Baiilp illaroonuniversity of chicago, tuesday, january 28, 1936 member united pressfrench chargegermany vv^ithbreaking pact“preparing for next in¬vasion of france,”asserts press.))aria, jan. 27—(up)—the frenchpuss charjred tonijrht that jfermanyhas secretly built a “hindenburp lineof the air” in the forbidden rhine-land for the “next invasion offranco.”a chain of ultra-modern militarysirports with underground hangarsaiol living quarters safe from hom-banimont, extending from the north.sea to the swiss frontier, was de-.scribod by the morning newspaperexcelsior. the sensational articlepurported to indicate even the direc¬tion from which the feared invasionwould strike,the paris press published extensive“evidence” that germany has circum¬vented provisions of the Versaillestreaty which established a demilitar¬ized rhineland zone, from 59 to 100kilometers wide, extending the wholelength of germany. the zone was toremain inviolate from fortificationor military occupation for 50 yearsafter 1919, when the world war end¬ed.french nervoushigh french officials are nervous-1ly awaiting next thursday, the thirdanniversary of adolf hitler’s rise to jpower, when they fear concrete ex- iamplcs of flouting the treaty by ger- imany will occur.the german pre.ss recently clam- jored that anglo-french general stafftechnical conferences violated thetreaty of locarno, and hence allowedgermany to disregard restrictionsagainst militarizing the rhinelandzone.“the work of fortifying the de¬militarized zone and rearming therhineland is well under way,” saidthe excelsior, ow’ned by mrs. Helenbrown depuy, an american. “therhineland is well-equipped for avia¬tion, which con.stantly practices pa.s-ve defensive while a hindenburgline of the air is established.“thus a line of airfields in therhineland provides initial hopping offplaces for attacking planes, in theevent of invasion (of germany) theplanes will move back from the firstline of airports, beyond the ‘demil¬itarized zone’ and in the event of(continued on page 2) appoint committeefor Washington prommembers of the student socialcommittee have appointed a specialsub-committee in charge of arrange¬ments for the Washington prom, jackalien, chairman, announced yester¬day. the prom will be held friday,february 21, at the lake shore athlet¬ic club,a.ssisting alien, as chairman of theprom committee, are henry cutter,business manager; robert bethke,ticket chairman, and Julian kiser,chairman of publicity, bethke has ap¬pointed four sales assistants, arthurgoes, henrv miller, melvin ury, andCharles hoy. publicity assistants in¬clude James kahnweiler, ralph leach,and cody pfanstiehl.members of the social committee,in addition to alien, are frank davis,irwin askow, leanard olsen, williamStapleton, eleanor williamson, Cath¬erine pittman, mildred eaton, andHetty ellis.report crushingethiopian loss24,000 men (destroyedon southern front inoffensive.tnexican bishopasks repeal ofobnoxious lawsinexico city, Jan. 27—(up)—thecpi.scopate of the roman catholicchurch in mexico addressed a note topresident lazaro cardenas tonightrc(juc‘sting repeal of laws which theyconsider constitute religious persecu¬tion.the note wa.s signed by msgr. pas-cuai diaz, archbishop of mexico,other bkshops and ’ archbishops ati'rosent in the country and by arch-liishop Jose othon nunez, of oaxaca,on behalf of himself and archbishopleopoldo ruiz flores and others nowin exile.the note was dated nov. 23, 1935,t'ut was Just made public.it attempts to refute the govern¬ment’s denial of the hierarchy’s peti-laui pre.sented last sept. 29 seekingI'epeal of the religious and national¬ization of property laws.Italian bombing kills500 ethiopian nativesaddi.s ababa, jan. 27(—up)—fivehundred ethiopian civilians, includ¬ing many women and children, werekilled on the southern front last weekh.v Italian aviator.s, official communi¬cations from that sector said today.italain bombing planes, it was as¬serted, swept low over numerous vil¬lages raking the terrorized popula¬tion with machine gun fire and drop-I'ing bomba.scores of farms were reported de¬stroyed and mere than 2,500 head ofcattle were killed,the reports said the seven-daybombing operation was carried outhy 12 separate squadrons of planes. rome, tueesday, Jan. 2S—(up)—na¬tive sources at neghelli, ethiopia, re¬portedly revealed today that ra.sdesta demtu’s army of 25,000 menwas virtually destroyed during therecent Italian offen.sive on the .south¬ern front and that barely 1,000warriors fled with the defeated chief¬tain to irgalen, capital of the sidamodistrict.it was .said also that ras desta,the “good” son-in-law of emperorhuile selassie, is so dejected by thecrushing defeat that he plans to en¬ter a Coptic convent for life.an Italian communique announcedofficially that 10,000 ethiopians havebeen killed on the .southern frontsince jan. 12 when gen. rodolfo graz-iani’s started his war machine roll¬ing in the greatest offensive of thewar.lose fewItalian losses in the sanguinarybattle for possession of the strategicganale dorya river valley were heldto a minimum, a communique said,several hundred Italian native sol-1diers were killed or wounded or aremissing, it said, but did not specifywhite casualtie.s. Ithe terrific onslaught has carriedthe roman eagle within 200 miles ofaddis ababa. military experts believethe capital city will be Italy’s nextobjective after reaching the south¬ern lake region, now within easystriking distance of gen. graziani’sadvance units, the current offensivealready has pushed forward morethan 200 miles.the village of malca murri, 130miles northwest of dolo, the startingpoint of the offensive, was capturedyesterday after a savage battle inwhich 1,467 ethiopians were knownkilled, the communique asserted.on jan. 23, it continued, advanceunits of the Italian army smashedethiopia’s defenses at uadara, 45miles northwest of neghelli and near¬ly 250 miles northwest of dolo. theethiopians de.stroyed their own mu¬nitions depot at uadara before re¬treating.THE ABCs{Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)fight for honor. . . witness, this army of such mass,and charge,led by a delicate and tender prince;whose spii’it, with divine ambitionpulT’d,makes mouths at the invisible event;exposing what is mortal, and unsure,to all that fortune, death, and dan¬ger, dareeven for an egg-shell, rightly to begreat.is, not to stir without great argu¬ment ;but greatly to find quarrel in astraw,when honour’s at the stake . . .Shakespeare, hamlet. remodel theaterin reynolds clubpostpone dramatic asso¬ciation production fortwo weeks.sponsored Jointly by the depart¬ment of buildings and grounds andthe university dramatic association,a complete redecoration of the in¬terior of the reynolds club theater isnow in progress, it was announcedyesterday by frank hurburt o’hara,director of dramatic productions inthe university, and howard w. mort,director of the reynolds club.in connection with the remodelingof the theater, professor o’hara an¬nounced the postponement of thedamatic association’s production of“the inspector general” until thurs¬day, friday, and Saturday, february13, 14, and 15. the play was orig¬inally scheduled