Price Three CentsqPbe Battp itUmionVol. 39, No. 71. Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1939AXED GAMING DENS FLOURISH AGAEVLunceford Swings for 35thWashington Prom TonightThe famous music of Jimmie Lunceford and his crack band of swing-makers will set the rhythm of the 35th annual Washington Promenade inBartlett Gym tonight from 10 to 2.Traditionally held on the eve of Washington’s birthday, the Prom isthe oldest of campus social traditions. The first eight Proms were held onthe campus, but thenfor a period of 25 years theevent was taken outside.I.a.st year the Prom Com¬mittee returned once againto the old tradition whereIt has continued to staythis year. The GrandMarch which is always thehigh point of the eveningwill lie led this year by BillWebbe, Emmett Deadman,l ew Hamity, Judith Cun¬ningham, Dorothy Thomp-.son and Kathryn MaClen-nan. These students werechosen for their participa¬tion and leadership incampus affairs.In order to make BartlettCym conform to the re-i|uirements of a ball room,the Prom Committee hasbeen busily engaged in aprocess of ventilating, per¬fuming, and decorating.Last year these measures proved suc¬cessful in making the gym perfectly(wlorless and completely transformeil,in patriotic colors, into a replica ofWashington’s Mt. Vernon home. Thisyear’s decorations will be black andwhite, formal and dignified. Twomiles of paiier streamers have beenus<‘d to cover the ceiling, cloth willdecorate the walls. White tables withblack strips and white candles, awhite coated orchestra, and amber.“•pot lights will complete the effect.Soft drink refreshments will beserved from a bar .stretching com¬pletely across one end of the room.Reports of bid sales indicate thata large crowd reaching 300 couplesi^ exi>ected to attend. Bid prices areJ for holders of Social “C” Booksand $.3.75 for others. Bids will be onsale at the door of the dance. Therewill be 50 tables reserved for the useof fraternities and other groups.Thirty-five faculty members andtheir wives have been invited as pat¬rons and patronesses of the dance.A receiving line will also be forme<lfrom members of this group. hrf >} .f- Present FourForeign FilmsAt Int-HouseCharles Crone Dies;I tiiversity Donor('harles R. Crane, who died in PalmSprings last W’ednesday morning, was'•Me of the group of Chicagoans whogreatly assisted in the developmentof the University.It was through the interest of< rane that the University’s work inthe Slavic field was established.< rane provided the funds whichbrought Dr. Thomas G. Masaryk tothe University in 1901-03. Cranelounded the chair of Russian Lan¬guage and Institutions at the Uni¬versity, now held by Professor Sam-nel N. Harper.With his brother, Richard T.• rane, Mr. Charles Crane provided'SlloO.OOO to establish the Richard T.t rane Distinguished Service Profes-'■orship in Medicine, now held by Dr.Prederic W. Schlutz, chairman of thedepartment of pediatrics.Freshman, FacultyFunch on TuesdaysEvery Tue.sday noon freshmen^hare a table with two faculty mem¬bers in the private dining room ofHutchinson Commons. Students whowish to eat at this freshman-facultytable should sign up on the bulletinboard outside of Cobb library.To date six prominent members ofthe faculty have eaten with membersof the class of ’42. Today Jerome Ker-win and Fay Cooper-Cole will join theJtroup.Meeting of the Business and Cir¬culation Staff., of the Cap andGown at the 0*t?ke, 3:30 TuesdayEebruary 21. Foreign films brought to campus bypopular request will be shown at In¬ternational House today and tomor¬row. Though filmed in Europe allhave English sub-titles.“Sous Les Toits De Paris,’’ a per¬ennial favorite will be shown todayat 2:45, to be followed at 4:30 and8:30 by another French film, “Crimeet Chatiment.’’ In it Harry Baur andPierre Blanchar co-star in a produc¬tion of Dostoyevsky’s psychologicalnovel of crime and the criminal.On Wednesday three revivals willbe shown. At 10:30 “Emil Und DieDetektive,’’ a German picture will bepresented. “Tsar to Lenin,’’ a filmmade by piercing together hundredsof scenes taken by newsreel men andamateur cameramen from 1912 to1922, will be shown at 4:30.“Sous Les Toits De Paris,” ac¬knowledged as one of Rene Clair’sgreatest films, will again be shown at8:30 Wednesday.The price of admission is 25 centsfor matinees and 36 cents for the eve¬ning performances.European Democracy Will WinIts Fight for Life — BenesEuropean Democracy is now en¬gaged in a fight for life. Dr. EduardBenes said yesterday in the first ofhis Walgreen Foundation lectureseries in Mandel Hall. But this fightwill eventually be victorious.“There are difficult times ahead forus, especially in Euroi)e,” he declared.“But there is no reason for despair.Man must never cea.'je to hope forbetter times. In fact the noblest partof human life is not in the realiza¬tion of an ideal but in the fight forit. Democracy will triumph becauseit is an inevitable law of social de¬velopment and history."Gives Historical SurveyBenes then proceeded to give anhistorical survey of democratic de-velojiments in Europe. Beginning inthe 15th century, he reveakvl thefundamental characteristics of feu¬dalism, with its church dominationand nobility rule.The second state came with themonarch who assumed ab.solute con¬trol over the individual and the state.“The French Revolution opened theway for the development of Europeandemocracy," he declared. “It was areaction against feudalism and mon¬archy and took up once again theideas germinated during the Renais¬sance and the Reformation."In the Revolution culminated thestruggle for the individual accordingto Benes. A new society was estab¬lished. It was a triumph of reasonand rationalism. It created bourgeoisdemocracy—the third estate.Out of the nationality, strengthen¬ed during this time emerged thefourth estate, namely one of theworkmen and the small peasants. Asthe democratic movement evolution-ized, the fourth estate became whatwould now be called left-wingers, peo¬ple who thought that by doing awayCUers Barn DanceFor Refugee Aid with capitalism a real democracywould be made possible.The World War is another greatmilestone in the development of Euro-I>ean democracy, according to Benes.From the war there came two reac¬tions in government, one leaning to¬ward communism and the other to¬ward a dictatorship with complete(Continued on page 3)ASU Pledges$300 For AidTo RefugeesWeek two of Refugee Aid startedyesterday with $3715 worth ofpledges in the treasury and prospectsfor reaping in shekels for ten schol¬arships for refuc*ees and aid forSpanish and Chinese war victimsbrighter than they have been sincethe drive was conceived.The ASU at a membership meetingFriday unanimously pledged