Bail? illanionVol. 36. No. 8. Price 3 cents UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1935 Member United PressBlack CavcJryWins Victoryover ItaliansHaile Selassie ConfirmsReport from Eritrea;Desertions Rumored.(Copyright 1936 By United Press)ADDIS ABABA, Oct. 8—A vic¬torious Ethiopian drive 25 miles intoItalian Eritrea by a darinp flyingcolumn of 15,000 black cavalry wasofficially announced by Haile Selas¬sie’s government tonight simultane¬ously with unconfirmed rumors thatEthiopians had recaptured Aduwaand taken “thousands” of Italiansprisoner.At the same time, the governmentannounced mass desertions of Ital¬ian native troops to the Ethiopianbanner. It was asserted specificallythat 50 Askaris arrived at Makale,south of Aduwa, bringing with themfive machine guns, 12 mule-loads ofammunition and several cannon, andthat 200 Askaris had deserted toEthiopia in the northeast.Selassie CountersA brilliant operation by Ras Sey-youm, Ethiopian commander in thenorth, sent 15,000 men across thefrontier into Eritrea on Saturday,while the Italian columns were pre¬paring to storm Aduwa. it was an¬nounced. Ethiopians had been ord¬ered not to defend Aduwa.The raiding column was command¬ed by Haile Selassie’s son-in-law,Dedjazmatch Haile Selassie Hugsa.There were reports—not substan¬tiated—that this column, or another,had captured Adicarich, 50 milessouth of Asmara, the Eritrean capi¬tal and chief war base.Another large Ethiopian force,estimated at 60,000 men, was sentby Haile Selassie to the Aksumfront, and still another was dispatch¬ed northward near the Sudan fron¬tier. The Askum force is command¬ed by Ras Kassa.Kasum May Be Taken(Reports that Kasum had beencaptured by the Italians were notconfirmed. An official communiqueat Rome today said Ethiopian war¬riors had attacked Hagar on the Eri¬trean side near the Sudan frontierand were repulsed by Italian Askarinative troops.)The 60,000 Ethiopians under RasKa.s.sa were expected to lead theEthiopian defense, but were not ex¬pected to attack positions now heldby 110,000 Italian troops in thenorth.A further report of Ethiopiansuccess asserted that Italians attack-(Continued on page 2)Ethiopians ReconnoiterAduwa by AirplaneLONDON, Oct. 8—(UP)—Thefirst Ethiopian air reconnaisanceover Italian lines occurred today onthe Aduwa front, the Exchange Tel¬egraph agency’s correspondent withthe Italian armies in Eritrea report¬ed.The Ethiopian plane reportedlyflew at 5,000 feet, eluding the fireof machine and anti-aircraft guns,and disappeared when urgently sum¬moned Italian pursuit planes arriv¬ed from nearby bases.THE ABCs(Contributions to The ABCswill be accepted by the editor.)HISTORY REPEATS ITSELFThe nationalist, conservative andclerical Italy of today wants to makethe sword her law and the army theschool of the nation. We foresaw thismoral degeneration and therefore arenot surprised by it. But those whobelieve that this dominance of mili¬tarism is a sign of strength are mis¬taken. Strong peoples have no needto suffer such rubbish as the Italianpress indulges in with foolish delight.Strong peoples have themselves incheck. Nationalist and militaristItaly shows that she has herself notin check. A little war of conquest iscelebrated as a Roman triumph.Benito Mussolini(This quotation is taken from aneditorial on Italy’s war with I/ybia,printed in the labor daily Avanti forJanuary 1, 1912.—ed.) Mussolini Brandedas People *s EnemyGENEVA, Oct. 8—(UP)—Pre¬mier Benito Mussolini was brandedthe “worst enemy of the Italian peo¬ple” today at a meeting of Italiananti-Fascists ranging from commun¬ists to liberals.The meeting adopted a resolutiondescribing the Italian war againstEthiopia as an “adventure of a dic¬tatorship at the end of its resources,which is seeking desperately, by re¬mote military enterprises, to gainpolitical success.”Envoys PonderLeague Action Mciroon OpensTrainingClassfor FreshmenStaff Members to BeSelecteid on Basis ofExaminations.Continuing a policy of four years’standing. The Daily Maroon willopen its annual training school forfreshmen interested in becomingmembers of the editorial staff Tues¬day, October 15, at 3:30. The roomin which the class will meet will beannounced later.Assembly to Consi(derSanctions in MeetingTomorrow.GENEVA, Oct. 8—(UP) —League penalties against Italy beganto take form today in private con¬versations among diplomats.Britain took the lead in attempt¬ing to whip into line the nationswhose attitude on sanctions wasdoubtful. Capt. Anthony Eden, Brit¬ish secretary for League affairs,conferred with French PremierPierre Laval, Baron Emeric Pfue-gel of Austria, Dr. Salvador de Mad¬ariaga of Spain. Foreign MinisterEdouard Benes of Czechoslovakiaand Foreign Minister James Maxi-mos of Greece.Other members of the Britishdelegation also were active. LordCranbourne was closeted with Las-zlo Develics of Hungary and theBritish treasury economic experts,R. J. Hawatry and J. S. Wills con¬ferred with Robert Coulondre,French foreign office economist.Preliminary MovesThe British drive was understoodto be directed at agreement on pun¬ishing Italy so severely for her un¬provoked attack upon Ethiopia thatPremier Benito Mussolini would becompelled to sue for peace.Austria, among others was report¬ed seeking limited exemption fromfinancial and economic measuresagainst her neighbor. Although Aus-(Continued on page 2) The course will have regular ses¬sions twice a week on Tuesdays andFridays. It will continue until theweek of the Thanksgiving holiday,when approximately 40 freshmenwill be added to the staff of the Ma¬roon. Selection of successful appli¬cants will be made on the basis ofan examination, covering the ma¬terial of the course, which will begiven Tuesday, November 26. Whilefreshmen will nqt be required to at¬tend the semi-weekly meetings ofthe training school, they must takethe examination in order to be con¬sidered as candidates for the staff.In addition to a discussion of theelements of journalism, the coursewill include a presentation of thehistory and background of the Uni¬versity and instruction in Daily Ma¬roon policy and style.Campus BriefsAnnounce ExaminationRegistration LimitsRegistration closes October 15 forthe English qualifying examinationgiven in November. For all Decem¬ber examinations, registration closeson November 1. Whether examina¬tions will be given in December de¬pends on the number of registra¬tions made, announced Ernest C.Miller, Registrar.Hull Calls forNation’s Supporton Neutral StandWASHINGTON, Oct. 8—(UP)—Secretary of State Cordell Hull to¬day called for the wholehearted sup¬port of the American people forPresident Roosevelt’s neutralityproclamation, “In order that theAmerican people may continue to en¬joy the blessings of peace.He said it was a “fundamentalpostulate of our foreign policy thatinternational disputes can and mustbe settled by pacific means.”This was Hull’s first official com¬ment on the sweeping presidentialneutrality decrees put into effectover the week-end, directed towardaverting American ir^olvement inthe Italo-Ethiopian war, or any con¬flict which may grow from it.His remarks were directed to theexecutive committee of the Nation¬al Federation of Business andProfessional Women’s clubs, repre¬senting some 60,000 members. Mem¬bers of the committee had called atthe State department to expresstheir interest in and endorsement ofthe economic aspects of Americanforeign policy.“In these unhappy circumstanceswhen the nations of the world are(Continued on page 2)Lansbury Resigns asLabor Party LeaderLONDON, Oct. 8—(UP)—GeorgeLansbury, faithful wheel horse ofthe chariot of peace and most belov¬ed of Labor leaders, today resignedas leader of the Parliamentary La¬bor party in the House of Commons,because he is out of sympathy withthe party’s policy of urging thatItaly be punished for her invasionof Ethiopia.Major Clement I. Attlee was elect¬ed to succeed Lansbury. Hold Freshman DanceAfter Football GameAs its first social effort, the Col¬lege council, with the aid of the Stu¬dent social committee, will hold adance for freshmen after the West¬ern State football game Saturday.To be held from 4:30 to 7 in IdaNoyes hall, the affair will featurethe music of Roy Lind and his or¬chestra. Refreshments will be super¬vised by the Women’s Athletic As¬sociation, and the admission will be25 cents for men, with no chargefor women.Students Asked toSign Activity CardsAll freshmen and transfer stu¬dents who failed to sign the activitycards, distributed Fi’eshman week,are asked to get the cards in theDean of Students office in Cobb203.These cards, sponsored by the B.W. 0., and adapted from a similarproject at the University of Mich-gan, aim to bring the new studentsinto the campus activities.Any activity which is interestedin contacting new members may ex¬amine these cards, on file in theDean’s office.W A A Holds FirstCozy for FreshmenWAA will hold a large cozy, thefirst of its weekly affairs, in theYWCA room on Friday afternoonfrom 3:30 to 5. Although freshmenare especially invited, anyone elsemay attend.Representatives of the