®[ie ©attfSifrarooriVol. 34. No. 13. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19. 1933 Price Three Ceni-The GreeksHave a Word-By ROBERT ALVAREZ—CROWBARSThe Kappa Nus have just found iout that the Phi Dilts were theguilty ones who made off with their IGreek-letter plate (in front of thehouse) four months ago. A requestwas registered for its return, andupon the Phi Delts refusal to sur¬render the plate, the Kappa Nus settheir alarm clocks for 4 a. m. and.staggered over next morning beforedawn to secure reparations. Aftermuch stewing and bending of crow¬bars, they managed to release thePhi Delt plate from the latter man¬sion, and scuttled home for break-;fast, with the plate in tow. Next day |the mailman brought in a bulky pack- ,age, which proved to be the kid-1napped Kappa Nu plate.The moral is the old one, ‘The ear¬ly bird catches the worm’, or some¬thing. And so all was quiet on theWabash until it was discovered thatthe Phi Delts had also swiped two ofthe Psi U’s stuffed owls. More de¬tails later when ^Awkins gets back.He just ran out to see whether thosedum Phi Delts left the Gargoyles onHull Gate.P. S. As we go to press, the PhiDelts are still minus the plate ac¬quired by the K. Nus, but from thedetermined appearance of that groupof conspirators huddling in front ofhlZl Woodlawn this noon, we proph¬esy yet more fun and stuff. And asfor the Psi U’s, one stuffed owl hasbeen recovered, but his hud«ly isstill to be found.CARSIt is not our wont to advertise,hut this is a special occasion. In otherwords cars are wanted for the par- NINE MEMBERSOF FACULTY HOLDU. S. miONSFormer Students Engagein NRA ExecutiveActivitiesNine faculty members and atleast nine former students at theUniversity are engaged in varioustypes of government service at thepresent time. The nine former stu¬dents hold national recovery admin¬istration executive positions.The University faculty appointedto government positions are: WilliamE. Dodd,^ chairman of the depart¬ment of history, ambassador to Ger¬many; Charles E. Merriam, chairmanof the department of Political Sci¬ence, committee of the Public Worksprogram; Robert M. Hutchins, presi¬dent of the University, chairman of !the advisory committee of SecretaryPerkin’s employment project; Stu-1art Rice, visiting professor of Soci-'ology, assistant director of the Cen-su.s Bureau.Floyd Reeves, professor of educa¬tion, director of personnel for the :Tennessee Valley .Authority; PauliDougla.s, professor of economies,:member of the Consumer’s .Advisory ,Committee; Samuel Nerlove, associ¬ate professor of business professor of jSocial Economy, RFC relief admin- |istrator for the Southwest during the ^past year; and John M. Cover, pro¬fessor of Statistics, member of a .committee to aid in coordinating the igovernment’s various statistical serv-!ices.Univeraity Student* in NRAThe number of former students in ; Three ProfessorsAnalyze Inflationon NBC ProgramInflation, one of the widely dis¬cussed problems of the day, and thepoint con.sidered most vulnerable inthe NRA program by many author¬ities, will be discussed on the Uni¬versity radio Round Table at 11:30Sunday morning over WMAQ andan NBC chain of fifty-two stationsthroughout the country. T. V. Smith,profe.ssor of Philosophy and chair¬man of the Round Table committeewhich prepares the programs, PercyHolmes Boynton, professor of Eng¬lish, and Garfield V. Cox, professorof Finance will be the speakers.Professor Cox, who is the authorof several books on finance and anauthority on business forecasting,will explain the technical phases ofthe problem, while his colleagues at¬tempt to a.sk the questions in whichthe “man in the street’’ would be in¬terested.From the outline that has beenprepared for the feature, severalgeneral points can be noted. First ofall, the professors w'ill strive for aworking definition of “inflation,”one that will serve to clarify therest of the discussion. This phrasehas come to mean many differentthings; one person thinks of it asdevaluation, another as printingmore money, and someone else aschanging the monetary standard. Student Settlement BoardDiscusses Plans TodayThe first meeting of the 1933-34Student Settlement Board will beheld this afternoon at 3:30 in thehome of Mrs. Ernst Freund, 5730Woodlawn avenue. Plans for thecoming year will be discussed andthe newly-appointed members of theboard will be introduced to the re¬turning members.Staley Forms DiscussionGroup in Social SciencesA. Eugene Staley, assistant pro¬fessor of Economics and head of 800entry in Burton Court, is forminga discussion group in the Social Sci¬ences among residents of the Halls.Members of this group will have fre¬quent meetings with various mem¬bers of the Social Sciences depart¬ments throughout the year.Hutchins Is Red Cross jChairman for Universities jPresident Robert Maynard Hutch-1ins has accepted the Red Cross RollCall chairmanship for the division of |the universities and .senior colleges.;Ida Noyes Auxiliary CouncilGives Tea Dance TomorrowPROPOSAL TO ABOLISHLAW COUNCIL AWAITSAPPROVAL OF DEAN All .students are invited to attenda tea dance tomorrow afternoontomorrow' afternoon from 3:30 to 5in Ida Noyes hall. This is the thirdof a series of affairs si)onsored bythe Ida Noyes Auxiliary Council asa means of acquainting the campus! with the facilities offered by thei hall. 