Office of the Dean of Students•Cobb Hall, Room 203Ihe University of ChicagoVol. 36. No. Price 3 cents UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 13, 1935 U-.Vv^ /1 i Member United PressUNIVERSITY STUDYPROGRAM OFFERSWIDE FREEDOMPlaces No Restrictionon Students’ Rateof ProgressFreedom in education has becomesynonymous with the University,the modern method of learning sig¬nifying the new trend in education.The student comes here no longerto be taught but to learn and in thisprocess of learning he is given free¬dom to proceed according to his per¬sonality. Students are “educated inindependence.” There is no com¬pulsion in the system but opportun¬ity to develop both character andintellect.This opportunity for freedom wasextended even further last year withthe enrollment of the so-called“students-at-large” who may entersimply as students, following noparticularly definite course of studyand seeking no degree.Break from RoutineIn this breaking away from rou¬tine and rigrid methods, the Univer-.shy aims at self-expression amongthe students, allowing them to prog¬ress according to their own abilityand desires. This gives opportunityfor the student to accomplish thework in shorter or longer periods oftime than the two years e.stimatedas the average time for the comple¬tion of the College work. However,the objective was not the speedingup of the educational process forstudents, but the adjusting of theeducational process to the needs ofthe individual.This work aims specifically to jgive the student a thorough generaleducation, and to prepare him formore specialized stndies in the high¬er divisions of the University. jGunerul EducetiuuThe College program, besidebroadening the cultural backgroundof the individual, offers a chance tothe undecided student to choose acareer. The work consists of fourgeneral survey courses, related sub¬ject courses, and a course in Englishcomposition.The four survey courses are in¬troductory to the work of the high¬er divi.sions of the University—^theHumanities, the Biological Sciences,the Physical Sciences, and the So¬cial Sciences. Each of the surveysis a lecture course, covering a periodof three quarters of an academicyear. Prominent members of the(Continued on page 6) Student Groups PlanVariety of Activitiesin Freshmen ScheduleWednesday, September 258:30 A.M.—General meetng of allentering freshmen, Mandel hall.Addresses by President Robert M.Hutchins; Jack Allen, chairman ofstudent social committee; GeorgeAllen Works, Dean of Students;and Aaron J. Brumbaugh, Deanof Students in the College.10 A.M.-12 M.—Placement tests.Attendance required. Place willbe indicated on engagementcard.1:30-4 P.M.—Placement tests. At¬tendance required.4-5 P.M.—Y. W. C. A. tea for en¬tering women. Ida Noyes hall.4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, Ida Noyeshall, open to all University wom¬en. Swimming suits (not caps)will be furnished. (In charge ofTarpon club.)4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, Bartlettgymnasium, open to all Universitymen.4:30 P.M.—Exhibition tennis match.University avenue courts.6 P.M.—Dinner for all entering stu¬dents and their upperclass coun¬selors. Exposition and discussionof the College requirements. Resi¬dence halls for men. Tickets tobe purchased by students. (Incharge of the Federation of Uni¬versity women and the FreshmenOrientation committee.)8 P.M.—^University reception to allentering students and their par¬ents. Ida Noyes hall. Dancing inthe Cloister club. (Under the di¬rection of the Marshal of the Uni¬versity and the College Marshalsand Aides.)Tkturaday, September 288:30 A.M.>12 M.—Registration, byappointment. Attendance re¬quired. Mandel hall.12:30-1 P.M. — Freshmen womengroup luncheons with upperclasscounselors. Information as toplace of meeting will be providedby upperclass counsellors. (Incharge of the Federation of Uni¬versity women.1-5 P.M.—Open house for men andwomen. Informal games andsports. The Trophy gallery, IdaNoyes hall. (In charge of theWomen’s Athletic Association.1:30-5 P.M.—Registration, by ap¬pointment. Attendance required.Mandel hall.2 P.M.—Sight-seeing tours of theUniversity. Harper Mil. (Incharge of the Student Social com¬mittee and the Board of Women’s(Continued on page 4) DAILY MARDDNPRDVIDES UNITEDPRESS SERVICEAssociation to FurnishComplete ForeignCoverage 'Complete foreign coverage, fur¬nished through the facilities of theUniteo Press association, togetherwith news of the university world ingeneral, will be offered in The DailyMaroon on an experimental basisstarting October 1.The United Press, having talentedwriters in all the world’s capitals,will furnish “copy” on activities inEurope, important as they now arein the light of Italo-Ethiopian rela¬tions and the resulting world-widecomplications. Furthermore, TheDaily Maroon will have at its dis¬posal news of sports happenings,educational activities, special fea¬tures; in all a more complete pic¬ture of the university world than inprevious years.A university student needs andi wants reliable, obectively editedj material on world affairs. In recog-I nition of that fact. The Daily Ma-; roon will reorganize its pages in or-i der to devote enough space to cov-I er the subject fully, and yet will noti slight its reportal of campus news.I By so doing. The Daily Maroon willI assume a more important position as, an informational force.I With the installation of this serv¬ice, The Daily Maroon will offer aunique setup in the metropolitanfield: it will be the only paper of¬fering morning United Preae m*h-terial, and it will afford a synthesisof material not akin to that flowingfrom the editorial desks of any ofthe metropolitan papers. President WelcomesStudents Entering inSth New Plan ClassTo The Entering College Students:I am happy to welcome you to theUniversity of Chicago. Our admit¬ting officers have selected you witha good deal of care and we believeyou are qualified to take full ad¬vantage of the opportunities afford¬ed by the College. Doubtless youare familiar with the principal fea¬tures of the Chicago plan. Afterfour years of experience with itwe are satisfied that it affords ex¬ceptional educational opportunities,and that young men and womenwho are really interested in an edu¬cation will find it exceptionally stim¬ulating. I am confident that youwill enjoy working under it. I knowthat the University will make everyeffort to make your stay pleasantand profitable.Robert M. Hutchins.COUNSELOR SYSTEMAIDS NEW STUDENTSIN FACING PROBLEMS University Head GreetsFreshmen September 25 asOrientation Program BeginsHORIZONSStrange As They Be, Don’tGet AgoraphobiaUniversity Risesto Preeminence in43 Year Periodfederation, B.W.O. Offer ActivitiesFor Adjusting Incoming WomenJohnsonBy ALICE JOHNSONChairman, Federation of UniversityWomenThe Federation of UniversityWomen is the organization of whichevery woman in the University is amember. Under its administrationlies the FreshmenWomen’s club towhich all Fresh¬men women auto¬matically belongafter matricula¬tion.Upon enteringthe Universiay,each woman willbe assigned to oneof the 25 Federa¬tion groups, fromt'hich representatives to the Fresh-len Women’s council are electedarly in the autumn quarter. Thisatter group serves as an executiveinit in the administration of allreshmen women activities, and it ishe function of the whole organiza-ion to facilitate orientation and en-rance into the extra-curncular ac-ivities of the campus.Federation traces its growth fromgroup organized during the war forled Crjss work, and it has nowvolved into a comprehensive associa-ion, whose major function is to aidn adjusting women to Universityife. A council composed of tenipperclassmen selects and trainsounselors each spring; freshmen arehen assigned to those counselors whoeem most fitted to give assistance inhe individual case. By JEAN PRUSSINGChairman, Board of Women’sOrganizationsFive major women’s organizations—the Freshman Women’s club, theFederation of University women, theWomen’s Athletic association, theY.WjC.A., and Mirror, the women’sdramatic group — offer freshmanwomen an opportunity to participatein undergraduate activities.Upon matriculation, all freshmanwomen become memibers of the Fresh¬man Women’s club, organized to pro¬mote friendship among enteringwomen students. Teas and lunch¬eons are given throughout the yearto achieve this purpose. The electionof officers is held in the fall and allfreshman womenare eligible. Theclub cooperateswith the Fresh¬man Men’s club tosponsor functionsfor first-year stu¬dents such as anannual dance, in¬formal afternoonmixers, and novel¬ty parties.'The Board ofWomen’s Organi-Pruscing zations is c o m-prised of representatives from themajor women’s activity groups and ofmembers-at-large elected from theundergraduate classes. Its purposeis to foster cooperation among thewomen’s organiiations, and to pro¬mote the welfare of all women in theUniversity. * In the relatively short period ofits existence