rjiVol. 34. No. 20. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1933 Price Three Ceni»GraduatePapers-By SCRIBLERUS-THEORY, BUT NOT THEORYALONEWe notice with satisfaction thatlourses in practice teaching are be-foming quite prevalent here at theI'niversity. Future teachers are tak¬en to the scene of actual cla.ssroointeaching and observe and take partin practical teaching. They are toldwliat to watch for in the way of ob->tacles and difficulties. They ob-.-crve and participate and by so do¬ing, they learn in the true sense ofthe word. This method of teachingis certainly more thought-provokingthan any mere text-imbibing couldever be. This all appears very ob-\ ious, now that practice-teachinghas become a reality but ap])arentlyit had escaped the attention of themajority of education schoolsthroughout the country. We com¬mend the University’s frowning onan uneven balance between practiceand theory and resort to that well-worn but .still pregnant maxim . . .“Experience is itself the best teach-HOW IT SHOULD BE DONEWr. Fred Millett’s section of thellentley-Millett opus tentatively en¬titled “How To Study The Drama”has been completed: Mr. Bentley’s>ection is, we understand, nearing(ompletion. We feel that this book,jinlging from the title and the au¬thors alone, may well prove a dis¬tinct contribution to the many vol¬umes on the drama. There havelieen numerous dramatic anthologiesand still more numerous works ofdramatic criticism, but unless ourmemory is failing us. we do not re¬call an equal number of treatises ofmethods of dramatic study. We can¬not help feeling that the last-men¬tioned is the most nece.s.sary, prob¬ably. because it is primary. Wemust quite naturally learn how toappreciate first. Until we do, theappreciations of others and theworks of others will remain quitemeaningless.HOME TO ROOSTOne of our proud traditions isthat we have had Rhodes scholars..Most of us have forgotten when welast had one. We must admit thatwe don’t know and that w'e are toolazy to phone Mr. Robert Valentine.Merrill and find out. But we doknow that John McDonough was aChicago Rhodes Scholar and that heis back in Chicago working in thecredit department of the HarrisTrust Company..John came to school here m 1924from Yankton High School in SouthDakota. He played quarterback onthe football team, was a Phi BetaKappa. Head Mitrshal of the Uni¬versity, a member of Owl and Ser¬pent, Iron Mask. Skull and Crescentand Green Cap. He won his ‘C’ inboth basketball and football, play¬ed varsity baseball and was a mem¬ber of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Hekicked the point after touchdownthat licked Purdue, 7-6, in 1927. Thatwas, by the way, our last victoryover the Boilermakers.He spent three years at Oxfordand took honors in the departmentof Modern Greats, which includesPhilosophy, Politics and Economics.He majored in Economics. Aftercompleting his three year course atOxford in 1931, he made a sevenmonths’ tour of China and Japanbefore returning to begin the year’straining course required of all ap¬plicants for positions at the HarrisTrust. He is living at the Interna¬tional House.SPEAKING OF FOOTBALLLaurie Apitz, a graduate of theUniversity Law School, is nowcoaching the end.s on Amos Alonzo.Stagg’s College of the Pacific foot¬ball team. Laurie was an all-confer¬ence end on a Stagg team here fouror five years ago. He was a Phi BetaKappa, a member of Sigma^ AlphaEpsilon fraternity, and a UniversityMarshal. While taking work in theLaw School, he helped Stagg coachthe football team.PARALYZING LA SALLE STREETMr. William Nelson Fuqua, agraduate of the University, is con¬nected with a LaSalle Street broker¬age firm and doing very well, wehear. Nels was an activity man inhis undergraduate days. .A Phi BetaKappa, Daily Maroon coluninist,Blackfriar star and the author of a(Continued on page 4) MOWRER PICTURESREIGN OF TERRORIN NAZUERMANYDescribes Persecution ofJews as of MinorSignificance.A New Germany of terror, a serv¬ile state ruled by fear, subject tothe caprice of the “scum . . . andsome high-minded young Nazi ideal¬ists,” a nation which has voted awayits power and freedom to follow ahypnotist was vividly Exposed by [Edgar Ansel Mowrer last night in.Mandel hall. Mowrer, speaking to ione of the largest audiences ever to jenter the hall, held his listeners spell¬bound for over two hours with adramatic picturization of the despot¬ic regime of Adolf Hitler.“Germany today is terror,” Mow’-rer .said. “Its principal victims arenot the Jews, but the pacifists, ed¬ucated and considered incurableswho could never be made ^Nazis.Then come the communists, andla.«tly the Jews, who are persecutedin most cases, not as -Jews but as.lew-pacifists, and Jew-communists.The “Stab in the Back”.Mowrer cited numerous in.stancesof the German terror, and spoke ofthe new German culture as that “of ia barracks, based on the myth of jGerman Nordic racial ‘supremacy.”Germany after the armistice still re¬tained the vestiges of Prussian mili¬tarism and did Tiot admit defeat,Mow'rer said. The Nazi party todayspeak of the “stab in the back” andblame the Jewish workmen for “sell¬ing out” and refusing to cooperate ,during the last days of the war. iThe complicated social and politi¬cal .structure of present day Ger¬many with its feudal anachroni.sms,ve.stiges of medieval crafts andguilds, and the peculiar German ra¬cial national i.sts was stressed byMowrer as factors which must beconsidered in the study of the Ger¬man problem. Head of WeatherBureau ExplainsFall Heat WaveTEMPERATURESHourly temperatures of the rec¬ord autumn heat wave since 2 A.M. yesterday are:2 A.M.3 A.M.4 A.M.5 A.M.6 A.M.7 A.M.8 A.M. .62 9 A.M..61 10 A.M..60 11 A.M..59 12 M..59 1 P.M..59 2 P.M..61 3 P.M. .64.70.73.76.78.78.77 PROFESSORS JUDD,SMITH TD ENTERIN RADj^DEBATESpeak Over NBC, CBSNetworks ThisAfternoon“Warm winds, originating in alarge high pressure area in southernUnited States, have been blowingacross the Chicagoland legion since.Saturday,” said T. E. Johnson, direc¬tor of the weather bureau in Rosen-wald tower, “and have been largelyresponsible for the summer heatwave we have been experiencing thelast two days.” Relief can be expect¬ed today or tomorrow, Mr. Johnsonpicdicted.Yesterday an all-time high temper¬ature was 7K..3 degrees for Oct. 30was recordeil. The former high was76 degrees. Today the thermometer jrecorded A temperature of 78 de¬grees which came within a degree(if the all-time high for October 31.Such weather is unusual for latefall and cannot last any consider¬able length