Today's Headlinesi'uUtical Union Announces Poll Re¬sults, page 1.Student Directory Appears, page 1.Psi U Wins 1-M Games, page 3.5th Row Center, page 4.Greeks Swing toVenuti, Senne atI-F Ball TonightTwo Freshmen Win Bidsin Yearbook Subscrip¬tion Contest.About 460 couples will dance to thecontinuous music of Joe Venuti andHank Senne at the annual Interfra¬ternity ball tonight from 10 to 2.This, the 22nd Thanksgiving Eveaffair held by the Greeks, will be heldin the Lake Shore Athletic Club. En¬trance is on Chestnut street on thenorth side of the Club.In order that everyone would besatisfied tonight the I-F Committeeselected two orchestras, providingcontinuous music for the first timein the history of the InterfraternityBall. Those patrons who are partialto “sweet” music will be especiallydelighted by Hank Senne who playswhat he calls “sweet swing.” On theother hand those musical connois¬seurs who abhor anything but“swing” music will get plenty of op¬portunity to swing to Joe Venuti’shot fiddling, and can sit out and restwhile Senne plays.The two wings will be led by Hilde-gard Breihan and Ralph Leach, BettyBooth and Herbert Larson.Cap and Gown thinks it’s funny.Jim Lineberger and Dale Tillery arecomplimenting themselves becausethey put one over on Bud Larson.Both parties seem satisfied with theoutcome.Here's the story. Bud Larson aspublisher of Cap and Gown offered afree bid to the I-F Ball together witha corsage to the freshman who wouldsell the most subscriptions for the1937-38 yearbook. No other fresh¬man is allow'ed to attend the annualfraternity affair.Lineberger and Tillery, who inci¬dentally, arc roommates at Burtoncourt, decided that they both wantedto go so devised an ingenious plot.They both turned in 36 orders. Noone else had sold as many. Not know¬ing what to do, Larson, after a con¬ference, awarded a bid and corsage toeach man.Local Medical GroupHolds Dance SaturdayThe local chapter of the Associationof Medical Students is having aThanksgiving Dance and Faculty re¬ception in Ida Noyes Hall Saturdayevening. The reception will be from8:30 to 9:30 with dancing to themusic of De Grazia’s Maroons from9 to 1. Admission will be for 40 centsa person.This is the first dance the AMShas sponsored since last spring, andwill be the only large gathering be¬fore the National Convention meetshere in December.There will be refreshments and un¬usual entertainment by some of thetalented students and faculty mem¬bers during dance intermissions. Alarge part of the faculty is expectedto attend.ASV OrganizesNew Mobile UnitIn Theatre GroupTo co-operate with the Maroon’sproposed program of an integratedcampus social life, the ASU TheatreGroup is organizing a Mobile Unit.This nascent unit aims to maintain arepertoire comprised of modem vau¬deville skits which can be performedon an instant’s notice without cos¬tumes, properties, or settings.As an example of the type of vari¬ety act they will attempt to emulate,the organizers of the mobile unit cite‘‘Of Thee I Sing,” and “Parade.” Thegroup will offer its service of subtleskits on the 24 hour basis to anycampus group which desires it.December 16, 16, and 17 have beendefinitely set for the ASU TheatreGroup’s intitial performance, whichincludes the mass chant, “America,America,” a one act tragedy, “JackRobinson,” and “Home of the Brave,”from the Broadway success “Parade.” Vol. 38 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1937 Price Five CentsBegin Sale of StudentDirectories on CampusStudent Directories with the namesand addresses of 8,000 students ofthe University are on sale all thisweek at the Cap and Gown office. In¬formation desk. Tailor Tom’s standin front of Cobb hall. The Universi¬ty Book Store and Woodworth’s, andat other strategic places about cam¬pus.Students who buy the Cap andGown receive the Directory free, butthe regular price is 36 cents. Thoseholding Cap and Gown receipts areasked to call at the Cap and Gownoffice to receive their Student Direc¬tories.Physics ScholarsReport Researchat ConferenceMembers of the American PhysicalSociety will assemble at Eckhart hallfor their 216th regular meeting thisFriday and Saturday.- Distinguishedscholars will road papers on the lat¬est developments in research.Friday morning at 9:30, the coun¬cil of the Society will meet in Ryer-son 27. At 10:30 the readings will be¬gin in Eckhart. The following papersby members of the University willbe presented in the morning: “ThePacking Fractions of Titanium, Iron,Copper, Silver, Gold and Platinum”by A. J. Dempster: “Radiography ofThin Microtome Sections by Means ofFluorescence X-Radiation” by ElmerDershem; and “The Crystal Struc¬ture of Potassium Acid DihydroniumPentaborate” by W. H. Zachariasen.Speakers from other schools includeGeorge R. Dean of PennsylvaniaState College; G. W. Stewart, Uni¬versity of Iowa; G. E. M. Jauncey,Washington University; Frank H.Trimble, Northeast Missouri StateTeachers College; and E. 0. Wollanof Washington University.