®fie Bailp iHatoon C)^ /VO Qyo\oVol. 33. No. 13. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1932 Price Three CentsINTERFRATERNITYCOUNCIL AMENDSRUSHING RULESDecides to Hold BallWith Reductionin Price ‘‘Achieve Socialism in Our Time!^’ Is Plea of NormanThomas to University Students of Present GenerationThe annual dance tponcoredby Skull and Crescent, sopho¬more honor society, will be heldthis year on Saturday evening,November 19, at the Shorelandhotel. Tickets are being sold byall members of Skull and Cres¬cent at a dollar and a half acouple..4n amendment of article 2 of theInterfraternity Council’s deferredrushinp rules was adopted at theCouncil’s second meetinpr last night.The purpose of this amendment is toclear up the former ambiguity in re¬gard to summer rushing.The amendment as adopted readsthat “a man shall not be rushed fora period of three months precedinghis registration in the University.”By “registration” is meant that timeat which a man actually signs up forhLs courses.Clarifies Rule By Norman Thomas('opyriKht, 1932, by The Daily MaroonIt is one of the ironies of American life thatthe increase in the proportion of our popula¬tion which holds high school, college and uni¬versity diplomas has been accompanied by anincrease in political apathy, political standard¬ization and, I am tempted to say, political in¬efficiency. Stuart Chase ought to add a newchapter to his famous book, “The Tragedy ofWaste,” dealing with the waste efforts of uni¬versities in training men in the so-called poli¬tical sciences.Ba.sically the fault is not the university’s or,at any rate, it is less the university’s than life.That is to .say, the university reflects the colorof our time. For many years during thatglamorous Insull epoch associated with thename of Calvin Coolidge the average Americanyoung man or woman entered college or theuniversity as a portal to success. It wa.s interms of success, and the cra.ssest sort of com¬mercial success at that, that higher educationwis sold to high school students all upland downthe United States. For the sons of the rich whowere likely to inherit prosperity, the idea of.‘•uccess was less crudely presented in commer¬cial terms. College education became tlie hall¬mark of the gentleman. This prevailing atti¬tude tended to frustrate some of the really finework that was being done all the while in ourThe purpose of this amendment |was the clarification of the spirit of i and universities,deferred rushing. The Council under- ! ^ jyreat change has come over the spiritstands that no plan of deferred i (j^eam.s. We are actually by way of dis-ru.hinp can possibly be successful ; ^ graduate can be un-ton o“f' al^.he ?rrternIt,Vs ZZL'- \ employed and hungry We are creating a col-pus. In accordance with the spirit of j lege diplonia-cd prolelanat, yes, even a prole-the rule... no fraternity man can in- I tariat of well trained technicians and engineers,vite a freshman to hus home or fra- i This fact is likely to be of profound significanceternity house during the period of ! for the future. I am well aware, in other words,deferred rushing. ! that I am writing this article for a collegeHowever, it is entirety permissible | generation in a far different frame of mindthat ca.'sual calls be made on fresh- | were most of the college men of, let usmen at their homes or dormitory irooms. Fre.«hmen may be met oncampus, and contacts thus establish¬ed are in no way unethical. Friend-ship.s between fraternity membersand freshmen existing before fresh¬men come to school need not bebroken under deferred rushing rules.After a .eomewhat heated discus¬sion the Council decided to remainneutral in its attitude on the peti¬tions asking for A. A, Stagg’s reten¬tion as head football coach. It waspointed out that Stagg’s forty-oneyear leputation was of great valueto the University and that any move¬ment looking toward his retentionwas worthy of whole-hearted sup¬port. It wa.s also suggested that in¬asmuch as the coach’s chief functionis the jiroduction of championshipteams, and that since for the last sixor eight year Coach Stagg has not,apparently, fulfilled this function,perhaps the I’niversity was taking theproper action.Will Hold BallThe Council decided definitely thatwith as much support a.s the Inter¬fraternity Ball received last year,and at a price this year of from$2.50 to $3.00, the party was assuredof succe.ss. The numerous small com¬mittees of former years were consol¬idated into one Ball committee un¬der the chairmanship of Francis X.Finnegan, secretary of the CouncilOther members of the committee are(Continued on page 4) I say, 1928.To college men and women of this genera¬tion I have thus to say and deeply do I regr-etmy inadequacy in saying it as I should like. Nopolitical or economic theory offers you auto¬matic salvation. But socialism offers to you theonly hope of controlling machinery for life andnot death. The one certain thing about thefuture of our society is the plain fact thatcapitalism as w’e have known it here in Americais doomed. I do not venture to predict the exacttime when historians will date its final collapse.I do affirm that no order of society whichequipped with all the means to give us abund¬ance, to conquer poverty, and to banish eco¬nomic insecurity has in.stead already given us13 million unemployed, a host of boys fifteenyears of age and upwards, no le.ss than 200,000in number, who roam the roads of America, livein holw jungles, and sometimes in jails because they have no homes at all—that civilization, Isay, is doomed. It is doomed, moreover; by thenumber and complexity of the international prob¬lems inherent in an order of society where ab¬solute nations claiming complete sovereigntyover their citizens compete for power, profit,and prestige in a world that machinery has al¬ready made interdependent.The only question before your generation iswhether or not you can manage the transitionfrom capitalism to a new order with a minimumof violence and disturbance. Socialism offersyou whatever hope there is of such transition,and that hope is bright if you and enoughothers of your generation awake and awake intime.Come to think of it, the marvel is that weare not worse off. It is because there is an es¬sential decency in human nature which tempersthe crazy cruelties of our system that w'e fareas well as we do. Why should we expect peaceor prosperity in a world which allows resourcesand tools necessary for great multitudes ofworkers to be the private property of absenteeowners, to bemanaged wholly for their ownprofit, and only incidentally for the good ofmankind? Waste, exploitation, war itself, areinherent in a system of this sort. I have yetto have anyone meet my challenge to show away whereby we can control either cyclical ortechnological unemployment satisfactorily andyet keep our present capitalist civilization.Fasefsm, to be sure, might do something tostandardized conditions, but as the historyof Italy shows even