Vol. 36. No. 118 Price 3 Cents, UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1936 Member United PressPublications Boards SelectHyman Editor of CombinedLiterary - Humor Magazine11 Duce FormsAfrican EmpireFrom EthiopiaPlan Division of ConqueredKingdom Despite LeagueOpposition.KOME, June 1—(UP)—In defianceof the League of Nations, GreatBritain and the other sanctionistpowers, the Italian cabinet todaycarved Ethiopia into thi-ee states,added them to Eritrea and ItalianSomaliland and proclaimed a newRoman empire to the world.Simultaneously, the governmenttightened its hold on the Italianwheat market when the Cabinet ap¬proved a law providing for “totali¬tarian accumulation of wheat.”Only the necessities for direct con¬sumption or sowing are excluded fromthe law, which also provides for aprice fixed by the government, thusfacilitating national distribution ofthe commodity in event of war.Fears New ConflictThe new law is in line with Pre¬mier Renito Mus.solini’s nationaliza¬tion of all key industries to prepareItaly for the conflict which she fears iscoming, perhaps as result of the Fas¬cist conquest of Ethiopia.11 duce himself presided c er thecabinet se.ssion in which the threeFascist states of Ethiopia were cre¬ated.Division of Emperor Haile Selas¬sie’s conquered kingdom was made inaccordance with geographical position,and historical, cultural and linguis¬tic ties, as follows:1. F^itrea, with the .seat of theregional government at Asmaria.2. Amhara, with the capital at(londar. Amhara, in northwesternEthiopia, includes the controversialLake Tana region, for many yearsBritain’s si^ecial si)here of influence,and is bordered on the West by the.\nglo-Egyptian Sudan.d. Galla and Sidamo provinces withthe capital at Gimma. This territoryis in .southwestern Ethipia. Italiantroops have not yet occupied all of it.4. Harrar, with the capital at thecity of Harrar, in .south-eastern Ethi¬opia.r>, Italian Somaliland, with theregional government at Mogadi-scio.The central government of the Ea.st.\frican empire will be at historic•Addis Ababa. It will be headed by aviceroy, to be a.ssisted by a council( Continued on page 2 )Supreme CourtVoids New YorkLabor StatuteWASHINGTON, June 1—(UP) —The U. S. Supreme court today killedthe New York Minimum Wage lawfor women and children in a far-reaching decision which appeared todoom efforts to control or regulatesalaries and hours of the nation'sworkers by federal or state legisla¬tion. It was a 5 to 4 decision.Although the Court’s verdict wasrestricted to the New York statute,it definitely imperiled similar legis¬lation in .seven states which inter¬vened in the case. They are Ohio,Connecticut, Illinois, Massachu.setts,New Hamp.shire, New Jersey andRhode Island.The majority of the Tribunal heldthat the New York law would de¬prive i)er.son.s of their liberty withoutdue process of law and was discrim¬inatory in that it would place womenat a di.sadvantage in competing withmen to earn a living. Sub.scribing tothis viewpoint wei’e Justices WillisVan Devanter, James Clark McRey-nolds, George Sutherland, Pierce But¬ler and Owen J. Roberts.Chief Ju.stice Charles Evans( Continued on page 2 )THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)MORAL SIGNIFICANCEThat the world has merely a physi¬cal, and no moral significance, is thegreatest, the most pernicious, the fun¬damental error, the true perversity ofopinion, and is at bottom that whichfaith has personified as Anti-Christ.Schopenhauer, Ethics Austrian HeadLeaves for Italyas Trouble LoomsVienna, June 1—(UP)—Chancel-,lor Kurt Schuschjiigg, confrontedwith the threat of civil war as re¬sult of his coup d’etat which ou.stedPrince Ernest Voji Starhemberg asco-dictator, left suddenly for Ven¬ice, Italy, tonight, presumably to con¬fer with Italian authorities, includ¬ing Premier Benito Mussolini.Starhemberg'.s private army, theHeimw’ehr, Numbering 120,000, isawaiting the “opportune moment” torestore its leader to power.A government spokesman saidSchuschnigg is going to Italy for a“much needed vacation at the .seashore.”Vice Chancellor Eduard Baar VonBaarenfels will be acting Chancellorin Schuschnigg’s ab.sence.Some observers believe Mussoliniand Schuschnigg will seek a formu¬la for Austro-German peace, thusenabling establishment of an anti-French, anti-Soviet front if Parisand Moscow continue to press for ap¬plication of .sanctions against Italy. |It was believed in some circlesthat II Duce will give his full sup¬port to Schuschnigg as new dictatorof Austraia in preference to Star¬hemberg, commonly regarded asMu.ssolini’s protege.Sees Threat ofArmed ActionJapanese Spokesman Pro¬tests Destruction of Rail¬way.‘ PEIPING, Tuesday, June 2—(UP)—A spokesman for the Japanese ar¬my .said today that if the official Ja¬panese investigation of de.structionof a part of the Shanhaikwan-Peip-ing railway reveals that “The digni¬ty of the Japanese army has been af¬fected” the Japanese forces immedi¬ately w'ill “resort to strong meas-ure.s.”The spokesman said that a mili¬tary commi.ssion now is questioningChinese believed to have had a partin the damage to the railway, be¬tween Tientsin and its down-riverport, Tangku. H<* .said rails wereremoved from a considerable sectionof the tracks and a bridge bombed.The line was quickly repaired andmovements of Japanese troops werenot affected. Purpose of the Ja¬panese investigation primarily wasto determine whether the Chine.se( Continued on page 2 )Nicaraguan GuardBesieges Presidentas Revolt FlaresManagua, Nicaragua, June 1—(UP)—Gen. Anastasio Somoza, chiefof the Rebellious National guard, wasin virtual control of Nicaragua to¬night while President Juan B. Sa-casa, surrounded by 800 loyal troops,remained besieged in the presiden¬tial palace atop Tiscapa hill.Guardsmen entrenched in machinegun nests controlled the approachesto the palace from nearby streetsand the Campo de Marte, army gen¬eral headquarters at the foot of thehill.Other guard units, under personalcommand of General Somoza, be¬sieged Fort Acosasco, near Leon,whose commander, Maj. Ramon Saca-sa, refused a rebel ultimatum to sur¬render. Somoza ordered artillery in¬to position for an attack on the fortbut it was expected to fall by tomor¬row without use of the heavy guns.It was reported surrounded and So¬moza was determined to starve itsdefenders into submission.Say Country QuietA national Guard bulletin said theentire country was quiet while inManagua banking and other com¬mercial activities w'ere normal.Here, as in other cities and townsof the republic, new authorities havereplaced those deposed by the Na¬tional guard. All the new officialsare supporters of Somoza. TheGuard bulletin explained the removalof departmental and municipal auth¬orities was made necessary by dis¬satisfaction of the people with thegovernment authorities who, the bul¬letin said, were elected fraudulently. Seniors PlanAnnnal ClassDay ProgramHold Meeting Thursday inMandel; Announce TicketSalesmen.Announcement of a Senior classmeeting to be held Thursday at 11:55in Mandel hall was made yesterdayby Jay Bervvanger, president, whowin preside.Berwanger also announced that allmembers of the University are invitedto attend Senior class day, June 15.Bids for the affair may be obtainedfor $3.30 a couple and will providea day of sports, a dinner at 6:30, andan evening of dancing to a competentorchestra. Excess receipts will gotowards the Senior class gift fund.Fraternity salesmen for the affairinclude: Bill Beverly, Alpha DeltaPhi; Quentin Ogren, Beta Theta Pi;Raymond Lahr, Chi Psi; Edward Sib-|ley, Psi Upsilon; Nat Newman, PiLambda Phi; and James Gordon, PhiBeta Delta.Others are Robert Shallenberger,Delta