Vol. 37. No. 19. Price 3 CentsReflectionsOf a Freshman WomanI came to the University for a lotof things that add up to liberty.I wanted to make my own friendsand not give a damn where they camefrom.I thought, “Oh, joy! No sororities,no snobbery, nobody cares if, how, orwhere my parents did what. Nobodyto tell me where not to go and whento come in. I’ll be my own boss.”Well, of course I was a sucker. IfI hadn’t been so none-so-blind-as-those-who-will-not-see I’d have real¬ized that people aren’t different justbecause they harp on liberty andequality. “We have no sororities.Sororities encourage snobbery andpromote ur.happiness among fine girlswho can’t run the gauntlet, so wedon’t hr.ve them.” Oh, lovely. Justsweet..And the matter of what is sonorous¬ly known as “Reputation.” Why, at('hicago I could Ik* continually drunk,lake dope, spend each and every nightwith a different man, and nothingwould happen to me if I took ap¬propriate precautions. (I didn’t reallyplan to do all those things, but it wasnice to know I could.)« * *Right now I want to make a point.Snobbery has never hurt me. In highschool I went around with the “goodcrowd.” I live on the hill in the veryThe article printed here came to TheDaily Maroon as an unsolicited con¬tribution. It represents the reactions ofa freshman woman to the social systemsl'.e found at the University. For obviousreasons, the name of the writer cannotbe revealed. If we are to accept herpicture of the situation, we must admitthat social snobbery is just as prevalenton the campus as it was in the days be¬fore the war which Vincent Sheean de¬scribed in the opening chapter of hisPersonal History." We believe that thearticle merits considerable reflection onthe part of the student body.—Ed.grandest part of my home town. Myancestry is straight British Isles, andthe fact is obvious. One look at meand I can hear people say that sortaf thing to themselves,I arrived for Freshman Week andwas given my green-and-white but¬ton. My counselor is nice. I don’tthink she’s too hysterically brilliant,hut she’s sweet and kind and she haswhai is termed a heart of gold. Atour first meeting one of the fre.shmangirls brought up this business ofclubs. I’d heard about clubs, but veryvaguely indeed. My counselor, whomwe may as well call Betty, gave us adissertation. The general drift wasthat such organizations are a help so¬cially, and that there are four bigclubs and a number of small ones.Hetty’s is small, and Betty rather re¬sents the big four. “We’re just abunch of girls who have a lot of goodtimes together,” That sounded whole-.some and homely and pretty harrow'-iiig to me. It reminded me of whenI was a (lirl Scout. It reminded meof the variety of Y.W.C.A. we haveat home, which includes Wednesdaytea-dances without boys. I thoughtmaybe I could omit a club.Hetty made a good counselor; butsu|)erficially, 1 didn’t need much coun-^^“ling. I had dates with the rightboys, I didn’t get drunk or tell dirtyJ^tories, and nobody made passes at'ue. I rnet a lot of attractive girlswho turned out to be club girls andI adored everything.I’d been brought up to be nice topeople—everybody—and there arevery few people I don’t like. I talkto people on the I.C,, I’m not rude towaitresses, and I turn on my lurefor the most unattractive specimensimaginable, I always feel wormy if1 have to discourage them.Being nice to people has let me infor a lot of trouble. I have no preju¬dice against Jewish people, and say¬ing “I’m sorry, but I have anotherdate” to boys I like isn’t pleasant.Hut, as I’ve been told only too often,going out with Jewish boys is thething that queers a girl with theclubs faster and more completely thananything else. It all depresses me.I don’t know how to be graciouswithout being “encouraging.” Before,I didn’t have to.* * *I don’t want to be a snob, I hatethe policy of the club that sends outinvitations late and expects rusheesto break previous engagements. Ihate to discriminate against a boy be¬cause he belongs to the wrong fra¬ternity. I hate to see the bitternessnf non-club girls, and the way theyContinued on Page 3) UNIVERSITY OF CEICAGO, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1936Landon Edges out Roosevelt by33 Vote Advantage in Faculty’sAlumni-Conducted Straw PollWilliam Douglas Flays Financiersin First Lecture of Moody SeriesStage GiantLandon-KnoxRally TonightArthur A. Ballantine WillI Discuss National Debt inPolitical Forum.Starting off with a torchlight pa¬rade, the campus Republican support¬ers will stage a giant Landon-Knoxrally tonight in Mandel Hall at 8:30.The main speaker of the evening willbe Arthur A. Ballantine, former Un¬der Secretary of the Treasury, whowill discuss “A Rendezvous withDebt.”F'orming in front of Bartlett at7:30, the parade will include decor¬ated cars, sound trucks, and torches,with all campus Republicans in theranks. The line of march will includevarious parts of the University com¬munity, finishing at Mandel.Profes.sors SpeakIn addition to Ballentine, Profes¬.sors Andrew C. McLaughlin, ArthurH. Compton, Henry Gordon Gale,George F. Dick, Harry A. Bigelow,Edgar J. Goodspeed, William N.Mitchell, Rollo L. Lyman, Gilbert A.Bliss, Leonard E. Dickson, Fay-Coop¬er Cole, Rollin T. Chamberlin, Wil¬liam A. Nitze, and Anton J. Carlson,the fourteen faculty members whorecently publicized their support ofLandon, will be present on the stage.Another highlight of the rally willbe the exhibition of what the commit¬tee in charge describes as the larg¬est copy of the preamble of the Con¬stitution of the United States everdisplayed.Ballantine Able SpeakerBallantine is considered by the Re¬publicans to be an especially ablespeaker on the debt situation. Hewas Under Secretary of the Treasuryunder Ogden Mills and was in activecharge during the bank crisis of1933. He resigned his post after serv--ing under the New Deal for threemonths. Considered as a nationally-known expert on taxation and publicutilities, Ballantine is a member ofthe law firm of Root, Clark, Buckner,and Ballantine.During the Republican campaign,he was e:>pecially active as special as¬sistant to John D. Hamilton, chair¬man of the Republican NationalCommittee. Ballantine is a graduateof Harvard University, where he wasa classmate of President FranklinI). Roosevelt.Aristotle must have been a greatguy.At least he was if he and all theother great philo.sophers have beenas pleasant, as broad-minded, and ashappy as the University’s new phil¬osophic genius from Vienna, RudolfCarnap, leader of the world-impor¬tant school of logical-positivism.Carnap, visiting professor of Phil¬osophy and one of the University’sfour recipients of honorary degi’eesat the Harvard Tercentenary lastsummer, was twinkling