Vol. 39, No. 9 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, OCTOBER 12, 1938 Price Three CentsCampusBriefs• * *Greet Chinese YouthDelegates TodayUnder the sponsorship of the Chi¬nese Students Club the two ex-dele¬gates to the World Youth Congress,Miss Yang Hui-min and Mr. Lo-ShanPeng will speak today in Ida Noyeshall. The program to begin at 3 willconsist of talks by delegates andDean Gilkey and tea served by Chi¬nese students wearing native cos¬tumes.To date the following faculty mem¬bers have joined the welcoming com¬mittee: Chairman Malcolm Sharp,Charles Gilkey, C. H. Faust, Mortim¬er Adler, Anton Carlson, SophanisbeBreckenridge, Fay-Cooper Cole, Ar¬thur Compton, R. J. Stephenson, Ed¬win Aubrey, Oskar Lange, AlgernonColeman. Everyone is welcome andthe 15 cents admission fee will gotoward the Civilian Relief Fund ad¬ministered by Mme. Chiang Kai Shek.Friars Call forBudding PlaywrightsBudding playwrights and prospec¬tive authors, offered their first chanceto get a production on a big-timestage, are invited to come to meetthe Blackfriars Board of Superiorsin Reynolds Club, room B, at 2:30 to¬day.The Friars, realizing that some menhave vague ideas about a good plotbut cannot crystallize them onto pa¬per, plan to hold a conference at whichrequirements for plays and hints a-bout writing them will be discussed.Moved back into the quarter twoweeks, the all-men musical comedywill be given during the last twoweeks of April, making it necessaryto have play scripts in by the endof November. Jacques MaritainStarts Series ofThree. LecturesFr e n c h PhilosopherSpeaks Monday in Na¬tive Tongue.Titles of the three lectures andthree conferences to be conducted,beginning next Monday, by JacquesMaritain, contemporary Frenchphilosopher, were released yesterdayby Richard P. McKeon, dean of theDivision of the Humanities.Maritain, who will lecture inFrench, opens his series Mondaynight at 8 in the lecture room of theOriental Institute, with a discussionof the Individual and Society (Lapersonne humaine et la societe). Histwo other talks. Democracy andAuthoritv (; Democratic et Authorite),and the Thomist Idea of Liberty(L’idee thomiste de la liberte) followon Wednesday and Friday of nextweek.Conferences Will Be HeldMaritain’s informal conferences, towhich members of the faculty and thestudent body are invited, will be heldMonday, Wednesday and Thursday ofthe week beginning October 24 inSocial Science 302 at 4:30. TheFrench philosopher will discussScience and Philosophy (Science etphilosophic), Freudianism and Psy¬choanalysis (Freudisme et Psychan-alyse), and Bergson’s Philosophy ofEthics and Religion (La philosophiebergsonienne de la morale et de lareligion).Maritain is professor of Philosophyat the Catholic Institute of Paris andvisiting professor at St. Michael’sCollege, University of Toronto. Thisis his second visit to the University,the previous one having been madein 1934.Anthropology StudentsDig into a DinnerFaculty members, graduate stu¬dents, and undergraduates in theDepartment of Anthropology willhold an annual get-together tomor¬row night in the Social Science Com¬mons at 8. Dr. Fay-Cooper Cole,chairman of the Department, will in¬troduce members of the faculty.In addition, Roger Willis will talkinformally on the annual dig, whichthe department conducts each sum¬mer for students in the department,laist summer’^ dig was near Metrop¬olis, Illinois. Arch Cooper, presidentof the Anthropology Club, will alsotalk.Russell Gives SecondPopular Lecture TodayBertrand Russell, famous Englishphilosopher will continue his analysisof .social power today in the secondof his free public lectures at the Uni¬versity. He will speak in Leon MandelHall, at 4:30 o’clock. Subject of thelecture is “Traditional and New Pow¬er.’’ When Mr. Russell gave the firstlecture last week an audience of 1,-500 attended, necessitating installa¬tion of a public address system inadjacent Reynolds Club.DA Calls for “ButterAnd Egg” SalesmenAll students interested in workingon the Publicity committee for “But¬ter and Egg Man’’ to be given Octo¬ber 28 and 29 in Mandel Hall should.see William Boehner from 2:30 to3:30 today in the Tower Room.Work on this committee is not re¬stricted to DA members, but is opento all students of the University. TheDramatic Association is eagerlylooking for “new blood,” which it ishoped will imbue the association withnew life.Pulse Managers CallIn Their SalesmenPulse’s subsc^'iption managers, Bet¬ty Newhall and John McWhorter, re¬quest that all Pulse subscriptionsalesmen turn in money and books atthe Pulse office today between 10 and12:30.The sales contest for individualcopies of the magazine was won byMortar Board. The subscription con¬test has closed, but the winner hasnot yet been announced. Second BookDance FridayThe second Social “C” Book partyof the year will get under way at9:00 Friday night when it is ex¬pected that an exceptionally largenumber of students will dance tothe music -of Floyd Towne and HisMen About Town.The Fraternity Honor Roll, com¬prised of those groups who have of¬fered 100 per cent support to the“C” Book, will be displayed sometime during the evening. A check isto be made tonight at the Inter¬fraternity Council meeting to ascer¬tain which groups have been success¬ful in getting their names on the Roll.The importance of the