Vol XIV., No. 77. ....aroonUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916.ENGLmH DEPARTMENTNAMES CAST FOR PLAy OFFER BEETHOVEN, .WAGNER AND ALFVENNUMBERS AT CONCERTatPrice FiTe Cents.PAGE, AGAIN AT HELM,HOPES TO TURN TIDE DR. JUDSON SAYSLEAGUE AIDS ALLTYPES OF WOMENThe cast for "The Second Shep­herd's Play," one of the old Englishplays to be presented under the aus-pices of the English department Feb­ruary 25 in Mandel hall, was an­nounced yesterday. Hamilton Cole­man has been secured as the coachfor "The Second Shepherd's Play"and "The Nice Wanton," and is re-.hearsing the casts regularly. Asso- By Frank 1\1. Webster.ciate Prof. Robertson will meet thetentative cast of "The Nice Wanton" The man who leaves you continu-this afternoon at 3:30 in the Harper ally in doubt as to whether he isThe first baseball conference of the assembly room. laughing with you or at you is a· year is scheduled for today at 1 :30, The cast for "The Second Shep- pest: the man who is generally seri-· when Coach Page and Captain Shull herd's Play" follows: ous, DUt who occasionally breaks intowill meet the candidates for thc k h h I fun, is an enigma; and the fun he hasMa , t e s eepstea er .-Varsity team in Bartlctt. Plans for James Dyrenforth is all his own. I generally wonder,the season, the schedule and meth- Mak's wife John Bannister when I hear the "Pastoral" sym-ods of preliminary training will be CI k phony,' how much of the time Beeth-First shepherd Dunlap ar .-discussed. Ed rd oven is laughing at us and how muchSecond shepherd Emmer wa sThe series with the Waseda univer- h h d F k W d of the time he means the compositionThird s ep er ran 00'sity of Japan will be the banner The three shepherds will present for serious music. He seems to startevent on the' schedule. A cable re- . out in earnest with comfortable feel-two songs, which are three-part-ecived yesterday by Page from Prof. melodies .taken from Chappell's ings about the country and theIso Abe, the father of baseball in "Early English Popular Music." The brookside, but he is struck in thethe-Orient, stated that the Nipponese parts of the Angel and' the Virgin midst by a whimsey-and well henave started to prepare for the in- Mary have not yet been assigned. might be, having written so much of-vasion' and that they will arrive in The two characters appear only in the first two movements=-and whis-San Francisco May 4. The Univer- the closing scene of the play, in tIes with the birds like a debauchedsity Alumni association has planned which the Christ in the manger is de- . cuckoo clock. Arid having whistled,to make the series one of the features picted. The other five. characters, and clarinetted, and oboe-ed, he letsof the Twenty-fifth Anniversary who carry along the plot of the -play, out his emotions further with a con-celebration, and it is probable that· are rehearsing regularly. sumptive basSoon in 'the "Village-the first game will be played Satur- Festival" Scherzo, and reaches a eli-·day, June 3. Coach Page is in c�e Mrs. Walton Is Chairman. max in -a storm-the progenitor ofof the trip and he is now engaged Mrs. Lyman .A. Walton. chairman much - barometrical music. It is ain arranging games for Waseda with of the committee on .ecstames, al- good, thunderstorm, too, although I'-several Ameriean eo1lege& ." -, - . re8dj. h88 �'·work-on"'tJ1f;;·m�ir "'dor?t·tmnk ifiiveS 'cause'for' quite -soof the costumes for the foUr num- much thanksgiving onthe pQrt of theJapaaeae.. Propess. thehers on the program. Dr. Lawton S. assembled peasants. Wagner andThe present tour will be the sec:- Parker and Mr. Charles F.rancis later composers who have depicted-oDd appearanee of a. Waseda nine in Brown, pro�t <Jlieago artists, the. frowning ,face of Nature mayAmerica. Since C4tir first trip in have made suggestions ·for the de- hAve·m8de more noise, for they had1911 the Japanese have made rapid signing. and 'for the general color more orchestra to do it with, butstrides in America's nationai game, schemes. Dr. Parker is a portrait their thunder is not more true norand Coach Page is counting. on some paintB and Mr. Brown a Iandseape their lightning more j&gged than tluit-real competition this year. In the painter of some �own. Mrs. Walton in the polite and good-natured 'play offirst series in the sunny land of Nip- has employed a staff 'Of seamstresses the elements in the "PastOral" Sym-. pon . the Maroons succeeded in win- and is having the work done at 'her phony. And yet r can not help feel­rung two out of the three games home. ing that the. master is playing theplayed. The first game went to the Appiic:ation blanks for reservations wag, that he 'is having lots of funVarsity by a 6 to 4 score and the were distributed at the concert yes- with Jove's playthings, quite nneon­third game went to the Varsity, 3 to terday afternoon in Mandel. Boxes seions 'of the mUSical' devastationo. During the. recent trip the Ma- seating six are priced' at twentY-five' which is to come in his wake.roons had a hard time defeating the dollars. Seats on the main floor front Of course one never has doubtsOrientals. - The score of the first center and in the first two rows of about Handel. He has no axe togame was 5 to 3,' the