the University hasreached a rank high among the in¬stitutions of higher learning. Sev¬eral objective ratings were made ofthe universities of the country andin all of them the University wasranked second to Harvard in schol¬astic eminence.The most recent of the ratingswas made by Edwin R. Embree, anexecutive of the Rosenwald fund,who judged the schools by the num¬ber of distinguished departments.In Mr. Embree’s rating, Chicago,with 21 departments of high excel¬lence, followed closely after Har¬vard with 22.Second in All Tests“Chicago stands at least secondby all the tests of eminence thathave been applied,” said Mr. Em-These ratings are not fool proof. Themost recent, that by Edwin Embree, isbased partly on data gathered some 10years ago and is now somewhat out ofdate. A case in point is this: Harvard,rated as distinguished in Biochemistry,selected as the head of its departmentthis year a member of our faculty whichis not rated as distinguished in the field.bree. “By certain of them sheequals and even exceeds Harvard.The University of Chicago is a shin¬ing example of what can be attainedby the combination of ideals, con¬sistent policy, and financial re¬sources. But it was not moneyalone that made the University ofChicago great. Even today her en¬dowment is less than half that ofHarvard.Measuring the relative standingof departments, the earlier Hughesrating found that Chicago had 8 de¬partments rated first among allAmerican universities, 4 rated sec¬ond, and 5 third; Harvard had 7firsts, 6 seconds, and 3 thirds.Another measure of scientificstanding is a study of the univer¬sities at which the leading scientistsreceived preparation for their ca¬reers. Among scientists who werestarred for distinction 101 tooktheir advanced study, culminatingin the Ph. D. or Sc. D. at Harvardand 96 at the University of Chi¬cago. By FRANK F. DAVISChairman, Orientation CommitteeFreshmen entering the Universitywill find themselves in an entirelynew environment to which they findit necessary to adjust themselves.Freshman week which begins on Sep¬tember 25 is made up of a series ofevents arranged by three cooperatinggroups, the Committee on Freshmanorientation, the Women’s Federation,and the Student Social committee, toorient the Freshman to the Univer¬sity and its surrounding.To further this adjustment a sys¬tem ' of upperclass counselors hasbeen devis^. Each entering fresh¬man is assigned to a counselor whoseduty it is to help the freshman ad¬just himself to his new world. Allcounselor jobs are filled by volun¬teers thereby eliminating any causefor the freshmen to feel that theyare imposing upon the upperclass¬men.invaluable AidBecause the counselors have facedmany of the problems which con¬front new students at the Universitythey are of great assistance to enter¬ing students. The counselor’s dutiesdo not end with Freshman week.When classes begin, new problemswill arise and the freshman shouldreport them to his counselor. Activecooperation between the freshmanand the counselor gives the freshmana start he later finds invaluable.In order to further intimate con¬tact between the freshman and thecounselor, it is suggested freshmenlive on the campus during Freshmanweek. Each year, besides the valu¬able aid given by the counselors,many lasting friendships are madethrough the contacts which bring to¬gether the freshman and the coun¬selor.If the freshman has not contactedhis counselor by the third day ofFreshman week he should notify theCommittee on Freshman orientationwhich will have representatives at allof the functions during the week. An EditorialA strange quiet hangs over thecampus as the first issue of a newDaily Maroon goes to press. Theusual centers of congi-egation are de¬serted ; the last of the summer schoolstudents have departed; the decksare clear. It is the calm before thestorm.In another two weeks, the deckswill be swarming with m»re thanseven hundred men and womenscrambling in confusion as they seekto adjust themselves to new horiz¬ons. Some in the crowd will meet thescene with enthusiasm; others maybe touched with agoraphobia, will bechilled by the size and remoteness ofthe University. All will be exposedto broadening horizons.Physically the University is aplant with more than 80 buildingson better than 100 acres where some600 faculty members distributethemselves in layer on layer of classrooms, libraries, laboratories, offices,gymnasiums, and what you will.Here, by means of a delicate chem¬ical reaction, scholars are synthes¬ised from the raw material that eachyear is belched forth from the coun¬try’s high schools.But is this a University? Are thebuildings themselves the thing? Per¬haps it is the faculty—distinguishedstudents and world-eminent—that isnearer to the heart of the matter.Or glance through this issue of TheDaily Maroon that gives a record ofactivities, courses, athletics—studentfigures in general. All are importantbut no one is the complete picture.The University is a spirit rubbedgently into life by the soft inter¬working of all these parts. Muchdepends on your ability to see this;much is to be lost if, like a sessileplant, you fix yourself to a singleparticle of the University and livecontent that here, here on thismeager extension, you have foundthe real thing.Scan these wide horizons.R. W. Nicholson. Entering Stuidents HoldFirst Assembly InMandel HallGeorge WorksCampus OffersMany Activitiesto New StudentsDO YOU FEELlike a little fish in a bigpond? There is no needfor it if you read TheDaily Maroon.SUBSCRIBEright away by filling outthe coupon on F>age twoand sending it to ouroffice.The Daily Maroon Many extracurricular activities areoffered freshmen as well as upper¬classmen at the University, and arevaried enough to meet the interestof all the students. Six publicationsform an integral part of Universitylife by dispensing news, informa¬tion, literature, and gossip, and bymirroring the many phases in cam¬pus activity. More than a hundredundergraduates write and edit thevarious periodicals.For those interested in dramaticsseveral groups present opportunitiesfor student activity, both in the act¬ing and the production of plays.Other organizations provide other ac¬tivities, including musical, political,and sports. There are also a varietyof departmental organizations andclubs.PUBLICATIONSDaily Maroon ReflectsStudent LifeThe Daily Maroon, the official stu¬dent newspaper of the campus re¬cords all the news of undergraduatelife and at the same time endeavorsto quicken student interest in activ¬ities and University problems. TheDaily Maroon staff publishes fourregular issues a week, the paper ap¬pearing Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurs¬day, and Friday during the schoolyear.Staff members are added to TheDaily Maroon once a year. Onlythose applicants who have attendedthe training school conducted by thepaper or who are otherwise able topass the informal, standard examina¬tion given to applicants are eligiblefor staff positions. The training class(Continued on page 2) Orientation and adjustment willbe the subject of the week plannedfor freshmen from September 25 toOctober 1. Open¬ing with a gen¬eral meeting inMandel hall atwhich the 700 ormore enteringstudents will bewelcomed byPjresident RobertMaynalrd Hutch¬ins, the week willbe a crowdedone, planned tointroduce the stu-R, M. Hutchins dents into all thephases of University life.Freshman week is a vital periodin the University career of everystudent, for it is in this time thathe must become adusted to a newway of life, a new educational sys¬tem, and new surroundings. Thismust be done in a single week, asthere is very littletime for the ori¬entation of stu¬dents after class¬es open on Octo¬ber kAlso takingpart in the open¬ing meeting onWednesday morn-i n g will beGeorge AllenWorks, dean ofIStudents, w' h -owill speak on“Educational Guidance”; Aaron J.Brumbaugh, dean of Students in theCollege; and Jack Allen, chairmanof the Student Social committee.Placement TestsImmediately following the gen-j eral meeting a series of placementj tests will be given to the freshmenI to determine their aptitude in vari-; ous subjects. Room assignmentsI for these and other required ap¬pointments will be made on a cardgiven to each student after the firstmeeting. These appointments in¬clude registration, medical examina¬tion, and the scholastic aptitudetests on the following Monday.Besides these few events at whichattendance is required, plans havebeen made for many informaldances, meetings, and mixers spon¬sored by various organizations totell the freshman what each groupdoes and how he can take part inthe activities for the coming year.Sight-seeing tours of the Univer¬sity will be held at various timesunder the direction of the StudentSocial committee.Athletic*The swimming pools in Bartlettgymnasium and Ida Noyes hall willbe open to men and women respec¬tively. Following an athletic meet¬ing in the field house on September26, suits will be distributed to fresh¬man football candidates for the firstpractice of the season. Anotherevent of the athletic program willbe an exhibition tennis match onWednesday afternoon.Highlights of the week will be asymposium under the direction ofthe Debate Union in Mandel hallThursday evening on “The CollegeProgram from the Student’s Pointof View” and a series of talks tostudents by members of the admini¬stration on Monday morning, Octo¬ber 1. On the latter program,Chauncey S. Boucher was scheduledto speak as dean of the College; butsince the program for freshmanweek was completed, Mr. Boucherhas resigned his position at the Uni¬versity to become president of theUniversity of West Virginia.Mr. Boucher did a great deal toforward the New Plan and is cred¬ited by many with the authorship ofmany of its features. His book, “TheChicago College Plan,” which was is¬sued last February is an interestingaccount of the educational systemat the University.