gDbe Baflp iWaroonVol. 40, No. 4- llfZ-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1939 ~ i<^.l / ^0 .v;>ncy.*-;IF Council Invites All Mort Gives CubsFreshmen to Open House Lowdown inMove Assures CompleteRushing: List for EachFraternity.“Fraternity house rushing lists are |never complete, so the Inter-frater¬nity Committee decided last year thatit would send out invitations for thefirst three open houses from the Uni- |versity’s list of freshman men. By jdoing this, we feel that all freshmenwill be invited to all houses, and none |will feel slighted.” Johnny Culp, IFCouncil head, continued, “Of coursethis is additional expense and work ifor the IF committee, but it is just |that much less work for the Individ- iual houses. In the long run it will ‘prove more profitable for everyone.” !On Friday all freshmen w'ill receive Im invitation from the IF Committee '‘mviting them to attend the open ’houses at Psi U, ZBT, Sigma Chi, Phi :Psi, and Beta. It will he an infrac- !tion of the rushing rules if any of Ithe.se fraternities send out individual |invitations. The open houses will be jopen Sunday evening from until10. I|{o<iHevelt Shakes ScheduleThe other two functions which theIF Comittee handled the invitationsfor are on October 15 and 22. Deke,Kappa Sigma, Pi Lam, DU, and PhiGams will be hosts on the 15th, andAlpha Delts, Phi Sigs, Chi Psi, PhiPsis, and Phi Delts are doing the re¬ceiving the following Sunday.This new policy concerning earlyrushing functions is part of the planof the IF Committee to increase thefrateVnity population. “Not enoughmen have been able to get around toall the fraternities in the past, andtherefore shut their minds againstfraternities long before they had achance to see what a fraternity isreally like. We want to change this, ’Culp concluded.Culp also complained about thePresident’s shifting the date ofThanksgiving, as it upsets the sched¬uled date of the IF Ball which is tra¬ditionally held on Thanksgiving eve.The Ball this year has been changedto November 22. This change alsothrows several open houses and fra¬ternity lunches off schedule. Thechanges will be made official when theIF Council holds its first meeting.“Night Must IFall” for DATryouts for Da’s fall production,Night Must Fall, will be held Fridayat 3:30 in the Reynold Club theatre.As yet no casting has been done andthe parts are open to all includingnewcomers. This is the first time thatthe starting play of the season hasbeen open to newcomers.The tryouts will also serve as pre¬liminary examination for workshopproductions, since workshop directorswill attend the tryout in an effort tofind new talent. Workers will be need¬ed for the various jobs centeringabout production and property. Forthose interested in these aspects ofthe show there are no requirementsfor previous experience.Best parts in Night Must Fall, adrama revolving around the psycho¬logical study of a killer, are those ofDanny, the murderer, Mrs. Bramson,the character lead, and Olivia, thefrustrated secretary to the super-sen¬sitive Mrs. Bramson. The play whichran for two years in London with theauthor, Emlyn Williams playing thelead, was chosen to lead off the DAseason because of its dramatic pos¬sibilities.- -— - r'~hiblic LecturesFeature BiologyRight of the leading biologists ofthe University of Chicago will pre¬sent a survey of the mechanism andbackground of man in a series of tenillustrated public lectures at the ArtInstitute on Wednesday evenings, be¬ginning Oct. 11. Philosopher-politi¬cian T. V. Smith also will present fivelectures, “The Legislative Way,” onWednesday evenings, but at a differ¬ent hour. Student Opinion onWar Crises SoughtIn Nation-Wide PollThe Daily Maroon is co-operating'with over 500 other college news¬papers in the United States in a na¬tion-wide poll to determine studentopinion on currently important ques¬tions of war and peace.A short questionnaire, which aimsto determine the exact conditions un¬der which the majority of Americanstudents would go to war, will be cir¬culated on campus on Thursday. Theresults of the poll at Chicago will beprinted in the Maroon on Friday.These results will then be sent tothe California Daily Bruin; studentnewspaper at U.C.L.A., where resultsfrom all over the country will be tab¬ulated. The final tabulation will thenbe announced in all undergraduatepublications co-operating in the poll.The questionnaire, which was pre¬pared by members of the U.C.L.A.faculty, deals with attitudes towardthe arms embargo, general armament,cash and carry, and when the UnitedStates should go to war.Those sponsoring the poll believethat a concentrated national studentopinion will affect the attitudes as¬sumed by the general public and thepolicies adopted by the Americangovernment.B. Fain TuckerPresents Law SeriesiGeneral knowledge of the law need¬ed by b woman to handle her family•nd hAme intelligently will be pre¬sented in a lecture-confeience courseat the Downtown College of the Uni¬versity of Chicago by B. Fain Tucker,prominent woman attorney. DeanCarl F. Huth announced. The .seriesopens October 13 and continues onF’ridays from 7:15—8:45 p. m. for tenweeks. Maroon SchoolFledgling reporters will gather thisafternoon at 3:30 in Lexington 15 forthe first meeting of the Daily Ma-Howard Mortroon’s annual training school. How¬ard Mort, director of the ReynoldsClub and editor of the mimeographedTower Topics is to be the speaker.Molt knows as much, if not more,than anyone on campus about storiesbehind the news, and therefore is wellqualified to talk to freshmen aboutthe University—things that everyoneknows and things that only a fewelite are permitted to know.William M. Randall, director of stu¬dent activities, is to be the nextweek’s speaker. In addition to beingfaculty adviser for student publica¬tions for the past year, Randall di¬rects the productions of the Dra¬matic Association, edits the LibraryQuarterly and teaches in the grad¬uate Library School.Not only will freshmen attendingthe Daily Maroon School listen tothe advice and comment of Mort andRandall, in subsequent meetings theywill be told about news gatheringtechnique, the way to write up newsstories and articles covering merespecialized fields, namely features,sports, and interviews by the mem¬bers of the Board of Control.Embargo Encourages,Assists AggressionExceptional harmony reigns amongprofessors of the social sciences inthe current crisis. The majority up¬hold the proposed revision of the neu¬trality act and condemn the embargofor ‘encouraging and assisting ag¬gression” to quote Quincy Wright,professor of international law.Professor Wright feels that Presi¬dent Roosevelt’s suggestion hasgained a majority in Congress. Inhis opinion the effect of numeroustelegrams heavy with sentimentagainst revision has been erased by alater barrage from those favoring therepeal of the embargo.