Vol. 37. No. 113. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1937 Price Three Cent*The Fire^Buming=(This, the sixth of a series of opin¬ions eoneeming the higher learning,is presented by Thomas Stauffer, (meof the old school of campus intellect¬uals, a worshipper of Kant, and,above all, a Beta.) Debaters ElectPaul Goodmanto Head Union Why Not?John £. Stoner, Sponsor,Resigns Post with SquadAfter Three Years.The position which has occasionedthe current discussion seems to meto be a good one. At any rate it isone the essentials of which may bevery simply formulated.I think that the function of a uni¬versity is properly .scientific ratherthan utilitarian. Its problems areproblems of truth, if possible, ratherthan of applied science. Its gradu¬ates should be persons with an under¬standing of the important ideas ofthe sciences, and sound habits ofpursuing them.In the pur.suit of fundamental un¬derstandings in the respective nat¬ural and social sciences and mathe- Our questions remain unanswered. Mr. Mather evidentlydoesn t believe in scotching rumors, so the rumors grow. Duringthe depression years preceding 1936 the books kept by the Com¬mons department are reported to have shown a profit. The shopsat present, are reported to be paying high rental in addition to light, 'heat, and maintenance costs. How can the University be justifiedin charging rental fees on a building endowed for the use of stu¬dents) If, as other reports say, no rent is charged to the Commons,then where does the surplus taken in by the department go? Andwhy do rumors of a $300 dollar a month rental persist? If theCommons department and Mr. Mather do keep books, why don't Phoenix Merges WithPulse; Begins Next FallPaul Goodman, a transfer studentfrom Emery University in Georgia,was elected oresident of the Debateunion last night. At the same meet- i they open them to public approval ?ing it was disclosed that John E. I Resentment was still growing last night among student waiters iStoner, sponsor and ardent worker as Bursar Mather continued to show cold indifference to the demand !in the union’s activities will leave theUniversity this spring when he re¬ceives his Doctor’s degree in Politi¬cal Science. The successor to Stonerwho has directed the work of the de¬baters for three years while attend¬ing the university as a member ofthe Political Science department hasnot as yet been named.Goodman is a junior and has beenone of the outstanding debaters ofmatics, common problems will be en- j the University this year. He has par-countered. Common to all the sci-1 ticipated in the Debate tournament |ences, they are not the same as the j at the University of Iowa and sev- iproblems of any one science. They j eral other debates on campus.are not problems of method but ofsubject matter. The clear formulation, consideration, and if possible 1 George Probst.solution of the.se problems are, or 1 from Los.should be, or must ultimately be, pre¬supposed by the clear formulation,investigation, or possible solution ofthe problems of the sciences. Theseproblems are tho.se of metaphysics.If careful work in the sciences,or in mathematics, or metaphysicsis to be done, it must be done bypersons trained in orderly intellec¬tual operation. These persons mustbe able to read and write intelli¬gently, and must know scientificmethod. These disciplines are tra¬ditionally called Grammar, Rhetoric,and Logic.Persons in the university are ex¬pected to be able to use these tech¬niques, and they would be useful toall persons. It seems fitting there¬fore that they be taught at the levelof general education, in the College.I think that the second greatesthelp in the clarification and solution Other OfficersThe office of secretary was won bya transfer studentAngeles Junior College,who will also be a junior next year.Probst has been active in the Unionand was the originator of the Speak¬ers Bureau on campus, an activitywhich he will continue as secretaryof the Debate Union.Treasurer will be Byron Kabot, ajunior next year, who has participat¬ed in the Debate at the Universityof Iowa and in the Big Ten De¬bates. Kabot was a member of thenegative team which won two of itsthree debates in the meet. He isalso a member of the Universityband.The Publicity Chairman will beEvelyn Van Emden, a member ofDelta Rho Sigma, and the first grad¬uate student to hold an office in theDebate union. Van Emden is in theSchool of Business and was the Uni¬versity representative on the coastto coast radio debate between the for an immediate increase in wages.So long as students working for the University permit them¬selves to be dealt with individually, the University will take advan¬tage of their financial necessity and lack of unified strength. Co¬operation is the only means of self protection. All students whowork for the University "should unite in a federation, with subordi¬nate unions of student workers in commons, libraries, buildingsand grounds, etc. Only then can students stand on an equality withthe University officials in determining wages.As the most closely integrated unit of student workers on the jcampus, intitiative in forming such a federation of unions rests withthe waiters of the Commons.Much as we love our Alma Mater, the University, a greateducational institution, is still a great corporation. Sentiment asso¬ciated with the one should not be allowed to interfere with thebusiness relations associated with the other. Begin Distributionof Questionnairesfor Maroon SurveyTwo thousand questionnaires arebeing distributed throughout thecampus today to probe the extent ofcramming and tutoring at the Uni¬versity. Thus The Daily Maroon be¬gins an extensive survey to continuethroughout next week.All students, after answering thebrief questions, may deposit theircopies of today’s questionnaire inboxes which are placed at sales sta¬tions of the campus newspaper and atgeneral meeting-places—M a n d e 1corridor, Cobb Hall, Judson Court,Ida Noyes Hall, International House,the Bookstore, Harper Library, andThe Daily Maroon office.Additional questionnaires will beplaced beside the boxes at each of j times a quarter, once every threethese places, and also in the girls’ ^ weeks.Eichenbaum, Morris HeadStaff; Warshawsky, Jer-ger Business Managers.Pulse throbs with new life todaywith the announcement that the newcampus magazine will join forcesnext year with Phoenix. The mergerwas completed yesterday following aseries of conferences between mem¬bers of the two staffs, representa¬tives of The Daily Maroon and Of¬ficial Undergraduate Publications,and Dean Leon P. Smith.Heading the staff of the new pub¬lication, as co-editors, will be AudreyEichenbaum and John Morris. Wil¬bur Jerger and Everett Warshawskywill act as co-busihess managers.Ralph Beck, Lloyd James, and BobSpeer complete the board of control,each holding the title of associateeditor.The new magazine will be calledPulse, and will be published fourSocial ScientistsSpeak at CurrentEvent Institutesof the problems raised here, and i East and the West in which Chicagothe problems affected by them, is tobe found in the intellectual traditionsof our civiliation, rather than in thedetails of modern life. The great¬est help is the investigation of allthese problems by every means nowat our command, including the wis¬dom of our predecessors, and by ourmost sincere efforts.There is a further problem aboutthe relation of investigation andinstruction in the university.The investigation of a subject isoften a disorderly procedure, muchof which is valuable only in elimin¬ating possible answers. Even thedata, when established with accept¬able accuracy, have not yet the ord¬erly structure of a science.The formulation of a science abouta subject should state whatever is dis¬cernible in the data which is pertin¬ent not to these data but to any dataabout the subject. It is for the sakeof these statements of principle thatthe investigation was made. Thestatement of these principles willproceed from the more general tothe less general, in each subject mat¬ter, and among subject-matters.These so far are problems of sci¬ence. The problems of teaching aredifferent. The teacher in the lowerschools must present his science inwhatever way will best suit studentsnot yet trained in exact analysis. Theteacher in the university must pre¬sent his science in as exact a form¬ulation as is possible. In either casethe problem is one of as much insist¬ence on principles as will make thestudent’s knowledge of the subjectorderly and integrated, and as muchexamination of data as will makethe derivation of and importance ofthe principles clear. I have foundno course in this university, evenamong those devoted to Aristotle,which taught “principles” in avacuum. participated