A/o\.2\. No. 59.WRGREN’S CAGERSPREPARE TO MEETBOILERMAKER FIVEnitial Victory Gives NewSpirit; Frida May BeEligibleJEW STYLE TO 1JE TRIED OUTBULLETINC. A. A. tankers defeated theMaroons 37-31 last night. Thevarsity water basketball teamwon 7-0.THE WEEK IN SHORTSaturday—Varsity Basketball Teams. Purdue University.Saturday—Varsity Wrestling Teams. Northwestern at Evanston.Saturday—Varsity Swimming Teams. Purdue University at Lafayette,nd. (2:30 P. M.)Confident as a result of their well:arned victory over the Ohio Stateive last week-end, the Maroons areForking overtime in an effort to beit top form when they engage theormidable Purdue University quintetn a Big Ten game in Bartlett Satur-lay night.The victory over the Buckeyesiroved to be a great stimulus to the/arsity cagers, and they are nowjoing at the work with added interest.Hoach Norgren is well pleased withhe new spirit shown by the men andiromises a better showing heretoforevhen the men take the floor for theJoilermaker battle.Norgren Ha3 New StyleCoach Norgren has deviated some-vhat from his short pass style of>lay and instead has instituted the:ombination of short and long pass-ng. This style has proved effectiven the daily scrimmage, and will beriven a thorough trial against thei*urdue aggregation.Harry Frida, who was declared in-•ligible at the beginning of the sea¬son, may rejoin the squad providedie is successful in passing a condi-:ional examination on Saturday morn-ng. Should Frida succeed in elimi-lating the scholastic bar, it would addtreatly to the strength of the team,»s he is adept at basket shooting, andflays a clever floor game.Dickson Is Going StrongThe same combination which van-luished the Buckeyes will take theloor in Saturday’s battle. Dickson,he star of the team who caged nine>nskets against the Ohioans, has beenfinking the ball through the net withjreat frequency during the past week,fle will bear watching Saturday.Joe Duggan, whose floor game wasi feature of the Buckeye clash, seems;o be improving day by day, and bidsFair to be one of the strongest menm the team before the season ad¬vances much fnrther. In the newityle he will assume the role of run-ling guard, advancing the ball withhe forwards and center, while Weisswill take his post under the opposingjnsket.Meet Iowa on Feb. 2On Feb. 2 the Varsity will playheir second Big Ten game away fromhome when they meet the strong Uni¬versity of Towa quintet at Town City,fhe TIawkeyes handed the Maroons alefeat at the opening of the Big Tenseason on the Bartlett floor, and Nor-erren’s proteges will be out for re¬venge.Ur>?vev«Uv Women toat ConcentSix University women will act asushers at the dee club contest ad¬vertised as th"> “greatest aggregationof college singers ever gathered to¬gether,” which will be held Feb. 9 at1:20 in Orchestra hall.In order that representative womenmay be chosen, organizations and in¬dividuals hnve been asked to send inthe names of women they feel willfill the requirements. The Men’s deeflub will then vote on the names pre¬sented. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1923 . Price 5 Cent.LAST MINUTE SCORESSwimmingC. A. A., 37; Varsity, 31.Water BasketballVarsity, 7; C. A. A., 0.Interfraternity BasketballPhi Kappa Sigma, 12; DeltaUpsilon, 4.Sigma Chi, 10; Phi KappaPsi, 5.Lambda Chi Alpha, 7; BetaTheta Pi, 6.Alpha Delta Phi, 11; DeltaKappa Epsilon, 2.Dr. Dodson Leaveson Honeymoon TripAnnouncement has recently beenmade of the marriage, on Jan. 17, ofDr. John Milton Dodson, Dean of theMedical school, and Mrs. Mary HydeWebb, formerly a resident of Detroit,Mich. Dr. and Mrs. Dodson left De¬troit for a two weeks trip to the Ber¬mudas, expecting to be back in Chi¬cago by Feb. 1. They will be athome to their friends after Mar. 1, at4956 Dorchester avenue.Dr. Dodson has been Dean of Medi¬cine here since the Rush Medicalschool was affiliated with the Uni¬versity.Hold Memory ChimeService For NicholsIn memory of Dr. A. H. Nichols,expert on bells and bell-ringing, aspecial program was played last Sun¬day on the Alice Freeman Palmerchimes.Dr. Nichols, himself an accom¬plished ringer and a member of oneof the London societies of bell-ring¬ers, influenced the Alice FreemanPalmer Memorial committee to selectbells of the English type for the Uni¬versity chimes.REVUE FASHIONS ATANNUAL IDA NOYESEXHIBIT ON FEB. 9To Present Silver Loving Cupsto Group PrizeWinnersWith a Gothic setting for the lat¬est of 1923 modes, and larger seatingcapacity than last year, the FashionShow will be presented to the campuson Feb. 9 at 3:30. The main gym¬nasium of Ida Noyes hall with a largestage at the north end and sufficientseats for the number of spectators,has been secured. The contestantswill exhibit the costumes from thestage, and will then descend down themiddle aisle to give a closer view ofthe materials and workmanship.Group Awards to Be MadeJudges without personal interest inthe entrants and who are competentto judge women’s clothes have beenchosen.