Read the Trilogyon ^'Booing*’ inLetters to the EditorPage 2 Bail? itlaroon A Guest BazaarToday byNELS FUQUAPage 2Vol. 35. No. 24. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1934 Price Three CentsSmith Wins as Democrats Sweep NationEmergencyEducationalProjectsBy JANET LEWYThis is first of a series of ar¬ticles describing the EmergencyEducational Projects now beingdirected by the University un¬der the auspices of the IllinoisEmergency Relief Commission. NAME MEMBERSOF CHORUSES FORMIR R OJ^ REVUEAnnounce Steppers andTappers in AnnualProductionAuthorized by the Illinois Emerg¬ency Relief Commission, the Univer¬sity is directing twenty-two Emerg¬ency Relief projects on various so¬ciological phases of the depression.Dr. M. H. Bickham, director of Pro¬gram Planning of the Commissionhas awarded this assistance to theUniversity to aid college graduatesand others who have had specializedtraining with their investigations.Emery T. Fill>ey, dean of the Fac¬ulties, is in charge of the projectson this campus; Robert C. Woellner,executive secretary of the Board ofVocational Guidance and Placementis in charge of the personnel.Nine professors of the Universityare doing re.search work in the fieldof adult education. William Ran¬dall, profes.sor of Library Sci¬ence, is studying the amount andnature of the reading materialsavailable to adults through public li¬braries and other agencies in SouthChicago.Determination of the difficultiesfound in reading such materials bythe meml>ers of these adult groups isthe topic of research, William Grey,professor of Education, has underway.ADULT INTERESTSAND MENTALITYProfessor L. Camovsky is makinga study of the library .service in themetropolitan area of Chicago in re¬lation to adult elementary and sec¬ondary education. Louis L. Thurstone,professor of Psychology, is undertak¬ing a study to develop methods bywhich mental abilities of high schoolgraduates and adults may be ap¬praised with respect to adjustment,service and adult education.The fifth section of the topic is asurvey of the adult interest on radio,being carried on by Allen Miller, theradio director. A study of the meth¬ods of teaching all leading adulteducation groups is the researchproblem of C. 0. Thompson. HelenWright, associate professor of SocialEconomy, is comparing the effects ofwork relief and direct relief. Profes¬sor I.asswell, of the Political Sciencedivision, is studying the efforts of or¬ganized groups to influence the atti¬tudes of unemployed adults by meansof printed and other media.The ninth study of some phase ofadult education is that of Louis R.Wilson, professor of Library Science,whose problem is that of the avail¬ability and resources of libraries,study clubs, forums, evening schooland other organizations in the met¬ropolitan area of Chicago for use inthis field of education.depressions andpersonality traitsThe effects of the depression onthe family life and personality traitsare included in ten of the surveys, jProfessor E. H. Sutherland, profes- jsor of Sociology, is continuing astudy of the personality traits and jfamily and social background of un- jattached men from the standpoint of |vocational re-education and personal- |ity adjustment. The effects of the de-!pression on family life and the per-1sonality development of its membersis the title of the survey under thedirection of E, W. Burgess, professorof Sociology. Professor Burgess is di¬recting projects on a comparisonof delinquency records and the rec¬ords of supervised child recreation inSouth Chicago and on the determina¬tion of the effects of the depressionon the birth rate and infant deathI'ate. Similarly, Professor Hauseris conducting research work on thecommunity factors making for andagainst child health and developmentas measured by the infant birth anddeath rate. The members of the Steppers andTappers choruses for the Mirror Re- ^vue, which will be presented in Feb-1ruary in Mandel hall, were an-[nounced yesterday by Peggy Moore,member of the Mirror Board, incharge of publicity.Lorraine Donkle, who directed theSteppers in the last Mirror show, willagain direct the chorus. She has beena member of Mirror for three year.';and is a member of Quadrangle. Theother women who will dance with herare: Betty Croft, Marion Kuehn.Donna Donkle, Gertrude Senn,Mary Johnstone, and Mary Paul Rix.Gertrude Senn is the only othermember from last year’s chorus.' Make Second AppearanceThis will be the .second Mirror Re¬vue that has featured the Steppers,and they are to be presented moretimes during the productions thanpreviously.The Tappers chorus will be direct¬ed by Peggy Moore. She is a memberof the Mirror Board, has been a writ¬er for The Daily Maroon, and is amember of Mortar Board.The women chosen to dance in theTappers chorus are: Virginia New,Frances Burns, Helen Ann j^ven-thal, Louise Acker, Nancy Nimmons,Hope Peterson, and Lois Peterson.Helen Ann Leventhal, Virginia New,and Peggy Moore, danced in lastyear’s revue.Ballet Tryouts LaterThe choruses will not start to prac¬tice until the first of winter quar¬ter. Tryouts for ballet positions willbe announced later.The chairmen of the twelve com¬mittees that have charge of the pro¬duction and publicity of Mirror willalso be announced in the near fu¬ture. After these chairmen have beenappointed, the Mirror Board willsponsor a tea for all undergraduatew’omen interested in working on Mir¬ror at which time they will be givena chance to sign up for one of thecommittees.Hold Teas for WritersThe Mirror Board also announcedthat it will hold several teas in thenext few weeks for writers of skitsand for those who have ideas forskits. Women writing music andsongs will be invited. These teas areto give the board an idea of howthe material is developing and tooffer suggestions to prospective writ- Senate Leaderof Arms QuerySpeaks FridayGerald P. Nye, United States Sen¬ator from North Dakota and chair¬man of the United States specialcommittee investigating the munitionsindustry, will speak in the theaterof International house Friday at 8on the subject, “The Senate Muni¬tions Inquiry.”His topic will be a first hand re¬port on the sales of American muni¬tions in foreign countries, and themethods employed by manufacturersto increase such sales. He will alsodiscuss the consequent key-positionheld by America in the distributionof implements of war.Upon this question of munitionssales hangs an important issue of theinternational war situation. Investi¬gations have tended to show STUUENT SERVICE £:ar/v Returns IndicatePRESENTS STEINLECTUR^TWICEMakes 2nd Appearancein Mandel Hall onNov. 