“The Rate of Production of LargeCosmic-Ray Bursts as a Function of(Continued on page 4) Churches CouncilGives CommunityService ThursdayVariety of Speakers Parti¬cipate in ThanksgivingfDay Devotions.Thanksgiving morning at 11 theCouncil of Hyde Park and KenwoodChurches will sponsor a communityservice in the Chapel. A carillon re¬cital by Frederick B. Marriott andan organ prelude by Fred Cronheim-er, of St. Paul’s Episcopal Churchwill precede the service.The mixture and variety of speak¬ers indicate to what extent the ser¬vice is community-wide. The invoca¬tion is by the Reverend Van OgdenVogt, First Unitarian Church; res¬ponsive reading by Robert Giffen,Inter-church Student Representative;scripture reading by Ralph Hall Col-lis, Hyde Park Methodist EpiscopalChurch; the prayer of Thanksgivingby Reverend F. C. Benson Beiliss, St.Paul’s Episcopal Church; offertorystatement by the Reverend Norris L.Tibbetts, Hyde Park Baptist Church;the prayer of dedication by theReverend Thomas M. Pender, St.James Episcopal; the sermon, “AThreefold Faith for a ConfueedWorld,” by Rabbi Joshua Loth Lieb-man of Kehilath Anshe MayriovTemple; and the benediction byRabbi Morton N. Berman, of theTemple Isaiah Israel.Statement of PurposeThe following is the statement ofpurpose of the sponsoring organiza¬tion. “The Council of Hyde Park andKenwood Churches, under whose aus¬pices this community service is held,was organized in 1911. It holdsThanksgiving services each year anda special Good Friday service. Itaims to promote understanding andcooperation among the churches ofthe community and has made finan¬cial contributions to the UnitedCharities and the South Side Child¬ren’s Guidance Center.Fairweather Declares that UniversityDoes Not Dictate Neighborhood PolicyAdding little to the statement of’resident Robert Maynard Hutchinsn the Chicago Defender, Negroewspaper, George Fairweather, as-istant business manager of the Uni-ersity, in an interview yesterdayepeated that the University does notry to dictate policy in any of theeighborhood organizations which itlav support because it feels that the Wirth of the department of Sociolo¬gy.Later he indicated that he thoughta wiser choice could have been made,since this area had been one of themost troublesome during the raceriots. However, he took no furtheraction and had no representation inany delegations sent to Washingtonto speak against the project. IDiscuss City Managerfor Chicago at ChapelUnion Outing SaturdayMeeting at 8:30 Saturday morningin the Chapel office. Chapel Unionmembers will go to Professor Rob¬ert Platt’s cottage in the IndianaDunes for an all-day outing. Any¬one who can obtain an automobile isurged to do so. The charge for theouting is 60 cents.A program of recreation in themorning and evening, and discussionin the afternoon has been arranged.The discussion will be “Mayor vs.City Manager for Chicago.” Speak¬ing for the mayoral type of govern¬ment is Ambrose Fuller, legal con¬sultant to the American MunicipalAssociation. On the side of the citymanager form of rule is Robert Gar-rigan, civic director. City Club ofChicago.Faculty members who have accept¬ed invitations to participate in theouting are Joseph Schwab, Leland DeVinney, Max Rheinstein, Z. L| Smith,and Maynard Krueger.William A. Brownof Yale UniversityTalks on TheologyWilliam Adams Brown, noted theo¬logian of Yale University and theUnion Theological Seminary of NewYork City, will deliver three lectureson “The Case for Theology in Educa¬tion” on November 29 and 30 andDecember 1, in the Social Science 122at 4:30.Brown is well known as author,educator, and as one of the most dis¬tinguished living theologians. HisMonday lecture will be on “Why theUniversity Needs Theology,” whichwill be followed by “Why the Uni¬versity Has Lost Theology,” and“Where Can the University FindTheology ? ”Among his outstanding writtenworks are “Beliefs That Matter,”“The Life of Prayer in a World ofScience,” “The Creative Experience,”“Imperialistic Religion and the Re¬ligion of Democracy,” “The Churchin America,” and “Is ChristianityPracticable ? ”Brown received his A. B., M. A.,and Ph. D. degrees from Yale Uni¬versity, where he was formerly act¬ing provost and head of the com¬mittee on educational policy. He hasbeen a professor of systematic theo¬logy at the Presbyterian UnionTheological Seminary since 1898.Doctor of Divinity degrees have beenconferred on him by Union College,Yale University, and the Universityof Saint Andrews, Scotland.Delegates Elect Seven to ExecutiveCommittee of Campus Peace Councilgeneral aims are good.“The University is an educationalinstitution,” Fairweather said. “Itmay advise policies and spread doc¬trines through education, but educa¬tion, not active political work, is itschief aim. As an investment organi¬zation, the University tries to be agood neighbor, letting neighborhoodleagues take the lead in starting im¬provements and only supportingthose it finds through investigationare sincerely trying to build up theneighborhood.”Referred to Burgess, WirthConcerning his participation in thelocation of the proposed South Park¬way Gardens housing project, the ad-minstrator said that he had been ap¬proached by the Federal HousingProject director to recommend a site,and that he had referred the commit¬tee to Professors Ernest Burgess andIllegal RushingIt has been reported and the re¬ports have been substantiated thatmembers of Delta Kappa Epsilonillegally rushed freshmen a tChampaign the week-end of theIllinois game. By their actions theDekes have admitted they are notcapable of obtaining a good fresh¬man class by the usual methods.This action is the penalty