AqPbe Batty ittaroonVol. 39, No. 57. Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1939 Price Three CentsRoselliDefendsFascismat Int-House; PicketsFail to Prevent MeetingGuards Oust Ogren for DisturbingMeeting; Speaker Apologizes for ItalianAction.“I am willing to pay, for one year, tuition to any personable to prove that I am or ever was a Fascist or connected withIhe Fascist party! Your Mr. Price will judge whether the proofis satisfactory.” With that declaration Bruno Roselli, guestspeaker at International House’s Sunday night supper Quest forWorld Peace Series, began and ended his lecture on “How thePrinciples of Italian Fascism Can Be Reconciled with the Prin¬ciples of World Peace.”Conditions preceding the program and continuing through¬out it produced this drastic utterance. At 5:20, with the dinnerscheduled for 6, and the speech at 6:30, a lusty group of picketsmarching in front of the main entrance to International House,brandishing sloppily painted, but legible banngers, which de-man(M, “What about Italy’s backing Three BWOCsHead ClubRefugee DriveLaura Bergquist, Doro¬thy Overlock, Jane Jung-kunz Offer Services.Franco?” and “Kick Roselli Out”“Don’t let a Fascist speak.”Explains Peace ProgramsErnest Price, Director of Interna¬tional House, gave the background ofthe Quest for World Peace programs.Last summer, he explained, housemembers decided that a series con¬cerning the ideal of peace would befit for an institution such as Inter¬national House “pledged to the thesisof harmonious international rela¬tions.” The Student Council thenwrote to various consuls, and request-e<l them to recommend speakers. Inthe .series Clifton Utley, HertrandRussell, Edward Cchoir Palyi have already presentedvaried attitudes. About six more lec¬tures are scheduled, representingRussia, Chine.se, Wa.shington, and thereligious aspects.Price, in anticipation of a distur¬bance, introduced Roselli by mention¬ing, “He comes on our invitation asexpre.ssed by the House-membershipthrough the Student C o u n c i 1.”The hisses which followed thissUitement turned to cheers, whenhe a<lded, “although we realize "weare extending to some of our guestspeakers a privilege which wewouldn’t receive in their countries.”Applause accompanied his, “With ameasure of pride we allow freespeech in this democratic country.”Briefly he gave the details ofRoselli’s life. Born in Florence, Italy,Roselli fought in the World War, haswritten several books, one of whichis now being published for free dis¬tribution by the Italian government,and taught Romance languages atVassar for 14 years.Ogren ObjectsEarly Sunday a notice had beenplaced prominently on the main bul¬letin board in International Houseannouncing that all questions to beasked of the speaker should be writ¬ten and handed in. This notice wasignored, for before Roselli had evenannounced the title of his speech.Bud Ogren was declaiming, “Thiswhole thing is ridiculous. Universityof Chicago students do not want tohear a Fascist.” Immediately several(Continued on page 3) SAE RevivesLocal ChapterFraternity, Largest inCountry, Off CampusSince 1935.Sigma Alpha Epsilon, largest ofthe country’s national collegiate so¬cial fraternities, will reestablish itsUniversity chapter immediately, Em¬ory D. Stocker, corresponding secre-Carter, and Mel- j tary of the Chicago Alumni Associa¬tion of the fraternity announced to¬day.The University chapter of the fra¬ternity was founded in 1904, and dis¬continued in 1935, largely_because ofthe financial burden of maintaining ahouse. Approximately 500 alumniwere members of Sigma Alpha Ep¬silon as undergraduates.Seven members of a special com¬mittee have been appointed to estab¬lish the chapter: Harry A. Acker-burg, former president of the ChicagoAlumni Association of the fraternity;Walker Davis, alumnus; MarshallPoreen, graduate student; WilliamOrthman, Northwestern Universitychapter president; Carl E, Rosboro,president of the fraternity’s alumniassociation; Robert Russell, regionalsecretary; and Emory D. Stoker,former regional president. They willbe assisted by Franklin E. Ferguson,national office traveling secretary.The fraternity plans to pledge agroup of fifteen students by June. Three Big Women On Campus yes¬terday proffered their services to theRefugee Aid and War Relief cause.Laura Berquist, Dorothy Overlook,and Jane Jungkunz promised theCommittee that they would organizethe women’s clubs to raise funds forscholarships for German political ref¬ugees and food and supplies forSpanish and Chinese children.The club girls, with a fresh cropof pledges to help make each quotaswell towards the $10,000 goal nec¬essary for the success of the drive,followed the example of fraternitymen Hart Perry, Bob Merriam, andLew Hamity in offering to organizethe social organizations for an effi¬cient refugee aid campaign.Bergquist, a Pi Delta Phi, is alsopresident of Inter-Club, member ofthe Board of Control of the DailyMaroon, and member of the Board ofWomen’s Organizations. Dotty Over¬look is the secretary of the StudentSocial Committee, member of theCampus Congress committee, memberof the Dramatic Association Board,and Mortar Board. Jungkunz is aQuadrangler transfer from North¬western University and is active indebating.Triota Pledges $100To Refugee AidAnother pledge of $100 wasdropped into the Refugee Aid andWar Relief bucket yesterday, whenTriota, recently organized g i r 1 s’club, voted to raise that sum forscholarship aid.The women in the club haveplanned a benefit bridge party toraise their quota. Over four hundredtickets at 25 cents have been sold forthe bridge, scheduled for Sunday,February 5, at Ida Noyes, and op¬timistic publicity woman Jean Levi¬tan predicted that another hundredwould be sold before the fifth.Triota was organized in November,1937, by a group of Jewish Univer¬sity women, and is headed by Eu¬genie Wolf.The donation of $100 was thefourth promise received by the Ref¬ugee Aid and War Relief committeeand raised to $800 the amountpledged for the February drive.Train Examiners to EvaluateCollege Students’’ LearningProsperity Back;W'ant Oboe Play erThe University of Chicago Sym¬phony Orchestra has struck hardtimes. It no longer possesses thediminutive squeak of an oboe inits midst. It had a plea printedon the bottom of the programs forthe Social Science record concerts,but to no avail. Of the 7,000 stu¬dents at the University not onewas willing to admit any oboe¬playing talent.Therefore, relying on the su¬perior promotional power of theDaily Maroon, Mr. Charles Towey,manager of the orchestra, askedus to print this offer. "In returnfor services as oboe player in theUniversity of Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, will provide compan¬ionship of many ardent musiclovers. All those interested seeMr. Chas. Towey, c/o Music Bldg.,University of Chicago.” Inaugurating a new program of theBoard of Examinations, Ralph W. Ty¬ler, Chief Examiner of the Board andchairman of the department of Edu¬cation, has borrowed three men hold¬ing instructorships in the Universityfor training in evaluating the educa¬tion students obtain in their collegecareers. They are: Lawrence Andrus,instructor in Romance Languages;Theodore A. Ashford, instructor inchemistry; and Harold B. Dunkel, in¬structor in Greek.