Vol. 36. No. 112. Price 3 Cents. (!Pbe Batlp ilUitaonTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936 Member United PressStarhemberg toTry Comebackwith HeimwebrOpposes Disarmament ofPrivate Army by Dicta¬tor.VIENNA, May 20—(UP)—PrinceRudiger von Starhemberg, ousted co¬dictator of Austria, called an extra¬ordinary session of the heimwehr com¬manders tonight to discuss “futureaction” in connection with Chancel¬lor Kurt Schuschnigg’s order to dis¬arm the heimwehr.Behind the guarded doors of hisprivate headquarters, the fallenprince, momentarily expected to makea new bid for power, conversed leng¬thily with his fascist chiefs, presum¬ably bringing them a message fromBenito Mussolini with whom Starhem¬berg conferred in Rome.The heimwehr leader returned fromRome by airplane this afternoon. Hewas at the controls of the tri-motoredItalian plane, carrying eight passen¬gers.Crowd Greets LeaderHundreds of heimwehr men and ad¬mirers greeted him at the airport. Theovation was mingled with cat-calls andbooa for the government.Strahemberg, apparently well satis¬fied with the results of his Rome con¬versations, told the United Press:“I am not able to reveal my plansat present, but they will be knownsoon.”He left the air port immediatelyfor his headquarters.Close friends and ranking membersof the heimwehr, SUrhemberg’s pri¬vate army, said the prince has de¬cided to oppose disarming of the or¬ganization in opposition to Schusch-nigg.The result may be civil war or thedownfall of Schuschnigg, who onlylast Fridi^ proclaimed himself abso¬lute dictator. If he enforces his or¬der, the heimwehr is expected to re¬sist by force of arms. If he rescindsit, his presitge will have been impair¬ed too greatly to allow him to con¬tinue as dictator.Cuba InauguratesGomez as Headof GovernmentHAVANA, May 20—(UP)—Mi¬guel Mariano Gomez and FedericoLaredo Bru were inaugurated presi¬dent and vice-president, respectively,of Cuba today, initiating the first re¬turn to constitutional governmentsince the overthrow of PresidentGerardo Machado on August 12, 1933.The chief justice of the supremecourt administered the oath of officeto the new chief executive in the hallof mirrors of the presidential palacb,after which the outgoing provisionalpresident, Jose A. Barnet, placed thesash of the grand cross of the Or¬der of Merit of Carlos de Cespedesaround Dr. Gomez’ shoulders.The ceremony was witnessed by alarge crowd, including foreign diplo¬mats and high ranking military,naval and civil authorities. Twenty-five thousand persons jammed the ap¬proaches to the palace and cheeredGomez enthusiastically when he ap¬peared on the balcony after beingsworn in. An artillery battery boomeda 21-gun salute.Havana was beflaged and a holidayspirit reigned everywhere. Celebra¬tions began at midnight.Following the signing of the offi¬cial act. President (jromez received the.senators, representatives, judiciary,military, naval and other authori¬ties in the hall of mirrors. He thenwent to the cabinet room for a briefsession with his ministers.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)HABITWe were like tram-cars running ontheir lines from terminus to termi¬nus****W. Somerset Maugham, Moon andSixpence. Authorities Refuseto Admit RussianOfficial into U. S.SAN FRANCISCO, May 20—(UP) Jacques Grossman Gutzman,45, an attache of the foreign depart¬ment of the Russian government, wasrefused entry to the United Statestoday at the Angel Island port ofentry today.Edward W. Cahill, commissioner ofimmigration, said Gutzman refusedto answer when asked whether hebelieved in the American form ofgovernment or whether he would de¬stroy it.Over the protests of M. G. Galko-vitch, Soviet consul in San Francisco,the immigration board then voted toretain the Russian official at AngelIsland.Calkovitch announced he wouldappeal to Washington. He said Gutz¬man was unable to understand thequestion. Cahill said an interpreterwas present.Gutzman came to the United Statesto study dairy farming in California.Three Fuehrersto Rule AustriaSchuschnigg Remains Headof Government on Com¬promise of Authority.VIENNA, May 20—(UP)— Thecabinet tonight gave final form to alaw under which Austria would havethree “Fuehrers” or national leaders.Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, un¬officially dictator, would become na¬tional leader of the fatherland front,and Vice Chancellor Eduard Baar vonBaarenfels national commander of thefront militia.Prince Ernst von Starhemberg,ousted as co-dictator in a bloodlesscoup d’ etat last week, would continueas national sports leader and alsohead the Motherhood protective as¬sociation.All would have the title of Fuehrer,but Schuschnigg would remain theactual head of the government.The law represents a compromisein the division of authority.Calls Commanders to MeetingMeanwhile, Starhemberg called anextraordinary session of heimwehrcommanders to discuss “future ac¬tion” in connection with ChancellorSchuschnigg’s order that the heim¬wehr be disarmed.Meanwhile, Schuschnigg receivedthe diplomatic corps for the first timein the capacity of foreign ministeras well as chancellor.Later he presided over a cabinetmeeting in which reconstruction ofthe fatherland front, formerly com¬manded by Starhemberg, was themain topic of discussion. 'The cabi¬net also discussed creation of afatherland front militia and provi¬sions for employment of former mem¬bers of the disbanded Schutz corpsand auxiliary police units.Townsend OfficialAnswers Charges ofCongressional GroupOKLAHOMA CITY, May 20—(UP)—The sultry Oklahoma airgrew blisteringly hot tonight asCorner Smith, vice-president of theTownsend organization, gave answerto charges that he bought firewaterfor Indians with organization funds.Smith enlarged upon his opinion ofthe Congressional committee which isinvestigating old age pension schemesby flatly defying the committee tosubpoena him.“Those scandal mongers can go tohell,” he shouted as a beginning. Hisfurther denunciations of the commit¬tee probably were noted by theweather bureau as unprintable causesof high temperatures.“The tyranny of King George,which brought on the revolution, wasgentleman’s conduct compared to thatof this committee,” he said after cool¬ing a degree or two. “This inquisitionis being conducted overbearingly. Theone idea is to bust the Townsendmovenient.”Smith asserted that the Democraticmachine of Boss Tom Pendergast inMissouri was responsible for the in¬vestigation. Pendergast fears thatonly the Townsend movement can im¬pair his strength in Missouri and hasdetermined to wreck the movement.Smith said. Committee ListsFraternity Orderfor Annual SingOrder of participation of housesin the Interfraternity Sing to be heldon June 13 was decided on yesterdayby the Alumni sing committee andthe undergraduate committee, meet¬ing in the Quadrangle club.On the basis of the quality of theirsinging at the sing last June, thechoruses of the following six houseswill be presented over the Blue net¬work of the National Broadcastingcompany: Sigma Chi, Phi GammaDelta, Psi Upsilon, Delta Upsilon,Phi Delta Theta, and Alpha DeltaPhi. Last year the Alpha Delt choruswas adjudged best in quality and thePsi U’s had the largest number ofactives and alumni present at thesing.Phi Beta Delta will open the pro¬gram. Other houses following in or¬der include Phi Sigma Delta, BetaTheta Pi, Kappa Sigma, Phi KappaSigma, Chi Psi, Zeta Beta Tau, PhiKappa Psi, Phi Lambda Phi, DeltaKappa Epsilon, and Alpha TauOmega. The houses whose programswill be presented on the radio fol¬low after Alpha Tau Omega in theorder already given.Members of the undergraduate singcommittee are James Callahan, Rich¬ard Smith, George Felsenthal, andHerman Schultz.Dramatic SocietyInducts Officers atBanquet TomorrowMore than two hundred studentsactive in the Dramatic associationwill attend the annual spring ban¬quet tomorrow at 7 in the AlphaDelta Phi house, William Beverly,president-elect, announced yesterday.New officers will be inducted andnew members will be initiated. Thoseeligible for initiation are:Elizabeth Anderson, William Bard,Ethel Barquis, Dorothy Beal, BettyBeard, Patricia Beesley, Jeanne Ben-ning, Alfred Berens, Marie Bomke,Joan Brautigan, June Breen, LauraBerquist, Frances Burnett, FrancesBums, Sidney Burrell, Robert Byer-ly, Margaret Callanan, Betsy Chase,Arthur Clauter, Joseph Coambs, TonyCohn.Barbara Collins, Shirley Coambs,Dorothy Cross, Lynne Cross, HelenDaniels, Shirley Davifson, EfizabethDickey, Mary Diemer, Ruth Doctor-off, Harriet Doll, Betty Jean Dunlap,Dorothy Echard, Patricia Elmer,Robert Emmet, Norma Eppens, Ma¬rion Evans, Betty Farrell, Pat Flood,Damon Fuller, Jean Gayton, Mar¬garet Gethro.Others are Ruth Glasscott, EleanorGraham, Mary Letty Green, MaryAlice Hart, Alice M. Hecht, HelenHeile, Catherine, Herbolsheimer, IrmaHolicky, Anita Homs, Jean Howard,Pesrgy Huckins, Louise Huffaker,Mary Johnstone, Mary Kerr, MarionKuehn, Sara Jane Lewis, Dean Lib¬by, James Loeb, Katinka Loeser,Martha Logan, Betty Lou Lindberg,Elizabeth McCaskey.Jean McDougal, Helen Meinnis,Marion McKinney, Esther Margolin,Ruth Marquardt, Charlotte Mars-chak, Mary Ann Matthews, EleanorMelander, Martin Miller, Helen My¬ers, Harriet Nelson, Betty Newrman,(Continued on page 3)Freshman Wins Prizefor Santayana EssayJohn Brady Marks, freshman, wonthe David Blair McLaughlin prize offifty dollars for an essay entitled “APuritan Sensualist,” according to anannouncement released yesterday bythe Office of the Dean of Studendts.The subject of his essay was ananalysis of the work of George San¬tayana.The award was made upon the rec¬ommendation of the judges of thecontest who were Mrs. Edith FosterFlint, professor of English, GeorgeSherburn, professor of English, andLouis A. Landa, instructor in Eng¬lish.Marks is publicity director of thelocal branch of the ASU. He is agraduate of Francis Parker School,and holds a one-year scholarship tothe University.The rules of the contest stipulatedthat the subject of the essays shouldconcern the field of the Humanitiesor Social Sciences; and be between1500 and 3000 words in length. Hold RecitalThis EveninginMandelHallLewis and Stracke FeatureDuets from Purcell,Gershwin, Sanders.Duets from the works of Purcell,Gershwin, and Sanders will be fea¬tured by Agatha Lewis, soprano, andWinifred Stracke, bass, in their duetrecital tonight in Mandel hall.The Purcell duets are not pub¬lished, but w’ere copied from the orig¬inal manuscripts now in the posses¬sion of the Newberry library. Theywere originally written for perform¬ance at the court of Charles II ofEngland. The Gershwin duet is “Bess,Yo’ Is My Woman Now,” from“Porgy and Bess.”The two Sanders duets are new ar¬rangements of hill-billy tunes by Ro¬bert Sanders, outstanding among theyoung Chicago musicians and a mem¬ber of the faculty of the departmentof Music.Other duets to be offered are takenfrom the works of Haydn and Mo¬zart. In addition. Miss Lewis willsing a group of four songs by Faure,and Mr. Stracke will sing a groupfrom Shubert’s “Winterreise” and anaria from “The Tempest,” by Pur¬cell.Miss Lewis and Mr. Stracke willbe remembered for their respectiveportrayals of Dorothy and Satan in“Shvanda” presented in April bythe Music society. Mr. Stracke alsosang the role of Elviro, the comicflower-seller, in “Xerxes” which theOpera association presented last year.A few tickets priced at 50 centsand one dollar are still available at theMandel hall box office, or may be re¬served by calling the department ofMusic.Names NewsThis politically-minded University’scontribution to the “gross field of po¬litical practice”, T. V. Smith, profes¬sor of Philosophy and Illinois statesenator from the Hyde Park district,received almost two columns of des¬cription in Time magazine two weeksago. Last week he wrote a clear state¬ment to the magazine denying thefact that he had been subject to anycensoring influence at the University.The magazine had hinted that theoffice of Senator freed Smith of domi¬nation by Hutchins.* * *Henry Reese, former Phoenix car¬toonist, is back in camp or on campusafter two years of batting throughthe nation. A highlight of his tourwas his service in California writingprogressive cartoons for GovernorUpton Sinclair’s propaganda period¬ical, ‘‘The Epic”. Reese will resumestudy here this fall.William Sherwood, another veter¬an of the battle-scarred Phoenix,plans to study at Oxford next year.* * *As everybody knows, yesterday wasSettlement Tag Day. “That is notnews,” you say, “and if it were news,it would be unpleasant from one as¬pect.” But the profound effect of thework was illustrated afterwardswhen Dan Smith and John Clark, un¬dergraduates, spent several minuteson their knees in the Chapel. Itseems however, that they were count¬ing the income, which will go to needychildren.University DoctorsWin Gold MedalsDr. Charles B. Huggins, Dr. W. J.Noonan and Dr. B. H. Blockstrom ofthe University department of Medi¬cine, were recently awarded goldmedals, awarded annually by theAmerican Medical association as re¬wards for outstanding individual in¬vestigation. Their research demon¬strated the importance of heat to lifein relation to the bones of the humanbody.0. H. Robertson and W. D. Sut-liff, also of the University depart¬ment of Medicine, received honorablemention for an exhibit illustrating theresults of a clinical and experimentalstudy of the lesion of lobar pneu¬monia. Northwestern and Chicago Rank asFavorites as Conference TennisTournament Opens Today at TenChange Method ofElecting Board forMerged PublicationsA primary board of control, thatwill start the new combined publica¬tion of Phoenix and Comment func¬tioning next year, will be selectedlater this week by the boards of con¬trol of the two magazines. This de¬cision was reached late Tuesday after¬noon when representatives of thepublications met with William E.Scott, assistant dean of Students.An editor, managing editor, andbusiness manager will make up theprimary board which will direct thepublication of the magazine until finalselection of an editorial staff is madenext fall quarter.Don Morris, Phil Abrams, andAdele Sandman of the Phoenix staffand Martin Gardner, editor of Com¬ment, will compose the voting com¬mittee which will elect the managingstaff of the new publication. Big Ten Coaches DivideTournament Pairings in¬to Four Flights.After heated discussion the BigTen tennis coaches decided to aban¬don the selection of pairings by theseeded method and drew the order ofplayers for the Big Ten tennis cham¬pionships which open today at 10 onthe Varsity courts.The single players will be dividedinto four flights,and the doublesteams into, twoflighst.The first flightdrawings are asfollows: 1. Bickel,Chicago and Moll,Illinois; 2 Flem¬ing, Iowa andKahn, Michigan; 3.Stafford, Wiscon¬sin and Wilcox,Minnesota; 4. Nil-housen, Ohio StateNorthw'estern.Captain Bickeland Russell Ball,Appoint Committeesto Make Changes inReligious ProgramAt the bi-quarterly meeting of theBoard of Social Service and Religionyesterday, it was resolved to appointa committee to consider the ampli¬fication of the religious activity ofthe University for next year, in co¬operation with a committee appointedby the Chapel Council at a meetingSunday evening.Ruth Emerson, member of the Li¬brary staff, chairman of the Boardhas not yet selected the committee.The Chapel Council committee ap¬pointed by Leonard Olsen, president,consists of Norman Pearson, DanSmith, Joe Witherspoon, and HenryLemon. A special meeting of theBoard will be called next month toconsider the report of the committee.The Chapel (Council in addition em¬powered the executive committee,composed of Leonard Olsen, MerleGiles, Joe Witherspoon, Louise Hoyt,and Cynthia Grabo, to reconsider thebasis of selection of membership inthe Council.The Board of Social Service andReligion has general supervision ofthe religious activities of the campus.It is composed of eight faculty mem¬bers and eight students.Business ProfessorsLead Discussion atBankers’ ConventionWilliam H. Spencer, dean of theSchool of Business; Garfield V. Cox,professor of Finance; and Carl H.Henrikson, assistant professor ofBusiness will lead a round table dis-cusssion before the convention of theWisconsin Bankers association in Mil¬waukee June 24. The subject of thediscussion will be “The Banking Actof 1935—Federal Reserve Regula¬tions.”Another question to be discussedis the probable action of