Vol. 37 No. 96. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1937 Price Three CenUThompson AsksAll Seniors toDance at BallSupport of Affair TakesPlace of Contribution toClass Gift. Bearded SeniorsLook for Honorsin Mustache RaceSince the proceeds from Saturdaynipht's Senior Ball will be used tocover the expenses of the class jfift,Pepjjy Thompson, secretary-treasurer,announced today that all seniors areexpected to purchase tickets to theBall as their contribution.Oriffinality will be the factor most.'^tro.ssed in the awardin^i: of prizes,although all types and kinds of cos¬tumes will be eligible for the numer¬ous prizes. The only uncostumedpeople to gain admittance will bethose in formal dress.The chaperons for the occasion willbe Mr. and Mrs. William Bethke, Mr.and Mrs'. Harwood G. Thompson, and.Mr. and Mrs. Leon P. Smith.Name PatronsThose who have consented to acta.s patrons are: Mr. and Mrs. Robert.M. Hutchins, Dr. and Mrs. Harvey A.Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Brum¬baugh, Mr. and Mrs. William H.Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert C.Woellner, Mr. and Mrs. John C.Kcnnan, Mr. and Mrs. William.Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P.Whiteside, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fel-.senthal, Mr. and Mrs. John E. New¬by, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill C. Meigs,•Mrs. Lottie M. Bernard, Mr. and.Mrs. H. B. Schulz, and Dean and.Mr.s. George A. Works.Carnival ball is the climax to theweek-end of siocial activity sponsor¬ed by the seniors. Friday night theMA is offering “Green Grow theLilacs” after which the College Innpresents their first collegiate dancecontest. University students will beadmitted for the special minimum ofone dollar.Preview Blacicfriar*Be.side.s the regular floor show,a portion of the new Blackfriars pro-tluction, “One Foot in the Aisle” willbe given. The Carnival Queen (thegirl who sells the most tickets to theBall) will be presented to the crowd.Northwestern, Loyola, and DePaulwill have the three following Fridaynights for their dance contests.Three winners from each night willreceive silver cups' and will competefor the three prizes of $150, $100,and $50 at the final contests. By HAIRLESS JOEOn the eve of the annual Black¬friars Mustache Cup race which be¬gins at noon tomorrow in front ofthe “C” bench predictions of the out¬come are already darkening the air,according to an unnamed Blackfriars'publicity agent.It is claimed that Edward Stern,I impresario of the barber shop, yes-j terday carefully counted the whisk-j ers of his' mustache and confidently! issued a challenge to the senior cla.ssI in toto to match his bushy accumula¬tion. Brad, Reynolds Club barberand official judge of the event, act¬ing in an ex officio capacity as pre¬contest prognosticator, installedStern as the advance favorite, andpredicted that he will disturb thewaters of the Botany Pond in a man¬ner unriv’alled by predecessors ofmany years heretofore.Also in evidence around the Bar¬ber Shop have been such notables asHairless Bob Bethke, Julian Kiser,Ed Sibley, Dwight Wiliams, TubbyWright.Promise Ducking to ShavenAccording to rumor strong-armedsophomore members of one fraterni¬ty promise to eagh and every seniorbrother not particijiating in this ton-sorial epic a thorough ducking in abathtub whose waters exceed in cool¬ness those of the famed BotanyPond.The coveted mustache cup whichwill be presented to the longest hair¬ed upper-lip posse.ssor is now on dis¬play in the University Bookstore,Brad announced yes'terday. Black-(Continued on page 2) University Students Join NationalPeace Strike in Protest Against WarMidwest RalliesEstimate Total Participa¬tion of Million StudentStrikers.Chapel UnionElects OfficersVan (le Water, Ranney,Wahlstrand, Ro.sensteinChosen.Anti-War Strike^Tliomism^ Discussedin April SoapboxAn article by Parabellum, cover¬ing the Student Strike, and one byMary Wise discussing the issue atNorthwestern over Freedom of thePress are included in Soapbox, pub¬lication of the Socialist Club, on saletoday at ten cents per copy.John Stirling, former instructorof Philosophy at Northwestern andgraduate student of Philosophy atthis University has written an articleon “Thomism and Reaction” whichwill serve as an introduction to thedebate to be conducted in the nextissue between Mortimer Adler andSidney Hook on this question. Therei.s a discussion by the editors of the“Pontiac Aftermath and AcademicFreedom” which takes up the recentprobations. Also pertinent to recentcampus discuss'ion is an article byA. Fiat entitled “Fraternities Do Dis¬criminate.”Literary ContributionsA short story by Robert Speer, “AQuart of Milk” and book reviews byGeorge Reedy covering “The Revolu¬tion Betrayed,” “Trotsky Case,” and“Mannheim” are the more literarycontributions. The is.s'ue is alsocharacterized by art work, includingan aquatint by Winifred Behre, theart editor, and poetry contributed byseveral students.The editorials will cover many ofthe Communist-Socialist differencesand the Ferrero-Salitto question. Theeditors promise one of the most ar¬tistic and liveliest issues Soapbox hasever put out under the inspirationof the quotation from Hearst—“Redradicalism has put a soapbox on everycampus.” • New officers of the ('hapel Union,i elected by the membership of thatI organization inilude John \^in dei Water, chairman; Caroline Wahl-I .strand, vice-chairman; .Mary Ranney,j secreary; and Joseph Ro.sen.stein,j treasurer. These four* will also be1 officers of the Chapel Board, whichI is composed of the officers of the! Chapel Union, those who were defeat-j ed for office, and four students chos-I en from the membership at large ofthe Union.The students who were defeatedfor office, but who will, nevertheless,be member.s of the Board are CharlesCorcoran, Purnell Benson, JudithKahn, and Ralph Straetz.Floris Rottersman, Judson Allen,Robert Goodman, Marie Berger,Carolyn Zimmerly, Gordon McNeil,and Emma Bickham were chosen fromthe membership at large of the Unionto run for the remaining positionson the Board. Voting Iregins todayin the Chapel office and will be con¬cluded at the Sunday night meetingof the Union.Sunday evening’s meeting, at whichthe election will take place, is Ireingheld at the home of Aaron J. Brum¬baugh, dean of students in the Col¬lege, Maynard C. Krueger, a.ssistantprofessor of Economics, will speak.The Chapel Union is an organiza¬tion which attempts to foster moreintimate relations between studentsand faculty, and among students. Itaccomplishes its ends by spon.soringvarious social affairs, including teas,dances, and informal discussiongroups. i An estimated 1,000,000 students' from high schools and universities! in the United States will leave theirI classes' today at 11 o’clock to par-I ticipate in the nation wide studentI Peace movement. University of Chi-' cago professors are taking an activeI part in the peace strikes throughoutthe middle west. Last week at the{ University of Wiscons-in, Robert M.