NO JUNIOR REPRESENTATIVEAS SECOND ELECTION RESULTSIN TRIPLE TIE OF CONTESTANTSKerwin States SituationUnique in CampusElectionsBecause of an unprecedented cir¬cumstances in the history of Univer¬sity elections, a third election forthe men’s representative of theJunior class will be held this Friday.This has been occasioned by theelection, held last Friday resultingin a tie. According to Professor J.G. Kerwin of the Political Sciencedepartment the present situation iswithout parallel in political history.In last Friday’s election of the160 registered voters 78 cast bal¬lots. One ballot was invalidated be¬cause of an irregularity in marking.A count of the remaining 77 result¬ed in Fish 22, Hardin 22, Wingate14, Letts 13, and Graf 6.Redistribute BallotsAll the ballots were counted byProfessor Kerwin. According to thepreferential system used, Graf’s sixvotes were distributed for secondvote. Of the six Wingate received4 and 2 Letts bringing the count to22 each for Hardin and Fish, 18 forWingate and 15 for Letts. Lettswas then ruled out and his fifteenwere distributed for second andthird choice. Of the 16 Fish ire-ceived 3, Hardin 3 and Wingate 9,( Contimie<l on page 4')4 II I ^MAJOR CHRISTIANAPPOINTS THIRTYR.O.T.C. OFFICERSMajor T. J. J. Christian, head ofthe department of Military Scienceand Tactics, has announced thirty-oneappointments from the advancedcourses. Appointments of secondyear basic students to non-commis¬sioned offices will bo forthcoming inthe near future.The following appointments weiemade effective Friday: cadet major,Gordon Watrous; cadet captains, P.S. Campbell, C. D. Baker, G. F.James, and G. Keyser; cadet firstlieutenants, G. Fetherstone, P. Rud-nick, L. P. Hunter, A. C. O’Meara,A. J. Stawarz, N. Veatch, R. B. Lewy,T. Thor.sen, C. A. Weaver, L. I^evine;cadet lieutenants, H. M. Licht, R. E.Driscoll, A. Gardner, 0. T. Hemkle,S. Sacerdote, J. M. Hutchinson, W.H. Elliot, M. A. Bowers, A. Dan-ovsky, H. A. Van Schaick, W. J. Ur¬ban, G. I^tt, K. C. Hill, T. H. Slus-ser R. Bush W. Hertrais.The number of freshmen enteringthe Military Science department,nearly twenty-five percent of theFreshman class, exceeded the quota(Continued on page 4)CAN YOU READ?JUDD’S TEST TELLSCan you read—efficiently? Prof.C. Judd, head of the Education De¬partment, addressing the freshmenMonday explained a self-test foryour reading ability. Try it your¬self!Read a page of type aloud, andnote the time it takes. Read a sim¬ilar page, silently, noting the lime.Unless the silent time was threetimes as fast as the other, you area poor reader. Prof. Judd said.“High tension thinking,’’ and theability to read efficiently are thesecrets of good work in school andin life, he continued. Cultivationof ability to concentrate is not moredifficult than rigorous athletic train¬ing; by studying interesting mater¬ial, one automatically concentratesand the habit, thus acquired, re¬mains.“Whole learning,’’ in connectionwith songs or passages to be retain¬ed, he also said, had been found farsuperior to the common “little pieceat a time” method. Divide FreshmenI Into Five Groups;Deans Will TalkAutumn quarter freshmen were di¬vided into five groups, each fresh¬man meeting with his dean, it wasannounced yesterday. The groupsand the places of meeting are as fol¬lows: law, with Dean Pomeroy, willassemble at the Alpha Delta Phihouse, the senior advisor being GlennHeywood; medicine, with Dean Coul¬ter, mets at the Chi Psl house, thesenior advisor being Minott Stickney;Commerce and Administration, withDean Scott, will meet at the Psi Up-silon house. Norm Root is senior ad¬visor. Professor Julius Stieglitz willj take Dean Clattfeld’s groqp to theI Delta Upsilon house, with Blairi Plimpton and Wendell Stephenson assenior advisors. Professor Knapp willtake Dean Brumbaugh’s and DeanNelson’s groups to the Zeta Beta Tauhouse. The senior advisors are LouisI Cohen and Robert Graf.I All freshmen are invited to thesej meetings, whether they are trying out: for the Green Cap club or not, be-j cause it is believed that they will beinteresting to everyone. The senior! advisors are to act as the chairmani of the groups. The deans will talki about some outstanding presonalityI in the field of academic interest ex-j pressed by their grroups.! This will be the first of two meet¬ings aranged by the Men’s Commis-! sion to give the freshmen an opor-tunity to meet faculty men on aninformal basis.i At Monday’s meeting of Green Cap,M. D. McLean, executive secretary ofthe Men’s Commission, and HaroldHaydnn made several important an¬nouncements. Haydon stated that allabsences from the cheering “C” willbe counted against those who are try¬ing out for Green Cap, and that thisTuesday’s meeting would be post¬poned until Wednesday.!