the presentreserve board which was appointedby the president in February of thisyear. According to experts thisboard will probably dominate the openmarket committee since it is a ma¬jority on that committee and wouldmean that the question of inflationcontrol might be weakened by poli¬tical considerations.The discussion will cover the ex¬periences of the federal deposit in¬surance corporation, certain amend¬ments to the federal reserve act, andespecially the power of the reserveboard to double the requirementsof the members.Heindel to InterviewFreshman Advisors• Upperclassmen interested in serv¬ing as counselors to the incomingfreshmen next year are urged to com¬municate immediately with DanHeindel, chairman of the FreshmanOrientation committee at the AlphaDelta Phi house.Final selections will be made Tues¬day, and a complete list of counselorsand alternates will be published thelatter part of next week. The second flight is as follows: 1.Leavens, Northwestern and Cline,Iowa; 2. Burgess, Chicago and Nist,Ohio State; 3. Richardson, Wisconsinand Hicks, Illinois; 4. Sherwood,Michigan and Huntley, Minnesota.In the third flight the order is; 1.Nye, Iowa and Lewers, Illinois; 2.Mertz, Chicago and Arnold, Minne¬sota; 3. Borchardt, Wisconsin, andBenjamin, Ohio State; 4. George Ball,Northwestern and Rodriguez, Michi¬gan.In the fourth flight are; 1. Shos-trum, Chicago and lams, Ohio State;2. Rich, Illinois and Metz. Iowa; 3.Rugg, Northwestern and Brain, Min¬nesota; 4. Flick, Michigan and Kovac,Wisconsin.In the doubles pairings are; 1.Russell Ball and Rugg, Northwestern(Continued on page 4)PresentMid- WestPremiere of EliotPlay TomorrowThe Mid-West premiere of T. S.Eliot’s latest play, “Murder in theCathedral”, will be presented in theInternational House theater tomor¬row night at 8:30, by the Interna¬tional House Players.First produced in England at theCanterbury Festival last year, andsoon afterwards in New York, theplay has been acclaimed as a unifiedand beautiful experiment in dramaticverse, while faithfully depicting thehistoric murder of Thomas a Beckettin the year 1170.Ruth Glynn and Leonard Great-wood play the leads, the latter ap¬pearing as the Archbishop. HarryW. Malm is directing the premiere,according to Katherine Cutter, incharge of social activities in theHouse.The setting, lighting, and cos¬tumes, along with rehearsals, havebeen in preparation for two months,in order that the last production ofthe group for the year may be out¬standing. There will be an ac¬companiment of medieval monasticalmusic.Tickets may be purchased for 50cents at International House, or maybe purchased at the door.Publish Monographby Douglas Waples“The Library” by Douglas Waples,professor of Library Method in theGraduate Library school, was publish¬ed Tuesday by the University of Chi¬cago Press. It is the fourth in theseries of North Central associationmonographs, based on the investiga¬tion conducted for the committee onrevision of standards of the NorthCentral association of Colleges andSecondary schools.“Finance” by John Dale Russell,secretary of the department of Educa¬tion, and Floyd W. Reeves, professorof Education, was published in No¬vember. “Administration” by thesame authors was published in March,and “Student Personnel Service” byDonfred H. Gardner came out thismonth.THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY. MAY 21, 1986Page TwoPropose NewBill for CoalStabilizationGuffey Substitutes Act toMeet Objections of Su¬preme Court.WASHINGTON, May 20—(UP) —Forty-eight hours after the SupremeCourt struck down his coal conserva¬tion act as unconstitutional, Sen. Jo¬seph F. Guffey, D., Pa., today in¬troduced a substitute designed tomeet the court’s objections andachieve the New Deal’s objectives ofa stabilized coal industry.The original Gufley act’s provisionsfor regulating wagjes and hours oflabor, held unconstitutional, wereeliminated from the new bill whichwas based on what Guffey descried asthe “undisputed” power of Congressto regulate interstate commerce.Chief feature of the new measureis a provision giving district coalboards, set up as in the original act,the power to fix minimum pricesbased on production costs includinglabor.It was started through Congresswith full support of the powerfulUnited Mine Workers of Americaand the National Conference of Bitu¬minous Coal Producers, representingmore than 800 operators with minesin 22 states. Both groups supportedthe original act invalidated by theSupreme Court Monday.The producers’ conference startedan immediate drive for enactment ofthe new bill this session. Mine unionleaders said they also hoped forspeedy passage and could see no rea-.sons for delay. President Rooseveltsaid yesterday the New Deal wouldcontinue to seek the objectives of theGuffey act, but did not indicate heconsidered substitute legislation“must” for this session.Chaiman Robert L. Doughton in¬dicated the bill may be reported tothe House next week.^atlg (JHaroonFOUNDED IN l»0tMemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,winter and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5S31 University avenue.Telephones: Local 46 and Hyde Park 9221and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any sta^aments 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 pai>er. Subscriptionrates: $2.75 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising repre¬sentative National Advertising Service,Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York; 400 N.Michigan Ave., Chicago.RALPH NICHOLSON, Editor-in-chief.ROBERT McQUILKIN. Business Mgr.RAYMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.HENRY F. KELLEY. Desk Editor.JEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Business associates: James Bernard,Don Elliott,Editorial associates: Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell, Julian Kiser, John Morris,James Snyder, Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: Irvin J. RichAssistant: Roosevelt RappaportSELWYN Now PlayingTHE GROUP THEATERIS“AWAKE •AND• SING!”by CLIFFORD ODETSAn entertaining play. These players are asclose as AmeHca has had to the AbbeyPlayers from Dublin—LLOYD LEWISORIGINAL CAST INTACT184 Performances at Belasco in N. Y.FIRST VISIT of the GROUP to CHICAGOMATS. WED.-SAT., 83c to $2.20EVENINGS. 83c to $2.75Sixth Play American Theater Societyand Theater Guild Labor GroupCensures CubaWASHINGTON, May 20-(UP)—The executive council of the Amer¬ican Federation of Labor today cen¬sured the “military dictatorship” inCuba, demanded passage of the Wag-ner-Ellenbogen housing bill, and of¬fered “full cooperation” to strikingtenant farmers in the south.The council then adjourned itsquarterly meeting after hearing thereport of Secretary Frank Morrison,showing that nearly 600,000 men join¬ed union ranks in the three monthsending May 1.President William Green refused todiscuss the Supreme Court’s Guffeycoal decision other than to say his as¬sociates are considering the situationcarefully.In response to a request submittedby Secretary H. L. Mitchell, of theSouthern Farmers Tenants union,Memphis, the council directed:“That the American Federation ofLabor assist the farmer Tenants un¬ion in its effort to organize tenantfarmers and to co-operate as fully aspossible with the Southern FarmersTenants union in all the effort it putsforth to promote and advance theeconomic welfare of its members.”Green said he had been directedby the council to send a cable to presi¬dent Gomez of Cuba urging him toprotect union workers in their effortsto organize and to end the “reign ofterror” under military dictatorship.Senate Votes on Billto Raise Income TaxWASHINGTON, May 20—(UP) —The Senate Finance Committee latetoday disposed of Minor controversialprovisions of the $803,000,000 rev¬enue bill and agreed to vote tomor¬row on the embattled corporate prof¬its tax—the heart of the measure.Votes will be taken on plans to as¬sess corporation earnings whichtreasury experts said would yield be¬tween $525,000,000 and $853,000,000annually.Meantime, it was learned that op¬position to one feature of a compro¬mise proposal which would increasenormal income tax rates from fourto five per cent, had increased to sucha point within the committee that theproposal may be defeated.Even if proponents of the highertax rate on lower incomes are success¬ful in committee, opponents Indicatedtonight they would carry their fightagainst the provision to the Senatefloor.Chairman Pat Harrison, D., Miss.,is hopeful that the profits tax provi¬sion may be disposed of tomorrowand a bill reported to the Senate earlynext week. Arrangements will bemade to consider it immediately. Townsend PredictsControl of LargeGroup in CongressWASHINGTON, May 20—(UP)—Dr. Francis E. Townsend, whose ideaof $200-a-month pensions for all over60 brought in $1,000,000 in contribu¬tions, confidently predicted today thatthe movement would control 200 mem¬bers in the next Congress, including“two or three” Senate seats.He testfied before the House inves¬tigating committee headed by Rep. C.Jasper Bell, D., Mo., that he had “ex¬changed views” with Father CharlesE. Coughlin of the National Unionfor Social Justice and the Rev. Ger¬ald K. Smith, one of the leaders ofthe late Sen. Huey P. Long’s share-our-wealth movement, but added thatreports of a third party alliance be¬tween the three groups are “prema¬ture.”“This investigation has not hurt usa bit,” the elderly physician told re¬porters before he resumed the witnesschair at the afternoon session. “Wewill sweep House seats west of theMississippi river. But we have nochoice in the presidential race, eitherbetween Roosevelt or the Republicannominee.”He made a threat to defeatRep. Clare E. Hoffman, R., Mich.,when the latter shouted questions ask¬ing if Townsend hadn’t held forththe promise of reducing the age limitfor pensions to 55, 50 and perhaps40 years.“You just wanted them to give youvotes,” Hoffman charg^ed.Tugwell to ContinueResettlement PlanCHAMPAIGN, May 20-(UP)—The Resettlement Administration willproceed with its other suburban pro¬jects despite the decision of theDistrict of Columbia Court of Ap¬peals invalidating the bound brookproject, Rexford G. Tugwell, adminis¬trator, today informed the ChampaignResettlement office.“As the Attorney General an¬nounced yesterday, the decision is li¬mited to that particular project,”Tugwell said. “Until there is a finaljudicial determination by the SupremeCourt of the United States the Re¬settlement Administration will pro¬ceed with its other suburban pro¬jects.”Elect Herzel CohenPresident of AvukahHerzel Cohen was elected presidentof Avukah for the next academicyear at a meeting held yesterday af¬ternoon in Social Science 107. Hewill.take over the duties from Mau¬rice Shapiro, the retiring presidentof the organization.Other officers elected yesterday areE 1 e a n 0 n Shapera, vice-president;Ethel Ginsberg, secretary; and IsraelRosenfield, treasurer. CollegiateWorld♦ * •(By Associated Collegiate Press)Clear As Mud Department“Students should not try to worktheir way through college. Thosewho try are likely to wreck their ca¬reers, by the very means throughwhich they hope to achieve success—Dean Nicholas I). McKnight of Co¬lumbia university.“Students are so much happierwhen they are working their waythrough school.”—Dean E. E. Nichol¬son, University of Minnesota.“Employment doesn’t make anydifference. A good student may beemployed up to four hours a day,provided she limits her extra-curricu¬lar and social affairs, without affect¬ing the quality of her achievement.”—Assistant Dean Zoe Bayliss, Uni¬versity of Wisconsin.* * *Sling a Little LingoAbout every six months this depart¬ment has to hire etymological ex¬perts to go over the college press ofAmerica and define for us the mean¬ings of all the newest expressions.Otherwise the time would soon comewhen college papers would be incom¬prehensible to us.The latest investigations have pro-duded some excellent nuggets.For example, did you know that“goon”, “dilly” and “drip” all meanthe same thing? In general they re¬fer to a male who just doesn’t rate,who is a punk, a washout, if you getour meaning. The correspondingterm for a female of the same typeis “flatto”, although it is consideredproper to use “floozie.”Courtship has been redefined asmeaning the act of “pitching woo”or “making schmoo,” and consideringthe slightly syrupy nature of muchconlemjwrary adolescent love, the ex¬pressions seem anyropriate.A “stout fellah may suddenly findhimself very “antsy” just beforefinals which means he has found itnecessary to study hard. In such acase, the reason for his lack ofknowledge is that he has been spend¬ing too much time “huddling with hishoney bubble.” Find 127 ChicagoGraduates HeadHigh InstitutionsIf the present generation of stu¬dents at the University is as able asits predecessors, the Midway campusis crowded with future college presi¬dents.Newest evidence of Chicago’s pro¬pensity for training heads of institu¬tions of higher education is the se¬lection, announced last week, of Mil¬dred Helen McAfee as president ofWellesley, famed Massachusetts col¬lege for women. Miss McAfee, whoreceived the Master of Arts degree atthe Midway in 1928, will be come theone hundred and twenty-sfeventh for¬mer University student currentlyheading a higher institution.Dr. George F. Simmons, who re¬ceived the Doctor of Philosophy de¬gree in Zoology at the Midway in1934, was chosen president of the Uni¬versity of Montana in December.Sociology MajorMiss McAfee took her degree in So¬ciology, writing a master’s thesis on“The Young Women’s Christian as¬sociation—Case Study of a ReligiousMovement.” Marion Edwards Park, in¬cumbent president of another notedToday on theQuadranglesLectures‘Treatment of Reading Di.sabilitiesof Children’. SSA club. Social Scien¬ce 108 at 7:30.Public Wedfare Administrationgroup. S<x:ial Science 105 at 7:30.“A Present Day Concept ofShock.” Waller J. Meek. Pathology117 at 8.MiscellaneousChristian Fellowship group. YWCAroom of Ida Noyes at 7:30.Duet recital. Agatha I.«wi8 andWinfred Stracke. Mandel hall at8:30. college for women, Bryn Mawr, was agraduate student at the Universityof Chicago in 1900.In addition to the 127 American uni¬versities, colleges, normal schools andjunior colleges headed by Chicago-trained scholars, three institutions inChina and several in Canada are pre¬sided over by former Midway stu¬dents. Those in China, contempor¬aries at the Midway, are Dr. Chih WeiLuh, ’20, chancellor of Yenching Uni¬versity; Herman C. E. Liu, ’20, presi¬dent of Shanghai University; andBaen E. Lee, ’21, president of Hangchow Christian College. Cecil C.Jones, chancellor of the University ofNew Brunswick in Canada, is a for¬mer Midway student.Several University PresidentsIncluded among the former Chica¬go students now serving as heads ofAmerican institutions are the presi¬dents of the Universities of Oklahoma, Arkansas, North Carolina, Colorado, and Tennessee; of Clark, Wash¬ington and Lee, Boston, Howard,Drake, Washington, Ottawa, Bucknell,Southwestern, New Orleans, Louisi¬ana State, Millikin, Butler and Wil-beforce Universities, and of GeorgiaTe*ch, Georgia Wesleyan and Nebraska Wesleyan; of more than fifty colleges; and of various teachers collegesand normal schools in twenty-fourstates.NOTHING ELSE HAS ITS FUVORHigh, Wide andHandsome• On every campus, smartly dressed men arewearing the Arrow Hunt shirt with the authen¬tic button-down, wide-spread English collar. Ex¬clusive fabrics, beautifully tailored, in oxfordwhite, stripes, and checks. Sanforized Shrunk.