Today*8 HeadlinesParties formulate platforms, page 1.University Woman, 1937, page 3.Fifty transfers pledge clubs, page 1.Reed on syphilis campaign, page 1.Change I-F rushing rules, page 1.The PrintedPageBy GEORGE STEINBRECKERGoliath, The March of Fascism; C. A.Borgese, The Viking Press, 1937Nothing has shaken the world inthe last few years as much as Fas¬cism and its step-son, Nazism. Therehas been much conjecture as to theorigin of Fascism and, roughly, twomain theories about it have arisen—that of the Marxians and that of theFreudians. The Marxians, developingfrom the ideas of economic determin¬ism, claim Fascism as the inevitabledying throes of capitalism. The Freu¬dians claim that in the characters ofauthor sets forth to give the intel-people. With this point in view, thethe Fascist leaders can be found thereasons for the existence of Fascism.With the ideas of the first of thesetheories, many citizens will havelittle truck; upon the latter, they lookwith curiosity. But neither, it wouldseem, explains enough.Now comes Mr. G. A. Borgese,who lived through the birth of Fas¬cism in Italy, functioned under it asa university professor and left thecountry under pressure when theFascist oath was demanded of him.Such a man, naturally enough, wouldnot look on the subject impartially.In any case, it is not an easy problemto meet without bias; either one isstrongly for, or against it. But theauthor of Goliath; The March of Fas¬cism argues his points fairly.Borgese claims that both theMarxist interpretation and the Freu¬dian analysis cover spheres too nar¬row to understand the nature of Fas¬cism. He maintains that Mussolini’salliance with capitalists was not thewhole explanation of the rise ofFascism, for if it were so, why havenot the elements of Fascism arisenfirst wherever capitalism has beenmost dangerously threatened Un theUnited States, or in England) ratherthan in Italy where capitalism wasweak? “No Hegel or Marx," Borgesestates, “has the key to Fascism, andno prophet ever had prophesized any¬thing like it. Fascism I'emains whatit is, an outburst of emotionalism andpseudo - intellectualism, thoroughlyirrational in its nature.”As for ti*e Freudians, he claims,they explain the behavior of the dic¬tators in sexual terms but avoid the(Continued on page 2)Rippy Lectureson Roosevelt andEuropean PeaceContinuing the Autumn QuarterIx'cture Series in the Social Sciences,J. Fred Rippy, professor of EconomicHistory will speak this afternoon at3:.30 in Social Science 122 on “Theo¬dore Roosevelt and the Peace of Eur¬ope."This lecture is the second of a'Ihursday series at which Rippy willspe»k on the United States and thepeace of Europe. Next week his sub¬ject will be “Woodrow Wilson andEuropean Feace,” and his last lec¬ture on November 4 will deal with“The So-Called Neutrality of theFranklin Roosevelt Administration.”The other lecture group is schedul¬ed for Tuesdays at 3:30 on “Prob¬lems of Education in a ChangingSociety.” Two lectures in this grouphave been given. The third will benext Tuesday when Professor ofEducation and Acting Dean of theCollege Aaron J. Brumbaugh willdiscuss “The College Curriculum.”Cap and Gown BeginsSale of 1937 EchoA limited supply of last year’sEcho, Timized running summary ofthe 1936-37 school year were put onsale for 20 cents starting yesterday.Copies can be purchased at the Uni¬versity Bookstore, the Informationoffice, or in front of Cobb hall.Cap and Gown, University year¬book, borrowed with permission theformat, style, and cuts from TimeIncorporated and turned it into a cam¬pus magazine. In spite of Echo’s joc¬ular style it contains a rather com¬plete survey of last year’s campusactivities which should be of interestto all but freshman, and possibly tothem as a prerequisite to campus life. tEk Bail? iHarcionVol. 38 No. 14 Z-149 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1937 Price 5 CentsI-F Council PlansPublicity Penaltiesfor Illegal RushingOld Measures Redefined;New Ones Formed InRevised System.Making publicity in the DailyMaroon an integral part of their pen¬alty system, the I-F council passednew' illegal rushing measures and re¬defined rushing in their meeting lastnight.The new penalties ai*e as follows:“For the first offense occurring be¬fore open rushing week the penaltyshall be publicity in the Daily Maroonas dictated by the InterfraternityCommittee.”“For the second offense occurringbefore open rushing week the penaltyshall be loss of the first day’s activi¬ties during said intensive rushingperiod and the ensuing publicity. Foreach suceeding offense the penaltyshall be loss of success days duringthat period and accompanying pub-lu-ity.”“Rushing is any di.scussion of fra¬ternities between freshmen andmembers of fraternities. Such dis¬cussion is legal only at fraternityhouses at specified times. Evenfriendly relations between freshmanand fraternity members off campusare illegal.”It was also agreed upon that allillegal rushing must be reportedwithin twenty-four hours and allprosecution must start forty-eighthours after the charge is made.The new definition of rushing ismerely to clarify the rules, but therushing penalties are softened tomake prosecution easier and allowthe fraternities to make chargeswithout laying themselves open todisapproval. The time limits are setto stop the “trading” of evidence be¬tween houses. No penalties have beenset up yet for illegal rushing duringthe intensive rush week, becau.se theCouncil has been unable to find aplan, which would be suitable.In addition, Rus.sell Baird, Chair¬man of the I-F Ball, told the mem¬bers of his research for the event.The Council decided, tentatively, tohold the Ball on the traditional date.Thanksgiving Eve, November 24, atthe Grand Ballroom of the PalmerHouse with Dick Juergen’s orches¬tra. Fratemity men will pay a maxi-mum of $2.75. Fifty Women StudentsPledge Campus ClubsConstituting the first pledge groupof the year, 50 students -with ad¬vanced University standing yesterdaypledged clubs. Leading in numberswere the Quadrangulars, who pledged9, followed by Achoth with 7.Ach’oth: Mary Carpenter, VirginiaLee Clay, Freda Jungenas, Alice Mc¬Farland, Betty Renstrom, RuthTupes, Edwina Meyers, Chi Rho Sig¬ma: Frances Brown, Margaret Car¬ter, Clara Falberg, Elizabeth Schiele;Delta Sigma: Katherine Johnston,Esther Larson, Marion Reutsch; Es¬oteric: Dorothy Behrensmeyer, MaryHanes; Mortar Board: Shirley Ad¬ams, Katherine Barnaby, MarionJernberg, Betty Newhall, DorothyOverlack, Mary Phenister.Phi Beta Delta: Batty Ahlquist, Pa¬tricia Gilmore, Edna Olson; Phi Del¬ta Upsilon: Dorothy Andrews, Bea¬trice Frear; Pi Delta Phi: ElinorBauchness, Katherine Brandt, EdithColver, Virginia Diedrich, Polly AnnLincoln, Cornelia Ruprecht, MarthaVan Gorkun. Quadrangler: Kather¬ine Bethke, Mary Dickey, Priscilla(Continued on page 3)JSF AnnouncesFirst DiscussionForming a medium for intellectualdiscussion and congeniality are theFiresides of the Jewish StudentFoundation, The Foundation will holdits first Fireside of this quarter to¬morrow evening at 8 in Ida Noyeslibrary.The main part of the meeting, opento all who are interested, will be de¬voted to a discussion of “The Parti¬tion of Palestine.” The proposeddivision of Palestine among theArabian British and Jewish peopleshas recently become a topic of‘inter¬est.The leaders will be Fred Karush,Midwest director of Avukah and Les¬ter Seligman, president of the Uni¬versity chapter. Exposition of thesubject will precede a general discus¬sion, following which refreshmentswill be served. The program wasplanned by the Fireside committeeunder the chairmanship of MurielLevin. Political Unionto DetermineMaroon SecuresThirty-five NewWriters for Staff Leaders MeetParty Platforms{Deadman, McEvoy HeadLiberals; Adopt Ideal ofSocial Reform.Thirty-five freshmen have assumedplaces on the Maroon staff. Of these,five have taken regular beats, theremainder assisting in the office orwriting stories as the opportunitypresents itself. All but two of thefreshmen have had experience inhigh school journalism, many havingbeen editors of their high schoolpublications.According to Betty Robbins, as¬sociate editor in charge of freshmen,they have produced competent workthus far. Following are the names ofthe new members: Vincent Burke,Dale Anderson, Charles Brown, Rob¬ert Cohen, Bill Hankla, John DeMott, Albert Moyer, Julius Kahn,David Fletcher, Irwin Biederman,Walter Rockier, James Lawson, Rob¬ert Sedlak, Charlotte Krevitsky, Mar¬jorie Kahn, Robert Snow, Jean An¬drus, Ernest Leiser, Marian Castle-man, Lorraine Lewis, Alice Carlson,Louise Snow, Marian Gracenick,Edith Davis, Pearl Rubins, Julia For¬rester, Sylvia Lang, Helen Linder,Margaret Rice, Edith McKee, Elean¬or Schwartz, Royal Wald, Bob Sabin,and Bill Rogers.Set Final Date forRhodes ApplicationsAll students who plan to apply forRhodes Scholarship should turn intheir applications, complete with sup¬porting documents, to R. V. Merrill,Cobb 314 by October 29. Merrill de¬clared that any man consideringcandidacy for the Scholarship fromIllinois should talk to him at once.So far, nine or ten men have come into discuss the matter, but have notfilled out applications.For the last three yeai’s one of thefour winners from this district hasbeen from the University. However,for five or six years previous to thatno Chicago student was selected.YWCA Settlement GroupHolds Tea in Ida NoyesThe Settlement Group of theYWCA invites all students interestedin the University Settlement to theSettlement tea to be given in theYWCA room of Ida Noyes hall thisafternoon at 3:80.Miss Marguerite Sylla and Miss M.McEnally, of the Settlement will dis¬cuss the conditions, the work beingdone, and the chances for Universitystudents to work there.Refreshments will be served afterthe discussion accoi’ding to MarjorieKuh, the head of the group. Reed Thinks Proposed Syphilis Testsfor Entering Students Not Worth Cost Formation of party policies andplans for campus-wide nominationand election campaigns began yes¬terday afternoon and Tuesday nightwhen party organizers for the Politi¬cal Union met for the first time. Inorder to complete prediminary draftsof party platforms, every group oforganizers will hold special sessionstoday and tomorrow.After a general organizing com¬mittee meeting this afternoon at 2:3.0in The Daily Maroon office, the Lib¬eral organizers will convene there at4:30 under the leadership of DennisMcEvoy, Emmett Deadman, and Sey¬mour Miller. Yesterday the Liberalswere able to adopt only the ideal ofsocial reform through normal, demo¬cratic activity, and the ideal of apositive attitude toward politicalchange to keep up with social andeconomic change, for their platform.Tomorrow afternoon at 12:46, theRadical organzers will wrangle overplatform policies in the cap and gownoffice. Since one or two absences atthe Radical meeting yesterday madeit impossible for every radical groupto be well represented, Frank Meyermoved that only business matters bediscussed, and controversial policiesbe held over for the special sessiontomorow. The Radical oi'ganizers pre¬sent did aver some sort of agree¬ment that their program would bebuilt about the policy of drasticchange in government.Henrietta Rybzynski, an unaffiliat¬ed radical, will serve as a whip alongwith Lloyd James and Bob Spear, itwas announced.At 5, the Conservatives will holdsession in the cap and gown office topass on a preliminary platform be¬ing drafted after the meeting Tues¬day night by Judd Allen. The right¬ist group will also complete plans fora nomination drive by which they in-j tend to secure 40 capable nominees' from which a select quota of 20 mayI be elected next month.The Conservative platform will,according to policies agreed upon atthe first meeting, center around amaintenance of the status quo, anenforcement of laissez faire, and anegative policy of government activi¬ties, with a decrease of tax-consum-! ing bureaus in America.Head of Health ServicjeSays Money Could BeBetter Used.“It will be impossible to test allincoming students for syphilis with¬out sacrificing some other part ofour budget,” was the reaction ofDudley B. Reed, director of the Uni¬versity health service, to a sugges¬tion to bring the campus into thepresent national drive upon venerealdiseases.Reed Approves CampaignReed went on to say, “I think thenatiovial campaign against syphilis isRenaissance Gallery Holds Exhibitof Federal Project Water ColorsDuring the month of October theRenaissance galleiy is showing, asits opening exhibit, a collection ofwater color reproductions of Ameri¬can folk objects. The exhibition pro¬vides an opportunity to see examplesof Americana and at the same timereveals the work of the Federal ArtProject of the WPA in Illinois.Fundamental AimThe Project has the fundamentalaim of recording a large body ofmaterial which will illustrate themany historic styles, cultural types,and regional aspects of Americanuseful design. In pursuing this aim anation-wide search is being made forobjects possessing both historicaland aesthetic value: such as cigar-store Indians, Punches, figureheads,slave pottery and household crafts,toys, old embroideries, and costumes.The artists on the Federal Art Pro¬ ject then make exact I'eproductionswhich are subsequently organizedinto classified portfolios and madeavailable to libraries, schools, anduniversities.The present exhibit at the Renais¬sance gallery provides a comprehen¬sive cross-section of this activity ofthe Federal Art Project. There arereproductions of bedspreads, grand¬father