’’'TVo Wilson Promises^^—Anti-War Rally CryClubs NominateGlamour GirlsThe mere mention of the word glamour has broughtfive of the women’s clubs forward with their favorite(laughters, each eager to secure the covented Mardi Grasti ip'for a club sister.Quadrangler has put forward Patty Wolfhope as theglamour girl of the campus. They base their claim notonly on her appearance, but a long series of extracurricu¬lar activities that include the Student Social Committeeand a Homecoming Queen this quarter.The Mortar Boards have not yet made their officialchoice but usually reliable sources have it that presidentn(>nna Culliton will get the nod.The EsotericsThe Esoterics love Clarissa Rahill, at least well enoughto have her represent them on the campus and possibly atthe gay Mardi Gras in New Orleans.Cynthia Dursimer has been chosen by her Delta Sig¬ma sisters as a candidate and the Wyverns, running trueto form, have entered not one but three girls in the glam¬our race. The Wyverns being put forward are Irene Rey¬nolds, Mary Toft, and Dorothy Hager.These girls, as well as any others that have been putup by their clubs unknown to the Maroon are asked tocome to the office to have their picture taken at 2 thisafternoon.Independents are, of course, eligible for the contestand will have a good chance to win the coveted trip to NewOrleans. The names of non-club members should be givento a member of the Maroon business staff. "These are hard times. Miss Wolfehope . . "Patty Wolfehope whose duties on the Student SocialCommittee last year included delivering a hid to the Wash¬ington Prom to President Hutchins, has been nominated byher club sisters for the ‘"most glamorous” title.If she tvins, and the Quadranglers expect her to, Pattywill attend New Orleans’ famous Mardi Gras as the guest ofthe Daily Maroon. The trip is being offered as the prize inthe Maroon’s annual circulation contest. Henrietta Mahon,Esoteric, won the prize last year, a trip to Sun Valley. Peace CommitteeDemonstrates“No Wilson Promises” will be the slogan of a campuspeace rally to be held in Rosenwald two Friday noon bythe Campus Peace Committee. Planned to include as manystudents and student organizations as possible, represen-j tatives of SSA, Chapel Union, and the Medical School willspeak to the gathering.Dick Salzmann, Freshman Orientation head, and Pa-rez Zagorin, Chairman of the College Council of the A. S.U. will also speak. The Peace Committee is deeply inter¬ested in “crystalizing anti-war spirit on campus,” for itfeels that the majority of students, whatever their politi-I cal views may be, are sincere in their desire to keep thiscountry out of the war.Designed for AllThe rally is designed to interest everyone on the quad¬rangles interested in the problem of peace and war. Forthose wishing to join students on other campuses in ex¬pressing their opinions to the national administration,there are tables in both Cobb and Mandel Corridor throughwhich a mass telegram campaign is being conducted.Buttons bearing the motto, “You Can't Pull a Wilsonon Us,” are being sold at the tables to publicize the rallyslogan. The committee’s chairman is Robert Armstrong,and its membership includes among others: Conrad Seipp,Parez Zagorin, Dick Salzmann, Vivian Barnert, RollinDenniston II, Quentin Young, and Ruth Brandstetter. Thegroup is not connected with the Campus Peace Counciland is not collaborating with the latter in sponsoring therally.Vol. 41, No. 39 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1940 Price Three CentsSymphonyPresentsSibeliusMendlessohn, Hindemith In¬cluded on Sunday Concert \Program. |iFirst concert of the season, by theUniversity of Chicago SymphonyOrchestra, will be presented in Man-del Hall, Sunday, December 8th at8:15. The first part of the concertwill be conducted by Charles Buck-ley, string coach of the orchestra.The rarely played Mendlessohn Octetwill be the selection for this part ofthe concert.Dr. Siegmund Lavarie will take ov¬er as conductor after the intermis¬sion. He will direct the orchestrathrough two works by Paul Hinde¬mith, and the “Karelia Suite” by JanSibelius. The two Hindemith selec¬tions, "Flute Solo with Strings,” anda “Quodlipet for Orchestra” are chos¬en from a collection of his works en¬titled "A Day of Music in Ploen.”This will be the first performanceof these works in the United States.The “quodlibet” is an old form ofmusical composition in which severaltunes or songs are sung or played“separately at first, and then com¬bined. For instance, the last page ofthe Hindemith quodlibet is a double(Continued on page three) Show Ancient Beauty ParlorIn Oriental Institute"England to HoldOut" Says LondonNews CorrespondentBy DAN WINOGRADEngland will not be crushed byNazi bombs this winter, or even nextyear in the opinion of David Wills,correspondent for the London NewsChronicle, and London Star. Wills wassent to he U.S. about a month afterthe heavy raids started on London.He is staying on the Midway whilehe completes his assignment.