/■ /iEk Bailp itojonVol. 36. No. 2. Price 3 cents UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1935Up to the Minute Foreign NewsPeace HopesFade as DuceMaps DrivesItalian Cabinet PassesMeasures to BolsterMilitary Plans.{By United Press)Optimism, which fluttered bravelyfor a few days amonj? the nationsseeking to preserve peace, crashed !Tuesday night after Premier Benito jMussolini had met with his cabinetand charted a clear course towardwar.To be sure, the Italian Foreign of¬fice spokesman announced that thedictator’s discussion of Italian con¬duct in relation to various provisionsof the League covenant “leaves thedoor open to all posibilities.’’ But ^diplomats, disillusioned by il duce’s ;exorbitant demands, believed “actions jspeak louder than words.’’ TheItalian cabinet took these actions: j1. Perfected army, navy and air !preparations for the East African |campaign. j2. Adopted several internal meas¬ures having to do with war. j3. Appropriated $81,400 to build :poison gas-proof shelters at Messina,Sicily, less than 200 miles from Brit¬ish Malta. IThe British embassy in Rome wasin deepest gloom after Ambassador ;Sir Eric Drummond had visited ;Mussolini with a plan to revivethree-power peace talks amongBritain, France and Italy. iIn Geneva, at the same time, Pre-1mier Pierre Laval was “deeply dis¬couraged’’ by Mussolini’s attitude as Iexpressed to the French envoy in;Rome, Count Charles de Chambrun.'Baron Pompeo Aloisi was preparedto walk out of the League counciltneeting Thursday if the Ethiopian[lelegate was seated.There was a general .stiffening ofjhe Italian attitude after the League‘ommittee of five, led by Premier[.aval, spurned Mussolini’s tci’ms oflettlement .Monday. Developmentsinmediately following this emphasiz-d how much the situation dependspon the temperament of its keygure—Mussolini.The Italian counter-proposals^•ere disowned almost as soon ase>’ were turned down. Rome tooklains to deny that any official count-|r-proposals had been made andloisoi, who had just informed theimmittee of five that its writtencord of conversations with himgarding the counter-proposals wasrrect in every particular, was(Continued on page 2) Maroon IntroducesUP Service TodayCoverage of foreign affairs—his¬tory in the making to be studied inthe classrooms of the future is totake its place in the columns of TheDaily Maroon on a sharing basiswith local campus new's and nation¬al educational items.It is fitting that the Universitystudent should have this materialavailable. It is to be hoped that hewill appreciate its presentation froma university background by a staffthat is not pre-convinced that inter¬national cooperation is impossibleor that advocates of the League ofNations are insidiously associatedwith un-American principles.The Maroon launches an experi¬ment.R. W. NichoUon.White-BlackIssue Raised France, BritainCompromise onCurrency PlansFavor Tariff Cutting toFacilitate MonetaryStabilization.Britain, France FearRace Dispute Loonn-ing in Africa(CopyriKht, IH.'IS, IJy Ifnited Pre»HtDjibouti, French Somaliland, Sept.24 — The race issue in the Italian-Ethiopian dispute — white againstblack, regardless of nationality—hascau.sed colonial powers in East Africato act drastically to control natives,avowedly sympathetic to Ethiopia, itwas learned today.Fear of trouble has resulted instrengthening of military forces onthe frontiers of British Somaliland,Kenya Colony, Uganda and theSudan, in British territory borderingon Ethiopia, and France has sent adetachment of Senegalese troops toAli Sabiet, last outpost of FrenchSomaliland.Also France has resumed negotia¬tions with Emperor Haile Selassie inhope of sending a company of whiteinfantrymen, due here Monday, toDiredawa to protect the Djibouti-Addis Ababa railway station andmembers of foreign colonies.The race issue is regarded as hav¬ing quietly but plainly been raised re¬cently as Ethiopia conducts a zero-hour rally of its subjects for thearmy.Also precautions have been in-crea.sed in fear that the Coptic Chris¬tian fete of the Cross on Friday maycause demonstrations of coloredsolidarity.The probable date of an Italianattack on Ethiopia seemed near.Rains have about ceased in the low¬lands, according to reports here, andthe ground is drying rapidly. Geneva, Sept. 21—(UP)—Franceand Britain tonight reached a com¬promise on the French plan to en¬courage de facto stabilization of in¬ternational currencies when GeorgesBonnet, French delegate to theLeague assembly’s Economic com¬mission, withdrew the French resolu- ■tion in favor of a more elastic planoffered by Dr. E. L. Burgin ofi Britain.j Burgin’s resolution recommendedI bilateral agreements embodying re-I duction of trade barriers and makingallowances for currency fluctuation,j The resolution might be revisedquickly in the event of serious varia-I tion in currencies of the signatories.It asserted that all governmentsi are seeking eventual restoration ofI the international gold standard, butI suggested that “the various govern-; ments endeavor to encourage morei free trade’’ before attempting rees-! tabli.shment of the gold standard.1 It pointed out that this could bej accomplished by conclusion of bilat¬eral agreements, subject to provision! .should large variation of exchangeI rates occur. Steps could be taken toI revise such an agreement on short; notice.I The League Economic committee! will discuss the resolution Thursday,j It was feared yesterday thatI Britain was attempting to side-stepI the stabilization issue when Burgini turned a cold shoulder to such an of-i fer during a meeting of the I.«ague: assembly’s Economic commission.The French Government had indi¬cated earlier that it favored stabiliza- ;tion, while England asserted that jstabilization should come after the jquestions of war debts and high tar- ■iff walls. England’s attitude was in- Iterpreted as meaning that she would ;not join in any such consideration at jthe present time.The agreement reached today took jon added significance in view of the ipresence in Europe of U. S. Secre- jtary of the treasury Henry Morgen- 'thau Jr., and two other Americantreasury officials. jA recent statement by Morgenthau jcalled to the attention of the world |the fact that Washington would not ;be an obstacle if other nations were Iready to find a basis of international :monetary stabilization. i Member United PressNew StudentsMeet Today inMandel HallPresiedent Greets Classof 1939 to OpenOrientation Week.The master at impaling politi¬cians, dowagers and students on thetilt of his eyebrows, and his righthand. President Hutchins discussing University policy with legal scholarand University Vice President Fred¬eric Woodward in the President’sHarper library office.Plan Week ofSocial EventsParty in I (da Noyes HallClimaxes Rounid ofMixers anid Dances.An extensive program of mixers,'teas, receptions, and dances, spon-'sored by campus organizations, hasbeen crowded into Freshman week jin order to orient entering studentsto the social life of the University, iAs a climax to the social activitiesof Freshman week. Freshmen areinvited to a party to be held ^Fridayevening at 8 in the gym of IdaNoyes hall, under the sponsorshipof the Board of Women’s Org-aniza-tions, headed by Jean Prussing, andthe Student Social Committee,he.’ded by Jack Allen.The committee is planning every-1thing at this dance to afford a maxi-1mum amount of fun to freshmen.Up to 9:30 the dance will be under:the direction of the campus who’s ^who; from then till 12, it is to be i(Continued on page 5)lenator Lewis ShowsSlight ImprovementMoscow, Sept. 24—(UP)—Al-j|ough U, S. Senator J. Hamilton j|iwis, stricken with bronchial pneu-!)nia, showed slight improvement, '?ak heart action tonight led physi-1ins to regard his condition as still ilitical. A crisis w’as expected Thurs- j\y- \iThe infection was not spreading|d his temperature was nearer nor-il but his strength was beingLped gradually. Doctors feared he|ght not have enough reserve en-?y.A Creed for JournaUmbelieve the journalism whichL'ceeds best *** is stoutly inde-|ulent, unmoved by pride of opin-or greed of power, constructive,.‘rant but never careless, self-[itrolled, patient, always respect-of its readers, but always un-|aid; is quickly indignant at injus-is unswayed by the appeal of/ilege or the clamor of the mob;is profoundly patriotic w'hile sin-|ely promoting international good-and cementing world comrade-is a journalism of humanity,ind for today’s world.Walter Williamsl^ate President of the Univer¬sity of Missouri. National CommitteeSeeks Curb on WarWashington, Sept. 24.— (UP) —The National Munitions Controlboard in its first meeting todayagreed upon a list of articles whichmay be considered “arms, munitions,and implements of war.”This list will be submitted toPresident Roosevelt immediately forhis approval and incorporation in apresidential proclamation definingarms, munitions, and implements ofwar under the recently enacted neu¬trality law.Under the new law, after thePresident has issued this proclama¬tion, all manufacturers, importers,or exporters of listed war articlesmust register with the state depart¬ment on or before November 29.After November 29, a separate li¬cense must be obtained for each ship¬ment abroad of an articles named onthe list. Graf Makes Cruise;Swastika Adorns FinFriedrichshafen, Germany, Sept.24—(UP)—The veteran Germandirigible Graf Zeppelin was enroutetonight to South America bearing afreshly-painted Nazi Swa.<itika onits tail fin.College Girls Freed. at Alfred, May SmokeAlfred, N. Y., Sept. 24—(UP) —Permission for Alfred Universityco-eds to smoke in a special recrea¬tion room was granted today by theboard of trustees. Smoking in soror¬ity houses, the Collegiate restaur¬ant or on campus is still forbidden,however. (ill;r imlg flSaraanis going to be an interestingpaper to read during the year.We would like you for one ofits daily readers.SUMMER NEWSwill be tersely reviewed innext Tuesday’s paper, the firstregular issue of the quarter.ETHIOPIANbackground will be presentedin a concise United Press sum¬mary on Wednesday. Look forthese features in®l|p iatly liaronn Phoenix DistributesFreshman Number toNew Students TodayMaking its first appearance of the.school year, Phoenix, campus humormagazine, has come out with a time¬ly freshman number that will bedi.stributed free to all incoming stu¬dents in Mandel hall this morning.Keeping up its reputation forsnappy covers, the new Phoenix pre¬sents a gaily colored cartoon thatmay make the freshmen look slight¬ly askance. Their good will shouldbe quickly regained, however, bytwo of the feature articles in theissue. Gertie the Go-Getter devotesher entire column to some “low-down’’ on certain of the newcomers,and the freshmen get a bit of fa¬therly advice from Bill “Daddy’’ jLang in his article, “A Few KindWords to the Youngies,’’In another leading article, Bill jSherwood, who is now, according to 1Phoenix, in the process of circlingthe globe, becomes the magazine’s“Hong Kong Correspondent.’’ Don¬ald Morris, the new editor, makeshis bow with the customary “InkPot Pourri,’’ and the magazine pre¬sents several of the other usual fea¬tures including “Round Town,’’“Wax and Wave,’’ and a last pagearticle on “Night Life’’ in Chicago. GULLIVERA New Crop Arrives andHere’s WhyA forty week rain of Universitypropaganda inundating the minds ofprospective freshmen has ceased. Andnow the freshmen crop is about tobe planted in University tradition.And being thus, finds itself placedhigh and dry on a mountain of hotair. And Gulliver send out its doveto determine the effect of the rain.In short: we would know whatbrought the freshmen to this Univer¬sity.4:There is this year’s addition to theUniversity’s flourishing Californiacolony. They are the boys who ar¬rive at the University two weeks be¬fore the opening of school. Like theirforefathers who beat a westwardtrail to the California gold fields,these boys follow the same trail east¬ward until it reaches the door of Del¬ta Kappa Epsilon in whose bondthey are predestined to achieve im¬mortality.With the campus walks depopulat¬ed in the two pre-bellum weeks, thereis ample room for the full flourish ofthe Californians swaggering should¬ers, bristling hair, and flapping cor¬duroys. Some times they recoverfrom this phenomenon in three years.How many stars in this year’sgroup?There is new hope for the civilizinginfluence of the University in its ef¬fect on the Pacific coast. There isthis freshman named Hollingshead,for instance. The pride of the SouthGate, Calif., he was granted a scho¬larship to the University of SouthernCalifornia, but decided he wouldrather attend the University of Chi¬cago because of its higher academicstanding.There is another chap who answerspresent when he is present and thename Petersmyer is called. This sun-kissed hero said he came to the Uni-(Continued on page 5)Plan Training Classfor Maroon CandidatesTo train freshmen for the staff ofthe Daily Maroon the Board ofControl will open its annual train¬ing school early in the autumnquarter. Instruction in campusknowledge and University historyand in fundamentals of journalismby members of the Maroon staff andthe faculty and representativesfrom several metropolitan news¬papers will be concentiated so thatfreshmen will be able to do actualMaroon work immediately afterThanksgiving. Announcement of thefirst meeting for interested fresh¬men will appear in the Daily Ma¬roon soon. Student HandbookGoes on Sale TodayThe conveniently vest-pocket sizeStudent Handbook, published an¬nually by Cap and Gown,, goes onsale today at 25 cents a copy.It is divided into four sections:general infoimation, undergraduateactivities, athletics, and memo¬randum. General information in¬cludes the names of the administra¬tive officers of the University, offi¬cers of the divisions and schools, adirectory of the University offices,and similar information helpful tostudents not yet acquainted withthe campus. The section is com¬pleted by a list of churches andtheir locations, and a list of time-honored University traditions.The second section, devoted toundergraduate activities, containsthe names of the campus “who’swho,’’ the rushing rules, Ii.st of fra¬ternities, women’s clubs, and cam¬pus’ publications, and informationon the music and dramatic associa¬tions. The athletic section describesboth men’s and women’s athleticfacilities. The fourth part is amemorandum in the form of adiary, and thus makes the hand¬book serviceable throughout theyear. When the 700 members of theclass of 1939 assemble in Mandelhall for the opening meeting ofFreshman week this morning, theorientation machinery of the Univer¬sity will rapidly get into full swing.The presence of the incoming classin its first official visit to the Mid¬way will provide the initial motiva¬tion necessary to set in motion theelaborate schedule of activities andarrangements that has been drawnup by the University administrationand the Freshman Orientation com¬mittee.Allen to SpeakHeading the list of speakers whowill greet the freshmen at this morn¬ing’s general meeting will be Presi¬dent Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins, who, in addition to his words ofwelcome, is expected to keynote theattitude of the new plan toward un¬dergraduate students at the Univer¬sity. Following the president. JackAllen, chairman of the Student So¬cial committee, will welcome the in¬coming freshmen on behalf of thegeneral body of upperclass students,and George A. Works, dean of Stu¬dents and University Examiner, willdeliver a short address.In the final item on the program,Aaron J. Brumbaugh, dean of Stu-«'dents in the College, who will pre¬side over the meeting, will discuss} the system of faculty advisors to stu-j dents under the topic, “Educationalj Guidance.’’ Further discussion of thenew plan, and particularly of the ed-A good start now will grease the skidsfor a four year run through a maze ofcours\ or parties—work or play—downor up however you choose. We suggestthat you use the facilities offered to helpyou in this start. Keep in mind: fac¬ulty advisers, student counselors, talksto freshmen, parties and mij^rs, athleticdemonstrations, activity teas, tours ofI campus. Read this paper for full infor¬mation.—R. W. N.ucatiojval requirements durimg thefirst two years in the College, willbe held at the dinner for all enter¬ing students and their upperclasscounselors in the Men’s Residencehalls at 6 tonight. Dean Works andDean Brumbaugh will be in chargeof the two sections.Placement Test*The remainder of today’s programwill include placement tests from 10to 12 and 1:30 to 4, to be followedby a tea for all entering women inIda Noyes hall from 4 to 5:30, swim¬ming for men and women in Bart¬lett gymnasium and Ida Noyes pool,respectively, from 4 to 5, and anexhibition tennis match on the var¬sity courts at 58th street and Uni¬versity avenue at 4 :30. This eveningmembers of the administration, in¬cluding President Hutchins, will bein the receiving line to greet enter¬ing students and their parents at theUniversity reception in Ida Noyeshall starting at 8.Similar programs of meetings,athletic activities, and social affairshave been scheduled each day ofFreshman week until Monday, whenthe intensive period of orientationwill be brought to an end. The meet¬ings with faculty advisors and withthe upperclass student counselors,however, which will be started dur¬ing Freshman week, will continuethroughout the autumn quarter andthe remainder of the year. The ex¬act schedule of Freshman week ac¬tivities is printed elsewhre in today’sissue of 'The Maroon.As in previous years, incomingFreshmen are being assisted in theirorientation to the Unversity by vol¬unteer counselors, recruited fromthe three upper classes.Most valuable to the Freshmen is1 the information derived from pei‘-I sonal contact with the counselors.I Questions which arise in the mindsi of the Freshmen can be taken to! their counselors, and confusion is: thus a%‘oided.In addition to private conferences,i there are several group meetings be-! tween the Freshmen and theircounselors, including tonight’s din-I ner./Page Two THE DAILY MAROCW, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 1935 L - ^ V' • • ' "3 ‘^IItalo-Peace HopesFade as DuceMaps Drives(Continued from page 1)compelled to explain ♦^hat there wasa bad misunderstanding—^the Italiandelegation merely had elaboratedupon the Rome rejection of the fivepower group’s offer w’ith a numberof “observations.”f^us the dictator’s “face” w'assaved.It is probable that any peacefulsolution must fail because it wouldinvolve either negation of theLeague’s covenant—by giving Mus¬solini too much—or because it wouldnot preserve il duce’s prestige be¬fore the Fascist populace if it gavehim too little. COMMITTEE FAILSNow Seeks FinalStep; Faces Wariatlg jiaroanFOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published morningrs except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,winter, and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5S31 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 The 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 nr.aterialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $2.75 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the poet office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.RALPH NlCH01,SON, Editor-in-Chief.ROBERT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.RAYMOND IjAHR, Managing Editor.EVERETT STOREY. Advertising Mgr.HENRY P. KELLEY. Desk Editor.JEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Editoria' a-ssociates: Wells Burnette,George Felsenthal, Zenia Goldberg, JulianKLser, George Schustek, James Snyder,Business associates: James Bernard,Don Elliott, Don Patterson, Roy War-sha wsky. Geneva, Sept, 24—(UP)—A five-nation committee named to seek asolution of the Italian-Ethiopian dis¬pute adopted a final report today,confessing failure and throwing theentire dispute back to the Leagueof Nations council.Now the council, after months inwhich it hoped against hope that afriendly solution might be reached,must decide what final steps to taketo avert war and how to deal withwar if it comes.Delegates foresaw six months ofcrisis before it w’ould be possible toliquidate the dispute.The report of the committee offive—Great Britain, France, Poland,Spain and Turkey—will be submit¬ted to the council Thursday morn¬ing. It will say that the committeecan go no further with its work.Diplomats asserted that the coun¬cil must draft some further recom¬mendations which might result in asettlement of the dispute, and thensubmit them to both parties. If HaileSelassie, Ethiopian emperor, acceptsthe terms and Benito Mussolini re¬jects them, Italy would be consid¬ered in violation of the League cov¬enant.England and France, it was un¬derstood, are undecided about theprocedure that the League will fol¬low, It was expected that Sir An¬thony Eden, British minister forLeague of Nations affairs, andPierre Laval, French premier, willdiscuss the situation tomorrow as aresult of the communique issued to¬day in Rome. However, the undoubted personalpopularity of Mussolini throughoutItaly somewhat discounts the accur¬acy of such reports as the Kingprobably will not attempt to thwartthe man who made himself completemaster of the country.Financial circles here say Musso¬lini’s gold reserve is decreasing rap¬idly because of the heavy cost ofthe East African campaign, includ¬ing payment of huge sums of goldfor shipment of his army, food andwar materials through the SuezCanal.PREPARE ARMY Diplomatic Channels Act in Elffortto Avert Imminent. War in .AfricaDEADLOCKSee Italy Hinderedby Internal AffairsParis, Sept. 24 —(UP)—Frenchnewspapers tonight attributed theabrupt slackening of Italy's progresstoward war to a reported clash ofopinion between Premier BenitoMussolini and King Victor Emanueland increasing financial difficulties.The press here gives prominenceto reports that the king has ques¬tioned the wisdom of seizing Ethi¬opia in the face of widesp’-ead in¬ternational opposition. Cabinet Hears Dictator |Reaffirm Italian Stand |I(Copyright, 1935, By United FreM) \Rome, Sept. 24—The Italian cab-'inet heard from Premier BenitoMussolini today what he proposedto do in case of international pen¬alties against Italy, and passed aseries of sweeping measures to pre-!pare the army, navy, and air force ifor the East African campaign.There was nothing in the resultof the meeting to indicate any weak¬ening in Mussolini’s determinationto enforce hs will aganst Ethiopia.For some unannounced reason,the cabinet postponed indefinitelythe test mobilization "of more than10,000,000 Fascist men, women,and children, which had been settentatively for tonight.The cabinet’s communique deniedItaly had made counter-proposals tothe League of Nations after reject¬ing the proposals of the League’sconciliation committee of five lastSaturday.After announcing that the cab¬inet had adopted various internalmeasures connected directly withthe East African campaign, the com- Diplomatic channels in Europeduring the past weeks have beenhumming with activity designed toevolve a peace plan which will stopthe seemingly inevitable Italo-Ethio¬pian conflict. The United Press yes¬terday reported these developmentsin the situation:Rome—Mussolini tells cabinet whathe will do if nations apply penaltiesto Italy. Cabinet votes sweepingmeasures to prepare army, navy, andair force for East African campaign.Italian test mobilization cancelled.Britain reassures Italy her fleet movement is not aggressiv'e.Italian troops and war suppliescontinue to pour into Africa.Geneva—Committee of five admitsfailure to settle dispute and throwsproblem back in lap of council.London—British cabinet holds fullformal meeting for first time in morethan a month, coinciding with Italiancabinet meeting.Berlin—Germany intends to re¬main neutral, responsible officialsays.Djibouti—Colonial authorities actto restrain natives, fearing “Blackversus white” movement. Tensethat Germany could gain nothing byaligning herself with either partici¬pant in the quarrel in East Africa.BRITISH CABINETmunique said:“Premier Mussolini afterwardsexamined possible developments inthe situation on the basis of certainarticles of the (League) Covenant |and the attitude Italy would adopt junder the circumstances.” IThe text of the section of the jcommunique dealing with the League jfollows: j“Premier Mussolini made a briefreport on the political situationfrom Saturday until today. Musso-;lini said Italy had not presented Icounter-proposals to Geneva butonly verbally exposed his motives |for finding the proposals of the icommittee of five inacceptable.“All that has occurred from Sat-,urday to today has proved that the iattitude of the Italian government!could not have been different. iPremier Mussolini afterwards ex¬amined possible developments in the jsituation on the basis of certain ar-1tides of the Covenant and the atti- itude Italy would adopt under thecircumstances.” GERMANY NEUTRALBudding Friendship withEngland Seen as Cause(Copyrittht, 1935, By United Press)Berlin, Sept. 24.