qPbe Batlp inamonVol. 40, No. 15 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1939 Price Three CentsFreshmen Candidates RegisterFor Election to New CouncilDistribute PetitionsNext Monday; Require25 Signatures.Freshman election will begin Mon¬day with the registration of office¬seeking first year students in the firstfloor corridor of Cobb Hall. The deskwill be open between 9 and 3 on Mon¬day for official registration of thosestudents desiring to take out petitionsin their own behalf or in the inter¬ests of fellow students. Petitions willbe distributed to eligible persons onTuesday afternoon between 2 and 4o’clock at the same location.Each student desiring to become acandidate for one of the nine spotson the proposed council must first se¬cure the signatures of twenty-fivefreshman students on his petition. Nofreshman may sign the petitions ofmore than nine office seekers. Allcompleted petition blanks must behanded in to Miss Smalley in theDean’s office by Thursday afternoonat 4. The names of the successful pe¬titioners will be published in the Ma¬roon and on the Freshman bulletinboard on Friday morning.Meeting in MandelAn open meeting in Mandel Hallthe same afternoon will serve to in¬troduce the successful candidates tothe class at large. At this meetingthe candidates will present short sum¬maries of the respective platforms onwhich they will base their hopes forelection.The following Tuesday Freshmenwill vote for nine persons to comprisethe Council which in turn will event¬ually select executive officers fromwithin its own ranks. The actual elec¬tion will take place on October 31 be¬tween the hours of 8 and 4 at a ta¬ble to be set up in Cobb Corridor.The election will be conducted byupperclassmen and women of variouscampus organizations who will of¬ficially hand over the reins of thefirst year class to the council that isannounced as elected, the followingday.Adler Speaks onFaith and ReasonFor Calvert ClnhAs a part of the University CalvertClub’s regular fall lecture program,Mortimer J. Adler, Professor of Phil¬osophy of Law, will talk on “Faithand Reason’’ in Ida Noyes library,Wednesday, October 25.For the coming year, the CalvertClub has chosen Alice Carlson, presi¬dent; La Verne Landon, vice-presi¬dent; Bob Hughes, treasurer; MaizeDunne, secretary; and Bill Kozump-lick, social chairman. The club ismaking plans for its annual fall out¬ing to be held this year on November4.Mr. Adler, noted Thomist, hasspoken for the club on several occa¬sions, and has enjoyed wide attend¬ance at his lectures. He is recog¬nized in this part of the country forhis views as presented in his jointcourse with Dr. Hutchins.Invite Students toHear NBC SymphonyUniversity students are invited byMiss Judith Waller, educational di¬rector of NBC, to hear the NBC Sym¬phony Orchestra, directed by ArturoToscanini at the National Broadcast¬ing Company’s studios in the Mer¬chandise Mart each Saturday night.Temporarily, there is no Chicago sta¬tion available as an outlet for theprogram. The studio, however, willaccommodate an audience of 500. Theprogram is played from 9 to 10:30o’clock Saturday night. No ticketsare necessary, but students attendingare requested to be in the studio by8:50 o’clock. Peace CommitteeCarries Out PeaceCongress AgendaWith a graduate student at itshead, a Peace Committee of Univer¬sity students was organized lastnight to prepare plans and carry outthe agenda of a Peace Congress,which an organizing group had de¬cided was necessary to rally studentpublic opinion against American par¬ticipation in a war.The head of the Committee wasBob Armstrong, an A.B. from MiamiUniversity. The agenda which causedAlice Meyer, editorial writer on theDaily Maroon, and Bud Briggs, chair¬man of Chapel Union, to decline in¬vitations to serve on the Committeeincluded 1) the formation of a PeaceCongress, with “Keep America Outof War’’ as its keynote, 2) two daysof sessions, with a general meeting,seminars, and a plenary sessions toformulate the resolutions passed bythe Congress, and 3) the election ofa chairman and a six-man committeeto carry on the work of organizingthe Congress.By HERBERT GROSSBERGThe Renaissance Society opens itsseason in Goodspeed Hall with an at¬tractive exhibit of modern sculpture,and drawings by sculptors. The piecesare all loaned by Chicagoans, and arenot large, but they are intensely rep¬resentative of the great original cre¬ators of the contemporary school.They exhibit a microcosm of feelingin the modern world.These men represent the mass offeeling stored up against the superfi¬cial and artificial expressions whichhave been perpetrated in the name ofsculture in the past three hundredyears. The romantic impressionism ofRodin, the innocuous exhibition of theearlier realists, the self-delusions ofthe neoclassicists, and inanities ofthe over-ripe baroque, —all wereready to be spewed out before thefirst war for peace, earlier in this cen¬tury. Maillol, a Frenchman, represent¬ed her by two very small but charm¬ing female nude studies (the onlypieces loaned by the Art Institute)was one of the first to hark back toa period where the glyptic quality ofthe medium was fully realized, wherethe artist acknowledged his debt tohis material, and hewed with chiseland hammer to show himself as earth-bound with the solid rock. (Even inthese small bronzes he exhibits afeeling of mass and solidity.) He wasspiritually bound to the forms of pre¬classic Greece.Constantine Brancusi, a Rumanianworking in Paris, who has a smallmarble torso here, was. one of thoseaffected by the simple urgency of thewest African sculptures which hadbeen attractive in their appeal tomodern artists since their first displayin Paris at the turn of the century.His work is always to a high degreeabstract but his abstraction, as inmany of the other sculptors, is alway.sbound to the natural form. Yet itseems an attempt to unite himself(and the spectator) with a myste¬rious and unknowable force beyondnature.Archipenko, Ukranian born Amer¬ican citizen, who has been a residentof Chicago for several years, is rep-La Follette TalksAt Int-House SupperPhillip La Follette, ex-eovernor ofWisconsin, will talk on “Freedom vsSecurity’’ at the first InternationalHouse Sunday supper. Mr. La Fol¬lette is the first of a series of Sun¬day night lecturers slated to talk onthe general topic of “Civilization inCrisis”. After the program there willbe an Alumni business meeting atwhich officers will be elected. Wolves on DoleAt Committee’sThird C-DanceBolstered by such adornments assubsidized wolfing. Settlement Boardsponsorship, and as fioor show, thethird of the “C” book dances carriesthe budding social season along to¬night in Ida Noyes at 9.The wolfing angle, trumped up byCommittee chairman Bob Reynolds asI a shot in the arm for those who shunthe responsibilities of dating, will berun off taxi dance style. Each malewill be given a certain number oftickets at the door. One of these hewill give to each woman he cuts inon.During an intermission the ducatswill be counted. The club corallingthe largest total will be duly awardedand publicized. The individual highticket girl will likewise receive a re¬ward. These prizes will be announcedat the dance.Settlement Gets ProfitsThe Student Settlement Board, forits sponsorship, will receive the prof¬its. These will be plowed back into ascholarship fund for the Settlementchildren. There originally had beenplans to import youthful performersfrom the Settlement who would bechosen in a form of elimination con¬test. This idea was foregone because,(Continued on page five)resented by one of his semi-abstractrealizations of the female form.There are two fine line drawings