for presentation thelatter part of this week.install new teatsthe principal change that will bemade in the theater, in addition tothe repainting of the walls, ceiling,and stage, involves the installationof permanent, large-sized, theaterseats, a maximum amount of spaceis being allowed between rows ofseats, thus reducing the sea4:ing ca¬pacity of the theater to about 120persons.other changes include a partialreconstruction of the floor of thetheater, the building of loges in therear to allow a better view of thestage, and the in.stallation of newradiators in the theater and newcurtain tracks on the stage.the redecoration is being financedby both the dramatic association andthe university, the former contribut¬ing $500 to a total sum of $1500.members of the administration whoauthorized the work. j eliminate tworusbing periodsfraternities may mailinvitations tomorrowj for intensive week.a meeting of the interfraterni¬ty council will be held this eve¬ning at 7:30 in the reynoldsclub, all members are especial¬ly requested to be present.a change in the regular scheduleof periods of intensive rushing be¬ginning next tuesday was announc¬ed yesterday by william stapleton,president of the interfraternity exec¬utive committee, contrary to form¬er announcements there will beneither dinner nor evening periodson Saturday, february 8.invitations for the intensive rush¬ing week may be mailed by the va¬rious fraternities no earlier than 5tomorrow afternoon, as was statedin the student handbook publishedat the beginning of the school year,older rusheesattention is called by the interfra¬ternity committee to the section ofthe published rules regarding fresh¬men over 21 years of age. these menmay be pledged to fraternities atany time, and the deferred systemneed not be followed.the committee considers the coun¬cil meeting tonight as the most im¬portant to fraternity men of anyheld so far this year, among theitems to be discussed is a change infraternity pledging aimed to aidsmaller houses in getting larger andbetter freshman classes.a continuation of the series oftalks for fraternity men only isplanned in the near future at whicha number of prominent members ofthe faculty will hold a symposium onsome subject of pertinent interest.pamphlet by university professorspresents townsend plan fallaciesafter “serious and careful analy¬sis” of the townsend plan, twenty-one experts at the university havecondemned the plan on every score,their findings will be published in ajointly-signed 30-page pamphlet tobe published this week by the uni-sity press Under the title, “theeconomic meaning of the townsendplan.”after pointing out by detailedstatistics that the money to financethe plan, even under the revisedmegroarty bill, cannot possibly beraised, and that administrative prob¬lems raised by the plan are insolu¬ble, the signers declare that the plan’seffect would be the reverse of “put¬ting money into circulation,” that itwould curtail business, depresswages, false living costs, deepen thedepression, and probably ruin themonetary standard, its tax provis¬ions are inequitable, and it is un-arnold a. bake speakson Indian music, poetry,to renaissance societythe renaissance society is present¬ing dr. arnold a. bake, noted author¬ity on the music and poetry of India,at a lecture tomorrow evening at8:30 in the theater of ida noyes hall,the subject of his talk will be “themusic and poetry of india.” follow¬ing the lecture there will be a recep¬tion in the library of ida noyes.having lived in india for nineyears and traveled extensivelythrough different countries givinglectures, dr. bake is well equippedto give a fruitful speech, he madehis home at ashram, the home ofrabindranath tagore, famous Indianpoet, studying the music, religiousdances, and folkways of the natives.college head speaksat international houseCharles k, edmonds, president ofpomona college, pomona, California,will be a guest of international housethe latter part of this week, thursday jevening at 8:15 he will deliver an il-jlustrated lecture on “flying downthe andes,” to be followed by a re-ception. there will be no Sunday •supper this week. sound as a system of old-age pen¬sions or social security.experts sign pamphletsigners of the pamphlet are ex¬perts on economics, taxation, publicwelfare and public administration,they are: professors harry a. millis,Jacob viner, frank h. knight, Chesterw. wright, henry schultz, Simeon e.leland, melchior palyi, henry c. si-mons, Iloyd w. mints, harry d. gid-eonse, a. eugene staley, and albertg. hart of the univer’s economicsdepartment; professors garfield v.cox, John h. cover and theodore ynte-ma of the school of business; profes¬sors marshall dimock and clarencehoer, of the political science depart¬ment; professor william f. ogburn ofthe sociology department; fred k.hoehler, director of the americanpublic welfare association; carl h.chatters, executive director of thenational association of tax assessingofficers; and Joseph p. harris, co¬director of the public administrationcommittee of the social science re¬search council.their major conclusions are asfollows:1. “this examination indicates thatpensions of $200 per month are muchtoo large to be met by any ordin¬ary scheme of taxation, the schemeproposed as a substitute for ordinarytaxes (the transactions tax) wouldalso be incapable of yielding enoughto pay any substantial part of theannuities promised, even withoutany shrinkage of transactions belowthe present level, the tax wouldscarcely yield enough to pay $75 permonth to 7,000,000 persons—muchless $200 to 10,000,000—and trans¬actions would shrink greatly if taxedat 2 per cent, the notion of suchlarge pensions financed by a 2 percent transactions tax is thus alto¬gether a delusion.would be ineffective tax2. “while the tax would be inef¬fective in producing money to paythe pensions on the scale desired, itwould constitute a very substantialburdeu, enough to exert a strong up¬ward pressure on living costs and astrong downward pressure on farmprices and wages, its administrationwould be extremely difficult and ex¬pensive, and would involve a tre¬mendous amount of inconvenience tothe millions of people and firmswhose affairs would have to be in-(Continued on page 2) ! new officers chosenby vote for yearcadet lieutenant colonel williamweaver, a member of the alpha deltaphi, and cadet major robert adair,delta epsilon, will head the univer¬sity’s reserve officer training corpsfor the coming year according to anorder issued by major preston vance,last friday.appointments to the positions ofcadet captains w'ere byron raagee,raymond hirsch, robert bethke, Jamesmarkham, robert haythorne, andhenry fairman; while those becom¬ing cadet first lieutenants were Johngifford, waiter schwede, georgekempf, riley Sunderland, and haroldstrever.new second lieutenants are robertJohnson, charles butler, frank mahin,richard wertzler, Iloyd powers, rich-ard adair, James melville, philliplawrence, richard smith, burrowsSeymour, waiter brandenberg, rich¬ard englehardt, william ross, darklincoln, ralph springer, robert ranes,and hart rose.publish januciryalumni journcJpresieJent’s annual re¬port to trustees