/Sophomores Land in Botany Pond While Freshmen LaughToday*8 HeadlinesPublish Poll results, page 1.Faust plans Maroon Boycott, page 1\nnounce new Law School scholar¬ships, page 1.Comprehensives hurt students, page4.Maroon sounds other campuses onathletics question, page 5.Campaign AgainstBlackfriars Stirsthe Devil in FaustStudent Faction AttacksAthletic Editorial of TheDaily Maroon.Shh! Don’t talk above a whisper.There are evil doings afoot.The campus threatens to boil over,says one fanatical observer. A cer¬tain faction wants revenge, revengeagainst the treachery of The DailyMaroon for exposing a nice monopolyon Blackfriars.The national guard will be here anyminute to maintain order. For no¬body knows what is likely to happenwhen that swashbuckling Mussolini,K(1 Faust, former Psi U pledge, getsgoing.The reason for the doubt aboutFaust is that he has never yet gotgoing. He is a great domineeringleader of Faustians, and you can’thold him down—no, not even withan anchor.Says Faust, “I think it’s just sim-l)ly a dirty shame the way the Ma¬roon has been misrepresenting thecampus opinion on the athletic sit¬uation.”The real motive, if not of Fau.st, ofhis instigators, appear to be a de¬sire for revenge for the recent Black¬friars expose.Under the guise of saving intercol¬legiate athletics on campus, Faust isacting as the figurehead in a revengeeffort to enlist the opposition of clubsand fraternities against The DailyMaroon.Already, in a vain effort to stopthe campus poll on athletics, whichThe Daily Maroon sponsored in fullrealization that the results would becontrary to Maroon editorial policy,someone stole in the dark of Thurs¬day night, ballot boxes furnished bythe athletic department for Friday’spoll. The Maroon replaced the boxesbefore voting opened.Three points .stre.ssed by Faust’sawful conspiracy are:(Continued on page 5) Bailp itajonVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937 Price Five CentsPulse Appealsfor Larger Staff;Rumor Shake-upCoincidental with rumors of ashake-up on the present Board ofControl of Pulse magazine came thequestion yesterday: Who will runPulse next year?To answer the query the presenteditors will send a letter to interest¬ed students, and hold a meetingThursday in Lexington’s to acquaintaspirants with openings on the staff.The letter outlines the financial,editorial, artistic, and managerial op¬portunities available, and explainsthat, since many of the editors willbe retiring, replacements in theBoard of Control will be necessaryat the end of this year.“Whether you be graduate studentor freshman you have an equal op¬portunity to run Pulse” the letterstates. “If you are of the opinionthe Pulse is a closed organization,then remember it would be suicidefor the editors to restrict the com¬pany , . . Would you like to continuethe building of the most distinctivecollege magazine in the country?”Yearbook OffersBid to I-F BallOne and only one freshman willgrace the scene in the annual Inter¬fraternity Ball this year, because,while the Greeks go to town in theirtraditional Thank.sgiving Eve festivi¬ties, the Cap and Gown will continueits annual offer of a bid and a cor¬sage to the yearling who sells themost subscriptions for them.The Interfraternity Ball, closedthis year as usual except to fratern¬ity men and their dates, ranks asthe major social event of the fall.season and is ori eqi^il basis with theother big dance of the year, theWashington Prom.The Friday before the Ball, Nov¬ember 19, has been set as the dead¬line and all subscriptions must be inby that afternoon. Freshmen inter¬ested in winning the prize should re¬port to the Cap and Gown office inLexington hall whrt-e they can getsubscription books and full details. Hotels Appeals withDouble-Deck NeckingThe Edgewater BeacP hotel prom-i.ses six acts of exclusive Universitytalent, but undoubtedly the mostpopular entertainment at “Univer¬sity of Chicago Night” next Fridaywill be the bus trip. Coming right outwith the whole truth, the ChicagoMotor Coach Company is advertising,“Why not neck on a double deck?”The company, which is supplyingthe special bus which will leave theCircle at 8 and take student couplesto the hotel, hopes to appeal to theadventurous spirit by stressing thefact that double deck busses havepreviously been noted for their mor¬ality. The prospect of a whole busrolling along 12 milea of lake frontwith no one to say “No,” is expectedto outweigh even the prospect ofsuch entertainers as Mary AdeleCrosby, Ray Soderlind, Wilbur Jer-ger, Ruth Doctoroff, and Bob Cramer. Campus Votes Against Maroon PolicyToward Sports; Majority for Status QuoThe PollThe poll proves two things. First, that there is more in¬tense “college spirit” here than one would guess from perform¬ances at pep sessions and football games. Second, that collegestudents, like the rest of mankind, put their reason to one sidewhen traditional attitudes are called into question.The poll does not prove much about general student opin¬ion. Only those affected by the editorials of the Maroon weresufficiently interested to vote on the question. The pro-athleticsfaction engaged in strenuous electioneering as anyone whowent near the Reynolds club on Friday knows. The resultstherefore indicate the strength of only one side. I repeat, thestrength of that side is surprising.As for the second thing that the poll proves—student ir¬rationality—the arguments advanced by the Maroon are abso¬lutely compelling if intellectual factors alone entered in. Let usonce more rehearse the argument in fully symmetrical form, asymmetry which has largely been lost in the heart of contro¬versy.