iHonionVol. 37. No. 43. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936 Price 3 Centsfirth, Carlson,Alice SponsorASU ConclaveListFacultyMembersMrs. Gilkey Gives Tea forOfficers and CommitteeMembers.Announced yesterday by Louis Sof-ft-r. chairman of general arrange¬ments for the national convention ofthe ASU, which will beheld near cam¬pus from December 27 to 30, was alist of University faculty members,who are sponsoring the convention.Louis Wirth, associate professor ofSociology; Earl S. Johnson, assistantprofessor of Sociology; Warder C. Al¬ice. professor of Zoology; Harold D.Lasswell, associate professor of Po¬litical Science; and Anton J. Carlson,professor of Physiology compose thelist at present, and Soflfer said otherfaculty members will be asked to addtheir names to the list.Mary Kerr, chairman of the dancecommittee, announced that all Uni¬versity students will be welcome atthe dance to be given on Tuesday eve¬ning. December 29, at the Hyde ParkBaptist Church. Danny Williams’swing band, which furnished the mu¬sic for the Victory Vanities andHomecoming Dance, will play.Tea at Gilkeys’.Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey has invit¬ed the national officers of the ASU,the convention committee chairmen,and members of the national exeu-tive committee to a tea to be givenin her home on Saturday afternoon,December 26, the day before the con¬vention officially opens.National officers are George Ed¬wards, chairman; Joseph Lash, execu¬tive .secretary; Molly Yard, treasur¬er; Celeste Strack, high school secre¬tary; and James Wechsler, editor ofthe Student Advocate and author of"Revolt on the Campus” and ‘‘WarOur Heritage.” Officers and membersof the executive committee are ex¬pected to arrive from two to threedays before the start of the conven¬tion, to complete arrangements.When University buildings werefound unable to accommodate the con¬vention, the local churches of HydePark accepted the role of joint hoststo the delegates who will come fromall over the country. Settlement LeagueWill Hold AnnualChristmas VespersThe annual Christma.s Vespers ofthe Music Section of the UniversitySettlement League will be held inJoseph Bond Chapel next Tuesdayand Wednesday evenings at 8:15.This year the Music Section pre¬sents the Midway Singers under thedirection of Mack Evans. The Sing¬ers’ program will include manyfavorite carols, two Bach chorals,folk-songs, and one of the rarely-found Christmas spirituals.Membership of the Singers includesMaude Bouslough, Madeline Kneberg,Bernice Rickman, and Mary Statham,all of whom are sopranos; CatherineBoettcher, Dorothy Mosiman, con¬traltos; Mark Littler, Douglas Smith,Harold Spencer, tenors; and WilliamCoy, Keith Hatter, James McDevitt,and Philip Stafford who are bassos.Assisting in the program are RuthEmery Riddle, soprano, RobertBuchsbaum, oboe, and Ernest Olson,who will play the bells.The Music Section invites its audi¬ence to join them in Swift CommonRoom after the program where allmay sing and Wassail will be served.As in other years, the proceeds ofof these musicals will be used forthe benefit of the children of the Uni¬versity Settlement. Tickets are 50cents and are on sale at Woodworth’sand at the Information Office.Publish Study ofGreek ManuscriptBooks by Willoughby, Col¬well, Reproduce Examplesof Codex.Change Universtiy(j)llege Curriculumfor Next QuarterThe University College today an¬nounced the changed and additionalcourses to be offered in the down¬town school during the next quarter.I'he courses added to the down¬town college program which will begiven by the College for the first timeduring the Winter Quarter are ‘‘Writ¬ing for Radio,” ‘‘Cultures of theEast,” ‘‘History of the Hebrews,”“Psychiatry,” “Spani.sh Literature,”and ‘‘Problems of Social Insurance.”Several courses will be offeredwith new instructors. Business 211,a course in intermediate accounting,will be given by Mr. Vatter, whileHistory 235 will be given by Mr.Kovacs instead of by Professor Gotts-chalk.Courses which have been given inother years either downtown or onthe Quadrangles have been added tothe College’s winter program. Theyinclude courses on the ‘‘Early MiddleAges,” ‘‘Fugitive Materials (libraryscience),” ‘‘Introduction to Philoso¬phy,” ‘‘Effective Speaking,” “Com¬munity Organization,” and “Verte¬brate Zoology.”The College has also announcedthe series of public lectures whichwill be given next quarter. Fred B.Millet will give five lectures onAmerican Poetry Today, while PercyH. Boynton will present a series onSocial Institutions in American Lit¬erature. ‘The European Crisis” willbe dealt with by Quincy Wright andHarley F. MacNair will discuss“Crises in the Far East.”Other series to be offered are the“Chinese on the Art of Painting,”by Lucy Driscoll; “Bases of HumanBehavior,” by Mandel Sherman; and“Current Problems in Business,” bymembers of the School of Business. “The Four Gospels of Karahissar”,an illustrated study of one of themost important of all medieval Greekmanuscripts, by Ernest Cadman Col¬well, assistant professor of New Test¬ament, and Harold R. Willoughby, as¬sociate professor of New TestamentLiterature, will be published by theUniversity of Chicago Press.The Four Gospels is published intwo volumes. The first volume byColwell contains the story of themanuscript and a study of the textualrelationships in the various sectionsof the codex. An appendix proposesand exemplifies an entirely new tech¬nique for the date determination ofthe manuscripts on the basis of pal¬eographic data.In the second volume Willoughbytreats in detail the decorative text,ornament, evangelist portrature, andthe technique of illumination. Thereis also a full iconographic study ofthe separate Karahissar text-illumin¬ation.The volumes contain 150 plates re¬producing not only examples of thescript and colophons and the illum¬inated and miniatured pages in theKarahissar Codex, but also 72 im¬portant paleographic and iconograph¬ic cognares.Created in an imperial scriptoriumby the same scribes who penned thefamous Codex 2400 (reproduced inthe Rockefeller McCormick New Tes¬tament) and illustrated by the sameschool of artists, the manuscript wascarried to a small island town in Pon-tus by the early Christians to protectit from destruction. For hundreds ofyears it was the goal of thousandsof devoted pilgrims, many of whomwrote their devotions and hopes onthe pages of the codex. Between 1848and 1854, Vladimir Paulovitch Titoff,a Russian diplomat discovered therare manuscript and took it to Rus¬sia where it remains today in theState Public Library in Leningrad. International HouseShows Gay Filmof Austrian TyrolThe final foreign film to be offeredthis quarter by the Renaissance So¬ciety and International House willbe shown Monday, December 14 whenthe Chicago premiere of “The WhiteFlame” will be held.A gay record of a humorous ski-chase in the exquisite .netting of theAustrian Tyrol, “The White Flame”presents some of the most scintillat¬ing snow photography to have beenscreened. It is, of course, by veteranHans Schneeberger, who has to hiscredit the camera work on the finestalpine films to have been made: “TheWhite Hell of Pitz Palu,” “The BlueLight” and “The Doomed Battalion.”But unlike these serious films,“The White Flame” is a comedy, donewith a breathless speed and sparklinglaughter that matches the sheen ofits snowy background.In addition to this feature, a newthree-reel film of the National Parkdistricts of southern Utah will beshown. Two performances will be heldon Monday; at 4:30 and at 8:30 p.m.Schuster Speaks atCalvert Club TodayToday at 3:45 in the YWCA Roomof Ida Noyes, George N. Schuster,managing editor of CommonwealthMagazine, will discuss the “CatholicChurch in Germany” at a meeting ofthe Calvert Club to which the publicis invited.New committees were announcedyesterday by Emil Jarz, president ofthe organization. The executive groupis comprised of James Davern, treas¬urer; Catherine Selzer, secretary; andJohn Polayner and Francis Shields.In addition to these people, AlbertDesroisers, Mary Alice Duddy, andDorothy Allen arc members of themembership committee. CatherineSelzer i.s chairman of the body. Symphony PresentsHampton QuartetteTonight in MandelWhen the Hampton Senior Quar¬tette is presented this evening at 8:15in Mandel Hall with the UniversitySymphony Orchestra, the spiritualswhich they sing will have been select¬ed, at least in part, by student choice.In i-esponse to the campus poll heldby the Daily Maroon in collaborationwith the Department o’f Music, thesefour favorite spirituals were unani¬mously selected: “Good News, deChariot’s Cornin’”; “’Tis Me, OhLord”; “Roll, Jordan, Roll”; and“Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.” Fourother favorites which will be sungby the group are “Keep A-Inchin’Along”; “(3reat Camp Meeting”;“Ain’t Coin’ to Study War No More”;and “Listen to the Lambs.”Student Talent FeaturedAnother guest artist w'ho will ap¬pear with the orchestra tonight isNatalie Rudeis, a senior in the Uni¬versity High School. 'She will playSaint-Saens’ “Concerto No. 3 forPiano and Orchestra in C Minor.”The 90 piece orchestra under thedirection of Carl Bricken, chairmanof the Department of Music, will givethe first performance to the originalcomposition of one of its members,Hilmar Luckhardt. His “Passacagliain G Minor for OrcRestra” will beplayed by the symphony. Beethoven’s“Second Symphony in C Minor” willalso be featured.Ushers SelectedUniversity women who will be ush¬ering at tonight’s affair are Mary JoEmerson, Betty Barden, Mary Kerr,Theodora Schmidt, Mary Reamer,Lily Lehmann, Aldana De Silver,Alice Hamilton, Emily Rodgers andCatherine Leavy. The University menwho will usher are Bill Lew'is, JohnVanderlip, Tom Turner, RamseyBancroft, Daniel Smith, Harry DeSilver, Huntington Harris, NorbertBurgess, Richard Wickem, HerbertLarson and Kenneth Osborn.A few tickets for the concert arestill obtainable at the InformationOffice and the Box Office in MandelHall at 50 cents and $1.00. Analyze Imperfections of StudyConditions in Biology LibrariesComposed of the Biology library,the Billings library, the Lying-Inlibrary, and the Opthalmology li¬brary, the Bio-Medical library sys¬tem provides study facilities for med¬ical and biological students.The mother library, and the oneused last year by over 100,000 stu¬dents, is the Biological library. As¬signed a large percentage of thebooks on Biology, the library also ac¬commodates back issues of all peri¬odicals, the current issues of whichare kept in the Billings hospital read¬ing room.The low esteem in which studentshold University libraries as places tostudy is indicated by the fact thatthough many who regularly use theBiological library find study condi¬tions superior to those in most Uni¬versity libraries, students interviewedmade numerous complaints, especial¬ly of excessive noise.Condemn Noise“People waiting at the desk makeunnecessary noise,” said Judith W.Hunt, Biology librarian. “Improve¬ment could only be made if the deskand important books w’ere moved intoan adjoining room, leaving the largeroom as a reading room. Ventilationis also poor.”To improve ventilation in the pres¬ent room in Culver hall is impossible.Not so the lighting. Flat tables, andfrosted globe ceiling lights, combinedto give the Biology library substand¬ard intensity readings and excessiveglare when lighting in the library wastested by The Maroon.Stacks InadequateLast year’s library report had thefollowing to say concerning facilitiesin the Biology library: “The readingand stack room facilities are inade¬quate for the amount of books kepthere and a large number of volumesare badly in need of repairs.”Second in importance to the Bio¬logical library in the Bio-Medical sys¬tem is the Billings hospital library.