U.S. WeatherReportPartly cloudyand warmerVol. 41, No. 9 Z-149 the UoiLc! HlQ/ioonTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1941 Ida Noyes TeaThursdayPrice Three CentsReconsider Action OnPulse Liquor AdsPulse magazine won a reconsidera¬tion yesterday of Assistant Dean Wil¬liam Scott’s request that no liquor ad¬vertisements be carried in studentpublications. In his letter to that mag¬azine Scott said, “...the Universitywill not tolerate advertisements in any.student publication of any alcoholicbeverage stronger than beer.”Claiming that contracts had alreadybeen signed, that no protest was madeupon presentation of the contracts tobe approved by the dean, Jacobson andTurovlin, Pulse editors, asked Scottto reconsider his decision.Scott, in his letter, claims that suchadvertisements are “contrary to estab¬lished University Policy.” In a tele¬phone conversation with Jacobson heclarified his statement to mean thatthe word liquor must not be used.Pulse claims that stores which mayonly advertise beer, may carry theword liquor in their name.Hampers Independence“Such a ruling definitely does ham¬per our independence and it is a def¬inite reflection on our own ability toremain in good taste,” Jacobson said.“In addition, the main objection to theword liquor being used in student pub¬lications seems to stem from parentalobjection. It seems to us unnecessaryto take this action until there havebeen such complaints.”Liquor Ads RefusedIn the past few years both Pulseand the Maroon have refused bigliquor ads from manufacturers ontheir own volition. Ads have beencarried from local taverns and liquorstores regularly. When this waspointed out to Scott, he quickly agreedto a reconsideration of the details andasked both publications to submit areport on the number of these adswhich have appeared in the last fewyears. The restriction will be recon¬sidered by Scott, Brumbaugh, andRandall. Wayne Boutell..."Flying Maroon."Airmen OnCampusEnrollmentDecrease CutsNYA AllotmentThe government allotment forN.Y.A. work has been cut down sincelast year, due to a smaller studentenrollment. Last year the budget pro¬vided for 430 workers, this year only322, although there have been 634 re¬quests for such workers from the fac¬ulty.Besides the 322 workers under theN.Y.A. budget itself, 30 more can betaken care of by a special social se¬curity project under Dr. Magnus. Thiswork will consist chiefly of interview¬ing.Students working for the N.Y.A.can still make about $15 a month, butthe regulations regarding time dis¬tribution of earning power have beenchanged. Previously the studentworked in a three-month cycle, andwhat he could not earn in the firstmonth he could make up in the secondtwo months. Now the student getsonly what he can make each month. “The Flying Maroons,” the air cadetsquadron made up of University men,will pay a last visit to campus tonightbefore going to Pensacola to completetheir training. The Institute of Mili¬tary students will play host to the 39men in the service at dinner, dancing,and general recreation in Ida Noyes.Campus beauties are being draftedto make the flyers’ last moments onthe Quadrangles memorable ones. Themen are one of the two “named”squadrons in Chicago, and one of themany made up from University menall over the country. Wayne Boutellis one of the most recent recruits tothe squad.Train Men ForDefense JobsIn New CourseCall "C"Books InThe sale of social “C” books endsFriday. All money and books mustbe turned in by Friday evening.Charley Cox, most popular orches¬tra of last year, will play at theFriday dance. To train men for defense industriesand to prepare them for positionsleading to supervisory responsibilities,a newly-created course. BusinessTraining for Defense, was startedMonday by the Business School in co¬operation with the United States Of¬fice of Education.An intensive 10-week program inproduction supervision provides 375class hours of instruction. There willbe 50 lecture hours on personnel prob¬lems, 50 hours on production control,50 hours on problems of procurement,50 on accounting, and 25 on organiza¬tion. In addition to the lectures, stu¬dents will spend two and a half hoursa day in discussion sections.Similar to the Quartermaster Sup¬ply course offered here in 1917-18, ithas one big dissimilarity. Whereasthe first course was for enlisted men,this one is designed to fit men forprivate industry. The defense pro¬gram has created a big demand forjunior supervisors and foremen whichindustry is unable to fill.Help SupplyTo help supply these men the En¬gineering, Science, and ManagementDefense Training Committee was setup by the government with about ninemillion dollars to pass out to variousschools. The engineering schools re¬ceived most of the appropriations.The course offered by the Univer¬sity is the only full-time, five-day-a-week course of its kind being offered.Most of the management courses arebeing given as part of the night- Civil Aeronautical AuthorityAbandons Course At UniversityU.S. Can’t Cure20% RejecteesPresident Roosevelt’s proposal tocure at government expense drafteesrejected for physical defects will reha¬bilitate for army duty only about 10per cent of the 1,000,000 deferred reg¬istrants, Dr. Dudley Reed, director ofstudent health, said yesterday.FDR Says 20%Mr. Roosevelt had estimated at apress conference last week that theplan would “salvage” approximately20 per cent, or 200,000 men, who wererejected for remediable defects. Hesaid the plan might be set into opera¬tion in January.