ISaAp inataonVol. 37. No. 27. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1936 Price 3 CentsPeopleEveryone Sees, but NoOne KnowsGetBy EDWARD C. FRITZ“Orders from headquarters,out and stay out!”These are “fighting words” imply¬ing a philosophy of force. You wouldnever expect such a philosophy fromgenial old John Moore, Irish guardof Ida Noyes Hall for fourteen anda half years and “a true defender ofwomanhood.” The old soldier wasalways popularwith the studentsand with the Uni¬versity presidents,from Judson ondown the line. Thewalls of Moore’squiant apartmentare embellishedwith gentle religi¬ous paintings. Butin his grip he canJohn .Moore still feel the han¬dle of a heavy club.For until his retirement threeweeks ago, Moore faced the neces-.<ity of gruffly handling all sorts ofintruders from picture-burglars tocrazy women Now, sitting impatient¬ly in the silence of his room, he isa most vehement objector to thelabel “aged,” and a most emphaticbeliever and expert in the use offorce, or rather, the use of the bluff,which he found much wiser and moreetfective for a 70-year-old.• • •“My bluff was never called,” hel*oasts, “no matter how big, howtough, how numerous, or how drunkthe intruders were. Why severalyears ago 1 even stopped Vice Presi¬dent Woodward from smoking in thebuilding. I’m famous as the manwho made President Burton gpve mehis hat one day before I knew whohe was. It was a rule that mencouldn’t wear hats in Ida Noyes, andI learned to obey orders in the army,no matter what.■‘One time two men about 25 yearsold were tearing up the place. Theylooked plenty tough. I approachedthem .swiftly, grabbed one by theshoulder, and said,‘(Jet out.’ ‘Who said III.so,’ they replied. WOMEN’S‘Ordirs from head- GUARDIAN<iuarters, I growled.IJight out that door, both of you.’ I-hoved them out easily. About twoyear- later, one of them came back,but as soon as he saw me, he scootedout the door.* « «" I hat's the way to bluff. Get tothem first. (Jrab them and catchthem off their guard. When the girlswanted me to shoo away the 63rd.street i)unhandlcrs who sometimesmenaced them on the front walk, Ialways started at them on the run.Then they scattered quicker.”Bluffing was only one of Moore’smany typical experiences as perennialguard of Ida Noyes Hall. He wasal-o a great fi.xer. “They alwaysdashed up to me and shrilled, ‘Oh,•Mr. .Moore, can you fix this candel¬abra, or this cape de morte?” ‘Yes,■A hat is it,’ I wx)uld reply. I love tofi.x things.” At that point Moore be¬gan to describe in detail, with re¬markable memory for such age, every(Continued on Page 3) Dunne to SpeakAt All-CampusSports Round-upPerhaps the only combination judgeand football coach in the country willbe one of the speakers at the all-cam¬pus sports round-up Friday night at8 in Burton Court.Jerome “Duke” Dunne, newly elect¬ed judge of the circuit court and linecoach for the Maroons will be intro¬duced by Harry Swanson, past presi¬dent of the Alumni Council and mem¬ber of the LaSalle Street Mondaymorning coaching staff. Swanson willbe Master of Ceremonies.Movies of University games, talksby authorities in the sports field, and,by special grant of the Interfratern¬ity and Interclub councils, cominglingof freshmen and upperclass-studentswill be the order of the evening.Men and women are invited. Tick¬ets may be purchased for 35 centsfrom the Maroon office, dormitory in¬formation desks, and campus repre¬sentatives.Defends HutchinsHigher Education ’in Scholars^ Feud“Naive” is hardly the word forPresident Hutchins’ proposed recon¬struction of higher education accord¬ing to Dr. William S. Gray, profes-.sor of Education. In answer to wide¬spread criticism aroused by PresidentHutchins’ recent publications. Dr.Gray stated: “He is achieving hispurpose by challenging the statusquo and stimulating people to re¬think values in education.”“From this point of view,” he con¬tinued, “his articles have already at¬tained remarkable success.”Dr. Gray’s statement is a directrefutation of the claim of Dr. Earn¬est O. Melby, dean of NorthwesternSchool of Education, that PresidentHutchins’ “new scholasticism” is just“.stark and sterile medievalism” show,ing a “fundamental lack of faith indemocracy.”Unintelligent Criticism“The criticism which has appearedin recent papers to the effect thatPresident Hutchins would rule ‘every¬thing out of education but the intellectual phase’ reveals in nTy judg¬ment lack of understanding of thebroad educational programs appro¬priate for different types of studentsin which President Hutchins be¬lieves,” Dr. Gray declared. “It failsalso to take into account one of thebroader implications of his articles,namely, the more adequate develop¬ment on the part of each individualof his mental potentialities.”Regarding the attack of Dr. Wil¬liam Allan Neilson, president ofStuith college on President Hutchins'belief in the “same amount and kind”of education for everyone, Dr. Graystated that he was quite sure Dr.Neilson had “misinterpreted” Presi¬dent Hutchins.“It is undoubtedly true,” he con¬cluded, “that President Hutchins andsome of his opponents would attaintheir goals through somewhat different materials and methods of instruction.” Campus Men toGive AcademyLateJ^dingsCompton, Harkins, OthersSpeak to DistinguishedScientific Group.At the National Academy of Sci¬ences meeting, next week, many fam¬ous University scientii,ta will presentpapers on recent developments intheir special fields. Dr. Frank R. Lil¬lie, chairman of the Biological Sci¬ences Division and President of theAcademy, reported yesterday.In the physical sciences famedscholars such as Arthur H. Comptonwill present short papers on theirrecent projects. Dr. Comptonwill discuss the effect of galactic ro¬tation on cosmic rays. Dr. WilliamD. Harkins will present a discourseon the intermediate product in nu¬clear reactions, and disintegration insteps. Drs. (jilbert A. Bliss andLeonard E. Dickson will discuss somenew discoveries in the higherbranches of mathematics. Yerkes Ob¬servatory will be represented by Dr.George W. Moffitt, who will discussthe 82-inch reflector of the MacDon¬ald Observatory, and by Dr. G. P.Kuiper who will present his findingson the empirical mass luminosity re¬lationship.Compton Introduces PhysicistsDr. Compton will introduce Dr.William H. Zachariasen and Dr.Henry G. Gale, w'ho will discuss theconstitution of borates and the rul¬ing and testing of diffraction grat¬ings, respectively. Electronic struc¬tures of molecules will be discussedby Dr. Robert S. Mulliken and theDebye-Hueckel theory by Dr. ThomasF. Young, both scientists to be in¬troduced by Dr. W’illiam D. Harkins.Dr. Herman I. Schlesinger will dis¬cuss a pair of newly-discovered com¬pounds, following an introduction byDr. Harkins.For the biological sciences Dr. An¬ton J. Carlson will introduce Dr. E.M. Geiling, who will discuss the pit¬uitary gland of whales. Dr. Julius M.Rogoff, who will discuss the adrenalglands in diabetes. Dr. Franklin C.MacI.K?an and Dr. William Bloom,who will present papers on a para¬thyroid extract. Other scientists tobe introduced by Dr. Carlson areDrs. H. Close Hesseltine, Fred L.Adair, M. Edward Davis, S. H.Pearl, Martin E. Hanke, Ralph W.Gerard, who will present new dis¬coveries on brain waves, Lester R.Dragstedt, and several others. Maroon NewsreelPresents CandidScenes of CampusWith excellent photography andwell-selected sequences. The DailyMaroon Campus Newsreel begins to¬day at 3:30 and 4:45 in Eckhart HallAssembly Room.Outstanding shots are the politicalscenes, the football scenes, and candidpictures of campus life. But there willalso be a color feature, a fashion showof beautiful gowns with Universitywomen as models.The program is a fitting local coun¬terpart of Time magazine’s March ofTime.Additional scenes include six viewsof President Hutchins, numerousscenes of freshman orientation, thetug-of-war. Communist propaganda-distributors, and many more. PaulWagner is photographer and directorof the newsreel.Tickets have been selling at a rapidrate. They may be bought from cam¬pus salesmen or at the door at thetimes of presentation. The newsreelwill be continued tomorrow and Fri¬day.Faculty MembersHonor Dr. Jordanat Service FridayA memorial service for Edwin 0.Jordan, late Andrew MacLeish Dis¬tinguished Service Professor of Bac¬teriology, will be held in BondChapel Friday at 4:30. Vice-Presi¬dent Frederic Woodward will presideand addresses will be made by FrankR. Lillie, Prof. Emeritus of Embryol¬ogy, Shailer Mathews, Professor Em¬eritus of Historical Theology, andCharles W. Gilkey, Dean of the Uni¬versity Chapel.The late Dr. Jordan was a scientistof world-reknown. He worked at thePasteur' Institute in Paris, was aCutter lecturer at Harvard, andchairman of the Depai'tment of Bac¬teriology at the University until1933, when he was appointed emeri¬tus professor.In addition to these honors. Dr.Jordan edited several scientific jour¬nals and was a member of the Medical Fellowship Board, of the National Research Council, and of theRockefeller Foundation. In 1936 hewas elected to the National Academyof Science, the highest measure ofscientific recognition in America.Dr. Jordan has w’ritten severalbooks on bacteriology, food poison¬ing, and influenza.Listeners Respond to Appeal torContinuance of Chapel ProgramAnother Fluke?B & G FenceUp yesterday, down today; just to show you it was there.