{Founder Of ForgeI Receives Prize ForExcellence in PoetryGladys Campbell, who graduated in1918, has won the annual MidlandAuthors’ Prize of $100.00, for a groupof seven poems which appeared in theOctol)er 1928 issue of “Poetry, aMagazine of Verse.” The Novemberissue of “Poetry” announces that thisaward is given by the Society ofMidland Authors to a mid-west writerwhose work is considered by the edi¬torial board of “Poetry” to be thebest of the year. Miss Campbell’sachievement is an outgrowth of herUniversity activities, for she, withGeorge Dillon, was co-founder of theForge, and was a member of thePoetry club.Miss Campbell has had her poemspublished in many magazines, notably“The Dial.” While she has not yetpublished, she has the publication ofa volume under consideration.Alpha Delt DanceOpens New HouseThe new Alpha Delt house openedits doors Saturday evening to inaug-arote the campus formal season withan affair, which has already estab¬lished a precedent for fraternityhnuRe parties this fall.The 200 guests who responded tothe efforts of Cope Harvey’s orches¬tra included buoyant brethern fromMinnesota, and some Wisconsin menanxious to efface memories of the af¬ternoon. These could not help butshare in the pep of the Chicago men,keyed up by the five straight victorieswhich mark the achievement of theMaroon eleven so far this season. Set Hutchin'sPresident forUNFAIR COMPETITIONThe University of Chicago, unlike other large colleges, has noofficial student directory. During the past five or six years therehas appeared annually an unofficial fraternity and club directorypublished solely for the financial gain of its manager. The book hasbeen inaccurate and wholly inadequate to campus needs. Althoughconsistently warned that this publication was not officially sanc¬tioned by the administration and had no permanent or authenticstatus, the editor of the book, who was at that time a student in thecollege, was so confident of his position that before leaving schoolhe sold his spurious proprietary rights for considerable financialreturn to a self-appointed successor.This year publication rights for an all-undergraduate directorywere awarded by the Board of Organizations, Publications, andExhibitions to an organized group of senior men. Though fully cog¬nizant of this grant, the original publisher of the old fraternity-clubdirectory, now returned to campus, is expending every effort toproduce another issue. The financial security of the official publica¬tion is hence jeopardized in two respects; first, it is difficult to securesufficient advertising for two directories, and second, the distributionof a free publication endangers the sale of any other. The situationis further complcaited by the fact that the administration cannotI exercise any jurisdiction and thus prohibit the publication of the un-I authorized book.. In the realization of these difficulties the official publishersj even went to the extent of offering to amalgamate the directoriesI and pay a very liberal percentage for the advertising already con¬tracted. The offer was emphatically rejected.The Daily Maroon recognizes in this affair a challenge to the! rights of all student activities. Certainly they deserve protectionfrom unfair and unauthorized competition. We therefore urge thatthe fraternities and clubs give no support to this unofficial directory.We believe that among those business institutions who have adver-! tised in the accreditted campus publications, there is no firm whoI in full knowledge of the details would in any way aid this deliberate: exploitation.I The protection and patronage which we thus urge for the offi-j cial undergraduate directory is equivalent to that which we would!urg« in the rase of any student activity threatened by outside com-I petition, for the whole situation is analogous to the attempt of anI off-campus organization to edit a student newspaper in competition! with The Daily Maroon or stage an illegitimate campus productionin defiance of the University Dramatic Association.Appoint CommitteeTo Nominate NewCommission MemberNominations for new members tothe Men’s Commission on Social Ser¬vice and Religion are to be made thisweek by a committee composed ofHaydon Wingate, Louis Engel, BrooksSteen and J. C. Kerwin. Those ap¬pointed by a board and the presidentof the University will attend themeeting to be held November 10, atthe home of D. H. Stevens.Last Sunday evening committee re¬ports were made by A. P. Hermanon the Sophomore group and byWendell Stephenson on the Freshmangroup. This Wednesday, sectionalmeetings of the Green Cap Club areto be held under the direction of theCommission.Anyone interested in week-endtrips with boys or in speaking en- I-M DepartmentGives Award ForStudent DebatingjIntramural debating competition incooperation with the University De-j bating Union has been arranged ac-I cording to an announcement by theI Intramural Department. The pro-I gram is both important and interest-I ing. This year will be the first thatj twenty teams of two men each are tocompete for a cup offered by the in-I tramural department. The debatingj for the first quarter will start withintwo weeks with the subject: “Resolv¬ed, That Democratic GovernmentMust Depend Upon An Appeal ToPrejudice Rather Than Reason.”Invitations will be sent to all thefraternities and notices will be post¬ed on the bulletin boards. Any stu¬dent, graduate or undergraduate, canparticipate in the meetings held everyThursday night in Reynolds Club at(Continued on page 4)gagements should see Norman Rootor Haydon Wingate.“PROPOSAL" CASTSTILL INCOMPLETE ! Olson, WeinbergerHead Poetry ClubI The Poetry club elected Elderi James Olson as president and Con-Opportunties await interestedfreshmen in both the business andacting ends of the Dramatic As.