;^HI||HI!WP'i»WJj^,|i n liiin - i-uf§. i<ih iiwiiw '» p ..i !k« 4*n,‘“COMPLETECAMPUSCOVERAGE” Batlp jRaroon Award major “CV’to twenty-one gridmen.Vol. 28. No. 31. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1928 Price Five CentsThe Blind AlleyBj Louis H. EngelFive o’clock. A dimly lightedcathedral. Gently, well-modulatedorgan melodies. Occasional silence.It was in the University chayelthat I sat almost alone the otherevening. Perhaps there were two orthree dozen others lost in the deepshadows of the vault, but the silence•nd the feeling of aloneness was ascomplete as though one were in thedepths of some monumental tomb.For a half hour the sonorous richstrains of the organ filled the chapelintermittently. Then slowly we filedout.It was an unusual experience, thishalf hour ♦'f complete removal fromthe world of care and confusion. Idon’t want to sentamentalize over it,but it was really unique and enrich¬ing. I shall go back again—perhapsevery day if possible.• « *It is a peculiarity of our greatAmerican culture that in our desireto go places and do things sel¬dom if ever do we stop to think justwhere we’re going or what we’re do¬ing. Platitudes, you say? Oh yes,but after all platitudes are some¬times distressingly true. This condi¬tion of expending energy withoutany regard for its direction is ex¬pressly true of the American col¬lege. The dear authors of the dayhave painted the evils of our collegelife with a vicious and a furid pen.In their eagerness to portray all thatis bizarre and exotic about our con¬ventional existence they overlookedour most salient short coming. Afterall, it is not the flamboyant nightsor sodden days that should furnishmother with sufficient reason forkeeping sonny closely connectedwith the maternal apron strings. Thehigh-school student has our bestfraternity man far outclassed ac¬cording to last reports.What might logically be objectedto is the smartness, the pseudo-cyni¬cism, the shallowness, the insidioussuperficiality, the damned ultra¬sophistication that college imbues ina man. College teaches a man onething; never to take anything seri¬ously. That the world at large isaccustomed to do so the collegegraduate frequently discovers to hisown discomfort. College encourageswise-cracking, not wisdom, indiffer¬ence not intellectuality. Infiniteboredom is the chronic state of acollege man’s existence; everythingis so stifling, so priggish, so ordin¬ary. The college man is too superior.That the sum total of this process isthe destruction of all that’s genuineand real in a man or woman is notpeculiar. All that is normal andnatural, all that is sane and vital, isnaive and as such is greeted with asatirical smile. Form not contentcounts, innuendo not intelligence. Itis a part of the college man’s codethat he never express his true emo¬tional feelings. Such naturalness isuncouth and a man must be“smooth” even at the cost of repres¬sion.The zenith of social activity andthe nadir of worthwhile accomplish¬ment is the result of this state ofaffairs. The most disastrous thingthat can occur to a college man isthe having of a few spare momentsin which there is nothing to do, forin such a situation one is likely tofall into a spell of introspection. Itis fatal to hesitate and wonder whatit’s all about. “Keep going,” that’sthe rule. It is perhaps because ofthis fact that so many students findphilosophy courses unsatisfactory.Occasionally they have stirred up anoriginal thought in the vacuity thatthe college man has comfortably cre¬ated in his cranium. And after aman has spent three or four years inacquiring social finesse and ultra¬smartness anything like an earnestthought is quite unnerving.Such things as values in li^e existonly for the middle classes. Personalintegrity and character are myths ofthe masses. The college man is abovethem. AWARD MAJOR “C” TO TWENTY-ONEHARRIETT MONROE INTRODUCES POET‘POETRY’ EDITORON PROGRAM OFMILLAY^EADINGSixteen Girls SelectedTo Usher*’ UniqueProgranuHarriett Monroe, editor of “Poet¬ry: A Magazine of Verses” and longa figure of outstanding importancein American literature, will intro¬duce Edna St. Vincent Millay at thelatter’s reading in Mandel hall nextTuesday night.Miss