'Mo/roons Seek toAvenge 9Defeatsby BoilermakersSince the year 1892, when theUniversity opened its doors to theworld, the Maroons have been play¬ing football games with Purdue. Inthe first year of competition thehome talent went down in disgrace,losing by a score of 38 to 0.Thus the 1933 Maroons have atorch to bear—they must avengetheir ancestors. Brushing aside thecobwebs of history, and looking atthe scores of the past five years, wefind that Shaughnessy’s warriorshave even more to avenge. In thepast five years the Maroons havescored the grand and glorious totalof two touchdowns and a placekick, against the 143 points rolled upby the Boilermaker machines.The totals over the complete per¬iod of competition, however, aremore cheering. For out of a total of37 games, Univeisity teams havewon 27. Purdue has won but 9, al¬though five of these victories havecome consecutively since 1928. Onegame resulted in a tie.The Maroons will go into the gameSaturday with tradition standingfirmly at their backs. They are de¬termined to wipe out the ignomin¬ious defeats of the jiast few seasons.Athletic Director Metcalf andCoach Shaughnessy urge the studentbody to attend the pep session in fullforce. BEAT PURDUE. CAMPUS UNITES INALL - UNIVERSITYPEP CELEBRATIONFestivities forCame BeginBartlett PurdueatQUARTET FEATURESSTRING GUMPQSITIQNSQFHArUNTQMQRRQWade to start off the huge pep-meet-1 NRA work may be larger than nine,ing Friday night, and we thought i The nine known former Universitythat you should be remin<led of it* j4udcnts are: Harold Ickes, Secre- The meeting of all Law school stu- o . ^ . .dents, which was to have been called Begin Reorganization oryouagain so as to be sure and be there..Among others, Wayne Rapp willhave three cars in the parade (theHudson and the two Studehakersfrom Calif.); Frank Nahser will bringhis Buick that still looks like it wasbought this morning, and Dex Fair-bank will insert his, etc. We also ex- tary of the Interior, who entered theUniversity in 1893, was awarded theA. B. in 1897, and earned the J. 1>.in 1907; Donald Richberg, chiefeoim.sel of the NRA, who was award¬ed the A. B. degree in 1901; and Dr.Earl D. Howard, tleputy administia-tor of the NRA, who earned the Ph.pect to see Leseman’s Chevy, Kerr’s | B- itt 1902, the M. A. in 190.1, andFord, Wegner’s “Heap”, Nicholson’sFord, Weaver’s Pierce-Arrow, Mont¬gomery’s Pontiac, Wiles’ “fire-en¬gine”, Sills’ sport-job, and a goodpercentage of tho.se Psi U and Phi the Ph. D. in 190.5; Milton H Pettitis chief of the Bureau of Exceptions;Jerome Frank, general counsel ofthe Agricultural Adjustment .Admin¬istration; Herbert Gaston, .secretary this week by Marvin Pink, secretaryof last year’s Law' Council, for thepurpose of considering a proposal toabolish the Law council and thefreshman and junior class officers, Jhas been indefinitely postponed Ipending fiTial approvjil of the moveby Dean Harry .A. Bigelow. The imeeting will probably take place'early next week.Because of the fact that the fresh-,man and junior cla.ss officers were |merely “figureheads,” according to |Pink, no reason for their continu¬ance is apparent. The senioi’ class ‘Courtier/ Dorm PublicationReorganization of the Courtier,publication of the .Men’s Residencehalls, will start tonight with a meet¬ing of prospective staff membeis inthe Burton coiwt conference roomsat 7:30. Howard Hudson and RobertChapel, who weie editor and publish¬er respectively of the paper lastyear, will present a plan which willdetermine the policy for the comingyear.i’si Ford coupes, to mention only ai of the Farm Board; and I* raneis J. officers, however, have traditionallyfew. If ’Awkins isn’t ashamed to j Carr, comptroller of the Tennes.seeshow “Betsy’s” radiator in public. Valley Authority,you shouldn’t be shy about bringingyour motor-vehicles over. .More fun!More people killed! !A. D. PHI DAYThe Alpha Delts had rather agood day yesterday. Well, rather!.Anyhooo, it seems they got out theold bag of pledge pins and signed upfour new men. The following makeup the quartet:Frank Hughes (Bill’s brother)from Evanston.Johny Auld from P'ort Collins,(Colorado.Bill Graham from Milwaukee.Paul Lavery from Chicago.Someone was just remarking thatthe Chicago fraternity men hadn’ttaken part in the Service Club revuethis year, as they had last year. Justhalf as many were in the show this.vear, all Blackfriars men, as before.Last year there wa.s a merry crowd(Continued on page 2)School of Business toHave Halloween Party.At a meeting of the Student Coun¬cil of the School of Busine.ss Tues¬day it was decided to sponsor a Hal¬loween party November 3. Dancingat Burton court will be the mainfeature of the event, to which allSchool of Business students are in¬vited.An as.sembly will be held withinthe next two weeks at which mem¬bers and officers of the council willbe introduced to the student bodyand a debate between two professorswill take place.A student will be chosen soon tocomplete the personnel of the coun¬cil, the group announced. The pres¬ent members of this body are JohnThompson, president; William Elliot,vice-president; Shirley Eichenbaum,secretary-treasurer; Arthur Hansen,representative of the graduate bodyin the School of,Business; StephenB Straoke and John Neukom Morse, KahnweilerLead Phoenix Sales;1,100 Copies SoldRosalyn Morse and Lois Kahnweil-er, with 106 and 95 .sales respective¬ly, are leading in the Phoenix racefor women selling the largest num¬ber of copies of the October Phoenix.More than 1100 copies of the Phoe¬nix were sold yesterday leaving only200 copies left to insure a total sell¬out of the i.ssue. The staff of thePhoenix awards to .saleswomen sell¬ing the largest number of copiesprizes of $5, $3, and $2.Pictures for the “Who’s the Sweet- je.st Little Gal on Campus” contest ]are coming into the Phoenix officein great numbers, according to MiltOlin, editor of the Phoenix. OtherUniversity women interested in en¬tering the contest should get theirpictures to the Phoenix office earlynext week. The winner of the con-vost will have her picture on the cov¬er of the November issue of thePhoenix. had their photographs placed at thehead of their respective cla.sses, and,for the purpose of continuing thathonor and tradition, they will beletained.