(Continued on page 2)Organizing Committee FormulatesConstitution for Political UnionFormulating the mechanics anddefining the composition of the Poli¬tical Union, the organizing commit¬tee drew up the general constitutionof the Union in its meeting lastThursday afternoon in the DailyMaroon office.Under the provisions of the consti¬tution, the Political Union is to begoverned by an executive commit¬tee, consisting of a chairman, a secre¬tary, a sergeant-at-arms, and tworepresentatives from each of thethree parties. Conservatives, Liberal,and Radical.Committee Selects TopicsThe executive committee has as itsduties the selection of the topics,which will form the basis of discus¬sion at each meeting of the Union,and the procuring of a nationally-recognized speaker to give his viewsof the subject.International House Features Film BuiltAround Lives of Viennese Choir BoysTo be shown at InternationalHouse today at 4:30 and 8:30 andagain tomorrow at the same time,“Singende Jugende” is a film which,although it sometimes lapses intomelodrama, should please the tastesof Chicago theater-goers.Built around the lives of the famedVienna choir boys, the film depictsthe story of an orphan who is adoptedby a wandering street musician andwho later is given an opportunity tojoin the choir institute.Free, Unstilled ActingThe free, unstilted acting of theboys coupled with the experienced in¬terpretations given the characters ofBlueml and Sister Marie by Hans Ol¬den and Tblia Janssen has given thepicture a finished and a wholesometone. The sincerity of their perform¬ances has made more realistic the emotional experiences of Toni, thetalented but homeless waif whomthey have befriended.High spots in the picture are theexcellent renditions of excerpts fromHandel, Schubert, Brahms, and Mo¬zart by the choir boys, accompaniedby the Vienna Philharmonic Orches¬tra. These boys live and are trainedin majestic castles on the outskirtsof Vienna. One of these castles, thepicturesque Hinterbichl in the Aus¬trian Tyrol, w’as the site where thispicture was filmed.Picture Moves SwiftlyA German film, the picture movesswiftly for American audiences be¬cause of an ample supply of Englishsub-titles. Several times these sub¬titles add to the humour of the pic¬ture through “Germanisms” whichhave been left in the American trans¬lation. In addition, the executive commit¬tee will select the proponents of thedifferent opinions on the subjectheld by the members of the Union,and these students will round out thediscussion after the speaker of theday has left the dais.Bloc Form ViewsThe procedure is simple. After theexecutive committee selects the topic,the diverse views in each party sep¬arate into blocs. In each bloc caucus,the members formulate their side ofthe question and select one of theirnumber to present their conclusions.To complete the set-up, the consti¬tution also provides for the election(Continued on page 6)Announces EightLaw ScholarshipsAward of seven scholarships in theUniversity Law School, totaling ap¬proximately $3,000, and one graduatefellowship was announced by DeanH. A. Bigelow yesterday.The Raymond scholarships wereestablished by Mrs. Anna Nelson asa memorial to her late husband, aprominent Chicago industrialist.Three Raymond scholarships, eachworth $475, were awarded annually.This year the scholarships were givento Charles B. Baker, Marcus Cohn,and Harry Schulman and the grad¬uate fellowship to Robert Diller.The Wormser scholarships areawarded to first year law studentsfrom the Leo F. Wormser fund, es¬tablished in 1935 by friends of Worm¬ser, an alumnus of the University,and a distinguished attorney who waskilled in an automobile accident in1934. Wormser awardees this yearare Bernard Apple, Tucker Dean, andRodham Kenner. Each scholarshipis $375.(Continued on page 4) About 758 Students CastBallots in Poll Sponsoredby The Daily Maroon.That the University should main¬tain its present athletic policy is thedecision of the student body accord¬ing to the Daily Maroon intercol¬legiate athletics poll. Second bestopinion is that the University shouldsubsidize athletics.Final returns in the poll show that758 of the 200 ballots distributedwere returned. In this group 63.9 percent or 485 voters were in favor ofmaintenance of the status quo; 23.8per cent or 181 favored subsidizingathletics; 6.8 per cent or 52 in favorof abolishing intercollegiate athletics,5.2 per cent or 40 in favor of with¬drawal from Big Ten competition.Ballot Box StolenDespite efforts of certain groups todisrupt the voting by stealing theballot boxes which had been set upthe night before and by the signingof numerous phony names whichwere eliminated, it is believed thatthe poll is fairly accurate.Ballots clipped on the Daily Ma¬roons distributed to subscribers inwhich there would be considerablyless danger of ballot-box stuffingwere counted separately from thosegiven out to students in general. Theformer group showed a somewhatlarger percentage in favor of theDaily Maroon editorial policies. TheMaroon subscribers were 59.3 percent as against 63 per cent in favorof status quo, 26.2 per cent as a-gainst 23.6 per cent for subsidiza¬tion, 7.4 per cent for abolition, and7.4 per cent as against 4.8 per centin favor of withdrawal from the BigTen.Interesting is the fact that n6t asingle club girl wants the Universityto withdraw from the Big Ten orabolish intercollegiate athletics.A complete tabulation of the vot¬ing may be found on the sports pageof today’s issue.Union SponsorsWeek-End TripWith a long awaited chance to getat Harry Gideonse promised to thestudents, there ought to be discus¬sion heated enough to melt away theautumn frost on the first weekendtrip of the year which Chapel Unionis sponsoring next Saturday andSunday at Druce Lake, Wisconsin.“International Relations—Isolationor Cooperation” will be the subjectof the debate. For $2.50 the camperswill be treated to two days’ lodging,a barn dance as only Chapel Unioncan do it, community singing, hiking,and various sports.The campers will leave at 9 Sat¬urday morning and return beforesupper-time Sunday evening. Sportsclothes, overshoes, and warm cloth¬ing in general will be in order. Thetrip is limited to the first 50 whosign up in the Chapel office.The camp is run by the Associa¬tion house, a North Side settlement.Page TwoPLATFORM1. Increased University effort toward studentadjustment.2. Abolition of intercoUe<7iate athletics.3. Establishment of Political Union.4. Revision of the College plan.5. A chastened President.6. Reform of Blackfriors.The Poll-(Continued from Page 1)There is no general social community on thecampus. A small group of fraternity and clubmembers almost monopolize traditional activi¬ties. A second great circle is the radical-liberalgroup, rotating around the ASU with the various political clubs on the periphery. But theseseparate and on the whole antagonistic groupsoverlook a vast proportion of the registeredstudents. These commuters are completely leftout of the campus world. They represent a vastloss in man power to campus activities, and aneven more serious loss of the full value of col¬lege to these migrant students.A system whereby they could be knit intothe pattern of campus life has been suggested.The full outlines would take too much space torepeat here. Implications and details will bedeveloped in succeeding editorials. Suffice it tosay that the proposal would cost money. Alarge part of the present University appropria¬tion for student