Garvey announcesSoph Class Council. araon A million for theadvsuicement of re¬ligion.sii Vol. 29. No. 18. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928 Price Five CentsAthenaeum“WAITING AT THE CHURCH”By Dorothy R. SylvesterBut it wasn't a wedding! Mercyno, something far more important asfar as I was concerned. After threeyears of watchful waiting when a newstone was heralded as a great affair,and one learned that the yells from theembryo tower came from a man, whoseearly training must have been flag¬pole sitting, hut who had degeneratedinto a caller for bigger and betterstones, we, the so-called student body,discovered that we had not lived invain and that the building on thenorthwest corner of Woodlawn and5Qth Street was to he opened for ourinspection and gratification Sunday,October 28.The University, wishing to assurea full attendance, announced thatonly a limited number of tickets wouldhe issued. Suddenly, those of us whohadn’t thought much about the Mfairdecided that it was of the utmost im¬portance that we secure one of theprecious pasteboards which would ad¬mit us to the inside or so we werelead to believe, of the latest StandardOil edifice.The first of a series of grijies camewhen eight o'clock was set as the un-gmlly hour to receive these pink rain-checks (although at the time Edna Millay toAppear on ForgeLecture Programpermeated with o])tiniiMn). fTaving lefta perfectly good breakfast ami an up¬set family, I arrived at Harjier onlyto find a petrified snake-dance woundthrough the solemn corridors of saidImilding waiting for the hour of eiglito clock to strike. I did my best to finda place to stand and having succeeded,much against the will of any numberof my fellow students, I waited andwaited—waiting has never beenknown to increase one’s good humorand this time was no exception. Iconsoled myself with the anticipationof what all this was going to mean to Edna St, Vincent Millay, authorof “The King’s Henchman,” “SecondApril,” “A Few Figs from Thistles,”“The Buck in the Snow,” and othervolumes which have brought her toa pre-eminent position in Americanpoetry, will appear at Mandel hallTuesday evening, November 27th, ina reading of her own poems, underthe auspices of The Forge: A Mid¬western Review. Miss Millay’s read¬ing, announced yesterday by the edi¬tors of The Forge, Dexter Mastersand Frances Stevens, will be second! in the Forge lecture series for 1928-29.Tickets On SaleThe editors also announced yes¬terday that tickets for the first pre¬sentation, a reading by Jessica Nel¬son North and Marion Stroebel atReynolds club theatre, Thursday,November 8. have been put on saleat Woodworth’s, the University book¬store, Burt Clark’s, and Ida Noyes,or may be* obtained at the theatrethe night of the reading. Tickets aresevent.v-five cents each.With the engagement of Miss Mil-1 was I lay, the Forge lecture series, accord- SELECT TWENTYFOR SOPHOMORECLASS COUNCILTwelve Men and EightWomen Aid ClassOfficersing to the editors, assumes top placeamong the various lecture programsin and around Chicago.Bring Other CelebritiesBesides Miss Millay and the twoChicago poets, Jessica North andMarion Stroebel, the Forge is bring¬ing Sherwood Anderson and LouisUntermeyer to Mandel hall on Jan¬uary 8 and Feburary 19 respective¬ly.These two, Mr. Anderson, famousas the author of “Winesburg, Ohio,”and Mr. Untermeyer internationallyme. 1 was determined to win, and fin- ! known poet-lecturer-anthologist, willally the ticket was mine to have and 'form the nucleus of the seiie or t eto hold. Nothing to do but wait until j winter quarter..Sunday and present it at the student 'door of the Chapel. (We poor Mor- | RURAL URBAN GROUP’S Members of the Sophomore classcouncil to organize the entire classvey, class president, last evening, areJanet Cunningham, Eleanor East-wood, Marion Eckhart, Martha Har¬ris, Zoe Marhoeffer, Jean Searcy,Evelyn Stinson, Ellis Busse, Stan¬ley Corbett, Clarence Cushman,Ray Fried, Lyle Gumm, GeorgeMahin, Robert Mayer, Carl Moses,Scott Rexinger, Lester Stone, RayVane, Sidney Yates, and Wilber Ur¬ban. The class officers, WilliamGarvey, president; Frances Blodgett,vice-president; Betty Kuhns, secre¬tary, and Roland Ericson, reasurer,auomatically become members of thecouncil.Twelve members of this groupwere active on the Freshman coun¬cil last year. “It is the hope of thecouncil to organize the entire classinto one unit, but to accomplish this,thel whole-hearted siHiport of thecla.ss is needed,” said Garvey.The first meeting of the councilwill be held tonight at 7:JO in Ida.Noyes hall. Plans for the first socialaffair of the season will be formu¬lated. Name CommitteeHeads for GreeksAutumn FormalCommittees in charge of bids, dec¬orations, programs and refresh¬ments for the Interfraternity ball,to be held on Thanksgiving eve, Nov.28, were announced yesterday byJohn Chapin, chairman of the ball.Paul Brady, a member of PhiDelta Theta, who was recently elect¬ed treasurer of the Interfraternitycouncil to fill the vacancy left bythe resignation of Saul Weislow, hasbeen selected chairman of the bidscommittee. The leaders of the ball,Verlon Meskimen and John Chapin,approved of the selection, saying thatthey felt this arrangement wouldfacilitate the management of the ex¬penses of the ball. Cooperatingwith Brady on the bids committeeare Charles Cutter, Delta Kappa Ep¬silon, and Allan King, Sigma Chi.Froberg Program HeadForrest Froberg, Delta Sigma Phi,will be in charge of the programcommitee, with John Link, AlphaTau Omega, and Elmer Friedman, PiLambda Phi, assisting him. Refresh¬ments are in charge of Gilbert Daniels, chairman. Clifford Alger, CHAPEL DEDICATION SERVICESMARKED BY MILLION DOLLARGIFT TO PROMOTE IDEALISM’Fall Musical Program' Faculty| Members TakeBegins 'with OrganRecital Nov. 1With the dedication of the Uni¬versity Chapel consummated lastSunday before a congregation of2,200, musical services in the newstructure will commence with a re¬cital by Lynnwood