meeting willbe further enhanced by an announce¬ment of the candidates for Freshmanclass officers sometime during thedance.Arrangements for the party areunder the direction of the “IronMask” and the “Skull and Crescent”,whose hopes for the large crowdwhich is exr'-iCi-^d ait '^ased on theoptimistic enthusiasm usually pre¬ceding Saturday’s “Pig Ten” footballgame.Debaters HoldSecond MeetingThe second meeting of the yearsponsored by the Debate Union willbe held tonight at 7:45 on the secondfloor of Ida Noyes to discuss prob¬lems of general interest to Univer¬sity students.The meeting will be held primarily jfor freshmen due to their request atthe Union’s first meeting duringFreshman Week for further discus¬sion of the problems of FreshmanOrganization, the Chicago plan ofeducation, and various other topicswhich were presented at the previousmeeting.Showed EnthusiasmThere were approximately 300students present at the first meet¬ing, and preparations have beenmade for an even greater number to¬night, not only because more studentsare on campus now but particularlybecause of the heated enthusiasmwith which the discussion particip¬ants unexpectedly met the problemswhich confronted them./ Fate of Netv International HousePaper, Argonaut, Remains Undecided BWO DiscussesVocational GuidanceThe fate of the new InternationalHouse “Argonaut” was still unde¬cided yesterday, according to its threeeditorial board members, GeorgeMessmer, Richard Kunkel, and Ber¬nard Moritz.Lack of time looms as biggest ob¬stacle to the newspaper. Althoughfinancially solvent, the paper provedunexpectedly to be a heavy drain onthe time of its members, as work onthe first issue revealed.Too Many JobsIn addition, Messmer holds jobs asa Fuller brush salesman and as acampus sign painter, while Moritz isendeavoring to get through Lawschool. Kunkel is working down townbesides going to classes. The situa¬tion is further complicated by a pro¬fusion of columnists but a dearth ofgeneral flunkies on the staff.As yet no successors have volun¬teered to fill the editors’ shoes. If thepaper is discontinued, subscriptions,K. C. Sears WritesTwo New Books'Two new books, a text book onCriminal Law and an AdministrativeLaw Casebook, by Professor KennethC. Sears of the Law School have re¬cently been published.May’s Law of Crimes was revisedby Professor Sears in collaborationwith Henry Weinhofen, associateprofessor of law at the University ofColorado. There had been three pre¬vious editions and, as the authorsstate in the preface, “The writersconcluded that it was no longer pos¬sible merely to revise the book andhave a suitable expression of the cur¬rent law;” therefore, the Sears’ edi¬tion is not merely a revision, butpracticallv a complete rewriting.Helpful to StudentsThe secon^ book, “Cases on Ad¬ministrative Law',” is one of theAmerican Casebook Series. Studentsare usually troubled by a lack offamiliarity with the remedies whichare commonly used in certain aspectsof administrative agency and tribunallitigation. For this reason the authorhas included cases that will make thestudents familiar with these reme¬dies. Other chapters deal with the gen¬eral nature, development, and meth¬ods by which administrative agenciesand tribunals function; selection ofofficers and methods by which theymay be removed; the final chapterdiscusses the general idea of respon¬sibility of local, state, and nationalgovernments for wrongs done to per¬sons and business organization.Christine PalmerAuditions Radio GroupChristine Palmer will be in the re¬ception room of International Houseat 8:45 tonight to interview anyoneinterested in being auditioned for aradio dramatic group under the direc¬tion of Lillian Schoen. which cost 35 cents a quarter, willbe refunded, and advertising con¬tracts cancelled.First of KindThe paper, a four-page weeklyprinted tabloid, is chiefly the inspira¬tion of Kunkel who had experienceas sports editor of a Michigan Citydaily. Appearing Tuesday, it featuredcolumns by residents and news stor¬ies about House happenings. It is thefirst attempt at such a newspaper inthe history of the House.Discuss CzechCrisis at SlavMeeting FridayIn an effort to clarify any issuesbeljind the present Czechoslovakiancrisis, the Slavonic Club of the Uni¬versity is holding a mass meeting atInternational House, Friday eveningat 8. There is no admission charge.Mr. Jaroslav Zmrhal, district schoolsuperintendent, and recognized Czechleader in the Chicago region, will at¬tempt to state the Czechoslovakianposition as he sees it. Mr. Zmrhalalso presided at the protest massmeeting held in Chicago Stadium afew weeks ago at which thousandsof Czech sympathizers were in at¬tendance.Although he intends to take nostand in the issues involved, QuincyWright, professor of InternationalLaw, will attempt to present the po¬litical set-up as it now stands.Dr. M. Palye, research assistant inthe Division of the Social Sciencesand former vice-president of theDeutsch Bank in Berlin, has beenasked to present the economic fac¬tors in the situation.The meeting is to be in charge ofDr. Ernest Price, director of Inter¬national House.Forum Director TalksAt International HouseDr. Ernest Schwarz, director of theGood Neighbor Forum, in Chicago,will deliver the first in a series of lec¬tures on Pan-American relations to¬night at International House. Histopic