“The commendable fact about Bill¬ings,” said one student, “is that theyallow smoking. It would be beneficialto study conditions if smoking couldbe permitted in all libraries.”Union to Debate^It Can’t HappenHere’ with U S CIrving Axelrad and Jacob Ochsteinhave been selected to represent theUniversity in an intei’sectional de¬bate with the University of Califor¬nia scheduled for January 13 on thesubject “It Can’t Happen Here.” Aspecial invitation has been sent toSinclair Lewis, author of the novelof the same name, to act as chairmanand commentator.The local debaters will take theposition that “it can and will prob¬ably happen here,” while the Cali¬fornians will defend the stand oftheir local author.The general public has been invitedto the contest. Tickets will be placedon sale at 10 cents each on January2, with no admission charge for mem¬bers of the Debate Union.The match with California is thefirst important meet of the year forthe Debate Union. A full schedule forthe Winter quarter, including par¬ticipation in national tournaments isstill in process of being drawn up. According to Mrs. Hunt, inadequatespace to seat all those using the roomis the outstanding defect of the Bill¬ings library. Because it is chiefly usedas a reading room for medical students and the hospital staff, the hos¬pital library contains a large numberof current magazines. Except for de¬ficiency of books in some nurses’courses which require extensive read¬ing, the book supply is adequate, according to P. Runge, student assist¬ant in the library.With relatively good facilities, andample room for the comparativelyfew who study there, the Lying-Inhospital is inadequate only because ofunderstaffing. With only one librarianon duty, the library closes for an hourat noon, and closes for the day at 5,thus making it impossible for studentsand members of the hospital staff toobtain books in the evening.Possibly indicating understaffing,the Opthalmology library, which islargely used by members of the hos¬pital staff, does not adhere to theschedule of hours listed in the Au¬tumn quarter official schedule of li-(Continued on Page 6)Renaissance Society Exhibits SmallCollection of Negro Artists^ PaintingsThe present Renaissance Societyexhibit hanging in Wieboldt hall,that of paintings by American Negroartists, is so small that it providesa narrow field for comparisons, yetshows very apparent differences inthe degree of perfection attained.By far the most outstanding inthe collection are the portraits byWilliam Johnson. Johnson displaysforce combined with technical excel¬lence, as well as fine color quality.The paintings are all finished and in¬dividual work. This is one charac¬teristic these works have in com¬mon; good or bad, they are all donewith care and the majority show astriving towards individual expres¬sion.This last is especially apparent ina landscape by Hale Woodruff;handicapped by treatment which isvery suggestive of Van Gogh in formand technique, the painting is es¬ sentially his own in subject andfeeling.The others are less satisfying;Palmer Hayden’s landscapes, thoughpossessing distinctive technique arecareful work, are singularly lackingin depth of form or color. MalvinJohnson’s portraits are only fair; hislandscape are more vivid and simple.Suzanna Ogunjami, the Africanchief’s daughter, contributes onlyone oil to the collection; while thewhole thing is carefully and beauti¬fully done, it is completely lackingin personality.There are also some very nicepieces of sculpture by RichmondBarthe.Whatever their other faults in exe¬cution, there is not a sloppy work inthe group; and though they may re¬flect different viewpoints, they arealike in their striving to depict anunderstanding of Negro life. Rehearsals Beginfor Annual Pageant‘The Kings Return’With steps and platforms alreadyerected, lighting arranged and cos¬tumes chosen, the cast of the annualChristmas pageant, “The King’s Re¬turn,” is completing final rehearsalsfor the performance Sunday eveningat 7:30. The pageant, which is consid¬ered one of the most impressive pro¬grams of the year, is being presentedby members of the University Choir,Singers, and the Dramatic Associa¬tion, assisted by girls from the Uni¬versity elementary school and boysfrom the Church of the Redeemerchoir.The part of Mary will be taken byHarriet Nelson; John Palmer will beJoseph; and James McDevitt will takethe part of Simeon. Paul Archipley,Allen Shackleton, and A. L. Ander¬son will be the Three Kings. Membersof the chorus of shepherds will beRalph Goldstein, Duncan Holoday,Paul Mernitz, Lloyd Sherwood, Den¬nis Cowan, William Read, Knox Hill,Dean Linger, Victor Botkin, Her¬mann Koenig, Dean Krueger, JohnPalmer, Robert Bigelow, Robert Dan-forth, Horace Holoday, and RobertReynolds.Science ProfessorsPresent Papers toLearned SocietiesSeven Social Science professors inthe University will participate in fiveassociational meetings, in the finalweek of 1936, Robert Redfield, deanof the Social Science Division, an¬nounced yesterday.At the annual holiday meeting ofthe American Association for the Ad¬vancement of Science at AtlanticCity, New Jersey, from December 27to 30, Fay-Cooper Cole, chairman ofthe department of Anthropology, willread a paper on “The ClassificatorySystem Applied to the Archaeology ofCentral Illinois.” Frederick Eggan,instructor in Anthropology, will dis¬cuss “Respect and Joking Relation¬ships Among the Cheyenne and Ara-paho.”Gray Delivers PaperWilliam S. Gray, professor of Edu¬cation, will present a survey of “ThePreparation of Teachers of Chemis¬try.”Before the American Economics As¬sociation meeting at the Stevens Ho¬tel, December 28, Simeon E. Leland,professor of Economics, will read apaper on “Debt Retirement and theBuffget.” Harry A. Millis, professorof Economics, will act as a member ofthe executive committee of the Amer¬ican Economics Association.Henry Schultz, professor of Eco¬nomics, will preside over a session on“Price Analyses” at the EconometricSociety Convention at the Stevens Ho¬tel on December 28. Dr. Schultz willalso chairman a session on “Statis¬tical Economics,” a section of theAmerican Statistical Associationmeeting at the Stevens hotel on De¬cember 29.“Methods of Studying the Social(Continued on Page 6) Daily MaroonAdds FreshmenStaff ListtoForm New BoardS i X Representative Menand Women Chosen asEditorial Advisers.By vote of the Board of Control, 33freshmen were yesterday admitted tothe staff of the Daily Maroon as re¬porters, and nine as business staffmembers.The newcomers were chosen aftera training period of two months, dur¬ing which time they participated instaff work under the observations ofthe Board.At the same time Emmett Deadmanwas named an Editorial Associate,which is equivalent to a junior posi¬tion.It was also announced that WilliamMcNeill, editorial Associate andsports editor for the past quarter,will be unable to I’eturn to school forthe balance of the school year, and sois forced to leave the staff.Invited by the Board of Control toform an Editorial Board, contributeto the editorial columns, and act in anadvisory capacity in certain questionsof policy were six representativeThis is the last issue of The DailyMaroon for the Autumn quarter. TheBoard of Control and Staff join in wish¬ing you a Merry Christmas and veryHappy New Year, and hope you willbe back with them on January 5, thefirst issue of the Winter quarter.graduate and undergraduate students.These advisors are Louise Hoyt, Dan¬iel Smith, V/inston Ashly, Marie Ber¬ger, John Barden, and Sidney Hyman.Ashley, Hyman, and Barden havebeen active in the publications of theUniversity. The other students werechosen to represent a cross section ofstudent opinion.This is the first Advisory Boardsince 1933. At that time John Barden,a member of the present Board, form¬ed such a group to aid in questionsof policy during his editorship.Those added to the staff yesterdayas reporters are: Henry Grossman,Ted Gleichman, Elizabeth Essington,Adele Rose, Joan Schutz, Andrew Le¬onas, Lome Cook, Robert Foster,Saul Weisman, William Grody, AimeeHaines, Frances Power.Add FreshmenLa Verne Riess, John Cooper, Nich¬olas Tapp, Barbara Beer, CorneliusSmith, Harry Levi, Charles Cleveland,David Harris, Ray Welch, Vera Rony,Sarah Lee Bloom, Janice Kaplan,Jack Cornelius, Sheila Bromberg,Areta Kelble, Josephine Springer,Joan Nichelson, Jacquelyn Aeby,Mary Elizabeth Grenander, Ruth Bro¬dy, and Josephine Kelly.New business staff members areHarry Topping, Richard Glasser, Al¬an Johnstone, Jerome Ettleson, CarlSims, Irvin Rosen, Robert Danforth,Dayton Caple, and Martin Burnson.Chapel Union HoldsCampus Barn DanceAn all-campus barn dance will beheld in the gym and lounge of IdaNoyes on Saturday, January 9, JohnVan de Water, chairman of the rec¬reational committee of the ChapelUnion, announced yesterday. Farm¬ers’ outfits and overalls will be in or¬der.The dance will be the first oppor¬tunity for new students to get ac¬quainted with social affairs of theUniversity.Working with Van de Water on therecreational committee are HelenThomson, Mary Raney, Jerry Mo-berg, Irwin Snyder, Esther Schaef¬fer, Christine Flanagan RomainePoindexter, and Douglas Martin.Sign Offers Themefor Gilkey’s SermonReverend Charles W. Gilkey, Deanof the University Chapel, will be thespeaker at Chapel services on Convo¬cation Sunday, December 13, Thesubject, “The Last Step,” was sug¬gested by a sign that Dean Gilkeysaw on a campus of an eastern wo¬man’s college this summer. Convoca¬tion prayer service will be held at 10.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936jMaroonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 46, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The Daily Ma¬roon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the views ofthe University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates:$2.76 a year: $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postoffice at Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.RCPRZSENTCD FOR NATIONAL ADVCRTISINO BYNaiional Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y.Chicago - Boston - San FranciscoLos ANGELES • PORTLAND • SEATTLEBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.. .Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESBernice Bartels ElRoy Golding Cody PfanatiehlEdward Fritz William McNeill Betty RobbinsBUSINESS ASSOCIATESSigmund Dansiger Bernard Levine William RubachCharles HoyEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSHarris Beck C. Sharpless Hickman David SchefferLaura Bergquist Rex Horton Marjorie SeifriedMaxine Biesenthal Henry Kraybill Bob SpeerEmmett Deadman David MauzyMary Diemer Byron MillerSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwayNight Editors: William McNeillCody Pfanstiehl.\ssistant: David HarrisFriday, December 11, 1936Interest in Leaders MovementEncouraging indeed was the report thatover 100 sophomore and junior men and womenpresented themselves as candidates for posi¬tions in the Leaders organization the first threedays of this week. Although the remainingweek of this quarter does not afford much timefor the movement to gain momentum, the in¬terest on campus already evidenced seems toindicate that, with the personnel of the organi¬zation completed, considerable headway can bemade by the beginning of next quarter.While the routine details of the ac¬tivity will necessarily be carried out by thestaff, the most important phase of the workmust be done by a much larger body of stu¬dents. That task is the securing of names ofoutstanding high school seniors from all overthe country. A great part of this can be accom¬plished during the approaching vacation period,through the investigation of high schools instudents’ home towns. Although the coopera¬tion of every student is desirable, the work canprobably be done most effectively by the fresh¬men whose contacts with their high schoolsare closest. While staff positions will undoubt¬edly be established later on for those freshmenwho have shown particular interest, the aid ofevery freshman will be especially helpful atthis time.The Leaders organization will circulatecards on campus next week on which studentscan record the names and other informationabout recommended high school seniors. Thesecards should be returned to the organizationnext quarter.The success of this movement should be ofvital interest to all those who wish to see a hightype of student attracted to the University, tothose who wish to see an improvement in Ma-The ABC’sConception of LifeThe soul! It was to be found in the tiniest mole¬cule of living substance. The watery, diaphanous frag¬ment of protoplasmic jelly.. .performed all the func¬tions of the human organism, fabled to be animated byan immaterial, immortal soul. It hungered and re¬produced, it breathed, ate, reacted to its surroundings,craved, as the human individual craved, for the satis¬faction of primary impulses. What was all else, allthe difference between human hunger and love and thehunger and love of the amoeba, but an elaboration ofthe means of gaining that satisfaction? It is as meresuperstructure; the springs and the aims of life re¬mained the same.Robert Briffault,. Europa roon athletic teams, and to those who wish tosee students activities continue to flourish onthe quadrangles. For the aim of the Leadersmovement is to bring t<i the University not onlystudents with outstanding scholastic records,but well-rounded individuals who show promiseof achieving distinction in either athletics orextra-curricular activities—in a word, to bringto the campus the “leaders” of the class of ’41.Attention Senior MenTwo weeks ago a call went out for all seniormen interested in obtaining jobs after theygraduate to register with the Board of Voca¬tional Guidance and Placement in Cobb 215.It is imperative that this registration be com¬pleted before the end of the quarter if theplacement bureau is to achieve