elie Batty iHaroonVol. 40, No. 16 Z.149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1939 Price Three CentsMaroon PlansAdvisory Boardfor PublicityAssists Campus Organi¬zations with Promotion¬al Problems.With a view towards assistingcampus organizations with their pub¬licity problems, the Daily Maroon an¬nounces the formation of an advisorybody which will aid student groupsafflicted with promotional troubles.This group, as yet unnamed, heraldsthe opening of the Maroon policy ofproving itself as a servant as wellas an observer of life on the quad¬rangles.Specialized InformationThe main function of this projectedcommittee will be to meet represent¬atives of any campus organizationwho wish to avail themselves of theexperience of the staff members com¬prising the group. As its stock intrade the committee will possess spec¬ialized information of promotionalvalue. Such items as the locations ofall bulletin boards for the placing ofposter material will be available;planning of special stunts will begone into; advice on the best andmost efficient way of planning a cam¬paign, the graduation and “nursing”of stories for their publicity worthwill be dealt with; most importantand most inclusive of all, the public¬ity committee will lay at the disposalof the campus as many good ideasas they can muster.Need for Good PublicityDavid Martin, chairman of theBoard of Control of the Daily Ma¬roon, stated that: “We (the Board)feel that there is definite need ofsuch a service for student activities.The best ways of catching the publiceye have been mysteriously revealedto tho.se working with the power ofthe |)r(*ss, and the Daily Maroonfondly hopes that it shares in thisrevelation. If this is true, the Ma¬roon’s publicity advisory serviceshould prove a boon to the campus atlarge.”Herzog, BostickFilm MesotronsIn StratosphereMesotrons, the heavy componentsof cosmic rays, were photographed inthe process of formation by two Uni¬versity of Chicago scientists yester¬day in an airplane 29,000 feet abovethe earth.The flight was part of the cosmicray investigation being conducted atthe University under the direction ofDr. Arthur H. Compton. It was thefirst time photographs of this naturehave been made at stratosphereheights. Dr. Gerhard Herzog andWinston Bostick, research associatesat the University, conducted the expe¬riment.Part of Cosmic RaysA year ago air meastirements madeby University scientists above 20,000feet demonstrated that mesotrons arebeing produced above this level. Meso¬trons are a heavily penetrating partof the cosmic rays with radioactiveproperties.“We were seeking,” said Dr. Comp¬ton, “to photograph, if we could, theprocess of mesotron formation. Whileour results must be studied at somelength to determine their scope, theflight was highly satisfactory.”The plane, a standard 21-passengerDouglas, was chartered by the Uni¬versity from United Air Lines for theflight. The plane remained aloft abouttwo and one-half hours, cruising asfar as Davenport, la., and averagingmore than 300 miles an hour in re¬turning to the Chicago MunicipalAirport where the flight started.First FlightExperiments of this nature havepreviously been conducted on moun¬tains. Dr. Bruno Rossi, leading Italianinvestigator of the cosmic rays whorecently joined the University, mademeasurements this summer rangingfrom sea level to 15,000 feet at anexperimental station atop Mt. Evansin Colorado. Dr. Volney Wilson, an¬other research associate at the Uni¬versity, has been conducting investi¬gations underground of the penetrat¬ing power of mesotrons. NormanThomasTalksforYCA WOn NeutralityMobilizing against war, the YouthCommittee against War, has garneredthe services of co-mobilizer NormanThomas to speak at its Armistice Daymeeting in Mandel Hall.Talking on the war situation,Thomas will tell his listeners theperils of repeal of the arms embargo,and the advantages of the strict ap¬plication of the principle of cash andcarry to the rest of America’s tradewith belligerent nations. Ho will ex¬press his way—and the YCAW’s way—to keep the United States neutral.Sponsored Nye LastThere will be other speakers at theYCAW meeting, and a small admis¬sion fee will be charged. Last spring,the peace group, which has about 50members left over from last year,presented its peace strike at whichGerald P. Nye, isolationist senatorfrom North Dakota, spoke. It is thegroup which has sponsored the Ox¬ford Oath, and is affiliated with theKeep America Out of War Congress.Heading the publicity for the Ar¬mistice Day rally is Purnell Benson.The rally will be held 8:15 in theevening.Yoiiii" Negroes SingAt Int. House forliberties BenefitFour young Negro artists and Dr.Edwin R. Embree, President of theRoscnwald Fund, will appear tomor¬row at International House in a mu¬sical benefit for the Chicago CivilLiberties Committee. The program,scheduled to begin at 8 o’clock, in¬cludes Mercedes Walker, pianist, Rob¬ert Davis, poet, and two singers: El¬mer Willington Harris, baritone andIrma M. Allen, contralto. All haveappeared at* previous benefits on theNorth Shore where they were well re¬ceived. The concert is sponsored bythe South Side Women’s Committee.Miss Allen travelled for twelveyears with the Mary Bothune-Cook-man College Quintet and was firstprize winner of the 1939 ChicagolandMusic Festival. Miss Walker gainedfame after her recital at OrchestraHall last spring. A scholarship stu¬dent at Chicago Con.servatory, Mr.Harris has been acclaimed a “secondPaul Robeson.”Patrons for the benefit include Al¬derman and Mrs. Paul H. Douglas,Congressman and Mrs. T. V. Smith,Mr. and Mrs. Joe Louis, Congressmanand Mrs. A. W. Mitchell, and Deanand Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey.Sun Valley Sounds‘‘So Glamorous^^ toBetty Lou CaldivellLast week some nominees for thetitle of Most Representative man andwoman on campus gave their viewsof Sun Valley. Here’s what some ofthe other candidates have to say abouta trip to this exciting, new recreationcenter.Deke Jim Anderson, captain of theswimming team, and member of Owland Serpent: “I