special in¬terest groups will be present to de¬scribe their various clubs to pros¬pective members and discuss withthem the entrance requirements.They will also notify the guests asto when tryouts will be held.No one club is sponsoring this af¬fair, but the whole of W. A. A. isbehind it. Usually the weekly coziesare given by individual clubs. Kerwin Appointed Acting Deanof Students in Social SciencesJerome G. Kerwin, associate professor of Political Science, has beenappointed acting dean of students in the Division of the Social Sciences, ac¬cording to an announcement made yesterday by President Robert M. Hut¬chins. Professor Kerwin is taking over theduties of Donald Slesinger, former dean, who isnow in Washington on a two-quarter leave ofabsence from the University.Formerly adviser in the College, ProfessorKerwin will now devote his time to the concernsof junior, senior, and graduate students register¬ed in the Social Science divisional courses. Heis expected, however, to continue with his lec¬tures in both the Social Science I and SocialScience II general courses.Professor Slesinger left for Washington twoweeks ago to take over the new training schoolrecently instituted by the National Associationof Housing Officials. This organization is notconnected with government housing agencies except as a training schoolof the personnel that will operate FHA projects. W.H. StapletonNcunedtoHeacJI-F CommitteeJ. G. KerwinServices HonorWilliam MoodyTrustees Holed Programto Mark Anniversaryof Poet’s Death.On October 17, 1910 WilliamVaughn Moody, poet, playwright,and University professor, died. Onthe same date next week the Uni¬versity Board of Trustees will holdanniversary services in Mandel hallin memory of the man who wrotethe stage success, “The Great Di¬vide.”Percy Boynton, professor of Eng¬lish, will preside over the programwhich will include talks by Ferdin¬and Schevill, professor of ModernHistory, on “William V. Moody, TheMan”; Dr. Howard Jones of theEnglish department of the Univer¬sity of Michigan, on “William V.Moody, The Poet;” and by JohnManly, Chaucerian scholar and Se¬well L. Avery distinguished serviceprofessor emeritus of English, on“Moody, the Scholar.”Moody was at the University from1895 to 1907. During this time hewrote several texts and considerablepoetry and prose. His name hasbeen perpetuated at the Universityby the William Vaughn Moodyfoundation, endowed by an anonym¬ous donor.Tickets for the anniversary pro¬gram may be obtained, withoutcharge after October 15 at the in¬formation desk in the Press build¬ing.University HeadsInaugurate NewBroadcast GroupInaugxirating the University’s lat¬est brainchild, the University Broad¬casting council, Robert MaynardHutchins, president of the Univer¬sity, joined Walter Dill Scott ofNorthwestern and The Rev. FatherM. J. O’Connell of DePaul in ex¬pressing enthusiasm for the projectlast night over a coast-to-coast NBChookup.Dr. Hutchins spoke from Mitchelltower, the University’s studios. Al¬len Miller, former director of radioat the Midway, is in charge of theorganization while Dean W. H.Spencer of the School of Businessis chairman of the corporation rep¬resenting the three universitieswhich fathered the new education-in-radio scheme.President Hutchins left this morn¬ing for DesMoines where he willaddress the Mutual Life Insurancecompanies’ convention on “Educa¬tion in Business.”SVC Elects TwoNew Members TodayTwo vacancies are to be filled inthe executive committee of the Stu¬dent Vigilance committee AgainstWar at its organization meeting inSocial Science 106 today at 4:30.John A. Vieg, chairman, has resign¬ed to take over the leadership of theGraduate Political Science club whileGeorg Mann is retiring from thecommittee. NAMES the news Boehm New Secretary;Mattmiller Selectedas New Member.James Weber (Teddy) 'Linn’s in¬fected right hand will be all rightsoon, and then there will be no ex¬cuse for his failure to pound on hisdesk when he tells you why he likesBrowning better than Tennyson.The University’s No. 1 authorityon American literature, Percy Boyn¬ton, had to step on it to get back tocampus for his English 268 class at8 yesterday morning. He spoke on“Changing Concepts of Patriotism”at Des Moines Monday night.Bernadotte Schmitt, Pulitzer prizehistorian, and Frank O’Hara, direc¬tor of the student dramatic produc¬tions, found that it was a smallworld after all when they bumpedinto each other in Hong Kong thissummer. O’Hara reports British sail¬ors on the Mediterranean think Mus¬solini will take Malta and Gibraltarif he gets serious about fightingEngland.Baseball does count, even on theUniversity’s lecture rostrums. A. P.(Artie) Scott couldn’t start his 1:30Humanities class until he found outhow the Cubs were doing.Stork over the Midway. The Ma¬roon received a blackball from Mr».Robert M. Hutchins last week be¬cause no mention was made of thebirth of the President’s seconddaughter, Joanna Blessing, quite assoon as it should.***P. S. Allen, erudite humanistwhose classes back in William Rain¬ey Harper’s days were THE placeto go, is convinced no one has readhis “Romanesque Lyric,” becauseHoward Mumford Jones, in editingit, cut out what he called an irrele¬vant chapter which Allen based therest of the book on. No one has everdiscovered the omission, Phil says.Walter Dill Scott doesn’t ratebold face type in this column be¬cause he isn’t connected with theUniversity, but his son, SumnerScott, does because he is the son ofthe president of Northwestern uni¬versity and is doing graduate workin English here.Mis* Mary Gilson, popular Collegeinstructor in Economics, is in Fin¬land, resting while a fractured footmends. When last seen by campusscouts she was waiting to get in thespectators’ gallery of the House ofCommons in London.Y.W.C.A. EntertainsFreshmen at FrolicAll freshman women are invitedto be guests of the YWCA at theFVeshman frolic tonight at IdaNoyes hall. Buffet supper will beserved at 6 and evei'yone is request¬ed to meet in the library at thattime.This is the 24th annual frolicsponsored by the College cabinet forthe purpose of furthering thefriendships and mutual interests ofifreshman women. Following thesupper will be an entertainmentfurnished by members of the Y. W.C. A. During the evening’s program,the Association group leaders will beintroduced and they, in turn, willmake announcements concerningplans of the interest groups’for theceming year. At a meeting of the executive com¬mittee of the Interfraternity commit¬tee yesterday, William Stapleton,former secretary-treasurer of thecommittee, was chosen president forthe coming year. Edward Boehm,who was previously a member of thecommittee, was selected as secretary-treasurer and John Mattmiller waselected to the vacancy on the commit¬tee, caused by the death of RobertLawrason, who was president of thegroup.As the first of its official functionsfor the autumn quarter, the commit¬tee meets with the Interfraternitycouncil at a general meeting in Rey¬nolds club tonight at 7:30. Eachfraternity is requested to send twomembers to the general meeting.Submit Autumn ScheduleBusiness pertinent to the fail activ¬ities of the council will be discussed.The rushing schedule for the fallquarter will be submitted to the coun¬cil meeting. Under the new rushingrules, each fraternity is permittedtwo Sunday open houses.The newly revised rushing ruleswill be submitted before the meetingfor discussion and preliminary plansfor the annual Interfraternity ballwill be laid. Committees to arrangethe location, orchestra, ticket sal<»8,and publicity will also be appointed.Announcement of the place selectedfor the ball will be made in the nearfuture. Various matters of policy,relative to fraternity activities forthe autumn quarter will be workedout.Supervise RushingMethods for supervising the cur¬rent rushing season will be plannedand suitable penalties for violation ofthe revised rules by either freshmenor fraternities will be discussed bythe general meeting.Stapleton, a member of Psi Up-silon, is active on the Cap and Gownand Phoenix staffs, and is a memberof the basketball squad. Boehm is aPhi Kappa Psi and captain of thegolf team. Mattmiller is a memberof Beta Theta Pi.Women’s CouncilElects HernlundGreen OfficersAt the election of officers for theFreshman Women’s council, yester¬day, Kay Hernlund was chosenpresident. Other officers electedare: Ellenor Greene, vice-president;Betty Mitchell, secretary; MarjorieRyser, treasurer and Barbara Boyd,representative to the College coun¬cil.In carrying out the policy form¬ulated by the council last year, theFreshman Women’s council is con¬tinuing the interest groups. Thesegroups are formed for the purposeof aiding freshman women enteringinto campus activities.Every freshman woman is urgedto try and see her council represen¬tative and inquire about the interestgroups which are being formed oncampus this year.The election of chairmen for thenew interest groups will be held nextweek. The new executives are chos¬en from the council.Hold Transfer Danceat Ida Noyes FridayIn order to give transfer