Irji Mp illairoonVol. 33. No. 60. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1933 Price Three Cent*Malaria inAnimalsand ManNote: Thi* is the second of aseries of articles dealing withthe University’s part in man’sfight against disease. Today’sarticle concerns work done inthe field of Parasitology. MAROON GATHERSINFORMATION ONFRATERNITY FEESWill Compile AccurateStatistics to AidFreshmen Daily Maroon InvestigatesStatus of Voluntary GymEducation ofto Plan'sIs NeededStudentsSpiritBy NOEL B. GERSONMalaria is the deadliest and mostwide-spread of all diseases that areenemies of man. The work done inthe department of Parasitology atthe University under the directionof Assistant professor Clay G. Huffchiefly concerns research centeringaround immunity from the malariagerm.The interests of Dr. Huff, w’ho isworking on immunity in inverte¬brates, and of William H. Taliafer¬ro, professor of Parasitology, who isworking on immunity in the verte¬brate host to animal parasites, are be¬ing advanced largely through thestudy of malaria in animals.“Two laboratory animals haveproven useful,” Dr. Huff said in arecent interview, “canaries and mon¬keys. Work on canaries is carried onalmost continuously in the labora¬tories, while studies of malaria inmonkeys have been made throughtrips to the tropics.”Birds, Monkeys HaveMalaria Like HumansAnimals have-been used in theseexperiments almost exclusively, be¬cause intensive immunological andpathological studies in human ma¬laria are impos.sible. The only ma¬terials that have been obtained frommen are of a post mortem nature,and hence lose much of their value.These studies have already been jmade on canaries by Dr. Taliaferro !and by Paul R. Cannon, professor ofPathology. i“More extensive studies are nowbeing made upon the malaria ofmonkeys and the effects on thehost,” declared Dr. Huff. “The truesignificance of our experiments maybe fully realized when we considerthat the findings on birds and mon¬keys have, almost without exception. The Daily Maroon, in an effort toprovide freshmen with materialwhich has never before been accur¬ately collected, and to end maliciouspropaganda as to the financial con¬dition of campus fraternities, beganFriday the correlation of material onthe financial situation of each fra¬ternity. jPostal return cards have been sent |by The Daily Maroon to the presi- |dents of each of the University’stwenty-six social fraternities. If any ifraternity refuses to answer the ^questionnaire, that fact will be pub¬lished in The Daily Maroon.Answer Five Questions jEach fraternity, in replying to Ithe questions, will state the amount jof the initiation fee, quarterly dues, isocial tax, average house bill for Iroom and board for men living inf *the house, and monthly rent on thefraternity house. It is hoped that in janswering the questionnaire, fra- 'ternities will give figures which are 'I absolutely accurate, for otherwise ;; the spirit of the plan—mutual bene- |i fit for all the fraternities—will be !I lost. The entry for initiation fees Ij must include any amount charged,I for badges or subscription to frater-'' nal publications, although such may jI be specified. The social tax _eptry;f should be the amount paid by mem-I bers each quarter on the average for! social expenditures. The iteiu. cou- |I cerning rent of the chapter housei! calls for the figure paid each month jby the active chapter to any alumni j; association or housing agency which ![ owns or holds the mortgage on thehouse. IIn order to insure that the results Iobtained are accurate, they will bechecked with all University record.s, jand the complete tabulated figure.s iwill be submitted for approval,'to 'the president of each fraternity- By HOWARD M. RICHThe scheme of voluntary gymna¬sium classes instrtuted in October asa further administrative extensionof the spirit of the new plan hasnow been in operation for an entirequarter. As one of the primary agita¬tors for this plan of voluntary gym,The Daily Maroon has watched itsoperation during these initial monthswith great interest. Its staff has nowgathered a comprehensive set of sta¬tistics indicating the present statusof the plan in both the men’s andwomen’s divisions of the PhysicalEducation department.These statistics indicate a radicaldrop in student participation inathletic activities, and reveal an ex¬treme degree of apathy upon thepart of the student body toward gymwork at the present time.Desirable in TheoryThe Daily Maroon is positive in itsconviction that voluntary gym' is tothe best intere.sts of the total stu¬dent body, and it is positive in itsconviction that in theory the plan isfeasible and desirable. The statisticsreproduced on page 3 of this issuedo not represent a fair or completetrial of voluntary gym. They do in¬dicate that new students have notbeen educated to the values and op¬portunities offered by the depart¬ment of Physical Education. Theyalso indicate that a program of pro¬motion and education is needed tocultivate an interest among Fresh¬man students in this department and [ its various teams and Intramural ac-I tivities, if the voluntary plan is toachieve the success it can be expect-' ed to attain.It is the purpose of The Daily Ma¬roon during the next few days toanalyze the present situation, and,through the medium of articles byits own staff members and by mem¬bers of the administration, attemptto portray for the new student some¬thing of the spirit and opportunitiesof the optional gymnasium plan. Themen’s division will be considered inthe first group of articles this week.Coache* SpeakIn a series of interviews withmembers of the Bartlett gymnasiumstaff, the following picture of the sit¬uation was secured by The Daily Ma¬roon to supplement the statisticsprinted in this issue. It should beborne in mind that the program of¬fered by the athletic department wasexactly the same during the twoquarter.s under comparison.Dan Hoffer, gymnastics coach, hasbeen affected more seriously by adrop in attendance than any otherMaroon coach,pionship gymmade” teams; that is, they are com¬prised of men recruited from gymcla.sse.s who had never planned to“go out” for the team. Hoffer’s us¬ually popular 11:15 gym class | j. ^dropped from 40 to 0, and his form- itjU'fKi tO ±TCSCflterly overcrowded 12:15 class dropped jfrom 70 to 4 during the fall quarter. I QNed Merriam, track coach, has felt | Ithe depression to the extent of 75%.No longer do men seek his tutelagefor exercise or work-outs; onlytho.se out