Today*8 HeadlinesHutchins takes TWA plane to Kan¬sas City, Page 1.Appoint 127 New Faculty Members,Page 1..Maroon announces platform, Page 1.Judd Marries Secretary; Hopkins,Chorus Girl, Page 1.Maroon reviews summer news. Page4.iJst New Courses, Page 5.Interview with Captain Fitzgerald,Page 6.ColumnsSchoen. Page 2.All Sorts of People, Page 2.Fifth Row Center, Page 5.Hickman Predicts, Page 6. IMaroons SeekVictory OverVanderbilt TeamPre-Game Dope ConcedesSoutherners Big EdgeOver Chicago.By REX HORTONProbable LineupCHICAGO VANDERBILTKitxaerald LE Fr»nVlinPct<*r»«n E T RayFink LG MerlinAntonie ^ HinkleKelley RG HayesJohnson RT RicketsonMeyer RE MeElreath(KKxistein QB HufrainitValors or Hamity I H AndrusSherman RH Reinsehmid*I.ehnhardt FB ForilPlace: Nashville, Tenn. Time: Oct. 2.2:80 P.MDetermined to avenge at leastsome degree last year’s 37-0 defeat.Coach Clark Shaughnessy’s Maroopstomorrow afternoon will open the1937 schedule by playing a return en-K'agement with Coach Ray Morrison’sVanderbilt Commodores at Nashville.Pre-game dope gives Vanderbilt,rated by some as one of the threestrongest teams in the south, a two-touchdown edge. While CoachShaughnessy is not very optimistic,there are at least two good rea.sonswhy the game may be closer than last iyear. First, the Maroons may be ableto profit from last year’s experience,an(i second, the Commodores whichlast year trampled the Maroons wereexperienced players. This year ex-I>erience is lacking and Coach Morri¬son’s lineup will consist of a largesprinkling of sophomores, some ofwhom appear to be nervous when un¬der fire.The Maroon line will be outweigh¬ed but the backfield will bt* heavierCoach Shaughnessy w’ill depend onMort Goodstein, Fred Lehnhardt, Sol-lie Sherman, and Lewis Hamity forthe offense. Chicago’s team will becompri.sed of eight lettermen, two oflast year’s re.serves and one sopho¬more, but the reserve strength is sad¬ly kicking. The squad of players en¬trained last night for Nashville.(A special dispatch from Nashvilleappears on page 6) Vol. 38. No. 3 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 1, 1937 Price 5 CentsThe Daily Maroon PlatformThe Maroon this year is different. We have a new format,we have a new promotion scheme, we have new columnists, butmost remarkable of all, we have a definite stand on campusissues. We propose to publish to all the general attitudes andpositions the Maroon will take in its editorial columns in a plat¬form, and then stick to it. We even intend to stop pussyfoot¬ing. As issues arise, the platform will be made more specificbut the general lines here laid down will be held throughout theyear.Here then is our platform for this year. The Maroon ad¬vocates increased University effort toward student adjustment.At present the University treats its students as tanks tobe filled with matter, intellectual or otherwise. It does nottreat its students as persons; almost no effort is made to coun¬teract the impersonality of the teaching methods of the Col¬lege. This is deplorable. Satisfactory adjustment to his fel¬lows is made difficult for the student. Yet it is necessary to ahappy man and the University has a responsibility for itsstudents’ welfare. The condition can be remedied by enlargedopportunity for intimate student contacts, the money for whichcan come only from the Univesity.The Maroon advocates the abolition of Inter-Collegiate ath¬letics.The money and attention devoted to varsity athletics is(Continued on page 2) Hutchins Takes Leaf FromContest; Rides TWA PlaneMan of the Day Travels to Kansas Cityto Speak to Bar Associa¬tion.Robert Maynard Hutchins. . . The President sets a fast pace for thestudents of the University. He is shownleaving in a TWA skyliner for KansasCity Wednesday . . .People’s Press Names University as “ForcefulInfluence” in Movement for Negro SegregationLong a silent cog in the wheels ofcampus machinery, the Universitybusiness office has come into promin¬ence as a result of a recent investi¬gation of negro segregation made bythe People’s Press, Chicago Progres¬sive weekly. The accusation that theUniversity is a powerful influencebehind the restriction of negroes inChicago followed a series of law\suitsbrought by members of the WoodlawnProperty Owners' League seeking topreserve an agreement signed in 1928that barred colored families fromhomes in the Washington Park sub¬division, A member of the Woodlawnassociation, th/e University is alsoblamed by the Press for directly sub¬sidizing the League.Section West of Cottage GroveThe section against which the re¬striction suits were aimed includesthe area bounded by WashingtonPark (60th street) on the north, 63rdstreet on the south, by South Park¬way on the west and Cottage Groveon the east. The University has ex¬tensive holdings east of CottageGrove avenue, but according toUniversity Personalities MakeHeadline News During SummerCampus personalities other thanthe epoch-making Hutchins have al¬so crashed the headlines this sum¬mer,FARADAY IS QUEENFaraday Benedict, young socialitedaughter of Commodore Robert P.Benedict who heads the Luke Michi¬gan Yachting Association, upheld thebeauty honors as queen of the Carni¬val of Lakes. Resplendent in whitesatin, sequins, pearls, and a ten foottrain, she ruled over a kingdom ofballet girls, divers, swimmers, andConvert Section ofCloister Club IntoNew “Coffee Shop”A second “Coffee Shop’’ will be op¬ened soon at the University, thistime in the Cloister Club, Sand¬wiches, soft drinks, ice-cream and thegeneral Coffee Shop bill of fare willhe served during the hours of 2 to 5and 7 to 10. The opening date willbe about October 18.The service room of the club hasbeen remodeled and colorfully decor¬ated. A metal covering will be laidon tho regular service counter toform a “bar’’ and will be removedduring meal times. Leather uphol¬stered chairs are to be used at thebar during the afternoon and eve¬ning and taken away the rest of thetime. (There will be no rail, we’resorry to say), A number of tablesare to be put in the service room sothat a total of 35 soft-drink guzzlerscan be accommodated at one time.Finally, a modern soda bar is beinginstalled. an audience of several thousand Chi¬cagoans who flocked to the lake frontto view the Carnival at the expenseof the Chicago Park System. MayorKelly himself was on hand to wit¬ness the coronation, one of the high¬lights in his Chicago Jubilee Cele¬bration program.JUDD MARRIES SECRETARYOn campus, faculty circles wereflurried by the activities of 64-year-old Charles H. Judd, DistinguishedService Professor of Education, whojumped from the educational pagesof the Daily News to the gossip col¬umns when he married his secretary.May Diehl. The bride formerly helda position as literary secretary andeducational assistant of the Depart¬ment. It is Dr. Judd’s second mar¬riage.FIRST BATH IN 30 YEARSMeanwhile the campus itself hadits face lifted.(Continued on page 7) George 0. Fairweather, assistantbusiness manager at the University,owns no property in the disputedarea. Fairweather stated yesterdaythat the University had only one votein the League and paid only regulardues.According to the People’s Press,executive positions in the League areheld by Lyndon H. Lesch, assistanttreasurer of the University and Na¬than C. Plimpton, University Comp-Transfer OrientationWeek Begins TuesdayCommittee AnnouncesOrientation Week for all transferstudents officially starts Tuesdaywhen the members of YWCA willgive a tea for women transfer stu¬dents. Transfer week activities areopen to all transfer students, includ¬ing those who entered last Winterand Spring quarter.