Fascism does not cure un¬employment. It gives the workers miserably lowwages and quite crushes whatever liberties wereleft to them.There is one reasonable way and only onereasonable way to handle the problems of amachine age. Let the great community ofworkers with hand and brain own those thingsnecessary for the common life—our natural re¬sources, our great machinery of production, ourbanking and credit system. Let these things bemanaged not for the profit of absentee ownersbut for the use of this community. Then andonly then shall we have the opportunity to solvethe probleqj of distributing equitably the goodsthat already we can produce abundantly. Thissocialist ideal of society does not assume thatwe shall have what Harold Laski has called the“omnicompetent state.” On the contrary, webelieve in functional government of socializedindustry under the general supervision of aboard of planners or of strategy. We are aware,moreover, that this program for a planned so¬ciety must rapidly be carried forward until wethink in terms of a world and not in termsmerely' of one nation.You will observe that so far I have said littleor nothing about politics in any narrow sense.I have not discussed the degeneracy of political MAROON TO TAKESTRAW VOTE ONPRESIDENT RACEWeidnesdayaction as exemplified by the old parties. I havenot analyzed the record of the Chicago Conven- jtions, the platforms they produced, and the | StudeUltS Urged tO Votenature of the campaigns they carry on. Neither • n^M nr. J.,,,have I set forth in detail the plane of socialism I ' UeSday andwhich are well summarized in our platformwhich I heartily commend to you. I have in¬stead insisted upon a point of view, upon a goalto be striven for, upon a philosophy, a loyaltyfor the re-making of life. If we set out alongthe right lines there is enough intelligence inAmerica to deal adequately with progress. Therepeal of unemployment, for instance, is notan impossibility. Once we adopt the point ofview that it is the primary business of societyto care for all of its members then we shall de¬clare war upon poverty and misery with anearnestness and intelligence at least equal tothat which nations use when they declare warupon one another. The socialist program forunemployment relief points to what can be doneand done immediately. 'But the abolition of un¬employment requires not only a planned societybut a society in which plan is for the purposeof making abundance available to all.To create the classless society, to establishthe cooperative commonwealth or, better yet,the federated cooperative commonwealth of theworld cannot be accomplished without struggle,without effort, without some sacrifice, certainlyon the part of members of an owning class whoyet see how precarious are the privileges of aclass even to its own members. I believe, how¬ever, that struggle does not necessarily meanwar or wholesale violence. The more of uswho awake and the more rapidly we awake thebetter chance there is to carry out transition inan orderly fashion. One of the means of such The Daily Maroon will sponsor amock national presidential electionon the University campus Tuesdayand Wednesday of next week. Bal¬lots and ballot boxes will be suppliedat every strategic position on cam¬pus.Members of The Maroon staff willpersonally canvass every fraternityand every residence hall in an at¬tempt to obtain a large vote. Ballotswill carry the name of every candi¬date from Republican to,Communist.The goal of this election is a totalof 2,500 votes, and an honest analy¬sis of campus political feeling.Results of the poll will be pub¬lished in The Daily Maroon Thurs¬day, October 27.To Print ArticlesLeading up to this symposium ofstudent opinion. The Daily Maroonis printing this week a series of com¬prehensive articles by prominentpersonalities, stating the case of theseveral political parties. Professor T.V. Smith supported the cause of theDemocratic party In an article whichappeared in The Daily Maroon yes¬terday. Today Norman Thomas ap¬peals to the student body in an edi¬torial presenting the plea of the So¬cialist party. Tomorrow Dean Shail-er Mathews, in a short, pointed ar¬ticle, tells why he will vote for Presi¬dent Hoover. With the.se contribu¬tions The Daily Maroon hopes toawaken a spirit of political en-transition unquestionably in America -is a re¬alignment of political parties. I do not say thata Socialist Party by itself can establish a social¬ist society. That would not be true but I dosay that a Socialist Party backed up with proper j thusiasm throughout the campup,organization of consumers’ cooperatives and of ! which will be reflected on the bal-labor unions can put us farther on the road lots of the mock election,than most of us dream. It cannot do it by one On the same day as The Dailyelection although this particular election is of i Maroon poll, thirty other collegeenormous significance in the development of i dailies throughout the country arepolitical action in America. i conducting local mock presidentialWhat I am really asking, therefore, of college i ^^^‘^tions. Results of these polls willstudents is not merely support in this vital andsignificant campaign but rather enlistment ina great crusade, a crusade which ought particu¬larly to appeal to you, a crusade for the achieve¬ment of socialism in our time. Only so can wehave any reasonable ground for expecting en-J tional election are: The Stanfordduring prosperity, true and lasting peace, and \ Daily, The Tulane Hullabaloo, Thethe achievement of a civilization wherein on the j Arizona Wildcat, The Nebraskan,basis of abundance for all human energy can be | The Daily Texan, and the Yale News,released from long tyranny to poverty, economic i Campus Organization Aidinsecurity and fear for the discovery of truth, : On many campuses Republican,the creation of beauty, and the joy of fellow- i Democratic, and Socialist clubs arej be telegraphed to a central office,i and the returns of the national col¬legiate presidential poll will be pub¬lished in the Daily Maroon, Friday,October 28. A few other collegedailies who are included in this na-ship.Nonnan ThomasFOREIGN STUDENTSANNOUNCE FIRSTDANCE OF SERIESFramed in a .setting of black andwhite, and playing dance music tothe accompaniment of colored lightsshitted in hjvmony to the music,(Jorey Linn and his “Voices of theNight” will play for the first Inter¬national House dance to be held Fri¬day night in the assembly room of Ithe House. Guests have been askedto appear in formal dress or the col- !orful co.stunies of their native coun- jtries.Dancing will begin promptly at 9, jand the orchestra will provide spe- |cial features during the evening VIEW, BELLS, MAKE VISIT TOCHAPEL TOWER IMPRESSIVE Stc$rt Ticket Salesfor Chase LectureIndividual tickets for the first pre¬sentation of the Student LectureService, which will feature StuartChase, prominent economist and au-• 1 u- i. e ■ *. TVT., i thor, are now on sale at the boxcipal object of