forthe first offense of illegal rushing.Reports of infractions by otherfraternities have been received andwill be dealt with over the week¬end.The Interfraternity Committee. Delegates to the All-Campus PeaceCouncil elected to the executive com¬mittee of the Council yesterday areDorothy Coleman, Ned Rosenheim,Hazel Whitman, Bill Hewitt, Jose¬phine Stanley, Charles Crane andSara Lee Bloom.The Council also voted unanimous¬ly to adopt the constitution submittedto it. As it stands, the Council de¬fines its purpose chiefly as a discus¬sion and educational group. PolicyAnnounce ClosingDate for Entriesin Camera ContestAll entries for the Candid CameraContest being sponsored by theNewsreel and the University Book¬store must be in Box 166 at the Fac¬ulty Exchange in the Press building,by 3:30 p.m. Friday. Because of thefact that the ten best entries are tobe made into slides, which will beshown at the next show, contactprints will be accepted. No still orposed pictures will be judged.The University Bookstore willaward the owner of the best shot acopy of “Photo Graphic,” a book con¬taining studies by some of the mostfamous photographers in the world.Submitters of the ten best pictureswill each be given a pass to the com¬ing show. of action will be adopted by the or¬ganization only at business meetings,with three-fourths representationnecessary for a quorum and three-fourths for a majority vote.Not less than one business meetinga quarter and not more than threediscussion meetings a month arescheduled as the program. Amend¬ments, as well as questions of policy,are to be passed only at businessmeetings, the latter after they havebeen approved by the executive com¬mittee. If some member wants tobring up a question of policy that theexecutive committee does not ap¬prove, he may have three minutes ata discussion meeting to state it; theexecutive will have three minutes tostate its position, and without fur¬ther discussion the meeting will voteon whether it wants to refer thequestion to a business meeting.Business School StudentAssembly Meets TodayThe Business School will hold thesecond student assembly of the yearthis morning at 9 in Haskell 108, itwas announced yesterday. H. L. Mc¬Carthy, regional director of the So¬cial Security Board, will speak on thework of the board.Classes will be dismissed to per¬mit all students to attend the meet¬ing. Campus Casts 835Votes for PoliticalUnion CandidatesLiberals Lead with 422;Conservatives Get 213,Radicals 200.With the Liberals gathering morevotes than the Conservatives andRadicals combined, 75 members ofthe Political Union were selected yes¬terday in a Campus-wide election.The tabulating of the votes, doneunder the Hare system, was directedby Harlan Smith and John Moore,graduate students in PoliticalScience, who were appointed by Pro¬fessor Jerome G. Kerwin. 422 Liberalballots were cast, and 213 Conserva¬tive ballots came in, while the Radi¬cals were last with 200 ballots.Conservative MembersThe Conservatives elected were;Jack Allen, J. Clayton Bales, EarleBirdzell, Robert Brumbaugh, WilliamCorcoran, Paul Goodman, Dan Gors¬ky, Glen Gustafson, Paul Henkel, Jr.,Dick Hood, Herbert Larson, HenryLuccock, William McNeill, CodyPfanstiehl, Charles Pfeiffer, RalphRosen, Cy Ruthenburg, Louise Snow,Robert Upton, and Bill Webbe.Liberals ElectedThe Liberals elected were: JerryAbelson, Lahman Arnould, JohnBarden, Laura Bergquist, Ann Bink¬ley, Edgar Bowman, William Cooper,Emmett Deadman, Tucker Dean, Al¬fred De Grazia, Ethel Frank, MaxFreeman, Edward Fritz, ElRoy Gold¬ing, George Halcrow, C. SharplessHickman, Bette Hunvich, Emil Jarz,Abraham Kaplan, Herbert Lesser,John Levinson, Dennis McEvoy, Sey¬mour Miller, Burt Moyer, Frank Par¬rish, Hart Perry, Irvin Rosen, Mir-riam Rosen, Erwin Salk, (JeorgeSeltzer, Lester Seligman, WillisShapley, Dan Smith, Marshall Stone,and John Van de Water.Radicals ElectedThe Radical divisions lined up asfollows: Socialists: Martin Cohen;Socialists (Fourth International):Larry Krader, Bud Ogren, HerbertPassin Ithiel Pool; the “ThroughLiberty to Socialism” group, whichwas supported by the Communists:Wayne Anderson, Beatrice Bunes, AIHarris, Victory Himmelstein, HymanJacobson, Catesby Jones, LeonardKarlin, John Marks, Frank Meyer,Alec Morin, Peggy Rice, Paul Selig-mann, and Barney Wiener; Inde¬pendent Radicals; Purnell Bensonand Richard Lindheim.First Meeting is December 8The first meeting of the PoliticalUnion will probably be held December8. It will be a closed business and in¬troductory meeting, headed by apresident pro-tem in which the mem¬bers will select their executive com¬mittee. The e xecutive committee,consisting of three officers and tworepresentatives of each party, will bethe governing body of the Union.The election today comes at the endof a campaign during which partyplatforms and candidates were deter¬mined.Social CommitteeSeeks Juniors toAssist with PromAll junior men and women inter¬ested in working with the Social Com¬mittee in sponsoring this year'sWashington Prom should come toCobb 203 between 4 and 5 next weekfor interviews, Robert Eckhouse,chairman, announced yesterday. Hewill be in the office at these hoursfrom Tuesday through Friday.Four juniors will be chosen to as¬sist the committee in its preparations.These will serve as Business Man¬ager, Publicity