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1935Campus Provides Extra-Curricular ActivitiesCContinued from Omeets weekly under the guidance ofmembers of the Board of Control, amember of the faculty and represen¬tative from metropolitan newspa¬pers and advertising firms.The training period occupies thefirst quarter of the would-be staffmembers’ work with the paper. Afterincompetent and indifferent membersof the freshman group are eliminatedapproximately thirty students areadded to the editorial and businessstaffs of The Daily Maroon. Conse¬quent promotions are made by voteof the Board of Control.The office of The Daily Maroon islocated in Lexington hall.Phoenix PortraysCampus HumorThe Phoenix, a monthly magazine,carries in print between its brightlycolored covers the wit and humor ofthe campus. It offers both humorousand literary articles and stories aswell as the usual run of jokes andcartoons.Editorial and business positions onthe Phoenix are open to freshmenupon application. The Phoenix officeis located adjacent to The Daily Ma¬roon office in Lexington hall.Cap and Gown RecordsCampus HistoryThe Cap and Gown, published inJune, is the annual of the University.Its aim is to picture with word andphotograph the activities and eventsof the year in a worthwhile form.Freshmen may obtain positions oneither the editorial or business staffsduring the autumn quarter. The Capand Gown office is a’so located inLexington hall.The minor publications of the Cap Wide Variety Offered to MeetInterest of Every Studentand Gown, the Student Handbook andthe University Directory, are issuedearly in the quarter. The StudentHandbook is pocket size, handsomelybound, and contains in concise fashionI information about the University.I The University Directory is a list of1 graduate and undergraduate studentstogethe/ with the home and campusj addresses, telephone numbers, andI fraternal connections.Comment ServesLiterary FieldComment, a literary periodical, is. published quarterly. It contains; much of the expressed seriousthought of undergraduates and fea-. tures now and then the work of somewell known writer or thinker. Fresh¬men may obtain positions.Sllfr Batlg iOaraattPOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,publish^ Tnornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,winter, and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephones: Local 46 and Hyde Park 9221and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con¬tract entered into by TTie Daily Maroon.All opinions in The Daily Maroon arestudent opinions, and are not necessarilythe views of the University administra¬tion.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrat^: $2.75 a year; $4 by nmil. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.RALPH NICHOl^ON, Editor-in-Chief.ROBERT McQUILKIN. Business Mgr.R.4YMOND L.AHR. Managing Editor.EVERETT STOREY. Advertising Mgr.HENRY P. KELLEY. Desk Editor.JEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Editorial associates: Wells Burnette,George Felsenthal, Zenia Goldberg, JulianKiser, George Schustek, James Snyder,Edward Stern, Mary Walter.Business associates: James Bernard,Don Elliott, Allen Rosenbaum, DickSmith, Roy Warshawsky. BLACKFRIARSM«i*s Group PresentsMusical ComedyOne of the five members of theCollege Musical Comedy league, the: Blackfriaffs organization offers an op-I portunity for interested men stu-t dents to display their dramatic,lyrical, literary, and creative talents.Freshmen are worked into the organ¬ization late in the winter quarterwhen work on the annual productionbegins.The Order of Blackfriars is com¬posed entirely of men. All of theactors and “actresses”, choruses andballets, are recruited directly fromthe male ranks of the University.The book is written, the productionis stagred, costumes and sets are de¬signed and made, and the whole pro¬duction is shaped up by members ofthe organization. The only outsidersconnected with the annual produc¬tions are the director, dance coach,and musical director.From 1904, when the organizationwas founded by a group of men stu¬dents and faculty members, until1934, Blackfriars in its own words“combined with jest and song somephase of college life that gives hintof reality.” Beginning with “Mer¬ger for Millions” in 1934, which sat¬irized the contemplated merger of theUniversity with Northwestern uni¬versity, and continuing with lastyear’s production, “In Brains WeTrust”, came the period of satire.Steeped in tradition and memory,the annual show each year brings tohundreds of alumni memories of theircollege’days. And the campus at largeis ever ready to hear the call of“When It’s Blackfriars Time Again.”DRAMATICSFreshmen Present Playsin FallStudents wishing to display abilityin dramatics are given ample oppor¬tunity in the University dramatic as¬sociation. The organization each yearpresents five productions, one ofwhich is a series of three one actThe Blackhawk . . .A University Tradition!• Incoming students looking for entertainment at itspeak . . . will find it at the Blackhawk.• The spirit of friendship, good-fellowship a^camaraderie prevails at the Blackhawk under the genialguidance of *Hhe ole left-hander,** Joe Sanders.• Join in the fun ... see the great floor show . . .thrill to Joe Sanders* famous music . . . take advantageof the mod^ate prices!The BlackhawkRandolph and Wabash‘‘Where Fun Is An Institution”SUBSCRIPTION BLANKInclosed is $2.75 for year’s subscription ($4 by mail).NameAddress City and State plays to be given by freshmen as¬pirants.The association is under the lead¬ership of Frank Hurburt O’Hara, di¬rector of dramatic productions, anda board including chairmen of acting,production, and business.Any freshmen interested in the ac¬tivities of the group may meet itsmembers at a tea which will be heldSeptember 30. The time of try-outsfor the freshmen plays will be an¬nounced in The Daily Maroon,WOMEN’S ACTIVITIESMirror PresentsAnnual RevueEach winter for the last ten years,“Mirror”, the woman’s revue, haspresented to the campus the Univer¬sity woman in her gayer and mostsatirical moods. The entire show isunder the supervision of women, withthe assistance of Frank H. O’Hara,director of Dramatic Production.The show is composed of songs andskits written by students, and fresh¬men especially are encouraged to sub¬mit their creations. The interests andsubjects included in the revue rangefrom campus events to national af¬fairs.Membership in “Mirror” is made onthe basis of performance in the castand the chorus or by participation inthe business and production phases.W. A. A. PromotesWomen’s SportsThe Women’s Athletic associationhas as its purpose the promotion ofinterest in all sports open to women.Fencing, basketball, bowling, golf,hiking, hockey, horseback riding,swimming, track, and tennis tourna¬ments are held by the associationthroughout each year.