Vol. 37. No. 18. Price 3 Cents\isli'i W illiam DouglasDelivers MoodyLecture TonightHutchins Introduces YaleLaw Professor, Memberof SEC.William O. Douglas, member of theUnited States Securities and Ex¬change Commission, will deliver thefirst William Vaughn Moody founda¬tion lecture on “Salvaging CapitalWaste” in Leon Mandel Hall tonightat 8:15. President Robert M. Hutch¬ins will introduce the speaker.Tickets for the lecture are stillavailable at the Information desk inthe Press building. There is no ad¬mission charge, but admission musthe by guest ticket.Among the box holders for tonightwill be Vice-President Frederic Wood¬ward. Mr. and Mrs, James M. Stifler,Dean Harry A. Bigelow, Mrs. ErnstFreund, Mr. and Mrs. Wilber G. Katz,Mr. Edward Levi, Mr. and Mrs. Wil¬loughby Walling, and Mr. and Mrs.John Nef.Foundation Established in 1917The purpose of the lecture founda¬tion established in 1917 by an anon¬ymous donor in honor of WilliamVaughn Moody, nationally knownpoet and at one time a member of theUniversity faculty, is to give the stu¬dents an opportunity to come in touchwith “minds and large subjects.”Douglas’ CareerReceiving his education at WhitmanCollege in Walla Walla, Washington,Douglas began his career as instruc¬tor in a high school in Yakima, Wash¬ington. Later he went to New Yorkas editor of Columbia’s Law Review.There he was awarded his LL.B. de¬gree in 1925.Entering a private law office inNew York City, Douglas was admit¬ted to the bar in 1926. After prac¬ticing law for a short time he re¬turned to Columbia as a lecturer inIjiw. In 1928 he was called to Yaleas .\ssociate Professor of Law, fouryears later becoming the Yale Sterl¬ing Professor of Law.As a member of the Yale Instituteof Human Relations, Douglas becameinterested in bankruptcy, collabora¬ting with the United States Depart¬ment of Commerce in bankruptcystudies. He received a leave of absencefrom Yale as commissioner and be¬came director of protective commit¬tee study on the Securities and Ex¬change Commission in 1934.Music ProfessorWrites Featurefor PhoenixThe second issue of the new Phoen¬ix, with a new price of 15 cents, goeson sale tomorrow. Featured is anarticle by Herbert Schwartz, instruc¬tor in the department of Music. Theprincipal theme of the article is anexamination of the nature of UltimateBelief and its proper objects, inquir¬ing into what happens when this be¬lief is prevented from its proper ob¬ject. Faculty members, who have ad¬judged the article “significant”, ex-I)ressed interest in the five intellectu¬al superstitions named by the author.Japanese Geisha girls are discussedby Dennis McEvoy, who was an Amer¬ican delegate to the Japanese-Ameri¬can Student Congress in Tokio, andwho reveals that the girls, contraryto public belief, do not belong to theoldest profession in the world.Other articles include “Rooms,”which is the second of a series writ¬ten by Griffith Fleming, and whichdescribes rooms in Los Angeles; and“Arab Strike,” by Richard Lindheim,who shows that Zionistic ideas andArab aspirations are compatible. “Ol¬ympian’s Return” is a description ofthe Olympics as told by Bill Graber,Olympian pole vaulter, to HenryReese.Gerty the Go-Getter returns tosling the dirt this month, and TayloeHannaford and Henry Reese join Sid¬ney Hyman, editor, in writing “Ink¬pot.” The cover drawing, by HenryReese, has a background of Gilbertand Sullivan’s “Patience,” which is atake-off on aesthetic shams, and por¬trays Governor Alfred M. Landongarbed in sunflowers and flowingrobes.Other features are a poem by Win¬ston Ashley, drawings by Aaron Lid-ov, and an article on Phillip LaFol-lette. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1936Committee SignsAnson Weeks toPlay at I-F BallArrangements have been complet¬ed for Anson Weeks to furnish themusic for the annual Interfraternityball which is to be held as usual onThanksgiving eve, November 25, atthe Medinah Athletic Club. Follow¬ing last year’s example the dance willbe open only to fraternity men.This famous band was contacted byCharles Axelson, who is in charge ofarrangements for the affair. As theyare to be in Chicago on that date, hewas able to sign them for their onlyChicago appearance this season. .At present, the Weeks aggregationis holding forth in a prominent Minne¬apolis night spot, and broadcastingnightly over a Minneapolis station.While fulfilling engagements at the“Aragon” and the “Trianon” Week’sband achieved the favor of many ofChicago’s younger set.Financial arrangements will behandled again as they were last yearwith the expenses being pro-ratedamong the fraternities in relation tothe number of actives and pledges ineach organization.Again this year there will be onlyone non-fraternity man present, asthe freshman bringing in the mostsubscriptions to the Cap and Gownwill be permitted to attend the ball.Ballantine toHead RallyYoung Republicans Aidedby Faculty Supporters ofLandon.A giant Landon-Knox rally, featur¬ing Arthur A. Ballantine, former Un¬der Secretary of the Treasury, speak¬ing on “A Rendezvous with Debt” isscheduled for tomorrow evening at8:30 in Mandel Hall, under the spon¬sorship of the Young RepublicansClub.Ballentine will be introduced by oneof the group of fourteen Universityprofessors who yesterday announcedtheir support of Landon. Also pres¬ent on the stage will be the othermembers of this group. ProfessorsAndrew C.McLaughlin, Arthur H.Compton, Henry Gordon Gale, GeorgeF. Dick, Harry A. Bigelow, Edgar J.Goodspeed, William N. Mitchell, Rol-lo L. Lyman, Gilbert A. Bliss, Leon¬ard E. Dickson, Fay-Cooper Cole, Rol-lin T. Chamberlin, William A. Nitze,and Anton J. Carlson.According to an announcement bythe committee in charge, the largestcopy of the preamble of the Consti¬tution of the United States ever dis¬played will be on exhibition in Man-del Hall during the rally.Being Under Secretary of the’Treasury under Ogden Mills and inactive charge during the bankingcrisis of 1933, Ballentine is consider¬ed by the Republican group as an es¬pecially able speaker on the debt sit¬uation.Edwin Sibley, president of theYoung Republican’s Club indicatedyesterday he was encouraged by thestatement of these fourteen profes¬sors, and that the local organizationswill launch an intensive drive toswing University voters to the Re¬publican banner.Plays at BallAnson Weeks... Greeks will be Dancin’ tvith An¬son” on Thanksgiving Eve. Four ClassicsPresented byFilm SocietyLionel Barrymore, WilliamHart, Mary Pickford Fea¬tured in Movies.Launching their second film revivalprogram. The University Film So¬ciety will today show four earlyAmerican films, significant in the de¬velopment of modern cinema tech¬nique, at the Oriental Institute.Featured on the four-film showwill be “America’s Sweetheart,” star¬ring Mary Pickford, in one of herearliest films, “The New York Hat,”made in 1912 by D. W. Griffith, andco-starring Lionel Barrymore and thethen ‘teen-aged girl’s half-brother,Jack Pickford. The first great west¬ern picture, “The Fugitive,” withWilliam S. Hart, greatest of all the“open spaces” heroes, will be repletewith villains, sweet heroine and glint¬eyed hero, and