Todaj/s HeadlinesKed Cross drive opens, page 1.Kay Kyser at Swing Session, page 1.Law Review features Kalven article,page 3.Campus Nazi denies propagandacharge, page 1.Nominations close for Political Un>ion, page 1. mtWiV oroonVol. 38 Z.149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937 Price Five CentsNominations forPolitical UnionClose TonightLiberals Trail Conserva¬tives and Radicals inOrganizing.With the Radicals and Conserva¬tives ahead of their goals and theLiberals still behind, nominations forthe Political Union close tonight andconvention plans are being rapidlycrystallized.All petitions may be turned in tothe Maroon office or to the respectiveparty organizers. Although the Lib¬erals have printed a special petitionform, which may be otbained in TheDaily Maroon office or from Liberalorganizers, any sheet with the re¬quired number of names is acceptable.Two Parties Double QuotaThe fact, however, that the Radi¬cals and Conservatives have reached40 petitions each, which is double thenumber of seats they will be allowed,does not mean that their slates areclosed, and there is still time to filea nomination.Tonight at 7:30, all Liberal nom¬inees ,organizes, and supporters areto meet in the Maroon office, and planthe final details of their convention,to be held next Tuesday at 3:30 inKent 106. They have already securedas speaker, T. V. Smith, professor ofPhilosophy and state senator.Meeting today at 12:46 in the.Maroon office the Radicals will pre¬pare for their convention, which willbe next Thursday at 3:30 in Kent106. The Conservatives hold theirconvention next Wednesday night at8 in Kent.Kerwin SapcrviaesIn addition, the organizing com¬mittee of the Political Union hasannounced that Jerome G. Kerwin,associate professor o f PoliticalScience, will select the personnel andsupervise the counting of votes onthe night of the election, which hasbeen officially set for November 23.The count will be public.ASU Theatre GroupSponsors SeminarsThe first of a series of seminars onthe theory of the new theatre will begiven by Milton Fromer, director ofthe ASU theatre group an hour be¬fore a general meeting Thursdayevening at 8 in Lounge A of theReynolds club.For their first performance, sched¬uled for the first week of December,the group has selected a one-act com¬edy, “Home of the Brave,” by PaulPeters and George Sklar, the masschant, “America, America,” and aone-act tragedy, “Jack Robinson.”The cast for the comedy, which is asketch from the Theatre Guild hit,“Parade,” will be selected at Thurs¬day’s meeting.The search for a precocious tenyear old to play the hero’s role in“Jack Robinson” is still intensive.The group requests that anyoneknowing of such a child please com¬municate with them.Exhibit Water ColorWork in Ida NoyesBeginning today, an exhibit ofwater colors painted by students ofthe University will hang in the IdaNoyes art gallery, Helen Bell, assist¬ant director of Ida Noyes hall, an¬nounced yesterday.Mildred Rogers, an undergraduatestudent in the Art department, willbe represented by three paintings.Some of Rogers’ work is included inthe Big Ten Art Show, which wasshown in Ida Noyes several weeksago and is now making a circuit ofthe other Big Ten universities.On Thanksgiving day the studentwater color show will be replaced bya photographic exhibit featuring pic¬tures taken by Arthur Edwards, agraduate student in the Art depart¬ment, which will be shown until De-.cember 10. Social Committee Plans .. Year’s First InformalAll-University DanceSponsored by the Social Commit¬tee under the chairmanship of BobEckhouse, the first All-UniversityDance of the year will take placeDecember 3 from 9 to 1 at Ida Noyeshall. Two orchestras will play, onein the Cloister club and the other inthe gymnasium.The dance was set for December3 so that it would come early enoughto allow those students with quar-erly examinations to attend, and willbe informal in order to attract a largeproportion of the student body. Ad¬mission will be 76 cents a couple.Twenty-nine of the 39 campus or¬ganizations asked to the meetingyesterday to plan the dance, attend¬ed, according to Eckhouse. No fra¬ternities or clubs were included inthe list, since the committee felt thatthese organizations would be contact¬ed through activities groups.There will be another meeting ofthe whole group of representativesnext Tuesday at 3:30 in Lexington 6.At this time tickets will be distri¬buted. Members of the committeearranging the program are AlvinCannon, Jack Schatz, and Art Rabe.Discuss Effectof Civilizationon Personality“That Civilization Kills Personal¬ity” is the subject for the discussionbetween representatives of the Na¬tional Union of Australian UniversityStudents and speakers from the Uni¬versity at 8:30 tomorrow in Inter¬national House. Faculty members,students and International Houseresidents arc invited to attend.