Vol. 36. No. 111. Price 3 Cents. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1936 Member United PressII Duce PlansConsolidationof ConquestsSee Road Construction asDanger to French andBritish Interests.ROME, May 19—(UP)—Musso¬lini’s new imperial machine movedforward on four fronts today to de¬fend, consolidate, exploit and com¬memorate Italy’s conquest of Ethi¬opia.Developments included:1. Orders for immediate construc¬tion of 1,740 miles of paved highwaysin Ethiopia.2. A command to all able-bodiedFascists between the ages of 21 and55 to enroll in the Fascist militia.11. Beginning of a nationwide censusin Ethiopia designed to facilitate po¬litical, social and military reorgani¬zation of the new colony.4. An appeal for subscriptions forconstruction of a national monumentin Rome commemorating the begin¬ning of the new Fascist empire andhonoring those who fell winning it.Koad.s Near Lake TanaIt was regarded as significant thata large part of the road constructionwill take place in the Lake Tanaarea, which Great Britain regards asher own special sphere of influencein Ethiopia.Experts said the most importanthighway will be the 310 mile stripfrom Assab to Dessye, where it willlink with the imperial highway toAddis Ababa.Italy then will be able to use Assabas a port for motor connections withAddis Ababa, thus relieving Italy’sdependence on the French port ofDjibouti and the French-owned Dji-bouti-Addis Ababa railroad.Probably the most significant de¬velopment today was the virtuallyforced enrollment of all able-bodiedFascist in the militia. The nationaldirectory of the Fascist party decidedall Fascists between 21 and 55 areeligible to carry arms. There are 2,-000,000 full-fledged male members inthe Fascist party and it is estimatedthat at least 1,500,000 of that num¬ber will be eligible.This means the party will be ableto present the fatherland with a huge,semi-trained army to supplement theregular army and the reserves inevent of a national emergency.Eden Presses Italyto Recall Attachesof Foreign OfficeLONDON, May 19—(UP)—For¬eign diplomats believed tonight thatItaly will be forced to recall certainmembers of her London military at¬tache’s office because of Foreign Sec¬retary Anthony Eden’s revelationthat they had been in contact with anotorious “purveyor of false informa¬tion and documents.’’Addressing the House of Commons,Eden charged that the military attache’s office continued in communi¬cation with the mysterious “Col.Lopez’’—alleged purveyor of the falseinformation—even after the British'foreign! office had sent Italy a“friendly warning’’ last March.Members of Parliament were great¬ly agitated by Eden’s allegations andtoday talked freely about pressingfurther questions regarding . with¬drawal of the Italian attaches. How¬ever, Eden has clearly indicated thathe does not want the question to beraised publicly.“What I said to the House of Com-mons, I said with regret,’’ Eden as¬serted. “I said it in order to clarifythe position of the government andthe good name of British firms.’’THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)PROGRESS OF NATIONALISMUnder the terms of a bill before theNew Jersey legislature, school chil¬dren would be compelled to salute theflag upon penalty of arrest.« * *Stated in publication of AmericanLeague Against War and Fascism. Mexican TrainWorkers ProtestStrike EndingMEXICO CITY, May 19—(UP)—Hundreds of national railway work¬ers demonstrated in front of theLabor department today against theordered termination of a strike whichthreatened to tie up Mexico’s railtransportation from the UnitedStates to the Guatemalan borders.Ordered back to work less than 18hours after proclaiming the walkout,the workers paraded by the depart¬ment carrying a coffin which bore theinscription: “Here lies the FederalLabor law, assassinated by PresidentLazaro Cardenas.’’The workers thus declared they hadnot been given full benefits of strikelegislation.The coffin was burned on a funeralpyre in the central patio of the laborministry, while orators haranguedthe crowd.Collapse of the strike was inter¬preted, nevertheless, as a victory forthe president in the first major laborconflict during his administration.Despite opposition of some workers,the Railwaymen’s syndicate abided by(Continued on page 2)Award Scholarshipsto Thirty-six HighSchool ApplicantsThe first .selection of winners offirst year entrance scholarshipawards was announced yesterday bythe Committee on Scholarships with16 full two year tuition, 6 one year,and 14 one-half awards being made.Two Year ScholarshipsTwo year honor entrance scholar¬ship awards were made to MarvinAdland, von Steuben high school,Chicago; Philip Brown, Los Angeles;Jack Carlson, Glendale, California;Victor Charles Cook, Neddick, Il¬linois; Charles Crane, Hyde Park,Chicago; Robert B. Davis, Hirsch,Chicago; Carter Eltzroth, Jr., In¬dianapolis; Joel Fantl, South Orange,New Jersey; Frederick Linden, Jr.,Moline, Illinois; Jean Modesitt, EastDenver, Colorado; Edward Notov,Roosevelt, Chicago; Jack Parker,Englewooid, Chicago; Earl Peirce,Brigham City, Utah; Kenneth Spon-sel, Gary; John Wallace, Moline, Il¬linois; William Webster, Ionia, Mich¬igan.Successful applicants for the oneyear awards were Beatrice Ann Fear,Evanston; James Lennin, Parker,Chicago; Kathryn Parliman, Lind-blom, Chicago; Laverne Tess, Amund¬sen, Chicago; Jane Ann Vaupel,Morgan Park, Chicago; and EileenWeakly, Evanston.Half Year AwardsOne-half year scholarships weregranted to Charlotte Blakemore,Streator, Illinois; Murle Rose Bor-chardt, Hammond; Roger Clemens,Long Beach, California; MargaretGarver, Minneapolis; Janet LouiseGeiger, Hirsch, Chicago; TheodoreGleichman, Jr., Moline, Illinois; Ro¬bert Green, Streator, Illinois; VeraJosephine Green, Streator, Illinois;Aimee Marie Haines, Harvey, Il¬linois; Ada Martin, La Porte, In¬diana; Harold Penne, Winner, SouthDakota; Sam Scott, Indianapolis;John Stearns, Morgan Park, Chicago;Oliver Warner, Galesburg, Illinois.The above list is not complete,however, as additional awards willbe made throughout the summer.Ratify Naval Treatywith England, FranceWASHINGTON, May 19—(UP) —Renewed evidence of Anglo-Americancordiality was apparent today afterthe Senate ratified, without a recordvote, the London Naval Treaty be¬tween the United States, GreatBritain and France.Simultaneously, state departmentofficials indicated they would not ob¬ject to England’s request to expandits cruiser and destroyer tonnage overexisting treaty limits. Secretary ofstate Cordell Hull deferred formaldecision on the request until he hadtime to study the British proposals.The newly-ratified treaty seeks tolimit construction of “Class A’’ cruis¬ers and new types of warships. Itdoes not impose, however, any quan¬titative restrictions as did the Lon¬don treaty of 1930 which expires thisyear. Netmen Win Doubles Matchesto Defeat Northwestern, 4-2Bickel Makes Comeback toDefeat Russell BallThree Sets. inEnding in a brilliant drive by win¬ning both doubles matches, the Ma¬roon netmen whipped Northwestern,4-2, yesterday afternoon on the varsity courts and wiped their only blackmark of the season off the slate.The stars of the day were both Chi¬cago men: Captain Norman Bickel,because of his defeat of Russell Ball,the Wildcat number one man andWestern indoor champion, who isranked fourth in National Intercol¬legiate singles; and Johnny Shos-strum, formerly fir.st-ranking Western junior, because of his singles vic¬tory over Dick Rugg, Trans-Mississippi title holder, and his spiritedefforts in the doubles match.Bickel Defeats BallBy far the most important matchof the day was the meeting of Bickeland Russell Ball. The Maroon cap¬tain and the El Paso flash are ex¬pected to fight it out for the confer¬ence title this week-end. Ball sweptthrough the first set 6-4 and took3-1 lead in the second. At this pointBickel found himself, tied Ball at 5-up, and went on to win the set, 7-5.This seemed to break the southerner’sgame and Bickel completely dominat¬ed the final set, winning, 4-6, 7-5,and 6-3.In the second match Norbert Bur(Continued on page 4) Settlement BoardAsks Campus Aidon Annual Tag DayInvite Students toTake Part in RadioTranscription TodayStudents interested in taking partin an electrical transcription forradio as well as \iewing the makingof such a recording will have an op¬portunity this afternoon at the Uni¬versity Broadcasting council whenUniversity and Northwestern stu¬dents will conduct a roundtable dis¬cussion on “Student Plans for Peace.’’The transcription is being made inorder to obtain the approval of theNational Broadcasting company fora series of student roundtable.