with Northwestern, Co¬lumbia, and Sarah Lawrence Uni¬versities. She also took part in theManche.ster Tournament.University GirlsDown Bryn Mawrin Spelling Bee tute of International Relations.At the Western Reserve SummerInstitute on Current Affairs, inCleveland, Mary B. Gilson, assistantprofessor of Economics, will delivertwo lectures on the relations betweenlabor and capital; “Public Opinion,Company Unions, and Worker’sUnions;” and “The Right to Dis¬charge.”Ogburn Speak*William F. Ogburn, professor ofSociology, will speak on “Technol¬ogy, Unemployment and Planning,”and “The Influence of Recent Inven¬tions on Economics and Social Insti¬tutions.” Ogburn has recently com¬pleted a government survey on thistopic, in order to give advice in theI establishment of planning boards. HeBy outspelling the entire field of j speak on July 15 and 16; Gilsonwill talk on July 6 and 7.At the Williams College Instituteof Human Relations at Williamstown,Massachusetts, which is held underthe auspices of the National Confer¬ence of Jews and Christians, FredEastman, professor of Biography,(Continued on page 2) Tittle Talks inChapel SundayEvanston Preacher SpeaksAbout “Religion in OurTimes.”With institutes on current affairsand public relations springing up allover the country, several professorsfrom the University will speak atWilliams College, Western Reserve One of the outstanding preachersUniversity, and the Mid-West Insti- the country as well as one of thecontestants, Mary Ranney, a fresh¬man in the College, last night wonfor the University the NBC Spelling\ Bee between 15 Chicago women anda similar group from Bryn MawrCollege. The match took place from9 to 10 over the NBC Blue network.In order to win first place and aprize of $50 Mary had to spell herway through such words as archie-piscopal and wheyey. The prize of$25, given to the next to the lastmembers remaining up on each teamwas divided among Freyda Penner,Marcia Lakeman, Claudia Knight,Annette Ivry, Jean Gayton, and Eliza¬beth Butler, all of whom went downon the word syzygy.At the end of the first round thescore stood 14-14. In the secondround Chicago led 12-7, in the third11-7, in the fourth 9-6, and in thefifth the Bryn Mawr girls pulled upto first place by 3-1. The sixth washeld by Bryn Mawr 2-1 and in thefinal turn Chicago won.In the “verbal treasure chest”round in which words of varyingvalues are dawn Jean Gayton won$5 for her correct spelling of ir-refragibility, and Elizabeth Butlerwon $2.50 on isosceles. Idiosyncrasybrought Annette Ivry $1.50. Evi¬dently not well versed in economicterminology, a Bryn Mawr represen¬tative missed a word familiar to most most outstanding ones in the MiddleWest, the Reverend Ernest FremontTittle, will speak at the Chapel serv¬ice Sunday morning at 11 in theUniversity chapel. He will discuss“Religion in Our Times.”Dr. Tittle is minister of the FirstMethodist Episcopal Church inEvanston, which has one of the larg¬est congregations of any church inthe country. He preaches every Sun¬day morning to Northwestern stu¬dents, in addition to his regular con¬gregation.Tittle gave the Convocation ser¬mon at the University last June andhas spoken in Chapel many times inthe last few years. In addition to hisposition as minister of the FirstMethodist Episcopal Church, he is amember of the Board of Trustees ofNorthwestern University, and recent¬ly gave the Beecher lectures onpreaching at Yale University.Because Dean Gilkey speaks thisweek at Cornell University in Ithaca,Lillie Lehmann will read the serv¬ice, which will also be broadcast overradio station WGN. dormitories, fraternity houses, andsuch buildings as Physiology, Eck-hart, Haskell, and Law. Results willbe announced Tuesday.The purpose of the survey is topresent to Maroon readers, to theadministration, and to the Board ofExaminations an accurate account ofcramming and tutoring here. Forthis reason, all students are request¬ed to answer the five questions askedtoday.Following results of the question¬naire, the survey will continue withpsychological facts, professorial opin¬ions, statistics on sale of past com¬prehensive examinations, compari¬sons between cramming and tutoringat the University and in otherschools, and numeroM- other angles.International HouseDramatists PresentStreak of Pink’Bodfish Speaks at First Sessionof Consumers’ Financing ConferencePredicting that thrift and a highrate of saving will continue to be in¬dispensable to national stability andthat capital, with new outlets, willplay a still more important role inAmerican economy, Morton Bodfish,executive vice-president of the U. S.Building and Loan League, and asso¬ciate professor of Lana Economics atNorthwestern Univeristy, yesterdayopened the Conference of ConsumerFinancing being held under theauspices of the School of Business.Eighty-three delegates from theeast and mid-west are registered forthe conference, which will continuetoday. The other speaker at the open¬ing session was L^Baron R. Foster,asociate director of the Pollack Foun¬dation for Economic Research.Outlets for CapitalNew outlets for capital cited byBodfish were improvements in trans-, portation due to the growing popular-A knowledge of the fundamental | University students. The word, hour- j ity of travel, a higher standard ofhousing and office accommodationand factory equipment, and an in¬crease in consumer financing.Foster, speaking on consumer fi¬nancing in relation to family budget¬ing, said that before budgeting canremedy personal financial ills, moreeffective controls in granting creditconcepts of a science would presuppose a knowledge of its place amongthe other sciences, and of its fject-matter among other subject-matters. These problems are phil¬osophic. It is philosophy which ex¬amines the orderly relations and(CflMtttnued on page 2) geois, was correctly spelled byClaudia Knight who received $1 forher efforts. Mary Janney, and Jac¬quelyn Aeby also won smalleramounts.Among other words causing diffi¬culty were corporeally, anise, appro-brium, and w»» are needed. “Budgeting is a humanproblem,” he stated, “and should bedevised to help men and womenachieve their strongest desires, rath¬er than ends which we believe oughtto be their strongest desires, such assaving.”Round Table Ducu*aionYesterday afternoon, MargaretGrobben of the Consumer Credit In-stitue, speaking at a round-table dis¬cussion, said that legislation requiringloan companies to lend money at lowrates paradoxically works againstlegitimate companies and in favor of“loan sharks” and unlawful business.“When maximum loan rates are re¬duced,” she explained, “it becomes im¬possible for small loan companies whooperate lawfully to continue in busi¬ness. Rates as low as 2% a monthallow only a minimum business to bedone, in spite of the fact that mostpeople believe that money can be loan¬ed, under any conceivable circum¬stances, at 6% a year. However,rates of even one and one half percent are wholly safe for the loansharks.”Government RegulationEvening addresses, on the subjectof government regulation of business,(Continued on page 3) “A Streak of Pink,” written byJanet Marshall, a former student inthe University, is to be presented atInternational House tonight for thefirst time in Chicago. Tickets arenow on sale at the cashier’s desk atInternational House.Miss Marshall, of Hubbard Woods,graduated from Bryn Mawr College,lived at International House whileshe studied under James WeberLinn, and is now in the Yale Schoolof Dramatics. Her works are beingwatched with anticipation by NewYork and Hollywood producers.The cast includes Janice Fink,Devorah Cohn, Leonard Greatwood,Bid bficol, Maurice Washer, SoulLevine, Ben Burt, Ester Bemson,Gerhart Schild, Lois Fisher, and Ger¬ald Sammon.Headed by Gerhart Schild, direc¬tor, the staff includes Ernest P. Co¬hen, scenery; Edna Welsh, proper¬ties; Harry Malm, make-up; and Mar¬tha Morse, publicity.The play is an amusing one of anAmerican girl who is “converted” ona trip through the U.S.S.R., and whobecomes an active member of TheParty after returning to the UnitedStates. Her reporter friends, fromthe stafs of conservative papers,come to her aid and address a meet¬ing of The Party which was to havebeen her crowning achievement, andthus eliminate the “streak of pink”which they charge/’ her with posses¬sing. Breaks PrecedentsPulse, declared the editors yester¬day, will be an entirely differenttype of college magazine than hasever before been produced. It willbreak the well-established precedentsof both literary and humor maga¬zines. It will not take partisanstands on controversial issues; rath¬er it will present controversies im¬partially and vividly.A salient feature of Pulse will bea regular review of the news behindthe news of the