^R. W. W. WiliBot and Alan Ben¬jamin, both graduate law students atthe University of Melbourne, will dis¬cuss the subject in the affirmative.Representing the University, PaulGoodman, president of the UniversityDebate Union, and George Probst,president of the Student SpeakersBureau, will uphold the negativepoint of view.The four speakers will conduct asimilar discussion, sponsored by theUniversity of Chicago BroadcastingCouncil, over the Columbia Broad¬casting System from 10:30 to 11Sunday morning.During their stay at the Universityof Chicago, Wilmot and Benjaminwill be the guests of InternationalHouse. From Chicago they will leavefor the University of Michigan atAnn Arbor. The University and In¬ternational House are joint sponsorsof the discussion.Campus Newsreel RunsSpecial Features atShowing TomorrowThe Campus Newsreel movie to beshown in Mandel Hall at 3:30 to¬morrow will be made up of three spe¬cial features, horror scenes from thewar in the orient, a preview of thenewest fall fashions, in natural color,and a great mystery drama of a de¬cade ago, “The Cat and the Canary.”Only the most hardened personwill have his emotions under perfectcontrol after seeing these bloody, re¬vealing scenes. Paul Wagner personal¬ly chose the scenes he thought wouldbest portray what is really happen¬ing in the far East. He took ex¬cerpts from the Paramount, Pathe,and Hearts Metronone, assuring com¬plete coverage of every phase of theconflict. Scenes of actual battle, drop¬ping bombs, fleeing refugees, razedbuildings, and most gruesome andhorrible of all pictures, actual photo¬graphs of torn, broken and mangledbodies of women, children, old folks,and soldiers lying side by side, giv¬ing mute evidence of the cruel carn¬age being wrought among the mem¬bers of the yellow race.Tickets for the show are ten cents,and may be procured from the box-office in Mandel corridor between11:00 and 1:30, or at the door Thurs¬day. Daily Maroon Sponsors Kay Kyser Concertfor Scholarship in Music DepartmentSociety ShowsChevalier FilmFrom the dusty files of movie his¬tory, the University Film Society to¬day draws “The Love Pai’ade”, ErnstLubitsch’s famed musical satire star¬ring Jeanette MacDonald and MauriceChevalier. The picture will be shownat 3:30 and 8:30 at the Oriental In¬stitute.Fifth in this season’s series of re¬vivals, “The Love Parade” was thefirst starring vehicle of Miss Mac¬Donald, and represented at the timeit was released a new high insound recording technique. The scoreby Victor Scherzinger, the inimitableLubitsch directorial technique, andthe romantic moods created by thispopular starring team made moviehistory. As in most Lubitsch produc¬tions, the element of satire is great—in this case by its depiction of thedecadent struttings of the titled mon¬archists of modern France.Maroon OppositionProposes to AbolishKeyhole ColumnistsMeeting in the Reynolds Clubtheatre yesterday, a group of Uni¬versity student* opposed to the edi¬torial policy of the Daily Maroonvoted to establish an opposition paperon campus.Under the leadership of BobGreenebaum, the paper will be pub¬lished twice week in mimeographedform. Tentative platform for thepaper sets forth the following points:1) Support of intercollegiate athle¬tics, 2) Establishment of a StudentUnion, 3) Promotion of campus spir¬it, and 4) abolition of gossip columns.After much discussion, they re¬jected a proposal that they seek toaccomplish their ends through spacewhich they had been allotted in thecolurnns of The Daily Maroon. Theysaid they did not want to displacethe Maroon but were starting thepaper as the most effective methodof altering policies.The founders plan to defray theexpenses of the paper by chargingtwo cents an issue for it.The backers expect to have thefirst issue ready within ten days.Pagels of International HouseInsists He Is Not Nazi PropagandistRed Cross Drive forMembership OpensThursday, Nov. 11Thomson, Eaton, Booth,Leach, Maina FormBoard of Directors.Beginning Thursday, ArmisticeDay, and continuing to Friday, Uni¬versity students will sponsor a localRed Cross membership drive in con¬junction with the National Red Crosscampaign from November 11 to 25.Directed by a board of five, stu¬dents will have charge of four tableson campus, in Cobb hall. Harper li¬brary, Mandel corridor, and IdaNoyes hall. The Board of Directorsconsists of Helen Thomson, EleanorEaton, Betty Booth, Ralph Leach,and Barth Maina.Besides the student drive, BillingsHospital, the faculty, and Interna¬tional House are sponsoring theirown drives. The Billings drive will bemanaged by Mrs. E. Arment, directorof volunteer service at the hospital,and the faculty drive will be sponsor¬ed at the Quadrangle club by Mrs.William Mather and Mrs. ArthurCompton.University students have alwaysbeen active in the local Red Crossorganization. Many of the Universityclubs and fraternities have alreadyturned in memberships as organiza¬tions.Headquarters for the student RedCross organization during the drivewill be the Cap and Gown office, inLexington hall. The committee hasrequested that all those girls who willhave charge of tables during the firsthour Thursday and Friday call at theheadquarters before 8:30 each morn¬ing for their materials.Chapel Union SponsorsStudent-Faculty TeaThe first formal opportunity sincethe freshman reception during Orien¬tation Week for the student body tomeet faculty members will be theChapel Union student-faculty tea,Friday afternoon from 4 to 6 in thelibrary of Ida Noyes hall. More than60 faculty members and their wiveswill attend the affair, which is heldeach quarter.Among prominent faculty memberswho will be there are Aaron Brum¬baugh, Dean of students ip the Col*lege, Emery Filby, vice-president ofthe University, the Reverend NorrisL. Tibbetts, and Howard Mort, direc¬tor of the Reynolds Club.Mrs. William Morgenstern, Mrs.Harvey Carr, Mrs. Dudley Reed, andMrs. William Mather will pour at thetea.The tea was planned by the stu¬dent-faculty committee of the ChapelUnion, which is headed by LucilleBarron. An invitation is extended toall students to attend.Inter-Frat. CouncilNew Rushing: RulesAffect Club DancesSetting a new precedent,, the I-FCommittee has decided to allow fresh¬men at club parties, provided no con¬versation takes place unless there ismore than one fraternity representedin the group conversing.The next open house schedule is:December 5 — Alpha Tau Omega,Beta Theta Pi, Delta Upsilon, PhiBeta Delta, Phi Gamma Delta, PhiKappa Psi, Phi Sigma Delta, PsiUpsilon, and