TawneyStartsLecturesDr. Richard H. Tawney, eminentBritish economist of the University ofLondon, will give the first of two pub¬lic lectures on “British Labor and theWar” at the University of ChicagoThursday, October 16.The lecture will be in Leon Mandelliall, at the University, at 8:16 p.m.Dr. Tawney’s second lecture will beMonday, October 20, on “Possibilitiesan<i Prospects of Post-War Recon¬struction.”Works For LaborA leader in the improvement of la¬bor conditions in Great Britain, Dr.Tawney has served on the Cotton Con¬ciliation committee, the British Coal] iniustry commission, and the Econom¬ic Advisory council and was the found-ci' and now heads the Workers Edu¬cational Association. He has been})rofessor of economic history at theI.ondon School of Economics of theI'niversity of London since 1929 andis the author of “The Acquisitive So¬ciety.” considered a modern classic ofsocial analy.sis, and of “Why BritainFights,” published last year.Flew to U. S.Dr. Tawney last month flew to theUnited States to take part in the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s fiftieth anniver¬sary celebration as the repre.sentativeif the London School of Economics.Me was one of thirty-five eminentscholars on whom the University con¬ferred honorary degrees in the cele¬bration.Horn in Calcutta (India) in 1880,Dr. Tawney was educated at Rugbyand at Oxford university, where ho(('ontinued on page four) Thilu iJfkJiDOYiVol. 41. No. 8 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1941 Price Three CentsASU Bats For Russia^ Allies!Sends Telegrams To CongressThe local chapter of the AmericanStudent Union will start a telegramcampaign tomorrow’, intended to con¬vince Senator Tom Connally, head ofthe Congressional Affairs Committee,that the Lend-Lease bill must bepassed without any attempt to omitthe Soviet Union from its benefits.Repeal of the neutrality act is anotherfocal point of the open letter.“We want the lend-lease bill passed,but will protest any move to leavethe Soviets out of its plans,” Ray Sie-vert the Local Student Union pres¬ident declaimed yesterday.The repeal of the harrassed Neu¬trality act is one of the proposed prin-sage of the lend-lease bill through the upper chambers as another pre¬requisite to ASU happiness.Will ProtestThe Russian problem is still around,however, as testified by Ray Siever’sstatement that, “we will protest anymove to omit the Soviet Union fromthe Lend-lease benefits.” Siever, tem¬porary president of the ASU, quali-trality Act is one of the proposed prin¬ciples of the telegram, with the pas-fied his statement with a reminderthat the Union goes on record as fav¬oring aid to China, Great Britain andWalgreen LecturesErnest C. Colw’ell, dean of theDivinity School, will speak underthe auspices of the WalgreenFoundation this afternoon at 4:20in Breasted Hall of the OrientalInstitute. Subject: “Rethinkingthe Function of Religion.” Nocharge.F r eeCoupoiis ContaiiieflIn Student HandbookUsing last year’s coupon idea, the1941-42 Student Hant^book, organizedunder Charlotte Ford, will offer thebuying public enough goods in tradeto jiay for the book and return aneat profit to student subscribers.The seven coupons entitle buyersto, respectively, a ten percent reduc¬tion on a corsage from Bern is’, a fiftypercent reduction on a Mitzi corsage,a free milkshake at Spic-N-Span,phonograph needles from Straders,and an automobile cleaning from Wal-droms Standard S e r v i c e. BothGeorge’s and Winter’s men’s shopsoffer pocket handkerchiefs, possiblyto help decide freshman minds in the(juestion of where to buy their clothes.Besides the premium offers, in¬formation offered by P'ord and herDiscussesResources crew includes a complete list of ad¬ministrative officers of the Universityand of the four Divisions, heads ofall fraternities and clubs, and otherimportant people on campus. Its di¬rectory of University offices also sup¬plies office hours and a detailed sum¬mary of the functions of each office.New idea this year is the calendarof comprehensive examinations, tell¬ing students when all college and divi¬sional comprehensives and depart-mentals bachelor’s are held.Alan GravesDavid Rockefeller’s book “UnusedRe.sources and Economic Waste,” isjust off the University Press. Rocke¬feller, grandson of John D., attendedthe University during the 1939-40term and presented this work as hisdoctorial dissertation.Now twenty-six, he was graduatedfrom Harvard, and got his masters ineconomics at the University of Lon¬don. At present he is aide to MayorLa Guardia.