typical nickelodeon“hurry” music.Also on the program will be “AFool There Was,” starring the great¬est of movie vamps, Theda Bara.The fourth picture will be an earlyMack Sennett bathing-beauty com¬edy, with such great stars as WallaceBeery, Chester Conklin, Gloria Swan¬son and Ben Turpin—all of whommade their start under the come¬dian’s banner.A feature of today’s showings,which will be held promptly at 3:30and 8:30 p.m., will be a short ten-minute address delivered during theprogram’s intermission, at which timecomments will be given on the per¬sonalities, techniques and develop¬ments in today’s pictures. Thespeaker at today’s showing will be C.Sharpless Hickman, Assistant direc¬tor of the University Film Society.For the succeeding three programsit is planned to have the three Fac¬ulty members of the Society’s Ad¬visory Council deliver the talks. Dr.Fred Eastman, Professor of Dramaat the Chicago Theological Seminary,will speak at next week’s program,which will be given over to D. W.Griffith’s “Intolerance,” and Dr. LeonCarnovsky, of the Graduate LibrarySchool will speak at the fourth pro¬gram, which is devoted to “The Filmand Contemporary Life.” Speaker atthe fifth program will be Dr. FredB. Millett, Associate Professor Eng¬lish.Release CorrectedFigures on RecentCampus Straw VoteThe following are the correct figuresfor the given classifications partain-ing to the campus straw vote takenlast week.Due to an error inaccurate figureswere printed in the detailed tabula¬tions of the vote for the Freshman,Sophomore, Junior-Senior and Gradu¬ate divisions. The following are cor¬rect:ROOSEVELT LANDONFreshmen . . . . 187 146Sophomore . . . , . 218 119Junior-Senior . . 393 184Graduate . . . . 449 161Unclassified . . . 173 114TOTAL . . . . 1420 724BROWDER THOMASFreshmen . . . . 19 32Sophomore . . . . 17 30Junior-Senior . . 75 67Graduate . . . 91 72Unclassified . . 3 5TOTAI . 205 206These figures contradict an observa¬tion gained from the erroneous num¬bers printed Friday, At that time itwas noted that underclassmen showedheavily Landon, while older studentswere predominantly pro-Roosevelt.Since the figures cited were only forthe female underclass vote, the obser¬vation was false as the above cor¬rected table indicates.The above changes, however, do notaffect the final poll numbers of thecandidates. And as may be seen, thetotals check with the total number ofballots cast—2,566.Other figures cited in Friday’schart are correct. In many cases thenumbers relative to the “unclassified”division were not printed, and so asimple addition of figures will net thereader a conflicting total. Sociologists Verify Resultsof Daily Maroon Straw PollRoosevelt ‘^Slippery Liberal” SaysCarlson in Interview with MaroonBreaking the seeming conspiracyof silence among faculty Landonsupporters on campus, Dr. AntonJ. Carlson, chairman of the depart¬ment of physiology yesterday gavereasons for his support. In an ex¬clusive interview with The DailyMaroon. Dr. Carlson elaborated onthe stand taken yesterday by him¬self and thirteen other facultymembers in endorsement of Lan-don’s candidacy, as reported in lo¬cal metropolitan papers.This is the first statement madeto the Maroon by any faculty mem¬ber in support of Landon, despiterepeated attempts on the part ofthe Maroon to obtain such opinions.By ANTON J. CARLSONFrank P. Hixon Distinguished Ser¬vice Professor of Physiology.{Copyright, 1936 byThe Daily Maroon)I am supporting Landon for thepresidency because I have lost confi¬dence in the reliability of Roosevelt.Even if Landon is not elected we needan opposition party in Congress. WeTrude to PresentFourth Lecture inBar Crime SeriesA lecture by Daniel P. Trude of theCook County Circuit Court and a teaat which William 0. Douglas, mem¬ber of the Securities and ExchangeCommission and the University’s'firstMoody lecturer of the year, will be. presented, comprise the highlights onI the week’s docket of the Bar Associa-I tion.I A former student of the Univer¬sity, Judge Trude will return to thecampus Friday to deliver the fourthlecture in the “Crime and Punish¬ment” series being sponsored by theAssociation, The lecture will be givenat the customary time, 3:30, althoughthe place has been changed fromBreasted Hall to Social Science, 122.Educated here, at Dartmouth, andNorthwestern, Trude practiced inChicago from 1904 to 1918 at whichtime he was made judge of the Mu¬nicipal Court. He remained in thisposition until 1929 when he went toRoom, 201, where students will havethe opportunity of meeting and speak¬ing with him.The final lecturer in the Bar As¬sociation series will be Ernest W.Puttkamer, professor of Law. Pro¬fessor Puttkamer is chairman of theChicago Bar Association’s Committeeon Police, Sheriff, and Coroner.His subject has not yet been an¬nounced. need restoration of the responsibilityof Congress rather than presidentialdictatorship. Now there is too muchregimentation. It is not done openly—no dictator calls himself a dictator.More Confidence in LandonI have more confidence in Landonthan I have in Roosevelt, who is aslippery liberal, Landon is an oldprogressive. He was for TheodoreRoosevelt in 1912. I have never yetvoted a straight party ticket.Franklin Roosevelt has some of theearmarks of Bryan, who in 1896 skill¬fully made the same appeals to laborversus capital. I didn’t like it thenand I like it less now because classhatred has been a large factor in pro¬ducing the present situation in Eu¬rope. Any man who appeals mainlyto the emotions and conducts a cam¬paign on the basis of hatred insteadof reasoning is a menace to democ¬racy, I know that employers are notall bad, nor employees all good. Noprogress is made by shifting powerfrom one class to another.Will Restore ConfidenceI think Landon will try to balancethe budget, but promising everyone ajob is political hokum. Landonmeans by that presumably that hewill endeavor to restore confidence tobusiness and stimulate employmentthrough regular business channels.Four years ago I voted for Thomasbecause I thought there was not muchdifference between the two main par¬ties. I think there is a very definitedifference now. It will be a miracleif Landon is elected. If he is, it willmean that a national election cannotbe bought in this country even withfour Billion dollars.Officers Elected byChapel Council; PlanSeries of LecturesAt the first regular meeting of thecurrent year, held Sunday evening inthe home of Dean Gilkey, membersof the Chapel Council selected theirnew presiding officers. HenriettaRybezynski, prominent in chapel ac¬tivities, will serve as president; DanSmith, vice-president and C. Eliza¬beth 'Thompson, secretary-treasurer.The list of new members selectedby the present council is pending ap¬proval of the Board of Social Serviceand Religion at their meeting thisafternoon. The executive committeeof the council is now composed of thethree new officers. Grant Youmans,and Lillie Lehman.As a new council activity for thisseason, religious leaders of the vicin¬ity will bring before the group theirparticular theories of belief. Manyof these talks will be open to theChapel Union as well as the council. Sample OpinionFind Landon Poor Secondto Roosevelt in StudentEsteem.