clocks, stoves, foot rests, bal¬cony rails, and embroideries. In manycases the original objects are shownside by side with the reproductions.Examples of Folk ArtEspecially impressive are three ex¬amples of 19th century Americanfolk art: a painting on velvet byJames Vail, a sculpture piece of theVii’gin Mary, and a metal footrestfrom an old shoeshine parlor onClark Street. a good thing, but I question the valueof wholesale tests by Student Healthin view of the other aid we would beforced to discontinue. Of the stu¬dents who come in to be examined forsyphilis, only a small minority areinfected. It would take about $2,250to test the average autumn class of1,600 students newly entering, and Ipoorer students, who are unexpect¬edly hospitalized.”Continuing, Dr. Reed asserted thatsyphilis can always be avoided bytaking necessary precautions. “Al¬though the disease can be contractedthrough such things as public drink¬ing cups, the usual case is infectionwould rather see the money used forthrough intercourse. However, doc¬tors and nurses sometimes get thedisease while handling patients. Thebest time for treatment is a day ortwo after syphilis has been con¬tracted.”At present the student health ser¬vice is testing students free ofcharge upon the request of the stu¬dent. The usual procedure is to giveboth the Wasserman and the Kahntests. These are both blood tests, butat present, the Kahn is believed to bethe more sensitive of the two. Dur¬ing the year approximately 100 stu¬dents request the exantination andless than ten per cent are found tohave syphilis. Forty Per Centof Faculty Joinin Hospital PlanEnrollment of faculty and non¬faculty employees of the Universityin the Plan for Hospital Care willhit the usual average of 35 to 40 percent of those eligible when the enroll¬ment period closes Friday (Oct. 22)at 5 according to Leslie Lane, incharge of enrollment.No more applicants will be receivedfor at least six months after thisdate. Group representative have beenappointed and will be notified to handin all applications before the dead¬line.Those enrolled are entitled to amaximum of 21 days of hospital careat a rate of $9.60 per year. Depen¬dents of employees are eligible formembership at reduced rates. TheUniversity allows payment of thefees through payroll deductions.Those enrolled can therefore makepayments on a monthly basis.Chapel UnionContrary to the announcement inWednesday’s Daily Maroon, theChapel Union supper-dance at IdaNoyes will be held at 6 Friday andnot at 7:30. Any student who hasfailed to receive a notice of the partyand wishes to attend is requested tosign up in the Chapel office. Avukah Meet; DirectorReads Convention ReportAt the opening meeting the Uni¬versity chapter of Avukah, nationalZionist organization, yesterday, FredKarush, midwest director, read a re¬port on the national convention heldthis summer in Liberty, New York.Main developments from the con¬clave is a change in organization.Hereafter, the chapters will be div¬ided into two groups: the active mem¬bers who will make a study of Jewishhistory, and the inactive memberswho will get their information frompamphlets.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21; 1937PLATFORM1. Increased University effort toward studentadjustment.2. Abolition of intercollegiate athletics.3. Establishment of Political Union.4. Revision of the College plan.5. A chastened Piesident6. Reform of Blackiriars.Athletics and the UniversityIntercollegiate athletics should be abolishedbecause the cost to the University is dispropor¬tionate to the number—148 last year—^whocompete. Gate receipts cover half the expensesof the department, but the expense of an intra¬mural program proposed bybe substantially less than half of the ^14o, 111appropriated for the department last year.But quite apart from this consideration,the University is not justified in competing inintercollegiate athletics in the more publicizedsports like football and basketball.A university should concern itself withthings intellectual. In deciding what has andwhat has not a legitimate place in a universitythis is the controlling consideration. The in¬tensity of football practice is such that duringthe fall quarter the football players stop goingto school in any more than a tuition payingsense. Some attend classes but few indeed keepup their studying. Football hardly cultivatesthe players' intellects.Physical exercise is justified in a universitythrough its contribution to health, a muchneeded accompaniment of intellectual activity.More imp<ni»nt perhaps is the contributionof athletics to the social assurance and ease ofcompetitors. Yet one can be healthy withoutexercise, and any form of co-opeprative enter¬prise leads to social poise. CurdsandWhey"... from the milk ofhuman kindness, I guess."By CODY PFANSTIEHLSUMMER’S ECHO, IILittle Marvin, the ten year old kid without a realhome, paid an unexpected visit Tuesday. I bumped in¬to him in the hallway of Lexington. He was lugginga cigar box, over which were stretched slices of innertube—his guitar. He had ridden street cars from theNorth Side.He politely sat while I typed out the remaining day’spublicity blurbs. Then we walked to the fraternityhouse for dinner. Just outside the door he stopped.“I’ll put on my best manners,” he said. And he did,assiduously, throughout a typical fraternity meal.Afterwards he played with the dog, showed off hisguitar, and read the funnies. Then we walked acrossthe Midway toward the Elevated. “Does the school bebigger than a block?” he asked.On the wind-swept expanse of the Midway, Iturned and pointed out the Billings lights, tangled inswaying trees, the dark, towering Chapel, and thegleams of International House. “That’s how long itis,” I said. “And there’s ever so much in there. May¬be you’ll know, someday.”He marveled, not at what the buildingfs stood for,but at their physical greatness. “Gee,” he said; “Gee,it’s big.”We turned, and continued across the gusty Midway.THIS WEEK’S QUOTE“. . . The Interfraternity Committee ... is depend¬ing this year, as always, upon the honesty of the fra¬Even this tenuous justification is denied theintenser, more professionalized college sportssuch as football, and to a lesser degree, basket¬ball. These team sports are of no value to thecompetitor after graduation, and leave onlymarks of bruises and enlarged hearts of maturelife.The University has recognized this.