^ onworld affairs, scheduled for this.spring and continuing next autumn.If the transcription is approved, theactual broadcast may take place fromMandel hall, June 14 or 15.Students wishing to take part willmeet at the studios, room 1020, 230North Michigan avenue at 2:30. Aquestion and answer session from thefloor will be included in the tran¬scription.Band Repeats New“University March”in Outdoor ConcertThe University band under thedirection of Harold Bachman willpresent the second in a series of out¬door concerts in Hutchinson courtthis evening from 7 to 8.Included in this program will bethe new University of Chicago Marchby K. L. King, which was featuredfor the first time in the concert lastweek. This is the second presenta¬tion of the number.Other numbers in the program willbe the Capitol City March by Staig-ers. Princess Jaune, Overture bySaint-Saens, Serenade by Toselli,Selection from Comic Opera, TheSerenade by Victor Herbert, and anovelty, A Girl in Every Port, ar¬ranged by Yoder. Others are Medi¬tation, Westminster (from LondonSuite) by Coates, Valse Triste bySibelius, Dance of the Tumblers(from the Snow Maiden) by Rimsky-Korsakov, and March El Capitin bySousa.Peace Council Meetsto Discuss CelebrationThe Peace Council will meet thisafternoon at 4:30 in Social Science106 at 4:30 to formulate plans foractivity during the remainder of thequarter, according to Nathan Mosco-vitch, chairman of the council.Projected activity centers around acelebration in the cause of peace onMay 30, Decoration day, as a part ofNational Youth day. No definite planshave yet been made for the celebra¬tion. “Buy a tag! Help support the set¬tlement!’’This entreaty voiced by approxi¬mately fifty club girls and membersof the Settlement board, will greetcampusites today, the annual settlement tag day, sponsored by the Stu¬dent Settlement board under the pres¬idency of Dan Smith.The proceeds of the sale of thetags will be contributed to the gen¬eral budget of the Settlement. This isthe only occasion upon which thecampus is directly asked to help irthe financial support of the Settle¬ment, and judging from past years,somewhat over 100 dollars will berealized.The tags were made this year bymembers of the Settlement, instead of,as in the past, being the handiworkof members of the Settlement board.Mary Letty Green, a member of theStudent Settlement board, is incharge of the sales girls. Ten FraternitiesAgree to InstallDietitian ServiceThe ten houses necessary to installthe Fraternity Cooperative Purchas¬ing agency dietitian service next fallhave agreed to give the plan a trialperiod, it was announced yesterdayby Everett George, head of theFCPA.Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta,and Sigma Chi by signing contractsyesterday insured that the servicewill go into operation next fall.Other houses that have previouslyagreed to the plan include BetaTheta Pi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, DeltaUpsilon, Chi Psi, Psi Upsilon, KappaSigma, and Zeta Beta Tau. Two addi¬tional houses. Pi Lambda Phi andAlpha Tau Omega may install thedietitian service next fall.The dietitian in charge of the ser¬vice will be selected this week, accord¬ing to George, and will begin herduties September 15.Consulting with the fraternitytreasurers each quarter for the pur¬pose of budget planning, the dietitianwill advise the house treasurers onmatters of house and commissarymanagement. The plan is a step irthe direction of installing better fra¬ternity cost accounting.Supreme Court Decision on GuffeyCase Reaffirms Earlier Verdicts“The decision was to be expected’’was the opinon of William H. Spencer, dean of the School of Business,when questioned concerning the ac¬tion of the Supreme court in declar¬ing unconstitutional the Guffey coalbill by a count of six to three. “Stillthe decision doesn’t present any newissues.’’Emphasizing the fact that the fullopinions have not yet been published,he pointed out that the decision was,generally speaking, to have been ex¬pected in view of the Schechtef caseThis w’as the case in which articleSix InternationalHouse ResidentsLead SymposiumSix International House memberswill lead a symposium on world peacetonight at 8:15 in rooms C, D, and E,James H. Wellard, assistant incharge of ini.dlectual activities, stat¬ed yesterday.Three of the speakers represent theUnited States and three are from theBritisli Empire, Wellard declared.The British students are David Mal-aiperuman of India, who will discusspacifist movements; Leonard Great-wood, who will discuss balance ofpower, and Leslie Lipson, who willdiscuss collective security.Albert Hart, speaking on isolation,Ronald Grant on imperialism, andFrank Meyer, of the American Stu¬dent Union, on the Communist In¬ternationale, are the American speak¬ers. Meyer will be a coordinating in¬fluence, having studied at Oxford andthe London College of Economics.Mr. Ernest B. Price, director of In¬ternational House, will be chairmanof the symposium.Each speaker will talk for fifteenminutes, and a general discussionwill follow the series of talks ac¬cording to Wellard.The program at regular meetingWednesday will be an Oxford de¬bate on the motion: Resolved thatthis house deplores the internationalincident of 1492.Gli Scapigliati Groupto Present ComediesGli Scapigliati will present threeItalian comedies in Reynolds clubtheater, Friday and Saturday eve¬nings. There will be no admissioncharge.The opening play is a modern farce,“La Stanza Nuda’’ featuring EdwardBlume, Robert Hatfield, and EstherBernson. The second play, “II MaritoSospettoso’’ is by a Florentine dra¬matist of 1850, Gherardi del Testa,and features Maurino Ricchiuto asthe husband who unjustly suspectshis innocent wife, played by Jose¬phine Mirabella. 'The final play is irevival of a comedy by Novell!, “L’Invito a pranzo’’ in w'hich Mary 01m-stead, Dorothy Kinsley, Mark A shin,Thomas Kerr and Albert Panza fakepart. three of the NRA was declared un¬constitutional.“The court reaffirmed its earlier de¬cisions that coal mining is not inter¬state commerce,’’ stated Dean Spen¬cer; “and that demoralized prices inthe coal mining industry do not affectinterstate commerce in such a wayas to justify federal control. On thisissue Chief Justice Hughes appar¬ently dissented in a separate opinion.’’Dean Spencer pointed out that themajority including Chief JusticeHughes held that an attempt to setup labor provisions for the cojil min¬ing industry was beyond the controlof the federal government.Furthermore the law containedtax provisions which were in the nature of penalties to force all coalproducers into alleged voluntary cooperation. This, too, the court thoughtwas unconstitutional. Dean Spencerdeclared.The minority opinion contained thesame views as in former decisions, ac¬cording to Dean Spencer. It held thatprice fixing was justifiable; there wasno reason to pass judgment on thelabor provisions, which were appar¬ently not in issue.Hold Conference ofCivil Servants fromMetropolitan RegionL. L. Thurstone, professor of Psy¬chology, will talk on “The StatisticalAnalysis of Personality Factors’’ be¬fore the central regional conferenceof the Civil