have nothing to sayexcept that I’d like to go if I couldpick the girl to go with me.”Betty Lou Caldwell, backed by bothChi Rho Sigma and Beecher Hall:“It sounds so glamorous.”John Davenport, Alpha Delt, co¬captain of the football team and cap¬tain of the track team: “After a hardseason of football, ten days at SunValley would be most welcome.”Thelma Iselman, president of Del¬ta Sigma and head of Women’s Fed¬eration: “From what the Maroon says,it must be wonderful.”Rules are simple: Any organizationmay sponsor a candidate. Each Ma¬roon subscriber gets two votes, onefor a man, one for a woman. Sales¬men get two votes for each subscrip¬tion sold.In the stratosphere balloon flights,apparatus attached to the balloonsmeasures the frequency and intensityof mesotrons at altitudes up to six¬teen miles above the earth’s surface.Photographs of the particles’ tracts,however, are not taken. Wave The FlagBy this time everyone knowsthe University’s renown comesfrom its being a great educa¬tional institution. Events of thepast two week ends have provedthis beyond doubt. Until thisschool’s intellectual essence isendangered no one here has aserious cause for alarm, nor hasany member of the Universityreason to be other than proud ofit.But events of the last twoweeks bring us up against someof the unpleasant facts of life.While American social conven¬tion expects big universities toprovide good football shows, ourschool has become a benevolentinstitution furnishing materialon which newspaper writers allover the country may practicecleverness when they have noth¬ing better to fill space. The re¬sult is that we are getting to bea big joke in the eyes of theAmerican public and a sore spotto our alumni. We are the placewhere the score would havebeen over 100 to nothing if thegame hadn’t ended 6 minutesearly.For the football team, how¬ever, the matter isn’t such abig joke. Each week a smallgroup of young men go out onthe field to be overwhelmed inbody and spirit so that a fewhundred spectators may passseveral dull hours of the after¬noon. For their reward theplayers get derision. This mightbe good moral training for mar¬tyrs, but football players arehuman beings too. They are students trying to effect a com¬promise between their studiesand their activities, and every¬body else at this school knowswhich of these two things mustget most attention for survivalhere. They are few, several ofthem not specially trained forfootball, because the Univer¬sity’s registration is largest inthe divisions and graduateschools, and the undergraduatepart has no peculiar attractionfor athletes.Four more games remain onthe University’s schedule forthis year. For the next threeyears at least the team is facedwith heavy Conference games.But there is some faint possibil¬ity that the football future maynot be so blank as the presentis. More freshmen are out forthe team than have been foryears before, and they are good.If the alumni continue theirsupport there is hope that thenext few years may attract bet¬ter players to Chicago.Properly, the game of foot¬ball is only accidental to an ed¬ucational institution, yet somepeople insist on it as part of theessence of any good university.These are often the peoplewhose support the universityneeds. When an accident, how¬ever, becomes an impediment tothe essence of a thing, theneither the accident should be re¬moved or those v;ho want tokeep it must mitigate its evils.The accident of football is mak¬ing the University look silly.The alumni have their problem.Freudian Expert Tells-All—Analyzes ^Night Must FalV^By IMAGONight Must Fall”, the first produc¬tion of the Dramatic Association to bepresented in Mandel Hall Friday andSaturday nights, is tlie psychologicalstudy of a killer. The writer of thisarticle, pseudo-nymed Imago, dealswith the play from the standpoint of aFreudian psychologist.The story of “Night Must Fall”, assummarized by the publishers, is in¬accurate, but will refresh' the memo¬ries of those who have seen the playor the movie. “Dan is a bellboy in aresort hotel remotely located in Es¬sex, England. Having seduced DoraParkoe, maid at Mrs. Bramsons’, Danis summoned to the Bramson cottage.Such is his charm that Mrs. Bramsonis immediately taken with him, add¬ing him to her household servants.The murder of a guest at the hotel istraced to Dan by Olivia, an unhappyniece of Mrs. Bramson’s, who electsto shield the boy. Dan, grateful butpowerless in the grip of his homicidalinstincts, plots the murder of Mrs. B.for her money. The police take himaway to be hanged, leaving Olivia re¬lieved but desperate.”One or two more facts are neces¬sary to know; The woman at thehotel (Mrs. Chalfont) was a nymph,who was murdered by Dan when shetried to force him to sleep with her.The inspector on the case, Belsize, isa very quiet, intelligent person, andnot easily fooled.“Night Must Fall” is not subject toa strictly Freudian analysis for theimportant mental changes of Dan andOlivia are not unconscious, but mere¬ly hidden for a time. There are fewFreudian symbols, and the action isnot very erotic. However, the mostimportant psychological facts of theplay—the identification of Olivia withDan, and the supreme confidence ofDan—may be interpreted psycho-analytically.Dan is completely successful sex¬ually, and is justified in his contemptfor women. All during the play, weare amazed at his facility for makingwomen love him. But since the sexualis most important for him, he over¬values his ability, and extends his confidence to situations not strictlysexual; here he fails.Dora, the nymph, and Mrs. Bram¬son he dealt with easily, because theywere subject to the charms of sex.! (Olivia, too, but she is a special case.)He acted a part for them. But in thesituations which were not sexual, hispart did not fit. Killing Mrs. Chalfontbecause she did not respect his sexualsuperiority was all right, but killingMrs. Bramson because he needed hermoney was all wrong.It will be considerably harder, per¬haps, to accept the second part ofthis analysis—Olivia’s identificationof herself with Dan. But