Vpi f">»ooVol. 33. No. 16. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 26. 1932 Price Three CNeutron IsFinallyPictured U. S. TO EXPECTMORE EDUCATIONCOSTS-HUTCHINS CLUBS PLEDGE 42WOMEN AS PERIODOF RUSHING ENDSBy DAVID C. LEVINEConsider the* neutron!It’s only a new kind of atom, butit’s a very unusual kind. Althoughits existence was predicted in theoryby Professor William D, Harkins ofthe department of Chemistry morethan thirteen years ago the actualfact that such atoms did exist wasnot proved until Professor Harkinsrecently demonstrated it by meansof photographs.The neutron is, according to Pro¬fessor Harkins’s description “a min¬ute atom millions of millions of timessmaller in volume than any othercomplete atom.” If a thimble werepacked full of neutrons in contactthe contents would weigh more thanthirty of the world’s largest battle->hips—and this, says Professor Har¬kins, is a conservative estimate.However, these atoms, collective¬ly called neuton, could not possiblybe kept in such a space. The neu¬trons, due to their extremely smallvolume, pass readily through any .known material. No walls can con- ' ^tine them since all other atoms arehighly porous to these minute par¬ticles.Neutrons FirstFound in BerylliumThe pre.sence of neutrons in atomsof beryllium was assumed by Pro¬fessor Harkins more than thirteen Addresses Members ofRotary Club atLuncheonThe United States must expectgreatly increased expenditures foreducation in the future, due to tech¬nological improvements in businessand industry which will advance theage when young men and women gointo productive work. President Rob¬ert M. Hutchins told members of theChicago Rotary Club at their week¬ly luncheon yesterday at the HotelSherman.The present trend toward shorterhours of work will also increase thedemnnds madeupon public agen¬cies for adult edu¬cation, PresidentHutchins said.Federal aid to ed-) j jcation may event-a n d ap¬propriately — beused to supple¬ment the educa¬tional funds oflocal commun¬ities. Pres. HutchinsNo Salary Cuts I Culminating a two-week period ofI rushing for transfer students andI sophomoi-es, forty-two women werei pledged Monday evening to ninewom'dn’s clubs. Sigma and Phi DeltaUpsilon will hold their official pledg¬ing Friday, while Achoth and Delthohave not yet reported.Wyvern received the greatestnumber of pledges, including GraceBurns, Helen Harrison, Helen John¬son, Mary Clare MeagWer, PhyllisNicholson, Phyllis Schaaf, Mary Ger¬trude Slusser, and Marion Westphal.Pi Delta Phi pledged only one wom¬an, Dorothy Diemer. Chi Rho Sigmapledged four: Annette Baker, Bar¬bara Broughton, Ruth Ketler andHelen Orvis.Mortar Board pledged Betty Ful¬ton, Mary Bell Glascow, Grace Grav¬er, Valerye Johnson, Wilma Kuehn,Maxine Nowak, and Jean Smith. Es¬oteric pledged Marion Austin, Fran¬ces iLoomis, Adele Morell, KatherineOber, Cornelia Scandrett, and Mar- NAME GROUP TOHANDLESTUOENTDRIVE FOR NEEDYHerbert Richmond WillHead Committeeof ElevenPlans for an all-University reliefdrive for funds with which to aidneedy students were brought nearcompletion yesterday with the form¬ation of a central committee repre¬sentative of camnus activities. Her¬bert Richmond will head the com¬mittee, and he will be assisted byGeraldine Smithwick, Martha Miller,Ruth Wieland, Jane Cavanagh, GraceGraver, Francis Mayer-Oakes, War¬ren Thompson, Edgar Goldsmith,Robert Dodson, and Carl Bode.Plan AffairsIt is planned to have the variouscampus organizations sponsor af¬fairs, the proceeds of which will be, ^ , , , , I turned over to the Community Needsearet Waterman. Quadrangler pledpto worthy students. Hoover OutdistancesThomas, Roosevelt;1731 Ballots Are CastFirst Day's ResultsHerbert Hoover . 810Norman Thomas . 512Franklin D. Roosevelt. . 339William Z. Foster 70Total votes cast. . 1731 Receives 810 Votes inFirst Day of DailyMaroon PollFORTY-TWO RUN FORLAW SCHOOL POSTSIN ELECTIONS FRIDAYReductions of educational costs j Berkowitz and Ruth Lurie,years ago when he found that beryl- necessary by present financial ed Jane Bradley, Mary Eleanor Buck,Margery Dencer, Helen Holmes, andj Mary Zanachowski.Phi Beta Delta pledged Marioni Gentz, Geraldine Hansen, GertrudeI Marshltz, Louise Pflesterer, EleanorI Porter, Beatrice Rayfield, and Junej Rose. .4rrian pledged Jean O’Hagan,I Alice Szambaris, and Margaret j increased markedly, and a drive wasYinger, while Aychud pledged Sarah | sponsored by the Chapel council inThis fund was established by theBoard of Social Service and Religionin 1928 for emergency needs of theUniversity community. Ten j)er centof the Chapel collections has goneinto the fund since that time.Lrst year demands on this fund Herbert Hoover took an early andcommanding lead in The Daily Ma¬roon straw presidential vote yester¬day, with 810 Republican ballots castin his favor. His nearest rival, Nor¬man Thomas, the Socialist candidate,received 512 votes, while FranklinD. Roosevelt trailed with 339. Wil¬liam Z. Foster, who seeks the presi¬dential office on the Communist tic¬ket, drew 70 campus votes. Upshawand Reynolds had little support. Thepoll will be continued today.The total number of votes castj was 1731 at 5:30 last night. AllI twelve ballot boxes on the campusForty-two students are candidates were emptied at that time andin the law school elections which I counted. Today there are few’erwill be held Friday between 9 and i boxes on campus, and several will1:30. Two freshman women are the i appear in different places. One willonly young ladies running for office i be in the lobby of the Law School,this year. - and another will be placed in Has-Each class will elect a president, j benefit of the School ofvice-president, secretary, treasurer. i Business students,and three cla.ss representatives for i Canvass Fraternitiesthe law council. For the first time i Fraternity men will be given ain law school history, no candidates | last chance to vote promptly at noonare running for secretary or treasur- i today, when members of The Dailyer of the Junior clas.s. Law school Maroon staff will bring a ballot boxcooperation with other student or-1 voters may write any student’s name ; to each house for a limited time.Pledging this year was not done i gunizations, which netted $500 for I on the regular ballots P’ridayiium, whose weight was calculated as ; crises should not take the form of , ^ ^ preferential basis, although a i student relief, efight times that of an atom of hydro-I cuts in teachers’ salarie.s. President . , , ciiencp was observed bv ; $500 went to theperiod of silence was observed by iclubs and prospective pledges he¬ight times that of an atom of hydro ,gen, really had a weight of nine. | Hutchin.s said. The details of econ-This wa.s accounted for by assuming ! omie.s within school sptems should I pledge dinners Saturdayhe decided by educationa adminis- pledging Monday.trators, not laymen, he told the Ro- ! .turians.the presence of a neutron, or elecIdeally neutral particle of the com¬position and nearly the weight of ahydrogen atom. That i.s, the neutron and an additionalBoard of Vocation¬al Guidance and Placement for as¬sisting students in obtaining con-i tacts with employers.Fund Exhausted Burton and Judson courts have theirSpeaking of Chicago’s attempt tois simply a hydrogen atom packed reduce its school budget Presidenttogether in a very smaU space,. - i Hutchins said, “We have in Mr. Bo-Thi.s theory wa.s confirmed a few ; gan one of the ablest superintend- Fratemity PledgingBecau.se of deferred rushing atmonths ago by Profe.ssor Harkin.s bymeans of an appuratu.s for photo¬graphing the tracks of fast-movingatoms. These tracks, which appearin the photographs as brilliant whiteline.s, are formed by the condensationof water-vapor along the path of anatom moving eight to ten thousandmiles per second. Although the neu¬trons themselves cannot be photo¬graphed, because they are so muchsmaller than other atoms, the effectsof their collisions with oxygen atoms(for example) are recorded by the ents in .America, honest, intelligent.expert. If he had the authority he I terests toward the pledging of upper-could, I have no doubt, produce im- ; classmen. Alpha Sigma Phi and Taumediate economies in the school sys- ! Kappa Epsilon led yesterday’s listtern without damage to the education j with four men each. The list of menof our children. Independent at- pledged to fraternities yesterday in-tempts on the part of the Board of i eluded 16 men in 6 houses.Education to dictate specific econ- Alpha Sigma Phi pledged Genethe University, several more of the | Kunizations have already signifiedfraternities have directed their in- i their intention of aiding the centralgroup, which will manage the drivethroughout the year.omies will merely contribute to theperpetuation of chaos.Adequate Compensation"We shall never have a respect¬able educational system ‘until weapparatus. When a neutron moving have made the teaching professionabout twenty thou.sand miles a sec¬ond collides with the nucleus of anoxygen atom it adds itself to thenucleus, which splits into an atomof helium and an atom of carbon.This type of collision, and the sub¬sequent split, are clearly recorded inProfessor Harkins’ photographs.Type ofApparatus UsedThe photographic apparatus usedby Professor Harkins in producingthese proofs is almost as interesting—to a layman—as the actual resultsobtained. It was devised at the Uni¬versity in 1920 by C. T. R. Wilson,and was successful although scient¬ists everywhere predicted that thetracks of atoms could never he pho¬tographed. After the instrument wasperfected at the University its usesoon became world-wide, until todayphotographs of the tracks of fast-moving atoms are an accepted part(Continued on page 2) attractive by adequate and securecompensation. A policy of salary re- .Napier of LaGrange, Ill., and PhilipMalm.stadt, Edward Novak, andDaniel Uhlir, all of Berwyn, Ill. TauKappa Epsilon pledged William Fillof Kansas City, Mo., Homer Jensenof Cincinnati, Ohio, Harold Voigt ofHomewood, Ill., and Ted Kleisner ofChicago.In addition to these Sigma Alpha The following candidates will run ! opportunity to vote tonight,for office Friday: For president of! Final results of the poll will bethe Freshman cla.ss; Don Birney, i known at the Maroon office by 6 to-David Livingston, and Earl Sim- I night. These tabulations The Dailymons; for vice-president: Julius Ru-: Maroon is telegraphing to Princeton. i, X, J • .L I dolph, and Pauline Cohen; for secre- i University, where they will be addedThe amount of the fund IS at pres-I c,o\ve, William Flacks, ! to results from other collegesand Maxine Nowak; for council rep- throughout the country. National col-resentatives: Peter Todhunter, Stan- legiate voting tabulations, taking inley Jenkins, Marvin Pink, George account the votes of 75,000 students,D’Arcourt, and Tom Goodrich. ! will appear in The Daily Maroon on_ 1 ^ ^ i.L T • 1 Friday of this week.For president of the Junior cla.ss:Charles Boand, Walter Baker, and Results as far as the University isJames Moore for vice-president; i concerned will appear tomorrow inHarold Lypski, and John Barnes; for The Daily Maroon with indicationsmade from the fund to more than ^’ouncil delegates: Frederick Merri-^ to how the faculty, graduate, andundergraduate vote ran.Comments and articles by Norman(Continued on page 4)ent exhausted, twice the usual num¬ber of urgent cases having been re¬ported. Several leading campus or-During the last year loans andgifts amounting to $1128 have been I council delegates: Frederick.")() persons for emergency needs, j field, Memin Rosenberg, GeorgeSeveral of these loans have been re-I McMurray, Nathan Wolfberg, Maxpaid in full.duction will indeed produce a low- j f.]pj,jion has pledged Anthony Alesaner cost; it will produce also a poorer George Youngdahl, and Noeleducation, now and in the future. Weaver, all of Chicago. Phi GammaGetting good government and get- Delta’s new pledges are Jerry Par-decent system of taxation j ker of Winnetka, Ill. and Gideonting ashould be the two major objectivesof citizens. Dr. Hutchins .said. Use ofthe general property tax as the chiefsource of local revenue he describedas "inequitable and preposterous.” Wells of Chicago. Louis Timchah ofJohnstown, Pa., is now pledged toBeta Theta Pi, and Kent Hughes ofMuskegon, Mich., is now pledged toDelta Tau Delta.Alpha Belts Play Naughty Trickon Fard-Working Her-Ex Reporter Freshman Classto Make FlaringDebut on Friday Barth, and Jim Sharp.For president of the Senior class:Stanley Kaplan, John Angus, andJoseph Tickton; for vice-president:Charles Adler, Abe Ribicoff, andWilliam Basile; for secretary: Ray¬mond Fried; for treasurer: GeorgeHecker and Eugene Cohn; for coun¬cil positions: David Krulewitch, CarlPomerance, Peter Chamales, RobertShapiro, Bernard Cahn, and WilliamGorham. Gay Audience TurnsPolitical Symposiuminto Heckling SessionBy ROBERT HERZOGTwo