“The present act,” according toWright, “in effect presents Hitler witha navy sufficient to intercept trade ofthe United States with Great Britain,France and Poland. A repeal of theembargo, giving the victims of ag¬gression the commercial opportunitieswhich belligerents have normally en¬joyed, would tend to shorten the warand support the principles of interna¬tional law and the Pact of Paris, towhich the United States and all ofthe belligerents are parties.”The authors of the neutrality actbelieved that arms manufacturersstimulate war for the sake of profitand that neutrals become involved inwar through controversies arisingfrom the .sale of arms to belligerents.But to Wright “these factors, whilenot wholly negligible, are of minorimportance as a cause df war amonggreat powers.”However, supporters of the repealof the* arms embargo do not meanthat this repeal should help Japan.Since the Far Eastern hostilities havenot been recognized as a formal warno legislation either way would beeffective. Wright hopes that “as soonas the commercial treaty of 1911 ex¬pires next January, Congress willfollow the suggestion of Senators Pittman and Schwellenbach and im-po.se an embargo on the export ofwar materials to Japan.”This seems to involve a dangerouscontradiction in end and means, butin reality, according to ProfessorWright, “the influences that will tendto involve the United States in thepresent war are not the propagandaof the arms manufacturers or thecontroversies arising from the armstrade.” Instead he lists as the causesof war, first, incidents affecting Amer¬ican life and property, but he feelsthat this danger would be nullified bythe clause barring American shipsfrom combat zones and restrictingtravel of Americans in combat areas.The other causes of war namely, war¬mindedness through propaganda frombelligerents and realization that .theoutcome of the war would affectAmerican security and the pi’estigeof democracy, are outside the realmof legislation.Wright LecturesAt Peace CouncilThe campus Peace council will holdits first meeting Wednesday, October11, in Social Science 122 with a lec¬ture by Quincy Wright, Professor ofInternational Relations. Prof. Wrightwill speak on “American Policy inFace of the European War.” A discus¬sion period will follow the lecture.This is the first in a series of Peacecouncil meetings on the problems ofpeace. The council, headed by HarryCornelius, is composed of delegatesfrom all interested campus organiza¬tions. In the light of recent develop¬ments in Europe, the council will bemore active than it was last year.The meeting is open to the public. What Is UniversityStudent, Asks MaroonAldermanic DutiesOccupy Douglas^Time Fall QuarterPaul H. Douglas, professor of Eco¬nomics and alderman of the fifthWard, is rapidly earning the reputa¬tion of being one of Chicago’s busiestcouncil members. He has been out ofresidence at the University since theSpring Quarter and will not be backin residence until Winter Quarter inorder that he may handle the largeamount of public work that he hasundertaken.His most conspicuous brainchild wasthe Hyde Park Golden Jubliee, whichentertained close to 250,000 people.Features of the celebration includedan outdoor art exhibition, a swingversion of the melodrama, “TenNights in a Bar Room,” presentednightly during the Jubilee, picnics,athletic events, a folk ballet in Man-del Hall, and a folk dancing exhibi¬tion.Discusses ReliefDouglas made an exceptionally largenumber of speeches during the sum¬mer, the most spectacular of w'hichwas a discussion of the relief situa¬tion in Chicago. In this speech hepointed out that at present a familyof four persons is allotted only 47cents a day for food. He effectivelyillustrated his talk by placing beforethe council the exact amount of foodwhich this sum would purchase atcurrent prices..After predicting that the relief sit¬uation would become worse unlessimmediate aet'Ibn wm- tiU&en, Douglas'luggested that more money could beappropriated for relief if the largeamount of delinquent taxes were col¬lected, if economies were effected inmany phases of municipal administra¬tion, and if the state would provide: more money for relief.I Investigating Negro housing condi-I tions, working on the traction prob¬lem, trying to settle a packing strike,j and taking over Teddy Linn’s regularcolumn in the Hyde Park Herald havealso been occupying a large part ofProfessor Douglas’ time.Settlement BoardBacks C-Dance;Gives ScholarshipPlans made by the Student Settle¬ment Board for initial activities of theFall Quarter include a tea, October11, for Board members at the Settle¬ment house, and a Social C-book dancebacked by the Board, October 20.Backing a dance is breaking prece¬dent for the Board. All proceeds madefrom the effort will go to the estab¬lishment of a scholarship fund forbringing a worthy Settlement studentto the University. Corry Lynn’s swingorchestra will play, and the Boardpromises a clever floor show’ by Set-tlehient children.A committee of Board members in¬cluding Bob Reynolds, Janet Geiger,Marcia Merrifield, Clayton Traeger,and BilDHankla is in charge of pub¬licity for the dance. Jay Fox is hand¬ling the sale of tickets.The tea is being held for the pur¬pose of the giving both old and newBoard members a close view of theSettlement that they might becomebetter acquainted with its activitiesand problems.Celebrate 47 YearsOf Chapel ServicesA special chapel service will be heldat noon today in the UniversityChapel in commemoration of the firstmeeting of its kind which was pre¬sented 47 years ago. Dean CharlesW. Gilkey will be the principal speak¬er.As in former years, services willbe held at the University Chapel everySunday at 11, with organ preludes at10:50. Carillon Recitals are held everySunday afternoon at 4, and are fol¬lowed by organ recitals at 4:30. Most Representative Manand Woman Go to SunYalley.Who goes to Sun Valley? Onlythe University student body can tell.The Daily Maroon asks to be toldwhat man and what woman on thequadrangles are most representativeof the University of Chicago, and will,as a reward, send the two nominatedto Sun Valley, Idaho, for a new kindof Christmas vacation.What is the University of Chicago,asks the Daily Maroon, what are itsstudents, what should its students belike, who are two people who are mostrepresentative of this ideal ? Whentwo University representatives alightat Sun Valley, what will they be?Will they be a fraternity man and aclub girl, an Asu’er and a Communi.st,a joyboy and a joygirl—or some in¬conceivable combination of all,To vote in the contest it is onlynecessary to buy or sell a subscrip¬tion to the Daily Maroon. Two votes,one for a man and one for a woman,are allowed to each subscriber, andtwo votes are allowed to a salesmanfor every subscription that he sells.Thus, a salesman plugging for anycandidate can sell fifty subscriptionsto fifty friends of his candidate andthus swing a hundred votes for theman or woman of their choice.Unless the campus so decides, thisis no beauty contest, no popularitypoll that the Daily Maroon is run¬ning. The students of the Universityare given a chance to reveal them¬selves—in whatever light they will.The Daily Maroon Board of Control,judges of the contest, disdain to“pack” the vote. ’’Vhenieve'* the cam¬pus elects, will willy-nilly go to SunValley—for all the country to see...and the Daily Maroon will interviewthe representative man and woman toair their views on politics, love,sports, and the University. Let thecampus answer the question—whogoes to Sun Valley?Hidden HeroEmerges atClub SmokerWith one of the most interestingScotsmen since the time of the poetBurns heading