28 Victory for University'sState Senate CandidateFrom University toState Legislature Democratic LandslideSweeps State,NationBecause the demand for tickets hasbeen so great for the Gertrude Steinlecture, the Student Lecture Serviceannounced yesterday that the fam-in two lec-!munitions manufacturers in competi¬tive selling of arms are contributingcauses for war.Another speaker of internationalreputation who will appear at Inter¬national house is Clark M. Eichel-bergor, national director of theLeague of Nations association. Hewill make an .Armistice day addressbefore the students assembled for theregular Sunday supper program. Mr.Eichelberger served in France duringthe World War and since then hasbeen i)romoting his conviction thatthe United States should take its fullplace in the League of Nations. ous author will appeartures in Mandel hall. All seats forthe first lecture scheduled for No¬vember 27 were sold out last Friday.The second lecture will be given thefollowing night, November 28 at 8.Tickets for the second lecture, pric-that' g(] 55 cents, 85 cents and $1.10,GREY STRESSES NEEDOF EXACT STUDY FORWOULD-BE TEACHERSIn the second of the series of sixlectures presented by the Board ofVocational Guidance and Placementfor the benefit of students uncertainof their professions, William S.Grey, professor of Education, spokeon the opportunities in that field yes¬terday afternoon in Haskell hall.“One must go into teaching w'iththe fundamental purpose of helpingto raise children and other youngpeople to a higher intellectual leveland of helping to broaden theirideas,” Professor Grey stated in ex¬plaining that the teacher must nec¬essarily be interested in workingwith younger people. If aiding youthin learning does not appeal to thestudent, the speaker advised that hestay out of the educational profes¬sion.Other aspects which should bestudied before deciding on the teach- will go on sale tomorrow at the Man-del cloister box office which will beopen from 12 to 2 and all day Friday.They may also be secured from thebookstore at any time. By special re¬quest of the speaker, the second lec¬ture will be limited to an audienceof 500.Announce SubjectsThe Lecture Service also announc¬ed that Gertrude Stein has chosentwo different subjects. On November27 she will speak on “The Making ofthe Making of Americans.” This willbe a discussion of the writing of herbook of that title. The next nighther subject will be “The Conceptionof Personality, and a Discussion ofRepitition.” Both lectures will dealwith the author’s style..Arriving today by plane from NewYork, Miss Stein will attend the open¬ing of her opera, “Four Saints inThree Acts,” tonight at the Audi¬torium. She was accompanied by herclose friend, Carl Van Vechten, andher secretary, Alice B. Toklas, andw'ill leave again in the morning forNew York to fill some lecture engage¬ments.First Lecture in MidwestPleased at the interest showm inher works and in her lecture at theUniversity, Miss Stein consented toappear twice. Her appearance in theStudent Lecture Series will be herfirst lecture in the middle west.(Continued on page 4) T. V. SmithDEBATE UNION HOLDSOPEN FORUM ON NSLAT REYNOLDS CLUBSheMrs. Link DiscussesCanadian Travels atIda Noyes TomorrowW. A. A. to InitiateFreshman Membersat Dinner TuesdayThe annual initiation dinner of theWoman’s Athletic Association will beheld Tuesday at 6, in the sunparlorof Ida Noyes, when all freshmanmembers and their parents will bepresent.Following the dinner, each club inthe W. A. A. will take part in a pro¬gram of entertainment. A water-show by Tarpon and exhibition oftennis by Raquet, will be some of thestunts. Tickets may be obtained frommembers of W. A. A. board for 50cents.Plans for a style show on Novem¬ber 21, in which the winter fashionswill be paraded by campus manne¬quins, are being made by the W. A.A. Elizabeth Scott is in charge, andMildred Eaton will help with ticketsales. Three .speakers, two from the Uni¬versity campus and one from Oberlincollege, are scheduled to deliverlectures tomorrow.The first lecture, which takes !place in Ida Noyes hall at 3:45 to-|. . ..1 J. ui m( iTOw, is bv Mrs. Adeline De Sale |ms profession are the disagreeable, assistant professor of Chem-1as well as the fascinating angles . University. Her topic, IProfessor Grey made clear that the ^ake Louise to Jasper Bysalary of the teacher is lower in |boom times than are most other sal- jaries, but that it is more stable and jdoes not tend to decrease as greatly | “Is the National Student Leaguemore harmful than beneficial to aUniversity?” has been definitely de¬cided as the principal subject aroundwhich the University Debate Unionwill hold an open forum tonight inroom A, Reynolds club, at 7:45.Members of the National StudentLeague, Socialist’s club, Cosmos club,ROTC, and American CommonwealNationalists are expected to be onhand to defend their position.A part of the meeting will consistof a brief discussion on the possibledisposition of the worlds’ fairgrounds. Although previously an¬nounced as the principal topic of themeeting, the impossibility of obtain¬ing speakers has necessitated thechange.First practice engagements inpreparation for the scheduled Man¬chester college debates will be heldWednesday and Saturday. JosephWitherspoon and Willard Hill, af¬firmative, will meet Robert Stewartand Irving Axelrad, negative, on theeducation question Wednesday at2:30 in Eckhart 203. Jacob Ochsteinand George Messmer oppose CarlThomas and Wells Burnette in asimilar arrangement Saturday. Victory appeared certain last nightfor T. V. Smith, University candi¬date for the State Senate, in his raceto represent the fifth district. Earlyreturns showed him, riding with theDemocratic landslide which has sweptthe nation, with a substantial leadover his Republican opponent, RoyWoods.The latest available returns