ol. 36. No. 101. Price 3 Cents. Member United PressUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1936"all of AddisAbaba Nears;Evacuate CityOnfusion Reigns in Capi¬tal as Italian Troops Ap¬proach.BULLETINMAKFUD, Ethiopia, Italian Fieldadquarters, April 30—(UP)—Thenjjuard of Italy’s troops are advanc-' 5>5 miles from Addis Ababa, Thevance from Dessye has been im-did during the last three days byd roads.(CopyrlKht, 19S6, By United Frees)ADDIS ABABA, April 30—If Ethiopian imperial governmentacuated Addis Ababa tonight wheniiting runners and refugee foreignd Cross workers arrived to reportdian camp fires twinkling behinds hills ringing the capital. Utmost[ifusion prevailed here.With invading black shirt troopsceping triumphantly across the richbra Birhan plain a trimotoredproni bombing plane machine gun-il the Addis Ababa airdrome at Aka-Anti-aircraft guns fired at theilian plane.All available men in Addis Ababare rushed into the mountains be-t en the capital and Debra Birhan int'paration for a last, desperate ef-t to stem the Italian advance. Buteir movements resulted in eveneater confusion.Orders RetreatFor Emperor Haile Selassie, main-ining his field headquarters inarby hills, ordered troops going for-ird to fall back. His majesty order-3,000 of his men back of Addis)aba not to fight for possession ofL* city. He hoped for a bloodlessI'upation. Resistance, he fearedght cost the lives of many non-com-itants and endanger foreigners.Kthiopian police commanders werelered to remain at their posts withfir men until the last possible mo-■nt in order to maintain publicier.Abandon Hope for CapitalHope that Ethiopia could hold Ad-s .4baba was abandoned when theitish Red Cross announced thatsre than 2,000 Italian infantrymen(Continued on page 2)hropean PartiesPrepare for MayDay Celebration(Copyright, ISSS* By United Frees)PARIS, April 30—Communists and)cialists, trades unionists, Nazis andiscists completed their plans todayr May day celebrations in Europe’spitals tomorrow.Parades, speeches, demonstrations,id in some cases the threat of at-mpted revolution marked the plans.In all those countries which stilljoy political freedom, the slogan ofe celebrants is “stop Fascism’’;lile in Germany and Austria, Nazisd Fascists, taking over the onene “Red” holiday, shouted fortalitarian support of leaders. Mayy is not celebrated in Italy underiscism; April 21, Rome’s birthday,the labor holiday.Spain presented the biggest possi-lity of serious trouble. Work of allnds will be suspended for the fullhours of May day in the firstass May day demonstration of so-alists. Communists, and Syndicat¬es since the establishment of theipublic in 1931.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)COURAGEit chance your eye offend you.Pluck it out, lad, and be sound:will hurt, but there are salves tofriend you.And many a balsam grows onground.id if your hand or foot offend you.Cut it off, lad, and be whole;it play the man, stand up anil endyou.When your sickness is your soul.A. £. Housman, A Shropshire Lad. Hull Urges LowTariff as AidingWar PreventionWASHINGTON, April 30—(UP)—Revival of world trade through ageneral scaling down of tariffs andelimination of trade barriers offersthe only hope of avoiding another dis¬astrous war. Secretary of State Cor¬dell Hull told the Chamber of Com¬merce of the United States today.Appearing as the principal speakerat today’s session of the 24th annualmeeting of the “Big Chamber,” Hullgave the nearly 2,000 delegates, manyof whom are foreig^n traders, a de¬tailed exposition of the various stepsinvolved in the negotiation of a re¬ciprocal trade agreement, and theprimary objectives of such an agree¬ment.The foreign trade program of thisgovernment is based fundamentallyupon what to us is an indisputableassumption—namely, that our domes¬tic recovery can be neither completenor durable unless our surplus-creat¬ing branches of production succeedin regaining at least a substantialportion of their lost foreign markets.Rap New Dealat ConventionU. S. Chamber of Com¬merce Asks Freedom forBusiness.WASHINGTON, April 30—(UP)—The U. S. Chamber of Commerce,with only one dissenting vote, adopt¬ed late today a set of resolutionscalling on the government to reduceexpenditures, stop trying to controlproduction, and let business workout its own social security program.The resolutions were the last busi¬ness of the anti-New Deal convention.After their adoption the chamber’sboard of directors re-elected HarperSibley president for another year.Just before the action of resolu¬tions the chamber heard an addressby Fitzgerald Hall, president of theNashville, Chattanooga and St. Louisrailway, condemning politicians as aclass, and a talk by Roger D. Lap-ham, president of the American-Ha-waiian Steamship Co., who chargedthat west coast seamen’s organiza¬tions are seeking to control trans¬portation labor in this country.Present Both SidesThe final day’s session saw crit¬icisms of New Deal policies by achamber spokesman and a defense byan Administration official.Fred W. Sargent, president of theChicago and Northw’estern Railroad,said the national policy of permit¬ting agricultural imports is holdingback recovery for the U. S. farmer.A few minutes later Secretary ofState Cordell Hull, sponsor of the re¬ciprocal trade program aimed at low¬ering world tariff restrictions, praisedit as the only alternative to war.This evening the chamber held itsannual dinner. President William I.Ransom of the American Bar asso¬ciation, urged that members of allpolitical faiths oppose all “extensionsand aggressions of arbitrary power”in the national government.The resolutions were in line withthe anti-administration sentiment evi¬dent since the definite break withPresident Roosevelt last year.He appealed for aid from the otherbusiness organizations and the gov¬ernment in a projected study of thepossibilties or reemployment byprivate enterprise.Iron Mask1936-1937Robert B. AndersonFrancis CallahanJohn EggemeyerRobert FitzgeraldDavid GordonGeorge HalcrowJames KahnweilerHarold LaBelleRalph LeachFred LehnhardtWilliam LewisKendall PetersenRalph SpringerRobert UptonRichard WasemFrench White Give Programof Events forLeaders’ DayEscort 519 High SchoolSeniors in Tour of Cam¬pus.Guides of Leaders for ’40 day willmeet this afternoon at four in Cobb107, instead of in the Reynolds clubas previously announced. All gufdesexchange tickets for the Blackfriarsperformance must be secured at thismeeting.Some 519 high school seniors from69 different high schools within a100 mile radius of Chicago will visitthe campus on Saturday, May 2, totour the University under the leader¬ship of special student guides selectedby the Leaders for ’40 day committee.A complete program of the day’sactivities follows:At 10, guides and guests will as¬semble at the University avenue en¬trance to Mandel hall where they willbe assigned to groups which willview the major points of interest onthe campus. Various traditions ofthe University will also be explainedto the prospective students such asthe customs connected with the Cbench botany pond, and the seal inMitchell Tower.On the completion of these tours,some of the guests will lunch atHutchinson commons where specialmenus will be provided, while smallergroups of men will lunch at fraternityhouses.From 1:00 to 2:30 there will be aBig Ten conference tennis match be¬tween the Chicago and Illinois varsityteams after which the visitors willview a matinee performance of “Fas¬cist and Furious”, latest Blackfriarsopus. Tickets for the show will bedistributed in Mandel cloisters beforeleaving on the morning tours.Additional University women se¬lected as guides by Doris Davenport,head of the women guides, are Harry-ette Nightingale, Betty Thomas, Mar¬garet Penny, Philomena Baker, Bon¬nie Bretemitz, Mary Jane Hector,Bonita Lillie, Mary Anna Patrick,Margaret Smith, Evelyn Smith, JeanMacDougal, Jean Gayton, LouiseHuffaker, Faraday Benedict, DonnaDonkle, Judith Palmer, Jane Masters,Betty Barden, Mary Johnstone, Theo¬dora Schmidt, Mary Adele Crosby,Nancy Jeffris, and Betty Quinn.Residence Halls’Smoker FeaturesVaried ProgramBoxing, wrestling, stunts, andmovies will be featured at the annualsmoker of the Men’s Residence hallson Wednesday, May 6, at 7:45. Theevent, sponsored jointly by a commit¬tee of eight students and a committeeof four faculty residents, will takeplace at Burton Court lounge.The student committee is composedof James Loeb, Victor Jones, H. Law-son, M. Princetl, Morton ,Goodstein,Richard Lounsbury, Martin Miller,and Alan