Service assembly of theUnited States and Canada when theorganization gathers in the JudsonCourt Library for a three-day meet¬ing on Thursday.G. Lyly Beleley, director of the as¬sembly, stated yesterday that approx¬imately 50 civil service officials fromthe middle west would attend themeeting at which personnel prob¬lems are to be the principal topicsdiscussed. Attending the conferencewill be Gordon R. Clapp, director ofper.sonnel for the Tennessee Valleyauthority; Herbert W. Cornell, ex¬aminer of the Milwaukee civil servicecommission; and Donald J. Sublete,civil service examiner for the city ofDetroit.Although the majority of the sub¬jects to be discussed are of a techni¬cal nature, the meetings are open Uall who wish to attend.French Ministry GivesPrize to Honor StudentAn award will be given by theMinistry of Foreign Affairs ofFrance, to the graduating studentmaking the highest grade in the de¬partmental examination in Frenchthis quarter. The committee ofawards includes Professors Nitze,Dargan, David, Parmenter, Vigneron,and Merrill.The name of the winner will be an¬nounced at the end of the Romancedepartment examinations period. May2b to 29. Linn DefendsNew Deal atA S U MeetingSelect English Professorto Uphold Democratsagainst Attack.James Weber Linn, professor Eng¬lish, has been selected to defend theNew Deal against the attacks of theother parties in the ASU politicalsymposium, to be held this evening at7:30, in Harper Mil.Professor Linn has long been affili¬ated with the Democraitc party, andwas one of the most important back¬ers of T. V. Smith, professor of Phi¬losophy, in his campaign for mem¬bership in the state senate. The regu¬lar Democratic organization founditself unable to supply a speaker, dueto other engagements.Change SpeakersA further change in the roster ofspeakers is the substitution of Eu¬gene Bethov, member of the IllinoisTonight’s symposium marks one ofthe first steps taken by the ASU infulfilling its stated aim to serve asa campus forum for the discussion ofimportant social and political prob¬lems. Even though this is an electionyear, it is highly significant that thismeeting was considered politicallyimportant enough to attract officialrepresentatives of the various partiesas speakers.—R.W.N.campaign committee of the Commun¬ist party of Illinois, for Jack Mar¬tin, state campaign manager of theparty.The symposium will consist of fif¬teen minute speeches in which each ofthe delegates will present the viewof his party on the issues of the cur¬rent campaign, and a floor discussionof the topics presented. The meetingwrill be presided over by Robert MorssLovett, professor of English.The speakers announced yesterdayare: Robert Tieken, first vice-presi¬dent of the Young Republicans, agraduate of the University Lawschool, and attorney with the firmof Winston, Stone, and Shaw, Repub¬lican; Phillip Booth, member of theexecutive committee of the Cook(bounty branch of the Socialist party.Socialist; and George Meade, secre¬tary of the Cook County branch ofthe Illinois Labor party, Laborite.Delta Signia RhoInitiates Membersat Banquet FridaySeven members of the Debateunion will be initiated into the Uni¬versity chapter of Delta Sigma Rho,national honorary forensic fraternityat a banquet in the Coffee Shop, Fri¬day at 6. They are Claude Hawley,Marie Berger, Marian Wagner, Ja¬cob Ochstein, Irving Axelrad, GeorgeMessmer, and Victor Lipsman.Professor T. V. Smith, an alumnusof Delta Sigma Rho, will appear asguest speaker, in addition to a shortprogram.George Messmer is the president ofthe Debate union at present, whileIrving Axelrad is secretary of theorganization, and Jacob Ochstein isthe president-elect. Other initiateshave held office in the Debate union inthe past.Reservations may be made for thebanquet by getting in touch withClaude Hawdey, Box 40, Faculty Ex¬change.Schuman Speaks inKansas City TonightFrederick L. Schuman, assistantprofessor of Political Science, will ad¬dress the first triennial convention ofthe Missouri Federation of Women’sclubs tonight in Kansas City on thesubject of “America and Japan—Neighbors or Enemies?’’Professor Schuman will assert thatthe present policy of naval challengeto Japan is the best way of assuringan American-Japanese war in thePacific within the next two or threeyears. “The purposes of this policyhave never been explained by the ad¬ministration in Washing^ton,’’ Schu¬man claims, “but the stake in com¬mercial advantages with Japan is notworth the cost of the present navalpolicies.’’THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1936Page TwoSeek Measureto Substitutefor Guffey Bill(By United Press)WASHINGTON, May 19—Presi¬dent Roosevelt today said the NewDeal intended to try to reach the ob¬jectives of the invalidated Guffey coalact by some other method.He did not reveal whether any spe¬cific substitute was under considera¬tion, and refused to say whether abill would be introduced at this ses¬sion of Congress. When asked abouthis “must” Congressional program,he listed only the relief and tax billsin this category.Two hours later the executive coun¬cil of the Federation of Labor brokeup an all-day session and PresidentWilliam Green announced:“I don’t see what we can do in alegislative way. It is so hopeless. Thedecision has stumped us. We feelvery badly about it. The mine indus¬try is the sick industry of the nation.“The way the Court defined inter¬state commerce pertains only tofreight which is definitely moving.”He said the council felt the Guffeydecision had jeopardized the WagnerLabor Disputes act which is basedupon the interstate commerce clause.Ickes Addresses CourtPWA administrator Harold L.Ickes went personally to the Districtof Columbia Supreme Court today tofight for the New Deal’s socially-ambitious power program, one of thefew federal recovery activities notoutlawed by the U. S. Supreme court.He was fighting, by his very ap¬pearance and testimony, for a rulingthat PWA is within the Constitutionin lending and granting governmentmoney for municipal electric systems.Rexford Guy Tugwell determinedtonight to continue all activities ofhis resettlement administration ex¬cept one suburban housing projectin Boundbrook, N. J., specifically out¬lawed by the District of Columbia icourt of appeals.Protest Endingof Train Strike(Continued from Page 1)the decision of the Federal LaborConciliation board that the walkoutwas illegal and “non-existent” and*>rdered it members back to theirjobs at once. The strike committeeof the syndicate ordered that “Allrailway services within the republicbe resumed within the time limit of24 hours set by the boai’d.” The com¬mittee reserved the right to protestagainst the ruling of the conciliationboard, which it considered “unjust.”The red flag still flew over theColonia station, Mexico City’s mainterminal, at noon but the pickets, whoalso continued to patrol the entrancesto the building, admitted they had re¬ceived orders to return to work.It was understood the Pi*esidenthad offered a compromise solutionwhich was turned down by the union.The compromise reportedly involvedpayment to office employes of one-half their demands.FOUNDED IN 1901Meinb«rUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maruon ig the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicatco,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.HALPH 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,Editorial associates; Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell. Julian Kiser, John Morris.James Snyder, Edward Stern. ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: ElRoy 1). GoldingAssistant: Byron C, Miller EditorialSettlement Depends on CampusContributionsToday, if you are at all mobile inyour habits, you will undoubtedly bestopped, at one point or another, byany one of several score young wo¬men, who will smilingly ask you todrop a coin into a little red lx)x, inreturn for which you will receive anice white tag.To what are you contributing? Tothe University of Chicago Settlement,of course. But that institution has be¬come a mere name in the minds ofthe majority of students.What then, is the University Set¬tlement—“Back of the Yards?” “Backof the Yards” would imply an alleyto anyone unfajniliar with the indus¬trial ecology of the Chicago ai'ea.This implication has a great deal oftruth, for it is in the area near the.stockyards that alleys are streets,that sheds are homes, that garbage isfood..Against this array of unsavory con¬ditions the University Settlement con¬stitutes the chief bulwark. Daily itprovides for the recreational and edu¬cational needs of the Yards commun¬ity, settles its internal squabbles, seesthat it does not starve, tries to findjobs and homes for its members.The Settlement is entirely depend¬ent on contributions, having no en¬dowment fund. Its staff, for the mostpart, works without compensation.The Settlement is specifically aUniversity of Chicago undertaking..As such, each member of the Univer¬sity community should share in the’ esponsibility for its continued suc¬cess.—J. G. Morris.Selassie’s FlightIncreases RoyalRefugees to SixLONDON, May 19—(UP)—Italytoday leads other European nationsas an asylum for depo.sed kings de¬spite the fact that Fascist legions ofPremier Benito Mussolini droveHaile Selassie from his kingdom, asurvey reveals.Former Kings Alfonso of Spainand Amanullah of Afghanistan botha’-e residents of Italy. They live inthe suburbs of Rome.England’s only royal resident inexile is tiny Prajadhipok of Siam.The flight into exile of the Negusbrings the total of former monarchsresiding in Europe and Jerusalem(where Haile Selassie is living) tosix. This number does not take intoaccount the various pretenders tothrones, of which there are quite afew.Two Exiled EmperorsWhen the Ethiopian King of Kingsfled his conquered empire he increasedto two the number of emperors inexile. The former Kaiser Wilhelm, de¬throned as the World War ended, hasbeen a resident of Doom, Holland, foralmost 18 years.Some of the royal exiles seem tobe confident of regaining theirthrones. Alfonso, according to thelatest authoritive reports, believes themonarchy eventually will be restoredto Spain and that he will be recalledto rule. In the meanwhile he con¬tinues to reside outside Rome, spend¬ing considerable time in motoring andyachting.Amanullah, who also lives in aRoman suburb, believes his countrywill recall him some day. While wait¬ing, he spends his days quietly and.serenely.Prajadhipok Is HappyPrajadhipok of Siam, who re¬nounced his throne, enjoys life as anEnglish squire: He spends much timein the open air, riding horseback,playing tennis and driving one ofthe seven motor cars he owns. Hedoes not seem to lack finances.The little man, just five feet tall,has all of his cars remodelled so thesteering wheel will be closer to thefront .seat.Another favorite pastime of Pra¬jadhipok is seeing movies. He has anexcellent cinema-gymnasium on hisestate. It is said he never misses a:American gang-movie and is especial¬ly thrilled by “G-men” productions.The former king also has an electrichorse, of the type made popular bythe late Pre.sident Coolldge, He ride.sthis “hobby” daily.Ferdinand, former ruler of Bul¬garia, resides in Germany. He spendsmo.st of his time in Bavaria where heenjoys his collection of birds and but¬terflies.While former King Manuel ofPortugal is dead, his family continue.^to live outside the homeland. 5th RowCenterBy C. Sharpless Hickman(Note: This is the third in aseries of guest articles on thedrama departments of leadinguniversities troughout the coun-try.)By KENNETH E. BARTLETTThe most remarkable thing aboutthe Carolina Playmakers of the Uni¬versity of North Carolina is the sen¬se of cooperation perv’ading the group—a dynamic loyalty contributing to-w'ards a greater efficiency in all theirproductions. Professor Frederick H.Koch, founder and director, has hadthe foresight to project into realityhis tremendous enthusiasm for atheater devoted, for the most part, tonative American folk drama, and asa result the Carolina Playmakershave become world-famous for theoriginal productions which they havesjjonsored.Professor Koch himself devotes histime chiefly to executive w'ork—es¬tablishing the general policies andmaintaining outside contacts—havingthe wisdom to turn over the detailsof production entii'ely to his unusual¬ly capable assistants. ProfessorsSamuel Selden and Harry Davis. Itis they who direct the major pro¬ductions, design the scenery, super¬vise its construction and oversee thelighting and costuming.They, in turn, are sensible in theirdelegating of lesser resiK)nsibilities tocapable students, who are given con¬siderable latitude and original oppor¬tunity for self-expression in direct¬ing, in designing and in construct¬ing scenery for original student pro¬duction. Experimental plays writ¬ten in Professor Koch’s playwrit¬ing class are given almost entirelyVast InstituteDictionary AidsA ncient ResearchBy BYRON C. MILLERWhat—The Assyro-Babylonian dic¬tionary consisting of over a millioncard references and big enough to de¬mand a room of its own in the Orien¬tal Institute.Who—Dr. Arno Poebel and a staffof eight persons in collaboration withlinguists and archaeologists the worldover.When—For the last 14 years—and foryears to come.Where—Compiling at Oriental Insti¬tute and digging in excavations inthe Near east.How—Through translation and con¬cordance by context in a mannersimilar to that employed in the Ox¬ford dictionary.Why—To reconstruct, through speak¬ing impressions, the 3000 year sweepof Assyro-Babylonian civilization.In the field of Babylonian and Per¬sian economics. Dr. Waldo H. Dub-berstein’s research, based largely onthe dictionary sources, has revealeda striking and instructive parallel toup-to-the-minute administrative poli¬cies. Present day price fixing and in¬creasing centralization of governmentmight well be referred to their Babyloniain antecedents; the monopolywith its evils might well be traced toits Babylonian forerunner.Students of historical geography,climatology, etymology, legal history,governmental administration — inshort, of every phase of the ancientMesopotamian culture—draw uponthis mass of data. As Dr. A. T. 01m-stead says, “In many respects, theAssyro-Babylonian dictionary mate¬rials are proving of more value fortheir by-products than for simple dic¬tionary purposes.”Revealing studies of the Aramaic,Phoenician, and Elamite languageshave leaned heavily upon the diction¬ary sources.SELWYN Now PlayingTHE GROUP THEATERIN'^AWAKE •AND• SING!’'by CLIFFORD ODETSAn rntertaininK play. These players are asclose as America has had to the AbbeyPlayers from Dublin—LLOYD LEWISORIGINAL CAST INTACT184 Performances at Belasco in N. Y.FIRST VISIT of the GROUP to CHICAGOMATS. WED.-SAT.. 83c to $2.20EVENINGS. 83c to $2.75Sixth Play American Theater Societyand Theater Guild through student efforts in all phasesof theater activity.* ♦ *On the uffiole, the one character¬istic that may be always observedamong the Carolina Playmakers isthat of work. Work, WORK! Forinstance, in addition to teaching twoclasses daily. Dr. Koch is regionaladvisor of the Federal Theater Pro¬ject; in addition to being play-read¬er and critic for Professor Koch, Mr.Selden has a sequence-course (threequarters) in Acting, Rehearsal andPerformance, and Directing, in ad¬dition to writing textbooks and di¬recting plays on the side. His “StageScenery and Lighting” and “ModernTheater Practice”, written in colla¬boration with Hubert Heffner andHunton D. Sellman, and his own “APlayer’s Handbook” are excellentcontributions to theater literature.Mr. Davis’ courses in Scene Construc¬tion, Scene Lighting and Scene De¬sign take his time when he is not di¬recting a play or acting as BusinessManager of the Playmakers, arrang¬ing and supervising the annual toursmade throughout this and otherstates with original folk-plays. Hehas also produced several plays forthe Children’s Theater..A cosmopolitan atmosphere per¬vades the Playmakers, who have at¬tracted to the University of NorthCarolina theater students from allcorners of the globe, each one con¬tributing a fresh and colorful view¬point. The last bill or regular one-act plays had settings in Mexico,Texas and South Dakota.