m af the Day ^ iiattp ittariMnVol 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1937 Price 5 Centsl MAUD SLYEy"8 Headlinesaphony presents concert, P*ge 1.linstiom Petitions for1 Union, page 1.I Trarels to Purdue Uni* Nomination Periodof Political UnionCommences TodaySeventy-Five Candidates ofThree Factions Will BeElected.Opening nominations for the elec¬tion of the 20 Conservative, 35 Liber¬al, and 20 Radical members, the Po¬litical Union swings into action todaywith a nomination period to close onNovember 10.Any student on Campus, graduateor undergraduate, is eligible for nomi¬nation, providing that his petitionfills the requirements set forth by,***CoIuMn; ON THE party under which he plans toI, page 4.I Superiors^ Blackfriarsitutional Reform>r the revision of Black-ions has been drawn upd of Superiors, accordingarey, abbott. and will ben toward the end of thisd by the general campuson with Blackfriars elec-■ the past few years, and)f the state of the Order,y Maroon, the Board ofas drawn up the plan toin the open and give theriness staff a more impor-1 elections.ill be announced when thelly accepted. Approvala meeting of the Board, for the Trustees mustchange before it can be-; of the constitution. The. been delayed by the factits members was out ofsek. A meeting has beenr Thursday afternoon, at>roposed change will bea. Slye Studies Cancer Inheritancein Socialistic Society of Rodentsrun.Nomination PetitionsThe Conservatives demand 10names on each petition, but there isno restriction to the number of peti¬tions a person can sign. These peti¬tions must be given to Herbert Lar¬son or Cody Pfanstiehl. The goal ofthe Conservatives is 40 nominationsor double the number of seats theywill hold in the Political Union. TheConservative party organizers willmeet tonight at 9 in the Maroon office.Those interested in gaining a seatin the Liberal section must get only5 signatures, but no one is permittedto sign more than one Liberal peti¬tion. Emmet Deadmen, SeymourMiller, or Dennis McEvoy are re¬ceiving the petitions for the Liberal-ites. The Liberal organizers meettoday at 2:30 in the Maroon Office.'*”Marshall Stone and Ruth Sager havebeen added to the Liberal staff.Radical ArrangementsDuplicating the Conservative reg¬ulations, the Radical party also re¬quires 10 signatures with no restric¬tions for signing more than once.Their goal is also 40 nominees and atentative division has been made into15 Communists, 10 Marxian social¬ists, 10 independent radicals, and 5Trotskyites. Bob Speer and LloydJames are collecting petitions. Hy¬man Minsky, Dean Krueger, and Bet-(Continued on pare 4) By LAURA BERGQUISTLeaving her 10,000 mice to the careof a laboratory assistant for a fewshort hours. Dr. Maude Slye took ahurried trip to Purdue Universitylast weekend to address 750 collegewomen on “The Frontiers in Science.”With scientific precision she toldthem of her research and the impli¬cations of her studies, about hermice who live momentous if not excit¬ing lives, and the battle which scienceis waging against the unknown inits fight against the disease, cancer—but with characteristic reticence jshe told them nothing of herself.Benefactor WatsonOf the early days when she was Anewly graduated psychology major,with many experimental mice butlittle to feed them with, and of herbenefactor John B. Watson, now fam¬ous throughout the world as thefounder of the Behaviorist school ofPsychology, who was the only onewho wondered how she managed tofeed both mice‘and herself on thelimited income of a Fellowship, con¬sequently offering the stores of hisicebox located in the ' basement ofBotany building toward the cause ofthe mice.Of the significance of the day shediscovered that one of her psycholo¬gical mice had cancer—and that itsoffspring had cancer, the day shegave up her psychology studies todelve deeper into this puzzling newfield. She little realized that nearly30 years of her life would be spentexperimentng, theorizing andstudying the disease, that she wouldbecome one of the most eminentscientists of her day and unlock thesecrets of the dread but unknowncancer.Today in her Ellis avenue work-(Continued on page 3) Maroon SubscriptionContest Closes FridayThe Daily Maroon subscriptioncontest closes this Friday, CharlesHoy, business manager, warned aspir¬ants yesterday. The prizes are threefree airliner rides to New York overthe Christnias vacation, and two ofthe three prizes are far from wonyet.First prize, an all expense roundtrip is practically in the hands ofJohn Van de Water who has soldabout 100 subscriptions. The remain¬ing two however can still be won bythe sale of twelve or more subscrip¬tions.The trips will be on TWA planes,leaving the airport at 63rd andWestern, arriving in New York a fewhours later. The winner will have hishotel bill paid by the Maroon up toa sum of $25.Hold Tryouts ForVictory Vanities Illinois SymphonyPresents Concertin Mandel HallAlbert Goldberg ConductsFederal Music ProjectOrchestra.The following clubs and fraterni¬ties have signified that they will en¬ter an act in the Victory Vanitiescompetition to be held at Mandel hallFriday afternoon a 3:30. Each gproup j *^”J®**is required to report at Mandel hallj^”®®^^ Dash’s Organ ^ PreludeWednesday at its designated time. " " "With two seasons of developmentbehind it, the Federal Music Proj¬ect’s eighty-piece Illinois Symphonyorchestra brings a program of sym¬phonies and operatic arias to its pop¬ular price campus concert at Mandelhall tonight. Albert Goldberg willconduct the concert, which featuresSonia Sharnova as soloist.Shamova’s SongsSharnova, contralto with the Chi¬cago Civic Opera Company, will singErda’s Warning- from “Das Rhein-gold,” Ortud’s Scene from “Lohen¬grin,” both by Wagner, and alsoVerdi’s “0 Don Fatale,” and Saint-Saens’ “My Heart at Thy SweetVoice,” from “Samson and Delilah.”She studied^ abroad with Jean deReskze, and has appeared with operacompanies in St. Louis and Cincin¬nati, as well as Chicago.The principal orchestral offering isBeethoven’s Symphony No. 4 in B flatOther selections by the or-Explains Federal Plan forudget; Sounds Optimistic Noteler, professor of Econo-dviser to the nationalpartment, in a speech onnces before the Hydee of Women Voters yes-vered four crucial ques-the federal budget. Theere as follows: Will thealanced in ’39, need it beall, when is it right tobudget, and are federala dangerous positionlains Budget Flans)mist explained the fed-or balancing the budget,ions for decreasing theual expenditure of 8 bil-gradually increasing them its present level of 5.41 in 1939 they balance atfdt the year,sident and the SecretaryOutliness as Chairman^ew State Boardy B. Gilson, assistant pro-Iconomics, yesterday de-of the problems whichher as chairman and hera members, of the newlyadvisory committee of, whose duties will be tostate division of unem-mpensation in matters ofve procedure,coming to the Universityiss Gilson had extensiven adjudication, in connec-ler work as employmenta large mid-western fac-10 in her consulting work,for the first time thiscommittee will outlinelistrative details. A veryse of their work will bet a method of procedurewherr/jy, when a workerfied for unemployment;he grounds he was dis-misconduct or left hisdue cause, he will havepresent his case. of the Treasury say that this will bedone,” he stated, “and I believe thatthey intend sincerely to do so as faras is possible. But any statement forthe 1939 budget is necessarily con¬jectural, and depends on such varia¬bles as important changes in the taxstructure.”Viner believes that the budgetshould be balanced, since an unbal¬anced budget may make the interestrate rise or even make it difficult forthe government to borrow at all. Onthe question of when an attempt tobalance is wise, he stated that thelogical unit was the business cycle,with heavy taxation and light spend¬ing in prosperity, and the reverse indepression years.Ends OptimisticallyEnding on an optimistic note, Vin¬er stated that he does not think weare entering a depression. “The onlyreal source of danger is that a largeand influential part of the publicthink they are in danger,” he stated.“My amateur, half-hearted, forecastis that conditions in 1938 will be bet¬ter than in '37. This is a rich man’spanic.”■ - ■■ — ■ -I ■ VInt. House Selects 20for Position on CouncilTwenty representatives of nationalgroups were elected to the Interna¬tional House Council at ‘the suppermeeting held Sunday. The countriesare given representation in proportion to the number of members livingin the House. A president of thegroup will be nominated by the council, subject to International Houseopen election.Council members for the currentyear are: Miriam Ferguson, LeonardGreatwood, Franz Joseph, BernardScholz, Fritz Veit, Godefray Goos-ense, Anthony Syz, Sahap Oregun,Majid Khadduri, J.S. Ma, Carl Kwah,Meieceio Vego, Ester Araya, Wata-nabi Tetsui, Violet Horner, FurnellBenson, Margaret Pease, ElsbethLockner, John Whiteside, Peter Klas-ain, non-residents. “Who Wears WhatPin?” FVosh Tug withSophmores to Decide“Oh yeah”, to reduce it to thebriefest compass, was the answer thefreshmen class accorded the sopho¬more demand that they wear theirUniversity pins all the time made inthe Maroon last Friday.The matter will be settled by a tugof war between the two classes in thecircle at noon Friday, the day beforeHomecoming. No matter who wins orloses, the meeting will adjourn to theBotany pond Elimination of two clubs and sevenfraternities will take place at thistime. Eight acts, six fraternities andtwo clubs, will be presented in Fri¬day’s spectacle.Clubs3:00—Sigma3:10—Chi Rho Sigma3:20—MortarboardFraternities3:30—Chi Psi3:40—Delta Upsilon3:50—Kappa Sigma4:10—Phi Sigma Delta4:00—Phi Delta Theta4:20—Psi Upsilon4:30—Zeta Beta Tau4:40—Phi Kappa Psi4:50—Pi LamMa Phi5:00—Alpha Delta Phi5:10—Delta Kappa Epsilon5:20—Sigma Chi5:30—Beta Theta PiShould any group wish to changethe time of its tryout, the leadershould get in touch with the head ofthe group that has been assigned thetime desired. Report any changes inthe schedule to Kennath Sponsel atthe Deke house.Opening Issue of International-House QuarterlyContains Articles on Far Eastern CrisisBy MAXINE BIESENTHALLetters to the editor of a magazineoften voice even more clearly thanan editorial just what the aims of amagazine are. “Spending my vaca¬tion at one of the highest mountainpeaks in Norway,” wrote a readerof the International House Quarterly,“I