Vol. 32. No. 5. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 6, 193} Price Five CentsMAROONS DRILL ONBLOCKING, TACKUNG;STAGG BEGINS WORKON NEW LINE PUYSNorgren, WattenbergInstruct Punters,PassersNO SCRIMMAGEThe Maroons spent a brisk after¬noon yesterday acquiring perfectionof techniques in the fundamentalsof blocking, tackling, charging, pass¬ing and punting, with some atten¬tion to new plays which may beu.sed against Michigan next Satur¬day. Following an intensive .sessionwith the tackling and blocking dum¬mies, the squad ran through a seriesof off-tackle smashes.Under Coach Stagg, the backspracticed a type of running block inwhich the "flanker” takes out theopposing end. Meanwhile CoachPage was sending his linemen overobstacles placed six or seven feetfrom a tackling dummy in an at¬tempt to secure more drive andmore precision in this pha.se of thegame. Ben Wattenberg, passing ex¬pert. was exchanging long throwswith A1 Summers, while Coach NelsNorgren traded punts with BobWallace and Pat Page Jr.* Stagg Appears In UniformPaul Stagg appeared in uniformand trotted carefully about the field,but he did not go through any plays."Ivan” Walsh, who watched prac¬tice from the sidelines, expects tobe ready to play within a week, de¬spite an infected foot. Aufdenspring,Page and Kanne will take examina¬tions to remove schola.stic deficien¬cies this week.The spectacular showing of threeMichigan sophomore backs in Sat¬urday’s doubleheader against Mich¬igan Normal and Central StateTeacher’.s college gave ample- indi¬cation that the Maroons will bemeeting a team composed of vet¬erans and extremely capable new¬comers.Michigan Sophomores ScoreThe three sophomores, Everhard-us, Heston and Fay, accounted forfour touchdowns and relegated tocomparative futility Harry Newman,pa.ssing star of last season, andCaptain Hudson, reliable plunger.Compared with the results ofChicago’s twin engagement the previous Saturday, in which the Ma¬roons beat Cornell 12 to fi and lostto Hillsdale 7-0, the Wolverinesfared well. Cornell was overwhelm¬ed this w'eekend, 47-0, by MichiganState.(Continued on page 3)Maroon AnnouncesJournalism ClassCandidates for the Daily MaroonFreshman training school may signup any day this week from 2:30 tofi at the office, of the Daily Maroon.The class will meet on January 4and on Tuesdays and Thursdaysthroughout the winter quarter. Noacademic credit will be given. LouisN. Ridenour, editor-in-chief of theDaily Maroon and William V. Mor-genstern, director of public relationsof the University will be in chargeof the school. Speakers from down¬town papers will lecture on the ele-nionts of reporting, news writing,copy reading, and editing. At theend of the winter quarter, membersof the Freshman reporting staff willbe chosen. After the opening of thespring quarter, the candidates select¬ed will begin work as members ofthe Daily Maroon staff, at whichtime they will take over the report-ving and proof reading duties forwhich^ they have been prepared attAe training school 'Publish New StudentDirectory October 15 FILBEY ANNOUNCES SIXTYFACULTY APPOINTMENTSA new undergraduate student di¬rectory, containing the names, ad¬dresses and telephone numbers ofall undergiaduate students, is be¬ing edited by William Custer,business manager of the Cap andGown, and Luke Galbraith, assist¬ant business manager. The direct¬ory, .scheduled to appear on cam¬pus October 15, will be the firstdirectory published since 1929.Presidents of clubs and fratern¬ities, and students holding otherexecutive positions on campus,will have their official titleslisted.MAROON BEGINS X'BOOK DRIVE TODAY Announcement of sixty new mem¬bers who have been appointed tothe University faculty for the cur¬rent year, was made by Mr. EmeryT. Filbey, assistant to the President,at the annual faculty homecomingheld last night at 6 in the Judson |Court dining hall. Speakers of the }evening were Dr. James M. Stifler,University Trustees; Dean Beard¬sley Ruml, of the Social Science Di¬vision; and Professor Frank R. Lil-,lie. Dean of the Biological Sciences.Seated also at the speakers’ table,were President Robert M. Hutchins,Harold H, Swift, President of theBoard of Trustees, and Mr. EmeryT. Filbey. mathematics: Assistant ProfessorAlbert A. Adrian; and Mr. W. T.Reid.Department of anthropology: As¬sociate Professor Manuel J. Andrade;Mr. Harry Hoijer; and ProfessorAlfred R. Radcliffe-Brown. Depart¬ment of English: Mr. Emmett L.Avery; Mr. Louis A. Landa; and