“Higher education is supposed toteach people to think,” says Tyler.They want to find out to what extentstudenis actually think more clearlyand accurately after college than be¬fore.Their findings will be used as abasis for curricular improvement.Another purpose educators assignDunne DiscussesWar in ChinaFather George Dunne will speak onthe Sino-Japanese war at the meetingof the Calvert club in the library ofIda Noyes hall at 7:30 this evening.Father Dunne lived in China forapproximately ten years, and wasthere when the present war started.His knowledge of Chinese life andconditions in that country qualify himto speak authoritatively on the War.The Club will hold its regular dis¬cussion this Thursday, its subject be¬ing marriage. to education is that of giving thestudents a more discriminating tasteand a broader range of interests.They wish to discover how far theschool succeeds in doing this.The problem of determining thesethings requires specially trained menand involves a long program of pre¬liminary testing and following upstudents to check on their interestsand activities even up to five or tenyears after graduation.Andrus, Ashford, and Dunkel werechosen because they are thoroughlyfamiliar with the work in their fields,and so can form an idea of possibili¬ties of attainment and achievement inthem. They supplement the work ofthe psychologists and specialists ineducational technique.Because other divisions and schoolswere unable to spare men at thistime, Tyler is filling out his staffwith two recruits from the Univer¬sity of Wisconsin, one from the Uni¬versity of Michigan, and perhapsothers.Tyler traces the rise of the needfor this new educational evaluationto the slower increase in the school-attending population in recent years,which has allowed a switch of em¬phasis from mere physical expansionof the school system to improvementin the quality of education. The Uni¬versity’s New Plan has centered at¬tention on the need for better exam¬inations, and helped to arouse theinterest of other institutions in thissubject. Clubs Pledge 73Freshmen Women;Membership SoarsEsoteric Leads with 14; Chi Rho Sigma,Sigma Tie for Second Place; Deltho PledgesNone.Twelve campus clubs, at their preferential dinners Saturdaynight, pledged 73 freshman women, a pledge class considerablylarger than that of last year, when all 13 clubs took part. Delthothis year pledged no freshmen, and Quadrangler has had pledg¬ing postponed by the Interclub Council for infraction of rushingrules.Esoteric, with 14 women, led the clubs in number pledged.Chi Rho Sigma and Sigma were second with ten each.Freshman women who joined clubs include:Achoth: Claire Hornstein.Arrian: Elaine Roy, Betty Reichert, Virginia Milcarek, andMarion Baumann.Paul DouglasFiles PetitionList Requirements forNew Voters; Registerat City Hall.Paul H. Douglas, professor of eco¬nomics, officially became a candidatefor alderman of the Fifth Ward whenhe filed his petition at the City Hallyesterday. Needing only the namesof 350 registered voters, Douglaseasily secured far more than the re¬quired number.A committee of students workedSaturday checking the names on thepetitions and also the names of thosestudents and alumni in the ward whoare eligible to vote.Citizens who have never voted be¬fore in their ward or precinct or whohave changed their address since thelast election are ineligible to voteunless their names and present ad¬dresses are registered at the CityHall before January 30. Voters mustbe registered in the state for oneyear, in the city for a month, and inthe precinct for 30 days before theycna cast a ballot on election day.There will be no registration daythis year in the wards. Consequentlyall registration must be made at theCity Hall from nine to nine on week¬days and from nine to five on Sat¬urdays.Short Skits AreBest For Mirror,Randall Thinks“The idea is to put the gag at theend,” explained William Randall, as-sistant dean of students and directorof dramatics, discussing how towrite Mirror skits, “and most suc¬cessful skits get to the gag as quick¬ly as possible.”This year the show will be builtlargely about the general theme ofundei'graduate life. Thus the Mirrorskits will aim at showing situationsfamiliar to the University, but withoutcomes that are not anticipated.“A good skit is very much like mostfunny stories,” Randall added. “Itpresents a usual situation with anunexpected ending.”Three to five minutes is the lengthhe sets for the average Mirror skit.This should take up about five type¬written pages.Writers should hand their skits into the Mirror Board by the begin¬ning of February.Discuss Big TenDebate TourneyStudents intending to participatein the Big Ten Debate Tournamentwill hear announcements pertainingto it at the Debate Union meetingtoday in Room 105, Lexington Hall,at 4:30.The field trips on the subject of“Higher Education” will also be dis¬cussed. The program of the meetingwill consist of a round table discus¬sion on “How Can Business and Gov¬ernment Cooperate.” Chi Rho Sigma: Aurel Spuehler,Mildred Lollar, Helen Ingram, BerthaHowell, Jeanne Cochran, Muriel Fro-din. Sue Easton7 Virginia Allen, JeanElvin, and Mary Jane Hoover.Deltho: none.Delta Sigma: Jean Ball, Ruth Dit¬to, Charlotte Ford, Patricia Smith,Anna Huling, Jean Boerger, andDorothy Einbecker.Esoteric: Shirley Latham, Eliza¬beth Shimmin, Shirley Adamson,Clarissa Rahill, Margaret Gray,Sue Steele, Helen Howard, MarjorieBrown, Gail Beckwith, Mary JaneGeisert, Carolyn Swanson, CatherineKellam, Barbara Thompson, and Cyn¬thia Mead.Mortar Board: Betty Monger, Mar¬garet