Vol. 24. No. 67 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925 Price 5 CentsJUNIOR COUNCIL READYFOR PROMENADE TONIGHTRecord Attendance Is Expected From Sale ofTickets; Decorations Reported to BeFinest in YearsMARGARET SANGERMAKES PLEA FORQUALITY CHILDRENShould Follow Example ofOur Ancestors and CheckPopulation“All countries of today are feelingthe pressure of over-population,”said Miss Margaret Sanger, birthcontrol advocate, last night at theInstitute of Liberal Thought in KentTheatre. “Population always hasbeen controlled and must be checked,either by death rate or birth control.”Miss Sanger pointed her fingerscornfully at pictures of record-breaking families of fifteen andtwenty. “What we need is quality,not quantity. The newspapersshould print pictures of the most in¬telligent families and not the mostprolific.“Through savagery and barbarismthere has alawys been a check,” ex¬plained Miss Sanger. “The earlysavages killed the infants and weak¬lings. Even such philosophers asPlato and Aristotle and Seneca ad¬vocated the killing of infants. Fromthe middle ages down to the eigh¬teenth century infanticide was prac¬ticed.”University of IowaHas Novel LibraryA newspaper library is just beingcompleted at the University of Iowaschool of journalism which will con-a copy of every daily paper that ispublished in the United States, some2500 in all. Each paper is being fas¬tened to wallboard in a vertical posi¬tion so that its makeup can be stud¬ied easily.This is probably the only libraryof its kind in existence. Its purposeis to give journalism students anacquaintance with a wide variety ofnewspaper makeups.Practically all of the 600 weeklynewspapers published in Towa arerepresented. Papers from distantpoints include the Anchorage, Alaska,Daily Times, which sells for '10 centsa copy; a paper from Porto Rico, andone from the Hawaiian Islands. Thelist is constantly being increased.CAMPUS INTERESTED INBUSCH FORUMSPEECHQuite an exceptionally keen inter¬est has been taken in the announce¬ment in The Daily Maroon yester¬day that Francis X. Busch, corpora¬tion counsel for the City of Chicago,will lead the debate at the All-Uni¬versity Forum to be held in theSouth room of the Law School thisevening at 8, it was revealed in aninterview with prominent backers ofthe movement yesterday. The meet¬ing tonight will be the first to beheld under the new plan of holdingan open forum after a speaker haspresented bis viewpoint of prominentsubjects, and is expected to becomea permanent institution of the Uni¬versity.Men and women are eligible toenter into the open debate which willfollow Mr. Busch's talk on “ TheTraction Ordinance of ChicagoShould Be Adopted.” Mr. Busch willpresent both sides of the question,taking neither affirmative or neagtiveas his sole argument.The audience will be permitted toask questions, and state their side ofthe argument when he has concludedhis address. A vote will be takenafter the discussion is finished to seewhat the majority of the people pres¬ent believe should be done with theordinance.Dean T. V. Smith, of the Schoolof Arts, Literature, and Science, willpreside as chairman of the meeting.He will introduce the speaker of theevening and outline the purpose ofthe Forum. It is expected that theForum will be limited in the verynear future to graduate students andfaculty only; at present it is open toall members of the University exceptFreshmen. Circle Out FirstWarm Day in Feb.The proverbial “ warm day inFebruary ” is to come into .its ownat last.Following a disastrous experi¬ence with frigid sales days in thelast two years, the managementof The Circle has decided to setn0 specific date for publication ofits February number.Yesterday Editor Jack Oppen-heim and (Circulation ManagerSeward Covert met in conferenceand agreed upon a new and uniqueplan.The February number of themagazine, which has earned justfame as being “ collegiate as thedevil,” will be printed on Febru¬ary 10, but will not be releasedfor public consumption until theweather man provides a morningmild enough to allow the bevy ofbeautiful saleswomen to take theircustomary stands in various partsof the campus.“ We must keep faith with oursales corps.” said Seward Covert,after the conference. * “ We can¬not allow our wonderful aggrega¬tion of women to be nipped bythe frost or chilled by the greatNorth wind from across the Mid¬way.”By mysterious calculation theeditor has arrived at the conclu¬sion that the first warm day inFebruary is due about the lltliof the month, according to in¬formation he gave to his bosomfriends. Harrison Barnes andBruce McFarlane. These two gen¬tlemen, however, refused to divulgeany additional information.ELECT PROFESSORSTO KEDU-REMTHETMake Burgess, Allen, Smith,and Pierce HonorariesProf. Allen Burgess. Advisor andExaminer in the Department of So¬ciology: Prof. T. G. Allen, secretaryof the Oriental Institute and HaskellOriental Museum, Gerald KarrSmith, executive secretary of the Y.M. C. A., and Russell Pierce assist¬ant publicity manager of the Uni¬versity. were elected to honorarymembership in the Order of Kedu-Remthet, it was announced yester¬day by George Snider, secretary ofthe organization.Honorary membership in the orderis given as a sign of the high es¬teem in which the order holds workwhich the holder of the membershiphas done in past years, before thehonor society was founded. In thecase of Dr. Burgess, he has long(Continued on page 3)months ago, when one could see thesun, if there happened to be aneclipse, when warm breezes werewafted along the Midway, and rac¬coon coats were things of mothballsand cedar bags, the legend goes, twoRussian countesses matriculate at theUniversity for the purpose, we sup¬pose, of adding even more culture towhat they already flaunted to theworld.And the legend goes on to tell ofhow the two countesses intriguedevery male who had been swelteringunder the actinic rays of the Julysun, and how the arrival of the twocountesses was hailed with glee bythese same sweltering males as a re¬lief, a pretense to stay away fromthe sun-burned tennis courts and un¬satisfying beaches, to loll at ease intearooms while the two Russians con¬sumed vast samovars of tea, smokedmiles of Russian cigarettes, andchatted of this and that, and, per¬haps, what notThe legend even rumors that staidsummer school professors left the BLACKFRIARS TOANNOUNCE BOOKFOR PLAY SOONNarrow Competition Down toTwo Plays; Work toPick ScoreAnnouncement of the selection ofthe manuscript for the Blackfriarsproduction of 1925 is to be madewithin the next week, the Board ofSuperiors announced yesterday, inexpressin gtheir pleasure that thebooks had come in so promptly, andthat the selection had been simplifiedby the excellence of several of themanuscripts.The choice has now been narroweddown to two of the five books incompetition, but here the decisionbecomes more difficult, according toDon Irwin, Abbot of Blackfriars,whohas been in conference with HamiltonColeman, the dramatic advisor of theorder. Mr. Coleman has consideredboth manuscripts and is as yet unde¬cided about their respective meritsfor production. However, the Boardof Selection is to decide finally attheir next official meeting, scheduledfor next week, and one of the twoclosest competing books will be cho¬sen for the 1925 production.