from24 precincts showed Smith with 4136votes and Woods v.uth 3171. Votingwas approximately two to one in fav¬or of the proposal to hold a consti¬tutional convention to reorganize thefundamental law of Illinois. Smith’sattitude toward this measure will bein accordance with that expressed bythe electorate yesterday.Supports New DealIn general. Smith’s political viewsare in agreement with those of theRoosevelt administration, and he haspledged himself to support GovernorHorner in his efforts to administerthe state NRA as well as other newdeal measures.Professor Smith is the first activemember of the University faculty towin an election to public office. Hehas had active support in the Uni¬versity community during his cam¬paign as well as from the coordinat¬ed efforts of the Democratic party. Anon-partisan organization, composedof both Democrats and Republicansfrom the Hyde Park-Woodlawn-Ken-wood district which Smith represents,also was an important cog in thecampaign wheel.Linn, Kerwin AidJames Weber Linn, professor ofEnglish, suggested the name of T. V.Smith to Governor Horner as aworthy candidate for the State Sen¬ate. F'ollowing the primary victoryj in the spring Linn and Jerome Ker¬win, professor of Political Science, ledthe pre-election campaign. John Bar¬den and Everett Parker directed thecampaign on the University campus.The incumbent. Senator RoyWoods, whom Smith defeated, hasserved two terms, in the last ofwhich he made a commendable rec¬ord. The former was during the no¬torious years under Len Small andWilliam Hale Thompson.during depression years as do sal¬aries in other professions.“There are many more teacherslooking for jobs than there are posi¬tion available. However, the teachermust be fully prepared for the posi¬tion, an element lacking in many ofthem.”Y.W.C.A. TO HOLDANNUAL SERVICEON NOVEMBER 14 Pack Train,” concerns the experi¬ences of Mrs. Link and her husbandwhile on a trip through the Ca¬nadian Rockies. The lecture is spon¬sored by Y. W. C. A.Professor Grace Abbott, editor ofthe Social Service Review, will speaktomorrow on “The Winter ReliefPicture.” The Sociology Club, whichis sponsoring the address, announcesthat it will be in Social Science 122at 7:30.Speaking for the ArchaeologicalInstitute of America, Professor Ed¬ward Capps, Jr., of Oberlin College,will deliver an illustrated talk on“Recent Excavations at Corinth.” Hespeaks tomorrow at 4 in Harper MU.THE WEATHERWednesday, November 7, 1934.Generally fair and colder today andThursday. Moderate to fresh south¬west winds diminishing tonight. The annual recognition service ofthe Y. W. C. A. will be held nextWednesday afternoon at 4:45 in theChapel. This candlelight service is formembers of the association and allothers who would like to participatein the organization. Mack Evanswill play the organ and a sopranochoir and a cantor will assist in themusical part of the program. A ma¬jor part of the service is made upof readings and this year some se¬lections from the work of Paul En¬gels a sensational young poet areforming the keynote of the service. HOLD TRIAL FORTHREE UNIVERSITYSTUDENTS TODAYA legal tilt with constitutionalangles and radical implications, in¬volving three University students,the police “red squad,” and, un¬officially, the University, is sche-nled for 9:30 this morning beforeJudge Frank Padden in jury branchof Municipal court, 11th and State.Augu.stus Kelly, Bernard Brand-schaft, and Lloyd James will defendtheir right to stand on the cornerof 43rd and South Park and wait fora street car, the police will attemptto prove them guilty of “distrib¬uting advertising material” in defi¬ance of a city ordinance, and Uni-Off-Campus tours have been j versity representatives, acting un-indefinitely postponed according to a | officially, will stand by “to see jus-statement issued yesterday by Daniel tice done.”D. Swinney, in charge of the tours! Admitted facts: three students.POSTPONE OFF-CAMPUSTOURS INDEFINITELYfor the past year.The tours which usually cover suchpoints of interest in Chicago as theHull House, the newspaper world,and Chicago life will continue dur¬ing the latter part of the winterquarter. two of whom have had previous en¬counters with the radical squad, werestanding on the corner of 43rd andSouth Park on the night of October16; one had a copy of the com¬munist “Daily Worker;” they werearrested. I-F Group BeginsProgram to Attract^Leaders of 1939’The Interfraternity committee’splans to aid the Student Promotionoffice in its program to attract“leaders of ’39” got under way lastnight at a smoker in the Reynoldsclub for the fraternity representa¬tives. Keith Parsons and CharlesGreenleaf outlined the plan and dis¬tributed cards on which informationrelative to outstanding high schoolseniors with whom the fraternitymen are acquainted is to be placed.Fourteen fraternities were repre¬sented including Delta Kappa Epsil¬on, Phi Sigma Delta, Kappa Sigma,Chi Psi, Psi Upsilon, Zeta Beta Tau,Sigma Nu, Delta Upsilon, Phi Gam¬ma Delta, Phi Pi Phi, Alpha SigmaPhi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Pi LambdaPhi, and Phi Beta Delta. Fraternitiesw'ho neglected to send representativesare urged to get in touch with theStudent Promotion office.The program is designed to attractstudents, who often go to otherschools in search of a well-roundedcollege career, for which they thinkthat the University is unfitted togive them.Other interfraternity activities forthe quarter will be considered tonightat the Interfraternity council meet¬ing in the Reynolds club. The finalarrangements for the Interfraternityball will be announced, and actionwill be taken on the revised coopera¬tive commissary plan.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1934iatlg i®ar00uFOUNDED I?«? 1901MEMBER^socintgd gbllrgiatf-’•93^ ^fjlt 1935 e-The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarter by The Daily Maroon^ompany, 5831 Univerilty_^enue.Editorial office: Lexington hall. Room 16: business office:Room 15A. Telephones: Local 46 and Hyde Park 9221.Subscription rates: $2.50copies: three cents. a year: $4.00 by mail. SingleTTie University of Chicago a.ssumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con*tract entered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in TheDaily Maroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily theviews of the University administration.