any fair degreeof success in securing jobs for University grad¬uates.In the past few years, the bureau has builtup a notable record in the matter of placement.This has been made possible because it hasbeen able to present an outstanding list of de¬sirable candidates to business firms which havewritten in seeking interviews with job appli¬cants. Satisfaction with the men recommendedby the University causes such firms to comehere' year after year looking for promisinggraduates to add to their staffs. These com¬panies begin to send representatives to the Uni¬versity early in the Winter quarter. Only bysecuring a complete registration of senior menbefore that time can the placement bureau ar¬range interviews for these representatives withmen who meet the company’s specifications.Whether or not a senior desires to get a jobsoon after graduation, it is desirable for him tohave his record on file with the placement bu¬reau for possible reference purposes in the fu¬ture. The value of this service should be obvi¬ous to all senior men. We urge them to registerimmediately.The Travelling BazaarBy CODY PFANSTIEHLIt is fifty-five minutes past midnight here at theprinters. The rolling roar of a 111th Street trolley oc¬casionally merges with the continual rumble of theflatbed “pony” press almost within reach of the fingersthat typewrite these words. And through the grindand whirl of the press trickles the metallic clatter of thelinotypes. Over there, not 20 feet distant, writtenwords that were but actions and sounds yesterday arecongealing into shiny metal to be pressed a thousandtimes on paper for you tomorrow.Here, at the printers, past midnight, while you whowill read this are sleeping, the last Daily Maroon of thequarter is taking form.BARGAIN INBACONHenry Reese writes in to say that Dick Lindheimordered a toasted English Muffin with three strips ofbacon, listed as a “Special” at twenty cents, in a res¬taurant the other night. Dick got the muffin withoutthe bacon, but was only charged ten cents. Still hun¬gry, and with his curiosity piqued, he waited a bit, thenordered ten cents worth of bacon. He got six strips.Which reminds us of our friend Smyth, who orderedcereal without dates in it, from the Coffee shop menu,and found it would cost him less to order it with datesin, which he hates.LITTLE BITOF SIGMAReese, who is the new editor of the new Phoenix,is, sight unseen, quite happy about Jean Garrigus, whowrote a revealing string of words about Club Teas inPhoenix. Jean is one of the Sigma squad, and if she’sfired out’n the club, may find Henry a convenient shoul¬der.HOW CRAZYARE YOU?If you live in the University community you have31.99 chances out of 1000 of becoming schizophrenic.A map on the wall in Social Science says so. Anothermap in the same informative display tells us that theaverage insanity rate of this territory is 80 to 89.9 per1000, which is about average for Chicago as a whole.The “Maniac Depressive Psychoses, All Types,” arepretty bad, though. There are more of this sort aroundhere than most any other place in the city—10 out ofevery 1000.We were a bit put out to find that our territory ratesonly next to highest on the “Literacy” map. We metJohn Morris a little later and he said that perhaps, sincewe’re high in Maniac Depressives, we have a lot ofgeniuses in the neighborhood.“And geniuses”, said John, “are apt to be crazy.”WE REACHTHE ENDIn a few hours the linotypes will stop their chatter,the presses their roar. For those who have written inthis column during the quarter, and for myself, I wishyou all a very Merry Christmas and highly successfulNew Year.—C. P. LaboratoryRow* * *By NICHOLAS TAPPOur chemistry department is build¬ing a cyclotron that will be one ofthe biggest in existence. The build¬ing of the cyclotron is in charge ofProfessor Harkins and his two re¬search assistants, Robert Moon andJack Newson.Essentially, the cyclotron consistsof a fairly powerful magnet, in thefield of which is placed a vacuumchamber, a stream of ions or elec¬trons being introduced into thechamber. The magnetic field has a ra¬dio frequency, of the order of 14 mil¬lion changes of potential per second,these rapid changes spinning the ionor electron around the chamber. Witheach change in potential, the ion isstepped up by the addition of acharge equal to 50,000 electron volts.After a number of circuits in thechamber, the ion or electron has ac¬quired tremendous energy, and isthen directed at the nucleus of theatom. Professor Harkins and his assist¬ants ultimately hope to secure parti¬cles with energies up to 20,000,000volts. The circumference of the mag¬nets and the speed of the rotatingelectric field are the two factors de¬termining the amount of energy thatcan be imparted to a particle.When deuterons are introduced atthe center of the field they fall inline with it. In other words thespeed of the rotating electric fieldmultiplied by the circumference ofthe magnet equals the speed that theparticles can attain.Mr. Newson made it plain that,“Most of the apparatus for the cy¬clotron should 1^ constructed by theend of February, however, we cannotsay how long it will be before theapparatus is in satisfactory runningcondition.”On the basis of alpha rays emitted,the cyclotron produces energies equiv¬alent to those produced by a kilo¬gram of radium. However, the costof the cyclotron is less than that ofa gram of radium.« * BIsotopes are different forms of thesame element which though havingdifferent masses they have the samechemical properties. Attaching im¬portance to the nature of isotopes be¬cause of their relation to atomicstructure, physicists explain the for¬ mation of isotopes by positing thatan isotopes is formed through the ad¬dition of neutrons to the atom of anelement. Neutrons are essentiallycollapsed hydrogen atoms.Contrary to supposition that themass resulting from the union of anatom with a neutron is necessarilythe sum total of the parts, it hasbeen found that when an atom isbombarded so as to produce its dis¬integration, some of its mass is con¬verted into energy.Artificially produced radio-activesodium disintegrates into magnesiumwith the liberation of energy. Froman exact knowledge of the atomicmasses one can deduce the energy re-leased. It is the computation ofthese masses and energies throughthe use of the “mass spectograph”that is the present research problemof Professor Arthur J. Dempster.Going Going GoneWe’re almost sold out, but you can still get yourcopy of the new and complete Student Directory if youBuy Your Student Directory Today25cOn sale at the U. of C. Bookstore, the InformationDesk, Cobb Hall (Tailor Tom), and the Cap & Gownoffice.OR BETTER YET, subscribe today for the 1937 Cap& Gown and get your Student Directory free. This doublevalue offer will be withdrawn at the end of the quarter,so don’t put it off any longer!Cap and Gown for 1937Office in Lexington HallGIFTSBooks-Special Gift EditionsBiography - Fiction - PoetryGreat Stock of Sale Books; NewTYPEWRITERS—All makes, new and rebuiltSTATIONERY—Personal Stationery and Office SuppliesBEREA WOOLEN GOODS—Hand loomed by Berea CraftsmenOther Gift SuggestionsKodaks - Pins with Guards - RingsPottery - Cigarette Cases - EtchingsBill Folds • Key Cases • Paper KnivesFountain Pens - Leather Goods • BookendsDo Your Christmas Shopping atU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis AvenueTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936 Page Threefjammer Out Platform Planksat ASU Columbus ConclaveRank University ChapterFirst in Active Member¬ship.(This is the second of two articlesoiL fhe groivth of student move-in America. Yesterday'sarticle traced the evolution of “po¬litical” youth movements prior tothe founding of the American Stu-iloit Union. Today's article treatsof the ASU itself.)By BOB SPEERl)riven by pressure of the attacksof the conservative press, the exist¬ing youth organizations came moreun i more to favor amalgamation intoone large body. They had been ham¬pered in their growth by the accusa¬tions of “radicalism!” which hadbeen hurled, rightly or wrongly, bycritics on all sides. Liberal studentshesitated to align themselves with or-giinizations of “red” reputation.The points of difference among thedith rent groups were also diminish¬ing as time went on. Students interrested primarily in peace began to seethe close interrelation of the peace is¬sue with issues of labor, race dis¬crimination, academic freedom. Thusun increasing need was felt for amass organization which would reachthe great body of American students,uniting people of liberal, radical, andeven conservative trends on a broadplatform of issues of specific studentinterest.('olumbus ConventionA convention to discuss the forma¬tion of the proposed organizationwas called jointly by the NationalStudent League and the Studentl eague for Industrial Democracy tomeet in Columbus, Ohio during ther.t!.') Christmas iva^tion. Approxi¬mately 425 delegates from all overthe Union gathered for the four-dayconclave. Better than half of thesewere from the NSL and the SLID;the rest were “observers” and “fra¬ternal delegates” from other organi¬zations and individual campus groups,including twenty student councils.After deciding that the AmericanStudent Union should be formed, de¬bate arose on its platform and poli¬cies. Conflicting groups attacked andcounter-attacked, hammering out com¬promise agreements on each specificissue. The final platform was dividedinto four main groups:I'l ace—The Union opposed Ameri¬can war preparations. It sought abol¬ition of the R.O.T.C, It supported theOxford pledge.Freedom—It defended student's andteachers’ rights against reaction. Itopjtosed “tru.stee-domination” of edu¬cation. It resisted the “Hearst-in-siiired march toward Fascism.”Security—It favored extension ofHeeson Writes Workon Transcription ofLatin ManuscriptsPreparing a manuscript for publi¬cation, Charles H. Beeson, professoremeritus of Latin, is at present di¬recting flour graduate students atwork on three projects.Planning to complete the book inthree years, Beeson explained thathis primary purjwse is “to discovertrom an examination of Latin textsand manuscripts, what texts have)>assed through the hands of Irish orAnglo-Saxon scribes, whether copiedin Kngland, Ireland, or in some mon¬astery on the continent.”Df the three projects, the first is astudy of Irish and Anglo-Saxon La¬tin manuscripts; the second is con¬cerned with the library of the Ger¬man monastery, Lorsch; the thirddeals with four Latin grammaticaltexts of the eighth and ninth cen¬turies, two of which are to be pub¬lished for the first time—the remain¬ing two, formerly edited on the basis"f one Latin manuscript, will be re-edited by Beeson on the basis of ad¬ditional manuscript evidehce.First Christmas CardOriginated in EnglandAlmost 100 years ago,^^ oredeces-i^ors of the ultra-modern streamlinedChristmas cards first appeared inEngland. Credit for the idea of send¬ing greeting cards is generally givento Sir Henry Cole. In 1875, LouisPrang of Boston introduced them inthe United States.Early cards were either ornatelydecorated w’ith fringe and lace orwere rare etchings and paintings,highly valued by collectors today.Teresa Dolan Invites You toDance Every Friday NightPERSHING BALLROOMS.W. Cor. t4th ft Cottsfc Grore. Adai. 40cERNEST TUCKER’S MusicL'* a CluM Lcmom ChiMrua ft A4ulta8tu4io. lt4( E. Ur4 St. H74. Park SMt Federal student aid and advocatedpassage of the American Youth Act.It sought “adequate social securitylegislation.”Equality—It campaigned for uni¬versal educational opportunity. Itcondemned Negro discrimination andsegregation, and came out againstpersecution of any minority group.As part of the Union’s generalpolicy, it was decided that anyonewho supported one or more of theabove planks would be eligible formembership, and complete agreementof members with every plank was notinsisted upon. While rejecting * affili¬ation with any political party, theUnion was to favor co-operation withlabor and other progressive groups.History Since ConventionThe delegates returned from theconvention to find a receptive studentbody awaiting them. Chapters sprangup overnight, expanding numericallyto include large segments of the re¬spective campuses. After the tremen¬dously successful Strike Aainst Warwhich was sponsored by the Union,and included 500,000 students, therate of growth increased. At presentthe University of Chicago has thelargest chapter, comprising over 325paid members.Brown CriticizesHutchins^ View inStudent Advocate“The Higher Learning” of Presi¬dent Hutchins has been welcomedwith approval and dissent throughoutthe country in the two months thathave passed since its publication. NowNorman Q. Brown, a graduate stu¬dent in political science, offers to theDecember Student Advocate, nationalpublication of the ASU, a “Critiqueof Chicago’s Noted President”. TheAdvocate will be on sale next week.Brown, who holds a BA from Ox¬ford is studying at the Univer¬sity on a Commonwealth Fellowship.He accepts some of the criticisms ofeducation as presented in the book,but maintains that the solution ofthem does not lie in an Aristoteleanmetaphysics, but in a further organ¬ization of a unitary scientific method.Linn, Sandburg, Mrs.' Barnes Speak BeforeForum Sunday Night Today on theQuadranglesTODAYMeetingsDelta Sigma Pi. Room D of Rey¬nolds Club at 1:30.All members of Leaders Organiza¬tion. Cobb 316 at 2:30.All who wish to join ASU eatingco-operative meet in Harper M-11 at2:30.EntertainmentSymphony Concert. UniversitySymphony Orchestra. Carl Brickenconducting; Natalie Rudeis, soloist;Hampton Singers. Mandel Hall at8:15 p.m.Formal Dance. Given by ChicagoTheological Seminary in SeminaryBuilding at 9.Junior Math Club Christmas party.Ida Noyes at 8.LectureGideonse on “Economic Planning.Planning and International EconomicRelations.” Art Institute at 6:45.Radio Program“The News Behind the News.” As¬sociate Professor Kerwin over WINDfrom 7:30-7:45.SATURDAYUniversity Basketball Game. Chica¬go vs. Carroll College, Field Houseat 8.Marian Van Tuyl and Dance GroupRecital. International House at 8:30.