♦ ♦ ♦Anyone automatically becomes amember of the Carolina Pla>Tnakerswho contributes to a performance,whether as an actor or a member ofthe technical staff. There is no poli¬tical organization, no officers, nodues. Finances are taken care ofthrough its own budget as an organ¬ization affiliated with the Associated GulliverReveals Effect of Moon onCampus SonsBy ROBERT JAMESIt’s been many moons havepassed under the bridge or somethingsince we last wrote this usual jumbleof words. In the meantime, springhas come, birds have started to sing,and pins have exchanged their rest¬ing places. Like for instance, there’sthe Fuller-Kuehn situation. And avery nice situation if we do say so.Then too, there are probably manyStudents, income being derived fromthe attendance at plays, as well asfrom gifts.The experimental productions aregiven gratuitously to the public,which, in turn, is expected to offercriticism for the improvement of theplays.The Carolina Playmakers are ex¬tremely self-critical of their ownwork; “post-mortems” being heldafter each performance to analyzeproduction weaknesses in play con¬struction, in acting, lighting, techni¬cal effects, etc. It is this healthycritical attitude (which is entirelyimpersonal) that keeps everyone con¬stantly struggling to improve stan¬dards.Students are i)articularly encour¬aged to write plays from their ownexperiences. During the year 3G one-act plays and fi major productions,by professional playwrights, aregiven. The small theater is in con¬stant use as a real work-shop, pro¬viding the home for one of the mostvital theaters in the south. Fourvolumes of the “Carolina Folk Plays”have been published, as well as manyindividual plays printed in thequarterly magazine, “The CarolinaPlay-Book”. other similar arrangements that evenGulliver doesn’t know about. Theremust be. All those moon-struck panswe see on campus must have sonu-significance.MUTINY ON THE SENIORSMonday night the Chi Psi Seniorsenjoyed (?) their annual tubbinggiven them by the underclassmen ofthe Lodge. They’re still mopping upthe water on the floor while the Seniors mop their collective brows trying to decide water they going to doabout it.TWO, FOUR, SEXLong ago, during the Phi GammaDelta hell-week one of the Freshmenwas sent out to find a Tom cat. Hewasn’t successful in finding the rightsex but he did find a plain cat withspring fever. Thinking the odds werein his favor he returned with the female pet. Now the Phi Gams have sixcats in all and there isn’t a Tom eatin the bunch.IT WOULD HELPI wish I were a KangarooDespite his funny stancesI’d have a place to put the thingsThat my girl brings to dancesOUR NEW DEALThis year Gulliver has a new planWe’re stacking the cards now and mthe last few issues we’re going to callspades spades and not spare theclubs. Subjects long kept dark, topic-about you, you, and you will lu-printed. The unprintables will befully explained in cold black type. Wetell all we know and then some.Bribes accepted every day betweenfour and four-thirty at the Maroonoffice.IRENE’S BEAUTY SHOl*1507 East .53rd StreetSECOND FLOOR—MID. 2517OPEN > A.M. to 9 P.M.SHAMPOO 2,5c—WAVE 2.5cMANICURE 35cYOU’REFor the Annual Settlement Tag DaySponsored by the Student Settlement Board• •And the way to escape the dis¬honor of the past is to buy a tagfrom one of the 50 salesgirls lo¬cated over the campus.Your contribution will help theUniversity Settlement make life“back of the yards” more enjoy¬able.iHHiiiiiiii iii L...j3ilwmmk mmmmUniversity WomanTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1936Reed AdvisesCare of Eyesas Beauty AidHealth Service DirectorGive Hints on ReadingHabits. Men from Five Colleges ExpressOpinions About Weddi/iflrsa/M/ WivesBy MARTHA LOGAN“An aid to beauty of the eyes ishealth of the eyes,” said Dr, DudleyH. Reed, director of the StudentHealth service, in an interview duringwhich he gave advice on general careof the eyes.“The human eye is not made forthe use to which we put it,” he ex¬plained first. It “is constituted to seethings at a distance comfortably, butwe rarely use it for that purpose. Allnear work puts a nervous and muscu¬lar strain on the eye because of themovements of the eye-ball, converg-etice of the eyes, and the necessityfor accommodation or focusing.”The movements, convergence, andaccommodation are muscular opera¬tions, requiring nervous stimulus.“Therefore, all near work involvesthe activity of small muscles, andsmall muscles are more easily tiredthan large muscles. So eye worktends to be tiring.”Rules fur Eye Care“Since the use to which we put oureyes requires a tremendous amount ofwork the eyes should be given thebest possible care for near work.“First: Do not put any kind of aneye wash into the eyes without a doc¬tor’s advice (tears are the naturalwash for a healthy eye, and if the eyeisn't healthy the person should seea doctor). Popular eye washes areno better than cold water, and thelatter cannot harm the eyes.Second: If the eyes tend to tire,bathe them with cold water for threeminutes once or twice a day.Third: Do the most difficult eye-work early in the day.Fourth: Do as much reading andfine work by daylight as possible.Fifth: Whether the light is day¬light or artificial, have it sufficientlystrong.Sixth: Have the light so placedthat it does not shine directly into theeye (the field of vision is about ISO’’and the light should come from be¬hind the range of vision).Seventh: Have the book or pagea comfortable distance from the eye,fourteen or sixteen inches for thenormal eye, and so that it doesn’t re¬flect a glare of light to the eye.Eighth: Do not read lying down.Ninth: Hold the page of the bookat right angles to the line of vision.Tenth: Close the eyes for a min¬ute in each half hour of continuousreading.”Dr. Reed explained that generalgoo<l health, getting plenty of sleep,for example, is a help toward makingthe eyes better looking.List Requirementsfor Radio SuccessFor those who feel themselves ableto assimilate the personalities ofmany types of people, the field of radioshould prove attractive, according toqualifications required of radio art¬ists. Other essentials for success inthe field are clear articulation, correctpronunciation, freedom from local ac¬cent, tone color, and evidence of culti¬vated taste.The field of radio is a relativelynew one for women, and there aremany opportunities offered to thoseinterested in the work. A beginnermust have a bare technical knowledgeof radio terms and signs used by theoperator in directing. Although thework is difficult and requires constantapplication, it has many advantages—among them the opportunities tomeet interesting people, the acquaint¬ance with various forms of art, andthe general broadening experiencegained.Beginners are usually set to workon radio plays, followed by a train¬ing period in station identification,and finally, they are given full chargeof programs. Experience in planningprograms, scheduling talent, and ingeneral public speaking is helpful.An announcer, to get best results fromthe performers on his program, mustbe capable of making them feel atease before the broadcasting begins. With June just around the cornerand nothing new in wedding themes(except gray trousseau lingerie,Elizabeth Hawes’ glass-clad bride andLelong’s motif in mauve) fashionscouts from Mademoiselle magazineinvaded five male sanctums of higherlearning in search of opinions fromthose so seldom consulted in suchmatters, namely, the