“Air raids don’t seem quite as ter¬rible when you are right in them,”says Wills, “as they do when you readand think about them. While sheltersare crowded, and the governmenthasn’t yet ordered compulsory innocu-lation against numerous diseaseswhich threaten, most of the sheltersare fairly safe.”“England Will Win”Everyone in England, added Wills,firmly believes in eventual victory.Most of them feel material aid will benecessary from America. Actual par¬ticipation of the U.S. in the war wouldbe welcome, but few Englishmen ex¬pect such an act, and there is no ef¬fort being'made to involve this coun¬try in the war. “America today,”states Wills, "is thinking and talkingthe same as the English did after(Continued on page two) Egyptian Women Used FaceCreams, Lipstick, NightMasks, Eye Paint.By NANCY LESSERAmenhoted III said 3000 years ago,"No matter where you find your wom¬en they’ll be up to their eyes in paint,whether it’s Kohl, ground by Miladyherself, or Maybelline-won’t-come-off-in-the-dark-super-dark-black.”On the supposition that any normalfemale who is capable of looking atthe Oriental Institute exhibit of An¬cient Egyptian cosmetics and orna¬ments, is capable of understandingtheir functions, the Institute if offer¬ing no explanatory lecture for thepresent display.Arden in EdenFrom an old dressing table the mod¬ern woman can see the forerunner toher Elizabeth Arden-alligator-travel-ing-kit-i n c 1 u d i n g all-purpose-facecream, keep-that youthful-skin-you-love-to-touch-night mask, and blue-blood-red lipstick.The pert Egyptian lass worked her¬self half to death grinding the cos¬metics and then tried to repair thedamages with the fruits of her labor.She applied her eye paint with a brushthe like of which is just coming backinto function; used a razor that wouldmake a man shudder, and put up herhair so elaborately that she had tosleep with her neck on an elevatedstone head rest in order not to haveto recomb her hair more than once amonth.Search for Glamour Among FacultyThe Daily Maroon, firm in the belief that campus glamour is not limited to the Coffee Shop, will offer fiveprominent members of the faculty an opportunity to serve a Glamour Board to determine the most glamorousfaculty member and enter him or her in the Mardi Gras contest.The members who will be requested to serve are James Stifler, Trustee of the University, Maud Slye, pro¬fessor of Pathology, Ralph Gerard, associate professor of Physiology, Siegmund Levarie, instructor of Music, andCharles Merriam, professor emeritus of Political Science. Actors Excel InBadly-Cut HamletDirector. . . Allen GreenmanHold ChristmasLuncheon At IdaOne of the highlights of last year’sChristmas season will be repeatednext Thursday when the Ida NoyesCouncil gives another Christmasluncheon. The affair is open to allcampus women.Luncheon will be served from 11:45to 12. A program of holiday musicstarts rt 12:30.So popular was the luncheon lastChristmas, that some 200 girls wereunable to get seats. Because of this,group reservations should be made atthe main desk in Ida Noyes before6, Friday. Tickets will be on sale Fri¬day, Monday, and Tuesday duringnoon hour in Mandel corridor, and allday rn Ida Noyes.Ann Schroeder is luncheon chair¬man. Others taking part in arrange¬ments are Sue Landis, Mary Herschel,Muriel Thompson, Mary Hammel, andMarjorie Sullivan. Shortened Version of PlayLeaves Little of Shakespeare,By .MARK FISHERThose planning to see tonight’s ver¬sion of “Hamlet” will do well to spendthe afternoon carefully reading theplay for if they fail to do so they maynot recognize the performance andthey certainly will have only a smallidea of what is going on.“Streamlined,” or perhaps shreddedwould be a better word, the plot be¬comes merely a flimsy, improbablescaffold on which actor-directorGreenman can hang his soliloquies.Saddest part of the production isthat the cast is good, that if givenenough of “Hamlet” they might haveturned in a performance that wouldhave done them credit. Allen Green-man's voice seemed tailor-made forthe part; his acting was good thoughhis efforts to underplay and thus avoidthe histrionics usually associated withthe role resulted in a Hamlet that wasfar too phlegmatic.Evans Red HotBetty Ann Evans’ Ophelia was su-berb. Her mad scene w’as by far thebest thing in the play and left onewith a definite regret that Shake¬speare saw fit to give her so few lines“necessary to the plot.” No one, how-(Continued on page three)Krechevsky SpeaksOn Total DefenseI. Krechevsky, secretary of the So¬ciety for the Psychological Study ofSocial Issues, will discuss, “Total De¬fense; Americas Need,” before mem¬bers of the New America Club in Wie-boldt 17 today at 3:30.The primary aim of the New Amer¬ica Club is to focus student attentionon national problems, particularly to¬tal defense, hemispheric solidarity,and the elimination of monopoly con¬trol. Clifford Murphy will be chairmanof the meetingMax BrookNotice to all “C” Book holders:The Max Brook coupons in the “C’Books will become invalid on De¬cember 1st.I/Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1940Ihe OqUUi ThiiAooYiFOUNDED IN 1901The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni-•'crsity of ChicaKO, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9221 and 9222. .After 6 :S0 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.TTie Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publication ofany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates: $3 a year;S4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18. 