Tully. On the faculty com¬mittee are Professors Osborne, chair¬man, Shaw, Pearson, and Shields.The opponents in boxing will beLawson and Blackman, Jeremy andTully, Nyquist and (ioodstein. Inwrestling Saulk and Libby, Fay andHauserman, Jones and Wheeler, andMiller and Loeb are scheduled. Inaddition, Rex Billings will do amagician act, Bernard Naumberg willstage a “March of Time” act, andRobert Warner will give an exhibitionof heat wave acrobatics. Movies ofthis year’s Maroon football team willalso be shown, Burnett Maschal willbe master of ceremonies.Gideonse Lectures on“The Political Outlook”Harry D. Gideonse, associate pro¬fessor of Economics, will give thethird of a series of lectures on “ThePolitical Outlook” at Fullerton hall inthe Art Institute tonight at 6:45.Gideonse's subject will be “The Eco¬nomic Picture”.According to Gideonse, his talk willinclude a descriptive survey of thebusiness cycle and a weighing of cur¬rent public policies.... ... Blackfriars Presents PremiereProduction of Annual ShowTonight at 8:30 in Mandel HallUniversity BandPresents MatineeConcert SundayUnder the direction of HaroldBachman the conce.t band of theUniversity will present an informalmatinee concert Sunday afternoon inthe north lounge of the Reynolds clubat 3.Included in the program is theWarmelin clarinet ensemble, pupilsof the prominent Chicago musician,and teacher of woodwind instruments.The quintet will play three numbers,two of which have been composed byDave Bennet, arranger for radio sta¬tion WGN; NBC and ABC, as wellas the Chicago theater. Another fea¬ture will be a trombone solo by JohnTienstra.The program will also include:Old Panama—march by Alford;Princess Jaune overture by Saint-Saens; Valse Bluette by Drigo;Bridal Song (from the Rural Wed¬ding Symphony) by Goldmark; andLondon Suite by Eric Coates. Otherselections will be the Grand^ March(from the Queen of Sheba) byGounod; Dance of the Buffoons(from the Snow Maiden) by Rimsky-Korsakov, and the Ballet Movement(from Herodiade) by Massenet.The concert will be open to thepublic without charge. Blackfriars’ AbbotGeorge Kendall Give Three Performancesof Hyman’s “Fascist andFurious” This Weekend.By CODY PFANSTIEHLMen indistinguishable from women;very brief skirts; very swishy skirts;gag lines and adlib lines; rippingapart the University, the D.A,, Build¬ings and Grounds. The Maroon.The Time: 8:30The Place: Mandel HallThe Event: The world premiere of“Fascist and Furious”.At 10 last night it w’as announcedthat because many did not claimtheir tickets held by reservation, ex¬cellent seats were thus made avail¬able for the opening night—tonight.These may be secured by the publicat the Box office in Mandel hall, openall day today. While customers maybuy seats at the door tonight it isadvisable to purchase tickets thismorning while the reserved supplyholds out.As a preliminary to the riot tonightin Mandel hall, the Blackfriars willsponsor the final judging of the sen¬ior moustache race this noon in thecircle.What’s HappeningAnnounce Schedule ofLaw School ExcursionsAnnouncement of Freshman tripsto the Cook county building on WestWashington street was made yester¬day by Howard Rich, publicity headfor the University Bar association.Excursions will be conducted today,Monday, and Tuesday in connectionwith Law 260, the course in commonlaw pleading, conducted by ProfessorWilliam L. Eagleton,Today’s tour will be conducted byEdwin M. Davis, and the group willassemble at the Law library desk at2:30. William M. Graham will con¬duct the Monday group which willleave the Law library at 1:30. Tues¬day’s group will also leave the Lawlibrary at 1:30 and will be conductedby Thomas M. Scully.Freshmen desiring to join any ofthese groups are asked to sign up atthe Law library desk.Peace Council ElectsPermament OfficersNathan Moscovitch was electedpermanent chairman of the PeaceCouncil at a meeting yesterday after¬noon. Other officers elected are: AnnGroot, secretary; Joy Schultz, treas¬urer; Leonard Engel, publicity direc¬tor; and John Simmons, program di¬rector. Their term ends with thestart of the autumn quarter.The council resolved to sponsor aforum on “Isolationism” to be heldabout May 15, the program probablyto consist of speeches by facultymembers. The showing of movies ofthe recent student strikes in the col¬leges of the country was also sug¬gested, but final arrangements wereleft in the hands of the program di¬rector.Delegates to the general committeefor the celebration of National YouthWeek were selected, and it was re¬solved to support the demonstration.Merrill Issues Call for1936 Rhodes ScholarsRobert V. Merrill, assistant profes¬sor of French, yesterday issued a newcall for candidates for Rhodes Schol¬arships in 1936. To date only one ortwo persons have made inquiry con¬cerning the annual award for oneyear’s study in Oxford university.Full details are available at Assistantprofessor Merrill’s office in Cobb 314.Dean Gilkey Speaks atChapel Services SundayIn his sermon at the Chapel serv¬ices on Sunday, Dr. Charles Gilkey,dean of the Chapel, will speak on “TheQuiet Mind”, "rhe talk will deal withcertain questions raised in Dr. HarryFosdick’s sermon two weeks ago, butwhich were not answered, concerningthe art of living in a confused timelike the present.Dean Gilkey will attempt to an¬swer such questions as, what theproper spirit toward religion shouldbe. Blackfriars’ AuthorSydney HymanFriars’ RehearsalRecalls Multitudeof Fond MemoriesBy C. SHARPLESS HICKMANBlackfriars held their last round¬up yesterday evening, and while itmay not have been Fascist, it certain¬ly was furious.Prompt, as usual, with their re¬hearsals, the first chorus trouped on¬to Mandel hall’s stage a mere twohours behind schedule. But the delaywas well worth the result, for amore buxom bevy of winsome wenchesnever saw a spotlight.I thought of “At Home Abroad”;I thought of “Jumbo”; I thought ofthe Ballet Russe—I even thought ofsouth State street—but all whirledinto insignificance before the volup¬tuous pulchritude of the precisionprancers director “Jed” Hanchett hasgathered for this year’s show.I thought of the passionate call toa class-conscious world voiced in thedramas of Clifford Odets; I thoughtof the appeal to strife in “Journey’sEnd”; I thought of the flaunting offascism in “Judgment Day” as Ithrilled at the fearless exposure bySydney Hyman of the diabolicalforces at work in seeking to under¬mine the academic freedom at thisUniversity.No man or woman who has beentaught to love his country, his col¬lege, his class, his co-ed will miss thisdrama which frankly shows howBuilding and Grounds is organizingits workers to overthrow the consti¬tuted authority of this land. No manor woman in whom the fire of ro¬mance burns bright will wish to missthe technique of lovemaking expound¬ed by these lovely creatures wholighten the dark drama of this diredisaster, or the lissome abandon withwhich they interpret the stunningscores written for the production. Vic Jones in LeadAs an autocratic. Fascist, cigarchewing superintendent of Buildingsand Grounds (and the real head ofB. and G., Mr. Lyman R. Flook, andMrs. Flook will be in the audience to¬night) Vic Jones, a Senior and mem¬ber of Delta Kappa Epsilon, willgrowl his way through the action asMcGlurk—by the climax of the .story.Major General McGlurk.McGlurk’s man behind the throneis “Henry Mason”, a smooth quickthinking, catch-phrase making U. ofC. student. Henry, on the side, is abit of a communist—an agitator. Inreal life Henry is Elliot Cohm, ajunior transfer from Notre Dame.Chiefly agitated by Henry is “Don¬na Taylor”—Gene Davis, junior. BetaTheta Pi. Dona and Henry—the“love” interest—find themselves un¬wittingly ruining the University—un¬til the “Stranger Incognito”, mali¬ciously played by freshman AlanBaruck, Phi Sigma Delta, clears upthe mess.Roundly panned is the DramaticAssociation in the “Mirror” dancenumber in which seven shaven fel¬lows show Mr. O’Hara what theythink of the campus girls.Those wishing to usher for Black¬friars are requested to report to theBlackfriars’ office in the Reynolds clubtoday.Feminine StarUpsets Traditionof Friars ShowsShe’s the only woman ever to act¬ually take part in a Blackfriars show.She’ll be a litle shy tonight—it’sthe First Night—so she won’t talkmuch. And anyw'ay, for two yearsshe’s been standing in Mrs. Hofert’sbasement.Before that, though, she was prettyused to people. You would be too,after standing for 40 years on thecorner of 69th and Wentworth. 