haVe a feeling that I am sittingon top of the globe . . . the samekind of a feeling as I have from read- and Fugue in G minor and a tonepoem, “Lilacs,” by Edward Burling-hame Hill. Selected waltzes fromStrauss’ “Der Rosenkavalier willclose the program.Goldberg ResponsibleGoldberg is responsible for much ofthe organization’s present repuationas one of the finest symphonies in thecountry. Formerly known more forhis w-ork as a newspaper critic thanas a conductor, he has been with thefederal project since it was startedtwo years ago.Tickets, which sell for 30 to 50cents, can be obtained at the infor¬mation desk in the Press building. Asimilar series of concerts was heldon campus during the summer. Datesfor the remaining programs on thisseries are November 9 and 23. Jan¬uary II and 18, and February 8. Theconcerts were planned primarily forstudents from the University, butmany South Side residents are ex¬pected to take advantage of the op¬portunity.Dramatic AssociationSeeks New Faces for3 December PlaysWith a “new faces” cast of stu¬dents who have never before actedin Dramatic Association plays, theorganization plans presenting a tri¬logy of one act plays on December8, 9, 10, and 11. Tryouts will beheld tomorrow and Friday in theReynolds Club theatre.This group will be the second pro¬duction of the Dramatic Associationfor the W’inter quarter. All partswill be taken by freshmen, transferstudents or students who have neverappeared in an Association play. Re¬hearsals will start next week andwill be going on simultaneously withthose of “Excursion,” the play to bepresented here November 17, 18, 19,and 20.The new plays will be directed byDramatic Association students underthe supervision of Frank H. O’Hara.The student directors are Bob Wag¬oner, Oliver Standford and AdeleWoodward. mg the International Quarterly.Certainly this letter expresses theaims of the Quarterly editors, whohave gathered together material con¬tributed by the International Housealumni, members and friends , whoare by virtue of their InternationalHouse connections, open-mindedlyseeking information concerning thecultures of other peoples.Articles from LecturesThe first five articles of Volume 1,Issue 4 of the Inteimational Quarter¬ly, have been taken from lectures inthe Seminar on Far Eastern studieswhich took place this summer at theInternational House of Berkeley,California, and vary in type from anexplanation of 'the ideas representedin the Japanese gardens to an ar¬ticle on Buddha and Confucius. Theeditors, in a brief paragraph whichpreceded these articles, state: Variedaspects of oriental culture are dis¬cussed by scholars whose knowledge(Continued on page 3)American Student UnionBegins Membership DriveThe annual membership drive ofthe American Student Union startedtoday with booths placed in conspic¬uous places around campus. Sincethere is no membership secretary,the drive is being conducted by theexecutive committee at large.The committee will meet today inSocial Science 106 at 12:30 to discussplans for the campaign and to electa new chairman and a membershipsecretary. Gala Programfor HomecomingHomecoming week is here, andwith it the Vanities, queens, front-yards displays and dances that al¬ways mark this football week-end asthe outstanding outlet for compusspirit that this campus can enjoy.Iron Mask, junior society and spon¬sor of the entire proceedings, yester¬day announced plans for the Fridaynight all-school dance, at which TonyFambro’s ten-piece swingsters willpreside. The Betty Co-ed Homecom¬ing Queen and her court of 11 foot¬ball girls are to be presented to thestudent body at this affair.Vote for QueensThese Queens will be selected bypopular vote from a group of youngladies. Ballots are to appear in theDaily Maroon beginning today andcontinuing through Friday. Purchas-rers of the Maroon may vote eachtime they buy a paper, and ballotsare to be deposited in the boxesplaced in front of the Coffee Shopand on the first floor of Cobb hall.The 12 beauties, whose names ap¬pear on the ballot, were chosen asnominees for the honor by IronMask. Each girl in the court repre¬sent a position on the Maroon foot¬ball eleven.Yearbook to Sell StudentDirectory on November 9The long awaited Student Directorygoes to press today. The directorydoes not go on sale, however, untilNovember 9 ■which is ten days earlierthan last year. The Directory lists6,800 names and the price is 35 cents.By buying a subscription to Cap andGown for four dollars the StudentDirectory and the Student Hand¬book can be obtained free.oPige Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 26, 19871. PLATFORMIncrooBod UniTonity oifoit toward studontodfustment2. AboUtton of intercollegiate athletics.3* Eslcd>lislunent of Political Union.4. Revirion of the College plan.5. A chastened President.6. Reform of Blackfriors.Athletic Poll—The Maroon is to have a poll, a poll on thequestion of what should be done about ath¬letics at the University. Ballots will be dis¬tributed Friday.Last year The Maroon came out for with¬drawal from the Big Ten, was generally criti¬cized for defeatism and indulging in sourgrapes. This year campus opinion has comeround to agreeing with that stand. We predictthat this w’ill be the alternative most popular inthe poll.