150 Pledge Clubs; Wyvems Top With 33BergmanQuitsAsHeadOf Orientation GroupDick SalzmannOrientation head Salzmann oflilackfriars and Owl and Serpent to¬day adds another name to his activitylist by accepting the Directorship ofthe Student Advisory Coucil follow¬ing the resignation of George Berg¬man. George Berj^man, Director of thenewly-organized Student AdvisoryCouncil, resigned yesterday and wassupplanted by Dick Salzmann, Fresh¬man Orientation Chairman.When asked by the Maroon to ex¬plain his resignation Bergman de¬clared, “I requested the Dean’s officeto coordinate all of the orientationgroups by listing them under the gen¬eral heading ‘Orientation Board’ andproviding them with an office. I sug¬gested a central publicity group forthe entire board from a central boardstaff. I also asked for a centrally lo¬cated office for the Student AdvisoryCouncil. It is impossible to make a goof it unless that is given us. Since Ihave not heard from the Dean’s officeI take it for granted that this hasbeen refused.No Cooperation“I assume, since the necessity is ob¬vious, that the lack of cooperationwith the Council on the part of theDean’s office is due to an unwilling¬ness to cooperate with me personally.Therefore, I have resigned as Direc-j tor of the Council. Dick Salzmann isj the new Director and will probably! have better success with the Dean’sI office.”! Bergman will still remain on theI Council as secretary taking the placej of John Stevens, Maroon head, whoI resigned due to the pres.sure of otherI (Continued on page two) Donna CullitonHaving fought an unsuccessfulbattle for Willkie and a better one tokeep club rushing clean Mortar BoardCulliton will relax by being one of theProm leaders tomorrow night.Schwab Discusses"Your Study Habits"Dynamic Joseph Schwab of the Bi¬ological Sciences Sui*vey Course willspeak tomorrow in Social Science 122at 4:30 on ‘‘Your Study Habits:What They Mean”. This is the first ofa series of lectures on how to studysponsored by the Chapel Organiza¬tions, Student Forum, and the Fresh¬man council. Smaller PercentageOf Eligibles JoinBy CHLOE ROTHAlthough the number of women pledging clubs this year showed an in¬crease from 147 to 150, the percentage of women joining clubs indicated anappreciable decrease from 64% last year to 54% this year.Wyyern pledged a record group this year, numbering 33. Alpha ChiTheta with three pledged the smallest class. Second highest place was takenby Sigma with 19 pledges. Chi Rho Sigma got 14 girls. Esoteric next, with12 pledges. The Quads and Mortar Boards shared honors with 11 girls each.Three clubs. Delta Sigma, Phi Delta Upsilon, and Triota, pledged 10. Sevenwent Alpha Epsilon while Pi Delta Phi came through with six. Tau SigmaUpsilon, is a newly formed Jewish club that is not yet an Inter-Club member.Dirty RushingQuadrangler was charged with dirty rushing by Ruth Steel and thedistribution of Quad bids was delayed. However, Interclub decided that it wasnot illegal rushing and did not act on the matter. The charges pressed againstQuadrangler were that many freshmen that attended the Quad preferentialwent to Jane Anderson’s, a former Quad, wedding. However, according toShirley Burton, president of Quadrangler, several of the rushees had invita¬tions, and the remainder were escorted by Alpha Delts, who had blanketinvitations.Miss Burton also charged that due to the negligence of Donna Culliton,president of Mortar Board and Interclub, the special delivei*y letters that were! to go out Sunday morning to notify the rushees of their bids were not mailed,j and that this resulted in confusion.I Culliton Repliesj Miss Culliton replied to the charges by saying, “Interclub treasury could! not cover postage costs, I couldn’t and clubs couldn’t be contacted for money.I Instead I called every club president and had them call those who attendedtheir preferentials and tell them that there was a bid for them. All the rusheeswere told and appeared at Ida Noyes, with the possible exception of three orfour.”Miss Culliton then added, “Miss Burton’s attitude was difficult to copewith and complicated matters!”Allies Will OverthrowHitler—Thomas MannWho ElectedDwight Green?—An Inside Story—By DANIEL WINOGRADDwight Green, a Republican wasck'cted Governor of this state withthe help of a large Chicago vote. |Green is supposed to bt* a reformer.Chicago is suppo.sed to be dominatedby anti-reform Democratic elements.An analysis of the vote by wardsgives good reason to believe that thecriminal elements known as the “syn¬dicate” gave Green their support,('learly, when the “syndicate” sup¬ports a reform candidate, somethingis rotten.Pre-election “dope” had it thatGreen was a reformer, the man whoput Capone in jail. On the face of thethings the “syndicate” and the ma¬chine should 'have fought tooth andnail to defeat Green. Yet in the RiverWards, where the “syndicate” isstrongest. Green rolled up an amaz¬ing vote. In Wards like the First,Twenty-second, Twenty-third, Twen¬ty-fourth, Forty-second, and Forty-third, Hershey, the Democrat, ranway behind his ticket.First Ward 2 to 1Wards like the First are Wardswhere the machine can control thevote if it can control it anywhere,yet Hershey led by only about 2 to 1there. Reports from the syndicate andpoliticians indicate that there was nopressure behind Hershey. It is shownin the Twenty-third, and Twenty-fourth Wards that the machine canJ^till produce. Roosevelt’s comfortablemajority shows the machine can stillproduce. Courtney’s big victory showsthe power of the machine. Why thendidn’t the machine produce for Her¬shey.The answer to the Bi-partisan re¬sult in Chicago is the fact that thesyndicate which in no small way con¬trols elections in Chicago is bl-par-tisan. The syndicate makes the bestdeal it can, with either political party.