40years, rain or shine. They put her inthe basement when she began to looka little threadbare and people beganto get a little too familiar with her.She admits, with a fixed smile, thatshe’s rather crumby now, but shethinks this part she has in the Black¬friars show is pretty much of anevent in her life. After all, not every¬body gets to stand in Maud PhelpsHutchins studio and look at pictures.Because she’s not quite as spry asshe used to be, the squaw will be onrollers tonight, and even though sheis a wooden indian borrowed for theshow, she’s mighty proud, in hersplintery heart, to be the first womanin Blackfriars.Professor Adler Speaksbefore Chapel CouncilThe Chapel council will meet withProfessor Mortimer J. Adler in theYWCA room of Ida Noyes Hall onSunday evening at 7:30. This meet¬ing will ’be for the purpose of dis¬cussing the relation of philosophy totheology. A discussion of the distinc¬tion between science and philosophywas held at the last meeting.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1936Page TwoEvacuate Addis Ababa as ItalianTroops Advance from Dessye(Continued from page 1)were advancing rapidly only 10 milesnorth of Debra Birhan, 60 miles fromAddis Ababa on the imperial highwayfrom Dessye.Debra Birhan is one of Ethiopia’slargest grain centers. It lies at thesouthern end of a rich plain separat¬ed from Addis Ababa by high moun¬tains representing the last chance fordefense.Red Cross reports as to the where¬abouts of the Italians caused thegovernment to decide to quit the capi¬tal immediately and leave the city inthe hands of the local administration.Government officials arranged to de¬part for an unknown destination.They expected the vanguard of theItalian army to reach Addis AbabaSunday or Monday. Exact where¬abouts of the Emperor were notknown but it was believed he was inthe hills behind the capital, keepingconstant contact with his representa¬tives here.The British Red Cross was basedon Debra Birhan. It retreated beforethe advancing Italians, abajndoningtrucks and considerable equipmentwhen exhausted runners brought newsthat a motorized column of Italiannationals had camped 10 miles fromthe city after taking the strategic jShula Meda pass without resistance, jThe Italians, runners said, are ad-1vancing over roads hastily repairedafter dynamite explosions set by theEthiopians last week in an attemptto hold oflf the invaders.The troops capturing Shula Medawere reported to have left theirtrucks at the foot of the pass, advan¬cing on foot through the deep moun¬tain defiles.Ethiopian couriers said two Ital¬ ian columns were camped on the De¬bra Birhan outskirts in the directionof Addis Ababa. Their camp firescould be seen from a distance of manymiles at night.Airplanes are reconnoitering theroads between Debra Birhan and Ad¬dis Ababa, ousting small bands ofarmed Ethiopians with bombs andmachine gun fire.GENEVA, April 30—(UP)—Dip¬lomatic advices from Rome, as yetnot confirmed in any other quarters,said today the Italian foreign officehas been informed that foreign dip¬lomats in Addis Ababa have beencaptured.They did not say whether the dip¬lomats reported captured had beentaken by Italians or Ethiopians. Un¬confirmed rumors said Ethiopianshad seized foreign diplomatic repre¬sentatives as hostages in hope ofstaving off Italian occupation of Em¬peror Haile Selassie’s capital. I I • IP J A Survey of YoungerLOOKIHQ HOrWQrCl • Members of the FacultyToday on theQuadranglesFOUNDED 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 arestudent opinions, and are not necessarilythe views of the University administra¬tion.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $2.75 a year ; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising 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.Elditorial associates: Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell, Julian Kiser, John Morris,James Snyder, Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: John G. Morris FRIDAYLecturePublic lecture (downtown): “ThePolitical Outlook: The EconomicPicture.’’ Associate Professor Gide-onse. Fullerton hall, the Art Insti¬tute at 6:45.MeetingsWAA. Y room of Ida Noyes at 3:30.German club. Library of Ida Noyesat 2:30.Graduate Political Science club.Sun parlor of Ida Noyes at 6.ASU. Dean Charles Gilkey, “Prob¬lems of Peace.’’ Harper Mil at 12:30.MiscellaneousSocial dancing. Theater of IdaNoyes hall at 2:30.Blackfriars. Mandel hall at 8:30.Also Saturday at 2:15 and 8:30.SUNDAYUniversity of Chicago ConcertBand. North lounge of Reynolds clubat 4.Chapel council. Y room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Delta Sigma Pi. 'Reynolds club,room A, at 1:30.Italian club. Classics 10 at 3:30.Professor Middeldorf will speak onFlorentine art.MONDAYDames Book Review club. Alumnaeroom of Ida Noyes at 2:45.Federation. Student lounge of IdaNoyes at 12:30.Renaissance club. Library of IdaNoyes at 8:30.Pi Delta Phi. YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 7:30.Winners of passes to the Blackstonetheater are: Robert A. Anderson,Marion Elisberg, Arthur Goes, Nor¬man Joffe, Audrey Neff, and JerryStern. By JULIAN{This is the third of a series ofarticles describing the work ofsome of the outstanding youngermembers of the faculty, and con¬cludes the survey of the Humani¬ties division. The next article, toappear next week, will be devotedto the Division of the PhysicalSciences.)Significant work in literature andlanguage is being carried on by Pro¬fessors Pierre Vigneron and HaywardKeniston of the Romance Languagedepartment in the Humanities divis¬ion. Vigneron is engaged in bio¬graphical work, bringing out newlights on the life and works of theFrench novelist Proust. He has al¬ready done similar work on Stendhal,19th century French novelist. Kenis¬ton is finishing a compilation of allsyntactical constructions in modernSpanish prose, under the sponsorshipof the Modern Language committeeof New York. He has completed simi¬lar studies of 16th century Spanishsyntactical usage and Spanish idioms.In addition to T. V. Smith, theUniversity’s well known political phil¬osopher, the department of Philosophyboasts Professor Charles Hartshorne,who has written “The Philosophy andPsychology of Sensation’’ and is nowengaged in writing “Beyond Human¬ism: Essays in the New Philosophyof Nature,’’ and Professor Charles W.Morris, author of several books on A. KISERthe nature of the mind and onpragmatism, who is now working ona general theory of symbolism.Work in ClassicsRichard P. McKeon, dean of theHumanities division and one of thebrilliant young scholars in the de¬partment of Greek Language andLiterature, is now writing a work tobe called “Philosophy in the MiddleAges,’’ and is editing “The PhysicalWorks of William of Ockham.’’ MissGertrude E. Smith of the departmentis co-author of a series of volumes onthe administration of justice in an¬cient Greece.In the New Testament department,Donald W. Riddle is studying thehistory of New Testament interpre¬tation and criticism, and is writing abook on “ReHgious Life in EarlyChristian Literature.’’ Ernest C. Col¬well is engaged in the preparation ofa book entitled “John Defends theFaith,’’ and is studying the text ofthe Greek New Testament lectionaries.A scientific study of miniatures foundin the McCormick manuscript of theApocalypse is being carried on byHarold R. Willoughby.German DepartmentHarold A. Basilius of the depart¬ment of Germanic Languages andLiterature is doing important re¬search work in compiling an indexwhich will serve as an historical guideto medieval German grammar and syntax. In the department of lin¬guistics, George V. Bobrinskoy, as¬sistant professor of Sanskrit, is en-I gaged in making a survey of pre-his-Itoric civilization in India in connec¬tion with recent archeological dis-I coveries in the Indus valley.Contributions in creative music andin research are being made by threemembers of the Music department:Howard Talley is engaged in re¬search on the presentation of materi¬als of musical composition, with emphasis on the music of Bach and thepre-Bach era; Herbert Schwartz iscarrying on research in musical criti¬cism and analysis; and Robert San¬ders, in addition to publishing severalof his own musical compositions, isdoing research in hymns.Finally, in the department of Art,Professor Ulrich A. Middeldorf is aspecialist in the field of Renaissancesculpture, architecture, and minorarts.Pete Zarante’sSteamship '’’’Zee”Dine and Dancewith Mort Lond and His LondonersIn an Atmosphere of the High Seas3 FLOOR SHOWS NIGHTLYWith an All Girl RevueNo Cover Charge—No Minimum50c Minimum on SaturdayDollar De Luxe Dinner1714 E. 71stFor Reservations Phone Midway 10404IRENE’S BEAUTY SHOP1507 East 53rd StreetSECOND FLOOR—MID. 2517OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.SHAMPOO 25c—WAVE 25cMANICURE 35cThe Renaissance Society andInternational Housewill presentMaria ChapdelaineLouis Hemon’s epic of the French-Canadian frontierSATURDAY, MAY 2alsoMARCH OF TIME• • •FRIDAY, MAY 1, AT 8 P.M.