Vol. 31. No. I UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER. 24, 1930 Price Five CentsVETERAN BACKFIELDjMAROONS’HOPE FORSUCCESSFUL SEASONStagg Begins Thirty-Ninth Year AsCoachSECRET PRACTICESForward Wall Hit HardBy Graduation; MayBe Weak Stagg to TrainPat Page’s SonAlthough Pat Page, footballmentor of Indianapolis, could wellemploy any football ace thatcame his way, he is sending hishis son, Harlan Page, **170,punter, passer and tackier,” towork under Coach Stagg and earna medical degree on the Midway,rather than at Indiana.Harlan Page enters the Unirer*sity this quarter as a freshmanbecause Pat Page, his father andone noted for having homo downon chemistry and an end positionwhen playing for Stagg years ago, 'declares it is better for a boy toattend school away from homeand not play under his father,and, secondly, because Pat Pagebelieves “Stagg is the greatestcoach of all.” HIKTOFACnvmES nFTY-NINE HONOROPEN TO FRESHMEN STUDENTS NAMEDREORGANIZED LAWThe high walls of the practiceheld on Greenwood avenue and the, — ^hawk-eyed surveillance of the gate i SCHOOL EINLAROESkeepers are succeeding in prevent- pa |-i|t| •T'Ving the football citizenry from get-|ting the ‘‘inside dope” on the mys- ] «terious Maroons. Amos Alonzo j Extra Leg^al Curriculum Is\ Stagg, in his thirty-ninth year asI guardian of the University’s grid- jI iron hopes, is doing things behind |I those gray walls.A Veteran BackfialdOn a backheld composed of suchmen as Captain Errett Van Nice,Walter Knudson, Joe Temple, andPaul Stagg, the “Old Mah” places hishopes for a reasonably successfulconference season. In practicescrimmages against the reserves, thiscombination shows speed, endur¬ance, and ability to execute thehighly coordinated plays which arecoming to replace the smashing lineplay of former days.There is plenty of resci've ma¬terial, too, to plug up this rirst-string backfield. Don Bimey, anexcellent punter and alert defensiveback, is one of the products of lastyear’s loudly hailed freshman team.Bob Wallace, another sophomore, isgreat in a broken field. Ed Stack-Jer, a freshman gridder of twoyears ago, has returned to lend hisplunging and defensive talents.Louis Kanne has been getting offlong punts with gratifying consist¬ency.The Line a QueationBut the line is a different story.Minus Buck Weaver's brawn at cen¬ter, the forward wall is anything butunyielding. While there is plenty ofwilling material for Coach Stagg tolabor with, practically the v^holestring lacks experience. Andy Bris-len, a veteran guard, may play atthe pivot position if Keith Parsonsand Ray Zenner, sophomores, fail tofill the bill. At guards are Brislenand Stanley Hamburg. Ken Mac¬kenzie has been working in both thebackfield and the line, as fullbackand guard.Horwitz, Reiwitch and Cassels arepossibilities at tackle. All three havehad some experience. At end, Ber¬nard Wien, who saw action last yearin several battles, notably Princeton,is expected to prove a decided fac¬tor in the forward passing attack.With Van Nice tossing the passesand Wien catching them, aerial pros¬pects look bright. Other ends areTom Cowley, who played last year,and Frank Thomson, a sophomore.Stiff ScheduleWhat Coach Stagg can do withthis array of athletes it is impossibleto predict. What he did last yearwith an even less brilliant aggrega¬tion, he will undoubtedly improveupon. The schedule is at least asstiff as last year’s, with Wis¬consin carded for the secondweek. Princeton, vanquished lastyear by a 15-6 score, will play onStagg field November 1. Reportsfrom the Tiger training camp indi¬cate an orange and black eleven ofabout the same strength as the pre¬vious squad.The complete schedule is: October4, Ripon College and Hillsdale Col¬lege, at Chicago; October 11, Wis¬consin at Madison; North CentralCollege of Naperville, at Chicago;October 18, University of Florida atChicago; November 1, Princeton Uni¬versity at Chicago; November 8, Pur¬due University at Chicago; Novem¬ber 15 University of Illinois at Chi¬cago; November 22, University ofMichigan at Ann Arbor. Added; Admission to BeMore RigidChanges in the policy of the lawschool, affecting the entire organiza¬tion from the scope of curriculum toadmission requirements of candidatesfor entrance, have been announcetiby Dean Harry Bigelow. The inno¬vations have been affected with adual aim to weed out unlikely can¬didates and give unusual studentsunusual opportunities; and to bringthe professional curriculum intocloser harmony with modern eco¬nomic conditions^ and enlist the aidof p<x-ial scientists in legal research.k • , IAdd Four ProfessorsThis latter change, which is inaccord with President Hutchin’s planof cooperation between departments,includes the appointment of four ex¬perts in non legal fields and the ad¬dition of seven seminar courses out¬side the usual curriculum. Dr.Franz Alexander, German psychia¬trist, Dr. Mortimer Adler of Colum¬bia, Dr. Quincy Wright, of the Po¬litical Science department; and Dr.Simeon Leland, of the Economics de¬partment, will conduct the extra-legal courses.Legal Aptitude Test Added.Additions to the regular facultyinclude Charles 0. Gregory of Yale,Wilbur G. Katz of Harvard, andDonald Slesinger, Executive-secre¬tary of the Local Community Re¬search committee.Admission requirements, in addi¬tion to the custon»ary twenty-sevenmajors, will include a legal aptitudete.st, an intelligence test, the sub¬mission of an application form con¬taining information not disclosed bycollege records, and a personal inter¬view with an officer of the Lawschool.Freshman PiratesHunt for TreasureFreshman and Sophomore men andwomen will unite in emulating Cap¬tain Kidd and his consorts when theycombine forces in Saturday’s Treas¬ure Hunt, starting at 2:30 from IdaNoyes hall. The trailing of clewsabout campus will be followed bydancing, ping-pong and cards, andthe consumption of the commontreasure, all a part of the afternoonOpen House policy.Guests will leave in groups to pur¬sue a hidden course about the quad¬rangles, and while there will be acommon loot to be divided among allthose who follow the route to thefinish, the winning crew will berewarded with additional prizes. Noallowance will be made for teamsstarting late, though they will gettheir “cut” of the refreshments.For those who do not care to danceto the new Ida Noyes’ panatrope, theentire resources of the building willbe thrown open, where they mayplay ping-pong in the trophy galleryon the second floor, cards in theY. W. C. A. room at the east endof the second floor, and where theymay lounge in the several rooms pro¬vided for that purpose. Publication, Social, and j Juniors and SophomoresDram^ic Posts Are AwardedOffered q l i u*ocholarshipsFreshmen whose interest in acollege education includes not only ; Fifty-nine University students,courses of instruction offered by the i twenty of whom will be juniors andfaculty, but also extra-curricular /thirty-nine sophomores, were namedactivities, will find the following j honor scholars recently by Deancampus activities open to freshmen, j Chauncey S. Boucher. They ledFreshman Women’s Club and Green ! last year’s sophomore and fresh-Cap Club ' man classes, respectively, in grades.AH Freshman women become ' Each of the fifty-nine is eligiblemembers of the Freshman Women’s , f®*" a scholarship carrying a vary-club upon matriculation and are | stipend, but for such of therepresented by a council appointed I h<>nor scholars as have sufficientby the Board of Women’s Organ-: dT'-'^Ticial means, an alternate willizations. Ruth Willard, Foster Hall, j be chosen to receive the scholar-is the sponsor of this year. Green ! *bip.Cap, a similar organization for Majority From ChicagoFreshman men, is under the direc- ' , . . - ,tion of Raymond Freed, Chi Psi. 1 ^ large majority of the fifty-nine. I are men, and Chicago residents pre-^ ®**’' dominate. Only fourteen of theBoth men and women are admitted | fifty-nine are women, and only teninto the choir. Mack Evans in the i veside outside the metropolitanChoir Office, second floor of Rey- area. 20 Freshmen MeetHutchins as TeacherMeeting President Robert May¬nard Hutchins as a professor willbe the privilege of twenty fresh¬men, selected by the Universityas the “most promising” of theincoming students and thereforeentitled to attend the honorscourse which the President is in¬novating on campus.The course will be officiallyknown as General Survey 110,and its curriculum will includereadings in the classics of West¬ern European literature, greatoriginal works in poetry, drama,fiction, history, philosophy, and astudy of literary trends in classi¬cal, medieval, and modern cul¬tures.Class will meet for a two hoursession once each week over aperiod of two years, at the end ofwhich time those who have suc¬cessfully completed the work willbe awarded six credits. Dr. Morti¬mer Adler of the Philosophy de¬partment will collaborate withPresident Hutchins at these week¬ly sessions. PRESIDENT HUTCHINSWECOMES CLASS OF1934 TO UNIVERSITYInaugurates Busy PeriodFor 750, NewStudentsADOPT NEW TESTSBoucher, Gilkey, and EastAlso Will EiXtendGreetingsnolds Club, is in charge. Try-outswill be announced in The DailyMaroon.Dramatic AssociationThe Dramatic association sponsorsa tea every Thursday afternoon inthe Tower room to which everyoneis welcome. A play with an all-freshman cast is given during theautumn quarter. Other produc¬tions in which freshmen may takepart are given during the rest ofthe year. Blackfriars is an or¬ganization of men which puts on amusical production every spring forwhich freshmen are eligible. Mirroris the corresponding women’s or¬ganization which provides oppor- Those named sophomore honorscholars are: Isadore A. Aarons,Savannah, Georgia; Herman S.Block, Chicago; Ralph B. Bowersox,Chicago; Clara Frances Breslove,Oak Park, Ill.; Cecil Edward Combs,Dallas, Texa.s; Lloyd J. Davidson,, . m n rLouisville, Ky.; Thomas Frances | Alumm to r oot Bill from$3000 DEFICITREPORTED FOR“SMART ALEC”Deegan, Chicago; Harold B. Dunkel,Indianapolis, Ind.; Richard V.Ebert, Chicago; Mildred Eichholz,Cicero, Ill.; Martell M. Gladstone,Chicago; Louis Allan Gusler, OakPark, Ill.; Alice Hamburger, Chi¬cago; Marjorie Hamilton, Chicago;Bion B. Howard, Chicago; ElenoraG. Johnson, Chicago; Mildred H. C.Johnson, LaPorte, Ind.; Maurice Profits of PreviousProductions(A complete financial report ofBlackfriars is reproduced on page7).“Smart Alec,” 1930 Blackfriarsproduction, resulted in a net deficit^ of over three thou.sand dollars, ac-Vunities for . women .ir,' fPs’^kersburg, W. Va., Junior cording to the financial statement ofthe stjio-P. James Scheibler. Chi Ghicago; Ruucit E. -evin, Gladys H. Un.versity AaditcrChicago; Norman L. Luster, Chi- Freshmen week starts today. WithI President Hutchins’ address at 8:30this morning to the 750 freshmen se¬lected from about 1,400 applicantsthe class of '34 will be welcomed toI the University. Among the otherspeakers at the Mandel hall meet¬ing are Dean Chauncey S. Boucherof the Colleges of Arts, Literatureand Science who will speak on “Ed¬ucational Guidance”; Allen East,president of the UndergraduateCouncil, who will welcome thefreshmen on behalf of the under¬graduate body, and Dean Gilkey ofthe University Chapel.RegistrationFollowing this meeting, registra¬tion for freshmen will be held inMandel hall from 9:30 until 12:00and from 2:00 until 5:00. Fresh¬men will be given appointments formeetings with their deans and reg¬istration. An exhibition tennismatch will be staged upon the Uni¬versity Avenue courts at 58thStreet at 3:00 and Freshmen wom-the stage. James Scheibler, ChiPsi, can provide further informa¬tion regarding the Dramatic associa¬tion, Martha Yaeger, Foster hall,for Mirror, and George Mahin, BetaTheta Pi, for Blackfriars.PublicationsFreshmen may work on thePhoenix and Cap and Gown staffs.The Daily Maroon will conduct a cago; John M. Lynch, Chicago;Isabel D. Macleod, Chicago; Os¬car C. Orneas, Chicago; Keith I.Parsons, Davenport, Iowa; ^alphM. Perry, Chicago; Harold Plumley,OalfFark, Ill.; Leo Rabinowitz,Chicago; John C. Ransmeier, Jr.,Chicago; Herman Ries, South Bend,Ind.; Oscar L. Scherr, Chicago; Samtraining school which all freshmen j Schoenberg, Chicago; Paul E.(Continued on page 8) ' (Continued on page 8)THE FRESHMAN PROGRAM;SEPTEMBER 24 - 25Wednesday, September 24th:8:30 General meeting of all entering freshmen, Mandelhall. Opening address of welcome by PresidentRobert M. Hutchins. Address of welcome by AllenEast, President of the Undergraduate Student Council.Address of welcome by Charles Whitney Gilkey, Deanof the University Chapel. “Educational Guidance” byChauncey S. Boucher, Dean of the College of Arts,Literature and Science.9:30-12 Registration, by appointment. Mandel hall.2-5 Registration by appointment. Mandel hall.3 Exhibition tennis match. University Avenue Courts.4-5 Swimming pool, Ida Noyes hall, open to Freshmenwomen. Swimming suits (but not caps) will be furn¬ished. In charge of the Tarpon club.8 University reception to all Freshman students and theirparents, Ida Noyes hall. With assistance from CollegeAides and Marshals, under direction of the Marshalof the University.Thursday, September 25th8:30-12. Registration, by appointment. Mandel hall.9. Sight-seeing tours of the University. In charge of theMen’s Commission on Social Service and Religion, andthe Board of Women’s Organizations. Attendance byappointment. Harper, Mil.2-4:30. Registration, by appointment. Mandel hall.2. Sight-seeing tours of the University. In charge of theMen's Commission on Social Service and Religion,and the Board of Women’s Organizations. Attendanceby appointment. Harper Mil.4-5. Swimming pool, Ida Noyes hall, open to Freshmanwomen. Swimming suits (but not caps) will be furn¬ished. In charge of the Tarpon club.Party for men and women, “Big Ten Track Meet.’’ Incharge of the Undergraduate Student council, Reynoldsclubhouse.8. of Student Oi*ganizations.But possibilities that the deficitmight force Blackfriars to cease itsexistence as a campus organizationwere eliminated when the Black¬friars Trust Committee, comp sed offormer heads of the order, agreed tofoot the loss out of the fund it ad¬ministers, made up of profits of pre¬vious shows.Plan Complete ReorganizationA complete reorganization of theorder if planned for this year, anda comn ittee made up of membersof Blackfriai*s, representatives ofthe University Board of Student Or¬ganizations, Publications, and Ex¬hibitions, and the trust committee,haf been working on a new consti¬tution.One Plan Rejected TO THE CLASS OF 1934:On behalf of the Officers, Trus¬tees, and Faculty I welcome you tothe Quadrangle.s. Those of you whoare returning appreciate the extra¬ordinary aiTay of opportunities of¬fered by the University. It will be apleasure to all of us to introducenew students to them.ROBERT MAYNARD HUTCHINS,President of the University.TO THE CLASS OF 1934:This day marks officially your en¬trance into the University of Chi¬cago “family” of students, alumni,faculty, and administrative officers.All the “older” members of thefamily are anxious that you, the“youngest” members, may have theOne such constitution was sub- best possible opportunities for edu-j mitted to the University board late j cational development. You can provelast year, and was rejected. The | that you are worthy of the oppor-; University board appointed a com-I mittee composed of Dean Merle C.(Continued on page 7)Place “C” Bookson Sale MondayI Student “C” books go on saleMonday, September 29, at the of¬fices of the Tickets committee in theWest stands, and will be availableto all registered students at tendollars. The books include admis¬sions to all sport events during theyear and the use of the tennis courtsin the spring quarter. The studentsale will continue for two weeks.Boom Ticket SalesPresent indications are that theticket sales for the 1930 footballseason will far surpass those of lastyear in spite of the highly advertisedbusiness depression. Re<iuests forseason books are equal to those ofprevious years, while the sale oftickets for single games is wellabove last year’s record. Fifty-seventhousand will be accommodated bythe stands, the erection of which isnow being rushed to completion.Tickets for single games may alsobe secured by students. These seatsmay be obtained in the usual way,but students will receive priority inthe allotment of seats. Applicationsfor these tickets should be placedwith the Football Tickets committeeas early as possible to insure goodseat location.Stagg f^ld is ready for the grid(Continued on naire 8> tunities which this family member¬ship entails by using them wiselyand to the utmost of your capacity.C. S. BOUCHER,Dean of the Colleges.en will have the opportunity toswim in the Ida Noyes pool from4:00 until 5:00. At 8:00 in theevening the annual University re¬ception to freshmen and their par¬ents will be held in Ida Noyes.College aides and marshals will as¬sist under the direction of RobertValentine Merrill, head marshal.Tomorrow registration will con¬tinue from 8:30 until 12:00. Forthose who do not have to registersight-seeing tours of the Universitywill be held under the auspices ofthe Men’s Commission on SocialService and "Religion and the Boardof Women’s Organizations.* Thesetours start from Harper Mil at9:30 and 2:00. In the afternoonanother registration period will beheld from 2:00 until 4:30 and an¬other swimming hour will be held inIda Noyes from 4:00 to 5:00. Inthe evening a party will be held inthe Reynolds club at 8:00 for bothmen and women. A “Big TenTrack Meet” will be the feature ofthe evening. The UndergraduateCouncil is sponsoring the entertain¬ment.Scholastic Aptitude TestsThe third day of Freshman week,Friday, will see the two last reg¬istration periods at 8:00 and 2:00and two more sight-seeing tours willbe held at 9:30 and 2:00. A mix-(Continued ^'n page 8)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24., 1^3034^ Satlg ifflar00ttFOUKOSO IN 1901THE OFFICIAL STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOPublished morninKS, except Saturday, Sunday and Monday, during the AutumnWinter and Springs quarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University Ave.Subscription rates $3.00 per year; by mail. $1.50 per year extra. Single cbpies, live-eents each.Entered as second cla^s 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 AssociationEDGAR A. GREENW.^LD, Editor-in-ChiefABE L. BLINDER, Business ManagerJOHN H. HARDIN, Managing EditorMARION E. WHITE, Woman’s Editor' ALBERT ARKULES, Senior EditorASSOCIATE EDITORS ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERSWALTER W. BAKER ROBERT T. McCarthyMARGARET EGAN JAMES J. McMAHONHERBERT H. JOSEPH, Jr. NED P. VEATCHJANE KESNERLOUIS N. RIDENOUR. II SOPHOMORE ASSISTANTSMERWIN S. ROSENBERG HERBERT BERMANGEORGE T. VAN DERHOEF JOHN CLANCYSOPHOMORE EDITORS RICHARD DEUTSCHBION B. HOWARD FRANCIS FINNEGANJOHN MILLS DAMON FULLERJ. BAYARD POOLE EDGAR GOLDSMITHGARLAND ROUTTJAMES F. SIMON CHARLES HOWEWARREN E. THOMPSON CHESTER WARDSOPHOMORE WOMAN EDITORSDOROTHY BARKMAN ALBERTA KILLIEMAXINE CREVISTON INGRBD PETERSENMARJORIE GOLLER RUTH WILLARDALICE HAMBURGER ELEANOR WILSON THEATREbyAlbert ArkulesTWO NEWCOMERSTwo newcomers—the freshmen and the revised version ofThe Daily Maroon—greet the campus today. To the freshmen,we of the staff extend our best greetings and felicitations and hopethat in some measure our success will be comparable to theirs.They of the class of 1934 enter with every advantage of one ofthe country’s greatest universities extended to them; our ad¬vantages and opportunities for success are as yet theoretical.The long debated change in the mechanism of The DailyMaroon is to be put into effect this year. The changes were notproduced from within, they were advocated and planned by mem¬bers of a higher board who based them on metropolitan newspaperexperience and founded them on what had proved to be journalistictruisms. As changes we believe we are safe in saying the:f are themost advanced in college newspaper circles and represent develop¬ments which far surpass those in institutions which harbor schoolsof journalism.The staff begins the year with the pledge to expend a maxi¬mum of effort in carrying out what is destined to be to thcir ad¬vantage and to the advantage of the campus at large. The DailyMaroon has ceased to be a gold mine for two people and will pro¬ceed as a business organization whose success is proportionate tothe support it receives from its readers.In turn the reader will receive in the way of a journalistic at¬tempt the best a revised system and carefully trained staff canoffer. TTie freshmen, whose solemn duty it has been in precedingyears to dance on the-toes of the staff for one solid quarter byway of gaining experience, will be placed in a training school andinstructed in the fundamentals of reporting and writing copy. Thusa smoother functioning organization is assured for the first quarterand a more efficient for the second.