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postoffice at Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all rights of publica¬tion of any material appearing in this paper. The Daily Maroonwill not be responsible for returning any unsolicited manuscript.Public letters sh''uld be addressed to the Elditor, The DailyMaroon, Lexington hall. University of Chicago. Letters shouldbe limited to 200 words in length, and should bear the author’ssignature and address, which will be withheld if requested..Anonymous letters will be disregarded.BOARD OF CONTROLHOWARD P. HUDSON, Editor-in-ChiefWILLIAM S. O’DONNELL, Business ManagerCHARLES W. HOERR, Managing EditorWILLIAM H. BERGMAN, Advertising ManagerHOWARD M. RICH, News EditorDAVID H. KUTNER, News EditorEDITORIAL .ASSOCIATESRuth GreenebaumHenry F. Kelley Raymond LahrJ anet LewyRalph W. Nicholson JeanneWilliam StoltaW. WatsonBUSINESS ASSOCIATESZalmon Goldsmith Robert McQuilkin Everett StoreyEDITORIAL ASSISTANTS.Shirley BakerJohn BallengerJack BrackenWells D. BurnetteRussell CoxSidney Cutright Jr. George Felsenthal2Cenia GoldbergRuby HowellJulian A. KiserGodfrey LehmanJohn MorrisJ une Rappaport George SchustekJames SnyderEMward S. SternElinor TaylorMary WalterCampbell WilsonPaul LynchAllen Rosenbaum BUSINESS ASSISTANTSHarold Siegel Roy WarshawskyRichard Smith Seymour WeinsteinWednesday, November 7, 1934FAIR TRIAL BY FAIR PLAYToday University attention will be focussed onthe trial of Augustus Kelly, Bernard Brandschaft,and Lloyd James, the three students who werearrested October 16 on the charge of “dis¬tributing advertising material.”As we pointed out previously in an editorial,as far as we have been able to ascertain, thisaction is merely an example of blundering tacticson the part of the police. They have not onlyaroused the radical groups on campus, who aremaking the most of their opportunity, but theyhave many of the students and faculty membersagainst them. These groups are united in the beliefthat it is a right and not a privilege to walk aboutthe streets of Chicago unmolested.What will come of the trial, we do not know.The Civil Liberties Committee, a non-politicalorganization which is defending the students,informs us that the courts are cluttered with sim¬ilar cases, and that the usual procedure is to post¬pone the trial indefinitly.It is imperative that the case be tried todayand for that reason many students and a repre¬sentative of the University will be on hand to seethat justice is done. Tire Daily Maroon plans tocover the trial in order that the campus may havefirst hand information about the proceedings.It has come to our attention that some of thegroups interested are prepared to start a riot inthe court room. Our only comment on this childishidea is they will weaken their own position andalienate the friends they have at the University.Any attempt to be disorderly would convinceoutsiders that the students are really guilty anddo not deserve any sympathy.If the students on trial and their friends whoattend conduct themselves in a gentlemanlymanner, they will be in a strong position. But ifthere is a demonstration we will be forced to con¬clude that these students want only publicity andnot justice.—H. P. H.WE ARE PROUD TO PRESENTMr. Nels Fuqua, Phi Beta Kappa, Beta ThetaPi, literateur, class of ’25, and Blackfriars authorwho is writing for us today in the next column.His efforts are a worthy contribution to the his¬tory of the University in the past decade, for hehas been the intimate of most of the great menand women who have frequented the campus inthat time. This endeavor marks his first appear¬ance in The Daily Maroon in ten years and prob¬ably his last for another ten, so we urge you toread his interesting account. Sincerely, Mr. Fuqua,we are proud to present you to our readers.—H. P. H. The Travelling Bazaar Letters toBY NELS FUQUA the EditorUniversity, by those barbarous, medieval prac¬tices of compulsory gym and chapel, tried togive you a beautiful body and a clean soul—whether you wanted them or not; when thegreat George Herbert Mead, his trousers held inplace by ankle clips, arrived at class on hisbike—the gift of John D.; when spring convo¬cations were held in Hutchinson Court in a cir¬cus tent; when the seismograph fluttered withthe foundation-shaking report: Charlotte Van-derlip, unabashed and unashamed, had openlysmoked a cigarette in Foster Hall; when FrankO’Hara wrote stories for the Sunday supple¬ments;—I am a vestigial remain of those days.* * *“The city grey that ne’er shall die.’’Xc >i> *You know of A. A. Michelson as the man whomeasured the velocity of light, won the NobelPrize. As a young kid, living across the street,I knew him as the man whose endless scales onthe violin intruded on the calm of the eveningair. One day I complained to his daughterthat he hadn’t seemed to know me when I spoketo him. “Don’t worry,’’ she countered, “thereare whole days he doesn’t even know us.’’ He wasworking on his famous theory of light.♦ ♦ ♦“For decades and for centuries.’’* * *Northwestern was dropped from our foot¬ball schedule. Gossips, buzzings, maliciouswhisperings. I spoke to Campbell Dickson,then star end and captain of the basketballteam, now Fritz Crisler’s line coach at Prince¬ton. “Not playing Northwestern?’’ He answered,“No, and we aren’t playing the Bears or Cardi¬nals either.’’* * *“Our loyal voices let us raise.’’♦ ♦ ♦Did you know that the Dean of the Chapelin his youthful days was head of Hitchcock andan amateur boxer?.. .that the then much taller,much thicker bushes by the president’s house,in the time of Ernest D. Burton, were surround¬ed by barbed wire, and at night protected bya strong electric light? Yes, those were thedays of the moron scares. . . .that Blackfriars,not Dramatic Association, used to hatch an an¬nual election scandal?. . . .♦ ♦ *“That right shall live eternally.’’