Soldiers BlastRoads to HaltItalian Advance(onfusion Reigns in Ad¬dis Ababa as EthiopiansMake Last Stand.(Copyriiht, 1936, By United Prew)Al>l)is ABABA, April 22—Undercolor of rain and mist, their onlyprotection against Italian bombingairplanes, thousands of Ethiopianwarriors today dynamited the impe¬rial highway from Dessye over whichMarshall Pietro Badoglio’s legionsare advancing to storm Addis Ababa.While they struggled to make thehighway impassable for the Italians,other warriors fought desperatelyagainst attacking columns betweenthe 12,000 foot Tarma Burrh passand Shula Meda, last outpost on theI)t >sye road.News of the fighting and the effortto destroy the road was brought toAihlis Ababa by crown prince AsfaWosan, who.se troops are fightingwith Emperor Haile Selassie’s im-IM i ial bodyguard.Similarly desperate fighting ragedon the southern front where the con¬centrations under the DedjazmachNa.'ibu are making a last .stand tokeep General Rodolpho Graziani fromcapturing Harar and Jijiga and thuscommanding the Djibouti-Addis Aba¬ba railroad.Divert StreamDiverted streams tonight were cas¬cading over the all-important road.The Ethiopians dynamited the tor¬rents from their u.sual channels inhope of bogging Italian camions.At Gibwasha 1,500 Ethiopians weredigging great trenches 12 feet deep,along the plateau escarpment to haltmechanized transport and Italiantanks.They have erected machine gunstrongpoints at vantage points alongTarmar Burrh’s edges. Except forairplanes there has been no sight ofthe enemy from Tarmar Burrh. ButEthiopians were concentrating on theShula Meda plain where the final bat¬tle for pos.session of Addis Ababa wasexpected to be fought.Empress Makes IMeaIn .■Vddis Ababa confusion reignedbecau.'e of rumors as to the where¬abouts of the Italians. Empress Men-en traveled out to the radio stationat .Akaki to broadcast an appeal tothe world and especially to France•ind Great Britain. She asked for im-(('ontinued on page 2)Racial PrejudiceCauses Riots inPalestine, Algiers•lERUSALEM, April 22—(UP)—Eighteen Jews and ten Arabs havebeen killed in bloody rioting in Tel••\viv and Jaffa since Sunday, officialsannounced today. In addition, 56Arabs and 53 Jews were wounded.•As result of the riots, work ofwidening and improving Jaffa harborwas discontinued indefinitely.Police e.scorts were accorded auto¬mobiles in the vicinity of Jenin follow-if'g a series of attacks, presumablyby badits. Police wounded two at-'ackers.ALGIERS, Algeria, April 22—(UP)-Two Jews were shot and seriouslywounded today in an election brawlwith anti-Semites.The shooting occurred when a groupof Jews forced their way into theheadquarters of an Anti-Jewish can¬didate in the election and attacked thewatchman, who opened fire with a re¬volver.After the shooting angry mobsgathered in the streets and staged a‘‘ree-for-all, swinging clubs and fistsand throwing stones. Several wereinjured.Meanwhile, other Jews demonstra¬t'd in f ront of the Anti-Semiticimblication La Libre Parole.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCs^’ill be accepted by the editor.)IDEALISTSOnly the poet or the saint canwater an asphalt pavement in theconfident anticipation that lilies willreward his labour.—W. SomersetMaugham, Moon and Sixpence. Committee Hintsat New Tax Bill Faculty GroupHears Views onWASHINGTON, April 22—(UP)Seventeen Democratic members of theHouse Ways and Means Committeeagreed in a report tonight that theadministration’s new tax bill, onwhich debate opens tomorrow, willnot meet President Roosevelt’s de¬mands and gave a strong hint thata new revenue act may be offered inthe 75th Congress.An estimated excess of $10,000,000in the first year’s yield will resultfrom the expected collection of $100,-000,000 in “windfall” taxes and $83,-000,000 from the capital stocks andexcess profits levies. These taxes willbe inoperative in the following years,thus reducing the revenue yield.Without these taxes and with nonew levies added, the bill will fall$334,000,000 short of the amountPresident Roosevelt called on Con¬gress to raise over a period of threeyears to balance the ordinary Federalbudget.Eden to QuestionHitler on Reich’sDiplomatic Status Rushing PlansThree Students ExplainChanges to Board Satur¬day.Fraternity men will present theircase for changes in the pre.sent rush¬ing setup to the faculty Board forthe Coordination of Student Inter¬ests at 10 Saturday morning in So¬cial Science 108. The outcome of thismeeting will determine the policy ofthe Dean of Students office duringthe next year.Three students will speak beforethe faculty group. The chief issue tobe discussed is the time of the in¬tensive rushing period. Advocatingthe seventh week of the autumn quar¬ter is Quentin Ogren, Beta ThetaPi, while those defending the reten¬tion of the period in the second quar¬ter are Merle Giles, Delta Kappa Ep¬silon, and Ralph Nicholson, PhiKappa Psi and editor of The DailyMaroon.<Cop)rriKht. 1936. Bjr United PreM) Proposed ChangesLONDON, April 22.—Great Brit¬ain is preparing a questionnaire toGermany on European security prob¬lems, it w’as learned today, in an ef¬fort to provide a basis for negotia¬tions into which France and Belgiumwould be brought at once.It was believed that a tentativedraft of questions was ready for ameeting of the cabinet today at w^ichP’oreign Secretary Eden submittedhi.s report on the failure of theLeague council to halt Italy’s war onEthiopia.Particularly, the questions are de¬signed to answer French doubts andsuspicions of Germany’s intentions,and it was learned that a prime fea¬ture was regarding Hitler’s view’s onthe possibility of making the .securityof east European states certain.The plan w'as reported to be to ob¬tain clarification of security questionsfrom Hitler for use immediately afterthe French parliamentary electionsof April 26 and May 3._Eden’s report to the Cabinet onthe League meeting at Geneva wasunderstood to have been most pes-simi.stic. It is recognized that thetwo weeks since the Cabinet last met,have seen a disastrous setback forthe League. British popular opinion,long favorable to the League, hasturned to some extent.Now there is an increasing ten¬dency to believe that Great Britainmu.st rely on its own armed strength,and for this reason the public wasexpected to accept the new’ tax bur¬dens under the budget which NevilleChamberlain, Chancellor of the Ex¬chequer, outlined yesterday. The former period is part of aplan presented to the Interfraternitycouncil toward the end of last quar¬ter which met with the approval ofa majority of the houses represented.Rushing during the second week ofthe winter quarter is one of thepoints of a plan proposed by TheDally Maroon. In the latter case, anattempt was made to reform themethods of rushing with the aim ofpreventing a repetition of the ac¬knowledged illegal practices thatjmarked this year’s rushing period. |Wright Departs forWashington to Speakon International LawQuincy Wright, professor of Inter¬national Law, left yesterday to at¬tend the thirtieth annual meeting ofthe American Society of