STUDENTS FAVOR SUBSIDIZATIONVc^ fJhAoon.Vol. 41. No. 24 Z-I49THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1941 Three CentsAhlquist Stars In DA RenditionOf O’NeilVs Anna Christie’ 22% Answer MaroonPoll; 71% Want BigTen Athletic LevelBy WERNER BAUMResults of last week’s Daily Maroon Athletic PolL although by no meansconclusive, are quite interesting. Pour hundred and seventeen ballots werecast. Almost all of the questionnaires were filled out by male undergraduatesand figuring on this basis, there was a 22% return. There are 1900 studentsof this classification in the University at present.The main question was worded as follows: If you answered “no” to theabove question, (do you approve of the “status quo” of athletics at the Uni¬versity of Chicago?), what change would you advocate: A. Drop from theBig Ten but continue intercollegiate athletics; B. Drop intercollegiate ath¬letics altogether; C. Subsidize in order to bring the teams up to Big Ten level;D. Any other changes.Of the ballots returned, 71.7% were in favor of subsidizing in order tobring the teams up to Big Ten level. 9.5% of the questionnaires were marked“A” while only 3.1% were marked “B”. Under the last item, 5.9% said “returnfootball,” 2.4% read “change coaches” and 2.8% stated “have compulsoryphysical education or a School of Physical Education.”Amazing NumberThe amazing number of ballots in favor of subsidization is certainly in¬dicative of opinion on the quadrangles but not necessarily conclusive. Selectivefactors certainly entered into the poll. For instance, 31.5% of the ballots werecast by fraternity men while only 19% of the undergraduate men are frater¬nity members. Members of varsity teams may also have been unduly repre¬sented, although figures on this have not been gathered as yet.This poll, as no other Maroon poll in recent times, gave the students ex¬treme freedom of expression. Many interesting and diversified commentswere received. Quotations from some of the ballots read as follows:“Confidentially, the athletic situation at Chicago stinks.”“Education in America is to a large degree corrupted by the undue em¬phasis placed on ‘big-time’ athletics, especially in regard to football.”“Get rid of some of the lousy coaches.”“I feel that the present athletic setup is detrimental to the University’sreputation and future. Surely the University of Chicago is worth maintainingin the eyes of the public even if a slight defilement of President Hutchins’‘ivory tower’ idea of the school is necessary.” (Continued on page four)Stud JiumJ, Stuart Srhulhrrg, Ruth AhlquiO. Marshall Palullo and Eddr ArmUrong as they uppearrd inlast night’s opening performance of "Anna Christie.”By BEATA MUELLEREugene O’Neill and I are not psy¬chologically attuned, but I still think“.Anna Christie” is a good play. Theopening performance of same, lastnight, did not disprove this theory,t>nce the play got under way.After a rather painful five minutes,during which Bill Dodds tried to be abartender with an unsuccessful Irishaccent, and had to content himself.simply with being a bartender, thefragments drew together and becamea play. Stud Ruml, the first bartender,gave a beer to Marshall Pattullo, adubious longshoreman. Marshall drankthe beer. Stuart Schulberg was madeto run in and out again, as a mailman.Then Bob Miller came in, only hewasn’t Bob Miller, he was Chris Chris-topherson, and everything was allright. O’Neill’s play had ^gun.Competent JobBetty Ann Evans did a more thancompetent job with the part of Mar-thy, Chris’ woman^ but I should sug¬gest baggy lisle stockings to concealtho.se legs that are much too youngand shapely for old Marthy. RuthAhlquist, as Anna Christie, was splen¬did, and did not overplay a part thatcan too easily out-Davis Bette Davisat her worst. Edde Armstrong, arriv¬ing during the second act, had muscu¬lar shoulders even in the dim lightand the fog (real fog, plea.se), anddisplayed a further persistent andnot unpleasing Irish brogue.The joint direction of Dick Himmeland Minna Sachs must have beengood, because the play stayed togetheras a whole, and (after the above-men¬tioned first five minutes) built up con¬ sistently to a climax in the fourth act,as O’Neill intended.The sets, an experiment designed bythat well-rounded impresario, Himmel,were effective in themselves, andachieved the desired result of realism.Placed at an angle to the aqdience, asin the movie technique of cameraangles, they were less stiff and morerealistic than the usual four-squareaffairs. The second act setting wasespecially nice, mostly dark, with alantern, a quantity of coiled rope, anda little light and a little fog comingin from one side. Mr. O’Neill and Mr. Himmel andAnna Christie are going to be in theReynolds Club Theatre for four morenights. DAILY MAROON ATHLETIC POLLDrop from the Big Ten but continueintercollegiate athletics ...40 9.5%Drop intercollegiate athletics altogether ...13 3.1%Subsidize in order to bring theteams up to Big Ten level ...299 71.7%Return football (written in on ballots) .. 25 5.9%Get some good coaches (written in on ballots) .. 10 2.4%Compulsory Phys. Ed. (written in on ballots) .. 12 2.9%Other suggestions or approve of “status quo” .. 