Upsilon; Hiram Lewis, DeltaKappa Epsilon; Dwight Williams, Sig¬ma Chi; John Bodfish, Kappa Sigma;Edward Stern, Zeta Beta Tau; Rob¬ert Kesner, Alpha Tau Omega; andDon Elliot, Phi Kappa Psi.Melvin Ury, Phi Sigma Delta; Em¬ery Fair, Phi Kappa Sigma; BradfordWiles, Phi Gamma Delta, and CharlesAxelson, Phi Delta Theta will alsosell tickets.Women who will sell bids in thewomen’s dormitories and to all women,include Jeanne Stolte, Barbara Vail,Cynthia Grabo, Ruth Rainey, BettyEllis, Lilliam Schoen, Alice Johnson,and Harreyette Nightingale.The committee of ticket salesmenin the men’s dormitories include ReaKeast, chairman; George Schustek,and Jack Bracken.Senior day will be held at the Cher¬ry Hills golf course, approximatelyfifteen miles southwest of the campus.Sport facilities available include golf,tennis, and riding, baseball, and groupgames. Senior day, formerly a high¬light of senior activities, has been dis¬continued for several years on cam¬pus, although the last such day, heldat the Olympia F'ields country clubwas very successful.Elect Jones NewPolitical ScienceClub PresidentVictor Jones, research a.ssociate inPolitical Science, was chosen nextyear’s head of the Graduate PoliticalScience club at its meeting last Fri¬day. Robert Morss Ix)vett, professorof English, spoke on “The Novel asa Form of Political Propaganda.”Other officers elected at the meet¬ing are: William Hagerty and AveryLeiserson, vice-presidents; CharlesThompson, secretary-treasurer; andMargaret Chandler, head of the Pro¬gram Committee.In speaking on propaganda and thenovel, Lovett gave an historicalresume of the “novel with a pur¬pose”, commenting that, contrary tothe majority of contempoi-ary opin¬ion, the post-war novel revealing the“horrors of conflict” had been effect¬ive. Authors alluded to as havinginfluencetl political thought by thenovel weie Dickens, Disi'aeli, God¬win, Kingsley, and Reade.ASU Holds FarewellParty Honoring LovettRobert Morss Lovett, professor inthe F^nglish department who will I’e-tire at the end of this quarter, will begiven a fairwell party by the campuschapter of the ASU on Friday, June12 in the librai’y of Ida Noyes hallfrom 4 until 6.Lovett,’ a member of the faculty for42 years, has been intimately connect¬ed with student affairs and problems,and has been a champion of the tradi¬tional liberties and academic freedom.He will become a professor emeritusin the fall. Council DiscussesPlans for NextYear at MeetingThe final meeting of the Interfra¬ternity council will be held tonight at7:30 in the Reynolds club. Room D,it was announced yesterday by Rob¬ert Shallenberger, president of theexecutive committee. Plans for nextyear will be discussed. Chief amongthese are a summer rushing programand the proposal to print a book aboutthe University of fraternity systemwhich would be distributed to allfreshmen during orientation week.The cost of this publication, whichwould contain rushing rules, picturesand lists of members of all the houses,and other information, will have to bepro-rated among the various houses.An extremely low estimate has beenreceived on the work. Details will beexplained this evening.Another matter to be considered bythe council will be the final ratifica¬tion of the new purchasing plan. Ithas already been approved by thegroup at an earlier meeting, but noaction has been taken since the com¬plete setup has been announced.Unveil CarlsonPortrait BustWoodward Accepts Giftfor University; Luck-hardt Delivers Address.Before more than one hundred sci¬entists, many of them his present andformer students, a portrait bust ofDr. Anton J. Carlson, distinguishedUniversity physiologist, was formallyunveiled yesterday in the corridor ofthe physiology building on the cam¬pus.Presenting the bust to the Univer¬sity, Dr. Arno Luckhardt, his col¬league, said that no other head of aphysiology department, with the possi¬ble exception of Dr. Karl Ludwig ofLiepzfg, could number so many dis¬tinguished scientists among those hehad trained as could Dr. Carlson. Dr.Carlson’s credo, he said, is thatfacts must be ascertained by observa¬tion, not divination.Vice-President Frederic Woodwardaccepted the bust in behalf of theUniversity. Executed in bronze byMrs. Alice Littig Siems, the bust isthe gift of a large group of Dr. Carl¬son’s friends and former students.The committee consisted of Drs. A. C.Ivy of Northwestern university, C. 1.Reed of the University of Illinois, T.E. Boyd of Loyola university, L. R.Dragstedt of the University, and Clay¬ton Lundy of Rush Medical college.Part I of “A Dictionary of Ameri¬can English” edited by Sir WilliamCraigie, professor emeritus of English,James R. Hulbert, and staff will beone of the seven books by Universityprofessors to be published by the Uni¬versity Press this summer. It is nota dictionary of Americanisms, nor adictionary of slang, but it includes, asfar as possible, every word, phrase,or usage which has originated onthis side of the Atlantic and “impor¬tations” which have had connectionwith the development of the country.The work of collecting material forthe dictionary has been carried onsince 1925, when Sir William Craigie,foremost lexicographer of the world,was brought over to this country andmade a member of the University fac¬ulty. He has had the assistance ofAmerican scholars, and voluntaryworkers from universities through¬out the United States. Words andsenses are restricted to those in usebefore 1900, although the illustrationof these is frequently carried into thefirst quarter of this century. Thematerial from which the dictionaryis compiled includes many thousandsof books and letters, diaries, news¬papers, magazines, and official rec¬ords. The complete dictionary willcomprise four or five volumes, mak¬ing a total of between twenty andtwenty-five parts. Each part will con¬sist of about 120 pages and will bepaper bound for greater conveniencein rebinding in permanent form asvolumes are completed.Other books to be published dur¬ing the summer are: “Culture andConscience: An Archaelogical Study Named New Editorof Campus MonthlySidney HymanDowntownCollegeOffers Course onTrends in OrientA course in “Modern Trends in theOrient” will be added to the programof the University college for the sum¬mer quarter, according to an announce¬ment by Dean Carl F. Huth yester¬day. Instructor of the course will beSunder Joshi, a fellow at the Univer¬sity of the department of Compara¬tive Religion.Subjects included in the course arethe historical background «f the fareast, its traditional social and indi¬vidual disciplines, elements in the im¬pact of western civilization, the typi¬cal forms of reorientation in India,and the contemporary movements andtrends in Japan and Chia.Joshi’s cultural background makeshim a particularly capable instructorfor the course. Descended from a longline of high caste Brahmin ministersof the Hindu faith, he is a Hindu bytradition, a Christian by faith and aMoslem by early environment. Heholds a masters’ degree from Har¬vard and is now completing his workfor a Ph.D. here.of the ‘New’ ” by William CreightonGraham, professor of Old TestamentLanguage and Literature, and Her¬bert Goi’don May of the faculty atOberlin cllege; “The Tenements ofChicago” by Edith Abbott, dean ofthe school of Social Service Adminis¬tration and member of the IllinoisState Housing commission, 1931-33,and collaborators is a study of thehousing problems of Chicago duringthe past twenty-five years; a revised(Continued on page 3)Vincent Speaks on**Pain of Thinking**at Commencement“The Pain of Thinking’’ is the ti¬tle of George Edgar Vincent’s convo¬cation address, to be delivered in theUniversity Chapel, June 