Internation¬al Law to be held at the Carlton ho¬tel in Washington from today throughSaturday. At 11 tomorrow morning,Wright will address the assembleddelegates on the subject of “Article I19 of the League Covenant and theDoctorine of Rebus Sic Stantibus,” onwhich, as one of the most authoritativeand widely known students of inter¬national law and affairs today, he isparticularly well equipped to speak.Out of residence this quarter,Wright has been engaged in com¬pleting his six-year study of “TheCauses of War”, the final volume ofwhich is scheduled to go to pressnext fall.American Gives First-Hand Storyof Recent Japanese Assassinations(An American citizen, ultimate¬ly associated tvith the Universitycommunity, who has resided formany years in Tokyo, but who forobvious reasons must remain an¬onymous, has furnished the follow¬ing first-hand account of the recentassassinations in Tokyo and theirajiparent significance as viewedfrom within.)Early in the morning on February26th a well organized plan was car¬ried out to try to dispose of the mem¬bers of the Japanese cabinet, thosein particular who were blocking themilitary. Groups of soldiers armedwith machine guns as well as ordi¬nary weapons, simultaneously at¬tacked the homes of the various mem¬bers of the Cabinet, while they werestill in bed and began shooting. Thereis no use in going into the gruesomestory, but four officials were killedand a fifth seriously wounded al¬though he seems to be recovering.The premier escaped simply becausehis brother-in-law, who was visitinghim and very much resembled him,was mistaked for him and was killed.Those killed were Saito, lord keeperof the Privy seal, who was “close tothe throne”; Finance minister Taka-hashi Watamanabe, inspector gener¬al of military education, and thebrother-in-law of the premier, whosename I have forgotten. (Dad says hisname was Colonel Matsuo.) In ad¬dition five policemen who attemptedto obstruct the soldiers were killed. Armiral Kantaro Suzuki, grand cham¬berlain, was severely wounded but isnow reported to be out of danger.Palace Approaches GuardedDad was in Tokyo the day of thehappenings, and when he came homein the evening he brought the firstnews that Kanto had received of theevents in the capital. All the ap¬proaches to the palace and govern¬ment buildings were heavily guardedby soldiers with fixed bayonets; bar¬ricades covered with machine gunswere set up at important approaches,as at Hibia corner and the Babasakiapproach to the palace. The head¬quarters of the metropolitan policewere taken over and the ordinarypolice control displaced by martial law.Martial law was put into operationonly in the city of Tokyo, notthroughout the entire country, as er¬roneously reported in part of thepress in U. S. The rebel forces, im¬mediately after the murders, barri¬caded themselves in the newly erectedDiet buildings and in the Sanno ho¬tel, a big foreign style hotel near theAmerican embassy. There they heldout for three days, disobeying thecommand of the emperor to lay downtheir arms. On the third day, how¬ever, they gave in (supposedly).Tokyo remained under martial lawfor three weeks until after the newCabinet was elected and installed.Reason for RevoltBill asked why they did it and thatis a big question, especially as most(Continued on page 2) Scene yesterday in front of Bart¬lett gymnasium as the peace parademade its way from the Fieldhouse toList Guides forScholarship DayTours of CampusWith the cooperation of the stu¬dent body as well as campus organi¬zations, fraternities and clubs, final ar¬rangements were completed yester¬day by the Student Social committeefor the Scholarship day program to¬morrow. Approximately 750 highschool seniors will be on campus tocompete in the examinations.Headed by Bob Bethke and MaryJane Hector, the tours committee an¬nounced the selection of guides for thecampus tours, to be conducted direct¬ly after lunch and ending with aChapel assembly at 2:15. Assistantson the tours^committee include BobAnderson, Russell Baird, SeymourBurrows, Ralph Leach, Arnold Phill¬ips, Judith Fox, Shirley Coambs, Bon¬nie Breternitz, Evelyn Smith, and Per-sis-Jane Peeples.Guides for scholarship day areJay Berwanger, Robert Ebert, JohnBodfish, Bill Negley, Dan Smith, TomKaratz, Charles Wilson, Charles Hoy,Stuart Abel, Paul Archipley, DickWasem, Jack Webster, Ray Lahr,Dave Humphreys, Bill Stapleton, andPrescott Jordan.Others are Harmon Meigs, MelvinUry, George F^elsenthal, ClarenceWright, John Ford, Delmar Markoff,Leonard Olsen, Omar Fareed, HenryMiller, Phil Werner, Dick Englehart,James Melville, Robert McQuilkin,John Flinn, Harold Watkins, JohnBeal, Sam Whiteside, Edward Bell,Ralph Nicholson, Bill Lang, and JackAllen.Women guides include Jean MacDougal, Mary Adele Crosby, JeanneGayton, Marjorie von Hermann, Bon¬ita Lillie, Betsy Chase, Betty Davis,Doris Danveport, Kay Hernlund,Louise Huffaker, Betty Jane Watson,Elizabeth Montgomery, Jane Brinker,Juanita Springer, and Mimi Thomas.Henry Cutter, chairman of the Stu¬dent Social committee, has alreadyasked that all lettermen wear their“C” jackets tomorrow.Classical HonorarySociety Meets onCampus TomorrowEta Sigma Phi, national Classicssociety, is holding its twelfth annualconvention today, tomorrow and Sat¬urday, on the campus of the Univer¬sity. The purpose of this Society isto promote appreciation of Greek andRoman culture and to promote goodwill and friendship between Classi¬cal students.The program begins this eveningat 8 with an informal reception atInternational House. Other parts ofthe program in which members of theUniversity faculty are taking partare: Tomorrow morning at 10:30 Pro¬fessor H. W. Prescott, chairman ofthe Latin department, will give atalk on “Wit and Humor in GreekEpigram”.Students of the University par¬ticipating are Caroline Zimmerly,president of the University chapterand national corresponding secretary,and Arnold Nelson. Caroline Zim¬merly will preside at a luncheon to¬morrow at 12:30.Recent initiates into the Universitychapter were Elizabeth Ann Mont¬gomery, Ida Siegal, Barbara Swett,and Mary Sullivan. the circle. Carrying banners, and sing¬ing a peace song, the strikers presentedan orderly front.Spring CommentFeatures Dialoguesby Two ProfessorsThe first of the two spring editionsof Comment, campus literary maga¬zine, appears today, offering stories,articles, and poetry by campus per¬sonalities.The feature article is a dialogueby Professors Percy H. Boynton andRobert Morss Lovett. Dr. WilhelmPauck of the Chicago Theologicalseminary analyzes the bewildermentof contemporary thought and sug¬gests various solutions in an articleentitled, “Times of Transition.” Ahighlight in the poetic contributionsis a poem by Elder Olson, graduatestudent in English, that will appearin a forthcoming volume of poetry bythe author.An article by Fritz Jacobin, “Lit¬erature and Society”, attempts toidentify Marxist criticism with Aris¬totle’s “Poetics.”Professor Frederick L. Schuman i?also featured in a speech which hegave at a former meeting of the Vet¬erans of Future Wars.Supplementing