“I’m only making a guess,” Reedsaid, “but I doubt if more than 10per cent of those rejected would bemade eligible by rehabilitation unlessthe army changes its physical re¬quirement standards.”Unacceptable“It is obvious that men sufferingfrom faulty vision and hearing wouldbe unacceptable for active duty underthe present standards,” he said.Of course, if the army toleratedsuch things as hearing appliances,thousands of additional men would beavailable for active duty, he pointedout. Reed listed defects of the eye,ear, spine and teeth as difficult toovercome. He said men suffering fromhernia or infected tonsils could mostsuccessfully be rehabilitated.Such diseases as tuberculosis areoften curable in time, but with thegovernment footing the hospital bills,it would hardly be practical for thearmy to waste time and money on any¬thing but simpler cases, Reed con¬cluded. Walter Bartky...stellar fellerBegin D.A.Try OutsThe first try-outs for freshmen andtransfers to work in the next Dra¬matic Association play, “The Mer-Club Theatre at 3:30. All newcomerschant of Venice”, will be held tomor¬row and Friday in the Reynolds Clubare requested to come tomorrow after¬noon to receive a number and theywill be called either that day or thenext.William Randall is directing “TheMerchant of Venice”, which opens De¬cember 9, and asks for a good turnout from the class of ’45 because thisplay will house the largest cast DAhas assembled in many years. Theproduction will be in “the good oldShakesperian style”, Randall said. After turning out more than 160first-rate pilots in five quarters bymeans of the Civil Aeronautics Au-ority course here, the Government hasdecided to abandon the course on thiscampus.Walter Bartky, of the Physics De¬partment, coordinator of the course atChicago, announced yesterday to theMaroon, that the Government, throughthe CAA, had decided not to renewfunds for the course this quarter, aspart of an extensive plan to transferemphasis from civilian training to de¬fense training.The course has been discontinued atfive other institutions in this area, butthe CAA is still offering training atNorthwestern and Wright Junior Col¬lege, and according to Bartky, someformer Chicago flying aspirants havetransferred their flight training there.Good FacilitiesThe University boasted unusuallyfine facilities, which included LansingAirport, 13 planes, and the servicesof the Physics department, underBartky. Nominal fees and insurancetotalled only $12.00 and thus thecourse was within reach of almostevery student desirous of pilot instruc¬tion. Although the course was opento anyone with the necessary educa¬tion and physical requirements, thegroup enrolled in the course was madeup predominantly of Chicago students.When questioned about the Univer¬sity’s stand on the question, Bartkysaid, “We would have continued thecourse if the government had madethe funds available but our action de¬pends on the action of the govern¬ment.' We were simply supplyingtraining at the Government’s expense,about $1,150.00 a semester, and wehappened to be among the group cutout of the CAA picture.”Fine JobAsked what he thought of the cur¬tailment of the course at the Univer¬sity, one student who had taken thesecondary section last year, said, “It’stoo bad. The University, and Mr.Bartky and the Physics departmentin particular, were doing a fine job,but in view of the transfer of em¬phasis, it’s still an understandablemove on the part of the Governmentand the CAA.”Time College Poll ShowsMaroon Policy. ConsistentThe Daily Maroon is almost theonly paper of the twelve leading col¬lege dailies, that has not changed itsstand on the war since last year, ac¬cording to the survey of college opin¬ion as measured in undergraduatepublications in this week’s issue ofTime. Out of twelve college papersquoted in Time that now have an in¬terventionist editorial policy, only theMaroon was interventionist last year.The Maroon, once known as “Pres¬ident Hutchins’ personal organ”, byhis own statement, has, since lastyear taken issue with him on hisstand that Americans are not yet suf¬ficiently wise and experienced in theirown democracy to be able to savedemocracy for others by entering thewar.Of the other publications, even theextreme rightist Big Three haveturned to interventionism this year.In the Princetonian poll this fall, 82per cent of the freshman class wereready to fight overseas, as against 33per cent last year, 89 per cent thoughtbeating Hitler was more importantschool program or some other part-time arrangement.Of the 1400 inquiries received bythe University in connection with thecourse, 120 students were finally ad¬mitted. than keeping peace at home, and 36per cent wanted to go to war immed¬iately.Completely IsolationistThe Harvard Crimson, once com¬pletely isolationist, is now a heartysupporter of Roosevelt’s foreign pol¬icy, and the Yale News, although stillisolationist under chairman WilliamFord, a hold-over from last year, willchange its policy in January with theadvent of new chairman Sterling Tom¬kins Jr., an ardent interventionist.Cornell, which last year sent a dum¬my ta!nk to Washington inscribed,“Dear President Roosevelt—keepAmerica