is entitled “Current Events inConnection with the Americas.”Formerly the director of the Insti¬tute of International Relations inBerlin, Dr. Schwarz is now also ateacher at the YMCA. In his capa¬city as head of the Good NeighborForum, he is attempting to furtherthe work of the organization in fos¬tering better relation between nations.Also scheduled for tonight is aGlobe Trotter’s Exhibition in one ofthe foreign rooms. Photographs col¬lected by International House resi¬dents from all parts of the world dur¬ing the summer months will be ondisplay.Rounding out the evening’s activi¬ties will be a tea at which the Stu¬dent Council is to act as host.Boethius Summers in Sweden;Catches Last Boat to AmericaThe Art department lost track ofhim for a month, but Carl AxelBoethius, professor o f ClassicalArcheology and Ancient History atthe University of Goteborg, Sw^en,finally showed up last week, havingtaken the last boat allowed to leaveEurope during the recent crisis.Boethius, who is serving as visitingprofessor of Classical Archeology andAncient History for the Autumnquarter, sailed on the Bremen Sep¬tember 20. The Europa following aday later was called back to portuntil the political situation becameless complex.The Swedish people, he reports, aremuch more closely connected withEuropean politics than they were in1914. Although he left Sweden onSeptember 20 and has had as yet nofurther word from the country, hefeels that Swedish public opinionsides strongly with Chamberlain’spolicy. “However,” he says, “I haveno right to speak for the Swedishpeople.’’Tells of SchoolsOf Swedish schools, he states thework is’ approximately the same as that in American universities, butpedagogy is somewhat different,there being more teaching here andmore lecturing in Sweden. The ad¬ditional teaching in America Boethiusconsiders as having a salutary effecton education, but thinks it impossiblein Sweden, due to the smaller teach¬ing staffs.Although he considers Sweden’spresent form of government splendid,he feels it is impossible to use thesolutions of a small country for theproblems of a nation the size of theUnited States.Has Two CoursesAt the University, he is teachingcourses in Homer and the Bronze Ageand on the Topography and Monu¬ments of Ancient Rome—a tracing ofthe development of Rome from asmall village to the center of anempire. He is especially qualified todiscuss Rome because of his positionas Director of the Swedish Archeo¬logical Institute in Rome from 1926-1935.This is Boethius’ second visit toAmerica, the first having been in1922 when he lectured and studiedmuseums in the United States. At Meeting FridaySimilar ConferencesHeld in Recent Years atPurdue.“Vocational Opportunities for theCollege Woman” will again be thetopic of discussion at tlie secondBoard of Women’s Organizationsconference scheduled to open Wed¬nesday, October 19.Initiated last year at Chicago byBetty Barden, the conference is mod¬eled after a similar affair held atPurdue in recent years.Program OutlinedAn introduction explaining the un¬derlying purposes it hopes to a-chieve opens the three day sessionat 3:30. At 3:45 Mrs. Frances Mur¬ray, Dean of Winnetka State Teach¬ers’ College, will speak on opportu¬nities in the field of education; at4:15 a talk will be presented by aspeaker not yet announced on socialservice work, which will be followedby a general discussion.The second day features a lectureon “Interior Decorating” at 3:30 byFrances Harrington, director of theFrances Harrington FhrofessionalSchool of Interior Decoration, andanother at 4 on “Personnel” by MaryKennedy, Director of tlie HarrisTrust and Savings Bank. Both villbe followed by a discussi'in.Talk on Journ» snvJudith Waller, Edu(" ..r . .jpiie j-tor of the Central ^National Broadcasting aj, i"'.^llpresent a view of w(>;r 'yOfr'* 'iradio at 3:30, and Marcia Winn o:^ theChicago Tribune will conclude theconference at 4 by discussing journal¬ism.General arrangements are super¬vised by Clementine Van der Schaegh,president of BWO, while Janet Gei¬ger is acting as publicity chairman.All sessions are free, and Universitywomen are especially invited.Burton-JudsonWeekly ExpandsTo All DormsIf the Dean of Students approves,the Courtier, free dormitory weekly,will again be published this year. BillRogers, editor, announced yesterday.Fifty-two interested persons attendedan organization meeting held Mondaynight. This year the paper will go toSnell and Hitchcock halls and to thewomen’s dormitories as well.At the Monday meeting, a board ofcontrol was elected to assign posi¬tions on the staff of the paper. Mem¬bers of the board are: Harris Beck,Courtenay Crocker, Bill Rogers. DaleTillery, and Leonard Zedler.The members of the staff are BillRogers, editor; Courtenay Crocker,publisher; Bob Brackenberry, manag¬ing editor; and Dale Scott, assistanteditor. Assistants of the publisherwho are in charge of production are:Bernard Ploshay, Norman Herro,George Mead, Ray Wittcoff, JamesTedrow, James Baldwin, Bob Hemen-way and Mrs. Forrest Richardson.Assistants of the managing editor incharge of writing the paper areBob Bowers, Dave Siebert, HerbertCopeland, Chester Hand, Bob Orton,Ben Crocker, Clayton Traeger, JamesFrey, Murray Starrels, Jack Camp¬bell, Ernest Schultz. Forrest Richard¬son is senior adviser.Want FreshmanAt I-F Ball (adv.)Freshmen are not sufficiently im¬bued with the traditions of the Uni¬versity for when they get the oppor¬tunity to legitimately violate a sacredrule they don’t take it. Witness thechance of some freshman man to greta bid to the strictly upperclassmenI-F Ball merely by selling the mostsubscriptions to the Cap and Gown.As yet few freshmen have gone towork on the problem when all theyhave to do is walk into the LexingtonHall offices of the Cap and Gown andpromptly be swallowed up by thebusiness manager.Page TwoPatlg^arnowFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun>day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 6831 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to ourprinters. Chief Printing Company,1920 Monterey avenue. Telephone Cedar-crest 3810.