the program. The Rey¬nolds Club Council reiterates their in¬vitation to the smoker for men to beheld tomorrow in the Reynolds club.Transfer students will be the gpiestsof honor at the function, and refresh¬ments consisting of cider and dough¬nuts will be served. Cigarettes willbe furnished and all campus malesare welcome.The highlight of the evening willcome with the appearance of Mr. A.J. Seymour, Building and GroundsJanitor Foreman at the University.Seymour is one of the most interest¬ing personalities to hide his light un¬der a bushel that the Midway con¬tains. During the World War thatceased temporarily in 1918, Seymouroccupied a unique position in thescheme of things. He was placed incharge of all allied ships passingthrough the area northeast of Scot¬land to England’s naval base in theOrkney Islands. He alone had mem¬orized the position of the mines whichwere placed in this area to combatthe German submarines. His mentalfeat was necessitated because of theabsence of any chart showing the lo¬cations of the explosive charges.Later he was moved to an areawhere no one could be sure of minelocations. It then became his job totake two minesweepers (with a cablebetween) and precede all battleshipsor freighters in the mined area,knowing that any minute his ownflagship might become a victim ofthe submerged explosives. He sawships on the other end of the cableblown to splinters, but he bore acharmed life.Four years after the armistice hecame to America, and obtained a po¬sition on the janitor force at the Uni¬versity.1Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1939 V. tfO \®hc Bailu 4^lariJiiuV ^ CFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBEK ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTb« Daily Maroon u Die official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicaifo,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5831 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.A'ter 6:30 phone in stories to ourprinters. The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went¬worth 6123.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 centst^ ____Entered as second class matter March18. 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illiaois, under the act of March 3, 1879.RKpneseNTED roa national AovaaTisiNO byNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison AVE. NewYork, N. Y.CHICA60 ■ BOtTOS ’ Los ANSELIt - SAN FRANCISCOEditorial StaffRUTH BRODYHARRY CORNELIUSWILLIAM H. GRODYDAVID MARTIN, ChairmanALICE MEYERBusiness StaffHARRY F. TOPPING, Business Mgr.ROLAND I. RICHMAN. Advertising Mgr.EDITORIAL BOARDMarion Gerson, William Hankla. Pearl C.Rubins, John Stevens, Hart Wurzburg,Marian CastTSWan. Ernest LeiserBUSINESS ASSOCIATESNight Editor: Pearl C. RubinsAssistant: Richard PhilbriekRevised EditionThe students responsible forgetting the Daily Maroon outfour times a week this yearhave received no special revela¬tions of the truth in campus af¬fairs, especially about affairsthat have not happened yet. Ifthey were able to show peoplethe' right paths for Universityaction they wouldn’t need tobother with being students anylonger; if they had the abilityto prophesy the matters wheresuch action would be necessarythey would be foolish to wastetheir great gifts here.As students, however, thoseresnonsible for the Maroon areproud of going to a good schooland they want their pride to bejustified. This simple prejudicewill color all their editorializingthis year.But nobody thinks the Uni¬versity good these days becauseof its gay social life, its high-powered activities, or because ofits dashing successes on thefootball field. Only from tradi¬tions of intellectual leadershipdoes this school get its reputa¬tion for greatness. Now thatthe whole world is strugglingwith forces of irrationality thesetraditions and this reputationneed more than ever to be pre¬served.Nothing, however, can kill ourtraditions faster than lettingthem become empty; they mustnot be preserved as museumpieces. If the days when theUniversity was a symbol of en¬lightenment and intellectual lib¬erty live on only in the mem¬ories of a few wistful scholars:if the symbols no longer repre¬sent actuaries, then the thou¬sands of students who pay tui¬tion fees might just as welltransfer to some other placewhere winter sports are goodbecause this school will havenothing exciting to offer them.By questioning whether or notwhat the University does thisyear fits into its traditions, theMaroon hopes to do its bit inpreventing stagnancy.Among specific things the Ma¬roon plans to question, the intel¬lectual efficacy of the New Planwill be one of the foremost.Much has been heard of thiscelebrated experiment in generaleducation; it has developed atradition of its own throughoutthe eight years of its existencehere. But experiments are sup¬posed to prove something; no¬body seems to know what theNew Plan has proved beyondthe fact that most students ofcollege mentality have the abil¬ity to survive six hours of exam¬ination in one day. Whether ornot this shows that they have agood general education is still amatter of opinion, and some saythat New Plan traditions areamong the empty ones. So far,there has been no scientific eval¬uation of the New Plan. Yet for those capable of planning andcarrying out our college pro¬gram, devising some machineryfor testing it should not be im¬possible.Since the University’s inter¬ests are predominantly concern¬ed with rational activity, stu¬dent organizations should en¬courage, or at least not interferewith, such activity. Though theyshould give scholars a chance forusing their minds outside class¬rooms, they must remain subor¬dinate to the classrooms. Asmatters of secondary impor¬tance, however, they cannot oc¬cupy the full time and energv ofthe students participating. Per¬fection on a professional level,therefore, cannot justly be de¬manded of them. This is as trueof the football team as it is ofthe Daily Maroon.Of all student organizationsencouraging intellectual activitythe radical groups traditionallyshould be the best informed andthe most alert. It is their tradi¬tion to be progessive, to pointout new paths, to prod thestodgy conservatives out of stul¬tification. Yet for several yearsthey have presented few plansfor adult and practical action,they have said nothing new,their contributions to intellect¬ual activity are certainly open toquestion. It may be hoped thatthis year they will be shockedout of their stagnancy.Because students responsiblefor the Maroon believe that dis¬cussing and disagreeing withother people’s opinions is a goodway of being intellectually ac¬tive, they invite Bull Sessionsand letters from students whowant to argue with them. Sothat their position may be moreopen to attack, they restate it;1. Deserve and continue theUniversity’s reputation for in¬tellectual greatness.2. Evaluate the New Planscientifically.3. Restore life to the activi¬ties, but subordinate activitiesto classrooms.4. Make even the radical or¬ganizations adjust themselves tochanging circumstances. TravelingBazaar Boynton DiscussesLove^ Humorists inCollege LecturesToday on theQuadrangles Beauty queens make news. Lastweek these beauty queens made news. . . Doris Alt, for being crownedfreshman queen between the