The DcdLcf TTlo/iOcrnVoi. 41, No. 52 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. JANUARY 14. 1941 Price Three CentsMAROONS DROP OPENER TO O.S.U.AnnouncePlans ForFC BallPlans for the Inter-club Ball wereannounced yesterday by Inter-clubpresident, Donna Culliton. The annualformal dance to which all club womenare invited, will be held on Friday,February 7th at the Gold Room of theConjjress Hotel. The Colonial Club or¬chestra, and vocalist, which has be¬come a campus favorite with dancerswho like good swing, will provide mu¬sic for the evening.Invite IndependentsThis year as has been the custom,the outstanding independent women |on campus will be the guests of the Iclub girls. The honour this year hasbeen extended to Pearl C. Rubins,;member of t h e iBoard of Control iof the Daily Ma-1roon, Nu Pi Sigma,;and an Aide; Mar- jion Castleman, amember of Nu Pi ISigma, M i r r o r iBoard and an Aide;!Esther D u r k e e,head of Y.W.C.A.,an Aide and also a member of Nu PiSigma; and Amy Goldstein, a mem-bt>r of the Board of Women’s Federa¬tion.Promises to be SuccessMiss Culliton ventured the predic¬tion that “This Inter Club Ball prom¬ises to be one of the most successfuland popular dances ever given by theorganization.”Miss Culliton also announced yester¬day that Tau Sigma Upsilon, newlyformed organization for Jewish Uni¬versity Women, had been formally ad¬mitted to Inter-club Council. Tau Sig¬ma Upsilon participated in rushingautumn quarter under Inter-club nilesalthough it was not at that time amember of the Council. Northwestern 105Maroon Board 95Give me 3 animals whose namesend in “x” said the announcer.“Sphinx” promptly answered P.C. Rubins.This is but a sample of the logicthat resulted in the defeat of fourUniversity students by a groupfrom Northwestern on a radio quizprogram last night.The Quadrangle Quartet got offto a bad start when Sally Adamsfailed to realize that Alaska wasbigger than Texas and they neverquite caught up. The brain work ofErnest Leiser brought them withinstriking distance of victory and forone breathless instant it looked asthough they might make it. Then“puzzle king” John Stevens wasgiven the difficult task of decidingif Norfolk was in the state of Vir¬ginia and the Maroons ended be¬hind 105 to 95. Daiches Lauds JamesJoyce’s TechnicalMastery of WordsHealth ServiceHas New VaccineAgainst InfluenzaA recently developed vaccineagainst influenza will be made avail¬able to students by the Student HealthService beginning today.The new anti-toxin, explains Dr.Read, Health Service director, is stillin the experimental stage and can¬not be guaranteed as a certain pre¬ventative. However trials in otherUniversities have been highly success¬ful, and no ill effects have resulted inany cases.The serum is a result of experimen¬tation by the Rockefeller FoundationWhich has included the work of Chica¬go bacteriologists.Vaccinations will be given duringregular Health Service hours from 9to 12, and from 1:30 to 4:30. Studentsliving in dormitories or other largestudent quarters are urged by theHealth Service to take the serum. (Literary circles the world over',were shocked yesterday to read of the Ideath of James Joyce in Switzerland. IThe noted author recently underwent Ian abdominal operation. Among thecomments offered on the passing ofJoyce is the following by DavidDaiches, instructor in English.)By DAVID DAICHESThe death of James Joyce removesperhaps the most brilliant and influ¬ential literax-y figure of the first halfof the twentieth century. No manhas ever struggled more and sacrificedmore for what he deemed to be the in¬tegrity of his art than he didthroughout his life. He never com¬promised with his public, the criticsor the powers that be in any field. Yetin spite of this—indeed, because of it—his literary ideals and his literarypractice reflect the problems and at¬titudes of the world of his time in amore illuminating manner than thoseof any other writer.“Naked Sensibility”In his attempt to discover and topractice a type of fiction which wouldguarantee the fullest objectivity anddisinterestedness of the artist, thatw’ould free the writer from implicationin confusing and confused contem¬porary attitudes, he stands as the mostbrilliant example of the writer whowas able to compensate by techniquefor lack of any non-literary belief, aman who looked as a “naked sensibil¬ity”, on the world of his day, an ob¬server who saw all and expressedeverything at once so as to avoidcommitting himself 4o^y preference,a technician who evolved a method ofexpressing the human situationthrough multiple fable that drew to¬gether and presented in simultaneousharmony all the various strands ofmen’s activity both mental and physi¬cal.Work is High, AmbitiousUlysses will remain as an almostsuperhuman attempt to hold all life inthe hand at once, without fear orfavor, attitude or distinction. The(Continued on page four) Ohio State WinsRough Game^ 67-38Joe Stampf Lineups:Chicaro far ft plOhio State fg ftFons, f ...3 3 2|’^i8her, f ....8 1Shaver, f ...1 0 3|Mickelson, f . ....2 0Nelson, f ...1 0 3|Pon8, f ....0 0AIsop, c ...0 0 OiMiller, T 0Stampf, c .... ...4 8 2|McLain. c ....4 1McMahon, g ...2 0 11 Jorgenson, c ....2 1Wasrenburfr, ...2 0 4 Young, c ....4 0Crosbie, g .... ...0 0 2|Graf, g ....2 2Krakowka. k ..0 1 Oinawaoii, g ... ....2 0IGicowets, g . ....1 2iO’Neill, g ....1 0INees, g ....0 0iMarzano, g ... ....0 0Totals .13 12 17|Total8 7Carlson CallsAid To AlliesActs Of WarMaritain Blames Politics^ ArmyWeakness For French Defeat“Political disintegration, not imput¬able to democracy but to a hateful di¬vision between leftest and Tightestparties, and military mistakes in theface of the horrible material andtechnical superiority of the Germanarmaments”. Those were the- most im¬portant of many conditiona contribut¬ing to the defeat of France accordingto Jacques Maritain, noted Frenchphilosopher now on the faculty of theUniversity.France suffered not only from in¬adequate preparation, but also from“insufficiency in conception of the im¬portance of mechanized armies inmodern warfare”. The French, saidMaritain, were victims of a rationalist fered from deep weakness and disin¬tegration, Maritain emphasized thathis condition does not characterize thereal, personal life of the great ma¬jority of the French people. The hopeof France, he said, lies in the hopeand energies of its common people. Inthese dark days, he said, the moral ofthe people of France is growingstronger. The gerat majority of themhope for a British victory.Have Confidence in PetainMaritain believes that the Frenchpeople have great confidence in Mar¬shall Petain. In the sudden shock of amilitary defeat which was experiencedby them in four or five days, the Maritainattitude of mind. They made the mis-; French people lost confidence in manytake of trusting in clear and distinctideas and “sleeping on these ideas”.The French, he said, as well as theBritish, tried “to fight a war that wasnot really a war” through purely de¬fensive means—by a puny blockade.Armies Hard to OrganizeSuch a war could be fought on pa¬per but could not work in practice.Maritain contended that this war“based on a nominalist reason de¬prived of faith and realistic insight” (Continued on page four)Bill Lytton PlaysFor Charity BallMerrymakers at the Charity Ball'will dance to the music of Bill Lyt-ton’s orchestra, it was announced to¬day. Well known to Northwesternwas a failure when it confronted the i University students, Lytton’s orches-“dynamism of instinct technically i has also played at several Intema-equipped” in the German armies, j tional House dances.Maritain emphasized that with the j Sponsored by the Student Settle-great complexity of modem warfare, ment Board, the Charity Ball is beingwhen an army is defeated, it tends to j given to raise funds for the Universitybe more easily disintegrated and more j Settlement House. It will be held indifficult to reorganize than in previous j Ida Noyes Hall next Friday night atwars. He said this type of disorgani-! 9. Admission is 60 cents a person. Jayzation probably occurred after theNazi victories at Sedan.While the French political life suf- Fox, financial secretary of the Stu¬dent Settlement Board, is in charge ofthe dance. political and militaryCap-Gown CallsFor Senior Photos By CHET HAND“President Roosevelt is dishonest inpretending that his past actions inhelping England are not acts of war,”asserted Dr. Anton J. Carlson, FrankP. Hixon Distinguished Service Pro-fes.sor Emeritus of Physiology, in aninterview yesterday.“If the President is honest in want¬ing to prepare us for the defense ofour country, he has no business inasking for dictator power as is thecase in his present measure now underdiscussion in Congress; he is leadingus into war,” continued Carlson.100 Percent for PreparednessAlthough 100 per cent for prepared¬ness he is convinced that the UnitedStates, “hasn’t really begun to pre¬pare.” “Pan Americanism is justanother empty phrase. Real PanAmericanism should embody educa¬tion, understanding and fair treat¬ment. The United States must go along way to undo past wrongs,” headded. “If the present bill to extendthe President’s powers of war aid ispassed, it will be looked upon with dis¬trust by South America.”“As early as last year Rooseveltstarted the war ‘psychosis’; in fact,”concluded Carlson, “Hitler has al¬ready conquered us idealogically.” Victors in their last two starts, theMaroons opened the Big Ten basket¬ball season last night in Columbus anddropped a 67-38 decision to the ram¬paging Ohio State quintet in a*roughgame with 34 fouls called.The two teams fought along a fair¬ly equal basis for the first half as the20-14 halftime score with the Buck¬eyes on top can attest. Chicago wiltedunder a vicious second half attack,however, and Ohio State piled up 47points to breeze in an easy victor.Stampf AgainCaptain Joe Stampf again paced theMaroon attack with 16 points. Hiseight connected free throws starts himoff again in a defense of the title hewon last year by dropping in the mostfoul shots in the conference.Dick Fisher, flashy forward, led theBuckeyes with eight buckets and afree throw for 17 points. The rest ofthe winner’s points were fairly evenlydistributed among the 13 players