(See editorial on Page 2) In immediate response to a briefappeal made by Dean Charles Gilkeylast Sunday morning at the beginningof the regular chapel broadcast, hun¬dreds of letters have been pouring in¬to the Chapel office. The programhas been heard in recent years overWGN at 11 every Sunday morningBecause of the return to central stan¬dard time next Sunday, the UniversityBroadcasting Council was advised byofficials of the radio station that aneastern network program would nowconflict with the Chapel service. Un¬less definite proof of the importanceof the program were shown, accordingto the station officials, the Universitywould have to relinquish their timeover the station to the network program.Accordingly, Dean Gilkey made abrief appeal at the beginning of hissermon, “....if all those who feelthat the Chapel service is importantwill take the trouble to write a letterto-day stating their personal convic¬tion as to the value of the broadcast,it will help to insure the continuanceof this service on the air.”Get 400 RepliesIt was a simple request, but indeeda potent one. By Tuesday afternoonnearly 400 families had written in andit is expected that the deluge will notcease for several days. The station¬ery ranges from engraved notes bear¬ing Sheridan Road addresses to pennypost cards from the tenement dis¬tricts.But the contents are quite the same.All have a pleading worried noteabout them, as if the writer felt thatsomething irreplaceable were beingtaken from him—as in the followingtelegram from a prominent Chicagopublisher, “Sunday morning broad¬ cast most beautiful, helpful, and in¬spiring radio hour of week. Leadsall programs for music worship, in¬tellectual and spiritual stimulus.Would be a pagan and barbarian out¬rage to deny it place on air....”Meanwhile, Dean Gilkey awaits thedecision of the station officials. Form Permanent “LeadersOrganization” for ContactingLeading High School SeniorsPublish StudentDirectory Tuesday;Includes All NamesThe 1936-37 edition of the StudentDirectory will make its first campusappearance next Tuesday, accordingto an announcement made yesterdayby Genevieve Fish, editor of Cap and<]Jown.Containing over 7,000 names, thedirectory has been carefully checkedand rechecked many times to insureaccuracy. This year’s edition will notdiffer radically from previous direc¬tories. It will list the name, classification, fraternity or club affiliation.University address, home address,and telephone number of everyregistered student on the quadrangles.Freshmen will be indicated by aster-icks. A list of the heads of all activecampus organizations and the addresses and telephone numbers offraternities is also included.The honor of being the only fresh¬man to attend the InterfraternityBall, with the ticket provided by Capand Gown, still awaits the one whosells the most subscriptions. Include Representativesfrom Various CampusGroups.Campus VolunteersBegin Red CrossRoU CaU TodayBeginning today the Red Crosswill carry on the annual intensivedrive on campus for subscriptions tothe Roll Call. Representatives fromthe 14 women’s clubs in the Univer-.sity will be stationed at tables inCobb hall, Mandel hall. Harper Li¬brary, and the Press building to takecontributions to the fund until Friday.Other tables under the auspices ofthe Ida Noyes council and Interna¬tional House will be placed in thesehalls.Under the 100 per cent quota sys¬tem, special cooperation is beingshow'n by the clubs and fraternities,several of which have already ful¬filled their quota. The first club toturn in a 100 per cent membershipis Quadrangler.President Robert Maynard Hutchins and Vice-president FredericWoodward endorsed the drive instatements to the Daily Maroon yes¬terday.Club women on duty at 8:30 at thetables for the Red (^ross drive willget supplies for their tables in Room16 in Lexington hall before going tothe stations. Women on duty at 5:30will return money and supplies toHenry Miller in the same room.Fraternities and clubs may turnin their money to Miller in Lexing¬ton 16 between 3 and 4 by Fridayafternoon.Pijoan Sees Spanish Civil War asOutburst of Volcanic TemperamentPresent Civil War between theBlacks and the Reds, is psychologic¬ally just another outburst of the intractible temperament of Spain, Professor Joseph Pijoan of the Department of Art, and authority on Span¬ish culture observed yesterday afterhis recent visit to that wai’-riddencountry.Spain has been a country anal¬ogous to a volcano, slumbering andthen suddenly erupting with violenceand ruin. Far behind the progress ofmodern civilization, the Spanish haveretained their nobility in the style ofthe middle ages, and have corre¬spondingly ground the w’orkers lowerand lower; while the rich have waxedricher, the poor have had barelyenough to subsist on. The averagewage for workers in Madrid is lowerthan one dollar a day; skilled laborrarely receives as high as three dol¬lars a day. Food, in Madrid, is ascostly as it is in any other country.In 1935 Chapaprieta, prime minis¬ter and a lawyer of the high finance,attempted to aid the condition of thepoor by lowering the salaries of theofficers of the administration, andincreasing the duties levied on the Replacing the temporary organiza¬tions heretofore associated with the“Leaders for 40” movements, a per¬manent system for contacting desir¬able high school seniors is being or¬ganized under the leadership ofEdward Bell, a senior member of PsiUpsilon.The system will be known as the“Leaders Organization.”Entirely under student manage¬ment, the group will functionthroughout the school year. Its pur¬pose is to bring to the University stu¬dents high in scholarship, high inpersonality, and high in athletics.Modeled After BlackfriarsThe Leaders organization is mod¬eled after the Blackfriars in that itwill be a hierarchy. With Bell, onthe board of control, will be anothersenior man and one senior woman.Six junior chairmen will be chosen,under whom, in turn, will servea sophomore staff. Promotion will beeffected by recommendation based onindividual records.Divisions in the organization, un¬der the direct charge of juniors, willinclude high school contacts, campusaffairs, women’s activities, and alum¬ni contacts.The Leaders Organization will bein direct contact with alumni organ¬izations in cities throughout theUnited States, and will work wher¬ever possible, with the UniversityAlumni organizations.In close conjunction, the group willaid the high school promotion staffof the University, since the purposesof both organizations are essentiallythe same.To Announce Junior ChairmenJunior chairmen will be announcedsoon. These six will probably consistof three fraternity men, two clubwomen, and one independent stu¬dent.Sophomores will be drawn into thestaff as they show interest in the ac¬tivity. There will probably be about20 second year positions available.