“The Law Council, for the pastyear, has done little more than exist.With the advent of the UniversityBar association, the latter body a.s-sumes most of the functions former¬ly assigned to the council, and,” Pinkfeels, “can quite easily take over allof its duties. This will eliminate thesituation whereby two conflictingbodies vie for the same accomplish-1ments, I Contrasting the earliest stringquartet music, written by Haydn,with the comparatively modern com¬positions of Borodin and Debussy,four Chicago musicians will pre.sentthe first of a series of five concertstomorrow afternoon at 4 in Cobb110. Ticket.s for the series, pi iced at$1, and single tickets for 25 cents,are still available in the office ofthe Music department in Ingleside201.The Haydn Quaitet in G Major,opus 54, number 1, which oiiens theprogram, is one of 88 compositionsDebating Union Selects string groups written by JosefNew Officers for Year , ‘he foundor' ol stiing quai'tet music, hollowingIhe University Debate Union met' chronological development ofla.st night in the Reynolds Cli^b The-1 this type of wmrk, the group will in-terjiret the D Major quartet of Boro¬din, who represents the Russian na¬tionalist school. This composition israrely performed in its entirety, al¬though the last movement, the Noc¬turne, is often included in musicalrepertoires. The concert will con¬clude with Debussy’s only stringquartet, the quartet in G Minor, opus10, which is based upon the style ofBorodin.Oscar Chaussow, violin; Guido St.(Continued on page 4)ater for election of officers. The re-.sults of the balloting are as follows:(Continued on page 4)HUTCHINS SPEAKSIN FIRST LECTUREOF SINAI SERIESMRS. SCHMIDT CLOSESCOSTUME WORKSHOPActivities of the Costume Work¬shop have been discontinued for thequarter, but will be resumed in Jan¬uary, according to Mrs. MinnaSchmidt, director of the workshop.Mrs. Schmidt has been forced toabandon her work on campus thisquarter because of her illness follow¬ing a major operation during thesummer.Models of “400 famous women ofthe world,” selected by the govern¬ments of various nations at the in¬vitation of Mrs. Schmidt, have beenportrayed by the costumer in a bookof that title published in July. Herdisplay of these models is still on ex¬hibit at A Century of Progress onthe second floor of the General Ex¬hibits building President Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins and five members of the Univer¬sity faculty will participate in thecurrent lecture series at Sinai tem¬ple.'President Hutchins will appear atthe first lecture October 30 in asymposium with Norman Thomas,Socialist leader, and Profes.sor Mor-decai Ezekiel, a member of the presi¬dent’s “brain trust.”A second symposium, entitled“Looking Forward” will be held No¬vember 13, featuring Dr. Louis L.Mann, rabbi of Sinai temple, LouisUntermeyer, author, Arthur HollyCompton, professor of Physics at theUniversity, and T. V. Smith, profes¬sor of Philosophy on the Universityfaculty.Harry Gideonse, associate profe.s¬sor of Economics, will speak Feb¬ruary 12 on “Economic Independ¬ence; Is It Possible for America?”Three of the prominent religiousgroups of the world will providespeakers to take part in a symposiumMarch 12. Mohammedamism will beupheld by Sufi M. R. Bengalu of In¬dia; Christianity by W. E. Garrison,associate professor of Church His¬tory at the University, and Judaismby Rabbi Solomon Goldman of NewYork City. University Fetes3,000 Librarianson Campus TodayThree thoiusand members of theAmerican Librarian A.ssociation willbe the guests of the University todayand tomorrow at a tea and openhouse conducted by the GraduateLibrary School at 3:30 in the com¬mons room of the Social Sciencebuilding.Seventeen members of the Univer¬sity faculty and student body areparticipating in meetings of the As¬sociation’s 56th annual conventionwhich is being ’.eld this week in theStevens hotel. Those taking part inthe conferences include Louis R.Wilson, dean of the Graduate Li¬brary School; Pierce M. Butler, LeonCarnovsky, Douglas Waples, HelenMarshall, William M. Randall, andCarleton B. Jaeckel, of the LibrarySchool; M. Llewellyn Raney, directorof University libraries, and Freder¬ick Kuhlman, his associate; GarfieldU.' Cox, professor of Finance;Charles H. Judd, dean of the Schoolof Education; Edgar J. Goodspeed,professor of Greek; Ruth Emerson,a.s.^ociate professor of Medical SocialWork; Carl F. Huth, director of theHome Study department and theDowntown college; Percy Boynton,professor of English; Winifred VanNooy, reference librarian; and Vice-president Frederic Woodward.Dean Wilson has been nominatedfor the vice-presidency of the as¬sociation.Topics for the sessions, which be¬gan Monday morning, have rangedfrom discussions of the college li¬brary to descriptions of medical li-hrpri*»« BEAT PURDUE, the watchwordof a united student body, will beechoed and reechoed tomorrow nightin the pep session and mass meetingthat will eclipse all previous Univer¬sity celebrations.Two thousand people will gatheroutside of Bartlett gym at 7:30, andled by the team and the Universityband will parade for an hour on aline of march that will be outlinedin tomorrow’s Daily Maroon. At 9the marcher.'