—Germany is un¬likely to take sides in the dispute be¬tween Italy and Ethiopia which nowis disturbing the chancelleries of Eu¬rope, in the opinion of statesmen in aposition to forecast probable foreignpolicy.Rigorous maintenance of a neutralattitude, well-informed circles say, isthe logical compliment of buddingAnglo-German friendship, as reflect¬ed in the recent agreement betweenLondon and Berlin, in which the re¬spective strengths of the British andGerman navies was fixed to the satis¬faction of both countries.With the possibility of hostilitiesbetween Ethiopia and Italy loominglarger every hour, the Reich’s desirenot to be dragged into that conflict isbecoming steadily more apparent.The opinion is freely expressed Meets and ApprovesStand on Ethiopian CaseLondon, Sept. 24—(UP)—TheBritish cabinet met today and unani¬mously approved Britain’s course inthe Ethiopian dispute, includingBritain’s stand at (Jeneva for com¬plete enforcement of the League cov¬enant.The cabinet, after hearing a sum¬mary by Sir Samuel Hoare, Foreign.secretary, of all action to date, rati¬fied the steps taken.It approved a decision to continueBritain’s policy on the lines previous¬ly announced, including Hoare’sspeech at Geneva in support of theCovenant.Improvement of its Italo-Britishrelations was anticipated as the re¬sult of diplomatic maneuvering. Yes¬terday at Rome, Sir Eric Drummond,Ambas.sador to Italy, delivered amessage to Mussolini from Hoareasserting that there was no reasonfor a quarrel between the two coun¬tries. It was hoped here that the un¬derstanding between il duce and theForeign office would perhaps helpthings at Geneva.Germans to Re-interBody of HindenburgBerlin, Sept. 24—(UP)—Body ofthe late President Paul Von Hinden¬burg will be transferred ceremon¬iously into its final resting place atthe Tannenberg monument October2, the Field Marshal’s 88th birthdayanniversary, it was announced to¬day.ANINVITATIONtoFRESHMENYou are cordially invited to visit the book store thathas been serving University students—Faculty and Executives forforty years.•You will see one of the largest stacks of Universitybooks, stationery, students suppliesand typewriters.•You are welcome to “browse” as much as you like—and incidentally—we hope you will avail your¬selves of the many public services offeredthe students by this store.WOODWORTH’S BOOK STOREOPEN EVENINGS 1311 E. 57th St.2 Blocks East of Mandel HallUSED AND NEW TEXTBOOKS By means of the United Press, withcorrespondents in all parts of the world,The Daily Maroon is bringing to the cam¬pus fresh, unbiased up-to-the-minute for¬eign news.The Daily Maroon is edited by a gener¬ation of young men and women who donot want war, and who lend efforts forinternational harmony.This presentation of foreign news inMaroon columns utilizes the best ma¬terial available to the editors, who solicityour subscription to their efforts. Each morning The Daily Maroon findsits way around the Quadrangles. It is onsale at the newstand at Cobb hall, in theCoffee Shop, bookstore, college library,the Reynolds club, Ida Noyes hall, andthe Maroon office.A subscription for the school yearcosts $2.75.The paper can be delivered to you ifyou live on campus, or you can get themorning’s news at one of the central pick¬up stations.For full information see the Maroonsalesmen.THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25. 1935 Page ThreeELEVENTH MEMBEROF CHICAGO FAMILYENTERS UNIVERSITYRobert Sass Follows LongLine of Relativesat MidwayWhen the 44th freshman class toenter the University comes to theMidway for the opening: of Fresh¬man Week today, it will include inits numbers the 11th member of afamily which has been in constantattendance at the University almosttwo-thirds of the time since it wasfounded in 1892.The Sass family, of Chicaffo, isthe one which can claim the Uni¬versity almost exclusively as itsAlma Mater, and the 11th Sass, whoenters this year as one of the 700members of the class of 1939, isRobert Sass, Westchester, Illinois.He is a jfraduate of Morgan ParkMilitary academy, and has been outof school for a year prior to matri¬culating at the University this fall.Louis Sass, an uncle of the pres¬ent Robert, was the first of hisgeneration of Sasses to come to theMidway, entering the first year ofthe University’s existence, 1892,and continuing to 1896. FrederickSass, another uncle, was in enroll¬ment during the years 1895-1901;Edith R. Shaeffer, an aunt, from1897-1901; George Sass, Robert’sfather, 1901-1907; Wila Sass, andaunt, around 1908; and DorothySass, another aunt, who took a fewcourses in 1908 and again in 1931.For a .span of about 16 years,there were no members of the fam¬ily at the University until theyounger generation made its appear¬ance in 1924 in the person of LouiseLanphear, a cousin. Prom 1924 un¬til the present time, with the excep¬tion of the years 1925 and last year,there have been members of theSass family as students on the Mid¬way continuously. Frederick SassJr., another cousin, was a studentfrom 1926 to 1932, Louis Carl Sass,also a cousin, from 1928 to 1932,and Margaret .McClintock, likewise acousin, from 1931-1933.The Sasses are not the only fam¬ily which have sent their children ofthe second generation back to theUniversity. According to figurescompiled by the Alumni office, ap¬proximately 11 per cent of the newfreshman cla.ss are children ofalumni. This percentage comparesfavorably with that of many easternschools which were founded manyyears prior to the establishment ofthe University.STUDENTS REGISTERFOR ORCHESTRA, BANDNew and old members interested injoining the band or orchestra thisyear may register any time duringF'reshman week from 9 to 12, and 1to 5, at the Music building, 5727 Uni¬versity avenue.Harold Bachman, a nationallyknown figure in the music world, willbe the new band director. He takesthe place of Howard Mort, formerdirector. Carl Bricken, who is chair¬man of the department of Music willconduct the orchestra.It's an old, old prob¬lem, but once you'vetried Younker's . . .we doubt if you’llconsider it a problemany longer.Complete Luncheon 35^^Complete Dinner.. 65^RESTAURANTS51 E. Chicago Ave.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.SOI DavU Street, EvanttonIways Delightfully Cool I G&vemment Aidto Help FinanceNeedy StudentsA part-time employment programfor students needing financial aidwill be undertaken this year ^by theUniversity under federal authoriza¬tion. This program will unable stu¬dents to support themselves duringthe entire school year.All students interested are urgedto go to the placement bureau inCobb hall at once and receive anapplication for a position under theNational Youth Administration. Un¬dergraduate students may earn onthe average of $15 a month, gradu¬ate students with a Master’s degree$20 per month, and graduate stu¬dents at the Doctor’s level, $30 permonth. The jobs will be similar tothose of the FERA of last year, cov-eing many projects of various typesin all the divisions. There are 531positions available and applicantsare to be selected on the basis oftheir financial need, character, andability to do college or universitywork.The application form asks foreducational, personal, financial, andexperience data. All students mustgive two references and under¬graduates must have the affidavitof the parent or guardian, completedbefore the application can be ac¬cepted. No per.son is eligible forregistration unless he is carrying aminimum of two courses. Jobs willbe awarded as soon after the open¬ing of school as possible. ANNOUNCE COMPLETELIST OF AWARDS TOINCOMING STUDENTSORIENTATION GROUPUSES GREEN TAGSTO MARK FRESHMENj That fre.shmen must be recognized; as such in order to be effectively ori¬ented, says the Orientation commit-; tee, is a self-evident fact. Of course,most of us are inclined to wonderhow anyone so far advanced as acounselor could mistake the novicesfor anything else. But then we areforgetting that some upperclassmen'are not as observant as the majority,and thus are not able to distinguishfrom the mournful countenance of afreshly jilted upperclassman,the bewildered look of a greenhornSo, (purely as a matter of con¬venience. we are told) the augustcommittee in charge of advising thenewly-arrived plans to distribute toall freshmen cleverly contrived tagsin a beautiful shade of emeraldgreen. The significance of this color,we assume, is purely patriotic Irish,at least we were not informed to thei contrary. For those rebellious mem¬bers of the class of ’39 who may ob-1 ject to being branded, a special honorusually restricted to only the mostfamous (or infamous) seniors will' be extended; namely a refreshingthough somewhat compulsory dip inthe Botany pond. Our advice to, freshman is to wear the little tags! —they’re not .so bad. Anyway, theirpartners in crime, the counselors, willhave a little tag all their own—ofcanary yellow, which is really not |nearly as pretty as green.PREPARE CARDS FORACTIVITY CHOICES.\ctivity cards, issued by the Dean)f Students’ office, will be given toill freshmen at the B. W. 0, lunch-;on for women and the generalneeting for men Monday.These cards, adapted from a formn use at the University of Michigan,vill put the entering student intocontact with the activity group invhich he is interested.The cards will be filed in tjie Dean)f Students office, where they will)e available to any student. Committee Grants Over 170Two-Year, Full, HalfScholarshipsAnnouncement of the completelist of two-year and one-year schol¬arship awards to entering studentshas been made by Aaron J. Brum¬baugh, Dean of Students in theCollege, for the Committee onScholarships.Thirty-four freshmen receivedscholarships covering tuition fortwo years, and thirty-nine freshmenwere the recipients of one-yearawards. In addition to these, approx¬imately 100 scholarships grantinghalf tuition for the first year wereawarded by the committee.Students from the Chicago areareceiving two-year scholarshipswere: Marjorie Consuelo Hamilton,Senn high school; William E. Bert-hoff, Hirsch high school; James Dav-ran, Hyde Park high school; Ed¬ward R. Gercas, Englewood; MartinD. Miller, Morgan Park; William B.Neal Jr., Oak Park and River Forest;Philip Wehner, Maine Township;and Lewis R. Miller, Harvard School.Other two-year winners are DonThomann, East Moline, Ill.; Alan H.Tully, Gland Island, Nebraska; PaulKreuger, Gary; Harvey L. Lawson,Fort Madison, Iowa; George E.Probst, Long Beach, California;Harris G. Beck, Decaur, Illinois;Clifford Gramer, Wyanet, Illinois;Jack Mullins, Salem, Ohio; John R.Van de Water, Long Beach; Mar¬shall Burch, Muncie, Indiana; JamesR, Yerger, Biloxi, Mississippi; HarryB. Lane, Omaha; Robert E. Ca.ssels,Hinsdale, Illinois; Robert E. Meyer,Hinsdale; Harold M. Bondhus, Be-resford. South Dakota; John Wil¬liams Busby; Roy E. Deadman,Fairbury, Nebraska; Robert Drury,Wa.shin^on, D. C.; Arthur Edwards,Sparta, Wisconsin; Frederick B.Emery, Seneca, Kansas; NormanHollingshead, Southgate, California;Joseph Jeremy, Salt Lake City; Lin-wood Johnson, Logan, West Vir¬ginia; William Phelps Kent, Spo¬kane; Francis H. Perry, Rork, Neb¬raska; and Clyde Emil Shepherd Jr.,Oakwood township, Illinois.The list of one-year scholarshipholders includes the following stu¬dents from the Chicago area: Clem¬entine Van der Schaegh, Hyde Parkhigh school; Laura Bergquist, Engle¬wood; Ellenor Kieth Greene, Hirsch;Byron Burrwood Hyink, Emerson;Norman M. Kaplan, Austin; AudreyL. Neff, Englewood; Alice MaryBright, Thornton township; HarrietNelson, Deerfield-Shields; MarjorieWhitney, Riv'erside-Brookfield; Wal¬ter J. Fehr; Stephen Stephanchev;Evangeline Jouras, Austin; KathleenE. McCamant; Alice J. Montgomery,Calumet; Marjorie Ryser, Hirsch.The remaining scholarship win¬ners include: Judson Wells Allen,Owatonna, Minnesota; Rachel E.Anderson, Topeka; Harold W. Miles,Terre Haute; Elizabeth A. Mont¬gomery, Rock Island; David D.Thompson, Columbus, Ohio; BettyJa»e Watson, Rocky River, Ohio;Anna Bess Wehman, Moline; WalterE. Wolff, Cerro Gordo township,Illinois; Ralph G. Noble, Detroit;Charlotte M. Sawdey, Rockford;Esther Schaeffer, Flint, Michigan;Wilbert H, Urry, Salt Lake City;Evelyn H. van Emden, WichitaF’alls, Texas; Bernice L. van Horn;Kenneth Osborn Jr., La Porte, In¬diana; Robert H. Harlan, Freeport,Illinois; Charlotte Richards, Ports¬mouth, Ohio; Richard E. Wheeler,Los Angeles; Josephine L. Stanley,Buffalo; Eugene M. Wolkhoff, Deca¬tur, Michigan; Harry Q. Peters-meyer, Los Angeles; and John R.Bonniw'ell and David F. Rogers, Mt.Carmel, Illinois. Fraternities Continue DeferredPledging: Recommend ChangeThe deferred pledging system ofrushing will be continued this year.The executive committee of the In¬terfraternity council has recom¬mended that Article II, Section I oflast year’s rushing rules be amend¬ed to permit fraternities to enter¬tain freshmen during the fall quar¬ter at three open houses rather thanat five luncheons. Final action onthis point will be taken soon by theInterfraternity council. In otherrespects, last year’s rushing rules,which follow, will be unchanged.Article IRushing shall be defined as anyact whereby a fraternity (alumni,active members, or pledges) shallarrange by appointment to meet afreshman, or shall have social func¬tions at which freshman may beentertained, or shall expend moneyfor the entertainment of a manother