byGaston Faschaise, the French-Amer-ican, who expresses his feeling forform by exaggerating the massiveparts of the female body. In his sculp-tual pieces he creates a sensationalquality by mounting such a figure ongazelle-like legs. Carl Milles, creatorof the Diana Court fountain, has oneof his romantic pieces after the Greekarchaic mood.The two men who really epitomizethe new renaisance in sculpture, whostrive for the glyptic and mysteriousquality of early Greek, Egyptian, andMayan stone carvers and who felt theurgency of the primitive African ex¬pressions are: the French Gaudier-Brzeska, who worked in England, andHenry Moore, an Englishman. The(Continued on page five)Bosley SpeaksOn ^FilialFreedom’ SundayDr. Harold Bosley, one of the fore¬most preachers in America, will de¬liver an address entitled ‘The FinalFreedom” at the regular Sunday serv¬ice in the University Chapel at 11.At 7:30 on the same day the preacherwill speak before Chapel Union mem¬bers and anyone who may be inter¬ested at Dean Gilkey’s home, 5802Woodlawn Ave., on a topic called “Re¬ligion and Social Attitudes.” Dr.Bosley is pastor of the Mount Ver¬non Place Methodist Episcopal Churchof Baltimore, Maryland.At 3:30 today the Race RelationsCommittee of the Chapel Union willmeet in the WAA room of Ida Noyesand at 6 the Interchurch Council willpresent a fellowship dinner for a 35-cent admission in Ida Noyes sun-par¬lor. There will be a meeting at 4:30Monday in the Chapel office of thoseinterested in working on Chapel Out¬look, official publication of the Chap¬el Union. Union members are mak¬ing plans for a week-end outing forSaturday and Sunday, October 28-29.Slash DA PricesWilliam Randall, director of theDramatic Association, announcedtoday that prices for the fall pro¬duction, Night Must Fall, havebeen cut to less than half. Theprice for all seats is forty centsand there are no reserved seats.There are still a few season spon¬sor books available.(Continued on page six)Renaissance ExhibitsModern Sculptures Homecoming BeautyContest By Iron MaskSocial ScientistHelps GovernmentCurb Forest FiresWeary with years of fighting firescaused by careless human-beings, theUnited States Forest Service has de¬cided that the best bet is to fight thehumans instead. Instead of CCC boysfor this job, the Service has turnedto the genius of the social scientist.A year ago the Department of Ag¬riculture asked the American Asso¬ciation for the Advancement of Sci¬ence to appoint an advisory commit¬tee of social scientists to aid in copingwith the human side of fire preven¬tion. Subsequently the Advisory Coun¬cil of Human Relations was formed.This group composed of eight uni¬versity professors in the fields of so¬ciology, psychology and anthropologywas given the job of advising thegovernment on research.According to Wilton M. Krogman,professor of Anthropology and mem¬ber of the Council, the main problemat present is that of making psy¬chological tests upon which to basefuture propaganda. Most of thiswork is being carried out by Dr. H.B. English of the University of Ohioand Chairman of the Council. Thistask is complicated by the fact thatdifferent forest regions are often en¬dangered by entirely different typesof people. For example, nationalparks frequented by tourists, backwoods areas, and Indian reservationsall present different human situations.C. E. Lively, rural sociologist fromthe University of Missouri has beenconducting research on this particularaspect of the problem, with 26 fieldstudies planned for next summer.Ninety per cent of the destructioncaused by forest fires is the result ofhuman carelessness, says Dr. Krog¬man. Just how much science can re-(Continued on page five)Delegates ForAlumni MeetWith HutchinsThe representatives of 45,000 Uni¬versity Alumni are meeting and eat¬ing tonight with the President of theUniversity and his trustees.They meet to launch a nationalAlumni Foundation — a Foundationwhose purpose will be, in connectionwith the Fiftieth Anniversary celebra¬tion, to help the University out ofthe sloughs of the financial depres¬sion.Around 125 of the alumni will bethere. Fifty of them will come fromall over the country. They will come,will be hosted by Harold HigginsSwift, chairman of the Board ofTrustees, will be toasted by John Nu-veen. University Trustee and chair¬man of the executive committee of theembryo Foundation, and will be talkedto by Hutchins.They will have the purpose of thenew Foundation explained to them.They will be told of the part that theUniversity wants its alumni to playin the Fiftieth Anniversary celebra¬tion, a part which includes a “tangi¬ble expression of their loyalty anddevotion to the University.”They will meet knowing that theUniversity in 1941 will need moremoney than there is in sight. Andthey will be told how they can helpout in this situation.For Feature Writers Eight Queens to Be Nom¬inated for Campus Wide“Election.”Pulchritude, for the lack of some¬thing more enticing, will dominatethe Homecoming week-end of Novem¬ber 10. Iron Mask, charged with theconduction of the affair, has decidedto hold a campus wide election inwhich a beauty queen will be chosento preside with her court over the“C” book dance that Friday night andthe game with Ohio State the follow¬ing day.President John Stevens outlined theprocedure to be followed last nightafter the second meeting of the jun¬ior BMOC honorary organization. Hesaid his organization would arbitra¬rily pick two beauties from each ofthe four classes. From these eightthe final choice will be made by theballoteers.Voters Get VoiceHolding an election in this mannerdeparts from the usual method pur¬sued. The queen has in the past beenchosen by Iron Mask without benefitof an election. Jean Peterson, whosecareer as freshman beauty queen lastyear launched her on a parade of re¬gal officiating that might be calledthe parallel to local Brenda Frazier,held the scepter in conjunction withthe two Murphy brothers, Chet andBill, the Homecoming kings.The eight candidates will be chosenon two-fold basis, says Stevens. Theywill need to have “not only beautybut personality, too. The kind of girlsyou see in these Hollywood concep¬tions of collegiate life.”Queens Next ThursdayNames of the eight potentialQueens will be announced next Thurs¬day. The week immediately prior tothe dance will be given over to elec¬tion. Unrevealed as yet but definitelyin formation are comprehensive plansto insure the honesty of the election.With nothing more concrete thanthe fact they have planned a program,the dance committee has announcedthey will attempt to deviate from theusual pep rallies such a dance bringson.Tariff for the affair will run “C”book bearing males $.40 for the littlewomen. Without the books costs willbe $1.10 per couple. Stags, the ladswho are wont to drink their fill ateventide, will be admitted for $.75.Still NeedSpecial Session,Says Douglas“We still need a special session ofthe state legislature...” in spite ofthe large municipal relief appropria¬tion, Paul H. Douglas announced yes¬terday.The city has decided to take $1,033,-400 from its aggregate of funds andlend it to the relief administration.This sum “. . . is to be divided intothree parts of $344,450 each for themonths of November, December, andJanuary, or until the council votes the1940 poor relief tax levy and ordersthe comptroller to borrow against thenew taxes.”This loan raises the relief allow¬ance per family from 65% to 83% ofthe prescribed allowance. It gives“... temporary satisfaction but in noway solves the permanent problem..”Douglas said. He went on to explainthat “...some of us have been push¬ing for ten weeks for action on therelief situation.” Douglas