out of war”, declared in theSun this week, “When shall we de¬clare war? . . . We should stand readyto accept the advice the Presidentand his small circle of advisers as tothe hour in which we must cast offthe last vestige of wishful isolation¬ism.”The Stanford Daily, which was forisolation last year, now declares, “Wehave picked our side of the fence. Wethink the menace can best be eradi¬cated by following the policies of thepresent administration,” and con¬demned alumnus Herbert Hoover’squeasy faculty poll on foreign policy.Board VotesThe Northwestern’s editorial board,once pacifist and isolationist, voted last week, for intervention—26, andfor isolation—1. At the University ofMissouri, the undergraduates held aWar Dance, and the editor of theStudent stated, “We must tip ourweight to the British side of thescales. Perhaps this will mean warparticipation.”The Iowan, which declared last yearthat war was not inevitable for theUnited States, took a stand this fallfor the defense of the Americas, “andif it draws us into war upon the seas,then war it shall be.” The Universityof Kansas and the University of Min¬nesota, both isolationist last year, inthe Kansan and the Daily this fallhave also declared for intervention.To increase understanding of thewomen’s clubs on campus, theMaroon is planning to run a surveyof these clubs, their members andtheir activities. Beginning nextTuesday, a daily column will ap¬pear each day devoted to one of thefourteen clubs which will be pre¬sented in alphabetical order.Cooperation of Interclub headVirginia Allen has been asked, andbefore the end of this week, each ofthe club presidents will be contact¬ed. A similar series of featurearticles has been an annual under¬taking for the Maroon.THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1941Page Two'The Oailci lfla/u>onFOUNDED IN 1902The 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:Hyde Park 9222. ...After 6 :S0 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 llie Daily Maroon.ITie Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publication ofany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates: $3 a year I$4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the iiost officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March S, 1879,MemberC^ssocioied Gc)Ile6iale PressDittribulor ofGollebiote DigestBOARD OP CONTROLEditorialJAMES BURTLE RICHARD PHILBRICK, ChairmanRICHARD HIMMEL ROBERT REYNOLDSBUSINESSCHESTER SMITH, business managerRICHARD BOLKS, advertising managerEDITORIAL ASSOCIATESRobert Lawson, Nancy Lesser, Beata Mueller, Philip RielT, ChloeRoth, Stuart Schulberg, and Shirlee Smith.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESROBERT PREGLER, circulation managerELLEN TUTTLE, office managerWilliam Bell, Virginia Brantner, Robert Highman, John MacBride,Paul Reynolds, Elaine Siegal, and Richard Wallens.Night Editors: Bob Lawson and Barbara GilflllanThe Reading PeriodWe do not believe that the reading period inthe social sciences is a yes or no proposition.In the past few years the reading period hasbeen too often either loudly applauded or thor¬oughly and completely condemned.: The rather sudden adoption of the readingperiod a few years ago gave the impression atleast that in every course in the social sciencesdivision three weeks would be given for “read¬ing and reflection”. It has become increasinglyapparent that this ruling was far too arbitrary.It seems to us that the number of lectures andthe amount of reading given should depend onthe nature of the subject matter in each course.Depends on CourseIn courses in which the material is largelyfactual like, for example Anthropology 201, itis far better to include a reading period than tohave the instructor merely repeat what is inthe required readings. In other courses likeAccounting, Statistics, or Populations Problemswide reading is not nearly so important as un¬derstanding methods of analysis. This under¬standing is usually best gained through class¬room work rather than through wide reading.The reading period is of course worth whilewhen writing long papers is of value to thestudent. In some cases however instructors haverequired wide reading during the reading periodand as a sort of guarantee that the students willdo such reading have also required papers whichreally involved handing back to the instructorthe material assigned. Such papers are usuallya waste of time.A CompromiseIn a great many courses we think a com¬promise on the reading period might be desir¬able. If over the three week period classes wereheld twice a week, the lecture schedule mightbe covered and at the same time students mighthave time to do some reading. This method alsohelps to avoid another frequently voiced ob¬jection to the reading period: that it leads stu¬dents to lose contact with their courses and tocome back at the end of “three weeks of empti¬ness” with a general attitude that “the class isabout over”.We favor continuing the reading period incourses in which it can serve some definite func¬tion and in which it does not cut too much intothe lecture schedule. In all cases we think areading period should be an integral part of acourse rather than merely a vacation with read¬ing to do.LETTERS TO THE EDITORThe Maroon has taken a clear, strong stand on thenecessity of taking steps to insure the