^ocia-tion as the cast of the freshman play“Proposal,” by Tchekov is not com¬plete, and freshmen are urged to re¬port to the Tower room in MandelHall between 2:30 and 3:30 today.ANNUAL PHOTOSAppointments for graduate stu¬dents and members of the Senior classfor the 1930 Cap and Gown are be¬ing made this week, it was announcedyesterday by Raymond Fried, editorof yearbook. All photographic workis (being handled by the Daguerre Stu¬dio, 2’8 South Wabash Ave. Actualtaking of pictures will begin the firstof next week. stance Weinberger as secretary, at ameeting held last Wednesday even¬ing at the home of Sterling North,former president of the society. Thenew president asks all students inter¬ested in joining the Poetry club tosubmit- several poems to himself orto the secretary.The club now has an enrollment offifteen who meet in the homes of themembers. They read and discuss per¬sonal contributions and that submit¬ted (by candidates for admission.Among the most prominent people ofthe organization are Gladys Camp¬bell George Dillon, author of the“Boy in the Wind,” Bertha James,and Jessica Nelson North. HarrietMonroe, editor of “Poetry, A Mag¬azine of Verse” is an honorary mem¬ber. Investiture AsNovember 19Ask Women to DoService For HospitalAll University women, who areinterested in rendering their ser¬vices for an hour once a week inthe hospital, are requested to at¬tend a meeting to be held onThursday, October 24, at 4:30 intht Nurses Sitting Room, S 133of the Epstein Clinic.The Auxiliary Committee, ofwhich Mrs. Gustavus F. Swift, Jr.,is Chairman, are very desious ofhaving a group of students co¬operate with them, in occupationaltherapy, library work, surgicaldressings or motor corps. At thesuggestion of Mrs. Edith FosterFlint, chairman of the Studentgroup of the Auxiliary Committeeof the University Clinics, the Fed¬eration of University women isasking the students to share inthis enterprise. Women who willattend the meeting are asked tonotify Dorothy Cahill, Hyde Park5913, before Thursday.PLAN SKULL ANDCRESCENT DANCEHonor Group ElectsNew OfficersSkull and Crescent’s annual dancewill be held Nov. 8 in Jerry Connally’sNight Club Room in the ShorelandHotel from 9 until 1. At the presenttime the orchestra has not beenchosen, but good music is promisedby Roy Black, chairman of the dancecommittee. It may be that they willhave Jimmy Noone and his ApexCluib orchestra as they had last year,but no definite arrangements havebeen made as yet. Tickets will costtwo dollars per couple, and everyoneis invited to attend. They will be puton sale the latter part of this week.The new officers of Skull and Cres¬cent, who were chosen recently are:Joseph Temple, Psi Upsilon, presi-(Continued on page 4)ANNOUNCE FIRSTPROGRAM OF FALLCONCERT SERIESA few season tickets for theUniversity Orchestral Associa- .tion’s concerts may still be ob¬tained in Cobb 202. Studentsinterested in hearing good musicmay obtain their tickets at halfrate by applying immediately.When the Chicago Symphony Or¬chestra opens its twenty-first seasonat the University in Mandel HallOctober 29 at 4:15 the followingnumbers will be played: Overture,“Leonore,” Opus seventy-two byBeethoven; Symphony No. 2, D.Major, Opus seventy-three, byBrahms; Allegro non troppo; Adagionon troppo; Allegretto graziose,quasi andantino; Finale; RapsodieEpagnole—Ravel; Prelude a la nuit;Malguena; Habanera; Feria; Bac-chanale ahd Finale from Overtureto “Tannhauser”—Wagner.LUTHERAN CLUBIda Noyes Hall, on 59th bstiveenKimbark and Woodlawn, will be thescene of Lutheran festivities Friday,Oct. 25th, at 8:00, when the Luth¬eran Club of the University will giveits Halloween party. According tothe Club’s officers, every student ormember of the University communitywho is of the Lutheran faith is cor¬dially invited. FIVE UNIVERSITYPRESIDENTS AREMAIN ^EAKERSInvite Delegates fromThree HundredUniversitiesASK THOMAS EDISONStudents Participate at SpecialAssemblyIn a ceremony which promises tobe the most impressive in the historyof the University, Robert M. Hut¬chins will be inducted into the of¬fice of president in a formal in¬auguration November 19 in the Uni¬versity Chapel. Invitations will bemailed by the Board of Trustees to¬morrow to four thousand prominentcitizens and educators for the in¬vestiture, according to an announce¬ment yesterday, and to 12,500alumni in the Chicago region for areception on November 20th, thefinal event of a two-day program.Speakers at the five major eventswill include President James R. An-gell of Yale, President Harry W.Chase of the University of NorthCarolina, President David Kinley ofIllinois, President Walter Dill Scottof Northwestern, President GeorgeE. Vincent of the Rockefeller Foun¬dation, and Secretary Ray LymanWilbur of the Department of In¬terior.Forty Presidents AcceptInvitations were mailed last weekto representatives of three hundredAmerican universities, learned so¬cieties and educational foundationsand to three hundred foreign insti¬tutions. Replies received to date in¬clude acceptances from forty col¬lege presidents who will personallyrepresent their institutions as dele¬gates.The program will be opened Tues¬day morning, November 19th at10:30 with organ music in theChapel. Delegates, members of theFaculties and Trustees will gatherat Ida Noyes hall in academic dressand march to the Chapel, the dele¬gates leading in the order of thedate of founding of