studentsan opportunity to become acquaint¬ed, a dance will be held for theirbenefit Friday from 9 to 12 in IdaNoyes hall.The entertainment will be provid¬ed by an NBC singer and an orches¬tra, and will feature a tap dance byMildred Eaton. Admission will be35 cents per person, and, as the af¬fair is to be in the form of a mixer-dance, it is asked that the guestsnot come in couples.The chaperones have been an¬nounced as Dr. and Mrs. Carr, Mrs.Charles Gilkey, and Mrs. GeorgeFairweather. /, IJ/ / FileCopyCotbHall203Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1935V Selassie Reports Ethiopian Victory in EritreaBlack CavalryWins VictoryOver Italians(Continued from page 1)ing in the Dolo district to the south,where Ethiopia, Italian Somalilandand British Kenya meet, were re¬pulsed and forced to withdraw backacross the border.Report De»ertionOfficials were reluctant to elabor¬ate on the announcements of Ethio¬pian successes and gave no addition¬al details of operations in the north.The reported desertion of Italiannative troops was regarded as a de¬velopment of first importance, asRas Seyyom each day has senttrusted men into the Italian linesspreading Ethiopian propaganda andurging the black soldiers to “stickto your black brothers and don’t aidthe Italian slave-drivers.”In announcing the Ethiopian pen¬etration of Eritrea, officials saidthey were worried at the lack of realItalian opposition to the thrust.They feared Italian strategy mightbe to permit the column to get deepinto Italian territory, where it wouldbe cut off and wiped out.Also they were veering to thefeeling Italians would concentratealmost entirely in the north rathertha nother fronts, with the purposeof lopping off the rich northernprovinces in preference to Ogadenin the south.Civilians LeaveA train left for Djibouti todaycarrying 120 civilians, including 11Americans, and leaving behind about100 civilians unable to get seats.These will have to wait until Wed¬nesday’s train to be evacuated.Cornelius Van H. Engert, Amer¬ican minister, formed a committeeof Americans to care for the in¬terests of the American colony. Ahuge American flag has been spreadon the roof of the American colony,and on the roof of the hotel wheremost U. S. citizens live. Hospitalsand some private homes have hugeRed Cross emblems painted on roofs.Sllfr iaily iKaroun Late Developmentsin Ethiopian Situation(By United Press)ADDIS ABABA—Government an¬nounced a column of Ethiopiandare-devils penetrated into ItalianEritrea in retaliation for Italianadvances around Aduwa. It wasrumored in the Ethiopian capitalthat Aduwa had been recaptured.The report was doubted.HARAR—Ethiopian forces in Oga¬den complained Italians are usingmustard gas in drive northw'ardfrom Italian Somaliland. Theirforces have no gas protection.GENEVA—British strove to whiprecalcitrant nations into unitedfront for penalties against Italy.Assembly meets today. Germanyreported to have agreed to coop¬erate passively if Britain will com¬pensate her for loss of big Italiantrade. Austria also cool.ROME—Italians, informed Ethiopiais expelling Italian minister Vinci-Giglucci, plan to retaliate by oust¬ing Ethiopian charge d’ AffairesJesus. Communique claimed cap¬ture of hundreds of Ethiopians.Report Aksum captured lackedconfirmation in Rome. Leeigue ConsidersSemctions UnderBritish Pressure Hull Calls forNation’s Supporton Neutral StandUSE MUSTARD CASDrop Bombs inOgaden.(Copyright 1936 By United Press)Behind the Ethiopian southernarmies at Harar, Oct. 8—(UP)—Italian airplanes have dropped anumber of bombs filled with nause¬ous yellow gas on the Ethiopianfront lines, Dedjazmatch Nassibou,commanding Ethiopian concentra¬tions in central Ogaden province,said today.The bombs burst over a wide areawhich was blanketed with a thick-yellowish fog, the commander said.The gas “caused soldiers and non-combatants to fall to the ground andsuffer painfully.”Nassibou was not certain but be¬lieved the bombs were charged withmustard gas, widely used in theWorld war.FOUNDED IN 1901MemberUnited Press AssociationAssociated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the autumn,winter, and spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 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 rny 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 materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates $2.75 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising repre¬sentative National Advertising Service,Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New York ; 400 N.Michigan Ave., Chicip).RALPH NICHOLSON, Editor-in-Chief.ROBERT McQUILKIN, Business Mgr.RAYMOND LAHR, Managing Editor.EVERETT STOREY. Advertising Mgr.HENRY P. KELLEY. Desk Editor.JEANNE F. STOLTE, News Editor.Editorial associates: Wells Burnette,George Felsenthal, Zenia Goldberg, JulianKiser, James Snyder, Edward Stern.Business associates; James Bernard,Don Elliott, Don Patterson. Roy War-shawsky.Night Editor: Edward S, Stern Itcdy Proposes toKeep Status asLeague MemberROME, Oct. 8—(UP)—It is “high¬ly probable” that Italy will remain aLeague member even if economic andfinancial sanctions are enforcedagainst her, the government spokes¬man said tonight.However the final decision will de¬pend upon the procedure chosen toenforce the sanctions, the spokesmanadded. This was taken to mean anaval blockade would result in Italianresignation but that milder measureswould be tolerated.The spokesman reiterated that “theItalian people considered theLeague’s attitude unjust, especiallyanti-Italian and anti-Fascist.”Reports that Italian airplanes areshowering bombs upon defenselessEthiopians were denied as “absolute¬ly false.”“The Italian government and themilitary command in East Africa hasstrictly ordered that the civil popula¬tion not suffer the slightest injury,”the spokesman said. “The truth ofthis lies in the fact Ethiopian civil¬ians continually are surrendering atvarious military outposts in the fieldand immediately are helped, owingto their dire conditions. Several! gi’oups of Askaris (native troops who! fight for Italy) voluntarily visited• various localities and returned withI babes in their arms, followed by un-j armed men and women. All immed¬iately were fed and comforted.”The spokesman concluded signifi-1 cantly by saying:I “Italy always is ready to examineI new proposals. Italy has not advanc-: ed any new direct plan. Besides it is, not up to Italy to make any afterj she presented her memorandum tothe League containing completeI data.”Ethiopian losses were said to havei been “very grave” while Italian cas-j ualties have been held to a minimumj by the “excellence” of the fascist warmachine. (Continued from page 1)tria values the League as a guaran-ator of the territorial status quo incentral Europe, she cannot overlookthe fact that Italy is a valuablemarket and that Mussolini has stoodas an invaluable opponent to Hit¬ler’s hope of uniting Germany andAustria.It is important that these conflictsbe straightened out before the as¬sembly meets at 5 p. m. tomorrowto follow the council’s lead in con¬demning Italy and voting to punishher by financial and economicmeans.Who Get* Trade?A plan to boycott foreign pur¬chases of Italian fruits and wines, asone phase of economic sanctions,was understood to have made theproject more acceptable to France,who probably would profit most fromthe diversion of Italian trade.Germany informally has respond¬ed to British feelers, it is under¬stood, explaining that she is inclinedto cooperate at least passively inLeague measures but that as thelargest supplier of foreign madegoods to Italy she must have com¬pensation for loss of gold and for¬eign currency. The Germans aresaid to be seeking a British “for¬eign currency compensation guar-* antee” as the price of Germany’sI participation.i The assembly is expected to fol-I low closely yesterday’s council pro-1 cedure, in which each nation indi¬vidually signified its opinion of the1 Committee of Six’s report findingItaly guilty of violating the Coven¬ant.A scheduled session of the coun¬cil was abandoned when Baron Pom-I peo Aloisi decided not to deliver aI verbal reply to yesterday’s councilI action, which held Italy gruilty of! aggression and bound the 13 coun-i cil members to enforce sanctionsj against the Fascist government.I Aloisi, instead, sent a letter to, the League secretariat deploring thej council’s approval of the CommitteeI of Six report. Aloisi regretted thatj “methods in sharp contradiction toI the most elementary rules of allj procedure had been adopted for theI first time by the League of NationsI against my country.”, The assembly was expected to1 ratify the Council’s action prompt-I ly. The assembly is expected to ap-I point a large committee, includingI Italy’s neivhbors, such as Austria,I Jugoslavia, Rumania, etc., to recom-I mend specific economic measuresj to be undertaken collectively.I Diplomats believed the first of aI gradually-increasing series of finan-I cial and economic sanctions wouldhe applied next week. (Continued from page 1)faced with