military defeatof Hitler and Fascism.As a communist, I have and will continue to sup¬port this stand of The Maroon unconditionally.However, in the interest of the all important clari¬fication and unity of the campus I would like to answerthe false and dangerous attack made against com¬munists in your Friday editorial. ^It seems that the Communists are once again beingaccused of turning "summersaults.” To accuse an or¬ganization of being inconsistent when it changes itspolicy to meet real changes in the objective worldsituation is to miss the cause and see the effect. Todemand the same policy in two different situationswould be the real inconsistency.To answer the superficial charge that the SovietUnion appeased Hitler, and that the American Com¬munists were isolationists requires an analysis of thedevelopment of the present war. Unfortuntately thiswill have to be all too brief because of space.It was the Soviet Union and the progressives thru-out the world who, in 1931 first recognized in fascist By BEATA MUELLERThis Bazaar is all about International House, whereI lost my Middlewestem accent. The inmates andhabitues of this* place, known to them as CrawlypawsHaven, are called its familiars, and very familiar theyare. The men can be divided into two classes, the re¬pulsive and the inoffensive, and the women are in threecategories: the well-kept, the unkept, and social work¬ers.One of the more well-known of these characters isGeorges de Huzzar, who knows three jokes, all of themclean. Another is Tom Wood, our own Bundle fromBritain, whose chief conversational gambit is “I say,old thing, could you let me have a fiver?” A close third,of course, is Holy Tom Schulz, who almost killed a manonce by dropping a milk bottle on him.Rubber HeelsNewcomers to our Haven where Brotherhood pre¬vails are Etta Brown, who is nice and plays an oboe,and Alex Randolph, who is nice and does not play anoboe. Of newcomer Agnes Mason, one of our best wom¬en, it is said, as of O’Sullivan’s Rubber Heels, she’stough.Of pretty brunette Helen Hirsch and pretty blondePeter de Kuffner it is said that they have one thingjn common—a pained expression like an advertisementfor constipation.The sinister Sam Mercer, of course, would appeal toGypsy Rose Lee, according to her statement in Timemagazine, “...a nervous tic excites me...” His mainclaim to immortality is his explanation of Pulse, madeto a visiting French geologist, "You know about theseearly western towns, where a new woman was anevent worth recording in the town paper. To be sure.W’ell, Pulse does the same sort of thing, I dare .say;they look over each new crop of freshman women andthen they run pictures of the prettiest ones with cap¬tions underneath giving their names and ages, the num¬ber of teeth they have, and what may be expected ofthem. You know the sort of thing.”PopularityCharley Davis is one of the cleverest. He has moreand better jazz records than other people, and a fancydressing gown like Benny Goodman. Buxom Lydia isthe one with the most leer. It was Lydia who said, witha look of sullen reproach, “This is the first night inseven weeks I have not had a date.”Finally there is Benjy Pritz, who sits for hours onend without saying a word as if he were thinking themost profound and cynical thoughts. Only those whoknow Surly Benjy know he isn’t thinking at all, evenwhen he suddenly says after a long silence, “You know,I think I must have a very low I.Q.”Tiffin RoomAnd most of these people are Four-Hour Contract¬ors, having an unwritten agreement to spend at leastfour hours every day in the Tiffin Room. The TiffinRoom is a small and intellectual version of the CoffeeShop, decorated with quaint figures on the walls andquaint figures at the tables, where the conversationruns, "Do you think she’s a Fascist?” "Not at all, she’sa sophist.” “You’re quite wrong. She’s just too fat.”aggression the threat to the peace and independenceof all the nations.Today, it is recognized that had this policy of col¬lective security for which the U.S.S.R. and progressivesfought unceasingly, been established in time the war to¬day would never have broken out. Or if it had, it wouldhave been under the most favorable conditions.When the Soviet Union on the very edge of dangermet the final refusal of appeasers Chamberlain andDaladier to form a peace front, the Soviet Union wasforced to make a pact with Germany. This was in theinterest of her peace, for time to prepare, and to limitthe scope of the war which the appeasement policy hadnow made inevitable.We Communists believe that there are just and un¬just wars, determined by the politics leading to thewar, and the aims of the war.The dominant pro-fascist imperialists in Great Brit¬ain and France, in Autumn 1939 still stood for thebasic reactionary aims they had pursued before Munich.Because we are a principled Marxist party, wecould not support an Imperialist War. We could not beisolationists or pacifists—we have had and always willhave an international outlook, we have and always willfight for the interests of the people.We called for a pact of U.S., U.S.S.R. and China,for a change in the aims of the British Govt, beforea real anti-fascist war could be carried out. This is,briefly, what has happened. Today the war is just,today we are doing by war which could have beendone in peace a few years back.Today