(Copyright, 1936 byThe Daily Maroon)Franklin D. Roosevelt is definitelythe first choice for President amongundergraduates at the University,and his Republican opponent, AlfredM, Landon, runs a poor second. Thisis the finding of a representative polltaken for The Daily Maroon in 31classrooms last week under the super¬vision of Harold F. Gosnell, associateprofessor of Political Science, andSamuel A. Stouffer, professor ofSociology.The results of this poll confirm themajor results of the straw vote con¬ducted by the Maroon, Phoenix, andASU and announced in last Friday’sMaroon. The preferences in the rep-resentative poll were:Per-Number centageRoosevelt 563 55.2Landon ....321 31,5Thomas .... 72 7.1Browder .... 39 3.8Others or no choice.. 24 2.4— —Total ....1019 100.0The preferencesstraw vote were: in the campusPer-Number centageRoosevelt ..1420 55.3Landon ... 724 28,2Thomas ... 206 8.03Browder .. 205 8.02Others ... 11 0.45■ _Total ..2566 100.00Neither Thomas nor Browder faredso well in the representative poll asin the campus straw vote. Each ofthe 1019 undergraduates whose voteswere tabulated in the representativepoll was asked whether he had casthis ballot in the straw vote. Dividingthe representative sample into twogroups—those who cast straw votesand those who did not, it is seen thata larger share of radicals cast strawvotes than of conservatives:Percentage of supportersof a given candidatewho cast straw votesLandon 57.9Roosevelt 61.8Thomas 72.2Browder 92.3“These percentages may be inter¬preted in three ways,” commentedProfessor Stouffer. “They may beindexes of the intensity of feelingwhich the campus supporters of agiven candidate have; they may beindexes of the comparative power ofthe four campus political organiza¬tions to get out their vote; or theymay merely reflect the possibilitythat conservatives, who may feel as( Continued on page 3 )Scientific Sample of OpinionPercentage of votes for presidential candidates cast by undergraduates in the college, divi¬sions, and professional schools, in a representative sample of 31 classes.SCHOOL NUMBEROF VOTERS PERCENTAGE OF VOTES FOR CANDIDATESRoosevelt Landon Thomas Browder Others orNo VoteCollege 590 64.7 32.5 7.1 3.1 2.6All Divisions andProfessional Schools 429 55.9 30.1 7.0 4.0 2.1Biological Sciences 75 64.0 25.3 5.3 4.9 1.4Humanities 88 51.1 36.4 4.5 5.7 2.3Physical Sciences 64 46.9 29.7 10.9 9.4 3.1Social Sciences 81 66.8 18.5 17.3 6.2 1.2Business School 54 44.4 61.9 3.7Law School* 46 71.7 23.9 2.2 2.2Social ServiceAdministration 21 66.6 23.8 4.8 4.8* 67 votes were cast by undergraduate law students, at random, were retained in the representative sample,48 for Roosevelt, 16 for Landon, 1 for Browder, and 2 in order to give the law school its proportionate sharefor others or unmarked. Only 46 of the 67 votes, drawn in the undergraduate total.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1936(^aroojtFOUNDED IN 1901Member 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, 5831 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,REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL AOVERTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.ColUfe Publishtrs Representativ*420 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y.Chicaoo • BOSTON • Ban FranciscoLos ANOELEs • Portland • SeattleBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.. .Advertising ManagerBernice BartelsEl Roy GoldingBernard LevineRobert Rosenfels EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESEdward Fritz Cody PfanstiehlWilliam McNeill Betty RobbinsBUSINESS ASSOCIATESWilliam Rubach Sigmund DanaigerCharles HoyEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSHarris Beck C. Sharpless Hickman Lewis MillerLaura Bergqulst Rex Horton Burt MoyerMaxine Biesenthal Herbert Kalk Audrey NeffEmmett Deadman Henry Kraybill David SchefferBetty Jean Dunlap Byron Miller Marjorie SeifriedSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwayNight Editor: Cody PfanstiehlAssistant: Emmett DeadmanTuesday, October 27, 1936Straw Vote AnalysisTwo questions immediately come to mindwhen one studies the results of the campus pollpublished in last Friday’s Daily Maroon, First,how honest was the balloting in this election?and second, how may the figures be inter¬preted ?It is clear now that the device of markingtuition receipts to prevent any person fromvoting more than once was not a foolproof one.Stuffing of the ballot boxes was easily possibleand it is known that it did occur in several in¬stances. In some cases, ink eradicators wereused to remove the marks on the tuition re¬ceipts ; in others, students presented more thanone receipt for the current quarter or showedreceipts for previous quarters which harrassedpoll clerks failed to detect as invalid. Yet de¬spite these occasional infractions of the votingrules, it is almost certain that nearly all of the2566 ballots cast represented honest votes, andit is probable that what few stuffed ballotsthere were tended to cancel out each other.Professor Stouffer, who served as technicaladvisor to the Maroon on the poll, commentsin this respect: “An interesting check on thehonesty of the Maroon straw vote may be madefrom the representative sample. Assuming thatthe 748 undergraduates voting for Rooseveltin the Maroon straw vote represented 61.8percent of all Roosevelt voters, as the repre¬sentative sample shows, one would estimatethat there are 1291 Roosevelt undergraduatesupporters on campus. Similarly, dividing the449 Landon straw votes by .579 (the percent¬age of Landon supporters on campus who tookpart in the straw vote) one estimates 775 Lan¬don supporters in the undergraduate body; di¬viding 129 Thomas straw votes by ,722, oneestimates 178 Thomas supporters; and dividing111 Browder straw votes by .923, one estimates120 undergraduates favoring Browder.“On this basis, Roosevelt has 54.6 percentof the undergraduate support, Landon 32.8 per¬cent, Thomas 7.5 percent, and Browder 5.1percent, excluding votes for other candidates.The corresponding estimates obtained directlyfrom the representative sample, entirely inde¬pendent of the Maroon straw vote, are Roose¬velt 56.6 percent, Landon 32.3 percent, Thomas7.2 percent, and Browder 3.9 percent. If therehad been much ballot stuffing in the Maroonstraw vote or if the representative sample hadnot been carefully chosen, much larger discrep¬ancies between these two sets of percentageswould have shown up.”The honesty of the straw vote thus havingbeen fairly well established, it is both logicaland pertinent to question the reliability of thepoll as an indicator of the divisions of politicalopinion in the student body. The percentagetotals of each of the four principal candidates in the straw vote were: Roosevelt 55.3, Landon28.2, Thomas 8.03, and Browder 8.02. Whencompared to the percentage totals received bythe same candidates in the representative sam¬ple, it is seen that, while the Roosevelt andThomas figures check rather closely, the Brow¬der percentage is proportionately too high andthe