used.Maroons UnderdogsWinners over Marquette and Prince¬ton in their last two games Chicagowent into this fray as the underdogsgiven slight chance to beat the Scar¬let and Gray basketeers althoughPrinceton had previous to their defeatat the, hands of the Maroons drubbedOhio State.It was Ohio State’s style of defensethat stymied Chicago last night. Mostof the teams encountered previouslyhad picked up the attackers at themiddle of the floor. The Buckeyes,however, employ a defense whereinthe opposing players are picked upright under the basket. AlthoughCoach Norgren had drilled his chargesagainst this defense all week, thesmooth passing attack of the Maroonscould never get sufficiently under wayto seriously challenge.Chicago meets the Minnesota five inthe Fieldhouse Saturday night fortheir second Western Conferencegame.Campus NewsreelHas Sex ProblemRobert 0. Evans, Publisher of theCap and Gown announced yesterdaythat all seniors who expect to grad¬uate should have their picture takenwithin the next ten days. The picturesshould be taken in the Photo-Reflexstudio of the Mandel Brothers storein the loop. Campus Newsreel, revamped andrevitalized, seems to be having aminor sex problem. In spite of its al¬most continuous effort to add womento the list of members, the group con¬tinues to count 35 males on its staff,but no females.The Newsreel will have its first of¬ficial meeting tomorrow in Lounge A,Reynolds Club at 12:46. Since thismeeting will determine for the greatpart the future of the organization,everyone interested is urged to come.Anyone who is interested but cannotmake the meeting should contactA1 Pfanstiehl at the Chicago Chi PsiLodge immediately.“Where are the snows of yester¬year”, and will they fall tomorrow ?sigh the WAA’ers. For at 4 tomor¬row they want everyone out inback of Ida Noyes, for an old-fashioned Sugaring Off Party.A Sugaring Off party is to Ver¬mont what a clambake is to Maine.If the snow doesn’t choose to fall,the party will be held the 22nd. Pick ShapliestPins On CampusFor MirrorOut of the 83 girls who tried outfor the Mirror chorus last week, 36were chosen to participate. Eight vet¬erans of last year’s are Ann Steel,Shirley Smith, Barbara Foote, MaryJayne Geary, Kathleen Comstock, Ros¬alie Phillips, Mary Hammel, and KayChittenden.Included in the remaining 26 areJeanne Robin, Barbara Deutsch, Vir¬ginia Butts, Jacqueline Horal, DorisWestfall, Marilyn Robb, Fay Trolan-der, Virginia Ailing, Charlotte Ford,Carolyn Vick. Frances Farwell, AgleAgiris, Peg Williams, Helen Quisen-berry, Betty Barickman, LorraineCurtin, Marge Hibbard, Mary LouScanlan, Beverly Blanksten, Maryj Trovollion, Billie Lansing, and RuthApprich. Angela Peyroud, Jean Groe-nier, Lou Eaton, Marie Ullman, andBetty Lu Simpson were also chosen.Rehearsals start this Wednesday at3:30 in Mandel Hall. They will be heldevery Monday, Wednesday, and Fri¬day at the same time and same place.Page TwcThjz OojUUf 'Ifla/iocm THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1941POUNDED IN 1901The Daily Mar.x)n is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of ChicaKo, published morninKS 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. _ . .sAfter 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompanv, 148 West 62nd street. Telephones: Wentworth 6123and 61is4. ...... .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 oiany 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 ofnceat Cb*'^ago. Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.Memberftssocioied GDllG6K3ie PressDistributor ofGDlle6ioie DibestWILLIAM HANKLAERNEST S. LEISER BOARD OF CONTROLEditorialPEARL C. RUBINSJOHN P. STEVENS. ChairmanbusinessWILLIAM LOVELL, Business ManagerWILLIAM KIMBALL. Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESlames Burtle, Mark Fisher, Chester Hand, Richard Himmel, DanielMezlay, Richard Philbrick, Robert D. F. Reynolds, and DsnielWinograd.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESRobert Dean, Lyle Harper, and Myles Jarrow.Night Editors: Jean Cargill, Bob Lawson, Richard PhilbrickConfusion in the GreatDebateSo many words are being poured o\er the issueof our country’s policy toward the warring worldthat to add to the stream seems as futile as pouringwater into an already overflowing receptacle. Nev¬ertheless, tve cannot resist the urge to condemn allthe emotion, wishful thinking, and irrelevancy thatare, unfortunately characterizing much of the de¬bate.The obvious method of boiling down an argu¬ment and making it intelligible is to first discoverthe premises on which everybody is agreed andeliminating such material from the discussion. First,it seems clear that the various committees and otherantagonists in this momentous debate are agreed,or should be ujxm the ultimate goals and purposesof our policy, whatever means they fator.Agreement on EndsIn general, these goals, or points of agreement,include the protection of our national freedom andintegrity from attack by any other national powder;the preservation of our democratic ideals as wellas our cultural and moral standards against bothapparent and insidious dangers: and, whereverfeasible, the promotion of human rights and dignityeveryw’here in the world.Those who cannot even agree in general tothese propositions do not belong within the scopeof the present debate and their presence only servesto confuse the issues, since it would take 100 debateson as many subjects to deal with them..If, then, the rest of us can all agree on thesepropositions as the ultimate ends in view, and canbelieve in one another’s sincerity, we can get direct¬ly to the real problem, that of the means, whereinlie the only issues of dispute.Policy DeterminedIt is obvious that the national administration,and the great majority of the people, are alreadycommitted U‘ one line of policy. That policy Ii'asbeen officially expressed as one of all possible moraland material aid to the invaded democracies shortof war. Undoubtedly, all the noise the opposingminority can make won’t now' change the countryfrom this course. The worst effect it can have is todelay and slow down real action, and its most salu¬tary effect can be to force the majority to morethorough consideration ot the steps being taken.Isolationist arguments have been unconvincingand mostly negative in form. So far as we are ableto discern, little of positive value has come fromthem. W^e are all supposed to agree, in general, onthe purposes and ultimate ends of our policy. Butwhat practical means do the isolationists suggest?For the most part they are satisfied with excitingfear and distrust of the action that is being taken—fear of its risks and distrust of its leaders.Certainly, There are RisksOf course it can be argued effectively that thereare risks in any course we take. Yet, although noone can read the stars and foretell the future, it isprissible to see where the greatest risk lies. Of courseit is easy to call interventionists imperialists, andwar mongers, hut it is etpially easy to call isolation¬ists commimists, fifth columnists, or appeasers. Butno intelligent discussion of the issues can includesuch name calling. We are supposed to be discussingthe issues involved in effecting certain goals alreadyagreed upon, not the relative virtues of the debators.IF. R. H. By DICK HIMMELBeat!.... Beati Gaidzik and Hart Perry announced theirengagement on Sunday at an intimate if somewhatswanky cocktail party. Now Beati heads off to Mexicoand Hart back to Rock Island to work in an arsenal. . . Beati and Hart both had whirlwindous college ca¬reers. Beati’s took a little over a year. Perry was spec¬tacular over a five year span At the tea were6,265 Mortar Boards and practically no Alpha Belts(Hart’s home). But Hart’s two brothers in a famouscampus triple alliance voiced their congratulations . . . .Bob Merriam and his fiance, Jane Jungkunz, werethere and at seven o’clock Emmet Deadman called upfrom Tulsa where he is flying in the army and droppingdiscreet bombs in discreet places . . . Beati% one timedouble, Chloe Roth and her man Jay, showed up to helpBeati pass the punch .... Margie Goodman and MhrtyLevit likewise .... Prime attraction of the show wasBeati’s mother who looks much too young to be Bcati’smother but as a result made a gay and charming ho.st-ess.BeatiI. . . . Started in her fre.shman year with Paul Florian,j fast and furious like, then suddenly that romance cameI to a stop. Things went with variety until Hart cameI along, then she settled down for the quiet life whichj culminated in their engagement Sunday.Bedti.... had several predecessors in the Perry heart, asmost college men like a little variety before they settledown. Most famous was beauty queen Patty Wolfhope.... Maxine Biesenthal, ex-Maroon woman, summed upthe female Perry sentiment on campus when she said,“Sure I like to go to the library. I just sit there andlook at Hart Perry.” .... But the strong alliance wasthe Perry-Merriam-Deadman trio which was a dailyBeati Gaidzik.... her work beginsfeature of this column. Consistently it was “the boys”who got the plugs the Bazaar chose to give out. Whenthey graduated the Maroon slipped out of its editorialgirdle and said, “At last we don’t have to read aboutthose boys any more!” But for once the Maroon waswrong. Hart came back to school to study and be housemother to the Alpha Belts .... Deadman became a biblesalesman and there were too many good stories abouthim not to repeat and Merriam never went awaybut seems to go on forever.Beati. . . . and Hart will to all available evidences live hap¬pily ever after because as someone remarked at theparty. “They make such a fine couple; they’re both alittle crazy.”Worship Service, Joseph Bond Chapel, 11:55.Meeting, Faculty of the College, Cobb 110, 4.Public Lecture, “Present Opportunities in the Fed¬eral Civil Service.”Leonard D. White, Social Science 122, 4:30.Foreign Film, “Port of Shadows,” InternationalHouse, 4:30 and 8:30.Public Lecture, “Warfare in the Ancient World,”Neilson C. Deboise, Oriental Institute, 8.Public Lecture, “Freedom and Discipline in theTraining of Youth,” Ethel Kawin, Graduate Education126, 8.Graduate Classical Club Lecture, “Cicero’s Invectiveagainst Pi.so,” P. H. De Lacy, Classics 20, 8.YW’CA, Supper