our front line of defense is in the SovietUnion and Britain. Therefore it is not a sacrifice ofour defense program at home, but a part of it to sendaid to the Soviet Union and Britain.We failed once before because we were not united.While Austria, Ethiopia, Czechoslovakia, Spain fell, weover here in America quibbled about working with Com¬munists.Well, we are lucky, we have a second chance—weare not likely to get a third! We can’t afford to muff it!We must unite with everyone and anyone who sees thatthe defeat of Hitler is the defense of the United States.The consequences of not doing this are horrible.Very truly yours,Muriel Schechter Swann JoinsTexas FacultyHoward G. Swann, research asso¬ciate and Seymour Coman fellow, re¬signed his position at the Universityrecently to join the staff of the Med¬ical School of the University of Texas.In a..private capacity Swann hasbeen an active supporter and speakerfor the America First movement. STUDENT PUBLICITYThe Student Publicity board willmeet Thursday, Oct. 16, in theReynolds Club Lounge A at 3:30.All students interested in workingwith this group are invited to at¬tend.CLASSIFIEDCONTRACT BRIDGE—CImmc And DapllcntcBridge Parties, BO cents. Call Plasa 8782(evenings).Today on theQuadranglesW’estminster Student Group, “Pres¬byterian Pow Wow,” Swift Commons,6:00, Informal Supper, 26 cents.Executive Committee Meeting, Hil-lel Foundation, Ida Noyes, W.A.A.room, 12.Meeting, F.Y.C. Girls’ Club. IdaNoyes, Alumnae room, 3:30.Meeting, Chapel Union, Ida Noyeslibrary, 3:30.Membership Committee Meeting,Y.W.C.A., Ida Noyes, Room B, 3:30.Business Meeting, University Play¬ers, Ida Noyes, Alumnae room, 8. Now UHder-armCream DeodorantsafdjStops Perspiration1. Does not rot dresses or men’sshirts. Does not irritate skin.2. No waiting to dry. Can beused right after shaving.3. Instantly stops perspirationfor 1 to 3 da^s. Removes odorfrom perspiration.4. A pure, white, greaseless,stainless vanishing cream.S* Arrid has been awarded theApproval Seal of the AmericanInstitute of Launderin^t forbeing harmless to fabrics.Arrid is the LARGEST SELLINGDEODORANT. Try a Jar today!ARRID. Atalltta*eaa«IItesta<lat foa(alaobi 104 asd set jars)JACKET • WAISTCOAT • TROUSERS • SLACKS‘3750COMPLETESMART • PRACTICAL • ECONOMICALStyled by Finchley in the brisk and gracefulmanner essential to garments destined for cor'rect but vigorous week-end and country usageor rugged campus wear. The jacket, trousersand waistcoat can be had in fine, durable,handsome tweed or Shetland, in herringbone,diagonal or mixed patterns. Browns, tans,blues, lovat green and other cheerful, newtones. The slacks are made of flannel or covertto harmonize or to contrast with the other units.19 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago564 Fifth Avenue, New YorkTHE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1941 Page ThreePHI GAMS LOSE OPENERChamps Beaten byPhi Psis, 7-0By BILL TODDDisplaying fiery tempers and razzle-dazzle offensives that didn’t alwaysclick, Wally Hebert and his staff rangup the curtain on the 1941 touchballseason, yesterday, with the followingresults: Phi Psi’s 7, Phi Gams 0;Phi Delta 12, Pi Lams 6; D. U.’s 26,Chi Psi’s 0; Phi Gam B 19, Peta B 12;The Phi Psi, Phi Gam affair waseasily the most bitterly fought gameof the day, the margin of victoryproving to be a touchdown pass fromPhi Psi Reynolds to teammate Shaver.Bob Cummins passed well for thePhi Psi’s in the early stages of thegame, but persistent rushing by TomHill and the other Phi Gam fore¬wards finally threw him off in thesecond half. Poor sportsmanship ranrampant during one of the two extraperiods, when Phi Psi Bud Bates, whowas not even participating in thegame, staged a brawl with Phi GamNick Parisi, as football was forgotten,for the moment. The losers were the1940 Fraternity champions.The Phi Delts overpowered the PiLam aggregation scoring twelve pointson a run by Erickson and a Burn-stein to Jacobs pass, while the PiLams could gather just six on an in¬tercepted pass in the closing secondsof the game.In the third contest, the D. U.’sslaughtered the Chi Psi’s to the tuneof 26 to 0. McClure passed for twoof the markers and with Stevensmade up the D. U. big guns.In one of the lesser games of theday. Phi Gam B defeated Beta B,19 to 12.HlilHIIliroBBGRtBy DICK HIMMEL"Cool braexes will toon b« playinghavoc around young man's troutarcuffs,” tha oracia at Delphi told methe other day at I was going fromRome to Athens. "Hark, ye, oracle,"I said to her in my stage voice, "Andpray what shall young men do aboutsame?" The oracle looked at me aminute, catting a withering eye at mycorduroy toga. "Doth Brutus boot¬less kneel?" the asked me."Nay, Madam, Brutus doth notbootless kneel.""Then, Son,doth collegeboy coatlessgo?"I o p en e dmy mouth toanswer the or¬acle but thestopped mesaying, "Thinkcarefully. Boy-chick, beforethou dost answer.""Nay, Madam," I said, quick at ashotath, "college boy coatless dothnot go.""Thou art blessed, my ton.""I am double blest, oracle.""And why are you double blest,Mr. Bones?""I am onceth blest because I havea corduroy coateth, tingertip length,priced at only $12.95.""Yea, o ton, that makes thou oncethblest at least. But why double blest?""I am blest doubleth, o oracle, be¬cause I bought said coat at theHub.""At the Hub, my ton?""At the Hub, o oracle.""At State