Sigma Chi.On December 12, Alpha Delta Phi,Chi Psi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, KappaSigma, Phi Delta Theta, and PhiKappa Sigma, Pi Lambda Phi, andTheta Beta Tau will entertain.All freshmen are cordially invitedto attend, whether they receive aformal invitation or not. Rumors of Nazi propaganda in In¬ternational House are apparentlywithout foundation. An official mem¬ber of the German Black Guard orS. S. (Schultz-Staffel), in which heholds the position of “Rotten-Fuehr¬er,” Jochen Pagels is the only Naziresiding in International House.Pagels has actively participated inthe Nazi movement since 1929. Hehas studied international relationsand philosophy in his home town,Freiburg, in the Black Forest, at theUniversity of Berlin, in Geneva, andnow at the University. Having al¬ready traveled widely he is nowspending a half-year in the UnitedStates and Canada at the invitationof relatives in Chicago.Khadurri Heads CouncilOf International HouseMajid K. Khadduri is the newpresident of the International Housecouncil. Khadduri an Arabian resi¬dent of International House defeatedMelecio Vega, a fellow council mem¬ber.Khadduri is at Chicago studyingfor his Master’s degree in Interna¬tional Relations. Previously, he re¬ceived his Bachelpr’s degree at theAmerican University at Beirut, Syria.The council aids the administrativedepartment in the planning of stu¬dent functions at InternationalHouse. Award Prizes to Organiza¬tions Selling the MostTickets.Some of the purest classical strainsof the Music department will be bas¬ed on a foundation of “jive” nextye^ir, for when Kay Kayser comes tocampus next Wednesday to play htthe Swing session sponsored by TheDaily Maroon, all proceeds will gotowards the founding of a scholar¬ship for some music student in theUniversity.Far from scorning the associationof Bach with Biederbecke, Carl Brick-en, chairman of the department ofMusic, says that he appreciates whatThe Daily Maroon is doing. He point¬ed out that in proportion to the restof the University there are very fewmusic scholarships, and that there isa great need for aid.Besides Kyser’s band, entertainersfrom the floorshow at the Blackhawkrestaurant, where Kyser is playing,will appear on the program, whichwill start at 3 Wednesday and con¬tinue until 5.30. Tickets sell for 40cents, and can be purchased at theReynolds club, the Information deskin the Press building, and Interna¬tional House.Kyser himself, acompanied by Vir¬ginia Sims, singer at the Blackhawk,will be on campus tomorrow and willmeet the committee, the group ofusherettes, and Bricken in the Coffeeshop. Prizes consisting of albums ofKay Kyser recordings will be award¬ed to the fraternity and the clubselling the most tickets.Peace Council EtectsRosenstein ChaimumMeeting yesterday for the firsttime to organize, the All-CampusPeace Council elected Joseph Rosen-stein, representative of the ChapelUnion, chairman until a permanentchairman is chosen later. Other offi¬cers are Dick Lindheim, vice-chair¬man; Barbara Allee, secretary; andBob Merriam, treasurer.The Council is sponsoring an Arm¬istice Day Rally Thursday at noon inMandel hall. The progn*am includesthree speakers, Arthur Clark, JohnStoner, and Frank Spencer, the read¬ing of a poem by Langston Hughes,“The Song of Spain”, and part of theJane Addams Memorial Peace Pag¬eant presented on x;ampus this sum¬mer.Member of the PartyRecently, PageUs attra'’t<>d someattention by posting a sign, writtfcwGerman, on one of the InternationalHouse bulletin boards. The noticeurged anyone interested in learningmore about the New Germany or inseeing German movies to see him,and it was signed “P. G.” This signa¬ture, which stands for “member of(Continued on page 3)President HutchinsAttends ConferenceLeading a symposium on the sig¬nificance of educational developmentson the junior college level, PresidentRobert M. Hutchins will be one ofthe University’s delegates to the 39thAnnual Conference of the Associationof American Universities in Provi¬dence, Rhode Island, this week.Henry G. Gale, dean of the divisionof Physical Sciences, will also attendthe conference, w’here he will give areport on the work of the nominationscommittee at the business session.Speakers in the symposium in theFriday afternoon session which thePresident is leading are PresidentRay Lyman Wilbur of Stanford andProfessor Clyde Hill of Yale. BrownUniversity will be host for the week¬end meeting.The University is represented onthe executive committee of the Asso¬ciation. i:tIPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937PLATFORMUniversity effort1. Increasedadjustment.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Establishment of Political Union.4. Revision of the College plan.5. A chastened President.6. Reform of Blackfriors. toward student CURDS and WHEYBy CODY PFANSTIEHLThe Political GroupsAmong the youngest and most flourishingof campus activities are the political groups.Heretofore political consciousness has beenlimited to the radical-liberal sector of campusopinion. The most recent addition to the ranks,the Political Union, promises to remedy thisdisproportion. Already the Conservatives havemore than filled their planned quota of nom¬ination petitions, actually surpassing both theother parties in the number of aspirants for aseat in the Union.The Political Union, as yet hypothetical,will provide the campus with a much neededforum for the exchange of all shades and de¬grees of political opinion. As far as can beseen it fits within the limits laid down yester¬day as indispensable for the success of anyactivity, namely it will take little time ormoney and has a real function. Its successdepends on