Vol 36. No. 72. Price 3 Cents. inaroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936 Member United PressFrance BlocksEngland in U.S.,German PactAlarmed by Possible Three-Way Peace Pact; Ger¬many Plans Treaty.LONDON, Peb. 25—(UP)—Francemoved today to block Great Britainefforts to salvage front the limpingnaval limitations conference a tripartite pact with Germany and theUnited States.Seemingly alarmed by the Britishproposal the French proposed that theconference proceed to conclusion ofa four-power accord signed only byBritain, the U. S., France and ItalyFrance was willing tor Britain toseal a separate naval pact with Germany but she shied from a three powor agreement between Germany, Britain and the U. S. which would leaveFrance and Italy out.While France sought to counteractproposals for a three power agreement, the German cabinet met in Berlin to consider a draft treaty providing for qualitative naval limitationand an exchange of naval buildingprograms as evolved during the presont conference.Britain OpenBritain apparently is leaving thedoor open to both solutions—a four-power pact among Britain, the U. S.,France and Italy accompanied by an.\nglo-German arrangement and aBritish naval understanding with theU. S. and Germany.The French counter-proposal waspresented to the British when Capt.De Leuze and Jean Paul-Boncour ofthe French delegation conferred atnoon with R L. Craigie, foreign officenaval expert.It was understood the French areconfident that if an Anglo-Germanagreement can be separated from afour power accord—thus relievingFrance of the onus of Blessing Ger¬man naval rearmament—France's po¬litical objections to a naval pact willhave been overcome.Then, it was expected, Italy wouldfall into line.The offer of a three power pactis regarded as a dramatic Britishretort to F'rench and Italian demandsthat enforcement of any naval agree¬ment be contingent upon satisfactionof their political wishes.Norman Davis and other Americandelegates declined to confirm or denyauthoritative reports of Britain’s of¬fer of a tripartite pact.Commentators doubt that the Wash(Continued on page 2)Germany DoubtsFranco-SovietTreaty LegalityPARIS, Feb. 25—(UP)—Francetold Germany that her objections tothe Franco-Soviet treaty are unwar¬ranted.“France always has sought Germanco-operation,” Foreign Minister PierreEtienne Flandin cried in upholdingthe Franco-Soviet pact in chamber ofdeputies debate.“The pact is the culmination ofpost-war efforts to obtain collectivesecurity. Far from being incompatiblewith the Locarno Treaty it is but an¬other step in our continuous policy.”The debate, to be continued onThursday, found M. Bastid, presidentof the chamber’s foreign relationscommittee, supporting Flandin’s con¬tention that the pact is compatiblewith Locarno and should be ratified.“The system of collective securityis open to all powers,” he said in an¬other reference to German declara¬tions against it.Jean Longuet, socialist deputy andgrandson of Karl Marx, urged ratifi¬cation.“After the Locarno Treaty theLeague of Nations assembly recom¬mended the conclusion of regional ac¬cords,” Flandin said.“In 1928 the League’s assemblyagain declared non-aggression andmutual assistance treaties to be thebest guarantees of security. It is ex¬actly in pursuance of this policy thatthe French and Soviet governmentsconcluded their non-aggression pactof November, 1932.” Denounce Oustingof Educator forPolitical ReasonsST. LOUIS, Feb. 25—(UP)—Theremoval of Payson Smith, formerMassachusetts commissioner of edu¬cation who opposed a state law re¬quiring oaths of allegiance fromteachers and pupils, was denounced bythe nation’s educators tonight as “con¬trary to the principles upon which theschools of America were founded.”The condemnatory action was takenb^the 66th annual convention of thedepartment of superintendence of thenational education association.“The facts in connection with thiscase are such that it is difficult torealize this event could have happenedhere in America,” a statement said.“We are confident that the citizens ofMassachusetts will not allow this ac¬tion to be forgotten or condoned.”An accompanying resolution, con¬demned “The removal of any teacheror administrator on the basis of poli¬tical or partisan considerations.” I-F Council Asks Shorteningof Deferred Rushing PeriodEverett George Tells ofPlans for Buying AgencyNext Year.Stanford Setfor InflationHoover Warns of Dangersto Endowed Institutionsin Testimony.SAN JOSE, Cal., Feb. 25—(UP) —Stanford university received courtpermi.ssion today to convert part ofit.s trust funds into common stocks asa hedge against possible currency in¬flation.In handing down his decision super¬ior judged William James took cogni¬zance of testimony by former presi¬dent Herbert Hoover, a Stanfordalumnus. Hoover testified that thethreat of currency inflation was .soreal that the university trustee shouldbe allowed to prepare for it.Hoover’s testimony pointed out thatendowed colleges, such as Stanford,has most of their investments inbonds, real estate loans and similarsecurities which would be adverselyaffected by inflation.Supports Trustee’s RightsJames’ opinion supported the rightof the trustee to invest in commonstocks by saying:“I am of the opinion that the peti¬tioners may lawfully and properlymake investments from trust fundscoming to their hands in bonds, de¬bentures and shares of stock in pri¬vate corporations which are well man¬aged and have enjoyed for a consid¬erable period of time such a reputa¬tion for permance and stability thatthey command the general confidenceof careful and intelligent investors.“The primary duty of the trusteesof Stanford university is to see to itthat the educational work is carriedon as intended by the donors of thetrust.”Unless the decision is reversed itopens the way for all endowed col¬leges to change the financial set-up.That, in turn, opens the possibility ofmajor changes in stock and bond mar¬kets because of the immense sums inendowments.Each individual case probablywould have to be decided on its mer¬its, however. James found there wasnothing in the grant to Stanford thatforbade purchase of common stocks.Grants to other schools might carryspecific bans against change in thefinancial set-up.The court found the Stanford trustfund was established “to provide anincome for a definite purpose.” A survey of the fraternities repre¬sented at the inlerlraternity councilmeeting last night showed almost aunanimous decision in favor of re¬ducing the period of deferred rushingto some week toward the middle ofthe autumn quarter. No decisioncould be reached because six membersof the council and several membersof the executive committee were ab¬sent. ,However, it was proposed by thecouncil that Dean William E. Scottappear before the council next weekto present the administration’s view¬point on the period of deferred rush¬ing. When an agreement is reachedamong the fraternities themselves, aresolution will be drawn up by thecommittee to be presented to theDean’s office.Discuss Rushing FutureA number of other suggestionswere brought before the council bythe members during the general dis¬cussion about the