them¬selves to give $300 toward the suc¬cess of the drive. The pledges hadpreviously been decided upon by theorganization’s executive committee,and its passing by the larger bodywas a formality.Earmark FundThe donation was earmarked, andfor the first time the emphasis of thepledge was not on scholarships alone.The ASUers decided to give $100 oftheir $300 to the Spanish Loyalists,another $100 to Chinese refugees, $50for relief for central European politi¬cal refugees, and the remaining $50for scholarship board and room.Direct from a spread in Life mag¬azine to the Quadrangles to lend ahand to the Refugee Aid and War Re¬lief Committee will come the ChineseCultural Theatre Group, March 7 and8. The Group, which is touring theUnited States at the request of Mad¬ame Chiang Kai-shek, will presentclassical Chinese drama at Interna¬tional House, using the musical in¬struments, dances, costumes, andplays of twenty centuries ago.2000 Years OldThe program will be presented inthe full costume of the conventionaltheatre, and shows the movementshave evolved through 2000University farmers will make theircontributions to the Refugee AidDrive at the Chapel Union BarnDance in Ida Noyes Friday at 8. Witheveryone in costume songs, games,and square dancing will make up theprogram.A 50 cent admission price will cov¬er expenses of putting on the dance I whichand contributions to Refugee Aid. Of j years of practice and tradition,each admission 15 cents w’ill pay for The committee will share the pro-the orchestra, refreshments, and gen- | cecds from the p erformance withand 35 cents will be I The American bureau for Medicaler?l expenses,donated.The Chapel Union Board has de¬cided that 50 per cent of the dona¬tions will go to the two Spanishfunds, 10 per cent to the Germanscholarship funds, and 40 per centto the Far Eastern Student ServiceFund. j Aid to China, and the Church Com-I mittee for China Relief.I The Group has attracted wide at¬tention throughout the country andwill probably prove one of the bigdrawing cards for the $2500 to be de¬voted to Chinese war relief for thedrive. Courtney Raids Fail to Close NearbyBookies, Gyp Joints Milking University Stu¬dents.By LAURA BERGQUISTUntouched by the ax or the law, 12 bookie joints and gam¬bling palaces flourish within the shadow of University ivorytowers.Patronized freely by certain groups of University students,who seem to accept them as philosophically as the local ten centstore, visited occasionally even by a prominent employee of theUniversity who enjoys playing the horses now and then, openlyadvertised in the men’s dormitories where willing students offercheerfully to act as messenger boys in placing bets at certainbookies for their fellows—our local brand of law breaking existsopenly and flagrantly, intimitated by neither the community northe University.PU Liberals andConservativesChooseMembersLuccock, Gauss HeadConservatives; Krone-meyer, Crane Liberals.Meeting in caucus Friday, the Lib¬eral and Conservative coalitions ofthe Political Union elected their quo¬tas of members and its co-chairmanfor the coming year.Henry Luccock and Dan Gauss areheads of the conservative coalitionof conservative Democrats and Re¬publicans. Bob Kronemeyer andCharles Crane will lead the Liberalcoalition of New Deal Democrats andProgressive Republicans. Joe Molkupwas chosen party whip for the Lib¬erals.Liberal GroupMembers of the Lioeral coalitionare: Pearl Rubins, Harry Sholl, Da¬vid Gottlieb, Bill Hankla, EmilyShields, Lawrence Noderer, JakeSwanson, George McElroy, BobKronemeyer, Joe Molkup, Judy For¬rester, Jim Leonard, Harold Wright,Dick Hartwell, Bill Harrah, CharlesCrane, Saul Weismann, Burt Moyer,Willis Shapely, Jim Richards, WilsonSweeney, Bob Sedlak, Herbert Les¬ser, Ned Fritz, Ray Whitcoff, GeorgeSeltzer, Tucker Dean, Susan Eliot,Audrey Eichenbaum, Jack Crane,John Patrick, George Ramspeck andClyde Miller. Four additional mem¬bers will be added in the near fu¬ture to fill the Liberals’ quota of 37.Conservative GroupA partial membership list of theConservative coalition includes: Josh¬ua Jacobs, Ernest Leiser, George Rin-der, Fred Hewitt, Ed McKay, RayCovert, A1 Teague, Douglas Martin,Earl Birdzell, George Sailor, BobCrow, Chuck Pfeiffer, Dick Salzman,Ralph Rosen, Bob Snow and MarianCastleman. The Conservatives willadd nine members to fill their quotaof 25.Paul Gantz LecturesOn Modern PaintingComing to the United States to ar¬range the Swiss Exhibit at the NewYork World’s Fair, Dr. Paul Gantz,President of the International Com¬mission for Art History and Profes¬sor of the History of Art at the Uni¬versity of Basil, Switzerland, will lec¬ture on “Modern Painting in CentralEurope" in Classics 10 tonight at8:15.This lecture, illustrated by slides ofmodern paintings of Central Europe,is given in connection with the cur¬rent exhibit of the Renaissance So¬ciety.EMMERICHLECTURES TODAYThe last in a series of lectures on“Admini.strative Problems of FederalCorporations and Supervisory Agen¬cies” will be given tt^ay by HerbertEmmerich, associate director of thePublic Administration Clearing Houseat 4:30 in Social Science 122.The title of today’s talk is “SpecialAdministrative Problems of FederalCorporations.” Cognizance of local gambling con¬ditions began with the current polit¬ical campaign. Gambling existed, asfamiliar a part of the local land¬scape as the corner lamp post, tillcame the flurry of the ax raidingcampaigns. A few minor places on55th street closed to the tune of theStates Attorney’s swinging ax.Stop RaidsBut Mr. Lindheimer’s Democratic5th Ward bunch agilely leaped fromthe Kelly to the Courtney side of thefence. There have been no raids since.Armed with the addresses of 12definitely investigated bookie jointsand gambling spots and the suspicionof many others, some local citizensbroached the subject of the Blossom¬ing Bookies to the attorney’s officejust six days ago. Thus far there hasbeen no response.Students and citizens continue totrek to the Woodlawn cigar store at1172 W. 55th Street, whose shallowcigar store front doesn’t even makepretense of selling, to the Club Frolicat 951 E. 55th Street which is onlytoo happy at all times to accept con¬tributions to horsedom charity, to949 E. 63rd street, Charley’s SmokeShop at 1352 E. 53rd st., 5404 LakePark, 1406 E. 63rd, 1160 E. 63rd,(second floor) 1222 E. 63rd and 949E. 63rd—all open till six for business.Bettors can even step convenientlyto a 5317 Lake Park Ave. joint for anafter lunch wager.Large ScaleBy far the cream of them all, how¬ever, is the Club Southland at 6245Cottage Grove recently investigatedby a Maroon reporter, where Gam¬bling on the Grand Scale is the key¬note. Just a few doors from one ofthe largest