effective leadership of the partiesand blocs, a requirement which only time canprove.The ASU on the other hand has immediateproblems to face. Primary is the problem oforganization, but that seems likely to be wellhandled by the new chairman. Bud James.More fundamental is the question of just whatthe ASU should do. Obviously it is organizedfor action, for doing things to educate stu¬dents, or to palliate the ills of society. This isthe only basis for a popular front, of which theASU is a student form.But the ASU in the past has generallyavoided the important problem of what theiraction implies. The diverse factions which theASU includes perhaps make this impossible.The group is open to the charge of going placesin a hurry without knowing or consideringwhere, and the condition should be remediedeven if it means the alienation of considerablegroups now embraced by the ASU.As for the other political sects of the cam¬pus, little needs to be said. They are fanaticto the point of absurdity. Witness the attemptsof the Communists to break up the Socialists’meetings and vice versa. The members arelargely persons whose social relationships aremore than usually unhappy, and in the prosely¬tizing, intimate political group they find a sat¬isfying social milieu. Their thinking is gen¬erally as emotional as that of the Fascists theyoppose. Their future is dependent on the socialdisorganization of the campus and the world.But until the world becomes Utopian, poli¬tical groups will be with us on the campus.The Political Union promises to establish asatisfactory balance between all factions, andpolitical discussion appears in for a vigorousfuture.Vol. 38 NOVEMBER 10, 1937 No. 25FOUNDED IN 1901.Member Associated Collegiate PressThe Daily Maroon ia 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, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 367. and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.. o:30'phone in stories to our printers. The Chief Printingvoaipany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 8311.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 opinions of the Board of Control, and are not neces¬sarily the views of the University administration nor of a majorityof students.The Daily Maroon expressly reset ves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates:83.00 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.^■PMKSCNTKD POn NATIONAL ADVCKTISINO BYNational Advert!<5in<» ^^rvice, Inc.College Huhli\>- alive420 Madison Ave uhk. N. Y.Chicuso . Boston • LOi ANoF.t.t!i - San FkahciscoBOARD 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 Johnstone The situation was a little bewildering.It was late at night, and when I unlocked the doorand stepped into the Maroon office in Lexington hall Itripped over te couple of somethings.A voice said, “Why don’t you look where you’re go¬ing?”Another voice said, “Who do you think you are,McNeill?”They were two of the larger Lexington Hall cock¬roaches.“Ferdinand and I were just talking over the athleticsituation,” said one.“Benny thinks we ought to subsidize,” said theother.“You see,” said Bennie, “it would make it a hell ofa lot easier for the boys.”“I dont approve of profanity,” said Ferdinand,“.^nd besides it would make every game a tie.”“Why?” asked Bennie.“All the players would fix it so they worked over¬time.” said Ferdinand. “Overtime pay at time-and-a-half.”“They don’t have overtime in football games,” saidBennie.“They’d change the rules, you bet,” said Ferdinand.“The exercise would do them good,” Rennie said.“What exercise?” asked Ferdinand.“J*unching the time clocks twice a day,” said Bennie.“Develop their mathematics, too. When you have tofigure up your own hours, Stati.^tics take on a newinterest.”“Maybe,” said Ferdinand. “Suppose they struckfor higher wages right in the middle of an off-tacklesmash. Where would you be then?”“Right here in this room,” Bennie said. “I nevergo to the games.”“What games ” giggled Ferdinand.“It would be all right,” continued Bennie, “If theydidn’t get violent when they picketed. Then you couldfire the band and have the football players picket indifferent formations.”“Can they spell?” asked Ferdinand.“That’s the whole thing about our team. Everydarn man can read and write,” said Bennie.“Then we’d better get out of the Big Ten and playHarvard,” sugge.sted Ferdinand. “Except Harvardpeople always leave out their R’s.”“If they were subsidized,” said Bennie proudly,“you could dock their pay for a thing like that.”“I wonder,” mused Ferdinand. “Would Mr. Metcalfput pockets in the football pants to hold the dollarbills?”“He wouldn’t have to’,’ .said Bennie. “They wouldn’tbe paid till after the game.”“The signals would sound funny,” said Ferdinand.“ ‘24, 36, 14, .shift, one dollar, two dollars, three dollars,four dollars . . . ’ ”As I edged out the door I heard Ferdinand ask,“But what does the Athletic department say about it?”And Bennie .shouted, “Who ever asked than for anyadvice?”I gently- closed the door. The situation was a littlebewildering.It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLE Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSFulse Staff. Lexington 5 at 3:30.YWCA Book Committee. WAAroom in Ida Noyes from 3.30 to 5.Spanish Club. Alumnae recreationroom in Ida Noyes from 7 to 10.I’oetry (Tub. YWCA room in IdaNoyes from 7:30 to 9:30.IVyvern. Alumnae room in IdaNoy-es from 4:30 to 5:30.Settlement League. Current EventsGroup in Library at Ida Noyes at 11.Labor ('ommittee of .ASU. Rosen-wald 26 at 3:30.Peace Committee of ASU. SocialScience 105 at 12:30.LECTURESMary Breckenridge on “The Workof Frontier Nursing.” Social Science122 at 1:30.Richard Gudstadt on “Will Demo¬cracy Surrender?” Sponsored by theJewish Student Foundation. I d aNoyes at 3:30..MISCELLANEOUSFrench film. “La Kermesse .Hero-ique.” International House at 4:30and 8:30.University Film Society. “The LoveParade.” Oriental Institute theatre at3:30 and 8:30.Phonograph Concert. Social Sciencelecture hall from 12:30 to 1:15. Sym¬phony No. 4 and Quartet in D minor,Movements 1, 2, 3, by Sibelius. Cross Ambulances inSpain, Says PershingA Red Cross ambulance is nothingin this war. Rather the Fascists re¬gard it as an excellent target,” spokethe commentator of the Loyali.stpropaganda film, “Heart of Spain,’’which was shown yesterday in Kentthe.atre under the auspices of theUniversity of Chicago (Committee forMedical Aid to Spain.