halves ofthe anti-climax of freshman week . . .Punky Johnson and Mike Rathje forbecoming Maids of Honor to theQueen, who seems to like Phi Psi BudArquilla . .. Barbara Phelps, for com¬ing to the game with her newly ac¬quired husband. Bob Anderson, stillthought of by his friends as “LittleAnder.”Speaking of marriages brings upASU’s Judy Forrester and Commun¬ist Cy.b’s Jim Peterson, whose be¬trothal went through on schedule lastJune. Another pair of honeymoonersare Quadrangler Ann Gregory andPhi Belt Paul Baumgartn, who areliving in an apartment across theMidway. Love also came to Baum-gartn’s fraternity brother and side-kick John Doolittle, who openedFreshman Week by pinning SigmaDorothy Teberg. This is undoubtedlythe first, and as far as we know, theonly pinhanging of the quarter.Although the Joe College spiritdidn’t exactly overrun the Social Cdance Friday night, it didn’t takelong for things to pep up when thelights went out in Hanley’s after theparty. Singing became the order ofthe evening while one candle providedall the light for a full house.Many freshmen are sure that John¬ny Bex is at least as good a salesmanas Johnny V'an de Water ever was . . .F'rank Carey, former abbot of Black-friars, and center of Maroon expo.se,is now studying to be a Jesuit priest. . . Bob Scott and Don Wilson woulddo much better on the gridiron if theywould block opponents instead of eachother . . . they knocked each otherdown at least twice . . . the “hapless”Maroons can well be proud of Par¬sons, Letts, Jensen, and a pair ofpromising quarterbacks . , . With alittle actual competition behind thema comparatively green team will un¬doubtedly look much better in thefuture. Everything from Old-Time YankeeHumorists to Romantic Love versusCompanionship will be lectured uponand discussed at the University Col¬lege lecture series starting October10. Among the lecturers will be Per¬cy H. Boynton who will discuss “Con¬temporary America in Fiction” in aseries of five lectures on Tuesdaysfrom 6:45 to 7:45 at the Art Insti¬tute. Following him at the same timeand place will be Walter Blair whowill stimulate appreciation of “Amer¬ican Humorists—Past and Present.”On Wednesdays at the Art Insti¬tute T. V. Smith, United States Con¬gressman and member of the depart-■ 'f philosophy, will give five lec-tUics on “The Legislative Way.” His successor in the same spot will beErnest W. Burgess on “Success orFailure in Marriage.” A miniaturebiological sciences survey will begiven on Wednesdays from 8 to 9 atthe Institute by members of the Bio-logical Sciences Division of the Uni¬versity. Among the lecturers will beMerle C. Coulter, Ralph M. Buchs-baum, Paul R. Cannon and Anton J.Carlson. The series includes 10 lec¬tures starting October 11 and endingDecember 13.On Fridays at the Art Institutemembers of the faculty of the Schoolof Business ^disStres'“New Techniquesin Management.” Also on Fridaysbut at the University College lecturerooms at 18 South Michigan B. FainTucker, J. D. conducts ten lecture-conferences on “Women Meet theLaw.” Other lecture-conferences willbe given by Lucy Driscoll on “ChinesePainting: The Independents” and on“Psychology and Modern Art.” Bothseries will be illustrated.Read The Daily Maroon...SEND your laundryhome by convenientRailway ExpressThrifty idea, this: It saves you bother, and cash too, foryou can express it home "collea”, you know. So phoneour agent today. He’ll call for your weekly package,speed it away by fast express train, and when itreturns, deliver your laundry to you — all with¬out extra charge. Complete and handy, eh?Only Railway F.xpress gives this service, andit's the same with your vacation baggage. Foreither or both, just pick up a phone and call70 E. Randolph Street Chicago, III.Harrison 9700IMV . . . A Century •/ Service . . . 193VllAILAVAYExprkssACiKNCY,NATION WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICETUESDAY, OCT. 3Christian Youth League, 12:45, IdaNoyes room A.Four Year College, 4:00 o’clock tea,Ida Noyes Library.Chi Rho Sigma Alumni meeting,7:45 Alumni room.Catholic Student Calvert ClubMeeting, “Books on the Surveys” byMartin D’Arcy S. J. Master of Cam¬pion Hall, Oxford, England. Old Hall,St. Thomas the Apostle Church, 55 St.Kimbark Ave. 4-5:30 P.M.Ellis Student Club for CooperativeMeals, reopens Tuesday Noon for menand women. 5600 Ellis Street.Commemorative Chapel Service byDean Gilkey, 12:00 o’clock noonRockefeller Memorial chapel. Attend¬ance requested.Public Lecture by Professor R. Kin-osita of Committee on Cancer. Pathol¬ogy 117, 8:00 P.M.WE HAVE A COMPLETESTOCK OFSheaiier Pens,Pencils, and SetsWHY NOT GET YOURS NOWAND PARTICIPATE IN THECONTEST FOR AFREE RADIOJ. H. WATSON1200 E. 55th St.HYDE PARK'S LEADING JEWELER FREE!Dancing, fun, whereveryou go. Great stuffwhen alone or withpeople. All -wave. No aeriai, sc ground, no piug-in.Ploys indoors, outdoors, anywhere. See thisgreat set at your supply store now.AT CHICAGOWHO WANTS THIS G. E. CARRYABOUT FREE?n Complete with Batteries—Retails U9.95^ I I/C M *tu<Jent who best completes this simple sentence in 20” Civ words or less: “SheofFer’s Fineline pencil is best for classroomwork because "I “pony” full of answers in the back of the book, this■ ■ • contest is a cinch—for here are samples of Fineline informationthat will help you write the kind of on entry that may win for you this great radio:“., . because Fintline'i double-length, Ihin, strong leads are permanently sharp." , becauseFineline’s same-weight hairline, balance and Hrmly-held point enable me to write accurate shorthandand make graphs, sketches, mechanical drawings, raulltessly." ... "because Fineline leads come In 4colon, and on overage year's supply costs only 15c." "... because Fineline has a double-sitedreversible propelling eraser." .. .because so Rne a line makes interlining, small noles, Rguring, ducksoira lor mel" "... because Fineline is the only REAL pencil writing improvement in S4 yean." GOAFTER ITI WIN, and have music, sports, entertainment, everywhere!MAKE 50 ENTRIES IF YOU LIKE!Contest rules; At your dealer, save the sales slip you gel when you make o Sheaffer purchase of 10cor more (SKRIP, leads, adhesives, pens, pencils, etc.). Write your entry on any piece of paper andsend it and the soles slip to Carryabout Radio Contest, W. A. Shealfer Pen Co., Fort Madison,Iowa. Send os many os you like—each has a chance to wini Judges' decision flnal. judges: An aaexpert, a lowyw. a minister. Remember—you are competing with students on your uwn campusonly. Winner will receive his radio on November 1 from dealer indicated on sales slip.SHEAFFER3.PENCILS FROM $1-PENS FROM $2.75ENSEMBLES FROM $3.95Know Shoaffor’s Foatiiortoiicli° penby tho two-tona point trado-mork'’LUiii'U Hi\\ ■*obm.0.B;Pi4.0« PARA-LASTIK, thoNEW way to pasta;dots not curl thin-nootaboots; ISoapRefugees AidRhodes ScholarsTo Come Here 1627404THE EjAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1939 \Page ThreeNicotine Addict^ (Hutchins too) Transfer-StudentC t A T c I • n Orientation Plansl^et Axe In Smoking Ban Made by CommitteeSince Rhodes scholars can no lon^:-er go to Oxford, President FrankAydelotte of Swarthmore, Americarsecretary for the Rhodes committeerecently wired the •if By ERNEST LEISER 'No longer can nervous