♦ ♦ *President Max Mason, the grandest personI have ever known, shocked the grey-beards ofthe Quadrangle Club who clung fast to the be¬lief that the presidential dignity should not becontaminated by exposure, to the pestilent, vileair breathed by undergraduates. His first weekin Chicago, unannounced, he walked into thePsi U house—one of the bros., you know,—greeted the boys, “Hello, there. My name’sMason.’’* * Xc“Today we gladly sing the praise.’’* * x=Shailer Mathews, Dean of the Divinity Schoola quarter century or more, used to panic theboys with such priceless and deathless mots as“That theology! It’s just a form of mental hali¬tosis,’’ and “Mental pyorrhea—four out of everyfive have it.’’Xt * XC“We praise her breadth of charity.’’Xt * XcOne of the great names, great personalitiesof of the University was Paul Shorey—probablythe greatest Greek scholar of our time. He wasa friend of all the greatest of his generation,including the philosopher William James. Hisacademic honors fill whole inches in “Who’sWho.” The world knew he spent his day in therarified atmosphere of Plato’s Republic, Sym¬posium and Phaedrus, but did not know thatevery night, shortly after nine, he’d close hisvolume of the classics, and go on a pilgrimageto fifty-fifth street, in time to see the last showof movies at the Frolic.Years ago walking across campus he stoppedJames Weber (he-doesn’t-like-to-be-called-Ted-dy-in-print) Linn, then a callow English instruc¬tor. “Say, Linn, do you drink?” The tousledhaired youngster, electrified by the question ofthe famous Humanist, gurgled a few unintel¬ligible noises in his throat.“Well then,” said Shorey, “how’d you like tocome to my house tonight and drink beer—with William James?”Xt x> x<“Our loyal voices let us raise.”* Xt XtAmos Alonzo Stagg—the Grand Old man.In the twenty years I knew him I saw him weeptwice.Once, while the organ in Mandel Hall gaveout the solemn strains of the Dead March fromSaul, and he, with James H. Breasted, led thepall bearers down the aisle, carrying the flowerblanketed casket of President Burton.Once again, at a University Sing, as his voicetrembling with emotion, pierced the momentaryhush, echoed and re-echoed across HutchinsonCourt, “Amos Alonzo Stagg, Junior. Winnerof the ‘C’!”X1 X> X1“ ’Tis our dear Alma Mater.” BOOING: A TRILOGYNovember 5, 1934.Grateful as I am to Mr. Tyrolerfor rushing to my support and to thesupport of fair play, I must never¬theless point out an inaccuracy in hisuse of adverbs. Mr. Tyroler says thatI asked “humbly” to be heard on be¬half of T. V. at the Purdue game. Mydemand to be heard was, sir, arro¬gant. The trouble was the microphoneneither conveyed nor properly trans¬lated my tone. Of course, if I hadknown that it was the students whowere booing, I should have been hum¬ble indeed. But I thought all the timeit was the alumni.I write this before the result of ithe election can even be guessed at, |but after having read both the lying i“affidavits” secretly distributed by the !Woods gang, and the Daily News |headlines asserting that former Sen-1ator Woods called T. V. Smith a com- |munist in last Sunday’s speeches. If it !should turn out that Smith is beat¬en, I shall believe that my own badjudgment in trying to advertise aChicago statesman at a Chicagogame had less to do with the resultthan the lies had. Of course whetherT. Y. wins or loses, he will sue Woodsand the News for libel. By the way,have you seen the new motto of theonce honorable Daily News? Knox, etpraetcrca nihil.James Weber Linn.November 6, 1934.Mr. Tyroler takes several stands.He says that since the football game.splayed by and at the University havelong been considered pui'ely personalaffairs, that such a place being « fthe University, is a place affordingthe situation for the presentation ofUniversity characters and a place tofind the “problems and prejudices”of the student body. He goes on tosay that the campaign move was ill-advised. This would seem to place theblame entirely on the shoulders ofthose persons who engineered the pro- 'ceedings in the late T. V. Smith foot- iball rally. !I had ratner categorized Stagg j Field as a pilace where football gameswere played and where any problemsto be solved were solved by the useof the physical properties of someforty-five picked men. As incidentalsto this form of entertainment atStagg Field I had rather come to ex¬pect the usual that we have all cometo expect, bands playing, drum ma¬jors strutting, clowns, and Indians.I think that we are safe in sayingthat I was not alone in my surpriseat the unusual form of play-actingthat we were confronted with. Imight say, out of fairness to the latecandidate, that there is a place forhim at Mandel hall or some otherUniversity hall; I think that the Uni¬versity is not so far along in its edu¬cation as to have lost all the ethno-centrism native in most groups as tonot afford its “Native son” someplace in which to present his views.But Stagg Field is not a space pe¬culiarly adapted to effective oratory.I think that you would find, by aprocess of more thorougn question¬ing, that the principal objection wasnot to the earnest appeal of Mr.Linn, pathetically oratorical as itwas, but to the sign-carrying, whichso effectively carried the name of T.V. Smith to the waiting multitude,then in the process of waiting to hearthe first strains of its Chicago songscome to them from the Purdue band,which was just as effectively cut en¬tirely out of the picture. No soonerhad we settled ourselves to enjoy theband after the rude interruption thanback came that same grotesque sign,asking us to then and there to for¬get all about the game and vote fortheir man.I booed very strenuously.Harry Morrison, Jr.I DIDN’T BOO EITHER, BUT . . .Nov. 6, 1934.Let letter-writer Tyroler hold histongue since his entire argument isbased on a false premise; to wit, thatfootball games held in Stagg field are primarily University functions. Lethim consider: that U. of C. alumniand students comprise a maximum10% of the football crowd; that if theAthletic Department had to dependon these few to support its gate re¬ceipts it couldn’t even buy enoughfootballs for the squad to practicewith; that no event of sufficient in¬terest to cause 32,000 people to pay$2.20 apiece to witness it can possiblybe claimed by the Alma Mater of oneof the contesting teams; that a foot¬ball game is a spectacle of sportwhich all thrill