in his descrip¬tion Friday, of the current philos¬ophic “pothers” of Europe, and evenof the logical-positivistic theories,which have been a source of specula¬tion to many ever since he came hereat the beginning of this quarter. Hestayed in his lofty office in the WestTower of Harper until long after hislunch-time in ox’der to explain hisviews to the campus.Logical-Positivism originated inthe 19th Century and is clo.sely akinto the English empiricism climaxingwith Hume, related Professor Car¬nap. The wide-spread movement at¬tempts to apply the methods of mod¬ern symbolic logic to the empiricalsciences, thus, at last, really unitingthe experimental and philosophic.sciences. But avoiding speculation,Carnap’s school denies metaphysics inthe traditional, European sense. “Ex¬periences are the entire basis ofkiiowledge,” asserted the eminentthinker. “It is our attempt to formu¬late empiricism in a more preciseway.”Of primary importance to the log¬ical-positivists is the division of la¬bor in philosophy, something w’hichhas been conoeved only recently. Professors DiscussPolitical Issues atDemocratic RallyA giant campus-wide torchlightparade, and a discussion of nationalpolitical issues by prominent facultymembers who are supporting theRoosevelt campaign, will be import¬ant parts of a Democratic rally sched¬uled for tomorrow evening at 8 inMandel Hall by the local Roosevelt-for-President club.Believing it unnecessary to go offthe campus to obtain qualified speak¬ers, the Roosevelt club will present agroup of internationally recognizedauthorities from among the Universi¬ty faculty. The list of speakers whowill discuss the important national is¬sues includes Quincy Wright, chair¬man of the Committee on Internation¬al Relations and Professor of Inter¬national Law; Sophonisba P. Breck¬inridge, Samuel Deutsch, ProfessorEmeritus of Public Welfare Adminis¬tration; Jerome Gregory Kerwin, As¬sociate Professor of Political Scienceand Dean of the Students in the Di¬vision of th^ Social Sciences; JamesWeber Linn, Professor of English;and Percy Holmes Boynton, Profes¬sor of English.The club points out that theirspeakers are supporting Roosevelt ascitizens, not as faculty members.If the October issue of Phoenix(out today) consisted of nothing morethan Herbert Schwartz’s article on“Five Superstitions” mimeog^’aphedon a half dozen or more sheets ofcheap paper, it would still be wellworth its price (now 15 cents).This article by the young instruc¬tor of the department of Music pre-.sents in convincing fashion the prac¬tical, if not speculative, reasons whyGod is the proper object of ultimatebelief as a preliminary to discussingnext month five current ideologiesin the light of this thesis. But whatis most amazing about his presenta¬tion of this not too unfamiliar ideais that, aside from its brilliant logicit has the further virtue of being ex¬ceedingly good rhetoric—a virtuemore rare among campus Aristotel¬ians.Standard PreservedBut to return to the magazine it¬self. On the whole it seems to main-by experiences, similarly to what wasknown in Germany as “Vissenschafts-logic.” This methodology is more im¬portant, in Carnap’s opinion, than thesimple denial of the non-empiricalphilo.sophy which is now flourishingin Germany.The leading present-day Germanswhom Carnap rejects are Heidegger,Nicolai Hartmann, and Japsers. TheirHegelian non-empiricism is paralleledin Italy, and seems to Carnap to have(Continued on Page 3)Add 36 New Membersto Chapel Council atFirst Board MeetingMeeting for the first time this sea¬son at 4:30 yesterday afternoon theBoard of Social Service and Religion,composed of eight faculty and eightstudent members, made up the calen¬dar and program for all chapel acti¬vities for the present quarter, and ap¬proved a list of candidates for theChapel Council.Basis for the appointment of thefollowing people was for interestshown in Chapel activities: MarieWolfe, Betty Mitchell, 3etty Benson,Hope Peterson, France.^ Protheroe,Dorothea Kreuger, Helen Woodrich,Elinor Taylor, Caroline Wahlstrand,Kirsten Richards, Ernestine Stresen-Reuter, Bill McNeil, John Busby, El¬aine Fox, William Cooper, Judson Al¬len, William Read, John Stamm,George Fogle, Freeman Morgan, Ed¬ward Fritz, Emil Jerg, Leland Jame-san, John Van de Water, Floris Rat-tersman, Charles Corcoran, IrvingRichardson, Denis McEvoy, Ithiel High finance in the hands of ex¬ploiting capitalists becomes a game,the stakes for which are supplied bythe investor’s money, said William O.Douglas, member of the Securitiesand Exchange Commission in Wash¬ington in delivering the first Moodyfoundation lecture last night.“To these fiitanciers business isnothing but a scrap of paper; stocksand bonds are diverted and appropri¬ated by shadowy means for the bene¬fit of the controller. The farmer andthe consumer are secondary and in¬consequential; business and industryform merely large reservoirs for fu¬ture exploitation.”President Hutchins introducedDouglas as the “ideal public servant”,the outstanding law professor of thegeneration. Having been born in afar corner of the frozen North, andtain the same high standard of thefirst issue under the'prqsent regime,,and is perhaps more varied, contain¬ing the works of a proportionatelygreater number of authors. However,there is a considerable reduction insize, but Reese contends that thereare more pages for the money thanthere were before—if Quantity is allyou want.Second as a point of interest is thefrontispiece, a reproduction of the oilpainting by Aharon Lidov whch wonthe 1934 All-Campus Art Competi¬tion. This was uncovered by Phoenixin its commendable search for newcampus talent, which has so far net¬ted considerable pay dirt.Honors to ReeseHonors also go to Henry Reese forhis second consecutive hit on the cov¬er design—Landon dancing in eques¬trian costume on the score of “Pa¬tience,”—perhaps symbolic of thatquality which the presidential candi¬date must most have if he is to at¬tain the White House.Again limitations of space force usto glossarize so we note: that “Grif¬fith Fleming” has again contributedone of his intimate sketches of“Rooms”—this time in Los Angeles;that Winston Ashley’s latest verse-child is set off with striking makeup;that the humor tends even more to¬ward the New Yorker’s; and thatGertie has returned in her old form,a setback after the innovation ingossip made in the last issue.YWCA HoldsGala Hallowe’enLuncheon TodayToday the YWCA holds its annualHallowe’en luncheon from 11:30 to1:15 on the entire second floor of IdaNoyes Hall. Members of the Advis¬ory Board will preside at the teatables.Those who have been planning theaffair for the past few weeks are:Frances Protheroe, general chairman;Pauline Turpin, chairman of the foodcommittee; Betty Abnet, chairman ofdecorations; Caroline Zimmerly,chairman of the service committee;Clara Sprague, chairman of the tick¬et committee; and Ruby Howell,chairman of publicity.The YWCA extends an invitation toall campus women and alumnae toattend the luncheon. Tickets may bepurchased from any YWCA cabinetmember or at the YWCA office in IdaNoyes Hall for 35c.'Those students who are members ofthe various interest groups are askedto take cognizance of the followingschedule: Hospital group, 12:30Thursday; Public Affairs group, 3:30,Thursday: Tour of Billings Hospital,Hospital group, at 4, Tuesday; Pub¬licity group, Wednesday, (new mem¬bers are welcome); Chapel group tea,at 4, Thursday, November 5, in theYWCA room. educated at Whitman College whichhe “destroyed”, Douglas is now knownby the bankers of Wall Street as the“whirlwind from Walla Walla, Wash¬ington”.