Vol. 41, No. 6 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1940 Price 3 centsMolkup Heads YouthFor DemocracyDouglas Speaks at Key-iVole Meeting of RooseveltSupporters.Hy MAKK FISHERIn a rapid, unanimous vote Youthfor Democracy yesterday chose thestudents who will lead the campusRoosevelt campaign. Joe Molkup waschosen chairman, Bob Kamens vice-chairman, and Milt Weiss secretary ofthe group. The first act of the newlyelected officers was to select an execu¬tive committee to aid them in theforthcoming campaign. The commit¬tee consists of Marian Castelman asmemlH-rship .secretary, Ernest Ixdserin charge of publicity, Mary Harveyin charge of organization, BeatiCaitlzik who will handle distribution,Monrad Paul.son who heads the speak¬ers’ bureau, Dorothy (Jreene whoheads the program committee, Edrilman who will contact the faculty,Sid Birell who will do the same forgraduate students and Marge Good¬man, responsible for canvassing.The meeting next unanimously ac-ceptetl a statement of principle whichincluded an endorsement of the NewDeal and a promise to actively sup¬port Roosevelt and Wallace..Molkup than introduced the onlyspeaker to address the meeting, Paul11. Douglas, of the University facultyand alderman of the Fifth Ward.Douglas began his talk by drawing apicture of the state of the nat.on atthe time Hoover left office, and con¬tinued by giving specific examples ofthe improvements that have occurredunder the New Deal. He stated thatRoosevelt has provided jobs for elevenmillion men, that under the presentadministration stock prices have risenloO percent and that the national in¬come has approximately doubled. Heaccused the ex-Republican regime ofabsolutely refusing to lend any aidwhatsoever to the unemployed andthen praised the President for helphe has extended to the working manthrough the WPA, the Social Securityand other laws. He added that themiddle class has been aided by being|)rotected from such things as the“Insull Insecurities.”“All the.se internal improvementsare more than enough reason for re¬electing Roosevelt,” went on Douglas,“but the foreign situation makes hisre-election an absolute necessity.” Hestated that Roosevelt made an urgentattempt to unite the democracies be¬fore the war broke out and ever sincethe war has shown an unswervingloyalty toward the Allied cause.Douglas said that we cannot resistand appease at the same time; we(Continued on page 2) Paul Douglas.“fartK hack ItooHevelt''Levi Gets Leaveto Help AnioUlEdward H. Levi, Assistant Profes¬sor of Law, was summoned to Wash¬ington this summer as a Special As¬sistant to Thuman W. Arnold, Assist¬ant .Attorney General. Levi will be onindefinite leave to fulfill this post.Mr. Levi is cooperating with theDepartment of Justice on Anti-Trustproblems. Arnold is rapidly increasingthe staff in an effort to enforce Anti-Trust laws which have hitherto beenallowed to lap.se. The war crisis hasmade in correlation of industry anddefense programs imperative, andMr. Arnold is trying to get anti¬trust laws into effect without hurtingdefense plans. Lawyers and econo¬mists from all over the country arebeing called in, as well as professorsfrom Yale and Harvard. University AsksIncreased FundsIn New BookletTo impress upon the public andalumni alike the need for an increasedendowment, the university has recent¬ly reissued a booklet it published lastspring called, “New Frontiers in Edu¬cation and Research.”Among the important facts whichthe booklet spotlights is the decreaseof endowment income from 6.2 per¬cent during the last decade. This, ineffect is the same as if 33 percent ofthe total endowment had been wipedout. More important to undergi-ad-uates is the resulting lowering of thenumber of full professors on the fac¬ulty.(University Third in EndowmentWhile the University has receivedmany generous gifts (luring its fiftyyears of existence, its seventy-twoand a half million dollar endowmentis still fifty percent less than the en¬dowment resources of Harvard andtwenty-five percent less than those ofYale.In order to place the University ina more secure financial position ananniversary drive for twelve milliondollars is now being conducted. Thesum, when collected, will be used tomeet such expenses as faculty sal¬aries, re.search work, and the pur¬chase of books for the library. It willalso enable the University to givefull professorship to deserving facul¬ty members and promote other mem¬bers of the faculty..Appeal to UhicagoansAt the end of the booklet, followingthe explanation of the .Alumni Fund,there is an appeal to Chicagoans ask¬ing them to make “the Fiftieth Anni-ver.sary Celebration . . . the occasion Pulse Off Probation;Plans PublicationWilliam M. Randall.Pulse beats again.Chicago SwapsProfessorsWith HarvardIn accordance with its policy ofbringing a variety of personalitiesand points of view to the campus, thephilosophy department has “loaned”Rudolph Carnap, professor of Philos¬ophy, to Harvard University in ex¬change for Professor Henry M. Shef-fer of that school.Next year Carnap will be back oncampus and SheflFer will return to Randall’s O.K. Given toEditor Click; Out of DogHouse.for a renewed manifestation by the ipeople of Chicago of their interest in i ^ associate professor of Philosophy,the University and their determina- *tion to support it.” The appeal issigned by many of the city’s mostprominent citizens. exchanged for JohnHarvard for two quarters. Wild ofPeter The Hermit KeepsPopping Up On CampusPhi Beta DeltaStill ActiveThe Maroon learned last night thatthere are still thirteen clubs on cam¬pus. Due to an erroneous report, astatement was printed that Phi BetaDelta had gone temporarily inactive.Yolanda Seniscalchi told Donna Cul-liton, president of Interclub, that, aspresident of Phi Beta Delta and act¬ing for the club, the club wished to gotemporarily inactive, as thefe wereonly two members left in the organ¬ization. However, it seems that shewas only co-chairman of the club andhad not consulted with the clubabout the matter. Carol Wilson, theother co-chairman stated that sheand the rest of the Phi Beta Deltasknew nothing of the matter until theyI saw it in the Maroon. There are stilljsix women in the club and they havejevery intention of remaining on cam-IPus.