for the team employ his(Continued on page 3) Gertrude Dunn HicksLeaves Estate toChildren’s HospitalThe late Gertrude Dunn Hicks,University donor and philanthropist,whose death occurred in Chicago onJanuary 16, has left the bulk of herestate amounting to over $100,000 tothe University. Her will was filed yes¬terday In the Probate court by Ten¬ney, Harding, Sherman, and Rogers,attorneys for the executors.After making two personal be¬quests, Mrs. Hicks left the residue ofher estate to the University with theprovision that the principal shall beheld and the interest accumulatedfor a period of ten years, and the in¬come thereafter used in support ofthe operation and maintenance ofthe Gertrude Dunn Hicks Memorialhospital for crippled children.Mrs. Hicks was the widow ofOliver Hewlick Hicks, former chair¬man of the Sefton Manufacturingcorporation. She made several giftsto the University during her lifetime,including one of $300,000 to estab¬lish the Gertrude Dunn Hicks Me¬morial hospital, a division of the Or¬thopedic hospital. Terms of the grantHis usually cham- | provided that preference in admit-teams are “home- | patients should be given to poorchildren.Mrs. Hicks first turned her atten-(Continued on page 2) RADIO STARS TOFEATURE SENIORDENEFIT SHOWClyde McCoy and HalKemp Head Bill ofCelebritiesin Mandel HallSETTIEMENT BOAROSPONSORS SALE OFOPEREnA TICKETS TICKETS FOR 29TH‘WASHINGTON PROMON SALE TOMORROWbeen applicable to human malaria.Inhabitants of cool, temperate re-i T iyytifgions are unable to appreciate the I//*'fact that malaria kills more peopleannually than any other disease inthe world. Its effects are felt to thefulle.st extent in thickly populatedtropical regions, where the deathrate is tremendous. Since RonaldRoss and Battista Grassi proved in1899 that mosquitos are the carriersof malaria, important steps S v.i/ i ■Pledges AllowedEach Fraternity.Another change in the rushinglules, looking to a limitation on thehave I number of pledges a fraternity maybeen continually made in the checkand control of the disease.Mosquitos are always involved inthe natural transmi.ssion of malaria.Dr. Huff knows of no case wherethey are not a link in the carryingof the germ. He has helped to es¬tablish a fact that has so far remain¬ed concealed from the general public,namely, that malarial organi.sms are“as truly parasites of mosquitos asthey are of man, monkeys, or can¬aries.”Anopheles and CulexCarry Malaria“The Anopheles type of mosquitotransmits human and monkey ma¬laria, while the Culex type transmitsavian malaria. The transmissioncycles are exactly comparable in thetwo types of insect. 'The continuedbreeding of the Culex type is possiblethroughout the year, while it is notpossible to breed the Anopheles con¬tinuously. This, of course, has animportant effect upon the transmis¬sion of the disea.se to men.”The transmission cycle of malariais as simple as it is deadly. The mos¬quito, in drawing the blood neces¬sary for his existence from man, oc¬casionally comes into contact withan infected individual. The insectmultiplies its breed, and the count¬less number of young mosquitos, allof whom are carrying the malariagerm, set out to make their way inthe world. Through contact withman they transmit the disease tohim and the cycle begins all overkgain.•’ Dr. Huff, in his work in Rickettslaboratory, has found that suscepti¬bility to malaria is inherited accord¬ing to the Mendelian pattern, andhas found it possible to change atwill the degree of susceptibility of.j^aces of mosquitos. “In addition to.;.r, . COaiilimiW.on pf apply for, will be taken up at the |Interfraternity Council meeting to- {moriow night. Ros.s Whitney, pi’esi- |dent oi the Council, .stated yester- jday that .>ieveral fiatei nitie.s have ;asked to have the rules changed.. ^As the matter stands, a fraterhitTy iis allowed to turn in a list contain- |ing the names of double the number jof men it wishes to pledge. The num- Iber of men desired may be indicated,and the Dean’s office, when it per- !forms its function of selective pledg¬ing* will take that figure into con¬sideration.The alternatives suggested are:(1) a limit ba.sed on the largestnumber of pledges that any singlefraternity might desire. Thus thelimit might be set at twenty ortwenty-five and padded lists wouldbe avoided. • : , ,(2) Another suggestion Wouldmake the limit proportional to thenumber of actives in the chapter atthe present time. -v » ■Or, (3), the limit could be madeproportional to the large.st numberof actives the chapter ever possessed. The Student Settlement board willsponsor the .sale of a large block of jseats for the February 10 evening jperformaiLce of the operetta “The ,Desert Song,” which begins its run |next week at the Civic Opei'a, the jfourth week of popular performances !under the direction of the Chicago |Operetta? company. [Tickets will go on .''ale today at !.the Cobb hall box office for the seats,which are located in the dress circleftnd fir.st balcony. Proceeds will beturned over for the use of the Uni¬versity Settlement back of the yards.“The Desert Song,” written bySigmund Romberg, had a run of 36weeks in the city several years ago.The lead tenor has not yet been se¬lected by the company, which is seek¬ing a well known singer for thepart. Charlotte Lansing will take theleading feminine role, and will besupported by Lorna Jackson, GreekEvans, and an all-star cast.Cooperating with the Board in thesale of tickets, which are priced at $1,are the Alumnae Settlement league,the Faculty Settlement board, theWomen’s Employees organization,the Freshman council, and otherbodies. Blocks of seats within thereserved section will ,be set aside forfraternities, clubs, and other groups.Two Students Heldas Communists RiotOutside ConsulateANTI-VIVSECTION CASEGRANTED CONTINUANCEThe Illinois Anti-Vivisection so¬ciety has been granted a ten daycontinuance in its case against th?city by Judge Hugo M. Friend dfthe Circuit court. The group will pre¬sent new material before JudgeFriend next Monday.Hobert E. Ward, attorney^ tSeanti-vivisectionists, .will off^r a def¬inite sum of money to the city forthe carcasses of unclaimed dogs. Thegroup hopes to stop the practice ofgiving the dogs to experimental andeducational institutions such as theUniversity. > Aaron Gilmartin and Don Thomp-j son, students in Meadville Theologi-i cal seminary, were among the twohundred suspects placed under ar-j rest* in the (Communist riot in frontI of the Tribune tower Saturday