■* Changes in type and makeup have also been effected, mainlyto eliminate the primer appearance of the sheet. These changesrequire and effect greater printing expense and more content, butare hoped to offer the reader a more pleasing and comprehensivepaper. By way of bolstering up the caliber of the articles, menof civic and academic renown will from time to time contributearticles written exclusively for The Daily Maroon. Among thelist of notables who have willingly consented to write are Col.Robert Isham Randolph, Col. Noble B. Judah, Mayor William HaleThompson, Richard E. Hanley, and others. A special column willbe devoted to these compositions and will appear according toadvance announcements.In short The Daily Maroon has been altered to meet and facethe requirements of a leading university and to offer to the stu¬dents of such a university a paper commensurate with their in¬telligence. Every effort will be employed to carry out this pledgeand to improve with every opportunity. The Daily Maroon is nota charity organization; it solicits no funds to keep it running; itreceives no help from the University. It is a purely student organ¬ization, supported by student readers. As such it hopes that stu¬dent readers will not be wanting.The freshmen who enter today will have the greatest share incampus activities and will derive the most benefits from alterationsnow being made. To them, the campus leaders of the future. TheDaily Maroon extends a most sincere welcome to membership onits staff. They will not be neglected. The course in toe dancinghas bf fn abolished and in its stead a course in journalism has beeninaugi: rated. We ardently hope the freshmen will respond andtake advantage of the opportunity. .E. G. We shall be able to feel withinthe space of a fortnight the vibra¬tions of three very unique, not tosay, impressive movements in thelocal theatre. The Dramatic Leagueand the Theatre Guild will share thepleasant honors of providing theatre¬goers with the most distinguishedfare of the season, while the Good¬man Repertory Company, havingabandoned art after a five yearfinancial struggle, hopes to join itsmore famous contemporaries with arepertoire that holds promise.It is of especial significance thatwe find the League and the Guildcompeting this year on “even”terms. Only one year old, theLeague observes the Guild’s activ¬ities with a frosty and selfsatisfiedair. And why not? While theGuild was forced to meet the cap¬tious criticism of malcontents whowere finding fault with the plays of¬fered last year, the League, withan ostentatious flourish, took itsstand at the Princess and proceededto unfurl an impressive season’sj offerings. There is material for de¬bate, I grant you, in liking or dis¬liking “The Infinite Shoeblack,” or“The First Mrs. Fraser,” or “TheMatriarch.” But the more import¬ant fact is that these plays revealeda quality of authorship, a maturity,a deftness, a sincerity, such as wehave encountered chiefly only >inGuild plays.That we need organizations likethe Guild and the I^eague is indis¬putable. It is in a sense unfortun¬ate that the Guild has been made avictim of formidable criticism. Evi¬dences of displeasure with theGuild’s taste struck a consistentnote last year. In Chicago, the un¬dertones which almost materializedin a lively dissonance were neatlymuffled when “Strange Interlude”took the boards. It was a strategicand astute move. But in New Yorkwhere “Strange Interlude” had al¬ready been succeeded by O’Neill’s“Dynamo,” a ghastly failure, evenaccording to the holy words ofj George Nathan, O’Neill’s theatricalI godfather, and where one importa¬tion after another of the Guild’shad disappear^ with no better ac¬companiment than the raspingsounds of a belligerent public, theFirst Theatre of America had littleto exclaim about except, perhaps,its growing subscription list.But a closer inspection of thislively reaction reveals a less tangibleimplication, an animosity, naturalin its development, against the fas¬cinating monopoly that the Guildhas exercised in the theatre in thelast decade. The unflagging andnaive enthusiasm of a genuinelystarved public has become moretempered. The Guild still remainsan anomaly in the welter of currentpuerile offerings, top-heavy with sex,but it must move over now andI make room for such lusty organiza¬tions as the Dramatic League andEive LeGalliene’s repertory com¬pany. With interest spread out inseveral directions, reaction to theplays offered by the Theatre Guildthis season will bear, perhaps, themore discriminating quality of com¬parison with what the League doesand to extend the argument onestep further, with what the Good¬man organization will offer thisseason.It is a trifle amusing, in the lightof the preceding paragraphs, thatI am reminded by a casual glanceat the calendar that the Guild andthe League could make no otherchoice for an opening but October6th. On that evening, “Tonaze”will face a crowded and eager audi¬ence in the Princess, while in themore austere Blackstone the Guildwill keep faith with Bernard Shawby presenting “The Apple Cart.”All of which nicely forestalls anycomparison between the respectivemerits of Monsieur Pagnol and Mr.Shaw, at least on the opening night,anyway.Del Marsh Apts.6150 Dorchester Ave.2 room furnished kitchenette apts.Gas, light, electric refrigeration. 2blocks to University—1 block tothe I. C. and L. $50 up. PhoneHyde Park 6150.Dictionary of Chemical EquationsContains twelve thousand completed andbalanced chemical equations, classifiedand arranKed for ready reference. It isno more difficult to find a desired equa¬tion in this book than it is to find aword in the Standard Dictionary.U. of C. Bo'-Jcstore58*2 ELLIS AVE. - CHICAGO LIBRARIES^^CAGO,Welcome \j.i\IN THE NEXT WEEK YOU WILLLEARN MUCH ABOUT THE CAM¬PUS AND ITS TRADITIONS. SOMEOF THESE TRADITIONS HAVEGROWN UP AS THE RESULT OFTHE JUDGMENT OF THOUSANDSOF UNIVERSITY STUDENTS. THE•‘ELLIS TEA ROOM” IS ONE OFTHEM.YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOMEWHERE GOOD FOOD AND GOODSERVICE GO HAND IN HAND.WHETHER FOR BREAKFAST, LUN¬CHEON OR SUPPER, OR FOR THATMIDNITE BITE, ELLIS TEA IS AL¬WAYS ABLE TO SATISFY.MAKE IT YOUR “FOOD-HEAD¬QUARTERS” WHILE AT CHICAGO,AND JOIN THOSE WHO HAVEMADE IT A CAMPUS INSTITUTION.SPECIAL FRESHMAN LUNCHEONSAND SUPPERS SERVED ALL WEEK.ELLIS TEA ROOM938-940 East 63rd StreetFOOD HEADQUARTERS FOR THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO#1# 9o77xUTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930 Page ThreePltlNCErON OPENS SPECIAL SCHOOL FORASPIRANTS TO U. S. FOREIGN SERVICEA step toward providing a definitecurriculum for those interested inthe United States foreign service hasbeen made by Princeton university,which is opening a new school ofpublic and international affairs thisfall. Co-ordination of courses fromat least six departments of the uni¬versity, mostly in the humanitiesfield, will constitute the major pro¬gram of the new school.‘‘Broader Outlook Needed”According to Dewitt C.. Poole, aveteran of the American foreignservice and a member of the Prince¬ton advisory committee, ‘‘the newSchool of Public and InternationalAffairs will provide training for thosewho contemplate careers in the for¬eign service of the government or onthe foreign side of banking, busi¬ness, the press or the law. But itis intended that the school shall servealso the future workers in the domes¬tic field who may never leave theUnited States except on a holidayjourney. In our new situation they,too, need to be citizens of the worldin knowledge and outlook. No indi¬vidual and no business is any longerfree from the interplay of worldforces.” “The new school’s program will rep¬resent a coordination of four depart¬ments, history, politics, economicsand modern languages, with specialcourses in geogrraphy and publicspeaking. Two other features in theschool’s program will be the bringingto Princeton of distinguished Ameri¬cans and foreigners to lecture andconduct round table conferences onthe practical affairs of the world andthe encouragement of foreign study,scholarships for which will be pro¬vided to deserving students needingfinancial assistance.‘‘Shows Proffressive Spirit”Mr. Poole, in discussing the needfor the new school said:‘‘With revolutionary ‘speed we« have left behind the good old dayswhen some native intelligence and acourageous disposition were aboutall that was needed to win successin the midst of riotous plenty. Howis it now? At home, less naturalbut much more liquid wealth; thedevelopment of huge quasi-publiccorporations almost rivaling govern¬ment and a concurrent enlargementof operations of government itself.In foreign relations emergence into a commanding position’ among thenations and the unfolding of busi¬ness, demanding a wider intellectualsions. These changes have descendedupon us with disconcerting sudden¬ness, emanding u wicer intellectualgrasp on the part of our citizens anda leadership that is not omly intelli¬gent and honest but educated.‘‘In this posture of our public andinternational affairs it has beeQ nat¬ural that Princeton should take adecisive step. Historically dedicatedto the nation’s service, it was almostinevitable that she should acceptleadership in meeting new require¬ments. Now Princeton has disclosedby the establishment of the newschool an intention to co-ordinateand enlarge the facilities of study inthe public and international field, inpursuance of a definite objective.”Campus NotablesMourn Death ofMrs. H. P. JudsonFuneral services for Mrs. HarryPratt Judson, widow of the secondpresident of the University, were heldSaturday afternoon, Sept. 13th inthe University chapel. Pallbearerswere Mr. Harold H. Swift, Vice-president Frederic Woodward, DeanHarry Bigelow of the Law School;Dean Henry Gordon Gale of theOgden Graduate school of science;Mr. John Wentworth; and Mr. Her¬bert Bradley.Mrs. Judson was stricken earlythis summer while travelling inin Europe, where she had gone withMrs. Moses Wentworth and Mrs.Lawrence Williams to see the Pas¬sion Play at Oberammergau. Aban¬doning her tour, she went to theAmerican hospital in Paris and inthe middle of July returned to Chi¬cago, where she was placed underthe care of Dr. Knute Rueter atBillings Hospital.Death was due to carcinoma ofthe alimentary tract and brain, ac¬cording to attending physicians.Mrs. Judson, who was seventy yearsold and is su’-dved by her daughter,Mrs. Gordon J. Laing, wife of thedean of the Graduate Schools ofArts and Literature.TypewritersFor S2Je and ExchangeFor RentRepairedFOR SALENew and Rebuilt Portables—all makes.Language and Technical keyboards—easy payments.FOR RENTBoth Portable and Standard Machines.Rental payments applied on purchase.REPAIRSOur Repair Department will put your oldMachine in good condition./Woodworth’s Book Store1311 East S7th StreetTelephone Fairfax 2103OPEN EVENINGSmm THREE UNIVERSITYWOMEN APPOINTEDFULL PROFESSORSMiss Gertrude Dudley, Dr. EdithRickert, and Dr, Lydia J. Robertswere awarded full professorshipsduring the summer quarter by Presi¬dent Robert M. Hutchins. This ap¬pointment makes eight of the 200full professors at the Universitywomen.Miss Gertrude Dudley, head of thedepartment of physical education,came to the University as instructorin 1898. Since that time Miss Dud¬ley served as assistant professor ofphysical education at Barnard col¬lege from 1917 to 1919, and as as¬sociate professor of physical educa¬tion at the University from 1919to 1930.Dr. Lydia Roberts, professor ofEnglish, came to the University asassistant professor of English in1924. Dr. Rickert received her A.B. degree from Vassar college andher Ph. D. from the University. Herfirst hovel, “Severn Woods,” ap¬peared last year.Dr. Lydia Roberts, profesor andchairman of tha department ofhome economics, became associateprofesor at the University in 1928.Dr. Roberts re:eived both her Ph. B.and Ph. D. at the University. Award Degrees to575 at Close ofSummer TermFive hundred and seventy-fivestudents were awarded degrees atthe summer convocatioi^ by Pro¬fessor Gordon Jennings Laing, Leanof the Graduate Schools of Artsand Literature, who officiated inthe absence of President Robert M.Hutchins. Dean Edith Abbott, ofthe graduate school of social serv¬ice administration, delivered theaddress on “The Univiirsity and So¬cial Welfare.”The first Doctor of Medicine de¬gree awarded from the new medicalschool on the University’s southside quadrangles, as distinct fromRush Medical school, was conferredupon William W. Redfern, who isalso a graduate of Michigan StateCollege and Johns Hopkins Univer¬sity.The degrees conferred at theconvocation were: 226 Bachelor ofPhilosophy degrees; two Bachelorof Law degrees; 271 Master of Artsdegrees; five Doctor of Divinitydegrees; twenty-one four-year cer¬tificates in medicine; twenty-oneDoctor of Medicine degrees; twentyDoctor of Law degrees, and sixty-three Doctor of Philosophy degrees. FIVE PROFESSORSGET SALARY RAISEUndergraduate TeachingBasis of AwardIn recognition of their excellencein the teaching of undergraduates,five members of the University fac¬ulty have received increases in sal¬ary, the money coming from aspecial fund established by an anony¬mous alumnus. The men who re¬ceived material recognition for theirservices are: Professor J. Harlan Bretz, of the department of geology;Merle C. Coulter, associate professorof botany; William T. Hutchinson,assistant professor of history; Jer¬ome G. Kerwin, assistant professorof political science; and lEinar Jor-anson, assistant professor of history.Seventy-one full professors are toreceive salary increases averagingseven hundred dollars within thenext year, twenty-three associateprofessors -will receive average in¬creases of $485, and fifty assistantprofessors will average increases of$470.Co-Eds.. PERMANENTofDISTINCTIVEBEAUTYWomen by the scores have come to knowthe distinctive beauty of our permanents. V.. /As a result they come here for all theirbeauty work. They have found by actualexperience that we go to every extreme togive the finest and most artistic beauty //treatment.Our Special Permanent Wave >. $3.00 Free SetThe Paris Swirl Wave $5.00 Free SetDuring the Week, Finger Wave 50cBeauty Shop - Zax Bros. Dept. Store1307-09 E. 63rd St. Dorchester 7586YOUNG MEN IN COLLEGE, DESIROUS OF POSSESS-IING CLOTHES DEVELOPED IN ACCORD WITHITHE BEST TRADITIONS OF STUDENT LIFE, WILLFIND THAT CURRENT PRESENTATIONS ARENOT ONLY SPLENDID AND APPROPRIATE BUTFAR REMOVED FROM THE ORDINARY, REPRE¬SENTING THE GREATEST POSSIBLE WORTHAT A MINIMUM OF COST. FOR YOUR CONVE¬NIENCE, ^•RUSS" CHRISTENSON, THE FINCHLEYREPRESENTATIVE, WILL EXHIBIT FINCHLEYAPPAREL AT COLLEGE AT REGULAR INTER-IVALS AND AT OTHER TIMES WILL BE FOUNDIIN THE SHOP TO FERSONALLY SERVE YOU.THREE-PIECE SUITS . . . FORTY AND FIFTY DOLLARSFOUR-PIECE SPORT SUITS . . . FIFTY DOLLARSTOPCOATS . . . FORTY AND FIFTY DOLLARSOVERCOATS . . . FIFTY DOLLARSREADY- TO-PUT- ONTAILORED AT FASHION PARKJackson Boulevard East of State ■/Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1930TRIANON‘‘World’s Most Beautiful Ballroom”COTTAGE GROVE AND SIXTY SECONDDANCING EVERY NIGHT BUT MONDAYDANCEwithWAYNEKINGSMIUNGJOHNNYMAITLANDALWAYSTWOORCHESTRASPLEDGE BUREAUESTABLISHED BYI -F COUNGLFor the purpose of eliminatingmany misunderstandings which havearisen in past rushing years, theInterfraternity Council has adopteda card filing system whereby eachpledge has his name officially reg¬istered in the central office on thesecond floor of the Reynolds club.Each fraternity will be given asufficient number of cards whichare to be filled out and delivered,not mailed, to the central office. Aman is not officially pledged un¬til the card is delivered. The filewill be in charge of the officers ofthe councilRegistration of^men pledged lastspring and during the summer maybe postponed until the first day ofFreshman week when the centraloffice will open. In event of re-elase, this headquarters must benotified at once. Lab Time Wasted;Will Be Cut—GaleAverage science students wastehalf the time they spend in thelaboratory, according to DeanHenry G. Gale of the OgdenGraduate School of Science. Lab*oratory methods in introductoryscience courses will be greatlycurtailed accordingly, in order togive the student a firmer basis ofthe fundamental theory.All the ordinary student needs,says Dean Gale, is enough train*ing in laboratory method to learnthe technique demanded. The stu*dent does not rediscover the lawsof nature and he knows it. Thecurtailment of time spent in thelaboratory, which will be effectedin all but research courses, willafford the student additional op*portunity for reading and class¬room work. ADD CHILDREN’SHOSPITAL CENTERSTO MEDIC GROUPMacInill^tn Author ofAtom-Building Theory(Advertisement)TWO DANCE BANDSEVERY THURSDAYHundreds of Extremely GoodLooking Young StrangersAppear and CaptivateLast Thursday told it’s own story.Dancing space was almost at a prem¬ium! It was a big crowd and ahappy and exceptionally good na-tured crowd. There were many wehad never seen before. If at anytime there were any set rules forany particular style of dancing theywere entirely forgotten at this time.Everybody appeared to have theirown ideas of just what a Collegiatestep or series of steps consisted of.No two couples seemed to dancealike. There were broad steps andmincing steps, half turns and bigswings and everything. Dependingupon a confidence inspired by thegeneral excellent propriety alwaysin evidence here, there were no floormanagers visible and pleasant to say,there was nothing apparent in thedance styles or manners requiringcensure or correction. This provesonce more that the kind of boys andgirls that dance here are naturallybred into the right conception of theright kind of public manner andAlternating with Wayne King wasSmiling Johnny Maitland, with hisvery best orchestra of our memoryand they acquired many new friendsand admirers.This “Collegiate Every Thursday”dance session bids fair to be the out¬standing dance event of each suc¬ceeding week.