J ^ *Today's HeadlinesHarvard Professor Speaks at Busi¬ness Conference, page 1.Announce Political Union Nominees,page 1.Chinese President Talks in Chapel,page 1.Anti-Vivisectionists Accuse Univer¬sity, page 4.Campus Briefs, page 4.Second Team Starts Against Beloit,page 5.Kay Kyser VisitsCampus; RelatesTheories of MusicVirginia Sims AccompaniesKyser; Tells of NearlyEntering U. of C.“Swing music is good in its place,but I think that what most peoplereally like is the pleasant melodywith a good rhythm,” Kay Kyserstated in the Coffee Shop Friday. Ky¬ser, who is featured at the ModemMusic Session sponsored by The Dai¬ly Maroon at 3 Wednesday, visitedcampus with his singer, VirginiaSims, to meet members of the com¬mittee* planning the program.Sitting at Kyser’s table were ush¬erettes, committee members, and CarlBricken, acting chairman of the de¬partment of Music. Since all profitsfrom the show will be used for amusic scholarship, Bricken was es¬pecially interested in meeting theSouthern band leader.Sims Lived Near CampusVirginia Sims, who came with Ky¬ser, said that when the band, now atthe Blackhawk restaurant, was play¬ing at the Trianon, she lived at theMidway Drexel apartments and vis¬ited the University frequently. Atthat time she wanted to enter theUniversity to finish her junior yearof college, but was unable to.Kyser’s band started as a collegegroup playing at dances at the Uni¬versity of North Carolina. Only oneof the original players is still withthe organization, although severalhave been with Kyser for many years.Last week the band celebrated itseleventh birthday.When interviewed on the questionof what type of music he preferred,Kyser said that what he enjoyedplaying most was straight music.Discuss Russia atInt House MondaySpeakers at the InternationalHouse round table on “Foreign Poli¬cies of Russia,” on Monday will beNorman Brown, Peter Klassen andMrs. Davida C. Lipson.Brown, an Englishman who wasborn in Mexico, is the CommonwealthFund fellow and was a student at Ox¬ford. Klassen and Lipson, authori¬ties on the Russian situation, spokelast year on the position of womenin Russia. Brown spent his youth inRussia, was educated in Germany andCanada, and is a British subject. ARussian bom-American citizen, Mrs.Lipson has traveled abroad and re¬ceived her M. A. degree in SocialScience at the University.The • discussion is held at 8:30 inRooms C, D, and E of InternationalHouse. gPbe Bailp itoionVol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937 Price Five CentsChapel Union GroupsMeet Sunday; PitcherLeads Religious TalkThe Religious Problems group ofthe Chapel Union will meet Sundayat 7:30 in the home of Dean and Mrs.Charles W. Gilkey, 6802 WoodlawnAvenue. A1 Pitcher will lead the dis¬cussion on “What a Religious Stu¬dent’s Attitudes on Campus Institu¬tions and Values Should Be.”At the same time, in the home ofDr. and Mrs. Harvey Carr, 5644 Ken¬wood, a member of the Australian de¬bate team will lead a discussion opento those interested in the social prob¬lems group. On the following twoSunday evenings John Stoner, Uni¬versity debate coach, will continuewith the same group.Another division of the social prob¬lems gp-oup will meet with Mr. S. De-Vinney of the Social Science divisionat the home of Dr. and Mrs. HarveyB. Lemon, at 6806 Dorchester. Party CampaignsNet 149 PoliticalUnion CandidatesLiberals Close Drive with63; Conservatives Get53, Radicals 33. Benton BroadcastsEducation LectureOver National ChainStudents to HearGeorgio Della VidaItalian Addresses NearEast Club on ArabicLexicography.Said to be one of the greatest liv¬ing authorities on Arabic languageand literature, Georgia Levi DellaVida, Italian scholar, will give oneprivate and two public lectures inthe Oriental Institute next week.Tuesday evening he will speak be¬fore the members of the Near Eastclub on “The Present State of ArabicLexicography.” Wednesday night hewill lecture on “Punic and RomanCivilization in North Africa.” Fri¬day night’s lecture will be, “ArabicLiterature and Its Influence UponMedieval Christian Civilization.” Thepublic is invited to attend these lasttwo lectures which will be given inBreasted hall at 8.Studied ArabicFor many years Della Vida was aprofessor of Arabic and Semiticlanguages, first at Naples, then atTurin, and most recently at the RoyalUniversity of Rome. He now spendshis time in private research and workon Arabic manuscripts in the Vati¬can library.In his field of interest the notedItalian scholar has been outstanding.He collaborated with the wealthyPrince Leone Caetani in the prepara¬tion of the ten-volume “Annali dell’Islam” dealing with Arabic history,which is reputed to be one of thegreatest undertakings in the field ofthe humanities. He alone preparedthe ninth and tenth volumes.He later edited a “Book of Horses”a collection of names of famouscoursers and verses composed inhonor of the mounts of the chiefsand warriors who lived in the roman¬tic period preceding the coming ofIslam in Arabia.T. Z. Koo, Chinese President of WorldChristian Federation, Speaks in ChapelT. Z. Koo, president of the World |Christian Federation, will speak Sun¬day morning at 11 at the Chapel.Koo is a member of the Young Chi¬nese Nationalist revolutionary partywhich brought about the revolutionand consequent democracy when Sun-Yat-Sen was made president. Knownin China as one of the leading youngpatriots, T. Z. Koo is hot-headed andASU Confers toDetermine AttitudeA closed membership meeting of ^the ASU at 3:30 today in Cobb 110will determine whether or not thegroup approves the recent action ofthe executive committee in supportof the Loyalist government of Spain.The executive committee will presentits report as the basis for the discus¬sion.As the meeting is closed to non-nu-mber.s, former members who wishto participate in the discussion butwho are not paid up this year arel^skod to join earlier or at the meet¬ing- The executive committee willineet a half hour before the generaldiscussion. - zealous. Recently he decided that thebest means to his desired ends wasreligion; as a result he has activelysupported world-wide re 1 i giousgroups.He is a polished speaker, and hisappearance and personality havemade him popular among college stu¬dents. It is emphasized, however,that he is not a propagandist, al¬though his appearance at this time isopportune.Chapel Union Holds TeaThis afternoon from 4 to 6 theChapel Union is sponsoring a stu¬dent-faculty tea. More than 60 fac¬ulty members had accepted invita¬tions by yesterday afternoon.Mrs. William Morgernstern, Mrs.Merkel Coulter, Arthur H. Compton,Mrs. Harvey Carr, Mrs. Dudley B.Reed, Mrs. Aaron J. Brumbaugh,Mrs. William Mather, Dorothy Brosi,Mary Berger, Carolyn Wahlstrand,Dorothy and Wilma Bangert, MaryRanney, Henrietta Rybzinski, andFloris Ersman will pour.Prominent faculty members fromevery department of the University,including the administration, have ac¬cepted invitations and will be present. Resulting in a total of 33 Radical,63 Liberal, and 63 Conservative nom¬inees, for a total of 149 candidatesthe Political Union boxes were closedlast night as the three parties turntheir efforts toward successful con¬ventions.The Liberal convention, featuringT. V. Smith, state senator and profes¬sor of Philosophy, who will speak on“20th Century Liberalism” takesplace next Tuesday at 3:30 in Kent106. The Radicals hold their conven¬tion Thursday at 3:30 in Kent, whilethe Conservatives meet Wednesdaynight at 8. The campus-wide elec¬tion is November 23.ConservativesThe Conservatives are: Robert 0.Anderson, Judson Allen, Dan Gor¬sky, Robert Sayles, Robert Brum¬baugh, Lawrence Traeger, BillWebbe, Richard Lyon, Bob Upton, F.W. Parker, Lee Hewitt, Bob Nunn,Leo O’Neill, Bud Larson. Earle Bird-zell, Louise Snow, Betty Kopper,William Corcoran, Paul Henkel, Jr.,Cody Pfanstiehl, Ed Ferriss, PeteWallace, Glen Gustafson, Doug Mar¬tin, Paul Goodman, Cy Ruthenburg,Art Goes, Chuck Pfeiffer, Dick Salz-mann, Karl Pribram, Ed Faherty,John Argali, James Melville, RalphRosen, J. Clayton Bales, George Gar¬vey, Dick Hood, Joanne Taylor, Shir-ly Adams, Kay Neeves, Jack Allen,Phyllis Todd, Aubrey Smith, Alfredi Link, Ted Howe, Roger Faherty,I William McNeill, Charles G. Manley,j Merle T. Burgy, Chuck Zerler, GeorgeKromhout, Chester Humel, and JohnW. Wallace, Jr.LiberalsThe Liberals are: Jerry Abelson,Lahman Arnould, Betty Barden, JohnBarden, Laura Bergquist, Ann Bink¬ley, Edgar Bowman, Robert Cohn,Norton Come, William Cooper,Charles Crane, Edwin Crocklin, Em¬mett Deadman, Tucker Dean, AlfredDe Grazia, Julia