than in a casual informal man¬ner.Article IIAfter matriculation freshmen maybe rushed only upon the occasionsprescribed in the following. Thenames of all freshmen entertainedupon these occasions must be re¬ported within 24 hours to the Exec¬utive committee.Section 1A fraternity may have five lun¬cheons, from 12 to 2 o’clock atwhich freshmen may be entertainedduring the fall quarter. No other oc¬casions will be permitted.The following restrictions shallapply:a. No more than three housesshall be allowed to entertain upona single day from Monday throughFriday.b. Each fraternity may haveonly one luncheon date during thefall quarter with the same freshman.c. No fraternity shall be permit¬ted to have an engagement the firstweek or the last week of the fallquarter.Section 2Each fraternity may have twoluncheons from 12 to 2 o’clock andthree open house periods during thewinter quarter, previous to the rush¬ing period, at which freshmen maybe entertained. No other occasionsshall be permitted.The following restrictions shallapply:a. No fraternity shall be per¬mitted to entertain the same fresh¬man at a luncheon more than onceduring the first five weeks of thewinter quarter. This restrictionshall not apply in the case of anopen house.b. No fraternity shall be per¬mitted to have a luncheon engage¬ment during the first week of thewinter quarter.c. Each fraternity may haveperiods of open house the second,fourth, and sixth Sundays of thewinter quarter, from 5 to 10:30.Article IIIA period of open rushing shallcommence on Thursday of the sixthw’eek of the winter quarter andshall continue until its conclusion at10:30 on the subsequent Wednesdayevening. The exact dates shall be ar¬ranged by the fraternities with thefreshmen by mail.a. Rushing invitations shall notbe sent out before Wednesday af¬ternoon at 5 of the fifth week ofthe winter quarter.b. Each day except Sunday shall ibe divided into three periods: name-jly, luncheon, 12-2; dinner, 6-8:30; |evening, 8:30-10:30. On Sunday]there shall be one period of open jhouse from 5 till 10:30. |c. No more than one engage-1ment with any single fraternity shalloccur on the same day.d. Until a_ freshman is officiallypledged in the manner hereinafterdescribed, he shall not enter intoany agreement or promise concern¬ing a pledge.e. After the close of the rushingRegister at Reader’s“The Campus Drug Store*’THE COLLEGE ROOMFeaturing• Luncheon Service.• Toiletries and Drugs• Every Student Need.Opposite Burton Ct. Free Campus Phone 9 period at 10:30 on Wednesday eve¬ning and until the announcement ofpledges, there shall be no contact bythe fraternity with any of therushees.Article IVAll pledging shall be done in thefollowing manner:a. By midnight of Thursday ofthe seventh week, the fraternityshall present to the Dean of Stu¬dents a list of names, in order ofpreference of the men it is willingto pledge.b. Between the hours of 9 to 12on Thursday morning of the seventhweek of the winter quarter, a fresh¬man who is eligible shall register (inthe office of the Dean of Students)in order of preference the names oftwo fraternities from which hewould accept a pledge.c. No later than the followingday both parties shall be notified oftheir respective agreements by theoffice of the Dean of Students.d. If by noon of Thursday of theseventh week of the winter quartera freshman does not express his de¬sire to join a fraternity, he will notbe permitted to pledge a fraternityuntil after the last day of the springquarter.Article VAny student with three quartershere or elsewhere may be rushed atany time during the school year.All other students may be rushedand pledged only at times herein de¬scribed and in the prescribed man¬ner.Article VIEach freshman shall be respons¬ible for seeing that these rushingrules are carried out with respectto himself under the penalty of be¬ing denied by the Dean of Studentsthe privilege of being pledged eitherto the offending fraternity or anyother fraternity.The Executive committee of theInterfraternity council in conjunc¬tion with the representative of theDean of Students shall con.sider allalleged violations of these rules anddetermine the appropriate actions tobe taken.These rules will be enforced withno exceptions or privileges. MODIFY RUSHINGREGULATIONS FORWOMEN’S CLURSList New Rules PermittingPledging in FallQuarterRushing regulations for thewomen’s clubs have been modifiedthis year to permit pledging in thefall quarter. The new rules are asfollows:1. One summer tea may be heldbefore F'reshman Week.2. There is to be no rushing dur¬ing Freshman Week (beginning Sep¬tember 25) and the first two weeksof the autumn quarter (ending Oc¬tober 12).3. During the open rushingperiod which begins on Sunday ofthe third week of the quarter (Oc¬tober 13) and ends on Saturday ofthe seventh week (November 16)the following dates may be made:a) Two teasb) One Dutch treat luncheonc) One partyDuring the week of intensive rush¬ing which begins on Sunday of theeighth w’eek of the autumn quarter(November 17) and ends at mid¬night on the following Saturday(November 23) the following datesmay be made. As four dates only,including the final dinner, will bepermitted this week, the type ofevent is optional. A suggested ar¬rangement is:a) One teab) One luncheonc) One informal partyd) F'inal dinner5. More than two members ofthe same club in company withrushees shall be interpreted as rep¬resenting the club.6. Absolute silence is to be main¬tained between club girls andrushees during the week of inten¬sive rushing, except at the four of¬ficially scheduled functions of theweek.7. Girls entering the Universityany other quarter than the autumnmay be pledged after the seventhweek of that quarter.FIELD’S... For CampusClothesClassic clothes . . . casual as a coke date and justas important. Warm, soft sweaters in glowingshades. Skirts with loads of swank. Swaggeringtopcoats. Adorable wool dresses. Knits with aknack of considering your huilget, yet looking hand-done. They’re all here . . . concentrated for youin one spot . • . Field’s Sports Room. It’s ahaven for fashionahles and h(.avc.n for (o-( ds.SPORTS ROOMSixth Fhntr, Middle. If abashI100% cashmere slipover sweaterin green, rust, navy, royal hlue^or natural. $5.50. A matching jcardigan is $6.95 ^"BThe w ool skirt is equally smart Iin black or navy. $5.95 ^IMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANYPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEiDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 1935University’s Growth Realizes Harper’s DreamForty-three years apo, when Wil¬liam Rainey Harper was asked tospeak about the struggrling youngUniversity which he was heading, hecharacterized it as “another type—differing essentially from the col¬lege of historical character.—It will,so far as man can tell, develop alonglines essentially different from thosefollowed by other institutions ofthis qountry and of foreign coun¬tries,”The University of Chicago’s firstpresident spoke with far-seeing vis¬ion when he uttered those words.For the University has consistentlydeveloped along “essentially differ¬ent” lines. From the first, whenHarper startled the academic worldby paying his top professors an an¬nual salary of $7000 and by enlist¬ing the aid of nine other universitypresidents to serve under him,through the widening of the conven¬tional college curriculum by his suc¬cessors, and finally to the entire re¬organization of the educational sys¬tem culminating in the “new plan”of higher education under PresidentRobert Maynard Hutchins, the Uni¬versity has always been a leader inthe educational world.In 1886 the old Chicago Univer¬sity, founded in 1857 by StephenDouglas, succumbed to financialdifficulties. Six years later the newUniversity of Chicago was founded,like the older one, as a Baptist in¬stitution. John D. Rockefeller, whohad contributed $600,000 of the ini¬tial million-dollar endowment fund,was interested in a man born in asmall Ohio town, educated in a one-horse college, and who was at thattime teaching Semitic languages atYale. Bcause of his Baptist and mid¬west connections, William RaineyHarper was chosen by the oil million¬aire as the proper man to head hisnew institution.Harper Selects Facultyof Well-Known ScholarsHarper imdediately began togather about him a brilliant arrayof scholars to form his new faculty.Besides the nine university presi¬dents, there came such well-knownand talented figures as ThomasCrowder Chamberlin, the geologist;Albert Abraham Michelson, Nobelprize winning physicist; Ernest De-Witt Burton, New Testament schol¬ar who becme the third president ofthe University; Eliakim HastingsMoore, mathematician; John M.Coulter, Botanist; and Charles O.Whitman, biologist. Amos AlonzoStagg, also of Yale, came to thelittle mid-west college not only asits football coach, but as the quarter¬back of its team as well. Thus inOctober, 1892, the University ofChicago opened, with the man at itshelm who was later to be the “flash¬ing comet in the western sky of the |universe of learning.” jThe site of the campus in 1892 jwas fixed by a gift of ten acres of |land by Marshall Field, The site waslocated on Ellis avenue between ;56th and 57th streets. At that time Ithe whole southern section of thecity was undrained, marshy land;iand the campus of the new Univer- :sity resembled more a swamp than ia beautiful gothic community. Thefirst, and only, buildings in that ifirst year were Cobb hall and the idormitories immediately adjoiningit to the south. However, there was Ialready a plan for the future addi- ;tions to the physical plant, and while ,it has not been followed to the let¬ter, the pre.sent University looks re- jmarkably like that envisioned in thedrawing made in 1892, and which !now hangs on the first floor wall of jCobb hall. It will be interesting to First President Sought to DevelopDifferent Type of College! trace the development of physical1 plant, always keeping apace with thedevelopment of the curricular uni¬versity,I From 1892 on, buildings were be-i ing erected continually on the cam¬pus. Wealthy individuals were ever{ generous in their gifts to the Uni-i versity, and it is not too much to say1 that constructon activities have nev¬er stopped, even to the present day.' In the first quarter century of itsj growth more than ten thousand per-I sons contributed to the funds of theI University. The Rockefeller familyArthur H. ComptonNobel prize winner in physics. Worldrenowned as discoverer of cosmicrays, and a worthy successor to an¬other Chicago Nobel winner, AlbertA. Michelson.I alone contributed more than thirty' million dollars, while Martin Ryer-I son, Hobart Williams, MarshallField, Julius Rosenwald, HelenCulver, and Mrs. Emmons Blaine, donated amounts ranging from five-j hundred thousand to two millionI dollars. And these were only thei largest of the ten thousand con-I tributors.I Much of Original Programj Survives in Present * Planj A comparison of the departmentsi and courses in 1892 and an up-to-date time schedule would give anI adequate picture of the growth ofi the curricular university. The orig-j inal plan of President Harper divid-; ed the University into three generaldivisions; the Univesity proper, theUniversity extension, and the Uni¬versity Publicaton work. The Uni¬versity proper was to include Acad¬emies, Colleges, Affiliated Colleges,and Schools. The colleges were toinclude the Colleges of Liberal Ar*ts,Science, Ltierature, and PracticalArts. The Schools were to includethose in graduate work. Divinity,Law, Engineering, Pedagogy, FineArts, and Music. The UniversityExtension was to include lecturecourf-es in the evening, night school,and a correspondence school. It isnow the University college. Thepresent curriculum is familiar to all.A comparison of the growth caneasily be made.The far-seeing genius of Presi¬dent Harper still lives, however, inspite of the tremendous changes, formany of the specific '.features, aswell as much of the bl’oad outline,of the original program still survivein the present plan. Harper livedlong enough to see the Universityenter into a gi’eat period of expan¬sion, but not long enough to see thefull blossoming of his dreams. His<►WELCOME STUDENTSGladstone Hotel62nd St. and Kenwood Ave.An ideal location and home for Uni¬versity students and Professors. Only5 minutes from the Campus.Rates as low as $20.00 per monthCAFTERIA DINING ROOMHyde Park 4100Roland Lakin, Res. Mgr. . untimely death, in 1906, “marked! the end of an era in the University’s, life,” says Dr. Thomas W. Good-speed in his “History of the Univer¬sity of Chicago.” It was the end ofthe era of early development andgrowth.From President Harper’s deathuntil the present time, four menhave followed as president of theUniversity. Dr. Harper’s immediatesuccessor, Harry Pratt Judson, filledthe office from 