their institu¬tions. The inauguration ceremonywill begin at 11 a. m., the occasion(Continued on page 2)BOOKSTORE HOLDSUBRARY CONTESTIf you could have just five booksin your private library, what wouldthey be In order to find out, theUniversity Bookstore has sent a“library nucleus” ballot to everystudent in the University asking forthe list each student would choose.The student giving the most fittinglist of books, and writing the bestreason for choosing the first one,according to the opinion of Profes¬sors T. V. Smith, of the departmentof Philosophy, James Weber Linnof the English department, and Ed¬ward Sapir of the Anthropology de¬partment, will be avyarded the listof books selected and 100 individu¬al bookplates.Ballots for the “library nucleus”contest must be in not later than 6,November 2. They may be handedin at the contest box at the RentalLibrary, or at the School of Educa¬tion Bookstore.The winners will be announced ashort time later. The results willbe made public in the Bookstorewindows and The Daily Maroon.rage Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1929iatlg iUarnottFOUNDED IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished mornings, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the Autumn,AVinter and Spring quarters by The Daily Maroon Company. Subscription rates13.00 per year; by mail, $1.50 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 e.xpressely reserves all rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper.Member of the Western Conference Press AssociationEDWIN LEVIN, Managing EditorEARLE M. STOCKER, Business ManagerROBERT L. NICHOLSON, Assistant Business ManagerHARRIET DEAN HATHAWAY, Woman’s EditorHENRY D. FISHER, Sports EditorLOUIS H. ENGEL, JR., Chairman Editorial BoardEDITORIAL DEPARTMENTEDWARD G. BASTIAN News EditorEDGAR GREENWALD News EditorJOHN H. HARDIN News EditorMARJORIE CAHILL Junior EditorMARION E. WHITE Junior EditorFRANCES STEVENS Literary EditorSIDNEY GOLDBERG Day EditorMERWIN S. ROSENBERG Day EditorGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF . Day EditorCLARA ADELSMAN Sophomore EditorMARGARET EGAN Sophomore EditorBEATRICE FEUCHTWANGERSophomore EditorLYDIA FURNEY Sophomore EditorJANE KESNER Sophomore EditorJANE WERTHEIMER Sophomore Editor BUSINESS DEPARTMENTABE BLINDER Advertising ManagerLEE LOVENTHAL . Advertising ManagerLOUIS FORBRICH ..Circulation ManagerROBERT McCarthy .. .Sophomore Asst.JAMES McMAHON Sophomore Asst.NED VEATCH Sophomore AsstSPORTS DEPARTMENTALBERT ARKULES Asst. Sports EditorWALTER BAKER Sophomore EditorHERBERT JOSEPH Sophomore EditorEDWARD LEWISON .. Sophomore EditorMARJORIE TOLMANWoman’s Sports EditorTHE DAILY MAROON PLATFORM1. Encouragement oj student partxcipation in undergraduate campus actwities.2. Promotion of student interest in lectures, concerts, exhibits and othercultural opportunities.3. Abolition of grading systm and extension of research principles.4. Cessation of extensile building program.5. Adoption of a plan for supervised, regulated rushing.COLLEGE RELIGION—AGAIN AND FINALLYReligion in the colleges is a matter of concern to everyone ex¬cept the college student. TTiis state of affairs is regrettable in thatit denotes an intellectual lethargy among undergraduates. We shouldlike to feel that there was ground even for the chronic charge of athe¬ism which is laid at the door of the American University by thoserabid souls who have our spiritual welfare so at heart.The great majority of students leave college blissfully unawareof the great discrepancies between traditional dogma and scientificfact. If we should hazard a guess we would say that possibly seventyper cent of the college graduates are only dimly aware of the vitalphilosophical disagreement between the old theology and the newmechanism. They are a peculiarly inconsistent lot. Insofar as theyworship at all they worship both God and Mammon. They acceptscientific fact at its face value; they cling devoutly to the outwornfaith of their fathers. An intelligent criticism of the latter in thelight of the former never has suggested itself to them, for they havedivorced the two concepts in their minds. It is this glaring inabilityto effect correlation of fact and theory, this failure to make intel¬ligent criticism of conduct, which makes us most skeptical of thepractical value of higher education.Of the remaining thirty per cent a large group has carried theirthinking only to the point of atheism. Though proportionately smallthis group is usually sufficiently sophomoric to attract undeservedattention. It is this body of half-grown intellectuals who bring theopprobium of atheism upon the whole college—the inane, uncriticalelement, the more mature thinkers, and their own radical selves. Theyare aware only of the great incompatibility which exists between thebiblical account of Genesis and the fact of physical evolution. Themore far-reaching ramifications of the philosophical problem are be¬yond their scope; so, headlong, they plunge themselves into atheism,venting their spleen upon an ignorant world which has so long rearedthem in an atmosphere of false theology.It is in the third group that the hope of intellectual progress lies.The group is a composite of varied personalities and viewpoints, butthere is one common tenet. They have acknowledged the