(Continued on page 4) By DAN WINOGRADDuring the last few weeks, new stu¬dents at the University have beenshown the various sights of the cam¬pus. One fixture overlooked by mostguides is Peter the Hermit. Peterisn’t his right name, but then hisname doesn’t matter much. Peter isthe fellow with the long white whis¬kers who keeps popping up aroundthe campus.The old guy has lived a long time,maybe too long. He belongs back withthe cracker barrel and pack peddler.In those days a man with such phil-o.sophical bent could have gladdenedthe heart of many a knowledge-hun¬gry farmers wife. Nowadays he hasto content himself with feeding thepigeons. iTammany PoliticiansOnce the bewhiskered gent opensup, he’ll tell you his name is JosephFrank, that he was born 76 years agoin New York and was once a leadingTammany politician. He'll tell youabout the Youth movement he’d like to form, the trips around the worldhe’ll take in directing the movement,and he’ll tell about his activities in“Bughouse Square.” He claims tohave been a leader in it for overhalf-a century. This kind of overlapswith his tenure in Tammany hall, butthen a guy can exaggerate a bit.Peter, as the Maroon prefers tocall him, would like to found a dis¬cussion center on the Midway, butdoCi^n’t think “Governor” Hutchinswould allow it. One thing this strangecharacter insists on is that he is not“Yehudi” of radio fame. Scientific EmpiricismBoth Carnap and Sheffer have madeextensive contributions to philosophyparticularly in the field of logic. Car¬nap is the outstanding proponent ofthe scientific empiricist or logical pos¬itivist school of philosophers. Shefferhas not as yet published very manyworks and is therefore not as wellknown as some other men in the field.Principia MathematicaAlfred North Whitehead and Ber¬trand Russell in the famous “Princi¬pia Mathematica” showed that math¬ematics and logic were basicly iden¬tical and that all the connectives inlogic could be reduced to four basicones. It remained for Sheffer to re¬duce Whitehead and Russell's fourbasic connectives to one “basic basic”one which he called “the stroke func¬tion.” Pulse, upon arranging its financialobligations to the satisfaction of theDean’s office, went off probation yes¬terday, Dean William M. Randall an¬nounced. The monthly magazine willbegin work on its first issue imme¬diately, and the date of appearancewill be announced later.Placed in the administrative doghouse because it failed to clear up itsfinancial difficulties before September15, Pulse was placed on probation byDean Randall in accordance with Uni¬versity regulations until that timewhen the periodical satisfied theDean’s office of its ability to set thebooks in order.According to Emil Hirsch, editorlast year, the debt was around $500,and their accounts receivable totaled$714. He placed the collection of theseaccounts in the hands of a legal firmwhich has loosened the frozen assets.Unpaid as yet is the obligation tothe publication’s sinking fund. Themajor portion of the debt was owed tothe magazine’s engraver, who, saysHirsch, was willing to continue theirservice in view of the accounts receiv¬able.The debt, the present managing edi¬tor, Ira Click, wants understood, wasincurred by the ’39-40 staff, and thepresent staff is to be held in no wayresponsible.“Such a thing could have happenedto any campus organization,” saysClick, “if their senior officers failedto collect their accounts or settle the-financial matters. No one should lookon the present Pulse members as be¬ing the cause of our probation.”He also added that in spite of re¬cent problems the carryover of for¬mer members runs as high as 25 whowill form a nucleus for the organiza¬tion. In the past it has been fewerthan 17 who returned as experiencedworkers.(Continued on page 3)Wa Noyes JuniorsJuniors interested in filling va¬cancies on the Ida Noyes Councilace requested to leave their nameswith Mary Hammel at P’oster HallI or at the main office of Ida NoyesI today or tomorrow. ORCHESTRA TRYOUTSTry outs for the University or¬chestra will be held between 2 and5 this week. Appointments for nextweek also can be made with Dr.Siegmund Levarie in the MusicBuilding. All University studentsare eligible to try out. Those whocan play the viola, string bass, orbasoon are especially welcome be¬cause there are several vacanciesin these sections of the orchestra.SFAC MEETINGMembers of the SFAC are askedto attend a meeting of the com¬mittee at 4:30 this afternoon in theMaroon office. Registration Up Two Per CentOver Last Year’s Record 571Entering freshman registration atthe University stood approximately 2per cent above the corresponding fig¬ure last year on Saturday, Sept. 28,the final day of Freshman Orienta¬tion Week. Registrants totaled 584compared with 571 for the same timelast year.Approximately 60 per cent of theentering students are men and 40 per! cent women. The exact figures were334 men and 250 women. Other thingsbeing equal, there will be approx¬imately one and one-tenths men gang¬ing up on each woman. Since thereare some Freshmen who register inBartlett Gymnasium after FreshmanWeek the crush may become evengreater.Total EnrollmentTotal registration in the Universityas of Oct. 1, 1940 is 6942 students.The corresponding figures for 1939give a total of only 6888 students.This is divided up as follows: 1939:Quadrangles, 5359; Rush MedicalSchool, 187; University College(downtown), 1342. 1940 records list; Quadrangles, 5369; Rush, 203; Uni¬versity College, 1370.The general trend in registrationhas been fairly steady during the pastfew years, according to Ernest C. Mil¬ler, Registrar. However tremendousincrease can be seen over the figuresgiven for the first class ever to regis¬ter at the University in 1892. At thattime the grand total for the year was744. There was neither a Law Schoolnor a Medical School in those days.The students spread themselves overthe following divisions: graduate stu¬dents, 217; “senior” college, 180;“junior” college, 41; Divinity school,204; unclassified, lok Freshmen PlanFor CouncilOrganizationThe English Qualifying Test willbe given Monday, October 7, from9:00 A. M. to 1:00 P. M. in BartlettGymnasium. There is no advanceregistration for the October Eng¬lish Qualifying Test. Informationregarding fees for this examina¬tion may be obtained in Cobb 100. First step in the organization ofthe Freshman class will be taken onTuesday, Oct. 8, at 3:30 in MandelHall. 