18 4.5%Nazi SuccessSends GermanEnrollment Up ■Warner says-Ban Organizations WhichSabotage Or Obstruct DefenseDouglas FansMeet Thurs.Those interested in working withthe “Douglas for Senator” studentI’om'mittee on the Quadrangles willmeet Thursday in Lexington 7 at 1.Copies of the petition, which urgesDouglas, professor of economics atthe University, and an alderman, tosubmit his name as a candidate forthe United States Senate on the Dem¬ocratic ticket in the April primaries,are obtainable at the Maroon office tobe circulated and signed by membersof the faculty and student body. “In spite of general aversion, quitea few people around here are impress¬ed by the military successes of Ger¬many, and many firmly believe it tobe the coming dominant power,” saidOtto Jolles, instructor of German, inexplanation of the tremendous in¬crease in German language enrollmentthis quarter.In the meantime the course sectionshad been reduced and the already de¬pleted staff unaugmented, in prepara¬tion for a supposed rather inauspi¬cious term. Now there are hardlyenough chairs in the small classroomsto go around.At the second year level accommo¬dations were provided for a dozen;23 piled in. Beginning classes havethirty to thirty-five more than ex¬pected.“This diTesn’t mean that they likeNazi idealogy,” commented Jolles,“and when and if we enter the warwe’ll have the drop we expected.” Be¬cause of this, candidates for bachelordegrees, thinking there will be no po¬sitions open in the long run, have de¬clined.“All universities are having thesame problem, and young instructorswho had no hope for jobs are findingthemselves snapped up.”“German,” ended Jolles, shouldn’tbe regarded as representative of apolitical sect, but as integral to theunderstanding of western civilizationand as such of definite value to edu-catior^” By PHILIP RIEFF“Any organization that can beproved by legal and democratic pro¬cedures to be intent upon sabotagingr obstructing our defense effort shouldbe banned, and their leaders jailed.”W. Lloyd Warner, professor of so¬ciology and anthropology, sat in hisclose, unpretentious office in the So¬cial Science building and expressedhis opinion on the problem of freedomin the present war situation for theUnited States.No Patriotic EmbellishmentWithout patriotic embellishment,and without the now prevalent ap¬peals to the founding fathers, Warnerplainly declared, that “for Democracyto survive we must clamp down onthose people who use the democraticmethod of action in attempts to de¬stroy our country and our democraticheritage. As the late great contem¬porary liberal, Justice Holmes, said,‘The most stringent protection of freespeech would not protect a man infalsely shouting fire in a theatre andcausing a panic.’ ”Citing Germany, in the shadowydays of the Weimar Republic, as anideal example of a nation that gavebirth to a Hitler because that demo¬cratic I’egime would not protect itself,the holder of the rare inter-depart¬mental social science post explainedthat the organizations (or people) whodeliberately spread hatred and dis¬unity for the purpose of “preventingus from continuing our war effortought to go to jail.”Deserve Federal BanAsked if he could point out specificgroups deserving federal ban, Warnerimmediately listed the German-Amer-ican Bund.“I have heard one Gerald K. Smithbroadcasting for some mysterious group called the ‘Million MemberClub,’ advocate something close totreason at this time. The Rev. CharlesE. Coughlin, who belongs to the sameDetroit cotorie, is emulating Smithwith the identical party line.Racial Disunity“The Bund, an organization whichtakes its orders from a foreign, anti¬democratic government, of course, isdefinitely designed to bring ethnic andracial disunity into the nation. Andthere are a large number of peopleusing America First as a cover not tofurther democracy, or the interests ofthe country, but to do all they can todestroy democracy as Hitler’s men de¬stroyed it in Germany,” Warner speci¬fied.Turning to the more general ques¬tion of freedom in a warring world,he emphasized that in “...all pastwars, America’s democratic systemhas functioned so that the ordinaryfreedoms were partially restricted toa point where anybody interferingwith the war effort had pressure puton him to prevent him from conscious¬ly or unconsciously aiding the enemy.”“Personally,” Warner continued, “Ipi'efer granting full liberty at alltimes, but, realistically, I know that it Iis impossible. As soon as the war hasended, the ordinary freedoms mustnatprally be reestablished and aug- |mented. Yet no democracy, nor anyother form of government, has evergiven complete liberty to its people.All democratic government is designedto bring certain restraints on somepeople to provide a larger amount ofliberty and security for the entire pop¬ulation.”Quakers Not Included^ Pacifists of the religious or ideal¬istic variety, such as the Quakers, arenot included among the candidates for banishment, for their opposition towar is based on idealistic or spiritualargument rather than on a preferenceQueen To EndAll QueensFor Iron MaskDetermined to “stop all this non¬sense of electing a ‘Queen’ for everyactivity on campus”, the Iron MaskCouncil has decided to name a queenHenry Senneto end all queens, and to announcetheir selection at the Iron Mask danceFriday night.Declaring that their selectionwould top all previous choices inbeauty, personality, and dateableness,the Dance Committee announced thatthe Council would keep the name ofthe winner secret until Friday eve-(Continued on page four)Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 19417^ OgUUi Tfh/ioonFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni-versity of Chic&sro, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 5831 University Avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9222. _ , r, .After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 148 West 62nd street. Telephones: Wentworth 6123 and«124. ,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^ssocided GDllG6icite PressDiitribulor ofGoIle6iate DibeslBOARD OP 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 ASSOCIATESBILL BELL, Circulation ManagerLYNN TUTTLE, office managerVirginia