Mr.J. T. Westbrook. Department ofmedicine: Dr. E. S. G. Barron, as¬sistant professor; Dr. Eugene C.Ciccarelli; Mr. Arthur N. Ferguson;Dr. Allan T. Kenyon; Mr. John A.Larson; and Dr. Kathleen Muir.Will Attempt to Surpass1200 Mark MadeLast Year Of the original members of thefaculty. Professors Herbert E.Slaught, A. A. Stagg, FerdinandSchevill, Edwin O. Jordan, andFrank R. Lillie were pre.sent, whiletwo others. Professors Carl R. Mooreand Julius Stieglitz, were ill and un¬able to attend.The C-book sales drive sponsoredby The Daily Maroon begins todaywith the opening of a C-book sta¬tion in front of Cobb hall. By means iof personal canvassing, by staff :members, and the use of The Daily iMaroon’s editorial facilities. The jDaily Maroon Board of Control ihopes to push the sales above the Imark of 1200 books reached last 1 Surgery DepartmentThe following additions havebeen made to the University facultysince July 1, 1931: department ofsurgery: Mr. W. E. Adams; Dr.Francis B. Fralich; Mr. Howard C.Hatcher; Mr. Earl R. McCarthy(Rush Medical College); Mr. WillisJ. Potts (Rush Medical College);Mr. Wiliam John Vynalek (RushMedical College); department of Modern Language*Department of modern language:Mr. H. A. Basilius. Department ofphysics: Mr. Niel F. Breadsley. De¬partment of zoology: Mr. Donald A.Boyer, and Mr. Ralph M. Buchs-baum. Department of music: As¬sistant Professor Carl Bricken. De¬partment of pediatrics: Dr. DouglasN. Buchanan, Dr. O. J. Emery, Dr.William F. Schoffman, and Mb’. J^nJ. Szavertnik, clinical instru!qpM!lGraduate Library School: Profes¬sor Pierce Butler. Department ofchemistry: Mr. Anton B. Bjki^'^^dMr. Simon Freed. Departmdh^ ofobstetrics and gynecology: AssociateProfessor Dr. W. J. Dieckmann, Mr.H. Close Hesseltine, Dr. Howard J.Holloway (Rush Medical College),and Dr. Frank E Whitacre(Continued on page 4)y«ar.“The reduced price of $7.50 hasaided the sales greatly,” Lester F.Blair, manager of the Football Tick¬ets coipmittee said yesterday. “Sixhundred books were sold before lastThursday, and since then studentshave bought almost 150 books, al¬though the open date la.st Saturday,undoubtedly retarded the sales.”This year’s (’-book section will bemuch larger than last year’s, thusassuring all purchasers of choiceseats, as these re.served .seats will beon the fifty yard line.Robel’t Mcf’arthy, business man¬ager of The Daily Maroon, pointedout that “The Daily Maroon staffwill not .sell any C-books i)ersonally.(Continued on page 4) Dramatic Tryouts Commence i l_ Di ! ITomorrow; Seats Go On SaleGIVE SCHOLARSHIPSTO FIFTEEN SCHOOLOF COMMERCE MENAwards of eight honor scholar¬ships to members of the Senior classand seven honor entrance scholar¬ships were announced yesterday bythe faculty of the School of Com¬merce and Administration.Seniors who receive the awardsare: Robert Colville, Chester Laing,Ernest Moldt, Stoddard Small, Jos¬eph Sherry, Fred \dams, ReubenTurner, and Frank Murray.Transfer students: Paul Bing-han^ Weber (Utah) College; Ches¬ter Hunt, Phoenix' (Arizona) JuniorCollege; John Ryan, Flint (Mich¬igan) Junior College; KennethCapouch, J. Sterling Morton JuniorCollege, Cicero; Milton Giller andTheodore Kleisner, Crane JuniorCollege are those receiving scholar¬ships. Sea.son subscription books for allDramatic association productionswill go on .sale tomorrow, it wasannounced yesterday by George T.Vander Hoef, business manager. Gil¬bert White, president of the associa¬tion, said that tryouts for the firstproduction will be held on the Rey¬nolds theatre stage tomorrow andThursday afternoons at 3. The titleof the first and second productionswill be announced tomorrow.Tryout* TomorrowThe tryouts tomorrow and Thurs¬day will be for all students exceptfirst quarter freshmen. Special try¬outs for entering students will beheld within two weeks. Candidatesfor the first two productions of theseason, to be given on November 5th,fith and 7th, and December 3rd, 4thand 5th, will try out. The freshmenwho try out at the special casting tobe announced later will be consider¬ed for the Freshmen plays to be pre-.sented in the third week in Novem¬ber, and also for regular Dramaticassociation productions during thewinter and spring quarters, iSeason subscriptions for six | plays, including the women’s vevue,“Mirror”, will be on sale* fit thebox office in ManSel cloisters dailjf.Telephone orders will be receivedevery afternoon from 2 until ^ atMidway 0800, locar47-. Th ^rice ofthe subscription is $2.50, ohe-haltof last year’s price, when thid nurti-ber of productions was fivci inBteadof six. . , ■ MlTickets will be'sold on camfiusLeslie Daniels, Robert ChapeV, JaheWeber, Clara Danziger, Lee Hasseil-busch, Edwin Hadfield, CharldsGreenleaf, Janet Lowenthi^l,.