distinct struggles, the strug-All members who will be elected gle of the social classes and the fightfor the council Friday will meet ; of the major political parties weresome time next week to choose a the results of the would-have-beenA “flaring” debut is the hope ofthe Freshman class, which will en¬ter the University social lime-lighton Friday night with the torch par¬ade, pep meeting and tacky dancethat it is sponsoring as host to the ' chairman of the group. The Council . Political Symposium, designed toer had filed a warrant charging,“the giving of false evidence to apublic servant,” and that a campuspoliceman would be right over forDiscovers the Neutron Few people were aware Mondaynight that in the Alpha Delt Housea big story was being made and de¬stroyed, that the hopes of a hard- ^working Herald and Examiner hjm. Dexter naively fell and prepar-porter were ruined, and that the I spend the evening in jail. He’sfreedom and happiness of Dexter ^ haj.(jiy convinced yet that he won’tFairbank were threatened. | have to go.The Herald and Examiner report- ;er shouldn’t have called up the AlphaDelt House, in the first place. Whathe wanted was “some dope on the iStagg petition.” Wallie Austin oblig¬ingly gave out gobs of imaginative |happenings which rnade the reporter ; pete Zimmer, the Maroon’s flashygasp and run for his half-inch type. | ,^^uitiple-threat half-back, will notPETE ZIMMER, STARHALFBACK, IS OUT OFSATURDAY’S GAMEProf. William D. Harkins, who final¬ly proved theory after thirteen years’work. Most of Au.stin’s story was aboutriots, and torch light parades.An hour later the reporter, nowall worked up, called again. Thistime Dexter Fairbank gave him astory that made Wallie Austin’s lookpale and distant in comparison. Greatexcitement undoubtedly reigned in j more seriously.play in the game against Illinois Sat¬urday. Zimmer wrenched his leftknee in the Indiana game last week,and although the injury is respond¬ing quite readily to treatment, hedecided yesterday not to take thechance of hurting it further and campus.The parade will form at Bartlettgym, led by the University band andcars carrying the football team. Itsroute will circle the campus and ter¬minate in a pep meeting on the Mid¬way with talks by Coach A. A. Staggand Captain Don Birney. Then thecrowd, en masse, is invited to IdaNoyes to consume cider and dough¬nuts and dance to Roger Boylan’sorchestra.Decorations will carry out a Hal¬lowe’en motif and are being plannedby Marthanne Edgecombe, HelenAnn Littig, Edith McCarthy, VirginiaMorris and Rosalyn Morse. Jack Al¬len, Bud Atkinson, Robert Ebert,Charity Harris, Charles Murphy andWilliam Wright are the committeein charge of publicity.The freshmen expect the enthusi¬asm which reigns on campus thenight before the Illinois game, com¬bined with the interest which al¬ways attends the first social ventureof the beginning class, to contributeto the success of their party. Wisconsin ProfessorCommutes to TeachFreund’s Law Classtakes care of all law school tunc- present the platforms of the fourtions and also sel ves as intermediate main parties, but succeeding only inbody for student-faculty relations, creating a session of heckling andconfusing of the speakers, before ajovial Mandel hall audience lastI night.“The two separate dog fights,” asthe evening’s activities were describ¬ed by the Republican advocate,i George Olmsted, were waged betweenNathan Paul Feinsinger, assistant Maynard Krueger, of the Socialistprofessor of Dome.stic Relations at : Party, and N. W. Good, a Com-the University of Wisconsin Law , munist, on the one hand, and Floydschool, will commute every week this Kenlay, of the Democratic Party,(luarter in order to teach the class and Olmsted, on the other,in domestic relations here every i The heart of the Socialist pro-Thursday and Friday in place of th' ^rram in America is the socializationlate Dr. Ernst Freund. He will teach of industries and the substitution ofhis regular classes at Wisconsin on . collective ownership for private own-other days. The class in comparative ership, emphasized Mr. Krueger, thelaw, another course taught by Dr. fii-st speaker. The issue of primaryFreund, will be discontinued for the importance is socialism versus capi-School of BusinessHolds Annual Dance quarter.Profe.ssor Feinsinger, who is onlythirty years old, was graduated fromthe University of Michigan in 1926and received his law degree there in1928. He took one year of researchat Columbia, and since 1929 he talism, he said. He advocated votingfor Thomas, not because a person ob¬jects to the other parties, but be¬cause that person adheres to the so¬cialist principles.Opposing the views of his moreconservative predecessor, Mr. Goodthe Herald and Examiner’s offices,for when the reporter called up again,disillusioned by Mr. Stagg, he sworeat Wallie and Dexter as only a re¬porter knows how.A fourth telephone call was madeby Strother Cary who informed Dex¬ter that it was the police departmentcalling, that the Herald and Examin- has taught law at Madison. Some of exclaimed that the burning issue ofthe subjects that he has instructed : today is not socialism versus capital-are Domestic Relations, Agency, > ism but unemployment. “The Capi-Partnerships, Servitudes, Quasi Con- talistic class will continue to cutThe annual Hallowe’en party and j tracts, and Seminar Invoices. He was wages as long as the workers do notdance of the School of Business will j admitted to the New York Bar in resist,” he said. Sixteen millions with-be held Friday evening in the Ida j 1929 and then to the Wisconsin Bar | out an income must become ourNoyes theater. The Blackfriars or jin 1931, j greatest concern. A social revolutioninto squads and working on defense j chestra will furnish the music. l Dr. Freund, whom Professor Fein- | of our states into the Soviet statesagainst a Freshman team using Illi- Refreshments, consisting of cider | singer replaces this quarter, died last ! of America, is what he advocates,nois passes. Seiss, tossing for the and doughnuts, will be served. Bids, | Thursday in Billing.s hospital from: The current political campaignsFreshmen, made several nice passes which are available to members of | a heart attack, terminating a distin-The Maroons worked out in thefieldhouse yesterday, splitting upwhich were caught for good gains, the School of Business and theirbut the Freshmen were not success-! guests exclusively, are on sale at $1ful as a‘Whole. la couple. were first discussed by the demo-guished career as a law professor and • cratic speaker, Mr. Kenlay. Ridicul-as one of the outstanding authorities | ing “Herby” Hoover and “Andy”on public law in the United States. I (Continued on page 4)V OfficialF Cobb205Page Twoiatig iiar00ttFOUNDED m 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies:three cents.