16 at 3.Former dean of the faculties ofArts, Literature and Science at theUniversity, Dr. Vincent is well knownin the University community. He isa retired president of the Rockefel-lar Foundation, and former presidentof the University of Minnesota.He holds a Ph.D. from the Univer¬sity, and an LL.D. from both Michiganand Yale. He has been one of theleaders of the Chautauqua movement,having held the position of honorarypresident since 1914.Invitations to the Convocation willbe available at the office of Miss Val¬erie Wickhem, editor of Official Docu¬ments, Harper M12, and may be ob¬tained by seniors upon applicationstarting Minday. Name Reese, Warshawsky,Pardridge, Rosenthal toNew Board.Sidney Hyman, graduate studentin International Relations and authorof Blackfriar’s Fascist and Furious,will edit the new literary-humormagazine during the next academicyear, according to an announcementmade yesterday afternoon followingstaff elections by the Phoenix andComment boards. Four other studentswere selected to fill positions on theboard of control of six.Henry Reese, member of the Chi-Psi fraternity and Dramatic associa¬tion, will fill the position of managingeditor; and William Pardridge, ofBeta Theta Pi will be business mana¬ger. Contributing editor is the posi¬tion assigned to Mack Rosenthal;Everett Warshawsky will serve as ad¬vertising manager; and a women’seditor will be selected later by thenewly chosen staff.Name UndecidedThe magazine, combination of thepre.sent Phoenix and Comment, willbe a monthly publication, and mayadopt “Phoenix” as a continued tra¬dition, for its name. Literary articles,critical comment, politics and humourwill form the basis for the featuredmaterial and it is hoped that such acombination will increase present cir¬culation of the parent magazine, andwill be more welcomed by the campusat large.The new staff, selected by theboards of control of Phoenix andComment, is an entirely new set-upof managing groups of the formerpublications. In addition to the sixchief members of the staff, reorgani¬zation will entail the selection of as-.sociate editors, an exchange editor,and a circulation manager. ElectionlM)wer for these positions will lie com¬pletely in the hands of the board ofcontrol.Outgoing BoardsOutgoing staff members includeMartin Gardner, editor of Comment;and Don Morris, Phil Abrams, andAdele Sandman of the board of Con¬trol of Phoenix. This group, withother representatives of campus pub¬lications, recently met with WilliamE. Scott, assistant dean of students,to plan the Phoenix merger.Hold Course inForeignRelationsat NorthwesternRepre.sentatives from Internation¬al House will attend the fifth annualMid-West Institute of InternationalRelations to be held at NorthwesternUniversity, June 22 to July 3.The purpose of the course is topromote international understandingand to present a factual basis in re¬gard to international relations. Lastyear the membership of the Institutewas drawn from twenty states, andat least sixty civic organizations.On the faculty of the institute isGarfield V. Cox, professor of Eco¬nomics in the school of Business.Notables from outside the Univer¬sity include Julien Bryan, student ofthe Orient; Toyohiko Kagawa, Ja¬pan’s great Christian leader; Freder¬ick W. Norwood, minister of the CityTemple, London; James J. Pope,United States Senator from Idaho;Norman Thomas, socialist leader; Er¬nest Fremont Tittle, Evanston min¬ister and trustee of NorthwesternUniversity, and others.Schuman Delivers LectureSeries in South DakotaAssociate Professor of PoliticalScience, Frederick L. Schuman hasbeen engaged to deliver two lecturesat the Northern Nonnal and Indus¬trial School in Aberdeen, S. D., June16 and 17, it was announced today.The lectures will be given beforethe entire student body on the* sub¬jects of “Democracy vs. Dictator¬ship” and “Contemporary AmericanPolitical Trends” Contrary to previ¬ous reports Schuman will be in resi¬dence at the University for bothterms of the sununer quarter insteadof only the first.University Press Publishes First Partof American Dictionary This SlimmerPage Two THE DAILY MAROON,Italian Colonial Minister SeesPromise in Plans for Ethiopia(Editor’s note: In the followingarticle Alessandro Lessona, Italianunder Secretary of State of Colonies,reveals the basic principles guidingItaly’s program for exploitation ofEthiopia.)(Copyright, 1936, By United Press)ROME, June 1—The war whichwe were forced to conduct in Africahas ended victoriously. Now we candiscuss the work of peace.Having just returned from Ethio¬pia, where I participated in the cam¬paign, I am in a position to outlinefresh impressions together with theGovernment’s plans. The territory isfull of promise with the populationsfavorable to Italy. If those of Gen¬eva could listen to the voices of theEthiopian people rather than those ofdispossessed cliques, it would be veryclear on which side leans the consentof the Ethiopian people. They weretired of a regime based on oppression.They tolerated this regime only be¬cause they were bound together byforce of tradition.Has Seen PossibilitiesI have spoken of magnificent terri¬tories. In our advance on AddisAbaba, I had opportunity to see andevaluate the great possibilities.Our goverment intends to respectthe legitimate rights of the nativeswho are a necessary instrument in \our program. We hope to increaseagricultural activity and to do it witha spirit of social justice which willinsure a better local government.The legitimate rights of the nativeswill be ascertained through a survey.Distinction will be made between le¬gitimate rights and the claims ofusurpers who in the past regime hadtoo free a hand. Even the crudeEthiopian legislation admitted thenecessity of executing periodical re¬distribution of lands usurped by therases. Italy will not skip this duty ofsocial justice which will insure a bet¬ter local production.Room for BothThere is ample room for both na¬tives and whites in the vast Ethio¬pian territory. Unexploited lands areabundant.These principles will open the wayfor colonization. All sound initiativeaffording a safe guarantee of successwill be accepted. Preference will begiven to small colonization carried outby agriculturists.A good network of communicationsis a necessary premise for everyeconomic evolution. There is no roadin Ethiopia worthy of the name, sothe gov’ernment has decided to givereal roads to the Empire, roads whichwill link Ethiopia to our old colonies,w'hich will radiate from the heart ofEthiopia to the sea and to distantprovinces.Construct RoadsThe Government will construct2,800 kilometers of roads which willhave natural outlets into harbors. Weshall continue improvements of theharftor of Massawa. We intend tomake Assab a harbor for the Danakiland other inland regions. W’e shallsupply the Somaliland coast with acommercial harbor and we shall alsotake into consideration the advantageswhich the harbor of Djibouti, FrenchSomaliland, might offer us.The water courses, which abound inChe ^aily ^aroonFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the Unirersity 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,Editorial associates: Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell, Julian Kiser, John Morris,James Snyder, Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: Barton PhelpsAssistant: Henry Krayhill Ethiopia and which have constituteda danger both for the population andagriculture, will be controlled as asource of prosperity.Mining resources, of which littleis known, will be surveyed. Theywill be honestly exploited.Large Scale SanitationWe shall carry out sanitation andhygienic work on a large