headsissue.headed by the president's annualreport to the board of trustees, un¬der the title, “the board of trusteesand academic freedom,” the januaryissue of the alumni magazine ap¬pears tomorrow.other lead articles by two alumniare, “the pen is mightier than thesword,” by nary louise foster, and“ ‘the law,’ said mark twain,” is anass’ ” by miiton s. mayer, and “hy¬pnosis is as reall as sleep” by harold■a. .swenson, assistant professor ofpsychology.the president’s article deals withthe ideal relation between trusteesand faculty, says the president “aboard of trustees is a body of pub¬lic spirited citizens,.they have un¬dertaken to relieve the faculty oftwo responsibilities they cannotcarry: the responsibility of manag¬ing their property, and the responsi-.bility of interpreting them to and de¬fending them from the public.”professor swenson reveals some ofthe “inside stuff” about hypnosis,and does his best to remove it fromthe realm of the uncanny, miss fos¬ter defends the power of the penagainst that of the sword by recit¬ing the effect of education in themodernization of spain and egypt.mr. mayer, in a reprint from theChicago bar record, lists some extremecases of legal technicalities in hisarticle with the picture.sque title“ ‘the law,’ said mark twain, ‘is anass.’ ”In a lighter vein, george living-stone praises the omniscience of theformation office,’ and howard w.mort’s title speaks for itself — “thescarlet letter, or seeing red in 1894.”the magazine contains the usualcomplement of columns, “in my opin¬ion” by fred b. millett, associateprofessor of english, “news of thequadrangles” by John p. harden, and“athletics” by John p. howe.gosnell to championpermanent registrationin lecture tonightharold f. gosnell, associate profes¬sor of political science, will lecturebefore the fifth ward meeting at thehyde park baptist church tonight onthe need for central permanent reg¬istration in this state, in his addressdr. gosnell will refer to a bill re¬quiring personal signatures as ameans of identifying voters whichwas not passed at the last session ofthe state legislature because of un¬favorable political pressure.in a statement made yesterday dr.gosnell declared, “the present regis¬tration system provided by the cityelection act is expensive, burden¬some on the voters, and yet nothighly effective in preventing fraud,the new type, of system proposedwould make fradulent practices moredifficult and would result in a savingof about one million dollars annuallyin election expense.” imichigan seizesrough tilt frommaroons 45-22bill lang is lost to teamfor season as old in¬jury is aggravated.maroon basketeers emerged froma breath-taking free-for-all on theshort end of a 45-22 score as mich-igan’s wolverines bowled down thefieldhouse floor last night.the first half was featured by theflamboyant performance of georgerudness, whose name might havebeen roughness, his most valuableplay for his team was not one of hisdashes for a clear basket, but rath¬er was his double-wrist-lock foulwhich caused bill lang’s leaving themaroon team for the game and theseason, bill’s right arm, which waslast year a source of trouble, waspulled out of its socket, his loss in¬cited the maroons to fight hard, buteven the excellent playing of Johneggemeyer and Jim Jordan, sopho¬mores, did not enable the midwayfive to keep up with michigan afterthe loss of lang.bill haarlow’s excellent playingwas not enough to bring him highpoint honors, not only did rudnessscore eleven points, but big earltownsend won high point honorswith five buckets and two freethrows, haarlow’s only field goal inthe first half was all that the ma-j roon’s scored from the field in that! period, however, Chicago made 16 ofits possible 19 free throws duringthe game,lefevre startsdave lefevre started the contestfor Chicago, completing so many ex¬cellent plays on offense and defensethat he often received heavy ap¬plause from the audience of 2000people, at the other guard, ken pe-tersen turned in some fine defensivework, as well as sinking a freethrow, however, the towering wel-verines did not allow Chicago’sguards to repeat the scoring doneagainst northwestern Saturday.the playing was furious from thestart with michigan Jumping into afive-point lead at once, and thusshowing a purpose not to be sui*-prised again as by minnesota last(continued on page 4)osburne, rogersentertain at skull& crescent dancewill osborne with dick and doro-thy rogers, now starring at the black-hawk restaurant, will be guests atthe first annual skull and crescentwinter formal to be held friday injudson court from 9-1.opening two weeks ago at theblackhawk, osborne’s band has al¬ready become popular as the succes¬sor to joe saunders, “the old left¬hander.” his is a band well-known inthe east and is famous for its imper¬sonations of rudy vallee and his cott-necticut yankees. dick and dorothyrogers, brother and sister, are thesong and dance support of the or¬chestra. miss rogers resembles thefamous “ginger” and is said to im¬personate the screen star.rusty stone and his orchestra, di¬rected by roy soderlind, has been en¬gaged to play for the dance, which-will be the first of its kind to be*sponsored by the sophomore men’shonorary organization, tickets arepriced at $1.10 and may be pur¬chased at the information office,the daily maroon office, or fromticket salesmen on campus.distribute tickets forShakespearean recitaltickets for edith wynne mathison'^sShakespearean recital will be avail¬able at the information desk withoutcharge starting friday. the presenta¬tion will be given next tuesday inmandel hall at 8:15.mrs. mathison has an outstandingrecord of stage and screen drama,having appeared in many of theforemost british and american eliza-bethan productions, she is beingsponsored by the william vaughBjmoody foundation. ‘page two the dmly maroon, tuesday, January 28, 1936french .chargegermany withbreaking pact“preparing for next in¬vasion of france,”asserts press.(continued from page 1)ful’ther reverses, establish themselvesin a second line.“the airports are strung: along:parallel lines, placed opposite eachother, with direct communicationsmaking: retreat easy.”these airports, excelsior said, con¬tain great subterranean quarterswhere the aviators and operating , • . , , . . , . ,personnel could remain for days, safe father s head dressed in a navalfrom bombardment, in telephone sons replace guardsmen inkeeping vigil at king's bierlondon, tuesday, jan. 28—(up)—. staking claims to vantage pointsking george’s four sons, king edwardviii and the dukes of york, gloucesterand kent, replaced the guardsmen atthe bier of their father and kept, vigilat the simple casket as the dead mon¬arch’s funeral day was ushered in.the king and his brothers enteredthe hall of king:s just before last mid¬night. the royal brothers advancedslowly up the hall and took positionsaround the coffin, accompanied bygentlemen-at-arms and yeomen of theguard.king edward, dressed in the fulluniform of colonel-in-chief of thewelsh guards, stood at the foot ofthe coffin, the duke of york, heirpresumptive to the throne, stood atcommunication with the outside,each hangar contains 100 war planeswhich rise to the surface on onegiant elevator, the article stated.the paper said that once or twiceweekly the german rhineland citiesare plunged into darkness, sirensscreech and the inhabitants scuttleinto newly-constructed, reinforcedconcrete bomb shelters, and thatblackshirts and officers of the reich-swehr frequently parade the streets,supposedly forbidden to soldiers.