Statement of PolicyTwo questions that are being asked us regularly thesedays are: “What is The Maroon going to be like this year?”and “Will it continue to carry the United Press foreign newsdispatches?” We are always glad to hear these questions, forthey indicate that the campus has retained a great deal of in¬terest in its student newspaper. We feel that this first regu¬lar issue is fairly representative of the type, if not of thesize, paper that will be published this year. We take the oc¬casion afforded by this issue to present The Maroon editors’traditional statement of policy.Above all, we believe that The Maroon must recognizeand fulfill its functions as a campus news organ. As such, itsprimary purpose is to report to its readers faithfully, ac¬curately, and completely all the affairs of the University andall events, both on and off the quadrangles, of interest to themembers of a University community. To accomplish this byfar the greater part of the space in the paper must and willbe devoted to these topics.For this reason and for other considerations—amongthem that the editors felt it impracticable for a paper of thesize and with the reading public of The Daily Maroon to de¬vote so many of its columns to news of outside affairs, no mat¬ter how significant from an international viewpoint they maybe—The Maroon ;will not continue the policy, inauguratedlast year, of running daily United Press reports of foreign andnational affairs. This abandonment of the news service, how¬ever, does not mean that The Maroon will henceforth over¬look everything that is going on beyond the pales of thequadrangles. We shall keep one eye cocked on world affairsand on all happenings of possible interest, political or aca¬demic, to students or faculty, and shall endeavor to run dailyarticles of analysis and comment by members of the facultyand other well-known authorities in various fields.The editors are convinced that the columns formerly de¬voted to foreign dispatches can and should be used for newsof more immediate interest to the campus. Feeling that com-(Continued on Page 2)Midway Scientists, Politicians,Discoverers, End Busy SummerBy EDWARD C. FRITZTransfer WeekContinuesSocialProgram TodayTea Dances, Smokers,Meetings Planned to AidNew Students.For the first time in the historyof the University, transfer studentsare being offered a comprehensiveorientation program. The schedule,planned by the Transfer OrientationCommittee headed by Frances Stan¬ton and David Hopkins and under thesupervision of the Dean of Student’soffice, continues into the second day.The program for today and follow¬ing is here given:11:00—Meeting for entering stu¬dents (This meeting in¬cludes fre.shman). Profes-■sor Edith Flint speakingon “Cultural Opportunities,in the City of Chicago.”Lecture room, Oriental In¬stitute, 58th and Univer¬sity.4:00—Tea for Transfer women.Sponsored by YWCA. Stu¬dents will be accompaniedby their counselors. Talkby Marie Wolfe, presidentof YWCA. Bridge. IdaNoyca Hall, 1515 E. 59thStreet.7:30—Smoker for All Universitymen. Fieldhouse, 5650 Uni¬versity Avenue.Friday6:45—Dinner for all transfer stu¬dents. Tickets 65 cents. Menliving in dormitories maytransfer tickets for this.Exposition of student activi¬ties. Judson Court, 1005 E.60 th .streetTuesday4:00—Tea Dance for all transferstudents. Ida Noyes HalLWednesday, October 77:00—Smoker for all transfermen. Reynolds club, 57thand University.Friday, October 98:30—Dance for all transfer .stu¬dents. Theater, Ida NoyesHall.The personal library of HarrietMonroe, editor of the magazinePoetry, who died last week in Peru,including a unique collection of orig¬inal manu.scripts and letters, has beenwilled to the University Libraries,her brother, William S. Mon-roe, an¬nounced Monday.The acquisition will be called theHarriet Monroe collection, and is themost comjdete collection of modernI)oetry in the country. The close re¬lationship between Miss Monroe andthe literary circle of the countrywhich earned her the title of “patronsaint of American poets,” is reflectedin the many signed copies of works,original manuscripts of poems firstpublished in her magazine, Poetry,and in the multitude of personal let¬ters from distinguished literary fig¬ures on both sides of the Atlantic,including Vachel Lindsay, Edgar LeeMasters, Rupert Brooke, Edna St.Vincent Millay, Edward ArlingtonRobinson, Robert Frost, T. S. Eliot.About 1500 first editions of volumesof poetry form the bulk of the library.Highlight of the collection is perhapsa letter sent by Rupert Brooke toMiss Monroe while sailing to the ProclamationBE IT KNOWN to all freshmenstudents at the University of Chi¬cago:THAT YOU ARE ABSOLUTE¬LY required by the undersignedto wear, remain bedecked, con¬tinue to be identified by, and in likemanner display the GREEN badgebenevolently bestowed upon you bythe Orientation Committee fromthis day onward until the mid¬night of November twenty-sixth,the year of our Lord nineteen hun¬dred thirty-six. The aforementioned date is Thanksgiving—andso will be doubly thus.IF YOU DO NOT follow theseinstructions to the last bitter let¬ter, your immediate fate will hangin precarious balance. The stillwaters of the Botany pond run deep—and slimy.THE SOPHOMORE CLASS.International HousePlans Long List ofEvents for QuarterActivity is no idle word at Inter¬national House, as evidenced by theimposing list of events scheduled forthe Autumn quarter.A reception for the House resi¬dents to be held Sunday afternoonwill serve as the formal debut forthe season’s activities. Ruth Conant,a pupil of Alexander Raab, will beguest pianist at the reception. Sun¬day evening will also see an estab¬lished tradition of InternationalHou.«e resumed this year with theSunday evening candle light supperat 6. At this supper, Ernest B. Price,director of International House, andP. M. Titus, president of the Stu¬dent Council, will review the activi¬ties, policy, and history of the house.Open to the general public are a.series of educational programs, in¬cluding concerts, movies, and lectures.Moving pictures are to be shown fort¬nightly on Mondays at 8:30, the firstone to be on October 19, a Chicagopremiere, “Comedie Francaise.” Thepolicy to be followed in the Interna¬tional House Theater is to presentChicago premieres whenever possible,thereby introducing to Chicago au-(Continued on Page 3)Dardanelles to have his brains blownout.The library will not receive thecollection until the magazine Poetr”ceases publication. A grant from theCarnegie corporation made in 1934has given the magazine sufficientfunds to continue publication for an¬other year, but at the end of thattime it may give up the ghost.Miss Monroe was born in Chicago76 years ago, and received her edu¬cation in Visitation Academy,Georgetown, D. C. She is the authorof several volumes of poetry, andcriticism. In 1893 she was chosen towrite the “Columbian Ode” of dedi¬cation for the Columbian exposition.It was in 1911 that she foundedher magazine for the encouragementof young poets. Philanthropic Chica¬goans supported it during the twenty-five years of its existence. In 1920Baylor University honored her withan Litt.D. ir recognition of her prom¬inence in literary circles. Her deathfrom heart attack occurred in Peruwhile she was travelling througlSouth America as a guest of the Penclub, an organization interested inpoevry. Officials MoveR.O.T.C. Unit toMichigan StateCaptain Holt Remains onCampus to Give SeniorCourses.Courses in military science will beoffered only to fourth year studentsin the ROTC Artillery unit on thecampus this year as a result of anorder from the War Departmenttransferring the unit to MichiganState University.Captain Henry W. Holt will remainon the campus to instruct the groupof fourteen seniors until the end ofthe year, and has been raised to therank of full professor of MilitaryScience and Tactics.Announced June 25, the transfer ispart of a nation-wide program ofmotorization and expansion of ROTCartillery units. ..41though the orderoffered no explanation of the move,the patent difficulty of managing amotorized unit within the confines ofa large city influenced the decision.Fourth-year work is entirely con¬fined to the classroom, and so will notbe hampered.Establish New UnitsWithin the past two years threeunits have been motorized, eight par¬tially motorized, and nine new units,all fully motorized, established. Anappropriation of the last congress ofhalf a million dollars, makes addi¬tional expansion in the future likely.The production of 1500 officers a yearis the goal of the War Department.The staff of last year has beenscattered over the country. MajorPreston T. Vance, former chairmanof the department of Military Scienceand Tactics, has been transferred toduty with the reserve officers inWashington, D. C. Captain Price hasjoined the field artillery at Fort Sill,Oklahoma.Crossed Cannon ContinuesIn spite of the discontinuance ofthe unit. Crossed Cannon, honorarysociety open to advanced studentsof military science, will continue ac¬tivity on the campus during the pre.s-ent year. Officers have not yet beenselected, but a meeting of the mem¬bers of the society is planned for nextweek. Plans are not yet definite, butthe Military Ball, annual springdance, will probably be held for thelast time next spring.The polo team, formerly composedof students of military science, willnot be continued however, due to thedeath of many of the mounts lastyear.The local ROTC unit was one ofthe original twenty artillery units or¬ganized in 1919. The original organi¬zation remained unchanged until1928, when a unit was shifted fromthe University of Wisconsin to the(Continued on Page 8)Hold Annual Servicein Chapel TomorrowThe 44th annual CommemorativeService will be held tomorrow at noonin the Chapel. Robert M. Hutchins,president of the University, will openthe traditionally brief and simple ser¬vice, and will conduct the ResponsiveReading.A brief commemorative address willbe delivered by Charles W. Gilkey,dean of the Chapel. The UniversityChoir led by Mack Evans, director ofChapel Music, will provide the music.The first University chapel servicewas held in the auditorium of CobbHall in the fall of 1892, with Presi¬dent William Rainey Harper presid¬ing. Bright spotlights illuminated therotating stage of the Universitythroughout the summer quarter, play¬ing longest on the fields of science,literature, education, and politics.Among the brightest of the summerscenes were the discovery of a newwealth of treasures in Persia and therelease of the first section of themuch-publicized Dictionary of Amer¬ican English.The new dictionary’s first volume,“A to Baggage,” traces the currentgeneral use of the word “awful,”back to an 1809 doggerel. ThomasJefferson is accredited with coiningthe supposedly modern phrase, “leftholding the bag,” as well as the much-used iK)litical and journalistic term,“Americanism.” Sir William Crai-gie, eminent lexicographer of theUniversity, directed work on the dic¬tionary, which has been developingfor ten years.Dodd FearsDemocracyWilliam E. Dodd, American Am¬bassador to Germany, and formerchairman of the University depart¬ment of history, pointed out in aMandel Hall lecture on July 6 thatin three great crisis in American his¬tory the will of the majority has beendefeated by minority opposition, inthe administrations of Jefferson,Lincoln, and Wilson. These crisislead him to fear for the success ofdemocracy.Maud Slye, associate professor ofPathology gave further evidence forher contention that ca -er is heredi¬tary, at the International Congressfor the Control of Cancter, in Brus¬sels, Belgium. She argued that withadequate genealogical records wecould stamp out cancer in a genera¬tion.Of the 60 largest United Statesrailroads, only seventeen have sur¬vived the