“Colllegiate” clicks right into pub¬lic fancy judging from the generalreception. It is evidently a fad anda fashion that will live for manyseasons.It brings out another of thegreater proportion of the youngerand more modern and sensiblysosphisticated element. Dr. W. D. MacMillan, professor ofmathematical astronomy at the Uni¬versity, has been accredited as theauthor of the atom-building theoryand of the theory that the universerejuvenates itself by the condensa¬tion of radium into atoms. Thetribute came in an article in “Sci¬ence” by Dr. Robert A. Millikan,President of the California Instituteof Technology, and •winner of theNobel Prize in Physics in 1923, atwhich time he was a member of theUniversity Physics department.Dr. Millikan, discussing the the¬ories, now partially substantiated,names Dr. Macmillan with Einsteinas pioneers in the theories first for¬mulated some twenty years ago.Professor F. R. Moulton and P. Har-i kins of the University are also men-! tioned as aiding in the early dis- With the addition of two newunits for the care and cure of Chi¬cago destitute and crippled children,the University has become one of thelargest child medical centers in theworld. The new units. Hick’s Ortho¬pedic Hospital and the McElweeMemorial Hospital, were made pos¬sible after ten years of planning bygifts of $300,000 each from Mrs.Gertrude Dunn Hicks and Mrs. Eliza¬beth McElwee.Faces MidwayHick’s Orthopedic Hospital facesthe Midway with a three floor leveltoward Ellis Ave. and adjoins Bill¬ings on the east. The McElwee Hos¬pital forms an “L” wing with theHick’s unit, has a six floor level westalong Ellis Ave. from the Midway,and adjoins the surgical end of Bill¬ings devoted to orthopedic or sur¬gical care of children.The new buildings were designedby Coolidge and Hodgdon and arecomposed almost entirely of wardswhich contain a total of 100 beds.The children have open air playingspace on the roof in addition to a large playroom under glass. Oper¬ating and X-ray work can be donein Billings. In the McElwee build¬ing there is room for the latesttherapy equipment; and here will bethe clinical and teaching headquar¬ ters of the University Medical schooland the center of research on cor¬rective work for deformed children.Another building soon to beerected is the Graduate School ofEducation which will occupy the site between Blaine and Belfield halls.ClaAsrooms and oflilces -will be con¬structed on the first floor, the libraryon the second floor, and laboratoriesand aalitiorial offices on the thirdand fourth floors.SHOESSoledHalfMEN’S HATSCleanedandBlocked 35cRUBBER HEELS, 35cCountry Club ShoeRepairing2347 E. 7l8t Si.Phone Hyde Park 9669coveries.University Hotel5519 Blackstone Ave.HOME OF THE STUDENTBeautifully Furnished Rooms, each with PrivateTub and Sl)owerOnly 10 min. walk from CampusRates from $9.00 to $13.00 per weekNo Extra Charge for Two in Room A New Tea Roomthat will appeal toUniversity StudentsPHELPS AND PHELPS*NEW COLONIALTEA ROOM6324 Woodlawn AvenueA tea-room that is utterly new and different—dec¬orated and furnished in early American style likea way-side inn of Colonial days.You’ll be delighted with its quaint charm. Andmost of all, the delicious food is worth going milesout of your way to enjoy.Just a whisper south of 63rd St., this new tea¬room Is within easy walking distance of thecampus and those who have been there go backagain.Hours of ServiceS^.uncheons, 1 1 to 2:30 p. m 35c to 50c)inner, 5 p. m. to 9 p. m 75cLnday Dinner, 12 to 9 p. m $1.00Waffles, Salads and SandwichesVEverything just Like Home atPHELPS AND PHELPS*NEW COLONIAL TEA ROOM6324 Woodlawn AvenueNote: Phelps and Phelps’ other shop Is located in the I. C.Station at 1423 East 63rd Street. Try it sometime.Always the Same Good Food!TYPEWRITERSSchool Opening SpecialsUsed PortablesAll the better makes of used and rebuiltPortables reconditioned in our own shop,and brought to the peak of efficiency byskilled mechanics. Every machine is guar¬anteed against defective workmanship andmaterial. $17.50 upRepair ServiceOur unlimited facilities assure you of quickand efficient repair service on all makesand models of typewriters. Three skilledmechanics to serve you.TYPEWRITERS FOR RENTLowest Rates in Hyde Park Rebuilt CommercialsUnderwoods—Royals—L. C. Smiths—RemingtonsEvery machine rebuilt in our own shop bythe “Phillips Process’* of fine rebuilding.When you purchase one of these machinesyou are assured of getting the finest thatmoney can buy. Only the best workman¬ship and material are used. Every machineis guaranteed unconditionally. Reasonablypriced.New PortablesRoyal — Corona — UnderwoodRemington—Bar-UniversalAll the Latest Colors and TypesCASH OR TERMSFirst Showing of the Bar-Universal PortableCome in and let us demonstrate this new wonder Portable. The only Por¬table made with a 15-inch width carriage. Made in three sizes.$50 $65 $soPHILLIPS BROTHERSThe Typewriter SpecialistsWe Serve With a Spirit That Money Cannot Buy1214 £. 55th Street2 Block* North and 1 block East of Mandel Hall Plaza 2673Open Till 9 P. M. Wayne King and his orchestra open at Trianon, Saturday Night,Oct. 4. Continuous dancing 8:30 to 2 A. M. Johnny Maitlandand his Collegian is the associate and alternating orchestra.Always 2 orchestras Saturday night.No Price Cut onNew Text BooksThere will be no reduction in theprice of text books this quarter ac¬cording to a statement issued by theTJniversivy Bookstore where texts aresold at the list price of the publi¬shers. Selling at this list price netsthe Bookstore a profit of fifteen per¬cent which falls to a mere five per¬cent when they subtract the tenpercent overhead necessary to runthe department. Second hand textsare in gjeat demand by the Book¬store and students are asked to sub¬mit used books for an estimate. THE D .. \AR00N, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1930 Page Five‘American TextsAre Ultra Pure,’Says Dr. PierceThe Rental Library departmentopens this year with an increasedvolume of literature in fields bothfor reference and pleasure. Recentfiction is found on open shelvesthrough which students are free tobrowse. Books will go out at thesame rates as formerly, three centsa day with the minimum fee of tencents a book, and the maximum timelimit of three weeks.Reference books listed for specificcourses and sets of books which goout by the quarter, and modern fic¬tion comprise the growing stock.In addition to the usual studentpatronage, the Library will now beopen to outsiders as well. Thislatter is an accommodation to Uni¬versity employees and faculty wiveswho frequent the campus. The threatened bonfire of text¬books which contaminate Americanyouth by over-emphasizing Englandand King George need never belighted; for Dr. Bessie L. Pierce,associate professor of history at theUniversity, has just published a vol¬ume which vouches for the absolutepurity of some 400 textbooks in com¬mon use throughout the UnitedStates.She has analyzed histories, read¬ers, geographies, civic and economictexts; and her book “Civic Attitudesin American School Textbooks” citeschapter and verse which set forthnot merely the desired Americanpatriotism, but the ignominy of allother nations in comparison.England Our Enemy?I As for England, Dr. Pierce has! found that Mayor Thompson’s wor-! ries were ungrounded. England isI treated as America’s traditionalI enemy, only Germany receivingtreatment equally harsh. With theI possible exception of the World War,j no episode produces such animosityI as the Revolutionary War. Dr. PierceI goes so far as to question whether' this attitude tends to promote Anglo-■ American accord in the minds ofschool children.PLAN SERIES OFFRIDAY U. DANCES “France Is Our Friend”U Dances held on Fridays from3 to 5 will fill the long-felt need forsocial activity in University life andwill initiate a new system of inter¬class contacts, especially profitablefor entering freshmen. The firstdance will be held on October 3and will be followed by a series ofrallies during football season.Such a aeries of dances has beencontemplated for some time, in ap¬preciation of the school spirit theyhave encouraged at other Big Tenuniversities. No admission will becharged and students are invited toattend with or without dates. Musicwill be furnished by a four pieceorchestra and cheer leaders and en¬tertainment will foment a festivespirit. While England and Germany re¬ceive this verbal taboo, France isunanimously nominated to the posi¬tion of traditional friend. This atti¬tude is due partly to the Frenchassistance in the Revolutionary War: and partly to the alliance in theWorld War. The study further in¬dicates that the Spaniards and Portu-; guese fare badly, China is cited asan example of American generosity; to a weaker nation, w’hile Japan isi commended for the progressivespirit. The Dutch are praised for, industry and cleanliness, the Danes. for thrift, and the Irish for theirsense of humor and interest in' American politics.Dr. Pierce’s study is one of aseries on civic education that isbeing published by the University.Y.M.C.A. Cafeteria53rd Street at DorchesterWe Make a Hobby of Freah VegetablesA 65cSpecialDianer Serving Hours Home madePastrieseveryweek-dayeveaing BreakfastLunchDinner 6:30—9:0011:30—2:005:30—7:45 A 40cLunchat noonSundayBreakfastDinner 8:30—9:3012:00—2:00WE INVITE BOTH MEN AND WOMEN♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦4D. W. GRIFFITH’S“ABRAHAM LINCOLN”TAKES CHICAGO BY STORMTRIBUNE (Four Stare)—" ‘ABRAHAM LINCOLN’ one ofthe very fineat of audible films.” —Roberta NanglcHERALD-EXAMINER -‘‘Screen MASTERPIECE . . . Pow¬erful and human drama . . . Tremendous picture.”—Carol Frink.THE DAILY NEWS—‘‘GRIFFI’TH comes back WITH ABANG I . . . He has forRotten more aboirt pictures thanmost directors will ever know.” —Clark RodenbachAMERICAN—‘‘A SUBLIME CINEMA in an EXQUISITESETTING . . . WeTI recommend it to men and womeneverywhere—in short TO EVERYBODY.” —H^zel FlynnEVENING POST—‘‘Ranks among the FINEST OF GRIFFITHPRODUCTIONS . . . His ■skill begins where that of othersends.” .—Genevieve HarrisDAILY TIMEIS (Four Diamonds)—‘‘Magnificent spectacle . . .Cast startlingly BRILLIANT in their roles . . . MAGNIFI¬CENT.” —Doris Arden.LIBERTY MAGAZINE (Four Stars')—‘‘A GREAT PICTURE... No one can atford to miss “ABRAHAM LINCOLN.”—Kate CameronPUNCH & JUDYTHEATRE uniquecinemaVan Buren at Michigan AvenueBECAUSE OF POPULAR DEMANDTwo Matinees Daily—2:30 and 6 p. m.—Price $1.00Evenings at 8:30—Price $2.00ALL SEATS RESERVED(Phone Harrison 6800)note:—This production will not be shown in any theatrein Illinois this year. Welcome Freshmen!toTHE CAMPUS STORESforBOOKSGENERAL BOOKS OF ALL PUBLISHERSTEXTS-NEW AND SECOND HANDRENTAL LIBRARYStationery - Fountain Pens - C JewelryAthletic Goods - Pillows and PennantsKodaks - Films - Developing and PrintingTYPEWRITERSBought - Sold - Exchanged - Rented - RepairedStudent LampsImported PotteriesPost Cards - EtchingsStationery and Engraved CardsVISIT OUR GIFT SECTIONLeather GoodsBook Ends - Wall ShieldsHand Wrought BrasswareGreeting Cards for All OccasionsUSE OUR POSTAL STATIONThe University of Chicago Bookstores5802 Ellis Avenue (Ellis Hall) Room 106 Blaine Hall.IlKhi.^|wch re-.sSBle upon the7 of 1980. Theu on page 14)Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, WHJNESDAY, SEPT^Ba^r i4. 1930GAY SOCIAL WHIRLFACES FRESHMENFreshman Week, that round ofactivities into which freshmen areplungred from today onward, hasfor its definite purpose the socialorientation of newcomers to life onthe Quadrangles, an introduction tothe activities which they will enter,the upperclassmen who will be ofaid to them, and the classmen whowill be their friends.Making freshmen “feel at home”will begin tomorrow when membersof the Men’s Commission and theBoard of Women’s Organizationsconduct sightseeing tours of theUniversity. Open house for fresh¬men will be held during the entireWeek in the trophy gallery of IdaNoyes hall, under the auspices ofthe Women’s Athletic Association.Plans for these informal “cozies”have been made by a Freshmancommittee whic^i will continue toplan social events throughout theyear.For the AthletesAll athletically-inclined Fresh¬men, and all those who do not leanin that direction, are invited to at¬tend the “Big Ten Track-meet”Thursday evening at 8 in the Rey¬nolds clubhouse. There will be atwenty-five yard dash, discus throw,boing, shot-put, and relay races.The men will be amused by the spec¬tacle of a hammer-throw for wom¬en, and the program will end witha cross country race. Refreshmentsand dancing will complete the eve¬ning in an nnathletic manner. TheUndergraduate Student council whichsponsors the meet has invited ashosts and hostesses Dean and Mrs.Chauncey Boucher, Dean and Mrs.Charles Gilkey, Mrs. Edith FosterFlint, Profecsor and Mrs. Robert V.Merrill, Mrs. George Goodspeed,Walter G. Preston, and Professorand Mrs. Lennox Gray.Mixer (or Freshmen OnlyThe Undergraduate Student Coun¬ cil will again be host at an exclu¬sive Mixer to which Freshmen onlyare invited on Friday afternoon at4:30 in the Reynolds clubhouse. Thisorganization is anxious to meet allthe entering students and to havethem meet each other. Fred Wit-mer’s band, and refreshments of icecream and cookies will contributeto making the “mixing” process aplasant one. Dean and Mrs. Chaun¬cey S. Boucher and Professor andMrs. Merrill will be among the hostsand hostesses. Allen East, presidentof the Undergraduate Student coun¬cil, and Stanley Garpit, in chargeof the Mixer, combine in requestingall fraternities and clubs to urgetheir rushees and pledges to attendthe dance.A More Serious AspectA more serious aspect of what itmeans to be part of the Universitywill be impresed upon the minds ofentering students in the Talks toFreshmen Saturday at 11 in Mandelhall. Dean Chauncey S. Boucher,of the College of Arts and Litera¬ture, will preside, and Dean Fred¬eric Woodward, vice-president ofthe University, will speak on “FirstPrinciples of College Life andWork,” Professor Alonzo Stagg,Director of the Department ofPhysical Culture and Athletics willfollow him with a welcome for thefreshmen whose attendance to thisassembly is required.Freshmen women will lunch tothe tune of college songs Mondayat 12:30 in Ida Noyes hall as theguests of the Board of Women’sOrganizations. Jean Searcy, chair¬man of the Board urges all Fresh¬man women to tell their upperclasscouncillors if they can be present atthe luncheon. It is a purely socialfunction which provides an oppor¬tunity for freshmen to meet eachother and members of the Board.Activities for WomenAt 2:30 they will have a chancecampus activities, which will be theto learn about women’s place insubject on review at the ActivitiesTea in Ida Noyes hall. A generalexposition of women’s work will begiven with emphasis on those phases Phi Bete InitiatesTen During SummerNine seniors and one juniorelected to Phi Beta Kappa, nationalscholastic society, were initiatednear the close of the summer quar¬ter. The seniors were James Brunot,Ruth Davidson, John R. Fall, LouisFeinberg, Eric Grimwade, WilliamT. Lyons, Martye Poindexter, Vir¬ginia Pope, and Zoe Singer.John M. Stevenson, a junior, waselected for having maintained anaverage of “A minus” for threeyears. The initiation was supervisedby Professor Henry W. Prescott,president of Phi Beta Kappa at theUniversity,open to entering women. Tea willbe served and prominent membersof faculty and undergraduate bodieswill be introduced.These festivities together with thetalks by faculty members are thecombined effort of the University towelcome the incoming students HOST OF ACTIVITIESOPEN TO FRESHMENCLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—3 double decked beds6 mattresses curtains and rugs.Priced reasonably. Phi Zeta Tauhouse, 5520 Kenwood Ave., Plaza0950.FOR SALE—Brand new trunk.Full size. Neverbreak brand. Dren-nan, 6429 Minerva Ave.WANTED—Young man to sellquick selling product among the stu¬dent's. Liberal commission. Call atDaily Maroon Office at 11:00 Thurs.,Septt 25. (Continued from page 1)can join, in preparation for a posi¬tion upon its staff. Further in¬formation regarding these publica¬tions may be obtained from RayVane, editor of the Cap and Gown;Julian Jackson, editor of the Phoen¬ix; and from Edgar Greenwald,editor in chief, Abe Blinder, busi¬ness manager, and Marion White,women’s editor of The Daily Ma¬roon. All publications have officesin Lexington hall.Religious Clubs and DepartmentalClubsThe “C” handbook has a com¬plete list of these clubs and thedates of their meetings are an¬nounced in The Daily Maroon.Clinic AuxiliaryThis organization is open to iwomen interested in hospital and |social service work. Cornelia Mac jClintock is in charge of details. The jMaroon contains announcements of Imeetings and activities.Federation of University Women jThe Federation is open to all |University women and is headed byRuth Earnshaw, Foster hall. TheUpperclass Counsellor system oc¬cupies the chief place in its program.Y. W. C. A.The office of the Y.W. C. A. is on the second floor of Ida Noyeshall. Lucia Downing, Foster hall,also will give information concern¬ing the organization.W. A. A.Membership in the Women’sAthletic Association is gained by awritten application to MargaretEgan, Beecher hall, the vice-presi¬dent. She will also give informa¬tion concerning the Tarpon club.Racket club, and Riding club forthose who are interested in swim¬ming, tennis, and riding. The of¬fice is in the Trophy Gallery ofIda Noyes hall.FRATERNITYJEWELRY STATIONERYDANCE FAVORSSpies Brothers, Inc .27 E. Monro« St.At Wabash • Randolph 4159 - 5th FloorFor Satisfactory LivingArrangements . . ,See theHomestead Hotel5610 Dorchester Ave. you have agreat dealto learn!an important thing to knowis the best place to eat ourup-to-date soda fountainwill serve you the bestyou should know the loca¬tion of a reliable druggist,our reputation has a solidfoundation in many yearsof service.ask the personwho knows, he• will tell you.the universitypharmacy1321 east 57th sLhyde park 0331Second Weekby Popular RequestCHICAGO’S PREMIERE‘The YeUow Pass’*Human Shadows in the Slumaof MoscowProduced and Acted byThe Moscow Art PlayersMore ^stoundinx Than “Ten Days”4 CHICAGO AVE..LIIiLMA o*'^ *^ ’*‘‘* MICHIGAN BLVD.Cont. 1 to 11 P. M. Mat. 560c, Eve. 75cTruthneeds no support;Sheaffer’sis the college favorite*Today there are more Sheaffer’s bou^tthan any other make; amon^ America’shundred leading colleges,’each registering1,700 or more students, Sheaffer’s salesovertop all others.With Sheaffer’s, the reason for such successisthattheseinstrumentsaresupremelywellsuited to the business of writing. First, thereis a Sheaffer’s Lifetime® pen point forevery hand. Second, each is a Balance® in¬strument, fitting the hand comfortably, tak¬ing class notes quickly, making lon^ themeseasy. Third, the Balance® contour is trulymodem, a happy blend of line and curve,the combination of utility witk beauty.And fourth, nobody can outlive his Life-time®pen’s^uaranteeofsatisfactoryservice.*Arecent survey made by a disinteresta^ organization showedSheaffer’s first in fountain pen sales amon^ the 100 leadingAmerican colleges having registration of 1,700 or more stu¬dents. Documents covering this survey are available to anyone.AT BETTER STORES EVERYWHEREThe ONLY genuine Lifetime® pen is Sheaffer’s; do not bedeceived! All fountain pens are guaranteed against defects,but Sheaffer’s Lifetime® is guaranteed unconditionally foryour life, and other Sheaffer products are forever guaranteedagainst defect in materials and workmanship. Green or BlackLifetime® pens, $8.75; Ladies’, $8.25. Black-and-Pearl De Luxeand Marine Green Lifetime® pens, $10; Ladies’, $9.50. PetiteLifetime® pens, $7 up. Golfor Handbag Pencil, $3.0thers lower.No. HTSC.MarineGreen,S4.00 SHEAFFEP’S%my PENS FFNCILS DESK SETS SKRIPW. A. SHEAFFER PEN COMPANY, FORT MADISON, IOWA, U.S. A.•Bw.o.8.pa.os. @w.a.8.p.c«.. im SAFETY SKRIP,SUCCESSOR TOINK, SK RIP-PILLED, 50c to $10.Carry Safety Skrip inyour luxate and tocla*«e*. Its leak-proof,practically unbreak¬able. Saves furniture,clothing, rubs, keepsthe fluid fresh, mekesall pens write batter.A Complete Line of Shaefer PensatBrandt Jewelry Co., Inc.1225 East 63rd Street ACCORDIONSTTiis Piano Accordion former¬ly sold for $130. Trimmedwith rhinestones, has 48 basskeys. Fine value for beginner.NowCompletewithCase ’79 .50 followed him to school one day.."ECHOPHONEPortable Radio'T^HIS is the new idea in radio. The ban¬tam Echophone is all-electric; hasscreen-grid tubes; and a dynamic speakerwith tone as mellow as a pipe. The Edio-phone is light, as portable as a lamp. Won¬derful for the dorm, in the hall or whereveryou are. Just plug it in a nearby socket.Beautiful walnut cabinet.TERMSIf you wish, you may use theLyon & Healy Deferred Pay¬ment Plan. CompletewitkTubes $gO.50Lvon/ OPENIn Woodlawn: 870 East 63rd StreetPlaza 3010THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1930 Page SevenBLACKFRIARS 1930 — “SMART ALEC”Statement of Receipts and ExpendituresMarch 3 to September, 10, 1930RECEIPTSBox OfficeLess Refunds $35.00. . Bad Checks 10.00Score Sales. Program AdvertisingLess Bad Accounts 15.00Reserve for Bad Accounts . . 