Today's HeadlinesRose lectures at 3:30, page 1.Zasu Pitts in film revival, page 1.Iron Mask, Queens reply to Schoen,page 3.Comments from athletic poll, page 4.Shaughnessy juggles line-up, page 4.Zazu Pitts StarsIn Film SocietyShowing, “Greed”“Gives Greatest Actress’sPerformance in Historyof Movies.”Today the Film Society exhumesfrom the grave of all great movies,the Museum of Modern Art, anothercinema ghost—“Greed.” Dead andburied since 1923, “Greed” has notbeen remembered as long as “Thebirth of a Nation” or “The FourHorsemen,” but at 3:30 and 8:30 inthe Oriental Institute theatre it willlive again.“Greed” was the pioneer of real¬ism in the films. The story, adaptedfrom Frank Norris’ “McTeague,” was|)ioduced against the original back¬ground of New York’s East side—not a single scene was filmed in thestudio. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer pur¬chased whole blocks for use as set¬tings. The immortal Eric von Stro¬heim directed all ten reels.According to Paul Rotha, ZazuPitts, the star, gives the greatestpiece of acting ever done by a wo¬man. Her performance revolves aboutthe dehumanizing influence of money,Jean Hersholt, Chester Conklin andGibson Gowland support her..\dmission to the revival is 35 centsfor the matinee and 50 cents in theevening. As in the past, the FilmSociety’s pianist, Ray Erickson, willplay the original musical score.University StudentsProvide Show atEdgewater FridayThey’re adding more and more stu¬dent names to the list of entertainersat the Edgewater Beach hotel’s Uni¬versity of Chicago Night this Fri¬day. Latest addition is Grant Atkin¬son, versatile tap dancer and memberof Beta Theta Pi.Even at a college party the Uni¬versity will not be free from themenace of Northwestern, becausemaster of ceremonies for the Edge-water’s series of college nights isChuck Apley, graduate of that uni¬versity. Student manager of the af¬fair is Craig Hazlewood, of the busi¬ness staff of The Daily Maroon.Orrin Tucker and his orchestra willfurnish the background for the sing¬ing of Quadrangler Mary AdeleCrosby and for the dancing of RuthDoctoroff. Bob Cramer will sing atenor solo, and more music will befurnished by Robert Connor, JackHageboeck, and Harry Snodgrass,members of the Phi Psi trio.Rabbits are expected to fly when“Jerk” Jerger, senior member ofDelta Kappa Epsilon, tries out hislatest magic tricks. The last enter¬tainer is Ray Soderlin, Phi DeltaTheta, who will play the accordion.Tickets for the evening are beingsold at the Reynolds club, the in¬formation desk in the Press building,and the Daily Maroon office.Interfraternity BallMarks High Point ofCampus Social SeasonThanksgiving Eve, soft lights andsweet music, the 22nd annual Inter¬fraternity Ball, and finally, theGrand Ballroom of the Lake Shorewill combine late this month to pro-\ ide fraternity members with theirmost important date of the year.The Lake Shore, scene of theWashington Prom two years ago, isWell known to the campus. There willbe two lounges in which to wanderbetween dances, but tables will beomitted this year. The I-F commit¬tee is investigating the possibility ofputting in a bar, but no decision hasbeen reached yet.No band has been signed at pres¬ent, but Herbert Larson of the Com¬mittee says: “The Committee expectsto be able to announce the orchestrawithin two days. The field has beennarrowed down and we have almostreached a choice.”Fugene Glickman has been placedin charge of tickets and Roger Neil-son will handle the publicity andI patrons for the Ball. IdentificationI cards will probably be issued to theI ^*’®tcrnity men as has been the cus-■ tom in the past. gPbe Battp jltomonVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1937 Price Five CentsGerard Talks toASU TomorrowRalph Gerard, associate professorof Physiology, will speak on “Sciencein Modern Education” at a meetingof the American Student Union to¬morrow at 3:30 in Law South. Themeeting, under the auspices of theCommittee on Democracy in Educa¬tion, is a continuation of the seriesof symposiums on education sponsoredby the ASU last year.Preceding the meeting will be theelection of the chairman and themembership secretary. Nominees forthose positions advanced by the execu¬tive committee are, respectively,Lloyd James and Vera Ellman. Win¬nie Leeds will complete a report onthe decisions of the national executivecommittee, and permanent member¬ship cards will be issued if they havearrived.The membership will also considerthe question of chapter finances andthe imposition of chapter dues. Tem¬porary committee chairmen will an¬nounce meetings of the various inter¬est groups.Former ProfessorReturns to LectureElizabeth Wallace Speakson History and Cultureof Latin-America.Returning to the University afterten years, Elizabeth Wallace, pro¬fessor emeritus of French Literature,w ill present three lectures on'Mexicoon November 16, 17, and 18. MissWallace, formerly head of Fosterhall, will live in Beecher hall and beentertained by the other women’sresidence halls during her stay oncampus.First Lecture in SeriesThe first lecture in the series,which will be presented at SocialScience Research 122 at 8:30, is onSor Juana Ines de la Cruz, a Mexicannun of the 17th century who wroteof love.Carrying out the idea of reflectingMexican history. Miss