of time.The low pressure area, which willfollow the high, is at present over.Montana, the Dakotas, and we.sternWisconsin and should bring with itnortherly winds which will relievethe present sultry condition of thenorth-central region.COX BRANDS 99 PERGENT OF DEPRESSIONCURES UNAUTHENTIC400 Thousand VisitUniversity Chapel inPast Five Months.Approximately 40(),0(»0 visitorsviewed the interior of the Univer¬sity chapel during the past five Imonths, according to F. J. Gurney, 'who acted as host for the University Jat the Chapel. During the latter;part of the summer the daily aver- jage of visitors was above 4,000.Sight-seeing busses carried an es- itimated .330,000 to the door of the;Chapel, and the remainder of the :visitors came independently. A totalof 17,000 people made the longclimb up the Chapel tower to inspectthe Rockefeller carillon. More thanl."),000 visitors were escorted onpersonally conducted tours of theIbiiversity grounds by the campusguide service.The Oriental Institute of theUniversity reported yesterday that,54,497 have visited its museum sinceJune 1. This figure is nearly twicethat for the same period in 1932.On one day during the summerthe Persian attache at Washington,the Persian consul in Chicago,^ agroup of native Persians, a nativeof Iraq, and a visitor from theStraits Settlement were visitors. “Ninety-nine out of 100 of the‘economists’ who jirofess to havesolved the current economic dilem¬ma are not economists at all,” as¬serted G. V’. Cox, profes.sor of Fi¬nance, at the School of Business as¬sembly yesterday morning in Has¬kell hall. He outlined the essentialpoints in the monetary policy of thenew administration and predicted apossible currency war between theUnited States and foreign countries,a situation which would result indrastic inflation.S. H, Nerlove, as.sociate professorof Business Economics, comment¬ing on the administration of theNRA, stated that the president’sscheme for recovery had reached thecrossroads of its effectiveness andthe question was whether to “soft-pedal” or change it. “The govern¬ment has tried to use the NRA toreconstruct rather than to governour industries,” Mr. Nerlove claim¬ed. He pointed out that 1300 codeshave been submitted, 57, includingall of the basic industries have beenapproved, and 75 await the presi¬dent’s signature. The NR.A has ac¬complished considerable good byabolishing child labor, increasing thepossibility of leisure, and creating afavorable attitude toward laborunions he stated.Meiklejohn Compares Curricula forExperimental College with University Charles H. Judd, dean of theSchool of Education, and T. V.j Smith, professor of Philosophy, par-i ticipate in a radio debate on the! merits and faults of the .Americanand British broadcasting systems,on both NBC and Columbia networksfrom 2 to 3 this afternoon.Profes.sors Judd and Smith, withDr. Harry W. Chase, president ofNew York University, will argue theside of the United States. Their op¬ponents 'will be Profe.ssor E. C.Buehler, of the University of Kan-'(as; Professor C. C. Cunningham, ofNorthwe.stern: and Professor H. L.Eubank, on the faculty at the Uni¬versity ,of \Vi.sconsin. .All of thespeakers will talk from the NBCstudios in Chicago, with the excep¬tion of Dr. Chase who will carry onfrom New York.National Advisory CouncilThe debate is sponsored by the.National Advisory Council on Radioin Education primarily for highschool and univer.sity debaters. Eachyear schools throughout the countrystage a series of debates and thisyear their efforts will center aroundthis question of radio. Handbookson both sides have been preparedand are being distributed to theschools of the country. Washingtonis reported to be watching for thelesults with keen interest.The commercial broadcasting com¬panies are vitally concerned, fortheir existence depends upon thepresent American .system of indi¬vidual enterprise. The British radii.stations, on the other hand are gov¬ernment owned and governmentoperated. Many representatives ofleading educationally owned radiostations are, at the present Hme,urging the government to take overthe broadca.sting in this country. Robt. E. ParkPark Speaks inUrban LeagueLectiu*e Tonight“The Main Street of the World.”along which European culture hasmoved, is the topic of Robert E.Park, professorof Sociology,who will opena series of fourlectures to¬night at 8:15in Mandel hall.Mrs. Park,Roberta Bur¬gess, and Pro¬fessor ErnestW. Burgesswill speak inthe remaininglectures, spon-soied by the University Joint Ite-search Committee and the ChicagoUrban I.eague.“1 he impact of Euro|)ean civiliza¬tion has been telt most keenly alongthe world’s ‘main street.’ its cen¬ter of trade and culture.” Dr. Paik.''aid yestei'day in discussing his re¬cent two-year ti'ip around theworld. “It is this contact which islesponsible for the mixtuio of na¬tive and Eui'opean peoples, result¬ing in the ‘maiginal man’, who livesin a woild produced by two differ¬ent ethnic and cultural gioups.”Ushers for the lecture sOries in¬clude Betty Cason. Lorraine Wat¬son. Malian Radgley, Lois Crom¬well. .Agnes Adair. Ruth Works, Ger¬aldine Smithwiek, Jane H'iesenthal,Rita Dukette, Pauline Redman, and.Madelaine Strong. The dooinien areClarence Cade, Bud Houghton, andAlvin Pitcher. Special student tick¬ets, priced at 35 cents for single lec¬tures and .$1 foi- the series, may hesecured in Cobh 202. REGISTRATIDN FDRSENIDR ELECTIDNSTO CLO^ TODAYOver 90 Signify Intentto Take Part inAnnual PollSchool of BusinessGives Annual AutumnDance Friday NightAt its weekly meeting yesterdayalternoon the Student Council ofthe School of Business made finalplans for the annual autumn dancewhich will be held Friday night atJud.son Court. The Council also dis¬cussed plans for the remainder ofthe quarter.I he Hallowe’en dance is sponsor¬ed by the School of Business Coun¬cil, and is open to all students. EddieFagan’s orchestra will furnish themusic. Patrons and patronesses forthe dance are: Mi', and Mrs. Carl H.Henrikson and Mrs. Eva B. Suther¬land. Admission is $1 a couple.In addition to discussing plansfor the dance, the Council decidedto sponsor an afternoon tea nextWednesday at 3:30 for all studentsand faculty members of the_ Schoolof Business. The assembly yester¬day noon proved to be such a suc¬cess that two more are planned thisquarter. A matinee dance will alsobo held sometime during the quar¬ter.William Elson was appointed tothe council to fill a vacancy left bythe graduation of one of the mem¬bers last year. UNIVERSITY RESUMESOFF-CAMPUS TOURSBEGUN LAST