it is truewithout a doubt, whether the play¬wright intended or not.Olivia is a plain girl, but unsatis¬fied sexually. Her completely sexlesslife in the little cottage with her aunthas made her wish desperately for(Continued on page two)Present RanchoGrande, FerdinandAt Int-HouseTito Guizar, Mexican singing mati¬nee idol, is starred in the second IntHouse movie today at 4:30 and 8:00.Guizar’s vehicle is “Rancho Grande”and was one of the most requestedpictures in the International Housemovie survey.With Spanish population way up atthe University, there has been con¬siderable demand for a picture inSpanish. This film was made in Mex¬ico and has all the trimmings of afirst class horse opera.James Wellerd, Int House activitiesdirector boasts, “It has singing cow¬boys, horses, women and everything;and besides that it has English sub¬titles.” The picture besides Wellerd’srecommendation is one of the mostpopular of the Spanish films.Giuzar has made several films inthis country. He has composed manySpanish songs which he sings in thispicture. Prices for the afternoon per¬formance are 35 cents. Evening show¬ing will be 50 cents. Returns ShowStudents FavorFlying CourseOver 200 Responses andInquiries Swamp Dean’sOffice.A week ago the University sent outinquiries to its undergraduate men tofind out whether they wanted to flyshould the University inaugurate acourse to teach them. By yesterday214 students had shown interest inthe establishment of local unit of theCivM Aeronautics Authority.Although Dean George A. Works,who sent out the questionnaire, wasout of town, it is probable that theresponse was even greater than wasexpected.“At least ten men” was the mini¬mum set by the University if it wasto set up a special course in the Phy¬sical Science division to teach stu¬dents the rudiments of aeronautics.The fact that two hundred men haveshown interest in the course does notnecessarily mean that they would signup for such a course, but it is a goodindication that the University couldget well over its minimum responseif it decided to establish the groundtraining school.The fact that war mortality ratesare highest in the air evidently hasnot served to deter the response ofUniversity students. Apparently theforty dollar charge made to each stu¬dent seemed cheap to the 214 whoshowed interest. The fact that theywere getting a several hundred dol¬lar training in flying, and that theywould learn meteorology, navigation,aerodynamics, and aviation law un¬der Physical Science Dean HenryGordon Gale, seemed to be worth theadditional risk in case of war.However, the fact of the responsedoes not mean that the Universitywill necessarily set up such a courseof ground training in conjunctionwith actual flying training at theairport. It has not yet indicated itsintentions to the CAA and no appli¬cation to the Authority has beenmade.Name HerbertWoodward HeadOf I-H DirectorsAt a meeting of the InternationalHouse Alumni Association Sundaynight new officers and a new Boardof Directors was elected. The presi¬dent is' Herbert Woodward, Chicagoattorney and graduate of the LawSchool; vice-president, Mrs. WarnerWicks, active in International Houseactivities for several years; treasurer,P. Anagnost, a student from Greece;and secretary, James Wellard, Inter¬national House Activities director.On the Board of Directors are PaulOppermann, Ganzolo Varies, SarahThompson, Dr. Margarete Kunde, andGeorge Klemperer. Oppermann isfamiliar to the campus for his workwith the International House Quar¬terly Magazine. Dr. Kunde is a wellknown Chicago woman physician.The Alumni Association member¬ship is now up to 200 persons in20 different countries, with activebranches in Hawaii and the near East.There is now a branch being formedin Stockholm Sweden.As their goal again, the Associa¬tion aims to spread the InternationalHouse movement over the world. Withactive agents scattered over the globe,and many foreign students in thiscountry today, the group feels therewill be rapid strides in this direction.International House’s increased for¬eign enrollment makes this seem like¬ly.Settlement SmokerBecause tbe men who went onthe Settlement tour during fresh¬man week were not given full par¬ticulars about the work of theSettlement Board, a smoker forall men interested in settlementwork is being held tomorrow eve¬ning in Room A of the ReynoldsClub.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1939“Slfe ^atig^aroo«FOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSTb« Daily Maroon la the official studentnewspaper of the University of Chicago,published mornings except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company, 5881 University avenue.Telephones: Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6 :S0 phone in stories to ourprinters. The Chief Printing Company,148 West 62nd street. Telephone Went¬worth 6123.The University of Chicago aaaumes noresponsibility for any statements appear¬ing in The Daily Maroon or for any con¬tract entered into by The Daily Marooji^The Daily Maroon expressly reservesthe rights of publication of any materialappearing in this paper. Subscriptionrates: $8 a year; 84 by mail. Singlecopies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March18, 1903, at the post office at Chicago,Illinois, under the act of March 8, 1879.RSPRESCNTSD FOR NATIONAL AOVBRTISINa OVNational Advertising Service, Inc.Collet* Publishers Representative420 Madison Avc. New York, N.Y.CMICASO ' BOSTOR ■ Lot ARSILIt • SAR FRARCItCOBoard of ControlRUTH BRODYHARRY CORNELIUSWILLIAM H. GRODYDAVID MARTIN. ChairmanALICE MEYERBusinessHARRY F. TOPPING. Business Mgr.ROLAND I. RICHMAN, Advertising Mgr.EDITORIAL ASSOCIATESMarion Gerson. William Hankla. Pearl C.Rubins. John Stevens, Hart Wurzburg,Marian Castleman, Ernest LeiserNight Editor: Chet HandAssistant: Betty Van LiewTravelingBazaar Boards were known as the MortarBackets and the Quadranglers as theQuaddies.In writing finis we will say that ifshe would accept it Freshman God¬dess Carolyn Wheeler would be morethan an even bet for Homecomingqueen.Letters