party for members of the AdvisoryBoard and their husbands, 5:30-8:30.Student Forum, “Student White Paper,” Lexington5, 3:30. Letters tothe EditorBoard of Control,The Daily Maroon:It is regrettable that a universityman should permit himself to fall intothe loose and faulty generalizations jattributed to Mr. Hugh Cole in yourissue of Jan. 3. A mere reading ofcurrent news should have warned himof his error. If the Italian forces inLibya have been crumpled up, with aloss of 90,000 men, by an allied armydrawn primarily from Australia whichMr. Cole states “has contributed littleexcept some technical aid such as airmen, tank drivers and machine-gun-1ners” then the troops from “down !under” are much tougher than eventheir most enthusiastic admirers havesupposed.Ml*. Cole’s comments on India’s re¬lation to the war are of a similar ill- jinformed nature. But I am most as-'tonished by his statement that “Can-1ada has been only lukewarm in her Isupport”. May I suggest that Mr, Cole jspend his next vacation in Canada, asI did mine of last summer, and there |learn the situation at first-hand? Hewill then be in a position to explain Ihow he came to make statements so 'remote from the truth.Sincerely,W. A. Irwin. 4 MONTH fNTFNSfVC COURSBrot COllEGE STUDENTS AND GRAOUATUA tkonmak, iMUttutm, eomnu-^writtarpkom. NasoSeUonmmaloymLmoserBUSINESS COLLEGEPAUL MOSER, J.D.rH.t.Reptlnr Caurtes for btginnrrt, opan ia HighSchool Gratiaatss only, start j^rsf Mondayof sack month. Adaomed Omrsa startany Mondtn. Dsy and Evetting. Ea^ngCottrscs open to men.116 S. Michigan Av*.,Chicogo,/tandotph 4347Have You Noticed the Latest atPHELPS and PHELPSColonial Restaurant?Ruth Steel of Sigma tried it the otherday and now she's a regular guest atthe Phelps and^ Phelps attractive col¬onial styled restaurant,6324 Woodlawn AvenueHERE IT IS:—FLUFFY SOUTHERN WAFFLESSMOTHERED WITH CREAMED TOOTHSOMECHICKEN, A BUBBLING PEPPY PEPSI-COLAAND those delicious HONEY PECANROLLS WITH CREAMERY FRESH BUTTERAND ONLY JScIMAGINE!Served Everyday—from 9 A.M. to10 P.M., except Sunday . . .Just Ask for aRuth Steel SpecialMrs. WILHELM6019 Kenwood Ave. Telephone Midway 1606ENTIRE SECOND FLOOR* FOR UNIVERSITY STUDENTSWeekly Tuition, One Week In AdvancePhone calls and use of parlor. MEN ONLY.WEEKLY RATES BELOW1—Private Front Room, running wa¬ter, $3.502—Front Room, 2 beds, $2.50 each.3—South Room facing front room,running water, 2 bads, $2.50 each.4—Side Room, 3 bads, $2.50 each. 5—Private Room off porch, runningwater, $3.00.6—Light Room off porch, 2 bads$2.50 each.7—Private Room, running water,$3.00. MRS. ADA WILHELMTHEPRESIDENTSPEAKSTHECAMPUSLISTENS^Read his column in TheDAILY MAROONTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 14. 1941WAA BasketballThe Women’s Athletic Associa¬tion is staging an intramural Bas¬ketball Tournament next week forall those interested. It is necessarythat all who wish to participateregister the name'of their team, nottheir players, by tonight. AS I WAS SAYING - Bob LawsonClassifiedexpert, experienced stenographerwill type manuscripts eveninirs, Saturday,Sunday. Neat, intelligent. Jeanette Mel-mich. Fairfax 5100.laundry service to sororities. Calland deliver : special monthly rates. PhoneEnglewood 5605. Specialize in silks.7 rooms—two baths, white woodwork. NearXL of C. and I. C. 5707 Blackstone. Sec¬ond floor, $90. Hyde Park 2525.EVERYONESHOULD HAVE ACHECKINGACCOUNT—and—with the2cono -PlanYOU CAN USEEVERT DOLLARIn Your Account—because—NOMinimum BalanceIs Ever Required!5cis our only charge for eachcheck drawn and for eachitem deposited!Open your account in person orby mail with an initial deposit ofor mors.Checkbooks FreeNATIONAL BANKofHYDE PARK1525 E. 53rd Streetin ChicagoPLAza 4600MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSITINSURANCE CORPORATION The “Three Dumb Dukes” of theNew York Boxing Commission aregenerally handed the palm for the inoststupid sporting body in the country,but the Western conference commit¬tee has been pushing them lately.Just recently, for instance, thisgroup granted permission to HelgePukema, Minnesota guard, and twoother Big Ten football players to com¬pete again next fall. All three hadplayed but a few minutes their sopho¬more years, and it was decided thatthey could have one more full year ofcompetition. This despite the fact thatConference eligibility rules state spe¬cifically that a player may have onlythree years of intercollegiate play. Their biggest boner, however, hasto do with their relationship with thePacific Coast Conference. For sometime this league had been trying tomake some sort of tie-up with theBig Ten especially for the Rose Bowlgame. The Big Ten reportedly tenta¬tively agreed if the coast boys wouldclean up their back yard.Hire Ex-G-ManThe coast conference proceeded tohire former G-man Edwin Atherton!as the czar of the league with full ^powers of investigation. Atherton jcompiled and turned in a several thou- jsand page expose of conditions as re- igard to subsidization. With an iron ' hand Atherton took charge andcleaned up these conditions which hehad unearthed.Then when Stanford had virtuallyclinched