“The irresponsible laissez faire pol¬icy is dead everywhere,” said Doug¬las. “Liberty must be built on a se¬cure and stable Democracy”. Highfinance is a termite which causes thecollapse of business. It is destruc¬tive, baffling all scientific remedies.The first warning of its presence isthe collapse of industries and rail¬roads which form the backbone of allpublic security.”Creditor finance is the enemy of alllegitimate business because of thisprevailing need of an unstable marketfounded upon the floating of waterstock for investors money. In reor¬ganization claims by investors againsta company can seldom be collectedbecause of the control immediatelyacquired by the bankrupt organiza¬tion.Alliances with lawyers and bankersform a guarded management throughwhich the investors can penetrate on¬ly with the aid of the government,taken in such steps as the Social Se¬curities Act. When high finance at¬tempts to serve two masters, the pub¬lic and itself, all self interest is thefirst considered. This struggle of thepeople and industry against high fi¬nance will be a bitter one because ofthe powers of money.Repertory GroupPresents Drama ofMining ConditionsDepicting conditions of the Illinoiscoal fields, “Black Pit,” a sociologicaldrama by Albert Maltz, will be pre¬sented by the Chicago RepertoryGroup at International House The¬ater Saturday evening.This University showing, sponsor¬ed by the American Student Union,marks the Midwestern premiere ofthe play which takes for its centraltheme a conflict between the workers,the miners’ union and a stool-pigeon.The players of the Chicago Reper¬tory Group will be remembered forthe instantaneous success they scoredlast year in their presentation of“If This Be Reason.” Tickets maybe purchased from any ASU mem¬ber.The American Student Union re¬cently formed a “Material Aid forSpain” committee to assist the Span¬ish popular front government.This committee is addressing anappeal to the campus to contributeclothing, shoes, canned food andblankets which may be used to re¬lieve the distress among the Spanishgovernmental troops. Boxes for con¬tributions have been established inMandel, Cobb, Social Science Re¬search, Foster, Judson, and Hitch¬cock Halls.The committee is working withthe Council for the Defense of Span¬ish Democracy, which in turn is co¬operating with the Spanish consul inthe forwarding of the supplies toSpain.Hutchins AddressesJewish FoundationPresident Robert M. Hutchins willbe guest of honor and speaker atthe second meeting of the Jewish Stu¬dent Foundation today in Ida NoyesHall at 3:30. Following the presi¬dent’s talk, a general meeting will beheld and refreshments will be served.The talk by President Hutchins isthe forerunner of a series of talks tobe presented by such prominentspeakers as Dr. Stephen Wise, Dr.Morris Fishbein, Dr. Abraham Sach-ar, and Dr. L. L. Honor.The group, which is headed byThomas Karsten, will discuss the re¬sults of a questionnaire on Jewishstudent interests at the businessmeeting. Release Final TallyTotal of 647 Ballots Castby 725 Eligible Voters inCouncil Survey.Nudging out the present incumbentby a 33 vote majority out of a totalof 647 ballots cast, Chicago’s facultyappears to favor Alf M. Landon, theRepublican nominee for president, ac¬cording to official figures on the fac¬ulty straw poll released late yester¬day by Charlton T. Beck, secretaryof the Alumni Council.The poll, which has been in progressfor the past week, was conducted bythe Alumni Council under the auspicesof the Alumni magazine. Final re¬sults are as follows:Candidate V'otes Per CentLandon 302 41.6%Roosevelt . . . . 269 37.1%Thomas . . . . 8 1.1%No preference . 68 9.3%No reply (appr.) 77 10.6%Totals 725 99.7%Under the requirements of the poll.no one under the rank of instructorwas permitted to cast a ballot, norwas any emeritus professor who wasnot engaged in active work for theUniversity. No members of the ad¬ministration were polled. In accordwith these requirements. Beck esti¬mated that from 780 to 790 personswere eligible to vote. The actualnumber was not ascertainable be¬cause of the doubtful status of manyof the emeritus professors. Subtract¬ing from this number approximately65 faculty members not in residencethis quarter, a possible total of around725 persons eligible to cast a ballotremains.Returns ClassifiedOf all eligible votes, Landon gar¬nered 302, a majority of 33 talliesover Roosevelt’s 269. Thomas polled8 votes. No ballots were cast for anyother candidates, but a total of 68 per¬sons returned blank ballots, assertingeither that they were as yet undecid¬ed, had no preference, or objected onprinciple to the idea of a straw poll.Approximately 75 of the possibletotal of 725 did not report at all, in-(Continued on Page 2)Announce RulesRelating to Voteof College GroupRules relative to voting of stu¬dents in the coming presidential elec¬tion were announced yesterday byDean Works’ office.According to the attorney for theBoard of Election Commissionersstudents cannot vote in the townwhere their colleges are located un¬less their residence is bona fide withno intention of returning to theparental home. Students are oi'di-narily disenfranchised if they returnhome during vacations even thoughthey are completely self-supporting.Students can vote in a college townonly if they are “entiiely free fromparental control, regard the collegetown as their home and have nohome to return to in case of sicknessor other affliction.” Under the newpermanent registration law no stu¬dent can in any case vote unless hehas already registered under thepei’manent registration law\Puttkammer Speaksto Sociology ClubThe annual fall dinner of the So¬ciology Club will be held tomorrowevening at 6:45 in Ida Noyes Hall.Ernst Puttkammer, professor of Law,is to address the group on some as¬pects of “Law in Relation to SocialConditions.”Robert Redfield, dean of the divi¬sion of the Social Sciences, will offi¬ciate as toastmaster. Louis Wirth, as¬sociate professor of Sociology, willrepresent that department.Following the dinner there will bean informal social gathering withdancing and bridge.Pool.Eugene Herz, Walter Blum, Burtonpursuing our methods, every Wall, Laura Wolf, Ruth Warsaw, Hil-tence must be comixletely verifiable da Yoblong, Blossom Tovrov.Aristotle a Great Guy” ConcludesReporter After Talk with CarnapBy EDWARD C. FRITZSchwartz’s Brilliance ElectrifiesHigh-Standard Issue of PhoenixBy JOHN G. MORRISPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1936^aroonFOUNDED 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, 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.REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISINO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.Collefe Publishers Representative420 Madison AVE. New York. N.Y.CHICAOO - BOSTON • SAN FRANCISCOLos ANOELBS • PORTLAND • SEATTLBBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD.. .Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESP rr.i;c Bartels Edward Frits Cody PfanstiehlElRoy Golding William McNeill Betty RobbinsBUSINESS ASSOCIATESBernard Levine William Rubach Sigmund DansigerRobert Rosenfels Charles HoyEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSHarris Beck C. Sharpless Hickman Lewis MillerLaura Bergquist Rex Horton Burt MoyerMaxine Biesenthal Herbert Kalk Audrey NeftEmmett Deadman Henry Kraybill David SchefferBetty Jean Dunlap Byron Miller Marjorie SeifriedSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HolwayNight Editor: Edward C. FritzAssistant: David H. MauzyW'ednesday, October 28, 1936Who Leads in the Faculty?Official figures released yesterday by theAlumni Council show Mr. Landon leading Mr.Roosevelt in faculty preference, 302 votes to269 votes. Yet despite these results obtained inthe faculty poll, to our mind the question ofwhich candidate is favored by a majority ofthe faculty members of the University remainsunanswered. Perhaps that question itself is notsignificant. The point we wish to make, how¬ever, is that on the basis of the above figuresno definite mathematical statement can bemade concerning the divisions of political sen¬timent in the faculty.It is our contention that the figures report¬ed do not present a reliable picture of facultypolitical opinion. We do not question the hon¬esty of the figures; we do consider them in¬adequate. We cannot blame the Alumni Councilfor this inadequacy, for we believe they usedthe best means of polling the faculty availableto them. It has been demonstrated too manytimes in the past that the mere mailing of bal¬lots to faculty members is a notoriously in¬effective method, and a system of personal in¬terviews with each faculty person is virtually aphysical impossibility.Certainly, it is not the fault of the AlumniCouncil that 68 faculty members who werereached either claimed they were undecided orrefused to vote. Yet when to this 68 we add ap¬proximately 65 who could not be reached be¬cause they were out of residence and approxi¬mately 75 who failed to report at all, the mar¬gin of 33 votes by which Mr. Landon leads Mr.Roosevelt cannot be regarded as significant.We repeat our earlier statement—perhaps thequestion of which candidate leads in facultypreference is itself not significant. One thingthe poll does show conclusively is that the po¬litical opinion of the faculty as a whole is fair¬ly evenly divided. Politically, the faculty of theUniversity of Chicago cannot be said to beeither radical, liberal, conservative, or reaction-The ABC’sQuestion of Ideals. ..the peaks had a chill gleam; utterly majestic andremote, their very namelessness had dignity. Thosetew thousand feet by which they fell short of the knowngiants might save them eternally from the climbing ex¬pedition; they offered a less tempting lure to the re¬cord-breaker. (He) was the antithesis of such a type;he was inclined to see vulgarity in the Western idealof superlatives, and “the utmost for the highest’’ seem¬ed to him a less reasonable and perhaps more common¬place proposition than “the much for the high”,..James Hilton,Lost Horizon ary. Certainly, it cannot be said to favor eitherMr. Landon or Mr. Roosevelt by more than asmall margin.The New PhoenixPhoenix has undergone a remarkable me¬tamorphosis. Junked at the end of last year asa disgrace to the campus, it has arisen anewwith a policy which should bring it to the foreas pointing the way to a new trend in collegemagazines. The new policy is that of kickingthe one sacred tradition of college magazinessquarely in the face. This tradition was that inorder to sell the magazine you had to insult theintelligence of the readers. In other words, col¬lege students were assumed to be a prize col¬lection of illiterate nincompoops, devoted tohoary exchange jokes and bad drawings.The new Phoenix is being edited on the be¬lief that the old assumption was wrong, or iswrong at the University of Chicago in 1936.Circulation of the magazine will tell whetherthe University is capable of supporting an in¬telligent adult magazine.With the last few years of Phoenix to over¬come in the battle for circulation, and with thetask of developing this strange i^ew idea of aworthwhile magazine, the staff of the publica¬tion has no mean undertaking before it. Weearnestly advocate that every student givePhoenix the benefit of one careful perusal. Webelieve that those who are skeptical of Phoenixand of college “humor” magazines in general,will be pleasantly surprised, for this magazineis not any “kind” of magazine. It is not devotedto those who consider themselves wits or poets.Recognizing that good humor is the most diffi¬cult field in writing, the editors are not restrict¬ing their pages to any narrow type of material,but are printing any sort of verbal or graphicexpression which is deemed worthwhile. Thiselastic policy means that if good humor isforthcoming it will be printed in abundance.If not, it will not appear. As the variety of con¬tributions should roughly indicate the temperof the students, the magazine should ratherclosely follow the trends in taste on campus andso continue to please its audience.The Travelling BazaarBy CODY PFANSTIEHLOur roommate has a job at the Quadrangle club. Andone of his many duties is that of typing the dailymenu. He makes about 30 copies a day.Now, it seems that the typewriter he must use forthe work is a bit irregular in action.“When you hit the letter A the thing skids a space,”he told us. “And the same thing with L. And sincethe menus have to be neat, we have to be careful. Ifwe don’t watch it, any word with A’s and L’s in it comesout full of spaces like ‘1 a mb’ ”.Then his voice rose a notch.