to theEditorBoard of Control,The Daily Maroon:Dear Sir:In the October 18 issue of the Ma¬roon there appears a leading articlereferring to the recent publicationsby Dr, Ernest A. Hooton of Harvard.It is stated that members of the De¬partment of Anthropology are unwill¬ing to be quoted because of a specialorder from me.It is, of course, clear that I am inno position to dictate to my col¬leagues either inside or outside theDepartment, as to what interviewsthey may give. However, when a copyof the proposed story was shown tome I expressed the wish (vain wish)that it should not be published. I haveno objection to having members ofthis department or of others preparecritical appraisals or reviews of thework of other scholars. I do, how¬ever, object to hasty statements or toanything which savors of the person¬al. I am sure that Dr. Hooton wouldappreciate constructive criticism ofany of his writings. It is this sort ofcriticism that I have urged upon theMaroon. Freshmen Viefor Posts onClass CouncilAs some 44 freshmen listed theirnames yesterday for prospective can¬didacy on the nine-man first yearcouncil, an upper class committee pre¬pared today to handle the resultingmaelstrom of clerical detail. Mean¬while petitions for candidacy, to con¬tain at least 25 boda fide freshmansignatures, are handed out at a deskin Cobb’s first floor corridor this aft¬ernoon between 2 and 4.The rules committee has decreedthat no freshman may sign morethan nine petitions, and that anyname found to be duplicated moreoften than thajt will be ruled invalid.Should such an invalidation leave apetition with less than the required25 required signatures, the unhappypetition will be summarily referred tothe wastebasket.Deadline for petition-handing-inwill be 4 Thursday afternoon, bywhich time all petitions, duly signed,must be in Miss Smalley’s hands inDean Smith’s office, Cobb 203. Fri¬day afternoon the successful petition¬ers will be presented to a generalclass meeting at a location to be an¬nounced.The names of all students present¬ing petitions will be published in to¬morrow’s Daily Maroon.Freudian—(Continued from page one)violent, passionate love. Then Dancomes along, and she sees in him onewho has acted violently and passion¬ately.The fundamental basis, then, forthe identification of Olivia with Danis their common belief in the over¬whelming superiority of the sexualover the moral and social. Olivia lovesDan because he takes advantage ofthis superiority.One additional reason Olivia didnot give Dan away to the police wasthat she knew Dan would murderMrs. Bram.son (but she did not sus¬pect it would be for money.) Oliviahated her aunt: “I could kill her!” shesays in Act II. This is a Freudianslip, and even though she says it inanger, it’s absolutely true. It is per¬haps important to clear up one addi¬tional question: Is Dan insane? Theplaywright means him to be, but ac¬tually he isn’t. Or, to put it more in¬directly, but less dogmatically, he wasno more mad than Olivia. They wereboth neurotic and maladjusted. Danacted; Olivia only wished she werelike him.Mrs. B. represented to Olivia themean, the social, and the moral thatwas frustrating her sexual desires.Mrs. B. should be killed, in a frenzied,violent way that would let loose allthe fury of a repressed libido. Suchhad been the murder of Mrs. Chal-font, and Olivia, through her identi¬fication with Dan, hoped for satisfac¬tion.But Dan murdered Mrs. B. for hermoney, cleverly, and rationally. Itwas a horrible mistake on his part,and even he suspected he was wrongas he planned it. “Is is really right?”he asks him.self. “Can I no longer livein my imagination, act no more?”Here he is in a situation where hissexual power is of no use.When Olivia discovers the murder,or rather the manner of the murder,she realizes how mistaken she hadbeen. She had expected to find Dancutting off Mrs. Bramsom’s head andlegs and perhaps gouging out herheart, but instead finds him calmlyspreading kerosene about. “But it’s soordinary!” she gasps; and her identi¬fication with Dan is broken.Inspector Belsize arrests Dan, andbrings him finally to the full realiza¬tion of his mistake. Sex is no goodagainst sexual forces. Belsize, a eu¬nuch as far as anybody knows, is,however, the potent representative oflaw and intelligence and he is a matchfor Dan.ist, received the aboye informationfrom Wilfred Van Wyck, Europeanimpressario. The count’s tour was toinclude a stop at the University andwas to extend over the months ofJanuary, February, and March. ClassifiedFURNISHED ROOM S—5648 Drcxcl At*.SInsle & doable rooma, 2nd floor. PhonoPlain 5720 (call between 6 p.m. A 12noon).FOR IMMEDIATE SALE—34 Ford four-doordeluxe aedan. Excellent condition—radio.8140. 5747 UniTersity, Dor. 1832, at noon.PIANO INSTRUCTION—Former atudent—Jnillard School of Music. N.Y.C., reason¬able. Hyde Park 4870.FOR YOUR CHOICE INFINE TYPEWRITERSKenath H. SponselBurton Court 522 Midway 6000 Read the Maroon4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COllEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorossgh. mtestsive, stenographic course^starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October!Interesting Booklet sent free. Without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employedmoser• BUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D. PH.8.