after-1 noon. The riot assumed military pro-i portions when members of the policeforce sought to stop the rioters withtear gas, rubber hose and nightsticks.' The demonstration was held as aprotest against the attitude of Japanin its present war against the Chin¬ese. The riot toojc place in front ofthe offices of the Japanese consul¬ate in the Tribune tower. A ma¬jority of the participants in the dem-ionstration were released, only eightyof them being held for further ques¬tioning. The two University stu*dents were among those given theirliberty.” Washington Prom bids go on saletomorrow, at their lowest price inthe twenty-nine year old history ofthe winter season’s most glamorousaffair, according to Robert Balsley,in charge of ticket sales for the Stu¬dent Social committee.Four dollars and a half this yearon February 21 will cover dancingin the Gold Room of the Congressfrom 10 to 2 to the music of HalKemp and his international favoritesand a midnight supper served in thePompeian Room.Men to handle ticket sales in eachof' the fraternities as well as thosewho wdll take charge of dormitorysales were named by Balsley yester¬day. He empha.--ized the fact thateveryone on campus is invited to sellbids, and a free ticket will be giv¬en to each person who sells ten.The men in charge of sales intheir fraternities are as follows:Harding, .41pha Delta Phi; Garen,Alpha Sigma Phi; McGuigan, AlphaTau Omega; Evans, Beta Theta Pi;Porter, Chi P.si; Pelton, Delta Kap¬pa Epsilon; Greenleaf, Delta TauDelta; Fendig, I>elta Upsilon; Odell,Kappa Nu; (loodnow. Kappa Sigma;Erickson, Lambda Chi; Feldman, PhiBeta Delta; White, Phi Delta Theta;(Continued on page 2) j The University Band, directed byI Howard W, Mort, will give its wdnter; campus concert at Mandel hall Tues-! day, February 7. This marks its firstj appearance this year as a concertI band in w’hich it provides the entireI program.i The band, which is composed of! sixty men, plays for numerous cam-I pus activities during the year, includ-! ing all major athletic events.I The program next Tuesday willi include concert numbers, solo num-j bers, and novelty and encore num-I bers. Three of the better known con-I cert numbers will be “Selectionsj from Gounod’s Faust,” “Sleeping! Beauty Waltz” by Tschaikowsky; and"Phedre Overture” by Massenet,i Solo numbers will consist of thej sousophone by Kenneth Moody, allcity conte.st winner; saxophone byAllen J. Sahler, winner of state andnational honors; and piano by Mar¬vin Jacobs, who will play “Tann-hauser” by Wagner-Liszt.Novelty and encore numbers willfeature chalk talks set to music,popular numbers with singingchoruses, and burlesque novelties. Anew band arrangement of Big Tensongs will be played for the firsttime at this concert. This numberwas arranged by William CaiTol, whoplays clarinet in the band.Tickets for thirty-five cents maybe obtained at Reynolds Club, atthe University Bookstore, and in thebox office of Mandel Cloisters. An array of stage and radio starswho are favorites in Chicagolandwill perform at the vaudeville showto be sponsored by the Senior classcouncil on Thursday afternoon, Feb¬ruary 9. Proceeds will go to theStudent Relief Fund or to otheragencies who will contribute themoney to the fund for needy stu¬dents.Two well known bands, those ofClyde McCoy and Hal Kemp, will beheadliners on the Mandel hall stage.The former plays nightly in theGold Room of the Drake Hotel. Thelatter holds sway at the BlackhawkRestaurant. Kemp will bring withhim an. pnusual stage show.Feature Bettina Hlllf’ •'*The singing of Bettina Hall willalso be featured at the Senior classbenefit. Miss Hall plays the<feriiininelead in “The Cat and tiBi,Fiddle”current musical production now ap¬pearing at the Apollo Theater. Inthis show she sings “She Couldn’tSay Yes; She Couldn’t and“Try to Forget,” two favoprU^.,The Songfellows, Mary Steele, andClara, Lu, n’ Em, headUtli* list ofradio .entertainers. All thpse starsare heard over the Natibtial Broad-Carting Chain. The Songf|llQ>^s wereformerly the King’s Jesters,' regularmembers of Paul Whitei$aB,’g crewof musicians. The Clara, Lu n’ Emtrio are famous for thei r^ftlfendlyconversations concerning) t^e^,* per¬sonal experiences.Stars of WGN, the Chicago Tri¬bune station who have been securedfor the vaudeville shofiA', includeEvelyn Renee, Bob Fonfans, andIrene_ Wicker. The lattdr Ife heardthroughout the nation 9Yer,rthe Co¬lumbia Broadcasting System. JeanPaul King, who at presentifconductshis own orchestra may alsp appearat the stage show.B and G DepartmentDoubles Night PoliceForce on Mid’way“Policing service along 59thstreet has been doubled,” William E.Scott, assistant to the Dean of Stu¬dents, announced yesterday in amemorandum to the heads of thewomen’s residence halls. The Depart¬ment of Buildings and Grounds hasarranged to have four men in uni¬form patrol the north side of theMidway from the. Illinois Centraltracks to Cottage Grove avenue be¬tween six and eleven’each night.“This move has been taken not be¬cause of ariy complaints arising,” de¬clared Mn Scott, “but rather as apreventative measure. The policewill include in their patrol the grad¬uate and. the women’s quadrangles.”The memorandun) emphaazed- thefact that the policing service will beconfined to ' the hours between sixand eleven; ti^ortien retohnirig after'' 'corts, the memorandum states. JAMES WEBERLINN ’97in a Guest Edi¬torial publishedin this issueroundly critic¬izes the candi¬dates for Maroonfootball coachnow being con¬sidered by Ath¬letic DirectorThomas N. Met¬calf. Thisshrewdest andmost ardent of Chicago footballfans predicts “misunderstanding anddisloyalty” if a man of Shaughnes-sy’s or Thistlethwaite’s “type” ischosen.ReadLINN’S EDITORIALon Page Two M/r.I‘Ham ’ in Russianor Greek Servedl» Kat Coffee,, Shop* »■*!It* >What an institution of learning!What brilliant students! Sortie'of theCoffee Shop customers are so wellversed in foreign languages and soanxious'to make use o5,0)gir learn¬ing that they write out their ordersin everything but Sanskrit'and hiero¬glyphics.One can imagine seeihl; spare-ribsand sauerkraut written, to ^(german,or chili in Spanish, or spaghetti inItalian, or tenderloin injFi'aiMFh. Buthow!about a “ham on rye’^ in Rus¬sian? Or macaroni in 'Hebrew? Orcliop suey in Greek? And fancy writ¬ing coca-cola in anythifi^^but’goodold American. | ^And another amazin mi: TbeUniversity scores again! Npt only arethe students intellectual, but—be¬lieve it or not—every *i8 al¬ways filled correctly, be it in ’ Jap¬anese, Hindustan, or whj^t^ve you.In other words, even the Coffee Shopemployees know their lanjm^^s ^(Ro-.mance or otherwise.) They are not. the least bit disturbed bN^-’sOfch Virdersas oeufs, or apfel kugel.