“Now I’m not saying the dietician knew what thetypewriter does on L and A, but yesterday she put Sal¬mon Salad Sandwich on the list!”LONG AR.M OFCIVILIZATIONPerhaps the most interesting letters we receive aresent from the little town of Culleoka, in Tennessee.There, far back in the hills, is a little old schoolhousewhere backwoods children struggle with the ABCs ofeducation. And teaching first to fifth graders is a highlyeducated woman embodying all the warmth and spir¬itual richness of the South.Inside the rough room they look at flat pictures inworn second-hand geographies of Chicago sky-scrapers.While they listen open-mouthed she builds a third di¬mension into those pictures, telling the small foreignerswhy we must have houses taller than Llhutter’s Hill,making what is commonplace in our lives a thrillingstory to the children of the hills.She explains that we must filter our water—that wecannot just drink at any stream or pool.‘They must pump it in from the big lake,” she toldthem last week, “and treat it with chlorine.”But are these backwoods pupils really far out oftouch with urban civilization?Witness a fourth-grader’s answer to a question ona Public Health test:“In Chicago they pump the water from the lake andtreat it with Listerine.”♦ * *MUCH POLITICALCACOPHONYThe old ones are coming back to haunt.People like Sulcer, Watson, Greenleaf, and Womerare now sporting yellow sunflowers and planning greatthings. They are the Push of the Young Republicanson Campus.Tonight there’s a whoop-it-up rally and parade start¬ing at Bartlett about 8:15. They’re going to raise 'olNed for Landon and Knox. Then speeches in Mandel.And it took the whole Psi U football team to carry the40 foot preamble to the Constitution down here fromthe Loop.The Young Roosevelts have things planned, too. Andthe Young Communists and Socialists.There just won’t be anything for the Young Peopleto do around here after November 3.Except gripe. Poll( C<Mitinued from page 1 )dicating, according to Beck, eitherthat they had no interest in the poll,delayed to report, lost their ballots orreceived none.Votes Handled by DepartmentsBalloting was handled through de¬partments, said Beck in describingthe mechanics of the poll. Seven de¬partments and one professional schoolwere mailed votes directly from theAlumni office. The rest were put incharge of their respective heads, whoin some cases delegated the actualcanvass duties to the departmentalsecretaries. Methods of “getting outthe vote” were left to the discretionof the departments involved. In somedepartments secret ballots were sentout, to be returned to designated bal¬lot boxes. In others a “walking tabu¬lation” was made, faculty membersmerely being asked their preferencesby the poll official.Individual departmental standingswere not given by Beck, who statedthat some departments had objectedto the release of such material..CONVERTS'BEGINNERS-'CONVINCES VETERANS!fOMimilGWONDfiinHGOESON INSIDi•OOARHOlOiMHWESY BftlAB MOMIYOUIBUV» THE ONtAY PATENTED r/^CELLOPHAttE**-^ALE[>I ft^HEAitLY ffLTER^Buy yourMedico pipe atREADER'STHE CAMPUS DRUG STORE61st and Ellisopposite Burton CourtLocal Phone 9 Today on theQuadranglesMeetings“Techniques of World Peace.” Pub¬lic meeting sponsored by EmergencyPeace Campaign at InternationalHouse, 8:30.Kappa Alpha Psi. Room B of Rey¬nolds Club at 12.Achoth. Room A of Ida Noyes at2:30.Jewish Student Foundation. Thea¬ter and Sun Parlor of Ida Noyes at3:30-6. President Robert Hutchins,speaker.Zoology Club. Zoology 14 at 2:00.Dr. L. Ingle, National Research Fel¬low. Open to all interested.Rayute. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes at 3:30.Republican Rally. Mandel Hall at8:30. Democratic Rally. Shotwell Hall,55th and Dorchester at 8.Settlement League book review. Li¬brary of Ida Noyes at 10.MiscellaneousPhonograph concert. Social ScienceAssembly room 12:50 to 1:16.YWCA Halloween Luncheon. Sec¬ond floor of Ida Noyes. 11:30 to 1.Tours of Carillon and Observationtower in University Chapel. 1:00 to6:00.Public Lecture (downtown). “Re¬cent Technical Trends in Transportation.” Lewis C. Sorrell, professor ofTransportation. Fullerton Hall of ArtInstitute at 6:46.Debate. Socialist. Shotwell Hall at 8.Fraternity Rushing Luncheons(12 to 2)Psi Upsilon.Alpha Tau Omega.PLEDGINGDelta Sigma announces the pledg¬ing of Charlotte Ellinwood of GlenEllyn, Illinois.SON??Have vou been drinking?Yes, Pop, aTriple DippedTransparent MilkshakeatSTEINWAY’S1335 East 57th StreetHALF $ HALF MAKESOKI! \Just add ’em up, Mister, and you have what it takes.Cool as a ^Hicket” for overtime parking. Sweet asthe proof it was all a mistake. Fragrant, full-bodiedtobacco that won’t bite the tongue-—in a tin thatwon’t bite the fingers. Made by our exclusive mod¬ern process including patent No. 1,770,920. Smellsgood. Makes your pipe welcome anywhere. Tastesgood. Your password to pleasure!Not a bit off bite In the tobacco or tho Telescope Tin, whichgets smaller and smaller as you uso-up the tobacco. Nobitten ffingors as you reach for a load, even tho last one.Copyright 1936, The American Tobacco Co.HALF HALF^POR PiPB OR CIOARRTTRTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1936 Page ThreeLettersto the EditorEditor,The Daily Maroon:“We ain’t red! We Ain’t Red!WE AIN’T RED!”Thus scream fourteen senators ofthe University faculty, learned inpractically anything but politics andUniversity public relations uponwhich they speak with such author¬ity. And they screamed it throughan unscrupulous press which will nothesitate to attack them tomorrowshould it become expedient.The sight was pitiable.Leaders of the academic worldpublicly gnawed a political bone togive them the dim, well-meaning lightfrom Kansas, unanimously backedby the forces in this country mostthreatening to academic freedom, aboost that cannot help them—a ges¬ture to prove the University of Chi¬cago is not red. T'le political viewsare respected. Let us examine thegesture.