future of rushing.One house desired that the powers ofthe interfratemity executive commit¬tee be more clearly defined while twoothers proposed a plan by which thevarious chapters could have morechances of getting acquainted withfreshmen. The plan included certainspecified evenings when fraternitymen could visit freshmen in theirrooms or in their homes.Everett George, as director of theFraternity Co-operative Purchasingagency, related plans for the futureof the service, whose success thisyear has been acknowledged by allthe fraternities.Four men, two fraternity men andtwo non-fraternity men, have appliedfor position of director for next year.These men will have a period of trialunder George’s direction during thespring quarter and the most capablewill be given the job upon approvalof the interfraternity council, (jeorgedeclared that he preferred that theposition be given to a non-fraternityman since otherwise it would becomeinvolved in the maze of interffatern-ity politics. A further suggestion wasmade that the agency employ a dieti¬cian to plan the meals of the houses.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)LETTERS ON SUPERFICIALITYWhilst on the one hand a luxuriantimagination creates ravages in theplantations that have cost the intelli¬gence so much labour, on the otherhand a spirit of abstraction suffocatesthe fire that might have warmed theheart and inflamed the imagination.Schiller, Aesthetical Letters Debaters MeetTeam from OhioWesleyan TonightTonight a debate team from OhioWesleyan, composed of women, willdiscuss the Supreme court questionwith a team from the Debate union,composed of Edythe Hollander, MarionWagner, and George Messmer. Thevisitors will take the negative, oppos¬ing any limitation of the powers ofthe Supreme court. The debate willtake place in room A of the Reynoldsclub at 8.Yesterday evening, Allan Ferguson,Alvin Weinstein, and Byron Kabotmet a team from St. Xavier’s college,Cincinnati. The Chicago representa¬tives took the negative of the samequestion in a non-decision debate.This afternoon, tryouts to select aman to represent the University in aproposed radio debate on the Supremecourt question between Viepresenta-tives of Yale, Harvard, Leland-Stan-ford, and the University, will be held.Only one man will be chosen, andradio experts will be on hand to de¬cide which of the debaters has thebest radio voice. The debaters willprobably speak from local stations,but details have not yet been fullyarranged, since the debate is sched¬uled for near the end of April. Dr. Colby FindsNumerous Benefitsin Change of TimeThat many factors are involved inthe shifting of Chicago from centralto eastern standard time Sunday wasthe opinion 'of Dr. Charles C. Colby,professor of Geography, when ap¬proached by The Daily Maroon yes¬terday.Primary among the considerationsare the benefits to business of havingthe two key cities of the nation, Chi¬cago and New York on the same time.Banking institutions and the stock andcommodity exchanges will be the chiefbenefactors.The region between New York andChicago is known as the trunk-linearea of the country. With this areaall on the same time, relations be¬tween shippers and their market willbe extremely simplified, and the mar¬kets in Chicago and New York willopen and close at the same time.Always in evidence is the relationbetween Chicago and the surroundingmetropolitan region, which has notdecided to change time. That this willonly be temporary is the opinion ofmost observers since they feel thatthe territory about Chicago will fallin line as soon as it realizes that thecity has made a permanent move.The chief difficulty In the whole ar¬gument is a geographical one. Sincestandard time and sun time differ asmuch as a half hour at the easternand western extremities of a timeband, a shift by Chicago, vvhich liesin the eastern part of the central timezone, will cause a difference of almostan hour between sun time and stand¬ard time.Discuss Protestantismand World SituationTomorrow evening at 7:30 Dr. PaulTillich, a prominent German scholar,will speak on “Protestantism and thePresent World Situation” in GrahamTaylor hall.Dr. Tillich is one of the many schol¬ars who have left Germany under thethird reich, and is a prominent theo¬logian. His lecture is sponsored bythe Chicago Theological seminary andMeadville Theological school. Select Committeeto Judge Entries inIda Noyes ExhibitThe judging of contributions to theart contest sponsored by Ida NoyesAuxiliary and the awarding of prizeswill take place at Ida Noyes hallFriday. The jury will consist of Dr.Ludwig Bachhofer, member of the artstaff; William Whitford, associateprofessor of Art Education; MarionClarke, of the Home Economics de¬partment; Charlotte Millis, an alumnaof the University; and John Alcott,graduate student in the art depart¬ment.The art exhibit will take place inthe libarary and lounge ‘of Ida Noyeshall next Tuesday. Tea will be servedfrom 4 to 6.A prize of ten dollars will beawarded by Mrs. Robert MaynardHutchins, and a prize of five dollarsby the Ida Noyes Advisory board.Mrs. Hutchins, in offering her award,expressed the desire that it would begiven “to the person whose workshows sedate promise rather thanclever finality. I should prefer to giveit to a serious study of the humanfigure because I think there is nothingso total or worthy of study. The artistmay prefer to do landscape all therest of his life but he will be ableto draw a falling leaf with ease ifhe has first studied the movements,hesitation, and passivity of the humanhand.” The Advisory board willaward its prizes to the student whosework seems most promising to thejury. Doc Youngmeyer’sOrchestra to Playat Mirror RevueD. W. (Doc) Youngmeyer, who hasappeared at nearly all the shows,and a complete ten piece modernorchestra will furnish the music forthe 1936 Mirror revue according toan announcement issued yesterday bythe Mirror board.This is the first time that an orches-of this size has been engaged for theproduction. In previous years a sixpiece orchestra has been the stand¬ard size.With the exception of the 1932show when a student orchestra wasemployed, Youngmeyer has been incharge of the music for all of the an¬nual Mirror revues since they werestarted eleven years ago. He has di¬rected orchestras for university an icollege musical shows all over thecountry.