falsitiesof dogma but retained the essence of religion. Tbey have formeda philosophy of life based on scientific fact but they have incor¬porated an idealism, an aspiration, which is at the root of religion.LIGHT FOR THE WOMEN(Editor’s Note: This editorial has been contributed by awoman. We deny any knowledge of the antics of lights in thewomen’s dormitories.)Friday night at nine o’clock darkness prevailed throughout thewomen’s dormitories. The already too dim lights had flickered afew times and gone out. Women who were dressing for dates, wom¬en who were studying, women who were just loafing, were throwninto confusion. For the second time this quarter candles which hadbeen purchased only for decorative purposes were pressed intoservice.Few complaints have been made concerning the dim lightswhich the University power plant has forced into vogue. Womenwith defective eyesight have studied elsewhere. But now that thelights have developed the habit of going out for a period of forty-five minutes once a week we feel there is just reason for criticism.The Department of Buildings and Grounds has set and attainedmany high standards. It is surprising they have been lax concern¬ing anything so important as the lighting system. FIVE UNIVERSITYPRESIDENTS AREMAIN SPEAKERS(Continued from page 1)being designated as the 157th Con¬vocation of the University. Dr. Hut¬chins will be installed as the fifthpresident of the University.Delegates Attend LuncheonFollowing the inauguration aluncheon will be given for delegatesin Hutchinson hall at 1:30 p. m. At7 p. m. twelve hundred citizens ofChicago and special guests will beinvited to attend a dinner in Pres¬ident Hutchins’ honor in the GrandBallroom of the Palmer House.Guests from every section of thecountry will attend.Students at the University willget their opportunity to participatein the inauguration at a special as¬sembly at 11 a. m. in the UniversityChapel Wednesday. November 20th.From 3 to 5 in the afternoon theUniversity alumni body will be re¬ceived by the new President at IdaNoyes hall.Dawes Among InvitedThe list of invitation.** to the in¬auguration includes the names ofPresident and Mrs. Herbert Hoover,Ambassador Charles G. Dawes and ’Dwight Morrow, W. C. MackenzieKing, premier of Canada, SecretaryRobert P, Lamont, a former trusteeof the University, Thomas Edi¬son and John D. Rockefeller. Allrecipients of honorary degrees fromthe University, including the CrownPrince of Sweden and MadameCurie, will also be invited, as wellas city and state officials and rep¬resentatives of all industrial, profes¬sional, educational and civic groupsin Chicago,jIDUunniiHHTobacco’sat its best... ina pipeMEN’S preference for a man’ssmoke — the pip>e — is plentypositive. But do you know why?We’ll tell you.First, pipe tobacco’s different—for instance, Edgeworth. Second,tobacco smolders as it should in apipe. And third, these mean you getmore satisfaction—greater relish ofthe good old savory hurley, soothingfullness of rich smoke.There’s even a fourth reason: youlike good company. The pipe-smok¬ing brotherhood is that.Tobacco’s at its best in a pipe. Itgets a chance to be itself there—toloosen up as it comes to life, to ex¬pand and take in air and glow. Onlythe choicest leaves get that chance,moreover, for pipes tell the truthabout tobacco. Choice leaves, choiceblends, and mighty careful han¬dling. Edgeworth comes up througheleven distinct processes before we’rewilling to pass it on to you.If you keep on missing all this,that’s your fault—for we’re waitingto send you your first pipefuls ofEdgeworth. See the coupon? Fill itout, get a good pipe and the postmanwill bring you a neat little glad-to-meet-you packet of good oid Edge-worth.Edgeworth is a careful blend of (foodtobaccos—selected especially for pipe-smoking. Its quality and flavor neverchange. Buy it anywhere—“ReadyRubbed ’’ and “Plug Slice’’ — I5|ipocketpackage to pound humidor tin.EDGEWORTHLARUS & BRO. CO.,Richmond, Va.I’ll try your Edgeworth. And I’ll tryit in a good pipe.Name.Street-Town and State.Now let the Edgeworth comet v U. of C, Bookstoreannounces aBIG LITERARY ELECTIONknown asLIBRARYNUCLEUSCONTEST1. Office to be FilledLiterary Dictatorship of theUniversity of Chicago.2. Candidates EligibleEvery student of the Universityof Chicago who enjoys booksand knows what books he en¬joys.3. Election JudgesT. V. Smith - - PhilosopherEdward Sapir - - ScientistJames Weber Linn - - LiteraryCritic4. Platform of the U. of C.BookstoreUniversal suffrage.Democracy and open-minded¬ness.Encouragement of frank per¬sonal opinion.CONTEST ENDS SATURDAY, NOV. 2Ballot Boxes at U. of C. BOOKSTORE.andSchool of EducationUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOBOOKSTORE5S02 ELUSPage ThreeTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1929THIS WAY OUTBy Albert Arkulea MAROON RUNNERS BEAT GOPHERSDear Hank;Things are moving along smooth¬ly at the present moment, which ofcourse will please your good oldheart. The shock troops of the de¬partment. meaning the irresponsiblesophomores, Walter and the rest,are wo^rking right merrily, as thesaying goes, and all of us entertainhopes that we may get out of theoffice sometime before midnight, atleast.Well, tht situation in the Big Tenis progressing favorably. For thefirst time iu two years, the Maroonsare