scale. Ihave been able to ascex’tain personallythe degree of degradation to whichso large a part of the Ethiopian-populace has been subjected. Thework of our physicans will be inten¬sified and extended throughout the en¬tire territory. We shall do our ut¬most to improve the natives morallyand intellectually.Our goverment will open schoolsand shops.Meanwhile we have abolished taxes.Subdivision of the Italian empire inEast Africa will be based on econ¬omic, ethical and communications cri¬teria. Our old colonies will be con¬sidered in their historic and geogra¬phic functions within the new empire.Customs and local religion will be re¬spected as long as they do not con¬trast with the principles of law, jus¬tice and morals.We do not hide to ourselves the en¬ormous difficulties which are waitingus in the work of improvement and re¬construction. We face them with con¬fidence. The world did not believethere could be such a swift militaryvictory for Italy, and it is still stupe¬fied by the results. We plan to stupefyit with another swift victory. A vic¬tory for the works of peace.Sees Threat ofArmed Action(Continued from page 1)attack on the line was officially in¬spired by agents of the Nanking gov¬ernment.Other Japanese believed that themost important element in the NorthChina situation, for the present, wasthe action of Mayor Hsiao Chen-Ying of Tientsin in retaining his postdespite Japanese military opposition.They predicted that Hsiao eventuallywill be forced to resign and will bereplaced by an executive sympathe¬tic to the Japanese program.The problem of Chinese forcesnorth of the Yellow river, it wassaid, might be solved by an agree¬ment between the Japanese army andthe Chinese commanders under whichthe Chinese troops would be with¬drawn to the South.Euroiiean observers, however, sawthe North China situation as still“loaded with dynamite."Plan to Resume DutiesA dozen Japanese army officers, as¬signed to take charge of GeneralSung Chen-Yuan’s 29th army corps,totalling 30,500 men, planned to as¬sume their duties despite vigorousefforts by sub-commanders of theChinese forces and student agitators.The Japanese “advisers," whosereal duty will be to reorganize theChinese forces into units which canco-operate with the Japanese army,were confident they would meet withno trouble. General Sung, it wassaid, has assured the Japanese highcommand that all opposition to apro-Japanese program in North Chi¬na will be ruthlessly suppressed.If the 20th corps revolts, as stu¬dents and pro-Nanking agitators areurging it to do, the Japanese canmuster only about 5,000 men in thePeiping region for immediate defen.se.Mussolini Carves NewEmpire from Ethiopia(Continued from page 1)of government, composed of high offi¬cials, and a general council, includingsix Italians selected among farmers,merchants and industrialists, and sixprominent natives.Marshal Rodolfo Graziani is actingviceroy of Ethiopia and is generallyexpected to be named viceroy shortlyto succeed Marshal Pietro Badoglio,commander-in-chief of the Italianarmies during the campaign. Ba¬doglio is not expected to return toEthiopia.Asmara will have a special admin¬istration under a city governor.The Cabinet reconfirmed the de¬pendence of the Coptic church on thePatriarch at Alexandria, Egypt, andalso guaranteed Moslems full religi¬ous liberty.Blakemore Dining Room6230 Kimbark Ave. Dor. 8222LUNCH 25c—50cDINNER 50c—75cSUNDAY DINNER 50c—75cHome Cooking Our Specialty Senate Passes NewDeal Work ReliefAppropriation BillWASHINGTON, June 1—(UP) —The Senate tonight passed a bill ap¬propriating $1,425,000,000 to continuethe New Deal’s work relief program,after defeating an amendment seek¬ing to turn administration of reliefover to bi-partisan state boards.The bill was pushed through undera self-imposed gag after hours ofgruelling debate. Leaders were de¬termined not to let the Senate quittoday until the important measurewas disposed of to clear the decks forthe tax bill, last bar to Congressionaladjournment.The relief appropriation is part ofthe $2,369,000,000 deficiency billwhich also carries funds for the socialSecurity program, TV A, and othermiscellaneous governmental activi¬ties.Before passage the Senate rejectedby a vote of 57 to 14 an amendmentby Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg ofMichigan, possible Republican presi¬dential nominee, seeking to substitutestate-administered relief for theWorks Progress .Administration andthe Public Works .Administration.Vandenberg proposed the establish¬ment of bi-partisan boards in each ofthe states and provided that federalfunds would be apportioned to statesthat put up 35 per cent of the money.Apportionment was to have been onthe basis of relative population, rela¬tive unemployment, relative livingcosts, and relative financial resourcesof the states.This general policy is a compositeof the views of Republican leaders asto how relief should be administered,and is expected to form the basis ofthe relief plank in the Republicanplatform at Cleveland.The Senate adopted another amend¬ment, proposed by the Appropriationscommittee, permitting PW.A adminis¬trator Harold L. Ickes to use a $300,-000,000 revolving fund for loans andgrants on larger construction projectsthan the type sponsored by Harry L.Hopkins’ WPA. The bill as it passedthe House made no provision what¬ever for the PWA.The measure now goes to confer¬ence with the House, so that the dif¬ferences between the two bodies maybe ironed out. IThe need for speed if the Senate!is to quit by Saturday night spurred 1the Upper Chamber in its work today.Supreme CourtVoids New YorkLabor Statute(Continued from page 1)Hughes broke with the conservativesto join the liberal trio and wrote abristling dissenting opinion.“I can find nothing in the FederalConstitution which denies to the statethe power to protect women from be¬ing ex’ploited by over-reaching employ¬ers through the refusal of a fair wageas defined in the New York statuteand ascertained in a reasonable man¬ner by competent authority," Hugheswrote.He noted that the majority opinionwas based in part upon the Court’sprevious position taken in 1923 whena law to regulate wages paid to wo¬men and minors in the District ofColumbia was held unconstitutional.Justice Pierce Butler in deliveringthe majority opinion held that theprinciples outlined in the District ofColumbia case were “sound" andshould be adhered to in the New Yorkcase.Classified AdsSTUDENTS’ TYPING SERVICE—5649 Dorchester Avenue. D. A.Cahill. Neat and accurate work. Rea¬sonable rates.TUTORING IN MATHEMATICS byChicago Ph.D.; individual or groupinstruction; reasonable rates. CallD. M. Dribin at Mid. 10266; after 6p. m. call Arm. 5153.FOR RENT—June 20 to Sept. 10.My home in Ogden Dunes. All mod¬ern conveniences including gas. Largeliving room, three bedrooms, sunperch, two baths, garage in basement.Beautiful view. Write me FacultyExchange or phone Local 670 or Og¬den Dunes 40.SUMMER WORK for energetic col¬lege student; splendid experience;healthful work; salary $175 for 70days. Write Dept. E, 59 E. Van BurenSt., Chicago, Ill.SUB-LEASE, June 30 to September15, cool 4 room apartment attractive¬ly furnished. Very close to the lake,Illinois Central (IC) and University.Reasonable rent to responsible party.Penn. 5511 Cornell Avenue. Call Mid¬way 1198, evenings. TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1936Relate Activities of Machado inFighting Cuban Student Movement(This is the first of two ex¬clusive articles on the history ofthe Cuban student movementduring the past few years ivrit-ten by Car'los March y Alvarez-Munez, secretary of the Nation¬al Cuban Studeyit Federation,and