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chicagofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or fcr anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post-office at Chicago, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves all right of publicationof any material appearing in this paper.BOARD OF CONTROLWARREN E. THOMPSON, Editor-in-ChiefEDGAR L. GOLDSMITH, Business ManagerRUBE S. FRODIN, JR., Managing EditorJOHN D. CLANCY, JR., Circulation ManagerMAXINE CREVISTON, Senior EditorJAMES F. SIMON, Senior EditorCHARLES NEWTON, JR., Student PublisherJane BiesenthalMelvin GoldmanWilliam GoodsteinBetty Hansen ASSOCIATE EDITORSRobert HerzogDavid C. LevineEdward W. NicholsonEugene PatrickBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWalter L. Montgomery Vincent NewmanEdward G. SchallerSOPHO.MORE ASSISTANTSJohn BardenTom BartonNorman BeckerRuth Belllola ChassonDavid CookClaire DanzigerGeorge DasbechJack DilleAmos Dorinson Noel GersonGrace GregoryRobert HasterlikMorton HechtHelen HiettRichard HookerHoward HudsonDavid KutnerFanny LevatinDorothy Loeb Dan MacMasterDugald McDougallMary Louise MillerRobert OshinsHoward RichSue RichardsonJeanette RifasJeannette SteinWilliam TraynorFlorence WishnickNight Editor: Vl'iHiam GoodsteinAssistants: MacMaster and HudsonWednesday, October 26, 1932SCHOLARSHIPS AND ATHLETESWith one hundred and fifty members of the newFreshman class entering the University this fallwith full scholarships of one kind or another, thepolicy and basis upon which these scholarships areawarded becomes a matter of interest. For manyyears the University has been accused of refusingto allow an athlete to be admitted—a feat accom¬plished. presumably, by raising its admission andscholarship requirements to a level unattainable byathletes.But recently anonymous correspondents ofdowntown papers are pointing out that this orthat athlete has received a scholarship from theUniversity of Chicago, indicating,, it would seem,a change in the University’s policy. That such aninterpretation is one of misplaced emphasis isclearly demonstrated by William Morgenstern ina recent statement he addressed to a downtownnewspaper. His explanation of the University’spolicy with respect to the awarding of scholarshipsis one that should be cl'ear to all. We reproducehis remarks herewith:“This year one student out of five in the Fresh¬man class holds a full scholarship. These scholar¬ships are of various types: thirty-two are two-yearhonor scholarships for men, awarded on the basisof scholarship, leadership, and achievement;thirty one-year honor scholarships; thirty com¬petitive examination scholarships; and fifty ‘remis¬sion’ scholarships complete the list, although thereare also several miscellaneous scholiarships.“The average of the thirty-two men awardedthe two-year honor scholarships is in the uppereight per cent of their graduating high school class.None of those who received a one-year honorscholarship is below the top three of his graduat¬ing class in high school; most of them were stu¬dents who ranked first or second. The competi¬tive scholarships were given on the basis of exam¬inations offered last spring, and some 1,1 00 highschool students took these tests. That, incidental¬ly, is twice the number that competes in the Staggnaional track interscholastic. i“Because so many high school students were indifficult financial' straits this year, the fifty remis- ;sion scholarships were established. There really jare one hundred of these, for the remission is for jone-half the three hundred dollar tuition. Noneof these has gone to students who were both scho- ilars and athletes; the conference rules prohibit re- 'missions to athletes.“All the scholarships are administered by a fac- iulty board, which has complete authority in mak- ;ing the awards. Needless to say, neither Mr. iStagg nor any other person connected with th'e ,athletic department is on the faculty committee. i“Our anonymous newspaper correspondents are icorrect in assuming that Chicago does award scho¬larships, and tha^t it will not discriminate against ’u/ THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1932a good student in making the awards because astudent is also an athlete. But the gentlemenhave the emphasis misplaced. The scholarship isgiven because the student has a fine scholasticrecord, and not because he is an athlete.“For a good many years the University has suf¬fered athletically because it has held to the theorythat a good athlete must also be a good student.There are indications, however, that next yearwill see the truth of that theory demonstrated, sofar as Chicago is concerned. There were a goodmany athletes who were able to measure up to thefaculty’s standards last year; there were more thisyear, the applications from new students indicated.And that, I think, explains the sudden reversal ofthe propaganda about Chicago’s attitude towardathletes. It is becoming apparent that the policywill be very sucessful, and once Chicago gets suc¬cessful on that basis, it will stay up.“You will hear more about scholarships fromthat angle in the near future on the part of thosewho spent most of their time in recent years in¬sisting an athlete couldn t get into the University.In a word, Mr. Morgenstern points out that to¬day, as in the past, scholarships are awarded b^the University of Chicago only on the basis ofintellectual attainment, but that this policy, stead¬ily followed year after year, is attracting more andmore men to the University who are at once scho¬lars and athletes.It is difficult to criticize such a policy. We are,after all, members of an educational institution—modern collegiate ballyhoo notwithstanding.