“Is Spain communi.stic?" a.skedGeorge O. Pershing, nephew of Gen¬eral Pershing, and Field Secretary ofthe Medical Bureau to Aid Demo¬cracy, who lectured before the filmwas .shown. “If having two commun¬ists on the Board of War is commun¬ism, then Spain is communistic,” heanswered himself. Those two mem¬bers are necessary for a united front.Spain isn't fighting for communism—she is fighting for democracy! We asAmericans can take only one side,that of preserving democracy.”University students interested inworking on the committee for medicalaid may join the group by writing toBox 213, Faculty Exchange.Noel McGrath is studying at the University becausehe was swindled. As a .student at University CollegeOxford, he played rugby, a modified form of football.Then a man named I. V. White decided to organize therugby team for exhibition games in California. Hecollected some $18,000 from student players to covertheir expenses in America. The day before the shipwas to sail Mr. White made off with the money, and therugby team did not go to California.“But I was determined to .see America,” says Mc¬Grath in his crisp Oxford English, “so when I learnedthat the University of Chicago was offering a fellow¬ship in Political Science I worked especially hard andI got it.”McGrath is far from being the traditional cold-as-ice Englishman, and he finds no difficulty in under.stand-ing American humor. Instead he thinks that the .stu¬dents at the University take their work more .seriouslythan Oxford scholars. “It was considered very badmanners to talk of your studies at Oxford. There youspoke of sports or .social doings, but here everybodydiscusses the courses they are taking.” However, des¬pite the lack of social life, he likes the University be¬cause it is more modern and more practical than Ox¬ford.McGrath refu.ses to pass judgment on America yet,since he has only been here six weeks. He finds Chi¬cago very interesting, and the .students here particular¬ly pleasant. “The girls in America apply'their war¬paint more accurately than tho.se in England,” he ob¬serves.When questioned about the possibility of war inEurope, he said, “In America you talk far more aboutwar than the Europeans. The people of Europe havebeen on the edge of another war for so long that theyare quite blase about the idea by now.” He could notunderstand the worried attitude of the United States,since he sess no rea.son for our having to enter any¬body’s war.At the University McGrath is doing research workin local government under Professor Ridley. He hopesto enter public administration work in England wherehis father is a clerk of the peace. SWING into FALLWithCONGRESS CASINOMinimum—Dinner $2.00Minimum—Supper 1.50Minimum—Saturdays 2.50Saturday Luncheon 1.50FRIDAY NIGHTCOLLEGE AU • STAR SHOWAND DORSEY JAM SESSION* CONGRESS HOTELJOHN BURKE. Mcr.National Hotel Management Co.. Inc.Ralph HiU, Pre»., J. E. Frawley. Viee-Prea. They DoCome BackMany Chicago Alum¬ni who live in othercities still continue toorder their clothesfrom us.This is really clothespreference.REXFORD'SClot hen for Men28 E. Jackson Blvd.2ND FI.OORWHY STINEWAY'S ARE POPULAR with theSTUDENTS!. . . FOR THE REASON THAT STINEWAY'S ARE CONVENIENTLYLOCATED, RIGHT ON THE CAMPUS-BECAUSE DRUGS, COSMETICS, AND EMERGENCY NEEDS ARE OF HIGHEST DEPENDABLE QUALITY—FOODS AND REFRESHMENTS AT OUR FOUNTAIN OF FINEST GRADE OBTAINABLE- PLUS FREE DELIVERYSERVICE.MAKE IT A POINT TO DROP IN AT STINEWAY'S OFTEN. YOU'LL FIND YOURFRIENDS THERE TOO!STINEWAY DRUG STORE57th and Kenwood Phone DOR. 2844■— . ... _ .Only Chicago Appeorance ofHAROLD KREUTZBERGTHE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUSMALE DANCERSunday Afternoon. Nov. 14th at 3:30Tickets 83c, SI.10. $1.65. $2.20on sale atBox Office & Marshal Field A Co. Only Chicago Appearance ofJOOSS FAMOUSEUROPEAN BALLETCIVIC OPERA house'Sunday Afternoon, Nov. 21 at 3:30Tickets 55c. 83c. $1.10. $1.65, $2.20, &$2.75ROLAND HAYESWorld FamousTenorCIVIC OPERA HOUSESunday Afternoon. Dec. 12, at 3:30Tickets 83c. $1.10, $1.65. 2.20 First Chicago AppearanceSIMON BARERNew Russian PianistCIVIC THEATRESunday Afternoon, Dec. 5th, 3:30Tickets 83c, $1.10, $1.65. $2.20On sale at box office andMarshall Field & Co.PRESENTED BY HARRY ZELZER CONCERTMANAGEMENTTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937 Page ThreePagels of International HouseInsists He Is Not Nazi Propagandist(Continued from Page 1)the party” led some of the Houseresidents to brand the notice as anattempt to spread Nazi propaganda.Protests were made to Ernest B.Price, Director of the House, andthe sign was taken down.Pagels ridiculed the fuss madeover this signature. He explainedthat it was almost a part of hisname, something that was alwayssigned. In Germany, ho said, beinga member of the Nazi party, morethan anything else gives a man posi¬tion in the community. He emphatic¬ally denied that the German govern¬ment had sent him here to spreadpropaganda, ,As to