1908. at the post officeat Chisago. Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPlssocided Gollebicite PressDiitribuior ofCblle6iate Di6estBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialWILLIAM HANKLA PEARL C. RUBINSERNEST S. LEISER JOHN P. STEVENS, ChairmanBusinessJOHN E. BEX, Business ManagerWILLIAM LOVELL, Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESJames Burtle, Mark Fisher, Chester Hand, Richard Himmel, DanielMezlay, Richard Philbrick. Robert D. F. Reynolds, and DanielWinograd.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESRobert Dean, Lyle Harper, and Myles Jarrow.Night Editor: Richard PhilbrickSomething is RottenFor presenting even a most convincing“Hamlet” the little group of students whoworked on their show for several weeks deservemore credit than would be due even the moststartlingly successful ordinary Dramatic Asso¬ciation production.Because the DA lacked the ambition to tryanything more profound than “Death Takes aHoliday,” these students decided independentlyto fill up an obvious void in the repertory ofplays presented on the Quadrangles.Needed Something ToughThey knew that there was acting talent oncampus; the performances that most of themgave indicated that they were right. Theywanted to bite their teeth into something tough;and they knew that Shakespeare, traditionallythe most difficult kind of drama for amateursto perform, would give them that real dramatictraining.So without any support from the DramaticAssociation, and with such implicit disapproval• that Director Randall promised that if any DAscenes or other props were used, the “Shake¬spearean Guild” would be charged heavily,these students went ahead on their own, andwith no outside help put on Shakespeare at itsmost difficult.Because they cut the plot so drastically thatthe play lost all probability, and became simplya series of sililoquies, their work was not assuccessful as we hoped. We writhed in acutediscomfort at some scenes, and we moaned aswe tried to follow the action as it jumped fromcut lines to cut lines.Worthy AttemptBut when the play was over, we felt at leastthat we were witnessing a worthwhile attemptto perform one of the best plays ever written.We were proud that these students had enoughinitiative to do the kind of work that it is nottoo much to expect a Dramatic Workshop toundertake.Undoubtedly the play would have been bet¬ter from the audience’s standpoint, if it hadbeen more maturely executed. But the fact thatit was executed at all, and the fact that it wasacted with such sincerity, and at times suchdexterity, convinces us that the experiment ofthe Shakespearean Guild will not fail.We are sure that campus support will en¬courage this group to continue its pioneeringwork, and we cannot feel kindly toward thoseheads of the Dramatic Association who wouldhave stifled such initiative, and who dared notattempt such a production themselves.Speak the Speech ...The Daily Maroon should like to leave offcriticizing for a moment and whole-heartedlypraise an organization, which, we believe, isone of the best on the Quadrangles, and whichwe hope will become one of the most important.The Student Forum is not a group whichexists simply because it gives to its members auseless executive position with a big name. Themembers get relatively little publicity, but theymust get the satisfaction of knowing that theyare doing a good job.Combines Many AdvantagesStudent Forum combines the advantages ofa debate group, an informal bull session, and asociety for political discussion. By arguing onall topics, it stimulates healthy intellectual dis¬cussion at an undergraduate level, and on acampus which is intellectual but not especiallyprone to discussion, this is an important func¬tion.The group has expanded greatly within thelast year. It is one of the few growing organi- The Traveling BazaarBy BETTY VAN LIEW and JANET PEACOCKNow it can be told,told with all its gory details. We mean the tall talesrattlihg around the Interclub Club Closet are oozingout. The cellar gang of the Mortarboards was hiddenfrom all potential MB’s because they gave the impres¬sion of being insincere. The basement brats had astheir nucleus none other than Mike Rathje... .One wenchwas hurled into the whirl because of tiny hands andfeet—and whirled out because of a corresponding tinybrain.... One none-too-scrupulous club arranged datesfor its favorite rushees in order to get them home earlyfrom another club’s function... the catch came whenthe dates evidently rushed for a third and non-com¬batant club. Another slightly unethical club was caughtin the ear-to-the-keyhole act. Another used its rivalsrushing list, got by