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 Ava., Chicago, Randolph 4347After all the celebrating and thelike done last weekend everyoneshould be a bit under the weather. Wehad better all start getting into shapenow as the Psi Us have promised us astupendous party next Saturdaynight. Chaperones for the evening willbe Mr. and Mrs. Robert Anderson(Barbara Phelps) and Mr. and Mrs,Robert Barr (Judy Cunningham).On Friday night there was the Set¬tlement’s Social C dance with a floorshow featuring newly married MargeGrey Exeter singing and a dance con¬test which Freshman Paul Reynoldswon. The Phi Psis there were morethan making sure that no one but thebrothers danced with Doris Alt de¬spite her date with Deke Jim Ander¬son. Certain people were seeing to itthat the Sigmas had more than aneven chance to win the prize for hav¬ing the most dance tickets. Too, forthe first time in our memory therewere girl stags standing along thewall, but not for long.At the Phi Psis lavish Esquire partyon Saturday night there was a genialmob. Hart Perry arrived with GeorgiaDish whom he inherited from EmmettDeadman when the latter was sudden¬ly called to Scranton, Pennsylvania toaccept a newspaper job. Betty New-hall and Bob Anderson did some im¬promptu dancing while others foundit more fun to spend their time in thelounge. The stag line was stronglyfortified by Dekes and Alpha Delts.At Hanley’s Friday night brothersBernhart and Perry were celebratingthe initiation of their new chapter atNorthwestern. (The Wranglers canno longer sing Ring Ching Ching withglee.) Saturday night the Dekesturned out to drown the place in songled by powerfully voiced little PunkWarfield.This week’s newsettes:In the C Shop: Louise Eaton hold¬ing on to Bill Reynolds as Mary EllenTaylor looks more than provoked atanother table. The Mortar Boardshaving their pictures taken and theSigmas with all the Freshman girlscornered.Among the Freshmen making good:Stud Ruml with B. J. Nelson, BetsyKuh and Jerry Moray, Barbara Quinnand Bud Caulten and Mary Millerwith Bruce Dixon. It should be asteady proposition with them all be¬fore long.The gong this week goes to: JeanScott for ending her romance withBob Reynolds by committing the un¬forgivable sin of breaking a date.Boner of the week: Clark Watkinintroducing date Faith “Punky” John¬son as Faith Bacon.Pinhangings: Alpha Delt Jack“Buffalo” Woolams on Mary MargaretMayer, who has long been consideredan AD girl, and Beta Grant Atkinsonon Eunice Erickson ... it also seemsthat Johnny Van de Water is now of¬ficially engaged to Harriet Doll.Look alikes: Kay Chittenden andDoris Alt. Anne MacDougall and Car-role Iximbard.Remember bac)^ when: The Mortar FAY COOPER COLE.Today on theQuadranglesPublic Lecture. (Downtown). “Con¬temporary America in Fiction.” Pro¬fessor Boynton, The Art Institute ofChicago, 6:45.Film. Ferdinand the Bull (Disney)and Rancho Grande (Mexican withEnglish titles). International House.Divinity Chapel Service Dinner.Church of the Redeemer, Rev. B. I.Bell, 6:30.Anderson Society Dinner. Churchof the Redeemer. Rev. B. I. Bell. 6:30.Junior Mathematical Club. “Con¬tinual Fractions”. Morris Bloom. Eck-hart 206, 6:30,Graduate Classical Club. “Popular¬ity of Lucan”. Mr. Buere. Classics 21,8:00.Iron Mask Meeting. Reynolds Club,Lounge A, 7:10,Skull and Crescent. Reynolds Club,2:30.Sigmas Win TaxiDanceChampionshipUp to the expectations of both So¬cial Committee chairman Bob Rey¬nolds and Settlement Board chairmanMarge Kuh, the third of the Social“C” book dances produced a bumpercrop of dancers last Friday night atIda Noyes.The publicized attraction of spon¬sored taxi dancing was run off withlittle fan fare. The Sigmas wereeasily the winners, with Quadrangu¬lar and Esoteric running two andthree. No individual champion waschosen.A dancing contest, won by fresh¬man Paul Reynolds and date, wastossed in to spice up the mediocrefloor show.All “C” book salesmen have beenrequested to turn in their receipts toMel Rosenthal.Saint-Martin GivesUp Organ for ArmyDrawn from his pipe organ into theFrench army. Count Leonce de Saint-Martin, head organist at the NotreDame Cathedral in Paris, was obligedto cancel a concert tour in this coun¬try. Although the Count is now inthe army, he still manages to play jthe organ at Notre Dame during theregular Sunday services, but is un¬able to commute as far as America.Frederick Marriott, Chapel organ-1 ★ Featurif^S-HowA TRULY WONDERFULHAPPY LUNCHEON rrSoup or Juice. Entree, potato,vegetable. Dessert and drink. 4aCOLONIAL RESTAURANT6324 Woodlawn Avenueat Jiddthis year, a new gigantic chairski-lift ... of the most modern type . . .will carry skiers up 3,253 feet to the topof Baldy Mountain. And, in addition,there are ski-lifts on Proctor, Dollarand Ruud Mountains, making it possibleto enjoy an amazing number of down¬hill runs in a day’s skiing. In short-^moreskiing for your money.Powder snow... ideal terrain... and thehealth-giving rays of a warm sun... makeskiing at Sun Valley the finest in America.Then, too, you can enjoy skating,dog-sledding, swimming in outdoorwarm-water pools, and other invigorat¬ing sports. In addition to smart Sun ValleyLodge and comfortable Challenger Inn,the Ski Chalets offer accommodationsat unusually low cost. Plan now to visitSun Valley this winter.4. SPECIAL EVENTSInter-Collegiate Ski Meet, Dec. 30, 31-Jan. 1. Mid-Winter Sports Carnival andInterstateSkiMeet,Jan. 20-21. Sun ValleyOpen Meet (for men and women) includ¬ing National Downhill, Slalom and Com¬bined Championships, March 22-23-24.For complete informationW.P. ROGERS or A.G.BLC)OM,G. A.P.D.Gen’l Mgr. Union Pacific RailroadSun Valley 1 S. La Salle St.Idaho Phone Randolph 0141Chicago, Ill.THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1939 Page ThreeCandles andGarUcBy GEORGE PECKSomeone hereabouts told me thatone was supposed to have a ready setprogram for a column before break¬ing into print. To him it will be mostdisappointing to discover that thiscolumn will wage no musical wars orindulge in fashionable extravagancesof condemnation or of worship. It in¬tends to give news of the comingevents in the city’s and the college’smusic program and some reviews ofperformances which will be repeated.It will cock an ear at the new re¬leases of the recording companies.To plunge into the musical activi¬ties going on at the present timelands one up in “medias res”. The gar¬lic and gelati of San Carlo have hard¬ly left town when they are replacedby the Chicago City Opera, openingwith color and gusto (and fortunatelywithout the prohibitive rates of NewYork’s Met.) in a production of Borison Saturday night. Old warhorse En-zio Pinza will sing the title role, prob¬ably with his usual careful workman¬ship. and will also probably shinenext to the “Dimitri” of ArmandTokatyan, a somew’hat