“C” letters and W. A. A. honor pins are awarded at the end of eachquarter for outstanding sports abil¬ity. Requirement for membershipis participation on a team or inter¬est in some particular sport.Y. W. C. A. OganizesActivity GroupsMembership in Y. W. C. A. maybe obtained by any woman whoshows interest in one of the activitygroups. These groups are organizedto take in every field of interest in¬cluding drama, music, settlement orhospital work, world fellowship, andliterature. The Y. W. C. A. alsosponsors the annual FreshmanFrolic, the Christmas vesper service,and numerous dinners.The office is located on the sec¬ond floor of Ida Noyes hall, and allfreshman women will be given anopportunity to sign membershipcards at the Wednesday Tea heldduring Freshman week. LUNCHEONAll |reshmen will receive addi¬tional information about entranceinto campus extra-curricular ac¬tivities at the two luncheons heldfor men and women respectivelyMonday, October 1. Activitiesleaders will be present at the gen¬eral meetings following the lun¬cheons and will indicate the vraysby which new students may par¬ticipate in the activities in whchthey are most interested.I advanced course is paid an allowanceI by the'War department which totalsj approximately ninety dollars a year! for the tw’o year period.R. 0. T. C.Training Leads toCommissionTo all entering freshmen, the de¬partment of Military Science andTactics offers the opportunity fortraining leading to commissions ofsecond lieutenants in the field artil¬lery unit of the Reserve Officers’Training Corps.In the College the department of¬fers a three-quarter sequence courseover a two year period know^n asMilitary Science 101-106. At the endof each spring quarter comprehensiveexaminations are given in this course.Successful completion of the sequencewill fulfill one of the two sequencecourse requirements for the College.Upon successful completion of thesequence course, the student may en¬roll in the advanced courses. He mayregister then for the two three-quarter courses of Military Science inthe division of the Physical Sciences,These may fulfill the requirementsfor elective courses for the Bachelor’sdegree. The student enrolled in the I FANDANGOI Carnival to BecomeI Annual EventI Brainchild .of last year’s Seniorj class, the Midway Fandango is theI newest student activity on campus,j Complete with gay and gaudylights, dance floor, orchestra, andamusement booths the Fandango is aUniversity carnival* Organized as aunique Senior class gift to the Uni¬versity, the Fandango’s instant suc¬cess last year justified its establish-j ment this year as a permanent Uni-1 versity activity.‘ Most of the profits of the Fan-{ dango go to the University scholar-j ship fund. Last year the Fandango! increased the fund by $2400.All work on the Fandango wasi done by students. Over 100 partici¬pated in administrative work, and'many others operated booths for fra-i temities and clubs. Last year’s Fan-' dango board selected a nucleus ofupperclass sfudents as officers of the1936 Fandango. However, freshmen,as well as upperclassmen are invited; to apply for Fandango positionswhen work is commenced on thisyear’s carnival in April or May. MUSIC SOCIETYOrganize Productions onActivities BasisCentralizing the direction ofcampus musical activities is thefunction of the newly-organizedUniversity Music society.In coordinating musical events,the Music society arranges dates forj performances, appoints ushers, andi directs publicity for the UniversityjOpera association, Symphony asso¬ciation, and with the cooperation ofBlackfriars, manages the Glee club.The activities of the Music society, are under the control of the govern-I ing board. The faculty members ofj this board are Carl E. Bricken,I associate professor of Music and di-I rector of the Symphony orchestra,i and Cecil M. Smith, assistant pro-j fessor of Music and director of thej Universrty Opera association. Otherj members of the governing board in-j elude four seniors and a numberof juniors, sophomores, and fresh-: men.DEBATE UNIONPromotes ForensicActivityChampioning the art of both for¬mal and informal speaking, the Uni¬versity Debate union sponsors sym¬posiums, open discussions and lec¬tures in hi-monthly meetings in theReynolds club and intercollegiate de¬bating under the supervision of JohnE, Stoner, coach.Membership in the Union is opento all students upon application tothe cabinet of the Union, headed byGeorge Messmer, Intercollegiate de¬bating last year included three tour¬naments and numerous exchangemeets with such schools as Stanford,Alabama, and Northwestern.On Thursday evening of Fresh-man week the Union will present aspecial symposium on “The CollegeProgram from the Student View¬point,” which is designated to out¬line the new-plan, answering ques¬tions and offering student opinion.Whether you are sipping your morning coffee, orsmoking your evening cigar.The United Press, with its thousands of miles ofleased telegraph wires and cables; writh its army oftrained newspapermen scattered across the face ofthe earth, brings the World news to you as itoccurs.The facilities of this vast newsgathering enter¬prise make thf WORLD YOURS through thecolumns ofThe Daily MaroonitSONINlAiN3dO«3a01SAIQNHIHJ3H1„ 008frJajsaUDJOQ iasjjg5UO||BHppUBJ^jO1SB365j30|a^ onuoAyf^jequii)|jeafq-4daj4SH^LS{{£[ AVaNOUVXSpueSMOOO StHXaOMQOOM \*S4di|3e)|siuuaj_ sudjuie4unoj sjd4iJMddAj^ :40ISuiJieda^ ■3!iqndXie^ON *Ajrjqi-||e4ua^*S4uauiuir4Ja4U3A4isjaAiuf|jo^S4a)|aij_ *aaiAjaspe-4uey^aunqijj[,oSeaiq^ *aaiAja$SuiddejyyyalSe^faej *sauoqda|aj[aaue4Si(]JSuo*^pue|eao-| *aaiAja^qdejSapj,uoiuf)uja4sa/yy **uoi4e4S|P4SOjsa4C4SP^^funV *iuaq440asn||n4 a^fciu04noXa4iAu;aMpues^q4JOMpoo/yy4e4uaiuaAuoa A||eiaadsasaaiAjas)Suimo||04aq4pui^||imnoj^ *saijpuns4uapn4S\\epue*sja4iJMadA4a|qa -4Jod'AipMafOiieaiq^40A4isjaAiuf|*S)|Ooqa40u*S4i44no luniseuuiAIS*sasaa49H9•seqansspaau4uapn4S jeiaads404uaiu4JOSsealSjefe)|ao4SaMuoi4ippeu| *sa|4i4lejaualSpueS4xa4A4isjaAiunq4oq —S)|OoqpasnpuaMau40:)|a04SpaucApuaaSi^ieuie4 -uieiua/yy*a|qe|ieAesiaaiAjasa4a|duioapuepaueAa40ui uaAaUPA4isjaAiuf|aq440S4uapn4S4uasajdoj[_ *an|eA|euoi4 -ipej4q4iMS4uapn4sAueuiAqpapje^ajaq04auioaseq s^q4JOMpoo/yyuosaaj$144joj*sAep4uapn4S4iaq4)Sui4np spaauA4auoi4a4Spueqooq4iaq4404sn04pa^oofaAeq *4a4qiSneppue4aq40ui'uospue4aq4ej*S4uapn4SA4iS4aA -lu^40suoi4e4aua)S0M4paA4asaAeqaMsaaue4suiAueui u|*uoi4eao|auiesaq44eS4uapn4SolSeaiq340A4is4aAiuf| aq4SuiAjasuaaqseqs^q440Mpooyyy33uis "a9{AJ9s9iya^k '311015)1009S.H11IOMaOOM *S4noAA|a4aaui9•A4iS4aAiun»q4 4eSuiuie4440poi4adSuiA4Si4espue|n4d|aqA|asua4uiue404spuai44 |euos4ad4noA40asoq404saqsiMipM4noppe04qsiMayyy *noA04a|qen|eA4SOU1 aA04d||iMqaiqMasoq4ui44edaqe4044ap40ui|ei4uassaA|a4n| -osqesauioaaqsai4iAi4ae40uoi4aa|as|n4a4eae4eq4pui4noAuaqM snoiaa4dsiauii44eq44ae4aq4q4iMpassa4duiiaquielSe||fMnoA 4iig*saipn4ssiq04aae|d4S414uaAjSseqaq4a44eui44edaqe4044uap -nissnoi4iquieue404sai4iAj4ae404Soqea4ea4aq4A||e4n4e|q•sa!4! 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Field house. Talksby T. Nelson Metcalfe, director of jathletics, and others.3-5 P.M.—Informal social tea dance ,for men and women. Ida Noyes ,hall. (In charge of the Ida Noyes |auxiliary and the Ida Noyes ad- ivisory council.)4-5 P.M. — Swimming pool, Ida |Noyes hall, open to all Univer-1sity women. Swimming suits(not caps) will be furnished. (Incharge of the Tarpon club.)4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, Ida Noyeshall, open to all Universitywomen. Swimming suits (not caps)will be furnished. (In charge ofthe Tarpon club.)4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, Bartlettgymnasium, open to all Universitymen.8 P.M.—Symposium on “The Col-Program from a Student’s Pointof View.’’ Mandel hall. (Incharge of the Debate Union.) iFriday, September 27 I6:30 A.M.-12 M.—Registration, byappointment. Attendance requir-!ed. Mandel hall.9:30 A.M.—Sight-seeing tours ofthe University. Harper Mil. (Incharge of the Student Social com¬mittee and the Board of Women’sOrganizations.)1-5 P.M.—Open house for men andwomen. Informal games andsports. The Trophy gallery, IdaNoyes hall. (In charge of theWomen’s Athletic Association.)1:30-5 P.M.—Registration, by ap-,pointment. Attendance required, iMandel hall.2-4 P.M.—Informal games for men.(In charge of the Division of In- |tramural Athletics.) Exhibition Ipolo practice. (In charge of the !department of Military Science-'“'and Tactics.) Greenwood field.2-4 P.M.—Games and sports for all jentering women. Ida Noyes hall, j(In charge of the Women’s Ath- ;letic Association.) !3:30-4:30 P.M.—Chicago Progres- |sive Union Tea. Ida Noyes The- Iatre. |4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, Ida Noyes jhall, open to all University worn- ien. Swimming suits (not caps) |will be furnished. (In charge of 'the Tarpon club.) i6 P.M.—Buffet supper, the Cloisterclub, Ida Noyes hall. Tickets tobe purchased by students. (Incharge of the Student Social com¬mittee and the Board of Women’sOrganizations.)8 P.M.—Party for men and women,Ida Noyes hall. (In charge ofthe Student Social committee and |the Board of Women’s Organiza-1tions.) !Saturday, September 286:30 A.M.-12 M. — Registration, by jappointment. Attendance re¬quired. Mandel hall. i9:30 A.M.—Tour of the Universitysettlement. Meet in front of theUniversity chapel. (In charge ofthe Student Settlement board.)1-5 P.M.—Open house for men and Iwomen. Informal games and !sports. The Trophy gallery, Ida INoyes hall. • (In charge of the !Women’s Athletic Association.) !1:30-5 P. M.—Registration by ap-pointment. Attendance required.Mandel hall.2:30-5 P.M.—Informal games formen. Greenwood field. (In chargeof the Division of Intramural Ath¬letics.4 P.M.—Meeting of freshmen wom¬en with upperclass counselors andfaculty sponsors. Information asto place of meeting will be pro¬vided by upperclass counselors.(In charge of the Federation ofUniversity Women.)6 P.M.—Informal dinner, the Cloist¬er club, Ida Noyes hall. Ticketsto be purchased by students. (Incharge of the Student Social com¬mittee and the Board of Women’sOrganizations.)Sunday, September 29 iNote: all events are hereafter:scheduled by Central StandardTime.)2-4 P.M.