foul means. All’s fair in love andrushing and something has to replace football.I Let Us Pauseto shed a bitter tear for the Alpha Delts. Gus, theI Mascot suddenly grew out of his cute stage,. .givingUniversity Women absolutely nothing further to raveabout.. .then to add .salt to the cut, Mike Rathje hadto pull her coup d’etat.I Speaking of Mike, poor Mike. . .reminds us of pins.Betty Ann Evans knows and it’s probably no greatshock to you, but some A. D. Phis have more than onepin. Just like Bill Macy and his four or five with anotch in each pin. However, from all reports Big Billhas settled down this year, at least that’s what he says.What happened to the Northwestern babe Ed (make itBourbon) Davidson dated for awhile? Who knows? Whocares? Looking up, who should we see but Baby giantI Panda Roth with her hair turning white over the! worries of “Icebound.” Chris Fryar in a very sarcasticI role has all the earmarks of an up and coming star....j Actress Ruth Awlkwist is twoing it again with DaleI Tillery,., .(breaking our hearts. —ed. note) Now thatI the Maroon is holding a glamour gal contest, it’s timej to define glamour. Some men like Bill Hochman, StudI Ruml, Ash Taylor, and Tom Clarage may be glamourmen and they reign as such without Zombie perfumeetc., so glamour must consist of sterner stuff. Poise,charm and an air of mystery plus a youthful freshman-ness seem to be components.... Gad, glamour is a stateof mind... .Nevertheless the best in the running so farare Clarissa Rayhill and Pat Wolfhope.j Out of Hibernationis Wenzl Ruml III, Remember Stud? He’s now offi¬ciating as treasurer of the newly formed Ski Club. Inhibernation is Bob-sie Miller who has a new habitat..the Music Hall, where he’s janitoring.Oh for the Gentle SportsThe Dekes have a lovely new hangout. . .Dave’s Cafe.Talk about the foul dives. At present they’re featuringStreamlined Sue, She takes off almost as much as theydo out of the streamlined Hamlet. All credit for dis¬covery of the rendezvous, however, goes to the Phi Psis.,. .Rumors fly about a coming feud over the Alpha Deltsand Psi Us gargoyles.PoemThere was an old owlLived in an oakThe more he sawThe less he spokeThe less he spokeThe more he heardWhy can’t we be—j 0, Lord, why can’t we,' All apologies to the various copyright owners. WeI don’t claim originality as one of our cardinal virtues.STUDENTS SLUMFor about 10 cents a year a thorough educationin the use of leisure time can be picked up at the Uni¬versity Settlement. These are the dues that the chil¬dren living in the South Side slums try to pay, but ifthat fee seems mountainous as it does to most of them,it may be reduced, or even waived.For many are children of the unemployed or un¬employable, and the public relief funds on which theymust depend provide not a cent for education outsidethe public schools, nor for recreation. And neither dothe wages of their so-called “self-supporting” parents.Settlement or SlumRecreation and mental activity are such elementalhuman needs that they are apt to be found in someway, any way that the slum affords, if not provided ina far better way by the Settlement. It is with this un¬derstanding and a vision of boundless possibilities forimproved social conditions through wholesome recrea¬tion, that about a dozen University girls are teachingclasses and leading clubs at the Settlement.Among those donating an afternoon or a Saturdaymorning each week are Louise Howson, Betty Rosen¬heim, Carol Mooney, and Beth Mahon, who take turnssupervising the game rooms. These rooms are wellequipped for indoor activities; ping pong, anagrams,tiddledy winks, ring-toss, even bubble blowing are play¬ed by the children.zations on campus, and for those unaffiliatedwith any other group, it provides a healthy andproductive outlet for the social and intellectualdesires of University students. —E. S. L. ‘‘'’iVo FlyingTodaf^-Ifs WrongMore incongruous than usual wasthe sign bearing the words “No Fly¬ing Today” that erratically appearsand disappears from the bulletinboard outside Dean Bartky’s office onthe first floor of Cobb.'Sandwiched neatly between two an¬nouncements offering scholarships tograduate students, the sign, which isused to inform the students enrolledin the Civil Aeronautics Authoritythat there is no need to journey out tothe airport as they won’t be able tofly anyway, always looks vaguely outof place in such academic surround¬ings, but on the day mentioned thesky was bright, the wind gentle; ob¬viously there was no reason for thesign.A quick talk with Dean Bartky’ssecretary showed us to be wrong. Shehad put up the sign as she alwaysdoes when the airport calls and saysthere will be no flying. The probablecause this day was snow that haddrifted across the airport, and madelandings impossible. Today on theQuadranglesPhonograph Concert, Social ScienceAssembly Hall, 12:30.College Faculty Meeting, Cobb 1104.Address, “Building Good StudyHabits,” D. L. Wolfle, Social ScienceAssembly Hall, 4:30.Carillon Recital, Frederick L. Mar¬riott, Rockefeller Memorial Chapel4:30,Zoology Club. “Certain Aspects