intellectualsdrag on a Sir Walter Raleigh in class,blow smoke through academic nos¬trils, and spit out terse interjections,to ^'agging classmates. No longer canfreshdjan women purse their lips in^ion and .stick a VirginiaV’^*^ately into their paintedjL ger can Robert Maynard^ I shirt-sleeved, puffingh: grind of administrative111 hand. For the axeto the rugged in-Chicago puad-t radio!' rt've sidewalk' Universitymoking inreadin j■'linking, So now all University men andwomen will have to take up smokingKaywoodie pipes—equipped withwind protector—for they will hav# todo all their smoking out in the coldof Chicago’s windy winters. Or elsego through their University careerwith shaking hands, and foggy brains.But it is an ill wind tAat blows noone any good, for ccgtainly DoctorReed and his staff wiji greet the newruling with pleasur^f. And, possibly,a new supply of npre or less smokefree afhletes will rbsult to participatein intramural pieties. Why even ahurricane coul/be justified by a goodcasuist.BSfOLISH QUALIFYINGEXAM' The English Qualifying Exam¬ination will be given Monday, Oc¬tober 9, 9-12, and 2-6 in BartlettGymnasium. There will be no ad¬vance registration for the October9th examination. Students shouldreport at 8:45 and 1:45. Studentswho are repeating the examinationwill be sent notice of fees subse¬quent to the examination. With the social program of theTranter-student orientation getting‘under way with a Buffet supper, thecommittee is planning further trans¬fer-activities.On Wednesday October 4, a com¬mittee, combining the Ida Noyes andTransfer councils, is planning a Teafor Women which will be held from4:00 - 6:00 P.M. in Ida Noyes Hallwhile the Reynolds Club and Trans¬fer councils are sponsoring a Stag forMen to be held from 7:30 - 10:00 P.M.in the Reynolds Club Lounge.On Friday, October 6, the IdaNoyes Council and Transfer Com¬mittee will end the week’s activitieswith the Transfer-Dance and OpenHouse. The evening’s enter¬tainment is open to the campus. Plansfor roller-skating in the gym, parlorgames in the south reception room,and swimming in the Ida Noyes pool,an informal dance, with no admissioncharge, will furnish opportunities toacquaint the students with each other.All during the week there will bea series of informal luncheon gather¬ings to be held from 12:00 to 1:00P.M. daily in the Cloister Club ofIda Noyes Hall which all Transfersare invited. Humanities SurveyChanges ReadingsThe two most important respects inwhich this year’s Humanities surveycourse differs from that of last yearare the deletion of Justin Martyr’sFirst Apology, and the addition, tothe syllabus, of a translation ofSophocles’ “Oedipus the King,’’ byDavid Grene, an instructor in theGreek department. Machiavelli’s “ThePrince” has also been added to thecourse, as well as study of Thucy¬dides’ History.With the addition of Ibsen’s “En¬emy of the People,” as well as anoth¬er Greek play to the two studied lastyear, it was the opinion of severalHumanities students that emphasisin the course might be greater on lit¬erature this year, rather than on phil¬osophy as in the past.Cap and Gown OpensStaff InterviewsInterviews for editorial and busi¬ness staff positions on the 1940 Capand Gown will be held by the pub¬lisher during the first week of thequarter 2:30-4:30, Harold Wright,publisher, announced yesterday. Ap¬pointments are not necessary.Editor John Anderson will also in¬terview editorial staff applicants.TEXTBOOKSNEW and USEDd all student suppliesYEARS SERVICE TO UNIVERSITYSTUDENTSall your school books and suppliesit here by the campus from theest book stock on the south siderOODWORTH'SBOOKSTORE57 th Street Open Eveningsi IMPERFECT IN ORIGINAL2 BLCXIKS EAST OF MANDEL HALLf/Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTfBER 3, 1939ASU Must RethinkIts Stand Says BornNo More Ivory Towers;Students Must Choose,Adds Daiches. Press Books goFrom ChineseTo Sleep“The ASU, in view of the war sit¬uation which has developed since itslast convention, faces, like all otherpolitically conscious groups, the ne¬cessity of rethinking its basic premi¬ses, and affirming or modifying them,or changing them to meet new sit¬uations.” This was the opinion ofKen Born district secretary of theAmerican Student Union, speaking to50 students at the opening tea of theAS yesterday afternoon at Ida Noyes.“Complete discussion of the wholeproblem is necessary,” he continued,“before any chapters brings forth itspolicy for this year. The NationalExecutive Committee does not intendto stultify fullest exploration of thesituation in individual chapters. TheASU has, however, always taken thethe intiative in presenting the factsof changing situations to the stu¬dent and it will continue to do so.”Promote Unity of America’sBorn further outlined the objectivesof the ASU as those measures bestdesigned to keep Amercia out of war,insure full defense of Civil Liberties,Social Security, and similiar meas¬ures, give all aid to China, includingan embargo on Japan, and promoteunity within the United States andamong the Americas.“The days of the ‘ivory tower’ forstudents are over,” said David Dai¬ches, instructor in the English de¬partment, who also spoke at the tea.His subject was “The Role of theASU in the University.”Although he made clear that • hefelt University courses to be theframework about which all other stu¬dent life must be built, Daiches heldthat the ASU and similiar organiza¬tions added a richness to student lifeimpossible to find in other ways.Students Form OpinionsHe added further that, of allgroups, students were in the mostfavorable position to form opinionson problems of their day, by virtueof their youth and access to informa¬tion, and had the best right to do so,since the outcome of those problemsaffected them most vitally.“Knowing how to think is notenough,” he concluded, “for conclu¬sions derived from incorrect premises,no matter how logically reached, willalso be incorrect. The moral of allthis is simply ‘Join the ASU!’ ”CommunistsTell HowThey FeelTaking the witness stand to explainthe attitude of the Communists to¬ward the present War in Europe,University students in the CommunistC’lUb have planned a meeting for to¬morrow night at 7:30 in Law Northto tell the University world theirviews 1/1 the present crisis—theiropinions cf the action of Russia inentering inti Poland, and their ideasas to the r<le the United Statesshould play in ‘he present crisis.Requesting em'jryo politicians of allpolitical faiths to attend their meet¬ings as well as mgnbers of the Club,the Communists have tentativelyslated Frank Meyer, director of theChicago Worker’s Sciool and memberof the Illinois Distrid; Committee ofthe Communist Party a* the speaker.Jim Peterson, presidem of the Com¬munist Club, assured all those whoplan to attend the meeting thatthere will be a question peric^ duringwhich violent opponents will be givena chance to repudiate Marxist log’c.Planning to open a counter-offen¬sive against the redoubled attacks onthe Communists as a result of thelatest Russo-German discussions, theCommunist Club is planning to havea large meeting in Mandel Hall, atwhich the problem of ^ivil libertiesin time of war will be> analyzed, andthe student attitude toward war willbe surveyed by Louis Budenz, editorof