^.The Transfer Orientation commit¬tee, headed by Ed Faust and MaryLau Price, has set up desks in Man-del Hafl to obtain the names of alltransfer students as they register.This list will be accessible to all or¬ganizations in the dean’s office nextweek.Hold Tea DanceIncluded in the week’s list of ac¬tivities is a tea dance, to be givenWednesday under the direction ofCarolyn Wahlstrand. This dance willbe held in the Ida Noyes theatre.William Young and Wilma Fay Ec-ton are in charge of the dinner to beheld in Judson Court on October 8.Assistant Dean of Students Leon P.Smith will be the toastmaster withprominent members of the facultyand administrative body as hosts andhostesses.An entertainment is scheduled atthe home of Dean and Mrs. CharlesW. Gilkey for October 16. The week’sprogram is desig^ied to introduce thetransfer student to the campus rath¬er than introduce all campus activi¬ties as is done during Freshmanweek. troller. Robert M. Mitchell, assist¬ant to the business manager, who re¬cently served with the department ofthe Interior in Washington, acts asliasason man between the League andthe University, the paper asserts.Late yesterday afternoon. PierceW. Jones, business manager of theLeague commented on the situation.He stated that the League was acommunity improvement associationwith approximately 400 menubers,who paid dues on the basis of prop¬erty owned in the Woodlawn area.He admitted that in all probabilitythe University is the largest individ¬ual property owner in the group.The agreement to rent property inthe district to white people only wasmade about ten years ago, said Jones,and any violators of the agreementare subject to a lawsuit.The restrictive agreement origin¬ated with a disreputable group call¬ed the Woodlawn Property Owmer’sAssociation. About a year ago it(Continued on page 8) President Hutchins spent Wednes¬day afternoon off campus — heflew to Kansas City, spoke to a con¬vention of the American Bar Asso¬ciation, and flew home again in timeto catch a snack from the family ice¬box and sleep in his own bed.The round trip cost the Bar As¬sociation 38 dollars and 70 cents forthe airliner ticket, plus Hutchinsown ticket, which he probably wrote.The President flew at better than150 miles an hour for five hours andtwenty minutes—two hours, fortyminutes each way.He rested in a soft, safe, cushionedchair, and he looked down on theworld.During the Christmas recess threeUniversity students will sit in soft,safe, cushioned chairs, and for tenhours will look down on the world,perhaps for the first time in theirlives.And they won’t pay a cent for theprivilege.These students will have sold moresubscriptions to The Daily Maroonthan any other three people in theUniversity. One will certainly be awoman, one will certainly be a man.The lucky third may be either manor woman.The lucky third will revel in an all¬expense trip by air to New York, aten day prepaid-by-the-Maroon stayat a prominent New York Hotel, anda free trip home by airliner.The remaining two students willfly to New York, and, when they arethrough sponging off the relatives,will fly back to Chicago. And TheDaily Maroon will have paid for theairliner tickets.The three round trips and the ten-day stay in New York are the prizesoffered by The Daily Maroon to thetrio of students who sell the mostsubscriptions to this year’s new styleMaroon. According to the rules, thegrand prize is open to everyone, thetwo secondary prizes to be given tothe next highest man and the nexthighest woman.Maroon staff members can't get onthe band wagon. Everyone else inthis University can.Just ask for a subscription bookat the Maroon office in Lexington hall.Administration Appoints 127 Mento Plug Gaps in Depleted FacultyA total of 127 new appointments i atomy in the Walter G. Zoller Mem-Wickhem Succeeds BixlerAs Admissions DirectorAppointment of Valerie C. Wick-hem, to succeed Roy W. Bixler asDirector of Admissions was recentlyannounced by George A. Works, deanof Students.Miss Wickhem has been editor ofofficial documents and will continue inthat capacity also, being assisted byKate L. Turabian, dissertation .secre¬tary. Bixler will work for his Ph, D.at Teachers’ College, Columbia Uni¬versity. He came to the University in1925 and has been Director of Ad¬missions since that time. Pulse Editors NameTen Beauty QueensFrom Freshman ClassChosen as freshman beauty queensby the editors of Pulse, the Uni¬versity’s latest journalistic upstart,ten freshman girls were given freesubscriptions to the magazine at thefreshman dance given at Ida NoyesHall last Tuesday. The girls wereJanet Adams, Jane Anderson, Pru¬dence Coulter, Betty Ann Evans,Mimi Evans, Phyllis Kiesselbach,Joan Lyding, Marjorie Schulz, JeanSkeeles, and Louise Snow.The catch? Oh, yes—to get the freesubscription each of the girls had tosell subscriptions to five other people.However, they all succeeded in doing to the faculty of the University havebeen made for service beginning inthe academic year which opens Mon¬day, Robert M. Hutchins, Presidentannounced yesterday. The appoint¬ments range from research associatesto full professors.Appointments announced by Presi¬dent Hutchins included three dis¬tinguished foreign scholars. Wal-ther von Wartburg, Swiss-born phil¬ologist of the University of Leipsig,the leading authority on the historyof the French language, has been ap¬pointed professor of Romance Philol¬ogy. He is the compiler of theFr e n c h Etymological Dictionary,classic study of the evolution of theFrench language from Latin originsto the present. Dr. von Wartburgwill be in residence at the Univer¬sity only one quarter a year, but willorganize and direct a staff to studythe French language used in Louisi¬ana and Quebec,Appoint Wasserman of MunichDr. Fritz Wasserman, of the Ana¬tomical Institute, Munich, has beenTryout for UniversitySymphony at 2 Today orial Dental Clinic. He is known in¬ternationally among medical workersfor his broad knowledge in all fieldsof anatomy, and is author of the vol¬ume on fibrous tissue in the series“Handbook for Microscopic Ana¬tomy,’’ edited by Wilhelm von Mol-lendorff.Third of the foreign scholars justadded to the faculty is Dr. ErnstManheim, formerly of the Universityof Leipzig, who has been made As¬sistant Professor of Sociology.Established as both a sociolo'jgistand anthropologist. Dr, Manheim isthe author of several importantstudies in both fields, includingappointed associate professor in An-(Continued on page 3)Those playing string and other or¬chestral instruments are especiallyrequested to try out for the Univer¬sity Symphony Orchestra today from2 to 5 in the Listening Room of theMusic Building at 6727 UniversityAvenue.Carl Bricken, director, will choosethe personnel from those applying atthis time and has called the first fullrehearsal for Friday, October 8 at7:30 in Mandel Hall. ’ IF Committee PlansScholastic Ratings,Rushing PenaltiesThat fill! publicity be the penaltyfor illegal rushing and that the stan¬dards used for awarding scholarshipsbe made the basis for rating tliehouses scholastically is the recom¬mendation formulated by the Inter¬fraternity Committee at a meetingTuesday,This recommendation will be pre¬sented in the I-F Council Tuesday,October 12. The Committee will al¬so recommend that the fall rushingprogram include only one open housefor each fraternity on either Sunday,October -17 or on October 24. Threeluncheons are the other rushing func¬tions suggested for this quarter.Russell Baird of Phi Gamma Deltawas appointed chairman of the Inter¬fraternity Ball.^age Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 1,1.2.3.4.5. PLATFORMIncreased University effort toward studentadjustment.Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.Progressive politics.Revision of the College plan.A chastened President.OUR PLATFORM-(Continued from page 1)utterly disproportionate ’to the numbers bene¬fited. Nor are athletics by any means alwaysof benefit to the competitors. The money wouldbe better spent on enlarged and diversified in¬tramural programs, athletic and otherwise.The Maroon advocates progressive politics.Change in social relations is constant andoccur as a part of the interrelated social com-of ramofications. Change in government mustoccur as apart of the interrelated social com¬plex. But governmental change has a peculiarimportance in that it is also a powerful force toshape social change. Therefore the Maroonbelieves that expert intelligence and thoroughconsideration of secondary effectss should beemployed in governmental change so that so¬cial change may be intelligently directed.The Maroon advocates revision of the col¬lege plan.The College as it is now organized onlyinadequately serves the end of a general educa¬tion. The survey courses only vaguely pointto the systematic intellectual orientation of thestudent in the world. Subject matter could berearranged, emphasis altered to serve this, theproper end of the College.And finally, the Maroon advocates a chas¬tened President.President Hutchins’ refusal to meet op¬ponents with anything but contemptuous eva¬sion is as reprehensible as the slogan-bandyingof professional politician. His emphasis on abody of general truths as the core of a uni¬versity is sound, but his tacit, and never ac¬knowledged choice of the Aristotelian corpusas these truths demands a chastening.THE EDITORwas too concise. There is space left in the editor¬ial column. If I were ElRoy Golding and thiswere the Bazaar, I could write 200 words aboutnothing. However, since this is the editorial col¬umn it should be filled with something worthy ofthe editorial column—even at 4 o’clock in themorning.Therefore I shall write about the DailyMaroon. It is the only thing on which I knowthe editor’s policy. The Daily Maroon is the great¬est activity on campus; you have to be good toget on it, you must be crazy if you stay on it.Vol. 38 No. 3®1{E '^arnonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Oollegiate PressThe Daily Maroon i» the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 357, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3311.