“the greatest concentration of air¬ports is around Stuttgart, indicatinga plan that the next invasion offrance will strike through north lor-raine and north Switzerland,” excel¬sior stated, “the neutral zone alongthe rhine today is no longer demili¬tarized except in name.” uniform, the duke of kent. also innaval uniform, stood at king ed-w'ard’s right and the duke of glou-cter, in the uniform of the tenthhussars, took up position to edward’sleft,their vigil lasteU until 20 minutespast midnight, when they left in theking’s car,meanwhile, funeral crowds began along the route the procession willfollow from westmipster to padding-ton railway station, a cold rain pour¬ed down which, it was forecast bythe weather bureau, will drench thefuneral procession today, many inthe crowds had umbrellas or slickers;others stoicly ignored the yain.peers and members of parliament,among whom were david lloyd-george, britain’s war time primeminister, and lord beaverbrook, ar¬rived in such numbers shortly beforeclosing time that they were forcedto form their own line outside thepeers’ entrance to Westminster hall.whatever the weather, king ed¬ward viii and his brothers, the dukeof york, gloucester and kent, willwalk behind their royal father’s cof¬fin the three and a half miles of thefuneral route to paddington railwaystation, where the body will be plac¬ed on a train for Windsor.more royalty and heads of statesarrived in london yesterday than inany day of britain’s long and colorfulhistory. illinois professoroffers substitutefor security planchampaign, jan. 27—(up)—assum¬ing the administration’s social secur¬ity plan will be declared unconstitu¬tional, dr. frank g. dickinson of theuniversity of illinois today proposeda security plan of his own to be oper¬ated by state rather than federalagencies.bachelors, old maids and childlessfamilies would feel the brunt of se¬curity taxation under dr. dickinson’sproposal, he pointed out such per¬sons were most likely to become de¬pendent on the community when theyreached old age.dr. dickinson also proposed to placeinvestment of the estimated $50,000,-000,000 which would be collect¬ed under the plan with established in¬surance companies.he said he could not understandwhy the federal government should“want to handle such huge funds, un¬less there is a secret, hidden desireto control a large fund so as to makethe ‘sale’ of government bondsridley rates citieson basis of annualadministrative reports!in his ninth straight yearly ap¬praisal of reports prepared by ad¬ministrative officials of various citiesfor the national municipal review,clarence e. ridley, associate professorof political science, recently ratedreports coming from berkeley, cali-receives chargesbritish foreign officehears of german violationlondon, jan. 27 — (up) — frenchcharges that germany has violatedthe Versailles treaty by militarizingthe rhineland zone were officiallymade to the british foreign officetonight, it was reported.the Versailles treaty, which endedthe world war, foresaw possible vio¬lation of the demilitarized zone sec¬tion of the document and specified:“in case germany violates this pro¬vision in any manner she shall beregarded as committing a hostile actagainst others signatory to the pres¬ent treaty and as calculated to dis¬turb the peace of the world.”the treaty stipulated demilitariza¬tion of the left bank of the rhineand of the right bank westward of aline drawn 50 kilometers east of therhine. france contends that retentionof this buffer zone is necessary toprotect the peace of europe.it was revealed today that on jan-uary 13 the french ambassador toberlin advised the german govern- j “this war has been thrust upon usment that any infraction of the de-1 and we must face it. if by anymilitarized zone would be the sub- chance, mussolini wins, we will re¬ject of french complaint to the | turn to the era when might madeleague of nations, the french govern-1 right, if we win, it will evidence ament has received very defnite indi- i great step toward collective securitycations that on thursday—the third I of a league of nations.” in this ten- dean works explains recentchanges in social conditions(continued from page 1) | manufacturing, our outside figurevestigated monthly, unless the ad- for taxable transactions in 1934 isministration of the april 17 amend-1 325 billions of dollars, which wouldments was unusually successful, the | shrink to 150 billions of dollars ortax would operate in favor of large i so with a 2 per cent tax in force,firms as against small and in favor ! cutting the tax yield to about threeof chains as against independent I billions of dollars, which is justenough to pay seven million peopleslightly over $35 per month perperson, neglecting entirely the cost•fornia; Cincinnati, ohio, and norfolk, | units; and many firms would prob-virginia, as tie for first place in ably be wiped out.“digestibility.” [ 3. “the imposition of such a tax“in looking back over the past would result in the virtual disappear-1 of administration in the taxing andnine years,” says mr. ridley, “i thinkwe can conclude that public officialsare becoming aware of the absolutenecessity for keeping the public in¬formed on governmental affairs, and,while it is recognized that the annualreport is by no means the only wayof accomplishing this objective, itnevertheless is clear that there is agrowing demand on the part of thepeople for public information.”in the total of 55 cities giving ac¬counts of their activities as against47 in 1934 the general grading basedon promptness of publication, con¬tent, and physical make-up, washigher, and reports tended to bebriefer. ance (or migration to Canada) of! distributing process,security markets and produce ex-1 “if all the debits to individual ac-changes. it would entail great counts in banks during 1935 hadchanges in marketing practices, with j been taxed 2 per cent, there wouldno ultimate gain to be expected [ have been just enough, neglectingfrom it. it would reduce the real in- ■ administration expenses and othercomes of urban workers and farm¬ers. most serious of all, by increas¬ing business uncertainty and by in¬ducing public and private hoarding,it would reduce employment and in¬tensify the depression, it is our be¬lief that this consideration alone taxes, to pay $100 a month to eightmillion persons, but the number ofthese debits is much greater thanthe number of taxable transactionsbecause payments for governmentsecurities, remittances between headand branch offices of firms, and ex-emisscuy foreseessuccess of leagueethiopian winin should condemn the proposal in' its [ penditures on salaries and interestpresent form. i of all governmental bodies are in-unwieldy administration I eluded in the debit figures.”4. “even though its size were re- j hinders money circulationduced far below the rate proposed, i “instead of putting money intomorever, the transactions tax would I circulation, the townsend plan as ofbe very objectionable, at a lower tax april, 1935 would force the treasuryanniversary of adolf hitler’s rise topower—there may be nazi militarydemonstrations within the forbiddenzone, with or without official cog¬nizance.Sllfp iatlg marnnnFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the ofTicial studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,wintc.’, and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Telephones : Local 46 and Hyde Park 9221and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered’ into by The Daily Maroon.All opinions in The Daily Maroon arestudent opinions, and are not necessarilythe views of the University administra¬tion.