Manager, and a manand woman in charge of ticket sales.Applicants are requested to have theirspecial interests in mind before theinterview so that the Social CJommit-tee will have something definite onwhich to base their selections.Eckhouse said that the candidateschosen would be among the first con¬sidered for committee positions nextyear, providing an incentive for am¬bitiously minded juniors.Pi^e TwoPLATFORM1. CrcKztlaii oi a vigonna ccanpua community.2. EsfobUshmeut of the PoHticcdl Union.3. Progressive politics.4. Revision of the College Plctn.5. A chcEstened president.6. Reform of BlackMors.Peace and WarIn preceding editorials I have traced anargument for conservatism; an argumentwhich omitted any consideration of the prob¬lem of the effect of war on the future of so¬ciety* Yet war would, one may better say will,be the greatest agent in the decline of the west.It will hasten the formation of totalitarian*states, the abandonment of intellectual and ar¬tistic activity, the hardening of the economicarteries.Yet war appears inevitable. Economic pros¬perity of today or perhaps one should say ofyesterday, was based on the armament race,and no nation can afford to abandon it for thatvery reason. Yet it is obviously a terriblestrain on the economy to have many men work¬ing piling up steel armories, most of which ismerely melted down again as the instrumentsof war become obsolescent. It is a sort of col¬lective madness—spending incalculable wealthon utterly unproductive instruments merelybecause the others do the same.But this is only the surface of the problem.War is an enjoyable experience, and serves asa much needed outlet valve for impulses inhi¬bited in time of peace. The high altruism ofself dedication, and unquestioning self dedica¬tion, of self to country is a high ideal and agreat satisfaction to him who does not knowany other causes for devotion in ordinary civi¬lian life. At the same time this release fromuncertainty is coupled with a release of allthe brutalism normally punished in civil so¬ciety. One may vent all one’s anti-social ten¬dencies on the enemy and be made a hero forit. Such a combination is hard to beat. It is aform of activity which expresses the whole in¬dividual in a way which ordinary life does not.This is the reason that many soldiers of theIj^t war look back to their days in the servicewith mild nostalgia; this is the reason thatDean Leon P. Smith, to take a highly sophisti¬cated example, talks of his war experiences somuch*This view of war invalidates the radicalview of war as a mere excrescence from theeconomic order. The phenomena which warreflects lie much deeper in the animal nature ofman, of which the economy likewise is an ex¬pression. But it also invalidates the liberalcure for war, collective security, for institu-' tional forms will not succeed in changing thehabitual form of expression of these impulsesunless another one equally adequate is found.And the liberals make no provision for such re¬channeling. The conservative cure—isolation—is invalidated by the close interrelations of themodern world.What, then, is to be done to secure, or atleast increase peace?Vol. 38 NOVEMBER 24, 1937 No. 33■Qllfe ^atl^ ^aroonFOUNDED IN 1901Member Associated Oollegiate 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, 6831 University avenue. Telephones;Local 857, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222,After 6:80 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 3311.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are 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:83.90 a year: $4 by mail. Single copies; live cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.nC^IlKtCMTlO POfI NAtlONAC AOVtftTtMHD SYNatioiial Advertising’ *^*‘»Yice, Inc.CoU*te FuhtiMi "420 Madison Ave ork. N. ¥.CMICASO ■ BOSTO* . Los SAN FNANCISCOBOARD 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 BergquistMaxine Biesenthal Rex HortonSe^our MillerAdele RoseEmmett DeadraanBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard GreenleeMax Freeman Alan JohnstoneNight Editor: Seymour MillerAssistant: Ernest Leiser THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1937RHYTHMIC READINGThere are four Bells and a Belly listed in the Stu¬dent Directory, fresh on sale yesterday. There are aGum, a Gung, and a Guy; a Booth, a Both, a Booz, aBoe and a Boss. There are an Erb, an Erp, a Hu, aWu, a Yu, a Faw, and a Ra.Whee.C. Sharpless Hickman’s name is Shapeless in thebook, and the prettiest person must he Jewel Cave, andthe happiest Adena Joy, and the most energetic Rose¬mary Wham.There are two Goes and a Come; three Wests, anEast, and two Norths; two Sweets and a Sugar; a Pooland a Potts;®an Upton, a Downing; 11 Hills and aHolloway; a Nix and two Noes; three Goods and aSinha; a Munz and a Dazey; a Keys, a Kehoe, a Locke;a Ham, a Lamb, and six Katz; a Dean, a Demb, a Dotyand a Dun.Bum Tiddely um bum. Bum bum.DOCUMENTDennie McEvoy is quite happy about the cold wea.ther. He can wear his Commissar’s coat now.It is a brown leather one, and Very Well BrokenIn because the elbows and edges are a bit roughed. Hisfather brought it back from Mo.