campus. Significantevents will be presented in vivid de¬tail. An effort will be made to makepersonalities out of names, and toemphasize the trends behind events.Emphasize PicturesPictures will be used more exten-lively than in any campus publica¬tion previously, while in layout themagazine will depart radically fromestablished tradition.An effort will be made to focusthe magazine directly on the campus.Articles will for the most part bebrief, and will be so chosen as toappeal to students of varying inter¬ests.Aside from the news review sec¬tion, the magazine will contain com¬prehensive analyses of campus insti¬tutions, literary and artistic contri¬butions of outstanding merit, andshort signed articles on live issues.Lovett, Potter Talkon War at SymposiumFour speakers including two pro¬fessors from the University, will dis¬cuss “War—How Can We Best Pre¬vent It?” at a community symposiumto be held ah the Hyde Park BaptistChurch Sunday evening at 7.Robert Morss Lovett, professoremeritus of English, Pittman B. Pot¬ter, visiting professor of Intemation-*al Relations, Howard Lawrence ofthe International Association of Ma¬chinists, and the Reverend RollandW. Schloerb will be the speakers at Discuss* Strugglefor Raw Materialson Round TableThe world struggle for control of-sources of raw materials and coloniesin which to market manufacturedgoods will be discussed on the Uni¬versity Round Table program Sun¬day at 11:30 on WMAQ and the NBCcoast to coast network.Entitled “Raw Materials and Col¬onies,” the group will examine thecauses of the world contest and itsprobable results. Participating inthe discussion will be Pittman B. Pot¬ter, visiting professor in InternationalRelations from the Graduate Instituteof International Studies in Geneva)Switzerland; Eugene Staley, assistantprofessor of Economics who has doneconsiderable research recently forcommissions inquiring into the prob-lems^of the world’s raw material sup¬plies; and Walter H. C. Laves, lec¬turer in Political Science and directorof the midwest division of the leagueof Nations Association.TheSRound Table is broadcast week¬ly under the auspices of the Univer¬sity Broadcasting Council from theUniversity radio studios in Mitchelltower.F •Iron Mask Meets to• ■ -M. Elect New’OfficersMembers of Iron Mask for 1937-88 Vrill meet Sunday evening at 7 inRoom D of the Reynolds club toplan the organization for the comingyeilr and elect officers.Harold LaBelle, president for thisyear I will be present at the meetingto present pins to the new members.I A\l!^ sMlfiiiylisjlifijjlMlIt Other Outgoing officers are secretarythe meeting, sponsored by the Hyde j Bob Fitzgerald, and treasurer RalphPark-Woodlawn Council of Youth. ^ Leitch.iiiillliikMiiiMiiiiiiHiiMPage Two THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, MAY 2!. 1937iatl^ iHaronnFOUNDED IN IMlMember />sociate<l CoUegiate PreMHm Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring Quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones: Local 4€, 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:12.75 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 S, 1879.■(..-RBSCNTED FOR NATIONAL ADVKRTISINO BYNaHonal Advertising Service, IncColUfe Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y.Chicago • Boston • San FranciscoLos Angelss • Portland • seattlsBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManajrerEDWARD S. STERN Manajrinir EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.Advertising: ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESBernice Bartels Edward Frits William McNeillEmmett Deadman El Roy Golding Betty RobbinsCharles Boy BUSINESS ASSOaATESMarshall J. StoneJacquelyn AebyBarbara BeerHarris BeckLaura BergquistMaxine BiesenthalRuth Brody EDITORIAL ASSISTANTSLome CookJudith GrahamAimee HainesDavid HarrisWallace HerschelRex Horton Harry LeviSeymour MillerLaVerne RleesAdele RoseLeonard SchermerDouglas ■P’l reBUSINESS ASSISTANTSEdwin Bergman Alan Johnstone Howard GreenleeJerome Ettelson Max Freeman Edward Gustafson. Doris GentzlerSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Ebendratb Donal HohrayNight Editor: Harris BeckAssistant; Robert FosterFriday, May 21, 1937Are They ComiM’^ensive?No. 1 hey are still not comprehensive.* *When the Board of Examinations was facedwith the problem eight years ago of compilingcomprehensive examinations for the Collegesurvey courses and the divisions, they foundbefore them an almost completely unchartedcourse. Members of the Board were facedamong other things with the problem of choos¬ing between exams which would test acquaint¬ance with facts and examinations which wouldtest students understanding of principles, forat either extreme was the whirlpool of error.Having no indices of what student accomplish¬ment would be on examinations, they had tocompromise between making examinations sodifficult that only a few would pass or mak¬ing them so easy that it would be impossibleto obtain a wide distribution of scores, an es¬sential for fair marking. They had to securea fair balance between the objective and thesubjective in examinations in order that onthe one hand exams could be mechanicallygraded by graders not familiar with the subjectmatter of the course, and that on the otherhand the student would contribute somethingof his own and not merely repeat parrot-likewhat the instructor had said.The result has been that the examinationsystem has developed by a process of trial anderror, A 1931 examination would look verystrange to a survey course student of today.Relatively it would be a cinch. On the objec¬tive portion of the tests, points taken up onthe early tests were chiefly the more obviousfactual questions, the answers to which wereobtainable directly from readings and lectures.Compared to this naive technique, the presentpolicy of devising objective questions in sucha way as to bring forth wrong answers fromstudents who memorized the facts and ideasbut did not think of applying them has beena great advance. In the subjective or essayportion of the examination, the student wasgiven an opportunity to present in an organ¬ized way what he had learned in connectionwith some great topic of interest in the course.Because of the difficulty of point grading, theessay portion of examinations has dwindleduntil recent examinations have either beencompletely objective or of objective and shortessay type.« « «In spite of the fact that the grading of ex-aminations has been made easier through re-|»^^moval of the ea8a> question, we feel that some¬ thing has definitely been lost through the es¬say’s demise. The Humsmities course is noth¬ing if it does not give the student a sense ofthe grand sweep and continuity of human cul¬ture through the ages; the Biological Sciencescourse is without value if it does not assertthe magnificent stories of the oneness of theorganism and of organic evolution; the SocialSciences course is worthless if it does not^ estab¬lish that any political problem cannot be con¬sidered apart from economic and sociologicalproblems.The remedy is relatively simple. Have partof the examination, probably about one-fourth, one or more essay questions which de¬mand for their answers exposition in logicalfashion of the really great ideas of the course.Have these essays read not by paid gradersworking by mechanical key but by the instruc¬tors in the course. Give not number gradeson essays but letter grades which can be lateraveraged with the more heavily weightedgrades on the objective portions of the exam¬ination. It is possible that individual injus¬tices will^result from such a system, but with¬out it the examination is not truly comprehen¬sive.—L D. G.In Union There Is a Wage IncreaseThose who sympathize with the underpaidwaiters of the University Commons are won¬dering how those waiters will be able to se¬cure a wage increase from the stringently eco¬nomical Commons Department, How doesany group of workers secure a wage increase?By unionizing.The Bursar has clearly stated that therewill be no wage increase until the Summerquarter. Even then, the increase is only fivecents. After that increase, prices are likely tocontinue rising and the waiters will be upagainst the same problem they are now facing—insufficient pay. TTie Commons Depart¬ment has been nortorious in its tight-fistedpolicy. The only way to get anything out ofthis department, the only way to obtain per¬manent security and due recognition, is bysqueezing the department's ears. A union isthe weapon which may be used for such pres¬sure.This is an ideal time for unionizing. Ban¬quets and parties create a great demand forwaiters throughout the last three weeks ofschool. And waiters are hard to obtain, be¬cause they are busy studying for exams. Aunion composed of 75 per cent of the Com-morts staff could paralyze the entire Commonssystem of Hutchinson Commons, the CloisterClub, the Coffee Shop, and Blaine Hall. Allthat would be necessary would be a threat tostrike, and up would go the wages at once.It would be wise for the student waiters toconsider seriously the formation of a union.