welfare and adjustment isspent on the athletic department. The depart¬ment serves only a few students in its inter¬collegiate program—149 competed last year.Actual cost to the University of the presentset-up above those of an adequate intramuralestablishment is about $15,000 per year. Thismoney could be and should be spent for somesuch program as the Maroon has proposed. Itshould be spent to improve the social life of thewhole student body as against the present con¬centration on a few.But there is a more fundamental reasonwhy intercollegiate athletics are not justified atthe University. The sports on which the de¬partment depends for its support—football andbasketball—are too intensive as traditionallypracticed in American colleges to mix withstudies. An activity w'hich is for student wel¬fare has grown into an activity which under¬mines the student’s academic welfare, that forwhich he came to the University.Without the support of football and basket¬ball gate receipts, the University would be some$70,000 more out of pocket for its intercollegi¬ate program, an expenditure totally unjustifiedby the number of students benefited.Argument against this is that there wouldbe disastrous ramifications. Student enrollmentwould dwindle to a few “long-hairs” say our op¬ponents. A survey made by “Lonnie” StaggVol. 38 NOVEMBER 2, 1937 No. 20FOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Oollegdate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6^,31 University avenue. Telephones:Local 867. and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 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:It.M a year; 34 by mail. Single copies: five cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.nCPAKSCNTKO FOR NATIONAL ADVSRTISlNa BYNational Advert'si*^'^ *^^nflce, Inc.Collett Puitisii^ 'i itive420 Madison Ave. i (ORK, N. Y.Chicaso ■ Boston ■ Los Anot.ss - san 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 Deedman Adele RoseBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard GreenleeMax Freeman Alan JohnstoneNight Editor: Burt MoyerAssistant: Hank Grossman THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937 Friday, October 29, 1937as a Master’s thesis a few years ago indicatedthat athletics was a minor motive in enticingstudents to the University. Those few whowould be scared away by the shift would bebetter lost to a University devoted to thingsintellectual. The deterring effect of the presentfragmented social system is naturally more po¬tent than the attraction of the present lameathletic performance in the publicized sports.A second practical objection is that intra¬murals could not be maintained without thestimulus of intercollegiate competition as a sortof carrot-before-the-donkey’s nose. Yet thecampus on which the greatest proportion of thestudents participates in athletics, according toa recent Carnegie Foundation survey, is thatof Washington and Lee, and almost aloneamong American colleges, Washington and Leedoes not engage in inter-collegiate competitionin any of the major sports.A third argument of the same sort is to theeffect that alumni support depends on athletics.Many of the more infantile alumni do cling toalma mater by football lacings. Recent ill-success has already weakened many such bonds.Those that remain are of little value to the Lettersto the EditorEMitor,The Daily Maroon:In view of the meeting today of theSocialist Club at which a member ofthe former—POUM, Harry Milton, isspeaking, the executive committee ofthe ASU has voted unanimously toexpress the campus its stand uponthe Spanish situation.The ASU is concerned with thesuccess of the Loyalist forces inSpain for several reasons. One isASU support of that government asthe democratically elected representa¬tive of the majority of the Spanishpeople. Another is its search forpeace and consequent antagonism tonon-democratic, militaristic fascism.Today it is absolutely necessarythat the war eruption be confined anderadicated. This is possible only bya united front of all progressive forces in the struggle against warmakers. The ASU, progressive or¬ganization, cannot support any anti¬united front group such as thePOUM, and it considers such ele¬ments conscious or unconscious sup.porters of fascism.ASU Executive Committee.CLASSIFIED ADSNAVAJO RUGS FOR SALE—For reas,.nubUprices made on Navajo Indian Reserv*tion in New Mexico. Call Hyde ParkSPECIAL INTENSIVESHORTHAND COURSEfor COLLEGE UNDERGRADUATESStarts October 1, lanuary 1,April 1, July 1.Arranged especially for the higher in-telligenee of the college graduate andundergraduate.Regular day and evening classes startevery Monday.GREGG COLLEGEHOME OF GREGG SHORTHAND6. N. Michigan ATonue, ChicagoUniversity, nay, stand in its way as an educa¬tional institution. Financial support certainlydoes not come to the University on the basis ofits teams. Moral support on that basis dragsthe University down to the dead level of Ameri¬can colleges and should be shifted to a properbasis—support of the University as a greatcenter of education—or relinquished.This is the argument. It seems good to us.To the portion of the student body which wasconcerned enough to vote, it acted only as a redflag acts on a bull.Bully for them; for those who believe in thepower of rational persuasion, searchings ofheart. miLRnonow on/y —once ^3.50'LTOW is it possible ? Enormous demand. EconomiesAA iu manufacture that do not affect the qualitv. Vastpr^uction in a great modern factory. Andthe skillac-quired in 75 years of making high grade briar pipes.NEW Range of Beautiful Shapes & Finishes!^SWEETNESS AND LIGHTBy ULUAN SCHOEN Chicago Night at the EdgewaterSTARTS ON CAMPUSSWEETNESSIf The Daily Maroon can have a platform we guessthis column can have a plank. Following this outburstwe will consider any social event promoted by a beautycontest beneath our notice and contempt. The eventsin the election of the latest Queen, that of Iron Mask,have struck the final blow to any respectability whichmight have been thrust on candidates for such an“honor.”What Iron Mask, among others, does not realize isthat beauty contests are a passe publicity stunt on thiscampus; witness the LOW total of 212 couples at IdaNoyes Friday night. Further, it might be observedthat publicity such as whitewashed signs on sidewalks,“Free Girls Tonight” does little but call attention tothe misdirected sex impulses of the members of IronMask, revealing—were we Freudian—unfortunate frus¬trations.Original plan of Iron Mask was to elect the Queenthemselves at the meeting Thursday night, completelyignoring all balloting, and announce the result to animpressed and expectant campus on Friday. But withthe disappearance of 600 Maroons containing ballotsfor the Contest, the Mask proceeded to fry in its ownjuice, for whoever took those Maroons knew that therewere 600 votes cast for Elisberg and if Snow werechosen how could the Mask explain that when only 1000ballots were cast. Result—Deadman counted the ballotshonestly—what else was there to do?