Monroe occupies roles ofpoet, critic, and editor in Americanpoetry. She has been a dominantfactor in contemporary literaturesince the founding of her magazinein 1912. She has intorduced toAmerican circles such poets as Va-chel Lindsay, T. S. Eliot, RabindrathTagore, Elinor Wylie, and D. H.Lawrence.Demand for Tickets LargeShe first came to the fore whenshe wrote the “Columbian Ode” justbefore the World’s Fair in 1899. Shehas since had several books of poet¬ry published.Girls To UsherThirteen girls have been chosenby the editors of the Forge, whichis sponsoring this reading, to usher.They are: Margaret Barrows, Vir-‘ ginia Patten, Leone Bailey, HelenI Gross, Carol Hurd, Hazel Wiggers,! Jeanne Hyde, Eleanor Scully, Evelyn' Stinson, Cora Mae Ellsworth, AtelleLichtenberger, Harriett MacNeilleand Ruth Holmes Lambert.Programs containing a silhouetteof Miss Millay will be distributed. Pick SaleswomenFor SettlementTag Day DriveTuesday, November 27 has beenselected as the date for SettlementTag Day, according to Cora MaeEllsworth and Robert McKinlay, TagDay Committee chairmen. Tags,which will be twenty-five cents apiece, will be sold around and aboutthe campus throughout the entireday.Twenty-five women were selectedto sell tags the basis of selection be¬ing selling ability and feminine pul¬chritude, according to Charles Cut¬ter, co-chairman of SettlementNight.Select Sales WomenWomen chosen as tag vendors are,Marion Eckhart, Helen Eaton, MaryElizabeth Kuhns, Frances Cushman,Evelyn Stinson, Eleanor Scully,Courtney Montague, Peggy Howe,Dena Shapiro, Jane Blocki, FlorenceBloom, Eleanor Eastwood, FrancesDee, Margaret Black, Helen O’Brien,Doris Anderson, Adelaide McLin,Eleanor Mickleberry, Clair Davis,Martha Bhering, Frances Franklin,Elsa Eiberson, Nancy Jane Kennedy,Jeanette Lamb and Charlotte Mey¬ers.Saleswomen will meet Friday noonin Swift Commons Room with Set¬tlement Night chairmen to discussplans for selling tags, and to receiveinstructions. A decision regardingthe color of the tags will be madeFriday. Robert McKinlay has stress¬ed the necessity of attendance atthis meeting, particularly on the partof saleswomen.Settlement Nights are December7 and 8. As an additional feature ofthe drive for the University Settle¬ment “Back of the Yards,” a tagdance will be held Friday, Novem¬ber 30. EDITORIALELECT FRANCESCARR CHAIRMANOF Y. W. BAZAARFrances Carr, head of the Tourscommittee of the Y. W. C. A., hasbeen elected by the first cabinet toact as general chairman of the an¬nual Y. W. bazaar which will beheld all day PYiday, December 7, onthe second floor of Ida Noyes hall.Six members of the organizationwill serve as sub-chairmen and han-del the detail work. Marcella Koer-ber is in charge of the luncheon andtea. The other chairmen are: Pris¬cilla Kellogg, donations; Peg Pringle,articles to be sold on a commissionbasis; Jean Searcy, publicity; LuciaDowning, food sale; and VirginiaPope, grab bag. Last week there appeared in the Daily Northwestern, the cam¬pus news organ of Northwestern, the collegeon the north shore,an editorial which recommended that the University of Chicagowithdraw from the Western Intercollegiate Conference because of'the poor showing of its athletic teams — particularly, its footballteam.CXir first reaction to that editorial was one of mild amusement;but later when we considered that its source was from Northwesternthe humor of it all dawned upon us, and we became overwhelmed bylaughter. Then we promptly dismissed the incident as another oneof those college pranks which we understand the lads and lassiesin Evanston are forever fond of evoking.Since then, however, it seems that the Daily Northwestern pub¬lished the article in all seriousness; and THE DAILY MARCX)Nhas been beseiged with requests to answer the Daily Northwesternin an editorial way.And still the inanity and incognitancy of it all strikes us. Theonly justification for the lethean Northwestern Daily article thatwe can see is the fact that this season the University football teamfailed to win a conference victory, while the north shore teamscored two handsome one-point victories out of a possible five. Thatbeing the case we gracefully congratulate Northwestern