$2 and $2.50ARROWLVtVeIFOLLOW ARROW AND YOU FOLLOW TH E STYLE Abo Imporiol YoKo Boh $1.50YOU DON’T HAVE TO BUY ACAP AND GOWNBUT IF YOU DON’TIn years to come you’ll be able to remember no names. . . faces . . . officials and leaders in activities . . .members of the teams . . . the big events of the year... the exciting and unusual things that happened ...your professors ... any number of things.You’ll have no complete resume of activities, for thereis no other complete record available.AND IF YOU BUY ITYou’ll get all the above, and it only costs $3.50.TheCap and GownFor 1936The few remaining copies are now on salein Lexington Hall.THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936 Page ThreeEditorialConquest Inspires Conquest asCooperation VanishesThe failure of other Powers to pre¬vent Japan’s seizure of Manchuriawas undoubtedly one of the factorsthat inspired Mussolini to undertakehis conquest of Ethiopia. Now thatItaly apparently is successful in itsaggression, Japan in turn is encour¬aged to take another step againstChina, as shown in the landing ofseveral thousand troops at Tientsin.One conquest thus inspires another,and the end is not yet.Japan's several explanations—thatthe move is to fight Communism, topacify the region and to protect Jap¬anese nationals—fail to conceal thelong-run objective, the subjugation ofall North China. Aside from Chineseprotests, the only official criticismthus far is the contention by foreigndiplomats that Japan is entitled tobring in only protective forces underthe terms of the Boxer protocol, con¬cluded after the Chine.se uprising of1900. This seems somewhat far¬fetched, since it has hitherto had noeffect whatever to point out that Japan has violated the Nine-PowerTreaty, the Kellogg Pact and theLeague Covenant.The conquering nations just noware having their will with only slightobstructions to overcome. And eachtime an expedition of one is success¬ful, other conquerors receive aid andcomfort therefrom. To so low a statehas the rule of international lawfallen.— (Reprinted from the St.Louis Post-Dispatch.) 5th RowCenterBy C. Sharpless HickmanIf it has done nothing else, theheated competition for tourist tradeon the part of European countrieshas stimulated the production ofmusic and drama festivals which, fortheir magnitude and number in threeshort months, are unequalled by anyother artistic offerings throughoutthe world.Outstanding, as it has been forseveral years, is the Salzburg Festi¬val in Austria. Many and differingare the opinions on this festival. Itis true that accommodations aresometimes poor, that the seats in thetheaters are the most uncomfortablein the world and that the perform¬ances of opera are often spotty. Butwhere else in one month and a halfcan one hear Toscanini directing “DieMeistersinger von Nurnburg”, “Fi-delio” (with Lehmann and List), and“Falstaff” (with Giannini and Borg-ioli); Bruno Walter directing “DonGiovanni” (with Giannini, Borgioli,Lazzari and Pinza); concerts underToscanini, Rodzinski, Walter, Mon-teux and Weingartner; and MaxReinhardt’s incomparable pageantryin von Hofmanstahl’s “Jederman”and Goethe’s “Faust”?« * «Germany, despite its dearth ofgyi’eat interpreters under the Naziregime, has managed to program aWagner Festival at Bayreuth withMax Lorenz, Rudolf Bockelmann,Fritz Wolff, Ivar Andresen and Fri¬da Leider, under the knowing batonEqualization and Improvement IsAimofTaxResearchin County Rates.A.fter four months of work, twoprojects in the WPA program of taxresearch have been finished and sixmore started under the direction ofJ. E. Lovvorn, field director of the-state-wide tax survey.Located on the top floor of the Uni¬versity heating plant, the surveywhen finished, will give Simeon E.Leland, professor of Economics andstate lax commissioner, and othermembers of his commission factualdata with which to better perform theboard’s function as an advisory andsupervisory body over the local town-.ship assessors.Duplication of RatesAs was pointed out by Lovvorn, thereare between 16,000 andd 17,000 tax¬ing units in Illinois. Since eachdistrict has a different tax rateand since the districts overlap inalmost every county, the tax-payeris confronted with a multitude of dif¬ferent tax rates. When the tax com¬mission has the data compiled by thesurvey it will be in a position to“supervise, equalize, and improve taxassessments” as well as to “formu¬late recommendations to the governorand general assembly relative to poli¬cies and procedures affecting financialoperations of the state and local gov¬ernments.”After completing studies in tax de¬linquencies and assessments the 40WPA workers have catalog^ied andanalyzed tax rates in the various tax-levying districts for the past yearsto find how many units have leviedup the constitutional limit or beyondand according to Lovvorn some of Il¬linois’ taxing districts have levied be¬yond the limits established by la\fr.The data on the trend of assess¬ment in taxing districts, shows thatDramatic SocietyInducts Officers atBanquet Tomorrow(Continued from Page 1)Nancy Nimmons, William Norby,Florence Nowak.Evelyn Ortendahl, Kenneth Osborn,Marguerite Owings, Robert Painter,Sarah Paris, Henry Parker, NancyParmalee, Persis-Jane Peeples, LucyPeter, Hope Peterson, Lois Peterson,Velta Press, Rosemary Prest, MarylouPrice, Jean Prussing, Jane Rinder,Josephine Roberts, David Raden, Em¬ily Rogers, Olga Scharff.Others eligible for initiation areEdward Schlain, Elaine Schmidt,Gertrude Senn, Bernice Shaefer,Lucy Shuler, Helen Shaw, BettySmith, Evelyn Smith, Janet Smith,Donald Smucker, Billiette Snyder,Frances Stanton, Ben Stevenson, Bet¬ty Thomas, Mimi Thomas, PhyllisTodd, Virginia Trees, Dorothy Turn¬er, Clementine Vander Schaegh, Isa¬bel Verbarg, Betty Jane Watson,I.«onore Weitheimer, Barbara Wild¬er, Pauline Willis, Aileen Wilson,Frances Wilson, Verna Winters, Zden-ka Zidek and Charles Zerler.PledgingDelta Sigma announces the pledg¬ing of Barbara Swett of River For¬est, HI. the as.sessed valuation of property ha.>!greatly declined during the pa.st 10years.One of the most exhaustive surveyscarried on under Lovvorn’s directionis a research project involving astudy of the funded debt of eachcounty taxing districts within thecounty. Information with respect toeach bond issue is obtained directlyfrom the bond resolution filed in thecounty clerk’s office. When completedthis study will show the bonded in¬debtedness of every county, not onlyas to the amount of indebtedness butalso as to the type of bonds outstand¬ing, the dates of maturing issues, andthe purposes of issue.Investigate Property TaxThe operation of the general prop¬erty tax will be scrutinized by aproject which examines the ratios ofassessed valuation to sale price andshows the difference in this ratio be¬tween rural and urban property in anattempt to determine if either isbearing more than its just load ofthe fi.scal burden. “In the end”, statedLovvorn, “We will know how the gen¬eral property tax is being adminis¬tered in each county and upon whichkinds of property it is resting mostheavily.“Lastly we are preparing mapswhich will show, in every county inthe state, just where the boundariesof the various taxing units togetherwith the tax rates in these districtslie. In some cases we find school dis¬tricts overlapping in two differentcounties with two different tax rateswithin the .same district.”Yale Enlarges Coursesin International RelationsNEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP).—En¬couraged by 'the widespread enthusi¬asm of the undergraduate body in cur¬rent affairs, Yale College will offernext year complete facilities for a“major,” as well as special courses fordepartmental students and honor menin International Relations.A sample comprehensive examina¬tion, consisting of one question to beanswered in four hours, has been sub¬mitted to members of the flourishingYale Political Union, and has beenreceived with unanimous commenda¬tion. It will not replace the courseexamination, but will be additional,designed to test the student’s abilityin analysis and integration.TENNIS RACKETSLARGEST. MOST COMPLETE STOCK$1.50 to $15.00Restrinaring $1.75 to $6.60 (12 grades)Balls - Presses - Covers • VisorsCOMPLETE TENNi8~CLOTHlNGWOODWORTH’S Book Store1311 E. 67th St. OPEN EVENINGSNear Kimbark Ave. Ph. Dorcheater 48$0 of Furtwaengler, and the Munich andDresden and Leipzig concerts againshow an upswing in talent.But Austria can effectively claimthe European championship with itsadditional festivals at Vienna andLinz. The latter is an annual eventchiefly devoted to the playing ofmusic by the late Anton Bruckner.This year Hungary celebrates the50th anniversary of the death ofFranz Liszt with numerous concertsand commemoratory exercises at Bud¬apest, Sopron and Szeged. And forcolorful folk music and dancing, Bud¬apest’s “St. Stephen’s week” is' ri¬valed only by the Ethnological song,dance and drama festival to be heldin July in Czechoslovakia.England’s Shakespeare Festival atStratford, and the famed MalvernDrama Festival are too well knownto require further comment.* *Certain aspects of America’s will¬ingness to “See America Last” andappreciate foreign talent to the ex¬clusion of native endeavor is mani¬fest in the wholesale attendance atmost of these events. In the firstplace there are thousands who gooverseas and applaud vociferously atthe American (often hiding under aforeign name) whom they will re¬gard with apathy next winter at theMetropolitan opera. Charles Kull-man of Yale is one example of sucha singer. The name sounds Gei-man.His work at Salzburg under Tos¬canini was widely hailed. But thispast season in New York he wasdistinctly ignored. It is to anAmerican negress that the ViennaFestival this summer extends itsgreatest honors: Marian Anderson,contralto, who will sing in concertwith the Vienna Symphony underBruno Walter’s baton. Miss Ander¬son was also ignored in this countryuntil she came here last winter witha ponderous amount of internationalacclaim following her European toursduring the pa^t few years.* *In the second place, there are thethousands who are all too prone tolook overseas while failing or refus¬ing to see what is in one’s own back¬yard. America, too, has its festivals.And while there may be fewer ofthem in comparison to the area cov¬ered than there are in crowdedEurope, they are not the outcome ofan announced endeavor to attracttourists. In a future column a listof the major events will be announc¬ed.Thus we see that where Americantourists go to Europe to applaudAmerican singers they have ig^iored,European artists to come to Americato regale audiences whom they oftenabhor.Classified AdsCollege student for summer months;pleasant work; can earn $150 to$300 monthly. Address Dept. E, 59E. Van Buren St., Chicago.LOST—Beta Theta Pi fraternity pinlost Tuesday. Return to 5737 Uni¬versity Avenue. Reward.WANTED—Tutor, chemistry andphysical sciences. Prefer 4th yr.or grad, student living on north side.Answer by writing only. 910 Ca.stle-wood Terrace, Chicago.PICCADILLY MATINEBDAILY51st and BlackstoneTHURS. - FRIDAY“The Prisoner ofShark Island”withWARNER BAXTERGLORIA STUARTStarting Saturday“13 HOURS BY AIR”HARPER 63rd and HarperMatinee DailyToday Only“NAUGHTY MARIETTA”Jeannette MacDonaldand Nelson EddyHYDE PARKThurs. - Fri. - Sat.“THE MILKY WAY”With Harold LloydIRENE’S BEAUTY SHOP1507 East 53rd StreetSECOND FLOOR—MID. 2617OPEN $ A.M. to » P.M.SHAMPOO 25c—WAVE 25cMANICURE 35c GulliverTells about Berwanger’s Feed¬ing Habits and ThingsBy CODY PFANSTIEHLBACK AGAIN FOR a day. JohnMorris is trying an “experiment ineducation” wherein he takes compre-hensives in courses he hasn’t been toclass in. For the rest of the week heis buried under books.And before we start we’ll say helloto the Business school office force andMrs. Sutherland, who are/is very kindto us.%WE HAVE IT ON good authoritythat during his periods of intensivetraining Jay Berwanger carefully re¬gulates the number of times he chewseach mouthful of food. An averagefraternity steak rates between 60 and50. Meat loaf would be somewhere inthe 20’s, mashed potatoes in theneighborhood of five, and Jello prac¬tically takes care of itself.While it takes about twice as longto eat a whole meal that way. Jaysays he gets three times the energyfrom the food, even after deductingthe calories used in the extra chewing.* ♦ •THERE IS AN elderly woman inan apartment at 1223 East 57th streetwho thinks college boys are crazy.In response to a knock and shout of“This is the Fuller Brahsh man!” sheopened her door Monday evening tosee and hear a half naked boy askwhere Ten Eyk and Turner’s apart¬ment was. She said upstairs, andwhen Henry Setzer chased Tom Be-van onto the roof she called the police.Henry got Tom back to the fratern¬ity in time for the tubbing, though.* ♦ *TO MARION FAGET and BradBrown we recommend a good stiffphysiology lab course. Driving to¬ward Jackson Park the other day theygleefully shouted to all friends insight “C’mon—Oh Boy!—They’redragging out a body that’s been in thelake for four months!”• • •ALL IN ALL, Eisendrath and Hol¬loway have taken about 7000 picturesin school this year as possible Capand Gown material. Now Hollowaysays he’s going west this summer totake pictures.Like the proverbial postman’s walk.* » ♦EDWIN HARLOW SMYTH, whodoesn’t like it when you call him EdSmith, reports a policeman resting ona bench under Mitchel tower, gloom¬ily humming the prisoner’s song.Harlow also wonders which they’llcall the new magazine when Phoenixand Comment merge: Commix orPhoeniment.« * «SPECIAL NOTE: Evelyn Smith,who stopped being president of Eso¬teric so she could marry Howard Hill,will carry out the threat June 12 at4:00 in Bond chapel. The Smiths andthe Hills are old friends anyway—though perhaps not as old as the Summer ResidentsHave Use of AllCampus FacilitiesChicago, often heralded as a sum¬mer resort because of its many recre¬ational facilities, forms a pleasantsetting for the woman student in res¬idence during the summer quarter.The University furnishes ampleequipment for women’s athletic ac¬tivities this summer. Three gymna¬siums, bowling alleys, golf cages, anda swimming pool are available to stu¬dents. On Dudley Field, adjoiningthe gymnasium, instruction is givenin golf and other outdoor games. Theentire equipment, except the swim¬ming pool, is open for the use ofwomen without instruction or chargeat any time when the space is notscheduled for class instruction. Theopen hours for the swimming pool in¬cludes one in the evening for bothmen and women.Housing facilities for the summerquarter are comprised not only of thewomen’s dormitories and rooms nearcajnpus, but also of rooms in severalof the fraternity houses which willopen their doors to women for thequarter. Room and board in the dor¬mitory average about $130, whileBlake and Gates halls, which serveno meals, schedule their rates be¬tween $42 and $55. Fraternity houserooms average five dollars a weekwithout board.Summer quarter enrollment for1935 totaled 4317 on the quadrangles,141 enrolled in the college, 555 in theBiological Science division, 681 in theHumanities division, 541 in the So¬cial Service Administration, and 1082in the division of Social Sciences.Offer Bross FoundationAward for ManuscriptFor the best unpublished book ormanuscript on the relation of theHumanities, the Social Sciences, thePhysical Sciences, the BiologicalSciences, or any other branch ofknowledge, to the Christian religion,the trustees of Lake Forest collegewill give a cash prize of $15,000.This award is made through theJohn Bross foundation, the winnerwill be announced on or shortly afterJanuary 1, 1940, although all manu¬scripts must be mailed to Lake Forestcollege before September 1, 1939.Hills. When Mr. Hill Sr. left his posi¬tion of assistant dean to become sec¬retary of University high school, Mr.Smith Sr. took up the assistant dean-ship.Pretty soon it’ll be all in the fam¬ily. * * *BOTHERED BY BUGS flyingaround in his morning class MortimerAdler gave a student 60 cents to buya flit gun. We suggest Adler cooper¬ate with his assistant, professor Reu-bin, who is a dead shot with a oneinch chalk. The latter uses his ac¬curacy to wake sleeping students.It does. Letters tothe EditorWHITEWASHEditor, Daily MaroonDear Mr. Nicholson:During the last few years somegroup has taken it upon itself to giveBlackfriars free publicity by meansof whitewashing University buildingsand some of the fraternity houses.This might have been the work ofsome group not connected with Black¬friars or it might have been by orderof Blackfriars. Two fraternities hav¬ing major offices in the organizationmentioned had a noticeable lack ofwhitewash. This might have been dueto a tacit agreement between the twoto have their stooges miss these twohouses or it might have been an at¬tempt to make the guilt obvious.The Psi Upsilon owls and the ChiPsi shield were taken last week. Icannot reveal the names of the groupthat did this but it was done by agroup comprised not so much of fra¬ternity men as by independents whoare tired of such a lack of regard forthe appearance of the campus and forpersonal property. This group hasinformed me that the confiscatedproperty will be returned next yearafter Blackfriars if the whitewash iskept on the sidewalk and off of thebuildings.Blackfriars may deny any part inthis and the two fraternities fromwhom the group took the propertymay be being unjustly accused; how¬ever it seems that the confiscatorsfeel that if they w’ant their propertyback badly enough they will takesteps to see that our campus is nutmade a billboard and an eyesore forvisitors.