* * *If the learned men believed thegesture would placate certain sec¬tions of the press in its antagonism tothe University, they should give thatbt'lief a decent burial. Newshawks,newspaper editors, and newspaperpublishers well know that wealthy,reactionary, Chicago-alumnus HillBlackett is a high-placed tycoon onthe Republican committee. Theyknow the spontaneity was false.When they choose to attack the Uni¬versity they will point with theauthority of truth to the lack ofspontaneity of this incident, if theybother with it at all.If the learned men believed thegesture would induce men of wealthand affairs to loosen purse-stringsfor the University upon the convic¬tion that it is not red, the learnedmen may bury that belief too. Menof wealth and affairs knew about theproclamation of the professors beforeit was proclaimed, perhaps before theprofessors knew about it. If pro¬spective contributors to the Univers¬ity were not so informed or are notso astute, they will openly approve,each secretly muttering sagely,"Methinks the professors protest toomuch, the meddling braintrusters.”If the learned men think they con¬vinced the people because the peoplebelieve what they read, they shouldstudy the correlation between howthe newspapers tell the people tovote and how the people do vote in('hicago. In case the learned mendo not know’ what the man in thestreet does know, the correlation,it may be said, is so low it does notexist.In short, our profes.sors havedemonstrated they are lambs amongthe wolves of politics and journal¬ism. They have demonstrated shock¬ing naivete in University public re¬lations, unless they intended to em¬barrass the administration of theUniversity, a possibility that shouldnot l)e overlooked.The cry, "We ain’t red!” w’ill neverconvince either the intelligent or theignorant citizenry. A sound policy Delegates to International HouseCouncil Represent 12 NationsIniernaiional News PhotoArthur A. Ballantine. ..“A Rendezvous with Debt" tonightin Mandel Hall.(Story on Page One)Carnap(Continued from Page 1)a relation with fascism. “The ten¬dency toward irrationalism is inboth.” As for the “social philos¬ophers” like Osenberg, Carnap saidthat they receive no attention at allfrom the true philosophers of Europe.In the heart of the continentalphilosophic disturbances, the logical-positivi.st school is centered in Vienna.Here, the 1 ate Professor Schlick,former leader of the school, was mur¬dered by an insane student whoclaimed he had philosophic reasons.The student had l^en at large underthe “strange and dangerous” Vien¬nese custom of releasing persons fromthe insane asylum if their family as¬sumes responsibility for their actions.The greatest movement in therealm of philosophy at present is theCongress for the Unity of Science,embracing the logical-positivists, thepragmatists, empiricists, and manyother.s, in an endeavor to join naturalscience and philosophical science.Carnap named Professor Charles W.Morris, head of the department ofPhilosophy, as the most widely knownAmerican fostering this movement.At the conclusion of the interview,Profes.sor Morris, himself, stuck hishead through the doorway and joinedProfessor Carnap on his way tolunch. The head of the Philosophydepartment stated that Dr. Carnapfortifies a weakness in the department,being a leading authority in math¬ematics and physical sciences, whichsupply many of the symbols of hislogic. Morris, another pleasant indi¬cator that Aristotle must have beena great guy, promi.sed a story on theset-up of philo.sophy in the Univer¬sity, and the relation to the positionsin other universities. Results of the election of delegates^ to the International House studentcouncil show that 21 members havebeen elected by 12 national groups tothe advisory board which serves asa “buffer” between the administrationand the student body.Canadian residents elected astheir two delegates Thomas Coulter,a graduate student in the School ofBusiness; and Melbey Kidd, a grad¬uate student in the Department ofInternational Relations and Eco¬nomics. Representing the BritishIsles and New Zealand on the Coun¬cil are two English students, bothCommonwealth Fund Fellows: Rich¬ard Flood, and Leslie Lipson.Continental RepresentativesStudents from the European con¬tinent have chosen seven members torepresent them on the Council:Fausto Jimenez, a Spaniard; Rich¬ard Stadler from Switzerland, a stu¬dent in the Chicago Musical Col¬lege; and three German students,representing central Europe: ArthurKrause; Franz Joseph, formerly alegal adviser in Germany; and FritzVeit, in the Graduate LibrarySchool. Themis Anagnost, fromGreece; and Marie Silvers, in theSchool of Social Service Administra¬tion, represent Eastern Europe onInternational House’s student gov¬erning body.The Near East has as its repre¬sentative Abdul Abbass, who holds aFellowship from the Iraq govern¬ment; and P. M. Titus from India,president of last year’s Council, hasof public relations for the Universitywould admit with pride that thiscommunity seeks the truth about allideas and things. It would discloseand create incidents which wouldaffirm to the world that one of thegreatest, most valuable institutionsof democracy in the country is theUniversity of Chicago. It would, inshort, use frankness, not fraud, indealing with an essentially kindlyoutside world.J. P. B.CHICAGO ftGO NORTHWESTERNto the RAILWAYWISCONSIN » CHICAGO GAMEat MadisonSaturday, October 31st$in Coaches LOW ROUND TRIP FARES$■■ i" PmrX'tr Car* orCaU Sleeper(♦Parlor Seat 65< addi-tional each way)Go any train Friday — orany train Saturday airiv-ing Madison before 2:00P.M. Return limit reach-i nK Chicago midnightMonday.Lv. ChicagoLv. Madison . . 9:30 A. M. Cent. Time(10:30 A. M. Chicago Time)RETURNING5:30 P. M.Other fast convenient trainsFori nformatioH and ticketsCITY TICKET OFFICE148 S. Clark St., Phone Dearborn 2121 orMadison St. Station, Phone Dearborn 2060Chicago £■ Northwestern Ry. Reflections(Continued from Page 1)emphasize the tale that they wouldn’tjoin a club for a salary.Clubs do dirty tricks. A friendof mine has for upperclass counselora member of a very good club. Misscounselor said to herself and clubsisters, “Ah! This is ours!” and asa result the freshman met no girlsfrom other clubs, almost no boys, andis being rushed hard—even illegally—by this one club. She has been com¬pletely ignored by the others. I talk¬ed a pretty wonderful man into get¬ting a blind date with her, and guesswho claimed the credit! The club.I’ve heard adorable tales about Ablack-balling B’s freshman becauseB grabbed A’s man, and plenty ofother comparable stories. I♦ • * jBut I shall join a club—a “GOOD” ione—if I can. I'll do it by the usualmethods: men, activities, mentioning!having lunch with a Park Avenue jsponsor of Pond’s Cold Cream, bring- iing up the fact that my mother went Ito a super-snob finishing-school, andany other trick that occurs to me. Iwant club prestige, I want to knowthe “right fraternity boys” and fewothers, and I want the push of a goodclub behind me in activities.I know a girl who doesn’t give ahoot about dates, prestige, and at¬tendant glories.