whether there were any other.Vazis in the House, he declared thatabout half-a-dozen persons hadshown considerable interest in hisofTer to show German movies butthat he did not think here were anyother actual Nazis living there. Di-rertor Price dismissed the idea of any\azi propaganda being carried on, bysaying that he would know about it ifIt were being done, and of course,would root it out. Other InternationalHouse residents, however, declarethat there are several Nazi sympa¬thizers living there who will notopenly express their views.The follotvinp is an interviewhrtueen George M. Messmer, German member of Internationnl House,and Jochen Pagels. Pagels askedfor the ehanee to explain ehargesthat he is a Nazi jyropagandist. Mess¬mer, one of those who had leveledthe eharges, was suggested to himas the German best qualified totranslate his remarks into English,sinee .Messmer’s liberal attitudearouldprevent him from giving them apro-Nazi flavor or tunstirng them intointerpretations not intended by thespeaker.Pagels denied when questioned byMcssner that he had been sent toAmerica by the German governmentto spread propaganda. "I was in¬vited by relations to come to Chicagoto study and learn the Americanviewpoint,” he said. "My speeches areonly my fulfilling of a personal con¬cept of duty towards the fatherlandto deny purposeful political lies.” Hedeclared that he had refrained frommaking any talks on campus in or¬der to avoid charges of spreadingpropaganda, until at Monday even¬ing’s roundtable discussion, the directaccusation that there was a Nazi re¬siding in the House was leveled.Concerning the sign which he post¬ed, he said "I was asked by a groupof American students and non-stu¬dents to try to get a picture whichshows what really has been accomp¬lished in Germany during the lastfew years.”“All so-called Nazi parties abroadhave nothing to do with the Naziparty in Germany,” he continued. "Ofcourse, they adopt our ideas, but wecannot help that.”Campus Florist1233 E. 55th near KimbarkSpecial Roses 50c Doz.Expert Floral DesigningDeliveries MadePhoneHyde Park 9414ORCHESTRA HALLCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFREDERICK STOCK, ConductorThun. Eve., Fri. AHernoon—Nov. 11-12Prelude and Entr'acte, from "DerCorregidor Wolftalian Serenade WolfSongs with Orchestra WolfSymphonic Poem, "Penthesilea . . WolfAndante and Scherzo, fromSymphony No. 1. D Maior ... Mahler"Leider Elnee Fahrenden Gesellen"("Songe of a Traveling Journey¬man'') MahlerRonde, from Symphony No. 7.E. Minor Mahler In view of the fact that he studiedunder Rosenberg, the author of the"The Myth of 'The Twentieth Cen¬tury,” Pagels views on the Jewishproblem are especially interesting. “Iam aware that as an S. S. man, I amsupposed to kill Jews just for thefun of it,” he said. "As a matter offact, those two occasions on which Idealt with Jews while in official uni¬form, it was to protect them from be¬ing beaten up by a mob they pro¬voked, for getting propaganda ma¬terial against Germany. Both wereFrench-Jewish journalists. I admitthat there are decent Jews but theyhad to suffer from the reactions toactions of the undesirable ones.” Law Review Features Articles byKalven on Income Tax Evasion"They maintain that they are notinterested in German ideals sincethey are Jewish, but when we pro¬ceed on this, their own basis, to ex¬clude them from German activities,then they suddenly claim to be Ger¬man and should not be discriminatedagainst.”When questioned py Messner a-bout Germany’s foreign policy, Pa¬gels said "In the United • States for¬eign policy is made with a view tocommon sense; in Germany, com¬mon-sense is subordinate to ideal¬ism,” and declared that the Germanforeign policy was decided primarilywith an eye to unifying and strength¬ening Nazi policy within the country. Feature article of this quarter’sLaw Review will be a study of in¬come tax evasion and the new taxloophole revenue act, Harry KalvenJr., editor, revealed yesterday.Written by Randolph E. Paul,prominent New York lawyer and taxexpert, Kalven promises the articlewill be "colorful and possessing wideinterest to the student body. It willmake free use of, and cite examplesin, the recent widely-publicized taxevasion and avoidance investigationby a Senate committee.Exposes Tax AvoidancesIt will be remembered that thiscommittee exposed the income taxavoidances of such celebrated per¬sons as Charles Laughton, Ed Wynn,Percy Crosby, Fritz Kreisler, andJohn Hay Whitney, among others.The Law Review, which will beready for subscribers about Novem¬ber 28, will also contain a book re¬view section. In this, James Martin,who last year was an editor of theReview and is now teaching inAnnapolis’ St. John’s College, willhave a "short but vigorous” reviewof Professor Harry D. Gideonse’scontroversial book, "The HigherLearning in a Democi’acy.”A discussion of recent Illinoislegislative issues by members of thefaculty of the Law School will com¬prise another ai’ticle. Included in thiswill be a review of the Salteal mar¬ riage bill, requiring examination forvenereal diseases, written by Profes¬sor Max Rheinstein.International Law ConferenceThe third major article will bebased on material presented at theInternational Law Conference in theHague this summer and will be asurvey by Professors James W.Moore and Edward Levy of changesin bankruptcy legislation in England,the United States and Canada dur¬ing the economic crisis.Of particular interest in thesetroubled times wil be a review of thebook "Neutrality” by Yale Law Pro¬fessor Edwin Borchard. It will be re¬viewed by Professor Pittman Potter.Yale Professor Conducts Course;Seeks Climate’s Effect on Man PLEDGINGPi Lambda Phi announces