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. SubscriptionratM $2.75 a year ; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 190.3, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3. 1879.Exclusive national advertising repre¬sentative National AdvertisingInc., 420 Madison Ave., New York; 400 N.Michigan Ave., Chicago^RALPH NICHOI.SON, Editor-in-Chief.ROBIiRT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.P \YMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.LENRY f KELLEY, Desk Editor.JEANNE r. STOLTE News Editor.Business associates: James Bernard,Don Elliott, Don Patterson. Roy War-shawsky.Editorial associates: Wells Burnette,Julian Kiser, John Morris, James Snyder.Ekiward Stern,Night Editor: Edward S. SternAssistant: Edward C. Fritz or, lij fasfaye zaphiro, youthful,calm, deliberate first secretary of theethiopian legation in london, addres¬sed a mixed audience at internation¬al house yesterday afternoon.lij zaphiro prefaced his report onthe present ethiopian situation witha sweeping history of his countryfrom 525 b. c., when it was one ofthe largest nations in the world, to1S,50 when it embraced civilizationafter 1000 years of damaging strife,he related how italy acquired the twoports which enabled her to establishitalian somaliland and vainly “triedto encroach still further upon .Ethio¬pia” in 1895 when defeated ataduwa.lij zaphiro took pains to makeclear the inaccuracy of most of theunofficial reports which the news¬papers daily flaunt in their head¬lines as weII as to deny the “atrocit¬ies” and the charges of slavery whichhave been made.the address was the first of tw'ogiven yesterday before the youngdiplomat leaves the city to continuehis good-will tour of the unitedstates.FRESH EGGS & POULTRYDIRECT FROM FARMof the Dr. Mor-Famous SunbeamDistributorshouse FarmsBrand.-Vo Charge for Delivery.Sanitary OdorlessJeffery Poultry Store1953 E. 75th StreetPlaza 2416A. DAVIDSON, Mgr.Wanted—Boys to Deliver Eggsand Poultry rate, the ponderous administrativebody which would be needed to su¬pervise the sales of every business inthe country would become even moreexpensive and bothersome in propor¬tion to the yield of the tax. e*^enaside from this, the incidence of atransactions tax would be neitherupon those gaining from the pensionscheme (like the taxes under thesocial security act), upon those whohave capacity to pay (like the incomeand inheritance tax), nor upon con¬sumers of luxuries (like the taxeson cigarettes, gasoline, and liquor),it would fall according to an arbi¬trary and inequitable rule uponeverybody who got in its way andcould not evade it in some manner.5. “not only would the plan beharmful rather than helpful to busi¬ness recovery and involve a highlyinequitable and inefficient form oftaxation, but it would be thoroughlyunsound as a plan of old-age pen¬sions. the complete centralization ofthe pension administration, it is gen¬erally admitted, would be a blunder,if large non-contributory pensionsare to be paid, it is insanely extrava¬gant to pay without regard to need,if small pensions are to be paid, itis absurd to propose to set up an ad¬ministration to supervise the lives ofthe pensioners for fear of supposedeconomic ill effects if they savedanything or gave too much away,to propose such an ill-advised schemecan do nothing but distract atten¬tion from more reasonable pensionplans.impossible, to financeamong other statements in thepamphlet are the following:“based on estimates from govern¬ment figures covering trade and to withdraw money from circulation,or bank deposits, and hold it idlefor the first months, in addition tothis, private firms would have to setaside cash reserves to meet the tax.thus for the first months, moneywould be withdrawn from circulationand when payments were made to thepensioners, this same money wouldbe put back into circulation.“business men would raise sellingprices, reduce wages, and hoardmoney to pay the tax, making theeffect of the tax one that would castus back into deep depression.”January 29, 1936—8:15 P. M.“THE STEPCHILDRENOF EUROPE”MARVIN LOWENTHALEditor and Representative ofMinority Interests at theLeague of NationsK. A. M. TEMPLE50th and Drexel BoulevardStudent Tickets 25c3 Months’ Shorthand Coursefor College Graduatesand UndergraduatesIdeal for taking notes at college orfor spare-time or full time positions.Classes start the first of April, July,October and January.Call, write, or telephoneState 1881 for complete factsThe Gregg CoDege6 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago NOTICE!Because of the coldweather effective dis¬tribution of the Es¬quire edition of Phoe¬nix was impossible. Inorder that studentsmay obtain copies, thisissue has again beenplaced on sale. Theymay be purchased atthe newsstand in frontof Cobb Hall or at thePhoenix Office in Lex¬ington Hall. today on thequadranglesmusicorgan recital by wilbur held, marioSalvador, esther Wunderlich, univer¬sity chapel, at 8:15.phonograph concert, sonata in dminor, beethoven. social science 122,at 12:30.lectures“making our idealism dominant,”the reverend norris i. tibbetts. bondchapel, at 12.“some aspects of economic plan¬ning. planning and monetary pol¬icy.”' associate professor gidoonse,social science 122, 3:30.“catalytic processes in living mat¬ter.” associate professor hanke, har¬per mil, 4 :30. “the music and poetry of iniPa »dr. arnold a. bake, ida noyes theater8:30.meetingsachoth. wicker room, ida no\csat 3.delta sigma, alumnae room. i,ianoyes, at 4:30.rayute, student lounge, ida noyes3:30.ywca, alumnae room, ida noyesat 12.french club, ywca room, ida tunes7:30. ■ ’CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT. Furnisho'! Jndapartment. 5505 University Avenue.5 light rooms near U. of C. Excel¬lently furnished. Can be rented to 2or more parties. For inspection seeC. W. Hoff and Co. 1348 E. 55111 ‘stH. P. 2215.BOOKS THATIMPROVE YOURENGLISHand make term paper writing easy. Thesesuperior reference books are now priced sothat every student can own them.ERRORS IN ENGLISHROCET’S THESAURUSMODERN WORD-FINDERSIMILES AND THEIR USEWORDS WE MISSPELL •IMPROVE YOUR CONVERSATIONEXPRESSIVE ENGLISHCRABB’S ENGLISH SYNONYMESVOCABULARIES$1.00 eachU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Av«.