Landon percentage too low in the strawvote. This fact is demonstrated in another wayby figures obtained from the sample showingthat only 57.9 percent of the Landon support¬ers on campus voted in the straw vote (the low¬est percentage for any candidate), while 92.3percent of the Browder advocates cast strawballots.Although Professor Stouffer believes thatthese percentages may be interpreted in anyone of three ways, to us they are merely addi¬tional evidence of the high degree of organiza¬tion existing among the Communist element inthe student body. The strength of this organi¬zation, which must be considered a permanentone, is further emphasized when we note thatthe Browder-for-President Club was the last ofthe political groups to receive official recogni¬tion from the University and that that recog¬nition came only a scant two weeks before thebeginning of the straw vote. We are forced toconclude, therefore, either that in less thantwo weeks’ time the leaders of the Browdercontingent were able to comb the student bodyto the extent that they secured over 90 percentof all Communist sympathizers on campus tocast their votes, or that a permanent organiza¬tion does exist, whether recognized or not bythe University, and that the Communist lead¬ers have definite knowledge of how many andwhich students favor their cause.We leave it to the reader to choose betweenthese alternatives. We wish only to ask thequestion: if such a permanent Communist or¬ganization exists here, will it continue hence¬forth t^wionduct its activities more or less inthe open or will it again go under cover? Byits very nature, the Browder-for-President clubwill cease to exist as an officially recognizedstudent organization after election day, Novem¬ber 3. As a Browder-for-President unit, theCommunists scrupulously abided by all Univer¬sity regulations pertaining to student organi¬zations. We ask: will they continue this strictobservance of University rules and will theyapply for recognition as a Young Communistgroup? We urge them to do so, for we feel thatunder such circumstances, recognition wouldbe granted them. Whatever happens, we shallwatch with considerable interest the policyadopted by the Communists after November 3.The Travelling BazaarBy LEXINGTON GHOSTPAGE IRENE CASTLEJudging mustache races is just a part of the job,and the resulting Botany pond immersion is just anitem in the year’s work for Brad, the genial proprietorof the tonsorial parlor ’neath the Reynolds club. Buttoo much is too much. Last Wednesday a gentlemanentered the clipping shop for a little trimming. Ac-companing him was an animal of somewhat doubtfulheritage and even more doubtful capabilities. “Is hetrained?’’ asked Brad.“Perfectly,” answered the owner. “Never a slip.”And with that he tied the pooch to the coat rack andleft for other parts until his turn should arrive. Therewas a look of indecision on the part of the hound; andthen he succumbed to the inevitable.Brad sniffed disdainfully, the dog was taken for awalk, and the owner returned with a handful of papertowels.SNOW OVER THE CAMPUSThe fact that winter is here with little dribbles ofsnow and semi-darkness bothering 8 o’clock class-go¬ers, reminds us that the weather department has notbeen mentioned in the Maroon since the zero spell oflast winter. At that time the forecasters atop Rosen-wald were stirred out of their lethargy for the firsttime in years by the forecast of a new record low. Theymissed by one point which shattered their prestige foranother year.All of this only reminds us of the almost insurmount¬able difficulties confronting the department. Officialprecipitation records are taken in the little cans be¬tween Beecher and Rosenwald, but the elements are al¬ways against the forecasters. One Sunday morningthey found three inches of precipitation in the bottomof one gauge and yet not a drop of rain fell all night.They claim the records for the whole city of Chicagoare twisted every time there is a campus party.ANCHORS AWEIGHBefore the Princeton-Navy game President Doddasked the students and alumni to refrain from drinkingin an effort to maintain the prestige of college football.After the game groundkeepers found only 12 bottles.Usually they cart away two truckloads of dead ones.A rather dry reception for Navy? Moody LecturerWilliam O. Douglas.. .Salvages capital iva^te.. .will heintrvduced by Hutchms.Lettersto the EditorEditor,The Daily Maroon:“The University of Chicago is anon-political institution. No memberof the faculty has any authority toact as representative of the views ofthe faculty generally or of the Uni¬versity.. .Because of the widespreadnewspaper publicity given to the po¬litical utterances of a few membersof the University of Chicago’s fac¬ulty, we have been told that manypeople hold the erroneous impressionthat these utterances represent thepolitical viewpoint of the Universityof Chicago and its faculty. We wishpublicly to announce that we shallvote for Gov. Landon for presi¬dent of the United States.”So say fourteen distinguished pro¬fessors. I flatter myself that I amone of the “few” members of the fac¬ulty whose “political utterances” arethus referred to. Though I may bewrong. Certainly my “utterances”have had no such “widespread news¬paper publicity” as was given theutterance quoted above. Still, DeanGale has personally suggested to me,in his old forthright fashion, that Iwas giving the University undesira¬ble publicity; so I think he meant meamong others as an utterer.Therefore I venture to w’eloomehim and his co-utterers for Landonto the field of free speech. I am sor¬ry to see the boys line up with Mr.Hearst and the Chicago Tribune; butI would far rather see them stand upfor the Old Deal principles than notstand up at all. There is only onething I wish they had added to theirutterance. When I announce that Iam voting for Roosevelt, I alwaysgive my reasons. I wish the Republi¬can few had given their reasons forvoting for Landon. Or is it that,just as they “have been told” aboutthe utterances of the “few,” so they“have been told” that Landon is theman to vote for? If so, who “told”them? And why is it so importantthat their “utterance” gets not onlywidespread publicity, but first-pagepublicity? Come on, boys, now thatyou have descended from your ivorytowers into the dust and blood of thepolitical arenas, don’t just standthere; take off your coats and fightfor your principles. WHY are youfor Landon?James Weber Linn.THREE MONTHS' COURSEPOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, inttnsive, sUnegraphic course-starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1,Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligatiom—write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEEAUL MOSER. J.D.,PH.S.Regular Courses, open to High School Gra^uates only, may he started any Monday. Dayand Evening. Evening Courses open to men.116 S. Michigan Av«., Chicago, Randolph 4367STUDENTS!!SAVE 1/2 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 Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSDelta Sigma Pi. Commons Room,Haskell Hall at 8:00. James