Elliot, Ethel Frank,Max Freeman, Edward Fritz, ElRoyGolding, Paul F. Goodman, Elton W.Ham, George Halcrow, C. SharplessHickman, Rex Horton, Richard Jac¬ques, Hunt Jaeger, Emil Jarz, AlvinE. Johnson, Abraham Kaplan, FrankKarush, Robert Kronemeyer, Her¬bert Lesser, John Levinson, George(Continued on page 4) After dodging a microphone for theyears when his company was direct¬ing such nationally famous radiocampaigns as, the Maxwell House“Show Boat,” the Palmolive “BeautyBox,” “Gang Busters,” and others,William B. Benton, new vice-presi¬dent of the University, finally willface a microphone, script in hand,Monday evening over the CBS chain.In Chicago, however, he will be heardSunday evening from 7:45 to 8:00over WBBM, CBS Chicago outlet.Over the national chain on Mondayevening the program time will befrom 6:30 to 6:45.Mr. Benton’s subject will be “TheEducation of a Business Man.’’As president and later chairmanof the board of Benton and Bowles,Inc., of New York, Mr. Benton par¬ticipated in the planning of many ofthe most important radio programsever put on the air. Business LeadersDiscuss IndustrialRelations TodayHarvard Professor Speakson Social Aspects ofIndustry.Cornell ProfessorSpeaks at ChicagoPolitical Science Depart¬ment Enffapres GuestSpeakers for Lectures.Communist ClubPlans Party forSaturday NightAn off-campus party (with specialinvitation to “other nice people”), isoffered by the Communist Club onSaturday night at 5568 Ellis. Admis¬sion of 36 cents will be charged inorder to raise money for the comingYoung Communist League conven¬tion, although the Communist Club isnot yet affiliated with the League.At the weekly meeting of the ClubMonday evening in Law North MorrisPresser and George Paz will speak onSpain. Presser has had personal ex¬perience in the anti-fascist fight inSpain, being especially familiar withthe work of the International Bri¬gades in building up the industries ofthe country. He himself built a muni¬tions factory out of an old farm andsome scrap iron and invented a handgrenade in use by the Loyalists.Paz is known on campus for hispart in various symposiums on Spainand programs to raise money for theNorth American Committee to AidSpanish Democracy last year. Hewill speak particularly. on the peo¬ple’s front and its achievements.Award Prize to StepanchevThe Midland Authors prize of $50has ju.st been awarded to StephenStepanchev, a University student. Itw’as granted for a group of Stepan-chev’s poems which was published inthe February, 1937 issue of Poetry.A Magazine of Verse. On campusStepanchev is noted as one of thefounders of the Poetry Club, writerof the Jane Addams Peace Pageant,and contributor to Pulse. Bringing to the campus a group ofmen out-t^tanding in their variousfields, the Department of PoliticalScience ha.s planned several groupsof public lectures by guest speakersfor the coming year.First on the schedule is RobertCushman, professor of Political Sci¬ence at Cornell University. He willspeak December 7, 8, and 9 on “For¬eign Experiences with IndependentRegulatory Commissions.” An expertin this field, he has recently return¬ed from a five month’s stay abroadwhere he studied the functions ofthese bodies in European countries.He is also well known as the authorof the section of the report of thePresident’s Committee on Adminisra-tive Management which dealt withthese commissions in the UnitedStates.Speaks on National PlanningOn December 13 and 14, CharlesW. Eliot III, executive director ofthe National Resources Committee,will speak on “National Planning.”As executive director of this commit¬tee, he has played an important ad¬visory role in the recent planningpolicies of the national government.Developements at the special sessionof Congress will probably make thislecture especially significant.In February the department willbring William A. Robson of the Lon¬don School of Economics and Politi¬cal Science to the campus. His sub¬ject and the exact dates of his lec¬ture have not been announced. Leaders in the business field fromMiddlewestern industries and univer¬sities will be on campus today to at¬tend the fourth annual Midwest Con¬ference on Industrial Relations, ac¬cording to Dean W. H. Spencer of theBusiness School. ‘The conference, sponsored jointlyby the University’s School of Busi¬ness and the Industrial Relations As¬sociation of Chicago, will feature anaddress by T. N. Whitehead, profes¬sor of industrial psychology at theHarvard Graduate School of BusinessAdministraton. His subject will be“Business as a Social Institution.”Filbey Welcomes GroupAt 9:30 there will be a greeting inbehalf of the University by Vice-President Emery T. Filbey, and onein behalf of the Industrial RelationsAssociation by Sara E. Southall ofthe International Harvester Com¬pany. Three addresses on variousbusiness problems by authorities onthe subjects will follow.After luncheon at Ida Noyes Hall,seven round table discussions will be¬gin at 2:30, and will conclude intime to allow conference members togo on tours to points of interest onthe campus.Dinner in Coffee ShopThe University Midway Singerswill provide the entertainment forthe dinner in the Coffee Shop. Pro¬fessor Whitehead will speak at theevening session in Mandel Hall.Speaking of this address. DeanSpencer declared, “Whitehead and hisassociates at Harvard have a distinctand original approach to the study ofbusiness organizations as complextypes of human groups. Followingthis approach they have made a sig¬nificant contribution to the under¬standing of human relationships inbusiness.”Union Debates WithTeam from AustraliaBeginning today and extendingthrough the weekend, the DebateUnion is sponsoring a series of threedebates with a team from the Uni¬versity of Melbourne, Australia. TheAustralian team is composed of twostudents who have been travelingthrough the United States for thelast few months and debating atmany of the country’s leading univer¬sities.The first two debates will be atInternational House on Friday even¬ing and the Woodlawn Men’s Club onSaturday, and will be principally forpractice. Sunday morning at 10:30the debate will be broadcast over theColumbia network. Paul F. Goodman,president of the Debate Union, andGeorge Probst, secretary, will repre¬sent the University on the question.Resolved: That Modern CivilizationKills Personality.Negotiations are also under way tobring a prominent Swedish politicalexpert here for a lecture, some timein the winter quarter, but plans havenot gone far enough to announce hisname. Liberals, PacifistDisagree on Wayto Attain PeaceTwo collective security advocateswere not very polite to a lone pacifistat the Peace Council’s Armistice Dayrally yesterday. Pointing out an ap¬parent fallacy in Arthur Clark’s ap¬peal to reject completely the use offorce in settling the pressing prob¬lems of peace, John Stoner declaredthat a failure to distingfuish betweenbandit and victim nations was moralturpitude and was to be avoided aswar itself.Frank Spencer, the third speaker,pointed out also that Japan didn’t useany peaceful persuasion on China,exemplifying his point with the re¬mark that when insane patients gowild, one gets them under control be¬fore stopping to reason with them.All three speakers proposed per¬manent solutions as well as tempor¬ary action. Clark advocated disarma¬ment and an ideal union of worldstates. Stoner, a member of theLeague of Nations Association, calledfor a crystallization of peace senti¬ment in international law and a courtto administer the rulings. Spencer’ssolution is a just reapportionment ofincome and a removal of the funda¬mental economic causes of war.Wilmot DiscussesJapanese ConflictDiscussing the Sino-Japanese con¬flict and its effect on Australian for¬eign policy, Chester Wilmot of theUniversity of Melbourne will speakat International House tonight at8:30.Wilmot is the official represents-,tive of the National Union of Aus¬tralian University Students, and istouring the United States to make asurvey of campus life and studentactivities at the colleges and univer¬sities he vists.Pagre Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937PLATFORM1. Increased University effort toward studentadivistment.