“Doc” will begin working imme¬diately with the newly selected castto prepare for the shows March 6 and7. This year’s show will contain moresinging numbers than there were inthe 1935 revue.Thursday is the deadline for fraternities and clubs to reserve blocksof seats for the show. This may bedone by getting in touch with JaynePaulman. Group ”1PeaceIssues Call forAnnual ParleyTwenty-Two OrganizationsDecide to Participate inMeeting.Cross PresentsMoody SpeakerTickets for Ransom LectureStill Available at Infor¬mation Desk.Entertainers StartNew Clearing HouseUnder the sponsorship of the Vo¬cational Guidance bureau, the Uni¬versity Entertainment service hasbeen set up to provide orchestra andparty service for campus organiza¬tions.The organization under the direc¬tion of Lathrop Harris, graduate stu¬dent, must list only student entertain¬ment and orchestras. Arrangementsfor Loop hotel parties are providedat special rates.The project has been extended toNorthwestern university where abranch is maintained. Under the Uni¬versity unit may be booked GeneDavis’, Roger Boylan’s, and FredHewitt’s orchestras. Northwesternorchestras are also available. Tom Pete Cross, professor of Eng¬lish and Contemporary Literaturewill introduce John Crowe Ransomnoted poet and critic of Vanderbiltuniversity who will present the nextMoody lecture in Mandel hall Thurs¬day evening at 8:15, according to anannouncement by the Moody commit¬tee yesterday.Tickets for the lecture are stillavailable at the Information desk.Press building without charge. Ad¬mission to the lecture is only by guestticket.Ransom first attracted attention ofUniversity students when he spokeat the Bread-Loaf Writers conferenceheld at Middlebury, Vermont, lastyear. At this time he developed a lib¬eral view of poetry and advocatedmore individuality in poems as wellas universality of appeal. It is saidthat he differs radically in viewpointfrom the Scholastic interpretation ofpoetry taught in many universityclasses.Ransom is the first Moody lecturerto be brought to the University bypopular student petition. He speaks asa part of a series of lecturers of theMoody foundation this year which hasincluded such names as the Arch¬bishop of York, Margaret AyerBarnes, Edith Wynne Matthison andRobin Flower.Organization SelectsMilitary Ball Date;Admits New MembersCrossed Cannon, honorary militaryorganization, will open a program ofheightened activity with the admit¬tance of five new members to theorder and the announcement of de¬finite plans for the sponsoring ofthe spring Military Ball, to be heldthis year on April 17.Richard Adair, Delta Upsilon; BartRose, Phi Gamma Delta; RichardEnglehart, Phi Gamma Delta; JamesMelville, Alpha Delta Phi and RalphSpringer, Alpha Delta Phi; were sel¬ected from the list of applicants foradmittance, and will be initiated to¬night at a meeting in the Reynoldsclub.Committees for the Ball, which hasbeen scheduled earlier to avoid con¬flicts with examinations prevalent inother years, are ticket sales, WilliamWeaver; publicity, Charles Butler;orchestra, James Markham, and JohnGifford; and arrangements, RobertAdair.The Ball, a formal affair, has beentraditionally sponsored by CrossedCannon and last year netted a sumof $150. Proceeds this year will becontributed to the Senior gift fund. Plans for the participation of up¬wards of 150 student delegates in a“sane” discussion of war, causes andcure, are now crystalizing with theannouncement by the provisionalpeace conference committee that the“call” for the conference, scheduledfor March 4 and 5 in InternationalHouse, will be sent to the four cor-Fortunate are we in recent yearsto have among us students withenergy and interest enough tostage the conferences on peace thatshould be a part of every under¬graduate’s curriculum. The DailyMaroon endorses the conferenceand joins with the sponsors in en¬couraging student participation.—R. W. N.ners of the quadrangle? tomorrowmorning.Distribution of 5000 copies of the“call,” endorsed by 22 campus organ¬izations and seventeen faculty mem¬bers, will be made in dormitories,classrooms, and at strategic points onthe campus. In issuing the “call” thearrangements committee makes clearthat it takes “no stand with the ex¬ception that it is against war andfor peace.”Faculty SponsorsDetails of the program which willinclude a number of outstandingspeakers will be released this week.Among the faculty sponsors of theconference are Grace Abbott, profes¬sor of Social Service Administration,W. B. Ballis, instructor in SocialScience, and Ruth Petersen, instruc¬tor in Social Science.Delegates to the conference will beadmitted on the following basis: (1)two for the first ten members of anyorganization, and one for each tenafterwards with a maximum of tenin all; (2) delegates from classes willbe admitted on same basis; (3) an un¬affiliated student may represent him¬self and four other unaffiliated stu¬dents by securing their signatures toa delegate’s credential blank. Cre¬dential blanks will be lound on the“call” to the conference, and in ad¬dition may be secured at the information office, Reynolds club, and inthe foyers of Cobb, Social Science,and Mandel halls. [or-3Issue FebruaryNumber ofAlumniOrgan TomorrowHeaded by an article on “Scienceand Belief,” by William MacMillan,professor of Astronomy, the Febru¬ary issue of the Alumni magazine ap¬pears tomorrow. Other lead articlesare “Public Administration StepsForward,” by Louis Brownlow, lec¬turer in Political Science, “Ethics inFootball Coaching,” by Clark Shaugh-nessy, and “NBC Is U. of C. Con¬scious,” by George Livingstone.In his article on “Science and Be¬lief,” Professor MacMillan discussesthe progress of the science of astron¬omy as an instance of the develop¬ment of the conception of the prin¬ciple of uniformity in nature. Hisfinal conclusion is, “No final state¬ment, no ultimate belief is possibleunless, indeed, men cease further tostrive.”The article on the University andthe radio, reveals the interesting ca¬reer of the University as a pioneerthe field, having begun footballbroadcasts in 1922, and radio roundtables in 1930, and also discusses animposing number of University grad¬uates who are prominent radio per¬formers.Louis Brownlow discusses the effectof the recent grant from the Spel-man fund on the department of Pub¬lic Administration.That a football coach should “Onlybe responsible for doing an efficientjob of teaching football to whateverboys come out for football and tomake his course in football so attractive that a fairly representative groupof boys will come out” is the themeof Coach Shaughnessy’s article.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936Japanese Military FactionsStage Coup in Tokio; ReportFinanceMinisterAssassinated Germany Looksfor Pact withU. S. andEnglandCensor Communications;Stock Exchanges Close;Martial Law Declared.(Copyright, 1936, by United Press)Japanese military factions, as yetunidentified as to partisanship, earlyWednesday morning appeared to havestaged a sensational coup in Tokyo.Despite drastic censorship—closingcable, radio and telephone channels ofcommunications—unconfirmed reportsof assassinations, including that ofK. Takahashi, finance minister, leakedout.Shanghai reported military forcesoccupied the Tokyo telephone ex¬change.All efforts to communicate with Ja¬pan by telephone from the UnitedStates brought only the laconic ex¬planation of a “power breakdown,”rendering communication impossible.Commercial circles in Shanghailearned that the Tokyo and Osakastock and commodity exchanges failedto open Wednesday morning but wereexpected to open Wednesday after¬noon.The Manila branch of the Yoko¬hama specie bank reported rumorsthat Minister Takahashi had beenkilled.In Shanghai reliable foreign sourceslearned privately that martial law hasbeen proclaimed in Tokyo,Japanese embassies and foreigngovernments throughout the worldwere without information as to ex¬actly what had transpired.Press dispatches reaching Londonfrom