busiest commercial centersoutside of the loop and the glitterof neighborhood theaters and ball¬rooms, exists one of the largest John-son-Skidmore gambling syndicatejoints on the south side. This is nota petty bookie for small Universityfry. This is a 24 hour a day estab¬lishment able to accommodate at least400 people. This is a place wherethey can afford to donate $2 taxifare to bankrupted customers wholeave its doors after depositing sub¬stantial sums inside.Good AdvertisingClub Southland also is the thrivingestablishment rumored to have run aspecial bus from the corner of 63rdand Cottage Grove to a 11901 Vincen¬nes Ave. branch in boom times totake care of the overflow. Southlandpatrons do not flock to its doors bysheer chance, however. Capable ad¬vertisers walk up and down 63rdstreets distributing match folderswith the suggestive figure of a horseracing across the cover and thepotent words “Club Southland" theaddress to likely looking customers.Entrance to the Club is impressivebut not difficult. After greeting byI an affable doorman and a climb of aflight of stairs. Our Gambler Hei’omust walk the length of a receptionhall. At the farther end a steely-eyedgentleman cautiously removes ma-I chine guns or hand grenades fromj prospective customer’s pockets, andshoves him past a barrage of barsand peepholes into the spacious sec¬ond floor gambling hall proper. Di¬rectly above the door through whichthe customer enters sits a gum-chew¬ing machine gunner in a plate glasswindowed booth. Most amazing of allis the camoflauge which hides thegun from the squeamish eyes of ladycustomers. No less than Shirley Tem¬ple’s cheery smile and childish curlsplays front for Brute Force—the gunpoints dii'ectly at the back of Amer-(Continued on page 3)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1939FOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the ofBcial studentnewspaper ef the University of Chicago,published 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 6128.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statemente appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.^e Daily 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, 1908, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.RSrRKS&NlKD FOR NATIONAL ADVIRTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representaiive420 Madison AvE. NewYork, N. Y.CHICA60 ■ aOSTOR ' LOi ARSCI-tS • SAR ERARCISCOBOARD OF CONTROLEditorial StaffLAURA BERGQUIST, ChairmanMAXINE BIESENTHALSEYMOUR MILLERADELE ROSEBasincM StaffEDWIN BERGMANMAX FREEMANEditorial associatesRuth Brody, Harry Cornelius. WilliamGrody, David Martin, Alice Meyer,Robert Sedlak, Charles O’DonnellBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRichard Caple, Richard Glasser, RolandRichman, David Salzberg,Harry ToppingNight Editors: Ernest Leiserand Richard Massell Today on theQuadranglesOpen Freshman Council MeetingCobb 308, 3:30.Freshman Faculty Luncheon, Dr.Fay-Cooper Cole, Hutchinson Com¬mons Private Dining Room, 12.Foreign Films (InternationalHouse) “Sous les Toits de Paris”(English Titles) 2:46 “Crime et Chat-iment (English Titles) 4:30, 8:30.Public Lecture (Department of Po¬litical Science) “Administrative Prob¬lems of Federal Corporations andSupervisory Agencies. Special Ad¬ministrative Problems of FederalCorporations”Mathematical Club “Linear Sys¬tems of Differential Equations” As¬sociate Professor Bartky. Eckart 206,4:30.Organ Recital. Leo Sowerby, Or¬ganist, Chapel, 8:15.Blackfriars Rehearsal Ida NoyesTheater, 3:30 to 5.Comad Club Luncheon, HaskellCommons room, 12 to 1:30.Chicago NeedsA New RaidAxe-raids have the same ef¬fect as a judicious pruning.Swish, go the axe-men, and twobookie joints flourished whereonly one grew before. And thepockets of the boys from Fra¬ternity Row and Burton Courtare lightened in exactly thesame degree that the pockets ofHorace Lindheimer and the restof the Fifth Ward gang arelined.This should be good news toTom Courtney, who assiduouslycultivates the impres^Pn thathe is riding the streets of thecity looking for some vice tooverthrow. It should be surpris¬ing news to Dean Works, whotold reporters yesterday thatthere was only a negligibleamount of vice in the neighbor¬hood. The news is that there areat least twelve gambling jointsin the immediate vicinity, to alarge extent supported by Uni¬versity students. If the investi¬gators had had time to do areally thorough job, it is sus¬pected that the number wouldhave jumped to about 22.It is the University’s businessto see that the gambling spotsare once and for all axed out ofthe University’s neighborhood.Bad publicity for Mr. Courtney,with elections so near,—this in¬timation that his raids are notas seriously intended as he pre¬tends. It should take only a lit¬tle persuasion to make him seethat this is the time to make agood impression on Fith Wardvoters by getting the axe-men'going again. And then the Uni¬versity officials should makesure that the bookies don’tagain take their business roundto the next empty store.This is no question of thejustice of the anti-gamblinglaws. As long as they remain onthe books, it is up to the Uni¬versity, as one of the most in¬fluential property owners in thedistrict, to see that they are en¬forced for this area. After all,the business officials have nothesitated to play a part in neigh¬borhood affairs before. Willing¬ly they endorsed restrictiveagreements against Negroes.Their influence is now needed ina more altruistic cause.Nor would this be any innova¬tion for the Dean of Students’office. The men there have notin the past shunned the ideathat they have the right tooverlook the lives of students.John Stuart Mill would not ap¬prove, but in a case of savingstudents from their own follies,interference is justified.The Maroon asks the supportof the administration in drivingthe gambling joints so far away Letters to theEditorBoard of Control,Daily Maroon:“I was accused both inside and out¬side of International House, by pla¬card and by word of mouth, of thecrime of fascism,” wrote Prof. Ros-elli to Director Price. He promisedto pay one thousand dollars to “any¬one who could prove that I am, orthat I ever was, a member of the Fas¬cist Party.”No accusation that he was a mem¬ber of the Fascist Party was evermade by the group of members ofInternational • House who passivelydemonstrated their opposition to fas¬cism. The objective of this group, asstated in a leaflet distributed by themthroughout International House, wasto point out “the obvious inconsis¬tency between the policy of the fas¬cist government of Italy and the‘Quest for World Peace’.” The spon¬sors of this leaflet and the passivedemonstration both publicly accordedProf. Roselli