—35 CENTSSATURDAY, MAY 2, AT 4 P.M.—25 CENTSAND AT 8 P.M.—50 CENTS• • •NOTE: The Saturday jrrograms include MARCH OF TIME,ITALIAN CAPRICE, and a Disney Cartoon. There is also aspecial Children’s Program at 2 P.M., featuring Byrd’s“Little .America.”International House1414 EAST 50TH STREET Go to theOLYMPICGAMESwithNELSON H.NORGRENONE CLASSRUN OF THE SHIPJuly 11th—New York. Sail on SS WEST-ERNLANDJuly 20th—SouthamptonJuly 21st, 22n<l, 23rd—LondonJuly 24th—Motor Tour through HollandJuly 25th—By train from the Hagueto ParisJuly 26th, 27th, 28th—ParisJuly 29th—CoblenceJuly 30th—Rhine Trip—WiesbadenJuly 31st—BerlinAugust 1st to August 16th—>Olympic Games at BerlinAugust 17th, 18th—DresdenAugust 19th—CologneAugust 20th, 21st—BrusselsAugust 22nd—Antwerp, Sail on SS WEST-ERNLANDSeptember 1st—Due at New YorkTOURIST CLASS IS TOP53-day Tour—$515Lve. New York on SS Westernland July 11Arr. New York on SS Westernland Sept. 148-day Tour—$451Lve. New York on SS Westernland July 11Arr. New York on SS Konigstein Aug. 27For further information or reservations seeNELSON H. NORGRENBARTLETT GYMNASIUMJOHN STOCKS TRAVEL BUREAUPRESS BUILDINGCharles Kozminski. Gen’l West’n Pass. Agent, 307 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. III. The Men's StoreMonroe at WabashTo the Seniors:With all the fretting about the mous¬taches there still must be some semblanceof care in your appearance. When inter¬viewing prospective employers, as thenext few weeks will necessitate, you mustbe able to convince them that aside fromability some thought has been given to theimpression made. A neat, clean cut, busi¬ness-like man is what employers are look¬ing for. With this in mind, we seriouslyrecommend adding a Carolina Homespunsuit to your wardrobe. The most interest¬ed of employers, as some might be, willrealize that you watch your dress as wellas have good taste. It is surely true thatthese little things are many times the de¬ciding factors.The Homespun is of a rugged sturdyweave which can stand real hard use, yetwill hold its shape. It is just what youwould expect the most exclusive Londontailor to turn out. They come in many ofthe finer spring patterns and are priced at$34.50 with two pair of trousers.Carson Pirie Scott & CoOp enin3 Tonight ^^Fascist and Furious //THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1936 Page ThreeGulliverLocates the Spirit in Friars-in the ShowHy CODY PFANSTIEHLIX IS 11:00 IN the night here inMandcl hall. Past long rows of darkseats and up there on the stage some60 young men are going through mo¬tions, crooning melodies, that tomor¬row night will be the thirty-secondannual Blackfriars show. About 50more young men are in shirt sleeves,conferring in the darkened audience,or in the basement finishing scenery,or stitching costumes.When the writer was initiated intothe Order of the Blackfriars last yearhe listened to talk about the “Spiritof the Jolly Friars”. That was hooey.The friars, as individuals, have nospirit. The show has the spirit—andalong about this time, at night, tensebefore the first production, the Showreaches in and grips every Friar’sheart.—That’s the spirit they weretalking about.Perhaps we the writer are silly.Perhaps we imagine things thataren't. But there must be somethingto a Force that can make you stayup all night, as many of us in thistheater will, to paint scenery, writenewspaper releases, stitch costumes.There must be something to a Forcethat can hold you in a place whileyou know somebody else is making adate with your girl and taking heryou don’t know w’here. Darkness andnight always magnify feelings.FIVE NEWSREELS and six papershave been invited out for the end of themoustache race tomorrow (Today, toyou) noon in the circle. We expectonly five newspapers. The photogswill want Berwanger to win, but,while Jay ha.s a fair little duster, wesort of favor the broom on Phil.\brams..And immediately following the de¬cision, of course, will be the annualPond Party. Come one, come all—theslime is gawdawful gooey.* * •TONIGHT (last night to you)Brad and his Reynolds club barbercrew exfoliated (Howard Mort’sword) .30 Blackfriar pairs of legs. Braddidn’t shave with lather—he just clip-cd ’em short with clippers. At onehalf inch per stalk (which Brad saysis a minimum) the fellows lost about420 feet of hair. Which will makethem considerably cooler.* • *MARY ANNA PATRICK told usyesterday she saw a fellow standing ona corner shouting “I am a bad boy,I am a bad boy.” And across thestreet was another, shouting equallyas loud, “Oh no you’re not. Oh noyou’re not”. Hell weak?Never have we regretted any state¬ment so much as the one which ap¬peared in Tuesday’s Gulliver concern¬ing the death of John Schiffer. Weconfess to a most serious error injudgment. —John MorrisFifteen Register forYWCA Conferenceat Geneva, WisconsinFifteen University students will at¬tend the 1936 YWCA student confer¬ence at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin inJune, according to an announcementyesterday by the campus organiza¬tion.Forums, panels and discussionsconducted by internationally knownChristian leaders, including Dr. To-kohito Kagawa, Japanese religiousleader, are scheduled for the conven¬tion which lasts from June 19 to 27.The conference which is concernedwith the development of the individ¬ual and the groups of which she is apart, is not restricted to YWCA mem¬bers, it w'as announced by DorotheaKrueger, chairman of arrangementscommittee. Effective methods forbuilding YWCA programs on a Uni¬versity campus, will be the chief dis¬cussion theme of 300 Geneva confer¬ence college w’omen who are assem¬bling for the ten-day session.Classified AdsFOR RENT. Unfurnished apartments.4 room apartment, 1 bath. Also 6room apartment, 2 baths. Modernbuilding. Sunny, airy, overlookingJackson Park and lake. Elevatorservice. Near I. C. Station. Referencesrequired. Midway 6273.FOR RENT. Furnished apartment.Exceptional home for 1 or 2 refinedbusiness women or teachers. Sharebeautifully furnished apartment withkitchen privileges. References re¬quired. Midway 6273. Strength of “Maria Chapdelaine”Lies in Simplicity of ExpositionBy C. SHARPLESS HICKMANThe strength of “Maria Chapde¬laine”, the French film showing atInternational House tonight and to¬morrow, lies in its simple expositionof the struggling existence out by theFrench Canadians in the timber coun¬try north of Montreal. As a book,years ago, Louis Hemon’s story wasone of the greatest of French novels;as a picture, “Maria Chapdelaine”marks a forward step in the natural¬ism and vital sincerity of the Gallicfilm.Not since Jacques Feyder’s sternsaga of the fishermen of Brittany,“Finis Terrae”, has any French filmso well delineated the drama of man’sstruggle against nature. Jules Du-vivier’s film, however, is not merelya photographic panorama of naturein the raw, as have been many ofRobert J. Flaherty’s nature epics(“Nanook of the North”, “Man ofAran”, etc.), but is a successful in¬jection of the human element into atale of struggle against nature. Toooften such films, by their breadth ofscope, make man, collectively ratherthan individually, the protagonist—achieving this position by a not-too-stressed representation of the strug¬gle of an individual man. But Du-vivier has so arranged his film thatthe personalities of the film, ratherthan the grand but tragic beauties ofnature, become the point of focus.In this he has been aided by a trulyremarkable cast, including MadeleineRenaud, Alexander Rignault, AndreBacque, Suzanne Depres, Jean Ga-bin and Jean Pierre Aumont. It isin the hauntingly sorrowful deathscene where Maria’s mother dies thatthe film reaches its climax, and re¬ veals its greatest acting in the per¬sons of the mother and father asportrayed by Andre Bacque and Suz-ane Despres.The contrast between the simplepleasures and tasks of the people ofthis land, and the fierce beauty oftheir surroundings has been as wellbrought out by the lens of Kruger’scamera as by Duvivier’s inspired di¬rection. Without extraneous material,or any relapse into sentimentality asdistinguished from sadness, the filmis an experience few lovers of thecinema will