has beenspeaking an average of twice a dayin his fight for a special session todeal with the relief problem.Students interested in writing fea¬tures for Pulse Magazine are invitedto meet with Feature Editor, BobDavis any time between 1:30 and 2:30,Tuesday through Friday. Pulse is in¬terested in people to write short sto¬ries, articles, and poetry for the mag¬azine. They may spend as little oras much time on the work as theyplease, as long as contributions arereceived regularly and on time. Hull House TripStudents in the School of SocialService Administration who wish totake the field trip to Hull House thisevening must be at the House at 7:30,where two guides will direct a tourof the House followed by a movie.Those who have not already register¬ed for the trip should do so immedi¬ately in Cobb 115.Tr:|i Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1939DaiiU(^IaroonFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTh« Daily Maroon is ttie 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, 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 W’ent-worth 6123.The University of Chicago assumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon oi for any con¬tract entered into by The Iiaily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expiessly 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 3, 1879.REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISINO BVNational Advertising Service, Inc.College Publishers Representative420 Madison Ave. New York, N. Y.CHICASO ' BOSTON ' Los ANGELES - SAN FRANCISCOBoard of ControlRUTH BRODYHARRY CORNELIUSWILLIAM 11. GRODYDAVID MARTIN. ChairmanALICE MEYERBusinessHARRY F. TOPPING. Business Mgr.ROLAND 1. RICHMAN, Advertising Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESMarion Gerson, William Hankla. Pearl C.Rubins. John Stevens, Hart Wurzburg,Marian Castleman, Ernest LeiserNight Editor: Dan MezlayAssistant: Kenneth PrinceGood Intentions committees get down to thebusiness of considering ration¬ally what America might savefrom the international fire, letus hope they do not get too bit¬ter with each other about meansof preserving what they can.The horrible example of lastyear’s three rival peace strikesshould be a warning to them.TravelingBazaarAnother Peace committee isbeing organized on campus. Theolder Peace Council is still inexistence. Other student politi¬cal groups carry on heated dis¬cussions about who wants warand who wants peace and whatshould be done. This activityseems encouraging; it showsthere are at least somepeople on this secludedcampus still interested inwhat goes on around them.Yet there are several dangers.With the multiplicity of thesepolitical associations comes thepossibility of conflicting aims,contradictory attitudes. Insteadof fighting the evils they organ¬ized to oppose, the groups maymake war on each other. Thishas been the case in the past.There is a grave danger thatmuch energy and emotion maybe diverted into attacks on strawmen. Every intelligent person isat least subconscious of a ha¬tred for war; all the belligerentnations loudly proclaim theirlove of peace. Open any dailynewspaper: it will tell you howthe Allies say they are just try¬ing to remove menaces to thesafety of the world; how Ger¬many is just pleading for a fairpeace which the British war-hounds forbid. None of thesenations hate anything worsethan war, they say; yet they areall using it as the means of se¬curing their safety and well-be¬ing. That is the way things aredone today. It would be foolishat this point to waste muchbreath on the horrors of war—men who really hate war know jthem now. At this stage, the !problem is whether a true peace |is possible, when, what kind it'can be, how it may be brought jabout. I We don’t hate Pulse. We love Pulse.If it weren’t for Pulse’s boners, wewouldn’t have anything: to writeabout in our gossip columns.Emil G. Hir.sch’s latest faux pas,aided by the intervention of freshmanfootball coach Jay Berwanger is thus-ly.Wednesday he went to see T. Nel¬son Metcalf and obtained permissionto borrow a helmet and a jersey sothat a beauty queen could have herpicture taken in it. Yesterday he wentto see the above-mentioned Berwang-er, and borrowed football playersLou Letts, Bob Kibele, and Jim At¬kins for a few minutes, not givingout the insidious reasons.The idea—and it was a good one—was to have a picture of beauty slay¬ing the beasts. Beauty was PeggyO’Neill, the beasts, the boys.But just as Pulse’s photographerswere about to swing into action, outcame T. Nelson Metcalf. Putting hisarm fraternally around little IraGlick, who had charge of taking thepictures and Lee W'einstein. Heraldand American reporter, who was inthis instance photoging for the cam¬pus newsmagazine, he said coldly—“I didn’t give you permission to takethe pictures of any football players.You asked me if you could borrow ahelmet and a few jerseys, and hereI come out and find you with footballplayers inside them.”When told that permission had beengranted by Berwanger, Metcalf snort¬ed, “Berwanger has no right to givepermission. If you had wanted to takepictures of players, you might atleast have asked Shaughnessy. As amatter of fact. Jay almost was de¬clared ineligible in his senior year because pictures of him appeared with¬out permission.”Then, calming down under thesmooth ministi’ations of clever Wein¬stein, he explained that conferencerules were very strict about the pub¬lishing of unauthorized pictures, andmodified his former ultimatum thatall of the negatives must be destroyedto a demand that all of the printsmust be brought to him before theywere put into circulation.Abashed, Glick assented, and theparty broke up after a few more soloshots of la O’Neill were taken. Ourguess is that the prints will not ap¬pear in publications—even if thenumbers are blurred so that the boysaren’t recognizable. The team isn’t sogood that it can stand many picturesfloating around of girls walkingthrough them—even pretty girls.P.S. The Maroon reporter didn’thave pei'mission to be on the field—as reminded in gi-uff tones by Alexthe groundskeeper — viz., “get theHell off.” GreekGossipThat time when a few stu¬dents got together once a yearand protested against war isover. The situation is no longerone of a general attitude—areyou for war or are you forpeace ? Whether we like it or notwe are faced with actual war.To spend very much of the littletime left for reasonable actionin demonstrating against reali¬ties would be less efficaciousthan whipping lunatics at Bed¬lam. It would be as foolish andchildish as war itself.When and if the various peace Today on theQuadranglesFRIDAYPublic Lecture (Downtown). “NewTechniques in Management. What IsManagement?” Professor Sorrell. TheArt Institute of Chicago at 6:45.Ministers’ Club. “My Experience inthe Ford Motor Company.” J. Win¬field Fretz. Swift Common Room at 7.SATURDAYUniversity Football Game. Chicagovs. Michigan. Stagg Field at 2.SUNDAYUniversity Religious Service. TheReverend Harold Bosley. RockefellerMemorial Chapel at 11.Organ Recital. Mendelssohns Elijah,shortened version. Rockefeller Memo¬rial Chapel at 4:30.Sunday Night Supper. “Freedom vs.Security.” Philip LaFollette. Interna¬tional House, Assembly room at 6. By DICK HIMMELBig event of the week-end will bothe Phi Psi’s ESQUIRE party Satur¬day night, which is open to the en¬tire campus. Ingenious Phi Psis sentout invitations attached to a copy ofESQUIRE magazine. General motif,the boys say, will be enlarged Esquirecartoons decorating the fraternalwalls.A huge Petty “thinclad” will beraffled off some time during the eve¬ning. Always alert, the Phi Psis havefound a thirteen piece orchesti'a. Yah,they’re called the ESQUIRES.