^ Itspresent program decreases the emphasis onteam sports in favor of intramurals and sportslike tennis. But the logical end of the argumentis not faced due to the inertia of the admini¬stration that last year decided the present set¬up should be maintained.But there is another incongruity in thepresent system. There is no reason why an ed¬ucational institution should engage in the busi¬ness of public entertainment, yet that is whatthe University does in its athletic program. Ab¬olition of admision fees would escape this ab¬surdity. But that would cost money, the love ofwhich President Hutchins has so berated. Yetthat lowly love, plus inertia, is distorting theUniversity’s athletic program.Vol 38 No. 14^atlg (MaroowFOUNDED IN 19*1Member Associated Oollegiate PressThe Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6831 University avenue. Telephones:Local 867, and Hyde Park 9221 and 9222.After 6:30 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 1920 Monterey Ave. Telephone Cedarcrest 8811.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon. All opinions in The DailyMaroon are student opinions, and are not necessarily the views ofthe University administration.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publicationof any material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates:18.00 a year; 84 by mail. Single copies; five cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1903, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.aspnassHTSD ron national AOvanTisiNO ayNational Advertisinf' S«*rvice, Inc.ColUt0 PuhUsherf. ’ntivt420 Madison AvE. i. . ork, N. Y.Chicaoo . Bostos • Lot Anc-ilcs - San FnanckcoBOARD OF CONTROLWILLIAM H, McNEILL Editor-in-chiefCHARLES E. HOY Business ManagerELROY D. GOLDING Managing EditorEDWARD C. FRITZ Associate EditorBETTY ROBBINS Associate EditorMARSHALL J. STONE Advertising ManagerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESLaura Bergquist Rex HortonMaxine Biesenthal Seymour MillerEmmett Deadman Adele RoseBUSINESS ASSOCIATESEdwin Bergman Howard GreenleeMax Freeman Alan JohnstoneBUSINESS ASSISTANTSDayton Caple Richey SimsRichard Glasser Mayer SternIrvin Rosen Harry ToppingNight Editor : William GrodyAssistant: Bette Harwich ternity men.”CORRECT MISTAKEBud Larson, publisher of the Cap and Gown, Stu¬dent Directory, and Student Handbook, has been re¬ceiving letters, bills, etc. from the Central Camera Com¬pany variously addressed to “The Cap and Crown,” TheCap and Town,” and, more pointedly, “The Cap andGoon.” He says once, though, they must have made amistake. Once they sent one to the “The Cap andGown.”LIFTED EYEBROWS DEPARTMENTThe Daily MaroonDear Sirs:We think it’s about time Clark Shaughnessy wasrecognized as the coach of the University football team.All the songs praise “Old Man” Stagg, and while wedo not intend to detract from the glory of his deeds,we think it only fair that the man who is coaching nowbe given some support.It would be a simple matter to change the words.For instance, in “C Stands for Cherished Courage,”it could be made to go “0 stands for Our Shag, thisGame’s in His Bag,” or something to that effect. Simi¬lar changes could be made in other Chicago songs, andwe think they are desirable changes.Yours truly,Bob Boyer '41BiU Hand '41Len Weigel ’41It TakesALL KINDS OF PEOPLEHiram is large, informal, friendly as a Yellowstonebear. For the better part of the evening he sits at alittered desk in his fraternity house, shoeless feet lying(among the books) hulk tipped back in a creakingchair, belt loosened, tie straggling, white shirt wrin¬kled, sleeves partly, sloppily rolled up. He readsbooks on mathematics, physics, chemistry, and, becauseit is his senior year and he found a few loose electivesavailable, a book on astronomy.Then at 10:30 after the Mitchell Tower chimes havetolled the end of the University day, he steps into slip¬pers and goes down to the living room and sprawls outon the couch.If you come in, h'e’ll smile all over his face, he’llsmile with oversized lips and big, chubby cheeks. He’snot fat, you see—just large.He’ll smile and say, “Hello, Joe. How’s everything?”and you know he really means it. Then maybe you’llpick up a few of the boys and go out for a beer, andHi will be in the center, shuffling along, tidied enoughfor a quick beer trip. After you’ve ordered you’ll goon talking—because you’ve been talking nice, friendlytalk all the way down—and pretty soon he’ll be draw¬ing a diagram on the tablecloth with a swizzle stick,and explaining why the earth only sees one side of themoon. Earnestly explaining it, and, by his earnest¬ness, taking you right along with him.He’s not a back slappepr—but he’s hearty. HiramKethcott is real, down-to-earth. Solid. That’s it, solid.She’s solid, too, just like him. Last year she movedto Davenport, but the two go on being solid, just likeone person. Of course they’ll marry when he gets a littleput by. You just know it to see them together. Noneof this sentimental stuff—^just genuine laughter—roundlaughter—and steadfast, mother-earth happiness. The Printed Page-(Continued from page 1)main question how and why thesemen have become dictators, entirely.The real solution, he maintains,lies in an understanding of the “fac¬ulty of the mind where men preservethe patterns of their imaginative ha¬bits, their shaping along lines ofhereditary education the myths oftheir individual and collective desires,and steering, whether they know itor not, their wills and destinies.”The roots of Fascism lie deeper,Borgese would argue, then the eco¬nomic and sexual frustrations of thelectual background of Fascism. Thefirst part of Goliath: The March ofFascism deals with this background,starting with Dante and his remotekingdoms, passing on to the popular¬ization of these ideals by Petrarch,and finally to their practise by Oladi Rienzo. There follows a chapteron the demonical Machiavelli, andfinally a discussion of the Risorgi-mento of the 19th century.The second part is a discussion ofhow modem Italians used and dis¬torted the ideas of the earlier Ital¬ians. Foremost of these, aside fromMussolini, is the poet Gabriel d’An-nunzio, whom Mr. Borgese roasts asan anti-social egotist. It is d’Annun-zio’s establishing of an independent'regency in Fiume which Borgese'thinks is the foundation for Musso¬lini’s imprisonment of all Italy.The third section of the book dealswith Mussolini, his background andhis ideas; the fourth, with Musso¬lini’s ideas in practice; and the fifthshows the terrible results of Fascismon the world today.University IncreasesRestaurant Prices\I~ ITo meet increased expenditures forlabor and food, prices at University,dormitories and restaurants have ‘been raised approximately three to Ifive per-cent this quarter. Recent Ill-jinois labor legislation stipulating an 8 {hour day, 6 days a week schedule forwomen made it necessary to add a-jbout 16 employees to the staff. Sal-jaries were not lowered.Previously, though working 48*hours a week, the maids were not inecessarily busy the same number of jhours each day. Now, they eitherwork in shifts or have