“ Both manuscripts,” said Irwin,“ are very well-adapted to our needsand ability for production, as bothdeal with campus life, which is aprime requisite, and both are of suf¬ficient simplicity to enable us to pro¬duce them from our own scenerycorps without a great deal of pro¬fessional assistance.”F. /. Carpenter,Noted ScholarDies HereFrederic Ives Carpenter, who re¬tired as professor of English at theUniversity in 1911, died at his homeat 5533 Woodlawn Avenue., Wednes¬day after an illness of ten months.He had been a teacher here sinceshortly after the University wasfounded, and retired in 1911 so asto devote more time to his studiesand to financial affairs.He was a trustee of the Newberrylibrary and gave a number of valu¬able books to that institution, as wellas to the libraries of the Universityof Chicago.He was born in 1881, studied atHarvard and abroad, and took his de¬gree of Doctor of Philosophy here in1895. In 1923 he published “A Ref¬erence Guide to the Life and Worksof Spenser,” a work which has beenused as one of the most valuable ref¬erence books ever published on thatsubject.to cluster about the two patheticones, who had been ill used by fate.But the professors, ruthless crea¬tures, had ulterior motives in theirattachments. The college men gratedtheir teeth and clenched their fistsas they listened to the countesses’tale of woe; the professors applaud¬ed ; perhaps they cried “Bis I” so thatthe Russians would understand andurged the two winning ones to ap¬pear as lecturers upon the Universityplatform!But they were frail women, hadseen life and had suffered, and theircommand of the English languagewas not what it might have been;and they were countesses; they couldnot appear upon the platform fornothing. The summer passed; theydallied at their tea, and left in Au¬gust.Now the legend ceases to be alegend and becomes a feature storyin a college newspaper. “The DailyNorthwestern.” rag from the Univer¬sity a ways up the lake from here,(Continued on page 4) • Ghere, CampusActor, PlayingVillage ShowW ill Ghere, formerly a student atthe University, is now in New York,playing the role of Phineas Fletcherin Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Besides thisactivity on Brodway, Ghere is takinghis masters at Columbia; coachingplays at Rockefeller’s new home forinternational students; and hascharge of the new extension reservelibrary.Last year he was active in dra¬matics at the University, being pres¬ident and student director of severalof the student dramatic associations.William J. Mather, assistant cash¬ier at the University received a let¬ter from Ghere yesterday which saidthat he had been playing to goodhouses since Nov. 5. “We had agood run uptown and are now play¬ing downtown at the Punch andJudy theatre, which is near theGreenwich Village Theatre.”STUDENT TALKS TOFEATURE FUND DRIVEAllot Ten Minutes for Ap¬peals in ChapelAll committee workers areurged to be present at a meetingtoday at 3:30 in Cobb 208, it wasannounced by Katherine Barrettand Edward Bezazian, co-chair¬men, yesterday.Ten-minute chapel talks will fea¬ture the Student Friendship drivenext week, it was announced by Ed¬ward Bezazian. co-chairman withKatherine Barrett, yesterday. DeanErnest Hatch Wilkins will take tenminutes from the regular twenty-minute chapel period each day fromMonday to Thursday and allow mem¬bers of the drive committee to appealto the students for aid.On Monday Dean Wilkins will in¬troduce Miss Elizabeth Bredin, amember of the class of T3, who willmake the opening appeal. MissBredin is central area director forthe national drive, and her appeal isexpected to net the drive a substan¬tial bit of money.Tuesday’s chapel talk will be givenby L. H. Mayes, a graduate studentof the University, and Wednesday,Glenn Harding, also a graduate stu¬dent, will be the speaker. One ofthese thre'* persons will also repeathis talk on Thursday for the Seniorclass chapel.Twelve students will hand outpledge cards asking for money at theend of each talk, and these are to behanded back to the ushers as thestudents file out of the hall, or mayhe mailed in to the local treasurer,H. L. Mays, through faculty ex¬change.Last year $1,200 was raised oncampus for the Student Friendshipdrive, Bezazian announced. “ Thisyear.” he said, “ our quota is $2,500.In order to meet this increased budg¬et we have enlarged our work to in¬clude the Llniversity college, graduatestudents. School of Education, andUniversity High School, in additionto the faculty and Divinity schoolwho participated in the drive lastyear. I hope each student will dohis share in making the drive a suc¬cess,” he added.Hold Exam Tomorrowfor English ExemptionAn examination for students seek¬ing exemption from English 3 willhe given tomorrow at 9 by the Uni¬versity Department of English. Thisexamination is open only to studentswho have had a similar course insome other university. Those whopass with a satisfactory grade willbe allowed to take some other courseinstead.Undergraduates who are interestedshould see the University Examinerin Cobb 106 to make arrangements. GIVE STUDENTS HALFPRICE TO MARDI GRASArt Institute Favors Universityat TrianonStudent admission prices to theBlack Sea Ball, which will be givenFeb. 11 at the Trianon, have beencut to have the regular price. Stu¬dents of the University may purchasetickets today and tomorrow at theUniversity Bookstore for $2.50.This is the thirty - first annualMardi Gras ball sponsored by thestudents at the Art Institute. Thesetting for this costume ball will beSlavonic, with a bit of the Orientalmysticness.Thomas Wood Stevens, head ofthe Dramatic School of the Art In¬stitute, will direct a pageant duringthe evening, the character of whichis a mystery to be solved on Feb.11.Jap Dancers GivePerformance inMandelFor the first time in the historyof the Dance we are to have a pres¬entation of native Japanese numbersby two native artists, when Konamiand Bac Is’nii appear tomorrow nightat 8 in Mandel hall.The fundamental characteristic oftheir art is the sense of repose.Though not typical of life in thecountry, it is the basis of all dancingin Japan. Heretofore presentationshave been given to us by Americanor European artists after a tourthroughout the country collecting theessential features of their nativedancing, but this has not been equalto performances given by the twoIshiis.Dances based on music of compos¬ers other than Japanese are includedin the program. Bac Ishii explainsthat they do not wish to give the im¬pression that their dances are expres¬sions of the common scenes of Japan¬ese life often seen in pictures bypainters of the country. In additionto native dances there will be severalselections of famous compositions,such as interpretations of pieces ofGrieg, Scriabine, Strauss and Liszt.Konami and Bac Ishii have been ac¬claimed in the capitals of $urope aspresenting dances different in everyway from those to which the Westerneyes are accustomed. “The dancing(Continued on page 7)Radical Will Speakat Freshman ForumJerome Keracher, member of Pro¬letarian body of the United States,will speak next Monday at 3:30, inCobb 110 before the Freshman Fo¬rum. Mr. Keracher will defend thequestion: The Proletarian Dictator¬ship Is Necessary for the UnitedStates.Mr. Keracher at present conductsclasses for the Proletaran university.He is an ardent enthusiast for theMarxian economics and has said thatthe dictatorship of the Proletarianwill not only be successful in Rus¬sia, but will be established in theUnited States and other nations. Hebelieves that this establishment isinevitable.The Freshman Forum has been or¬ganized only about a month. So farit has proved very successful. Mr.Keracher is the first speaker that hasbeen brought to talk from outsidethe campus. Every student is wel¬come to express his opinion for oragainst Mr. Keracher’s defense in theForum. Tonight the Hye Park Hotel willbe converted into a huge amphithe¬atre