|laHidnNash, Dorothea Hatton, ^ W^lmaStout, Nathan Krevitsky, GeorgyWish, and Billie Aronoff, The]) itlkyalso be procured from Geofki jVarti-(ler Hoef, and from Rube Frodin, atthe Maroon office.Date* of Production*The complete list of datt*(||Jl^r \thesix productions are as foilplays on November 5th, fitand December 3rd, 4thfreshman plays on NovemPlayfest on January 28th,30th; Mirror in FebruarAmerican play revival inSocial Program GroupHolds First MeetingMembers of the Social Programcommittee of the University willmeet with Dean William E. Scott at4 on Thursday afternoon of thisweek in Cobb 203, Charles Schmidt,chairman of the committee, an¬nounced yesterday. .The group will discuss and out¬line a schedule of campus socialevents for the year. Senior mem¬bers of the committee are CharlesSchmidt and Sylvia Friedeman; theJunior class is represented byJerome Jontry, Luke Galbraith, andEleanor Wilson; Katherine Wieden-hoeft is the sophomore member. The Daily Maroon ‘‘C’’ Book Drive , fStudent season ticket books, providing admission ailathletic events for the academic year 1931-32, are this,priced at $7.50. Mail the coupon below with $7.50 andtiJfpMri/, ifall quarter tuition receipt to the Football Tickets Comniitt^eU'*i<Faculty Exchange, and a receipt entitling you to a “C’t'iibolikl*!will be mailed you. You may then secure your book bing at the office of the Football Tickets Committee, preiyour receipt, and signing the “C” book. HomFootball Tickets CommitteeFaculty Elxchange, University of ChicagoChicago, IllinoisGentlemen;I wish to enter my application for a “C" book,cashis my tuition receipt and money order for $7.50.check 4|#11 Hi.,>'i »ilbo hf’Endoacd.), ♦irln ■, ' Ln."■f-j , 1 haL-NameAddress Hutchins AddressesFreshman AssemblyPresident Robert M. Hutchins,Coach A. A. - Stagg, Dr. C. H.Judd, dean of the school of edu¬cation, Charles W. Gilkey, deanof the chai>el, and C. S. Bouch¬er, dean of the colleges of Arts.Literature, and Science will talkto the freshmen in a series of as¬semblies starting tomorrow at 9in Mandel hall.These assemblies which havebeen held every Fall quarter forentering students are now madeoptional for the first time. In thepast, they were held every Mon¬day morning at 11 and attend¬ance was compulsory.HUNGARIAN ART ONVIEW IN WIEBOLDTRenaissance SocietySponsor Display ofModern Work toShowing for the first time inAmerica, the Renaissance Societyannounces the exhibition of fortyrepresentative paintings from themodern art of Hungaria, daily from2 to 5 until October 25, in Wie-boldt 205. These paintings havebeen collected by the College Artassociation under the patronage ofhis excellency, Nicholas Roosevelt,Minister to Hungary, his excellency.Count Laszlo Szechenyi, Minister tothe United States, with the assist¬ance of the Nemzeti Salon of Buda¬pest, and the Silberman Galleries.The opening or the exhibit lastThursday was attended by officersand members of the Renaissancesociety, by Mr, Medgyesy w’ho is theRoyal Hungarian Consul in Chicago,and guests from the Hungariangroups in the city. Mr. A. Silber-man of E. & A. Silberman, NewYork ar|f dealers, who negotiatedthe loan of the collection inBudapest, was also present.These paintings were selected ob¬jectively from every .school in Hun-(Continued on page 2)DR. AMES BEGINSRADIO CLASS INRELIGION TODAYProfe.ssor Edward Scribne;- Ames,head of the department of philos¬ophy, today inaugurated a lectureseries on the “P.sychology of Reli¬gion,” which will be broadcast fromhis classroom from 8 to 8:35 fourdays weekly. The broadcast willcome through radio station WM.4Q.In general, it is the purpose ofthe course to apply the point ofview and method of psychology,taught in standard univei’sities, tothe study of religion.The course is divided into fourparts, the first dealing with the be¬ginnings of psychology of religion,its, problems and methods; the sec¬ond, with the beginnings of religionin the race and its early develop¬ment; the third, with individual re¬ligious experience, and the fourth,with special problems.Culver Hall MonkeyTakes Course in BotanyMonkey business!Yesterday, the University’s oneand only monkey, heretofore impriJVoned in Culver hall for purposes ofanatomical research, escaped