^p spinoliice cream, or gefuhite fish. What aninstitution of learninglJ—KWllwie thestudy of languages, Rot^ncc.^ andotherwise, can be donsummatedacross a lunch counter, iq'lunptjii;*ROUSE, BECK BElBIN'i'’PROMOTIONAfc TOUR'•P'tioKenneth Rouse, assistant to thesecretary of the UniVettH^, f andCharlton Beck, executi^«^..#fycrctaryof the Alumni Council, yesterday be-^an the first of a sericB'iif extendedtours designed to acquaint lalumniclubs and high school stiffrobi withWork of the Univeii)|^^4« ^j;}J.n,|Bach city which they v^it theywiir ‘ tove showings oflillb $mnreon the QuadrangW’ and twoof the physical science'Cities which tl^i^ilU-yiaitinclude Indianapolis, Dannie, TerreHaute, Louisville, and Cincinnati.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, JANUARY 3i, 1933Satlg iHaraonFOUNDED m 1901The Daily Maroon is the olTicial student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a year ; $4 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or fcr anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post-otfice at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSJane Biesenthal Robert HerzogMelvin Goldman David C. LevineWilliam Goodstein Edward W. NicholsonBetty Hansen Eugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. SeballerSOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSJohn BardenTom BartonNorman BeckerClaire DanzigerAmos DorinsonNoel GeraonRobert Hasterlik Morton HechtRichard HookerHoward HudsonDavid KutnerRoy LarsonDorothy LoebDan MacMaster Dugald McDougallRobert OshinsHoward RichSue RichardsonJeanette Rif asWilliam TraynorFlorence WishnickNight Editor: Robert E. HerzogAssistant: Norman BeckerTuesday, January 31, 1933attBaifSMgsrHTHVKiK’ k;x x x x «. x«:«. x xxi x xxiix^'.a. x x. >{LX.k-A Guest EditorialBy JAMES WEBER LINN, '97^rKjf«iXiXixT«"x-x,xx:,xX:XX:H:X;X‘X:«;x.'g';x:XjHiiagiiXNote: This is one of a series of Guest Editorialswritten by members of the fa/ndty at the request ofthe Editor.Comment on the appointment of a head coachfor the football teams of the University of Chicagocan be of little general interest, or there wouldhave beon more of it on the quadrangles andamong alumni; and it is of little importance at themoment, because Professor Metcalf has alreadyreached his most unfortunate decision. Never¬theless, because that decision is so bitterly unfor¬tunate, one comments.Not that, at the moment of writing. ProfessorMetcalf has selected his man. He has only select¬ed his type. Shaughnessy, or Wilce, or Thistle-thwaite—not necessarily one of those three, butone of their sort. And what is the definitive char- jacteristic of the type? Ignorance of the situationat the University of Chicago.No coach will ever again give Chicago a suc¬cession of winning football teams so long as Chi¬cago remains in the Conference. An occasionalcontender may crop up. Once in a blue moonenough skilful athletes may be secured to Chi¬cago through the medium of honorary scholar¬ships, and may remain eligible long enough afterthey have come here, to afford Chicago a strong fully take what they could get—which wQuld bea hgfiiting. loyal team, doing its best, and pToudof being a part of an institutidn which had stand¬ards and lived up to them.But what would a Shaughnessy, a Wilce, aThistlethwaite, do? Yelp! Insist that if Chicagowere to play football at all, it should “get” bet¬ter players, and “do more” for them, in the wayof lenient marking. Tell his players that the Uni¬versity was “out of sympathy” with them, andwith football. Create in this fashion a little groupof separatists, who regarded the coach and them¬selves as “martyrs,” and the faculty, and the ad¬ministration, as narrow and inhumane.And what would the alumni and the student-body think of an unvictorious Shaughnessy.Thistle-thwaite, or Wilce? Thumbs would be turned downand kept turned down. The coach would be or¬dered thrown to the lions, and the University ad¬ministration censured for hiring a gladiator whodidn’t know how to conquer. A fine situation allround, that; and it is to be ours.It is surely not necessary to re-assert that in es¬tablishing and maintaining standards, the Univer¬sity is only doing its plain duty, as an endowedand therefore independent institution in the Mid¬dle West. TTie point is that in thus doing its plainduty, it cannot at the same time afford winningfootball teams. But neither can it afford, it is clear,discord and bitterness. The introduction of an“outsider” will not alter the situation. It will onlyencourage misunderstanding and disloyalty.A coaching set-up which included at its topsuch a man as William J. Monilaw, who knowseveryone here and is known to everyone, and sucha stimulating assisting group as Nelson Norgrenand Otto Strohmeier, Ken Rouse and H. O. Page;or even which had a keen young alumnus at itshead, who would grow up with the country asStagg did; would not produce winning teams. Nocoach or set of coaches can, here—not on the Con¬ference, state-university level. But it would pre¬vent friction, modify disappointment, develop themore reasonable loyalty which recognizes the Uni¬versity for what it is—nlone in the Middle West,an institution which not only wistfully desires anadherence to standards, as many others do, butmust adhere to them, if it is to do its work in theeducational world, and justify its being.j The Travelling Bazaar|j By Jerry Jontry |IT CAN HAPPENWe have all dreamed about being locked inHarper library and other such unusual things,but few of us have had it actually happen.Roslyn Soble is one. She hesitated so long lastSaturday afternoon that the building was lockedfor the night by the time she reached the door.To be sure there were janitors about, but underthe University Rules for Janitors RegulationNo. 4 it says the doors are not to be opened untila specified time next morning. After an hour ofuseless (pleading and even offering to go outthrough a window, Roslyn was saved by an un¬known professor wlio came along and by somevery unusual insight realized the situation andlet her out through a side door. Well, there’sno fun in being a janitor if you’re not going toplay by the rules.