SUMMERBALLENGER HEADSFRESHMAN COUNCIL The University off-campus tours,organized last quarter by John L.Bastian, graduate student in Eng¬lish, and sponsored by the Boardof V’ocational Guidance and Place¬ment, will resume tours of the city,because of their great success dur¬ing the summer session. Begun lastJul.v as a response to the many de¬mands of summer school studentswho \tanted to see a Century ofProgress, Hull House, and otherpoints of interest, the tours are con¬tinued, because many students stilldesire guidance through the cityduring the autumn quarter.Last summer two or three tripswere taken each week-end and wereattended by as many as 110 studentson each tour. Each trip was accom¬panied by a lecturer who specializ¬ed in a particular field of interest.Some of the guides last summerwere Di*. Ben Reitman, Jane Ad-dams, and Robert Mor.ss Lovett.There will be a trip to HullHouse Friday at 5, starting fromMandel Cloisters. If enough stu¬dents respond, tours to Chinatown,radio broadcasting stations, theStock Exchange, and the Board ofTrade will follow. Tickets for Fri¬day’s tour may be purchased at the jUniversity Bookstore, the Reynold^club, or Woodworth’s bookstore for*!$1.50, which includes transportation ;and meals. ■ Registration of voteis in the se¬nior class presidential election willcontinfie today from 9 until 2:30 atCobb hall. Members of the seniorclass who expect to vote tomorrowand who did not register yesterdaymust do so today if they expect theirballots to be valid.Over 90 seniors registered yester^(lay during the four and a half hoursthat the polls were open. If thisnumber is equaled today a new highwill be set for senior election regis¬tration. .As this will be the last elec¬tion of a president by. a cla.ss underthe old jilan, and with backers of thecandidates routing out voters, it ishoped that over a hundred peoplewill register today.Campaign StatementsCampaign managers of the threecandidates, Maivin B'avgeman.ayne E. Rapp, and John Thomsonare expected to bring a statementfrom their men to the office of TheDail.v Maroon this afternoon in or-dei’ that voters may fully under¬stand the promises of the candidates.Voting will take place tomorrowfrom 9 until 3:30. Names of regis-tiants will be checked against theballots before each voter puts thename of his choice into the ballotbox. Any prospective voter whosename is not on the registration listwill not be allowed to vote. Membersof the staff of The Daily Maroonwill supervise the voting, and theywill determine the eligibility of thevoter. Counting of the ballots willbe carried on under the direction ofJerome G. Kerwin of the departmentof Political Science.Candidates are again being warn¬ed against carrying on any activeelectioneering themselves. Their ac¬tivities are limited to a statement.Student Salesmen toAid Concert SeriesTicket Sales Drive.Student .salesmen are invited toparticiiiate in the final ticket salesdrive for the Chicago Symphony’Orchestra concerts which beginTuesday afternoon in Mandel hall.Students who sell five tickets for theconceit series will receive one freeadmi.ssion to each of the six sym¬phony programs and to the specialrecital by Claire Dux January 23..Applications for the sales posi¬tions can be made in Cobb 202, theoffice of the Orchestral Association,which is sponsoring the series. Stu¬dent rates have been reduced to $3,$4, and $5, one-half the price of tic¬kets offered to non-students.Programs for the current series,as outlined by Dr. Frederick Stock,director of the orchestra, and Cecil.\L Smith of the department ofMusic, will present a survey of mu¬sic. with compositions from classicaljieriods contrasted with modernworks. This survey treatment hasbeen planned by Dr. Martin Schutze,head of the Association, as a paral¬lel to the University’s educationalsurvev courses.A Production Manager Looks for. an Angel and Finally Finds One“In comparing the University’snew plan with the two years coursein the Experimental College at theUniversity of Wisconsin, I find avery large agreement in the courseof study, contrasted with a verywide divergence in the method ofteaching,” said Alexander Meikle¬john noted educator and founder ofthe Experimental College, to TheDaily Maroon yesterday. Mr. Meikle¬john is giving his second campus lec¬ture on “Significant Living” thisafternoon at 4:30 in Mandel hall.While the subject matter of hisschool was confined to a study oftwo civilizations, Greek and Ameri¬can, the scope of these studies wasextended to all the fields of knowl¬edge which are included in the new plan divisions at the University.The difference in the method ofteaching lies in the strong stressthat the University puts on examin¬ations and the absence of any ex¬aminations in the experimentalschool, which is fundamentally tu¬torial. The community side of thestudent life is emphasized, trying tomake the groups something like afraternity, all of whose membersare taking the same course of study.Mr. Meiklejohn ended the inter¬view by saying, “The whole collegeworld is eagerly watching to seehow the plans of your Universitywork out, because they have raisedfundamental educational questionswhich are apparently being tackledwith vigor.” | John B'allenger was elected presi¬dent of the temporary freshmancouncil at its first meeting Monday.The other officei’s are Mary LouiseCoolidge, vice-president; Helen An¬dersen, secretary; and John Web¬ster. treasurer.The first activity of tne newgroup will be the Hoosier Hop, anall-University dance to be held inJudson Court November 10, the eveof the Indiana game. Preceding thedance, there will be a large pep-parade starting at Bartlett and end¬ing' at Greenwood field, where an ef¬figy of an Indiana football playerwii> be bullied on a great bonfire.Fuither details will be announcedlater.In the middle of this month a per¬manent council will be chosen by thefreshman class. Tickets for “AmericanDream” are available at thebox-office in Mandel cloistersevery day this week from 12 to5:30. Single admissions are$1.00 and season subscriptions$2.50.Production managers always havetheir troubles, but Gifford M. Mast,who is the production director for“American Dream,” the play beinggiven by the Dramatic AssociationThursday evening, feels that he hashad more than his share.When, two weeks ago, he readthrough the play to see what wasrequired in the way of properties henoticed this: “a large figurehead ofan angel, taken from the prow of anancient ship.” Where could one find such an article on a staid University! campus.For a few days