there¬from, wended its way to the Botanybuilding, and when pursued by sev¬eral students, sought refuge in aconvenient hole in the wall. Thehole, about a foot square, ends in ablind passage. The monkey, at thetime The Daily Maroon went topress, had not seen fit to come outand the University authorities hadlocked the door to the room andgone home. SCHMIDT TO HEADHOMECOMING WEEKPROGRAM PREPAREDFOR YALE CONTESTPep Sessions, Parades,Bonfires PlannedFor StudentsLAY CORNERSTONEAppointment of Charles Schmidt,Delta Tau Delta, by the Undergrad¬uate council as chairman of Home¬coming on October 17 marks thebeginning of a series of Homecom¬ing activities extending over ninedays and culminating with the Yalegatne on Homecoming Day.The Homecoming committee yes¬terday assumed responsibility for aseries of pep sessions and paradesbefore the Michigan and Yale games,as well as for the arrangements ofthe Homecoming program. Thursdayevening of this week a pep sessionand parade will begin outside ofBartlett gymnasium at 8. It willculminate in the laying of the corn¬erstone of the new field house at5fith street, the ceremony to be per¬formed in the light of a huge bon¬fire. Coach Stagg will officiate, as¬sisted by members of the Board ofTru.stees. The pep session will serveas a send-off for the football squadas it leaves for the Michigan game,Saturday.Parade Through Street*Monday evening, October 12, thefootball team and band, transportedin trucks, will lead a parade of Uni¬versity students and automobiles,through the Hyde Park and Wood-lawn districts. The parade willform in front of Bartlett gymnasiumbetween 7 and 7:30 that evening.A second pep session is plannedfor Thursday evening, October 15,two days before the contest w'ithYale. There will again be the tra¬ditional bonfire, and members of theteam and student leaders will speak.The Homecoming committee yester¬day referred to this affair as “areal, organized rally on a largescale.”Decorate Fraternity Hou*e*All fraternities are urged to com.-pete for the trophy to be awardedto the most effectively decoratedchapter -house. The houses will bejudged at 10 Saturday morning,October 17. Permanent po.ssessionof the trophy- is allowed the winnereach year. . The emblem was won byPhi Kappa Sigma last fall.Concluding the Homecoming Dayactivities, a dance is to be spon-(Ctontinued on page 4)Maroon Editor IsElected to CouncilLouis N. Ridenour, Jr., editor-in-chief of The Daily Maroon, waselected to represent all LTniversitypublications on the Undergraduatecouncil for the present year. Theelection followed a meeting of theeditors and business managers of allcampus publications held yesterdayin Lexington hall.Attendlngi the meeting w’ereLoui.s Ridenour and Robert Mc¬Carthy, edil;or and business managerof the Daily' Maroon; Orin Tovrovand James McMahon, editor apdbusiness manager of the Phoenix;and Gilbert White and William Cus¬ter, editor and business manager ofthe Cap and Gown. The addition ota representative' of the publicationsto the council wa$ made last year.Ridenour said yesterday that hewould see that all publications wouldhave adequate representation in thebody, and that he would do all inhis power^ to see that the councilgave full support to all worthy puK-lication ventures.n-ill is'^r ,u ,< v*”^ 1.1'* '• ’ I 'J A o^N.VMESDAYf£>CT0BER:6>*m Ma:iliCm.t r y^lrJ foil* f^Tiwic fefift\s‘^Ofc5l \TE»«' A.«I§i;'p5 S F'RM'^. J)EW>^ B ^HOWVKE)I>>frRiFxn >K-. jE^pRSlJ^s> §^f Abigar^ir'.(f^O^ ii'•■i^ *■tW^ 'itH'ilJianl'^^oSfs'tlLm, Mafeerni^r^l ‘iMMmat i foe lUaily IVimoan Mas laor aesceniii©a lo s,o'wis.iwn»K. ^VTn#i- ^ ^ ‘apt p'Marb®M beliiev^#® «rh’at ra«0M% sr-^iaft- (m.fcfee 'pw^b^sc ol?^ “C” !fss rao5n®y we® sp®M; we axe afeo coitmitaed tehaf tbe d'esfee &}<majeirity o>f sfeudtefots is^ to swp'port the Umiversby s teams,Cpadh A. A. Stagg?* ^he “Oranil ^Id ^^<art of mter^il^gtateij^^®^ — T-,Y-’.-y-f*'-Ibe w&m& of Sm-gg is kmown and respe^Tejdv. In xeB'enit yeax^^ fo lackoi niafeeniaJi dWe to the petat^vejy small enwollmenit |it fki? tjailfe58U|?#and the ubflaggmg sehojlaattc stawdlarda wbrcb'|ji^^ ‘maintained here has handlca^pped Che ©Id Man. I^nlt^in'k^h^i oi^tics^hawe pointed to th® ummjpressive footsbaW record MaVpoi^ teantstew years as a<n exam>pjle #ipt §tagg fg "‘l^trbis Tbis. we beKeve, is an entirely unfair critielsm.Be 6ha;t as it may, the Old Man is putting ofo the fireld-this /a-lj I fc ) .-S- fi.^m ->1'r«#:= liS\what js bailed a« prospectkvi^y the bejt 4ea’'m m ’year.s. 