* • • ^HAVE THEY GOT RHYTHM:team. There are enough such skilful athletes inthe freahman class now to permit of the organ- jization pf a strong team next fall—IF most of jthem are eligible. Who believes most of them, orsixty percent of them, will be eligible? Thestandards of scholarship at Chicago are too highto permit eligibility to many boys who have hadhigh standing in high school, but have never learn¬ed to study there. Such boys can be brought here,but they cannot be kept here—not long. Theywere, ip the old days, because in the first year herethey learned to study. Now they are not forcedto learn to study in the first year; consequentlythey do not learn; consequently they fail in theirexaminations.Nqw alumni understand this situation, most ofthem; and an alumnus coach, or a coach who hadbeen about the University for years, would makethe best of it, and would be made the best of bythe alumni and the student body, and by the fac¬ulty. 3uch a coach would not be forever tryingto chfOfl^ situation, camping on the trail ofthe examiners, swearing to high heaven that “hisboya" ^re being unfairly treated. Nor would thethe student body, demand victory ofhipi. FfOm one of themselves they would cheer- And now the Esoteries,They’re sueh a lovely lot;They drive one to hysterics |When they say, ’’We’d rather not.”♦ ♦ *AND NOW——that you’ve all heardTabout Dorothy Chaplineand Chips Hall getting tied up 'way last June, Iwant to say that it is a pretty dirty trick to an¬nounce it on Friday afternoon when there isn’tanother Maroon out till this morning. Well, bestof luck to you both, anyhoo. And here’s a funnything: the same day the news came out a newmovie called “They Just Had To Get Married’’ ’•opened in the loop. Even the movies get it beforewe do. But I hear her sister is quite pleased,and why not! She’ll get the car all to herselfnow.« * «LET’S HAVE A PARTYAmong those who organized the Druce Laketrip over the week end was Gerry Smithwick.Among those not at Druce Lake over the weekend was Gerry Smithwick. Among the things ac¬complished were discussions which were swell un¬til the profs got to arguing among themselves;and the taking of the two dishwashers. Faith andHope, off to a dance where Merle Giles alreadywas with Charity Harris and L. W. was the Belleof the Ball. If Sulcer and Zenner will give methe girl’s name and address I won’t tell - whatI heard about them. Times have changed—^theyused to be stag affairs, but Paul is out of schoolnow.T ’Jr: . r.- ■..J -li ''■ ■ L TICKET SALES FOR29TH ANNUAL PROMTO OPEN TOMORROW(Continued from page 1)Luis Alvarez, Phi Gamma Delta;Mathews, Phi Kappa Sigma; Sharp,Phi Kappa Psi; Solf, Phi Pi Phi; Zo-line, Phi Sigma Delta; Goldman, PiLambda Phi; Young, Psi Upsilon;Johnson, Sigma Alpha Epsilon;Montgomery, Sigma Chi; Finnegan,Sigma Nu; Sherwin, Tau Delta Phi;Richmond, Tau Kappa Epsilon; andKutner, Zeta Beta Tau.Jack Allen, Jim Sharp, and OlinSethness will have charge of the saleof bids in all dormitories and mem¬bers of both the Freshman and Soph¬omore councils will also sell tickets.The bids are to be available as wellat the University Bookstore, Wood¬worth’s Bookstore, Burton Court of¬fice, The Daily Maroon office, and thePress Building.Gertrude Dunn HicksWills Big Estate toChildren’s Hospital(Continued from page 1)tion to the welfare of crippled chil¬dren through her interest in her hus¬band’s crippled caddy. The child wasoperated upon too late for an entire¬ly successful result. She thereforeresolved to help the cause of human¬ity by enabling underprivileged chil¬dren to enjoy medical care in timeto produce the most beneficial re¬sults.A University of Michigan profes¬sor, while hunting for new animalparasites, was examining hides ofAlaskan grizzly bears. To his sur¬prise he found flakes of gleaminggold in the thick fur of the bears.Washington university co-edsspend more money for cigarettesthan the men students do.RAISE YOUR GRADES!EXPERT TYPING of Term Papers,Compositions, Theses, etc., atlowest possible rates.ETHEL WITT 5452 Ellis Ave.Phone Hyde Park 1958 Studies of Malariain Animals and Man(Contiuuea from page 1)this,’’ he stated, “it is important tonote that immunity in malaria is de¬pendent upon a cellular mechanism.’’Men working in the Parasitologydepartment at the University arealso concentrating upon investiga¬tion of immunity to trypanasome in-fectiors in rats and mice; and onthe effects of drugs on malarial or¬ganisms and various phases of thegeneral problems of immunity.CLASSIFIED ADS6056 KIMBARK AVE. Room andboard $6.50 per week. Student mealsby dietician and tea room. Dorch.10135.I LOST—Red pocketbook contain-\ ing small purse and glasses. Call! Midway 7243 or return to the In¬formation Office. HILL’S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rd St.I We Feature Noonday LuncheonI 25cI Evening Dinner 35cI Sunday Dinner 50c! Served on 2nd FloorWe will select 3 students andco-eds to assist us in a unique plannow operating at other universitieswith satisfactory remuneration. Neat¬ness and personality e.ssential. PhoneMr. Bell, Rand. 8769 for appoint¬ment.FOR COLLEGE GIRLSonly...Ommm Mwt OaMkar I, JMOSBB BVSIIVUS C«LLB«B114 fM*4g4TM iss LindquistI CAFEj in the' BROADVIEW HOTEL5540 Hyde Park Blvd.I Luncheon 35c, 50c, & 60cDinner 55c and. 75cSwedish Buffet our specialty, con-I sisling of from 20-25 varieties ofI delicious salads and relishes on ice,from which you make your owni choice. Hotels WindermereARE JUST A GRANDOLD MIDWAY CUSTOMThe place that grads andDads hold dear—the favor¬ed parking place for visit¬ing teams and parents. Nottoo near, nor yet too far, theclosest fine hotel—and notin the Scotch sense either!For parents or parties, termsare as liberal as a politician'spromises. Just a grand oldMidway custom that's beenkept thoroughly up to date.^otels Hindermere^hicogo56th St. at Hyde Park BoulevardTelephone FAIrfax 6000Ward B. James, Managing DirectorSUBSCRIBE TO THEDAILY MAROONStop—Have you made your date for the IRONMASK BALL. NEXT FRIDAY NIGHT?If not, hurry, for you will certainly wantto be at the FIRST ALL-CAMPUSPARTY AT THE INTERNATIONALHOUSE.Look—PHIL LEVANT’S ORCHESTRA willplay from nine until one and ROBERTROYCE of the URBAN ROOM will singthose songs that you like so well.Listen—The party is being given for the benefitof the STUDENT RELIEF. The ticketsare ONLY $ 1.50 and are on sale at all fra¬ternity houses, the dormitories (by theFreshman Council), and the Bookstore.Don’t Miss the IronMask BallDAILY MAROON SPORTSTUESDAY. JANUARY 31, 1933 Rage ThreeOne Quarter’s Operation of Voluntary Gym s.a.e., pmb.d.,n,n„„l.i.