tied for first place, which showsthat we’re going somewheres thisyear. Of course, it’s true we’ve onlywon one game, but don’t be so crit¬ical, my boy. After all, we haven’tlost a game, and by virtue of ourconference victory, our team is justas good as Ohio’s or Purdue’s orNorthwestern’s.It seemed to me, Hank, that allsorts of mean tricks were pulled lastSaturday in the Big Ten. I thinkZuppke and Ingwersen tied for tophonours. I can just aboue imaginehow the Zuppkemen felt last Satur¬day afternoon when they observedthe badly crippled and nervouswreck, Glas.sgow, trotting about thegridiron with his mates a.s if hemeant to do things. And the Illinimust have been so upset at seeingGlassgow in the lineup that theysimply fell all over themselves fromshock on that opening play, and ofcourse the poor nervous wreck fromIowa just ran and ran and ran un¬til he roosted under the goal posts.But that must have made littleZuppke awfully mad. There musthave been a lot of satisfaction torthe Illinois mentor in rememberingthe adage, “he laughs best wholaughs last.’’ .4nyway, that hiddenball play which the Illini pulled onthe Hawkeyes was about as ancienta play as football knows, and thehonest trusting men from Iowa weretaken in rather sheepishly. Well,call it even Stephen all around!I read this morning that E’urdue’sflashy fullback, Yunevich—what aname for a fullback—will be unableto play against the Maroons nextSaturday. I think Phelan’s tryingto make our boys believe that theBoilermakers arc a bunch of crip¬pled weaklings, and that they willhave probably have to hold massservices over the remains all thisweek. Booh! Booh!Yunevich may be a bad actor, butHank, did you ever hear of thosecharming gentlemen, Mr. Welch andMr. Harmeson? You probably re¬member them well from last year. Alot of us do. And their activitieson a basketball floor are not alto¬gether dim in my memory. Mr. Welchand Mr. Harmeson are a duo whohave strange ideas about football.Strange but most effective. Theirmain occupation for Purdue is tolug the ball off the ends, throughthe line, and even via the aerialroute. From all indications, the duoseem to have enjoyed themselvesimmen.sely thus far.Knowing how much the Old Manbelieves in the efficacy of praying—remember in 1924 the Illinois-Chicago battle how the Maroons(Continued on page 4) MIDWAY DISTANCERUNNERS EMERGEVICTORS IN RACEHarlacher Turns TideWith StrongFinish Ohio, MinnesotaIndiana, PurdueWin Grid TiltsDowning the Minnesota CrossCountry team in the first Dual Meetof the season. Coach Merriam’s hilland dale men got off to an auspici¬ous start. Despite the appearanceof two Minnesota veterans who werereported to have graduated, namely,Anderson and North, Chicago’s dis¬tance men sent the Gophers homeminus the proverbial bacon. In orderto win the Maroons took a 1st, 4th,5th and 6th for an aggregate totalof 16 points while their opponentscopped a 2nd, 3rd 7th and 8th total¬ing 20.Letts Never HeadedDale Letts, captain of the Chicagorunners, took the lead at the startand was never headed. He ran thethree miles in 15 minutes 30 and 3-5seconds to take the first place. Thesecond man, Anderson, a runner ofno mean ability, crossed the finishline a good two hundred yards be-RinH Ditlp, to fiTPt n spoond fo*" thpvisitors. His teammate. North,sprinted in a close third. At thiistage of the race matters began totake on a cloudy a.spect for Chicago.When Lawrence Brainard andKelly finished 4th and 5th respec- !tively for the Maroons, the scoring |was pretty much evened up. Coach |Merriam’s hopes must have sunk iwhen he .<aw two Minnesota men ap- :pear at the turn for, if they finishedahead of the next Midway man tne 'result would be a tie. But Harlacher, ;a Chicago man, had the the task cutout for him and he certainly turnedin a fine job.Harlacher in SprintWith a desperate sprint thatwould have done credit to a 440 manHarlacker gave all he had and bare- ,ly nosed out the two Minnesota men ;at the finish. Witnesses of the race ^.say that Harlacher passed both IGophers just a step before the line. iThis thrilling incident explains how ja near catastrophe for Maroon fol- *lowers became a victory.lTEBNITTJewell^VAPKFN PTPER ACXD31 N. State St., Chicago The week-end was a very inter¬esting one as far as activities onthe gridiron are concerned. TheIllini, with the prestige of last year’schampionship, journeyed to thehome grounds of the Iowa schooland met opposition there that heldthem to a 7 to 7 tie. The fightproved as interesting as the closescore would indicate. Michigan wasvanquished again at the hands ofOhio State, who was at the outsetof the season heralded as a mediocremachine but who demonstrated realform in downing the Hawkeyes aweek ago. Minnesota came backwith a rush in the last period of the ithem into camp by a count of 26contest with Northwestern and tookto 14.The Maroons captured a victoryin both acts of the double bill itstaged on Saturday. Although theMaroons did not perform with thesame style that they bested theHoosiers with last week, they putup as good an exhibition as couldbe expected in a less important, non¬conference tilt. Ripon fell before Michigan X-CountryChances Are SlimAs Coach Steve Farrell, Michigan’slovable old veteran track coach says,prospects for a good cross countryteam in this, his last year as