( Lovett, professor emeritus of Eng-1 lish, was the principal speaker.Climaxing a week of peace activ¬ities on the campus of the Universityof Illinois, Charles Gilkey, dean ofthe UniverKity Chapel, will speak to¬morrow on “1917—Twenty YearsAfter.”Maynard C. Krueger, Assistantprofessor of Economics, will speak[ at the peace rally at the Universityof Michigan and at NorthwesternUniversity.Scott Favors StrikeIn granting the students of North-{ western the right to .strike. PresidentDill Scott issued the following state¬ment: “The youth of this generationare awake to the calamity of war toa degree probably unequalled by theyouth of former times. The studentsof Northwestern agree as never be¬fore to the importance of promotingpeace. April 22, 1937, will not onlyregister the attitude of the students'of Northwestern University, and ofthe world, but will hasten the daywhen war will he abolished from theworld.”At Northwestern the program willbegin in the morning with a paradeby the students and Evanston peo¬ple, assisted by members' of the Uni¬versity band. Flags will be securedfrom the Building and Grounds De¬partment and carried in the parade.Governor Elmer A. Benson of Min¬nesota has by official proclaniationdeclared April 22, 1937, as PeaceDay, and recommends “that the daybe celebrated with the proper exer-cist's and programs.”The statement points out thatwhat we are now witnessing in Spainmay be a civil war, but it also hasall the elements of international con¬flict, and even while this war is be¬ing waged the only solution whichstatesmen of other countries can findfor ending war is' an armament race.“But youth, which will be called uponto do the fighting and shed the blood,for what they know not why, is neith¬er so blind nor so pessimistic as thestatesmen.” Leaders SpeakPalmer, Cary, WechslerAddress Mass Meeting inHutchinson Court.Approximately 3000 students' willassemble in Hutchinson Court ateleven today to hear three speakerscondemn war and show the need ofstudent peace movements. At thesame time, in colleges all over thecountry students will be showingtheir unity in .similar strikes.Permission to use HutchinsonCourt for the meeting preceding thestrike was granted yesterday by Vice-President Woodward, in s'pite of thefact that several classes were sched¬uled for adjoining buildings. Afterthe speeches, strike marshals' will or¬ganize the audience into parade lines.Strike committee members, bear¬ing posters reading “Strike AgainstWar at 11” will picket the campusall morning. Ten o’clock classes willbe organized to come to the paradeYoungest Freshman Woman CombinesCirens Dancing with University Life Desirous of uniting forces wheneveragreement on an issue confronting stu¬dents can be reached, we, the under¬signed editors of the Student Partisan,i Phoenix, and The Daily Maroon, herebystate our suoport of the Peace Strike.We urge all students to participate init, and to carefully study the variouspranks of the Strike platform.Mack RosenthalI Henry A. Reesefulian A. KiserBy LORNE COOKClarke, demure Cole Brothers when they were in Chi-her after-school- <*ago.Started Dancing At 4V’irginia started dancing when shety, Ken Maynard, and other person-, showed remarkable aptitude,alities of Cole Brothers' Circus where ! and has been dancing ever since,she is a featured dancer. j Her tap instructor was the same that‘ taught Hal LeRoy and Betty Atkin¬son, winner of the tap dancing con¬test at the stadium la.s't year. Mosttwice daily before 25,000 people. 1 her ballet instruction has comeClarke participates in five numbers, j from Miss McRae who is recognizedone of them a beautiful Arabian Solo i RS one of the best in the city. Duringdance in the center ring. The dance ! ten years she has attended' s'everal classes throughout the coun¬try. Although no one in her imme-Virginia Mayfreshman, spendsIhours in the company of Clyde Beat- iSince April 16, she has been, anduntil May 2, will continue to danceis done in .the large circular lioncage—without the lions. She alsodoes three group numbers in addi¬tion to acting as assistant to FrankSheppard, trapeze headliner.Born in Chicago nearly 16 yearsago, Virginia has lived here with theexception of time spent traveling.She has toured the entire UnitedStates, Alaska, Mexico, and Canada,sometimes as a tourist and sometimesto dance. Last year she danced withKertcin Expresses Doubt ConcerningPassttge of Anti-Lynching LegislationStrike Against War at11 TodayG. E. Bentley:“Foreign dispatches remind usdaily that millions of people arebeing taught to look forward towar. In the midst of such sicken¬ing preparations for the return tobarbarism, it is heartening to seeAmerican students organizing tofight war. Such efforts deservethe encouragement of everyone in¬terested in the preservation ofcivilization.” “Although it cannot be doubted jthat the anti-lynch bill was drawn up jsincerely and with the best inten- jtions, I doubt whether its' evident junconstitutionality will let it pass theSenate,” said Jerome Kerwin, ass'oei-ate professor of Political Science,commenting on the measure whichlast week passed the House of Rep¬resentatives by a narrow margin.The bill provides for penaltiesagainst the officers of the county inwhich the lynching takes place andagainst private individuals' con¬cerned, with trial in a federal courtfor the offenders. There were sev-eal milder lynch bills proposed, butthe most extreme one was cho.senbecause, according to Kerwin of theemotional impetus given by news ofa lynching in Missi.ssippi a few daysbefore.“The bill is especially opposed bythe states rights advocates,” continu¬ed Kerwin, “especialy by Borah, whocalls it unconstitutional and immoral.He points out that it is unfair dis¬crimination against the southernstates, where, by states action alone,lynchings have decreased 5000%since the hey-day of the lynch mobs.It is a question of the constitution¬ality of having the federal govern¬ ment reach into the state, for by thefourteenth amendment, no state maydeprive a person of life or libertywithout due process of law, but in¬dividuals are not responsible to thenational government.”“If the bill goes through in itspi'esent form,” Kerwin predicted, “itmight S'et back the movement to re¬form the South b.v causing antagon¬ism toward the federal goveernment.Besides, sentiment against the billwould be so strong that a Southernjury would never convict under it.We would see the same thing as oc¬curred during Prohibition, with thelaw laughed at and disregarded al¬together.