some of the more^ ambitious members of the .Associa¬tion harbored the notion of buildingi a figurehead from the material athand. Campus artists used reems ofi paper in their preliminary sketches.1 but finding anyone who could under-j stand them was another problem.Then followed sevei*al evenings ofj conferences by the production staffI at which many cigarettes were! smoked and many hazy ideas evolv’-ed. The situation became so acuteI that robbing a museum or strippingi the Santa Maria in Jackson ParkI harbor was seriously considered.But last week the solution wasfound. Helen Conover, a student at(Continued on page 4)Page Two 'THE DAILY MARCXJN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER I. 1933iatlg liarnnnFOUNDED IN 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, publuhed mornings except Saturday,Sunday, and Monday during the autumn, winter, and springquarters by The Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Subscription rates: $2.50 a year; $4.00 by mail. Single copies:three (.-eitU.No responsibility is assumed by the University of Chi(»gofor any statements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for anycontracts entered into by The Daily Maroon.Entered as second class matter March la. 19U3, 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 CONTROLJOHN P. BARDEN, Editor-in-C hiefVIN€ENT NEWMAN, Business ManagerWILLIAM GOODSTEIN, Managing EditorWALTER L. MONTGOMERY, CirculationJANE I. BIESENTHAL, Associate EditorBETTY HANSEN, Associate EditorEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSTom Barton Noel B. Gerson Howard M. RichRobert J. Hasterlik Howard P. Hudson Florence WishnickDavid H. KutnerBUSINESS ASSISTANTSWilliam Bergman William O’DonnellWilliam Loventhal Robert SamuelsSOPHOMORE REPORTERSHope Feldman lanet Lewy Philip RossCharlotte Fishman James MacKentie Harker StantonEdgar Greenebaum Curtis Melnick Jeanne StolteRutn Greenbaum Robert McQuilken Marion WagnerCharles Hoerr Donald Morris William WatsonHenry Kelley Frank Moss William WrightRaymond Lahr Ralph Nicholson Harry YeidelJean TrussingSOPHOMORE BUSINESS ASSISTANTSJoel Alexander Zalmon Goldsmith Eklward SchaarRod Chapin Howard Gottschalk Gerald SternFrank Davis Stanley Hayes Everett StoreyMarie Berger EDITORIAL COMMITTEELouise Craver I reston CutlerWaldemar SolfNight Editor: Howard M. RichAssistants: Kelley and Ross When you consider how opaque and meaninglessmuch philosophical discussion becomes, this is allthe more remarkable.In a few days some professor may come to usand roar, "What do you mean by criticizing Uni¬versity professors? What do you know aboutteaching?” Then we will stand up and roar rightback at him, "We ought to know something aboutteaching. We’ve been on the receiving end longenough. Besides, who said we were criticizinganyone?”Somewhat abashed, he will proceed more cauti¬ously, "But why do you insinuate that most ofthe professors here are uninteresting and ob¬scure?" And still not committing ourselves, wewill do our best to mystify him with our reply:*‘Have we done that? Do you think wewould criticize one professor by praising another?"We were just remarking that Bartky is so in¬teresting and Osborne is so clear.”—P. C.The Travelling BazaarBy SIDNEY HYMAN and HARRY MORRISONWednesday, November 1, 1933THE MAD ASTRONOMER ANDTHE TRANSPARENT PHILOSOPHERHis name is Bartky, and he comes to class witha weird sparkle in his eye and the profound an¬nouncement that "Some of you may know thatthe sun rises in the East and sets in the West.Whereupon we laugh at this sly insult and decideto hang around; this might become interesting. Heis the only man on the campus who can make uslaugh by insulting us.That isn’t all he does. You should see him ex¬plain altitude and azimuth. He talks with hiswhole body. When he gets into the thick of it,you begin to believe that you must have made amistake and wandered into the calisthenics de¬partment. Confidentially, we think the man isa little crazy, he makes such a spectacle of him¬self.We see two possible futures for this man Bart¬ky. Both are so dangerous that we feel we mustwarn him. Last week he was greeted with a hugeround of applause, in which one could detect anunmistakable undertone of hisses and boos. Thisindicates one imminent possibility. One of thesedays he may forget himself and utter an insultwhich the audience won’t swallow. In that casehe will be answered with a great ovation whichwill be interrupted now and then by the sinisterundertone of rattling machine guns. The otherpossibility is that he will get all wrapped up inaltitude and azimuth and a few other things tosuch an extent that he will tie himself in a knotand choke to death. jNow that you know the Mad Astronomer wewant to make the observation that he is one ofthe best teachers on the campqs. We wish allthe other professors of this University could seewhat that man will do to get his subject matteracross.Astronomy is an interesting subject to us, butonly because of Bartky. It could easily be veryboresome. It would be the easiest thing in theworld for the instructor to wheeze through thatsubject and drive us to sleep in no time. Someprofessors seem to have a remarkable capacityin this respect. But not Dr. Bartky (and nowwe say "Doctor” with a note of respect). He isinterested not only m knowing astronomy, butalso in making it interesting and attractive to stu¬dents.The good teacher must be not only interesting,tut also clear. Now we want to mention theTransparent Philosopher. His name is Osborne, jHe lectures on Socrates and Kant in the Human¬ities course. The remarkable thing about himis that you can see right through him, understand iexactly what he means. That is because he iswilling to condescend from abstruse philosophicalheights and speak an understandable language. FLASHES FROM ALL OVER THE GLOBE...Flash . ...Flash.. .Flask.. .FlaskLYING-IN HOSPITAL BUILDS HIPPODROMEANNEX TO ACCOMMODATE PROSPEC¬TIVE SENIOR CLASS PRESIDENTS WHOVIE TO KISS NEW BORN BABIES....Daily MaroonTAMMY HALL ADOPTS U. OF C. EAGLETO REPLACE TIGER AS SYMBOL OF PO¬LITICAL PARASITISM....Daily MaroonPRIZE BULL SELLING AT $947 A HEAD ATSTOCKYARDS CLOSES AT $8,736 IN UNI¬VERSITY OF CHICAGO UNDER HIDDENPRESSURE OF BULL MARKET DailyMaroonEARTHQUAKE IN JAVA CAUSED BY BOSSTWEED TURNING OVER IN GRAVE INSHAME AS SENIOR CLASS POLITICIANSTEACH FIRST WARD POLITICIANSTRICKS... .Daily Maroon* « *Thumbnail Sketches of the Candidates:Wayne Rapp belongs to the Carriers Of TheTorch, Local No. Five. His good right arm has,ever since that