Brantner, Georgia HinchliiT, Donald Rice, Marge Kraus,Betty Baron, Dorothy Duncan, Gloi;la Ploebst, John Feiler,Edgar L. Rachlin, and Dick WallensNight Editors: Jim Maclear and Ray PoplettArmistice DayWe hope that yesterday marked the end ofArmistice Day celebrations as they were inthe muddled years since Versailles. The strugglefor freedom, equality, justice and democracycan never have any armistice.We have heard too may long-winded, short¬sighted orators describe the ideals of theAmerican tradition as though they were tro¬phies won by our fathers and put in glass casesfor us to admire. We have heard too little aboutthe sacrifices we ourselves would have to maketo preserve the values of freedom, equality, jus¬tice, and democracy.Armistice day then was usually a time fortwisting the meaning of American ideals. Thearchpatriots spoke of values in the sense thatwe speak of goods. They told us that our fath¬ers had paid for freedom, equality, justice, anddemocracy in great and dramatic sacrifices. Andthey led us to glorify the symbols of these val¬ues more than the understanding of values.Pagan TraditionWaving the flag at correct times, marching^ in step to brass bands, chanting the ritual of areligion-called patriotism: these symbols weremore important than knowing the meaning ofvalues. Freedom for children of Jehovah’s Wit¬nesses, equality for men out of work, justice forSacco and Vanzetti, democracy for Negroes inthe South: these and endless other problemshad no place in the pagan tradition of Ameri¬canism.The cult of American nationalism assumedthat the values whose symbols it worshippedexisted everywhere in America, untarnished,uncompromised, and unquestioned. So gloryingin the signboards of the values they did notknow, the high priests of American nationalismused the great patriotic holidays for loudly pro¬claiming “America, right or wrong.” Proudly,stupidly calling themselves 100% Americans,they became among the worst Citizens of theWorld.When everyone thinks he can do no wrong,no armistice can ever mean permanent peace;but the misled leaders of America made interna¬tional cooperation impossible by declaring thatone of the three greatest nations in an inter¬dependent world had no interest in the affairsof other nations. And raising their tariff bar¬riers higher they gloried in their false security.Blame Our FathersNow when even the trophy cases of theAmerican tradition are perilously near to beingsmashed, we may blame our fathers for leadingus to believe that values once built will standforever. We may blame them for not showing usthat values can exist only through everlastingwatchfulness and understanding. But the er¬rors of our fathers were really quite natural.Their blindness was the logical result of theirpattern of thinking. With their rugged individu¬alist mentality, they could see progress madeonly through buying and selling and manipu¬lating material objects. So great was their faithin the magic of the market place that they couldnot conceive of any immaterial values. Theycould know and honor only the symbols ofvalues. Did it not seem reasonable to them thatfreedom, equality, justice, and democracy couldbe treated like houses, or automobiles, or land,or groceries, as objects we could own if we onceaid for them? And with childlike faith theyonsidered these values as part of the nation’s By ANN STEELThe Weekend Started. . . with the C dance turning out different from otherC dances. There weren’t more than fifty faces we hadseen before. The usual couples were there like RosaliePhillips and Jack Shilton . . . Punk Warfieldand Roys Jeffris '. . . Eloise Goode and sisterJanice with their respective men Warren Wilner andJack Cahoun ... some new pairs like Betty Plasman andBob C. Miller . . . Frank Lynch and Wendy Wendricks... Dave Comstock and a girl in red . . . Elaine Hackettand Dale Johnson . . . Bill Roberts with Sydney Strack,at least for part of the evening . . . Bob Monaghan es¬corting Marilyn Sill... and Mike (best dressed woman)Rathje living up to her title and with Bob Cummins.Orchids for the evening, or should we say turnips, goto Ruthie Wehlan for giving out with some pretty sweetblues to the audience . . . and Dick Himmel, who lookedlike a rabbit without any ears in a luffly suit of cover¬alls, and who did more than his share to liven things up. . . turnips also to the Colony Club band for the bestmusic of the year.Saturday nightIn fact Saturday turned out to be the best night ofthe season . . . with the Dekes, Alpha Delts, and PsiU’s all having closed parties. The Dekes had an or¬chestra in the house for the first time and that mayhave been the reason for the most unbelievable partywe’ve seen. It was mainly unbelievable in the fact thatall the Dekes had dates except Norm Barker, GordieTraeger, Bud Long, and Taylor Morris . . . and that ishistory ... It was also unbelievable to see so manypeople having such a wonderful time for apparently noreason . . . Please note that the reason was not ap¬parent . . . Anyway, all the “best people” was there . . .Bill Baugher was with Barbara Ortiund . . . EstherMiller with Dave Siebert . . . Ralph Ashley and JaneThomas . . . Ginny Nichols and Joe Hackett starting inwhere they left off last spring . . . Gene Folks, who wasresponsible for the success of the party, with MickeyBonzinsky . . . the perpetuals—Bob Thorburn and JeanHopkins . . . Jane Moran and Clayton Traeger . . .Erie Thejmer and Rae Hatcher . . . Bob Raiman andCecile Scharfenberg . . . Janet Peacock was there withBob A. Miller . .. George Lauerman and Marietta Moore. . . George Girton with Marcia Marland . . . MarionBaker and Bob Dinnsen . . . Frank Lynch taking a napupstairs while the brothers took