“Aren’t you being terribly petty?All this hypocrisy and downrightcruelty that goes on—do you want toget messed up in it? It’s all so littleand mean and snobbish. You’ll haveto steer clear of some swell people,and play up to an awful lot of con¬ceited big shots. It can’t be worthit.” And of course she’s right. ButI haven’t the courage of my convic¬tions. Pretty soon I’ll have somenew ones, and I’ll forget that I everfelt this way. Convictions need sup¬port that I daren’t give mine. been elected from the India, Japanand Korea group.Far Eastern RepresentativesTsu-Sheng Ma, a graduate stu¬dent in Chemistry, represents theChinese students at the House, andfrom the Hawaiian delegation HarryMau was chosen.Latin America and the Philippineshave for their representative CJarlosA. Cowes, a student in the ChicagoAcademy of Fine Arts. From theUnited States, Jean Charters, on thestaff of the Public AdministrationClearing House; Carl Flaxman; andRichard Van Wagenen, on the staffof the Council of State governmentshave been elected to the council.Dorothy Rogers Speaksat Nurses’ ConventionHeading a roundtable Friday after¬noon during the Illinois State Nurses’Association convention at the PalmerHouse will be Dorothy Rogers, as¬sistant professor of Nursing Educa¬tion. The subject of discussion will be“Problems of Clinical Teaching asMet by Supervisors and Instructorsin Nursing Schools.”THEATREI/Jl£iA£iL 858 E. 63rdThusday and Friday"Crime of Dr. Forbes"with Robert Kent, Gloria Stuart,Henry ArmettaFrolic Theatre55th & ELLIS AVE.Wed. & Thur., Oct. 28 & 29Robert Taylor & Binnie Barnesin"THERE'S ALWAYSTOMORROW"Added Johnny Burke Comedy"Good Old Plumber Time"GRAND NOWLAST 2 WEEKSHeld over to Sat., Nov. 7MESSRS SHUBERTpresentVictor Herbert'sWORLD FAMOUSOPERETTA MASTERPIECENaughtyMariettaA Staire Production—Not a Motion PicturewithILSE MARVENGAROBERT SHAFERVIOLET CARLSONHARRY K. MORTONBARTLETT SIMMONSGreat Singrinsr and Dancing EnsembleHear Your Victor HerbertSuperbly Sung Favorites"ITALIAN STREET SONG""SWEET MYSTERY OF LIFE”"I’M FALLING IN LOVE WITHSOMEONE”Nights 1 GflJtO. UrrlrMain Floor^i'^U-^A, DOlC.ii, $1.50Pop.Wed.-Sat. Mats. 50-75-$l-$1.50SEATS NOW AT INFORMATION BUREAU—H. O. HOEPTNERRosa PonselleSECOND CONCERTStage Arts Association, Inc.ORCHESTRA HALL8:20 P. M., FRIDAY EVENING, OCT. 30Seats: 75c; $1.25; $1.75; $2.25 Amusement SectionTONIGHT at 8:30GREAT DRAMA ... hotwith 1936 problems andspeech. A DRAMATICTHRILLER...a wallopingevening in the theater.”—LLOYD LEWIS,Daily News.NORMAN BEL GEDDES Presents“DEADEND” CASTOF70By SIDNEY KINGSLEYSTUDEBAKER418 S. MICHIGAN. Ph. HAR. 2792NIGHTS (IncL Sun.), 55c to $2.75MATS. WED. & SAT., 55c to $2.20 MflfU Mat. Sat., 50c-$1.50SELlf YN —“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 OFclAlVUARY*3 Paid for your vote on jivychoaen from andienee atevery performance.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-EXAMINER50c, $1, $1.50Chicago 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 MANCE, SHARNOVA, OHLIN, BENTONELLI, BALLAR-INI, RUISI WEBER, conductingMON. EVE.NOV. 2THAIS, withJ e p 8 o n,Thomas,Martin, Pageand Ballet;Hasselmensconducting. WED. EVE.NOV. 4MARTHAwith Jepson,Schipa, Rimi¬ni, Malatesta,Page andBallet, Moran-zeni, conducting Fri. Eve. Nov. 6Gianni Schicchi(first time • inEnglish in Chi¬cago ) Burke,Sharnova, Rim¬ini, Bentonelli.Cavalleria withRaisa, Tokat-yan. Brown;Moranzoni con¬ducting.Also Gershwin’s SAT. MAT, EVE.NOV. 7 pjoV. 7ATA with Ma-son, Thomas, TERFLY withTokatyan, Love, Burke, Matyas,Cavadore, Mor- Chamlee, R i-anzoni, con- mini, Moranzo-jucting. ni conducting.Presenting Your Americans inParis (Chicago American andFavorite Operas premiere). Pageand Ballet: Sai- International Starsdenberg c o n—6 WEEKS OF GRAND OPERA—Oct. 31-Dec. 12SEATS AT INFORMATION OFFICE—PRICES 75c to $4.00CIVIC OPERA HOUSE Telephone Randolph 9229Internationally FamousJOOSS EUROPEAN BALLETTues. Eve., Nov. 3rd, Sun. Aft. & Eve. Nov. 8Programs 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. 2990BUY PHOENIX•r^-* *'•■■ • ■ - ■»^-:-v-j^?r^.*-‘DAILY MAROON SPORTSPage Four WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1936'ArettSSTAKI VOmA 6ALTo A SMOWThere are lots of pleasantthings you can do with themcMiey you’ll save by eat¬ing at Younker’s regularly.CoMplefe LuKcheott 35^CompMe Dinner .. 65*^51 E. Chicago Ave.1510 Hyde Park Blvd.501 Davis Street, EvanstonMembers of the University Rifleand Pistol club started their annualfall ladder tournament yesterday,and competing marksmen are nowplunking out their targets under theWest stands. Every member is re¬quired to shoot a tournament targeteach time he reports at the range,and at the end of the tournament willbe scored on the improvement shown.In shooting a ladder tournamenttarget, riflemen fire five shots fromeach of the basic positions, prone,sitting, kneeling, and offhand. Mem¬bers who have the highest averagesfor the duration of the contest will beselected as members of the team rep-re.senting the Club in inter-collegiatecompetition. Smoke round after round of Luckies, andyour throat keeps clear, your voice keepsclear. For Luckies are a light smoke! It isonly Luckies that give your throat the pro¬tection offered by "Toasting.” So makeyour choice a light smoke and then smokeround after round and they’ll still tastegood — your mouth will taste clean. ForLuckies are a light smoke —made fromchoice center leaves... the top price leaves... of the "Cream of the Crop” tobaccos!★★Momed NEWS FLASH! ★ ★25 Winners in One WeekForget to Sign Their NamesMany people, in their hurry to mailin their entries in Your Lucky Strike"Sweepstakes,” have forgotten tosign their names. In one week alone25 winners did not receive theirprizes because we didn’t know towhom to send them.Have you entered yet? Have youlur de'won your delicious Lucky Strikes?There’s music on the air. Tune in"Your Hit Parade”—Wednesdayand Saturday evenings. Listen, judgeand compare the tunes—then tryYour Lucky Strike "Sweepstakes.”And don’t forget to sign your name.And if you’re not already smokingLuckies, buy a pack today. Maybeyou’ve been missing something.OF RICH, RIPE-BODIED/TOBACCO — "IT’S TOASTED"Copyright I i)36, The American Tobacco CompanySophomore Talent Augurs StrongerWrestling Team for Coming SeasonRay EllinwoodLeaves Campusfor CaliforniaStar Trackman Plans toStudy Philosophy in Her¬mitage.Ray Ellinwood, star middle distancerunner of last year’s Maroon trackteam left yesterday afternoon in anoverloaded broken-down ’29 Chevro¬let for the wilds of California wherehe plans to study philosophy and playthe hermit for three years. At theend of that time he will return to theUniversity, where he will take a doc¬tor’s degree with a year’s study.Ellinwood catapulted to prominencewhen he broke the world indoor rec¬ord for the quarter mile last winter,running the distance in 48.9. He wonevery meet with conference opponentsby wide margins, and was one of theprominent contenders for an Olympicberth. According to Ned Merriam,track coach, he failed to qualify fora trip to Germany only because of ex¬cessive nervousness, which caused himto lose so much sleep as to weakenhim.Ray excelled in both the 440 and880, and his brilliant performance atanchor on the relay team w’on manyof the relays for the Maroons.