(Continued on page three)Skull and Crescent MeetsSkull and Crescent will meet to-niorrow at one in the ReynoldsClub third floor lounge. Thomas Mann. . . sees silver liningCommittee InvitesSeven BarbariansTo Attend l-F BallThe Inter-fraternity committee hasbroken precedent by inviting sevenoutstanding independent men to theInter-Fraternity Ball to be held to¬morrow evening in the Hotel Sherman.William Malinowski, Bino Marchello,Robert Boyer, Mark Fisher, HprrySholl, Ira Click, and Ernest Leiserare the men to whom bids have beenextended.Charlie Barnett and his orchestra,who have just finished an engage¬ment at a big loop theatre, will be onhand to play at the Ball and help outfraternity men as they traditionallysing their own songs during inter¬missions.“The King of the Saxophone” willfeature at the Ball, for the fir.st time,his own composition “Aviation Suite.”Vocalists with Barnett are “gold¬en-voiced” Bob Carroll and America’s“Swingheart,” Harriet Clark. By MINNA SACHSThomas Mann, rated one of theworld’s greatest living men of letters,sounded an optimistic note in an In¬terview last Saturday by stating that;“Out of the present chaos there willcome a spiritual regeneration. Afterthis cruel and undemocratic epoch,and after the inevitable resulting suf¬ferings there will be a strong reactionleading to a new human feeling.”Dr. Mann went on to say that thecynicism of the last war was the re¬sult not of the suffering itself so muchas the failure of the war to bringabout any permanent social reforms.He gave samples of this by recallingtht France did nothing whatsoever tosupport the cause of Democracy inGermany, and the refusal of the Unit¬ed States to enter the League of Na¬tions, which could not function ef¬ficiently without American participa¬tion.Confident of English VictoryThe eminent author, who will speakunder the auspices of the Hillel Foun¬dation in Mandel Hall tonight, is con¬fident of the ultimate‘victory of Eng¬land and her allies; he believes thatthe overthrow of the Hitler regime isonly “a matter of time”. Mann added,however, that he fears the world isfacing a long war.He commended the English peoplefor refusing to believe that they werelicked after the downfall of France.This ability to fight on is gaining theadvantage of time not only for them¬selves, but also for the Americas.(Continued on page three)Red Cross BeginsFund Drive TodayThe Red Cross Committee urges thecooperation of the entire student bodyin the membership drive being heldtoday and tomorrow. Tables for thecollection of contributions will be lo¬cated in Cobb, Mandel and Ida Noyes.Anyone interested in aiding in theDrive will please see Mary Harveyat International Hou.se. Maroon AdoptsStray Cur; PledgedBull Tau Dog |The Daily Maroon, mother of men,today became the mother of a dog.“Demi-Tosse,” as she is called becauseshe was found after lunch, wanderedaimlessly into the office in the middleof staff meeting.Immediately the paternal instinctrose as a great cloud in Maroonpeople’s breast. It was time for thedog to chose his real mother. Hesniffed carefully around the room.“Sniff, sniff.” For a moment he lookedas if he was headed for Don Mc-Knight, then he doubled back andmade for Pearl C. Rubins. “But no,”he thought and finally he found hisreal mother. Maroon freshman Bar¬bara Deutsch.Life of RaleighThis afternoon, Demi-Tosse got abath and was dried with somebody’sblue towel. Then she was fed. Tonightshe gets the thrill of her life. Shegoes home to sleep with Dick Phil-brick.From now on “Demi” is at home inthe Maroon office to greet any othermongrels who may care to visit. Sheis currently being rushed by Collies,but is not exactly their type. It isrumored that Demi will go Bull TauDog.E. Power Biggs, considered bynewspaper critics as one of the great¬est organists in America, will pre¬sent an organ recital in the Chapeltonight at 8:15. There will be no ad¬mission charge.The Boston Transcript speaks ofBiggs as follows: “. . . . a serious,modest musician, intent on performingBach’s music in a manner which willsatisfy the most exacting critic . . .the hall is crowded on every occasionthat he plays ... he has power, dig¬nity, eloquence.”The publication, “Musical America,”considers him as “a most interestingsoloist, who is compatible and versa¬tile with both the herc4- and intimatestyle.” \'\ IPulsemeniBranchOutOrganize Daily Newspaperto Represent Campus; Pub¬lish in January.Organization plans were filed withthe Dean’s office yesterday for a newdaily paper on campus, to be entitledthe “Daily Chicagoan,” publishedfive times weekly. Slated for theBoard of Control are Harry Sholl,Ira Click, Walter Angrist and Hend¬rik Jacobson.The purpose of the organization, asmentioned in the Dean’s office blanks,is to “satisfy a need for a campusnewspaper representing the campus.”Sholl, Click, and Angrist are mem¬bers of the Pulse Board of Control.Jacobson is their publicity director.