these articles arecontributions by Sam Hair, WilliamSherwood, Winston Ashley, and Don¬ald Morris.Mitzi MayfairJudges Legs ofFriars ChorinesMitzi Mayfair, 20-year old dancingstar of “At Home Abroad”, willjudge the Blackfriar Beautiful Legscontest tomorrow noon in Hutchin¬son court. Final arrangements forMiss Mayfair’s visit to the Univer¬sity campus were made yesterdayafternoon by Francis Callahan, soph¬omore manager of general publicityfor Blackfriars.Chorus “girls” and “women” prin¬cipals of “Fascist and Furious” willgather in Hutchinson court shortlybefore noon. The contestants will bedressed in feminine costume to facili¬tate the judging.The youngest dancing star on thelegitimate stage. Miss Mayfair hasbeen behind footlights since she was11. At the age of fifteen she was fea¬tured in a Ziegfeld revue, and of latehas played in “Take a Chance”,“Calling All Stars”, as well as ap¬pearing in motion pictures. She is atpresent playing with Beatrice Lillieat the Grand Opera house in “AtHome Abroad”.After the judging Miss Mayfairwill join the list of popular stars whohave appeared in the Coffee shop.Lovett Gives Addresson Academic FreedomRobert Morss Lovett, professor ofEnglish, will address faculty mem¬bers and those students interested onthe subject of “Academic Freedomand Teacher Tenure” this afternoonat 3:30 in Haskell 108. As Lovett isscheduled to retire at the end of thequarter, this may be his last officialtalk to the campus in his presentcapacity. Member United Pressus Jin Anti -DemonstrationStaley, Fiske, and MeadeAddress Assembly inFieldhouse.By WELLS D. BURNETTEWaving banners calling upon thecampus to join in the student strikeagainst war, sixteen hundred peoplegathered yesterday morning at 11 inthe fieldhouse to hear Reverend Ches¬ter Fiske, Professor Eugene Staley,and labor leader, George Meade urgestudents and labor to prevent anotherwar by uniting now for peace.Creating an impressive and force¬ful scene, these students marchedforth, four abreast, under the bannersof the All-Campus Peace council in atwo-block parade across the qua¬drangles—singing, to the tune ofWave the Flag:“March out students from theclassroomsRaise our slogans highStrike for peace and let the worldknowFor profits we won’t die.Students of the world stand withusDetermined war must ceaseMarch on, students of ChicagoAnd we’ll win our strike forPEACE!”Audience InattentiveThe demonstration in the fieldhousefell short of expectations with peo¬ple milling around, standing on onefoot and then another, straining earsto hear the words from the blaringamplifiers, and in general giving theeffect of only a mildly interestedgroup. The speeches, all brief, car¬ried home only one point, that mod¬ern warfare seems futile among civ¬ilized peoples. Three blue-coats lurkedin the background, just in case—Fiske in his address commentedthat in Christianity or in any otherreligion there is no room for war;in view of this fact took a definitestand for peace.Staley SpeaksThe only faculty member on theprogram, Eugene Staley stated, “TheOxford oath will not do the trick ifthe enthusiasm which it generateswill not bring about more positiveaction. Once a war starts, the Oxfordoath, taken by hundreds of thousandswill not prevent that war. We mustprevent that war from starting.” Thesame criticism was made of otherproposed war-preventatives.Other speakers who sounded peaceopinions, ranging from demandingimmediate anti-war programs to rec-(Continued on page 2)Students ProtestThroughout Countryoins IWar *NEW YORK, April 22—(UP) —More than 500,000 students in 400colleges and high schools throughoutthe United States went on strike to¬day in a demonstration against warand left classrooms for an hour toact on a five-point platform. At leastfive disorders were reported.Two students were injured in aclash with police at Lawrence college,Appleton, Wisconsin, and an un¬known number were affected by teargas when a bomb exploded unexpect¬edly at a rally of University of Kan¬sas students at Lawrence, Kansas.In Philadelphia a peace demonstra¬tion at Temple University ended innear-violence when speakers werepelted with vegetables and an at¬tempt was made by unsympatheticstudents to tear down the platform.Police broke up a Communist dem¬onstration when they erected a plat¬form five feet away from one usedby Thomas Jefferson High Schoolstudents in New York. A James Mon¬roe High School strike was dispersed,but upon protest by school officialsthe police allowed students to reform.Although many meetings refused toadopt one or more of the five planksof the campaign staged by the Amer¬ican Student Union to end war, thethird annual peace strike was calledfor the following purposes:1—To protest against - war andfascism.2—To protest against the ReserveOfficers Training Ck)rps.3—To demand passage of the NyKvale act outlawing compulsory miiitary training in some colleges.(Continued on page 2)sPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1936Soldiers BlastRoads to StopItalianAdvanceConfusion Reigns in Ad¬dis Ababa as EthiopiansMake Last Stand. Prepare Plan toAvoid Waste inCanadian Relief(Continued from page 1)mediate action “while yet theretime to assist Ethiopia.”She said: “I will remain in mycountry and with my people until theend. This is the time of our country’smost critical need. We are fightingagainst tremendous odds but we arestill undefeated.”Capital in TurmoilIncreasing indications that AddisAbaba is not to be surrendered with¬out a struggle spread further panicthrough the city.Excited shouts of “flee to the hillsand save yourselves” mingled withthe braying of donkeys and the noiseof tangled traffic in muddy streets asnative families by the hundreds evac¬uated.Foreigners continued to evacuate.John C. Robinson, negro aviator ofChicago who served with Ethiopia’s OTTAWA, Ont., April 22—(UP—A new unemployment relief plan, em¬powering the Government to tacklethe problem by creating employmentthrough a scheme of public work pro¬jects and agreements with private in¬dustry, has been placed before theCanadian Parliament by Norman Rog¬ers, Minister of Labor.Rogers quoted comparative figureson unemployment for this year and1935 to support his contention thatnew legislation is necessary to dealwith the constantly changing situa¬tion in Canada. The total receivingdirect relief from the Dominion inFebruary this year was 1,080,931, com¬pared with 1,136,840, in February,1935, but to this year’s figure, he said,must be added some 256,944 farmersand their families in the drouth-strick¬en areas of Western Canada who arebeing directly supported by the gov¬ernment.Bill Past First ReadingRogers said the object of the legis¬lation he has sponsored in the House,and which already has been givenreading, w’as to vest in the Govern¬ment authority to:1. Establish an employment com- Large Crowd Attends Local Strike;Report Little Violence Over Countrypathetic air force until Italian bom- _ „ . a. ^bers destroyed Emperor Haile Selas- mission to co-ordinate all relief effortssie’s few planes, left by train for j and to promote efficiency and econo-Djibouti with Captain John Meade,..military attache of the American! 