- The prize for the most suit¬able costume in each group will be asilver loving cup. An additional prizewill be presented to the campus or¬ganization winning the greatest num¬ber of points. Programs planned byHazel Jenny and printed by MarshallField and Co. will contain the namesof the judges and a list of the organi¬zations represented.The four types of costume are:formal, informal, street and campus,and sport and campus wear. A dis¬tinction will be made between ready¬made and self-made clothes, andprizes will be awarded in both elasses.Several attractive entries in the lat¬ter class have already been made, ac¬cording to Mary Hess.Entries Must Be in Feb. 5She pointed out that an individualmay represent only one group andeach organization is restricted toeight contestants. All registrationsmust be made ns soon as possible, andmay be left in the Maroon office withRuth Metcalf or in the Federation boxin Mrs. Goodspeed’s office. No entrieswill he accepted later than Feb. 5. STAR COLEMAN,PERCY BOYNTONIN ALUMNI PLAYDirector of Friars and DeanWill 1 ake LeadingRolesFIRST NIGHT TO BE FORMALAnnouncement that Dean PercyHolmes Boynton and Mr. HamiltonColeman are to play the leading rolesin “The Beaux’ Stratagem,” the Res¬toration comedy of Farquar which isto be produced under the auspices ofthe University Dramatic associationin Mandel hall on Feb. 9 an 10, hasaroused keen interest among the mem¬bers of the undergraduate body. Thisfact was determined yesterday whennumerous telephone calls, asking forfurther details about the performance,were received in the office of TheDaily Maroon.Dean Boynton is a “Little Theater”actor of note. His last impersonationwas in Bernard Shaw’s skit, “Augus¬tus in Search of a Father.”Coleman in CastHamilton Coleman, producer of theBlackfriars shows for the last nineyears, is well known as a professionalactor.Dean Boynton will take the part ofthe gay Lothario who disguises him¬self as a servant. He and HamiltonColeman, who will take the part ofthe other fortune hunter, act as foilsto each other in the production.As two gay rakes in search ofwives and lucre, they finally win both,only after rebuffs on the part of Mrs.Sullen and Dorinda, the two women tobe played by Phoebe Bell Terry andPhyllis Fay Horton.Pierrot Plays SquireAdolph Pierrot, head of the Uni¬versity Alumni association, will playSquire Sullen, who conveniently re¬tires before the impetuous Archerand Aimwell. Mr. Pierrot was at onetime director and president of theDramatic club.The remainder of the cast is com¬posed of Dramatic club alumni.First night will be formal. Frater¬nities and women’s clubs plan to at¬tend in groups.Tickets for the performances go onsale this week. Reservations may hemade at Cobb 11-A in the afternoon.Sell Gargoyle TicketsTickets to the All-American pro¬gram of the Gargoyles, which will hestaged in Mandel hall Friday at 8:15,are obtainable at the bookstore andat Mandel cloister from 3 to 5. Sea¬son tickets for the four future Gar¬goyle productions are on sale for onedollar, single tickets for 50 cents.Teams captained by Ruth Stagg,Helen Steel, Carmel Hayes, ElizabethHyman and Marion Quint report ex¬cellent sales thus far. Unsold ticketsare due not later than Friday at 4.Point System TriedAt Other CollegesA point system for campus activ¬ities will be voted on at Ohio Uni¬versity on Feb. 1. This system, ifcarried, will limit participation in ac¬tivities tp 20 points. Other schoolswhich are installing this system areiCarnegie Technical college and Mich¬igan Agricultural college.Such a limitation of activities herewas discussed at an open councilmeeting of the Federation of Univer¬sity Women held last winter, but noaction was taken.Men’s Club Formal Feb. 2The date of the Reynolds club for¬mal has been changed from Feb. 9because of the interfraternity gleeclub contest, to Feb. 2. This formalwill he the first given by the Reynoldsclub in Several years.Senior Committee MeetSenior class committee chairmenwill hold a meeting today at noon inCobh 12-A. Some important classbusiness will he discussed. 