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon, or for any con-tract entered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $3 a year; $4 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18. 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.RSeRSSSNTSD FOR NATIONAU ADVSRTiaiNO BYNational Advertising Service, Inc.Collegt Publiibert Representative420 Madison Ave. New York, N, Y.Chicabo ' BotTOH * Lot AnstLli • San FnanciicoBOARD OF CONTROLEditorial StaffLAURA BERGQUISTMAXINE BIESENTHALEMMETT DEADMAN, ChairmanSEYMOUR MILLERADELE ROSEBusiness StaffEDWIN BERGMANMAX FREEMANBUSINESS ASSOCIATESRuth Brody, William Grody, Bette Hur-wich, David Martin, Alice Meyer,Robert Sedlak.BUSINESS ASSOCIATEDayton Caple, Richard Glasser, IrwinRosen. David Salzberg, HarryToppingNight Editor: David MartinAssistant: Richard MassellNight Club onCampusNo, we don’t mean quite that.Not, at any rate, if it means adimly lighted basement roomwith soda pop and a first-rateopportunity for campus ama¬teur talent to practice.What we have in mind is ahaven for the homeward boundwho like to sit and talk a whileafter Harper, or who just wanta chance to meet friends oncampus some night. They maybe rooming house residents, whowant to get out of dingy roomsfor their conversational activi-ties< They may be timid dormi¬tory girls, who object to havingeveryone who enters the parlorleer at them knowingly.The more we think about itthe clearer the picture becomes.It almost looks like one of theReynolds club lounges, open towomen, card tables, and lateconversations. It seems to bestaying open until 12 on weeknights, and a little later onweek ends. There’s very possi¬bly a victrola in one corner, forpeople who want to dance, anda pop-corn stand in the other,for people who have to eat whilethey talk.Maybe the vision is wrongand Reynolds club isn’t avail¬able for a night meeting place.Somewhere on the campus, how¬ever, there must be some betters p ot than Mandel corridorwhere students may gatherafter library hours. There mustbe such a place, and there’s amuch-needed use for it.Hands Across theSeaTwo Chinese students willwalk up to the sun parlor in IdaNoyes hall at 3 this afternoon,hoping to find there a largeenough group to prove thatAmerican students are interest¬ed in China’s fight for inde¬pendence. China’s delegates tothe World Youth Congress heldat Vassar College this summer,the two have been touring west¬ward, stopping at colleges anduniversities all along the way.Their reception has apparent¬ly not been as enthusiastic asthe distinguished sponsoringcommittee of the tour hadhoped, for there is the possibil¬ity that the rest of the trip willbe cancelled, the two returningimmediately to China.They probably wouldn’t ob¬ject. Both Miss Yang Hui-minand Mr. Lo-Shang Peng havebeen active in Chinese war re¬lief work. They may feel thattheir job is back there, not in¬terpreting China to a group ofapathetic A m e r i c a n s. HullHouse’s Charlotte Carr and the THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1938TravellingBazaarRODITI CRASHES THEHEADLINESNone other than Edouard, I-am-a-poet, Roditi, is seriously consideringbecoming a jitterbug. He knows ayoung lady who has the habit andconsequently think it’s fascinating.He took a trucking lesson the othernight and allows that while all thisis very strange, it’ll be just no timebefore the Susie-Q will be his forte.He thinks it’s slightly undignified,and rather difficult when performedin crepe soles, but maybe in the longrun—some fun.CRUSADE — 1938 VERSIONThe campus is definitely a hot-bedof conservatism. There is an un¬healthy reactionary force suppres¬sing what promises to be the mostrefreshing movement of the year.Van de Water and Webbe are theprophets, Betty Clarke and Janie An¬derson the disciples. The wholescheme is to promote enthusiasm atfootball games by having campuslovelies lead the cheering. But theDean’s office (Works) says NO! It’s“not in University tradition and it’sundignified.” The box office approves,Mr. Hoeppner of the Informationdesk is enthused, the cheerleaders op¬enly applaud. But Mr. W’orks backedup by Mrs. Carr says — NO. Men ofthe U of C unite!LOCAL GIRL MAKES GOODRuth Doctoroff, former campusbeauty queen and premier danseuse,now holds a very swell job designingdresses for a Chicago manufacturer.She likes the work and plans soon totravel the Hollywood way to carryon in higher planes. Incidentally,she also got a plug in this month’sissue, “Mademoiselle,” picture andall!—GRANT ATKINSON.