«cow maybe five yearsago.There is not the slightest doubt but what it wasworn by a Commissar and went through all the revo¬lutionary business of 1917. Right in front of theheart is a big pocket for a I^euger. Dennie hasn’t anyLeuger, but he can go through the motions of the sud¬den draw, the sneer, and the shot.There is a patch in the back. This can only be ex¬plained, Dennie says, by a thrilling chase across Si¬berian snows between the Commissar and the coat, andan Archangle bear.Ihe coat was originally lined with fur—probablyrabbits from Omsk. Dennie had Abercrombie andFitch reline it with cloth. The fur stank.CONVERSATION AT MIDNIGHTIt was late, and everybody had gone home.Ferdinand, one of the larger Lexington hall cock¬roaches, was sitting with his feet on the managing ed-tor’s desk.. He; was reading the paper."I see where a local beauty shop will fix girls upwith formal lacquered hairsets,” he said.“What?” said Benny, swinging slowly on the win¬dow shade cord.“Sure,” said Ferdinand. “They paint your hair andfix it in different shapes. When it dries it gets hard.”“That’s a fix all right,” said Benny. He droppedfrom the cord. “Its sort of like when we used to takea bath. We’d get our hair all soapy, and then standin front of a mirror and make it into Skeezix shape.s.”Ferdinand laid down the paper.“Formal lacquered haircuts,” he mused. “Is thatwhat it is to be modern?”“I guess so,” said Benny.“Lacquered, modern, hard and brittle,” said Ferdi¬nand. “I gue.ss I’m old fashioned. I like to run myfingers through a girl’s soft hair. I don’t like it to bebrittle.”Benny leaned against a table leg. “I don’t under¬stand it,” he said.“Neither do I,” said Ferdinand.INDIANS—CHICAGO STYLEI find the following bit in my journal, written thissummer after returning for another season’-s counsel¬ing at a camp for city children:“It was the same. The pool was cool, the childrengaily noisy and ray Wilson Cottage youngsters affec¬tionate to the point of hanging on my arms and shoul.ders.“We wandered out into the First Field and throughthe wood while the kids ‘showed me the Camp’ again.Coming back to the meadow we were Indians, creepingstealthily through the underbrush. Our war paint fairlydripped,“As we neared the field we sighted a few of ournumber, who had gone on ahead, kneeling around abarrel in the middle of the clearing. They drummedon the wood with sticks. -“We crouched lower, and crept to the edge of thewoods. Then with shrill war whoops we charged thedrummers.“And the drummers, in true Chicago street style,stood up, held their sticks at their hips, and with grimlips proceeded to mow us down with 'rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat’ . . . ’”TOIDY TOID STREETLater this summer one of the smaller girls came toMiss McEnally, her coun.selor.“Hey,’ she said, a bit gruffly, “I want to tell youabout a horse in Detroit.”“Well,” laughed Miss McEnally, “Why don’t you rideit?”The smaller girl was puzzled, then painfullycleared her throat and said “No—I gotta horse ind’ troit, and I can’t sing!” Today on theQuadranglesWEDNESDAYASU. Executive Committee meet¬ing. Social Science 106 at 12:30.ASU. Program Committee meeting.Classics 11 at 8:30.Biology Club- Lecture. “AbsorptionSpectroscopy Applied to BiologicalProcesses.” Associate Professor Hog-ness. Pathology 117 at 8.FRIDAYPeace Council. Executive Commit¬tee meeting. Social Science 105 at3:30.Negro Student Club. Meeting, IdaNoyes. 8 to 12.SATURDAYPublic Lecture. Miss Muriel L,esterwill speak on “Pacifism Adequate toOur Day.” Lawrence Hosie will speakon “The Power of Non-violence inIndustrial Disputes.” Graham TaylorHall at 2.SUNDAYRelifioas Service. The Reverend Charles Cardi^n. Rockefeller Chapelat 11.Beethoven Trio. Rockefeller Chapelat 4:30.TUESDAYASU. Art Group experimentalworkshop. Room C, Reynolds Clubat 4:30,Campns Horlsl1233 E. 55^ near KunbarkCORSAGESby expert designer forIf BALLALSO THANKSGnmiGPLANTS ANDCOT FLOWERSREASONA^EPhoneHyde Park 9414 SWING into FALLCONGRESS CASINOMlniimm—Dhiner $2.00Minimum—Supper I AOMtoimum—Scrturdoy* t.SC>Saturday Luncheon lAOFUDAT mQRTOOitSEY lAM ^SSIONCONGRESS HOTELJOHN BURKE. M«r.Ifaitoiiol Koiel MoaoBeuiMt Co., lae.Ralpii ®Ua. Pra*.. 3. E. Prawfay. VIce-Praa.ThanksgivingDinner90cRelish: Hearts of Celery and Queen OlivesCocktail: Fresh Shrimp, Oyster, Tomato or Grapefruit Iuic»Soup: Pottage Alexandrine or Consomme A. B. C.Salad: Combination, Russian DressingROAST YOUNG TOM TURKEY WITH CHESTNUT URI^SING.CRANBEIffiY SAUCEPotatoes: Candied Yams, Cream Whipped or Parsley BoiledVegetables: Baked Pepper Squash or Buttered lune PeasDessert: Hot Mince or Pumpkin Pie, Chocolate SundaeCbffe, Tea or MilkJ. a C. CAFE1527 East 5Sth Street4>BKMimumLAFAYiTTE5 TUBE A. C.SUPERHETSelected by engineert•‘moat likely to auccecd”LafeyMte Model D.21 u tekttig «I]houorf on every campua. AC aiqMrhet mthfive lateat type tube*, forei|pi reception, ‘ Whufe”volume cont:^, Model D.21 fit* into any colf^ pic.lt«re--po«rerful aa an Atl-American tacUc, ainooth ata ftooi Queai. Even you anil be aurpriaed how littfcdua aet cmt*, JO DAY FREE TRIAL.Fuee iATAiOfispm two great ftll catafa^ are youra for die aalan|^^ pag^ of die lateat radioa, patn laboraloty teatc^tdpmen^Ham apparatua, puWk atiJreat, ate. Extremely handy vol.um foe engineera. Spoetnl—Xmaa eaulm crammed full ofgift* for dte kid brotner, die ftdka, and the “date."STOP IN Ot SEND THIS COUPON NOW.lOlW.MCKSONBlVO.;CHICACO, 111.!