Wallace wil^also speak on the Mexican Revolutionas seen in the Mexican novel, and onthe poetry of a group of SpanishAmerican poets. These same lectureswere given in a series at the Univer¬sity of Denver this summer.Miss Wallace is an outstandingauthority on Latin American lifeand culture. This year she conducteda seminar in Mexico City for thepromotion of cultural relations withLatin America, and has written manybooks and articles on the subject, in¬cluding several stories in the AlumniMagazine.One of the most popular professorsever to lecture at the University, shetaught French and Spanish, andsince her retirement has led a lifefully as active as her years before1937. She prepared for retirementby studying art at an artists’ colonynear the Hudson river, and has trav¬eled extensively in France, Spain,and Mexico.Swift AppreciatesIn an article of appreciation in theApril, 1932, issue of the Alumni mag¬azine, Harold H. Swift wrote, “Eliza¬beth Wallace is one of those greatsouls who has made the Universityof Chicago great.” She was withthe University as a fellow when itopened in 1892, and in 1897 was ap¬pointed associate in Romance Lan¬guages and head of Foster hall.Lutheran Club HoldsTea Today in Ida NoyesThe Lutheran Club invites Luther¬an students to a tea to be held in thelibrary of Ida Noyes today, from 4 to6. This is the opening event in theyear’s program of the Lutherangroup at the University, and a num¬ber of guests, including Dean CharlesW. Gilkey, will be present.There are more than 200 Lutheranstudents on campus, and they cooper¬ate with the Metropolitan LutheranStudent Council, which contacts morethan 2,000 students in the Chicagoarea.A discussion of long-range plans,and a program of religious and socialfellowship will take place at the tea. Announce End ofStudent GroupRegistration TodaySixty Organizations FileLists of Members, Offi¬cers.Student organizations wishing tobe included in the official list ofrecognized organizations to be madeup today, are requested to return im¬mediately to the office of the dean ofStudents, Room 203, Cobb hall, theblanks sent from there for listingofficers and members. Any organiza¬tion which did not receive blanks maycall for copies at the office of theDean of Students.The following organizations havefiled returns and are to be includedin the official list: Achoth, AlphaDelta Phi, Alpha Tau Omega, An¬derson Society, Arexis, AmericanStudent Union, Avukah, Band As¬sociation, Beta Theta Pi, ‘C” Club,Calvert Club, Camera Club, CampusNewsreel, Chapel Union, Chi Psi, ChiRho Sigma, Chinese Students’ As¬sociation, Christian Science Organi¬zation, Communist Club, Daily Ma¬roon, Debate Union, Delta Kappa Ep¬silon, Delta Sigma, Delta Upsilon,Deltho, Dramatic Association, Fed¬eration, Film Society, Gamma Alpha,German Club, Iron Mask, JuniorMathematics Club, Kappa Alpha Psi,Kappa Sigma, Lambda Gamma Phi,Mortar Board, Nu Pi Sigma, Owl andSerpent, Phi Beta Delta, Phi DeltaKappa, Phi Delta Theta, Phi DeltaUpsilon, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kap¬pa Psi, Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi SigmaDelta, Pi Lambda Phi, Poetry Club,Psi Upsilon, Radio Group, RomanceClub, Scientific Method Group, SigmaChi, Social Committees, SocialistClub, Student Speakers’ Bureau,Symphony Orchestra, Tarpon Club,Wyvem, Zeta Beta Tau.ASU TheatreGroup ConductsFinal TryoutsThe recently formed ASU TheatreGroup will conduct tryouts for • finalcasting for their first presentation ofthe season Thursday evening at 8in Room A of the Reynolds club.Vera Rony, executive-secretary ofthe group, announced that an intens¬ive search for a ten-year old prodigyhas been inaugurated because thehero in the main piece, “Jack Robin¬son,” is a child. As the play is asocial tragedy, based on the povertyof a relief family in which the childcommits suicide, a talented youngsteris required. The group will appre¬ciate information concerning anychild capable of playing the role.Compile Membership ListBecause the group wants to avoidthe problem of a floating membership,it will compile its final list of mem¬bers at Thursday’s meeting. “Wewant to consider ourselves a unit andwish to preserve as professional asetup as possible,” stated Rony.“Therefore, we will consist of an act¬ing and producing company. To dothis we must limit the membershipto those who honestly wish to workon every production in some capacity.Additional members will be selectedafter this meeting only on the basisof interviews followed by a proba¬tionary period, I advise all those in¬terest^ to make a point of attendingthis all-important meeting.”Business StudentsHold Tea, ElectionTea at 4 o’clock and an election ofofficers at 5 is the program scheduledfor tomorrow afternoon when theGraduate club of Economics andBusiness holds its first meeting ofthe year in the Common room ofHaskell hall.All graduate students in the De¬partment of Economics and theSchool of Business are invited byClub members to attend.Organized to further the associa¬tion of scholars in the allied fields ofeconomics and business, the Graduateclub also conducts meetings at whichstudents, faculty members and guestspeakers offer the findings of theirresearch. Socialist ClubHears MiltonAgreeing with Ralph Bates, recent¬ly heard on campus under ASU aus¬pices, on