“However, in some backward com¬munities', or when states fail to takeany action against lynching, someforce may be needed. I would sup¬port a bill holding the state author¬ities accountable for any lynchings,for besides having a good chance topass the Senate, it would fairly, ef¬fectively prevent mob violence.”Kerwin pointed out that the billopened up the possibility of the fu¬ture use of federal power in crim¬inal cases of all kinds. He said thatalthough this action might eventual¬ly be desirable, at present it needsmore careful consideration. diate family has been a dancer sev¬eral of her relatives were in the showbusiness.In past years special recognitionhas been made of her talent on sev¬eral occasions', besides winning abathing beauty contest at JacksonPark in 1935'. In 1932 Virginia gqvean exhibition at a Dancing Masters’Convention in Montreal. Later inthe same year she received a silverloving cup for a dance given on a boatto Bermuda. Her dancing has alsograced the stage of the StudebakerTheater where she appeared beforea Teachers’ Federation Show.Love* the CircusAbout her work she says, “I justlove dancing at the circus. I get a bigkick out of it.” Although planningto take up dancing as a career shehas no intention of staying with thecircus. At presen her main interestis school, or as she remarked, “Edu¬cation is the important thing, afterall.”Aside from her dancing, Virginia(Continued on page 3) in a group, headed by committeemembers carrying banners with anti¬war slogans.John Morris, chairman of thestrike committee, will open the meet¬ing by reading the official strike call,which states, “We recognize the in.creasing threat of war and acceptour responsibility for creating andsupporting an aggressive peace pol¬icy through a nation-wide demonstra¬tion of solidarity for world peace.”Emphasizing the committee policy,“To strike is not enough,” Morris willintroduce Richard Lindheim, hea/iof the permanent Peace Council whowill .show the necessity of continu¬ing anti-war activities through thewhole year.The three speakers are AlbertPalmer, head of the Chicago Theolog¬ical Seminary, James Cary, head ofthe electrical and radio workers un¬ion, and James Wechsler, editor of“Student Advocate,” national ASUpublication. Wechsler is alsn speak¬ing at strike meetings at Northwest-ei n and at Central Y College.Parade lines will be organized at(Continued on page 3)Federation CommencesCounselor TrainingWomen’s Federation Council an¬nounced today that the first counsel- jor training meeting to be held in the jtheater of Ida Noyes Monday at 2:30will be open to all women on campus.Those women who would like totake the course of four meetings maydo so even though they have not re¬ceived a letter of invitation from theFederation. One hundred womenwill be chosen from the group tak¬ing the course to act as counselors toFreshmen next fall.All who attend the first meetingmust bring a picture or snapshot ofsome kind with them. HildegardeBreihan will speak at the meeting onthe s'ubject of social adjustments. Beverly^ RussellPlay Final Rolesfor DA TomorrowFriday night’s presentation of“Green Grow the Lilacs” will markthe farewell appearance of twoDramatic Association veterans whofor four years have contributed ac¬tive service to campus productions.William Beverly, president of DA,will face Mandel hall footlights forthe la.st time in the character roleof a country pedlar, while Jean Rus¬sell, member of the Mirror Board,gives her final performance in a lead¬ing comedy part.Tn addition, Duncan Holadaysteps into the lead role which sky¬rocketed Franchot Tone to Theater(^uild fame in 1931 and Mary PaulRix plays the part in which HelenWestley was featured in the Guildproduction..\gainst a background of the Okla¬homa Indian territory of 1900, theplay unfolds as a drama of the Westin the days when the West was Wild.“Green Grow the Lilacs” has been in¬cluded in the Association’s 1937 rep¬ertoire in accordance with the customof presenting at least one strictlyAmerican play each year.Page Two THE DAILY I^ROON, THURSDAY. APRIL 22. 1937iail^ iiamonFOUNDED IN 1>01Member Afcociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published morningrs except Saturday. Sun-4lsy. and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby Tlae Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 48. 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 appearirg 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 poet officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.It-.'RESENTEO FOR NATIONAU ADVERTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, IncCollege Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York. N.Y.Chicaoo - BOSTON - San Franciscokos Anseues • 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 BartelsEmmet' Deadman Edward FritzElRoy Golding William McNeillBetty RobbinsCharles Roy BUSINESS ASSOCIATESBernard Levine William RubachMarshall J. StoneEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSJacquelyn AebyBarbara BeerHarris BeckLaura BergquistMaxine BiesenthalRuth BrodyCharles ClevelandLome Cook John CooperPaul FergusonJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisWallace HerschelRex Horton Harry LeviSeymour MillerLaVerne RiessAdele RoseBob SassLeonard SchermerDolly ThomeeDouglas ’’’’.'reBUSINESS ASSISTANTSEklwin BergmanJerome Ettelson Alan JohnstoneMax FreemanDoris Gentzler Howard GreenleeEdward GustafsonSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwayNight Editor: ElRoy D. GoldingAssistants David Harris — Douglas WareThursday, April 22, 1937Are We Old Enough?For five years Midway students have beenunder the New Plan. They have been takingcomprehensive examinations covering a year swork. TTiey have enjoyed optional attendanceat class. In the survey courses, they have hadnumerous optional readings pointed out tothem. They are supposedly using their owninitative, gaining their own education. Inso¬far as it works, this plan is excellent, but towhat extent is it .effective? As a matter offact, under the complacent exterior of NewPlan “Initiative,” there is now a chain of eva¬sion.One major evasion is the magnification ofcramming as the main means of passing a com¬prehensive examination, instead of regular,repetitive study. The system of long-term ex¬aminations as the sole check on one’s acad¬emic success tends to concentrate a lop-sidedportion, sometimes all, of the study into thelast few days or weeks, when haste and ex¬citement lead to a quick forgetting after theexam. Cramming is psychologically uselessfor long-term knowledge, as compared withrepetitive learning over a long period.Many students can get away with only acouple nights study to pass an exam, but theirlearning is brief. There is a large number ofstudents who are evidently not old enough tomake themselves study all year long. Re¬gardless of the cause of their lack of academicinitiative, they need more direction than theyreceive at present.A factor which facilitates the increase incramming is the R quarterly grade. It is quitesimple to wait until next quarter before start¬ing to study, because one can take an R wtih-out indignity.Another related aspect of comprehensiveexaminations is the fact that the exam is ex¬alted. TTirough the entire course, especially inthe surveys, constant attention is brought up¬on the exam. Shortly before the test, copiesof previous exams are practically memorizedin order that the recurrent stock answers maybe stated readily, parrot-like. Is this educa¬tion?In the case of optional attendance, evasionof initiative is not so bad as in the case ofcomprehensives. The class attendance is al¬most