care of his date ViolaBready . . . Jeane Groenier with a Deke legacy A1 Sie¬bert . . . Bob Fitzgerald dropping in to make the partyeven better by taking over the ehtertainment and giv¬ing the boys in the band a break.The Alpha Delt party was also one bigCal Sawyiersuccess. . . with the SadieHawkins theme be¬ing very popularEvery little lassiilooked like an “ohthis is just an oldldress” edition ofDaisy Mae exceptFay Horton (withCal Sawyier ofcourse) who made a|real smooth Daisy]what with a skirt shewore when she waseight. Pat McKnightwas there with BobChristie . . . BettyPlasman with DaveBrown . . . HappyLiska with Carl Bue. . . Lin Leach withMarion N e b e 1 andsister Sigma, JeanRoff with brotherBill Leach of Leachand Leach . . . Pris¬cilla Copeland withTom Hoegen . . .Joan Linden with Howie Husum . . . Marge Peacockwith Paul Smith who had a dog patch wedding presidedover by Marryin’ Sam, Bill Leach. Main event of the Dean’s Office Announces RegistrationDates for Winter Quarter ClassesAdvance Registration for the Win¬ter Quarter, 1942, will begin in theappropriate Dean of Students office,beginning Nov. 24. Students in theCollege who have not registered inadvance for the year, and students inthe School of Business will registerNov. 24 to Dec. 12; Students in theBusiness, Divinity, Library, and Med¬ical Schools, Nov. 24 to 28; Divisionsof Social Sciences, and Biological Sci¬ences, Dec. 1 to 6, and Divisions ofHumanities, and Physical Sciences,Dec. 8-12.Students in the College who haveregistered in advance for the yearmust secure their class tickets in theRegistrar’s Office, Cobb 102, accordingto the following schedule, (Lettersrefer to the first letter in the lastname): A D, Nov. 24; E - I, Nov.25; J - O, Nov. 26; P - U, Nov. 27,and V - Z, Nov. 28.May Be ChangedRegistrations may be changed dur¬ing this period by filling out a changecard in the office of the appropriateDean of Students, and presenting itto the Registrar’s office. Students whoToday on theQuadranglesFaculty Women Association meet¬ing, Ida Noyes, 12.Exhibition of “Works by ChicagoArtists Loaned By Chicago Collec¬tors”, 108 Goodspeed hall, 2.Four Year College Girl's club meet¬ing, Ida Noyes, 2:30.Neo-Hellenic society meeting, IdaNoyes, 2:30.Speaker from Chicago Civic De¬fense committee, on program for Na¬tional Civilian Defense week, Amer¬ican Student Union. Reynolds Clublounge A, 2:30.Avukah meeting, Ida Noye.s, 3:30.Y.W.C.A. tea, Ida Noyes^ 3:30.Keystone meeting, Ida Noyes, 4:30.Opera Hour. Phonograph-recordconcert, “Daughter of Regiment.”Analytic comment V. Howard Talley,Reynolds Club lounge, 4:30.Noon Phonograph Concert. SocialScience Assembly Hall. 12:30-1:20.Pulse Staff Meeting. Ida Noyes,North Reception Room. 12:30.Dames Club Meeting. Ida Noyes. 2.Alpha Chi Theta. Cozy. Ida NoyesLibrary. 2:30.Triota Meeting. Ida Noyes AlumniRoom. 7:00.Anna Christie. Reynolds Club Thea¬tre. 8:30. are entering thp^ University for thefirst time may register in advance oron the first day of the Winter Quar.ter, Jan. 6.Students who register in advancemay pay their fees within three daysafter they have registered, and allfees are payable at the Bursar’s Of.fice by Jan. 6. Fees must be paid byFriday, Jan. 9. Students in the Collegemay pay their fees as soon as theyhave secured their class tickets.VouchersScholarship vouchers, for the schol-arships granted before Nov. 1, will beattached to the recipient’s registra¬tion card in the Bursar’s Office.Letters tothe EditorEditor,The Daily Maroon:I am the David Heller who does notwrite letters to the editor of the Ma¬roon. I view both the A.S.U. and theChicago Bears football team with con-siderable a^jathy and I have at themoment no pronunciamentos for myfollowing, if any.I do wish this sage from Centralia,Illinois, also named David Heller,would make it clear that he representsthe opinions of no David Hellers be¬sides himself and I do wish my erst¬while friends would talk to me again.Yours truly,David H. HellerZoology BuildingNow undetHtrmCream DeodorantsafelyStops Perspirationevening was a leg contest for thebrothers, who hoisted their raggrytrousers, stood behind a screen whichhid all but their shapely limbs, anda\4^ited the judging by “Legs” Mc¬Carthy and her committee.. .the win-nah was big Bill Oostenbrug, theprize being a frontline position in thechorus of the coming Mirror show.The Psi U's went offcampus Saturday.. .for a big party with Frank Evansat his South Shore home. “Just oneof those smooth gatherings” they say... Frank was with Carol Case . . .Dick Baker with Helen Pearce . . .Bob Bean and Beverly Smith... BillBarnard and Carol Mooney... GeorgeKrakowka with TeeTee Evans . . .Bob Meyer...Joe Van Albade and allthe rest. !■ Does ooc rot dresses or men’sshirts. Does not irritate skin.2. No waiting to dry. Can beused ri^t after shaving3. Instantly stops perspirationfor 1 to ) days. Removes odorfrom perspiration.4» A pure, white, greaseless,stainless vanishing cream.8. Arrid has been awarded theApproval Seal of the AmericanInstitute of Laundering forbeing harmless to fabrics.Anid is the LAROEST SEIXINODEODORANT. Try a Jar todaylARRID(ahoielO^aaaaOSjan)Get it atREADERSYour Campus Drug StoreWE DELIVERFree Campus Tel. #352property, bought with the great sacrifices of ourancestors.We, with our inheritance of chaos, shouldbetter understand the true meaning of freedom,equality, justice, and democracy. We shouldbe able to see that these ideals can live onlyfrom moment to moment. We should know thatthe great sacrifices of our predecessors, no mat¬ter how noble, cannot insure for us the perma¬nence of these values. When a people honor onlythe shiny symbols of values, and do not knowthe meaning of values, and do not realize