wish to miss. Languageis no drawback to this film, for notonly will the French version be pre¬sented, but an English-titled editionwill be shown also.Students’ Ability toReadlmproves afterQuarter of TestsLetters tothe EditorPRAISES KENNANEditor, Daily Maroon,Dear Mr. Nicholson;Never in my dealings with Mr.Kennan has that gentleman indicatedthat he is in any way anti-Semitic.I have never made any bones aboutthe fact that I am of Jewish descent,but Mr. Kennan has afforded me op¬portunities to interview every com¬pany representative who has offeredpositions in my field. None of mygentile friends, to my knowledge, hasseen more company representativesinquiring for accountants than have I.I protest against these senselessrumors and I despise these rumormongers; not only can they accomplishno good— they are distinctly in theworst possible taste. Your corre¬spondent in today’s issue of the Ma¬roon must be slightly “meshuga.”Myron W. Curzon.Dimock Speaks beforePolitical Science ClubMembers of the Graduate Politi¬cal Science club will meet tonight at6:30 in the Sun-parlor of Ida Noyeshall for a dinner at which they willhear Marshall E. Dimock, assistantprofessor of Public Administration,speak on “The Future of PoliticalScience.”According to John Vieg, presidentof the group, the gathering has beendesignated as a “hard times” party.Reservations for the dinner may bemade in Social Science 309 at acharge of 25 cents per person.SELWYN Seats—NowOpens Next Mon., May 4THE GROUP THEATER-IN-^^AWAKEANDSING!”by CLIFFORD ODETS“POWERFUL. EXCELLENTENTERTAINMENT.”—WALTER WINCHELLORIGINAL CAST INTACT184 PerformancM at Belasco in N. Y.FIRST VISIT of the GROUP to CHICAGOMATS. WED.-SAT.. 83c to $2.20EVENINGS, 83c to $2.75Sixth Play American Theatre Societyand Theatre Gniid Significant improvement in therate of reading has been gained bysix students who took special train¬ing as part of an experimental studyduring the winter quarter, accordingto a report recently completed byFrances Triggs, graduate student inEducation, who directed that part ofthe experiment. Also included wereexperiments involving training incomprehension and training in studyhabits.All three were conducted by mem¬bers of a class in Education, andsupervised by a committee composedof Dr. William S. Gray, professor ofEducation, Aaron J. Brumbaugh, as¬sistant professor of Education anddean of Students in the College, andArthur E. Traxler, psychologist, theUniversity High school.The six students who took the ratetraining under Miss Triggs practicedan hour a day for six weeks. Theyread books w’hich interested themduring half the period, and engagedin controlled practice through the useof a metronoscope the rest of thetime. The purpose of the metrono¬scope as a remedial device is to pre¬sent important material at varyingrates of speed.Before the training experiment be¬gan Miss Triggs explained to the ex¬perimental group that the eye doesnot move continuously across thepage, but stops at intervals, knownas fixations, and that the number offixations per line varies according tohow much the individual can graspat one fixation. One cannot see whenthe eye is moving.She emphasized the importance ofcertain rules of reading hygiene:avoiding glare and strong light, hav¬ing the light come over the left shoul¬der, and relaxing the muscles of theeye by looking away every few min¬utes.Little is known about the relationof rate of reading to retention, butin general, other things being equal,it may be said that the faster readerretains the material read better thanthe slower reader. Miss Triggs urgedthe students to form good habits ofconcentration by avoiding as far aspossible such distractions as radioor worry while studying.XAVIERCU&AT“Rumba and Tango King”with hii Latin - Americon OrchestraCARMEN CASTILLO — GOFF & KERRC^ftti^rLorLta^STEVENS HOTEL.MIN. CHAKOI I.SO, SATURDAY 2.00“Sunday Tea Dancing” from 4 to 6 Art of MoppingFloors Told byStudent JanitorFloor-mopping, when done artistic¬ally, is not a drudgery but a formof art, say twenty University stu¬dents who are helping to pay theireducational way by working as jan¬itors.In an essay on the fine points ofswinging a mop, which will be pub¬lished in the University of Chicagomagazine, one of the student janitors,Martin F. Young, undergraduate, de¬scribes the intricacies of the tech¬nique and the aesthetic satisfactionsderived from a perfectly-swabbedfloor. Gets Satisfaction“The mere thought of turning outa slick tile floor with a virgin sheenlike Queen Elizabeth’s gown wouldlead us through inferno,” writes theliterate Mr. Young. No soap, no hotwater should be used on such a floor,he writes, just a ‘lukewarm bath anda brisk mopping up.’ But—“When it comes to a floor of smoothbut porous stone, the treatment andthe ideal are different. On this kindof floor we can vent freely all oursuppressed Puritanism with the hot¬test of hot water and soapiest ofsuds. The ideal job on this type offloor, if different from that on theslick tile or cement, is no less tempt¬ing. It is less showy, but to the tasteof many a connoisseur of mopping,a more subtle, a more refined ideal.It is to turn out a floor as smoothand suave and unspotted as the tightDouglas to DiscussImminence of WarBefore Peace Group“The Imminence of War in Europe”will be discussed before the Emer¬gency Peace Council of Madison, Wis¬consin, tomorrow night by Professorof Economics Paul H. Douglas.According to Douglas the most im¬portant factor undermining worldpeace is the restlessness of the threefascist states, Germany, Italy, andJapan. Developing this thesis, Doug¬las will stress the danger of an at¬tack on the Soviet Union.“We may expect Japan and Germany to attack the Union almostsimultaneously within the next twoor three years”, Douglas claims. Theproblems resulting from the challengethrown to the capitalistic nations inthe League to defend a communisticcountry will be interesting to watch.Undoubtedly another major Euro¬pean conflict will mean the termina¬tion of the present League of Na¬tions.” white breeches of an 18th centurydandy.”Two-Man TeamsMopping is done by two-man teams.Young reports; his partner Bill “putson” while Young “takes up.” Themop-handle is a virile instrument.“One of our mop handles bears some¬what the same relation to a broomhandle that a salt sailing captainbears to a delivery boy, or an oak toa lily,” says Young. On the art of“putting on,” Young says:“Bill, grasping the handle like acasting rod, ducks his mop in hispail of suds, schlunches up and downa couple of times and holds thestreaming spaghetti-like mass abovethe pail for a moment to drain outthe superfluous water. At the momentthe suds no longer cascade out of themop, but before the mop has becomea senile drool. Bill gives it an un¬dulating flick to interrupt the streamand makes the first grand bubblingswish across the open floor.”“Monotony?” says Mr. Young. “Noton your life. The chief value of mop¬ping is the spiritual value the mop-pers themselves get out of it. Thefloors are only mopped to get dirtyagain, so that the artist may havemore practice, for, as Candida sagelyremarked, everything is for the bestin this best of possible worlds.” PICCADILLY51st and BlackstoneTODAY ONLY“The Milky Way”HAROLD LLOYDStarting Saturday“MODERN TIMES”CHARLIE CHAPLINHARPER 53rd and HarperMatinee DailyFriday and Saturday“DON’T GET PERSONAL”James Dunn Sally EilersHYDE PARKFriday and Saturday“HER MOTHER’S VOICE”Edward Everett HortonKitty Davis Needs CollegeStudents for Summer Jobs]WANTED:A bouncer who croonsA doorman who dancesA stenographer who singsA bookkeeper who plays the pianoA busboy for master of ceremoniesAnd coeds for cashiersI owe much of my success to college students and in appre¬ciation want to help them during their summer vacation.Prices reduced in our “Collegiate” Lounge for students.Seventy degrees cool at all times in the lounge. Come iniif only to look around. No cover or minimum charge at any |time.KITTY DAVISUniversity Rendezvous andCollegiate Lounge245 S. WABASH AVENUETwo Convenient Entrances—Jackson Blvd. and Wabash Ave.liuseSUITSCorrect and exclusive adaptations of theEnglish drape to embrace the exact touch likedby well dressed young men of today. Superblyexecuted in colorful Quadley woolens.Single and double breasted and sport models.FOR SPORTS, CAMPUS AND BUSINESS USAGEAlso Quadley House TopcoatsIncomparable valuesAll one priceJfmctlep19 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago564 Fifth Avenue, New Yorkr ^ ■ T ■ 1 i //r -4 1 r . 