“After ten years of depression inlarge areas of the civilized world itmust be obvious, even to the confirmedoptimists,” says Mr. Rockefeller, “thatthe world is not progressing automat¬ically and uninterruptedly towardutopia.” Work on this study began inLondon under Professor von Hayek,and the problem of unused resourcesis approached from an analytic ratherthan statistical viewpoint.The volume includes discussions of“The Production Plans of Entrepre¬neurs,” “Resource Use with ChangingConditions,” “Monopoly and PriceFixing,” and “What Is Waste.” Rocke¬feller holds that waste is a moral con¬cept, and warns that costs of change,as well as goals which stimulate de¬sire for change, must be taken intoaccount before the degree of waste inany situation can be asceitained. .red-headed dynamoCall FreshmenFor Verbal TiltWith an eye to the future, the Uni¬versity of Chicago’s Student Forumwill .sponsor an extemporaneous con¬test for freshmen tomorrow, in theirLexington Hall offices, at 3:30 p.m.The verbal tilt, open to any freshmeninterested in forensics, will test theoratorical ability of the newcomers inan attempt to measure the capabilitiesof prospective Student Forum mem¬bers.Webb Fiser, president of the or¬ganization, announces that the winnerwill receive two tickets to the firstStudent Forum banquet as his reward.Of the yearlings. Bob Pickus, LoisCarrol, Don Durnberg, Ted de Looze,Peter Dornan, and John McEldourneyhave already placed entries with For¬um representatives. Freshmen par¬ticipating should be in the Lexingtonoffices. Room 6, by 3. Objectors OutOf Jail! TalkOn WarTonight Russia as an all-inclusive bloc.The ASU will sponsor a meetingin the Reynolds Club tomorrow fororganizations interested in participat¬ing a proposed mass rally to be setfor some unsighted future date.Smith ResignsAs MarshalDue to the press of his duties.Dean Leon P. Smith resigned hispost as University Marshal last sum¬mer, he announced today. The resig-Leon P. SmithRecently released from federal pris¬on after being sentenced to a year anda day for refusal to register for se¬lective service, five former UnionTheological Seminary students willconduct a symposium on “A PacifistProgram in a Warring World” at 7:30tonight in Swift Hall Common Room.The meeting is sponsored by The Uni¬versity of Chicago Fellowship of Re¬conciliation.Now students at Chicago Theologi¬cal Seminary, the five men are GeorgeHouser, Joseph Bevilacqua, HowardSpragg, William Lovell, and RichardWhichlei. Also active in campus peaceactivities the five former Union stu¬dents were released from DanburyF’ederal Corrective Institution duringSeptember.Office hours for the campus Fellow¬ship of Reconciliation are from 1:00until 5:00 during the academic weekin the ba.sement of Rockefeller Me¬morial Chapel. Chairman and secre¬tary for the campus are Homer Jackan(l Bernice Fisher. .../ don’t love a parade.nation was not announced in order forhim to fulfill his office during the Fif¬tieth Anniversary celebration. Theduties of University Marshal are con¬cerned mainly with planning andleading academic processions such aswere frequent during the Fiftieth An¬niversary Week. No successor hasbeen appointed.Knowledge Reigns—AtN. U., As Chicago Loses“An jinimal ending in “x”? Let’ssee, what about minx?” It was PCRubins speaking for our last year’sDaily Maroon-Northwestern Dailyradio quiz battle and PC Rubinsgiving Northwestern another title.Day after the program, win-starvedChicago students complained, “Howdid it happen? We’re smarter thanNorthwestern.”Rain AffectsMaroon School Yesterday the same students weresaying the same thing. For AdeleRose, representing the Chicago alum--ni vs. N.U. alumni, couldn’t think ofthree meanings for “wake” and theboys and girls from Evanston wenthome with a 1000 per cent average.Laura BergquistInclement weather kept the at¬tendance down at the first sessionof the Maroon training school yester¬day.Big surprise to the paper was theunusual amount of experience whichshowed up in the questionnaires filledout by the freshmen. Professionalwork and editorships of both highschool papers and yearbooks appearedon most of the application blanks.There will be four more meetingsof the school, two lectures and twotrips to the Chief Printing Companyto view the mechanical end of anewspaper work. Yesterday’s meet¬ing was a lecture by Bob Lawson onthe difference between the Maroonand high school papers and concludedwith a brief resume of certain funda¬mentals of newswritings.Freshmen who missed the first meet¬ing are still eligible to join the schoolsession next Monday afternoon at3:30 in Rosenwald 2. ...loses to NorthwesternLaura Bergquist, Bern Lundy and DonMorris did their best for Chicago butit was a lost cause and Rose went offto stand in the corner with Rubins. DouglasPossibleSenatorBy ELIZABETH JANE WATERSPaul H. Douglas, professor of eco¬nomics at the University, and aider-man of the fifth ward, has been namedas a possible candidate for the UnitedStates Senate. Two petitions, contain¬ing, in total, the names of 128 people,have already been sent to Douglas re¬questing his candidacy on the Demo¬cratic ticket.Although the well known professor-politician has given no reply to thepetitions, he has issued a statementof thanks to the petitioners and statedthat he would reserve his answer untila later date.The first pf the petitions on Septem¬ber 26 came from 48 residents of Win-netka and Evanston and