the actualities of war onthe African continent,” Hull said,“I am convinced that your organ¬ization will recognize the importanceof the President’s proclamation andofficial statement of October 5 andwill accord wholehearted support totheir execution in order that theAmerican people may continue toenjoy the blessing of peace.”All authorities were agreed thatthe United States has gone aboutas far as legal limitations will per¬mit in cooperation with the. Leaguepowers. President Roosevelt has:1. Proclaimed an arms embargoagainst Italy and Ethiopia.2. Warned Americans that travelon Italian ships and any attempt totrade with either nation would beat their own risk.Both the White House and theState department are believed to befrankly in favor of strong Leagueaction to compel Italy to observepeace. In many quarters here it hasbeen asserted that President Roose¬velt’s statement of policy issuedsimultaneously with his arms em¬bargo, was intended to reassure theLeague powers sufficiently to inducethem to vote .sanctions. U. S. and GermanyRenew Tariff WallsWASHINGTON, Oct. 8—(UP)—The State department today an¬nounced exchange of ratificationsyesterday at Berlin of the agree¬ment between the United States andGermany withdrawing “most favor¬ed nation” treatment of commercebetween the two countries.All other sections of the treatyof friendship, commerce and consul¬ar rights of 1923 remained in ef¬fect. The abrogation of the sectionproviding for tariff reductionsequivalent to those given other na¬tions was provided for in the agree¬ment signed at Washington on June3. Today on theQuadranglesMinister Gets PapersGENEVA, Oct. 8—(UP)—CountLuigi Vinci-Gigiucci, Fascist Italy’sminister to Ethiopia, will be expell¬ed from Emperor Haile Selassie’sterritory, the League of Nations wasnotified today. Lectures“Greek Science.” Professor Clif¬ford D. Osborne. Eckhart 202 at4:30.“The Constitutional Significanceof the American Revolution.” Pro¬fessor Andrew McLaughlin. Fuller¬ton Hall, the Art Institute at 6:45.Meeting*Wyvern. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes hall at 3 :30.Pegasus. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes hall at 12.Pi Delta Phi. Wicker room of IdaNoyes hall at 3:30.Mifcellaneou*Social Science tea. Social Science202 from 4 to 5.Freshman frolic. Theater of IdaNoyes hall at 6.TAKi VOUA MLTo A MowThere are lots of pleasantthings you can do with themoney you’ll save by eat¬ing at Younker’s regularly.Complete Luecheon 35^Complete Dinner .. 65^51 E. Chicago Ave.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.901 Davit Street, EvanstonArrest Nine Italiansin British MaltaV A L E T T A, Malta, Oct. 8—(UP)—Nine Italians, reportedly in¬cluding officials of the Banca diRoma and Fascist steamship andairways lines, were arrested today.Police refused to divulge thenames of those arrested or thecharges against them. Several weretaken into custody during a raid onthe Banca di Roma this afternoon.Other arrests were made later.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Used RemingtonPortable. Excellent condition. Fair¬fax 3855 after 6.FOR SALE. Men’s $400 RaccoonCoat for $100. Phone Plaza 7311.Try CUNAC’SDelicious HOME-MADE ICE CREAMHOME-MADE CHOCOLATESand FAMOUS CARAMELS1011'/2 E. 53rd St.—Fairfax 66692211 E. 7l8t St.—Fairfax 77.>i91505 E. 53rd St.—Fairfa.x 2538 Have You Gotten Your 1935-36STUDENT HANDBOOK?Here is a letter we received last week:To the Student Handbook:Permit me to congratulate you upon the appearance and quality of theStudent Handbook this year. The dates are arranged systematically, and this is agreat convenience. The paper is of a quality that will take ink. It is a pleas¬ure to use this handbook.Very sincerely yours,Sidney B. Snow,Dean, Meadville Theological School.Get Your Student Handbook Today25 centsAt the desk in Cobb Hall, at the Cap and Gown office in Lexington Hall, at the LJ.of C. Bookstore, and at Woodworth’s Bookstore.THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1935 Page ThreeCRITICSReply to Censure; ProposalsAre SolicitedAn Editorial jCriticism of things better than ^themselves has always been the func-1tion of little minds. The Daily Ma- |roon, it appears, finds its way intomany hands attached to prunelike 1knobs. IThis feeling springs from the edi-1tor’s impressions that his efforts fall Iupon sterile ground. Attempt hasbeen made to develop coverage of |foreign news as a legitimate collegi- |ate activity. Efforts have been |launched to select and present cam¬pus news more intelligently. Energyhas been expended to revamp themakeup so that The Daily Marooncan take its place as a publicationof a university community and notan unsucce.ssful imitator of thecommercial press.What’s the result? Our commun¬ity resents being bettered. Opinionsamong our non-subscribing criticsand miscellaneous fraternity secondguessers have it that we don’t shov¬el out the good (popular) stuff. Theywant:Pages full of campus news evenif every story has to be doubled tofill the paper.F'ull dope on what they, them¬selves, are doing in the columns ofthe Maroon so that they can pointout to all their friends how mad theyare that our columnist has daredmake that dirty crack..Ml information about their owmactivity even if we have to rewritethe same article bearing a long listof sponsors every day for two weeks.This is at least consistent with thefirst proposal that we blow up all thestories in order to fill the paper.Complete freedom to resist anychange that affects themselves orcomplicates their existence, and yetfull liberty to advocate abandoningone attempt at improvement with¬out suggesting an alternative.F'unctional segregation of relationbetween buying, reading, and know¬ing the Maroon and dogmatizingabout what is good.We propose simply this:Publication of a paper that wethink to be good to the readerswhether or not the readers think so..Abstractedly we may put it that weare interested in the readers ratherthan in ourselves. It is not profit¬able to do anything but what thereaders dictate.Di.scrimination in the presentationof campus news for we know thatthere is not enough worthwhile ma¬terial to fill the paper. We knowbecause we wrote the worthless typeof thing for three years. Did youever read it?Substitution for hot air of solid,well written cable news as the onlything that shouldn’t be thrown backon us by minds on the universitylevel.—R. W. Nicholson.THEATREI/IUIiAIjL ®Wednesday“SHE” PUBLISH RESULTS OFLATEST SCIENTIFICSTUDIES BY FACULTYCosnell Writes Book onNegro Politicians inChicago.Another group of campus personsagain comes to the foreground asauthors of a varied selection of1 books being published by the Uni-j versity press.I “The Negroes of Chicago havej achieved relatively more in politicsthan have the Negroes in othercities.” says Harold F. Gosnell, in; his book, “Negro Politicians: Thei Rise of Negro Politicians in Chi-! cago.” Mr. Gosnell is professor ofI Political Science.i Reginald J. Stephenson of the de¬partment of Physics has writtenI “Exploring in Physics: A New Out-j look on Problems in Physics,” whichis being used in the survey course.! G. T. Buswell, professor of Educa-I tional Psychology, has made the firstI experimental study of eye move-I ments in looking at pictures whichhe describes in “How People L#ookI at Pictures.”“Lafayette Comes to America” byLouis Gottschalk, professor of Mod¬ern Hi.story, offers the only bio-i graphical study of Lafayette basedj exclusively on contemporary sources,j In the field of business and eco-' nomics Marshall E. Dimock hasI written “Developing America’s Wa-j terways: Administration of the In¬land W’aterw’ays Corporation.” Mr.i Dimock is as.sociate professoi* ofI Public Administration.I William C. Bower, professor of: Religious Education, has edited aI volume entitled “The Church atI Work in the Modern Wolrd.” Thej work is a symposium of which the! authors are all members of thej faculty of the Divinity school of theI University.j “The Vectors of Mind: Multiple-1 Factor Analysis for the Lsolation ofPiimary Traits” has been written byL. L. Thurstone, professor of Psy¬chology. A group of lectures havebeen edited by Samuel N. Harper,profe.ssor of Ru.ssian Language andI In.“titutions in “The Soviet Union' and World Problems.” In the samefield of political science is “HomeRule for Metropolitan Chicago” by.Albert Lepawsky, research associatein Political Science.William S. Gray, professor of Ed¬ucation, has edited “The Academicand Professional Preparation of Sec¬ondary-School Teachers.” Two mem¬bers of the faculty have collectedand edited material for “A GreekPapyrus with Vocabulary.” They areI Edgar J. Goodspeed and Ernest C.1 Colwell.CAR FOR SALEChrysler Coupe—1934ReasonableWILL SELL I'OK TERMS OR CASHPhone Dorchester 0662i>r call atHelen Gahagan and RandolphScott 5719 Dorchester—WallsHer* it your chanc* to obtainChackar'i Famous Tripla-Klaanprocau at monay-iaving pricat.It maant your garmantt ara tri-pla dry elaanad with cryttal-alaar, filtarad Ingradiantt tomala tham itay elaan longar,look and waar battar.SmuM additionat charg0 /ar fitr-trimmed, pleated and heavy garmentsCor. 