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Establishment of Political Union.4. Revision of the College plan.5. A chastened President.8. Reform of Blackfriors.Activities IntegrationActivities are so autonomous on the Univer¬sity campus that one knows not what anotherdoes. All-campus undertakings seldom do morethat appeal to one faction of the campus toback their project. For the rest of the cam¬pus, they rely on general appeals to anonymousindividuals, an appeal necessarily weaker thanone through established groups.The first attempt to remedy this lack ofintegration was made last Tuesday when Rob¬ert Eckhouse called a meeting of representa¬tives of all campus organizations to consider anall-campus dance late this quarter. If such agroup were made permanent, with regularmeetings every two weeks or so, a means wouldbe available for using all the existing groupsto publicize general undertakings so that everystudent would be reached. It would furtherbreak down the ignorance that now divides thevarious campus groups from one another.Trimmings immediately suggest themselves.The council could be started off with a gen¬eral activities conference, open to the mem¬bers of all the various campus activities. Sucha conference would help break down the sep¬aratism of campus life, would serve to makeclear the problems facing various activities,would provide a channel for the disseminationof information as to experiences on other met¬ropolitan campuses. The Maroon will back anymove made toward the holding of such a con¬ference.A more important elaboration would be theorganization of the Reynolds club in a manneranalogous to student unions at other schools.With student officers, the Reynolds club couldsponsor the proposed activities council, an un¬dertaking more pretentious and time consum¬ing than any existing organization is equal to.This though would be only a starter. TheReynolds club could sponsor dances upon oc¬casion, and so help provide the campus withthe cheap on-campus affairs so much needed.It could stimulate the formation of independentgroups of a sort analogous to those advocatedby the Maroon. An organized Reynolds clubcould take over the freshman week and trans¬fer orientation, now awkwardly divided be¬tween the Social Committee and the specificorientation heads.Short of administration action, this seemsabout all that can be done to improve the Uni¬versity community.Vol. 38 NOVEMBER 12, 1937 No. 27^aily ^larnonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Collegiate 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, 5831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 357, 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 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 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.***^***®*^T10 FOPI NATIONAL AOVBfVTISINO OVNational Advertise **** Inc.ColUt* Fnhihh ulivi420 Madison Avl ork, N. Y.Cnicago • Bostqh . to Sam FxAllclfCOBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H. McNEILLCHARLES E. HOYELROY D. GOLDING...EDWARD C. FRITZBETTY ROBBINSMARSHALL J. STONE..EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist Rex HortonMaxine Biesenthal Seymour MillerEmmett Deadman Adele RoseBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard GreenleeMax Freeman Alan JohnstoneNight Editor; Seymour Miller CURDS and WHEYBy CODY PFANSTIEHLPRELIMINARY NOTEPm typing this on the back of a Liberal Party Pe¬tition. It was the only blank piece of paper I couldfind around the Maroon office.YOU GOTTA BE PROPERBob Ulbrich (Fraternity Co-op head) married KayWatts last spring.Yesterday the Government called and said she’dhave to go back to Canada where she came from whenshe was 10, and furthermore she will have to leave thiscountry between November 23 and November 27. Nosooner, no later.She must stay for three weeks, and then can comeback and live here for ever and ever. It’s all becausethe Government says she didn’t come in right. Theycall it Illegal Entry.In 1926 she came in with her mother. If her mothertook out citizenship papers before Kay was 21 Kaywould automatically be a citizen in good standing. Ifnot she’d still be a Canadian.Well, Mother went home after a while, and Kaystayed, and everybody forgot about it. Except theGovernment, who watched like a hawk and when thetime came leaped for the telephone.So now Kay has to pay her way out, and her wayin, as well as a Head Tax of 20 dollars on the way in.It might have been worse because sometimes they handyou to a guard and you have to stay out for a year. Inthat case they pay your way, which is better.As I figure the whole thing out it’s like this:You come into the country, and, say, your tie isn’ton straight so they make you go outside. You straightenyour tie and then they open the door and smile and youcome in again, as good as new.RELAX AND PLAYVirginia Sims was pretty sleepy in the coffee shopyesterday. She sings with Kay Kyser’s orchestra atthe Blackhawk, and came out yesterday to look thesituation over. She’ll sing Wednesday in the ModernMusic Session in Mandel.“We were up till five practicin;’’ explained Kyser.“We don’t work that late but twice a week.’’ (Miss Sims, who is one of the few public-spotlighted jpeople who looks just as good up close, had eggs and jorange juice, met the Modern Music Session Committee, iand went back downtown. Harry Miller, Blackhawk jpublicity man, drove her to the I. C. and she got on jalone and went to work just like you and I. |Then the Committee dispersed. Carl Bricken .shook ;Kay’.s hand warmly and said he appreciated what hewas doing (proceeds will make a scholarship to theMusic department).Adele Rose, Maroon reportre.ss, Kay and I went toMandel stage, and then to Buildings and Grounds to ilook at platforms. On the way we talked and talked. iThe bandmaster from No’th Carolina hates the jword “swing ” “What doe? it mean?” he ask.?. His voice jis I’ounded .at the edges, a semi-southern gentleness, j“Musicians been playin’ that sort for years. Now all jthe people who don’t know what it’s about are su<ldenly |making a fuss over it. j“You can’t take it apart and analyze it. It’s jus’ imusic, and you sit down and play it.” |We talked about the wild, improvised “jive”—the |tracery and filligree of the “cats.” j“That’.? fun. all right, hut the eonsi.stant thing,the ba.sis of real, lasting popularity, the thing thatappeals for more than iu.st opo bouncin’ minute ismelody. Jus’ natural melody.“Why,” he said, “You can’t hum hot mu.sic. But youcan hum a melody. That’s what’? kept Guy Lombardoand Wayne King up there consistantly, and will teep j’em up there.’The r)4th note 100 mile-an-hour jazz hasn’t heartappeal, and won’t last, he says. It make.? you bounce.It’s fun to play sometimes, hut a simple melody willalways bring in the customers.B & G couldn’t sho\v us th'' platform.?, so wewandered back to the Maroon office. j“We jus’ relax, and try to plav things naturally”he said. “Natural is the word for it.”We stood around in the office and outlined the pro¬gram. “If its gonna be a show, let’s fix up the stagean’ make it good.” Kay said. “I can probably borrowa .set somewhere, and you can dig up that platform.We’ll plan music for two 50 minute periods, with a tenminute intermission.”He looks right at you, with blue eyes and a seriousface that pulls into a friendly smile at the corners.He sticks a cigar in the middle of his mouth and talksaround it.Before he left we fell to talking about college life.When they were juniors at North Carolina, he andHal Kemp simultaneously decided to start orche.stras,just for the extra cash in it.“I tol’ Hal he’d better quit .startin’ his own an’come into mine’” Kay explains, “He did.” Sully Masonjoined too.Kay didn’t go to the first job his band had. He wasafraid it wouldn’t turn out well. The boys knew sixnumbers, and played their repertoire in a cycle. By theend of the evening the dancers were calling the piecesfrom memory.He was majoring in History. “Had to get a diplomain something” he said. “I was goin’ to be a lawyer.”His folks were agin’ popular music at first. Butnow, in a town in North Carolina, his mother turns onthe radio every night at 1:30 Carolina time andlistens to her boy.Kay Kyser’s eyes light up when he says that.