—W. E. T.I The Travelling Bazaarj By Charles Newton, Jr. and John Holloway. . . '‘—white tie, JEEVES." . . .Bernie Wien has got himself a valet to savehis face.If it were for any other reason, we wouldraise a fuss, and probably demand drastic stu¬dent action, because no man can come' it over uswith a valet and get away with it. But Bernie’sreasons are, for just this once, sufficient.The valet is a Filipino lad, and Bernie giveshim free rent; let s him sleep in the clothes-closetkTo keep things on a commercial basis, he alsogives him two bits a week. In return for this,the Filipino valets him. We, who have neverhad a valet—not even a little one—cannot tellyou what this implies. We do know, however,that he performs two functions. 1In the afternoon, at four, Bernie serves tea tofriends. The valet officiates at such affairs. Andin the morning, Bernie wakes up,, and it is therethat the valet’s chief job appears. He saves Ber¬nie’s face.Bernie, you see, is used to getting out on theright side of the bed. It’s an old Wien custom.But in the International House the right side ofthe bed is placed hard by the wall. When Berniewakes up, he springs smartly to the right. Andhe bashes his face in.That is, he used to. Now, with the valet,things are different. Bernie says it’s much betterthat way. And when winter comes, Bernie says,he is going to buy himself a sled, and have thevalet pull him to school.. . . SHEETS IN THE WIND. . . .On that Yale trip that some of the boys tooka couple of weeks ago, Frank Carr, Fred Gund-rum and Bill Dee were being entertained in Pel¬ham, a Westchester suburb of New York. Thelads were Guy Lombardoing in N’Yawk Satur¬day night after the game and were broughthome by their guardian in the wee hours of themorning.To the point. There were pink sheets on thebed of the guest-room in which they were beddeddown.Sunday morning Frank Carr woke up withthe remark: “My God, am I seeing red!”. . . RANDOM. . . .Hap Sulcer’s map is at last clear of the tracesof poison ivy he picked up last summer at abeach party. , . .Eric W'halgren, TKE, was bounced from Rey¬nolds last year for—guess what? Laughing tooloud. He was told not to come back until hehad apologized. Well, last year he was presi¬dent of the Debating Society. This year too.Early this fall the Debating Society was to meet.Of course, a Debating Society meeting is hotnews, so a Maroon reporter hustled over to coverit. There was no meeting; Whalgren would notapologize. The Maroon was gypped. Is Whal¬gren laughing!Kay Collins says it’s etiquette now to burp atthe dinner-table if you burp in the water-glass,because then it sounds like thunder. . . . DoctorPeterson, who can’t keep out of arm-chairs, iscollecting some pictures that will set the campusby the ears or heels or something. He won’tlet us tell what they’re about. . . . Watch forthe next Phoenix. . . .Bull-Neck Moose-Face, why don’t you write?All is forgiven. THEATERbyMaxine CreviatonCYRANO DE BERGERACj at thej Apollo Theaterfor one weekThe silver loveliness of Rostand’spoetry, delicate, infinitely musical,again takes shape, takes form, be¬comes a reality, a living beauty.Again Cyrano, the incorporation of 'all lovers, is roused from mutenessand given audience. This reversion toromance, as a protest against moderndramatic trends, is no less delightfultoday than when first produced atthe end of the nineteenth century.Here we become engrossed in aseventeenth century France, with itsbew’igged gentlemen and courtiers,its effusion and eloquence—an offer¬ing widely in contrast to other billsin Chicago at the present time, deal¬ing as they do, with a modem NewYork family triangle in one instance,with a current political satire in an-j other, with gangsters of strictly con-1 temporary origpn, or with a Haps-I burg aristocracy. It is a question of! producing the flowery spirit of an-] other age in a time when pragatism' holds the high throne of philosophy.‘ But Walter Hampden with rarej artistry and a depthless understand¬ing of the Rostand piece, accom-! plishes the seemingly impossible par-1i adox. Ij Seldom do w'e find drama, involv-' ing a large number of characters, soably cast, as the current “Cyrano”,with Hampden the repressed lover..John D. Seymour f he handsome!'Christian, and Katharine Warren add- iI ing all the cold disdain her inter- Ij pretation of Roxane demands. Nor '1 are the lesser persons of minor con- isideration: a more carelessly select-1ed group of Gascoyne cadets, or eventhe citizenry, by their very number jwould clutter the stage, indeed. jBut it is to the exceeding finesse 1of the production that most consid- ieration is due: the preservation of itone during the balcony scene, jachieved by a sure sensing of its psy-1chological and emotional implica-1tions; those strained, difficult mo- !ments when Cyrano speaks his own 'love; the almost equally fragile de- jlusion of the Comte de Guiche with !an insane tale of Cyrano’s fall fromthe moon. That is not all: with real¬ism highly in demand today, the bat¬tle of Act IV, cannon balls and all,does not lose effectiveness.There Is an elusive sad-happinesswhich permeates the last portion,etching the poetry, line-by-line, asgracefully as the autumn leaves cutsmall red angles in their fall. Thehaunting melody of voice as Hamp¬den enacts the dying Cyrano, thetinge of love’s joy suddenly realized, ithe receding chime of bells at dusk—these and the noisy cacophony ofa lover who duels with death—One regrets it is Hampden’s last“Cyrano.”FRESHMEN! DO YOUKNOW BOTANY PONDIS COLD AND MUDDY?In large letters appears the fol¬lowing poster in front of the Cbench: “It is tradition. Only C menand seniors sit on this C bench.” !Then suggestively illustrated on thebottom of the poster, appear thesewords: “Beware of the botany pond.”Apparently the only class to takeoffence at this high-handed order isthe Freshmen class. A notice wastacked up on top of the poster to theeffect that inasmuch as they have todevote their time to studying theycannot be bothered with sitting onthe C bench. They challenge the jseniors, however, in saying that they Iwill sit on the traditional bench if Ithey wish. jThis second notice was signed I“The Freshman Class” with the let- Iters “f-r-e-s-h” underlined. IPROFESSOR HARKINSEXPLAINS NEUTRONSWITH PHOTOGRAPHS(Continued from page 1) Iof chemical and physical research. |Reduced to its simplest terms, the japparatus consists of a glass-toppedcylinder in which the atomic move¬ments and collisions take place, andtwo cameras mounted above and toeach side of the cylinder. A high-powered lighting system constitutesthe third part of the unit. The lengthof the exposure is between one-hundredth and one-thousandth of asecond, so that an elaborate timingsystem is needed to synchronize allthe parts. i Scholars Discover 'Early Copiesof