seekers from tycoonsto moppets pay their shekels to seeand not the backyard my-team-can-beat-yours quarrel that Tyroler wouldhave us believe. So, to Speaker Linna rebuke for foisting off onto a crowdnon-fifth district residents (witnessthousands of cars, dozens of trains,busses and taxies bringing two-thirdsof the 32,000 from other parts of thecity) a political speech; to managersBarden and Parker for not being sureMr. Linn would review the game firstand Mr. Smith in closing, a warningto be surer next time; to the footballcrowd sympathy and commendations;to Mr. Smith a hearty wish for aninteresting and successful term as.senator from the 5th district.J. Barney Kleinschmidt.DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdWednesdayWarner Baxterin“GRAND CANARY”with H. B. Warner and Madge EvansDAILY MATS. 15c till 6t30PUBLIX CAFETERIA(Formerly Hill's)1165 East 63rd StreetSECOND FLOOR“You can buy a ticket to the OhioState game with the money yousave eating the Publix way.” STUDIO ROOMSFOR MEN6040 EUlis Ave.Phone Fairfax 3741Double rooms and three mealsa day for $7.25 per person. Reser¬vations taken.WHOLESOME MEALS in pri¬vate dining room for girl or menstudent.s. Dinners 30e; specialrates by week.Dinners served in private din¬ing room to fraternities, clubs andsmall parties.O P. L«riUtr4 C»., Inc.Who w ouli dnl ) prefer a cii ^arette thafseasier i on the throafVot,* j lo KclillSee Joan Blondell in Warner Bro«. Picture, “DAMES”The Daily MaroonTheater Bureauwill save.you a great deal of time and worrywhen you buy theatre tickets.Stop in at Lexington Hall and take ad¬vantage of this added service to our readers.DAILY MAROON SPORTSWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1934 Page ThreeGRID TEAM LOSES-BUT PROGRAM BOYSMAKE NEW RECORD Phi Psis, Phi Gams, Phi SigsWin Last I-M Fraternity GamesCroup Sells Over 8000; |Sommer Leads withTotal of 435 iW >COIONIM T|A>/ ^ONTOOHIOSTATESPECIALCHARTEREDBUSESROUNDTRIP $^.00UNIVERSITYSTUDENTSEXCLUSIVELYBuses start from the circle at•' B. M. Friday and arrive in Co¬lumbus at 8 A. M. Saturday.Buses leave Columbus at 9 P.-M. Saturday and return to cam-I'us at 7 A. M. Sunday.'lake reservations for the tripat themily maroon officein Lexington HallDe Luxe MotorStages, Inc. ITlu' Maroons were defeated by:Purdue Saturday. Nice, fresh news!Hut another Chicago aggregationvon. though not a football game, atleast a moral victory of some sort.The vic torious group was the sciuad of;i() nun who sell football programsthese Saturday afternoons at Staggfield. They made over 8,000 sales atthe Purdue game despite wet weath¬er to set a new record for the cur- irent season at Stagg field.These lads, captained by WalterSommer in deed if not in name, havesold '20.019 programs during the pastfour games. Although not in the line¬up for all the games, Sommer haspaced the field of competitors in thetwo games at which he has been pres- ient. having averaged a sale of 442|programs. His highest total was in'the Michigan contest when he dis¬posed of 4.)0.Other LeadersI’p to and including the Missourigame, tlie following were high-stand¬ing salesmen: Yedor, 743; SheldonHi rnstein, 020; Jerome Sterling, 000;Hoheit Wheeler, 508; Ward Albert,■.(■.7: .Jack Homs, .564; Bob Fitzger¬ald. ‘i.'.t; and Ted Block, 537.Four boys besides Sommer soldmore than 400 programs at the Pur¬due game. Defeating Alpha Delta Phi 13-0 inan overtime game. Phi Kappa Psiyesterday firmly clinched the cham¬pionship of the Alpha league in theIntramural touchball tournament.Phi Gamma Delta beat Zeta BetaTau, 31 to 0 and Phi Sigma Deltadowned Phi Delta Theta seconds 27to 0.After playing a .scoreless tie untilthe end of the regularly allotted time,things began to happen when theteams got into the five-minute over¬time period. The Alpha Delta pro¬tested the first score on the groundthat the passer was ahead of the linefor the first pa.ss of the play andalso that Duvall, the receiver, wasGYMNASTIC TEAMPROSPECTS H ITBOTTOM—HOFFER“Ixiusiest gym team prospects in15 years,” exclaimed Coach Dan Hof-fer yesterday. ‘‘And I say these wordsnot in the usual tone of a coach whothinks he is starting a successfulseason, but tries to cover up his truethoughts.”Facts bear up Coach Hoffer’s state¬ment. The loss of George Wrighte,all-around Conference champion oflast year, Constantin, Murphy, andNordhaus is a blow that will be dir-ficult to offset. There are two goonmen left, but the team is unbalanced.Adams, ring champ both of the Con¬ference and the Central A. A. U.,seems destined for similar gloriesagain this year. Snyder, who wasthird in the horse last year and Cen¬tral A. A. U. champ in the event,is also hack. Hanley, letterman oftwo years ago, forms the third partof the nucleus about which Maroongym hopes hang.The conference schedule, whichstarts the middle of the winter quar¬ter, includes meets with the mostpowerful teams of the Big Ten. Illi¬nois and Minnesota both looK good,says Hotfer. And Iowa, also on thelist had one of the strongest Con¬ference freshman squads last year. oi bounds. Their claims, however,were not allowed.A few minutes later Chuck SmithI snared a difficult, long pass whileI standing in the midst of about sixI would-be defenders. Werner drop-; kicked the extra point. This playcompleted the last minute downfallin the previously effective AlphaDelt defense.In the Phi Gam defeat of Z.B.T.,Baird w^as easily the outstandingplayer. His speed enabled him tomake several long runs. On one occa¬sion he intercepted a pass and ran90 yards through the whole ZetaBete outfit for a score. He also hungthe jwint after touchdown on one of {‘ the other scores.Wiles played a good game, stand¬ing out on defense. He also crossedfor one touchdown. Mertz did somenice passing. Manske was the high-point man of the game, with two tal¬lies, and Butler scored once for thePhi Gams.For the losers, Kutner wa& the out¬standing man on the six-man team,tossing some long passes. Felsenthali seemed to be the only man who couldhang on to those passes consistent¬ly. He held one for the only Z. B. T.score. Kutner to Harris to Kutnerwas the formula for the running backof kick-offs used by the Zeta BetaTau team.Spitzer was high point man in thePhi Sig-Phi Delt