“Every night she listens,” he says, and smiles like apleased kid. Students Participatein Anti-War SkitUniversity students Demerset Pol-acheck, Mac Rosenthal, Joan Shalit,Robert W'olf and Zelman Dworkinwill participate in the Peace CarnivalSunday November 14 at the Steubenclub.The proceeds of the carnival spon¬sored by the American LeagueAgainst W'ar and Fascism will go toSpanish war orphans homes.Also featured are Kissin’s SwingOrchestra. Abbott8 Honor Successorto Jane Addams SundayTo honor Miss Charollett Carr, thisyear’s successor to Jane Addams atHull House, Miss Edith and MissGrace Abbott will pour at tea from4 to 6 this Sunday in the library ofIda Noyes.Distinguished by a notable recordin social work as Commissioner ofLabor in Pennsylvania and as Direct¬or of the Emergency Relief Bureauin New York city. Miss Carr will in¬terest numerous faculty membersComplete Selections ofARROW SHIRTSthe Cf) HUBHenry C. Lytton ft SonsState and Jackson, CHICAGO • EVANSTON • OAK PAIKAuthenticity of style is easily recognized in the Rodney... A new shirt with white cuffs and a white collar con¬trasted on a colored body. For town wear and scmi-formaloccasions. Mitoga-form-fit and Sanforized Shrunk. $2.50ARROWS SHIRTS and TIESHanley’s 1 .Follow theBuffet 1 ARROW1 for1512 E. 55th St. 1 ARROWIF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—1IF YOU WANT "COLLEG-lATE" ATMOSPHERE— 1 SHIRTS1 ALL GOODIF YOU WANT TO SEE 1 MAROONSYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS- 1 LIKE TOYOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING AT V BUY HEREERIEHANLEY’SOver forty years of congenial CLOTHING COMPANYservice 837 E. 63rd StreetTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937 Page ThreeOriental Institute Excavates inIran, Syria, Palestine and EgyptIran, Syria, Palestine and Egyptare the sites of the four archeologicalexpeditions that the Oriental Insti¬tute now has in the field. This rep¬resents a considerable reduction fromthe 14 expeditions that were workingseveral years ago.Perhaps the most widely publicizedof the expeditions is that at Perse-polis, some 40 miles from Shiraz inIran. Here, on a high plateau nearthe Iranian mountains, the Persianemperors built their magnificent cap¬ital. Later, Alexander the Great con¬quered the city, and set fire to thepalaces and for over 22 centuries theonce great Persepolis lay a ruined,little-known reminder of Persia’s for¬mer greatness.Excavate PersepolisIII 1930 the Oriental Institute be¬gan to excavate and restore Perse¬polis. Still standing were parts ofthe palace walls and many of the tallslender columns. The expedition, un¬der Professor Ernest E. Herzfield,first selected one of the buildings,cleared it and restored it to its for¬mer grandeur. It proved to be harempalace, and today dignified scientistslive and study in the rooms once occu¬pied by the emperors’ wives.One of the outstanding discoveriesat this site was two magnificent roy¬al stairways, carved with reliefs.Monumental sculptures from Perse-poli.s will be placed on exhibit in theOriental Institute this winter.Hundreds of miles to the west onthe Nile, the Institute has its largestNear Eastern cxpediton. Here atancient Thebes, or modern Luxor, isits Egyptian headquarters, a moderngleaming white group of buildingscontaining living-quarters, libraryand workrooms, and surrounded bywide lawns.Pharaoh’s PalaceOne of the most striking and im¬portant pieces of excavations was thelaying bare, for the first time, of apharaoh’s palace which had vaultedceilings and was not flat-topped likethe Egyptian temples. Two hugestatues of Tutenkhamon, carved inred quartzite, have been dug up, oneof which is now in the halls of theOriental Institute.At the present time the epigraphic.surv'ey of the Institute is copying theinscriptions on the walls of the tem¬ples.In Northern Palestine, halfway be¬tween the Jordan and the Mediter- the ruins of the preceding. The dig¬gings have penetrated to debris de¬posited in the 20th century B. C.,which is perhaps the time of the Pa¬triarch Abraham,Solomon’s StablesHere were uncovered the famousstables in which King Solomon kepthis blooded horses. Last year’s im¬portant finds of gold and ivory treas¬ure are being exhibited in the Orien¬tal Institute.The fourth of the Institute’s fieldexpeditions is located in Syria whereseveral large mounds contain buriedremnants of the ancient Hittite Em¬pire. A step-trench has been cut inthe side of one of these, revealing 14distinct periods or cultures, the ear¬liest of which is a Syrian village con¬taining pottery, bone and filing tools,and dating from 4500 B.C.Four LayersThe fourth layer from the top waslaid during the Hittite Empire, thethird during the Persian Empire, andthe one next to the top during theRoman Empire, shortly after the be¬ginning of the Christian era. Thehighest stratum contains an earlyChristian church, and the final stageof the mound’s history dates fromabout 600 A.D.Thus the Oriental Institute contin¬ues the work which has contributedgreatly to man’s knowledge of hisearly history in the Near East, andwhich has made it one of the greatestinstitutions of its kind in the world.Residence Halls BeginNightly Supper ClubHungry Burton and Judson Cour¬tiers no longer must brave inclementweather to get that much needed be¬fore-bed snack. Miss Gertrude R.Binns, capable dormitory supervisor,has turned the private dining roomunder Judson court into a cheery sup¬per club. From nine forty-five untileleven forty-five at night men in thehalls and their dates if they wishmay be served short orders at reason¬able prices.If one must be really impressive,as much as thirty-five cents may bespent on one order, a turkey sand¬wich. Ail other prices on a large vari¬ety of sandwiches range from ten totwenty cents. Pie and sundaes areten and fifteen cents respectively. Topprice for drinks is ten cents.Miss Binns said that she would liketo see the Supper club become a socialmeeting place for the men in the Association Groupof YWCA PlansLecture MeetingPlans for an Association meetingof the YWCA to be held Wednesday,November 17, at 3:30 in the YWCARoom at Ida Noyes hall were an¬nounced by Joan Fuchs, chairman ofthe Association group, which met lastweek to lay out the program.The afternoon’s discussions will bebuilt around the theme of the integra¬tion of the University YWCA withthe metropolitan board, the nationalYWCA, the world board, and otherstudent groups.Scheduled to speak are PhyllisChow, a graduate student in SSA whohas done considerable work with theYWCA in Hawaii, and who will talkon the world board; Sylvia Maniloff,president of the League of IndustrialGirls and an active member of theGarment Workers Union, who willpresent the views of the metropolitanboard of the YWCA; and SarahBeach, regional secretary of theGeneva district, which embraces allthe local YWCA organizations of themiddle west. Tentative plans also in¬clude as a speaker Mrs. HowardGoodman, who may talk on themetropolitan board of the YWCA.All members of the YWCA areexpected to attend the meeting, andany other University women whowould like to come are invited. Teawill be served at the beginnng ofthe program. Add Galleger, Evansto Chemistry StaffReturning from a year’s fellowshipat the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute inBerlin, Assistant Professor T. F. Gal-leger has taken up his teaching andresearch duties in the Bio-chemistrydepartment.Another addition in the departmentis Dr. Earl A. Evans Jr., instructorand researcher on sterols. He comesfrom Columbia University where heworked under Dr. Rudolph Schoem-heimer. Maroon Issues Call forAll Subscription BooksThe day of reckoning has come forDaily Maroon subscription peddlers.Charles Hoy, Daily Maroon businessmanager, today issued a general proc¬lamation to all holders of subscrip¬tion books to bring them in. Thewinners of the Daily Maroon sub¬scription contest will be announced ata later date. The books will bechecked and unwary freshmen will atlast be free of the fear of John VanDe Water.courts. There was a waiting lineranean, is the famous battlefield of chairs the first night. The shopArmageddon or Megiddo. Here theInstitute has been literally strippingoff city after city, a number of whichwere built on the site, one on top ofMorrisonReturnsFrom Trip toRussia, Siberia/After four months in Russia,where ne attended the 17th Interna¬tional Geological Conference and in¬vestigated Soviet regionizing, JohnMorrison, instructor in Geography, isback again on the Quadrangles. He isolticially out of residence this quar¬ter, but the pressure of work stillfinds him at his desk.Although he did not go to the Sov¬iet to attend the Congress, he man¬aged to sit in on many interestingsessions and participated in an ex¬cursion through Siberia with severalconference delegates.The excursion enabled him to studysome of the more important boundarychanges, a study for which the SocialScience Research Committee and theRockefeller Foundation financed histrip.According to Mr. Morrison, Russiais in the midst of changing some in¬ternal territorial boundaries so as toprovide for a more efficient adminis¬trative service. If the sizes of thestates are reduced, the cost of gov¬erning them may also be reduced.Several changes in boundary lineswere made while the Chicago instruc¬tor was in Moscow. Thei*e he studied,collected materials and interviewedSoviet authorities in the field of reg¬ionizing, who, he reported, were verycooperative."Don’t ask about Stalin,” Mr. Mor¬rison concluded, "because I wasn’table to form an impression in onlyfour months.” will be open after the Fall quarterdance Saturday November the 13th. SundayNov. 