coach,“are not so rosy.”Coach Farrell lost his two bestmen from last year’s team whichfinished third in the Big Ten meetwhea Randolph Monroe and TedWuerfel graduated. Of this threeremaining letter men only Austin,a junior, looks good. Captain Ben¬son and Grunow, the other two towin the varsity “W last year, areonly fair. Two sophomores, Fitz-gibbons and Wolfe, are fair prospects.Minnesota’s men were not accus¬tomed to the terrific pace that Lettsset and it exhausted them before therace was half over. Even men ofthe caliber of Anderson and Northcouldn’t match strides with the peer-le.ss Maroon captain. Coach Mer-riam was pleased with the perform¬ance of his men. Only Letts andBrainard have had previous varsityexperience and’Kelly and Harlacherdid very well in their first test un¬der fire. The former’s developmenthas been very rapid and his reliableshowing Saturday marks him as adependable regular.Ten Chicago distance men were iallowed to run Saturday and al¬though their placing in the finish jhad no bearing in the scoring yet !they did well. Fink, Nelson, Baker 'and Goldman finished the' grueling |grind in fair position, Fink took aninth place and had the race beenreckoned on the five man team basisintead of four, he would have beenthe deciding factor in turning in aMaroon victory. the charge of the regulars 10 to 0,while the reserves sent home WallieMark’s Indiana Normal team withan 18 to 0 defeat.Indiana met Colgate in an inter¬sectional battle and suffered defeat.The Colgate squad proved too pow¬erful for Pat Page’s aggregationand were able to run up a 21 to 6score against them. This is the sec¬ond set-back that the Hoosiers havereceived in two weeks.. Purdue ripped through DePauwfbr a 26 to 7 victory. Yunevich, theflashy soph fullback, was not in thelineup and is not expected to be incondition when the Boilermakerstflr^el toward the Maroon encamp¬ment next Saturday—a fact whichshould bring added hope for victory:o the Staggmen.Notre Dame crashed into the Bad¬gers and came out the winners by a19 to 0 tally. The Irish displayedtheir usual tactics and easily smoth¬ered the efforts of the Wisconsincontenders. This does not mean,however, that the Thistlethwaite ma¬chine is a weak one, and much canbe expected in future engagementsfrom that section of the battlefront.Captain Glassgow of Iowa tookthe ball on the first play of the Illi-nois-Iowa game and raced 77 yardsdown the field for a touchdown andthen preceded to hang up the extrapoint with a kick. The Blue andOrange, thus awakened, were ableto score only a single goal through¬out the remainder of the competi¬tion, and were obliged to returnY. M. C. A.CAFETERIA53rd St. and DorchesterMAISON SEVERINHigh class French Table d’hoteDinnersOpen 6 P. M. to 8:30 P. M.5334-36 Dorchester Ave.Phone Plaza 8594M. S E1D E LManufacturing Furrier243-245 West 30th Street. NEW YORKBuy Direct from ManufacturerSend forPrice List and Photos Home-Cooked Food^ Homemade Pastries^ Delicious Ice-Cold SaladsI Both' Men and Women ServedI at Breakfast, Lunch and^ Dinner EVERY FRIDAY NIGHTFRATERNITY ANDSORORITY NITEat theDIL - PICKLE CLUB18 Tooker PlaceEnter through famous "Hole inthe Wall”858 N. STATE ST.Famous Colored ‘Honeycomb’Orchestra Six 1. M. GridironMatches For TodayToday’s games on the Intra¬mural Touchball schedule will fea¬ture six comibats. The most im¬portant fray is that between PhiPsi, 1928 champion, and D. U., astrong contender. The games areas follows:3:00—Kappa Sigma vs. S. A. E,Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Phi B, D,Phi Psi vs. D. U.4:00—Z. B. T. vs. Alpha Delta PhiSigma Nu vs. Chi Psi.Alpha Sigma Phi vs. Blake Hall.home with a 7 to 7 tie on theirrecord. The Zuppke group took thechampionship th^ last two seasonsand are putting forth an effort toregain it this year, but they are dueto meet plenty of hardships on theirway to the pennant.Ohio State won from the Wolver¬ines by a perfectly executed pass.Ohio marked up their second con¬ference win while Michigan wereforced to take their second beatingby a 7 to 0 score. The pass whichcaused the damage was tossed byHolman and was nipped from theair by Fesler.At the close of the third period ofthe Gopher-Purple tilt, Minnesotawas the under-dog 14 to 9. CoachSpears thereupon called out his re¬serve strength and sent them againstthe leading Wildcats. The finalscore was 26 to 14. The most form¬idable of the Gopher backs wasPharmer who is now leading the BigTen point scorers by virtue of histwenty points. MINOR INJURIESHAMPER MAROONGRID PRACTICEBurgess With Bad KneeHeads List ofCripplesAnother week has passed and inits fold it has brought a twin vic¬tory to the scrapping Maroons; butin its wake it has left a short listof injured. It might sound like a“morning after the night before,”tale but in reality it is just a blueMonday after a double victory onSaturday.Burgess seems to be the most se¬riously injured player in the lot andaccording to the statement of Dr.Benson, he will be out for at leastthree weeks. His injury came inthe form of a “cavin” of the knee,received in last Saturday’s game.Those that are slightly injured,and it is predicted that they will bein the Purdue game, are: Jersild,Temple, Heywood, Bluhm, Marshall,Greer, Kelly and Horwich. Jersildis suffering from a back injurywhich turned out to be kidney trou¬ble. Temple was bruised in thechest and will be back in few days.Kelly with a sprained ankle andHarwich with a charley horse aretaking some light practice and willalso see action in the Boilermakertilt.CLOTHES$35, $40, $45, $50Suits and Topcoatsthe • HubHenry C. Lytton & SonsState and JacksonCHICAGOl 18 So. MichiganTSfo USE CRYING over spilled milk.