Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, December 03, 1930, Image 1

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What Say?
Homecomings at the University ;
ol Oregon would be much greater
could the annual clash between
Oregon State be staged each year.
Read editorial page two.
The Weather
Cloudy with no change in tem
perature.
Maximum . 56
Minimum . 42
Precipitation .02
VOLUME XXXII
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, EUGENE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1930
NUMBER 41
Reed Man Will
Speak Tonight
At ViDard Hall
Future of America Topic
T To Be Discussed by
Professor Noble
British Consul Will Take
Part in Discussion
Group Thursday
INTERNATIONAL WEEK
PROGRAM
Tonight—Address by Dr. G. B.
Noble, Reed college, at Villard
assembly, 7:30 p. m.
Thursday—Forum discussion at
Westminster house, 4 p. m.
International banquet, Hen
dricks hall, 7 p. m.
Open house at International
club, 8:30-10:30 p. m.
“America's Future—20 Years
Hence” is the subject of the ad
dress by Dr. G. B. Noble, of Reed
college, who speaks at Villard as
sembly tonight at 7:30 p. m. as the
second event on the International
week program which began last
night with forum hours in all of
the living organizations on the
campus.
“Dr. Noble is most capable of
discussing foreign affairs,” stated
Professor Turnbull in a brief talk
made yesterday. “He has been in
Europe recently where he made a
complete study of world-court
problems and international affairs.
He is probably as well versed in
international conditions as any
man of his day.”
Alumnus To Talk
World fellowship and industrial
groups of the Y. W. C. A. are
sponsoring the meeting on Thurs
day afternoon honoring Mary
Klemin, an Oregon graduate, who
A is now secretary of the National
Consulate for the Prevention of
War.
Miss Klemm is just back $rom
Washington, D. C., where she at
tended the national consulate meet
ing, and will address the group on
the relation of the European politi
cal and economical situation to
America's attitude towards the j
World Court and the League of
Nations.
Eric Cable, British consul from
Portland, is expected to be present
and take part in the discussions.
The meeting is to be held at the
Westminster house at 4 o’clock,
and Frieda Holzmeyer is in charge
of arrangements. All interested
are invited to come.
The highlight of Thursday’s
program of events will be the In
ternational banquet to be held at
Hendricks hall starting at 7
o'clock. Dr. Roy Agaki, prominent
Japanese authority on internation
f al relations, vice-president of the
University, will be toastmaster.
All foreign students on the cam
pus will be guests of their friends
who are members of the student
body.
Open House Set
The International club will hold
open house Thursday evening from
8:30 to 10:30 at their residence,
727 Thirteenth avenue East, in
honor of Mrs. Gertrude Bass War
ner, Mr. Eric Cable, British consul
(Continued on Page Three)
\.■~-r...v,TX^
‘l Hours' Wait;
A **ar Too Late
'P’RIEND. TALL, named for
the tradi al spirit of Ore
gon friendliness, proved not so
friendly last night when a stu
dent seeking an old acquaintance
asked for a certain party. The
freshman who took his call asked
him to wait. He did.
After a half hour without re
sult, he went outside and rang
the dooriiell again. A different
freshman answered this time apd
again a half-an-hour wait with
out result. When the half hour
was up the student went his
way. Thinking it probably the
fastest way, the student invested
a nickle in a pay station and
culled the hall.
•‘Is so and so there?'’ he
asked.
“No,” was the reply, “he has
not lived here all term.”
One-Act Plays To
Be Given Today at
Guild Hall Theatre
Theatre Workshop Class Is
Finishing Last Details
For Production
While the one-act play casts are
winding up their weeks of rehear
sals in perfecting of details for the
performances to be given today,
the Theatre Workshop class, un
der the direction of Fred Orin Har
ris, is doing its part with hammers,
paint brushes, and sewing ma
chines. The stage crew includes
Myrtle McDaniel, Virginia Rock,
and Norbert Jallings. Rosamund
Strieker, wearing overalls which
are used to work, is arranging for
the lighting effects.
Yesterday there was great ac
tivity going on in the Guild thea
tre. Mr. Harris, from his lofty po
sition on the top of a step ladder,
was indulging in an inimitable
flow of oratory punctuated by the
bangs of his hammer, while his
crew smeared red paint on certain
stage settings.