25.00 $6,771.2545.00 $6,726.25478.251,021.2540.00 981.25Initiation Fees—147 @ $7 ...Msuling FeesTotal Receipts $8,515.14EXPENDITURESProduction ExpenseDirector $1,800.00Music 2,933.35Scenery 406.50Costumes 2,472.91Wigs 340.75Service of Janitors and EJectricians. . . 297.56Lighting ^ 9Properties 22.00Publicity 566.78Reynolds Club Checking Service 28.50Tickets and Envelopes 39.00Score 915.00Programs 1,241.78Photographs 127.00 $11,260.23Administration ElxpenseCap and Gown SpaceAuditing FeeMadison TripTelephoneTelegramsInterest on U. of C. LoanPins and Keys 150.00Initiation Elxpense 1-50Expense Accounts 63.15Informal Elntertainment 18.75Commons Dinner 80.0050.0075.0015.0011.806.253.13474.58Total Elxpenditures $11,734.81SUMMARYTOTAL EXPENDITURES $11,734.81TOTAL RECEIPTS 8,515.14NET EXPENDITURES 3,219.67ASSETSCashAccounts ReceivableLess Reserve . . . .Total Assets . .DEFICITLIABILITIESLoan due Trust FundAccounts Payable . . . 50.0025.00Total Liabilities 52.95$3,219.673,272.62250.003,022.62'3,272.62JOSEPH ODELL, AbbotJACK DIAMOND, HospitallerWelcome to Chicago, FreshmenFor All Social EventsSend Her a “Kidwell” Corsage(One Dollar and up)We also make a specialty of decorationsfor fraternity dancesJ. E. KIDWELLFlorist826 E. 47th StreetTelephone Kenwood 1352 Campus MemorialService Planned forProfessor MoorePlans are being made for a cam¬pus memorial service for professorAddison Webster Moore of the phil¬osophy department, who died inLondon while attending the Inter¬national Philosophical Congress dur¬ing August. Arrangements for aservice at the time of his death hadto be postponed because of the ap¬proaching close of the summer term.He had been a member of the facultysince 1895.Professor Moore resigned his chairin logic and metaphysics last yearbecause of ill health and was madea professor emeritus. He left for Europe in March and had completeda 6,000 mile motor tour before arriv¬ing in England, where a paralyticstroke was followed almost immedi¬ately by death.Among his publications are severalbooks on philosophy, including“Pragmatism and Its Critics”, “Ex¬istence, Meaning and Reality”,“Studies in Logical Theory”, “Cre¬ative Intelligence”, and a series ofmonographs on logic.Professor Moore’s death, coupledwith the resignation of ProfessorJames ,H. Tufts, who becomes pro¬fessor emeritus, marks the breakupof a quartet of eminent philosopherswho have taught philosophy side byside almost since the founding of theUniversity. Only two members ofthe quartet, Professors George H.Mead and . Edward S. Ames, remain. Starkie May BringIrish Players HereDr. Walter Starkie, a directorof the Abbey theatre of Dublin,hopes to bring a bit of old Irelandto America next year through themedium of the famous AbbeyTheatre players. One prominentpatron of the theatre in the UnitedStates is already considering pledg¬ing a guarantee fund large enoughto bring the players here on tour.Dr. Starkie, who spent the summerat the University as a visiting pro¬fessor, attracted large audiences tohis lectures on gypsy and Irish musicand contemporary drama, which heillustrated with his violin. $3000 DEFICITREPORTED FOR“SMART ALEC”(Continued from page 1)j Coulter, Professor Frank H. O’Hara,j and the heads of the Dramatic As-I sociation and Blackfriars, ex officio,to plan a further revision of thepresent set- of regulations. GeorgeMahin, Charles Poliak, and WilliamKincheloe were appointed by thej junior managers of Blackfriars toI represent the order, and have alsoi been working on new rules during{the summer.Due to the revision of the consti¬tution, election of officers of the or¬der has been deferred until, this fall.WINTER’Sannounces itsGrand OpeningFriday and Saturday, September 26 - 27A new College Shop in a modern manner yet with prin¬ciples the same as in the last seven years of service to you./SISociety Brand ClothesBostonian ShoesStetson HatsINTER’S JHEN’S 9HOPONE-THREE-FIVE-SEVEN EAST FIVE-FIVE STREET‘'The College Shop for College Men 99t,Page Oght THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1930PRESHWENT HUTCHINSWELCOMES CLASS CWF1934 TO UNIVERSITY FIFTY-NINE HONORSTUDENTS NAMED(Continued from page 1)er for all entering students will beheld in the Reynolds club at 4:30.On Saturday Scholastic Aptitudetests, which are required of allfreshmen will be given at 8:30. Fol¬lowing them Vice-President Wood¬ward and Coach Stagg will addressthe freshmen at a Mandel hallmeeting at 11:00 presided over byDean Boucher. An open house willbe held at Ida Noyes from 2:30 un¬til 5:00 for all freshmen under thedirection of the 1929-30 Freshmanwomen’s club and Freshman men’sclub. On Sunday a special musicalservice for all students will be heldin the chapel at 4:30 under the di¬rection of Mack Evans, Universityorganist; and at 5:00 a tour of thechapel will be held under the di¬rection of members of the Chapelcouncil.Reading, Placement TestsMonday will see the new experi¬ment in reading and placementtests, which will be given to allfreshmen in Cobb lecture hall at8:30. All freshmen are required totake these tests. A luncheon forFreshmen women will be held inIda Noyes at 12:30 in charge of theBoard of Women’s Organizations.At 2:30 General meetings will beheld. Women are supposed to re¬port at Ida Noyes hall and men inthe south lounge of the Reynoldsclub. These meetings are under theauspices of the Undergraduate coun¬cil and are for the purpose of dis¬cussing extra-curricular activities.Another swimming period will beheld in the Ida Noyes pool for wom¬en from 4:00 to 5:00. Vaudevillefor .all University students will beheld in the evening at 8 in Mandelhall under the direction of the Dra¬matic association.The last day of Freshman weekwill feature a meeting under thedirection of the Women’s Athleticassociation. All Freshman womenare invited to Ida Noyes for an af¬ternoon of ping-pong, bridge, bowl¬ing, etc. The meeting will start at2:00 at which time another meetingfor men will be held at Greenwoodfield under the direction of the In¬tramural department. Playground-ball, horseshoe pitching, touchball,and horse-back riding contests willbe held. (Continued from page 1)Treusch, Chicago; David M. Weil,Chicago; Sam Weissman, Chicago;Lee Roy Wilcox, Wilmette, Ill.;Sidney Zatz, Chicago; Raymond E.Zenner, Brookfield, Ill.; and JosephZoline, Oak Park, Ill.Third Year ScholarsJunior honor scholars are: ViolaK. Bower, Oak Park, Ill.; Mary C.Budd, Chicago; Virginia Burd, Chi¬cago; Bernard Cahn, Chicago; Wil¬liam' Frazer, Chicago ^ Blanche Hyiles,St. Louis, Mo.; Alfred H. Kelly,Chicago; Sylvia Kramer, Chicago;Fritz R. Leiber, Chicago; HaroldMorris, Chicago; Sam Neivelt, Chi¬cago; Jean E. Rhys, Chicago; JesseB. Schreiter, Savannah, Ill.; MildredShaffer, Chicago;, William Shapiro,Chicago; Alfred J. Stawarz, Chi¬cago; John M. Stevenson, MaplePark, Ill.; Gilbert F. White, Chi¬cago; Nathaniel M. Winslow, Chi-i cago; and Samuel Zelkowich, Chi-! cago. MAROONS NEAR ENDOF JAPANESE TOURMeet Slump AfterSeries of Winsin U. S.PLACE “C” BOOKSON SALE MONDAY(Continued from page 1)season. Jimmy Twohig and hissquad of attendants have been lab¬oring with painstaking care to getthe grass of the gridiron ready forJimmy’s “byes”. The electricalscoreboard and other equipment willbe in order for the opening gamesthis Saturday.Demand for seats for the Prince¬ton and Illinois games has beenespecially heavy, but several thou¬sand good seats are still available.lEarly application for these twogames is especially requested bythe committee. Baseball in Japan is better thanthat on the Pacific coast and in thewest, if the experiences of the Ma¬roon baseball team, which is nowtouring Japan after a foray throughwestern diamond circles, mean any¬thing. The Maroons have accumu¬lated two victories in eight starts onthe Pacific Island, while they wereable to take about half their gamesin the continental U. S.Chicago’s diamond men began aseries of practice games with localaggregations at the conclusion oftheir Conference schedule last June,preparatory to the western trip.From the showing made in thesetilts. Coach Norgren selected thepersonnel which is now making theclassic foreign invasion. He chosethirteen Varsity men, including threefreshmen who completed threequarters of residence, to representChicago. The veterans selected wereCaptain Maurice Holahan, ArthurCahill, Marshall Fish, John Gray,William Knowles, William Olson,Wilbur Urban, Harold Bluhm,Harold Johnson, and Hayden Win¬gate. The three freshmen whomerited berths on the select teamwere Roy Henshaw, John Lynch Jr.,and Clarence Johnson.Distribute StickersA special students’ informationcircubr has been issued and may besecured at *he ticket office and atvarious places on campus. Thecommittee has also prepared a largenumber of football stickers for dis¬tribution on campus. A tire coverhas been designed and may be is¬sued at the University bookstore ifthere is sufficient demand therefor. Win OpenerThe first game with St. Paul waswon by a 3 to 2 count, “Lefty”Knowles furnishing fine moundwork; but the team was not luckywhen facing Jamestown, N. D., afew days later. They lost this battleby the reversed score of 3 to 2, Ur¬ban doing the pitching. The nextfive games came to the Maroons withlarge scores. Cahill pitched the Mid¬way nine to a 16 to 4 win overDickinson, N. D., Knowles duplicatedthis achievement with a 17 to 2 vic¬tory against Miles City, Montana;Urban held Forsythe, Montana, to 2runs while the Maroons scored 21,and the same pitcher was workingwhen the squad defeated Livingston,Montana, by 12 to 4. Cahill conti- 26 STATES AREREPRESENTED INCLASS OF 1934750 freshmen from twenty-sixstates will matriculate at the Uni¬versity when the Autumn quarterofficially opens next Wednesdaymorning. Among the Eastern statesMassachusetts, Connecticut, NewYork, Pennsylvania and New Jerseyhave students included in the offi¬cial registration while the Southernstates represented are Louisiana,Kentucky, Arkansas, Tennessee,Georgia, North Carolina, and Okla¬homa.Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas andNorth Dakota in the Western group,Utah, California and Montana in theFar Western section and every statein the Middle West have sent stu¬dents to the University. MICHELSON, TUFTSRETIRE THIS YEAROnly Eight of OriginalFaculty Still Left Cornerstone Laidfor New OrientalInstitute Buildingnued the winning streak by taking atighter battlb from Bozeman, Mon¬tana, 4 to 3. Despite the retirement of two pro¬fessors this year the University isable to recall eight of the originalfaculty to resume their work thisfall. These eight professors, sevenof whom are heads of departments,will return to begin their thirty-ninthyear of instruction.Michelson, Tufts, Retirei The two professors who retiredI this season are A. A. Michelson andJames H. Tufts. Professor Michelson,who was 77 and head of the depart¬ment of physics, left last spring forSanta Anna, California, where herechecked his computations of thespeed of light. However, he willreturn to his laboratory at the Uni¬versity this fall as professor emer¬itus. First Laboratory forStudy of Originof CultureGame CalledWhen the game in Butte, Montana,was called because of darkness inthe sixth inning, Chicago was trail¬ing 4 to 3, but their winning wayswere resumed when Norgren’s mendefeated Helena, Montana by 6 to2, Urban pitching. Knowles receivedcredit for a shqt-out when he facedHamilton, Montana to win 9 to 0,and when Henshaw was removedafter seven innings in the Spokane,Washington game, Knowles againwent in and received credit for thatgame by slowing the Washingtonsquad enough to allow Chicago towin the slugfest 13 to 11.Before taking the steamer toYokahama, the Maroons dropped agame to Yakima, Washington, 8 to3, and another to Everett, Washing¬ton, 4 to 3.On Japanese soil, the Chicago menfound the going more difficult, meet¬ing with four defeats before beingable to take a game. The ooponentsencountered in this schedule in¬cluded a series with Waseda uni¬versity, the University of Tokyo,Meiji university, and Keio univer¬sity.The last repbrt received fromJapan was to the effect that Chicagohad defeated Waseda 6 to 4, Cahilland Wingate forming the Maroonbattery. Tufts Once Acting PresidentProfessor Tufts’ record at the Uni¬versity includes being head of thedepartment of philosophy in 1905,vice-president from 1924 to 1926,acting president between the admin¬istrations of Ernest D. Burton andMax Mason, acting president of theChicago Theological Seminary, Presi¬dent of the American Philosophicalassociation, and editor of the Inter¬national Journal of Ethics. Profes¬sor Tufts, who was one of the lead¬ers in the pragmatic school of phil¬osophy, will devote part of his timeto service in his department this fallas professor emeritus.The eight professors who willreturn this fall are: Carl DarlingBuck, head of the department ofcomparative philology; George How¬land of the department of compara¬tive literature; Edwin Oakes Jordan,head of the department of bacteriol¬ogy and hygiene; Frank Lillie, headof the department of zoology; Elia-kim H. Moore, head of the depart¬ment of mathematics; Paul Shorey,head of the Greek department; A.A. Stagg, director of athletics; andJulius Stieglitz, chairman of thedepartment of chemistry. Cornerstone ceremonies for the$1,500,000 Oriental Institute, to belocated on the corner of 58th andUniversity avenue, inaugurated thefirst laboratory in the world forstudy of the origin and developmentof civilization, and brought to a re¬alisation the dream of its director,Profes.sor James Henry Breasted.Professor Breasted laid the corner¬stone, in which were placed publica¬tions of each member of the depart¬ment of Oriental Languages andLiterature, official communications ofthe Institute, University documents,photographs of Professor Breasted,President Hutchins, and Mr. HaroldSwift, and coins and copies of theday’s newspapers.Also Will Train MenAccording to Professor Breasted,“The Oriental Institute will be theonly group in the world to have anintegrated program of research onin ail of the more important oldercivilizations of the near east. Manyorganizations have special expedi¬tions but none of these are preparedas is the Institute to support expedi¬tions to study the whole group ofearliest civilizations.” The Instituteplans, not only to carry on work inthe east, and to exhibit its findings,but considers also the training ofnew men to carry on this type ofstudy in the future,”Cecil Plaza Apt. Hotel6139 Kenwood Ave.Reautitul 1-2-.I R(H>ni ,\partments.Electric Refrigeration, daily MaidService, Linens.Near I’, of C. - $60 and upPhone Fairfax 6331A University Institution ^d!!h !••{gijj' !!!^ ^The Maid-Rite Sandwich Shop has become aninstitution at the l^niversity of Chicago. When¬ever a student thinks of food he inevitablythinks of the Maid-Rite Sandwich Shop.The members of the Maid-Rite Organization extend a specialinvitation to the Freshmen to make this sandwich shop theirshop. Here you will become acquainted with your classmates;here you will meet the “big” men and women of the campus; here you willmingle with a University crowd in a University Sandwich Shop.The Maid-Rite Sandwich Shop13241/2 E. 57th St.Just a Block East of Mandel Hall“53IMDCDCirr'T IhW. H. ThompsonGreets Classof 1934 Batlp Jflaroon Part TwoVol. 31. No. 1 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, 24, 1930 Price Five CentsW. H. THOMPSONGREETS MAROON;CLASS OF 1934Mayor Lauds UniversityAs Typical CityInstitutionWELCOME^FRESHMENUrges Loyalty, Courage, andSincerity as Cure forCorruptionEditor’s Note: The Dailjr Maroonwishes publicly to thank His Honor,Mayor William Hale Thompson forhis article written exclusively forthis publication. More articles of asimilar nature by notables in aca>demic, civic, and athletic circles willappear at short intervals accordingto announcements. We hope therebyto erect columns in a hall of famededicated to the students by menand women who evince an interestin them and recognise in them thefoundation of times to come. Thesearticles are directed at intelligent,thinking readers who can appreciatethem and regard them in a construe*tively critical light. Propaganda ofany sort is barred and will not beprinted. E. A. G. Break Ground forNew DormitoriesSouth of MidwayBrings University Close toRealization of IdealCollegeA new phase in the expansion ofthe University was inaugurated re¬cently when ground was brokensouth of the Midway for the firsttwo units of residence balls for un¬dergraduate students, which will becompleted by next autumn at a costof. three million dollars.The ground breaking ceremonybrings the University close to realiz¬ation of its plans for a unique col¬lege. Involved in the decision toerect halls south of the Midway isa plan for comprehensive reorganiza¬tion of college life, instruction, andmethod which the University author¬ities have been planning for severalyears.Halla on Sixtieth St.The two units for which groundwas broken are a men’s hall, to besituated between Greenwood Ave.and Ellis Ave., on Sixtieth St., anda women’s hall, to be located betweenWoodlawn Ave., and Kimbark Ave.,on Sixtieth St.The men’s unit will be a buildingenclosing two quadrangles, and will(Continued on page 12)By William Hale Thompson,Mayor of Chicago(li’riffcn exclusively for The DailyMaroon by ll'wi. Hale Thompson,Mayor of Chicago. Not to be re¬printed.)Dear Mr. Editor:To the Students of theUniversity of Chicago:In accepting your gracious invita¬tion to express, through The DailyMaroon, a sentiment to the studentsof the University of Chicago, myearnest wish would be to impressupon that splendid student body, thatthey are living in a city that enjoys,probably, more of the choice gifts ofa generous Providence than anyother large city of the world; that,at the same time, no other city ofthe world compares with Our Chi¬cago in the golden opportunities itoffers to ambitious and energeticyouth. I of wealth and prosperity as the mind' or imagination of man cannot nowI conceive.I Chicago’s future offers an invitingI field of speculation for the thought-I fully inclined; it is a study calcu-I lated to inspire the soul and quickeni the mind of the youthful student,possessed of vision, energy and ambi-; tion.I Chicago is the typical Americancity. In less than a hundred years! it has risen from an Indian tradingpost, not quite a square mile in ex¬tent, a few white people trading infurs, to a city of more than 200square miles, 3,500,000 people, doing: a business of a billion dollars amonth, possessing 40,000 acres ofparks, 85 miles of beautiful boule¬vards, schools unsurpassed, churches' abundant, music, art, culture, refine¬ment, red blood and throbbing life.in describing its growth, wouldyou make use of the word marvelous A. A. Stagg Named ‘‘All-American^^Coach in Poll of Athletic DirectorsForty - Year Record ofCharacter BuildingOne FactorAmos Alonzo Stagg, director ofathletics at the University since itsinception in 1892, was recentlynamed “All-American” coach in apoll of prominent football coachesthroughout the country. Six confer¬ence championships in football,couoled with a lifetime record as asincere and effective advocate ofsportsmanship in college athletics,have combined to give the “GrandOld Man” undisputed leadership ofAmerican football coaches.A. A. Stagg, who has watched thegame of football develop from asport scarcely tolerated to the mostpopular form of college athletics, hasplayed a major part in keeping thegame free from professionalism. Asa player, coach, and finally seniormember of the Football Rules Com¬mittee, Mr. Stagg has been the spon¬sor of such important regulations asthe “one-year residence” rule forfreshmen and the rule against mig¬rants. The organization of theWestern conference, afterwards tobecome a model for other confer¬ences, was to a large extent the workof the “Old Man”.Fifth of Eight ChildrenBorn in West Orange, New Jersey,on August 16, 1862, Mr. Stagg wasthe fifth of eight children. His for¬bears on both sides fought in theWar of the Revolution. In the sum¬mers, young Stagg worked cuttinghay on the salt meadows of NevvarkBays, labor that toughened an al¬ready strong physique.He entered Vale in 1884, and atYale he pitched the Blue team tofive successive championships, and asa member of the football team waschosen by Walter Camp on his “All-American” team at end. Stagg wasunquestionably the greatest pitcherof his time, and had many offers topitch in p’*ofessional baseball. Herefused them all, although he wasoffered sums almost fabulous at thattime, just as he had refused offersof assistance while he was at Yaleand was forced by his limited fundsto live at times on a diet of breadand milk. That Spartan strain inMr. Stagg has continued. His tastes have always been simple and quiet.Intended to be MinisterMr. Stagg had intended, when heentered Yale, to become a minister,but his own stern judgment con¬vinced him that he was not fitted forthe ministry. After spending onlyone year in the Yale Divinity school,he left in 1890, and went to theInternational Y. M. C. A. trainingschool at Springfield, Mass., theautumn of 1890, as a member of thefaculty. His success at coachingCourtesy The Chicairo Tribunesoon won wide attention, and whenWilliam Rainey Harper was organ¬izing the new University he per¬suaded Mr. Stagg to become directorof athletics, with the title of asso¬ciate professor. Academic rank foran athletic coach was an innovation,but the long career of Stagg at Chi¬cago has many times over justifiedthis novel step of President Harper’s.T' j “Old Man” has made the postone of hoiior. service and dignity.Among the famous athletes devel¬oped under Mr. Stagg’s coaching are:the late Walter Eckersall, all-time,All-American quarter-back; HugoBezdek, now coach of Penn State;Walter Steffen, coach at CarnegieTech; H. O. “Fritz” Crisler, recentlyappointed head coach at Minnesota;Pat Page, head mentor at Indiana;John and Harry Thomas; MiltonRomney; Nels Norgren, basketballand baseball coach at the University;John Schommer, conference footballofficial; Babe Meigs; Jim Pyott; Ken(Continued on page 10)A climate, invigorating and health¬ful; an inland tea; an abundance ofnavigable rivers, to carry our prod¬ucts to the world outside; the Miss¬issippi Valley for a hinterland, therichest and most extensive valley onearth, yielding from 60 to 95 per¬cent of the agricultural, mineral and or miraculous?Chicago’s growth is due to thefact that it is the typical Americancity, its people being composed ofthe commingling of the healthy,wholesome, vigorous, ambitious bloodof Europe. This has resulted ingiving us the best brain, probably.HISHONOR,MAYORWILLIAMHALETHOMPSONmanufactured wealth of the Ameri¬can nation, a valley, in wealth andextent, surpassing the dreams ofAlexander, the Caesars or Napoleon.And Chicago is the capital city ofthis mighty valley.As chairman of the Illinois Lakesto the Gulf Commission it wax myprivilege to lead the campaign fora navigable waterway from Chicagoto New Orleans. As a result of thatcampaign. President Calvin Coolidgesigned the bill in January, 1927,making this navigable waterway acertainty, which means opening upthe markets of the world, of SouthAmerica and the Orient, to the prod¬ucts of the factories and fields ofChicago and the Mississippi Valleyat $7.00 a ton, msJcing of Chicagothe greatest inlpiMl seaMrt eity efthe world, and bringing uuch an era the world has ever produced; andthis brain is dominated by the Amer¬ican idea of Equality; that is, thegenuine aristocracy of brsun inAmerica, as against the false aristo¬cracy of birth in the old world coun¬tries. And this, in the everyday lifeof America, means that restlessactivity of mind that gives us ourinventions and surprising progress,*while, in the cIms and caste riddencountries of the world, the brain isstagnant and paralyzed on accountof the restraining, depressing, de¬grading effect of inequality.The American idem of Equality,proclaimed by Thomas Jefferson,written into the Declaration of Inde¬pendence., and revered by AbrahamLincoln, does not mean that everymsMS is the aquid ef every ether man—i>“K® '51 'Raise Educational Standards SaysPresident Chase in First Address(Editor’s note: Dr. Harry Wood-burn Chase was recently appointedpresident of the University of Illi¬nois, to which institution he camefrom the Univeristy of North Caro¬lina, where he built up a notableeducational record. The followingare some of the high lights from hisfirst official address, delivered lastweek before more than 1500 mem¬bers of the administrative and edu¬cational staffs of the University ofIllinois).“What distinguishes our Americantheory of education, especially ourtheories of state university educa¬tion, from the (European tradition,is precisely this faith that highereducation is among other things, alever to raise the general social levelof intelligence and good-will. I be¬lieve in the power of leadership, butI also believe in the necessity of ahigh general level of intelligence andculture for the future of America.”“This two-fold obligation, a stateuniversity like our own must dis¬charge, intelligently and well, amidall the complications that come fromdoing thingrs on a large scale,” thepresident told the faculty members.Covers Educational FieldThe general field of education vdthits changing trend was covered byDr. Chase during the course of hisaddress and the talk brought tolight the problems facing the largerstate universities which he termed“peculiar problems possessed of pe¬culiar opportunities.”Dr. Chase emphasized the duty ofthe University toward the (;entialleader and branded as c d thesupposition that any lar{ mberof college men will beco: dersm public affairs, in busii « inthe professions. ^ “We have business with the po¬tential leader—to him the state uni¬versity owes the best that it has;for him it must maintain an atmos¬phere that is stimulating and cre¬ative,” he explained.Must Raise Level“The state university, however,has also the definite task of raisingthe general level of life throughoutits state,” the president continued.“Tens of thousands of young menand women who come out of it willlead lives which are, if you please,undistinguished, but which ought tobe forever finer and fuller and moreuseful.”Education’s period of pioneeringwas developed during the talk andthe common mistake of regardingvery many things about our insti¬tutions as settled was emphasizedfirmly by President Chase.“Liberal, professional, voca,tionaleducation are, in my judgment, inthe beginnings of a period of Care¬ful scrutiny and rapid change,” thespeaker asserted. “Concepts of edu-(Continued on page 13)Bull-Moving BafflesBest B. & G. BrainsNoted engineers of the Buildingand Grounds department are atpresent trying to solve the perplex¬ing problem of removing the 2000pound Assyrian bull from beneaththe Stagg field bleachers to its finalresting place in the new OrientalInstitute. Because of its size andbecause the field is being used fordaily football practice the sacredanimal will probably witness mostof |the season’s gamesj before it‘.Stirpoffres its nermanent soand. College Life AsIt Really Is, Aimof First PhoenixAt Last! The Diary ofa Chicago Co-edIs ExposedO’NEILL OUT-O’NEILLED“Old Bird” to Make FirstAppearance onOct. 15Newly organized in conipositionand boasting the secrets of a Chi¬cago Coed’s Diary as written by“one who knows”, Phoenix, thecampus humor magazine, will thumbits beak at the fire on October 15and invade the quadrangles to tellFreshmen about college life as itreally is.-In an effort to depict campus cir¬cumstances in a true light, Bruce hasout-O’Neilled O’Neill and delveddown into the very depths of col¬legiate truth. Equally profitable tocampus newcomers will be “TovrovLardner Goes to College”, a recitalof the thrilling adventures of OrinTovrov told a la Lardner; and “Am¬ber Pastures for Green Folk”, aspeakeasy of high moral values.Shorter ArticlesThe first Phoenix of the year willbe illustrative of the higher standardwhich will prevail in the magazinethroughout the year. The aim ofthe editors, according to JulianJackson, managing editor, will be to■make the magazine more personal,incorporate into the contents morehome talent, especially in the fieldof jokes, and enlarge the circle ofcontributors. The articles of theforthcoming issues will be shorterand of a more local nature.Plan Serial ArticlesSeries of articles will serve as aconnecting link between the publi¬cations. There will be a page of“Applause” on which will appearpictures of those who deserve recog¬nition in the public eye; a “Schol-astica Dimentia,” short sketches offamiliar professors; a “ScholasticSequence” of poems by Ruth Ziev,and a series of “Education by Tu¬ition”, by Julian Jackson.Freshmen are invited oiit as liter¬ati or artists to work on the publi¬cation and club pledges are wantedto sell the magazine and try for theclub prizes. The Phoenix is twenty-five cents an issue or two dollars jfor a year’s subscription, nine issues. |It will be published in the third Wed- jnesday of every month and will be isold on campus for three consecutivedays instead of one day as formerly.Unemployment to |Increase College \Enrolment—MoonDepression in BusinessBooms ExiucationDepression in the world of busi¬ness means a boom time for collegesall over the country, in the opinionof Dean George R. Moon, assistantto the University Examiner. Dean {Moon bases his statement upon thegreatly increased number of appli¬cants for admission to the freshmanclass. “The loss of position by alarge number of young people dur¬ing the prolonged hard times islargely responsible for this abnormaldemand for a college education,” hesaid.“The present freshman group isone of the finest in the history ofthe University,” was the tribute ac¬corded the class by the assistant |examiner. “The official quota of750 was reached on the basis ofscholarship and citizenship, althoughmany students were turned awaysolely because of the tardiness oftheir applications. 135 of the en¬tering men and women are here onfull or part scholarships, forty ofwhich are special awards, donatedby alumni.”Registration for freshman willtake place Wednesday, Thursday andFriday of freshman week during themorning and afternoon iix Mandel(Continued on page 14) FRIARS MEET OCT. 3TO CONSIDER LEGAL,HNANCIAL TROUBLEi Committee Makes PlansI for Entire NewI OrganizationSIX HEADSSUGGESTEDI Abbot Supreme; Others toServe Only asAdvisorsBlackfriars may soon be out ofthe constitutional maze enmeshingit, if the present plans of a com¬mittee appointed last year to revisethe regulations of the order areapproved. The committee, com¬posed of George Mahin, CharlesPoliak, and William Kincheloe, forBlackfriars, Frank Breckinridge, forthe Blacfriars Trust Committee, andDean Merle C. Coulter, for theUniversity Board of Student Organ¬izations, Exhibitions, and Publica¬tions, has drafted a plan which wassubmitted to the trust committeeyesterday, and this plan, as revisedand changed by the committee, willbe presented to all members of theorder at a general meeting to beheld Friday, October 3, at 3:30 inReynolds club theatre.One Tentative PlanAfter any changes made by theorder, the plan will be sent to theUniversity Board of Student Or¬ganizations, Exhibitions, and Pub¬lications at its meeting on October4.One tentative plan suggested tothe committee embodies the follow¬ing reforms:1. The abbot is to be entirely re¬sponsible to the University and tothe Blackfriars Trust Committee forany and all phases of the produc¬tion.2. An advisory board of superiors,five in number, will assist him. Theboard is made up as follows:3. One member chosen by thecast and chorus.4. One member chosen by the“monks”, a group composed of allthose men who are not working di¬rectly on either the production orbusiness staff in the current pro¬duction.5. The others of the three juniormanagers, beside the one who be¬comes abbot. This means that therewill be four junior managers, all tobe appointed by the abbot. Eachof the four will head.a division ofthe staff, the divisions to be knownas:a. The business division.b. The technical division.c. The publicity division.d. The company.6. There will be twelve sopho¬mores, three to each junior manager.The sophomores are appointed bythe particular junior manager un¬der whom they work, and they areresponsible only to him, just as thejuniors are responsible only to theabbot.7. The abbot will appoint hissuccessor.Will Hold Elections SoonIf the plan is at last approved,there will be no delay in puttingit into execution. Elections forsenior posts, which were deferredlast year until the joint committeereported, will take place at once.Blackfriars’ constitutional trou¬bles originated in the spring of1929, when a number of questionswere raised about the election ofabbot in that year. . It was thenbrought out that Blackfriars had noapproved constitution on file withthe Board of Organizations, Exhi¬bitions, and Publications, and thatit was operating under a set of reg¬ulations written unofficially in themiddle 1900’s.In the fall of 1929 a revision ofthese regulations was attempted bythe then board of superiors. Thisrevision was passed and sent on tothe Board of Organizations, Exhi¬bitions, and Publications, which re¬jected it.Ticket Sales PoorMnrp tronWos upon theorder in the ‘spring of 1930. The(Continued on page 14)THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930Page Eight ^PRESIMNT HUTCHINS IWELCOMES CLASS OF !1934 TO UNIVERSITY I(Continued from page 1)er for all entering students will beheld in the Reynolds club at 4:30.On Saturday Scholastic Aptitudetests, which are required of all jfreshmen will be given at 8:30. Fol- !lowing them Vice-President Wood- jward and Coach Stagg will address jthe freshmen at a Mandel hall jmeeting at 11:00 presided over byDean Boucher. An open house willbe held at Ida Noyes from 2:30 un¬til 5:00 for all freshmen under thedirection of the 1929-30 Freshmanwomen’s club and Freshman men’s iclub. On Sunday a special musicalservice for all students will be held }in the chapel at 4:30 under the di¬rection of Mack Evans, Universityorganist; and at 5:00 a tour of thechapel will be held under the di¬rection of members of the Chapel jcouncil. 1Reading, Placement Tests jMonday will see the new experi- |ment in reading and placement!tests, which will be given to all jfreshmen in Cobb lecture hall at8:30. All freshmen are required totake these tests. A luncheon forFreshmen women will be held inIda Noyes at 12:30 in charge of theBoard of Women’s Organizations.At 2:30 General meetings will beheld. Women are supposed to re-'port at Ida Noyes hall and men inthe south lounge of the Reynoldsclub. These meetings are under theauspices of the Undergraduate coun¬cil and are for the purpose of dis- jcussing extra-curricular activities, jAnother swimming period will be iheld in the Ida Noyes pool for wom¬en from 4:00 to 5:00. Vaudeville |for .all University students will be Iheld in the evening at 8 in Mandel |hall under the direction of the Dra-•matic association.The last day of Freshman weekwill feature a meeting under thedirection of the Women’s Athleticassociation. All Freshman womenare invited to Ida Noyes for an af¬ternoon of ping-pong, bridge, bowl¬ing, etc. The meeting will start at2:00 at which time another meetingfor men will be held at Greenwoodfield under the direction of the In¬tramural department. Playground-ball, horseshoe pitching, touchball,and horse-back riding contests willbe held. ‘ FIFTY-NINE HONORSTUDENTS NAMED(Continued from page 1)Treusch, Chicago; David M. Weil,Chicago; Sam Weissman, Chicago;Lee Roy Wilcox, Wilmette, Ill.;Sidney Zatz, Chicago; Raymond E.Zenner, Brookfield, Ill.; and Joseph IZoline, Oak Park, Ill. |Third Year ScholarsJunior honor scholars are: ViolaK. Bower, Oak Park, Ill.; Mary C.Budd, Chicago; Virginia Burd, Chi¬cago; Bernard Cahn, Chicago; Wil¬liam' Frazer, Chicago ^ Blanche Hyiies,St. Louis, Mo.; Alfred H. Kelly,Chicago; Sylvia Kramer, Chicago;Fritz R. Leiber, Chicago; HaroldMorris, Chicago; Sam Neivelt, Chi¬cago; Jean E. Rhys, Chicago; JesseB. Schreiter, Savannah, Ill.; MildredShaffer, Chicago;, William Shapiro,Chicago; Alfred J. Stawarz, Chi¬cago; John M. Stevenson, MaplePark, Ill.; Gilbert F. White, Chi¬cago; Nathaniel M. Winslow, Chi¬cago; and Samuel Zelkowich, Chi¬cago.PLACE “C” BOOKSON SALE MONDAY(Continued from page 1)season. Jimmy Twohig and hissquad of attendants have been lab¬oring with painstaking care to getthe grass of the gridiron ready forJimmy’s “byes”. The electricalscoreboard and other equipment willbe in order for the opening gamesthis Saturday.Demand for seats for the Prince¬ton and Illinois games has beenespecially heavy, but several thou¬sand good seats are still available.lEarly application for these twogames is especially requested bythe committee.Distribute StickersA special students’ informationcircular has been issued and may besecured at the ticket office and atvarious places on campus. Thecommittee has also prepared a largenumber of football stickers for dis¬tribution on campus. A tire coverhas been designed and may be is¬sued at the University bookstore ifthere is sufficient demand therefor. MAROONS NEAR ENDOF JAPANESE TOURMeet Slump AfterSeries of Winsin U. S.Baseball in Japan is better thanthat on the Pacific coast and in thewest, if the experiences of the Ma¬roon baseball team, which is nowtouring Japan after a foray throughwestern diamond circles, mean any¬thing. The Maroons have accumu¬lated two victories in eight starts onthe Pacific Island, while they wereable to take about half their gamesin the continental U. S.Chicago’s diamond men began aseries of practice games with localaggregations at the conclusion oftheir Conference schedule last June,preparatory to the western trip.From the showing made in thesetilts. Coach Norgren selected thepersonnel which is now making theclassic foreign invasion. He chosethirteen Varsity men, including threefreshmen who completed threequarters of residence, to representChicago. The veterans selected wereCaptain Maurice Holahan, ArthurCahill, Marshall Fish, John Gray,William Knowles, William Olson,Wilbur Urban, Harold Bluhm,Harold Johnson, and Hayden Win¬gate. The three freshmen whomerited berths on the select teamwere Roy Henshaw, John Lynch Jr.,and Clarence Johnson.Win OpenerThe first game with St. Paul waswon by a 3 to 2 count, “Lefty”Knowles furnishing fine moundwork; but the team was not luckywhen facing Jamestown, N. D., afew days later. They lost this battleby the reversed score of 3 to 2, Ur¬ban doing the pitching. The nextfive games came to the Maroons withlarge scores. Cahill pitched the Mid¬way nine to a 16 to 4 win overDickinson, N. D., Knowles duplicatedthis achievement with a 17 to 2 vic¬tory against Miles City, Montana;Urban held Forsythe, Montana, to 2runs while the Maroons scored 21,and the same pitcher was working jwhen the squad defeated Livingston, iMontana, by 12 to 4. Cahill conti¬ 26 STATES AREREPRESENTED INCLASS OF 1934750 freshmen from twenty-sixstates will matriculate at the Uni¬versity when the Autumn quarterofficially opens next Wednesdaymorning. Among the Eastern statesMassachusetts, Connecticut, NewYork, Pennsylvania and New Jerseyhave students included in the offi¬cial registration while the Southernstates represented are Louisiana,Kentucky, Arkansas, Tennessee,Georgia, North Carolina, and Okla¬homa.Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas andNorth Dakota in the Western group,Utah, California and Montana in theFar Western section and every statein the Middle West have sent stu¬dents to the University.nued the winning streak by taking atighter battlt from Bozeman, Mon¬tana, 4 to 3.G.: me CalledWhen the game in Butte, Montana,was called because of darkness inthe sixth inning, Chicago was trail¬ing 4 to 3, but their winning wayswere resumed when Norgren’s mendefeated Helena, Montana by 6 to2, Urban pitching. Knowles receivedcredit for a shqt-out when he facedHamilton, Montana to win 9 to 0,and when Henshaw was removedafter seven innings in the Spokane,Washington game, Knowles againwent in and received credit for thatgame by slowing the Washingtonsquad enough to allow Chicago towin the slugfest 13 to 11.Before taking the steamer toYokahama, the Maroons dropped agame to Yakima, Washington, 8 to3, and another to Everett, Washing¬ton, 4 to 3.On Japanese soil, the Chicago menfound the going more difficult, meet¬ing with four defeats before beingable to take a game. The o^onentsencountered in this schedule in¬cluded a series with Waseda uni¬versity, the University of Tokyo,Meiji university, and Keio univer¬sity.The last repbrt received fromJapan was to the effect that Chicagohad defeated Waseda 6 to 4, Cahilland Wingate forming the Maroonbattery. MICHELSON, TUFTSRETIRE THIS YEAROnly Eight of OriginalFaculty Still LeftDespite the retirement of two pro- jfessors this year the University is jable to recall eight of the originalfaculty to resume their work thisfall. These eight professors, sevenof whom are heads of departments,will return to begin their thirty-ninth jyear of instruction. 1Michelson, Tufts, Retire |j The two professors w'ho retired j! this season are A. A. Michelson and! James H. Tufts. Professor Michelson,who was 77 and head of the depart¬ment of physics, left last spring forSanta Anna, California, where herechecked his computations of thespeed of light. However, he will jreturn to his laboratory at the Uni-1versity this fall as professor emer- iitus. jTufts Once Acting President iProfessor. Tuft.s’ record at the Uni-'versity includes being head of the idepartment of philosophy in 1905, jvice-president from ^1924 to 1926, |acting president betv/een the admin-1istr.'itions of Ernest D. Burton and |Max Mason, acting president of the !Chicago Theological Seminary, Presi¬dent of the American Philosophicalassociation, and editor of the Inter¬national Journal of Ethics. Profes¬sor Tufts, who was one of the lead¬ers in the pragnnatic school of phil¬osophy, will devote part of his timeto service in his department this fallj as professor emeritus.; The eight professors who will ;return this fall are: Carl DarlingBuck, head of the department of jcomparative philology; George How-1land of the department of compara-1! tive literature; Edwin Oakes Jordan, jI head of the department of bacteriol- ji ogv and hygiene; Frank Lillie, head0 the department of zoology; Elia-kim H. Moore, head of the depart-1ment of mathematics; Paul Shorey,head of the Greek department; A.I A. Stagg, director of athletics; andi Julius Stieglitz, chairman of thedepartment of chemistry. Cornerstone Laidfor New OrientalInstitute BuildingFirst Laboratory forStudy of Originof CultureCornerstone ceremonies for the$1,500,000 Oriental Institute, to belocated on the corner of 58th andUniversity avenue, inaugurated thefirst laboratory in the world forstudy of the origin and developmentof civilization, and brought to a re¬alisation the dream of its director.Professor James Henry Breasted.Professor Breasted laid the corner¬stone, in which were placed publica¬tions of each member of the depart¬ment of Oriental Languages andLiterature, official communications ofthe Institute, University documents,photographs of Professor Breasted,President Hutchins, and Mr. HaroldSwift, and coins and copies of theday’s newspapers.AUo Will Train MenAccording to Professor Breasted,“The Oriental Institute will be theonly group in the world to have anintegrated program of research onin all of the more important oldercivilizations of the near east. Manyorganizations have special expedi¬tions but none of these are preparedas is the Institute to support expedi¬tions to study the whole group ofearliest civilization.s.” The Instituteplans, not only to carry on work inthe ea.st, and to exhibit its findings,but considers also the training ofnew men to carry on this type ofstudy in the future.”Cecil Plaza Apt. Hotel6139 Kenwood Ave.BeantituI 1-2-3 H<Kmi .\partmrnts.Electric Refrigeration, daily MaidService. Linens.Near U. of C. - $6(1 and upPhone Fairfax 6331A University Institution—The Mai(i-Rite Sandwich Shop has become aninstitution at the University of Chicago. When¬ever a student thinks of food he inevitablythinks of the Maid-Rite Sandwich Shop.The members of the Maid-Rite Organization extend a specialinvitation to the Freshmen to make this sandwich shop theirshop. Here you will become acquainted with your classmates;here you will meet the “big” men and women of the campus; here you willmingle with a University crowd in a University Sandwich Shop.The Maid-Rite Sandwich Shop1324y2 E. 57th St.Just a Block East of Mandel Hall2;^W. H. ThompsonGreets Classof 1934 Zhe Battp JKlaroon Part TwoVol. 31. No. I UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER, 24, 1930 Price Five CentsW. H. THOMPSONGREETS MAROON;CLASS OF 1934Mayor Lauds UniversityAs Typical CityInstitutionWELCOME^FRESHMENUrges Loyalty, Courage, andSincerity as Cure forCorruptionEditor's Note: The Daily Maroonwishes publicly to thank His Honor,Mayor William Hale Thompson forhis article written exclusively forthis publication. More articles of asimilar nature by notables in aca*demic, civic, and athletic circles willappear at short intervals accordingto announcements. We hope therebyto erect columns in a hall of famededicated to the students by menand women who evince an interestin them and recognise in them thefoundation of times to come. Thesearticles are directed at intelligent,thinking readers who can appreciatethem and regard them in a construe*tively critical light. Propaganda ofany sort is barred and will not beprinted. E. A. G. Break Ground forNew DormitoriesSouth of MidwayBrings University Close toRealization of IdealCollegeA new phase in the expansion ofthe University was inaugurated re¬cently when ground w'as brokensouth of the Midway for the firsttwo units of residence halls for un¬dergraduate students, which will becompleted by next autumn at a costof. three million dollars.The ground breaking ceremonybrings the University close to realiz¬ation of its plans for a unique col¬lege. Involved in the decision toerect halls south of the Midway isa plan for comprehensive reorganiza¬tion of college life, instruction, andmethod which the University author¬ities have been planning for severalyears.Halit on Sixtieth St.The two units for which groundwas broken are a men’s hall, to besituated between Greenwood Ave.and Ellis Ave., on Sixtieth St., anda women’s hall, to be located betweenWoodlawn Ave., and Kimbark Ave.,on Sixtieth St.The men’s unit will be a buildingenclosing two quadrangles, and will(Continued on page 12)By William Hale Thompson,Mayor of Chicago(HViffen exclusively for The DailyMaroon hy H’m. Hale Thompson,Mayor of Chicago. Not to be re¬printed. )Dear Mr. Editor:To the Students of theUniversity of Chicago:In accepting your gracious invita- <tion to express, through The Daily |Maroon, a sentiment to the studentsof the University of Chicago, myearnest wish would be to impressupon that splendid student body, that ,they are living in a city that enjoys,probably, more of the choice gifts ofa generous Providence than anyother large city of the world,* that,at the same time, no other city ofthe world compares with Our Chi¬cago in the golden opportunities itoffers to ambitious and energetic ,youth.A climate, invigorating and health¬ful; an inland sea; an abundance ofnavigable rivers, to carry our prod-ucts to tbe world outside; the Miss- ;issippi Valley for a hinterland, the 'richest and most extensive valley onearth, yielding from 60 to 95 per¬cent of the agricultural, mineral and ; of wealth and prosperity as the mindor imagination of man cannot now; conceive.Chicago’s future offers an invitingI field of speculation for the thought-I fully inclined; it is a study calcu-I lated to inspire the soul and quickenthe mind of the youthful student,possessed of vision, energy and ambi*tion.Chicago is the typical Americancity. In less than a hundred yearsit has risen from an Indian tradingpost, not quite a square mile in ex¬tent, a few white people trading infurs, to a city of more than 200square miles, 3,500,000 people, doinga business of a billion dollars amonth, possessing 40,000 acres ofparks, 85 miles of beautiful boule¬vards, schools unsurpassed, churchesabundant, music, art, culture, refine¬ment, red blood and throbbing life.in describing its growth, wouldyou make use of the word marvelousor miraculous?Chicago’s growrth is due to thefact that it is the typical Americancity, its people being composed ofthe commingling of the healthy,wholesome, vigorous, ambitious bloodof Europe. This has resulted ingiving us the best brain, probably.HISHONOR,MAYORWILLIAMHALETHOMPSONmanufactured wealth of the Ameri¬can nation, a valley, in wealth andextent, surpassing the dreams ofAlexander, the Caesars or Napoleon.And Chicago is the capital city ofthis mighty valley.As chairman of the Illinois Lakesto the Gulf Commission it was myprivilege to lead the campaign fora navigable waterway from Chicagoto New Orleans. As a result of thatcampaign. President Calvin Coolidgesigned the bill in January, 1927,making this navigable waterway acertainty, which means opening upthe markets of the world, of SouthAmerica and the Orient, to tbe prod*ucts of the factories and fields ofChicago and the Mississippi Valleyat $7.00 a ton, making of Chicagothw gveateet inland seaport city ofthf world, and bringing such an era the world has ever produced; andthis brun is dominated by the Amer¬ican idea of Equality; that is, thegenuine aristocracy of brain inAmerica, as against the false suristo-cracy of birth in the old world coun¬tries. And this, in the everyday lifeof America, means that restlessactivity of mind that gives us ourinventions and surprising progress,*while, in the class and caste riddencountries of the world, the brain isstagnant and paralyzed on accountof the restraining, depressing, de¬grading effect of inequality.The American ideta of Equsdity,proclaimed by Thomas Jefferson,written into the Declaration of Inde-pendc !icc. and revered by AbrahamLincoln, does not mean that everyman is jtke equal of every o£her man■^onticj|d on page A. A. Stagg Named “All-Americjin”Coach in Poll of Athletic DirectorsForty - Year Record ofCharacter BuildingOne FactorAmos Alonzo Stagg, director ofathletics at the University since itsinception in 1892, was recentlynamed “All-American” coach in apoll of prominent football coachesthroughout the country. Six confer-j enct championships in football,coupled with a lifetime record as asincere and effective advocate ofsportsmanship in college athletics,have combined to give the “GrandOld Man” undisputed leadership ofAmerican football coaches.A. A. Stagg, who has watched thegame of football develop from asport scarcely tolerated to the mostpopular form of college athletics, hasplayed a major part in keeping thegame free from professionalism. Asa player, coach, and finally seniormember of the Football Rules Com¬mittee, Mr. Stagg has been the spon¬sor of such important regulations asthe “one-year residence” rule forfreshmen and the rule against mig¬rants. The organization of theWestern conference, afterwards tobecome a model for other confer¬ences, was to a large extent the workof the “Old Man”. have always been simple and quiet.Intended to be MinisterMr. Stagg had intended, when heentered Yale, to become a minister,but his own stern judgment con¬vinced him that he was not fitted forthe ministry. After spending onlyone year in the Yale Divinity school,he left in 1890, and went to theInternational Y. M. C. A. trainingschool at Springfield, Mass., theautumn of 1890, as a member of thefaculty. His success at coachingCourtesy The Chicatro TribuneFifth of Eight ChildrenBorn in West Orange, New Jersey,on August 16, 1862, Mr. Stagg wasthe fifth of eight children. His for¬bears on both sides fought in theWar of the Revolution. In the sum¬mers, young Stagg worked cuttinghay on the salt meadows of NewarkBays, labor that toughened an al¬ready strong physique.He entered Yale in 1884, and atYale he pitched the Blue team tofive successive championships, and asa member of the football team waschosen by Walter Camp on his “All-American” team at end. Stagg wasI unquestionably the greatest pitcherof his time, and had many offers to! pitch in professional baseball. Herefused them all, although he wasj offered sums almost fabulous at thattime, just as he had refused offersof assistance while he was at Yaleand was forced by his limited fundsto live at times on a diet of breadand milk. That Spartan strain inMr. Stagg has continued. His tastes ! soon won wide attention, and whenWilliam Rainey Harper was organ¬izing the new University he per¬suaded Mr. Stagg to become directorof athletics, with the title of asso¬ciate professor. Academic rank foran athletic coach was an innovation,but the long career of Stagg at Chi¬cago has many times over justifiedthis novel step of President Harper’s.T^ j “Old Man” has made the postone of honor, serv-ice and dignity.Among the famous athletes devel¬oped under Mr. Stagg’s coaching are:the late Walter Eckersall, all-time,All-American quarter-back; HugoBezdek, now coach of Penn State;Waiter Steffen, coach at CarnegieTech; H. O. “Fritz” Crisler, recentlyappointed head coach at Minnesota;Pat Page, head mentor at Indiana;John and Harry Thomas; MiltonRomney; Nels Norgren, basketballand baseball coach at the University;John Schommer, conference footballofficial; Babe Meigs; Jim Pyott; Ken(Continued on page 10)“Raise Educational Standards “SaysPresident Chase in First Address(Editor’s note: Dr. Harry Wood-burn Chase was recently appointedpresident of the University of Illi¬nois, to which institution he camefrom the Univeristy of North Caro¬lina, where he built up a notableeducational record. The followingare some of the high lights from hisfirst official address, delivered lastweek before more than 1500 mem¬bers of the administrative and edu¬cational staffs of the University ofIllinois).“What distinguishes our Americantheory of education, especially ourtheories of state university educa¬tion, from the (European tradition,is precisely this faith that highereducation is among other things, alever to raise the general social levelof intelligence and good-will. I be¬lieve in the power of leadership, butI also believe in the necessity of ahigh general level of intelligence andculture for the future of America.”“This two-fold obligation, a stateuniversity like our own must dis¬charge, intelligently and well, amidall the complications that'eome fromdoing things on a large scale,” thepresident told the faculty members.Covert Educational FieldThe general field of education withits changing trend was covered byDr. Chase during the course of hisaddress and the talk brought tolight the problems facing the largerstate universities which he termed“peculiar problems possessed of pe¬culiar opportunities.”Dr. Chase emphasized the duty ofthe University toward the potentialleader and branded as absurd thesupposition that any large numberof college men will become leadersin public affairs, inthe professions. “We have business with the po¬tential leader—to him the state uni¬versity owes the best that it has;for him it must maintain an atmos¬phere that is stimulating and cre¬ative,” he explained.Must Raise Level“The state university, however,has also the definite task of raisingthe general level of life throughoutits state,” the president continued.“Tens of thousands of young men iand women who come out of it will jlead lives which are, if you please,undistinguished, but which ought tobe forever finer and fuller and moreuseful.”Education’s period of pioneeringwas developed during the talk andthe common mistake of ^ regardingvery many things about our insti¬tutions as settled was emphasizedfirmly by President Chase.“Liberal, professional, voca,tionaleducation are, in my judgment, inthe beginnings of a period of* Care¬ful scrutiny and rapid change,”- thespeaker asserted. “Concepts of edu-(Continued on page 13)Bull-Moving BafflesBest B. & G. BrainsNoted engineers of the Buildingand Grounds department are atpresent trying to solve the perplex¬ing problem of removing the 2000pound Assyrian bull from beneaththe Stagg field bleachers to its finalresting place in the new OrientalInstitute. Because of its size andbecause the field is being used fordaily football practice the sacrednnimtl will probably witness mostof ahe season’s game.:; before itr<*''^es its permanent stand.busi^gs^or in College Life AsIt Really Is, Aimof First PhoenixAt Last! The Diary ofa Chicago Co-edIs ExposedO’NEILL OUT-O’NEILLED FRIARS MEET Oa. 3TO CONSIDER LEGAL,FINANCIAL TROUBLECommittee Makes Plansfor Entire NewOrganization“Old Bird” to Make FirstAppearance onOct. 15Newly organized in conipositionand boasting the secrets of a Chi¬cago Coed’s Diary as written by“one who knows”, Phoenix, thecampus humor magazine, will thumbits beak at the fire on October 15and invade the quadrangles to tellFreshmen about college life as itreally is.-In an effort to depict campus cir¬cumstances in a true light, Bruce hasout-O’Neilled O’Neill and delveddown into the very depths of col¬legiate truth. Equally profitable tocampus newcomers will be “TovrovLardner Goes to College”, a recitalof the thrilling adventures of OrinTovrov told a la Lardner; and “Am¬ber Pastures for Green Folk”, aspeakeasy of high moral values.Shorter ArticlesThe first Phoenix of the year willbe illustrative of the higher standardwhich will prevail in the magazinethroughout the year. The aim ofthe editors, according to JulianJackson, managing editor, will be to■make the magazine more personal,incorporate into the contents morehome talent, especially in the fieldof jokes, and enlarge the circle -fcontributors. The articles of theforthcoming issues will be shorterand of a more local nature.Plan Serial ArticlesSeries of articles will serve as aconnecting link between the publi¬cations. There will be a page of“Applause” on which will appearpictures of those who deserve recog¬nition in the public eye; a “Schol-astica Dimentia,” short sketches offamiliar professors; a “ScholasticSequence” of poems by Ruth Ziev,and a series of “Education by Tu¬ition”, by Julian Jackson.Freshmen are invited out as liter¬ati or artists to work on the publi¬cation and club pledges are wantedto sell the magazine and try for theclub prizes. The Phoenix is twenty-five cents an issue or two dollarsfor a year’s subscription, nine issues.It will be published in the third Wed¬nesday of every month and will besold on campus for three consecutivedays instead of one day as formerly.Unemployment toIncrease CollegeEnrolment—MoonDepression in BusinessBooms EducationDepression in the world of busi¬ness means a boom time for collegesall over the country, in the opinionof Dean George R. Moon, assistantto the University Examiner. DeanMoon bases his statement upon thegreatly increased number of appli¬cants for admission to the freshmanclass. “The loss of position by alarge number of young people dur¬ing the prolonged hard times islargely responsible for this abnormaldemand for a college education,” hesaid.“The present freshman group isone of the finest in fhe history ofthe University,” was the tribute ac¬corded the class by the assistantexaminer. “The official quota of750 was reached on the basis ofscholarship and citizenship, althoughmany students were turned awaysolely because of the tardiness oftheir applications. 