Peacock, Patricia Lyding, RuthScott, Dorothy Jane Wendrick, Clara-belle Grossman, and Betty Jane Nel¬son.Phi Beta Delta: Yolanda Seniscal-chi, Laura Solstead, Geraldine Scott,Helen Turgasen, and ElizabethFrench.Wyvern: Beverly Smith, Eloise(Continued on page 3)ASU KeepsCommittee Plan^Divides JobsDeciding at their first meeting tocontinue the committee system in usethe first quarter of this year, thenew ASU executive committee metlast Wednesday and reassigned re¬sponsibility for each committee. Un¬der this system, each committee isunder the direction of one executivecommittee member, who may or maynot be its chairman. Committees aremade up of ASU members, and theirmeetings are open to all members aswell as to the campus at large.With Muriel Schecter continuingas membership secretary and headof that committee, Alec Morin wasappointed to the Peace committee,Charles Stern to Labor, and VirginiaBrown to Campus Problems. AnneBorders, last quarter’s treasurer, isin charge of publicity, Edith Wittheads the Education committee, andElton Ham, vice-president of thepraesidium, will take charge of Polit¬ical Action. Gayola Goldman was ap¬pointed to the Race Relations com¬mittee.Time and place of committee meet¬ings; open to all ASU members andother students, are as follows:Monday: Political Action, S.S. 108,12:30; Race Relations, S.S. 108, 2.30.Tuesday: Labor, S.S. 108, 12:30;Wednesday: Membership, S.S. 105,12; Peace, S.S. 106, 12:30; Publicity,S.S. 106, 12:30; 'Thursday: Educa¬tion, S.S. 108, 12:30; Friday: Cam¬pus Problems, S.S. 108, 12:30.Rushing ViolationPhi Gamma Delta and Phi Del¬ta Theta, by illegally rushingfreshmen, have indicated thatthey feel themselves unable to ob¬tain a good pledge class by theusual means. This is the first of¬fense by both houses.The Inter-Fraternity Committee.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1939FOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicayo,publish^ morninffs except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.A'ter 6:80 phone in stories to ourprinters, The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went-worth 6123. *The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any sUtements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.TTii oTily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $3 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3,REPNESCNTKD for national ADVERTIEINO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. new York. N.Y.Chicago * Boetor * Los Angel-ES - Sar FranciscoBOARD OF CONTROLEditorial StaffLAURA BERGQUISTMAXINE BIESENTHALEMMETT DEADMAN, ChairmanSEYMOUR MILLERADELE ROSEBusiness StaffEDWIN BERGMANMAX FREEMANEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRuth Brody, Harry Cornelius. WilliamGrody, David Martin, Alice Meyer,Robert Sedlak. Charles O’DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESDayton Caple, Roland Richman, DavidSalr.berg. Harry Topping.Night Editors: Ernest Leiserand Pearl C. RubinsRushing Reacts-Something is wrong with club¬dom. It is evident after the furorof the past week that some re¬definition of club rules and clubpurpose is necessary. It is equal¬ly evident that Interclub Coun¬cil needs a thorough houseclean¬ing.Befuddled as the Council maybe, the dean’s office also has afinger in the pie. Intentionallyor unintentionally, deferredrushing has been slowly, subtlychanging the whole emphasisand character of club life, fromthat of a pleasant channel forsocial life to the status of arushing machine. For fourmor":hs of the year, under thepresent setup, the club’s pri¬mary purpose is to acquire newmembers, certainly a poor ex¬cuse for the existence of any or¬ganization.The Dean’s office has beenjustly worried about the ad¬justment of freshman to theUniversity, fearing that theywill become club conscious tothe exclusion of interest in allother campus activities and or¬ganizations. However noble theirideal may be, the actual work¬ing out of the deferred rushingsystem has resulted only in bit¬terness and confusion. Not onlyare freshman pursued by clubsfor nearly a third of the schoolyear and made to feel that clubsare all-important, but club mem¬bers are forced, if they be at allconscientious, to spend the ma¬jority of their “activities time’’in club jingoism.Freshman have their rightsbut so do club girls. In the au¬tumn, transfers must be pledgedearly if they are to be pledgedat all and to participate in clublife. The remainder of the quar¬ter, as it has actually workedout, is spent in contemplation offreshmen — ferreting out offreshmen, talking to freshmen,eating lunch with freshmen,cautiously watching other clubswith freshmen, till by winterquarter actual pledging is inmany cases pure farce andempty ceremony.“No rushing during fall quar¬ter,” says the dean’s office. Andto enforce the ruling the Coun¬cil must make regulations, seem¬ingly absurd, such as allowing jonly four club girls with a fresh-1man, to offset the possibility ofrushing functions. The Councilis perhaps at fault in passingrulings which are impossible tofully enforce, but it is nonethe¬less the victim of circumstance.Should the Dean’s office feel ithas the power to make rules forthe clubs, it should enforce themitself.Net club result of the yeartherefore—twice as many func¬ tions are given, because of the jdouble rushing period expensesconsequently soar twice as high,few clubs have managed to keeprushing expenses under $200though functions were kept toa minimum and as simple as pos¬sible. But most serious of allthe evils of deferred rushing isthe slow sapping of interest ofclub members in club life. Stud¬ies, work in other organizations,enjoyment of a normal club life,all become subservient to thisconstant over-emphasis of theclub and its activities. The clubno longer has any function oncampus to perform if it is to be¬come merely a merry-go-roundof rushing.Yet Interclub Council canboast no spotless record. It hasproved that it is inadequate, orrather that the existing ma¬chinery is inadequate to success¬fully and satisfactorily enforceits own rules. It has revealed intrying to enforce rushing regu¬lations for the first time inmany years under the compe¬titive club system, club girls willnot trust the decisions of theirfellows. If the Council is to func¬tion effectively next year, itcannot continue on this year’sbasis.The responsibility for hearingcomplaints, for enforcing therules, and judging on their valid¬ity