1923 PROM BUDGET SHOWSPROFIT OVER EXPENDITURESHartman’s Plans Approved by Auditor; $176Profit to Go to Council; ExpensesAs High As in 1922NO, SOLITAIRE IS NOTBASHFUL PROFESSORNor Is He a Woman, Says Editor ofThe CircleIngenious theories concerning theidentity of Solitaire, the man, womanor child who comments once eachmonth on the lugubrious aspect oflife in general and the Seven Arts inparticular, have been advanced bycampus sleuths.A communication recently receivedby The Circle, Solitaire’s scene of bat¬tle, maintains that the person in ques¬tion is an author native of the Phil¬ippine Islands. Other investigatorsare convinced that he is a bashfulprofessor, and others that he is awoman.According to Lennox Grey, editorof the literary monthly, none of thesetheories are entirely correct.After dummying the January issueyesterday, he announced that it wouldappear on the campus positively notlater than Friday morning. Theprice remains at 15 cents.INTRODUCTIONS ARENOT NECESSARY ATCLASS DANCES HERESocial Chairmen Discuss Prob¬lems of Campus Life atFederation MeetingNo longer need the University wo¬man sit at the side of the dance-fioorduring class social functions, nor isthere longer need for the men to se¬cure introductions to the women at¬tending the dances before they mayspeak or dance with them.At +he bi-weekly meeting of theFederation of University Women heldTuesday night the decision of the wo¬men present, as well as that of theclass presidents and social chairmenwho attended the meeting, was thatat all future class and all-Universitymixers the men and women shouldconsider the fact that the “roof of theUniversity” is sufficient introductionin itself.To Encourage More “Mixing”One of the main contentions againstrequiring introductions in the socialform prescribed for all these under¬graduate affairs was that it led to thesegregation of the students intogroups, the popular men dancing andspeaking with the popular women,while those not quite so prominentsocially had no real chance to mix.The opinion of the social chairmenwas that doing away with the eti¬quette of introduction would lead toan almost certain solution of this con¬dition.Just how much a man ought tospend on a girl when taking her outon a date and in what way a girl canreciprocate were also among the so¬cial problems discussed at the meet¬ing. According to Russell Carroll, agirl can he very influential in curb¬ing the expenditures of her escort.The women, on their side, contendedthat, most girls would ho perfectlywilling to sit in the balcony of atheatre with their gentlemen friendsif the men would tnko the initiativeand suggest it. Here the men againbrought up the argument that theypreferred not to he thought “cheap.”Divide Blame For ConditionAs n result of the discussion it wasdecided that the blame for most ofthe existing conditions was equallydivided between the men and womenand that the remedy of these condi¬tions is up to both. Tt was also de¬cided to try various plnns at dancesand tens for the mixing and introduc¬ing of the people attending. Complete budget plans for theWashington Prom were announced byGeorge Hartman yesterday. Tickets,which will be on sale the first weekin February will cost $6.60, the sameas last year.The budget as approved by the Uni¬versity auditor, shows a profit of $176.All money which is made on the dancewill be turned over to the Under¬graduate council to aid it in its workfor the student body. In this way allindividual gain from the affair iseliminated and such profit as it isnecessary to make in order to coverunlooked for expenses will be turnedback to the students through the workof the council.Krogh to Handle TicketsFull management of the ticket salewill be in the hands of Egil Krogh,chairman of the tickets committee.Livingston Hall and Clarence Brick-man will work under him in distrib¬uting the tickets under the plan whichis to he announced later.Brickman is the first junior everappointed on a Prom committee. Thefact that all the men in charge haveheretofore been seniors has made itimpossible for the next year’s com¬mittees to profit by the work of theirforerunners, there being no one leftin school who had any experience inconducting the details of the Prom.Putting a junior on the finance com¬mittee this year will eliminate thisdifficulty. The practice will probablybe kept up hereafter.Expenses as High as Last YearIn accordance with the announcedpolicy of the leaders to make knownto the student body where the moneyobtained from the ticket sale is usedthe entire budget as approved by Na¬than C. Plimpton is published. Thesixty cents added to the price of eachticket is required as war tax. Con¬trary to general expectation the ex¬penses connected with the Prom arejust as high this year as last. Everyeffort has been made to cut the costdown as much as possible. The bud¬get is as follows:Publish Complete BudgetMusic $175Supper 680Programs 200Decoration and buildingchanges 473Prom Maroon 75Picture 25Checking 50Tickets, stamps, etc 50Transportation 15$1,745325 tickets at $6 $1,950Profits 2152 ner cent of gross income toUniversity auditor 39Net profit $176PI. A NS UNDER WAYFOR FIFTH ANNUALPREP CAGE MEETInitial preparations for the FifthAnnual National Tnterscholastic Bas¬ketball Tournament were made thisweek when letters were sent to fourhundred of the best high school cageteams in the country. These lettersare not invitations as they state:“Because of the past record of yourbasketball teams, this special noticeis being