>K * *The third Sunday of open houseswill be along this week. Alpha Delts,Phi Sigs, Phi Kappa Sigs, Chi Psis,and Phi Delts. This is the last openhouse for which the IF Committee ishandling the inv'tations.Victory Vanities is slated for No¬vember 10. Judges will be WilliamRandall, DA director and publica¬tions advisor; Edith Ballweber, IdaNoyes head; and Harriet Paine chair¬man of acting for the Dramatic As¬sociation. A schedule for prelimina¬ries is being prepared for November 7and 8. All fraternities and clubs areeligible to submit a ten minute skitfor the show.* * *Beta Theta Pi announces the pledg¬ing of Frank Oliver, George .Arthur,Bill Courrier, and George Ramspeckhave been pledged to Delta Upsilon.Deke announces the pledging of BillHector.About rushing, the IF Committee de¬cided that the following places arelegal for talking to freshman: Read¬er’s, Stineway’s, Mabry’s, The BlueCircle, Campus Restaurant, Hanley’s,Coffee Shop, Hutchinson Commons,and the Cloister Club. The dean’s of¬fice has ruled that although SigmaAlpha Epsilon has not b^en recogniz¬ed by the IF Council, i: must obeythe rushing rules. Their rooms in thedorms will be considered S.AE’s head¬quarters and not open to freshmen.Letters to theEditorBoard of Control,The Daily Maroon:Since I wrote the Traveling Bazaarlast Wedne.sday, it has been broughtto my attention that there are twosides to the story concerning an in¬cident between Chuck Moulds andDan Barnes which I related. Mouldssays that Barnes came into Hanley’sand started a verbal battle withMoulds, ending by taking a slug athim which did not connect. Mike Ilan-ley threw out Barnes, but not Moulds.Frantz Warner was not even thereMoulds says. Mike Hanley confirmsthis story.It is worth a columnist’s neck to letyou know that Moulds denies the ac¬count which was printed.Dick Himmel.(Continued on page three)"Got My ArrowAt Erie's!"Erie has ALL the Arrow Shirt inspira¬tions — remember that ii you wantCOMPLETE selections — and OFCOURSE you do — because at Erie'syou can find that SPECIAL Arrow youlike so well! I Read The Daily MaroonTop flight shirt for Fall —ARROW’S AEROLAN£TJ|'ER£’S a new shirt pattern that rates strato-sphere hi^ in looks — AEROLANEJMaybe you’ve seen it featured in the SaturdayEvening PosL But anyway you’ll want to see it ooODT counters . . . and once you see it there, you’llwant to see it on your chest. It’s got perfectArrow tailtxic^ the one-and-only Arrow collar. . . and it’s Sanforized-Shrunk (fabric shrinkageless tban 1%!) Get it today |2.Special Aerolane Ties ^WINTERS MEN’S SHOPVj. 55tli Si. Hvde Park 5160Follow Arrow And You Follow The StyleNational Arrow WeekHis Master's ChoiceA N Arrow combination hard to beat^ is this AEROLANE feature . . .Arrow shirt ($2) and Arrow tie ($1) . . .both made precisely for each other.This distinctive spaced stripe broad¬cloth shirt, tailored by Arrow, will win many complimentsfor you. Get yours today. In colors, blue, tan and green—all sizes. Sanforized Shrunk (Fabric shrinkage less than 1%).ARROW SHIRTSCOLLARS . . . TIES . . . HANDKERCHIEFS . . . UNDERWEARFollow "Arrow" To The HUBYou'll find the smartest newest patterns in shirtsand ties... including the new AEROLANE fea¬ture, a handsome striped broadcloth.THECfiHUiState and Jackson • CHICAGOFROTHandFOAMr-HIGH’STrack team ou^ht to be very suc¬cessful this year, especially if thesecond year college class competes inthem. Boy, oh boy, that race fromBelfield to fourth floor Classics isenough to make a Cunningham sit upand take notice. Attention: Mr. Derr.If you hearwind in the halls, keep in mind,that though winter is coming, therace between time and students witha cross-campus course is bound toput one out of breath.So this is progressive education!?......From a Humanities B. exam:‘‘.\fter Boethius wrote the Consola¬tions of Philosophy, they executedhim...”...“But I thought Grad. Ed. waswhere people were educated gradual-l.v’’.. .“For a saint, Augustine certoinlyled an interesting life...”...Dr. Frank is rumored to have re¬marked, “Ordinarily, we wouldn’t saya frog had calves, but if it were ahull from...”. . .“Some disillusioned senior washeard to comment, “Every other yearwe are freshmen. ..”...Famous last words: “This is mylast sheet of paper...” from ,Joanne.Did you ever hear of anything soquaint,.As a dictiitor wanting to paint.He’d give up his glory.If you think this is Hitler, it ain’t.But here’s a meatier dish,Chamberlain wanting to fish.He’d give up MunichTo put on a tunic.And go out casting, his wish.■And what about dicUitor Benito,Going spying, dressed incognitoIf his people don’t toil.They get castor oil..My, how they work for Benito!Getting a new strike this pitch.Hitler and Stalin, same ditch.They’ve stopped an old fight.If doesn’t seem right.Mixing both “Heil” and “Tovarich,”Contributor Metcalfsagely reminds us that we shan’tbe able to go fishing anymore, be-cau.se the Germans have all the Poles.Folk Scings:That of a mute witch doctor: “INever Had A Chants”.In Ec, Soc.a new definition arises. Feudalismis that which one feels it’s helplessdoing something, why do it if it’s sofutile.A vassal is another name for aboat.Fashion NotesOf CollegeOne no longer stares at one of ouryoung fcmmv,j dressed something likethis:— Crowning glmy adorned withribbons, sometimes matching th.r restof the outfit—more often not. A beau¬tiful dusty-pink shirt, light bluesocks, and a pair of (theoretically)white and tan saddle shoes.Sweaters reach a new low in styleas cardigans practically cover theknees of our precious femmes.Again it is proved that history re¬peats itself, even in the classroom.Our interest in prehistoric times isenhanced when a witty teacher in¬quires, “How’s hunting today?” to astudious member of the fairer sex.The girl appears as though she hasmade a fresh kill; her blood-rednails and lips are the clues which leadto the teacher’s query.Coats are deceptive nowadays. Re-versibles are always keeping usguessing. What next we are askingyou ?The aforementioned styles are afew examples of what we have to tol¬erate in school—perhaps even becomeaccustomed to enjoy.Can YouNAME 5810? Phi Beta SigmaHolds 1st MeetPhi Beta Sigma, the Four-YearCollege’s honor society, held its firstmeeting of the last Monday at 7:30in the North Reception Room at IdaNoyes Hall. This congress was open¬ed by the president who welcomedall the members. After the usual rollcall, the meeting took the businessturn.Among the more Important mat¬ters discussed w'ere initiations, elec¬tions, and amendments to the consti¬tution. The meeting was very pro¬ductive, in that it brought forth themembers’ opinions concerning theirorganization. Some were for the dis¬continuation of the traditional infor¬mal initiation, but the majority wereagainst this revolutionary movement.The green and blue smocked figures(traditional for Phi Beta Sigma neo¬phytes) will api)ear soon after theelection of new members. The con¬stitution, as it stands, is very roundabout in the provisions for amend¬ments, so there is an amendmentpending that will change the methodof amending the constitution.Lettei>to the Editor(('ontinued from page two)Board of Control,Daily MaroonDear C. L. M.,Read your inspired letter of the18th. It smacks of the glory of dearold Siwash plus the added quality ofa high school pep rally. It certainlymerits an answer.We,* as well as Harvard, also pro¬vide “such a foolish thing as a foot¬ball team.” We provide a coach, (in¬cidentally rated high in football cir¬cles), a field, a place for practice, anorganization to handle such uninter¬esting supplementary necessities asseating paying guests and rampantchildren, maintenance, etc., and