—Reception for new resi¬dents of Burton and Judsoncourts, Judson court lounge. (Incharge of the faculty heads of thehalls.)4 P.M.—Special carillon recital forall entering students, their fam- !ilies, and friends. The Univer.sity Ichapel. I4:30 P. M.—Vesper service for allentering students and their guests.The University chapel.5:15 P.M.—Tours of the Chapel. (Incharge of the Chapel council.)6 P.M.—Buffet supper, the Cloisterclub, Ida Noyes hall. Tickets tobe purchased by students. (Incharge of the Chapel council.)Ferdinand Schevill, professor of ' LECTURE SERVICEBRINGS FAMOUSSPEAKERS HERE Clubs Assume Roleof **Local” Sororitiesin Campus Functions SENIORS BEMOANLAPSE OF SACREDCAMPUS TRADITIONNow a well established institution,the Student Lecture service was es¬tablished in 1931 for the two-foldpurpose of offering well-known speak¬ers to campus audiences and of pro¬viding employment for students need¬ing help in financing their education.Under the supervision of theBoard of Vocational Guidance andPlacement, the Service is run com¬pletely by students. Usually wellover 100 students are provided withpart-time employment by the organi¬zation.During the school year the Servicebrings to Mandel hall a series of sixnationally and internationally knownfigures. Tickets for the lectures aresold for the season and for individ¬ual lectures, generally the best seatsbeing reserved for season ticket hold¬ers.Among the lecturers that have ap¬peared in the series in the past areStuart Chase, Edgar Ansel Mowrer,Raymond Moley, Ruth Bryan Owen,Frances Perkins, Alexander Wooll-cott, Julian Huxley, and the lateRichard Washburn Child.Modem History, will speak on“Cultural Opportunities in theCity of Chicago.’’Monday, September 308:30-11 A.M.—Scholastic aptitudeand other tests. Attendance re¬quired. Place will be indicatedon engagement card.11 A.M.—Talks to entering students.Mandel hall. George AllenWorks, Dean of Students, presid¬ing.12:30 P.M.—Luncheon for 5vomen,Ida Noyes hall. Tickets to be pur¬chased by students. (In chargeof the Board of Women’s Organ¬izations.)12:30 P.M.—Luncheon for men,residence halls for men. Ticketsto be purchased by students. Incharge of the Student Social com¬mittee.4-5 P.M.—A tea for entering stu¬dents interested in dramatics. TheTower room, Mitchell tower. (Incharge of the Dramatic Associa- An integral part of the campus so¬cial life is centered around the four¬teen women’s clubs. Since there areno national sororities at the Univer-eristy, these clubs furnish the near¬est equivalent to the Greek-letter or¬ganizations, by offering to eachfreshman woman the companionshipand gruidance necessary in her orien¬tation to student life and activities.The clubs do not own houses, andall the rushing functions and socialevents that they sponsor are held inprivate homes, hotels, or other pub¬lic places.Membership, which averagres abouttwenty women to each club, is con¬trolled under a system of deferredrushing that was introduced fouryears agro. Under the new rulesadopted last spring, the open rushingperiod will begin October 13, and endNovember 16. A week of intensiverushing during which time each clubwill be permitted to hold four func¬tions, will be from November 17 tothe following Saturday, November23. Pledging will be the next day.The Interclub council this year isstressing the rule that there will beno rushing during Freshman week orthe first two weeks of the autumnquarter.tion.)4-5:30 P.M.—A tea for enteringstudents interested in music. Thelibrary of the Music building. (Incharge of the University Musicsociety.)4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, IdaNoyes hall, open to all Universitywomen. Swimming suits (notcaps) will be furnished. Incharge of the Tarpon club.)4-5 P.M.—Swimming pool, Bartlettgymnasium, open to all Univer¬sity men.Tuesday, October 1No special activities are scheduledfor freshmen.Wednesdagr, October 2.All classes meet.Thursday, October 32:30-5 P.M.—French placement testfor students regristered in French104. Attendance is required. The worm turns and reaches for itscoonskin coat and little green cap. Itwould be more to the point were itto don its slicker and so shed thetroubled waters as they splash fromthe Botany pond.Traditions are the cause of it all.The senior class is often aggrieved ifno one cares about tradition. Fresh¬men wander around quite unaware oftheir dumbness, and In their fog vio¬late the purity of 42 years of condi¬tioned behavior. Sophomores, be¬cause they are smart, consciouslyravish the few chaste ideals, for thatshows their disdain. This was beforeour worm awakened.Nurses, Children, and SeniorsThe senior class would start byasking observance of three specialtraditions. There is the one about theshield on the floor by the 57th streetentrance to Mandel hall. People arenot supposed to step on it, you know.It’s awful the way folks don’t knowthings.Another is the habit that only sen¬iors sit on the senior bench. The ideais a grood one, and if you wish toknow where the senior bench is, youmay allocate it as the one just offthe walk from Cobb to Kent. Theproblem of keeping underclassmenaway from it should be simple; thereisn’t room for them anyway whatwith all the nurses and children thatuse the spot.Kissed WomenFurthermore there is the traditionabout the “C’’ bench that stands justin front of Cobb hall. The ages de¬mand that only seniors and “C” menuse the bench, but more flexible folk¬lore has it that, in addition to thoseworthies, women kissed by seniors or“G” men may also enter the charmedcircle of the bench’s embrace.The senior class is very serfousabout the enforcement of these littletraditions. The men who annuallyraise luxuriant mustaches are en-clined to be a little hard on unlight¬ened, unobserving young fellows. Atleast that is what they say.“Why, those ideas are sacred,” theseniors say.The ideas are sacred.VISIT OUR SHOW ROOMJ. A. LAVERY MOTOR 1AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER6127 Cottage Grove Ave.^ • ;o. Fraternities Lead inUndergraduate LifeTraditional leaders in undergradu¬ate life and activities, fraternities atthe University will this fall enter in¬to their fourth year under a systemof deferred rushing. This programis now acquiring some semblance ofpermanence and has suffered onlyminor changes in the past two years.The deferred rushing rules pro¬hibit freshmen from joining any fra¬ternity until they have been in resi¬dence at the University for one andone-half quarters. Pledging is thus deferred until the seventh week ofthe winter quarter, and it is the aimof the Interfraternity council, gov¬erning body for the Greek letter so-cities ,to allow the freshmen a per¬iod in which they will be fully orien¬tated to University life as well as onein which they may adequately evalu¬ate the organizations of most inter¬est to them.There are now 22 national frater¬nities with chapters at the Univer¬sity; there are no local grroups. Thesehouses have a total membership ofapproximately five hundred. Frater¬nity life centers in the organizations’houses, most of which are found onWoodlawn and University avenuesbetween 56th and 58th street.Welcome...Seasoned upper¬classmen realize fullwell the importanceof correct clothes . . . and they have NO doubt as towhere to get them. Verdant freshmen who may not bequite so sure of themselves, agree, however, with theirolder brothers, that there is definitely but one place toselect a wardrobe . . . the Erie Clothing Co.The Erie ClothingCo. extends to youits sincere wishes foran intellectually prof¬itable career as astudent of the Uni¬versity of Chicago.You have enrolled ii^one of the country’sgreatest educationalinstitutions and aresoon to become amember of our littlescholastic communityhere on the Midway.For this decision, youare to be congratu¬lated.Freshmen.Wait • •Come to school first and see for yourself just whatChicago men are wearing, then come in and let us helpyou select a distinctive wardrobe.Drop in.,.If you like to browse, take a short walk down to ourdisplay rooms and allow competent members of ourorganization to show you what the smartly dressed Uni¬versity man will be wearing ‘this fall. You’ll find ourentire display the most distinctive and well tailored inChicago. Notice ourHART SCHAFFNER & MARX—Suits and Top-coatsMALLORY & KNOX—HatsARROW & KINGLY—ShirtsFLORSHEIM—ShoesErie Clothing G!o.837-839 Blast 63rd Street(Maryland Theatre Building)DAILY MAROON SPORTSCHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1935 Page FiveSHAUGHNESSY OPENS PRACTICE FOR 1935 CAMPAIGNMaroon Varsity Assembles forIntensive Drill in Preparationfor Current Football Schedule‘Eleven Major LetterWinners Returnto SquadHeaded by Captain Jay Ber-wantrer, more than fifty Maroonfirridmen assembled in the fieldhouseTuesday morninj?, September 10, forthe first session of intensive train¬ing for the coming football season.At the morning session when suitswere handed out and plans for theseason