“Straight Reporting”Publication is planned for Januarywith the price set at two cents. Theeditorial policy will be straight newsreporting as differentiated from “biasnews stories written around personalambitions,” Jacobson said.Although the Board of Control ofboth publications will be practicallythe same, the two publications willnone-the-less be distinct organizations.E. Power BiggsBiggs, World Famed Organist,Presents Recital Tonighti:Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1940Ihje Oolicj 'llhAooti The Traveling Bazaar Today on theQuadrangles Bergman—(Continued from page one)FOUNDED IN 1901Tlie Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni-••ersity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sund^,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9221 and 9222. , .After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompanv, 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: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the post officeat Chicago. Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPlssoclolGd GollG6icitG PressDistribulor ofCblle6iale Di6eslBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialWILLIAM HANKLA PEARL C. RUBINSERNEST S. LEISER JOHN P. STEVENS, ChairmanBusinessJOHN E. BEX, Business ManagerWILLI.\M LOVELL, Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESJames Burtle, Mark Fisher, Chester Hand, Richard Himmel, DanielMezlay, Richard Philbrick, Robert D. F. Reynolds, and DanielWinograd.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESRobert Dean, George Flanagan, Lyle Harper, and Myles Jarrow.Night Editors: Murk Fisher & John StevensWe Test Our MetalToday we can test ourselves individually andas a student body—test our ability to act un¬selfishly and sacrifice a little for other people.It is far from a great test, that is, far fromthat sort of test which strains at our everymoral fiber and taxei^ full strength of our char¬acter. But we need not go through the ordeal ofan acid test to learn our true metal. In theordinary trials of daily life we either ring true,or we do not.Can We Help?Today, the Red Cross makes its annual ap¬peal for contributions. How many of us, withwords at least, have not expressed our admira¬tion and whole hearted support for this organi¬zation and its work ? Many of us even have beenenough stirred by accounts of the present hu¬man suffering in Europe to feel a strong urgeto do something—anything, to help. Yet thepossibility seems so remote that it is easy togive up, resign ourselves to cynacism, and at¬tempt to forget.But certainly a contribution to the Red Crossis an easy and convenient enough mediumthrough which to express our good intentions.And surely it is not too much to ask of anyone who bemoans and decries the horrors andbrutality of war.Let’s Not ForgetAlthough we all hate what’s happening inthe world, we have not all been fortunate enoughto escape the trap of complacency. In defenseof the horror and perplexity of the times it iseasy to adapt the mechanism of indifference,and to forget such duties as war relief. But to¬morrow’s drive should remind all of us.Begging off on grounds of other taxing de¬mands such as the Fiftieth Anniversary contri¬bution drive, and what else, is a weak evasion.We Americans who are enjoying democracy,exalting it, and weeping as it crumbles allaround us, can’t possibly know what real sacri¬fice means. Certainly it is a small test to beasked to give up a petty pleasure here and therefor the sake of aiding somewhat, suffering hu¬man beings who have already sacrificed almost jeverything. •If We CareIf we actually care about democratic and hu¬manitarian principles as we claim, we should beprepared to make every sacrifice to preserveand maintain them. If we, who call ourselvesuniversity students, cannot measure up full}" intomorrow’s little test, what hope is there for thefuture?W. B. H.Letters to the EditorHoard of Control,The Daily .Maroon:I wish to protest against what strikes me as a sorrylack of taste in today’s supplementary issue of theM aroon. Pages one to five, inclusive, are fine; serioustopics are discussed intelligently by outstanding schol¬ars; and I had looked forward to sending several ciVues By DICK HIMMELThe Bazaar, that Gallup Poll of the University,came through with club predictions. Some right . . .Some wrong. Mooney as hinted went Quad. B^th Mahantook a reversal and fooled the Maroon and went