Farnam, one ofAmerica’s premier organists, Thurs¬day evening, Nov. 1, at 8:15. No tic¬kets are necessary for attendance, itis announced.Famous OrganistMr. Farnam, whose playing hasgained the plaudits of a great partof the American musical world, is agraduate of the Royal College ofMusic in London, where he studiedfor four years on a scholarshipgranted to him on the basis of hispiano playing. After serving in theWorld War, he became organist ina large New York church, a position Part in ImpressiveProcessionPlan FriendshipTour Series forCampus Students he still holds despite the demandsPgj I an annual musical tour makes uponUpsilon and Donald Moore, Phi Kap¬pa Psi. ICarl Olson. .41pha Tau Omega, will ,head the decoration committee for j musical program for next Sundaythe ball, assisted by Orvis Henkel, aftenoon. Nov. 4, it is announced, inPhi Gamma Delta, and Norman Ea- ■ Clara M. Schevill, contralto,his pieces from memory.The Chapel council has arranged aon. Alpha Delta Phi.Chairmen To MeetCommittee chairmen will meetwith the chairman of the ball thisweek. No decision has as yet beenmade as to where the ball will be held ' and Maude Bouslough Minnema, so¬prano, .accompanied by Walter Blod¬gett, a.ssistant University organist,will participate.Lectures PlannedDr. Charles W. Gilkey, who wastals)..Suiuhiy morning about 10:50, Irushed up the steps at the west en¬trance, confident that the line in frontof me were poor unfortunates withoutthe necessary password. ‘‘Ha,"thought I, "I'll pass them hy and pre¬sent my card.” But....do you know?.411 those peojde were holding ticketseven as you and 1. Having lieeii tochurch before I thought that theywere waiting until after the doxologyto let us in. Why couldn't I haveseen that we were only University stu¬dents and that it was merely our cha¬pel. consequently it was necessary tolet everyone else in tickets or no tic¬kets, before us. Of course, these oth¬ers who were sitting in the seats whichrightfully belonged to us, had a great¬er interest; they had watched the Cha¬pel grow for three long years; theyknew the student Chapel council, andthtV paid a hundred dollars a quarterfor student privileges. It was jiositive- ily disgraceful of us to think for oneminute of depriving them of thepleasure. .4iid as I stood on the mud¬dy stones of the walk and felt the coldwind blow about me, I was glad thatthe University had taught me a greatunselfishness. .Might I add that .sev¬eral trustees, Charles (iood and aprofessor or two failed to appreciatetheir University' training.My Sunday morning pilgrimagewas not entirely in vain for as thedoor was slowly oiieiied several timesto admit newspapers photographers, Iheard the strains of "Thank God fromWhom Oil Blessings Flow!” OCTOBER SESSION ATTHEOLOGY SEMINARYOver 125 members of the Rural-Urban Relations conference assem¬bled at the Theological seminaryyesterday morning for their Octobermeeting..4fter inspecting the new chapel,the ministers were entertained bythe University at an informal lun¬cheon givetj in the Reynolds club.Professor Rufus M. Jones of Hav-j erford college, Pennsylvania, wasthe speaker for the morning sessionand in the afternoon a series ofspeakers was presented to speakupon the pure milk situation.It was stated that reports fromthe headquarters of the Pure Milkassociation indicate that a crisis inthe Chicago milk supply is immin¬ent. In an effort to bring students intocloser intellectual and social rela¬tionship, a series of acquaintancetoures has been arranged by Mrs.Robert Valentine .Merrill, social di¬rector of the University. The firsttour, to be sponsored by the Renais-ance Society, will be taken Monday,November 5, to the .4merican artexhibit at the Art Institute, underthe direction of Mr. Edmund W.Giesbert of the .4rt department.The group will meet in Reynoldsclub at 2:30, and will take the 1. C.downtown.(Continued on page 2) Several locations have been consid- j installed as dean of the Chapel lastered but no preference has been Sunday, is to preside over the serv-shown. I earlier in the day..4 number of orchestras have also j A series of Wednesday eveningbeen considered but the contracts | lectures contemplated for the fallwill not be let at present. | quarter will be launched Nov. 7 at— 7:30 when Dr. Ernest H. Wilkins,! Chauncey S. Boucher’s predecessor■ as dean of the University, and now: president of Oberlin college, willPROF. CHAMBERLIN’SNEW BOOK DESCRIBESSOLAR GROUP ORIGINGolden Lily PlansNew Student Night Drama Group PlansTo Attend “Porgy“Porgy,” a play by Dorothy andDu Bose Heyward, being presentedby the Theatre Guild at the Black-stone Theatre will be attended bythe dramatic group of the Y. W. C.A. Saturday afternoon, November10. Melba Schumacher, chairman ofthe committee, has invited all wom¬en who are interested to join thegroup.Those who v/ish to attend havebe^n requested to sign up at theY. W. office as the tickets are forreserved seats and will be orderedtoday. Tickets are one dollar and ahalf and will be paid for when or¬dered.University students have come intotheir own at the new Golden* Lilyclub, according to an announcementby Fugar Nip, the owner, who hasarranged for special student enter¬tainments Friday nights.Located at 309 Garfield boulevai^dthe club has acquired a reputationas an attractive rendezvous .. VARY GROUP PHOTOSThe Cap and Gown will use a newplan for the fraternity and clubpages of its 1929 issue. Group pic¬tures taken on campus, will be usedinstead of individual pictures, clubswill have two pages instead of one,and fraternities two, as before. ‘HOOVER SUPERIORCANDIDATE’ STATESPROF. CHAMBERLINThe victory of Herbert Hoover inthe coming election would as.siire theL nited States a lietter adniinistrationthan the election of .41 .Smith. 