should not be that of eitherthe president or the council. Thewhole issue of “dirty rushing”needs to be clearly defined andleft no longer to “gentleman’sagreement” and “the spirit offair play” and the executivecommittee to define. What is ob¬viously needed is an impartialboard, entirely independent ofthe club system, which couldhear cases and judge on theirmerits, which would make thedecision as to which side is theright one, and make certain thatthe individuals who report of¬fenses would be guaranteedanonymity. Except for blatantlyself-evident cases, which arefew and ably handled by theCouncil, the more subtly com¬plex ones should be decided bya body removed from the hub-bud and heightened emotion ofrushing. In brief. Student Selfgovernment is impossible insuch instances.To synthesize the many les¬sons which have been learnedfrom the recent rushing period,it might be wise in the nearfuture to perhaps hold a con¬gress of club girls, to defineclub “rushing,” penalties forviolations and the sphere of theexecutive committee.Laura BergquistToday on theQuadranglesProfessor Viner, “Political and So¬cial Ideas of the English ClassicalEconomists. Laissez Faire. Soc. Sci.122, 4:30.Foreign Film “Carnival in Fland¬ers” (French film with English sub¬titles) International House 4:30, 8:30.Mathematical Club ‘ A Minima ofFunctionals” Dr. Herman H. Gold-stine. Eckhart 206, 4:30.Mr. Daiches, “Recent English Nov¬elists, Virginia Woolf.” The Art In¬stitute. 6:45. TravellingBazaarTHE CONFESSIONS OFARMPIT McLEVYThe Daily Maroon hasn’t done jus¬tice to us freshmen. They have failedto show the violence, the meanness,the stinking period of agony and in¬decision through which all of us go.I could tell stories that would makesome of your hairs stand on end.For instance, there is the time Ivisited a certain fraternity housewhich, out of sheer whimsy, we shallcall Ooh. Whee, Smear. Those lads atOoh Whee Smear certainly take thecake when it comes to intensive (andI mean intensive) rushing. Why, onenight last week they had me over fora succotash and rhubarb dinner, andthen took me upstairs into a closet,which had apparently been used forthe storing of cabbages to be stuckinto a postage stamp album. Nosooner had 1 been locked in the closetwhen the Ooh Whee Smears to a mansurrounded me playing a wild caco¬phony upon muted flutes and bed pansbeaten with a spoon, which, aftersome minutes 1 recognized as an ap¬proximation of the Andante move¬ment from Beethoven’s Seventh Sym¬phony (Opus, opus, I tell you).The w’ay in which I managed myultimate escape was by climbingdown from a third story window, viaBertha the cook. It seemed an eter¬nity between the time I left thatdreadful closet and the moment when,bleeding profusely, I landed, after a40-foot drop, on a small piece of damprag.I’m sorry that I can’t stop here, butthat isn’t all—no, not even half ofall. I had decided by this time to giveup the idea of fraternity when theO Pe U’s called up and invited meover for dinner. I was tempted torefuse but what man who has heardthe call of the chef can refuse Pureeof Pelvis and Trouffles? (sounds likeMargaret Halsey). No sooner had wecompleted the fifth course (no sec¬onds) than I was whisked upstairsas fast as my little leggies would tod¬dle. There for two hours I was blownat by several of the members who, intheir combined state, sounded like oldmother west wind coming lippity-lippity-lip across the green meadow..4fter what seemed like two hoursI was permitted to leave only when Iexplained that I still owed my firstquarter’s room and board at BurtonCourt and could see no prospect ofpaying unless Middle West Utilitiesj suddenly declared a dividend. This.seemed to cool off all but one boywho, like myself, was interested inthe collection of middle-aged postagestamps. FI could tell more, too, don’t everthink I couldn’t, tales of wild partiesin the Burton lounge (with and with¬out women)—of ever so beery eve¬nings at supposed gatherings cfChapel Union which were in realityfronts for fraternity smutfests. ButI believe that I have fulfilled my pur¬pose with this expose. If some at¬tempt is made on my life, I shall diehappy in the knowledge that, like allgood crusaders, I have done my bittoward making this big wicked worldof ours a better place in which tolive.Calvert Club “China?” FatherDunne. Ida Noyes 7:30.Christian Youth League (Specialcomittee meeting) Ida Noyes 12:45 to1:15.SSA Undergrad Tea Ida Noyes.3:30 to 5:00.Collegium Musicum Plays15th^ 16th Century WorksBy Ada SteeleThe Collegium Musicum, conductedby Dr. Siegmund Levarie, gave itssecond concert of the year Sundayevening in the South lounge of theReynolds Club. The program includeda Bach cantata, a sonata composedby the 16th century composer, Gio¬vanni Gabriele, and songs by 15thand 16th century composers.Added to the group, which per¬formed at the first concert was anexcellent small chorus, a recorder,and two Fluegle horns to take theplace of the obsolete trumpets whichBach had used in scoring his cantata.Henrietta Chase, a graduate of theMusic department, sang the soloparts in the two charming songsfrom the Nurnberg Song manuscript,and chose sides wisely and well inthe recorder and the other depart¬ments. Except for this unresolved difficul¬ty, and the group of six German folkdances which all sounded alike, theperformance was musicianly and en¬joyable.The Collegium offers members ofthe University and of the surround¬ing community an almost unparallel¬ed opportunity to hear excellent musicfrom the time of Bach and before.Because it was written for small en¬sembles and cannot be performedeffectively in large auditoriums, thismusic is seldom heard today. Beforeeach composition. Dr. Levarie ex¬plained briefly and well the workwhich was to be performed.Interest in the work of the Col¬legium has spread so that on Sundaynight late comers, unable to findseats, remained standing in the doorand hall, and sat on the floor tolisten. Brent House Strives to FurtherInter-Racial UnderstandingBy ROBERT SEDLAKLittle known by University stu¬dents, yet playing an important rolein the lives of graduate Oriental andAmerican students, Brent House isone of the few institutions that makenotable success in following no spe¬cific program except to further in¬ter-racial understanding and to pro¬vide good fellowship for students farfrom their homes.The Institute of Oriental students,which directs the house activities, wastransferred