Quadie... Mortar Board snatched Sybil Farriter at the zerohour.. .Lois Regnell and Madelyn Baumeister went Sig¬ma and not Wyvem as forecasted incorrectly, JeanRoflF fulfilled her legacy.. .Wyvern, however, did well.They ran out of pledge pins and they had to resortto little ribbons for the excess pledges.. .Their coupd’etat of the year, beside a large pledge class, isYvonne Martin, whom they stole the at the last minutefrom the Pi Delts.. .Prize Wyvern crack was furnishedby Lois Whiting who, speaking of their good luck said,“And you know the nicest part of it all was that wewere so indescriminate’’.Carrol Russell flew in just in time to pledge. Shehad bids, ’tis rumored, from all the big clubs. She tookthe little envelope from Esoteric.. .Mary Louise Row¬land had everyone guessing for a while and then wentMortar Board...The Quadie’s intensive summer rush¬ing on Helen Pearce had lots effectiveness.. .North sideDebbie Margaret Stewart was out of town duringpledging, killing time in the East between week-ends.She hasn’t yet made up her mind...She’s debatingamong all four. She makes up her mind comes next Mon-Jean Roff. . . legacy gone rightday....Sigma completes the record. They have pledgedthe outstanding D.\ freshman actresses three yearsrunning. Evans. . .Ahlquist.. .now Sue Hohnen andVirginia Butts join their ranks . . . Jane Thomas, anEsoteric legacy on her sister’s side and a Mortar Hoardlegacy on her mother’s .«ide, went ()uad on her ownside.. .Otherwise no major upsets.Local Gossip...Phi Psis have stopped sharing the wealth. Ed Dav¬idson has just pinned Gail Grassic. . . Jane Andersonwas married Saturday night and started a lot of trou¬ble for the club girls (see front page). Lots people, lotschampagne, lots marriage. ..Hob Thorburn hitting thespots with best thing since Ellie Tatje, .Mary LouKramer, who has got the smoothest wink and fastestline this side of Cicero. .. Mary Ryerson making theAd Phi rounds . . . The Mortar Hoard’s la.st rushingparty Friday night, a Monte Cailo gambling for funparty, was raided by Beverly Hills police. They weretipped off, ’tis said, by Quadie fifth column. Police‘haw hawed’ pleasantly when they found the stakeswere bracelets and loose female tidbits.. .The com¬mand performance of “East Lynne’’ Friday afternoonW’as broken up too, too many tomatoes...Hud Hriggstook a flier to Shanghai on the hopes of landing a jobthere. He got one with the United Press first crack...Heati Gaidzik is accepting condolence calls thesedays and hoping they materialize into something morepermanent. Her man Hart just joined the army. Sheain’t really back in circulation, but a girl has to cheatsometimes...Dick Philbrick is pi4icticing with BettyMueller for IP’.of the supplement to friends throughout the countrywho are much interested in the controversy.But page six is abominable. It does no good what¬ever, and contrives a great deal of harm. What in theworld were you thinking of in printing it—getting downto the undergraduate level of comprehension? If so, Ican’t think highly of said level. More likely, you wishedto add a lighter touch to the discussion—a fine idea, butthe light touch, in this case, should also be intelligentthroughout, as this contribution is not. Bathos and scur¬rility ought to be excluded from a symposium whichwill receive more than local attention as a matter ofdeep concern to all thinking people, undergraduates orotherwise. The article’s emphatic position, indicating amore or less final word on the subject, is doubly un¬fortunate. It would have been much better to leavepage six blank than to accept the blatant nonsense of astupid fool.Sincerely yours,C'harle.s T. Miller,Department of English. Address, “Freedom in our Time,”Thomas Mann, Mandel Hall, 8.Art Exhibition, Hand-woven Tex¬tiles Produced by the Federal ArtProject, Milwaukee. Goodspeed 108,daily except Sunday, 9-12 and 2-5,through November 29.Worship Service, Muriel Lester,Joseph Bond Chapel, 11:55.Noon Phonograph Concert, SocialScience Assembly Hall, 12:30.Foreign Film, “Life and Loves ofBeethoven,” French with English sub¬titles. International House, 4:30 and8:30.Public Lecture, “Studies in SocialConditions and Personality Character¬istics. An American Japanese Com¬munity,” Frank Miyamoto, SocialScience 122, 4:30.Public Lecture. “Interpretations ofthe 1940 Election,” Harold Gosnell,Law’ South, 4:30.Opera Hour, Montemezzi’s “TheLove of Three Kings,” comment byCecil Smith, Reynolds Club Lounge,4:30.Junior Mathematics Club. “Systemsof Linear Equations in InfinitelyMany Unkowns,” Y. K. Young, Eck-hart 206, 4:30.Public Lecture, Downtown. “TheForms of Literary Criticism,” Norman |Maclean, Art Institute, 6:45. ILutheran Student .Meeting, Ida!Noyes Hall, YWC.