“These people are not drama stu
dents,” announced Mr. Harris be
tween pounds, “they are English
majors, disillusioned journalists.
They scorn the actors. They stand
behind the scenes and make noise
effects and laugh at the mistakes
of the cast—”
“Sure,” said one of the crew,
“they ought to pull the curtain and
let the audience see us in action
between scenes. It's much more
exciting drama.”
In the dressing room under the
stage the costume committee was
busy. Winifred Schoonmaker was
at the sewing machine putting blue
ruffles on a dress for “The Break
ing of the Calm,” while Elva Ba
ker and Cathryn Snapp were mak
ing those to be used in “The Devil
Comes to Alcaraz.” They were
Spanish, too, with high combs,
mantillas, and bright skirts.
All this activity is for the the
three one-act plays, “The Dear De
parted,” by Stanley Houghton,
“The Devil Comes to Alcaraz,” by
William H. Fulham, and “The
Breaking of the Calm,” by Dan
Totheroh. This program is the first
public production by the members
of the beginning class in technique
of acting, and will be given at
(Continued on Page Three)
Spats and Derby Ensemble
Popular With Men at Ohio V.
If Oregon men were to accept
the style of dress prevalent at the
University of Ohio, they would go
to class attired in neat suits, spats,
derbies and canes, according to
Neil Taylor, Oregon delegate to
the Sigma Delta Chi convention in
Columbus, Ohio, last month.
Taylor, who has just returned
to the campus, said that he saw no
student at Ohio going to classes
in “campus” clothes. Cords are
taboo, and neatly pressed clothes,
derbies and spats are the vogue
“The University of Ohio campus
is quite large,” Taylor said. "It is
about six blocks wide and nine
blocks long, and it takes about If
minutes to walk across it.
"Sororities and fraternities are
much more conservative than those
here. The houses are set bach
from the streets and have wel
f kept lawns and many trees.”
Taylor returned home througt
j Canada. “The weather at Colum
! bus was warm, but in Winnipeg it
• was eight degrees above zero with
| a foot and a half of snow,
j “I was impressed by the piles
I and piles of wheat in Canada. At
j one place there were 40,000 bush
! els of wheat piled in sacks along
\ the railroad tracks. There was no
room in the elevators, so the wheat
was piled outside with no protec
tion.
There is a considerable amount
of construction work going on in
the East,” Taylor continued, “but
there were about three times as
many men working than were
j needed. Many stood around with
■ shovels over their shoulders, mere
ly looking on.”
Among the many prominent men
who spoke at the Sigma Delta Chi
convention were William Mapel,
Washington and Lee University,
(Continued on Page Four)
Prep Session
Group Named
By Chairman
Velma Powell Is Appointed
To Hold Assistant
Chairmanship
High School Conference
Directorate Plans
Get Under Way
The high school conference di
rectorate, with a complete list of
16 chairmen appointed, will get
Bill Pittman
unuer way wun
the opening ses
sion of the group
this afternoon,
Bill Pittman,
general chairman
for this year’s
annual event, an
nounced yes ter
day.
Velma Powell
will act as as
sistant chairman,
and Louise Ans
ley win serve-as me uirecioruie
secretary.
Committees Named
Chairmen for special divisions
have been named as follows: Adele
Wedemeyer, correspondence; John
Penland, program; Ralph Wal
st.rom, student body conference;
Conny Baker, deans’ conference;
Merlin Blais, publicity; Carson
Mathews, accommodations; Harry
Van Dine and Tony Peterson, press
conference; John King, principals’
conference; Margaret Cummings,
Girls’ league; Carol Werschkul,
banquet; Barney Miller, entertain
ment; Marguerite Tarbell, regis
tration, and Bill Price, campus
tour.
Faculty Appointed
The faculty committee will be
comprised of Earl M. Pallett, reg
istrar • George H. Godfrey, pub
licity director; Hugh L. Biggs,
dean of men; George S. Turnbull,
professor of journalism; Mrs. Ha
zel P. Schwering, dean of women;
Mrs. Charlotte R. Donnelly, secre
tary of housing; Leonard Hag
strom, University editor; Reginald
Coggeshall, professor of journal
ism; Paul W. Ager, comptroller;
R. U. Moore, University high
school principal.