some matters of fact butdiffering as to their interpretation,Harry Milton yesterday told the So¬cialist Club and a near-capacity audi¬ence in Law South that the losses ofthe Loyalists on the Aragon frontare directly due to the political acti¬vities of the Stalinist movement.Milton, a member of the POUM,Trotskyite organization liquidated bythe Loyalist government, discussedthe happenings in Barcelona in theMay uprisings. According to him (hewas there at the time), the revoltwas organized by the Stalinist-con¬trolled government in an effort to dis¬credit tne working classes, whichhad become too revolutionary forthe government. “The POUM shouldhave tried to seize power”, he said,because it represented the working-class majority in their “spontaneous”revolt. “It was possible to make arevolution in Spain, which was theonly way to win the war. A popularfront cannot fight fascism because apopular front is capitalism.”Speaking before the speech. BobSpeer challenged the unanimity ofthe vote in Tuesday’s executive meet¬ing of the ASU and announced ameeting of the general membershipof the ASU within two weeks atwhich the policy therein advocatedwould be discussed.Squall Comes Up onWoodlawn; BentonsAdopt Baby GirlsThere are two new squalls onWoodlawn avenue, signifying Vice-president Wiliam B. Benton’s com¬plete acceptance of . Chicago and thebabies born in it. Two baby girls,aged 8 and 12 weeks, were just a-dopted by the Bentons from theCradle in Evanston.The millionaire advertising manwho became an educator, comes froma family of college professors him¬self and feels that a University at¬mosphere is ideal for children. Hisown son, aged 6, is attending theUniversity elementary school.The babies are named Helen Orrand Louise Hemingway, after Ben¬ton’s grandmother and his wife’scousin. Originally the Bentons in¬tended to adopt only one, but sincethe babies have only eaten, slept, andcried so far, they have had no ac-casion for regret. CzechO’ SlovakianLectures on RoleOf SmaU NationsDiscusses Place of MinorCountries in Internation¬al Relations.A lecture which Professor Paul A.Douglas has characterized as “bothtimely and important” will be giventoday at 3:30 in Social Science As¬sembly hall when Dr. Jaroslav Koseof the American Institute of Praguewill speak on “The Role of the SmallNations in Europe.”One of the leading civil servantsin his country. Dr. Kose is vice-president of the Czechoslovakian Ex¬port Institute which has been createdto expand the export markets of thatcountry. He was formerly on thestaff of the International Labor Officein Geneva and has done a great dealof work in youth movements in hiscountry.A personal friend of former presi¬dent of Czechoslovakia T. G. Mas-aryk, he has recently established aMasaryk Institute in the UnitedStates for the promotion of friendlyrelations between the two countries.It is in connection with this Institutethat he is now in this country.Professor Douglas, a very closefriend of Kose, said that should theFascists win in Spain, it is probablethat Czechoslovakia will be the nextobject of Fascist aggression. Whetherit may come as a direct invasion oras a coup d’etat by the Fascist party,he did not predict, but it is certainthat Czechoslovakia may soon be¬come the center of European politi¬cal turmoil.Danders ConductsSecond WPA ConcertThe second in the series of IllinoisSymphony Orchestra concerts spon¬sored by the University will be heldTuesday evening in Mandel hall.Robert Sanders will be guest conduc¬tor and Winfred Stracke, guest solo¬ist.Sanders, assistant in Music at theUniversity, has been active as teach¬er of musical theory, organist, com¬poser and conductor. Stracke, knownas a basso, has appeared on campuswith the Illinois Symphony.Tuesday evening’s program openswith “Ancient Dances and Airs, Suite2” by Respighi, under whom Sand¬ers studied for years in Rome.Leland Directs Surveys to Check CollectionAnd Expenditure of Taxes by Local OfficialsActing as chairman of the statetax commission. Professor of Eco¬nomics Simeon Leland is now direct¬ing three surveys of the relationshipbetween the state and local govern¬ments in Illinois. Two of the studiesare being carried on with federalfunds under the WPA and the thirdis being made by research associateshere at the University.Collect Fiscal DataThe largest and most importantsurvey is engaged in collecting allavailable fiscal data from local units.It is hoped that this data will providean adequate basis for intelligent dis¬cussion of, and action on, local taxproblems.Included in the report are completereports from 4,000 local units in thestate. The type of unit ranges all theway from the conventional countyand city organization to mosquitoabatement and fire protection dis¬tricts. One of the largest WPA pro¬jects in the state, it has necessitatedthe maintenance of a field force ineach of these 4,000 units.Accuracy DifficultSeveral circumstances make thissurvey a difficult one to keep accur¬ate. In many places the studentshave found antiquated or incompletesystems of bookkeeping. Often thetreasurer merely makes a note ofwho got the money and no notationas to what it was spent for. Manytimes they have found unbalancedbooks, which the officials in chargehad apparently merely regarded as anatural state of affairs