thatthe battle for freedom, equality, justice, anddemocracy will be an eternal battle, these valuesare as perishable as snowflakes in early autumn.The genuine ideals in the American traditioncan live only in the hearts of a people able tounderstand them and ready to defend them. READSwedenborg"Swadenborg's message has meant so much to me. It has givencolor and reality and unity to my thought of the life to come; it hasexalted my ideas of love, truth and usefulness; it has been mystrongest incitement to overcome limitations. Swedenborg's 'DivineLove and Wisdom' is a fountain of life I am always happy to benear."HELEN KELLER“DIVINE LOVE AND WISDOM”lOc unabridgedat UniversitY and other bookstores.V oTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1941 Page Three'No A.E.F.' Rallies300 In Peace BlocTo Hear Krueger,Fey“Steps toward war are steps inthe dark”, rallied 300 University ofChicago students together in Rey¬nold’s Club lounge yesterday noon foran Armistice Day No-War Rally co¬operatively sponsored by Fellowshipof Reconciliation, University Social¬ist Club, and Youth CommitteeAgainst War.Speakers for the rally were May¬nard C. Kreuger of the University ofChicago Economics department andSocialist candidate for vice-presidencyin 1940, and Harold Fey, interna¬tional journalist, traveler, and as¬sociate editor of the Christian Cen¬tury.Chaired by Howard Spragg, re¬cently paroled from federal prison asa draft non-registrant and now atthe Chicago Theological Seminary,the rally was identified as “called bydemocrats who still believe thatAmerica’s best interests can best beserved by staying out of war.” Callsto y e s t e r d a y's non-interventionistmeeting bore the slogans “We SayNever Again! We Want Democracy,Not War.’’Fey, former executive secretary ofFellowship of Reconciliation, interna¬tional religious and humanitarianpacifist movement warned that “theonly way to stop war is to resist warresolutely.” He traced total war’sevolution and concluded that effectiveand large-sdale warfare today de¬mands a program of total conscrip¬tion. The Chicago journalist furthercited a statement by Mohandas Gan¬dhi, on a trip Fey made three yearsago to India, to the effect that de¬mocracy must go pacifist or lose dem¬ocratic identity.Kreuger, popular University pro¬fessor and frequent participant onthe University of Chicago RoundTable, detailed ten popular fallaciesin current American thought con¬cerning foreign policy.Greatest audience reaction was in¬curred by Krueger when he attackedthe common belief that this worldcrisis is produced by a European man¬iac. Invalidity in this thesis was tohim comparable to history’s “greatman” theory current during the earlynineteenth century and fostered byCarlyle. For the same reasons thatCarlyle analyzed the French Revolu¬tion in terms of “great men”, it iscomparably fallacious to liken JohnL. Lewis and the American labormovement or Hitler and the rise andgrowth of fascism.That the war’s outcome is depend¬ent upon the nature of the victors andthat while we won the war yet lostthe peace last time, but will win boththis time, Krueger labeled equaly er¬roneous by quoting Walter Lippmanof ten years ago that the nature ofwar determines the peace.His further premonition that Amer¬icans have rejected fascism, and holdour alternative to authoritarian orderas better tnan any others, was sup¬ported by a comparison of the militari¬zation of German and Americaneconomy which reveals only slightdifferentiation soon fading into in¬finity. Krueger’s concluding remarkstook the nature of a belligerent ap¬peal for a democratic dynamic.HutchinsonOnWorld AffairsWilliam T. Hutchinson will addressthe meeting of the Student Councilon World Citizenship tomorrow, at3:30 in Social Science 122.He will discuss the analogy betweenthe process of United States federa¬tion and world federation in the lightof United States history, centeringhis talk on the similar and differentproblems that must be faced in theprocess of world federation.Delegates to represent the Univer¬sity at the Intercolle^ate Conferenceon American Foreign Policy In aWorld At War will also be consideredat this meeting. Further details ofthe conference which will take placeat Beloit College on November 28 and29, will then be disclosed. The Student Publicity Board re¬quests all Freshmen and Sopho¬mores on the staflP to attend a meet¬ing in Mandel Hall Tower from2:30 to 4:30 today for assigpiments.Board members are reminded tobring the names of high schoolseniors and their activities.William Morgenstern• ^ ^ \ vS' JHowe, ShubartTake OverNew PositionsIn anticipation of increased activityin radio, the University is strength¬ening the personnel of its radio of¬fice, it was announced today.John P. Howe, Assistant to theVice-President, who has collaboratedon University radio policy for thelast four years, has been named exec¬utive secretary of the radio office inaddition to his other duties.Sherman H. Dryer, who directs theproduction of the U. of C. RoundTable and who supervised “The Hu¬man Adventure” and other Univer¬sity programs, is named Director ofProduction. The move will free Dryerfor greater concentration on produc¬tion, including development of newprograms.Harry E. Shubart, who temporarilydirected the press relations office whileWilliam V. Morgenstern conductedthe Alumni Foundation Fiftieth An¬niversary campaign, is being shiftyto the public relations^ office. He willbe an associate in charge of variousactivities in the office, in collaborationwith Mr. Howe. fFin PrizeByNamingNew ClubThe contest to name the new campusorganization for University peopleinterested in any and all sports be¬gins today. There will be a five dollarprize for whoever