2. Vote specific sums in supplemen-legation.Heavy fighting was reported atWarrah Hailu, between Addis Ababaand Dessye. There the Ethiopians re¬portedly made three sorties from thetown and repulsed Italians who weresaid to have suffered severe loses. tary estimates to cover relief costs,ending “blank check” legislation.3. Initiate programs of publicworks to provide jobs.4. Sign agreements with companies,partnerships or individuals relating tothe expansion of industrial employ¬ment.5. Extend land settlement schemesto take more men from the cities andback to the farms.6. Negotiate direct relief agree¬ments with the provinces, continuingor extending the monthly payments! now in force.7. Lend money to provinces.Under the Minister of Labor’s bill,are hein^ held virtual I Government may initiate anyLos Angeles, are being held virtual ^ undertakings that it findsprisoners by hungry savage Ethio-pian bandit groups at Lalibella, a let-' ^ter fron them received today said. (Continued from page 1)4—To demand support of the Oxford pledge not to fight for the Unit¬ed States in either offensive or de¬fensive wars.5—To demand more academic free¬dom.In a radiocast Joseph P. Lash, executive secretary of the AmericanStudent Union said: “It is a ques¬tion to President Roosevelt: at whomare we to shoot these rifles that weare learning to handle in the ROTC?When we have learned these drillformations, over what foreign fieldsdo you propose to march us? In yournext speech to the youth of America,we respectfully suggest that youanswer these questions.“We are against war: we areagainst militarism. We demand thatarmaments funds be turned over toconstructive uses. We want no bonusas veterans of any future war. Wedemand economic security for theveterans of a catastrophe worse thanwar—the depression. Schools, not bat¬tleships, is the cry of American stu¬dents.”Hold MissionaryPair in EthiopiaADDIS ABABA, April 22—(UP)—The Reverend Kenneth Oglesby and jhis wife, American missionaries fromDanger of being attacked by “shif-tas” (Ethiopian bandits) preventedthem from venturing even a short dis¬tance from the mission compound.Word of their plight reached AddisAbaba by mere chance, as numerousother letters had been sent whichnever reached their destination. Thismessage was dated March 15.‘A plague is wiping out the goat! ada and may execute agreements andcontracts deemed necessary or expe¬dient. Yale DemonstrationProfessor Samuel Bemis of YaleUniversity told an assembly of Con¬necticut State College students atStorrs, Conn., tonight that “Everyprofessor ought to be willing to diefor his country.”Dr. Albert Einstein, famousphysicist and pacifist, said that itwas “the duty of enlightened youthto combat the poliics of national ego¬tism” in a message read before 500Princeton students in Princeton, N.J.In Cambridge, Mass., 500 Harvardstudents and 75 Radcliffe girls votedfor immediate passage of the Nye-Kvale bill, abolishing ROTC training.But David W. Prall, Harvard facultyrepresentative, told the group that“Simon-pure pacifism is not for usIt is not passive resistance that wewant but vigorous and forceful meth¬ods,”About 50,000 students struck inPhiladelphia, 12,000 in Chicago, 10,000 in Boston, 7,500 in Los Angelesand 90,000 in New York. Lash saidPuerto Rico .students joined in dem¬onstrations.American Gives First-Hand Storyof Recent Japanese Assassinations(Continued from page 1).said. “The natives attribute the dis¬ease to an ‘evil eye’ brought to Ethi¬opia by the Italians. Thus theirhatred for all white men has in¬creased.The Reverend and Mrs. Oglesbyare natives of Missouri, but camehere from Los Angeles. They havebeen in Lalibella for two years. Lali¬bella is 50 miles south of Socota onthe route followed by Italian troopsin their advance on Dessye.“The bandits have gone mad,” theletter said. “We cannot get carriersthrough. We have had no mail sincemid-February. A postman left hereFebruary 20 and never returned.herds and there is no milk,” the letter, of fh® killed were retired armyand navy officers. You may know thatthe affairs of Japan are in the handsof two groups who are independentof each other, the civil and the mili¬tary. Both of these however areanswerable to the Emperor. The mil¬itary has been growing increasinglystrong and has been trying to get cer¬tain controls over the heads of thecivil authorities. But the military hashad factions appearing in their ownmidst that have been becoming verybitter. Perhaps the most powerfuland certainly the most aggressive ofthese factions is a military fascistgroup that got after Dr. Minobe lastcontrol of the government and runthings as they decree. It was thisgroup that got after Dr. Minobe lasummer and forced his resigna¬tion from the law department of theImperial university after somethirty years there. Dr. Minobe wasteaching that the Emperor was sub¬ject to the law of the land. Thisfascist group raised a hue and crythat the Emperor was above all law.As a matter of fact what they want¬ed to establish was that since theEmperor was above all law and theywere accountable to him alone, theywere above all law. This fascistgroup had become very much an¬gered at the Okada cabinet not onlybecause they opposed their demandsfor increased military budget but be¬cause they were too open to foreigninfluence and had too much powerover the Emperor. Their actual de¬votion to the Emperor was shown bythe refusal of the insurgents to laydown their arms even at the com¬mand of the Emperor. This fascistgroup finally decided that the onlyway to get the control they wantedwas to resort to arms. It looks to usas though there were some prettyhigh up military officers behind theFebruary 26th outburst because ofsubsequent events.Army Approves PremierThe new Premier had to be ap¬proved by the military before he wasinstalled. He had to make certainpromises before the military wouldFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings 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 aresfrident 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. Subscriptionrat^: $2.75 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising 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.^itorial associates: Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell, Julian KUer, John Morris.James Snyder. Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: William McNeillAssistant: C. Sharpless Hickman approve him, such as a big increasein military and naval appropria¬tions, educational reforms along con-serative, nationalistic lines, limita¬tions of the powers of the Diet etc.In a veiled way the military haveused references to the “February26th incident” to show what mighthappen if their demands were dis¬regarded. They expressly want tobring their military and naval andair strength up to that of SovietRussia and demand increased forcesand fortifications for their Manchu¬rian and Chinese outposts. You candraw your own conclusions as towhat that names. For all the “re¬grets” over the “incident” that themilitary have expressed and theirassertions of a cleanup in theirranks, they have gotten what theyw'anted.Japanese Elements ArousedThere is a large element in Japanwho have been greatly aroused overthe affair. A friend and I want tocall on the wife of a very high rank¬ing civil official here. We were amazedat her outspoken denunciation of thewhole affair, but of course her hus¬band is a civil official. Many Japanesehave said that the military have thistime gone too far, that the Japanesepeople would not stand for suchthings. Yet we keep seeing that themilitary got what they wanted. Ireally think that the majority ofJapanese who do any thinking at allare opposed to the high handednessof the military. But they have ma¬tured an octopus that has been get¬ting bigger and more tenacious untilnow they cannot throw it off. Theminority with the machine gun cancontrol the majority without it. Dadsays he thinks the only thing thatwill break the power of the militaryis war with an outside nation inwhich Japan loses. It is sad to con¬template for there are many fineJapanese people who would havethings different if they could, butthey are helpless. Yet I have faithto believe that here as in our owncountry there are hidden forces atwork that will bring about a betterday.HAVE YOU TRIED THE J-R RESTAURANTFor rich, creamy waffles with bacon or pure pork sausagefor twenty cents.Other attractive menus—Open twenty-four hours a dayTHE J.R RESTAURANT1202 East 55th Street (Continued from page 1)ommending a change of the socialorder were given by Ralph W. Nichol¬son, Solomon Kobrin, Ruth Balder-ston, Georg Mann, William Sher¬wood, Jesse Reed, Henrietta Rybczynski, and Nathan Moscovitch who wasin charge of the day’s events.That the anti war movement understudent control had a definite ally inorganized labor was the contributionby George Meade, general chairmanof the Brotherhood of LocomotiveFiremen and Engineers, to the meet¬ing. The chairman, Quentin Ogren,read a resolution to be sent to Congress in favor of the Nye-Kvale antiROTC measure. The resolution unani¬mously adopted. As a climax the Ox¬ford oath against supporting any warthat the United States might undertake was given to those who wereinterested in accepting it. About 250.students raised their right hands inanswer.Little DisturbancePhotographers and sound news-camera men met the parade led byFrank Meyer and fifty w’hite arm-banded marshalls as it started fromthe fieldhouse. Quietly the paradecontinued and finished. It was notuntil the marchers had disbanded thatanything reminiscent of last year’segg debacle took place. Banners werebeing re-photographed in the circlewith Meyer repeating a short talkfor the sound effects when some un¬identified person tossed a bag of sixeggs into the “circle.”Thieves Steal BridgeWhile Police WatchWARSAW, April 22—(UP) —Thieves today dismantled and stole aniron bridge over the Ochnia river atKutno under the very eyes of policeand interested kibitzers who believedthey were repair men. Suspicion aroseonly when the whole bridge had beenremoved and there were no signs itwould be replaced. Neither the bridgenor the thieves have been found.University literary and critical magazineIN THIS ISSUE:The Professional and the Amateur in the Arts—A dialog between Robert Morss Lovett andPercy Boynton.Times of Crisis—By Dr. Wilhelm Pauck.The Text of Schumanns V. F. W. speech.Stories by William Sherwood and Sam Hair.Verse by Elder Olson, Winston Ashley and others.And many other features.our TODAYPRICE 15cTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. APRIL 23, 1936 Page ThreeEditorialCampus Is Host to High SchoolVisitors TomorrowTomorrow some 800 high schoolseniors will come to the Universityto test their wits on the puzzlers con¬cocted by the scholarship examiners.These people all want to come to theUniversity, with a scholarship if pos¬sible, but they are disposed to comeanyway. They will want to ask ques¬tions; they will want to know allabout the University.The Social committee, the group incharge of Scholarship day, providesa set of guides to help the high schoolvi-itors and to answer their questionsanil imint out the sights. But at bestthis is a formal thing. A real under¬standing of the University and thelife that insists on making itself felton the quadrangles comes ratherfrom the informal friendliness thatstudents can give.You, then, simply by “beingfriends” with the visitors tomorrowwill do the most toward properly in¬troducing them to our community.—K. \V. Nicholson.I niversity SettlementHead Tells of Duties,Worries of WorkersThe worries and woes of socialworkers were outlined in detail byMiss Elsie Anderson, head socialworker at the University settlement,at a meeting of the Student Settle¬ment board held yesterday afternoonin the home of Mrs. Harvey Carr,University social adviser..Miss Marguerite K. Sylla, head res¬ident of the Settlement, spoke brieflyof the opportunities for student co¬operation at the settlement in • thenear future, revealing plans for abazaar May 6 and the annual dinnerMay 14. It was the first meeting ofthe newly elected board..Miss .\nderson told of her experi¬ences in meeting the frequent crisesin the relief situation and of the dif¬ficulty met in providing adequatemedieal care for the people back ofthe Yards. She expressed the opinionthat the WPA has a much betterpsychological effect on the unem¬ployed than direct relief.Offer 14 Coursesin University LawSchool Next QuarterFourteen cour.ses will be offered inthe University Law’ .school during theummer quarter it was announcedvi ,ter(lay.During the first half of the quar¬ter courses will be presented in per¬sonal property, taxation and equity.During the la.st half of the quartercour.ses will be given in remedies,quasi contracts, and public utilities.Throughout the quarter courses willhe given in code pleading, torts, busi-rios.s organization, statutes, family re¬lations, and contractual law. There\'ill aLso be a seminar in comparativelaw’.Details about summer law coursesin the following schools are now’available in the Law school: Univer-i^ity of Colorado, University of Il¬linois, University of Oregon, Emoryuniversity at Atlanta, Georgia, South¬ern Methodist university, the Univer¬ity of North Carolina, and the Uni-'ersity of Kan.sas.Today on theQuadranglesReligion and MusicJoseph Bond chapel. Professorilhelm Pauck at 12.Lectures“Radical and Anti-Radical Propa-uanda in America: A Comparison.< hannels and Organizations.” Har-"Id D. Lasswell. Social Science 122it ,3:30.“Ethnology.” Robert Redfleld. Har¬per Mil at 4:30.“The Effect of the Depression onhe Negroes in the United States.”'toward Gould. Social Science 122 at7:30.MeetingsPegasus. Alumnae room of Ida^’oyes hall at 12:30.Delta Sigma Phi. Reynolds club.Room D at 1:30.Blackfriars. Reynolds club. RoomsA and C 2-5.YWCA. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes hall at 4:30.Christian Fellowship group. Wickerroom of Ida Noyes hall at 7:30.Public Welfare Administrationi?i’oup. Social Science 105 at 7:30.Miscellaneous“Shvanda.” Leon Mandel hall at8:30. Circling the CircleVIII. Haskell HallBeyond the grey stone entrance ofHaskell hall over which is inscribedin three languages—Greek, Latin,Hebrew—“light, that, coming into theworld enlighteneth every man”, theSchool of Business has its adminis¬trative c'ffices and classrooms. Has¬kell hall is located on the w’est sideof Harper court, between Harperlibrary and Swift hall.Mrs.CarolineE.Haskell gave$100,000for its erection, as the Haskell Orien¬tal museum, which was to be dedicatedin the memory •f Frederick Haskell,her husband and a prominent Chi¬cagoan. The cornerstone was laid onJuly 1, 1895, with a colorful cere¬monial address by Dr. John HenryBarrows. Toward the end of thespeech he prophesied the futuregreatness of the University datingfrom the dedication of Haskell, say¬ing, “A century hence the HaskellOriental museum, now rising, w’ill besurrounded by groups of academicbuildings that shall repeat many ofthe glories so dear to Oxford.” Atthe time of its erection the buildingsStudy Etymology,History inChineseLanguage ClassBy MARTHA LOGANThe first class in Chinese evertaught in the University is progress¬ing as rapidly as could possibly beexpected at the end of the third week,says Herrlee G, Creel, instructor ofChinese History and Language. Heis using a method different from thatcommonly followed, placing specialemphasis on the etymology and his¬tory of the language, and giving thestudents a general background in theliterature and culture.Of the approximately ten students,including one Japanese, who attendthe class regularly, one is taking thecourse because he plans to ^o backto China and w’ishes to be able toread the newspapers and understandwhat’s going on around him. Anotheris studying Chinese because “it’s sucha fascinating language!” Others wantit in order to read Chinese history.One philologist who has studiedcuneiform and Egyptan finds thatin many w’ays Chinese furnishes themost i^teresting material concerningthe meaning and etymology of words.Study Chinese MentalityCreel is trying to give his students,in the shortest possible time, a back¬ground for intelligent reading of Chi¬nese, by giving them some idea ofhow the Chinese mind works, thestructure and nature of the language,and some general culture. He givesthem the etymology of the Chinesecharacters, show’ing in some caseshow the modern ones have changedfrom the ancient characters whichare found on 3000 year old bronzeand stone tablets, bones, • and othermaterial excavated fairly recently.Original Pictograph MeaningWhere possible he explains the pic-tographic meaning of the characters.For instance one character signifiesa woman w'ith her hair standing onend, being threatened by a hand witha stick; the character means active,prompt, ingenious, skilled, diligent,etc. and shows something of the na¬ture of the ancient Chinese concep¬tion of education. The English mean¬ings of the characters, which onlyapproximate the Chinese conceptions,will be dispensed with as soon aspossible in the class.Creel hopes to have a text bookwritten by the next time he teachesa beginning class. The classwork nowconsists mostly of copying characters,meanings and other details. Transla¬tion is still in the elementary stages.The class as it is being taught isof immediate value to philologists;Creel believes it to be very valuableto philosophers and psychologists be¬cause it gives them knowledge of thedifferent way the Chinese record andexpress their ideas. on campus were Ryerson, Foster,Kelly, Beecher, Walker, Cobb, Kentand Snell. The building was formallydedicated on July 2, 1896. PresidentHarper accepted the building sayingthat it would be sacredly set aside forthe purpose indicated.First Site of Oriental InstituteThe building originally housed theoffices of the department of OrientalLanguages and Literatures and theexhibits now displayed in JamesBreasted hall,—including antiquitiesof predynastic eras of Egypt; theantiquities of Babylonia, Assyria, andMesopotamia; the results of excava¬tions at Megiddo and Hittite AsiaMinor; religious literature fromSyria-Palestine in Samaritan, Syriac,and Hebrew; and Persian and Arabicmanuscripts. The official headquar¬ters of the president were in thebuilding during the last ten years ofPresident Harper’s term, and the en¬tire term of President Judson until1906. For many years it was also usedas the lecture hall of the Divinityschool.Became Business SchoolIn 1930, when the Oriental institutew’as erected, the department ofOriental Languages and Literatureswas moved to its new’ quarters w’hichit still occupies. The School of Busi¬ness was given $30,000 to make newpartitions as w’ell as install a newheating system before the schoolcould occupy the building. It wasnecessary to hold a meeting of theBoard of Trustees to decide whetherit would be legitimate to change theoriginal purpose of the HaskellOriental institute to just Haskell hall,for the School of Business. It wasdecided in favor of the change; thereis now a tablet erected in the Orien¬tal Institute reciting the relation ofthe Haskell gift to the presentOriental exhibits.Has Statistical LaboratoryThere is a statistical laboratoryfor all classes in statistics in the hall.Here also is the commons lounge;there are also kitchen facilities,w’here, upon certain occasions mealsare prepared. Among the machinesused by the students in the Schoolare the comptometers, stenotypes, andadding machines.W. H. Spencer is the dean of theSchool of Business. Former membersof the faculty which are now nation¬ally prominent are—Leon CarrollMarshall, head of a division of theNRA; Leverett Lyon, executive sec¬retary of the Brookings Institute inWashington; and James 0. McKinsie,chairman of the board of MarshallFields.Publish Summer TimeSchedules in 2 WeeksThe summer time schedules, listingthe time and place of classes for thesummer quarter are at present on thepress, Valerie W’ickhem, editor ofofficial documents announced, yester¬day. They w’ill be available at theInformation Desk within two weeksfor those who wish to take coursesduring the summer.PICCADILLY ™51st and BlackstoneTHURS. & FRI.“IT HAD TO HAPPEN”GEORGE RAFT LEO CARILLOROSALIND RUSSELLStarting Saturday“Trail of the Lonesome Pine”Also THE MARCH OF TIMEHYDE PARKTHURSDAY“KING OF BURLESQUE”Warner Baxter Alice FayeTENNIS RACKETSLarxMt, Moat Comploto Stock$1.50 to $15.00Restrinrinc I1.7S to M.50 (12 (radea)Balia • preaaca • corera • viaoraCOMPLETE TENNIS CLOTHINGWOODWORTH’S Book StoreMil E. S7th St. OPEN EVENINGSNaar Kiaabark Art. Ph. Dorckcatcr 4809 HARPER 53rd and HarperMatinee DailyTHURSDAY^First a GirVJESSIE MATTHEWSIRENE’S BEAUTY SHOP1507 East 53rd StreetSECOND FLOOR—MID. 2517OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.SHAMPOO 25c—WAVE 25cMANICURE 35c GulliverCommends Peace Committee onNew Song HitBy JOHN MORRISIt struck us that the strike struckmost effectively at the cameramen,who were completely buffaloed intheir efforts to get some real riotshots. Even a football rally in theworst Stagg years was more exciting.Credit the Strike committee with asure song hit, however—“Peace, Be¬lieve Me;”Don’t believe what you read on thefront page or in the downtown press.There were only 560 people who pa¬raded around the circle by actualcount.A member of the ASU asked uslast night in all sincerity where thefieldhouse was.Professor Niel Beardsley had toforcibly expel an agitator who forgother manners in his morning physicsclass.And one banner waving club girlfelt so sensitive about the Universi¬ty’s reputation that she carefullypulled her coat collar over her brightred scaf.