143:30 P. M. Wagnerian FestivalSingers of SalzburgAuditorium TheatreOnly one performance!STARRING» ALEXANDER KIPNIS. Gr«*»t RuMian-American basso» MARTA KRASOVA, Sensational t>ri-ma donna o fthe PraKue operat HILDA KONETZNI, Principal soprano,Vienna State opera» JOEL BERGLUND, Foremost Swedishsinsert HENK NOORT, Ringing Dutch tenorTickets New on Sale atUNIVERSITY OP CHICAGOINFORMATION OFFICEPrices 5»c, 7tc. «1, ll.SI $2. |2.S«No TaxWORLD FAMOUS ENSEMBLE SINGINGfaVorite selections from theGREAT OPERASPresented bjr theADULT EDUCATION COUNCILLoeber's offer 3 outstandingStyles for smart figure control"INTI MO"rhs nsw MaldenForm brassiereemphaaltlngthedivided bustline. All titetIn while andoeaoh. Maiden Form!•BRASSIERES•GIRDLESPANTIE GIRDLESat eachPANTIE GIRDLESMade of two-waystretch Lottes.For evening, day¬time and sportswear. All sizesIn white andpeach.•1 GARTER GIRDLESMade of two-waystretch Lostsi.Can bs worn forall occasions. AllSizes in whits andpeach.•1SERVICEExpert CORSEllERES-20 FIHING ROOMSNO CHARGE FOR FIHING ALTERATIONSLOEBER S37 S. STATE ST.at Monroe St. Randolph 4874 O HSM □ HSM m □ HSM ^ HSM □ HSM □ HSM OHSM HSMo□HSM□HSMoHSM□HSj□HSMnHSM□HSM□HSMnHSMHSMnHSMHSM□HSMnHSM□HSMnHSMC!lHSM□HSMsaHSM□HSM9HSH Take a load oilyour shoulders99$55'HSU□P T4ulored byHART SCHAFFNERS£> MARXERIECLOTHING CO.837 East 63rd StreetOPEN EVENINGS □HSMoHSMihelHSMoHSMHSM0Enfoy theShoulder Sagconkiort oi theRAREPACKCOATEasy to look at, easy to wear—that’sHart Schaffner & Marx Rarepack. Itgives the snuggest protection imagin¬able, yet it’s as shoulder-light as thefinest camel hair. You can wear Rare¬pack from morning till night withoutgetting weary, sagging shoulders. Nowonder so many men cheer Rarepack! OHSM□HSM0HSM□HSMoHSMmHSMmHSM0HSM0HSM□HSM I□HSMlh»lHSMraHSM0HSM0HSM0HSM0HSMll$IL0 HSM 13 HSM □ XSM E3 EStHSM Q| HSM Q■‘ '‘-'..t^^ '‘'/wV -r’’.'!:'. -'’‘ :%yy *.{■='.' ’sj.#' Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937^^ '^r;'-ti yyMt-13 CampusRed CrossSwinging into the second day oftheir concentrated membership drive,student directors of the campus RedCross drive reported yesterday after¬noon they had already received near¬ly $50 in donations and membershipsfrom University students.Those fraternities and clubs whichhave already fully subscribed to theroll call are Sigma Chi, Beta ThetaPi, Esoteric, Chi Rho Sigma, PhiDelta Upsilon, and Phi Beta Delta.Members of the board of directors ex¬pected to have a 'one hundred percent roll call subscription from allcampus organizations before the endof the day. The faculty drive, spon¬sored at the Quadrangle club by Mrs.William Mather and Mrs. Arthur H.Compton, reported a membership anddonation fund of $7S.All girls serving at the tables dur¬ing the last hour today are asked toreturn to headquarters at the Capand Gown office, Lexington hall, atthe end of the hour.Progressives MeetThe newly formed Progressive Clubwill hold its first public meeting nextTuesday night at 7 rilO to take inmembers and fix dues. The topic fordiscussion is “The Role of the Stu¬dent in City Politics.” After the ses¬sion is formally adjourned, the mem¬bers will listen to E. L. Kohler, treas¬urer of the Chicago Council-ManagerConference, who will explain what astudent can do to support the citymanager plan in Chicago.Ogburn Goes to UtahWilliam F. Ogburn, Sewell AveryDistinguished Service Professor ofSociology, left Wednesday for Utahwhere on today and tomorrow hewill assist in the dedication of theschool of Social Work at the Uni¬versity of Utah. There will be meet¬ings on both days, and on tomorrow,Profesor Ogburn will deliver thededicatory speech.•Arthur Beeley is the dean of thenew school.Kerwin LecturesDelivering the second lecture of aseries on “Great Leaders o fThought,” Jerome G. Kerwin, dean ofstudents in the division of the SocialSciences, will address an audience atthe Convent of the Sacred Heart,6250 Sheridan road, Sunday after¬noon at 4.His topic will be “Aristotle and HisPolitics.” He indicated yesterday thathe would deal first with the Ethics,and would then trace the growth ofAristotle’s conception of the statefrom this basis.Scandinavian ClubMembers of the Scandinavian clubwill honor Professor Dag Stromback,internationally famous Swedish lex¬icographer, and his wife at a incep¬tion this evening at Ida Noyes hallfrom 8 to 10:30. During the eveningProfessor Stromback will speak tothe members of the club on “Wordsand How’ to Catch Them.”Afer the meeting refreshmentswill be served.Report on ElixirA report on an elixir of .sulfanila-mlde-massengil, a compound whichrecently killed 63 persons, has beenprepared for the American MedicalAssociation by tw'o University facul¬ty membei’s and associates.Dr. E. M. K. Ceiling of the depart¬ment of Pharmacology tested thetoxic effect of the drug on rats, rab¬bits and dogs. His findings tended toshow that not the sulfanilamide, butanother compound used in its prep¬aration, diethylene glycol, was theagents which caused the deaths.Dr. Paul R. Cannon of the Pathol-ogy department studied the organsof several of the victims soon afterdeath to find the pathological effects.Law LecturePostponing Corporation CounselBarnet Hodes’ lecture for the secondtime this quarter, Arthur Sachs, sec¬retary of the Bar Association, lastnight announced that Hodes was un¬expectedly called out of town withthe mayor and would be unable toappear this afternoon.Hodes was to speak on “Law andthe Modern City.” Sachs said he didnot know when Hodes will be ableto speak again. The lecture wouldhave been the third in the currentBar Association lecture series.Exhibit at FairExhibits sent by the University tothe New York Times Book Fair nowin progress at Rockefeller Center in Political Union—(Continued from page 1)McElroy, Dennis McEvoy, RobertMerriara, George Messmer, Kay Mey¬er, Harold Miles, Seymour Miller,Burt Moyer, Christine Palmer, FrankParish, Hart Perry, Alvin Pitcher,Newell T. Reynolds, Bill Rogers,Irvin Rosen, Miriam Rosen, HerozlRosenson, Floris Rottersman, ErwinSalk, George Seltzer, Lester Selig-man, Willis Shapley, Dan Smith, Wil¬liam Speck, Mary Jane Stevenson,John Van de Water, Bette Harwich,Harold Winkler, and Alex Furtwang-lei-.RadicalsThe Radicals are: Bud Ogren, Her¬bert Passin, George Reedy, MartinCohen, Hyman Minsky, Dean Krue¬ger, Celia Paul, Nathan Barack, Bea¬trice Bunes, Frank Meyer, JohnMarks, Martha Jane Marshall, JoanMichelson, Catesby iones. VictoryHimmelstein, Barney Weiner, PaulSeligman, Alec Morin, W^ayne Ander¬son, A1 Harris, Leonard Karlin, Hy¬man Jacob-son, Peggy Rice, PurnellH. Benson, Martin Lieberman, Man¬ny Ti'bovich, Viola Aronson, ChrisSergei, Barney Cohen, Lany Krader,Bob Speer, Ithiel Pool, and FredFortress.5th RowCenterBy C. SHARPLESS HICKMANA Univei-sity which had every rea¬son to be proud of Robert Sanders—its assistant in the Music department—humiliated him and the rapidlj' im¬proving Illinois Symphony Orchestralast Tuesday evening when only 217paying customers listened in MandelHall to the second Univereity—spon¬sored WPA orchestra concert of theseason.Mr. Sanders’ musicianship has be¬come as distinguished as his appear¬ance—and that is con.siderable whenone notes the new goatee he hasraised to give himself an appearancequite like that of a younger Beech-am.Two years ago—and once or twicesince then—I heard Mr. Sanders con¬duct the Chicago Symphony Orches¬tra. Each time it was with lesseningannoyance and with increasing enjoy¬ment. On Tuesday he conducted amuch newer and less coordinatedgroup with scholarship and elan, andturned in an excellent performancewhich gives lustre to what must nowbe considered a promising career.Especially delightful was his pro¬gramming of Respighi’s arrangementof old Italian airs and dances—oneof the many suites which the compos¬er wrote later in his life from themusic of early Italian masters. Apleasing diversion from the standardsymphonies was Hadyn’s “La Reinede France” symphony—conductedwith vigorous tempi, though notice¬ably lacking in a certain deftness ofattack due probably to lack of ade¬quate rehearsals—always a necessityin a sprightly