the Rose Bowl bid they sentfeelers to Michigan, Minnesota, andNorthwestern among other schoolswith the expectation that the BigTen would okay participation in thisevent. Their first choice was Michi¬gan.Michigan VetoesThis was stymied when the Michi¬gan faculty themselves voted down theproposal for some unknown reason.On December 14 the Western Con¬ference committee convened and de¬livered the coup de grace when they voted down any participation in post¬season games.Having expected a Big Ten oppo¬nent, this left the Rose Bowl commit¬tee in a jam since the other good teamshad been snapped up by the othervarious and sundry bowl games. Theyhad, therefore, to invite Nebraska andtry to justify this with a high-pressurepublicity campaign.The w’hole episode left a bitter tastein the mouth of people on the coastand rightly so. About all that is need¬ed for the Major John Griffith, et al,to eject Chicago for not having a foot¬ball team to give them a good chanceto replace the “Dumb Dukes.”DAILY MAROON SPORTSForty to One ScoreFeatures LM Games Swimmers BeatNorth CentralSixteen more fraternity teamsswung into action Friday afternoonon the Bartlett Gym floor with aneven greater variation of scores thanthe preceding evening showed.The Deke C team held the DeltaU D team to a lone free throw scoredin the first half, meanwhile rollingup 40 points of their own. HarlanNaas, high point man for the D U’s,narrowly missed scoring again in thesecond half, but the ball just wouldn’tstay put. Art Moynihan scored 16points in this game to lead the indi¬vidual scorers of the afternoon.Phi Fsi C’s WinThe Phi Psi C’s ran up ten pointsin the first half and two in the sec¬ond before the Psi U C’s scored. BillKimball dropped in a free shot tobreak the ice, but only two more bas¬kets were forthcoming.Harry Beach scored seven of histeam’s 10 points, which in itself wouldhave been enough to down the PhiSig C team, who scored only six pointsaltogether.Smith Scores 14Dave Smith was second to Moyni¬han when he dumped in 14 pointswhile his A D Phi D teammates wereputting together four more to beatD U C, 18 to 4.The Phi Delt D’s and the Phi PsiD’s hooked up in the season’s first ov¬ertime game with the former winning,13 to 12. Paul Reynolds contributedhalf of the loser’s points. Maroon State TopsMaroon WrestlersIn the last meet before their East¬ern trip the wrestling team sufferedits first loss of the season to IllinoisState Normal, 19 to 13, Saturdaynight.Captain Willis Littleford, 165pounds, and Sam Zafros, 136 pounds,won their matches by falls. BernardStone, 155 pounds, won on a decision.Bob Mustain, 175, Roy John, Heavy¬weight, lost on falls. George Balia, 121pounds, Carroll Pyle, 128 pounds, andMartin Ondrus, 145 pounds, all loston decisions.The team had previously defeatedthe American College of PhysicalEducation, 28 to 6, in the opening meetof the season.The “B” team,also saw action Sat¬urday, defeating the DivisionY.M.C.A., 19 to 16. Coach McGillivray’s water-goingMaroons opened their 1941 seasonSaturday by handing North Centrala 52-23 beating.Outstanding was the work of sopho¬more Bill Baugher. After losing the40 yard event to Harold Henning,well-known North Central sprint star,Baugher came back to win his spe¬cialty, the 100 yard free style fromthe towering Naperville threat.Brown DivesArt Bethke took the 100 yard breaststroke by clicking off a neat 1:06.6.and Chuck Brown captured the Divingevent. Summaries:120 yard medley relay — Won byChicago (Fein, Bethke, Thorburn).Time, 1:08.1.40 yard free style — Won by Henn¬ing (N. C.); Luckhardt (C) second;Baugher (C!) third. Time, :19.3.220 yard free style — Won by Field(C); Richardson (C) second; Koehler(N. C.) third. Time, 2:33.5.Bethke Wins100 yard breast stroke — Won byBethke (C); Matheson (C) second;Mullen (N. C.) third. Time, 1:06.6. 100 yard free style — Won byBaugher (C); Henning (N. C.) sec¬ond; Luckhardt (C) third. Time,:54.5.More HenningDiving — Won by Brown (C), 82.2;Crosby (C) second, 77.9; Ostroth (N.C.)'third, 77.6.100 yard back stroke — Won byHenning (N. C.); Smith (C) second;Fein (C) third. Time, 1:08.7.160 yard relay — Won by Chicago.Yellow BantamRental Library1460 E. 57th SL (Shop in Lobby)Open to 9 P. M.New Mysteries, Novels, etc.TYPEWRITERS All MakesSOLDTRADEDREPAIREDRENTEDPortable or LargeCash or TermsWOODWORTH^SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Open EveningsNear Kimbaric Ave. Dorchester 4800SCORESDeke C 40—DU D 1Phi Delt C 13—Phi Psi D 12A D Phi D 18—DU C 4Phi Delt D 10—Phi Sig C 6Phi Gam C 21—Phi Sig D 8Phi Psi C 27—Psi U C 5Deke E 15—A D Phi C 6D U C 12—Deke D 5 HURRY-HURRY-HURRYTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS50th AnniversarySALE OF BOOKSNOW IN FULL SWING-BUY WHILE STOCK IS COMPLETEWOODWORTH'S BOOK STORE1311 E. 57th Street - Store Open EveningsAFTER MINNESOTA GAME SAT., JAN. 18,REYNOLDS CLUB COUNCILfpresentsCHARLES COXand hisSs .iL!gSgE PUMP ROOM FAVORITESSeason Tickets for Four Dances — $1.25THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 14. 