(ORCHESTRA HALLMonday Evening, Feb. 10, 8:15 P. M.Prices 83c and $2.20Ticket Sale at Information Bureau or'Harry Zelzer, 20 N. Wacker Drive, Dea. 2991The AmazingRuth SlenczynskiTen Year Miracle Pianistthe daily ' tuesday^ january 28/ 1936 page threeeditoriayoung ethiopian prince bringslight to campusa minor event judged by anypractical scale and unscholarly con¬sidered by purely critical minds, thetalk made by a lean, serious youngman yesterday is nonetheless des¬tined to be one of the high pofnts inthe quarter so far as we are con¬cerned. we refer to the discussionconducted by an ethiopian. princeabout affairs in his country.so friendly was the recital—seem¬ingly .so frank in accepting blamewhen blame was due—that it both¬ered us but little whetner or not allwas as he said, what we were inter¬ested in was lij saphiro, dusky faced,black cloaked—proud young son ofothiopia. we were touched by his de¬sire that we should think well of hiscountry and his emperor; we wereimpressed by his manner of talkingand thought of the years he spentat kings college, Cambridge; but mostof all we were taken by the youngman, himself, as he peeped out be¬tween his words quite unknown tohimself.here was a fellow not much olderthan some of the students on the(luadrangles, come from a land equal¬ly remote and mysterious, strivingto meet his problems squarely andfearle.ssly. war to him was a horriblereality; frustration and disappoint¬ment were his constant companions;his fight was to slowly lift ethiopiafrom a condition of war and crueltyto that of the west and civilization.the moving thing about it all vva.sthat he was doing it, he was throw¬ing himself intelligently to the task,he was travelling far to make hisaims known, we students who feelabout things in this world may takea lesson from him.—r. w. nicholson.columnist tells offame of Chicagorepertory groupthe fame of the Chicago repertorygroup, which will present "if this berea.son” at international house feb-ruary 7 under the auspices of theChicago progressive union, has spreadall over the middle west as the re-•sult of tours during which they pre¬sented “waiting for lefty” and otherwell known broadway successes.Iloyd lewis said of them in the“daily news”; "the local theatergroups at least, have a very healthyand artistic attitude toward them-.selves—they write a satire upon theirown .serious efforts and upon odet’sjilays. the Chicago repertory grouphas written and produced “waitingfoi odets,” a burlesque of “waitingfor lefty” in the various manners ofo’neill, earl laemmle and noel coward,seek new acting technique“this particular band of youngpeople—mad about the stage—started three years ago, rehearsingin dingy lofts, after a time, Charlesde sheini, an actor and radio player,joined them as director, and sincethen they have grown in numbers andequipment, they study all phases ofthe theater—acting, .scene painting,directing, lighting, dancing, theyhave not patronized the established'dramatic schools for two reasons:one, as wage earners they have nomoney to spend for training; two,they are after a new sort of realisticacting, they want to lear nhow to“think” and “live” their roles ratherthan acquire conventional techni¬ques.“cooperative, very much in earn¬est, deejdy excited about a new pro¬gram for making the drama grip theproblems of the day, the new theaterleaguers may be headed for disillu-.sion that has come to so many otherlittle theater groups, or they may bet)ioneers in a renaissance of thedrama itself, one think makes themdifferent from the traditional ama-teurs-with-a-purpose; they have kepttheir .sen.se of humor, they have satir¬ized themselves, they have grown—which is of course, they way to getgrowth.Ideal accommoda¬tions for studentsand faculty.HAmRD uom“24-Hour Service”5714 Blacksfone Ave. university presspublishes group ofhutchins' lecturesadopting the title “no friendlyvoice” from the writings of John mil-ton, president robert maynard hut-chins submits his collection of ad¬dresses to the university press forpublication in book form later infebruary. The jacket of the book isto feature a drawing of presidenthutchins by mrs. maude phelps hut-chins.the collections included in the pub¬lication are a group of varied lec¬tures, dealing chiefly with education,and its purposes that were deliveredby president hutchins at differenttimes either at the university or else¬where.twenty-two lectures make up thevolume, of these, one was deliveredto a graduating class at the univer¬sity, one to the faculty and trustees,and one to the students, other lec¬tures posso?s such titles as “radioand public policy,” “the Chicagoplan,” “what it mean to go to col¬lege,” “the y m c a,’ “the higherlearning,” and “thomas jefferson andthe intellectual love of god.”letters tothe editorgerman exhibiteditor, daily maroondear mr. nicholsonthere is a very interesting collec¬tion of books now on display in wie-boldt KLrary. i think it is interestingenough to deserve attention and in¬spection by every student at the uni¬versity.you see, there has been so muchanxiety about communistic indoc¬trination that i think this aforemen¬tioned visit to wieboldt will set hys¬terical uncles at rest and allow manyworthy and conscientious students toget a load of fascist indoctrination.when questions are posed aboutthe origin of the exhibit we learnthat the library administration waspersuaded by the german vice-consulto allow a german publisher’s asso¬ciation to display its wares in one ofthe university libraries, one can pro¬cure a price list of the books for theasking, let me see —hitler’s “mybattle” is being sold at the bargainprice of $3! but what have we here?—just imagine the pamphlet, “hit¬ler’s wonderland” can become yourvery own for only $.50.if you will take the trouble to lookthrough some of the lovely picturebook.s (one doesn’t have to read ger¬man to understand a picture) youwill find hitler posing with the chil¬dren who “love their leader” somuch, here is a .stalwart uniformedlad of eight who stands rigidly atattention with the fuehrer behindhim. underneath we read, “spirit ofour spirit!”aha!—here is a sad little boy whois being comforted by the gentle hit¬ler. and underneath we read thelad’s mournful wail of, “yesterdaythe reds killed my father.”i am sending my poverty-strickenand blind grandfather to the libraryadministration to see if he can getpermission to display a miscellaneousassortment of .safety pins, ribbons,rubber bands, and pencils, he willonly use one table, i am sure it willbe no trouble at all.1. w.(naturally you do not like fa.scistpropaganda, but, honestly, do younot find it interesting? furthermore,are you not proud that your univer¬sity is in fact, as well as priociple,interested in all theories, approaches,and what have you?