1think tliat it would he very unfortnn-.ate for the I nited States to have aman like Smith in the highest officeat the White House, especially fromthe point or view of the peoples ofIvnrope. .4 new Book of Genesis, moldingrecent advances in dynamic astron¬omy, geology, celestial mechanics andchemistry into a coherent explanationof the earth and all parts of the so¬lar system, is announced by the Uni¬versity Press. Dr. T. C. Chamber¬lin, 85 years old professor emeritusof geology and paleontology at theUniversity, is the author of this sci¬entific genealogy of the worlds,called “The Two Solar Families—The Sun’s Children.”In extending his “planetesimal”theory of the earth’s birth, first ad¬vanced by him in 1896 and now ac¬cepted as displacing the “nebular(Continued on page 2) speak on “Truth Increasing.”There will be an organ recital ev¬ery weekday except Saturday at 5,according to the Chapel council’splans. Special organ music willform next Saturday afternoon’sprogram after the game with Penn¬sylvania.DEAN GALE DENIESSCIENTISTS’ POWER. OVER gravitationFrankenstein GivesNotes on Symphony Dean H. G. Gale of the physics de¬partment refutes statements in thePurdue Exponent of October 26 to{the effect that insulation for gi’avityI has been discovered by R. H. Tate,an Engli.sh scientist. According toDean Gale, there has been a mistakein reporting or someone is playinga practical joke.The Exponent states that the di.s- Built as a testimonial of the Uni¬versity’s belief in a gospel of toler¬ance and spiritual courage, the newUniversity Chapel was dedicated lastSunday before a congregation of 2,-200.During the services a gift of $1,-000,000 to the University “to pro¬mote the religious idealism of thestudents of the University and of allthose who come within its gates’*was announced by John D. Rocke¬feller, Jr. The new endowment wasdedicated by Mr. Rockefeller as theLaura Spelman Rockefeller Memorialfoundation in memory of his mother.Gifts Total $1370Collections among the congrega¬tion, which were directed by AliceBenning and Charles Cutter, totaled$1370, in contrast with the maxi¬mum of $300 collected in one day ofservices in Mandel hall.Acting President Frederic Wood¬ward, giving the opening address,compared the Chapel to the “choicestmonuments of mediaeval religion.”Of John D. Rockefeller, Sr.,whose total pei'sonal gifts, exclu¬sive of large amounts since givenby his son and the Rockefellerfoundations, have been $34,700,000,Mr. Woodward said:”“A deeply religious man, he knewthe value of religion; with charac¬teristic clarity of vision he saw theplace which religion should occupyin an institution devoted to thesearch for truth, and he consequentimportance of an impressive centerof worship and service.”Rockefeller SpeaksJohn D. Rockefeller. Jr., speakingas the representative of his father,praised the religious attitudes whichhave grown up during recent yearsas being at once honest, tolerant, andidealistic.Following a colorful procession of300 faculty members in academicrobes, the service was opened withthe St. Anne hymn, “0 God OurHelp in .4ges Past,” by the Univer¬sity choir, directed by Mack Evans.Invocation was pronounced by theRev. Rufus Matthew Jones of Hav-erford College, after which JamesMinott Stickney, as the representa¬tive of the student body, read thescriptures. Following the addressesof Mr. Woodward and Mr. Rockefel¬ler, and the dedication by Prof.Compton, the Rev. Charles WhitneyGilkey, formerly pastor of the HydePark Baptist Church, was installed(Continued on page 4)Mr. .Smith docs not have the educa¬tion, the hearing, the culture, or thenation-wide experience required of apresident of the United States. Mr.Hoover, on the other hand, has tiieadvantage of education, prestige, cul¬ture and international exnerience.h'or the above reasons, 1 am forHerbert Hoover.RoIIin T. Chamherlin.Hold Second RoundOf Debate TonightVictors of the first round of theIntra-Mural debates. Phi Delta Theta,Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Lambda Phi, Kap¬pa Sigma, Kappa Nu, Delta TauDelta, Cahn and Barbera unattached,and Tau Kappa Epsilon will debatein the quarter finals tonigh at Rey¬nolds.The 'first two teams mentionedwill meet in room C a 7, the thirdand fourth in room D and 7 and thenext four teams in rooms C and Drespectively at 8. r> 4. *1, u i takes the form of a new metalProgram notes on the symphony! rp„. . ,, ^ « new mtiai. , , ,r t:, 'which Tate is able to make float inthe air when a plate of it is placedover a plane of the same materiallying on the floor.Dean Gale exhibited an instru¬ment which he says is probably sim¬ilar to Tate’s experiment. It con¬sists of a wooden case over whicha metal bar is suspended betweenends of curved glass which keep it inplaceconcerts by Alfred V. Frankenstein,musical critic, will appear in TheDaily Maroon before evfery concert.These notes will be comments on thecomposer or on the theme of the se¬lections played by the orchestra.They are planned for the convenienceof students who are not acquaintedwith the background of musicalscores.Comments on today’s programwhich consists of selections fromBrahms, Wagner, Debussy, andBeethoven, will be found on an in¬side page of the Daily Maroon. Thisis the first of the series. The nextwill be published before the secondconcert.SLAV CLUB MEETSThe Slavonic club of the Univers¬ity will meet Friday evening, No¬vember 2, at the home of Mr. andMrs. Bruce Dickson, 1232 E. 57thSt., at 7:30. The meeting will beheld for election and soi^^jgwcposes.All who are intereste^4*ave heenasked to come. Classical StudentsOrganize New ClubA new Classical Club was organ¬ized last week by undergraduatesinterested in Latin and Greek cul¬ture. Loyd Stowe will act as chair¬man of the club until the perman¬ent officials are elected. He appoint¬ed a committee to draw up a consti¬tution which will be presented at thenext meeting.Professor Robert J. Bonner, chair-The bar instead of dropping i man of the Department of Greek, ex-to the case, remains suspended inthe air, apparently defying theforces of gravity.Give English TestSaturday in Cobb 110 plained that the purpose of the clubis to found an organization whichwill interest everyone concerned inthe classics. The club will meet onalternate Thursday afternoons inClassics 20.The English 103 Exemption testw'ill be given Saturday, November 3,1928, from 9 to 12 in Cobb 110. Ap¬plication should be made at the Ex¬aminer’s office some time before thedate announced. Only students whohave entered from other institutionswith at least eighteen majors of ad¬vanced standing or two majors incomposition are eligible to take thetest. CLUB HOLDS TRYOUTSTry-outs for the membership inthe Women’s Speaker’s club wdll beheld today at 2:30 in the alumnaeroom of Ida Noyes hall.Subjects will be assigned by lot¬tery. After five minutes each con¬testant will deliver an extemporane¬ous speech. The club membershiphas been limited to thirty.