1907 to 1923. Hewas followed by Ernest DeWitt Bur¬ton from 1923 until 1925. Max Ma¬son served until 1928, and in 1929Robert Maynard Hutchins becamethe youngest university president inthe country.University Has ElxpandedScholastically and PhysicallyLet us trace the growth of thephysical plant of the University.From the humble start of Cobb halland the adjacent dormitories, theUniversity eaidy began to stragglearound what is now called the Cir¬cle. The buildings were all of uni¬form style, modified Gothic, with theexception of a few buildings such asIngleside, Ellis, and Greenwoodhalls. At about 1905 there was ascattering of buildings taking uptwo square blocks from Ellis to Uni¬versity (then Lexington), and from57th to the Midway.As the years went by, the emptyholes and gaps were filled in withother Gothic structures, making thesolid mass of buildings that nowgreets the eye. More recent addi¬tions to these groups, those build¬ings that sprung up in the large ex¬pansion of the late 20’s, are Eckhartand Jones laboratories, which, addedto Ryerson and Kent laboratories,give the University a “laboratoryrow” which is world famous. Rosen¬wald hall, on the south side of theCircle, provides a home for the Ge¬ography department, while Swifthall and Bond chapel provide a;|»omefor the Divinity school. iAt first, the Midway, scene theColumbian Exposition a year-^fterthe University opened, was paifjallyforgotten. The building of HarperMemorial Library, immediately fol¬lowing the first president’s death,made way for the expansion on theMidway. Wiebolt hall and the So¬cial Science group filled in the solidline along the Midway. Later theEducation group was built at theMidway and Kenwood, and more re¬cently International house at DoiChester. The first step across theMidway was accomplished with thecompletion of the men’s dormitoriesa few years ago.The north side of the Midway wasagain the scene of building activitywith the erection of the Medical modern athletic plants in the coun-trj\ Supplemented by the olderBartlett gym^ and by the many play¬ing fields, it gives adequate oppor¬tunity for all types of athletics.The University has always beena pioneer in the fields of researchand education. The spirit of investi¬gation has produced the planetesim-al hypothesis of the origin of theearth; the Oriental Institute, thegreatest archaeological organizationin the world; the discovery of a newanasthetic; and the basic studieswhich led to the discovery of insul¬in, These are merely a few high¬lights.English scholars must come toChicago to study Chaucer, as theUniversity has the most completecollection of information concerningthat author and his works in exist¬ence. It was at the University, too,that sociology was established as ascience. Here is found the social sci¬ence capital of the nation today. Asignificant sidelight of the brilliantsocial science work being done at theUniversity is that a most importantgroup of semi-governmental bureausdealing in public administration andgovernmental problems has been set \up as the Public AdministrationClearing House at 58th and Drexel. jWithin the last few years innum- William Rainey Har¬per (1S56-1906) waxthe first President ofthe University. He en¬tered Muskingum Col¬lege in Ohio at theage of ten, was grad¬uated from there, andbefore he was 19 hadreceived his Ph. I),degree from Yale.After holding a posi¬tion at Morgan ParkAcademy (affiliatedwith) the Universityat one time) Harperrefused to head theold University (in1886 and returned toYale as professor ofSemitic languages.A brilliant scholarand a genuine leaderin education. Harper,on Feb. 16. 1891, ac¬cepted the presidencyof John D. Rockefel¬ler's new school onthe Midway. Conceiv¬ed as a “small mid-western Baptist col¬lege" Harper at oncestarted building agreat university.V iI'/Uhl, '■'’’4/Men’s DormitoriesFirst advance of University south ofthe Midway. Built by donutiom ofRosenwald family, second largestdonors to University.group. Thi.s group alone is larger inarea than many colleges of the coun¬try.Thought by many to be the mostbeautiful building on the campus, isthe University chapel. Toweringabove all other buildings, the chapelis a source of inspiration to studentsO'f all denominations. It houses thesecond largest carillon in the coun¬try, and each year thou.sands of vis¬itors come to hear the concerts andto see the simple beauty of the in¬terior.Worshippers of athletics, too,have benefitted from the expansionof the University. The fieldhou.se,farthest north of any of the Univer¬sity buildings, offers one of the most i erable University scholars have beenloaned to city, state, and federalgovernments to assist the rehabilita-I tion of our political systems. The di-; rector of research of the President’s: research Committee on Recent So-I cial Trends a few years ago was aUniversity faculty member, as wasalso the vice-chairman of the .same! committee. One faculty member isa state senator, another is amba.s.sa-dor to Germany, several of the more, important advisors of the Presidentin Washington are University grad¬uates.Organizes $1,500,000 Schoolof Graduate Elducation.Always a pioneer in education, theI University a few years ago providedI $1,500,000 to build the GraduateI Education building and to supportOne of country’s foremost physiolog- I the study of educational problems.ists. Made basic experiments leading In connection with the school of edu-to the discovery of insulin. i cation, the University maintains theAnton J. Carlton laboratory schools, the Universityhigh school, elementary school, andkindergarten.Sketchy as this history is, it gives.some glimmering of the tremendousaccomplishment that has transform¬ed a near-swamp into one of themost outstanding educational insti¬tutions in the United Staes. It hasgrown from a student body of 594to one of 14,500; the faculty has in¬creased from 120 to nearly 900; theendowment from one million dollarsto more than one-hundred millions.But this remarkable record of ma¬terial and educational growth is notyet closed, for each year new dis¬coveries, new theories and new ex¬periments mark the growth of theone-time small Baptist college. TheUniversity of Chicago still carrieson the dreams of iLs first President,it is a universty of “another type.”George FelsenthalHERE IS ONE CAMPUS TRADITIONTHAT YOU ARE SURE TO OBSERVEOF YOUR OWN FREE WILLYear after year the Maid-Rite Shops maintain theirwell earned reputation for fine food. The same air ofcordiality which won them a place among the tradition¬al institutions of the Midway still prevails for you to en¬joy.Whatever the hour of the day or night you are sureto find at least one of your friends on deck ready to joinyou in any thing from a milk-shake to a steak dinner.LUNCHES 25 & 35 centsDINNERS 40 Cr 50 centsThe Maid-Rite Shops, Inc.Where College Students Meet and Eat1309 E. 57th St. 1320 E. 57th St.fwy 1'TT' "I"Ml* •#kp^:;*Wl^''•^W^■THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 1935 Page FiveThe Green Caps which in other years adorned the heads of wide-eyedfrosh are a thing of the past and with this quaint means of identificationgone a freshman is more frequently ignored than noticed.In recent years it has been pointed out that entering freshmen are men¬tally more mature than formerly. But, perhaps the most noticeable differ¬ence between freshmen then and now can be accounted for by a greatadvancement in tastes.Entering freshmen are often as “style conscious” as seasoned upper¬classmen. They mingle with their fellow students in the class rooms, atthe football games or at University social affairs as fashionably attired asmany a polished senior.Conformity to university customs and observance of university tradi¬tions is expected of every student, but no less important to a successfuluniversity career is the conformity to campus modes of dress and the ob¬servance of fashion decrees.The same sophomores, juniors and seniors who acquaint you withthe customs and traditions of the Midway will direct you toMARSHALL FIELD & COMPANYFor CORRECT Campus FashionsNON-STARTERSAVOID ANNOYANCE...GET THE PEN OF THE DAY-4^Watermaoi’s-AND A PEN THAT HASTO BE SHAKEN TO MAKEjT^,,WRITE-THAT DIS¬TURBS CONCENTRATIONWHEN YOU NEED IT MOSTUSEWATERMAN’SINKPlan Busy Week of T^MIMX/CDSocial Events During ^ U LLI V L K*"Orientation Program i (Continued from page i >(Continued from page 1)turned over to freshmen.Rea Keast, Hospitaller of Black-friars will be master of ceremonies.Novelty dances, such as a “lightsout” and a prize dance will keepthe freshmen entertained. One ofthe features of the evening will bean exhibition by Rea Keast andNathan Krevitsky of their dancefrom last year’s Blackfriars show,“In Brains We Trust.” Then, at9:30, the winners of the prize dancewill lead a grand march.On the afternoon of the first dayof Freshman orientation, the Y. W.C. A. will be host at a tea from 4 to5 for freshman women in the Y. W.C. A. room of Ida Noyes. Then at8 that evening there is the tradi¬tional President’s reception for allentering students and their parents.This will be held in Ida Noyes halland will be under the direction ofthe Marshal of the University andthe College Aides and Marshals.In the receiving line at the recep¬tion will be President Hutchins,Vice-president Woodward, MissShelly, the new director of IdaNoyes hall. Dean and Mrs. GeorgeAllen W’orks, and Dean and Mi-s.Aaron J. Brumbaugh. After thefreshmen have pas.sed down this re¬ceiving line they will be introducedby the Aides and Marshals to theirfaculty advisors who will be as¬sembled in the lounge.There will be dancing in theCloister club immediately after thereception, and punch will be served.Officiating at the punch bowls willbe faculty wives, who are mothers ofincomintr students.F'rom 1 to 5 Thursday afternoonthe W. A. A. will hold an openhouse for both men and women inthe trophy gallery on the secondfloor of Ida Noyes. The program willconsist of informal games andsports. On the same afternoon theIda Noyes auxiliary and advisorycouncil is sponsoring an informaltea dance in the theater of IdaNoyes.A buffet .supper will be served at6 on Friday in the Cloister club. Itis being sponsored by the StudentSocial committee and the Board ofWomen’s Organizations, and ticketsfor it are to be purcha.sed by thestudents.On Saturday afternoon at 4 there versity because he believed that aCalifornian’s outlook would be broad¬ened by contact with Midwesternpersonalities. I vote for Carl Sand¬burg. Another chap betrayed the in¬sidious (if we may borrow the workback, Mr. Hutchins) effect of UptonSinclair when he said that he cameto the University because of its repu¬tation for political integrity which heconstrued to be synonomous with lib¬eralism. He plays football, too.* * *Then there is the U. High gang.These are the post war children.Sophisticates even w-hen they wereembryos. There is a lady who an- jswers to the name of Huffaker w'howas introduced to one Bill Stapleton ,of Psi Upsilon, by one Odell Bach- irach, and to the latter’s lady-like dis- |may, produced a wonderous effect on ;the gentleman. Yes, Miss Huffaker, |your interest in the finer things oflife, your desire for a broad culturalbackground stirs us like a trumpetcall off tune.We’ll be seeing you and yourfriends at the Psi Upsilon afternoonchit-chat dances, the Psi Upsilon eve¬ning somnombulist dances, and thePsi Upsilon midnight nightcapdances. Joe Schwab is one of thebest instructors in the University.Remember the name, Joe Schwab. Ifthe Biology Department will allowhim the task, he might be of assist¬ance to you in June around examina¬tion time.*Then there is the Gary crowd.Nine of them. Fine missionary workdone by the Gary delegation whichgraduated from the U. of C. in June1935. Four valedictorians in thatcrowd and three salutatorians. Threeof them football and basketball stars:Pospichel-Kreuger-I>indeck. Surewe’re interested in the new plan ofeducation. Sure we want to get allthe cultural advantages that are tobe gained in going to school in a largecity. Sure we read the articles in theAtlantic monthly. Sure we think theUniversity is a great place. Whyshouldn’t we?will be a meeting of 'reshman wom¬en and their counselors and facultyadvisors and another informal din¬ner in the Cloister club.On Monday there will be lunch¬eons for both men and women andteas in the afternoon for studentsinterested in music and dramatics.SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE ATWOODWORTH’S BOOKSTORE41 Years of Serving Students of theUniversity of Chicago1311 EAST 57th ST.—Near Kimbark Ave. CriiiiiiiiJ \Jay Berwanger, the work horse ofthe team. He passes, kicks and runswith the best of them; he is a fineblocker and tackier. He’s team cap¬tain and an All-American.DAILY MAROON SPORTS\WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25. 