and had letgo. A second survey, being carried onto provide legal background for thefinancial data, is seeking to digest allprovisions of the state statutes re¬lating to local control. This is beingdone in an effort to see if publicfunds are being expended properly,to check on the local officers and toremove the confusion occasioned byoverlapping or contradictory laws.Investigate State ControlThe University’s project ties inwith these two by investigating thestate control of local fiscal affairs,and studying the relationship of thetwo units wherever the state meetsthe local unit in either co-operativeor supervisory capacity.Business Fraternity HoldsDiscussion and SmokerAlpha Psi chapter of Delta SigmaPi, professional fraternity in the fieldof commerce and business administra¬tion, will hold the second of a seriesof scheduled professional smokers to¬day at 8 *in the Commons room ofHaskell hall. The smoker will takethe form of a roundtable discussionon “The Present Trend of the StockMarket.” The participants in theroundtable will be Professors GarfieldV. Cox, Stuart P. Meech, and Theo¬dore 0. Yntema, of the School ofBusiness faculty. The smoker will beattended by members of the frater¬nity, Alumni, and guests.Page Two THE i^AILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1937PLATFORM1. Increased University effort towardadiustment.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics,3. Establishment of Political Union.4. Revision of the College plan.5. A chastened President.6. Reform of Blackfriars. studentCampus SocietyUniversity policy toward .student swiallife is one of negative regulation. Ine uni¬versity’s worst dream is a report of radicaldoings reaching the metropolitan papers. Itspicture of perfect felicity is a group of docilestudent organizations, each of which sedulous¬ly asks permission and obeys regulations, thisis totally inadequate.An education should be something morethan filling of intellectual vacuum tanks. Hap¬piness of its students is the aim of the Uni¬versity. True, the contribution to happinessthat the University uniquely makes is intellect¬ual orientation in the world, and it is this con¬tribution that the University should primarilyconcern itself with.But it is putting one’s head in the sand tosuppose that there are not other and more in¬dispensable elements entering into happiness.One of them is easy intimate contact with one sfellows. This does not exist on the Universitycampus for many students. The University shands-off policy is at fault.Such contacts could be established on thecampus only by concerted administration ac¬tion. Since the only time all students are onthe campus and free from classes is the noonhour, a thorough-going program must centeraround this period.Since personal relations can be set up onlythrough time and repeated contacts with thesame persons, small semi-permanent groupsmust be the vehicle of an adequate student so¬cial program.Since most of the marginal students aredesperately poor, the program could be suc¬cessful only if it cost very little to the student.The problem facing the University then isto form groups of students, provide them witha place to meet and talk, yet avoid the troubleof clique and, more important, the studentswho could find no compatible group.The Maroon has already set forth the out¬lines of plan designed for these specifications.Briefly it was this. The University, as an ex¬tension of its advisory system, should employa number of persons to lead groups of about 20students. The groups would meet togetherfor lunch, retire to a room to talk, or otherwisespend the hour together.Membership might be managed as follows:the student body would be divided into groupsquite arbitrarily, and invited to attend themeetings of one particular group. If a studentcame several times, thus indicating interest,he would be permanently assigned to that par¬ticular group. Those who never returned,would be privately counseled in the manner ofpresent advisor meetings, and the whole ques¬tion of social adjustment discussed, perhaps amore congenial group indicated.Vol. 38 NOVEMBER 3, 1937 No. 21^ailg jHaroonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, published morniegs except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 357, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 1020 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: five cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.REPRCSCNTCO POR NATIONAL ADVtRTItlNO RYNational Advertisip:rFf*rvice, Inc.CelUgt Publisher lalivt420 Madison Ave. iOrk, N.Y.Chicago ■ Bostos ■ Los Angclcs . san FhanciscoBOARD 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 GreenleeMax Freeman Alan JohnstoneNight Editor: Rex HortonAssistant: Maxine Biesenthal By CODY PFANSTIEHLSLYE REMARKFamed for her research with cancerous mice. Pro¬fessor Maud Slye spoke on that subject at Purduerecently.Next day the Purdue Exponent typographicallyerred:“Under perfect environmental conditions she hashad 28 years of nice breeding...”MENTAL SPLITIf one unidentified gentleman who voted in the Ma¬roon poll Friday tries to carry out his convictions hewill find himself in a fix.He voted:1) To maintain the status quo.2) To withdraw from the Conference.SIGN OF THE TIMEOne hundred and forty-four fraternity, club, andindependent men and women were having the time oftheir lives at the Chapel Union Barn Dance Saturdaynight.In overalls and shirtsleeves they swung their part¬ners in natural unsophisticated happiness. The orches¬tra was only a thumping through the laughter.Six fraternity men, dressed to traditional perfec¬tion, walking on artificial clouds, tentatively steppedinto the gym and blinked at the uninhibited joy.