** Somesmokers at the top—others have to **smoketheir way up."But if you haven’t been getting your share ofaroma, flavor, richness—now's the time to trythe short-cut. In a cigarette it’s taste; inChesterfield it’s“TASTE above everything MILO ... and yetTHEY SABSPyOiesterfleldk.. .L TUKMbH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but CROSS-BLENDEDPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 22, 1929MAJOR CHRISTIANAPPOINTS THIRTYR. O. T. C. OFFICERS(Continued from page 1)assigned to the University R.O.T.C.unit by the Sixth Corps Area head-quartrs. Mmbers of the departmentinterpret this large enrollment tomean that interest in Military train¬ing is increasing. They point out thatgovernment allotment in funds is in¬sufficient to provide for the increasednumber of students in the depart¬ment. Hardin eliminated any chance of a ;distribution of votes of the low man. ;The Undergraduate Council, on jthe recommendation of Professor jKerwin has called a complete new jregistration of the Junior class whichwill take place Wednesday in frontof Cobb hall from 9 to 3. The oldregistration has been ordered de¬stroyed. The third election willthen be held Friday after the newregistration has been completed. Plan Skull and CrescentDance THIS WAY OUTREELECT JUNIORSRESULT OF TIE AS(Continued from page I)bringing the final tally to Wingate27, Hardin 25 and Fish 25. A maj¬ority of 39 is necessary for electionin-as-much as one more than halfthe total number of ballots cast isrequired. The tie between Fish and I-M DEPARTMENTSTUDENT DEBATINGGIVES AWARD FOR(Continued from page I)7:00 o’clock. The Union follows par¬liamentary law in its debates. It hasan executive committee composed of apresident, secretary, and treasurer,all of which are elected. There isno membership fee, and no facultyfinancial support. Professor Nelson,head of the Public Speaking De{>art-ment, has been asked to be the facultyadvisor. (Continued from page 1)dent; Dawson Snideman, Chi Psi,vice-president; Gil White, Alpha Del¬ta Phi, secretary; and Paul Stagg,Psi Upsilon, treasurer,Acording to Joseph Temple thenewly elected president, the 1929 jdance of the Skull and Crescent is jintended to l>e one of the most out- jstanding events in the societty’s his- jtory. iPATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERS (Continued from sports page)prayed with tears in their eyes, andhow they won a moral victory—^well,now is the time for all good Maroonsupporters to come to the rescue. Isuggest we have services in theChapel before the game. If we prayhard enough, our boys are certainof reward. Just what the rewardwill be is yet to be found out. Didn’twe lose to Purdue, 40-0 last year?Well, hurry up then, Hank, and startpraying right now. I’M join youshortly.Regards,OSCAR. CLASSIFIED ADSWANTED—Young woman to giveservices in home with children in ex¬change for board, room, and com¬pensation. Normal 8070. ter overcoats. Call Hyde Park 3250or 5725 Woodlawn Ave.FOR SALE — Buick Roadster;winter enclosure. Reasonable. CallShoreland Hotel, Room 1006. 1 FOR SALE — Winton sport tour-} ing, latest model, mounted discI wheels; rear windshield; excellentt condition. Just overhauled. $200cash. Midway 8671.FRATERNITYJEWELRY STATIONERYDANCE FAVORSSpies Brothers, Inc.27 E. MonroeAt Wabash St5th Floor TERESA DOLANBEN SMITZDORFSchool of Dancing1208 Fast 63rd StreetYoung and old taught to dance..Adults’ lessons strictly private. Noone to watch or embarrass you.Day or EveningTelephone Hyde Park FOR SALE—Two first class win- 1 LOST—Lady’s wrist watch, white' gold, Oct. Friday, bet. Wiebolt &j Cobb. REWARD. Return to Beat-i rice Metz. Kenwood 7187.KENWOOD TEAROOMEvening Dinner 65c4:30 to 8:00Luncheonn to 2:00Sunday Dinner 90c12 to 8:006220 Kenwood Ave.MIDway 2774 t GREGG COLLEGE !I Home of Gregg Shorthand |I Thirty-fourth Year 5“ S|>erint riasses in shorthand and type* *S writinK for Colletre Htudenti* ... in your S- sparo time, days or eveniiiits- Learn ?i OreKK shorthand. the fastest known ^i mot hod of writiniT. =^ Write for detail, of our ahort. intenalTe §i Collerr courte and FREE BOOK OF ?5 FACTS. SI . 225 Wabash Avenue, North 2: * Phone State 1881 Chicago, Ill. -© 1929. Liggbtt a Myfrs Tobacco Co,%ohawK'Daniel Hays GlovesGloves. . by . -Daniel HaysAt the game, in the motor car—these soft, finely grained leatherswill be a constant source of en¬joyment. A firm grip at thewheel, infinite wear, as immacu¬late after washing as on the firstday. The hand-drawn back andhand-sewn wrist give it smart¬ness.Winter’s Men’s Shop1357 East 55th Street“THE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE SHOP ’BOOKS BOOKS BOOKSThis Fall five times as many books are being issued by the Publishing Firms of the United States as were issued4during the same time last year. We welcome you to loo k over our selections from these many titles.Woodworth^s Book StoreGifu and Stationery 1311 E. 57 ST. TELEPHONE HYE PARK 1690 AND 7737 Typewriter.OPEN EVENINGSX