as good as it ever was. But here, again,there are some students who just don’t havethe initiative to attend class or to study out¬side during class period. These students arenot all dopes. Many of them are simply at-Itacied to other interests. The further Mid¬ way students advance, and the longer theyhave to break the habit of strict attendance athigh school, the easier they find it to avoidclasses while reading a magazine.One may say, “If they don’t learn to dis¬cipline themselves now, they never will. Dis¬cipline them now, and after they get out of col¬lege they’ll begin to loaf just the same.” Buteven if this remark were true, the college sup¬ervision of students who lack academic initia¬tive would at least give them the advantageof four years’ learning and save them fromwasting four years. To those who would denythe value of such learning by contending thateducation is nothing but the learnng of self-discipline, we ask, “How does the child learnself-discipline without undergoing disciplinefrom others? So, to some extent, with thecollege student.”A third great evasion of initiative is in op¬tional readings offered by the survey courses.The College has no statistics on extent of op¬tional reading actually done, but it is doubt¬ful if one student in ten does any at all.These evasions lead us to wonder—are wereally wise enough to be put on our own initi¬ative in these respects?>f- * *The University is at present considering anextensive additional program, a new NewPlan, embracing the features of the New Plan,and more. Before expanding the present sys¬tem, would it not be wise to buckle down andmake a few needed corrections?—E. C. F-(This edit(yrial has been purely destructive in crit¬icism. Tomorrow the winter will attempt to suggeston or two methods of improvement, although theproblem is difficult.)The Travelling BazaarSABOTAGE ON PEACEThe Maroon office was turned into a carpenter-paint shop Tuesday evening as a dozen or so PeaceStrike workers labored for hours to turn out thenecessary placards, banners, and signs for the Strike,These were all stored neatly away in Editor Kiser’s“private” office. You can imagine the Strike com¬mittee’s chagrin when the next morning the signshad all disappeared. Tempers boiled and numerouspersons were suspected.Then, at the Strike day committee’s meeting, thetruth was revealed. The Maroon staff had commit¬ted sabotage, had placed the placards in a back of¬fice of Lexington Hall which is used by men only.♦ ♦ ♦IT STRIKES USthat more different kinds of people are partici¬pating actively in the Strike this year than everbefore. Never before has The Daily Maroon stoodfirmly for the Strike. Never before has the Strikebeen chairmanned by a leading “activity” man, vice-chairmanned by a leading “activity” woman. Neverbefore have so many fraternity men considered theStrike seriously, nor have so many houses given theirsupport. And never before has the administrationgiven the Strike the consideration it has this year.■ c ♦ ♦ ♦WE HOPEthe Costume Carnival Ball’s publicity committeehas the courtesy not to capitalize on the Peace Strikeas a means of publicizing her own affair, meritoriousthough it is.« * *Incidentally, we think it would be a fine idea ifthose who have been going crusading for “Scholar¬ships not Battleships” would take the trouble to sup¬port the Carnival Ball, for after all, the proceedswill go for scholarships or some equally worthy Se¬nior class gift.♦ ♦ ♦None other than Sam Whiteside, whom we hadthought to be above such things, suggested that theCarnival Ball award to “the sweetest couple” somefurniure for the boudoir.♦ ♦ ♦It is rumored that Margaret Penney will arriveat the Ball completely swathed in adhesive tape (tosave her skin); that Duncan Holaday will come asa split personality so that he can bring two dates;that Genevieve Fish will come with a dummy (Capand Gown); that little Bob Anderson will come aslittle Bob Anderson and win the prize for most orig¬inal costume; that Bob Bethke will forget to come.* * ♦JUST FOR YOUCharles Evans Hughes is an honorary trustee ofthe University. We don’t care any more than youdo, but we feel it a duty to add to your stock ofmeaningless miscellaneous information because wedo so like to emulate our eminent faculty.ip * *And in case anyone knows them, for we don’t, wehasten to inform that Bond Chapel has been reservedfor 11 a. m, tomorrow for the wedding of MurielDavis and Richard L. Longini, both formerly of theUniversity. And we don’t see any sense in havinga wedding breakfast at noon. LeHersto the EditorPEACE vs. THE SPANIARDSEditor,The Daily Maroon:Orchids to ElRoy Golding for hisletter to the editor in Tuesday’s is¬sue. It is a much clearer expositionof the Peace Strike than has beenpresented by the IJ^ousand and someminds (?) that signed a petition tohave classes dismissed this morn¬ing. Originally they were going tostrike by not going to classes, thenthey petitioned to have classes dis¬missed. Had the petition been grant¬ed it would have been nothing morethan a mass meeting held when thestudents couldn’t go to school any¬way. Nice technique!The whole thing seems to be noth¬ing more than a bunch of toy wheelsspinning aimlessly in a lot of inaneimmature minds. On the bulletinboards we see placards reading, “HelpSave Spanish Democracy,” put thereby the same organizations that arebacking the Peace Strike. In one handthey carry a palm leaf and cry forpeace and in the other they carrystories’ of rebel ravages and beg forj our support of one army against an¬other. “Save poor downtrodden Span¬ish Democrats (Communists) fromthe bestially fiendish attacks of thebig bad rebel Fascists. To arms,comrades’! To arms!!” Then whenthey get you so hot you are readyto personally assassinate Hitler, Mus¬solini, and Franco, they turn and say,“Let brotherly love enfold you andfill your heearts with a desire forpeace. Strike for peace, brothers!Follow us, brothers, to the fulfill¬ment of the cooperative way oflife.”Sounds like Henry Reese’s satireof a Maroon editorial in the last is-sut of Phoenix,We see the ranks of the peacestrikers split, some advocating peace(They’ve got a good ideal but don’tknow what to do with it) and othersadvocating class war. If the minorconflagration in Spain can drawthose who are actually engaged in apeace demonstration away from theirobjective, we might suspect that apropaganda campaign built aroundthe theme “Save the world fromFascism” would trouble them no end.It is unfortunate that the few sin¬cere proponents of the cause ofpeace should be “taken in” by thosewho are using the set-up to furtherpropagandize militarism in the formof class warfare. The Peace Strikeis no longer for peace—it is to arousea feeling that favors war. The strikewill become for the most part a massdemonstration to arouse sympathyfor the Spanish Communists, a sym¬ pathy which is conducive to war—|not against it.I blame those who use the PeaceStrike as a cloftk, but also I blamethose sincere leaders who have beenfoolish enough to let their ideal bemade subservient. It