—and Elisberg,orchids on shoulder, was “unveiled” on Friday night tothe “delighted” view of all 212 couples attracted bythe contest. Van de Water did his best—which wemust admit is excellent—to put the farce over but ifthey had tried the Mask could not more effectively haverun a .Beauty Contest to end Beauty Contests.The only person to suffer—needlessly—from goodintentions of misguided Zeta Betes and Pi Lams (anattempted coup by th^ Phi Psis and one by the Psi U’shad failed) was Marion Elisberg. It is easy to say sheshould not have permitted or endured such a fraud tobe perpetrated on her behalf. On the other hand thereis the possibility that she knew nothing of the plot andthat once elected she could do nothing but be a goodsport and go through with it. She, and other candi-' dates, would do well to take their example from AnnBinkley and refuse to be tools of campus megaloma-‘ niacs’ publicity machinations.LIGHTWilly Crockett says he wishes someone would givehim a formula for distinguishing Phi Psi's from PsiU’s. What would this world be like if not for peoplelike Willy . . . Dick Evans, of DKE, found himself guz¬zling Alpha Belt beer Saturday night . . . The AlphaBelt chapter bore down on the Beaux Arts Ball Satur¬day, leaving P. J. Peeples, Joe Whitlow and companywaiting for them on the curb in front of the Phi Belthouse. They were met by the biggest bouncer JohnnyMcWhorter had ever seen. The gentleman did his stuffbecause the boys didn’t show up inside . . . Reports haveit that Ralph Springer lost his inhibitions Saturdayevening . . . Bud James suggests that the fire whichstarted under the C section at the game should havebeen started undcjr the team . . . Sign on fraternityhouse privy—-“It’s the Refreshing Thing to Do” . . . ROMANCE RUNS RAMPANTON A DOUBLE DECKEDBUSLeaving the Circle Friday, Nov. 5th at 8:30 p.m.Round Trip 25c Per PersontkfhtciirtiacAlifatf**Make Your Reservations at Maroon Office, Lexing¬ton Hall, University of ChicagoI * 8I WE ARE NOT TRYING TO RUSH YOU, 8I BUT WE ARE TAKING ORDERS FOR |i PERSONAL CHRISTMAS CARDS. THE |1 EARLIER YOU ORDER THE BETTER CHa |i ICE YOU WILL HAVE OF AN EXCELLENT 8I STOCK. ^PERSONAL II CHRISTMAS II CARDS50 for $1.00 II AND |[I 25 for $1.00 I—PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW— iU. of C. BOOKSTORE5802 Ellis Avenue I;aCOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOQOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOtt'eTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937 Page ThreeTHE DANCE CRAZEOF THE TOWN!ORRIN TUCKERAND HIS ORCHESTRAMARINE DINING ROOMEDGEWATER BEACH HOTELHalf Rates to University of Chicago StudentsSpecial Coach Service, Half-Hour via the Outer DriveProfessional Floor Show and U. of C. Student ShowUniversity of Chicago Cast:Nary Adele Crosby Bob Cramer Roy Soderlind"Terk" Jerger Ruth Doetoroif Phi Psi TrioHalf-rate tickets available at Reynolds Club, Press Building and the DAILY MAROON office□Page Pour THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937Psychologists Conduct Survey of theStudent’s Reactions to ComprehensivesComprehensives have their grim- unsurprisingly, thought thatmer side. Last year, two studentscommitted suicide at one large univer¬sity, both presumably because of wor¬ry over approaching comprehensives,and Charles Howard Browm, of thePsychology Departmont, has esimatedthat fully half of his class in medicinehad resorted to drugs at one time oranother in an effort to improve theirstudies or to help them write an ex¬amination. Last spring, therefore,he and David Van Gelder of the Phy¬siology department conducted a ser¬ies of tests on groups of representa¬tive students from the University andIowa State College to determine theiremotional reactions before examina¬tions. Their data was published lastmonth in The Journal of Psychology.Typical QuestionsTypical questions which were askedon tests handed out to 405 collegestudents and upperclassmen were “Isyour hand shaky or is there a tremorin your fingers before an examina¬tion?” “Do you feel as though youhave been through quite an ordeal af¬ter an examination?” “Are you dis¬tracted by outside noises, students’loudly chewing gum, students’ cheat¬ing, etc., during an examination?”“After an examination, do your feetperspire quite freely so your socksare damp?” In answer to one ques¬tion, five per cent of those studentstaking the questionnaire replied thatthey “always” felt “like getting drunkafter an examination,” and, rather there is “not neady enough . . . em-phasis on examinations.”Brown’s ObservationsBrown, in his article written fromthe data obtained, said, “. . . We notethat 21 per cent of the students atsome time or another study all nightbefore an important examination,that most students are excited mostjust when the papers are passed out,that 45 per cent of the students studyup to an hour of the examination,and that most students regard exam¬inations as distasteful. We also notethat 80 percent of the students would,a some time or another, rather writea term paper instead of taking a finalexamination.”Comparing the results of the ques¬tionnaire at the University with thoseobtained at Iowa State College,Brown writes “the freshmen at a,uni¬versity employing the final compre¬hensive system have about the samescores on the questionnaire as fresh¬men at a university on a final quar¬terly basis,” but “seniors at a university employing the final compre¬hensive system are more excited be¬fore examinations than seniors at auniversity employing the final quar-terly system.”In correlating his data with gradesand intelligence, Brown found that,on the whole, students who got ex¬cited before an examination tended toget slightly poorer grades than stu¬dents who remained calm.Struve Announces Mirror Ready;University and Texas CooperateFinal polishing of the new 82-inchmirror destined for the McDonaldobservatory, which is managed on acooperative basis by the Universitiesof Chicago and Texas, is almostcomplete, according to Otto Struve,director of both the McDonald andthe Yerkes observatories.