? will enter Mandel hall,and for an hour will sing, cheer, andlisten to speeches by James WeberLinn, representing the faculty; Mer¬rill Meggs, publisher of the ChicagoEvening American, representing thealumni; Kenneth Rouse, representingthe C club; Athletic Director T. N.Metcalf, Coach Clark Shaughnessyand Captain Pete Zimmer, represent¬ing the football team. Jerry Jontrywill be the master of ceremonies.Dance at Ida NoyesAt 10 the group will adjourn toIda Noyes hall, where a dance willbe held under the auspices of theFreshman Orientation committee andfinanced by the Interfraternity com¬mittee. Paul Lau»’ie and his ten pieceorchestra, an organization new toUniversity social life, but reputedlyone of the better orchestras in thecity, will play until midnight, atwhich time Blackfriars will takeover the entertainment for an hour.Admittance to the BEAT PUR¬DUE dance will be based on whetheror not people are wearing tags whichwill be distributed just prior to theparade. No other admission receiptwill be necessary.Campus organizations are hurried¬ly climbing on to the band wagonof what promises to be the moststupendous enterprise of combinedgraduate and undergraduate groups.The freshman class has been espe¬cially responsive .Heading the different committeesin charge of the affair are: FrankCarr, Ell Patterson and Ralph Nich¬olson. representimg the honor so-cities and in charge of the parade;(Continued on page 4)Students Tour LatinQuarter, ‘Hobohemia’,’Greenwich Village’ANNOUNCE SALEOF TICKETS FORMO WRER ’S SPEECHTickets are now on sale for the lec¬ture by Edgar Ansell Mowrer, news¬paper correspondent, to be held Oc¬tober 31, in Mandel hall, as the sec¬ond lecture of the series offered bythe Student Lecture Service. Ticketsmay be purchased for 55 and 85cents at the box office of Mandelhall, the University bookstore, or atthe University College.Season tickets have been reducedto $2.50 for the remaining five lec¬tures. They will be on sale untilOctober 31.Patrons and patronesses for theStudent Lecture Service are: EdithFoster Flint, Dr. and Mrs. Basil Har¬vey, W. E. Spencer, Mary B. Gilson.Edith Abbott, William E. Scott,Fredric Woodward, Dr. Frank R.Lillie, Sophonisba P. Breckinridge,Dr. James Stifler, Chauncey S.Bou<•^er, Charles Merriam, JeromeKerwiii, Nathan C. Plimpton, CharlesH. Judd, Charles W. Gilkey, EugeneStaley, Harold F. Gosnell, Fred Mil-lett, Arthur Compton, Davis Ed¬wards, Lloyd R. Steere, Leonard D.White, George O. Fairweather, Al¬gernon Coleman, Dr. Wilber E. Post,Mr. and Mrs. William Harrell,George A. Works, Dr. Henry S.Haughton, James W. Linn, and Rob¬ert A. Carr. Chicago’s Latin Quarter will bethe jobject of a Reconciliation tour tobe held on Saturday. Any interestedperson may join tne group when hecan, and leave when he must. Thetour includes a visit to Chicago’s“Greenwich Village,” to the homesand haunts of poets and painters,and to “Hobohemia.”At 2 in the afternoon the partywill meet in the vestibule of the Tri¬bune building for a trip through the.‘Streets of Towertown. A life classstudio will be visited next. From theItalian court the group will go tothe Round Table, an underground“Hobohemia” cafe where starvingpoets and painters eat. After din¬ing there, they will attend Hobo col¬lege before going on to the nighthaunts of the Bohemians.Expenses will include 50 centspaid on the trip plus the price ofsupper.HONOR STOCK AT TEAIN IDA NOYES SUNDAYDr. Frederick Stock, director ofthe Chicago Civic orchestra, will bethe principal speaker at a tea to begiven in his honor Sunday from 4 to6 in Ida Noyes hall by the UniversityOrchestral Association, for studentsubscribers. «•Invitations have been sent only tostudents who have subscribed for theseries of six symphony concert.*?which begin November 7. Othergxiests will include members and stu¬dents of the music department, ac¬cording to Mrs. Henry Spacer, secre¬tary-treasurer of the Association.Dr. Martin Schutze, president, andMrs. Frederic Woodward, vice-presi¬dent, will also be present.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1933 \ilarnnnFOUNDED IN 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of ChicaKO. publiihed mornintrs except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday durinjr the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.SO a year ; $4.00 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entert'd into by The Daily Maroon.EnU*red as fevonu ciass matter March 190.3. 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 CONTROLJOHN P. BARDEN, Editor-in-C hiefVINCENT NEWMAN, Business ManagerWILLIAM GOODSTEIN, Managing EditorWALTER L, MONTGOMERY, CirculationJANE L BIESENTHAL, Associate EditorBETTY HANSEN, Associate EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSTom BartonNoel B. Gerson Robert J. HastcrlikHoward P. HudsonDavid H. Kutner Howard M. RichFlorence WishnickBUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam BergmanRobert Samuels W’illiam O'DonnellSOPHOMORE REPORTERSRobert Ebert James MacKenzie Jean TrussingCharlotte Fishman Curtis Melnick Philip I^ssRuth Greenbaum Robert McOuilken Harker StantonCharles Hoerr Donald Morris Jeanne StolteHenry Kelley Frank Moss Marion WagnerRaymond Lahr Ralph NicholsonJanet Lewy William WrightEDITORIAL COMMITTEEMarie Berger Louise Graver Preston CutlerWaldemar SolfNight Editor: Noel B. GersonAssistants: Watson and StantonThursday, October 19, 1933A NEW PLANFOR CAMPUS SOC IETY II. Through the holding of numerous dances,luncheons, and parties sponsored jointly b;/clubs and farternities and open to ALLfreshmen and transfer students. In thisway the University would benefit by provid¬ing attractive social opportunities for the en¬tire group of new students; and the fratern¬ities and clubs would increase both theirprestige and their membership to a greatextent by controlling a large-scale rushingarena. This plan should prove of enoughbenefit to the University that it should bewilling to provide a large part of the ex¬penses for these social activities, while theclubs and fraternities would be fulfillingtheir part by taking charge of the varioustypes of entertainment.By contacting all new students, the plan wouldmake it possible, in time, for the entire studentbody to be offered at least the opportunity for in¬teresting and pleasant social activity. If the in¬dividual student fails to avail himself of such aplan as we propose, assuming always that it isadopted, the lack of desirable social contactswould be largely a personal matter. The Univer¬sity could then feel justified in leaving him tohis own endeavours, conscious that it had doneits part.