• They didn’t join the dancing. They stood for awhile by the door. Then, in the manner of eight yearolds who find themselves left out of the fun at a party,the boys paraded twice around the room, singing amarching song.Nobody noticed.The boys again stood by the door, hands in pockets,watching the joyous turmoil. Then they made sheep,ish grimaces, turned, and walked out, unnoticed.WHIMSY ON CEMENTThis Department likes the big sidewalk splotch ofwhitewash, under which is written, in large letters,“OOPS!”INTERNATIONAL URCHINCity Sight: The bored newsboy in front of Inter¬national House, blowing beans at his customers’ win¬dows.WUXTRY WUXTRY“Stoop” (for Big Stoop, no Stoop, or Stoopid), thehorse-like Alpha Delt Great Dane, has been missingthese 56 hours. Twice in two weeks the boys have res¬cued him from the gutters of 63rd street. Yester¬day’s search resulted only in a rumor concerning twosmall boys leading a huge black dog by a hawser.HASHIt is, of course, impossible to follow the tangles ofthe Iron Mask Queen election, but I might tell youthat Jimmy Goldsmith was the one who was campaign¬ing for Marion Elisberg and borrowed Maroons but notMarion, who was very naive about it and wanted towin, but not Jimmy who couldn’t and didn’t mean to,but circumstances and Marion and Jimmy and roundand round and and round,BILL WHO?Eavesdropped in Bookstore: unintelligent-appearingwoman, pointing to Shakespeare’s Complete Works:“I’ve heard that that’s sort of good. I don’t know whyany one’d want to read it, though—it’s sort of old.”It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLEShe stands, a little bent over, at her sink and looksout at the world through her window.If the milkman brings extra gallons to the Betahouse next door she knows they’ll have a rushing lunch¬eon. If the trash man hauls away a large load fromthe Phi Kaps she knows the pledges are cleaning outthe attic again. And she’ll name every owner of everycar that parks in the Chi Psi’s back yard, for they’reher boys.“I cooks you ‘alls’ food how you likes it, but thatstuff isn’t for my husban’ and I. We gotta eat special.You fellows are young and strong, an’ you goin’ up theroad. Steve and I gettin' ol’, and we going down theroad.”She scrubs out a pan, and her husband, polishing agla.ss, grins and says, “That’s right, Darlin’.”You sit there and eat food she’s kept warm for youbecause you had to work late,“That’s not so, Mrs. Steve, You and Steve are go¬ing up the road, and you’re getting higher and higher.You won’t go down any road.”She says, “Ah hope not,” and bends over her sinkagain, looking up occasionally to watch the worldthrough her window. And WIN 1000PHIUP MORRISCIGARETTESLAST WEEK'S WINNERSGRAND PRIZE—1000 Philip Morris Cigarettes toMiss Margaret LumpkinOTHER WINNERSStan GoldstrinMaurice HartmanJohn E. NewbyH. PinchRalph McCollumWayne SharerLauren NeherNelson Robinson S. J. SetterL. WeirelHarryette NightincaleEdward KmpowicsMary FerroCatherine BroderickMartin JoneaLibby Schiele Betty BealeBetty CaldwellEunie PriceHerbert LaraonHarold Fri^G. LaraenFrancea BetddcLouise KelsayThis Week's PHILIP MORRIS Scorecast Is On!CHICAGO vs. MICHIGANMINNESOTA vs. IOWAHAVE YOU ENTERED? Write your scores, name, ond aifiliatton on back oi 0PHILIP MORRIS wrapper and deposit in ballot boxes ot THE COFFEE SHOP, ^THE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE, IDA NOYES CLOISTER CLUB, or at yourFrotsmity or Dormitory.CONTEST RULES POSTED AT ALL ABOVE PLACESFINAL GROUP PRIZES to Fraternity. Girls Club, ond Open House ior mostballots during the entire contest on disploy atUniversity BookstoreMcooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooeoooI10 ^ONTH .CHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS presentsThe Funniest Comedyin a GenerationYOU CAN'TTAKE ITWITH YOUPUUTZEl PRIZE PLAY. 1937by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS Nishtly, tael.Geod Beats at Bax OSesFar All Perfarmaacca HALF A BLOCKFROM THE DORMSWALDROM'SIlST AND ELUS DOR. 1004<YOUR CAR SERVICED DURINGCLASSComplete Washing, Tire,Battery, and Lubrication ServiceSTANDARD OIL SERVICECampus Florist1233 E. 55th near KimborkMum and Pom PonsVERY REASONABLERoses Special 50c per dozPhoneHyde Park 9414 GRAND119 N. Clark—Cen. 8240EVERY NIGHT — 8:30MATS., Wed. - Sat., 2:30ALFRED da LIAGRB, J{,A COMCOT by MAMC MEDwith FLORENCE REED9 MONTHS IN NEW YORKEves.. $1.10, $1.65. $2.20, $2.75Mat!.. $1.10, $1.65, $2 20SELWYNS i f eVo'f NDW PliyiiitTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVI8IOROE ABBOTTJOHN NOWIS Jft. Aso mu A RNKUNOFNtAf i A C O lTe GECOMEDY“lUBILANT HlT-~BOCBB THZATZI WITS LADGlRar Detfy MmssKVE8. 55c ta n.7S MATS. Wed. 4 Sirt. Me teTZae.ERLANGER127 N. Clark St. Slot* 2461 NightlyIncluding SundayMAX GORDON PrMentsTHE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settmge by Jo MielxmerCAST OF 40—ALL WOMEN'SMART' 'FUNNY' \Lettersto the EditorVOICE FROM THE VISOREditor,The Daily Maroon:May I say that I think the writeupon the Beauty Contest, appearing in•Lillian’s column of “Sweetness andLight,” was, in truth, very sweet?