^ Bad? itoionVol. 37- No. 77. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY. MARCH 5, 1937 Price Three Cent!Committee OnResolutions toConveneTodayPeace Strike Is Vital Issueto Be Discussed in Meet¬ing.By ADELE ROSEMeeting today to draw up theirstatement for the resolutions sessionin Ida Noyes Theater at 2:30, the 15members of the resolutions commit¬tee of the all-campus peace confer¬ence will present only resolutions ofaction before the general meeting.The resignation of Winifred Leedsand appointment of Caroline Zim-merly, WAA representative, will tendto equalize liberal and conservativeforces on the committee.Most controversial issues to be tak¬en up by the resolutions group willprobably be the question of declar¬ing a peace strike on April 22.Statements of policy will not be madeby the committee, but will be broughtup from the floor after the reportson the eight seminars. Resolutionsof action not suggested by the resolu¬tions committee presented during thethe meeting.Discuta NeutralityHigh point of the Clifton Utleyseminar on "Spain” came whenFrank Meyer arose shouting "A mat¬ter of procedure,” and proceeded toturn the meeting from a questionand answer session to a discussion ofthe neutrality policy of the UnitedStates. John Morris, rememberingwhen the recount vote brought inabout 23 extra delegates from thelobby, was almost afraid to ask fora recount on the 30-30 vote, but thehnal decision was that the neutral¬ity policy of the United States gov¬ernment was an aid to the Spanishgovernment and should be repealed.Joseph Watseka's discussion on"The Student Peace Movement”brought a resolution to support thestudent strike, and the group discus¬sing "Propaganda Technique” withLouis Gleek determined that the pre¬sentation of rational propaganda onthe causes and evils of war with dra¬matic emphasis would be an effectiveweapon against it. Campus NewsreelPresents Stagg,Prom, Pontiac ShowCampus highlights of the pastmonth will be presented by the Cam¬pus Newsreel in the latest editionwhich will be shown Wednesday,Thursday, and Friday. Paul- Wag¬ner, director of the campus movieproject, has also made arrangementsfor an all-color feature of Easterfashions with University girls asmodels.This, the third newsreel producedby the Student group, will include"shots” of the Red Norvo Swing Ses¬sion, Pontiac show, WashingtonProm, A. A. Stagg in his recent visit,the Law School and members activein its reorganization, athletics, andother events which have taken placebetween January 20 and March 1.The fashion show will be of the" ’round the clock” type, showing thecorrect attire from morning throughevening, including the latest in for-mals. Those modeling are CharlotteRexstrew, Eleanor Melander, JeanGayton, Betty Jean Dunlap, MarthaBoone, Mary Adele Crosby, Clemen¬tine Van Der Schaegh, Jane Morris,and Ruth DoctoroflF. The clothes forthe fashion show were provided byMarshall Fields. UndergraduateTeam EngagesTiger SpellersContest Princeton “Coun¬try Club Boys” on March15. Curtain Rises Tonight in MandelHall to Reveal Twelfth AnnualPresentation of Mirror RevueComely Choruses Dance TonightOffer EnglishDrama TonightInternational House Play¬ers Present Hodges’ “TheWind and The Rain.”Conference NotesHidden behind 12 large boxes ofgardenias and white carnations, apeace advocate from the BudlongFlorists, of 71st street, dumped hisofferings on the conference regfistra*tion desk in Ida Noyes yesterdaymorning. Astonished delegates ask¬ing the wherefore of the gift wereeven more amazed by the answer.Not only werf the flowers brought inbecause the florist was interested inthe campus peace movement, but thegift will be repeated tomorrow.Delegates, looking like Easter onFifth avenue, are making the previ¬ously uninterested see the advan¬tages of peace.* * *Wendell Hayes’ seminar on "Neu¬trality” declared for opposition tothe embargo of Spain and the advis¬ability of government support of thedemocratically elected Spanish gov¬ernment. Defeating a motion to re¬fuse to take part in any war that thecountry might enter upon, the groupfailed to reach a conclusion on thesuggestion that in case of a warcri.si.s, the students and workers ofthis country would strike.• • *The seminar on “Labor Move¬ments and War” decided that sincelabor is potentially the most effectiveagency to work against war, thepeace strike should be held with thecooperation of labor groups in thecity. The group, led by Philips Gar-man, pointed out that it is the dutyof stuc^ents to learn about the actuallabor situation by active participa¬tion as well as theoretical study.* * *The star of the wholg evening,however, was undoubtedly VeraRony, who learned her part for"Bury the Dead” in three hours whenthe former leading lady found thatshe had a "Mirror” rehearsal at thetime of the performance. The wholeplay was very successful, and a pow¬erful commentary on the effects ofwar on individual Mirror is finding a rival tonightand tomorrow night in the Interna¬tional House Players current produc¬tion “The Wind and the Rain,” theEnglish drama by Merton Hodgeswhich pleased London audiences formore than two years.At 8:30 the curtain rises in theAssembly hall of the House upon aproduction which has been directed,managed and acted wholly by thedrama group with the exception ofKatherine Ewing of the Chicago Fed¬eral Theater Project, who has co¬operated with the cast in an advisorycapacity.Chosen by the little theater’sboard of directors for both its dra¬matic possibilities and implications,the play gives an insight into the de¬velopment of a young English medi¬cal student enrolled at the Universityof Edinburgh. His changing attitudes,development of character, and find¬ing of “The Girl” furnish the plotfor the three act play. Richard Elm-hirst plays the part of the young herowhile Adele Sandman, who will beremembered for her work in the Dra¬matic Association last year, fills thepart of the heroine.Malm Direct*Harry W. Malm, who has assumedan important role in the Players ac¬tivities, directs “The Wind and theRain,” which is open to the publicat an admission price of 50 cents.WGN again broadcasts, the weeklyInternational House forum tomorrowafternoon on the subject “AmericanForeign Policy.”In place of the Sunday night sup¬per, a tea hour featuring Bert Aren-son, young violinist from Boston hasbeen scheduled for 5 on Sunday af¬ternoon. A select team of undergraduateswill return temporarily to grrammarschool days on Saturday, March 16,when the National Broadcasting Com- {pany pits fifteen University studentsagainst an equal number of "coun¬try club boys” from Princeton in anintercollegiate spelling bee. Theprogram will take place between 3:80and 4:30 Chicago time.Not alone for the glory of Maroonand Tiger will the two squads ofspectacleclads battle. NBC offers$25 to the “last man up” on eachteam, an additional $2.5 to the finalsurvivor, and $10 to each runnerup.Preliminary tryouts for the beeteam will be held on Tuesday afternoon from 3:30 to 4 in Lexington 6,according to an announcement madeyesterday by Joseph Weckler, man¬ager of the University radio studio.Any University undergraduate mayenter the competition for member¬ship on the squad by taking a writtenexamination.Arou*e* Fan*In the words of Miss Waller of theNational Broadcasting Company whois arranging the program, “the Chi-cago-Princeton contest will be thefourth in the series of spelling beesgone collegiate. The program, whichhas aroused great interest is an out¬growth of an NBC regular sustaining ifeature—the inner-grammar school Ispelling bee.” |On February 20, Columbia Uni-'versity met and defeated Bucknell in 'the first orthographic contest be-!tween institutions of higher learning. |Yale met Smith on February 27, and Starts at 8:301 W I\\ wt * f ’Left to Hght: Louise Huffaker, Mar¬jorie Ryser, Marjorie Kuh, FrancesBurns, Jane Myers, Lawarence Har¬rell, and Louise Hinckley. Alumni, Students WriteSkits and Music forProduction.Left to right: Mary Ann Patrick,Jane Myers, Betsy Chase, and MaryMargcuret Mayer.Mirror Revue Bids to Outrank PastShows with Outstanding SpeeialtiesWith a little more dash and en¬thusiasm, which should hardly belacking on opening night, the 1937Mirror Revue bids fair to outrankthe productions of the past two orthree years. Whatever campus ac¬claim the show may receive, how¬ever, will be due to a few hit num¬bers and skits rather than a continu¬ed high plane of entertainment.Merriel Abbot scores again withexcellent dancing by the Tappers,Ponies, and Kickers. Of especialnote are the closing number, “Can¬dlelight,” by the Kickers, and a nov¬elty “Magic” show by the Tappers,Harvard will engage Radcliffe on to- who themselves emerge from a trail-morrow