on both ofits triumphs and fervently hope that the time may not be far offwhen she may win as many Eis three within the limits of one season.Yet, fully realizing the tremendous import that the fact thatshe achieved two more conference victories than did the Universityof Chicago must carry to Northwestern, we are prone to point outthat it should not affect the journalists of that school with a badcase of vertigo, and that it should not justify the dithyrambic proseof last week’s Daily Northwestern.Aside from the past season, which has been quite marked inthat all the good teams of past years have performed ignobly, webelieve that the record of University of Chicago athletic teams isquite creditable. Since the formation of the Western Conference theUniversity athletic rating in that body is, according to the standardof wins and losses, second in football, third in basketball, second intrack, first in tennis, first in golf, first in gymnastics and second inswimming. The University has won eight football, seven basketball,seven track and six baseball conference championships, to say noth¬ing of fifty-four other titles. Northwestern’s rating of a poor eighth(Continued on page 3)Ann Arbor CitizensOppose Erection ofLarge DormitoriesDESCRIBES CITY’SCHURCHES TONITE“The Church and the ChangingCommunity” will be the subject ofthe lecture given by Professor Sam¬uel C. Kincheloe of the Theologicalseminary at the meeting of the So¬ciology club tonight at 8, in Swifthall, 106.The veactions of the Protestantchurchej in the city in their effortsto survive will be treated by Profes¬sor Kincheloe in his lecture. He willdiscuss the downtown and movingchurches, those that are federatingor dying, the rescue of church mis¬sions, institutional churches, Chris¬tian centers and neighborhoodhouses, and primitive churches. Mapsof the city showing the distributionof the various types of churches willbe used to illustrate his talk. “No more dormitories” seems tobe the cry of 7,000 Ann Arbor res¬idents who have petitioned the Cir¬cuit Court to restrain the Univers¬ity of Michigan from constructing aprojected $800,000 woman’s dormi-toryy.“Hundreds of persons, includingmany widows, have invested heavilyin Ann Arbor homes which arerented to students. They stand tolose both their livelihood and theirhomes,” according to the petition,for the doubtful advantages of a dor¬mitory system.Another feature to which the resi¬dents object is the financing of theconstruction by an outside syndicateno state funds being used. Lead Chosen for“Mirror” Act onSettlement NightRussian ProfessorTo Explain TheoryProfessor A. Frumkin of the Kar-pow Institute for Chemistry in Mos¬cow, will lecture in Kent theater to¬night and tomorrow at 8 on “Electri¬cal Phenomena and Orientation ofMolecules at Interfaces” and “NewAspects of the Theory of Adsorptionfrom Solution.”Professor Frumkin, a noted Rus¬sian chemist, is at present a visitingprofessor at the University of Wis¬consin. His particular field is colloidchemitry. Dr. William Harkins ofthe Chemistry department, who is apersonal friend of Professor Frum¬kin, has been conducting researchI aluag he aaiiic liiica. Louise Garrett was picked byVirginia Ratcliffe yesterday after¬noon to star in the Mirror act forSettlement Night, December 7 and8. Miss Ratcilffe. who is in chargeof the tryouts for the act, said thatshe was pleased to find someone whocould take the part as efficiently asMiss Garrett, who will sing specialtynumbers of popular songs. Twelvewomen were chosen for the chorus,but their names will not be announc¬ed in The Daily Maroon until a la-er issue.The casts for the bivo one-act playsto be produced by the Drax^atic As¬sociation are practically complete.These will also be announced later.One of the plays is not in book formyet, and has never before been giv¬en in the United States.Those interested in taking part inth Mirror act may speak to VirginiaRatcliffe for a' special tryout. Dramatists SproutBeavers for “LadyWindermere’s Fan”With three days left to grow, themustaches of the contestants in theDramatic association mustache raceare in a flourishing state. RussellWhitney is leading by a hair, whileArthur Ernstein