Chaucer’s "Canterbury Tales"During the past summer two im¬portant manuscripts and recordshave been acquired by the depart¬ments of English and New Testamentand Early Christian Literature. Oneis an early copy of part of Chaucer’s“Canterbury Tales”, and the other,an early Armenian manuscript ofthe Gospels, confirming the beliefthat passages in the modern Bibleare s.purious.In addition to the discovery of thefragmentary manuscript of the“Nuns’ Priest’s Tale”, of the periodwithin ten years after Chaucer’sdeath, more information has beenuncovered by Professors John Man¬ly and Edith Rickert of the Englishdepartment concerning more detailsof the writer’s life, revealing thathe was an efficient business man andliberal spender at the English inns.Discover Several ManuscriptsThe two University scholars, whohave spent six months on the newlyannounced discovery, for five yearshave been conducting a classicstudy of Chaucer, and have addedsixteen manuscripts to those knownwhen they started their work, aswell as bringing to light a greatnumber of unknown facts aboutChaucer himself.This new manuscript is one of theearliest and the best, and consists ofbut six leaves of the “Tales”.Through an advertisement in aWelsh newspaper, based upon in¬formation supplied by the librarianof the National Library of W’ales,the owner was found, and permittedDr. Manly to make photostats to addto his collection, the only completeset in the world. The manuscriptconfirmed readings by which thescholars determined that it is closestto the text as written by Chaucer.Poet Alto ButinettmanChaucer, as comptroller of theCustoms House, kept accounts whichwere found to be correct to the lastpence when examined by govern¬ment officials. Four research assist¬ants under Professor Manly alsofound record of a law suit againstthe poet to recover a $1000 hotelbill. Records were also discovered which proved that he was from Kent.Through the work of ProfessorsManly and Rickert, the Universityis now the best center in the worldfor the study of Chaucer’s life andof his “Canterbury Tales”. . TheEnglish department has copies of allthe 85 known manuscripts of the“Tales”, the only central collectionin the world. A text, practically aswritten by Chaucer, may be publish¬ed by Professor Manly.Acquire Gospel Manuscripti One of the most important manu-i scripts that the University has pur-j chased was obtained recently byI Professor Edgar J. Goodspeed andj Associate Professor Harold R. Wil-' loughby of the Department of New! Testament and Early Christian Lit-! erature. This Armenian manuscript' of the Gospels lends strength to thei belief that certain passages found toI be omitted from other newly discov-! ered manuscripts are spurious in the: modern Bible.j No other Gospel manuscript inI America equals the newly acquiredj manuscript in the quality of theI text. It dates from the seventeenthcentury, and is a copy of the textj completed in 1119 of the .ArmenianEra. The book is bound in its orig¬inal worm-eaten board covers, whichare lifted with cloth and coveredwith leather. The text is written ini a cumbersome hand on oriental pa-I per.I Bought in ChicagoI The manuscript was purchasedj from H. .M. Tashjian, a retired Ar-I menian antiquarian living in Chicago.The University has also been for-! tunate in obtaining from Mr. Tash-;jian a first edition Armenian Biblepublished in ,1666, and other Ar¬menian Gospels of great importance,to research workers.DIVINITY MEETING.A gathering to promote fellow¬ship and orientation among the stu¬dents in the department of Prac¬tical Theology will be held this eve¬ning at 7 in Swift Common Room.We invite you toThe Birch Tavern876 Elast 63rd StreetThe Restaurant with the North ll’oods .AtmosphereLANTERN LIGHT-COZY BOOTHSClub Breakfast, 20c to 25cLuncheon Served from 11 to 5 P. M,, 35c up—From Soup to NutsA 7 Course Dinner Served from 5 to 9 P. M., 50c to 70cTYPING TERMTHEMES1. A Good Typewriter2. A Fresh Ribbon3. Plenty of Dissertation Bond4. No Dates5. A Fertile ImaginationThe first three items may be securedfrom theThe University of ChicagoBookstore5802 Ellis Ave.THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1932 Page ThreeTHE UNIVERSITY WOMANBOOKS—Current Fiction and Non-fictionDollar BooksSTATIONERY FOR ALL PURPOSESWoodworth’s Book Store1311 Ea<tS7thSt.Open Evenings Dorchester 4800Women AnswerW.A.A. ActivitiesWith Enthusiasm SOCIETYbyElizabethI’m very much afraid that the PsiTap Club Is New Subsidiary jUpsilon and sService Club events,Organiaztion; Golf ClubHolds Day. in the column across the way, willhave to feature here too; there wasmuch that happened which was notoff-color, (the Bazaar to the con¬trary); maybe I should tell you.The school contingent at ServiceClub was small but very active; likethose cheery affairs at South Shoreon New Year’s eve, the party at theBlackstone was sort of scrambled.Of campus boys and girls who werethere, I can only list these: AmosAllen and Kay Collins, Edgie Gold¬smith and Nina Duvall, Bob Bohnenand Milly Hackl, Bill Friedeman andBev Paulman, Gus Chapin and Bar-Eldridge, Bob Balsley andW. A. A. has embarked upon anextensive program of activities ofthe year with the membership driveoccupying the spotlight of interest.The subsidiary clubs have receivedan unprecedented response and theyare planning numerous interestingmeetings and special activities. Theregular Friday cozies are being heldas usual and the organization as awhole has drawn up a lively and at¬tractive schedule.THE GOLF CLUBEncouraged by the success of its j barafirst Golf Day held last week, the | Ethel Ann Gordon, Dudley Buck andGolf Club is planning a similar fea- ; Marietta Gillette, Leeds Mitchell andture for 10 o’clock Saturday morn-| Jane Bradley, Hap Sulcer and Wallying on the Jackson Park links. | Crume, Bion Howard and Lita Dick-THE TAP CLUB | erson, and Ralph Webster and HelenThe newest group club will hold i Holmes,tryouts today between 3:30 and 5; Rankin Roberts waited the wholein the rhythms g>’mna.sium. Candi-j evening for Barbara Graf; I don’tdates should be able to perform the j know, even now, if he found her.fundamental tap steps. The club has i He may have joined Milt Olin, Wal-been organized for ad\ anced work in ter Montgomery, Dave Cochran,tap with the aim of production. Six Fred Fendig, Bob Sharp, Gordon Al-charter members have already been ! len. Bill Peterson, Luis Alvarez, andenrolled. Archie Allen, all of whom were amb-. “C” CLUB ling about, more or less unattached.The “C” Club will meet Thursday The Psi Upsilon party shared spot¬evening at the home of Vivian Carl- lijrfits and guest'^ with Service Club.