*This year the Maroon came out for theabolition of intercollegiate athletics, ajrousedgeneral opposition on the campus, was accusedof the same defeatism and sour grapes.Let us review the arguments. The Univer¬sity appropriates $140,000 or so for the ath¬letic department. About half that sum is takenin as gate receipts, over $50,000 of which sumcomes from football. The remaining $70,000is divided between men and women in a ratioof about 4 to 3.The Maroon asserts that this money couldbe better spent than it is. The abolition of in¬tercollegiate athletics, and the staff andgrounds set-up that goes along with it, wouldsave money, though not as much as the earliereditorials implied.An adequate intramural program could beset up with a single director of organized sportsand student assistants, with the addition of twomen who could give instruction in the fewsports in which there is any demand for in¬struction. Ground expenses would be reducedby the destruction of the North and Weststands. In the men’s division, counting $15,000for salaries, $11,000 for upkeep, under this planthere would be a saving of about $15,000. Inthe women’s division there would be far fewersavings possible.The money so saved the University wouldbe spent in creating discussion groups, meetingdaily at noon, for lunch and talk, competentlyled. An initial expense for an adequate buildingwould be considerable; the $15,000 might per¬haps not support the system.But the change would have this enormousadvantage. It would provide the Universitycommunity with a vigorous basis for campusVol. 38 No. 15^arootiFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity* of Chicaso, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 867, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3311.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 DailyMaroon 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:$3.00 a year; $4 by mail. Single copies: Ave cents.Entered as second class matte* March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MPMSSNTSO son NATIONAL AOVBRTISINe SVNational AdvertisiR?.^^rvice, Inc.ColUx0 Fubliihfr^ ’ativ*420 Madison Ave. 'ork, N. Y.Chicaso • Boston • Los ANSiLes ■ Sah FranciscoBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILL Editor-in-ChiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist Rex HortonMaxine Biesenthal Seymour MillerEmmett Deadman Adele RoseBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard Greenlee ^Max Freeman Alan JohnstoneNight Editor: William McNeillAssistant: Ernest Leiser life, would tie in the commuting student withthe University, would make a generally suc¬cessful intramural program feasible.A second argument for the abolition of ath¬letics is that many of the sports now practicedhinder rather than help the competitor’s Uni¬versity career, sometimes make it next to im¬possible for him to go to school and engage inathletics at the same time. These are the sportswhich attract gate receipts, so under an legiti¬mate system the deficit for intercollegiate ath¬letics would be much greater.SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy ULUAN SCHOENINCIDENTAL INTELLIGENCEWe were told to keep the column short today. Itseems that a chap by the name of John Barden is be¬ing bowed to in today’s issue (see below) and he is soimportant in Ned Fritz's estimation, that everythingelse must be ruled by what there is to say about him.Of course, many people on campus will see the nameat the top of this column, then glance down and see Mr.Barden's and chuckle. But they are wrong, for whilewe think Mr. Barden is a very nice man and we arefriends, we do think that it is “unfair” to run every¬thing else short just because an anonymous writerwants to dwell at length on Barden’s sweetness. If thatisn’t giving full play to his ‘spirit of a dictator’ then Idon’t know what it is . . . We had it all planned howwe were going to remark that people are pickingcampus queens again, that this time the excuse isHomecoming, but that we could never figure out why itis that men always do the picking. The very next timewe get a chance we are g^oing to nominate our ownqueens. After all it takes a woman to know women. . . We were told by a member of Iron Mask that therewere only eleven boys present when they picked theeleven candidates—a sort of football team of pulchri¬tude, according to Johnny Van de WaJer. What is it,boys, another mor^l victory? . . . But no matter howshort the column must be we have to find room to con¬gratulate Ann Binkley for not showing up at the massmeeting organized to publicize Iron Mask’s best girlfriends . . . We were also going to tell of a certaintype of amusement with which we noted in last Friday’sMaroon the public announcement to be given by theDekes. There is a certain austere scientific snobbish¬ness about letting everyone know that you are givinga party that everyone cannot attend.It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLE Students and PnblicAgree on Magazines CLASSIFIED ADSMagazines most popular the coun¬try over are the most popular withthe student body. Of the 4,500 maga¬zines to which the University sub¬scribes, only 60 are placed on reservein Harper