—E. C. F.The Travelling BazaarIT’S THE SEASONIn addition to the four soon-to-be brides of thecampus whose pictures appeared in the Tribune theother morning, two more are reported.Kay Griffin (“Hello, this is stupid.”) will be mar¬ried to a handsome cadet from West Point on June5. Kay is now going to cooking school, so shouldbe well prepared.Martha Zimmerman, Quadrangler, will marry DickEnglehart, Phi Gamma Delta, on June 10,* * *Bob Anderson (big one, DKE) gave his pin toHarriet Dali, usually known as “Happy,” a weekago. For a week she kept it in hiding, but nowwears it proudly.* * *THE DAILY TIMEScarried on Wednesday the most atrocious over¬sensationalized story we have seen for some time.Beneath a cut of the Quadrangler Club ran an amaz¬ing story on how the bachelor residents of the Clubare now permitted to take unescorted lady friendsup to their rooms. Most of the rest of the storywas speculation pure and unadulterated. Amongother things, it was stated that neighborhood deal¬ers report a heavy demand for etchings.* « *STRANGELY FAMILIARyet always good is the following story. A pro¬fessor wrote to a newly appointed staff memberfor next year and told him he was looking forwardto meeting his charming wife and daughter. Backcame a terse reply: “I am not married. Neitheram I a father.”And then there was the English teacher who wentthrough the voluminous English 102 research paj^r,crossing all the “t’s,” and dotting all the “i’o.” Institutes(Continaed from page 1)Literature and Drama at the Theo¬logical Seminary, and Harold Lass-well, associate professor of PoliticalScience, will speak.The general theme of the institute,“Public Opinion in a Democracy,”will permit discussion of the presentuse of such agencies as the motionpicture, press, and radio, and theirpossible use to promote more whole¬some human relations in the UnitedStates. Eastman will speak in a for¬um on the public responsibilities ofthe motion picture,Lasswell wdll participate in around table on Public Education. Hewill also present one of the eveninglectures, speaking on “The Minor¬ities in a Democracy.”The American Friends ServiceCommittee, which supports ten in¬stitutes of international relations ineducational centers scattered throughthe United States, will have severalUniversity professors on its staff.Pitman B. Potter, visiting professorof International Relations, PaulDouglas, professor of Economics,and Warder C. Allee, professor ofZoology, will speak at several in¬stitutes.At the meeting at North CentralCollege in Naperville, Illinois, Alleewill speak on “The Biological Inter¬pretations of War,” and MelchiorPalyi, former economic advisor tothe German Reichsbank, who is car¬rying on research at the Universityw’ill also speak.The Fire=Buming^(Continued from page 1)1common problems of the sciences,and hence is indispensable to them.Training of advanced students inthe techniques of research in a sci¬ence is another matter. It seems tome to presuppose a thorough intro¬duction to what is known of the sci¬ence. But the problems of researchin general are not the problems ofeducation, even though the scientistand the teacher may be one man andin one institution, to have either atits best it is not necessary to chal¬lenge those who would deplore itsconfusion with the otljer.I hesitate to proceed. What I havesaid seems true to me; I am not clearas to the remaining topics. How arewe to find the answers to the phil¬osophic problems which are the es¬sential problems of universities? Isit by studying and judging betweenthe proposed answers as best we can,and acting on our best judgment, orby pointing out that men of varyingwisdom give different answers, or bydenying the existence of these prob¬lems, and of scientific knowledge? I Today on theQuadrangles IFRIDAYConference on Consumer FinancingPublic Forum Session. “ConsumerDebt and the Business Cycle.” RolfNugent, Director, Department ofRemedial Loans, the Russell SageFoundation. “Consumer Failure andRehabilitation.” Professor Cover.Lecture Hall, Ori^tal Institute at 10.Luncheon. “Recent Activities ofCommercial Banks in Financing theConsumer.” Dudley Cates, Vice-President, Commercial InvestmentTrust Company. Judson Court Din¬ing Hall at 12:30.Round-Table Session. “The Chargeto the Consumer and the Cost toBusiness.” Discussion leader, Wil¬fred L. White, Chief, Marketing Re¬search Division, Bureau of Foreignand Domestic Commerce, U. S. De¬partment of Commerce. Judson CourtLounge at 2 (admission by card).“A Streak of Pink,” by Janet Mar¬shall. International House Players.International House Theater at 8:15.WyTern. Spring Formal. RiversideCountry Club.Quadrangler Dinner Dance.. HotelSherry from 9 to 1.Meeting of the Senate Committeeon University Policy. Classics at 11.SATURDAY“A Streak of Pink,” by JanetMarshall. International House Play¬ers. International House Theater at8:15.VICTOR%25575*Buzzin'’ Round With theBm—>F TWhoa Babel-^F.T.Lionel Hampton and hisOrchestra25576The You and Me That UsedTo Be^F.T.When Two Love EachOther—F.T.Eddy Duchin and his Orchestra25577Alibi Baby—F.T.He’s a Gypsy FromPoughkeepsie—F.T.Tommy Dorsey and hisCl ... 1_UNIVERSITY MUSICAND RADIO CO.1371 East 55th St. at DorchesterOPEN 9 A M. to 9 P.M. Alpha Delta Phi. Open party andplays. Reynolds Club at 8.Phi Delta Theta. House dancefrom 9 to 1.Phi Gamma Delta. Spring formalfrom 9 to 2.SUNDAY“Religion in Our Times.” The Rev¬erend Ernest Fremont Tittle, Firsti Methodist Episcopal Church, Evans¬ton. University chapel at 11.THREE MONTHS' COURSEI poa coiiaoi STUDema and oaAOUATtaA tkorsmelt, itsimsivt, Mtess^trapkic ccmrst-iPgrHsig Jaststary I, April I, July 1, October 1,bstorwoting Booklet tent free, without oMifoOoe—mrito or phone. No tolicitort employnd.moser• USINESS COLLEGEMui Motaa, j.D..rN.a.BetolmOeetrte».opom to High School OrmAsmtee only, moyooetmrtodonyUoisday. Degosti Emetthtg. EoosebsgCouneeapontouoett.na S. MicMgan Ave., Clilcaeo, teinSolph 434FChicag^o TheaterErrol Flynn“PRINCE & THEPAUPER”United Artists TheaterJanet Caynor - Frederic March“A STAR IS BORN”GARRICK THEATRE“WAKE UP & LIVE”Winchell • Bemie - Alice FayeRoosevelt Theater* Wallace Beery“GOOD OLD SOAK”Oriental TheaterCharlie Chan at“OLYMPICS”On Stage—Eioue MortonAPOLLO“CAFE METROPOLE”DREXELToday“The Case of the Black Cat”Tomorrow — “Hideout”Frolic Theater5S»h fir ELLIS AVE.Today and Tomorrow“When’s Your Birthday?”aand“Mr. Deeds Goes to Town”Warner Bros.LEXINGTON THEATRE1162 E. 63rd StTO HAVE POTATOES YOU MUST PLANT POTATOES.TO HAVE INCOME YOU MUST ?Bill Walling. Ph. B. ’33Paul Whitney, Ph. B. ’36CONNECTICUT GENERAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.1 N. LaSalle Street Randolph 8440 Today and Tomorrow“BROADWAY BILL”and“MR. DEEDS GOES TOTOWN”rbm ataWoroifipUniversity Church ofDisciples of Christ5655 UniTershy ArenueMinister: Dr. Edward ScribnerAmes. Minister’s Associate:Mr. Fred B. WiseSUNDAY, MAY 23, 193711:00 A. M.—Sermon.Sermon subject: “The MagicCountry.”12:20—Forum.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers. Teaand Program. Special guestswill be members of UnitedYouth Peace Council. Hyde Park BaptistChurch5600 Woodlawn Ave.Nonis L. Tibbetts and RollandW. Schloerb, MinistersSUNDAY, MAY 23, 1937 -11:00 A. M.—Morning Worship.“Can the Church ChangeLife?”5:30 P. M.—Hyde Park Wood-lawn Council of Youth. “PeaceDiscussion.” The First UnitarianChurchWoodlawn Are. and E. S7th St.Von Ogden Vogt, D.D., MinisterSUNDAY, MAY 23, 193711:00 A. M.—“The Dilema ofHuman Knowledge,” by JohnW. Laws.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club Teaand Discussion. “SpanishCharacter in Spanish Litera¬ture,” by Hope Grimwade.6:30 P. M.—High school clubsupper and meeting.THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, MAY 21. 1937 ThmCollegiateWorld(By the Associated Collegiate Press)Lungs with efficiency greaterthan those of any man ever testedbelong to Don Lash, Indiana Univer¬sity’s sensational two-miler runner.This claim was made by Dr. D. B.Dill of the Harvard University fa¬tigue laboratory at the annpal meet¬ing of the American Association ofPhysical Anthropologists.In tests, Dr. Dill found that, whilerunning, the Indiana star has an oxy¬gen intake 60 per cent greater thanthe average man and nearly thatmuch more than four other out¬standing American milers—Cunning¬ham, Venzke, San Romani andFenske.While running at his two-milepace. Lash is capable of taking inthree liters of oxygen a minute.4> * *Many seniors qualified to hold posi¬tions fail to land them because theybungle the first interview with theirmight-have-been employer.For this reason. Dr. Clarence E.Clewell, director of the Universityof Pennsylvania’s placement service,and his assistants advise seniors whatnot to say:“I am willing to accept any jobyou offer me.