L. Palmerwill discuss “Opportunities in Market¬ing.”WAA. WAA room at 12:30.Wyvern. Alumnae room, Ida NoyesHall at 3:30.YWCA. Settlement group. YWCAroom, Ida Noyes Hall at 3:30. MissMarguerite Sylla, speaker.Pi Lambda Theta. YWCA room, IdaNoyes Hall at 7:30.Mathematics Club. Eckhart 207 at4:30. Dr. Bengt Stromgren will speakon “The Theory of Internal Consti¬tution of the Stars.”Board of Social Service and Religi¬on. University Chapel at 4:30.LECTURESPublic Lecture (downtown). Ful¬lerton Hall, the Art Institute, at 6:45.Associate Professor Fred B. Millettwill speak on “The American NovelToday: Exoticism.”I*ublic Lecture (Division of the So¬cial Scienes). Social Science room 122at 3:30. Frederick Eggan will speakon “Anthropology; Culture HistoryDerived from the Study of LivingPeoples”.Public Lecture (William VaughnMoody Lecture Foundation). MandelHall at 8:15. William 0. Douglas,member of the Securities and Ex¬change Commission will speak on“Salvaging Capital Waste.”Bar Association Tea. Social Science201, at 3. In honor of William O.Douglas, member of the Securitiesand Exchange Commission.ATHLETICSIntra-Mural games. Delta league at3: Beta Theta Pi vs. Alpha Delta Phi;Phi Sigma Delta vs. Phi Psi “B”.Gamma league at 4: Phi Kappa Psivs. Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Beta Deltavs. Pi Lambda Phi.MISCELLANEOUSFilm Revival (University Film So¬ciety). Oriental Institute at 3:30 and8:30. Mary Pickford and Lionel Bar¬rymore in “The New York Hat”; Wil¬liam S. Hart in “The Fugitive”. Ad¬mission 35c in the afternoon, and 50cin the evening.Federal Music Project Concert. In¬ternational House at 8:30. Admission25c. Brooks, HornerTalk to Votersat SymposiumWith Governor Henry Hormr, Re¬publican candidate C. W a y 1 a n dBrooks and State Senator T. V. Smithheadlining the list of speakers, fourlocal non-partisan organizations lastevening presented a symposium onnational and state political issues inthe International House Theater.After an enthusiastic greeting bythe audience, Governor Horner spokein a simple, conversational manner,briefly about the accomplishmentsmade during the past 45 months ofhis administration. He told of theeconomies effected in governmentalexpenses, of abolishing the state prop¬erty tax, of reducing the public util¬ities rates, and of securing the safetyof the insurance companies of thestate.Received with a combination ofcheers, boos, and laughter, C. Way-land Brooks, Republican gubernator¬ial candidate, told briefly some of theglories of Illinois, pointing out thatthe nation’s forefathers foresaw someof the tryanny which might come asa result of centralized authority. Inreferring to those who desire a changein government, Brooks declared, “Wewill change them, not the govern¬ment on November 3.”State Senator T. V. Smith, chair¬man of the University department ofPhilosophy, Elmer Schnackenberg,candidate for state representative,and Martin Fisher, Socialist candi¬date for United States senator dis¬cussed the national political issues.TAKl VMA 6ALTo A MowTheHITCHINGPOSTOpen 24 Hours a DayWAFFLECHEESEBURGERCREAM OMELETSTEAK1552 E. 57lh St.N. W. Corner Stoncy Iiland Tbere are lots of pleassoitditngs you can do with themoney you’ll save by eat«ing at Younker’s regtilarly.CompMm UmckRon 35'CompMR Miner.. 65'RESTAURANTS51 E. Chicago Ave.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.501 Davit Street, EvanstonBe anEARLY BIRD!There are never enough RYTEX CHRISTMAS CARDSto go around.. .because last minute shoppers make itimpossible to produce and supply the demand. If youwish to save disappointment, we suggest that you or¬der your RYTEX CHRISTMAS CARDS this week...the price, as of old, is only $1.00 for 50 including yourname on the cards and 50 envelopes to match. Seethe new 1936 samples and order early before the rushstarts.U of C Bookstore5802 Ellis AvenueTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27. 1936 Page ThreeVerify Resultsof Straw Poll;Sample CampusSociologists Take AccurateCross-Section of StudentPolitical Opinion.( Continued from page 1 )(keply as radicals, tend to take lessseriously a campus ‘election’ whichhas no practical consequences. Atall events, the results tend to con¬firm the belief that campus radicalsare more likely to speak up, in pro¬portion to their numbers, than camp¬us conservatives.” ,The representative poll showedthat Roosevelt was the favoriteamong the undergraduates in theCollege, in all divisions, and in allj)i-ofessional schools except the Schoolof Business, where Landon had a.slight lead. Roosevelt polled hislargest pluralities in the Law Schooland in the Division of the BiologicalSciences. Thomas and Browder werestrongest in the Divisions of the So¬cial and Physical Sciences. TheStrong leftist tendency among students in the natural sciences mayseem surprising, yet Landon failedto carry a single science class whichhad more than ten students.Students who applied for NY Ajobs this quarter are overwhelminglyfor Roosevelt or left-wing candidates.I.andon received only about one outof every eight NYA votes. The per¬centage distribution of 233 NYAvotes was:Roosevelt 63.9Landon 12.9Thomas 11.6Browder 9.9Others or no choice 1.7Total 100.0The most conservative studentstended to be those not living in CookCounty, who have paid their tuitionfet>s in full and not in installments,and who have not applied for NYAjobs. Among 186 such students, thepercentage distribution of votes was:Roosevelt ...41.4Landon ...45.7Thomas ... 6.5Browder ... 1.6Others or no choice.. ... 4.8Total ..100.0Men and women cast about thesame j)ercentage of votes for Roose¬velt, but Landon was slightly morepopular among the women thanamong the men, who supported left-wing candidates in larger propor¬tions.The representative poll was takenin .31 classrooms on Thursday andFriday of last week. The 24 classespolled at 10 on Thursday werefound not to have enough studentsmajoring in the Divisions of thePhysical and Biological Sciences.This deficiency was remedied bypolling five additional 10 o’clock Fri¬day classes which also had met at thesiime hour on Thursday. Two Fri¬day classes in the Law and MedicalSchools, containing students whocould not be reached by the Thursdaypoll, also were included.An attempt was made to representeach of the divisions and professionalsclools by about one-third of its un¬dergraduate total. This ideal pro¬portion was not quite obtained, butthe errors tended to compensate;consequently each candidate’s shareof the total vote was within one percent of the share he would have re¬ceived if the College, divisional, andprofessional school votes, by sex,were mathematically adjusted togive each group its proper weight.Further scientific checks indicatethat the sample of 1019 undergradu¬ates is a fair sample of the entireundergraduate body. That most stu¬dents co-operated sincerely is sug¬gested by the fact that only one ortwo “joke” ballots were returned.No effort was made to samplegraduate students, as it was impossi¬ble to poll enough of the numeroussmall seminars for the more advanc¬ed graduate students. Hutchins Outlines His Ideal forUniversity Curriculum