invents the winningname.Entries should be put in the boxoutside the Student Forum Office inLexington Hall. A contestant mayput down any number of names on aslip of paper, and must add his ownname, his address, and the approxi¬mate time when he put the slip in thebox. In case of a tie, the contestantwho got there first will win the fivedollars.The new sportsman’s club is forall students, faculty members, andemployees of the University and forall sports. It has incorporated the oldski club and yacht club, but the or¬ganization is also interested in hik¬ing, skating, bicycling, and horsebackriding. The committee in charge plansto have bicycles for rent on campusto supply a long-felt want, and torent equipment for skiing trips.ASU ConvenesTo Back CivilDefense Drive PulseTakesUpTrendBattle; Can FulfillStudent DesiresRicky Jacobson, co-editor of Pulse,has taken up the cudgels in the Pulse-Trend battle with the following state¬ment to the Maroon in regard to astory carried last week about Trend,HOWARD W. MORTTrendAllan Dreyfuss of “Trend,” theUniversity of Chicago’s new liter¬ary magazine, announced todaythat the deadline for student liter¬ary contributions is November 15. Taking cognisance of PresidentRoosevelt’s proclamation of Nov. 11 to16 as National Civilian Defense Week,the American Student Union hasscheduled an open meeting for today,at 3:30, in the Reynolds Club, on thesubject of “National Civilian DefenseWeek”.As announced in the dictum ofFiorello H. La Guardia, who is thechairman of the Office of Civilian De¬fense, the program for the seven dayscalls for Civilian health, volunteerdefense work, the improving of themilitary defense of the United States,and a renewal of faith in the basicfreedoms of the nation.A speaker from the Chicago Civilian Defense Committee, which hasbeen set up with Mayor Kelly aschairman, will address the meetingand explain the part the students canplay in civilian defense.Following the meeting, the localUnion will replace their temporaryexecutive committee with a permanently elected body. Tower TopicsPublishes ItsLast Issue“Tower Topics”, the popular littleorgan of the Reynold’s Club, CoffeeShop, Cloister Club, and HutchinsonCommons, has brought out its last is¬sue, Howard Mort, the sheet’s one-man staff, has announced.The press of duties, which havebeen extended since Mort’s appoint¬ment as director of the Alumni Foun¬dation, was given as the main reasonfor discontinuing publication. However,Mort expressed the hope that in “an¬other quarter or two” he would be in the new campus literary magazine:“At no time did the magazine. Pulse,make any official statement. Howeverat the request of James Burtle I didgive my personal opinion on the sit¬uation. 'This was that Pulse was thisyear trying to put into its pages thesort of material which the studentbody would read and write. We havenever felt that we were limited to anyparticular type of writing.“Very definitely I did say that if thestudents wanted to read the literaryefforts of their fellows Pulse can fillthat demand, and will. We feel thatPulse can enlarge itself even morethan it already has. Last year’s Pulseaveraged 24 pages. This year we havealready put out two issues of 32 pageseach. The magazine can easily includenews, fashions, gossip, humor, poetry,fiction, and criticism in addition tohaving pages of pictures.“The impression left by the Maroonstory that Pulse Editors could not bereached is patently untrue. My nameis in the student directory along withmy phone number. I was not called.“Furthermore at no time did Pulsesay that it was, or ever has been, aliterary magazine. This is an honorwhich we feel we do not deserve. Thatwe become a better magazine is how¬ever entirely and quite completely pos¬sible.”a position to resume “Tower Topics”.Since its first issue of 1933, thepaper, which is sponsored by theQuadrangles’ three restaurants andthe Reynold’s Club has become in¬creasingly important until in recentyears it has attained the position ofa complete cappus institution.OPERA HOUR“Daughter of the Regiment” willbe the second opera to be presentedby the Music department today at4:30 in the Reynolds Club lounge.Cecil Smith will analyze the plotand play excerpts on the piano.There is no charge for admission.Contrary to a report published inFriday’s Maroon, there is a definitetime limit for noontime rushingfunctions at fraternity houses. Ac¬cording to an announcement by theI-F Council, rushees must leaveluncheon functions by 2. Fraternitymen are also reminded that themen’s residence halls are out ofbounds for the remainder of therushing period.JUST PUBLISHEDMORTIMER J. ADLER—A DIALECTIC OF MORALS—$1.80"A distillation of actual arguments which President Hutchins and I have had withstudents in courses devoted to the reading of groat works in ethics and politics."John Gunther—Inside Latin America $3.50Clifton Fadiman—Reading We Liked.. 3.00E. B. White—A Subtreasury of American Humor 3.00Edna Ferber—Saratoga Trunk 2.50Thomas Wolfe—The Hills Beyond 2.50WOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St. Rental Library Open Eves. Have fun-be friendlyTreat yourself andothers to fresh-tastings Spearmint GumPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 12. 1941CHI PSI BEATS A D PHI "B"PhiPsi^ ChiPsi^ D.U.