eventful day in May, long yearsago, that he first saw the light of day, alwayschampioned the rights of women, and children,not to mention BABES. He has never left any¬one at the church; not only has he never seen achurch, but he has never left anyone. His sten¬torian voice has always rung out whenever theboys needed a beast for a Blackfriar show. Inshort he is just the man who should be presidentof the SENIOR CLASS.Marvin Bargeman has long been known as astrong, not so silent, man who grunts horribly.He has a kind face and beautiful hair; also he isa linesman for the Intramural Department. Toillustrate his dutiful, kind, nature, let us tell alittle st»)ry about him. He was supposed to workat a touchball game but instead he let somebodyel.se, the poor damn fool, do it because he, Barge¬man, could work less and make more than theother guy. In short, he is just the man whoshould be president of the SENIOR CLASS.Gerts McGerts who never kissed a baby andnever had a date with Jerry Smithwick is ourcandidate for president. He stands full on a plat¬form of peach brandy and there he lay on thefloor, dead... .drunk. He goes to all the partieson campus and has a marvelous insight into allthe problems confronting the undergraduate, in¬cluding smoking in Cobb, and he is also firm inthe belief that Foster girls should be allowed tostay out all night. He swears that if he iselected, there will positively be no Cap andGown. In short, he is just the man who shouldbe president of the SENIOR CLASS.John Thomson has always led an upright lifeand he has no enemies. He is a nice hoy and per¬haps he parts his hair in the middle. He neverhas a great deal to say and therefore rarely saysvery much. He also speaks in short clipped sen¬tences. Perhaps he has a dog, and if he didhave a dog he would be very kind to it, we aresure. At any rate he is very kind to ChuckHoltzberg, which could mean most anything. Oneof the -best things about him is that he is amember of Delta Sigma Phi, which is a hell of athing for a guy to have the best thing abouthim he. .Also he makes no campaign promises.In short, he is just the man who should be presi¬dent of the SENIOR CLASS,♦ • ♦WHAT THEY SAY ABOUT THE ELECTION:Ward Heeler Frank Springer... .“The elec¬tion is an election.”Undertakers Association (Who contributed$999,999,000 to defeat all the candidates)....“The customer is always right.”Amalgamated Parachute, Inc “The elec¬tion should be good to the last drop.”Joe Zoline... .“I hope the guy who wins makesmore money out of the job than I did.”Coach Shaughnessy “I think that we shallprobably beat Wisconsin by two touchdowns.”Edgie Goldsmith... .“Herumph!” Lettersto theEditorEditor, The Daily Maroon,Dear Sir:I have seldom read a more unhar-monious collection of ideas than ap¬peared in your recent editorial onthe R. O. T. C. But be that as itmay, one thing is fairly clear, theMaroon plainly believes the R. O.T. C. to be jingoistic.There is always an echo to therattle of the saber—^jingoism leadsto war! Then everyone who abhorswar must w’ork for the abolition ofsuch organizations as the R. 0. T.C. We assume that the universitydoes not desire another war; then itmust not tolerate preparations forwar. Every person or group of per¬sons who tolerate those force.swhich make for war are responsiblefor the next catastrophe if it comes.Let each of us weigh that well. In¬difference, tolerance, to these ques¬tions plunged us into the la.st dis¬aster, and the world can little .standa repetition of such collective mur¬der. The world is living under ashadow, neither men nor universitiescan afford to be indifferent—theymust take one .side or another.Let the Maroon be courageousenough to take a firm stand on thiswar question, and put an end tovacillating journalism. Let the Ma¬roon. if it is an “oral deplorer of jwar,” and pray God that it is such, i‘‘fit actions to word.s,” and take imeasures against the R. O. T. C. iOr has the Maroon traded its deep jred for a parlor pink. 'C. J. McL., 1934.Your subtle admission that we have ideas pleased us greatly.Write us your version on how toexterminate the R. 0. T. C. We willtake care to’ tolerate your projectwith as much equanimity as a sud¬den suggestion from the campus mil¬itary unit proposing to abolish you!—ed.* * *' Editor The Daily Maroon,Dear Sir: )Following your editorial of Thurs¬day, and Don Kerr’s letter in today’s' issue, I make this earnest request ofthe Inter-Fraternity council.I A booklet ha.s been .sent to the 'freshmen at Knox College, contain- 'I ing a chart of all the fraternities on |: campus, their income and expendi- ,i tures for the fiscal year '32-’33, the ;I amount of the house mortgage, fra- jternity dues and their necessary in- j, formation, which clearly indicatesi to the freshman ju.st where the fra- |! ternity of his dream stands. II It is terribly awkward for any 'I freshman to ask these questions ofj a fraternity, even though he is in-I vited to ask them.! Please forward a marked copy to Ij the I-F council. iI Joe Stephenson, ’37. iWe quote from The DaMy Ma-'roon of March 7, 1933* “Twenty-jj five F'raternities List Costs.” Last lI year’s survey, conceived and direct¬ed by The Daily Maroon, was sim- Iilar to the one you describe. It may jbe repeated this year as a service to ifreshmen and fraternities.—ed. 'PATRONIZE THE DAILYMAROON ADVERTISERS Two Booksthat linkwithTwo Eventsof the current weekMEIKLEjOHNExperimental College$3.50STANLEY JONESChrist and Human Sufferings$1.00The.9e and otherTIMELY BOOKSat theU. of C. Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE.DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdWed.F, P. ISomethinK New Under the SunMaU. Daiir 15c till 6:30 University Grill1172 E. 55th St., Cor. WoodlawnThe 55th St. Home of Gambrinus BeerCatering to those who demand the best in good foodat prices that are reasonableFREE PERCH EVERY FRIDAYOur steak sandurichM can’t be beat!Chicken Dinners Every Saturday and Sunday, 25cTOM COLEMAN. Mgr.Have You Put OffSubscribing?You can sHII get the Daily Maroon for the restof the year for only $2.50. You are losing everyday you delay. An absolute necessity for thewell-informed, up to the minute student. Youcannot afford to miss its daily wealth of what'sdoing on campus at Chicago — clear, complete,concise.SUBSCRIBE TODAYTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1933 (Page ThreeTHE UNIVERSITY WOMANUniversity ManAirs GrievancesAgainst WomenOpen Letter Criticizes Lackof Interest in CampusActivities.You want to know who i am?Well, i am just an