“Explain what you have done, cando and want to do. Should the ques¬tion of. salary arise, do not respondthat you are willing to work forpractically nothing, for the employerwill judge you worthy of no more.State the minimum wage accept¬able.’’Some other suggestions for over¬coming negative impressions arethese:“Sincerity, modesty and good man¬ners are most essential. Avoid per¬sonal inquiries and crude curiosity,such as attempting to read corre¬spondence or other papers lying onthe interviewer’s desk, listening tohis telephone conversation or inter¬rupting another speaker.The lowly worm helped Ralph L.Emmons, federal attorney, earn hisway through collegre.Picking worms off the UniversityConference(Continued from pnge 1)were delivered by G. Earle Ingram,of the division of Consumer Credit inthe Wisconsin banking department,and John R. Walker, executive vicepresident of the National Associationof Sales Finance Companies. Ingramstated that government regulation isa necessity for correcting abusesagainst the public interest and forperpetuating the economic equalityguaranteed by the Constitution.However, he warned against ex¬tension of regulation until it be¬comes competition, saying that entryof the government into the consum¬er credit field produces unemploy¬ment in private enterprise.Walker said that government in¬cursions into the commercial creditfield have shown no clear benefit tothe country and have probably in¬jured the national economy. “Stateregulation of installment selling andsales financing,’’ he stated, “havefeatures which represent a step inthe direction of political dictatorshipand are also economically unsound inthat they indirectly attempt to regu¬late the selling price of merchan¬dise.’ of Michigan golf course was one ofthe odd jobs that contributed to hisgetting an education.“The job paid me 20 cents anhour,” said Emmons. “Attendantspoured a chemical on the ground tobring the worms to the surface. Ipicked them up.” American Journalists and Linguists'Put Meat’ on English Word 'Bone’How dictators establish them¬selves and retain power over sub¬jects is going to be studied next fallin a new course, “dictators and dic¬tatorships,” at Colgate University.In announcing the new subject.Dr. Rodney L. Mott, director of theuniversity’s School of Social Sci¬ences, explains that “an attempt willbe made to show that dictatorshipshave come from writings of intellec¬tuals who influence public opinon,from economic factors, or from psy¬chological post-war attitudes andmilitary factors.“In the later stages of the coursethe students will take up the actualoperations of a government under adictator with such subjects as thenew constitution in dictator-con¬trolled nations, the relation of thestate and industry, religion, civil lib¬erties and propaganda considered aspoints for study.“Dictators are here to stay, for awhile at least,” concluded Dr. Mott,“and the students might just as wellknow how they work. It will be apart of their education.”Football and ski-jumping are goodpre-requisites for anyone who wishesto fly an airplane.At least, that’s the opinion of RodElliot, All-Maine halfback and wintersports performer for the Universityof Maine. Four hours and one halfof instruction in the air was all heneeded to make a solo flight and aperfect three-point landing. American journalists and linguiststook the English word “bone,” bothin its noun and verb forms, and lit¬erally “put some meat on it,” proofsheets of the second section of the“Dictionary of American English,”shortly to be published by the Uni¬versity of Chicago Press, disclose.Such typical Americanisms as “tofeel in one’s bones,” “bonehead,”“bone-player” (the right hand end-man in a negro minstrel show),“boneyard” (cemetery), “bone-up”(to cram for an examination),“bone-picker” (characteristic of cer¬tain old Indian customs), and “tobone in, into or down” (to workhard), are indicative of some of the“meat” added to the English “bone.”While “bone-yard” was coined inAmerica as a yard or place in whichthe bones of dead animals are col¬lected for subsequent use and as aplace in the forest where animalbones are abundant, it was MarkTwain in “Roughing It” who firstused the slang expression for a cem¬etery.The phrase, “to feel in one’sbones,” meaning to feel certainabout, to have an intuition of, datesto 1844 when Barnes used it in“Memoirs of Thurlow Weed.” As farback as 1857 politicians “felt it intheir bones” that they were goingto be elected. In the second volumeof “Quinland,” published in thatyear, one character said, “I feel it inmy bones that the next election willbe the making of me.”Rattling BonesWhile “bones,” rattled togetherto form an accompaniment to a ban¬jo or a guitar, is of English origin.Bubonic Plague Stillas Government Menaces CountryWages War on RatsContrary to popular belief, the bu¬bonic plague has not yet been wipedoff the face of the earth, stated GailMonroe Dack, Associate Professor ofBacteriology in an interview yester¬day. The dread disease is even in thiscountry a potential danger to the in¬habitants.Because of very efficient rat sur¬veys carried on by the governmenton every incoming boat, few of therodents engage passage on any boatsnow. The rat inspectors are expertsin their line and can tell almost hya glance how many rats are hidingin the ship. If there are very many,the ship is immediately fumigated.On one occasion, the estimated num¬ber of hidden rats was placed at 318and on fumigation, 330 dead ratswere found.Other Plague Carrier*Although fleas and lice bearing theplague may not pass the borders ofthe nation, many flea-bearers are al¬ready in residence. Recent investiga¬tions have found that in addition torats and ground squirrels, ground¬hogs or marmots may also carry bu¬bonic-infected fleas. Besides fleas,lice are also able to bear the virus.Taylor EntertainsViennese ProfessorProfessor Arnold of Vienna, oneof the foremost physiographers inEurope, will be the guest of Dr. Ar¬cher Taylor, chairman of -the Ger¬manics Department, at a tea tomor¬row, to which the Germanics staffand the German Literary Society ofChicago have also been invited. Pro¬fessor Arnold works in the field ofGerman literary history. Related to the plague, and owningexotic names are the Rocky Moun¬tain Spotted Fever, carried by woodticks and dog ticks; and Tularemia,carried chiefly by rabbits, who, how¬ever, do not have a monopolistic con¬trol of this doubtful privilege.Method of PreventionThe only way to safeguard ourcountry permanently against theAsiatic “Black Death” is to cleanout the rats. A disease of the lowerclasses, the plague is found wherethere is unprotected food. Thereforeto rid the country of the disease, rat-proof food supplies and storage fa¬cilities must be provided. To cleanout a city is not difficult. In 1911,San Francisco was threatened withan epidemic of plague. The citywent to work and through an exten¬sive campaign demolished all lurk¬ing places for rats. With the de¬struction of the rodents came a de¬cided decrease of the disease. It wasduring this campaign that groundsquirrels were found to carry theplague.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT—Opposite Dunes StatePark, Tremont, Ind. A very beautifulfurnished home. 3 bedrooms, bath,porch, large living room, hot and coldwater, elec., gas, etc. Inquire Ma¬roon office.For SaleSPRINGER SPANIELSPhone: Mid. 5767One Thing We All Agree OnOpinions may differ as to the Supreme Court, The Edward-Wallyzdfair, The Higher Learning in America, Sports, Prohibition, etc. butone thing everyone who has worked on or seen any part of the newyearbook agrees to is that it will be the best this campus has seen inthe 41 years of its publication. Better subscribe today.The 1937 Cap & GownNow on sale at the office in Lexington Hall, at the Information Desk,or from Tailor Tom at Cobb Hall. $3.50 ($1.50 down will reserve^ your copy). a “bone-player” became an Ameri¬can characterization of such a per¬former.America has undisputed claim forthe compound “bonehead,” meaningthick-headed, obstinate, stupid, al¬though its origin first was associatedwith a mule.The colloquialism first was assign¬ed to a human being, as far as dic¬tionary readers could determine, in1903 by the “Smart Set.” “You talklike a bone-headed fool,” one of theSmart Set’s less sophisticated char¬acters said.Bone PickerA “bone-picker” was a privilegedperson among certain American In¬dian tribes. Duties of stripping theflesh from the bones of corpses usual¬ly were assigned to a priest or amedicine man.