the right to presentfreely his views.It is not necessary, morevoer, tomaintain membership in the FascistParty to be a fascist, or to present insympathetic terms Italy’s “contribu¬tion to world peace”. How could anyspeaker recommended by the ItalianConsul be considered other than aspokesman for fascism ?Prof. Roselli, in short, has ap¬parently attempted to evade the issueby setting up a straw man. The issuefor the members of InternationalHouse participating in the demon¬stration inside the house before thelecture was never his membership inth Fascist Party, but rather his rep¬resentation of the fascist point ofview.The International HouseStudent Forum.from the University that onearea of the city at least will beobeying the law and keepingtemptation away from weak-willed collegians. ... and therewas lightB * «By SEYMOUR MILLERMr. Leland’s discussion of publicdebts on the Roundtable last Sundaywas worthy of a New Deal propa¬gandist but not of a University pro¬fessor of Economics. It was a goodexample of the type of things thatmake many people regard universityprofessors as rattlebrained theorists.Mr. Leland’s thesis was that eachgeneration pays its own debts anddoes not pass them off onto the nextgeneration, that each generation paysthe costs of fighting its wars or de¬pressions. He proves this by explain¬ing that in the paying of a nationaldebt (that is internally held) thereis merely a transfer of funds fromtaxpayers to bondholders within thecountry but there is no net changein the money or resources of thecountry. Hence, there has been no de¬ferment of the debt.* * ♦Mr. Jacoby timidly pointed outthat there might be certain problemsconnected with this transfer of fundsand then retired. Problems! Thereare the problems of collecting themoney to pay for the debt and it isprecisely this that is meant when aperson refers to the saddling of thenext generation with the debts of thisone.Suppose the government borrows 24billion dollars' to meet the cost of adepression and issues, say, 26 yearbonds. When the time comes to payoff the bonds it must collect an extra24 billion dollars plus interest fromthe taxpayers. Who is it that paysfor the benefits received from thespending? Not the generation of thedepression—they just borrowed themoney. Not the lenders—they or theirheirs got their money back with in¬terest. It’s the generation 25 yearshence who is forced to cough up allthis money and forego buying thingsthat they could have bought other¬wise.* * *Another great Truth that Mr. Ice¬land has discovered is that dams,roads and other public works are notbuilt with future concrete and steel.The implication ie that since we useexisting materials to build works,therefore we pay for them at thepresent time.What actually happens, however, isthat the government borrows thesematerials from people who could havespent them or their equivalent forconsumption goods but who preferredto invest them. When the bonds comedue in 25 years the materials or theirequivalent with interest must be paidback to the lenders by the govern¬ment. The latter could use the ma¬terials for other purposes if it didnot have to pay off the debt. This iswhat critics of New Deal spendingmean when they speak of one gener¬ation paying off the debts incurredby a previous one.Mr. Leland is undoubtedly aware ofall this but gave no indication of suchawareness on the Roundtable. Hisstatements would have done littleharm in a graduate economics class,where the students would have real¬ized that he didn’t mean what heseemed to mean. Hindemith HearsAmerican PremierOf Own Work French PriestInvestigatesYouth ProblemsBy BETTY BASSA gala atmosphere pervaded Man-del Hall last Friday evening at theconcert presented by the Universityof Chicago Symphony Orchestra un¬der the Won of Dr. Siegmund Le-varie. Before the program and dur¬ing intermission, many glances weredirected upward toward the boxes, oc¬cupied by Paul Hindemith, whoseCantata furnished the focal point ofthe occasion, and David Van Vactor,whose Passacaglia and Fugue in I)won him the New York PhilharmonicPrize this year.David Van Vactor’s Passacagliaand Fugue in D, which opened theprogram, proved the composer to bea present day writer strongly in¬fluenced by the fine classic forms ofthe Seventeenth Century rather thanby the so-called modern music of hiscontemporaries. Played with intelli¬gence, the work displayed decisiverhythmic patterns and the fugueprovided an especially accented ef¬fect when the theme was stated bythe roll of the kettle drums.Two more numbers completed thefirst half of the evening’s perform¬ance. They were the seldom heardand rather slow moving SymphonyNo. 5 in B Flat Major by FranzSchubert and Rossini’s Overture to"La Gazza Ladra”. The Americanpremiere of Paul Hindemith’s Can¬tata, owning the rather scholarlysounding title, “Exhortation toYouth to Apply Itself Industriouslyto Music”, was extraordinarily suc¬cessful and truly inspiring. A partof a longer work entitled “PlonerMueiktag”, the cantata was especial¬ly written for a German school. Dis¬tinctive praise is due Dr, Levarie forhis poised direction and fine integra¬tion of orchestra, chorus, and soloists. |Four choruses, with the fourth chorus ■formed by the simultaneous singingof the first three, followed the open- |ing March. |Colorful highlights were the melo- |dious baritone voice of Robert Spiro isinging the intricately .scored Aria Iwith great elasticity of tone, and Ro- iland Bailey’s fine, well-articulated jexpression of the sometimes amusingSixteenth Centrury text of the Melo¬drama. “What interests you most for themoment, sports, movies, studies, girlsetc,? What worries you most at thepresent time?” “What does a girlmean to you: amusement, friend, orhuman being worthy of particularrespect? Has purity before marriageany human value? Do you accept eas¬ily the risk of being tied to one girlwhen you get married, and do youwant to have children?”These are the first of a list often questions that Father Dillard, aCatholic priest active in the youthmovement in France, put to a meetingof the Chapel Union Campus Prob¬lems Committee during his stop atthe campus during the weekend. Thequestions were drawn up by group ofFrench men students of about 20 to21 years of age, and they representthe problems that seem most import¬ant and urgent to them. These stu¬dents want to know if these are theproblems that loom large in theminds of youth in other countries.Father Dillard is traveling throughthe United States talking to youngmen in colleges, YMCA’s, and otherorganizations about these problems.Our Sp^cioltyTh* Very LatestMen's Formal WearTuxedosFull DressAll Accessorieslack's Tuxedo Shop36 W. RANDOLPH DEA. 0489School ForBRIDESMrllll ts Msy 23 Tke KHOOLofDOmOTKflRUand KI6nC(r.l<M-lflr<l tnvala a daux or to. SO rur-rrctly M-rvad. Individual Inatnirticm In»h<«.rut rmdiinc. Clrvar maraardirntof mnnry. timr and arrvanU. MamiwrOuidanrr. Hay or Xvanlnc. Bcoklrt C.350 6ELDEN AVE. LINCOLN 0927MITZIE FLOWER SHOPFor Ritzie CorsagesSEE MITZIEMID. 