Garraghan, S. J., of ArchiLoyolversity (Chicago) unearthed many famed letters >Jesuit missionary explorer. Father Jacques Marquett.mQNE OF THE FASTEST QUINTETS on the west coast.^ the Loyola University (Los Angeles) hockey squad iscoached by Tom Lieb, former Notre E>ame skating star./^'WE OF THE NATION'S outstandingcollections of the works of RobertBrowning has been made for Baylor Uni¬versity by Dr. A. J. Armstrong, who isshown at the left in the photo above withDr, Sanki Ishakawa with a file of Japanesebooks on Browning. The photo at theright shows Basil Rathbone and KatherineCornell with the famed bronze replicaof the Brownings' clasped hands which isnow a part of the Baylor collection. 300 'Words a MinuteCTOOGING for Gracie Allen, one of Ted Hum 11numerous radio chores, is at best confining hiness for the man whose tongue and quick eye Inbeen ten years behind the mike. When given tscope, as it is during the football ‘season and in rniclubs, the tongue wins hordes of admirers sprink:hberally with enemies. For example, when Ted s.Minnesota's '35 first stringers might be bench warm,at Princeton, or some such. Or when he throw'forked retort off-duty at critics or anyone else w.brushes with the man who has been ten years behithe mike.keener or morecurate eye has caughtfootball game. Hiscome at the rate of 301minute. Wherever a mu3 phone can be taken,.^|fl high places and bBEC " ^•'oughout the nation, 1^ has taken it, donnedglasses, and cast a IcL gbnee at the doings. Ne^^B events,sports,spectacle.>^quick fexivfor his uninterrupted aglossy announcer's technique.Six feet, 168 pounds, he nas played both professiobaseball and football, and can be a greater physimenace than one would think when he bristlesfrequently. Ted was born in Demine, New Mexibut he IS a graduate of Stuyvesant nigh school aColumbia University in New York. In nigh schoolwas a slim but alert center on the eleven, and earran all-city rating.He was a furniture salesman temporarily outwords that really sell when he decided to try out aradio announcer. He went into an audition in NYork, decided he wanted the job, but there wexactly 608 other applicants.Ted, of course was chosen. The Camel Cara\has brought him to the mike on Tuesday and Thurstnights for a long time. Lately he has had a radio sjof his own—to tell of his ten years behind the miCollege men during those ten years have learned wlhe can do in letting them know just how their A1Maters are ^ring of a Saturday afternoon.V. IV- I/ anRED LIDHTI No left turn!Keep in line! Today’s tangledtraffic puts a load on nervesand digestion. When you "getthe red,” light a CameL Camelsset you right...help keep thedigestion woridng normally.■ '0<.{Ufi}miu/km, or kuqler's,famous old Philadtlphia rostauramt.Hen choice foods an served imam atmosphen of delightful repose.William says: "Camels and good food go to¬gether. Our patrons naturally prefer qualitytobaccos, judging by the popularity that Camelsenjoy here. So we keep well stocked with Camels.”(Right) The cigarette counterat Kugler’s, where Camels arealways in demand! etfmsfyam mD^ess^Natural digestive actionnotably increased bysmoking Camels People in every walk of life get "keyed up.” The ef¬fects on digestion are known to all! In diis connection,it is an interesting fact that smoking a Camel duringor between meals tends to stimulate and promote di¬gestion. Enjoy Camel’s mildness... the feeling of well-being fostered by Camel’s matchless blend of costliertobaccos.Smoke Camels for digestion’s sake!IN BRITISH GUIANA-the LaVarresford a river. "I always take a big supplyof Camels along,” says William LaVarre."They make any meal taste better —anddigest easier.” Mrs. LaVarre adds: “Camelshelp my digestion, whether I’m in thejungle or dining in my New York home.”i <COSTLIERTOBACCOS!Camels are made fromfiner, MORE EXPENSIVETOBACCOS - Turkishand Domestic — than anyother popular brand. TUNE INICAMEL CARAVAN WITHWALTER O’iCEEFEDEANE JANIS, TED HUSINGGLEN GRAY AND THECASA LOMA ORCHESTRATuesdar and Thutsday—9 p. m. E. S. T., 8 p. m. C. S. T.,9:30 p. ID. M. S. T.8:30 p. m. P. S. T.