“Bone,” as a verb, also is of Eng¬lish origin but several mutationshave been made. There is its conno¬tation to work hard, to apply oneselfclosely or strenuously, as Greeley setforth in “Correspondence of R. W.Griswold,” written in 1841: “Webbwants to be postmaster ... he hasbeen round boring every big-bug inthe State to bone for him.” Wim (SILLS, Inc.Famous for**The Glorified Hamburger*(Trade Mark Res.)Invite you to the most beautifullyappointed Sandwich Sliops *■*America.1558 E. 63rd MOO E. 63rdAt Stony Island Ave. At Dorchester672 W. 63rd St., East of Halsted117 E. Chicago Ave., at Michigan1055 Lawrence Ave., opp. AragonHouse of Wimpy in the Boston) StoreQualitySerrkeClean! ineaTo “bone-up” for an examination, jmeaning to study hard, to get up asubject by close study, took on jour¬nalistic meaning in E. B. Custer’s“Tenting on Plains.”TheHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57fh StreetN. W. Gamer Stony Island HOE SAl 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. Hanley’sBuffet1512 E. 55fh S».IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT “COLLEG¬IATE” ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLErSOver forty years of congenialserviceTHE STORE FOR MENA. favorite in the early lineup‘30To dress comfortably and properly for leisure-time, you shouldinclude slacks and a sports jacket in your wardrobe. Not just anyold coat and trousers, but a special combination carefully chosenfor this purpose. Our gabardine coat at $30 is specially styledwith many hand-tailored features. It is only one of a wide selec¬tion at this price.Other Jackcta, $17.50 to $75 • Slacks, $7.50 t# $#•The Sportsman*s Floor, The FifthTHE STORE FOR MEN .) I.MARSHALL FIELD iSe> CO.■saiiliitaftiiliiMlMiAlDAILY MARQOM SPORTSPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1937Big Ten Track Stars Clash Today at MichiganMerriam Enters Six Contestantsin 37th Annual Conference MeetMichigan, Ohio State, Wis¬consin Threaten Indianafor Crown. Maroon HopeAlthoug:h Coach Ned Merriam issending six of his best men to theBig Ten track championships beingheld at Michigan this week-end, it isdoubtful whether many of them willreturn with points to their credit.Only one Chicago runner, GeorgeHalcrow, is listed as a pre-meet fav¬orite.Indiana is the defending championbut they will have to display theirbest form to retain the crown. TheMichigan, Ohio State, and Wisconsinsquads have strong men representingthem and will fight hard for thechampionships.Halcrow will be striving to winthe 440 yd. race which last year wascaptured by his former teammate,Ray Ellinwood. Since Ellinwood hasleft school and turned professional,it will be up to the Maroon junior tokeep the title on the Midway for an¬other twelve months.Records show that he ranks withthe best representatives ,of (otherConference schools and no one hasdefeated him in dual meets this year.In a meet against Northwestern Hal¬crow recorded the time of :48.8 andalmost repeated the performance thefollowing week against WesternState Teachers College when he cov¬ered the distance one tenth of a sec¬ond more.Competition StiffHowever Halcrow’s path to victorywill not be an easy one. Competingagainst him are Birleson of Michiganwho won third place in Ikst year’smeet and who captured the event atthe indoor meet; Andy Dooley ofIowa and Harley Howells of OhioState; each with records of 49 sec¬onds for the distance.Chicago’s next best bet on thebasis of past performances appearsto be Carl Frick. Frick, who is alsoa junior, has placed either first orsecond in the 100 and 220 yd. dashesin most of this year’s dual meets, butthe competition he will be forced “tomeet this week-end will probablyprove too fkst for him.Frick Face* StollerHis best time was made againstNorthwefftern when he covered thecentury distance in 10.1. However,at least six other schools will havemen who are capable of betteringthat time. Probably the most notedof the sprint runners who will facehim will be Sam Stoller of Michigan,a member of the Olympic relay squadand a :9.5 runner.According to Coach Ned Merriam,Frick will be fortunate if he finishesfourth. He will have to show his bestto capture even this position.The other Chicago men are enter¬ing just for the competition sincetheir hopes of placing are extremelyslight. Bob Cassels will be our lonerepresentative in the pole vault eventbut his erratic form makes it diffi¬cult to prophesy about his chances.In the Northwestern dual meet,Bob reached the height of 13 ft. %in. but has failed to repeat that per¬formance. For the most part, hisjumps have not exceeded 12 feet.Only a few’ of the entrants arif cap¬able of bettering 13 feet in thiSf eventso Cassel’s chances for a place mayraise if he shows superior form.Beal Out of MeetCaptain Beal’s presence iti the Award Blankets toSenior Athletes atInterfraternity SingHALCROW. . . Pre-meet favorite seeks to keep440 title on Midway.chances are slight. His best time of24.4 is considerably slower than the:23.1 heat turned in by Jack Neeleyof Indiana last year. Neeley will beback to try to better the fourth placehe took in the 1936 meet.Completing the list of Maroon en¬trants will be Kobak in the broadjump and Gorden in the high jump.Although Kobak’s jumps of 23 feetare three feet short of Jesse Owen’sworld record mark, they rank favor¬ably with several of the jumps turn¬ed in by men from other Big Tenschools.Gorden has shown his ability topass six feet in the high jump but thepresence of Dave Albritton and MelWalker of Ohio State make it improb¬able that his efforts will be reward¬ed with one of the first four places.The championships begin todaywith preliminaries in several eventsholding the center of attraction. To¬morrow finals in events will be deter¬mined and the 1937 Big Ten trackchampion will be crowned.SANDERS V'and His Orcbtifro fvafurinJANE KAYERUTH & BILLV AMBROSEJANE LA VONNEmeet might have increaseijithe teamsstrength, but a sore leg ahd exam¬inations have forced him’to past upthe championships. Chicago'^ hopesin the hurdles, then, wall reM^'on NatNewman. Newman will only partici¬pate in the low hurdles where his BLACKHAWKRANDOLPH AND WABASHCOl'L'EGE MENNational merchandisine firm with forty thousandemployees wants 100 outstanding young men who arecollege graduates for key position training. Salary tostart $25 per weekv^^'^rite giving full (particulars andinclude snapshots. rite, care Post Office Box No.5415, New Post Office, Chicago, Illinois. Seniors who have won a major Cduring their four years work at theUniversity will be awarded theirblanket at the Interfraternity singJune 5, it was announced yesterday.These blankets represent an addi¬tional award bestowed upon thosemen who have competed in a majorsport and played the required timeon a Varsity team. Blankets are ma¬roon with a white C in the middle.Different colored stars represent thedifferent sports with one star forevery C won in that sport.The award of C jackets for thespring sports will take place June 3at the annual C banquet. At thistime all the men who won major C’sthis year will be inducted into theorder of the C, by taking the fol¬lowing oath: “We hereby denote our¬selves as members of the order ofthe University of Chicago ‘C’ men,avow our steadfast loyalty to ouralma mater, and pledge our endur¬ing support of her athletic honor andtradition.” Tennis Team Enjoys Perfect Day:Win All Matches in First RoundBickel and Burgess DefeatBall and Wachman inDoubles Meet.WAA Scrambles Eggsat Beach Party Sunday Without losing a single set. theMaroon tennis team roiled throughthe first round of the Big Ten Cham¬pionship Meet yesterday at Ann Ar¬bor, Michigan.Only Krietenstein, in the sixth sin¬gles flight drew a bye. Bickel andBurgess captured the prize of theday in the first doubles bracket whenthey defeated Russell Ball andWachman of Northwestern.In the singles Bickel led off bywhipping Captain Miller Sherwood ofMichigan 6-3, 6-4. Bill Murphy, thesecond University representativeeliminated Minnesota’s Scherer, 6-3,6-4. End Second Ronndin Women’s TennisWAA members are holding their Iannual “egg scramble” Sunday morn- jing at Jackson Park Beach. They will |meet in front of Ida Noyes Hall at 9.1Marcia Lakeman, president ofWAA, will be the official “scramb¬ler” for the party. After the yolksand whites have been thoroughly fus¬ed, cooked and consumed, the partywill spend the remainder of theirtime in playing baseball or swimming. Another Gopher dropped out whenPetrich lost to Captain Burgess ofChicago in the third single flight6-4, 6-5. Chet Murphy followed inhis brother’s footsteps by crushingWilcox, also