ordinary Univer¬sity man and i rate average or soamong the species. In addition, iwish to state that i have eyes, earsand somewhat of a brain, to whichi attribute my presence at the Uni¬versity. Usually i use full equip¬ment except my mouth, which, iwi.sh to say, may be large, but is notgiven to extensive use. However, iam practically ready to burst out inunrighteous indignation.As you will soon gather, i havebeen silently observing the Univer¬sity woman, and i think she is avery nice person; that is why myindignation is .so unrighteous. Un¬fortunately, if i may be so rude, imust say i have some very grievouscomplaints. ILike God, i shall .start at the be¬ginning. When the future Univers¬ity woman arrives on campus, .shemeets a diligent upper-class coun¬sellor, who looks at the freshmanand decides whether she is a griud,a lady-athlete, a .sweet thing with acomplex for males, or an ambitiousleader of mixers and teas. Then iob.serve that an attempt is made toremodel her into an all-around per- i.son, but she usually has a very defin¬ite idea of what kind of a person she iwants to be, and so rebuffs the kind, |superficial attentions of the upper- iclass counsellor..\nd so, i wish to remark, the em- jbryonic University woman eithermakes a striking success or a phen¬omenal failure. Upon the strikingsucce.s.ses, the clubs pounce. Thephenomenal failures, i observe, areleft to intellectual passion and PhiBeta Kappa,Now i call these women’s organ¬izations clubs for convenience, but i ,a.ssert that the only time they betray 'any club spirit is during rushing andthe exercise of that mysterious sub¬stance, prestige.The club, i will admit, is a worthyinstitution—in its ideals. But, likethe fraternity, its practice is not so(Continued on page 4)WHICHFOR YOU 7iti Maiden Form*»t»etvftnusiere, fur the ueuM'idp** linen utim/HtrtatU thin neanonftttte itn unusual t >jHiittied front line.H if li 1: " / tM - ranh -i<tn,^^tite Forwhrii^sure tikeit <t1tckit^g*^’^\ttltt^^e%%,*'^hitt-smiM0h' thrnttiffirh ■ hrtHiit Bi<rrit»n%. V ..."-In wntn^ UF*r-niott of”lhc-lAM-'ray^'uith avrrylou>~ntvumgfuM'k that can be ad-justed to three dijf*y^ent low net'kiincs.litfUf: 'Ihis ItrasniiTegiven exreiditityiUyOiHtd uplift support tt»the /tins dUi^fthragm controla HvH-fttu*il bund.Left: Orw* o/ ^^au^4'HIf nisi’’ girdl4»s thiUsuftdy smmdhs thehi[»9 an4i at tki* Mimetitty* the uttist’iim> a geftile curve.lUr Ifu illuf*lran*iJ above show you, jllwre arr Mauirii Kttriii foumlalioii garnienta to 1take care of all of ligtire* aiul lo suit every jiHNttunie neetl. Karh is UesiKoed to M4ipaii9e yourJigurr ill terms of fasliitm’s latest deniamls. Ask ^> our dealer to show you the new Maiden I*orms-tir write for free iMMiklet. Dept. (-4 Maiden FormBrasaiere CUi., Ino., 24.> Fifth Ave., New York. j6 I Ik P k • • • n A ■ fk P»tTtNbNi: Qtyuit^i,* time.s party will be the favorite jsport of all gatherings for the nextfew months, but while they’re still jfre.sh memories, you’ll be able tochuckle extra hard over BILL WAT¬SON in a blue sweater and suspen¬ders bowling pumpkins down thedining room floor MARGECHAPLINE in overalls proudly dis¬playing the costumes which she de- |vi.sed to make BUD RADCLIFPEinto a buxom chorus dolly and(’HIPS II.\LL a diabolical surgeon. . . who was the gal that looked likeKatherine Hepburn’s twin?...GIN-NY EYSSEL, FRANK CARR. BET¬TY CASON, and ED NICHOLSONhaving much fun tickling each otherwith corn stalks. . ..JILL EDWARDSarriving escorted bv six Phi Psi’sand GEORGE WA'TROUS. . . .DOTTRUDE looking trim in a crimson«hirt and riding breeches.The FORGOTTEN MAN (Icouldn’t find out his name) of PsiU masquerading as a Flit soldier. . ..lERRY JONTRY having a wonder¬ful time telling jokes to evervone insight. . . BOBBY STORMS and EDKENNEDY promenading. . . PETEZIMMER in a striped blazer sittingon the floor enjoving the bedlam. . . jMAXINE NOVAK and BOB WAL-L.4CE executing some deft dance I.steps for the approval of the on- jlookers. . .SARA GWIN and LIZZY |W.ALKER looking no end coy in , MALES, FEMALES!WHY TRY FOR ACOLLEGE DECREE?By HOPE FELDMANAbout this business of college, Iask you, why bother? Did Mae Westgo to college? And look at her, girls,look at her! (You can look, too, fel¬las—ah, ah, that’s enough!) Ofcourse you can figure she’s got whatit takes, but then even college won’thelp the little lady that hasn’t.Don’t leave men, don’t leave, thisis for you, too. What about that talldark and handsome hero, ClarkGable (just call me “dearie.”) Doyou suppose he got those ears list¬ening to lectures or those dimplessleeping on a collar-button? Well,think again you b. m. o. c.’s, and ifyou still don’t know, come up ansee us .some time.All of which reminds us of whatwe started out to say. In answer tothe wise guy who says “Go to col¬lege and live longei- (you know, getin on all these new .scientific meth¬ods of how to keep going.), what wewanta point out is, it isn’t how longyou live, but how you do it. Eh,Mae?maids’ uniforms. .CHAUNCY HOW-.•\RD in a derby, looking like MoonMullins. ..Psi U’s always enjoytheir parties .so much—but then, sodoes everyone else.There’s also a wedding announce¬ment... MARIE HOWLAND, a PhiDelta Upsilon. was recently marriedto MAYNARD VAN DYKE at theUnitarian church. They have gone(o Topeka, Kan.sas, to live. Political ChaosMolds Life of jGerman StudentDebates and Duels FeatureExtra-Curricular Programin Berlin Universities.An atmosphere almost poisonedby the influence of politics prevailsover the university life of the stu¬dent in Berlin, according to MissMarjorie Minck, a Social Servicestudent at the University, a nativeof Germany, and, at present, a resi¬dent of International House, in aninterview yesterday with The DailyMaroon.The regularity of the curriculumis broken up by the debates, andduels between the two main organ¬ized groups of politically consciousmen, the more conservative, the€oips.studenten, and the more lib¬eral, the Burschenschafter.Two other divisions that attractthe German woman most in her se¬lection of a profession are philologyand medicine. Miss Minck stated.These were the conditions before theHitler regime which at present islimiting the number of women inprofessional schools in an effort toencourage home life.With the serious surroundings of ja university situated in the heart ;of a city, little, if any social life ion the campus, and the almost spirit- |bending pow'er of political events, !the University woman is seldom :bothered by the worry of what to Iwear. .As a rule, the more tailored '(Continued on page 4) CalendarWednesdayY. W. C. .A, meeting in the Y, W.C. A. room of Ida Noyes at3:30.Pi Delta Phi in the Wicker room at3:30.Social Dancing Class in the theaterat 7:15."ThursdaySpanish Club Tea in the Alumnaeroom from 4 to 6.Transfer Group of Y. W. C. A. inthe North room at 3:30.Socialist Club in the Y. W. C. .A.room from 4 to 6.FridayGerman Club in the Library andLounge from 4 to 6.W. A. .A. Masquerade Party in thetheater at 3:30.