4020 1239 E. 55th ST.FOR SALEAn Investment — Modern 4 Rm. Co-op Apt. with Extra In-a-door Bed.Unusually Large Closet Space.Live Comiortably,Reasonably, ConvenientlyFine Modern ApL Can Be Purchased At Low Cost — Reasonable Terms.Now Rented At Considerable Over Monthly Assessment.Leas* Can Be Renewed If DesiredReal Bargain for Quick DisposalPhone Dorchester 4220For Vigorous and Progressive LeadershipElectPAUL H. DOUGLASIndependent CandidateALDERMAN FIFTH WARD“Paul DoukIss with his specializedknowledfre and his unspecialized sympathyshould be a most useful servant in theCity Council. While RettinK for the 6thWard what it deserves, he can restore tothe city what it deserves, leadership fromHyde Park.”T. V. SMITH. ^ConRressman at Large from Illinois “Paul H. DouRlas would make an aider-man of whom our ward and city would beproud. He knows well the needs and pos¬sibilities of our neixhborhood and our city.He_ has not only hixh chatacter and Rreatability but he has more than that. Hehas also the stout courage and broadvision which are too often lacking inmunicipal affairs. He would be one ofthe master builders of the greater andbetter Chicago.”CHARLES E. MERRIAM,Distinguished Political Scientist IIOES your pay eovvlope show* you hav<» become more valu¬able to your employer?Here are tome books, available'now for only one doilar per vol¬ume which will help you to helpyourself and improve yourchances of success in life:ROQBT8 THESAURUS 1100CRABB'S SYNONYMBS............ 1100MODERN WORO-PINDER. 8L00|USEFUL QUOTATIONS $1.00OUTLINE OP MAN’S KNOWLEDGE$1.00DICTIONARY OP EVENTS $1.00SPANISH IN 20 LESSONS $1.00HOW TO IMPROVE YOURCONVERSATION..... $100HARTRAMPF’8 VOCABULARIES$1.00(mnd many othtn)U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Ave.inOODUIORTH’S- Store Open All Day Wednesday —ONE CENTSALE!First item regular price — second 1 cent!Typing Paper - Bond Envelopes - White Napkins4x6 Index Cords - Pencils - Photo AlbumsStationery, plain and with U. of C. SealBARGAIN TABLES - BOOKS - le29e - 2 for 30c 69e - 2 for 70c49c — 2 for 50c 98c — 2 for 99cUIOODUIORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. OPEN TO 9 P. M.Gaming DivesMilk Students((’ontinued from page 1)ica’fe 1 Sweetheart’s clever brain.Other than this domestic touch,Club Southland verges rather on thepalatial. It has murals of large,healthy horses galloping across thewalls. It furnishes deep leatherlounges where middle aged womencan relax their bunions. It has 20 em¬ployees on an “off” night to accommo¬date the e.xacting demands of its cus¬tomers.The Club remains open all night,unlike ordinary horse betting hand¬books which confine activities to rac¬ing time in the afternoon. On a slackevening when about 100 persons werepresent, two blackjack games werein progress. Two crap games, aver¬aging 30 persons apiece, in whichhuge rolls of $10 to $60 bills were in¬volved (this is the game in which themanagement reserves the right tochange dice at any time) a chucka-luck game, two poker games, and sixroulette wheels. If you can afford topay S.*) a chip, you can reserve onewhole roulette table for yourself asdid one seedy looking gentleman whodropped $050 at one sitting.In handbooks and full-fledgedgambling establishments alike pa¬trons were average, respectable-look¬ing citizens—the communitys’ voters,university students, supporters of or¬ganized crime. And these will be theindividuals who demand decent citygovernment.Metvsrpel to ShowWashington PromIn TechnicolorSpecial arrangements to shownewsreel scenes of the WashingtonProm at the Friday shows of the Uni¬versity Newsreel have been made.Bill Boehner, business manager ofthe organization, announced yester¬day. The main portion of the news¬reel will be in technicolor, an inno¬vation in campus movies.Besides the newsreel, the programwill consist of the Walt Disney'Car¬toon, “King Neptune”, and the prize¬winning government film, “TheRiver". It is the latter picture whichhas aroused much criticism as beingnew Deal propaganda and sheer non->en.so as far as actual fact goes.However, the film contains someof the most outstanding motion pic¬ture photography ever done in thiscountry, and many believe it to be astirring and honest presentation of avery serious problem facing the citi¬zens of this country today, namelythat of the effect of the practicallyannual devastating floods that takeplace in the Mississippi drainagearea.There will be three continuous'hows held in the afternoon, begin¬ning at 2:30 and two shows in theevening beginning at 7:30. The pic¬tures will be shown at Oriental Insti¬tute and the price of admission will1h‘ 25 cents.llaydoii TalkKimIs (]hapelI iiion Quarter•Albert Eustace Haydon, Chairmanot the department of ComparativeReligion, will address Chapel Unionnext Sunday night at the Gilkey’s inthe last of a series of four talks onKthics. This will be the last ChapelCnion Sunday night meeting of thequarter as the organization usually'tops activities for the last fewweeks before exam time.Similarly The, Chapel Outlookceases production, the last issue in¬cluding an article by Marion Matics,well known student philosopher en¬titled “My Religion”. “The most re¬ligious men today are atheists, ofcourse” writes Matics. Hazel Whit-inan, chairman of the Race Relationsf'oinmittee, is another contributor tothe latest issue.Over a hundred members have not.vet voted as the annual presidentialelection enters its third day. OnThursday noon the nominating com¬mittee lead by President Jack Con-"ay will count the ballots to seewhich of the two candidates. BudBriggs or Evon Vogt, will be the nextpresident.Classified AdsW.\NT TO PASS YOUR EXAMS in Spanish,Erench, and Italian ? Sp. tutoring byformer Uni. of Wis. inatr. Private. 6 hrs.,*•‘>00: classes. 50c hr. Beil’ana Studio, 25E. Jackson. Web. 8762.I.OST—KEYS betweeiS^Oth-rtiKleside and Bill-Hospi»<il. Please return toMaroon office. i the daily maroon. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1939 Page ThreeFinish Taking of CapAnd Gown PicturesH. DuBois, 1939 Cap and Gownphotographer, will finish taking thesenior pictures this week. All seniorsmust come to Room 16, Lexingtonhall, between 10 and 2, Monday, Tues-day, Thursday or Friday and makeappointments for their sittings ifthey want their pictures in the Capand Gown.WAA SponsorsRoller-Skating PartyAs part of its Winter quarter ac¬tivities the WAA is sponsoring a rol¬ler skating party in Ida Noyes gymon Thursday from 4:30 on. Marchesand stunts will be part of the after¬noon’s activities. Eleanor Paul andDorothy Huber are the WAA boardmembers in charge of the affair. Benes—(Continued from page 1)lack of freedom for the individual andan international policy of brute force.It is against both of these the bour¬geois democracy must fight.Benes consciously exceeded the 50minutes allotted to his lecture but inthe future he will stick to his allottedtime.IntensiveShorthandCourseFOR COLLEGE GRADUATESAND UNDERGRADUATESIdeal for taking notes at collegeor for spare-time or full time posi¬tions. Classes start the first ofApril, July, October and January.Call, write or telephone State 1881for complete factsThe Gregg College6 N. MICHIGAN AYE., CHICAGO No CoverorMinimuinChargeExceptSaturdayNight Head¬quartersFor ThatAfter-the-Prom Get-TogetherKNOTS YOU AILHAVE SEEN M'-1 TteOMr-KMkKMt 2 tin Pm-Wm KmI ITbiPiMf-HMiiliKioI 4 TIm SIuwGn Knot 5 TIn Arrow Knot ARROW TIESSEE THIS WEEK’S POSTZHere’s a new kind of heroine—slimyoung Phoebe Titus, who had reddish-chestnut hair and a ready hand with aSharps rifle. Fighting her own waythrough Arizona of the 60’s... a landoverrun by Apache raiders, Mexican ban¬dits, gamblers, murderers, and riffrafffrom the States. Fearing no man in theSouthwest—yet finding there the oneman she could love.Start an exciting new novel in thisweek’s Post. First of eight installments, mA smashing^ action-packedromance of the old SouthwestrizoYiCLhy CLARENCE BUDINGTON KELLANDuiHEfl n BUSHiESsninnOUTTRIKS POllTlCinnS^that’s news! howdoyott^"hypothetical bullet ?O Suppos* you werean antiaircraft gunner.And were ordered tobeat off a sham attackwith “hypotheticalbullets, and no search¬lights ! What would youdo? That’s the puzzlerLuke Morgan’s regi¬mentfaced. You’ll find► their solution inHome the BeaconchamberlainMan Who Talked BackALVA JOHNSTON Luke Bringst, WILLIAMEnjoy t'Post tonigISTHEU.S. PREVENTING(or Provoking)A NEW WORLD WAR?^ What one country worriesEurope most today ? Germany?Italy ? Russia ? Japan ? No, theanswer is the United States. Abrilliant foreign correspondentreaches this conclusion aftergathering evidence from behindthe European scene, wherestatesmen fear that Uncle Sammay upset the bomb racks. SecUncle Sam Scares Europe,by Demaree Bess.They toy withDEATHUNDER THE RIVER^ “Sand hogs”have their choiceof three quick, easy ways to die.They can be drowned, trappedby fire, killed by compressedair. No wonder they call rivertunneling a man’s job—a craxyman’s! Here’s the story of theyoung mechanic who licked ajob no old-timer would touch.You Can’t Stop a Guy LikeThat, says Borden Chase.THE SPYthey wouldn *t believe^ It was March, 1936 ... andHitler was moving into theRhineland. Would he backdownif France mobilized? Only oneFrenchman knew—and theArmy wouldn’t believe him!A dramatic story of espionage:Crisis by William C. White.gtsoBAGPIPE MUSIC in a swamp?It gave Dr. MisCally the shockof his life. Here’s the strangestory the Doc learned one nightfrom The Pipe Major ot LittleSorrowful. A short story byGlenn Allan.“IMACINE THAT HIRED GIIH.making eyes at our son 1 ” saidMrs. Timble. “Why, I thinkthat just shows taste, naturalgood taste,” said her husband.Dorothy Thomas tackles a farmproUem that might stump eventhe AAA. See Thank You,Rosie. ...THE SJiTURpHY EVENING POST-.^J5-»^- vi;'"'';f^w5‘^’P<i>;’if^--5-.^;«i.' v'" .'■■Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1939Maroon Cagemen Crush Michigan Splashers Meet^ c^ 1 ^ r wr* Gophers Tomorrow"In Second CtOnicrcnce W in BartlettClinch Victory in I^stMinutes 34-29; StampfStars.Just a little more accuracy underthe basket was enough to turn thetrick for the Maroons Saturday nightagainst Michigan when they wontheir second conference basketballgame in the Fieldhouse. They over¬came a six-point lead which the Wol¬verines had acquired early in the sec¬ond half, and came from behind towin 34-29 with three quick scores inthe closing minutes.Both Dick Lounsbury and JoeStampf counted four times from thefloor, and Stampf sank four of hiseight opportunities from the foulline, while Lounsbury dropped two inthree. Sophomore Tom Harmon wasMichigan’s individual star; he rangup eight points in the first few min¬utes of play, but the Chicago defenseheld him down to a mere two bas¬kets in the remainder of the game.Michigan jumped to an early 9-6lead right at the outset of the game,but Chicago gradually caught up andled by a two-point margin at halftime. Michigan came back strong inthe second period, and forged ahead24-18, but the Maroons again camefrom behind to knot the count on abucket and free throw by Lounsburywith eight minutes to go. From thereon it was nip and tuck; with a min¬ute to go Chicago had a one-pointlead, thanks to a two-pointer byLounsbury. Stampf put the game onice with a long shot and then madethe final score on a solo dash downthe floor, when the whole Michiganteam was frantically trying to getback in the game.Bill Murphy was effectively bottledup by the expert guarding of theWolverine prodigy Harmon, but twinChet managed to bring the specta¬tors to their feet on numerous occa¬sions with his spectacular play.Although there is very little leftof the basketball season, Chicagoseems to have hit its stride, and ifthey continue to click, they should beable to take at least one more game. Davidson TakesOnly MaroonHonor in RelayTaking only one medal but havingfinished barely out of the money inthree other events, the Chicago trackteam returned from the Illinois Re¬lays last Saturday feeling somewhatdisappointed but not downhearted.Star of the evening for Chicagowas Davidson, who took second in thepole vault by clearing 13' 4”, the bestmark a Chicago man has ever madein competition. John Davenport andBob Wasem were adjudged to haveplaced fifth in the dash and highhurdles respectively, though both fin¬ishes were so close the judges musthave been using surveyor’s telescopesto make a decision. Davenport seemsto have mislaid the finishing kick thatpulled him up to victory so manytimes last year.In the two-mile relay the Chicagoteam ran 8:10, not bad time consider¬ing that only one of the runners hadcompeted in the half-mile this year,and were barely beaten out of fourthplace by Notre Dame. Chet Powellmanaged to recover in time to placesixth in the 1000, but Merriam andAbrahamson were too tired from therelay to make a race of it. Jimmy Raycleared 6’*/s” in the high jump, thefirst time this year that a Chicagoanhas bettered 6’, but failed to place.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, tntomsive, sUnographtc course—starting January 1, A^l 1, July 1, October I,Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEFAUL MOSER. J.D« PH.R.