—not sweet in the sense of an ordi¬nary pleasant review, but sweet, onthe idea of dragging people’s namesthrough a messy marsh of heinouscynicism in order to make a few moresales of the paper that will stoop solow as to print such filth. It is mightybad when city papers will attempt totear down individuals with a view toattracting attention of the commonlot. It is infinitely worse when thecampus newspaper of such a univer¬sity as our own alma mater feels itsordidly essential to print such avitriolic tirade against any and everyperson who attempts to cooperatewith plans to put a little spirit intothe campus which that newspaperpretends to represent.The members of the organizationsponsoring the Homecoming Programfeel that the choice made by thecampus for its Homecoming Queenwas indeed fine. The ‘facts’ presentedin the article, concerning the choice,were entirely untrue. Each of thegirls nominated for the honor readilytook part in the program and feltthat the outcome was indeed splen¬did. If the contest had been run withthe same mercenary and cynical in¬tent with which the article againstthis contest was written, I would in¬deed say that the program presentedfor the annual Homecoming Weekendwould be most unpardonable.•My only regret is that I sold sub¬scriptions to your paper, using theargument that “we should all sup¬port campus activities.” The lessthat your paper gets into the handsof the students, while such articles asthis continue to appear, the betterwill be the opportunity for the stu¬dent body to give its campus life thewell-rounded, genuine, true-to-lifesubstance that it should have.J. R. Van de Water.(The Maroon is tearing downfarces, not activities. —ed.) Candidates forQueen DiscussSchoen ChargesReached after they had been madethe objects of a discussion in whichLillian Schoen in her column in theDaily Maroon attacked all beautycontests and the recent contest forHomecoming Queen in particular, thegeneral concensus of the campus can-ididates yesterday was that Schoentook both herself and the contest tooseriously.The girls said that they did notconsider the contest very importantand had merely entered it as a sport¬ing act to help promote a little spiritfor campus functions. It made noparticular difference to them, theysaid, whether they won or lost. ThatSchoen should seize upon it as a scan¬dal, they thought rather unnecessary.THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1937TOQ Page ThreeHANLEY’SBUFFET1512 EAST 55th ST.li you want coUoge soaga—li you wemt “CoUogiato" Atmoaphore—li you wont to aoo your frienda—You or* oaaured oi auch on evening otHANLEY’SOVER FORTY YEARS OF CONGENIALSERVICE LECTURES“Applications of Polarizing' Mi¬croscope.” Lecturer, Dr. Pettijohn,Department of Geology. Biochemistry101 at 8.“Bases of Human Behavior. Clini¬cal Studies of Personalities. AssociateProfessor Mandel Sherman. Art In¬stitute from 6:45-7:45.“The Role of the Small Nations inEurope.” Lecturer, Dr. Joseph Kose,vice-chairman of the American Insti¬tute in Prague.Social Science 122 at 3:30.MEETINGSAssociation Group of YWCA.Alumnae room, Ida Noyes at 3:30.Poetry Club. Ida Noyes, WAAroom at 7:30.MISCELLANEOUS“Singende Jugende.” Foreign filmWagnerian FestivalSingers of SalzburgSundayNov. 143:30 P.M.Auditorium TheatreOnly one performance!STARRING• KONETZNI - NOORT - BERGLUND• ALEXANDER KIPNIS• MARTA KRASOVA• RICHARD HAGEMAN, DirectorTickets Now on Sale atUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGOINFORMATION OFFICEPrices 50c. 75c. $1. $1.50 $2. $2.50No TaxWORLD FAMOUS ENSEMBLE SINGINGFAVORITE SELECTIONS FROM THEGREAT OPERASPresented by theADULT EDUCATION COUNCILWHY STINEWAY'S ARE POPULAR with theSTUDENTS!. . . FOR THE REASON THAT STINEWAY'S ARE CONVENIENTLYLOCATED, RIGHT ON THE CAMPUS—BECAUSE DRUGS, COS¬METICS, AND EMERGENCY NEEDS ARE OF HIGHEST DEPEND¬ABLE QUALITY—FOODS AND REFRESHMENTS AT OUR FOUN¬TAIN OF FINEST GRADE OBTAINABLE—PLUS FREE DELIVERYSERVICE.MAKE IT A POINT TO DROP IN AT STINEWAY'S OFTEN. YOU'LL HND YOURFRIENDS THERE TOO!STINEWAY DRUG STORE57th and Kenwood Phone DOR. 2844 with Vienna choir boys and the Vien¬na Philharmonic Orchestra. Eng¬lish titles. Presented by RenaissanceSociety and International House. In-'ternational House at 4:30 and 8:30.35 cents, 50 cents. j“Greed,” with Zazu Pitts, JeanHersholt, Chester Conklin OrientalInstitute at 3:30 and 8:30. 