'Two members of last year’sFreshman Council, Betsy Kuh andMonroe Fein, will explain to thegroup the present form of the Council,discuss its previous activities, andsuggest plans for the organization ofthis year’s class.The Freshman Council is a groupcomposed of nine members selected bythe whole Freshman class to representthe class and carry on its activities.Last year these activities covered awide field. Prominent on the Council’scalendar were a series of student-fac¬ulty luncheons at which such notablesas President Hutchins, Dr. Anton J.Carlson, and Paul Douglas were en¬tertained. These luncheons were opento the first twenty Freshmen whosigned up for them. The groups werepurposely kept small so that the stu¬dents would really get a chance toknow the guest of honor.Sports DanceAnother successful venture was theFreshman sport dance given in IdaNoyes. Athletes from the ChicagoBears football team and UniversityVai'sity men presented an exhibitionof various sports. Afterwards on¬lookers were permitted to make anexhibition of themselves on the dancefloor of Ida Noyes gymnasium.The Council’s biggest activity dur¬ing Winter Quarter was the orienta¬tion of mid-year Freshmen. Duringthe Spring Quarter, goodwill meetingswith members of Northwestern’sFreshman Council were held. Lastyear’s Council members who will serveuntil a new Council is elected are:Bob E. Smith, Betsy Kuh, Bob Todd,Monroe Fein, Orville Kanou.«e, DickReed, Kay , Chittenden, Fait.i John¬son, and Salrah T^e Peters.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1940'(fie VgHli IflaADOtiFOUNDED IN 1901MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED COLLEGIATEPRESSThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of ChicaKO, published morninirs except Saturday, Sunday,and Menday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters hyThe Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9221 and 9222. . . .After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 148 West 62nd street. Telephones: Wentworth 6123and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publication ofany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates : $3 a year ;$4 by mail. Single copies : throe cents.Entered as second class matter M.arch IS. 1908. at the post officeat Chicago. Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPlssocialGd GollG6icite PressDistributor ofCDllebiate DigestBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialWILLIAM HANKL.\ PEARL C. RUBINSERNEST S. LEISER JOHN P. STEVENS, ChairmanBusinessJOHN E. BEX. Business ManagerWILLIAM I.OVELL, Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESJames Burtle, Chester Hand, Richard Himmel, Daniel Mezlay,Richard Philbrick, Robert D. F. Reynolds, an<I Daniel Winograd.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESRobert Dean, George Flanagan, Lyle Harper, and Myles Jarrow.Night Editors: Dan Mezlay and Dan WinogradInterclub ActionThe Interfraternity Council has set an ex¬ample which the heads of Interclub might wellfollowLIn pledging the presidents of each fraterni¬ty to clean rushing, the I-F Council has taken aforward step toward eliminating one of theevils of the fraternity-club system. Althoughclub rushing in the past has been more honestlyconducted than that of the fraternities, therehave nevertheless been many minor infractionsof the rules by club members in years past.If these infractions were eliminated entire¬ly, and we see no reason why they cannot be,the prestige of the Interclub Council w’ould beincreased, and the club system itself strength¬ened.We therefore advocate that when the Inter¬club Council meets tonight its members pass aresolution which will require each club presi¬dent to assume responsibility for insuringstrict observance of club rushing rules. Thisshould mean perfect fairness in the conduct ofrushing, since the president of each club caughtviolating the rules will have to bear the chargeof personal dishonesty.Council President Donna Culliton has ex¬pressed her approval of the scheme. Unlessany club dares to admit that it fears the resultsof clean rushing, the resolution should bepassed unanimously.Within the LawWe withheld judgment on the protest of theTrotskyites yesterday because the facts in thecase were not yet in. Enough evidence has nowbeen submitted for us to discount their protest,and to venture a guess that they were pleasedto be given a chance temporarily to appear inthe limelight as martyrs.Pool’s statement that he was booked on anopen charge at the Hyde Park police stationwas false. So w^as the statement that the po¬lice’s investigation of the Trotskyite meetingwas illegal.Technically, the police w’ere entirely withinthe law, in investigating a public meeting whichhad not filed a notice with the health authori¬ties. It is probably true that if a Chapel Unionmeeting, announced by handbills, were held inthe home of Dean Gilkey, the authorities wouldnot be so quick to enforce the health ordi¬nances. It may even be true that the local po¬lice are out to stop “radical meetings’’ aroundthe campus in the near future IF THEY LE¬GALLY CAN.But the responsibility to see that the meet¬ings can be held falls on the radicals them¬selves. They should realize from innumerableexamples in history, that a group whose idealsare in direct contradiction with those of thevast majority of the people, must expect atbest to be held far more strictly accountableto the law than ordinary persons.We cannot feel that the Trotskyites, es¬pecially since their ideology has been dis¬claimed by almost all thinking people, consti¬tute a menace to the community. But neithercan we feel stirrings of sympathy or qualmsabout our civil liberties when a meeting atwhich they fail to comply strictly with the lawis investigated.E. S. L... {:4 ' The Traveling BazaarjBy ERNEST LEISERYESTERDAY AFTERNOONwas very fine. All the downtown photofjraphers and•lohn Sanderson were over in Ida taking pictures ofsome of the .Maroon's nominees for freshman beautyqueen. Ignoring our request to take pictures in thekitchen, proving that the “fresh tasties” had utility as |well as glamour, they went out on the roof for their ^shots. jThrowing Mary Lu Price over the parapet so they |could get an action shot to adjust their lens lengths, tlie jphotogaphers laughed as she bounced otf the pavement, |and went ahead with their pictures.We were quite pleased with Helen Pearce. We hadheard all about her from her brother Lee wlio someliow ^isn’t nearly as pretty, ami were prepared to expect tin*worst after all the propagandizing. She was hot stuff,liowever. Shot of the week, but one which probablywon’t ever get into print is the one which showed La 'Pearce in front of tlie hood of an equally long, sleek 'looking .Vuburn kneeling beside a sign which said “su- :percharged.” iThen, of course, we were also quite pleased with ;the way the other namely ,Iean RofT, Louise Hawsen(Howsen), Heth Mahan and her sleek convertible, andGinny .