thepledging of Jack Green of Calgery,Alberta, Canada.ITeacher, writer, explorer. ProfessorEllsworth Huntingon comes to theUniversity after a 30-year stay atYale University where he is a mem¬ber of the Geography department.His visit on the Quadrangles, how¬ever, will be short lived, for he re¬turns to New Haven after conductinga course dealing with Asia, where hehas been several times, and one con¬cerning climate, about which he haswritten many books.Although Professor Huntingtonhas not been to Asia for eight yearshe still recalls many interesting andexciting Tnonrtents spent in that hugecontinent. Asked about his experi¬ences, he told a tale of discoveringold towns almost buried in the sandfor 1600 years, but finding undecayedbeams still standing in their location.Digging in the sand he found piecesof parchment only slightly yellowwith age and still easily readable.I)ryne.ss is Cau.seSixteen hundred years is a longtime for wood to remain undestroyedbut, as Profes.sor Huntington ex¬plained, the extreme dryness of theclimate accounts for this phenome¬non. It is unusual, said he, for rain tofall more than a few times a year.Sometimes there are years with norain at all.Strange as it may seem, the anc¬ ient people of the Asiatic desert hada knowledge of modern mailing sys¬tems. After marking up wooden tab¬lets with their native symbols theywould clamp two tablets together,affix a seal of clay, write an addresson the outside and send the woodenletter on its way.Besides touring through Asia, Pro¬fessor Huntington has also spentmany years in compiling statisticswith the hope that he may be able todiscover the effect of climatic condi¬tions on man.Gathered Statistics. Using statistics gathered from var¬ious parts of the United States, Pro¬fessor Huntington finds that on anaverage people born in March out¬live those born at other seasons ofthe year.Another evidence of the signifi¬cance of March is found in the factthat the births of boys and girls aremore nearly equal in number at thattime than in any other season.Asked why such a condition exists,the Yale professor said the cause jprobably dates back to the origin of |our species which is known to have joccurred in the glacial period. In thesevere climate of that time the babiesborn in March apparently had a 1beter chance of survival than those |born at other seasons. IaOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOO^LAST CHANCEANDSTOCK REDUCING SALEOFUniversity of Chicago Press BooksA Few of the BargainsAsk for Complete ListKraus Sick Society, $2 30Pennell Graphic ArU, $5 2.50Art in America, $1 25Projects in Design, S20 5.00Boucher College Plan, $3 1.25Butler Library Science, $1.50 ... .75Reeves— Liberal Arts College,$4.50 1.25Breasted- Oriental Institute. $4.. 1.00Chinese Poems in English, $3.50.. 1.25 Checagou, Indian Wigwanto City,$1 25Costs oi Medical Care, $4 2,00Shorey—What Plato Said, $5 .... 3.00Dubs—Rational Induction, $4.50..2.25Harper—Making Bolsheviks, $2.. 1.00Burgess -Urban Community, $3.. 1.25Reckless—Vice in Chicago, $3... 1.50Goodspeed—New Gospels. $2... 1.00lapanese Scroll Painting, $5 .... 2.50WOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsNEAR KIMBARK AVE. PHONE DORCHESTER 4800 WTHMONTH^CHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS presentsThe Funniest Comedyin a GenerationYOt) CAN'TTAKE ITWITH YOUPULITZER PRIZE PLAY, 1137by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS Nichtif, iBcl.Gee4 BSets st Bez OSecPer All PerfersisncesGRAND ^^5jse119 N. Clark—Cen. 8240EVERY NIGHT — 8:30MATS., Wed. - Sat., 2:30ALFRED de LIAGRE, Jt. ir«j«el*A COMiOY by MAUK MR>with FLORENCI REED9 MONTHS IN NEW YORKEtm.. tl.ia, I2J0, $2.75Meta., II.IQ, $1.65, $2 20 Phi Kappa Sigma announces thepledging of David Wylie, AlfredSiemens, Gordon Crowder and Ber¬tram McElroy of Chicago; RichardRanney of Metamora, Illinois andDavid Mooney of San Francisco, Cali¬fornia.Have You Sentin Your Entry?Only 9More Days$50CASH PRIZEESSAY CONTEST"Should theUniversity ofChicago AbolishInter-CollegiateFootball?"RULES1. Each essay shall consist oinot more than 500 words onthe above question.2. Only bona fide U. of C.students are qualified entrants.3. Each student can submitonly one paper.4. Entries must be mailed nolater than Nov. 19 to Box No. 0,Daily Maroon.5. Judges' decision will befinal.SPONSORED BYERIECLOTHING CO.Headquarters forHart, Shaffner & Marx Clothes837 E.63rdOpen EveningsERLANGER Ni^hUy127 N. Clark St. State 2461 Including Sunday LAST 3WEEKSMAX GORDON PresentsTHE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settings by Jo MieltinerCAST OF 40—ALL WOMEN"SMARr TUNNY'SELWYNS S fcVa‘J NOW PlayiD,'BROTHERRATTHE LAUGH HIT EVEBYBODY lOVESIlA CEOROE ABBOTT1A. JIIHM way JAwHW BHlIIIUMOFfr/ A COLLE G ECOMEDY'JUULANY BTT-aeCZa TMAIB WHB lA..EVES. S«c to |X.n MMS. Ws4. « Sol. $$« toPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1937Burton Teams OpenDormitory EliminationTouchball TournamentThe elimination tournament of thedormitory league began in inti’amuraltouchball yesterday, when Burton“700” took Burton “800” into camp bya score of 21 to 6. A hangover gamefrom the round-robin tournament wasalso played bteween Psi U “B” andPhi Delta Theta with Psi U's teamwinning by a lone score, 7 to 0.The Burton “700” squad won easilythrough the efforts of Ewald Nyquist,former football star. His passes toGAMES TODAYGreenwood2:30 Snell vs. Judson “400”2:45 Psi U vs. Delta Upsilon3:45 Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. PhiPsi4:00 Broadmen vs. C. T. S.Cottage Grove3:00 Phi Sigma Delta vs. Psi U “B”Barnard accounted for two of thetouchdowns, and Bex scored the other.Vertuno made “800’s” only score.After a touchdown