(Ed. note: Grant Atkinson who pi¬lots the column today, otherwise tapdances, is a Beta and occasionallyattempts play writing. In the inter¬vals he writes songs and presides aschief usher at football games, nomean combination.) Rose BamptonLeading Soprano, MetropolitanOperaORCHESTRA HALLSaturday EveningSpecial Student RatesBalcony 50c Main Floor 75cTickets Avoilable Press Building Guiomar NovaesOne of the World’s GreatestPianistsORCHESTRA HALLTues. Eve., Oct. 18Special Student RateMain Floor $1 & S1.50Tickets Avoilable Press Building1 QUARTER'SCleaning-‘$1.95The NU-GLO CLEANERS ©Her this MONEY SAVING PLAN tothe University students and faculty. They offer you 4 dry-cleanings for the total price of $1.95.The system is this:1. You coll our driver at Midway 18002. He will coll and you may buy a Student Cleaning Cordfrom him for $1.95.3. This cord is good for 4 cleanings which includes: suits.dresses, topcoats, overcoats, tuxedos, etc.4. One cord may be used by 2 students and is good all year.We do our own cleaning at our own plant, 1306 E. 55th streetwith a special odorless process.We ABSOLUTELY guarantee our work to be PERFECTLYsatisfactory.Any work collected or brought in before noon can be returnedthe afternoon of the some day.NU-GLO CLEANERS1306 E. 55th StreetMidway 1880 55th and EimborkEven the Finest Fountain PenPerforms Far BetterWhen Filled with this Modern Ink A Marvelous Creation!University’s Robert M o r s sLovett, members of the nation¬al sponsoring committee, feeldifferently. So do a group oftwelve University professorswho form the faculty welcom¬ing committee for the meeting.They support the tour of theChinese representatives becausethey believe that the two willspeak about the Oriental warfrom a viewpoint which shouldbe heard by University stu¬dents.There are ways and ways ofshowing sympathy for thenotable show o f resistanceacross the Pacific, one of thefew hopeful notes in a discour¬aged, browbeaten world. Somestudents do it by boycottingJapan. Others do it by lookingcordial whenever a Chinese stu-I dent crosses the Quadrangles.One of the simplest and mosteffective ways is to take timeoff this afternoon to hear whatChina’s two official student rep¬resentatives have to say abouttheir country.Letters to theEditorBoard of Control,Daily Maroon:Sunday’s papers gave little atten¬tion to Michigan’s romp over Chicago45 to 7. Something was said aboutthe development of Michigan into“the dark horse” of the Big Ten(what a horse) and then there wasthe sentence “the heroic spirit ofCaptain Lew Hamity was character¬istic of Chicago’s play.” For once thenewspapers neglected to wisecrackabout Chicago being out of her class.We were out of our class, but wefought Michigan for sixty minutes.The newspapers realized this fact, butI am confident that the Chicago cam¬pus does not.Come out next Saturday and seeChicago’s team get up every time itgoes down even if they have to geton their knees before they get ontheir feet. I just met Ed Valorz goinghome to bed. He says to come outSaturday and watch us beat Iowa.The Waterboy,Bert Hughes.Board of Control,Daily Maroon:The Political Union was to be aplace where all factions in any politi¬cal dispute could present their caseand try to gain converts to it. Sec¬ondly the union was to be a placewhere those interested could hear allsides of the dispute and be able toweigh every argument before tyingthemselves to any side.Surely none of even the mostardent factionalists will insist thatthey made many, if any, converts atthe sessions. How could they whenthe appeals were to emotion ratherthan reason. Such appeals will in¬evitably result in strengthening emo¬tions—the emotional attachment toone side or the other which existedin every member of the audience be¬fore any speech was given at all.It is therefore to the interest ofevery faction that emotional appealsbe eliminated as fully as possible. Itis only by a cool and well organizedlogical appeal that one can hope tosway people who are already armedagainst the speaker by their emo¬tional biases. How few extremistsseem to realize this!When the individual leaves a ses¬sion of the Political Union with anumber of well organized pointsclearly in mind, he has benefitedmuch more than when he leaves withnothing more than emotional turmoiland a firmer indoctrination of onlythe appeals of the side he favoredbefore he entered. Dan Glaser.Book ExchangeNeeds More BooksThe Book Exchange, with its cardcatalog already full, reports a verysuccessful start for the new schoolyear. The Exchange, managed by theUniversity of Chicago Bookstore, actsas a sort of “jobber” between stu¬dents who wish to sell books they nolonger need and students who wishto purchase those books.The Exchange has received 120books so far this fall, and 100 ofthese have already been sold. Nowthe exchange has two pleas: (1) Withonly 20 books unsold their supply isrunning down and they would likesome more books; (2) Will those whohave already brought in books to besold drop into the Bookstore and col¬lect the money due them. Created by Parker to guard pens frompen-clogging inks ... Ends 69^ of thefountain pen troublesThere is not—and never has been—any other pendesigned to handle all kinds of inks—go^ and bad—as well as the revolutionary Parker Vacumatic.One reason is that this modem invention has norubber ink sac, no lever filler, no piston