atleast once every two years we buythe footballers new pants. Then wecordially invite all male undergrad¬uates resident in the University tojoin the clambake. All we ask of themis to maintain “D” or above in theirstudies, and follow the rules laid downby the coach and by the Big Ten.After this it is up to the studentbody. There are other activities of¬fered, and the potential BMOC mayprefer to win his letter in Black-Ddars, Psi U., or field hockey ratherthan on the gridiron.Could Offer StipendsOf course, the school, through theathletic department, could offer sti¬pends to prospective students on thebasis of their football ability. Thismove, no doubt, would increase “theirpride in their school.” But those who“play football because they like thegame” would find an entirely differ¬ent atmosphere surrounding them.It’s one thing to fumble on an ama¬teur team, and quite another to fum¬ble on a pro team.Another point you bring up, myfriend, is that Mr. Hutchins “hasmanaged to abolish a lot of the Uni¬versity’s tradition,” which “foolish”as you are, you “consider pretty im¬portant.” Well, foolish as I am, I tooagree tradition is important. ButI don’t think Hutch has destroyed anyreal tradition, ’mb ivy'still clings tothe classic Gothic, the C beneli_is.-Still-in front of Cobb, no one has abol¬ished the seal in Mitchell tower, everynoon and night the chimes in Mitch¬ell tower still ring out; at ten o’clockw'elcoming home-coming students withthe strains of Alma Mater, Big Ber¬tha is still sacred to the band, theintefraternity sing is still virgin tothe touch of rain (I might add thatHutch engages in this tradition), theghosts of Walter Eckersall and com¬pany can be seen on a clear night inStagg field and Nels Fuqua stillnurses the Betas. So you see we aren’tbankrupt of tradition as yet.Hutchins Will AnswerAs to your question—“What answerhas he (Hutch) for the 61-0 defeathanded Chicago by a real educationalinstitution?” Why don’t you arrangean interview and ask him? He’s al¬ways willing to see anyone who hassomething to contribute to the better¬ment of the University. I think he’llbe more than pleased if you can sug¬gest some method of ridding Chicagoof “superficial scholars,” I doubt if“a few more regular fellows and afew less of his ideas...” would dothis. Signed: H. M. H. Weekly GivesHistory ofBolza HouseNext time one of your classes i5810 grows boring, and you’re evetired of admiring the wallpaper, peeback into the farthest corner ofcloset (anyone will do) and drag oua skeleton. Perhaps if you ask hirvery sweetly, he’ll tell you all abouour new building.Back in 1870’s at the University cChicago there was a professor oMathematics named Oskar Bolza. Hlived in Englewood, then a suburb, almost seven miles from the campufNot only was transportation bad, buin the winter it got so cold that water froze, and only two rooms werhabitable. And to top this off, alonjcame the Columbian Exposition anirents went up. So Professor Bolz:moved farther south. After the Faiwas over, a group of University professors including Bolza settled aroun(the campus. About this time he buil5810 Woodlawn, to wsich a few year;later he brought his bride.Then came the French invasion amthe house was used as a dormitory fosome of the students studying FrenchIt was kept up by a subsidy from theFrench Government. After a whilethis was discontinued. Then the stu¬dents moved out, and Dean Worksmoved in.Well there’s the story. Now w’hatshall we call the place?("olle^e WeeklyHolds Meeting“The meeting will come to order,”announced the editor, as the firstmeeting of the Junior College Weeklywas opened last Monday.Over the consistent competition ofthe Correlator staff next door, theeditor discussed news writing and ex¬plained the system to be inauguratedthis year. Under the organizationonly those members of the staff whosearticles are selected for publication,will be listed in the masthead of theissue. However, all reporters are re¬quired to submit at least one articleevery two weeks for satisfactorywork.Assignments were given to thewould-be reporters and the meetingadjourned.Glee Club OrganizedBy StudentsYes, we’re having a Glee Club thisyear. Mary Strauss and RichardSchindler have organized a mixedchorus for students of the first twoyears of the Four- Year College,which meets regularly on Tuesdaysat 8 in room 214 Blaine Hall.As Mr. Vail is extremely busy thisyear, Richard Schindler is directingthe group. Mr. Vail however hopes tovisit the rehearsals as often as pos¬sible to see how everything is comingalong. At present there are 26 mem¬bers and all ye warblers are urged tojoin and swell the ranks. !To attain favorable balance so¬pranos are especially needed. Thebass and alto sections are excellentand only one or two more tenors couldbetter the composition.Missing TypewriterRecovered! Where?In 5810One day, and it wasn’t so very longago, a typewriter was missing fromthe headquarters of the Four-YearCollege Weekly. That, of course, wasa serious handicap to all further pro¬ceedings and inquiries were made asto the location of the implement. Itwas found after long research to bein 5810, the unnamed Four-Year Col¬lege building, in the firm possessionof Miss Evans.In the midst of the discussion, cen¬tered about the problem of getting itback, it was discovered that the type¬writer was really supposed to bethere; instead the Correlator machinewas to have ben abducted. A great re¬lief although there was pity for theCorrelator staff. The typewriter wastaken back to its former residence andwill probably stay there until theFour-Year Weekly Office is moved—if it is moved.FOUR - YEAR COLthe daily maroon, FRIDAY, Oti'imperfect in originalFRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1939Soccer Squad Wins Twice, 3-0Kemp, head of student councilI Barbara Deutsch, club presidentlarbara Deutschrirls^ Club Prexy: Where were you born?: Chicago, Illinois.: When did you come to this school?: In my freshman year in highschool.: What did you do when you gothere?: Ruined the Junior InternationalCorrespondence Club by becomingits president, and, incidentally,went to school.; What other outstanding thingshave happened during your stayhere?: I studiously contributed my writ¬ing and social talents to the MID¬WAY and they appreciated it somuch that they made me co-ed¬itor of the third page for partof my junior yeai . Also, I’ve beentreasurer and representative ofthe Girls’ Club, and now I’m presi¬dent. Also I’ve been in severalPlayfester productions.J; Where are you going after yougraduate? Soloman, Yasus TallyAgainst Hyde Park;Coach Pleased.Last Friday and again on Wednes¬day U High’s soccer squad defeatedHyde Park by a score of 3-0. A fur¬ther coincidence was that Jerry Solo-man scored the first two points inboth games while Vytold Yasus scoredthe third. During the first ijerform-ance. Coach HoflFer was so pleasantlysurprised that he even got f’iendlywith the substitutes.In Friday’s contest, Soloman scoredby punting in rebounds from thecrossbar. Yasus’ point was squirtedthrough the goalie’s legs from 15yards out.The conditions in Monday’s gamewere the same. In the first half, withthe help of a trailing wind, the ballwas kept deep in enemy territory.When the sides were changed at thehalf, U. High’s backfield got its shareof the hard work. Often a fullback’skick would sail high in the air, andthen descend to its starting point.However the team cashed in on itsdrives into enemy territory, winningwith a safe margin.Soccer Squad Ties Hyde Park 1-1A depleted U. High soccer teamstruggled futilely to break a 1-1 tieWednesday. Many of the regularswere absent from the field—presentat the Dean’s