^A DPhi In Semi-Finals Red DevilsDefeated Meyer-Oakes WinsMedalln Cross CountryBy BILL TODDThe brothers of Chi Psi came, saw,and conquered a much favored AlphaDelt “B” seven yesterday 6 to 0,thereby putting a number of so-calledexperts in their rightful places, andmore important, reserving a place forthemselves in the touchball semi¬finals. In the games played Mondaybefore a gallery that divided its timebetween vain attempts at keepingwarm and lusty criticism of the of¬ficiating, three teams, namely the Al¬pha Delta, Phi Psis, and D.U.s, es¬tablished their right to participate inthe semi-finals. Results Monday wereas follows: Alpha Delt “A” 18, PhiGam 12; Ph Psi 18, D.U. “B” 12;D.U. “A” 7, Deke 0.Plagued by Kelly, Rassmussen, andSkinner, the usually potent AlphaDelt “B” machine was slowed to acrawl, and at times was even stoppeddead, by the lodge boys who wouldnot be denied. A lad named John Kellyfired passes to Chi Psi teammatesRassmussen and Skinner in a remark¬able fashion; so good was he in factthat he may get in the hair of and bequite annoying to the Chi Psi oppon¬ent in the very near semi-finals.Skinner PassesThe day’s only score came duringthe dying moments of the first periodwhen Chi Psi Skinner attached him¬self to a pass, skidded to the fifteenand let fly to teammate Rassmussenin the end zone, thereby salting thecontest away for his fraternity. “Cy”Allen threw picture-like passes allafternoon but his receivers showed adefinite tendency to let them skitterthrough their fingers to the ground.Kicking which hardly ever approachesthe phenomenal or spectacular in atouchball game did precisely that,with Bill Leach and John Kelly punt¬ing them in an almost professionalmanner.Phi Gams OutMost colorful and strenuouslyfought of Monday’s games was thatbetween the Alpha Delts and the PhiGams, a wide open exhibition boast¬ing of two powerful offenses and al¬so two impotent defenses. The initialAD Phi touchdown was the result ofa Wheeler to Smith aerial thrust,made possible by the interception ofa thwarted Phi Gam pass. For thesecond and third scores, Knohl col¬laborated with brothers Sawyier andHussum respectively.Led by voluble and irate Nick Par¬is!, the Phi Gams proved themselvesa noisy minority in objecting to a number of decisions by officials Lif-ton, Wagenberg, and Wally Hebert.Capitalizing on two D.U. “B” er¬rors, the Phi Psi team converted theminto touchdowns. The winners scoreswere made by Shaver, Cummins, andKremel, the latter on an interceptionof a stray pass. Daly engineered oneD.U. pass and Balia and Kemetickthe other.Boyes to McClureEarly in the game Boyes heaved anastounding pass that must have trav¬eled forty yards into the waiting armsof D.U. McL'lure, thereby setting upthe pins for the D.U. touchdown whichultimately proved the margin of vic¬tory over the Dekes. Mainstay of theunsuccessful DKE attack was shortBud Long who twisted, eluded, andsquirmed away from the heavier D.U.forwards. Earl Theimer did yeomanwork in deflecting D.U. passes, butin the end this was the deciding fac¬tor. Tully starred for the winners andFitzgeralds kicking was excellent.Soccer Team TiesBattling the strong Wheaton Col¬lege Soccer team to a 2-2 dead¬lock last Saturday, the Universityteam played its best after manydays of leisure due to the heavyrain that has more than saturatedthe campus.A crowd of 100 fans came outto Greenwood Field to watch thegame and saw a new star in theperson of Martin Weiner, whoplayed an excellent game, scoringa goal and keeping on the offensivethroughout the game.Meinstein, substantial insideright man, scored the other goalwith the support of the other for¬wards, mainly the English-Canad-ian, Duckworth, together withHyman and the fast, hard hitting3t. Louis importation, Ed Glik.Next Saturday the soccer teamtravels to the west side to tacklethe strong Morton Junior Collegeteam at 1:30. The University teamhas played them two times beforeind has defeated them both times.Iron Mask—(Continued from page one)ning, when she will be presented inthe floor show.Two bands will play for the dancewhich is to be the climaxing event of In two viciously fought footballgames yesterday at Stagg Field, theRed Devils were defeated by thethird place Gopher team in the mostsurprising upset of the season, whilethe Indians just nosed out the Duf¬fers by a last minute touchdown tobeat them 14-6.Duke Harlan of the Devils scoredmidway through the first half on a20 yard plunge into the end zone.John Stapler failed to convert. Im¬mediately the Red Devils scored twopoints on a safety when A1 Weinmantackled a Gopher in the end zone.A Different StoryGoing into the second half of thegame the Gophers started their vic¬tory march on a touchdown by TykiCoston who plunged over for theGopher first score. Fighting valiantlythe Gopher team brought the balldown the field time after time notgiving the Satan squad a moment ofrest. They succeeded in scoring thedeciding touchdown on a pass fromTyki Coston to Bob Murray in the endzone.One of the factors in the downfallof the Red Devil team is the absenceof halfback Bob Cummins, who stoodon the sidelines cheering his team onhopefully, not able to play because ofa broken thumb he received whileplaying touchball.Indians WinIn another exciting game, the In¬dians scored the fatal score in thelast minute of play on a reverse byTom Mahoney. Ned Munger dropkicked successfully. Bill Landry hadpreviously scored on a plunge fromthe 5 yard line in the first half. Thelone touchdow'n for the Duffer squadwas scored after Friedmann blockedan Indian punt, Frazier falling on itin the end zone for the score. Finalscore Indians 14, Duffers 6.Standings to date are as follows:Won Lost TieRed Devils 4 1 0Indians 2 1 1Gophers 2 2 0Duffers 1 3 0Owls 0 2 1the All-Campus Week-end. HarrySenne, recently engaged at the SouthShore Country Club, will play in theIda Noyes gym, and Marty Janci andhis rhythm band from New Orleanswill occupy the Cloister Club band¬stand.Victory Vanities has been indef¬initely postponed because of conflictswith the DA production and IntensiveRush Week. *C-book holders will receive a 20 centreduction in admission