ofBacterial Variation,” William Bur¬rows, Zoology 14, 4:30.New America Club, “Total DefenseAmerica’s Need,” I. Krechevsky, Clas¬sics 17, 4:30.Yacht Club. Eckhart 202, 4:30.Council on Religious Truth, “Per¬sonal Religious Living,” Bill Strube.Ida Noyes Hall, 5.Chapel Evensong, Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel, 6:30.Pi Lambda Theta Panel Discussion,“Education for Family Living. ShallSecondary and Higher Education Of-i fer Specific Courses in Home andI Family Problems, Including the Areaof Marital Relationships?” GraduateEducation 126, 8:15.University Shakespearian GuildProduction. “Hamlet,” Reynolds ClubTheater, 8:30,England—(Continued from page one)Munich. Some said Czechoslovakia wasBritain’s problem; others said, “Oh,it’s so far away. Those same argu¬ments are evident in American discus¬sion. What the results will be, no oneknows.”An interesting observation made byWills, is that even after England wentto war, the slogan was “business asusual,” because the government didn’tseem to understand the job on hand.Now although full realization of thetask is everywhere, even in the faceof the heavy raids, people are stillsaying, “business as usual. By gosh,I’m not going to let an air raid botherme”.“I Remember —”Wills has no difficulty in recallingSeptember 7. It was on that day thatthe first heavy raid hit London. Hethinks that the damage done then, wasequal to any done in later raids, evenat Coventry. “On that fateful Septem¬ber day, no curfew was needed to takethe people off the streets.” Mffr Ml AtnilRWKH8 COURSE DINNERS FROM 75cOriginators of the Round-Up SkilletGoarc* T. Drmka, Mcr.123 E. OAK ST. AT MICH. AVE.:iii6iMMa6 66iiiaMnaii6MiaaiaEMinE4-7T R I - W A YFORMALFlowers fromOBERGS‘il- I4«l E. 57th■ ■ i ■ iTf I ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ f iTirri ■■ ■ ■ it iTi n W*Sale Taxes InhibitInterstate TradeForces Business Men to Al¬ter Methods of Doing Busi¬ness.Rk'pcal of the present system ofsales and use taxation by the states,Vas advocated today by ProfessorXeil H. Jacoby, assistant professor oftinatuc in the University School ofHiisincss.Professor Jacoby spoke at the ninthannual nieetintr of the Tax Institute,formerly the Tax Policy League,k\hieh today ends its sessions at thePalmer House. The meeting is held in(■hiea>ro in conjunction with the Uni-voi^ity of Chicapro’s fiftieth anniver¬sary celebration. Leading tax author¬ities of the nation, including govern¬ment officials, professors from thir¬teen American universities, and exec¬utives from private industries andresearch as.sociations have attendedthe sessions.Millikan, NotedPhysicist SpeaksAt ConvocationDr. Robert A. .Millikan, eminent('alifornia Institute of Technologyphysicist, will return to the Univer¬sity where he carried on researchuhieh brought him the Nobel Prize toaddress the 102nd convocation Decem-her 15.Dr. Millikan was a member of thefaculty from 1890 until 1921. He re¬ceived the Nobel Prize in physics inllij.l for his work in isolating elec¬trons. the smallest electrical units,and research in photo ekKrtric effects.He is now director of the NormanP.ridge I..}iboratory of Physics, andchairman of the executive council ofthe California Institute of Technologyat Pasadena.His convocation address subject istaken from the motto of the Univer-'ity: “Let Knowledge Grow, that Life.May be Knriched.’’President Hutchins, will deliver theconvocation statement and confer de-'M i es to more than 250 candidates. Professor Jacoby declared that sales |taxes act as barriers to interstatetrade by: “Forcing business men toalter their methods of doing businessin order to minimize their tax pay¬ments.“Causing consumers to spend theirincomes somewhat differently thanthey would otherwise, because of dif-!ferences in elasticity of demand for jthe commodities subject to taxation.” ^Consumers Spend DifferentlyBecause all states do not levy sales |taxes at an equal rate. Professor Jac- joby said, a consumer in one state will joften go to a neighboring state to buy |a commodity which is there subject to Ia lower tax levy. However, Professor iJacoby pointed out, recent court de-i cisions and the development of use'faxes have reduced this advantage,though without completely eliminatingit.Columbia, California,U. of C. Inf HousesOn “Bull Session”With Mr. James Wellard acting asmediator, six members of Internation¬al House will participate in Colum¬bia’s “Bull Session” December 14. Theprogram will be the first of a series ofsix “friendly neighbor” discussions bymembers of international houses atColumbia, the University of Califor¬nia, and the University of Chicago.Pan-AmericanismDesigned to further Pan-Americanunderstanding, the programs will bebroadcast coast to coast and by short¬wave to Latin-America. Mr. Wellard,director of activities at InternationalHouse, announced that Chicago willtake over the programs of December14 and 21. The first “bull-session” willcenter around the subject, “What IDiscovered in America.” Others willtake up topics related to problems ofthe American nations.The participants in the