office.Soloman scored by following up akick blocked by Jaros, which madehis fifth goal of the season. How¬ever, Chave led the spearhead of theU. High attack.Bundeson and Kemp have been se¬lected captains of the team. Eachi‘eceive<l nine votes in the election. Soccer SquadContinues PracticeThe U. High and Junior CollegeSoccer Team began practice on thefirst day of school. Since then, therehas been a fairly good attendancein the Afternoons although the ad¬dition /f a few more players wouhlhelp greatly. The team retains anumber of veterans from last year,and is fortified by several new mem¬bers. Most important among the ex¬perienced players are Jack Millar whostarred last year at goal and guard,Rill Kemp and Bob Simond efficientfullbacks, Sherman Sergei, Jim Rlum-berg and David Jaffe, veteran half¬backs, and Bill Bundesen and HowieBrown, the bulwarks of the line.Some boys who were out for theteam last year and who will probablysee action this year are GrantChave, Jerry Portis, Jerry Solomanand Boh Schwartz, all linemen. .Apractice game with the Hyde Parkteam and a game with the U. Highalumni on Tuesday showed that manyboys out for soccer this year for thefirst time are (juite capable of gainingregular positions on the team. Inthe back field there are Ted Friede-man an<l Sid Epstein. Linemen withconsiderable promise are Vytold Ya¬sus, Duval Jaros and .41 Metcalf..■Although our team has started theseason with the great disadvantageof having three or four weeks les^practice than most of the other teams,neverthele.ss if the boys continue toshow their fine spirit and if the teamis supporteil by the student body, U.High’s chances of “cleaning up’’ insoccer will be good.\; ! And a private room anda straight jacket at Kankakee.Seriou.sly, though, to Swarthmore,Bennington, or Connecticut.Hobby—?4: Writing and acting!^: To be—?4: Some type of writer—4nd Barbara rushed to lunch.(/. High SportsContinued at BartlettWith the complete separation of the?our Year College from the HighSchool, many changes in athleticslave taken place. The Four Year::olllege boys use the facilities ofJartlett Gym now, instead of those)f Sunny.Fall athletics fall into three groups.The soccer team works out daily onjreenwood Field and members areixcused from routine gym work.VIembers of the swimming team areAlready busily getting in shape for;he coming season. 'They use the 113’clock gym period for practice in theBartlett pool, where they receive firsthand instruction from Coach McGilli-vray. The regular gym class has or¬ganized touch-football teams. Compe¬tition is held in the 11 o’clock period,and after school intramural teamsare in the process of organization.Junior College GymOnly a few arrangements have beenmade for the faculty volleyball games.Last year the faculty started playingin the early part of November, andthis year efforts are being made byMr. Phelps and others to start evenearlier.Nothing^ has been said about the:aculty-studiivf mattli, the aniittalgame between the Junior College stu¬dents and the faculty. Last year thismatch was held in the winter afterthe players had a while to practice inclass and intramural competition, butso far the schedule of winter athleticshas not been planned. Therefore thestudent competitors may not have a:hance to work out.Also, there is the problem that thelunior College boys have their gymAt Bartlett. The boys will have todecide for themselves whether theywant to have their annual game. OCTOBERSPECIALRYTEX FLIGHTPrinted StationeryDouble the Usual Quantity200 SINGLE SHEETS100 ENVELOPESor100 DOUBLE SHEETS100 ENVELOPES•m *Prikited with your nameand address or monogram SIU. of C. Bookstore5802 ELLIS AVE..'OU GET A 1939 CAP & GOWN?YOU GET A 1940 CAP & GOWN?ional foresight of the 1939 stalL there are a limited number of copies of theavailable. For the sake of those who missed out last year and those newt a good base on which to start campus life, we offer you— 1. The 1939 Cap940 Cap & Gown— 3. The Student Handbook—all for only $5.50. HurryIMPERFECT IN ORIGINALITHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1939 Page Five66 E. VAN BURENSONOIL/Wti noon to MIDNITE25c to 2:00: 35c to 6:30; 55c Evenings—One Week Only—The Epic Story of the Adventive Youthof Maxim Gorky"ON HIS OWN"based on the author's own memoirsExtra!Exclusive Chicago showing"THE SOVIET RED ARMY PLANES,TANK, CAVALRY, ON THE MARCH "THE NEWLEX THEATREFKATl'KlNt; “PUSH BACK” SEATS1162 E. 63rd St. Open 11:00 A.M. DailyFR. & SAT."Frontier Marshall"withRANDOLPH SCOTT NANCY KELLYand"Behind PrisonGates"withBRYAN DONLEVY^ SHE O910SPECIALCONSOLE6 TUBE RADIO AND RECORDCHANGER$79.50COMPLETE STOCK OF THELATEST50cCOLUMBIA RECORDSBY THE BEST BANDSKEYSER. GOODMAN, JAMESHEIDT, ELLINGTON. DUCHIN955 E. 55 th St.FREE DELIVERY - PLAZA 7800 Million DollarArtist BlowsIn From Nome“A million dollar portrait for only50 cents,” boasted the gray-hairedgenius Charley Pape as he blew ihfrom Nome, Alaska to sketch por¬traits of any and all Chicagoans. Aft¬er carefully explaining that he wasthe greatest artist in the world, Papewent on to tell stories of everythingfrom Esquire magazine (oh boy!) tothe Banker’s club of New York.His proudest possessions ai-e hispatented “fountain” paint brushes,with which he iilans to make a for¬tune. “Oh, yes. Da Vinci was a greatartist,” ho conceded, “but he couldn’tdo his best work because I hadn’t in¬vented my fountain paint brushes asyet.”As he .settled down to work in oneof the fraternity houses yesterdayafternoon, he remarked, “The samething costs two dollars when the snowis on the ground, you know, boys.You .see, snow gives a portrait wintersports appeal and makes it that muchmore glamorous.”As he finished his sketch of DApresident Bud Linden, he explained,“Everything you don’t understandabout this work is art, boys...Youknow—ART.”After he has completed his workhere, he plans to move on to Illinois,where he expects to make a fortunesketching the luminaires of the 80fraternities and sororities there.OBSERVATORYThe student observatory in theRyerson Laboratory tower willnow be open to students and theirfriends every Wednesday eveningfrom 7:50 to 10, weather permit¬ting. An instructor will be on handto demonstrate the apparatus.Two Thread Hose$173(Box of 3 pr.)Our Very SheerOne Thread Lisle$200(Box of 3 pr.)R. P. Kay Hosiery30 W. Washington St.Room 040 - Dearborn 3773We pay your postage on all maildeliveries and half your postage onall ('.O.D. <»rders.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 OUTMrs. STEVEN invites youto try herCANDIESAlways Freshand Delicious—A special assortment ofbutter creams, caramels, nou¬gats, bonbons, crunches, allpacked in a beautiful metal$1.00Cream PeanutClustersDelicious freshly roastedVirginia peanuts, combinedwith Fondant and dipped ina cluster with vanilla choco¬late. Special this week-end.pound 29c box.2/2poundsFresh RoastedNutsWe also have .salted nuts,roasted in our own kitchen—always crisp and fresh. Spe¬cial this week-end—MIXEDNUTS.pound 39cMrs.STEVEN’S CANDYSHOP63rd St. at Ellis Ave. Phone Dor. 6069WE MAIL ANYWHERE Renaissance—(Continued from page one)former was one of the great innova¬tors who died in the war before hecould bring his full genius to light,while the latter continues to evolveextraordinarily inventive forms, be¬coming more and more abstract butalways in a mysterious fashion retain¬ing a suggestion of the natural form.In the current exhibit he demonstratesthese qualities with two female nudesboth primitive in a fundamental feel¬ing for mass plus a spiritual urgencycommon to the group of moderns.A pre-Columbian stone carving ofa bird head serves as a keynote ofexpression for this show as well asof the whole school.I might add that .some of the sculp¬ture in the show is arranged morewith an eye to the “modern” group¬ing of the pedestals than to an ef¬fective display of the figures them¬selves. Otherwise this constitutes oneof the best efforts of the Renaissancesociety within recent memory, thanksto co-chairmen Katherine Kuh andInez Cunningham Stark.The exhibit will continue until No¬vember 17.