and Howard Willett,Jr. threaten to blossom into the front.The race, which is rivaling in cam¬pus interest the annual Senior mus¬tache fracas, was originated becauseof the necessity for long-haired andlong-mustached men in the cast of“Lady Windermere’s Fan,” which isbeing produced on Friday and Satur¬day nights, November 23 and 24, inthe Reynolds club theatre by theDramatic association.The men have been parting theirlong hair in the middle in order toconform with the customs of the“nineties.” The women of the castalso have their share in this tonsor-ial display, exhibiting the knottedcoiffures of the same period. PICK ONE SOPH;TO CHOOSE NEWCAPTAII^TODAYSixteen Minor LettersGiven Total ofTTiirty- SixTwenty-one major “C’s” wereawarded by the University Board ofAthletic Control to members of theMaroon football team on recommen¬dation of Director A. A. Stagg. Theonly sophomore member of the teamto receive the emblem was ClarenceCushman, tackle. Nine juniors andseniors received their first football“C,” the rest of the awards beingto men who had previously beenawarded the letter.Outstanding AbilityIn his announcement, Mr. Staggsaid, ‘When the ‘C’ is given on oneyear’s competition, the award ismade on outstanding ability andservice, supported by superior qual¬ities of manhood as demonstrated byconspicuous courage, persistence,fight, leadership, self-sacrifice, loyal¬ty, and sportsmanship.”Adolph Toigo, a senior, the 144pound guard, received the “C” for‘three years of hard work and su¬perior qualities of manhood,” A‘first year award supported by twoyears of hard work and service alongwith superior qualities of manhood”was given Laurel Smith, ForrestFroberg, Wayne Cassle, Pat Kelly,and Howard Jersild. A “first yearaward supported by three years ofhard work and service along withsuperior qualities of manhood” wasgiven Kenneth Small, Minott Stick-ney, and Joseph Garen.Second Year Letter*Those who received their secondletter were Vincent Libby, WalterBurgess, Malcolm Proudfoot, CharlesWeaver and Hugh Mendenhall, Cap¬tain Saul Weislow, Robert Spence,Anatol Raysson, Rudolph Leyers,Harold Priess, and Kaare Krogh re¬ceived their third football letter.Six Old English letters and nine“C. F. T.” recognition letters werealso awarded, bringing the total tothirty-six, almost the entire numberof men on the final squad.The captain for 1929 team will beselected today, and the freshmanfootball numeral awards will be an¬nounced at the same time.“GET ACQUAINTED”' " ■■ ■■ »“Get Acquainted” is the keynoteof the first meeting of the WomenSpeakers club to be held today at2:30 in Ida Noyes hall.Members are being paired, eachinterviewing the other and thenformally introducing her in a bio¬graphical sketch. The remainder ofthe time will be devoted to inform¬al discussion. Dr. A. C. WidgeryLectures on “India”“Modem Tendencies in the Re¬ligions of India,” will be discussedby Dr. Allan C. Widgery today at4:30 in Swift hall assembly room.Dr. Widgery is an honors lecturer inthe Department of Philosophy of Re¬ligion at Cambridge university, andis a special lecturer on the facultyof Rnwdoin college. FOREIGN STUDENTSATTEND BANQUETThree hundred foreign studentswill attend the fourth annual din¬ner, given by the Chicago ChurchFederation tonight at the Hotel LaSalle. Many of the fifteen hundredforeign students of the metropoli¬tan Chicago district attend the Uni¬versity and a large number of themwill be at the dinner.The principal speakers will beJane Addams of Hull House andHarry Edmonds of InternationalHouse, New York. Their subject*have not been announced.Two students will also speak. Theyare Helen Tupper of India and JoseDeseo of the Philippines. They willdiscuss“ What Students Are Doingto Promote International Friend¬ship.”At the dinner tables two or moreAmerican hosts and hostesses will sitwith a small group of foreign stu¬dents. The hosts will number onehundred and fifty. In past 3’’ear8 theforeign students have later visitedthe \ AB+o in theirPage Two THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22. 1928iatlg iiar00ttFOUNDED IN 1991THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OP CHICAGOPubiiafaed mornings, except Saturday. Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription ratesfS.OO per year; by mail, |1.60 per year extra. Single copies, five cents each.Ehktered 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 Prms 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 9221MENNewa EditorRobert C. MeComuiek.^.Edwmrd G. Baation News EditorJohn T. Etobbitt.Bdcar GrcenwaldJahn H. Hardin — —Dair EditorWOMENHarriat HathawarRoaalind Green „ ...J. Aldean GibbonejrFraneea A. Blodsett.Marjorie CahillPaarl KlainMarion E. White Junior Editor^..Sophomore Editor^Sophomore Editor....Sophomore Editor SPORTS DEPARTMENTHenry D. Fisber ...AssisUnt EditorAlbert Arkules -.«...«-_....Sophomoro EditorMaurice Liebman Sophomore EditorJerome Strauss Sophomore EditorEmwiarette Dawson Women’s BMitorMarjorie Tolman..Associate Women's EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTEarle M. Stocker. ....Advertising ManagerRobert Nicholson Cirenlation ManagerBlanche Reardon Secretar>'Lee Loventhal ^..Office ManagerRobert Mayer Downtown CopyFred Towsley ....Doamtown CopyAbe Blinder^ _...LocaI CopyRobert Shapiro ...... ..._..._...Local CopyHugh Mackenzie Advertising Rep.THE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement of etudent initiative in undergraduate activityand echolarehip.2. Awlieation 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.6. Support of military unH.6. Adoption of a deferred fraternity and club rushing plan.Monk Lectures onIndian Professor’sPhysics Discovery“The Raman Effect” is the subjectof a talk to be given by AssistantProfessor George S. Monk of thePhysics department, today at 4:30, inRyerson 32.The discovery by ‘ Professor C. B.Raman and his associates of theUniversity of Calcutta, correspondswith the “Compton Effect” in x-rayradiation made known by ProfessorArthur H. Compton of the Phys.cs de¬partment of the University, winnerof the Nobel Prize last year.In scattering light by liquids, Pro¬fessor Raman discovered new typesof spectrum lines. The discoverymade known in February, 1927, is theresult of several years investigationin the field of radiation. Repeat Four CubeStage SuccessesFour one act plays are announcedby the Cube for Saturday and Sun¬day nights. They are “Episode,” bySnchnitzler, “Hero of the SantaMaria,” by Stevens, “The First Tri¬angle,” by Webber, and “The GreenScarf,” by Hecht. These plays willbe presented at 8:30 at 1538 East57th St. They are a repetition oflast week’s productions, which provedsuccessful.Kirby Page SpeaksFor Liberal ClubKirby Page, editor of “The WorldTomorrow,” a liberal publication ofwide circulation, speaks today to theLiberal Club on “Nationalism andImperialism.” The meeting will beheld at 4:30 in Harper M 11. Allstudents are invited.Nunif-BushcAnhle:^ishionedCs(fords1515TK< IJptoumBlack Rutsia Calf,Also Brown. You can stand on anyshoe — but not stamout. Get the good shoehabit in a>llege. WearNunn'Bush oxfords,fashioned to £t at theankle and heel. Nogapping. No slipping.Minn-Bu^ SRoe Sf^42 N. Dearborn St.32 W. Jackson Blvd,115 S. Clark St.Chicago, Ill. CLASSIFIED ADS of Cottage Grove, phone, StewartFOR SALE—Corona typewriter,excellent condition. $25 cash. EdithAdams, Greenwood Hall.YOUNG COUPLE wUl sacrificebeautiful furniture, only 2 monthsold: 3 pc. frieze parlor set, carvedframe; 2 9x12 Wilton rugs; 8 pc.walnut dining set; 4 pc. walnut bed¬room set; 2 lamps; davenport andend tables, mirror, pictures, silver¬ware, small rugs, 5 pc. breakfast set;all like new. Will take $650 for all;worth $2000. Will pay for delivery,also separate. Winner, 8228 Mary¬land Ave., 1st apt., one block east 1876.FOR SALBl—At half price man’sblack Siberian pony coat with rac¬coon collar. Size 38, full length, like new. Price $60. Phone Atlantic3886 or address XYZ care DailyMaroon.LOST—A white gold wrist watchin Ida Noyes locker room Will find- er please return to Rosalind Greenin the Maroon office. Reward.FOR SALE — CORONA port¬able; also new Royal portable; andSmith standard. For prices call Mr.Mayne, Fairfax 5931, today.Official Collc^FEATEBNITY<Jeweli;y'WARREN PIPER AOQ31 n. STATB ST. PROCLAMATIONAnnouncing the Celebration of our 38th Anniversary HianksgivingWe are thankful for our 38 years of