'P'lay'iiig’ ^stiff sebedude the teana should provide plenty (of thti®^ in ijt^ihpnriegamesi’ ."■■*■. .Matoon teams in the oth,er spoirts have always bet^q'winnws, and contmue to be today. The gym team ts pptb^i|g %<|its tenth eonferenc^ championship in tbe past twelve years pif. gbm-JpetfetiQifo. The baseball team was nosed out of the chfon^ptisOq^hfR^ of y.the Big Ten at Wisoo-nsin last springy, dropping -atheir ve>ry eagerness to win it, to a team that ^they had^t^d|L^^beaten. The water pol-o tea.m has won numergi^.elmmpioigflyps;Last year's basketba® team, though eHmin|ited ii|-'widseb^ntitelle eoM^ender, nevertheless won, some sutpjr^e i4*^feoj4>e8, ^andhad the great Northwestern five pretty v{p^.ried.There is no question but feha't^thjij. ptferohase o| n 'XP -h$^ok ci^titles the student bnying it to far nQ^#reb%an seven dr^lla^rs fijd a hl^lfworth of good entertainment. There is also the ^rjpajdent that h,^is helping the Univerjsity provide an athletic progr<fgnq fpr the bth-dents. Intramural athle^tica, the funds for whhh qfime frqip thcathletic dq,pprtment, were pa9rticipat<'ed in fost yuat By no 4^J200 men. The aim of the Intramural departq^nt h to prpjfi,^competfifiv^ athletics for every able-'bodied man in residence tKpber ormot he is re^prcsqqit fh^on a team.That this IS a worfhy aim cannot be gainsaid, and it is im|>qrt'?ant that it be not handicapped by p Jack of funds. The prohtby the University from the sale of '"‘C** books is almnst mlb but tb^ 1’'if packed). with''teei, slosif^Burnin^g Edge^^SWOCth, m$ favor* *'ite pipe tohaccsl*'in 4I out of 5,^/f'MMbuage, one qi^Wt \ ■ ■■ *f..';,'4thoutgh by UQ meapf essential, is ip this unenMgoithe best means of bringing the University i^o -dtte <piProducing a winning footbatl team'is nojt od .stlflSfi'ent imppr^'ance i© justify apy underhanded or shady practice designed to pro¬duce that Winning ten-m,—^we do nxot m any way condone thetice of proseJyting, or t3h,je hk,e:. Bnf jf *t helps the boys onlust to have us sit up jp the stands ahd y®ll—-and they claim it does—5we^ shoAuIjd stand rejady and W'^pli^g to do it . " . ,For the reasQin^ abpV^,^ ^e Claiiy Mptoon befeeves t^aj'*t|ie'dr’ive to sell ‘T)*' books to fjre itudreirts h worthy pf its wbol«^hse|ijfte.dsupport. In this d|sy of purchase of a, stu^^f^nt atiftuaj^ticket book for sev’^p; dd^^s half is ope of the greafegt barf f«ily "^afoon is outfeed/ffil'^pH^d d| Iteci^ng^s “C^’ b^'k #'' r d-fi’o of fifie'¥^'kO- m “t ‘ ^ ^»r V:'!/•m .11 ^ miS'" b b %•*v-T' -'Mt*mi m-'h rif,THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 6, 1931 Page llirceFRESHMEN TO MEETTODAY IN BARTLETTFOR 1-M POSITIONS OFFICIAL NOTICESAll freshmen interested in themanagement of I-M programs willmeet at one today at the Intramuraloffice on the third floor of Bart¬lett gym. At this time they will besigned up for work during the fallquarter. Freshmen are elected toSophomore positions in charge ofthe various sports at the end of theschool year.A number of touchhall entrieshave already been turned in andthe balance of the entries from frat¬ernities and profe.ssional schools aredue in by noon of Wednesday, Oc¬tober 7. The drawings for leagueswill take place Thursday and theschedules will be made up in timefor play to start the following Mon¬day.The Intramural department isconducting a special drive thi.^ yearto get all dormitories and profes¬sional schools of the University a?well as independent organizations toenter teams in the touchhall tourna¬ment..All games are played on the fieldsat doth and Greenwood and at 59thand Cottage Grove avenues. Win¬ners and runnersup in each league,play off for the gold football trophygiven to the University champion,Psi U, last year’s champions, playingwith Phi Beta Delta, last year’s run-nerup, won by a 6 to 0 score in anexhibition game played duringh'reshman week.The most important of the rulechanges this year is the addition ofthe point after the touchdown, .