was weightywith prominent names of the northsuburbs. Included among the signa¬tures are those of Walter Dill Scott,former president of NorthwesternUniversity and a wartime UnitedStates Army Colonel, Russell Whit¬man, former Superior Court Judgeand past president of the Chicago BarAssociation, an‘d Julia Ricketts King,artist, once president of the CookCounty League of Women Voters.Second PetitionThe signatures of eighty women,from various parts of Cook Countyand down-state, comprised the secondpetition, brought forward on Monday,October 6. Mrs. Andrew MacLeish of(ilencoe, former president of RockfordCollege and the mother of Archibald'MacLeish who is librarian of Con¬gress, Mrs. Mary L. Longworthy ofWinnetka, past president of theWomen’s City Club and of the Nation¬al Council of Parent Teacher Associa-*tions, and Miss Amelia Sears, formerCook County Commissioner, wereamong those who endorsed ProfessorDouglas in this second request.Given by the signers among thereasons for their choice of Douglas asa candidate were the following pointsof the petition: Douglas’ record andwork as alderman, his knowledge ofgovernment in general and the econ¬omy of the country, and the fact that~the professor’s “public support of theforeign policy of the national govern¬ment in a great international emer¬gency indicates statesmanship of ahigh character.”Law StudentsMeet At MixerAll the faculty and student body ofthe Law School will meet each othertonight at the annual Law SchoolMixer at 7:30 in the South Loungeof the Reynolds Club.The faculty will be formally in¬troduced to the students, and DeanEmeritus Bigelow will deliver themain address of the evening. Therepresentatives of student activitieswill speak briefly on the Law Review,the Barristers’ Club, fraternities, theBar Association, and, the Legal AidCommittee. This committee fqnctionsat the University Settlement, throughthe services of Dr. Rheinstein and theBar Association.The Lewis Carrol Society will alsobe represented. Refreshments will beserved.Monrad Paulsen, president of theBar Association, announced the com¬mittee for arrangements as follows:Philip Rutter Lawrence, chairman;and Margaret Lutz, Demitra Kachi-roubas, Nancy Chioles, Virginia Ed¬wards, Donald Wallingford and Rich¬ard Babcock.Mort LeavesReynolds ClubHoward Mort, director of the Rey¬nolds Club for the past several years,and connected with the organizationfor at least fifteen, has left his posi¬tion to take over duties as head of theAlumni Foundation. Alexander Har- imon, who was temporary director /through the summer while Mort was;engaged in Fiftieth Anniversary CeLebration work, has been appointed di¬rector in place of Mort.The president of the Reynolds ClubCouncil for the coming year, KenCornwall has not returned to school,and the council will hold an electionsoon to determine his successor.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1941No Peace With HitlerWe find Mr. Pohlmann’s letterto the editor interesting becauseit reflects a viewpoint that may ibecome politically important!within the next few weeks. If jRussia is defeated, the allies will jlose all hope of beating Hitler jthrough an economic blockade, jUnder such circumstances an in- jvasion of the continent within ithe next few years will probablybe the only alternative to rec¬ognizing that Hitler has won the ;war. ISince invading the continent!is not a particularly happy jthought, there will probably be Ian enormous amount of pressure Ion England to make peace with ^the Axis. The advocates of a inegotiated peace would probablyuse much the same arguments!of Mr. Pohlmann. Basicly such;arguments rest on the proposi- ition that it is safer to makepeace with the totalitarian statesthan to fight them.Will Weaken AlliesBut we believe that a negotiat¬ed peace would make the alliesweaker than they already are: Ifpeace were made the “aid the al¬lies” policy and to some lesserextent the rearmament programin America would be tremen¬dously discredited. We can al¬most see Wheeler, Lindbergh,and Nye wanting to know whyAmerica had gone to so mucheffort to aid Britain when thatnation did not keep on fighting.In England the war organizationof production and the war psy¬chology would be replaced by a peacetime organization and apeacetime psychology.The totalitarian states on theother hand are always on a warfooting and would be better pre¬pared than ever for an all outattack on the democracies with¬in a few months. And becausethe last air campaign againstBritain failed does not mean thatthe island is by any means im¬pregnable.Therefore the so-called thirdalternative is really no alterna¬tive at all; it is a delay mech-1anism that will lead us to wait iuntil Hitler is stronger insteadof fighting him now.A Lasting PeaceWe think the possibility ofmaking any kind of a lastingpeace with Hitler is so near zerothat it is not even worth consid¬ering. The chances of the allies Imaking a workable peace after jthis war are not good but are:infinitely