“Our Democracy: Jackson.” Associ¬ate Professor Hutchinson over WINDat 7:30.SUNDAYRennaissance Society presents Mr.Alfred Churchill on “The Adventuresof Collecting” in the Cloister Club,Ida Noyes Hall, at 3:30. Tea follow¬ing.Arrian Formal Christmas Tea athome of Laverne Reid, 6630 SouthWhipple Street, at 3:30.Frederick Marriot, organ recital.WBBM 9:30-10. WGN 10:30-10:45.Round Table Discussion, “FascismCommuJiism, and Capitalism.” Gad-eonse, Kerwin, Utley, WMAQ at11:30.MONDAY“The White Flame ” or “The Ski-Chase.” German movie—English sub¬titles. International House. 4:30-8:30.Carl Sandburg, Margaret AyerBarnes, and Professor James WeberLinn will speak at “A Chicago Liter¬ary Evening,” third lecture forum ofTemple Sholum, at 8:30 Sunday.Mr. Sandburg, famed poet of theMiddle West and Lincoln authority,was born in Galesburg, and attendedLombard college there after servingin the Spanish-American War. Hisfirst volume, “Chicago Poems,” waspublished in 1916.Mrs. Barnes, who began writing byaccident, was awarded the Pulitzerprize for her novel “Years of Grace.”Other best sellers by Mrs. Barnes are“Westward Passage” and “WithinThis Present.”“A Chicago Literary Evening,” inpresenting a poet, a novelist, and aprofessor of English, is expected tofurnish an unusual divergence of lit¬erary views. Tickets, priced at 75c,may be obtained from the Temple of¬fice, 3480 Lake Shore Drive, or at thedoor.YWCA Will FeteSettlement ChildrenCommittee members of the YWCAare completing plans for the annualSettlement Christmas party on Fri¬day, December 18, at 3:30 in theYWCA room in Ida Noyes Hall, whenthey will bring one group of the chil¬dren from the Settlement House tothe campus.The association will entertain itsguests with games and Christmascarols, after which will be served re¬freshments and present the childrenwith small gifts. Decorations will bein keeping with the holiday spirit. ADVANCE REGISTRATION FORTHE WINTER QUARTERHours: 9 to 11:45, 1:30 to 4:30.Professional schools—Nov. 23-28.Biological sciences—Nov. 30-Dec.5.Humanities—Nov. 30-Dec. 5.Social Sciences—Dec. 7-12.Physical Sciences—Dec. 7-12.Students entering the Universityfor the first time may register in ad¬vance or on January 4, the first dayof the winter quarter.Students in residence during thecurrent quarter register in the officeof their dean by appointment. Do notgo to Registrar’s office as heretofore.Where to RegisterCollege .Cobb 203Biological sciences (includingMedical students) Cobb 216Humanities Cobb 208Physical Sciences Cobb 108Social Sciences (graduate studentsin Education go first to Grad¬uate Education 121) ....Cobb 208Divinity Swift 100Law Law buildingBusiness Haskell 102Social Service Administra¬tion Cobb 112Graduate Library Soc. Sci. 329DUKE UNIVERSITYSCHOOL OF MEDICINEDURHAM, N. C.Four term* of eleven weeks are giveneach year. These may be taken con¬secutively (graduation In three anaone quarter years) or three terms maybe Uken each year (graduation in louryears). The entrance requirements areintelligence, character and at Iwt twoyears of college work. Including thesubjects specified for Grade A medicalschools. Catalogues and wW®***®"forma may be obtained from the Dean.Marian Van Tuyland groupDANCE RECITALSaturday, December 128:30 P. M. International HouseTICKETS $1.55 - $1.10 - 83cON SALE AT INT. HOUSE and INFORMATION DESK— Management: Harold Marshman, Kimbal Bldg.,.Webster 2873 Apprentice WorkPermits Seniorsto Show Ability“How my knees shook when I facedthat classroom” need no longer be theshaky reaction of prospective teach¬ers in secondary schools on that fate¬ful day when they forsake the Uni¬versity halls to give informationrather than receiving it. The Univer¬sity has a protective measure,—thea-nr>ror>+i/*o torching course.For the third year the Universityis offering apprenticeship in virtuallyell subjects taught in the city highschools, including English, SocialScience, Natural Science, German,Latin, French, Spanish, and Math¬ematics. As the plan is now operated,the Seniors spend two hoursi,>daily atthe local high school assigned to them,devoting one hour to actual classroominstruction, and the other observingthe psychology of classroom instruc¬tion at the expense of their fellowapprentices.Their instruction includes the tech¬nical aspects of examination make-upand checking papers. Faculty mem¬bers from the University regularlyvisit the classes to offer constructivecriticism and aid the student in asmany ways as possible.Algernon Coleman, professor ofFrench, who is in charge of thecourses in the French and Spanishdepartments describes the plan as anopportunity “for prospective teachersto practice teaching under the expertguidance and under actual condi¬tions.”And the students, have they react¬ed favorably to the plan? ProfessorColeman, judging from their punc¬tuality for their classroom appoint¬ments, declares that they emphatic¬ally do.Puttkammer, DeLong,Stone Lead MeetingErnst W. Puttkammer, Earl De-Long, and Donald Stone will leada round table discussion Monday, De¬cember 14, at 2:30, ia the First Uni¬tarian Church house. The discussion,“Police, Politics, and the Public,” issponsored by the Hyde Park Leagueof Women Voters.Hanley’sBuffet1512 E.55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT "COLLEG¬IATE” ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY’SOver forty years of congenialservice Lexicographer Explains New ^^Wally”Angle—What is a ^^Baltiniore Beauty”With the attention of the worldfocused On the crisis over the Britishthrone. Dr. M. M. Mathews, assistantEditor of the American Dictionarystaff, has found the situation of nolittle interest to lexicographers in re¬gard to the American expression“Baltimore Beauty.” Mr. Mathewshas gleaned the following informa¬tion from an etymological study ofthe expression.More than a hundred years old,the expression has gained an inter¬national distinction for Baltimore, al¬though in recent years it has beensparingly used. Comments on thebeauty of Baltimore have been gen¬erally enthusiastic. In the 1830’s,Fanny Kemble, the celebrated actresswho was in this country at the time,wrote that “the Baltimore womenare celebrated for their beauty, andI think are the prettiest creatures Ihave ever seen...”Another traveller from Englanddeclared, “In one respect Baltimoreenjoys a very enviable, in another avery invidious, reputation. It is said to be full of pretty women, a ‘Balti¬more beauty’ being a sort of prover¬bial expression. I can say from per¬sonal observation, that, in so large apopulation, I never saw so small aproportion of unattractive faces.”Some attribute this assemblage ofbeauty to the large admixture ofFrench blood in the Baltimore popu¬lation. A large number of Acadianrefugees settled there, and were laterjoined by their compatriots duringthe French Revolution. From theseFrench settlers were descended someof the handsome women whose beautymade dhem renowned in their day.Among Baltimore’s famous beaut¬ies was Harriet Lane, niece of Pres¬ident Buchanan, w'hose charm andgrace greatly impressed the contem¬porary Prince of Wales on his firstvisit to the White House. Upon hisreturn to England he sent Miss Lanea set of royal engravings, accom¬panied by a personal letter, express¬ing his gratitude thus, “the cordialwelcome vouchsafed to me can neverbe effaced from my memory.”lllaisieifiiOND HIS ORCH&STHfiMAURINE AND NORVAFLORENCE HOPE • DONNA DAECONTINENTAL TRIO • MASTERS’ GLEE CLUBCONTINENTS ROOmSTEVENS HOTELDEBUTANTE SHOPSAKS FIFTH AVENUECHICAGOstrips on satin slippers, to shimmer onyour insteps when you dance. Toe-less,hi^h'heeled — to make your feet tiny.Black, red and white. 7.95Inexpensive Fashions — Fourth Floor669 Michigan Avenue, NorthAuditoriumFRIDAYDECEMBER 188:30 P.M.Northwestern UniversityMusic CourseBALLET RUSSEdeMONTE CARLOWORLD FAMOUSA few Seats in AU Locations50c, 75c, $1. $1.50. $2. $2.50 .(No tea)7:00 P. M. LectureJOHN MARTINSoots on Solo For All Concorts Now S. HUROKPresentsCOL. W. DeBASILSBALLET RUSSEDe Monte CarloMaitre de Ballet and ArtisticCollaborator:Leonide MassineCompany of 125Symphony OrchestraComingFri., Dec. 18 - Thurs., Dec. 31Seats 55c » $3.30Tickets at Information OfficeI ■mi iiw—M—ws^wii ■ >\ •JktmmmKmmmummm Chicago City Opera CoJason F. Whitney Paul Longon*President Gen’l ManagerLAST WEEK OF OPERATONIGHT, Dec. 11, 8 P. M.“TANNHAUSER”—Lawrence, LaMance, Matyas, Althouse, Bonelli,Baromeo; Ballet. Cond., Weber.Saturday Matinee, Dec. 12, 2 P.M.“SAMSON AND DELILAH” —Wettergren, Martinelli, Morelli,Baromeo, Cavadore, Ruisi; Page,Stone and Ballet. Cond., Weber.Saturday Evening, Dec. 12, 8 P.M.“THE BARTERED BRIDE” —Burke, Sharnova Barova, Cham-lee, Engelman, Rasely, D’Angelo;Page, Stone and Ballet. Cond.,Weber,Special Gala PerformanceSunday Evening, Dec. 13, 8 P.M.“LA JUIVE” — Lawrence, DellaChiesa, Martinelli, Baromeo, Mar¬tin, Cehanovsky; Ballet. Cond.,Weber.Prices—75c to $4.00 (Tax Exempt)Box Office, Telephone Rand. 9229CIVIC OPERA HOUSEPage Four -THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936• #> Qreek betters #>« * *By CODY PFANSTIEHLC~TFOLDING to the policy that “a small, compact group is in the bestinterest of comradeship and fraternalism,” Phi Beta Delta has neverbeen a large chapter at this University. At present there are 13actives and two pledges.Living costs as quoted by the fraternity, are very low—only $35 per_month for activesliving andthein¬feefee,pledges living inhouse. Other priceselude a $20 pledgeand $55 initiationand $3.75 per month forpledges and actives liv¬ing outside the house.As to be expected insuch a small group, activ¬ities are not numerous.The Phi B D’s have oneman on the varsity bas¬ketball team, one on thestaff of Phoenix, thetreasurer and one mem¬ber of the executive coun¬cil of the Jewish StudentFoundation.In past years Phi BetaPhi Beta DeltaDelta has dominated the Intramural program, but of late have been fallingoff in this respect.This is a small group, united in spirit, living quietly together “in the bestinterests of comradeship and fraternalism.”Fraternity CostsFRATERNITY ANDMEMBERSAlpha Delta Phi (43)... PLEDGECOSTPERMONTH16t °20 INITIA-TIONFEE60 ACTIVESLIVINGINHOUSE60 ACTIVESNOTLIVING INHOUSE25Alpha Tau Omega (16).. 9.90 50 42 12.90Beta Theta Pi (22) *2 50 45 *6Chi Psi (28) 13 50 57 19Delta Kappa Epsilon (42) 30 55 43 27.50Delta Upsilon (27) 10 50 40 20Delta Gama Delta (21)... *3 60 40 22.50Phi Kappa Psi (37) 13 75 59 23Phi Sigma Delta (31).... 13 46 42 16.50Phi Kappa Sigma (19).. 