sent to you so that you maywork towards this season’s greatestclimax, the University of Chicago Na¬tional Tournament.”Score Club MeetsScore club will hold an importantmeeting today at noon in ClassicsCommon room.Page TwoUll|r Daily jiBaruuuThe Student Newspaper of theUniversity of ChicagoPublished mornings, except Saturday, Sun-Uuy utid Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DailyMaroon Company.Kntt red as second class mall at the Chi¬cago Post office, Chicago, Illinois, MarchIS, IttOti, under the act of March 3, 1873.Telephone Midway 800Offices Ellis 14Member ofThe Wentern Conference Press AssociationNOCTURNEIt has been privately determinedand publicly proclaimed that fromsixty to seventy-five per cent of theundergraduate body is absolutely im¬pervious to professorial instruction.The professors themselves are re¬sponsible for the statistics.The professors, too, are responsiblefor the average undergraduate’s dis¬interestedness in the pearls cast be¬fore him. Our own conservative es¬timate is that from sixty to seventy-five per cent of the lecture coursesfoisted upon the average undergrad¬uate are fearfully devoid of interest.To doze or not to doze, that is thequestion.HOMO PESTUSThere is a race of men thatshould have become extinct when thelaw of the survival of the fittest wasin full force back in the pristine ages,and when they were crossing theCromagnon, and the Heidelberg, andtheir progeny off the later paleolithicstatute books. For lack of a bettername we shall call the race homopestus, which translated freely fromthe Latin means the Pest. Numberedamong its prominent citizens are thefunny boys who steal up behind one,and announce their presence with adeath-dealing slap on the back andan accompanying guffaw. Then, too,there are patron saints of prominentpersons, eternally ready to proffercigarettes, and to assist in putting oncoats. They may be excused onlyduring campus elections. There areperpetual jokesters, and caperingclowns who orally herald themselvesto the universe.No undergraduate action can elim¬inate homo pestus. He came with theworld, although as yet he has notbeen located on the record of therocks, and he will probably guffawhis way to eternity.Contemporary CommentEXTEMPORANEOUS LESSONS(Indiana Daily Student)Occasionally a professor stops in adiscourse upon the subject supposedto occupy the hour and finds his stu¬dents following him closely throughan extemporaneous lecture upon atopic far astray from the professor’sspecialized knowledge. It is lecturesof this sort by which the student ismost often most impressed and whichhe is apt to regard as the most valu¬able lessons of his college career.There is something attractive inthese informal, wayside conversa¬tions, when a professor of mathe¬matics interrupts the circumscribingof parabolas on the blackboard to de¬liver to his class a free lecture uponthe appreciation of poetry; when aprofessor of political science stops togo upon a chatty excursion into thevalue of traveling slowly on a jour¬ney and making the time spent worth¬while; when an economics professorbreaks off from the technical defini¬tions of his subject to discourse uponthe larger aspects of present-dayevents and the need of reading news¬papers and periodicals; when the his¬tory professor suddenly forgets hisrecitation of the age of feudalism andlaunches into an inspired messageupon the cultural value of architec¬ture: when the professor of Chaucerfor a moment discards his metrics andtalks upon th" practical political ques¬tions of the day.Manv things are discussed at theseinformal lectures. Campus affairscome up for a moment; subjectswhich the student has an opportunityof discussing in a special course butwhich do not attract his attentionnearly so much or make so indeliblean impression as in these impromptulectures, occupy the classroom for amoment, brighten up an otherwiseuninteresting hour, and establish acloser sympathy between the in¬structor and his students.The extemporaneous lesson, notlisted in the University catalogue and THE DAILY MAROON. THURSDAY, JANUARY 25. 1923unscheduled in any syllabus, affordsthe professor opportunity to drivehome lessons to his students. Thewire-fencs salesman who can talkinterestingly upon Milton or Dante,often has the power of converting hislisteners to a purer appreciation ofliterature than the most learned pro¬fessor of English literature. So theprofessor of economics may be ableto interest his pupils in the paintingsof Rembrandt, and the professor ofmusic may be able to say somethingwhich will set the student to thinkingupon sociological and economic prob¬lems.FRESHMAN TO COMEDATELESS TO PARTYON VALENTINE’S DAYFreshmen will come dateless to aValentine dinner dance Feb. 14 in IdaNoyes hall, according to plans an¬nounced by Walter Stevens, Fresh¬man president. The plan of havinga