in ArticleBy WILLIAM McNEILLWith articles in the current issuesof both the Atlantic Mon^ly andHarper’s, President Robert MaynardHutchins, comes to the defence of aneducation aimed at the inculcation ofknowledge rather than opinion, thecultivation of the intellectual virtuesrather than money-earning power.In the article in the Atlantic, “AReply to Professor Whitehead,”Hutchins discusses the problem ofhow the universities of America cangive intellectual leadership to themodern world, a question whichWhitehead had taken up in an articlelast month.Agreeing with Whitehead that theuniversities must be “married to ac¬tion,” Hutchins g;oes on to disagreeas to the nature of the marriage. Vo¬cational schools should teach “sys¬tematized understanding,” not “tech¬nical routines” which have constitut¬ed their subject matter in the past.Confining the CurriculumIn order to avoid trivialization, thecurriculum should be confined to the“tradition of learning,” primarily theliberal arts, the classics, and math¬ematics.As to the relation between knowl¬edge and action in the world. “Thepurpose for which any action wasstudied or taught would be to in¬crease our understanding of that ac¬tion and what it implies. The prim¬ary object of our study would be togive the student a grasp of the theoryof the discipline,” not “vocationalpractice.”Matters of knowledge must be putfirst in the curriculum, with the re¬sult that “matters of fact, which areprobable, would be subordinate toand illustrative of laws and relationsbetween ideas, which are knowledge.”Only so can the unity of educationbe achieved which Whitehead hadpointed out as needful.Theology Goes OutEspecially interesting to campusfollowers of Aquinas is the statementin connection with the discussion ofthe unifying principle for the curri¬culum, “The mediaeval universitiesfound order through theology. I donot see that we can do so.” This lookslike a disavowal of the neo-scholasticpanacea.The Harper’s article is the secondYearbook ArrangesSubscription Contest | of a series based on the Storrs lec¬tures which President Hutchins de¬livered at Yale last spring. He dis¬cusses the content of a general edu¬cation, and pleads for a restorationof the classics and liberal arts to thecurriculum, which have been dis¬placed by a disproportionate develop¬ment of the empirical sciences.Education properly is “the cultiva¬tion of the intellect. The cultivationof the intellect is the same for allgood men in all societies. It is more¬over the good for which all othergoods are but means.” Education isonly in small part confined to aca¬demic walls, but that within the wallsshould be confined to the intellectualtraining of the young, and leave ex¬perience to the wider field of theopen world.Rigid CurriculumFree choice of curriculum shouldnot be permitted the students, sincethey cannot know' what constitutesa sound education. Individual varia¬tions should be allowed for by varia¬tions in method, not content. Techni¬cal work is justified only as a methodof teaching general principles.The President further urges astudy of the classics, grammar,rhetoric, logic, and mathematics Theaim of the curriculum is to “reducethe elements of our common humannature.” Without a common intellec¬tual heritage “a university must re¬main a series of disparate schools anddepartments, united by nothing savethat they have the same presidentand board of trustees,” and only sucha curriculum as outlined above cangive such unity.In conclusion President Hutchinsholds that the only barrier to theestablishment of the ideal curriculumis the conservatism of professors whohave been brought up in a differentti'adition, and would oppose any such!radical shift. CLASSIFIED ADTUXEDO—reasonable price, goodcondition, size 36-38 for person 6feet tall, can be shortened. PhoneTriangle 5073.forAnd Fun!Party Goods, Decorations,Coshunes and just-for-hm itemsore here in great variety. Seethem today.Crepe Paper Costumes 25cMasks 5c & 10cNoisemokers 5c & 10cParty Hats 5c & 10cCut-outs oi witches,skeletons, owls, etc...5c to 25cTABLE COVERS, NAPKINSPLACE CARDS, TALLIES, ETC.CREPE PAPER - STREAMERSCONFETTI and allHALLOWE'EN ITEMSWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. PhoneOpen Evenings Dor. 4800^aLmaccan OvercoatOne, and only one, freshman manwill have the privilege of attendingthe Interfraternity Ball. This honorgoes to the freshman selling the mostsubscriptions to the Cap and Gownbetween now and November 20, itwas announced yesterday by HerbertLarson, business manager of the Capand Gown.All freshmen interested are invitedto call at the Cap and Gown officein Lexington Hall after 3:30.According to Genevieve Fish, edi¬tor, approximately thirty freshmensold subscriptions to the 1936 Capand Gown A large percentage of thetotal sales of the book were attrib¬utable to their efforts, she commented,adding that she wanted to contradictan impression current among somefreshmen that they may sell only tomembers of their own class A TRUEOVERCOATVALUETERESA DOLAN INVITES YOUDance Every Friday NightPERSHING BALLROOMS.W. Cor. 64th & Cottage Grove. Adm. 40cERNST TUCKER’S MusicPrivate & Class Lessons Children & AdultsStudio, 1545 E. 63rd St. Hyd. Park 30803 Months’ ShorthandCourse for CollegeGraduates andUndergraduatesIdeal for taking notes at college orfor spare-time or full time positions.Classss start the first of January.April, July, and October.Call, write, or telephoneState 1881 for complete facts.The Gregg College6 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago Cold weather comfortdemands this fabric...university fashions de¬mand this sweepingbalmaccan model. Mil¬itary collar ... slashpockets...raglan sleeves.. .exclusive patterns.An untra-smart coat togive you all thewarmth you need. Wedo not like to preachprice... but we're surethat you could not dup¬licate this coat if youwere to pay ten dollarsmorelTHE J-R WAFFLE AND SANDWICH SHOP1202 EAST 55thWHERE QUALITY IS HIGHER THAN PRICEWAFFLES — SANDWICHES — NOON AND EVENING DINNERSSEE YOUR FOOD PREPARED r teCLOTHING CO.837-39 EAST 63rd STREETOpen Every Evening “The brave and clear platform adopted by this Demo¬cratic convention, to which I heartily subscribe, sets forththat government in a modern civilization has certain in¬escapable obligations to its citizens, among which are theprotection of the family and the home, the establishmentof a democracy of opportunity and aid to those overtakenby disaster.”FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT,Acceptance Speech, 1936.Forward withROOSEVELTlInsure Your ProsperityVote la DemocraticFor President For Recorder of DeedsFRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT EDWARD J. KAINDLFor Vice-PresidentJOHN N. GARNERFor United States SenatorJAMES HAMILTON LEWISFor GovernorHENRY HORNERFor Lieutenant-GovernorJOHN STELLEFor Secretary of StateEDWARD J. HUGHESFor Auditor of Public AccountsEDWARD J. BARRETTFor State TreasurerJOHN C. MARTINFor Attorney GeneralOTTO KERNERFor Representative in CongressState-at-LargeE. V. CHAMPIONLEWIS M. LONGFor University of IllinoisTrustees(Vote for three)LOUIS C. MOSCHELJAMES