of revelry to celebrate the firstundergraduate formal ball of theyear. Elaborate preparations havebeen made by the Sophomore andFreshman executive councils to in¬sure the success of the traditionalprom. With few exceptions, everymember of the Sophomore class willbe present, according to WendellBennett, chairman of the ticket salescommittee.Walter Marks, president, and Es¬ther Cook, vice-president of theSophomore class, will lead the rightwing, and Seymour Borden and Mar¬garet Hitt of the Freshman class willlead the left wing in the grandnjarch at the Frosh-Soph prom to¬night. The grand march is scheduledto begin at 10 sharp, starting at thesouth end of the ballroom.Hosts and HostessesMr. and Mrs. E. Marks, Mr. andMrs. W. C. Cook, Mr. and Mrs. J.Hitt, Mr. and Mrs. Borden, Mr. andMrs. W. Keeney, and Mr. and Mrs.H. McCloskey will act as hosts andhostesses during the festivities.Husk O’Hare’s famous Casino cluborchestra will be on hand at 9 sharpto demonstrate the way in which realsobs, moans and wails may influencehuman behavior. Eight worthy ex¬ponents of jazz will endeavor todrive away the blues that have beenaccumulating during the fiscal quar¬ter. This weird crew of music con*tortionists play regularly for thearistocratic Casino club on the nearNorth Side. O’Hare said in a recentinterview that the orchestra wouldhave twenty-two various wind instru¬ments to please the ultra-sophisti¬cated college critic.Exotic DecorationsEsther Cook, chairman of the dec¬orations committee, at the last mo¬ment decided that the ballroomwould be decorated in an exotic ori¬ental manner with swaying palmsand an oasis in the corner. Underthe cooling shade of the palms fifteengallons of Baltimore punch will bedispensed to thirsty dancers. This(Continued on page 7)ALUMNA OF UNIVERSITYORGANIZES TRAVELSERVICEA travel bureau for students plan¬ning to go broad during the presentschool year or during the comingSummer has been organized to facili¬tate giving information about thetrip. It informs University studentsas to the hotels, railways, and otheraccommodations of travel in Europe.Miss Hay, a former student ofthe University, and at one time areporter of The Daily Maroon, hasorganized the bureau. She traveledin Europe for six months after hergraduation from school, and wasgiven a certificate by universities inboth France and Italy authorizingher to set up such a service.She had, however, first made anextensive study of various Americantours so that she was in the posi¬tion to give advice on matters con¬cerning accommodations to travelersin the Old World. She is especailyinterested in helping students plantheir tours or picking the line oftravels when they go over.Her office furnished first-hand in¬formation on. life in countries ofEurope and the rate of hotels andtransportation while there, as well asadvising the course of a Summertour. At present she is engaged inorganizing a tour to Rome for aparty of students that would like tosee the neighborhood around Rome.Miss Hay’s Travel Service, as itis titled, is located in the NorthAmerican building, suite 410. Heroffice also secures reservations on allsteamship lines, if desired.Maroon Unearths Idenity ofCountess; Proves to be ColdIn the summer quarter, just six dignity and formality of their officesPage Two THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1923Winter Migration to Florida Is ComparedTo Flower Turning Its Face Toward SunAs the sun once again hangs low,the Winter migration to Florida andCalifornia is on. Although it is out¬wardly but a social phenomenon andseems to be only a custom of civil¬ized man, it is inherently an actinichunger, and the tourist becomes asinstinctive a being as a migratingbird or as mechanical as the helio¬trope turning its face toward thesun. In spite of the speculativesound of this; the scientists havefound that the properties of variousrays originating with the sun are ofgraet curative value.As man may hunger for vitaminA or vitamin B, and never evenhave heard the word itself, so mayhe be impelled by the desire for theactinic rays screened out of North¬ern Winter by the clouds and smoke.At least, so it may appear to thelayman, and not without what ap¬pears to be scientific authority. Thelegends of ancient sun worship takeon a new guise and the time tablesof Southern railroads surroundthemselves with the shadowed mys¬teries gathered in such books as TheGolden Bough of Folkways.Hunger UnconsciousThis hunger, if it be such, is notyet conscious. Yet, even that maycome about. In time one may nottoss up to decide between Canadaand Nice, nor yet stay at home andmerely wish; insted, one may sub¬mit to diagnosed treatment, baskingin rays ten miles long directed byradio or tanning one’s self not onyellow sands but under manipulatedhigh-frequency rays such as have at¬tracted unusual attention in the lastfew months in a variety of curativeprocesses.It all sounds speculative to a mostunscientific degree, yet the fact re¬mains that scientists have found dif¬ferent properties in different raysoriginating with the sun, and havefound also that clouds and fog andsmoke eliminate or alter this one orthat and so change the chemicaleffects. There is the classic instanceon ants; they apparently see ultra¬violet rays which man cannot see, asother creatures hear sounds too finefor the human ear. This, however,it not affected by the invisible light.The interchangeability cf lightand vitamin action receives specialnotice in the annual report of theMedical Research Council in Eng¬land, published early in January.The report declares that the studyof the problem is of far-reaching im¬portance to a population living in anorthern climate, with smoqe preval¬ent in the cities. It adds:“All of these studies, which arestill in active progress, have givennew hopes, of which some are al¬ready realized, of a widespread di¬minution of disease and of greatfuture improvement in the health,stature and beauty of the people ofthis country.”That is the aim, then in submittingpationts to the controlled rays of thesun or of its substitute light and raygenerators.Violet or Heat RaytJust how these rays work on manis still unknown. It is a .centurysince Herschel first gave the nameactinometer to an instrument formeasuring the heating and chemicaleffects of light, yet since that event,in 1825, hardly more than a begin¬ning has been made, and the ques¬tion now is mixed up with whitenedcelery and trees whose rings showtheir growth slowed when a smoke¬making factory was built near them;with such things as chlorosis and the suicide rate and sunlight for tuber¬culosis and the statement by anEgyptologist, based on the examina¬tion of whole piles of mummies, thatsunny Egypt produced no rickets.Even the foremost exponent of thecurative use of sunlight, Dr. A.Rollier, has not solved the riddle.He has been conducting his clinicin Switzerland since 1903 and he haslearned that sun must be adminis¬tered in certain ways to be of bene¬fit, but what happens to the rays isstill undetermined. Rollier oncesuggested that the pigment of theskin transformed the ultra-violetrays into red. There are often work¬ing on the subject who maintain thatthe changes in the body are due notto the ultra-violet rays but to theheat rays.Toasting UnconsciousDoes the tourist clad in bathingsuit and Crookes-lens goggles daw¬dle at Palm Beach because of a bio¬logical necessity for letting amplered rays go through his body? Ordoes he know instinctively that ifthe sun is bright enough it will pene¬trate him for ten inches and thatwhen ten inches on one side aretoasted he can turn over on the otherside