1o pening 1 onight rascist :and rurious jDAILY MAROON SPORTS, FRIDAY, MAY 1> 1936Page FourBoehm ImprovesSlowly FollowingAuto AccidentEd Boehm, Maroon golf captain,who received a broken collar bonewhen he was thrown out of CoachEdward H. Mauermann’s sedan in anaccident which occurred last Wednes¬day evening on the corner of 183rdstreet and Western avenue, regainedconsciousness at about 4:30 yesterdaymorning and fell back into an uncom¬fortable sleep.At one this morning his conditionwas improved slightly, and hospitalauthorities declared him out of dan¬ger. He sustained no brain injuries.Mauermann was driving north onWestern avenue about 8 when DavidCassin, who lives at 5700 West 111thstreet, having failed to stop for the“through street” sign on 183rd street,crashed into Mauermann’s rightfront fender, ripping off the rightdoor. The impact threw Mauermann’scar over the curb on the west sideof the street, and through a fenceinto a field. Boehm, who was sittingin the front seat received the bruntof the crash. He tumbled through thevacant door after the car had rolledabout twenty feet.Three UninjuredJohn Dudgeon sitting in the backseat on the right side of the auto¬mobile, received a fractured bone,while Mauermann, Hi Lewis, andJack Gilbert escaped injury.Although Cassin was uninjured, hiswife, who suffered a broken hip, diedearly this morning at the IngallsMemorial hospital in Harvey. Author¬ities said that Mrs. Cassin’s weakheart was the probable cause of herdeath.T. M. Metcalf, director of athletics,announced that arrangements havebeen made with Purdue officials tohave the next Monday’s Maroon-Boilermaker match indefinitely post¬poned. Mauermann expects to be ableto get the team ready for the sched¬uled meet with Northwestern atOlympia Fields on May 11. BenStevenson, at present one of the al¬ternates, will probably play. Wildcats Hope to Change Luck atExpense of Maroon Team TomorrowMaroon SwordsmenCompete in FencingMeet at BartlettMaroon varsity and freshmanswordsmen will conclude the year’scompetition tomorrow and next weekin the Illinois Fencers’ league meetsat Bartlett gymnasium, according toHenry Lemon and Jim Walters, cap-tains-elect.The senior IFL foil, epee, and saberevents will be held tomorrow after¬noon and evening in that order. Thefoil will begin at 2. Captain CampbellWilson will probably enter the foiland epee competition, after returningfrom participation in the NationalAmateur Fencers’ league semifinals inNew York. Walters and Strauss, afreshman, will probably enter the foiland epee, also.Lemon plans to compete in epee, andFritz and Richardson, along withseveral freshmen, will wield the saber.Next Friday, several Maroons planto enter the junior IFL foil event,which was postponed from last week.A Maroon three-weapon, three-manteam will be selected to compete forthe Eddy cup, annual IFL senioraward. Coach R. V. Merrill said yes¬terday. The Eddy cup meet will takeplace next week. Northwestern university’s hopes ofbeing a title winner are pretty wellshattered, but they can always becounted on to give the Maroons ahard tussle. The Wildcats will get achance to show their stuff here to¬morrow afternoon while Kyle Ander¬son’s boys hope to make fur fly.The only hold-over regulars fromlast year’s crop on the Wildcat squadare Captain Stewart Merrill, a shortstop, and Ralph Mack, a catcher.Thus, the team had to be padded withsophomores: Enio Hayskar, a half¬back on the football team, who hasPhi Sigs, Phi PsisShutout Opponentsin Intramural GamesPhi Sigma Delta whitewashed ATO,16-0, and Phi Kappa Psi shut outDelta Upsilon, 8-0, in the Delta leagueintramural games played yesterday.In the Sigma league Snell hall ledthe Rinkydinks all the way to comeout on the long end of a 6-2 score andthe Barristers downed the Chemists,5-4. The Kappa league saw the Mag-glers overwhelming Bush house, 11-2,and Burton-Judson downing CTS, 8-4.Today’s Schedule(59th and Cottage)3:15, Gamma league:Phi Beta Delta vs. Psi U. “B”Sigma Chi vs. Delta Kappa Ep¬silonBeta league:Psi Upsilon vs. Phi Sig “B”4:15:Phi Gamma Delta vs. Zeta BetaTauAlpha league:Phi Delta Theta vs. Phi KappaSigmaAlpha Delta Phi vs. Chi PsiDuvalUwas outstanding for the PhiPsi’s, garnering three hits, one ahome run, out of four times at bat.The Barrister-Chemist clash provideda movie climax for the spectatorswhen the Barristers came to battrailing by 3 tallies in the last halfof the sevenfh and pounded out fourruns to take the game, 5-4. Burton-Judson pushed 6 runs across the platein the third to clinch the game withCTS, and were not in danger of losingat any time. been given first base; Bill Chown, whohas been placed at second; and CurtShanahan, who has been assignedthird sack. While these boys get to¬gether on the batting end of thegame, they have been fielding ratherspottily in the past contests.Kyle Anderson will probably starthis revamped lineup of Cochran, lead¬ing off, Bernard, Shipway, Haarlow,White, Trojka, Nieman, Gold, and JoeMastrofsky, who will probably starton the hill, since he has done the bestpitching to date.This batting order seemed to clickpretty well against Davenport, forthe hits came when they were needed.Track Team OpposesPurdue in Dual MeetWith Coach Orval Martin’s PurdueBoilermakers as their opponents, theMaroon trackmen are scheduled toparticipate in a dual meet tomorrowafternoon at Lafayette.Maroon hopes of victory sufferedsomething of a setback yesterday;when it became known that Halcrovrmay be unable to compete because ofillness. According to rumor, Purduefield men are considered strong, 'and-in the distances, Goory may be a dis¬tinct threat. Traditionally, the Ma¬roons are unable to overcome Purduein outdoor meets.Among Maroon entrants are Ber-wanger, Krause, and Archipley in thedashes; Ellinwood, Johnstone, andHalcrow in the quarter mile; Ellin¬wood, Wasem and Webster in the halfmile and mile; and Beal, Newman,Berwanger, Steele, Ballenger, Kobak,Gordon, La Belle, Wilson, Abel, andEly in the field events.THREE MONTHS' COURSEK>e coueoi stumnts and oiAouAmttartmt January 1, AprU 1, July 1, Oetoiar i.jatmuiting Bookkt mUfraa, witkemt akUtaiimforpkoma. Naaotidtortaatpleyad.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.O..PH.B.BagiiUtrComrus,opmtaHi^SdtoolGrm4‘imtm amly, may ba atartad any Monday. DayondBaaaint. EeamngCamnmoyantomam.tM S. Michigan Av«..Q)ioago,taMdolpJi 4347^ Tennis Team FacesIllinois in Big TenMatch TomorrowIllinois will furnish the Maroontennis squad its third conference testtomorrow at 1 on the Varsity courts.The mini netters have had an in¬consistent season so far. They whip¬ped supposedly strong opposition inOhio State and Notre Dame, but lostto Michigan.Captain Moll won the team’s only match when he beat Burgess lastyear. Lewers and Hicks, numbertwo and three men, respectively, werebeaten that day by Mertz and Patter¬son of the Maroons. Number fourposition is being contested between two new men, Wright and Rich, anup to the present time Wright hamade the better showing.The Conference tennis meet, whicwill decide the championships is to bplayed here on May 21, 22, and 2:;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 StreetClimax a Grand Evening of FunAT THEa CAMPUS CfIBfIRETTonight at the 99BLACKHAWKDance to the tempos of Chicago’s “Rajah of Rhythm,”Joe Sanders and his great band featuring BarbaraParks.• Thrill to the guest stars from your own campus.• “CAMPUS CABARET” EVERY FRIDAY NIGHTBLACKHAWKWABASH AT RANDOLPHIfm ®0 WnriBilftpThe First Unitarian ChurchWoodlawn Ave. and E. 57th StreetVon Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSunday, .May 3, 193611:00 A. M.—“Appraisal,” Dr.Vogt.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club. Teaand Discussion. “Youth’s Per¬plexities,” Dr. Vogt.Students cordially invited. University Church ofDisciples of Christ5655 University AvenueSunday, May 3, 193610:30 A. M.—Communion Service.11:00 A. M.—Sermon, Service:A Service of Music in Naturein three moods. Awe, Repose,and Exultation, with interpre¬tations by Dr. Ames.12:20 P. M.—Forum.12:20 P. M.—Wranglers’ Forum;“Religion and Social Action,’Leader, Mr. Irvin E. Lunger.