‘‘His loss will mean the loss of twofirst places a meet,” commented CoachMerriam, “Halcrow is the only substi¬tute of comparable ability, and he isgood only for the quarter.”Ellinwood, in addition to his trackprowess has distinguished himselfwhile at the University by his interestand adeptness in philosophy of- theneo-scholastic brand. He came to theUniversity as a transfer from Purdue.Leonard Olsen, graduate and for¬mer president of the Chapel Council,is accompanying Ellinwood to Cali¬fornia. 'Their proposed schedule ofstudy is as follows; for the fist twoyears, the intricacies of Aquinas andAristotle; for the last, a study of themodern philosophers in the light ofthe systems of Aquinas and Aristotle.He has not yet decided upon thesubject for his doctor’s thesis, butwill maintain correspondence withcertain members of the Universityfaculty. He hopes to use the facili¬ties of some of the California librar¬ies to aid him in his studies.Rifle Club StartsFall Tournament Hard ScrimmagesPrepare Maroonsfor Badger ClashWith their best chance of winninga conference tilt close ahead, the Ma¬roon football warriors scrimmagedhard again today.The squad received a blow in theloss of Clarence “Tubby” Wright, vet¬eran tackle, whose knee injury recur¬red in today’s skirmish. He will prob¬ably be unable to play at all in theWisconsin game, Saturday.However, FYed Lehnhardt is in goodshape again, so that the Maroon back-field will return to full strengthagainst the Badgers.In the two-hour overtime work¬out today. Coach Shaughnessy stres¬sed all phases of the game, includinga long signal drill and a running ofBadger plays by the freshman team.Neither Wisconsin nor Chicagoplayed last week, so both have beenpointing for this game.Sponsor Meeting ofPeace Group at I.H.International House, cooperatingwith the Emergency Peace Campaign,is sponsoring a public meeting to¬night at 8:30 to discuss “Techniquesof World Peace.”Four specific viewpoints on the sub¬ject will be presented in the courseof the evening by students at theUniversity. The fact that four lettermen havegraduated w’ould seem to hurt aneight-man squad no small amount.However Spyros K. Vorres, coach ofthe “wrastlers,” instead of displayingthe usual pessimism of mentors, con¬tends that Chicago will boast as goodif not a better team this year.In six weights the grapplers shouldbe stronger than that of the last sea¬son. Tom Barton’s graduation leavesthe 126 pound class open but this willprobably be filled by a numeral win¬ner of last year, Nick Collias, whoshould be a tower of strength. Withthe experience of last year behindhim. Captain Bob Finwall, already agreat matman as is attested by hisconference championship in the 145weight should be tops this season.Fresh StrengthAlthough there is no returning let¬ter man tipping the scales at 155, theaddition of either George Schoon-maker or Warren Uelany, bothcracker jacks, or numeral winners BenHouserman and John Haas will inVorres’ opinion, inQiease Chicago’schances this year. With experiencedDick Anderson back whose berth atthe 165 weight is hotly contested byAllan Tully, numeral winner, and Jo¬seph Mottl, the Maroons will be moredangerous this year.Lehnhardt, Whiteside BackWeighing in at' 175, Fred Lehn¬hardt promises to have his best year,and is practically certainly a regular.Other football men will aim at the heavyweight position on the squad.Sam Whiteside, letterman and EdValorz, numeral winner are the out¬standing prospects and shouldstrengthen the squad this year to agreater degree than they did last sea¬son.Completing the squad are DaveTinker at 118 and Jim Fay at 135.However Tinker will get plenty ofcompetition from Pete Dzubay, whohas already gained his numerals.Student Body, 300Strong, to FollowTeam to WisconsinUniversity students three-hundredstrong will entrain Friday and Sat¬urday for Madison to cheer the Ma¬roons on when the going gets tough.More than 200 tickets have alreadybeen sold by the Athletic departmentand it is expected that at least 100more will be purchased this week. Themajority will take advantage of theMilwaukee road’s special price, somewill travel .the Noi'thwestern line,many will drive, while others will goby bus.At special reduced rates of $3.35round trip, with return trip goodwithin a 30-day limit, the MaroonSpecial of the Milwaukee road leavesChicago Union station at 9 and 10Saturday morning, although the rateswill be good for those leaving on Fri¬day. Alpha Delta PhiBeats Betas 37-0in I-MT^chhallThe Alpha Delts, the Phi Gams, andthe Phi Sigs were the victors, whilethe Betas and both the Phi Psi “A”and “B” were the vanquished in I-Mtouchball competition yesterday.The Alpha Delts, who have one ofthe most powerful teams in theleague, were expected to win theirgame with the Betas yesterday, andthey lived up to their reputation. BillRunyan, Jim Lytele, John Krieten-stien, and Walter Eckersall—the neph¬ew of the one and only Eckersall—were the scoresmen for the AlphaDelts. Outstanding for the Betaswere Gene Davis, and John Mattmil-ler, Krietenstien, of the Alpha Delts,has as much on the football ashe has on the ping pong ball.Score U psetBiggest upset of the day and forthat matter of the entire season, wasPhi Gamma Delta’s defeat of the PhiPsi’s “A” in a close fought game,l‘2-6. Durbin tallied the lone score ofthe Phi Psi’s, but his efforts weremade fruitless when Darnotsy follow¬ed Russ Baird across the white line,giving the Phi Gam’s 12 points.The winning score was the productof a pass from Engelhart to Darn-CLASSIFIED ADLOST—A diamond ring, Thursday,Oct. 22, in Rosenwald. Return toM. A. Fairman, 5748 Kimbark, Hyd.2‘291; reward, no questions asked. otsy, after which the receiver scam¬pered the better part of the lengthof the field. The defeat is the firstsuffered by the first Phi Psi team, andputs them out of the running for thefraternity championship. The PhiGams through the upset kept theirrecord free from defeat.Phi Sigma Delta’s touchball teamyesterday defeated the hard-tryingPhi Psi “B” with a score of 18 to 6.Th#honey intho briarkeep* tho pipetweet.High.efficiencyCondentor cieont, puriflettmoke. Traps moiitwre. Noclog-ging. No trouble. Prove it yourself IBur yourYrllo-Bole pipe atREADER'STHE CAMPUS DRUG STORE61st and Ellisopposite Burton CourtLocal Phone fIfs g Light Smoke!A GREAT FEATURE—throat protection!coin.. Your Throat KeptClear for Action I