♦ * ♦OUT FOR GOODImagine the astonishment of theportress in the girls’ dorms on be¬holding this sign-out slip last night:Name: Betty EllisHall: Foster Destination with address: AtHome AbroadBon voyage!* * *OBJECT LESSONOne might almost think that Gra¬ham Fairbank was an important per¬sonage the way his private life wasspread over the front page of theDaily News last night. (TWO U. OFC. STUDENTS TO VISIT MORGUE.)The other was James Loeb, but hewas more clever in his alibi andescaped the relentless questioningthat was aimed at Graham and Mrs.Fairbank as to just why an irresponsi¬ble youth should be allowed to speeddown the outer drive at the amazingrate of 54 miles per hour at 3:30 a.m.We only hope that the sight of theFairbank face does not make thecprpses roll over.t * *PINS AGAINLittle Ruth Raney is now strug¬gling under the weight of Joe Steph¬enson’s Chi Psi badge. She certainlykept him guessing long enough.It is rumored that James WillardMelville would like to get a load offhis vest.* + *MADHOUSEWe are firmly convinced that thecampus is going nuts. The comer of58th and University fairly bristledwith silent sentries at 11 last night.As we passed the Phi Psi house weheard a sharp crack, followed by a loud yell and a sharp command; fur¬thermore we understand their base¬ment has been turned into a veritablemenagerie, what with chickens, gold¬fish, turtles, frogs, cats and dogs,and a cow on deck.r * tPLAYING SANTA AGAINThe following people will receivetwo free ducats each at the Black-stone. Note the “random selection”—straight from the masthead.Walter Rathke, Ruth Schoenemann,Margaret Sihler, Sigmund Danziger,Howard Rich, Irvin Rich, JamesSnyder, and Wells Burnette.Bribes accepted. Apply after mid¬night at rear door, Lexington hall.NOTHING ELSE HAS ITS FLAVORA/so Imperial Yello Boh $1.50University Music Society PresentsSHVANDAWeinberger’s Czechoslovakian Folk OperaDIRECTED BY CARL BRICKENand theUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOSYMPHONY ORCHESTRAwith theCHICAGO SYMPHONIC CHOIRandPaul Pence, Agatha Lewis, Eugene DressierWinifred Stracke, Bessie BrownMANDEL HALLThursday, April 23,1936AT 8:30 P.M.SEATS $1.00--$2.50 at MANDEL BOX OFFICEDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THURSDAY, APRIL 23, 1936At BatwithEd VincekAll is not lost. There are sevenmore conference games to follow andanything can happen to push the Ma¬roons into the thick of the champion¬ship fight. To date the Maroons havelost one and won one ball game and(if we may be permitted to cite theideal situation) a clean sweep of theremaining contests would give theman average of 8 wins and 1 loss. Ina short season such as the Big Tenhas it may be good enough to win.* * *VVe were very happy indeed to findout that our voice was not merely alone cry in the wilderness. Our rivalcolumnist Jerry Brondfield, sportseditor of the Ohio Lantern, in bemoan¬ing the sorry plight of Big Ten base¬ball sized up the situation pretty wellwhen he stated, “Big Ten baseballstarted out rather haphazardly anduntil something is done about it, itwill continue in much the same man-It may also be added that the sameslipshod treatment of baseball withinmost Big Ten schools account for itsinability to stay on par with con¬ference football.We wish Chicago could supporttheir teams as well as Notre Damedoes. Interest runs so high therethat the ball games are broadcasteddirectly from the ball diamond.* * *Hale Swanson of Illinois is a re¬markable strike out artist. However,it is doubtful whether he coufd matchthe excellent performance of histeammate Howie Berg.♦ ♦ ♦Paul Amundsen is about the mostnon-talkative member of the Maroonson the ball field. While he knows andloves to play ball, he remains very re¬served as witnessed during the con¬test with mini. He broke his tra¬ditional silence with a “Come onHank” in shouting encouragement toHank Trojka in the sixth inning.♦ * ♦Frenchy W'hite made the best field¬ing gem we’ve seen this year in therecent game with the downstate out¬fit. Weber blasted a sharp groundball to dead center field. Frenchydashed over and stabbed the ball ona short hop, rolled over a few timesand forced a runner coming into sec¬ond on a peg to Hank Trojka.What is more remarkable is thatWhite was in a very low condition inthe morning as he was suffering froma bad cold. At one time he was ac¬tually heading for Billings hospital.^ * HfIt appears that there were othermotives behind Joe Kacena’s fine hit¬ting against Notre Dame. By hitting.600 in the contest he was able to col¬lect a whole pint of ice cream at theexpense of one of his fraternitybrothers.» * ♦The cold weather for the Illinoisgame was of no help to the players,especially the pitchers whose muscletone, as Dr. Carlson of the Biologicalsurvey would put it, interferes withthe necesary limberness. Net Team MakesClean Sweep ofElmhurst MatchSweeping their matches, the Ma¬roon tennis team whipped Elmhurst,6 to 0, on the varsity courts yesterdayafternoon.The Elmhurst squad, runners-upin the Little Nineteen conference lastyear and composed of four seniors,found the University boys too muchfor them.Captain Emil Amsen of Elmhurstsquared off in the first positionmatches with Captain Bickel of Chi¬cago and the Maroon leader playedsome of his best tennis this year towin, 6-2. 6-1.At second position Herb Mertzfaced Hoecker of Elmhurst. Mertzwas in poor form and played errati¬cally but squeezed out a victory, 6-4,8-6.Burgess was number three man forthe Maroons and his opponent Eisenrepresented Elmhurst. Burgess wasin fine form and crushed Eisen, 6-0,6-0.Fourth man for the home squad wasShostrum matched against Nienstedof Elmhurst. Shostrum played aslow, cautious game but held the up¬per hand all the way to win, 6-3, 6-2.In the doubles matches Burgessand Bickel met Hamsen and Hoeckerand came out on top, 6-3, 6-1.The second encounter brought Mertzand Shostrum into play with Eisenand Niensted. Mertz showed im¬provement over his singles game andthe University swept the final match,6-0, 6-1. Plan Tennis Matches, WaterCarnival for Scholarship DayHOTELMayfair^ room(itUNIVERSITY NIGHTNEXT FRIDAYMINIMUM CHARUE. $1.09AL KAVELINuml hin tnuHicWITHEthel DixonRobert PaodockVirginia Gilcre.stANDCar.men at the Piano Golfers Meet N. D.in Opening MatchEd Boehm, last year’s captain, willlead the Maroon golf team againstNotre Dame’s fighting Irish, whowere undefeated last year, to openChicago’s golf season tomorrow atSouth Bend.Coach Ed Mauerman, who captain¬ed the Maroon team two years agoand was the fifth ranking player in *the conference, says that the teamlooks much better this year. Hefigures Boehm, Hi Lewis, FrankCarey, and Jack Gilbert, his regulars,stand a fair chance of beating theIrish, even though Notre Dame didgive the Maroons a 16^-1trimminglast year. If something happens toone of the regulars, either Ben Stev¬enson, or Johnnie Dudgeon, alternates. As a part of a full afternoon’s pro¬gram of entertainment for 750 highschool seniors who will spend theday on campus for their scholarshipexaminations, the Student Social com¬mittee has scheduled exhibition ten¬nis matches and a water carnivalfor tomorrow afternoon.Captain Norman Bickel will leadthe Maroon tennis team. Big Tenchampions for the past two years,into action as the athletic exhibitiongets under way on the varsity courtsat 3:30.Doubles MatchChet and Bill Murphy, one of themost prominent high school doublesteams in the state last year, will startthe show playing against Bickel andBurgess, who topped the Big TenNo. 