—ed.)pledgingphi beta delta announces the ipledging of bernie moss of Chicago.THREE MONTHS'COURSErOI COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATISA Utorough, tMUnsivt, sttMograpkic amne—atartutg January 1, April 1, July 1, October 2,tmUreatit^ Booklet sent free, without obhgatum—write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D.,PH.B.tegular Courses, open to High School GrmPmates only, may be started any Monday. Dayattd Evening. Evening Courses open to men.n6 S. Michigan Ay«., Chicago, Randolph 434/ONLY 28 MOREDAYS TILLTHEWASHINGTON PROM travelling barpranksters take a trip tothe doghousebrain teasers:what two juniors, who are fre¬quently seen about the coffee shop(both of whose initials are b. b.),swiped nancy nimmons’ lacy unmen¬tionables out of her car and drapedthem over the hood in a most ar¬tistic manner, we are made to un¬derstand that nancy is quite gripedabout it, and as far as she is con¬cerned, those two chaps are in thedoghouse.great? minds at play:hutchins came wandering out ofharper library at peace with theworld and his wife, singing the “mus¬ic goes round and round”.... by theway hutch, what ever happened tothat 1913 joe college hat you usedto wear?the villain pursued her:villian h. snodgress (the snake inthe grass) got his fingers burned1 pursuing ex-queen connie dalziel.there’s one gal he couldn’t sink hisfangs into.riot in the dorms;butter Wilson almost melted whenshe saw an inmate of walker insti¬tute leering at her from the fire es¬cape outside her bedroom.new economy:andy hoyt and harry morrison.save money by escorting a mutualdate to all important social eVents. . . .seems they are a couple of wall¬flowers. . . .this is the mo.st recent ofbrain trust theories, the girl with theleast principle draws the most inter¬est.the other side:after our contest for the prettiestgirl on campus, we have had num¬erous reque.sts for something similar,so just to .satisfy everyone that weare impartial, we are going to pub¬lish real soon the results of a polltaken for the prettiest boy on cam¬pus. those votes will be cast by thedifferent girls whom our vote tak¬ers approach, make up your mindsoon girls, the boys are just dyingfor dates with the winner, yoo hoowinner.this week on the quadranglers:breternitz is at last as free as theair.famous last words:gentlemen prefer blondes, theyget dirty faster.—purple parrot. 1“Anyone witnessing a collisionbetween a Studebaker Sedan anda Chevrolet Laundry truck on May16, 1934, at about 2:45 p. m. at58th Street and Woodlawn Ave¬nue, in which both cars came toa stop after the accident at thenorthwest curb, please telephoneWabash 1874.”TIMES ARE BETTERwith a new guaranteed Elgin,Hamilton, or Ix>ngines watch. Lat¬est models in white, yellow gold,and Platinum. Special for thismonth only—Trade-in allowanceon your old watch.KENDALL NORTH& COMPANY55 E. Washington St.Pittsfield Bldg.R-749 Chicago Ran. 0609MonopolyThe game of games. New shipmentjust received. Buy and sell houses,hotels, property, railroads, utilities,etc.A game of chance and skill$2.00Woodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsNear Kimbark Ave. hutchins condemnsprice cuts beforeI national retailers1* appealing to national retialers fort their support of public educationI and their opposition to “all price-1raising and volume-restricting meas¬ures of every character,” presidentrobert maynard hutchins addressedthe silver jubilee convention of thenational retail dry goods associationin new york last week.in the governmental recovery pro¬gram, education was the last institu¬tion of the nation to be aided, accord¬ing to president hutchins. “today itneeds your assistance as never be-1fore,” he commented, “i am now con¬vinced that the greatest danger to jeducation in america is the attempt, |under the guise of patriotism, to sup¬press freedom of teaching, inquiryand discussion, it is laughable,” headded, “to hear americans talk abouttheir devotion to education and thensee them resist any increased ex¬penditure upon it, particularly anyexpenditure upon teacher’s salaries.”frankly admitting that he hadnever crossed the threshold of thebusiness world except when he work¬ed his way through school by sellingclothesline reel, he stressed the key¬note of distribution importance. *‘itdepends upon your ability to sellmore and more, better and bettergoods to more and more people atlower and lower prices,” he declared.LEARN TO DANCE WELLTERESA DOLAN DANCESTUDIO1 545 E. 63rd St. Tel. Hyde Park 3080Beginners Class Every Mon. Eve. 8:15Private Lessons Day or Evening by Appt. psychiatry professorexhibits lie detector inlaw school tomorrowthe bar association will presentthe next of its weekly lectures Wed¬nesday when dr. john a. larson, pro¬fessor of psychiatry at rush medicalschool and Illinois medical schoo’will give an illustrated lecture onthe lie detector, because of lack ofacilities, the lecture will be givenin rosenwald 2, at 2:30.dr. larson is noted as a criminologist, and was associated for men''years with chief of police vollmei’ ofsan francisco. chief vollmer is oneof the foremost criminologists in the country, larson has also been as¬sociated with dr. keeler of north¬western university, larson and keel¬er were the pioneers in work withthe polygraph,dr. larson is in charge of researchI at the state penitentiary and at the; state reformatory, he has written abook on “lying and its detection.”SSrOR THAT eRANDAND OLORIOUSFEELINL,, ^e P.UrilMOfc.li^These are the gentlemen (?) employed to “bounce’anyone appearing with a corsage at theSkull and CrescentFormalJUDSON COURT — JAN THIRTY ONEDamages Only One Buck and TenAND NO CORSAGES!page four DAILY MAROON SPQRTStuesday, January 28, 1936haarlow tallies 10 points, but twowolverines lead in scoring honors(Continued from page 1)week, the amount of roughshod playis attested by the fifteen foulsagainst michigan, as well as elevenagainst the maroons.John eggemeyer creditably filledlang’s place after the latter’s injuryin the last half, the sophomore star,after becoming accustomed to thedisconcerting play of rudness, tookan important part in working ma¬roon offensive plays, and sank hisonly free throw' on the foul whichfinally put rudness out of the gamewith four personals in the secondhalf.the score at the end of rudness’ |spree in the first period was 22-12in favor of the ann arbor five, rud¬ness had scored frequently on deadlyaccurate long -hots, while earltownsend starred at terrificly spee¬dy hoop shots near the basket.in the second period after a shortlived rally by the determined mid-w'ay quintet, tamagno, the w'olverinecaptain, started on a run of fieldgoals which put him into a final scor¬ing tie with haarlow and put his teamway ahead.wildcats, 42;.maroons, 27after threatening to subdue north-western’s third place wildcats, themaroon cage quintet succumbed to alast-half attack and lost the first en¬counter of the year between cityrivals by a score of 42-27.captain bill haarlow ran upagainst 210-pound duke vance, pur¬ple captain, and scored only tenpoints, trailing only the twelve pointsscored by jean smith, towering wild¬cat center, vance himself, looped in ! box scoremichiiran (45) fg ft pf; Chicago (22) fg ft pfj. townsend. f 2 0 2i haarlow, f 2 6 0e. townsend. f 5 2 0| lang, f 0 3 0jablonski, f 0 1 2j eggemeyer. f 0 1 2slavin, f 1 2 0 g. petersen, f 1 1 2Kee. c 0 0 1| amundsen, c 0 1 0tamacno, g 5 0 4i lefevre, g 0 1 1meyers, g 0 0 2 fitzgerald, g 0 1 3rudness, g 5 1 4i k. petersen, g 0 2, 3tishman, g 1 1 0,totals 19 7 lol totals 3 16 11referee- —feezle, indianapolis. um-pire—kearns. and paul.three buckets from mid-court.haarlow’s three baskets were ex¬tremely difficult shots, especiallysince