—Anonymous.Let Your BaggageGo Borneby theLAUIVDRYROUTEArrange to ship it off this June by your old friendRailway Express and when Commencement Daydawns, be fancy free to board the train for home.Anything — trunks, bags, books, golf clubs, cups,even your diploma—Railway Express will pick themall up on your phone call, forward them at passen¬ger train speed, deliver them safe and sound atyour home. And it’s economical. Railway Expressrates are low, and you pay nothing at all for pick¬up and delivery service. There are no draymen’sdemands, no tips, no standing in line, and sure¬ness is made doubly sure by Railway Express’sdouble receipts, with $50.00 liability included onevery piece you ship. Besides, you have the choiceof forwarding your things either prepaid or collect,and they’ll be home as soon as you are. No otherway of shipping gives you this kind of service,as you probably know, and to get it you haveonly to phone the nearest Railway Express office.70 EAST RANDOLPH STREETPhone Harrison 9700Chicago, Ill.Railway ExpressAGENCY INC.UATIOkl \X/inC DAII.AID c e B vy I eDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1936Swanson Hurlsas mini DownMaroons, 11-1URBANA, 111. May 20—Illinoisconcluded its baseball season hereyesterday by belaboring three Chi¬cago pitchers for an 11-1 victory.The victory gave the Illini a finalstanding of 10 triumphs against twolosses in the Big Ten. Hale Swansonpitched his sixth victory of the yearand finished undefeated.The Maroons hopped off to a onerun lead in the first inning whenSwanson walked White, the first manup. He went to second on Bernard’ssacrifice and scored on Bill Haarlow’sinfield single. Shipway followed withthe first of four hits but Soderlindfanned to end the inning.Mastrofsky held the Illini well inhand for three innings, but in thefourth six runs came across beforeHaarlow took the mound and finallystopped the attack. McDonald wassafe on White’s error and Duffnerwalked. Franklin singled to left scor¬ing McDonald and three tallies scor¬ed when Weber hit a home run to deepcenter. Daukus survived on Kace-na’s error and Swanson also reachedfirst on Mastrofsky’s misplay. Rein¬hart then tripled but Dancisak sup¬plied the last out with an infield pop.The merriment continued in thefifth as four more Illini dented theplate. McDonald singled, Duffnerand Franklin walked, Meleno tripled,and Swanson singled to produce themarkers. Illini’s final run was pro¬duced by Weber when he hit anotherhome run in the sixth.The game was featured by Swan¬son’s hurling. No Illinois outfieldermade a putout. Howie Berg, senior,replaced Swanson in the ninth topitch his last tilt for Illinois. He for¬ced Kacena and Amundsen to hiteasy rollers and fanned pinch hitterDean as his last collegiate gesture.The Maroons scored 1 run, 5 hits, 3errors; Illinois 11 runs, 10 hits, 1 er¬ror.Batteries Chicago: Mastrofsky, Ye-dor, Haarlow and Shipway; Illinois:Swanson, Berg, and Daukus.Choose Ohio asWinner of BigTen Track MeetWith Olympic possibilities in prac¬tically every one of its fifteen events,the thirty-sixth annual Western Con¬ference championships will get un¬der way tomorrow on the Ohio Statefield at Columbus.As usual, pre-meet predictions ofthe outcome may be found in abund¬ance. Tom Jones, Wisconsin trackcoach, expects Ohio State to win withMichigan second, and either Indianaor Wisconsin third. The Daily Ma¬roon also places its bet on Ohio Statefor first, but predicts Indiana, Mich¬igan, and Wisconsin to finish in theorder named, with a probability of allfour being within ten points of eachother. Illinois will probably trail thefirst group with Iowa, Chicago, Min¬nesota, and Northwestern finishingmore or less in a bunch. Purdue hasnot shown up particularly wellthroughout the season and may pos¬sibly bring up the rear.With every Big Ten track record indanger of being broken under favor¬able conditions, with candidates fora trip to Berlin in every one of theevents with the possible exception ofthe pole vault, and with the winnersof 12 of the 14 individual eventsamong the returning men, a bitterfight is almost a certainty.In the sprints, Jesse Owens, OhioState’s colored star is the favorite,although Sammy Stoller of Michiganrnay give him some opposition. El-linwood is considered as almost a surewinner in the quarter mile. In thehalf mile, Charley Beetham of OhioState is the number one prospect.Don Lash of Indiana is the outstand¬ing distance man, although WayneSlocum of Minnesota will probablygive him stiff competition in the twomile. Owens is also the favorite inthe broad jump, with Dan Calde-meyer of Indiana and Jack Kellnerof Wisconsin outstanding in thehurdles. In the shot put, Freimuth ofMinnesota, and Christianson of Wis¬consin are shot put choices. Etchellsof Michigan in the discus throw, andI^mb or Mark Panther in the javelinare other favorites. Tennis Tourney Opens Today withNorthwestern, Chicago FavoritesBig Ten Coaches DivideTournament Pairings in¬to Four Flights.(Continued from Page 1)vs. Cline and Nye, Iowa; 2. Wiscon¬sin’s first team vs. Wilcox and Brain,Minnesota; 3. Nihousen and Tams,Ohio State vs. Kahn and Sherwood,Michigan; 4. Moll and Hicks, Illinoisvs. Bickel and Burgess, Chicago.The pairings in the second doublesflight are composed as follows; 1.Metz and Fleming, Iowa vs. Benja¬min and Nist, Ohio State; 2. Hunt-ley and Arnold, Minnesota vs. Leav¬ens and George Ball, Northwestern;3. The Wisconsin second team vs.Rodriguez and Flick, Michigan; 4.Mertz and Shostrum, Chicago vs.Lowers and Rich, Illinois.The only bad break for the Ma¬roons is in the second singles flightwhere Burgess will meet his tough¬est opponent. Leavens of Northwest¬ern in the second round.PredictionsBy BURT MOYERIt’s tennis today. The Big Tenchampionship matches will open onthe University courts this morningand continue through tomorrow andSaturday. For a change the Ma¬roon team will not be the underdogsor oven the dark horse, in fact, theyare co-favorites with Northwesternand have held the edge over the Wild¬cats in dual competition this season.Yesterday afternoon the Universi¬ty squad held its final practice on theQuadrangle club courts with CoachWally Hebert in charge, while MaxDavidson, assistant coach, and Cap¬tain Norm Bickel volleyed back andforth, Here’s what they had to say:Coach Hebert—“The biggest. dayof the meet will be next Saturdaywhen we expect and hope to play adual match with Northwestern. Lastyear we lost the dual engagementsand went on to whip them for theConference title. This year we wonthe pre-tourney battles and we don’tintend to continue the precedent.Davidson has done most of the activework with the squad and deserves plenty of credit.’’Assistant-coach Davidson—“I don’tthink there has ever been a year inthe (Conference that has produced somany individual stars, in spite ofthe fact that all the talent has beenlimited to ti^o squads, Chicago andNorthwestern. The Ball brothers,Russell and George, ranked fourthand eighth, respectively, in last year’sintercollegiate listingrs; Don Leavens,placed first in Middle-West juniorcircles; and Dick Rugg, winner ofthe Trans-Mississippi title, form awell balanced team that could invadeeither the East or the W’est withoutfear and we have beaten them oncethis season.’’Captain Bickel—“Northwestern isthe team to beat. However, Nihousenof Ohio State is no easy mark foranybody. I won the last time I play¬ed him but he was off his game. Af¬ter the victory over Russell BallTuesday, I feel prepared for any¬thing.’’Won Second FlightLast year Bickel started slowlybecause of an appendicitis operation,but managed to recover in time towin the second flight title in the(Conference meet. Ths year Bickel isundefeated in dual play. The onlytwo men to extend him were RussellBall and Leavens of Northwestern;his only set w'as lost to Ball. Bickelhas whipped the number one man ofevery team in the meet and only Rus¬sell Ball blocks his path to the firstflight title.Norbert Burgess, the Maroon en¬trant in the second flight, holds thefourth flight title from last year. Hisonly losses in dual play were to Rus¬sell Ball and Leavens of Northwes¬tern. Ball will be in the first flightand the man Burgess must whip isLeavens.Herb Mertz is the defending titleholder in the third flight. Of histwo defeats this year one was admin¬istered by Stafford of Wisconsin, whois competing in the first flight today.The other defeat was administeredby George Ball after Mertz whippedhim in the first Northwestern match.Ball is the man to defeat.If Johnny Shostrum con continueplaying in the style he showedagainst Northwestern Tuesday, hewill easily be the fourth flight favo¬rite. Dick Rugg of Northwestern ishis toughest opponent.TITO SCHIPALending Lyric TenorMetropolitan Opera AssociationSEATS--83C to $2.75 AT INFORMATION OFFICE Freshmen GolfersPlay First Roundof 36 Hole MatchPlaying the first round of a 36-holematch, freshmen golfers yesterdaytook over wind-swept Evergreen golfcourse. Low medalist for the firsteighteen holes w'as John Mathieu, jun¬ior state'champion from Utah. Card¬ing a 41 on the out nine he made twostrokes better on the second nine fora total of 80.Seven strokes behind him were JimGoldsmith and Bob Sampson both ofwhom carded 41-39-87. As neither ofthe pair had played more than acouple of rounds this season theirfirst nine score can be discounted un¬der the heading of “limbering-up’’.Others who competed in the tourneywere Salk with 50-42-92; Webb with47-41-88; and Ottenheimer with 52-46-98.Play will be continued today whenthe yearlings will play their finalround on the Evergreen course. Nu¬merals will be awarded not on thebest scores alone but rather on theindication of varsity ability.Swordsmen ContinueWorkouts in BartlettWith four lettermen and an ex¬perienced freshman team practicingthis spring, the Big Ten champion¬ship Maroon fencers are making adetermined drive to assure the reten¬tion of the trophy next year.The team loses Captain Wil.son,Marks, Winters, and Gelman, but Co-captains-elect Jim Walters and HenryLemon are returning to .service infoil and epee. In saber, Irv Richard¬son and Ned Fritz will be back.Freshmen who show promise offilling the rubber-soled shoes of Wil¬son and Winter in foil are Strauss,Corbitt, and Chapman, from HydePark high school. In epee, Straus andPolachek are doing good work, whileGustafson is a prospective saber star. Phi’Sigs Defeat Burton-Judson Teamfor Intramural ChampionshipFraternity Team PermitsThree Hits in 17-3 Vic¬tory.By EMMETT DEADMANHolding their opponents without arun until the ninth inning, the PhiSigs yesterday won the intramuralplayground ball championship byswamping the Burton-Judson team,independent league champions undera 17-3 score. The Burton-Judsoniteswere clearly outclassed throughoutthe game, the Phi Sigs scoring at willwhile allowing their opponents onlythree hits.The game appeared to be headedfor a nip-and-tuck battle in the first,with both teams being retired in one-two-three order. The fraternitychamps came back in the second,however, to score two runs on twosingles and a triple by Komaiko.Hit in FourthAfter allowing the independentstheir first hit in the early part of thefourth frame, the Phi Sigs came backto establish their superiority and putthe game on ice by garnering eighthits, getting a walk and convertingthese opportunities into nine runs onJosephson’s circuit hit. The Burton-Judsonites blew up in this inning,making several wild throws.The first tight spot of the gamefor the ultimate victors came in thefifth when Roesing gave passes toLawson and (k)odstein. The Phi Sigsbore down at this point, though, andset the net sluggers down in orderand preserved their shut-out lead.Score EasilyThe last half of the sixthmight be called a riot—if a riot werenot so orderly in comparison. The Phi Sigs sent two tallies across thecorner bag at this stage of the gameon two errors, a fielder’s choice,and a walk.After entering the game in theseventh, Josephson, hurler for thefraternity champs set the Burton-Judsonites down one, two, three inthe eighth. His teammates came backin the last part of the inning to scoretheir last three runs on two hits andtwo errors.In the ninth, it appeared as ifthe independents were due for awhite-washing. However, after fan¬ning the first man to face him,Josephson walked the next three. Atthis stage, Goodstein, who had al¬ready gone down swinging threetimes, came to bat. It looked likethe old ball game was over, but Mortslipped a three-bagger down betweensecond and first to send two runner.shome ahead of him and account forthe Burton-Judsonites only markers.Phi Sisnia DeltaAB HKrause, c 5 2Berkaon.Sb 6 1Sherman,aa 5 1Silveratein.lb |6 2Joaephson.2b-p 5 SRoeainK.p 6 1Komaiko.If 5 5•Odena.rf S 0Barurk.rf 2 1Burrowa.aef 5 2Ury.cf 4 1 Barton -JodionR AB H K1 Fay.2b 3 2 U2 Hopkins, c 4 0 12 Greenebaum.Hs 4 0 1S Lawaon.p 4 1 iS Goodstein,3b 4 I u2 Holt, cf 4 0 02 Roaenfeld.rf 4 0 00 I..eviton,lb 3 0 01 Hail.scf 2 0 01 *Gonnan,lf 3 0 00 Eviiith.lf 1 0 0• Becker .aef 1 0 0ToUU 48 17 17 ToUU 37 t 3*Entered in the eighth.Two base hits Krause, 2: Silverstein. 2:Komaiko.Three base hits—Komaiko. Goodstein.Home runs- Josephson.HAVE YOU TRIED THE J-R RESTAURANTFor rich, creamy waffles with bacon or pure pork sau.sagefor twenty cents.Other attractive menu.s—Open twenty-four hours a dayTHE J-R RESTAURANT• 1202 East 55th StreetriioiiiPHLARESandPHLASHESinPHINALPHLAMESnextnWEBESIIIWlft Bail? itaionVol 36. No. 113. Price 3 Cents. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1936 Member United PressBaldwin WarnsItaly to StayOut of EgyptEngland, France MaintainTroops at Addis Ababa toProtect Interests.LONDON, May 21—(UP)—PrimeMinister Stanley Baldwin today im¬plicitly warned Italy against inter¬ference in Egyptian afffiirs and de¬clared Great Britain will repel anyact of aggression against Egypt by“all means at Britain’s command.”The blunt warning closely followedreports of Italian troop consolidationnear the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan bor¬der in northwestern Ethiopia andaround Lake Tana, head water of theNile which furnishes a large part ofthe Sudan water supply.Replying to a questioner in theHou.-<e of Commons, Baldwin brieflyoutlined Britain’s position regardingEgypt.In connection with termination ofthe British protectorate over Egyptin 1922, he said, the British govern¬ment unmistakably “made it clearthat Great Britain will regard as anunfriendly act any attempt to inter¬fere in the affairs of Egypt by anypower and would consider any ag¬gression against the territory ofEgypt as an act to be repelled by aimeans at Britain’s command.”Both Refuse RequestsMeanwhile, official circles indicatedthat both Britain and France will re-fu.se Italy’s informal request to with¬draw their small military garrisonsfrom Ethiopia.It was understood Britain has de¬cided to retain the Sikh guard atAddis Ababa pending evidence cor¬roborating local Italian authorities’ability to .safeguard foreign lives andproperty. Britain maintains about125 Sikhs at the legation.A Franco-British exchange of viewsindicated France also will refuse, atlea.st for the pre.sent, to remove troopsnow guarding the legation at AddisAbaba and railroad shops at Dire-dawa. There are about 150 troops atDiredawa.Italy pointed out that foreign mili¬tary forces no longer are necessaryin Ethiopia now that Italian troopsare in occupation.Thomas Ranks asFirst Choice atParty’s ConventionCLEVELAND, May 21—(UP) —White-haired Norman Thomas, two-time Socialist candidate for Presi¬dent, came to Cleveland tonight forthe party’s convention which prob¬ably will again name him to carry its.standard.Accompanied by his wife and apress secretary, Thomas set up his“headquarters” close to public halland lost little time in receiving in¬terviewers.Thomas said he favored a revisionof the language of the declaration ofprinciples adopted at Detroit in 1934“If it will satisfy anyone.” The pro¬posed changes do not alter the mean¬ing, however.Socialists of many ranks flockedinto “Comrade” Thomas’ suite whenword spread through the hotel thathe was receiving newsmen.Criticizes CourtSitting with his arm on the shoul¬der of Milwaukee’s picturesque So¬cialist Mayor Daniel W. Hoan, Thom¬as directed some rather sharp critic¬ism at the U. S. Supreme court andforecast success for the “Workersand Farmers Rights Amendment”now before the House and SenateJudiciary committees.