library; the remainder aresent to other libraries throughout theUniversity. These 60 include the time-worn favorites, Atlantic Monthly,Harper’s, New Masses, Time, andmore recently. Life.Although approximately $21,000 isspent annually on periodicals throughDr. Raney’s office, don’t ask for a Chi¬cago daily paper in the Harper pe¬riodical room. Daily papers are re¬ceived in bound volumes at the end ofthe month.About 1,000 of the magazines re¬ceived are foreign sheets, printed andcollected abroad. Most of these pub-ilications are sent to the hospital unit,although Rush Medical School has a.separate subscription list of about500 magazines. MANY rcBponsible manufacturera ar* Beekinan«w linaa of producta to aapplement thrirpraaent Una of production. We are in-tereated in receiving auggeationa. Haveyou an article to offer? In your replyaUte clearly the nature and purpoae ofyour article, material uaed. haa the articlebeen patented or ia it patentable, whatinveatigation have you made for the purpoae of proving the economical neoeaaitvfor the article yon have to offer? If weare intereated in the article you have tooffer, we will communicate with you •otherwiae no reply will be made to yourletter. Addreaa: Wiaconain Manufacturera* Aaaociation. Firat Central Bldg.. Marf.iaon, Wiaconain.FOR SALE—Brand new Auction BoughtMen a auita, overcoata, $12.60 up. BuyaeU, exchange, men*a used clothing. Talllor Shop, 6226 Cottage Grove.SPECIAL INTENSIVE COURSErot coiieoe students and oeaduatmA thorough, tnttmswt, tiemagraplue eomrat--atartmg lammoryl- AprUl. Jmfyl. Oetobarl,ImUmtmg Booklot tont frtt, tnthota obkgmtitm—wiiUor phom. NosokeUonomtplogod. START ENJOYING-STOP DOUBTING-YOV ALSO WILL RECOMMENDFILTER.«OOLIO^Acunii,MEDICO^SOMETHMUONDOnLflOBORMSBE:moserBUSINESS COLLEGEFAUL MOSet J.D. mi.Itagulof Omntt, opm to IhNt School GroAttotm only, mgy be started ony Monday. Dayand Eoamtag. EaemngConnosopmtomem.116 S. Michigan Ava., Qtkogo, handolph 434FHALF A BLOCKFROM THE DORMSWALDROM'SBIST AND ELLIS DOS. 1004BYOUR CAR SERVICED DURINGCLASSComplete Washing, Tire,Battery, and Lubrication ServiceSTANDARD OIL SERVICE It haa the oalyPit'dfilter combiningnoiatnre-proof Cewlophaae exterior and66 Baffle abeofhentmeeh acrccn interior.reaolting in greateetbeatific pipe aiiiok*iaginveoMiiknown.Preventa tongnehite,rawnN>at^'wet heel, badodor, fce^et'expeetontioa.*No breakiafin.IaqMoveethetaaleaadof anyt^eoeo^KlllllPIlTEIt FBIKDCIPiltME NMEIlinitKIMiRianiJohn Barden has the spirit of a dict;ator and themind of an intellectual. He is reported to have said,“The University of Chicago has ruined me, because Istill want all the power I can get, but my Universitytraining will prevent me from using it.” He is good-humored, modest, mild-mannered, and, in conversation,alternately brilliant and stubborn. His stubbornnessis his biggest fault and the despair of his friends.At present he has many acquaintajices, a few verygood friends and, to his knowledge, no enemies. Thelatter statement holds, because at present he is notactively engaged in anything but his legal studies; thiscondition will be altered as soon as he begins to “dothings.” When he is doing important things” (his ownwords) he gauges the success of his venture by thenumber of enemies he makes in the process. He has asuperstition that a poor beginning means a good end¬ing and vice-versa but he will not admit that this be;lief is a superstition—insists it is an empirical factand is very discouraged if a project in which he is in¬terested gets off to a good start.As editor of the Maroon in his junior year and asa member of the famous class of ’35, he was eminentlysucessful, as judged by his own standards, for he mademore enemies on this campus, among both faculty andstudents^than any other undergraduate has ever daredto make. In that year he defeated a petition, organizedby disappointed seniors, to oust him from the editor¬ship; he attacked fraternities (he is a Deke) so effect¬ively that none of his brothers would speak to him;he attacked O&S so viciously that they refused to takehim in the following year, saying that if they tookBarden in they’d have to let him run the organizationand he would probably abolish it as his first official act;he infuriated large sections of -the faculty by writingable editorials in support of the educational policy ofRobert Maynard Hutchins and when the faculty wrotehim letters of protest, he picked out the weakest pointin the letter, conceived an appropriately devasting epi¬gram, and printed it with the letter thus further in¬furiating the faculty; he was the first editor to per¬suade President Hutchins to write a column in the Ma¬roon and to address the student-body at the annualMaroon banquet; he was so insistent on the latter pointthat Hutchins finally consented, saying, “Barden istrying to make me the most popular girl on campus.”Barden started the Hutchins defense campaign as apractical journalistic stunt but finally convinced him¬self that the President was correct in his educationalpolicies and decided to take up educational reform se¬riously. He has therefore entered the Law school be¬cause of the intellectual discipline it offers and hasbecome, for the present, a book-worm scholar. Studenteditors since ’35 have attempted to draw him into cam¬pus activities, but he will not budge from the books,which he really despises. OUTSTANDING VALUESIN BOOKSLOST HORIZON—ff«£on 75cDID SHE FALL?