‘!on. Members are asked to pay their the .same night. Everybody whodues of 50 cents as soon as possible, wasn’t at Service Club was at theRACKET CLUB local affair, and more people thanRacket is continuing its fall ten- I can name commuted. The Psi Unis tournament, on the Kenwood party w’as more attractive than itscourts, despite rainy weather. At the title Hard Time.s, gave me reason toregular meeting Friday, members expect; the decorations were pleas-may play off the next round in the ing, and the crowd (because thereping-pong tournament and practice wa. a crowd) happy no end.badminton in the gymnasium. Back, now, to Friday night andTHE OUTING CLUB the Joseph Urban room, which seemsMore activities are being planned to be well on its way toward becom-for the near future by the Outing ing another campus stamping-CTub, which, undaunted by Ihe ^is-- jrround. Local ^personages seen atagreeable weather following the In- the Congiess on that night were War-diana game, held a pleasant steak ren Thompson and Maxine Crevis-fry by the lake. Jane Jordan, the , ton, Joe Salek and Barbara Blocki,club’s chairman, and the recently ap- Billy Sills and Dot Trude, Ed Nich-pointed controlling board promise a olson and Betty Cason, Hayden Win-number of outings for the remainder gate and Betty Schmidt, Freddieof the quarter. Gundrum and Elenore Scheel, JoeBailey and Eleanor Welch, AllanMarin and Shirley Seily, George Postand Lizzie Walker, and Frank Nah-ser and Jean Jordan.Yankee Doodle shared the crowd,with Stoopnagle and Budd and theD „ I ! busy Milt Olin as the chief attrac-fiecause no one know's what its ' . , j ^correct name ia, ife called a “p,- The Place »as jammed, oKcon” or maybe a "piKeull.” That ‘■““’'f: I-aPtmnn ms.ats thatr - fUo* iracvico pcop e Were piled to the ceiling inmeans, of course, that it looks and |acts—like a cross (but not too cros.s) ' i u-abetween a plyeon and a lake kuII, ' Taat I give you a personal bit:Franny Hutchlna, daughter of the iUniversity Hutchinses, found the “fbeastie with its mate, on the Midway, '» housewarm.npr Sunday niph . ThusShe took the critters home and irave ' "“•■'‘‘s. ™‘' ythem bird and room in the Hutchins ;‘p'” conjuKal social life.And that—I think, is all for a lit-FRANNY FORSAKESDOC FOR STRANGEFEATHERED FRIENDgarage, where one of the birds—theone on the left, with the brown eyes—soon shuffled off this mortal perch.The other one survived, however,and when interviewed by a DailyMaroon reporter yesterday afternoonwas found to be alive and well.The gugeon—or is it a pigeull?—is, in the opinion of all who haveseen it, an interesting addition to tie while.the private menagerie of the Hutch¬ins menage. The rest of the men¬agerie is a harlequin Great Dane pupwhose chief claim to fame is hisindia-rubber tail.WOMEN'S PACE STAFFV^yliesterfieldFoster Hall Boastsof Squijee, Eruditeand Gossiping OuijaAn educated ouija board thatspeaks in words of six and sevensyllables and groans when it has totell the truth is the property of Cath¬erine Gessler of Foster hall.Originally dragged out to w'hileaway a long Sunday afternoon, theouija board is rapidly becoming ahabit. Apparently Squijee, as theboard has been named, has seen all—and it also tells all, answering withequal facility such questions as “Whois the laziest girl in the hall’’ or“Who’s got the most personality’’ or ieven “Who was that gentleman I seen Iher with last night?’’ ' jAs a conclusive proof of Squijee’spotency, consider the wealth of de- itail it offered in answer to a ques- jtion concerning a future husband, iNot only did Squijee name the gen- .tleman—one Robert Stafford—but itadded such interesting points as“dark, tall, young, one tooth gone,handsome but dumb, and residing inBurton Court. If found please referto—’’ but maybe this has gone farenough. I CAMPUS YOUNG REPUBLICAN’S LEAGUEI TO HOLD LUNCHEON MEETING TODAYThe Young Republican’s League'^■ponsored by the Republican partyto acquaint campus women with theis.sues of the campaign, is giving aluncheon in the Cloister club of IdaNoyes hall tomorrow at 12. The lun¬cheon, which is the first of a seriesof pre-election events planned bythe League, is open to all Universitywomen interested in the election.Mrs. Grace Brosseau, a formerpresident-general of the D. A. R.,and a personal friend of Mrs. Hoover,will give the principal address, ex¬plaining the aims and plans of theRepublican party. In addition to Mrs,Brosseau’s speech, three officers ofthe Young Republican League willexplain the work being done by thatgroup on national, state, and localscales.Miss Jean Summers, national sec¬retary of the League, and director of iactivities, explains the Tiation wide iwork of the organization, while Mrs.Andrew Sandegren, state director of ithe League, outlines state plans,Mrs. Philip Ringer will discuss thework being done in the city. Three Women’s HallsPlan Observation ofHallowe’en This WeekBeecher, Gates and Kelly hall areobserving Hallowe’en with the tradi¬tional stunts appropriate to the occa¬sion. Beecher will give a party to¬night from 9 to 11 at which thehouse residents will appear in fancycostumes, preferably original. Therewill be dancing, and cider and dough¬nuts will be, served.Kelly hall residents will appear atdinner tomorrow night in costumesand will be entertained with gamesand stunts following the dinner.Gates hall will hold a dinner for itsresidents tomorrow night at IdaNoyes hall. Special entertainmentfeatures have been planned byEsther Weber.Beecher is planning a tea dancefor the near future and a campaigndinner preceding the presidentialelection November 4. Bouye and Gilsonto Address TwoY.W.C.A. Groupsj Miss Catherine Bouye, a graduatestudent at the University, who hasI taught school in China for severalyears, will be the guest speaker atthe first meeting of the Y. W. C. A.World Fellowship Group tomorrow.The subject for discussion at themeetings this quarter will be theChinese-Japanese difficulties in Man¬churia. Later in the quarter a Jap¬anese and a Chinese student in theUniversity will be invited to speak tothe group and a trip to Chinatownwill be conducted.Miss Mary Gilson, instructor inEconomics, will describe her experi¬ences in England this summer at ameeting of the Y. W. C. A. today.On the basis of her wide contactwith English people of all classes andespecially the working class, she willdiscuss the administration of reliefto the unemployed, the dole, and un¬employment insurance in England.Miss Gilson’s subject is “On theBasis of Need.”