“°'“jew,WHOlfiSAlE RADIO SERVICE CO., INC,901 W. JACKSON BiVD., CHICAGO, lU,kutt, Mil lt)t Calal«9 Ns. 4t-tHiRsjK tree Xma, Cslefoa Ho. 70—tliiNAME. STATE..-9?THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24. 1937 Page ThreeDAILY MAROON SPORTSOnthe Bench« « *By HANK GROSSMANVanderbilt’s Commodores and OhioState’s Buckeyes head the DailyMaroon All-Opponents eleven byplacinpT on it three men apiece. Themythical team is composed of theoutstanding men on the various gridsquads faced by the Maroons duringthe season just completed. The Tigersfrom Princeton get two positions, andMichigan, Wisconsin, and Beloit areawarded one post each.BackfieldProbably the most outstandingplayer the Maroons opposed was littleBert Marshall, Vanderbilt halfback.It was primarily his running thataccounted for the Chicago defeatdown in Nashville. Weighing no morethan 160 pounds, this diminutivespeed demon darted through smallholes opened in the middle of theChicago line and cut for the wideopen spaces; he was very successfulin the latter. Virtually the entireCommodore backfield consisted of thesame type of ball-carrier, and if wehadn’t desired a more even distribu¬tion, some of the others might havefound places on this eleven.Jack White of Princeton grabs off jthe other half post by'virtue of his'gftod play on a mediocre team. At Iquarterback and fullback are a pair (from Ohio State’s great secondarycombination. Mike Kabealo is chosenover John Rabb because of the “nev¬er say die’’ spirit he demonstratedon numerous long runs. There weretimes when it appeared that Mike jwas smothered and a second later he |emerged on the other side of thepack. He was also the hardest run¬ner of the .season. Nick Wasylik getsthe quarterback post for .some ex¬cellent pa.ssing and punt returning.LinemenThe standouts in the line were lessnumerous and hence the task of choos¬ing seven men was a great deal eas¬ier than picking four men as backsfrom an excellent field of ten men.The Maroons faced very few endsof worth. Smick of Michigan waspossibly the only one that rated men¬tion, but in order to complete theeleven the other end post was givento Brown of Beloit. This giant passreceiver demonstrated a certain a-mount of ability in all phases of thegame.Chicago opposed three excellenttackles in Charley Toll, Princeton;Buford Ray, Vanderbilt; and AlexSchoenbaum, Ohio. Toll and Ray, thelargest and heaviest football playersin the country, are given the callbecause of their all-around value totheir respective teams. While neitherwas as fast or agile as Schoenbaum.They both served as bulwarks on of¬fense and defense.Cole of Wisconsin and Maggied ofOhio get the guard posts over a cropof mediocre guards. Hinkle of Van-'Irrbilt was one of the best centers Give Demonstration ofModern Dance SundayA dance demonstration, under thesponsorship of the Chicago DanceCouncil, will be given Sunday after¬noon from 3 to 6 in the Dance roomat Ida Noyes hall.Participating in the program,which is to be a demonstration ofdance techniques, are members ofMarian van Tuyl’s advanced class inmodern dancing, and the CreativeDance Gild, a north side organization.There is no admission charge, andanyone interested in the technique ofmodern dancing may come.Show Photo ExhibitAt Ida Noyes GalleryBeginning Monday, a photographicexhibit of pictures taken by ArthurEdwards, a graduate student in theArt department, will hang in the IdaNoyes art gallery, Helen Bell, as¬sistant director of Ida Noyes hall,announced yesterday.On December 10 the photographicexhibit will be replaced by a displayof postcards, ranging, according toBell, from work done in “elementaryschools, through Mrs. Hutchins.’’Any students who have designedpostcards, or have received uniqueones, are invited to loan them foruse in the exhibit.Bell also revealed that tentativeplans are being made for a class inpublic speaking. All students whoare interested in meeting about oncea week in Ida Noyes hall for instruc¬tion along this line are urged toleave their names in the office at IdaNoyes. Psi U’s DefeatBarristers 7-0Fraternity Champions LickIndependents to Win I-MTouchball Title.THE BEST TAILORINGCO.D. Bartow, Mgr.TAILOR AND FURRIERFOR MEN AND WOMENRepairing and Remodeling olAny Cloth, or Fur GarmentOur prices on all work are veryreasonable.1147 E. SSth St, near UniverailyTel. Midway 3318WEDNESDAY. NOV. 24THking CROSBY and MARTHA RAYEIN"DOUBLE OB NOTHING”ALSOWARNER OLAND IN“CHAN ON BROADWAY”THURS.. FRI. & SAT.—NOV. 25, 26. 27FRED WARING’S PENNSYLVANIANSAND DICK POWELL IN"VARSITY SHOW”ALSO JOE E BROWN IN"RIDING ON AIR”Frolic TheaterSSth and Ellis Ave. in the country, but so was Wolf ofOhio. The former’s ability in cover¬ing punts give.s him the advantage.Daily Maroon All-opponents TeamSmick (Michigan) EToll (Princeton) TCole (Wisconsin) GHinkle (Vanderbilt) CMaggied (Ohio State) GRay (Vanderbilt) TBrown (Beloit) EWasylik (Ohio State) QMarshall (Vanderbilt) capt. HWhite (Princeton) HKabealo (Ohio State) FHonorable Mention: Ends, Ream (0) andCastelo (I): Tackles. Schoenbaum (0) andSeiirel (Ml; Guard, McElmore (V): Center,Pohl (W) and Wolf (M) ; Backs, Hunrins(V) Schmitz (W), Wardley and Zimmerman(I). VirRili (B). and Rabb (O). The Psi Upsilon touchball team isthe undisputed, unchallenged cham¬pion of the University intramuralleagues for the 1937 