—Thorne Smith 79cLIFE AND DEATH IN SING SING-Lawes 79cTHE SOUND WAGON—SIri6/mi; 89cCASUALS OF THE SEA—Jfcfec 89cTHREE SOLDIERS—Dos Passes 89cTHESE ARE ONLY A FEW OF THE MANY TITLESSTOCK AT THESE LOW PRICES. IN OURU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 ELLIS AVENUESave ViSTUDENTS!!of Your Laundry BillYoiu entire bundle is washed sweet and clean in pure soapand redn soil water.Underwear. Pajamas, Sweaters, Socks, etc., ore fluff-driedready to use at only *12c per lb.Shirts Do Luxe Hand Finished, starched, mended, and but¬tons replaced, at 10c each additional.Handkerchiefs ironed at Ic each additional when includedStudent Economy BundleMetropole Laundry, Inc.Wesley N. Kcrrlson, Pres.1219-21 EAST 55TH STREETPhone Hyde Parit 3190FREE PICK UP St DELIVERYMiuateuuiBUtfutfCM O' •.THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1937 Page ThreeToday on theQuadranglesLECTURESPublic Lecture. “Problems of High¬er Education in Changing Society.The College Curriculum,” Dean A. J.Brumbaugh. Social Science 122 at3:30.Dr. A. H. Compton. “Human Free¬dom in a World of Law.” Swift Hallcommons, 7:30.MEETINGSCalvert Club. YWCA room, IdaKoyes, 4:30 to 6. Professor J. G.Kerwin will speak.Graduate Classical Club. “TheRome of Augustus.” B. L. Ullman.Illustrated. Classics 21 at 8.Christian Science Organizations.Thorndye Hilton Chapel at 7:30.Board of Social Service and Reli-eion. Rockefeller Memorial Chapel at4:30.Genetics Club. Zoology. 29 at 8.Chapel Union. YWCA room, IdaN'oyes from 7 to 10. Practice bamdance.WAA. WAA room, Ida Noyes from12 to 1:30.Student Social Committee. DeanWorks’ office, Cobb 203 at 4.JSF Council meeting. HutchinsonCommons at 6.YWCA Hospital group. Alumnaeroom, Ida Noyes from 3:30 to 6. Teaserved.ASU Executive Committee meet¬ing. Social Science 106 at 12:30.MISCELLANEOUSIllinois Symphony Orchestra. Op¬ening concert, Mandel hall at 8:30.30 and 50 cent seats.('hamber orchestra, 7:30. IdaN'oyes theatre.Tryouts. Tarpon club. Ida NoyesPool at 4:46.Seligman ReelectedPresident of AvukahThere will be little change in Avu-kah’s administrative force this yearas the group reelected three out offour of its officers.They are: Lester Seligman, presi¬dent; Miriam Rosen, secretary; andIsrael Rosenfeld, treasurer. JosephEpstein is the newly elected vice-president. Engineer Talksto Radio ClubStanley Reynolds, engineer for theUniversity Broadcasting Council, willspeak tonight at the Radio Clubmeeting on “Problems in Sound Re¬cording.” The meeting, which willstart at 7:30, is to be held in theBurton Court Little lounge, and isopen to all interested students.The Radio Club is now enteringupon its third year on the campus.It is composed of persons interestedin electronics and amateur radio,and has sponsored a number of talksby persons prominent in these fields,both from the campus and industryat large.One of the chief iirfersts of theclub at present is the erection of athousand watt transmiter in the clubstation room in Ryerson laboratory.This will be capable of communica¬ting with all parts of the world. Slye-(Continued from page 1)Int-House-(Continued from page 1)and wit may add perspective in view¬ing the present sad happenings inAsia.” Whether the aim is attainedor not, certainly International Housereaders can feel a close contact withthe Far East by reading the articlesof obviously well-informed men.Not included In this gorup of fivearticles is an account of a ChineseAmerican negotiation of 1844 fromthe point of view of the Chinese, whoobserved the peculiar “barbarian”habits in a manner particularly in¬teresting to the American. Food forthought is found in the rather pessi¬mistic articles of Fredrick Osburn onthe population change in the UnitedStates, and in the brighter articleson Mexican peon education entitled“Redeeming the Peon.”The Quarterly certainly strikes ahigh for publications circulating oncampus, although it included neitherhumor nor pictures. Its informativearticles are stimulating, particularlythe one on Turkish development,while Old England in New Englandcontributes a whimsical bit whichcan only be described as lovely. Al¬though the International House go¬ings-on may not be of interest to thecampus reader, so extensive is thescope of the Quarterly that there ismuch to be gained by a careful per¬usal of this issue.SPECIAL!Extra HeavyMALTED MILKS ...:..Giant Double RichSODAS and SUNDAES...Using Our Delicious Home MadeIce Cream make these Prices PossibleThe MAID-RITE SHOP1320 BAST 57th STREETWhere University Students Meet and Eat shop she still experiments. “Wheremice are kings,” she says. “They arehappy and content in their worldwhere the environmental influencesare identically the same for each . . .it is a perfect example of socialism.”She knows the ancestiy of eachmouse back for 100 generations, sheknows how old each one will live tobe, when he will die and the cause ofhis death. Once a week they are fedbread and milk, mixed birdseed andtimothy hay. Once a week the cagesare thoroughly sterilized, a precau¬tion she