forcing gen¬tleman who has fallen into the croon¬ing heresy. Eleanor La Mance takes“Marina”. In spite of the lack of el¬ephants, Boris ought to come up tothe classic spectacle-opener Aida.The symphony hits its full stridethis afternoon when it opens its Tues¬day series. Dr. Stock will present afairly commonplace program, openingwith the Fidelio overture, passing onto that most delightful compendium ofhit tunes, Schubert’s C. Major Sym¬phony. Strauss’s Don Juan ratherweighs down that worthy with atten¬tion. considering the all-Strauss pro¬gram for Thursday, and the popularCaprircio Espagnol of Rimsky-Korsa-kow tops off the afternoon. Woodward OutlinesQuinquagenary PlansBy ERNEST LEISER“Barring war or acts of God theUniversity will have a Fiftieth An¬niversary celebration.” Just backfrom his vacation, and moved intohis new offices in Goodspeed Hall,vice-president emeritus Frederic C,Woodward, swiveled around in hischair, and outlined the plans for theUniversity’s quinquagenary.“I don’t expect that the UnitedStates will be in the war by 1941,”said Woodward, director of the 50thAnniversary committee. “But if it is,of course there would almost certain¬ly be no celebration of any kind.Even if the European nations werestill fighting, it would mean a limi¬tation on the scope of our celebration.It would make it a purely Americanacademic gathering, rather than aninternational one, for European schol¬ars would not be able to come over.As a matter of fact, many of themare even now being drafted for warwork.”One Year CelebrationThe third set of Thursday nightand Friday afternoon of the sympho¬ny features Rose Pauly, who has abig soprano voice, in three songs andparts of Salome from RichardStrauss. Those who take their sexwith Strauss will like the latter, andthose who go the whole way withNietsche’s Beyond Good and Evil andadmire heroes, ought to enjoy ThusSpake Zarathustra..Mr. Levarie says that there seemsto be an increasing interest in old mu¬sic. Perhaps the tender candlelight ofthe Mozart maniacs is spreading itswarm glow to include the whole class¬ical period, but in any case it appearsno lony?r exotic lU think highly of*he early Eighteenth Century writers. Plans for the celebration are highlynebulous. Woodward pointed out.Starting in 1940, with the gatheringof as eminent scientists as can bemustered, the program will come toits climax in September of 1941, withthe w'hole Middle West invited to seethe progress Chicago has made in thefifty years of its existence, and witha three day super Alumni Reunion,awarding of honorary degrees, and ahuge celebration downtown.The official birthday of the Univer¬sity, July 1, will probably be com¬memorated with a sort of minor pre¬paratory celebration. The date thatPresident Harper took over his du¬ties, and the date which has beencelebrated by the University for itsfifth, tenth, and twenty-fifth anniver-.sary, is not being used for the heightof the Fiftieth Anniversary for ob¬vious reasons. F^or undergraduateparticipation, and for an opportunityto show the University at the heightof its activity, it is necessary to havethe celebration during the fall quar¬ter, rather than the summer.Alumni GiftW’oodward said that the develop¬ment of the celebration would be slowmanaged to give a richness of expres¬sion and fullness of orchestral tonewith instruments of the period. Thestately “Menuet des Ombres Heureus-es” from F’roserpine and the famousminuet from “Amadis de Gaule” areoutstanding examples of Lulli’s har¬monic craftsmanship. until the big year draws near. Im¬portant to the celebration wilFbe thepresentation of the Alumni’s gift.Work on which has been activelystarted with between three and fourhundred national chairmen being ap¬pointed under the supervision of JohnNuveen, Jr., chairman of the AlumniFoundation, whose purpose is to raisemoney for this gift.Work done in the near future willbe mostly groundwork, with effortsbeing made to arrange for meetingsof the learned societies on the Quad¬rangles during the Anniversary year.Steinbeck NovelTo be DiscussedBy J. WeinsteinThe facts behind John Steinbeck’s“The Grapes of Wrath”, the storyof California’s migratory workers,will be discussed when Dr. JacobWeinstein speaks to an open meetingsponsored by the Social Problems com¬mittee of the ASU, on Friday at4:30 in Social Assembly room.Weinstein, who accompanied Stein¬beck on some of his field trips, hasmade several investigations of mi¬gratory labor for the Simon LubinSociety of California. Besides giv¬ing the results of these investigations,he will analyze the remedies for thesituation suggested by Carey McWil¬liams, author of “Factories^ in theField,” and by Paul S. Taylor of theFarm Security Administrations.This meeting constitutes the firstlap of the “Transcontinental Tourof the Labor Movement,” sponsoredby the ASU for this year. From theSan Joaquin, Sacramento, Imperial,and Salinas valleys the tour will pro¬ceed to the San Franciso waterfrontand the Hollywood studios. A viewof the battle currently raging be¬tween Dave Beck’s teamsters and theCIO woodworkers will complete thestudy of the Pacific Coast.After the initial meeting Friday,the weekly “tour” will depart regu¬larly on Tuesdays at 12:30 from So¬cial Science 105.Regular open meetings of the othertwo ASU commissions, both of whichwill be held in Social Science 105 at12:30, will be on Wednesday for thePeace Commission, and Friday forthe Campus Problems group.Tonight a most noteworthy presen¬tation of Rameau and Couperin is be¬ing given at the Goodman Theatre bythe Manuel and Williamson Harpsi¬chord Ensemble. The harpsichonlswill be backed by a small chamber or¬chestra, and the finale is a motet ofCouperin.Interesting along the same line, isthe recent Columbia recording of ex¬cerpts from four operas of Lulli byMaurice Cauchie’s orchestra in Paris.On two 10 in. discs, M. Cauchie hasWHO GOES TO SUN VALLEY?The Maroon can’t send every student to Sun Valley during Christmas, soit will send the man and woman that University students consider to beMost Representative of the unique educational, cultural, social and athleticopportunities provided on these quadrangles. Balloting will be heldWednesday, Thursday, and Friday of this week. Among the names whichwill be on the slate are those of;Henrietta MahonPeggy FlynnJanet GeigerClarabelle GrossmanJean PhillipsThelma IselmanBetty CaldwellJohn Davenport Dick TrowbridgeArt LoewyGordon MurrayChuck PfeifferJerry AbelsonBill MacyJim AndersonMel RosenfeldAny organization, social or otherwise, which feels it isn’t represented byany of the above students can nominate one or two or a dozen by simplyregistering their names with David Martin in the Daily Maroon office be¬fore 1:30 this afternoon. Climb on the wagon and tel? usWHO GOES TO SUN VALLEY? Registrar MillerHunts for HundredsOf Lost Millers Harper DiscussesRussian PolicyLost! 