interest. Mr. Town- i • n, j i i • x t>^^ , T-i , _j 1 office in Mandel cloisters. Box seatsdown on them from a greater height.Inside the tower the seventy-twobells of the carillon were the prin- I urging the support of their parties.The National Student’s league is ai communist organization which isI wide-spread in middle-western col-I leges. The “Thomas for President”i club has two hundred divisionsi throughout the United States. Theproposed national collegiate poll willtherefore give these organizations afinal chance to “have it out.”Many universities have been ac¬cused of unnecessary radicalism. Thenational mock election will show ex-StudentI had climbed to the top of theChapel tower to see the great Rocke¬feller carillon going through the laststage of the long process of instal¬lation. Up and up and up the narrowstairway, built within the wall ofthe tower, wound almost intermin¬ably. At least I reached the top, andemerged from the stuffy staircaseSocialist candidate for presi¬dent, who writes exclusively forthis issue of The Daily Maroon.‘‘Sin” to be Discussedby German Professorj Professor Johannes HempelI Gottingen, Germany, a distinguishedTickets for residents may be obtain- j visitor to the University cornmunity,ed at $.50, while their guests may | lectures tomorrow at 2:30 in^ Bondpurchase tickets at $1.00 by apply- | chapel on “The Old Testaments Ideaing before 5 Friday afternoon at the i of Sin.” , • • xu- • -x ^Activities office i Professor Hempel occupies the is reorganizing this year in spite ofof I Chair of Old Testament and Compar- the fact that the University departBy DAVID C. LEVINETo the west the gray stone andgreen grass of the campus formedneat patterns. Beyond, Washington m xTxanuci tiuiaxcxs uua b aL.>Park sprawled carelessly half-ob-I send of Croydon, England, where and""seats ^hi""the'^crnter'se'ctionT'^of i ^^tly how each stands,scured in the haze of a cloudy au- I the bells were forged, is in charge of ........tumn afternoon. the installation. A short talk withhim on carillons in general—and theRockefeller carillon in particular—proved illuminating.Installation Almost FinishedThe work of installing the bells isnow finished except for painting thesteelwork and wiring the bells to theconsole. The smaller bells, some ofwhich weigh as little as ten pounds,onto a narrow balcony where the sud- ’ Played directly from the console, j ^^.2 daily,den wind was a refreshing shock. ! i^a^ner of a piano. The largej bells, weighing several tons, cannotView From Tower ■ played in this way, and the strokeNo less interesting than the caril- I of the carilloneur is assisted by com-lon itself, hanging huge and silent in i pressed air by means of an electrica maze of steel beams, was the vista i motor.afforded by the tower’s height. Fa- Because considerable force mustmiliar perspectives were strangely be exerted by the player, the key-altered: the lake had come close; the j board of the carillon is made of wood-1Midway, its roar of traffic reduced to ; en pegs which are struck with the ia faint drone, seemed far away; Mit- doubled fist. The question naturallychell Tower and neighboring church suggests itself, “If the largest bells jof . steeples were small when one looked (Continued on page 4) ; University social event ' may be on time for the lecture.five cents, while the side sections ofthe main floor and the entire balconyare being sold for fifty-five cents.Season tickets for the six lecturesare also still on sale.Bion Howard is collaborating withGeorge Van der Hoef on the experi¬mental project in the capacity of.sales manager. Because of greaterdemand for tickets, the box office isthe main floor are selling for eighty- j ^Pm^n in major cultural divisions of' the United States will be analyzedand compared by the Daily Prince-tonian, originators of the poll.WILBUR TO BEHONOR GUEST ATDINNER TONIGHTRay Lyman Wilbur, secretary ofMr. Chase will open the series of I the Interior, who is to speak tonightsix lectures on the evening of No-j at 8:15 in Mandel hall, will be guestvember 8. Tickets for this and the j of honor at a dinner to be given be-other lectures may be purchased at j fore the lecture by President andthe University bookstore, at Wood- j Mrs. Robert Maynard Hutchins,worths, and from individual sales- I The dinner guests in addition toDien. : Mr. Wilbur will be Mr. and Mrs.- - , , . I Kellogg Fairbank, Mrs. Waller Bor-Hold r irst Mixer in den. Professor and Mrs. Arthur Hol¬ly Compton, and Professor and Mrs.Charles E. Merriam. Dinner will beserved at 7 in order that the guestsIda Noyes TomorrowKindergarten ClubThe Kindergarten-Primary Club Saracen LectureI morrow afternoon when the first of_ ~. . . J X I ^ series of mixers, novel in nature,Robert E. Corradini, vice-president jg Cloister club from 2:30of the Saracens and national execu-j 5:30.of the year sponsored by the Student j Wilbur’s subject, as previous-Social committee will take place to- | ^y announced, will be “Is Democracyout of existence tive director of the Foundation forlast ^ Narcotic Research and Information,This is the first of a series .Friday night dances for residents of ative History of Religions at Gotting- j men wenIntwnational House and their gueste *AtosUment'lich^ Senior women who are graduating by 1 Perils of Narcotics" at InternationalSy'atTh wtZcnlk June, 11133. I House on Saturday evening a. 8.en University. He is the editor of the ‘June. The group consists entirely of | will speak on ‘New Findings on the Although no admission will becharged and everyone on campus isinvited, a good orchestra and novelentertainment will be provided. Safe?” The lecture is open to thepublic without ticket. The secretary(s speaking at tTie University as partof a lecture tour which will takehim to a number of leading mid-western universities and colleges.He has previously spoken to audi¬ences at the Universities of Minne¬sota, Northwestern and Purdue.liMj&Staiiii *•* *9 •rage Two THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1932iatig iHarnanFOUNDED 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Subscription rates: J2.50 a year ; $4 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the Llniversity of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as ,second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post-office at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherASSOCIATE EDITORSRobert HerzogDavid C. LevineEdward W. NicholsonEugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward SchallerNight Editor: Eugene PatrickAssistants: Hooker and McDougallThursday, October 20, 1932THE CASE FOR SOCIALISMToday there appears on the front page of TheL -aily Maroon a message to University studentswritten by the country’s leading Socialist at the re¬quest of the editor of this paper.It is presented in the columns of The Daily Ma¬roon not as political propaganda nor as a sensa¬tional feature. It is offered for what it is: a clearand challenging statement