real party to which the membersof the class may come individually iscalculated to bring out a large groupwhich would not otherwise attend andto enable everyone to make newfriends.Valentine decorations will trans¬form the Ida Noyes ball room andValentine favors will serve as memen¬tos of the affair. The best of dancemusic and high class vaudeville stuntsduring the dinner will make the affaira lively one.Men and women will be given num¬bers at the door which will assignthem to their places at dinner whilethe dance will be a strictly informalcut-in affair. Tickets will be on saleMonday for $1.25. VERSAILLES TREATYGIVES GERMANY NOHOPE, PROFS. STATEPark and Schevill DiscussConditions in Germanyand ItalyNo hope exists for Germany so longas the Versailles treaty remains inforce, according to a statement njadeby Prof. Ferdinand Schevill of the De¬partment of History in a lecture givenyesterday evening at a joint meetingof the Social Science clubs in HarperAssembly room. Prof. Schevill andProf. Robert E. Park of the Depart¬ment of Sociology and Anthropologywere the speakers of the evening.Both have recently returned fromCentral Europe where they have madean intensive study of conditions, po¬litical, social, and economic.Prof. Schevill spoke principally ofthe Fascisti movement in Italy. Thebourgeoisie of that country, said Prof.Schevill, have long feared an assaultfrom the communistic proletariat.To protect their property and theircultural traditions they united in vari¬ous local groups which eventuallyformed the Fascisti—an awakeningof the bourgeoisie.“Fascisti Won By Force”Aided by their technical trainingand the characteristic bourgeois classdiscipline, the Fascisti were able tocarry out a deliberate purpose of win¬ning Italy by force. Civil war fol¬lowed. It was on a small scale ascompared with the conflicts of recent years, but it was civil war neverthe¬less.“Every day,” sad Prof. Schevill, “Iwould read in the Italian newspapersof a dozen or so of local conflicts.The Fascisti commander in some pro¬vince would call an expedition againsta certain village where the commun¬ists still held out The Fascisti wouldset out, fully equipped with steel hel¬mets, muskets, and ammunition belts,and with machine guns in their ar- jmored trucks; a fight would follow; |and nearly always, in the end, a con-1flagration.”Says Fascisti Averted DangerEventually the Fascisti took Rome.What is the result?The Fascisti have averted a danger,the danger of a communistic revolu¬tion. But what have they gained?Italy still has a big balance on thewrong side of her budget, high taxes,and a discontened people.No remedy can cure Italy, accord¬ing to Prof. Schevill, unless it helpsGermany and Austria also. So longas the Versailles treaty still furnishesa means for legal and deliberate loot,there is no hope for Germany’s re¬vival.Conditions in Germany, accordingto Prof Park, who devoted his lec¬ture to a survey of that nation ashe saw it, make a visit there “un¬pleasant” in many ways, from thepoint of view both of personal con¬venience, and of what one sees.The middle classes are suffering themost, said Prof. Park. They are the |scholars, the lawyers, the physicians, jand for their intellectual work there,is no demand. Day by day they arejcoming nearer to starvation, and to:the loss of their priceless tradition of Ilearning. ISAAC LEVINEConcert Pianist - Teacher930 KIMBALL BUILDINGRes., 1215 E. 52nd St. Mid. 4035Consider the ' .SUN ROOM\ &r private partiesCOME to the Sisson for student activi¬ties! Unusual courtesies are extendedfor private parties, dances and ban¬quets. Our Sun Room, twelve storiesabove Lake Michigan, is an idealballroom.Dinner-dance* in the main restaurantevery Wednesday and SaturdayLake Michigan at 53d StreetTelephone Fairfax 1000( :< ;{ h j: )1 SAVE TIME BY READINGTHE ADVERTISEMENTSWhat do you want—a hat, coat, suit, a pair of shoes,gloves, a cravat? Or do you want to send flowersto someone? Or perhaps candy. Maybe you need somebooks or stationery.Of course you are busy and haven’t time to look in all thestores for just the article you want.So for your convenience the merchants tell you throughthe advertisements just what they have. If you readthem, you are sure to find the best place to buy.No merchant would spend his good money advertising ifhis merchandise were not of good quality and fairlypriced. It wouldn’t pay.Read iThe Advertisements CarefullyTHEY SAVE YOU TIME AND MONEYTHE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1923 Page ThreeSPANISH SOCIETIESOUTLINE ACTIVITIESFOR THIS QUARTERMr. Abel Cantu, a member of theUniversity of Wisconsin faculty and awell-known lecturer, yesterday gavea stereoptican lecture on Mexico un¬der the auspices of the Pan-Americansociety and El Circulo Espanol. Thisis the second number of the programwhich the Spanish club has plannedfor this quarter. On Feb. 23, anotherlecture will be given by Senor JuanAntonio Meana, president of the His¬panic American society, on earlySpanish painting. This lecture willbe for the members of both clubs.The second annual “Noche deFiesta” (night of merrymaking), willtake place at Ida Noyes hall on Mar.3. The whole third floor of the build¬ing will be thrown open for the affair,and dancing will alternate with indi¬vidual vaudeville numbers throughoutthe evening. All the members of theclub, and their friends who desire toadd to the Spanish atmosphere, willattire themselves in Spanish costumes.The club will also sponsor the inter¬romance meeting which is a gatheringof the three Romance “circles” onMar. 