“The shape is almost true tospecifications, and the mirror evennow could be used for many observa¬tions,” Dr. Struve said. “The amountof glass which must be removed isexceedingly minute, about .0002 ofan inch. The removal of this glassis accomplished by polishing thesurface with a tool of aluminum cov¬ered with a small amount of bees¬wax.”An exceedingly fast camera, witha focal ratio of 1. has also been con¬structed for the observatory. Dr.Struve said. The camera has a spher¬ical mirror, and a thin lens of ultra¬violet ^ass.Used with infra-red plates sensi¬tive to radiations intermediate be¬tween the reddist visible rays andthe heat rays, the camera has shownthat the night sky is so constantlyluminous in infra-red light that ifhuman eyes were sensitive to theseradiations they wuold see the sky asa luminous effect on which the starswere relatively pale. Edwards DiscussesEducation of FutureAnnounce-(Continued from page 1)Jack G. Beamer is the winner ofthe Eighth Circuit scholarship, a $400award made possible by contributionsfrom alumni of the University LawSchool in the Eighth Federal Dis¬trict. A further popularization of sec¬ondary education, a broad develop¬ment of the junior college, and a re¬vision of the college curriculum,were predicted by Newton Edwards,professor of Education, at the region¬al conference of the ProgressiveEducation Association Friday. Hepresented a program for future edu¬cation almost exactly like the pres¬ent four-year College plan of theUniversity.Edwards cites a population trendtowards more youth of secondaryschool age to account for this. “Theabsolute number of children of ele¬mentary school age,” he stated, “hasbegun to decline.This changing population pattern,Edwards said, will lead to a rapiddevelopment of the junior college,with perhaps a revision of the educa¬tional school system to provide forthe awarding of Bachelor’s degreesat the end of junior college. W. WashinytonGoes to Town onBiy Bass FiddleBy WILL ROGERSYou’re damn right he was good.When Waldo Washington worked onthat bass Friday night at the Home¬coming Dance in Ida Noyes hall heleft the ranks of mere mortals. Waldomade the bass come to life and to¬gether they swayed gyrated and theair became pulsated and beat with arhythm that had its roots in theCongo. The cold Nordics on the floorforgot themselves and sang songsabout their college and danced asthey never did before. Who was thatman who did so much to make thedance a definite success?Prosaic Life StoryWaldo Washington gave the ratherprosaic story of his life to a DailyMaroon reporter after the reporterexplained what the Daily Maroonwas. Waldo is only 19 years old. Hecomes from New York where hegraduated from high school at theage of 17. Waldo has brains andtalent. He went two years on partscholarships to one of the finest mus¬ical schools in this country. TheEastman Musical School at Roches¬ter University.Monetai’y difficulties, so often thecause of a cessation of academiccareers, accounted for Waldo’s drop¬ping out of school and coming tothis city. Washington came here threew'eeks ago looking for a job. TonyFambro was short a bass player, andfortunately Waldo found out aboutit. He is still just a substitute. Waldocan also play the tuba and the violin.Waldo going to town with a tuba isinteresting to speculate on, by theway.No Definite IdeaHe has no definite idea about a vo¬cation. He likes to play in orchestras,which is obvious, but he says thereis not enough money in it. He got alittle cagey when questioned abouthis feelings were when he got reallyinspired. Such a feeling one wouldn’twant in newspaper anyway, so hewasn’t pushed. Waldo only had trou¬ble once with his bass. The AlmaMater just will not be jazzed up.W'aldo said if this article is pub¬lished, he would like a copy sent to3636 Prairie Avenue where he isstaying. Jaeger, Dunkel, Grene Join Staffof University Greek Department' HALF A BLOCKFROM THE DORMSWALDROM'SeiST AND ELLIS DOl. 1004$YOUR CAR SERVICED DURINGCLASSComplete Washing, Tire,Battery, and Lubrication ServiceSTANDARD OR. SERVICE The Greek faculty has gained threenew members this year and lost twoand one-half, a net gain of one-half.The chief loss is Professor R. J. Bon¬ner, who retired last June and hassince received the honorary degree ofdoctor of literature from Trinity Col¬lege, Dublin.Dr. Bonner has been a member ofthe University faculty since 1904.Some of his textbooks are still beingused in the elementary courses here.He and Professor Smith have collab¬orated in the writing of volume twoof their work, “The Administrationof Justice from Homer to Aristotle,”which will be published early nextyear. The degree from Trinity Col¬lege, one of the strongholds of classi¬cal studies, was given Dr. Bonner inrecognition of his acomplishments inthe field of Greek legal institutions.Chief Gain, JaegerThe chief gain has been WernerJaeger, Charles L. Hutchinson Dis-tinguished Service Professor of Greekand one of the world’s leading classi¬cal scholars. He has been studyingat the University for the past yearbut this is the first quarter that hehas done any teaching. Although pri¬marily a student of Aristotle, Pro¬fessor Jaeger is giving courses onPlato this year, because Aristotle hasbeen the subject of numerous coursesin recent years.The second newcomer, Harold Dun¬kel, is strictly a Chicago product, hav¬ing taken his A.B. and, last March,his Ph.D. at the University. His par¬ ticular field of interest is Greek trag-edy. The final addition to the staffis David Grene, a graduate of Trini.ty College. He is giving several gen¬eral introductory courses in Greekliterature.The other losses consist of one oflast year’s instructors and the halfof Professor McKeon that went overto the Philsophy department.Call Meeting Thursdayfor New Camera ClubShutter-clicking studeWts will bepleased to hear that a UniversityCamera Club has been formed. Ameeting has been called for Thurs¬day at 4:30 in Room A of the Rey¬nolds Club. Women photographersas well as men are invited to attend.Twice a month meetings will beheld in which speakers will lecture onthe art in photography. Every quar¬ter at least one exhibition of members’ pictures will be presentedcampus. onGET IN ON THIS!ONE OF OURGiant Double Rich Malted MilkANP A15c SandwichFor Only 25e—AN IDEAL LUNCHEON FOR STUDENTS-THE MAID-RITE SHOP"WHERE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS MEET and EAT"'The Greatest Piece of Acting Ever Done by a Woman”—Paul Rotha, Eminent CriticAfternoon 3:30f# TOMORROWZAZU PITTSinGREED Evening 8:30Another popular Old Timer, brought back full length with the original piano score!ORIENTAL INSTITUTEAUSPICES UNIVERSITY FILM SOCIETY. SPECIAL INTENSIVE COURSEroa coiiioi trudints and oiaduatis0^1.moseriUtINESS COLLIOIDAUi MOtIt. AD. m.