rigorously follows. Dr. Slyewas one of the pioneers in the cam¬paign for better living conditions forexperimental animals. For as she ex-pluino, “if a hundred other causesof disease are present, how can wedetermine which is the correct one?”Her scrupulous cleanliness has beenrewarded, for to date she hasn’t hada single epidemic in her laboratory.Autopsies on MiceFrom her autopsies of thousands ofmice have resulted facts which as¬tounded the medical world. She hasdiscovered that a hereditary gene notonly determines the type of malignitywhich results but also the place where the cancer will locate. Sinceshe has also found that the malign¬ancy is a recessive trait which canbe overruled by the dominant, shehas been able to breed cancer outof her mice families completely, andholds that the same thing can ac¬complished in the human race. “Diag¬nosis is merely a mathematical prob¬lem,” she stated.V/U). & THURS., OCT. 27-28EUGENE LUFSThe Wandering JewCONRAD VEIGT AND ALLSTAR CASTMaryland Theatre63RD & MARYLANDBARGAINS IN USED BOOKSThe Colony Book Shop1540 E 57th St DOR. 6992Hours: 11 A. M. to 9 P. M.TERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63rd SL— Loam to dance correctly —take private lessonsHyde Park 3080Hours; 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.IQmohthICHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS presentsThe Funniest Qbmedyin a GenerationYOU CAN'TTAKE ITWITH YOUPULITZER PRIZE PLAY. 1937by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS Nishtljr, incl.Sun.MsU. Wed. Sat.Geod Seats at Bos OfficeFor All PerformanceaANOTHER SELL-OUT ISSUE?WE THINK SO-PULSE-AGAIN TAKES THE STANDFeaturing—• COMPREHENSIVE ATHLETIC SURVEY• PRIZE WINNING ATLANTIC MONTHLY SHORT STORY• “LETS HAVE DONE WITH TIME STYLE” —by James Wellard• AUTHENTIC PERSONAL LETTERS FROM FORMER U of CSTUDENTS FIGHTING IN SPAINOUT TOMORROW 0£.OjV/^^— Featuring —HURRY-UPLUNCHEON QrGood food— OwCQuickly servedWAFFLESSANDWICHESSALADS B A .L LOTVOTE FOR THEBETTY CO-EDHOMECOMINGQUEENCheck one—Anne BinkleyBetsy ChoseBetty ClarkMarion ElisbergEdith HansenLouise HuifakerJoan LydingMary Margeret MayerMarjorie SchulzLouise SnowLccrena StubbsBetty TraceySELWYNSS fcVa* J NOW FbyingTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVESl>A ttfisnfve k.tmevTTBROTHERRATt, JOHN MDimt nue t.it-A-tA^-Mt / A COLLEGE' COMEDY■nOttMIT Hn-aOCD theater with laughter- DoOt h«*EVES. 55e to n.7$ MATS. Wad. 4 Sot. S5e to Sl.SS Tax be.ERLANGER127 N. aork St State 2461 NightlyIncluding SundayMAX GORDON PresentsINE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settings by Jo MielzinerCAST OF 40—ALL WOMEN'SMART “FUNNY'TIES6 for 39c12 for 59eTRIPLE-KLEANED ANDPROPERLY RE SHAPEDCosh & CarryPlus Ins.' ' ' ;HlOQleahei1179 E. 55lh St 1178 E. 61sl StFife Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1937ON THEBENCH-* ♦ *By HANK GROSSMANFootball last week-end passed themid-season mark with very few ma¬jor upsets being registered. With theexception of one eleven, Maroonopponents, past and future, did asexpected ... We refer to Beloitwhich entered the victory column forthe first time this year, when itbounced back from thirty and twentypoint defeats to whip a previouslyunbeaten Knox team.Chicago after a week of rest Ufyou call intense preparations for agame “rest”) meets Ohio State . . •Saturday the Buckeyes eliminatedNorthwestern from title considera¬tion by the narrow margin of sevenpoints ... To us this one touch¬down victory represents a poor show¬ing against a none too strong eleven. . . The Wildcats lone major victorywas credited to luck more than any¬thing else, and the Columbus ladsshould have run roughshod over themon the basis of previous records . . .Can it be also that Ohio isn't asstrong as supposed? At any ratewe’re betting our shirt that the Ma¬roons are going to give them quitea battle . . . And perhaps we’re theonly persons in the entire countrythat think so, but we reserve theright to the old “I told you so” ifChicago returns a victory to itsHomecoming crowd . . .Skipping ahead a bit . . . Michig^anwill 1^ the opponents the following'week-end . . . The Wolverines camethrough with their first conferencevictory since 1936, when it whippeda weak Iowa team . . . The Hawk-eyes must have been weak to drop itsgame to Wisconsin . . . And the Bad¬gers were lucky to escape with onlya 21 point loss at the hands of thePitt Panther . . . The Madison outfitat Stagg Field was’one of the poorestteams, despite what critics say . . .Those 27 points? Luck, Maroon mis¬takes, and if you don’t believe Chica¬go outplayed Wisconsin, look at themovies . . , Illinois was idle, butmeets the Wolverines this SaturdayAnnounce BilliardTourney at ReynoldsReynold’s club officials announcedyesterday that a billiard tourney willbe held at the club in the near fu¬ture. It will be played on a straightrail, and will be open to all univer¬sity men.Registration for the meet startedFriday morning and will continuethroughout next week. A fee of 26cents will be charged all entrantsand all tournament games will befree.The prizes for the contest will notbe medalc as has been the case inprevious years, but will consist ofvarious articles appropriate for col¬lege men. These prizes are now ondisplay