depression in excellent fin¬ ancial condition, stated L. C. Sorrell,Professor of Transportation in theSchool of Business. His announce¬ment came in the Current Trend ofBusiness series held here this sum¬mer.In a cost of living study, John H.Cover, professor of Statistics, citedthe cost of living for the averageworker’s family of four people at$1260.Dempster MeasuresThe MinuteChicago newspapers publicized thedelicate instruments used by Midwayphysical and biological scientists. Pro¬fessor Arthur Dempster’s “weightscale” detects differences of 4-1,000,-000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 of agram. Professor Arthur Comptonmeasured distances in atoms of1-100,000,000 of an inch as if theywere yawning chasms.Important observations at the Elev¬enth Annual Institute for Adminis¬trative Officers of Higher Institutions,included those by George A. Works,dean of Students and University Ex¬aminer, on the efficacy of the Chica¬go system which divorces examina¬tions and teaching. The Institutewas confined to an intensive study ofexamination techniques.Chairman of the National ResearchCouncil for the next year will be Dr.Ludvig Hektoen, Professor of Path¬ology, who succeeds Dr. Frank Lil¬lie, noted embryologist and profes¬sor emeritus in the University. Dr.Lillie continues as president of theNational Academy of Sciences. Bothorganizations have headquarters inWashington.Judd WantsMore ReasonToo much emphasis is placed onmemorizing and not enough on rea¬soning powers, Charles H. Judd, dean(Continued on Page 3)Library Acquires Harriett Monroe’sCollection of Poetry, ManuscriptsHighlights of Freshman Week in Pictures Price 3 Cents.Smith ReplacesWilliam Scott asAssistant DeanFormer Advisor in CollegeReturns from Washing¬ton and Lee.Succeeding William E. Scott as as¬sistant dean of students, Leon P.Smith, former instructor of Frenchat the University, has taken over thekey post in faculty-student relations.He will also be an assistant profes¬sor of French.Professor Scott will continue as ad¬visor here and, in his position withthe Progressive Education Associa¬tion, will serve as college advisor atSwarthmore College, the Universityof Denver, and either the Universityof Colorado or the University ofPennsylvania. He will advise stu¬dents who come to these institutionsfrom “progressive” schools.Served as AdvisorDean Smith served as one of themost popular advisors in the Col¬lege from 1932 to 1934. He is re¬turning to the campus, where he re¬ceived the master of arts and doc¬tor' of philosophy degrees in OldFrench in 1928 and 1930. He taughtFrench here from 1928 to 1934, leav¬ing to become head of the depart¬ment of Romance Languages atWashington and Lee University,Lexington, Virginia.Smith will fill an important post.Working under George A. Works,Dean of Students, he will havecharge of most of the informal rela¬tions between students and the dean’soffice. With his friendly. Southern(his father—a University alumnus—is vice-president of Wesleyan Col¬iege, Macon, Georgia) manner hewill act as a “buffer” between stu¬dents and the administration.llis assi^ment calls for tact insmoothing out difficulties arisingfrom individual acts, fraternity do¬ings, and student organization trou¬bles. For the latter he is also Ad¬visor to the Board of Publications.One of the major responsibilitiesof this position is the handling ofthe delicate relationship between theUniversity administration and cam¬pus radicals.Plan EntertainmentSmoker TomorrowMagic, gymnastics, boxing, andfour acts from the Blackfriars showof last year, will provide entertain¬ment for the men’s smoker in theFieldhouse, tonight at 7:30, the finalevent of Freshman Week.As the crowd gathers the Univer¬sity band will play Chicago songs.Called to order by Jay Berwanger,master of ceremonies for the evening,the audience will see the gymnasts ofthe varsity team perform on theparallel bars, and a boxing or ju¬jitsu match, while a fencing bout willcomplete the athletic performancesof the evening.From last year’s Blackfriars show,“Fascist and Furious,” Bob Fitzger¬ald will play some of his composi¬tions, Vic Jones will sing, and select¬ed dance numbers will be presented.Wilbur Jerger will perform a varietyof magical tricks, but only on condi¬tion that the audience remains in thegrandstand.Hutchins Speaks.. .to the Class ’40,uH>rd8 of wisdom. Coulter College Advisor...for the student: tu*o surveys, onesequence. Heindel, Master of Ceremonies Lehnhardt KickingAi'ititdtieo dinner- speakers' table ...Ayainat Lawrence,minus speakers. 38 yards a try.Stauffer, Student Marshal...for Margie Smith: a stvimmingtank; for Bob Anderson, envy. Leads Campus Tour...Ed Williams introduces “the City Gray.”Page TwoIBatly ^aroonFOUNDED IN 1981Member Associated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day, and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quartersby The Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Tele¬phones : Local 46, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The Daily Ma¬roon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the views ofthe University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates:$2.75 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the postoffice at Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Exclusive national advertising representative: National Adver¬tising Service, Inc., 420 Madison Ave., New Tork; 400 N. MichiganAve., Chicago.BOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.. .Advertising ManagerBUSINESS ASSOCIATESBernard Levine Charles HoyRobert Rosenfels Sigmund DansigerWalter RubachEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESBernice Bartels Cody PfanstiehlEl Roy Golding Barton PhelpsEdward Fritz Betty RobbinsWilliam McNeilSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Don HollowayNIGHT EDITORSBart Phelps Cody PfanstiehlWednesday, September 30, 1936Policy-(Continued from Page 1)piet^^ei^lS^f University and all itsaffairs has never before been accomplished byThe Daily Maroon, we shall this year striveto attain that goal. Although written and edit¬ed by undergraduates, the paper in its appealwill be directed to all students, both undergrad¬uate and graduate, to the faculty, and to allpersons connected with the University.In addition to reporting the day by dayevents of the quadrangles, the paper will de¬vote itself to broader surveys of various aspectsof the University and the life of its community,and to a study of certain trends in studentactivities, in the academic pfogram of the Uni¬versity, and in the various schools of thoughtespoused by members of the faculty and theirstudent adherents. Considerably more spacethan in the past will be given over to pictures,showing in candid fashion important happen¬ings in the daily life of the campus.Editorially, the paper, through its editorialcolumns and “Letters to the Editor” department, will attempt to serve as more or less ofa forum of campus opinion—both student andfaculty—on important issues that arise. To aidin this respect and in shaping policy with re¬gard to University affairs, the editors willshortly invite a number of representative in¬dividuals in the student body to form an Edi¬torial Board through which they can contrib¬ute to the columns of the paper.Finally, the editors wish to emphasize theaspect of The Daily Maroon as a service insti¬tution. Our columns will always be open to suit¬able material submitted by any person con¬nected with the University. In particular, wew’ish to call to your attention the greatly ex¬panded “Today on the Quadrangles” column,which will include not only a daily calendar ofcampus functions, but a schedule of all eventsin the city of interest to students, and whichwill carry all notices from student organiza¬tions, faculty members, and the University-administration.This is the platform on which we stand. Itis for you to judge the effectiveness with whichit is carried out. For this purpose we refer youto all forthcoming issues of The Daily Maroon.The Travelling BazaarBy LEXINGTON GHOSTFreshman week has careened past and Pres Hutchinshas again charmed the newcomers with his welcomingspeech. This time he mildly suggested that the worldwas going to hell on the proverbial toboggan. He didhold out education as a possible salvation, however.Well why not, if he doesn’t pat himself on the back, whowill ?And then we understand that Landon-Knox havehinted that a good sound business man might turn thetrick. Then there are the Democrats with their politici¬ans, the Communists with the poletariat. Father Cough¬lin and Gerald Smith with themselves.Frankly we look to the bartender to solve our prob¬lems, so come war, come peace, you will find us underthe table at Hanley's loyally clutching the ever over¬flowing bottle of beer.But we leave politics to last year’s United Presscolumns which are now happily gone forever.♦ ♦ ♦One .Maroon office cockroach to each of the following:T. Nelson Metcalf for THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 19361. Changing the C book prices thereby creatingclass distinctions at the University.2. Pinching Pennies.3. Refusing C books to Faculty members’ families.4. Pinching pennies.5. Selecting the funeral dirges we heard over theamplifier at the Lawrence game.Ibsen of the University Book Store for1. Those of you who don’t know will find out soonenough.2. Those of you who know...know.Pleasant dreams and no hangovers to:Leon Smith (New Dean of Students) for—Frankly and firmly taking a stand against illegalrushing and then doing something about it. Our de¬cision may be premature but we think you’ll like hisstraight-forward manner.Dan Heindel for—Running Freshman Week and for bringing peopletogether at the mixer—with a slight thud.Bob WheelerWho says he was born in a hospital, not that he w'assick- you understand, but he just wanted to be nearhis mother.♦ ♦ ♦Left off the FTeshman week program by oversight,the following item—WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 304:30-5:00. WEDDING. In charge of Dean Gilkey,sponsored by Edith McCarthy et Al.♦ ♦ ♦Things that looked good to us last weekNed Bartlett running last Saturday like he didagainst Michigan two years ago. And in the samegame Solly Sherman, Sam Whiteside and Duke Skoning.Things that looked sick—The cheer leaders, the pass defense, the freshmandinner. The price of food in Hutchinson Commonslooked healthy however and may get stronger.♦ ♦ ♦The Hutchinson twins are said to look like one girlbeside herself.♦ * ♦A mild crisis arose during the Lawrence game afterthe fourth touchdown. Stauffer and Scanlon were diz¬zily trying to total up the points by doing flip flops.It was obvious as they neared the end that both menwere weakening and in all probability would be unableto finish. The stands were in a frenzy, and one alumevidently bolstered by Seagrams actually yelled “Carryon”. Jay Brown was about ready to call the wholedamn thing off, when into the breach leaped young RussBaird. Peeling off his sweater he dramatically flippedthe remaining flops, and then retired to the oblivionof the bench, the thunderous applause of the drunkenalum still ringing in his ears.♦ ♦ ♦Van and Mac, the locker kings of Bartlett and theFieldhouse- have terminated their sourpuss contest.Van inadvertently smiled when he short changed threegymnasts by giving them towels and no soap, thuslosing the three year battle.♦ ♦ ♦Is there anyone wtio doesn't know that GingerRogers and Paul Henkel are married? Well, they are.More about Saturday’s game—There is a rumor that Shaughnessy felt that theboys weren’t giving the game all that they might.Came the usual pep talk at the half and still no resultsuntil someone confessed that Metcalf had pleaded withthe boys not to tackle anyone on the white lines. Theycould, he felt, reduce the cleaning bills considerably.