(Colleges Adopt NewWool SlipoversThe slipover sweater is makinggreat strides in American colleges anduniversities, and it is very near theperfect campus garment. Usuallymade of soft wool in a variety ofcolors the sweaters are not expen¬sive.Don’t let anyone tell you that woolties are not the newest wrinkle inmen’s fashions, because if they dothey’re wrong. Tweeds and soft woolsin paisley designs, checks and stripesare on the up and up, and one of thelargest tie manufacturers has recent¬ly announced a 1940 spring and sum¬mer line that will be made up almostentirely of wool.The thing to remember about theseties is the fact that they do not soileasily, that they will wear forever,and retain their shape no matter howoften or how tightly they are tied. Harmon Gives SeriesOf Contract LessonsStarting October 23 Harry Harmonwill give a series of five Mondaynight contract bridge lessons for be¬ginners. Following the lesson at IdaNoyes Hall from 7 to 7:30 there willbe a play period during which Mr.Harmon will take up individual dif¬ficulties and will supervise the play¬ing.Moreover, there will be, as lastyear, a playing period from 7:30 to10 every Monday night for inter¬mediate and advanced bridge players.All persons holding Ida Noyes Activ¬ity cards and interesting in learningbridge are welcome to join cithergroup.Price MemorialThe University will hold a memo¬rial service for Ira Maurice Price, onMonday, at 4. Dean Shailer Mathewswill speak.Professor Price had been connectedwith this University since its foun¬dation in 1892, as professor of Seme-tic Languages and Literatures. ClassifiedLOST—Gold Broadway Curvex Watch. Re¬ward—return to Foster Hall, Km. 14.LOST—Last of September, on Midway, Wom¬en’s black lifetime ShaefFer’s FountainI’en. Reward. Mary Riley, 6217 EllisAve.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, stenographic course —starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D„ PH.B.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men..16 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Randolph 4347mmcbLO^roiit t lYtSiyOOf jr-THK TESTIS INKFOR EVIRY PEN^T^^Dance-(Continued from page one)as Settlement Chairman Marge Kuhdiscovered after plans had beenformed, the instruction-classes haddisbanded, scattering the talent.The deficiency will be made up byMirror specialty dancers VirginiaClark and Margerie Whitney. Thesetwo gathered in their share of ap¬plause last winter with interpreta¬tions of various terpsichorean move¬ments.C-Books Save MoneySocial chairman Bob Reynolds againconcerned himself with the financialbenefits of “C” books when hestressed yesterday that the book,priced at $1.50, saves $.70 on the re¬maining three dances.Tonight’s dancers will trample thewax of half a “C” book season intothe laths of Ida Noyes. Abetted bythe weekly Saturday night open houseparties the various frats have begunto give, these dances more than in¬augurated and propelled the ’39-40social season.Socia IScience—(Continued from page one)duce this figure is at present unpre¬dictable, however, even if only a 20%reduction were accomplished the de¬struction prevented would compen¬sate the effort. Dr. Krogman believes.Professor Krogman made no men¬tion of the University’s contributionto the science of fire prevention.Doubtless a blunt ban on all smokingand playing with matches would proveimpractical in a full-sized forest.UNIVERSITYTAVERNANDLIQUOR STOREFREE DELIVERY MIDWAY 0524COMPLETE LINE OFBEER - WINES - LIQUORSWE FEATUREBlatz and Siebens Beers COLLEGENIGHTWithBILLB A R D Oand His OrchestraCollege and ProfessionalFLOORSHOWSEveryFRIDAYMarine RoomEDGEWATERBEACH HOTELGet Half-Rate Student TicketsMaroon Office and Press Bldg,IPage Six THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1939THE DAILY MAROON SPORTSAristotle Leads Michigan Med. School HasUnique History U^Newsreel DoomedBy FinancesBut A Fellow Named HarmonIs Most Feared of InvadersShaughnessy RemodelsTeam; Moves Wasem toHalf; Jampolis Out.PROBABLE LINEUPS:Chicago vs. MichiganLounsbury LE FrutigMaurovich LT Sa villaScott LG FritzWheeler C KodrosWallis RG SukupWilson RT SmithRichardson RE NicholsonR. A. Miller QB EvashevskiWasem LH KromerLetts RH HarmonHowe FB WestfallUntil now the University has hadno quarrel with Aristotle, but tomor¬row at 2 Aristotle leads a f?reat Mich¬igan team against the Maroon organ¬ization on Stagg Field. Aristotle I,with whom Chicago has for manyyears had the most friendly relations,was an ancient Greek philosopher. Hisnamesake, Aristotle II, is AristotleKodros, captain and center on theMichigan eleven and more familiarlyknown as Archie.The game will also bring anothername, long familiar along the Mid¬way, back to Stagg Field. The firsttime Herbert Orin (“Fritz”) Crislerreturned to the Midway, where he isremembered as one of Chicago’s greatends, was in 1937, when he broughta Princeton team to Stagg Field andovercame his alma mater 16 to 7.This year he comes for the first timeas the head of Michigan’s footballforces, although last year, his first atAnn Arbor, he coached a team whichvanquished the Maroon team 45 to 7at Ann Arbor.Coach Makes ShiftsPartly in anticipation of Michigan’sscoring power, chiefly exemplified byTom Harmon, the Conference individ¬ual scoring leader, but primarily be¬cause he plans a remodeled teamwhen the second half of the Maroonschedule begins November 4, CoachClark Shaughnessy has made somelong-range shifts in his lineup.Co-captain Bob Wasem has beenmoved from end to halfback to re¬place Co-captain John Davenport,whose leg injury will allow him onlya few minutes of play against Mich¬igan. Ted Howe, a lineman last year,will probably perform the major partof Chicago’s fullbacking because ofthe injury of Bob Howard. Bob A.Miller, a sophomore, will replace BobJampolis in the quarterback post.End MenChicago’s two 6 feet, 4-inch basket¬ball players, who were drafted forfootball two weeks ago, will probablytake over the end positions in CoachShaughnessy’s new scheme. CaptainDick Lounsbury and his mate, RalphRichardson, move into the spot vacat¬ed by the shift of Wasem and theposition formerly held by Russ Par¬sons, who will still be on reserve.Coach Shaughnessy also hopes touse 215-pound Hugh Rendleman, vet¬eran tackle, if he is in condition bygame time. Rendleman, an outstand¬ing sophomore last season, reported this week for the first time.After Michigan’s successful attackon Iowa last week, which netted theWolverines 27 points to 7 for Iowa,Coach “Fritz” Crisler is planning nochanges in his starting group. Thefact that Tom Harmon scored all fourof the Michigan touchdowns behind ahighly effective blocking organiza¬tion and that even such capable backsas Fred Trosko and Hercules Rendawere scarcely used indicates the con¬fidence of the Ann Arbor squad.Forest Evashevski, an outstandingjunior, last year proved himself anintelligent field general, and BobWestfall, although he weighs only178 pounds, matches Harmon’s speedwith his own line-battering power.The Michigan line, led by CaptainKodros at center, has apparently com¬pensated for the loss of outstandingplayers by graduation last year, in¬cluding Captain Fred Janke andRalph Heikennen, All America guard.Coffee Shop ChangesCoffee PolicyThe old order changeth and the cof¬fee shop