135 of the en¬tering men and women are here onfull or part scholarships, forty ofwhich are special awards, donatedby alumni.”Registration for freshman willtake place Wednesda.v, Thursday andFrirlay of fr»>«lhTn»n week during themorning and. afternijon iT\ Mandel(Continued on page 14) SIX HEADSSUGGESTEDAbbot Supreme; Others toj Serve Only asj AdvisorsIBlackfriars may soon be out ofthe constitutional maze enmeshingit, if the present plans of a com¬mittee appointed last year to revisethe regulations of the order areapproved. The committee, com¬posed of George Mahin, CharlesPoliak, and William Kincheloe, forBlackfriars, Frank Breckinridge, forthe Blacfriars Trust Committee, andDean Merle C. Coulter, for theUniversity Board of Student Organ¬izations, Exhibitions, and Publica¬tions, has drafted a plan which wassubmitted to the trust committeeyesterday, and this plan, as revisedand changed by the committee, willbe presented to all members of theorder at a general meeting to beheld Friday, October 3, at 3:30 inReynolds club theatre.One Tentative PlanAfter any changes made by theorder, the plan will be sent to theUniversity Board of Student Or¬ganizations, Exhibitions, and Pub¬lications at its meeting on October4.One tentative plan suggested tothe committee embodies the follow¬ing reforms:1. The abbot is to be entirely re¬sponsible to the University and tothe Blackfriars Trust Committee forany and all phases of the produc¬tion.2. An advisory board of superiors,five in number, will assist him. Theboard is made up as follows:3. One member chosen by thej cast and chorus.4. One member chosen by theI “monks”, a group composed of allthose men who are not working di¬rectly on either the production orbusiness staff in the current pro¬duction.I 5. The others of the three juniori managers, beside the one who be-I comes abbot. This means that there; will be four junior managers, all toj be appointed by the abbot. Eachi of the four will head • a division ofj the staff, the divisions to be knownI as:! a. The business division,i b. The technical division,i c. The publicity division.I d. The company.6. There will be twelve sopho¬mores, three to each junior manager.The sophomores are appointed bythe particular junior manager un¬der whom they work, and they areresponsible only to him, just as thejuniors are responsible only to theabbot.7. The abbot will appoint hissuccessor.Will Hold Elections SoonIf the plan is at last approved,there will be no delay in puttingit into execution. Elections forsenior posts, which were deferredlast year until the joint committeereported, will take place at once.Blackfriars’ constitutional trou¬bles originated in the spring of1929, when a number of questionswere raised about the election ofabbot in that year. . It was thenbrought out that Blackfriars had noapproved constitution on file withthe Board of Organizations, Exhi¬bitions, and Publications, and thatit was operating under a set of reg¬ulations written unofficially in themiddle 1900’s.! In the fall of 1929 a revision ofthese regulations was attempted bythe then board of superiors. Thisrevision was passed and sent on tothe Board of Organizations, Exhi¬bitions, and Publications, which re¬jected it.Ticket Sales PoorMute troubles 57ame upon theorder in the 'spring of 1930. The(Continued on page 14)Page Ten THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24. 1930THETRAVELUNGBAZAARByART HOWARDThe traveller was standing infront of a stone edifice that waserected at the cost of at least onehundred thousand bucks, if there isthat much money in the world, whenalong came a gentleman.“Say,” he said, “can you tell mesomething about these lodges thatare called fraternities? I have aboy coming in school, and I’d beinterested in having him join oneof these frats.”The traveller wondered. Couldthis guy be serious?“And in case my boy joined thisfraternity, w’hat are the bills?Would he have a room of his own?This sure is a nice place,” he wenton. “I’ll tell you what I’ll do. Ihave a few more houses on my listthat I have to see yet, so I can’tmake any dates yet for my son, butI’ll look around and if I don’t seeanything I like better. I’ll bring himaround”. And with that the gentle¬man left. All of which may be sad,but is nevertheless very, very true.* * *A little further on, the travellerwas annoyed by having his hatcrushed from the rear — a newhat too. He turned and there stoodRobert J. Graf, Jr., the grafter,smiling from ear to ear.“Just back from Europe”, beamedRobert, “where I’ve been all sum¬mer. Have you heard? I’ve beenkicked out of school. They thinkI’ve been grrafting. I didn’t graft.It’s easy to make an honest livingthese days—there’s so little compe¬tition”. And having rung up asmart one, Robert departed into theshadows, but somewhere tuckedaway in his head, the traveller re¬membered that Robert had beenbusiness manager of the Cap andGown and that more recently he hadgone to Europe. Oh, well, whokilled Jake Lingle?♦ * ♦We have it from an authenticsource, at least we have almost everyreason to believe that it is‘authen¬tic, that the brick domicile on Uni¬versity Avenue, the Psi U. house, isbeing renovated. Evidently, thelast Treasurer was honest, which issaying something for this day andage.* * *To the dubious reader of TheDaily Maroon who believes that theword enrolment (kindly see page 9)is misspelled in these columns, wehasten to assure him that either oneor two “I’s is looked on with favorby the Honorable Noah Webster andother equally eminent authorities.* * *Over in one dark corner, oppo¬site Dan McGrew, sits the new ar¬rival of an old guest, the honorableJames J. McMahon, chief mud sling-er at the now defunct Whistle. Asis his ancient practice, we hadn’tshaken hands with him before hepulled us over to the other darkcorner and said in a whisper, “Say,have you heard the one about—”If you should find him prowlingaround some dark night, ask him totell you about the gigolo. Thenagain, maybe you’d better not.Come to think of it, it’s only nextyear that that new fangled ideaabout deferred rushing goes into ef¬fect. That ought to be the signalfor the fraternity boys to dig inand make hay-hay while the sun isthus shining. A word to such wiseought to be sufficient. And it prob¬ably will be.STAGG IS NAMEDALL AMERICAN(Continued from page 9)Rouse, captain of the 1928 team, andnow secretary of the Alumni Asso¬ciation.Perennially presented with theleast attractive football materialfrom which to mould a team of anyBig Ten coach, Mr. Stagg perenniallyinstills in his elevens a phenomenalamount of aggressive strength. Forthe past few years he has extendedthe forward pass attack into a threatjustifiably feared by potentiallystronger machines.Some of the high spots in confer¬ence rivalry which have respondedto Mr. Stagg’s brilliant generalshipare the campaigns of 1899, 1905,1907, 1908, 1913 and 1924, in whichthe Maroon gridders have won thechampionship of the Big Ten. In1905 the Stagg machine astonishedfootbairfans by defeating “Hurry-Up” Yost's “point-a-minute” Michi¬gan Wolverines, 2-0. As recently aslast year Mr. Stagg surprised a pessi¬mistic Maroon following by trounc¬ing Princeton, 15-7. >-- c WHATHAS BECOME OF THECOLLEGIATE" COLLEGE MAN?THE STORE FOR MENMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY<;SPECIALIZING IN STANFORD WILLIAMS COMPANY CLOTHINGV-Data for MenAssembling aSchool Wardrobe Gone are the peg-tops. Gone ore the bell-bottoms. Gone even ore ^^choker style^*three-button coats. In their place the college man of the 1930 era indicates os hispreference the styles of younger alumni in business. Realizing the trend which hasbeen taking place The Store for Men introduces today its new university styles forautumn. You’ll find a certain trimness, a definite swagger, in these campus clothes.They simulate business-like lines — yet they hove on individuality all their ownlT|CQ Solid colors and smallI ICO figures hove the call.The traditional stripe may seesome service but the tendencyruns heavily toward the moreconservative patterns. At $1.35IKIITIAI handker.11^1 I l/\L chiefs! Fine linenhemstitched handkerchiefs withyour initials in colors or white willbe executed to your order andsent to you at school. $5.50 doz.Hots, hose, shorts and shirtsand other accessories follow theideas of former seasons. You'llfind a complete selection here.Ql IITC —will be smoke blue.OvJI I O This blue-gray com¬bination will be tailored in doubleand single breasted models—although indications forecast aheavy double-breasted season.Notch lapels will also be widelyworn. $50 is a price which willbe more popular than ever. Wealso hove o good selection at $45TOPCOATS Itscamel's hair will be the dominantfabrics. Fifty inches will be aboutthe correct length. Single-breast¬ed is the model. Prices from $40QllinTQ College men seemIK I O to put their faith insolid color or white broadcloth.Collar is attached. Price $3.50Rich nut brownsand block, prefer¬ably in the French toe or wing-tip style tell the story. Priced inthe Young Men’s Room, $7.50 up.THE DAILY MARCX)N. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24. 1930 P^lge ElevenWisconsin Taboos*Academic Loafer*In Novel ReformMeikiejohn Says Attitudeof Student TakenInto AccountThe University of Wisconsin, forseveral years the bell-wether of aca¬demic reform, with its experimentalcollege headed by Professor Alexan¬der Meikiejohn, this week starts pio¬neering in new educational pastures.For the first time one of the largestuniversities in America puts into ef¬fect changes explicitly designed tobar out the academic loafer and tomake education a matter of thespirit and not the letter, by ceasingto place sole reliance on grades andcredits as a measure of intellectualattainment. Passing marks alonewill no longer serve the student asan academic life preserver.“The University of Wisconsin can¬not be converted into a high-classcountry club,” announced PresidentGlenn Frank after the changes w'^readopted. Students who are cleverenough to pass in their studies butwho begrudge the hours spent awayfrom social and athletic activitiesare wasting their own as well as theuniversity’s time and money, in hisopinion.The new curriculum will give newstudents two years to demonstratethat they can profit from the univer¬sity’s opporunities. If their experi¬ence during that time has really beennothing more than an intellectualsiesta they will not be allowed to goon, despite passing grades. Butevery encouragement will be givenstudents of superior ability and in¬terest.Grand Scale of ExperimentThis time the university is pioneer¬ing on a grand scale. For where theMeikiejohn experiment concerns but200 students in a special college, thenew course of study, which groes intoeffect with the freshman class thisFall, will ultimately affect the 6,000students of the College of Letters andScience, with the possibility of in¬fluencing sometime the whole univer¬sity enrolment of almost 10,000.How far the Meikiejohn experi¬ment is responsible for the changesis a matter of disfpute, but every¬ FORMER UNIVERSITYDEAN HEADS GOUCHERDavid Allen Robertson, formerdean of the colleges of Arts, Litera¬ture and Science of the University,has been elected president ofGoucher college in Baltimore, andwill assume the robes of office thisfall.Dr. Robertson spent the first twen¬ty-one years of his career at theUniversity following his gp’aduationhere in 1902. He was assistant pro¬fessor and secretary to the presidentuntil 1920. From 1914 to 1923 hewas associate profe.ssor of lEnglishand also spent the last three yearsof that time as dean of the collegesof Arts, Literature and Science.Dr. Robertson was the founder andfirst president of the Renaissancesociety, which organization stillexists to foster the appreciation ofart in Chicago.where it seems to be agreed that itprovided the stimulus. The studiesof the young disciples whom the ex-pre.sident of Amherst has gatheredabout him on the Wisconsin campushave been for the past three yearsan educational cynosure. Their wide¬ly discussed two-year cour.se throwsoverboard the whole paraphernaliaof marks, civdits, examinations andthe cut-and-dried subjects of study.Instead, the students are “intro¬duced into the ways of thinking bygetting them to study in the first yearthe Athenian civilization of the fifthcentury B. C., and in the second yearthe civilization, of the United Statesin’ the nineteenth century. Thesetwo studies are intended to give intro¬duction to literature, history, art andarchiecture, economics, politics, re¬ligion, anthropology, science andphilosophy, each in two different set¬tings and each in relation to theothers.’’The new plan, now begun in theCollege of Letters and Science on therecommendation of a faculty com¬mittee aided by two student groups,represents a compromise betweenthis freedom of the experimental col¬lege and the inflexibility of the uni¬versity’s old system. The tutorialmethod, for example, the most im¬portant item in the teaching systemof the experimental college, is strong¬ly urged in the new system through¬out the university. The general dep-‘^recatlon of cold bookkeeping records as an indication of the students’ de¬velopment may also be traced to theexperimental college, as may the in¬troduction of general survey courses.The Fir»t Two YearsOn the other hand, the curriculumis still chopped into separate courses.A definite number of credits is nec¬essary for graduation, as of yore.Required subjects, while they may bedisposed of more easily, remain. Formost students the day-to-day routineof the first two years will be the sameas it was under the old regime.The freshman who enrolls thisweek will be confronted, however,with a variety of arrangements tonurse along his individual develop¬ment. 'First he will face a series ofexaminations in English, foreignlanguages, mathematics, history andthe sciences. If,a test shows thathis proficiency in history is beyondthat indicated by his high schoolcredits he will be placed in a classcommensurate with his actual attain¬ment rather than his credits. Thesame rule will apply to the other sub¬jects. If he is a student of unusualability he may not have to take mostof the required subjects and so havea wider range of electives. Thenumber of years spent in classroomswill no longer be a criterion.At the end of two years, however,a sharp line is drawn. Formerly thestudent would be entitled to go as ajunior provided he had accumulatedthe necessary number of credits. Butnow that is not enough unless hisgrades place him in the highest groupof his class.If he, falls into the second grouphe must apply for admission to thejunior year. His application will beconsidered by a faculty committeewhich will give weight not only tohis high school and university recordbut also to the written recommenda¬tions, if any, of members of theteaching staff under whom he studiedas a sophomore. If he is in the thirdgroup be cannot be taken into thejunior class at all, but may applyagain after a lapse of one year. Atthis time his activities since leavingthe university will be taken into ac¬count.It is estimated that 65 per cent ofthe students will fall into the firstgroup, 20 per cent into the secondand 15 per cent into the third. Ap¬proximately half of the applicatiortein the second group are expected tobe approved.However, regardjess of whichgroup he makes, he will be given aIIThe Maid - Rite GriUIsrapidly nearing completionand will be readyto servea limited number ofstudenUFriday, September 25th.WATCHthis paper for the announcementof our formal openingThe Maid - Rite Grill1309 East 57th Street certificate entitling him to the rankof “graduate in liberal studies.’’If the student has proved his abil¬ity and seriousness he will be al¬lowed as much freedom from rou¬tine work as he can profitably use.He may even be granted a master’sdegree, in addition to a bachelor’s de¬gree, after only four years of study.1 - M DEPARTMENTHAMPERED BY LOSSOF PLAYING FIELDSAlthough faced with the loss ofseveral of its playing fields acrossthe Midway, the Intramural Depart¬ment of the University will begin itsfirst major activity with the inaugu¬ration of the fall touchball season, atthe opening of school. The construction of the new wom¬en’s dormitories at 60th and Wood-lawn Avenue has deprived the de¬partment of a valuable playing field.No announcement has been yet madeby the department concerning itsplans for the fall quarter, but un¬doubtedly the problem of providing adequate fields for the intramuraloutdoor sports will prove a knottyone.The I-M department, headed thisyear by Ray Vane, expect to comecloser to their declared purpose ofan all-University participation insome form of sport.lookfor-theVenetianstar Studio tea shopFAVORITE CAMPUSRENDEZVOUS1369east57th★ ^ ^ ^ ★^ WELCOME ^BACK TOCHICAGO* ¥ Jf V The Penthat passesexamswill help you pass all yoursEasily—3,000,000 Parkers will goto school this fallGUARANTEED FOR LIFEVm paid a bonus if my point gets 11 okays—1 pay a forfeit if it fails to earn them allV*The Parker Point-Smith$3 buys this polished Italian marble Desk Base—tapered pen end included free—to convert.your pocket Duofold to a Desk Set Pen. Com¬plete set, as shown with Duofold Jr. Pen{pocket cap and clip included), $10.Matched Vest-Parkers$750Pest-Parker Duette Set — midget Pen andPencil together weiring less than % ounce.Each convertiblefor Desk Set use. Pen alone, |J;Pencil, $2.30.inmihinsmmywvmFor co-eds or travelers this inlaid enamel TravelSet with Moire Pen {convertible for purse orDesk Set)—pocket cap with ring includedfree, complete, $8. We pay a bonus for every Duofold point to give you a Pen thatwrites with Pressureless Touch. To produce this, we had to developsquads of post-graduate point-smiths. We allow them to make but alimited number pe. day. Thus they have time to make each point amasterpiece.It must pass 11 merciless tests. Then we pay its maker an extrareward. If it fails any test, we reject it, and the point-smith pays a forfeit.Yet 7 out of 8 they make are Bonus Points. And these, and these only,go into Duofold Pens.Like 2 Pens for the Price of OneTry this famous Pen at any pen counter. See how it changes from apocket Pen to a Pen for your study Desk Set by simply interchangingthe pocket cap and the tapered tip. This saves the price of a second pen.Parker Duofold Pens are Guaranteed for Life. Their Permanite barrelsare non-breakable, yet they have all the beauty of costly jewels.Duofold Pens hold 17.4% more ink than average, size for size.New streamlined balanced shapes now ready at all dealers. See them—and see the streamlined Pencils to match. Don’t buy any pen withoutfirst trying the Parker Duofold Bonus Point.THE PARKER PEN CO., Janesville. WisconsinPEN GUARANTEED FOR LIFE, $5, $7, $10A Complete Line of Parker PensatBrandt Jewelry Co., he.1225 East 63rd StreetPage Twelve THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930STIFF SCHEDULEDRAWS CROWD ATILLINOIS STADIUM930 Ticket ApplicationsAlready Heavy W. H. THOMPSONGREETS MAROON,CLASS OF 1934Champaign, Ill., Sep:. 23—Sched¬uled in the stellar role as the Home¬coming attraction October 18, theNorthwestern football game showspromise of jamming the Stadiumwith more spectators than have wit¬nessed a Homecoming since RedGrange' ran to fame through thebaffled defens? of Michigan’s teamin 1924.With thousands of ticket applica¬tions pouring in from all points opthe compass, ticket office estimatesindicate that the new south stand,erected last year and filled only forthe Army game, may once more bepacked with cheering spectators. Thepresent capacity of the MemorialStadium is 66,704 seats of whichapproxinn ?ly 88 per cent are be¬tween the goal posts.The Wildcat encounter, besidesbeing the first conference game onthe schedule, brings the “F'ightingmini” an opportunity to avengethemselves against the Purple, whohanded Illinois ' s only defeat lastyear and effec "ely 'wi-ecked theOrange and Blu. title hopes. Com¬parative reports of the two teamprospects indicate another excitingstruggle in store for this year.Purdue Is On CardPurdue, conference champion, in¬vades the Stadium November 1 forthe first game the Illini and Boiler¬makers have staged since 1919.Some 3,000 dads are expected to beon hand to see the prestige of theconference titlists matched againstthe fighting spirit of the Zupmen.The climax of the season and thetraditional wind-up against OhioState will be played November 22.Illibuck, the famous turtle whichtraditionally resides with the win¬ning team, has been a resident ofChampaign-Urbana for four yearsnow, leaving for but two week-endsand being promptly reclaimed fromthe Buckeye campus on each occa¬sion.