10.50 50 42 15.50Phi Beta Delta (15) 3.75 75 35 3.75Phi Delta Theta (43) 11.90 65 52 17.50Pi Lambda Phi (21) 8 100 52 19.25Psi Upsilon (36) 8 75 51 16Kappa Sigma (38) 13 50 48 17.50Sigma Chi (32) 5.70 50 50 8.20Zeta Beta Tau (29) 19.50 100 54 24*Does not include mealstFor those living in dormitories“For those not living in dormitoriesThis table will indicate relative expenses of the 17 campus fraternities.The figures are as accurate as possible, but may be taken as the minimumin every case. Assessments, not listed here, vary widely according to the fra¬ternity—from $0 to $20 or more per quarter.The number of required meals to be eaten at the house varies with theorganizations—usually from three to six.Freshmen are not allowed to live in fraternity house during their firstyear of residence at the University. Transfer students may live where theywill after being pledged.Faculty Plans Tripto Share CropperArea for SeminarySpring “hikes” of the Chicago The¬ological Seminary, carrying the stu¬dents to distant points throughout thecountry, will be resumed this year,after a one-year po.stponement.Plans for recontinuing the series ofspring hike.s by the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary have been announced.The plans for this spring’s hikehave not as yet been completed, butthe tentative ones include a trip to the industrial East, or one to theshare-cropper country of the South.The trip to the industrial Eastwould include a stay at Pittsburgh,the center of this district. This tripwould lead through Detroit and Cleve¬land, with a short stop-over at eachcity.The trip to the Share Cropper coun¬try of the South would include a tourof the experimental farms and the re¬settlement administration of this dis¬trict as well as colleges and schools.Each trip takes about ten days.Dr. Holt, Mr. Alderton, and others,have in the past led these hikes, andthey are attended by a certain num¬ber of students of the Seminary, theirinstructors, and prominent guests.rRHYTHM CONCERTTht ChioaKo Rhythm Club invites the University to its only concert of the 1936season at the Blackhawk Re.staurant Sunday afternoon, December 20th, at 3:30 P.M.The projrram will star the sinKinK of Mildred Bailey, the swinft rhythms of RedNorvo and his orchestra and the piano improvisations of the sensational rhythmpianist, Meade Lux Lewis.The Chicago Rhythm Club is an organization composed of enthusiastic musicdevotees whose aim is to further the understanding and appreciation of popularmusic of the past, present and future. The club has been in existence for approxi¬mately two years during which time they have held five concerts. Previous con¬certs have featured the music of Benny Goo<lman, Fletcher Henderson, and severalother instrumentalists and instrumental groupings.The selection of Mildred Bailey and Bed Norvo and his orchestra, to star inthe Club’.s only 1936 concert is an acknowledgment of their ability to interpret pop¬ular music in the accepted rhythmic or "swing” style. Both Bailey and Norvo areapt pupils of the modern manner o? musical presentation. Mildred Bailey, a PaulWhiteman protege, was formerly featured with Whiteman as a song stylist. Norvo,also a Whiteman alumni, is considered by musical authorities to be one of the out¬standing xlyophone players in the country. He is accredited with the introductionof a distinctly new type of swing tempo which he calls "relaxed rhythm”. Hisxylophone and his "slow music in swing tempo” are an integral part of his danceorchestrations. Meade Lux L^^wis is considered one of the foremost rhythm pianistsof the day.Tickets for the concert are available at Lyon-Healy music store and at theBlackhawk. Tickets purchased prior to the date of the concert can be obtained forone dollar. Admission at the Blackhawk Sunday, December 20th, will be one dollarand fifty cents.Although the tickets have only been available for a few days. Club officials pre¬dict from the advance sales that this concert will be one of the best attendedaffairs ever sponsored by the Chicago Rhythm Club. University ConfersPh D D egree onDaily News EditorIncluded in the list of the recipientsof the 274 degrees to be conferred atConvocation will be Royal F. Monger,financial editor of the Chicago DailyNews. He will be awarded a Bachelorof Philosophy degree, which was con¬ferred under the old plan.A senior in the School of Business,Monger needed only a few credits tocomplete his University degree whenthe United States entered the War.Monger’s enlistment ended his workon the Quadrangles. Recently he sub¬mitted several articles to be substi¬tuted for his lacking credits. The Uni¬versity examiners accepted these pa¬pers, thereby permitting Munger toreceive his degree.Speaking on the question, “CanScience Point the Way”, Arthur HollyCompton, Charles H. Swift distin¬guished service professor of Physics,will deliver the 186th Convocation ad¬dress. Diplomas will be awarded byPresident Robert Maynard Hutchins.By order of the President’s office,the Phi Beta Kappa awards will notbe released for publication until Mon¬day.Since the attendance is expected tobe small, persons may be admittedwithout ticket. However, those withinvitations will be given preferencein seats. Tickets may be obtained atHarper M12. University ^Dames^ Sing Folksongs^Review Books^ and Explore ChicagoBy MAXINEWay back in 1900 someone stum¬bled on the fact that graduate stu¬dents often marry; and that theirwives often live, with little oppor¬tunity to make friends, in theUniversity community. At that time,the “Dames” club was organized, forthe purpose of bringing together thewives of sti’dents, the mothers ofstudents who have no permanenthome in Chicago, and faculty mem¬bers’ wives.At present the “Dames” club is anational organization with chaptersat Universities all over the country.Its Chicago chapter numbers about150 members, 95 per cent of whomare wives of graduate students. Al¬though the dues are only one dollara year, the club offers its membersdiscussion group meetings about twicea week. Special activity groups in¬clude book reviewing classes, artgroups, tours. The trips taken are BIESENTHALto points of interest around the city.Dame MembershipAlthough at least 90 per cent ofthe members are college gradutes,few have degrees from the Univer¬sity. The club has attracted thewives of missionaries, who have re¬turned to this country to receivehigher degrees, only a small percent¬age of the women have children, but,although the financial status of mostgraduate students is none too se¬cure, not many of the women work.Because the club is mainly a so¬cial one, the money collected in duesis used for parties. A children’sparty will be given this week, andonce a month a party is given towhich the husbands are invited.Typical programs for the meetings in¬clude speakers from the University,and singing of folk songs. The bookreview classes are conducted by thevice-president, Mrs. J. B. AllinTHE J.R WAFFLE AND SANDWICH SHOP1202 EAST 55thWHERE QUALITY IS HIGHER THAN PRICEWAFFLES — SANDWICHES — NOON AND EVENING DINNERSSEE YOUR FOOD PREPARED mnnnoL.LGOINGFORMAL?lor theHoliday SeasonWhen a man "qoe« iormal" hehoe to keep hie eqo intact. Theeliqhteet doubt in hie mind, at tothe correctneee oi hie attire willeour any eocial event And tolerreme accepte the reepontibility for hie peace of mind, withReady-to-wear"Toils" atiorty-five dollarsond moreCuetom tollored to order,eiqhly-five to one hundredtwenty-fiveJerrems324 S. Michigan Ave.and 7 S. LaSalle St.booooooooooooooooooooocccTIMELY CLOTHESCorrect Formal WearO/tlcLTimely Drees Clothes permityou to go properly formal,but they also allow you tobe perfectly natural — anachievement in eveningwear you'll be doubly grate¬ful for. Timely tailoring guar¬antees true ease and free¬dom. Both Tuxedo and FullDress are available in thepopular draped and con¬servative midnight blue.Coat and trousers$ 35Dress Overcoats $35 to $115, Opera Hats $10 to $15, Silk Hats $12 to $18, Dress Shirts $2.50 to $3.50, Dress Oxfords $6.85 to $10.85THE C#) HubHenry c. Lytton & SonsSfote and JacksonCHICAGO Orrington and CharekEVANSTON Marlon and LakaOAK PARK Broadway and FifthGARTStore Hours: 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Until Christmas JX LXDAILY MAROON SPORTSFRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936 Page FiveMaroon CagersMeet CarrollFive TomorrowCliicago ImprovedAmundsen, Cassels LeadDevelopment of Hard¬wood Quintet.STARTING LINEUP CarrollB. Knoblauch(hiia^'oKiTK^'iiieyor IFitzgirald f Buck\muiulson c J. Knoblauchg Barnesg BegpTdiuoiiow night, the Maroon hard¬wood five meets Carroll College onthf fioldhouse floor. The Carroll team,loaohod by Elmer Lampe, formerMidway athlete, will be the Maroons’thinl opponent of the season.Tlu* University cagers thus farhavo won one game and lost one. Af-loi an unimpressive 27-24 victory overWheaton, they looked much improvedin their 25-21 loss to a strong Mar-(luilte quintet.Amundsen ImprovesI’lactioe this week has been prim¬arily drill on the fast break and de¬fense As the cagers approach con¬dition, Paul Amundsen, lanky center,a[)pears to be the key figure. Lastyear awkward and lacking in fire, theformer Bowen high school star ap¬pears to have gained something ofboth, and was the main factor of de¬fense in both games so far this yer*.He has become increasingly rugc^uas the .season progresses, and haslearned how to use his weight to ad¬vantage in center jumps and in con¬trolling the backboards. His aggres¬siveness on offense in this week’spractice has been a source of greatpleasure to coaches and fans whohave watched him.Others HelpOthers whose play has been note¬worthy and who will see plenty ofaction tomorrow are Bob Cassels,sophomore forward, whose speed andstamina will be a large factor in thetinal success of the Maroons; “Red”Kossin, speedy guard, who with Cas--els has proved very effective in thefa>t break; Bob Fitzgerald, juniorforward, who is gradually working in¬to basketball condition after a slowstart because of football; and JohnKggemeyer, regular forward, who asyet has not lived up to the reputationhe earned for himself last year.Vacation means more work for thecage team. The Carroll game will befollowed by one with alumni, the firstof its kind, Tuesday evening. Thealumni team is being formed by Billhang and Tommy Flynn. ArmourTech will be the opposition a weekfrom tomorrow evening; but theteam will be weakened by the absenceof Ken Petersen, who will go homefor the week. The Prep Tourney ofChristmas week will be climaxed bya Notre Dame-Chicago game on thenight of the finals, Saturday, Janu¬ary 2, 1937.ImykOLDCHAP!Don't youknow thatthePiccadilly PubServes such tasties asCHICKENOYSTERSFROG LEGSand your favorite bev¬erage the way youlike them and at yourfavorite priceslPiccadilly PubA. rendezvous for students736 East Sixty-third StreetN.W. Corner Sixty-thirdand CottaKe Grove Coach Says Track Squad SuccessDoubtful; High Jump^ Mile StrongWith most of last year’s stars miss¬ing, track prospects for the seasonere a large question mark, whichCoach Ned Merriam is trying tochange to an exclamation mark. Theonly bright spot in the setup is in thehigh jump, where four men are bet¬tering the six foot mark. Kobak andGordon did 6-1 last year in Texas.The most glaring weakness is polevault. In this event there is only Law-son, and possibly Bob Cassels, bas¬ketball star. Of the hurdlers, Beal isthe only man showing championshipcalibre.Halcrow Stands Out in 440In the 440 Halcrow and Bergmanare standouts. The half milers areWasem and Miller. McElroy, Bonni-well, Reitman, and Leach are battlingfor the mile run. One of these milersmay have to be converted to a twomile runner to bolster the weaknessin this event. Kringle is the only po¬tential point winner at this distance.Ftom tossing footballs to pitchingthe shot is the progress of Fink,Goodstein, and Hamity, erstwhilegridsters, now shot putters. UntilBartlett and Frick start training,the sprinting department is whollyAlvar HermansonHas Fine Recordas-Fencing CoachSwedish, taciturn, gigantic, AlvarHermanson, assistant fencing coach,has a record in training championswhich would raise envy in anycoach’s bosom. Invincible in cityfencing circles, he has succeeded inturning out three conference champ¬ionship teams in the four years ofhis tutelage. During this period histeams have lost only one dual meet.This year’s team is aiming confi¬dently at another conference title.Its members are almost solely theproduct of the 220 pound coach’straining.Trains Men from ScratchAs for this year’s team, it is al¬most entirely a product of the 220-pound Swedish coach’s training.Henry Lemon, co-captain, learned tofence epee entirely under Herman-son’s direction. Lemon had the bestepee record in the conference lastyear, and is the leading threat forthe individual epee crown left vacantby the graduation of Gillies fromNorthwestern.Jim Walters, the other co-captain,has also developed rapidly under theassistant coach, having won foil andepee honors in the state and division¬al meets of the Amateur Fencers’League of America last spring. Wal¬ters has almost an open field in foilthis year.The third senior on the team, Irv¬ing Richardson, has learned epeesolely under Hermanson’s guidance.Last year in saber he defeated someof the best men in the middle west,and looks even better in the epee thisyear.The only junior on the team, NedFritz, didn’t know how to hold aweapon when he started freshmanfencing under the coach. lacking save for Hollingshead, highjumper, who is working out in thedashes. Lawson and Busby are jav¬elin tossers.Lawson in Several EventsLawson appears to be the work¬horse of the team. While a little slowin shaking off the effects of football,he seems to have the ability to takepoints in several of the events inwhich he is working. He does the one-man track team act, performing inbroad jump, javelin, high hurdles, andpole vault.Hold High SchoolBasketball