\ftereach touchdown, the ball is put inplay on the eight yard line and theteam that has just scored the touch¬down has one down in which to scorethe extra point by either running,passing, or kicking. I 8—Station WMAQ, Professor Ames on “The Psychology of Re¬ligion.”1 1—“Modern Public Welfare Work in Germany: Juvenile Law” byDr. Marie Baum, Graduate School of Social Service Admini¬stration. Wieboldt 102.1 1 :30 to 12:30—Tryouts for choir, Mitchell Tower.12—President Robert M. Hutchins addresses the Freshman menand women holders of scholarships; Elast terrace of the newresidence halls for men.12—“The Religious Man As A Citizen”—Dean Shailer Mathews.Joseph Bond Chapel.12—First meeting of the student council of the School of Commerceand Administration.2:30 to 4:30—Tryouts for choir, Mitchell Tower.2:30 to 3:30—Tryouts for orchestra. Harper M-1 1.3:30 to 5—Social Science Tea, Common room. Social Science 201.4:30—Seminar of the Department of Medicine, Dr. P. C. Hodgesand A. C. Ledoux will present a paper on “X-Ray Pelvime¬try,” in sunparlor of M-3.4:30—“Get acquainted meeting” for women of the Divinity School,Swift Hall, Room 207.5-5:30—Organ recital. University chapel.7:30—Christian Science Organization Meeting, 1110 E. 58th St.8—Biology club and Division of Biological Sciences. “Experimentson The Amphibian Egg” by Professor Hans Spemann ofthe University of Frieburg. CLASSIFIED ADS.CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING15c a line. Minimum charge, 45c.10 per cent discount for four ormore insertions. All classified adver¬tising must be paid for in advance.FOR RENT — Furnished room,suitable for two students. 5942 S.Michigan Ave. 1st apartment. Engle¬wood 8661.FOR RENT—Large corner room,3 wind. Priv. fam. Single. $5, $8 for 2. Hyde Park 0375.FOR RENT — Large front bed¬room in house. Double bed. Alsosmall single side bedroom. 6440 In-gleside Ave., Midway 7201.YOUNG MAN will share roomwith same. $4 per week. Jones, 6019Kimbark Ave.TO RENT—One room on screenedporch. Double bed. Breakfast ifj desired. Also 2 room furnished kit¬chenette, $45. McKewal. Call Vine. 9104.MEN STUDENTS—Good rooms;one furnished apartment. \ cry lowrates. 5605 Drexel Ave. Hyde PiV.2286.FOR RENT—Apts. 5701 Black-.stone Ave. Corner, 7 rms. 2 baths.$120. 5703 Blackstone Ave. 7 rms.2 baths $100. Hyde Park 2525.TO RENT—Attractively furnish¬ed room wdth private family. Largecloset. Fine location. Call eve¬nings 5-9 at 5706 Drexel Avenue.YEAR’S LOWEST PRICE!NEW 1932RCALicensed RADIOSAll the latest features!Multi - mu - Pentode —just the radio you want! COMPLETEwith RCA Licensed TubesRADIO7 MONEY-SAVING RADIO STORES860 East 63rd Street OPEN EVENINGSMaroons Drill OnBlocking, Tackling(Continued from pa^e 1)Other conference eleven.s on the.Maroon .schedule this fall, such asWisconsin, Purdue and Illinois, alsowon their games. The Badgers heatNorth Dakota State, 12 to 7, whilethe Boilermakers were subjugatingWe.stern Reserve, 28-10 and Coecollege, 19-0, and the Illini weresmothering St. Louis University,20-6. Indiana, on the other hand,dropped their contest with NotreDame. 25-0. -HOT!-Elar Roasting RythymDine and dance to thesultry syncopation ofJUNIE COBB and his“12 Grains of Corn”playing nightly at the(Clubid linntrMichigan Ave. at 23rcl St.Chicago's newest andsmartest Chinese andAmerican Restaurant.No cover charge—from5 P. M. until the milk¬man comes.Don’t miss theCOLLEGIATE“KICK - OFF”EVERY FRIDAY NIGHTTHE TRAVELER’S BAZAARMARIE GULBRANSEN, ImporterA traveler’s curiosity shop in an Old English setting.O ORENTAL UBRARY GREETING CARDSDUNHILL pipes and smoker’s equipmentWAHL EVERSHARP pens and peneikANTIQUES GIFTSo o**A place to browse and improve an idle moment”1019 (@lb CtioliBliPROFESSOR or STUDENTYou’ll enjoy the quiet home-like atmosphere of theWoodlawn Apartments5238-40 Woodlawn Avenue1-2 rooms completelyfurnished including maid service bully old sloganme just right- Aitsno bamboozlin' about thatI 95OURE! When a word fits, you know it!“Satisfy” just fits CHESTERFIELD. A smokerpicks up a package, and he likes its neat appear¬ance — no heavy inks or odors from ink. Thatsatisfies him.Then he examines a Chesterfield. It is well-filled; it is neat in appearance; the paper is purewhite. And that satisfies him.He lights up. At the very first puff he likesthe flavor and the rich aroma. He decides thatit tastes better—neither raw nor over-sweet; just pleasing and satisfying.Then he learns it is milder. That’s anotherwpy of saying that there is nothing irritatingabout it, And again he’s satisfied!Satisfy — they’ve got to satisfy! The right to¬baccos, the CHESTERFIELD kind, cured andaged, blended and cross-blended, to a taste that’sright Everything that goes into CHESTER¬FIELD is the best that money can buy and Ithatscience knows about CHESTERFIELDS do acomplete job of it They Satisfy!) 1931. LiGGxrr & Mynts Tobacco Co.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 6. 