• * *The Phi Psi’s back from their four thousand milerushing tour report that the following members aregetting married—Dick Hathaway — Marvel Fast.Dick says he is tired of hearing cracks and that hewill marry her in spite of all. What’s in a name,he says, a marvel by any other name would be asfast.Eddie Boehm — Lucille Claes.Marshall Burch — Unknown.* >•< *Jay Berwanger is now writing a column in the Chi¬cago Daily News. In our next column we will posi¬tively reveal who his ghost is.* * *And we finish with the student name of the week—Rose AxelrodCongratulations Rose.The ABC’sCode of EthicsThe college newspaper is a serious and important stu¬dent activity; it is a newspaper in every sense of theword, and must fulfill for its readers the primary func¬tion of all newspapers—to communicate to the human racewhat its members do, feel, and think... .To a newspaper’sopportunities as a chronicle are indisolubly linked its ob¬ligations as teacher and interpreter. The college news¬paper can render a most valuable service in the presenta¬tion and interpretation of events and incidents of mutualinterest to the students, faculty, and administration ofthe University.The Daily lllini.Canons of the Collegiate Press. Today on theQuadranglesMISCELLANEOUSSkull and Crescent meeting. Rey¬nolds Club at 1.Registration of incoming students.Bartlett Gymnasium, 8:30- 11:30;1:30-4.Choir try-outs. Mitchell Tower,second floor, 1-1:30 and 2:30-5. Ex¬perience not required.University Singers’ try-outs, Mitch¬ell Tower, second floor, 1-1:30 and2:30-5. Registered students only. Ex¬perience not required.Carillon recital. University Chapelat 4:30 Frederick Marriott, carillon-eur.Smoker for all University men.Fieldhouse, 5650 University avenue,at 7:30.Tours of inspection of the carillon,1 to 5 in the afternoon.UBC RADIO PROGRAMSThe Voice of Science. WMAQ- 3:45-4.“Government and youjr money.”Martha Jean Ziegler, professor of Po¬litical Science, Northwestern Uni¬versity; Parker Wheatley. WLS,8:15-8:30.REGISTRATIONThe following courses were closedat 5 yesterday afternoon:Biological Sciences lectureBiological Sciences discussiongroups k, t, u, V, w.Humanities discussion groups e, j,and f.Physical Sciences lecture A, B. Dis¬cussion groups m, s.Social Sciences I, discussion groupsn, q, r, u, v, t.Social Sciences II, di.scussion grouph.English 102A, sections a, b, d, c,f, g, h, k, m, n, o, p, q, r, s, t.English 130, sections a, b.French 101, section a.German 101, section d.Chemistry 130 (230).Hygiene and Bacteriology 320.Mathematics 104, section b.TheHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57th St.N. W. Corner Stoney Island "The ForcasC'It’s the New Hat forFall in a New ColorLow cars may hove had something to dowith it, but at any rate the crowns of this fall'shats ore lower, and the brims are wider. Run¬ning down it's origin, we discover ed that thelow crown hat is not untried. The style scoutsreported it last fall when they spotted it at thePolo matches on Long Island, and later at theEastern universities. To assure the proper ef¬fect, after pinching and indenting, the crown isrounded with a slight slope to the rear. The2% brim has a welt edge with triple row ofstitching.The color ii cobble grey, one oi the moti diiierent anddistinguished colors we've hit upon... It looks as wellwith brown as it does with grey.Carson Pirie Scott & CI , 'Men's Hats, First FloorThe Great Wall of China$2.75 PER YEAR•*' 'was not built in a day. Any worthwhile structure, whether an architectural masterpieceor a modern college institution, takes years to establish itself as a by-word in its country, city, orcommunity. The Daily Maroon represents a local institution which has been built on years ofexperience and tradition. For a bird's eye view of the University readTHE DAILY MAROON//^30 MiCHiOAN AVtiiVt»Nt«i«'.noot:Tf'THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1936 Page ThreeDiscoverers Boom in Eventful Summer on Midway(Continued from Page One)of the School of Education, told theannual conference of administrativeofficers of public and private schoolsthis month.Garfield V. Cox, professor of Fin¬ance in the School of Business, pre¬dicts further economic improvementin the next six months. He consid¬ers the drought more menacing to re¬covery than the presidential election.The Annual Pastor’s Institute washeld at the Chicago Theological Sem¬inary.OrientalistsHit Pay DirtDiscovery of a new set of magnifi¬cent sculptures, among the finest ex¬amples of ancient art yet unearthed,is reported by the Oriental Instituteexpedition at Persepolis, Iran, the“Versailles” of Ancient Persia andthe former seat of DariUvS the GreatSid William Craigie...finds things '"awful" buck in 1809.and his son, Xerxes. The discoveryincluded two colossal panels twentyfeet long, lost when Alexander’sdrunken soldiers fired the city. Dr.Erich F. Schmidt, field director ofthe expedition, estimates the age ofthe sculptures at 2,400 years. Theexpedition added many pages to Hel¬lenistic history.The 12 ton magnet to be used byProfessor Arthur Compton in hisnoticp:All freshmen who did not re¬ceive the Interfraternity Councilbooklets in the meeting yesterdaymay obtain them by calling at theDaily Maroon office^CLASSIFIEDFOR SALE—OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE EIGHT 1934. Excellentcondition in all respects: Motor, TiresBody, and Paint Job. Equipped withHeater. S. P. WILLIAMS, JudsonCourt 345. Phone or call eveningscare of Judson Court Office.BRIDGE GAME, Duplicate gameFriday at 8 and Monday at 8. A progressive game. Supervised with les¬sons. Plaza 8732._NEWLY REMODELED 1 and 2room furnished apartments. 1 blockto university and surface lines. 5406Kenwood Ave.MINIATURE CAMERA, Dolly 16exposures on Vest-Pocket film, F4.5lens, $12.00. Cali campu.s 141.GCCCGESMENS SHOPHATS BYMALLORY & PORTIS•KINGLY & VAN HEUSENSHIRTS•ROYAL SMART, SHOES1003 E. 55th St. at EllisOrSN EVENINGS Oriental Substitute Discovers ImportantPersian Remains During Summerstartling cosmic research was com¬pleted by Haydon Jones, his researchassistant. Photographs of the instru¬ment, one of the largest of its kind,were printed throughout the nation.Twenty-six members of the Univer¬sity faculty participated in a back-to-the-farm movement this summer,although the drought singed their ar¬dor to some extent. They all ownfarms near Chicago. 'They MissFreshman WeekOnly eight per cent of Chicagoansattend college, it was reported to thedepartment of Sociology by RichardO. I..ang. The education of 60 percent of the inhabitants ends by theeighth grade, he found.Local “red-baiters” seized an op¬portunity to knife the only decidedlyprogressive organization on campuswhen the University chapter of theAmerican Student Union came out infavor of the unionization of the steelindustry. One Chicago newspapercriticized the ASU on the groundsthat it, a peace organization, wassupporting a movement which wouldinvolve industrial w’arfare. Earl S.Johnson, of the Sociology department,declared as one of the ponsors of theASU that the indust.dal union sys¬tem was best suited to the steel in¬dustry.Mental fatigue produces recurrentand involuntary moments of blank¬ness, a possible explanation of “uh’s”in lectures. This was the discoveryof Professor Arthur G. Bills of thePsychology department in his studyof mental “blocking.”Building PlansForge AheadPlans were developed for theground-breaking in building the Pub¬lic Administration Clearing House,the first building started by the Uni- of Oriental History, departsi forBagdad where he will spend fifteenmonths as annual professor of theAmerican Schools of Oriental Re¬search. A second University facul-William E. Dodd...Ambassador to Nazis fears fordemocracy.Professor Arthur Dempster...xinder four-octillionths of a gramis too small for him.versity since the depression. Thenew structure is to be completely air-conditioned.Dr. Albert T. Olmstead, professor ty member received the other annualprofessorship abroad. William C.Graham, professor of Old TestamentLanguage and Literature, will servein Jerusalem.Midway students walked away withthe prizes in the National MunicipalLeague contest on local government.Herman B. Director won the firstprize of $100, Leonard Reichle tooksecond place, and Janet Weiss wonhonorable mention.Krueger GetsHot ReceptionUniversity of Chicago Professor IsRun Out of Town. Maynard C.Krueger, assistant professor of Eco¬nomics and state secretary of the So¬cialist party, left Warsaw, Illinois,in haste when he was uncordiallygreeted by American Legion veter¬ans on his arrival to speak againstsweat.shop conditions in the pocket-book industry. Five of the biggestlegionnaires told Krueger and hiscompanions that they had ten min¬utes to get out of town. They went;but Krueger complained to GovernorHorner, and planned to obtain thelegal rights due to him.Stepping from the “Hindcnberg”on his aerial return from Europe,Charles E. Merriam, head of the de¬partment of Political Science, assert¬ed his conviction that Europe willgo to war. He laments the prevalent“decline of faith in intelligence” inEurope, and sees disorder as the onlyoutcome.Myra Reynolds, professor emeritusof English, died in Los Angeles onAugust 17. Professor Reynoldsserved here from 1894 until retire¬ment in 1923.FINER QUAUTY-STYU... FITNEW FAIL SHOESOUR HIGHEST PRICEGentlemen:*Your new fall shoes areready in all of Feltman &Cnrme's Stores. Hundreds ofsmart new styles in all thenew materials. The finestvalues we have ever shown—and for nearly $1 lessmoney. Our great volumehas made it possible.Ask to see the StormKings—real winter brogues.Over 100 Smart SFELTMAN & CURME Institute DisplaysIts GemsUnexcelled jewelry from ancientMegiddo was placed on exhibition inthe Oriental Institute this month. Aunique gold-plated statue from thesame deposit is also in the display.The jewelry and statue are 3,500years old. Gordon Loud is field di¬rector of the fruitful expedition toMegiddo and the great battlefield ofArmageddon.Freedom is completely bound upin the news, attested Robert E. Park,eminent professor of Sociology, at theannual institute of the Society forSocial Research.At the 185th Convocation on Aug¬ust 28, Charles H. Judd, Charles F.Grey distinguished service professorof Education, delivered the address,“This Era of Uncertainty in Educa¬tion.” Invention in education isJudd’s proposed solution to the lackof coordination and the uncertain pol¬icies of the present.And at the end of this institute,Louis L. Wirth, associate professorof Sociology- was elected president,and Harold Gosnell, associate pro¬fessor of Political Science, was nam¬ed vice-president.Y erkesSees RedRed nebula, the first ever to bediscovered, were announced by Di¬rector Otto Struve of Yerkes Obser¬vatory. Dr. Charles Hetzler foundthe first red stars with an infra-redapparatus which opens new realmsof space to the study of astronomersSamuel N. Harper, professor ofRussian Language and Culture, sailedaway on his seventeenth trip to Rus¬sia. Thirty-seven years ago. Profes¬sor Harper, son of the first presidentof the University, witnessed theslaughter of the Russian peasants onhistoric “Bloody Sunday.”The age of maturing has been foundby recent studies to be 19 1-2 yearsor beyond, Frank E. Freeman, professor of Education, reported. Maturitywas explained as the age at whichthere is no further advance in learn¬ing capacity. The power to learn isat its peak around twenty years ofage. Freeman announced.Distinguished FacultyMember PassesDr. Edwin Oakes Jordan, AndrewMacLeish distinguished service professor emeritus of Bacteriology, diedin September. Dr. Jordan was one ofthe original members of the University faculty.The expedition to the Kincaid In¬dian Mounds in southern Illinois re¬turned this month. Dr. Thorne Deuelheaded the party.By uncovering an ancient sculptureof a humped bull. Professor HenriFrankfort and the Iraq expedition ofthe Oriental Institute linked the cul¬tures of buried India and Mesapota-mia. Tint. House—(Continued from Page One)dience foreign films of note, includ¬ing German, French and Spanishproductions.