second, 2 to 0, the balcony will sell at two dollars. grind, no theories to 'propound, noand the third, 1 to O. .Seats in the remainder of the house games to play in the Second COn-Besides the Waseda series,. ten may be secured at one dollar. Tick- certo, and without any feeling of re­Conference games and the usual eta may be purchased at the Publie sponsibility one' can sit· back andpraetiee games with local semi-pro Lecture Ofr'lCe in Cobb 16A or may . listen. to the StUrdy Andante largbet-be ordered from Dean Lovett. to, the stately largo-suggestive of a(Continued on Page 3) Dean Lovett is c:bairman of the combination of "Stille Nacht" andPublicity committee for the produc- the Bach' "PastOi'ale"-the daintytion. Assistant Pro£ Charles Bead minuet, and the busY allegro. AndBaskervill is general chainnan of the one does enjoy them as they are paly­entire affair. Of the foUr numbers ed. by the Chicago Symphony strings.on the program the, first.. "Sponsus." There .probably are better string or­is in c:barge of Dr. J. Lewis Brown, chestras somewhere than Chicago'sorganist of Our Lady of Sorrows band of players, but I do not care forchurch, "The Second Shepherd's gilded lilies.Play" and "The Nice Wanton" will Lack of Restnint.be given under the direction of Ham- The Alfven Symphony No. 3 in EiTton Coleman. Associate Profs. major, the novelty of the program,Boynton and Robertson are in charge bas already been played �ce at theof the plays. The Elizabethan Jig regular symphony concerts with con­will be produced under � direc- siderable success. It was a successtion of Miss Hinman and Prof. Wil- yesterday afternoon too. There isliam D. MacClintoek. no doubt about it:. the symphony iseffective, and yet there is equally nodoubt that it is not a great sym­phony, and .there is some questionwhether it is even a good one. Thethemes in general are too long, tooformless and too lightweight, theAndante is much too mental, and thefinale too fussily turbulent. There isa lack of restraint and a youthfuland sportive enthusiasm which wouldbetter fit a symphonic poem than asympnony. The orchestration isclever without being original. And(Continued on Page 4)-WILL HOLl) FIRStBASEBALL MUtINGOF SEASON TODAY'Coach Page and Captain Shullto DiseuSS Plans With Var­sity Candidates.WASEDA SERIES O� SCHEDULE· Team Will Play in Ten CenferenceGames-Open Year AgainstBadgers at Madison.WEATHER FORECAST ....Fair and continued cOIei today p withlowest te.perature about ten de­�. above zero: iiiOderate westerlywiiIds; Thunclay fair and warmr.BULLETINTODAY.a.apel, the Senior colleges and theCollege or Commerce and Adminis­_ tratiOllp 10:15, Mandel.Devotional services, the ChicagoTheological seminary, 10:15, Haskell11.Junior social committee, 2:30, Cobb12A.Junior Mathematieal club, .. :15,Ryenon 37.Divinity Khool lecture, "ChnrehArdaiteetare-Prac:tieal," by Mr.HarTy JoneS, ":30, Haskell.ZooJO.,icat duh, 4:30, Zoology 29.UDiTenity Forum, 3 :30, HarperalMe.Wy.TOMORROW.Chapel, the Divinity ec:hool, 10 :15,Hatti1I..Y. w. C. L., 10:15, LemliOil 14. Hamilton Coleman to Coach TwoProduetions at Shakespearian An­mversary Alrair-Distribute Appli­eatlon Blanks ror Reservations. Chicago Symphony OrchestraAlso Pays Handel's Compo­sition for Strings.THIRD, SUCCESS FOR ALFVENNovelty IS Effective Despite Lack ofGreatness-Village Festival Pic­tured in "Pastoral."UNIVERSITY FORUMTO CLOSE CHARTERMEMBERSHIP TODAYAttendance at today's meeting ofthe University Forum at 3:30 in t'lteHarper assembly room will be suffi­cient to qualify stUaents for chartermembersllip to the club. A eonsti­tution wUl be adopted and final or­ganization perfeded. Members wmdiscuss the topic, "Presidential Pos-sibilities. " Coach Expects Development of ShortPass to Aid Maroon Five AgainstlIlini-Have Hard Road to HoeNext Month. -Two Hundred and Fifty HearPresident Speak at Y. W.With Coach Page again in chargeof the basketball team, efforts willbe made to break the losing streakby defeating the Illini in the game tobe played a week from tonight inBartlett. Page declared yesterdaythat the team was good enough totum the tide against the Illini andthat the three defeats administeredso far were the result of inxperience.He will play a special defense forRalph Woods, the scoring unit of -thedownstate five and, if he is success­ful in this, athletic relations betweenChicago and Illinois should assumetheir normal status, with CoachJones' men on the small end of thescore.The next month will be the hard­est period in the Maroon schedule.The team will leave Friday night forMinneapolis to play Minnesota Satur-day night. They will return and play "The purpose of the League, as itIllinois Wednesday and again go on has presented itself to me in the Unithe road Friday night to play Iowa at versity," said President Judson, "isIowa City Saturday. The North- well expressed in the old verse,western game at Evanston Wednes- "Look up and not down,da >, February 16, will follow the Look out and not in,Iowa game. Mter the Northwestern Look forward and not backward,game, the Varsity will met Ohio at And lend a hand."Columbus, February 19; Illinois at Mrs. Edgar J. Goodspeed acted asUrbana, February 26; Ohio at Chi- toastmistress. President Judsoneago, March 3; Wisconsin at Madi- spoke on "The League in Our Unison, March 8, and Minnesota in the versity," Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey, for­last game of the season, March 11, mer secretary of the Y .. W. C. L., onin Bartlett. "City Association Work," Miss MaudePr 0 rt·t Trego on UWhat· Are We Doing in the. _. ,_��.t __ !