\lling, put out smiles for the downtown boys. ,Dale Tillery put out a line of propaganda for MaryLouise Rowland, who wasn’t there. JWe had been quite cynical about the whole thing ibefore, hearing about how there wasn’t a Really good- _looking freshman woman, but things is looking up. iAN EDITOR iof the Maroon broke into June Provine’s column to-1day by proxy, when her letter to Random House, which jemphatically stated that “John Gunther is no longer,with the Maroon” was reprinted in part.An unknown gentleman, the same who called up j“June” and repeated the cute little quip, and who is our ,chief informant these days, also told us theGAG OF THE WEEKIt’s not a joke. It’s gospel. Even truer than the itemabout Chuck Percy in the Botany Pond. Part of the re¬quirements for membership in Mortar Board, accordingto gospel, is a little punchline wihch demands that eachloyal sister spend a required number of hours everyweek in the Coffee Shop. Lo the glories of higher edu¬cation.QUEEN OF THE WEEKand joy to our hearts is Mimi Evans. She wins thecoveted horsehair medal weekly awarded by the Ma- |roon because in addition to her astonishing beauty andher amazing eyebrows, she is also the most charminglyscatterbrained daisy on campus. She still calls club sis¬ter Sally Adams “Shirley Smith”, and vice versa. Stop¬ping Dean Randall on the street one day, she beamed,“How DO you do, Mr. Smith.” Wow!CONTRARY TO RECORDSof Dick Saizman’s freshman orientation boys,Demetra George Columbus is of the female gender. Theyoung lady received a charming note from a male coun¬selor, saying that anything he could do, O.K. She alsoreceived mails from seven fraternities in the Big Fourwho were interested in having (him) (her) (it) jointheir frat club eating house. After thusly taking abeating, she finally retorted, with gusto, “I do not ob¬ject if a young man chooses to show me around the Uni¬versity. I do not object to being a guest at fraternities’rushing functions, regardless of the conventions. Butthings has come to a pretty pass when I’m proposi¬tioned into living in the men’s dormitories over night.”TACTICS AT THEYouth for Democracy meeting strangely resemblethe Chicago Democratic convention. Before Paul Doug¬las could stifle a yawn, Joe .Molkup was elected chair¬man of the Committee. Official time; :14.6 seconds. Joe,or Joe Palooka, as the newest and most likable instruc¬tor in the Humanities, William Clark, calls him, hasnow an accumulation of six, count them six titles. Heis President of Political Union, Student Forum, the PhiPsi House, the Student Fiftieth Anniversary Commit¬tee (pause for breath) chairman of the Youth for De-mocrary Committee, and Circulation Manager of theMaroon. Oh, we just thought of two more. He is also aStudent Marshal, and an Owd and (or) Serpent.FIVE QUADSjoined the Maroon staff yesterday. Rushing doesthe strangest things to the strangest people.THE ROLLING STONEThe stone of the class of ’98, which was in front ofSwift Hall has been moved to Kent Hall and convertedinto a drinking fountain. It is now possible to have adrink on the class of ’98!Today on QuadranglesTea for students in the home economics departmentat 4 in Ida Noyes library.Christian Youth League meeting at 7:30 in YWroom, Ida Noyes,Settlement Board meeting Reynolds Club, lounge A,8-10. Molku])—(Continued from page 1) that the Republicans would takevictory at the polls as -a sign ththe people favored a policy of apeasement.must chose our course. He went onto say that the famous statement ofWillkie’ that the president told thedictators to “sell Czechoslovakiadown the river” was a “brazen lie”and an impossibility “as neither ofthe two dictators the president wassupiiosed to talk to over the telej^honecan speak English and the Presidentspeaks neither Italian or German.”The alilerman closed his talk by stat¬ing that he had nothing to sayagainst the personal chai'acter of theRepublican candidate but tliat he be¬lieved him to be totally unfit for thejiosition of president and added finally GREGGSECRETARIAL TRAININGAdequately prepares young menand women for the better typestenographic, secretarial and ac¬counting positions.ENROLL NOW!DAY AND EVENING SESSIONSCdll, write or telephone State 1881for BulletinFREE EMPLOYMENT BUREAUThe GREGG CollegeHomr> of GrpKK ShorthandMUSIC APPRECIATION COURSEFifteen Weeks at theAmerican Conservatory of MusicBYSONIA GIBBS AUSTINOctober 16 8 P. M.Midway 8834HOTELSt. George Dining Room“On the .WiV/irny”1433 Ea.st 60th StreetI.,iinrlieoiis 25r - 40<* Dinners ^33e - 40cSpecial Evening; Six Course Dinner 45eOpen 7 AM, to 8 l\M.Though it spreads across the entire nation, the BellTelephone System is simple in structure. You canthink of it as a tree.iira:vciiesThe 24 associatetl optwaling companies . . .which [tro-vide telephone service in their respective territories.TRIJAKThe American Telephone and Telegraph Comjtany...which coortlinates system activities, advises on tele¬phone operation and searches for improved methods.ROOTSBell Telephone Laboratories... whose functions arescientific re.search and development; Western Electric...manufacturer and distributor for the system; LongLines Dejiartment of A.T.&T. ...which interconnectsthe operating companies and handles Long Distanceand overseas telephone service.♦ >|c :|cWith common policies and ideals, these Bell Systemcompanies work as one to give you the finest, friend¬liest telephone service... at lowest cost.