-4. t'j, f * dikikPage Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 30. 1928SJIj? imlg iiaronnFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninifs, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, durins the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates03.00 per year; by mail, $1.60 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationThe StaffLOUIS H. ENGEL, JR., MANAGING EDITORROBERT W. FISHER, BUSINESS MANAGERHARRIET HARRIS, WOMAN’S EDITORROBERT L. STERN, SPORTS EDITORVICTOR ROTERUS, CHAIRMAN EDITORIAL BOARDOFFICE—ROOM 16, 5831 University Avenue, LEXINGTON HALLTelephones: Midway 0800, Local 44, Hyde Park 9221MENCharles H. GoodEklwin Levin — _.New8 EditorStanley M. Corbett Day EditorDay EditorEdgar Greenwald Day EditorDay EditorWOMENRosalind GieenJ. Aldean GibboneyFrances A. BlodgettMarjorie Cahill Junior EditorFeature Editor...Sophomore Editor...Sophomore EditorMarion E. White ...Sophomore Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENTHenry D. Fisher Assistant EditorAlbert Arkules Sophomore EditorMaurice Liebman Sophomore EditorJerome Strauss Sophomore EJditorEmmarette Dawson Women’s EditorMarjorie Tolman..Associate Women’s EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTEarle M. Stocker .Advertising ManagerRobert Nicholson Circulation ManagerBlanche Reardon Secretar>Lee Loventhal Office ManagerRobert Mayer Downtown CopyFred Towsley Downtown CopyAbe Blinder Local CopyRobert Shapiro Local CopyHuge Mackenzie Advertising Rep.THE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement of student initiative in undergraduate activityand scholarship.%2. Application of research principles and abolition of grades forsenior college students.3. Promotion of undergraduate interest in lectures, concerts,exhibits and other campus cultural influences.4. Erection of dormitories and field house.5. Support of military unit.6. Adoption of a deferred fraternity and club rushing plan.DENYING DEMOCRACYOne of the most aggravating and exasperating argumentsthat has been directed against the election of A1 Smith to thepresidency is the one that has been uttered so often in regardto that candidate’s progressive politicies, especially the one con¬cerning prohibition. “What is the difference,” the argumentruns, “even if Smith is elected, he can’t do anything about it.”W’aiving for the moment the debatable point whetheror not if A1 Smith were elected president his attempt to reformthe existing status of prohibition would result in more thana sheer attempt, this stock argument takes on deep and deplor¬able implications when sincerely advanced by those who recognizeand regret existing evils and faults.It sounds a note of resignation, of direct abdication of loftyaims and ideals. It is the voice of a beaten, severely disillusionedold man from whose soul the spirit, the joy of striving has de¬parted and w’ho indifferently awaits his inevitable and gloomyend. For as youthful, evolving, progressive a nation as w’e are,it is not only a poor but a demoralizing and calamitous politicalphilosophy.The United States cannot afford insouciance and apathy toideals in its political activity any more than it can in its moraland material activity. No reform, no forw’ard looking legislationcan be gained, no heights in political excellence can be achievedwhen the majority voters are skeptical, pessimistic and resigned.In denying that A1 Smith could “do anything” about hisprogram of reform even if he polled a vote sufficient to send himto the White House, we must affirm in the same breath the futil¬ity of democratic, representative government such as the UnitedStates sets itself up as possessing. Surely if the majority willof the people desires and demands such reform—as would beindicated in case of a Smith victory—then, surely, if we admitthat the situation is hopeless and immune from repair, do wecommit ourselves to the extent of saying that democracy is theo¬retically nothing but an idle dream, and practically no more thana flat failure.HEADS UPSaturday’s game with Purdue was a rather severe dose forfollowers of the Maroon to take. Only once in gridiron historyhave Stagg’s forces taken it on the chin harder than last Satur¬day, and that was more than a decade ago.Purdue, under-dog for time immemorial, avenged a practical¬ly uninterrupted string of defeats from the Maroons in one crush¬ing blow. Although Chicago’s play was ragged and uninspiring,the Boilermakers proved conclusively that they are a good teamand deserve to be up with the top-notchers.The Maroons still have ample opportunity to redeem them¬selves. Penn, Wisconsin and Illinois might well prepare them¬selves for a surprise. OFFICIAL NOTICESTuesday, October 30j Public lecture (the GraduateI School of Social Service Administra-I tion): “The Work of the Chicagoand Cook County Schools for Boys.”1 George Masslich, Superintendent,! Chicago and Cook County School fori Boys. 8, Cobb 209.' Radio lecture, “Elementaryi Ethics” Professor T. V. Smith of the1 Philosophy department, 8, Stationi WMAQ.Divinity Chapel, Associate Profes¬sor Albert E. Haydon of the depart¬ment of Comparative Religion, 11:50,Joseph Bond chapel.The Women’s