(Continued on page 4) MOSCOW SHOWSMODERN TRENDS,STATES BURGESSRussia and how it has changedfrom 1930 to 1933 was discussed byMiss Roberta Burgess in an intei-view yesterday with The Daily Ma-’•oon. .Miss Btjrgess, who recentlyreturned from Russia, is the sisterof Ernest W. Burgess, professor ofSociology, and is well-known oncampus for her work on the advisoryboard of Y. W. C. A.Mi.ss Burge.ss made her first tripto Russia in 1930. She spent mostof her time on collective farms, inthe villages of the Soviet Russia,studying the life in the communes.Ru.ssian language is another ofMi.ss Burgess’ interests and she hasmade a collection of Russian prim-(Continued on page 4)ANNOUNCING THESaint George GrillSaint George Hotel~60th and BlackstoneDomestic Science Cooking-Meals at All HoursBreakfast 10c and up, Lunch 25cDinner 30c-40c-50c\\ ■■■t ■‘"'f'-f :>Page Four HE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER I, 1933MOSCOW SHOWSMODERN TRENDS,STATES BURGESS(ConUnued from page 3)VI'S which she is studyinj; to tiiul outwhether they inculcate communisticideals in the children.On her second trip she shiueil asmall apartment with a communistfamily in one of the new residentialareas for workers in Moscow. Themost significant change in Russiasince her first trip there was thegreat improvement in Moscow,which now has new street, and elec¬tric lights, gas ranges, and plumbingin buildings. She watched the peopleat work and at play, in the routineof daily occupations and in the in¬timacy of family life. From her ob¬servations Miss Burgess learnedthat the Russians expect life to beeasier under the new Five YearPlan.“Moscow-19;R?" wdl be the subjectof a lecture that Miss Burgess willpresent in Mande! hall Novemberir>. Her lecture, the third of foursponsored by the Research t'ommit-tee of the Chicago Urban League,will be illustrated with slides andpostei’s presenting every<lay life inMoscow.NO COLLEGE COURSECOMPLETE WITH¬OUT A VISIT TOOLD MANHATTANGARDEN!Ernie Yoking Presents4 DOROTHY WAHLGreatest of All h an-L>aiieersA ALFREDO and DOLORESRed Hot Rhumba TeamA ALVIRA MORTONPrima-DonnaA DOROTHY DENISEThe “Little Egj'pt’’ of Ziegfeld’s“Show Boat’’A CLYDE SNYDER240-lb. Ma.ster of CeremoniesA BEAUTY CHORUS ANDCOMPANY OF SIXTY-FIVE Wisi /isin GameIs No Set-up for 'Fightit!^ Maroons'Wisconsin, underrated as a resultof losses early in the season, loomslarge in the path of the footballteam. Coach Shaughnessy. avvarethat the Maroons have reached a de¬cisive point in the season, is work¬ing the squad harder than at anytime since the beginning of practice.The Chicago-Wisconsin meetingshave always been tough, ana Satur¬day’s game will be no exception. Ac-i cording to Kyle Anderson, 'W'hoj scouted the Purdue game at Mad¬ison. the Boilerniakei*s were lucky towin 14 to 0. The Wisconsin team isrugged and will be playing Satur-1 day with the addition of a 200 pound! sophomore back in the form ofSchuelke who was late in returningto college.Shaughnessy Adds ScrimmagePurdue and Michigan came to theMidway on t-wo successive week-endsj 'spreading defeats as they would.1 The Maroon team, composed mainlyof sophomores, did find some advan¬tage in these losses, for now thevirtually green team has absorbed alot of football from master teach¬ers in the profession.Coach Shaughnessy thinks that hisplayers are toughened up enoughnow to take a lot of scrimmage withlittle danger of depleting the smallnumber of regulars. A week of hardcontact work will help greatly in; whipping the line into shape and ingetting the effective blocking that‘ as been absent so far.“I have been taking a lot forgranted with you so far,” Shaugh¬nessy told the players last night. “Iassumed that you knew what Imeant by blocking, but apparentlyyou didn’t. The only thing to do nowis to give you plenty of experiencein blocking and tackling.”A large part of the Chicago of¬fense will be done away with in the' hope that a few plays well executed^ with decisive blocking will be moreeffective than the present conditionof many plays and slip-shod work.The offense is simlpe as to its mainpurpose, which is to allow CaptainPete Zimmer and Jay Berwanger tobreak l90se.GERMAN UNIVERSITIES Today on theranj^les Wave the Flag!It Lives forEver and Ever Production ManagerLooks for an AngelThe Daily Maroon•Night editor for the next issue:Tom Barton. Assistants: Raymondl.iihr and Harker Stanton. jMusic and Religion {Associate professor Archibald ,Baker on “The Place of Religion inSocial Life.” In Joseph Bond chapelat 12.Carillon recital, Univer.sity chapel,t ::io.MiscellaneousV. \V. C. A. meeting in Ida Noyes 'hall at 3:30. “Women and Politics,” 'by Mrs. Quincy W’right.“Significant Living.” by Alexan- 'tkn- Meiklejohn in Leon Mandel hallat 4:30. A public lecture.Professor Robert E. Park, on “TheMa n Street of the World.” In Leon-Mandel hall at 8:15.Meeting of University DebateUnion in Reynolds clubroom at 7:45. jDancing to the RythmicMusic ofEDDIE NIEBAUR’S“SEATTLEHARMONYKINGS”ORIENTAL VILLAGE25th Street and the MidwayA CENTURY OF PROGRESS University Man AirsCriticisms of Women^Continued from page 3)styles are favored by the best dress¬ed women, who are usually .studentsof the law schools.The serious atmosphere of theuniversity life is furthered by thefact that all the students board inprivate families in town; however,some social contact is found in theStudentenwerk. a social center forboth men and women. (Continued from page 3)ideal. At weekly meeting.*, its mem¬bers sip tea. talk fraternity men.and are very polite, but never underany eireiimstances do they exhibitany real organi/ation spirit. Theynever indulge in anything intra¬mural. not even a bridge tournamentwith another club. They never doanything on campus as a group.Thei)' methods of competition areajit to he lefthanded, backhanded,and underhanded.