he was often being covered bytwo northwesterners. as a result ofthis concentration on the maroonstar, one of Chicago’s guards, kenpetersen, broke away with three fieldgoals in the first half.after leading only 23-21 at the endof the first half, the strong purpleteam resolved not to repeat its sur¬prise loss to minnesota last week, andswiftly ran ahead of the tiring mid¬way five. macmichaels tossed infour buckets and trenkle, three, dur¬ing the game.amundsen stirred the crowd by sev¬eral times saving the maroons frombeing scored upon when the north¬western offense went toward thebasket.it was the strong wildcat reservelist which counted for the rally inthe la.st half, although captain vanceheld out until the last three minutes,while the city newspapers featuredvance’s guarding of haarlow, haarlowdid well under the harrying of thecrowd and the opposition of the wild¬cats, who had trained more to holdhim than to play the maroon quintet. wrestlers loseall but two boutsto gopher squadthe maroon wrestling squaddropped its first conference meet ofthe season last Saturday night inbartlett when the university of min-nesota ^eam won five bouts to winthe meet 22-10.sam Whiteside, maroon heavy-w'eight, was throw’n into the ropesat the outset of his fight with stanhanson, gopher star, and suffered arecurrence of an old knee injurywhich will keep him from competi¬tion the rest of the year, whitesidewas not on the line-up out wrestledwhen the minnesota squad protestedthe headgear worn by nelson thomasto protect an injured ear.in the 118 pound division ros? mo-corquodale required 9:38 to beatChicago’s dave tinker by a decision,in the 126 pound event tom barton,maroon senior, won the first fallof the evening by throwing colwellof minnesota in almost nine minutes,the score was tied, but the gopherspulled ahead in the 135 pound divi¬sion when vernon bernhardt droppeda decision bout to erwdn upton in6:05.the result of the 145 pound matchbetween bob finwall, young Chicagosophomore star, and norman borlang,put hicago in the lead with finwall’sfall done in 4:50—almost the short¬est bout of the meet.Charles butler lost by a decisionto don daily in the 155 pound classand john whitaker, gopher 165pounder, threw dick anderson in4:40 in the 175 pound class, how¬ever, fred lehnhardt gave captaincaifson johnson a real battle beforehe lost the match by a decision in4:40. cts, chiselers, hoffer’s reds, win i-m j all sabres win ascage games; announce high scorers maroon fencersonesided games were the rule infriday’s intramural basketball playwhen the Chicago theological semin¬ary, chiselers, and hoffer’s reds com¬pletely swamped opponents to ad¬vance in the independent divisiontournament.the chiselers piled up 66 points torout the broadmen 66-14. scoring atwill, the business school men showeda smooth accurate passing attack ingarnering their victory, in whichhickok and surdyck led the scoringwith 19 points each.the c. t. s. team, lead by traynorw'ho rang up six baskets and a free-today’s game*(tuesday, January 28)at 7:30court 1. phi delt vs. kappa sigma2. delta u. vs. phi psi3. alpha delt vs. a. t. o.4. chi psi “b” vs. phi delt “b’at 8:15court 1. psi u. vs. beta pi2. chi psi vs. phi sig3. z. b. t. vs. phi kappa sigsigma chi “b’ alpha delt “b”at 9:00court 1. delta u. “b” vs. phi b. d.“b”2. pi lam vs. phi b. d.3. phi gam vs. sigma chi4. phi psi “b” vs. deke “b”throw, had little trouble in defeat¬ing the barristers 40-19.in what was probably the hardestfought game of the afternoon hof¬fer’s reds overran the barbarians23-15. with a 15-5 score at the half,the barbarians started a determinedrally in the second half, only to find their hopes blasted by a scoring spurtfrom the red team.leading high scorers in the intra¬mural basketball winter cage tour¬ney announced yesterday by the in¬tramural department follow, highscorers in the “a” division of thefraternity league have been previous¬ly announced.1. traylor, c. t. s 272. hiekock, chiselers 253. hough, electrons 214. doris, hoffer’s reds 205. sundek, chiselers 196. metzner, electrons 19rudness moves into jthird place in scoring :Chicago, jan. 27—(up)—bill rud-1ness, michigan guard, scored 11 ^points in tonight’s game with Chicago jto pass from fifth to third place in ,big ten individual scoring standings,earl townsend, michigan, collected 12points to advance from 18th to a tiewith smith of northwestern for sixthplace, those were the only majorchanges resulting from the contest,sole conference game of the night.both bill haarlow, Chicago, andjohn townsend, michigan, maintainedtheir positions in first and secondplace respectively.The standings:' g fg ft tp !haarlow, chicago 6 27 21 75 'j. townsend, michigan ...7 20 18 58 {rudness, michigan 7 21 11 53 Iwhitlinger, ohio state ...5 16 19 51^gunning, indiana 5 15 12 42 ismith, northwestern ....5 13 14 40 je. townsend, michigan ..7 18 4 401lang, Chicago 5 17 4 38 Upset Cincinnati•Chicago fencers won all theirbouts in sabre to pull ahead of astrong Cincinnati dueling team, 10':.-6^, Saturday afternoon in bartlettgymnasium.the maroons led 5-4 at the end ofthe first weapon, foil, but the beaicats pulled up to a tie, bywinning two and halving one of thefour epee bouts, then leland winterand louis marks carried all four sa¬bre bouts for Chicago, clinching thevictory.the meet was the second of theyear for the maroons, and may proveto be one of the most difficult, theCincinnati aggregation, fresh from avictory over purdue, displayed ex¬cellent form in foil and epee, thebearcat captain, libecap, won two ofhis three bouts, captain CampbellWilson of the maroons was strickenw'ith a bad cold, but won tw-o of hisbouts, and lost the third to libecapby a narrow margin.besides wilson, winter, and marks,george gelman, henry lemon, andjim waiters, all lettermen, par¬ticipated. gelman and lemon ac¬counted for 1V6 points in epee, andwaiters won his only foils bout.the bouts were almost all close un¬til the sabre competition, the weirdstyle and hand movements of vanceperhaps attributed to his earningmany points for Cincinnati.the maroons face michigan stateat lansing Saturday in the first meeton an opponent’s floor this year, ac¬cording to coach r. v. merrill./62/HThis picture shows how the JamestownColonists exchanged tobacco for brides.They paid ‘ ^120 pounds of the best leaf^'for transportation ofeach futurewifewhocame to the New Wwld from England, 'm 1936 -And here is a picture of the modemauction warehouse of today where thesame type of leaf tobacco is sold on theopen market to the highest bidder.Ihere is no substitute for mild, ripe tobacco tomake a good cigarette—and there never will be... and that is the kind we buy for Chesterfield Cigarettes,In the tobacco buying seasonLiggett & Myers Tobacco Co.buyers will be founcJ at 75 mar¬kets where the Bright type oftobacco is sold, and 46 marketswhere Burley and other typesof tobacco are sold. All these tobacco men aretrained in the tobacco business,and are schooled in the Liggett &Myers tradition that only mild,ripe tobacco is good enough forChesterfield Cigarettes.Liggett & Myers Tcmcco Co, .. for mildness.. for better tasteC 1936, Liccbtt Si Myers Tobacco Co.