61st Street and Woodlawn Ave.Two Blocks South of University ChapelTELEPHONE PLAZA 4484 Loop College toHold Seminarsfor PrincipalsThe University College has plan¬ned four special seminar coursesfor the present academic year totrain the city’s public school teach¬ers and principals. The Downtowncollege is acting in cooperation withsuperintendent of schools WilliamJ. Bogan who felt the need of sucha program.A seminar on “The School Prin-cipalship in Chicago,” and one on“Curriculum and Instruction inJunior Colleges,” began Saturdayand will last two quarters.The other two begin January 4and will also be held two quarters.They are a seminar on “The Curri¬culum,” centering on the buildingand enrichment of academic pro¬grams in Chicago schools, and an¬other on “Educational Measure¬ment,” dealing with tests and exam¬inations.The classes meet downtown Sat¬urday mornings. The University willrecognize the courses as preparatoryto examinations for higher degrees.Van Tuyl DirectsMen’s Dance ClassA class for men in fundamentalsof modern dance technique has beenorganized this quarter upon studentrequest. This class will meet from12 to 1 on Tuesday through Fridayin the theater of Ida Noyes hall un¬der direction of Marian VanTuyl.Registration will be extended un¬til the end of the week, and is openwithout prerequisite to any student.Although this is the first timesuch a class has been offered at thisUniversity, other colleges and uni¬versities throughout the countryhave sponsored men’s groups in in¬creasing numbers during the pastfew years.General Makes TourASMARA, Eritrea, Oct. 8—(UP)—General Emilio de Bono,commander of the Italian forces inEast Africa, left tonight on an in¬spection tour of the Aduwa and Adi-grat front and other positions occu¬pied by the Italians.The Italian forces have resumedtheir advance southward from Adi-grat and occupied Edaga-Hamus,nine miles from Adigrat, a messagefom Asmara to the newspaper Tri¬buna said in Rome. GulliverFood for Gossip — HungryU. of C. StudentsRose TEIBER building up hertrousseau. For what we can’timagine. Anyway, her date last Sat.nite came home without his topcoatMy, my. Flip Ebert! How longyour hair is growing since you wentto Paris this summer.Information to the effect that oneJean Russell is taking a course ininterpretive dancing.. . .Great is thespeculation as to what she is tryingto interpret.A new-comer in school, one JackFuler of Colorado is making hisniche here...R. Teiber and A.Palmer are understood to already bein his clutches. Loving friends callhim “Silver Dollar” or “Taxi-cab”Jack.Phi Delt Paul Wagner always oc¬cupies the seat next to a certainyoung lady in English 247 (no mat¬ter where she goes.) Could it be abudding romance at this time of the iyear? j* * jThings aren’t turning out for A.Sandman as expected. Shethought the beginning of the schoolyear would bring an end to summersocial hibernation. She confessesconfidentially that the lads aren’tresponding'.We hear on good authority thatHal James, late of U. C. D. A. hasa swell part in the new Hecht-Mac-Arthur shifty in N’Yawk. Fan let¬ters are in c^der. (Save the orchids 'till you see the show).Fame of Saturday’s neo-nuptialparty growing. Everything out ofcontrol including chaperones, H.Hudson, and elevator... last twovaguely connected. It seems that H.Hudson was one hour in solving thetricky mysteries of said elevator.Psychologists present, concluded thatmental images in Hudson’s pateranged from bird cage to captiveballoon. Game of the evening con¬sisted of a three hour preparationconsuming quarts and then all con¬cerned (or able) squatting in circle.One of circle leaves and the idea isto guess who it was. One J. Bardenleft and wasn’t missed for hours,until his triumphant return ladenwith tons of Shredded Wheat Bis¬cuits that were sportively crunchedon marcelled heads.* * *WE hear Ginny Rabe is over atWilliams college payingthrough the nostrils for the gay so¬cial whirl she indulged in last year. Remember girls. ,. “Those who eatcake must pay the fiddler,” or how¬ever you like.Pinkie Kehoe is wowing them withthe new “Ethiopian Song” thesedays... “I love Selassie”. . .ouch!Have you seen Lois Klafter Man-del sinking back in the luxury ofthat big limousine and orderingJeeves to, “Take it away?” Vulgardisplay of wealth, sezzi. ('Commun¬ist paper please copy).Warning to co-eds: One ZenaKarras gaining fame in reliable tac¬tics of so-called “shift”... the ideais to shift dates with party until j equilibrium is reached, at least part¬ly-Notice. .. All freshman girls inter¬ested in choral singing report to thePsi U’s at table 1 in the Coffeeshop any week day afternoon aroundthree.Your chance is coming. . .Gul¬liver’s chest is to be placed at thedoor of Coffee shop with slot forentries. Only choice morsels accept¬ed (no gum wrappers). Originalmanuscripts not returned unless ac¬companied by self-addressed stamp¬ed envelope.Enough for one day, dear friends.Hear ye, hear ye1 bring ye glad tidings. For in these very pages, if yours is thequick and clever eye, ye shall discover the new sensational, aston¬ishing and reveling column—GULLIVERblack with dirt from and aboutYou and YouandYouWhoopee!! is right — it exceeds the out-moded “Travelling Bazaar ,bringing you dirt even Gertie can’t imagine. You 11 roll in the isleat the humor, open your eyes at its revelations, blush at its franknessand smile at its clever style.Yes Suh!!You too, can be a contributor to this startling column-dropyour suggestions in the Bird house receptical in the Coffee Shop.Read It Now and Join Its PublicPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1935First Fraternity I-M TouchballGames Scheduled This Afternoonindependent Leagues StartTheir Season a WeekLaterToday’s Games4:00 Deke Reds vs. Pi Lambda Phi59th and Cottage GrovePhi Sigma Delta vs. LambdaChi AlphaPhi Delta Theta vs. Phi Kap¬pa Sigma60th and GreenwoodTomorrow’s Games3:00 Phi Kappa Psi vs. Alpha TauOmega59th and Cottage GrovePhi Beta Delta vs. S’gma Chi60th and Greenwood.4:00 Psi U Varsity vs. Zeta BetaTau59th and Cottage GroveDelta Upsilon vs. Chi PsiAlpha Delta Phi vs. KappaSigma60th and GreenwoodSix fraternities will christen theIntramural Athletic program of1935-’36 this afternoon as they meetin the initial touchball contests ofthe Greek letter league.Independent teams are scheduledto begin play Oct. 17.Delta Kappa Epsilon will sendtheir “Red” team against Pi Lamb¬da Phi on field no. one at 59th andCottage Grove. The Deke “Blues”are not scheduled to play this week.On Greenwood field, at 60th andGreenwood, Phi Sigma Delta will mixwith Lambda Chi Alpha, while PhiDelta Theta and Phi Kappa Sigmamatch wits on another part of themeadow.Intramural tennis, golf, and horse¬shoes will start Oct. 15.Entry blanks will be sent to fra-Conference CoachesShift Team Lineupsas Big Games Near{By United Press)BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 8—Aahakeup in Indiana’s varsity lineupwas ordered today by Coach Bo Mc-Millin in a search for replacements.Halfback Wendel Walker called sig¬nals, and North, a first year man,was gfiven a trial in the backfield. Ashort scrimmage was held againstfreshmen using Michigan formations.ANN ARBOR, Mich., Oct. 8—Three new faces appeared in theMichigan lineup today as scrimmagefor the Indiana game started. ChetStabovitz, former end and back re¬placed the injured Freddy Ziem attackle. Tiny Wright was at center,and Art Valpez played at right endin place of Mike Savage. Coach Har¬ry Kipke said he had “high hopes”of defeating the Hoosiers.LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 8—A re¬built Boilermakers team today prac¬ticed passing and kicking; CecilIsbell probably will not be able toplay against Fordham next Satur¬day, so Hewitt East and Leon Dailyalternated at his position. CoachKizer’s present worry is to get hismen into good physical condition be¬fore they leave Thursday. Thegruelling battle with Northwesternleft the squad with four veterans in¬jured.Maroon SharpshooterWins Illinois TitleBrad Wiles won first in the north¬ern Illinois small bore rifle champion¬ship at the Arrowhead Rod and Gunclub of Hinsdale last week. RussWiles, brother, took second by a closemargin.Brad took the 50, 100, and 200yard events for a total of 496 points.His brother also finished with 496points, but gained a 98 in the 200yard shoot to Brad’s 99. This onepoint difference in the long shoot gavehis brother the final winning decision.J. Balderson finished in third placewith 495. ternities and organizations, but any¬one may register personally at theIntramural office in Bartlett duringthe day.The all University singles tennistournament will be run in the samemanner as last year—straight elim¬ination tourney with medals for firstand second winners. Cards will besent to contestants notifying themof their opponents.Everyone is eligible with the ex¬ception of “C” men, and numeralwinners in tennis.The horseshoe tournament will beconducted in both fraternity and in¬dependent and singles and