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers’ Meeting.Tea and program. Hyde Park MethodistEpiscopal Church54th St. and Blackstone Ave.Garfield Da we. MinisterChurch School for all ages, Sun¬day morning, 9:45.Open Forum every Sunday eve¬ning at 8 o’clock. You will bewelcomed.MAY CHURCH SCHEDULEEleven O’Clock ServicesMay 3—Sermon: “An Ancient and Mod¬ern Speed-Maniac.”May 10—Sermon: “Mother’s Day—Senti¬ment or Sentimentality."May 17—Sermon: “'The Pathologry of aBroken Spirit.”May 24—Sermon: “Veterans of FutureWars.”May 31—Sermon: “Seeing the Far Hori¬zon.”The Wesley League, the University Group,meets every Sunday morning at 10 o’clockunder the leadership of alvanced studentsin the University. The same group alsomeets Sunday evening for social hour anddiscussion, at 5 :30. Spring Styles A La Field's iIn spring a young man’s fancy turns to what the girlshave been thinking about all winter—clothes!You will enjoy inspecting our complete showing ofjust what the well dressed University of Chicago man willwear. Every popular style and material can be found inany style you desire. From slacks to tails can be found inyour size and preferred material and cut.Drop in at your earliest convenience and allow ourcompetent salesmen to help you select your complete springwardrobe.THE STORE FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANYenins Tonisht—^Ta scist and Furious //NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS IN PICTURE AND PARAGRAPHDROVING THAT THE AMATEURS REALLY CAN TAKE IT, Nick^Deanovich, University of Wisconsin 175'pounder, despite injuries came back towhip Blair Smith in the dual meet with the University of Maryland leather pushers.CotkfciATi! I)icMT Photo hy Willum Wright' ACTl JS J ACK John Nance Gamer, last winner of the vice'presidential champion'‘ diip match, leads a tough left to the chin of Carl Vinciguerra, Creighton Uni'sity's Iight'heavyweight dumpion now on tour in the east, when the btter paid: Texas heavyweight a visit in his capitol oftce.WAIT WCX5DS.^0.1 lie of the Uni'of CaliforniaLos Angeles’ Pacificwst intcrcolleguiteater polo champions,■aches for a high one1 an Olympic gamesractice session. D OPE CLIMBING cham'pionship of the worldwas won by TornGuck^ofPriixeton University whenhe set a new record at agymnnastics meet withTemple University inthe latter's gym' ■nasium. His tim^-was 3.9 seconds.'HE^ WANT THEIR TENSION NOW'"In keeping with the demands of the now nation'widi Veterans of Future Wars orranization. University of Iowa students have devised aouth Sxrial Adjustment Plan” which would revise the Townsend plan to give payments torsons between the ages of 10 and 40 “so it can be enjoyed by future veterans before gettingled ill a future war.”prOR THREE YEARS Ber* right has won first honoannual South Dakota Statebeauty competition.(Vnur.iATii IHortT PhotKhy M4Ri.-nt4 photo DOBERT FROST, newlyappointed Charles EliotNorton professor of poetry atHarvard University, leavesEmerson Hall after the openingof his series of not less thanSIX lectures. Y^ORLD'S LONGESTFrank K. Danzig, trumpeter with Dartmouth Col¬lege's Green Collegians, per¬forms a speciality number onthe longest trumj-iet in theworld. Write Before 45pLJLL ETHIOPIAN REGALIA was worn by Am- ^herst College students'representing the delegates 'of Haile Selassie at the 9th annual Model League of -Nations meeting held at Williams College. Williams jcontinued its ancient rivalry with Amherst by sending Iblackshirted fascist delegates to the convention. I 'P'HE Drs. joseph B. Heidler and Harvey C.* tif Ohio University (Athens. Ohio) haveattained the stature which would include thecxirrent Who's Who with their less activecitizens, but they have been bn.skly engaged 11that has not been without national recognitiWPA research men. they reported their finthe AnH’rican Association for the AdvaiKe^ ScieiKe some tinv^ Heidlerciate professor of\ ’■ at Ohm. while^ A 1 league. Dr. Lehmj prt^essor of psyTheir field, rougli^ the age of produc? life 1 bterary men. The^ more value toogy than literatu■ be briefly summafollows: the creatnwould do well, tll}r. HeiJUy tics say, to startwriting before he is 45 years of age. Thatbeen an average of sound proliftcness amoiBritish, American, French and German autlprofes.sors have found. The poets say thibefore the age of .xo; biographers are at theithe sixties; historians, critics and philosopher:fifties; scientific, |mlitical and educational wrisatirists, in their forties.The oldster turning outhis first novel at 60 is notnecessarily a senile prac¬titioner in literature, thereport says. Such a one,figures show, has com¬batted a fact of old age:change of interest and lossof motivation. GeorgeSantayana's The Last Purrtan, the professors willcheerfully admit, is an ex¬ception to their findings. , .But, humble scholars, they "readily grant the exceptiori and s|ieak largelyhistory and its facts have contributed to tlpilation. CIGHS OP warning,usual sky-and'Water phThenaas H. Miller of the Uiof Iowa, is the winner of thicontest. The Picture of tfcompetition is sponsored bLEGiATE'Digest to further inigood photography amongcamera enthusiasts in colle^versities. Five dolbrs is paidnet each week. Send your erEditor, Collegiate DigestP. O. Box 47a, Madison, Wis.MENTAL STNAINinduces ncnroos ten¬sion—slows down thedigestive functions.Smoking Camels in-cteases digestive ac¬tivity—gives you a’’lift.’* Smoke Camelsfor digestion’s sake.Camels set you right! isaJk.SMOwCtme^Camel’s aid todigestion confinned by ScienceMany phases of modern life—thehurry, worry, and mental effort—tend to slow down the flow of the di¬gestive fluids. Smoking Camels helpsrelease you from this strain on di¬gestion. Renews and increases the-naniral flow of the digestive fluids.Enjoy Camels steadily! They en¬courage that delightful sense ofcomfort and well-being that good digestion brings in its wake. SmokeCamels with meals, after meals, be¬tween meals, as often as you like—for the pleasure of their matchlessflavor... for digestion’s sake ... fortheir cheery "lifL” Cameb set youright! You can smoke as many asyou please. Camels never get onyour nerves or tire your taste. Turnto Camel’s costlier tobaccos today.Conmirtt. im, B. J. ItemMa Tab. Ca.. Winalaa.iialcm. N. U.METHOD USED.Credit for paving theway for the discov¬ery that Caii^eis pro¬mote digestion goesto Pavlov, the greatphysiologist. Recentinvestigation con¬firms this benefi¬cial effect of Camels.-Dining de Lmx* at Pierre’s, New YorkWhat will you have? It’s pleasant to imagine.Pi rhaps Bentb Pelwtaise to start. Then Supremeof Halibut a la Raise, Braised Lettuce, and StringBians am Gratia. Then...a CameL..a crisp salad■ ■■* Camel again... and an ice with demi-tasm and...Camels! Camels are part of the art of din¬ing. They stimulate digestion. M. Bonaudi, ban- 'quet manager of Pierre’s, who handles many ofNew York’s smart *'deb’* parties, sa3rs: "Camelsare by hr the most popular cigarette here." WHIRLED throughspace upside down.Attractive Vera Kim-ris, featured artistein the New Yorkbit, "Jumbo," says:"Thanks to Camel’said to digestion, Ican always be sure ofenjoying my food.’’TUNE INICamel Caravan withWalter O'Keefe, Deanejanit, Ted Husing, GlenGray and the Casa LomaOrchestraTuesday and Thursday —9p-m.E.D.S.T.,ap.m.C.D.S.T.H:30 p. m. M. S. T.7:30 p. m. P. S.T.—overWABC-Columbia Network COSTLIERTOBACCOS!Camels are made from finer. MOREEXPENSIVE TOBACCOS-Turkish andDomestic -than any other popular brand.PAID SENATORS of the labor committee th*t is now conductinAmerican Youth Act. a hill to provide work and education for uis holder ofwith a time.'was.^ estab-;lishcd by Helen Steirfi'chs of ^^liam; WoodsOdlm when sl]« diirew)’-t|fe’’'f^>e(tBid shottfi^^dct7, Jfi' inches <Kif^m,Chica®.T ' : Address your request to : Picture Editor, Gollegi ATE Oir.EST Section,to bur readers is suitable for framing and. will make an appropriate wall■' .'%■''' ■’'i.tV '»’j' ’i‘JEANNE PERKINS, Kappa Delta from LouisianaJ State University, is now in Hollywood studyingmotion picture acting under an award granted her lastmonth by Paramount.X^ARGARET ROSSITER approaches her newly-wonthrone as Hatchet Queen of Washington University(St. Louis) escorted by Gene Beare, junior class president.''al photograph of this7 Fredaik Kaeser II'An'apping and postage.