6. Activities of the quarter willbe brought to a close with a banquet.Disciples Club Meets TonightThe Disciples club will hold an im¬portant meeting this evening at 6:30in Ida Noyes hall. All members havebeen urgently requested to attend.kWK':»x«»!Ki»wWKW!Ki« *;>?'«TheCircleI111iwill be outFriday YEARBOOK ISSUESLAST REQUEST FORINDIVIDUAL PHOTOSAll seniors graduating at the end ofthis Winter quarter or the followingSpring and Summer quarters musthave their pictures taken for the Capand Gown by Feb. 1 if they expecttheir pictures to appear in this year'sannual. This time extension has beengranted in a final effort to include thenames and pictures of all graduatingseniors in this year’s book. In astatement made to-day Editor-in-chiefLathan Crandall pointed out that onlyseven hundred pictures (about two-thirds of the senior class) have beentaken.Appointments should be made im¬mediately with the official Cap andGown photographers, the De HavenStudios, 144 South Wabash Ave.Senior activity cards have been mailedto all seniors whom the Recorder’sOffice has reported as eligible tograduate before the Autumn quarter.These activity cards may also be ob¬tained on request at the Cap andGown office in Ellis hall. All cardsmust be returned by Feb. 1 to theCap and Gown, Box 280, Faculty Ex¬change.Law students obtaining the degreeof J. D. or LL. B. are included amongthose who should have their picturestaken and activity cards returned bythis date.Commerce Club MeetsW. L. Munk of the Toledo Sales Co.will speak on the methods of produc¬tion control used in his company at ameeting of the Commerce club thisafternoon at 4:30 in Classics 10. Allmembers have been urged to attend.Delta Sigma PledgesDelta Sigma announces the pledg¬ing of Drucilla Schroeder of Chicago.CLASSIFIED ADSFULL DRESS SUIT with corded silkvest size 39 in perfect condition,only $25.00. Call Oak Park* 2338.University StudentsYou who are away from homewill most certainly enjoy ourdelicious home-cooked meals.BLAKEMORETEA ROOM6230 Kimbark Ave.\ trial will make you a steady customerBeating Old ManWebsterNoah Webster becamefamous when he wrote70,000 wordsIngersoll"Pencilcarries in its magazine15 double length leadswith a writing mileageof 540,000 words.It requires a new leadonly once for every36,000 written wordsand is so simply con¬structed that it alwaysworks. Will not clogat the point.The GIFT—shown here¬of Rolled Gold $3.00. InRolled Silver $1.00.See this and other modelsat your stationery or cooper¬ative store.Ingersoll Redlpolnt Co.. Inc.Wm. H. Ingenoll, Pres.461 Fourth Are., New York Cltr COLLEGE LIFEBerkeley, Calif.—Rugby football hasmade its reappearance as an officialsport. A coach has been appointedand regular practice has beenstarted.Madison, Wis.—Junior Prom pro¬gram starts today with a perform¬ance of “Stop Thief” and specialtheater parties. Tomorrow eveningthe grand march will be led by thegovernor at 9:15. Dancing will con¬tinue until 2:45.Lawrence, Kans.—A bureau of per¬sonal assistance exists in the depart¬ment of geology of the University ofKansas. Requests for advice andcounsel with regard to oil, gas, coal,zinc, and salt mines are being an¬swered daily. Material is sent in tothe department for identification anddetermination of value.Champaign, Ill.—More than 200designs submitted in the Tribunearchitectural contest will be on dis¬play this week on the campus.Athens, O.—A point system hasbeen worked out at Ohio Universitywhereby the activities of men andwomen on campus will be limited ac¬cording to the importance and num¬ber of activities engaged in.Neff Gives LectureAssociate Prof. Neff of the Romancedepartment will give an illystratedlecture on conditions in North Af¬rica at a meeting of Le Circle Fran-cais this afternoon at 4:30 in theFrench house. All members of theFrench club have been invited to at¬tend.Masons Invited to DanceAll Masons and Eastern Stars onthe campus have been invited to at¬tend a dance to be given by theAchoth and Square and Compass clubsSaturday evening at 8:30 in Ida Noyeshall. Admission will be by member¬ship card only, which may be securedat the Acacia house or from club