the Midwest Daily Record. Datefor the meeting has been tentativelyset at October 10. “Life” magazine. Kleitman is the manwho with an assistant spent thirty-two days in a sound-proof, light-proof,temperature-proof and visitor-proofchamber in Mammoth Cave wherethey were able to ignore the usualorder of events which influence sleepand establish a 28-hour day. This ex¬periment is described in the bookA total of 12 books written or col- j along with many others performed Loop College HasCourse in RadioAnniversaryMachineryStarts TurningThe University will be 50 years oldin 1941. The Alumni Office on Sep¬tember 9 sent letters to Universitygraduates of yesteryear remindingthem of this fact. Yesterday morningVice-President Emeritus FredericWoodward moved with assistant How¬ard Hudson into a shiny clean officein Goodspeed Hall, and the gears ofthe University’s Fiftieth AnniversaryCelebration were thrown Into high.While the neat office of Mr. Wood¬ward is being settled, and whileHoward Hudson is cleaning out hisdesk drawers for action, in another,dingier office in Cobb, planted nextto the Alumni Office, the dirty workof the celebration is further advanced.Plans for systematizing the collectionof donations from prosperous alumnibetween now and 1941 are going onfaster than the necessarily nebulousschemes for a scholastic celebration.Although cloaked in secrecy untilthey can be officially announced to thealumni in a pamphlet, already printedand to be distributed October 13, theplans of the money-raising organi¬zation include the formation of a“new and important” alumni group,whose function will be to organizealumni support to make the celebra¬tion a financial, as well as an intel¬lectual success.On the academic and social side ofthe celebration of the golden anniver¬sary of the University’s birth. Wood¬ward’s plans are tentaive, but theyare also very ambitious.They include, besides the schedul¬ing of various meetings of learned so¬cieties on the Chicago campus, dur¬ing the 1940-1941 academic year, afour day climax in which honorary de¬grees will be awarded, speeches willbe made, a reunion will be held, andthe University of the present will beshown to the students of the past andto the rest of the country.Work of the Celebration office alsoincludes finding a theme for the An¬niversary. The theme will probably benot what the University has achievedin the 50 years of its existence, butwhat the University’s scholars havenot done—^what scientific and scho¬lastic achievements lie ahead—andwhich, incidentally can be made pos¬sible by the endowment of the 15 mil¬lion dollars which the Universityhopes to raise by 1941.Though the real pressure of thecampaign will not be turned on until jnext year, there will be two offices 'working full-time on the celebration 'during the entire year, and plans will'be released as rapidly as the publicitymen working on it think up ideas tomatch the Harvard Tercentenary withthe University of Chicago’s Quin- loborated on by members of the fac- j during the sixteen years of researchquaqenary.Linn^s Courses GoUntaught in AutumnNo arrangement has been made forthe courses which the late JamesWeber Linn planned to give, accord¬ing to an announcement by RolandCrane, chairman of the English de¬partment.Linn was scheduled to teach onlyone course in the Autumn quarter, aseries on “Browning and Tennyson,”English 260.Further announcement will be madelater concerning the courses Linn wasto give Winter quarter in advancedcomposition, English 281, and in theEnglish novel. u'lty were published by the Universityof Chicago Press this .summer. iThese faculty accomplishments covera field of scientific and academic sub¬jects rarging from the physiology ofsleep to the inductive method oflearning CKnese. Among the mostoutstanding work of the summer,however, was ^he publication of PartVII of the monunental “Dictionary ofAmerican Englidj on Historical Prin¬ciples” edited bj Sir William AGraigie, Professor Emeritus of Eng¬lish, in collaboration with James R.Hulbert of the faculty. This work,acclaimed the foremost project ofAmerican scholarship now in prog¬ress, will comprise twenty to tventyfive parts in all, to be pubishel atintervals until completed. Volume Iof the Dictionary, comprising the firsfive parts have recently been beauti¬fully bound and presented to the Pres¬ident of the United States and to theKing and Queen of England.The Unified SciencesAnother monumental work, grad¬ually being accomplished by the Press,is the “International Encyclopedia ofUnified Science,” on extensive seriesof monographs. The initial two-vol¬ume unit, now in the process of pub¬lication is called “Foundations of theUnity of Science.” The seventh mono¬graph of this unit was finished July18th, with the next expected in Sep¬tember. The undertaking of this ex¬tensive project is inspired as a wayto meet a growing interest through¬out the world in considering .scienceas a whole—the logic, the history andthe sociology of science—in terms thatare universally understandable.The book “Sleep and Wakefulness”by Nathaniel Kleitman, A.ssociateProfessor of Physiology, which wasput out in July, has already gainedwide attention, including a spread in Dr. Kleitman has spent trying to discover just why and how people sleepMedieval LibraryAlso published in July was -»ily illustrated book by Fmon, titled “Demonstrati'ratories of Physics at t’of Chicago,” and “Med-by James Westfall ’)fessor of EuropeanUniversity, which i'tory of manuscripublished by the ,In July cam*Waples, Prof* ,Method, called .roblems,” a:er-Unemplo;(ConU A course in “Writing for Radio,”outlining problems and prerequisitesof successful commercial radio writ¬ing, will be offered in an eveningcourse which started yesterday utUniversity College downtown of theUniversity.The course will be conducted by— .Kor of the edito-Daily IlliiiiReports GorillaCrushing PetuniasEdgar Allen Joe addicts at the Uni¬versity of Illinois have been treatedto a shot of jitters by reports of theDaily Illini, student newspaper, thatan escaped gorilla and a half wittedex-member of the bearded Hou.se ofDavid have been operating in a 10mile radius around the Urbana-Cham-paign campus. So far there have beenno murdered bodies found with si¬mian-tracks and whisker hair near¬by—only trace of the wild pair be¬ing hundreds of petunias apparentlycrushed by some size ten ape-feet.Club RushingDuring club rushing no clubrushees may double date with clubwomen or take part in off-campusor dormitory parties at which clubwomen are present. However,friendly association at Universitygames, campus and fraternity ac¬tivities and parties, in classes, andin the Coffee Shop has been legal¬ized.CHRYSLERPLYMOUTHEarl A. MartinMotors5200 Lake Park Av.Dorchester 0715We ServiceDodge Desoto PlymouthChryslerGood GuaranteedUsed CarsA nnouncing—Larger QuartersFORTHE RECORD SHOPAT1746 E. 55th StreetTJltTSE SouvenirVITH EACH RECORD PURCHASE -- FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY1 7\ i-’V Oc'V 1 IMPERFEClTHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1939 Page FiveClassifiedlarge front, double twin beda, runnincwater. $14.00 per mo. each. Alao 1 doubleat $12.00 per month. Baaement, doubleat $.15.00. Call Ste. 7615. List of University