-,.nnnr,n,M « Tlocc VARSITY «S TRtCt ^dependents Win5hOWS LdfgC UccrCdSC in Ul&SS Lnrollin6nt intramural GamesGreatest Drop FoundIn Gymnastic andTrack Croups(Continued from pzge 1)services, he now reports.S, K. Vorrea, wrestling coach, ha.snot suffered a decline in materialthis year, due to the fact that wrest¬ling is essentially a voluntary sportin any event; he is the only Marooncoach who declares that the volun¬tary plan has not handicapped hi.ssport.Kyle Andernon, instructor inclass basketball, has found himself inthe embarrassing predicament of hav¬ing to draft by-standers to fill uptwo teams. Anderson himself hasbeen forced to play, at times.Nel* Norgren, coach of fall bask¬etball, both varsity and freshman,notices no appreciable change in theattendance of his classes. This mayalso be explained by the fact thatthose who come out for the basket¬ball teams would come out anyway,whether compelled to or not. Theyare the so-called naturally inclinedathletes.Pat Page, baseball coach, has no¬ticed not less registration, but moreirregularities in attendance at base¬ball practice. "Baseball,” he says, "isa game of no-body-contact, and theboys come out for the fun and so¬cial benefits of it." In basketball.Page has noticed a decline in thenumber out, there being many goodFreshman cagers who have not re¬ported for practice. The winter foot¬ball class has shown a decided wane.Little interest is evident, and thepart of the field house devoted topractice at 4:30 is sparsely populat¬ed, Page states.A. A. stagg, Jr., instructor ofclass tennis and Freshman football,states that the former shows nochange in registration, but marked ir¬regularities in attendance. Football,however, is a different proposition.Whereas in previous years 90 menreceived suits, only 74 did this year.The biggest attendance of the year,and this w'as unusual, was 34 boyson one day. There were only about45 men actually out, although therewere 60 Freshman awards made la.styear. Freshman football was hurtabout 40*/f.Detailed figures indicating the de¬cline in the number of men partici¬pating in Intramural competition lastquarter as compared with the sameperiod in 1931 are included in thestatistical table on page 3. Althoughthe number of independent dormi¬tory teams has increased, the grandtotal is 19% lower than last year,according to Walter Hebert. Attendance Records Compared1 The following figures compare the Freshman sports, and Intramurals forI attendance at various gym classes, the fall quarters of 1931 and 1932.1 (Story on page 1.)1 Freshman Sports Participation, ParticipationAutumn, 1931 Autumn, 1932 ChangeFootball 63 35 —28Swimming 40 15 —25Track and Cross-country 18 12 — 6Tennis 15 12 — 3Fencing 10 8 2Gymnastics 8 6 — 2i Basketball 20 19 — 1Wrestling 10 15 •f 5Totals 184 122 —62A Decrease of 33%Gymnasium WorkGraded gym 176 30 — 146Corrective gymnastics 14 4 — 10Totals 190 34 —156A Decrease of 82%Intramurals — general participation, with duplicationsTouchball 529 400 —129Horseshoes 173 80 — 93Cross-country 67 29 — 38Swimming 99 66 — 33Wrestling 60 36 — 24Golf 38 36 — 2Tennis 56 60 + 4Totals 683 551 —132 1A Decrease of 19% ,GERMAN UNIVERSITIESREQUIRE MANY HOURSOF WORK IN CLASSES LEVINE BEATSREED IN FINALSOF CUE TOURNEYAfternoon and EveningClasses inGREGG SHORTHANDFor th« convenience of nniveraityatndenta, Grtgg College ogera after¬noon and Monday and Tharadajr are-ninc claaaea in GREGG SHORT-HAND. Courac la arranged for maxi¬mum progreaa, with minimum ex¬penditure of time and egort. Call,write, or telephone State 1881 forparticalara.The GREGG COLLEGE• N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, III. Students who trek to Germanyand its far-famed universities forpost-graduate work find both thescholastic and chronological pace setby their Teutonic brothers a hardone.American students who bewail thevigor of university life might wellprofit by taking the measure of theirGerman brothers,. whose lo4 is hardand comes sewed in packages of allsizes.There students carry twenty-flvesemester hours of work regularly.Classes begin at 6:00 in the morningand run steadily through the day un¬til 8:00 at night. Sunday is the onlyday on which the university is closed.The students have no social life inconnection with their school. Theirexistence is all work and no play.Nothing but one dance every Fri¬day night at the student-house.Life upon graduation is one ofcommercial emptiness to the Germanstudent, with 60 percent of the adultpopulation unemployed. The studenthas no prospect of securing work,j With absolutely no future in sight,! these students are working merely^ for work’s sake, and to obtain an ed-I ucation for its cultural value. A stu¬dent may possibly pick up somethingj upon graduation, but as for thei others—.j The University student has a pre-! liminary education equal to that of' a junior college graduate here, and! is more mature than the AmericanI scholar both when he enters andwhen he leaves the university. In¬struction is given entirely by theOxford system, under which class at¬tendance is voluntary, and studentssupplement lectures by extensiveoutside reading. Examinations aregiven by the state at the end of thesecond and the fifth final years.—The Daily Cardinal. David C. Levine, associate editorof The Daily Maroon, beat RufusReed in the finals of the ReynoldsClub Billiards tournament ye.sterdayafternoon, by a score of 100 to 95.The game was one of straight railbilliards played in a block of 100,and was characterized by cautiousplaying by both participants. In aformer* game Levine made the high¬est run of the tournament when hescored seventeen consecutive points,but his best yesterday was a stringof eight. Reed also had a high runof eight.At the end of the first fifty, Reedwas trailing by sixteen points. In thesecond half he caught up and at onetime came to within three points ofLevine. Again with the score 98-91against him, Reed made a run offour. Levine finished the game witha run of five.Edward Peniston beat DudleyBuck for third place by a score of50-34.Medals will be awarded for first,second, and third places, and for thehigh run.CARTOONINGETCHINGDRAWINGPAINTINGWe carry a completeline of art material.1546-50 E. 57TH ST.Phone Plaza 2536 The freshman-alumni-varsity track imeet crown went to the varsity last jFriday night by a score of 70-35-18. |The alumni took second place, while jthe last berth went to the freshmen, |John Brooks, who was partially in- icapacitated, having sprained his an- jkle in the