of the Socialist’s pointof view as the leading exponent of Socialism wouldhave it understood by the college student. It ispublished in this paper for the same reason thatsuch a statement should be published in any stu¬dent paper edited by individuals pledged to theprincipal of freedom of thought. For students areinterested in truth. They are interested not in con¬venient truths, nor in truths which everyone canbelieve. They are interested in honest expressionsof honest opinions.The political convictions of the individual mem¬bers of The Daily Maroon editorial board are inno way indicated by the publication and promin¬ence of this feature. Nevertheless, the expressionof opinion upon the front page of this issue is onethat might well cause the student and the adultvoter alike to consider the merits of the socialist’scase.In past years voting the Socialist ticket was athing simply not done by respectable Americans.This situation is changing, rapidly. One of thefruits of the depression is that almost everyone iswilling to admit that the existing economic order isfar from perfect and that those who wish to alterit at least have a right to be heard.Whatever we as individuals may think of theSocialist platform and its principles, or of the meth¬ods which the Socialist would adopt, no individualcan deny that this party is aiming at goals whichinspire enthusiasm—a commodity which is strange¬ly lacking from our conventional' politics. Thereare growing indications that as Socialists inci'easein strength and numbers with' each election, the an¬cient sham battle between the tweedledee and thetweedledum of our historic parties is to be ad¬journed for a much more meaningful contest be¬tween intelligent conservatism on one side and in¬telligent socialism on the other.Meanwhile, though the Socialist is accused bycapitalistic newspapers of “plucking schemes out ofthe air and resting them again upon the air,’’ thereare those among us who are increasingly realizingthat many of his tenets are fundamentally humanand sound. There are those among us who feelwith him that the acquisitive instinct of human be¬ings need not dominate all relations of mankind.There is an increasing number among us who agreewith the Socialist that the state should be an in¬strument of social welfare and not of special privi¬lege, and that individualism should be measured bygenuine cooperation for the common good and ;not by supremacy in predatory gain. jThere are other points in this growing case forSocialism that are today being appreciated bythose individuals not numbered among the intel¬lectually timid. Norman Thomas in his article callssome of them to our attention. There is undeniablereason, we care not what you* political beliefs maybe, in a scheme that states in simple words thatJane BiesenthalMelvin GoldmanWilliam GoodsteinBetty HansenI the great community of workers with hand andbrain should be allowed to own those things neces¬sary for the common life. There is logic, too, inother statements of this man who is trying to ob¬tain a planned society that would be gifted withthe ability “to distribute equitably the goods thatalready we can produce abundantly.”The methods of the Socialist tend toward theimpractical. The point of view of the Socialist isidealistic and at complete variance with the pre¬vailing philosophy of modern life and commercial-lized civilization. But neither fact invalidates themerits of the Socialist’s case to a harmful degree.The Socialist party remains as the one politicalgroup striving to peacefully remake human societyalong lines that wil'l eliminate the evils permeatingit today. TTe Socialist party, alone, is thinking notin terms of one election, or of maintaining powerand prestige, but in terms of common prosperity,world peace, and human equality.The leaders of the movement have been accusedof not facing the conditions in which a politicalsystem must operate. The University professorswho have aligned themselves with the Socialistgroup have been referred to as collapsed intellect¬uals who disregard in the consideration of nationalaffairs every characteristic which they woul'd re¬quire of true scholarship.Nevertheless, the movement gains strength anddraws to its ranks an ever increasing number ofintellectually sound Americans. And among themost active leaders of the Socialist movement to¬day are hundreds of college men and women wh'oare convinced that the Socialist platform is des¬tined to bring social justice and the promise of abetter world. Young America, perhaps, is notwrong.—W. E. T. Weir’s FreshmanGroup to MeetTuesday at NoonII John Weir Jr., chairman of onei of the Freshman men’s orientationgroups, announces that he will meetthe following men at 12:30 Tuesdayin the Burton Court lounge, and thatthey will meet every Thursday there¬after at 12:30 in 'Burton CourtLounge: Robert R. Johnson, QuintinJohnstone, James V. Jones, Philip! N. Joranson, William David Jordan,'jQlius Josephson, Joseph Martin Ka-j cena, Warren Robert Kahn,j Joseph Kalla, Stanley Marvin Kap- j' Ian, Sidney Z. Karasik, James Kas- jdan, James A. Kasper, Robett L.Keats, Alexander G. Kehoe, HenryF. Kelley, George V. Kempf, GeorgeP. Kendall, William E. Kendall, IThomas W. Kerr, Joseph Kesselman, iJerome S. Klein, Theodore M. Kolb,Robert D. Kracke, Philip Kramer,I Raymond M. Lahr, William C. Laird.I Mark H. Lane, Earl Edwin Lang-don, Sidney R. Lash, Bernard C.Latham, Leroy LaTowsky, FredThomas Lauerman, Robert Wood¬ward Leach, Samuel R. Lewis, Ben¬jamin Libitsky, Sigmund H. Lind¬ner, Robert S. Lineback, Paul HugoLitwinsky, Alfred E. Lukasek, GeorgeLunter, Hyman S. Lusher, John R.Lynch, Vernon F. Lyon, Rae Wood¬ward Macdonald.COMPTON TELLSOF SEARCH FORDATA ON RAYSThe Travelling BazaarBy Charles Newton, Jr. and John Holloway. . . DITES-MOI OU, N’EX QUEL PAYS . . .Apart from the obvious reason, campus queenshave always interested us. What do they do afterthey go? To us, of course, it seems an outragethat they should go at all, or change at all. W’eshould prefer them to remain forever, strewnabout the campus, beautiful and useless. Butchange they do, and go they must, and it de¬presses us terribly.What happens to them after they vanish? Dothey grow ugly, grow fat, glow dull? Do theyregret past glories? Or do they, maybe, go toheaven fully dressed?Not all of them. Eleanor Eastwood, who sent(and could still send) palpitations up and downfraternity row, is married. Martha Hoffman isa secretary of some sort at the Shoreland. JanetJohns and Adrienne Bonniwell are idle, which iswell. Helen Dodd is working at Field’s; so is thethird of the blonde beauty-trust, Jane Block!; so,too, are Mary Jane Maloney and Barbara Cook.Connie and Tots Reiner are teaching. FrankieDee has a job connected with the movies out onthe coast; they say she is doing well.And that’s what makes us pretty sad when wesee some nice girl making a name for herself asa campus beauty; we get to thinking about herforgotten predecessors and vanished Helen andthe short life of the rose, and pretty soon we arecrying right out loud, and have to be taken home.We are glad we are not beautiful.. . disgusting incident . . .Bill Walling, Wyvern chauffeur and G. P. (PhiPsi for “House president’’) went down to his frat¬ernity’s convention last July. The convention wasto last quite a few days, and Bill departed withevery intention of seeing it through.He left Friday noon. He arrived Friday night.And the next morning, his family were surprisedto see him stalk into the house, carrying his bagand an expression of extreme distaste. They askedhim why the sudden return.