is for thisthat I term them “infantile.” Evenat . this stage they have allowedthemselves to be led from their goalby more mature and capable minds,and have shown their susceptibilityto propaganda. It would be a safebet that the majority of the peacestrikers would be the first to jointhe big parade when the bands start¬ed playing and the flags waving.Obviously the strikers don’t haveto sell themselves the idea that peaceis glorious. In trying to sell s'ome-one else they use the same tacticsas the propagandists for war. As El¬Roy said, “It is unlikely that anyonewill be converted by a parade, slo¬gan, or fifteen minutes of oratory.”If any are allied with the ideal, theywill be the type who will follow flagwaving and rabble-rousing, andwould be the first to be ralliedsheep-like to the colors in the eventof yvar. So far the score would be1-0 in favor of the Spanish Commun¬ists.Lome Cook. Mustache - Race(Continued from page 1)friars hope that all senior men willtake advantage of the unusual op¬portunity offered to achieve undy¬ing fame; Blackfriars predict thatall senior men who do not make useof this advantage may receive an¬other type of fame. The waters ofthe Botany Pond run still, cool, deep,and muddy, as someone once said.Along with the mustache race theBlackfriars management is conduct¬ing voting for head score girl todayand tomorrow in Mandel Corridor,Any senior girl is eligible to becomea candidate and the winner will be incharge of music score sales for theproduction, “One Foot in the Aisle.”In addition, all voters will receive afree chance on the two $2.20 ticketsto the opening perfoiinance whichwill be raffled off at the Senior Car¬nival Ball.TYPE.WRITERSCLASS WAR TO END WAR jEditor, jThe Daily Maroon: II understand the American Stu¬dent Union is urging the support ofthe Spanish loyalists to save theworld for democracy. I thought wewon that war in 1918.Emmett Deadman.“PEACE PROGRAM”Editor,The Daily Maroon:With the peace strike upon us mayone more unbeliever try to state theanti-position?We can see only two points in thestrike program—Disarm the United States.And/or—Join the Communist par¬ty.In our view there are various elect¬ed national officials better able toform our defense policies thanMessrs. Wechsier, Stouffer, Scherr,Moscowvich, et al. ad nauseam.And we are not joining the Com¬munist party. So phooey on thestrike, we’ll pray for rain.Student Janitor. All Makes—Portable and LargeUsed and New. $24.50 and up.Terms If DesiredRepaired - Rented - ElxchangedWOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57Hi St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsDorchester 4800Frolic Theatre55th & ELLIS AVE.Today, Friday, Saturday“More Than a Secretary’*“The Plough and the Stars”Sunday, Monday, Tuesday“Canulle”“Sea Devils”DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdLast Time TodayTHE MAN WHO COULDWORK MIRACLES”“SUZY” Warner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd St.Last ‘Time Today“Rembrandt”“BUck Legion”Friday and Saturday’The Plough and the Stars”“More Than a Secretary”Out Today!Special Peace Strike IssueSOAPBOXFeaturing:A QUART OF MILK—Bob SpeerTHE STUDENT STRIKE—ParabellumTHOMISM AND REACTION—John StirlingCHICAGO STRIKE WAVE—Bud Ogrenc/^24 Pages SOAPBOX 10 CentsTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1937 Pe^ ThreeLaboratoryRowIn an interview with The AtlantaConstitution recently, Miss- WinstonElizabeth Gambrell, a former grad¬uate student at the University, pre¬dicted that research on malaria incanaries holds out hope for the erad¬ication of the mosquito-borne diseasein human beings. Miss Gambrell,now an assistant in bacteriology andpathology-at Emory University, re¬ceived a Ph. D. degree from the Uni¬versity of Chicago.The Atlanta Constitution quotedMiss Gambrell as concluding that“Two germ elements are necessaryfor the transmittal of malaria by an¬opheles mosquitoes, and the ele¬ments necessary are germs knownas gametocytes and scizonts.” Shefound that “Blood strains carryingmalarial gametocytes could be car¬ried from one bird to the other bymosquitoes, while strains lackingthis germ could not be transmitted.”Mias Gambrell used canaries forher research purposes since malariain these birds produced the same ef¬fect as the illness in humans.Calling attention to the danger tothe community of malaria, the form¬er University student remarked thateach person who has the disease isa carrier and can infect many others.“The best way to eliminate malariais to exterminate the mosquito,”Mi.ss Gambrell carefully pointed out.Quinine is not efficacious for alltypes of malaria, and in any case itdoes not prevent transmission toothers. Rice Criticizes Hutchins^ Stress onClassics in Current Issue of Harper^s“If we do think as we want tothink, it looks* as if we ought to be-grin to consider education as a thingconcerned at least in part with howpeople feel.” So John A, Rice, found¬er of Black Mountain College voiceshis objection to President Hutchins'program for higher education in thecurrent issue of “Harper's Maga¬zine.”The article is one of a pair critic¬izing Pres-ident Hutchins, and followsthe publication of a series* of articlesby the President.Mr. Rice arrives at the conclusionthat thought is “a running comment-ASU ParodiesLiberty Loan atAnti-War Party ary on feeling” through a consider¬ation of the persistent diversity andspecial pleading of philosx)phersthrough the centuries.He urges an education aimed atthe penetration to “meaning”through the channels not only of lan¬guage, to which President Hutchinswould restrict higher education, butalso the direct channels of seeing,hearing and doing.He then goes on to criticize thecurriculum s*et forth by PresidentHutchins in detail. “To nothing hasreverence been paid more stupidlythan the classics. We do not readthem as tracts of the times, which iswhat most of them are, but as* distil¬lations of pure reason, and we playthe game of matching one abstrac¬tion against the other until allmeaning is drowned in a sea ofwords. Or we do worse, we worshipourselves* in them.”Because of the failure of their ac¬celeration tube to carry the neces¬sary voltage. University experiment¬ers in the artificial transmutation ofthe atom may be forced to recon¬struct their apparatus entirely, Sam¬uel K. Allison, associate professor ofPhysics, told a Maroon reporter re¬cently.The acceleration tube Is the cham¬ber in which the actual bombard¬ment of the atom takes place afterthe proton particles gain their speedthrough the powerful electrical fieldset up between the two ends of thetube. Warning “Don't Be A Slacker,”the American Student Union invitesall students to a Liberty Loan peacestrike party in Ida Noyes theaterfrom soven to ten this evening. Re¬ports of anti-war strikes on othercampuses will be sent in by telegramand phone and will be read at theparty.There will be dancing, entertain¬ment, and no admission charge forpeace advocates, who can concludea day of campus peace activity withnews* from other sections of the unit¬ed student strike front. Parodies