while he reads of the snowfallback home?The curative properties of rays,whether taken direct from the sun orfrom lesser sources, is one side of thematter, and so far the bigger. Therewas the discovery of the seasonednature of rickets; Summer producedno new cases, but the Winter cropof babies, coming into the open inMarch, had plenty. Now’, with someyears of such work in New’ York andelsewhere already behind, JohnsHopkins is acquiring a special quartzwindow for the rickets room, and in¬stitutions such as the New’ YorkNursery and Child’s Hospital are us¬ing artificial light-generating ma¬chines in cases of malnutrition andcertain forms of convulsions andtuberculosis. Sunlight itself, in “Win¬ter, may not be enough, and glass,it is declared, screens out certainelements needed for the light-starvedpationet.Effect of Smoke and ClothingiPttsburgh’s studies, conducted bythe Mellon Institute of Industrial Re¬search, showed that smoke was notgood for the bronchial passages(which sounds probable if one re¬members that the average personsbreathes thirty-four pounds of air intwenty-four hours, against an intakeof five and a half pounds of solid andliquid foods). More pertinent areother findings of the Mellon Instituteinvestigators, who reported that asmoky atmosphere not only lowersnatural bodily resistence and makespeople keep windows shut, but “shutsout light and deprives us of certainqualities of fight of great import¬ance in regard to changes in organicmatter.” The Florida migrant flees a pall which is “inimical to our phy¬sical or at least our psy^hial wel¬fare.”The Pittsburgh smoke reportsquote other authorities, of whomsome give a hint of rays. Dr. H.Liefmann, for one; of the diminu¬tion of sunlight, he says, “An excit¬ing impulse which influences our dis¬position is weakened and the energyof metabolism, especially as it con¬cerns respiration, is demolished.”Another is Sir William Ramsey, hold¬ing that smoke absorbs light andmakes clouds and fogs, which areparticularly fitted to absorb blue,violet and ultra-violet rays, whichare especially germicidal. He saysfurther that there is a direct effecton human skin as well as on mentalstates.Clothes Ruin HidesIf fog and smoke do this, what ofclothes? Dr. Rollier holds thatw’earing clothing has atrophied ourskins. Thus one more does the Flor¬ida Winter dweller show himself asactuated by obscure but preservativeinstinct. Not unerringly, however.Besides the gay costumes of ,thebathing beach envisage 500 Ameri¬can soldiers filing across a Philip¬pine hilltop, and every one of themcursing whatever powers made himput on bright orange underwear.That, too, was an experiment, with¬out guinea pigs. It showed that or¬ange adds materially to the burdenof heat—to which each of the 500attested. There were blond andbrunette soldiers, but as to signific¬ances of that the evidence was con¬flicting. The findings, however, giv¬en to the International Congress ofHygiene and Demography a fewyears ago, contain a sartorial hintfor warm climates which somehowsuggests the Wintertime picturesfrom Florida.“The ideal condition,” says the re¬port, “would doubtless be that at¬tained by an umbrella where the sub¬ject is constantly in the shade andthe radiation and evaporation of per¬spiration are unobstructed. It is re¬markable how instinctively, or other¬wise, the native in the tropics hasadopted this form of protection. Inmany places the workers in the fieldswill be found to wear practically noclothes and a hat often so large asone meter in diameter. The nearerthe white person can approach thiscondition the more comforable hewill be in the tropics, when the ef¬fects of sunlight alone are consid-CHEESE MUFF‘Unbelievably Delicious un¬til you have tasted it.”at theGOODRICH SHOP1369 East 57th St.Ready to Serve11 to 2 Sundays 5 to 9TonightClub Chez Pierre247 EAST ONTARIO ST.One Block East of Bus LineCollegiate DancesEvery Friday NightNOTE: Feb. 6 will be intercollegiate night withthe football stars from the leading schools of the BigTen as Guests. ereck”This study, which included obser¬vations from Honolulu and Khartoumand many other sunny towns,touches again on the actinic in itsexplanation that not only does theblood flow toward an exposed part ofthe body, there to be heated, butultra-violet light converts oxyhemo¬globin into methomoglobin, thosewould do as the names of futureradio cocktails. There is a deal be¬sides about pigmentation and howlight skins rise in temperature morequickly than dark but do not go asfar, which has a bearing on swim¬mers’ tan as well as the progress ofhuman wisdom.The chemistry of living things hasjust been broached. That statementis to be found in a recent book, Sun¬light and Health, by Dr. C. W. Salee-by, who is known as an apostle ofsunlight. In a note the authorquotes Sir Oliver Lodge, who thirtyyears ago told of experiments thatdemanstrated the antiseptic action ofultra violet rays, of just those wavelengths which are arrested by coalsmoke in the air.May Use All RaysDr. Saleeby, quoting forerunners,postulates a gamut of rays with fiftyoctaves. There are the shrillestANNA LYON TEASHOPDelicious Home CookingEvening Dinners . . . ,60cSteak and ChickenDinners 75cSANDWICHES, WAFFLES,SALADS and SHORTORDERS AT ALLHOURS1449 E. 57th St ultra-violet, noxious, but screenedout by the atmosphere; then thelower note# of the ultra-violet, thenthe visible violet, and so on, withfew gaps below the red at the otherend of the scale—rays ranging frominfiniitesimal length to perhaps tenmiles. Some are lethal, some harm¬ful, others have their virtues for usalready indicated or presumptive,and of them he says:“The ethical organ is, in my view,a part of nature upon which the in¬telligence of man is to play, and Idoubt not that, in one way or an¬other, every note in the gamut, sing¬ly or in combination, can be usedfor the purposes of man.” And headds: “They are telephoning acrossthe Atlantic by the use of the lowestnotes of the ether wave organ, whileeven cancer to the tongue is begin¬ning to yield to the notes of thehighest pitch.”So the scientists work and theFlorida migrant continue to makehimself into potential case reports.The latest Social Register came outjust a little while ago; statistics com¬piled from it show that women pre¬dominate.—From the “Yale News.”Teresa Dolan DancingSchool1208 E. (Vir<) St. (Near Woodlawn)Beginners' Class—Mon., Tues. & Thurs.eveningsAdvanced, with Orchestra Wed. endSaturday.Tango—FridayPrivate lessons dav or eveningTel. Hyde Park .1080E*t 1896 H. P. 1187Baggage and ExpressingAnytime Anywhere.Unexcelled ServiceGive Us a TrialDIAMOND EXPRESS1412 East 63rd St “THE INVISIBLE DRAMA OFMAN”J. D. Levine, D.C., D.O., D.P., oneof the foremost scientists in Amer¬ica, will address the Walsh ForumSunday night, Feb. 1, on “The In¬visible Drama of Man.” The lecturerwill give a demonstration of whatcan be foretold by the colors in theeyes. The Walsh Forums is locatedat Frolic Hall, 951 East 55th street.In the afternoon at 3 p. m. the sub¬ject, “What Is the Matter with theAmerican Press” will be discussedby the audience. Questions and dis-cusion have been the keystone of thisforum for the past nine years.BEAUTIFUL PRIZESGiven AwayWED. and FRI.NightsDance ToBenson’s OrchestraTheGolden Lily“South Side’s Best Liked Cafe”309 £. Garfield Blvd.at the"L"Carson Firie Scottand CompanyDon Lockett(Our campus representa¬tive) will be in the Men’sSection Friday afternoonsand Saturday mornings —he’ll be glad to assist you inmaking selections.Ties, $1.00In the batwing or butterflyshape, in moire pattern or plainblack slik.. $ 1.Oxfords, $7.00Patent Coltskin