work such as this,« » *Chicago last Monday evening wasthe scene of an auspicious debut inthe musical world—Helen Jepsonsang Violetta in “La Traviata”. Mis.sJepson’s voice has always been ofvelvet smoothness, but in her newrole it took on added qualities ofdrama—without, however, at any¬time approaching the baldly drama¬tic. Especially was her ease in therole—for which she was exhaustivelycoached by Mary Garden—apparent,and the naturalness and simple sin¬cerity with which she sang and actedwas a welcome relief from the over¬fed, overdramatic and over high-noteconscious singers who so often col¬laborate to make the more familiaroperas only more familiar bores.Certainly Miss Jepson was the per¬fect complement to .lohn CharlesThomas in the second act—the duetfrom which provided, uniquely, thehigh spot of the performance.New' York city are attracting muchattention, reports Jane Morris, Uni¬versity Press respresentative.University Press publications havebeen very popular, selling more cop¬ies than any other publishing houseon opening day.Wagnerian SingersThe Wagnerian Festival Singerswill give a performance November14 in the Auditorium theatre underthe direction of Richard Hageman,Among the artists appearing willbe Marta Krasova, Alexander Kipnis,Hilda Konetzni, Joel Berglund, andHenk Noort. Selections from “Tann-hauser,” “Der Freischutz,” “DieWalkure,” “R i e n z i“BarteredBride,” and others will be given. Disapprove of NewCity School PlanDisapproval wa.*^ voiced by severalmembers of the faculty yesterday onconclusions implied in the new plansubmitted by Dr. William H. John¬son, superintendent o f Chicagoschools, to transform the program ofinstruction in the 37 high schools ofthe city to place emphasis in thecurriculum from 80 per cent academicto 80 per cent vocational courses.Frank N, Freeman, professor ofEducational Psychology, declared“The Schools have been somew'hat tooacademic in the li|rht of the needs ofthe great mass of pupils who now at¬tend high school. The question iswhether this program hasn’t gone toofar and isn’t making too drastic re¬organization. The temporary ap¬pointment of teachers will be danger¬ous. Temporary appointees have nosecurity in their position, and thuspolitical appointees can be put in; ifthey ai'e not docile to the machinewhich controls the school administra¬tion. they can be removed.Bobbitt C'ommentsFranklin Bobbitt, professor of edu¬cational administration, .said “I amsympathetic to Johnson's idea thatwe should not stuff children withtextbook information which dot's *00good. But instead of substituting vo¬cational training we should undertakeextensive training in citizenship.The high schools should train pupilsfor intellectual living.”Professor William S. Gray, execu¬tive secretary of the University Com¬mittee on the Preparation of Teach¬ers, stated that “if the vocationalcourses are interpreted in the strictsense of that term, then general edu¬cation will receive inadequate empha¬sis in the new program.”Board Not AffectedThe Board of Vocational Guidanceand Placement would not be affectedone way or another by the plan, ac¬cording to John C. Kennan, place¬ment counselor. “Undoubtedly,” hesaid, “there is a sudden demand forskilled training now, but whetherthere will be too much emphasis puton vocational training by the changinlcurriculum, I am not in a position tosay.”Johnson’s program to ti*ain boysand girls how to earn a living in aminimum five-year plan is beingbacked wholeheartedly by the Boardof Education. It will take jurisdic- ition from the North Central Associa- *tion and give it to the educationalbureau of the Department of Interiorand the state department of tradeand industrial education. FRIDAYMEETINGSAdvisory Council, YWCA room ofIda Noyes from 12 to 1.Dames Art Group. Room C of IdaNoyes from 3 to 5.ASU Theatre Group. Room B ofIda Noyes from 7:30 to 10.Scandinavian Club. YWCA roomof Ida Noyes from 8 to 10:30.Sigma. WAA room of Ida Noyesfrom 3:30 to 6.30.Delta Sigma Pi. Reynolds Clubroom D at 12.Football ushers and gatement. Rey¬nolds Club Theatre at 7:30.Negro Student Club. Reynolds Clubroom A at 8.•4SU Closed Membership Meeting.Cobb 110 at 3:30. Executive Commit¬tee at 3.Jewish ^ Student Foundation. Li¬brary of Ida Noyes from 8 to 12.Consumers’ Cooperation. Ida Noyesat 7:45. Professor Marshall E. Dim¬ock will speak on “What is wrongwith cooperation.” Dinner at 6:30.Mist ELLANEOUSChapel Union Student-Faculty Tea.Library of Ida Noyes from 4 to 6.Student Group Tea. Alumnae rmiraof Ida Noyes from 7 to 10:30.Student Group Party. Theatre andSun Parlor of Ida Noyes from 7 to12.WAA Hockey Tea. YWC.\ room ofIda Noyes from 4 to 6.SATURDAYMEETINGSDames, library and lounge of LlaNoyes from 3 to 5:30..Vdult Education 1‘rojeet. Y’WCAroom of Ida Noyes from 8 to 10.MISCELLANEOUSStudents’ Interview. Room B of LlaNoyes from 3 to 5.Bridge for .Yluranae. Sun Parlor ofIda Noyes from 2 to 5.Bridge for Phi Delta .Alumnae. |Theatre of Ida Noyes from 8 to 12. IField Trip for the Social Science l iclasse.s to the Wisconsin Steel Corp-1oration. jCommunits Ulub Party. 5558 Ellis-at 9. ^SUNDAYMEETINGSArrian. YWCA room of Ida Noyesfrom 3 to 6.Y'WC.Y. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes from 12 to 1.Chapel I'nion. .Alumnae room ofI(ia Noye.s from 7 to 8.Communist f'lub. Theatre androoms A, B, C of Ida Noyes from 3to 10.ASU Executive committee. .Maroonoffice at 2. MISCELLANEOUSSocial Service Tea. Library andlounge of Ida Noyes at 3:30.University Memorial Chapel. Relig¬ious Services at 11. T. Z. Koo, Lid,will speak,MONDAYMEETINGSSettlement League. Library, loungeand theatre of Ida Noyes from 3 to 6.Phi Delta Upsilon. Alumnae roomof Ida Noyes from 5:30 to 6,Delta Sigma. Alumnae room of IdaNoyes from 7 to 9.Pi Delta Phi. WAA room of IdaNoyes from 7 to 9.Chi Rho Sigma. Private diningroom of Ida Noyes at 7.Phi Delta Upsilon. C room of IdaNoyes from 7 to 9.YWCA Membership Committee.Alumnae room of Ida Noyes from2:30 to 3:30.Physiology Club. YWCA room ofIda Noyes from 7:30 to 10:30.MISCELLANEOUSCommunist Club. Law North at7:30. Morris Presser and George Pazwill speak on “From the Trenches oiSpain,”Courtier MakesIts Debut TodayThe Courtier, recently revived Juu-son and Burton Court weekly news¬paper, will make its first appearancetoday. Editors are Ed Meyers andWill Rogers. Ewald Nyquist, formerUniversity of Chicago football play¬er and contemporary of Jay Ber-wanger, will handle the sports sec¬tion and will write a column on insidenews about the football team. Therewill be an art column which will al¬ternate from week to week with lit¬erary and musk criticism.Canpas FloristE. 55th near KimborkExpert Designing onFLOWERSFor All OcemsionsCorsages Special forWeek-ends35c and up.PhoneFOR NIGH ON TO 20 YEARSThe LOG CABIN865 E. 63rd St Has been a lavorite eating place forU. of C. students. Tables and log wallsare covered with initials of former stu¬dents. Maybe you'll find your folks'initials here. Come in cmd look! MEAtS FROM 25c TO 7ScREAL SOUTHERN COOKINGBARBECUES SANDWICHESEnteiicdtunent Saturday Eves.TERESA DOLAN1545 E. 63rd St— Learn to dance correctly -take private lessonsHyde Park 3080Hours; 10 A.M. to 10 P. M.BOUGHT AT AUCTION—250 new woolsuits and overcoats—sell at great sav¬ings — $12.50 — $15,00 — $17.50TAILOR SHOP6225 Cottage Grove Plaza 1261Buy. sell, exchange men's used clothing LASTSEVENDAYSThe Msnsificent Seqnrl toLem film’s ’Youth of Maxim”The Story of s ‘Generation of Conqueror’s’Brilliant New Musical Score bySHOSTAKOVICHContinous Noon till MidnishtSONOTONE 66 EAST VAN BURENTHE HRST UNITARIAN CHURCHWoodlawn Ave. and East 57th St.Von Ogden Vogt. D.D.. MinisterSunday, November 14, 193711:00 A.M.—“Routine and De¬tachment,” Dr. Vogt.4:00 A.M. — Channing ClubTea and Discussion. “Cli¬mate and Civilization,”Prof. Ellsworth Huntingtonof Yale University. HYDE PARE BAPTIST CHURCH5600 Woodlawn AvenueMINISTERS; N. L. TibbeHs. R. W. SchloerbSunday, November 14, 193710:00 A.M.—A d u 1 t Classtaught by Dr. A. E. Hay-don.11:00 A.M,—Morning Worship“Which Way to Peace?’’Dr. R. W. Schloerb.7:30 P.M.—Young People’sChurch ClubThe Drama Group will pre¬sent Kennedy’s“The Terrible Meek” UNIVERSITY CHURCH OFDISCIPLES OF CHRIST5655 University AvenueMinister: Dr. Edward Scribner AmesMinister's Associate: Mr. B. Fred WieeSunday, November 14, 1937Sermon—“Thinking Together”Dr, Ames12:30 P.M.—Forum Mr. JollD. Hunter—^Superintendentof the United Charties ofChicago will speak, On theRelief Situation.6:00 P.M.—Wranklers Tea—Mr. Bruce Gentry ■— OnTeaching of the Blind.