“Trends in Modern Thought” isthe title given to the series of pub¬lic lectures which will feature suchspeakers as Lorado Taft on art. DeanCharles W. Gilkey on religion. Arthur Compton on Science, andFrederick Stock on music. Beginningthe middle of October, eight lectureswill be presented on Wednesday eve¬nings this quarter.Continuing a series that was opento the public this summer. Interna¬tional House announces the Tuesdayevening concerts to be given by theAmerican Concert Orchestra twicemonthly, beginning October 13. Theconcerts are under the direction ofthe Federal Music Project.'maor camel’s hairthis time in a superblytailored coat with deep,deep pockets and a newflared line. Wear itwherever you must havewarmth, plus chic. Inrich Autumn shades,sizes 12 to 20... #4975Morth Evanston Town and Country Lake Forest(916 E. 63rd Street) TEXTUsed and New for University CoursesSTATIONERYFOUNTAIN PENS TYPEWRITERSNOTEBOOKSWOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57TH STREETNear Kimbark Avenue 2 Blocks East of Mandel HallOpen EveningsPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1936Newly FormedGiapel UnionHolds MeetingReligious Life, Social Ser¬vice Work Are Interestsof Group.“The Chapel Union includes thosestudents, members of the faculty, andemployees of the University of Chi¬cago who desire to have some per¬sonal part in the religious life andsocial service work that center aroundthe University Chapel. Membershipin the Chapel Union facilitates par¬ticipation in the act)|vities of thevarious groups of this nature, andalso provides a common associationamong those who are interested inreligion and social service at theUniversity.”Thus is stated the purpose and com¬position of the newly formed Chapel,which held its first meeting Sundayevening in Ida Noyes Hall, with 300students, mostly freshmen, and fac¬ulty members present.Response to a DemandOrganized late in the spring iiresponse to a growing demand forsuch an organization, which had beenexpressed by numerous students toDean Gilkey and members of theChapel staff, a small committee,headed by A1 Pitcher and Marie Ber¬ger, graduate students, has been mak¬ing plans for the Union thorughoutthe summer.The Chapel Union, as now planned,will first serve to integrate the al¬ready existent religious and socialservice groups of the University. Sec¬ondly, it will probably sponsor under¬takings in its own name—perhapsdiscussion groups, lectures, or socialevents. Honor 133 Undergraduates atAutumn Convocation, August 28Explain InstitutionsAt the Sunday evening suppermeeting, at which Dean and Mrs. Gil¬key were hoafcs^ an informal sympo¬sium was presetted, in which a groupof students, led by A1 Pitcher, MarieBerger, Hannah Fisk, and Judson Al¬len, explained the functioning of such“institutions” as the Druce Laketrips, the University Settlement,Chapel Council, denominational so¬cieties, and religious discussiongroups at the Gilkeys*.Following the symposium member¬ship cards were passed out, as a re¬sult of which the Union now numbersmore than 100 members. These cardsmay be obtained at the Chapel officeand at the YWCA office in Ida NoyesHail.Future activities now planned in¬clude a meeting with President Wil¬kins of Oberlin College on October11, and a party for transfer studentson November 1. A meeting of theorganization committee will be heldFriday at 3:30 in the Chapel office. One hundred and thirty-three un¬dergraduate and graduate studentsreceived honors at the 185th convo¬cation on August 28. Awards tostudents in the College are based onhigh ranking in the comprehensiveexaminations. Divisional awards aremade by the departments.Of last year’s 700 freshmen, 49were awarded second-year honorsjcholarships. Those honored IwereHoward Lahman Arnould, Daniel> Banes, Walter J. Blum, FrederickCarl Bock, John Wilkins Busby, Mor¬ris H. Cohen, James M. Davran, Al¬fred Joseph DeGrazia, Robert Fin¬ley Drury, James Allen Dunkin, Al¬lan Charles Ferguson, Paul EugeneGlassberg, Albert Glasgow Guy,Alice Evelyn Hamilton, Marjor|(eConsuelo Hamilton, and Robert Ham-mel Harlan.Others are Ruth Margaret Hersch-berger, Jack Indritz, William PhelpsKent, Jerry John Gollros, HenryLawrence Kraybill, William WalterLevis Jr., Betty Linn, Alexander Ig-natz Lowinger, Irving Mack, KathrynIsabel MacLennan, John BradyMarks, Martha Jane Marshall, Mar¬shall Melin, Burton Barrow MoyerJr., Burton Nathaniel Navid, WilliamBrannon Neal Jr., and Robert Pink.Robert Leroy Platzman, EdwajdFrank Raack, William Charles Ras¬mussen, Arnold Marshall Rose, LeoJames Saidel, Robert George Sass,Edward Segel, Frederick GeorgeSmith, William Burton Sowash, LeahSpilberg, Robert Leonard Straube,Alan Harold Tully, Douglas Wil¬liams Ware, Philip Wehner, LeonardWeiss, and Arthur Joel Yaspan werealso honored.Third-Year HonorsEighteen students were awardedthird-year honors after having com¬pleted two years of University workwith high average marks. They in¬clude Richard Abrams, Bernard Ap¬ ple, Hugh McCulloh Davidson, Av-ron Isaac Douglis, Miriam Fine, El-Roy D. Golding II, Robert LlewellynJones, Frank Foreman Kahn, RobertLouis Kyhl, Robert Severin Rass-mussen, Francis Joseph Seiter Jr.,Oscar Seltzer, Daniel Shanks, So¬phie Henriet Shapiro, Avivoh Silbert,Zelda Teplitz, Ra3miond Edgar Wein¬stein, and James Leander Wood.The above students w’ere all citedfor excellence in the work of the Col¬lege for the year 1935-1936 as wen-ethe following additional students:Mark Ashin, Irving Irmas Axelrad,Sidney James BeHannesey, WinstonHarper Bostick, Edward CarletonFritz, Gladys Gerner, Irving ArthurGordon, John Simpson Gordon Jr.,Fred Gross, Richard David Hall, Rob¬ert William Janes, Philip Janus, Hen¬ry Seymour Kaplan, Shimmon Kap¬lan, William Champlin Lewis, DavidJerome Lochman, William Hardy Mc¬Neill, Sidney Merlin, Omer WilliamMiller, Bernard Moritz, Jerome Mo¬ritz, Herbert Solomon Pomerance,Elizabeth Frances Poole, MachaLouis Rosenthal, Francis Joseph Sei¬ter Jr., Louis Ralph Soffer, GordonTiger, Mordecai Waxman, GeorgeWilliam Whitehead Jr.FouHh-Year HonorsThe following students were award¬ed four-year honors after being se¬lected by their various departmentsfor excellence in the work of the firstthree years. Those named w'ereMark Ashin, English; Joseph Axel¬rod, Romance Languages; FlorenceMaJnie Becker, Geography; PifiedaMildred Brim, Sociology; John KeithButters, Economics; Joseph JamesCeithaml, Zoology; Edwin JuliusCrockin, Political Science; Norman Ralph Davidson, Chemistry; CharlesHerron Fairbanks, Anthropology;Lorraine Marie Gustafson, German¬ics; Ruth Louise Hoyt, History;Leonard Charles Miller, Physics; Ma¬cha Louis Rosenthal, English; JoySchultz, Sociology; Stephen Stepan-chev, English; and Jam^iS Lee Wal¬ters, Botany.Departmental HonorsThe students selected by the de¬partments as honor scholars in thedivisions were Leonidas Alaoglua,Mathematics; Sarah Tatler Bergholz,Anthropology; Sophia Fagin, Sociol¬ogy; Martin Gardner, Philosophy;John H. Giese, Mathematics; GarrettJames Hardin, Zoology; DonaldJames Hughes, Physics; Arthur Har¬old Jaffey, Chemistry; Sylvia RosyleKaplon, English; William Rea Keast,Committee on Literature; and EthelDixon Kendrick, Home Economics.Others named were Harold GreggLewis, Economics; Wayne WilliamMarshall, Chemistry; Bessie Nicopou-los, Romance Language; Rae Eliza¬beth Rips, History; Lewis VictorThomas, Oriental Languages; JosephParker Witherspoon Jr., PoliticalScience.Ruth Lillian Maimon received theLillian Gertrude Selz scholarship forthe first year woman ranking first inthe comprehensive examinations ofthe College.Civil Government PrizeThe Civil Government prizes forexcellence in the political science sec¬tion of the comprehensive examina¬tion in the introductory course in so¬cial science w’ere awarded to Ray¬mond Edgar Weinstein, first, WalterJ. Blum, second, and James AllenDunkin, third.Haskell Fischel Lamm was award¬ed Whital Stern prize for writing thebest essay on the subject, “The Im¬portance of Common Honesty.”STUDENTS!!SAVE Vi OF YOURLAUNDRY BILLYour entire bundle is washedsweet and clean in pure soap andrain soft water.Handkerchiefs and flat piecesironed. Underwear. Pajamas,Sweaters, Socks, etc., are fluff-dried ready to use at onlylOc PER LB.Shirts De Luxe Hand Finished,starched, mended, and buttons re¬placed, atlOc EACHwithstudent Economy BundleMETROPOLELAUNDRY, Inc.Wesley N, Karlson, Pres.1219-21 EAST 55th STREETPhone HYDe Park 3190We call and deliver at no extracharge STUDENTS ...HAVE YOUR BRAKESRELINEDWE WILL REPAIR THE BRAKES ONYOUR CAR SO THAT IT WILL BESAFE DRIVING IN SLIPPERYWEATHER. BRAKES ARE RELINEDAS LOW AS $6.95 INCLUDINGLABOR AND MATERIAL. ALL OURWORK IS GUARANTEED.Come in and Inspect Our Complete Line ofAUTO RADIOS - BATTERIES and HEATERSBEST BRAKES INC.6040 COTTAGE GROVE AVE.Phone Plaza 1200 Film Society ShowsSeries of Old Filmsin Breasted HallTickets to film revivals being spon¬sored by The University Film Societyat Breasted Hall will be placed onsale at the Information Office in thePress building, at InternafionalHouse and by mail through Box 283,Faculty Exchange, next Mondaymorning.Prices for the showings, wluch willinclude such famed old films as D.W. Griffith’s “Intolerance,” SarahBernhardt in “Queen Elizabeth,” “AllQuiet on the Western Front,” and F.W. Murnau’s “Sunrise,” will be 35cents and 50 cents, for matinee andevening performances respectively.Series Tickets OfferedTo accommodate those who wish tosee the films as a series, a limitednumber of series tickets at reducedprices will be offered, at $1.25 for thematinee series of five programs and$2.00 for the similar evening series.Those who wish series tickets areasked to write immediately to theUniversity Film Society, Box 283,Faculty Exchange, enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope forticket returns.Announcement of the opening pro¬gram on Tuesday, October 20th hasbeen withheld pending the possibilityof a benefit performance for one ofthe University social organizations.This first program will include, inaddition to the Bernhardt film,Georges Melies “A Trip to the Moon”(1902). “The Great Train Robbery”(1903) and a French production of“Faust” (c. 1905).