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the views ofthe University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates:$3.00 a year: $4 by mail. Single copies: five cents.Entered aa second class matterat Chicairo, Illinois, under the act Harch 18, 1903, at the post officeof March 3, 1879.aaeftcsCNTKO roit national aovkiitisino byNational AdvertisingService, Inc.Collect Publisktrs Reprwntativt420 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y.CHicAeo . Boston . Los Angclis • San FnanciscoiBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILL..CHARLES E. HOYELROY D. GOLDINGEDWARD C. FRITZBEATRICE ROBBINSMARSHALL J. STONE....EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist Rex HortonMaxine Biesenthal Seymour MillerEmmett Deadman Adele RoseBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard GreenleeJerome Ettleson Edward GustafsonMax Freeman Alan Johnstone SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBv ULLIAN SCHOENNAMES THAT WILL HAUNT YOURobert Maynard Hutchins—man on horseback withouthorse.Harry D. Gideonse—man on horseback in need ofhorse.• Arthur Holly Compton—only God can make a tree.Anton J. Carlson—a man and his dogs.Frank Hurbert O’Hara—Master of Arts and PoliticsLeon P. Smith—man with a hoe (in everything).William V. Morgenstem—who is Morgenstern ? ? ?HEN HOUSE PECKINGSAdvice to freshmen women; Don’t take your upper-class counsellor’s opinions concerning men and clubs tooseriously, she probably made a mistake about both andhates to see you doing better.OUR PULSE IS NORMALMediocre publications,attempting to buildstrictly undeserved circu¬lation, every October pickten Freshman beutiesThe number is never sev¬en or eleven, but inevitably ten. Personally wehave always preferredseventeen, or two hundredand fifty-nine.Should we ever descendto such mediocrity wewould pick:Louise SnowJanet AdamsBetty Ann EvansJean SkeelesJoan LydingJane AndersonMarjorie SchulzPhyliss KiesselbachMimi EvansPrue CoulterEver see that list before?ASLEEP AT THE SWITCHThe other evening our illustrious contemporary, CodyPfanstiehl, that Epicurean of wit, that sadist of the pen,was busily stealing the witticisms of John Morris, BudJames, and others whose names are no longer important.As a comment on the quality of the humor, Cody (1) wassteiling it (2) fell asleep. The wiseacres began ticklinghis nose with the hair of a paste-brush. The hilariousresult was that Cody, muttering ominously, almostscratched off his nose—without the slightest intent tospite his face. The laughter grew so high, Cody awokeand hiked home in a huff. Since this one Cody possiblywill put in his diary but certainly not in his notebook, wethink it deserves light—and even sweetness.It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLE(Note: This is the first of a series of daily person¬ality sketches revealing the facts about interestingUniversity characters, from elevator operators andstraggling students to prominent faculty members andundergraduate leaders.)The person on the University quadrangles who ismost certain he is right and who is most often wrongis probably Harry Snodgress. As head of student orien¬tation, “Snod” has been the most important under¬graduate of the week.Why freshman week has gone along in the conven¬tional uninspired manner is partly explainable by thecharacter of the orientation head. Harry is strictlyconventional, in clothes, in spirit, in ideas. His fa¬ther is a typically successful sup^r-.salesman. Hismother is a charming and well-bred lady and a lovingparent. Snodgrass idolizes and patterns himself afterhis father and mother.Above all, “Snod" is social. On a busy afternoon,he will dash off to Northwestern Univeristy to see hisAlpha Phi heart-throb, leaving the work to be done bysubordinates. He is a loyal fraternity man. He willspend much time getting up a bridge game, much timetalking to freshmen, but little time studying. He tu¬tors most of his courses. He u.sed to consider himselfan authority on feminine pulchritude, and spent muchtime discussing girls, but his fraternity brothers talk¬ed him out of this idiosyncrasy.He is said by many to be the best dancer in theUniveristy.Although driving faster and more spectacularlythan the most daring high school sport, Snodgrasshasn’t had any wrecks since the ones .several yearsago which left a scar on his forehead and ruined hisarm for swimming and basket ball, in which he formerlystarred.Snodgress aspires to work on the sales force of ameat concern, and has every conviction that he will ina very few years be an important executive in a largepacking company. If, for once, the truth conforms tohis dogmatic confidence, he will become one of Chicago’scivic leaders. AND MEET THE TWAHOSTESSTHE THREE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS WHOSELL THE MOST SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THEDAILY MAROON WILL WIN FREE TRIPSTO NEW YORK IN A TWA AIRLINER.RULES1. You must be a registered student of the University ofChicago.2. You must be a subscriber to the DAILY MAROON.3. The final decision will lie v/ith the Board of Control of theDAILY MAROON.4. This contest is not open to members of the DAILY MAROONstaff.5. You must get a subscription book from the DAILY MA¬ROON staff.5. You must get a subscription book from the DAILY MA¬ROON office between 1:30 and 3:30 P. M.SUBSCRIPTION POINTS1. Every student subscription at $3.00 to count three (3) points.2. Every mail subscription at $4.00 to count four (4) points.PRIZES1. First prize: an all-expense round trp to New York by TWAairlines to the student obtaining the most subscriptionpoints.2. Two second prizes: a round trip to New York via TWA air¬lines to a man and a woman next in order to subscriptionpoints.3. To every p>erson selling at least ten subscriptions to theDAILY MAROON; a free ride by airplane over the Uni¬versity campus.Subscribe Now to The Daily Maroon andand You Are Entered in the Contest!!mmmb iMIiTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER. 1, 1937 Page ThreeAdministration Appoints 127 Mento Plug Gaps in Depleted Faculty(Continued from page 1)“Moulders of Public Opinion," con¬cerned with the shifts in public opin¬ion following the war as a result ofpolitical manipulation; “Family andAuthority,” in the series published bythe International Institute of SocialResearch, and “Logic of Concepts.”Dr. Manheim will teach a course inthe autumn quarter entitled “Secur¬ity and Insecurity in Contemporaryand Primitive Society,” a comparativeinvei^tigation into the assumption thatprestige in society is attained bythose who assume the greatest risks.Miss Eula B. Butzerin, Director ofPublic Health Nursing Education,University of Minnesota, has been ap¬pointed Director of Public HealthNursing. Trained at Columbia, whereshe took her Master’s degree inTeachers College, Miss Butzerin hadtraining at the Presbyterian HospitalSchool of Nursing, Chicago. Thework in public health nursing whichMiss Butzerin will direct is an addi¬tion to the University’s program innursing education..A Chicago Ph. I)., Dr. Melvin H.Knisley, has been appointed assist¬ant professor in Anatomy. He hasCongregationalistsLead in DivinitySchool Registration New GeologistNorman L. Bowen. . .He comes to the University as one ofthe nation's foremost authorities on pet¬rology, taking the place of Johannsen, col¬lector of dime novels . . . Today on theQuadranglesThe University BulletinFRIDAYSecond annual Freshman RifleTournament. University Rifle andPistol Club Range in West Stands ofStagg Field from 3 to 6. Admissionfree.Tryouts for the University Sym¬phony Orchestra. Listening Room ofMusic Building from 2 to 5.Both a wide denominational affilia¬tion and a wide geographical areawere represented in the DivinitySchool last year. Strangely enough,considering the University’s begin¬ning as a Baptist .school. Baptist stu¬dents constituted only 7 per cent ofthe total registration, the Congrega-tionalists with 19 per cent had thelargest representation and Metho¬dists, Presbyterians, and Discipleswere next in number.There were students from everystate in the Union but .seven; and al¬though the largest group came fromIllinois, they were only 22 per centof the whole. held a General Education Board fel¬lowship for four years, two of whichwere spent at Chicago, and the lasttwo at the Marine Biological Labora¬tory, Woods Hole, Mass., and in studyunder Profes.sor Augu.st Krogh at theUniversity of Copenhagen. Dr. Knis ley is the inventor of a method ofilluminating practically any tissue inliving small vertebrates for micro¬scopic study. His device uses rods ofquartz which conduct light to the de¬sired point, much as a pipe conductswater.Walter Petersen, also a ChicagoPh. 