pump. Itis filled by a simple diaphragm, sealed in the top,where ink can never tou^ or decompose itsworking parts.And its patented Television barrel lets you SEEthe level of ink at all times—see when to refill.This pedigreed Beauty of laminated Pearl andJet is everywhere acknowledged to be the grandestpen ever created. Yet even this GuaranteedMechanically Perfect pm can be plugged up bythe grit and gum in ordinary writing inks.Hence to guard the celebrated Parker Pens frompen-clogging inks, Parker e:^rts developed thisutterly new kind of writing ink—called Qxunk—an ink that actually cleanses any pen as it writes.This is done by a secret ingredient, whollyharmless. It dissolves the gum and other trouble¬some particles left in your pen by ordinary inks. Itmakes your pen a self-cleaner—cleans as it writes.Parker Quink is full-bodied, rich, and brilliant. Never watery or gummy. And it dries on PAPER31% quicker than average, due to stepped-uppenetration. Yet Quink costs no more tlum ordi¬nary inks—small bottles, 15c and 25c.If you use an ordinary pen, you need Quinkeven more than does a Parker Pen owner tokeep it in writing condition. If you use a ParkerPen, you’ll be thrilled and surprised by the way itperforms when filled with Quink. For until wecreated Quink and the Parker Vacumatic Pen,there never was a really scientific writing com¬bination.Those who can afford the best will not rest untilthey have them both. The Parker Pen Company,Janesville, Wis. ^Get Parker Pens at1311 E. 57th St. WOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE open Even:ngsNear Kimbark Ave. Phone Dor. 4300THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1938 Page ThreeWAA Holds OpenMeeting, Tea toDiscuss ProgramPlan Hiking Party,Steak Fry to Start Ac¬tivities.An open meeting and tea for allgirls interested in athletics will beheld this afternoon at 4 in the IdaKoyes YWCA room, under the aus¬pices of the Women’s Athletic As¬sociation, to discuss the WAA fallprogram, which so far includes anall (lay dune-hiking party and steak-fry on Saturday, October 22. Allthose participating will leave in carsfrom the Prarie Club. The hike willbe under the auspices of Miss Mar¬guerite Kidwell and Miss MargaretBurns.New officers of the WAA are Aud¬rey Mitchell, vice-president, who re¬places last year’s vice-president,.Mary Phemister, who left school;hiking manager, Frances Englemann;publicity manager, Jean Ball; andfencing manager, Dorothy Engram.Further plans, according to Mar-jraret Ewald, president, include aprogressive tennis tournament opento all University women which willbe played from court to court all dayFriday, October 28 in the Ida Noyesjrymnasium with Miss Kidwell incharge, and a football lecture, opento men as well as women, to providespectator instruction in understand¬ing the elements of the game froma grandstand viewpoint. One of theUniversity’s line or backfield coacheswill probably be the speaker. Asarrangements are still incomplete, thetime has not been definitely an¬nounced, but the lecture will be givenin Ida Noyes some time this quar¬ter.Arrangements for the formation ofan alumnae council, composed of twomembers of each of the last tenyears’ classes to hold monthly nightmeetings, and plans for an initiationdinner later in the quarter are alsobeing made.r RESHMANWill you be at the I-F Ball? There willbe one and only oneMALE Freshmanthere. Ho wiM bethe winner of theCap a GownCONTESTAny Freshman iseligibleGet Your Subscription Book at theCap and Gown Office Vox EditorsRefuse to WorkWith TrotskyitesVox editors, Jim Peterson andPeggy Rice, yesterday walked out ofthe meeting of representatives ofcanipus groups called by the Trot-skyites to consider protest measuresagainst new stu(ient regulationsissued by the Dean’s office.Before leaving Jim Peterson reada letter in which he accused theTrotskyites of “attempting a diver¬sion, or flank attack on the campuscongress,’’ and backed the MAROONproposal that the matter be turnedover to the Campus Congress com¬mittee. This committee will meet Oc¬tober 30 to specifically consider rela¬tions between the administration andvarious campus political organiza¬tions.Vox BarredProceeding, without the Vox headsor any representation from the Com¬munists, the representatives at themeeting voted to leave the matter tothe Campus Congress group but toappoint a committee to plan furtheraction in the light of what the Con¬gress committee does.Vox, a magazine edited by mem¬bers of the Communist Club, wasbarred from the campus by ActingDirector of Publications Martin J.Freeman on the grounds that theeditorial staff had not complied withregulations and had tried to high-pressure their way to recognition.Today on theQuadranglesMEETINGSASU Theater Group Meeting. Rey¬nolds Club, Room A at 4. ^WAA Open House. YWCA room,Ida Noyes at 4. For women inter¬ested in athletics.Chinese Students’ Club. Ida Noyesin the Sun Parlor room, 3 to 5.Social Science teas from 4 to 5 inthe Common room. Social Sciences.Dames Club. Ida Noyes Theaterfrom 7:30 to 10.Spanish Club. A meeting and teain the Alumnae room from 7 to 10.Ida Noyes Council. From 4 to 6 inIda Noyes Library. Tea for advisersand groups.BWO. From 12 to 1 in the YWCAroom, Ida Noyes.Debate Union. From 7:45 to 10 inthe YWCA room, Ida Noyes.Arrian. From 5 to 6 in the Alumnaeroom, Ida Noyes.The Blue Mirror. From 3:30 to B.Room C, Ida Noyes.Prospective Blackfriars Authors.At 2:30 on the third floor of Rey¬nolds Club. Book requirements anddeadline to be announced.PUBLIC LECTURE“Power: A New Social Analysis.Traditional and New Power.’’ Ber¬trand Russell. Mandel Hall, 4:30.Faculty Homecoming Dinner.Hutchinson Commons, 6:30. Fifth RowCenter Faculty Meets TonightAt Homecoming DinnerBy DEMAREST POLACHECKIf the audience enjoyed watchingthe performance of The Mikado one-half as much as the cast enjoyed theplaying of it, then there will be alarge group of very contented peopleat the Great Northern Theatre forthe next few weeks.Gilbert and Sullivan’s most fre¬quently played comic opera enjoys thedistinction of being produced by anall-colored Federal Theatre cast—with embellishments.Those addicts of the works of Gand S may set any fears at rest thatthis is a perversion of the original,and as such, is beneath their dignityto hear. In the main it is a straightproduction which follows the bookvery closely.Chorus Tops/ In addition, however, there are themuch publicized “swing” numbers.Single verses from “A WanderingMinstrel,” “The Flowers That Bloomin the Spring” and especially “AMore Humane Mikado” (this is thebest of the lot, when an entire danc¬ing chorus starts shagging to Bachinterwoven with Spohr and Bee¬thoven) are treated in a mannerreminiscent of Louis Armstrong athis best.In the list of principals MauriceCooper as Nanki-poo stands out. His Given annually with the idea of in¬troducing new faculty members tothe old ones, the Faculty Homecome-ing dinner will be held tonight at6:30 in Hutchinson Commons.W. H. Herrell, who has been amember of the staff since 1926 andhas recently been appointed as busi¬ness manager of the University, Ber¬trand Russell, famous philosopherand visiting professor in philosophy,and James Franck, who won theNobel Prize in physics when he re¬sided in Germany and at present is aprofessor of chemistry, will speak.Mrs. Robert M. Hutchins will presideat the dinner.voice, his diction, and his generalperformance top the cast easily.Lewis White in the usually minor roleof Pish-tush does the best job froman acting point of view. Expert workwas also done by Clive Rickabaugh,the set designer, Oscar Ryan, whodid a wonderful job with lighting,and Harry Minturn the director.GutbucketBut the real star was the chorus.There can be no doubt of that. Inmovement, musicianship, and generaldrive, they stole the show. It was aspretty a case of mass larceny as youwould wish to see. Time after time,two or three principals would standstage center, grinning sheepishly,while that chorus took call after call!Their singing was solid—in the wordsof the trade it had plenty ofSchmaltz. In the swing numberstheir work was strictly gutbucket. CLASSIFIED ADSWANTED—Passengers from Oak Park toUniversity for 8:00 class. Harry B. Gor¬don—Euclid 6216, after 3:00 p.m.Discuss Race RelationsAt Chapel Union MeetingHaving organized several sub¬groups this year to study various as¬pects of social and religious problems,the Chapel Union will launch itsbroader program today when theRace Relations group convenes in IdaNoyes at 3:30 in its first meeting ofthe year.As a result of several conferencesthis summer between Miss HazelWhitman and several Negro leaderson campus, a program for the yearhas been studied and will be discussedtoday.OpeningTonight(BthnJiLCumminsiAND HIJ- ORCHEyTR-A3F LO O RSHOWS lUPinuTRoomNIGHTLY NO COVER. C-HAKGEl^lfMAlUK HOTELRANDOLPH AT LAyALLElx Better GradesWith Less WorkSound* impoMible, but it can bedone if yon follow the Gnnthorp StudyChart*, a “*treamlined” method ofefficient *tudy. Thi* practical, te*tedsyatem will more than double the re-aulta of your work. Don’t poatponeaction. Write today for information.THE STUDENTS GUILDBox 511, Son Diogo, ColiL JudgeHellerREPUBUCANNOMINEEHelp Re-ElectAnAlumnusJUDGE SAMUEL HELLERReceived his Ph.B. at the Uni¬versity oi Chicago in 1913 andhis M.A. in 1931.He received his Low degreeat Northwestern UniversityLow SchooLHe is up for Re-election osJudge of Municipal Court on:TUESDAY. NOV. 84th Name in the Republican JudicialColumnSUPPORT HIMCHICAGO SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAFrederick Stock, Conductor1938 _ Forty-Eighth Season « 1939First Concerts This WeekProgramChoral Prelude BachSymphony No. 2—E minor Rachmaninovi“Iberia” DebussyPerpetuum Mobile Kreutzer-Schoenherr“The Waltz” RavelTICKETS 50c TO $2.50. SEASON TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE.Or CHESTRA HallINDISPENSABLEREFERENCE BOOKSFOR YOVifDICTIONARIES — WEBSTER COLLEGIATE.5TH EDITIONThe best abridged dictionary—110,000 entries.Pronouncing Gazetteer, Biographical Diction¬ary, Guide to Pronunciation, Rules for Spelling,Synonyms and Antonyms—1300 pages— 1800illustrations.Priced $3.50 to $7.00Other Dictionaries—Priced 25c to $20.00New Concise Pictorial Encyclopedia—300.000 facts, 3200 illus.Up-to-Dote—Authoritative Price $1.79Complete Rhyming Dictionary—Wood Price $1.89Medical Dictionaries—Gould—Stedmon—Dorlond.. Price $7.00Foreign Language Dictionaries—Wide Selection—All PricesTHESE DOLLAR REFERENCE BOOKSSHOULD BE IN EVERY STUDENrSLIBRARY—Fitzhugh—Concise Biographical DictionaryCrabb—English SynonymsVizetelly—Desk Book of Errors in EnglishVizetelly—How to Speak English EffectivelyRoget—ThesaurusKleiser—Similes and Their UseWords We MisspellWoods—The Writers HandbookTHE COLUMBIA ENCYCLOPEDIA—PRICE $17.50inOODUIORTH’SBOOK STOREOpen Evenings 1311 E. 57th St.tSmMore smokers everywhere areturning to Chesterjield^s refreshingmildness and better taste.It takes good things to make a goodproduct. That’s why we use the bestingredients a cigarette can have—iw/Wripe tobaccos and pure cigarette paper—to make Chesterfield the cigarette thatsmokers say is milder and better^tasting.Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co MOMPLEASUREfir millions Paul WhitemanEvery Wednesday EveningGeorge GracieBi^rns AllenEvery Friday EveningAlt C. B. S. StationsEddie DooleyFootball HijhlithtaEvery Thursday and Saturday52 Leading N. B. C. StationsCopyright 1958, Licoirr 8c Mrm Tobacco Co.IMPERFECTPage FourMaroons Enter Scrimmage for IowaGame; to Oppose ‘Tubbs” SystemTHE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 12, 1938ChicagoWith the end in view of avoidinga repetition of last week’s defeat,Coach Shaughnessy yesterday sentthe entire football squad through astrenuous defensive scrimmage.A team consisting of a freshmanline and ex-Maroons Berwanger,Sahlin, Flinn, and Skoning workedwith the Iowa double wing back. Thevarsity had little success in stoppingthe opposition, but it was their firstlook at the Tubbs system, and withmore drill on it they should be betterequipped at the end of the week.Berwanger flashed around the endsfor numerous long and skillful runs,and brought the minds of bystandersback a few years as he executed hisfamous weak-side passes with TommyFlinn.Team in ShapeMost of the bruises sustained inthe Michigan game had disappearedand with the return of Bob Greene-baum to action as center, the teamseemed to be in better shape than itwas a week ago. Bob Harlan, reserveend, will be confined to passing drill,but should be ready for contact workagainst the Hawkeyes. Anothercheerful note in practice was the re¬turn of Bob Wassem, last year’s out¬standing end. Although he has notheard from the Board of Examinersconcerning his grades, Shaughnessyhas been working him in at the flankposition instead of sophomore BobHoward. George Kelley was stillawaiting the outcome of his exams.Besides Wassem, the only otherchange that may take place is thereplacement of Rendleman by trans¬fer student Flack. If the latter goesto the tackle post. Rendleman mighttake over one of the defensive guardpositions. What “Shag’s” plans arefor the starting backfield remains amystery. It is possible that Shermanmay be replaced by Meyers at quarter,or that Hamity take over the signal¬calling and Davenport go to left half.Dress Sales WomenFor Saturday employment. Girlsexperienced in selling women’sready-to-wear preferred. ApplySally Frocks,233 S. State 5th Floor IowaWhen Irl Tubbs brings his Hawk-eyes to Stagg Field Saturday he willbe putting a team into action thatis in much the same boat as the Ma¬roons.Iowa finds themselves going intoits second conference game of theyear, having met overwhelming de¬feat in the opener last Saturdayagainst Wisconsin. The “tall corn”NILE KINNICKIowa Backoutfit has an eleven with^ a fine back-field, but, like Chicago, is havingtrouble gathering together a line thatcan withstand major opposition. Bothteams seem to have no better thanmediocre reserves.Outstanding i n the Hawkeyes’lineup is Nile Kinnick, unanimouslyacclaimed All-Conference, distinctivefor a sophomore. He averaged 42yards per try on his punts last sea-I son and completed 40 per cent of hisI passes. Kinnick is a stocky player.5 ft. 7 in., but despite his smallnesshas been one of the best quarter¬backs and basketball scorers in theBig Ten. Fraternity TouchballBegins TodayTouchball competition in the fra¬ternity league opens today. An¬nouncement was made last night thatthe rules issued last week are to berevised. The new rules will be postedby noon today. The date of the open¬ing of the dormitory and independentleagues is not yet announced but willprobably be next week.Competition in the fraternityleague promises to be unusually closewith Psi U, Alpha Belt, and Deke theoutstanding pre-season favorites. Theschedule: Hawkeyes Bring Band,Bag-Piping GroupIowa* will be here in all her glorySaturday. Led by their regular bandof 110 pieces and an auxiliary groupof 60 bonnie Scotch Highland bag¬pipers, Hawkeye football enthusiastswill invade Chicago Friday and willtake in the sights of our thrivinglittle metropolis before attending thegame on Saturday. According to T. Nelson Metcalfe,athletic director of the University,lowans make an annual football pil-grimage. And this year, the followersof the sacred pigskin will make Chi-cago the site of their crusade. Thebag-pipers will parade downtown Fri¬day for the benefit of gaping localcrowds, and the band will join withthat of Chicago for a between-halfconcert.3:00Field1. DU V ZBT2. AD Phi “A” V Phi Belt3. Deke v Pi Lam4:001. Phi Sig V Chi Psi2. Psi U “B*’ V Beta3. AD Phi “B” V Kappa Sig Call This Lucky NumberMIDWAY 0102You will yot—FOR THE PRICE OF ONE1. Pickup & Delivery2. Buttons Relecwed3. Speed & EfficiencyMIDWAY CLEANERS1207V4 East 55th St. (Near Woodlown)FRIDAYOCT. 14 HUTCHINSONCOMMONSYou and You and You and YouC-BOOK DANCENumber TwoRoses are red^ Violets are blueC-Book Party Number 2SocialC-Book $1.50 OneDance 55c