Oxfords,smart and comfortable, in theslightly blunt toe style. $7. TUXEDOSAndACCESSORIESFor the Sophomore-Freshman Promtonight, and other formal affairs soclose at hand.Finely tailored tuxedos, and dressaccessories in assortments that will befound especially satisfactory for collegemen.Tuxedos, $50Correct in every detail, made of soft,smooth worsted fabric are these tuxedos.They’re distinctly English in their “easy”style, the coat being short with broadlapels. $50.Waistcoats, $10Excellently tailored waistcoats in thesingle or double-breasted styles, of blacksilk or white pique. $10.Mufflers of striped silk, $10.Dress Shirts, $2.50These shirts for the tuxedo, have thepleated front and laundered cuffs, $2.50.Other shirts up to $6.Collars with wide opening, 20c.Men’s Store, First and Second Floors, SouthTHE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925 Page ThreeJAPANESE OFFERORIENTAL DANCERSTOMORROW NIGHTKonami and Bac Ishii WillPerform in MandelEast will be West tomorrow night,at 8, in Mandel hall, when Gonamiand Bac Ishii, Japanese artists ofthe dance, will express the life ofthe Orient through their interpre¬tive selections, under the auspices ofthe International Students’ associa¬tion, as announced by A. S. Alonzo,president of the organization.The brother and sister Ishii haveappeared in several European cities,including Paris, London, Berlin,Prague, and Warsaw, and have givenperformances at the new million-dol-lar International House of the Cos-has secured them for the eveningthrough the cooperation of the In¬ternational club with the JapaneseY. M. C. A.The dancers have their own stageeffects and native Japanese musi¬cians who will do their share towardcreating the oriental atmospherenecessary for getting the full con¬ception of their interpretations. Thedances will be given to the works ofwell known musical composers aswell as to their own Japanese musicin various solo and group numbers.Art in Poem DanceThe artists feel that the danceis an expression of our habits anddesires from our mode of living. Inspeaking of the Choregraphic poemdance, Bac Ishii said, “The art ofdancing in its true sense is merelyan expression of life itself; it is notthe slave of history nor tradition.To this end it does not differ fromits sister arts, in that it must bestrictly creative. No matter howcleverly one is able to imitate Raph¬ael, the imitator cannot be called anartist. Before we speak in racialor national terms, it is of first im¬portance to remember that we are,above all else, human beings.”The tickets for the performancecan be purchased for fifty cents fromthe Japanese Y. M. C. A. or the Uni¬versity Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. Theproceeds will be divided between theartists and the International Stu¬dents’ association alfter all expenseshave been paid.Blending ChimesNow Ring FromMitchel TowerAs the great clock of the Univer¬sity struck six and the chimes pealedforth from Mitchell Tower—did younotice a melody, distinctly differentfrom the usual sound, acompaniedby a harmonic blending of notes?For the first time in ten years twobolls chimed in unison and the notesof the “Blue Bells of Scotland’frang out musically perfect as if thedouble notes had been rehearsingtheir part each night. When thechimes were first installed in theTower, by the same people whoplaced in Westminster Tower thebells of nation-wide reknown, heavyropes hung from the ceiling. Thedifficulty of ringing more than oneof these great chimes and of keepingup the rhythmic time of the music,prevented the use of compositionswhich were written with doublenotes. Since the ropes have beendiscarded and the more convenientsystem of wires is being used, awider range of music may be sub¬stituted by the mingling of notes.Each night the chime-ringer opensanother page in the old music bookand rouses the bells to action byselections of the famous classicalmusicians, by English folk songs,and by solemn hymns. During thefootball season, with the loyal spiritof the University instilled in them,the chimes send a message to thestudents and the football men in“Wave the Flag of Old Chicago.”“Keep the Home Fires Burning”(Continued on page 4) ELECT PROFESSORSTO KEDU-REMTHET(Continued from page 1)been interested in the field of vol¬unteer social service work and withDr. Allen, sponsored the founding ofthe Order of Kedu-Remthet. Mr.Smith for years has done work insocial agencies and his work oncampus alone would merit him tohonorary membership in the order.Russell Pierce, by virtue of workwhich he has done in the past atHull House and because of his in¬terest in the work, was given thefourth honorary membership.Allen PleasedProf. Allen, last night when inter¬viewed by a reporter for The DailyMaroon was quite surprised of theelection of the campus order. “ Youmay say that I am very pleased tofind that I have been elected tohonorary membership,” he said. “ 1have long felt the need on campusfor such an organization, and amgreatly pleased that I had a hand inits founding. When formally notifiedby the organization, I shall undoubt¬edly accept the membership.”Smith FlatteredGerald Karr Smith was also un¬aware of the membership conferredon him when interviewed. “ I amgreatly flattered.” he said over thephone. “ I had long hoped that 1could become a member of the ordersome way or other, and the actionof the organization in electing meto membership makes me greatly in¬debted to them. Of course I'll accept.Who wouldn’t ? ”Piercie SurprisedRussell Pierce could hardly beconvinced that the volunteer workhe had done in the past entitled himto the honor accorded with the mem¬bership. “ If what you say is true,”he told a reporter, “ I shall be veryglad to accept the membership. I amnot sure that the little work I havedone warrants giving me an honorarymembership, but if the organizationbelieves that my work merits it, I■shall certainly accept. I deem it agreat honor to be one of the first ofthe honorary members of the Orderof Kedu-Remthet, along with suchpeople as Drs. Burgess and Allen.”Burgess OutProf. Burgess could not be reachedup to a late hour last night to findif he would accept, but it is gen¬erally believed that as a sponsor forthe organization he will not turn itdown. W. A. A. PlansRifle MatchesFor MembersRifle tournaments and matches inwhich prizes will be awarded themost skillful marksmen are beingplanned by the Rifle club. W. A. A.,now sponsoring the organization, of¬fers classes in rifle shooting to wo¬men every Wednesday night at theRifle range at 5625 Ellis avenue.! Rifle classes have been organizedby W. A. A. to create interest amongwomen in shooting, acocrding toElizabeth Barrett, president of W.A. A. “Many women have ex¬pressed their interest in shoting andso we feel sure that the classes willbe well received,” she added. “TheRifle club was organized originallybecause a group of students realizedthe value which could be receivedfrom the knowledge of the use offire-arms. The men have long hadclasses of this sort which have beenvery popular; they have had tourna¬ments and matches which helped tokeep up interest. We want the wo¬men to have the same chances.”Challenges from other colleges forwoman’s matches have been receivedby the Rifle club. Many colleges, es¬pecially in the east, have rifle clubswhich send out groups of shootersto compete with organizationsthroughout the country. Reportsfrom rifle clubs not connected withuniversities indicate that many ofthem stand ready to challenge theUniversity of Chicago R'fle club tomatches. Women wishing to regis¬ter in rifle classes may do so in thelocker room at Ida Noyes hall.Le Cercle FrancaisTo Hear “Chansons”New and old “chansons” sung bya French student of the Universitywill be the main attraction at themeeting of Le Cercle Francais, to-,day at 4:30 in the lounge of IdaNoyes hall, acording to Mourine Lo-coff, president of the organization.