of1917 Liberty Loan campaigns will befeatured in the entertainment, ex¬plaining the caption on the invita¬tions.The ASU, the Theological Semin¬ary, the peace strike committee, andseveral nationally affiliated campusorganizations are supporting the vol¬untary fast for peace tomorrow. Thecampus strike call states, “We sug¬gest that students demonstrate their jdetermination to work for peace by 1fasting on the day of the strike anddonating to a worthy peace cause themoney which they would otherwisehave spent for lunch.” The fast issponsored by the United StudentPeace Committee, which called thenation-wide strike. The grammarian “comes feet firstout of the water, rises gracefully inthe air and lands on the diving board.He says in effect ‘If you see how it'sdone you can do it yourself.' This* ac¬counts for the belief that there arerules for speaking, writing and think¬ing, the belief that you can reversecreation.”Peace StrikeAccording to Professor Allison,the highest voltage reached in thetube has been about 350,000 voltswhile no research of value can bemade until 500,000 volts have beengained.Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSPeace strike. Mandel Hall at 11.Damea bridge. South receptionroom of Ida Noyes at 2.YWCA. YWCA room of Ida Noyesat 3:30.Interclub council. Alumnae roomof Ida Noyes at 12.Chriatian Fellowahip. YWCA roomof Ida Noyes at 7:80.ASU. Theater and foyer of IdaNoyes at 7.LECTURESPublic lecture. Associate professorM. Lloyd Warner. “The Commun¬ity.” Social Science 122 at 3:30.Public lecture. Professor R. ClydeWhite. “The Relation of Sociology toSocial Work.” Social Science 122 at7:30. (Continued from page 1)the meeting by Lloyd James, headparade marshal, and four assistants*,Robert Speer, John Marks, Mack Ros¬enthal, and Hart Perry. Any stu¬dents who will be able to work asparade marshals can s*ign up at thestrike de.sk in Mandel corridor,where banners and picket posterswill be distributed.Paraders will sing anti-war songs*written to “Jingle Bells,” “YankeeDoodle,” and “Wave the Flag.” Theywill yell “Not a man, not a gun, nota dollar for war,” and will carry ban¬ners with flaming vultures, gas-mask¬ed birds, and helmetted soldiers,bearing snich captions as “Stop Fasc¬ism,” “Scholarships, not Battle¬ships,” and “Your Country NeedsYou—Alive.” The parade route willencircle the campus and end in theCircle, where the Oxford Oath, “Ipledge not to support my country inany war it may conduct,” will beadministered by Chris Sergei to thosewho wisb to take it.Strike committee officers are JohnMorris, chairman, Caroline Zimmer-ly, vice-chairman, and Alice Gins¬berg, secretary. Committee heads areMartha Jane Marshall, AnnestaFriedman, Victory Himmelstein, andDavid Sadler. The students in the universities ofthe country will never enjoy truehigher learning until education be¬comes a learning of a “common wayof approach, a method of dealingwith ideas or anything 615*6. Whatyou do with what you know is theimportant thing.”When truth and experience are notdivorced the students will not befaced with his present “choice ofparting with his academic past orholding on to his alma mater by theumbilical cord of athletics, fraterni¬ty, friendship . . .”In a second article in the samemagazine, Edward A. Richards, form¬erly of the extension department ofColumbia University, takes anothertack in his* attack on the President'sideas:. He asserts that it is the highcalling of the Universities of thecountry to answer the crying need ofthe non-professional adult of thecountry for education.Potter, Page Speakat Peace SymposiumHERE’S A TIP!All copy for the 1937 Cap and Gown is now atthe Printer’s. The book will be on the pressesstarting May 1st, and only a limited numberover those subscribed for will be ordered. Toassure yourself of a copy of the best U. of C.yearbook in the 42 years of its publication, takeour advice and subscribe at once. Subscriptionsmay be bought at the office or from Tailor Tomat Cobb Hall. The price, $3.50, and $1.50 downw ill reserve your copy.The Cap & Gown for 1937Office in Lexington Hall Pitman B. Potter, visiting profes¬sor from the Institute of Inter¬national Studies at Geneva, will speakat the Emergency Peace Campaignsymposium today at the ShermanHotel. The questions which will bediscussed by Potter and Kirby Page,the other speaker, are “Should theUnited States as a last resort go towar to save democracy in Europeand Asia?” and “How can the UnitedStates without going to war promoteworld peace?”Potter’s stand on the first questionis that war is not inevitable even inEurope because the most belligerentnations are not economically readyfor it, and the United States neednot be implicated. He believes thateconomic agreements may preventtension which cause war threats.University faculty members spon¬soring the Emergency Peace Cam¬paign are Charles W. Gilkey, GraceAbbott, Albert W. Palmer, ErnestB. Price, and Aaron J. Brumbaugh. CollegiateWorldPrinceton, N. J.—(AGP)—TheVeterans of Future Wars movement,started a year ago by Princeton Uni¬versity students to satirize the Harri¬son Bonus Bill, is* officially ended.Word of the dissolution of this or¬ganization, which last April claimed60,000 members under 36 years ofage and 534 chartered posts, comesfrom a bulletin issued by Robert G.Barnes*, '37, and Thomas Riggrs Jr.,'37, joint commanders.The purpose of the bulletin is toanswer the question, “What are theVeterans of Future Wars doing to¬day?” recently raised.“Since that time it has been foundfinancially impossible to resume ac¬tivities on a scale that the AmericanLegion and the Veterans of ForeignWars deserve, and since there is nopoint in doing a half-hearted job, weare stopping the organization alto¬gether,” explained the Princeton sen¬iors.“The main accomplishment of theorganization,” continued the bulle¬tin, “is shown in the size of mem¬bership and the national response itreceived.“This can be taken as a fair crit¬erion of the fact that we did awaken the people of the country to (1) theabsurdity of the war and youth's re¬action to it, and (2) the equal ab¬surdity of the treasury exploitationin which various veteran organiza¬tions have been allowed to indulge.Cambridge, Mass. —(ACP)—Thesurge toward social sciences* by Har¬vard’s University’s freshmen in “pre¬lim” choices of major fields may up¬set the intellectual balance of thecollege, it was disclosed by Pres*.James B. Gonant.About 36 per cent of the sopho-mores-to-be have shown preferencefor economics, government and his¬tory. The trend toward the socialsciences is revealed by the declineof other subjects.Last year English attracted 109freshmen in this vote; this year only86. Romance languages droppedfrom 53 to 37 and classics from 20to 16. Virginia Clark(Continued from page 1)is a remarkable young woman, notonly a scholarship student but alsothe youngest freshman in the Uni¬versity. Not content with being anhonor student and a prominent danc¬er she is also active in the CampusChoir and the Spanish Club. Sheplans to major in Spanish.She spoke rather shyly of herstudies* as she explained that she ismanaging to keep up with her workfairly well. Modesty seemed to beone of her outstanding virtues—infact it took a lot of coaxing to gether to say that her picture was toappear in the rotogravure section ofthe Daily News next Saturday.Anyway she’s s'well.The definite about-face in student^interest from English to the socialsciences is highly significant, statedDr. Conant. Ten years ago, Englishdominated the other fields.This trend, “if it continues in thesame direction at the same rate foranother decade might well prove dis¬astrous,” explained the Harvardpresident in his annual report.