“Tinny” PianoAn notable feature of the serieswill be the playing of “hurry” musicon the piano, in emulation of the old-time nickelodeons and dime theatres.Without such accompaniment thetheme of “the villain still pursuedher” would be incomplete. Scouts ofthe Society are now searching thecampus for a piano with the exactdegree of “tinniness” for such a mu¬sical accompaniment.The presentation of film revivals i.not the sole aim of the society. Ex¬hibits and lectures on films and filmarts form a large part of its pro¬gram. Membership in the society isfree of charge to all who are inter¬ested in its work and purpose, whichis to gain widespread interest in bet¬ter films.RememberLast Year’sMirror ShowNow's the time to get yourD.A. sponsor tickets forthis year. The tickets areselling for only$2.75You will see three plays, the annual revival,and the big smash hitMIRROR REVUEU. of C. Dramatic AssociationBOOKS NEW and SECOND HANDFor All CoursesAlso GENERAL BOOKS - RENTAL LIBRARY SETSSTATIONERY SUPPUESTYPEWRITERSFOR SALERENTEXCHANGEREPAIRS ON ALL MAKES NotebooksPencils - PadsFountain PensTheme PaperFile BoxesDesk BlottersLocksATHLETIC GOODSKODAKS - FILMS - SERVICEPOSTAL STATIONUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUE, , " . i■ 'VI "» ’' "I'TTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1936Bolster University Faculty Mdth Addition ofMore Than Thirty Renowned InstructorsMany Distinguished For¬eign Professors Are inNew Group.The University has made more than30 new appointments above the rankof instructor during the last academicyear in an effort to build up the facul¬ty, which has been depleted of oldermen by death, and retirement in re¬cent years.To an already distinguished group,the Humanities division has addedfour professors of international re¬pute who begin teaching tomorrow.From a University of Berlin chair ofclassical Philology comes ProfessorWerner Jaeger, distinguished studentof Aristotle. His work on the great¬est Greek philosopher, published in1923, is revolutionary in that it is thefirst one attempting to trace the de¬velopment of Aristotle’s thought.Two years ago Professor Jaegerdelivered the Sather lectures at theUniversity of California, on Demos¬thenes. He is at present continuingresearches into the life and works ofthe orator. Professor Jaeger was oneof the sixty-six internationally knownscholars honored at the Harvard ter¬centenary celebration, a fortnight ago.Philosopherof ScienceAnother new University professorhonored at the Harvard gathering isRudolf Carnap, professor of Philoso¬phy. Famed as one of the most in¬fluential of the Vienna circle of posi¬tivists, Professor Carnap is an out¬standing scholar in the philosophy ofscience, and particuarly in the logicof mathematics. Coming to the University from theGerman university at Prague, Czech¬oslovakia, Dr. Carnap attended theUniversity of Jena and taught at theUniversity of Vienna. He is co-ed-itor of the journal “Erkenntness,” amember of the editorial board of thejournal “Philosophy of Science,” anda member of the organizing commit¬tee of the International Congress forthe Unity of Science.The Latin department has securedone of the abler young men in thefield of classical studies in Kurt Lat¬te, visiting professor of Latin, whountil recently occupied the principalchair in Latin at the University ofGoettingen, Germany. Professor Lat¬te’s interests include Roman andGreek religion, law, and political in¬stitutions and Roman historiography.At present he is working on materialon Sallust and Heysechios.Poet, Critic,NovelistA literary critic, novelist, and poet,Guiseppe Borgese, formerly of thefaculty of Smith College, joins theUniversity this quarter as Professorof Italian. In his early works hefollowed the critical doctrines ofCroce, the Italian idealist; at present,he is following an original approachto literary criticism.In the English department GeorgeWilliamson of the University of Ore-gin has been engaged as visiting pro¬fessor for the coming year. He isan accepted authority on 17th centuryEnglish literature, specializing par¬ticularly in the metaphysical poets.In 1930, the Cambridge UniversityPress published his book, “The DonneTradition, a Study in English Poetryfrom Donne to the Death of Cowley.” Coming to the History departmentas Professor of American History,James F. Rippy of Duke Universitywas appointed last spring by Presi¬dent Hutchins. His particular fieldof interest is the Spanish influenceon the American continent.To HelpWith ClassicsProfessors Stringfellow Barr andScott Buchanan of the University ofVirginia have been appointed as vis¬iting professors in the Humanitiesdivision. Known for the past fouryears to students of “Classics of theWestern World” as harassing oral ex¬aminers, the two men from Virginiawill aid Associate Professors Adlerand Sharp in conducting law 201.The only losses to the faculty ofthe Humanities division are Profes¬sor George Sherburn of the depart¬ment of English, who was granted ayear’s leave of absence to teach atColumbia University, and RobertMorss Lovett, socially-minded Englishprofessor who last year reached theretirement age of 65.To the staff of the Physical Sciencedivision will be added assistant-pro¬fessor of Mathematics Zens L. Smith.Formerly an assistant to the presidentof Knox college and an instructor ofmathematics in the Morgan ParkJunior College, he will replace Mrs.Mayme Logsdon to lecture on mathe¬matics in the Physical Science surveycourse. He is also assisting in or¬ganizing a mathematics course for thenew unit of junior college in con¬junction with the University HighSchool.Four distinguished astronomers willalso join the University faculty this fall. From Leyden, Holland comesGerald P. Kniper and from Copen¬hagen, Denmark, Bengt Stromgren,who will teach astrophysics. Dr.Philip Keenan of Perkins observa¬tory, Ohio and Dr. S. S. Chandrasek¬har of Madras, India will in additionbe added to the staff of astronomyprofessors.A course on “Problems in SocialInsurance” will be taught this fall bya former professor of Sociology anddirector of the Bureau of Social Re¬search at Indiana University. Be¬sides teaching. Professor R. ClydeWhite is now also conducting researchwork on contemporary relief meas¬ures and policies.One of the chief losses to the So¬cial Science division this year will beassistant professor of Political Sci¬ence Frederick L. Schuman, who ac¬cepted an appointment to Williamscollege as visiting lecturer in Politi¬cal Science and International Rela¬tions this spring. While in New Eng¬land, Professor Schuman will com¬plete a second edition of his work on“International Politics” and introducesome of Chicago’s techniques into thecollege curriculum.Attendto TeethIn the newly established dentalclinic. Dr. James Blahney, formerlydirector of the Zoller dental clinic andDr. Sigmund Bradel will take posi¬tions as assistant professors in theclinic.As the newly appointed professorof Psychiatry, Dr. David Slight, pre¬viously a clinical professor at McGillUniversity, Montreal, will head workin the Psychiatry division of the Uni¬versity clinics. Dr. Slight comeswith a distingushed record behind himas member of the Canadian MentalHygiene commission (on a Rockefellerscholarship) and organizer of thecourses in mental psychiatry at Mc¬ Gill University.Law courses in Evidence and Prac¬tice will be taken over by Paul H.Cleveland, a 1933 Harvard graduate.From the Yale school of law comesJames W. Moore to instruct coursesin Pleading and Procedure, while inthe field of reorganization and legalresearch, Edward Levi, also recentlywith Yale, joins the Law Schoolteaching staff. Both Levi and Moorereceived their degree here at the Uni¬versity, and were outstanding stu¬dents.William N. Mitchell, associate pro¬fessor of Production in the School ofBusiness has been named AssociateDean, effective this quarter.Larsh Appointed toPlacement PositionDoris Larsh, former graduate stu¬dent in the University, has been re¬cently placed in charge of part-timeand full-time business position place¬ment for women in the Board of Vo¬cational Guidance and Placement.She occupies a position formerly heldby Helen Landon, who resigned Sep¬tember 1 to accept another position.Miss Larsh has had considerable ex¬perience in Chicago with personneland social service wokr.Binns Replaces SawinAs Dormitory DirectorGertrude Binns, former assistantdirectors of the College ResidenceHalls for Men, has recently been ap¬pointed director of the Halls. Sheis replacing Nell Sawin, who resignedSeptember 1. Miss Sawin had beendirector of the halls since their erec¬tion in 1931, and Miss Binns hadbeen her assistant for the last twoyears. Page FiveEditor ReportsTwo-Thirds ofHandbooks SoldMore than two-thirds of the 1500copies of the 1936-37 edition of theStudent Handbook have already beensold, reports Genevieve Fish, editorof the Cap and Gown, which annual¬ly publishes the book.Containing the regular features—information concerning Universityactivities, athletics, rushing rules,campus Who’s Who, list of Univer¬sity administrative offices, residencehalls, dining places, libraries,churches, and diary for the year—thenew Handbook was placed on salelast Thursday.An idea of the personal service af¬forded by the Handbook may be got¬ten from the example of the bewild¬ered freshman who strolled into Lex¬ington Hall day before yesterday.“Can you tell me where I can geta copy of the little book that haseverything,” he queried. This was alittle too much, even for the editorsof the Handbook; they were deeplymoved and it was some little time be¬fore any of them could recover suf¬ficient poise to speak.However, a copy was produced andthe Innocent began a minute exam¬ination of its contents. After sometime he gave his verdict: “This is amatter that requires a great deal ofthought. If I buy the Handbook Ishall lose the 15 cents which I havejust invested in a notebook of myown. On the other hand, I should saveconsiderable writing because there ismore information printed therein. Ishall think it over and inform youof my decision at a later date.”He walked out, dignified as everBut if he could have heard theechoes....ENTERTAINMENT FOR STUDENTSIt's an old, old prob¬lem, but once you'vetried Younker's . . .we doubt if you'llconsider it a problemany longer.Compfefe Luachooti 35*Compfefe Dlaner..(J RESTAURANTS51 E. Chicago Ave.1510 Hyda Park Bird.501 Davfa Streetf EvanstoaAlways DaligktfMlIy Ceol Hanley’sBuffet1512 E.55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT ''COLLEG¬IATE'' ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY’SOver forty years of congenialservice AUDITORIUMFORTUNE GALLO’SSan CarloOpera Co.THREE WEEKS, MONDAYOCT. 5 to OCT. 26Every Night and Saturday MatineesFIRST WEEK’S REPERTOIREMon.. Oct. 5—8:15—LA TRAVIATA (Ben¬efit Illinois Masonic Hospital). Tues., Oct.6—8:15—FAUST. Fri., Oct. »—8:15—LOHENGRIN. Sat., Mat., Oct. 10—7T75—MARTHA (in English) with Ballet Di-vertiaaement. Sat., Oct. 10—8:15—ILTROVATORE. Sun., Oct. 11—8:15—CAV-ALLERIA RUSTICANA and PAGLIAC-CI.Grand Opera at Prices Within the Reachof All—25c, 50c. 75c. $1. Boxes $1.50 and$2. At box office and information office.HYDE PARKTHEATREWED. & THURS.“AH WILDERNESS’with Wallace BeeryBertha Ott Announces ...GOODMAN THEATERNEXT SUNDAY AFTERNOONOCTOBER 4 at 3:30Program of Original Dance CompositionsHarry HamiltonwithWANA WILUAMSSeats 55c-$1.65 on sale at Information Bureau oroffice of Bertha Ott, 59 E. Van Buren PICCADILLYTHEATRE51st AND BLACKSTONEWednesday“Second Wife”Gertrude MichaelandWalter Abel GRAND ®ho®us'e tonightPUBLIC DEMANDS IT!WE STAY ANOTHER WEEK!TO SATURDAY, OCT. 10SEATS NOW—All PerformancesTHE MOST POPULAR ANDMELODIOUS OPERETTAOF ALL TIME!BLOSSOMTIMEwith FRANZ SCHUBERT’S IMMORTALAND MOST BELOVED MELODIESGREAT SINGING ANDDANCING ENSEMBLENEW POPULAR PRICESS!frFio«r$1.50-$2;Balc.,t',SoPOP. MATS. WED. & SAT.mTi];Tloob$1-B«1<=- 50c. 75c, $1(Plus 10% Tax) TT ARP TCI TWO WEEKS ONLYX]..^£vrvi0 Mats. WEDS, and SATS.MORRIS GESTSAS THE HONOR TO PRESENT FORTHE FIRST TIME IN CHICAGOA Chinese Play in EnglishLady PrescioiisStreamby S. I. HSIUNG with3o8tumes Executed in China from Designsby MEI LAN-FANG3 Years in London—6 Months in NewYork—2,000 Years in ChinaFirst Play, Theater Guild and AmericanTheatre SocietyTickets on Sale at Information Office SEI^WYN tonightOCsAj TV 1 lY xND EVERY NIGHTJoin the Crowds!Report for Jury ServiceFor the first time in history the audiencedictates the ending of a play. The jurywill be chosen from the audience, andeach will receive $3 for his services. Youmay be one of he 12 lucky persons!A. H. WOODS, LTD., presentsTHE NIGHT OFJANUARY 16‘Best Mystery Tale I’ve Seen or Read inSeasons I"—Ashton Stevens, American“Novel and arresting melodrama”—Carol Frink, Herald-Examiner"The most interesting murder mysteryplay of many seasons....cast admirably se¬lected”—Charles Collins, TribuneEVERY 50c, $1, $1.50NIGHT $2 and $2.50Pop. Mats. Wed. &Sat., 50c, $1, $1.50HARPERTHEATREWed. & Thurs.