first pro¬gram are Ray Witcoff, Dennis Mc-Evoy, (both of the United States),George Huzar (Hungary), Franz Op-penheimer (Germany), Miss E. Theo-dorivov (Greece), and Paul Bouteiba(Algeria).Hamlet—(Continued from page one)ever, suffers from line cutting asheavily as Grace Farjeon; an actressof proven ability. She, no doubt, findsit difficult to add anything to theplay by merely sitting on the thronelooking grieved at the utterances ofher son.Louis Welch, Jeff Mongerson, andBob Miller as Claudius, Horatio, andPolonius respectively all turn in cred¬itable performances, but they are notup to the standards set by Miss Ev¬ans or Greenman. Weakest spot inthe cast is Bill Minteer whose Laer¬tes is weak and insipid.Good SetsThe play was executed with simpleprops against a plain black drop.Th is combined with the very effectivelighting employed throughout gave theperformance a unique and successfulsetting. The music employed in a fewparts of the play did net add greatlyto the mood.Blame for the presentation’s faultsobviously lie with director Greenman.Besides his ruthless cutting he miss¬es in using too many off-stage actionand voices, faults that are glaringlyportrayed in the play-within-a-playscene and the final death scene.Those well enough acquainted withShakespeare to enjoy disjointed ex¬cerpts recited by capable actors willenjoy the play; others will be littlemore than mystified.Symphony-(Continued from page one) On October 25, there was publishedin the Daily Maroon the results of thepoll taken among the students on cer¬tain great questions facing us at thepresent time. To the question, “Shouldthe United States enter the war?”,889 said no, 106 yes. But ironicallyenough, 662 students thought that wewould enter the war, and only 278thought not. These figures are symp¬tomatic of the overwhelming desire ofstudent America to keep America out]of the war, and of the profound un¬rest and fear which moves a great |part to think that nothing can save usfrom involvement.Rally RoundThe results of the Maroon poll showhow very important is the Peace Rallytaking place Friday noon in Rosen-wald 2. For here, at last, we have atthe University a group which is in¬clusive enough to unite all shades ofanti-war opinion on the campus and to |articulate the unity of the students intheir desire for peace. The bases for |the meeting and for the peace actionwhich must result from it, are the slo¬gans, “NO WILSON PROMISES,”!and “YOU CAN’T PULL A WILSONON US”. Around these slogans allstudents can rally and find a groundwork upon which all may stand in or¬der to work together. What these slo¬gans mean is simply this: Just asPresident Wilson was elected on hispromises to keep us out of the war, sowas President Roosevelt. And yet thepath that Wilson followed led to in¬volvement. President Roosevelt mustnot follow this path! Surely there isno one who will disagree with such aformulation, or who cannot join in apeace movement based on that formu- |latioYi.Mass MeetsWe must realize, however, that a|mass meeting such as this will be, isnot enough. From this meeting, com¬mittees must emerge to serve as thenuclei for peace work in all thoseplaces where students meet; dorms,eating coops, and classrooms. More¬over, it would be a token of the recog¬nition of the significance of such ac¬tivity if individuals were spontan¬eously to organize little groups priorto Friday, and to come to the meet¬ing and say for example, “I comefrom Burton Court. We have collected70 signatures on telegram petitionsand have sold 90 buttons. We are pre¬pared to continue the organization ofBurton with all our resources.” Anyindividuals or groups who are pre-1pared to do this may procure the nec¬essary materials from the tables ofthe Campus Peace Committee in Man-del Corridor or Cobb Hall.Opportunity KnocksHere at last is our opportunity tofulfill our collective responsibilities tothe American student body and theAmerican people. Here at last is ourchance to fulfill democracy’s highestduty and participate in the formula¬tion of policies which touch our deep¬est interests. This meeting, and thispeace movement being inauguratedhere is a challenge to us all. It is achallenge to unorganized independentsand to club women and fraternitymen. Let the club and fraternity peo¬ple vindicate themselves by evincinga real awareness to this question; letthem make those who have questionedtheir integrity retract. This is an op¬portunity for independents to makethemselves effective by participationin an 'important part of universitylife. In short, let us all not mourn forpeace, but rather organize to preserve |it.Basketball DancesFor Winter Quartercanon, in which two different melo¬dies are played simultaneously, eachof them being treated as a canon be¬sides.The Karelia Suite is a pertinentselection, as the composer, Jan Sibe¬lius will celebrate his 75th birthdayon the day of the performance, De¬cember 8th. During the Winter Quarter, the'jReynolds’s Club Council, under the di- [rection of Jack Crane, will continuelast year’s precedent of holding in¬formal dances, following each homebasketball game. According to presentplans the dances will be withoutcharge and the first will be held Jan¬uary 11.A formal dinner-dance has alsobeen placed on the Reynold’s ClubWinter Quarter social calendar. Thejdetails of this are to be announcedlater.t iK. t-m. 