%Ohmm, to BNs$ SckMiOraAmttmomlf,mmfhtatart$dmtyMamda9.Dt$B90000 S9009iS 00099$ 9^9$$ $9 9$0LHe S. Mkliigoii Av*., Ctilcogo, MaatMph 4347BARGAINS IN USED BOOKSThe Colony Book Shop1540 E. 57th St DOR, 8992Hours: 11 A. M. to 7 P. M.TERESA DOLAN1545 E 63rd St— Leam to dance correctly —take private leseonaHyde Park 3080Hours: 10 A. M. to 10 P. M.THE DRAMATICASSOCIATIONSeason SponsorTicketsAre now on Saleat $2.75They entitleThe buyerto choice seatsfor fiveproductions.The seasonopens onNOV. 17.18.19. 20with theBroadway hitEXCURSION.a rousingcomedy abouta heatry seacaptain, hiscrew, and hispassengers.Friday, October 29, 1987 _THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937 Page FiveDAILY MAROON SPORTSOnthe Bench* • *By HANK GROSSMANFor a while we thought that theFreshmen-Sophomore tug-of-war wasgoing to be the most one sided routof the week-end . . . But we hadn’tcome to Saturday yet . . . And theOhio State team hadn’t come to usyet ... So how were we to knowwhen the Frosh crowd dragged theupperclassmen past the winning linein nothing flat—how were we to knowthat there would ever occur any¬thing more one-sided . . . And all inthe same week-end . . .There just aren’t any excuses oralibis for Saturday’s massacre . . .Ohio was smart, skillful in blockingand tackling, and fast to charge . . .That latter, incidentally, will spellthe difference between victory anddefeat in any game . . .Vanderbilt outplayed the Maroonsin certain phases of the game . . .Wisconsin didn’t have a thing overthe Midway lads . . . Princeton wasoutclassed ’till Chicago tired . . . Butthe Buckeye game was a differentstory ... It was apparent the minutethe Buckeyes grabbed the ball thatthey were going to be able to gainmiles by running . . . Only factorthat kept the Columbus lads from.scoring in the opening period and ahalf was the team’s own foolishnessin resorting to their razzle-dazzle af¬ter carrying the ball up the field bypower . . .Everything about Ohio’s attacklooked good . . . The running of MikeKabealo was especially pleasing towatch . . . none of their runnersgave up until they Just had to . . .A few of those long runs took placeafter most of the crowd had thoughtthe ball was dead . . .Everybody within a mile of theplay was able to detect it when a bigScarlet back began to slug Fitzger¬ald while Bob was on the ground . . .If Coach Blumer hadn’t been aroundto cool down the reserves there mighthave been a riot, so great was theresentment on the bench . . . How¬ever a great deal more of that goeson than can be seen from the side¬lines . . . Among players who resortto that sort of tactics the crime liesin being caught and penalized fifteenyards . . .More worried than anyone else wasWrestling coach Spiros Vorhees . . .He could practically imagine thechances of his team in the conferencegoing to ruin as Ed Valorz lay writh¬ing on the ground . . . “Fool kid,’’he exclaimed . . . But a minute latert h e muscular, light-heavyweightwrestler was up on his feet andSpiros was breathing easier . . . Sound FootballOpinion at Pitt,Illinois, KansasIllinois Reporter BacksGames as Stimulant toSchool Spirit.Reynolds Club BilliardMeet Opens ThursdayThe registration period for the Rey¬nolds’ Club billiard tourney is rap-i<ily drawing to a close. Play in themeet will begin Thursday.The prizes have been placed on dis-I'lay at the candy counter in the Rey¬nolds Club. Winners will have theirchoice of thm in the order in whichthey finish. The awards that have ^been selected to date are: a zipper)notebook, a leather desk calendar and ‘niemoranda book, book ends contain¬ing the University of Chicago seal,a cigarette case, cigarettes, a pipe,and an ash tray. By MAXINE BIESENTHALIn spite of the preponderance ofcampus opinion in favor of the sta¬tus quo in regard to campus footballthe controversy calls for a survey ofopinion on other campuses as report¬ed to The Daily Maroon. Choosingthe Universities of Kansas, Pitts¬burgh, and Illinois as focal points,because they seem to represent threedivergent points of view concerningathletics. The Maroon contacted rep¬resentative students, received whatwe consider representative replies.Athletics at IllinoisFrom Illinois, known as the coun¬try’s most collegiate campus, a Dailymini reporter stressed the fact thatintercollegiate games, and the pepsessions which precede them, “makesomething out of the words schoolspirit. “At Illinois,’’ quoting one ofthe students, “school spirit seemsnatural and spontaneous . . . ’’An¬other student added that Illinois stu¬dents feel “ . . . a thrill of pride inregard to its fine sportsmanship . . .’’Expressing a different feeling is aletter received from a freshman atthe University of Kansas. Here, itseems, all of the pep displayed atfootball games by the typical rah-rah colleges is not spontaneous. An¬nouncement was made in the DailyKansan recently that the policy offreshman hazing would be resumedin an effort to arouse “school spirit’’for an oncoming game.The reaction of the student bodyto this disciplined enthusiasm isthat this element of an athletic con¬test is useless and futile. Our corres¬pondent asks, “Why should an in¬stitution of higher learning concernitself with a thing of this kind?’’Pitt’s Amateur StandingPitt, whose football team makesthe school well-known, is taking thesteps to give Pitt a secure “amateur”standing. School feeling, coupled withthat if the administration, is in favorJK£ST^UJt.J,YT— Featuring —HURRY-UPLUNCHEON orGood food—Quickly servedWAFFLESSANDWICHESSALADSS 6324 WCX)PUWH AYE.STUDENTSI!Save H of Tear Laandry BillYour entire bundle le washed sweet and clean In pure soapand radn soft water.Underwear. Pajamas. Sweaters, Socks, etc., ore fluii-driedready to use at only12e per lb.Shirts De Lxixe Hand Finished, starched, mended, and but¬tons replaced, at 10c each addltlonaLHandkerchief Ironed at Ic each additional when includedStudent Economy BundleMetropole Laundry/ Inc.