grooms-to-be.Five young eligibles were queried,and speaking in behalf of their re¬spective alma maters, present thefollowing symposium for what it isworth to prospective Lohengrinmarchers.Beginning with the bridal gown,Yale, Harvard and Williams, emphat¬ically preferred the conventional whiteas opposed to such radical departuresas pink, glass, and mauve. Princetononly wanted to be sure that it wasn’t“the gown grandmother wore,” whileDartmouth contended that “Cello¬phane would keep this most prizedof packages, fresh and sweet.” Prince¬ton and Williams wished to forsaketheir celibacy in comparative peaceand quiet but Harvard, Dartmouthand Yale thought a big weddingwould be more impressive and conse¬quently make it last longer. A chor¬us of emphatic “Ayes” greeted “thehoneymoon in some secluded spot,”but there wasn’t a murmur in favorof “Monte Carlo and other gayplaces.”Discuss TrousseauJust how long the trousseau oughtto last was a matter for conjecturebut the hopeful estimate was “atleast a year.” Dartmouth voted alonein favor of “mad, silly hats,” though“dingbats for evening wear,” receiv-e<l no support whatever. Ultra-shortbathing suits were, generally speak¬ing, quite acceptable, but of doubt¬ful desirability for one’s own wife.Only Williams approved flat-heeledshoes for other than sports wear andlikewise voiced a singular approvalfor mannishly tailored suits. Printedsilk dresses were preferred to solidcolors, Princeton, however, advisingselective care lest the result be some¬thing like Aunt Martha’s Christmastie.In matters of beauty the jury seem¬ed most opinionated. “Lipstick is anecessity to be used judicially—andindellibly.” Red nail polish was per¬turbing to all except Williams whobalked only because “it is too oftenvividly overdone.” Bleached hair wasvoted out completely though Yale andAbbott DiscussesJuvenile Crime inIssue of “SurveyThat community organization isneeded in addition to, and in part, inplace of, the juvenile courts was thetheme of an article by Grace Abbott,professor of Public Welfare Admin¬istration, in the current issue of“Survey, a Journal of Social Work.”Commenting on the recent bureau toaid in the adjustment of delinquentchildren, instituted by Mayor La-Guardia of New York, Miss Abbottasserted that “because the juvenilecourt i.s a court” there are certaintypes of cases which could be handledmore successfully by some otheragency. Typical conduct cases werecited as an example of the above asthe author of the article raised thequestion of the form which the newcommunity organizations advocatedshould take.The schools were ruled out, not onlybecause of their lack of curriculumin matters of correction, but also be¬cause many problems are not evidentin the child until he reaches highschool. Other difficulties arise fromthe fact that many children are inparochial schools and misunderstand¬ings between teacher and parent area constant source of trouble.Concluding, Miss Abbott states:“Experience in this country showsthat in view of what we have learnedin recent years about the mental andemotional problems of children, weshould not ask a judge to decide whatshould be done for the very large per¬cent of delinquents. In the opinion ofthe writer this should be the functionof neighborhood centers to whichparents could turn for help in childtraining.” Princeton condescended to overlookan occasional slight something in therinse water.False eyelashes received not one af¬firmative vote and the same wentfor painted toe nails, Princeton ob¬serving that “‘their only value mightbe to some future anthropologist whowished to compare the decorativehabits of ring-in-the-nose aborigineswith 20th Century American women.”Pencil-thin eyebrows were another ta¬boo, “such hirsute adornments as donot approximate those of Irvin S.Cobb or a mountain goat, should beleft alone.” Eye-shadow put the juryin mind of Dracula, and a bride re¬tiring for the night in hair curlersand gobs of cold cream would bearstriking resemblance to a WhiteZombie.Harvard alone came out wholeheartedly in favor of perfumes, Dart¬mouth insisting that “a man nevernotices it until it is put on in suchquantities as to become distasteful.”On the subject of “making up inpublic” Dartmouth was again mostvitriolic, citing “powder in public—pet in the park” as his best reason.All except Harvard were againstbeaux after marriage, this dissentermaintaining that extra curricularcompanionship was all right if itdidn’t come too soon after the wed¬ding and provided, of course, that“they weren’t too utterly utter aboutit.” Careers were all right too asfar as he was concerned “for asidefrom certain economic advantagesthey keep a young wife out of mis¬chief.”List Desirable TraitsAttributes unanimously desiredwere; beautiful face and figure (inthat order), a flair for cooking and.sewing, “after all what was a wifefor,” participation in golf, tennis,swimming, etc., courage in avoidingthat one last cocktail that invariablydoes the damage, (providing shedrinks at all), sunny enthusiasm (butonly when it is appropriate), an abil¬ity to save without stinting and, mostof all, occasional glimmerings of in¬telligence.'Undesirable traits, including theantitheses of the above, were: habit¬ual sarcasms, risque stories (parti¬cularly if badly told), swearing (ex¬cept when undeniably justified), call¬ing the office at frequent intervalsto chat, leaving a party too early orstaying too late, buying furniturethat is too modern for comfort or tooantiquated for safety—in short, ex¬tremes of any sort, for the commit¬tee seemed to place a wishful rever¬ence in the two words, “con.servative”and “natural.”—MademoiselU' Maga¬zine. Cite Openingsfor Women inBusiness W orldGibbs Asserts There AreMore Jobs than CollegeWomen.“Openings for college women ? Atthe present moment, business seemsto want more trained college womenthan there are to be had,” accordingto James Gordon Gibbs, of New York,president of the Katharine GibbsSchools, through which college womenannually receive good business posi¬tions.The above declaration should affordreassurance to the women in the Uni¬versity who will be or are now lookingfor summer positions of one kind oranother.Demand for Clerical WorkMost of the openings are office posi¬tions, clerical or secretarial work.Dorothy Adams, director of the Uni¬versity Employment office, recom¬mends that every woman has or ac¬quires a working knowledge of short¬hand and typing. Miss Adams says,“If a girl can type and type well, shecan certainly get temporary work.The demand for good secretaries ex¬ceeds the supply.”There have been calls for salesgirls.There are no special requirements inorder to fill these positions, but anyexperience in sales work, especially inthe Loop, would be an asset. In ad¬dition, there are a few camp counsel¬ing jobs, although most of these aretaken early in the year, around Jan¬uary or February. The applicant mustbe 21 years of age with experience indirecting sports or handicraft workor have training in handicraft.The Placement office of the Uni¬versity gets requests to fill all sortsof positions from day to day. Conse¬quently, there is no definite knowl¬edge as to what will be coming ineven within a few days. Diet, Exercise NeedExtraordinary Carebefore ExaminationsIf an advertisement announced“New and painless cure for compre¬hensive headaches,” it is logical toassume that the majority of the stu¬dents on campus would buy theremedy at the earliest opportunity.Whereas there is no specific curelabeled as such in one tiny bottle,common sense in regard to diet andexercise will achieve the same resultsfor students.As the comprehensive dates grownearer and the intensive study andconcentration become more tense,many of the students are inclined toneglect their diet completely. Somehave gone so far as to go on a coffeediet alone; physicians as well as dieti¬tians have objected to this, statingthat the