Shanghai reported merely a mil¬itary coup in Tokyo “resulting in theassassination of several importantmilitary leaders.”Peiping, China, followed Manilawith an as yet unconfirmed report ofTakahashi’s assassination.Throughout the far east, from thePhilippine Islands to the Japanese-controlled empire of Manchukuo, bus¬iness and journalistic interests soughtto crack the traditional all-effectiveJapanese censorship.Assassinations FrequentNEW YORK, Feb. —(UP)—Poli¬tical, assassinations have been fre¬quent in Japan for a generation.First of importance was the killingof prince Ito in 1909.Others of importance were the slay¬ings of premier Ta Kashi Kara in1918 by a Japanese youth, and ofpremier Tsuyoshi Inukai by armyjingoists in 1932.London Agent Unaware' LONDON, Feb. 26—(UP)—TheJapanese charge d’affaires and theJapanese military attache told theUnited Press at 2:40 A. M. todaythey had no knowledge of a militai'ycoup or of assassinations in Tokyo.Troops Occupy ExchangeSHANGHAI, Feb. 26—(UP)—Anunconfirmed report here today saidphone exchange.It was learned that the Japaneseforeign office is not expected to in¬form its representatives abroad of asituation such as is reported.“Such a message might easily beintercepted by members of a coupd’etat party and might make the for¬eign ministry it-self subject to attackif there was a revolt,” the informantexplained.W.P.A. Grants‘Stage’ MoneyWASHINGTON, Feb. 25—(UP)—Angry charges of “terrorism” and“dictatorship” were flung at the NewDeal today in stormy debate over theswift punishment of Maj. Gen. John¬son Hagood, suspended as commanderof the 8th corps area after describingWPA grants as “stage money.”The name of the late Gen. William(Billy) Mitchell, the identity of anoth¬er high-ranking army officer accusedof being politically active, freespeech and state quarrels over WPAprojects, were plunged into the wordbattle which threatened to lift Ha-good’s suspension into a top-flight po¬litical issue as army officials hast¬ened to explain that the phrase “byorder of the president...” whichheaded the Hagood suspension order,was a routine one and did not signifypersonal intervention by Mr. Roose¬velt. Congressional authorities gen¬erally regarded it as disciplinaryaction. Rep. Thomas Lanton, D., Tex.,has suggested impeachment of Ha-good’s superiors for “the damnableoutrage.” Victory Is Culmination ofAncient Struggle for Con¬trol of Japan.(Copyright 1936 by United Press)NEW YORK, Feb. 25—The presentmilitary outbreak in Tokyo unques¬tionably has its roots in the longstruggle between militarists and par¬liamentarians for control of the Ja¬panese empire.It is a struggle which has persi.st-ed through hundreds of years—andwhich has become acute since the mil¬itarists virtually seized power in theseries of events which led to the un¬declared Chinese-Japanese war inManchuria and creation, by the army,of the independent empire of Man¬chukuo.It is a logical development of thetradition of Japanese feudalism—atradition which placed the Samurai,or knights, above all law except theEmperor, and which propounded thetheory that the armed forces are “thereceptacle of the imperial tradition.”This theory, in plain English,means that the Army and Navy arethe State.The theory has been challenged byJapanese parliamentarians for ageneration.Prince Ito, “Father of the constitu¬tion” was one of the first challengers.He was assassinated by pro-mili¬tarist fanatics.Premier Inukai, in 1932, challengedagain—and he, too, was as.sassinated.And now Korekiyo Takahashi, ven¬erable minister of finance has chal¬lenged and he apparently has paidwith his life.The differences between advocatesof parliamentary rule and a militarydictatorship in Japan are perfectlysincere. That is what makes them soimpossible of reconciliation.Predict RussianVictory if Jap-Russo WarOccursJACKSONVILLE, ILL., Feb. 25—(UP—Prediction of war in the orient“the moment a Japanese soldier setsfoot on Russian soil” was made heretonight by Maurice Hindus, well-known Russian-American author.The outcome of such a war, Hindustold delegates to the final session ofthe MacMurray College Institute onPublic affairs, would be revolution inJapan and victory for Russia.Russia would win, Hindus said, be¬cause of her 15 year improvementplan affecting military forces and“the fervor with which revolutionaryarmies have fought in the past.”“Russian planes would have littledifficulty bombing industrial centersof Japan,” the writer declared, “nervecenters of Russian industry on theother hand, lie far beyond the reachof cruising airplanes.” (Continued from page 1)ington government would accept theBritish offer of a tripartite agree¬ment, although it might remain opento adherence by other powers.Fears were expressed that Wash¬ington’s acceptance might arouseAmerican isolationists who would ac¬cuse the American delegates in Lon¬don of aligpiing the United States,Britain and Germany against Franceand Russia, thus embroiling the U.S. in acute European political rival¬ries and morally and psychologicallystengthening the Hitler Nazi regime.Germany WelcomesThree Power TreatyBERLIN, Feb.25—(UP)—Germanywould welcome a tripartite naval ac¬cord with Great Britain and theUnited States, officials hinted today.While officials professed no know¬ledge of the British proposal to sal¬vage the London naval limitationsconference, well informed privateopinion was enthusiastic.It stipulated only that a three-pow¬er accord should not interfere withthe advantages Germany has obtainedunder the Anglo-German pactA three power treaty would na¬turally be welcomed from the view¬point of German prestige:1—As additional inteimational rec¬ognition of Germany’s claim for aplace as a first rate naval power.2—As indication of solidarityamong Germany and the Anglo-Saxonpow'ers.3—As a symptom of estrangementbetween Britain and the U. S. on onehand and France on the other.Photographic Guildto Show Color FilmMoving pictures, some of under¬water scenes in natural colors, willbe shown by Dr. Ralph Buchsbaumbefore the Photographic Guild of theNew Arts League in Social Science107 at 4 tomorrow. Anyone inter¬ested in these phases of photographyis invited.The color films were made in Ber¬muda by the new Dufay process. Dr.Buchsbaum will also discuss hisphotographic experiences gainedwhile making the pictures.Himmelblau Lectures onProblems in AccountancyDavid Himmelblau, professor ofAccountancy at Northwestern, willaddress members of Delta Sigma Pi,honorary commercial society, at asmoker in the commons room of Has-kel hall this evening.Profes.sor Himmelblau will discussthe practical problems of account¬ancy.CAMEOCLASSICSj in de luxe editionsj Beautifully bound, printed, and designed gift editions.I Each volume comes in a handsome slip-case box.! ROMEO AND JULIETIncludes Temple notesA SHROPSHIRE LAD IllustratedCYRANO DE BERGERAC IllustratedW. S. GILBERT LIGHT OPERASADVENTURES OF BARON MUNCHAUSENTHE TAMING OF THE SHREWTemple Notes IllustratedFAUST IllustratedRUBAIYAT OF OMAR KHAYYAMFamous Sullivan IllustrationsLEAVES FROM THE DIARY OFSAMUEL PEPYS IllustratedEachi U. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUECANDIDE Illustrated59c Ask AmericanYouth to Fight“Alien Ideas”Steel Magnate Hits NewDeal; Asks Support ofConstitution.PITTSBURGH, Feb. 25—(UP)—Ernest T. Weir, steel magnate whosuccessfully challenged the NRA, ap¬pealed to American youth today toresist “alien ideas” and protect theU. S. constitution.The chairman of the board of Na¬tional Steel Corporation spoke for theconstitutional education association,which proposes to place a framed copyof the constitution in every publicschool. His speech was interpretedas a lightly-veiled attack on the NewDeal.“Political and economic nostrumshave been advanced and are receiv¬ing serious support from a surpris¬ing number of our people,” saidWeir, “who in normal times would im¬mediately spot their absurdity andlaugh them out of existence.”“Worst of all, the cloud of discon¬tent while present, and uncertaintyover the future, have established asmoke screen under which the people,both inside and outside the UnitedStates, have been able to carry ontheir work.”Weir urged his listeners not to“barter liberty for economic secur¬ity.” He appealed for support of theconstitution against the belief it is acollection of “old fogey ideas” andthat “the only government consistentwith modern times is a central gov¬ernment manned with rulers, not gov¬ernors.”Today on theQuadranglesLecturesHistory of Science lecture. “Thedevelopment of BacteriologV” by Dr.S. A. Koser. Harper Mil at 4:30.Public lecture (division of SocialSciences). “The Nature of NationalPlanning” by Professor Charles E.Merriam. Social Science 122 at 3:30.Public lecture (downtown). “Musicof the Pacific Groups.” Fullerton hall,the Art institute, at 6:45.Hyde I’ark forum. “Too ManyCourts” by John P. McGoorty, judgeof Cook county supreme court.MeetingsWyvern in the student lounge ofIda Noyes at 4:30.Phi Delta Upsilon in the Alumniroom of Ida Noyes at 4.Y W book group in the Wicker roomof Ida Noyes at 4:30.SSA in the Alumni room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.MiscellaneousMirror rehearsal in Mandel hall,2:30 to 7.Social dancing in the lower gym ofIda Noyes at 7:30.Carillon recital in the Universitychapel at 4:30, Frederick Marriott,carillonneur. At Home AbroadBy JOHN G. MORRISTo those whose impressions of themysterious East have been largelyformed by such cinematic thrillers asthe “Lives of a Bengal Lancer,” thefirst contact with the natives of Indiawho are now studying on this campusis liable to come as a distinct shock,for in this group we find a numberof serious-minded graduate students,working for their advanced degrees ina manner that is quite western andaltogether civilized.Probably the most active group forits size in the International Housefamily of nations is the little bunchof six Indian students, all of whomhave chosen to come more than 10,000miles in pursuit of the higher learn¬ing, an indication of the far-reachingpre.stige of the University.Presides Over CouncilPresiding over the InternationalHou.se .student council this year is P.Mathew Titus, a native of Travan-core province in India, and a graduateof Madras university. Enrolled in theDivinity school, he is doing advancework in social ethics. Small, black¬haired, dark-skinned, and quiet-man¬nered, he will talk enthusiastically ofthe University in which he has beenenrolled the past three years. Indianschools, he .says, are all right on pure¬ly technical lines, but here “youbreathe the free air of an academicinstitution,” while freedom is lackingin India.Aiming on a small scale to bringabout a better common understandingbetween the peoples of America andIndia, the Indian students, togetherwith a number of other interestedpeople in the University community,have organized the “Friends of India.”Under the leadership of Sunder Joshi,a graduate student in comparative re¬ligion, this group holds regular meet¬ings, and sponsors lectures and theannual “India Night” program at In¬ternational House. Joshi, by the way,is the son of a Dartmouth profes.sor,and ha.s .studied at Bombay, Oxford,Paris, Harvard, and is now here ona fellowship. iOne Is MohammedanOf the six Indians, three are Chris¬tians, two are Hindus, while one is aMohammedan. The last-named has theimposing title of Habiballah G. H. K.Baluch, j)rofessor of zoology atPuoona agricultural college, nearBombay. He is spending a year’s leaveof absence in doing research underthe direction of Professor Sewall |Wright. IBy far the most picturesque of thenative Indians in residence here isMahanam P. Brahmachari, the Hindu Imonk whose turban and long robeshave become one of the well-known |sights on the quadrangles. He camehere from Calcutta as a participantin the convention of the World Fel¬lowship of Faith last year, and de¬cided to remain afterwards in order to pursue his studies in philosophy.Serves on CouncilAnother active Indian student i.sDavid Malaiperuman, a graduate inthe Divinity School who ha.s servedfor two years on the Internationa!House Student council.But for sheer length of record,there is none to match Tarini Sinha,who is now studying international re¬lations on a fellowship. In addition tobeing a per.sonal friend and discipleof Mahatma Gandhi, he has been amember of the sub-editorial staff ofthe Manchester Guardian, field lec¬turer of the Briti.sh Independent La¬bor Party, Secretary of the IndianNational Congress, Secretary of theSociety for the Suppression of Trafficin Opium, Indian representative toInternational Temperance confer¬ences, and a temporary member of theSecretariat of the League of Nations.He .seemed terribly disappointedwhen we declined an invitation toplay bridge.®l|e 0ailu ^iflanuniFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon ia the ofhrial atudentnewspaper of the University of Chicatro.published morninKs except Saturday. Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,i winter and sprinic quarters by The DailyMaroon Comtwny, 5831 University avenue.Telephones: Local 46 and Hyde Dark y.’il! and 9222.The University of Chicaiiu assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing In The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily MaroonAll opinions in The Daily Maroon arestudent opinions, and are not necessarilythe views of the University administra¬tion.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $2.76 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3. 1879.Exclusive national advertising repre-aentative National Advertising Service.Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York ; 40U N.Michigan Ave., Chicago.RALPH NICHOLSON, Editor-in-ChiefROBERT McQUILKIN, Business MgrRAYMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.HENRY F. KELLEY, Desk hklitorJEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Business associates: James Bernard.Don Elliott, Don Patterson, Roy War-shawsky.FMitorial associates: Wells Burnette.Ruby Howell, Julian Kiser, John Morris.James Snyder, Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: Cody Pfan.stivhlAs.sistaiit: Richard Evan.sORCHESTRA HALLf BURTONHOLMESAmerica’s Foremost Traveler Raconteur• Thi.s Week •WED. EVE. FRI. EVE. SAT. MAT.S;'.T SOUTHAMER ICACUATEMALA. COLO.MBIA, MYSTERIESof PERU. CHILEFLILHT OVER THE ANDESALL IN COLOR AND MOTIONTICKE’rS 85c. $1.10. GALLERY 40cIS LESS THAN THE AUTO DEATHS IN THE LAST |5 YEARSILLINOIS AUTOMOBILE CLUB SAFETY WORK...Editorial...John Dewey Society PutsFinger on FoesAt the meeting of the John Deweysociety in St. Louis (reported in yes¬terday’s Maroon) a group of liberaleducators denounced four men andt,vo national organizations sayingthat “if they succeed in their aimsthey will destroy American democra¬cy.”The men named are William Ran-tlulph Hearst, publisher; Frank N.Belgrano, former national commanderof the American Legion; Alfred E.Smith, presidential nominee in 1928;and Father Charles E. Coughlin,radio orator. The organizations arethe Daughters of the American rev¬olution and the American Libertyleague.A full statement of the Dewey so¬ciety’s attitude appears in the St.Louis Post-Dispatch. After quotingfrom a recent artcle in Fortune mag¬azine which estimated that theHearst fortune rests in the neighbor¬hood of $220,000,000, the case con¬tinues:"Thus Mr. Hearst fights incometaxes. He doesn’t like anyone who ad¬vocates an income tax. He prefers asales tax which rests heavily on thepoor. An employer of thousands, hefights unions and union labor. He de¬mands the right of free speech forhimself and his vast holdings, butwould deny it to anyone who, in fbcinterest of the public welfare, threat¬ens financial power."He uses the device of pinning theCommunist or Bolshevik label on any¬one whose ideas he does not like.Name-calling is his special weapon.His attempt to label the colleges ofthe country as Communistic is evi¬dence of his duplicity and subversivemethods. He was truly characterizedlast year by Dr. Charles A. Beard as‘an enemy of everything that isnoblest and best in our American trad¬ition.’ ”Of Belgrano the statement said:“He does not represent the AmericanLegion in its spirit and devotion todemocracy. He is willing to co-oper¬ate with Hearst in pinning the Com¬munist label on ministers, journalists,and others who advocate a humanecivilization for the many.”Of Smith this: “Once a friend ofeducation and of the common man, hehas sold out to privilege. He wouldguard the privileges of himself andthe class he has recently entered byusing his one-time great authority tomake people believe that God guidesthe Supreme Court. He has brokenfaith with the schools and the in¬articulate masses of the people outof which he came.”Of Father Coughlin: “He employshis sacred office to spread confusion,misunderstanding and falsehoodamong the people. His characteriza¬tion of the present administration as‘mired in the red mud of Soviet Com¬munism’ is willful misrepresentation.A master of the vague generalization,he conveys the impression of broad so¬cial sympathies and thus achievesa popular following.”Of the DAR: “As an organizationthey betray the spirit and devotion oftheir fathers. Their patriotism is acombination of thinly veiled snobberyand protection of privilege. Folk ofhumble origin who speak out for aliving wage they characterize as‘reds.’ ”Of the Liberty league: “The pur¬pose of this group is so obviouslythat of protecting the great fortunesobtained through munition sales, spec¬ulation, and exploitation of the Amer¬ican people that its use of the word‘liberty’ is ludicrous. It stands forthe liberty to continue to exploit themany for the profit of the few. TheLiberty leaguers have appropriatedthe liberty bell as their symbol. Butthey apparently think the revolutionwas fought to make Long Island safefor the polo players.”« >l<We thought you may not have seenthis in Chicago papers.R. W. Nicholson.For art evening’s diversion visitChuck’s Big TenBuffetMusic and EntertainmentEVERY SATURDAY NIGHTIL 1155 E. 55th St.Toffer Nichols, Mgr. THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936 Page Three5th RowCenterBy C. Sharpless HickmanIn 1897 Georges Melies of Parisstartled the then infinitesimal cinema¬tic world with his phenomenal pro¬duction of Jules Verne’s “A Trip tothe Moon.” In this film primitive,(produced only two years after Arm-at’s perfection of the Lumiere project¬or,) Melies introduced almost everyknown camera trick which has beenused to this day. But the amazingthing about the picture was the modelwork which he photographed in show¬ing futuristic and mechanical aspectsof the lunar rocket flight.In forty years there has been onlyone remarkable advance over thecinematic technique evolved by Meliesfor this type of film. It was madeabout a year ago, when a womanpuppeteer, Sarra Mokil, persuadedthe directors of the Moscow Film stu¬dio to make a ‘cinema version of“Gulliver’s Travels” using 3,000 pup¬pets sculptured by 0. Tayezhnaya.The result, “The New Gulliver,” isnow showing at the Sonotone theater,and for sheer originality, uniquetreatment and directly pointing satire,it has no equal in any contemporaryfilm. It stands alone as a monumentto patience, genius of craftmanshipand individuality of cinematic con¬cept.PropagandaThe story has been modified to fitthe needs of Soviet propaganda to besure, but the modification has been soclever, the satire has been so subtlybarbed that the film’s artistic levelis raised by the very modificationscalled for by the propaganda.Our Gulliver is a young Sovietscout who, during the reading of thebook, has fallen asleep and is in hisdreams transported to Lilliput, whichland is a curious ensemble of modern¬ized present and monarchical past. Itis a land ruled by an inane king whois counseled by an unscrupulous groupof advisers, headed by his prime mini¬ster. The workers are oppressed bya large army. Munitions magnatesrule the land. The King, when hespeaks m parliament, does so bymeans of a phonograph record playedon a portable phonograph concealedunder his cloak. The record is cracked.So is the king. The munitions groupand the food producers battle overGulliver's existence. Death meansmoney to the armaments men whowill be paid for the enormous amountsof explosives needed to kill him. Lifemeans food contracts for the butterand egg barons. The armament fac¬tory, where the people, with the aidof the Sovietized Gulliver, revolt, isequipped with machinery which sar¬donically has been contrived to re¬semble preying insects. Again andagain, by these and other clevertouches, does the satire sting.But it is the puppets who make thefilm. Each of the leading Lillipu¬tians has an individual character, andthe facial expressions on these smallcreatures are a magnificently con¬ceived psychological study, whichraise the film from brilliant enter¬tainment to forthright art. GulliverTells About Thirty People WhoWere Happily MaroonedBEFORE OUR SNOW made itshasty disappearance a rescue partyfought through sub-zero drifts to alone farmhouse by a snowbound high¬way near Sycamore, only to find theinmates didn’t want to be rescued.Three days happily marooned in thehouse were 30 persons: a harlem jazzorchestra, a beer-truck driver, com¬plete with truck, a soft-drink truckdriver—also complete with truck—andassorted motorists.