* '' Wesley N. Karlson, Pres.121S-21 EAST 55TH STREETFhona Hyda Pork 3190FREE PICK UP 4 DELIVERY ____ Athletic PollCLASSIFICATION Abolish Status Quo Withdraw Subsidixe TotalsMaleFraternity Members 16Unattached 24FemaleClub Members 0Unattached 12Totals 52 183 6 81 286176 23 65 28877 0 18 9649 11 17 89485 40 181 75863.9% 5.2% 23.8%of curtailment of athletic subsidies.In the future, no special grants willbe given to students solely becauseof athletic ability. The gridiron sche¬dule has been shortened, but it is be¬lieved, according to the coach, thfteams will not be weakened. Inspite of the fact that most alumniseem to be in accord with the plan,one voiced the opinion that he didn’tthink good teams could be obtainedwithout subsidy. A member of theStudent-Faculty committee stated,“This plan should raise the educa¬tional prestige of the University. Ido not favor big time football.”TOQMEETINGS_ASU Executive Board. S o c i a 1Science 107 at 12:20.Socialist Club. Public meeting. LawSouth at 3:30. Harry Milton willspeak on “What’s What in Spain.”Lutheran Club Tea. Ida Noyes hall.Chri.stian Science. Organizationmeeting. Hilton chapel at 7:30.Renaissance Society and Interna¬tional House present “Singende Jug-ende” with Vienna choir boys and the Campaign-(Continued from page 1)1. Stop the Maroon athletics edi-torials (already concluding, anyway).2. Gripe about Blackfriars’ reform(already sufficiently taken care of inPsi U house).3. Gripe about a short sketch ofMargaret Penney run three weeksago (the Maroon long ago apologizedto Margaret).To effect this program, the Faust-ians are attempting to enlist DeanLeon P. Smith as a censor of TheDaily Maroon. When asked if he isin favor of being such a censor. Smithejaculated, “No!,” with a distastefulexpression fitting for his belief in theindependence of The Daily Maroonand the freedom of the press.There will be a meeting of frater¬nity and club presidents with Musso¬lini Muscelbound Faust and DeanSmith this afternoon. All those wish¬ing to play stooge to the dissatisfiedfaction on campus are cordially in-Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. In¬ternational House at 4:30 and 8:30.35 cents, 50 cents.Oft CHADIAN J. MItUMOti4a mtix aTunreobUMMA. •. e. Feb. 10« 1987S. M. Frank & Co., Ino.New Tork, N. X.Gentlemen:-About eighteen months ago I was foroedto quit smoking a pipe because the tarryproducts In the heel kept me chronicallynauseated. Too bad, but It couldn't behelped. No use feeling miserable everytime I fired up. So I stayed off tobaccofor over a year.Then one day I saw a few Frank'sMedicos In a druggist's showcase^ andhalf-heartedly decided to try one. Somany patented filter systems on the mar¬ket. But I'd risk a dollar on one anyhow,-Just In hopes ...For six happy months, how I've beensmoking that Frank's. This afternoon Ibought my second one, and have It send¬ing up incense as I write. I want to tellyou - in case you don't■already know It -that you're one of the benefactors of so¬ciety. Lot the poor Indian! Lot SirWalter Raleigh! Lo! everybody who diedbefore you brought out a filter that re¬ally works. I'm,telling my friends bythe dozen, but not fast enough.You may use my name if you care toiand add that this letter is absolutely'unsolicited on your part.Very cordially yours.ONLY FAT'D FILTER COMBINING MOISTURE-PROOFCELLOPHANE EXTERIOR AND 66 BAFFLE AB¬SORBENT MESH SCREEN INTERIOR. RESULTING INGREATEST PIPE SMOKING INVENTION EVER KNOWNFINESTBRIARMONEYCAN BUYIINNEASD OF VALUE3i<unAMEDICOPILTm-COOLEO vited to attend this meeting and tohear Faust make up to Dean Smith.The Daily Maroon will keep thecampus up to date on the progress ofFaust’s mysteriously inspired cam¬paign. •SWING into FALLWithCONGRESS CASINOMinimum—Dinner $2.00Minimum—Supper 1.50Minimum—Saturdays 2.50Saturday Luncheon 1.50FRIDAY NIGHTBIG APPLE CONTESTCONGRESS HOTELJOHN BURKE, Mgr.National Hotel Management Co.. Inc.Ralph Hitx, Pres., J. E. Frawley, Vice-Pres.GRAND119 N. Clark--Cen. 8240EVERY NIGHT — 8:30MATS., Wed. - Sat., 2:30k COA4COY by MARK RER)whk FLORENCE REED9 MONTHS IN NEW YORKEyes., $1.10, $1.65, $2.20, $2.75Mata.. $1.10, $1.65, $2.20I10 HONIH .CHICAGO'^ LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS presentsThe Funniest Comedyin a GenerationYOU CANTTAKE ITWITH YOUPULITZER PRIZE PLAT. 10S7by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS Mata. WaA Bet.Gea4 Baeta at Bax OOaaFar All ParfanesMaa ERLANGER137 N. Clark St Sial. SMI NighttyIncluding SundayMAX GORDON FrwMntoTHE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settmge by Jo MielzinerCAST OF 40-^ALL WOMEN'SMART" TUNNY'se:lwyn""‘*”“CHICAGO NOW PlayiuqTHE LAUaH KIT BVllTBODT LOVB8IA. * ■ mm-rn. Am Mia i <BROTHERRATi<vjBiiaieaMja.<w.miXHaatwiiw P—# A COLLBOBv^muomvbb/ comedy'IDBILAIITIVES. 5le le)it the toughestfootballis a tryingRock.”...-talks, withe of how itling a teame” schedules,tells youCharles Moran, f *feels to ^ts “suic•tVi a thousand recruits,"*?;l„«tiontorw>nning.following ROCRNEtnd the Blue Goose,adventure, hyWylie^stephenVincentCastle.Uow to Make a Movie,-o details of maki^ eStreet” by Grover Jone^/-the inside story of China s't bv Edgar Snow...SSeit between Jnpa«-«Alaskan waters, bySHORTSTORlES...Moses«)^nafr transport pilot’s^ Ir. “You KnowJaitueson.-*love among theMore stones by i. a. jBenfet, Everett Rhod'special ARTICLESttowingtheetep-bystepnewWfenttoRedChfiu^ted front agairAre Fish Citizenand U. S. fisherrFrank Richardsoiserials, e^toiPage Six THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1937Maroon’s Platform Shares InterestWith Gandhi in Alumni MagazineNot once, but twice does the DailyMaroon’s startling platform receivemention in the November issue ofthe University of Chicago Magazine,which is published by the Alumnicouncil. In his article “The CampusDissenter,” Herbert (Bud) Larson de¬votes one-half the space discussingwhat he terms “the powerful campusorgan’s” five planks. Howard W.Mort, editor of Tower Topics, morethan states Maroon policies in his“Quad Rambles.”First Issue of YearAs this issue is the first since theMidsummer issue of July, manyitems have been condensed with anattempt to gather together looseends. Short reviews of books byalumni and faculty and letter col¬umns are permanent additions to themakeup.A recent interview with MahatmaGandhi by vice-president William B.Benton highlights the issue. The in¬terview, which dramatically describesthe great little man, was granted be¬cause he travelled as an Americanbusiness man with press credentials.As he is unable to get direct hear¬ings with the English press, theMahatma is especially fond of theAmericans, for in them lies his onlychance of indirect communicationwith the English.Wells Envisions NewEncyclopediaof AllIntellectual Achievement Plea for Better TeachingWilliam Clyde Devane, chairmanof Cornell’s department of English,contributes to the contemporary con¬troversy on educational theories witha plea for better teaching as well asthorough research. University