doubles.Courts are located between 56th and57th on Ellis avenue.Golf matches must be run offearly, as the weather man says therewill be an early winter. Straightmatch plays will determine the cham¬pion. Matches may be played on anygolf course.SHAU6HNESSY SHIFTSLINE AS MAROONSBATTLE YEARLINGSij For the second day straight theMaroons worked out in Stagg field,and spent most of the afternoonscrimmaging the freshmen. A shake-up in the lineup was in evidence asCoach Clark Shaughnessy shiftedI Merritt Bush from tackle to end.Several second team men earnedpromotion and were placed in onthe first string eleven. A1 Thomas,junior guard, was in Bud Jordan’splace while Woodrow Wilson, a soph¬omore, took Bush’s tackle position.Jordan, who received a slight injuryin the Carroll game, has not respond¬ed satisfactorily to treatment andmay not be ready to play againstWestern State Saturday. {The Maroons spent most of yes¬terday’s practice session on defense,as Coach Shaughnessy has been try¬ing to strengthen that part of hisattack. Although Lew Hamity andDave Rogers, freshman backfieldstars, were able to gain ground jthrough the varsity team, they were |unable to make more than a few 1yards at a time. (Defensively, the shift in the Ma- iroon line has apparently bolsteredthe Maroon team; but the test willcome Saturday when Chicago meetsWestern State. Although not a first-class team, the Teachers from Kala¬mazoo have won their last ninegames, and may prove to be danger¬ous opposition should the Maroonsfalter in the fundamentals of theirgame.Cheer Squad MeetsToday in Bartlett;Plans New StuntsIn preparation for the forthcom¬ing major grid tussles, all membersof the cheer leading squad are ex¬pected to meet at Bartlett gym¬nasium today at 4:30, it was an¬nounced by Jay Brown, head cheerleader.At the same time any membersof the gymnastic team who are in¬terested in putting a bit of tumblinginto the usual cheering gyrationsare urged to appear. Brown alsostated that any novel ideas for newcheers or any new way of doing oldcheers would be appreciated.This year will mark a departurefrom the old conventional cheermethods. In an effort to evoke moresound from the cheering sectionsacrobatic stunts will be added. LastSaturday saw the first performanceof the new summersault “skjrrock-et,” and the members of the cheersquad have promised more trickcheers. Most of these will not beready until the first conferenceopener with Purdue a week fromSaturday. I INTRAMURAL HEADREVIEWS RULES ASFALL PLAY STARTSNo Blocking or Tackling;Seven Man Limit onEach TeamBy RICHARD ADAIRIntramural touchbalT managerWith the touchball season openingtoday a few of the more frequentlyapplied rules are given to aid thosewho may be in doubt concerningthem:1. Seven men is the maximumnumber on a team, and five theleast.2. On the kickoff, the ball is deadif touched by a member of the kick¬ing team before it is handled by amember of the receiving team.3. Offensive team must gain 15yards in four downs.4. Man receiving ball from cen¬ter may run or pass as he progress¬es down the field, however, firstpass on any down must come frombehind the line of scrimmage..5. If a pass is incomplete the ballis dead and returned to the scrim¬mage line providing it was the firstpass of the play. If other than thefirst pass, the ball is placed at thespot from which it was thrown.6. Second incomplete pass overgoal line from scrimmage is atouchback.7. Blocking and tackling are pro¬hibited. Penalties will be inflicted.8. Anyone is eligible to re¬ceive a pass.Last year the Phi Beta Deltas camethrough with the University cham¬pionship, but this year they will un¬doubtedly have a tougher time thanbefore. The number of teams enter¬ed this year is about the same as be¬fore.N. Howard, Deke; T. Weiss, PhiDelt; D. How-ard, Deke; W. Haarlow,Psi U; P. Archipley, Phi Delta The¬ta; D. Kerr, Alpha Delt; W. Duvall,Phi Psi, and R. Cochran, Psi U., weresome of the more outstanding play¬ers from last year’s all-star team.HofFer Leaves forOlympic CommitteeMeeting on SaturdayOn Friday, Coach Dan Hoffer, re¬nowned for his uniformly successfulgymnastic teams, leaves for NewYork to attend a meeting of theOlympic committee on gymnastics.The committee will make plansfor the sectional tryouts to deter¬mine the membership of the Olympicteam, arrange for the coaching anddevelopment of candidates for theteam, complete plans for the drivefor funds necessary to send thegymnasts to Berlin in 1936, andelect a coach and manager for theteam.Lastly, the committee will witnessa demonstration of performance un¬der Olympic requirements, which arenot generally known in this coun¬try. The one man must compete inall the standard events in the Olym¬pics, instead of competing only ina single specialty as is the customhere. This makes versatility thechief requirement.Order of C BuildsLounge Under StandsExclusively for the use of “C”men, a lounge under the North standsof Stagg field was built by the Orderof the C during the summer.The lounge is open before and af¬ter football games, and during thehalves, for University athletic awardwinners.Former athletes may relax in over¬stuffed chairs, play cards, or partakeof food at the refreshment counter.The project was approved at themeeting of the Order of the C lastspring. A COUEtE KOEESSIR DISCOVEREDThat Often It Isn^t a Student’s Brain but his Penthat Runs Dry—causes Failure—in Classes and Exams!So he invented this sacless Vacumatic, and Parker engineered it to perfection^gave it102% more Ink Capacity-made its Ink Level VISIBLE, so it suddenly can*t go empty!Yes, a scientist on the faculty ofthe University of W isconsin wasamazed to find now pens that runout of ink slow down classes, de¬moralize thinking, and bring marksthat no student wants to write homeabout.His observations led to the birth ofthe revolutionary Parker V acumatic.This miracle pen writes 12,000 wordsl^rLerfiUMANTCfO WfCMANICAUV FtSMCTJunior, $5 $1S0,Ovr-Sizo, $10 $3.50 and |5 from a single filling—shows when it’srunning low—tells when to refill!Any good store selling pens willshow you bow the Parker Vanimaticeliminates 11 old-time parts, includ¬ing the lever filler and rubber ink sacfound in sac-tv^w p<'ns.And due to this,it hasdouble room for ink, uith-out increase in size.But don't think thatsacless pens containingsquirt -^n pumps are likeParker s patented Vacu-matir. Tliis new creationcontains none of these.That's why it'set'AKAN-TEBD MBC BA NIC ALLYPBRPBCr! Go and try writing two differentways with its Reversible Point—solidGold combined with precious Plat¬inum—skilfully fashioned to write onImth sides—slightly turned up at thetip BO it cannot scratch or drag, evenunder pressure!Do this and you won'tlet an old {>en impedeyour learning anotherday. The Parkrr PenCompany, Janesville,Wisconsin.Send a Post Card for Free Bot¬tle of Parker QimmA—the mar¬velous new quick-drying, pen-cleaning ink. and throw yourblotter away. Address Dept.712.wmmt TWO WAVSL^aWITHOUT AfiJOBTMtftTSEE OUR COMPLETE LINE ATWOODWORTHS BOOKSTORED 41 Years of Serving Students of the OUniversity of Chicago1311 EAST 57th ST.—Near Kimbark Ave.SI}? iaily HarnnnYear after year is marked with the campus appear¬ance of The Daily Maroon. Few will contest the factthat It serves the University student well.It arouses his Interests, keeps him well informedand coordinates every phase of his regmented collegecareer.In a new and glamorous form, The Daily Maroon,this year presentsTHEATER BUREAU FOR YOUR CONVENIENCEALL CAMPUS ANNOUNCEMENTSGULLIVER —THE HUMOROUS JESTERCOMPLETE FOREIGN NEWSCURRENT CAMPUS NEWSSUBSCRIBE NOWthrough Tailor Tom or at the Maroon OfficeHUMOR INSURANCE AT ONLY $1.35 the yearONE NINE MONTH ENDOWMENT POLICY TO ONE NINE MONTH HUMOR LIABILITY POLICY TOLIFE PHOENIX• No home should be without one! • Two policies for the price of one!• Get rid of joy killers! • You need the assurance this insurance offers!• Let this be your happy year! • See your policy writer today!jlume IV • NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWS IN PICTURE AND PARAGRAPH IssueAN ARCH AND THREE ARCHERS' Members of the Washington Uni^versity women's archery team pose forthe cameraman in front of one of the St.Louis institution's impressive archways.yHE CAPTAIN RIDES HIS MAS'^ COT '' A1 Barabas, star of 1934 RoseBowl contest, watches his Columbiateam'inates from the back of the lion whichguards Baker Field.