��_� ! ...... _._ .. _ .... COuntry," MisS.Margaret Burton onCoach Page is directing his efforts "Foreign Work in Foreign Lands,"toward perfecting the passing game. and Miss Helen Johnston, secretaryThe game' With Wisconsin. last Sat- of the Y. W. C. L., on uThe Businessurday clearly demonstrated what ad- of Being a Secretary."van� results from accurate pass- FOUDdecl in 1866.. ing and how. deficient the VarSitY is According to .the. statistics of Mrs.in this deparbnent of the �e. The Edgar J. Goodspeed, the Y. W. C. A­five presents great opporturuty for a has 979 associations 1660 secretaries,successful short passing game, as 150 student secretaries and 342 305employed by the Badgers, with Cap- members. Work in 'five fo�igntain George as running guard and countries, China, Japan, India, SouthParker, Schafer and Townley work- America and Africa, is being sup­ing the ball down .the floor with him. ported by the association in Amer­Rothennel has shown up well as a ica, Notable among the associationsstationary guard, and it would not in foreign countries are. those at Pe­be easy for any team to intercept the king and Madras, the former beingpasses and elude him. supported by Wellesley and the latterThe game with Minnesota Saturday by the University of Chicago.night at Minneapolis promises to be Two hundred and fifty women at­one of the most interesting games of tended the dinner, which was the firstthe season. The Gophers started the strictly women's affair ever held inseason with poor prospects, but they Hutchinson. Members of t!te de­have developed in good shape since partments of the League attendedtheir defeat by Wisconsin and at the dinner in a body and members ofpresent they are the' dark horse of the Second cabinet acted as ushers.the Conference race. Captain Dick ..Lewis has been shifted from guard to VARSITY SWIMMERS TOforward and has' Connell, a sopho- PARTICIPATE IN MEETmore, as his running mate. Gillen isplaying center and Douglas and Wy- Coach White Enters Earle, Redmonman, who played fullback on the �nd Rnbinkam in Illinois Ath-football team, are at guards. letic Club Contest.C .A. Celebration.SPEECHES TELL Y. W. C. L. WORKMrs. Goodspeed, Toastmistress, GivesStatistics-First Strictly Wo-men's Affair in Hutchinson.A spirit of mutual helpfulness wasnoted as the keynote of the League'swork in the University by PresidentHarry Pratt Judson at the JubileeBanquet last night in Hutchinsoncommons, in celebration of the fiftiethanniversary of the founding of theYoung Women's Christian associationin the United States.UNCLES OF WISCONSINSTUDENT ARE GENERALSIN THE GERMAN ARMY Earle, Redmon and Rubinkam, ofthe Maroon swimming team, havebeen entered in the open swimmingmeet to be held tomorrow night atthe Illinois Athletic club. CoachWhite has entered Earle in the 100-yard swim.Redmon has been entered in theplunge and stands a fair chance tocapture first in this event, althoughhe has not been doing his best workfor the past two weeks. Rubinkamwill compete in the fancy diving, andshould make a strong bid for secondor third place. Heyn, of the C. A.A., must be given the advantage, andprobably will capture first in thisevent.Helmuth Mathes, student at theUni'Versity of Wisconsin, is a nephewof two German generals and a broth­er of a colonel. General Lochow,commander of the German forces inSerbia, and General "on Seydewitz,who is directing a large force in theRussian campaign, are his uncles. Hisbrother, Siegfried Mathes, is colonelof a Gennan regiment which is fight­ing in France.Name Added To List.Phillips Goddard completed threemajors with seventeen grade pointsduring tile Auumn quarter. His namewas added to the list of those havingsimilar honors yesterday. Bible Class to Meet.Miss Mollie Carroll will hold herBible stlldy class tomorrow at 8:30in Foster S2.TIIB DAILY IIAROON. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916.m�r laily _arDDnOfficial Student Newspaper of theUniversity of Chicago.Publtshed mornings. except Sundayand Monday. during the Autumn. Win­ter and Spring quarters by The DallyKaroon start.F. R. Kuh Managing EditorH. R.. Swansea, .New8 &!itorB. E. Newman Athletics EditorA. A. Baer Day EditorB. Cohn ._ _ Night EditorWade Bender Associate EditorBusiness Mana�C. A. BirdsalL._ _ R. P. Matthew.Entered 3!'5 second-class mall at theChicago Postoffice. "'-icago. illinois.Karch 13. 1908. under Act ot March 3.1173.Subseription RatesBy Carrier. $�.50 a year: $1 a quarter.By Mall. $3 a year. $1.25 a quarter.Editorial Rooms ......• � ....