beverage drugs the nervesand leaves the body in a generally ex¬hausted condition. Lillian Marshall,who superintends the menus at theCloister club, advises people who in¬sist upon going on a liquid diet, todrink milk, for it is nutritive as wellas filling.Miss Marshall was reluctant tostate general food requirements, ex¬plaining that all individual needs arenot similar. However, she doesrecommend a well-balanced diet in¬cluding fresh vegetable plates, meatonce a day, liver once a week, plentyof milk, and fresh fruits.In general, students eat lightly be¬fore comprehensives.The consideration of the foodproblem is coupled in importance withthe problem of sufficient exercise.Miss Marguerite E. Kidwell, directorof physical education at Ida NoyesBlakemore Dining Room6230 Kimbark Ave. Dor. 8222LUNCH 25c—50cDINNER 50c—75cSUNDAY DINNER 50c—75cHome Cooking Our Speciality Page Threehall, describes exercise as an “excuseto break away from studying” whichfreshens the mind at the same time.It is only by getting away from notesand print for a short period that themind may relax. For those who re-.side on campus, facilities at Ida Noyesfor golfing, swimming, tennis, bad¬minton, and social dancing are attheir disposal. The commuters, onthe other hand, will find that even tenminutes of stretching and bendingexercises will freshen their tiredmuscles and equally tired heads.It is granted that comprehensivesdo require large amount of prepara¬tion, but at the same time it is wellto remember in the words of Dr. Sten-house of Billings hospital, “Youth canpush itself hard when it is necessary,but even youth in time will reach itslimitations, which may prove disas¬trous if he is not careful.”HYDE PARK , J’pUWEDNESDAY‘ KING OF THE DAMNED”CONRAD VEIDTLJ I? P F 1^ 5;^r<l and Harperrl^ In I CIV Matinee DailyWed. and Thurs.‘‘NAUGHTY MARIETTA”Jeannette MacDonaldand Nelson EddyPICCADILLY51st and BlackstoneMATINEEDAILYWED. - THURS. - FRIDAY“The Prisoner ofShark Island”withWARNER BAXTERGLORIA STUARTStarting Saturday‘13 HOURS BY AIR”Send Delegates toYWCA ConventionAlthough many group activitieshave been curtailed in view of springexaminations, YWCA members arenow focusing their interests on theannual conference at College Camp,Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.To date, sixteen women will com¬prise the delegation from the Uni¬versity, one of the largest represen¬tations in many years. The group in¬cludes: Laura Bergquist, Annie Groot,Beth Hemmens, Jane Hebert, RubyHowell, Dorothea Krueger, BettyMitchell, Audrey Neff, Betty AnnNelson, Mrs. Agnes Prentice Smith,Ada Swineford, Elinor Taylor, HelenThomson, Marie Wolfe, Helen Wood-rich and Caroline Zimmerly.In addition to the student delega¬tion, faculty speakers will includeEugene A. Staley, professor of Eco¬nomics, who will lead round table dis¬cussions on the international peacesituations.With the close of the quarter alsocomes the announcement by theYWCA advisory board of the reap¬pointment of Mrs. Agnes PrenticeSmith as secretary and Bettyan Nel¬son as assistant secretary. Bettyannheld the position of general chairmanof the Lake Geneva conference lastyear.The YWCA is also aiding in tagday activities today in co-operationwith the University settlement organ¬ization. The freshman group is atpresent functioning to plan activitiesfor autumn freshman week, underthe leadership of Clara Sprague. NEXT WEEK LITTLE PHOENAEDONS THE CAP AND GOWN ANDGOES TO ROOSTWHY?JOHN DOE TELLS ALL IN THEJUNE ISSUE OF THE PHOENIX,OUT NEXT WEDNESDAYrDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four WEDNESDAY. MAY 20, 1936\ X Netmen Win Doubles Matches KocsisandMalloyto Defeat Northwestern, 4-211 Golfing HonorsBickel Makes Comeback toDefeat Russell BallThree Sets. in(Continued from Page 1)gess of the University played Don¬ald Leavens, ranked first in Mid-Western junior rankings, who hasalternated at the number one positionwith Russell Ball most of the year.Burgess lost for one reason, he start¬ed too late. Leavens romped throughthe first set, 6-1, and when the Ma¬roon ace started he was a set behind.The handicap was too great andLeavens edged out a win in the sec¬ond set, 7-5, to sweep the match.Mertz LosesAvenging his loss in the first en¬gagement of the two teams, GeorgeBall, Northwestern captain, whippedHerb Mertz of the Maroons, 6-2, 8-6.Mertz, who whipped the second Ballbrother at Evanston, 6-2, 6-2, wasapparently still enjoying his victory.Over-confident, he also started toolate and after bringing the second setup to 6-all he went down.To even up the singles matches,Shostrum battled doggedly and hispersistent fight finally wore downRugg, 10-8, 6-4. In his best momentshe showed much of his old-time skill.Doubles Decide MatchThe doubles matches decided theday, and in the first Bickel and Bur¬gess, showing excellent teamwork,took the two Ball brothers, 6-4, 6-2.Burgess’ spectacular kills at the netbrought the applause of the specta¬tors. In the second doubles matchMertz aided Shostrum ably andLeavens and Rugg were unable tokeep up, losing 6-4, 4-6, 6-2.At'BatwithEd VincekThe best crowd of the season turn¬ed out for the Indiana-Chicago ballgame to pay their respects to theseniors who played their last Big Tengame of their careers here. Amongthose celebrating their last homegame in Conference competition wereBill Haarlow, Connor Laird, BussYedor, Dick Cochran, Hank Trojka,Joe Kacena, and A1 Hoffman.* ♦ *A1 Hoffman, one of the more quietmembers of the Maroon ball squad,is one of the swellest fellows youwould ever want to meet. He is eager,yet sincere, and a maker of life longfriendships. But besides his personalqualities A1 is also a very good bailplayer, only that he has the misfor¬tune of being an understudy to asexcellent a first baseman as BillHaarlow and thus has had very littleopportunity to distinguish himself.* * *Roy Soderlind has been gaining inhis playing ability by leaps andbounds. During the earlier part ofthe season he warmed the bench mostof the time because of his inability toget started. However, Roy’s fieldingnow is smooth and sure and his bat¬ting has improved tremendously. So¬derlind hit safely in all his appear¬ances at the plate in the Hoosier en¬counter, thus showing that he cancork that old apple plenty.«The five teams within the upperbracket of the Big Ten baseball stand¬ings are within striking distance ofthe title as the teams enter into thefinal three weeks of play. While theMaroons are just about out of thetitle race, yet it is quite certain thatthey will not slip lower than sixthplace and they may be able to pushup in the standings a notch or two.Conference StandingsW. L. Pet.Michigan ....7 1 .875Minnesota ...6 1 .875Iowa 6 1 .875Illinois 9 2 .818Indiana .... 