>tograph that is odFered A ND NOW COME THE “PROFITEERS OF FUTURE WARS” - Above is shown the organization meeting of the Prohteers of^ Future Wars of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Say the organizers: “We will lobby in Congress for payment in advance of profitsfrom contractS'clS'yet'to-be'let for the war supplies of future battles and against payment of bonus to veterans of the future wars and a pen¬sion to gold star mothers of the future wars. We are not going to be taxed to death.”The “Why” of Collegiate Movies, Told by One VV^Jio Writes ThemTHE AUTHOR- Fred W Person.Uraversity ot Wisconsin 'yf,. has lust brushedventinu a picture tor Warner Bros, based onthe musK-al comedy work of such orxaniS'tions as Wisconsin's Haresfoot and Prince-ton's Triangle Clubs. Because ot his experi¬ences with studio otficuls in the vxTitin^ andpiannini! of a colleKUte movie, we believe heIS most capable ot discussinj^ the why otHollywood’s portrayal of college life. - -Editor.By Fred W. Pederson^OLLEGE students invariably sneer at Hollywood’s^ celluloid conceptions of their life, conceptions inwhich ukeleles and saxaphones pby more important rolesthan textbooks, fraternity houses resemble royal suitesat the Ritz, and professors croon while leading the classin the latest dance rage.I can remember when I shared in the genera! indigna¬tion. “Why can’t those guys ever produce a real, honest-to-gosh, down-to^rth picture of undergraduate life?”I u^ to ask myself. Having recently been one of “thoseguys”, I can cite several reasons why college picturesare as they are and perhaps always will remain much asthey are. 'Youth, Music, Lave, Gaiety, and Laughter—}^everboot(s"The average theater-goer associate youth, music, love,beauty, ^ie^, and lau^ter (never books) with collegelife, and consequently expects to see these elements in acollege picture. The film producer, whose natural show-manly preference lies more in the direction of snappydialogue and dance routines than classroom dignity,knows this and is prepared to meet the demand. Hispictures are intended for the film-going public as a whole,and not solely for a few hypercritical students. For thisreason most college films, outside of the annual footballepic (for which I offer no apologies), are musicals. purists. He holds his job by the amount of black ink hecan-put on the company ledger, not by the number ofartistic hurrahs he is able to arouse.Producers feel, and perfiaps rightfully, that they aregiving the great mass of theater-goers what they expect.A painstakingly produced picture based on college life asit actually is might be a dismal failure. We college 'peoplemight not even appreciate it. After all, twentieth cen¬tury pioneering, especially in the cinema, comes a bitexpensive, and the producer, if he wants to stay in business very long, must keep his eye on box office grosses,not on the embittered criticisms of a few collegiate "N^OR can alumni, no matter how perfectly they con-^ ^ formed to the collegute pattern of life in pre-dipUxna days, be expected to defend undergraduaterealism. A ye.ir otf the campu.« and the average alumnusIS more apt to remember the good time he had at such-and-such Christmas formal, the weekend of the Purduegame, or in the Mask C^ Wig show rather than the factthat dunng exam weeks he ordinarily lost ten pounds andannexed a few grey hairs. It is the same with collegegrads in a studio conference. Confessing no seriousintent, they stnve to put as much entertaining fnvolity aspossible in the .scenario—dram itizing college life never\vas meant to be a .s;id task.In prepanng any college story it is amazing to discovTrhow very readily all college types, both real and imag¬inative, lend them.selves to caricature. The Joe Collej^e^ APT AIN Joe Cusick this year is leading the HolyCross College nine in a zb-game schedule to re¬tain the Eastern Collegiate championship it won lastyear by winning 22 out of 2} games. l—IELEN BACLAWSKI, Rhode Island State College^ junior, IS the honorary cadet colonel of that insti¬tution’s R, O. T. C. corps. freshman; the cross IVan, a fvrtect heavy in every c.tthe co-ed-heroine, usually portrayed as a sweet, delect 1Dream Pnneess; the hard-boiled ftxitball coach, alwavcharacter builder; the towering Adonis who plays fthack and causes feminine hearts to flutter; and as for .absent-minded professor—pick up any college cimmagazine and vou'll find plenty of K)kes about him.When one takes intoconsideratHm the natural tend.,toward exaggeration for dram.itic effect in presenting tlcharacters, it is little wonder they appear as they dothe screen. Realism doesn’t .seem to have a place ncollege picture. And for this reason college pictualways have been and, I am afraid, always will besigned to please the eye and ear and not provide foodcerebral meditation.What’s Wrong with MoviePicture of College Life?prOR the best letter of 500 words or less offerin)* constructive criticism or defense of the typKacollegute motion pictures, and written by a studenor faculty member of a college or university in thtUnited S^tes, Colugiate Diuerr will award a priz«of lio. The writer of the second best letter will rcceive a prize of $5. Send your letter NOW to: MotioiPicture Editor, Coluglate Digest Section, P. OBob 473, Madison, Wis, .Letters cannot be returneeto writers.CETH LOW Junior College students have Ivi^ making all sorts of appeals to the electorate tstop the move to discontinue their college, nowpart of Columbia University. Robert Burton (nijliIS shown making a radio address to New York citizeni' inicmampiPc; (5 OME of THCFAVOi^iTES tN VDUR.CTION^ |SKI*T fXPEACE- VES, THE CALUMETIS ABOUT THE ON LVDECENT MEMENTOOF oue uong^useles^OMXr/?] I AND BUOOD/ INDIANWAPS. rr SEEMS THATBOTH REDSKINAND WHITE HELDiTHE CALUMETAN INVIOLATESVMBCX- OFpeaceONE-WOn DESCMPIION OFPRINCE MBERT: “COMFORTNK”The minute you light up P. A.,/I'-Jip . you know you’ve met as cool andtnellow and fragrant a tobacco asyou’ll ever want No other tobacco■H^kS 4lfc« is like it. Prince Albert diannsaway your cares—Imgfatens thekM^ hours ai study. Itw “erhapcut.”Thatamkescooler smoking, keeps pipes sweeter. P. A. does notbite the tongue. It’sa national favmite. Read our openinvitation to all colkge raoi to try P. A. without risk.SMOKE 20 PimUiS UNDBI NO-RISK OFTBIISaMkc as frmgrMrt yEpehii* mi Frtec* Aikart. If AM it tW mU«w-Mt. tasiteat Ns* takacc* ymt *rmr amtkmi, ratwra tkc e*ckat tia wMi therest af tW takacca ki it ta aa at aa^ tiaaa wMila a Maatt fraai tMa 4ata, aaSwa wUI refaad fall surckaaa priem, plw saatasa.(Siwmmd) tL J. KEYWOUM TOBACCO COMPAflYWiaataa*SalaBi, Nortk Carallaa# Wiaataa'SalaaPrince Albert nKNAflOIMipipafuU of fra*•rant tokacca inaoara R niioa tinaf Friaaa T/ . - ^Dosemary Brandstrader played the^ lead role in the Loyola University(Chicago) College Players’ production ofFrank Craven’s ^{ew l^ooms. Cdumbia’smassive foot'Circus Saintsand Sinners Qub.MIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN’S swimming coach MatMann uses this newly-invented electric pacer to train his-T proteges for Big Ten competition. T^mv\/tT I IniVPr^ifV oldest college in America, Brown was established as RhodeLJUJWIl LJIli VCi oiLj. Island College in 1764 to “preserve in the Community a Suc¬cession of Men duly qualify’d fer Discharging the Offices of Life with usefulness Cr* reputation.” OJIegc wasgiven its present name in 1804, in recognitkxi of a gift of $5,000 from Nichobs Brown. With a campus ofapproximately 40 acres (including Pembroke CJoUege, the women's division of the university), it I-as 14 resi¬dence halls, with land, building and structures being valued at approximately $5,772,725.CoufciATE Diczst Photo hy McLaughlin Aerial Survey!T;K^ARJORIE CAMPBELL (oboi'c) reigned asprom queen at Denison University, thesame weekeixi her sister, Jean, ruled over theWestern Reserve University prom.‘‘MOW ITS THIS WAY.” Princeton's^ Prof. Frank Fetter, now visiting pro¬fessor at the University of Illinois, explains tothe senate interstate commerce committee thatthe present steel code legalized a system whichhas always been “a shady and doubtful prac¬tice.” NJORTH.CAROLINA'S H^trry Williamson^ ^ breaks the tape to win a Madison SquareGarden i,ooo'yard run in the time o( 2:13.5.I ANDON'S THE MAN! - - At least he is so far as the collegians who attended Colgate's^ model Republican convention are concerned, for they nominated the Kansas governor forthe presidency at their convention. James Wadswwth was picked as his running mate. VWHEN pohtically dissatished students of the Nation. in Athens, Greece, attempted to force other student'spolitical movement riots resulted that threatened to s|among the entire popuhee. |T'ot: fVhat's the idea of Casper ksing a hintDot: He just heard that it isn't safe to ride u\out Knee-ActionImost everyone knows that Kncc-^has greatly increased the comlort of ri<hut not so many know that it is an u{tant contribution to safety. Not so 1know, either, that you can have the bt:of such improvements because they are liifactured by General Motors in such quaas to bring the cost within reach ot:General MotorsA Public-Minded InstitutionCIIKVRULET • PONTIAC • OLDSMORILE • Bl'ICX • LASALLE