2 doubles bracket in ’35. Sincethe Murphy brothers gave Bickel andBurgess a beating in the field houselast February, the varsity boys areout to get revenge.John McDiarmid and Bickel willfollow up the doubles match with asingles game. McDiarmid, who hascompeted in prominent winter tourna¬ments, was the 16th national rankingplayer three years ago. AlthoughBickel underwent an appendicitisoperation shortly before the seasonstarted, he fought his way to the topof the No. 2 singles bracket in lastyear’s Big Ten championship meet.Carnival at 4:30Johnnie Shostrom, one of the coun¬try’s outstanding junior net stars, willMarksmen Preparefor Armour MatchIn the spring, a sports lover’sfancy lightly turns to thoughts ofout-of-doors. This is as true of theUniversity rifle club as it is of theother Maroon teams. According toan announcement by Carl Henrikson,assistant dean of the school of Busi¬ness and faculty sponsor of the group,the team will soon start outdoor prac¬tice at Fort Sheridan. In shootingoutside, a .30-06 calibre gun is used—a heavier bore than the guns usedin indoor meets.Henrickson commented that an in¬creasing interest is being shown bythe women in the rifle club. He alsocalled attention to the fact that thefeminine aspirants for the club areas good shots for beginners as the match strokes with Burgess, Chica¬go’s No. 3 man, winding up the ten¬nis exhibition. In the event of rainthe matches will be held in the fieldhouse.The tennis tourney will be followedby an exhibition water carnival at4:30 in Bartlett pool, where the futuremembers of the class of ’40 will seesuch Maroon swim stars as ChuckWilson, Margie Smith, and JayBrown in action.Margie Smith to SwimMargie Smith, who has twicechased Eleanor Holms Jarrett to newworld records, will give an exhibitionof her famous back stroke. This willbe followed by a 100-yard breaststroke race, in which the butter fly,the illegal, and the conventionaltypes of strokes will be demonstratedJay Brown, who won third place inthe 60-yard sprint at the NationalIntercollegiate meet several weeksago at Yale, and Captain Wilson,who captured fourth place in the 300-yard medley race at the recent A.A.U.Olympic tryouts, will stage a 100-yard free style race.The next event on the program willfeature a couple of humorous pajamaand rope relays, which Floyd Stauferwill follow with a low board diving ex¬hibition.Before the pool is turned over tothe male visitors for an open periodof swimming. Captain . Merritt“Moose” Bush will split the Maroonwater polo squad into two teams, andplay a game.After the afternoon of entertain¬ment the group of high school seniorswill reassemble in the Mandel hall inthe evening, and the results of theexaminations will be announced. Merriam NamesFour Entries inRelays at DrakeThe mile relay and an exhibition440-yard run are on the schedule ofevents which Coach Ned Merriam’sboys plan to enter at the Drake re¬lays, to be held at Drake university inDes Moines tomorrow and Saturday.As a result of tryouts held Tues¬day, Coach Merriam has selected Web-st'r, Wasem, Halcrow, and Ellin-wood as the Maroon entrants. In ad¬dition, Ellinwood received a specialinvitation some time ago to run inthe exhibition quarter mile.Since no advance Information hasbeen received from Drake concerningother entries, it is difficult to makeany prediction of Maroon chances. Inthe mile event. Northwestern, Indi¬ana, and Texas, assuming that theyare entered, will probably be strongcontenders.Among others who scheduled to runwith Ellinwood in the exhibition 440is Sunny Heg of Northwestern. Hegran the 440 in :47.6, faster than Ellin¬wood has ever made it, in the Kan¬sas relays. However, Merriam feelsconfident of Ellinwood’s ability tostay out in front. Magglers Lose OutCTS by Single Run;Phi Psi Wins, .3.3-4Among the I-M games played yes¬terday afternoon the hardest foughtand also the lowest scoring game ofthe season was the fray between theChicago Theological seminary and theMagglers, the latter winning b y aToday’s Schedule(59th and Cottage)3:15, Beta league:Psi Upsilon vs. Zeta Beta TauBeta 'Theta Pi vs. Phi Sig “H”Alpha league:Phi Delta Theta vs. Chi Psi4:15, Alpha league:Pi Lambda Phi vs. Phi KappaSigmaGamma league:Phi Beta Delta vs. Delta KajipaEpsilonSigma (Independent) league:Chemists vs. Snell hallscore of 1-0. The win can be at¬tributed to the fine pitching of Swan¬son, and also his homer, the only runof the game. Phi Kappa Psi left theAlpha Tau Omega nine far behind bya margin of 29 runs, the final scorebeing 33-4.International House PresentsInternational NightsA hrilliant revue of national danreneostumen and munic.Friday, April 24 and Saturday, April 25at 8:30 P.M.ALL SEATS RESERVED. 50c, 75c, $1.00will wield their clubs for Chicago. members of the stronger sex.If pre-season means anything, the The next match of the Rifle clubMaroons should certainly advance at will be tomorrow’, when they meetleast four notches up the ladder. That ! Armour Tech. The match, which willwill show plenty of improvement, j be shot under the West stands, willsince Chicago was almost in the ! be between 15 men teams, eight highcellar last year. 1 on each to count in the scoring. Beautiful LegsJUDGED BY ABeautiful GirlMake the Transatlantic crossings high spots of yoursummer European trip—sail STCA* with a congenialcollege crowd — to England, France or Holland.Statendam June 5 Statendam July IVeendam June 13 Veendam July 11Volendarn June 21 Statendam {via Boston) . . . July 21Tourist Class $0"| QOO and Third Class gl /j /C 50 andRound Trip ^LO up Round Trip L^O up*STC.A meant either Student Tourist Clast or Student Third Class Association.For full details seeSTCA departmentOrHOLLAND-AMERICA LINE40 North Dearborn Street, Chicago, Ill. No older than junior Esoterics,Mortar Boards, Chi Rhos, SigmasMISS MITZIMAYFAIR20 Year Old Dancing Starof“AT HOMEABROAD”will select the most shapely pair ofBlackfriar legs on campus■ Tomorrow Noon - - Hutchinson Court(THE LISSOM YOUNG STAGE STAR WILL TASTE THECOFFEE SHOP ATTRACTIONS AFTER THE CONTEST)