better than the chancesof Hitler making a workablepeace.It is wrong to suppose thatall wars are necessarily followedby punitive peace settlements.The treaties following the Cri¬mean war, the Austro-Prussianwar, and particularly the Na¬poleonic wars were fair to thedefeated nations. We would bethe last to deny the danger of apeace of vengeance after thiswar. But we think that thechances of a decent post war set¬tlement are greater than anypossibility of democratic statesliving side by side with the Axis.Letters To The EditorTo the Maroon:I studied your editorial, “The Lib¬eral’s Dilemma,” with great sym¬pathy. Out of a burning desire thatno liberal,—no anti-fascist—shouldsuffer dilemmas, I sought to analyzethe article and supply a solution.It should be asked of the MaroonBoard: How can you state that themost important task confrontingAmerica is the defeat of Hitler?—andjuxtapose the declaration that collab¬oration with “communist-dominated”groups and individuals is suicide forliberalism. Red-baiting is the suicideof liberalism.No Anti-FascismCan you name the anti-fascist or¬ganization that could weather a stormof appeaser-inspired red-baiting andemerge with its strength and pres¬tige unimpaired? Put in other words:there is not a single anti-fascist ac¬tivity on campus (be it “Bundles forBritian” or “Negro Rights Council”)which could not be disrupted by anycry, “Red”. Your “no collaboration”stand puts a vicious weapon in thehands of our enemies.I should like to allay your fearsof attack from the A.S.U. No, ratherthan be provoked, the A.S.U. will con¬tinue to view you as a sincere sup¬porter of the anti-Hitler unity (althomore concrete evidence than splittingeditorials is desired.)To Defend AmericaFurther the A.S.U. seeks no dom¬ination, no glory. It will simply laborceaselessly and tirelessly to defendAmerica. Thru its newspaper, leaf¬lets, movies, tag-days, parties, rallies,petitions, campaigns of all descrip¬tions, the A.S.U. will help unite thecampus against the Nazi plague. Theterrific effort to save democratic Spainin 1936, ’37 and ’38 is our tradition—and we shall increase our activitiestenfold in the hour of supreme crisis.The answer to your dilemma is im¬plicit in what has been said above.It is: full support to any activitywhich in any way contributes to Amer¬ica’s defense, to the military defeatof Hitlerism; exposure of the ap¬peaser elements on the campus.Unitedly yours,Quentin Young To the Editor of the Daily Maroon:In your editorial, “America and theWar”, you presented a very clearstatement of what a policy of isola¬tionism may mean to the UnitedStates. Feeling that it would be dis¬astrous, you have advocated inter¬vention as the only possible alterna¬tive.Now when a person sees only thesetwo ways out, he is left with littlemore than the choice of intervention.The difficulty, however is that too fewof us realize that there is a very def¬inite and practical third route to fol¬low. The United States, I believe,should use its influence, which is nowvery great, to bring these world con¬flicts to a close. Judging by the se¬cret meeting among Jaipanese andAmerican diplomats, we are pursuingsuch a policy toward the Sino-Japa-nese War, and at the same time weshould seek to mediate the war inEurope.Can’t Beat HitlerI was grateful to see that your edi¬torial almost took this identical posi¬tion. As you stated near the end, “theodds are against our winning thiswar,” you hit the nail on the head.Hitler is so strongly entrenched onthe continent that defeating his armiesis an almost impossible task. Justas he has not been able to cross theEnglish Channel so also neithercan England estabish herself onthe mainland. If she can, then whyisn’t she doing so now that Germanyis well occupied in Russia?Will Lose The PeaceMoreover, if we should succeed onthe battlefield, we would again losethe peace. The propaganda which isessential to building up a war hy¬steria, leaves people with exaggeratedemotions of hate and fear. Hatred forthe enemy and fear that he might ri.seup again and nullify your victory.Under such circumstances a peace isimposed forcefully upon the conqueredwithout an attempt to determine theirrights and needs. We have anotherVersailles, another reaction, anotherwar.Staying out of that war, however,we can still maintain enough Christ¬ian spirit to reorganize the worldalong democratic lines as you have soably suggested in your editorial. WeI can then set up a tVue internationalj power to see that Hitler for oncekeeps his word.1 Vernon Pohlmann By RUTH WEHLANA female Freshman, self-christened“The Midget”, has written us a fineletter which we think you ought toread, too. She says “Dear Ladies andGentlemen and Cockroaches:——“Why is it that every time I pickup a Maroon or a Pulse all I read isimpressions of Freshman Week byUpper Classmen? After all, there are650 of us and so, please, let us tell youwhat we think, unhampered by in-quu'ing reporters!