5 2 .714Chicago .5 .3 .625Wisconsin 3 5 .375Purdue 1 9 .100Northwestern 0 9 .000Ohio State 0 9 .000 Stauffer to Compete inOlympic Diving TryoutsAlthough the final Olympic divingand water polo tryouts will be heldin Chicago, July 3, 4, 5, Floyd Stauf¬fer will probably be the only Maroonrepresentative in the meet. Staufferwill compete in the diving events.Chuck Dwyer, Merrit Bush, andHubert Will, who led the Maroon wa¬ter polo team into second place in theCentral A.A.U. meet, qualifying Chi¬cago for the Olympic finals, are nowmembers of the high ranking I.A.C.team, which already has four otherformer Maroon stars in its ranks. BobBethke is planning to get up anotherChicago team to represent the Uni¬versity.Play Game for I-MChampionship TodayThe Intramural championship oftheUniversity will be decided todaywhen the independent and fraternitychampions clash. Phi Sigma Delta,fraternity champions, will meet Bur¬ton-Judson who unseated last year’schamps, the Dinkydinks to cop the in¬dependent division title. The gamewill be played on the field at 95th andCottage Grove at 3:15.Monday the Phi Sigs overwhelmedPhi Beta Delta in the fraternityleague finals, thus earning the rightto compete for the University cham¬pionship. Josephson who was on themound for the Phi Sigs against PhiB D will probably be hurling for thefraternity champs tomorrow, while op¬posing him will be Lawson of theBurton-Judsonites. EVANSTON, May 19—(UP) —The battle for the Big Ten individualgolf championship settled down to aduel between a pair of Michigan vet¬erans, Charles (Chuck) Kocsis andWoody Malloy, as the field of 40 fin¬ished today’s morning round andheaded into the final 18 holes.Kocsis, the stocky blonde sharp¬shooter who is attempting to regainthe title he held in 1934, passed the54 hole mark in possession of a twostroke lead over Malloy, who cut histeammate’s advantage a stroke. Heshot the windswept Kildeer course in38-36—74 this morning.Kocsis, after rounding the turn in36, one over perfect figures, ran intotrouble on the back nine and finishedwith a 75. His 54-hole total was 214as compared to Malloy’s 216.Michigan’s four-man team of Koc¬sis, Malloy, Saunders, and Barclaycontinued to top the team standings,having an 877 total at the 54 holepause. The highest score any Wolver¬ine had turned in was Saunder’s 77 inthis morning’s play.Rifle Team to Take onWheaton College SquadThe rifle team of Wheaton collegewill shoot a match against the University rifle team in the range of theWest stands Friday. Shots will befired from the sitting and standingpositions. No team has been pickedfrom the local club, and any one mayshoot in the match who wishes, asthe final scores will be those madeby eight highest members of eachsquad.The rifle club has been popularwith Maroon students this year.Maroons Expect to Garner Pointsin Big Ten Mile Relay, 440 DashWith practically every Big Tentrack record in grave danger of beingsmashed, the thirty-sixth annual Wes¬tern Conference track and fieldchampionships are scheduled to beheld Friday and Saturday on the OhioState field at Columbus. At least oneof the records will probably fallbefore the Maroon’s sensationalquarter-miler, Ray Ellinwood.While the complete Maroon entrylist is not as yet absolutely certain,it will undoubtedly include the milerelay team of Dick Wasem, JackWebster, George Halcrow, and Ellin¬wood, with the latter two also enter¬ed in the 440. Ellinwood may alsocompete in the 220, while Ed Krausewill compete in the sprints. NatNewman and John Beal will take careof the hurdles, with Dave Gordon inthe high jump, and Matt Kobak inthe broad and high jumps, and StuartAbel and possibly Bud Steele in thepole vault. Jay Berwanger, hailed inOhio State publicity as “the iron manof the Midway,’’ will not compete be¬cause of the pressure of comprehen¬sive examinations. Quintin Johnstonewill remain at home for the same rea¬son, while Steele’s entrance will de¬pend upon the recovery of his injuredankle.May Break RecordOn the basis of past records, Chi¬cago’s chief point-gathering hopesshould lie in the quarter-mile andmile relay events. It is considered asalmost certain that Ellinwood willsmash the present Western Confer¬ence quarter-mile record of :47.8,around two turns established by IvanF'uqua of Indiana in 1934; and also,it is probable that he will break theBig Ten record for a straight-awaycourse of :47.4 established in 1916 byanother great Maroon quarter-miler,Binga Diamond.Ellinwood will, however, have plentyof competition to face among theother entrants, led by the defendingchampion, Carleton Crowell of Wis¬consin. Other competitors will be thefour men who placed behind him,Stanley Birleson of Michigan, Wins¬ton “Sunny’’ Heg of Northwestern,Eugene Skinner of Iowa, and HarveyPatton of Michigan.Enter Relay TeamThe mile relay team of Wasem, Webster, Halcrow, and Ellinwood isconceded a distinct possibility ofplacing, with at least a third beingpredicted. In the Drake relays themilers, with the aid of a recordbreaking anchor leg by Ellinwood,managed to pull up to third place withNorthwestern winning in 3:19.8. Dur¬ing the trials, however, the Maroonsfinished out in front in 3:19.4 Therelay men appear to be in excel’lntshape at the present time, with Hal¬crow, who was out of several meetsearlier in the season because of ill¬ness, in better condition than he hasbeen this season.Today on theQuadranglesLecturesAlpha Zeta Beta. “The GeologicalHistory of Cephalopods.’’ Dr. CareyCroneis. Zoology 29 at 8.MeetingsZoology club. Zoology 29 at 4:30.Federation. Ida Noyes library at3:30.Arrian. Wicker room of Ida Noyesat 12.Chi Rho Sigma. Student lounge ofIda Noyes at 12.Pi Delta Phi. Wicker room of IdaNoyes at 3:30.BWO. Alumnae room of Ida Noyesat 12.Wyvern. Student lounge of IdaNoyes at 3:30.SSA. Alumnae room of Ida Noyesat 7:30.BWO dinner. YWCA room of IdaNoyes at 6.MiscellaneousASU political symposium. HarperMU at 7:30.Medical conference. Medicine 137at 4:30.Obstetrics and Geneology con¬ference. Dora DeLee hall at 8.Roentgenology-Pediatrics confer¬ence. Medicine 137 at 3:45.Roentgenology seminar. Medicine137 at 7.Band concert. Hutchinson court at7. Baseball SquadChampaignOrange and Blue Rated asOne of Best BalancedTeams in Big Ten. Travels toto Meet IllinoisWith a possible fifth place berth insight the Maroon ball team will in¬vade the mini camp today and seewhat can be done to make a littleprogress. However, Illinois are alsodetermined to win the game for thetitle hangs just outside their grasps.Illinois has one of the best balancedball clubs on the diamond this year.So far this season Illini has droppedonly two contests, one to Purdue andanother by a 1-0 score to Wisconsin.Howie Berg and Hale Swanson ablytake care of the pitching responsibili¬ties, while Eddie Dancisak, who isnow hitting .400 in eight ball games,is mighty powerful with the bat.Fanned SixteenHowie Berg fanned sixteen men thelast time the Maroons and Illinitangled and proved victorious in hand¬ing Kyle Anderson’s boys an 8-2set back.Dick Cochran will probably notmake the trip down to Urbana be¬cause of excessive amount of schoolwork. Thus a new outfield combina¬tion will have to be tried out. Ander¬son has been toying with the idea ofputting Buss Yedor in the outfield.As a pitcher Buss has fallen be¬low par this year but he has still re¬tained his hitting form from last sea¬son. He has done some pinch hittingthis year, getting one apiece in theIndiana and Ohio State games andbesides he got two good solid baseknocks against Northwestern atEvanston. Table Tennis GroupBeats Hyde ParkersHyde Park high school’s table ten¬nis team gave the Reynolds clubsquad a long evening last week, butthe Maroon paddle aces managed tosqueeze out a victory by the narrowmargin of one match. The final countfor the evening was 11-10.Captain Lowery of the Hyde Park¬ers, Illinois state champion, downedthe University champion and numberone player, Krietenstein, and McNeill,number three player on the Maroonteam, but lost to Greenberg, springquarter champion of the club. Green¬berg and Wilkins both had clean slatesfor the evening’s play, winning allthree matches. Classified AdsCollege student for summer months;pleasant work; can earn $160 to$300 monthly. Address Dept. E, 59E. Van Buren St.^ Chicago.jTENNIS RACKETSLARGEST, MOST COMPLETE STOCK$1.50 to $15.00RMtririKinK $1.75 to 16.50 (12BalU - PrMsea - CaTara • ViaonCOMPLETE TENNIS CLOTHINGWOODWORTH’S Book StoreISII E. 57th St. OPEN EVEMNt.SNear KiMbark Ava. Ph. Dorrheeier titUOdinner and supper (Saturdays at lunch¬eon). Cover charge after 9:30 P. M.only. $1 weekdays; $1.50 Saturdays.URBAN ROOMCONGRESS HOTELJohn Burka. ManagarBatisaal Netai ManagenisiH Cammamt, Ise.RaleiilUtz.Prss. • i.E.Fraetay.VicaPrss.You May Not KnowWho compiled itWhere you can get itWhen it will come outWhere you’ll scare up the $3.50But You Can Be SureIt is cleverly writtenIt is beautifully finishedIt contains a complete record of the yearYou’ll be entirely satisfied with itTheCap and GownFor 1936A few remaining copies are now on sale at Lexington Hall... mv