HonorScholarships Released by Dean•39 1 nor Schumm, Leopold J. Shapiro,Eleanor Schliffer, Dorothy Shawan,James Albert Schoenberger, WalterSelove, Leo Seren, Isobel Sklow,Frederick Smith, Harry Smith, JohnFrederick Speck, William BurtonSowash, Shirley Star.Andrew F. Steney, Robert Stokely,Alice Louise Terwilliger, Elmer Beu-mont Tolstead, Laura Tolstead, NealVander Laan, James Earl Walsh,Charles William Wagener, AnnaElizabeth Wehman, Bernard D.Weissbourd, Jack Welchons, Sol Wex-ler, Marie Williams, Kenneth Wilz-bach, Lester Winsberg, Samuel Wol-fenstein, Phyllis Genevieve Wright,Evon Zartman Vogt. European War FillsRanks of InL HouseForeign ResidentsPress Books-ICompany guaru«i»M cuitompr ■ satis¬faction in tho HI ol h clothos. Excol-Isnt commission one bonus arrangs-mont. Local branch ctxt in big citiss.Writ* fully. Ths A. Wash Company,1921 Elm StrosI, Clndnati. Ohio.4 month intensv^e courseFO« COUEOe STUDENTS nD GRADUATESA thiirorngh. in/rniiM, $t0l^pkic count—%tarttnK January 1. April ftutv 1, October 1.IntelfitiHM Booklet sent frmMuiut obligation— write or phone. No employed.mBUSINESS C^LEGEPAUL MOSER, J.G^sHitmlar Courses for Beginn^ip, n to HighSchool Graduates only, stmfLit Mondayof each month. Adraneed surw* startany Monday. Day and Ei>entngCourses open to A16 S. Michigan Avu.tChicagaj^c^olpb 43474THE NEW 1LEX THEATfeFR.\TURING “PUSH BA(»1162 E. 63rd St ...WED. . THURiJOHN HOWARDIn"GRAND lURY SEC—PLUS—LINDA HAYESIn''CONSPIRACY' TS" Her1, A’!^ orthelei uiL^, Alexande.-George, Herbert Goldstone, Irvi'ilGordon, Mary Elizabeth Grenander,Norman W. Greenman, FrancesGreenfield, Raymond Goodman, Elean-nor Goodrich Hammer, Frank JosephHarrison, Eleanor Anne Hartzler,Cynthia Hawkes, Robert WeltonHemenway.Robert George Higgins, Walter JHippie, Jr., Joshua Zalman Holland,John Howenstein, Helen Diane Iseh-berg, Joshua Jacobs, Paul BartdnJohnson, W'illiam Harper Johnstoh,Norman Maurice Kaplan, Luana Myr¬tle Kekkonen, Claire Kercher, LorenzKoerber, Louise Landman,* John Al--bert Lacey, Lucille Lapidus, RalphEugene Lapp, Ernest Stern Leiser,Morton Ijeonard, Saul Levin, JosephLevinger, Joan Longini, Julian Lor¬enz, Paul Francis Lorenz, Bartholo-jmew Maina, Roland Neely McKean, (Continued from page four)Professor R. Clyde White of theschool of Social Service Administra¬tion.“A Hellenistic Greek Reader,” byErnest C. Colwell, Dean of the Divin¬ity School, and Julius R. Mantey waspublished in August. In Septembercame “.Selections from the Lun Yu,”a collection of Chinese readings ar¬ranged with notes, edited by H. G.Creel, Assistant Professor of ChineseLiterature and Institutions, to be usedin connection with classes in Chinesereading. Also published in Septemberwas a Dook, edited by John ThomasMcNeill, Matthew Spinka, and HaroldR. Willoughby, called “EnvironmentalFactors in Christian History.” Dr.McNeill is a Professor of the Historyof European Christianity in the Uni¬versity. This testimonial volume wascompiled in honor of Shirley JacksonCase, former Dean of the Divinity.School. Although no official records areavailable, the figures at hand seem toindicate that International House’sforeign population has greatly in¬creased this quarter.Foreign students evidently preferInt House to the district of the Sec¬ond World War. The war has increasedthe number of refugees from variouscountries, with German refugees at anew high.This indication is directly contraryto campus rumor which had Interna¬tional House’s foreign group at verylow ebb. STUDENTS!!J. A. LaveryMotor CompanyOFFERS YOUFORDMERCURYLINCOLN-ZEPHYRSALES AND SERVICEAlsoALL MAKES OFGUARANTEEDUSED CARS6127 di 6529 CottageGrove Ave.MIDwoy 5300Pay By CheckA CHECKING ACCOUNT insures youagainst loss or theft. You save tiine.Your cancelled checks are your receipts.The safest most convenient way is to pay by check.UNIVERSITY STATE BANKMember Federal Deposit Insurance CorporationWHO?GOES SUN VALLEYJohn Francis McNellis, Leo MelcherMiner, Robert Scott Miner, HymanPhilip Minsky, Jane Morris, ErcoleMotta, V. Alexander Nedzel, MelvinNewman, Aaron Norvick, Stuart IrvinOost, Daniel Orloff, Walter Porges,David Mitchell Pletcher. ' i s li.n»- v ■ • iREADER'S.. .MeansGood Food—Priced RightQuality Drugs• Fine CosmeticsYou'll like the college atmosphere and our friendly service.JACK READER61st and ELLIS AVENUE OPPOSITE BURTON COURT■ Samuel QuitmanI Samuel Quitman, Charles Raeth,Baxter Key Richardson, Joseph Al¬fred Rider, George Greer Rinder, Her¬bert Ruben, David Larry Rubinfine,Harry Leonard Ruehr, Walter Rock¬ier, Joseph Rosenstein, Calvin Parker1 Sawyer, Harry Schaffer, Esther Elea- Even a Railroad Spike cant'take itlike this Jewel of a Parker Pen nVISIT THE iNSATIONAL, NEWraNTWR ROOMAlso T4 famousIN HOTELr IN ORIGINAL SAYS THE RAILROAD SPIKEtN ONB 0PTH6S TORTURB TESTSiV\/AS CRIPPLEDBOR LIES BYFERRIC CHLORIDE(adO) SOLUTION.'' %' mark on dieARROW clipmeansGuaranteedfor Life.SAYS THE PARKER VACUMATIC-"/ \NAS FILLEDWITH THE SAME ACID•^WROTE ALL DAY•A SIMILE LtNE^AND l*M JUST ASGOOD AS ever/'*GUARANTEED for LIFE ^OF THE ilUECE INN;★Tho Groatest Trumi^ Since Bix BeiderbeckeHARRtJAMIS (against everything exceptWe’re using more than 250 collegepapers to tell students of the 5 devas¬tating and devitalizing feats recentlyperformed by the Parker Vacumatic toprove it will last for life. No other penwe know has ever faced such torture.Yet the Parker Vacumatic did it—cando it any time—and come forth in per¬fect working order. loss or intentional damage)1st—Filled with Acid (strong ferricchloride solution which ate away a rail¬road spike) insteadof with ink, this in¬credible pen wrote a5-mile line with theacid on a revolvingpaper-covered drumand finished in per¬fect working order.and his rchestra Pencils toMatch:SjSOjoSSOO larker Pens:All UK GoU Pomtt—$$00 TO SI2^BOOUi VOOfillS . Pens marked with the Blue Diamond are guaranteed for the life of the owner against^ everything except loss or intentional damage, subject only to a charge of 35c forpostage, insurance and handling, providea complete pen is returned for service. 2nd—“Bomb” Test: Parker’s Dia*phragm filler encased in an oxygen bombfor weeks, where a single dayequals 6 months’ normal age—to proveits long life.3rd—“Electrocution”: Every ParkerDiaphragm proved 100% leak-proof byexposing it to 5,000 volts of electricitywhich flashes a red light if there’s evena pinhole leak.4th—“Drip Test”: Pens filled andhung points down for hours in frigidtemperature, then in torrid temperature.5th—Dropped 3,000 ft from an air¬plane to prove the lovely laminated pearlbarrel and cap are Non-Breakable.You never saw such a pen. You neverowned one. A sacless pen that holds farmore ink than ordinary rubber sac pens—shows the ink level at all times, hencewon’t run dry without warning, in classesor exams. So go and see it now and getit for college and for life.The Parker Pen Co., Janesville, Wis.WINGING Ol the ivoriesNo Cover CH.g at any limaNo Minimum i tpt $at. nights. Get your PARKER pen from this complete stock $2.75, $3.50,$5.00, $7.50, 8.75 and $10.00WOODWORTH'S Book Store1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsPhone DORchester 4800meat sflaai isesNPage Six THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1939THE DAILY MAROON SPORTSBeloit UpsetsMaroon Eleven 6-0By LES DEAN... So we lost the first Rame—SOWHAT, Beloit turned out with apretty fine outfit, and they were onegame farther along in their schedule.It wasn’t so long ago that Dart¬mouth, a team which must always berated an Ivy League title contender,dropped their first game to a no-ac¬count opponent and went on to winall their remaining games. Of course,with teams like Ohio State and Mich¬igan on the schedule, Chicago canhardly hope to pull one like that, butWabash and Oberlin are certainly notout of our class, and victory over Vir¬ginia, Illinois, and Harvard is notcompletely out of the question.Coach Shaughnessy w'as very wellpleased with the team’s showing intheir first encounter of the campaign.