Speakers Club, 2:30,Ida Noyes hall.Concert b.v* the Chicago Symphon.vOrchestra (University Orchestral As¬sociation), 4:15, Leon Mandel As¬sembly hall.1 Physiology Group Seminar, “Spe-j cific Vascular Reactions of the Uter-! us of the Guinea Pig.” Mr. J. E.iMarkee, 4:30, Physiology 133.Chamberlin TellsGenesis of SolarGroup in New Book(Continued from page 1) •hypothesis” of LaPlace, ProfessorChamberlin now offers the first con¬sistent explanation of satellite.s,planetoids, comets and meteoites, or“shooting stars.” Their stor>’ involvesa solution of the hitherto inexplic¬able phenomena of “zodiacal ligh,”of the retrograde motion of satel¬lites of the outer, planets and of the“creep” of the axes of planets, withthe reason the moon presents onlyone face to the earth.Plan AcquaintanceTour Series forCampus Students(Continued from page 1)“We hope,” said Mrs. Merrill,that many of the other campus or-' ganizations will follow this plan, asit is an excellent device for makingthe students better acquainted withone another. We especially want thestudents to remain for the tea whichwill follow in the Art Institute tea¬room.”The mixers which w’ere hereto¬fore held bi-weekly in Reynolds clubwill be held on Tuesday nights onlyfrom 7 to 8. This does not includethe acquainance dances held everySaturday afternoon after the game.WANTED:CLEVERMAN OR WOMANFORTELEPHONEWORK.0—0 O OYou may spend as manyhours at this work as you wish.You will be paid for each tele¬phone call made.MR. LIEBERMAN5346 Cornell Ave.Plaza 5400iMOS-E’E*'The Butineii College with eVniveTiity Atmotphere"Prepare for a butinats caracr atlha onl)' Buiiaca* Collage in thaWettwhich caqubatavery attidcnt to ba atlaait a 4>yaar High School graduate.Baginaiiig on the firii of April, July,October, and January, wa conciijct aipocial.complata, inteaaiva,■iMtli*' PparM in aunogtaphywhich ia opaa toG«lUf• OradoaCM andIlntftwfradtMtM OnljrEnrollmantt for thia courte mutt bamade befora the opening day—pref*ersbiy tome time in advance, to beaura of a place in the claaa.Stenography opena the way to inde>pendencoj and ia a very great help inany potition in life. The ability totaka ahorthand notaa of lecturaa,aarmona, converaation, and in manyother aituaiiona ia a great aaact.Bulletin on requaat.No Solieilors EmployedPAUL MOSER, J. D. Ph. B., Preiidenl116 South Michigan Avenue12th FloorRandolph 4147 Chicago, Illinoiain Ike Dey School GirhOnly ore Enrolled(1404 B) CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Hammond typewrit¬er, 4 sets of letters, good condition,practically new. Will sell cheap, 57E, Drexel, phone, Hyde Park 1376.WANTED — College representa¬tives. We have an extremely profit¬able proposition for a limited num¬ber of responsible college men asuniversity representatives for BART¬LETT Clothes. These clothes arfemade from fine quality Pure VirginWool fabrics in the newest styles.They are sold direct to the wearerthrough special representatives atthe manufacturer’s price—'$23.50—for suit, topcoat, overcoat or tuxedowith a positive guarantee of satis¬faction or money back. Generouscommission and bonus. The finest sell¬ing outfit in the field furnished free.See City Sales Manager, William C.Bartlett, Inc., 850 W. Adams Street,Chicago, at once. UNFURNISHED APARTMENTFOR RENT OR SALE—High grade100 per cent co-op bldg. Five largerooms, tile bath, Frigidaire refrig¬erator, new decorations, inside in¬ cinerator, selected neighbors, 2 blks.to Univ., 1 blk to Midway, 3 blks toJackson Pk., 1 blk to bus line, 2 blksto surface car, 2 blks to electrifiedI, C., moderate rental or sales price.Phone Plaza 3480 We Call and DeliverKIMBARK HAND LAUNDRYFOR BETTER WORK AND SERVICEMENDING AND DARNING. COLLARS AND CUFFSREVERSED BUTTONS REPLACED FREE20 Per Cent DISCOUNTOn Laundry Brought in and Called for.Open 7 A. M. to 9 P. M,Laundry bag free to every new customer1324 E. 57th St. Chicago, Ill.FOR SALE—Hammond typewrit¬er, 6 kinds of type, good condition,cheap, for cash. Box O, FacultyExchange,FOR SALE—Buick sport road¬ster, A-1 condition, good paint, run¬ning board spot light, wing-shield,front and rear bumper, 6 good tires,must see to appreciate. Phone Drex¬el 8373 after 6:30.TO RENT—Pleasant room facingRoslie Park. Freedom and privacy,near 57th and Harper. Call Midway4759.TO RENT—Two room apartment.Housekeeping privileges if desired,5718 Kimbark, Hyde Park 3170.University Drug Co.61st and EllisLUNCHEON SERVEDReal Home Made FoodServed as You Like It.We Deliver Fairfax 4800 FootballThe Best of Football Teams LoseBUTWe Admit Defeat To No OneRules of the Game Change but theQUALITYof our food remains the same.ELLIS TEA SHOPSpecial Table D’Hote Dinners, 75cStudent Luncheons, 50c940 E. 63rd StreetIS^d enough for anybodyand yet they Satisfy♦ ♦ ♦^^^^PLAIN, unvarnished statenkent of fact:'Mild enough for anybody and yetthey satisfy”.If you will light a Chesterfield andsmoke ii: critically you will find no bint of harshness, but a certain mildness, with arich, wholesome flavor..Chesterfields satisfy without beingharsh. They’re mild without being insipidor tasteless.'.'~L’% ■4 I'* J»/.A »■ I. M. reci'iares healthexam before crosscountry nm. ®fie Battp Hlaroon Cagers start organ¬ized basketball drillsessionds in gym.THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928STAGG IRONS OUT MAROON MISTAKESINTENSIVE DRILLSTARTS ANEW ASPENN THREATENSPuts Tired Squad ThroughSession AgainstFroshWith one more defeat to remem¬ber as a lesson in football erperi-ence, Coach Stajirjf’s Maroons bepranpreparation last niprht in the traininjfcamp for their one Sntersectionalstruprple of the season, that withPenn this Saturday. If any satisfac¬tion can be derived from Saturday’sdebacle, it probably is the fact thatmost of the team weathered thegame in good shape.Deafeaf !