season. Theywon their crown yesterday afternoonon Stagg field before a shiveringcrowd of spectators by beating theBarristers, 7 to 0.They outplayed their opponents andwell deserved the title. However, thegame was not an especially goodshowing for either team, and playwas not up to their usual standards.It is sure that the Psi U’s could nothave beat the Alpha Delts by play¬ing the same ball that they playedagainst the Barristers.Both teams tried long passes whichwere almost entirely unsuccessful.Although the Psi U’s got off to a fly¬ing start with four first downs anda touchdown in the opening minutesof the game, they slowed up decided¬ly after the half, and during the lasthalf, their offense showed no scoringpower.Displayed Little PowerThe Psi U squad, which earned acup, and individual awards, in¬cludes Bland and Will Button, Upton,Webbe, Daniels, Bell, Gordon, andFlynn. It was Flynn who scored thePsi U’s lone touchdown on a bulletpass from Bland Button after histeam had made an unstoppable rushdown the field to the Barrister one-foot line. Button passed anotherscorcher to Gordon for the extrapoint and the scoring stopped there.CLASSIFIED ADSLARGE NICE ROOM in small adult family.Prefer a Rirl. Call afUr five. Plaza8450. B. Rosen, 6426 8. Maryland Ave.MAN’S $.10 GREEN TWEED SUIT- Size 39lonR. Worn once. Will sell for $15.Plaza 5676 or call at H. Wheeler, 6629Drexel Ave.Hanley’sBuffet1512 E. 55th St.IF YOU WANT COLLEGESONGS—IF YOU WANT ''COLLEG¬IATE” ATMOSPHERE—IF YOU WANT TO SEEYOUR CAMPUS FRIENDS—' YOU ARE ASSURED OFSUCH AN EVENING ATHANLEY’SOver forty years of congenialservice ORCHESTRA HALLCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAHANS LANGE CONDUCTINGThurs. Et*.—Fri. Afternoon. Nov. 25-26Overture to "Anacreon" ....CherubiniVariations Symphoniques—"Istar”Opus 42 D'IndyConcerto for Pianoforte, No. 2,A Major LisztSymphony in One Movement... Barber(First Chicaqo Performance)Two Legends from the "Kalevala,"Opus 22 Sibelius"Lemmin Kainen Turns Homewards""The Swan of Tuonela"HALF A BLOCK FROM THE DORMSWALDRON'S61st and Ellis - Dor. 10046YOUR CAR SERVICEDDURING CLASSWinter is coining—change toWinter Oil(Complete Washing, Tire,Battery anid Lubrication ServiceStandard Oil ServiceSTANDARDSERVICE Pulse Names NewAdvertising ManagerPulse announces a new shake-up onits Board of Control, this time on thelevel. Graham Fairbanks has takenthe position of advertising manageron the publication.Pulse editors also wish to announcethat back copies of Phoenix, campushumor magazine which precededPulse as the official student magazine,are to be disposed of, but will begiven away to students who wish tocome in and get them. Pulse hascopies of most of the issues of Phoe¬nix for the last three years. For alimited time these copies will be inthe Pulse offices.Settlement SponsorsThanksgiving DanceA Thanksgiving dance will be heldSaturday night at 8 in the girls’gymnasium at the University settle¬ment. This dance is the only activitythat the Settlement is sponsoring forThanksgiving, The WPA coloredorchestra will provide the music. Theonly decorations will be coloredlights.The grade school and high schoolclasses of the University High Schoolsend canned goods and presents tothe Settlement annually at Thanks¬giving. “Makes—You-Want-to-DanceMusi&^KAY KYSERHIS ORCHESTRAAND SINGING STARSwithLOYANNE & RENARDJO ANDREWSAttend the CollegiateTea DanceSundays — 3:30-6 P. M.$1.00 MinimumBLACKHAWKHANDOLPH & WABASHHoney in the howlThe "Yello-Bole" treztmeDt—real honey in the bowl—give* this pipe a "weil-broken-in" taste immedi¬ately, AND impregnates the bnarwood thoroughlyas you smoke, so its wonderful flavor it preservedpermanently. Special attachment gives (1) auto¬matic free draft (2) double-action condensor.YELLO-BOLE*1Also "CAtBURETOl""STEMBITER", "IMPEWAl"VEIIO BOIES, $1.35 a $1.50MIRA MAR HOTELDINING ROOM6218 Woodlawn Avenue^^Jmnkscjiviruf Q)Lnner70cNOON 'TILL 8:00 P. M.FRESH SHRIMP COCKTAIL FRESH FRUIT CUPFRESH OYSTER COCKTAIL GRAPEFRUIT COCKTAILCHILLED TOMATO JUICECELERY RADISHESCREAM OF FRESH MUSHROOM SOUPROAST TOM TURKEY, OYSTER DRESSINGROAST WISCONSIN DUCKLING WITH DRESSINGFRIED SPRING CHICKEN, CURRANT JELLYGRILLED SIRLOIN STEAK, MUSHROOM SAUCEROAST PRIME OF BEEF, AU JUSSHERBERTMOLDED CRANBERRY SALADWHIP POTATOORCANDIED SWEET CORN SAUTEOR BUTTEREDBRUSSEL SPROUTSHOT MINCE PIE, BRANDY SAUCEPUMPKIN PIE WITH CHEESECHOCOLATE NUT SUNDAEFRUIT CAKECUP CUSTARD WITH CREAMROQUEFORT CHEESE WITH CRACKERSCOFFEE, TEA OR MILK35 Get Your Copy Today!STUDENT DIRECTORY-35cPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1937Physics Society- !