100,000 ex-Universlty of Chi¬cago students. An extensive searchin the stacks divulging nothing, CarlBeck and the Alumni Office take ac¬tion.Action begins with the Millers. Mil¬ler is a nice name, inoffensive, com¬mon, and ripe material to work withon the man hunt. Besides the regis¬trar’s name is Miller. Samuel N. Harper, professor ofRussian language and institutions atthe University and eminent author¬ity on matters pertaining to Russia,will address the second meeting ofthe Campus Peace Council next Thurs¬day at 3:30 in Social Science 122. Aft¬er Professor Harper’s speech on So¬viet Policy in the European crisis,there will be discussion and a ques¬tion period.It’s all very complicateC. Thereare slightly under 40,000 Universitydegree holders for whom the AlumniOffice have correct addresses. Thereare also about 9,000 ex-students whonever graduated, of whose where¬abouts the University is reasonablycertain. But there are almost 100,000students who, having matriculated atChicago at one time or another, havemoved so often that the ever vigilantAlumni boys can’t keep up with them.Among the missing are some threeor four hundred Millers. Millers fromwayback, and more recent Millers. Sothe Alumni office is trying by use ofthe mails, to find all the lost Millersof recent vintage. If they succeed,they may go out looking for the other99,500. Read the Maroon for latestnews about the Millers. A meeting of the executive commit¬tee will be held today at 3:30 in roomC of Ida Noyes Hall. They will dis¬cuss plans for a general membershipmeeting for the purpose of planningprograms for the rest of the year. Anominee for secretary will also bedecided upon at this meeting of theexecutive council.Florris Beauty ShopWhere you will meet your best friends"The shop where beauty work is anArt, not just a Job."Phone Fedriox 03095523 KenwoodSensible Prices All we ask is a trialIf 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 OUTVVWW^WWWWWWWWWVWWWiWVW^WVWWWVWWVTYPEWRITERWILLHELP YOUWITH YOUR NOTES, THEMES, PAPERS, AND LET¬TERS, SEE OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF ALL MAKES—PORTABLE AND LARGE MACHINES—USED ANDNEW.New Portables $29.75 to 79.50Used Portables 19.50 to 39.75Used Large 17.5D to 79.50ALSO—TYPEWRITERS RENTED - REPAIREDBOUGHT - EXCHANGEDWoodworth'sBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsPhone Dorchester 4800>wwwvwwvmMvy^Mv^w^AAA/vwyyvyyyyyvyfi mIMPERFECT IN ORIGINALPage Four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1939THE DAILY MAROON SPORTSIntramural ResultsCherishedCourageBy BILL GRODYChicago succumbed to Michigan’spowerhouse Saturday by the score of85-0. It was the worst Maroon defeatin the history of the University, sur¬passing the one-week old mark pre¬viously set by Harvard. It showedconclusively that the Maroon footballteam cannot compete with superiorteams under present conditions.What should we do? Should weabolish football? Absolutely not! IfUniversity undergraduates are will¬ing to battle for a losing cause, if theyare willing to practice five days aweek to take defeat on Saturday, theyshould not be deprived of whateverpleasure they may derive from thegame.0 * *Should Chicago schedule only thoseteams which it considers in its class?Until such time as the Maroon teamcan compete on equal terms with itsmore athletic-minded rivals, this ap¬pears to be a plausible answer. How¬ever, providing Conference opponentswill include Chicago in its schedule,a couple of Big Ten games could beplayed in an otherwise easier sched¬ule.But to those who once again wish tosee Chicago on top, there is anothersolution which will not involve thesubsidization to which the Universityadministration is so whole-heartedlyopposed. It involves the assistance ofthe alumni, and, in addition of theStudent Publicity Board, and of theundergraduates themselves.* ♦ *The alumni made a commendablestart his year by supposedly attract¬ing to the University a better fresh¬man team than Chicago has seen inseveral years. They must continuethis support if we are ever to seegood Chicago teams perform onStagg Field. They must sell the schoolto students who have shown athleticprowess and who, at the same time,can meet Chicago’s scholastic require¬ments.Certainly, with Chicago alumniscattered in all sections of the nation—with alumni who truly appreciatethe superior educational opportunitiesthat this University has to olfer—withalumni who are willing to co-operate—there is no reason why Chicago can¬not attract competent athletes with¬out at the same time violating therules of the Conference that preventsubsidization and without loweringthe University’s scholastic rating.