described by Coach Clark D,Shaughnessy, the players were in¬troduced to Judge Robert Jerome(Duke) Dunne, who will serve a.sline coach this year.Faced by the loss of several menthat he had counted on to carrysome of the load in the Maroonbackfield, Coach Shaughnessy hasbeen making hurried plans to revisehis attack in order to relieve Ber-wanger of all the burden. The mar¬riage and subsequent withdrawalfrom school of Rainwater Wells,who had been slated for the quar¬terback post, will cause Ewald Ny-quist, fullback last season and endin gprimg pmetice, to be shiftedback into the backfield to fill theWells vacancy. However, signal¬calling duties will be thrust uponCaptain Jay Berwanger.Also unable to report at the open¬ing day of practice for one reasonor another were Ralph Balfanz, full¬back candidate, James Chappie,sophomore back; Bob Shipway, All-American LeadsMaroon Grid TeemCapt. Jay Berwangerquarterback candidate; and BillRunyan, one of last year’s ponybacks. The first three have as yetnot crossed successfully the schol¬astic hurdle, while Runyan has beenadvised to lay off of football for aseason because of an injury received last year. Lost to the team, too, isEllmore Patterson, captain and all¬conference center on the 1934eleven, who was to have been coachof the centers this year, but has in¬stead accepted a position with J. P.Morgan and company in New York.In the light of these necessary re¬visions of the Chicago plan of at¬tack, the Maroons will probably usea backfield composed of Berwangerand Ned Bartlett, who showed flash¬es of brilliant running last year butwas handicapped during most ofthe season by an injured knee, atthe halves; Warren Skoning, hard¬hitting junior at full; and Nyquistat quarter.At the ends of the forward wallBob Perretz and Gordon Petersenwill probably receive first call. Lastyear Perretz played running guardduring most of the season, althoughA-ha, football is with us again.Bright yellow hunks of cow-hide giveback the sun as they go arching into ttieair over the weeds and burrs of the prac¬tice field. There are the same liftingnoises; the same thuds and grunts thatwe collegians know with a rising heart.We sit in th sparse “C” section andcheer weakly or not at all. We dont’often expect a conference championship.But we love it in our own way.And now you are with us.he had been trained for the end postat that time. Hard-hitting, efficient,reliable Merritt Bush and ClarenceWright are expected to play manyminutes of every game at the tac¬kles. As relief they will have EarlSappington, who lacked only experi¬ence in being one of the outstand-! ing linemen on last season’s eleven,i Guarding Sam Whiteside, who willi try to fill the vacancy at centerI caused by Patterson’s graduation,! will be Prescott Jordan and Har-; mon Meigs, both of whom haveplayed a good deal at these positions. INTRAMURAL GAMESGIVE OPPORTUNITY TOUNIVERSITY MENFurnishing all men with an op¬portunity to engage in athletics isthe function of the Intramural di¬vision of the University athletic de¬partment. Men who for one reasonor another cannot engage in inter¬scholastic competition can keep phy¬sically fit through Intramural activ¬ity.The Intramural department, head¬ed by Walter Hebert, sponsors over20 sports events during the year.Actual management of tournamentsand competitions, however, lies sole¬ly in the hands of student managersselected by the Intramual staff.In many Intramural tournaments,competition occurs in three di¬visions, the fraternity division, thedormitory division, and the divisionfor unattached entrants. In themore popular sports, touchball,basketball, and baseball, divisionsare further subdivided into leaguesof four to six teams each. Amongthe typical sports are swimming,handball, squash rackets, ping pong,bridge, and golf. Awards of cups,plaques, or medals are made to win¬ning teams and to individual placewinners.Eligibility rules for Intramuralactivity are such that all may par¬ticipate. Any student registered fortwo or more courses, and not amember of a professional or varsityteam in the sport in which he is en¬rolled, is eligible. Only men reg¬ularly enrolled in an organizationmay compete for that organization.Last year approximately 700 stu¬dents took part in Intramural activ¬ities. Freshman Grid Prospects High asMany Report Early for PracticeWith the official call for freshmanfootball men issued for the first dayof Freshman week, an early crop ofyearling grid candidates were al¬ready on hand Tuesday when thevarsity assembled for its intensiveearly season drill. Since they had ar¬rived ahead of their coaches, and socould be assigned little formal work,they were given track clothes andtold to throw the ball around in onecorner of the practice field.If this early turnout is any indica¬tion of the interest to be shown thisyear by the freshman gridders.Coach Nels Norgren should have anable and enthusiastic group at hiscommand when the times comes towhip a team into shape. AssistingNorgren will be Bob “Tarzan”Deem, tackle in 1933, line coach;John Baker, regular end who gradu¬ated in June, end coach; and ThomasFlinn, quarterback, who also gradu¬ated last year, backfield coach.Demonstrate PlaysAfter he gets a team organized.Coach Norgren plans to train it inboth the Maroon method of attackand also the intricate ways of Chi¬cago’s opponents during the comingseason, so that they may give ad¬vance notice to the varsity about thetreatment it will receive on Satur¬day afternoons.Climaxing the season will be theannual “Yale-Harvard” game be¬tween two teams of yearlings. Thisevent will probably take place a fewdays after the Illinois game, and willbe the final event of the footballseason on the Midway.Freshman Cross-CountryPracticeWhile their classmates are cavort¬ ing on the gridiron, long-windedfreshmen may report to assistanttrack coach Norman Root for train¬ing in cross-country running. Prac¬ticing whenever they can on Staggfield’s cinder track, the harriersspend a good deal of their time jog¬ging around the large playing fieldin Washington park. This space, overtwo miles in circumference, providesample opportunity for the runnersto display their talents.While the varsity cross-countrymen hold a few meets on Saturdaymornings during the football seasonwith other Big Ten schools, thecrowning event of the season is theannual sprint for freshmen, which isheld sometime in November. Al¬though the chief incentive to the .runners are freshman numerals, thechill November breezes furnish theyearlings with the drive necessary tocomplete the long jog.Engage InOther SportsDuring the autumn months first-year men may engage in other sportsincluding swimming, gymnastics,basketball, and track under the lead¬ership of the coaches of those sports.Freshman numerals are not awardedin these realms of athletics until thequarters in which competition isheld, winter in the case of the firstthree, and spring for track.Numerals are awarded in allcases to freshmen upon the demon¬stration of ability and promise ofvarsity caliber. Different reqtiirer^^ments are set up by the coaches.Certain times must be made in trackand swimming events while in mostof the other sports the judgment ofthe respective coaches suffices.Welcome to the Official Campus StoresMake the Stores your Headquarters-Meet your friends here. We are located on the Campus to serve you for allUniversity suppliesT exts—GeneralNew—Second Hand BOOKSRental LibraryYou will need STATIONERY! Show your al¬legiance by writing to your family andfriends on U. of C. stationery. If you arerushed for time, use our University picturepostal cards. TYPEWRITERSOur selection of GREETING CARDS—birth¬day, convalescent and all special occasions—will meet your approval. Equip your study table with aGLOBE — ATLAS — DICTIONARY —THESAURUS — ENCYCLOPEDIAAny BOOK or MAGAZINE you desire, notfound in our regular stock, will be quicklyprocured for you.It’s convenient to have your FILMS devel¬oped with us—24 hour service.For refreshments between classes—visit ourcandy counter—we also have sandwiches,soft drinks, milk, nuts, packaged wafers,fruit, and cigarettes. Bought - Sold - Exchangd - RentedRepairedRibbons - Paper - Supplies Start your college career with a good FOUN¬TAIN PEN—one with style and quality.See our selection of Shaeffer, Parker andWaterman pens.When you need a simple but distinctive giftSHOP WITH US.University of Chicago Bookstores5802 Ellis Avenue 106 Blaine HailUSE OUR POSTAL STATION IN ELLIS HALL STOREPage Six IHL DAILY MAROOSl, FRldAY, SEPTEMBER 13. 