“Some of us were privately shockedat seeing more girls smoking thanmen and quite a few of us have openlystated that we weren’t going to startbecause, ‘If my mother ever thoughtI was smoking...’. The only timemost of the girls saw any men was atnight at the Mixer and Barn Danceand we are positive that Burton andJudson are bolted securely during theday.Some of uswere rather disappointed in notmaking the first C-book dance andwish we were sophomores so we’dknow what to do in a case like that.“We’d like to know if.. .Nels Fuquais a teacher or what...when some ofthe Coffee Shop inhabitants study...Hanley’s is all it’s cracked up to be.“The great Himmel actually stoppedby my chair the other day to talk toClarissa and I nearly swooned withrapture. (See why you’ll never knowwho I am? My true feelings arehereby revealed!) The Midget”.Dear Midget:We were awfully glad to find outabout your true feelings, becausethey are probably quite representa¬tive. We like Freshmen, and that’swhy you read so much about Fresh¬man Week. Besides, it’s the most JoeCollege time of the year, and we haveto make the most of it while it lasts.Your decision not to start smokingis very wise. Independent researchcarried out this afternoon in the Ma¬roon office proves conclusively the oldsong, “Cigarettes will spoil your life,ruin your health and kill your baby,poor little innocent child!” Four sterl¬ing characters, each smoking a differ¬ent brand of coffin nails, puffedthrough pieces of Kleenex and werehorrified at the nasty brown stainsthat appeared upon said tissues.We don’t know why you didn’t seeany men during the day, but we doknow that Burton and Judsen are notbolted during the day. On Sunday aft¬ernoons you can even visit men intheir rooms if you’re invited. Wewould advise that you shun those whohang out of the upper windows andsay in sinister tones, “Want a pieceof candy, little girl?” We are con¬vinced that these men are depravedindividuals, having repulsed their eviladvances twice daily for the past twoyears.Unofficial but usefulNels Fuqua is, in a manner ofspeaking, a teacher—a purely unoffi¬cial, but nonetheless useful one. CoffeeShop inhabitants don’t study; that’s jwhy new faces appear with each au¬tumn. Hanley’s, like beauty, exists inthe mind of the beholder. It all de¬pends on your mood.The longer you know Himmel, thecloser you will come to swooningwhen you see him. Whether or notyou swoon with rapture depends onwhat he said about you in his lastBazaar. He never says anything aboutus, but we swoon anyway. We lovehim dearly, too.We hope that we have been of someSTUDENTSBuild a business of your own.Take orders on crates and giftbaskets of Texas Citrus Fruit.ESTABLISH A STEADY CLIENTELECall DOROTHY FROELICHFairfax 6100between 5 to 7 benefit in clearing your befuddledFreshman mind. Just call us theadolescent Dorothy Dix.Love, Ruthie. The OaliUiTfloJuion,LEX 1162 E. 63rdTHEATRELest Time Todey•THE BIG STORE""MY LIFE WITH CAROLINE"Sterts Tomorrow"KISSES FOR BREAKFAST"Dennis Morgan Jane Wyattand"TILLIE THE TOILER" FOUNDED IN 1902\STOP- \LIGHT INOSE? ^Use Soft KLEENEX ^^ Tissues During Colds ^200 Sheets ... 13cATREADERSCAMPUS DRUGS1001 E. 61st St. <Free Delivery Tel. Ext. J^352 f The Daily Maroon i« the official gtudentnewspaper of tt« University of Chicago, pob.lished mornings except Saturday, Sunday, andMonday during the Autumn, Winter,’ andSpring quarters by The Daily Maroon Com.pany, 5831 University Avenue. Telephones-Hyde Park 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printersThe Chief Printing Company, 148 West 62n<ii street. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and 6124.The University of Chicago assumes no re-sponsibility for any statements api>caring inThe Daily Maroon, or for any contract enteredinto by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves therights of publication of any material appear¬ing in this paper. Subscription rates: |2.7.'i ayear,*$4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March is,1903, at the post office at Chicago, Illinoi.s]under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberPissoebiod CbllG6icrfe PressDiiiribulor ofCDllebiole DibestnOARDOF CONTROLEditorialJAMES RURTI.E RICHARD PHll.PUU KRICHARD HIMMEL ChairmanROBERT REYNOLDSHL’SINESSCHESTP:R S.MITH, business managerRlCH.AUl) BOl.KS, advertising managerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy Lesser, Bcata Mueller,Philip Ricff, Chloe Roth, Stuart Schulberg,and Shirlee Smith.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESWilliam Bell, circulation managerEllen Tuttle, office managerVirginia Brantner, Robert Highman, JohnMacBride, Robert Pregler, Elaine Siegal,and Richard Wallens.Night Editors: Bob Lawsonand Barbara DeutschREADSwedenborgIn fha «9« of "•y«-«yod" raason, ai it has baan callad, Swadanborg wasamong the very tew who kept both ayes open, the eye of the soul end theeye of the senses. By sheer devotion to scientific research he discovered thelimitations of science two centuries before Einstein and Eddington; but unlikemany prophets of the soul, he never disparaged reason in the name of faith,or nature in the name of grace. For him, the materiel and spiritual universeswere joined together by multiple correspondences, and an unbroken chain ofdiscrete degrees. WALTER M. HORTONProfessor of Philosophy of Christianity,Obarlin Collage.The doctrine of discrete degreesis treated in Port III of“DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM”10c unabridgedat University and other bookstores.What are you doing withYOUR LAUNDRY THIS YEAR?...Coart«*y of Dartmouth "Jack-o-LanUm”A better method is to send it home regularly by Rail¬way Express—and have it returned the same way.Our service is fast, sure—and convenient. Economicalrates include pick-up and delivery at no extra chargewithin our regular vehicle limits in all cities and prin¬cipal towns. Your choice of prepaid or collect charges.Just as convenient too, for ’most any shipment:Baggage, gifts, cake or a pet elephant.RAILWA'^^XPRESS% AGENCV^^P^NC.■■■■Hi NATION-WIDE RAIL-AIR SERVICETHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1941 Page ThreeTouchball Season BeginsPhi Gams ToDefend TitleBy WERNER BAUMToday marks the opening of theeighteenth season of intramural touch-ball on the Quadrangles. Intramuraladvisor Wally Hebert and touchballmanager Carl Dragstedt have an¬nounced a schedule of five games forthis afternoon. All the games will bein the fraternity league. The sched¬ule is printed in a box in an adjoiningcolumn,(James will be played on three fields.Fields one and two are on GreenwoodI’ield and field three is at Cottage(Jrove and 69th street.Twenty-seven fraternity teams havelicen entered and five leagues wereformed. Four of the leagues will beciunposed of “A” and “B” teams.These teams will vie for the fraternitychampionship. The fifth league ismade up of “C” and “D” teams whoare playing “for fun.” All fraternitiesare represented except Phi Kappa Sig¬ma which withdrew its team at thelast minute.I’si U’s Win OftenIn the history of intramural touch-ball the Phi Upsilons have compilednine fraternity championships whilePhi Beta Delta, no longer in existence,won thrice. No other house has wonmore than once. The Phi Gamma Del¬tas are defending the championshipthey won last fall. The All-Universitychampions last year were the Elites,an independent team, which defeatedthe Phi Gams in the finals.Refereeing will be in the hands ofBud Lifton, Frank Lynch, DonaldBoyes, Carl Dragstedt, Bill Oosten-brug. Chuck Wagenburg, Nick Parisi,Gordon Traeger and Don Warfield.The fraternity league will playevery afternoon this week. The sched¬ule for next week is not completed asyet. Intramural TouchballTuesday, October 14, 19413:00Phi Gams vs. Phi PsiPhi Delt vs. Pi Lam4:00Chi Psi vs, D.U.Deke “B” vs. Kappa Sig “B”Beta “B” vs. Phi Gam “B” Varsity Basketball PracticeOpens; Norgren Lacks MaterialNels NorgrenGolf DayMondayPulse Magazine will hold a staffmeeting today at 3:30 in Lexing^ton16, the Pulse office. Freshmen whohave either signed up or shown in¬terest in working for the magazine,as well as interested upperclass¬men, are asked to attend. “Golf and Mums” are to be featuredat the Lasker Estate Monday, October20, when members of the Universityof Chicago drive out and off for theirfirst Golf Day of the fall season. Spon¬sored by the Department of PhysicalEducation for golf enthusiasts, invita¬tion to this event is extended to fac¬ulty members, employees and studentsalike.Deadline for registration, which willgo on all week in Bartlett Gymnasiumand Ida Noyes Hall, is Friday, Octo¬ber 17. The green fee will be thecustomary one dollar. Lunch will bearranged for at a slight additionalcost.Prizes will be awarded for the bestscores turned in by men and women.I A special tournament is to be held forj members of the freshman class. Var-j sity golfers will also engage in a! tournament.{ While at the Lasker Estate, thej golfers will also have a chance to see! the chrysanthemum show which has! been running steadily for some time. .lacking materialBob Lawson took the lead in thePickin’ ’Em race over the week-endwhen he amassed twenty-onepoints for a record for this season.Phil Rieff, last week’s crystal-gaz¬ing champion hit the bottom thisweek. Saturday’s score reads asfollows: Lawson 21, Baum 13 andReiff 10.Total score to date (Eds. note:the season is still young): BobLawson, 37, Phil Rieff 30, WernerBaum 23. By PHIL RIEFFWith calls of consolation alreadycoming in from the more cynical,though experienced, critics, Nelson H.Norgren, Assistant Professor of Phys¬ical Education, officially opened prac¬tice for the 1941-42 season yesterday.Miserably lacking the raw material tocope with the better Western Confer¬ence teams, the gray Norge will use aI combination of last year’s crop of vet¬erans and untested sophomores in anattempt to break into the victory sideof the conference ledger.The glaring absence of Joe Stampfputs the burden of scoring on all thefive members of the team. Theeligibility of John Jorgenson, the lanksophomore, is still in doubt. And Nor-gren’s opportunities for a respectableseason may depend on the academicaptitude of the happy John.If Jorgenson can’t pass enough com-prehensives to play basketball thiswinter, George Siska, a junior vet,will take over Stampf’s glory at thecenter spot. Ed Nelson and FreddieShaver are the most logical choicesfor starting berths at the two guardposts and big Jack Fons will retainhis post as one of the forwards. Fons,dangerous under the basket, Nelson, along shot specialist, and Shaver, ashifty ball handler, carry the burdenof making the new schedule more thanan unhappy series of conspiracies. Read TheDaily Maroon4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLEOe STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, stenographic course—starting 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.B.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSrhool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advancea Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses oprn to men.116 S. Michigan Ava., Chicago, Randolph 4347LUNCHREADER'SToday's SpecialB AR-B-QU ESPARE RIBS\POTATOES - VEGETABLESDRINK & DESSERTA Real Special30cPUM^ PIETopped with Whipped CreamlOcREADERSThe Campus Drug Store1001 E. 61st St.How to Win Friendsm one easy lessonTreat yourself and others towholesome, delicious Wrigley’sSpearmint Gum. Swell to chew.Helps keep breath sweet, teethbright. The Flavor Lasts. TEXT BONEW and USFor University Courses OKSEDSTUDENTS NEEDSNote Books - Fountain Pens - Zipper CasesAlarm Clocks - Brief Cases & BagsStationery - Typing Supplies, etc., etc.TYPEWRITERS—All Makes - Used <5. Newsold, rented, repairedWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsPh. Dorchester 48002 blocks east of Mandel HallPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1941Enrollment In MilitarTraining Course MountsAs Registration Goes Ony SmithStays Home Study Caters ToWithMusic Many Varied AmbitionsSchoolClassifiedATTENTION, MARRIED STUDENTS!We have for rent desirable 4 rm. furn.bsmt. apt. with pri. bath, elec, ref rig. Con¬venient to Univ. and trans. At $30 mo. Ifinterested, act quickly. 6023 Kenwood Ave.,Butterfield 9424. With nearly 200 men representingall walks of life enrolled, officers ofUniversity’s military training coursetoday announced that registrationwould be extended through Thursday.Business men—from clerks to pres- 'idents—lawyers, artists, actors, so-! cial service workers, doctors and“University personnel’’ were amongthose in the Field House when theintroductory session was held Fridaynight.The University offers this extra¬curricular course, which is the onlybasic military training course offeredfor non-student civilians by an edu¬cational institution in the UnitedStates today. Enrollment in the courseis open to all men in the Chicago: area, 18 to 45 years old and more than1,300 men already have been trained inthe four previous courses.Designer for ProspectiveConscript eesIn an interview with the Maroonyesterday, Arthur Rubin, director ofthe Institute of Military Studieswhich sponsors the course, explainedthat it is designed for men who willbe conscripted or volunteer and whowant advance training and the advan¬tages such training offers over theuninitiated.In answering the common miscon-j ception that all R.O.T.C. recruitsI emerge second lieutenants, Rubinpointed out that only about one-tenthof them actually ever get commis-1sions. However the remaining 90 per¬cent enter the army with a definiteadvantage over the “uninitiated” andit is in the hope that Chicago men willbe able to give them some competi¬tion for commissions that Rubinurges students here to sign up. “Thereis some angle for every future drafteeto work on”, Rubin said, suggestingthat every student tie in his educa¬tional background with actual prac¬tical training.Course Meets FridaysThe course is staged Friday eve¬nings from 7 to 10 and applicationsshould be made to the InformationOffice. Fee for the quarter is $5, whichI covers cost of equipment and textsas well as transportation, meals andlodging for a weekend on maneuversat the Mill Road Farm.Your Last Chancato get Walt Disney's A few years ago Cecil Smith tookCarl Bricken’s place as head of theMusic Department. President Harperhad wanted a music school but hisdickerings with the Chicago Sym¬phony fell through and it wasn’t un¬til 11 years ago when Bricken an¬nounced via telephone that he wasforming an orchestra and a fewclasses for the general student body,that the music school got under way.In 1938 came a general shakeup.Bricken went to Wisconsin and Smithbroke his ties with the Divinity Schoolwhere he taught music courses andcaught the first cloud to the MusicBuilding. Dr. Levarie arrived in timeto take over the orchestra. A severechange in curriculum made it into aUniversity department, with coursesin analysis and criticism instead of asheretofor, in composition, like a con¬servatory.Last year Smith created a stirwhen it looked as though he might bedrafted, then the age limit was lower¬ed. This year performances of the Col¬legium and orchestra are uncertainbecause Dr. Levarie is waiting to hearfrom the draft board. First to leavethe department this year was ScottGoldthwaithe, who is studying atHarvard.In 1936 need for a second musiccritic on the Tribune started Smith asa newspaper coi’respondent. Two yearslater the drama critic was transferred,and the post dropped in Smith’s lap. Are you crazy about writing Latinprose? Do you crave knowledge ofhow to teach social studies at theKindergarten-Primary level? Did youever long to know our local flora?If so, you came to the idght school,for the Home Study Department,maintained by the University, has sucha varied and far-reaching curriculumthat it embraces these subjects andmany others.For the copy boy who has longnourished a secret ambition to becomean editor, the department offerscourses in proof-reading and copy-editing. Or for the good housewifewho waited in vain last year for herpetunias to appear, there is a courseon “Plants, Their Culture and Utiliza¬tion” which “provides a knowledge ofthe nature of plants, the methods usedin their culture in field, orchard, gar¬den, or forest.” The course furtherendeavors, as the catalogue puts it,“to develop an appreciation of the beauty and dignity of plants as a partof our environment.”Even the troubled minister or frus¬trated Sunday School teacher can gethelp from such studies as “The Ad¬ministration Work of the Pastor” or“Religious Development in Children.”Not only teachers but elementaryand secondary-school principals willbe lectured to on their duties, that is,for a nominal sum.For the rebuffed suitor or the un¬successful insurance man. Home Studyhopefully suggests a course to “devel¬op good taste and standards for theselection and designing of costutnes...of dressing artistically.”Last but not least. Home Studymakes^ schoolboy dreams come truethrough its courses in “Police Admin¬istration,” “Fire Administration,” and“Municipal Administration.”Tawney(Continued from page one)was graduated from Balliol college in1903. He has taught at Glasgow Uni¬versity and Oxford and in the firstWorld War volunteered as a privatesoldier and was ^verely wounded inthe Battle of the Somme. Followingthe war he sefved with numerousgovernment, labor, and educationagencies.Too much work has finally made'himswear off personally covering hopefuldebuts and small programs. TarponHoldsTryoutsTarpon, the women’s swimmingclub, is holding tryouts for new mem¬bers this evening at 7:30 in Ida NoyesHall. The club was organized for in¬termediate and advanced swimmersinterested in club work. Admission re¬quirements consist in passing the firstswimming test—the Tadpole.Continued membership in Tarpondepends on the improvement of theswimmer and his ability to pass fur¬ther tests known as the Frog test andthe Fish test. Besides holding openhouses for other swimming clubs, Tar¬pon participates in giving the WaterCarnival, an annual school event.with the purchase of a bottle ofPARKER j\JVLinkaf onlv 15(4QuinACLEANS APEN ASIT WRITESRICH,FULL-BODIED,BRILLIANTCOLORS of onlyNo box-tops to send —no waiting—just get this quick-drying, pen-clean- ^ing ink at your retailer's and receiveyour Song Book right then and there!We might have known that such a swell offer wouldsoon exhaust retailers* supplies, but we didn’t dreamit would happen so fast. If you don’t find any left at thefirst store, try a second But act without delay, to be safe.And when you fill your pen with Parker Qyiink, besure to try it without a blotter. See how fast it driesON PAPER—31% quicker than average of 4 others.And see how beautifully your i>en works—a Parker orANY OTHER. For Quin* contains a secret agent thatdissolves deposits left by j^n-dogging inks. That’sreally why we created Qoink—to guard pens fromsediment and gum that stop the flow.Qoink will help keep your pen in your hands andout of repair shops.To induce you to try it, we are giving Disney’s SongBook FREE when you buy Qu/n A for 15 cents. Betterclip out this announcement as a reminder. It’s prob¬ably your last chance.The Parker Pen Company, Janesville, Wisconsin,6 DUMBO Lyrics includedLook Out For Mi. StorkCasey J uniorBaby MineI’ve Seen EverythingSong of the Roustaboutsand 94 other Favorites bythese and other authors.O Walt Disney ProductionsGet Parker Peris and Quink atWOODWORTH'S1311 E. 57th ST.Near Klmbark Ave. STOREOPEN EVENINGSPhone Dorchester 4800 Copyright 1941. Liccarr A Myus Tobacco C*. for a Definitely MILDERCOOLER BETTER TASTESmokers everywhere know you con travel o longway and never find another cigarette that can matchChesterfield for a Milder Cooler Better Taste.It's Chesterfield's Right Combination of the world'sbest cigarette tobaccos that wins the approval ofsmokers all over the country. Let the Navy's choice beyour choice ... make your next pack Chesterfield.BVERYWHERE YOU GO