and Jackson, my ton?""At State and Jackson, o oracle."The Endthe I Hubi/ni/ 7acijAOf7, CHICAGO By MIKE BARRASHSocialite, SportsmanHow many of you caught a glimpseof JOHN DRYDEN mugging for aDaily News society photograph re¬cently. . .he had about two squareinches devoted to his face. . .JOHNhas promised to try and get his pic¬ture in again. . .this time as a basket¬ball star . . .RecoveryOne day while he was playing fresh¬man football at Hinsdale High,“BERT” WHEELER found it difficultto lift his head with the rest of hisbody as he arose after a bruisingtackle. . .so carrying his crew-cut inhis hands he strolled over to thehospital to fix it up. . .finding out thathis neck was broken, he decided tostick around the place. . .but today,although staying clear of football,WHEELER is willing to risk his neckin basketball. . .HintsKeep a wise eye on CONNIEKONTOS when he carries the ball inan open field for the glory of SIGMACHI. . .Use the other eye to follow theshots of LOU ROTHSTEIN in fresh¬man basketball. . .Human InterestTen boys have decided to continuesticking together. . .after withstand¬ing the orgy of seeing each otherevery day in U-High classesJERRY SOLOMON, BOB SWARTZ,DAVE COMSTOCK, BILL ROBERTS,CHARLEY MEYERS, JIM HAL¬VERSON, AUBREY MOORE,WALLY BAYARD, BOB FRAZIERand HAL FRIEDMAN have petition¬ed KYLE ANDERSON to letthem play as one team in thesix-man football league. . .The last ofthese boys, HAL FRIEDMAN must behealthy. . .he is taking punishment intrack and wrestling also. . .Success StoryAfter working his way through asuccessful college career at Chicagoex-PHI SIG, ex-footballer, ex-wres¬tler, ex-water poloer MILT WEISS isnow teaching school at Antioch HighSchool in the town of the same name,Illinois. . .Not to discredit him, how¬ever, we’ll add ..that he is assistantcoach of an undefeated footballteam.. .Big Coaches on CampusFreshmen, for that matter, anyone. . .have you been told that NELSNORGREN is president of the Na-Maroon Issues Fra¬ternity SupplementHard-working, versatile Daily Ma¬roon will bring freshmen the dopeabout Chicago’s Greek Letter soci¬eties. A special issue will supplantlast year’s Interfraternity booklet.The Maroon will contain six pagpof pictures and articles which willcover thoroughly every fraternity onthe Midway. These and a list of rush¬ing rules make it a sort of rushingBible which should be carefully stud¬ied by every freshman.By this choice. President Traegeris saving the Council several hun¬dred dollars. Cap and Gown has sup¬plied the cuts for the special issue,while Traeger has been in charge oicompilation of the material. tional Basketball Coaches Associa¬tion?. . .that he has coached a nation¬al A.A.U. championship team as wellas a runner-up?.. .A Chip Off the Old Block?The days of BERWANGER areback. . .however, this time it hankersto go up in the lights over the Field-house basketball court. . .lanky PAULlooks good enough to make the head¬lines that once blazed the name ofbrother JAY. . .Shaughnessy...plays the game fairlyYou Can't Take It Awayfrom HimWALLY BOCK, trainer for theUniversity athletes, remarked thatone thing he admired in CLARKSHAUGHNESSY was that the latternever used WALLY to carry messageson the field. . .some coaches will doanything to win. . . CLARK, whetherhe needed to (as then) or not (asnow), played the game on thesquare. . .Tournaments HeadGolf Day ProgramFreshman men are especially in¬vited to attend the Golf Day at theMill Road Farm course Monday. CoachVorres plans to run several tourna¬ments. He is interested in finding outthe caliber of the freshmen golfers.The green fee will be one dollar forall students, faculty members andemployees. Registrations will be ac¬cepted at Ida Noyes or Bartlett untilFriday noon.Lunch will be provided at a smalladditional cost and transportationmay be arranged for at the time ofregistration. The Lasker Estate Chry¬santhemum Show may also be viewedby the golfers.Luncheon at IdaNoyes TomorroivIda Noyes Hall and Women’s Fed¬eration will sponsor an “Off-CampusMeets On-Campus” luncheon for allUniversity women in the CloisterClub at noon, Thursday, October 23.Activities of the afternoon includeluncheon, bridge, music, and, possibly.Daily Maroon movies, as well as con¬tact of entering students with mem¬bers of campus organizations.Ticket sales begin tomorrow andwill continue through Monday, Oc¬tober 20, at tables in Mandel Corri¬dor and Ida Noyes Hall. FourSix-Man Teams ToOpen Season Tuesday“Stagg Field is the scene of theswellest turnout in all the athleticdepartment with special enthusiasmbeing shown in the experiment—sixman football”, beamed Coach KyleAnderson yesterday. Those who areinterested in this new up and comingsport are warned against the deadlinefor entering the tournament. Todaywill be the last day aspirants will beable to enter.To be eligible for any of the fiveteams, each participant must havegone through six conditioning work¬outs which will prepare him for thegames in the best possible way. Thisis a stem requirement not only to getthe men in condition but to readythem against any possible injurywhich may occur.Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. four of theteams will see action on Stagg Fieldin the first of the seasonal games.Two games will be played at the sametime, one group occupying the eastfield and the other the west field.Form Five TeamsTentatively five teams have beenselected with the letters of the al¬phabet signifying their names; withone exception, the “B” team whichwishes to retain the name of “RedDevils”. Coach Anderson has dividedthe lettermen coming back equallyamong the five teams so that no oneteam will have the advantage of sea¬ soned football players. Ten or elevenmen will compromise a team.“Duke” Harlan and George Balia,stars of last year are back again andwill both be on the same team spur¬ring for another championship, tryingto duplicate the feat of the “RedDevils” last year.INTRAMURALTOUCHBALLWednesday,October 15,19413:00Alpha Delt vs. Sigma ChiDeke vs. Phi Sigma DeltaPsi U. vs. ZBT4:00Kappa Sig vs. Alpha DeltD.U. “B” vs. Pi Lam “B”Phi De^t “B” vs. Psi U. “B”Tuesday’s ScoresPhi Psi 7; Phi Gam 0Phi Delts 12; Pi Lam 6D.U. 26; Chi Psi 0Phi Gam “B" 19; Beta “B”12Pledge NotePsi Upsilon announces the pledgingof Ted Friedemann of Chicago. TEXT BOOKSNEW and USEDFor University CoursesSTUDENTSNEEDSNote Books - Fountain PensZipper Cases - Alarm ClocksBrief Cases & Bags - StationeryTyping Supplies, etc., etc.TYPEWRITERS—All MakesUsed & New - sold, rented, repairedWOODWORTH'SBOOK STORE1311 E. 57th St.Near Kimbark Ave. Open EveningsPh. Dorchester 48002 blocks east of Mandel HallPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 15. 1941fe.:P-th': On QuadranglesIt's AnimalsThree To OneAn InnovationOver in the Zoology building is aninnovation in the form of an ab¬breviated stock of opossums (4). Nextwinter the zoologists hope to be har¬boring 30 or 40 of these. Likewisemany another supply will shortly mul¬tiply somewhat.Ricketts Laboratories caused somedifficulty. Said they, “no talk." Thiscircumstance arises, no doubt, fromover-zealous patriots exercising espe¬cial caution during the national emer¬gency. Perhaps the government is con¬ducting a course for carrier pigeonswithin these walls. At any rate, Rick¬etts probably contains more animalsthan any other building.20,000 AnimalsOther animals may be found coopedup in Whitman and Billings, and ad¬ditional white mice in Miss MaudeSlyde’s cancer workshop. Altogether,there must be close to 20,000 animals.And this, we hasten to add, takes nocognizance of numberless pigeons andground squirrels running about thecampus footloose. Or of the cock¬roaches which Pulse is convinced areundermining Lexington Hall. Even theanimal man in Ricketts doesn’t countthese.All in all, mankind is strictly out¬classed on this campus. But what canyou expect. The campus populationjust isn’t multiplying like rabbits andguinea pigs multiply.Read Swedenborg's'DIVINE LOVEAND WISDOM'lOc unabridgedof University and otherbookstores ASU PreparesCampus Anti-Hitler RallyLatin American students form thelargest single group of new membersat International House this quarter.Many of the students are studyingon fellowships from their governmentsor on exchange scholarships.Contrary to expectations the for¬eign membership has not decreasedthis year but has remained almoststationary. Brazil, Canada, Chile,China, Czechoslovakia, England,France, Germany, Hawaii, Korea,Palestine, Philippine Islands, PuertoRico, Thailand, and Turkey have sentstudents. ObjectorsVoiceOpinions... he wins, 3 to 1$Scattered about the campus, one finds nothing but people. In the Com¬mons are hungry people, in Bartlett, muscle-bound people, in Billings, de¬crepit people. The place is full of them.But don’t be misled. Because it’s not, really. Instead, it’s full of littlewhite mice and their brethren. For some 20,000 assorted animals, claims aneminent authority in the Biologry department, inhabit this University. Andthose who know tell us a mere 6,000 are enrolled on the Quadrangles. So theanimals have it by more than 3 to 1.Some conception of the variety of the University’s menagerie may begathered from the diversity entombed in Abbott Hall. Here are housed 1,200rats, 144 frogs, 70 guinea pigs, 65 rabbits, 6 turtles, 120 dogs, 20 cats, and6 pigeons. Completing the roster is the lowly barnyard hen, of which a paltryhalf-dozen nightly roost here. (With43c eggs it might pay the professorsto increase their stock.) Recently released on parole fromtheir year and a day sentence at thepenitentiary at Danbury, Connecticut,five of the eight students from theUnion Theological Seminary who lastregistration day, October 16, 1940, is¬sued a statement of conscientious ob¬jection, last night presented theirviews for their stand and their plansfor the future in a symposium inSwift Hall under the sponsorship ofthe University’s Fellowship of Recon-cilation. Those who participated were:Richard Whichlei, William Lovell,Howard Spragg, George Hauser, andJoseph Bevilacqua. All are students inthe Chicago Theological Seminary atthe present time.The main reason given last year bythe group for their objection to theconscription was presented in thestatement as a disagreement with thepolicy of “consciously employing badmeans to a good end.”Whichlei, who spoke first, stressedthe reason for the 1940 action. Thesecond speaker, Lovell, claimed thatour real battle is a non-violent resist¬ance and that we should seek to ac¬quire a “deeper personal relationshipwith each other."In listing points for a practical pro¬gram for pacifists, Spragg, a memberof the F.O.R., the Youth CommitteeAgainst War, and the Young