M. CLEARYHOMER MAT ADAMSJudge of Circuit Court(To Fill Vacancy)ROBERT JEROME DUNNEFor States AttorneyTHOMAS J. COURTNEYFor County TreasurerHORACE G. LINDHEIMER For Clerk of the Circuit CourtJOHN E. CONROYFor Clerk of the Superior CourtVICTOR L. SCHLAEGERFor CoronerFRANK J. WALSHFor Member of Board of Appeals(to fill vacancy)PAUL DRYMALSKIFor Trustees of the SanitaryDistrict(Vote for three)D. A. HORANTHOMAS F. BYRNEPAUL V. COLIANNIFor Bailiff Municipal CourtALBERT J. HORANFor Clerk Municipal CourtJOSEPH L. GILLFor Chief Justice MunicipalCourtJOHN J. SONSTEBYFor Associate Judge ofMunicipal CourtTHOMAS GREENCHARLES S. DOUGHERTYJOSEPH A. GRABEREDWARD S. SCHEFFLERJUSTIN F. McCarthyJAY A. SCHILLERJOHN V. McCORMICKERWIN J. HASTENOSCAR S. CAPLANLEON EDELMANMICHAEL TREMKOJOHN T. ZURISFor Representative in CongressDist.1 ARTHUR W. MITCHELL2 RAYMOND S.McKEOUGH3 EDWARD A. KELLY4 HARRY P. BEAM5 ADOLPH J. SABATH6 THOMAS J. O’BRIEN7 LEONARD W. SCHUETZ8 LEO KOCIALKOWSKI9 JAMES McANDREWS10 CHAS. J. WIGHTMANElection November 3rdTHE DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF COOK COUNTYP. A. NASH, CHAIRMANDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1936permitting, the fourtK annual run-ning of the relays will be held onStagg ^ield Thursday afternoon at3:45.Alpha Delta Phi emerged the vic¬tor from the relays last fall, and areone of the favorites to cop the meetthis year. They led the second placePhi Psis by seven points, but due tothe loss of several men and the addedstrength of the Beta entry they willhave a battle to retain the crowm.There will be two track and twoGridLeaksBy WILLIAM McNEILLDoes football as it is organized inthe colleges today have any rightfulplace in institutions of higher learn¬ing along with all the accompanyingballyhoo, partisanship and profes¬sionalism?The aspect of football as a bigbusiness has often been enlarged up¬on, and the fact that many collegessupport their entire athletic programfrom the football gate receipts makesit inevitable that coaches who seetheir salaries dependent on winningteams, and enthusiastic alumni whosee the “honor” of the alma mater atstake in the outcome of the “biggame,” will subsidize athletes to bringthem to their colleges.The problem was brought into re¬lief by the action of the SoutheasternConference making athletic abilityone of the recognized criteria inaward of scholarships and otherforms of financial aid, “with the un¬derstanding that such assistanceshall never be granted primarily asa reward for athletic services.”Obviously there is nothing intrins¬ically wrong with paying of athletes.The argu ment that the playersspend much time and effort on thegame and should receive some com¬pensation in return, seems to carryweight, at least at first glance.The fallacy lies in assuming thatthe game can be justified on anybasis other than the fun the playerscan get out of the game. What hashappened on nearly all campuses isthat the benefit of the spectatorsrather than that of the players hasbeen put first, due to the vital partthat gate receipts play in the ath¬letic setup.With the long daily practiceswhich leave the players too exhaust¬ed to study effectively, all year-roundpractices, the intensive study of op¬ponents’ tactics, and development ofcomplicated plays, football has beencarried so far that proficiency in thegame is a full time job. With thegame directed toward the players’profit, scouting would be abandoned,recruiting and subsidization aband¬oned.The problem of restoration of per¬spective on the values of the gamehas begun to be felt at a number ofinstitutions, and the University isplaying a leading role in the returnto a player-orientated game. Thepursuit of the policy means anabandonment of the winning team asthe ideal and, more painful, thereality as well.The big problem facing the Uni¬versity is that of finding opponentswith similar ideals of the game in theMiddle West. A sharp difference ofopinion between the members of theBig Ten as to whether gate receiptsor the benefit of the players is theproper end of college football has al¬ready manifested itself.The resolute pursuance of the Maroons Drillon Signals forWisconsin TiltA long signal drill was the orderof the day in the Maroon practice ses¬sion yesterday afternoon as CoachShanghnessy started his final prepar-tions for the tilt with Wisconsin atCamp Randall Saturday. Both teamswill be pointing for their initial con¬ference victory, and although the Ma¬roons are rated as underdogs they arehoping to upset the dopebucket andbreak into the victory column.Shaughnessy also stressed defenseagainst the Notre Dame style of playwhich Purdue employed in downingChicago and which is also used byWisconsin. Still experimenting withbackfield combinations. Shag hadthree sophomores in the quartet doingthe ball lugging. Besides veteran“Duke” Skoning the other membersof the backfield were Sherman, Val-orz, and Hamity.Another Maroon was added to theinjured list Saturday when DickWheeler, understudy to center and co¬captain Sam Whiteside broke two fin¬gers. It is not known yet whether ornot this will prevent his seeing action,but indications are that “iron-man”Sam Whiteside will be called upon togo the whole route. In case of his be¬ing injured. Bob Sass is next in lineto take care of the snapback position.Meanwhile at Camp Randall CoachHarry Stuhldreher and his aides arebusily preparing for the Maroon inva¬sion. A great deal of time is beingspent on pass defense and linesmen are being given tackling practice toenable them to stop the runs of slip¬pery Sol Sherman, Maroon back.Wisconsin had to inaugurate an en¬tirely new style of play this year, butevery game has seen them improvingin the Notre Dame style. Althoughthey have not won a game the moraleof the Badgers is high, and headed byJankowski they are counting uponwinning the Maroon fracas to revengelast year’s defeat at Stagg field. Favor Betas, AlphaBelts to Win FallI-M Track EventLester Cook, intramural managerof the Fall relays, yesterday empha¬sized the fact that all entries forthe event must be in the Intramuraloffice Wednesday afternoon. Weather field events on the afternoon’s sched¬ule. On the cinderpath there willbe competition for six man sprintteams in the three-eights mile relayand for four man teams in a halfmile relay.The running broad jump and th(twelve pound shot are on the cardfor the field. In each of these, thethree best marks from each organiza¬tion will be averaged and this average will be u.sed to compute thewdnner.Dekes Beat Psi U^^B” 7-0; Owl FirstTeam Shows ClassWith a brilliant passing attackworking in superb style, the Psi U“A” team defeated Alpha Delt “B”,19-0. While the Psi U “A” was jubi¬lantly marching toward victory, thePsi U “B” was losing to the Deke’s,7-0.Sprinting fifteen yards. Bell of theOwls tallied first, but they failed toconvert the extra point. Bickel, Gor¬don, and Cochrane also went over thestripe for touchdowns, with Cochranealso catching a pass for an extrapoint. Flynn shone brightly for thePsi U “A”. The Alpha Delts usedone substitution, while the Psi U’shad two replacements. This victoryis