“The French students at the Uni¬versity learn the language, but fre¬quently do not get much of a Frenchatmosphere. ‘ We are endeavoring togive them some idea of the kind ofmusic the French enjoy,” said MissLocoff.Lowell Sherman Talks WithCampus “Little Girl Reporter”By Ruth G. Daniel“ Ah, a young lady interviewer !This is, indeed, apart from the usual.Won’t you sit down and tell meabout your great University of Chi¬cago? I visited there about six yearsago — it’s a beautiful place. I likedit.” And he paused in reveriethinking of our University. (?)Mr. Lowell Sherman had receivedme “ back-stage ”— in the tiny star’sdressing-room of the Adelphi theatre,where he is now acting in “ HighStakes,” a melodrama by WillardMack. It was not by any means thesort of setting in which, as an ad¬mirer of Mr. Sherman’s superb act¬ing, I had wanted to see him. It wasa box-like room, high-ceiled, and fur¬nished with merely the necessary act-tors’ equipments — a densely covered“ makeup ” table and several cre-tonned chairs.“ You know,” Mr. Sherman re¬sumed, “ I rarely let people interviewme; I don’t know what they wantme to say. They all know I’m in¬terested in the drama — for if Iweren’t, I’d be out cleaning streetsor selling women’s hosiery. I dolike monologues, especially, though.Some day, I hope to bring to Chi¬cago several that I’ve never had out¬side of New York. My friends hereall want me to do them; but Ihaven’t th^ time. We’re all pressedfor time, aren’t we ?“ But as for “ High Stakes.” Thisis the first time in years that I haveplayed the role of a Good Samaritan.I like it. You can find this samecharacter in real life all over the world, however. You know, theatri¬cal managers invariably seem to caterto the likes and dislikes of the ‘ ladytheatregoers.’ And as long as the¬atres continue to base their hopes onthe preferences of women, villainywill be more popular than virtue.This would seem a somewhat alarm¬ing situation for the theatrical world,and so I had better explain that whatis meant by villainy is the beautifuland chcarming villainy of the stage,which is not at all the villainy oflife; and what is meant by virtue isalso the dull, unattractive, bourgeoisvirtue of the footlights.“ Actors, you know, feel the emo¬tions of their audiences even with¬out applause or censure; and in myworst moments in the play I canfeel that the sympathy of the ladiesis jvith me, although by adversary inthe play is the very essence of good¬ness. Really, I sometimes feci sorryfor him, myself.“ But the entire thing comes downto this one point — that, at heart,women are far more sentimentallyadventurous than men. They arewilling, and even anxious, to riskmore for tomantic excitement. Theyprefer emotional color and miscreantplots and variety to safety and mo¬notony and the common unexcitingplot. The truth of the matter isthat they don’t look on us so-calledvillains as villains.”“ S-E-C-O-N-D A-C-T! SECONDACT ! Second act. Ready, Mr.Sherman ? ” Y. W. C. A. WILLDISCUSS FOSMCKIN OPEN MEETINGCabinet Group and Membersto Convene in MandelVarying its customary form ofcabinet meeting, Y. W. C. A. willhold an open discussion Monday at 4in Mandel hall, for the purpose ofdiscussing the talk given last weekby Dr. Fosdick.The discussion will be based onthe main topic of the lecture, “Mod¬ernism in Religion,” and the attemptwill be to reach a decision as towhether or not Fosdick’s philosophywas sufficiently sound to be appliedto practical life. Elsa Dahl, chair¬man of the Social Service commit¬tee of Y. W., will lead the discussion,which will be similar in general formto the bi-weekly meetings of Feder¬ation.“From Within Out”Dr. Fosdick, in his talk, emphas¬ized the importance of faith. “Notin a religion, not in a creed,” he said,“not, of necessity, even in the NewTestament, but faith in the highestthat you know. Start from whereyou are in your search for char¬acter,” he continued. “The problemmust be approached from within out,and not, as has commonly been sup¬posed, from without in.”“We feel that the result of thisdiscussion, and of participation in it,will be invaluable to anyone, and forthat reason we are having an openmeeting, instead of limiting attend¬ance, as is customary, to members ofthe first and second cabinets of Y.W.,” said Miss Dahl. “Dr. Fosdick’sentire lecture wil be reviewed beforethe discussion is commenced, and inthis way it will be possible for thosewho were unable to attend the talk,to get at least a digest of it.”The religion of the Greek Ortho¬dox church will be the subject of thenext Vespers talk, to be given Wed¬nesday at 4 in the Y. W. rooms ofIda Noyes hall.CLASSIFIED^ ADSFOR RENT—Large, light, cleanroom attractively furnished; homeprivileges; reasonable. 1413 East57th St. Heiner, Apt. 1.WILL person who found pocket-book containing keys and tuition re¬ceipt Jan. 15 please return to Box O,Fac. Ex. iFOR RENT—Double parlor, suit¬able for four; en suite or single; also1 single rm.; home privileges if de¬sired. Phone eve., Dor. 5346.LOST—Gold watch, initials D. A.J., on 59th, bet. Dorchester and El¬lis. Reward. Call Hyde Pk. 4497,or leave at Press Bldg.WANTED—An agent for hand-woven scarfs and homespun dressmaterial; attractive terms. AddressE. H. Cahn, Box O, Faculty Ex¬change, University of Chicago.FOR RENT—2 large, clean, mod¬ern rooms, each suitable for 2 per-hons; $8 and $10 per week. Onesmall room, $5 per week. Privatefamily residence. 5461 UniversityAve. Phone H. P. 1395.FOR SALE—Fine set of lawbooks, The Northwestern Reporter,cost $650.00; now reduced to $200;at your own terms. Mrs. G. H. Mor¬rison, 127 W. Delware St., GrandRapids, Mich.TO RENT—6115 Kimbark Ave.;2 room suites comp, for housekeep-inf. Clean and attractively furnished,pleasant and economical for 2 girlsor couple.FOR RENT—Unusually desirablerooms for girl students. Ideal loca¬tion. Kenwood Ave., near 58th St.Telephone Hyde Park 1100.LOST—Black Parker pen withgold band, in Harper. Return toLost and Found. Hazel Rudoy. BY THE WAYThis column is conducted for thepurpose of creating and stimulat¬ing interest of the student body inthe history of the campus and Uni¬versity as a whole. Contributionsof persons desirous of having someparticular phase of the history ofthe University treated will be dis¬cussed from day to day.Questions1. Why isn’t there an elevator inCobb hall?“Rig.2. How and when did the Quad-rangler club for the faculty start?—One Dring.3. Didn’t the old University ofChicago have an observatory calledDearborn Tower, once upon a time?—OI’ Settler.4. Can you tell me the significanceof the Cirele in the center of thecampus?—L. G. B.5. What was the opinion of theold fellows “away back there” aboutthe University being a graduateschool?