The conference, which will be
attended by high school represent
atives from the entire state, will
include sessions under four divi
sions: student body officers, edi
tors of annuals and school papers,
representatives of Girls' leagues,
and faculty advisors. The confer
ence will be held shortly after the
opening of winter term.
Winter Concerts
To Open Tuesday
December 9 Is Selected for
First Recital
Next Tuesday evening, Decem
ber 9, will be on this campus what
the opening night of grand opera
is to New York and Chicago, for
on that evening the Associated
Students’ winter concert series will
open at McArthur court with an
appearance of Guy Maier and Lee
Pattison, world’s foremost two
piano duetists.
This concert, like the other four
on the series, will be free to all
holders of student body cards, by
virtue of the small share of each
student’s registration fees which
helps to make up the A. S. U. O.
concert fund.
Maier and Pattison have been
charming audiences all over the
world with their masterful two
piano work for the past 12 years,
but now each desired to follow a
musical profession of his own, and
this year’s concerts comprise their
“Farewell Tour.”
When they first explored the
field of two-piano music, they
found that the range of composi
tions for this use was very limited.
However, they brought to light
many little known compositions
for two-pianos by Debussy, Aren
sky, Rachmaninoff, Franck, Saint
Saens and Mozart. And as their
fame has grown, many modern
composers have dedicated two
piano works to the two—among
them Sowerby, Ernest Hutcheson
and Godowsky.
They are scheduled for a concert
in Portland the evening of Decem
ber 8, immediately before coming
to Eugene.
Japanese Consul Praises
Oregon International Week
Hirosi Acino Telia About
Oriental Interest in
World Affairs
By KENNETH FITZGERALD
“I am very glad to note the spir
it portrayed by the University of
Oregon in its annual International
week,” said Hirosi Acino, Japanese
consul to Portland, when asked
for his opinion recently on the
scheduled campus event. Seated
behind the desk in his private con
sular office the little Japanese rep
resentative displayed a remarkable
warmth of feeling towards the
University and its ideals.
After talking with Mr. Acino p
few minutes one is astounded at
the small world in which most of
us live, as compared with that of
Portland’s present Japanese con
sul. He has built for himself a
universe wherein prejudice and ha
tred can find no room, and from
which he can gaze upon the world
with calm and unillusioned eyes.
“Although we have nothing sim
ilar in our colleges to your inter
national week, our students are
struggling towards the same ideals
as are displayed by that event at
the University of Oregon,” said Mr.
Acino. “Our schools promote in
ternational meetings of all kinds,
and are especially fond of sponsor
ing debates on international af
fairs. It is quite remarkable to
«•
note also the large amount of
space devoted to foreign news in
the Japanese newspapers. This
fact has quite a tendency to pro
mote a greater feeling of interna
tionalism among the people of the
country.”
Mr. Acino also attributes the
Japanese international feeling to
his country's insular position.
"Since Japan opened her doors to
the world 65 years ago.” he said,
"her people have had to take a
strong interest in foreign affairs
because of the vast amount of
trade that has been carried to the
shores of the island kingdom since
then.” This, he claims, has had a
tendency to bring the Japanese
people into a spirit of internation
alism.
The great majority of the Jap
anese people, according to Mr
Acino, were very much interested
in the arms conference held in Lon
don a few months ago. He was
impressed by the fact that, when
the arms parley was not making
the success it had aimed at, that
many Americans came to him and
asked him if Japan were opposed
to the conference. In answer to
that question he would point to
the attitude of the Japanese public
when their delegation sailed for
London. Although the rain was
pouring down, thousands crowded
the piers at Tokio to express their
(Continued on Page Three)
Debaters Chosen
For Varsity Team
In Annual Tryout
Potwin, Miller aiul Hoben
Gain Position; Other
Speakers Selected
Stage presence, oratorical skill,
and intelligent thinking were dis
played at the oratory and extem
pore tryouts held last night in Vil
lard hall. The orators spoke for
15 minutes on an optional subject
and were judged on their delivery
and the contents of their manu
scripts.
Those chosen for the varsity
squad and their subjects are Her
bert Doran, “Eyes That See Not;”
Arthur Potwin, “Penalties of Pow
er;” Robert T. Miller, "The Ren
aissance of Modern Youth;” and
Ard Hoben (alternate), “Cross
Roads of Tomorrow.”