“From the point of view of main¬taining a proper intellectual climatein Harvard College, the distributionof the student body among the vari-1ous subjects is of great significance.” i THE BEST CLEANINGCO.D. Bartow, Mgr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFor Men and WomenRepairing and Remodeling ofAny Cloth, or Fur GarmentOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. 55th St., near UniversittyTel. Midway 3318The Dramatic AssociationPresents^^Green Grow the LilacsOne Performance OnlyTomorrow Evening, April 23Reynolds Club Theatre—55 CentsSTRIKEFORPEACE!Hutchinson Court at 11 Today< . amDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1937Weatherman Determines Fate ofMaroon-Notre Dame EncounterBaseball Team Waits forSun; Hopes to RevengeDefeat.Thougrh'the Northwestern gamewas rained out, and the weather mandoes not promise any changes, the Phi B D DefeatsPsi U 'A’, 13-10 inIntramural Softball TheCol umnBy EMMETT DEADMAN4i « «Flying footballs will feature thespring football “round-up” whichwill start tomorrow at Indiana Uni¬versity and continue through Satur„ . K „ . . “W- The instructional staff will beMaroon baseball team has great i a 13-10 victory over Psi Upsilon ‘A’ Ihopes of playing Notre Dame this in the only Intramural softball gameafternoon.Many of the players who have notas* yet broken into the lineup will un¬doubtedly get their chance in thisgame. The pitching assignment willprobably go to Bob Reynolds, fastright hand hurler, who has not start¬ed in a game this season. Bob is yesterday. The Phi BD boys went wildin the third inning scoring 10 runs,seven of which came after there weretwo outs. Fifteen men faced thepitcher that inning. Added to thethree runs they scored in the firstframe this gave them a safe leadlacking in experience on the mound | ^nd they didn’t exert themselves toand Coach Anders'on hopes to give ! the extent of scoring any more runs,him some in this non-conferencegame. Since the Northwestern gamewas called, there is an outside chancethat Lefty Lawson might also seesome mound action.Chicago FavoredThe Irish defeated Chicago atSouth Bend early this* month by thescore of 16-9. Most of the runs weremade on errors of the Maroon team,who had an off day. Since that gamethe Maroons have shown great im¬provement and should be able to takeIhe South Benders,Notre Dame has a strong pitching jstaff headejrl by C^pt. Ennio Arboit.!John Goncher, and Os'car Rydell whorecently won a 10 inning game fromIllinois. Rydell pitched for the Irishin the first Chicago game.Strong At BatAt bat the Notre Dame men boastof several hard-hitting players amongwhom are Johnny Moir, All-Ameri¬can basketball forw*ard and Jim Car-son, another member of the basket¬ball team. ,Coach Anderson expects to us'eSolly Sherman, whose hitting has im¬proved quite a bit, and Bob Green-enbaum, agreat talent, before the game endsSaturday the Maroons meet Pur¬due in their third conference game. The first independent games getunder way at 3:15 tomorrow. Elevenindependent teams have entered thetournament, in contrast to 20 frater¬nity squads. The schedule for the re¬mainder of the week:GAMES TODAY3:15—Lambda Gamma Phi vs.Gamma Alpha.Magglers vs. Burton-JudsonCourt.4:15—Phi Sigma Delta ‘A’ vs.Kappa Sigma.Phi Delta Theta vs. AlphaTau Omega. 'GAMES TOMORROW3:15—Psi Upsilon ‘B’ vs. BetaTheta PiChi Psi ‘B’ vs. Sigma Chi.4:15—Ladies Aid vs. Kent.Counselors vs. School of Busi- headed by Ray Morrison, Vanderbiltmentor, and Matty Bell, SouthernMethodist coach, both of whom arerated as two of the outstanding usersof the forward pass in modern foot¬ball.Indiana’s Bo McMillin said that heexpected more than 100 high schooland college coaches from Indiana andthe bordering area to attend the“round-up.”* * *A battery of identical twine isproviding a real puzzle for CoachDutch Fehring as he attempts to gethis Purdue baseball candidatesstraightened out. The BredewaterI twins from Greensburg, Indiana, onea pitcher and the other a catcher,I are the nightly puzzle until they! pick up their gloves. It has finally Intramural TennisGets Under WayDespite poor weather, Intramuraltennis competition has started. Threefraternity matches have been decid¬ed in the first round of the fraterni-ity meet. The Phi Phis defeated thePhi Gams, 2-1, Delta U trounced PhiB D, 3-0, and ATO forfeited to Al¬pha Delt.Judging from the large numberwho s'igned up for the meet, tennismust be increasing in popularity.Eighteen fraternity teams, consistingof 2 singles players and one doublesteam each have entered, accordingto Wayne Shaver, I-M tennis man¬ager. All fraternity matches are de¬cided on the basis of two victoriesout of three. In addition, 45 dormi¬tory and 29 independent singlesplayers and 13 dormitory and 6 in¬dependent doubles teams have en¬tered. _Last year’s winner of the Univer¬sity tennis crown was the ChicagoTheological Seminary. Runnei*-upand fraternity winner w’as AlphaDelta Phi. Tennis Coach Chooses Northwesternas Most Dangerous Foe of Maroonscatcher and Arnold ic the pitcher,but names mean nothing until theyessay their roles. Purdue will comebeen determined that Arthur is the I to Chicago for a game Saturday. By BURTThat “Hebert fears Northwestern”is no idle talk if you accept the wordof Walter Hebert, Maroon tenniscoach, who picks the champion Wild¬cats as Chicago’s most formidable op-pos'ition for the Big Ten tenniscrown.Last year the Wildcats won thetitle by one point after splitting twodual matches with the Universitysquad. This year three of their firstAnderson Divulges Pet Superstitions ofMaroon Nine; Keeps Mum on His Ow nBy LEONARD SCHERMERPrepare Tennis Courtsfor Student PlaversWeather permitting approximatelyfielder who has shown | thirty-six of the University’s tenniscourts will be ready for use by theend of the week and the remainingtwenty will see service in the nearfuture.Because of the erection of the Pub¬lic Administration building at 60thand Kenwood, four courts have hadFreshmen May StillWin Tank Numerals Almost all baseball players havetheir pet supers'titions. Babe Ruthalways touched second on the wayout to right field. Some players rubout part of the lines of the batter’sbox before batting. Others try not tostep on any of the baselines on theway out to their positions.The Maroon baseballers* are notwithout their superstitions and be¬liefs. Though Coach Kyle Andersonis willing to tell of the superstitionsof the team, he will