35 cents,50 cents. PSYCHOLOGICAL CONSULTANT^ucxrtionol and Vocational CounselingFor College StudentsMargaret Frank. Ph. D. Uni. of ChicagoLeroy N. Vernon. Ph. D. UnL of IowaPERSONNEL AND PSYCHOLOGICALSERVICE160 North LoSoUe Street — ChicagoINDIRECTSTUDY LAMP$1.95IT'S HERE. THE FIRST POPULAR PRICED LAMP WITHALL THE EYE SAVING ADVANTAGES OF INDIRECT LIGHT.A SCIENTIFIC LAMP —SO DESIGNED THAT IT REFLECTSTHE LIGHT WHERE NEEDED —AND NOT IN THE EYES.Finished in beautiful bronze Metalustre Lacquer.Overall height 11 inches — Get one todayWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsNEAR KIMBARE AVE. PHONE DORCHESTER 4800saocooooooooooocoooooooooooooooooooooooocoooooooooootfTHE DANCE CRAZEor THE TOWN!ORRIN TUCKERAND HIS ORCHESTRAMABINE DINING ROOMEDGEWATER REACH HOTELFriday Night, November 5th, isUniversity of Chicago Nightin the Marine Dining RoomHalf 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:Mary Adele Crosby Bob Cramer"Jerk" Jerger Ruth Doetorofi Roy SoderlindPhi Psi TrioHalf-rat^tickets available at Reynolds Club, Press Building and the DAILY MAROON officePage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1937DAILY MAROON SPORTS‘‘Subsidize Athletes, ” “McNeill IsCrazy, ” ‘Too, ** Written on BallotsCoaches JuggleFirst Team AgainPeirce Moved to Center;Johnson, Goodstein Re¬instated.Coach Clark Shaughnessy juggledhis lineup again yesterday afternoonin an effort to remedy the generalweakness of the Maroon eleven whichwas evident in its flop at the feet ofOhio State, 39-0.Earl Peirce, 200 pound sophomore,was moved from a reserve tackleberth to the regular center. Peirceworked efficiently in scrimmage a-gainst the freshman squad andshould bolster the forward wall ondefense.Other of the team’s weighty per¬formers returned to the first elevenafter spending last week in the “dog¬house.” Bob Johnson is back at atackle position and Mort Goodsteinhas been I’einstated at the fullbackspot.The team went through its offens¬ive paces yesterday in hopes ofdeveloping an attack which maytrouble Michigan next Saturday af¬ternoon. In past performances, theMaroons have displayed a respectable'defense at times but have not filash-ed any indication of scoring punch asyet.George Antonie who has been oc¬cupying the center position at timesthis season will be lost to the squadfor the remainder of the campaign.Antonie suffered a severe leg injuryin the tussle with the overpoweringBuckeyes.Varsity OpensRifle SeasonWith CaliforniaVarsity members of the rifle teamwill fire their first match of theseason this week with the Universityof California providing the competi¬tion. The members of the team havebeen practicing since freshman weekand seem to improve last year’s rec¬ords. The match will be fired oneach team’s home range and the re¬sults mailed to the opposing squad.The course of fire will be ten shotsin each of four positions, prone, sit¬ting, kneeling and strictly off-hand(standing).The latest ladder tournament re¬sults show Hugh Bennett, presidentof the club, to be the leading shooter.He heads both the varsity and four-position ladders. Don Hamilton againtops the pistol addicts while AlleneTasker has resumed her last year’sposition on the top rung of thewomen’s ladder. Numerous comments — favorable,unfavorable, serious, foolish, andotherwise — but nonetheless com¬ments, were received in The DailyMaroon’s recent intercollegiate atn-letic poll.One voter suggests: “Subsidizeathletes to the extent of paying onan hourly basis for time spent prac¬ticing and in games.” Another pointsout: “The Big Ten shows no signs oftaking to heart the example we setfor it. I therefore feel that it is use¬less for our boys to continue to takepunishment in the interests of simon-pure athletics.”Athletics SecondaryStrange as it may be, a fraternityHockey Team PlansNovember Play DayAt Meeting FriddyA nameless popcorn-popping get-together will inject enthusiasm intothe women’s hockey team Friday af¬ternoon when WAA meets in the firstfloor library of Ida Noyes from 4 to6. All University women are invited,but bring your own corn.The Hockey Play Day to be heldNovember 19 and 20 furnished theinspiration for what WAA refuses tocall the “Pop-Concert.” The Play Daywill be held Friday afternoon and allday Saturday in Jackson Park. Fea¬tured during the session will be theannual WAA banquet Friday night,the 19th, in honor of the players, anda noon luncheon on Saturday.Schools which have accepted invi¬tations to attend the Play Day arePurdue, Northwestern, Illinois, LakeErie (Ohio) College, Michigan State,State University of Iowa, BattleCreek, St. Mary’s, Rockford, North¬ern Illinois State Teachers, andIllinois State Normal.Each school will enter from one tofive teams and will play two gamesdaily, beginning Friday at 1:15.Wagnerian Singers toPerform at AuditoriumChicagoans will have the oppor¬tunity to hear the Chicago debut ofthe Wagnerian Festival Singers ofSalzburg at the Auditorium theatreon November 14. The group, whichwas organized this summer by Tos¬canini, was an overwhelming successwhen it played in New York.Th concert will include the out¬standing Wagnerian operas as wellas selections from other operas. Tick¬ets are being reserved for studentsand faculty members at the informa¬tion office of the University. member declares: “A University isan educational institution and not anathletic club. Athletics should assumea secondary position in a universitycommunity.” Another voter claims:“Simple, inexpensive sports that de¬mand little preparation, that wearwell in later years are what Chicagostudents need—not the sound andfury of intercollegiate athletics.”Among others, were such learneddiscourses as “Foo,” “Nuts,” “I liketo see football games,” and “Wakeup and live!”Various persons have very definiteideas concerning the Maroon person¬nel such as: “Abolish the editorialstaff. Also decapitate McNeill, Gold¬ing, Robbins, and Fritz.” “Withoutathletics we could expect a campusof McNeill’s. That would be too bad.”