* * *ONE DAY some years ago a fellowfed a hungry duck on the Galenariver in Galena, Illinois. After a fewmonths, what with the fowl’s friends’friends and all, the proposition got alittle large for one person, so the citycouncil voted an appropriation forduck feed.Time passed. The appropriationgave out and the mayor’s wife gavein—fed the birds from her pin money—but a few weeks ago found shecouldn’t keep it up.On the second day of fast the ducks,160 of them, held a protest meeting,(and there are photographs to provethis) formed a line, waddled twoblocks to the mayor’s wife’s house andup onto the porch, loudly quackingtheir maledictions.The council passed another appro¬priation and the ducks went back.« « 4>JUST TO SORT of clean up onlittle odds and ends:The Alpha Delts (into whose houseonce came a couple determined to“wait till the w'edding started,” werefinally convinced that the TheologicalSeminary was next door) want itnoised about that their party afterthe second night of Mirror is closedthis year. Tight closed.The Daily News reports a man‘stabTied twice in the badomen”...and there’s something sort of swellabout Russia giving medals to a fewhundred milkmaids who got a greaterquantity of milk out of their cows.“C’mon, Bossy—put out for theladies.”The Daily Maroon has gone quitenuts about questionaires. Two girls,who wish to remain unnamed, areasking boys things like “Do you thinkless of girl who lets you kiss her onher first date?” and “Do you like ablind date?” The latter to whichKahny Kahnweiler answered “No sir.Mine has to see at least.” The resultsof the whole thing will be exposedin a forthcoming Woman’s Page,Dave Humphrey says more girlswould send in their pictures for theCap and Gown beauty contest if eachdidn’t think the other was better.Lee’s Catering Serviceand Chop Suey1204 E. 53rd Fairfax 0429-0544We furnish American and Chinese dishes.Caterina for parties, etc.<|l—Valor Symphony.TED SHAWN and hisEnsemble of Male DancersFriday Evening, February 28th8:30 P.M.TICKETS 83c—$2.20 Seats at Information OfficeSTUnEBAKER THEATRE Letters tothe EditorSUPERFICIALITY AGAINEditor, The Daily Maroon,Dear Mr. Nicholson:In a 750 word letter, a student ofAristotle criticized an editorial whichappeared in the Maroon last week.The editorial protested against thesuperficiality prevalent on campus.The letter stated that the editorial, it¬self, was superficial, because it failedto analyze thoroughly the qualitywhich it attacked.The letter-writer is mistaken in twoimportant features.First, he should understand that aneditorial may be valuable in raisinga challenge, whether or not it pre¬sumes to present the answer to thequestions asked. Any effective edit¬orial is necessarily short, and cannotbegin to exhaust a subject like super¬ficiality. But by stimulating thoughtagainst an evil, the editorial is bene¬ficial.As a result of this original mis¬understanding, the spirit of the stu¬dent’s thorough letter was one oferroneously slamming an editorial,rather than of developing a more pro¬found principle.This leads to the second, and majormistake of the letter. It has beenexplained how the student’s argumentwas false. It is now to be determinedhow his object was superficial, in spiteof his thorough system. For did henot attempt, as mentioned above, toslam an editorial without a moreworthy purpose than to display know¬ledge? Does he keep us aware of theflagrant flaw which we should cor¬rect? Does he realize the entire prob¬lem in its general seriousness?This case is strongly reminiscent ofa situation which existed when an¬cient Greece began to decline. Thesophists became notorious for theirweaving of words and definitions to form the conclusions they wished; butthey were, in the ultimate sense, pur¬poseless.Having concluded this rebuttal, Ishould like to advance the challengeagainst superficiality of all kinds uponthis campus. Superficiality is incom¬patible with a comprehensive orderingof society. It should be respected innone of its forms, from pseudo-soph¬istication to the lacking of a purposein life.* * *At this point, there is a need to gofurther, as the letter-writer suggests.In his concluding paragraph's, he de¬velops a line of thought which, in amore purposeful attitude, might helpus in our attempt to abandon superfi¬ciality. If he re-reads the editorialwhich he criticized, he williind a neces¬sarily brief indication of the samesolution which he suggests as if incontrast to the original: The develop¬ment of true knowledge.The controversy seems to boil downto the old conflict between the theoristand the moralist. The theorist is in¬adequate without a purpose. Themoralist in insufficient without atheory. It seems to me that, in thiscase, the purposeless theorist has beenpresuptive in assuming that the mor¬alist has no theory. It is of course un¬likely that either side is absolutelyprofound. Yet I think it is morefitting to attack superficiality thanto slam an editorial.The cursive editorial may necessari¬ly have been incomplete in its depthof analysis, but the demand made issincere; Superficiality, pseudo-soph¬istication, affectation, Uck of purpose,must be direspected, e’er man’s fullenergy can be applied to life. Whetherthis is possible, and by what means itmay be possible, is for us seriouslyto consider.(This reply, like the original article,is not signed. We’ll soon have a re¬lay team.—ed.) Taft Works onClay Figures ofLincoln, DouglasBy JAMES MICHNAIn his studios next door to the Uni¬versity at Ingleside and the Midway,where he has w'orked for thirty years,Lorado Taft, famous the world overfor his sculpture, is busily at workon the clay figures for a life sizebronze plaque of the Lincoln-Douglasdebate.The plaque, which will stand 8 by10 feet when completed, has been or¬dered by Quincy, Illinois, and willstand on the actual site of the sixthLincoln-Douglas debate, the publicsquare in Quincy, It will be dedicatedon October 13, as a memorial to theoccasion when townspeople participat¬ed in one of the famous events of his¬tory.Use CastsA plaster life mask of Lincoln anda death mask of Stephen Douglas willbe used in modeling the actual physi¬ognomy of the two main figures of thework. Lincoln will stand beside asmall table with the ever-presentwater pitcher on it, and to the left ofthe table, Stephen Douglas will besitting apparently immersed inthought while several women andnumerous important first citizensgather behind the speakers, the treesof the square forming a canopy overthe whole tableau.With the completion a part of an¬other of his projects, a collection ofplaster casts of the outstanding ex¬amples of the best statuary of allperiods of Greek art, Taft has par¬tially realized his dream of an idealart museum arranged in chronologi¬cal order, to be used in art apprecia¬tion work in schools throughout thenation.The casts will be used as the sub¬jects of artistic photos all on thesame scale of one inch to a foot, andarranged in order in which they oc¬curred in history, showing pictoriallythe development of Greek sculpturalart from its earliest forms.Meet your pipe half-way. Pack it with Half & Half.Cool as Big Ben’s: ’’Come on. Fellow; scram!” Sweetas recalling: ”It’s Sunday . . . hurrah!” Fragrant, full-bodied tobacco that won’t bite the tongue—in a tinthat won’t bite the fingers. Made by our exclusivemodern process including patent