•.. Ellis 1�Teleph {Hyde Park 5391ones �fidway 800Business Otfice ElIls 14Telephone. Blackstone 2591.WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916.A LITERARY RECIPE.The student whose ambition is theattainment of the requisite numberof grade points usually reads thepages assigned to him, in order thathe may survive the next class hour;another student yields to the tempta­tion of quantities of tainted fictionand Pullman car reading in currentperiodicals; a third student, a typerapidly approaching extinction, per­uses only the classics during his leis­ure hours. Each one of these is in­dividually far from the ideal, yetcould a compendium of the three beformed, we should be near the solu­tion of the much-mooted problem,"what shall the student read?"Queen's J oumal, published by theAlma Mater society of Queen's uni­versity, Canada, speculates editoriallyabout the most nourishing literaryfood for consumption by the collegestudent. We reprin� the article infull:"Mistake us not, reader, nor imag­ine that we refer to the volumes enu­merated in that formidable catalogueof best sellers, the University Calen­dar, to that modicum of intellectualnourishment which an all-wise fac­ulty has declared essential for ourcerebral development. By no means.What we wish to consider is the liter­ature consumed of the student's ownfree will, without the stimulus of' aMamocles' sword. (which may fall inApriI>. T-o what does he turn whencloyed with Calculus, Livy or AdamSmith? Are there any authors forwhose sake he will commandeer anhour from the daily routine of work?"Inquiries made amongst the stu­dents show that, in general, the timespent in reading for reading's sakeis very short indeed. The headlinesand sporting columns of Ithe dailypapers and an occasional short storyfrom such a magazine as the "Satur­day Evening Post" is all that can beSandwiched into the wild round of lec­tures, meals, skating, studies, drill,and sporadic social sorties. All whostray into the Arts reading-roomtake time to thumb over "Life" and"Punch"-and quite rightly, too, forsuch publications are absolutely nec­essary to a well-balanced mind. Themental craving for humour is as na­tural as a child's appetite for sweets.But, unfortunately, the mental lifecannot attain to strength on a meremenu of jocular sweetmeats andshort-story sandwiches, and the lack- of more substantial pabulum too of­ten leaves the intellect puny andstunted in growth."It might be suggested that thecinematograph theatre is helping todisplace the habit of individcal read­ing. The ocular presentatio.: of astory is so easily grasped, pruned asit is of al1 superfluous description,conversation, and prosy philosophiz­ing. We need only, as if in Kinsgs- ley's fancy-land, rest beneath thetree and find the, ripe fruit fallingready to satisfy our wants. Buthere again the lack of mental efforttends to debauch our powers of as­similating literature of any real sol­idity. A diet restricted to moviescannot but be enervating."We would not .however, counselany student to read conscientiouslythrough any series of 'one hundredbest books of whose merit he isyet able to appreciate nothing. Itsavours too much of an indiscrimin­ate assault on the EncyclopaediaBrittanica, commencing with the let­ter 'A,' and is likely to produce" 'A blockhead: ignorantlyread,With loads of learned lum­ber in his head.'"Nor would we advise the immedi­ate consumption of 'Marius the Epi­curean,' Lafcadio Hearn's Japanesecaviare, or Swinburne's 'Atalanta inCalydon.' Let him favor first thosewho write 'sine fuco ac fallaciis'­and study stylists later. Those whobegin discreetly with the authors of'Rob Roy,' 'David Copperfield,' and'Twelfth Night' will soon find that'1' appetit vient en mangeant' andthat they have secured, withal, a sanestandard of judgment for future use."The modern novel is occasionallydiscussed at the boarding-house tablebut it seems a thousand pities thatso many should waste time over theshoddy workmanship of a WinstonChurchill while neglecting a WilliamHale White who, in his 'Mark Ru­therford' series has treated some ofthe same problems in pure and cul­tured English which_ can really rankas literature., "Some university graduates oflast generation have told us of thedelightful hours spent long ago inone another's rooms reading and dis­cussing Matthew Al-nold, Carlyle,Dickens, or Charles Lamb. Perhapsthe reminiscences of these worthygraduates may, like a meerschaumpipe, have taken on color with ageand use; but we would fain dismisssuch an insinuation. It is far morelikely that they are presenting a mi­nority report from the students oftheir times-and who knows butwhat some few lurk amongst us evenyet who hobnob over their Shelleyor their Milton? But it might re­quire a Diogenes to search them out-rari quippe boni," definite ties to a particular circletakes a more genuine interest in theacademic, religious and social life ofthe college. She enters into thingsfor their own sake, and' not for glorywhich she may bring to her club. Shedoes not confine her circle of ac­quaintanceship and thus miss the op­portunities for friendship formedamong all the women in college.She feels a pride and interest inher college which the woman whosehorizon is bounded by "club" cannotieel. The woman who does not iden­tify herself with a particular groupis more loyal to herself, to her friendsand to her University.E. A. H.Wellesley college.DES JARDIEN D&'�IES'CHARGE MADE INTHE DAILY CARDINALPaper Says "Shorty" 'Vas Out ofSchool Over a :l\Ionth and ThenPlayed Basketball. The most popular pipe inthe world-because it meetsevery demand. The "weD"keeps the tobacco dry, andthe upward bore of the bitprotects the tongue.At all dealers'�_iiii�25c, 35c:, SOc and upolWILLIAMDEMUTH& COMPANYNew YorkTYPEWRITERS! !! --- ANY MAKERENTED OR ·SOLDi� to Y2 ,MANUFACTURERS' PRICESYou may rent a typewriter fOl'as long as you desire andwe will apply six month'srental on the purchase price c���5��I�11should you decide to buy-If you do not f_ind it conven­ient to call at our sales­rooms, telephone or writeMr. Geisser our City SalesManager, who wiD be gladto seleet and sead a type-.writer to you promptly.'