Tourneyon University CourtThirty-two Chicago High Schoolshave entered the annual UniversityChristmas week basketball tourna¬ment, and the final pairings will bemade at the beginning of next week.The tourney will commence at 1on Monday, December 28, and willcontinue till 10. The hours of play willbe the same Tuesday and Wednesday,but on Thursday there will be onlyfour games, two in the afternoon andtwo m the evening. The semifinalswill be played the evening of Friday,January 1; and the finals will be play¬ed Saturday evening. The champion¬ship game will follow the NotreDame-Chicago game.Coach Nels Morgren, who is incharge of the tournament said yester¬day that the four leading schools oflast year’s tourney are again entered.They are, in order of rank, Farragut,Crane, Bowen, and Foreman. Otherteams who will play are MorganPark, Harper, Sullivan, Wells, HydePark, Lane, Calumet, Kelvyn Park,Senn, Von Steuben, Marshall, Austin,and Waller, and Harrison.Others who have accepted the invi¬tation are DuSable, Tuley, Amund¬sen, Manley, Hirsch, Tilden, Engle¬wood, Lindblom, Parker, McKinley,Steinmetz, Philips, Fenger, and Uni¬versity High.Price of admission will be 40c butadmission to semifinals and finals is7Bc. All holders of “C” Books will beadmitted free of charge. Wrestlers OpenSeason AgainstWheaton CollegeWheaton will play host to a fairlystrong University wrestling squad to¬morrow evening at 8, when the- Ma¬roons travel west for their first com¬petitive meet this season.Wheaton has a strong team, havingwon the Little Nineteen championshiplast year. The University team hasall been chosen, except in the 145pound division. Nick Colias will wres¬tle in the 126 pound weight. DavidTinker will take on the responsibil¬ity in the 118 pound class, whilePeter Dzubay will tussle in the 136pound division.Fred Lehnhardt WrestlesThe 165 and 165 pound weights willbe handled by John Haas and AllenTully respectively. Ed Va^orz willtake part in the 175 pound class, andFred Lehnhardt will participate inthe heavyweight division. The afore¬mentioned men have all won the rightto wrestle in the meet by matches car¬ried on during the past few weeks.As yet, the 145 pound contestant hasnot been determined, choice lying be¬tween Cutler, Bernhardt, and Freese.Last year when the two teams met,each won on their own mats; Chi¬cago winning 21-13, and Wheaton bya score of 22 to 8.According to Coach Vorres, numer¬als will be awarded to seven fresh¬men grapplers. The men to receivesweaters are W. A. Thomas, and Rob¬ert Hughes, 118; Myron Davis, andGill Finwall, 135; David Coz, 145;Jack Carlson, 175; and, Joseph Brook-hart, heavyweight. Phi Delta ThetaWins Intra-MuralSwimming MeetEnding Psi Upsilon’s two yeardomination of the event. Phi DeltaTheta yesterday nosed out the Owls36-34 to capture the annual Intra¬mural swimming meet. Amas.sing 12points by winning all three places inthe 100 yard breast stroke, the PhiDelts gained a margin which thePsi U’s could not overcome.The summary of events40 yard free style: Won by Andalman;second, Stevens, Psi Upsilon ; third, B. Miller,Alpha Delta Phi: fourth, Anderson, Psi Upsi¬lon ; fifth, Otani. Time 20:4.100 yard breast stroke—Won by Baumgart,Phi Delta Theta; second, Rubach, Phi Del aTheta; third, Lehnhardt, Phi Delta Theta;fourth, James, Alpha Delta Phi. Time —1:39.9.100 yard free style—Won by Schor, unat¬tached : second, Andalman, unattached; thirdFrick, Phi Delta Theta; fourth, Sibley, PsiUpsilon. Time—1:01.7.100 yard backstroke—Won by MacLaury, Psi Up-silon; second, Adair, Delta Upsilon;third, Anderson, Psi Upsilon. Time -1:13.2.220 yard free style—Won by Baumgart, PhiDelta Theta; second, Sibley, Psi Upsilon;third, Valorz, Phi Delta Theta; fourth. Sha¬ver, Alpha Delta Phi. Time-2:63.Fancy diving —Won by Harris, Phi DeltaTheta; second, Webbe, Psi Upsilon ; third.Hood, Delta Upsilon; fourth. Shaver, AlphaDelta Phi.180 yard medley relay—Won by Psi Upsilon(MacLaury, Stevens) ; second. Phi Delta The¬ta. Time -2 :09.2.160 yard free style relay—Won by Psi Up¬silon (Stevens, McLaury, Anderson) ; second.Phi Delta Theta ; third. Delta Upsilon ; fourth.Alpha Delta Phi. Time—1:28.9.THREE MONTHS' COURSEPOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, stenographic course-starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligation—write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.D.,PH.S.tbegnJar Courses, open to High School Grcuhsuites only, may be started any Monday. Dayand Evening. Evening Courses open to mess.116 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Randolph 434^The John MarshallLAW COURSES(40 waeks par year)SCHOOL Afternoon—3years5 days... 4:30-6:30FOUNDED 1899 Evening — 4 yearsMon., Wed., Fri.,AN 6:30-9:20ACCREDITED Post-graduateLAW SCHOOL 1 yeor..twice a weekPractice coursesTEXT and CASE exclusively.METHOD All courses lead• to degrees.For Catalog, r«com- Two years' collegemendad list of pr*-legal work required forsubjocts, and boolilet. entrance."Studyof Lawond Proper New classes formPreparation' address:Edward T. Lee, Dean. in Feb. and Sept.315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, SAI C.Chicago's finest Chinese AmericanRestaurantThe University of Chicago stu¬dents have by popular acclaimchosen HOE SAI GAI to be theofficial Chinese-American restaur¬ant.If you desire the finest Amer-can dishes or quaint Chinese deli-casies, you will be more than sat¬isfied with our service.Come in and enjoy the congen¬ial modernistic atmosphere.75 W. RANDOLPH ST.Jtist the place for after the showbm WorfilfipUniversity Church ofDisciples of ChristMinister: Dr. Edward ScribnerAmes. Minister’s Associate:Mr. Fred B. WiseSunday, December 13, 193611:00 A. M. — Sermon. Subject:“W’hy Religion Today?” Dr.Ames.12:20 P. M.—Forum: Dr. MarjorieWilliamson Bruner on “MedievalChristmas Dramas.”6:00 P. M.—Wranglers. Tea andprogram. Hyde Park Baptist Church5600 Woodlawn Ave.Norris L. Tibbetts and Rolland W.Schloerb, MinistersSunday, December 13, 193610:00 A. M.—Adult Classes.11:00 A. M. — Morning Worship.“Prelude to Power.” Rev. Nor¬ris L. Tibbetts.7:00 P.M.—Young People’s ChurchClub. “Christmas in OtherLands.” Annual carol sing atthe home of Mrs. William Roth-mann. 6148 Woodlawn Ave. The First Unitarian ChurchWoodlawn Ave. and E. 57th StreetVon Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSunday, December 13, 193611:00 A. M.—The Magnificat—TheSong of Mary. Dr. Vogt.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club. Teaand Discussion “The Hopes andProblems of the Negroes OfAmerica”, Miss Pauline Red¬mond, Urban League. TUXEDOQyadley evening clothes are treated inthe manner pursued by the best customshops. DevelojDed in a deep midnight blueunfinished worsted of enduring quality—lined with silk and grosgrain^ facedlapels. High, twin ^pleated trousers.35SINGLE OR DOUBLE'BREASTEDFULL DRESS COAT-THIRTY DOLLARSCOMBINATION-SIXTY'FIVE DOLLARSWaistcoats fy.yo • Opera fHat fiojfmcfilep19 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago • 564 Fifth Ave., New YorkPage Four TOE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 11. 1936^ Qreek Metiers #>* 4 «By CODY PFANSTIEHLCTYOLDING to the policy that “a small, compact group is in the bestL interest of comradeship and fraternalism,” Phi Beta Delta has neverbeen a large chapter at this University. At present there are 13actives and two pledges.Living costs as quoted by the fraternity, are very low—only $35 permonth for actives andpledges living in thehouse. Other prices in¬clude a $20 pledge feeand $55 initiation fee,and $3.75 per month forpledges and actives liv¬ing outside the house.As to be expected insuch a small group, activ¬ities are not numerous.The Phi B D’s have oneman on the varsity bas¬ketball team, one on thestaff of Phoenix, thetreasurer and one mem¬ber of the executive coun¬cil of the Jewish StudentFoundation.Phi Beta Delta In past years Phi BetaDelta has dominated the Intramural program, but of late have been fallingoff in this respect.This is a small group, united in spirit, living quietly together “in the bestinterests of comradeship and fraternalism.”Fraternity CostsFRATERNITY ANDMEMBERSAlpha Delta Phi (43)... PLEDGECOSTPERMONTH16t °20 INITIA¬TIONFEE60 ACTIVESLIVINGINHOUSE60 ACTIVESNOTLIVING INHOUSE25Alpha Tau Omega (16),. 9.90 50 42 12.90Beta Theta Pi (22) *2 50 45 ♦6Chi Psi (28) 13 50 57 19Delta Kappa Epsilon (42) 30 55 43 27.50Delta Upsilon (27) 10 50 40 20Delta Gama Delta (21)... *P> 60 40 22.50Phi Kappa Psi (37) 13 75 59 23Phi Sigma Delta (31).... 13 46 42 16.50Phi Kappa Sigma (19).. 10.50 50 42 15.50Phi Beta Delta (15) 3.75 75 35 3.75Phi Delta Theta '(43) 11.90 65 52 17.50Pi Lambda Phi (21) 8 100 52 19.25Psi Upsilon (36) 8 75 51 16Kappa Sigma (38) 13 50 48 17.50Sigma Chi (32) 5.70 50 50 8.20Zeta Beta Tau (29) 19.50 100 54 24*Does not include mealsfFor those living in dormitories“For those not living in dormitoriesThis table will indicate relative expenses of the 17 campus fraternities.The figures are as accurate as possible, but may be taken as the minimumin every case. As.sessments, not listed here, vary widely according to the fra¬ternity—from $5 to $20 or more per quarter.The number of required meals to be eaten at the house varies with theorganizations—usually from three to six.Freshmen are not allowed to live in fraternity house during their firstyear of residence at the University. Transfer students may live where theywill after being pledged.Faculty Plans Tripto Share CropperArea for SeminarySpring “hikes” of the Chicago The¬ological Seminary, carrying the stu¬dents to distant points throughout thecountry, will be resumed this year,after a one-year postponement.Plans for recontinuing the series ofspring hikes by the Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary have been announced.The plans for this spring’s hikehave not as yet been completed, butthe tentative ones include a trip to the industrial East, or one to theshare-cropper country of the South.The trip to the industrial Eastwould include a stay at Pittsburgh,the center of this district. This tripwould lead through Detroit and Cleve¬land, with a short stop-over at eachcity.The trip to the Share Cropper coun¬try of the South would include a tourof the experimental farms and the re¬settlement administration of this dis¬trict as well as colleges and schools.Each trip takes about ten days.Dr, Holt, Mr. Alderton, and others,have in the past led these hikes, andthey are attended by a certain num¬ber of students of the Seminary, theirinstructors, and prominent guests.RHYTHM CONCERTTh(- Chicago Rhythm Club invites the University to its only concert of the 19.'5Gseason at the Blackhawk Restaurant Sunday afternoon, December 20th, at 3:30 P.M.The program will star the singing of Mildred Bailey, the swing rhythms of RedNorvo an<l his orchestra and the piano improvisations of the sensational rhythmpianist, Meade Lux Lewis.The Chicago Rhythm Club is an organization composed of enthusiastic musicdevotees whose aim is to further the understanding and appreciation of popularmusic of the past, present and future. The club has been in existence for approxi¬mately two years during which time they have held five concerts. Previous con-cert.s have featured the music of Benny Goo<iman, Fletcher Henderson, and severalother instrumentalists and instrumental groupings.The selection of Mildred Bailey and Red Norvo and his orchestra, to star inthe Club's only 1936 concert is an acknowledgment of their ability to interpret pop¬ular music in the accepted rhythmic or "swing” style. Both Bailey and Norvo areapt pupils of the modern manner oi musical presentation. Mildred Bailey, a PaulWhiteman protege, was formerly featured with Whiteman as a song stylist. Norvo.also a Whiteman alumni, is considered by musical authorities to be one of the out¬standing xlyophone players in the country. He is accredited with the introductionof a distinctly new type of swing tempo which he calls “relaxed rhythm”. Hisxylophone and his "slow music in swing tempo” are an integral part of his danceorchestrations. Meade Lux Lj^wis is considered one of the foremost rhythm pianistsof the day.Tickets for the concert are available at Lyon-Healy music store and at theBlackhawk. Tickets purchased prior to the date of the concert can be obtained forone dollar. Admission at the Blackhawk Sunday, December 20th, will be one dollarand fifty cents.Although the tickets have only been available for a few days. Club officials pre-diet from the advance sales that this concert will be one of the best attendedaffairs ever sponsored by the Chicago Rhythm Club. University ConfersPh D Degree onDaily News EditorIncluded in the list of the recipientsof the 274 degrees to be conferred atConvocation will be Royal F. Munger,financial editor of the Chicago DailyNews. He will be awarded a Bachelorof Philosophy degree, which