1941^DdubleFeature ’Hits FrenchParisian ArtCurrently being exhibited by theRenaissance Society in GoodspeedHall are the works of Jean Vigoureux,French artist now residing in Amer¬ica. The exhibit is open daily from 9to 12, and 2 to 5, and will remain openuntil January 21.Vigoureux’s French studies were allmade in Paris. Apparently Paris, too,was affilicted with “double features”for one of the drawings is called “dou¬ble feature” and depicts a typicalaudience.The artist spent some time in Indo-China before coming to the UnitedStates. He has been here three and ahalf years, and feels he can now startto paint American subjects. A show¬ing of his work recently closed inSan Francisco. Fred Waring & CompanyASCAP trouble handcuffs composers Laves Book Discusses ProblemsOf Achieving World PeaceIn “The Foundations of a MoreStable World Order” an economist, ageographer, two political scientists,and two historians discuss the prob¬lems of achieving world peace in thelight of the Second World War. Thebook which is edited by Walter H. C.Laves, associate professor of PoliticalScience, will be issued by the Uni¬versity Press today.The articles included are lecturesgiven at the University last summerunder the auspices of the HarrisFoundation.Abusive ExaggerationFerdinand Schevill, nonresident pro¬fessor of Modern History, concludesthat the present crises is, “attribut-Debevoise to SpeakOn Ancient War New Chicago SongAxed In Radio WarNeilson C. Debevoise will deliver anillustrated lecture tonight at 8 inOriental Institute lecture hall. Mr. De¬bevoise, who has been a research as¬sociate of the Institute for severalyears will speak on the subject “War¬fare in the Ancient World”.During January, a special exhibiton this subject is featured in the lobbyof the Oriental Institute as part of theUniversity’s Fiftieth AnniversaryCelebration. Most interesting amongthe objects on display is a print whichshows that history repeats itself. Ittells that the British and Italians arefighting on the ground of a battle of1187 B.C.Both the exhibit and the lecture arefree, and members of the Oriental In¬stitute may make reservations in ad¬vance. Chicago has little to sing about, atleast in the ordinary sense. And whenit does sing it voices lyrics that wouldhave you believe people were crash¬ing through somebody’s line and gen¬erally creating mahem among the bigathletic powers around the country.Feeling the necessity to revise thelyrics of “Wave the Flag,” the Ma¬roon contacted Fred Waring and hiscompany of nationally known Pennsyl-vannians to have him write a song tosupplant the antiquated standby of thelast 30 years.ASCAP IntervenesIn the past. Waring has regularlypresented anthems, alma maters, andfight songs over his weekly “CollegeSmoker” program for other schools.But this service has been discontinued because of the current ASCAP—radio broadcaster’s war.According to Waring, who says,“Since we are active members ofASCAP, the performing rights of ourcreations are licensed through thatorganization. The radio networks havenot renewed their licensing contractwith ASCAP and the copyrights con¬trolled by the former organization areprohibited from the air.”' Over 40 colleges have received songsI by Waring in the past year. Thei Pennsylvannians presented them overi the air and later gave the manuscriptsj to the schools for their exclusive use. Learn Bridge!Five LessonsFrom Mr. HarmonFor three successive years Mr.Harry Harmon of the Education De¬partment has been giving elementarycourses in bridge, and now due togreat demand, Mr. Harmon will givea series of five bridge lessons for in¬termediate and advanced players onFriday evenings beginning January17.All persons holding Ida Noyes rec¬reation cards will be admitted free ofcharge. Lessons will be at Ida Noyesfrom 7:30 to 8:30, when advancedmethods of playing and bidding willbe taught.Also starting this Friday, a roomwill be kept open from 8:30 to 10:30,for anyone on campus to come anddance. Absolutely new recordings areto be provided to whet those appetitesjaded by recent radio music. Mem¬bers of the social dance club will actas hosts r">d hostesses. able in last analysis to an abusiveexaggeration of the two ruling forcesof our civilization—science and thenation-state.”Jacob Viner, distinguished serviceprofessor of Economics, examines thepossibilities of economic cooperationwith Latin America. Charles R. Colby,professor of Geography, discusses therole of shipping in the present crisesImportance of Public Opinion“International law,” writes QuincyWright, professor of Intt.-nationalLaw, “rests on the support of publicopinion” which will not be forthcom¬ing without the cooperation of publi-cists, educators, jurists, and states¬men.J. Fred Rippy, Professor of Ameri¬can History, criticises American isola¬tionist tendencies and lauds the GoodNeighbor Policy. Laves outlines theinstitutional requirements of a morestable world order.3 HITS100% MuucalProgram1. Ignace Jan Paderewski’s"Moonlight Sonata"with Charles Farrell2. "Lilac Domino"with Michael Bartlett& June Knight3. Mendelssohn's"Wedding March"in Technicolor ,Jan. 14. 15. 