“Aw,’’ he said, “It was nothing but a lot ofdrunks yelling and chasing each other around.’’Naturally, we can understand his surprise.. . random . . .Frank Harding wants it clearly understoodthat there are fourteen men in the Alpha Delthouse, and not four . . Okay, Frank . . . CharlesTyroler wanted to see the Yale game so badlyhe rented a car . . . got as far as Cleveland andcracked up. Lost the car and his chance to seethe game ... If you’ve noticed, there’s only onewoman painted on the walls of Yankee Doodle,ilt’s Gerry Mitchell . . . women, unite! . , . HalLaufman did the whole room in three days, andit made a real splash in commercial circles; he’sbeing propositioned by one of Chicago’s largestadvertisers . . .Bill Dea is in quite a daze. He went to histen o’clock class at eleven and wondered why he ,found a different prof there. He found, however,that he could sleep just as well with the new profas with the old . . .Professor J, Harlan Bretz is known for hisquick thinking as well as for his quick tongue . . .Last Friday, loaded with a couple of cumber¬some buckets, he started out of the basement ofRosenwald ... At that moment, the class-bellrang, and he was overwhelmed by a jam of mill-students ... So quick he hollered “Fire!” at thetop of his voice, and quick they all scattered . . .He could have carried a step-ladder crosswisefor the rest of the trip . . . Speaking on a technical subjectwith a convincing enthusiasm whichinfected his listeners in Mandel hallDr. .Arthur H. Compton, Nobel prizewinner and Charles H. Swift, Distin¬guished Service Professor of Physicslast night enacted “the first present¬ation on any stage of the drama ofcosmic rays,” as Vice-President Fred-, eric Woodward described the lecture[ in his introductory speech.Professor Compton, whose subjecti was “Cosmic Rays on Six Continents”! told of the labors of 10 expeditionsi of more than 60 physicists, whoI were posted at various points all over■ the world to take ob.servations on the' behavior of these mysterious raysI whose source no one knows, nor doesanyone know what they are. Theireffects alone can be described.The lecture was illustrated withslides and moving pictures of thetravels of Dr. Compton to widelyseparated latitudes, longitudes, andaltitudes.New AnthropologicalData Collected bySummer Expedition! While other University members! were vacationing during the sum-I mer, twelve graduate students of an-1 thropology were on an expedition inI Illinois as part of a huge project onj the prehistoric inhabitants of theI Mississippi valley planned by Fay-Cooper Cole, chairman of the depart¬ment of Anthropology. This expedi¬tion, which visited Fulton and Jo ■Davies counties, was in direct chargeof Thorne Deuel, assistant to Profes- ,sor Cole. iThe sites and mounds explored Inear Lewistown were those of the i“black sand Indians” oldest inhabi- !tants of Illinois, who lived in the |region 2,000 to 5,000 years ago. Inthe mounds of these people, the ex¬peditions found, among other things,the walls of houses many with fire¬places; shell-tempered pottery, burial !grounds, and a figure in terra cotta. iFrom the evidence found, the site |appeared to be pre-European.I I“We have in Fulton county the jmost complete data for culture se- ;quence yet found in the Mississippi jValley, if not in North America,” 'Professor Cole stated. “With the !work that is now going on in Iowa, iWisconsin, Indiana, and Ohio, this iproject is probably the most import- :ant single contribution toward solv- ;ing the problems of American pre¬history.”Even before the coming of Colum- i! bus, Illinois was the center of tradej and progress in the Mississippi Val-:; ley, Dr. Cole believes. At least four |: distinct Indian cultures prevailed in jI the state at one time or another.I “Primarily we are trying to learn |I how ideas and customs spread among jprimitive people, and how one cul- jjture affects another,” Dr. Cole said. iPrevious expeditions, of which ithere have been six, have brought jback nearly 1,000 skeletons and !more than 10,000 artifacts—weapons, Itools, and ornaments used to identifyI primitive culture. I One Hundred and Eight FreshmenAssigned to Upperclass AdvisersSupplementing previous announce¬ments, one hundred and eight fresh¬men men have been assigned upper-class advisers by Robert Balsley,chairman of Freshman Orientation.These men are urged to get in touchwith their new advisoL* immediately.By telephone or personal call ev¬ery first year man is a.sked to com¬municate with his adviser. Import¬ant announcements of all meetingswill appear in The Daily Maroon.The following freshmen have beenassigned to Garland Routt, 5737Woodlaw’n Avenu«> Hyde Park 6694;Kenneth Carr, George Gelman, Wil¬liam Granert, Stanley Hayes, JerryKlein, Sigmund Lindner, NormanMetzl, Paul Samuelson, Marvin Tav-lin, and Harry Yedor,Oscar Entin, William Jordon,James McQuilkin, Wilbur Melcher,Charles Murphy, Wallace Peters,Harker Stanton, Oliver Statler, Ar¬nold Stine, and Robert Ware, Jr.will have as their adviser John Bar¬den, 5725 Woodlawn Avenue, HydePark 3250.Report to DavidsonMax Davidson, 5629 UniversityAvenue, Dorchester 1017, will be ad¬viser for the following men: MelvinCohen, .Albert Dorisman, HenryEisle, Edmond Eskenazi, Robert Fis-chel, Eugene Hahnel, Warren Kahn,Richard Levin, Raymond Pearlman,and Sam Schuman. .These first year men will haveMarshall Foreen, 7516 Prairie Ave¬nue, Triangle 0315, as their adviser:F'rank Davis, Tom Glassford, Gil Hil-brarit, Lyman Huff, George Lunter,Ben Mann, Edward Ockoly, JoeMarkin, Warren McDermed, andJames Smith.The following freshmen are to re¬port to Warren Askew, 5639 Univer¬sity Avenue, Plaza 8870, as their ad¬viser: Addison Carr, Charles Fair¬banks, Gerald Fitzgerald, John High, I Maiwin Jacobs, Leonard Nathan, GailI Rose, Otto Sinderar, George Schaef-; fer, Ralph Tiffany, and Carl Warns.Harold Dunkel Is AdviserHarold Dunkel, 5737 Universityi .Avenue, Midway 0718, will be ad-i viser for these men: W’illiam Chiera,Delos Coyed, Jaroslav Folda Jr., F.Mark Garlinghoiise, Richard Helmer,' Dick Henry, Shepard Hollander,Francis Hoyt, T. .Robert McCloskey,Ewald Myquist, and David Speer.Robert Cook, William Davis, Rich-i ard Edmonds, Roger Henning, Rob-I ert Johnson, S. R. Lash, D. EldridgeI McBride, Wayne Marshall, Tom Riley,! Aaron Saywetz, John Simpson, and! Carl Singer will