Armour meet two weeks |ago, duplicated his triumphs of last jyear’s meet by taking first place in 'the 60 yard dash in :06.4 and the ■low hurdles in :07.9. He did not en- iter the broad jump in which he was .Conference champion last year.Roy Black, captain of last year’s |team and winner of the high hurdles ifor the varsity, repeated this per¬formance for the alumni, defeatingCaptain Ted Haydon of the varsityin :09.1.Ovson, winner of the shot put forthe freshmen last year, had littletrouble winning for the varsity, thedistance being 45 feet, 6 inches.Harry Frieda, veteran of severalOlympic decathalon competitions,captured .second place in the shotput. Anton Berg, former Confer¬ence champion in the high jump andtwice a member of American Olym¬pic teams, took an easy first in thehigh jump, his height being 6 feet,5 inches.Summary:60 yard dash—won by Brooks(V); second, Zimmer (V); third,Cullen (V); fourth, Brand (A).Time, :06.4.70 yard high hurdles—won byBlack (A); second, Haydon (V);third, Burwanger (F); fourth, Rob-•erts' (V). Time, :09.1.70 yard low hurdles—won byBrooks (V); second, Burwanger(F); third, Black (A); fourth, Hay¬don. (V). Time, :07.9,440 yard run— won by Cullen(V); second, Perils (V); third, Wal-denfels (V). Time, :51.880 yard run—won by Fairbanks(V); second, Moore (V); third,Cameron (V); fourth, Nicholson(V)*. Time, 2:01.5. ' "One mile run—won by Simon(V); second, Milow (V); Maynard(F). Time, 4:40.1.Two mile run—Milow (V); sec¬ond, Varkala (V); third, McNeil(A). Time, 10:09.High jump—won by Berg (A);second, Roberts (V); third. Burwan-ger’(F). Height, 6 feet, 5 inches.Pole vault—won by Jackson (V);second, Roberts (V); third, Atkin¬son (F); fourth,'Burwanger (F). Dis¬tance, 12 feet.Shot put—won by Ovson (V);.second, Frieda (A); third, Burwan¬ger (F); fourth, Zimmer (V). Dis¬tance, 45 feet, 6 inches.Broad jump—won by Burwanger(F). Distance, 21 feet, 6 inches. S. A. E., Independents, and PhiBeta Delta won in yesterday’s I-Mbasketball games, defeating U. High,Sigma Nu, and Phi Camma Delta.Effective team play featured theS. .4. E.-U. High game. Both fivesshowed smooth passing on offence,but lack of height on the U. Highteam gave S. A. E. the edge, 21-13.Pitcher and Ralston starred for thewinners. Werner was high scorer forU. High.Trailing at the half, the Independ¬ents came back with a strong .secondhalf attack that rolled up a widemargin of victory over Sigma Nu,28-11.Individual effort, with little evi¬dence of teamwork, marked the PhiB. D.-Phi Gam game, which was wonby Phi B. D., 31-16. J. Weiss leadthe Phi Bete scoring with eightpoints.Phi Psi forfeited to Chi Psi inthe only other game scheduled.TODAYS GAMES MAROON MAT TEAMLOSES MEET TOCORNEU COLLEGE3:30Delta Upsilon vs. Kappa NuPhi Delta Theta vs, Tau Delta Phi4:15Ponies vs. Phi Sigma Delta7:30Medics vs. Alpha Sigma PhiKappa Sigma vs. Alpha Tau OmegaTau Kappa Epsilon vs. Phi KappaSigma8:15Chinese Association vs. Disciples Wrestlers from Cornell college ofMount Vernon, Iowa, defeated theChicago mat team Saturday night,17 1-2 to 12 1-2, at Bartlett night,nasium. This was the third straightdefeat suffered by the Maroon mat-men this year.Ed Bedrava, who weighs a mere165 lbs., was the Maroon hero.Matched against Haloupek, a 200 lb.Cornell football player, Bedravapinned his adversary in four minutesand 30 seconds. Bion Howard, Ma¬roon captain, sweated down to 135lbs. and defeated West in that divi¬sion.In spite of the defeat suffered byChicago, the meet had its cheeringpoints. It showed, for one thing,that Howard can wrestle effectivelyat 135 lbs., and he will do so hence¬forth. This will allow Hubbard andBargeman to move up to the 145lb. division, and thus make room forHeide at 155.Summaries;118 POUND CLASS—Bernstein (Chicago)defeated Dave Hill (Cornell). Time advan-tage, 9 :30.! 126 POUND CLASS — Fry (Cornell) de-; feated Zukowski (Chicago). Time advantage3 minutes.I 135 POUND CLASS — Howard (Chicago)' defeated West (Cornell). Time advantage,i 2:30.I 14.1 POUND CLASS—Dale Hill (Cornell)I defeated Bargeman (Chicago). Time ad-' vantage, 2 :13.155 POUND CLASS—Morford (Cornell)! threw Hubbard (Chicago) in 4:37.i 165 POUND CLASS—Ellison (Cornell)I and Heide (Chicago) drew.176 POUND CLASS—Osburn (Cornell)threw Bamberger (Chicago) in 2 minutes.I HEAVYWEIGHT CLASS—Bedrava (Chi¬cago) threw Haluui>ek ((k>rnell) in 4:30.Hoiif1b4vo4D RonertA GOITEk ISA MUSICALINSTkUMENTTERESA DOLAN’S DANCESSaturday Eve’s — Midway Templehriday Eve’i — Pershing BallroomAdmission 40 CentsPrivate Lessons day or evening at Studio6332 Cottage Grove Tel. Hyde Park 3080 THERE ought to be a law againstpeople like Bill Boner! He eventhinks an escapade is a staircaseoutside a houseStill—he might be cured, if some¬body would convert him to pipesmoking. For a good pipe with theright tobacco is man’s first aid toclear thinking and wisdom. As forthe "right tobacco,” that’s easy. Arecent investigation showed Edge-worth Smoking Tobacco to be the fa¬vorite at 42 out of 54 leading colleges.Just one puff will tell you why. It’sthat truly individual blend of fineold hurleys—a blend you find onlyin Edgeworth SmokingTobacco. Onceyou try Edgeworth, you’ll neveragain be satisfied with less.CDGEWORTH SMOKING TOBACCO-Buy Edgeworth anywhere in twoforms — Edgeworth Ready - Rubbedand Edgeworth Plug Slice. All sizes— 15^ pocket package to pound hu¬midor tin. If you’d like to try beforeyou buy, write for free sample packet.Address Larus &Bro. Co., 120 S. 22dSt., Richmond, Va.1449 East 57th StreetWhere the Best of Food, Properly CookedIs Neatly ServedOpen from 7 a. m. Until MidnightCome Once and You Will Come AgainModerate Prices F. P. RODGERS, Prop. A Concentrated MarketA community as concentrated asthe University has definite possibilitiesfrom the stand-point of the advertiser.The official University Bulletinestimates the annual average student expenditure is $951 which excludestuition.At a school the size of the Univer¬sity of Chicago, the possibilities ofsuch a market are self-evident.The Daily Maroon is the onlydaily University publicationreaching this market.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. JANUARY 31. 