“NOBODY’S FOOL”with Edw. Everett HortonEVERY NIGHT at 8:30“A stirring start for the newplaygoing season in CHICAGO,”CHARLES COLLINS—Tribune.NORMAN BEL GEDDES Presents“DEADEND” CASTOF70By SIDNEY KINGSLEY"A VIOLENT. NOV¬EL AND WALLOP¬ING EVENING INTHE THEATRE." saidLloyd Lewis in EVE.NEWS.STUDEBAKER418 S. MICHIGAN. Ph. HAR. 2792NIGHTS (Inel. Sun.). 55c to $2.75MATS. WED. & SAT.. 55c to $2.20 ThePalm Grove InnA RESTAURANT OF DISTINCTIONWISHES TO ANNOUNCE ITSSpecial Luncheon MenuFrom 11 A. M.—3 P. M.For theSTUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOwith Special Prices to Meet Anybody's Pocket BookServing the Best of Foods and Delicious DrinksCatering to Baniguets and Special Parties at Special PricesVisit thePALM GROVE INN TODAY56TH STREET AND OUTER DRIVEAt the Shores of Lake MichiganWhere the Elite Meetl•Mai’■ I uilll\ 'r\Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1936fv'" 5th ROWCENTER* * ♦By C. SHARPLESS HICKMAN which made his New York programscontinually pleasant feasts of the un¬usual. His playing at Ravinia wassolid and slightly introspective, butit did exhibit a certain amount of in-The appointment of Hans Lange tothe post of Associate Conductor ofthe Chicago Symphony Orchestra isthe most important musical announce¬ment in several seasons.It is not only important because itinforms us of the resignation of EricDeLamarter—a competent and ofteninspired conductor—but because itseems to definitely look forward to theapproaching time when Dr. FrederickStock will be forced to forego moreand more of his podium appearances,and that eventual time when the sym¬phony w’ill have its third permanentconductor. spiration which seemed perfectlymade for the intricacies of Brahms.The msitter of programs had evi¬dently been settled out of his handsby those who took good care that thesummer fare was of an exceedinglysame and light nature.For the future the question seemsto be: Will the Orchestral Associa¬tion allow Dr. Lange to dictate in thematter of program-building, or willthe Association insist upon his con¬fining himself to the confining pat¬tern of Chicago’s musical tastes—tastes which last year coldly receivedsuch great music as Walton’s Firstand Sibelius’ Seventh symphonies?The selection of Dr. Lange is inevery way in keeping with the gen¬eral managing regime of the orches¬tra. It is conservative and it is prob¬ably judicious. Dr. Lange is one ofthe great musical scholars in thiscountry; a man with deep musical vi¬sion which, unfortunately, is occa¬sionally marred by the lack of fire heexhibits as a conductor. But Chica¬go has never been accustomed to afiery conductor such as Stokowski orOrmandie. Conservatism — besidewhich that of Boston seems rampant—seems to suit its hearers best.By this I do not mean to say thatDr. Lange is hidebound or lacking ina certain brilliant approach to hismusic. It has been his lot to haveserved as associate conductor underToscanini for the past several years;a post which no conductor in theworld could have lifted to promin¬ence or brilliance beside the brightItalian star.Dr. Lange’s appointment is prob¬ably the outgrowth of his not havingbeen considered as a successor to Tos¬canini by the New York Philharmonic-Symphony Society, and the satisfac¬tion of Chicagoans with his summerappearances at Ravinia Park thissummer. Downtown (AllegePlans Seven NewLecture Series Letters...To the EditorSeven lecture series on current so¬cial problems and on American andIndian art will be offered in the reg¬ular Autumn quarter program of pub¬lic lectures sponsored by the Univers¬ity downtown college in FullertonHall of the Art Institute.“The Presidential Campaign” is thetitle of a group of five weekly publiclectures delivered on Fridays by Har¬old F. Gosnell, associate professor ofPolitical Science. Dr. Gosnell’s ser¬ies, starting October 9 and endingNovember 6, will be followed by dis¬courses on “Economic Planning” byHarry D. Gideonse, associate profes¬sor of Economics, at the same houreach Friday from November 13 toDecember 11.His forte, as exhibited during hisNew York concerts, is the playing offorgotten, or extremely new music;all of it unusua 1 in character andtherefore of extreme interest to thor¬ough-going musicians. Unfortunate¬ly, Chicago’s average symphony audi¬ence is anything but thorough-going,save when it comes to likes and dis¬likes.. Then they thoroughly dem¬onstrate—through the conservativeand controlling members of The Or¬chestral Association—their dislikefor anything that is musically off thebeaten track.In his Ravinia concerts Dr. Langeplayed music that was, for the mostpart, of standard fare. The back¬bone of his four programs was aBrahms symphony cycle. On no pro¬gram did he exhibit his unrivalledtalent for program-building—a talent A series of lectures on “The Ameri¬can Novel Today” will be offered byFred B. Millett, associate professorof English, Tuesdays at 6:45 fromOctober 13 to November 10. He willbe followed by Helen Tieken on “TheAmerican Theater in Performance”at the same hour each week from No¬vember 17 to December 15.Wednesday lectures on “CulcrentTrends in Business,” by various fac¬ulty members of the School of Bus¬iness will be held at 6:45 from Octo¬ber 14 to November 18. A series on“The Soul of Modern India,” by Sun¬der Joshi, lecturer in ComparativeReligion, will follow at the same timeeach week from November 25 to De¬cember 23.Single admission to any of theabove lectures is 50 cents, and admis¬sion to a complete series is $1.50.An additional informal course on“Vision and the Art of Painting” byLucy Driscoll of the department ofArt is offered Tuesday mornings at11 from October 13 to December 15.A series ticket for ten lectures costs$10.00. Editor, The Daily MaroonDear Sir:About twenty-five years ago whenwomen attended dances without datesit was proper, I have been told, toreturn the girl with whom you hadbeen dancing to her chaperone at theend of a set of dances. A very finecustom no doubt. But times havechanged; twenty five years have elap¬sed. Now University women attenddances Freshmen Week with othergirls if they have no date. But an¬other girl is no chaperone. Anothergirl is not waiting in a chair by thewall to gather the girl whom you are“through with” into/ understandingarms. The other girl is smiling pain¬fully at the stag line, and wants tosee very little of her friend.You have given the Freshman mena piece of advice on “How to act ata mixer.” Now let a sophomore wo¬man give those same men some dif¬ferent advice. Let me suggest thatthey dance with a girl, and then, in¬stead of returning her to the wall,as one would return a letter marked“opened by mistake,” introduce herto the fellows they came with. Giveher a chance to meet other fellows;don’t force her to return immediatelyafter one dance with you to girls shealready knows, while you have theopportunity of meeting members ofthe weaker sex. If your friends af¬ter meeting her don’t like her theycan excuse themselves, and then thegirl can do as she thinks best, butw'hy not give her the same chance tomeet people that our social systemgives you—and help make a mixer alittle less horrible for the averageFreshman woman.I am sorry that this letter must re¬main anonymous; I dislike anonymousletters, but I won’t sign this one. Nogirl would.. (As a general rule, The Maroonwill print no unsigned letters. Weherewith make this first exception tothat rule purely out of courtesy tothe “weaker sex."—Ed.)FIRST KICKBACKEditor, The Daily MaroonDear Sir:Knowing that the usual run of edi¬torials in The Maroon is undeniablybetter than that of September 24 en¬titled “Invitation to the Dance,” theFreshman woman might be inclinedto voice a complaint. If the point ofthe ed was to encourage freshmen toattend the dances, it was well dis¬guised. It seems to be lesson num¬ber one of a course on How to GetRid of the Unwelcome Guest, or Howto Ditch Someone in one easy lesson.Very fine, but he does not consiaer thegirl’s attitude. She has the same dif¬ficulties only more so, and no oppor¬tunities such as the male, but then,ain’t it always so tsk tsk Well,anyway, the ediorial was not so hot.Do give my love to Morris.Yours for less critical stagliness,—Barbara Q. Lewis.A Philco in Your Roomfor ^20FOR MORNING RECORDPROGRAMSFOR AFTERNOON BALL-GAMES ....FOR EVENING HITPARADES ....FOR EVERY MINUTE OFTHE HOURModel 600C—$25.00Terms. $1.00 per Week Terms $1.00 *per weekAmerican Receiver — Illuminated Dial — Pentode AudioSystem — 5 Philco IRgh Efficiency Tubes — Cabinet fin¬ished on all sides with speaker grilles at front and back.The largest and most complete Radio Store on the South SideWOODLAWN RADIO 6- MUSIC COTwo Convenient Locations Near Campus1371 EAST 55th STREETFair. 0323OPEN EVERY EVENING 1004 EAST 63rd STREETFcdr. 2006COMPLETE RADIO SERVICE Anticipate Increasein R^istration; AllDormitories FilledRegistration figures for the upperclasses are not yet available, but thenumber of reservations for rooms indormitories, and the general trendtoward inceased enrollment pointtoward a considerable increase in thesize of the student body. At the endof the day yesterday a total of 1700had registered.Tentative freshman figures indi¬cate an increase of about 10 per centin the size of the entering class thisyear. For the first time since theerection of the new men’s dormitoriesacross the Midway five years ago,every room at the University’s dispos¬al is reserved in advance, a surveyof the housing bureau disclosed.The only change in registration pro¬cedure this year is the abandonmentof registration by mail. This changewas made because of expense involv¬ed and the fact that the service wasused by rel^itively few students, ac¬cording to Ernest C. Miller, Regis¬trar. Advance registration in personis still retained.The rise in enrollment is part of anational trend figures from otherschools indicate. !Official figures at the University of jIllinois show a gain of about ten per¬cent in registration, the student body |rising to 11,566, a new record for all itime. Northwestern University like-!wise anticipates a ‘phenomenal’ rise iin registration, with the upswing par- jticularly pronounced among theFreshman class. |5519 Blackstone Dor. 4100UNIVERSITY HOTEL100 Rooms each with private com¬bination tub and shower bathComplete Hotel ServiceRates $6.00 week up.Walking distance of the Univer¬sity—Good transportation facilities Ink ... to thelast drop . . .always at topiNew WELL-TOPbottle that’s per¬fect for fountainpen filling. Pens, $5, $6 and $8.50Pencils to match, $3 and $4Other Waterman's pens, $2.50 upWatermaoi^sBuy your Waterman Pen*atWOODWORTH’S BOOKSTORE41 Years of Serving Students of the University of Chicago(Open Evenings) Phone DORchester 48001311 East 57th St.—Near Kimbark Ave.Hit the Deck at SchalVsFor years we have served University of Chicago Students thechoicest steaks, the finest meals, the most refreshing beveragesin the entire community. Our food and service is known through¬out Chicago.Drop in for lunch, afternoon snacks, delicious dinners andsuppers. For a few free hours or a pause that refreshes try—THE DECK AT SCHALL’S5473-75 LAKE PARK AVENUETel. Dorchester 0004 for Special PartiesTHE DAILY MAROONEnclosed please find $1 for one subscription, to The Daily Maroon,1936-1937.NameUniversity Address—1 \. .....DAILY MAROON SPORTSWEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1936 Page SevenGridLeaksBy BARTON PHELPSAt their favorite indoor sport again,dopesters found their hands full thisweek. With six Big Ten teams seeingaction—three of them in hard con¬tests—there are a couple of factswhich we can't forget. First, Minne¬sota, one of the nation’s most power¬ful teams, bids fair to go through afourth season undefeated; and sec¬ond, despite the locker-room tragedywhich shocked the nation three weeksago. Noble Kiser has built a power¬ful eleven at Purdue.