© 1932.Liggett St Myees Tobacco Co.■what on earthare you up to now**T7INDING things out, smarty! I thought Fd ex-•L amine the tobacco in a cigarette.*^Look here... this is Chesterfield tobacco. Notice itslighter color.. .you don’t see any dark heavy types,do you? I guess that’s why Chesterfields are milder.Fm told that uniformly lighter color is due tocross-blending. It sort of welds all the tobaccosinto one.And here’s something else. Notice that these longshreds are all cut the same width. It stands to rea¬son they bum smoother and cooler.”I don’t pretend to be an expert but it looks tome as if they make Chesterfields right."Here, light one. That’s the best test after all.“When the frost is on thepumpkin”AMBER PIEenjoys the limelight.As a topper for our thirty-fivecent lunch or dinner it can’t bebeat!Treat yourself to a home-cookedmeal in congenial surroundings.Amber Pie Tea Shop846 East t>3rd St.“Known from Maine to Califorvia” i Betty Hansen—October Man-I aging Editor.' Sophomore Assistants: Ruthj Bell, Sue Richardson, Florencei Wishnick, Jeannette Rifas, MaryLouise Miller, Helen Hiett, lolaChasson, Grace Gregory ClaraDanziger.Subscribe toThe Daily Maroonr-Page Four THE OAltY, MAROON,rWEDNESDAY, OPJQBER 26, 1932AUDIENCE CHANGES^ -POUTICAL MEETINGTO HECKLING SESSION(Continued from page 1)Mellon, and the “false economies ofthe present administration,” he at¬tempted many witty remarks whichfell flat before the audience, whomade a farce out of his frugal ef-orts.Handling his audience more intel¬ligently than any of the others, Mr.Olmsted pleaded the Republicanplatform, emphasizing the protectivetariff stand, the eighteen pointsbrought up by President Hoover, andthe reduction of governmental costs.He referred to the advocates of theclass struggle as the “comic arenaof the particular campaign.” He ap¬pealed to the college students asthose who must solve our nation’sproblems.Herbert Hoover Takes EarlyLead in Daily Maroon Poll(Continued from page 1)Thomas and Herbert Hoover, as wellas several faculty members, wereprinted in the Maroon, preceding thestraw poll. Last night, under thesponsorship of the Socialist Club,a symposium with every party rep¬resented was held, and the audiencewere given an opportunity to vote inthe Maroon poll at the close of themeeting.HILL’S CAFETERIA1165-75 East 63rcl St.Woodlairn’s Leading CafeteriaDining Rooms - First and SecondFloorsGood Food at very ModeratePricesFINGER WAVE THAT COMBSWITH SHAMPOO50cKennedy Beauty Shop6351 Cottage Grove Plaza 10601455 E. 63rd St. Dorchester 3755 I The Daily Maroonj Night editor for the next issue:i Melvin Goldman. Assistants: Tom; Barton and John F. Dille.Music and Religious Services“Religion and the IntellectualLife: II. What Is Religious Faith?”Professor McGiffei’t. Chicago The¬ological Seminary, Joseph Bond Cha¬pel, 12.Organ Music in the UniversityChapel at 5 by Edward Eigen-schenck; choi'al gioup.OrganizationsNational Student League, “WhatHave the Major Political Parties toOffer of Significance to Us?” SocialScience 302, at 4.Junior Mathematical Club, “TheHistorical Background of CertainMathematical Periods.” Eckhart 209,at 4:30.Zoological Club, “The Relation ofthe Corpus Lutem to MammaryGland Function.” Mr. W. 0. Nelson,Zoology 29, at 4:30.Poetry Club Meeting, Studio TeaShop at 8.Association Meeting (Y; W. C.A.) “On the Basis of Need.” MissMary B. Gilson, Ida Noyes Hall ati 4I Faculty Women’s Luncheon, IdaNoyes Hall at 12.MiscellaneousRadio lecture: “International Re¬lations. The Elements of Public In¬ternational Law.” Assistant Profes¬sor Frederick Schuman over StationWMAQ at 11.I Orientation and Fellowship Gath- iI ering (Department of Practical The-jology). Swift Commons Room, 7.j Tryouts lor .Accompanist, Univer-j sity of Chicago Chorus, ChicagoTheological Seminary, Room 439, atI 4:30.Freshmen who wish to try out forI either business or editorial depart¬ments of the Cap and Gown shouldreport today at 1:15 in Cobb 209.CLASSIFIED ADSLearn to Dance Correctly—Takea Few Private LessonsTeresa Dolan Dancing School6307 Cottage GroveTel. Hyde Park 3080Hours 10 a. m. to 12 midnight LOST—W'rist watch between Bur¬ton Court and Chapel. Circle Dia¬monds. University 7690. Liberal re.ward.ROO.M AND BOARD—Univers¬ity Students. Opportunity to practicei Spanish. Reasonable prices. HomeI cooking. 1512 E. 65th Place, Fair-^fax 8499.Get Your Noveltiesand Decorationsfor thatHALLOWEENPARTYatWoodworfh’s Book Store1311 East 57th St. Dor. 4800OPEN EVENINGS FOR RENT! FURNISHED APART.MENTSAdjoining U. of C. very attractivei 4 room apt. all outside rms., light,i quiet; refrig, accom. 4 individual,j will arrange to suit. 922 E. 56th St.■ 2nd apt.ISTUDY AND SLEEPING ROOMSAccommodate three. Single beds.Good home cooked meals. Privilegeof large living room. $7 each. Otherdesirable rooms. 6427 University.$5.50 Meal Tickets for $4.75. This Includes aFountain Pen FreeWELCOME STUDENTSTEN-O-FOUR RESTAURANT1094 E. 55th StreetGood Meals Served at 3.5-40-45 cts.Table Pe Hote 50-60-70 cts.GOOD COFFEEInternational HouseShop FairFrom year to year foreign students bring to thiscountry many beautiful gifts which they sell to aidthem in their school work.SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29there will be a FAIR of the International HouseShop displaying these goods. Buy your Christmasgifts now.A gala time! Cider, apples, music and a festive spirit.Come, pay us a visit and help these foreign students.— Stay All Day —International House1414 East 59th St. MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY\VHAT SHE WEARSIN FOOTBALLWEATHERON THE SIXTH FLOORThe Football Coat—she wears it open, wide lapelsturned back—or buttoned high with super-Carboswank. Warm fleece wool in Big Ten colors—maroon, purple, blue and green. 14 to 20; SportsApparel, $17.50.At the game—underneath her football coat she’swearing a vivid little woolen frock. Two-piecewith collars and cuffs of white crepe embroideredin angora yarn. Bright green, red, blue and black ;14 to 20; Sports Apparel, $12.75.After the game—she dashes home and into thisbeguiling dinner dress. Puffed sleeves and a rowof crystal buttons down the back; crepe in hyan-cinth blue, burnt orange, green and black; 14 to20; Misses Dresses, $15.