1931The Theater“THE GREEN PASTURES”Pulitzer Prize Play, 1930Presented by Lawrence Rivers Inc.At the Illinois TheatreAuthor—Marc ConnellyProduction designer—Robert Ed¬mond JonesMusic directed by—Hall Johnson“Good monin chillun” dis amMarc Connelly, welcoming you-—notmerely to “The Green Pastures” ofthe negro faithful, but to the dra¬matic walhalla of those who havefaith in the theatre as a living artmedium. His heaven is a happyhunting grounds where fish frys arethe order of the day and the “Lawd"smokes ten cent ceegars with true.\mos ’n Andy relish. His angels areartists who well deserve halos forthe simple grace with which theypresent an epoch in theatre history.“The Green Pastures” is not mere¬ly an achievement—It is not merelythe master stroke of a master show¬man. On the night of February 26.1930, when the curtain first rose onMr. Deshee’s didactic Sunday school,there rose with it the mist of ob¬scurity which all too often shroudsthe artistic essence of the drama.We have here, in the adroit Connellyvein, a flash of the theatre as itwas in the days when all Greecebent, with one accord, to warm theirhands at the flame of lyric drama.“In the beginning”, Mr. Desheetells us, “God created heaven andearth, and He made Adam and Eve”.Then, bye and bye (although Mr.Deshee does not tell us this)Aeschylus came along and combined‘he mythological, legendary, and de¬votional elements of life, buildingthe first dramatic unity. His godswere glorified men; his men, mortalgods. Beneath the high note of hisdramatic action flowed a rich moraltremor; and the formula produced.nasterpieces like “Oedipus Rex”.Now, in a mechanistic age, when thestage has become the stampingground for propaganda and bur¬lesque, Marc Connelly has revertedto the simple technique on which thetheatre was originally built.Like Aeschylus, Connelly deriveshis material from the mythologicaland devotional life of a primitivepeople. Even the tragic fatalitywhich pursued the unfortunateAgamemnon, returns to hound Con¬nelly’s genial “Lawd.” who createsthe earth only as a draining placefor his surplus firmament—only tofind in it a growing source of tortureto himself. “The scum what’s onit” grows worse and worse, a phen¬omena God cannot understand whenhe contrasts their antics with thoseof the angels who frolic in a sinlessheaven, not unlike the ElysiumFields of Virgil or the Paradise ofDante. There is in his cosmogonya simplicity that is profound, adramaturgy so unconscious of itsown existence that it is flamboyant.Mr. Connelly proved with “TheBeggar on Horseback” that he wasimbued with unusual agility in strip¬ping life of its complexities anddrawing its caricature in bold relief.In the present instance, he hasblended his satiric conceptions withthe very harmonious simplicity ofthe one religion which has remainedunscathed and un.selfconscious. Un¬der a touch less delicate than thatof Marc Connelly, the simplicity ofnegro spiritualism would have beenutterly lost. In the hands of anysave those who have savoured thatspirituality from childhood—thisdramatic conception could not havecome to life.Richard B. Harrison, the sixtyyear old Chataqua reader, who madehis stage debut in “The Green Pas¬tures”, brings to the “Lawd” awarmth of understanding, a genialkindliness unattainable to one whohad not spent a long life learningthe significance of mercy.Between the action, the dialogue,the lighting and the setting of hisdrama, flows a coordination of tonetjhat is like the full, single blast ofa trumpet. Mr. Connelly has ban¬ished from the theatre all essence ofsensationalism, all flavor of oration.He represents the theatre in its mo.stsimple form; and—after all—it isonly simplicity that approximatestruth. God Talks with Noah FILBEY ANNOUNCESAPPOINTMENTS TOFACULTY FOR YEAR 28 14 IHOMECOMING ,(Continued from page 1)sored by the committee in Bartlettgymnasium beginning at 8:30 andcontinuing until midnightu Thedance will be open to all studentsand returning alumni.The committee in charge of thisprogram* is composed of JackClancy, Bayard Poole, Gardllilr Ab¬bott, .Alfred Jacobsen, Robertard and Warren E. Thompson.tj: C-BOOK DRIVE(Continued from page 1)The purpose of this drive is to showthe students that this year’s C-bookis the best buy in athletic conteststhat has ever been offered on thecampus.” L .In addition to all the home foot¬ball games, the C-books include tic¬kets for swimming meets, basketballgames, and other winter sports, andpasses to the tennis courts for theSpring quarter. (Continued from page 1)Department