* * mBernie Bierman risked a lot intaking his Gophers to Seattle, but byhis strategy kept he and his team atthe top. Now the Gopher squad willpoint toward Nebraska. This gamewon’t be easy—Dana Bible has asquad doped to be stronger than hisla.st year’s Big Six Conference cham¬pions which Maroon fans will remem¬ber gave Chicago a 28-7 drubbing inthe initial tilt of the 1935 .season. Par¬ticularly will Bierman have to reckonwith Lloyd Cardwell, last year’s“Cr’mson Limited” who gave themighty Berwanger a run for hismoney. (We don’t know whether ornot the publicity office at Minne¬sota has a sense of humor but welike the way it describes Andy Uram,triple-threat back . . . “cool underfire”.)Even though the Boilermakers havebeen playing a brand of inspiredfootball, the 47-0 score against ateam undefeated and untied last year,a squad which humbled the Illiniwould indicate that Kiser still hasone of the most “potent ’ squads inthe conference. After his passing inthe initial periods had led to threetouchdowns, Cecil Isbell, triple-threathalfback from Houston, Texas, ranwild in the last half of his contestSaturday. But again, the Chicagofans will remember his passing lastyear, when, with a bad shoulder, hethrew pass after pass tw pave theway for a Boilermaker victory.Another team which was doped tohave tough sledding was Wisconsin.By now most sport-writers have in¬formed their cults that Coach HarryStuhldreher might “win a game” af¬ter their showing at South DakotaState. However, with a tough sched¬ule—including Notre Dame, Purdue,Northwestern, and Minnesota—aheadof them we think the Badgers willhave all they can do to stop Mar-jUette this Saturday, let alone de¬feat Chicago later in the season.Lowell Spurgeon seems to have aknack of pulling the Illini games outof the fire—or mud. Last year thelittle 154-pound back stood in a driv¬ing rain to kick the field goal thatdefeated the Wolverines, 3-0. Thisyear, in the same kind of weather,his educated toe booted out a 6-9 winfrom DePaul. W'e don’t wonder that Maroons Speed Preparation forVanderbilt Invasion Here SaturdayBy LOUIS MILLERAfter an expected victory overLawrence last Saturday, the Maroonfootball team this week continues it’srace against time to prepare for theVanderbilt Commodores Saturday,Coach Clark Shaughnessy expres¬sed his worries about the coming in¬tersectional tilt by saying yester¬day. “Vanderbilt is a good footballteam, I wish we met them two orthree weeks later. I doubt if we willbe ready by Saturday.” Today willsee the last of the early season doublepractice sessions as the squad tapersoff on Thursday and Friday.Sophomores Show AbilityLast Saturday’s game did littlemore than prove the worth of indi¬viduals since the Maroons used onlytheir most fundamental running playson offense, and made no effort to“open up”. Several sophomores show¬ed ability enough to make them use¬ful later in the season. Sollie Sher¬man, shifty halfback from MarshallHigh, was the outstanding yearlingball carrier, ripping off several longgains off tackle and around the ends.He scored the last Chicago touchdown.Lew Hamity, playing in the block¬ing quarterback position, won praisefrom Shaughnessy for his fine block¬ing and defensive work. Harvey Law-son, another sophomore back, al¬though handicapped by an injuredshoulder, did some fine ball carryingsee why they’re so pessimistic forthe future of the squad.some call the Orange and Blue“Zuppke’s flea circus”, but we can’t« * «Out in Iowa, the fans were root¬ing for a conference championshipbut Carleton held the team to onlytwo touchdowns. Although the Corn-huskers still have their Ozzie Sim¬mons, the team is weaker this yearthan last. More than once in thecoming season will Coach Ossie Sol-em wish he had another Dick Craynewhose punting and stellar defensivework featured contests in 1935. Nowdon’t misunderstand us—Iowa has agood team this year, but we don’tthink it will be good enough to takeNorthwestern this Saturday.* * ♦The Indiana-Centre game will bea pushover. After absorbing a 50-7licking from Temple, the Prayin’Colonels won’t be much for the pow¬erful Hoosier squad when they tan¬gle Saturday in Bloomington. Themost interesting thing about the con¬test for us is the fact that Bo McMil-lin* now chief kicker at Indiana, wasthe star of the last three really greatteams that Centre produced—teamsthat rolled undefeated and untiedthrough three years (1918, 1919, and1920) of stiff competition. and showed much promise. Bob John¬son materially bolstered the Maroonforward wall by his offensive tackleand defensive end play.Bartlett Stands OutAmong the veterans, Ned Bartlettwas perhaps the standout. The Cali¬fornia lad averaged fourteen yards,carrying the ball, and scored twotouchdowns, one on a 41 yard dash.With his usual speed plus an addeddrive, Bartlett served notice that hewill be a constant scoring threat laterin the season.The rest of the team—in particularLehnhardt, Farced, and Skoning—turned in fine performances. The twogreatest weaknesses were kicking andpass defense, Lawrence completedseveral passes for their only realgains from scrimmage. Work thisweek has centered on this point, sincethe Commodores are reputed to havea fine passing attack.Meigs May be EligibleHope again appears that HarmonMeigs, veteran guard of the past twoyears, may yet become eligible.“Ham” took the Humanities compre¬hensive yesterday, and is expected toreport for practice today, to get incondition in case he should be declaredeligible. Meigs’ return would domuch to bolster up the line reserves,weakest spot on the small Maroonsquad.Gymnasts Swing intoAction before FroshThe gym team is losing no time ingetting started. After tugging at theleash all summer, the Maroon g;ym-nasts are swinging into the year’s ac¬tivities with two exhibitions thisweek.The initial appearance of CoachDan Hoffers proteges will be thisevening when they display their bagof tricks to the freshmen men at thesmoker in the Field house. Slated toappear before the yearling athleticenthusiasts are Hayes, Byer, andWetherall from the 1937 edition ofthe squad and Indritz, a graduatestudent who is appearing with theteam in its exhibitions. Friday night,the team will journey to the Hamil¬ton club where a meeting of Maroonalumni will see the squad perform.Planning a year as full of activitiesas possible. Coach Hoffer calls thisyear’s team the best in the last threeyears. Several steady performersfrom last year’s group will be backand Byer, a ’39 numeral winner whoshowed much promise, should addmuch to the squad.KNOCK KNOCK!Who’s There, ETHYL?Not ETHYL, SHE DOESN’T KNOCK!FOR ETHYL OR REGULAR, COMPLETE GREASING,WASHING, OIL CHANGE ITS:STANDARD LUBRICATION SERVICE55th AND DREXELFREE VACUUM SERVICEFREE BATTERY AND TIRE SERVICESAVE 20% TO 40%ONUsed Law BooksBest Allowance in City for Used TextsUniversityBook ExchangeDearborn 6837 - A StudenCs Exchange ■ Open EveningsRoom836 ■ 216 N.WabashAve. • PiireOilBldg. Hebert AppointsJunior I‘M AidsFor Fall QuarterEleven Juniors found themselvesappointed as sports managers in theintramural department yesterdaywhen Walter H. Hebert, head of thedepartment, announced managerialassignments for the fall quarter.At the head of the touchball di¬vision will be Ralph Leach, assistedby Herbert Larson. Spencer Ironsand Gregg Geiger will manage thehorseshoe tournament this fall whileWayne Shaver will be in charge oflinks competition. Another junior ap¬pointed to a managerial post wasRichard Wasem who heads the fallintramural tennis tournament. Swim¬ming will be in charge of GrahamFairbank. Lester Cook will managethe Fall relays, intramural outdoortrack event. Prospective intramuralwrestlers will report to Joseph Friel-ich and Burton Stern will managethe dormitory table tennis activity.Opening Date SetUrging that all independent teamsget their entries in as early as pos¬sible, promotion manager James Mel¬ville yesterday set October 7 as theopening day for intramural touch-ball play. He stressed the necessityof early entries by the independentsto facilitate the planning of theschedule. Metcalf Denies Rumors of Strifein American Olympic DelegationReturning from the Olympic gamesin Berlin this summer, T, Nelson Met¬calf, Director of Athletics at the Uni¬versity, denied the rumors of dissen¬sion circulated by the American pressand declared that “the games wereT. Nelson MetcalfOlympic games** smoothly operated",. .**no discrimination".. .Jarrett case*xinfortunate"the most smoothly operated in thehistory of Olympic competition.”Serving as assistant manager ofthe American track and field team,Metcalf watched the University’s lone performer in Berlin. The athlete wasJohn Brooks, captain of the 1933track team and holder of the Uni¬versity’s records in the broadjump andthe 220 yard dash. Entering thebroad jump event, the former negroMaroon star was second in the finaltry-outs, but by placing sixth in Ber¬lin he failed to qualify for the games.“A Wonderful Bunch”According to Metcalf there existeda “great spirit of co-operation amongall the contestants. Most of themwere very sober-minded and on thewhole, a wonderful bunch of youngpeople. The 66 boys on our trackteam were a splendid outfit.”Questioned about the expulsion ofMrs. Eleanor Holm Jarrett from theswimming squad, the Maroon’s ath¬letic head replied that there was noalternative for Avery Brundage totake. Pointing out the fact that sim¬ilar disciplinary measures have beennecessary on almost every team inthe past, he termed the Jarrett case“a most unfortunate affair.”No Discrimination“There was no discrimination byany of the Olympic committee,” Met¬calf declared and explained that manycases which resulted in temporary ill-feeling among the contestants weredue to strange rules.ardrohe £Lneup^^ ^or 0'alL---HART,S11AFFNER&MARXSUITS and TOPCOATS''Qieerio Stripes" . . . "Homespuns".. ."Game-feathers". . .and many other models styled byRobert Surrey, foremost fashion authority.You'll need at least one of these suits this fall.A Surrey-styled topcoat will also be well worthhaving.SUITS TOPCOATS$29.50 $26.50MAIXORY HATSA true campus favorite — and why not? It'scorrectly shaped for university wear —"dished"on top... snapped in front... weather-proofedthroughout.. .real smartness.$4.00ARROW SHIRTSThe only college man's shirt with the Mitogaform-fit cut.. .and Arrow has the best collarsmade. A host of styles in whites... oxfordcloths... stripes... checks...$2.00CHENEY CRAVATSBright striping on deeptone grounds . . . gayScotch plaids... neat all-over patterns. Fab¬rics include repps, baratheas, twills, basket-weaves, poplins, crepes, wools, boucles. Anassortment without equal.$1.00FLORSHEIM SHOESFull-brogues and cordovans with real univer¬sity character.. .style perfection in town mod¬els. And they're almost wear-proof. Shoesdesigned especially for campus wear. Remember...THE ERIE is at your call — and mostconvenient at that — for any ap¬parel you may have occasion to vise.And with the aid of Esquire, we hoveformulated a budget to moke yourwardrobe complete within your ownmeans... Let us help you with yourapparel problems... A short walkfrom campus... that's all it is foranything you need. Remember...through your wardrobe do you greetthe campus!