to Chicago in 1930 fromRacine, Wisconsin, where it was be¬gun in 1925. It now has an enroll¬ment of 150, and draws interesteduniversity students from throughoutthe Middle West.The house, located at 5540 Wood-lawn Avenue, is for meeting and so¬cial purposes only. It was purchasedfor the Institute by the NationalEpiscopal Church, but the programsin it are directed by the students andMrs. George Biller, more affectionate¬ly known to the members as “Mother.”The building is named after the lateBishop Charles Henry Brent, whowas famous for his national and in¬ternational work in religion, and whospent 20 years working in the Philip¬pine Islands.Seminars, informal discussions, anda Sunday afternoon dinner make upthe routine program for this hetero¬geneous band of students. Threetimes a year Institute members fromall sections of the country congregatein Chicago for conferences on con¬temporary affairs.The Institute, Brent House, and theactivities of the members are sup¬ported partly by the National Epis¬copal Church, by individuals who feelthe need for such an organization es¬pecially among Oriental students,and not a little by the members. De-405.811 spite the fact that it is partly sunported by the Episcopal Churchthere is no discrimination, andChristian and non-Christian peonieare invited to join.Brent House is unique in that itdoes not actively solicit member.shinStudents feel that the best member!ship comes when interested studentstake their own initiative in seekingto join the group. In a way the organization is not terribly anxiousabout a larger group, since the fa¬cilities of the house are taxed to theutmost with the present enrollment.(^olorful examples of all forms ofOriental and Occidental art testify tothe appreciation of the members 'forthe Institute. Each wall is coveredwith pictures, embroidery, and plasticworks that would make a collectorturn green with envy. And the dona¬tions keep on coming, all of whichleaves “Mother” Biller slightly per¬plexed as to where she can ' hanvthem.Ed's MarketFine Meats, Poultry and Fish1154 E. 55th St.Coll Hyde Pork 7254OPERAHOUSEGRANDNOW PLAYINGTWO WEEKS ONLY ICORNECiTbTIStJkuifWLuand A Notable CompanyinSatisiied Customers BERNARD SHAW'SReader'i Luncheon Hat This RecordLast YearBreakfast • Lunch • SupperREADER'SCAMPUS DRUG STOREAt61st & EUIS AVE. 'CANDIDA'WithDorothy Onslow JohnSands Stevens CromwellEXTRA MAT. FRIDAY. JAN. 27KveninsH t2.T6, $2.20. 11.6.6. 11.10Wetl. A Set.. M«tine«« $2.20. $1.6.>$1.10, 65c-NEW BALI BALITHEATRE RESTAURANT7223 South Chicago Avenue•CAN YOU DANCE? SING? OR WHAT? Friday NightsLET'S HAVE IT IN THE COLLEGE AT¬MOSPHERE AT THE NEW BALI BALI.A GALA NIGHT OF FUN AND •FROLIC, FINE FLOOR SHOW. EXCEL- U. of C.LENT MUSIC AND DANCE FLOOR.PRIZES AWARDED Student(No cover or minimum charge except Talenton Saturdays) NightTODAY ON THEQUADRANGLESStudent Calendar ofUniversity EventsEVERY DAY IN THEDAILY MAROON—-ATHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, JANUARY 24. 1939Roselli—(Continued from page 1)stalwarts, self-appointed sergeant-at-•u ms, Ken Womack, Martin Bronnfen-brenner, and Lowell Oswald, rosefrom their tables to urge Ogren toretire. When he refused, he wasforcibly ousted.Proposing to give the weak pointsa-; well as the strong ones of the Fas¬cist machine, Roselli received atten¬tion and sympathetic concentrationfrom the majority of the audience.Accusations from the radicals, mut-teied or enunciated boldly, pepperedhi< entire speech, especially the in¬sistent, “What about Spain?”Maintaining that it was better tobo historically than hystericallyminded, Roselli said he was follow¬ing the former method. “Fascism,just as democracy,” he insisted, “re¬quires a background, social, religious,even climatic, which isn’t foundhere.”Italy Not WarlikeHe objected to the application ofthe terms “warlike or peacelike” to-Italy. The Germans, he suggested, bynature are barbaric or militaristic,but it can be proved by Italy’s his¬tory that she is neither innately mil¬itaristic or barbaric, although notstrictly peace-loving.The present Fascist-Nazi parties heblames on the brutal conclusion ofthe World War. “A bad war and abad peace,” because the peace settledthe war in the “American way, w-hichis crush your enemy so well that noone will be left, instead of the Eng¬lish way. which is friendly and help¬ful to the adversaries.” Italy, he con¬tinued, was wronged in the peace ofVersailles. She was duped and didnot receive the territories promisedher as reward for participating inthe War with the allies.He denied sympathy with Ger¬many’s anti-semitism, and said, “Isaw with horror the Jews’ plight inGermany, but 1 have a historicalsen.se which makes me know there isan explanation for their treatment.”Shut Koditi UpWhen Edouard Ro<iiti interruptedsaying, “These aren’t historical facts,they’re prejudices,” he was forcibly(|uiete<l. Roselli declared his respectfor “Tho.se boys and girls (the pic¬kets) out in the cold who have beenmarching for a half hour.”He wound up his speech by recom¬mending that the corporative statebe studied, whether one approve ornot, and that he would prefer it to"the South .American upheaval andchange-constitution type.” He dis-mis.sed the F^thiopian conquest bysaying he didn’t approve of all ofItaly’s moves, and that he wasn’tgloating over the victory. He avoidedany statement regarding Italy’s partin the Spanish Civil War.I’redicls FightHis prediction was, “that unlessthere is a compromise there will bea terrifc fight, and the Americanswill be in the front lines.”In answer to written questions hestated that both the Italian an<l Ger¬man people, regardless of what theend was, were much healthier thanthey ha<l ever been. To the que.stion,“I>o you consider the people in theFascist countries happy?” he repliedthat it depended on what happinessmeant, because “to some people hap¬piness means freedom, but to othersit means guidance, health, security.”I ^lodging(Continued from page 1)Proctor, Mary Taft, Violet DanieLson,Ppggy ♦’lynn, Ruth Mortenson, andArdis Molitor.Pi Delta Phi: Dorothy DeJong,Jeanne Knauss, Doris Knudsen, Gene¬vieve Mahlum, Jean Hambly, Jos¬ephine Beynon, and Ruth Beiser.Sigma: Betty Burd, Mary EllenBean, Margaret Dillon, Agle Argiris,Dorothy Teberg, Diane Winston, Bar¬bara Poole, Dorothy Freeh, ShirleyJane Borman and Lois Roff.Phi Delta Epsilon: Helen Arnold..Cornelia 0. SkinnerIn Show PlayChicago theatre-goers are seeingCornelia