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Av*.,Chicago, Randolph 4347 The swimming and water poloteams will take on Minnesota tomor¬row’ evening at 7:30 in Bartlett ip theonly athletic event of the day. Themeet was changed to the evening togive the swimmers and spectatorsample time to get over the hangoversof the prom, if they have any.From present indications Chicagois going to have a tough time to winboth the swimming and w’ater polomeets, especially since the Gophersnow boast of a highly improved w'at-er polo team. Chicago defeated Pur¬due at Lafayette last Saturday, 46-38, by winning seven out of nineevents.Those who will likely see action to¬morrow are: Ralph McCollum, BobSorenson, Joe Stearns, John Argali,Hank Wells, Captain John Van deWater, Jim Anderson, Jerry Mark¬off, John Speck, Captain Phil Schner-ing, Jack Bernhardt, Bob Stein, BillSpeck, Lewis French, Chuck Brow’n,B. Boi’bjerg and R. Teague.Wrestlers Win, LoseChicago’s w’restlers had an up andMayer Edweni J. Kelly down week end, by nosing out Pur¬due last Friday at Lafayette, 16-14,and losing to Northw’estern last Sat¬urday at Evanston, 19-11.IjFree - Decca Records iFriday NightGET TICKETS AT INFORMATION DESK iOR MAROON OFnCE CampusRestaurantAnnouncingTHE CAMPUS ISOPEN FORBREAKFAST—Complete -Breakfast15cDINING RCX5M AVAILABLEFOR PARTIES.OPEN EVERY DAY8 A. M. TO 9 P. M.1309 E. 57thFOR THEGOOD OF CHICAGORe-EleciMAYOR KELLY5th WardRegular Democratic OrganizationDAVID EICHNER — WARD COMMITTEEMAN1503 E, 55th ST. DORCHESTER 4711that Satisfies with a Capital SRadio City’s world-famous “Rockettes”«w</CHESTERFIELDS...two canH-be-copied combinationsThere’s skill and precision inthe way the Rockettes dance andthere’s skill and precision in the waythe mild ripe Chesterfield tobaccosare blended and proportioned tobring out the best in each.That’s why Chesterfields are milderand taste better. . . that’s why they’llgive you more pleasure than any ciga¬rette you ever smoked.Copyright 1939, LicciTT & Myers TOBACCO Co. a HAPPY COMBINATION of theworld’s best cigarette tobaccosimpus Dude Ponders aProblem *Steffens, recently elected best-d man on the University of Penn-campus, sits dejectedly with thet that won him the "honor’ , fororried how he II ever be able tolown" the distinction. * Thcy*rc Fighting Against Social Security TaxesThese four student employees of Delta Upsilon fraternity at Amherst Collese are amons the manyworkers on campuses throughout the U. S. who are campaisning to be exempted from payment of oldage and unemployment tax assessments. Congress will be asked to pass a special bill exempting student•moIawam Collesiate Digest Photo by Corey**Quaan to End All Qiiacns*'That's the title given to Jack Brennan, University ofMichigan football star who was elected "aueen" ofthe annual Wolverine ice carnival. He is shown sur*rounded by his special "court of honor" made up offour cheer~leaderS. Colleglate Dlgest Photo by LakatosDarns to EndPlay DeficitAnd members of the new'Hunter College "PersonalService" bureau will alsobreak in your new shoes,give you a manicure or rentyou an umbrella on a rainyday. Members of the Var*sity Show group are doingthese things for a fee toraise money to wipe outthe deficit on their last pro¬duction. Wide WorldClett CiH lor Divinf StarJack Lawler, Cetc School of Applied Science diving «cc,missed the ceiling in performing « spectaculer stunt during « reduel divinf meet CoIIcimc ottcst Pkote by cDoat 61 Math Operations at OnceWeighing e ton end looking almost like a creationfrom Mars, this multiharmonograph invented byDr. S.^LeR. Brown, University of Texas, is the onlyinstrument in the world that can solve equationsup to the fifteenth degree. Store Experience for DruggistsPractice in making sales of sundries andsupplies and in filling prescriptions isgiven Temple University pharma^ stu¬dents in the model drug store operatedby the school.A Pit of Horreplay to Entertain Initiation SpfctatoriTo add a touch of novelty to fraternity initiation activities at Vanderbilt University, Martha Wade,l^ppa Alpha Thet« sophomprC/ collfred f dot of Pi Kappa Alpha pledges and paraded themabout the campus. ' "• I,IXJE TODAYSEJJ; "ST^intnrW pmh tick[!InstaUmani Buytns Invaded CeNatclandin a new way when Ohio University students purchased theirjunior prom ticicete with many small payments spread over severalweeks. Our correspondent forgot to tell us why co-eds boughttic k eb^ They're Reflectins on TheSr PopulerityThe o^ueen and her four attendants for the Southwestern Louisiana Institute mid-winter fair pose for a"double exposure" beside the campus pool. Rita Motty (center) will be Queen of Camellias for thepageant. With her are Laura Sevier, Doris Bickham, Audry Lions and Valerie Wartelle.^ WHATS YOUR WAY OF ‘AVDIWNG NERVE STRAIN ?A FREQUENTPAUSE TDLET UR.UGHTUPACMMEL' I SMOKERS FIND-CAMEL’S COSTLIER TOBACCOSARE SOOTHING TOTHE NERVESHit Name it I. Q.. . . and ha's ika talk of th«Svracuta University campus.Tnc dog being held by Bax*ter Ckamberiain seems to pre¬fer SPCA life to the Acaciaboys at Syracuse. The Greekletter men took him from thesociety's animal shelter, butthe next day I. Q. turned adoor knob himself and walkedthree mil^s throueh the cityback to the shelter. Takenback to the fraternity again.1. Q. pulled the trick a secondI time.CollcgiMc Digest Photo by Hillcg*Hamilton Collaga't Second Alumna... is Actress Helen Hayes, shown here withRaconteur Alexander Woollcott after she re¬ceived her Doctor of Humane Letters degree. . . and proviipledges to dolonorary miiitPersonality of the real fouthern variety is found in these 13 members of St. Petersburg Junior CoMege*s novelPhoto by Mok«sIf Initiatci Drtssad Up Like Indiansways than one^jand’s Geotsei|y ,of Pennsyl*r’s towed himunusual actionIcrt cameraman.themtcivcs and campus onlookers when Scabbard afid Blade ordered itsformal initiation into the Alabama Polytechnic Institute chapter of theshnnte Dee Stansberry was the subject one of dieir many pranks. Ingenious Collegians InventNovel Get - UppersGetting up in the morning seerps to be the mostdifficult task of the day to inventive mindedcollegians, and many of them have sat up lateinto the night to devise ways and means ofmaking the job more pleasant More like theinventions of modern Rube Goldbergs than thework of serious-minded college students are thenight marish devices they have perfected, asyou will see from the pictures in this exclusiveCollegiate Digest picture-storyALARM WtNOINO STEM ON CLOCK A.TURNSWHEN ALARM RINGS WINDING STRING PULLINGWEIGHT B OFF SMALL SHELF C UNDER TABLE,CORDS ATTACHED TO WEIGHT B TURN ON *<3AS IN STOVE I> AND PULLS STICK E ;OUT OF WINDOW ALLOWING WINDOWTO CLOSE - FALLING WINDOWSUPPORT E-PULLS string Eattached to light SWITCHLIGHTING LIGHT Ca ANDTURNING ON RADIO ffAT SAME TIME. .This super-gadget is making 7 a. m. a much more pleasurable hour for William Edwards(above) and Howard Unruc, Ohio State univ?ersity students AcmeAlden Thompson and Mac McMerril! of Bali State Teachers have their alarms set so theywill turn the radio on and off, close the window before they hop out of bed. hof. t, v rHal Olmsted, University of Iowa freshman, has added a tin cup to his dock so it willmakeenoughnoisetowakehimupwhenheissleepingsoundly ■'.