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937 Page FiveDAILY MAROON SPORTSL.E. BrownL.T. CoxL.G. AndersonC. MitznerR.G. MorganR.T. MeyerR. E. CampbellQ.B. VirgiliL.H. HillR.H. GatesF B. PlinskeMaroons MeetBeloit at StaggField TomorrowShaughnessy Plans to OpenGame with Second StringMen.Probable StartinR LineupFetmanShacklelonSa?sParsonsAndersonTioldsmithMeyerGret-nebaumI.ettsPalmerKelloKKBroadcast: WHIP, Hammond, Indiana.The same Maroons who “refused”to accept a win at Ann Arbor lastSaturday should receive the season’sfirst nod from Dame victory whenthey meet Beloit at Staj?g Field to¬morrow afternoon. Coach ClarkShaughnessy plans to start the for¬gotten men—his second team. Shouldthe going be to tough for the re¬serves, the regulars will be sent tothe rescue.Beloit has done nothing this seasonto indicate that it will upset itscomparatively powerful opponent.Coach Bud Butler’s squad is strug¬gling along at the bottom of theMidwest Conference with two winsand five defeats as its campaign re¬cord.Only two players on the Chicago“B” eleven, Bob Greenebaum, quar¬terback, and Lou Letts, fullback, havehad any lengthy participation in var¬sity games this year. The freshmansquad managed to crack through thereserve line early in the week but thesecond-stringers have improved in thelast two scrimmages. Shaughnessywould prefer to use the second teamfor the entire battle in order to con¬serve the regulars who performed sowell against Michigan for next week’sclosing contest with Illinois.The last game betw’een Beloit andChicago took place in 1929 when theMaroons whipped Beloit 27-0 as theopening half of a double header andthen proceeded to defeat Lake For¬est 9-(i. Lay Plans for Alumni-VarsityFencing Match for DecemberPlan IntramuralSwimming MeetUniversity swim enthusiasts willreceive their chance to take honorsin the sport with the coming Intra¬mural tilt, a yearly event, which isscheduled for December 9.Swimmers who wish to prepare forthe Intramurals may use Bartlettpool Mondays through Fridays at thetime scheduled for free swimming.According to the turnout for fresh¬men swimming, a large splash is ex¬pected.The events in which swimmers willparticipate are: 40, 100, and 220 yardfree style; the 100 yard backstrokeand breaststroke, 180 yard three manmedley relay, the 160 yard four manfree style relay, and fancy diving.The Phi Delts received top place last Crack varsity swordsmen of thepast—including Professor Robert V.Merrill, former fencing coach andnow instructor of French at the Uni¬versity—will be given a chance toshow Coach Alvar Hermonson’s '37squad how it was done in the “goodold days,’’ if present plans for a var¬sity-alumni fencing meet in Decem¬ber materialize.Captain Herb Strauss revealed yes¬terday that negotiations are alreadyunder way and that there is a strongpossibility that the match will takeplace.Head Graduate TeamExpected to head the graduateteams are Campbell Wilson, Leland Winter, George Gelmar, Henry Le¬mon and Irving Richardson of the1936 Chicago squad and Bert Youngand Ormand Julian of 1935 fame.Professor Merrill, another potentialvarsity opponent, has been workingout with the blades for the pastmonth and will be in good conditionfor the meet.Veteran campus sport fans givethe former athletes more than aneven chance to finish victorious,pointing to the fact that only fourhave returned from last year’s sevenman team. Acknowledging that “onpaper the varsity look a bit green,”Captain Strauss neverthless claimsthat prospects are very optimstic.Modem Dancing as Expressiveas Music, Literature-Van Tuyl“You kill it! You murder it!”No, it’s not la quotation from Dick¬ens in one of his bloodthirstiermoments, but a typical remonstranceMarian van Tuyl is giving her classin modern dancing.And the members take it, and likeit, for from one to three hours a day,five days a week. Modern dancing setsthem a strenuous pace, as attested bytaped up toes and wrists, and jointswhich crack when muscles complainat a difficult step.Results EffectiveBut the results are effiective, forthere is a certain virile beauty in agood modern dance performance, thefunctional grace of the body in mo¬tion.Miss van Tuyl, in duscussing theplace of the modern dance in art, saysthat it is as truly a medium of expres¬sion as literature or music. Becausethe instrument of expression of themodern dancer is his body, it is neces¬sary to keep it in good condition, andfor this reason the class does pre¬liminary exercises in unison whichprepare the members for the dancesto follow.Individual ExpressionEach individual expresses himselfin his own way in the modern dance;consequently composition plays avery important part in the artist’srepertoire, and Miss van Tuyl’s stu¬dents work out solutions to a statedproblem involving an original com¬position once each week.At present the dances are beingdone to modern music, which is peculiarly fitted for the type of ex¬pression the modern version of theterpsichorean art employs. Both menand women are members of the class,which meets in the dance room at IdaNoyes.Rosy OutlookReason for the rosy outlook is thepresence of four men who did notcompete in ’36. They are RalphGrtenberg, senior, who was No. 2man on the Northwestern Universitysquad during his sophomore year;Lawrence Goldberg, transfer fromMichigan University where he wasintramural champ; Alex George,sophomore and runner-up in city highschool competition two years ago;and Dick Chapman, experienced fenc¬er who was not out for fencing in1936.The addition of this quartet to theveteran nucleus, composed of HerbStrauss, Ned Fritz, Edward Gustaf¬son, and Charles Corbett, will roundout a team expected to give oppo¬nents much trouble this year.Six Sophomore.sThe six sophomores, toiling forpossible berths on the varsity, will—even if they do not make the varsity—get plenty of opportunity to exhibittheir prowess in intercollegiate com¬petition under the new policy to befollowed in the coming year. *Other plans released show that atentative match has been scheduledwith the Edgewater Fencing Club onDecember 11.Eastman CompilationLists Book InfluencesPioneer SociologistSpeaks at BanquetPi'ofessor E. A. Ross, noted Ameri¬can sociologist, will address membersand friends of the Sociology club atits fall banquet Wednesday evening,November 17, at 6:30 P. M. ip IdaNoyes. He will speak on the topic,“Reminiscences of a Pioneer in Amer¬ican Sociology.”Professor Ross received his educa¬tion at the University of Berlin andat Johns Hopkins University. Asearly as 1891 he served as professorof Economics at Indiana University,and at Cornell. When sociology be¬came his special field, he taught atStanford University, at Nebraska,Wisconsin, Harvard, and at the Uni¬versity. In 1913 he was elected Presi¬dent of the American Sociological So¬ciety.Professor Ross has contributedover 200 articles to sociological andeconomic journals and literary peri¬odicals. Some of his better knownbooks are: “Social Control,” “TheFoundations of Sociology,’’Tickets for the dinner and meeting-are 85c and reservations may be se¬cured by leaving the money in careof the Sociology club. Box 55, SocialScience building. Tickets will alsobe sold at the door. ' ‘ Designed as a guide for anyonewho wants to become well-read isHooka That Have Shaped the World,one of the two recently publishedbooks of Dr. Fred Eastman. Theother is a compilation of ten one-actplays of .social and religious signifi¬cance.Hooka Thnt Hax'e Shaped theWorld is a popular introduction togreat biography, classics, drama, andpoetry. The 64 pages are divded intosections concerned with each of these4 types. The author, who is profes¬sor of Biography, Literature, andDrama at the Chicago TheologicalSeminary, after pointing out the sig¬nificance and value of each type, pre¬sents a topically classified list ofwhat he considers best in each field.This volume has received favorablecomment from The Christian Centuryand The Christian Evangelist.History Society OffersPrize in Essay ContestThe New History Society of NewYork is offering three prizes of $300,$200, and $100, for the three best ori¬ginal essays dealing with problemsof minority groups in the UnitedStates and its possessions. The es¬says are to be not over 2000 wordsapiece, and must be in by March 15.The nine judges of the contestare drawn from leaders in their re¬spective fields. The list includes Er¬nest Gruening of the Department ofthe Interior, Professor Herbert Her¬ring, executive director of the Com¬mittee on Cultural Relations withLatin America, and Dr. AlexanderLesser, professor of