made by Jern-berg near the start of the game, thePsi U team and the Phi Delts playeda close game, neither team havingthe punch to score. Psi U’s victorywon it the right to play in the eli¬mination tournament of the fratern¬ity leagues.The postponement of the Snell-Judson “400” elimination game left afull schedule for today, with threefraternity league elimination gamesand an Independent game.According to Coach Wally Hebert,the intramural touchball seasonshould be over shortly before Thanks¬giving.SPECIAL STUDENTLUNCHEON25cREGULAR LUNCHEON3ScEVENING DINNERS40cDEUaOUS FOODWE ESPEQALLY CATER TO CLUBPARTIESFREE USE OF CARD ROOMMIRA MARDINING ROOM6212 Woodlawn Ava. Cinder Men’s Thoughts Turn toApproaching Indoor Track SeasonWith the indoor track season onlya few weeks off, thoughts of the cin¬der-men have turned to their specialevents, and many of the runners haveben working out daily with thecross-country team. Before long theboys will use the Field House forprotection from the chilling windsduring their preparation for thecoming track season.The Maroon outlook this season issomewhat brighter than that of lastyear, and the Midway tracksters hopeto finish high in the Big Ten confer¬ence. Several returning lettermen,aided by a strong frosh team fromlast season, will probably present agood aggregation during the comingcampaign.With the returning men are twocompetitors who placed in last year’sBig Ten conference meet, GeorgeHalcrow, captain of this season’steam, who won the quarter mile, andMathew Kobak, who placed third inthe broad jump.Chicago will probably be stronglyrepresented in the distance by JohnBonniwell, who ran a 4:40 mile whenhe was a freshman. Bill Webster, andPowell in the half and the mileevents, and by Linden, Vernon Mock,Reitman, and Straker in the two-mile run.Halcrow and Sponsel will make thegoing tough for competitors in thequarter mile, while Hirsch and Dav¬enport, who should both break tenseconds in the century, will carrythe Maroon flag in the dashes. Brum¬baugh is another man who should Checker Club PostsBulletin for WouldBe Members to Sign WAA Announces TeaFor Hockey Playersdevelop into a consistent point-get¬ter in the dashes and hurdles. Help¬ing him in the latter event will beParsons, who won the Iowa inter¬scholastic high hurdles, Wasem, now |wearing football togs, and Kobak. >The Chicago tracksters will pro-1bably be weakest in the weightevents unless Louis Hamity, Good-stein, Ted Fink, and Levell showimprovement.Bob Cassels, Chris Sergei, andLouis Letts should compose a trioof point-winning pole vaulters, whileKobak and Gordon, who have bothcleared six feet and two inches in thehigh jump, and Dick Wasem, whohas broken six feet should contributeto the Chicago score in the latterevent.With, Halcrow, Sponsel, Webster,Powell, Wassem and Davenport,Coach Ned Merriam should be able topick a good mile relay team.HANLEY’SBUFFET1512 EAST SSth ST.li you wemt coll*9« tongs—li yon wemt "CoHogioto" Atmotphert—li you wont to your irionds—You or* osturod of such on tToning o1HANLEY’SOVER FORTY YEARS OF CONGENIALSERVICE Persons interested in joining theChecker club and who were not pres¬ent at the first meeting last week stillhave an opportunity to join by sign¬ing the bulletin on the second floorof Reynolds club, according to an an¬nouncement by Ralph Fearing, cluborganizer.The Checker club was recently be¬gun to provide an opportunity forstudents who are interested to com¬pete among themselves. Variousmatches are being planned for thefuture.Want AdsLOST—C«*e of key*. Notify Elroy Goldinfr,Kenwood 4558. Reward.BOUGHT AT AUCTION—250 n«w woolsuite and ovorcoate—toll ot groat tov-ings — $12.50 — $15.00 — $17.50TAILOR SHOP6225 CoHago Grove Plozo 1261Buy, mU. oxebonge men's used clothing WAA will hold a hockey tea towhich all University women are in¬vited, Friday from 3:30 to 5 in IdaNoyes.Combining business with pleasure,WAA will elect a new hockey repre¬sentative, and may announce thehonor team, members of which areeligible to join the C Club.THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mgr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOR MEN AND WOMENRepedring and Remodeling oiAny Cloth, or Fur GarmentOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. S5th St. near UniversityTeL Midway 3318YOUR NEAREST SERVICE STATIONWE TAKE A PERSONALINTEREST IN YOUR CARGET READY FOR WIN¬TER NOWIlCOMPLETE LINE OF ANTI¬FREEZESPICK-UP AND DELIVERYSERVICEBROWN'S Standard Service Station1101 E. SSth Street55THANDGREENWOOD TEL.MID.9092—TRY THE NEW 1938 RED CROWN- And WIN 1000 ^PHIUP MORRIS ICIGARETTES SLAST WEEK'S WINNERSGRAND PRIZE—1000 Philip Morris Cigarettes toBUD HAZELWOODOTHER WINNERSSUM GeldsUinManrice HartmanJohn B. NewbyH PinchRalph McCallnmWayno ShaverLanren NchcrNelaon Rohinaon & J. SaiUrL. WdxolBarryrtU NtehtinsaloEdward Kmpevi^sMary PorraCatharina BrodatickMartin JoumLibby Schiala Betty BanlaBatty CnldwallKnnia PrkaHarbart LaraaiiHarald PrtadG. LsraanPraneas Bacdakl^niaa Kalsay'This Week's PHILIP MORRIS Scoreoast Is On!CHICAGO vs. MICHIGANMINNESOTA vs. IOWAHAVE YOU ENTERED? Write your eootee. name, and cdflBottea ea bodt etPHILIP MORRIS wrapper and depoatt tu ballot boxee at THE COFFIZ SHOP.THE UNIVERSITY BOOE8TOHE. IDA NOYES CLOISTER CLUB, ot at yourFroteralty or DocBitery.CONTEST RULES POSTED AT ALL AMOVE PLACESFINAL GROUP PRIZES to PrateniHy. OIrla Chik. amd Opm Renee ler meetbaUeta during the entire conteet ea diaplay atUniversity BookstoreKAY KYSER'S KOLLEGE KAPERSALL FOR A MUSIC SCHOLARSHIPWEDNESDAYNOVEMBER 171937 MANDEL HALL3:00 to 5:30P. M.Come to the Coffee Shop at 2:00 P. M. Tomorrowand Meet Kay Kyser!He Will Meet the Usherettes and You!COME ONE! COME ALL!