Successful Business in Chicago and forour Anniversary Week Celebration we are offering the most wonderfulshowing of High Grade Suitings we have ever shown at aSPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRICEOFTHIRTY EIGHT DOLLARSNot a Suit i nthe lot worth less than $50.00 and many of them worth $60.00to $75.00.We ivant you to rejoice with us and are giving a Thraksgiving Turkey freeevery suit or overcoat sold dtoring Anniversary Week.Sale Start Wednesday, Nov. 21st--ONE WEEK ONLYFREE Thanksgivmg Turkey wi0i Suit <Nr OvercoatNOBLE D. SOPER CO., TaUors1329 EAST 55th STREET CHICAGO BILL GOULD, Mgr.Qrophecy—On some rainy day, you will cumikiwn yoitf hat and diank Godfor John Hancock.Insurance Comreny^or SotTOM. oewwttTO Plan to have yourTHANKSGIVING DINNERATWITOI KITCH INN6325 Woodlawn Ave.TURKEY with all the trimmings$1.25 per plate.GREGGSCHOOL Bxscumra|SBCaSTAa|AI.|TaAOflNOSpwlal CoUts. CteMM umicMl w> m net to eM-diet with euU^ work. EnroltaoMt to hichMhod irradintoo or oqniraloot. Coodneotional.Pkoiw StaU mi for portiemlanlORUO scMoot. aas worei witi ss aw—■o 3of3 >u} OQ Z7 UJa:o U.o o2 <J 0.z ^o ^CO ^o U4CQE H ba 9 wQi Qi -J= S£ OQUJCQ CDb H bo>UCIUlX -JH du, ^Ou00 a:Q DU Ha: £lQ -JZ D•r COCG <o aCQ HfcSQi << a: toinuin Cover That Cold Floor WithThis Smart New College RugIt has a particularly soft and deep pilewhich everyone wants. It can be used asa bath mat, a throw mg, chair cover ormost any decorative purpose as well.It is 24 X 48 inches and in the colors ofyour Alma Mater with its initial wovenin the center. These Rugs are veryspecial now at the low figure of $9.75THIRD FLOOR, I^OIJTH, WABANHMARSHALL FIELD& COMPANY'f '/Toigo geU place withEckertall in lightweighthall of fame. Baili’ Jllaroon Thirty-six m«i arereward^ with lettersby Stagg.THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 22, 1928SIX FOOTBALL MEN ARE GIVEN OLD ENGLISH AWARDSEDITORIAL(Continued from page I )in the football standing since the beginning of the Western confer¬ence is indicative of its other athletic ratings.The charge that the University’s athletic prestige rests only inthe remote past, and that the showing of its football team in recentyears is poor enough to warrant its withdrawal from the conferenceis also totally without foundation. Since 1918 University footballteams have won 27 conference games, lost 16, and tied four.In conclusion may we call the attention of the NorthwesternDaily editors to the history of football games between the Universityand Northwestern. The only black spot on the record is the 1926game, the year in which, if we remember right, it was even necessaryfor the president of the north shore school to straighten out theineligibility of Northwestern’s star athlete. The following, we be-lieve, speaks for itself:1902—CHICAGO 12. Northwestern 0.1903—CHICAGO 0. Northwestern 0.1904—CHICAGO 32. Northwestern 0.1905—CHICAGO 32. Northwestern 0.1909—CHICAGO 34. Northwestern 0.1910—CHICAGO 10. Northwestern 0.1911—CHICAGO 9. Northwestern 0.1912—CHICAGO 3. Northwestern 0.1913—CHICAGO 14. Northwestern 0.1914_^HICAG0 28. Northwestern 0.1915—CHICAGO 7, Northwestern 0.1916—GHICAGO 0. Northwestern 10.1917—CHICAGO. 7. Northwestern 0.1918—CHICAGO 6. Northwestern 21.1919—CHICAGO 41. Northwestern 0.1921—CHICAGO 41. Northwestern 0.192;—CHICAGO 15. Northwestern 7.1923—CHICAGO 13. Northwestern 0.1924—CHICAGO 3. Northwestern 0.1925—CHICAGO 6. Northwestern 0.1926—CHICAGO 7. Northwestern 28. Stagg Cites ToigoAs Example of GritIn his speech as guest of honorat the football banquet of RiponUniversity, Amos Alonzo Staggcited Eckersall, Bodwell andToigo as outstanding examples oflight weight men who have madegood in inter-collegiate football atthe University of Chicago.Eckersall and Toigo need nointroduction to followers of Chi¬cago’s teams. Bodwell played atend in 1900 and only weighed149 pounds but in the featuregame of the year he outlastedKelly 220 pound Michigan wing-man.PHELAN TO LOSESEVENTEEN MENAT END OF YEARLafayette, Ind., Nov. 21.