now serves two cups of cof¬fee. In fact the coffee shop coffee sit¬uation has improved to a great extent,for in addition to the two cups, theprice of coffee (with cream) has beenreduced to five cents, and the javacomes in larger cups in place of thesmaller pots, but best of all, the cof¬fee comes hot.Hamburgers and women waitersare some of the other innovationsthat Mrs. Artman, the new shop man¬ager has introduced. The waitressesof course are the most spectacular ofthe additions, and according to Mrs.Artman, “people like the girls”. Thegirls are useful and decorative frombreakfast on, and are supplemented atthe rush hours by the more experi¬enced waiters.Mrs. Artman plaps more new andhomey touches to be added during theyear. The first surprise for coffeeshop joygirls and jolly boys will benew wooden menus.Library AidsSpanish RefugeesThe Spanish Refugee Relief Cam¬paign needs books for its lending li¬brary, according to a letter sent tothe Daily Maroon by executive secre¬tary Mary Gordon. Enough income isexpected from the library project tosupport at least four children livingin camps in France.Books may be donated or lent.Lenders may be sure that their bookswill be well taken care of and returnedwhenever wanted. They should besent to the Spanish Refugee ReliefCampaign, Room 812, 203 North Wa¬bash Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.Among the long list of sponsors ofthe Spanish Refugee Relief Campaignare two members of the faculty. MissMaud Slye and Mr. Quincy Wright.'TheVictrolaShops'forVICTOR & BLUEBIRD RECORDSj RCA VICTROLAS & RADIOSRCA RADIO SERVICEJ Everything in Records from SYM¬PHONY to SWING — private booths —Recording Studio — Guaranteed Repairson All Makes of Radios and Phonographs.Authorized RCA Victor DealersCampus representative—Jim Richards, Judson CourtTHREE STORES TO SERVE YOUWoodlawn University South ShoreMusic Shop Music Shop Music Shop1004 E. 63rd Street 1371 E. 55th Street 2237 E. 7l8t StreetFAIrfax 8400 FAIrfax 7272 PLAza 6080 Chi Psi, SigmaChi, Pi LamScore UpsetsDefeat ZBT, Dekes, Kap¬pa Sigma, in I-M Touch-ball.Three surprises featured yester¬day’s touchball games. Chi Psi, al¬ready labeled as a “so so” team, over¬whelmed Zeta Beta Tau 24-6; SigmaChi overcame Deke resistance 12-0I-M GAMES3:00 Delta Upsilon vs. Psi Upsilon3:30 Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi SigmaDelta4:00 Burton “500” vs. Burton“600”Burton “800” vs. Judson“400”Bar Association vs. Freshmenand Pi Lambda Phi, previously loserof two games, downed Kappa Sigma12-0. In the other two games A. D.Phi “B” topped the Psi U “B” 13-6and the Phi Psi “B” lost to the Deke“B” by forfeit.Stoner, Plumley, and Marrow scoredfor Chi Psi; Stoner on a pass fromWestenberg, Marrow on a lateralpass from Campbell and Plumleytwice on heaves from Pabst and Wes¬tenberg. Mitchell’s pass to Hirsh inthe first half accounted for the ZetaBetes touchdown.Sigma Chi, who lost to Phi KappaPsi 12-7 last Wednesday, revengedthemselves on the Dekes 12-0. Stampfscored on a pass in the first half andBohnhoff opened up the second halfscoring on another pass.A sleeper play with Bob Greenbergscoring and a touchdown pass caughtby Joel Bernstein totaled up Pi Lamb¬da Phi’s scoring over the haplessKappa Sigs. Two passes with John¬stone on the receiving end wereenough for the A. D. Phi “B” squadto beat Psi U “B.” Dick Jacquesscored the Psi U touchdown on an¬other pass. •Music Students GetOpera TicketsThe Ilinois Opera Guild, headed byMrs. James G. McMillan, has againincluded Chicago in the universities towhich the guild presents season boxes Within a square block is housed asituation unique in medical circles.Under the same roof are hospital fa¬cilities and research laboratories,clinics and classrooms. Centering a-round the medical school and BillingsHospital are the three phases of med¬ical work: teaching, research, and ac¬tive practice which join in closer co¬operation than in most other medicalschools and hospitals.Harper Wanted Medical SchoolWhen the University was founded.President Harper cherished the ideaof a medical school, but funds wouldnot permit. Therefore, arrangementswere made with the PresbyterianHospital to affiliate the Universitywith Rush Medical College. On Octo¬ber 1, 1937, the first of the Universitymedical school buildings, BillingsHospital, was opened. Medical schooldepartments are in close conjunctionwith hospitals and clinics. The de¬partments of medicine and surgeryhave their parallel in active hospitaland clinic work in Billings, which hasbeds for 216 patients. Only facultymembers may bed their patients inBillings.Home Prepared for CrippledThree years later in May, 1930, agift from Colonel and Mrs. John Rob¬erts enabled the University and pe¬diatrics department to establi.sh BobsRoberts Memorial Hospital, contain¬ing 80 beds. The following year, theHome for Destitute Crippled Childrenmoved from the west side, where ithad been since ^891, to its new hos¬pital adjoining killings. There are 100beds for orthopedic surgery cases.The University provided for half thecost of construction through a giftof Mrs. Gertrude Dunn Hicks, and theHome provided the other half plus thecost of operation. Lying-In MaternityHospital opened its doors on the Mid¬way that same year. It has facilitiesfor 160 patients. In the last year,there has been no mortality amongLying-In mothers.for the Chicago City Opera perfor¬mances.Last season, the first year the boxeswere offered, the music departmentdistributed the tickets among intro¬ductory music students, and usedthem along with the 101 cour.se. Thesame procedure will be used this year.The music department al.so an¬nounced that the noon time recordconcerts would probably start withintwo weeks. The delay in presentingthe concerts has been due to the factthat the old record machine was invile shape and had to be replaced. The University Newsreel has beenindefinitely cancelled according toLoyal Tingley, Chi Psi in charge ofthe series. This came as a surpriseafter the popularity accorded the stu¬dent enterprise in past years. Fi-nanced and managed by formerr ChiPsi Bill Boehner, the Newsreel hasbeen discontinued, said Tingley. be¬cause of the time it took, and themoney it would take to start it thisyear. Anyone interested in work ofthis kind, Tingley said, may, if theyhave the money and make the properarrangements, take it over.Peace Coniiiiittee—(Continued from page one)The members of the committee se¬lected were Nick Helburn, Ann Gu-sack, Allen Philbrick, Emmy Shields,Sid Lipshires, and Jim Peterson.They started their work without thesupport of the Peace Council, whosepresident Harry Cornelius, opposedthe convoking of a Peace conference.A fevered discussion preceded theactual consideration of the formula¬tion of a program. Robert Krone-meyer dramatically hauled out a pic¬ture of Woodrow Wilson from an in¬conspicuous paper package, and inringing tones, proclaimed, “I don’tthink any of you have seen this pic¬ture. This man got elected becau.sehe kept us out of war. Our presentpresident has made the same sincerepromise. Student opinion must be or¬ganized to ktep America out of thewar. Therefore I favor this Con¬gress, and agree with its theme.”Accurate and RapidLens DuplicationsAND FRAMES REPAIREDYOUR PRESCRIPTION FILLEDNELSON OPTICALCOMPANYDR. NELS R. NELSONOptomatrist 30 Y«ar> in Sam* Location1138 East 63rd St.AT UNIVERSITY AVENUEHYDE PARK 5352HANLY COLLEGE NIGHTTonightwithJOHNNIE"SCAT"DAVISand hisorchestrafeaturingJulieSherwinBill OwenSUNDAY TEA DANCING★ ★ ★and Scat Club meeting . . , Let Johnnie teach you the newScat dance and present you with a "Scat" club certificate.3 Floor Shows Nightly — No Cover Charge★ ★ ★