Anthropology atColumbia University. Students Turn OutMats for DegreesIt’s all done by levers. The machirierests on a table and the workers,three or four in a group, lean over itcounting, counting . , ., Maybe it’s because the hand loomsare housed in Blaine Hall’s fourthfloor that few University students areconscious of their workings in connec¬tion with the awarding of a Bachelor’sdegree tp a limited few. The little rec¬tangular mats that emerge fromyarns that have been threaded andpulled up and down in the loom bymeans of the hand levers are the re¬sults of class “lab’’ work, and thehandiwork of each class member ischecked off much as a lab paperwould be.The weaving is done in Textiles;officially called Home Economics 254,but what is done with the productsof class labor is still a mystery. Greenberg DefeatsMcNeil for ReynoldsClub ChampionshipGreenberg climaxed a brilliant af¬ternoon of ping pong play in the Rey¬nolds club tourney by smashing Mc¬Neil 21-13, 21-17, 15-21, and 21-18,thus copping the championship. Inthe semi-finals he defeated Finn inthree out of four games and McNeildowned Allan Green in the samenumber of starts.The champ’s powerful backhandstroke and steady volleying provedtoo much for his opponents. Althoughhe had some trouble overcoming thescintillating pace set by Finn, whofeatured a strong forehand, he soonhit his stride and coasted through thefinals.Allan Green looked like a would-befinalist until McNeil gained controlof his serves and downed him in athrilling exhibition of speed andspins.The most exciting game of the af¬ternoon was the semi-final match be¬tween Finn and Greenberg. Both boyswhipped the celluloid over the netwith remarkable speed and controlwhich thrilled the small aggregationof late afternoon spectators. Finntook the first game by a 22-20 count,but the champ’s backhand cut looseand enabled him to win the followingthree games.McNeil’s best weapon was histricky serve, which gained him sev¬eral points that enabled him to copsecond honors in the meet.Perlman reached the top of the Rey¬nolds club ladder in this weeks play.Behind him are Anderson, second,Mertz, third, Rosenblatt, fourth, andFinn, fifth.WAA NamesHockey TeamAt its hockey tea this afternoonfrom 4 to 6 in Ida Noyes hall, WAAwill elect hockey representative fornext year and announce the honorhockey team, members of which areeligible to join the “C” Club. AllWAA members are urged to come,and any University women who areinterested may attend.Gertrude Polecar, present hockeyrepresentative, and her assistant, El¬eanor Coambs, will be aided by thenewly-elected officer in plans for theHockey Play Day November 19' and20, in which approximately 150 play¬ers from colleges and universities inthe Chicago area, as well as repre¬sentatives of the University women’shockey team, will participate.Maroon Gridder GetTheir Equipment BackCaustic critics who have beenclaiming that the Maroon footballteam has lost everything includingits pants this season were squelchedyesterday. The Maroons have theirpants back, as well as the other gridequipment which was recently stolenfrom the Field House locker rooms.Three south side youths who ad¬mitted taking the equipment for asandlot team were yesterday finedand sent to jail.CLASSIFIED ADSNA\ ».TO For reasonableprices. Made on Navajo Indian Reserva¬tion in New Mexico. Call Hyde Park4334. Dorm and IndependentTeam Finals ScheduledToday at GreenwoodA classy Alpha Delt “A” team eas¬ily beat their fraternity brothers, theAlpha Delt “B’s,” 38 to 0, in a slowday of Intramural competition yester¬day. The contest cleared the deckfor the fraternity league semifinals,as well as finals in the dormitory andindependent leagues today.GAMES TODAY3 Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. AlphaDelta Phi3 Burton “700” vs. Snell4 Phi Sigma Delta vs. Psi U4 Barristers vs. BroadmenThe Alpha Delt “A’s” showed aclever passing and running attack,led by Runyan and Topping that theiropponents just couldn’t cope with.SPECIAL INTENSIVE COURSErOI COILIOI STUDINTS AND ORAOUATMJL ifcwwifA uUtiitkts,fmmry 1, Jmhl,Only Chicago Appearance ofHAROLD EREUTZBERGTHE WORLD'S MOST FAMOUSMALE DANCERSunday Afternoon, Nov. 14th ot 3:30Tickets 83c, $1.10. $1.65, $2.20on sale atBox Office & Marshal Field & Co. Only Chicago Appearance ofJOOSS FAMOUSEUROPEAN BALLETCIVIC OPERA HOUSESunday Afternoon, Nov. 21 at 3:30Tickets 5Sc. 83c, $1.10. $1.65. $2.20. &$2.75 -ROLAND HAYESWorl(d 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. $2.20On sale at box office andMarshall Field & Co.PRESENTED BY HARRY ZELZER CONCERTMANAGEMENT —mUstrpImm. No$olieil$ntmpkf$i.moserlUSINESS COLLEGErAUl MOtIR. J.D.. ntt.MmrnlmCmnm. rNw Ip «■* SribwICw*«m4 rNh R» MMAIM S. AMchlsm Av*.. Chteoga, NaiHfolp* 434PBARGAINS IN USED BCX^CSTh« Colony Book Shop1540 E. 57th SL DOR. 6992Hours: 11 A.M. to 7 P. M.miSMOKmyoupmam...AHi) m sump...A TOBACCO M/XTUR£ .<•, A !Does the averaee standardized blend suityour taste? Are you still seeching forthe perfect pipe smoke? Then send forthe complete Royal British Tobacco Blend¬ing Kit. A little experimenting . . . youdiscover your perfect blend 1eleven types of guaranteed finest-qualitytobaccos, and simple instructions, enableyou to create your own exclusive individu¬al blend (not obtainable in any othermanner). ,F'ile your formula with us.Thereafter, we will fill your order accord¬ing to your prescription, at most reason¬able prices. Large humidor kit alsoincludes mixing tray, measuring jigger,instruction-formula book. Sent complete,postpaid. $2.50.OFFER NO. 1One hali pound oi your preicilptionfree if ordered within thirty dayi afterpurchase of Royal British Blending Kit.OFFER NO. 2For twenty-five cents in coin to coverpartial cost of mailing, packing andgovernment tax. we will send on as¬sortment oi six different types of outcustom blended tobocoos.Royed British TobaccoCompanySuite t04 140 S. Dearboca 8tSeyal British Tebecce Ce.Belt* tM UR 8. DMrhem Bt.Gentlemen: □ Send ese theRoyal British Tooaoeo BlendinsKit by return mail, postpaid. 1am enclosing $2.60. (Send cheekor money order—do not nanilcurrency 1)□ Send me your sample offerof auortment of six differenttypes of custom blended RoyalBritish Tobaccos. I am enclos¬ing 25e in coin.Page Six THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1937KAY KYSERSPECIAL STUDENTLUNCHEON25cREGULAR LUNCHEON35cEVENING DINNERS40cDELICIOUS FOODWE ESPEQALLY CATER TO CLUBPARTIESFREE USE OF CARD ROOMMIRA MARDINING ROOM6212 Woodlawn Ave.**Music That Makes YouWant to Dance**KAY KYSERHIS GREAT ORCHESTRAAND SINGING STARSENJOY THE SUNDAYTEA DANCESContinuous dance music Sundays3:30 P.Af. to closingalsoa grand floor show withLOYANNE & RENARDJO ANDREWSNEVER A COVER CHARGEMin. week nights $1.50' Saturday Night $2.00RLACKHAWKRANDOLPH & WABASHGRAND119 N. Clark—Cen. 8240EVERY NIGHT — 8:30MATS., Wed. - Sat., 2:30ALFRBO 4* UAGRB, Jf >r«s«trtiA COMiOY by MAiat mowith FLORENCE REED9 MONTHS IN NEW YORKEtm., $1.10. 11.05, $2.20, $2.75Mate^ 11.10, $1.05, $2.20 MODERN MUSICSESSIONONWEDNESDAYAT3:00 O'CLOCK INMANDELHALLTICKETS 40eCome and hear music played as themusicians feel the rythm flow throughtheir veins.ADDED ATTRACTIONJO ANDREW, Blackhawk DancerTickets may be obtained at Information Office,Reynolds Club and International House or fromindividual salesmen on campus ChicagoEthical SocietySTUDEBAKER THEATRESUN., NOV. 14, at 11 a.m.Dr. HORACE 7. BRIDGESwill ipeok onTHE COMING PROBLEMTOO YOUNG AT FORTYORGAN RECITAL AT 10:45Children's Sunday Assembly at 11SWING into FALLWithCONGRESS CASINOMinimum—Dinner 12.00Minimum—Supper 1.S0Minimum—Soturd'^ys 2.S0Saturday Luncheon 1.50—Tonight—COLLEGE AU.8TAR SHOWAlfD DORSEY JAM SESSIONCONGRESS HOTELJOHN BURU. Mar.NoSonol Hotel Management Co.. Inc.Ralph HJU. Praa.. J. E. PrawUy. Vtoe>Praa.II0?C«THCHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS preaonMThe Funniest Comedyin a GenerationYOU CANTTAKE ITWITH YOU'PULITZER PRIZE PLAY. 1937by MOSS HABT andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRIS Niifktly, tnel.Gm4 Saata at Box OMeaPar All ParforMancMSELWYN^ fcVIINOW PlayingTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVESI* 4 A CEOROE ABBOTT IBROTHERRAT^ JOHII MflMKI M.AH0 mo f. HNKLtHUI 11 pWNM/ A COLLEGE6^^iAUGHir£p/ COMEDY'TUBHANT HIT—ROCKS THEATER WITH LAUGHTER" DoOy NowaEVES. SSe la HUTS MATS. Wad. 4 Sot. 55c to 11.6 tom L" ERLANGER NIghUy LAST 3127 N. Clark SL State 2461 Including Sunday WEEKSMAX GORDON PresentsTHE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settings by Jo MielzinerCAST OF 40—AU WOMEN'SMART' 'FUNNY'