official of the InterumericanStudent Alliance, who spoke at arecent meeting of the ASU.)Gerardo Machado, President of theRepublic of Cuba, felt extremelysatisfied after the interview with theDisciplinary Court of the Universityof Havana. The president of theCourt had offered to the Dictator itsco-operation in solving with drasticmeasures the subversive activities of asmall group of students. The facultywas all on the side of the monsterwho already had shown himself inthe several political assassinationsthat had occurred in Cuba from 1925to 1927. His policies of “educating"the Cuban people were approved byall the serious thinking citizens, andamong them the professors of theuniversity. Mella, the student lead¬er, had called Machado in his famousarticle “Tropical Mussolini.” It wasgenerally accepted that it was anhonor to be compared to the Italianfounder of Fascism, but the tone ofthe article was insupportable, andMella was expelled.In February, 1927, the whole Uni¬versity Student directorate was ex¬pelled, many of its members for tenyears. Its crime: to have called ageneral meeting of the universityHull DiscussesForeigu PolicyWASHINGTON, June 1—(UP) —The policy of the “good neighbor" as ameans toward raising the “material,moral, and spiritual well being of theworld” was urged upon the thirdtriennial conference of the .Asso¬ciated Country Women of the Worldtoday by Secretary of Staite CordellHull.Hull expressed the opinion that thepresent “unprecedented catastrophe"in world economy is “largely of ourown making," and added:“Striking Contrast"“There is a striking contrast be¬tween the almost incredible decree ofmaterial progress achieved by ourcivilization in the past few decadesand the relatively smaller degree ofprogress—and in some instances, evenactual retrogression—that has markedthe sphere of human relations.“The development of transporta¬tion and communication and the tri¬umphant onward march of inventionand technical efficiency have laid thefoundation for a vastly higher level ofwell being for everybody everywherethan was ever known in history.“But this level can be attained onlythrough peaceful and sincere cooper¬ation of individuals within communi¬ties, of local communities with eachother and of nations among them¬selves. Unfortunately, in recent years,especially in the sphere of interna¬tional relations, such cooperation hasfrequently been sporadic and preca¬rious.”3 Months’ Shorthand Coursefor College Graduatesand UndergraduatesIdeal for taking notes at college or forspare-time or full time position.Classes gtart the first of July, OctoberJanuary, and AprilCall, write, or telephoneState 1881 for complete factsThe Gregg College6 N. Michigan Ave., ChicagoSELWYN Last 5 DaysTHE GROUP THEATERIN“AWAKE •AND• SING!”by CLIFFORD ODETSAn extraordinary play. Theseplayers are as close as Amer¬ica has had to the Abbey Play¬ers from Dublin—Lloyd LewisORIGINAL CAST INTACT184 Performances at Bclasro in N. Y.FIRST VISIT of the GROUP to CHICAGOMATS. WED.-SAT.. 83c to $2.20EVENINGS. 83c to $2.75 students to discuss the attacks of the jexecutive on the rights of free speechand assemblage in connection with jstudent activities. The student paper, I“Alma Mater" was raided; its editor jsent to jail. And the students of the jUniversity of Havana, with a longhistory of struggle against the Span¬ish tyranny behind them, could not |admit a new tyranny to be set up in jCuba without strong protest. It is !true that this new system was being 1organized in order to defend the j“rights" of the billion and a half idollars invested in Cuba by the Chase \National Bank, the National CityBank, and the United Fruit Companyin the only Cuban industry—sugar—to stem the protests that were spread¬ing all through Cuba against the un¬just exploitation. jAfter the expulsion, the studentsdeclared a strike that was not to end iuntil the reinstatement of the ex- ipolled students. Machado ordered thearmy to take over the University, jand for the first time in its history iof two hundred years was clo.sed. 'Since then it has been opemnl only :two years, 1929 and 1934. ^In September, 1930, it was closedagain to relieve the “excess” of pro- ifessionally trained men. Studentsprotested and in a demonstration be¬fore the presidential palace the first:student was killed; Rafael Trejo. Ina public statement the faculty backeilthe student movement. Three quart¬ers of the faculty was expelltnl byPresidential decree. HARPER 68rd and Harpe)'Matinee DailyLast Times Today“FOLLOW THE FLEET”Ginger Rogers Fred AstaireHYDE PARK uJ’pULast Times Today“MODERN TIMES”Charlie Chaplin Paulette GoddardStudents!!Save Yz of yourLaundry BillYear entire bundle ia washed iweet andclean in pure aoap and rain aaft water.Handkerchiefa and flat piecea ironed.Underwear. Pajamas, Sweaters, Sock*,etc., are fluff-dried ready to uae at onlylOc PER LB.Shirta De I.uxa Hand Finiahed, atarrhrd.mended, and buttona replaced, at8c EACHwithSTUDENT ECONOMYBUNDLEMetropole LaundryInc.’ Wealey N. Karlaon, Prea.1219-21 EAST 5.5th STREETPhone Hyde Park 3190We call and deliver at no extrachargeGET YOUR SCHOOLOR COLLEGE RINGBearing Your Schtwl Seal, Certified $2.00 Value^^with the purchaseONLY^g^J^J ofabtHtleofHirlcer Q11///X!at 15c—Total 40c—You Save $1.75This amazing uflTer is made solely to introduce Parker Quink—themiracle ink that cleans your pen as it writes—dries ON PAPER 31% FASTER.Seal Ringa forUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO U HIGHHYDE PARK LANE I.AKE VIEWNow AvailableThia Offer Made at the Following Store* Only and for Ten Daya OnlyU. of C. B(M>k Store, ('ampus Reader’s Drug Store.Woodworth’s. 1311 E. 57th St. 1001 E. 61st StreetClay’s, 6267 Harper .AvenueRing Sixea GuaranteedNo “DoctobedNews”IN MANY countries press associations areunder the influence of government agencies. Thesepress associations either are given government sub¬sidies, or are under such strict censorship that onlynews favorable to the government is distributed.Readers of newspapers in countries wherethese press associations operate are not given thereal facts about news events. The reports arecolored to fit the needs of the government. Storiesare given a favorable twist mistakes of theadministration are hidden behind thousands ofwords of propaganda true conditions aredeleted by censors from the press association re¬ports.But in America, press associations are free fromsubsidy, censorship, or governmental supervisionthey do not deliver “doctored news.’* Re¬ports of news events are given to readers withaccuracy and clarity in an unbiased andunprejudiced manner.The responsibility for this condition rests pri¬marily upon the shoulders of press association cor¬respondents. UNITED PRESS correspondentsall over the world jealously guard the UNITEDPRESS reputation for truth, honesty and impar¬tiality.These factors have contributed to a large de¬gree in making the UNITED PRESS the great¬est worldwide press association. Its news isprinted inThe Daily MaroonTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. JUNE 2, 1936 Page ThreeEditorialConsiders Role of BusinessSchool in UniversityWhat is the relation between uni¬versities and the business world?This question has been the subjectof much debate since the close of theWorld War. Before that time therewas no apparent preoccupation ofuniversities with the training of stu¬dents for business careers. Sincethen there have developed all overthe country business schools bothgraduate and undergraduate in con¬nection with every large educationalinstitution.It is natural that universities mustdepend on businessmen for a largepart of their endowments, but itseems that many institutions