—Whenthe final gun cracks at the Purdue-Indiana game at Lafayette Saturdayafternoon in the Ross-Ade stadium itwill mark the close of the collegiategridiron careers of a great group ofseventeen players on the Boilermak¬er squad. Phelan’s loss, one of theheaviest that has ever been suffer¬ed by graduation in any single year,will include his stalwart line fromend to end, and two backfield stars,along with a number of the best re¬serves the Boilermakers have had inyears.Phelan’s regular line, composedof Guy Mackey, New Albany, andLeon Hutton, Indianapolis, ends;Herb Galletch, Chicago, and Ed.Eickmann, Indianapolis, tackles; SigGreieus, Chicago, and Bud Hook,Indianapolis, guards, and CaptainHarvey Olson, Ravinia, Ill., center,will doff the moleskins for the sheep¬skin as a unit next spring. Includ-THE HOMESTEADHOTEL5610 Dorchester Ave.A Pleasant Place to LiveAmerican Plan - ReasonableRatesTAKE YOU8 LECTURES INOWEN ABCA ConcUie, Abbreviated LonghandEaay to Learn — Easy to Write —EUay to ReadCircular on RequeatANNETTE E. FOTH$38 8*. Dea^rn 8t. 1480 E. 67th St.Harriaon 1747One Semester Hourof MusicMaybe it isn’t scheduled in theDean’s Office; however, it is ob¬served in most of the ChapterHouses and Halls. For that dailymusic hour, stop in at Wood-lawn’s foremost music store forportable phonographs, radios,saxes, banjos, new song hits.“Everything known in musicnot ten minutes away.Monthly Payments, If You WishlyonAHealyWoodlawn Store870 E 63rd St. SIXTY GRAPPLERSQUAUFY FOR I. M.TOURNEY FINALSRecord Number of EntriesCompete !nPrelimsIntramural wrestling opened witha bang yesterday afternoon when thepreliminaries and semi-finals of allweights were held. Due to the largenumber of entrants the plan ofholdiUg the finals on the same daywas abandoned and postponed toTuesday afternon at 3:30. Thebouts were very well managed bythe I-M department and were runoff without any injuries which isextraordinary. Coach Vorres andseveral medical examiners were pres¬ent all through the affair.Run Heavy FinalsOf the 200 participants about 60qualified for the finals. As therewere only a few entrants in theheavyweight division it was possibleto run off the final round with Cobban unattached wrestler winning firstplace. In the 177 pound class Men¬denhall, Willet and Kaminsky emerg¬ed victorious and will wrestle in thefinals.ed in the group are some of the out¬standing linemen in the Big Ten cir¬cuit, such as Hutton and Mackey.In addition, Phelan loses a greatgroup of other forwards in BettDreyer, Cleveland, Ohio, center,who" has divided the time with Ol¬son all season; Don Cameron, Chi- Class Rush TodayTo Fix SupremacyWith the class rush set for to¬day it was announced that Clar¬ence Cushman, president of theSkull and Crescent, ana varsityguard will lead the Sophomores intheir struggle tomoiTow afternoonat Greenwood field. Eugene Buz-zell will be the captain of theyearlings.WOMEN’S HOCKEYTOURNEY TO LASTTILL DECEMBER 5Eleven teams of women’s hockeyclasses will compete in the inter¬sectional tournament now beingplayed off which began last Tues¬day and will continue until Decem¬ber 6.Tuesday’s games resulted in theelimination of the White Elephants,the Red Devils and the Sparks ofthe 11 o’clock and 10 o’clock Tig¬ers. In the games today, the 10o’clock Racers will play the Grass¬hoppers of the same section, theBarking Dogs of the 9 o’clock groupwill meet the Cardinals of the 11o’clock section, the 10 o’clock Ar¬rows will clash with the 11 o’clockStars and the 1:30 Old Golds willcompete with the Lucky Strikes ofthe 9 o’clock section.Semi-finals of the tournament willbe played off at 12:15 on November25 and the to teams meeting in thefinals will come together on Decem¬ber 5.cago, tackle; Joe Dellinger, Elkhart,tackle; Fred Eibel, Gary, end; BudHill, Fort Wayne, guard, and L. A.Nelson, Wauwatosa, Wis., end. NINE PLAYERS GET‘C.F.T.’ LEHERSAS RECOGNITIONSeveral Sophomores GetMinor ‘C’ LetterSweatersIn addition to the twenty-one ma¬jor awards which the Board ofAthletic Control granted yesterday,six men were given the Old Englishletter, and nine men were awardedthe ‘C. F. T.” recognition letter, to¬taling thirty-six in all. Practicallythe entire squad that stuck through¬out the entire season and who weresent in to play in at least one of thegames received a letter.List WinnersOld English awards were given toGlenn W. Heywood, Robert W.Straus, Errett Van Nice, Harold J.Bluhm, Andrew J. Brislen, and Ro¬land N. Erickson.