No. 1,770,920.Smells good. Makes your pipe welcome any¬where. Tastes good. Your password to pleasure!Not a Mt of bito In tho tobacco or tho Toioscopo Tin, which gots tmallor and amallora* you uM-up tho tobacco. No Mtton llngars as you roach for a load, oven the last one.Copyright 1936, Tho Amerirtn Tobtcco CompinyA i F H A L FTAe Sa/e P^eFOR RIPi OR CIGARETTEHALF t HALF MAKESOHE SWELL SMOKE!DAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936TheOlympics(This is the first of a series of arti¬cles on prominent undergraduateand alumni athletes of the Universityvihose names have been mentioned aspossible Olympic material.)With a long string of important vic¬tories behind him, Bob Finwall, Ma¬roon wrestler, should have an excel¬lent chance to enter the finals in the135 pound weight class when theOlympic try-outs are held in Lehigh,Penn., April 16, 17, and 18.According to Coach Spyros K.Vorres, Finwall is a “fast, clean,wrestler with plenty of ability.” Afterlooking into the wrestler’s record, onefinds this statement no exaggeration.Five years ago, the compact brown¬haired lad went out for the wrestlingsquad at Parker high school. In thespring of the same he had won the135 pound division in the Cook countymeet and was rated as one of the bestgrapplers in the state.* if IfAnother victory in the state anda second place in the Central A.A.U.meet in Bob’s senior year at Parkeradded two more cups to his collection.In 1933, daily workouts under CoachVorres enabled him to take a thirdplace in the National A A.U. tourna¬ment here in Chicago. It was in thistournament that Finwall’s spine wasfractured when he wrestled ErnieStout of Southwestern State Teacherswho went on to win the tournament.A Big Ten champion. Dale Goingsof Indiana, fell before the speed andpoise of Chicago’s grappler when thethen 19-year old freshman defeatedthe favorite to win the 135 pound classof the 1934 World’s Fair Tournament.A fractured leg, the result of a fallin the autumn of his sophomore yearin the University, deprived the teamof a valuable man last season, but,back on top this winter, Finwall haswon all of the contests he has enteredso far. Six have been won on fallsand the other two by decision.* tWhat about the future? Will hisability and speed carry him to Berlinthis summer? His colleagues seemto think he stands a good chance inthe Olympic competition and his rec¬ord strengthens this opinion.Not once this year, has Finwallwrestled in his own weight division.All of his conference bouts have beenw’on in the 145 or 155 division againstsome of the best wrestlers in the con¬ference. The Big Ten crown isacknowledged to be his and there isgood reason to believe that the poise,experience, and mat skill which hascarried him this far will see himthrough the Olympic tryouts.Chess Squad HoldsLead Over OpponentsWith four games yet to be finished,the Maroon chess team now holds a3-1 lead over the Swedish club whichthey played last Friday in the majorsection of the city chess league.When the time limit was up, threegames had not gone to fifty movesand only one was at 56. The latterwill be sent in for adjudication andthe others will be played out to 50.Classified AdsREWARD—For return of overcoatcontaining valuables taken fromfirst floor of Art Building yesterdayafternoon. Finder please call Busi¬ness Dept., Daily Maroon,LOST—One class in History 264.Finder please communicate withFlory and Wiles, 5615 University Ave.No questions asked.HYDE PARKRESTAURANT1211 E. 55TH ST.Under new management.FeaturingSTRICTLY HOME COOKEDDINNERSat35c and 45cPrompt and Courteous Service Psi Upsilon, Delta Upsilon ReachFraternity Basketball Finals Maroon Fencers Lead Big Ten byWide Margin; Meet Illini SaturdayLAST NIGHTS RESULTSPsi Upsilon, 25; Phi Delta Theta, 21Delta Upsilon, 25; Phi Sigma Delta, 22In two of the best games of the sea¬son Psi Upsilon and Delta Upsilonnosed out Phi Delta Theta and PhiSigma Delta last night to enter thefinals of the fraternity league basket¬ball play.Favored to win over Phi Delt, thePsi Upsilon team was almost upsetby the determined attack of the bandwhich placed second in the Alphaleague. The Phi Delts, playing atight man-to-man defense, capitalizedon bad Psi U passes to get the balland drop in enough baskets to showthe reigning favorites their hardestbattle of the season.The Psi U’s, lead by high point manStapleton who accounted for 11 tallies,had a smooth, fast-breaking attackbut once under the basket couldn’tkeep the ball away from the Phi Delts trying desperately to stage anupset. The final score was 25-21.The D. U.’s were trailing 7-13 atthe half in their game with the PhiSigs, but came back to even the scoremidway in the second half. Matchingeach other point for point, bothsquads fought it out till the finalTODAY’S I-M GAMESAt 3:00. Chiselers vs. Hoffer’s RedsAt 7:30 Psi U ‘B’ vs. Phi Delt ‘B’whistle ended the game with the D.U.’s on the long end of a 25-22 score.The first half w'as characterized bysloppy playing by both teams, butDick Adair, leading the D. U. scor¬ing with eight points, lead the at¬tack in the whirlwind rally in thelast half of the game. By virtue of hisnine tallies, E. Krause of the PhiSigs was high point man of the game. Kessler Chosen ToBeat Haarlow In1936 Basket Race(By United Press)With an average of nearly 12J4points a game. Captain Bob Kesslerof Purdue today appeared certain win¬ner of individual scoring honors in theBig Ten basketball race.He added 11 against Minnesotalast night to bring his total up to124, 22 more than Bill Haarlow ofChicago who has played one lessgame.SCORING LEADERSG FG FT TPKeseler, Purdue .... 10 47 30 124HAARLOW, Chicago 9 37 28 102Gunning, Indiana ,... 10 35 26 96Whitlinger, Ohio State 10 31 28 90Young, Purdue 10 34 19 87McMichaels, Northw. 9 37 11 85J. Townsend", "Mich. .. 10 30 25 35Combes, Illinois .... 10 30 24 84 Six Swordsmen OpenI-M Fencing FinalsSix freshman fencers lead the wayinto the finals of the annual Intra¬mural fencing competition which hasbeen proceeding for three weeks inthe basement of Bartlett gymnasium,according to Alvar Hermanson, as¬sistant fencing coach.Strauss, last year’s Hyde Park highschool flash, has led his pool in allthree weapons, and Osner is a finalistin foil and sabre. In the third pool,Chapman is a foils finalist, Polachek«and Miles are qualified in epee, andGustafson has advanced into the foiland sabre finals. Chicago fencers stand far ahead inthe Big Ten, as a result of meets lastweek-end. The great surprise of theseason was Ohio State’s victory overIllinois, conference champions, Satur¬day, 10-7.Having defeated Wisconsin, 14.3Chicago has a .772 percentage. TheMaroons have won 52.5 bouts whilelosing only 15.5, having won an aver¬age of more than thirteen bouts permeet. There are seventeen tilts ineach meet.Illinois, which still has three op¬ponents to fence, including the Ma¬roons at the fieldhouse, Saturdayafternoon at 2:30, has a .574 percent¬age, and stands in second place. OhioState is third with .510.Chesterfields!well that’sdifferent—their aroma ispleasing—they’re milder—they taste better—they burn right—they don’t shedtobacco crumbso 1936, Liccett & Myers ToEacco Co.