1935Study Program at UniversityiQffers Student Wide Freedom(Continued from page 1)faculty, each an expert in the par¬ticular field, lectures to the students.These lectures are given fromthree to five times a week to a largegroup of students. Once each weekthe large group is divided into smal¬ler divisions for discussion of thework covered. These discussions aresupervised by some member of thedepartment who meets with studentsindividually and offers suggestionsas to the needs of the particular per¬son. Besides these discussions someof the survey course have specialhonor sections for students whoshow exceptional ability or interestin the work.Varying Progre*»Although the College term is esti¬mated as two years for the averagestudent, exceptional students ma.’j’'complete it in a shorter period andthose requiring longer time maytake it. An outstanding example ofthe complete freedom allowed is thefact that a student received the de¬gree of Bachelor of Arts at the lastAugust convocation after only oneyear at the University.Throughout the student’s course,he has an adviser whose business itis to counsel him in his particularproblems and to indicate to him how’he may best prepare for the exam-inatons.The specific requirement for thecompletion of the College programand for entrance to one of the di¬visions is the passing of comprehen-sives in the work of the four surveycourses, two related subject courses,and English composition. In casethat a student may have satisfied apart of the College requirements hemay, if he desires, take courses inthe divisions while completing hisCollege work.General CoursesThe work of the four generalcourses is the basis for the generaleducation which is the chief aim of"the College program. The Human¬ities is based on history of the civ¬ilizations which have contributedmust to the shaping of the contem¬porary outlook on life. The coursepresents the literature, philosophy,art, and religion of the cultures be¬ginning with that of ancient Egypt' and the Tigris-Euphrates valley.The work then advances into wes¬tern Europe, treating the civiliza¬tions of Greece and Rome. Ap¬proaching modem Western Euro¬pean culture, the course treats in detail its development from medievaltimes to the present day.Cultivation of the scientific habitof mind is one of the objects of theBiological Sciences. The attainmentof this object is sought through il¬lustration of the scientific method ofattack upon nature’s problems.Other objectives of the course are:to implant such practical informa¬tion about biology as is desirablefor a modern citizen, and to awakeninterest in the major concepts ofbiology and the machinery of theorganic world.The Physical Sciences course sur¬veys the various fields of chemistry,astronomy, physics, mathematics,radioactivity, geology, and geo¬graphy. In chemistry the coursedeals with the many varieties offorms which matter assumes in ourenvironment: elements, compounds,mixtures, solutions, colloids, andtheir distribution in nature and theirreactions. rPhysical SciencesCoordinated in tne course are alsofacts covering the following: theearth as an astronomical body; themoon, the sun, and its family ofplanets; the stars, star-clusters, andgalaxies; the analytical characterand method of the physical sciences;the relation and character of thecontributions of mathematics to thedevelopment of these sciences; thefundamental law’s of energy; themany manifestations of the atomictheory; sound, light, infra-red, ultra¬violet, and x-rays as examples ofwave phenomena. The course treatsalso the earth and its materials:rocks and minerals and their eco¬nomic aspects; the character of thegeologic record and determinationof a time scale, shifting of land andsea areas; periods of mountain mak¬ing and degradation; and climaticchanges, and problems in surveyingand mapping the surface of theearth.The work in this course is mademore vivid and interesting by theuse of motion pictures and variousfield trips to regions that illustratesome principle of the course.The Social Sciences are interest¬ed mainly in the impact of the com¬plex of forces generally describedas the industrial revolution on eco¬nomic, social, and political institu¬tions. It begins with an examinationof the problems and methods of in¬vestigation peculiar to the socialsciences.ISELF-‘ STARTERS r...andTHE PENOF THE DAY■MtWatermeofsA pen you don't have toshake when starting towrite—that doesn’t disturbyour eoncentration in lec¬ture, classroom or exam.The only pen with thethree features essential toSelf-Starting t1. Perfect Feed2. Perfect Point3. Right Point for youin view of the writingpressure you apply.GETWATERMAN’SINKIN THE NEW"TIP-FILL'^BOTTLESEE OUR COMPLETE LINE ATWOODWORTH’S BOOKSTORE41 Years of Serving Students of theUniversity of Chicago1311 EAST 57th ST.—Near Kimbark Avc. University of Chicago Men(IThe HuttonIs the Style Source of ‘'Big Ten*’ UniversitiesFeaturing the All-Star All-AmericansChart or llottsp CtothosThis is a cordial invitation to campus bound college men to visit The LyttonCollege Shop. The richly appointed series of rooms which make up thisintimate shop are brimful of advance Fall styles. Proudest of all are we ofCharter House Clothes, an all-star aggregation of college clothes withoutequal for correctness or distinctiveness. This Fall set the campus style yourself—be the first to wear Charter House Clothes.SUITS $ 35The Lytton College Shop—2nd Floor—Chicago StoreRepresentative Showing in All Branch StoresTHE {#) HubHenry C. Lytton & SonsState and JacksonCHICAGO Orrington and ChurchEVANSTON Marion and LakeOAK PARK Broadway and FifthCARYprOUR University of Hawaii^ students get a big tlmll astheir' outrigger surf canoe isstarted shoreward by a ^t^moving wave. prm But«uJBBER'SOLED SHOES AND TOP HATS are part of the regular uniforms of the “Bulldogs” who■ccompany the Proctors at Cambridge University when they make their rounds of the campus.; IS the first photo ever made of a student being arrested for not wearing mortar board and gowne walking on the campus of the English institution. i:i.>bc WARTHA ELIZABETH GUNNING is the new head ofthe student government association at Mississippi StateCollege for Women, oldest state'supported school of its kindin America intern-itionjlrtz. University of Southern California's winner of many diving , (^OTDS TAKE UP FOOTBALL '' Butler University’s coaching school has four women whoHe has just set a new junior flight mark by flying from Vic- are learning the fine points of the game from Noble Kizer, Purdue mentor, and Tony Hinklei. C.) to Agua Caliente in 11 hours, 50 seconds. (shoum here), Butler athletic director. iCev»t<H.eTo FOSTER MORE CORDIAL FranccyAmerican relations, theseAmerican college students were guests of the University of Pans fortwo weeks this summer. (L to R) A. E. Davidson, University of Delaware;C. F. Rumsey, Jr., Princeton; Aurelius Parenti, Chicago; R. H. Rawson,Harvard; R. E. Long, Yale; J. S. Weeks, Columbia; j. J. Gilveau, Jr.,Louisiana State; J. A. Vatlz, Stanford; H. E. McCarthy, California.n\OCTOR OF FLY'CASTING possibly will be the degree conferred^ by Massachusetts State College after students finish “Professor"1. E. Grayson's course in bait and fly'Casting.l^OCTOR of Canine'ology was the degreeconferred on Sig, mascotof Sigma Alpha fraternityat James Millikin Univer'sity, by Pres. J. C. Messierat special “commencement"exercises for the dog.T IFE WITHOUT BACTERIA is possible. Prof. J. A. Reyniers, University of Notre^ Dame scientist, proved with experiments with animals raised in this air-conditioned, germ-free cage. It is believed his experiments will lead to the isolation of germs which cause colds,influenza, infantile paralysis and similar ailments. He is shown at the left examining his germ-free guinea pigs through a glass porthole.Exclusive SPEED GRAPH of Jesse Owens in Action |IJERE'S A SPEED GRAPH OF JESSE^ ^ OWENS, Ohio State's sensationalathlete, covering the loo-yard dash to tiethe world's record of :09.4 and set a new BigTen mark. His calf measures i6 inches incircumference. AcmeV. IV - Issue 1Some of the famousathletes who approve ofCameVs mildnessBASEBALLDizzy Dean, St. Louis CardinalsLou Gehrig, New York YankeesMelvin Ott, New York GiantsHarold Schumacher,N.Y.GiantsGuy Bush, Pittsburgh Pirates• "Let’s have a Camel," says Mel Ott, heavy-hitting Giant out¬fielder, to his team mate, Harold Schumacher, ace pitcher. Melsays: "1 smoke all I want, yet keep in good condition. Camelsare so mild, they never get my wind or bother my nerves."And Hal adds: "To my mind that settles it! Camel is thecigarette with real mildness. 'I’d walk a mile for a Camel!”’In baseball, and in all the strenuous sports, leading athletescite the fact that Camels are mild. And to this impressive evi¬dence of Camel’s mildness is added the experience of peoplein every walk of life who wish to smoke freely and keep fit. TENNISEllsworthVines,Jr. WilliamT.Tilden,IIGeorge M. Lott, Jr. Lester R. StoefenBruce BarnesGOLFGene Sarazen Willie MacfarlaneCraig Wood Helen HicksTommy Armour Denny ShuteTRACK AND FIELDJim Bausch, Olympic Decathlon StarGeorge Barker, Former IntercollegiateCross-Country StarLeo Sexton, Olympic Shot-Put StarSWIMMINGHelene Madison Josephine McKimStubby Kruger Susan VilasJane Fauntz Buster CrabbeDIVINGHarold ("Dutch”) SmithGeorgia Coleman Pete DesjardinsSam HowardWINTER SPORTSRaymond Stevens Irving JaffeeJack SheaPaul ThompsonBill Cook• It’s just as important to you to keep"in condition" as it is to any champion.Smoke Camels all you wish. Enjoy thosecostlier tobaccos! Athletes say Camelsnever upset the nerves, never get the wind.OSTLIERTOBACCOS !