“C. F. T.”, third football awardswere tendered to Donald MerrillGreer, Thomas E. Cowley, Walter K.Knudson, Benjamin Wattenberg,Leon Carroll Marshall, Jr., ArthurAbbott, Jr., David D. Brown, Max E.Sonderby, and Thomas S. Vin^n.Two of the men to get Old Eng¬lish letters were sophomores, name¬ly Bob Straus and Roland Erickson.Srtaus alternated with Small at thecenter position and should provevery valuable to the team next yearas Small is graduating. Ericksonalso made an excellent showing atguard position and also should servethe team as a nucleus next fall.Mild enough for anybody.. . and yet they Satisfy^TF your taste demands lomething moreI than mildness, ask yourself this question:“Where can I get mildhess without flat¬ness; where can I get mildness tvitb taste?” Where indeed—except in Chesterfield?Of what other cigarette, in all your experi¬ence, can this truthfidly be said: "They’remild—and yet they satisfy!**' /THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1928Page FourTHE management of Raphael’s takes great pleasurein extending an invitation to the students of theUniversity of Chicago, to attend the opening of one ofAmerica’s most magnificant places of entertainment onFriday Evening, Nov. 23rd.Mr. E. R. Ettelson, president of Raphael’s, and a formerstudent of the University of Chicago, has designatedevery Friday evening as College Night. Special enter¬tainment will be featured on this night.Luncheon Eleven to Two Dining Five to EightDancing Eight to ThreeRAPHAELStony Island Avenue at 79th StRegent 1000MORE FUN TONITE—AND HOW!YOU don’t know what happy en¬tertainment is — if you aren’tattending the “Maroon Night’’ Frolicsat the Tower Theatre.HERE’S TONITE’S PROGRAM!SIGMA CHI are guests of honor and are planninga surprise “punch”—^hear them sing the “Sweet¬heart” song as it should be sung.1^ ED GRANGE, the famous “77” himself,is going to show you what an “All-American” football star is thinking about.Frankie masters, happy Director ofthe Collegiate Syncopators, has a lot ofnew stage thrills for you—^and a stage full ofstars to help him.Eddie MEIKEL will play Chicago’s favor¬ite loyalty songs. Sing with him —you’ll love it.The Amateur Discovery Contest tops offa gala evening. You’ll cheer thesecoming stage performers — and how you’lllaugh ItOATTLE OF THESEIXEIS” on the screen.See if you can pick the winner.COME ALONG! COOK^SANDWICH SHOPSouth Side’sBusiest and FinestSANDWICH SHOPHOME COOKEDDINNERS1524 E. 63rd St.S Doors East of Tower Theatre LONG SKIRTS—BIG FEETOe«r Blind Tiger: lustrator for the Whistle. The pic¬ture, in /your coli^mn-h-^ad, of aChicago woman, probably shows whythey call them “women” at Chicagoand “co-eds” at Northwestern.DelElsewhere in the less read col-I should like to compliment the 11-1 umns of this sheet lies comment onBEAUTIFUL INDIAN BLANKETSFor your room, car, or football games.PENDLETON’S Blankets, all virgin wool—NAVAJORUGS—CHIMAYO BLANKETS—OrientalPerfume — Very fine Xmas Gifts.W.H. ALLEN*Tf the Indian makes it I can get it direct to you at one-halfor two-thirds eastern prices.”6310 Kenwood Ave. Plaza 0259 the laddies raising long hair to pre¬sent a play in the true spirit of thenineties. Can't see any mews valuein that tale. All our best shicks havelong hair.A Moonlif ht Kim ....a kissa sighan embracea huga squeezeOOF!You have been eating garlic, Alfred tLa BratsiereP. S.—Do the stars stand for aSpecial kind of profanity?4fter All—Scotty will continueto garner the sheaves, The Advertis¬ing Department to take all ourspace. The Stumble Bum will maun¬der on and there you are—”THE BLIND TIGERihE(#)Riibnemru CLutton 8 SonsBROADWAY and HFTH—Gary STATE and JACKSON—ChicagoORRINGTON and CHURCH—EvanstonMARION and LAKE—Oak ParkUniversity OvercoatsFor University MenT HAT’S the wholestory, and it’s worth re¬peating — ^^UniversityOvercoats for UniversityMen.” The styles youwant — the fabrics youwant — the colors youwant — at the price youwant to pay. No storecan offer you more.**Dartmouth” is the mod¬el sketched—long, easyhanging — single breast-four buttons —high lapels — exactlyright. In our famous“Chicagoan”$35 and $40