1)., who ha.s made extensivestudies in comparative philology, hasbeen appointed assistant professor inthe Department of Linguistics.Appointed last May, Dr. NormanL. Bowen, petrologist of the CarnegieGeophysical Laboratory, Washington,D. C. who holds the Charles L.Hutchinson Distingui.shed ServiceProfes.sor.ship, will begin his work atthe University next week. Dr. Bow¬en was one of the international groupof 62 scholars to receive an honorarydegree at the Harvard UniversityTercentenary Celebration last Sep¬tember. Five of this group are nowmembers of the Chicago faculty.GO CHICAGO!STINEWAY DRUG STORE57th and Kenwood Ave. Talks to entering students. DeanAaron J. Brunmbaugh and Dr. Dud¬ley B. Reed. Dean George A. Workspresiding. Attendance required. Man-del Hall at 11.Meeting of entering students interested in student publication. OrientalInstitute, lecture hall, at 2,Splash party. Open to all enteringstudents. Swimming pool, Ida NoyesHall at 3.Tea for entering students interest¬ed in dramatics. Tower Room, Mit¬chell Tower from 4 to 5:30.Barn Dance. Ida Noyes Gymnasiumfrom 8 to 11.SATURDAYRifle Tournament. University Rifleand Pistol Club Range from 9 to 12and 7 to 10.Tours of the city for enteringfreshmen.(Continued on Page 8)NEW!The CollegiateVARSITYPUBIs the Place You HaveAll Been Waiting forEntertainment - - -featuring 'DUKE at the PIANOSWING IN TO THEVARSITYPUB1155 East 55th St.WOODWORTH'SWOODWORTH'SWOODWORTH'STEXT BOOKSand all student suppliesFORTY YEARS SERVICE TO UNIVERSITYSTUDENTSWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311E. 57th Street. Open Evenings2 BLOCKS EAST OF MANDEL HALL To WOWthat cutething inEnglish inIf your personal mag¬netism fals you, your newWest End covert topcoatwon't . . . An easy fitting . . .loose . . . raglan model . . .styled and tailoring by HartSchaffner & Marx . . . Herbooks will drop right at yourfeet (and also her heart).The covert started in theEast and now . . . from Yaleto the University of SouthernCalifornia, with stopoverseverywhere, college men ac¬claim it their coat!And say ... if you don'tgo for coverts . . . we've gotsome beauties in camelshair polo coats . . . doublebreasted . . . single breasted... or wraparounds. Or ifyou want to be formal aboutit . . . Chesterfields that justdemand a derby ... In factany kind and every kind... at prices so low youwon't believe your ears.OTHER THINGSOvercoats too . . .Rich . . . Warm . . . wind,rain and snow proof.And if you're runningout of accessories . . . Hic-kock 'and Swank belts,braces and Jewelry . . . Ar-r o w shrts . . . Florsheimshoes . . . Knox, Malloryand Borsalino hats.Buy on an easy budgetplan that gives you ninetydays ... 3 full full monthsto pay ... at no extra cost!ERIEjCLOTHING CO.Iss? E. 63rd St.Open Every Eve.'1Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 1, 1937Appoint Four to Board of Trustees;Summer Gifts Total Nearly $600,000 Somewhere in ChinaWhile the University faculty wastraveling, writing, fishing, and work¬ing peacefully without interruptionsfrom Daily Maroon reporters thissummer, the University administra¬tion was making news with the ap¬pointment of four new trustees, andgifts totaling almost $600,000.Additions to tl^e Board of Trustees,announced by President Harold H.Swift, are Lessing Rosenwald, TrevorArnett, Marshall Field III, and Al¬bert D. Lasker.A son of the late Julius Rosenwald,Lessing Rosenwald is chairman ofSears, Roebuck and Company, active¬ly interested in philanthropic work.Trevor Arnett is a one-time auditorand vice-president of the University,and until July, 1936, president of theGeneral Education Board.Marshall Field III, is a grand¬son of an original incorporator ofthe University and donor of half theoriginal site. Another advertisingExecutive who has consistently beeninterested in the University, Albert jD. Lasker is a former chairman ofthe United States Shipping Board,now president of Lord and Thomasadvertising agency. With his wife hegave $1,000,000 in 1928 to establishthe “Lasker Foundation for MedicalResearch.High point of the summer was agift of $550,000 from Charles R. Wal-gren whose accusations against theUniversity made news several yearsago. Matching a gift of $275,000 fromthe Rosenwald foundation it is to beused to establish the Walgreen Foun¬dation for the Study of American In¬stitutions.Hope for New HospitalA court order, handed down dur¬ing the summer makes it probablethat the long-dreamed-of Charles Gil¬man Smith Contagious Disease Hos¬pital may soon become a reality.For some time the University hashad a fund of $475,000 to build sucha hospital, but nothing for mainten¬ance. Two other funds in the city, theDurand and the McCormick institute,provide for hospitalization and re¬search respectively. The court ordermodified certain provisions of thesefunds, enabling the University to usethem in the new hospital unit.Faculty Migrates vision faded from the news during thesummer, but DeanRichard P. Mc-K e 0 n promisesseveral new booksfrom them in thenear future. Thefirst is MortimerJ. Adler’s new vol¬ume entitled“What Man Didto Man.’’Surprisingly Nobel prize winnerArthur Holly Compton spentsummer on the quadrangles.Ogburn Reportson TechnologyMortimer Adlerthe istration Clearing House some time in Robert Kronemyer, William Laiblin,Go to E uropeEurope held the most lure for thewanderers among the faculty, thelarge majority of whom were socialscientists bent on observing the poli¬tical situation in these countries. Har¬old Lasswell is still the “lost boy”of the division. He is in China on athree-quarters leave of absence ap¬parently unworried by the notoriouslack of discrimination among Japan¬ese bombers.StoufiFer Seeks PleasureSamuel Stouffer, professor of Soc¬iology, toured the continent but large¬ly as a pleasure expedition. CharlesE. Merriam, chairman of the depart¬ment of Political Science attendedthe International Conference on Na¬tional Resources Planning in Brus¬sels.John Nef, professor of EconomicHistory also spent three months onthe other side.Two of the faculty have not yetreturned. Professor Quincy Wright ofthe department of International Re¬lations is somewhere on the wayhome, and Hyman Cohn is still inPoland.The faculty of the Physical Sciencedivision also found travel attractive.Frank Hoyt, associate professor ofPhysics, attended several scientificconferences in Europe, and JohnMorrison, instructor of Geography at¬tended a scientific congress in Russia.Dr. Otto Struve, professor of Astro¬physics and director of Yerkes ob¬servatory was another continentaltraveler.Work at Other CollegesSeveral of the men did work atother institutions and in other partsof the country. Samuel Allison, as¬sociate professor of Physics and Wil¬liam Zachariasen, assistant professor,were in Pasadena at the CaliforniaInstitute of Technology. Dr. Anton J.Carlson, professor of Physiology,was on a lecture tour through theWest.The professors in the Humanites di- Wm. J. OgburnUnder the direction of P. WilliamFielding Ogburn, Sewell L. Averydistinguished service professor ofSociology, a report on “TechnolgicalTrends and National Policy, Includ¬ing the Social Implications of NewInventions” was prepared late thissummer by subcommittee of thescience commmittee of the NationalResources Committee.The question of whether the paceof invention and technological im¬provement has abeneficial orharmful effect onthe whole of soc¬iety is a' meatyquestion that hascome in lately fora good deal of de¬bate. To this enda subcommittee ofthe National Re¬sources Commit¬tee was appointedin 1935, and givenan appropriation of $800,000 from theEmergency Relief Act Funds. WithOgburn were chosen President FrankLillie of the National Academy ofSciences, President John CampbellMerriam of the Carnegie Institution,President Edward Charles Elliott ofPurdue University, several economistsand educators, and one mathemati¬cian.Guess Future IndustriesThey deduced that while “inventionis a great disturber”, it creates newindustries, new reservoirs of employ¬ment. For this the committee recom¬mended that a board be establishedwhich would keep track of develop¬ments in and try to foresee the soc¬iological impacts of new inventionswhich they deemed had the largestfuture.Deuel Digs upIndian MoundsHeaded by Dr. Thorns Deuel of theanthropology department, the thir¬teen members of the University Ar¬chaeological expedition spent tenweeks in southern Illinois this sum¬mer excavating Indian mounds nearMetropolis.Returning September 3, they re¬ported that they had uncovered furth¬er details of the pre-Columbian In¬dian culture.While searching for the burialgrounds of the tribes who made theKincaid mounds, they found an oldburial ground on the adjacent E. E.Lewis farm. The Lewis mounds, they Harold D. Lasswell. . . Spends sabbatical year studyingmass psychology in China. Or is hedodging