“McNeill is crazy as hell. Its guyslike him what should be shot.”“Subsidize Maroon”Other suggestions are: “W h ydoesn’t the Maroon quit trying toplay big brother to Hutchins and giveus some good dirty news?” “Subsi¬dize the Maroon and get a real paperon campus.”A ballot signed “Robert MaynardHutchins,” in very un-Hutchinesquehandwriting declares, “To hell withMcNeill.” “Bemarr Macfadden” says,“It is inconceivable that such a bunchof chums could run a college rag.Why not eliminate the Maroon in¬stead ? ”Anyway, they were comments.Alpha DellWin Touchball GameFrom Beta TeamWith the game between the Bar¬risters and Lambda Gamma Phi for¬feited by the Lambda Gams, andthe game between Psi U and Phi Psipostponed, the game between theAlpha Delt “B’s” and Beta Theta Piheld the center of the stage in intra-GAMES TODAY2:30 Burton “700” vs Snell Hall3 Alpha Delt “13” vs. Phi SigmaDeltaJudson ‘300” vs. Burton “600”4 Broadmen vs. U. Hi-LitesHitchcock vs. Burton “800”Judson vs. Burton “600”mural touchball yesterday. The AlphaDelts won 12 to 6, in a double over¬time.Arnold for the Betas, and Atkinsfor the Alpha Delts made the touch¬downs during the scheduled time. Inthe second overtime, with but ashort time left, Dick Smith climaxeda series of short passes by taking theball over the goal for the winners.Tarpon Plays Host toDolphin at Splash PartyTarpon will play host to Dolphinwhen the women swimmers of theUniversity meet the men swimmersat a splash party in the Ida Noyespool, Thursday, November 11, at 7:30.Included among the activities ofthe evening will be a rehearsal forthe Water Carnival, which Dolphinand Tarpon will conduct on Decem¬ber 4 in an effort to find “Tarzan andhis mate.” THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mgr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOR MEN AND WOMENRepedring and Remodeling ofAny Cloth, or Fur GarmentOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. S5th SL, near UniversityTeL Midway 3318KITTY DAVISCo-ed LoungeandUniversity Bar75 COLLEGE EDUCATEDEMPLOYEES TO SERVEAND ENTERTAIN YOUlACKSON & WABASHChicago, IIL 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.Relph Hits, Prea., J. E. Frawley, Vice-PrM. Five Foot VorresDemonstrates HisPunches to TeamA little man, but a dangerous one.Coach Spyros Vorres, University box¬ing, wrestling and self-defense coach,is no ringside pugilist. Wound up inhis five feet some inches is a mule-kick punch and no little bit of ring¬smartness.More than that, Vorres knows howto teach others and has, in his 15years here, turned out a number oftourney-winning wrestlers and box¬ers. But Vorres has been at it longerthan that. Previous to coming to theUniversity he was in charge of sportsand recreation for the giant WesternElectric plant in Cicero.During his years there, and since.Western Electric was and has beenone of the leading contenders in theindustrial athletic leagues, havingcontestants playing everything fromtennis to touchball. Vorres has ex¬perience in handling men—at timesmore than 1400 people played touch-ball under his direction.“Boxing and wrestling give youconfidence,” says Vorres. He is num¬ber one exhibit of that contention. Aconfident man. He knows that he’snot so tall, but he’s dangerous. Hedidn’t get his battle scars playingtiddly-winks.Open Stenographic andTgpewriting ServiceTo aid students who do not owntypewriters, the University now fur¬nishes to .students and faculty mem¬bers a stenographic and typewritingservice at cost. The office is locatedin Ingleside hall, room 201.All work is carefully supervisedand the employees are qualified to’type all kinds of manuscripts includ¬ing foreign language and technicalmaterial.'Term papers average ten cents perpage and up, depending upon thecondition of the mansucript. Metcalf SeeksReturn of FiveBallot BoxesBallot box, ballot box, who’s gotthe ballot box? Regardless of who’sgot them, the ballot boxes stolen fromCobb, Ida Noyes, Mandel and Harperare still missing.Dean Leon P. Smith has a fewideas on the matter. Buildings andGrounds department has some more.Certain janitors report seeing certainindividuals spiriting them away inthe dark of Thursday night.T. Nelson Metcalf, athletic director,said that the missing ballot boxesweren’t missed Saturday as there aredozens of them in the department.In fact, they have three times asmany as they are using. But—hewants them back. Metcalf remarkedthat the action was a “fool trick,”and Rex Horton, sports editor, whois responsible to the Athletic officefor them heartily agrees with him.SPECIAL STUDENT ILUNCHEON25c iREGULAB LUNCHEON35cEVENING DINNERS40cDELiaOUS FOODWE ESPEQALLY CATER TO CLUB iPARTIES IFREE USE OF CARD ROOM IMIRA MAR IDINING ROOM6212 Woodlawn At«.CO-ED-MAKEA CAMPUSSYLPH OFyourselfICOLORED "MOULDETTES”by CarterNew colors in a grand pantie girdle to "hold that line" ... it fits like asecond birthday suit. Everything under control without a sign of abone or seam . . . the lastex fabric flattens out tummies and disciplinesderrieres. Colors for young sophisticates . . . red, blue, gold, andblack. Pre-shrunk to insure perfect fit through rep>eated wearing andwashing.PANTY GIRDLESIZES 26 to 30$2.50MATCHING BANDEAU in lace andlastex with elastic shoulder straps. Sizes32 to 36. $1.50."it'iif ■A*TaiLARGEST DETABTMENT STOBE IN WOODIAWN