not let down hishair and tell of his owr, v/hich ares'upposed to be many.Only the other day one of the play¬ers found a nickel on the playingfield which he placed on home plate.Now every time a game is played thelead off man rubs that part of theplate with his bat. Every once in awhile you can see a player lean overSeveral freshmen ai-e still trying. yp addition of the j and touch the lucky spot hoping thatinumb,.,-on Woodlown makes u|,! a hit will result. In the Saturday1 game with Iowa last week the firstReservation.s for play may be madeby telephoning to Bartlett Gymnas-ming, although the varsity sea- j lyss.son is over. “Those that havecome out regularly during the pastseason but have been unable to equal • , • . •.v. ..uthe numeral winning times as vet, 1■egis'ermg w.th the per-will reeeive their numerals should |they do so before the quarter ends,”says swimming coach E. W. McGil-livray.Bob Brown, diver, Jo.seph Anval-man, free styler, and Robert Jac-qumin, free styler, are the three boysgiven the best chance to receive the Play is limited to students ofUniversity. thecoveted award. At the rate Brownis going, it looks as though he willbe the second diver on the Maroonvarsity next year. batter forgot to rub the lucky spot;well, needless to say, we lost. Thenext day the right place was touch¬ed by the lead off man and presto,the game was w.on.For several years it has been thecustom of the captain of the team tocarry the box of new balls over to theplaying field. Sometime before hegets there every player tries to rubth box for good luck.Captain Bob Shipway carries* a personal lucky charm in his pocket.As yet he has not seen it, since thedonor of the coin told him to put itin his pocket and never look at it.Since he received the coin. Bob hasgot several nice hits and his throwto second has* improved.Two of the players are looking forsome sort of a charm. Morry Nei-nian and Ed Thoqipson both had hardluck Tuesday in practice. Morry waspitching when a line drive was knock¬ed to him, which he stopped with hisjaw. Though taking it on the chin,he was not knocked out. Thompsonwa.s* not so lucky for when he slidinto .second base he dislocated hisshoulder, probably putting him out ofthe game for the season. Thompsonearned a letter in ba.seball two yearsago and then dropped out of schooland was playing his* la.st year of col¬legiate ball. Track Men HoldClass Conipelitioiion Outdoor OvalIn order to give the track mensome competition before their nextencounter. Coach Ned Merriam hasscheduled a class meet for today onthe track in Stagg field. Merriam isalso interested in finding out if thefreshmen can repeat their excellentperformance of last quarter whenthey met the varsity on the indoortrack.The class of 1940 has broughtcheerful tidings to the track coach,for included in it is the best crop offreshman tracksters that the Univer¬sity has- had in years. Maybe it istoo early to prophesy but their per¬formances to date have been verypromising.During the Winter quarter, in aneffort to determine freshman possi¬bilities, Merriam had them competewith the varsity, with the result thatthe varsity was defeated. Parsonsand Wasem shone in the hurdles andprobably will be good replacements*for the two seniors, Beal and New¬man.Davenport was strong in thesprints and Sponsel and Powell led inthe distance runs. There are aboutsix or eight others who also may beconsidered capable of vars*ity per¬formance. MOYERfour men are returning: Russell andGeorge Ball, the bother combinationfrom El Paso, Texas and Dick Rugg.George Ball, the brother combinationsingles title while Rugg won thefourth-flight honors last year. DonLeavens, who teamed with GeorgeBall to take the second flight doublesaward, has transferred to the Uni¬versity of Southern California, buthe will be replaced by Marvin Wach-man, a sophomore from Milwaukee,who whipped Leavens last summerin tournament play. Therefore it isvery likely that Wachman may havea better than even chance to takeover the s*econd-flight singles crownthat Leavens leaves behind withoutmentioning the trouble he may causein doubles.Ohio State It Dark HorseThe dark horse of the race is OhioState. The Buckeye number oneman is Robert Nihousen who upsetRussell Ball in the conference meetlast year only to lose to Norman Bic-kel of the University in the finalround, Nihou.sen has done very poor¬ly many times in the last three yearsand Bickel whipped him soundly lastsummer after the collegiate seasonended, but now and then he comesthrough in astonishingly good formand nobody knows how he may bethis year. Coach Hebert has hoardrumors that the remainder of theOhio State team is composed of soph¬omore stars that are being kept un¬der cover, and he is watching for theresults of the Buckeye matches*.9 COURSEChinese Dinner50cMEE HONG’S2125 So. Wentworth Ave.irs A PLEASURETO SIT ONE OUT!!CROCOMBE’SBOWLING ALLEYS6225 Cottage Grove Ave.OPEN ALL SUMMERSpecial rates to students dailyexcept Sunday up to 5 P. M.Come Undressed — Cotne DressedCARNIVAL BALLSaturday 8:30 tillHutchinson CommonsGRAND PRIZES FOR OUTFITSPrizes for Every One, Hard Timers,Hoboes, Smoothies,— GRAND PRIZES—Travelaire Midget* Radio given t-o a women by Atlas RadioCompany, 860 East 63rd Street.Wrist Watch to a man given by J. H. Watson, “Hyde Park’sLeading Jewelers”, 1200 East 55th Street. Milos $20watch.« « # 0 »Other Prizes and Donors—Men’s Sport Slacks—Erie Clothing Co., 837 East 63rd.Album of Six Popular Records—University Music Store, 1371 East 56th.Six Admission Tickets—Midway Theatre.Ladies’ Shoes—Feltman & Curme Shoe Stores.Dollar in Trade—Hanley’s Buffet.Fancy Shoulder Corsage—Oberg’s Florist Shop.Corsage—Kortsch, Florist.Two Cals, of Oil—Washington Park Service Station, 51st and Cottage.20 Admissions—Frolic Theatre.Mallory Hat—George’s Mens Shop, 1003 East 55th.Electric Hot Plate Grill—Strader’s Electric Shop, 955 East 55th.Ladies’ Hose—Herzog’s Department Store, 948 East 55th.Ladies’ Pocketbook—Moser’s Fashion Shop, 1100 East 55th.Lubrication and Wash—Standard Oil Station, 55th and Greenwood.$2.00 in Trade—Ten O Four Restaurant, 1004 East 55th.Two Suit Presses—M. Latz, Tailor and Presser.Gardenia Corsage—University Florist, 1130 East 55th.$2.00 in Trade—Mariann’s, 1155 East 55th.Car Wax—Enamark Supply Co., 1162 East 55th.Vi Month Storage—University Garage, 1161 East 55th.Haircut, Shampoo, Tonic—Reynolds Club Barber Shop.Three Suits Cleaned—Best Cleaners, University and 55th.Two Ties—Leon Drach, 1148 East 55th.$3.25 in Meals—Fraternity Lunch, 1145 East 55th.Shaving Kit—Finnegan Drugs, 55th and Woodlawn.Boudoir Lamp worth $5.00—Arthur Lowe & Son, 1217 East 55th.Face Powder—Cornell Pharmacy, 1237 East 55th.Desk Lamp worth $3.00—Bourgeau’s Hardware, 1216 East 55th. YEAH,MAN...If “sitting one out” includesyour best girl and your bestsmoke . . . LITTLE FENDRICHPANETELAS ... the cigar en¬dorsed by thousands of youngmen the country over . . . thatcomes in one size and one flavorevery time . . . always fresh . . .always a PLEASURE!!LlTTtPA, N E T E L A SFAVORITE SIZE FOR ■ YOUNG MEN