[ Of school or University spirit, ihold, they cultivate it not at all asa group, though i do know many Uni¬versity women who aie loyal to thecore.The clubs throw some very fineparties, as other fraternity men andI i will admit. But the party neverends up with a good, healthy song,unless, i am sorry to point out, someof the fraternity men reach so sada state as to sing their own songs.You must see that i am an opti¬mist. believing that the L^niversitywomen can do things collectivelyand constructively in athletic, social,and extracurricular fields. BTit then,i am a mere University man andprobably don’t know what i am talk¬ing about, and .sometimes i wish theUnivei'sity woman would admit thesame,(Signed) i. The conservative element of theL’niversity, after a gruelling uphilltight, crashed through with a stun¬ning victory over the forces ofchange (evil demons), on campusSaturday. This stirring triumph,which passed practically unknownin the gloom of the Michigan de¬feat. stands out as the one redeem¬ing feature of the football seasonthus far.The battle staged by the tradi¬tionalists, standpatters, perennialthinkers, and those other Universitystudents and stews who were inter¬ested. culminated in the humblipgof the forces of radicalism andchange, led (according to rumor)by Director Mort of Reynolds club.(.As their part o^ the between thehalves program, the Universityhaml. finally and irrevocably, played“Wave the Flag.”)Unfortunately this stirring an¬them was piactically drowned outby .some uncouth individual in theMichigan stands who persisted intooting a whistle. Those who wereclose enough to hear a few bars,liowever, were thrilled doubly by thetune, both for itself and for themoral victory it represented. Scat¬tered individuals even .sang loudly(but badly) as the song was play-e<i.GRADUATE PAPERS (Continued from page 1)the Art Institute, was induced tobuild a figurehead in the workshopsof the Goodman Thester accordingto a design by Lillian t ihoen. Yester¬day Mast and his assistants wentdown to see it and were more thansatisfied. A bit larger than lifesize,the angel seems to meet all require¬ments. Now the only difficulty is totransport it to the campus by Thurs¬day night. Since Mast has nevercairied an angel before, he’s stillup in the air! SPENCEIIIIIN(Continued from page 1)Black friar book, “F’lastered inParis.” he deserved his reputationas a prominent member of Iron•Mask and Beta Theta Pi. He is nowalumni secretary of his fraternity.He always could write! .And talk!PSYCHOLOGIST IN BALIHarold Swenson, assistant profes¬sor of psychology, spent the summerwith the natives in Bali. Some of ushave seen a motion picture entitled“Goona Goona,” which depicted thelife of the natives in the beautifulisland of Bali. Those of us that have,envy him. We hope that the nativeswere not aware of Dr. Swenson’s oc-ciiiiation. It really is terribly dis¬turbing to be “observed.” the best pensthen . and NOfV!SPENCERIANFOUNTAIN PENAh! Thp Swwtheart of '.’iScoyly I’ourinK Out Her Heartto her One True Love far, faraway at the ColleRe. Ueina al>eraon of Discernment (aa canreadily be determined from herGeneral Surroundinire), it noeswithout sayinic that ahe UsedSpencerian Pena. And aa-sum-init that her Swain knew hia Stuff, we canIh' sure he Replied in Kind . . . Nowadays,the new Spencerian Fountain Pen make-writinif ever so much eaaier for Both Partie-Honiatly. this Pen haa Got Somethina thatmakes it work amoother and leaa coaxincly,aa you'll quickly find out once you try oneAnd while you have it in your hand, notethe nice balance, and the self-evident work¬manship, quality, and finish -thinaa yon haveheretofore associated only with expensivemakes. Next time you're at the B<x)k8tore,try the Spencerian Fountain Pen.J ^ 0 O’Genuine Iridium TipScientific feed maW(« coaxlcas writingPatented tiilinit device works every_ tinae. be¬sides asstirintt generous ink rapacity. Fin*-,Medium, and Dome points. Barrels ia con¬servative black, or seven brilliant moderncolor effects. TYuly, a great value!THE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO BOOK STORE5802 Elllis AvenueCLASSIFIED ADSFOR RENT—Suite of 3 rms; 2bedrms., Igc. study; suitable for 3or 4 jteople. Mrs. -Arthur llallam,6116 Ellis A VO.CALENDAR(Continued from page 3)Barrette and Balance Club in thetheater and sunparlor from 8to 12.Achoth dance in the Y. W. C. A.room from 8 to 12.Scandinavian Club in the libraryand lounge from 8 to 10. TODAY’S I-M GAMES3:00Beta Theta Pi vs. Chi Psi, Field1.4:00Alpha Tau Omega vs. Phi SigmaDelta, Field 1.Phi Pi Phi vs. Delta Kappa Ep¬silon, Field 3.Barbarians vs. Optimists, Field 4. 1 I.OST—Wrist watch. Initials M.E. W. Lost last Thurs. near Classics.I Reward. Tel. F'airfax 6924. SPECIAL OFFER — PHILCO RADIOSdown ^1= per weekEXPERT REPAIR SERVICEOpen Evenings Until 10A. J. F. LOWE & SON1217 E. 55th St. Midway 0782Don’t MissCOLLEGE NIGHTEVERY FRIDAY Nl'CHTCome to the South Side’s newest and finestInn to dance and enjoy the best inAmerican and Italian food. PHI BETA DELTA,BURTON 600 WINTOUCHBALL TILTSEvery University of Chicago man whoregisters will be given a handsomesouvenir.LEGION INN7100 Stony Island Ave.Fairfax 3247 Jack Caliendo, Mgr. Phi Beta Delta continued on theroad to victory for its fourth winof the season, whitewashing the PhiGams 26-0. 600 B'urton Court entryplayed a close game with the 700entry to win 14-7. The U.HighPanthers turned in the lop-sidedscore of 80-0 over the Hyde ParkAces.The Phi B. D.-Phi Gam tussle wasby far the best played of the threegames. With Trevor Weiss startingevery piay and tossing some longpasses, Marver put over three of thetouchdowns and two of the extrapoints, while Nelson scored theother six points for the victors.In the 600-700 Burton Courtgame Bichel and Spitzer both putover a touchdown ffor the 600 boys,with Lloyd scoring the extra points.Archepley scored the touchdown forthe losers.Phemister put over six touch¬downs to help the U-High Panthers.Employers preferUniversity graduateswho write Gregg ShorthandBusiness men can fit you into theirorganizations more quickly and easilyif you write Gregg Shorthand. Don’tlet your college training go to waste.Put it to work in a postion securedthrough Gregg Secretarial Training.Wiii'e, call or telephoneStab. 1881 for particularsThe GREGG COLLEGEHome of Gregg Shorthand6 N. Michigan At*., Chicago You Wouldn't Shave With aTable Knife!of course you wouldn’t! Neither would you attemptto sell your goods by advertising matter that did notreach the proper people. The Daily Maroon reaches oneclass of people — COLLEGE STUDENTS — and it coversthe entire field in this area more thoroughly than anycombination of other publications could.Don’t allow part of the'force of your advertising tobe wasted, but cover your field thoroughly.Advertise in The Daily MaroonH\ \ f IMPERFECT