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Select yoursfrom our 2000 designs intended for "those whocare.PRICED $5.00 to $50.00 PER HUNDREDINCLUDING YOUR NAMEAlso "Economy" cards, 50 per $1.00Also "counter cards," gift wrappings & accessories.// The Store of Gifts"WOODWORTH'SSTOREBOOK1311 E. 37lh St.Near Eimbork Ave. Open EveningsPhone Dorchester 4800Page four THE DAILY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1940AnnounceSix-ManAwardsAward winners in six-man and elev¬en-man football have been announced.The following men have been chosenfor the six-man award by virtue oftheir accomplishments and interestin the Round Robin Tournament.Armbruster, PaulBaker, HilliardBalia, GeorgeBauman, JohnBean, RobertCooperrider, Ed.Bostik, WinstonDaboll, WarrenFitzgerald, RobertGruhn, RobertHarlan, DukeHarwood, HaroldJaros, FredKoch, FredKontos, ConstantineLevinson, JulianReynolds, RobertRoosen, IsaacSimond, RobertStein, RobertSutton, BenjaminVon Albade, FrancisWillot, JamesYasus, VytoldThe following men are especiallycited for their effort, interest, and ac¬complishments in eleven-man football:Baker, RalphBasich, GeorgeBoyd, CharlesBurris, AllanDvorsky, ThomasGlabman, JackIvy, JohnKeller, JohnKosacz, AdamMeyer, R. A.Parisi, DominicSapp, WilliamWallis, BairdWeinberg, RobertGwin, MerrittHarlan, DukeHowe, TedBoth sets of men will be givensweaters with emblems. The six-mansweater will probably have a footballwith the word “six-man” across it. Asin other informal sports, the eleven-men players will get shields. Letterscould, of course, not be awarded inthese sports.PLAYSANTA CLAUSIncludetheS. F. A. C.on YourCHRISTMASLIST Shag CenterOf SquabbleOver SuccessBy WERNER BAUMWe should like to say a few thingsabout Phill Rieff's article of yesterdayon Shaughnessy. Mr. Rieff says thatShaughnessy is not the miracle of theage he is built up to be by newspap¬ers. Maybe so, but we can not quiteagree with Mr. Rieff’s statement thatthe team makes the coach.We do not believe either that theteam makes the coach. A combinationof the two is necessary. Rieff supportshis argument by saying that the onlything Shaughnessy did was to giveStanford the “T” formation. This verypoint disproves his argument becauseif Shaughnessy was good enough torealize that the “T” formation was thebest formation, he is a good coach andwas responsible for the showing ofthe team.“T” Formation No SecretBut the “T” formation can not bethe only thing Shaughnessy gaveStanford. It could not have beenenough. Rieff says that the “T” forma¬tion is practically unknown and thusunscouted. This is not true. The for¬mation was well enough knowm forour high school, Senn High of Chi¬cago to use it. One can not concludethat the formation is not known be¬cause it is not used widely.Nor is the “T” formation as all-powerful as Mr. Rieff paints it. TheChicago Bears have used it for yearsand they should be champions everyyear if the formation were all-power¬ful. A good coach can figure out a de¬fense.Explains AttackAs a note of explanation for thosewho have not seen it, the “T” forma¬tion is the formation in which onebackfield man is in motion toward thesidelines, the ball is centered to thequarterback and he hands it to a manwho makes a line plunge through aquickly opened hole. The quarterbackmay lateral the ball back and a passor an end run may result.The formation may have accountedfor Stanford’s first or maybe first twovictories but by that time the coachesof the other teams should have had adefense, and probably did. The “T”foiTOation has a strong element ofsurprise in it. In high school we didnot use it until the championshipgame and then saved it until the sec¬ond half. The opposition was so sur¬prised that they were defenseless.Not Basically Offensive TeamWe also object to Mr. Rieff’s impli¬cation that a team using the “T” for¬mation must be basically offensive.When the opponent has the ball, theteam can be defensively just what itwould be if it did not use the “T”formation.Shaughnessy gave Stanford morethan the “T” formation. Not havingseen the team in action, we can notput our finger on it.All “C” men are to meet at 12:50tomorrow, Thursday, in the TrophyRoom of Bartlett Gymnasium. This isa very important meeting pertainingto development of a “C” club.Shag Reigns asKing of Stanford CampusIf we have the story straight,Shaughnessy is probably king of theStanford campus. He wrote HerbBlumer, sociology Prof, and one-timeassistant grid coach here, that whenhe arrived on the coast Stanford gridfollowers offered him sympathy andapologies for the “poor material” he’dhave to work with. Maroon Quint TriesFire Alarm OffenseThe University of Georgia Crackershave never met Chicago on the hard¬wood floor before, which may or maynot have been their own misfortune,but they will have the honor