the third straight for the Psi U’s,including one forfeiture.In the Deke-Psi U “B” game, Lewiswent over for the Dekes on a shortpass, also making the extra markerfor the only score of the game. TheDeke winning streak has reachedthree straight, with yesterday’s vic¬tory.The Zeta Beta Tau-Kappa Sigmatussle which was scheduled for yes¬terday, has been postponed by mutualconsent.ideal will involve the severance offootball relations with at least someof the Big Ten schools, and perhapscomplete abandonment of the con¬ference.HAVE YOUHEARD?PHOENIXhas flown down to15Out Tomorrow AMUSEMENT SECTIONTemple Israel toPresent Series ofUnique MusicalesIn announcing a program of “FourNights in Music”, The Temple IsaiahIsrael, Hyde Park Boulevard atGreenwood Avenue, follows the leadof many other religious centres whichhave widened the sphere of their cul¬tural activities by including concertseries on their yearly programmes.But this congregation has gonefarther than the others in that theyhave arranged their first musical sea¬son to embrace remarkable soireeswhich will include not one, but sev¬eral great artists at each perfor¬mance.Opening on November 17th, the firstevening will bring Carlos Morelli andan ensemble from the Chicago CityOpera Company, plus young DanielSaidenberg, who recently resigned asfirst ’cellist of the Chicago SymphonyOrchestra.Mr. Morelli, who is not Italian, butChilean, has for several seasons beenthe featured baritone of Chicago’sopera, and last year was chosen bythe Metropolitan Opera to round outits coterie of American baritones. Hissuccess there during the past seasonwas phenomenal, and it is expectedthat his Isaiah Israel appearance willbe widely hailed, for it is rarely thathe gives concert performances.Daniel Saidenberg’s desertion ofhis desk at the Symphony, it appears,is to give him a chance to concen¬trate upon his success as a conductor,in which capacity he will this yearappear with the opera. But as a’cellist he will long be remembered bythose Chicago patrons who for thepast several years have marveled atthe technical skill and emotionalwarmth of this very young musician.The second program, on December15th, will bring three noteworthies:tenor Armand Tokatyan, violinist Is-adore Berger and harpist Alberto Sal-vi. Tokatyan, whose Ravinia andCivic Opera House appearances havebeen too numerous to chronicle, is oneof the greatest of lyric tenors, and hissuccess in Puccini works places himamong the very small group of per¬fect interpreters of this Italian’s op¬eras. His work in last year's produc¬tion of “La Fiamma” was so electri¬fying as to be remembered for manyyears to come.Salvi, whom many have consideredthe greatest of harpists, is too seldomheard in concert, and there will bemany who will be amazed to find theadequacy of this instrument as a soloperformer. The confinement of theharp to the drawing-rooms of the so¬cially elite is a thing which too manyhave come to take for granted. Thevirtuosity of Salvi will soon makethem realize its great concert scope.Two further programs, featuringMischakoff, concertmeister of the Chi¬cago Symphony, and Segovia, thegreatest of guitarists, will be an¬nounced later in this column. Ticketsfor the concerts may be purchased atthe Information Bureau in the PressBuilding, or at the door before theconcert for $1.00. (Advt.) DREXEL THEATRE858 E. 63rdTuesday and WednesdayTwo Against the WorldHumphrey Bozart-Beverly RobertsFrolic Theatre55th & ELLIS AVE.Tue., Oct. 27Warner’s Great Spectacle“Green Pastures”Wed. & Thur., Oct. 28 & 29Robert Taylorin‘Always Tomorrow”TONIGHT at 8:30GREAT DRAMA ... hotwith 1936 problems andspeech. A DRAMATICTHRILLER...a wallopingevening in the theater.”—LLOYD LEWIS,Daily News.NORMAN BEL GEDDES PrcMitU“DEADEND” CASTOP70Br SIDNEY KINGSLEYSTUDEBAKER418 S. MICHIGAN. Ph. HAR. 2792NIGHTS (Incl. Snn.). 55c to $2.75MATS. WED. & SAT.. 55c to $2.20GRAND a^olsE NOWLAST 2 WEEKSHeld over to Sat., Nov. 7MESSRS SHUBERTpresentVictor Herbert'sWORLD FAMOUSOPERETTA MASTERPIECENaughtyMariettaA Stkge Production—Not a Motion PicturewithILSE MARVENGAROBERT SHAFERVIOLET CARLSONHARRY K. MORTONBARTLETT SIMMONSGreat SinginK and Dancing EnsembleHear Your Victor HerbertSuperbly Sung Favorites '“ITALIAN STREET SONG”“SWEET MYSTERY OF LIFE”TM FALLING IN LOVE WITHSOMEONE”Nights Rn-^9* RftlrMain Floor^i'^U^*' DOlC.ji, |i.5|Pop.Wed.-Sat. Mats. 50-75-$l-$1.50SEATS NOW AT INFORMATION BUREAU—H. O. HOEFFNERRosa PonselleSECOND CONCERTStage Arts Association, Inc.ORCHESTRA HALL8:20 P. M., FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 30Seats: 75c; $1.25; $1.75; $2.25\ EVERYONE TALKS about“PRIDE & PREJUDICE”A SMASH HITSeats Now on Sale for 3 WeeksSubscription Ended, All Seats for AllPerformances at Box Office at Regu¬lar PricesMax Gordon Present.s the ComedyPRIDE &PREJUDICEJane Austen's Great Novel Dram¬atized by Helen JeromeCHICAGO CRITICS ALL AGREE“SUCCESS” “SUCCESS”Collins. Tribune Stevens, American•St^CCESS” “SUCCESS”Lewis, News Frink. Herald-Exam.•SUCCESS” “SUCCESS”Borden. Times Cassidy, Jour, Com.HARRISEves. Except Sun.. $2.50, $2, $t.5t, $1Mat.. Wed. & Sat., $2, $1.50, $1, plus tax SELWYN - Mat. Sat., 50c-$1.50Nights, 50c-$2.S0“Best mystery tale I’ve seen orread in seasons,”..... This one oughtto stay in the loop until the dateof its title.”—ASHTON STEVENS. AMERICANTHE NIGHT OFolAlVUARYPaid for your vote oa JvyehoacB from nadienu aterery perfarmanee.Women on Jury Sat. Mats.“Most interesting trial and murdermystery play of many seasonsCast admirably selected.”—CHARLES COLLINS. TRIBUNE“Novel and arresting melodramaExcellent cast.”—CAROL FRINK. HERALD-EXAMINER*“■• 50c, $1, $1.50All PerformancesChicago City Opera Co.JASON F. WHITNEY. President PAUL LONGONE, Gen'l ManagerGALA OPENING PERFORMANCESaturday Evening, Oct. 31, 8 P. M.“LA FIAMMA”—last season’s great success(By Respighi)RAISA, LA MANGE, SHARNOVA, OHLIN, BENTONELLI, BALLAR-INI, RUISI WEBER, conductingMON. EVE.NOV. 2THAIS, withJ e p s o n.Thomas,Martin, Pageand Ballet;Hasselmensconducting. WED. EVE.NOV. 4MARTHAwith Jepson,Schipa, Rimi¬ni, Malatesla,Page andBallet, Moran-zeni, coniUlcting Fri. Eve. Nov. 6Gianni SchirchiIflrst time inEnglish in Chi¬cago) Burke,Sharnova, Rim¬ini, Bentonelli.Cavalleria withRaisa, Tokat¬yan, Brown;Moranzoni con¬ducting. SAT. MAT.NOV. 7 SAT. EVE.NOV. 7Presenting YourFavorite Operas Also Gershwin'sA mar leans inParis (Chicagopremiere). Pageand Ballet; Sai¬denberg c o n—ducting. LA T R A V I-ATA with Ma-s o n. Thomas,Tokatyan, Love,Cavadore, Mur-anzoni, c o n-lucting. M M E. BUT¬TERFLY withBurke, Matyax,Chamlee, R i-mini, Moranzo¬ni conducting.American andInternational Stars6 WEEKS OF GRAND OPERA—Oct. 31-Dec. 12SEATS AT INFORMATION OFnCE—PRICES 75c to $4.00CIVIC OPERA HOUSE Telephone Randolph 9229Internationally FamousJOOSS EUROPEAN BALLETTues. Eve., Nov. 3rd, Sun. Aft & Eve. Nov. 8y-Programs of 4 Ballets include:The Green TableBalladeJohann Strauss, To-night!....The MirrorA Ball in Old ViennaThe Big CityChicago Premiere: “The Prodigal Son”Prices: $1.10—$3.30. On Sale at Information OfficeFor Special prices for group of ten—Harry Zelzer, 20 N. Wacker Drive. Dea. 2990TI