People’sSocialist League, urged that pacifistsdo not ally themselves with the Amer¬ica First Movement.Houser concisely explained his opin¬ions in the declaration that, “Becausewe don’t have the kind of democracywhich we want and because the sys¬tem under which we are living is pro¬ducing an international conflict, weneed a system to give to the peoplethat which they need. . .economic as Chapel UnionBegins Year;Seeks MembersDo you like to dance? And sing?Or would you rather enter into a dis¬cussion? Have you found that yourmental and social activities are def¬initely lacking? Well, to remedy thesituation, you ought to join ChapelUnion.Chapel Union prides itself on thefact that it is the largest and mostinclusive organization on campus. Itsprogram is planned so that faculty,students, and alumni may all join intoits many functions. Activities varyand change from year to year; forthe interests of the members are thegreatest concern of the heads of theorganization, and when these interestsrequire new outlets, Chapel Union willprovide them.To keep its members well informedof its affairs. Chapel Union presentsa weekly publication, The Outlook.Every Monday, this paper announcesevents of the week such as barn danc¬ing, discussion group meetings, orplans for week end outings.Discussion meetings wrangle withsocial, political, or religious problems.They hold frequent sessions and oftenform councils which investigate prob¬lems of general concern. The Stu¬dent-Faculty Committee sponsorsweekly luncheons where students maymeet the faculty and discuss aims fora closer understanding between thetwo groups.Chapel Union is headed by an Exec¬utive Board of eight. President ofthis board is Webb Fiser, Vice-Presi¬dent is Josephine Beynon, while otherboard members are Greg Hedden, JimMcClure, Betty Leonard, Brad Patter¬son, Joe Van Hise, Dave Krathwahl.well as a political democracy."After the meeting plans were madefor further campus action on the paci¬fist movement. First of these futureplans is scheduled as a peace-actionon Thursday, October 16, the anniver¬sary of registration day. Co-op UpsWage RateA NickelHourly wage rates at the Ellis Stu-dent Co-op have been raised from$.45 to $.60. This measure was ap-proved last Thursday by the co-opassembly after a consideration of thepresent higher costs of living. Alsobecause of this same situation, theco-op has found it necessary to raiseits prices to $5.15 for twenty mealsaccording to a schedule prepared bycomptroller, Bernard Zagorin.In addition to plans for this quarterat the eating co-op, a new men’s hous¬ing co-op is being organized at 5445Maryland. The house can accommo¬date from fifteen to twenty students.Anyone interested may ask Ed Millerat the Ellis Housing Co-op.WestminsterOpens YearWar-Time ProblemsHarass Librarians First meeting of the year for theWestminister Student Group will beheld tonight at 6 in Swift Commonsunder the title, “Pow Wow". John E.McCaw, new director of InterchurchCouncil, will be presented at dinnerbefore the activities of the eveningbegin.Officers elected last spring and newmembers of the group will also be in¬troduced. The evening will then bedevoted to renewing friendships andrecounting summer adventures. Thelatter will be done by each memberin turn.Read TheDaily MaroonA second meeting, scheduled forWednesday, will decide the ultimatestructure of the proposed Anti-Hitlermass rally, which was originally sug¬gested by the ASU yesterday. Dele¬gates from representative Quadrangleorganizations will present theirgroup’s final decision on participationin the rally at that time. The presentintention is to include all organiza¬tions of interventionist sympathy,with two prominent—but unnamed—faculty members as the keynote speak¬ers.An executive committee has alreadybeen selected to steer the rally’s pol¬icy in the desired direction.LatinslnvadeInt. House The first fall issue of The LibraryQuarterly is out, including seven ar¬ticles and a dozen reviews. Titlessuch as “The Crisis in Cataloging”,“Fifth Column of the Catalog", and“Reading for Prisoners of War AsSeen From Geneva”, indicate how thewar has affected librarians.In the last-named article by A. C.Breycha-Vauthier, he states the twomajor problems of the librarian to¬day, safeguarding collections in warareas, and providing reading matterfor soldiers. Of the 2,000,000 prison¬ers he continues, 1,500,000 are Frenchand their major work is devoted tothem. A Committee to Aid Prison¬ers has been set up in Paris but greatcensorship due to ideological gaps be¬tween nations makes work difficult.The only uncensored books are thoseof purely scientific nature publishedbefore 1869.Another major article, “Library-Radio Relationships”, by FrancesHenne, considers the degree of radioinfluence affecting the library’s adulteducation and the book selection prin¬ciples of the library. •Y PARKCt'S•lue OlAMONOiDivinitySchoolWednesday, October 22, has beenannounced by the office of the Deanof the Divinity School as the datefor the annual faculty-student re¬ception for members of the School.The reception will be held in theCommons Room of Swift Hall at 8o’clock in the evening.Members of the faculty of theDivinity School will be in the re¬ceiving line to meet new studentsand to renew last year’s friendshipswith returning students. 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