bomba? . . .said, were smaller than the Kincaidones, and probably were of earlierorigin. The Targest of the Kincaidmounds is a truncated pyramid 33feet high and two acres in extent.Also conducting research work thissummer was J. Harlen Bretz, profes¬sor of Geology, who led parties ofstudents to various parts of the Unit¬ed States studying caves. He con¬ducted cave study in Arkansas, Mis¬souri, Iowa, Indiana, Minnesota, andIllinois.Educators SeekLiberal ArtsTo the Board of Visitors and Gov¬ernors of St. John’s College, Anna¬polis, Maryland, was added the nameof President Robert Maynard Hutch¬ins of this University last summer.This, event happened, in July, short¬ly after two educators, StringfellowBarr and Scott Buchanan, brought tothe University last year from theUniversity of Virginia, had been tak¬en over by St. John’s as President¬elect and Dean-elect respectively. Be¬hind these two moves by St. John’s isthe idea of reviving the college as aliberal arts school.Erect NewBuildingThe mass of gray stone envelopedby scaffolding '.at 60th Street andKnwood avenue will resolve itself intowhat will be called the Public Admin- the Winter quarter, according to Em¬ery B. Jackson, architect of the Uni¬versity .The Art Department, which ishoused at present at 60th street andEllis avenue, will move into its newheadquarters about January 1. The 16groups called the National Goveim-mental Organizations will occupy thePACH when it is completed, movingfrom their present home at 850 E.58th street.List ConvocationHonors, AwardsHonor scholarships were awardedto 113 undergraduate students and to21 graduate students at the 189thconvocation of the University on Aug¬ust 27. The awards were made onthe basis of work done in the Collegeand various divisions.Second-year honor scholarships forexcellence in the work of the firstyear in the College were awardedto Katherine Adams, Jacquelyn Aeby,Betty Lois Ahlquist, Arnold Ander¬sen, Elizabeth Austin, Charles Rich¬ard Barton, Barbara Beer, LutherBirdzell, Sara Lee Bloom, EdgarBowman, William Corcoran, HarryCornelius, Charles Crane, CourtenayCrocker, Tamaara Danish, StanleyDodd, Joel Fantl, Helen Florsheim,Ethel Frank, Margaret Garver, Alex¬ander George, Matthew Gladstone,Daniel Glaser, Rober Green, VeraGren, Mary Grenander, Harper Heiz-cr, Howard Herzig, Vincent Hollan¬der, Herbert Johnson, Elliot Kaplan,Marvin Kernes, Wasley Krogdahl, Herbert Lesser, Peter Levin, MartinLevit, John McNellis, Lawrence Nod-erer, Pierre Palmer, Robert Patton,Monrad Paulsen, Charles Pfeiffer,Karl Pribram, John Punderson, Ana-tol Rapaport, William Remington, La.Verne Riess, Joseph Rosenstein, Wal¬ter Rothstein, Joan Schutz, WillisShapley, Patricia Schrack, JosephSondheimer, William Speck, RobertStokley, Norman Svendsen, ChankeyTbuart, Harvey Vernon, Naomi Wax-man, and Richard W'orthington.Third Year ScholarsThose who were awarded third-yearhonor scholarships for high scholas¬tic achievement in the comprehensiveexaminations of the College wereDaniel Banes, Walter Blum, MorrisCohen, Robert Drury, James KunkinAlbert Guy, Jack Indritz, NormanKaplan, William Kent, Henry Kraybill, William Levis, Alexander Lowringer, Irving Mack, Kathryn MacLennan Ruth Maimon, Marshall Melin, Byron Miller, Seymour MillerWilliam Neal, Robert Platzman, Edward Raack, William Rasmussen, Arnold Rose, Leo Saidel, Edward SegelFredrick Smith, William SowashShirley Star, Robert Straube, AlanTully, Leonard Weiss, and ArthurYaspan.Fourth-year honor scholars, .select¬ed by the departments for excellencein the work of the first three yearswere Richard Abrams, Victor Altman,W’inston Bostick, Robert Brumbaugh,(Continued on Page 8)TAKE YOUR GALTO A SHOWThere are lots oi pleasantthings you can do with themoney you'll save by eating atYounker's regtilorly.CompleteLuncheon . . . 35cDinner .... 65cY OUNKERSRESTAUBANTS51 E CHICAGO AVE.1510 HYDE PARE BLVD. YANKEEDOODLEINNANDFAMOUSBLUEROOM1371-73 E. 55thDANCING EVERYNITEAMATEUR NITESATURDAY’S Whether it's sent collect or prepaid,your laundry always arrives quickly,safely, by Railway Express—the favoritelaundry route of generations of collegemen and women. Low rates. No addedcharge for pick-up and delivery—justphone nearest Railway Express office.70 E. RANDOLPH STREETPhone HARrison 9700CHICAGO. ILL.RAILWA' XPRESSMATIOM-WIDK RAIL-AIR SERViCRWHERE TO WORSHIPHYDE PARK METHODISTCHURCHBlackstone Ave. and E. 54th St.Ralph Hall Collis, S.T.M., MinisterSimdcry, October 3, 193710:15 to 12:00 A. M.—Unified MorningStudy and Worship.10:15—Classes. Wesley Class for CollegeStudents.10:55—Worship. Sermon: "Living on Tip¬toe"—Rev. R. H. Collis.7:00 P. M.—Young people's Worship andDiscussion.A motion picture on "How a Newspaperis Made"—by a representative of theChicago Tribune.Social Time Follows.A cordial welcome to coUeqe stadeots. HYDE PARK BAPTIST CHURCHStindcxy, October 3, 1937 THE HRST UNITARIAN CHURCH11:00 a.m.—"The Little Devil of Compar¬ison"Dr. R. W. Schloerb7.30 p.m.—"The Spanish Situation"Sylvester Jones Woodlawn Ave. and East S7th StVon Ogden Vogt. D.D.. MinisterSimdoy, October 3, 193711:00 A.M.—"Things Old and New,” CVogt.4:00 P. M.—Channing Club Tea aDiscussion. "Religion for Toda'Professor Edward Scribner Ames.Students especially invited.Maroon Reviews Eventful Summer at UniversityV0ITHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY. OCTOBER. 1, 1937 Page Five5th RowCenterBy GORDON TIGERIn “The Women,” current comicattraction at the Erlanger, playwrightClare Boothe presents three acts ofbrilliant, concentrated vituperationanent the more secret and less ap¬pealing aspects of some fellow mem¬bers of her sex.Miss Boothe seems to be bitten rawwith disgust by what she has seenof certain females in private mo¬ments, and has contrived to com¬municate her feeling in twelve cat¬tish episodes, cleverly placed, devoidof the male presence, in such sug¬gestively sacred sanctums of femin¬inity as a beauty parlor, an exercisesalon, a Reno hotel room, and theladies’ powder room of a night club.The story, a slight thing, interferesbut little with the quick pace ofthese scenes, which, despite widelydiffering locales and stage sets, areamazingly similar. It concerns thebattle of Mrs. Stephen Haines tokeep her blissful domestic affairs, uni¬que in her circle, clear of the fouldust created by the machinations ofan envious, gossipy friend, and byher husband’s acquisition of a mis-tress, Mary Haines’ home is brokento the extent of a trip to Reno be¬fore she takes stock of herself andfinally wins her battle by re.sorting,paradoxically enough, to the veryfeline tactics which are satirized andfrom which she had been distinctivelyfree,I would hesitate to distill a moralfrom “The Women,” for I feel thatit bespeaks Miss Boothe’s shrewdconception of a stageworthy comedyrather than any effort on her part toreform the subjects of her satire,which, in spite of the title, certainlyapplies not to all women, but only toa limited group, namely, pamperedPark Avenue matrons. Miss Boothe’sstagecraft manifests itself in thenovelty of the idea, in audacious, of¬ten grossly indecorous frankness, incharacters which are really adroitcaricatures, and in hard, sophisticatedquips. Her purpo.se is to draw laughs,and though often working in defianceof strict truth and at the expense ofgood taste, she achieves it.The production is staged effective¬ly, and creates an atmosphere of ele¬gance with elaborate settings andcostly gowns. Many of the majorplayers, however, burden unsympa¬thetic roles with incompetent acting.Lois Wilson, late of the cinema, givesa tepid performance of the rathercolorless role of Mary, while VirginiaBamelle, in the part of the super¬gossip, Sylvia, overacts the part intoincredibility. The best acting is donein minor roles, and, notably that ofI^aura Pierpont, as Mary’s worldly-wise mother, and of Dorrit Kelton,as the hard-boiled native chamber¬maid in the Reno hotel, is of a highlevel.LAST 2 WEEKSJOE SANDERSand his Orchestrawith Jane Kaye• Ronald & Roberta• June Glory• Pete the Newsboye • eKAY KYSERHIS ORCHESTRA —HIS SINGINGSTARS AND ACOMPLETE NEW FLOOR SHOW1Opens October 13thDEUCIOUS DINNER $1.65No Cover Charge—Min.Sat. $2.00BLACKHAWKRandolph—WabashDEArbom 6262 University Offers Eighty-SixNew Courses; List Most ImportantHumanities Division MakesMost Additions to Cur¬riculumEighty-six courses that have nev¬er before been presented at the Uni¬versity have been added to the cur¬riculum of the divisions. In adddi-tion to these changes, the schedule ofthe department of English has beencompletely reorganized, with manycourse numbers changed and manyadded. With the exception of thosein the English Department, the mostimportant new courses are tabulatedbelow:Division of the Biological Sciences:Botany 212—Elementary Plant Ec¬ology. Shull.Zoology 416—Problems in the Biologyof Social In.sects. Emerson.Division of the Humanities:Germanics 220—Modern Drama. VonHelms.Greek 214—The Development ofGreek Comedy. Grene.Greek 216—Studies in Greek Tragedy.Grene.Greek 470—Seminar: Greek Tragedy.Jaegar.History 383—The Reconstruction:North and South, 1860-76. Craven.Latin 335—Martial. Ullman.Linguistics 309—Italian Dialects.Petersen.Oriental History 392—The Family inBabylonia and Israel. Feigin.Old Testament 423—Prophets of theSixth Century. Irwin.Hittite 308—Various Hittite Texts I.Walther.Archaeology 321—Introduction to theArchaeology of Egypt and Pales¬tine. Debevoise.Phil. 360—The Philosophy of the Seventeenth Century: Hobbes. Mc-Keon.French 281—Survey of Fr. Lit. to1715, David.French 340—Etudes Critiques surMarcel Proust, Vigneron.Italian 383—Manzoni and Romanti¬cism. Borgese.Spanish 286—The Mystics. Keniston.Division of the Physical SciencesAstronomy 330—Variable Stars, Kee¬nan.Chem. 354—Contributions of Physi¬cal Methods to Organic Chem.Wheland,Chem. 367—Surface Chemistry. Har¬kins.Geog. 305—Climate and Man. Hunt¬ington.Math. 227—Units and Dimensions.Lunn.Physics 326—Nuclear Transforma¬tions.Division of the Social SciencesAnth. 