price by turn¬ing in their regular C-dance ticketsat the booth in Mandel which will beopen from 12:30 until 2:30 eachafternoon.Poll-(Continued from page one)“The University of Chicago bragsabout its status as a school superiorto other schools in learning. The stu¬dents attending this school are most¬ly dopes and misfits that don’t carefor any athletics because they thinkthey are of the smarter set (likeHutchins. What they really are is;‘They are Dull Tools.’) Also—the fewwho are trying to uphold the tradi¬tions of the past are getting no helpfrom any of the other organizationson campus. In fact the Maroon andPulse both are antagonistic eventhough they put on a good front attimes. What this school really needsis a ‘cleaning house’ campaign—kick¬ing out the editors of both the Maroonand Pulse, Hutch, etc. Most of all theMaroon should be knocked because ofits dumbness in sending sports writ¬ers to the different activities—menwho don’t know the score; Dopes whoneed direction on the way the dif¬ferent games are played, how to scorethem and to recognize also what teamis the home team. This is also meantfor writers concerning intramurals.”“The athletic situation here stinks,but this is still the best University inthe world.”“The athletic situation is way belowpar here and that is why there are so Competing against a field of over200 entrants in the Central A.A.U.Cross Country meet yesterday. Fresh¬man Meyer-Oakes, running unattach¬ed because of eligibility requirements,placed sixth with a time of 13.20. Win¬ning time for the 2 Vi mile seniorevent was 12:54. Other Maroon Har¬riers placing were Bud Tozer, twelfth,13:46; Bud Moran, sixteenth, 14:00;and Harry Roberts, twenty-fourth,14:48.Meyer-Oakes received a silver med¬al for his feat, while Tozer and Moraneach received bronze awards. Goldmedals were awarded for the first fiveplaces; silver, for the next five, andbronze for the next ten.The meet, which determined theCentral A.A.U. junior and seniorCross Country championships, washeld at Waveland golf course underthe sponsorship of the Chicago DailyTimes. The Senior event, 2V4 miles inlength, carried the contestants overMaroons Meet ArmourIn Six-Man GomesIntercollegiate competition in six-man football will be initiated on thequadrangles Friday. Armour Collegeof the Illinois Institute of Technologyhas a group of twenty-five men whoare schehduled to meet Maroon grid-ders on Stagg Field at 2:30 Friday.Jack Adelson of Armour, a grad¬uate of the University of Chicago,has been the main cog in bringingthe two schools together.Coach Kyle Anderson’s plans callfor two games to be played simultan¬eously. All four of the Maroon squadswill get a chance 'to compete. Thegames will be played on regulation80-yard fields and the quarters willbe ten minutes in length.many neurotics here. Build brains butdon’t forget the body.”Comments such as the above ap¬peared on almost all of the ballots.Discussion of the poll will be con¬tinued in tomorrow’s edition of theDaily Maroon. the bunkers, hills, sand traps, andgreens of the North Side course. Tomake it more difficult and excitingthe officials added two fixed barriers’30 inches high, to the natural haz’ards of the course.The meet was conducted by TimesAthletic Association officials under thedirection of James Vanderbosch, andJohn Murphy, Chicago Park Districtrecreation supervisors.Hundreds of Harrier fans crowdedthe pavilion of the club which over-looked most of the race course, towatch the race in spite of the almostfreezing weather.Mike Ralhje DefeatsRiefft Lawson in Foot¬ball Picks; Baum WinsMike Rathje, “guest expert” inPickin’ ’Em this past weekend, didquite well for herself. She piled up17 points to defeat former sports edi¬tor Bob Lawson and sports writerPhil Rieff who compiled 16 and 14points respectively. Werner Baumtook first place with a total of 26points.Rathje hit the Detroit-Marquettegame on the head when she predicteda score of 7-6. Lawson and Rieff bothpicked the Northwestern-lndianagame correctly, 20-14.Pitt-Fordham UpsetAll four crystal-gazers were stun¬ned by the Pittsburgh-Fordham up¬set and the Harvard-Army game.Baum hit the jackpot in the othereight games while Lawson missed onemore and Rathje and Rieff only pickedsix winners.In the private contest between the“experts,” this week’s score reads:Werner Baum 21, Bob Lawson 13 andPhil Rieff 11.Baum Takes I.ea4TBaum, by scoring his third con¬secutive victory, thus takes the lead inthe race in which he was trailing by16 points at one time. The total scoreto date: Baum 99, Lawson 91 andRieff 89.By virtue of his victory, Wernerwins a date with Rathje, most-date-able-girl-on-campus. Further develop¬ments on this are expected shortly.How About It?There will be a meeting Friday, November lUth, at 12:00 noon in theTrophy Room, Dartlett Gymnasium, of men interested in playing Ice Hockey.At that time we shall decide whether or not we shall have an informal varsityteam, intramural hockey or no hockey at all.Come prepared to indicate whether or not you will attend practicesregularly on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and whether you wouldprefer practice from j^:00 to 5:S0, 7:00 to 8:30, or 8:30 to 10:00. If youcannot attend the meeting but would like to play hockey, please leave wordat the Athletic Office before Friday noon indicating your preference of prac¬tice hour.For the information of new men on the campus our hockey is played ona small natural ice rink fifty feet wide. There is no possibility of a regularintercollegiate schedule. If we have an “Informal Varsity we will playIllinois Tech and some amateur clubs. Anyone in the university will beeligible.T. N. 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