haveturntHl themselves over to the fanciesof the men of the business world.Puring this period the liberal artshave sufferetl tremendously, while theschools of business expand and takeon more and more the education of thebachelors of arts.Granted that certain courses in thecurriculum of the business schoolare of worth to a student that willenter the business world upon grad¬uation, they need not form the ma¬jority of his education.For a broader education he mighttake courses in the liberal arts, withsuch subjects as a survey of account¬ing procedure, the elements of statis¬tics, finance, and economic history forelectives, but there is no need for himto spend a large part of his time oncommunications, production and traf¬fic management. The content of thesestudies is either mere common-senseknowledge' or material that the busi¬nessman will have no contact withafterwards, for whenever he has aproblem involving the fields covered Park Talks at AnnualBanquet of SociologyClub Next ThursdayThe Sociology Club will hold its annual spring banquet Thursday at 7 inthe Gladstone Hotel at 62nd and Ken¬wood streets. Ernest W. Burgess, pro¬fessor of Sociology, will be the toast¬master and Robert E. Park, professorof Sociologj, will give the principaladdress of the evening.Tickets are priced at $1.00 and maybe purchased from Marshall B. Clin-ard, Bernard Hermann, Elma Stauf¬fer, or Florence Miller. The addressThursday may be the last time Parkwill speak in public this spring sincehe is scheduled to go to Harvard forthe summer quarter to conduct coursesin “Races and Nationalities” and “TheCrowd and the Public.”0uiliiverHeralds First Annual Reunionof “Guinea Pigs”By JOHN MORRISThe class of ’35 is throwing a par¬ty in Hutchinson court following theAlumni Revue June 12 (the night be¬fore the Sing) at which everyone willbe welcome on payment of a head taxof two bits.So many stories have been floatingabout concerning the thirtyfivers thatit is time to catch up with the tide, forit is written that time ‘and tide waitfor no man (anything waits for awoman).It is said that Charles Tyroler sosuccessfully polished the fruit forRaymond Moley this year at Columbiaby these courses on which he spent j that he is graduating as a Politicalone quarter or so he will call in a spe- Science Marshal, which entitles himcialist that makes the subject hislife’s work.The business school should take alesson from law schools, especiallythe University Law school. Al¬though they too are professional in¬stitutions training the students fortheir life’s work, law schools havemanaged to arrange their curricu¬lum so that the prospective lawyerhas a broader cultural base than hisbrother in the business .school. Suchinnovations as Professor MortimerAdler’s pre-legal course which stress¬es grammar, logic, and rhetoric; andtakes' a great deal of time studyingthe classics of the world are illustra¬tive of this trend. Even those stu¬dents who do not choose to take theirpre-professional year under Profes¬sor .\dler are allowed great leeway inselecting their courses from practi¬cally any department in the Uni¬versity.Prospective businessmen would dowell to spend a little less time ontheir simon-pure business trainingand a little more time in acquiringa higher education in metaphysicalrather than material pursuits. Infact there is no reason why a coursein grammar, logic, and rhetoric couldhave as much a place in the trainingof a businessman as it has in thetraining of lawyers.—E. S. Stern.Noted Woman AviatorSpeaks at Ida NoyesPhoebe Fairgrave Omlie, notedwoman flyer who is a member of theNational Advisory Committee forAeronautics, will give a public lectureon aviation today at noon at Ida Noyeshall. Miss Omlie was the first wom¬an to qualify for a transport licenseand also was the first woman to holdan aeronautical mechanical engineer'slicense. She has also won numerouscompetitions, including the NationalReliability Tour, and the NationalSweepstakes. to carry a gold baton. Next year Tyis going to the London School of Eco¬nomics. Pity poor England with twoChicago Dekes over there (Ebert ofcourse).Sidney Hyman, who is getting hisshare of publicity on the front pagetoday, will follow Tyroler to the Lon¬don School (or Royal Institute) yearafter next.Noisebox Noel Gerson is writingsynopses of all the plays in the Eng¬lish language for the Schuberts. Ittakes a Gerson to do the colossal.This is also an enlightening comment¬ary on the Schuberts.The Peggy Moore flock has returnedto the fold. O’Donnell, Bart Smith,and the others who had gone astrayhave formed a “Back to MooreLeague.”BREAKFAST FOODWhen Shipway came through witha home run in the last of the ninthwith two on, two down, the count 3and 2, and the Maroons losing to Wa*seda by two runs last Frjday, thecrowd naturally went wild. But Mrs.(mother) Shipway was most jubilantof all. Planting a kiss on the hero’slips, she exclaimed triumphantly,“Now young man will you eat youroatmeal in the morning!”SHORTSThe Quadranglers and Psi U’s hada get-together at the home of Phyl¬lis Cummins Friday night. It musthave been quite the party, for it costthe Quads each $2 and the Psi U’s each$5 to miss it.Things came to a sad state in theMaroon office yesterday afternoonwhen Jeanne Stolteiwas ^rced to writeToday on the Quadrangles, a menialfreshman task.Dean Brumbaugh broke his leg someten days ago, but we don’t knowwhether it was on business or pleas¬ure. At any rate they haven’t had toshoot him.????????? ??????c^. 5th RowCenterBy C. Sharpless Hickman{Note: The information forthis article, the fourth in a serieson the drama departments ofleading universities, has been sup¬plied by a Yale drama student.)Yale University, since the transferto Yale from Harvard of the lateGeorge Pierce Baker, has been thepossessor of the finest graduate schoolof drama in this country and, con¬sequently, the finest undergraduatedramatic organization.In understanding the organizationof Yale’s system, it must be under¬stood that the undergraduate “Dra-mat” society, though having no offi¬cial connection with the GraduateDepartment of the Drama, does muchof its work under the close supervi¬sion of Graduate students and instruc¬tors, and frequently serves as an ex¬perimental field for the practicalwork of those students. While theundergraduate curriculum offers moreactual courses in drama, dramatictheory and history than any otheruniversity, it is in the Graduateschool that one is introduced to ac¬tual theater working as a part of therecognized courses. Most of the ac¬tual dramatic activities in the collegeare extra-curricular in nature, suchas the productions of the “Dramat”society and the newly-added extra¬curricular course in fundamental mod¬ern dance movements (a course de¬signed to improve stage actions andpoi.se).The factor which primarily contrib¬utes to Yale’s success in the dramaticfield is the fact that the instructorsfortn what is undoubtedly the mostauthoritative single drama faculty inthis country. Heading the staff of theGraduate school is Allardyce Nicoll.Professor Nicoll, who succeeded Dr.Baker, was formerly Professor of theHistory of the Theater at the Univer¬sity of London, Under Dr, Nioll, andtaking over the play-writing coursesof Dr. Baker, is young Walter Prit¬chard Eaton, a Baker graduate andformerly one of the foremost Man¬hattan dramatic critics, AlexanderDean, who this year actually savedtwo current Broadway productionsby his unravelling of productionkinks, is the head of actual dramaticproduction and direction, while un¬der him teach famed Donald Oens-lager (scene design), Stanley R. Mc-Candless (lighting), and ConstanceWelch (dramatic