At the beginning of the tryouts
the extempore speakers were as
signed a phase of free trade on
which to speak. Those who were
selected for extempore speaking
and their subjects are Arthur Pot
win, “Free Trade—the Salvation
of America;” Wallace Campbell,
“The Tariff Outgrown;” and Rob
ert T. Miller, "Infant Industry—
Passing of the Need for Protec
tion.”
Two of the orators chose peace
as their theme, pointing out the
need for a new era of good will to
be resolved from the confusion
caused by the World war. Several
(Continued on Page Three)
Sophomore Men
On Service Club
> To Pick Officers
Constitution ami Name for
Croup; Other Business
Items for Thursday
Five committees were appointed
yesterday afternoon at the first
meeting of the new sophomore
class service honorary organiza
tion to draw up plans for a con
stitution, decide upon a name for
the group, and to investigate fields
of activity in which the 15 mem
bers will enter for the service of
the University. Officers will be
elected at a meeting Thursday.
The committees are: Purpose,
Jim Travis, Bill Bader, and Ted
Jensen; name and membership,
John Marrs, Freeman Young, and
Richard Mumaw; officers, Ed Kin
ney, Carson Mathews, and Charles
Larkin; meetings, John King, Vir
gil Langtry, and Kenton Lawson;
standing committees, Larry Bay,
Gordon Day, and George Vaughan.
Ken Curry, senior in law and
chairman of the upperclass com
mittee which chose the charter
members of the honor group, was
in charge of yesterday’s meeting,
and will preside Thursday after
noon when the organization will
hold its second meeting and hear
reports of the committees.
“All the men are very enthusi
astic about the honor group,”
Curry said, “and are eager for an
opportunity to do some construc
tive work for the University.”
=—Forum Hour Gleaninqs—
I_
“The world is becoming smaller
and smaller due to international
dependency and to the develop
ment of transportation,” explained
Waldo Schumacher, professor of
political science, in a short talk at
the Sig Ep house last night.
The United States is at present
playing the role of the banker,
Schtimacher said, and because of
this part has many problems with
numerous nations. The materials
which the United States has to
import also brings out the fact
that the nations are becoming al
most entirely interdependent, he
said, and because of this condition
the countries in the future will
have many problems and disputes
to settle among themselves.
• • •
Racial problems took the chief
place in the discussion led by Dr.
John Mueller, professor of sociol
ogy, at the Pi Beta Phi house.
Dr. Mueller discussed the origin of
racial prejudices and the attempts
made to erase them. Education is,
after all, the chief tool whereby
progress is made in overcoming
unsoundly formed opinions and ra
tionalizations in regard to race, he
said.
The League of Nations, interna
tional conferences and accomplish
ments in the economic relations
between nations, he cited as in
!
stances of progress toward better
racial relationships.
* * *
The League of Nations’ impor
tance to world relations was the
subject of Reginald Coggeshall’s
talk to members of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon. Coggeshall stressed the
point that before any act or or
ganization can become effective
public opinion must be in favor of
it. Not until people begin to be
lieve in the league can it success
fully carry out its objectives, he
said.
* * •
“The reason why the civiliza
tions of Greece and of Rome were
destroyed, and at the same time
those of India and China have per
sisted since 2000 years before the
Christian era, is that the western
peoples have attempted to follow
the ideal of power rather than of
perfection.” Dr. J. R. Wetherbee,
local physician, made this state
ment during his talk on Mahatma
Ghandi and the Rabindranath Ta
gore, Hindu leaders, before a com
bined audience of Oregon Yeomen
and independent women.
• • *
“The most serious problem con
fronting Japan today is over
population,” said Dr. Victor P
Morris, associate professor of eco
(Continued on Page Three)
A.W.S. Starts
New Service in
Vocational Aid
Program Started To Help
Co-eds in Seleetinp
Their Careers
Margarot Cummings Picks
Committer* To Head
Guidance Work
A vocational guidance program
as a direct, practical, and vital
service to the women of the Uni
versity has been definitely
launched with the appointment of
a committee of women leaders to
work out the organization of the
project by Margaret Cummings,
president of the Associated Women
Students, which, with the coopera
tion of the personnel administra
tion of the University, is sponsor
ing the undertaking.
Miss Cummings announced her
appointments Tuesday evening.