> . cv'.R«fittanc€ Meter Sett Dance Ticket FeeWhen Worcctttr Polytechnic Inititute ensineers set out to pl«n sthins novel for their ennuel dence they hit on this novel retisUnce trGuests peid on the besis of the resistance recorded by the sedset.Future Star ol the Track WorldYou'll be seeins Leslie MecMitchell's picture in ellof the mile recins pictures soon, for this New YorkUnivenity sophomore is hsiled by speed experts «sone of the most promising of the younger runners.Cat Hat Place on UnKrertity Faculty *'And Now iuft Look at This • •This nameless mouser is paid $16 a year by the University of Vermont to keep its greenhousesfree of destructive rodents — and he does the job so well that one of the national netwr^s recentlysent out an appeal for a name for him. Instructor Robert M. Skelton, industrial design expert at Woman'slege. University of North Carolina, gives student Margaretta AuicoufMe .of pointers on the design she is making for a modern service tlNewest Camera Devices ^Stop^ BulletExposures up to one one-millionth of a second are made possible with the new device developed by Dr. F.Godwin (left) and Dr. A. O. Walker of Armour Institute of Technology. The ultra-speedy exposures arc mpossible by illumination created by the discharge of 38,000 volts of electricity into a partial vacuum tube. Tremarkable photos of a bullet in night are shown below. At Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ScierF. E. Barstow and H. E. Edgerton have discovered by the use of 'equally speedy photographic devices that y>glass breaks the cracks move at the speed of approximately a mile a second. Their photo at the right on the ipage,, taken at one one-millionth of a second exposure, shows for the first time the perfect circle pattern cre<when a plunger strikes tempered glass.Judicial Solemnity... ii accurately depicted in this newKrrtrait of Chief Justice Charles Evai»ujhes beine completed by SimonElwes, Enelisn painter. The finishedportrait will hang at Cornell University.Intcro4tjon4lRural Costumes... like that shown at the right were re¬quired attire for one week for Missis¬sippi State College students initiatedinto Alpha Zeta, honorary agriculturefraternity.TMOREOUT OF thisjnt burn Sihot ANDTONSUE! J1^)GETAL0, pleasurePIPE iF rr Ditfast andr BITE /vvyNew Yank at Oxfordon "Whizter" White, great All-American star of University oflorado who postponed his journey to Eneland on a RhemesoUnhip so he could play pro football, is shown as he donnedtraditional cap and gown upon his arrival at Hertford CollegeOxford Univeiidty late last month. Inienieitoiiel ^VELL.GeTSET^ for so/we REALc^iNG joy,f fcu-RE ABOUL/^^oTRy/wyjr prince ALBE^Every time you say “PRINCE ALBERT” at the tobaccocounter you get around 50 pipefuls of the coolest, mel¬lowest smoking a fellow could ask for. P. A.’s “no-bite”process removes harshness, but leaves in the GOOD, RICHTASTE of P.A.’s CHOICE TOBACCOS. The “crimp cut”PACKS RIGHT, DRAWS EASIER. There’s no other to¬bacco like Prince Albert. Get the big red P. A. tin today.IM*. B. J. SotmM* Tabaeo* CininayI SAY^RA.SMOKES COOLAND TASTYEVERY PUFF/\TRY IT, MEN!SMOKE 20 FRAORANT PIPEFULS of Prise* Alb*rt. If yttadon’t find it the in*Uow**t, tnaticst pip* tobacco ran ***r•mekod, return the pocket tin with the reet el the tobaccoin it to ua at any time within a month from this date, and w*will refund full purckaa* price, plu* poetag*. (SigmmJ) R. J.ReynoldaTobacco Company,Wineton-Salem, North Carolinaand Breaking Glassiitt j^miHHigher Education Takes to the AirAnnual flyins mt*ts arc st«3«d by the National Intcrcollasiatc Flyins Club or^anizad in 1935.Tht national orsanization is made up of the 20 flyins clubs (the first was orsanized at Harvard morethan 10 years ago) which have a total membership of more than 400 members who last year spentmore than 10,000 hours in the air. The flyins meets test competitors in bomb droppins, maneuver-ins cross country flyins, *nd lay particular stress on safety (no member of any flyins club hashad a cracic-up or been killed). Fifty per cent of the flyins club members obtain piloCs licenses atthe close of their trainins period. CoiicsMtc Oigcu phou> by Kku** In addition to the work of the flyins clubs, collesiate air activfostered also by^Alpha Eta Rho, professional aviation (founded at the University of Southern California in 1929chapters are at U. C. L. A. and Northwestern, and additionswill soon be installed at San Dieso State, San Jose State arBarbara State. The s^oup above is plannins details of an air m(With the armaments race amona the nations of the world preat an ever quickenins pece, U. o. colleses and universities th>joined in the movement to create a great reser corps of trepilots and aeronautic technicians. OAided by a special yant of $100,000 from the^Nation<>Administration, the program announced by President Roosevides for a trial training period at a group of selected instituteluding Purdue. Ala^ma, Minnesota, Washington, Mass-Institute of Technology, Tezas A^M, Ge^ia Tech andEach of the 300 students enrolled under the trial program wil50 hours of dual and solo instruction, qualifying them forpilot's license. Enrollment is limited to those between the a^and 25, and is open to women as the promam is co>educatic^If this program is successful, future plans call for the tr.20,000 students in the next five years. The President's budge (|asked for an annual appropriation of $9,800,000 to carry oi.*|gram.Already active in aeronautical training work, many coir:universities have flying clubs and aeronautics courses. Cpiflll here presents a pkture-story of higher education inIi, s■ f. ■ ■r-.■f,:: I,:• r ■J ■■ • ■V.■ iI;?'.'i ■■ Purdue aeronautical students iearn all about wingconstruction by constructing one. Many learn about planes by constructing modelsas these Santa Barbara State students are doing. These Alabama Polytechnic Institute studentsconditioning a motor and its ship.Santa Barbara studenb coisstruct a plane radio. Finished unit at right Purdue s 224-acre airport is one of largest owned by a col