menand women show aggressiveness dis¬closing their plans for procuring thecity manager form of government forChicago, in an article written byHoward P. Hudson, former Marooneditor.Two pages of clever candid shotsof freshman week by Paul Wagnershould delight alumni by refreshingmemories and recalling their fresh¬men days.Fred B. Millett, visiting professorof English at Wesleyan University,gives his opinion of recent publica¬tions, best sellers and otherwise, inhis article, “In My Opinion.”Paul MacLean reviews athletics, inwhich less interest is manifested byUniversity alumni than in PresidentHutchins’ volumes on education, ac¬cording to Charlton T. Beck, editorand business manager of the maga¬zine. Harold Holt’s Returnin Seminary RegisterFeaturing Dr. Arthur E. Holt’s re¬turn from a year in India and Afri¬ca, The Chicago Theological SeminaryRegister for November was presentedtoday to the public.On the inside of the front cover is“You Have Blazed a Trail, Sir!”which is an address to Dr. Holt byhis students and co-workers in Bom¬bay, expressing their appreciation ofhis work and regret at his departure.Appropriately following the ad¬dress is an article entitled “The Spir¬itual Center of the Universe,” whichis the text of Professor Holt’s ad¬dress made in Graham Taylor Hall atthe opening of the Autumn quarteron October 5.Dr. Samuel C. Kinchloe’s newbook, “Research Memorandum on Re¬ligion in the Depression,” just pub¬lished by the Social Science ResearchCouncil of New York, forms the basisfor another article entitled “Religionin the Depression,” which is an ex¬tract from the book.“A Year in London” describes Ed-w'ard Oulette’s experiences in thatmetropolis. He was graduated fromthe Seminary in 1936 and awardedthe Ford scholarship. Maroons Lose toTeachers in CrossCountry Run; 43-16About all the Maroon harriers wereable to bring to the Midway aftertheir disastrous cross country meetwith Normal last Saturday were sixpairs of badly blistered feet. Theywere forced to bow to the speedyaggregation from the Normal StateTeacher’s College by a score of 16to 43.The race was run over a three milecourse of which about a mile and ahalf were on pavement. Before therace the hosts issued tennis shoes tothe Chicago sextet to wear duringthe race. As a result, the unaccustom¬ed shoes and paved course addedmore discomfort to the already un¬comfortable score.Chet Powell, the foremost Maroonharrier in both of this season’s meets,was only able to secure a safe fifthSaturday. Linden was next amongthe Chicago runners with an eighth.The results of the race were as fol-follows: Smith (N), Tubb (N), andBush (N), tied for first with a timeof 16:38. Then came Tubb (N), Pow¬ell <C), Conant (N), Redden (N),Linden (C), Sponsel (C), Webster(C), Bonniwell (.)C Fearing OrganizesNew Checker ClubFor those interested in forming achecker club, there will be a shortmeeting in Room D of the ReynoldsClub at 12 tomorrow.Ralph Fearing, who is attemptingto organize such a group, has an¬nounced a two-fold purpose in theunder-taking. First, the club will pro¬vide for those unattached studentswho are interested in playing check¬ers but who are unable to find some¬one to play with.Organize-(Continued from page 1)of new members in the middle ofeach school year. However thisyear’s members will continue in officefor another year and a half. Provis¬ion is made for an election next fallto fill the seats of those members,who graduate in June. The officers ofthe excutive committee will be electedfrom the group at large.Meetings this week include a Con¬servative meeting tonight at 9 in theMaroon office, a Radical meeting to¬morrow at 12:45, and a Liberal meet¬ing Friday at 2:30 also in the Ma¬roon office.“Universities today”, piped Her¬bert George Wells, English philoso¬pher and novelist, “are gilt coachesin which minds take a short ride andget out again.“No-one should end learning whilehe lives. Therefore the idea of adiploma is preposterous.“The true university is a remark¬able gathering of hungry, eagerminds. And I don’t mean a super¬ficial finishing school where rich mensend their sons and daughters.”Rotund ProphetAll this the rotund prophet andplaywright Friday night told 6,000people—most of whom were North¬western students.Thanking science for the amplifiersystem which enlarged his voice andmade possible the public hearing, the iwriter, who visions future world-so- *cieties, who in his imagination “toys”with rockets to the moon, describeda lack of intellectual organization ina high, delicate English accent.He outlined a world encyclopediato contain all intellectual achieve¬ment, to chronicle each and every newdiscovery, to assemble, to digest, toprint, to distribute knowledge ofman’s progress.Warns Against FactsIn the vein of President Hutchins,he warned of a tremendous assort¬ment of undigested facts whichthreaten to submerge the world’speoples.Because the telegraph, radio, andairplane have so reduced the size ofthis globe, he said, we must learnto think in terms of a world-state.“I propose a world-wide organization—a new encyclopedism—of all thatis thought and known.”Divinity School Gives Teafor Student-Faculty GroupThe Divinity school will hold a teain the Swift Commons room Thurs¬day at 4:30. Mrs. Ernest C. Colwelland Mrs. John T. McNeill, wives ofprofessors in the Divinity school willpour. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Vernonare the hosts at these teas for theFall quarter, while Mrs. John Cheekis in charge of the refreshments.The teas are held each Thursdayafternoon in the Swift Commons sothe students and faculty members ofthe Divinity School can meet social¬ly. This will be the fifth tea thisquarter.Pharmecology DepartmentReceives Drug BottlesA gift of approximately 375 pre¬pared bottled specimens of drugs hasbeen given to the Pharmecology de¬partment by the Abbott Laboratories. ^The drugs are chemically pure as jlisted in the number 11 U. S. Phar- jmacopoeia and will be of much useto students in studying'the charac¬teristics of various drugs.A special glass cabinet to show theexact color of the drugs will be builtto house them. T TERE’S excitement, football, and love,X JL crammed into a fast new novel by theman who wrote “Pigskin Preview’*. . . All-American prospect Larry Todd hits the cam¬pus and declares one-man war againstprofessional, “razzle-dazzle” style football.He even steals the coach’s girl! In four fastinstallments, starting today.BEGIN A NEW NOVELof love and kigh-pressure footballby FRANCIS WALLACEAuthor of**Kid Galahad** and **The Double Ride**