They are: Daphne Hughes, presi
dent of Y. W. C. A., Jessie Puck
ett, president of W. A. A., and
Marguerite Mauzey, president of
Phi Theta Upsilon. This group is
to work out the organization of
the project which will include all
women on the campus.
Opportunities To Be Revealed
"Women in college seem to think
that they must prepare themselves
for the conventional vocations of
teaching or stenography,” ex
plained Miss Cummings in outlin
ing the program which the A. W.
S. will carry out here. “The A.
W. S., through the several organi
zations it includes, plans to pre
sent to the women of the Univer
sity the many opportunities in vo
cations which are open to them.
So many women follow these con
ventional vocations because they
l do not know what opportunities lie
outside them,” she added.
“This year the A. W. S. is doing
distinctly personal service to the
women of the campus by giving
them the opportunity to investi
gate fields in which they might
wish to enter,” Miss Cummings
said. "The A. W. S. has its Peters
lodge for the recreation of the
women, its teas for their social
activities, and the foreign scholar
for its outside service.”
Will Begin Next Term
The personnel administration of
the University, under the direction
of Dean Karl W. Onthank and
Howard R. Taylor, director of the
personnel bureau, has offered its
cooperation in the project and will
assist the A. W. S. in procuring
speakers who are leaders and ex
perts in their fields. They will
also help in outlining the pro
gram.
Actual working of the project
will begin next term, when indi
vidual conferences of women stu
dents with leaders in the fields in
which they are interested and
small group meetings will be held.
All organizations which are part
of the A. W. S., namely, Y. W.
C. A., W. A. A., Phi Theta Upsilon,
heads of houses, and honoraries,
will stress vocational guidance
throughout their programs for the
■ rest of the year, in cooperation
with the A. W. S.
Work Will Begin
On Tennis Courts
Unique Structural Devices
First of Kind in U. S.
The University is expending
$8700 in the construction of four
new tennis courts. From the
standpoint of construction, the
courts are the only ones of their
kind in the United States.
Two devices will be used tc
strengthen the foundation of the
courts. Reinforced footings will
be laid under the joints, and gravel
will be spread below the concrete
to prevent the adobe soil from ex
panding and contracting with fluc
tuations in climate.
Indians Participate in Dance
The beat of tom-toms and chant
ing of braves echoed over the cam
pus of Haskell Institute, Lawrence
Kansas, as more than 1,000 In
dians, attending a nation-wide
pow-wow incdent to the game be
tween Haskell and the University
of Kansas last week participate
in the war dances of their fathers
Students to Play
Hosts at Banquet
r|''HE foreign students will lie
the guests of the American
students at the International
Immiuet, Thursday evening at 7
o’clock at the Hendricks hall
dining room.
Men wishing to attend the
banquet should get in touch
with .lint Landye, Alpha hall,
either to he given a name of
some foreign student or to pre
sent a name of one nlready in
vited.
The banquet is an nnnunl af
fair, held in conjunction with the
observance of International week
on the campus.
OSCDean Speaks
At Club Meeting
Oil Poor Whites
Professor Says Kentucky
Mountaineers Are
Often Skilled
“If by education you mean book
lamin', as they call it in the south,
they have mighty little of it,” said
Dean J. R. Jewell, of Oregon State
college, speaking last night as
guest of the Education club on
"Education of the Poor Whites in
the South.” Dean Sheldon of the
school of education, also addressed
the group last night on the sub
ject of “Educational Researches in .
Education.”
Dean Jewell said In further an
alysis of the education of the Ken
tucky mountain whites, “If you de
fine education in terms of skills,
they are a well educated people,
because they are certainly skillful
in many lines.” Dean Jewell ex
hibited a hand woven, hand dyed
bedspread which had been made
in the southern mountains by the
woman whose husband raised the
sheep which furnished the wool.
“When I went to school," Dean
Jewell said in reference to his own
early education in the mountains
of the South, “I took with me all
the textbooks that my older broth
er had used in the school up to
the time he was 'quituated.' And
here it is,” said the speaker pre
senting the copy of Webster’s Ele
mentary Blueback speller which he
had taken to school with him.
“There are this day, December
2, 1930, hundreds of men and wo
men who received their education
from this book,” he stated. “Any
one who can spell past page 82 of
the Webster’s Speller is educated
in those mountain regions, and,
there are hundreds of thousands of
men and women who have gone to
their graves never having seen any
pictures except those in this book,”
said Dean Jewell, indicating the
thin blue book.