\ /THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1940 Page ThreeGlorified ^Mum^To Go On ExhibitVnhliv To SopI'loivpr Shotr at LaskerEstate.How riiiversity of Chicago Botan¬ic- (iovi'loped a “fool-proof” chrys-; iithctiiuin which the amateur Karden-j.,. Vaa I'laiit once and for^ret, exceptto water it, will bo unfolded to Uni-v. i'ity students and the public at the\ , iversity’s Mill Road Farm estateof bake Forest on October 12ai'.d lo¬in ad'lition to thirty acres of flower^r:,ideas where the flowers will beHiuwii. seventy-live acres of tirna-n.ontal ^'rounds, parkways, lawns andurehards of the estate will be oiumfor inspection. The recreation hall,swimmin^r pool, tennis courts, and lo^cabin will be open, as well as thetopiary jrarden containin»? treestrimmed in the form of animals,^rioln s, and arches. Ida iNoyes DanceOpen lloiiHC FridayTrimmed lledKe.sThe Laskar estate, which probablycontains more trimmed hedpes thanany other property in the ChicaKO-laiid. was jriven to the University lastwinter by .-Xlbert I). Laskar, trusteeof the University and former chair¬man of the bimrd of Lord and Thom- Ida Noyes Council is holdinj; thefirst bi>r all-campus dance and openhouse of the school year Friday, Oc¬tober 1, from to 12.There’ll he lu'idire, checkers, chess,liin^ poiifT, bowline:, and orchestra mu¬sic. The orchestra, Blanche Brown’s,is we'l-known, hut a new-comer to thecampus.Jean Scott started working: on theafl’air last spring:, and althouprh sheis not on campus this year, she will beback that nip:ht and is in charjre ofthe festivities.Collegium ToPresent FirstConcert Dec. 1Five Year ExperimentsThe “mums” are the result of fiveyears of selection and controlled fer¬tilization by the department of bot¬any. The plants bloom in August—almost two months earlier than othervarieties—and withstand tempera¬tures of 30 degrees below zero. Thus,members of the department ex¬plained, for the first time the averagegardener can have large-bloomed“mums” in his garden while the ma¬jority of his late-summer flowers arestill in bloom. Heretofore the large-bloomed chrysanthemum was limitedto greenhouses.IMant.s Released to PublicThe plants will bt* released to thepublic for inspection and purchase forthe first time at the estate “openhouse.”Display CuttingsThirty thousand cuttings and setxl-lings—approximately three hundredvarieties—will be on display in thirtyacres of gardens and two green¬houses. Their colors run from whitethrough yellow to bronze and deepred. .Most are semi-double or full dou-ole blooms.Ca vers Already looking forward to theirnext performance, the members ofthe Collegium Musicum will beginregular rehearsals this week. Theorganization, which consists of a smallchorus and chamber orchestra, givesperformances of pre-classical selec¬tions and other music that is seldomheard.The first lu'rformance of the seasonwill be given in the InternationalHou.se Assembly Hall, Sunday eve¬ning, December 1. It will consist in16th century Motet.s and Madrigals;a first performance in Chicago of aHaydn piano concerto; Brahms’“Love-Song Waltz;” and a two piece forbrass ensemble by Holborne, an Eng¬lish contemporary of Shakespeare.There will be no admission charge.Campus ConcertsThe Collegium Musicum has alsobc*en invited to give two concerts oncampus as part of the 50th anniver-.sary celebration of the University' ofChicago. They will be given on January 29 and April 4 before the con¬ventions of the College Art Associa¬tion and the Midwest Chapter of theMusicological Society of America.Other concerts will be announcedlater.The Musicum which was started inthe fall of 1938 by' Dr. SiegmundLevarie has averaged about six con¬certs each season. Most of the workswere first performances in Ch'cagoand America. Last year the organiza¬tion gave Bach’s “Passion Accordingto St. John” in an English tran.sla-tion which was made on this campus.Law SchoolDavid F. Cavers visiting professorfrom Duke and Eugene Rostow visit¬ing professor from Yale will compen-.'<ate for the Law School’s loss of Ed¬ward Levi this fall. Mr. Cavers, whois coming on the John F. Wilson,foundation has joined the other mem-bt-rs of the faculty in teaching acouoe known as “Law and EconomicOrganization”, which will be a studyof the effect of industrial and labororganizations on the processes de-teimining prices and wages, and ananalysis of the effect of legal institu¬tions in promoting or retarding biisi-n(‘>s fluctuations. Mr. Rostow' will lec¬ture in that course during the secondsemester only and take uj) some ofthe duties of Levi.t avei's is widely known for his con¬tributions in bringing the law in clos-'•r touch with social problems. He isthe founder and editor of the quarter-l.v periodical “Law and Contempo¬rary Pioblems”, each i.ssue of whichcon^ists of a symposium dealing withcurrent problems. Professor Caversis a graduate of Wharton School ofFinance, University of Pennsylvania,and Harvard Law. He practiced inN’ew York, taught at Yale and Harv¬ard, and has counseled many govern-nient enterprises.Rr. Rostow is a Yale graduate andpracticed with the N. Y. firm “Gra-vath, deGersdorff, Swaine, and Wood.He is a specialist on corporate reor¬ganizations and government controlof business. Due to its restricted size, most ofthe places in the Collegium are filled.Those with good bass voices who areinterested in solo work should see Dr.Levarie.Humanities,Social ScienceSvHahi ChangePulse—(Continued from page 1)Reorganization to the extent of de¬partmentalizing the functions of thernagazine has taken place. The Boardof control, composed of Harry Scholl,^ally Angrist, Rollo Richman, and Slight alterations in the syllabi andlectures of the Social Science andHunmanities Survey courses havebeen put in effect this year.The classes and syllabus of SocialScience 1 have not been greatlychanged but Social Science II haschanged from three lectures and onediscussion to two lectures and two <lis-cussions. The Di.scussion will meetMonday and Tuesday, and the lecturesWednesday and Thursday. There willbe no rental set for Social Science 11as all I’equired readings have beenput in the syllabus whose cost hasbeen increased to $4.50.p]very year there is a rotation ofthe survey courses offered at theDowntown College and