of Minnesota 6-1, 6-2in the fourth bracket. The final Ma¬roon singles victory was garneredby Shostrom, who really turned onthe heat in the second set to whipFrank Froehling of Northwestern6-4, 6-0.In the second doubles victory theMurphys triumphed 6-2, 6-1 overCarson and Petrich, the fourth Min¬nesota representation to fall underthe strokes of the Maroon squad.Shostrom and Krietenstein completedthe day by overwhelming Batzel andWeigler of Wisconsin 6-2, 6-2.liiiMit iu ikWWW wWWWr WW WWrwI^WW WWWGANTNER WIKIES!Make a splashinto beach society thissummer .. in WIKIES I"22% better" yarnsiGantner patented snugwaisti Self-adjustingSupporter! Free-breath¬ing Lostex beltl Quick¬er-drying I • • . $3.95De Luxe WIKIES . $5Ask your dealer or write us.OANTNIR A MATTIIN CO.Francitc* Md**. Mart, Oiicago1410 BroMlway, N«w YorkAbove..Jinn Palkemberg mndLorry (Bmtier) Crobbt,tvo former twipiont wto arttHtkmtiatit. With the deadline for the secondround of the women’s tennis tour¬nament set for 5 this afternoon, fivematches have yet to be played. Thusfar only Sally Chase, Janet Rosen¬thal, and Mary Ann Matthews haveprogressed to the third round.Miss Marguerite Kidwell, who isin charge of the tournament, picksChase, Rosenthal, Virginia Stagg,Irene Buckley, and Meg Sievermannas the strongest contenders.The matches of the second roundwhich remain to be played are:Stagg vs. Buckley, Mary Karahutavs. Eloise Husmann, Betty Homingvs. Marjorie Seifried, Sievermann vs.Joan Kammerer, and Charlotte El¬linwood vs. Bernice von Horn.Matches not played off and re¬corded by the time of the deadlineof the tournament will be considereddefaulted. Matches must be playedby 5 this afternoon. Lambda Gams LickBurton-Judson inSemi-Final MatchLambda Gamma Phi advanced tothe finals of the independent divisionof the I-M, softball meet yesterdayby defeating a Burton-Judson team15-7. The winners earned the rightto meet the Barristers, who have al¬ready won their semi-final match,for the independent title.The businessmen almost put thegame away in the first inning whenthey blasted out seven runs. Threeerrors contributed by the dormitoryboys were a great help in accom¬plishing this. Another five run rallyin the fifth and three more at inter¬vals completed their total while theiropponents were being held to sevenoccasional runs.Today, Phi Sig ‘B’ will play PhiB D for the fraternity championshipwhile the Lambda Gama and the Bar¬risters scrap over the independenttitle. The two victors will meet nextweek, probably Monday, for the Uni-verjjty championship.Phi Sigma Delta protested todayto the I-M department about theeligibility of some of the Phi B Dplayers. No decision has been reach-I ed yet.Oiilv at Fieldsa campus fad spreading fast!of off-white canvaswith metal beer-keg buttons$|95Sizcw 11 to 20First it was the traditional garb of Princeton seniors.Now other college men and women in eastern schoolshave adopted the nonchalant beer jacket over anyoutfit. Takes to penned autographs and original art¬work better than slickers or sweatshirts. Serves aswindbreaker for hiking,biking,motoring,8ailing,or forbeach or garden. Wear it with slacks, shorts or skirtsand rest assured it washes with no trouble. Handiest,delightfully craziest new fad. Watch it spread! Getin the sw’ing—get your beer jacket at Field’s today.Sixth Floor^ Middle, fTabashMARSHALL FIELD& COMPANYHMiHHi mDAliY jVIAKOOMC R A M jVI IM G O U £ S TIO M M AIR £(This questionnaire will be impersonal. Please do not sign yourname.)Definition: By cramniirig is meant intensive^ short-term study ofKew or practically new material as final examinations approach. Hardreview is not considered cramming^ but reading from books which wereformerly neglected or skipped through is called cramming.QUESTIONS1. V.bat percentage of your year's work do you do before cramming?(e.g., How far have you gotten in your quarter's or year's read¬ing assignments when you begin to study intensively and specifi¬cally toward final exams?2. How long before exams do you begin to cram (two months, two weeks,two days, etc.)?J', Do you hire a tutor? In how many courses do you do so?How long before exams do you start tutoring?h. Do you use past comprehensive examinations in preparing for anexam? If so, do you use them for the purpose of mem¬orizing answers to stock questions which you expect to be usedon the exam you are planning to take?Vdiat is (are) your main interest(s) or occupation's) outside aca¬demic work? (e.g., social, athletic, musical, working for wages,serving on campus organization, etc.)Student's classification (College: division which ;professional school which .)Hale or femalo?^_ Do you live at home, in a dormitory, ina fraternity house, or in an apartment, or boarding house?tars otutureVinners ofilt\’ contestsUSoreJ *he:rii^.;ters. the^e•6:2 5:x c '-eJsshou n on their^ to H. ;iv-)?I anJ moviePr v.r^ Fisler. Uni-•a\- o f' N' e 'la; lure F’envHere's something new in testing machines]D ^ f*p»f All men and women attending the recent “Spring Fever”IvdtCl Jance of the M.I.T, Catholic Club were given tests on thisnovel Seaso'Thermo'Feverometer, developed by Tech student scientiststo add a touch of novelty to the affair. This “patient” is “slipping”, as thelighted bulb on the diagnosis machine indicates. phr<n by YorkOpening vast new fields of scientific researchT)U Capable of measuring the light rays of a loo'Watt1 llUtwillCtCi 2,000 miles away, a photometer to be usedin gauging the light from the most distant stars is shown being put intoservice in the University of Arizona's Steward observatory.CoLUGMTf DioirrPhoto by BumsVi; HOHCmFri Eve-a(jolle6iGite Di6estNATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS IN PICTURE AND PARAGRAPH Issue vj9L-AlarmistAn unusual photoidy by Fergus Reiin, a member of theiiversity of Minne'M Camera Club.Photo bv wjqjjutfThey held out for a longer notice before datesMaryville Cdlege coeds rebelled at late'noticcso they staged a one-day sitdown striketo impress upon the men their demands for at least la hour'enotice. The men agreed, after many peace parleys, suchshown above.Larrupin’ Louaseball’s Iron Man GehrigIs Top Salary Player^^^hen Chi Bi ta ChiVV wl Ulo University (>f To¬ledo initiated Tom Baiioiii andDon Williams they first made tltemdress semi ' formally and gatherworms at an earlymoming hour.X xvArxoiX ticularly interested in felseteeth yet, but it may be comforting to know thatWestern Reserve University’s Dr. J. E. Bliss hasdeveloped a technique for making face masks so hecan make your face kxJt the same after false teethhave replaced original teethi WnitWoruShirt'signing is latest fad for dance'goers He's played more than 2,000 gamesT AST YEAR it seemed probable that the American public wouldsee a new Tarzan, the Ape Man, on the motion picture screen.Henry Louis Gehrig, the Yankees’ first baseman for 14 years, wa.*^being photographed in leopard skins and having his muscles measuieJin Hollyw’ood. He was just as sinewy and handsome as TariinJohnny Weismuller, but you can’t be swinging from Hollywoodjungle trees and playing first base for the Yankees at the same time.To keep Lou from falling faint from starvation on the first sack thisseason. Col. Ruppert of the Yankees is paying him $j6,ooo, thehighest sabry in American baseball this year.Henry Louis Gehrig came into the world in New York on June19, 1905, one of four sickly children in a German family. Son L( ubegan to develop muscle as a star athlete at New York's High SchiK'lof Commerce. In 1922 he continued the development as halfKickon Columbia’s football team and pitcher and first baseman on theColumbia nine. Pushing the apple far out cm the field was a specialtyof his, as the Phi Delta Thetas recognized by initiating him. AYankee scout recognized it, tex), so Lou left Columbia his junior yearand has never returned. The reason: in 14 consecutive years 1Yankeefirsthasemanhehasplayednearly2,oooconsecutivegames. He 1play many more as long as there are wheehchairs to get him on tl.efield. Last season he knocked out 49 home-runs, 11 .short of BaKRuth's all-time 60. Baseball handbooks' are filled with Gehrig recordFor all these reasons plain Henry Louis Gehrig has b^ome, mbaseball, Larrupin' Lou, the Iron Man.A Memories of that important date and that famous formal dance will be1 dpiio recalled when you look at the shirt-front autographed by those who attended—that is if you follow the latest fad started on the Princeton University campus. The above group(Kay Dickinson, Rufus Worrell III, Constiince Hou.se and Edward Myers) are demonstrating howvit's done. • $ P 0 T L I (i H T E 1ionheavyChampNo. I !wci^t collegiateboxer is Harry**Moon” Mullins ^Mississippi State,who won his crownat the natkmal cc^'legiate tourney heldin Sacramento, Calif. I^vid Potter,Clark Universityscientist, will be one the 30 collegemen to accompany Explorer David B.MacMillan cm a trip to Ba^ Land inJune. CouniAn Dnrr Photo br SchifCommentatorreviewer of University of Idaho,Southern Branch, students is MikeMegeath, who broadcasts hot uni'versity news items over KSEI every^^edtmsday. rsnuwri I^oai Photo hf Shin^AND WHEN THEYFEEL TIRED THEYUfT—ir«*-«(]rlc and back-«trokechampton pad fpMMHM lorher rocord-broakind perf cmthi-onew M a plundor—ha*HBokod C’aaioit olaco l^iS. •tartod tmokiaddirt’twoaOlympic bonora.Cawridit. 