\ Room, 7:30. IPublic Lecture, “Basic Documents'of Our Republic: President Jefferson’s |State Papers,” William T. Hutchinson,!Social Science 122, 8. |Organ Recital, E. Power Biggs,Rockefeller Memorial Chapel, 8:15.taacw tm Mkhn »«>• vad* rail activities. Pearl C. Rubins, Assign¬ment editor of the Maroon, also re¬signed saying, “I am in complete ac¬cord with the program of the Council,but feel there are others with morefree time and therefore better ableto carry out its objectives.” Joe Mui-kup will continue as Assistant Dire,tor.The Student Advisci-y Council wasstarted this fall to give freshmen andother students the benefit of advicefrom outstanding undergraduates.It takes a sturdylaundress . ... . . to rub the buttons of!an Arrow shirt. Arrow has apatented button stay thatanchors buttons on. Recordsshow that Arrow buttonscome off 1/lOth as often asother shirt buttons. Besideswhich Arrow is a wonderfulshirt. Get some today.$2, up.ERIECLOTHING STORKS837 East 63rd StreetWho’s Who at a House PartyTHE CRINKLE CHEST (Every fraternity has one).He’s miserable enough with his ancient off-colorilres.s shirt, but when it buckles anti leaves itsmooring and goes “crinkle crunch “ he tlies amillion tleaths.Sinee you ean’t keep himlocked in the cellar, tell himabout Arrow Shoreham, thesoft pleated bosom dressshirt with the eomfortablesemi-soft eollar attached,$3. See your Arrow dealer.(For tails — Arrow Kirk,very smart, very smooth¬fitting. ‘$3.)ARROfV SHIRTSComiortable!It's old-iashioned to suffer in "soup and fish" —just visit the Hub and learn what modern comfortis.fMCC4^HaState & Jackson—CHICAGOHE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1940 Page ThreeBe it ever so humble,there’s no place like home—Ruth SteelServingUniversity olChicago StudentsFor 30 YearsNELSOH OPTICALCOMPANYDR. NELS R. NELSON1138 East 63rd St.AT UNIVERSITY AVENUEHYDE PARK 5352Yellow BantamRental Library1460 E. 57th St. (Shop in Lobby)Open to 9 P. M.New Mysteriea. NotoIi, etc.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSECOUEGt STUDENTS AND GRADUATES••1 thorou/ik, tMtenswf, slenoKraphtc course —starling January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligation— write or phone. No solicitors employed.moserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER. J.D„ PH »ficgul.ir Courses 'or Beginners, open to HignSchool Gr.iduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Av.., Chicago, Randolph 4347TYPEWRITERS All MakesSOLDTRADEDREPAIREDRENTEDPortable or LargeCash or TermsWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EvaningsNear Kimbark Ave. Dorchester 4800POWERandHOSTERFhmvrs for every occasionReasonable rates for all corsages.$1.00 and upS.W. Corner57th and DorchesterHyde Park 3861-2 Registration Rules ForNext Quarter ChangeBeginning November 26, students inresidence will register for the WinterQuarter in the office of the appro¬priate Dean of Students. Those in theCollege who registered in advance forthe year must secure class tickets inthe Registrar’s Office.Change in registration may be madeduring advance registration, or later,by preparing in the Dean of Student’sOffice a change card to be presentedto the Registrar’s Office with the stu¬dent’s coupon.Pay Tuition January 2Tuition fees are due and payableat the Bursar’s Office on or beforeJanuary 2, and must be paid by Jan¬uary 8. Students who register in ad¬vance may pay fees within three daysafter their registration and studentsin the College may pay as soon asthey receive their cla.ss cards. |Those entitled to scholarships |granted before November 9 will find jvouchers attached to their registra- jtion cards in the Bursar’s Office if Ithey register in advance. New stu-1(fents may register in advance or onthe first day of the Winter Quarter. 1 Schedule for registration9:00-11:45 1:30-4:30November 25-December 13Students in the College who havenot registered in advance for theyear.Social Service AdministrationNovember 25-29School of BusinessMedical SchoolNovember 26-28Divinity SchoolDecember 2-6Division of the Biological Sci¬ences.Division of the Social SciencesGraduate Library SchoolDecember 9-13Division of the HumanitiesDivision of the Physical SciencesDays to secure class tickets—lastname begins with—A,B»C,D, Monday, Nov. 25E,F,G,H,I Tuesday, Nov. 26J,K,L,M,N,0 Wednesday, Nov. 27P,Q,R,S,T,U, Thursday, Nov. 28V,W,X,Y,Z Friday, Nov. 29Club PledgesAlpha Chi Theta—2Lois GartnerElizabeth Waters.Mpha Kpsil«)n—7Hilvie BensonBeryl BrandBeth DringDorothy SefeikPhyllis ServiesBetty SoderstromEloise WittChi Itho Sigma—14Marjorie AlderGeorgia AndersonCarolyn CoeCatherine HueyDorthey Lindley.Jewel MaskinEva Mac DowellMary Jane Mct'ueRosemary Purvis.Muriel RanueyPat ReeveJean SinioniniAnn Schwinn.Muriel ThomsonDelta Sigma—9.Jane ClaradgePatricia ClaradgeEllen GroveWilma MartensAgnes MassiasLois Massberg.Martha MannsHelen QuisenberryHelen ReevesMarcia StevensEsoteric—13Geraldine BergFlorence DanielsMiini DaytonJoan DunawayBeth FischerMarjorie HibbardKatherine LawsonMartha PhillipsMai y ReayCarroll RussellMary Louise ScanlonBetty Lou SimsonVirginia MullikanMortar Board—11Virginia AilingSybl Ferriter Connie FlorianV'irginia HarlanBetty FanningGeorgia HinchliflfJean HopkinsNancy NewmanBarbara PageMary Louise RowlandMary Parke WelshI’hi Delta Cpsilon—9Harriet EatonHelen Jane EllsworthDorothy HoffmanLouise KachelMarjorie LiittGeorgia TauberEthel RasmussenJean RhodesGeraldine WatersPi Delta Phi—8Viiginia BrontnerMary BogieLoi raine DaleyDoris FisherDoris Henrickson.Marjorie TompkinsEllen TuttleGene Pierce(^uadrangler—10Clark BaneVirginia BothDoiothy DonovanBetty HeadlandLouise HowsonElizabeth MahanCarol MooneyHelen PearceJane ThomasMary TrovillionSigma—19Ruth .ApprichMarian BakerMadelyn BaumeisterSuzanne BohnenJoan BroderickVirginia ButtsKathryn ChristophFrances FarwellBarbara GilfallenBeverly GlennJanice GoodeKaren GrenanderJean GroeniorDorothy Hendrickson Marian NebelLois RegnellJean RoffDorothy TuellDoris WestfallTau Sigma L'psilon-Lois HellerFlorette LobelThelma SloanTriota—10Myril HurivickCaryll ICousnetzCharlotte LandauReva NovyElla OzeronPhyllis PeltzSarah RayorDella SilversteinRoselyn SmolinMarjorio ThomasWyvern—33Cicely AikmanVirginia BanningLorraine BevilleKay BoatwrightEsther BohnFJilecn ClintonBetty CrawfordLaurette CreightonI^orraine CurtinFrances CuttleHelen DadyVirginia DadyHelene EichenbaumDorothy HagerMary HayesAnn MartinYvonne MartinRosemary McCarthyLois MerkerSarah Jane PetersLucille PetersonPat Petei’sonMary PetrieMiriam PettyJanet PettyJanet RissmanRuth RossRuth RoweBarbara SmithShirley SmithMary StevensMargery SullivanJoan WehlenWanda WojniakFormal Wear for Interfratemity BallJACK'S TUXEDO SHOPWE RENT Full Dress36 W. Randolph Accessories TuxedosDear. 0489Get your Students' Special DISCOUNT reservationsduring the week of Nov. 25 (except Sat. night)$2.75 Orchestra Seat for $1.10"PERFECT ACTINGand by all testsTHE PERFECT PLAY"RUTH CHATtERTONin G. B. Shaw sPYGMALIONSELWYN Theatre Matinees Wed. & Sat.Students' rate tickets at Maroon oftice, and InformationOffice and International House beginning tomorrow. Green—(Continued from page one) Scoop!fOffer TypingService At CostThe University furnishes to stu¬dents and faculty members a steno¬graphic and typewriting service atcost, Nadreen Burnie announced yes¬terday, The office is located in Ingle-side Hall, Room 201.The office has machines with spe¬cial keys for writing accented foreignlanguages, mathematical equation?,chemical symbols, and the more com¬monly used Greek letters. Typists arequalified to read and transcribe thismaterial rapidly and accurately.Electric machines are available fortyping material to be planographed IThese machines can also make twelve'clear carbon copies at one typing.Private dictation rooms are avail¬able; or stenographers may be sent toyour office! All work is carefullysupervised. feelings between these two countries.For these reasons Mann urged thepeople of the United States to fore¬go the natural Humanitarian feelingwhich in the long run would result inmore not less suffering.ClassifiedWill rent very reasonably, with all modemconveniences, two sleepinK rooms, one withtwin beds, and one with a double bed.HOUSE AND GARAGE FOR RENT—6047 Uni¬versity Ave. Available Jan. 1. 6 rms.Completely furnished. Oil heat, mech. re-frijteration, piano & radios. $4.'> per mo.Dor. 091,3.Sell Tickets to ShawPlay at Low RatesUnivei’sity students may purchase.$2.75 orchestra seats for “Pygma¬lion”. George Bernard Shaw’s most[ popular comedy, with Ruth Chatter-j ton, for the* usual gallery price of■ $1.10 during the first week of the playI with the single exception of Saturdayi night. A limited number of these spe¬cial seats are available for theopening night on Monday.Tickets will be sold at the Informa¬tion Office, International House andthe Maroon office. II X;"Gamblers who form a large part ofthe “syndicate” have reasons to bedisgusted with the Democrats. One ofthe big boys is in the penitentiarynow, another big-shot goes on trialsoon.“Book” Boys Didn’t TryIn the election, the boys who runthe “books” in wards like the Forty-second and Forty-third could havesupported Hershey or Green. Theydidn’t try to stop Green. Men whowant protection from the law, not bythe law, permitted the districts theyare supposed to control to help electtheir “enemy”. The “syndicate” had |no ties with Hershey, they hardly!knew him; they were afraid of him.The syi;idicate knew Green from thedays when he was U S. District At¬torney; in spite of this Green waselected governor with the help of the“syndicate-controlled” River Wards.Will this state see real reform, orwill it merely see the descent ofDemocratic corruption and the ascentof Republican corruption? Mann—(Continued from page one)If and when Germany is defeated.Dr. Mann favors the formation of aDemocracy of European or worldstates, independent, but responsible toeach other. He condemned the presentstate system which allows the forma¬tion of such a deadly war machine asis now possessed by the Third Reich.The indifference of the states of theworld to the building of this machineby Germany has placed many of themin a position where they must eitheryield to the Fascist way of life or faceannihilation.When questioned as to his opinionon the subject of sending mercy shipsto conquered European countries thiswinter, Dr. Mann emphatically statedthat “Such a policy would serve toextend the length of