The language of the poor whites
in Kentucky is probably the only
language in the world which
Shakespeare could understand if
he were to return to the earth to
day, according to Dean Jewell,
who says that the original Eliza
bethan ballads are still sung in the
mountain regions.
In conclusion Dean Jewell said,
"It is the ambition of every moun
tain native in the South to be able
to write his own name, yet his be
liefs are so democratic that he re
fuses to have the board of educa
tion force upon him anything like
compulsory education.”
Fate of Oregon
Grid Situation
Still Unsolved
Rumors That Spears Will
Leave To Take New Job
Continue Unabated
Pallett Says Talk Invalid;
Emerald Gets No Replies
To Telegram to Doe
By JACKSON BURKE
Just what the fate of the Ore
gon football team for the next
four years will be, remains a mys
tery as rumors of the possibility
of Dr. C. W. Spears accepting a
coaching position elsewhere con
tinue uninterrupted.
Speaking for the University in
the absence of President Hall, Earl
M. Pallett, executive secretary and
registrar, when asked as to the
validity of the rumors, stated that
as far as he knew there was no
foundation for them.
Dr. Spears, at present in Los
Angeles where he will attend the
Notre Dame football game and the
meeting of the Pacific Coast con
ference, has not as yet made any
definite statement whether or not
he will leave Oregon, but did state
to San Francisco newspapermen
that he was “as free as a jay
bird without feathers" to accept
“any offer that was made, upon
his arrival there for the St.
Mary’s game. Just how free this
is it is not. possible to determine
as it has not been possible for the
Emerald to reach Spears by wire.
Wisconsin Seeks Spears
The resignation of Nibs Price
started all the talk at the present
time, although Spears was men
tioned as the possible successor of
Glenn Thislethwaite at Wisconsin
on November 22, before the resig
nation of Price from the Univer
sity of California position.
Just why it is considered all
over the country that Spears is to
be approached with offers, while
his contract has to all good ap
pearances four years to run, is not
known, the whole situation being
devoid of any direct statement by
the principals involved.
One explanation of the pro
tracted meeting of William Mona
han, graduate manager of Califor
nia, and Spears is that it may
have been in the nature of an en
deavor on the part of the Oregon
coach to secure a game with Cali
fornia for 1931. Monahan, how
ever, is also the man who has been
commissioned by the Associated
Students jf the University of Cali
fornia to secure a new coach.
As to the Wisconsin situation
Spears, before he left Minnesota,
spoke of a desire to “see what
could be done with the type of
material available at Wisconsin.”
This would indicate the possibility
that the officials of the Big Ten
college are basing their assumption
that Speai-3 would be willing to
consider any offer they might
make in the light of a preference
he exhibited some time ago.
The fact that this rumor started
before Price’s resignation, how
ever, adds weight to the belief
that the Oregon coach may be
looking around, as it is well known
that Mrs. Spears has been dissat
isfied here and would perhaps wel
come a change.
Stillman Suggests Different
Name For Intelligence Tests
The use of the term “intelligence
test” for the most part is a mis
nomer, according to A. B. Still
man, professor in the school of
business administration. It would
be far better, he says, for the so
called intelligence tests to be call
ed aptitude tests, for that, in fact,
is what they really are.
The psychology entrance intelli
gence tests are really aptitude
tests which show the abilities of
the students for general college
work.
Many men might well find them
selves unable to pass with any de
gree of success the examinations
given to the entering freshman
class but still be rated as intelli
gent. On the other hand many of
the students who rate way above
the average in these tests if given
an "intelligence” test ibasedi on
I say blacksmithing, plumbing or
I kindred knowledge would find |
themselves extremely “unintelli
gent” simply because of a lack of
aptitude in that field. Therefore,
Professor Stillman thinks, it would
be much better if the erroneous
impression of the “intelligence”
tests could be erased, so that the
students could perceive their real
value.
In the business ad school an ap
titude test has been developed for
the rating of business ad majors
which has a very close correlation
with actual abilities of students in
class work.
In these tests he said it is quite
possible to forecast within a rea
sonable degree of accuracy the
grades the student will earn in his
courses in business administration.
If any marked degree of variation
from these tests shows up in his
work, checks are made upon the
student which often lead to the
(Continued on Page Four)