technique).Offering courses in the undergrad¬uate department of Drama and Eng¬lish are such famed scholars as KarlYoung and C. F. Tucker-Brooke, whoare respectively the greatest authori¬ties in this country on the history ofMediaeval and Elizabethan drama.Dr. Nicoll’s own specialty is theRenaissance and Restoration drama.In addition to these courses, studentsintending to pursue their interest indrama through the Graduate schoolusually take several of the allied un¬dergraduate courses in French andGerman drama. In general the cur¬ ricular policy is to take the coursesin the literary and historical phasesof the drama in the under-graduateschool, and the technical work in thegraduate department.A list of the major productions ofthe last two or three years shows aprogramme of productions whichtakes no recognizance of the usualproduction difficulties attendant upondramatics at other and smaller insti¬tutions. Especially outstanding havebeen Rostand’s “Chantecler”; an orig¬inal play by Luther Martin Kennetbased upon the Lancelot-Guiniverelegend—“One Shall Be”; Nicholsand Browne’s timely peace drama,“Wings Over Europe”; the firstAmerican production of T. S. Eliot’s“Murder in the Cathedral”; Dryden’sgreat tragedy, “All for Love”; a high-comedy satire on the M’Divani broth¬ers entitled “We Three Kings”; anearly American 18th century comedy,“The Contrast”; and an Elizabethanplay, “George a Greene”.Above all, it is notably obvious thatthe dominant characteristic or forcein Yale dramatics is the fact thatthese students are interested in thedrama, per se, and not as a playthingto be toyed with in one’s lighter andmore exhibitionistic moments. Letters tothe Editor This is what I defended and not thefaulty workings of past committees.Further, in no place did I imply thata permanent organization and systemis not necessary for effective orien-I tation.H. W. Cutter.University PressPublishes Partof Craigie’s Work(Continued from page 1)edition of “An Introduction to Span¬ish Literature” by George T. North-up, professor of Spanish; “Methodsof Tissue Culture in Vitro and Out¬lines of Histological Methods” byRalph Buchsbaum, instructor in Zoo¬logy, and Clayton G. Loosli, of thedepartment of Anatomy; “The Storyof the Bible” by Dr. Edgar J. Good-speed, chairman of the department ofNew Testament and Early ChristianLiterature; “A Reverse Index ofGreek Nouns and Adjectives with aSurvey of Greek Nominal Formation”by Carl D. Buck, professor emeritusof Comparative Philology, and Wal¬ter Peterson.Charles E. Merriam, chairman ofthe department of Political Sciencehas written the foreword to “The Roleof the Bar in Electing the Bench inChicago” by Edward M, Martin. Mar¬garet Cochran Bristol, field work in¬structor in the school of Social Ser¬vice Administration, has written the“Handbook on Social Case Record¬ing”.IRENE’S BEAUTY SHOP1507 East 53rd StreetSECOND FLOOR—MID. 2517OPEN » A.M. to » P.M.SHAMPOO 25c—WAVE 25cMANICURE 35c MORE ORIENTATIONEditor, Daily Maroon ^Dear Mr. Nicholson:Perhaps I should concede the wholeargument in re men’s orientation toMr. Burnette because of the last pointmade in his letter about my not re¬ally objecting to “anything.” Thereason for this surrender is that Iwas really objecting to Mr. Burnette;however, I shall explain my objections,which are three-fold, in a more gen¬eral manner.One objection is that the orientationcommittee has already discussed allthe suggestions that were raised andthey are not new problems. You areevidently aware of this as is shownby your editorial, but I did and donot feel that you give Heindel and therest of the orientation committee duecredit, even though you did pay thema compliment in the first paragraph ofthe editorial.The second is that you think men’sorientation constitutes exactly thesame problem as that of women’s.Do you deny that the customs, etc.,with respect to v/omen are different?Also that the andergraduate socialset-up is different? These are exist¬ing conditions, and whether theyshould be or not does not enter intothe discussion at all, except to makeit clear that a difference does existwhich the committee must recognizein making its plans.Thirdly, there is empirical evidenceto show that there has been an or¬ganized system in the past. The onefor the last two years has been sim¬ilar to that of Women’s Federation.Today on theQuadrangles THREE MONTHS' COURSEfOe COLLEGE STUDENTS AND OEAOUATnA tktnmgh, inttnsiva, atmograpkic countatmrlmg January 1, April I, July 1, Octobtr i.htmttmg Booklet tent fret, witkomt akHttUmt't or Phono. No solidtort employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSEE. J.D.,PH.t.Etrular Courser, open to High School GraAmattt only, may bo started arty Monday. Dayand Eotning. Evening Counts open to memIM S. Michigan Av*.. Chicago, Kandolph 434/JEUJELRYWITH A MAN’S OWN INITIALSSwank pratanLs a compUtaassortmant of Lha parional-izad jawalry accassorias manadmira. At jawalart and man’sshops spacializing in thasmartar things.MeetingsYWCA. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 12.Interclub council. Student loungeof Ida Noyes at 12.WAA. WAA room of Ida Noyesat 12:30.Arrian. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 2:30.Achoth. Wicker room of Ida!Noyes at 3.Phi Delta Upsilon. YWCA roomof Ida Noyes at 3:30.Delta Sigma. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 4. JEWELRY ACCESSORIES nOR MENTENNIS SPECIALSGEO. LOTT, Autograph RacketGut String to Order, $12.50 Value.Championship Tennis Ralls, 3 for $1.00Expert Reslringing, $1.29 and upRYBICK BROS. TENNIS SHOP1554 E. 63rd St. Just west of Stoney IslandWhere?THE CHERRY HILLS COUNTRY CLIDbWhen?JUNE 15,1936How Much?$3.30 PER COUPLEWhat?SENIOR CLASS DAYDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four TUESDAY, JUNE 2. 1936Announce Selection of I-M All-Star Diamond TeamMaroon, WasedaTeams Split TwoWeekend GamesAfter pitching three and one-thirdinnings on Friday and being chargedwith the defeat, Shozo, Wakahara,Japan's’ number one hui’ler, returnedon Memorial day and fanned 17 Ma¬roon batsmen as he turned Chicagoback by the score of 10-5. The firstcontest of the series was played al¬so in a very loose manner; each sidecontributing eight errors. However,Russ Yedor got credit for the 18-16win as the Maroons scored five r t nsin the ninth inning, which was cli¬maxed with the second homer of theday by Bob Shipw'ay.Going into the first of the ninththe Maroons were leading 1.3-7 andthinking the six run margin secureenough Kyle Anderson sent Joe Ka-cena, who had just finished takingan examination, to third, Morry Nie-man to second and Hank Trojka toshort so as to give French White’s ail¬ing ankle a rest. Rut the revisedinfield failed to click and before theframe was over nine runs countedon four errors, three walks and ahomerun by Murakata.Yet the Maroons had contraryideas as to the outcome of the ballgame as compared to the Islanders.After Kacena fanned, Buss Yedorconnected for his fourth hit of theday by doubling to left. Pick Coch¬ran’s single to center scored Yedorand Mike Bernard was safe on afielder’s choice when the attemptedforce out of Dick Cochran at secondfailed. Trojke reached first by virtueof Go’s error and after Haarlowl)opped out. Bob Shipway ended thecontest with a long circut wallop toright center.Second Game of SeriesChicago was given the ins in thesecond game and Waseda’s specialballs were used. Both teams got offto such a flying start that it seemedas though the contest would be mere¬ly a continuance of the previous ballgame. Dick Cochran was safe whenGo bobled his grounder and Mike Ber¬nard beat out a hit also to Go. BillHaarlow walked to fill the bags, butSoderlind’s tap to Go forced out Ber¬nard at the plate. Then French Whitepromptly slammed a hard single toleft pushing home Trojka and Haar¬low. The final tally of the inningwas counted when Joe Kacena drovea base knock through the pitcher’sbox. After making one more run inthe second, the Chicago score remain¬ed .stationary throughout the rest ofthe game.Wa.seda got three of the four runsback in their half of the first. Satakebeat out a hit to White, Nagatadrew a pass, and Go dusted off thesacks with a line homer to right cen¬ter. The visitors picked up one morerun in the second to tie up the countand they forged ahead to win insqueezing two runs in the fourth onno hits and three more markers inthe fifth on only one hit.Thus the present series standsdeadlocked with each of the ball clubsone victory to the good. The rubbergame will be ])layed on June 17.One ApieceWasedaMiyoshi.cf.ssSalake,.ss.cfNaKata.rfGo, lbTaka.su,:{bShirakawa.2bSuzuki.IfMurakata.,'Kondo.pW'akahara.pWasedaChicaKoWasedaMiyoshi.cfSatake.sSNagata,rfGo,3bTakasu,2bTsuruzaki.cMurakata.cOshita.lbWakahara,pChicagoWa.seda .M.4Y 29ab. r. h. Chicago ah. r. h.