this year Hu¬manities is being given instead ofSocial Science. Therefore the Human¬ities staff has been increased and theSocial Science staff decreased.New members of the Humanitiesstaff are: Mildred Rogers who hasdone archeological Art research andKarl OlssonIra Glick, chairman of the Board, willhandle straight news, features, fash¬ions, sports, pictures, and advertisingin accordance to their categories.Freshmen and undergraduatesinterested in working on Pulse arerequested to see Ira Glick as soonas possible.f Carey Croneis Campus Militant Twenty YearsAgo; Maroon File Shoivs.heads Si)eaker’s lUircnu.Kroiifier^ W ri^ht.,Spencer Speak on‘‘War and Atnerica^’^“War and .America” is the topic fortwo of the roundtables scheduled bythe Speakers Bureau. The meetingswill take place in Youngstown, Ohio,and Louisville, Kentucky.Professors Maynard Kreuger, andQuincy Wright, and Dean WilliamSpencer of the business school willspeak at the Youngstown meeting Oc¬tober 22, under the auspices of theJewish Community Center. The Louis¬ville meeting is November 24, and issponsored by the Young Men’s He¬brew Association. Professors Kreuger,Wright, and Walter Laves will be thespeakers. By BETTY VAN LIEW“The?’e’s nothing at all I detest.There’s nothing at all I despiseHalf so much as a guyWho comes through w'ith the cry,‘Oh, I’d be exempt on my eyes.’”! jThis wasn’t heard in the Coffee |Shop last night, nor was it in Tower ITopics. It is a direct quote from the jCampus Whistle of the Maroon twen- !ty-three years ago today. At that ;time Coach Page reported the largest ifootball squad on record although the iFreshman Class as a whole had fallen :off thirty percent. While the Old Manwas trying new trick formations onthe yeai'ling squad, R.O.T.C. w'as look- ■ing after the formal exercise of an- :other 130 men. |The Psi U. house to show it w'as I“right in there” proudly unfurled a !twenty-foot Service Flag indicating |with blue stars its forty chapter men ■engaged in active war service. In fact ;over half of all the University’s ac- 'tive fraternity men of 1916 had en¬rolled in some branch of the service.Of these sixteen percent were actual¬ly serving in France.Mighty howls w'ere raised at firstwhen the students found there wereto be no C books issued, but subsidedimmediately when the Y.M.C.A. ex¬plained that they intended to save atleast $1000 for the army. The Y.M.C.A. also started a War EmergencyFund Campaign, as well as holdingthe Annual smoker in the ReynoldsClub. Even the Freshmen took their beating or their mixing like stalwartsat the Ida Noyes Mixer.FOR YOUR CHOICE INFINE TYPEWRITERSFRED SYMANSKIJudson Court 146 MIDWAY 6000STUDENTSYou save 20% fo 40%discount on ail laundrybrought in and calledfor.CASH and CARRYMETROPOLELAUNDRY1219-1221 East 55th St.Between Woodlawn and Klmbarlt Ave.—Open 7 A. M. to 8 P. M.—200 EngagementsLast year the Bureau scheduledover 200 engagements. Repeat requestby the National Council of JewishVVomen has been answered. On No¬vember 11, this group will hear Pro-fes.sors Kreuger, Jerome Kerwin, andLouis Wirth,Professors Laves, Kerwin, andWright will be in Omaha, Nebraska,on October 29. Their topic has notbeen decided upon.The Speakers Bureau was organ¬ized by the University to provide menfor various meetings. A booklet hasbeen issued which contains over 250names of possible speakers, and sug¬gested topics for each. These may besecured by interested organizations.Dr. Carey Croneis is head of theBureau. WELCOMESTUDENTSYou may be only a Freshman on campus, buteveryone is treated alike AT STINEWAY'SEnjoy a Delicious BreakiasULuncheon, or DinnerAT THE MOST POPULAR DRUG STOREON CAMPUSREASONABLE PRICES! PROMPT AND EFFICIENT SERVICESTINEWAY DRUGSCor. 57th Street and KenwoodBOOKSUSEDand NEWand allStudents' SuppliesUsed books are a-vailable for manycourses and youcan save moneyby using them.GET YOURS TODAY ATBOOKWOODWORTH'S STORE1311 E. 57th Street Open eveningsnear Kimbark Ave. Dorchester 48002 blocks East of Mandel HallyPage Fdur THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1940Willkie or FDR?Here Are ProsXloiisGOP Uses Cliurcliill SpeechTo Blast New Deal. No Basis for Third TermOpposition, Says Molkiip.Printed below is the complete textof Winston Churchill’s denunciationof the New Deal and his warning tothe American people. It clearly showswhat the leader of the British Com¬monwealth thinks of the New Deal.It clearly shows the part that the ad¬ministration of Franklin Roosevelthas had in the present war and thebreakdown of democracy. Mr. Church¬ill’s statement was issued in Londonto King Features Syndicate and pub-1lished by American newspapers onDecember 11, 1937.“There is one way above all others inwhich the United States can aid theEuropean Democracies. Let her re¬gain and maintain her normal pros¬perity. A prosperous United Statesexerts, directly and indirectly, an im¬mense beneficent force upon worldaffairs.“A United States thrown into finan¬cial and economic collapse spreadsevil far and wide, and weakens Franceand England just at the time whenthey have most need to be strong.The quarrel in which President Roose¬velt has become involved with wealthand business may produce results pro¬foundly harmful to ideals which tohim and his people are dear.“It is surely better to allow the pro¬ductive forces of capital and creditto create wealth and abundance andthen, by corrective taxation of profits,meet the needs of the weak and poor.“Instead the Washington administra¬tion has waged so ruthless a war onprivate enterprise that the UnitedStates, with none of the perils andburdens of Europe on it, is actually at'he present moment leading the worldback into the trough of depression.This warfare has taken three mainforms:“1.) The attack upon the capital re¬serves of great corporations, whichhas woefully crippled their power tomake future plans and give futurework.“2.) The remorseless pressure ofuncertainty and ill will which hasbeen maintained against the immensesphere otf public utility undertaking.“3.) The irksomely hampering re¬strictions imposed upon market andstock exchange transactions.“The effect has been to range theexecutive of the United States againstall the great wealth producing agen¬cies of the capitalist system. On bothsides blood is up, and between themin their fury they can undoubtedlytear the financial and economicstrength of the American people topieces.