$8.75rteCLOTHING CO.837-39 EAST 63rd STREETOpen Every EveningA IPage Eight THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER SO, 1036New Dental ClinicOpens on Campus;Provides TrainingDental research, hitherto neglectedat the University, will begin on thecampus this year with the opening ofthe Zoller Dental Clinic, to occupyquarters adjoining Billings Hospital.The Clinic is made possible througha fund of $2,900,000 bequeathed to theUniversity by the late Walter G. Zol¬ler, Chicago coal magnate, upon hisdeath in 1933.The clinic will attempt to bridgethe gap between dental and medicalresearch, to relate more exactly thecondition of the teeth to generalhealth. In addition to the main taskof research, the clinic will provide ad¬vanced training for prospective den¬tists, and give dental service to a se¬lected group of needy patients. Thecases will be drawn from among char¬ity cases in the University clinics andits affiliates.Blaney Appointed DirectorDr. James R. Blaney, formerly pro¬fessor of Dental Pathology and Ther¬apeutics at the University of Illinois,has been appointed director of theclinic. .4ssi8ting him will be Dr. Sig¬mund Bradel. The clinic will start ona modest scale, but future expansionwall bring its budget up to $80,000 ayear, according to Dr. Arthur C.Bachmeyer. director of the UniversityClinics.Director Blaney pointed out thatnearly all modern men are afflictedby tooth decay or other form of den¬tal disorder, yet the cause of decay oreven conditions favoring infection arealmost wholly unknown, and attemptat the integration of oral and system¬atic disease promises fruitful results.Students to Serve as InternesA selected group of dental gradu¬ate students will be added to the staffas internes, fellows and instructorsthis year. Their time will be dividedbetween dentistry and research in thevarious departments of the BiologicalSchiences division. Working throught he departments of bacteriology,physiology, biochemistry, pathology,anatomy, among others, the studentswill engage in research on problemsrelated to dentistry. The regular ac¬ademic degrees of Master of Scienceand Doctor of Philosophy will begranted.There is no connection between theStudent Health Service and the newClinic, according to Dr. Dudley B.Reed, director of the Health Service-but he hopes that in the future stu¬dent dental service may be availablein the clinic. Press PublishesNine New BooksHarvard Looms asFuture Maroon GridFoe in New Schedule Nine books by University profes¬sors will be published by the Univer¬sity Press during the fall quarter.Heading the list of early fall pub¬lications is “The Tenements of Chi¬cago, 1908-1935,” by Edith Abbott,dean of the School of Social ServiceAdministration, and associates. Thevolume, which will be published inOctober, covers twenty-seven years ofresearch on the housing and sanita¬tion problems of Chicago. Fromstudies of sanitation, rentals, nation¬ality groups, and pertinent legisla¬tion, the author concludes that sincethe present economic situation can¬not provide decent housing at a ratesufficiently low for the unskilled la¬borer, American cities must turn topublic housing projects.Political, Religious BooksSeptember publications of thePress included two books on politicalscience and one on religion. “TheFrontiers of Public Administration,”is a series of essays by Leonard D.White and Marshall E. Dimock, mem¬bers of the Political Science faculty,and John Gaus, professor at the Uni¬versity of Wisconsin. “Public Ser¬vice and Special Training,” by LewisMeriam, visiting professor of Politi¬cal Science, discusses the types oftraining most valuable for govern¬ment service and administration, andwas published yesterday “The storyof the Bible,” by Edgar J. Goodspeed,chairman of the Department of NewTestament and Early Christian Lit¬erature, endeavors to interpret thebooks of the Bible in the light of theevents and personalities with whichthey deal.Library Book PublishedOther publications of the Press byUniversity authors scheduled forprinting this year include “Principlesof College Library Administration,”by William M. Randall, professor ofLibrary Science, and F.D.L, Good¬rich, Librarian of the College of theCity of New York. This volume willappear in October.Among November and Decemberpublications are “The Illinois PoorLaw and Its Administration,” bySophonisba P. Breckinridge, profes¬sor of Public Welfare Administra¬tion; “The Four Gospels of Karahis-sar,” by Ernst Colwell, assistant pro¬fessor of New Testament, and HaroldWilloughby, associate professor ofNew Testament Literature; and “Re¬discovering Illinois,” a work dealingwith local excavations of Indian re¬mains, by Fay-Cooper Cole, chairmanof the Department of Anthropology,and Thorne Deuel, research assoc’ •ate in Anthropology.Continuing the recently establishedrule of one important intersectionalgame a year, the 1937 and 1938 foot¬ball schedule list Princeton and Har¬vard as Maroon gridiron foes of thefuture.Princeton-Chicago rivalry is of oldstanding. The teams have met fourtimes since the series was started in1893. Harvard, however, will be anew experience for the Maroons.The 1937 Schedule gives the Mid-waymen two intersectional games—Vanderbilt and Princeton. The sched¬ule is as follows:1937October 2—Vanderbilt—thereOctober 9—Wisconsin—hereOctober 16—Princeton—^hereOctober 30—Ohio State—hereNovember 6—Michigan—^thereNovember 20—Illinois—thereIllinois still holds the last place andthe Maroons invade the East accord¬ing to the 1938 schedule:1938October 8—Michigan—thereOctober 15—Iowa—here.October 22—Ohio State—thereNovember .5—Harvard—thereNovember 12—Wisconsin—here.Novembei* 19—Illinois—here. William E. Scott...To adi^ise students from Prog¬ressive Schx>ols.Issue Call for NewUniversity BandmenAll students interested in joiningthe University Band, and who havehad previous experience in similarmusic units are requested to attendthe tryouts held daily from 3:30 to5:30 in the West stand of StaggField. Rehearsals are being held forregular members on Tuesdays, Wed-nc-'-days, and Thursdays in the sameplace at 6:30.Registration for this year showsthat the Band will be one of the Uni¬versity’s largest, having a prospec¬tive membership of 80 or more. OnSaturday 65 are expected to play atthe Chicago-Vanderbilt game. Thissteadily growing organization willplay at all succeeding home gamesand will take its annual fall trip toMadison for the Chicago-Wisconsintilt.Reynolds Club StagesTable Tennis MatchToday brings Dan Mahee, nation¬al banking table tennis pJayer towield his paddle before an expectedlarge gathering of freshmen and up¬perclassmen in the south lounge ofthe Reynolds club at 4. Howard'Mort, manager of the club, extendshis invitation to women as well asall men.Mahee and his partner will dem¬onstrate the fine points of the gameas they put on an exhibition game.Following this, Mahee will answerany questions concerning the more in¬tricate parts of the game. Leon P. Schultz, Jr....To advise students in a Prog¬ressive School.University StudentsAwarded Essay PrizeRecipient this summer of the 100dollar Baldwin prize given annuallyfor the best essay on Municipal Gov¬ernment was Herman B. Director, se¬nior in the Political Science Depart¬ment. Awarded by the National Mu¬nicipal League, the prize has beenwon by Chicago students consistent¬ly in the past, but this is the firsttime in three years that the firstplace award has returned to the Uni¬versity.Leonard Reichle was given secondplace and Janet Weiss received Hon¬orable mention.Berwaiiger and NyquistFill Coaching VacanciesChanges in the Maroon coachingstaff this year see Jay Berwangerand Ew’ald Nyquist acting in part-time capacities to take the places ofBob “Tarzan” Deem and John Baker.Baker has been shifted to end coachto replace Otto Strohmeier, who re¬signed from the University’s strate¬gy board this fall.Strohmeier, formerly a star Ma¬roon end on the strong 1923 foot¬ball team, coached at Indiana forfour years before coming to the Mid-w^ay in 1932 to take charge of theflank positions. Here, he entered med¬ical school and, finishing in June,has accepted a position as interneat St. Lukes hospital.PHOENIXVanity! Vanity! All Is Vanity—Except the Line That the New Phoenix Leads the Field of College MagazinesSATIRE— POLITICS-CRITICISM— GRAPHIC ARTS—POETRY— SHORT STORIES—Theatre All There to Back Our Boast GOSSIP-ANECDOTES—SUBSCRIBE NOW—TEN ISSUES $2.00 SINGLE COPIES 25 Cents R.O.T.C(Continued from Page 1)University of Florida and motorizedin the process. Membership in thelocal unit has fluctuated somewhat,but has never been compulsory. Dur¬ing the past three years the groupreceiving commissions has averagedabout twenty, but the class of thisyear contains only fourteen.Radicals Not the CauseThe local ROTC unit has long beenthe object of disapproval and attackfrom pacifist and radical groups onthe campus, but the discontinuance ofthe unit can hardly be attributed totheir agitation.Frederic Woodward, vice-presidentof the University, commented: “Wehope that in time other ways may befound by which the University maycontribute to the national defense.We have excellent equipment for ad¬vanced training and research in suchfields as mathematics, physics, chem¬istry, geography, history and medi¬cine. We should be very happy tohace our facilities in the.se and othert fields employed for the special train-j mg of army officers or the study ofarmy problems.” In the past the Uni¬versity laboratories ha^ bran used fbrspecial research and graduate studyI by army officers.Offer University Ringsat Campus Bookstores Faculty Members,Students PraiseNewest PhoenixOfficial University rings may be ob¬tained at the Bookstore for the priceof 25 cents upon presentation of thetop of a carton of the new ink, ParkerQuink. The ring is certified as a $2value. The size fitting your fingermay be obtained at any retailer ofParker Quink. “The new Phoenix is just what thedictionary says it should be: the suc¬cessor of something reduced to ashes.The account of the Knox meeting isworth the price of the issue.” So Har¬ry D. Gideonse, associate professor ofEconomics welcomes the revised andrevamped Phoenix in its first appear¬ance on campus.Combining the serious vein of theLate Comment with the best humorof last year’s Phoenix, editor SidneyHyman has been universally compli¬mented on the first issue which ap¬peared during Freshman Week. SaidBill Beverly, president of the Dram¬atic Associatiin, “I’ve waited a longtime to be proud of a Phoenix andI’m pleased with this one as the guysare w'ho made it. It is definitelyswell.” Henry Cutter, chairman ofthe Student Social Committee wasequally enthusiastic, “The new Phoe¬nix is the mo.st pleasant surprise ofthe school year.”Staff Member.s PleasedGraduate Student V. P. Quinn, for¬mer contributor to Comment observes,“I was round shouldered until I readPhoenix.”The faculty likewise has expressedapproval. Said Jerome G. Kerwin,associate professor of Political Sci¬ence, “Phoenix should have a largecirculation among the faculty. Themakeup is excellent. The contentpromises to be even better.”The editors offer a year’s subscrip¬tion to the magazine to him who cancorrectly identify the real authors be¬hind pseudottiyms wh|ich adorn thepages of the first issue.10 REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD EAT ATTHE MAID-RITE GRILL1—Special 40c Dinner Daily and 6—Home Made Pies and HoiSunday (Including Steaks and RollsChops) 7—Extra Cup of Coffee Free with2—Delicious Students Luncheons Dinner—25c & 35c 8—A Greater Variety of Home3—A Clean Inviting Dining Room Cooked Foods4—Rapid, Courteous, Personal 9—Your Discriminating FriendsService Dine Here5—Clean White Linen Table 10—You Save 10 Per Cent if YouCloths & Napkins Purchase Meal BookThe Maid-Rite ShoDS. Inc.1309 E. 57th St. 1320 E. 57th St.Just Two Short Blocks E^st of .Mandeit Hall iWhere University Students Meet and Eat VIA SAKfii FIFTH AVKIVFKIIFHFTAA'TF $$hof^ 4t Sheer grey wool two-piece dress, its topsplashed with bright !''candle-wick'' dots. Its 'scarf comes with it.Smart for class or town.Also in green and brown.$19.95SIZES U TO 17669 MICHIGAN AVENUE NORTH, CHICAGOFOURTH FLOOR—INEXPENSIVE FASHIONS -1*THE COLLEGE ROOM61st and ELLIS AVE.Where one may enjoy the real “college atmosphere”of the campus. A delightful spot to meet and eat.From a Dainty Sandwich to a Full MealOpen 7 A. M. to 12 P. M.READER’S CAMPUS DRUG STOREOpposite Burton Cafirt