Otis Skinner on the stagewith other players for the first timeduring the celebrated star’s cui-rentengagement at the Grand OperaHouse in George Bernard Shaw’s“Candida.” The two-week engage¬ment will end Saturday night, Feb¬ruary 4.There are matinee performanceson Wednesdays and Saturdays, withan extra maliiiee on Friday of thisweek. \ Prom Committee MeetsTomorrow in BartlettAssemble Students toBegin Organization forSale of Tickets.To assemble the cogs of theirticket selling machinery, pro¬moters and ticket salesmen willmeet together in the TrophyRoom of Bartlett Gym tomor¬row at 3:30. This is a “mustmeeting,” according to PromCommittee members, whichmeans that everyone who ex¬pects to participate in the pro¬motion program must attend.MacNamee Heads DriveTicket selling this year will be or¬ganized on a “pyramid plan,” underthe direction of Chuck MacNamee.Salesmen are to be divided into teams jof ten. There will be a leader foreach team who in turn will be ledby MacNamee. Using this plan theCommittee hopes to distribute asmany as 1000 ticket.s.Tickets, how-ever, will not be is¬sued at Wednesday’s meeting, prob¬ably not until three weeks before theProm.- This meeting is being heldpurely for the purpose of making as¬signments and organizing .salesmeninto leaders and teams.As usual diligent workers who .sellten bids will be awarded one. Bidprices wdll be $.‘1.,50 for holders of So¬cial C-Books and $.‘1.75 for others.Publicity DriveThe Prom Committee’s publicitydrive is already getting under way.Posters are beginning to appear onbulletin boards. Book matches carry¬ing “Washington Prom” in black let¬ters on a silver background have beenprinted and are being distributed.Blotters have been made again thisyear and again “snappy poems” sup¬ply the publicity material on them.Fifteen different recordings ofJimmie Lunceford’s band, which willsupply the music at the Promenade,have been purchaser! by the Commit¬tee. Some of these are now in nickel-odians at the Coffee Shop, Reader’s,Maid-Rite, and Hanley’s. Others areto be distributed among the frater¬nities.JSF Reorganizes;Votes to BeginDues for MembersThe Jewish Student Foundationwill reorganize next month on a paidmembership basis. This was decidedby a unanimous vote of the councilafter a questionnaire was sent tomembers of the organization. Overseventy-eight per cent of the studentswere in favor of such action.Dues for the remainder of the yearhave been set at fifty cents, whilefor every year hereafter they will beone dollar. Privileges included with jthe member.ship card are quarterlyafternoon dances, free admission tothe Chanukah and Purim receptions,the right to serve on committees andon the council, vote in electing offi¬cers, and a subscription to the Bul¬letin.In charge of the reorganization arePearl Fisher and Frances Brown,vice-president and secretary .of theFoundation. Membership cards will bei.ssued at the functions sponsored bythe Foundation and at the Chapeloffice daily, except Friday, from 1to 3.Mortar BoardsWill Pulse PrizeThe Mortar Boards followed uptheir winning streak in Pulse’s ClubContest by winning first prize forselling the greatest number of issuesagain this month. Quadrangler wassecond, Wyvern third, Chi Rho Sigmafourth. Esoteric fifth, and Sigmasixth, with a sale of three Pulses.Mortar Board has won first prizefour out of five times. The prize eachmonth to the winning, club is a fivedollar credit at various southside res¬taurants where the clubs hold theirweekly luncheons. The Mortar Boardswill lunch on their winning credit thisThursday at the Broadview Hotel.Arrian was the winning club onemonth and has not competed since.Pulse plans to offer another prize tethe girl selling the most copies, aswell as to the club. Ralph W. Tyler... His board evaluates collegeeducationAmerican StudentsSeek FelloivshipsAt Foreign CollegesApplications are now being re¬ceived from American students forfellowship for graduate studyabroad, which are administered by theInstitute of International Education.Most of these are “exchange” fellow¬ships, i.e., the college or universityof an American applicant offers asimilar opportunity to a foreign stu¬dent from the country in which theAmerican wishes to study.A limited number of tuition fel¬lowships are offered without directexchange. Applications for Czechoslo¬vakia and Hungary are consideredwithout reference to a direct ex¬change arrangement, although such aplan may be effected. The FrenchMinistry of National Education of¬fers to American men and womenteaching assistantships in Frenchlycees and ecoles normales which areopen to general competition. Thereare at present two similar assistant-ships in Italy.One of the most important qualifi¬cations is a knowledge of the lan¬guage of the country in which theyear of study is to be undertaken, ex¬cept in Brazil, Czechoslovakia, andHungary, where, in exceptional casesfor certain fields of study, the lan¬guage requirement may be waived.YWCA-ers Plan AllCampus Mardi GrasSouthern hospitality will reign ov¬er the University February 17 amidballoons and confetti at the YWCAMardi Gras. The Carnival will be anall campus party with dancing andside-shows to entertain the crowd. Anold-fashioned nickleodian will supplythe atmosphere for a melodrama, apuppet show, games, and 10 fortunetellers providing general festivities.During the entertainment and danc¬ing Aunt Jemima’s Waffle Shop willserve the merrymakers with waffles,coffee, and everything else.The YWCA announces the follow-decorations, Peggy Everett; side¬shows, Marjorie Woodrick; publicity,ing committee heads for the Carnival:Patricia Schrack; games, Mary Blan¬chard, Bernice Blum, and Edith Mc¬Kee; fortune-telling, Janet Geiger;food, Aimee Haines; dancing, BettyBurd and Lois Roff; tickets, BettyGrace; general personnel, Betty Tut¬tle.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intonsive, stouographic cours*—ttmrting January 1, April 1, July 1, Octobor 1.Intontt^ Booklet sent free, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEFAUI MOSER, J.D. PH.B.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof eewk month. Advanced Courus startany Mondin. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.IIA S. Michigan Av«.,Chicago, Randolph 4347 Poor LightingFlaws Newsreel Page ThreeClub Bali-BaliOffers College NightOf FraternitiesThe film survey of campus frater¬nities shown Friday by the Univer¬sity Newsreel was an excellent idea,and on the whole a well executedone, with the exception of one frater¬nity which was unfortunately blackedout. There were a few other slips, aswhen the commentator said, “Hereis your Psi Upsilon,” the film broke,le'tving the screen with a blank emp¬ty iook.Not very much can be said aboutthe newsreel part of the show because,due to poor lighting when the filmwas taken, nothing much could beseen. This poor lighting was the chiefflaw all the way through, althoughthe continuity was poor and the com¬mentary very poor.Perhaps the best part of the showwas H. G. Well’s fantasy, “The In¬visible Man,” a really excellent pic¬ture.According to Bill Boehner, direc¬tor of the newsreel, they probablybroke even or lost a little financially,but all the tickets and money havenot been turned in yet. In any casehe feels that the experience gainedfrom their mistakes made it morethan worth while, although it maybe necessary to charge ten centsmore next time.The organization plans to continuetheir monthly newsreels, and nextmonth they will include shots of theSkull and Crescent formal, and In¬terclub. For a supplementary movie,Boehner plans to have a documentarygovernment film, such as “The Riv¬er.” In addition, the newsreel willonly be about half as long, and moretime will be allowed for careful cut¬ting, which ought to contribute a lotto the interest of the show. Boehneradmits that in the fraternity picturesthere were too many shots of peopleeating or standing around the piano.There will also be a written scriptto replace the impromptu remarksthat accompanied the newsreel lastweek, and more care is promised withthe lighting.Schiimaii Speaks inChicago TodayProfessor Frederick L. Schuman ofWilliams College, until three yearsago a member of the Political ScienceDepartment of the University, willspeak before the Chicago RoundTable of Christians and Jews todayon “The Outlook for Freedom.”Schuman will speak following aluncheon in the Cameo Room of theMorrison Hotel, at which Miss MaryB. Gilson, assistant professor ofEconomics, is presiding. Universitystudents may hear the lecture, whichbegins at 1, for 25 cent.Schuman is the author of manybooks and magazine articles dealingwith totalitarian states, and his book,“International Politics,” has beenadopted as a text by 104 colleges anduniversities. University dancers, torch-singers,and performers of every kind willcompete in the All-Campus CollegeNight Show which the Club Bali-Baliis instituting as a regular Fridaynight feature. The entertainment willbe impromptu, allowing those withhidden talents who are too shy toperform other than on the spur ofthe moment, to do their stuff. Therewill be a University Master of Cere¬monies, and prizes will be awardedto the winners.Dud Quinn, host of the Club Bali-Bali, located at 7225 South ChicagoAvenue, wants to provide the stu¬dents with a nearby rendezvous fortheir night life, and promises goodmusic, a fast floor, and an entertain¬ing show.Wilder Play, '‘OurTown"* OpensThornton Wilder’s “Our Town,” agentle classic of New England life,opened yesterday at the Selwyn thea¬tre. “Our Town” won the Pulitzeraward as the best play produced in1938. The presentations here in Chi¬cago is acted by the original cast.Final performance at the Selwyn willbe played on Saturday, February 18.Wilder, former professor at theUniversity is the only author to winthe Pulitzer prize in both fiction anddrama. His “Bridge of San Luis Rey”won the novel prize in 1928.CLASSIFIEDWANTED—Graduate student. School of Busi¬ness, to orKanize retail chain of Floralshops. Familiar with selling and displayadvertising. Part time to start. Givefull particulars. Address: BOX O, Fac¬ulty Exchange.READER'S CAMPUS DRUGFor Free, Fast DeliveryCampus Phone 352 Fairfax 4800KLEENEX — KOTEXKURB — QUESTREADER'S CAMPUS DRUGWVIU HEARBQRNAND LAKE'"NOPIAY mi MOVED_ 1938"^ ME SO DEEPLY"^^llUTZERll Alexander Woollcottiifthountonwiioekoductlon tff HARRISgJithFRANKCRAVENAND THE NEW YORK CAST OEA^AFTEHA YEAR AT THE MOROSCO THEATRE.N.YNKHTS (EXCEPT SUNMY) *I.t0 TO $2.75 -MATSWED. AND SAT. ^1.10 TD$Z20 (INC. TAX)FOUR WEEKS ONLYSIXTH GUILD SUBSCRIPTION PLAYWHERE SHOULD WE GO??NOW OPENSEGAL'SBARBECUE83rd and Jeffery South Shore 8446Chicken - Steak - Fish Real Southern BarbecuedDINNERS RIBSAMeet your friends at our newly remodeled dining rooms,featuring ourBeautiful Glass Brick IlluminatedCocktail LoungeBanquet rooms available for parties, bridge clubs or businessmeetings.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1939Trackmen Show Strength in Hurdles,Dash, Field Events in Indoor OpenerWallop North Central62-33; Wasem, Daven¬port High Point Men.By GEORGE McELROYShowing strength in the hurdles,dash, and field events, and an un¬wonted weakness in the middle dis¬tances, the Chicago track teamstarted its indoor season last Satur¬day by taking 8 out of 11 first placeswhile handing North Central a 62-33defeat. The score was almost thesame as last years' 61 -31Football co-captains Bob Wasemand John Davenport were high pointmen for Chicago with 914 and 1114points respectively. Wasem’s per¬formance in the 60 yard high hurdles,where, with only three week’s train¬ing, he flashed beautiful form to winin the respectable time of 7.9, wasthe most encouraging feature of themeet for Chicago. Davenport, the in¬door and outdoor conference sprintchampion ran as usual, just fastenough to beat his opponent in theslow time of 6.6. He came back laterto nose Wasem out in the 70 yard lowhurdles in 8.0. Morton took a thirdto give Chicago a slam.Wins Shot-PutSophomore Huge Rendleman, asexpected, took the shot-put with aheave of 45’1014”, which is betterthan any Chicago weight man hasdone since Jay Berwanger. Hugh willbe expected to clear several feet morewhen he rounds into shape. John Bextook second with a put of over 35feet. Two other sophomores, JimmyRay and Maury Abrahamson, provedthey are going to be valuable men tohave around. Ray cleared six feet inthe high jump, though he officiallytied with Tingley and Moffitt, both of jChicago, at 5’8", and took third in the !high hurdles, a race he had never rununtil this year. Abrahamson, the firstreally promising Chicago two-miler inyears, thought he wasn’t in good con¬dition and so let the other team setthe pace for a 5:25 first mile, andthen ran the second nearly twenty seconds faster to win by over a lapin 10:31.9.Picture-runner Chet Powell strodethrough a 4:40 mile to win easily,with