—B. H.The Travelling Bazaar[By SIDNEY HYMAN and HARRY MORRISON |lUNo one knows how she got there but there shewas, standing outside the door of a room on thethird floor of what fraternity house. The- occu¬pants of th^ room stood by and did nothing asshe rushed in and tore her picture off the walland rushed out again. Who was she and whoseroom was it? It happened night before last. Doesanyone know anything mare about it than TomGlass ford does?i^ ^ *We would bring no storms of criticism upon our 1editorial heads by referring to our noble institutionas a great university. Learned professors, far¬sighted plans of study, and academic advantagesof every sort are provided by the powers that bewhich control the destinies of the University. Andlet it not be thought that we are not properlygrateful. Yet, rationalize as we might, it is hardto believe that there is not something seriouslyamiss in the general scheme of things. We refer,specifically, to the truly appalling lack of anyadequate program of social orientation.Our chief purpose in attending the Universityin the first place is to obtain some sort of prepara¬tion for life. The academic aspect of this prepara¬tion is so well attended to that no major faultscan be discerned. At least this is the charitablepoint of view and one not intended to provokediscussion. And yet, the other angle, that com¬plicated and gradual process of becoming in tunewith the social order and learning to live harmoni¬ously and effectively with our fellow men is leftsolely to chance. You sink or swim on your ownjnerits—merits which in the final analysis dependlargely upon previous social experience in a com¬munity which is strange to a considerable, if not avast, majority of the student body.Entrance into the University makes it essentialthat the individual student form new friendshipsand establish for himself a satisfying social set-up.And it is here that the University turns its staidGothic back and becomes immersed in its ownconcerns. We would cite cases to indicate howmany students fall tragic victims to this neglect,but they are too numerous and too familiar todemand special mention. We are all acquaintedwith the lost souls who, from no fault of their own,are forced to throw themselves into study becausethe social life they want and need is denied them.We have observed with strict impersonality that“society”, in the strictly local significance of theword, is confined to the favored few. In the So¬ciety column of The Daily Maroon, in the Phoenixchit-chat, and in the little groups which congre¬gate about campus the same names are mentionedover and over. Not that we have any quarrelwith these “names”. Their social life is successfulbecause it is well organized. But think of thegreat mass of students who are not included in anysort of social organization, in the narrow sense ofthe word. TTieirs is indeed a sad plight, and onein which we firmly believe the University shouldtake a hand.Solution of the difficulty would undoubtedly beno small matter. But we believe it might be hand¬led in the following way:I. Through the forming of a Social OrientationBoard to function through the Dean of Stu- jdents office and to be composed of two {committees, one of representative students, jthe other of interested faculty members. (, Last Saturday night everyone was having afine time at the South Shore country club. StaidBarbara Beverly, reserved and dignified as ever,was carrying on a reserved, dignified, and staidconversation with a group of her clubsisters andtheir escorts. Across the lounge another group,more lively, were talking about the survey coursein the Biological Sciences. One of them, quiteexuberant, yelled, “Barbara Beverly, what isyour favourite method of reproduction ?“* • •WHAT EVERY BRIDE SHOULD KNOW ONCE AWEEK ON THURSDAY CORNER:“Mush” Newman has a cadavor he calls “Wil-mot” in honor of Wilmot Palmer.Henry I). Lytton uses three alarm clocks towake him up every morning. He times them oneminute apart and receives a carillon effect ashis electric clock chimes in.Arthur Sears Henning, astute Washington poli¬tical observer, was one of the founders of IronMa.sk.George (Chi Psi) Kendall went to St. Louisto see the Maroons play but spent all his moneybefore the game. He spent the afternoon as adistinguished onlooker at one of the local highschool games.Professor Laswell defines column writers as“specialized symbol slingers indulging theirnarcissistic impuLses by peddling verbage to thepopulation.”* ♦ *Louise Kreutzer is sporting a mouse and sheclaims that a door fell on her eye but we know!Operator 13 called us up last night and told usthe whole story. It seems there was a party(there usually is) and Bruce Stewart was there(he usually is). He was sitting on the floor andhis feet were pireouetting round and round.Louise leaned out and caught one in the eye.It w hard to believe, but you know our Louise.* ♦ *It’s pretty funny about Herb Peterson, theswell barber over at International House. Herbthought he’d get a lot of free publicity by offer¬ing to give a free haircut to every man who play¬ed if Chicago beat Purdue. Chicago beat Cornelland then whaled the tar out of Washingto.i andNOW THEY’RE GOING TO BEAT PURDUE.But Herb’s no slacker; he doesn’t back down. It’sa free haircut to every man on the team whenChicago beats Piirdue this Saturday.* * * ITHE TRAVELLING BAZAAR AS WE SEE IT: IThe Typesetters and Night Editor.