“The tragedy of government now,’he added, “Is that nobody can act.This amendment gives Congress thepower to do some of the things whichthe Supreme court has been castingaside as unconstitutional.”Thomas held no hope to get theamendment out of committee at thepresent session, but predicted thatsufficient sentiment would be crystal-ized to force it to the floor next year.Pre-convention conferences wereheld this afternoon. The most impor¬tant early session will be the meet¬ing of the National Executive com¬mittee tomorrow afternoon. The bodyis expected to approve seating theNew York “Loyalist” delegation overthe “Old Guard.” The convention of¬ficially opens Saturday morning. Austria ConsidersStarhemberg for**Sports** FuehrerVIENNA, May 21 — (UP) — Athree-man dictatorship was envisagedby the Cabinet today to end the dan¬gerous situation precipitated by theousting from power of Prince Ernstvon Starhemberg, Heimwehr leader.At an emergency meeting which ex¬tended late into the* night, the Cab¬inet gave final form to the draft of alaw by which the country would havethree “Fuehrers.” They are:Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, ascommander of the Fatherland front,the combined semi-private armies.Vice Chancellor Edouard Baar vonBarrenfels, as national commander ofthe new armed “Front” militia, armyauxiliary.Prince Starhemberg, as NationalSports leader and head of the Moth¬erhood Protective association.Schuschnigg would be the supremehead. Starhemberg, however, despitethe trivial titular nature of his status,would be restored to cooperation.Each of the triumvirate would betermed fuehrer.Roosevelt BacksTariff IncreaseL^vy Rate Averaging 42Percent on Japanese Cot¬ton Goods.WASHINGTON, May 21,—(UP)—The U. S. Tariff commission today an¬nounced President Roosevelt’s approv¬al of tariff increases averaging 42 percent on cotton textiles of types whichrecently have been imported chieflyfrom Japan.The tariff increases marked abreakdown in official negotiationswhich had aimed to solve the situa¬tion by a “gentleman’s agreement”with Japan whereby that countrywould voluntarily limit exports ofcloths whose competition has antag¬onized the New England textile in¬dustry and provoked widespread poli¬tical repercussions.The increases announced to¬day, to take effect June 20, are appli¬cable to bleached, printed dyed orcolored cotton cloths containing yarnsexceeding 30 but not exceeding 50,and the rates are levied on a gradua¬ted ad valorem basis.Commission Recommends ChangesThe changes in rates were re¬commend by the Tariff Commissionafter findings on differences of domes¬tic and foreign costs of productionunder section 336 of the Tariff act of1930. The investigation was institu¬ted -by the Commission in response toa Senate resolution.International negotiations betweenthe United States and Japan werestarted after January trade statisticsdisclosed large increases of importsof textiles from Japan, and continuedtwo months, but official hopes of asatisfactory “arrangement” were notrealized.Japanese diplomats in recent weekshave countered the rising dissatisfac¬tion here over imports by inviting at¬tention to Japan’s heavy purchases ofAmerican raw cotton, and by claimsthat their success in the Americanmarket was due to the efficiency oftheir production, and the consumer’sdemand here for goods of Japanesetypes.Ambassador Hirosi Saito in an ad¬dress on Wednesday connected withnational foreign trade observance(Continued on page 2)THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)CONTROLLED EDUCATIONDiscussion can reach a point whereit may run into dangerous issues***Should it be indicated that danger¬ous topics are being brought up fordiscussion in class, the instructorshould analyze the situation, and ifit is considered unwise to deal withany given topic, lead the discussionaway from that topic***; if the casewarrants it, the instructor shouldtell the class that the dangerous issueis not a part of the lesson, andshould refuse to discuss it.« « *Presented in A Manual: For In¬structors in CCC Camps. Quoted byGeorge S. Counts. Social Studies, Jan.1936. Professors Leave |for Conference inBerlin Next WeekITwo members of the Department of jPolitical Science of the University and :four executives from the Public Ad¬ministration Clearing house will leavefor Berlin next week to attend the !sixth international congress of LocalAuthorities in Berlin and Munich June8-13 and the Institute of Administra¬tive Sciences in Warsaw the first ofJuly.Appointed by Secretary of StateCordell Hull as official delegates fromthe United States, the men attendingthe international meetings will beCharles E. Merriam, chairman of thedepartment of Political Science, Leon-1ard D. White, Professor of Public Ad¬ministration and United States CivilService Commissioner; Touis Brown-low, director of the Public Adminis¬tration Clearing house; C. W. Ham,executive director of the AmericanMunicipal association; Carl H. Chat- 'ters, director of the Municipal Finance |officers association; and G. Lyle Bels- ;ley, director of the Civil Service as- jsembly of the United States and Can- ;ada.The themes of the Berlin and Mu- 1nich conferences will include the re¬lations of local authorities in connec- Ition with unemployment, cultural ac- jtivities, and “communal science intheory and research.Edith Abbott toAttend Conclaveof Social WorkersMiss Edith Abbot, dean of theschool of Social Service Administra¬tion, will represent the University atthe National Conference of SocialWorkers in Atlantic City next week.Miss Abbott will speak the Saturdaymorning preceding the conferencebefore the American Public Welfareassociation on the general subject ofrelief.Miss Sophonisba Breckinridge andMiss Grace Abbott plan to arrive intime for the final sessions of the con¬ference and they will remain in Atlan¬tic City, to attend a meeting of the ad¬visory committee of the United StatesChildren’s bureau on the social securi¬ty provisions which the bureau en¬forces.Other members of the departmentof Social Science who will be presentat the conference are: Helen RussellWright, associate professor of politi¬cal economy; Elizabeth Dixon, super¬visor of SSA field work; HarrisonDobbs, associate professor .of SocialEconomy; and Charlotte Towle, asso¬ciate professor of psychiatric SocialWork. Announce 13 NewUniversity HonorScholarship AwardsA new contingent of thirteen highschool seniors who have been selectedas the winners of University honorscholarships was announced yester¬day by the faculty scholarship com¬mittee.John Anderson of Evanston, Illi¬nois, and Edward Burke of Orange,New Jersey, have been awarded two-year scholarships.A one year scholarship has beengiven to Pierre Palmer of Rock Is¬land, Illinois.Half year scholarships go to Su¬zanne Barclay, Morgan Park, Chica¬go; Kathryn Chatham, Universityhigh, Chicago; Mildred Crain, Mur-physboro, Illinois; Robert Foster,Hyde Park, Chicago; and CarolynKemler, York, Elmhurst, Illinois.Others include Lorraine Krueger,Hyde Park, Chicago; Morton Postel-nek, Sullivan, Chicago; Charles By¬ant Jr., Caliunet, Chicago; and Bar¬bara Smith, Paw Paw, Michigan.Announce NewTransfer WeekSchedule Orientation Pro-g:rani for September 29 toOctober 5.The Dean of Students office yester¬day announced the definite schedulingof transfer week, a new orientationprogram planned especially for in¬coming transfer students, from Sep¬tember 29, to October 5.Women of the Transfer Orienta¬tion committee will meet today to dis¬cuss plans for the counseling and en¬tertainment of incoming womentransfer students. Frances Stantonis chairman of the committee. DavidHopkins, chairman of men’s transferorientation group, will handle activi¬ties for the men. A complete selec¬tion of transfer counselors will beannounced next week.The problem of transfer orienta¬tion has recently become a majorconcern of Student Social commit¬tee’s which is trying to coordinateorientation activities. About one-half of Seniors graduating from theUniversity are transfer students.The program of this orientationweek will include the usual registra¬tion and social events, and will makea special effort to contact the trans¬fer students upon their arrival oncampus.International House Play StealsHonors as Year’s Best ProductionBy C. SHARPLESS HICKMANThe production of T. E. Eliot’splay, “Murder in the Cathedral,” atInternational House is, beyond doubt,the most important and finest theatri¬cal event of the year on this campus.Not only is it important in that itis the mid-western premiere and thirdUnited States production of this greatverse-tragedy, but from the scenicand histrionic standpoints it is themost advanced dramatic enterprisewhich has been staged on the midwayin many seasons.The difficulties attendant upon theproduction of such a play as this dra¬matization of the martyrdom ofThohias a Becket—a play which ismore in the character of a mediaevalmasque or pageant-play—are inten¬sified by the necessity of working inthe verse medium, which always pre¬sents greater problems in vocal ren¬dition than does prose. Furthermore,first produced in abbreviated form atthe June, 1935 Canterbury Festival,the play is one which is unfamiliarto most persons, thereby necessitatingdistinctly clear interpretative playing.Well might other campus dramaticgroups, notably the Dramatic Asso¬ciation, take a lesson from JacqueCoupeau’s simple, inexpensive, yetfully atmospheric settings, achievedthrough skillful cooperative lightingby Ruth Wolkow and simple construc¬tion methods which have been em¬ployed to the finest effect. The ideaswhich have been incorporated into thesettings are not new, but they arepractical and have intensified theplaying action by their unobtrusiveharmony with the fervidly simplemood of Eliot’s verse. In his use of the chorus, Eliot hasin this play returned to the Greekdramatic mode, but directors HarryW. Malm and Leonard Greatwoodhave unfortunately seen fit to disectthe chorus lines and turn alternatingpassages over to individuals for re¬citation, rather than employing thestrophe and antistrophe mode whichis distinctly suitable to the characterof the play and the ideas allotted tcthe chorus.Acting is fairly well sustained, withuncommonly fine voices being appar¬ent in many of the roles. Stiffness asseen at the dress rehearsal should,and probably will be, worked out b\tonight’s performance which, by theway, commences at 8:15 p.m.International HouseHolds Candle ServiceInternational House will hold thetraditional International Candle Cere¬mony at the last Sunday supper ofthe year Sunday evening, accordingto Miss Katherine Cutter, assistantin charge of social activities at theHouse.Members who attend will wear na¬tional costume or semi-formal attire.Attendance is limited to members andstaff of the House.The ceremony has in the past re¬ceived enthusiastic support frommembers of the House. Arrange¬ments are in charge of a committeerepresenting the staff and the stu¬dent council, Miss Cutter announced.The event will follow the sameform as last year. Ida Noyes CouncilPlans to IncreaseActivities ProgramLess formality and greater use ofIda Noyes hall as a clubhouse is theaim of the administrative staff andthe Ida Noyes advisory council, ac¬cording to Miss Mary Jo Shelly, di¬rector of the clubhouse. Plans for nextyear are being made with the designof furthering this aim.An enlarged recreational programwill probably be the first step towardfurthering the use of the building.Formal registration in advance willbe unnecessary for those who wish tocome in and play badminton, dance tophonograph music, practice golf, ormake use of the swimming pool. MissMarguerite Kidwell, instructor of phy¬sical education, will direct the recrea¬tional program, it is planned.New Game RoomA second step toward increased useof the Ida Noyes facilities will bethe arrangement of a new game roomon the second floor. This will, ac¬cording to tentative plans, includeping pong, chess, card-game, and bil¬liard equipment, as well as loungespace. Instruction at scheduled hourswill be given as previously in suchsports as hockey, golf, archery, tennis,swimming, and social, tap, and mod¬ern dancing, for women who wish tobecome more proficient in these sports.“There has been a steady increaseduring the last few years in the per-(Continued on page 3)Arthur ComptonSpeaks at ChapelService SundayDr. Arthur H. Compton, Nobel phy¬sicist at the University, will be thespeaker at the weekly services in theChapel on Sunday. The topic of hisaddress will be “We Must Shape OurNew World.” Dr. Compton was thefirst chairman of the Board of SocialService and Religion, which began tofunction at the time of the dedicationof the University chapel in 1928.In his recent book, “The Freedomof Man”, Dr. Compton expresses hisbelief in the hypothesis of God as “amore reasonable interpretation of theworld than any other” and that beliefin immortality must be based on reli¬gious, moral, or philosophical groundsrather than on scientific reasoning.In addition to his notable works inthe field of physics, Dr. Compton hasinterpreted science in a manner thatparallels closely the highest type ofreligion.Last year Dr. Compton began a se¬ries of stratosphere balloon tests inorder to further his study of cosmicrays. In 1932 he directed observa¬tions at an altitude of 19,000 on thetop of the volcano, El Misti, in Peru.Other tests have been made 100 feelhigher in the Himalayas since thenand several stratosphere balloon testshave been done successfully.Initiate 7 Membersat Debate BanquetThe University chapter of DeltaSigma Rho, national honorary foren¬sic fraternity, will hold its annual ban¬quet at 6:30 in the Coffee shop. Atthis time seven members of the ‘De¬bate union will be initiated into thelocal chapter. All of the initiateshave been prominent in forensic workduring the past year and most of themhave been or are at present officersof the Debate union. Those eligiblefor initiation are: Marian Wagner,former publicity director, Marie Ber¬ger, former secetary, Claude Hawley,twice president, and Jacob Ochstein,recently elected president. The otherinitiates are George Messmer, pastpresident, Victor Lipsman, and IrvingAxelrad, former secretary of the De¬bate union.Professor T. V. Smith is the sched¬uled guest speaker and ProfessorHarold D. Lasswell of the PoliticalScience department will also speak itwas announced yesterday.The University Delta Sigma Rhocommittee which selected the newmembers is composed of ProfessorsMarshall Knappen and Sheldon Teft,Assistant Dean of Students, WilliamScott, and John Stoner, coach of de¬bate.Officers for the local chapter will beelected following the banquet. Thisis the first time that the group hasbeen large enough to maintain an ac¬tive organization. Maroons Leadin ConferenceNet StandingsNihousen Defeats RussellBall in First Round Up¬set.In a thrilling three-set duel. BobNihousen of Ohio State came fromnowhere to provide the biggest upsetof the day as he defeated Russell Ballof Northwestern, co-favorite in thefirst singles flight, 2-6, 6-4, and 6-3.The Maroons came through in unex¬citing matches and all of them wentinto the second round as Chicagotook the lead in points with 6 winsto Northwestern’s 5.Captain Bickel of Chicago whippedthe plucky little Illini leader, Moll,6-1, 7-5; Burgess took Nist of OhioState 6-2, 6-4; Mertz won over Ar¬nold of Minnesota 9-7, 6-1; Shostrumbeat lams of the Buckeyes 6-4, 6-3;Mertz and Shostrum defeated Illinois’Lewers and Rich; and Bickel and Bur¬gess eliminated Moll and Hicks of thestate university.The other results were as follows:In the first singles flight Kahn ofMichigan lost to Fleming of Iowa 6-1,6-1; and Stafford of Wisconsin whip¬ped Wilcox of Minnesota 6-3, 6-5.In the second singles flight Leavensof Northwestern had to bear downin the second set to overcome Clineof Iowa, 6-1, 7-5, after taking thefirst set easily. Richardson of Wis¬consin smothered Illinois’s number twoman, Hicks, in two sets, 6-0, 7-5. Mich¬igan’s representative, Sherwood wasgiven a tough battle by Huntley ofMinnesota, who came back to win thesecond set but the Wolverine weath¬ered the storm, 6-2, 3-6, and 6-3.After fighting for 16 games onlyto lose 9-7, Nye of Iowa had nothingleft and was white washed in the sec¬ond set, 6-0, by Lewers, Illini ace, inthe first match of the third singlesfight. Borchardt of Wisconsin whippedBenjamin of Ohio State 6-0, 7-5, andGeorge Ball had no trouble taking thebig Puerto Rican from Michigan, Rod-(Continued on page 4)Feature Reunionsin May Issue ofAlumni MagazineStarting a new column on under¬graduate life and thought with SamHair’s “The Campus Dissenter”, theMay issue of the University of Chica¬go Magazine will appear Monday. Fea¬turing the coming June alumni re¬union, it also gives additional plansfor the meetings.In “Whaling for Science” Lewis L.Robbins ’35 explains Dr. E. M. K. Ceil¬ing’s whale studies, now being car¬ried on north of Vancouver. Dr. Ceil¬ing is chairman of the newly foundeddepartment of Pharmacology.Martin F. Young, ’36, one of Flook’sjanitors, writes amusingly on the fineart of mopping the University build¬ings. Howard W. Mort, editor ofTower Topics, interviews Miss Mari¬on Talbot, first dean of Women at theUniversity and in the United States,and quotes parts from her comingbook, “More Than Lore”.J. F. Christ, associate professor ofBusiness Law, in “The Constitutionas We See It” criticizes an article byHarry D. Gideonse, associate profes¬sor of Economics.Professors DiscussProblems of YouthThe social and economic problemsconfronting youth will be discussedSunday at 11:30 by the professors ofthe University round table. Theprogram will be presented overWMAQ and a National Broadcastingcompany hookup.Those participating in the discus¬sion include William J. Campbell, Il¬linois director of the National Youthadministration and a member of theexecutive council of the Boy Scoutsof America; William H. Spencer,dean of the School of Business; andT. V. Smith, professor of Philosophyand Illinois state senator.