in the club.Chess Tourney Begins,Twenty-Seven EnterTwenty-seven men began play thisweek in the Reynold’s club champion¬ship chess tournament.Outcome of the games will beclosely watched, it was announced, asthe top-ranking men will most pro¬bably be used on the A and B teamswhen the University enters the citychess league in Deceiuber. Prizes willbe awarded to the three highest menat the end of the tournament.Political Union-Continued from page 1)ty Robbins have been placed on thelist of Radical organizers. They meettomorrow at 12:30 in the Maroonoffice.In order that hesitant candidatesmay decide under which banner theyare running, the Daily Maroon willprint the complete party platformstomorrow with a review of the Poli¬tical Union developments to date.These platforms have been drawn upby the party organizers in a seriesof meetings held last week-end. How¬ever, they may be amended duringthe party conventions to be held be¬tween November 10 and November22.Following the party campaignsand conventions, a general Campuselection will be held. At this electionthe student may vote on only one ofthe three ballots, either Radical, Lib¬eral, or Conservative. I-M Upsets MakeOutcomeinDoubt;Phi Psi's WinWith the intramural touchballtournament nearing • the halfwaymark, sports followers were still nonetoo anxious to “name” the comingchampion, for startling upsets andpowerful scoring from unexpectedsources marked tourney games yester¬day and Friday.Phi Kappa Psi handed Zeta BetaTau’s representatives a 26 to 0 drub¬bing at Greenwood field yesterday.GAMES TODAYGrenewood Field ‘3 Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. Beta The¬ta Pi “B”3 Chi Psi vs. Pi Lambda Phi4 Alpha Delta Phi vs. Psi Upsilon“B”4 Phi Delta Theta vs. Phi KappaSigmaCottage Grove and 59th4 CTS vs Gamma AlphaRinging up a touchdovm apiece, Uryand Oden led Phi Sigma Delta to a 12to 7 triumph over Phi Gamma Delta. Intercollegiate Athletics?What is the campus opinion onthe current proposals that theUniversity should abolish intercol¬legiate athletics and that Chicagoshould withdraw from the BigTen? The Daily Maroon will at¬tempt to obtain the answers in acampus-wide poll to be conductedFriday. Details will be announcedlater.In the final tussle yesterday. AlphaTau Omega’s footballers defeated PhiBeta Delta, 7 to 0, but were forced todefault the game, when one of theirplayers was found to be ineligible.Heavy scoring—highlighted b yPsi Upsilon’s equalling of the 40point scoring record held by the Al¬pha Delts—featured Friday's games.In Psi U’s overwhelming victory,which was against Alpha Tau Omega,Belle and Webbe contributed 26points to the victor’s total.Broadmen and Lambda GammaPhi battled to a 6 to 6 deadlock in asecond game Friday afternoon.Barristers, 37; U. HiLites, 0.Alpha Delta Phi “B”, 6; SigmaChi, 0Delta Kappa Epsilon, 12; DeltaUpsilon, 6.Beta Theta Pi, 13; Phi Sigma Del¬ta, 7. Harriers TakeLoyola 28-27Chicago’s inexperinced harriersemerged triumphant over their cityrivals, Loyola 27 to 28, Friday in across country meet in Washingtonpark.Macomb, matching her total a-gainst that of Loyola only, enteredsome outstanding men in the meet,but lost to the latter, 26 to 30.The runners in the order they fin¬ished were: Layden (L), Powell <C),Sponsel (C), Wagener (L), Webster(C), Beauregard (L), Linden tC),Walsh (L), Armington <L), andMcClimon (C). Hold Tarpon Tryouts;“Tadpoles” Take TestTryouts for Tarpon, ^^omen’sswimming club at the University, ^Ki\\be held this afternoon and tomorrowat 4:45 in the pool at Ida NoyesOfficials of the club urge that aliwomen who are interested in joiningtake the tests at either of th^times.In order to be eligible for member,ship, a woman must pass at least theTadpole test, which will entitle herto wear the red uniform cap of thisdivision of the club. Higher testsare for Frog, Fish, and Shark posi-tions.TODAY—^Delicious Fruit Sedod Plot* with Sherbeton criip lettuce on Roddn Toast 25c.READER CAMPUS DRUG STOREGist & ELLIS AVE ’FAIRFAX 4800 CAMPUS EXTENSION 352anjo playersmake the bestRNif BJUi COACHES ?1 look runlimmiw**™do artists find th^ T^ABBING a bit of moisture from his eyes at his unknown team offive years ago “that didn’t look strong enough to kick its way outof a paper bag,” Coach Jimmy Conzelman, of Washington University inSt. Louis, tells you how his team now comes to play such notables asSouthern Methodist and Army. How he did it, with the aid of a percus¬sive banjo, wow speechmaking, de luxe character building and what not,is probably the most hilarious football gossip j'ou ever read. You’ll wearout your copy of the Post this week showing it to friends.icre do artists find tho«geous models whose pic¬es you see in magazines and^e^sements?rSSSS"';srsrs-slotograph*- THAT’S FOOTBALL FOR YOUBy that Great Tragedian and Washington Universify CoachJIMMY CONZEIMANThe Merchant of 1^"“’WALTER THORNTON..u*,witne(nt of the bombing ol naieodorc Roosevelt, Jf- ^ctreR of them[APPIMG ®lJ®^fSn^ho/nas E.Rackets, by SEE THE 1938 CARS*y us wa***—^ - Pages of colorful, excitingadvertisements .previewing thenew automobiles and accesso¬ries. A show in itself! The big¬gest issue of the SaturdayEvening Post in six years I P^OST(THE SETURP^Y EVENING POST■ X i