1933MAROON FOOTBALL‘BRAIN TRUSTERS’AMONG THE BESTDuke” Dunne Aids CoachShaughnessy as NewLine Coach1= AV 'v - ''xl->' 'X4^' -:‘4 - :<? AC|i?f?A- :'fX xr.’i*?''!’': A:-*1935 FOOTBALLSaturday—at Nebraska. Oct. 26—Wisconsin.Oct. 5—Carroll. Nov. 9—Ohio State.Oct, 12—Western State. Nov. 16—Indiana.Oct. 19—Purdue. Nov. 23—at Illinois. In the wake of the general tur¬moil of facing classes as a reality,lives the clearly defined shadow offootball, waiting to embrace at lastthe new men who have looked up toit, anxiously dreaming of its glory.And just behind are the halfdozen or more gi’eat men w’ho areas much part of the student’s col¬lege life as the classroom itself.These men, the coaching staff ofthe Maroons, represent a definiteand efficient working body that willgive any man a real opportunity toplay the grame of football.Heading the list is Clark D.Shaughnessy, head coach, and a manwhose personality has found kind re¬ception among students, faculty andalumni. Coach Shaughnessy believesthat every capable man should playfootball. He sincerely encouragesmen to come out, and insures all, nomatter what their ability, of care¬ful attention and instruction. "*Great Worrier'*Has **Jaiy Tonic”By tradition and temperamentfootball coaches are long-facedfellows. As a great respecter oftradition, and.at this season ofthe year, agreat warrior,the most I cansay about Chi¬cago’s footballprospects is thatwe shall have aspirited teamthat will playan interestingand at times alively game. Wehave a startingteam which hasfair size andspeed and some experience. Ourline reserves are not what acoach would wish, and our back-field replacements are mostly aproblem. On the other hand, westill have Jay Berwanger and theright to hope for good health andour share of the breaks.Clark Shaughnescy.bhaughnessy FOOTBALL IS KINGOF SPORTS OFFEREDIN AUTUMN PERIODTwelve Other ActivitiesClaim Share ofAttentionDunne New Line CoachP-J saysWe All Bid YouGOOD MORNINGand may the day beCHEERFUL”PJ’s Breakfast Special(SERVED AT ALL HOURS)One Fre»h, Golden Err cookedany style, with two strips ofMickelberiy’s Old Farm Ba«con, hot crisp toast, Rrape jellyand a cup of true 15ccoffeeP. J. CuTelier, Jr.EVERY EGG A MASTERPIECEFreahljr created by some fine, healthy country ben, fresh from the nest,each one fathered by the cheerful, lovinf hand of the farm wife (maybethe daughter), each one candled by inspectors to assure you of its per¬fect goodness.PJ^s Famous Flavor Unjointed, FriedMilk-Fed Spring Chicken.... 1 . u..- tf’enfured lliiilt )With old fashioned country gravy, choice otcold slaw or hot vegetable, crisp golden ^french fried potatoes, bread and butter.Steak Sandwichon ToastDill Pickle, ShoestringPotatoes, oozing withnatural sauces, properlyseasoned; .15ccole slaw. FreahCherry Pie6cALA MODE, tOcDaily Feature Grilled ChoppedSirloin SteakWith fried onions,French fried potatoes,cole slaw, bread 15cand butter.EVERY DAY SPECIALFresh Home-Made Apple Pie, 6cThese luscious pies are made with juicy A La Modefresh apples, perfectly peeled, cored and gtfsliced. Prepared in a marvelous shell with JbatterWoo<flawn*8 All-American Restaurant Metcalf, Dean WorksCite Importance ofThe Daily MaroonT. N. METCALF, Director of! VI Athletics. ’The Daily Maroon can^ make an important contribution *^0I the effectiveness of Chicago’sI athletic program, both intramuralI and intercollegiate. Through itsj news stories and announcements ofI athletic events, it can bring reliableI and valuable information to stu¬dents and faculty. Through its; edi¬torial comments and the tone of itsnews reports, the Maroon can be apowerful aid in the maintenance ofa healthy institutional spirit and asound and sportsmanlike attitude to¬ward athletics. The Athletic depart¬ment is glad to cooperate with theMaroon to this end.” Judge Robert Jerome Dunne ofthe Chicago Municipal court, betterknown off the bench as “Duke”Dunne, is the extremely personablenew line coach. Duke was captainof a great Michigan team in 1921and then coached Harvard. Hecomes to Chicago this season tobuild up a fighting, holding line thatwill match or better any in the con-. ference.j The plea.sant gentleman with theI southern accent is Julian Lopez, aI graduate from Loyola in New Or-! leans. Coach Lopez played for threej years under Clark Shaughnessy atI Loyola, and is into his third seasonnow as Clark’s assistant in the back-! field.i Otto Strohmeier has been end! coach of the Maroons since the 1931season. Graduating from Chicago in1923 after a very successful foot¬ball career. Coach Strohmeier work¬ed four years with the Butler eleven,and four more at Indiana under PatPage. and a member of one team that op¬posed the Minnesota team on whichClark Shaughnessy was a player,rounds out the faculty coachingstaff, serving as head coach of thefreshmen and assisting w'ith varsitymaterial. Graduating from the Uni¬versity in 1914. he was one of thetwo men to win twelve major let¬ters, competing in only four sportsduring his three years of intercol¬legiate competition. “Norg’s” punt-ting has yet to be excelled, and inhim any freshman will find a help¬ing friend.With Coach Norgren on the Fresh¬man staff are Bob Deem and JohnBaker.Athletic DepartmentPlaces Books onSale in Bartlett Gymi GEORGE A. WORKS, Dean of! Students, “The Daily Maroon isj your best means of keeping in touchI with the happenings of the Univer¬sity community. It deserves yoursupport.” Three on Freshman StaffAnother of the football coachingstaff, Kyle Anderson, is a formerMaroon athlete. He is popular withthe “gang” and had a fine year lastspring as head coach of the baseballteam.Nelson Norgi'en, one of Chicago’sall-time outstanding football playerr WEicOME CLASS OF ’39 ^You are about to enter the social life of the Universitywhere neat appearing; wearing apparel is a prime requisite.We are equipped to take care of your cleaning and pressingneeds promptly.A delivery service is maintained for your convenience andwe shall be glad to call at your residence either on or offcampus. There is bus a small additional charge for thisservice and we assure you prompt and courteous attention. i The annual athletic ticket entitlesthe owner to all regularly scheduledintercollegiate athletic events on theUniversity campus in the school year1935-36. This includes six footballgames, thirteen basketball games,and all contests in wrestling, swim¬ming, gymnastics, fencing, baseball,track, and tennis.“C” books, which contain $25 insingle admissions, are on sale for $5at the University bookstore andBartlett gym.Books are non transferable andwill be sold only upon presentation ofthe student’s tuition receipt.“C” book seats are not reserved.Persons desiring reserved seats atthe football games are advised topurchase season football tickets at$7.70 apiece.PJ RESTAURANTTHE PLACE TO EATTRADE MARK REGISTERED1206 East 63rd StreetBlock East of Woodlawn Ave.How Are You Fixed forLiving Quarters?Have you found a suitable room or are you in thesame boat with many others and just don’t know whereto look?If you are in the market for timely advice upon thisperplexing problem feel at liberty to enquire today at theDAILY MAROONHOUSING BUREAULexingtx>n Hall Hyde Park 9222 PING PONGColeman Clark, former nationalping pong champion, will give an ex¬hibition in the Reynolds club Mon¬day at 3:30. His opponent has notbeen selected. Football is king for freshmen andvarsity athletes alike during theautumn quarter but training forother sports gets under way in Bart¬lett and the fieldhouse as soon asthe University opens.First year men students may en¬gage in these sports:Swimming TennisBaseball TrackGolf HandballGymnastics Wrestlingf'encing Horse PoloSquash BasketballCompetition starts during the win¬ter quarter after three or moremonths of preparation. If a studentregisters for a gym period, or an¬swers the call for various teams, hecan work out under supervision ofthe coaches during the fall.Spyros Vorhees, wrestling coach,has classes at 11, 12, 2 and 4 inthe basement of Bartlett. He pre¬dicts “more action on the mats thisyear than ever before” as candi¬dates eye possible Olympic posts.Dan Hoffer is the “grand old manof Conference gjTn champs” and su¬pervises workouts upstairs. Hofferhas a reputation or taking “green”first year material and developingthem into Big Ten gym champs.Lack of experience is no drawbackin this sport.While weather permits the var¬sity tennis squad and freshmen can¬didates with W’alter Hebert (greet¬ing play on the varsity courts at58th and University. During thewinter the netmen, tops in the BigTen for two consecutive years, prac¬tice in the fieldhouse.The swimming and water polovarsity use the Bartlett pool from4:30 to 5:30. Coach McGillivrayconducts classes for beginners dur¬ing the day.Both indoor and outdoor track areunder the direction of Coach Mer-riam, who conducts cross countrywor'KOuts at 3:30 in Stagg field andin Washington Park.Lt. Alfred Price’s polo playersrode to a first place tie with Illinoislast year. Persons intere.sted in poloare advised to see John Bod fish inthe military offices in Ryerson.Practice is held in the 124th fieldartillery armorj’ at 52nd and Cot¬tage Grove.The fencers work out in the ba.se-ment of Bartlett. Those interestedin competition may see Prof, Rob-ct V'. Merrill, Basketball practicegets under way in the field houseearly in the fall under Nels Norgrenand Kyle Anderson.Handball and squa.sh courts in theWest stand of Stagg field are opento students, and may be “signed up”for at the cage in Bartlett lockerroom.Freshmen !The University Dramatic Asso¬ciation offers you a season sponsorticket for only $2.50. Individualtickets would amount to $4.00. Theseason ticket entitles you to enjoyfive expertly handled productionsdirected by Frank Hurburt O’Hara.Freshmen in past years have con¬sidered the purchase of a ticket oneof the first requisites of a full collegeprogram.DRAMATIC ASSOCIATION......SEASON SPONSOR TICKETPlease send me Season Sponsor Ticketsat $2.50 per ticket for ( ) Thurs. ( ) Fri. I ) Sat.My addresB is: (check night!NameAddress PhoneSend check to THE DRAMATIC ASSO¬CIATION, Faculty Exchange, Box 249 Single Ticket* Total$4.09 for the SeasonTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 1935 Page Seven1 cigc ocvenMaroons Open Against Big Nebraska TeamIni 1 1 ^ - —Shaughnessy Picks Starting Squadfor Season’s Opener at LincolnConcentrates on Trainingof Number of Reservesin Key PositionsGAMES SATURDAYOhio U. (Athens) at IllinoisBradley at lowaNorth Dakota Aggies at Minne¬sotaDePaul at NorthwesternSouth Dakota at WisconsinKansas at Notre DameBy EDWARD STERNWith only two days of practiceleft before they leave for NebraskaThursday evening, Chicago’s Ma¬roons are earnestly preparing tomeet the onslaught of Dana Bible’sbig Cornhusker team Saturday. Al¬though he has never scouted Nebras¬ka, Coach Clark D" Shaughnessy hasbeen working his men against thesingle-wing back formations thatBible has used in the past.With the starting team alreadypicked for the tilt, the Marooncoaches have been concehtrating ondeveloping a number of reserves forthe key positions. Adolph Scheu.ssler,midget halfback, has been under-studying Jay Berwanger’s role inthe backfield, and from the practiceperformances that he has turned induring the last few days he shouldbe capable of the large job that iscut out for him.Line Reterve*Although it is probable that BobPerretz and Bill Gillerlain will re¬ceive first call at the end positions,Gordon Petersen will be able to re¬lieve either one. In the center of theline Clarence Wright and George An-tonic, a sophomore, will be on handto substitute for the probable start¬ers at tackle, Earl Sappington andMerritt Bush, while guarding thecenter, Sam Whiteside, will be BudJordan and Ham “Orchids” Meigs.In the Maroon backfield the “BigFour” of Captain Jay Berwanger,Ned Bartlett, Ewald Nyquist, andWarren Skoning will try to think upways to fool the salwart Nebraskans.Skoning’s line bucks, which were thephenomena of last week’s practicesessions, are expected to worry theCornhusker’s line and to lighten theburden which Jay must carry.While the Maroons have beenmaking hasty preparations for thecoming battle, the Cornhuskers outin Lincoln made an attempt to pickup its stride so that Chicago may beovercome as the first hurdle in arace for the national championship.Down Freshmen in GameAs its first opponents the Ne¬braska eleven took on its own fresh¬men and downed them 34 to 0.Headed by Lloyd Cardwell, halfback,who is compared by Nebraskans toBerwanger, the first string elevenromped through the yearlings; butwhen replacements were made, thevarsity was unsuccessful in gainingground.According to Coach Dana X. jBible, the Cornhuskers played a“spotty” game as there were manybadly filled assignments and plentyof fumbles. He concluded by .sayingthat “Our problem now resolves it-.self to bringing the team to theplace where they can play 45 to 60minutes of football instead of thebrilliant fifteen minutes that theyshowed in the freshman game.”Throughout the game, the Corn¬huskers showed that although theyhad a starting lineup that couldclick off yardage, their reserves wereas yet not experienced enough toprovide replacements of first-stringcaliber. As inadequate reserves areChicago’s chief worry also, the factthat the game is being played earlyin the season may prove to be anadvantage to the Maroon eleven.The probable starting lineups:Nebraska ChicagoScherer le PerretzShirey It SappingtonWilliams Ig MeigsMorrison c WhitesideHubka rg JordanHeldt r t BushDohrmann re GillerlainBenson Ih BerwangerCardwell rh BartlettBauer qb NyquistFrancis fb SkoningFURNISHEDAPARTMENTS5519 Kimbark Ave: 3 roomfurnished sunny basement;for rent; private bath; rea¬sonable. Inquire 1st Apt. OUTSTANDING PREPATHLETES ENROLLIN CLASS OF ’39Although their regular footballpractice is not scheduled to start un¬til this afternoon, more than a dozenfreshman gridmen have reported forworkouts to Coach Nelson Norgren.Among the early yearlings areJerry Jeremy, a half-back from SaltLake City; Lew Hamity from HydePark High who received all-city rat¬ing at halfback from all sources lastyear; Norman Hollingshead whocomes to the University with an out¬standing record on the gridiron outin Huntington Park, Calif.; DaveRogers, a quarterback from MountCarmel, one of the leaders in the Chi¬cago Catholic league; and DickWheeler, a ^Los Angeles boy who ishighly toted as a center.Others who have reported so farfor practice are Norman Joffee andTed Pink from Hyde Park, Quaylelu , „ j HI u 1^ Petersmeyer from Los Angeles, A. M.Ned Bartlett, speedy Maroon half „ , • tt i j r>•11 u • u 1 c 1 1 ' Hawkins frnm TTr.la«r4= r-owmII be in the backfield against the BIG TEN TRAINING CAMP BRIEFSCornhuskers.Competition Beginsfor Cheer LeadersEach year there is a stiff competi¬tion among candidates for the fivepositions of cheer leaders. This yearthere are plenty of chances for fresh¬men to fill these coveted positions.Walter Hebert is the coach for thisgroup and any men interested areasked to report to him in the Intra¬mural office any day this week.A captain will be selected from thesuccessful candidates, who will assistHebert with the managing of thesquad. At the end of the year whitejackets will be given as awards. Hawkins from Uplands, Calif.,George Hays, and Lewis Miller,James Goldsmith, and Wilbur Jergerfrom Harvard school.This group will probably composeabout one-fourth of the squad, asmany other freshman have signifiedtheir intention to come out for prac¬tice but have not reported.They include two men fromk'rancis Parker School. Mort Good-stein and Bob Greenebaum; Bob Cas-sels, a brother of Bill Cassels, formervarsity tackle and assistant freshmancoach last year. Cassels was leadingscorer in the west suburban leaguelast year as was another freshman,Sollie Sherman from Marshall Highin the city league.Among the list of entering fresh¬men today are four men whom ten¬nis coach Wallie Hebert is counri'^ - Bloomington, Ind., Sept. 24—(UP)—Bruno Vercuski, 1934, tack¬le, was today appointed assistantcoach at Indiana. Vercuski, lawschool senior, will work with bothvarsity and freshmen lines. Theteam again went through blockingdrill and timing plays with attentionto reverses and spinners.* *Iowa City, la.. Sept. 24—(UP)—University of Iowa Coach Ossie Sol-em re-opened his practice sessionsto newspapermen today after fourdays of secrecy, and showed an all¬veteran team on the gridiron, withthe exception of sophomores BushLamb, quarterback, and Bob Lan-non and Homer Harris, ends.* *Minneapolis, Sept. 2b—(UP) —Practice sessions at the Universityof Minnesota training camp was cutto afternoon sessons only today.Coach Bernie Bierman expressedconcern over the condition of JulieAlfonse, right halfback, who wasout of the first string lineup becauseof numerous boils. In the event thatAlfonse is unable to play in Satur¬day’s game with North Dakota Ag¬gies, there probably will be foursophomores in the lineup.* * *Madison, Wis., Sept. 24—(UP) —Gene Zinser, promising sophomorehalfback, was lost to the Wisconsinsquad for the season today whenword was received that he failed aneligibility exam. Coach Spears dis¬covered that injuries to Ed Chris¬tianson, regular tackle, will probably New GridmanAn accomplished ball handler wasadded to the Maroon’s lineup yester¬day, when Bill Haarlow, all-confer¬ence forward andcaptain of thecage team, ap-peared in uni¬form at the dailydrill.With the in¬creasing import¬ance of the bask¬etball pass infootball, Haarlowshould be a realaddition to theMaroon lineop.He will play end,and should be inshape for the Carroll game, a weekfrom Saturday. At the .same time anote of pessimism was added to theChicago hopes as it was ascertainedthat Ned Bartlett and Paul Whitney,backfield men, were on the sidelineswith minor injuries.Coach Shaughnessy stressed de¬fense for the single and doublewing-back formations which Nebras¬ka is expected to use against theMaroons Saturday.Haarlowkeep him out of the South Dakota.state game here Saturday.* Hf *Ann Arbor, Mich., Sept. 24 —(UP)—Coach Harry Kipke tonightnamed the first string team wh'chwill line up in scrimmage tomorrow.It consists of Patanelli and Valpey, ends; Hanshue and Lincoln, tackles;Bi.ssell and Ziem, guards; Rinaldi,center; Renner, Smithers, Cooperand Sweet, backs.* * *Champaign, HI., Sept. 24—(UP)—Coach Bob Zippke continued todrive Illinois today when he sent thesquad through another long scrim¬mage. Perfection of the Illini pass¬ing and running attack with improv¬ed offense in the line was sought.* * *Lafayette, Ind., Sept. 24—(UP)—Lateral passes were developed to¬day in Purdue practice as the Boil¬ermakers prepared for their openinggame against Nothwestern. Fearingthe forward wall too light CoachKizer plans to make full use of allaerial plays possible.« * *Evanston, Sept. 24—(UP) —Coach Waldorf again made defensethe theme of Northwestern drill to¬day. Freshmen ran DePaul playsagainst the varsity without success.Bill Henderson, end out with a brok¬en ankle, may play in the DePaulgame, he said today.* * 0Columbus, 0., Sept. 24—(UP)—Coach Francis Schmidt today drilledplace kickers. He was determined toprevent a recurrence of Ohio State'sone point defeat last year by Illi¬nois. Frank Boucher and Dick Beltz,halfbacks, Carl Brungard, AugieGeorge and Sam Busich, linemen,were outstanding candidates to takeover the place kicking assignment.on to form the backbone of one ofthe best first-year tennis squads inmany years. These include the Mur¬phy brother from Tilden Tech, highrrnking unior play'ers in the city, andJohn Krietenstein, former number j one man on the Hyde Park team.I From California comes James Ware,a high-ranking player from Pasadenajunior college.When Coach Nels Norgren issuesthe first call for basketball some time during the fall quarter, some of hisfreshman candidates should includeDick Lounsbery, former captain ofSt. John’s Military academy basket¬ball team; and Ralph Richardsonfrom Pittsburg, Penn.ahe leaves of Turkish to-bacco are strung one by onelike beads {see how it is donein the picture). After theleaves are strung they arepacked in hales (see picture)—sometimes as many asSOyOOO leaves to the bale.W. have on hand at all timesfor CHESTERFIELD cigarettesupwards of 350,000 balesof Turkish tobacco...The pleasing aroma and flavor of Turk¬ish tobacco is almost necessary if you wanta good cigarette.Turkish tobacco is more costly whenyou take into account that you have topay 35c a pound duty, but we have tohave it to blend with our mild ripe home¬grown tobaccos.It helps make Chesterfields milder, ithelps give them better taste. Just try them. .. for mildness.. for better taste• 1M5. Lnomr*Page Eight THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 25, 1935List Highlights ofScheduled Eventsin Freshman Week University ChapelWednesday, September 25B: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 Collece.4-5 P.M.—Y. W. C. A. tea for en¬tering women. Ida Noyes hall.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.—U niversity 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.)Thursday, September 2612:30-1 P.M. — Freshmen womengroup luncheons with upperclasscounselors. Information as toplace of meeting will be providedby upperclass counselors. (Incharge of the Federation of Uni¬versity women.2 P.M.—Sight-seeing tours of theUniversity. Harper Mil.2 P.M.—Athletic meeting for en¬tering men. Field house. Talks byT. Nelson Metcalfe, director otathletics, and others.8 P.M.—Symposium on “The Col¬lege Program from a Student’sPoint of View.” Mandel hall.Friday9:30 A.M.—Sightseeing tours ofthe University. Harper Mil.1-5 P. M.—Open house for men and■ ' women. Ida Noyes hall.3:30-4:30 P. M.—Chicago-Progres¬sive Union tea. Ida Noyes theater.6 P. M.—Buffet supper, the Cloisterclub, Ida Noyes hall.8 P. M.—Party for men and women,Ida Noyes hall.Saturday9:30 A. M.—Tour of the Universitysettlement. Meet in front of theUniversity chapel.4 P. M.—Meeting of freshman wom¬en with their upperclass counsel¬ors and faculty sponsors. Inform¬ation as to place of meeting willbe provided by counselors.6 P. M.—Informal dinner, the Clois¬ter club, Ida Noyes hall.Sunday2-4 P. M.—Reception for new resi¬dents of Burton and Judsoncourts. Judson court lounge..6 P. M.—Buffet supper, the Clois-■ter Club, Ida Noyes hall. Ferdin-ratud Schevill, professor of ModernHistory, will speak on “CulturalOpportunities in the city of Chi-■cago.”Monday11 A. M.—Talks to entering stu¬dents. Mandel hall. George AllenWorks, Dean of Students presid¬ing.12:30 P. M.—Luncheon for women,Ida Noyes hall. In charge of theB. W. 0.12:30 P. M.—Luncheon for men,Rsidence Halls for men. In chargeof the Student Social committee.4-5 P.M.—Tea for entering studentsinterested in dramatics. The Tow¬er room, Mitchell tower.4-5 P.M.—Tea for entering studentsinterested in music. The libraryof the Music building. 1934 Freshman AssemblyPacifist Play Delayedas Supers Keep SwordsNew York, Sept. 24—(UP) —Opening of the pacifist play “IfThis Be Treason” was delayed lastnight because six Japanese employ¬ed as stage soldiers refused to throwdown their swords in renunciationof war. They explained the actmight be displeasing to the JapaneseEmperor since they were supposedto represent the finest type of Jap¬anese soldier. Debaters Hold Symp>osiumon College CurriculumIntroducing a new feature ofFreshman week, the Debate Unionwill sponsor an informal studentroundtable discussion open to allfreshmen. The discussion is titled“The College program from a stu¬dent’s point of view” and will takeplace in Mandel hall at 8 tomorrow.Marie Berger, Wells Burnette,Irving Axelrad, and George Mess-mer are the students who will ban¬dy questions and their answers tothe problems likely to face the en¬tering freshmen. The discussion isunder the chairmanship of MarshallM. Knappen, assistant professor ofHistory.After the roundtable, there willbe an open discussion when Fresh¬men may ask any questions theymay have. rjHTENSIVEjStenographic CourseFor College Men and WomWL100 Words a minu-e in 100i'ssured for one *ce. Enroll aomDay classes begin Oct. 7th.Tel. Ran. 1576Also Regular Courses. Day and Eve.BRYANT^STRATION18 SO.MICHIGAN AVE . CHICAGO 1 ^ is WeekMAKE THE1 University Bookstoreone of your **ports of entry**' SEND A■ NOTE HOME Post Cards of the UniversityFountain Pens—Pencils—InkU. of C. and Plain StationeryGreeting CardsPostal1 LOCATE YOUR1 BOOKS: AND SUPPLIES1 Text Book SectionRental LibraryNote Books, Files, etc.Typewriters and SuppliesPafjers and PadsLaundry Cases1 j| 11General Book SectionCompletely RearrangedGet acquainted with the different new orolder books, many you will want to own;some may be in the Rental LibraryPrompt attention to special orders1 FOR THATLEISUREMOMENT Candies, Sandwiches, etc.Kodaks—FilmsGift ArticlesMagazines—RadioPublic TelephoneGet your “orientation” course in Bookstore “where,1 which and whither” all over with this week, before the! other classes begin, and you’ll soon be an old-timer.Signed—The Managerand Staff of theU. of C. BOOKSTORE58th and Ellis Ave.Branch—106 Blaine Hall, School of EducationSTIFLER TELLS OFVALUE OF MAROONJAMES M. STIFLER, Secretaryand Trustee of the University.“Here at the President’s office wesubscribe to some eight or ten copiesof the Maroon. I read it every dayfor it is one of the best ways I knowto keep in touch with student senti¬ment.