(We sell to students oa easy pa yments.aad cata log 179.TYPEWRITER EMPORIUMN. E. C.mer Lake and Dearborn, St., Second FloorTelephones Randolph 1648-1649-1650LAWYERS WIN FROM SENIORS••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Director HansoD to Preside.Scofield Stars in Bitterly-FoughtBasketball Game.The lawyers won their second gamein the interclass series yesterday af­ternoon, when they defeated the sen­ior team by a score of 21 to 8. The'first half was bitterly fought andended with the Law five leading byone point.In the second half Scofield wentthrough the senior guards again andagain, making a total of six basketsin this half. The seniors were welJguarded by Cox and Hoyt and securedonly two baskets in this period.The lineup:LAW.Hall Right ForwardScofield Left ForwardStriker _............................... CenterCox Right GuardHoyt Left GuardSENIORS.Plume Right ForwardCole Left ForwardPaine CenterWhiting Right GuardJiran _............. Wt GuardBaskets: Scofield, 8; Striker, 2;Jiran, 2; Plume, Paine.Peace Party Will Meet.The University branch of the Wo­mens Peace party will meet tonightat 7 in Kelly hall. Associate Director James· C. M.Hanson, of the University libraries.will preside at a meeting of the Chi­Cago Library club, to be held a weekI from tonight in Fullerton hall, Artinstitute. .Dr, Frank W. Gunsauluswill talk on "Collections and theMethods of Collecting." Mr. Hansonis president of the club.Pi Delta Phi Pledges.Pi Delta Phi announces the pledg­ing of Mable Brisley, of Prescott,Ariz.; Dorothy Dorsett, Grace Green­man, Jane Kinsella, Elizabeth Pat­terson and Helen Wood, all of Chi­cago.COMMUNICATIONS(In view of the fact that the com­munication column of The DailyMaroon is maintained as a dearing­house for student opinion, TheI Maroon accepts no respo�b�ty forthe sentiments therein expressed. Com­munications must be signed as an evi­dence of good faith, although thename will not be published withoutthe writer's consent.)Cash for Relief in Belgium.To the Editor:-In your issue of January 22 yougive a very admirable report of mylecture at the University, but theheadlines are somewhat misleading:"Belgium No Longer in Need, SaysVan Schaick."It is true that Belgium is no longerstarving, but only because relief isbeing rushed in at the rate of $10,-000,000 worth of supplies per month.Money contributions to help financethis work are still urgently neededand should be sent to the Commissionfor Relief in Belgium, 71 Broadway,New York City.John Van Schaick.Washington, D. C. Coach Des J ardien, in a letter writ­ten to The Daily Cardinal, calls at­tention to a mis-statement of factwhich was printed in the Wisconsinpaper in December. The articlewhich involved "Shorty" read as fol­lows:"Eligibility at Wisconsin is harderto secure than at Chicago, an exam-I ple .of which was proved at the Mid­way institution last winter in thecase of Paul Des Jardien, famous 1\Ia­-roon athlete. Mter the close of the1914 football season Des Jardien· leftChicago for a tour of the South, cov­ering a period of a month and a half.When Des Jardien returned to Chi­cago in January he joined the bas­ketball squad immediately and therewas no doubt of his eligibility."In his letter Coach Des Jardiensays the statement is absolutelyfalse. He took a tric with the bas­ketball team during the Christmasvacation but returned at the begin­ning of the Winter quarter and didnot miss a single recitation.Y. M. C. A. SChedules Field 'Trip.A Y. M. C. A. field trip to theDeering plant of the InternationalHarvester Co. has been scheduled forSaturday, the party to leave Cobb at8:30. The manufacture of the vari­ous products will be explained to theparty 'by guides.Plan Bowling Finals.Beta Theta Pi, Chi Psi, Phi KappaPsi and Psi Upsilon will enter the fi­nals in the interfraternity bowlingtournament. The schedule for the fi­na} games will be arranged by thebowling committee of the interfrater­nity council tbis week. Following theregular tournament there will be anindividual bowling tourney.Sophomores to Hold Smoker.Sophomore men will hold a smokertomorow night at 7:30 at the DeltaTau Delta fraternity house, 5607 Uni­versity avenue. No program will begiven at the aft'air.Holds Harpsichord Tryouts.Any woman who can sing or playamusical instrument is eligible forthe Harpsichord tryouts to be heldtoday at 2:30 in Foster hal1.G1� Club to Rehearse.The Glee club will hold a rehearsaltomorrow afternoon at 4 in the Rey­nolds club.Divinity Council Meets.The Divinity council will meet thismorning' at 10:15 in Haskell 16.New Magazine to Appear.The first issue of "War," a newintercollegiate magazine, will appearlate this month. The publication