^TING AN ANGLE is one of the things that has kept mathematicians puzzled—and amused, too—for years,lore Macknik, 21'year-old Pennsylvanian who hopes to enter University of Chicago, has caused the latesti^r this question with his solution to the problem illustrated above. ^HIS PHOTOGRAPH of Marjorie Weaver^ has been selected to typify the “Indianaco-ed" in a series of photographic muralsrecently prepared for exhibition.JJEAN BURNETTE, Delta Delta Delta at Northwestern University, is secretaryof that institution's sophomore class. She’s a member of the executive board of theWomen’s Self Government Association, too. htJoi 1ivMKti BuiltPROFESSIONAL AUCTIONEERS “knocked down" the movable pi^of Cotner College at Bethany, Neb., last month to a crowd of i,oooand spectators who turned out to witness the unusual event of a collegauctioned off. Depression enrollments closed the school last year.D OOKIE TO IMMOR'TAL '' Vernon Ken-nedy, ib-year-old WhiteSox pitcher who gained hisearly training at MissouriCentral Teachers College,pitched the first no'hitgame of the 1935 baseballseason. CTOCKING FEET replace cleared shoes when the Fordham Rams work out indoors on rainy da^Coach Jim Crowley is demonstrating blocking with the help of Capt. Maniaci and Sol Ro«New Models Illustrate Molecular StructuresA*:!,. IMPROVED METHOD of indicating whatmolecules might look like if they could be seen bythe naked eye has been developed by Drs. T. H.Hazlehurst, Jr., and Harvey A. Neville of LehighUniversity. Using wooden models, they have illus' trated the composition of several substances, with Ismall balls representing hydrogen, the larger d;objects carbon, and the light ones oxygen. The hrbetween the balls represent valence.Methane and Water.(ELEMENT C. WILLIAMS, former dean of theUniversity of Iowa college of engineering, hasaccepted the presidency of Lehigh University. Cobak.V. IV - Is-.GLtN GRAYAND rnrCASA LONiA BANDBACK AGA/N —WITH TH€ H/TT(/NtS OF THF PAY* CATCHYRHyTHMj/ ORIGINAL ORCHES¬TRATIONS! JHBSE COLlEGtATEFAVORITES Ft/RNISH TNRIUINGMUSIC FOR 7H€ CAMFL CARAVAN,T€DHUS WOH£RE5 rapios famous srortsCOMMENTATOR. WITH THE’’INSIDE POPE" ON TNE DIGSPORTS events. FOELOW H/SREVIEWS AND PREDICTIONSONTNE camel CARAVAN.iWAlTER D£ANEiO'KEEFI JAN/Smnterful master of cere- ! YOUNG-BEAUnFUL-EXCmNG1MONIFS-SINGING COMEDIAN -the new Singing sensa-•STAR OF LAUGH-COM PE LUNG T/ON OF the air. ROMANTICDRAMAS* WALTER IS MORE FUN MELODY IS HER CONTRIBU-tNAN EVER ON THE NEW PON TO THIS NEW ALL-STARcamel caravan. CAMEL CARAVAN.NOW BAOAOCASTING!E&IMNING TUESDAY; OCTOBER ISI AA^D EVERT T(/ESDAVAHoVHMKSDAY9:00 PM. EAStEAN TIME8:00 PM. CENTAAE TIME9:30 PM. MOMNWlN TiMi8:30 PM. PAOPIC TlMtA LIFT WITN a camel T'Copyright, 1936, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C,OVER COASr-TO-COAST WABC—COLUMBIA NETWORKOfiJ TNAT CAMEiS/ WH/CH OFFER THIS AlL-STARprogram for your enjoyment, are made from finer, more expensive/■OMOar-TURKISH and DOMEST/C-THAN any other POPUIAR BRANDA Lesson in PuntingprORDHAM'S STAR sophomore halfback, Joe^ Woitkoski, demonstrates the correct puntingform in this SPEED GRAPH. Starting at the topand reading down and across, the pictures give youthe position of the kicker in the various stages ofmaking a punt. ■BPPAINING HABITS^^a millicHi years agohave been discoveredfrom the remnantsmeals eaten by the Pek'ing Man and analyzedby Dr. Ralph W.Chaney, University ofCalifornia paleontolo-gist. They ate, he says,hackberry seeds, bison,and rhinoceros. He isshown holding some ofthe fossils unearthed ina Chinese limestonequarry.eLK B*- * rXLE is the newjme among these mem-uad (L to R) Bill Dough'olitte Amadejo, ArthurMFDICA, Universityleadoi of the American1 competed in the Orientcongratulates Captaininese team, after he wonstyle event. Ishiharada,>ient team, is looking on.XX)K THE SOLDIER'Sjp of U. S. Militarybeing taught the finepreparing flapjack batterg- ^^C^ERN UTOPIA OF FACTORY-MADE MOTOHOMES - - An artist’s conception of a plan initiated byroster Gunnison, exponent of the pre'fabricated housing movement, for a model community to be offered for studyand research at Pi^due University in connection with a new course on “The Science erf Better Living.” The above planIS ased on Mr. Gunnison s motohome principle of mass'produced, air-conditioned and fully mechanized homes builtaround a central m<»rhanical unit.tBuilding for Business--Groping for GranUeu[OT one of our older buildingsvenerable or will ever be'come so. Time refuses to consolethem. They look as if they meantbusiness and nothing more."Thus lamented James RussellLowell in a stinging indictment ofAmerican college architecture de'livered on the 250th anniversary ofthe founding of Harvard College,the one college that should possessa solid architectural tradition.Between Lowell’s plaint and Hat'vard’s 1936 Tercentennial, a hostof critics have hurled as manyverbal bricks at the architecture ofAmerican college buildings as havebeen used during the same periodto build them. These critical brickshave been returned promptly andeffectively by the architects anddefenders of the fortresses of learn¬ing under bombardment. Thehonors, if any, are about even—butthe battle is not yet ended!Structure versus decoration, util¬ity versus sentiment have long beenthe battle-lines in the builder’scraft. American collegiate buildingsclearly reveal the fierceness of thefight—from the first halls of the Eighteenth Centuryto the “University of the Future ” existing only in thedreams of a few.“We have none, or next to none of those coignsof vantage for the tendrils of memory and affection,built into English universities," Lowell complained indelivering the speech which has rallied the decoration-and'sentiment guild. “They are well-nigh desolate ofaesthetic stimulus.”But standards of value have changed since theVictorian era, the utility-and-structure guild replies.We no longer build colleges, or anything else, in the“General Grant" Gothic of the dark and stuffyinteriors, their fronts tortured with ornament.Machine-age esthetic stimuli are found in straight¬forward, business-like buildings, where our Victoriangrand-parents insisted on gingerbread ornament fromwhich to drape their “tendrils of memory and affec¬tion." The sentimental Victorian distinction between“architecture” and- “building” no longer prevails forthe modernist.Charles Eliot Norton called the modernists tobattle when he spoke of “noble architecture, simpleas It may be"—a phrase that expresses the taste of ageneration closer to ours. Norton, Harvardian likeLowell, felt the inestimable influence of architectureat a “^eat seat of education—especially in ourcountry '. Both men’s views on architectural greatnessand its pedagogic value apply not only to our oldestand richest institution, but to every college every¬where. St0KUr •Reprinted from The Pounding of Harvard College by courtesy of Harvard University Press. ige!((The first American college building—The Old College at Harvard (1038) StA Review of American Colleaie ArchitectureWith Sidelights on “Battle of the Builders2. The first state universities and the colleges of theearly republic, their more pretentious Romanizedbuildings reflecting the new self-sufficiency and largerscale of operations of the United States.3. The winning of the West, the multiplication ofcolleges, the series of Anti-Classical revivals in artand architecture—all phases of turbid, radical pro¬gress spiced with cultural glances-over-the-shoulder atvalues inevitably doomed to extinction.4. The period of architectural and cultural re-intc-gration at the end of the 19th Century, clearly appar¬ent in the re-discovery of the unified campus and therenewed Roman revival. Now colleges founded byindividuals—not by Church or State as before—pre¬dominate.5. Our own Post-War era with its often errant,sometimes prophetic answers to the double problem ofarchitecture and culture.Harvard First Used‘ ‘ House-Architectu re’ ’TN 1636 the General Court of the Colony of Massa-^ chusetts Bay generously voted to “give £400 towardsa School or College.” A matter of $2,000 at today’s ex¬change, it had a purchasing power of about $5,000.The first Harvard curriculum, soaked with philoso-We have an unsuspiected and forgotten wealth ofesthetic material in our college buildings—especiallyin those of Colonial and Early Republican times. InIt, we can enjoy and compare a bewildering varietyof artistic values. Fascinating, colorful connectionscome to light between the buildings and their builders,with the undergraduates who inhabited them, withthe whole civilization that produced them and en¬joyed the fruits of the institutions they housed.