“It is only through a well organ¬ized attempt to secure good materialthat the University may hold to thepresent high quality of student,” saida committee member yesterday.University PressPrints FoundationSeries of Lecturesfortunes of the wealthy. Balking atthis the nobles brought sufficientpressure to bear on the prime minis¬ter forcing his resignation.Government WaveredGovernment under the parliamen¬tary system was a wavering one atbest, which gave the lower classesvery little respite toward improvingtheir conditions. Of that governmentsays Professor Pijoan, “Parliamentswork in Anglo-Saxon and Scandina¬vian countries, because it is in theblood of the Nordics to discuss calm¬ly public affairs. They have done this] Economy,from prehistoric times—Ricks, Riggs,or Reichs. In those Nordic assembliesdiscussion brings evidence and evi¬dence brings convictions which inturn inspires decision. The southernpeoples will convene only with tum¬ultuary assemblies like the Romancomita. They would even discuss bythis process such questions as towhether the sun is in the sky or not.The debaters will stick to their opini¬ons with a passion and love of theirown beliefs. What is true and conveni¬ent matters very little. What is of im¬portance is to conquer the others(Continued on Page 2) Among the books published yester¬day by the University of ChicagoPress was “Neutrality and Collec¬tive Security,” a collection of theHarris Foundation lectures deliveredon campus in June of last year.Six lectures are included dealingwith “The Status of Western Civili¬zation,” by the Honorable William E.Dodd, professor emeritus of Historyand United States ambassador toGermany, “Collective Security, as a So¬cial Problem,” by Sir Alfred Zimmer,professor of International Relationsat Oxford, and director of the Ge¬neva School of International Studies,and “The United States and Collec¬tive Security” by Edwin Dewitt Dick¬inson, dean of Jurisprudence at theUniversity of California.The publication of the proceedingsof the National Conference of SocialWork held in Atlantic City last yearcontains lectures and papers bySophonisba P. Breckinridge, profes¬sor emeritus of Public Welfare Ad¬ministration, Edith Abbott, profes¬sor of Social Economy, and HarrisonDonns, associate professor of SocialA third book appearing yesterdaywas “Edna St. Vincent Millay andHer Times” by Elizabeth Atkins, As¬sistant professor of English at theUniversity of Minnesota. The authortraces the importance of Millay asthe only living poet who is casuallyquoted in philosophical treatises andin motion picture magazines, inchurches and in night clubs, in therural schools of Oregon and in theSorbonne of Paris. “Millay repre¬sents our time to itself”, said MissAtkins,” as Tennyson represented theperiod of Victoria to itself or BryonI the period of Romanticism.”1-.,tv,4.-E8ee^Tw<Jf ~i .;■- > ' •• •■ XVi-.'s'• •'■• '■■' '. ,,:—'- --' ' ^ _. _ , ■— ^ . oTuVirT-IV^iv O ■ ^' ■ ■“^"■•■■■"?!“*'^'“*^'»^^'^'*T“““'“*T“''‘“"““ ■" ^WI, .■" jrrc I'fT tfy »kW, r.,': ■■&•■Miy,‘IW*ft?'--fe-.;-" #• 3II{e ^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 respotfsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The Dalily Ma¬roon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the views ofthe University admin-istration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription rat'es;12.76 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,REPRCse.NTEO FOR NATIONAU ADVERTISING BTNational Advertising Service, Inc.College PmbUskers RepresSentative420 M.ADISON AVE. New York, N. y.Chicago • Boston • San FranciscoLOS Angeles • Portland • SeattleBOARD OF CONTROLJULIAN A. KISER Editor-in-ChiefDONALD ELLIOTT Business ManagerEDWARD S. STERN Managing EditorJOHN G. MORRIS Associate EditorJAMES F. BERNARD., .Advertising ManagerBernice BartelsEdward Frit* EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESElRoy Golding Cody PfanstiehlWiMiam McNeill Betty RobbinsSigmund DansigerCharles Hoy BUSINESS ASSOCIATESBernaril Levine WMliam RubaehRoibert RosenfelsEDITORIAL ASSISTANTSHarris BeckLaura BergquistMax ine BiesenthalEmmett DeadmanBetty Jean Dunlap C. Sharpless HickmanRex HortonHenry KraybillDavid Mau-,7iy Byron MillerLewis MillerDavid SchefferMarjorie SeifrledBob SpeerSTAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSDavid Eisendrath Donal HelwayNight Editor: ElRoy D. GoldingAssistants: Emmett Deadman andDavid HarrisWednesday, November 11, 1936Latest B&G Brainstorm(Picture on Page 1.)Something new in the w’ay of a decorativemotif for campus sidewalks appeared yester¬day W’hen the Department of Buildings andGrounds erected a barbed wire fence at bothends of the walk running back of Ida NoyesHall betw’een Woodlawn and Kimbark avenues.Not only in this latest brainstorm to springfrom the fertile minds of the Buildings andGrounds authorities, but in almost every con¬tact with student organizations and activities,the department exhibits a complete disregard ofthe student interest at the University.Blocking of this sidewalk undoubtedlycauses a serious inconvenience to those stu¬dents who have classes in the Graduate Edu¬cation building and who must, in many cases,walk from the opposite end of the campus toKimbark avenue in the ten minutes betweenclasses. What makes this inconvenience seemtotally inexcusable is that there is no appar¬ent, indeed almost no conceivable, reason forthe erection of fences here. The Buildings andGrounds authorities yesterday refused to di¬vulge any reasons for their action.Apparently we are supposed to guess thereason. We can, of course, advance severaltheoretically possible explanations. It is ju.stpossible that the department has a lot of extrawire and fence posts and thought that a side¬walk offered the most attractive spot on cam¬pus to use them. It that is the case, perhapswe can expect to have all campus sidewalksfenced off in the near future. Or perhaps thedepartment has a theory that students do notget enough exercise and that walking a fewblocks extra each day might do them somegood. It is also likely that it is necessary tokeep students off the walk in order to protectthe girls in Ida Noyes Hall from the glances ofpassers-by. It is even more likely that thefences were erected because the sidewalk is un¬safe for students to pass over.The only serious reason that we can thinkof is that the department might want to pre¬vent students who use this thoroughfare fromThe ABC’sBewildered WorldThe most characteristic feature of the modern worldis bewilderment. It has become the fa.shion to be be¬wildered. Anybody who says he knows anything or un¬derstands anything is at once suspected of affectationor falsehood. Consi.stency has become a vice and op¬portunism a virtue. We do not know' where we are go¬ing, or why- and we have almost given up the attempt to#nd out.Robert M. Hutchins,No Fi^vdlif Voice. cutting across the lawn behind the Chapel-Cf course, it would- never have occurred to thesages of Buildings and (grounds that if a suffi¬cient number of students use this pathway towarrant such drastic action as fencing off asidew*alk, it would be a much more effectivemeans of handling the situation to constructa walk back of the Chapel, running betweenLexington Hall and Oriental Institute to Uni¬versity avenue.Nor is this the first time the Departmentof Buildings and Grounds has failed to takeinto consideration thie effect of certain of itspolicies on the student body and on studentactivities. It is apparently a rule of the depart¬ment to fix its charges for work done for anystudent organization so high that in most casesthe group is forced to abandon its plans. Theremust be some numerologist in the departmentwho has a mystic regard for the sum of $t5,for that is the customarj’^ charge for work doneof any nature. Only recently Buildings ahd‘Grounds wished to charge ^he committee ar¬ranging a pep session $15 for running a wireextension from Ryerson Hall to the Circle sotha#a public address system could be set up.The only bright hope that appears for thefuture is that the department may soon erectfences in front of the doors to all buildings inorder to save wear and tear on the floors andin the classrooms. The fact buildings are meantto have classes in will certainly carry noweight, for apparently it has been forgottenthat sidewalks are meant to walk on.P.S^ At a late hour last night, it was ob¬served that the fences had been taken down.It seems that pressure from the Marooii andother interested 'groups was able, for once, tocounteract B&G inefficiency. Of course, wenever can tell what to expect next.The Travelling BazaarConducted by CODY PFANSTIEHL■ Continuing and concluding the Opinions Of The Op¬posite Sex, w’e here present a conglomerate cross sectionof the flood of feminine rebuttle.We like especially the one about the man who datesgirls in a derogatory manner.TO LOVE— .AS IN SPINACHI hate the man who passes out on his date and leavesher to get home as best she can.I hate the man who says he will call for me at 8:30and doesn’t appear until 