time off in theafternoon.Higher food costs, especially thoseof meat, effected an increase in pricesat the University restaurants. Ribsof beef, for instance, are 33 cents apound this year, whereas they soldfor 23 cents last October. Milk is sixcents more a gallon. Approaching the subject of Fas.cism from the intellectual and emo¬tional elements of the Italian back¬ground, Borgese sets the ground fora better understanding of the politi-cal and social movements so ablyexpressed in other books on thesesubjects.Goliath: The March of Fascism iswritten by an alert and keen-wittedman. It lacks the ponderous sagacityof the average historian and israther an expression of a capableintellect with an acute knowledge ofthe subject. Borgese’s fine use ofirony and the neat turning of wordsmake lively his book.To those who wish to gain an ex-cellent understanding of the perilsand fallacies of Fascism, of itsevolvement, and of its effects, thisbook is heartily recommended.Daily Maroon readers interested inuniversity provincialism will be gladto know that the author of this bookis professor of Italian Literature onthe University campus.They DoCome BackYear After YearWatch forDetailsREXFORD'SClothes for Men28 E. Jackson Blvd.2ND FLOORand WIN1,000PHILIP MORRIS CIGARETTES-Last Week's Winner-GRAND PRIZE—1,000 Philip Morris CigarettasSTANLEY ZURAKON DEAN LIBBYOTHER WINNERSROBERT J. ULBRICKHERBERT LARSONBOB MAC DONALDGRAHAM FARBANK W. P. HOSKINSH. PINCHBUD lAMESTHIS WEEK'S PHILIP MORRIS SCORECAST IS ONChicago —vs.— OhioMinnesota —vs.— Notre DomeHAVE YOU ENTERED? — Write your scores, name, andaffiliation on the back of a Philip Morris wrapper cmd de¬posit inBallot Boxes Located inUniversity Bookstore — Coffee Shop — Ida Noyes Cloister ClubOR AT YOUR FRATERNITY HOUSES.CONTEST RULES POSTED AT AU ABOVE PLACESFINAL GROUP PRIZES TO FRATERNITY. CLUB AND OPEN HOUSE FORMOST BALLOTS DURING THE ENTIRE CONTESTNow on Display atUNIVERSITY BOOKSTORETHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1937 Page ThreeThe University Woman—1937Onique ConferenceOf Campus WomenOpens TomorrowIn a two-day session which openstomorrow at 3:30 in Ida Noyes, theBoard of Women’s Organizations willwelcome University students to aunique conference dedicated to theUniversity woman of 1937. First ofits kind at the University, the con¬ference will be similar to one held atPurdue University two years ago.Prominent Women LectureI pctures by prominent women andHiscussion periods will occupy thelarger part of the program arrangedfor the meeting. Mercedes Hurst,advertising manager of the Common-vrealth Edison company, will speakon Advertising instead of Marie Sul¬livan, as announced earlier in theweek. Miss Hurst, ex-president <ifthe Women’s Advertising Club, willlecture in the Ida Noires theatre at4 tomorrow afternoon.At 3:30 tomorrow the conferencewill be opened by Betty Barden, presi¬dent of BWO. She will introduceEsther Stamats, director of the Met¬ropolitan Service Department of theYWCA, and consultant in vocationalguidance. Her lecture will be, “Im¬portance of Vocational Choice.’’ Fol¬lowing Miss Hurst’s talk, Mary Ken¬nedy. personnel manager of the Har¬ris Trust and Savings Bank of Chi¬cago, will speak on personnel. Herdi.'^cussion, scheduled for 4:30 willconclude the Friday seminars.Open.s Saturday MeetingsMrs. Francis Murray, alumna ofthe University, will open the Satur¬day session. Dean of the GraduateTeachers’ College at Winnetka andan authority on teacher training inprogressive education, she will speakon “Education.”At 11 Helen Ross, member of thestaff of the Institute for Psychologyand consultant on the staff of theInstitute for Juvenile Research. Con¬cluding the formal section of the con¬ference will be a symposium on“Marriage and a Career,” withBlanche Carrier and Mrs. FranklinMcrriam participating. The sympo¬sium is scheduled for 2.As the capacity of the Ida Noyestheatre is approximately 200, womenwishing to attend the conference areurged to arrive early. Club Woman Looks at Oubs; Non-Oub WomanSays They Lack Originality in Dress, ThoughtNon-Club Girl CondemnsAnti-Intel lectuality,Conventionality.Today on theQuadranglesLECTURES“The Insull Utility Setup,” DeanHarry A. Bigelow. Law North at3:30. Small admission charge exceptto bar members.“The United States and the Peaceof Europe. Theodore Roosevelt andthe Peace of Europe”. Professor•lames Rippy Social Science 122, 3:30.Dr. W. D. Riddle. Joseph BondChapel, 12.MEETINGSCivil Service Joint Committeemeeting. Harvey’s restaurant, 12:30.“The Battle for the Merit System inthe Nation and the City.” LeonardWhite.SAA faculty and student reception.Ida Noyes theatre, 7:30. Dean Abbot,speaker.ASU open executive meeting. So¬cial Science, 107, 12:30. Anyone in¬terested in working should come.Camera Club 4:30. Reynolds Club,room 1).Christian Fellowship. YWCA roomat 7.Deitho. Alumnae room, Ida Noyeshall. 3:30 to 4:30. Tea served.Achoth. Ida Noyes, Room A, 3:30to 6.Social Science Administration club.Ida Noyes theatre and sun parlor,7:30, Refreshments.MISCELLANEOUS"PA Spanish class. 7 to 10.Student group supper. Ida Noyes,room B, 6:30 to 7.Settlement group tea. YWCA roomIda Noyes hall, 3:30 to 6:30.Phonograph concert. Social Scienceassembly hall. 12:30 to 1:16. Over¬ture to “The Flying Dutchman” byWagner, “Ein Heldenleben” by Rich¬ard Strauss. Club girls, in their enthusiasticrushing talks, sometimes overlooksome factors which make theclub system not so bright as it ispainted. Providing excellent socialcontacts, clubs often fail in someequally important matters.Granted that girls of the same typetend to group together; this cannotexplain away the almost completelack of individuality found amongclub girls. The sameness in dress isonly a fad, and might some day per¬form a valuable service in the wayof protective coloration, but samenessin thinking is something that shouldbe fought against strenuously today.Club Girls ConformIn a day where regimentation isbecoming the rule, the prospect ofgroups deliberately fostering thesame attitudes, deliberately trying tomake their members conform to themold which signifies social accept¬ability is frightening. Ability to getalong in a social group should bepromoted, but not at the expense offlexibility and individual expression.In a University which provides somany opportunities for a broad out¬look on life the club members seem toexploit the absolute minimum. Longhours spent on bridge and gossip inthe Coffee Shop can produce nothingprofitable in the way of personalityenrichment. A club girl is a raresight at concert or lecture, and con¬sequently bull sessions consist mainlyof boys, God, and what shall we doabout so-and-so who has no dates. Anon-intellectual attitude is not active¬ly fostered, but certainly the