1037. m. 3. RqmoUs Totaceo Coapair. WlnWwi Wlw, M. C.rmuL AHEAD!EXAMSCharlie Gctchcll, 40When P*®*rmstudies.S*ng awaylike to en}oy i^ainei:steadily. Fm all for CamCaoielsels they janglenevermy nerves. WON the OlynqiicHEdiving crovm! MarshallWayne, high diver,says:"I enjoy s Camel when¬ever I want. Camelsdon WHAT THESE ACE MERMAIDS SAY-Dorotby Poyniom Hill speaking: **I’m alwaysin training. 1 prefer Camels for their mild¬ness. They never jangle my nerves. 1 can enjoysmoking as often as 1 wish. Another advan¬tage of smoking Camek is the invigorating’lift' they give me when I'm dred." Lenort Kight Wingard—one of the greatestwoman athletes of our times—adds this: ”Ireally get ftm out of swimming. Hard workis part of the game. For four years I've beena Camel ftn. Camels help me enjoy my foodno matter how dred or strained 1 may be.I've found Camels do not irritate my throat."(%me^ala are mad* fram flaar, moreEXPCNSivc Toaaccos -Tarfcish aad Da-nf an idea erf wnae me^ve yO« * , nOLLEOlATB D\OESTStudent wtU the Un.v.ndid camera ^ ^aow the ori^ cam^ to “«®^^before tl(fcparcd for h» exanirt of hi^r education, the nnai exaa all over wc decided that*, aonn™l‘^o»<loYOUdoit?\yfolr£> nr\ Lucilc Fairbanks,niece of famed cin¬emactor Douglas Fairbanks, completesher make-up for the dress rehearsal of aU.C.L.A, student production whichpreviewers predict will prove her aremarkably talented and capable ac¬tress. Wide WiirUSleep caught up with Evelyn Deeble,leaving her studies to run awayThe Wieland twins worl{ as a unitTelepathyidentical twins, are shown measuringtheir “extra-sensory perception" in atest being conducted at New YorkUniversity by Vernon Sharp (center).Thev do not have the same powers of“E.S.P.”It's the old blan/^et gamePTlfyll PllPr to sprawling ino the air when he is tossed high, wideand handsome by his fellow' classmates around the blan¬ket. t HjLLtGtATi: Dicut Photo by Well*West Pointers prepare early for vacation. . . make the man, and uniforms aren’t always proper wear,so tirst and third-year men at the U. S. Military Academyr “cits” now in anticipation of life “on the outside.”Exclusive CoueniATE Digest PhotoClothes inniriirBed, pajamas aiid slippers is a favorite study'session set'UpThe alarm isA snacl{ in time . . . prevaits drowsiness This University of Texas ^‘'Sweetheart'' is beautiful and LearnedBy vote of the entire student body, June Learned, seniorlllllCi n^ennber of Kappa Kappa Gamma, was elected No. i co^don the University of Texas campus. She is shown making her appearance atthe annual Round-up Revue, traditional homecoming celebration of Texasalumni.pYnPripnPP ■ • • ability of the “heelers” (men on prO'l-<ApC CllGC lotion who seek jxisitions on the staff) are beingconsidered in this mast serious meeting of staff members of the HarvardCritnSOn. OjutciAXt Dices? Phc*i> hy Ahlx- from Wide World There's no tallying bac\ when the husband is the teacherpo mi Iv ir Russell J. Hammargren’s best pupils in the journal'i dlllliy department of Butler University is his wife, who isshown here receiving a few tips from the head of the house during a class session in“Ethics of Journalism.” Hammargren is acting head of Butler’s journalism departmentAt Ohio State Uni. . . Scrccnstar Anita LoiEllen Morlcy, Kappa Kapto be queen of the yeaMalpo.This timber'topping jump made pok'vaulting history7sJ(>wr PrnrH Seftcn, great Trojan vaulter of the Uni'INCW rvCCwI VJ of S^them California, is shown ashe cleared the bar at 14 feet, 7* 8 inches to set a new world’s record inthe event. The new mark breaks that set last year by Oregon's GeorgeVaroff.Beauty and -bra... go together for Belt;of Colby College. She is qprom and has been elecBeta Kappa^^^flj^^^^^ueen of the Col. . . was the position ofworth when she ruled oveA. and I. College Lantanalast week-end.Wibe WorUSpeedsteHe was a member of the class of ’69Kittredge Brown, 94, becamev-rlVaCoL oldest living Harvard graduateupon the recent death of Henry M unroe Rogers. Hewas for thirty years a missionary in Turkey. ^peeastersGlenn CunninoKam f UnivermFredric March ju. . . Jean Fitzgerald onemost beautiful co-eds on thside College campus.Horsewomen 'S'. Sriders of Rollins College, where womenstudents are demonstrating an increasinginterest in horseback riding as a part oftheir physical education training. ^ueen of the M. . ..at Earlham. College'sibration was Eleanor Hecaiwas elected outstanding stMayParacT^l-1 Chief art,tni^or-' of1 Icinncrs program torthe ^lant nuJ-west cnm-o of Inter'iritional Relations Clubs af BelcntC'lolle^e was this group of Beloitslydent'. shown heie in sessu.n,^1 ,)g meeting.irn■xasliesmn<l University1 Upb of Q'noin.ati’s Pres. Raymondi/altcrs crowns Mar^Mie Udry prom queent a dance swing'timedy Glen Gray and hishsa Lomans. couMATi Diovr rlioco^ LcrtacbSTAICryDUR XOUf^SMOKING OFF —TOE KI6HTfWr.FRNCE ALBERT 15'(CRIMP cur'TOP(UXRI6HT.fT17KAW5 5MOOTOF0RC0Q4 LASTINGPIFEFLEA5UREpipefuls of fragranttobacco in every 2-oz.tin of Prince Albert. OcnrIKbt, 1«37.a. 4. Bvwads Tgtiacrn O^ PRINCE ALBERT MONEY-BACN CUARANTEESmoke 20 fragrant pipefuls ofPrince Albert. If you don’t findH the mellowest, tastiest pipetobacco yon ever smoked, re¬turn tke pocket tin with tbe restof the tobacco in it to us at anytime within a month from thisdate, and we will refund fullpurchase price, plus postage.(Signed) R. J. ReynoldsTobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North CarolbuunsonthePhi These producers must pull strings'Mathematical marionetteers” is theOilUW hi^>'«iunding titk given to Lehi^University's Prof. J. B. ReyrKjlds and his wife anddaughter, Jane. They are shown here taking a fewminutes off from dad's theoretical mechanics to puton a show for a fKulty party.OnuaaiSTS D—r Pfcoto by Vfcirfcr3 Here's the fishtinHere's the noting finish of the9.9 seconds loo'yard dash of theSt^orchWashington track meetwhich the fooner won by a scoreof 80 to 5a Humber of Washing'ton is shown winning the hundred.-SO THE SKXJKINOIANSFXSSSED IME /ipOUMOAS A eEsrruRE of1 FRlEMOSmP THE sameAS WE DOV/ITMPRINCE ALBERTTOOA'iJ EH3U0GE? isn't that true, professor?MANY A MAN MAS RUM ONIOREAL SMOtOMG PLEASURETHROUGH BORRONs/IMG APIPE-LOAD OF RA.IMDIAN'FRIENDSHIPTHAlt HOW I GOT ACQUAIMTEDWITH PRINCE ALBERT, ALL RIGHTSAND I’VE BEEN BaXJVING ITALL OF TV^sITV YEARS MOW -AMD IM ALL THAT KnOR I-R A. CERTAINLYTIME I'VE NEVBR HADA'TOMGue-aTE'PROM PRINCE ALBERT GIVES A MILD BUTTASTV SMOI^E,THANKS TO THATNO-BITE'PROCESS^§41 0»e erf the features trfXiXcll (jjg rx)vel law enforce-nrent institute of Ashland Colkgewas a court tnal trf a drunken driver,with the above students acting asbittrtutKKiiilThis queen didn^t get a crountUfoTYOr ^ Holy Cross under^aduate clubV/tlv/1 ^ Worcester, Mass., held its annual dance,Phyllis Croteau (ri^ht) was chosen by the club’s membersas “Mi^ Htrfy Cro^.” The runner-up was Martha Saltus{lefty. CoutmATC Dtorar Pfcoto br iitvifw ,Miiriii)j»itgW)iriiii> fmimthe jury.-. -Ptescriptiion: Have pet hates to be happyAA\rirs» Walter Couth of the UiMveraity of (jjbown telling monbers of one of his cb“pet hates” are a stroi^ facbv in married life. He saysthings draw two people more closely togrther than mutiof certain things.T^rainPr championship crewa. i^x top-ncrtch form is a toughassignment for any trainor, but TraineiMickey McLoughiin has done it for Penn'screws f(x the past ten years. He’s shownhere working on an important red and bluesheilman. C^lmiate Otem Phoeo by StlherM<M‘ •. ^Twenty schools will battle for outboard championshipsSrrJUnKlp With last year’s champtem in France competing in an intematiaial race, this year’sOCX aXilL/iv. i«|at»anal Intercollegiate Outboard Championships to be held in June at Saratogafirings, N. Y., bid fair fo become a grand scramble for the individual high honors. C^rtmouth, thro^hforce of ntanbers, is expected to gain a third teg on the team champion^p cup. Above h Gar Wood, Jr.,of M,LT., displaying some of the top-fl^t driving form that gained great fame for his illustrious father, the American S^tv'rf’o^ Ririn^ExetevE CdtxEctArE Dicin' Pboto Tkey*fe wiming pop'drinl^g honorsCko Tym helps Ray Mendez p<^s^bottle of pop in record tanc at th;