was con¬ferred under the old plan.A senior in the School of Business,Munger needed only a few credits tocomplete his University degree whenthe United States entered the War.Munger’s 'enlistment ended his workon the Quadrangles. Recently he sub¬mitted several articles to be substi¬tuted for his lacking credits. The Uni¬versity examiners accepted these pa¬pers, thereby permitting Munger toreceive his degree.Speaking on the question, “CanScience Point the Way”, Arthur HollyCompton, Charles H. Swift distin¬guished service professor of Physics,will deliver the 186th Convocation ad¬dress. Diplomas will be awarded byPresident Robert Maynard Hutchins.By order of the President’s office,the Phi Beta Kappa awards will notbe released for publication until Mon¬day.Since the attendance is expected tobe small, persons may be admittedwithout ticket. However, those withinvitations will be given preferencein seats. Tickets may be obtained atHarper M12. University ^Dames^ Sing Folksongs,Review Books, and Explore ChicagoBy MAXINEWay back in 1900 someone stum¬bled on the fact that graduate stu¬dents often marry; and that theirwives often live, with little oppor¬tunity to make friends, in theUniversity community. At that time,the “Dames” club was organized, forthe purpose of bringing together thewives of students, the mothers ofstudents who have no permanenthome in Chicago, and faculty mem¬bers’ wives.At present the “Dames” club is anational organization with chaptersat Universities all over the country.Its Chicago chapter numbers about150 members, 95 per cent of whomare wives of graduate students. Al¬though the dues are only one dollara year, the club offers its membersdiscussion group meetings about twicea week. Special activity groups in¬clude book reviewing classes, artgroups, tours. The trips taken are BIESENTHALto points of interest around the city.Dame MembershipAlthough at least 90 per cent ofthe members are college gradutes,few have degrees from the Univer¬sity. The club has attracted thewives of missionaries, who have re¬turned to this country to receivehigher degrees, only a small percent¬age of the women have children, but,although the financial status of mostgraduate students is none too se¬cure, not many of the women work.Because the club is mainly a so¬cial one, the money collected in duesis used for parties. A children’sparty will be given this week, andonce a month a party is given towhich the husbands are invited.Typical programs for the meetings in¬clude speakers from the University,and singing of folk songs. The bookreview classes are conducted by theI vice-president, Mrs. J. B. AllinTHE J-R WAFFLE AND SANDWICH SHOP1202 EAST 55thWHERE QUALITY IS HIGHER THAN PRICEWAFFLES — SANDWICHES — NOON AND EVENING DINNERSSEE YOUR FOOD PREPARED GOINGFORMAL?for theHoliday SeasonWhen a man "qoee iomal" hehat to keep hit eqo intact. Thetliqhtett doubt in hit mind, oi tothe correctnett oi hit ottire willtour any tocial event And tolerremt accepts the retpontibility ior hit peace oi mind, withReady-to-wear“Toils" atforty-five dollarsand moreCustom tailored to order,eiqhty-Hve to one hundredtwenty-fiveJerrems324 S. Michigan Ave.and 7 S. LaSalle St.leeooooooeoooeeoocf'XTIMELY CLOTHESCorrect Formal WearmuTimely Dress Clothes permityou to go properly formal,but they also allow you tobo perfectly natural—anachievement in eveningwear you'll be doubly grate¬ful lor. Timely tailoring guar¬antees true ease and free¬dom. Both Tuxedo and FullDress are available in thepopular draped and con¬servative midnight blue.Coat and trousers$ 35Dress Overcoats $35 to $115, Opera Hats $10 to $15, Silk Hats $12 to $18, Dress Shirts $2.50 to $3,5Q, Dress Oxfords $6.85 to $10.85THE C# hubHenry c. Lytton & SonsState and Jack$aa Orrhgtaa and Charck Marlon and Laka Braodway and FIttkCHICAGO EVANSTON OAK PAKK GARY- Store Hours: 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Until Christmas JDAILY MAROON SPORTSFRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936 Page FiveMaroon CagersMeet CarrollFive TomorrowChicago ImprovedAmundsen, Cassels LeadDevelopment of Hard¬wood Quintet.STARTING LINEUPChicago ‘ CarrollEkrLnmeycr f B. KnoblauchFitzgerald f ^ BuckAinutuiscii c J. Knoblauchivtcrscn g BarnesHossin g BeggsTomorrow night, the Maroon hard-wooil five meets Carroll College onthe licldhouse floor. The Carroll team,coaehed by Elmer Lampe, formerMiiiway athlete, will be the Maroons’third opponent of the season.The University cagers thus farhave won one game and lost one. Af¬ter an unimpressive 27-24 victory overWheaton, they looked much improvedin their 25-21 loss to a strong Mar-(juitte (juintet.Amundsen ImprovesI’ractice this week has been prim-aiily drill on the fast break and de-lense As the cagers approach con¬dition. Paul Amundsen, lanky center,appears to be the key figure. Lastyear awkward and lacking in fire, theformer Bowen high school star ap¬pears to have gained something ofboth, and was the main factor of de¬fense in both games so far this year.He has become increasingly ruggedas the .season progresses, and haslearned how to use his weight to ad¬vantage in center jumps and in con¬trolling the backboards. His aggres-siveiie.ss on offense in this week’spractice has been a source of greatpleasure to coaches and fans whohave watched him.Others HelpOther.s whose play has been note-woithy and who will see plenty ofaction tomorrow are Bob Cassels,sophomore forward, whose speed andstamina will be a large factor in thetinal success of the Maroons; “Red”Kossin, speedy guard, who with Cas-els has proved very effective in thefast break; Bob Fitzgerald, juniorforward, who is gradually working in¬to basketball condition after a slowstart because of football; and JohnKggemeyer, regular forward, who asyet has not lived up to the reputationhe earned for himself last year.Vacation means more work for thecage team. The Carroll game will befollowed by one with alumni, the firstof its kind, Tuesday evening. Thealumni team is being formed by Billhang and Tommy Flynn. ArmourTech will be the opposition a weekfrom tomorrow evening; but theteam will be weakened by the absenceof Ken Petersen, who will go homefor the week. The Prep Tourney ofChristmas week will be climaxed bya Notre Dame-Chicago game on thenight of the finals, Saturday, Janu¬ary 2, 1937.Don't youknow thatthePiccadilly PubServes such tasties asCHICKENOYSTERSFROG LEGSand your favorite bev¬erage the way youlike them and at yourfavorite priceslA rendezvous for students736 East Sixty-third StreetN-W. Corner Sixty-thirdand CottaKe Grov< Coach Says Track Squad SuccessDoubtful; High Jump^ Mile StrongWith most of last year’s stars miss¬ing, track prospects for the seasonare a large question mark, whichCoach Ned Merriam is trying tochange to an exclamation mark. Theonly bright spot in the setup is in thehigh jump, where four men are bet¬tering the six foot mark. Kobak andGordon did 6-1 last year in Texas.The most glaring weakness is polevault. In this event there is only Law-son, and possibly Bob Cassels, bas¬ketball star. Of the hurdlers, Beal isthe only man showing championshipcalibre.Halcrow Stands Out in 440In the 440 Halcrow and Bergmanare standouts. The half milers areWasem and Miller. McElroy, Bonni-well, Reitman, and Leach are battlingfor the mile run. One of these milersmay have to be converted to a twomile runner to bolster the weaknessin this event. Kringle is the only po¬tential point winner at this distance.Prom tossing footballs to pitchingthe shot is the progress of Fink,Goodstein, and Hamity, erstwhilegridsters, now shot putters. UntilBartlett and Frick start training,the sprinting department is whollyAlvar HermansonHas Fine Recordas-Fencing CoachSwedish, taciturn, gigantic, AlvarHerman.son, assistant fencing coach,has a record in training championswhich would raise envy in anycoach’s bosom. Invincible in cityfencing circles, he has succeeded inturning out three conference champ¬ionship teams in the four years ofhis tutelage. During this period histeams have lost only one dual meet.This year’s team is aiming confi¬dently at another conference title.Its members are almost solely theproduct of the 220 pound coach’straining.Trains Men from ScratchAs for this year’s team, it is al¬most entirely a product of the 220-pound Swedish coach’s training.Henry Lemon, co-captain, learned tofence epee entirely under Herman¬son’s direction. Lemon had the bestepee record in the conference lastyear, and is the leading threat forthe individual epee crown left vacantby the graduation of Gillies fromNorthwestern.Jim Walters, the other co-captain,has also developed rapidly under theassistant coach, having won foil andepee honors in the state and division¬al meets of the Amateur Fencers’League of America last spring. Wal¬ters has almost an open field in foilthis year.The third senior on the team, Irv¬ing Richardson, has learned epeesolely under Hermanson’s g^uidance.Last year in saber he defeated someof the best men in the middle west,and looks even better in the epee thisyear.The only junior on the team, NedFritz, didn’t know how to hold aweapon when he started freshmanfencing under the coach. lacking save for Hollingshead, highjumper, who is working out in thedashes. Lawson and Busby are jav¬elin tossers.Lawson in Several EventsLawson appears to be the work¬horse of the team. While a little slowin shaking off the effects of football,he seems to have the ability to takepoints in several of the events inwhich he is working. He does the one-man track team act, performing inbroad jump, javelin, high hurdles, andpole vault.Hold High SchoolBasketball Tourneyon University CourtThirty-two Chicago High Schoolshave entered the annual UniversityChristmas week basketball tourna¬ment, and the final pairings will bemade at the beginning of next week.The tourney will commence at 1on Monday, December 28, and willcontinue till 10. The hours of play willbe the same Tuesday and Wednesday,but on Thursday there will be onlyfour games, two in the afternoon andtwo in the evening. The semifinalswill be played the evening of Friday,January 1; and the finals will be play¬ed Saturday evening. The champion¬ship game will follow the NotreDame-Chicago game.Coach Nels I^rgren, who is incharge of the tournament said yester¬day that the four leading schools oflast year’s tourney are again entered.They are, in order of rank, Farragut,Crane, Bowen, and Foreman. Otherteams who will play are MorganPark, Harper, Sullivan, Wells, HydePark, Lane, Calumet, Kelvyn Park,Senn, Von Steuben, Marshall, Austin,and Waller, and Harrison.Others who have accepted the invi¬tation are DuSable, Tuley, Amund¬sen, Manley, Hirsch, Tilden, Engle¬wood, Lindblom, Parker, McKinley,Steinmetz, Philips, Fenger, and Uni¬versity High.Price of admission will be 40c butadmission to semifinals and finals is76c. All holders of “C” Books will beadmitted free of charge. Wrestlers OpenSeason AgainstWheaton CollegeWheaton will play host to a fairlystrong University wrestling squad to¬morrow evening at 8, when the- Ma¬roons travel west for their first com¬petitive meet this season.Wheaton has a strong team, havingwon the Little Nineteen championshiplast year. The University team hasall been chosen, except in the 145pound division. Nick Colias will wres¬tle in the 126 pound weight. DavidTinker will take on the responsibil¬ity in the 118 pound class, whilePeter Dzubay will tussle in the 136pound division.P’rod Lehnhardt WrestlesThe 166 and 165 pound weights willbe handled by John Haas and AllenTully respectively. Ed Va^orz willtake part in the 175 pound class, andFred Lehnhardt will participate inthe heavyweight division. The afore¬mentioned men have all won the rightto wrestle in the meet by matches car¬ried on during the past few weeks.As yet, the 145 pound contestant hasnot been determined, choice lying be¬tween Cutler, Bernhardt, and Freese.Last year when the two teams met,each won on their own mats; Chi¬cago winning 21-13, and Wheaton bya score of 22 to 8.According to Coach Vorres, numer¬als will be awarded to seven fresh¬men grapplers. The men to receivesweaters are W. A. Thomas, and Rob¬ert Hughes, 118; Myron Davis, andGill Finwall, 135; David Coz, 145;Jack Carlson, 175; and, Joseph Brook-hart, heavyweight. Phi Delta ThetaWins Intra-MuralSwimming MeetEnding Psi Upsilon’s two yeardomination of the event. Phi DeltaTheta yesterday nosed out the Owls36-34 to capture the annual Intra¬mural swimming meet. Amassing 12points by winning all three places inthe 100 yard breast stroke, the PhiDelts gained a margin which thePsi U’s could not overcome.The summary of events40 yard free style: Won by Andalman;second, Stevens, Psi Upsilon ; third, B. Miller,Alpha Telta Phi: fourth, Anderson, Psi Upsi¬lon : fifth, Otani. Time 20:4.100 yard breast stroke—Won by Baumeart,Phi Delta Theta: second, Kubach, Phi