•'> 1 1 Cwnran.cf 6 2 21 2 1 Flernard.rf ."i 3 0'» 2 1 Trojka.2b,s.s 6 .3 31 I 1 Haarlow, ib 6 0 2■1 2 2 Shipway,c 6 2 3r> 3 2 Soderlind, IT 12 26 2 2 Nieman,2b 0 0 0.") 1 2 White.ss 4 193 11 Kacena,3b 10 03 10 Gf)ld,3b 4 3 2Yedor,p 5 2 441 16 13 47 is 18003 001 219010 406 205.MAY 30ab. r. h. Chicago ab. r. h.112 Cochran/'f 4 2 15 1 1 Bernard.rf 4 0 24 2 2 Trojka,2b 5 113 2 1 Haarlow, lb,p 3 11•5 0 0 Shipway,c 5 0 01 2 0 Soderlind,If 5 1 13 10 W’hite„s8 5 0 13 0 0 Kacena,3b 5 0 3310 F,aird,p 200.Ma.strofsky,p 2 0 0Hoffman,lb 0 0 032 10 6 40 5 10410 000 000310 230 01*Chess Team SnaresCity College TitleCompleting an undefeated season,the University chess team won itsthird title yesterday when final re¬sults of the Chicago college chessleague tournament were reported.Previously this year the Maroonchess experts had won the city chessleague title and the Midwestern Imtercollegiate chess tournament title. Student Rifle ClubTo Operate Rangein Summer QuarterIntent on making the rifle club ayear round organization, members ofthe club yesterday announced that theUniversity range under the Weststands will open during the summerquarter. Club pistols and rifles willbe available for those who are in¬terested in practicing.A fee of fifty cents will be chargedto new members of the club, and oneof twenty five cents to those who be¬longed to the club the spring quar¬ter. The range will be available toboth men and women who are in resi¬dence now, will be in residence duringthe summer quarter, or expect to beenrolled in the autumn quarter.Tentative range hours for the quar¬ter are: Tuesday 7:30-10 rifle shoot¬ing; Wednesday, 3:30-6, pistol shoot¬ing; and Thursday, 3:30 to 6. rifleshooting. It is probable that an out¬door range will also be set-up onStagg field to allow shooting at 100yards. However, nothing definite hasbeen done as yet..Anyone wishing a postcard statingspecific hours and details should com¬municate with Freeman Morgan at2320 West 110th street, Chicago, orby registering at the cage in Bartlettgym before June 17. Place 17 on Honor SquadAll-Star TeamPitcher—Josephson, Phi Si^ma DeltaCatcher—Howard, Delta Kappa EpsilonFirst Base—Dorsey, Phi Kappa PsiSecond Base—Fay, Burton-JudsonThird Base—Berkson, Phi Sigma DeltaShortstop—Sherman, Phi Sigma DeltaShort centerfield—Kessel, Phi Beta DeltaLeft field—Weiss, Phi Beta DeltaCenter field—Komaiko, Phi Sigma DeltaRight field—Lawson, Burton-JudsonHonor SquadPitchersJosephson—Phi Sigma DeltaGordon—Phi Beta DeltaRoesing—Phi Sigma DeltaCatchersHoward—Delta Kappa EpsilonKrause—Phi Sigma DeltaFirst Base—Dorsey, Phi Kappa PsiThird Base—Berkson, Phi Sigma DeltaShort Center—Kessel, Phi Beta DeltaCenter field—Komaiko, Phi Sigma DeltaUtility Infielders—Werner, Phi Kappa Psi: Rossin, PhiBeta DeltaSecond Base—Fay, Burton-JudsonShort stoii—Sherman, Phi Sigma DeltaLeft field—Weiss, Phi Beta DeltaRight field—Lawson, Burton-JudsonUtility Outfielders—Burgess, Psi Upsilon; Leach, PhiKappa Psi Hold Semi-Finalsin Olympic TrackHere, June 19-20Procedure for selection of the.American Olympic track team wasannounced today by Nelson Metcalf,Maroon athletic director, secretaryof the Olympic track committee.Fifteen of the 23 regional tryoutsin the Middle West have been held..A place in tbe first three in any eventand meeting of a certain standardof jjorformance is required to qualifyfor a semifinal.College athletes who have qualifiedin regional tryouts anywhere in theUnited States will meet on StaggField on June 19 and 20 for the Na¬tional College championships, whichalso constitute an Olympic .semifinal.Three additional semi-finals open toall amateur athletes will be held thefollowing week in Los .Angeles, Mil¬waukee, and Boston.First and second place winners inevery event in each of the four semi¬finals will qualify for the final try¬outs in New York on July 11 and 12.From the sixteen competitors ineach event of the final tryouts a max¬imum of three men in each event willbecome members of the Olympic team.The .American team will be coached jby Lawson Roberts, University of.Pennsylvania; E. C. Hayes,University; and Dean Cromwell, Uni¬versity of Southern California. It willbe managed by William J. Bingham,Harvard University; Edwin F'.Schaefer, Buffalo; Nel.son Metcalf, ofthe University, and .Alfred U. Mas¬ters, Stanford University. Murphy BrothersMeet in YearlingTourney FinalsAfter being extended to win oneof two sets in the freshman tennistournament last Thursday, Chet Mur¬phy, ace of the freshman squad, cameback on Friday to win the third andfinal set from Johnny Kreitenstein6-0 thereby advancing himself to thefinal round.On Thursday Chet lost the first set9-7 and then battled until the twen¬ty-sixth game before he managed toput himself back in the match by win¬ning 14-12. Because of the oncom¬ing darkness the deciding set washeld over until FYiday. Murphy,sixth ranking national junior, was athis best on Friday and Kreitensteintired after his efforts Thursday fur¬nished no opposition. Facing Chet inthe final round to be played sometime this week. Bill Murphy, hisbrother, is the other finalist.Coach Warns againstOverconfidence in BerlinPHILADELPHIA, June 1—(UP)awaits America’s athletesat the OlymjFic games in Berlin un¬less they check their present enthu.-iasm before it develops into a seriouscase of overconfidence, Lawson Bobertson, head coach of the UnitedStates track and field team, predictedtoday.Indiana —DisasterLYRICAL LINGOMay I remind you that this year’s CAP& GOWN is bigger and better thanever. It isn’t just one of those things,but is truly the top. IVs no fun beingtormented when you’re alone withoutone, while you could be celebratin' ifyou had one. Let yourself go and orderone today. It’s true that it will be outsoon and that there are only a few copies left. Who wouldn’t want somematerial way of remembering his schoolyear, and there’s no other one available.Would you want to be always withoutone? You're the one who will be lost ifyou don’t subscribe today. We’re nottrying to build you up to an awful letdown, for we know we have a book youwill be proud to place among yoursouviners.The only complete record of the University year, andthis year it is as authentic as a history, as interestingas the sports page, as exciting as next year's news, asnecessary as nourishment, and as complete as a year'swork by a competent staff could make it.TIE CUP & SOWNFOR 1936OUT THURSDAYNo Intelligent Student Should Be Without OneThe few remaining copies are now on sale at Lexing¬ton Hall and Tailor Tom's stand.