lack ofany outstanding scholastic attainmentamong the club groups and the factthat clubs do not even bother to ratethe scholastic standings of their mem¬bers indicates a fine contempt for in¬telligence.Cliquish and SnobbishThe most common accusationbrought against clubs is that they BWO ConferenceSpeakers DiscussMarriage, CareerBecause Blance Carrier and Mrs.Franklin Merriam, who are to ad¬dress the BWO conference, do not be¬lieve that the subject “marriage asa career, or marriage together with acareer” is a controversal subject inall of its aspects, they have arrangedtheir respective talks on the basis oftime. Miss Carrier will describe herviews on the ever present problemof whether or not the married wo¬man should work; while Mrs. Frank¬lin will discuss the practical prob¬lems confronting the married v’omanwho attempts both marriage and aa career outside the home.Having conducted a course in “Mar¬riage” on the Northwestern campusMiss Carrier is well acquainted withthe psychological aspects of marriage.“Although some universities do notfavor such courses because they areconsidered non-academic, Northwest¬ern is one of the universities whichbelieves in training its students forsuccessful lives.” About one-third ofMiss Carrier’s students seeking thistraining are masculine, and approxi¬mately one-half the group is engaged.Mrs. Franklin Merriam is one ofthe “mother-plus-a-career” women. Apsychiatriac social worker, she is af¬filiated with Northwestern throughher husband, who is in the depart¬ment of Religion.are cliquish and snobbish. The snob¬bishness is not so much a deliberateattempt to shun all other society; itis really caused by a supreme contentwith the inner circle and the corre¬sponding unconsciousness of the ex¬istence of anyone else. This unconsciousness of outside groups andevents leads to a typical conventionality and complacency that deadensany original thought that may dareto form.Muskingum College, University Joinin Memorial to William R. HarperThe University, which WilliamRainey Harper organized, and Mus¬kingum College, from which he grad¬uated at the age of fourteen, will jointoday in a Memorial EducationalConference to him at New Concord,Ohio. Making the pilgrimage to theOhio college, which is celebrating itscentennial, will be President RobertM. Hutchins; Dr. Harper’s widow,and his three sons.Several of the country’s leadingeducators, including Dr. George E.Vincent, once an associate of Presi¬dent Harper at the University, andlater President of the RockefellerFoundation; and Dr. Stephen P. Dug¬gan, Director of the Institute of In¬ternational Education, will partici¬pate in the conference.The two-story cabin in which Dr.Harper was born near the entranceto the campus, now owned by Mus¬kingum College, has been furnishedwith much of the original furnitureand will be dedicated this afternoon.The cabin, which wi’l become a per¬manent memorial to Dr. Harper, alsowill contain a set of all his writings,Harris Trust PersonnelManager Talks FridayOpening the possibilities of person¬nel work as a field for women, MaryA. Kennedy, personnel manager ofthe Harris Trust and Savings Bank,will speak at the Women’s Conferencein Ida Noyes theatre at 4:30 Friday.The conference is sponsored by theBoard of Women’s Organizations.Although many people associatepersonnel work with the routine ofhiring and firing only, Miss Kennedysays that one of the most fascinatingaspects of the work is its connectionwith the fields of employee relation¬ships within the industry, and of pub- including magazines he edited, suchas “The Biblical World,” “The He-braice,” “The Old Testament Stu¬dent” and “The Journal of Theology.”When William Rainey Harper en¬tered Muskingum College in 1866, hewas ten years old. He graduated in1870, and five years later •marriedElla Paul, daughter of PresidentDavid Paul of the College. Mrs. Har¬per, who lives on the Midway withher son, Samuel, professor at Chica¬go, will be an honored guest at thecentennial today. The three Harpersons, James, Samuel, and Paul, anda cousin, Clyde Harper, also willparticipate in the memorial.Club Pledges-(Continued from page 1)Hawley, Anne McDougal, Betsy Pen¬dleton, Catherine Shaw, Louise Snow,Betty Tracy, Betty Vincent.Sigma: Jean Fraine, Dorothy Hill,Eileen Lindley, Wyvern: BarbaraBeer, Mary Calnan, Jane Cruger,Ruth Parsons.Women receiving special deliverieslate should see Miss Foreen in Cobb203.AU MAKES and MODELS—TYPEWRITERSNEW ond USEDFOR SALE-RENT—EXCHANGE$19.50 and up. ALSO REPAIREDWOODWORTH’SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St Op«n EvnningiNear Kimboik Ave. Phone DOR. 4800 Find Girls’ Clubs FormLasting Friendships, andUnderstanding.With transfer rushing safely athing of the past and pledges well-guarded with pins, perhaps it mightbe wise to lean back, take a deepbreath and view this Club Situationa bit more objectively.The omnipresent question againrears its ugly head—do women’sclubs at Chicago perform any realfunction ?Liberal and Broadminded?We pat ourselves on the back andsmugly comment that we are somuch more liberal and broadmindedthan the average college sororities;that an interclub friendliness prevailswhich supersedes any one organiza¬tion, but the facts l^lie our words.The average club woman finds herclosest friendships within the club,her ideas on situations and peopleremain flavored by clubs and she be¬comes identified with the membersof her club for the remainder of herUniversity career.These are the things to be weighedin the balance in considering pledg¬ ing. For the student entering theUniversity, bewildered by a new so¬cial setup and a desire to know peo¬ple, the club can perform a very use¬ful function. The feeling that onebelongs to a grroup, that one is notan isolated atom in the social schemeis undoubtedly a soothing sensation.Cliques usually form, come whatmay, and the club system is more orless a magnified clique system inter¬ested possessively in the cultivationof its members.There is undoubtedly somethinglacking in the club setup—witnesstheir declining ranks and the inter¬nal dissatisfaction.Scarcity of MaterialWith the present scarcity of clubmaterial and the declining numbersof freshman women, it is inevitablethat at least two or three clubs willbe forced to drop from sight in thenear future and that those fortunateenough to survive will have to modifytheir programs in order to offer amore definite appear for the rushee.Perhaps no club woman can useeither logic or rhetoric to defend herviewpoint—in fact clubs are notunits of reason, but they must fillsome need to be able to exist.Honey in the bonilThe‘‘yello-Bole“ treatment—real honey in the bowl—gives thia pipe a “wetl-broken-in" taate immedi-mtely, AND impregnatea the briarwood thoroughly'a» you smoke, so its wonderful flavor ia preservedpermanently. Special attachment gives (1) auto¬matic free draft (2) double-action condensor.YELLO-BOLE»1Also "CARBURtTOII''"STEMBITCR". "IMPCRUI"VEIIO-BOIES, $1.25 a $1.50A very tmait girl was Etta .. • xWho Bhowed h«r judgment was bettei ^For Mojuda the choaeTo be the best hoseAnd the sevingi an income did net her.