« • «THE TRAVELLING BAZAAR IS IN FULLACCORD WITH THE PROPOSITIONTHAT CHICAGO WILL BEAT PURDUE! Lettersto theEditor Louie Alvarez, and Dud Buck, andfinally from the A. D. Phis, FrankHarding and John Dille.In the current revue “DancingDebs,” the campus was representedby John Coulson, Jimmy Stevens,John Shallenberg, Bill Watson, JohnFlinn and Allen Schlesinger. DREXEL THEATRE8S8 £.THEY CALL I Gieorirc BrentIT SIN 1 Lorettn TonnxMIDNITE CLUBDaily Mat. 15c till 6:30Editor, The Daily MaroonDear Mr. Barden:Once again in reference to“Breaking Some Ancient Habits”,I’m all with you. It is unquestion¬ably the satisfaction of having delvedmore than superficially into a sub¬ject rather than having passed thecomprehensives that will make thesefour years vital and important.It w'ould seem to me that this isthe basis of the new plan: encourag¬ing voluntary work. But do profes¬sors and instructors realize andagree on that point? If so, theymight, as guides and leaders, help usto encourage this desire for deeperknowledge and arouse our naturalacademic curiosity. Instead, constantemphasis is laid on the importanceof passing the comprehensives, leav¬ing the student once more with theold high school conception of theever omnipotent exam.If we can’t have the an’ scantiat-ing suppoil of instructors, 1 -t’s makethe most of the advantage: anywayAnother Fr« thman.We agree with you ent rely, butdo not be too hard on our instruc¬tors. If you do not pass the compre¬hensives. your failure, under thenew plan, would reflect on them,since both students and instructorsare out to beat the Board of Exam¬iners.—ed.j Today on thei QuadranglesNight editor for the next issue:Tom Barton. .Assistants: Curtis Mel¬nick and Donald Morris. |Music and ReligionPhonograph concert from 12:30 1to 1:16 in Social Science assembly:hall. iAssociate profes.sor William Garri- json: Worship in Historic Christian-:ity III. “The Central Element in IProtestant Worship” at 12 in JosephBond chapel. ’Undergraduate OrganizationAvukah meeting at 3:30 in Y. W. jC. A. room of Ida Noyes hall. Dr. S. jM. Blumenfeld will speak on “A iJewish Question. A World Pi oblem.” jDelta Sigma at 4 in Alumni room jof Ida Noyes hall. IDepartmental OrganizationsSpanish Club at 4 in the North jroom of Ida Noyes hall. iGraduate Student Council at7:30 in the Alumni room of Ida !Noyes hall. |Miscellaneous jDames club at 2 in the South:room of Ida Noyes hall. A strategic pointin the battle for salesToday’s intense competition calls for new andmore effective merchandising methods. Severalplans pioneered by Bell System men are provinghelpful.For example; the “Where to Buy It” sectionof the telephone book. Here local dealers are listedbeneath the trade-marks of advertised products—such as Plymouth, Greyhound Lines, F.xide,RCA Victor. This service helps manufacturei-sto reduce substitution, helps dealers to increasesales, helps you to locate the brand you want.BELL SYSTEM• THE GREEKS HAVE A iWORD !(Continued from page 1) Iof twelve; h>ed Fendig, the D. U., >Walt Montgomery the Sig Chi, and !Hap Sulcer the P.si U; then from;the Deke house, Bion Howard and 1Ralph Webster, from the Phi Gam !house Gordy Allen, Bill Peterson. I TAKE A TRIP HOME BY TELEPHONE II -TONIGHT AT HALF-PAST EIGHT! !PATRONIZE THE DAILY MAROON ADVERTISERSQ^cr tkhiHOLLYWOOD COMES TO THE COLLEGE INNEVERY NIGHTPHBL HARRISSENSATIONALHOLLYWOOD STARAND HIS ORCHESTRAWITHLEAH RAY and the3 AMBASSADORSANDA NEW KIND OF FLOOR SHOWCOLLEGEIHMNEVER A COVER CHARGEDAILY MAROON SPORTSTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1933 Page Three"WHEN A FELLERNEEDS A FRIEND"• • I there’s cheer in good old Briggs!Another football player may take your sig^nals, but there’s no substitute for BRIGGS.You could pay twice as much for othertobaccos and find them not half so good.BRIGGS is aged in the wood extra long.It’s mellowed and biteless. It’s so goodthat it won nation-wide popularity beforeit had a line of advertising.But it’s easy to make a tobacco soundgrand in print. Smoking’s what counts.Won’t you try a tin of BRIGGS?Briggs Pipe Mixture is also sold in impound and}^-pound tins . . . and in Impound Humidor Kegs.Do Your Part at the Pep SessionBEAT PURDUE TAU OELTS, PHI BETADELTA, S.A.L, PONIES,WIN l-M TOUGHBALLOptimists and BarbariansTurn in Victories OverWeak Teams SportFlashesBEAT PURDUE—Proms and Football—Half an Hour to Live—Fehring Purdue—‘Tug’ Gets out of the Way—By TOM BARTON MAROONS WORK LITETO DEVELOP iniCKI FOR PORDOE DIMEFundamentals Stressed in!Overtime Drill: Team IStill Intact IGood and bad playing wa.s mixedin yesterday’s Intramural touchballgames which saw Tau Delta Phi, thePonies, Phi Beta Delta, the Optim¬ists, the Barbarians, and Sigma Al¬pha Epsilon take respective victoriesover the Ramblers, the Kents, PhiSigma Delta, Chicago TheologicalSeminary, the Hyde Park Aces andChi Psi. Independent teams playedtheir first games while the fraternityoutfits completed second rounds intheir leagues.The Tau Delts. ^xh'biting asmoothly-working offense, took .the jRamblers into camp, 19 to 0. Open-;ing up with trick plays, the fratern- jity team pushed over a touchdownin the first four downs with Sher-win finally taking the ball over. Sixpoints by Lewy who scored on ashort pass ,and a third touchdownby Nachman, who intercepted a pa-^s, jmade the win decisive.I^ed by Samuelson and Shen c, thePonies outclassed the Kents. 19 to 0.With Sherre in the thick of everyplay and Samuelson counting twice,the independent team had littletrouble in taking the game. Rudolphmade the la.st touchdown for the win¬ners. IThe Phi B. D.’s, defending oham-!pions, came from behind to downthe Phi Sigs. 8 to 6. Near the closeof the fir.st half, Zacharias of thelosers “pulled a .sneaker” and scoredon a long pass from ScKlifke. But inthe concluding half the Phi B. D.’spromptly tied the tilt up when Marv-er dashed thiity yards and flippedthe ball to Yedor for the touchdown.The kick-off rolled over the goal lineand a safety, which proved to be thewinning two markers, was chalkedup when Schlifke threw the ball onan incomplete pass.Scoring twice the Optimists out¬lasted the C. T. S. team in a latherclose game, 12 to 0. The Barbariansoverwhelmed the Hyde ^ark Aces(Continued on page 4) During the past four or five yearsthere has been a very noticeable ab¬sence of the good ole college spiritamong the undergraduates at Chi¬cago. Maybe there havan’t been anychampionship teams but the Maroonshave occasionally played good foot¬ball in the last few years. Now Chi¬cago appears to have a real team—perhaps a championship team—solet’s get behind our football team atthe Pep session tomorrow. . . andBEAT PURDUE.Clark Shaughnessy will be makinghis conference debut as a coach Saiurday. The new Maroon coach leai n-ed his football at Minnesota, but thelast taste a Big Ten team had of aShaughnes.sy coached team was in1925 when Tuiane romped overNorthwestern, then Western Confer¬ence champion.