“In quiet times there is much to besaid for some of these issues beingpatiently fought out. But even themost enthusiastic New Dealer mightask himself whether, with Europe andindeed the whole world in its presentcondition, this is a good time for theUnited States to indulge in this dev¬astating internecine war.“Those who are keeping the flagsof peace and free government in theold world have almost a right to askthat their comrades in the new worldshould, during these years of excep¬tional and not diminishing danger setan example of strength and stability.The well being of the United Statesmay spell not only the well being butthe safety of all sorts and conditionsof men.” Izler SolomonBy JOE MOLKUP“A third term would usher in a to¬talitarian form of government intothis country.”—Wendell Willkie.“As long as periodic free electionssurvive, no set of people can perman¬ently control the government ... Nodictator in history ever dared run thegauntlet of a really free election.”—Franklin D. Roosevelt.Three of the ten presidents wholived to serve two full consecutiveterms had aspirations for a thirdterm—Grant, Theodore Roosevelt and“I do not choose to run” Coolidge—and they were all Republicans! Thefirst named failed of renomination;the second failed because of a partysplit; while the third missed being“drafted” for a third term by theHoover boom. It is apparent that itwas not reverence for precedent ortradition, but political luck in theshape of deaths, sicknes.s, party splitsthat have prevented third term Pres¬idents.The constitution does not forbid athird term, and the Founding Fathersrefused arbitrarily to limit president¬ial tenure because it might deprivethe nation of its ablest leader in time |of crisis. Alexander Hamilton, fatherof the Republican Party, first voicedthis argument. (Federalist, #72).DOES THIRD TERM MEAN DIC-T.ATORSHIP? This question has bestbeen answered by a columnist who re¬cently quipped that Congress can tiethe hands of any president so thor¬oughly that “he can’t scratch whereit itches.” Further, whatever would bewrong and dangerous in seeking athird term is equally applicable in de¬siring a second term.The only basis for the fear of dic¬tatorship lies in the fantastic imageof Roosevelt conjured up by the na¬tion’s press—a press overwhelminglydominated by the business (with acapital B) point of view. Most of thedailies have given distorted reportsof presidential motives and actionsfor the last eight years. The 1940press lineup, according to Time’s sui’-vey of 120 dailies in 41 of our largestcities, shows 78% for W’illkie, 9% forF.D.R. and 21% undecided. The presshas, however, printed enough ofRoosevelt’s speeches and enough ofthe New Deal record to allow the pub¬lic to make up its own mind. Theradio, moreover, has become a furthersource of information. This disparitybetween the press and public opinionwas made strikingly clear in the elec¬tion of 1936. Izler Solomon, brilliant Chicago con¬ductor of the Illinois SymphonyOrchestra.Phi Beta—(Continued from page 1)Miss Seniscalchi asked Miss Culli-ton if it were permissable for herto pledge Delta Sigma. The presidentof Interclub agreed, but, according toInterclub rules, no one is allowed topledge another club until she has beenout of her former club at least sixmonths.The president of Delta Sigma,Carol W’ilson, confirmed the state¬ment that Yolanda Seniscalchi is tobe initiated Monday. However, MissWilson says that Phi Beta Delta wastechnically inactive for six months.No dues were paid, no functions giv¬en, and there was no participation inInterclub during the last two monthsof last spring quarter. The club wasalso inactive during the four summermonths, making six months in all.Phi Beta Delta is having a meetingtonight to discuss the affair and willissue a statement Friday morning. Resume DA Tryoutsfor NewcomersTryouts for dramatic talent will beresumed today at 3:30 in the Rey¬nolds Club Theatre by the DramaticAssociation staff. Almost 200 fresh¬men were given an opportunity toread scripts during yesterday’s trials.Some of the newcomers will getparts in the D A play, “Death Takesa Holiday,” to be presented in Man-del Hall on October 25. The cast forthis production will be announced to¬morrow. Because the number of act¬ors to be used in this play is not great,many of the promising candidateswill have to wait for later produc¬tions.Interviews are now being acceptedfor those interested in stage manag¬ing, make-up, and production. CANDLESandGARLICBy GEORGE T. PECKThe frost is not quite yet off thepumpkin; so there is not much doingdowntown in music. But the compara¬tive inactivity is convenient in givingthe writer a chance to survey theprospects of the season in gross. Thiseffort, though it may be useful tonewcomers, will probably sound a lit¬tle like the Rose Bowl releases of tlieLos Angeles Chamber of Commerce.The local pride is pardonable in Chi¬cago, which is the second musical cityof the continent and, I hope tempo¬rarily, of the world.The Chicago Symphony Orchestra,perhaps the most prominent musicalorganization, opens tonight its fiftiethseason with very appropriately, afanfare by its conductor, FrederickStock, who has been with the outfitfor forty-five of those fifty years. Dr.Stock will play, among other things,“Till Eulenspiegal” by his goodfriend, and he is almost certainly thebest Strauss conductor in America. Ingeneral the season will be slightlylarger and gate receipts promise to beproportionately greater. It is, how¬ever, quite useless to go into detailsabout c’oming programs, for theSymphony will appear in these col¬umns every week.The Chicago Opera Company is toopen its doors on Nov. 2 with the tra¬ditional “Aida”. A great variety ofwell-known singers will appear in thesix weeks’ season, and fewer repeti¬tions will be given. As usual, theItalians predominate; big names:“Otello” (Martinelli), “F a 1 s t a f f”(Thomas, Hawkins), and “Traviata”(Novotna). German opera is a bitsparser than in New York, but just asgood. Flagstad, Melchior, Branzell,etc., will do “Tristan”; and Pinza’sreally great talent will be as usualsorely tried in “Don Giovanni”. Mar¬jorie