have as their ad¬viser Ora Pelton, 5725 WoodlawnAvenue, Hyde Park 3250.Eleven Men Report to PitcherEleven men will report to AlvinPitcher, 5621 Woodlawm Avenue,; Midw’ay 3217, as their adviser: Irwin; Askow’, S. Bereman, Charles Brow-1 ing, Elmore Frank, Joseph Kalla,William Rea Kea.st, Richard Nelson,Reginald Martin, Frank Moss, M.Bland Runyon, and Charles Schiff.I Jack Loeb, Burton Court, Midwayj 6000, w’ill be adviser for: Harv'ey El-I lerd, Emery Fair, Arthur Hansen,‘ George Kempf, H. Lasher, W’ayneMarshall, Donald Morris, ArnoldSchwartz, William Shanner, W’dliamShorrock, Henry Swanson, and Ben: Walpole.Ten freshmen have been as¬signed to Bill Traynor, 6936 Bennett.Avenue, Fairfax 6936. They are RodChapin, Max Clark, Charles Finson,Larry Grandahl, Richard Hathaway,Claude Hawley, Robert Herman, Ra-mond Hosken, Walter Shaw, and JohnWhiteside.SUBSCRIBE TOTHE DAILY MAROONDesert air is wet... by comparison!Making telephone equipment presents manyan interesting problem to the engineers of WesternElectric—manufacturer for the Bell System.A case in point is the drying of telephone cablebefore putting on the protective lead sheath. Thisstep is of utmost importance, for the tiny copperwires cannot carry your voice properly unless theirpaper insulation is thoroughly dried. To this end,Western Electric engineers devised special dryingovens in which the air is thirty times drier thandesert air!The same ingenuity and thoroughness go intoevery step of making cable, telephones, switch¬boards and many other kinds of telephone equip¬ment. The dependable apparatus that results isone reason why Beil System service is dependable.BELL SYSTEMA NATION-WIDE SYSTEM OF INTER-CONNECTlNG TELEPHONESDAILY MAROON SPORTSTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1932 Page ThreePOLO TEAM MEETSOKLAHOMA SQUAD INARMORY TOMORROW I^ee’s DottingsThe University polo team will meeta strong: team from Oklahoma tomor¬row afternoon in the 124th FieldArtillery Armory. No admission willhe charged.This is the first regular game ofthe season. In the No. 1 positionBruce Benson will perform, withCaptain Edgar Friedheim as No. 2man. Bert Daugherty, captain of thepolo team last year, will take theNo. 3 position on the squad. BobHepple, a promising substitute, willbe on hand in case of injury to afirst team player.Major T. J. J. Christian, assistedby Captain Downinig, is coachingthe ’32-’33 squad. New horses havebeen supplied to the players by theUniversity and the War Department.Games with Illinois, Iowa, Ohio,.Missouri, Culver, and several ridingflubs are being scheduled for theChicago aggregation, and they areexpected to come out on the brightside of the ledger of the NationalIndoor Polo Association this year.ALPHA BELT, D. U.WIN I-M TILTS;3 TEAMS FORFEIT.Alpha Delta Phi defeated Sigma.Alpha Epsilon, 7-0, and Delta Up-silon won from Delta Kappa Epsilon,*»-0, in two clo.se Intramural touch-hall games yesterday afternoon.These were the only games played,since Delta Tau Delta forfeited toPsi Upsilon, Phi Kappa Sigma for¬feited to Chi Psi, and Zeta Beta Tauwon a forfeit from Phi Kappa Psi.In the Alpha I)elt-S. A. E. tilt,Dille scored for the winners in thefirst five minut() of play when hecaught a 20-yard pass and ran for a ,touchdown. The Alpha Delts nearly 'scored again in the last three minutesnf the last half, but were stopped onthe 2-yard line. ' By WILLIAM DEEAfter working hard for threeyears, Bernie Johnson finally got hischance last Saturday. What should hedo but run out on the field with hispants falling oflf. Better luck nexttime.m if IfEl Patterson’s efforts Saturdaywere rewarded with—a broken hand.Too bad, Pat, you looked good.* * *Who is this Wahoo that TommyFlinn, Bill CasseLs, and Cap Hiltonknow so much about?* * *The dead ball rule is causing a lotof trouble. It seems to me that therule should be revised to mean thatif an opponent forced the ball car¬rier off his feet then the ball shouldJ)e dead.* * «Right now A1 Summers looks likeour best bet at full back. His defen¬sive play is especially noteworthy.* * *The great Watrous has a new wayof getting passes. Catching them withhis head gives the passer a nice markto shoot at, but it isn’t very success¬ful.* * *Have you noticed the SherlockHolmes look on the face of Sid Yateslately? Ralph Cannon has him re¬porting for the Daily News. Maroons Disregard Dope;Figure on Beating Indianain Game on Stagg Field HARRIERS WORKOUT FOR DUALMEET SATURDAYAlthough Indiana is picked to The probable first string line ofHold All UniversityPep Meeting Tonight.An- all University parade and pepmeeting will be held immediately af¬ter the football men’s banquet to¬night. The parade will start prompt¬ly at 7:20 from the Men’s new resi¬dence halls and will continue aroundthe campus, ending at Bartlett atabout 8.A huge bonfire will be built justeast of the north stands and the OldMan will address the rooters. Cheerswill be led by Jerry Jontry and sev¬eral of the football men will giveshort speeches. walk over Chicago Saturday in thetwenty-second meeting of the twoschools, the Maroons gave no evi¬dence in their last hard workoutyesterday that they expected to bebeaten. The Staggmen showed theold confidence they have been dis¬playing all season, and are in greatphysical shape.The Hoosiers, who have won onlythree games from the Midway out¬fit since the beginning of the seriesof 1902 two of them coming lastyear, have tied a highly rated Ohioeleven and took a 12 to 0 game fromIowa last week. Saturday’s ^ame willbe the first Big Ten contest for theMaroons this year. The team has beenbrought along steadily, getting a stifftest at Yale after an easy openeragainst Monmouth, and then lettingdown and polishing off in their gamewith Knox last week.After taking a 32 to 6 beatingfrom the Hoosiers last October, Chi¬cago came back in the Thanksgivingtournament and outplayed and out¬fought Indiana completely, only tolose to them because of a fumble byChicago on the goal line. Figuringthat they have improved at least asmuch as Indiana since last .season,the Maroons consider that theyshould w'in easily.Elmore Patterson and 'Bart Smith,the two sophomore linemen who werejust beginning to be considered asregulars when they broke a hand anda leg respectively, will probably bethe only Maroons out of Saturday’sgame, although Pat Page’s sprainedankle may keep him on the bench.If Page does play, he will not be!ihle to punt, as the injured ankleis his right one, and the punting as¬signment will fall almost completely 'on Capt. Don Birney.The Maroons looked good in prac¬tice yesterday, running through theirplays against Freshmen lines withconsiderable smoothness and finish. Bellstrom and Toigo at ends, Casselsand Spearing, tackles, Maneikis andZenner, guards and Parsons at cen¬ter opened large holes in the Fresh¬man team through which Cullen, Ma¬honey, Sahlin, Birney, and Sum¬mers made good gains. The Old Manplaced the ball on the five yard lineand told the varsity to put it over: rom there. After accomplishing thishalf a dozen times easily, Stagg pen¬alized them ten yards and told themto make it from there, which theydid. Birney’s and Summer’s passes(Continued on page 4) Maroon cross country harriers yes¬terday took a four mile trot aroundthe Palos Park course for their finalworkout in preparation for the tri¬angular meet with Purdue and North¬western at Evanston.Stiffest opposition will be expectedfrom Purdue who will present a con¬ ference team that ran better thanthe Maroon thinclads did last year.Lovejoy, Sears, Kenny, Flinn, andHenley composed the Pui’due squadlast year and most of them are ex¬pected back Saturday.Simon and Richardson, who havebeen running the three mile coursein Washington in around 17 minute.s,will give Purdue most of the Marooncompetition. Kadin, Varkala, Kelly,Groebe, Moore and Milow' will helpcarry the burden over the Evanstoncourse.Eight Teams EnterI-M Golf TournamentThe qualifying round of the I-Mgolf tournament has been played andthe eight teams entering the elimin¬ation are as follows: Ovson andSchmidt, Phi Sigma Delta, vs. Coil-man and James, Phi Kappa Psi;Schoflor and Williams, unattached;vs. Levy and Levy, Tau Delta Phi;Fields and Wienberg, Zeta BetaTau, vs. Morrison and Geagan, PhiKappa Psi; Levin and Home, unat¬tached, vs. Offil and Barton, Kap¬pa Sigma.A gold medal will be presented tothe man with the lowest score in theelimination tourney. The first roundis to be played by Monday, October24. Col. Stoopnagle & Buddare to appear atYankee Doodle InnFRIDAY, OCTOBER 21 AT MIDNIGHTas honor guests forCELEBRITY NIGHTwith Milt Olin as Master of Ceremonies andother Campus stars.YANKEE DOODLE INN1171 East 55th StreetFairfax 1776Col. Stoopmu'Jc 011(1 Budd iKdll begin an engagement at theTivoli Theatre Friday, Get. 2i.wyvwvvwwvsThe Proof of the PuddingIs Its Taste!!The PROOF that our pu<3<ding tastes goodis the fact that you keep asking for more. Andnot only pudding, but everything else on ourmenu that goes to make our shops THE place toeat on Campus.NOT THAT WE’RE BRA.CCINC. But justask anyone on campus. They’re all interestedprimarily in our good food at economy prices,as well as in our college atmosphere and friend¬ly service.And don’t forget the seven weekly PRIZES.A number of prominent campusites have al¬ready collected theirs.GET THE MAID-RITE HABITMaid-Rite Shopsa Where Good Food Always Prevails ft1309 E. 57th St. 1324 E. 57th St. OR CAMPUS CORDS?When the wiseaacks wax personal, does yournonchalance stay with you.^The wearer of Campus Cords remains cool and calm through all suchaises, and the mob subsides into mute admiration.For no audience, however critical, can find fault with the hip-fit andstraight-hang of these handsome light-colored Cords—correct in shadeand in every detail of style.Campus Cords reflect the distinctive, conservative taste of universitymen from Coast to Coast. They wear as sturdily as a prof’s jokes, andcome up smiling from countless cleanings or washings.CANT BUST CMCAMPUSi CORDSSAN ntANCISCO CALIFORNIAtHEC,®)HubHenry C. Lytton & SonsCAMPUS CORPSWhat a BUY at their new, low price $4,95State and Jackson—CHICAGOStore Open TzmingsPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1932on theQuadranglesThe Daily MaroonNight editor for the next issue;David Charles Levine. Assistants:Norman Becker and David Kutner.Music and Religious ServicesDivinity chapel, “Religion andHuman Need: III. Fellowship,” Pro¬fessor Fred Eastman of the ChicagoTheological seminary. At 12 inJoseph Bond chapel.Organ recital. At 5 in the Uni¬versity chapel.Public LecturesRadio lecture: “International Re¬lations. The Elements of Public In¬ternational Law,” Assistant Profes¬sor Jerome Schuman. At 11 overstation WMAQ.The Dramatic association. “HeroicDrama,” Clayton Hamilton. At 4 ;30in the Reynolds club theatre.The downtown college. “Lookingto Business Recovery. Credit Pol¬icies in a Period of Business Recov¬ery,” Associate Professor Stuart P.Meech. At 6:45 in the Club room ofthe Art Institute.“Is Democracy Safe?” Ray LymanWilbur, Secretary of the Interior.At 8:15 in Leon Mandel hall.□fepartmental OrganizatioirsSurgery seminar. “The Radio-Pathology of Hodgkin’s Disease andLymphosarcoma,” Dr. A. Brunsch-wig and Dr. Charles S. Capp. At 8a. m. in Billings S. 437.Bacteriology club. “Factors in theNatural Immunity and Susceptibilityof Culex Mosquitoes in Avian Ma¬laria,” Assistant Professor Clay G.Huff. At 4:30 in Ricketts North R.1.Physics club. “Cosmic Rays,” Pro¬fessor Arthur H. Compton. At 4:30in Ryerson 32.Sociology club, annual banquet.“Needed Developments of Sociologi¬cal Data.” Professor Stuart A. Rice.At 7 in the Judson court dining hall.Philosophy club. “Some Misunder¬standings in Whitehead,” AssistantProfessor Charles Hartshorne. At 8 p.m. in the Commons room of theClassics building.Undergraduate OrganizationsMeeting of members of the Phoe¬nix staff and all candidates for thestaff. At 3:30 in Harper M. 11.Meeting of the drama group ofthe Y. W. C. A. At 3:30 at the homeof Mrs. A. J. Brumbaugh, 1360 E.58th street. All members are urgedto attend.PLEDGINGPhi Pi Phi wishes to announce thepledging of James B. Eisenlohr ofTerre Haute, Indiana.Sigma Chi wishes to announces thepledging of Howard Foote and JulianDowell.FINGER WAVE THAT COMBSWITH SHAMPOO50cKennedy Beauty Shop6351 Cottage Grove Plaza 10601455 E. 63rd St. Dorchester 3755 RiDE ’EM, COWBOY^’Naturein theRau ”—as expressedin the famous rodeo cry; inspiredhy the picture in the July issue of theNational Geographic Mugutinetaken at the Ski Hi Stampede,Monte V'ista, Colorado/'Natureinthe Rate is Seldom Mild”—and rawtobaccoshave noplace in cigarettes.Maroons DisregardDope; Plan WinningGame on SaturdayPhoenix Makes Its Autumn Debut UP-TO-DATE FIGURESWith Welcome to New Students INDICATE INCREASEDNUNIDER RECISTEREDBy WILLIAM GOODSTEINA revamped Phoenix made itsfii'st appearance of the year yester¬day under one of the most strikingcovers that has ever decorated themagazine. There is no getting awayfrom the fact that the three coloredcover by Joe Low is very attractive,and as the women would say darncute.In making its first appearance, thePhoenix carried two messages with¬in its leaves. One, which included thecover, was a welcome to the fresh¬men. The other was not so outspok¬en, but clearly enough pointed outi that the Phoenix was honestly turn-I ing over a new leaf—as different asthe art w'ork, and the new make-up^ characterized the Old Bird yester-: day.More Space for JokesBut this does not mean that the' Phoenix has become a little angel,' for there are still a few black spots■ among the numerous jokes for whichi much more space has been used.Those near the end, however, are abit off color, compared with thosein the first half of the Phoenix.' The art staff is to be commended;or its work in illustrating the jokesI as well as the short articles, all ofwhich are so arranged as to make avery improved page make-up through-' out the magazine.; Congratulations are in order foreditor Joe Zoline, who is making agood bid for one of the places amongthe Walter Winchellers with his InkPot gossip even though one of theitem.s was published in The DailyMaroon Traveling Bazaar earlier thisseason. But no accusations, Joe.Only One Short Story’ The Low-Down w’hich attempts toI give the description of the bootleg-1 ging racket on campus doesn’t doI quite the job it w’as intended to, es-! pecially as far as the wit is con-I cerned. “Stress and Severe Pain” isI the only short story wdth a plot. Any-1 way it starts out and tries to giveI that impression, but its humor seemsI a bit too silly.