“King Football” will claim his•first cohorts from the campus Octo¬ber 4 when Iowa State college bringsits boys from the “Tall Corn college”to open the 1930 season. Boy Scoutday will be observed for the Amesencounter. Tickets for this gameand the, one with Butler the follow¬ing week-end will sell at Sl.oO.Other home games will be $3.Go to Ann ArborMichigan will attempt to repel thefirst Illini invasion at Ann ArborOctober 2'). The Wolverines, stillsmarting from a 14 to 0 beatingIE 1^ ID'Ll 1^ A§¥IMIEiriRIIIKmore.It isn t necessary to understand Einsteinto appreciate tke new dimension so Lap—pily expressed in tke C onklin EnduraSymetrik. Gracefully tapered, roundedends, stream lines, a radical and startun^departure from tke conventional, maketkis tke pen for tke progressive. If youkreak it on kard words we fix it. Freerepair service is provided ky a perpetualand unconditional service guarantee. Tkeup-and-'going college stores skow tkeseand otker collegiate Conkkns.ConJtlin Pen Co.TOLEDO, OHIOSANFRANaSCOCHICAGO ^cav'*'mriiim i (Continued from page 9) |, physically and mentally; it means jI the equal recognition of God’s gifts :I of mind and soul, wherever found, |; whether in the cottage or in the ,I castle. Ij The University of Chicago is Itypical of Chicago, as Chicago is: typical of America. Out of the ^dreary fields of sand and weeds and ibrush of yesterday, there has arisen, |as if touched by a magic hand, this iI University, a thing of architectural '> grandeur and scholastic splendor, jarresting the attention and arousingthe admiration of the world. Nextto the advantages of citizenship inChicago is the privilege of educationenjoyed by the students of the Uni¬versity of Chic. go.My sentiment would be incom¬plete without a final word to theyouthful student, that great bless¬ings impose correspondingly graveresponsibilities. The primary pur¬pose of the school room is to arouseI in the young mind a craving for thefacts and the truth, and to elevateabove all things else the standard ofloyalty, courage and sincerity.Is there any spectacle more repre-I hensible, more pathetic, than the! man of learning prostituting himselfI by bartering his knowledge for the; crumb of corruption from the tablei of criminal profit?I Is there anything, on the otherI hand, more ennobling than the ex¬ample of the man of learning, usingI his knowledge to exalt the ideals ofI God, and home and country? Allowme to extend my sincere welcome tothe class of 1934 which enters schooltoday and wish them every successduring their college career.! Very sincerely yours,j WM. HALE THOMPSON,I Mayor, City of Chicago. Bigelow Gives Firstof Raymond Law !Scholarships to 3The first of the James Nelson Ray- |mond law scholarships of $600 each jwere awarded at the close of thesummer quarter to the three winnersby Harry A. Bigelow, dean of thelaw school. These scholarships wereestablished by Mrs. Anna L. Ray¬mond as a memorial to her late hus¬band and are among the few avail¬able to law students. Other scholar¬ships providing whole or half tuitionare available for those who havedone special work in the undergradu¬ate school.Carl N. Howig, Gerhardt S. Jer-sild and William Klevs, winners ofthe first Raymond scholarships, haveall worked their way through col¬lege. One of the students is a union jlather and still works at his trade; janother is a Roumanian who has 'been in this country only since 1923, |and the third is one of a family of 'fourteen children. ' BREAK GROUND FORNEW DORMITORIESSOUTH OF MIDWAY(Continued fi'oni page 9)be 341 feet long by 240 feet deep.It will accomodate four hundredstudents. The Midway front will befive stories in height, and the sideswill be four stories. There will beeight .sections in the hall, each withan individual entrance, with twomain gates facing on the Midway.Two club rooms and two dining hallswill be in the south end of the build¬ing, and adjoining on the south willbe recreation fields.Women’s DormitoryThe building for women studentswill be 340 feet by 154 feet, fivestories in height on the Midwayfront, four stories on the wings, andtwo stories on the south section. Itwill house 370 women, and will bebuilt in four sections, each with itsown dining room. The club room andrecreation facilities of the men’s building will be duplicated. Zantin-ger, Borie and Medary, of Philadel¬phia, are the architects, and Bulleyand Andrews are the contractors.Erection of the dormitories wasmade possible through the generos¬ity of Mr. Julius Rosenwald, a mem¬ber of the Board of Trustees of theUniversity and one of its leadingbenefactors. Mr. Rosenwald hasagreed to contribute forty per centof a total construction cost of fivemillion dollars. .These new dormitories will sup¬plement those accomodating studentsat present. The first residence hallsbuilt at the university were thoseerected in 1892 adjacent to Cobb,for the quarters of divinity students.No undergraduates were admitted.These halls cost $173,044; withCobb, the total cost was $395,000,$70,000 more ihan had been planned.Snell hall, accomodating sixtystudents, was erected in 1893 at atotal cost of $53,586. For ten yearsSnell was the only undergraduatehouse for men, and the center ofstudent life and activity. Hitchcock, the last dormitory built, opened itsdoors to undergraduate men in 1902.Its architect studied halls of itstype all over the United States andEurope for the best ideas to be em¬bodied in the construction of the newbuilding. Hitchcock cost $150,000,provides for 93 students and has aclub room, infirmary, breakfastroom, and a large library.Three of the present women’s dor¬mitories were erectea in 1893; thosegiven to the University by Mrs.Elizabeth G. Kelly, Mrs. MaryBeecher, and Mrs. Nancy S. Foster.Kelly and Beecher each cosi $62,149,and each has quarters for 42 wom¬en, as well as a dining room andparlor. Nancy Foster hall, referredto in University records as “thisbeautiful building” cost $83,433, andhas rooms for 67 women.The erection in 1899 of the wom¬en’s dormitories, was made possibleby a gift of $72,000 from Mrs. Kellyin memory of her parents.SUBSCRIBE TODAY FORTHE DAILY MAROONwhich, resulted last yenr when“Gaga” Mills and Frankie Walkerbroke loose for six riotous minutesin the third quarter, are out to spoilthe Illini visit.The only intersectional encounterthis fall is the .Army game, at theYankee stadium in New Yo,rk City.Student transportation facilities arebeing arranged for a general exodusthe week-end of November 8 andtickets are selling briskly.A chance to spend a week-end athome and see two traditional rivalsmeet is being utilized by many Chi¬cago students and file engagementNovember 15 with Chicago at Staggfield is drawing more applicationsfrom the Illinois student body thanany other out of town game. Store Open EverySaturday EveninfiUntil 9 oXlock S(SliMrtrtHovfiResents a NewSemi-Peak Lapel for College MenYOUNG FELLOWS WHO DRESS IN GOOD TASTE, ANDWHO PURCHASE ECONOMICALLY, HAVE ACCEPTEDCHARTER HOUSE CLOTHES ALMOST UNANIMOUSLY.INTERESTING ASSORTMENTS WHICH INCLUDE THENEW SEMI-PEAK LAPEL COAT IN CHEERFUL FALLCOLORS, AS WELL AS SMART EFFECTS IN BLUES ANDOXFORDS ARE READY NOW-IN THE LYTTON COLLEGESHOP-AND OUR SUBURBAN STORES.THECVyHUBHenry C. Lytton & SonsChicago StoreSTATEATJACKSON Suburban StoresEVANSTONOAK PARKGARYrTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1930 Page ThirteenTHE DAILY MAROONwishes to announce thatin the next issue — ap¬pearing October the hrst— an article by Col.Robert Isham Randolphwill appear in the “Col¬umns in the Hall ofFame” section.‘RAISE EDUCATIONALSTANDARDS’—CHASE explained, ‘but it has too often trans¬ferred the center or gravity of edu¬cational thought as a whole to thedepartment of the division of thespecialty.”The president expressed his hopeto see some day a faculty into whichall those who come will have atleast some general knowledge ‘ofwhat higher education as a wholeis about, and of the great philoso¬phies and creative movements that have represented the best attemptsof man to educate his youth.Co-operation between educationaldepartments was lauded by thespeaker and he compared it with theformer trend towards departmentalspecialization.In closing, President Chase spokeof two other binding duties of theUniversity, first, that of research,and second, that of making its re¬sources public resources.(Continued from page 9)cation can scarcely escape the im¬pact of the forces which are shapingthe civilization of the western world.Names Definite Obligation‘‘In such a period, there is an ob¬ligation of a definite sort to face therealities of our own day and timeof freshness and vigor and creativeinsight. What I am arguing for issimply what might be called educa¬tional realism, in the sense of anattitude that faces frankly the prob¬lems that are about us here and now,in the spirit of open-minded andscientific inquiry; whether thoseproblems are those of liberal or pro¬fessional curricula, of organization,of student life, or in whatever fieldthey lie.”‘‘The immense growth of speciali¬zation in American institutions inthe last half-century has raised defi¬nitely the level of competence ininstruction and research,” Dr. Chase BIp1p1pp An open letter to youCowhey’s Men Shop1001-03 E. 55th Streetat Ellis AvenueStudents, University of Chicago:For yeart' Cowhey’s have been serving thestudents of the University of Chicago, andnow we are to serve you even better than wehave in the past.We carry a complete line of Sweaters, Caps,Knickers, Shirts, Shorts and Neckwear.Let us serve you.Yours very truly.Cowhey’s Men ShopCh as * A * Stevens & Bros.GO CHICAGO!TO THE JUNIOR DEBSALON • • •FOR CLOTHES, OF COURSEWith a campus in the heart of chic Chicago—it is necessary for you to be dressed in justthe correct costume for each occasion. Fromfrocks for ordinary campus wear to grace¬ful gowns of distinctive formality — wherebut at Stevens, in that modern little roomTHE JUNIOR '0E8 SALONFIFTH FLOORS^eClALlZlNG IN SIZBS II—13—15—17 SubscribeToday for...illaroon$3.00 the YearSTATI STReeT. CHICAGO Waterman’s—The fountain penwith SEVEN degreesDoctor of letters, perhaps—but the degrees we mean arethe seven different degrees of pen points through whichWaterman’s will exactly fit your handwriting needs.Try all seven yourself—pick your point. Examine thepatented spoon-feed that brings the ink evenly to thepaper without skimping or blotting. Note Waterman’ssize-for-size greater ink capacity—won’t run dry in themiddle of a lecture or exam.There’s a Waterman’s for every taste and every purse.Newest are the Patrician and the Lady Patricia—the verylast word in colorful beauty, as well as writing efficiency.The Patrician’s five jewel colors, its great ink capacity, itsextra large gold pen point and its aristocratic lines, makeit the natural choice for the man who wants the best. Tendollars. A pencil to match, five dollars.The Lady Patricia is the pen women have wanted foryears. A smart feminine clasp locates it securely in belt,pocket or handbag. Choice of three smart colors. Slen¬der and graceful, yet it holds plenty of ink. Five dollars—and three for the matching pencil. miWhen you select your Waterman’s, have it filledwith Waterman’s ink — that’s the nr plus ultraof writing luxury. Waterman’s new Blue Ink inthe blue carton; Blue Black in the yellow carton.Use the first for note-taking and general correspon¬dence, the second when permanency is needed.Every Waterman’s is guaran¬teed forever against defects.'Waterma n*sPage Fourteen THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 24, 1930THISTLETHWAITE IN ^FRESHMEN GIVENUSUAL ROLE; FEARS NEW EXPERIMENTALSTAGG AND MAROONS TESTS ON MONDAYMadison, Wis., Sept. 23—Al¬though cheerfully conceding thatthe first week’s practice of his Uni¬versity of Wisconsin football squadwas the best opening week he hasever had, Coach Glenn Thistleth-waite is still frankly apprehensiveregarding the Badgers’ openinggame with Chicago, October 11.The Maroon publicity, all ofW'hich has been on the “bear” order,and the low estimate placed uponChicago’s prospects by many ex¬perts—real and alleged—is heavilydiscounted by the W’isconsin mentor.“Whatever Coach Stagg’;5 ma-teiial—and it must be admitted thathe usually has less than most con¬ference coaches—the Maroons arealways dangerous vn two games—their first and last ones.” CoachThistlethwaite said, “If you willstudy Chicago’s record in recentyears, you will find that Stagg hasusually won his first importantgame. Chicago may lose somegames after that, but they generallyrally strongly for their last one.W’e have been playing them at theend of the season and have alwaysfound them tough. Now we are tomeet them at the start of the sea¬son, when, relatively, they are evenstronger. I am expecting one of our jhardest games of the year from ,Chicago.” jChicago, opening October 1, has {a distinct advantage — « perfectly ;legitimate one, of course—in hav¬ing a week more of unrestricted jpractice than Wisconsin, where thetwo-a-day workouts are limited toa week. With registration occupy¬ing Monday and Tuesday, andclasses beginning W’ednesday, theBadgers are now' practicing only twohours a day, in the afternoon period.Coach Thistlethw'ane closed thegates Monday and secret practicewill now be the rule until the endof the season. Only newspapermen and members of the athleticdepartment staff are admitted to thesecret drills. Reading and placement tests forall incoming students, a new experi¬ment in measuring the capabilitiesof freshmen will be given Mondayfrom 8:30 to 11 in Cobb hall. DeanChauncey S. Boucher has introducedthese examinations for the purposeof extending University personnelwork with freshmen and enablingtheir advisors to become better ac¬quainted with their individual schol¬astic deficiencies.To Help Program PlanningIn this way, more helpful advicecan be given on second and thirdquarter programs and a check willbe provided to compare with theregular high school marks w'hich haveoften proved inadequate in the pastfor evaluating each student’s ability.Another purpose of the new testsis to reduce the number of studentswho drop out during the four yearcollege course because of failure.At present the University graduatesabout half of its entering students,as compared w'ith the one out ofevery four proportion mentioned re¬cently by the president of Princetoni university as the average for Ameri¬can colleges.Friars Meet October 3To Consider Legal, iFinancial Troubles(Continued from page 9)ticket sale was far lower than theyear before, and the order showeda large deficit. About the sametime, led on by rumors of ineffici¬ency and favoritism in the order,the Board of Organizations, Exhi¬bitions, and Publications appointeda committee to investigate conditionsand propose possible remedies.Blackfriars attempted to meet thesituation by drafting a new consti¬tution and submitting it to theBoard, but it was rejected. It wasat this time that the order decidedto defer the election of officers un-I til this year, and it appointed repre-: sentatives to confer with the Uni¬versity Board and the Blackfriars. Trust Committee. IGRIDIRON READY Michigan Uw OpensNew Golf CourseVISITORCHICAGOTIME TO GO P DOWNSYDS.TOGOR YD. LINE •. Ann Arbor, Mich., Sept. 23—Members of the board of regentsof the University of Michigan anda group of faculty members willgive the new' University golf courseits first baptism of fire Friday, play¬ing over the course as guests ofthe athletic association. It is un¬likely that the course w'ill be openedfor general use before next spring,nevertheless ' it is to ne given itstrial now.The course is the old universitylayout, enlarged and completelymade over. Experts have said thatit is a course which w'ill becomenationally known m a few' years,because of the naturalness of itshazards and its completeness in ar¬chitecture. Its greens, averaging jin size slightly less than 10,000 |square feet, being of a rolling type, {sloping off at the edges into traps |are outstanding. From one to three jtees have been constructed for each ;hole, W'hich result in variation ofthe length of the course between6,210 feet and 6,650 feet.The layout has just been finished,and will be kept fiom general useuntil next spring to permit harden- jing and to allow completion of a |clubhouse. The clubhouse will cost japproximately $70,000 and will be |artistic in design. It will boa.st a imain section of two stories for joffices, a soda fountain and loung- |ing rooms, and tw'o wings i of onestory each. One wing w'ill containlockers for men students, and the jother three locker roms for women ^students, faculty men and faculty imen’s wives.REGISTRATION(Continued from page 9) jIhall. Class cards will be issued, and ieach entering student will have a jpersonal interview with his dean, for \advice in the selection of a programand assistance in his orientation toI The University Chapel, regarded as one of the three most beauti-I ful buildings in the country, marks the culmination of the religiousspirit of the University. . ; the college world.SUBSCRIBE TODAY FORTHE DAILY MAROON VETERAN’S PEACEMEDAL AWARDEDTOUNIVERSITYWork in Political ScienceWins RecognitionWashington, D. C., Sept. 20.—The University was one of threeAmerican institutions which todayreceived peace medals from theveterans of allied armies in sessionhere at the annual congress ofFidac, the interallied veterans' as¬sociation.Other institutions receivingawards were based principally uponthe number and excellence of theircourses in political science havingbearing on international relations,w'ere Columbia university and theUniversity of California, Princetonand Georgetown universities re¬ceived honorable mention.Prof. Dodd Receives MedalProf. William E. Dodd, chairmanof the university’s department ofhistory, received the medal for hisuniversity, while Dr. Noel T. Dowl¬ing represented Columbia and Dr.Jujljus Klein, California. The medalswere presented by Lieut. Col. FredW. Abbot, president of Fidac.The presentation was made infront of a phalanx of allied flags andin the presence of the delegates tothe Fidac congre.ss from ten coun¬tries.One Hundred Colleges CompetedIn awarding the medals, Lieut.Col. Abbot expressed the world warveterans’ appreciation of the accom-pH.shments of the universities inpromoting international good willand understanding among theirstudents. Each of the universityrepresentatives responded briefly inaccepting the medals.More than 100 colleges and uni¬versities were nominated for theawards and all were invited to sub¬mit reports to a jury headed by Dr.Stephen P. Duggan, director of theInstitute of International Educationof New York. The medal award,conducted for the first time thisyear, will be made annually by Fidacat future congresses.SECOND HAND AND NEWLaw, Medical, ’TCV'T ROOKTS ForMU.ofC.General * Jl Jii^ CoursesComplete Line of Students’ Supplies of All KindsStationery, Fountain Pens, Brief Cases, Laundry Mailing CasesTennis and Sporting Goods, University Stationery,Jewelry and Souvenirs, G5mi SuppliesPortable and Large TYPEWRITERS Sold, Rented, RepairedOPEN EVENINGS OPEN EVENINGSWoodworths Book Store1311 Blast 57th Street, Near Kimbark Avenue2 Blocks North of School of Education 2 Blacks East of Mitchell Tower