• UptefPenn’s defeat hy Navy at Frank¬lin Field last Saturday was consid¬ered an outstanding upset in theAtlantic seaboard panorama, so lit¬tle consolation can be derived fromthat source. In fact, Penn’s defeat,blotting a perfect record of vic-ories, has put Coach Lou Young’swarriors in a frame of mind whichbears no good will for the Stagg-men when they clash Saurday.Whilethe Penn record looms im¬pressively in the eyes of the Midwaycamp. Coach Stagg is wasting littletime getting his men into shape forthe colorful scrap. A freshmen squad,under the tutelage of Lonnie Stagg,made their appearance in the train¬ing camp last night and scrimmagedwith a mixed varsity line of veteransand reserves. The freshmen backs,emulating some of Penn’s fleet backsfound several big holes in the vars¬ity line in the w'orkout, although theyearlings at time were smeared bad¬ly.Concentration LateralThe varsity backfield concentratedon various formations of their run¬ning attack which they displaytxleffectively for a while against Pur¬due. The lateral pass, so prominentin the Stagg attack last year, wasbrought out in full Saturday butlacked efficient and precise hand¬ling. The afternoon’s workout wasdevoted to correcting these mistakesand then later on a varsity line at¬tempted its luck in turning back theoffensive backs.One casualty turned up in thetraining camp last night in the per¬son of Proudfoot, who dislocated hisright shoulder while scrimmagingagainst the freshmen. Michigan Buys BigRubber Grid CoverMichigan athletic authoritieshave added still another precau-itno as a guard against a wet play¬ing field. During the past weeka huge rubber cover, similar tothose in use by other Big Tenschools, was placed in position sothat it can be rolled over the fieldwith dispatch in case of rain.This rubber cover will makeMichigan’s football field the driestin the Cnference for in additionto it, the field is equipped with adrainage system so efficient thatit prevents water standing on thefield after the most severe rain. Coach Spears Loses Weight a&Gophers Take It On the Chin:THREE VETS BACKFOR CAGE TEAMGist, Kaplan, CooperLetter MenFifteen men. of which three areletter men, and two are Old English“C” winners, make up the squadj that scrimmages daily on, the basket-1 ball floor in Bartlett gym under theI tutelage of Coach Nels Norgren,i In the three weeks that practicehas been going on. Sophomores havebeen furnishing the competition forthe varsity aspirants. Although themen are working hard and gdettinginto trim individually nothing con beprophesied as to how many will stackup as a team.Many Sophc OutThe letter men are: Captain Gist,Kaplan, and Cooper, Murphy, andChangnon are the reserve lettermen. The sophomores out are:Fish, Blattburg, Cahill, Yates, Chis-son, Hedeen, Williams, Ilowerd, Ur-an, and Davis. Most of these arefreshman numeral men. Herb He¬deen received recognition in fresh¬man football. He is a big hard driv¬ing fellow who should be valuable tothe team.Five preliminar.v games are sched¬uled. Dec. 8 the Maroons face Mon¬mouth; Dec. 15 No. Dakota; Dec. 27Beloit; Dec. 29 De Pauw; and onJan. 5 Butler. Games will also becarded for a B team.The squad will be cosiderably en¬larged after the football season, asmany cage men are now chasing thepigskin.MEMBERSHIP ROLLSOF WOMEN’S HOCKEYSQUADS ANNOUNCEDMembers of the interclass hockeysquads who will play in the firstgames of the tournament series onWednesday on the Midway have beenannounced by the coaches, MissMargaret Burns and Miss OrsieThomson. They are:Seniors: Dorothy Alvord, Mar¬garet Force, Marcella Gedons, Hen-drene Gansevoort, Gladys Govier,Agnes Kerr, Frances Nelson, AmaliaNemec, Margaret Newman and MaryShurman, captain.Juniors: Frances Carr, Clair Da¬vis (captain), May Friend, BerthaHeimerdinger, Margaret How, HelenMcDougall, Edith Mohn, Mary Phil¬lips and Rose Resnick.Sophomores: E. Bailey, J. Cun¬ningham, 0. Eggan, D. Fox, G. Hac¬ker, M. Hirsch, R. Hunter, B. Kuhns,E. Lowenstein, M. Marshall, D.Moulds, H. O’Brien, F. Pezel, V.Pope, L. Schlesinger, an dH. Simon.Freshmen: Anderson, Andrews,Brown, Budd, Cooke, Eberson, Fric-we, Hyde, Meyer, Mix, Newman, VanWestman, Wertheimer and Wilkins.Freshmen will oppose seniors andjuniors will clash with sophomoresin Wednesday’s game which will be¬gin at 2:40. .Sailors BegMaster Marinerfor FavoritePipe TobaccoMalden, Mass.Larus & Bro. Co. March 10,1928Richmond, Va.Dear Sirs:I have been a Master Mariner formany years, and as a general rule allseafaring men smoke a pipe. I havetried about all the different brands oftobacco on the market, and in my esti¬mation, there is not one make of to¬bacco that will com par 3 with Edge-worth Slice for a good, cool, long smoke.Sailors would come to me and say“Capt., be sure to put in a good sup¬ply of Edgeworth when you fill up thecanteen.” That speaks for what theaverage sailor thinks of Edgeworth.I retired from the sea six years ago,and the largest grocery dealers inBoston keep me supplied v >'■' thiswonderful smoke. I take great ^-oasurein boosting it to my friends.Very truly yours,(signed) Capt. C. E. KenneyEdgeworth' Extra High GrrideSmoking TobaccoOnly By Morris LeibmanCoach Spears of Minnesota is onhis way to a rainbojv of gold; sim¬ply because he has discovered a wayto reduce that is both simple andeasy. All we know is that he arriveda Iowa with his potential champs andI after receiving a 7-6 defeat on Sat-day, walked out of he stadium 45 1-2j pounds lighter than when he enter¬ed.“Hoof & Mouth” FlopsBe that as it may, the Gophersno longer remain as a serious threatfor the Big Ten crown and “SittingBull” McLain’s Hawkeyes look toughenough for Custer. The battle of thefullbacks which had received soso much publicity by the ticket de¬partments of both schools, failed tomaterialize when “Hoof and Mouth”Nagurski and “Sit-a-lot” McLainwere both corraled. However, as ina case of this kind, two new starsappeared. Not that they have beenentirely unheard of, but were yet tobe shown. The two gentlemen ofwhom^ fans now’ orate are noneother than the Messrs. Hovde andPape, of Minnesota andIowa respectively. It seems thatthe former picked up a ball that hadbeen kicked to his eight yard lineby Mcl.