—W. G. F.Answers1. Well, Rig., when Cobb hall wasbuilt, they didn’t put elevators inrecitation halls of that type. Thesuperintendent of buildings andgrounds reports rather discouragingprospects for such an innovation inCobb. In the first place, it is esti¬mated that there are approximately900 students passing through thehalls of Cobb, each hour. In orderto accommodate this number, fourelevators would have to be con¬structed. These, at a cost of $1,500a piece, each year, would cost theUniversity $6,000 annually and offi¬cials figure that it isn’t worth it. Itis now the plan of the Universityarchitects to have elevators in allbuildings more than four storieshigh. The Cobb hall handicap is notlikely to be repeated.2. It happened something likethis, One Dring. In 1893, the pro¬fessors, strangers to each other andfeeling the need of a place and op¬portunity to become better acquaint¬ed, got together on the subject andorganized the Quadrangler club.Although the earliest records of theclub have not survived the changesof location and fires, it is knownthat the first meetings were held inthe Hotel Del Prado, where many ofthe professors made their home. Thefirst president was Marry Pratt Jud-son, later President of the Univer¬sity. President Harper made thefollowing statement at the Marchconvention or 1895:“The friends of the Universitywill be pleased to learn that theQuadrangle club is making plans fora permanent home on Lexington ave¬nue, opposite the University. Themembership of the club, originallyrestricted to University instructors,has been opened to trustees of theUniversities . . . and others. Theproposed club house will cost aboutthirty thousand dolars. This build¬ing, if erected, will serve as a socialheadquarters for the faculties of theUniversity and their friends. Thegood already resulting from the or¬ganization of the club has been be¬yond estimate. With a permanenthome, increased facilities, and closerproximity to the grounds of the Uni¬versity, the club will be able to ren¬der a service to the University whichno other agency could perform.”The club house was built on thesoutheast comer of Fifty-eighthstreet and University avenue, andfinished in the spring of 1896.3. Yes, 01’ Settler, in 1863, so thestory goes, the Chicago AstronomicalSociety secured the very largest tele¬scope that had been built, up to thattime. Mr. J. Y. Scammon offered tobuild an observatory in which itmight be mounted in. connection withthe main building of the old Univer¬sity. Odd as it may seem, the trus-ees voted “that steps be immediatelytaken for the completion of the mainbuilding of the University, tha erec¬tion of which fvM become indespen-sible to the propesd Obesrvatory.”(Continued on page 7) RECORD NUMBERENTER WOMEN'SSTYLE SHOWINGNinety-Seven Models to ShowWhat Campus WearsNinety-seven women have sub¬mitted their suggestions as to ap¬propriate apparel for campus wom¬en, to be displayed on Friday, Feb.6, from 3:30 to 6, in Mandel hall.This hearty response has been grati¬fying to Federation promoters,” saidEdna Wilson, general chairman olthis years’ Fashion Show.Of the four types of clothes elig¬ible, formal, informal, street, andsport wear, the formals and infor-mals comprise the majority of en¬tries. These gowns will be judgedin respect to the appropriateness ofthe creation to the wearer, as well asthe attractiveness of the dress itself.The elements of self-made andready-made will also be taken intoconsideration.Choose PagesBetty LeMay, who is in charge ofthe page, announcers for each num¬ber of the display, has chosen Pris¬cilla Ferry, Jessica Pickett, and LoisRussell to assist her.Prominent members of Universityorganizations, as well as severalalumnae, have been selected to actas judges for the women. Mrsfl Wil¬liam A. Nitze, Mrs. Tom Pette Cross,Mrs. Phyllis Fay Horton, EleanorAtkins and Mrs. Eleanor Donahuewill award the six silver medals.Faculty Co-operatesInvitations have been extended tomembers of the faculty in recogni¬tion of their co-operation with Fed¬eration in this undertaking. Theyare: Dean Breckrnridge, Dean Flint,Dean Talbot, Den Wallace, DeanErnest Hatch Wilkins, Mrs. GeorgeGoodspeed, Mr. Edward Goodspeed,Mr. Emerson Swift, Mr. H. J. Smith,Mr. A. Coleman, Miss F. Trilling,Miss L. Blunt, Miss Gertrude Dud¬ley, and Mr. Frank O’Hara.Marshall Field and Company, oneof the prominent downtown depart¬ment stores, is sending representa¬tives to the Federation FashionShow, and will give special co-opera¬tion to the event. They have volun¬teered to print the programs gratis.Mr. O. Oberg, florist, has offered tofurnish the floral decorations.Tradition of IdaNoyes IncludesMonkey Tales’“Ha! Ha!” said the monkey as h<jate the acorn which he had receivedas his prize for winning the racedown the railings of the center stair¬way at Ida Noyes hall.Second only to walking across theseal in Mandel hall, is the crime ofsliding down the railings of thestair-way at Ida Noyes hall. In theearly days of the building studentsused to slide down the railings, re¬gardless of convention, until the godsbecame so angry that they decreedthat the next being to slide downthem would be turned into wood, toremain fixed forever as an exampleto others to abstain.One day two monqeys strayed intothe edifice. The first monkey betthe second monqey an acorn that hecould slide down the railing thefaster; so up to the third floor theyboth ran. The first monkey got onthe west railing and the second onthe east, and at the pop of the gunthey were off! Down they went asfreshmen stood by and cheered. Theyreached the bottom, and the secondmonkey had won by a nose. Thenlo! the gods looked out of heavenand saw it all; so the monkeys wereturned to wood on the spot.Today, visitors to Ida Noyes halllook with interest at the two monk¬eys where they remain as they werepetrified so long ago. The secondmonkey on the east railing stilllaughs as he chews on his acorn, andthe first monkey still frowns inhumiliation.Four THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY JANUARY 30, 1925X — . j - ■■■■■■ ■ —gift? Satis MaroonThe Student Newspaper of theUniversity of ChicagoPublished mornings, except Sunday andMonday during the Autumn, Winter andSpring quarters by The Daily MaroonCompany.Entered as second class mail at the Chi¬cago Postofflee, Chicago. Illinois, March13. 1906, under the act of March 3, 1813.Offices Ellis 1Telephone*:Editorial Office Midway 0800Business Office Fairfax 5522Member ofThe Western Conference Press AssociationEDITORIAL, DEPARTMENTW. L. River Managing EditorAllen Heald News EditorMilton Kauffman News EditorVictor WTsner News EditorAbner H. Berezniak Day EditorDeemer Lee Day EditorReese Price Day EditorWalter Williamson Day EditorWeir Mallory Women's EditorGertrude Bromberg 'Asst. EditorLois Gillanders Asst. EditorMarjorie Cooper Soph. EditorRuth Daniels Soph. EditorFrances Wakeley Soph. EditorJeanette Stout Asst. Sports EditorBUSINESS DEPARTMENTHerbert C. DeYoung Business ManagerEdward Bezazian .... Asst. Business Mgr.Thomas R. Mulroy. .Advertising ManagerLeland Neff Circulation ManagerEthan Granquist AuditorSidney Collins Office ManagerDudley Emerson ....Distribution ManagerThomas Field Local Copy ManagerEliot Fulton Promotion ManagerPhilip Kaus Subscription ManagerMilton Kreines and Jerome Zigmond....Downtown Copy ManagersJack Plncus Service ManagerMvron Weil Merchandise ManagerFRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925WHAT MAY BE INTERPRETEDAS A BOOSTAs announced in various placesand on various occasions recently,the Circle—the literary publicationof campus undergraduates—willmake its customary monthly appear¬ance sometime in the near future.We feel that a bit of a boost for our inotable contemporary will not be outof place at this juncture. Not thatthe Circle requires a boost. No, no!It merely requests it.In the first place, on account ofthe fact that a co—pardon, campuswoman is reported to have frozenher hands, or at least one of them,while selling Phoenixes last month,Editor-in-Chief Oppenheim, being ofa merciful, humane, and humanitar¬ian character, as all—or at least twoor three—of his acquaintances willbear witness, has taken a notewor¬thy step in the cause of mercy, hu¬manity, and humanitarianism. Mr*Oppenheim