willbe issued under the auspices of theCollegiate Anti-Mmtarism league.To the Editor:-The members of the womcn's clubsof the University are to be congratu­lated on the stand which they aretaking against the very groups ofwhich they are members. There is,indeed, a "new era dawning" for thewomen of the University, when thissmall per cent of the women studentsvoluntarily resign their narrow smallgroup interests for the broader inter­ests of the larger group.The woman who is not bound by Will Give Smoker Friday.The Three Quarters club will holda smoker for its active members and.alumni Friday night at 7:30 at thePhi Kappa Psi house, 5633 Univer­sity avenue., Freshmen to Hold Tea.Freshmen will hold a tea Sundayafternoon from 3 to 5 at the PhiGamma Delta house, 975 East 60thstreet.Freshman Committee Meets.The Freshman social committee willmeet today at 10:15 in Cobb 8B. Rene"Hom(Polish. IAlfred ).I"Homorible boo]rible in tgrunts, ,.originalthe woreis nothhdepictsThere al'"terpiecesin agony,temallyGreek trtorture,classicalhas an athe agonmerely bby cO.,!DplThis pPrzybyszFaulk, isperman.evolvedFaulk wacept. Flchian distempts tci ubermensI he finds 1j' philosophwill notI struggle. sires uph., on the 0I that maleI other, tillthe book.it has neta man w:such as FAs formay beded by rnaare firstyoung Wlfound stubut one .,He undernothing;best !rielthrothedtion fordevotionpityiJig 11instant 8conceiveother. !forces Yf:order'to 'thereforelove.Faulk,ries, basagainst �friend's 1After da�lizing tJuThe twomeanwhilbecause :act be Iuout whiclDuringtells himkita. Dtbeeomesing jea101desire fosions, heundenninhas piqushe killsgirl, to .,returns,When Y!Janin� !himself 1It al1blooded �mental aFaulk unaround apassions,he.wrongto be aare not IOne isthat Fauresult (smokingact, thansufferingto doubtsome palIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIReviews of RecentBooks THE DAlLY MAROON, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916."Homo Sapiens," a novel from thePolish, by Stanislaw Przybyszewski.Alfred A. Knopf.By Dorothy Weil, '14."Homo Sapiens" is the most hor­rible book I have ever read. Not hor­rible in the small sense in which onegrunts, "Ugh, disgusting," but in theoriginal horror-inspiring meaning ofthe word. To my knowledge thereis nothing else in literature whichdepicts such unutterable agony.There are, of course, wonderful mas­terpieces which portray human soulsin agony, either souls with agony ex­ternally imposed, as in most of theGreek tragedy, or' wrecked by self­torture, of which "Hamlet" is theclassical example; but never beforehas an author attempted to portraythe agonizing soul, tortured notmerely by self and circumstance, butby cO,!Dplete self-knowledge as well.This power of self-analysis whichPrzybyszewski has endowed his hero,Faulk, is a characteristic of the su­perman. Until that creation hasevolved in the Nietszchian brain,Faulk was not a possible literary con­cept. Faulk is avowedly a Nietsz­chian disciple. But although he at­tempts to live in accordance with theubermensch idea, he scoffs at it, forhe finds that despite himself and hisphilosophy he has a conscience thatwill not be extinguished. It is thisstruggle between the strongest de­sires upheld by a ruthless philosophyon the one hand, and a "somethingthat makes for righteousness" on theother, that constitutes the drama ofthe book. That is trite enough, butit has never been conducted before bya man with complete self-knowledge,such as Faulk.As for the actual events, they alsomay be duplicated and even surpass­ed by many another book. When weare first introduced to Faulk he is ayoung writer of twenty-four-a pro­found student and observer of life,but one who has never been "of" it.He understands everything, and feelsnothing; he' has .never loved. Hisbest friend, Mikita, an artist, is be­throthed to Y sa, who out of admira­tion for Mikita's art and his objectdevotion to herself, grants him apitying maternal love in return. Theinstant she meets Faulk the twoconceive a great passion for eachother. Mikita becomes jealous andforces Y sa to become his mistress inorder 'to make sure of her in reality,therefore, he utterly forfeits herlove.Faulk, meanwhile, despite his theo­ries, has had conscientious scruplesagainst yielding to -hi�. love for hisfriend's bethrothed, and goes away.After days of torture he returns, rea­lizing that Y sa reciprocates his love.The two arrange to fiee-Mikita,meanwhile, decides to commit suicidebecause he. knows that by his ownact he has forfeited Y sa's love, with­out which he cannot live.During Faulk's honeymoon Y satells him of her relations with Mi­kita. Despite his philosophy, Faulkbecromes the prey of a most corrod­ing jealousy. Led on by bitterness, adesire for revenge, and intense pas­sions, he seduces Marit, after u�rlyundennining her catholic faith, whichhas piqued him from the first, andshe kills herself. Janina, a slip of agirl, to whom from time to time hereturns, bears his illegitimate child.When Ysa learns of this affair withJanina," she leaves him and he killshimself because he has lost her love.It all sounds sordid and cold­blooded enough, but the excruciatingmental and physical torture whichFaulk undergoes as he is buffetedaround at the