Herschel running a surprisinglygood second, making this almost thefirst meet within the memory of manin which Chicago captured both firstand second in the distance runs.Merriam ImprovesThe 440 and 880, where GeorgeHalcrow and Jack Webster made Chi¬cago dangerous last year, have beeninherited by Bob Merriam, andthough he is the most improved run¬ner on the team he is hardly up totheir standard yet. In the 440 he hadto run outside around two turns andwas shut out in a blanket finish forNorth Central’s only slam. In the halfmile he took second and might havewon except for a lack of self-con¬fidence.In the pole vault White of NorthCentral cleared 12’6” to beat David¬son and Tingley of Chicago. CaptainBob Cassels, who took third in theConference meet in this event lastyear, is still too busy getting intoshape for basketball to come out, butwill round out Chicago’s rather un¬accustomed strength in the fieldevents when he does.Without a real quarter-miler on hissquad. Coach Merriam was forced todraft two milers, Herschel and Pow¬ell, a sprinter, Davenport, and ahurdler, Wasem, for his mile relayteam. In spite of the fact that onlyPowell, who ran on last year’s speedyquartette, had trained for that dis¬tance, they managed to win in 3:33.5. [Freshman WrestlersTryouts for all freshmen inter¬ested in wrestling will be held thisweek in the basement of Bartlettgymnasium. Those interested maycome down any afternoon and re¬port to Coach Vorres. Few fresh¬men have turned out so far thisseason. Grand StandBy EMMETT DEADMAN* * *The Maroon bucketeers were idlethis week-end but a track meet, awrestling meet, a swimming meet,and a water-polo game gave thesportsminded plenty to do . . . The idlecage-men showed up at the wrestlingmeet with Lounsbury, Richardson,and Remy Meyer being conspicuouslypresent . . . Also there was ex-captain Lew Hamity of the football team(and of course with Betty Friedberg)... It was the first wrestling meet forthis scribe and it was found the bestway to tell who really was gettingthe advantage was by watching theteam-mates of the fellows on the mat. . . Every time it appeared theNorthwestern man had an advantage,the purple squad would immediatelybe on its feet, while if they were quietyou could pretty generally be surethe Chicago man had the better ofit The meet had an ironic de¬nouement when Bob Brown, who loston points in the final match aftera good struggle, was able to get outof the ring unassisted while his sup¬posed conqueror had to be helped outwith smelling salts , . . IncidentallyBrown was pretty much on the spotas his was the last match and North¬western was leading by three points.. . . Either a fall or a decision wouldhave won or tied the meet, but it wasBob’s first match and he wasn’t quiteable to cope with his more exper¬ienced opponent.* « *Saturday afternoon the thincladstook North Central to the cleanersbut didn’t look particularly impres¬sive .... The mile relay team wontheir event but no one who ran didany more than stagger to the finishof his lap . . . The next meet willprobably find the boys in better shape,i however. . . . John Davenport won hisraces handily but his time was slow. . . He has had only a short time toget in shape and will probably chalkup some real races by the time theconference meet rolls around ....Maurice Abrahamson had the least toworry about as he lapped his fieldcompletely in winning the two mile Water Polo TeamWins; Wrestlers,Swimmers LoseChicago’s water polo team is al¬most assured of winning the Big Tenchampionship by defeating North¬western, 9-7, last Saturday in Bart¬lett Gym. Northwestern’s swimmingand wrestling teams also invadedBartlett during the past week-end,the former winning, 50-34, and thelatter, by two close decisions, nosedout Chicago, 21-15. Chicago’s secondstring wrestlers defeated Herzl Jun¬ior College after the Northwesternmeet, 25-13.The water polo team was composed * Ofhardt, Anderson, McLarry, Van deGrazio and Macey. The game wentinto two extra periods, but Chicagofinally came out on top. In the firsthalf, the Maroons led, 4-2, but severalunusual interceptions helped North¬western tie the score when the sec¬ond half ended. 8-8.Chicago’s swimming team put up atough battle all the way. The contestwas decidedly closer than the scoreindicates.event.* * *In spite of the loss of the swim¬ming meet. Maroon tankmen werepretty jubilant over their win overNorthwestern in water-polo . . . Thismeans the Maroons have practicallyclinched the Big Ten championshipin this sport and after having had toshare the glory with the Purple forthe past two years, the boys have aright to celebrate (we hope it’s not jtoo soon) ... Van de Water was!tossed out of the game along with a INorthwestern man for getting a littlerough ... It was only for a few min¬utes but by the time they got into thepool again it looked as if Vandy hadsold him a membership in the ChapelUnion and three subscriptions to TheDaily Maroon. AnnouncingCampusRestaurantSPECIALSCompleteBREAKFAST15cLUNCHEONSBITS FROM BARTLETTRumor has it that the gymnastswould like to give an exhibition at the |Washington Prom to show off their jnew white trunks ... it would prob-1ably be a novel and attractive idea, jbut so far Coach Hoffer has ruled’ No.” . . . Willys Littleford, who quit jvarsity basketball performed on the iwrestling team last Friday and pinned ihis man without too much trouble ... IWillie is now known as “Gentleman |Bill” because of his play on the cagesquad . . . “With “Gentleman Bill” ontheir team, the Alpha Delts may notwin the I-M bucket trophy, but theywill probably murder a lot of peopleI trying. 25cDINNERS35cOPEN EVERY DAY8 A. M TO 9 P. M.1309 E. 57lhThecolor/ul P. HAL SIMS,master bridge authority andplayer says, **lt*s the right 1combination of keen bid- Iding and skillful play of the Ihands that takes the tricks**, IRightCombinationis Chesterfieldw^en ^ouYe biJJinq /or Afore Smoking PleasureBy combining (blending together) the rightkinds of mild, ripe American and aromaticTurkish tobaccos, Chesterfield brings out alltheir fine smoking qualities and gives you acigarette that’s outstanding for mildness...for aroma... for taste.When you try them you will know whyChesterfields give millions of men andwomen more smoking pleasure • • •why THEY SATISFYesterfield...the blend that can’t be copied...the RIGHT COMBINATION of theworld’s best cigarette tobaccosCopyright 1939. Liccett & Myers Tobacco Co.i