“My Friend, Julia Lathrop,” JaneAddams’ biography of Julia Lathrop,will be reviewed in his weekly booktalks by James Weber Linn, profes¬sor of English, Sunday at 7:00 overWGN.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1936TwoJaps Point to Heavy Purchasesof Cotton as U. S. Boosts Tariff(Continued from page 1)here, held that Japan’s success in thetextile trade “is due to the art, the in¬dustry and the enterprise of our peo¬ple. It is not due to cheap labor orgovernment subsidies. Those are un¬fair charges against us.’’The Tariff commission report to thePresident, dated April 15, found thatthe bulk of the imports from Japanwere plain-woven fabrics technicallyknown as shirtings. They find usemainly in the manufacture of under¬wear, nightgowns and handkerchiefs.New York was found the principalmarket in the United States for bothdomestic and imported cotton cloth,and Japan the chief competitor incloths containing yarns of averagenumber exceeding 30 but not above50.The tariff increases approved byPresident Roosevelt will apply equal¬ly to all foreign countries. The spec¬ial attention to Japan is because un-Che BailyFOUNDED IN 1»01MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,winter 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. Subscriptionrates: $2.75 a year ; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising repre¬sentative National Advertising Service,Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York; 400 N.Michigan Ave., Chicago.RALPH NICHOLSON, Editor-in-Chief.ROBERT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.RAYMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.HENRY F. KELLEY, Desk Editor.JEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Business associates: James Bernard,Don Elliott,Eklitorial associates: Wells Burnette,Ruby Howell, Julian Kiser, John Morris,James Snyder, Edward Stern, ElinorTaylor.Night Editor: Wells D. BurnetteAssistant: Frank J. Orland der the law comparisons of domesticwith foreign costs are made with theprincipal competing company, in thiscase Japan,Import statistics for 1935 indicatethat United Kingdom after Japanwould be most affected by the in¬creases.United States total imports of cot¬ton cloth in 1935 were about 62,000,-000 square yards. Japan supplied 36,-400,000 square yards of which 30,000,-000 were bleached, 6,000,000 wereprinted, dyed, or colored, and 57,000unbleached.Senate Rejects NewIncome Levy Bill,Favors Profits TaxWASHINGTON, May 21—(UP)—The rebellious Senate Finance com¬mittee today scrapped a proposal toincrease normal income taxes 25 percent in the $802,000,000 revenue billand then accepted a weakened cor¬porate profits tax compromise embra¬cing only a skeleton of PresidentRoosevelt’s original plan.There was no record vote on thedecision to discard suggestions for anincreased normal income rate fromfour to five per cent which would havetaken an additional $713,000,000 frompersons in all walks of life. ChairmanPat Harrison, D., Miss., said opposi¬tion in committee to such a revisionwas “substantial.”Adoption of the compromise wasforced by a revolting group of con¬servative Democrats led by Sen. Har¬ry F. Byrd, soft-spoken Virginian, andhard-hitting Republicans. They re¬jected flatly the more drastic Housecorporate tax scheme, adopted a sub¬stitute as the basis of negotiationsand then agreed to a compromise onlyafter Administration followers threat¬ened to carry the fight to the floor.There, the rebels explained, theyfeared Administration pressure wouldforce passage of an even more drasticplan. Sharp revisions in the compro¬mise still may be made in conferencebetween the two houses after the Sen¬ate acts.United Committee support of thecompromise was assured when Harri¬son told the group that he would notoffer harsher rates from the floor asa substitute. Pastors HoldMeeting in JulyHaydon, Calhoun, WiemanTalk at Summer Confer¬ence.Several new features will mark thisyear’s program of the Pastors’ insti¬tute to be conducted jointly by theDivinity School, the Chicago Theolog¬ical seminary, and the Disciples Di¬vinity house at the University fromJuly 27 to August 2. Details of theprogram recently were announced byDr. Charles T. Holman of the Divin¬ity School, who is in charge. Whilethe morning sessions will be given tocourses of study of a strictly pro¬fessional character, the evening pro¬grams will reach out into other cul¬tural fields.On Tuesday evening, July 28, Pro¬fessor A. Eustace Haydon of the De¬partment of Comparative Religion ofthe University, Professor R. L. Cal¬houn of the Divinity school, Yale uni¬versity, and Professor Henry N. Wie¬man of the Divinity school, will dis¬cuss in conversational form “Is Goda Phantom, a Force or a Person?”This discussion will be followed by anopen forum in which the discussionwill be general.Round Table FridayA similar round table on Fridbyevening will discuss “The World Sit-France Doubts Italy’sRight to Expel PriestPARIS, May 21—(UP)—Francetonight challenged Italy’s right to ex¬pel Monsigneur Jarousseau, CatholicBishop of Harrar, from Ethiopia.After a conference with CharlesRoux, Ambassador to the Vatican,Joseph Paul-Boncour, secretary ofstate and acting foreign minister, an¬nounced that “expulsion of Jarousseauis not acceptable.”He said Count Charles De Cham-brun, French ambassador to Rome,has been instructed to take the mat¬ter up with Premier Benito Mussolinihimself.The Bishop was ordered to leaveearly this week because of allegedanti-Italian expressions both beforeand after Italian occupation of Har¬rar. He was a resident of Harrar al¬though attached to the church head¬quarters at Djibouti, French Somali¬land.Dance to Really Grand Rhythm MusicBYTHREE MONTHS' COURSEfOI COLlfOC STUDENTS AND GIAOUATtSA OtonugK iniattsivt. stamogrophie eomraaatartmg January 1, April 1, July 1, Odobar 1,bataratHng BooUat sant frea, without obligationt or Pkoma. No aolUiton amployad.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSEB. J.0..PRS.Ragular Coursas. opam to High School GroAmataa only, may ba startad any Monday. Daymad Eoaning. Eoaning Couraaa opam to mam.116 S. Michigan Avn., Chicago, Kaudolph 4347PICCADILLY51st and BlackstoneMATINEEDAILYToday Only“The Prisoner ofShark Island”withWARNER BAXTERGLORIA STUARTStarting Tomorrow“13 HOURS BY AIR”HARPER 53rd and HarperMatinee DailyP'ri. & Sat.LAUREL AND HARDY“The Bohemian Girl”HYDE PARK 5312Lake Park JOE SANDERS and HisNIGHTHAWKSAT THE“CAMPUS CABARET”every Friday night at 11:30• Thrill to the songs and dances presented by yourown classmates• The Blackhawk goes ‘collegiate’ every Friday nightat the“CAMPUS CABARET”BLACKHAWKRANDOLPH AND WABASHPhone Dearborn 6262Where to WorshipThe First Unitarian ChurchWoodlawn Ave. and E. 57th StreetVon Ogden Vogt, ,D.D., MinisterSunday, May 24, 1936 University Church ofDisciples of Christ5655 University AvenueSunday, May 24, 1936Today & Tomorrow“THE MILKY WAY”With Harold Lloyd 11:00 A. M. — “Sentiment versusSentimentalism,” Dr. Robert J.Hutcheon.IRENE’S BEAUTY SHOP1507 East 53rd StreetSECOND FLOOR—MID. 2517OPEN 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.SHAMPOO 25c—WAVE 25cMANICURE 35c 4:00 P. M.—Channing Club. Teaand Discussion. “Music,” Rob¬ert J. Sanders, F.A.A.R.Students cordially invited. 10:30 A. M.—Communion Service.11:00 A. M.—Sermon. Sermonsubject: “The Ministry of Si¬lence,” Mr. Roy (X’Brien.6:00 P. M.—Wranglers’ Meeting.Tea and program.Students cordially invited. nation Today” with Professor PaulH. Douglas of the Department o.Economics, who recently returnedfrom a tour of Europe; Professor A.Eugene Staley also of the Depart¬ment of Economics, and President Al¬bert W. Palmer of the Chicago The¬ological seminary, who has traveledwidely in the Orient, leading the dis¬cussion.On Wednesday evening ProfessorHarry D. Gideonse will lecture on“Is America Heading for Fascism?”This lecture will also be followed byan open forum period.On Thursday evening the IllinoisSymphony orchestra will give a con¬cert in Hutchinson court under thedirection of Max Bendix.The opening service of worshipwill be held on Monday evening, July27, in the Chapel with the ReverendIvan Lee Holt, pastor of the St.John’s Methodist Episcopal Church,South, of St. Louis, Mo., and presi¬dent of the Federal Council of theChurches of Christ in America,preaching the sermon. His subjectwill be “A New Strategy in Protest¬antism.” Music for the service willbe furnished by the University choirunder the direction of Mack Evans.Courses in MorningAt the morning sessions, intensivecourses deal with subjects of in¬terest to ministers while the after¬noons will be given over to recrea¬tion and conducted sociological toursof the city. It is anticipated that ap¬proximately three hundred ministers,representing many different denomin¬ations, and from all parts of theUnited States and Canada, will be inattendance.Classified AdsCollege student for summer months;pleasant work; can earn $160 to$300 monthly. Address Dept. E, 59E. Van Buren St., Chicago.WANTED—Tutor, chemistry andphysical sciences. Prefer 4th yr.or grad, student living on north side.Answer by writing only. 910 Castle-wood Terrace, Chicago. The Men's StoreMonroe at WabashCarson Pirie Scott & CoI IfiUrta — Ftrat Flmmr.Vorn by Larry {BusUr) CrabbrOnly genuine Gantner WIKIEShave patented Perma-snug waist IFree-breathing Lastex belt! Self*adjusting supporter! Quicker*drying yarns! Smart new weaves IAs Featured in Esquire!Pencil Welt or Military WIKIES 3.95De Luxe WIKIES 5.00At better dealers everywhere!GANTNER & MATTERN CO.San Francisco 1410 Bdwy., New YorkMakers of America’s Finest Swim Suits Carson Pirie Scott & CoMb Sir*' M#m— at WakashSuits and Neckwear in Light ColorsChoose Deeptone ShirtsWith Wide Spread gO CA In Red, GreenButton Down Collar Blue and BarkFor smart, interesting contrast, nothingoutdoes the combination of a rich soliddeeptone shirt with lighter color necktie.These deeptones are easier to wear thanyou’re likely to think on first sight and ifyou think you’re not up to doing a good jobof contrasting, we will be glad to help you.This all whita Buckskin is dosigned with an overweight flex¬ible sole—quarter lined withwhite calf and specially treated innersole.ftt.75 pail*All white Buckskin wing tipoxford. An important featureof its construction Is Its whitewelt, which simplifies cleaningand unsightly after-cleaningstreaks on the sole.The plain toe white Buckskinwith black or tan calf saddleholds undisputed position asthe shoe fiHed for wear withan Informal sports turnout.•6.75 pairMedallion tip all white ox¬ford, also ecjuipped with whitewelt, is anotner of those smartshoes that has a place wheredressiness is of major concern.•6.75 pairThis Wing tip oxford, withbrown calf trim Is one of thefew types of sports shoesproper to wear with businesstropical worsteds.•6.75 pair•8.75 pairTHE DAILY MAROON. FRIDAY. MAY 22, 1936 Page ThreeEditorialEducate Teachers in Subjects,Not MethodsRecognizing a significant trend inthe teaching of education, the ChicagoTribune of May 17 in an editorial un¬der the heading of “The UniversitiesWake Up” states: “The academic andscientific departments of our univer¬sities are becoming more and moreconcerned over the complete domina¬tion of the secondary school systemby the professional educators.”Later on the editorial summarizes areport of the American Chemical so¬ciety which charges that “futureteachers have to devote so much timeto ‘professional teacher training’ thatthey have insufficient time to studythe subjects that they later teach. Theprofessional educators have completecontrol of the licensing of high schoolteachers through teaching certifi¬cates.”Under present state laws prospec¬tive teachers are required to spend agreat deal of time in studying thetechniques of education and much lesstime in studying the subject or sub¬jects they intend to teach. Further¬more when the teacher does secure hiscertificate he is allowed to teach anycourse rather than just his own spe¬cialties.« * •In 1933 as part of the Chicago plan,the University’s School of Educationwas disbanded and a Department ofKducation placed under the Social Sci¬ence division. Instigated at the re¬quest of the education faculty, themove was made for the purpose of re¬moving the emphasis on education asa profession and placing it upon thesubject matter to be taught.Under the present system, no bach¬elor’s degree is given in Education,but a certificate is given on the basisof a comprehensive examination. Thisexamination covers work in only fourcourses; the American Educationalsystem (Education 201), EducationalPsychology (Education 210), an ex¬pository course in the technique ofteaching a given subject or field, andu course in apprentice teaching in agiven subject or field. The latter twocourses in each case are placed underthe department in which the student isspecializing; all the profspeptiveteacher’s other courses are taken inhis own subject or field and he re¬ceives his degree from this depart¬ment.Says the Department of Education:“The program of teacher educationat the University is directed to thedevelopment of teachers who have abroad general education, who have anadequate mastery of their fields ofspecialization and who are efficientlyqualified for efficient service as teach¬ers.”* « *Although this may be the ideal ofthe department, a number of pointsmay be brought out in which this the¬ory is not followed. In the first place,the methods course and the apprenticeteaching courses are nominally underthe jurisdiction of the departmentsthat the prospective teacher is plan¬ning to teach. However, a number ofthe professors teaching these coursesare members of the education facul¬ty and have no connection with the de¬partments in which they are givingthe courses. For instance, the pro¬fessor who is in charge of the coursein methods of teaching art is a pro¬fessor of Education rather than aprofessor of art. Numerous other ex¬amples can be cited, but the Depart¬ment of Education claims that theyare exceptions rather than the rule—“remnants of the old order.”Then again, the various professorsin the department still use textbooksin their course written by men inother schools who believe in a scienceof education, that results can be pre¬dicted in this field as they can in thefields of physics or chemistry.The two facts do not seem to follow.Can a department which says that theteaching of education should be sub¬ordinate to the subject matter taughtstill feel that there is a science ofeducation?