he??? ,, ,, Central Yhflwflfit to Hear Yeach’s 'll'etllt Professor V. B. Teach of the mathema. cs department has been in» vited by the Mathematics Club of the Central Y. M. C. A. college to give a lecture on “Modern Devel- opments in the integral Calculus,” tomorrow. He will show the fa]- lacies and incongruities existing in the methods and theories of the so. called infinitesimal calculus and the Du Hamel theorem. The more mod» ern, rigorous, and powerful theor~ ems supplanting these popular meth- ods of analysis of a few decades ago will be presented and discussed. The Bliss theorem, formulated and proved in 1917 by Protlcssor Bliss, htad of the mathematics de- partment of the University of Chi» cage, will receive its due considera. tion, as it is a very powerful tool in integral calculus. If time permits, Professor Tcach will give a brief dis- cussion of Lebague integrals and their applications in analysis of func- tions in which discontinuities are present. The Mathematical Club of the Y. M. C. A. invites a noted manic-ma- tit-inn of one of the schools of high- or education in Chicago to speak at their meetings. Armour Additional: Is Transferred” to Ohio ARMOUR TECH NEWS Wednesday, May 23, l934l SEDELEIYES (Continued from page 1) who went to Europe to pour out their blood, only to have scheming enemies in return. The American Legion has enough of Europe——take the advice of an authority, America! As one writer set forth in attack upon Italy, “Mussolini is still sing» ing his ‘Song of Peace’ and playing the accompaniment on his drum?" THE WORLD court has a dual character. One is the judicial func— tion. The second is an advisory body controlled by the league. With the league involved, the nations are in- volved. Where the nations are in- volved, certain indivnluals are in- volved for solt'»intereuts-——especially in the case of European “master minds." With this in mind we wonder at the advantages of the World Court. The situation brings to mind the famed statcmtnt ol' Abra~ ham Lincoln: “lt is the eternal strug— gle between these two principles—.- right and wrongvAthroughout the world. They are the two principles that have stood face to fare from the btginning of time and will ever continue to struggle. The one is the common right of humanity, the other the divine right of kings. It is the same spirit in whatever shape it do— velops itseli’. It is the spirit that S. J. McLaren, Jr., a mtmbcr of; the Armour faculty in the fire prod teetion engineering department tori the period from 1927 to 1929, and an i Armour graduate, has been tron», i'ci'red to the Columbus offices of the, (‘rum and Forster group of insurance, companies. lie had previously been opeeiul agent for the same group in Iowa. llis new territory includes the northern portion of Ohio. THE JUNlOR CLASS gives eight-loot pushbull a ride for victory. it required In minutes for a l—O score. ONE Oil: the big open'house lions. The giant Tesla coil in tion. BEETS makes a mighty heave as his part in the pentathlon. lohnny won the medal to: lettermen. says. “You toil and work and corn bread, and Hi eat it. No matter in what shape it comes, whether from lht mouth of a king who seeks to hc~ stride the people of his nation and lwc by the fruit of their labor or from one race of men as an apology for enslaving‘ another race, it is the amt tyrannical principle.” We would say that “Abe” Lincoln de scribed the World Court before its xistenverian eternal struggle. the attrac- opera! mores are out; for pants. freshmen and fionhumoren finish in itmeli’gltl flaring Junior Micaela Clues work for the most part for- gotten, Junior Week saw all classes and fraternities plunged into friend- ly rivalry; but the freshmen and sophomores were as usual most strongly opposed. In baseball, track, and in free-for-alls on 33rd street, they were at each other, hammer and tongs. Clean sportsmanship is one of the fundamental principles underlying the idea of Junior Week. The sopho- mores, having been led to believe that the freshmen were unaware of this fact, decided to recall to use one of the bath tubs formerly used in Chapin Hall. The incoming- fresh- man who was without his green cap was ushered onto Ogden Field, stripped, bathed, and informed of the sophomore. idea of fair, clean, play. The freshmen, having been misinformed by their many collabor- ators, who remained on the side lines, attempted to reverse the pro» cedure, but their plan was thwart» ed, with the result that many :1“ them were bathed without the re moval of their outer garments. The. activities were brought to a close by the arrival of Dean John C. Penn, who was under the belief that the plans for clean sportsmanship inau- gurated by the class of '36 nhould cease. A surprising victory over the sophomores at the expense of certain T. X. men gave an inkling- of the strength of the freshmen. In the organic lab last Tuesday, while plot.