325—North American Archae¬ology. Cole.Econ. 330—Money, Mints.Education 397—The use of Achieve¬ment Tests in Improving Instruc¬tion. Breed.Soc. 329—The Modern Community.Warner.SPECIAL INTENSIVE COURSErOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thonmgh, tnUnswg, stenographie cours*—atarttng January 1, April 1. Julyl, October 1.InUresti^ Booklet sent free, without obtigatiom—write or phone. No solicitors employed,moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.D. PH.S.Regular Courses, open to High SchoolGrad-nates only, may be started any Monday. Dayand Evening. Evening Courses open to men,116 S. Michigan Av*., Chicago, Randolph 4347YourNearest Service StationTRY THE NEW RED CROWNBATTERY SERVICE — TIRE REPAIRINGLUBRICATIONPICK UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE DURINGSCHOOL HOURSWE - TAKE - A - PERSONAL - INTERESTIN-YOUR-CARBROWN’SSTANDARD SERVICE STATIONS.E. Comer SSth* and Greenwood Ave.1101 E. SSth St.Tel. ^fidwoy 9092StandardOilProductsTires STANDARDSERVICE ChicagoAutoRadios,andAccessories. YOUNG MAN—to sell line of high grade pipe tobaccos tostudents and faculty. Experience not necessary. WriteL.W.C., c/o Daily Maroon, Box O, Faculty Exchange,University of Chicago.Though the Bell System is made up of 315,000 menand women serving every corner of the country, itsstructure is simple. The American Telephone andTelegraph Company coordinates all system activities. Itadvises on all phases of telephone operation and searchesconstantly for improved methods. The 25 associatedoperating companies, each attuned to the area it serves,provide local and toll service. Bell Telephone Lab¬oratories carries on scientific research and development.Western Electric is the Bell System’s manufacturing,purchasing and distributing unit, The Long LinesDepartment of American Telephone and Telegraph inter¬connects through its country-wide networic of wires the25 operating companies and handles overseas service.Thanks to the teamwork of these Bell System units, youcan talk to almost anyone, anywhere, anytime — at low cost!NEW and1 Jti Jx 1 l5w w J^O Second HandNOTE BOOKS OF ALL KINDS from 5c to $7We are proud of our new stock ofU. of C. STATIONERY. Show yourschool spirit and use U. of C. STA¬TIONERY that does credit to yourschool. When that all-gone feeling comesdrop in and visit our CANDYCOUNTER, Sandwiches - Cookies -Candies - Milk , Coca Cola - Pie - Po¬tato Chips. We also carry a fullline of cigarettes and pipe tabacco.FOUNTAIN PENSFROM $1.00 UPDon’t limp along and only half understand class lectures, and don’t mark yourself with the same old mistakes in English—get a WEBSTER’S COLEGIATE.U. of C. BOOKSTORES5802 ELUS AVENUE ROOM 106 BLAINE HALL \Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 1, 1937DAILY MAROONHALF A BLOCKFROM THE DORMSYOUR CAR SERVICED DURINGCLASSComplete Washing, Tire,Battery, and Lubrication ServiceWALDROM’SSTANDARD OIL SERVICECIST AND EUIS DOS. lOOCC HICKMANPREDICTS-Topping the intersectionals, as faras Chicago is concerned, is that gamewith Vanderbilt. “Shag” has a teamwhich may surprise. It is dreadfullyweak in reserves, but there has beendeveloped a fast, shifty, open style ofattack which may throw Ray Mor-CARBURETORU.S. Pat. No. 2,082,106 .YELLO-BOLELATEST DISCOVERY IN PIPESThis new way of burning tobacco gives you abetter, cooler, cleaner smoke. Updraft of air frombottom cools smoke, keeps bowl absolutely dry,takes rawness out of any tobacco, improves com*bustion. Carburetor Yello-Bole also gives you thefamous honey-treated bowl. Nothing else has itsflavor. At dealers’ now.STUDENTSSave 12 of your Laundry BillwithStudent Economy BundleTRY IT YOUTL LIKE IT!Free Pick Up & DeliveryMetropole Laundry, Inc.Wesley N. Karlson, Pres.1219-21 EAST 55TH STREETPhone Hyde Pork 3190 Bob Fitzgerald Rises From Incubatorto Become Captain of Maroon ElevenBy JERRY ABELSONRobert Fitzgerald, an incubator babyof 1916 who blossomed out with musi¬cal talent and a splendid physiquesoon after his half-hearted beginning,captains the Maroon football squadthis season. Six feet and one hun¬dred and ninety pounds, “Fitz” hasserved admirably on University ath-rison’s men off their fet for a quar¬ter or two. Whether the Maroons cancatch a few of those sixty-yard andlateral passes they have been tossingon the practice field will tell whetherthey can get some points before theCommodore’s superior man-power be¬gins to dominate. When I say thatBob Fitzgerald seems positively op¬timistic about the Maroon changes,you can see why I can predict norepetition of last year’s crushing de¬feat. It looks like a tough, all-over-the-field battle.Minnesota clashes with its alwaysformidable rival, Nebraska, in a gamewhich as usual should see the Goph¬ers take a small-point struggle. OhioState, after that Texas Tech win,should trip Purdue, and Northwesternshould trample Iowa State. Michiganmay again lose that ill-omened open¬er to Michigan State, and Wisconsinshould give Marquette a very closeshave. Even Illinois will have tostruggle hard with those boys fromDePaul.Herewith some predictions, forwhich the University, the Maroon,and I disclaim all responsibility.Vanderbilt 25 — Chicago 13Minnesota 13 — Nebraska 3Ohio State 19 — Purdue 6Wisconsin 13 — Marquette 7Michigan State 13 — Michigan 10K. J. Ernst Fairfax 10108ST A N D A R DLUBRICATION SERVICE.Atlas Tires & Batteries55th and Drexel letic taems and on the school’s famedBlackfriars organization for the pa.stthree years. In recogfnition of hisaccomplishments Bob has been elect¬ed to Owl and Serpent, the senior hon¬or society.Anticipating a question on theoutcome of tomorrow’s game, Fitz¬gerald announced, “I won’t venture aprediction but with the experiencegained against Vanderbilt last yearwe are better prepared to turn themback. And by the way, the .squad isnot perturbed by the razzing ofmetropolitan newspapers. The sport-writers are primarily humorists atheart and have to make fun of someoutfit.”Bob is the school’s outstandinghope in the field of popular music. His“Can Love be Gone?” the big song ofthe 1935 Blackfriar show is now apos.session of a top-flight publishinghouse. However, music is but thehobby of this versatile gentleman.He hopes to become a surgeon.Although “Fitz” claims that snar¬ing a Jay Berwanger pass in the Wes¬tern State game of 1935 was hisgreatest thrill, many of his team¬mates emphatically insist that Fara¬day Benedict, “Queen of the GreatLakes” is Bob’s only thrill.Northwestern 30 — Iowa State 6Illinois 13 — DePaul 7Notre Dame 26 — Drake 13Temple 19 — Mississippi 6Boston Col. 20 — Kansas State 6Texas A & M 27 — Manhattan 6Pittsburgh 39 — W’est Va. 6Carnegie Tech. 13 — N. Y. U. 6Penn. 20 — Maryland 0Holy Cross 20 — Providence 3L. S. U. 20 — Texas 6Arkan.sas 19 — Tex. Christ. 6Ala. Poly. 10 — Tulane 6Tennessee 20 — V. P. I. 7Alabama 27 — Sewanee 0Rice 20 — Oklahoma 7So, Meth. 13 — Centenary 10Washington 16 — U, S, C. 7Calif. 20 — Oregon St. 10.Oregon 10 — Stanford 7PHOTOGRAPHIC HEADQUARTERSOpen Everyday and Sunday Until MidnightEverything for the Snopshooter . . .Cameras — Films — Paper — ChemicalsAuthorized agents for Eodok, Graflex, Agio, Defender,and othersL M A WHENCE 53rd and Dorchester9 th IMONTH 5CHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS praunUThe Funniest Comedyin a GenerationYOU CAN'TTAKE ITWITH YOUPULITZER PRIZE PLAY. 1937by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS Nixhtly, incl.Sun.Mats. Wed. ?Sat.AIR-COOLEDT\T/^ Good Seats at Box OfficeJ. For AH Performances SELWYNS S fcVo’J now PMmTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVESIA erORAE ABBOTT Aiti/WAiBBOTHERRATti, JOHS MOSSt J«.