*00Chicago is rated as one of the lead¬ing, if not the leading educational in¬stitution in the country. With that astheir best selling point, perhaps thealumni can contact students who aregood football players, and who wishto secure the best education that canbe offered.The Student Publicity Board andthe undergraduate body in its contactwith prospective students can alsofulfill the same purpose. Selling theUniversity, then, seems a plausiblesolution to this present situation.Who Won^ 854);Was It Michigan?Chicago met defeat once more Sat¬urday, this time by the score of 85-0.Michigan, finding its path to the goalline comparatively easy, made twelvetouchdowns, ten extra points and afield goal to total the largest figurethat has ever been made against aMaroon team.Featuring the running of its cele¬brated halfback Tom Harmon and theplaying of Zimmerman, Evashevski,Troskos, Renda, and others in thebackfield, the Wolverines displayedthe brilliant offensive power withwhich they had been credited.THE NEWLEX THEATREFEATURING “PUSH BACK” SEATS1162 E. BSrd St Open 11:00 A.M. DailyWED. & THURS."THE MAN THAT THEYCOULD NOT HANG"withBORIS KARLOFFand"CAREER"1,\ ! I Coach Expects'Alumni Aid forj Future GriddersRefuses to Break Big TenRegulations in Improv¬ing Midway Football.When asked what he thought wouldbe the upshot of the two lopsided beat¬ings to which Chicago has been sub¬jected in the past two weeks, footballmentor Clark Shaughnessy replied,“I imagine that the alumni will startdoing a little more work on prospec¬tive football players.” In contrast tosome Big Ten schools, however, it isexpected that Chicago will stay with¬in the conference regulations regard¬ing financial assistance. “I wouldnever have anything to do with thatsort of business,” continued Shaugh¬nessy.”As far as this year’s team goes,Shaughnessy has not given up hope.He regards the open date this week¬end as little short of a godsend.“We’ve got several players out therewho need seasoning,” he explained.“They have the natural ability andspirit, but they just don’t knowenough football. These other schoolscan spend ten hours on the gridironto our one.”In order to polish his raw recruitsand give them game experienceShaughnessy is planning to have twopractice games between the vauntedfreshman team and the much-beratedvarsity. For psychological reasons,the coaching staff has decided to ex¬clude the public from these contests,for they feel that the varsity-froshrivalry is already strong enough andthat any factors which would tend toincrease it should be eliminated ifpossible.Despite recent reports deflating themuch publicized cub gridders, VinSahlin, one of Nels Norgren’s assist¬ants in coaching the yearling grid¬iron hopefuls, is still completely soldon them. “Why, I’d be willing to betthat I could take a team of thoseboys up to Northwestern and win byfive touchdowns,” he bragged yester¬day. Unfortunately, conference reg¬ulations will prevent him from carry¬ing out his threat..iiilllllllillilllllllllllllllillllllllllllillllllllllChicago Festivalof Ancient MusicHear the harpsichords, spinet, vir- iginal, dementi piano, with strings, Iflutes, and voices—at the GoodmanTheatre.Bach and Mozart Oct. 17Rameau and Couperin. Oct. 24Music from Old London.Nov 1Hear this music as it was origin¬ally played—On instruments foiwhich it was composed —*WORLD-FAMOUS ARTISTS.Tite Manuel & WilliamsonHarpischord EnsembleTickets can be obtained at Infor¬mation Desk.Students!!SAVE FROM 20% TO 50% ONYOUR LAUNDRY BILLMENDING — DARNINGBUTTONSSHIRTS 12cCOLLARS. Starch 4cCOLLARS, Soft 3cUNDERSHIRTS 5cDRAWERS 5cUNION SUITS lOcPAJAMA SUITS 20cSOCKS, per pair 5cHANDKERCHIEFS 2cTOWELS 2cMETROPOLELAUNDRYWESLEY N. KARLSON, Prop.1219-21 EAST 55th ST.Phone Hyde Pork 3190Between Woodlawn and Kimbark Are. HutchinsNotable by his presence at theMichigan—Chicago encounter Sat¬urday was President Robert M.Hutchins. A visitor in the lockerroom after the game, he talked toa few of the players and promised“to look into the situation to seewhat could be done.”I-M Games Today3:00 Burton “800” vs. Judson “100”Aristotelians vs. Nu Beta EpsilonQuadrangle Club vs. Snell Hall4:00 Burton “500” vs. Judson “400”Burton “600” vs. Burton “700”Bar Association vs. X U Hi Six games, three fraternity andthree independent, were played in theintramural touchball circuit last Fri¬day with the fraternity favorites A.D. Phi, Psi U, and Beta coming outon top.The Alpha Delts, although winning6-0, were not as impressive as theirprevious record warrants. Their onlyscore came in the first half on a passfrom Stanley to Herschel.Psi U, snapping out of their earlyseason lethargy, smothered Delta U31-6 mainly due to A1 “Sonny Boy”Vanderhoof’s alert playing. Beta Theta Pi, after being held to a score¬less tie in the first half, showereddown on the Phi Sigs for three touch¬downs before the final whistle. Mer-riam and Jones accounted for two tal¬lies on passes and Brumbaugh addedthe final score on a pass interception.In its first game of the season theBar Association showed its tradition¬al power in defeating a team com¬posed of freshmen 33-6.Burton “600” and “800” entrieswon their first starts. Burton “600”over Burton “500” 6-0 on a passPaine to Liebman. Burton “800” overJudson “400” 12-6.ooacva. .opens Doorsto Fields ^ere PeopleLive,W)rk & Achieveoday there are about 1,000,000cigar stores, drug stores, country and grocery stores whereyou can buy cigarettes in the United States. These re¬tailers, and the jobbers who serve them, have built upa service of courtesy and convenience unmatched by any otherindustry catering to the American public’s pleasure.[here are another million people whoare engaged directly or indirectly in the transportation ofcigarettes to every town, hamlet and crossroads.f of the 48t crops to! skill andg and cur-^ell the jobI product,of the 13,230iries, storage^ ^ ^ mms is over 10years. This means that every step in the making ofChesterfields, regardless of how small, is handled by peo¬ple who have had 10 years of experience and ability inknowing^ their jobs.Tr.RULY TOBACCO OPENS DOORS to fields wherepeople live, work and achieve, and Chesterfield takespride in its ever increasing part in this great industry thatis devoted entirely to the pleasure of the American public.To SMOKERS, Chesterfield Cigarettes havealways said, and now repeat, that in no other cigarettemade can you find the same degree of real mildness andgood taste, or the same high quality of properly curedand aged tobaccos. Chesterfield Cigarettes are madewith one purpose only,,,to give smokers everywherethe MILDER, BETTER-TASTING SMOKING PLEA¬SURE they want. You can*t buy a better cigarette.