«, 18 to 7.* * *Activities are alright in their place,but foi’ Doc Spears, Wisconsin gridboss, there aie activities and thereare activitie.s. When Fontaine, oneof his halfbacks, was appointed headof the prom committee for the juniorcla.ss. Doc decided there was no placefor a prom leader on his team. SoFontaine had to .sacrifice his socialactivities for the more brutal giid-iron action.Gordon Watrous, Maroon polocaptain a few yeais ago, who wasseriously injured in a polo game atGreen Bay la.st summer, is at homeand sufficiently i*ecovered to receivevisitors. Watrous, one of the bestpolo players in the Middle W’est, re¬ceived a triple .skull fracture as aresult of a blow from a polo mallet,and was given a half hour to live.His marvelous .stamina kept himalive during the early crises afterhis injuries, and today he is up anddiking around his home. Goidon isa brother of George Watrous, half¬back on this year’s grid team.« * *Chicago will have reason to be“Fehring” Purdue Saturday. In ad¬dition to Captain “Dutch” F'ehring,Ail-American tackle, the Boilermak-eis will have another reason in theperson of Ted Fehring, brother of“Dutch”, who will be opei-ating atthe other tackle post.* * *“Tug” Wilson, director of .Ath¬letics at Northwestern, was almostrun over by an automobile driven bya fox terrier Wednesday. Wilson,whose car was parked on one of theEvanston slopes, was just enteringhis machine, when he looked up andsaw another car coasting downhill ,toward him, with only a barking and |much-excited fox terrier in the frontseat. Wilson decided to get out ofthe way just as the car struck hismachine. The brakes in the runa¬way car are believed to have beenreleased by the jumping around ofthe dog in the front seat.* ♦ *It seems that Washington has onlytwo centers on their football squad.During the last quarter of the Chi-cago-Washington game Saturdaj', asub.stitute was sent in for the reg- jular center. After a few plays thesubstitute was hurt, and under therules the regular center could not!be substituted in the same quarter.!Coach Jimmy Conzelman was tear- jing his hair and looking for a cen¬ter among the subs on the Bearbench when Vin Sahlin yells over to ithe Chicago bench from the middle Iof the field. “Hey coach! they hav-' Working late last night, the Ma-1roon griddei-s plugged away at the jjob of building up a team that will |turn aside the thrust of the Purdue iattack by drilling hard on the funda jmentals of the game. There was no |scrimmage and there will be nonefor the rest of this week. Personal. 'physical contact has pi actically been |aboli.shed in Coach Shaughnessy’s Icamp.The varsity worked until 7 yester- |day evening, rehearsing plays and 1developing the new* combinations Ithat will be used against Purdue Sat-1urday. When the practice field be- jcame so dark that even the white Iballs that were brought out at dusk jcould not be seen clearly in the glowof the floodlights, Shaughnessy mov¬ed the squad into the fieldhouse toI continue the practice.It is pos.sihlo that George Wat¬rous will start in the Purdue gamein order to take care of the kick-off.The opening kicks haven’t been whatthey should he. Watrous is a sopho¬more reseiwe halfback who got hishigh school training at Hyde Parkand Bowen. His kicks from place-I ment are consi.stently up over GOyards and his drop kicks are accur-;ate. ;j The team will appear at full istrength against the Boilermaker ipowerhouse. Captain Pete Zimmer |and Rainwater Wells, the only two iMaroons to report even slight injuries! will be set to help .stem the Purdueinvasion. Jim Gold, who recentlypa.ssed a comprehensive examination ,to secure his eligibility, will be avail-1able for wotk in the line, and will |add to the reserve .strength of the jteam. The first string line proved'last Saturday that it was strong de¬fensively, but the reserves were notquite so air tight. The regular for¬wards have yet to allow a team tomake a first down through the line, jI Chicago’s hones rest on the back-1field. Zimmer, Berwanger, Nyquist, jand Sahlin make up the formidable jcombination that will meet its equal jfor the first time in the Purdue ag¬gregation. Sahlin will see more work Ias a ball carrier Saturday after hav-:ing clearly demonstrated his profi- jciency against Wash. gton. Both j; teams have a wealth of scoring |j threats. IThe game will be fought in the j' air. Chicago has a good passing at- iI tack with both Zimmer and Sahlin[ able to throw the old pig skin accur- :i ately. Duane Purvis, Purdue back |and Big Ten javelin champion, can jget tremendous distance on his ;passes. In the Minnesota game he jsailed one just short of 60 yards. The |Boilermakers have considerable edge jon the kicking, but Berwanger, at hisbest, may be able to hold his own. |Captain Zimmer has the boys iworking to a little tune that theyall sing under their breath: “There’sa little box of pine on the seven !twenty-nine, and we’re taking Fehr¬ing back to Old Purdue.” Fehring is aPurdue tackle that will cause plentyof trouble.en’t any more centers. Should we (let them put that other one back |in?” Shaughnessy waved his o. k. iand the game proceeded. !