9:15.1 hate the man who smokes a pipe becau.se someonetold him it suited his profile.I hate the man who makes a fetish of “old fashionedfemininity”,I hate the man who is overly “Joe College.’’I hate the man who talks nothing but smut.I hate the man who gossips about girls he has datedin a derogatory manner,I hate the man who takes me out only to makepasses.But, as a rule, men aren’t bad.TAKE 2 EACHNIGHT. SHAKE WELLInstead of always dictating to the other fellow whatwe particularly dislike about' him, how’s abo.ut tellinghim w'hat we DO like for a change. At least it giveshim something to work toward.We are club girls—not that it makes any difference^but anyhow—We like the man who can mix well—but not so wellthat he excludes everyone from the small private circleformed by himself.We like our men to say nice things, naturally, butnot exactly the identical things to every girl. Howabout a little Variety? At least now and then.We’re interested in what our dates have been doingand expect them to be the same. Why do people dateif they have no mutual interest ? Only an extremelyconceited person is interested solely in his own affairs.We like men AND girls who make the most of ablind date even w'hen it’s proved disappointing.And then, what’s wrong with hamburgers? Onlydownright gold-diggers ask for more all the time.We like men who are considerate of our feelings—we try to be the same. ;We like flowers, at least for formal dates, if theycan afford it—and particularly when the date’s on us.We hate red nail polish too—but we like neat nailsand good grooming in either (not pronounced Eye-ther)sex.We don’t mind gum—but we don’t like to hear it.We also don’t mind our dates drinking—if they knowwhen to stop. There’s a limit for men as well as for us,and after all you have to drive home.We like ’em to hold us comfortably while we’redancing not by the scruff of the neck. We’re just notmade that way.We like ouY men to “know their stuff” and not toact self conscious when performing common courtesies.They really are appreciated'even though we seem totake them for granted.We’ve not attempted to be clever in writing this—we feel there’s been too much of that and not enoughconsideration. We know you’re not perfect—but neitherare we. Why not make the best of it?In other words we like men, we like girls, both or¬ganized and unprg^nizefl. We recognize the. fact thatnothing is flawless.^. Editor,The Daily Maroon:Presumably we are all students inorder to know things, but the columrisof the Marodn and PhoenTx and theclassrooms of our most, popular pro¬fessors seem rather to imply that weare students in order to disagree witheach other: 'This love of schism isfed by a firm determination never tolisten for anything in opponents’ ar¬guments but ambiguities. It is fos¬tered by a vast indifference to oppon¬ents’ aims. Examples are all tooready to hand.;Messrs. Stauffer and Brumbaugh,for instance, lately spent a long Ma¬roon column attacking not the conten¬tions of Mr. Herbert Schwartz print¬ed in the last Phoenix, but his meth¬ods of proof. Now Mr. Schwartz’sarguments are of little interest unlesshis conclusions are important. IfStauffer and Brumbaugh had concern¬ed themselves with the nature of thoseconclusions they would have given usa correct statement of proof or ofdisproof. They would have at leastadmitted that Schwartz’s argumentis not that ontologncal argument.They would have pointed out that thepassage on immaterial substances,though, perhaps badly stated, has nev¬ertheless a perfectly valid meaning;they should have stated it for us cor¬rectly. Instead of complaining at theomission of the proofs of God’s exist¬ence, if these proofs' can establishan Almighty for us, let them give theproofs. Finally instead of handingMr. Schwartz to “superstitious” psy¬choanalysts, why did they not defeadthe truth from such attacks? Inshort, the object of Messrs, Staufferand Brumbaugh in attacking Mr.Schwartz seems an anti-intellectualone; the statement of an argumentseems to them more vital than thedissemination of truth and doctrine.On the other hand Mr. Schw'artzseems himself to have felt that con¬version was more important for hisaudience than understanding, with theusual result of too clever rhetoric...bad rhetoric. Bad because he talkeddown to a student body as if theyhad no interest in philosophy, andyet he couched his arguments iri thetechnical language of scholasticism,a language especially alarming to theunregenerate. When he is persuad¬ing he seems to be trying to denjon-strate, and yet the only justificationfor his demonstrations is their rhet¬orical plausibility. Assuming thatthese practical errors do not arisefrom intellectual confusion, they dobetray a sad lack of the art of themissionary.A third and even more sobering ex¬ample is the pair of lectures on thetheories of Karl Marx delivered lastweek by Prof. Gideonse to the unsus¬pecting subjects of Social Science I.They were neither an explanation nora disproof of what some of us mightconsider rather important contentions,but very expert propaganda againstbothering to understand what it is soeasy to wisecrack about. Pres. Hutch¬ins has repeatedly stated that thereare only two sufficient causes for dis¬charging a professor; (1) incompe¬tence; (2) deliberate and maliciousindoctrination. We are not surewhich charge should be leveledagainst Prof. Gideonse. The studentswere told that “Capital” was probablyfalse and contradictory because i£ waswritten over a period of years and bytwo men; that Engels was insincerebecause he was a capitalist; that Marxwas contradictory in believing boththat history was determined and thatmen could alter it; that the proletar¬iat has decreased in numbers (definingproletariat as unskilled labor, not asMarx define.^ it); and so on and so onwith no attempt to explain the actualfundamentals of Marx’s system. IfProf. Gideonse is not a mere propa¬gandist he should give his studentsat least a glimpse of what he is avow¬edly discussing. Student Marxists,without benefit of the professorialpulpit, will have to do as best thfeycan to undo ProX Gideonse’s skilledORCHESTRA HALL1936--FortY-Sixth Season—1937Chicago SymphonyOrchestraFREDERICK STOCK. ConductorPROGRAMS(Subject to change)FriaayAfternoonEvening Nov. 12-13Soloist—Guiomar Novaes“Tragic Overture’* Opus 81 Brahms“Pyanepsion” (first performance) Bliss“Trio for Piano, Violin, and Violin-cello” Opus 50 .'fschaiskowskyPiano Concerto, No. 4—G MajorOpus 68 ......BeethovenTickets: Main floor,. 11.00. 11.50; Gallery, 60eBaleony/ And indIodic fbr a neeiconfusioiiisiii.ar|' we toattempt at; coridu-sions rather thlin, controversy. If itis to the' AHstbtelians tliey niust firstorient ,thei|! kiM.^edge toward theend of good action. If to the Thom-ists, they must acknowledge thatCathoTi'cisin coniradicts its own nameif it becomes a sectarian snorting atthe infidel or a jesuitical attempt atproselytizing. The sore beset Marx¬isms do at least claim and attempt to'follow this orientation to good actionfor good arid honest ends*, they arenot concerned v^ith dispute but withacebmplishnjent. Let tho’sV who thinkthey have a good philosophy follow itspractical conclusions and work' forthe good state where truth' is nota here.sy, where no one has vested in¬terest in being superstitious. ‘Leo Shrelds,Winston Ashley, 'H(Continued from Page 1)with fiery words. It is quite plainthat for peoples of this type a mini¬mum of parliament is advisable.”Color Situatiriri:The intractibility of the parliamen¬tary government led to the presentalignment of Blacks and Reds, Underthe Black banner are the officialArmy, the nobles, and the Church;following the Reels are the proleta¬riat, who after centuries of being theunder-dog are making a bid for free¬dom. In the event that the peopleshould win, they advocate the poli¬cies of mild communi.