- ting against the of the green caps, one of the soph chem‘ ikers become sick, and in a short in- terval, live more men had left class wearers 'or the same reason. Professor ii‘rtud, alarmed at the oecurenee, called the hospital, and in a short mm GEORGE R E E D, high point man of in- teriraternity m e e t. breaks tape in 220 event. time the doctor reported the sick» ness of the schmicrs was due to the doping of their meals at the fru- ternity house by one of their pledges. Wednesday the pledge’s pants were overhanging 33rd street, but the freshmen had scored a moral vic- tory. Wednesday the activities of both of the lower classes were curtailed although sophomore flags were fly" ing high, The scnior~faculty base— ball game proved to the upper cluss~ men that the faculty is always right, whether in the classroom or on the ball field. The humiliation to the student body of the loss handed the seniors was due to the home runs of John Schommer and the superb fielding of Art Scar. Johnny Marigold man- aged to get on base each. of his four times at but, and scored four runs. The Sunny Weissman-Herby Ensz battery had their signals mixed, causing manager Hendricks to go out to the mound and set Sunny straight. In the fifth inning Bibb scored from second on a short single to center, but would have been out had manu tiger Krafi‘t not signaled “Sad Slim” to slide across the plate. On Friday morning the sopho— mores were prepared for a real but- tle, but found their main difficul- ty to be finding; freshmen willing to battle, back. A scrap was started down at the 33rd St eet “‘L" station resulting in the dcpantsing of every freshman present. Several freshmen were dcpantsud and kidnaped but managed to return for the. rush. The. rush proved to be a glorious affair for the class of '36, as they are one of the three clas .5 to win the rush in both their freshman and sopho- WIOYE‘. yea UNDERTHE WATCH’FUL eye of an assistant junior marshal. the sopho—~ This scramble took place at the freshman goal. to WOW, WHAT A S‘WHNG! John Schem- mer adds punch to the faculty baseball team. dim lifeline Although the nophs mad juniors turned in their "RSI—AND ME- MORKALS” at day apart, only the reaults of the junior judgments were available in time for this issue. Do you think you can wuit till next week? Each to the “junganmw‘ LAMMERS and KVAPU. copped n couple of mention commends while ton of their claim mitten received mention». We wonder if STEWARD writes, "To the sweetest girl 1’ know", on all his cards that are enclosed with the flowers he sends them???.. Last Friday was the first anni- versary for “Peg leg” Faro. It was just one year ago that. Phil met with a little tough luck and had his leg broken. When are you going to throw away your wooden leg and really walk? Today is the day the senior proj- ect is due. The seniors have been ‘working hard of late and here’s hop- ing they receive a little credit for at least attempting; to work. The [molt have been given their assignments and all that’s holding up the A. A. S. initiations is the three paddles each, frosh has to make. They tell me. colt water namelimos helps!!! Snooping Sum. At. Washington college, the ctr—eds, after a still fight. were granted per-- mission to smoke. in classes. When several came to a class the next day smoking; corn-cob pipes, the professor maintained his composure, and ordered that. all windows he kept closed. In a short time the girls be- gun to excuse themselves rather in— formally. Hold histaminationn for licholarehipe Scholarship were held yesterday for incoming freshv men in the gymnasium and freshman drafting room at the main building. The examination lasted {our and one- examinations half hours, beginning at 10 o’clock, with an intermisnion at 1 o'clock and resuming at 2 o’clock. The test was similar in nature to that of last veal? and was run in a similar manner. The examination was a concise set of~questions on the major subjects of high school courses. The, in the morning were on mathematics, history, and civics; in the afternoon, physics, chemistry, and English were the sub- jects. Lunch, was served to the par. ticipants in the school cafeteria at 1:00 o’clock. The number of students that took the examination was estimated at 175; these students represented practically all of the high schools in the city and suburbs, which is 35 or 110. Other students who do not live within the city’s limits took their examinations at the respective high schools. The questions were mailed to the schools and these participants were interviewed by an Armour alumnus. All those who took the ex- aminations were required to present a certificate of recommendation from their respective schools and also to have a personal interview with one of the members of the scholar- ship committee. From this large questions number, 10 men are chosen and 10 alternates to substitute in the event that any of the first members do not accept. BRUNO RHGONF makes a dash for the medal in the non—lettermen division of the pentathlon. John's two home runs helped defeat the sen— iors, l9—9.