16Tues., Wed., Thurs.KIMBARKTHEATRE6240 Kimbork Ave.Roshevsky SpeaksTo Philosophy Club This bookTOBACCOLAND*U*S*A*gives thousands of smokers like yourselfthe facts about tobacco and...Aided by analogies and illustrationsinvolving yo-yos, jig-saw puzzles, anddangerous pick-axes in wine cellars,Nicholas Rashevsky, associate profes¬sor of Mathematical Biophysics, spoketo the Philosophy Club, Friday, on “AMathematical Approach to the SocialSciences”.Rashevsky emphasized the import¬ance of theory in science. “The formu¬lation of any theoretical science”, hesaid, “is temporarily divorced fromthe facts; we must first work outmathematical foundations on whichproblems may be approached”. A fewyears ago, he pointed out, mathemat¬ical biophysics was fairly well devel¬oped in theory but did not rest on anyempirical basis. However when thesetheoretical mathematical formulationswere checked with observed data, thecorrelation was very close.Mathematical Approach ToSocial SciencesThe mathematical approach to thesocial sciences, said Rashevsky, is inthe same stage that mathematicalbiophysics was in a few years ago, and, he added, “will probably stay inthat stage for a long time.” He thengave several examples of how math¬ematical theory could be applied inrelation to social problems.Rashevsky ended his lecture with acriticism of excessive fear of futuredifficulties in experimentation. Suchfears, he said, are comparable to theyoung lady who wept in the wine cel¬lar because she saw a pick axe thatmight fall down and kill her grand¬children. “The further we increase ourknowledge,” he added, “the more weincrease our ignorance.” MILDER, BETTER TASTEDaiches—(Continued from page one)Maritain—(Continued from page one)of their leaders, while the Marshallappealed to them as “an honest manhaving an interest in the commongood”. At that time, it was generallybelieved in France that England wouldbe defeated in a very short time.Since England has shown more possi¬bilities of holding out and Laval hasbeen dismissed, Petain’s popularity,according to Maritain, has increasedin the eyes of the French people.Has Contempt For PoliticiansMaritain expressed particular con¬tempt for those French politicianswho took advantage of the defeat oftheir country “to disown the reasonswhich made this war a just war, torenounce liberty, equality, and fra¬ternity, and to take vengeance ontheir political opponents”. The newFrench government, he said, is notFascist, but has reacted against someof the principles of the French revolu¬tion. “The anti-semitic measures, itenacted under German pressure are adenial of French traditions, the ma¬jority of people are nauseated bythese measures”. Many of the bour¬geoisie classes, he added, while notconsciously Fascist, have tended tohold democratic tendencies responsi¬ble for the nation’s defeat. function of its pattern is to give mean¬ing without subordination—an idealwhich in a sense sums up the positionof the artist in his time. The samecan be said of Finnegan's Wake, aneven more ambitious attempt to do thesame thing to an even greater de¬gree. But perhaps most important ofall is not Joyce’s attitude and hisview of art—though to the literaryhistorian this is a fascinating question—but his sheer technical mastery oflanguage.It can be safely said that no writersince Shakespeare had such sheer con¬trol over words as Joyce possessed. Ifhe had not Shakespeare’s insight intoall aspects of the mind of man hecertainly had his ability to mould lan¬guage to fit uniquely and impressivelyany given content, however complex,however all-inclusive or subtle. He isprobably the one English writer whocould have successfully parodiedShakespeare.Work Substantially CompletedThough he has died at a compara¬tive early age—in his late fifties—wehave the satisfaction of knowing thathis work was substantially completed.His was the voice of the pre-1940part of this century, and his say hasalready been said. With the publica¬tion of Finnegan's Wake the cycle ofachievement that began with Dublin¬ers was completed, and Joyce had ful¬filled himself as an artist. Whateverfuture critics may decide about thenature and quality of his work, thename of James Joyce will always beremembered as long as English litera¬ture is read, remembered for his tech¬nical virtuosity, his mastery of theword, and his unique and brilliantexpression of a terrifying objectivity. To the keen interest of thethousands of men and women whovisit our Chesterfield factories, weowe the idea of publishing the book,“TOBACCOLAND, U. S. A.” It is acomprehensive picture story aboutthe growing, curing and processingof tobacco, telling you why Chester¬fields are MILDER, COOLER-SMOKINO andBETTER-TASTING.W are proud of the hundreds of lettersfrom smokers like yourself who have seen "TOBAC¬COLAND, u. S. A " Many have asked us to sendcopies to their friends. We would take pleasurein sending you a copy—just mail your request toLiggett & Myers Tobacco Co., 630 Fifth Avenue,New York, N. Y.Copt. JOHN M. MILLER, Amsrica'sNo. 1 autogiro pilot and pioneerof the world's only wingless moilplane route between Camden,N. J. and the Philadelphia PostOffice, is shown here enjoyingChesterfield's new interestingbook “TOBACCOLAND U. S. A.”