(Continued from page 1)Lead Shield Thickness” by RichardL. Doan, Phillips Petroleum Com¬pany, and William P. Jesse of theUniversity will start the afternoonsession at 2. Continuing the discus¬sion of cosmic rays, Arthur H. Comp¬ton will introduce V. C. Wilson whowill describe an experiment on cos-m.ic-ray intensities at great depths. Apaper on “Operating Characteristicsof a Voltage Multiplying Circuit forNuclear Disintegration Experiments”prepared by S. K. Allison, G. T.Hatch, L. S. Skaggs, and N. M. Smithwill conclude Chicago’s contributionsFriday, Other reports will be givenby A. L. Hughes and Marvin M.Mann, Jr. of Washington University;Frederick A. Maxfield, University ofWisconsin; Harold Lifschutz and J.L. Lawson, University of Michigan;and Charles Hire, Murray StateTeachers College.Saturday’s program beginning at10:30 includes papers by EugeneGuthe, University of Notre Dame,and Josef Mayerhofer, University ofVienna on deviations from Ohm’sLaw; by George B. Collins and Vic¬tor G. Reiling, University of NotreDame; J. R. Dunning, H. J. Hoge, J.H. Manley, and F. G. Brickwedde ofColumbia University and the Na¬tional Bureau of Standards; H. A.Bethe and M, E, Rose of Cornell Uni- jversity; M. L. Pool, Edward C. Camp¬bell, G. H. Shortley, and R. Weller of |Ohio State University; and B. R. iCurtis and J, M. Cork of the Uni-1versity of Michigan. jAt the afternoon session Reginald 'J. Stephenson, M. Ference, and A. E. jShaw will present the results of their jwork with production of uniformmagnetic fields. Shaw will describe a •new method for the precision deter- jmination of the ratio of charge to |the mass of electrons. Hubert M. |James of Purdue University, and Al- Speak at Chapelj The Reverend Charles H. Cadigan,! religious adviser of Amherst College,I Massachusetts, and minister of anEpiscopal church near the campus,j will speak in the Chapel Sunday at11.Cadigan is popular with groups ofstudents on eastern campuses. Afterhis first visit to the Chapel last year,students who heard him and met himat a Chapel discussion were eagerfor his return this year. He is one ofthe best known of the younger Epis¬copal clergy.bert Sprague Coolidge of Harvardwill explain the quadrupole rotation-vibration spectrum of hydrogen.Other speakers include Arthur Haas,University of Notre Dame; h’a M.Freeman, Central College; S. S. Sid-hu and Victor Hicks, University ofPittsburgh; J. C. Slater, Massachus¬etts Institute of Technology.At a joint dinner of the AmericanPhysical Society with the ChicagoPhysics Club at International HouseFriday evening Dr. Paul D. Footewill speak on “Physics and PetroleumResearch.” Dr. Foote is vice-presidentof the Gulf Refining Company, 5th RowCenter* * <>By C. SHARPLESS HICKMANJoris Ivens’ much-heralded docu¬mentary film, “The Spanish Earth”moved into tne Sonotone Friday eve¬ning and promptly proceeded toprove that Ernest Hemingway hasas straight-from-the-shoulder a voiceas have his books. But, aside fromthis and the proving that there was acivil war in Spain, it is hard to seewhy such a furor should have beenraised in New York about the film.To be certain, Ivens’ scenes of lifein a small war-torn Spanish villagewas beautifully photographed—withthat dull white aura apparent in somuch of Georges Perinal’s work—but good photography cannot alonemake a great film.That this is a sincere expressionof the government position done inan artistic manner cannot be gain¬said, The scenes of actual warfareon the Madrid University-sector frontare excellent considering the painfulcircumstances under which they musthave been filmed. Many individualsequences—especially those centering around the irrigation project in thelittle village are done with a tech¬nique which is vivid without losinga natural wine-like mellow beauty.Chief fault of the film lies in itsediting, which is haphazard to the ex¬treme. Whether Ivens’ himself hasdone the editing I do not know, butwhoever did do it is responsible forthe chief failure of the film. To thepoor sequence of the material is duethe gi'owing boredom one feels inseeing the picture. Had proper integ¬ration of the local and the nationalproblem been achieved in the editing,“The Spanish Earth” might well havebeen the great film its critics havesaid it is. However, it is by no meansa film to be missed. By far the bestfilm on the Spanish War, and by farthe most human of them, “The Span¬SELWYN last FOUR WEEKSTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVESIA erODAE ABBOTT ImOTHERRAT‘50c - $1.50l^yJOHIIWnilM JB.Aii»WtB f.HimtMOffiIt-M-Uf-Mt / A COLLEGE:6fs4«4U6Ht£ff.' COMEDYMATINEES WED. & SAT. and EXTRA THANKSGIVING |MAT. THURS. CALLPLAZA 6444FORThe Most ExqmsiteORCHIDANDGARDENIACORSAGESREASONABLY PRICED1364 East 53rd Street ish Earth” is distinctly a “must” forthose who pretend to take an intelligent interest in the world issues tol• * *The highlight of Chicago’s operaseason comes Wednesday, when Chicagoans have their first chance tohear the phenomenal Kirsten Flagstad in opera. Her greatest role isIsolde, and this she will sing to LauritzMelchior’s Tristan, Emmanuel List’sKing Mark, and Gertrude Wettergren’s Brangaene. With minor exceptions this is the cast I heard in NewYork last January 4, and that performance I consider unquestionablyto have been the greatest musicalperformance of any type I have everattended. Wednesday should be theseason’s nadir.md week!CHICAGO'S LONGESTRUN PLAY OF 1937SAM H. HARRIS prsMittiThe Funniest Comedyin a Generation111PULITZER PRIZE PLAY. 1937by MOSS HART andGEORGE S. KAUFMANHARRISMats. Wed. Sot.and EXTRA MATINEETHURS. (Thanksgiving)Every night incl. SundayN^OtlCC the pure white ciga¬rette paper... notice how everyChesterfield is like every otherChesterfield—the same size andevery one round, firm and well-filled.Notice when you smoke one howChesterfields are milder and howdifferent they taste. That’s due tothe careful way Chesterfield tobac¬cos are aged and blended.Mild ripe tobaccosand pure cigarette paper.. that's why they're MILDERwhy they TASTE BETTERA