—E. S. Stern.TENNIS RACKETSLARGEST. MOST COMPLETE STOCK$1.50 to $15.00Restringing $1.76 to $6.60 (12 gr«dei)Balls • Presses - Covers • VisorsCOMPLETE TENNIS CLOTHINGWOODWORTH’S Book StoreUll E. 67th St. OPEN EVENINGSNear Kimbark Ave. Ph. Dorchoater 4800 Today on theQuadranglesFRIDAYMeetingsScandinavian Club. YWCA room. 4to 6.WAA. WAA room. 3:30.Central Regional Conference of theCivil Service Assembly of the UnitedStates and Canada. Judson Court.9:30 to 4.Delta Sigma Rho. Annual dinnerand initiation of new members. Cof¬fee Shop. 6:30. Professor T. V.Smith.Sigma Xi. Quarterly meeting. Din¬ner and initiation of new members.“Field Work in the Amazon Valley”.Associate professor Robert S. Platt.Quadrangle Club at 7.Delta Sigma formal supper dance.Edgewater Beach Hotel. 9 to 1.MiscellaneousPhonograph concert. Concerto No.2 in B flat major for piano and or¬chestra—Brahms. Arthur Rubensteinand London Symphony Orchestra un¬der Albert Coates. Social Science As¬sembly Hall from 12:30 to 1:15.“The Murder in the Cathedral”. In¬ternational House theater at 8:30.SATURDAYMeetingsDames. Library of Ida Noyes. 3to 5.SUNDAYMiscellaneousHigh school tea for south side highschools. 3 to 5. Ida Noyes lounge.British Club. YWCA room. 4 to 6.Chapel service. Arthur H. Comp¬ton, LL.D. (Charles H. Swift distin¬guished Service professor of Physics).Chapel at 11.Organ music by Irwin Fisher.Chapel at 4:30.MONDAYMeetingsYWCA. YWCA room. 12 to 6.Pi Delta Phi. Alumnae room. 7:30.Pi Lambda Theta. YWCA room.6.YWCA dinner. Sun parlor, IdaNoyes at 6.All those wishing to become mem¬bers of Blackfriars should see Ed Sib¬ley any afternoon after 1 before May‘26.Plan Expansion ofIda Noyes Program(Continued from Page 1)sonal use of Ida Noyes,” observedMiss Shelley, “and we hope to en¬courage this practice.” The mainlounge will be rearranged with newand less formal furniture, and will bekept open for the use of students morethan formerly.The Ida Noyes advisory council willbe admitted to Bqard of Women’s or¬ganizations on the same basis as YWCA, WAA, Federation, and Mirror, itwas decided. The council will havetwo representatives on the board. Mrs.Merle Coulter has been newly appoint¬ed to represent the faculty wives onthe council. GulliiverBounces Bouquets and CallsIt a Big DayBy ROBERT JAMESBy way of introduction, “hello.”Today as we sit here in front of ourtypewriter we recall things and faceswe saw at the tennis matches. Feel¬ing that all is well and that every¬thing is good we have decided tomake this bouquet day.To Mary Letty Green a large onefor those horned-rimed glasses shew’ears...to Sword Werner for hisonly attraction.. .the car... to Nich¬olson on the last day of his exam...to Mary Jane Stephenson and Mar¬garet Waller for not finishing pay¬ment on their Maroon subscription...to Rodriguez from Michigan forhis cute physique., .to Roe Prest juston account of because...to GeorgeBall of Northwestern for that home-spun service of his...to Leonard Ol¬sen for sitting on the Chapel stepsin the moonlight, probably meditat¬ing... to the cat in Lexington hallfor what she’s going to have prettysoon.The editorial department says thisstuff has to be divided into para¬graphs so here’s where we go on . . toVic Jones for no good reason at all... to Ginger Rogers because we likeher in sweaters.. .to Marge Reynoldsfor her Goldie...to Jean MacUougalfor week-ending at Cornell...to JimMelville for rushing around so muchdoing nothing.. .to Echo Guiou forlosing our Captain’s insignia.. .andto you my dear public for readingthis drivel.Newcomers’ Group PlansSummer Dance SeriesThe newcomers’ group of the Set¬tlement League, consisting of wivesof new faculty members interested inthe University Settlement yesterdayannounced plans for a series of infor¬mal dances to be held every Saturdaynight in the Ida Noyes gym duringthe summer quarter.The primary purposes of this spon¬sorship by the League is the initiationof a social program for summer stu¬dents at the University and the rais¬ing of funds to carry on Settlementwork. A nominal fee will be chargedfor these dances.HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 E. 55th StreetIf you want “Collegiate”atmosphere—If you want to sing thecollege songs—'If you want to see yourcampus friends—You are assured of suchan evening at—HANLEY’SOver forty years of conKenlal service.KITTY DAVISand her 24 beautiful employees will entertain you in herCOLLEGIATE LOUNGEANDUNIVERSITY RENDEZVOUSCongeniality always prevails and the guests mingle in afriendly fashion.My employees have college educations. Come in if onlyto look around. No cover or minimum charge at any time.Attention StudentsSummer Positions Available Enjoy Your FavoriteBeverage Neath YourCollege Colors245 S. Wabash AvenueTwo Convenient Entrances—Jackson Blvd. and Wabash Ave. Sigma Xi InitiatesMembers at AnnualDinner This EveningA dinner at the Quadrangle clubwill precede the formal initiation ofthe recently selected members of Sig¬ma Xi, national scientific honorary so¬ciety this evening at 7.After the initiation, Robert E. Park,professor emeritus of Sociology willspeak on “Some Experiences in theCommonwealth FundDirector Visits CampusE. K. Wickman, acting assistant di¬rector of the division of Education ofthe Commonwealth fund, will visit theUniversity Sunday or Monday, accord¬ing to Mildred Compire, secretary ofDr. Ernest B. Price, director of In¬ternational House.Wickman will reside in the guestsuite of International House, MissCompire announced. He will observethe operations of the House and willconsider arrangements for Common¬wealth fellowships for next year.Two English fellows will reside inthe House next year, Wickman ad¬vised the staff last week. They areNorman 0. Brown, of Balliot College,Oxford, and Richard B. Flood, of Man¬chester University. Amazon”. The meeting is one of theregular quarterly programs of thehonorary society.Professor Park is an eminent sociol¬ogist, and has made extensive studiesof primitive cultures of the Amazon region, and has made several expedi¬tions into the tropical forest.PledgingEsoteric announces the pledgingof Diantha Warfel of Springfield, Ill.dinner and supper (Saturdays at lunch¬eon). Cover charge after 9:30 P. M.only. $1 weekdays; $1.50 Saturdays.URBAN ROOMCONGRESS HOTELJohn Burke, ManagerNational Hotel Management Company. Inc.Ralph HHz. Pres. • J. E. Fraiwley. Vice Pres.HAVE YOU TRIED THE J-R RESTAURANTFor rich, creamy waffles with bacon or pure pork sausagefor twenty cents.Other attractive menus—Open twenty-four hours a dayTHE J-R RESTAURANT1202 East 55th Street^cHulce i Aom ^tkenSON; I have a problem and I would appreciate your advicewhich I know is from experience. My budget doesrCt allow meto buy the most expensive clothes and yet I want to be welldressed. Where shall I buy my clothes to the best advantage?FATHER: Always patronize a fine shop. Even if you must selectapparel from the lower price range, you can do so with confi¬dence knowing that it is sponsored by the discriminating tasteand reputation of the right store.NOTE: Father haid always purchased his clothes and accessoriesat Finchley's and no doubt he was thinking of us when giving theabove sound advice.SPORTS AND BUSINESSSUITSTWEED AND CAMEL’S HAIRTOPCOATS335SPORT COATS M500 • SLACKS m • HATS >5oojfmcftlep19 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago • 564 Fifth Avenue, New York^BERDASHERykiuunillwDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1936Today’s Tennis ScheduleFirst Flight Third Flight(at 11) TEAM STANDINGS (at 10)Bickel, Chicago vs. Lewers, IllinoisFleming, Iowa. Chicago .... 6 vs. Mertz, Chicago.Stafford, Wiscon- Borchardt, Wis-sin vs. Nihousen, Northwestern consin vs. G. Ball,Ohio State. Michigan ... 4 Northwestern.Second Flight Wisconsin .. 4 Fourth Flight(at 11) Illinois 2 (at 10)Leavens, North- O Shostrum, Chica-western vs. Burgess, Iowago vs. Rich, Illinois.Chicago. Ohio State .. 1 Rugg, Northwest-Richardson, Wis- Minnesota .. 0 ern vs. Flick, Michi-consin vs. Sherwood, gan.Michigan.DOUBLESFirst Flight Second Flight(at 3) (at 2)R. Ball & Rugg, Northwestern vs. Metz & Fleming, Iowa vs. LeavensBorchardt & Stafford, Wisconsin. & G. Ball, Northwestern.Kahn & Sherwood, Michigan vs. Rodriguez & Flick vs. Mertz & Shos-Bickel & Burgess, Chicago. trum, Chicago.Maroons Leadin Conferenceset.(Continued from page 1)matches.four man, smeared Brain of Minne¬sota 6-0, 6-2; while Michigan’s Flickwas eliminating Kovac of Wisconsin1-6, 6-1, 6-4.The results of the first doublesflight were; Russell Ball and Rugg ofNorthwestern defeated Cline and Nyeof Iowa 6-4, 5-7, 6-2; Borchardt andStafford gave Wisconsin a point bywhipping Wilcox and Brain of Min¬nesota 2-6, 6-3, 6-1; and Michigan’steam of Kahn and Sherwood van¬quished Nihousen and lams of OhioState 6-4, 6-4. In the second doublesflight Metz and Fleming of Iowa de¬feated Benjamin and Nist of OhioState 8-6, 3-6, 6-4; Huntley and Ar¬nold of Minnesota lost to Leavens andBall of Northwestern 6-1, 6-0; andRodriguez and Flick of Michiganwhipped Richardson and Kovac of Wis¬consin, 6-4, 6-2. Give Maroons Easier Chance for BigTen Tennis Victory Because of Upset Conference Outdoor TrackMeet Opens at Ohio StateEllinwood and Relay TeamSeen as Likely Victorsfor Maroons.Makeshift SquadMeets Hoosiers.in Baseball GameA makeshift squad comprised most¬ly of sophomores will make the tripto Lafayette, Indiana, and play Pur¬due for the season’s final baseballmatch on Saturday.Among the missing seniors will beHank Trojka, Joe Kacena, and DickCochran, all of whom will have tostay in Chicago and take examina¬tions for their degrees. These threevacancies will have to be filled someway and so probably Gold and Nie-man will be called in from the outfieldto play third and second; and perhapsBuss Yedor will be put out in rightto round out the outfield combinationof Mike Bernard and Roy Soderlind.This will also be the last contestof the season for the Boilermakersand they are more than ever determ¬ined to win so that they may at leastequal their record of last year. Theold Black and Gold nine have not doneso well this year mostly because ofa bad start and some pretty poorhurling.However, the Purdue outfit hassort of taken a new lease on life aftergiving Indiana a surprising upset aweek or so ago. Lefty Martin beatthe Hoosiers that day for their firstloss and Chicago then catching thema few days following, put the Hoosieroutfit out of the title chase. There¬fore the Maroons ought to be on thelookout for a rejuvenated ball squad.However, the Maroons will not beexpecting a push over as the lastmeeting and they will see what theycan do about ending the .schedulewith six wins and three losses. Thiswould give them a percentage of.666. By BURTNorm Bickel said it. I wrote itdown. It appeared in yesterday’s Ma¬roon. “Nihousen of Ohio State is noeasy mark for anybody. I won thelast time I played him but he wasoflf his game”. And Paul Nihousenwas no easy mark because, yesterday,he defeated Russell Ball, fourth rank¬ing inter-collegiate player, in theonly upset of the Big Ten tennischampionship matches.Paul accomplished the same featlast year but his indifferent play thisspring forced the experts to pass himup. Placed in the opposite half of thebracket from the Maroon captain, heshould be the man Bickel will faceSaturday in the finals. If he playsas he did yesterday Norm will beforced to his best.The feature match of today’s playis the second flight match betweenNorbet Burgess, the Maroon numbertwo man, and Don Leavens, firstranking Western junior from North¬western. The winner of this contestwill go on to the championship be¬cause of the lack of opposition in th,other bracket. Leavens has beatenBurgess in dual play but the Chicagoman plays a steady game and a vic¬tory by Burgess will be no upset.In the third flight Herb Mertz andGeorge Ball should win easily to moveinto the final round. Here the resultis a toss-up. Mertz defeated the Wild¬cat captain earlier in the season butlast Tuesday Ball avenged the defeatin a dual match.Johnny Shostrum and Dick Rugg,Trans-Mississippi title holder andNorthwestern number four man,should slip through today’s play inHold Cozy for Women’sBall Team in Ida NoyesA baseball cozy for women’s intra¬mural baseball teams will be giventhis afternoon from 3:30 to 5 in theWAA room at Ida Noyes hall. HelenThompson, social chairman of WAAboard, is in charge of arrangements.All University women are invited toattend the cozy.Four women remain in the all-Uni-versity women's tennis tournamentsponsored by Racquet club of WAA.The finalists are Irene Buckley, Mar¬garet Gethro, Margaret Marrifield,and Sara Chase. The champion willbe decided by May 25.Pete Zarante’sSteamship '’’’Zee”Dine and Dancewith Mort Lond and His LondonersIn an Atmosphere of the High Seas3 FLOOR SHOWS NIGHTLYWith an All Girl RevueNo Cover Charge—No Minimum5Uc Minimum on SaturdayDollar De Luxe Dinner1714 E. 7l8tFor Reservations Phone Midway 10404 MOYERthe fourth singles flight. Shostrumplayed his best of the year to defeatRugg in the dual match Tue.sday, butthe Wildcat star is plenty dangerousand Johnny must allow no-let-down ihe expects to win.In the doubles matches Bickel andBurgess have defeated the strongestremaining team, Russell Ball andRugg of Northwestern, and theyshould be facing the same team Sat¬urday. Bickel and Burgess are play¬ing their best of the season right nowand only Ball and Rugg have anychance against them. Shostrum andMertz have been defeated earlier inthe season by George Ball and Leav¬ens. If they want the title they mustreverse that in the final round Satur¬day.All Saturday’s matches will startat 2.First Year MenComplete 36-HoleTryout MatchesPlaying their second consecutiveday of golf in competition for fresh¬men numerals, first year men yester¬day turned in much improved scoresat Evergreen golf course. JohnMatthieu, again low medalist shot a45-36—81. His remarkable play onthe in nine demonstrated that CoachMauerman would have a man of nomean ability foB next year’s squad.All the other golfers turned in im¬proved scores. Bob Sampson shot an81 composed of a 40 on the first nineand a 41 on the last nine, whileWebb turned in a 43-41—84. JimGoldsmith, playing the weakest lastnine holes of any of the golfers,carded 43-43—86; Leon Ottenheimerturned in 47-41—88; and Salk re¬corded a 48-41—89.Each man bettered his Wednes¬day’s score, some by six and By REX HORTONWith ten Maroons among the 234competing trackmen, the 36th annualWestern conference outdoor trackmeet will begin today on the OhioState field at Columbus.One record is expected to fall be¬fore Chicago’s quarter-mile ace, RayEllinwood, and the Chicago mile re¬lay team is fairly certain to beamong the first three to cross thefinish line. The Maroon squad whichleft for Columbus yesterday morn-Dave Gordon, Matt Kobak, andStuart Abel, accompanied by CoachNed Merriam and T. Nelson Metcalf,director of athletics.Provide Dark RoomWith a crowd of 25,000 expected,Ohio State authorities have beengiving the field an extensive groom¬ing, even setting up a dark room atthe stadium for developing slow mo¬tion picture shots immediately afterclosely-contested events.Ohio State, meet favorite, expectsat least twenty points to be cleanedup by its negro star, Jesse Owens.Owens, who broke three world’s rec¬ords and tied a fourth in the AnnArbor meet last year, will be enter-seven strokes. For the second daythe course was wind-swept and hin¬dered the golfers quite a bit, byshortening drives, and causing mis¬judged approaches. Nevertheless itwas evident too that the freshmngolfers as a group will prove to bethe backbone of next year’s squad.Numerals for Wednesday’s and yes¬terday’s play will be announced sometime in the near future.SELWYN Now PlayingTHE GROUP THEATER-IN-^^AWAKE •AND• SING!”by CLIFFORD ODETSAn entertaining play. These players are asclose as America has had to the AbbeyPlayers from Dublin—LLOYD LEWISORIGINAL CAST INTACT184 Performances at Belasco in N. Y.FIRST VISIT of the GROUP to CHICAGOMATS. WED.-SAT., 83c to $2.2*EVENINGS. 