^in and gleefully jaunted 92yards for the first touchdown of thegame. Bert Ingwersen immediatelygo blazing mad and sent Pape, theboy who is reputed to be able to runthe hundred in ten flat in a footballsuit, into the battle. This well fedHawkeye in two runs scored atouchdow’n with a casualness thatcan only be matched by the blaseair which Hovde exhibited on histrip. Iowa scored their point aftertouchdown, while the Gophers failedand "thereby hangs the tail.lilini Win AgainThe mini kept right ahead in theirmarch for another conference titlewhen they stopped the battling Wild¬cats 6-0. Northwestern threatenedtwice, but was stopped on both oc¬casions on the five yard line whenthe famous “fighting Illini” spiritcame into view. On the offense, the Big Ten champs did not “open up,”and probably won’t until the Ohiogame.Coach Wilce’s boys kept their slateclean when they trounced theHoosiers 13-0. The threatened In¬diana offense did not come into evi¬dence, while Eby, Correy, and Krissrepeatedly ripped through the op¬posing forward wall for large gains.While Bennie Friedman was run¬ning wild through All-Americansfrom all over these United States,his former teammates at Michiganwere nursing their w’ounds afterhaving taken another one on the chin.This time it was “Gloomy Glenn”and his Badgers who turned thetrick. The Wolverines still have towin a conference tilt this year.j Indications GoodThe way the Big Ten teams stackup at the present date is a prettygood indication of what they willhave done when the season has closed,low’a has been playing excellentfootball all season and is notthreathened at the present time byany opponent of great strength.The Hawkeyes should go throughtheir conference games without adefeat. The other two undefeatedteams are Illinois and Ohio. Theyboth meet on November 25th andthe tilt is bound to be an exceptionalone inasmuch as a championship^ is atstake.Wisconsin has as yet been unde¬feated, but has been tied by Purdue.How’ever, the Badgers may be re¬moved as a threat for the crown whenone realizes that they must faceIowa and Minnesota on successiveSaturdays. If “Gloomy Glenn’s” boyswin those two games they reservethe title.Purdue has exhibited greatstrength since their defeat at thehands of Minnesota. It is generallyconceded that had the Boilermakersmet the Gophers later in the seasonthe battle would have been quite abit more exciting.Michigan’s weakness is more ap¬parent when the current record iscompared to that of ytars gone by.HALLOW’EENPARTYWednesday Night, Oct. 31Special EntertainmentNovel SouvenirsCOON^SANDERSOriginal Nighthawk Orchestraand Feature EntertainmentDirector of EntertunmentRALPH WONDERSRESERVE YOUR TABLE NOW!Telephones - Randolph 5419 - Dearborn 6262BLACKH AWKRESTAURANTWabash Avenue - - Just South of Randolph I. M. Runners MustHave ExaminationsOne hundred and thirty menhave entered that gruelling grindknow’n as the intramural cross¬country race. The contest will beheld over a two and a half milecourse in Washington Park.However, these men will not beallowed to compete unless theyreceive a heart examination byDoc Molander. Runners will haveto have their hearts examined be¬fore Wednesday. HARRIERS DEFEATBOILERMAKERS INVERY CLOSE MEETLetts Loses To MartinIn FeatureRaceFENCERS TRAIN TOKEEP CHAMPIONSHIPCaptain Friedman MainstayOf TeamCaptain Friedman, conferencechampion with the foils, and Wal¬lace, second place man with thedueling sword last yea^*, are themainstays of this year’s fencing team.The team will miss former CaptainKerr, conference sabre champion,and Nash, another good sabre man.Coach Merril has Goldberg and Bick-ley working hard to fill these va¬cancies.Porter, Walsh, Schmidt, and En¬gle, Sophomore intramural point win¬ners, are trying hard for places onthe team. In addition to these menMcCandless and Rudnick are againworking into shape.Prominent Frosh FencersThe Freshman class has severalprominent fencing candidates. Sac-erdote and Shinn, two Hyde Parkhigh school men, are the most prom¬ising in this group. There are alsotwenty-five new men in a beginningclass.A schedule for this year has notyet decided upon, but the men areworking hard to attain a greater de¬gree of accuracy and aer quicklygetting into condition. ! The Maroon cross-country team-j once more succeeded in upsetting' the dope Saturday when they down-' ed the Boilermaker harriers by thei close score of 27 to 28. Letts, the! Maroon star, was beaten by Martin,I one of the oustanding ditsance run-j ner in the Big Ten, in the featureI race of the day.j Letts, Brainard, and Titleman ledI until the last mile when Martin pull-! ed out in front to stage a battlei with Letts. In the last quarter mile' the Purdue star took a lead of fif-! teen yards but was hardly able totook him to within four yards of! stave off Lett’s final drive whichMartin.Time FastThe time of the race was 15:38for Martin and 15:41 for Letts.Brainard, who took third place ranthe three miles in 15:59. Wagner,Purdue, won fourth place. He cap¬tured a neck and neck race fromToitleman, Chicago, who finishedfifth. Captain Berndston of Chi¬cago failed o place. ^Saturday’s performance stampsthe Maroons as powerful contendersfor he Big Ten championship. Thenex mee twill be a triangular onewith Wisconsin and Minnesota atMadison on Nov. 10. The Maroonsand Gophers battled to a tie twoweeks ago at Minneapolis.Letts Maroon HopeLetts’ performance against Min¬nesota and Purdue has stamped himcas the est prospect the Marocrns-have for the Big Ten champioiiship.