“There was nothing wrong in Satur¬day’s game that we can’t remedy withhard work,” he predicted yesterday.“If we had been two weeks fartheralong, we could have taken Beloitquite easily,” he went on.Blocking and tackling proved to beour two greatest weaknesses; so anhour’s drill on these two departmentsof the game is on the docket for ev¬ery practice session this week.Shaughnessy stated that contact workis 90 percent “guts” and 10 percenttechnique, but he felt that if the teamhad more practice, they would gainconfidence and would consequentlyshow more “guts”. ParsonSy Letts Star inLast-Minute Chicago At¬tack. Name IntramuralSports ManagersFar from being discouraged, theteam seemed aroused by Saturday’sdefeat, and settled right down to hardwork yesterday in preparation forthis week’s game with Wabash.The only casualty of the Beloitgame was Bob Wasem, who hurt hisside more or less seriously in the firsthalf. He kept on playing, but had tobe removed later on because his ef¬ficiency was somew’hat impaired. Heexpects to be back in shape by theend of the week, however; so, bar¬ring further injuries, the Maroonswill enter the Wabash game in firstclass shape. A last-minute aerial attack featur¬ing the team of Letts to Parsons car¬ried the Maroon eleven to Beloit’sgoal line Saturday, only to have Chi¬cago’s single touchdown threat re¬pulsed in the last play of the game.With Eddie May, Beloit’s fleet-footedcolored back, accounting for most oftheir gains and their lone touchdownBeloit triumphed over Chicago 6-0.Despite the defeat, however, CoachShaughnessy was pleased with theteam’s showing. Although it was evi¬dent that additional practice is need¬ed in both blocking and tackling, sev¬eral players stood out in the season’sfirst game.Letts PassesSeen in his first starting assign¬ment, Lou Letts handled himself ad¬mirably as he rifled bullet-like passesto his receivers and did the kickingfor the team. Russ Parsons, inactivelast year because of an injury, ap-peai’ed to be a valuable addition tothe squad as he speared passes fromthe air after Wasem had left thegame in the waning minutes of thelast quarter. Howard’s plunging anddefensive work was commendablewhile Dave Wiedemann, playing oneof his best games, and Kenneth Jen¬sen sophomore guard, stari’od in theline.Beloit AttacksThe game itself, except for the lasttwo minutes, was more or less an un¬inspired one with Beloit constantlydriving into Chicago territory only tohave Chicago receive the ball ondowns and have Letts kick out of dan¬ger. The Chicago line, how'ever, heldin a desperate goal line stand whenBeloit w’as bidding for a second touch¬down, and will probably show im¬provement in the games to come asCoach Shaughnessy continues to con¬centrate on that part of the game.While the Maroon attack was supe¬rior thi’ough the air it could not com¬pete against a surprisingly good of¬fensive furnished by Beloit. Announcement of managers for theFall quarter sports program was an¬nounced yesterday by the IntramuralOffice. The managers, all of whom arejuniors will organize their tourna¬ments and active participation by stu¬dents will begin within ten days.Robert Mathews DKE, will manage jtouchball; George Kinder, DU, swim¬ming; Will Pauling, Kappa Sigma,table tennis; Art Wolf, Phi SigmaDelta, billiards; Walter Kurk, KappaSigma, horseshoes; Lawrence Trae-ger, DKE, dormitory table tennis.The first games in touchball arescheduled to begin a week from to¬morrow. Any group of seven men,fraternity men or independents, are 1,eligible to form a team and compete ; /in the tournament. i \■v*l le)i ikIMurphys Return to CampusAfter Eastern Tennis TourThe tennis twins are again on cam¬pus—this time in an official capacity.The Murphy brothers have returnedas assistant instructors m physicaleducation, assisting Coach Wally He¬bert during the tennis season andcoaching U-High’s lightweight bas¬ketball team during the wintermonths.Having completed a very successfultour on the grass and clay courts inthe East they intend to settle downand study for their master’s degree inphysical education at George WilliamsCollege.Leaving the Qaudrangles soon aftergraduation both Bill and Chet com¬peted in the National Intercollegiatesat Philadelphia. Chet gained the finalbracket of the singles before suc¬cumbing while both Chet and Bill lostto ImlofF and Peacock in the doubles’finals, only to defeat them threeweeks later in another match.Bill WinsBill was also successful in climbingto the finals of the Western ClayCourt Championships, this time win¬ning the crown while the brother actlost to Bickel and Shostrom, formerMaroon tennis stars, in the doubles.Adrien Quist and Jack Crawford,members of the Australian squad over¬came Bill and Chet in the LongwoodBowl tourney but Bill managed to an¬nex the mixed doubles trophy, havingMary Arnold of California as hispartner. Probably the best tennis they play¬ed came in the Southampton Long Is¬land tourney where Bickel and Wach-man fell before their net play andbothered Riggs and Cooke for fivesets before the Cup men hit theirstride. It was .5-4, 6-5, and 8-6 in thethird set before Chet Murphy lost toBobby Riggs at Rye, New York, withthe Chicagoan taking the first frame,dropping the second and deucing thethird before giving up.Ida Noyes OffersReereatioii ProgramAlthough Ida Noyes Hall might bemistaken for a women’s dormitory bysome unwary newcomers, it is in real¬ity the center of recreation for bothmen and women on campus. Whilethe lunch hour has proven to be avery popular time for mixed groupsto take advantage of .the many ac¬tivities offered including badminton,roller skating, bowling, shuffle board,deck tennis and swimming, they areavailable all day from noon until tenat night.Facilities are available to all uponpresentation of an identification card,available at the front office of IdaNoyes, This insures the safeguardof Hall property from outsiders.If You Want to Buy Or Sell a Used CarCallTAUBER MOTOR CO.REGENT 0616 7601 STONY ISLAND AVE.IF YOU CAN'T COME IN, WE'LL COME OUT BOOKSNEW and USEDTEXTSFOR ALL COURSKBuy a durable note¬book that will be apermanent posses¬sion and will preserveyour class notes in ahandy and neat form.STATIONERYOF ALL KINDS Ac to see our stockoleather brief casesand without zip-|r8. Also, you will^ interested in ourpper brief case andbtebook combina-bns.FOUNTAINPENSStudent Book ExchjngeRental Library S?tsWe SeU NEW and USED TYPEWRITERSWe rent, repair, rebuild and bu;typewritersGifts — JewelryU. of C. StatioieryEVERYTHING IN BOOKS AND (AGAZINESU. of C. BOOKSTOREIMIOrDCmT IN