^ts, to wit:gradual nationalization of lands andindustries, and humane laws for work¬ers. ■The dispatches in the newspapersconcerning the destruction of thechurches, according to Mr. Pijoanhave been exaggerated, and killinghas been in pre-revenge anticipatinglike treatment at the hands of theBlacks. Noro Franco wants Madrid ridof American correspondents thatcould publish the white terror what iscoming after the Red one.With sharp emphasis Mr. Pijoandeclared, “Anyhow, this is not anoperetta-music hall war. Spain is stillthe same as it was in the time ofNumantia Roncesvalles, and Welling¬ton. Perhaps this shall disturb theones that thought that the Cid, Car¬men, and Cortes were concoctions ofthe brain to be served only -for schol¬astic purposes.”Avoid SMOKER’S HangoverBuy your smoking equipmsiil atStinewaysSouthwest CornerKenwood & 57th St. theOi|iad®iiglesKlEETINd^Sun roomCrossed Cannon. Reynolds Club,room D at 7,WAA Initiation ‘ dmner.of Ida Noyes Hallfai 5:30.Je>|vish Student Foundation. RabbiCharibs Shulman will speak on "WhetDestroys Peace?” Theatre of IdaNoyes Hall at 4. .El Cjrculo Espano). Alumnae roomof Ida Noyes- Hall' at 7.Senate Committee on UniverLi^j,Policy. Social Science lD7 at 3:30.Special Orchestra' Group. MamudHall at 7:30.Rayute. Alumnae room of I d ^Noyifs Hall at 3:30.Arrian. Room C of Ida Noyes Hallat 4:30.Achoth. Room A of Ida Noyes Hailat 2:30.YWCA. Miss Mary Gilson, assi^tant profes.sor of Economics, will spe;ikon “Finland, a New Itepublic’’. Li¬brary of Ida Noyes Hall at 3:30,Hawaiian Night. CoVrectibn. This isNOT to be a fqrfnal affair.Physics Club. Three speakers. Eck-harf Coiri'mon room at 4:30.Chapel Union. Student-Faculty committee. Chapel office at 3:30.Zopldgy Club. “Experimental Modi¬fication of Echino'derm Development’’'—Profes.sor Child. Zoology 29 at 4:3(1,RADIO PROGRAMS“Art in Modern Life—Photo¬graphy,” WTND at 7:30.MISCELLANEOUSPhonograph Concert. “Symphony inE Flat Major,” Beethoven. Social Sil¬ence Assembly, at 12:.30.Campus Newsreel. 10c ad-missiunEckhart Assembly Hall at 3:30 andRenais.sanre Society Exhibit ofpaintings, drawings, and water col¬ors. Wiebolt Hall 205, 2 to 5.Public I.ecture (downtown). “Cur¬rent Trends in Business: The tax;i-tion of Corporate Surpluses.” Assistant Professor Graham, Fullerton Hall.Art Institute, at 6:45.Open Physics Lecture. “Heal’’—Prbfe.ssor Lemon. Eckhart 202 at 4:30-, American Concert Orchestra. 35i'admission. Alexander Savine, conduc¬tor, Saul Dorfman, piano soloist. In¬ternational House at 8:30.Frolic Theatre.5.>th & ELLIS AVE.Today and Tomorrow"Road to Glory"Warner Baxter, Frederick March,Lionel BarrymoreFriday and Saturday"Taxi"Jimmy OagneyChicago City Opera Co.Jason F. WhitneyPresident Paul Lonrone' Gcn*l Mana'cerWed. Eve., N®v. 11LOUISE'—JeRson, Claessens; Has-selmans, Conductor.Fri. Eve., Nov. 13TRIPLE BILL: Gaveileria Rusti-cana; Gianni Schicchi; Gershwin’sAmericans in Paris.Sat. Eve.Nov. 14Sat. Mat.JACK ANDTHE BEAN-STALK with MARTHA, withMatyas, Porter, Jepsori, BarovLa,Diano. Schip'a, Rimini.6 Weeks of Grand Operato December' 12Seats at Information (^ffice >Prices 75c9229 TAM ¥CHif| MLTo A fflOWThere are lots of pleasantthings you can do widi themoiiey youMl save by eat*ing at Younker*t regularly.Cowplaft UacfcaoaDh»fRtStAURANTS51 E. Chicago Ave.1510 Hydiie Park Blvd.501 Davit Street, Evanstoneveryone TALKS about“PRIDE & TRFHUDICK”A SMASH HITSeats Now on Sale for 3 WeeksSubscription Ended, All Seats for AllPerformances at Bos Office at Rexu-' ia'r' Prices; ■■Max 'Gordoii Presents the ComedyPRIDE &PREJUDICEJane Austen’s Great Novel Dram¬atized by Helen JeFomeCHICAGO CRITICS ALL AGREE‘SUCCESS" "SUCCESS”, Collins, Tribune Stevens, Americiiu-SUCCESS" "SUCCESS”■Lewis, News Frink. Herald-Exam“SUCCESS" "BUCCEBS"Bprdem Tfi^ Gaasidy, Jour, ComHARRIS^Eves. Except Sun.^ 52:l«. II, tl.SS. *1Mat., Wed. a Sat., $2i' $1.50, |1.'plus tax/ ■•aITHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 11, 1936 Page ThreeProblemataBy PHIL AGATHON* * ♦GKKENVILLE, MICHIGANWhen he said that Aristotle wasjust like the people in Greenville,Michigan, Beta Fred Bock got rightat one reason why Aristotle is good,^ev. r trying to be subtle from a loveof n'.anipulation, never being fancywith a simple problem, there is nononsense about our hero, just goodplain common sense, like the peoplein Greenville.lo say that he is common sensedoes not imply that he is an apolog¬ist for unreflected opinion, or that heis a jiroverbial philosopher like Ed¬die Guest or those who regard ethicsas a descriptive science. What Imean is that when confronted witha scientific problem (his sense ofscientific) he let his perceptive andanalytic powers deal with it withouta lot of hypochondriac stuff aboutwhether he was really there, orsolipsism, or any of t hat interfering.(l)’ja ever read a book on solipsism?I can’t imagine anything funnier!)Further, Aristotle is common sensein that, as far as I understand, hetreats of them as we understandthem, not at they may be in se.\K( HITECTONICSAnother good reason for preferringAristotle is this: many other menhave treated the same subjects asthe man from Stagird, but none hastreated them all. Aristotle thus pre¬sents the (philosophic) sciences intheir proper mutual relations, andhas one system of terms for all thesciences. He also by means of thehigher sciences makes perfectly clearthe principles (his word again) ofthe lower sciences.Other men, tho they reached rea¬sonable conclusions very often, do notpresent so complete a scheme, so ex¬tensive a terminology, or so clear anexamination of fundamentals. Oneman may be a metaphysician, a psy¬chologist, an ethicist—Aristotle aloneis all things.Which is why all philosophy shouldbc-gin with Aristotle, and even thoughit extend or refine or apply histheories, must in a sense end withhim, or consistently with him.sri.iTThe Thomist wing of the TruePhilosophers will object that Thomaspresented an equally true universaland more explicit system. Here asjilit appears: Ashley, Stauffer, andother Betas claim that Thomas' argu¬ments on the need for Sacred The¬ology ar-e not valid, the Alpha Pelt’sclaim that they are.The Betas cite the Ethics 1 10, andecho the opinion that the Summa I.HU “smells like Grace,” which letsout Thomas’ argument on the Beati¬fic Vision as the proper end of man.The point to all this is that ifThomas is wrong on the last end ofman, the whole fabric of revelationand theology, church and all, is dis¬solved as necessary and hence pos¬sible.A I) Phi takes the contrary posi¬tion, but lo.'^t one outwork—they ad¬mitted that Thomas was wrong onone point in this book on Law.NO SPLITThis split does not mean that allconcerned will not hold out manfullyagainst the .substitution of pragmaticfor necessary philosophy.ITEM from the calendar for lastThursday: Noon Service, How canWe avoid Self-Pity? Anthem: Come,Soothing Death.•'I BMC ENEMY NO. 1•Mr. Dewey is the greatest man thatoyer lived. Whereas other men mustnibble at the problems of science in aliiecemeal fashion, Mr. Dewey boltshis cosmos whole. He is obsessedwith the idea that everything is agreat big something. He cannot makethe least remark without qualifyingIt yvith all the rest of the universe.1 his is inconsiderate of him. Heshould realize that other minds arenot as he is. They digest the naturalorder only part by part, and so mustConsider the sciences one by one. Andit is just possible that if Mr. DeweyWould adopt this nwre pragmatic ap¬proach, his writings would gain intnielligibility what they would losein texture and lush obscurity. Guiseppe Borgese, Noted A ntUFascist^ Joins University StaffRefusal to Take FascistOath Led to Self ImposedExile.PLEDGINGAlpha Delta Phi announces thepledging of Byron Miller of Chicago.Sigma announces the pledging ofLouise Garrigus of Indianapolis, Ind.Sigma Chi announces the formalpledging of: Otto Seidelman, of Chi-^ftgo; Paul Pischer, of Chicago; DeanLinger, of Ocinto, Wisconsin; BobertBurke, of Chicago; Frederick Emery,of Seneca, Kansas; Gordon Stewart,nf P’roemont, Texas; Lynwood John-son, of Peach Creek, West Virginia;William Young, of Chicago; FrankStormer, of Chicago; Herbert Hall, ofMilwaukee; George Martin, of SiouxLity, Iowa. By MARJORIE SEIFREIDTo the University has come unher¬alded one of the world’s greatest op¬ponents of Fascism, a man who leftItaly for the sake of his convictions,small, vigorous Giuseppe AntonioBorgese, newly appointed professorof Italian.