—OYerWABC-Columbia Networki». uaa. a. s. a«ytia« T«a. c*.. wi—m id I. M. o. ^ - A.A TIP FROM GEORGE LOTT, formerU. S. Doubles Tennis Champion. Athletesknow how nervous strain and over-exer-don strike at the digesdon. He says: "Ismoke a great deal...while eating andafter eating. Camels have a beneficialeffect on digesdon. They help me to enjoywhat I eat and get more good out of it.”t 1iW YORK UNIVERSITY women’s court squad ^sts the outstanding beauties in the metropolitan institutionSo liar this season it has won half of the games it has played.CCIENCES’ NEWEST“ATOM BUSTER” - - Dr.M. Stanley Livingston, CornellUniversity, “breaks” atoms inthis ncwly-perfectcd thrcc'tonmagnetic resonance accelerator. jy^ARY LOU BRINTON is the newly-elected freshman queen at the Uni¬versity of Louisville. She’s a member ofKappa Delta sorority.L.T.’s Dr. W. K. Lewis is^ ^ • awarded the Perkin medalfor valuable work in appliedchemistry by Prof. M. T. Bogert,Columbia University, presidentof the S(x:iety of Chemical In¬dustry. K;-AN ALLOY WHICH MELTS AT 47 degrees centigrade hasbeen developed at Colgate University by Dr. Sidney J. FreiKhand [>onald J. Saunders. The new alloy contains lead, tin, cadmium,bismuth and indium.csideiu of the juniorilleijo will lead theweekend at the StdAC'HINE STRUCTURES arc studied by the use of the photoelastic' eloivd at the University of Minnesota bv Prof. James J. Ryan.ivei siiy of Chicago is^ P<'tu)n of this un-iiiKlui.-'west's famed T ATERALITY TESTS developed by Southern California's Prof. Eugene Hahn aid in deter-^ mining whether stuttering in a person can be cured by Jjuilding up a single-handedness inthe subject.■thJNB■BillWORTON HAMER MESH is the cap'^^ tain of the College of the City of NewYork chess team which has just won theintercollegiate championship for the secondyear in succession.DATTLING HEAVYWEIGHT Bill^ Smith receives final instructions fromCoach Henry Lamar before a practice bout inthe Harvard gym.TTNION COLLEGE^ drama students' areshown working on sets forthe production which opened their 132nd activeyear, Charles II, by JohnHoward Payne, Union1812.LJ^RE’S A REAL WORLD’S RECORD - ^ Jack L.^ ^ Holder, Ventura (Calif.) Junior College senior,claims the world’s record for the largest known stretchof the hand on the piano keyboard, reaching 13 notes.A close'up of the proof of the stretch is shown above.Jack has just bested the mark of 11 notes made by theGerman composer, Walter Geiseking.JOURNALISM STUDENTS throughout the country get their practice “copy " from AssociatedPress and United Press teletypewriters. Here's the newly installed machine in the Rider College(Trenton, N. J.) journalism laboratory.T^lpteworthy Record They Fool the Keenest EyD EAL CLOSE'UPS of ordinary substances, made through^ the medium of macrophotography, produce unusu;'and startling pictures, with the most familiar objects madiunrecognizable. Identifications of the photographs will 1found at the bottom of the column.j_JERE ARE THE RIGHT ANSWERS: 1. Tops of^ ^ordinary cigarettes. 2. Hairbrush. 3. Apple Coii4. Piece of gauze. 5. Ordinary paper matches. <S. Flint wheeland flame of a cigarette lighter.Back offer helps pipe smokersfind what they wontTHE MONEY-BACKOFEER STARTEO MEON THIS OfUNOTOBACCO> ;y-4>«ck offer introduced me to Prince(iy» John T. Norton, ’88. “It'e great.”pRma AUBCirrNEVER BITESMY TONOUE “Prince Albert is a grand tobacco,” says Jen¬nings Potter, ’37. More men like Prince Albertthan any other kind. This mild, choice tobaccois sure to please you. See no-risk offer below.piVE ' LEGGED FRCXJ ''Edna Wilson, Santa Ana(Calif.) Junior College stU'dent, inspects the rare frogwhich was sent to the collegein a shipment of frogs to beused in the zo(Jogy laboratOTy.Albert ia the mildest tobacco I've ever’ ays Jesse Heiae, ’89. “It never ‘bitea.’”HOW TO TRY P. A. WITHOUT RISKSn^oke SO fragraat pipeJaia si Pvmcm ABmH. If jsm doa't fiad it iImm'liowesl, tnaHsst pip« tobacco ysm over ■SBokad, rotom tbs pockettin wttb Um rest of tiM tobacco ka it to as at aajr taeao widia a aMotkfrom tkia data, aad wo will rafaad fall parekaso prica, plas postage.(Sigitsd) R. J. Royaalds Tobacco Coatpaay, Wiaetoa-Salswi, N. C.Historic 'War Ship FoundpHEERS and sobs^ were both caughtin this unusual actionphoto of the NewYork University —Fordham game, whichthe former won, 5ato 23. AET'ER 150 YEARS beneath the waters of Lake Qtamplain whereBritish shot had sent her in the famed Revt^uticxiary War battle ofValcour Island, the warship Philadelphia was raised to the surface lastsununer and now is to be mven to the University of Vermont museum forpreservation. From one of her thr% canon a bar'shot still protruded, prov'ing she had gone down in the act of firing. Numerous relics, « ch as canoiballs, bayonets and axes, were found aboard the ship.Nl > IT COMES OUT HERE”'' George Bums and GracA i len try their hand at “The Music Goes Down and Around,fhat is making every radio listener goofier than they arI \ jm 1Mui'Victorian aca'utrcmentsprovide the setting tor illS. P. C. S. meetings.DELIEVING that all speakers^ were subjected to too muchhand'shaking and tea drinking, agroup of University (rf Iowalecture lovers formed the So-ciety for the Prevention ofCruelty to Speakers. They turnover their quaintly furnishedheadqxiarters to visiting celeb'rities who may wi^ to escapethe auto^ph'hunting ' mobs.And the visit of each notable isrecorded by a photographer whohas them maike'up in clothessuited to the room.And Diplomat Nkhob'^ Roosivelt resurrected a derh whethe S. P. C. S, photo lapbarrived.They got out the old mu^achecup (or Writer Gilbert Sekfcsmmmmmmmmmmmmmmemm Vol. 36. No. 71. Price TEden RevealsModeration cAttitude on CAsserts England DesiE^stablishment of PcPrimarily.LONDON, Feb. 24—(UP)—Apeace appeal revealing a more m<ate British attitude toward oil stions against Italy featured Ca|R. Anthony Eden’s maiden speecforeign secretary in the house ofmons today.Resisting laborite and liberalniands for sanctions, Eden sailwould go to Geneva Sunday interreviving conciliation in the IEthiopian conflict by the LeaguNations committee of five.‘•While taking our full part in itions the government desires firstforemost to see re-establishmentjust peace,” Eden said before cro‘galleries.“The government will examinsanctions proposals from the vpoint of whether they will help towar. But in the view of the Brgovernment the committee of five’port still represents a basis on yany further attempts at coheilishould be made.“If both sides even now accepigood offices of the League, of vboth are members, I am sure 1would be no hesitation amongmembers in agreeing that the rnaery of the committee of five isavailable,” Eden said.Uemarks InterpretedHis remarks were interpretehinting that Britain would refrom leading the League to sanctalthough Eden said the governhas not departed from her decisi<favor an oil embargo in principkfrom her resolve to participateother members of the league inlective action.“There will be neither weakcnor wavering of collective resistto aggression until peace hassigned,” he said.“The effect of sanctions airimposed is continuous and cumuland must be an important influenachieving the main objective ofLeague—cessation of hostilities.”Diplomats thronging the gallheard the liberals, through Sir Jibald Sinclair, support labor’s itence upon oil sanctions; but alsoheard L. C. Amery, conservativehard, oppose risking war for itions.Denounces League“The League of Nations is notmore than an Anglo-Franco-Rualliance with an obsequious bueffective clique of minor powAmery said.Sinclair urged a League oil emlto win United State’s co-opera‘T do not believe the United Swould allow export of oil on ascale if it were clearly seen thadirect effect of those exports v(Continued on page 2)Head of LegionDefends AttituiTowardTeachiDES MOINES, Feb. 24—(URay Murphy, National Commatoday defended the American Lefstand toward teaching of commvand fascism, declaring “the legi<an organization has never op;academic freedom.”Commenting on a statement ofse H. Newton, Professor of Educat Teachers’ College, Colmnbiaversity, Murphy said:“The Legion does not opposesemination of knowledge relati^communism, fascism or any ismit believes the study of such isrsecondary schools and colleges sbe approached with care, andcertainty that information relthereto is not the product ofschool of anti-American propagaCommenting on the John Desociety’s action opposing loyaltyfor teachers, Murphy declared:“I have doubted the valueteachers’ oath as a means of coiing subversive influence. Probablagents of such influences couldan oath with mental reservaNevertheless, I fail to see wheioath to support the constituticstate and nation is an abridgemeacademic freedom.”pRASHlNG THROUGH A BURNING WALL at 6o miks per hour, crack motorcycle nder“Speck” Dykes gpves bis Louisiana Polytechnic Institute classmates a real thrillP)ANCE OF THE BASKETEERS'' A remarkablephoto dt the Long Isbnd University'Duquesne'hich L. 1. U. nosed out Duquesne. 56-34. acticHgam<m w<D ECOGNIZED as one of the finest student courts in theUnited States, the student tribunal at Ohio StateUniversity is noted (or its fairness and equity in handlingundergraduate problems.Artists Grant Wood (standing) andTTKxnas Benton adopt the tradi'tional family'album pose DAS RELIEF photos are the particular photographic hobby^ Jack Towers, and here’s one dat he made from a photothe carillon tower on the campus of his alma mater, SxjthState College. Information as to how theac photos can hecan be secured from the editors of Collbgiatb DicEsr.Author Stephen Vincent Bcnetdonned cravat and side-burns for hisalbum photo.