-IN DESIGNING CLOTHES FORTHEIR USAGE, FINCHLEYHAS RECOGNIZED THEVARIOUS IDEAS OF COL¬LEGE MEN AS THEY APPLYTO STYLE AND WOOLENS.COLLEGE REPRESENTATIVEDICK BRANNANFIFTY-FIVE DOLLARS AND MOREREA D K- TO-PUT-ONTAILORED AT FASHION PARKTHEJackson Boulevard East of StatePage Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928CONCERT NOTESBy Alfred V. FrankensteinThe program of the first concertof the Chicago Symphony orchestra,to be given in Mandel hall this af¬ternoon at four consists of the “Aca¬demic Festival” overture of Brahms,Beethoven’s fifty symphony, De¬bussy's orchestral prelude “The Af¬ternoon of a Faun,” and the bac-chanale and finale from the over¬ture to “Tannhauser,” by RichardWagner.The Brahms overture sounds staidenough today, but when it wasfirst palyed its effect must have beenelectrical. In 1879 the university ofBreslau conferred on the composeran honorary Ph. D. He was at thattime 46 years old. The 79 numberedworks he had completed revealedhim as the exponent of the classi¬cal, traditional, and academic. Andthis classicist, this academician,played for the faculty assembled inits official robes this overture writ¬ten tor the occasion and made upalmost entirely of the melodies ofrowdy student songs the facultyhighly disapproved of, and wouldhave suppressed it if it could. Butthe records show that the assembledmagnificoes of the University ofBreslau quite fully appreciated thejoke.It would he useless to point outthe vairous songs made use of in theoverture, since all but one, (Guade-amus Igitur,” introduced at the end!are not known popularly in thiscountry.Of Beethoven’s fifth symphonycritics and commentators havebeen writing for a hundred years,wherefore further comment fromthis writer would seem like imper¬tinence. But I can not help but feelthat certain of the commentat(!rshave succeeded more in gummine upthe minds of concert goers than inelucidating the symphony. The open¬ing two bars of the symphony make up the most famous tag in all music.We have been informed authorita¬tively that these four nose signify(1) fate knocking on the door, (2)the notes of a bird call, (3) Beeth¬oven himself.The irrenconcilable differences ofthese interpretations is one goodproof that Beethoven had no suchideas in mind. Rather it seems thathe was struggling with a formali problem. The symphony up to his! day had been a disconnected suite ofI four pieces. The fifth symphony isj perhaps the earliest erample of aI work in this form unified by the re-I petition in late movements of theI material of earlier movements.Observe also how the openingtheme of the scherzo is used in theintroduction to the finale. One cannot avoid the conclusion that theseBietamorphoses of the themes in¬spired the structure of such sym¬phonies as the fourth of Schumannand the fifth of Dvorak (the NewWorld” '•ymp’nony) wherein almostevery melodic idea can be relatedto other melodic ideas, the wholefoi'ming an intricate and tightlywoven pattern of sound.Dubussy’s tone poem was writtenin 1892. It was inspired by a poemof Mallarme, which tells how a faunwandered through a forest, chased1 some nymphs he saw bathing in a! pool, and wandered off again. TheI work does not attempt to describe this episode, but rather to create them6od of the poem—a langorous,moss-green hothouse atmosphere,gently sensuous and dreamy.Wagner wrote at great lengthoncerning the Tannhauser overture,and the interpretation is worth read¬ing, but is too long to quote. Suf¬fice it to say that the story of thei opera presents the conflict betweenreligious rapture and the lusts of theflesh, the latter represented in theoverture by the Bacchanale, theformer by the familiar tune of thepilgrim’s chorus which eventuallyrises in the orchestra to drown thesounds of the court of Venus.CHAPEL DEDICATIONSERVICES MARKED BYMILLON DOLLAR GIFT upon the basis of a great heritage,remains for the University itselfnow to do again in the program with¬in the Chapel,” Dr. Gilkey said inhis response.I “This great challenge and oppor-I tunity, dramatized in the very archi-, tecture of the Chapel, lies before! the Board of University Social Serv¬ice and Religion, which is respon-I sible for the uses of the new struc-I ture.”Sunday afternoon at 4 the first1 Vesper Service was held, with theI Apollo Club of Chicago giving theI program. Mme. Claire Dux (MrsI Charles Swift) was the soloist, and! Jacques Gordon, concertmaster ofI the Chicago Symphony Orchestra,played the violin obligato.(Continued from page 1)as Dean of the Chapel by Mr. Wood¬ward.“What Bertram Grosvenor Good-hue has done in the architecture ofthe new University Chapel, with itsbold and successful originalities built TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1208 E. 63rd STREETYountr and old taught to dance. .Adult’slessons strictly private. No one to watchor embarrass you.DAY OR EVENINGTELEPHONE HYDE PARK 3080GREGGSCHOOLIL ■XBCUnVBISBCHBTARIALTRAININGSpecial Collette Classes arranged so as not to eon-diet with Collette work. Enrollment limited to highschool irraduaCes or equivalent. Coeducational.Phon* State ISSI for partimlare0RC60 SCHOOL 22S North Wabash AvooimDopt. O. M. CHICAOOCome for theSPECIAL HALLOWEE.N LUNCHWED., OCT. 31stFORTUNES FOR ALLWITCH KITCH INN“Where the Witchery of Good Cooking Lures”6325 WOODLAWN AVENUE IF YOU STARVE^,RAPIDLY,$U5TAINLIFE TILLDINNER-TIIVIE.BY NIBBLINGkNESTLE’52'NTstle'sMILK CHOCOLATERichest in Cream! ummacumlaude;SPEAK to the trainer,the coach, the doctor,or the physiology pro-fessor. They’ll tell youthat there is a no morehealthful habit thanyour daily two biscuits ofShreddedWheatWITH MILK OR CREAMWHO’S YOUR TEACHER?SAP -Now the Law of Easy Travel,So the Pavement Lah. reveals,Says the Maximum of CushionIs in Goodyear U'ingjoot HeelsTHERE IS NO TEACHER likeexperience.Remember this when you need to buynew heels—when you need new springin your step, quiet, easy walking andre-lief from tiring, noisy, hard heels.And remember that out of theteachings of experience —MORE PEOPLE WALK ONGOODYEAR WINGFOOT HEELS THAN ON ANY OTHER KIND!They are all fresh, live rubber, andyou know how rubber ^ives and liftsand helps. They last longer, lookbetter, and cushion deeper.Your friend, the Shoe Repairman,can put them on betweenclasses. Step in nowand say\ Goodyear WingfootHeels today!Cop)Tfgbt 1928, by Thu Uuudyear Tin ft Rubber Ca, Inc.WDfGVOOT