“Kicking the Gong .Around” is an; interesting concession to the Phoenix' advertisers, but the space could be employed for a clever funny shortstory. Dr. Bill Peterson’s “.Arm-chairClinic” outdoes Milt Olin’s “Piffle”in humor as far as depicting w'hat’swhat in campus gossip. “The The¬atre” does a complete and excellenti review of the season’s stage activity,and informs the theatre-goers notonly what’s in the plays, but whereit is.Campus women have a whole pagedevoted to them, but the first halfon feminine gossip could be toneddown a lot. The fashion columnmakes up for the boldness in theother half and informs Milady whatthe coed will wear to the Universitysocial affairs.The short short features, however,win the prize for the month withsome of the best original humor i:the Phoenix. INTERFRATERNITYCOUNCIL AMENDSRUSHING RULESSophomore StudentCouncil Is NamedThe new Sophomore Council, ac¬cording to an announcement fromthe Dean of Students Office yester¬day, is composed of Evelyn Carr,Grace Graver. Betty Patterson. San.Gwin. Peggy Rittenhouse, EllmorcPatterson. William S. O’Donnell, Le-Roy .Ayers, John Barden and CharlesMerrifield.The members of the council arenominated by the Student Socia’Committee and appointed by theDean of Students office. .Although enrollment figures an-, nounced at the end of the first weekI of school indicated a loss of 39 stu-j dents over the previous year, R, W.i Bixler, University registrar, statedI yesterday that up-to-date figures showi instead an increase of 39. This totalIrepreserts tuitions paid or account-; ed for.The total of students registered inj the College and the four upper divi-I sions of Arts, Literature and Sci-; once is 4,104, showing a drop of 83i over last year. In this group there'are 2,459 men and 1,645 women. .At-csting perhaps to the efficacy of thenew plan, the entering freshman classI was larger than that of last year.The six professional .schools, the■ School of Business, and the School ofI Social Service Administration all! showed substantial gains in their en¬rollment. . The University collegealone sustained a loss, probably dueto the plight of Chicago schoolteachers who have heretofore madeup a substantial proportion of the(iowntown college enrollment.The total registration of allbranches of the University combinedis 7,267. The fact that the Midwayenrollment is relatively unaffectedis largely due to the eJttraordinarymeasure taken by the administrationin increasing the number of scholar-hip.-^ and adding $35,000 to the stu-’ent loan fund. (Continued from page 1)looked great, and Cullen’s plunginglent an encouraging note,i Pete Zimmer made a number of! long runs in, out, around, and over(another Freshman squad. Keith Hat-! ter also showed up in a backfieldj made up of these two with Flinnand Johnson, Hugh Mendenhall, greatMaroon star of several years agoand who has a year of competitionleft, worked out with this outfit, be¬ing his first practice since he becametligible recently. (Continued from page 1)Edgar Goldsmith, Zeta Beta Tau,Robert Balsley, D. K. E., and EdwardNicholson, Phi Kappa Psi.The problem of fraternity men liv¬ing in dormitories was discussed ina desultory fashion, but no actionwas taken. Cooperative buying forall the fraternity commissaries wasbrought up, but the matter wastabled until the next meeting, atwhich time a comprehensive reportwill be presented.View, Bells, Make' Visit to Tower ofj Chapel Impressive(Continued from page 1)are played by electricity, why can¬not the same method be used for all,j so that a piano keyboard might be |i employed?” Mr. Townsend pointed iout, in answering this query, that II such an arrangement would make i, the tone wholly mechanical, so thatthe effect would be no subtler thanthat of chimes. The present system iI allow's the carilloneur to produce :' delicate gradations of tone, giving it j■ in this respect the same superiority ■' over simple chimes as the piano hasover the organ. iConsole Like an Organ, The general appearance of the car- 'illon console will suggest an organ,ratler than a piano, because it has |pedals similar to those of an organ.These pedals will operate the lower Iregister of the bells. The six largest ,bells, in fact, may be played only by | •the pedals, while the next three oc- itaves may be controlled either by the i.pedals or by the keyboard. |The appearance of the large bells jI is quite different from that which |j church bells are generally considered ias having. The clappers do not swingfreely, but are held fast in placenear the sides of the bells, and atno time do they move more thantw'o inches in striking the bell.Mr. Townsend expects to have thepainting and wiring finished “some¬time in November.” The campus will 'become accustomed to the sound of !many of the bells before that time,however, because they will be testedoften during the wiring process..Although no definite plans have jbeen made, the carillon will prob- jably be played on Christmas day forthe first time.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT — Large, light, frt.room, priv. bath, home cooking, good |transp., priv. family. Gentlemen ^only. 5615 University Ave.ROOM AND BOARD—Univer.s- jity Students. Opportunity to practice :Spanish. Reasonable prices. Home Icooking. 1512 E. 65th Place, Fair-‘fax 8499.FOR RENT — Lovely furnishedrooms; homelike overlooking lake.Miller, 4360 Oakenwald Ave. Copr.. itn,Th* AaMTletnTobMco Co. No raw tobaccos in Luckies—that^s why they’re so mildbuy the finest, thevery finest tobaccosin all the world—but thatdoes not explain why folkseverywhere regard LuckyStrike as the mildest ciga¬rette. The fact is, we neveroverlook the truth that^‘Nature in the Raw isSeldom Mild*’—so thesefine tobaccos, after proper aging and mellowing, arethen given the benefit ofthat Lucky Strike purify¬ing process, described bythe words—**It’s toasted**.That’s why folks in everycity, town and hamlet saythat Luckies are such mildcigarettes."It’s toasted’’That package of mild LuckiesFate in the Revealing Lines of Your HandMAJARINA* <’ READS THE SECRETS WRITTEN THERE’ \ ou are invited to consult this gifted Seeress, who <will conduct free private readings for our Luncheonand Afternoon Tea Guests each week-day afternoon^ from 1 to 5 o'clock, beginning Saturday, October 22PHELPS and PHELPS, COLONIAL TEAROOM i* 6324 Woodlawn Avenue/ii