rep¬resentatives on the campus. Thecommittee in charge hopes that allclub members and their friends willcome out and assures a good time forall.University Buys CollectionThe University has recently pur¬chased an interesting collection ofbooks of the Fifteenth century fromProf. E. T. Merrill, of the Classicsdepartment. Among them is an edi¬tion of Catullus, printed in Venice in1491, by Bonatus Locatellus, and sev¬eral early editions of Pliny’s Letters.Of the latter, one was printed by Ru-beus at Treviso in 1483, which hasmarginal notes and contemporary an¬notations; one was printed at Veniceby de Blavis in 1485; one printed inRome by Silber in 1490; and a lastedition printed in Bologna by Faelli,in 1498. In addition to these earlierhooks there is a number of volumesof the 16th century in this collection.TypewritersALL MAKESSold and RentedReasonable PricesSpecial Rental Rates to StudentsREMINGTON PORTABLESAmerican Writing MachineCompany329 S. Dearborn St.* Harrison 1360Seen theCollege Fellow Belt Yet?A Real Belt in MAROONAsk our Special Representative Mor¬ton Barnard at Reynolds Hall anyday, or 1545 East 60th St.Also on display at Book Store.Made byCollege Athletic Co.153 East Ontario St.ChicagoA Complete Line of Men’s Furnish¬ings, Arrow Collars, Van Heusen Col¬lars, Interwoven Socks, SuperiorUnderwear atBAIM’S VARIETY STOREHyde Park 9674 1327 E. 53rd St.OPEN EVENINGS Bohemian NiteEvery Friday EveningSouth Side’s gayest and mosttalked of Blowout Party—un¬rivaled in beauty of settingsand brilliant effects.Fun, Melody, Dancing, Souvenirs,Noise- Makers—n’evrythin’Edgar A. BensonPresentsJean Mack and His OrchestraNo one can resist such living rhythm indance music--the kind that dancers al¬ways want hut seldom find.TheGolden Lily**South Side's Best Liked Cafe99309 East 55that the“L”Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1923THIS WEEK IN SPORTSThe football team attended a per¬formance of “Sally,” Tuesday night.The class team is practicing inpreparation for a gruelling contestwith Illinois.The Women’s Rifle team has sched¬uled a telegraphic contest with RiponCollege.The second round of the BridgeTournament will be held next week.Alas, Friends, ’Tis True!Scene in Harper Reading Room.1st French student: What’s thefeminine of “Joli?”2nd same: Don’t know.3rd likewise: Oh, what’s the femi¬nine of “shut-up?”Voice from the next table: Thereisn’t any.The first atrocities of the initiatingseason have been reported. Phv Psifreshmen are about with sandpaperednoses. Wonder which fraternity willbe the first to have its pledges dig¬ging for treasure on the Midway ?Jacqueline was explaining to us howfifty more people will be accommo¬dated at the Prom. “It’s not that thefloor will be larger,” she explained,“but that they will dance differently.”FAMOUS DIGSGold ers.night.Infra .In nity.up.Dirty s.Our Money Is on the Phi KapsDear Jacques: I notice in the sched¬ule of the Bridge Meet, that onematch is between Phi Kappa Sigmaand Phi Kappa Sigma. Looks likedirty work to me. Sinai Swimmers ToGive Exhibition HereGeorge Eckert, swimming coachfor Sinai Social Center and trainerof many famous swimmers, will bringhis team to the Ida Noyes pool for anexhibition meet, to be held Tuesday,January 13 at 4:15. This exhibitionpromises to be an interesting and in¬structive one and all students inter¬ested in swimming are invited tosee it.Coach Eckert has a record for pro¬ducing nine A. A. F. championshipteams in the last ten years. He alsoconducted the A. A. F. championshipmeet at Lincoln Park last summer,the largest meet ever held in thecounry.Abe Spiegel of the I. A. C., Green¬berg of the C. A. A. and several ofour own swimmers have been devel¬oped by him. He is one of the lead¬ing coaches in the country and shouldput on an interesting exhibition.Freshman Cage SquadPrepares ForScrimmageAfter three weeks of intensive drill,the Freshman basketball squad, un¬der the direction of Coach “Fritz”Crisler, is beginning to show realability. The squad has been reducedfrom 50 to 25 men and it is expectedthat this number will be retained tillthe end of the season when numeralswill be alloted to those showing Var¬sity ability.Several men on the squad have hadconsiderable experience at the cagegame, and are already displayingVarsity class. Alyea, Abbott, andStevens, forwards, and Barta, Francisand McCarty, guards, are the menwho have shown a good brand of pass¬ing and basket shooting.At present, the men are beingdrilled in several different styles ofdefense and attack, and will soon bein condition to give the Varsity stren¬uous opposition. Student's Car HitWhen Autos CrashFour automobiles were damaged,two of them badly, in a freak accidentwhich occurred at Ellis ave. and Fifty-sixth st. yesterday afternoon when aspeeding auto going north on Ellisave. crashed with an electric whichwas turning in the