II fray with 13marks. Dick Zacharias, director andgenerallv the backbone of the PhiSigma Delta .squad, followed closelywith 12 points. It was he who didmost of the passing. The down-trod¬den and almost universally beatenPhi Delt seconds played only fivemen. FRESHMAN GRIDDERSINJURED IN BATTLEWITH VARSITY TEAM Berwanger Has Enviable Recordfor First Five Games of YearNorgren Abandons Plans forYearling Intra-SquadFootball CameFavorites Advance inBilliard Tournament TODAY’S GAMES3:00Phi Pi Phi vs. Phi Delta Theta II.Phi Beta Delta vs. Kappa Sigma.Barristers vs. Trojans.Independents vs. Chess Club.4:00Chiselers vs. C. T. S.I-M Golf ReachesEnd of First RoundThe billiard tournament now in ses¬sion at the Reynolds club has beenprogressing smoothly, the favoritescoming through as expected. So farthe tournament has reached thequarterfinal round with one man,Daskais, in the semi-finals. The quar-terfinalists are Miller, Levin, Wiles,Snodgrass, Stafford, Euyler, Nickols,and Saltman. The semifinals must beplayed by November 14.The winner of the tournament willbo rewarded with a large blanketwith the University seal on it. Thesecond place man will win a leatherbill fold with the University seal en¬graved on it. Third place winnerwill receive a University pennant andthe winner of the consolation tourna¬ment will get a letter file. The first round matches in the in-1tramural golf tournament have been |completed, as the result of three for- |feits. Dudgeon of Burton court took |the forfeit from Hanses of Alpha!^ Sigma Phi. Veasy of Psi U defautled |; to Hilbrant of Phi Psi, and Ely of jPhi Psi took the place from Wernerof the same house.Last week Funk, playing unattach¬ed, beat Barton, Kappa Sig ,3-1. Auld! of Alpha Delta Phi upset Haarlowj of Psi U. 5 and 3. Gilbert of BurtonI court took Schaeffer, unattached, 3; up and 1 to go. Semi-final matchesj will be played this week.PLEDGINGChi Psi announces the pledging ofJohn Cates of Tulsa, Oklahoma.Books ofGERTRUDE STEIN“Portraits and Prayers”—$2.50Just out today!”Four Saints in Three Acts $1.00—Now playing in Chicago—“3 Lives”—95cEdna St. Vincent MillayFirst edition — now on saleWine From These Grapes—$2.00Get your copy now and have it autogfraphedlater by Miss Millay.Woodworth’sBook Store1311 E. 57th St. Open Evenings Plans for a freshman intra-squadfootball battle this weekend havebeen abandoned by Coach Nels Nor¬gren because of the great number ofinjuries which the yearPngs have re¬ceived at the hands of the varsity inscrimmages the past few days. Fromall indications the freshmen may notbe able to play a game among them¬selves until the traditional Yale-Harvard battle after the seasoncloses.Paul Gill, a hard-hitting halfbackis lost to the squad because of a brok¬en bone in his ankle, while AlbertSchenk, a good punter and runningback, will be unable to practice forat least the rest of the week.During the past few days a first-string yearling team has begun totake shape. Besides Schenk, whoplays left half, the backfield consistsof Seymour Burrows, James Chap¬pie, and Fred Lehnhardt.The forew'ard wall has a good setof ends in Omar Fareed and KendallPeterson of the famed Peterson tribe.Hard-driving tackles in the person ofRobert Wheeler and Jankowski havebeen the mainstays in defending thefirst-year team against the ferociousMaroon onslaught, while the pivotposition has been manned by Albertor Woodrow Wilson. Jay Berwanger, Maroon oackfieldstar who last Saturday almost singlehanded offset the scoring prowess ofPurvis, Carter, and Drake, the Pur¬due backs, goes into his last threngames of the season with a notablerecord of performance.Berwanger in five games, threeagainst Big Ten opponents, has car¬ried the ball 101 times from scrim¬mage and gained 534 yards, net, oran average of 5.2 yards per play. Hehas punted 58 times for 2,338 yards,and made an average of better than40 yards from the line of scrimmage.His punting record is all the moreremarkable because two of the gameswere played in rainstorms. He placed22 out of bounds, and only 5 over thegoal line.REYNOLDS CLUBPING PONG MEETAPPROACHESENDThe ping pong tournament now insession at the Reynolds club is near¬ing completion, the finals being sched¬uled to be played Friday afternoon.All the semi-finalists have been deter¬mined and one quarterfinalist, theformer being as. follows: Glickman,Entin, Baird, Weiss, Channon, andTeles. McNeil by virtue of his 21-13,17-21, 21-16 victory over Greenbergadvanced to the semi-final round. Thefavorite to win the tournament isBaird.The victor will be allowed to choosebetween a prize of a pair of bookends and a leather covered pillowwith the University .seal cut on it. The Dubuque boy has attempted 27passes, of which 9 were completed,travelling 160 yards in the air. Onlytwo of his passes have been inter¬cepted this season. Of the 9 complet¬ed passes, 5 were good for touch¬downs by the receiver, most of thesecoming on the play in which Ber¬wanger throws a reverse pass aftera run. He has made 8 touchdownshimself, the most spectacular beinghis 97-yard run against Indiana ona kickoff.Berwanger lost nothing in compar¬ison with Purvis last Saturday, forhe was not only called upon to do thegreater part of Chicago’s offensivework, but he also was called uponto make a large number of tackles.His runs were largely individualefforts. Berwanger made 47 plays onoffense, including runs from scrim¬mage, punts, passes, receiving ofpasses, interception of passes, returnof kickoffs, and return of punts,while the rest of the Maroon teamtogether made but 54 plays.TheUniversity of ChicagoTypewriting OfficeREASONABLE RATESAll Work GuaranteedIngleside HallRoom 201956 East 58th St.‘‘West of Press Bldg.”Six Timely QuestionsWith But OneAnswerWHERE can I find news of scho¬lastic interest?WHERE can I find the MidwaySports News?WHERE can I find news of lectureengagements and socialevents?WHERE can I find a review of theTheatre or other importantoff-campus entertainment?WHERE can I freely express myopinion on campus topics?WHERE can I find a receptive audi-ience for my product or ser¬vice? THEDAILYMAROONPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 7. 