— tubtnicud by a wearer• We are giving a pair of Mo Jud SilkStockings each week to the prominent Uni¬versity of Chicago girl whose name ap¬pears in this column. Watch this columnfor next week's winner.89c 3 PAIR $2.55HAZEL HOFF1371 E. S5th ST.SEXWYNS S fcVlimaw FMiqTHE LAUGH HIT EVERYBODY LOVE81A isrr%Dne Aaa/vrrBROTHERRATby JOMli WHilCf JR. AW WHO f. WmttiMdffil—^ # A COLLEGE^6f^l^U6Hlr£p/ COMEDY“JUBILANT HIT—ROCO THEATER WITH LAUGHTER*' Dcdly NowsEVES. SSe te IX.7S MATS. Wa4. « Bm. 5S« to ilJS tm Im.ERLANGER127 N. Clark St Slot. 2461 NightlyIncluding StindoyMAX GORDON PresentsTHE WOMENA COMEDY BY CLARE BOOTHEStaged by Robert B. Sinclair—Settinga by Jo MielzinerCAST OF 40—ALL WOMEN'SMART* TUNNY'Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1937DAILY MAROON SPORTSHarriers MeetLoyola; CourseLaid In ParkThree MileR u n n er sTomorrow. Grind Forin ContestIn spite of the cold, drizzling rain,and other unfavorable weather condi¬tions of this week, several of the Ma¬roon harriers dug their toes into theslushy surface of the Stagg Fieldtrack in their final week of prepara¬tion for the coming meet with Loyolatomorrow.Although the short amount of prac¬tice may slow down the pace of thethin-clads, there will be plenty of ex¬citement for cross-country fans asthe trackmen dash over the serpent¬like, three-mile course through Wash¬ington Park at four.Both teams have worked out forthe past three weeks, and in thisshort period of time have tried tocondition themselves for a tln-re milegrind usually requiring from six toeight weeks of preparation. For thisreason many of the men on bothsquads will not be in very good con¬dition.Some of the tracksters have evadedthe handicap of a short training pe¬riod by doing some running duringthe summer. Due to this extra amountof training Ken Sponsel and ChesterPowell, two Maroon sophomores,seem to be in the best conditionamong the Chicago athletes, and willprobably carry the bulk of the Mid¬way’s hopes.Other men from among the remain¬ing members of the Maroon squadwill be picked are: A1 McClimon andFred Linden, sophomores; Herschel,Brutus Reitman, Chester McElroy,Bob Merriam, Gordon Watts, JackWebster, and Jack Bonniwell, most ofwhom are experienced harriers.The race will end in WashingtonPark near the end of 57th Street,onlookers at this point will be able tosee the runners as they wind theirway over the course. Stomach Pills Are No Substitute,Says Hoffer; Recommends Exercise“They say that they’ll take stom¬ach pills when they get out of theUniversity. They don’t mind thatprospect as much as the alternate oneof exercising. The trouble is thatthey still remember the exercise theyhad thrown at them in high schoolcalisthenics and all that kind ofthing. What they don’t realize is thatkeeping fit is fun here, that it isn’twork but rather that it is play.’’ Tosuch heights did Gymnastics CoachDaniel Hoffer reach in expoundingthe “why’’ of exercising.Value of BasketballThere was more. “Playing basket¬ball for half an hour is about theequivalent to a short hike. It’s betterto get other kinds of exercise too.We have all kinds of apparatus here—pulley weights, flying rings, hori¬zontal bars, climbing ropes, tumblingmats—those are just a few. And it’sfun using them, not work, none ofthis one, two, three, return stuff.”In effect, says Hoffer, they laughwhen they walk by the gym but inlater years they wish that they had¬n’t.“Swimming gives you a chance torelax, to quiet down and to exercisewithout putting too much of a strainBy DAVE MAR'ONthat you never knew you had”. Thusbegins Swimming Coach McGillivrayas he prepares for an impromptulecture on the “right kind of exer¬cise.” Emphasized is the fact thatswimming affords relaxation, thatgraduate students and doctors comeregularly to the pool to splash aboutand forget their worries.Boxing and Wrestling“If a man will come down herejust a few times a week and workout for an hour I can teach him howto defend himself well within twomonths. If he’s of tournament calibre,if he has what it takes, I can havehim ready for inter-college competi¬tion in three months, even if he hashad not former experience.” CoachSpyros Vorres, boxing and wrestlinginstructor, is sure that it can be done.He has done it. Boxing gives you tim¬ing, balance, teaches you to “takecare of yourself.’’Bartlett gymnasium is large. Thereis room there, if necessary for theentire student body. Exercising,knowing how to do your best work,the coaches agree, is no extraneous,unnecessary thing but an essentialon your heart. It exercises muscles part of a complete educationFrosh GriddersA re Good, Say Coaches,Yearliny Squad Boasts Many StarsNational GroupPresents RifleClub EquipmentThe outlook for the coming yearof the University Rifle and PistolClub was brightened with the recentannouncement from the director ofcivilian marksmanship of the theNational Rifle Association that hisorganization has alloted guns, am¬munition, and targets to the Uni¬versity.The association will give the Ma¬roon gunmen 20,000 rounds of .22caliber and 5,500 round of .30’06caliber ammunition. The ammunitiongranted has a total retail value of$250.In addition two .22 caliber and two.30’06 caliber army rifles accompan-ied by a large allotment of targetshave also been granted.This year’s officers expect the clubto surpass last year’s number ofmembers which reached a peak of 120students.The range hours box this quarterare: pistol—Monday and Wednesday,3:30 to 6:00; and Thursday, 7:00 to9:30. Riffle—Tuesday, 3:30 to 6:00;Thursday, 3:30 to 6:00, and 7:00 to9:30; Friday, 3:30 to 6:00; and Sat¬urday, 9:00 to 12:00. Although the varsity has yet towin a game this season, Chicagoboasts the finest group of freshmangridders that have reported in thepast three or four years. Head Fresh¬man Coach Nels Norgren states, “Wehave plenty of high class materialwhich should blossom into a gang ofreal football players.”A squad of thirty first year menhas been reporting regularly forpractice conducted by Norgren, ex-AU American, Jay Berwanger, DukeSkoning and Spyros Vorres.Several of the yearlings were out¬standing men in prep football andcome to Chicago highly rated. Amongthem is Dave Wiedemann, range All-City end and Howard Hawkins, atransfer student from MichiganState, who plays a strong defensivegame at end. The guard posts areably handled by Jim Lineberger, All-Shaughnessy AltersFirst-String LineupCLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Brand new Auction BoughtMen’s suits, overcoats. $12.50 up. Buy,sell, exchange, men’s used clothing. Tai¬lor Shop, 622.5 Cottage Grove.WANTED—Lecture n otes for anthropology201 from good student. Call Monroe 1030week evenings. A juggled Maroon lineup appearedon the practice field yesterday after¬noon with Coach Shaughnessy mak¬ing alterations in both the line andbackfield. Anderson, reserve guard,was shifted to a first string spot,Kelley was moved from guard totackle, and Johnson was dropped tothe second team.Hamity, Valorz, Sherman, andLets formed the backfield with Good-stein performing with the reserves.Sherman suffered a minor ankle in¬jury during a scrimmage against thefreshman yesterday.Captain Bob Fitzgerald refrainedfrom contact work because of a dam¬aged hip garnered in the Princetonbattle and Jack Getman worked theend post. Coast performer from California;George Maggos, All-City candidatefrom Austin High school; and WalterMaurovich, who sacrificed a four yearscholarship at the University ofWashington in order to study anddemonstrate his athletic prowess forChicago. A polished center is power¬ful Jack Plunkett who was awardedAll-State honors in Montana.In the backfield. Bill Kimball ofCleveland has proven aggressive andat all times alert. Bob McNamee,who is playing organized football forhis first time, is both shifty and fleetof foot and has scampered throughthe varsity defense during many.scrimmages. Wally Ottemeyer ofParker High and George Crandell ofHirsch High both show promise asball-carrying backs.Other players who have attractedthe attention of the coaches are Les¬ter Rice and Don Wilson, tackles;John Tanner, end; John Keller,guard; and backs, Otto Snarr, BobJampolis and Bob Smitter.At present the frosh are runningBuckeye plays against the varsity.Using Princeton formations lastweek, Norgren’s boys proved effectivewith razzle dazzle lateral passes.Berwanger has worked with the sec¬ondary men and has molded a hard-running backfield.Chicago rules do not permit fresh¬man men to participate in inter-col¬legiate athletics so their training isconfined to varsity competition. How¬ever, they are eligible for freshmannumerals at the end of the season.Professor Speaks toLeague of Women Voters Alpha Delta PhiScores Record WinPhi U ‘B*, Beta Are VictorsIn I-M Touchball GamesYesterday.Stamping itself as a definite threatin the Intramural touchball tourney,Alpha Delta Phi’s speed/, fast-pass¬ing squad ran raughshod over KappaSigma to ring up its second leaguevictory, a 40-to-0 win, in the out¬standing game of the day yesterdayafternoon at Greenwood field.With Runyan’s shifty runs andtricky passwork paving the way for26 of the victor’s points, the AlphaDelts had little trouble subduing theiropponents, grabbing the lead on theopening kickoff when Runyan ran theball back almost the entire length ofthe field, finally tossing a short passto Busby.Today’s GamesDormitory League3:00Judson 300 vs. Burton 700Burton 500 vs. Snell. 4:00Hitchcock vs. Burton 600Judson 400 vs. Burton 500Jacob Viner, professor of Econom¬ics, will address the Hyde ParkLeague of Women Voters 'on the“State of the Federal Finances” nextMonday. The meeting is scheduledfor 2:30 at the First UnitarianChurch House, 57th street and Wood-lawn avenue, and will be followed bytea. •USED BOOKSSave 30 per cent to SO per centWILCOX & FOLLETT COMPANY1247 S. Wabash Ave., 1st Floor Cal. 4580 Lytle and Cassels al.*^ starred forthe winners, the former tallying 19markers.In other Alpha league games thePhi U. “B” aggregation finished withan 18 to 0 margin over the Phi Kap¬pa Sigs. MacLellan, Douglas and Hor-tey scored touchdowns, with Claxmantaking a part in all of the scores.The Beta “B” .squad defeated PiLambda Phi, 18 to 12, in the loneBeta league tussle. However, thegame will be replayed for severalBeta “A” players were in the victor'slineup and although the arrangementhad previously been agreed upon byboth teams, the Beta’s offer to replaythe match was accepted by Pi Lamb¬da Phi.Even Captain HasTo Fight for PostOn Fencing Squad“Herb Strauss,” says FencingCoach Alvar Hermanson, “has a goodchance of being on the fencing team.”Strauss has been fencing for sevenyears, has spent three of those yearsfencing at the University, will nowhave to fight for a place on his team—he is the Captain. This is becauseof the fact that competition for teamplaces will this year be held on astraight elimination basis, that manya good foil, sabre and epee man hasan eye on one of the seven squadpositions.“But there is yet time,” said Her¬manson, “and anyone that wants tolearn fencing, to compete for a posi¬tion, should come out. Every manhas a chance.”To hold the eliminations on aregular tournament basis is the plan.If possible Hermanson plans to havesome neutral observer present tojudge the contest. Swimming PracticeIn Shifts; ConductMock Tilts WeeklyUnder the direction of Coach E. W.McGillivray, and Captbin Bob An.derson, swimming team members arenow practicing in shifts. The purposeof this system is to grant the splash¬ers a maximum amount of practicein the least time.On Monday nights the crawl .swim¬mers practice first, with the breaststrokers and back strokers cominjjlast. On Wednesday evenings thebreast strokers have the pool, whileon Fridays the back strokers arefavored.“Every Friday night is meetnight,” stated Coach McGillivray.“One week the crawl swimmers willhold a mock tilt, the next the breaststrokers will compete against eachother.”The lineup for the splash squadleans a bit tow’ard the heavier side.Honors on the weight list go to JoeFerguson at 198 pounds, with DickFerguson a near second at 193.Campus Florist1233 E. 55th near KimbarkFlowers Say it with . . .Fragrance and BeautySo Do WeEXPERT DESIGNINGCorsages 75c & UpDeliveredPhoneHyde Park 9414HALF A BLOCKFROM THE DORMSWALDROM'S61ST AND ELLIS DOR. 10046YOUR CAR SERVICED DURINGCLASSComplete Washing, Tire,Battery, and Lubrication ServiceSTANDARD OIL SERVICESPECIAL INTENSIVESHORTHANDlot COLLEGE UNDERGRADUATESStarts October 1. January 1,April I. July 1.Arranged eapecialiy for the higher in¬telligence of the college graduate andundergraduate.Regular day and evening riaasea atarievery Monday.THE GREGG COLLEGEHOME OF GREGG SHORTHAND6. N. Michiqan Avonuo. Chlcaqo"352"YES! — THAT'S THE NUMBER OF READER'S—DIRECT—FREEU. OF C. TELEPHONE EXTENSION ... OR JUST ASK FORREADER'SPROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE 7 A. M. to 12 P. M.YOUR NAME WILL BE IN IT—IFYOU WERE HERE LAST YEAR. IFYOU ARE NEW ON CAMPUSYOU OUGHT TO KNOW WHATHAPPENED. Feature Section of 1937 Cap & GownECHOLIMITED NUMBER ON SALE20e YOU CAN BUY IT FROM:UNIVERSITY BOOK STOREINFORMATION DESKTAILOR TOM (Cobb Hall)CAP AND GOWN OFFICE