mercy of his restlesspassions, makes one feel as did a manhe .wronged. "You suffer too greatlyto be a scoundrel," he said. "Youare not a bad man."One is inclined, however, to believethat Faulk's emotions are rather theresult of excessive drinking andsmoking which accompanies his everyact, than of any inherent capacity forsufFering he may have. He beginsto doubt his sagacity, however, when,some pages farther on,' he discovers MARSHALL, ANNEX-- pre fgrMen"�feriSYOlll1g �feriScll1dYOutlt8·elotJtin6.0ifJiees It; lowest 0 - tlw a. orcoats. q;�urtli Pioorthat Faulk himself is both consciousof his excessive indulgence and will­ing to accord it all due responsibilityin the explanation of himself.Reluctant as I am to admit it-forI find that I rather line up with theconservatives in my disapproval ofFaulk-I think it must be acknowl­edged that he constitutes a new li­brary type,-the introspect of parexcellence. And whether or not oneapproves of the type, he ought atleast to be able to understand it andsympathize with it sufficiently torecognize that Faulk has been por­trayed with superb truth and under­standing.Mlle. de Lamare to Read.MIle. Marguerite de Lamare willgive three readings at a meeting ofthe French club tomorrow at 4 inLexington 14. Mlle. Ie Lamare, whois a member of the French Theatercompany, which is now playing atthe Little theater, will read VictorHugo's "La Fiancee de Limbalier,""Le Lion de Belfort/' by FrancoisCoppee, and a Bergerette of theeighteenth century.Scoutmasters Meet Today.IThe Scoutmasters' class will meettoday at 4:15 in Ellis 3. Mr. LouisMacDonald will lead in the discus­sion of "Tracking, Trailing and Ob­servation." FINDER KEEPER-BUTBRING BACK, 0 BRINGBACK MY BONNIE TO ME Classified Ads.Fly. «:eat. per ODe. N. ad.ertlaemeJIC.neelftd lor I... tbaD U eeata. All elael­Sed HntrtlHlDeDt. lDa.t be paid I. ..­YUlee.Lost, strayed or stolen-a set ofthe best themes produced by the Eng­lish 4 class of Associate Prof. EdithF. Flint. Finder will greatly obligeMrs. Flint by returning the papers,I as they are to be J;ead for the cul­tural advancement of the members ofsaid class. Mrs. Flint stated in aninterview last night that she mournedher loss also because the themes al­ready had been corrected. TEACHERS WANTEDto fill vacancies in every departmentof school work. \Ve have more callsfor teachers than we can possibly fill.WE COVER ALL THE WESTERNSTATES. 3 1-2% COM. Payable Nov­ember 1st. Rcgisted NOW AND BEPREPARED WHEN THE FIRSTREQUESTS COME IN. WRITETODAY FOR PAPERS.TEACHERS' EMPLOYMENT BU-REAU.E. I. Heuer, Manager.CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA.532 C. R. S. Bank Building.Cabinets Hold Joint Meeting.The First and Second cabinets ofthe League will hold a joint meetingtoday at 3:30 in the League commit­tee room.TO RENT-ROOM; STEAM HEAT;electric lights; bay window; alsosingle room, front at $8 per month.Ind. Apt., 6020 Ingleside.Will Hold Tea Today.A tea for all University women willbe held by the Voluntary Study de­partment of the League today at4 :30 in the League room. DO YOU WISH TO EARN BIGmoney in your spare time? Perm­anent employment oflered to a lim­ited number of men and women.Call at 4521 St. Lawrence after 7p. m. Permanent profits.Mrs. Gilkey Will Speak.Mrs. Charles W. Gilkey will speakat the meeting of the League tomor­row at 10:15 in Lexington 14. WANTED-THREE STUDENTS TOoccupy two beautiful front rooms.Student lamps, . all conveniences. Reasonable. Phone H. P. 2209. .6037 Ellis Ave.WILL HOLD FIRSTBASEBALL MEETINGOF SEASON TODAY(Continued from Page 1)teams have been scheduled. The Ma­roons will open the season April 22with the Badger nine as the oppon­ents at Madison. The first homegame will be played against QhioState, May 6. The annual two-gameseries with Illinois is scheduled, thefirst game to be played May 12 atUrbana and the home game May 27.The team will close the Conferenceseason May 31 at Purdue.Conference Baseball Schedule.AprilMayMayMayMayMayMay1\IayMayMay 22-Chicago at Wisconsin.2-Chicago at Northwestern.6-0hio State at Chicago.12-Chicago at I1linois.l3-Northwestern at Chicago.16-Iowa at Chicago.20-Purdue at Chicago.24- Wisconsin at Chicago.27-TIlinois at Chicago.31-Chicago at Purdue.Dancing Class Will Meet.The Hitchcock dancing class wiDmeet tomorrow night at 8:15 in theclub rooms.WiD YOU .tIy a_sensible cigarette?Fatimas have a tastethat wins most men onthe first trial. Thatmust be true. Other­wise. Fatimas wouldnot be outselling everyother cigarette costingover Sc.But what keeps men60 loyal to Fatimas isthat Fatimas play Fairin every way. Theynever taste "hot" and never leave a "sandpaper tickle" or any"mean feeling" afterconlinued smoking.Fatimas are truly •sensible cigarettebecause-t�arealw.,..cooJ.D4comfortable to the throatand tonl:ue and-they leave one fcellDKtip-top even after a 10nKsmokiOK day.-they are paeked In a com­mon-sense. lnexpenalvepackal:e. The value lainthe d�lJrettes..Their Turkish blendof all-pure tobacccs iscombined in such a,way as to make themalways com£orta'bIJlmild, yet rich in goodtobacco-c haracter.Try them yourself..1lff4.�wlitaw dieFati",,, ':MS ,It� .,,� �;lfardNtnIIardtd tltt GRAND PRIZJi.t.t AirAuI a".. "rd (it'"'' '" a""l'i.I�r'tU iZl tA, P""a", •• ·P,rci/fc''''Ir''''tic''''II:',..