1933iiihirT^liMi Avmts wmutd. L tktf/d tnmmumtm fmid.Fraternities at ChicagoBy MELVIN GOLDMANALPHA TAU OMEGACalling espe¬cial attention toits strong alum¬ni organization,Alpha TauOmega invitesinspection of itslocal chapter,Gamma X i,founded in 1904,thirty-nine yearsafter the birthof the nationalfraternity.At the presenttime the chapteris housed at 5735Woodlawn av¬enue in a ramb¬ling brick andframe structure.The house is typ¬ical of fraternityhouses in general—it is neither pre¬tentious nor in disrepair, and largeenough to give the boys plenty ofroom.Since the time when Gamma Xiof Alpha Tau Omega was chartered,more than three hundred Universityundergraduates have been initiated.The chapter roll has included menin all forms of scholastic and extra¬curricular activities. “C” men andPhi Betes, publication editors andorganization presidents, have passedthrough the''"doors of the chapterhouse. The present active chapter in¬cludes Hugh Mendenhall and Wil¬liam Berg, both on the footballteam; Dan McGuigan, treasurer ofthe Interfraternity Council; Ray¬mond Dunne, business manager ofthe Phoenix; and Carl Bode, assist¬ant editor of the Phoenix.The Alumni OrganizationAlpha Tau Omega boasts, in ad¬dition to the inducements ordinarilyoffered by "fHitwmties, an extreme¬ly strong alumni organization whichis nationwide in extent. Since a manis a member of his fraternity notonly for the four years of his under¬graduate career, but for the rest ofhis life, the fraternity’s standing inthe outside world is fully as import¬ant as its reputation in collegiatecircles.In every fraternity a man canmake good*friends and gain instruc¬tion in the art of playing bridge.But Alpha Tau Omega, with seventy-four alumni organizations all overthe country, and with more than74,000 alumni living at the presenttime, offers advantages which fewfraternities can duplicate.A. T. 0, possesses what is perhapsthe largest and strongest alumni or¬ganization of any undergraduatefraternity. In addition, the nationalorganization of the fraternity pre¬sents a spectacle of extreme solid¬arity. There are ninety-three activechapters, distributed all over thecountry. Almost every large city ,has an alumni club. These clubs jkeep in touch with the nearest ac- ;tive chapters, offering them friend- excellent position when he graduatesto secure an initial push from hisfraternity brothers in business. AnA. T. O. will, in short, get the breaksfrom whichever of his fraternity’s74,000 alumni he may come in con¬tact with.The alumni spirit is a very realforce. It is that which binds thewhole fraternity into a lifelongfriendship—a friendship which isjust as strong as the ties of und^^r-graduate days.Today on theladrangles5735 Woodlawn Avenueship and advice.Helps in BusinessAny man in a chapter of such agroup is almost certain to becomeacquainted with men in the businessworld who can help him in the fu¬ture. Merit is, of course, indispens¬able, but in the last analysis afriend’s helping hand is an inval¬uable aid to success in business. Amember of A. T. O. is thus in an The Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue:David C. Levine. Assistant: AmosDorinson.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, “The Law of theRoad.” Professor W. C. Graham, at12 in Joseph Bond chapel.Organ recital, at 5 in the Univer¬sity chapel.Undergraduate OrganizationsMortar Board meeting at 12, inIda Noyes.W. A. A. meeting at 12, in IdaNoyes,Freshman women meeting,12:30 in Ida Noyes theater.Federation council meeting,12 in Ida Noyes.Federation tea, at 3:30 inNoyes lounge. atIda Y. W. C. A. dinner, at 5 in IdaNoyes hall.Mirror chorus, at 7 in Ida Noyestheater.Iron Mask, at 7:30 in Room C,Reynolds club.Skull and Crescent, at 7:30 inRoom D, Reynolds club..Public LecturesRadio lecture, “Expansion ofEurope.” Associate professor ArthurP. Scott, at 11 over station WMAQ.Divi.sion of the Social Sciences,“I./aw in Pre-literate Societies. Retal¬iation as a Sanctioned Procedure.”Professor Alfred Radcliffe-Brown, at3:30 in Social Science assemblyroom.Divinity school, “Medieval Here¬tics in a Modern World.” ReverendGuido R. Miegge, at 4:30 in JosephBond chapel.Downtown lecture, “M o d e r nDrama: The Heart of Life.” Assist¬ant professor Davis Edwards, at '0:45 in Fullerton hall of the ArtInstitute.Renaissance society, “MedievalManuscripts.” Ernest P. Goldsmidt, ,at 8:15 in the Oriental Institute.MitcellaneoutMedical seminar, at 4:30 in Bill¬ings M433.German talking picture. “Der ;Leibesexpress,” at 4:30, 7, and 9 inthe International House theater.Between $75,000 and $100,000 oflife insurance has been taken outby fraternity initiates at Ohio Stateuniversity. The University of Chicago Band inPOPUUR CONCERTClassicalSemi-Classicaland PopularMusicSolos andNovelty NumbersMANDEL HALLTuesday February 7TICKETS 35c 8:15 P. M.COMMONSENSEhas been lost in America sincethe days of Thomas Paine.IF you agree that our presentleadership never heard of it—IF you want radical change inour American way—IF you prefer action to talk—Read COMMON SENSE, thenew fortnightly magazine witha positive platform, smashingyet authoritative articles andsharp, humorous illustrations.QontpbutorsSmart ChaM John Dos PassosCarleton Beals V. F. CalvertonRoberts. Allen John ChamberlainHenry Hazliri John T. FlynnJ.B.S. Hardman George SouleJames Rorty A. J. MusteEdifort: Alfred M. BinghamC. Hartley Gratun Selden RodmanSPECIAL OFFER TO STUDENTSCOMMON SENSE, IntI)) Eait 44th Street, New York, N.Y.I enclote one dollar for a four month’s tub.tcription. Please send the fine four isaucs inaddition without cost.Same-Addrtss- forwara - -gXPLANATION: aThis old illusion ‘s/'P® Attached to each of, „bb.r ‘'*uck*r” or,he p.rlotm«s ,„a adheres to th. It’s fun to be fooled...it’s more fun to KNOWWe all like magicians' tricks. Buttricks in cigarette advertising arequite another matter.Here’s one you may have won¬dered about. The illusion that onlyone cigarette is “pure.”EXPLANATION: All popular cigarettcsare made under the most sanitaryconditions. All use a good cigarettepaper. All are made with practicallyJVO TRICKS..JUST COSTLIERTOBACCOSl-lt a' MA I'CHLESS, BLEND identical modem machinery. All arepure.But the quality of the tobacco isanother story.The pleasure you find in a cigaretteis determined by the quality of thetobaccos used. Mildness and fine fla¬vor come from the costlier tobaccos.It is a fact/ wall knownby loaf tobacco axpairts/that Camels are mode fromfiner, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos•bon any other popular brand.It’s the tobacco that counts...plus amatchless blending of leaf with leaf tobring out the delicate flavor of choicetobaccos. That’s why Camels havegiven more people more pleasurethan any other cigarette.Camels are always fresh, always cool,always in prime condition...in theair-tight, welded Humidor Pack.