of laryngology andotology: Mr Clifford L. Doughertyand Mr. Louis D. Greene, both inRush Medical College. Departmentof economics: Miss Mary B. Gilson;and Assistant Professor Alvah E.Staley. Department of law: Assist-1ant Professor Wilbur G. Katz. Forphysiological chemistry, Miss Eliza¬beth M. Kock, and Mrs. Zonja Wal-lin-Lawrence have been added. Ingeology ana paleontology, Mr. Wil¬liam C. Kriimbein; in education.Miss Helen Mansfield, AssociateProfessor John D. Russell, and As-.sociate Professor Mandel Sherman.Associate Professor A. F. Mar¬quette is in the Commerce and Ad¬ministration school; Associate Pro¬fessor H. H. McMillen in SocialService Administration; and the de¬partment of history has added visit¬ing professors Raymond C. Miller,and T. W. Riker.Two new members of the phil¬osophy department are Mr. MerrittH. Moore, and Associate ProfessorCharles W’illiam Morri.s. Additionalinstructors on the Board of Examin¬ations are Miss Ruth C. Peterson,Mr. William Reitz, Mr. James T.Russell, and Mr. John M. Stalnaker.Dr. Arthur Turner has been assignedas School Physician in the Labora¬tory schools. Major John M. Walshis an assistant profes.sor in the de¬partment of military science andtactics. TWENTY-EIGHT YEARS AGOOctober 5, 1903Reynolds club was just opened.Membership tickets, free to all menat the University for the first termof the quarter, were distributed inthe hallway of the club.Delta Kappa Epsilon, Alpha DeltaPhi and Psi Upsilon announced theintention of continuing their pol¬icies of not pledging until the fifthweek of the quarter.Forty-five students registered inthe Law School. Dean Beale said hethought the growth of the schoolwould be gradual. A large shipmentof European law reports were re¬ceived and placed on the shelves ofthe Law library.Advertisement — “The ShermanHouse is serving to college men aspecial table d’Hote dinner withwine, sixty cents.”FOURTEEN YEARS AGOOctober 5, 1917Drexel house opened and a newexperiment started. By a system of rotation, each of the eighteeji womenin the hall was assigned to take herturn at cooking meals and keepingthe house in order.At the University of Kansas menwere outnumbered by women threeto one for the first time in the his¬tory of that University, accordingto registration figures.Professor John M. Manly, head ofthe department of English, leftcampus to assist the department ofintelligence at Washington, D. C.He was engaged in translating ciphermessages; and received the rank ofcaptain in the department.Associate Professor Robert Red-field of the department of An¬thropology returned from Francewhere he had been driving an ambul¬ance.ONE FEAR AGOOctober 5, 1930Women’s clubs at the Universitypledged 118 women. Wyvern andPhi Delta Upsilon lead the list withfifteen pledges each.Sixty Freshmen aspirants to thegridiron answered Stagg’s call forfootball players.The current issue of College Hu¬mor elected Jean Searcy to the Col¬lege Hall of Fame.FOR OIKL^(«radu«U*8 or Underfraduattrs. Six••• ^onth-* of thorough training —putinto a thrve months* intenaiva iH>ur9** for irirh whoknow kmv fo tiudy. Sand today for KuHatinCourars aiart 0«*iubar Jaaiuiry 1*April 1 • JuK 1.MOKKH I'OI.I.KUK"'Chm liuM*n*m ('cMieV'' teifA 4 •''IIH Smith Mlrhl^an Avrnur, t.hira|c*»PSoiir H«ml >lpb MtTStationan New and Second HandLaw - Medical - GeneralText and Supplementaryj ,Brief Gases, Laundry Mailing Cases, Tennisorting Goods, ;>tjniversity Stationeryit!n *w Fountain PensLIkrgest stock on South Side—all the leadinglines $2* 75 to $ 10.00. Other pens $ 1.00 andup. Pens and Pencils repaired!(PI ft'I'Portable^ M Large TYPEWRITERS Sold,.11 fuo^iir ^!t Rented, RepairedJJ.! U.ldHOpen Evehimfeif y.yAiir y, Open EveningsWoodworth’s Book Store1311 E. 57th St., near Kimbark Ave.2 Blocks East of Mitchell Tower2 Blocks North of School of Education lllllliilll47 Years of ExperienceDeveloped This PenWaterman’s Patrician is everywhere regardedas the world’s most beautiful pen. In addition,it stands at the top of the Waterman’s line ofquality writing instruments — any of whichwill give you:1—A selection of pen points regardless ofstyle or price.2—An extra large ink capacit>' in everymodel.3—Attractive colors in modern designs.4—Every worthwhile mechanical improve¬ment which perfects writing.Pens from $2.7-5 to $10.Waterman’s IdealInkThere is no finer writingfluid. Made in six colors —for dip or fountain pens —writes on any paper—super¬ior quality at real low cost. Pencils $1 to $5.Watermaifs