Lawrence’s Carmen will be prob¬ably the high point of the Frenchopera.The season will be somewhatspruced up by the addition of a morelively ballet and the periodic acces¬sion of such first-rate conductors asRodzinski and Breisach of the Staat-soper.The Illinois Symphony Orchestra,certainly the most progressive of lo¬cal organizations, is all up in the airas far as plans go. Right now, it’s ontour in the environs, but the down¬town season may start in a couple ofweeks at probably the same theatreas last year (the Studebaker on So.Mich.)CHICAGO SYMPHONYORCHESTRAFREDERICK STOCK. ConductorHANS LANGE, Associate ConductorGOLDEN JUBILEESeason 1940-1941FIRST CONCERTS OCT. 10. II28 THURSDAY EVENINGS BEG. OCT 1028 FRIDAY AFTERNOONS BEG. OCT II12 TUESDAY AFTERNOONS BEG. OCT. 22World Renowned SoloistsTHURSDAY-FRIDAY: Piano — Brailowsky,Ganz, Gradova, Hofmann, Horowitz, Iturbi,Serkin. Violin Francescatti, Heifetz, Kreis-ler, Milstein, Weicher. Cello—Feuermann,Kurvz, Piatijzorsky. Vocal Fairbank, Harrell,Peerce. Choral Apollo Club, Lake Shore Chor- jal Society, Chorus from Public Schools. Visit- |ing Orchestra N. Y. Philharmonic.TUESDAYS: Piano Hofmann, Iturbi, Levitz¬ki, Rachmaninow. Violin Francescatti, Mil-stein, Quick. Cello Feuermann. Vocal- (tobe announced). Chorus from Public Schools.SEASON TICKETS STILL AVAILABLEAT ORCHESTRA HALL ;Prices; Tuesdays, $12 to $30; Thursdays, $24 |to $65; Fridays, $21 to $48 (All $60 and $65 iSeats Sold). | Mal<e all your dreams of loveli¬ness come truel Accentuate yourpersonality with new hair beauty,attractive naturaMoohins color,glorious sheen and highlights.Ask your beauty operator for aGLO-RNZ, the hair tint rinsemillions of women demand afterevery shampoo! *Write Todty for Punt-sizt Bookie^How To Hire Lovely HeirGLO-ftKZ, DEPT L1424 Court Piece Denver, ColoreJoGIO-RNZ SERVICE IS AVAILABLE.IN BEAUTY SHOPS EVERYWHERE j#ET A CIORNZ.'.be a‘new youl Politician Keeps Promise!Douglas Issues Income ReportProfessor-Alderman Finds CityJob Costly PropositionMaking good his 1939 aldermaniccampaign pledge that, “if elected hewould audit and publish his annualincome, so that his constituents mightknow how much he made and fromwhat source it was derived,” aider-man Paul Douglas made public todayhis income which netted him $16.72from his pay as alderman in the CityCouncil.Douglas, who trebels as professor,labor arbitrator, and lecturer, lost$2000 earning capacity in his manyfields because of the work he has doneas alderman, his financial report re¬veals.Financial ReportIn connection with the financial re- jport, Douglas made this statement. \“Ever since I have been elected alder- jman, I have been deluged with re- ■quests for contributions from organ-1izations who never before asked me^for gifts...Upon inquiry I found;other aldermen are subject to the isame solicitations.”“How can an alderman satisfy theserequests and still remain honest? An |alderman naturally wants to be re¬elected and does not wish to offend |religious and charitable organizations, jHe is therefore sorely tempted to give |to them as liberally as possible in order iRed Cross AsksFor VolunteersIndicative of the intense effort that jis being made to prepare this nation’s |defenses for a possible war is the re- [cent announcement of the Red Cross |calling for volunteers to aid them in !their work.Red Cross life guards and swim¬ming instructors as well as first aidinstructors will find their skills use-full if they are called into army ser¬vice. A recent announcement by theBureau of Medicine and Surgery ofthe U. S. Navy says that individualsholding Red Cross first aid certifi- icates may, under certain conditions,receive petty officers ratings as highas chief pharmacist’s mate.At present an effort is being madeto increase the Red Cross Nurses’Reserve so that in an emergency hos¬pitals will not be under-staffed. At thesame time the Red Cross hopes to in¬crease the number of women trainedin home care of the sick and methodsof preventing illness and its spread.Already more than half a millionwomen are working under Re<l Crosssupervision making garments and sur¬gical dressings for use in Europeanwar zones. In an emergency, however,this volunteer effort must be greatlyexpanded. to avoid unnecessary trouble.. .Butwith an alderman’s salary what it is,if he does make these contributions onany appreciable scale, he is almostliterally forced into the “Racket” inone form or another.”Douglas continues to say that inorder to try to preserve the honestyof his position as alderman, he willhave to limit the amounts he donatesto organizations in order to reducethe pre.ssure that the “good people”put on their public servants, forcingthem into what Douglas terms “rack¬ets.”Student Foriiiii toSpeak Before (]hil)Three members of the Student For¬um present a round-table discussionof the “International Situation” be¬fore the West Palmer Kiwanis Clul>at noon today. Joe Molkup, Jim Engleand Ruth Apprict are doing theround-tabling and answering thequestions of the audience afterwards.Talent Ruth Apprict has visitedGermany twice, last time leavingMunich just before Chamberlain visit¬ed there for a short stay.Office hours of the Director of theStudent Forum, George Probst, arefrom 3:30 to 5:30 in Lexington 15Hevery weekday afternoon. Because ofinterest shown, he is inviting thoseinterested in participating in an ex¬temporaneous speaking contest toleave their names with him. Theevent will be held Tuesday of nextweek.Women WantedThere are several Junior and Sen¬ior positions open on the Ida NoyesCouncil. .411 Juniors and Seniorsinterested are asked to leave theirname with Mary Ilammel. FosterHall, or at the Ida Noyes office.Athlete DiesPeter Nicola, a member of lastyear’s fre.shman fooiball squad and ofSigma Chi fraternity, was drownedlast Sunday near Ann Arbor, Mich¬igan. The canoe he was paddling over¬turned. Nicola had planned to enterthe University of Michigan this year.CPsil V7 DA' rS LEFTHIGH SPOTSIN AUTUMN REPRINTSJames JoyceULYSSES $1.25Sir James FrazerTHE GOLDEN BOUGH $1.49Marquis JamesLIFE OF ANDREW JACKSON . $1.98Marjorie KInnan RawlingsTHE YEARLING $1.29Launcelot HogbenSCIENCE FOR THE CITIZEN . $2.49Ruth McKenneyMY SISTER EILEEN ...... $1.29U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue