Vol. 41. No. 16 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1941 Price Three CentsmilelSlatesBig NamesMaurice Samuel, translator of “TheXiizarene” and author of “The GreatHatred*’ will be the first speaker pre¬sented by the Hillel Foundation thisy(‘ar. Mr. Samuel will address Hillelmembers and others in InternationalHouse on December 10, and will takeas his subject for the evenin>r “The(ireat Hatred in 1941.”Kaeh year, Hillel makes an effort topresent on their lecture forum menwho will be interestinK to every stu¬dent and faculty member. To continuethis aim, the Hillel Foundation hasm.ide arranprements to sponsor PierreVan Passen in a lecture next Febru¬ary. .Mr. Van Pas.sen who has beencalled “a contemporary historian—and a major prophet” is the authorof "Days of Our Years” and the cur-in nt i)ublication “That Day Alone.”!This noted author and speaker has ■made a lonp: study of the manner in(('ontinued on pajfe two) i Three Students, ProfessorInjured In Jones ExplosionW heaton AndDePaim FallItefore MaroonsThe University experienced a minorressurection of athletic KloJ'y over thewc‘C‘k-end. The soccer and cross-coun¬try teams, the only teams enjrafrin)? in |inter-colle»riate competition this quar-1ter, won victories over Wheaton and I1)»‘ Pauw, respite lively.The soccer s<iuad bounced back jfioni the defeat it suffered at Oberlinlast week and eked out a 1-0 victoryover the a^rKrcRation from W’heaton. ]400 spectators witnessed the Maroontriumph.Outstandinjf characteristics of thejjame was its cleanliness and fairness, |often lacking in the kicking tussels. !Chicago’s passwork and skillful:maneuvering of the ball excelledWheaton’s fast technique. HarryDuckworth’s famous Canadian-Eng-(Continued on page four) i Photo by ChicaKo Daily NewsExploniov leaven Jones lab a shamble as three students and jrrofes-sor escufie serious injiiri/^ Discreditiuff rumors, Hermann Schlesinger,Chemistry Ifepartment head, denies that national defense experimentswere being carried out in. the lab. Cause of the explosion is as yet un¬known.GarbagePlanToSaveMoney—Douglasowned land than it would cost it toown the land itself, in addition to thefact that the land which the city usesfor these purpo.ses is improved bybeing filled in and becomes of greatervalue to its owners than originally.(Continued on page three)Names OfficersTaxpayers can be .saved |.S50,00()out of a total of nearly $900,000 s})enton city garbage disposal, claims PaulH. Douglas, alderman of the fifthward and professor of economics atthe University. As chairman of aSpecial Committee on Methods of Gar¬bage Disposal, Douglas has for thepast several months been investigat¬ing costs and means of disposing T ■■■■»Chicago’s bargage and has suggested: |||i- r|A|1GAseveral methods of economizing.At the present time, garbage is dis-lK)se<i of in two main ways, namelyat private dumps and at loading plat¬forms where the refuse is loaded intocars and taken to other dumping sites.The rates paid by the city at thedumps range from 22 to 25 cents acubic yard, and at the loading plat¬forms the rates are approximately 32cents a cubic yard. In the course of ayear, the total expense of the city faroutnumbers the expense which wouldbe incurred under the new i)rogramrecommended by Douglas in whichdumping would be on city-owne<l land,using city located and/or operatedloading platforms, and employing theniore accurate tonnage method. Senate HearsKrueger OnConvoysMaynard Krueger, assistant Profes¬sor of Economics at the Universityand the Socialist Party’s candidate forvice president in the 1940 nationalMaynard KruegerWould Save $150,000 'The new program would save thecity $150,000 on the loading plat¬forms and $200,000 at the dumpingsite. Therefore, under existant con¬ditions, the city is paying more forthe privilege of dumping on privately I After a week of intensive campaign-! ing, elections of mernbers of the In-I ternational House Student Councilwere held Sunday. Some of the for¬eign groups formed parties while ev¬ery candidate was on his own in oth¬ers. IOn the whole, well-known old mem-1bers were elected. The United States igroup elected Charles Davis, W’illiam iHarlan, Marian Hayes, Betty Meyer.s, jArthur Steurwald, and Ray Wittcoft'.Audrey Collinson, Paul Dowie, and |Clifford Patrick were elected by the !British students. The Chinese chosePui-Kwong Kwan, Eva Yi-Chuang Lu,Lung-Maoo, and Yolanda Sun as theirrepresentatives.Franz Oppenheimer and Erich Ros¬enthal will be the German members(Continued on page four) Victims Hang FromLedge; One Falls1j By STUART SCHULBERGj Blasting Jones Laboratory, an explosion at 11:25 yesterday morning blew' out one wall, and gutted a room, severely burning three men and forcing aI fourth to crash three stories to the ground below.1 The four men. Dr. Sidney Weinhouse, Dr, Frank Westheimer, Eugene, Ordas and Harold Graham were experimenting with solvents when the ex-i plosion occurred. Only Dr. Westheimer, who was leading the experiment,managed to reach the door before the heavy black smoke and intermittentsheets of red flame drove the others to the windows where they hung desper¬ately until firemen arrived to rescuethem. However, W’einhouse apparent¬ly lost his grip on the window-sill be¬fore help arrived, plunging three floorsand landing on a small bush below.Rushed to BillingsAll four were immediately rushed toBillings where it was discovered thatWeinhouse was suffering a brokenleg, burns about the face and hands,possible internal injuries and shock.Westheimer was found to have re¬ceived mild hand burns. Ordas, hand,(Continued on p ge three)ASII Key ManSpeaks Here“...No Southern Colonel, he.”election, testified on the hotly debatedAmerican convoy issue before the(Continued on page three) Convening to decide on future cam¬paigns on the Quadrangles, the Uni¬versity’s chapter of the American Stu¬dent Union will meet in the ReynoldsClub, Wednesday, at 3:30. Herbert Ij Witt, national executive secretary ofij the organization, will address the |gathering. ]]I Witt, the most prominent speakerI the Union has procured thus far thisyear, is a New York University stu-I dent and holds a key post in the1 ASU’s central body.Though the general attitude of theUnion has already been formed, withimmediate anti-Fascist action as theI dominant theme, Witt's speech may bea weighty item in determining thefuture structure of the local section’sspecific movements. An open meeting for all fratern¬ity men this afternoon at 3:30 inthe South Lounge of the ReynoldsClub has been called by the Inter-Fraternity Council. The group willconduct an informal discussion ofcurrent fraternity problems, andspecifically, questions pertinent torushing rules. Anxious to secure aslarge a representation from eachfraternity as possible, the Councilhas characterized the meeting asone of the most important of therushing season.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1941"%£ OaiLcj IfkiAjocmFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicagro, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University Avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 148 West 62nd street. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and6124.. .The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. ■ • ,The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publication ofany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates: $3 a year$4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberP^ssocioiGd GDlleftiaie PressDistributor ofGolle6iciie Di6eslBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialJAMES BURTLE RICHARD PHILBRICK, ChairmanRICHARD HIMMEL ROBERT REYNOLDSBUSINESSCHESTER SMITH, business managerRICHARD BOLKS, advertising managerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy Lesser, Beata Mueller, Philip Rieff, ChloeRoth, Stuart Schulberg. and Shirlee Smith.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESROBERT PREGLER. circulation managerLYNN TUTTLE, office managerWilliam Bell, Virginia Brantner, Robert Highman, John MacBride,Paul Reynolds, and Richard Wallens.Night Editor: Richard B. Philbrick LETTERS TO THE EDITOROn Declaring WarThe America First Committee has asked thePresident to submit the issue of peace or warto a vote of Congress. In asking us to choosebetween peace and war, General Wood assumesthat there is an arbitrary distinction betweenthese two states of being. But if there ever wasa sharp borderline between peace and war, thatdistinction was completely destroyed by theAxis. We are sure that the people of China, Eth¬iopia, and Czechoslovakia who believed that itwas necessary to declare war in order to beat war were sadly disillusioned.The declaration of war is a necessary pre¬requisite for a nation to engage in violence to¬ward other nations under the recognized inter¬national law of nations. But in a world that fol¬lows the laws of the jungle, for a nation to waitto declare war before it engages in warlike actsis likely to be suicide.International AnarchySince in the last ten years three of the sevengreat nations have followed the rule of mightmakes right in national policy, America mustrecognize that it is no longer in a world of in¬ternational law; international anarchy is therule in the present world. The western democra¬cies have been and will be forced to abandon theformalities of an international law that is tem¬porarily dead if they are going to be successful.The situation is analogous to that of a prizefighter w’ho finds that his opponent is usingknives. Under such circumstances to try tofollow the rules of the game would be folly. Theaxis has destroyed the rules. If we are to con¬tinue to exist in the new kind of world they havemade, we cannot tie our hands with any formali¬ties that applied only under the law of nations.A careful distinction must be made betweentwo different problems: (1) Should we enter thewar? (2) Should we formally declare war? Inanswer to the first question we would say whatwe have said before that we think America isalready in the war. To the second question wewould say that the decision to declare w'ar isno longer a decision to be or not to be in thewar; it is rather a decision to use a particularsymbol in an effort to unite the nation and toassure ‘the people of Europe that America ison their side in an unqualified way. There aremany arguments both for and against a formaldeclaration of war but these arguments have noconnection with the problem of whether or notAmerica should be in the w^ar.The Three ArgumentsThe misunderstanding of the nature of thedifference between being at w^ar and declaringwar has given the members of the AmericaFirst Committee three of their sharpest argu¬ments: (1) 80% of the people are against war.(2) The President advocating peace has led usto the brink of war. (3) The President should behonest and ask for a declaration of war.These three arguments fall to pieces whenwe consider that the distinction between peaceand war has vanished. The American peopleand congress when they say that they are op¬posed to war mean that they are opposed to adeclaration of war. A large majority of the peo¬ple, while they oppose a declaration of w‘ar, havefavored all the moves that put us in the war.They have approved the appropriations for war.They have approved the warlike actions of thePresident as commander-in-chief of the navy.They have approved the President’s commit¬ments to other nations at war. By ANNE STEELSomebody gave a party Friday night. . . and in the midst of it ail we still wonder who thegenerous host or hostess was . . . but it was a goodparty . . . campus celebrities were there . , . Brad theBarber . . . Dan Burton back from “my life with thearmy or how to develop a deferment day” . . . CodyPfansteil of the “get me ten beautiful women for theTribune and I’ll rush for your club” fame . . . Hutchin¬son Common’s hostess Star and her fiance Bob Wheelerwho climaxed the evening by reciting a charming littlepoem about four little men without any fathers . . . Thepunch line of the poem goes, “My father was a marriedman and what is even more—he was married to mymother, a fact which I deplore” . . .Somebody else gave a party Friday nightPhi Psi's. . . and this time they couldn’t fool us. It was the Phi jPsi’s entertaining their lady fairs at dinnah before the jC dance ... As far as we can figure out the dinnah was ja success because it seems no one could gather enough |strength to leave his place at the table and make thelong journey over to Ida Noyes . . . Dot Tuell was there jwith Fred Zahrn , . . Peg Williams per usual with BudBates ... Mary Miller with pin Bill Van Horn ... Esther :Miller with Corky Wickham . . . Louise Ecklund and |John Clarage . . . Alf Gentzler and off campus woman 'Mike Reed . . . Punky Johnson and Allan Green .. . Syd- iney Strack with Jim Hoatson. jFriday night was sure the nightThe Phi Gam’s also gave a party ... or did we say jsomething to this effect before ... It was a nice quiet jparty with people playing games . . . Games, we said... !Pushing match boxes around with their noses, they !were . . . Anyway it was a nice quiet party . . . Afterbandaging up their scraped noses the guests took to thatold vice . . . Dancing . . . Lila Lee Kirk was there es¬corted by Johnny Riddle . . . Jack Fons with an off-campus blonde dolly . . . Dave Martin and Sue Easton. . . and Frank Brunner with a lovely Northwesterngirl . . ,Speaking of Phi Gam's. . . they do think up the best things, don’t they . . .Next week another closed party at the house . . . Thistime it will be a “turnabout night” with the handsomeladdies attired in ladies wear and their dates in trousers. . . That’s what this school needs . . . More spirit • • • jHanley’s Friday Night. . . was complete with all the trimmin’s . . . BeezieRosenheim, Joseph Hackett, Jane Tallman, Betty Chap¬man, and Punk Warfield surrounded by his happy revel- ;ers from the Beer and Football party on the lawn at !Greenwood Field ... As is always the way at Hanley’s jwe never can figure out who is with who . . . but we do 'know' that Pat Lyding was there with Jim Anderson andthat Sue Bohnen and Jackie Horal were there but not itogether . . . And while w'e are at Hanley’s we must notforget to tell you that Sunday was Joe Hanley’s birth¬day and that we expect each and every one of you to ,pay your respects at the first possible opportunity.We are afraid to tell you. . . but . . . well here we go . . . someb<»dy else gave aparty .. . only this time it was Saturday night, so 1 havean out there ... It all happened at the Phi Delt houseand they tell us it was good . . . the usual people werethere and the unusual and no one would set me rightas to which w'as which . . . But Fred Gustafson was withGloria Robinson which, if at one time was unusual, isfast becoming the usual thing . . . Editor of the Daily Maroon:Two hundred innocent men andwomen murdered in cold blood; in¬nocent people, taken from anywhere,stood against a wall, and shot—bysavage Nazi firing squads. Fifty moreto be shot tomorrow; fifty more thenext day—fifty more each day untilthe French people are gone or remainonly as living corpses. We students atthe University of Chicago cannot sitby and watch this horror; and waittill the day comes when we too willbe rounded up and shot because we be¬lieved in democracy and because wehated fascism. As Prime MinisterChurchill says: “The butcheries inFrance.. .are but a foretaste of whatHitler would inflict upon the Britishand American people if only he couldget the power.”Can any of us imagine what itwould be like just on campus to liveunder Hitler? Women would not beallowed in the colleges—in France thegirls have been conscripted for thepleasure of the soldiers; there wouldbe no Negro or Jewish students. Theremaining students not placed inforced labor battalions, or not intern¬ed in concentration camps for havingonce spoken out for democratic edu¬cation or decent living conditions,would attend only classes showing thepower of the Germanic race over allother peoples. Our faculty would bedismissed; our coops closed—no clubsor fraternities. And worst of all we’dnever know from hour to hour wheth- ]er we might not be taken and placedbefore a firing squad—and killed. ^ jThis definitely must not happen.Yet it won’t do us a bit of good tomerely agree that Hitler must notcome to America; that won’t stop him.We have to demand, each one of us, |as Churchill and Roosevelt have al¬ ready, that the butcheries in Francecease and insure that we’ll have nosimilar mass murders in America,Wednesday at 3:30 in Lounge A ofReynolds Club, Bert Witt, an out-standing student leader and nationalexecutive secretary of the AmericanStudent Union will speak on these re¬prisals in France and what they meanto us as students. If every student atthe University of Chicago is there atthat meeting, together we’ll be ableto make plans for action to show theFrench people that we have not for¬gotten them, to show the students ofall Europe that they are not fightingalone.Helen TylerCLASSIFIED816 HYDE PARK BI.VD.. 2, 3 A 4 RM.KITCHENETTE APTS., all private bathj..$40 A up. elevator buildins- Krn. 0940.tWWSAWWWJMAN OF ARAN8 P.M. Monday, Nov. 3Soc. Science 122Science 122 SiVWVWWWVWVWWHillel-(Continued from page one)Conditions ChangedIt is true that the president solemnly prom¬ised the American people that he would keep usout of war. We are sorry that he made thatpromise. But the president has one argument inhis favor: in a world where the distinction be-itween peace and war has vanished we cannot ex¬pect anyone to be held to promises made attimes when there was still some hope of main¬taining the law of nations.The president does not look for a declarationof war because he realizes that there is a vastdifference between being in the war and reviv¬ing an old fashioned custom of formally declar¬ing war. He knows that the gain for the nation¬al policy through declaring war would be noth¬ing compared to the terrifying dilemma thatthe nation would find itself in if congress shouldvote down a motion to declare war. Such an ac¬tion of congress would be interpreted by themembers of the America First committee tomean that America had repudiated its part inthe war, just as they now try to tell us that weare not in the war because we have not formallydeclared war.Therefore the question of whether or notAmerica should declare war is a separate issuefrom the question of whether or not America isin the war or should enter the war. The distinc¬tion between being at peace and being at warwas destroyed by the totalitarians. We believethat America is in the war and that the nationis behind the war policy of our government re¬gardless of whether or not we declare war. which organized religion has under- jmined Christianity and made an era of Ibarbarism possible. He has chosen forhis subject “Which Way America?”Subsidized BanquetThird Hillel lecturer of the year willbe Dr. Abram L. Sachar, famous his¬torian, biographer, and educator. Dr,Sachar, the National Director of Hil¬lel Foundations, will speak at a sub¬sidized banquet open only to Hillelmembers. This well known analyst ofthe current of contemporary affairswill not speak until next April al¬though he is in Chicago frequently.While not on the intellectual planeof these other events, the Big TenHillel Frolics should not escape men¬tion on a list of Hillel’s plans for theyear. This annual dance for Hillelmembers in the Big Ten Universitieswill be held at the Covenant Club onNovember 22.All members of the Hillel Founda¬tion will be admitted to these fourimportant affairs free of charge, butnon-members must pay for each oneseparately. CAN AMERICAN YOUTHcollaborate withEuropean Youth 7On Wh«f Educational Basis?CAN AMERICANDEMOCRACY FAILAs Europaan Damocracias Failad?Read "THE ALTERNATIVE"by LEON COTNAREANUformer publisher of Le Figaro, ParisPubliihad byDODD MEAD & COMPANY432 Fourth Avenue • New York, N.Y.SEE YOUR BOOKSTORE4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEFOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, intensive, stenographic course—starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1,Interesting liooklet sent tree, without obligation— w'nte or phone. Mo sohators employ^.moserBUSINESS COLLEGE"AUl MOSER. J.D., PH.e.Regular Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany .Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Ave., Chicogo. •4“" \'o/ph 4347READSwedenborg"Amazingly versatile as ha was in the fields of science, engineering, naturalphilosophy, the classics, theology, Swedenborg's voluminous works place him as anextraordinary teacher striving to increase the sum of human knowledge. His namebelongs in an illustrious company of scholars who through the centuries possessedan appreciation of education as distinct from mare schooling, and whose livesexemplified such beliefs."MORSE A. CARTWRIGHTDirector, American Association for Adult Education.“DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM”J 10c unabridgedi at University and other bookstores.SvAnAAAAAAiWVWUVVWVbVVVVWAA/WWUVVWdVWbWkWVWTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 28, 1941 Page ThreeDefense Industries Hit SchoolsHarder Than Does Draft—TylerDefense industries are making adeeper inroad into education, both inteachers and students, than the draft,Dean Ralph Tyler of the educationdepartment stated yesterday.It is the younger crop of bothteachers and prospective teachers thatis being affected by the war, however.It is also the high schools in smalltowns and the elementary schoolsthat are hardest hit.Lucrative jobs are taking studentsfrom both the teaching colleges andJameson TellsOf British WarTime HealthUniversity of London professor Wil¬liam Wilson Jameson lectures tomor¬row on “The War and Public Healthin Britain” in Billings at 8. Sir Jam¬eson is visiting the United States un¬der the auspices of t h e RockefellerFoundation.Professor of public health and deanof the University’s London School ofHygiene and Tropical Medicine, Jam¬eson is a recognized authority in hisfield. He has been Medical Advisor tothe Secretary of the Colonies since1040, and is a member of the BritishArmy Hygiene Advisory Committee.He is also an honorary fellow of theAmerican Public Health Association.The lecture, sponsored by the As¬sociation of Medical students of theUniversity of Chicago, will be inPathology 117. the high schools. In an attempt tocounteract the loss of young menteachers the schools are showing atendency to hire more young womenand also to rescind rules forbiddingmarried women to teach as manyschools have.Larger Cities Not Affected“I do believe that the bringing upof young boys by too many women isbad, and so I believe that this trendis bad. However, I believe that theRalph Tyler employing of more married womenwho probably have a more wellrounded life is better,” said Dean Ty¬ler.The larger cities like Chicago arenot being affected because the amountof experience required to work in suchschools is great enough to put theteacher beyond the draft age. It isthe schools in the smaller cities thatare bearing the brunt of the loss.The elementary schools are thehardest hit* because the teachers areusually younger and the students, ofcourse, are too young to work. In thehigh schools because of students leav¬ing for jobs less teachers are re¬quired.Priorities HamperPriorities are hampering the schoolsmainly in building new buildings.However, schools in areas around de¬fense industries are granted prioritiesto build additions to care for thelarger body of students. Paper is themain staple affected by priorities.'...Married Women Better"Fire—(Continued from page one)back,face and arm burns,while Grahamwas found to be suffering severe burnsabout the hands, face, shoulders andback. It is believed that Weinhousewould be interned at the hospital fora few weeks while the other men willprobably be released in “a day or two.” 'Estimates of the damage rangedfrom “around $300” to “over$1,000,” although official quarters be¬lieved that the correct figure would befound to lie somewhere between thetwo, when a more thorough investiga¬tion is made. Rumors to the effectthat the men were working on “na¬tional defense” experiments when theexplosion occurred were common yes¬terday in spite of Executive Secretaryof the Chemistry Department Her¬mann Schlesinger’s statement that a“national defense” laboratory wasnon-existent at the University. Never¬theless, witnesses reported that chem¬istry students announced “It happenedin the ‘national defense’ lab” whenquestioned about the source of theblast.Parked Cars a ProblemAccording to Director of Buildings& Grounds Lyman Flook, his B & Gguards were responsible for extin¬guishing the fires which resulted fromthe explosion more than five minutesU'fore the fire department arrived. Atthe same time, he pointed out that thecongestion caustMl by oars parkedalong Ellis Avenue near Jones causeda serious problem for the firemen, andhe demanded students pay closer at¬tention to no-parking zones in the fu¬ture.When contacted yesterday. Profes¬sor Schlesinger tended to scotch sen¬sational reports of the blast when hestated that explosions occur “aboutonce a week” and that this one wassimply of a more violent nature. Fiser ExplainsStudent ForumWebb Fiser, president of StudentForum, the University’s student for¬ensic society, will explain the struc¬ture and function of the organizationto all freshmen and newcomers today,in Lexington 5, at 3:30.The Forum has scheduled a fullprogram of inter-collegiate and civicengagements for the autumn quarter,with the returning members carryingthe bulk of the assignments. But Fiserand the executive council, the Forum’sgoverning body, are interested in ac¬quiring a new crop of speaking talentfrom the yearling class. Hold BiologicalSciences Forum,Seminar TodayDr. Max Habicht, formerly amember of the legal section of theLeague of Nations Secretariat andan authority on international law.will speak Wednesday afternoon at4:30 on “The Punishment of Of¬fenses under International Law”in the Social Science Assemblyroom. The lecture is open to allstudents. Ten different conferences and sem¬inars by various departments in theBiological Sciences will be held dur¬ing the remainder of the week, includ¬ing a Medical Seminar today in Med¬icine 433 at 4:30. Dr. Lillian Eichel-berger and Dr. Franklin McLean willbe in charge. The subject is “The Dis¬tribution of Calcium and Magnesiumbetween the Cells and the Extracel¬lular Fluids of Skeletal Muscle andLiver.”Wednesday brings five conferences,and the lecture by the visiting Britishprofessor W'm. Eilson Jameson of theUniversity of London. Included inthe meetings will be a Clinical Con¬ference in Obstetrics and Gynecologyat 8 A.M. in Dora DeLee Hall, otherconferences in Pediatrics-Roentgenol¬ogy (2, Roberts 269), Medicine (4:30,Pathology 117). There will be twoseminars as well: Pediatrics (3:15.Bobs Roberts 259), and Roentgenol¬ogy (7, Medicine 137).Bacteriology and Parasitology Clubmeets Thursday at 4:30 in RickettsNorth, Room 1. Dr. Stewart A. Koserwill discuss “Accessory Growth Fac¬tor Requirements of the BrucellaGroup”. A Surgical Pathology Con¬ference will meet at 8 in Pathologythe same day.A Clinical Pathological Conferencewill meet Friday in Pathology 119(4:30), presenting the followingcases: 5415-Rheumatic Heart Disease;5396-Subacute Bacterial Endocarditis;5274-Congenital .Heart Disease. M'ilfiiiTiif,..Deliver Ultimatum ToJapan In Indo-ChinaKruege(Continued from page one)Senate’s Foreign Affairs Committee,in Washington, over the week-end.The busy non-interventionist speaker,who is filling engagements in Pitts¬burgh at the moment, spoke outagainst the use of the nation’s armedships for convoy duty on the high!seas.Constantly interested in the funda¬mental problem of granting more de¬mocracy for the American public,Krueger alluded to the necessity ofextending freedom to “our own peo¬ples in the south.” Senator Tom Con¬nolly, of Texas, the head of the For¬eign Affairs Committee, instantly rosefrom his chair, as Krueger alluded tothe southern question, and objected tothe statement. The book you've been waiting foris now on saleand it is more fascinating than we bad imaginedA TREASURY OFG I L B E R T &SULLIVANThe Words and Music of One Hundred and Two Songsfrom Eleven Operettas • Edited by DEEMS TAYLOREleven full page color illustrations by LUCILLE CORCOSArrangements by DR. ALBERT SIRMAYWe invite you to come inand see a copy today.U.ofC. Bookstore5802 Ellis Avenue An ultimatum to Japan, backed bya willingness to go to war immediate¬ly, was offered as the only solution tothe “Pacific problem” by two of thethree experts who spoke Sunday onthe University Round Table broad¬cast.“Japan should be told to get out ofIndo-China, to resign from the Axis,and to withdraw her armies from Chi¬na,” James Young, experienced FarEastern newspaperman, said. “Onthese conditions we could offer to dobusiness with Japan and see whatcan be done about solving her eco¬nomic problems.”Harley F. MacNair, professor ofFar Eastern history and institutionsat the University, in agreeing withMr. Young said:“I am reluctant to agree that waris necessary at the present time, butI do not think a policy of doing noth¬ing will keep Japan from attemptingfurther aggression.”Nathaniel Peffer, professor of in¬ternational relations at Columbia Uni¬versity, arguing that a “watch andwait” policy will best serve Americaninterests, said:“Why involve ourselves in a shoot¬ing war in the Pacific when our in¬terests in the Atlantic—which are farmore important—may be threatenedmore seriously at any moment?“If you would guarantee that ournavy could knock out Japan in amonth or six weeks I’d agree that thatshould be done. But unless you cangive me that guarantee I think itwould be foolish to engage Japan inwar at this time.”The new Japanese cabinet wascharacterized by Mr. Young as “Ger¬man controlled.”“The Nazis have run Japanese pol¬itics for years,” Young said. “PrinceKonoye sat on the fence until theNazis took it out from under him andput Tojo in. The only thing that willconvince Japan that their interests donot lie with the Axis is a positiveaction by the United States. Our navyis the strongest in the world and couldhandle Japan easily.’’“You take war too lightly,” Peffer replied. “War is taken as a last re¬sort, and involves the killing of youngmen. We should examine the long-run interests of our nation and deter¬mine in what spheres our greater in¬terests lie. If we engage ourselves ina war in the Pacific which might lastfor a long time we are turning ourback upon our primary area of inter¬est—the Atlantic. Our job is to keepJapan quiet, not to force her into Si¬beria or the South Pacific.”Douglas—(Continued from page one)Other points in the policy beingrecommended by Douglas and his com¬mittee include the rapid extension ofthe filling of Lake Calumet, the fillingof the unused and stagnant Illinoisand Michigan Canal, and the encour¬agement of lower competitive bids atthe loading platforms.Investigations by the committeehave been extended until December, atwhich time Douglas and his associateswill again submit their report andrecommendations to the City Coun¬cil.SUPER TAMPAXREGULAR TAMPAXJUNIOR TAMPAXWhichever size suits yourneeds, Tampax is the civi¬lized way to meet women’ssanitary problems.29^ for a month’s supplyfor your convenienceWE DELIVERUse the FreeCampus Tel. ExtensionREADERSYour Campus Drug StoreiOOl E. 61st St.> V No Cramming Necessary!For swell flavor andreal chewing fun-theanswer is deliciousWrigley’s Spearmint Gum■THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1941Page FourSOCCER TEAM AND HARRIERS WINWheaton A nd DePauwAre Maroons^ Victims(Contifiued from page one)lish kick was again responsible forthe sole Chicago score. Ken Roberts,the new Maroon goalie, showed hiscapacity for water tight defense andgoal tending. “Mascot” Brooks, latestUniversity High School addition tothe squad, was the most dependablesubstitute.Smashing Offense MenThe smashing offense men, chieflyDuckworth, Davidson and Meinsteinwere outstanding in view of the factthat they executed combination aftercombination effectively. George Peck,Chicago’s fastest man, threatenedmany times as did Ed Glik, new out¬side man. iOutstanding defense work was;magnificently done by Nick Parisi, as¬sisted very ably by Ken Olum andTom Hyman. Substitutes Jim Frankland Martin Weiner are improvingvery rapidly and promise to be thecore of next season’s team.Dick Bovjberg, excellent wing man,'will leave to serve Uncle Sam in the;Naval Reserve this week. Having;served on the team since its incep-1tion, he will be a great loss.Seeking revenge, Wheaton College!comes to Chicago on Saturday Novem¬ber 8, when the rivalry will be con¬tinued on Greenwood Field.• Overcame OddsThe University’s cross countiyteam overcame tremendous odds Fri¬day afternoon and defeated a verystrong De Pauw squad 27-29 at Wash¬ington Park.Although the victory was achievedby a narrow two point margin, itcame as an entire surprise to follow¬ers of the team.Running the three mile course in17.35, J. Stuart of De Pauw took tophonors. The harriers reached the tapem the following order:1. Stuart, De Pauw2. John Leggit, Chicago3. Truman Dahlberg, Chicago4. De Pauw5. Harold Harwood, Chicago6. De Pauw7. De Pauw8. R. Moran, Chicago9. Harry Roberts, ChicagoWe are sorry to say that the nameof the opponents was misppelled inFridays’ Maroon. De Pauw Universityof Greencastle, Indiana provided thecompetition. Red DevilsLead 6-ManBasketballersVie for RegularPositionsBy PHIL RIEFFFired by the controversy now rag-ng among the Quadrangles sidelinesages as to the destiny of sports on;he Midway, and hampered by a new-y waxed floor, the 1941-42 edition of;he Maroon basketball team beganaractice in earnest Thursday.Norgren has about 28 men, of vary-ng degrees of ability as a workingjasis for the winter recreation, withEd Nelson, George Wagenberg, andlack Fons forming the veteran nu-deus for a first string five.The pre-season side-line sages haveilready slated the steady, bespectacledWagenberg and the blond, sharp-eyedNelson* for regular guard positions,with Fons in his usual spot on one)f the forward posts.Experienced men, of the JimmieIJrosbie or George Krakowka vintage,will have to fight a sprinkling of ablesophomores for the remaining active jspot. No matter who wins the other i•egular contract, a fine bunch of sophs Ilomposed of Bob Oakley, Danny Fo-1?le, Bernie Heinen and Bert Wheelerwill make a good reserve strength for,Norgrens’ latest contribution to col- jegiate sport. IOakley, in fact, is favored to win an j)pening assignment by the fearless |sideline sages. Remaining undefeated in the six-man football tournament, the Red Dev¬ils trounced the Owls 32-14 in theirsecond consecutive victory last Fridayat Stagg Field.Ed Cooperrider, flashy Red Devilhalfback gave the crowd a thrill whenhe received the opening kickoff andran 65 yards for a touchdown evadingthe Owl defense masterfully while dis¬playing some swell leg art. GeorgeBalia caught a pass in the end zonefor his team’s second score. Balia thenconverted, catching a pass in theend zone boosting the score to 13-0.However, the Owls were not to beheld scoreless; fighting Bob Reynoldsthrew a long pass to Bob Murray inthe end zone for the Owls’ first score.Reynolds then drop kicked making thescore 13-8 at the end of the first half.Cooperrider AgainOooperrider started things in the.secoml half by plunging through theline into an open field and running45 yards for the score. Balia trieil toconvert by drop kicking, but failed.Immediately on the offensive, wastingno time, the Red Devils fought theirway inch by inch down into Owl ter¬ritory with Bob Cummins finally goingover on a buck from the 4 yard line.John Stapler failed to make good hisdrop kick.Fighting desperately to get backinto the game, the Owls brought thepigskin down to the Red Devil 5 yardline. Bob Reynolds dashed aroundhis left end for the touchown.In the closing minutes of play BobWeinman caught a pass by Ed Cooper¬rider and ran 30 yards to a touch¬down. George Balia converted by run¬ning around his left end to make thefinal score—Red Devils, 32, Owls, 12.Goaded by a standstill in their ini¬tial 14-14 encounter with the Owls,the Indians took to the warpathamidst the green plains of Stagg Fri¬day, defeating the Gophers by a scoreof 21-14. This was the Gophers’ firstgame of the year.iI Gophers Score First! Getting off to a rousing start, thej Gopher cheering section had some-: thing to hoot about when Tyki Cos-ton ran 60 yards for a touchdownafter receiving a pass. However, theirjoy was short lived for Henry Melinof the Indians came right back shortlyfor a touchdown on a pass by EdLundry. At the half the score wastied 6-6.Melin started activities in the sec¬ond half by scoring a touchdown on a10 yard run. Ned Munger drop kick¬ed for the extra points. Tom Ma¬honey of the Indians created an up¬roar by intercepting a Gopher passand running 45 yards to a touchdown.John Ivy caught a pass in the endzone for the conversion to halt thescoring habits of the Indians for theday.In a final attempt the Gophers camerampaging deep into Indian territoryin the final minutes of play and wentover on a line buck by Tyki Coston.Jame Costakis drop kicked success¬fully. Standings: O — ingfSPORTSWith WERNER BAUMSports EditorPICKIN' 'EMI Believe it or not, once in a whileI there are pleasant surprises on this' rather pleasant job. Over the pastI week-end we had two of them.Number one came late ThursdayI afternoon as we were preparing Fri¬day’s paper. Out of the clear skymembers of the Board of Control in¬formed us that Pickin’ ’Em was theI second most popular feature in the‘ Maroon. Trailing right behind thei Bazaar, it seems that Pickin’ ’Em isj expectantly awaited each week in manyi University circles. So high it seems,I was football enthusiasm over theweek-end, that our feature was tem-jmrarily promoted to the front page.^ It was indeed a pleasure to learn that; many people had so much interest inj football that they would go as far asI Ann Arbor to see the game of the1 week. in the cellar with prospects none toobright. But how things have changed!This week results were as follows:Yours truly 26, Phil Rieff 16 and BobLawson 13. The best part about it isthe twenty-six points. For this setsa record unequalled in Pickin’ ’Emhistory. Never before has any “ex¬pert” garnered that many points outj of the thirty points possible.I It’s A Pleasurej It’s a pleasure to have the laugh on1 the other two gentlemen. E'er all dayI Friday they were ranting: “Duquesnehasn’t got a chance against Mar-qquette. It’s ridiculous to think thatPurdue will beat Iowa by a singlepoint, 7-6.”But Purdue did beat Iowa 7-6 andMarquette did lose to undefeated,untied Duquesne. To top it off, ourpick of the Stanford-Washington gamewas only one point wide of the actualscore.After four weeks we are practicallyback where we started from. Thescore reads: Bob Law.son 65, PhilRieff 63 and \V. B. 62.Once more week is all we nee<i tochange this picture slightly. Int House—(Continued from page one)of the council. The Latin-Americanschose Ernesto Cuesta and FedericoGrabiel. Dr. Juan Salcedo will repre-sent the Pacific area students whileI M. Sahap Ongun and Aziz El Araj; are the new near East delegates. Dr.! Peter Flesch, Anthony Geber, Jac-I queline de Sieyes, and Dr. CharlesI Vallotton are the European members; of the council.j Hook Young and Yun Soong ChockI are the Hawaiian delegates, and Mcr-I cedes Velez Herrera is the Puerto! Rican member. Sam Mercer and Erii-I est Sturc will serve as the non-resi-I dent council representatives. P,cn' Pritz was chairman of the committeewhich supervised the election.Badminton PlayersChoose OfficersThe second surjirise came as a, result of the scores of Saturday’s! games. For three weeks we had been; trying to break the charm of Boh; Lawson and Phil Rieff, but to nq avail.Rieff won Pickin’ ’Em twice and Law-' son was once victorious. We were left The Varsity “C” Club willhold a meeting: today, Tues¬day, in the Bartlett TrophyH(N>m at 12:45. All ma jor “C”men are asked to attend. New officers were elected for theBadminton Club at their latest meet¬ing, Sunday. Replacing Rudy Rudolph.Charles Jones, graduate student inChemistry, takes over the duties ofpresident. Rachel Smiley will replaceVivian Carlson, the retiring secretary-treasurer. Mr. Rudolph will be incharge of the instructional programthis year.A group of Canadian badmintonl)layers were the founders of this or¬ganization five years ago. Since thenthe club has developed many good ba<i-minton players. .4mong its membersthere are two who hold national rank¬ings, F]lcanor Coambs and GertrudePolcar.ADRIENNE AMES(star of stag*, tcrMn and radio) viiittmany training camps in har job asChoirman of th* Entartainmant Com-mittaa of tha Homa Lagion. A cartonof Chastarfialds is a mighty walcomagift for tha man in comp.Won Lost Tied P- op.Red Devils 2 0 0 52 12Indians 1 0 1 35 28Duffers 0 1 0 0 20Owls 0 1 1 26 46GophersGames today 0 1 0 14 21Red Devils versus Gophers.Owls versus Duffers. 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