“Universities are institutions de¬voted to the search of beauty andtruth,” he declares with true Italiangrace. As a distinguished literarycritic, author of modern Italian liter¬ature, history, poetry, and drama,journalist, and statesman, he hasgained world recognition in affairsboth political and educational.He left Italy because of differencesof opinion with Premier Mussolini,climaxed by his refusal to take theFascist oath. Two open lettei's fromProfessor Borgese to Premier Musso¬lini, published in Europe (Paris) onJanuary 15, 1936, presented the schol¬ar’s points of difference with the Fas¬cist regime and philosophy. He op¬posed as unwise the efforts after thewar of some Italian statesmen to ac¬quire Dalmatia, contending that suchaction would be a renunciation by It¬aly of its advantages of insularity.Italy to CaliforniaHis position in Italy became an in¬creasingly difficult one until he leftthe country to come to the Univer¬sity of California in 1931.In one of his open letters to Mus¬solini, Professor Borgese pointed outthat until recently the oath mighthave been interpreted as one of gen¬eric homage to the state, a civic, nota doctrinal, obedience. ’More recent¬ly, he wrote, expressions of Mussolinihave enunciated the principle that theoath now implies an allegiance to anintellectual system. To that system.Professor Borgese said, he refusedallegiance.His clear striking statement at theclose of his second letter to the dic¬tator expressed his philosophy. “Mydwelling place can be only where itis permitted a writer to be truly awriter, that is, to write his thoughts;where, for instance, it is not a crimefor him to think and say that amongthe immediate aims of history thereis or must be the free union of statesof Europe, and that within thesestates existft as much liberty as isnecessary for the intellect to liveand for justice to take its course.Studied at FlorenceBorn in Polizzi Generosa, Palermo,in 1882. Dr. Borgese received his Ph.D. from the University of Florence in1903, his thesis being on the “His¬tory of Romantic Criticism in Italy,”which was later published in a col¬lection of essays sponsored by Croce.After studying in Germany, he wasappointed professor of German Lit¬erature at the University of Rome in1910; later in 1917 he received a sim¬ilar appointment from the Universityof Milan. In 1925 he became profes¬sor of Aesthetics; and in 1930 he wasunable to accept the nomination tothe chair of Italian Literature at Mi¬lan because the Fascist governmentfrowned upon it.Upon the invitation of the Univer¬sity of California in 1931 he came tothe United States, where he was vis¬iting professor of Italian Culture.From 1932 until his appointment tothe University of Chicago he was atSmith College, holding the Neilsonresearch professorship of Italian Lit¬erature for three years; his title in1935-36 was that of Professor of Ital¬ian and Comparative Literature.Founded PublicationsHis active interest in the Florentineliterary movement of the early 1900 s,and his journalistic contributions tosuch publications as “Medusa,” “Leon¬ardo,” and “Hermes,” which he him¬self founded, paved the way for hiscareer as a critic.Orchestra FeaturesStudent Arrangement In addition to his work on novels,psychological and realistic, he becamean active journalist, editing the “HMattino” of Naples, acting as Germancorrespondent and literary editor for“La Stampa,” and contributor to“Corriere della Sera.” His politicalactivities included his acting as Headof the Italian Press bureau, organiz¬ing the Conference and Pact of Rome,and leading Italy in the movement forthe establishment of the League ofNations.People(Continued from Page One)Arrangements of Bach by HilmarLuckhardt and Clark Kessler, bothUniversity students, will be playedby the woodwind section of the Uni¬versity Symphony Orchestra at theregular “Tea and Chatter” social ofthe Music Society at 4 today in theMusic Building. In a novel bit ofsong, Mrs. Robert Mason will featureGertrude Stein’s “Fourteen Anony¬mous Portraits,” as arranged byThomas Turner and Mrs. Mason withmusic by Ellis Kohs.The department of Music also an¬nounces the installation in the MusicBuilding of a sound-proof room withamplifying equipment for playing re¬cordings. The room will be open tothe public at scheduled hours: Mon¬day, 1:15 to 2:30; Tuesday, 10 to 11and 1:30 to 4:30; and Friday from10 to 11 and from 1:30 to 4:30. little chair or table he repaired in14 years.“The Masons and Judsons andBurtons were fine people and werealways particularly nice to me,” theyouthful old soldier commented.“Fred Woodward is a great guy,too.” Hutchins’ name was peculiarlyabsent from Moore’s list of adminis¬trators.* *“The building used to be full offaculty members,” Moore reminisced.As guard, Moore met the Bishopof Canterbury, the Lord Mayor ofLondon, and many others. He has a“warm place in the heart” for thewomen whom he has served in IdaNoyes, including Mrs. Goodspeed, thefirst director; Mrs. Brook, the seconddirector; Miss Shelley, the third;Miss McDougal, the present; andMiss Dudley and Miss McDougal.“I used to have more fun listen¬ing to the Chinamen sing, ‘My WildIrish Rose’,” Moore continued patri¬otically.In 37 years, Moore had been idleonly six weeks until his retirement.Two of those weeks were when hebroke his ribs one stormy night byslipping on some punch while hurry¬ing to close all the windows. He sawthat everything was all right beforehe finally went to the hospital. Thenhe w'orked two weeks with threebroken ribs until one black night hebumped into a chair and fracturedthe ribs. Then he lay on his backfor two solid weeks before suddenlygetting upland going back to work.The present retirement with itsconcurrent inactivity has distressedMoore so much that he is alreadyseeking another job, although he hasa six-months pension. In his expostu¬lations on bluffing, he continually gotup to illustrate his expert methods.« « *“It’s great to be moving aroundagain,” he confided in the midst ofsidling to the door to illustrate thecorrect procedure for getting rid ofcrazy women.He has encountered three crazywomen. One came shrieking into IdaNoyes hall with the avowed intentionof killing her sister. “Go ahead,”Moore yelled back at her. As hetalked to her he kept,approaching thedoor and she kept following her audi¬ence until she stood on the thresh¬old. He then calmly closed the door.Several weeks later she came back,and when Mrs. Goodspeed requestedher withdrawal, she asked haught¬ily, “What right do you have buttingin around here?” But when Moorestarted after her with his sidlingtactics she soon had the door calmlyslammed in her face a second time.Moore’s favorite system for di¬spersing drunks was the pin method.“A timely pin-thrust in one especial¬ly glorious souse caused him to jump12 feet with his knees kocking toge¬ther all the way,” Moore testified. Onetime he got rid of a quarreling“drunk”couple at a dance by dashingup, gently tapping each on theshoulder, and saying, “Come on outon the roof; I have something to sayto you.” They fell in beautifully,and never got back to the dance floor,we may be sure.*The old soldier of Ida Noyes Hallconcluded with a few candid remarkson the women who frequent the pla^e.He disgustedly quoted such questionsas, “Mr. Moore, what do they use fortables here?” to which he replied,“Tables.”But he made it clear that themajority of the girls “are perfectlygrand,” and that everybody especial¬ly loved Miss Demares Ames whenshe was there. He also remembereda couple “fine boys,” Jack Allen andJohn Barden.As his interviewer left the quaint,gentle, apartment with its “Last Sup¬per,” “St. Anthony” (his favorite),and original etching of “The Brideof Lammermoor,” old John Mooremade his final statement—“Alwaysremember, son, be a good boy andmake your bluff strong.”CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Man’s raccoon coat, ex¬cellent condition. Reasonable. K. J.Hampton, 6431 Cornell. Ph. Fai. 1343. # Qreek tellersBy CODY PFANSTIEHL^ i ORMING no large mass on the fraternity horizon. Delta Upsilon rollsalong its quiet road as one of the lower priced, moderately large or-ganizations.The average initiation fee is charged—$60. Pledges pay $10, actives liv¬ing outside the house $20, and actives living inside the house $40 a month.Numbers descend throughclasses. There are ten seni¬ors, nine juniors, and eightsophomores.Of 27 actives, 11 are def¬initely “in an activity”.While the D Us may notclaim a high percentage ofextra-curricular offices, thosewho do hold offices, holdpositions of merit. A partiallist discloses the chairmanof the Intramural depart¬ment, two members of Cross¬ed Cannon, president of theInterfraternity council, cap¬tain of the fencing team,and a varsity tackle on thefootball squad.Delta Upsilon may boastof more than 30 Brothers inthe faculty. The fraternitymakes a practice of holdingteas during the winter, towhich are invited well-known speakers.The fraternity is perhaps strongest in the Intramural department