$5 — Stetson Hats — $5sold atWINTERS’ MEN’S SHOP1357 E. 55th St. I-M Horseshoes, Golf,Tennis Meets BeginThe fall intramural athletic pro¬gram is now well under way withthe beginning of golf, tennis, andhorseshoe tournaments this week.The touchball meet is in its secondweek, with the semi-finals still threeweeks away. Entries for the crosscountry and fall relays must be inthe intraminal office by tomorrowafternoon.Though it is as yet too early inthe tournament to decide it looks asthough Psi Upsilon and Phi BetaDelta will fight it out for the touch-ball championship. Participants inthe golf, tennis, and horseshoes con¬tests have been notified whom theywill meet, and are urged by the in¬tramural officials to complete theirgames by the end of next week.PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERSYourStetsonHatean take itTHAT^S what value meansin a hat. Your Stetson hasthe stuff in it to stand ubeating—open car, roughweather, anything you handit. And all the time it keepssmiling—keeps that smart¬ness of line and beauty m{color which makes you ad¬mire a Stetson.IVew Stetson styles arebeing shown now. Ask par¬ticularly to see the newSuede Finish and colormixtures.at the better storeeJohn II. StetsonCompany''Editorial Enterprise'*is the new standard of the Daily Maroon of 1933-34. New features, more interesting columns,a greater number of pictures, and more ably edited pages are achieving this standard of“Editorial Enterprise.**Become a Regular Reader of the Daily MaroonSubscribe by the Year $2.50PHI B. P: " Th'e remniiting cpp^rts of theReries are scheduled for ilte^ateFridays, on November 3, November17, D^ember 1, and December 15.WINI-MrH EATER(Continued from page 1)Rizzo, viola; Leonard Sorkin, violin;and James Kann, cello, compose thequartet, which was heard by campusaudiences., last season at the Presi¬dent’s Inception for gradiiatintj'se¬niors, the Alumni Reunion, and theMusic Guild’s Sunday concerts.byBETTY ilANSEN Mebel Viola HolgateTeacher of.Piano ,and VdiccStudio;. .5510 Kenwood Ave.^EWS IN BRIEFiiouse, Hanilel svijs! i)yt rather, and more plausibly,^» heroic prpponion i the outward manifestation of a greatlie astciibed to him [ in^r^v turmoii. is of his complex na j Players have also ventured to ‘tight to light, ( make various minor, but significant,the daring of the 'h'tnges in the staging and costum-jring to diverge from j'^g of the play. In the best Latin jriir.ire their attenip*. tradition all the “evil” characterstvithin the eharatte:: i ^nter from the left (sinister)he play, tut aiso to jj^^d the “good” characters will .c'on-e influences uhi'h, hoe thei; action to the right' (d"<*x-,nplication It is the. ter), Othei changes have been made,and of its diiectors I manner of entrance.s and " tlieas a truly heroic > grouping of actors on the .stage. The'jle to the immovta' costnmcs will not he Elizabethan in,s intelligent, poi<ed, character, as playgoers have I'earnedd overcome any sit- to expect. Rather will they he deifin-with which he was ttc*y V'king, calculatcil to expressseeming he-itationi with force the vigor and strength of;from one course tot the characters, especially that "-ofnot, t<> them, evi* Hamlet, and to provide the ah' of•jitially weak charac- bleakness and ruggedness so e^ssenthe attempts of an tial to the setting.twilled, tinely disci- innovations in inter^^ripla-'I to adiust h m .tl staging have been made in *itig'tion which even. effoit to give the play atlded lifv^tjosition was umi.ucj kc>ep its ad ion p-moc.fch an 1 j• rapid. Thei'i' will he no tend'C®.ey to Iivas, in addition, o i “artiness” and no dfeposition to ftip-c finest court tnadi- ply changes which are not in keepifng j. scholar, a w t, a , with the play as a fgreat lito'-ary-god >dly capable of nvvr-| ilraniatic masterpiece. It w^Il be 4n-1npli.«hed ^wol•dsmau,, tcrpretcd with sincerity and, ftp- fh [ic' lighter side of hit- most pait. with f’delity. There heed jtually blotted out by , he no fear that Hamlet as the Chi-'jorhing melancholy cago Players present him will he aiimed him does not changeling, stripped of all his fa-»le that in him they miliar qualities, Rather can we ex-;ted to a high degree, pect a new depth of tone and fgVl-,elancholy, itself, wa,s ing, coupled with a strength \ybi;e;bd*!;effect of the insur- all too frequently denied him op j'hv!iculty which faced modern |s''.Age. ; (Contiau'cd from page 1)Debate manager—*- Robert Chapel;Recording- Secretary—Mary Mc-Kcnsie; Co-rrespondi-ng Secretary—Leroy LaTowsky; Tfeasui'er—Wen-del .\uld; Publicity Manager—Ev¬erett St 01 ey.The freshmen will meet next Wed¬nesday to elect a non-voting repre¬sentative to the cabinet,A debate followed the electionwith last year’s talent holding forth,and while it was begun in a spiritof calm deliberation, soon became averitable “Comedy'of Errors,’’.The freshmen debaters intendshortly to restore the union to nor¬mal with a deliiate on the .same ques¬tion—-Limitation of Incomes. IT’S BIGGERIT’S BETTERIT’S MOI>ERNIT’S WORTH MORECLASSIFIED ADSLOST—Three EiiglTsh hooks nearUniversity Commons between 0 and7 p. m. Reward, Helen Keller. Com¬modore 2514.FOR RENTt—Interesting livingroom and'.Jiirge' pleasant sleepingroom. Vify . reasonable. Bussey,572.1 Kiniberk. Midway 5266,• 5X‘.S55*iN%V..lAA<iv.*l>N'.Uy'.■S.'.'PU-';;.';,',./'.';" "" ** ****U,H Choice tobaccosrolled right—no loose ends-.-A,i','. sAlways the finest tobaccosAlways thejinest workmanshipAlways Luckiespk When smoking a Lucky, have younoticed the long white ash? That’sthe sign of fine, choice Turkish andDomestic tobaccos. And have younoticed how fully packed Luckies arewith these choice tobaccos — rolledright—so round—so pure—with noloose ends. Luckies always please!CoDyrlfht, 19SS, Tha Amerlcmn Tobacco Corapanr.. . .•s ■' 'i irs toasted