�si'ic",You Need a TypewritertoThe University 01 Chicago-0-- 'An oid, Strong BaikResi;urces $2,(YoO,oolt-0--It will be a pleasure to US; aconvenience to you; if you doyour Banking here.WOODLAWN TRUST& SAVINGS BANK1204 E. SIXTY:THIRD STREETThe MultiplexHammond is theTypewriter es­pecially _ adaptedfor college work.TflJO DifferentStyles of Type orLanguages arealway. in the machine. II Just Tu",'''6 K"cb ,. and change in 'tantiy fromone to the other.Write for CGtalo. andSp«ial Propo.itionThe HaJiuiiond Typewriter Co.N£W YORKChicago Branch:-189 W. Madison St. Club Plaus Third Tournament.PRINCESS I Now PlayingWinthrop Ames Presents the Three-ActComedyA Pair of Silk Stockings0riIW CuI..d I'M __ ReUe4., SAIl SOTREUMATINEES THURSDAY and SATURDAY Entries may be made now at theReynolds club for a three cushionbilliard tournament, to be- staged inaddition to the pocket and straightrail billiard tournament alread-y an­nounced by the club. The Brisk Smoke- "Bull" DurhamWhen you see an alert-looking young man in alively argument roll a "Bull" Durham cigarette-it'sthe natural thing. ,He likes to punctuate a crispsentence with a puff of "Bull" Durham. His mindresponds to the freshness that' s in the taste of it, andhis Senses are quickened by its unique aroma. Acigarette of ·'BuW' Durham just fits in with keenthinking and foree� action.GENUINE:'BULL DURHAMSMOKING TOBACCOMade ofubrigbt" Virginia-NorthCarolina leaf. "Bull" Durham isrich, fragrant. mellow-sweet-themildest. most enjoyable of smokes.GRAPPLERS TO �IEET PURDUEWill Open Conference Season Satur­day in Bartlett.Maroon wrestlers will open theirConference season Saturday agaiiistthe Purdue squad in Bartlett, Thismeet will determine largely theirchanges in the Conference meet tobe held at Minneapolis in April.Coach Paulsen of the Boilermakers,has had a hundred men out for wrest­ling since the begmning' of the yearand together with the veterans un­doubtedly will send a strong team toopposes the Maroons. Marshall,Grames and Maurer have all beenshowing good form in the lightweightclass, with Cutler, Mullendore, Me­Gill and Kauffman in the next divi­sion.Purdue appears as strong in theheavyweight classes as in the light­er divisions. Longenecker, Ludlumand Noblett will represent the Indi­anians in the IS8-pound class, whileBorum, Dawson and Berns will roundout the squad in the 190-pound divi­sion.The Maroons have a number ofgood men in the lightweight classesand will give the Purdue team a hardbattle, but if the result of the meetlies in the heavyweight bouts, thePurdue grapplers appear to have theadvantage. Sherlaw, Bondzinski andGraves are the only men at presentwho are out in the heavyweight class.Kahn will make a strong bid for firstin the ISS-pound class against Long­enecker. Mahannah, captain of lastyear's squad, must be given the call,over Cutler in the 14S-pound divi­sion, while Jeschke should make ahard fight for first in the 135-poundclass.Cap and Gown Schedule.The Cap ana Go'Wu picbire schedulefor Saturday and Sunday includesphotographs of nine campus organi­zations. The pictures will be takenat the studio of Melvin Sykes, 16North Wabash avenue. The sehed- 'ule follows:Saturday_11 :OO-Deltho.11 :30-Esoteric�,2 :30-Phi Beta Delta�3 :OO-Chi Rho Sigma.Sunday.11 :30-Phi Delta Theta.1 :30-Phi Kappa Psi_2:00-Wyvem.2:30-Pi Delta Phi.3:0�LinC"ol'n House.•Schednle Musical 'Program. FREE-"'.'An nta� Book­let. aHowinc correctway to •• ROIl YourOwn ,. Ciprettes. and a "'Cb� of-oprette papers. will both be mAiled.I_.to aDyaddreu in U. S.OQ,req,a_at.AddIeu ·'Ball·· Durham. 0arbIim. N.C.m 'IQRIC'. TOJW:CO cO.Misses Louise Beaman, contralto,and Mildred Dilling, narpiste, wl1Tgive a musical program Saturdaynight at 8:30 at the Quadrangle club. seidors Will Bold Dinia\er_ the last, and the feeling for form isdefinite and comptete. Altven' takesyou f�m a definite stai1irig point byway of four movements to Ii definneend, and says all there is to say enroute. At the time he is Saying ityou are satisfied. If you think aboutit afterward you are not.Afte'r all, what difference does itmake whether Beethoven WaS serioUsor Alfven profound, if we enjoy 'themusic they provide for us? I confessI do not know, I always get miXedUp when it comes to a diseussion ofstandards. There is a sort of sur­vival of the fittest, and it is alWaysinteresting to trY to pick a wi_nner.Seri1o� wJU J{�ld a dinn4!r nextWednesday at 6 in HutehilliOn cafe.Following the dinner the members of'the class will attend the minois-Chi­cago basketball game in Bartlett.OFFERBU�,. WK"Gmnt AND ALFVENNUMBERS AT CONCERT(Continued from -page 1)yet the WDole tmng is eXciting friimthe first measure, even through thetoo long and too sweet Andante, toDoYou Know that a comparativelysmall number of busi­ness men support your student newspaper? These arethe men who have confidence enough in you and yourloyalty to University activities to spend real money in advertising.It is not charity on their part. It is simply a hearty expression oftheir belief that if they aid you in supporting your paper, you willin turn aid them by patronizing their houses. Is this confidencemisplaced or are you justifying their expenditures?'_ , I, � IiI.(_t, IIL'II,//' ,