street, and sentit crashing into a car parked alongthe west curb. The first car aftercolliding with the electric skidded tothe east side of the street, ripping offthe fender of an auto owned by HenryHieronimus, a student at the Uni¬versity.According to witnesses, the carwhich caused the accident, owned byJ. C. Loeb, 6957 Jeffry ave. was tra¬veling at a high rate of speed whenthe electric, driven by Mrs. J. N.Reddy, 2820 Sheridan road started toturn. The chauffeur of Loeb’s carapplied the brakes but was going toofast to stop in the hundred feet hehad to go before reaching the electric.The worst damage was sustained bythe electric which lost its battery boxwhen struck in the rear.Football Players SallyForth to SeeStage Hit“C” men and Old English “C” menof the 1923 football team, attendedthe musical comedy “Sally” at theColonial Theatre, Tuesday evening.The party came as a reward forthe time and energy displayed by themen during the grid season, and itwas received with many thanks. Thewinsome Marilyn Miller was forcedto take second place to Leon Errol inthe opinions of the majority, as thelatter’s jokes had the players in amore helpless conndition than theywere after the Princeton game.“Oh to be a ‘C’ man,” were the sen¬timents expressed by every day un¬dergraduates, as the lucky heroes re¬galed their listeners with the manyhumorous incidents in the show.Flip.A QUIET AFTERNOON IN THEOFFICE“All is not gold that glitters,”So quoth the Woman’s Ed.“Yet all is female that titters,”Snapped back the Sporting Ed.“Fools laugh at their own jokes,”The Woman’s Ed. replied.“Sooner a fool than foolish,”Was the Sporting Ed.’s aside.Dear Mr. Whistler: I don’t see whyyou make fun of all we boys who wearred feathers in our hats. I think theyare simply dandy.One Who Wears One.He’s right, they are dandy.Jacques.Sport ShortsJohnny Vorees, brother of the Ma¬roon wrestling coach, won the CentralA. A. U. Championship at 135 lbs. inlast week’s tournament. MARRIAGE OF DEAN DODSONTO MRS. WEBB ANNOUNCEDThe marriage of Dr. John MiltonDodson, Dean of the Medical school,to Mrs. Mary Hyde Webb, has beenannounced.Dean Dodson, a graduate of theUniversity of Wisconsin, received hisDoctor’s degree from Rush Medicalschool and since 1889 has been con¬nected with that institution. Afterthe affiliation of Rush medical withthe University he became the dean ofmedical students.Robertson to Give Talk“Objectives” will be the subject ofa talk to be addressed to the Presby¬terian Club by Dean Robertson tomor¬row afternoon. The meeting will beheld at 4:30 in Harper M-17. Allmembers of the club have been urgedto attend. COWHEY’SStore for MenMen’s Furnishings, Hats,Caps and NeckwearBilliardsCigars, Cigarettes, PipesS. E. Cor. 55th and Ellis Ave.BY A STUDENTNear the University is a cozy nookwhere STUDENTS may enjoy whole¬some American meals at reasonablecost, prepared by FELLOW STU¬DENTS who know what students wantBaldwins Restaurant1025 East 55th Street(Between Ellis and Greenwood)Special Swiss Steak Dinner To-nightMarcel WavingR. Jones1372 E. 55th StreetHyde Park 6941Formerly with Mrs. KennedyGifts that grow!Triwood Flower Shop1527 E. 63rd Street—Near Harper AvenueAs Near As Your PhoneHyde Park 5562Say it with flowersFreshmenHiere are many good positions on theadvertising staff of The DAILY MA¬ROON for willing workers. No ex¬perience is necessary. See the adver¬tising manager any day at I 2:00 noonor between 4 :30 and 6:00 P. M. PLAZA RESTAURANTTABLE d'HOTE A LA CARTEQUALITY PRICE COURTESY1464 East 57th Street“ALWAYS OPEN"Dainty Food Wholesome FoodGood Service Clean Pleasant SurroundingsWe do not advertise Home Cooking—there’s a reason.THE BLUE SHOP1445 ON THE MIDWAYYards 0444 Boulevard 9269PEOPLE’SCREAMCOMPANYICECREAM s49£cK,The Cream of All Creams, our“SUNDA E”Get It at U. of C. BookstoreWith FRUIT CENTER is DeliciousDO YOU WANT TO EARN MONEY EASYMany persons are needed on the Cap & Gownstaff to sell subscriptions. A liberal commis¬sion is paid.Patronize Our AdvertisersIn these three words the fate of The Daily Maroonrests. If you want The Daily Maroon, you must supportits advertisers who make it possible.Our advertisers use The Daily Maroon because theyknow it appeals to a very intelligent, high class group ofreaders. They want and greatly appreciate this type ofpatrons, and so they are always looking for you and wel¬coming you in their establishments.And because our advertisers realize the intelligenceof Daily Maroon readers, they offer them only the bestand most reliable brand of goods. They know Univers¬ity of Chicago folk cannot be fooled as regard quality orprice.And SO WE ARE ASKING YOU TO PATRON¬IZE OUR ADVERTISERS, not only because they makeThe Daily Maroon possible, but because they are alwaysendeavoring to give you the best that there is in com¬modities at the most reasonable prices.The Circle-Get One