<wo F«I0 f. USSUHOWTI^™/ A COLLEGECOMEDYEVES. S5e to tt.7S MATS. Wod. « Sol. SSc to S1.65 Tax 'L"ERLANGER Nightly127 N. Clark St State 2461 Including SimdoyMAX GORDON PresentsTHE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settings by Jo MielzinerCAST OF 40—ALL WOMEN'SMART' 'FUNNY' BALIBAN AND KATZTHEATRESCHICAGOGARY COOPER and GEORGE RAFTin 'SOULS AT SEA"ON THE STAGEIN PERSON—ALEC TEMPLETON — "TheBLIND PIANIST"UNITED ARTISTS"BIG CITY" WITH SPENCER TRACY andLOISE RAINERI ROOSEVELT"THIN ICE" WITH TYRONE POWER andSONIA HENIEORIENTALLORETTA YOUNG - WARNER BAXTER"WIFE DOCTOR NURSE"VIRGINIA BRUCEAPPOLLORONALD COLEMAN and JANE WYATT in"LOST HORIZON"GARRICKBETTE DAVIS, "THAT CERTAIN WOMAN"Tickets at Information Office Vanderbyt IsConfident ofWin TomorrowSports Editor of HustlerWrites of Commodores'Team.By ELLIOTT TRIMBLE(Sports Editor, Vanderbilt Hustler)Nashville, Tenn., Sept, 30, 1937(Special to the Daily JWaroon) Van¬derbilt’s Commodores rested today,preparatory to their second homegame of the 1937 grid season tomor¬row at Dudley Stadium with the Chi¬cago Maroons.A week of strenuous practice, inwhich Maroon plays were lookedover, found the Commodores in finespirits, confident of b4?ating Chicagoin the same fashion they turned backKentucky last Saturday.Fair skies and sunshine during theweek strengthened predictions thatperfect weather conditions will existfor the game.On the strength of his brilliantshowing against Kentucky, BertMarshall, Texas lad who made all-state three years in succession be¬fore he came to Vanderbilt, will bethe leading figure in Coach Ray Mor¬rison’s “razzle-dazzle” attack tomor¬row.Marshall played less than two quar¬ters in the Wildcat tilt Saturday, car¬rying the ball only 14 times, but heaveraged close to seven yards perjaunt. He scored one of the dandytouchdowns himself-and paved theway for the other with a long runthat put the leather on Kentucky'stwo-yard line,Marshall will not start at quarter¬back tomorrow, however, it was an¬nounced today. Morrison will useJimmy Higgins, who starred in lastyear’s game with Chicago in that po¬sition, and save the Texas boy to sup¬ply the touchdown punch when need¬ed.Joe Agee, injured in the Kentuckygame, will not play tomorrow. Hewill be replaced by Turney Ford.WIND CancelsUsual BroadcastsCancellation of the tentative agree¬ment with Station WIND for theexclusive broadcast of Maroon homefootball games this season was an¬nounced yesterday by William B. Har¬rell, assistant business manager ofthe University. The station was un¬able to find a sponsor acceptable tothe University, as provided under theagreement, and the arrangement wasended by mutual consent.It was understood that out-of-town stations from areas of visitingteams were to have the right tobroadcast games, and several have al¬ready been given permission to do so.Hold I M ExhibitionsBefore 75 FreshmenWith a turnout of seventy-fivefreshmen. Coach VV’ally Hebert in¬augurated the fall quarter intramur¬al season on Greenwood Field ye.ster-day. There were three touchballgames and one .softball contest. Tointerest the newcomers in intramuralathletic activities, the Alpha Deltsand the Phi Psis, two strong teams inthe fraternity division, played an ex¬hibition game.The Alpha Delts nosed out the PhiPsis by 25 to 24. Cassels starred forthe victors, while Eggemeyer run upthe .score for the vanquished.While the game was a display ofgood clean fun it was noted thatPhi Psi Snodgress played in barefeet that were plenty dirty.The intra-mural touchball tourna¬ment for the independent fraternitygroups will open within the next twoweeks. Entry blanks may be procur¬ed at the intramural office in Bart¬lett Gymnasium.ContainsPresident Hutchins' message and picture. Songscheers, traditions. Campus map. Who's Whoamong students and administrators. Fraternities.Clubs. Rushing Rules . Complete diary spaceio rthe whole school year, including the entireschedule of events on campus. Get Your 1937-38STUDENT HANDBOOK25eFree with Your Subscription to the1938 CAP AND GOWN On Sale AtWoodworth's BookstoreU. of C. BookstoreInformation DeskTailor TomThe C & G office in Lexington HallFrom any C & G staff memberTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER. 1, 1937 Page SevenSPORTS NEWSI-M Staff OffersVaried Athletic,Program to MenAutumn Quarter FeaturesTouchball, Table Tennis,Handball, Swimming.By WALTER HEBERT(Head of Intramural Division)The Intramural division of the de¬partment of Physical Education wasorpfanized thirteen years ago to offercompetitive athletics for every malestudent. During this time we havemade many changes in our programbut have retained our original policyof offering so diversified a group ofactivities that every student will findsomething to interest him.In the Autumn quarter our head¬line sport is touchball, and the largenumber of men competing in it everyyear vouch for its desirability as asubstitute for football. Our otherswimming, handball, badminton, ta-sports in the Autumn quarter areble tennis, and horseshoe pitching.We are sure that you will find atleast one sport in that group whichwill appeal to you and keep you frombeing a grandstand athlete.We would like to see any group ofinterested freshmen organize a unitfor intramural competition. The dor¬mitories will be organized on the en¬try basis for participation. Anyfreshman not finding a group to com¬pete with should come to the Intra¬mural office in Bartlett and let ushelp him to find a team that can usehim.There are a few positions on thePersonalities--(Cont’d. from Page 1)A time honored tradition was brok¬en this summer when window wash¬ers scraped 30 years of accumula¬tion of dirt from the windows ofHarper Library and Hutchinson Com¬mons. When pressed for an explana¬tion of the sacrilege, the mundaneanswer was preferred by a janitor,“Ve needed more light.” <While Hutchins revamped the Lawschool in spirit, the Law school base¬ment also underwent a series of al¬terations. Five new .seminar roomswere built to accommodate growingclasses, lockers were moved, andshelf space for the library added.Cobb Hall, freshman-ridden-oldest-building on campus, was decked outin a new coat of paint while the Ma¬roon office, hitherto famous for itsdust, disorder and grim is now gracedby the presence of new telephonebooths, spacious bulletin boards, newwastebaskets and a paint job.The only catastrophe of the sum¬mer came w'ith the striking of Mit- Liberty Article Claims Football MakesAddled-Brained Dim Wits of PlayersFootball makes addled-brainedstumble-backs of its players. Thatis the indictment leveled todayagainst the nation’s leading amateursport by Frank Scully, noted authorin an article in the current Libertymagazine which the editors claim“will start a wave of controversy onevery campus in the country.” Scullyattributes his invalidism to the drubbing he took in school competition.Reporting the results of a surveyhe made of the leading players oftwenty years ago, Scully declares inthe current issue that many of thesewho weren’t killed in the World Wareither died from tuberculosis or arenow addled-brained dim wits.“After careful study I have cometo the conclusion that you don’t haveto be a half-wit to be a half-back,but if you are a half-back longenough you will be,” he writes.He relates for example the experi-ience of one Coast championshipteam; “Of the three stars in thebackfield, all named on one All-America team or another, subse¬quently one broke his neck in his lastseason and therefore missed hischance of becoming a complete stum¬ble-back; the second ended his under¬intramural student staff open at thistime to interested freshmen havingathletic managerial experienceFreshmen getting into intramuralsports will find that intramurals arebeneficial not only from the physicaland recreational standpoint but area great medium for making friendsGet into the game, freshmen.chell Tower by lightning to the un¬usually cheap tune of less than $500worth of damages.HOPKINS GATHERS CHERRYIt was really love.Last writer when Dave Hopkins,son of FERA Administrator HarryHopkins, became a stage-door John¬ny, the campus hummed with amuse¬ment. When he took his Ziegfeld Fol¬lies favorite. Cherry Blossom Preis-ser, to the Washington Prom, hisfriends began scratching their heads.When the Chicago tabloids blastedforth rumors of his engagement, evenhis professors nodded. Cherry Blos¬som said that Dave and she were justfriends, and that the ring on her lefthand was just there, heh, heh. Davecultivated their “friendship” by tak¬ing frequent trips following the Fol¬lies to Milwaukee, Detroit, etc. Butstill few took the affair seriously.In the middle of the summer, Davidand Cherry got married in New Or¬leans, and every newspaper in theSouth carried their pictures. Scatter¬ed over the country, Dave’s acquaint¬ances sat back and gasped, "Well . . .so it was really love.”DO YOU KNOWWHO-Goes to Hanley's?WHAT-The Reds Are Doing?WHY-The New Plan?WHERE-You Were Last Night?READThe Daily Maroon$3.00 PER YEAR $4.00 BY MAIL graduate days by walking on hisheels; and third was so punch-drunkfrom too much football that he couldsee no way out except playing morefootball, either as a professional oras an assistant coach.SPECIAL INTENSIVESHORTHANDfor COLLEGE UNDERGRADUATESStarts Octobor 1. January I.April 1. July 1.Arranged especially for the higher in¬telligence of the college graduate andundergraduate.Regular day and evening classes startevery Monday.GREGG COLLEGEHOME OF GREGG SHORTHAND6. N. Michigan Avonuo. ChicagoHanley’sBuffet1512 E. 55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT "COLLEG¬IATE” ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY’SOver forty years of congenialservice Free Football SchedulesCopies of a booklet giving com¬plete football schedules for thecoming season, results of lastyear’s games, changes in rules,and other information are avail¬able through the courtesy of theSaturday Evening Post in theDaily Maroon office.YOURCHECKBOOKIS A SILENT SERVANT AL¬WAYS READY TO SERVE YOUIN YOUR FINANCIAL AF¬FAIRS. IT ENABLES YOU—to write a check anywhereat home, store or school—to write a check any time.