the war andstrengthen the German position and,therefore, I must condemn it.” Headded that if the United States shoulddecide to send such ships, the English(Jovernment would be forced to stopthem, and this would result in badTrack Team BeginsIndoor PracticeCoach Merriam’s tracksters are nowstarting their practice for the comingindoor and outdoor seasons. At pres¬ent practice is held in the Fieldhousebut as soon as the weather permitsthe boys will move outside. The firstmeet will be held toward the end ofJanuary.Cornell Florist1017 E. 55th St.Reasonable prices for corsagesPhone Fair. 1436OPEN DAY & NIGHTDoes your per¬sonality stop atyour''hair lhe'7 Achieve thrillinghair glamour... hair that shinessoftly, gleams with glorious high¬lights, lovely natura/'loohing color!Ask your beauty operator fora GLO-RNZ after your nextshampoolWrite Todey for Purst-site Booklet,"How To Here Lortly HeirCLO-RNZ, DEPT H1424 Court Fleet Denser, ColoreJoGLO-RNZ SERVICE IS AVAILABLEIN BEAUTY SHOPS EVERYWHEREGET A (iLORNZ...BE A NEW YOU! WAYNEKINGAND HISORCHESTRACOLLEGENIGHT★EveryFridayAmerica’s FinestDance Music★Gay College andProfessionalFloor ShowsGET SPECIAL RATE STUDENTTICKETS AT MAROON OFFICEOR PRESS BLDG. •★ComingNovember 23rdBEN CUTLERand his OrchestraDecember 21stRichard Himberand his ChampionsEDGEWATERBEACHHOTEL5300 Block Sheridan RoadPage four THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1940Giraful insp*€tion of ovary stop inthe making of Chesterfields assuressmokers of always getting the samecooler, defi nitely milder, better taste.(As seen in the new film "TOBACCO*lANO, U. S. A.")STUDENTSYour Favorite BarberSAM MALLATBack of Burton-JudsonSTUDENTSYou save 20% to 40% dis¬count on all laundry broughtin and called for.CASH and CARRYMETROPOLELAUNDRY1219-1221 East 55th St.Between Woodlawn end Kimbark Ave.—Open 7 A. M. to 8 P. M.—For Your I-F Boll CorsageMITZIE'SFLOWER SHOPOPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAYSPhones:Midway 4020-4021 55th Streetat KimbarkWe Will Deliver Directly to theSherman Hotel By Tl ie 0of the rderSecond G uessThe end of the football season for the semi-professional college teamsfrom coasc to coast is near, but at Chicago, where convention walked out theback door ages ago, gridiron fever is reaching a boiling point in some circles.It’s stimulated by discussions of the future of this thing called six-manfootball, which some enterprising Nebraskan originated several years ago.When Father Hutchins and his eminent board of trustees took the bull by thehorns last December and threw King Football into the same ashcan whichbore the remains of the Old Plan, Harry Gideonese, Fred Millett and millionsof clipped Standard Oil bonds, everybody said the Good Lord had intestitinalfortitude, also known as guts.Hutch Takes Originality CakeFor lack of convention this boy Hutchins takes the cake. First it wasten-cent football. Remember? Every¬one laughed. Now it’s six-man, withouta gate. That’s what the bolshevistswould call revolution. Oh, how they■would love to have him on their side.He’s what big businessmen call a Di¬rect Actionist. No beating around thebush with the Adonis of the Presi¬dent’s office. IM Race ReachesClimax with Phi GamsRanked as FavoritesBooks of»*0PEM•UUTiniLLYlUUSTRATED|M FOU COLOt/SpoiMorad by th« Motropolitaa Opmtm/ Guild, Inc. Adnptod by Robert Law¬rence; IlltMtrat^ in color ^ wellknown artisti. Parent!, too, will enjoytheae remarkable ftoriee t(dd in iim-ple language. Include! coitumc!,themes and aria!, recommended re¬cording!, etc.SOe eachHAENSEL AND GRETELHumperdinckAIDA VerdiLOHENGRIN WagnerCARMEN BixetThe four bookg in alovely slip box $2.00SOe eachWagner's Nlbelungen RingTHE RHINEGOLDTHE VAIXYRIESIEGFRIEDTHE TWILIGHT OF THE GODSThe four books in alovely sUp box $2.00U. of C. Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue It’s a safe bet that cries of “He’snuts’’ etc. went up in athletic direc¬tors’ offices around the Big Ten thisfall when the word came around thatPapa had okehed six-man football,telling Nelson Matcalf to go ahead fullspeed. He must be psychic, this Yale-man turned Chicagoan. At least 200undergraduates have played the gameat one time or another this season.Why only 43 turned out for the var¬sity team last year. Compare thosefigures, skeptic.The game currently is in its em¬bryo state on the quadrangles. Rightnow only inter-class games are beingplayed, but it keeps the boys plentyhepped up. Locker room dope hasit that the Gophers were the bestteam in the league, and who wouldhave predicted that those Unexpectedshad a chance at even seeing a cornerof the trophy.Propose Intercollegiate GamesTake it from the boys who areplaying this year, you can get justas hepped up over the outcome of asix-man game as you could over thethrills of a semi-pro eleven-man con¬test. Taking the suggestion of sev¬eral of the players, the Maroon hasproposed institution of six-man foot¬ball relationships with Loyola, DePauland other interested middle-westernschools. Both of the schools namedhave signified interest.Boy.s