“The paper is well edited, excep¬tionally so. I know that it will bekept on a plane of ascending merit.”SUBSCRIPTION BLANKInclosed is $2.75 for year’s subscription ($4 by mail),NameAddress City and State If You Want.... up to the minute information on campus affairs . . .complete information on intramural and inter collegiatecompetition . . . witty columns . . . forceful editorials . . .graduate, fraternity, society news . . . the latest news ofthe campus . . .READTHE DAILY MAROONSubscription for Year$2.75mtw • NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS IN PICTURE AND PARAGRAPH •TORIES arered” in theclinic justUniversity ofby Authorbison.CHE'S A CHAMPION AR'^ CHERETTE ' ^ BarbaraDerge, St. Lawrence University,is the crack shot of the univer-sity’s archery team, highest scor^ers over all eastern teams forthree years.p\ON ELSER,Notre Dame’saao'pound fullback,IS the fastest man onthe Rambler squadthat Coach ElmerLayden hopes willbetter its 1934 recordof seven victories andtwo defeats."THIS MECHANICAL RAT^ can think, but it can’t eatcheese. Dr. Stevenson Smith,University of Washington,worked five years to perfect themotor rodent which, they say,can remember, can thread anintricate maze, and can react tostimuli with even more intelli'gence than a human.CTENOGR APHER8 ARE MORE SENTIMENTAL '' Regard'^ less of what you may think. Prof. J. W. Bnerly, Columbia psy¬chologist, has proved with tests that stenographers are more senti¬mental than housewives and that actresses do not sentimentalizemuch when off the job. The actre,ss in this particular test is UnaMerkel (center). CARAH THOMPSON, of^ Salem College, ruled theannual Mountain State ForestFestival, A RT CARAVAN - - Brown University and the RIuk: IslanSchool of Art cooperated in this project to exhibit oiv. masterpieces in small communities.A MONG THE NOTABLES who attended the Canadian-American Conference at St. L-‘'^University to promote good will between the nations were Dr, Hamilton Fyfe, head ofUniv'ersity, Sir Robert Borden, Alanson B. Houghton, and Owen D. Young.Generals Map Fall Campaigns as Football Wars Open\TAVY PLEBES start the season at the^ ^ Naval Academy with a brisk work¬out under Coach Caldwell. CTANFORD S CoacThornhill gets in trstrenuous season.D OOM, BOOKS, board and tuition* ^ will be provided Waynesburg Collegeathletes this year under the new “anti-hypocritical” policy inaugurated by Ath¬letic Director Frank Wolf. ”A boy whoworks hard all season should not give hisservices completely free of charge,”he says. CTUB ALLISON does his pre-season homework p ASTERN COACHES WENT TO SCHOOL this summ. and^ in preparation for the early practice sessions of ^ the classes were conducted by Columbia's Lou Little, wl toldthe University of California Glolden Bears. the mentors how he shoves the Lions into first place Quite ret itlvV. IV I -' "GINI SARAZiN, champion ofchampions: *’I havt to keepin condition. So it*s impor-unt to me as a steady smok¬er that Camels are milder.Extra millions are spentfor the choice tobaccos inCamels. They never get mywind or upset my nerves.”LOU OEHRI6, "Iron Man ofBaseball,” says of Camels: "Ilike their mildness. Camelsare so mild they never inter¬fere with my wind or my’fighting trim-' There areplenty of times when I feeltired after a game. ThenI get a ’lift’ with a Camel.”sEPHINE McKIM, Olympic swimmer. ’’One of myd and fast rules in connection with smoking,” shes. "is that I always choose a Camel. Camel»-are suchtild cigarette that I can smoke them steadily. Theyer bother my wind. 'I’d walk a mile for a Camel!”’YOU’LL LIKE CAMEL’S MILDNESS TOO.Your own physical condition—your wind...your energy... the good health of your nerves—is important to you. So remember this aboutsmoking: it is a fact that Camels are made fromcostlier tobaccos. They are so mild you cansmoke all you want. Athletes say Camels neverget their wind or throw their nerves off key.LISTIR STOiriN, U. S. tennisdoubles champion with(>c‘orge LotC Both smoke( amels. Stoefen says: "Nomatter how steadily I smoke,( amels are so mild that theynever get my wind or dis¬turb my ’condition.’ And( amels have a better flavor.”COSTLIERTOBACCOS!• Camels are made from finer,MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS—Turkish and Domestic—than any other popular brand.{Signtd) R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANYWinston-Salem, North Carolina”TH EY DON'TYGETYOUR WIND"■A"- ■ ^ 4”7A MINE IN A UNIVERSITY '' Modern mining methods are studied with^ the aid of the special apparatus found in the laboratories at Sheffield Uni¬versity (England). Above is a special device for measuring gases found in coal. TESS WILLARD, JR., husky son of the formerJ world's heavyweight boxing champion, registersat the University of California. He plans to followthe athletic footsteps of his father by playingfootball, running and swimming.pVEN THESE FEARSOME Guatemalan cere-^ monial masks, found recently by Universityof Southern Califomu scientists, fail to dim thesmiles of Mary Evers and Nancy Nolen, collegeof architecture and fine arts students.A P. W. A. ARTIST, Charles Allan Winter, of Gloucester, Mass., has just completed his interpret.ition ot nuxl'ern education*• which he has called “Student Parade.” His classic rendition of Alma Mater is surrounded with students engaged in the variou.sactivities found in a school curriculum/ERSITY yearbook editors selected these seven as the most striking beauties on the Evanston institution'serner, Laura Sprague, Cecilia Abbott, Rita Pool, Dons Duerlein, May Norton, and Martha Purnell. ANOTHER "MAN MOUNTAIN” ^ ^ Arthur John-■'^son, of Hobart College goalie for the AIL Americanteam in the international lacrosse games.LIE'S A SAILOR THIS TIME ' - Dick Powell looks stern in an Annapolis scene for his new picture. When Flirtation^ * Wali{, featuring West Point, was filmed, the Army's yearbook said, “Herbie Gee and Dick Powell vied for first cap-taincv. Herbie winning in the eves of the corps, Dick in the eyes of the camera.”^EOLOGICAL STUDENTS trom many U. S. institutions climbed the mountain tops in Glacier National Park duringthe summer months while on many scientific and educational expeditions. The group shown here is reaching the topof one of the peaks.A Candid Camera Record of the Life of Student'Soldiersa record that includes many intimate and personal scenes thatare denied the ordinary visitor.This pictorial record of the many curricular, military, andextra-curricular activities found on the West Pointer’s programalso includes several scenes of summer camp activities, for thestudent-soldier does not have the usual summer vacation ofthe average college student.TITROM the first note blown by the bugler in the morning to* the “turn in" order at night, the life of a West Point cadetis a continuous round of classes, military duties, and study—with a bit of pleasure thrown in.' The candid camera gives you a record on this page of theordinary life of an undergraduate at the West Point MilitaryAcademy on the banks of the Hudson River in New York—ReveilleThey must be perfect! Marching to the mess hallThe Commandantsuperintends a coof(ing lessonThe plebes' first hil{e unth (xypound pacl{sBoning” for the next day's classesTheir social life is not neglected.Hiding aftermath! "Ready! Aim! Fire!" An intimate mess hall scene.easy way to MAKf A TOUCH[)ENT arrivesloom, turnsNK IN MOVIE;HINE ® AND; FAN DANCER.ly machine®•ECTS STUDENT^SCET AND;OVERS 25<.TS PHONOGRAPHVHICH PLAYSr SAD MUSICJNG WEEPING)FUS® SHEDER TEARSING SPONGECM CAUSESOW ® TOCTURE BALLOON5 RELEASINGCHMAKER 0.cent’s heartBEEN SOFTENEDSAD MUSICPING WOOFUSI FAN DANCER> HE WILL FORKR 25* AND TAKE} IN RETURN i;AOAjjcen.rty7- ^' '' ..AND AN EASY WAYTO ENJOY A PIPEP* MANPRINCE ALBERTIS SMOOTH.ANDIT'S MILDERAND COOLER.WHAT FLAVOR!voteomosTp^lml!-because p-a. isSO MILD—because itlong-burning—because there re2 OZ IN EVERY TIN-because A SPECIALPROCESS TAKES OUtthe’bite'i, DAYLOR BELLE''Doris^ Driggers was one of Art'ist Russell Patterson’s choicesfor the charm section of theMary Hardin'Baylor Collegeyearbook.KTAPOLEON RIDES^ ^ AGAIN ' The“little corporal,” imper'sonated by a seniorcadet, always plays animfxjrtant part in thepromotion day bur'lesques at St, Cyr, theFrench West Point.pRl Z EWINNER^ Paul Heffernan (left),Harvardman, is congrat'ulated by Joseph Freed'lander upon his winningthe Beaux Arts archi¬tectural prize.AFE GREEN, WINE AND WHITEare strikingly combined in this four-ce suit of waffle weave woolen. Theuse with wide shirred scarf is whitepe. Campus Fashion KeynotersA SWAGGER COAT of plum colored suede, a matching angora blouse and heather^ mixture tweed skirt is worn by the girl in the “Dude ^ncher” felt hat. Her com¬panion wears a demure looking gray jersey frock that buttons in back. 'T'HIS SUIT combines agray tweed coat, a clai^^^,_plaid skirt of green, blue ana Tgray, and a soft white flannelshirt.CTAID STUDENTS OF OXFORD UNIVERSITY (Eng^land) will be taught ancient Indian dances by Acee BlueEagle, a Pawnee Indian from Oklahoma, who is shown in fullregalia aboard a liner bound for England. ^HEY’RE THE YOUNGEST STU'^ DENTS, and the only triplets enrolledin the University of California. ButRobin and Laurel and Roger study howto build castles out of blocks at theuniversity's Institute of Child Welfare.(^OV. MARTIN L. DAVEY, of Ohio,^ signs the bill making Kent StateCollege a university. The first graduateschool added to the curriculum of thenew university was that of businessadministration.Tunes, Scripts Plagued Them in College-^ And Still DoA tune was bothering him . .So he gave up his law studies.T IKE Fred MacMurray, another successful ex^ex'^ collegian in Hollywood, Pinky Tomlin got a fairstart at the higher learning, but tunes and rhythmskept running through his head in the classroom, andhe ended up by having only a fraternity shingle toshow for his academic days. MacMurray and Tomlinnow have about $100,000 apiece—a very disconcertingfact to Ph. D.'s who stuck it out—and didn't have anytunes to plague them.An Oklahoma farmhand. Pinky Tomlin can lookeither forty or his actual twenties, depending on thecamera used and the amount ot re-touching. He was aprofessed hick and already losing his thin, flame-colored hair rapidly when Delta Tau Delta at theUniversity of Oklahoma pledged him. That made nodifference; the brothers hoped to tame their alfalfaJowboy. In the meantime, he went to work leading acollege orchestra. That got him three meals a day, low grades, and a reputation for having a singing voicewith a twang to it. In spite of the I^lts, he remaineda hill-billy.^HE Oklahoma law school was the end for Pinky^ The tune that was bothering him the day he re¬ceived his release was something about the object ofhis affections. Pinky put it on paper, and soon sororitygirls the nation over were playing it again and againon the victrola they hadn't used since the radio came in.On the strength of that song. Coy Poe, a fellowDelt, and Pinky started for Hollywootl in an oldFord. A few months later they bought a Lincoln andtook a vacation trip. Pinky needed it. He had justfinished his first acting—in M-G-M’s Times SquareLady. He has since made Smart Girl. M-G-M isgoing to keep him at acting for some time to come; andwhen he's out of greasepaint, M-G-M is chainingtheir hog-caller and actor to a piano.ANOTHER important boy from rural mountain^ parts—with face and hair of reddish hue, isThomas L. Riley. Fat pencil in hand, he's the manwho has put such people as Lowell Thomas, RuthEtting, and the NBC Honeymooners on the air. Hisjob IS not performed at the microphone. His pencilmay cross out one of Lowell Thomas’ lines. Whenthe orchestra gets its cue for one of Ruth Etting’ssongs, Tom Riley, late of the University of Kentucky,is the man who penciled it in. Mr. Riley, in short.IS a producer at NBC, one of the gentlemen who isas important to radio as Flo Ziegfeld was to theFollies.For his present job of building radio shows, Rileystarted training at the age of eleven, when his ma¬gician's act made him a sort of boy wonder in Hender¬son, Kentucky, his home town. Roughing it bter as aminstrel end-man and a showboat entertainer, he de¬parted the tinseled and shabby byways of trouping toenter the University of Kentucky. There he Ixgan a Fat pencil m hand . . .He learned to wield it at Kentucky.one-man show, starring Tom Riley, Pi Kappa Alph.iHe produced student revues, directed the universitvplayers, the Strollers; announced over WHAS.University of Kentucky station; and found time to g('to movies and review them for the “Kernel,”A GRADUATE in igji, he went to WLW inCincinnati as continuity writer, later to a handfulof other stations where he did everything at thimicrophone and off except run the control room. H*.came to NBC in igj4.If It s a good NBC show, Tom Riley may be th<man whose pencil and quiet'word gave the script itmagic touch. If the bass fiddler didn’t arrive for thebroadcast, that may have been Tom Riley you heardfaking It. He s one of many well-paid but unsungNBC producers.