—to send a check anywhere,safely and conveniently.—to have a legal receipt foryour files in the form of acancelled check.—to get an acurate statementof your account every month.—to obtain cash when youwant it.WE INVITE YOU TO USE OURCHECKING FACILITIESUNIVERSITYSTATE BANKMEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSITINSURANCE CORPORATION. miSMomsyou nttscmi..AND wc bumd...A TOBACCO MIXTURE /Does the average standardized blend suityour taste T Are you still searching forthe perfect pipe smoke T Then send forthe complete Royal British Tobacco Blend¬ing Kit. A little experimenting . . . youdiscover your perfect blend 1Eleven types of guaranteed finest-qualitytobaccos, and simple instructions, enabluyou to create your own exclusive individu-a] blend (not obtainable in any othermanner). File your formula with us.Thereafter, we will fill your order accord¬ing to your prescription, at most reason¬able prices. Large humidor kit alsoincludes mixing tray, measuring jigger,instruction-formula book. Sent complete,postpaid. $2.50.OFFER NO. 1On* hali pound of your proscriptiontree if ordered within thirty doy* alterpurchase of Royal British Blending KitOFFER NO. 2For twenty-fir* cents in coin to coverpartial cost ol mailing, packing ondgovernment tax. w* wiU send on am-sortment of six different types of ourcustom blended tobaccos.Royal British TobaccoComponvSuite 904 140 S. Dearborn SLRoyal British Tobacco Co.Suite 904 140 S. Dearborn SUGentlemen: □ Send me theRoyal British Tobacco BlendingKit by return mail, postpaid. 1am enclosing $2.60. (Send checkor money ordei—do not mailcurrency!)□ Send me your sample offerof assortment of six differenttypes of custoni blended RoyAlBritish Tobaccos. I am enclos¬ing 25e in coin.yUSED TEXT BOOKSCASHfor yourOldBooksFREEBookCovers REAL SAVINGSWatch for Special Ad in Oct. 5th IssueNew students and old are anxious to reduce textbook expenses. Nowhere in Chicago—or for thatmatter in the world—will you find a larger stock ofclean used texts than at Wilcox & Follett. We're noton campus—but the hundreds of students who flockto our store know that they'll save money on everybook for every course.You'll find a trip down here profitable. Bringalong your old books—they're as good as cosh. WeTlGuaranteeYou'llSaveOpenEveningsuntil 7:30America’s Largest Educational Book HouseWILCOX & FOLLETT CO.1255 So. Wabash Ave. Wholesale-Retail ChicagoFor Women Only:To the woman selling the most subscriptions to PULSE willbe given two tickets to “The Women," now playing at theErlonger Theatre. Secure subsrlptlon blanks at PULSEoffice, Lexington Hall.Page EightHonors—(Continued from page 4)Nadreen Bumie, Hugh Davidson, Av-ron Douglis, Miriam Fine, GladysGemer, Emil Jarz, William Karush,David Lochman, Cfitharine Luther-man, William McNeill, Herbert Pass-in, Robert Rasmussen, Oscar Seltzer,Wilma Son, 2^1da Teplitz and Bar¬bara Wilder.Graduate ScholarsThe graduate students who receiv¬ed scholarships were Joseph Axelrod,Frieda Brim, John Butters, JosephCeithaml, Sophie Eisenstein, ThomasHowells, Robert Kyhl, Libuse Lukas,Joan Naumburg, Edith Neidle, JacobOchstein, Iva Osani, Norman Pearson,Theodore Puckowitz, Dorothy Shap¬iro, Earl Strieker, Nathan Sugarman,Norman Taub, Raymond Weinstein,George Whitehead, and Gertrude Wil¬son.Adele Rose received the LillianLecture on MussoliniAt International HouseMonday at 8:30, the InternationalHouse will sponsor a lecture by Pro¬fessor Peter Silbermann of the RoyalUniversity of Rome, on “Mussolini,His Personality and Private Life.”Professor Silbermann has been teach¬ing in Rome for a number of years,where he had a unique opportunity toobserve the Italian dictator.All students interested in securingfirst-hand information on one of thechief figures of our time are invitedto come to Room CDE of the In¬ternational House Monday evening.Admission is free. THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER, 1, 1937Gertrude Selz scholarship which isawarded to the first-year womanranking first in the comprehensive ex¬aminations of the College. Otherhonors awarded at the convocationwere the Alfred Whital Stern prizefor the best essay on the subject “TheImportance of Common Honesty” a-warded to Thomas Blakely, and theCivil Government prize for excellencein the political science section of thecomprehensive examination in the in¬troductory course in the Social Sci¬ences, the first prize of which wentto William Speck, the second to Mon¬rad Paulsen, and the third to DavidLozansky.Discrimination—(Continued from page 1)was reorganized and renamed theW'oodlawn Property Owner’s League.The University was not a member ofthe former association. The Pressdeclared in an article on September25 that recent changes in personnelin the League were due to the Uni¬versity’s “dissatisfaction with theway the restriction fight was proced-ing.”As a result of the discriminationand because of the plight of Chicagonegroes on relief, the Council of Ne¬gro Organizations voted yesterday tocall a mass meeting for early Octo¬ber, in protest against housing poli¬cies in the city. In an issue out to¬day, the People’s Press makes thefollowing statement. “ . . . one of theUniversity’s own staff members. Dr.James Lowell Hall, staff physician ofthe Provident hospital, a Universitysubsidiary, is the object of one ofWoodlawn group’s restrictive suits.” Today—(Continued from page 3)SUNDAYChapel Service. University Chapelat 11. Broadcast over radio stationWGN.University Roundtable. Red Net¬work of NBC at 11:30.Receptions for new residents of theResidence Halls in the lounges andreception rooms of the several hallsat 2.Special carillon recital. RockefellerMemorial Chapel at 4.Freshman Vesper Service. Rocke¬feller Memorial Chapel at 4:30.Tours of the Chapel for enteringfreshmen. Rockefeller Memorial Cha¬pel at 5:30.Buffet supper, sing, games, andinformal discussion for all enteringsHidents. Meet at the home of Deanand Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey, 5802Woodlawn avenue.MONDAYClasses meet.(except in the Law School)Registration will be held in Bart¬lett Gymnasium today and tomorrowfrom 8:30 to 11:30 and from 1:30 to4. Students assemble in Leon MandelPHONOGRAPH CONCERTSThe daily phonograph concertsw’hich are given in the Social ScienceAssembly Hall will be resumed Mon¬day, it was announced yesterday bythe Department of Music. The pro¬grams will be presented, as last year,from 12:30 to 1:15. Programs willbe posted on centrally located bulletinboards. Hall where they secure serial numbertickets admitting them to Bartlett.Students who register after tomor¬row will do so in the office of theappropriate dean.(in the Law School)First year—today from 9 to 12 and2 to 4.Second and third years—tomorrowand Monday from 9 to 12 and 2 to 4.All students must be registered byMonday at 4. There will be a chargeof one dollar for registration afterOctober 8. Make-up Exams—Students in goodstanding in the Law School who canregister for work in the Autumnquarter and who received December,1936, grades below 70 in PersonalProperty or Remedies, may takemake-up examinations as follows: '■Remedies—Saturday, October 9,from 9 to 12.Personal Property—Saturday, Oc¬tober 16, from 10 to 12.Register in the Dean’s office. Therewill be no other opportunity. Thesecond grade counts.KITTY DAVISCoed CocktailLoungeandUniversity Bar75 COLLEGE EDUCATEDEMPLOYEES TO SERVEAND ENTERTAIN YOUJACKSON & WABASHChicago, Ill.? ...because theyremade of MILD RIPEtobaccos... the^lgive gou MOKE PLEASURECopyricltt 1937. Liecirr ft Myim Tobacco Co.