‘ The most beautiful campus in America" is adistinction claimed by more than a few colleges. Inalmost every case the distinction is based upon naturalsurroundings with which architecture or unified planare not integrated in any significant sense.Five chapters comprise the evolution of the Ameri¬can college building:I. The first successful attempts to establish pri¬marily theological seminaries in Colonial New Eng¬land and Virginia, with their earliest, long-vanishedhalls and their varying versions of the “Georgianvernacular” of the i8th century. MassdehusetTs MlnPiO'uiN'Fiphy and New Testament Clagged behind the advances of1*^ century continental thand science. Latin, still Ha*official language, wasjiot tau htwas merely assumed and cc !moLused. Scholastic disputatioi ^ vvstill in vogue; and in the sc neemid-17th Century Massai \usethe earth was still the cente ofuniverse (as was BostonHouse in the mid-19th).Twenty dollars a year aikeep was the princely saPresident Dunstcr’s two firtents of the Class of 1642tinctions of family and rarobserved in class and atAbout half the graduatesfirst century or so (an aveeight per year) went into tlgregational ministry, Harvarpurpose.Jc^ Harvard, M. A. Cair ridftKdying in 1638 gave his name tonew institution along with i v(modest legacy—£40010 mat hinvestment of the General ''kxiand his entire library of 300 v )Pumes. The endowment w sdently appreciated more than some of tf ■ spendous sums sunk in later institutions. (Roclcfelgave millions to the University of Chicago, but ustill called Chicago!).Harvard's first buildings were of wood, Nev Eland’s favorite building material in the sixtec hidreds. None remain, but a good drawing of wh it 1original Harvard Hall must have looked like honothing but an amplification of the typical EaiAmerican dwelling house. Tradition thus pLyelarge part in our earliest college architecture.The house-architecture tradition was all the mereasonable in the 17th Century American colksince the halls served entirely as “chamber^ ^studies.” Thus they embodied the fundamental E;lish and New England educational theory th. twas only by studying and disputing, eating and dn;ing, playing and praying as members of the same clegiate community that the priceless gift of cha:.iccould be imparted to young men.” The dornutcharacter of all college buildings is preserved well uthe 19th Century, and since the war has come in foilively revival.The drawing at the left below shows Old Ha: vHall before it burned in 1764. The drawing atright below shows the New Harvard Hall whichplaced It in 1766. The later building, still clear!dormitory, is composed on the lines of the tvpiNew England Town Hall or Court House, withtinuous cornices, fully developed gables, and cla^symmetry of all its parts.The oldest college building still standing is 11vard’s Massachusetts Hall of 1720. Seen on bothprints, It IS midway in style between Old Harwi:with Its medieval emphasis on pointed dormer winJoiand Its strikingly irregular roof line, and themeasured formality of New Harvard Massachusestill lacks the continuous cornice, but her dormers,completely subordinated to the single horizontalthe roof balustrade. In general composition, and wthe clock enframed in her end wall. Massachusett-reminiscent of Boston’s Old State House of the mEarly Georgian period.Here a type has been created, early in the uCentury, which will influence American college r uiiings, with Icxtal and periodic variations, up toRevolution. The red “Harvard Brick ” has remtin<the dominant material in all Harvard’s later buiklinjAs a rule, departures from it have been unfortum:This IS the first m a series of special articles"American College Architecture " The second will ^CU55 other pre'Rewlutionary colleges.—Editor.S^TF.TrtfAn Early View of harvard Engraved by^ASY WAY TO WAKE UPIN TNE MORNING ..AND AN EASY WAYTO ENJOY A PIPEl|N<’ SUNVh ^OWSLm throughIgmfving^ASr (i) WHICH]hT . FUSEJG OFF|nn< N®WHICHHUNGRYIRC r® ON TOiCr . PARROTIts :racker®[pAf ATINGIpE RELEASINGliGf r ® ON5T )F BED ®^ICK CATAPULTSNT INTOiNTi ®-P.S.CLOUDY)RNINGS SITE NIGHTIfore f\ \- I MADE A SURVEY-PRINCE ALBERTIS THE SMOKETHATS MILO,COOL,LONG-BURNING.IT^ THE TOP ji^r^lCA'S f A«*>« i4 il MAOe 0H06II A,.,*06 0H06II ASPECIAL Processthat takes outall *B»Te- CWMP-CUT SLOW-BUP-NINGanMlo and wellowi!JisTTRVP.A.-ANOYOU,TOO, WILL CAUIT 'THE nationalJOV SMOKE P)R. W. O. HOTCH'KISS last month as-sumed his new duties aspresident of RensselaerPolytechnic Institute.teiALBtWD L. SACKETT, Penn^sylvania State Collegeengineering dean, headsEngineering Foundation’snew student guidance com-mittee.DHIL BRUBAKER, THE “FIGHTING PARSON,” scores another knockout in^ one of the many fights he “works” to earn his way through College of the Pacificto become a minister.CPEEDSTERS OF LONG AGO are to be found in the locomotive museum at Pur^due University. The formidable model in the front (above) was known as theTornado from its terrific speed of 15 to 18 miles per hour when used on the SeaboardAirline in 1840. The coach in the immediate rear was used on the Boston and Provi'dence road, while the Daniel ^lason, in the rear, was used on the New York, NewHaven and Hartford in the Fifties. At the left is Winan’s Camel Bacl{, built in 1868for the B O and given its peculiar name from the position of its cab.A ROOSEVELT GATHERS ALASKAN BONES " Archibald Roosevelt, Jr., (left) OTandson of“T. R.”, dug up these i5,oe)0'year'old bison skulls in old placer mines near Fairbanks for the Uni¬versity of Alaska and the American Museum of Natural HisttM^. piRST COURSE IN AMATEUR TELESCOPE-MAf^ taught at Pennsylvania State College by Prof. Henry I(right). He is here showing students how to operate thewhich he built foi $io.Mel ton, Ameche, Flynn^^Stars of the Air LarA BOUT the time undergraduates begin to use their■^season football tickets, network radio stars startlocating for new penthouses to replace the stuffy oldten room quarters they have occupied during thelong hard summer when listeners stay home only forthe baseball broadcasts. From October on the livingrooms of the land are filled with ffoods of expensivemusic and a hundred expensive voices that engulf thefireside from morning until night.Among these voices none wiu be rtKX'e prominentthis year than that of a University of Florida DeltaTau Delta, a swarthy gentleman the alumni magazinesof Florida, the University of Georgia, and VanderbiltUniversity have a right to talk about. James Meltonby name, he was bom in Moultrie, Georgia, but grewup in Citra, Florida.DEFORE entering the University of Florida in^ 1920, he had two accomplishments: he couldbuild a boat and was a whiz in any church choir.President Murphee heard him sing in an assemblyand turned him from law to music. Shortly after'wards, in initiating him, the Delts tied him to atombstone for the night. He acted with the Mas-queraders; then learned to play a saxophone as anexcuse for starting a band.From that moment cm he wandered from the higherlearning. In 1923 he returned to school, this time atthe University of Georgia. The next year he went toVanderbilt to study voice. After graduation he sangin Nashville night clubs for a year. He arrived inNew York the day Lindbergh came back from Pans.Roxy gave him a chance. Next Jimmy sang top tenorwith the Revelers, a quartet which has since grad'A whiz in any church choirHe was rescued from law. uated Frank Parker. You have heard Melton in boththe Palmolive Beauty Box and Ward’s Family theaters.This winter you’ll see him in a movie and continue tohear him on the Gulf Headliners program.Jimmy Melton’s yacht is named Melody, and it’sbigger than any twenty he made when he was a boyin Floricb.T IKE James Melton, Don Ameche didn’t win an^ athletic letter in schcxDl, but Eton was also a three-college man, the Alma Maters being Georgetown,Marquette (Milwaukee), and Wisconsm. He wasDon wor\ed for a law degreeBut He’s A Leading man now.working for a law degree on The Hill at Madison in1927 when Prof. Wilham C. Troutman cast him in afew ccJlege shows. Thereafter, Professor Troutmanand Eton Ameche concentrated on getting EtonAmeche on the professional stage.After two years of stardom at Wisconsin, Etonwent with the professor to New York. There Etonrose to the dignity of froheking with Texas Guinanand her girls on a tour of Brewklyn stages. Amechereturned to Kenosha, Wisconsin, his home town, toponder the stage as a career.r^E night a girl phoned him from Chicago. Wouldhe like to get to Chicago in a hurry for a radioaudition.^ He would. That was in 1931. Today, ifyou listen to Betty and Bob—Dc« Ameche is Bob.For three years he has been leading man in the First Nighter and Grand Hote! NBC dramatic pr ’r;coast'to<oast. In SeptemK r he made his appt-.ir;in person on the Pacific coast—in Hollywcvilmovie scout had at last found him. When theturn, they will record a flashing smile, a stronsatile voice, and lightning-like acting talent.Brothers in Phi Alpha Delta at Wisconsin remcnhim for his overwhelming and convivial frieiulhr^HE girl who phoned Eton Ameche that iia>^ 1931 was Bernadine Flynn, Don Ameche'<» co-at Wisconsin. She, too, had found her way to Bnway. She carried letters of recommendation from ZGale, Wisconsin novelist and playwright, v.hoseen her with Dcm in Ltliom.In New York, Bernadine did little mor*- tacquire a stage accent and understudy a star or tThis diction she had to discard that day in Chicwhen she tried out with Eton for the NB(' Em|Builders program. There were a few hundred otapplicants, but Eton and Bernadine were chost';.,they acted together for a long time in Empire BuildThen Bernadine struck out for herself.^HE result was the part of Sade in Vic and Sa^ a homespun daily sketch now three years oldNBC. Bernadine is also appearing with Eddie Giin Welcome Valley over NBC. By way of vaneshe once cross-fired with Ben Bernie on the airThese two kids, a girl from a Madison, Wiscorhigh school, and a boy from Kenosha, upstate, vcame together at Wisconsin to take lessons from PiWilliam C. Troutman, are doing very well for thselves.Bernadine telephoned DonAnd they became Empire Builders.i