# Camels are made from finer, MOREEXPENSIVE TOBACCOS —Turkish andDomestic—than any other popular brand.(Signed) R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANYWinston-Salem, North Carolinac IW, a. J. Rwii»ld« Tob. Co.New Intercollegiate JHonored At S\i .'j-^DOLO: Yale defeated Harvard lo to a in the final game at Governor s Island to give the Elis their^ third straight win. The winning Yalemen (shown above) are J. K. Secor, R. E. L. Wilson, PeterDominick, and J. P. Grace, Jr, A.mo (^OLF. Ed White,University ofTexas, captured thehigh honors at theintercollegiate tour'ney held at the Con¬gressional Countryclub, Washington.Michigan won theteam championship.^REW: The Golden Bears of the Uni-versity of California nosed out Cornellby three-fifths of a second at Poughkeepsieto win the Intercollegiate Rowing Associa¬tion crown for the third time in three years.long, daughter of Louisiana's1 senator (she calls him “Sonnys one of 12 students out of theLouisiana State University whoA average last semester.WARD BOUND - Richardiger (left) and Frank Haskell,y of Minnesota students, leavek for a 2,5oO'mile inland cruise toills. Krystotw f^NE'MAN TENNIS COURT' - This court at Harvard University makes it unnecessary for the server to chase^ balls during practice sessions. The ball is returned through a gutter in the center of the court no matter what partof the court it is served to. Wide WorldMhampionsFournamcntsyENNIS: Wilbur Hess.* Rice Institute, is thenew holder of the Inter-collegiate Tennis singleschampionship after he suc¬cessfully met all comers atthe tournament held at D ASEBALL: The Dartmouth Big Green nine was led to the championship of the Eastern Intercollegiate BaseballNorthwestern University. D jg^g^e by Pitcher Ted Olson (mset).'iT'ETLYING: Ray Gaver (third from left), Purdue, was the high point scorer at the First^ National Intercollegiate Air meet held at his alma mater. Jean Barnhill, the only womanentered in the meet, garnered fourth place as the representative of the University of Min¬nesota.They also leam how to coo\. Universities On Wheelsr'\MNIBUS COLLEGES have become so popular a form ofsummer school in the United States that dozens of thesecaravans, loaded with hundreds of college students, covered mihlions of miles during the last three months studying at first handgeography, history, geology, literature and natural history.Traveling in chartered buses, living in tents, eating food servedfrom camp kitchens, the students spent from eight to ten weekson the road, and several weeks on their home campus “digesting”the material gathered during their tours. On this page CollegiateDigest presents exclusive candid camera photos of the “omnibusflege' of Illinois State Normal University—a college that hasCOthe entire nation as its campus, the open field as its classroom, andtents as faculty offices and student dormitories. KevjtoocHe forgot his mirror!Reviewing the impressions and findings of the day. Studying for the next day's important tour'lecture' '•The Omnibus College in session—a "here's the real thing" botany lecture.JY WAY TO PICK A COURSE |..AND an^a^ WAlays too^NOS ONALDER.MAND)ADCASTSGNATION.ERS THEID HEdash forvty PANTS®IN SOCKET\RTS FAN(g)./S COURSEF STANDiENT SELECTS^SES WHICHLY PAPER®.ES SiniNG$ WORRYINGMT COURSES ONE COURSE THATnt ALWAYS SAFETO TAKE IS TOPACK YOUR PIPEWITH PRINCE ALBERTITl5 MILD AND COOL-NEVER BITESTHE TONGUE,D EPRESENTS GERMANY IN OLYMPICS ' - Helen Mayer (right) of Scnpps College, holderof Olympic and United States fencing championships, has been selected to represent Germanyin the igjb Olympics. a,meMATIC USE OF CON'POLLED SOUND is madeby new instruments deveh■y Harold Burris-Meyer atInstitute of Technology. By^ audio audience appeal canas flexible and complete as theippeals controlled by lightingProf. Burns'Meyer is shownit the controls regulating the)f those in the scene at the QNLY SURVIVOR of the^ Rutgers team that playedthe first intercollegiate footballgame in the U. S. is G. H.Large, 84. The historic gamewas with Princeton in i86q.JOHNNIE MAE DONOHOJ won a Texas Christian Uni'versity contest to select the“most popular girl” on the FortWorth's institution's campus.\\/HEN OXFORD UNIVERSITY students sit out a dance, they use the college qu.^ Tom Quad was used by Christ Church students as the sitting out “room” for the,;h(held once every three years. -' A NEW VITAMIN, that is a possible cure for homophilia has beenl)discovered by Er LhR. Stokstad (uniting) and H. J. Almquist,.Uni'I yersity of California sciennsts.^^Xl)^ vitamin has been tentatively',named Vitamin K ' - piRST CHINESE SORORITYiin- the United. States has been, foun Jed at the Univer .^ Michigan.' The charter thembers.qf Sigma Sigma,.Phi are.lL to R) Pearl Chen, Lilian V\Lily Wang and Helen VongInu-rn iiit«iWill W Up- ONCE—At Kemperwife, laughed so hard^at him in making it that thedirector had, to leave'some of her laughs in.^evoii .itserious moments, in-order to hnish the'time. The public laughed with Irene Rich. Therest IS national history and on the right side -ot theledger at the Fox studias;’,. •When his friend Fred Stone was nearly killed in a.*'airplane crash. Will rushed to New York to\<plav inFred's show. Three jCheers. >_ Will Rogers always refused honorary degrees Ji tocolleges, and ^^universities ' He had ,to hnd time fii^the saidf'to gef back to finish his schooling at KemperMilitary Academy.'W/^LL ROGERS .had> tlown by plane over my'' accessible areas of^Stiuth America, Asia-'Mimu.and the Orient. Hadihe’ lived long enough to ivake astatement, it is not inconceivable that he might.h.i\esaid he was glad he came to his end on ArncMcansoil; He was part Cherokee Indian, and mcre\tyi'Kaiof ,th"e U.'S. .A.^^than the''raccrxin-coated collegian otALTHOUGH he masked it behind-a richly-hued■^-vocabulary of .barbarisms-Uught him by .cow-puhehers, the late .Will Rogers had more ^schoolingthan w'as the lot of his boyhood companions inOolagah, Indian .Territory, where he was^born iniSyq. He recited out of McGuffey’s Readers, in theWilhe Hassell school in Neosho, Missouri: ?- Afterhe had written seven books and a million words, hestill insisted that McGuffey’s Readers were mightyputzling volumes.' . ^ -A mother's desire to make him a Methodist min¬ister took him out of the corral-and enrolled him inKemper Military Academy at Booneville^ Missouri.This was toney and* starchy business; but his prasperous ranching father, was busy drafting' the con¬stitution of Oklahoma, and he wanted his^spn to heable to read it. At . Kemper there was much em-phasis on horses. So far as reading was concernedWill didn't have to buy glasses until many .yearsafter Kemper days. He-won a cadet horseman's prizeat fourteen, had his picture ' taken in a spangled military ,.blouse and a high stiff collar ; then took carenever to be dressed up again in his life.^^>T'SEVENTEEN, he quit parting his hair neatlyin the middle, let his hair grow over his eyes, andcast his lot with horses comfiletely-: -He went with acarload.-oCthe beasts to South :Americ<i and ended upin the-company of a bcwitful oL army mules pre.ssedinto service in the Boer w'ar. A “wild west " .>,howiwith too miuch of a British accent found him veryacceptable: Touring on to England, he was billed asthe Cherokee Kid, and he did much with a lariat anda grin to overcome the hard feelings still leftin.Britainfrom the Revolutionary War.Returning briefly to his parents and the new stateof Oklahoma, he immediately afterwards Ix'came theworld's greatest wandering boy.-vOn his return fromAustralia,, a. booking agent signedplaim up for a hor.seshow in.-New' York in KJ03. ..If horses could getalong in New York, young Will could. Swinging ala-sso was something new in the east. Will was en¬gaged to Jo It nightly, ^before' the supper eaters onHamrherstein's Roof:" ’ , ,Later,.Flo. Zie^eld wanted his-midnight frolickersto see that a rope was not only:something to hangclothes on.-' To Mrs. Rogers; whom he married in1908, making a rope do everything except talk wasnot enough. She was used to ^rope twirling. Shewanted Will to talk, to distinguish himself from therope. “But all I know is what I read in the news¬papers," Will protested, whereat his Alma Mater,Kemper Academy,--grcCinedV The line, was-born;Will'used at to his last day.,<and the lasso came out ofthe act." ' ‘ ' - -silent movies .starring "Will Roger;,, ’® wereI ^ ^ received by the public with- less enthusiasmthan they’showed for one reel of Rin-Tin-Tin. Per-“Toney and Starchy Business.'/ ' ^ ^ suaded • to leave Flo Ziegfeld" to • try a talkie, WillAt Kemper Academy . ‘made They-Had to Sec, Pans. ,Irene Rich, his Kreen All I Know Is What ...''-^ He Gave Up Rope Twirling ‘