activi¬ties, but is otherwise not “typed”.Delta Upsilon5714 Woodlawn Avenue.Richter InvestigatesParkinson’s DiseaseResearch on the causes, treatmentand cure of Parkinson’s Disease hasrecently been undertaken by Dr.Richard B. Richter, Assistant Pro¬fessor of Medicine, with the aid ofa fund of $50,000 contributed by Mr.Morton D. Hull of Chicago. The fund,initiated this summer, is known asthe Morton I). Hull Fund for Medi¬cal Research.Dr. Richter’s work will be pursuedover a five year period. He receivedhis M.D. degree from Rush MedicalCollege in 1925. Previous to his ap¬pointment on the South Side (July1, 1936) he held the title of Assist¬ant Clinical Professor at Rush Medi¬cal College. WAA Holds Initiationin Ida Noyes TonightInitiation services for new mem¬bers of the Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion will be held at a dinner tonightin Ida Noyes hall from 5:30 till 7:30.Formal and informal initiations willbe performed by former members forabout 25 women.Arrangements for the dinner havebeen made by the “C” club, withGregory Pennebaker, president, act¬ing chairman. During the dinner,Caroline Zimmerly, president of theWAA will discuss the history of theorganization, and describe the funo^tions and purposes.Regular meetings of the WAA areheld weekly in the WAA room in IdaNoyes hall.Delicious Foodhas brought us many customersYou, too, will enjoy our tearoom.Luncheon — 35c upD’nners — 65c to $1.00WAFFLES and SANDWICHES6324 Woodlawn Ave.Special arrangements for parties. Call Hyde Park 6324NEW FICTIONVera Brittain—Honourable Estate $2.50Sterling North—Night Outlasts Whippoorwill $2.50MacKinley Kantor—Arouse and Beware $2.50Lloyd Douglas—White Banners $2.50Phyllis Bottome—Level Crossing $2.00Margaret Flint—Old Ashburn Place $2.50Linn—Winds over the (Eampus $2.50Mitchell—Gone with the Wind $3.00Jas. Farrell—World I Never Made $2.50NDN-FICTIONBoswell's Tour to the Hebrides $5.00Stuart Chase—Rich Land, Poor Land $2.50Kallen—Decline and Rise of Consumer $2.75Gunther—Inside Europe $3.50Carrell—Man the Unknown $3.50D. H. Lawrence—Phoenix $3.75Jastrow—Story of Human Error $3.50Hutchins—Higher Learning in America $2.00Heiser—An American Doctor's Odyssey $3.50Subscriptions for All Magazines—WOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open Evenings Receive Petitionsfor ExaminationsDuring DecemberComprehensive examinations i nnine College sequence courses arescheduled for this December. Otherexaminations for which petitions havebeen received will also be given ifdesired by a sufficient number of stu¬dents.The examination schedule follows:December 10, French 101-102-103; De¬cember 11, German 101-102-103; De¬cember 14, chemistry 104-105-120 or130; December 15, Social Science II;December 16, mathematics 101-102-103, and 104-105-106; December 17,English 130-131-132 or 141. Regis¬tration for the December examina¬tions closed on November 1.Students are requested, accordingto Ernest C. Miller, registrar, to noti¬fy the Registrar’s office of changes inUniversity address. T^his is neces¬sary in order to have admittancecards to examinations and class tick¬ets, which will be sent to College stu¬dents after advance registration.nni<ITMUia^botitU(ornmUetsffinest■ BRIAR■ MONEY* CAN BUY'•NRtiIRO OF VRIOE vention with Cello*phane exterior andcooling meah acree»interior keepaipieeoand flakes mrilterand ootof moodLPreventa tongMbile, raw Bondhwet heel, baaodor, fre^eatloratioM,o breakingimlmptoYcathetaateaadaromaofaiiYtobacco.flltO eiOMETTE AND CIOARTHE ONLY PATENTED“CELLOPHANE”- SEALEDFILTER-IT REALLY FILTERSBuy yourMedico pipe atREADER'STHE CAMPUS DRUG STORE61st and Ellisopposite Burton CourtLocal Phone 9INMusic Corporation ofAmerica—PresentsAt theINTER¬FRATERNITYBALLWEDS.November 25thDAILY MAROON SPORTSPage FourGridLeaks* * «By WILLIAM McNEILL♦ ♦ ♦One of the great attractions of foot¬ball is the ever present possibility ofan upset, of which the past two week¬ends have seen more than their share.The factor which makes upsets socommon is the psychology of the play¬ers, which upon occasion may work upto an intense pitch of emotional ex¬altation which makes a team com¬pletely unaware of tiredness, galvan¬izing each member into intense andwholly unself conscious activity.It is this phenomenon of psycholog¬ical momentum which makes a suddenmarch down the field possible, and itis the dying down of this momentumwhich makes the time-out an effect¬ive weapon against such a march. Itis common to all groups working un¬der pressure, but is particularly ap¬parent in football because of the sizeand close physical cooperation whichexsists between them the players.Such an experience came to the Ma¬roon team last year in their greatgame against Ohio State, when for afull half game they led the vauntedBuckeyes, and three times held themwithin the Maroon twenty yard line.The value of a “sparkplug” to ateam is just the ability to reach ahigh emotional key, and act as a cat¬alytic agent in starting the team onthe way to an upset.• * ♦In modern coaching the psycholog¬ical condition of the players receivesattention proportionate to its import¬ance in the performance of the play¬ers. Rockne was among the first towin fame for his handling of the psy¬chology of his players, and now it isa part of every coach’s duty.The effect of newspaper publicityoften counteracts the most strenuousefforts of the coach. When a gameis played up as tough, the teams arenaturally keyed up to begin with,making the ascent to the white hotpitch so much the easier. When a teamis played up as invincible, as were theGophers before the Northwesterngame, the emotional pitch is inevit¬ably lower, and an upset is to be look¬ed out for.The coach’s problem is so to varythe emotional excitement of his play¬ers throught the season as to win themaximum number of games the ma¬terial at his disposal permits. Psy¬chology will achieve gi’eat things, buta high pitch cannot be maintained formore than one or at most two week¬ends on end. A fatal letdown on thepart of a strong team is almost im¬possible to prevent.Proof of the refusal of the Univer¬sity to give athletes special treatmentis to be found in the figures of schol¬arship holders. Only .257 per centof the athletes who won awards lastyear held full or partial scholarships,while for the student body as a whole,.293 per cent have some sort of aidwith their tuition. The disparity isattributable to the omission of fresh¬men from the ranks of the athletes,while the average for the school atlarge is raised by the large numberof freshman scholarships. Even moreremarkable is the fact that the per¬centage of scholarship holders amongthe football players is only .209 percent. Proving that only dumb ath¬letes play football?Plan Japan Tripfor Baseball TeamWaseda University, which was de¬feated by the Maroon team lastSpring, with a score of 3 games toWaseda’s 2, may have a chance toeven things up next fall, if tentativeplans for sending the Maroon base¬ball team to Japan are consumnated.The players will probably leave inthe latter part of August. Theywill take a month for the trip to thecoast, and will play games on theway. Arriving in Japan, they willplay a series of at least three gameswith V/aseda, as well as games withother of the Japanese colleges.There being no equivalent of foot¬ball in Japan, baseball is the majorsport of the colleges. It is quite com¬mon for college baseball games todraw crowds of as much as 60,000and the emperor himself attendsthem upon occasion. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1936Owls Rout Phi Psis 38—0;Phi Sigs Win in PlayoffsPhi Gams MeetU “B” TakesBelts Today. DU; PsiAlphaonAn unexpected upset and a thor¬ough trouncing were the results ofyesterday’s quarter-final I-M fra¬ternity league touchball playoffs. Theupset was instigated by the Phi Sigs,who defeated the favored Dekes bya close score of 18-12, while the PsiU’s ran over the Phi Psis 38 to 0.Today, the Phi Gams take on theDU’s at 4 and the favored AlphaDelts meet Psi U “B” at the sametime. The Phi Gam-DU game shouldbe close, but in the second game, theAlpha Belts should have little troublein downing the second string Owlaggregation.Psi U’s Score Six TimesVarying a deceptive, man to manpassing attack with a longer, run¬ning attack, the Psi U’s trounced thePhi Psis to the tune of 38 to 0.This variety of attack seemed toconfuse the hard-trying Phi Psis noend. In the last few minutes of thefirst half Norm Bickel, Big Ten ten¬nis singles champ, intercepted a passfrom midfield, and in coming downfrom that upper strata in w'hich hesnagged the pass, temporarily putRalph Leach out. The score at theend of the first half was 13 to 0 inthe Psi U’s favor.The first play in the second halfwas a spectacular one. Cochran, re¬ceiving a lateral from Bell, reversedhis field and ran to the 20 yard line,passing at this point to Upton whowas tagged on the 3 yard line. But¬ton scored on the next play. On thenext play, Bell, after a couple of lat¬erals, passed to Flynn, who went overfor the score.Flynn Scores AgainIn the process of adding anothersix points to the Psi U’s total, theball, thrown by Bell to Bickel, wastipped by Bickel to Cochran. Cochran,running diagonally across the field,slipped the ball to Flynn for thescore.Keeping up this blasting attack,the Psi U scorers made eighteen ad¬ditional points against a bewilderedPhi Psi team.In the Deke-Phi Sig tilt, the firsttouchdown was executed by the PhiSigs on a beautiful 40-yard pass fromHarris to E. Krause. The Dekesevened up the score when Lewisran for 20 yards, lateraled toMurphy who threw a short passto Jeremy over the goal line.On this play Jeremy caught the balland land heavily against the fence.At the half the score remained tied,6-6.Dekes Forge AheadThe Dekes scored thehr secondtouchdown early in the second half;Beal taking credit for the goal. ThePhi Sigs not to be outdone came rightback and tied up the score with Ko-maiko going over. Making a shoe¬string catch, Odens tallied the win¬ning touchdown, which put the gameon ice for the Phi Sigs. The clash Battered MaroonTeam PreparesforHoosier Tiltwas a hard fought tilt throughout,each team playmg fine touchballfrom start to finish. The deciding None of the football players werefactor in favor of the Phi Sigs was left idle yesterday, as Coach Shaugh-their passing attack, whichin the final score.Psi U’s Champion CalibreIn the crushing defeat adminis¬tered to the Phi Psi’s the Psi U'sgave warrant for all the optimismof their supporters who have beenfreely predicting another all Univer¬sity championship for the veteranteam. Barriers to their triumphalprogress are formidable, w’ith thestrong Alpha Belt team as the firsthurdle, assuming they will beat thePsi U “B” team they meet today.The game between these two fratern¬ities should be the best of the w'holetouchball season.Morgan Again LeadsRifle Club TourneyFreeman Morgan maintained hislead in the Rifle Club ladder tourna¬ment last w’eek by plunking out sixmore points than Hugh Bennett tostay in the fore 183-177. In the wo¬men’s division Margaret Conger andLois Shelford are tied for honorswith 191 apiece.The men’s shooting is done fromfour different positions, while thewomen fire all their shots from theprone position.Several of the members spent yes¬terday at the Indiana Dunes, prac¬ticing on a 100 yard range in prep¬aration for the annual invitation longrange meet held in the Field house.showed nessy kept one group working out onStagg field and another busy on thepractice lot north of the Fieldhouse.He is taking no chances of a repeti¬tion of last year’s disastrous Satur¬day when Indiana overwhelmed theMaroons 24-0.Battered and bruised after lastSaturday’s conflict, the team spentthe first part of the session increas¬ing the mechanical perfection of itsplays. Later they engaged in abrisk scrimmage with the fre§hman.Humbled by Saturday’s whitewashing,the varsity carried out its assignmentswith effectiveness.With the exception of Sherman, thesquad seemed to be in good condition,although every member of the teamwas swathed in bandages which serv¬ed as silent reminders of the Buck¬eyes.Lineup ShiftedNew faces again appeared in theline-up which received most ofShaughnessy’s attention. Gillerlainand Frick were at ends, but Wrighthad been shifted back to the tacklepost with Antonie, and Bosworth wasat guard with Jordan. Sherman, Fa-reed, Goodstein, and Lehnhardt weredoing the ball-lugging.At Bloomington, Coach Bo McMillinwas drilling his men on defenseagainst Maroon attacks and Sol Sher¬man in particular. The Hoosiershave considerably more manpowerthan Chicago and a more impressiverecord this season. Krietenstein Downs Kobak in Finalsof Reynolds Table Tennis Toume^SC)© O (I< OB John Krietenstein, defending cham¬pion of the University, added anotherto his string of aw'ards yesterday bydefeating Matt Kobak in threestraight games to win the champion¬ship of the Reynolds Club autumntable tennis tournament. In theplayoff for third place between BobWilkins and Harold Greenberg, thelatter was the winner, 18-21, 21-18,21-17, 21-18.Dick Finn ennexed the consolationtournament first place by defeatingHitchens 21-18, 21-15.In a battle of vicious slams mingl¬ed with sharp cuts, Krietensteinproved his championship calibre bynever letting Kobak get close enoughto become dangerous. In the firstof the three games with a comforta¬ble lead of 18-12, Alpha Belt Kriet¬enstein eased up and coasted to a21-17 win. The second fray wasfeatured by the smashing drives ofKobak, but these were not sufficientto penetrate the almost perfect de¬fence of the winner, w’ho withstoodever>i,hing Kobak had to offer, andthen turned on the pressure withblasting drives followed up withsharp breaking cuts. The final scorewas 21-11.Krietenstein Regains I^adTrailing by five |K)ints in the be¬ginning of the third game, Krieten¬stein won the next eight points togarner the lead which he never lostas he blasted his way through to adecisive 21-9 match victory.Proving that the best defense is agood offence, Kobak in the upset ofthe day defeated Harold Greenbergin semi-final play. The most hotlycontested game of this match was thelong 26-24 win of Kobak’s. Green¬berg, W’ho had been leading most ofthe way, abandoned his usually cau- • tious style of play and switched toa hard slamming driving attackw'hich was effective, the majority ofthe drives clearing the table. Kobak’sslams, moreover, began to click andhe rapidly caught up. The tie cameat deuce, and then follow’ed a sea¬sawing back and forth with Kobakfinally winning tw’o in a row.Greenberg made a great comebackin the third game to beat Kobak de¬cisively 21-9. Kobak steadied himselfin the fourth and final game, how¬ever, and won 2J-17.Bnjr yourYcUo-B«l« pip* atREADER'STHE CAMPUS DRUG STORE61st and Ellisoppoaitf* Burton CourtLocal Phone 9Seeing is Believing—?How Does HE LookHow Does SHE LookHow Do YOU LookIN MOVIESSee What You Saw(or didn't see)On Campus in OctoberAdded Attraction: All-Cclor Farhion Show with SevenBeautiful Midway ModelsCN A ME WS P UREE SLTODAY, TOMORROW, FRIDAYEckhart AssemblyDaily—3:30 and 4:15 Admission10c45 Minute ShowingsFootball SeniorsBill BosworthBy LEWIS MILLEREvery football team needs at leastone utility man; a man who can shiftfrom one position to another on shortnotice and perform capably at all. Theutility man for the Maroons this yearhas been Bill Bosworth, chunky 200pound senior lineman. He has beenshifted around more than any otherman on the team, which is quite adistinction on a Shaughnessy-coach-ed team.Bosworth came to the Universityfrom Oak Park high, and played atfullback during his first two yearswith the Maroons. He is exception¬ally fast for a man of his weight andheight, and the combination made avery useful substitute back.Last year when the need for re¬serve linemen became actute, Bos¬worth was shifted to center. WhenWhiteside was put out with his in¬jured knee, he did yeoman service atcenter. This year he has seen actionchiefly at guard on offense, end on de¬fense. He has further proved hisversatility by playing blocking half¬back upon occasion. As runningguard, his speed makes it possiblefor him to pull out and head the in-terference for the ball toters.Bosworth is a member of Phi Kap¬pa Psi, and is enrolled in the businessschool. The November Issue ofTHE UNIVERSITY OFCHICAGO MAGAZINEon Sale to Students<$at 15c(regularly 25 cents, off campus)In This IssueThis Era of Uncertainty Charles H. JuddThe First Hundred Years Are The Hardest Emmet B. BayTrivial Travel Tales Howard MortIn My Opinion Fred B. MillettNews Of The Quadrangles William V, MorgansternThe Campus Dissenter Sam HairAthletics John HoweWinds Over the Campus (review) Carl GroboCandid Camera Shots Caricatures by Henry ReeseGet Yours Today From Taylor Tom See . . .BerwangerPicturesatSport^s RoundupBURTON COURTFRI. NIGHT8:00Only 25c