of par¬ticipating in the baptizing ceremoniesof the new Maroon offense at StaggFieldhouse next Thursday night.The Crackers, and the Chicago en¬tourage will see a team that will passand break as fast as they humanly'can. They will see a length-of-the-floor firehouse brand of bucketball,with long Joe Stampf in the unusualrole of receiver on basket to basketpass breaks.Crackers Need Lose No SleepBut the southern team, to the dis¬turbance of all the Quadrangle faith¬ful present at yesterday’s Maroonscrimmage between the varsity andthe Freshman squads, would lose justhalf of their usual sleep if they hadwitnessed the manner in which theregulars handled the unfamiliar sys¬tem. VV'rinkles would have nevercrinkled the white foreheads of themen from Athens if they had gazedupon the sight of the red-hot fresh¬men out-scoring the first-stringers.The youngsters tarnished the shin¬ing new attack of the C-men, by con¬stantly beating the Norgren squad tothe scoring punch.The Freshmen quint, fired with theidea of showing their elders what theymight expect in future seasons, werea hot, scrappy team as Jorgenson,Fogle, Nitchie and a host of others found playing against the varsity aparticularly profitable task.A strange offense, In spite of thebad taste of yesterday’s foray, is adifficult thing to work out smoothly,and Coach Norgren is not takingTuesday’s play as too serious a cri¬terion. •Passing Needs ImprovementThe regular’s passing is in need ofbrushing up, and the exceptionallyspeedy break from under the basketseems to lack coordination at the mo¬ment. But the record books don’t payoff on how a squad looks against itsfreshmen in practice on a single day. ChessTeam WinsThrillingContestWhile other schools are publishingtheir lists of major letter winners infootball, we have what could be calledexciting news in some circles for thispage.The Reynolds Club chess team beatthe Evanston team by a 4',4 to 2''.score last Friday. W. Corcoran, H.McBlaine, O. Reinmuth, and E. cirootcounted for the Chicago Team.The next meeting of the team willbe on Friday, December 6, 1940 at7:30 in the Reynolds Club chess room.A match will be played Friday, I),..!cember 13, 1940 at 8:00 in the Chessand Checker Club. The German-.\mer-ican Club will provide the opposition.The match will not be held on StaggField because of the late snow.Riddled Gymn TeamCancels MeetThe Gymnastics Meet with MortonJunior College has been called off be¬cause of injuries suffered by the Ma¬roon squad. Robertson, the tumbler,injured his back, while Earl Shankinhas a bad wrist.The squads endurance and skill incompleting routines is growing daily.A gymnastic performance is judgedlike diving, but a single performance ion the apparatus consists of more {than one move, unlike diving.StO/\/y/SlMDAI^.d^S9'SZrbuntexlrvn^stypod/Ste&hs * Chops-Biirbecue*All-CampusPULSE SANTA CLAUS PARTYRecord Dance -Record Dance - RefreshmentsIDA NOYES THEATRE RefreshmentsFriday, Dec. 6—3:00-5:30Everyone Invited STUDENTS!WHEN IN TOWNBrush-Up on DancingAT SPECIAL HOLIDAY RATESDuring the holidays, as soon as you reachhome, plan to visit the Arthur Murray Stu¬dios and arrange for a few lessons. You’ll enjoylearning the latest Rumba and Fox Trot steps. Injust a few hours you’ll surprise your partners withthe thrilling new steps. Gain poise and confidence.Special low rates are offered to all students! En¬roll as soon as possible and be a good dancer intime for your next party. All lessons are transfer¬able to any one of our studios from coast-to-coastat no extra cost. Lessons may also be used atresorts. Don’t wait until the last minute.ARTHURDone* StudiosATLAKHC dTT Chalfaot»-Hv1dna HallRAl/nMOKB Hotel BelrodereBOSTON Hotel SUUerBRIDOEI>ORT Stratarld HotelBUTTAIiO Hotel StaUerCHAALOITE . . . 1516 Hardtnc PlaceCHICAGO Hotel Drake A 57 E. JaekaooCINCINNATI . . Netherland Plata HotelCLEVELAND Hotel StatlerDALLAS Baker HotelDETROIT Hotel SutlerEAST ORANGE .... Hotel SuburbanHARTFORD Bond HotelHOirSTON ints W«,t UrarKANSAS cmr. MO. . . 4722 BroadwarLOS ANGELES . Forman Rida at 7Ui A Hill(Bererlj HlUa) . . 357 N Beverly Drive MURRAYCoost-fo •ConstMEMPHIS Hotel nabeirHILWACKEE Hotel AMorMINNEAPOLIS Hotel NleoOaNEW HAVEN 1056 Cha|Ml 8LNEW ORLEANS .... Rooeaeait HoMNEW YORK r Ea« 4Srd SUetCOMAHA Hotel FoaUaMUPHILADELPHIA . BeUerue Stratfort] HotelPITTSBUnOH . . . Hotel WUUam FWaPROVIDENCE . . . ProT. BUtmora HoUlKT. LOUIS .... mi ForwUie Bird.ST PAUL 8L Paul HotalRAN FRANascO ... St. FraaeU HotelSEATn.K Olmikto HotelSIOUX FALIS riaba Bids.TOUCDO .... Comnodora IWiy HotalWASHIN(rrON.D.C.,U0l Ooaa. Ara. N.W.There is something delight*ful about the clean, exhilaratingtaste of ice-cold Coca-Cola.The minute it passes your lipsyou know it for what it is,—pure, wholesome, delicious.And you welcome the refreshedfeeling that follows.^4 iTs E THAT REFRESHESBottled under authority of The Coca-Cola Co. byCOCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF CHICAGO, INC.Delicious andRefreshing y/For years:THE THREE WAY PARTY CORSAGESHave Come from J. E. KIDWELL - FLORIST826 E. 47th St. Kenwood 1352