Del'aTheta; third, Lehnhardt, Phi Delta Theta:fourth, James, Alpha Delta Phi. Time-■1:39.9.100 yard free style—Won by Schor, unat¬tached : second. Andalman, unattached; thirdFrick, Phi Delta Theta; fourth, Sibley, PsiUpsilon. Time—1:01.7.too yard backstroke - Won by MacLaury, Psi Upsilon; second, Adair, Delta Upsilon:third, Anderson, Psi Upsilon. Time -1:13.2.220 yard free style—Won by Baumgart, PhiDelta Theta; second, Sibley, Psi Upsilon;third. Valors, Phi Delta Theta; fourth. Sha¬ver, Alpha Delta Phi. Time - 2 :63.Fancy divinsr —Won by Harris, Phi DeltaTheta; second, Webbe, Psi Upsilon ; third.Hood. Delta Upsilon; fourth. Shaver, AlphaDelta Phi.180 yard medley relay—Won by Psi Upsilon(MacLaury, Stevens) ; second, Phi Delta The¬ta. Time ~2 :09.2.160 yard free style relay—Won by Psi Up¬silon (Stevens, McLaury, Anderson); second.Phi Delta Theta ; third. Delta Upsilon ; fourth.Alpha Delta Phi. Time—1:28.9.THREE MONTHS' COURSEPOR COllEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, stenographic course-starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligation—write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.D..PH.S.Rtgnlor Courses, open to High School Grtuhstates only, may be started any Monday. Dayand Evetdng. Evening Courses open to mess.114 S. Michigan Av*., Chicago, Randolph 434fThe John MarshallLAW COURSES(40 w«eks per year)SCHOOL Afternoon—3 years5 days... 4:30-6:30FOUNDED 1899 Evening — 4 yearsMon., Wed., Fri.,AN 6;30-9:20ACCREDITED Post-graduateLAW SCHOOL 1 year..twice a weekPractice coursesTEXT and CASE exclusively.METHOD All courses lead• to degrees.For Cotolog, racom- Two years' collegemandad lilt of pra-lagol work required forlubjocti, ond booklat. entrance."Studyof Low ond Proper New classes formPraporotion" oddraii:Edward T. Lea, Dean, in Feb. and Sept.315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, III. SAI4/Chicago’s finest Chinese AmericanRestaurantThe University of Chicago stu¬dents have by popular acclaimchosen HOE SAI GAI to be theofficial Chinese American restaur¬ant.If you desire the finest Amer-can dishes or quaint Chinese deli-casies, you will be more than sat¬isfied with our service.Come in and enjoy the congen¬ial modernistic atmosphere.75 W. RANDOLPH ST.Just the place for after the showhm @0 PoroijqtUniversity Church ofDisciples of ChristMinister: Dr. Edward ScribnerAmes. Minister’s Associate:Mr. Fred B. WiseSunday, December 13, 193611:00 A. M. — Sermon. Subject:“W’hy Religion Today?” Dr,Ames.12:20 P. M.—Forum: Dr, MarjorieWilliamson Bruner on “MedievalChristmas Dramas.”6:00 P. M.—Wranglers. Tea andprogram. Hyde Park Baptist Church5600 Woodlawn Ave.Norris L. Tibbetts and RoIIand WLSchloerb, MinistersSunday, December 13, 193610:00 A. M.—Adult Classes.11:00 A. M. — Morning Worship.“Prelude to Power.” Rev. Nor¬ris L. Tibbetts.7:00 P.M.—Young People’s ChurchClub. “Christmas in OtherLands.” Annual carol sing atthe home of Mrs. William Roth-mann, 6148 Woodlawn Ave.i The First Unitarian ChurchWoodlawn Ave. and E. 57th StreetVon Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSunday, December 13, 193611:00 A. M.—The Magnificat—TheSong of Mary. Dr. Vogt.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club. Teaand Discussion “The Hopes andProblems of the Negroes OfAmerica”, Miss Pauline Red¬mond, Urban League. TUXEDOQyadley evening clothes are treated inthe manner pursued by the best customshops. Developed in a deep midnight blueunfinished worsted of enduring quality—lined widi silk and grosgrain^ facedlapels. High, twin ^pleated trousers.35SINGLE OR DOUBLE'BREASTED(3^FULL DRESS COAT-THIRTY DOLLARSCOMBINATION-SIXTY'FIVE DOLLARSHsDdistcoats • Opera fHat fioJfmcfilep19 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago • 564 Fifth Ave., New York"wi^twijp^iPPBBPP!^ 1 m. 1^ I jiHim iij, 4.'^- /S^ •'.THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1936Receive Six Stiulruiiinto Profession,,ilEducation ,So,-uyKrueger Advocales. Industrial Unioii^i^|||'|y.t~as OiiRBasis of Labor|<Qrgaiiizadouthough ^theV, present'-? niovement^*ft of*la^r^is^sprnewhat spontaheous^'Con-iditions’f'for^ organization; wopld- prob->ablyi have**been ""much more favorabletwo*^years iago'. t* On the'^ other hand'labori|is'Vt •Pi'est'nr aided by Jmore*ha\e^had^at'an earlier date,Brii?^Xmerican'>'« Federation'* 4offchefet^*^>uniont:'6f • which' Krue^r|is^i?^i^(Mideht#is;#h#recbrdf::as’faN'oring|-thef^':i'’C^tandJprotestingthetfactio'nfbf f'the ''Americ'an 9Federa-tiom^ offLabor^ in-'^suspending^^LeNx isand hisYcolleague.; ^Cirf«.n5e,iP<«iil«Oii!;f(.Harieso/' ...... -. . BulletinW^’:- "" ' '~~~" '.Six, graduate students;:{.Yv,‘Vi'upartment of Education \\ i r*.*,night initiated into nie^^^M?Zeta“^^ ^ ^ Phi I>eh.i;K; professional educationYfr^^^g^Y*ei-emony:being heldi'ln'lt^^^^oomsisofg the; Graduate/■ 1'. iuS^bu i Id i ng.f ^' T he: :[mem bers^^^^Chapter Ynow ' totalsoneW thousand men. 'Thosi'.-,,,“iast|night were: ' i'^I^Vayhe'Tf'Branom, assistant ^tintendent of schools in Karn ( inC. W. Schwede, a Chicago | i,i.H. ^A. Maloney, a teachei iFlosemoor schools: D. M.Homewood, Illv H. T. Muhih ii'caga;&an(l;aJ.:; Li'ThuChicago.^^, ' \ ,•I" Following the initiation, <ui ijiHa\vkins,%former piesident I'f'Chapter, and a jmemlx'i of tht \tof< the .-laboratory schools, a i ij'4the.;ig'roup;$on - the.vhLstorj^a**of'^the-organization. •* .'. ...A.". S t u m p f i 8,1 p res ujei it v' 4'Chapter's'll -n-zi,'|e^tV,fe^^ss'9:<?'y^%^iK@fe'.ssoi»C!f;MEc'dj;IpSnii^^i^^jfill'e,d&wit^^.aiistj‘jc§.cphi|-iuia'c^'^^^gRl^Wi^^^BM'.i.Pd.igaliy ■nt sii.Qf ■lac ies;'ifMtift*^ie^^^^^^Mitfnl^a''‘^d^tpl|hQw-the inconsisi^cie^#-(li'"editbriaLpoli’cy?These comments; .he-emphasizes;, areintended prim^rify Yor those"|Wh(^afeTollow mg tlft^^ciar'Sciehce^ aiursesl;' Gideo^nse^.,fufther|^points^ out that^the^f||[_e^^^ffi;s^^^^t|mSMus^^naeF^’P %n"yhl^^^%i^lftaftt‘it'iidefapd^vrew|.«> ^gi-e"atest^misfoi'tune‘ r^cuiYedfe!lSenWsomlfefShi^^||if^ve''^Sstblehl?^W^^^w|ue^^^^SnptMij^.nded«for; Shoughf Gideonselhas^iattempted' mereTyiito|point;'put inconsistencies’'iin' newsIstbriest- it'is'obvious that’ the'i;butsider';would.;-accuse/'>hin'P‘of" attempting-' to>rform?^University’'^policies'.^This,>. Gid-^jeonse^'-assu^s^^us/pis f ar^f r^m % beingSeveralCoffers” 'have!?, beenotmade , bymev( spaper'vsyndicalesj.tOv‘purchase oldJ^copies.'^'TKe;^ idea"''-was,'tdn make’* photo-''f^ati(#i^pie^of?|themWiand^ithe^tyVrintj'them in papers.or^to’^distribut^jj,themJ in pamphlet^^'form. This, how-:eveFis clearly/impossible. '-a■yf'His” favorite .trick is to place ex¬tracts from corresponding news jtemsKfom the New York .Times and a'Chi-|cagoSpaper'side by side .and^compare|both4'the ^ factual*,, rnateriajvand^the^ed^s,itoriaK content.'f^^|^^'5<^^'^^^^^^'^".Gideon^e does'"not"^propose to^edit'anything' aboutJ^?King '* Edward' and-W.ally. He con.sidersMhe,,\\Kole -thingvrather.-pointless.=^*His4.wholei'attitude%may?;,be.' ,summed,4up,^„invj h;s,j remark,ftillt'’is^ltypjcalMB'ritish^ns^ By C.- Sharpless 'Hickman^' ' ^A'-'^^'Christmastide'’ renaissance of ^‘industrial 'iisbut^i;ather^^‘^t^gat^alll^^ t%ca n A'6nly.,f,bi|t*3i'fW0n“iohs^l'fead^^offeht ,, .,the%noveriieht*rather'thari^ the,'cause.His'^function'Ts/mainly Ahat? of pub-|i cit^^a gent^^A ^|a r|pe x am pi e%;;oflIie^^us’s^f^’acuteisense 'bf‘'showmanship^Kruegef^citedt the-^fact'-fthat although:iiew’is:jjwas. 4not'^ everfy pre^ntt^ at-Hhe^i^nwiaboMconveht ibnfaraT am p a;; he|P^||edg;gigrab||an^^|'i^a^.nes|iniohs .’vs.^’craft.unions,*l&industrial^jinionsS^s;i#^Tf laborVisloarganizMile^’on the basis'^qf ind^us^he’'maintained#MW;|feha tlfJ oh'riWL^Plie w is;4theatrica4activity#wiiUhit’Ghicago>Sfthes,4unei|of ^^ingling - coins- onf,box^!office j couritersi and^ ?? thunderous'^aSlplauseyrqnvJ^oxes'?and'‘ gallerms|JKl^^w|dp^jti^^btioqk?£that;i|ever^thc^’"whoj squirm^with‘‘'envic)US'Qonging oh/re'adirigVth'eHKeatricah'sections of the'1pre'ss^'-may ’ make■-r-.i;-";—v,e>--'- --0tivellpat-on-tHe-back :at«the prospects!smile '.and., give themselves a figura-they!feas'^s^a^-at-homj(^s,'^^Will?jha^^.^foremost|tpersonalities<oftheitheatiiej Jewish Foundation to.’Open Post in;Xhapel^,^Thq Jewish, student Foundation has!^ahnou n(?ed t h at begi n ri i ng ne xt ^woek a•,sectioAinfe'the. .Chapel t-officer^'Mlh betq^l!; OhJ^T ue^ aythrough^Fi iday.' Appointments’‘4withl)i'i“f*GeofgeAFo\;'^'‘adNi^er- to^^JJew ishisttiilfmtl^ah{l)i^ia(l^h!^daj!!a«0!e|^^^^p^p^fa^Vieil® le''v..; -iwillistruti.theTlhallsvof Elsih6re!lapa|Washingtori,'*^’as|Lesli^ Howard brings:h4;HamleOa:'tow'n1and Jane Cowll,mtroducW>hei>l>Fiistt.Lady.”■SjHbwaT!d[%iht!ei$!rqtatiph;gbf|..Hamlw^ha^§ bee^n^mucht,ijgtheVnews Jately, be^^useKMlfis|Bro^waj^uel^ith|l|isO-ouns’e^fellSMountrymatejolffJ^elg^^^h^^^n d ei^GiA h r^^>CirhticV^Fas>beeh‘^stagmg'va^rival^iii-''^terpretat ib^.j u i'^a^f.^few i^^block's^dow<:i.nterpretation?;hasf fitted j.the,i,‘melan-i5’|holic^)an‘ev^atch-phrase.^ has beenrtjK‘05chiefrpomf:Qf^^iatribe "among the Rufm^quai'ti^ItT'W* f *^5^^miJn:ame^MbhtinuejdlfrqmiHOWARD WICH.MAN()w‘tglass^_. jBeaiimont’* a,^nd ^he.^ American F'ur^l}lAjjO,u^^ ^Trading/tGompany.''nn'';which a repre-^ntatiyj^Q^thefecPnililir^^^ll^^ilT^^]^^IMartiiMahS^Mhislwiilineness.‘'to .liii-f^^W.qykg^ergliiexWr'imentationyB.^^^^^Si'i^gripping than an> ofotters, IS a blue piecepaper, crudely typed,h, .di.stoited oy French|hating..«‘a.s!Chicago Ethical Society!Studebaker Theaterh traditional, thenaboutAhe stunningt.Cbeney has ma<laichitecture of theuil^^wnichMb^^j^S^mc h’" as^f S hak^^^^S;|sl^tfeglm^^.sets which StewiihWfie^pOTder^>mcdi|Eejter GOINGFORMAL?Hblidgy^SegspjI ft ^ai'^igp ni useg ibml^yfac H,it lejSfia^^ilnec'^^^^f^l.i^^^.xtgfbri '■K'i nglEd t^rd^MrsIlSi m'psbff.b«B,to<'kwp,^hl.|.90 iniacf-:Thsi^tliqhUsI: doubt in hit'mind;Oifeto: thov,;coiT»CTnott.IoBh««Xo.%tlnDwin "Mur^unyfAn^-iio^I«rrtnuJacc«|Utf^_^|^#i^if^bilUy^^for h i i” ptac^'^pj'mind,, wllh!kn'ewSn’qminiMof feai.|E.xpefiwi^teu^^gP^i|tibn’vx»,-;.:.j':- Beau'moh» wu"during',AheLeniui\ Intelested in the pro-^ of (iigestion', he sets out uponpoihal experiment. . .ah oxp^aw iihra^ihMian, guinea'''pigIfjfhe''apigwa-. ■\1, M.s .Maitiii, who^al-1 the ^mntist to do asiit-Shfs^^mp-1'!■•, ln?_t he.''.c'dilec-r!"at '*Bi!lf^gs\ Libi ai j, ;areYa\ tn (layTecoKl :to-wearPhyMrnSn the .same timeees the gho.st atSocial fqrty^five dollars'V. ,? ^and^morefei^fom^Hailorddftolbrdtriytiqhly,.-tiy®fe|bh’tJhundr<W^^gri|^kxi^t-[(GontihuedSfi^ ho last 'reason sat tn-ill open on llVctnibei 28th, .“ Heo^SGabiei’:^^^^^Cffect^^St^pKe!?us??e^ffi;MSTOtuhip|i,i^^m'eet'ing^^tmal' A.ssocialio|S'qcio1qgi|a:l^^|hotel on Decenul^l^qis'l. Th;Ifisycimicy^^^i^du>aTi^Sf,v;>\’ss:|Jiql.umbu>-, O'hidtlie ‘subject, “-JMental Abilities.'Garfield \' Cfe.^sor of Finanjoint committed[ments for the'Ihg^fShlSi®*rplspiqi;Pifaweillowed by a deniaifded' .rei^ti shhei through the fleeting \iaisra of “la grande ti agedienne’’itci foiniance- ha\c uniformlyinvested with such uiiostenta-sineentv that he i woik has1 bright page m the book ofthe not too-hci glamoi of ancient costume AvIand 7 S. LaSaUe slSpain's;®jm;i''dlOffiNINiSVEAll?b^,^Ut;y;^G l^^nOU'g^iion \an Tu>l will piOMOit aSf modern dann Satuiday at/ Hou-jC Membeis^y*^^li^ I Bettv I )e w e'>,'FletcMi^^-Rjuth^A-nh HeiseV;'Emily Pdtteison, Sophie Sha-h.d f iT’l^'^ffir^^SWf i'Ssrier.j!y-'Mj^slu>l will be accompanied by two.s, Raymond Eric.son and Jeann^, two' clarinetists, Peter Tu-r^J.'n(1“;John^*.i“gent,4and "a Complete, stocksof expertly ' tailoredclothes ^ for evenindvwear .'and. a^ldrge "^ll®|||^^^^?B^^P^^H:^dutnehticinjt IatcMssonesl * bne~ oflthe largest selectionsxoi^ silk and ,opera|;hats in the middle west.l‘-'‘T£eliriirfglbh^®fc^tJ,^MYhel^''l)j\-fill! ‘ itfhJC-h li’i 1 o l t e^l^gs”) • G‘i e;;('h|^qo(i^g^.^'are1nS’on at the 'Selw^h -.-Viid ohIba'ves "^!anh'ary^2)' ,’^'the' -irre-aaifiil-Bl-icmcl.Uhat okres, Bobby Claik, move intoid Ojicra House in the annualpb^B»lf^|Ehey-Ziegferd•ma-iviou-^iw^MaqiiMetRtSObttnictiM'm r BILLY AMBROSIJELICIOUS DINNERioE* ' r tea dancinq[MU jreS^iVERL^SUlipAYllATUBDAMrA'- 3:304t«,C*|p.;«.>KI^I©REP®lfMEIM|!traveIinK^by|^Greyhouna l'%Round^ ^|ftripfrates|togprincipat;cittea&a{onlyMHiySlthelScostfAoflilrivings^much lestitKa^othefj waya^offitrayiel.-' .Warm^^Ccoacliea^r.'-'Ycoiweriienf achtdulet.^Kor#otKer>, far’eif’Xandy. informa-■;, ; •. (ibri^n-i ■’3758, Elba Avfnuf(IREYHOUND TERMINALS ' "C30Z Stony Itland Ave.^Minneapolis '5@al9.00''' ("'Duluth .sr-li-vl 10.50Madison $7.00Keep your group loacihcharter 'a Greyhound* pua < 3WSMAEL flEBEWCOMPANYitheatriH.IS E. 63rd. FridayRHYTH.MJlON>THE RANGE:Satufday^|‘;SEA SPOIEERS”^'•^Suneiay and Monday-^- -*-'“MY AMERICAN WIFE” Wabash dt Washington3.330:?^ DsQBSSS^do qour Xmas shoppinqIN AMERICA'S GREAT GIFT GUIDEllVtUZINE FOR MENTHE MACAJANUARY ISSUEON SALE DECEMBER 11MILDREDBAILEYRED N0R70AND HIS ORCHESTRAGREY/HOUND