83c to $2.7SSixth Play American Theater Societyand Theater GuildHARRY ZELZERPresentsTITO SCHIPAin recitalCivic Opera House, Sunday Afternoon, at 3:30 o’clock.Assisting Artist, Julian Huarte, Pianist.PROGRAMI. Ombra Mai Fu (Largo) HandelSpirate Pur, Spirate DonuudgDu Bist Die Ruh SchubertThe Secret Marriage (Paolino’s Aria) CimurosaTITO SCHIPAII. Granada AlbenizMoonlight in Granada HiuirteJULIAN HUARTEIII. Werther (Ossian Song) MassenetBarber of Seville (Serenade) RossiniManon (The Dream) MassenetL’Arlesiana (Frederick’s Song) CileaTITO SCHIPAINTERMISSIONIV. Prelude in D Major ChopinPrelude in C Minor ChopinJULIAN HUARTEV. I Shall Return SchipaLe RossijjTiol Rimski/ KorsakoffGiro Tondo .,,R, BelliniMarechiare TostiTITO SCHIPATickets—83c to $2.75 at Information Office. ed in 100 and 220-yard dashes, thelow hurdles, and the broad jump.Michigan, defending champion,hopes the balanced strength of its23 men will give it enough points tobe definitely in the running for afourth straight Big Ten title. Whilenot expecting to win many firsts.Coach Charlie Hoyt expents points tobe gathered by Sammy Stoller in thedashes; Birleson, Patton, Aikens andDavidson in the middle distances;Osgood in the hurdles; Brelsford,Fink, Staehle, and Stone in the mileand two mile; and Etchells andTownsend in the weight events. Themile relay team, which last year wonthem the conference title by settinga new Big Ten record of 3:15.2, mayrepeat its performance again tomor¬row.Placing its hopes in Don Lash, tobring victory in the mile and twomile runs, Indiana is also definitelyin the running. Other Hoosier fav¬orites are Don Caldemeyer in thehigh hurdles, Schneiderman in theshot put, Stevenson in the javelin,and Collier in the sprints.Wisconsin StrongWith the strongest and best bal¬anced team since 1931, Wisconsin willprobably display considerable strengthin the field events. Haller, who clear¬ed 14 feet 4 inches in the pole vaultlast week is a distinct threat in thisevent. The Badgers are heartenedby their fine showing in nosing outOhio State in a dual meet last Satur¬day, but they will be handicap¬ped by the loss of Jack Kellner, BigTen high hurdle champion who pull¬ed a muscle in this meet.While Illinois or Iowa may crashthrough, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana, and Wisconsin will-probably have tlubig four group to themselves. Otheientries undoubtedly will make first!in individual events, with Ellinwoodalmost sure to bring back a first forthe Maroons in the quarter-mile.Blakemore Dining Room62.30 Kimbark Ave. Dor. 8222LUNCH 25c—SOrDINNER 58c—75cSUNDAY DINNER 58c—75cHome Cooking Our SpecialityXAVIERCUOAT'Rumba and Tango King'with hit Latin American OrchettraIN THE AIR-COOLEDSTEVENS HOTEL•• MIN. CHAROI I.SO, SATURDAY 3.00NO COVER CHARGElMPOSSiBLE?~not at all. Yearafter year Long Distance telephone service grows longerin reach—shorter in the time needed for making connec¬tions—higher in quality of transmission—lower in cost.Since the first of this year. Long Distance calling hasbeen made cheaper in two ways.1. Rates are now reduced after 7 P. M. each night onperson-to-person calls to most points. As formerly, station*to-station rates are lower after 7 P. M.2. The same low night rates now apply all day Sundayon both types of service.Just another proof that the Bell System is constantlystriving to fit telephone service more closely to yourneeds in every possible way.Why not take advantage of these**Bargain Hours** to keep in closertouch with home?\WHEN Massachusetts Institute of Technology engineers wanted’''a new way of determining admission charges to their annualdance, they invented the “It" machine, and the higher the person'ality record the higher the admission charge. Mary Wells Atwood(ubOT’c), Nasson College student, had so much “it" she burned outthe machine. e Co PyCobbIV NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS PICTURE AND Sail 203"PARACRAHnUp ’n OverA daring young manand his trapeze—bar thisone doesn’t fly. WilliamSefton, University of South'emCalifomiaOlympic pros'pect, just sets it up thereto jump over with thebamboo pole, a vaulter'ssingle piece of equipmentused to defy the law ofgravity. Sefton is stoppedby the Magic Eye SpeedGraph camera in eightdifferent poses as he clrarsa near'record height.FAILED'' This remariuKle action photo caught UnivcrsTty (/ Iowa trapeze performersunscheduled mid'air collision. The trick is for the man in shc^ to leave catcher's hands. IT XPERT RIFLEMAN E)r. J. F. McClendon, University of Min'^ nesota physiologist, keeps an air rifle by his side m classroomand laboratory'' to shoot flies that bother him or his students.»Kaf lv» invariably ht« flv ”Smith Cd'authoritiessubject when it started its*, rofed that Helen LitzI L-_- not keep her petduck in her room, shereplied^ that if the duck, , -V ;hin adioraier8r«Se%'dje4ter„ operation and^I'by'tfee sou^^ Institution'' Pictured here are thc ^iT^udoitsIhr* and we presume theyi A'- ~ n-i*!-to £0, she’d follow.i'Rc^lt: the authoritiesallowed both to stay. .Jh'Sf - •. ~''N ’'^of die four suitscelebrating AceDay at the Oniver'si^ of^ Tennetewere Edicl Mays.Allison D.t^.Viv-;iai Gks alia Ifise -ifNpac>=&iFk«\|4il#|??rginjtatibh'J&st'l^ on.d^ PiOttjvcraty cmp^f.has Jtuofikl .into moresetioiis 1>ikuS^:0ffi&rs 'H t^". p^^are now -fl|^iand^y;'^tto^AftrH nr Timf srrivn rwnrd of t^,» ^ are repood^-by ,JnofsofTHEMAacHosrent.bjganizatspermissiMailmen are kept real busy bringing mail to the Princeton.headquarters of the organization. .The nation^s youngest senator. RuS Hqltj' argues waysJ means with the Vctoam' fcMiyistsV ■ r Two -‘of the Veterans' lobbyists corner‘ Sen.- J., Hamilton Lewis on the mono-'■ rail subway .which connects the CapitalS' with die ^nate Office building to try to'. cpnvin^'him that they deserve nius support._ *rA and-bfficiS *faff>op«rale-in „big busine^ way to answer the thousandsof letters received daily. “Stveet Swing”}i\WILL OSBORNE, the orchestra leader, has oi. a slight connection with Yale. He once sued RuVall^, Yale alumnus, for a siim running' past'$W,ooo mark. Rudy, Will averred, had ccipied.crooning .^from Will Osborne. At'that“time Wivoice and vocal; mani^ier was so much • like' Rudthat the radio public coirarely tell them apart.: . Not knowing who cailirst,’ the court direw Cthe ; case. 4-. Rudy Vawai^ more famous, aWill Osborn, who soundlike him, bore in silerthe onus of an imitatBut Will has leftAndrews College (innative Toronto) to heccxan orchestra leader of no; He worked inoes^nlljl,special trombone ef^rel^^i^ ofi, lvts,:v<)toe.; A year ago dancers beganl -^iptice that Will Osborne had a sweet swing to 1vplayingJ Today Rudy Vallee’is known chieflyhis radid^varicty houi;:! ^ill; Osborne is known..his band" - ^i ITHEIR sifting, and winnowing for the Jtru\ professors and schdars, often disagree for yearsj.eiid,'"; debating, compromising, and surrenderingintegrity of intellect dictates. . Politicians disagand debate, but elections d^tde issues, and whileoffice, the victors are Doers. President Roosevinvited professors and scholars to take an active hain government four years ago. They sifted and wnowed and had to announce the results immediateShortly after they did; the; Republicans how led, at the,bumbling theories.On the eve of anothernational election, the Rcrpublicans are announcingtheir own “brain trust" ''Republican college profes'sors to show Etemocraticcollege professors they arewrong. Heading the ”ew“trust" is Dr. Olin GlennSaxon, professor of businessadministration at Yale, Har'vard Phi Beta Kappa. , Dr.Olin, once a broker, at other times a lawyer, is quispoken .and busincss'like, no dreamer to disfMeiRepublican Big Business aligned against the Admistration.Dr. Saxon of Yale was a democrat until 1933^Harvvd he studied under Dr. Felix Frankfurter,'fiand main inspiration of the Democratic “brain trusSaioo's qf nine asaistants is «vanalyzing the NewDeal “to expose its fallacies/’TUNE HI! CAMEL CARAVANWITH WALTER O’KEEFEDEANE JANIS. TED HUSINGGLEN GRAY AND THECASA LOMA ORCHESTRATuesday and 'Thursday—9 P- m.E.D.S.'T., 8 p.aa. E.S.T^ 8 p.m.CD^.T..7 p.ni.CS.T..8:30 p.m.M.S.T.. 7:30 p.m. P.S.T.-overW A B C • Columbia Network COSTLIERTOBACCOSCamels are made from finer. MOREEXPENSIVE TOBACCOS-Turkish andtytillir-'aiii —.Jl.. <-‘*Ur-.e'r^r*r>»ll'Tir'Hr‘anHLiaHTNINQ SPEED has car¬ried petit€ Mrs. Ethel Arnold tothe peak of tennis fame. ”I smokeGunehi,” she says. **I enjoy foodmore and digest it better too.”THE CHEF PRESENTS a Planked SirloinSteak d la Parker, named, like the renownedrolls, for the famous Parker House in Boston.Martin J. Lavin, banquet manager, is im¬ pressed by the number of people who smokeCamels. He says: "Camels are a favorite withthose who love good food. At the ParkerHouse, Camels are outstandingly popular."for Digestions sake...SPRING FEVER makes dig¬ging into studies all the harder— mental tension increases. But( amels help. They add much tothe enjoyment of life. Camelsgive you a "lift"—and never geton your nerves. smoke CamelsOne of life’s most enjoyable experiences is the pleasureCamels add to eatingYou have surely noticed how muchmore you enjoy eating when yourmind is free from care. No mentalstrain or hurry slows down the nat¬ural flow of digestive fluids.Much of this same enjoyment isyours when you smoke Camels. Smok¬ing Camels increases' the supply of alkaline digestive fluids... so neces¬sary for zest while you eat and fordigestive well-being afterward.In Camels, you find tobacco at oncerich, mild, and perfect in taste. Camelsset you right! They give you a cheery"lift.” And never jangle your nervesor tire your taste.Copyright, 19S6, R. i. Reynohli Toboeeo Company. Winston-Salem, N. C.FIRST AMERICANCOLLEGE MAN towin theNationalOpen.Sam Parks, Jr., says: "ACamel with meals andafter nukes my foodsetde right.”Ts^ASH of^ drives outin .the second itt^ht battle witYork Lknversitmen.CPEEDBALL is the newest sport to be added to the physical education curriculum for women of'^Han Francisco State College. They are shown learning the “pickup," the object of which is to catchthe ball before it toudies the ground.The name of F. Whitney Jaeger (left), Colgate University geology student and star halfback on the1935 football team, may go down in history, not asa gridiron hero, but as one of the great of science.He has just discovered a 275,000,000'year-old brittle star, «ie of the rarest fossils known to mankind.He's shown with Dr. T. B, Root. I—IUGH BEDIENT, sophomore hurler, is one of the L* of Alabama's outstanding moundinen. Hugh's fatl^rChristy Mathewson in two games to win the World SernBoston Red Sox m 191a.J—JOOVER'S THE MAN!' - At least 4ie is m the opinion of students who attendedthe mock Republican riatiunal corfvefition at Westminster College. All Landon olKansas was selected as his running mate. The photo shows the opening session of theconvention. T ILLIAN^BERG LANDS'was KappaKappa Gamma's winnerin the Annual beautycontest at Drake Uni-verwty. She was selectedas one of the six mostbeautiful cm the campus.fN’ )REDpi^ve justL. ighcKM-'F he Uni'^higan’sfc' Theha* kground^ORLD'S RECORD for the medley relay was established by this quartet froms State Teachers College at Emporia at the 14th annual Kansas Relays heldThese runners raced through their variety of distances in 10:12.7. ‘‘With a Minimum ef Disorder’’U^ITH a minimum of disorder, 1956's peace “strike” enlisted almost double the^ number of student participants as did the second annual nationwide peacedemonstration in 1935. An estimated 500,000 undergraduates in 400 college andhigh schools conducted this year's onc'hour peace movement, according to esti'mates of officials of the newly formed American Student Union, sponsor of the 1936Collegiate Digest below presents typical scenes of demonstrations in var*strike,ious sections of the U. S.1'^Listeners at Washington University (St. Rolf Kaltenbom lead his HarvardLouis) were quiet and attentive. Veterans of Foreign Wars in song.Jerry Schmidt lead the peace at any price” detnutistrations at U. C. L. A,Members of “future ’ organizationsof Barnard, NewCollege and Columbia pa-raded New York in thisfashion.U.S. College Amateurs’ BestAN OUTSTANDING event of importance to student and faculty amateur^ photographers in all colleges and universities was the third annual NationalCollegiate Photographic Salon held in the University of Wisconsin Memorial Unionunder the sponsorship of that institution's Camera Club. Colleoiate Digeston this page presents the medal winners in both faculty and student classifica-tions. Because of the large amount of space needed to feature these prize^winningphotographs, the Picture of the Week contest is discontinued for this week.It will be resumed in the next issue of Collegiate Digest.Far into theNightRudolph FrundtMassachu>ctts State('.ollcgcRed Sailsin theSunsetFranklin J.FlickmanPurdue DniversityColor Guard Lawrence FI. Miller(lamcgic Irvstitutc of TechnologyPhantom PowerUniversity of Mirmesota Self-Portrait Jannes A. Schi*University of WiMEV, NOT SO ^FAST ON thatOLD 0WARr^ SON ^< vou^' collection are as UEAUTIF JLAS yOUR DAUQHTER-jTAFTER UOOWN© THEM OnCR(J. STiCk: TO MV , 1pODOUTBpi^ft / Ik started manuracturingJ UkE PQtKCC utnEv anjo INTHOOLICEO rp^ ALBERT. ATWE BRIAR TO THE VNORLO.H MODERN 8MQk£TOrr'S REALLV A MODERN Jfj SUIT MODERN TASTESPIPE )n ImSi POCKET-l.i’ I f m bcocs^eh We’reinvitiiifi'yoatosmokePrince Albert If you don’tany it’s amdung tobacco ntits beat—we’ll accept yourregrets, and your amokeawillbeonua. But when youlearn how modi cooler andsweeter P. A.’a ’’crimp cut” tobacco is and thatPrince Albert doesn’t bite the timgae —well, wetake the risk on r^n>^ts. Read our offer below.DEST LOOKING and “prettiest girl” in the all'inale cast^ of Pennsylvania’s Mask and Wig Club show. Red Rhumba,was Reeves Wetherill, who played one of the “female" leadsin the farce.(Sigmtd) IL J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANYWiMtM-SalMB, Nortk CarsliMWpRl^>van I IniT/prQlfv Oiliest institution bearing the name of Wesleyan, the Middle-V ColCjclll v«/IllVd olLj town. Conn., Methodist university was founded in 1831. Withan endowment exceeding $5,000,000, Wesleyan stands fifth in the U. S. list (^highest endowments per student.Wesleyan's property costs exceeds $4,000,000, and its equipment includes 36 buildings (one of which is a newmillion dollar library). With one faculty member for each ten students, Wesleyan's curriculum trains in liberaland sciences, not in the professiems.^FFICIAL SPONSOR of the College of MountSt. Joseph's spring festival for ccMumercestudents was Betty Ahern, outstanding financestudent at the Ohio collegiDEST LEADER, most dignified and^ .most friendly student on the Harrison¬burg. Va.. Teachers College campus isFrance Wells, her classmates decidedreixntly in an all-campus vote.^ARD TRICKS and all sorts ofV TRICKS and all sorts of magic are in the repertoireMakar, who is earimi^ HM way throtj^ LoirisiamState Normal performing at convcntions'^ind before spa:ial 0|LDEST CLOCK in the world in running condition hasjUSt been acquiitsl by Prof. D. W, l^fin^, New YorkUniversity curatev. Experts say the clock was made abemt1410.Oi JUDd^ f^OBBIf^THE story or THE BRIAR PIPE1 •( fra* ■■S 11 grmt tafcacca la 11 aawy M-mmem tfa' al Mca Albart 0Lki|||Hin||KA-Xll you have to do is to look at a GcncriMotors car and you will find all the worthwhile improvements. Thanks to the greatne?9f its resources, this organization is able tkeep ahead of the parade in pioiieering ne^developments — and able to add these improvements to its new cars at a price anGeneral Motors car owner can afford.General MotorsA Public-Minded InstitutionCHEVROLRT • PONTI AC • C^dsMOBILC • IITCK • L.A SALLK • C.AMLJIGH FLYER* ^ Earl Meadows,University of SouthernCalifornia pole vaulter,demonstrates for theMagic Eye Speed Graphcamera the form he usesto set world records{read from bottom totop). Co-holder of theN. C. A. A. record,he IS now seeking tobetter Keith Brown’smark of 14 feet, 5 Hinches.WOST POPULAR^^^woman on the LittleRock Junior College cam¬pus is Charlotte Mas-ingill, according to theresults of a recent stu¬dent poll on the subject/gation problems when she m««tB informally with Capt. G. W. Haskins' class. Purdue has justannounced the provision of a $50,000 fund to l^ild a special flying laboratory for Miss Earhart. DADDLEWHEEL airplane 1^ been developed by UniversityWashington's Prof. F. D KirstiThe plane substitutes six blacpropellors for the customary winand will be able to rise vertiaiand hover in mid-air.YOU KNOW WHERE HE 6ETS THOSESAFETY GLASS AND KNEE-ACTION IDEAS'