Favor GameThe advantages of such a leaguewould fill more printed space thanMortimer Adler would take to writeof his medievalism theories. If youdon’t believe it, just stop into the field-house some afternoon and announceyourself as the lone wolf who’s aginsix-man football. The boys are accept¬ing odds-on-end bets you won’t at¬tend the Adler-Hutchins bit of con¬fusion next Friday if you do.Originally, the Maroon had plannedto petition the student body, but sinceNelson Metcalf, athletic director, im¬plied that that he would only takecognizance of a petition signed bysix-man players stating they were in¬terested, plans have been changed.From this 40-yard-line stagg field seat,it looks like it ought to be a cinch.wMBMEN§/tc4miBRIIE MimsAND I I $ BANDSpecial Student Rate Cardsavailable at Daily Maroon Office Indiana WinsHarrier MeetIndiana placed first with 32 pointsin the W’estern Conference CrossCountry Championship Meet held atWashington Park yesterday after¬noon.Ohio was second with 43 points,Purdue third with 58, and Wisconsinfourth with 107. Chicago and Illinoisfailed to get a man in the first ten.The winner, Wayne Tolliver ofIndiana, made the four miles in 22:-25.5. Indiana also had a second, sev¬enth, eighth, and fourteenth.There were 34 men competing. Chi¬cago placed 30th, 32nd, 33rd, and34th. 'They were Randell (30th), Leg-gitt (32nd), Ratzer (33rd), and Cox(34th). As. the Intramural Touchball Raceapproached a climax, two high-power¬ed offensive units clashed. Phi Gamfinally besting Alpha Delt, 24-13 in afray that fully lived up to pressnotices. Elites surged to a 26-12 vic¬tory over Aristotelians, clinching theIndependent Championship.This week may see the terminationof the title race. Elites will tacklethe Dorm Champ, and whoever comesthrough that fracas will have thedubious pleasure of mixing it withthe winner of tomorrow’s Phi Gam-Phi Delt brawl, which decides thefraternity champ.Kosacz, Wisely PassWith their usual dispatch Phi Gamshot to a 24-0 halftime lead on thegreat passing of A1 Wisely and AdamKosacz. Seconds after the contest gotunder way, Kosacz lined the ball toArt Lopatka eluding the A. D. half¬backs, the Phi Gam ace got away forthe first touchdown. Minutes later Mc-Kracken grabbed another Kosacz aer¬ial to make it 12-0. Lopatka snaggedWisely’s efforts for the third andfourth scores.Alpha Delt opened up a neat pasl-ing game of its own in the last pe¬riod, a Smith-Ottomeyer aerial and aDean Higgins combination accountingfor the A. D. points.Passes. Passes, PassesAt each others’ throats from theopening gun. Elites and Aristoteliansfought it out for their league title.Aristos opened the point-getting witha Lifton-Koven aerial, and, afterElites had forged ahead on a Smidl-Nitche touchdown pass and conver¬sion, made it 12-7 on Johnson’s fiftyyard heave to Feldman. Elites cameback to lead at the half by virtue ofJorgenson’s beautiful bullet to Hirsch-berg. Gophers-DevilsMeet Today In6-Man FinalsAfter being held down for a weekby Mother Nature, the six-man foot¬ball league will swing back into ac¬tion today. The outstanding game ofthe day, which should prove to beone of the hardest fought contestsof the year, pits the Gophers againstthe Red Devils.One more game remains for allthe teams after today. Since both theRed Devils and Gophers will in allprobability win their remaining game,today’s game proves to be the gameof games. If the Red Devils beat theGophers today, they will be champions.If, however, the Gophers win, as isvery possible, the two teams will thenbe tie. This would necessitate a play¬off for the championship, would prob¬ably consist of three games, the win¬ner of two contests becoming cham¬pion.Air vs Ground GamePassing power will be pittedagainst driving power today. TheGophers, most of the season, havemade their gains by virtue of BobStein’s long passes. The Red Devilrunning attack will feature DukeHarlan. Both teams however are fair¬ly well balanced. The Gophers haveplenty of running power in Win.stonBostik and Connie Kontos. The RedDevils have a good passer in quarter¬back George Balia.All in all, the game promises tobe a close one and a hard fought one.Both teams have been looking forwardto a meeting for an entire week.The Unexpecteds meet the Bears inthe other game of the afternoon. TheUnexpecteds will attempt to run up alarge score as they still have a chanceto come out on top in the scoringcolumn even if they don’t win thechampionship.DO YOU SMOKE THE CIGARETTE THAT^5^%^...it’s the smoker's cigaretteSmokers like yourself findCHESTERFIELDSvery refreshing with theirCOOLERBETTER TASTEEvery time you light up aChesterfield you know why itis called theSmoker*s Cigarette.It’s because Chesterfield’s rightcombination of the finest to¬baccos grown gives you every¬thing a smoker could ask for...a cooler, better taste that isdefinitely milder. You can’t buya better cigarette./ELLEN DREWParamount Starand 1940 Choica forMil! Vatoron of Foraign War!soon to appaarin‘'Taxoi Rangar! Rid* Again"LMAKE YOUR tCopyright 1940,Liccin & Alius To!ac^ Co.