at 3:30. Weckler urges all preceding scene andwho intend to tryout for positions on who deftly perform several tricks ofthe University team to tune in on this , trade. Icontest in order to ascertain the type Individual talent in the cast is theof words which students will be be exception rather than the rule. Ruthasked to spell. Doctoroff’s two dances, both as theOriental Institute Head ExploresCivilization in Convocation AddressFriars Issue FirstCall for FreshmenAll freshmen interesting in work¬ing on Blackfriars should apply forpositions next Monday or Tuesdayafternoon in Room D of the Rey¬nolds Club, Ed Sibley, abbot of theOrder, announced yesterday.Junior managers will interviewthe applicants and each freshman willbe allowed to choose the departmentin which he wishes to work. Therewill be men chosen to work in thefive depax‘tments of Publicity, Castand Chorus, Business, Technical, andCompany.No experience is necessary to ob¬tain a freshman position, althoughthe candidate must show an interestin the work. Men who work on thisyear’s show will be eligible for initia¬tion into the Order next spring. Thisyear’s show is tentatively set forMay 7, 8, 14, and 15. “Exploring Civilization” will bediscussed by John Albert Wilson,chairman of the department of Ori¬ental Languages and Literatures andDirector of the Oriental Institute,in the Convocation address of'the185th University graduation service,Tuesday, March 16, at 3, in the Uni¬versity Chapel. President RobertMaynard Hutchins will preside.Conducted by Dean Charles A. Gil-key, prayer service for candidatesGilkey Discusses^Religion, Youth’in Chapel SermonSubtitled “What Has Religion toOffer the Young Generation?”, “Re¬ligion and Youth” will be the subjectof the sermon to be given by DeanCharles W. Gilkey at the UniversityChapel Sunday morning at 11.Whether it is, possible for a youngpei'son today to retain a spiritualfaith, why young people should be re¬ligious, what resources religion hasto offer which education cannot alsogive, and whether religion is indis¬pensable, are topics which Dean Gil¬key will discuss in his talk.The Chicago High School AlumniChoir will sing at the vesper servicesto be given in the afternoon at 4:30.Dr. Gordon Clark of the Liniversityof Pennsylvania, visiting professor ofPhilosophy at Wheaton College, willspeak on “The Christian Fundamen¬tals” at the meeting of the ChapelCouncil to be held at the home of |Dean Gilkey at 7:30 Sunday evening, jSpeaking at the Chapel Union jmeeting is Matthew Spinka, assistantprofessor of the History of EasternChristianity, and librarian of the Chi¬cago Theological Seminary, who willdiscuss “Why I Am Not a Commun¬ist, or Christian Socialism vs. theSoviet.” The group will meet at7:30 at the home of Miss Ruth Em¬erson, 076b Kenwood avenue. for degrees will be held in the Cha¬pel, Sunday, March 14 at 10. Follow¬ing the prayer service. Dr. WilliamJ. Hutchins, father of the UniversityPresident and President of Berea Col¬lege of Berea, Kentucky, will speakat the regular Sunday morning reli¬gious service.Admi**ion by TicketNo tickets will be required for ad¬mission to the prayer and religiousservices Sunday, but visitors will beadmitted to the Convocation serviceonly by invitation. Distributed atCobb 104 during office hours untilnoon of Monday, March 15, threetickets will be awarded each candi¬date with additional admissions avail¬able to those who wish them. Fiveannouncement cards will also be giv¬en to each candidate with additionalones purchasable at five cents apiece.Candidates for degrees will wearthe academic dress which they haveearned at the Convocation service;to settle the controversy forever R.V. Merrill, University Marshal, re¬ports that the “tassel may be wornon either side with the right pre¬ferred.” Merrill will be assisted inconducting the Convocation proces¬sional by the Marshals, directed byJulian Kiser, and the aides, headedby Louise Hoyt.Awards to Phi Beta Kappa will beannounced following a meeting ofthe Phi Beta Beta Kappa committeeon March 9. By JULIAN A. KISERGibson girl and the Egyptian damsel,are particularly outstanding, andstrike a note of individuality as theonly solo dance numbers in the pro¬duction. Robert Wagoner gives hisusual fine performance in characterparts throughout, and Bill Beverlyand Lillian Schoen “bore each otherto death” in "Sidney Hyman’s CliffordOdet’s version of Verdi’s “Aida” (in¬troduced, incidentally, by proletarianWini Leeds). This, the outstandingskit of the revue, is rightly saved forlast.Convocation SkitAnyone who has ever heard Uni¬versity Marshal Robert V. Merrill in-stuct graduates at Convocation whatto do, or rather what not to do orthink, will enjoy the first act finale,a burlesque of the “Marshals andAides.” A popular demonstration ofwhat President Hutchins’ pet peeves,vocationalism and love of money,can do to a university is given in“Munchies,” presenting a profession¬ally sponsored football team. Look¬ing forward to the Dramatic Associa¬tion’s Spring revival, Messrs. O’Haraand Evans give an appealing preview,in dance and song, of Lynn Rigg’s"Green Grow the Lilacs.”Except for Virginia Shilton’s ren¬dition of the torch number, “TheBottom’s Falling Out of Every¬thing,” the singing is outstandingonly for its mediocrity.Skits, in general, depend too muchon comic situations and not enoughon clever lines and reparte—they area little too nice. The production islivened considerably by colorful cos¬tuming and striking lighting effects.A touch of continuity in theme, un¬usual in a revue, is used to tie to¬gether the various skits and numbers.Jewish Students toMeet Around FireAnnouncement has been made ofan all-campus fireside meeting forJewish students at the University tobe held Sunday in the Judson Courtlounge at 7:30. The event is the firstof its kind ever attempted by theJewish Student Foundation, sponsorsof the event. Irvin Rosen, chairmanof publicity, has announced that aneffort is being made to reach 1100Jewish students sn campus. President HutchinsSpeaks at Premierof Science MoviesPresident Hutchins last night spoketo a large gathering of college andhigh school educators who were as¬sembled at International house tosee the premiere showing of threePhysical Science sound pictures.This program was a repeat perform¬ance of the one that took place atOrchestra Hall several weeks ago.“Under the Chicago Plan, whichwas the ‘new plan’ seven years ago,”remarked President Hutchins in in¬troducing the pictures, “a system ofdemonstration lectures was institut¬ed to take the place of laboratorywork. These films and the lecturerin presenting an idea subject mat¬ter.Mentioning that these pictures arestill in the experimental stage, thePresident commented that they arenot expected to compete with “ThePerils of Paul Lee” as far as inter¬est goes. He also reminded the au¬dience that to appreciate these pic¬tures, “one must be in the frame ofmind—if any—of the student.” Presenting nine original skits andten new songs, the 12th annual Mir¬ror Revue will open tonight at 8:30in Mandel Hall. Introducing a varia¬tion by including a preview of thespring quarter Dramatic Associationplay, the revue has been produced bythe Mirror Board and directed byFrank Hurburt O’Hara.D. W. Youngmeyer, traditionallydirector of Mirror music is again incharge of this year’s production.Merriel Abbott, who last year intro¬duced the pony chorus to Mirror, re¬turns this year and has directed thedancing for the revue.Sixteen women and fourteen menhave been assigned acting parts, inthe production and they will be as¬sisted by three choruses. Tradition¬ally, Mirror is a women’s show butsince 1933 men have been invited totake parts.Name Spon*or* and Usher*The Mirror Board yesterday an¬nounced that the sponsors for thisevening will be Mr. and Mrs. Fred¬eric Woodward, Mr. and Mrs. GairTourtelot, Mr. and Mrs. John Mc¬Donough, Mr. and Mrs. James M.Judson, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W.Dodd, Mr. W. J. Boone, Mr. and Mrs.J. N. Hunter, Miss Margaret Wiley,Mrs. Kellogg Fairbank, and Mr. andMrs. Roger White.Betty Ellis, president of the Boardannounced that Catherine Pittmanwill be head usher, assisted by Han¬nah Fisk, Persis-Jane Peeples, LouiseHoyt, Betty Barden, Mary Walter,Mary Alice Duddy, Henriette Ry-bcznski, Mary Letty Green, FrancesProtheroe, Clementine Van derSchaegh, Pauline Willis, VirginiaClark, Shirley Sondel, Marion Elis-berg, Audrey Eichenbaum, ElizabethAnn Montgomery, Alice Myers, Bet¬ty Thompson, Ruby Howell, Ida Elan-der, Laura Bergquist, and FrancesFairweather.Contribute to ShowContributing to this year’s showis such an eminent personality asSterling North, alumnus of the Uni¬versity and at present literary editorof The Daily News. North has writ¬ten a song “Victoria Regina” whichwill be sung for the first time to¬night by Mary Paul Rix, WinstonBostik, and Duncan Holaday.D. W. Youngmeyer, director ofMirror music, composed the music forNorth’s song as well as one “Don’tThink,” by Norman Bridge Eaton,former president of the Dramatic as¬sociation. Along with this song, Ea¬ton contributed a skit satirizing aUniversity convocation managed bymarshals and aides.Sidney Hyman, graduate student,who wrote last year’s Blackfriarsbook is responsible for two skits intonight’s show.Tickets for the performance areavailable at the Mandel Hall box of¬fice for 85 cents and $1.50.Bartky to Be Guestof Honor at ClevelandWalter Bartky, associate professorof astronomy at the University ofChicago, will be the guest of honorand will give a showing of threesound films presenting an all-starcast with sun, moon, and planetsplaying leading roles.” Thus reads aparagraph from a letter to the Cleve¬land Alumni Club of the Universityof Chicago, regarding an Alumni Get-Together to be held Saturday eveningat the Shaker Heights High SchoolAuditorium in Cleveland.Preceded by a dinner at the Shak¬er Heights Tavern at 6, the programincludes two films “produced underthe direction of Mr. Bartky, who isone of the most popular lecturers onthe Quadrangles, the author of‘Highlights of Astronomy,’ inventorof the ‘Stellarscope,’ and a frequentlecturer at the Adler Planetarium,Chicago.”Page Two THE DAILY MARCX)N. FRIDAY. MARCH 5. 1937iiar00nFOUNDED IN INIMember Associated Collei'iate PressThe Dsily Msroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except ^turday, Sun¬day. and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 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 DailyMaroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the viewsof the University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearii g 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 post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.aSPaSSSNTEO POR national ADVBRTISINa RVNational Advertising Service^ IncColUfe Publishers Representative420 Maoibon AvE. New York, N.Y.Chicago . Boston . ban FranciscoLob ANOELas • Portland • SeattleBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManaiirerEDWARD S. STERN Manaffinj? EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.Advertising: Manat^erEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESBernice BartelsEknmett Desdman Edward FritzEl Roy Golding Cody PfanstiehlBetty RobbinsCharles Roy BUSINESS ASSOCIATESBernard Levine William RubachMarshall J. StoneEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJacquelyn AebyHarris BeckLaura BersquistMaxine BiesenthalRuth BrodyCharles ClevelandLome CookJohn Cooper Paul FergusonJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisRex HortonHarry LeviJohn Marks Seymour MillerLaVerne RiessAdele RoseBob SassLeonard SchermerCornelius SmithHarold SwansonDouglas ’’■•'reBUSINESS ASSISTANTSEdwin BersrmanAlan Johnstone Max FreemanDoris Gentzler Howard GreenleeEldward GustafsonSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwayNight Editor: Harris BeckAssistants: Leonard Schermer and Harold SwansonFridAj, March 5, 1937Peace Strike—With a Purpose?"We would enthusiastically support a PeaceStrike that served as a prelude to objectivediscussion and constructive action with regardto the problem of preventing war. We cannotsupport, however, a Peace Strike that merelyrepresents purposeless agitation."Thus ended Wednesday’s editorial on thePeace Strike. It would seem, from this para¬graph and that which immediately precededit, that we are opposed not to the Strike it¬self, but to the Strike coming at a certain time.Nevertheless, probably because of a precon¬ceived notion of what The Daily Maroon’sattitude would be, the impression gained cir¬culation among certain groups on campus thatwe did not support to the idea of a PeaceStrike.Let us make, therefore, a brief restatementof our position:We are not opposed to the Peace Strike inprinciple. Rather, we favor the Strike as oneof the devices to be employed in the studentpeace movement.We favor it, not because we agree with theassertion that it prepares students for commonaction with labor in the form of a generalstrike in case war is declared; nor because webelieve that it is an effective method of puttingparticular student demands before the publicand the government; but because we feel thatit is necessary, as a propogandist device, rath¬er than a method of action, to arouse the in¬terest of students and the public in the peave movement before a constructive program ofeducation against war can begin.Looked at in this light, what would be theplace of the Strike in a year-round peacecampaign? Such a program, we should sug¬gest, might be organized somewhat as follows:( 1) A permanent, non-partisan, All-CampusPeace Council, to have sole responsibility forthe direction of campus peace activities;( 2 ) An intensive campaign to recruit all cam¬pus organizations as members of this Coun¬cil;(3) Regular monthly or semi-monthly semi¬nars and symposiums during the Autumn andWinter quarters, to show that war is bothwrong and unnecessary and to discuss thecauses of war;(4) An All-Campus Peace Strike (or callit what you will), to be held either late in theWinter quarter or earl^ in the Spring quarter,with the purpose of arousing greater interestamong both the students and the public in thepeace movement and to call their attention toa forthcoming All-Campus Peace Conference;(5) Finally, the All-Campus Peace Confer¬ence, where students can intelligently discussand agree upon certain common ends andconstructive forms of action against war.We are told, however, that the Strike isone of the strongest forms of action, that itshould demonstrate to the public certain ob¬jectives previously planned and agreed upon,that it is necessary to show solidarity with lab¬or. To this, we reply that the mere expres¬sion of solidarity between youth and labor willin no measure keep us out of war, unless youth,labor, and the public all know what can bedone to prevent war. The Peace Strike is adramatic method and a strong method, but itis, nevertheless, a vague protest: it does noteffectively get across to the public and thegovernment just what things students opposeas causes of war, what methods of action theythink will help prevent war, and the reasonswhy they support these measures and rejectothers.It seems, then, that the Strike is mainly apropogandist device used in behalf of the peacemovement. As such, it should logically pre¬cede an intensive educational effort like thePeace Conference. If it follows the Confer¬ence, it is purposeless: granted that it can taean added impetus to the peace movement be¬cause it arouses the interest of more studentsand more people; but that interest, oncearoused, is followed up with—nothing, andthus accomplishes nothing.That is why we see little reason for a PeaceStrike on April 22. Such a Strike, followedup with further education, further organiza¬tion, and constructive action in behalf ofpeace, could serve a highly useful purpose. Weconfess our inability to suggest any subsequentprogram that would not involve a duplicationof the Peace Conference—and this probablywould not be successful. We challenge theI delegates at the Conferenc to suggest a con¬structive program of peace education to followthe Strike. If they cannot, we have littleground for supporting it.—J. A. K.The Travelling BazaarBy CODY PFANSTIEHLThe ABC’s“War Prayer”0 Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiersto bloody shreds with our shell; help us to covertheir smiling fields with the pale forms of their pa¬triot dead; help us to lay waste their humble homeswith a hurricane of fire; help us to wring the heartsof their unoffending widows with unavailing grief;help us to turn them out roofless with their littlechildren to wander unfriended through the wastesof their desolated land in rags and hunger andthirst, sport of the sun’s flames of summer and icywinds of winter, broken in spirit, worn with travail,imploring Thee for the refuge of the grave and de¬nied it—for our sakes, who adore Thee, Lord, blasttheir hopes, blight their lives, protract their bitterpilgrimage, make heavy their steps, water their waywith tears, stain the white snow with the blood oftheir wounded feet. We ask of One who is the spiritof love and who is the ever-faithful refuge andfriend of all that are sore beset, and seek His aidwith humble and contrite hearts. Grant our prayer,O Lord, and Thine shall be the praise and honorand glory, now and ever, Amen.^ Mark Twain. PASSING THEIMPASSIBLEMirror rehearsals have been ever so closely guard¬ed. “Aboslutely no-one,” read the Orders, “exceptthe cast will be allowed inside Mandel.”And so, just because Aileen Wilson, who hascharge of keeping people out, said it couldn’t bedone, this reporter snuck in two night ago. It in¬volved climbing out a window in the Reynolds club,pussy-footing along a roof, and working through afire-escape door the balcony. Sort of story-bookreporter-like.Lying on his tummmy in a secluded nook this re¬porter laughed as loudly as he dared at an actorwho, supposed to be the tougiiest sort of gangster,has a great deal of trouble (not in the script) inlighting a cigarette. Go to the show tonight ortomorrow if only to see if he does get it lit.* ♦ ¥CARLSON VS. FREUDON SEXThree most potent letters in a publicity man’s al¬phabet are S, E, and X. A dispatch from the Sat¬urday night Montparnasse forum (Vassar House,8:30, (everybody welcome) informs The Maroonthat Dr. Anton J. Carlson, U. of C., will speak on“Is Sex the Basic Drive in Human Behavior?”For Dr. Carlson, teacher of college students,thevp f'RTi hp but on«» answer. PROFOUND APPRECIATIONEditor,The Daily Maroon:Having just read The Daily Ma¬roon of February 25 and having beendeeply moved by your editorial ofthat date, I am taking the liberty ofwriting to express my profound ap¬preciation—to “S. H.” (Sidney Hy¬man?), to The Daily Maroon staff,and to the student body—for thehonor therein accorded me. Whethermy contributions to life and learningon the Midway have merited suchhigh praise is not for me to say.But it is heartening to know thatmy own devotion to my Alma Materis in such large measure reciprocat¬ed.Your appreciation and that of stu¬dents generally is. more valued thanthat of colleagues and of the Uni-1versity Administration. But let mehasten to add that here, too, therewas no lack of it—and that my de- jparture was not in any degree moti- 'vated by any failure on the part of jthe Administration to bid me stay Ion generous terms. I have simply Idecided, not without sincere regret, Ithat New England and the East offer jme opportunities for the next few ;years which I ought not to pass by. 1It is my hope that I may return to Ithe University of Chicago in the not'too remote future, a wiser but, Itrust, not a sadder man. And I need jscarcely say that I am comforted in jmy wanderings by the knowledgethat this hope is shared by you andby others at Chicago.Accept my thanks and my warmestregards,Frederick L. Sckuman.DISSENTING OPINIONEditor,The Daily Maroon:I believe your views on the sub¬ject of the Peace Strike can be ade¬quately summed up as follows: thestudent Strike is valuable in so faras it arouses interest in the discus¬sion of peace problems, but it hasno value as an action designed to putdemands for peace before the peopleand before the government.I believe your argument to beChicago TheaterLoretta Young A. Tyrone Power“LOVE IS NEWS”Fred Waring and hi> Pennsylvan-ians on the stage.Oriental TTieaterLeo Carillo, Chester Morris in“I PROMISE TO PAY”Major Bowes International Revueon the stage.Roosevelt TlieaterDick Powell, Alice Faye, MadelineCarroll in“ON THE AVENUE”IgARRICK THEATREErrol Flynn, Anita Louise in“GREEN UGHT”United Artists Theater“BELOVED ENEMY”with Merle Oberon, Brian Aherns fallacious in two respects. In thefirst place I think you put the wellknown cart before the horse whenyou say that action should be a preli¬minary to discussion.If you want to be rational aboutit, I would suggest that the questionto be decided is a practical question,or a question of Politics, which in¬volves the choice of means to attainthe proper end. The end in thisinstance is. Peace. Peace, it is gen¬erally admitted, can not be finallyattained until actiou i.*". taken, e. g.legislation on the part of govern¬ments, or a refusal to fight on thepart of citizens. But deliberation isnecessary to determine which actionis to be taken. This seems to me toclearly show that deliberation corneabefore action in the ordination ofmeans to ends.Now for fallacy No. 2. Even thoughyou are confused as to the properplace of action you do not deny thenecessity for it. You simply do notbelieve that the Peace Strike consti¬tutes effective action. At the risk ofrepeating what Dick Lindheim saidyesterday in a Letter to the Editor,I would like to take up a few points jthat have been advanced on bothsides.1. A Strike is no “vague protest.” jIt is a direct and forceful indication ;of what measures are necessary to iprevent war. As has been said so !many times, the Strike is a dress re¬hearsal of a method proposed foractual war situations.2. It has been said that those whoparade for peace are the most like¬ly to parade for war. This objectionis. hard for me to understand. I be¬lieve there are very few individualswho parade simply for the sake ofparading, with no regard for the ob¬jective. It seems only logical thatthose who have been convinced suf¬ficiently of the necessity of peace toparade for it are less likely to go tothe other side than those in the mid¬dle, who lack strong convictionseither one way or the other. Fur¬thermore, if this argument is valid,it should hold both ways. Who wouldlike to try to organize a Peace Strikein the U. S. army?3. It is said that the Strike createsa bad impression of the Universityin the minds of the public. The moreenlightened members of the publicMORTON’S5487 Lake Park Ave.LOBSTERDINNER75cThese lobsters are caught offthe coast, frozen and only thetails (each one at least a halfpound of solid meat) shippedhere.Broiled and served with plentydrawn butter.Open from Noon to Midnight are for peace; if the Strike createsa bad impression among the remain¬der it cannot be helped, but I do notfeel that the University has a greatdeal to lose from the alienation oftheir effections. Violence will alsogive a bad impression of the Univer¬sity. But violence in the past hasalways been caused by opposers ofthe Strike. The problem is curbthem.4. However, it seems importantthat the Strike does not become splitby political factionism. If the Strikeis to have real success, it is necessarythat political affiliations be subordi¬nated for the time being. Here Ibelieve that the ASU is somewhatnarrow-minded in saying that stu¬dents must show solidarity only withlabor. Everyone—employers, pro¬fessional men, farmers, laborers,—stands to lose through war. Why notinclude them all when orgranizing acrusade against it?If all sides will forget petty preju¬dices and political differences, theStrike may do much for the causeof Peace.John Morrit.TheHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57Hi StreetN. W. Cmnsat BUmf lalui4Hanley’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 congenialserviceolinilarBfautUniversity Church ofDisciples of Christ5655 UniTersity AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward ScribnerAmes. Minister’s Associate:Mr. Fred B. WiseSunday, March 7, 193711:00 A. M.—Sermon.Sermon subject: “Life Ten¬sions: Physician and Patient.12:20—Forum.6:00 P. M,—Wranglers. Teaand program. Hyde Park BaptistChurch5600 Woodlawn Ave.Norris L. Tibbetts and RollandW. Schloerb, MinistersSunday, March 7, 193710 A. M.—Adult Classes taughtby A. E. Haydon, ShailerMathews.11:00 A. M. Morning Worship.“As Far As the East Is fromthe West.” Rev. N. L. Tib¬betts.7:00 P. M.—Young People’sChurch Club. “Jesus’ GreatDecisions—and Ours.” Rev.N. L, Tibbetts. The First UnitarianChurchWoodlawn Ave. and E. S7th St.Von Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSunday, March 7, 193711:00 A. M.—“The Act of Af¬firmation”, Dr. Vogt.4:00 P. M. — Channing ClubTea and Discussion. “ModernTrends in Music”, Robert L.Sanders, Organist, First Uni¬tarian Church and Facultymember University of Chi¬cago.THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, MARCH 5. 1937 Page ThreeDigest FindsMore StudentTipplers NowReturns Indicate StudentsPrefer Hard Liquors toLightThere is more drinking of alcoholicbeverages and students are drinkingmore hard liquor than light liquor inmost American colleges and univer¬sities, according to a survey just com¬pleted by the Literary Digest, whichfindings are published in its currentissue.Questionnaires were sent to theheads of 1.475 colleges and alsoto 1,475 student editors and lead¬ers, the magazine states, asking anappraisal of their campus drinkingsituation since Repeal.60 Report Less DrinkingMore drinking since Repeal is re¬ported by 303 of those respondingand 60 others state there is lessdrinking in their colleges. Reportsfrom 205 state that students aredrinking more hard liquor and from100 that they are drinking more lightliquors.The Literary Digest epitomizes thefindings from its nine-part question¬naire survey of American colleges:“1. Drinking is on the increaseeverywhere, but there is relativelyless drunkenness.“2. Students abhor the drunk, ad¬mire the man who can drink like agentleman.“3. One third of the colleges re¬plying see a great increase in beerdrinking, two third see an even great¬er increase in cocktail and highballconsumption.“4. A vast majority of collegepresidents see drinking as a problemin other institutions, but not in theirown.Teatotal Enforccmant Wanaa“5. Everywhere, teetotal enforce¬ment in colleges appears to be crumb¬ling.“6. The average undergraduate =does most of his tippling off the cam¬pus.“7. Coeds and women students ingeneral have lost their moral revul¬sion toward drinking.“8. Most student editors agreethat repeal has aided temperance.The majority favor education fordrinking, not against it, as a solutionfor the liquor problem.“9. No matter whether the stateor community is wet or dry, studentshave little trouble in buying whatthey want to drink.“Practically every one of the ques¬tionnaire letters told of a plentifuluse of hard and light intoxicants bythe undergraduate body as a whole.One editor wrote that drinking in hiscollege had increased 500 per cent.Opinion Varies“Opinion as to whether or not thegeneral increase was deleterious de- \pended on the correspondent’s per¬sonal opinions. Many students whohad never touched liquor prior to col¬lege days, it was disclosed, found so¬cial pressure or the new availabilityof liquor or the safety of govern¬ment-bonded stock an inevitable in¬centive to drink moderately. Direct Mirror Dramas DancingFrank Hurburt O’Hara Muriel Abbott... O'Hara's dramatics, Abbott’sdancers make 12f^ annual Mirrorshow. Today on theQuadranglesTODAYLeon Mandel Hall atTwelfth Annual Mirror—BackstageThese are the people who will not be seen tonight. But theseare the people whose shoulders support the show every bit as muchas those who appear before the spotlights.Elizabeth Campbell, Laura Bergquist,LeClair Perry, Denny Schuele, KayChetham, Doris Kennedy, Jane My¬ers, Nedda Davis, Mary Gifford, AliceBreckinridge, Marjorie Hess, JeanJacob.ProgramPersia PeeplesDorothy Miles, Betty Jane Harris,Kay Chetham, Janet Geiger, PhyllisCummins, Mary Louise Mills.Properties CommitteeJane KinderJean Tobin, Margaret Penney,Betty Kopper, Jane Weston, Clemen¬tine Van der Schaegh, Betty Cald¬well, Janet James, Betty Beard,Barbara Crane, Margaret Fairman,Aili Ann Allen, Mary Jane Hunter,Jean Stockfish, Thelma Stevens, Dor¬othy Miles, Kay Chetham, Betty Wet¬zel, Jane Brunson, Jane Ann Vaupel,Jane Thompson, Helen Moren.DesignMary KerrEdith Hauser, Lee Wood, BettyVirginia. MacDonald, Emma Jane i Parker, Virginia Mac-Mirror BoardBetty Ellis, Jayne Paulman, JeanRussell, Peg Thompson, GenevieveFish.Stage Manager CommitteeEileen WilsonBetty Booth, Joanna Smith, MaryLou Price.Promotion and PublicityVirginia PrindivilleJoan Taylor, Ruth Nuetzel, KayeWalsh, Kathryn MacLennan, Clemen¬tine Vander Schaegh, Peggy Huck-ins, Margaret Baugher, Hazel Storer,Pat Hutchinson, Peg Hutchinson,Ada-mae Balmer, Jane Kinder, MaryLuckhardt.Costume CommitteeBetty QuinnBetty Jane Watson, Kathryn Chet¬ham, Laura Bergquist, Virginia Gray,Elizabeth Ann Montgomery, FaradayBenedict, Janet James, Betty Booth,Jane Brunson, Jane Ann Vaupel,Margaret Penney, Jane Thompson,Pearson, Lynne Cross, CatherineStevenson, Mary Margaret Mayer,Mary Gifford, Kathryn MacLennan,Charlotte Rexstrew.Boxc^ice CommitteeEluanor MulanderVirginia Johnson, Rebecca Scott,Marjorie Pendleton, Ruth Hauser,Barbara Furry, Elizabeth Essington,Elizabeth Ann Montgomery, MaryLouise Mills, Kathryn MacLennan, Donald, Jane Ann Vaupel, JaneMorris, June Cover, Edith Brownlee,Janet Geiger, Delcum Brodt.DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rd “Mirror.8:30.Peace Conference. Resolutions ses¬sion. Report of seminars. Reportof credentials committee. Ida Noyesat 2:30.Presentation of Merton Hodge’s“The Wind and the Rain.” Interna¬tional House Players. InternationalHouse Assembly Hall at 8:30.Track. Northwestern. Fieldhouseat 8.Scandinavian Club. “Banners andAnthems of the North.’’ Speaker,Hammer. YWCA room of Ida Noyesat 4:30.Graduate Economics and BusinessClub. “The Forward Exchanges.’’M. H. Hoffman. “The InternationalTin Control Scheme.’’ C. A. Myers.Haskell Hall common room at 3:30.Renaissance Society Library ofIda Noyes at 8.Negro Student Club. WAA roomof Ida Noyes, at 8.Public Lecture (Downtown).“Crises in the East. The RussianAngle.’’ Professor MacNair. TheArt Institute at 6:45.Student Settlement Board. Chapeloffice at 3:30.Chi Psi House Dance. 8 to 1.Beta Theta Pi House Dance. 10 to2.Delta Sigma Pi. Room D of theReynolds Club at 12.SATURDAYMirror. Mandel Hall at 8:30.“The Wind and the Rain.’’ Inter¬national House at 8:30.Basketball Game. Minnesota.Fieldhouse at 8.Meeting of the Faculty of the Di¬vinity School. Swift 100 at 9 a.m.Kent Chemical Society. Secondfloor of Ida Noyes at 8.Basketball. Ida Noyes at 9. Spon¬sored by the HAA. Tickets 25 cents.Zeta Beta Tau House. Dance. 8to 1.Phi Sigma Delta Party. 9 to 1.Alpha Delta Phi House Dance. 10to 1.Phi Beta Delta House Dance. 9 to1.Phi Kappa Psi Closed Party. 10 to1.Delta Kappa Epsilon Radio Dance.9 to 1.SUNDAYUniversity Chapel Service. Rev.Today‘THREE MEN ON AHORSE” Teresa Dolan Invites You toDance Every Friday NightPERSHING BALLROOMS.W. Cor. 64th* Cottage Grove. Adm. 40eERNEST TUCKER'S MusicPrivate & Class Lessons Children * AdultsStudio. 1545 E. 6Srd St. Hyd. Park SOSOCHICAGO ETHICALSOCIETYStudebaker TheaterSunday, March 7th, at 11 a.m.DR. HORACE J. BRIDGESTHE SUPREME COURTAND OUR LIBERTIES. DEFINITELY TOPS!BOB CROSBYand his orchestrayou may as well have the bestEnglish ToppersbyBURBERRYJAEGER ‘‘The Favorite of the Campus”'When Bob sings and the bandswings you just can’t resist danc¬ing. Make a date right now for abig festive evening in the sensa-^ tional Congress Casino. Nightlyat dinner and supper—also Satur¬day at luncheon.DORWARDAQUA SCUTUMTHEXTON WRIGHT324 SOUTH MICHIGAN AVE. Plus a NEW SHOW featuringNewLow PricePolicyDINNERSfrom$2.00Never a Cover ChargeSupper minimum (after10 P.M.)$1.50 ($3 Saturday) Marion WILKINS - Jack WALTERSartiitirally superb dancersLILA CARMENSinging star of Earl CarrolFs Sketch BookTHE OLYMPIC TRIOKay Weber Ray BaudiicEddie Mfller ‘‘Nappy” La MareCONGRESS HOTELJOHN BURKE. Manager*950 rooms . . . minimun rate $3National Hotel Management Company, Inc.RALPH HITZ, President Charles W. Gilkey, D.D., Dean of theChapel, 11.Chapel Union. “Christian Socialismvs. the Soviet.’’ Discussion: “Why IAm Not a Communist.’’ MatthewSpinka. The home of Ruth Emerson,5755 Kenwood Avenue.Snell Hall Tea Dance. YWCA roomof Ida Noyes at 3.Alpha Epsilon Iota. Library of IdaNoyes at 3.Evangelical Group. Room A of IdaNoyes at 5:30.Jewish Student Foundation.YWCA room of Ida Noyes, at 7. In¬formal party at Judson Court from7:30 to 11:30.MONDAYCommunist Club. Ida Noyes Thea¬ter at 5.Bridge Group. Alumnae room at7.Chi Rho Sigma. Private Dining'room at 7.Pi Delta Phi. Room A of Ida Noyesat 6.Phi Beta Delta. Room C of IdaNoyes at 7.Pi Delta Upsilon. WAA room ofIda Noyes at 7.Delta Sigma. Room B of Ida Noyesat 7. CLASSIFIED ADSSTUDENTS TYPING SERVICE—Dorothy Ann Cahill, 5649 DorchesterAve.Dean Adds Seven toOfficial OrganizationsSeven campus organizations havebeen added to the list of officiallyrecognized groups by Leon P. Smith,Assistant Dean of Students. Theyinclude the All Campus Peace Coun¬cil, Arexis, Dance Club, Federationof University Women, Freshman Ex¬ecutive Council, Nu Pi Sigma, andSenior Class of 1937. Pre-medicalclub has been removed from the listsince merging with the Medical Stu¬dent’s Forum. BURTONHOLMESin person as alwaysColor and Motion PicturesFri. Eve., Sat. Mat.“BEAUTIFULSWITZERLAND”Orchestra HallSeats $1.10 - 85cTickets at Information OfficeTHREE MONTHS' COURSEFOR COllEGE STUDENTS AND ORADUATRSA thorough, intensive, stenographic course-starting January 1, April 1, July I, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligatum—write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGESAUL MOSIR. J.D..FH.t.ttm"heOmnes, open to School Orm^states only, may be started any Morndgy. Dapatsd Eeatdttg. EaaningCostrsaaopamtamatt.ns S. Michigan Ava., Chicogo, Randolph 4347 CONVERTS BEGINNERS-CONVINCES SKEPTICS!SOMiTHING WONDERFUlGOiS ON INSIDE^^OOOLfSPIPESrCIOARETTEA CIOAR HOLDERSFINEST BRIAR MONEY CAN BUYTHE ONLY PATENTED“CELLOPHANE”-SEALEDFILTER-IT REALLY FILTERSPIPE CENTER OF THECAMPUSFeaturingSASINE PIPESG. B. O. PIPESGOLDEN ROOT PIPESASTOR PIPESCOMOY PIPESatR £ A D E R ’STHE CAMPUS DRUG STOREWe Service Your Pipe* for 1 Yearji)For VarietyFancy yourself owning a handsomeassortment of Arrows as pictured below.New colors — new collars — each shirtcarefully tailored to Arrow standards.Mitoga-shaped and Sanforized-Shrunk.TABLESS TAB12WITH TIE LOOPS$2ARROW SHIRTSand TIESWarner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd St.Today and Tomorrow“THEODORA GOES WILD”“WE WHO ARE ABOUT TODIE”Sunday“STOWAWAY”‘COLLEGE HOUDAY’ Frolic Theatre55th & ELLIS AVE.Today“THEODORA GOES WILD”“WHITE HUNTER”Tomorrow“WE WHO ARE ABOUT TODIE”“COLLEGIATE”DAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1937Maroons to ”Shoot the Works”in Basketball Tomorrow NightSing Swan Song AgainstGophers; Hope to SpillLeague Leaders. Maroon FencersBattle Purduein Title MeetStartiBf LineupMinnesota Cki(Kundla L. F. CasselsAddington R.F. Eggemeyeror MullinsManlv C. AmundsenRolek L.G. Rossi nSeebach R.G. Petersenor FitzgeraldThe Maroons will close their woe¬ful season tomorrow at 8 in theFieldhouse against the powerful Min¬nesota Gophers who are tied up withthe mini for the Big Ten lead.Norgren’s cagers will “shoot theworks” against the “TerribleSwedes,” hoping for a “hot” nightto enable them to dump the north¬ern team into second place, besidethe fact they would like to win agame just for themselves.Petergon InjuredIt is doubtful whether Ken Peter-Mn will start since he hurt his leg. in practice. Norgren however hopesI to use him before the game ends.I The Maroons did not find theGophers overwhelmingly tough intheir first game with them this sea¬son as Minnesota won by only a 30to 23 score at Minneapolis. Minne¬sota plays a rough, bang-up game ascould be expected from their foot¬ball reputation so any team that canmatch them in their style has a goodchance of winning. If the Midwaycagers add a little “method to theirmadness” it probably would turn thetrick.Amundsen t». ManlyBob Manly, one of the best defen¬sive centers in the conference, willagain have a chance to match hisskill against Paul Amundsen, who hasturned in many excellent defensivegames this season, his crowningachievement being the Northwesterngame last Saturday, Paul’s fierce as¬pect these days is an omen of whathe expects to do to Manly, his mostbitter rival.Norgren’s worry, of course, willagain be that of hoping that his for¬wards can find the hoop consistently.In practice this week they have beenoff and on in scrimmages with thefreshmen. Eggemeyer and Casselshave been the most consistent, andsome time during the game may find“Eggie” at guard and Mullins in hisforward post, which combination hasbeen used several times in the lasttwo weeks’ practices. Big Shot! With a Big Ten championship inthe balance. Maroon swordsmen arebattling Purdue tomorrow at 2:30 inBartlett gymnasium. By winning tenbouts out of seventeen, Chicago canbreak through a tie with Illinois andthus retain the conference crown,won last year.The entire Midway team has beenconcentrating for two weeks on thiscrucial match, in spite of the factthat Purdue is at present in lastplace. For the outcome of a fencingmeet is not exactly predictable, andevery man must be going just rightto sweep his bouts.j So far, Chicago has four tough! conference meets on opponents’I strips, which makes the schedule ai difficult one, on account of the prej-I udiced judging which is customary insupport of the team which is fenc¬ing at home. But the Maroon sevenhas lost only one bout, 9-8, againstIllinois, and has trounced Northwest¬ern, 10-7, and Wisconsin, 13-4. Atthe beginning of the season, Ohiotied Chicago, 8%-8Vi.John Kundla, . . Tall, high-scoring sophomoreforward of the league-leading Gopherquintet.Cinder-Burners toRun Against PurpleTeam at FieldhouseAs a preface to the Chicago Re¬lays, the Maroon thinclads meetNorthwestern’s Wildcats in a trackmeet at 8 tonight in the Fieldhouse.The contest should be close as Chi¬cago came within two points ofNorthwestern in a triangular meetlast week.Coach Ned Merriam * counts onGeorge Halcrow to win the quarter.Captain John Beal to capture thehigh hurdles, and Dave Gordon totake first place in the pole-vault. Healso stated that Newman and Kobakshould do well in the hurdles, McEl-roy in the half mile, Frick in thedash, and Tipshus in the relay. Big Ten BasketballRace Between TwoWindy City FivesChicago will be the center of in¬terest for those who are looking forthe winner of the Big Ten Confer¬ence meet. Tomorrow the two teamstied for first place, Illinois and Min¬nesota, will both be playing in thisneighborhood. Minnesota appearingat our Fieldhouse and Illinois com¬bating Northwestern in Evanston.Though Minnesota will not havethe competition that Illinois willhave, both games should be fairlyclose. Illinois had a close call whenthey played Iowa last week and Min¬nesota had to go into an overtimeperiod to beat Northwestern thisMonday. Both winners will have thedisadvantage of playing their lastgame away from the home court.With so many upsets already thisyear it would not be surprising foranything to happen. Illinois had a 'tough time beating Chicago. Lastweek at the Northwestern game Chi¬cago after being behind at the halfcame back so that at the end of thegame they had scored only two lessfield goals than Northwestern. In theMinnesota-Northwestern game a nipand tuck fight took place. All this Phi Gamma Delta Takes Short LeadOver Dekes in Intramural Wrestling Hamilton, MatousekPlace in Rifle MeetPhi Gamma Delta piled up 31points in the preliminaries, of the In¬tramural wrestling team champion¬ships yesterday to jump into the lead.Seven of their men came throughwithout a defeat. The Dekes tooksecond tentatively with 30 points al¬though they kept only six men in themeet.The Chicago Theological Semin¬ary accumulated 21 points whileplacing five men in tomorrow’sevents, and Phi Kappa Psi was onepoint behind with four men. Thesemi-finals in most weights and finalsin all weights will be run off tomor¬row, beginning at 3:45.118-lb. class—Only three men en¬tered this event. Morris (unattach¬ed) defeated last year’s runner-up,Karlin with a fall.126-lb. class—Dennis (unattach¬ed) and Davis (Beta) both won oiifalls and will match each other inthe finals.135-lb. class—Zubay (Phi Gam)Fisher (Sigma Chi), Thomas (Deke),and Christenson (unattached) camethrough unbeaten.145-lb. class—Semi-final positionswere won by Loeb (ZBT), Ullbrich(Chi-Psi), LeBoy (Phi Gam) whowon two, and Glissman (unattached)who also won two.155 lb. class in the semi-finals areThomas (AD Phi), Englehart (PhiGam), Ickes (unattached), all ofwhom won two matches, and Lawton (Phi Psi) who took three matces dur¬ing the afternoon.165-lb. class — Hauserman (PhiGam), Sidell (CTS), Delaney (PhiDelt), and Jones advanced tosemi-finals.175-lb. class—Resnikoff, Carlson(Deke), Jeremy (Deke), and Le-Fevre (Phi Psi) will fight it out to¬morrow.Heavyweight class—T h o m a s(Deke) and Wilson (Chi Psi) wonthe only two matches in this weight,thereby advancing to the finals. Two members of the University ofChicago Rifle and Pistol club, DonHamilton and George Matousek,placed in the pistol matches held thisweek at Navy Pier in conjunctionthe I with the National Sport and Motorj Boat Show. Hamilton placed fourthin the Class A competition, whileMatsouek was nudged out of firstplace in (|ie B class by a margin oftwo points.Another sharpshooter, Fred Kleinled the Maroon shooters in the Mis¬sissippi State College match lastweek.added together equals Minnesotaplaying Chicago and Illinois fightingNorthwestern and they are’ anyone’sgames.Tankmen TryIllinois WatersChicago battles the stellar Illinoiscold-water boys at Champagne, to¬morrow.The only team that both the Illi¬nois and Chicago swimming teamshave faced is the champion Iowa ag¬gregation. Iowa defeated the Ma¬roons 44 to 40, and beat the Illini 45to 39. Judging the outcome of themeet on the basis of these scores isvery difficult, but on paper, the Ma¬roons seem to have the edge.Co-captain Jay Brown and BobSorenson yesterday turned in thebest times they have made this sea¬son. Brown swam the 100-yard freestyle in 52.6 seconds, with Sorensonsplashing the same distance in 53.2seconds. On the presumption thatthese times will be equaled in themeet, the Maroons should take asure first place. Jay is also expectedto capture the 60-yard swim.Co-captain Chuck Wilson is top-heavy favorite to win the 220 and440 yard swims, while Floyd Stauf¬fer should be able to protect and ex¬tend his unbeaten record in the div¬ing event. The Maroon 400-yard re¬lay team is figured to whip the Illiniquartet. Should the Maroons winthis meet, they will finish the seasonwith a record of .500, three won andthree lost.The water polo game will decidethe Conference co-champion. Chi¬cago, Northwestern and Illinois aretied for first place now. A win foreither side would send that team intoa tie with the Wildcats from theNorth side. Coach E. W. McGilliv-ray won’t even try to predict the out¬come of this gfame. HARRY ZELZER presentsMRS. MARTIN JOHNSONIN PERSON—Presenting the MARTIN JOHNSONS’LATEST MOTION PICTURE MASTERPIECE‘JUNGLE DEPTHS OF BORNEO”Civic Opera House—^Sunday Afternoon, March 7Tickets: 55c, 83c, $1.10, $1.65—-at Marshall Field’s andCivic Opera Box Office ONE MORE WEEKto enjoyMILDRED BAILEY**Queen of Swing**andRED NORVOand His OrchestraAA ¥ ¥Thrill toRuth and Billy Ambrose“America’s Liveliest Dancers’’andPAT KENNEDY¥ ¥ ¥Never a Cover Charge$1.50 Min.$2.00—Sat.BLACKHAWKRandolph - WabashORCHESTRA HALLVIOLIN RECITAL... BY - - -RUGGIERO RICCISATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 6, at 8:15PROGRAMLa Folia Corelli-KreislerConcerto in D Major MozartConcerto in A Minor GlazounoffRondo Schubert FriedbergDanse Elspagnole DeFalla-KreislerReve d’enfant YsayePolonaise WieniawskiBERNARD FRANK at the PianoTickets: 40c, $1.10, $1.65, $2.20 (tax incl.)—saleat box officeDirection: Harry Zelzer Concert ManagementAuspices: MUSICIANS CLUB OF WOMEN HOE SAI GAIChicago’s finest ChineseAmerican RestaurantThe University of Chi¬cago students have by pop¬ular acclaim chosen HOESAI GAI to be the officialChinese-American restaur¬ant.If you desire the finestAmerican dishes or quaintChinese delicasies, you willbe more than satisfied withour service.Come in and enjoy thecongenial modernistic atmo¬sphere.85 W. RANDOLPH ST.and75 W. RANDOLPH ST-Just the Place for afterthe show. DON’T LET THE WEATHERFOOL YOUI... you can fool the weatherWith jtTHE TOPCOAT THAT LEADSA DOUBLE LIFE# leave tlie in wken Wm eold• dp tike Hnm^ oat wken it’e waemA between - seasons overcoat and awarmer-weather topcoat all in one—a ‘‘naturar* for Chicago weather. Thecoat is smart tweed, made of im¬ported Australian wool. The plaidwool lining zips in with a simpleflick of the wrist. And best of all isthe price — $4BFourth FloorMARSHALL FIELD&) COMPANYX)lle6iate Ui6estNATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS IN PICTURE AND PARAGRAPH- Issue I'iThey protest the protestersTo i^ugh out of existenceOdtll C much-denounced Loui-Sana Coalition of Patriotic Societies,Tulane University sttidents have or¬ganized the Coalition of Red Huntersto protest attacks made by the firstgroup on their teachers. Moise S.Steeg, one of the second coalition'sorganizers, is shown addressing a recentopen-air meeting. Above he is waivinga red paper effigy of a campus red. Atleft he is crumpling it up becauseburning it would bring more red intothe scene. It's summertime for sports at the U.S. island universityT^rM> r^anr*P Greenwcll, kicking star of the University of Hawaii soccer team,1 Lie l.>'d.liec jogg almost-classic toe dancing in getting off a long and highone in a game between two teams in the intra-university league. internjtitruiInspectors found them at their bool(s)Ur examination week at the Ih S. Naval Academy when(^^harles Edison, new assistant secretary of the navy, wasrteJ on his first inspection trip of the institution by Admiral Davidthey found all of the future admirals busy. imcfiutMwui They're protesting legislative abolition of compulsory military trainiPrO-'R.C^nrC^ North Dakota State College students learned their stateX 1 LI IVV-/ Xconsidering a bill to make military instruction optionathan 1,000 of their number jammed into Festival Hall, listened to speeches for an houradvocates of the measure and wildly cheered its opponents. Below left is Gorman Kinging against the measure while Georgia Cook and Francis Ladwig scan notes before takistand to suppwt King's contentions.i^ducation vs. FloodBible and JonesAre Almost Twins These NamesMake NewsRelief messages were l^pt moving... through the able assistance of Evansville Cc^l^'sBernard Pattberg, who is shown mapdeeeping- forCBS's Hal Burnett and Bill Fligel.Ruing Waters. . . kept Universityof Louisville base^ments flooded fordays.Relief money for flood refugees. . . were collected by U. S. college and univcstudents in large sums. This is one of the scollecting stations established at the UniversitMinnesota.Planet PostsThis line of white posUHood College’s WillianwObservatory represents therelative distances of fourplanets from the sun, thegilt ball at the right.lamps of learning... provkkd illumination fo*^ the ccal work of Bus. Mgr. Frank Goand Assistant to the President RBbckwell in temporary quitters.Emergency heroes. . . were Ae nation's'radio amatand the University of Arkansas’ IRains was one of the many who tmitted messages for refugees and iworkers.Biff Jonesing the Huskers six Bi]a Saturday afternoon m 1908 Dana XenophonBible of Nebraska and Major Lawrence Me-Ceney (Biff) Jones of Army had a number of thingsin common. They coached highly respected footballteams about to engage each other, they had the samebirth date, October 8, and both had served as lieu'tenants in separate aero squadrons with the A. E. F.The final scOTe was Army 13, Nebraska 3. In 1935Nebraska's bald-headedgrid tutor evened the score.His Comhuskers trampledMajor Jones’ Sooners ofOklahoma two years in arow.Now ex-servicemenBible and Jones are aboutto have coaching at Ne¬braska in ctMnmon. Biblegoes to the University ofTexas at something like$15,000 a year, leavingbdhind him tearful fare¬wells and a record of bring--six championships in eightyears. An army transfer robbed Oklahoma of BiffJones's services several months ago. Now he has beenlost irrevocably to the Sooners. He has resigned hiscommission in the U. S. A. to become Nebraskas’snew coach.D. X. Bible was bom in lefferson City, Tenn., 46year ago. Biff Jones in Wasningtcwi, D. C., five yearslater. Jones was captain ofWest Point eleven in 1917.Delta Kappa Epsilon Biblewarmed the bench fre¬quently as a football subat CajTBon-Newman Col¬lege. He supplemented hisB. A. degree with^aduatework at North Carolina,CXiio State, and CentreCollege. Before the warBible had coached , Miss¬issippi College three years,Louisiana State one year. _ ,After the war Biff Jonesrose from assistant coach at West Point to the headcoachship (1906-29). Army regulations causing histranrfer, he followed in D, X.’s rrotsteps at LouisianaState where he developed an undefeated eleven in1933, ordered Huey Long out of the dressing roomsbc^een halves in 1934.At Nebraska D. X. established a reputation ascoach and soft-spoken gentleman with a habit ofsmacking his lips as he talked. Biff Jones has thegallantry of an Army officer of the old school, withoutits starched aloofness. Xnd the rampaging water of die Ohio and Mia^issippi rivers won out in most of the battles!CoLUBoiATB DioesT ptesents here ezdusrve photosof flood damage and relief activities at four of the.nation's educational institutions, only an moomdete *picture of the part educators and students arid ttdralma maters puyed in history's worst flood, for inmost instances cameras were forgotten in the work of - ;preventinff history's record of 1937 river ruin from |linffDbcker. The'photos of the University rfiphj^t were taken by that msdtutkin's ;It of Buildii^ and Grounds, L. O.Aiaa.‘Pyofn ejcaminations in thel^Aa.111 cbjji in microecopic anatomybring forth toag lines oi magnifying i n'struments {(X use by Fordham Universitystudents.1 AO IV h^assachuse11sAirieaming state coucgc stu^dents listen in comfort as Prof. W. E.Prince lectures on Elizabethan Drama.Notice that they take careful notes sotbeyll have something to refer to in pre'paring for final exams. >Siiiokiiig Camels, yoa enfoy a sense of greaterease while you’re eating, and afterwards too!WHAT Fred McDaniel {below} says about Camels isbacked uplOO^ by baseball’s "Iron Man,”Lou Gehrig— by Frank Buck, of’’Bring ’Em Back Alive” fame— byEleanor Tennant, the outstanding woman tennis coachof the U.S.—and by millions of other Camel smokers inall walks of life. Enjoy Camels at every meal. They speedup the flow of digestive fluids. Increase alkalinity. Helpyou enjoy food. Camek set you right! They’re the cigarettefor steady smoking. Light up a Camel and get a ’’lift.”yTEDIOUS STUDIES tendto drag on the nerves, oftenpenalizing digestion. ButCamels help in two specificways: You get a ’’lift” in en*ergy with a Camel. Again,smoking Camels with yourmeals and afterwards helps di¬gestion run along smoothly.And Camels don’t get onyour nerves or dre yourtaste. Camels are mild!Ciftwn. a. j. an—T’’AFTER RIDINC HERD from sun¬up to sun-down, the chuck-wagonlooks mighty good to me,” says FredMcDaniel {left and right}. ’’But I’msure I wouldn’t enjoy my ’chuck’ halfas much without the pleasure 1 getfrom smoking Camek with my meakand afterwards. After a good mealand Camek 1 feel plenty O.K. Camekset me right! They’re throat-easy,and they never get on my nerves.”BUSY SECBETABY. "I smokeCamels— nothing else! ” says Joae-lyn Libby. "Camels pat more funinto eating and smoking too. Somany girls feel the same way thatdo they smoke Camels.soCOSTLIERTOBACCOS!i Camels are made from finer. MOREI expensive TOBACCOS-Turkish andT Domestic —than any other popular brand. m RADIO’S ^'NEW SMASH HIT!^Jaek OaWe'a Collogm^IrrcpreMible Jack Oakic at hiabest ... Also Benny Goodman’s“Swins” Band, Hollywood come¬dians and singins stars—and specialcollesc amateur talent! EveryTuesday — 9:30 pm E. S. T.,8:30 pm C. S. T., 7:30 pmM.S.T.. 6:30 pm P.S.T..^ WABC-Columbia jNetwork.At first called it '‘h.i Vpinmechanics," but now iu a f\4i,fledged course fbrCorheil Imvct^«t7 women. Eighteen ye-rs agoit had only m stunts, but newthe class has mwe than i <>—and no men are allowed to eirolt."Agricultural Engineern ,g ,o”was begun as an ejqperim nt inengineering and remain.^ oncurriculum to give coeJsconfidence and instructioi mfundamentals of nu^;mei.Apriall^t'Q players -werethe photographer snapped this hit ofaction in the Sprin^eld-St. Francisrame in Madison Square (larden.Springfield won, 35 to 18. Acmt7^etwor}{ band will feature his songQ^rirrc<'£>r Syracuse University senior ball dancers gave top-OUllgotCl ranking to Richmond Gale's Why Did I Believe inTou? and now he’s to get the break most young songwriters pray for:Hal Kemp will feature his song on an early program,They welcome Hurdue journalists and then gudiiil^QQclo Rpr^>nfinn Pubhcityman T. R. Johnston, W(^rVCUCJJLlUll Director Helen B. Schleman and As>!President Frank Hockema glad'hand the students arriving for Sigma I"Riveters' Rassle" at the ^lermaker school. CVKUciAri Du;ht Phiibi hrTrial a University ofX 1 Idl California Daily Cali'fomian feminine columnist came outfor pipe sme^ing for her sex, theseunderclass women decided to giveit a try. The photographer leftbefore the first pipeful had beensmoked. w>de Wodd Interna tiona]Plumbers better not forget their wrenches in the future Hereafter mechanics will have to l(now their businessrs. Housewife will buy her own equipment and put the plumbing system in order This group is learning all there is to know about what makes a car go. They doI self. Here students take down all the pipes, put them together again. everything from greasing the chassis and changing a tire to taking the motor apart.Roxralt'tr Bernice Holland, Alpha Deltay Pi, and Charles Herrington, SigmaPhi Epsilon, led the grand march for the annualNahheeyahli mid-winter formal dances at theUniversity of Tennessee. Kay Kyser provided themusic.Blind WrestlerIt s catch-as^atch-can for pluckyRobert Allman (left), blind Universityof Pennsylvania wrestler, for he mustuse the touch system in his matches. Vacuum cleaners lose all their mysteriesProf. Robb (right) tells Barbara MacLeod the fine points concerning what goes on inside the rug cleaning ma'chines. Prof. F. B. Wright, assistant in the course, is at the left.Pumps are important household machines, too'So the co-eds learn how to take them apart, see what makes them tick, and put them back together again .<othat they will tick properly. CoiLtci.ATE Digest Pbtnos from Betty Fivt?PORTS PAGE readersmay think that it s allMts and no play for thoselo attend the Dartmouth)llegc Winter Carnivals,t that wasn’t so thisar, for the Dartmouthuting Club planners ofe a7th annual snow festi-1 arranged many social'ents and considerableitertainment for the i ,037minine guests (more thanftr before) who took over21 fraternity houses)r the week-eno ^^memhe^slust room elsewhere, oftenut of town when theypeak for rooms too late).There were big-time or-;hestras for big-time par¬ies, skiing exhibitions bybreign experts, studentsfrom Swiss and Canadianuniversities, and any num¬ber of winter sports con¬tests—besides actual par¬ticipation in all manner ofwinter sports. CollegiateDigest here devotes all tooinadequate a space fcM" high¬light and sidelight photosof Dartmouth as showman*sportsman and host. Unim'ithcnviae credited, photo* on thu pogricoiATc Dicerr by Arthur Gnfin.UnusualIS thisphoto of a sharpturn being madeon the Dartmouthslalom course. rtrst snow . . . prst crownAlabama's Florence Allan had never <snow before her arrival in Hanover, N. H.,the Clival. She won the Carnival queen:over 14 rivals a. the starters-n set for his start m^nter sportsmen.^W Horse'and'sl(i racing was pofmlaand Dartmouth’s W. Bryn and |. FJwon the speedy ski-jonng dCrowd'topperSchautfler of Am¬herst soars highabove the crowd inhis try for the ski-jumping honors fi¬nally won by McGillUniversity’s R. Jo-hannsen. Wi<ic WodjCamivalites scorned cars. . . and took to sleigh-riding for their first trip through thestreets Hanover, leading U. S. college winter carnivalcity. J^rnmedArrival: Old friends re-unitedSpills are part of the game. . . guests who took up skiing found byactual experience on E)artmouth’s manyski courses. Wid< Wi,rid Relaxation and tal\ before a fire. . . was most welcome after a long day on the ski trails. Thisgroup is in the shelter built in front of Robinson Hall.Wide World Carnival crowds paraded at nigiOn their way to see Winter Temfx) they alnthe band off the street.Dartmouth’s Big ShowfBooks and Menpresident (above) . . . and daughter (right above)Tncf-Qllof-iVkn Henry Merritt Wriston, for ii years11 ioUlilcitliJll president of Lawrence Collie, is sbo^ ashe marched in the procession that lead to ceremonies that inductedhim as Brown University’s i ith president. His daughter, Barbara,an Oberlin College student, is above, at the right. pwuiw, inc.Wrestlers' timers wrestle with clocl(s01nplrrnf>n timers’ table at the r^ent Kent StatiUniversity vs. University c£ Chicago wrestling meet performed a nriost important activity for it was animp rtant match for both teams. Kent won its 24th straight interco’^egiate match, 19 to 11. U. S. MilitaryAcademy cadets line upfor their daily inspection just before marching to class fewthe first lesson of the day. They march to claMCS in squads.EuoMUcdt'PiiThere's no dozing off in this roomTnlfPrQ Bill crams for his exams at EmoryJUILC.I0 University he prepares for long study sessions;he borrows at least half a dozen clocks, then sets their alarmsto go off fifteen minutes apart so he’ll not doze too long shouldhe fall asleep over his books. Acme60UR0CALABASH PIP£ JUDGE, MY UNCLE SENT ME A ^CAJuABASH PIPE, JUST UKE 'yOURS.AT RRST I TMOUQMT IT VUAS ASAXOPHONE AND UDOiCED FORAN INSTRUCTION BOOK WITHTHE SIX EASV LESSONS. JUSTMtlHATAND VJKVIS A calabash? THE MJHAT'of A CALABASH ^PIPE ISA BOWL OF THE AFRICANI BC3TTl£ GOURD WTTH A MEERSCHAUM IOR PORCELAIN INNER BONLAND AN amber STEMTHESmHV'iS THE VUAV THE CALABASH1 BOWL ABSORBS HEAT AND MAKES FOR IN iv r-r^ SMOKE—BLIT,Bs/BHSQ" thatS only halfTHE STORY —THETOBACXO THATGOESINTO ms EVENIMPOCTANTI DOUteE TELUNG ME ' BEFORE I GOT'jNEXT TO Pf^lhtCE ALBERT,I BLAMED)MV PIPE FOR THE WAY MV TONGUEWAS ALWAYS BITING.'CHANGINGPIPES DIDN'T SOLVE PC BUT CHANGINGJTO mild. TASry BlTELESS'PRlNCelALfliBBT I■really\POT MEON THEbOY NfELL,! SEEI CAN'TTEACH TOUANYTHINGNEW ABOUTGOCX>SMOK'NGpipefuls of frafranttobstcco in every 2>ok.tin of Prince Albert WHAT YOU WANT IN A PIPE TOBACCOIS WHAT YOU GET IN PRINCE ALBERT*., ’CRIMP cut'to pack right and smokeCOOL.‘BITE' REMOVEO-NO HARSHNESSON TONGUE OR THROAT. THERES REALPIPE-JOY, FRIEND i PRINCE ALBERTMONEY.BACK GUARANTEESmoke 20 fragrant pipeful* ofPrince AlberL If you don’t find it tbemellowest, tastiest pipe tobacco youever smoked, return the pocket tin withthe rest of the tobacco in it to ns at anytime within a month from this date, andwe will refund full purchase price, pluspostage. (Sign»<l) R. J. Reynolds To-bacco Company, WinstoU'.Ssdem, N. C.Cai>>'ricnt, 1937, R. J. Iternoltls Toljacco ComiNiiiyhiNCE Albert THE NATIONALMisterioso!baton reflects^ opening; WidxHit resorting to temperament or histriomes. Directi GatDaachhas built Northweattm Univeraity's symphonyorchesti mwothe flnest student'^KuIty muacal groups in the U.8. With toredleadership and careful organization he brings his groups to p ' fectxnWll ^^ectingplace of allWesleyan University(Middletown, CJonn.)students is theappointed andgrill in EXiwncy House,under'graduate socialcenter. “Hit hard arid hit often,'' says Coach Manassa Mauler IPrizefighter turned restaurateur turned teacher—is the career record I1 LILtJl Dempsey, who has just been named boxing coach at the University ot 1He's shown here giving Andy Csaky a few pointers in preparation for a tough scheJintercollegiate matches.Perfect patientDentiststient never bites or howlswhen it is used for p^cticeby University of Michigandmtal students. Dr. R. V.Levette maintains.Wide World