1934FRATfeRNlTY FACTSBy DAVID KUTNERKAPPA SIGMA(Editor’s note: The ac¬count of Kappa Nu, whichaccording to alphabeticalranking should appear to¬day, will appear tomorrowinstead.)The Gamma Beta of Kap¬pa Sigma was founded atChicago on April 28, 1904,and grew out of a local or¬ganization known as BronzeShield. The national fra¬ternity was founded at theUniversity of Virginia in1869 and now has i06 chap¬ters scattered throughoutthe country. Thirty-threethousand alumni boast ofKappa Sigma as their fra¬ternity, including 1,000 men living inChicago. Three hundred men havebeen initiated into the local chapter. SUAFW MEETS INPROTEST AGAINSTIMPERIALIST WARStealing a two-day march on so-called “semi-fascist” opponents whowill commemorate Armistice day onSunday the 11th, the Student UnionAgainst Fascism and War announceda demonstration Tor Friday noon inthe circle, November 9th.Asking all students to boycottjingolic meetings, the Union plans ademonstration against a “second im¬perialist war,” as its program forthe afternoon, to be follow'ed by alater meeting in C. T. S.The speakers wnich have beenscheduled for the circle are RudolphGilbert and Alice Norwood. In theevening. Maynard Kreuger, assist¬ant professor of Economics; RalphShaw, editor of Railway Unity News;and Sidney Snow, president of Mead-ville Theological seminary will speak. Today on theQuadranglesMusicCarillon recital. Frederick Mar¬riott, carillonneur. University chapelat 4:30.Phonograph concert. Social Scienceassembly hall at 12:30.Lectures |“Euripides for English Readers, jThe Bachae.” Thornton Wilder. Ful- ilerton hall, the Art Institute, at j6:45. [Open forum. “Is the National Stu- |dent League More Harmful than Ben- !eficial to a University?” Reynolds;club at 7:45.MeetingsB. W. 0. North room of Ida Noyeshall at 12. IPhi Delta Upsilon. Alumni room ofIda Noyes hall at 12. j Golf club. Lower gym of IdaNoyes hall at 4.Socialist club. Social Science 302at 3:30.French club. Y. W. C. A. room at7:30.Arrian. Alumni room from 7 to 8.Crossed Cannon. Ryerson 37 at2:30.MiscellaneousFaculty lunch. South receptionroom in Ida Noyes hall at 12.Social dancing. Ida Noyes theaterat 7:30.WIN CIGARETTESGilbert Shroger, of Burton Court,was the winner of 1000 cigarettesas the result of predicting most accur¬ately the outcome of last Saturday’sConference football games. MortarBoard won four cartons of cigarettesfor having the most alumnae registerduring the Homecoming Week fes¬tivities. STEIN WILL LECTUREFOR STUDENT SERIESON ADDITIONAL DATE(Continued from page 1)is in this country for the first timesince she left 35 years ago, havinglived in Paris for that time and madefamous the literary salon at 37 Ruede Fleurus.She has become known for her.style which breaks from the ordin¬ary styles of books and which seemsincomprehensible to many readers. Inher own words she explains her styleas an attempt “to escape from thenarrative of the nineteenth centuryto the actuality of the twentieth.” Be¬sides her opera, her works include“The Autobiography of Alice B.Toklas,” “The Making of .\meri-cans,” and her latest book, “Portraitsand Prayers,” which will be publish¬ed by Ransom House this week.CHAPTER HOUSEOWNED BY ALUMNIThe Chicago chapter house is locat- ■ed at 5715 Woodlawn avenue and is iowned by the Alumni Association. |The initiation fee for members is $50, iwhich sum includes pin, national dues !for one year, magazine, and scroll.Men living in the house pay $44.50 'a month for room, board, and dues. IMen outside the house pay $14.50 jeach month for six meals a week, five ■lunches and one evening meal, and |dues. A social fee of $5 per quarter itakes care of all special assessments, jFamous members of Kappa Sigmainclude William Gibbs McAdoo, Low- |ell Thomas, Levon West, Admiral IGrayson, George Jean Nathan, John- jny Mack Brown, Bob Zuppke, Dwight jGreen, Edwin Hubble, and Bernard !Iddings Bell, the latter being from |the local chapter, ?Members of the faculty who are |members of the organization areJames L. Palmer, Edward A. Duddy,George Bartelmez, Emmet Bay, C.Phillip Miller, William Thomas, and iRichard Watkins. |OFFICERS OF THE !CHAPTEROfficers of the local chapter are jHoward P. Hudson, Dan Glomset, [John Bodfish, George Schaeffer, and ;Floyd Weinand. Activities include |five men working for The Daily Ma- iroon, including the editor-in-chief, ione man who is in Owl and Serpent jand a Marshal, one man in Black-;friars, two in the Dramatic Associa- ition, including the publicity director, ■one in the debate union, two in the jChapel council, two in the Universitychoir, one in the Interfratemity com¬mittee, one out for baseball, one forgolf, three for wrestling, and one for }polo. jHINTON RECOVERSFROM OPERATIONJudge Edward W. Hinton, JamesParker Hall professor of Law, is re¬ported to be recovering rapidly in the *hospital where he is convalescing af- |ter an emergency operation perform¬ed a month ago. |He is expected to leave the hospi- |tal in about a week or ten days and !he expects to be able to meet hisclasses in the Law school again dur¬ing the winter quarter.PLEDGING Inspecting tobaccobefore going to thefactories for blend- Tobacco ageingin storage ware¬houses.WE have tried a good many meth¬ods to age cigarette tobacco, butwe have never found any method thatequals the slow old-fashioned plan ofageing it in wooden casks for two yearsor more.All the tobaccos we use in Chesterfieldsare aged this way.It takes time, money, and miles ofwarehouses — but it’s the one way tomake a milder better cigarette.the cigarette that’s MILDERthe cigarette that TASTES BETTERTo age and mellow tobaccosjust right to give Chesterfieldits milder better taste... Prizing tobacco in1000-pound hogs¬heads for ageing.Arrian announces the pledging of |Gladys Sundstrom of Chicago. > © 1934, Lic,gitt & Myers Tobacco Co.IT MAKES IT WELL FISH!THE STUDENT LECTURE SERVICEOQft Presents8s GERTRUDE STEIN OS MANDEL HALLar NOVEMBER 27THo 8:30 P. M. &Mandel Box Office is now open from 1 2 to 2 on Monday, Jvr»C/) Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday and from 9 to 5 on;> Friday. Tickets are also obtainable at the Bookstoreand the Information Desk in the Press Building. t)1 SEASON TICKETS—$1.85 and $2.75 SINGLE TICKETS—55c-85c-$ 1.00aso^ le sj—aso^ is sj—asoM y