has decided to postponeputting his Circles on sale until thefirst warm day in February.Needless to say, the ambitiouswomen who periodically standaround Cobb hall and other land¬marks of the campus, will depreciatethis action from the bottom of theirsoles—provided, of course, the daydoes not prove to be slushy or other¬wise disagreeable.Furthermore, Mr. Oppenheim an¬nounces that tTie periodical, for thefirst time in its history, will appearwith a colored cover, and a scarletone at that. Whether this has anyconnection with the feature story ofthe issue, entiled “Why Young GirlsLeave Home,” was not divulged.However, we have our suspicions asthe professor said, when three fra¬ternity brothers misspelled the“Sanjak of Novi-Bazar” in the sameway.Moreover, the date of publicationwill not in any way depend upon thearrival or non-arrival of the w. k.ground-hog. Mr. Oppenheim wishesit to be known that no shadow ofany kind will be sufficient to eclipsethe Circle. It has always been asource of wonder and astonishmentto Editor Oppenheim that the Circleseems to come out every month onthe day before the Phoenix is is¬sued. He cannot understand or ac¬count for this phenomenon, but fullyintends to break away from the cus¬tom if it is humanly possible. Ifnecessary, he will put the Circle onsale two or even three days beforethe Phoenix comes out.It will be preceived, then, thatin all likelihood, the Circle, thePhoenix, p.nd the ground hog willall come out about the same time.If this doesn’t keep the Harper Read¬ing club busy for a while, nothingever will. man-Sophomore Prom, to be held to¬night in the Hyde Park hotel, atFifty-first street and Lake Park ave¬nue.Tickets for this affair were notput on sale until a late date, butstill there was plenty of time to ob¬tain them. Less than one hundredtickets have been sold to date. Un¬less a total of one hundred and sev¬enty-five tickets are sold, the dancewill be a financial failure. Thissituation is partly due to the lowprice of the subscriptions—$2.50apiece.It would seem that most studentsmight show their appreciation andat the same time take advantage ofthe low price by snapping up thesetickets like hot dogs—to bring anold saying partly up to date. Thecomparatively informality of thisdance makes it an ocasion for a lotof mixing together and good-fellow¬ship among both sexes of the under¬classes.In most eastern colleges, theproms are the best-patronized socialevents of the school year. Andnearly all of them are considerablymore expensive than the most lavishof our campus entertainments. Ofcourse, students in a city collegehave more opportunity for “dates”and things like that, but they do nothave big affairs any more often, andaccordingly they may reasonably beexpected to take as much interest insuch parties as their fellow-colleg¬ians down east.The thing to do, if you haven’tdone it already, is to arrange tobring your “Friday night date” overto the Hyde Park hotel, instead oftaking her to some one of the usual“palaces of the dance.” You willbe helping the party itself, and alsohelping yourself to a considerablybetter time than you will have in“Cocoanut” or any similar place, andin much more intimate company. BLENDING CHIMES NOWRING; MITCHELL TOWER(Continued from page 3)pealed in clear notes by the bells,proclaimed the patriotism of theUniversity, while the soldiers werebravely fighting in Europe.A new chapter was incorporatedinto the history of the Tower chimesduring the Christmas holidays, whenpeople sitting comfortably at homewere able to hear the old ChristmasCarols broadcasted from HutchinsonTower. Mr. Freeman Palmer, whodonatet the chimes to the Universityas a memory to his wife, and AnttiLepisti, the chime-ringer from Eng¬land, who gave his services to theUniversity when no one could befound to ring the crimes, wouldprobably be astonished to see themosic intended for the Universitydistrict alone being applauded fromall over the city.MAROON UNEARTHSIDENTITY OF COUNTESS;PROVES TO BE COLD(Continued from page 1)Church Calls for Menand Women as WorkersDr. Pangen, promotional secretaryof the Lincoln Street InstitutionalChurch, at 22nd Place and LincolnAvenue, is calling for ten men andnine women to take charge of socialwork in that institution. They areto work among two hundred boysand girls. published an article about two Rus¬sian noblewomen who had taken theUniversity campus by storm, won thehearts of all the eligible men, anddisappeared as mysteriously they hadcome. Olga and Volga were shams,says the “Daily Northwestern.” “Thetwo Russian countesses.” to quote,“were two very popular Northwest¬ern co-eds who are studying for thestage and took the means describedto test their histrionic abilities.”But whether from lack of infor¬mation, or from nicety of sensibility,the ‘Daily Northwestern” has keptthe names of the two dashin gco-edsa deep, dark secret.Now the legend takes another turn,and two lynx-eyed sleuths in the per¬sons of two campus correspondentsare implicated. If the “Daily North¬western ” keeps the names of itscountesses quiet, we can do the samewith the names of our sleuths, yetperforce these boys went daringly outand dug up the name of one of thenameless coeds and were prepared toflaunt it to the public eye.Miss Sara Ann Schweich of 7658Sheridan Road, Chicago, as CountessOlga, was the heroine of the summe*'YOU'LL FEEL AT HOMEin our place because it is aheadquarters for college men.Whether or not you care tobuy some of the apparel es¬pecially selected and pricedfor undergraduates, you arewelcome here.Qladt (Mi is anb QarjjbREPUBLIC BUILDING • CHICAGOfor College Men by College Men”Suits at $39.75, $42.50, $45.00and $49.30PROM TONIGHTIn reference to student interest(that inevitable phrase of collegeeditorial writers! there is one thingon the bill this evening that meritscomment. This is "the annual Fresh- THE EPISCOPAL CHURCHRev. C. L. Street, Student Chaplain5650 Dorchester Ave. Tel. Fairfax 7988SERVICES, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 1stChrist Church64th St., at Woodlawn Ave.The Rev. H. J. Buckingham.Holy Communion, 7:30.Morning Service, 11 a. m.Young People’s Club, 5:30.Evensong. 7:45.St. Paul's Church50th St., at Dorchester Ave.The Rev. George H. Thomas,Sunday Service, 8 and 11 a. m.Church School, 10 a. m.Young People’s Supper, 5:30p. m.Evening Service, 7:45 p. m. Church of the Redeemer56th St., at Blackstone Ave.The Rev. John Henry Hopkins,8 a. m., 9:15 a. m., 11 a. m.a. m., 7:30 p. m.Three services each week day.Church always open for privatedevotions.Special Sunday Evening ProgramSuper, 5:30.Discussion Group, 6:30.Led by Rev. C. L. StreetSubject, “Religion and Science”Evening Service 7:30University students speciallyinvited.Three services each week day.Church always open for privtedevotions. legend. She it wa3 who conceivedthe idea of putting one over on theChicago men, the same being a hintthat it couldn’t be done with theNorthwestern males, and at the sametime getting a lot of practice forgoing on the stage. CHICAGO ETHICAL SOCIETYA non-sectarian religions society to fosterthe knowledge, love and practice of theright.THE PLAYHOUSE410 S. Michigan Ave.Sunday, Feb. 1st, at 11 a. m.Dr. Louis L. MannWill Speak on“The Pholosophy of Happiness”All seats free. Visitors cordially welcome. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH50th StreetBetween Drexel Blvd. and Ellis Ave.Dr. Perry J. Stackhouse, Minister11 a. m.—“The Greatest Thing inthe World”A Communion Meditation8 p. m.—“The Tragedy of a LostReligion.”STUDENTS INVITEDTuesday Evening Dance Affairsat theHYDE PARK HOTELInformal The Really Smart Place to DanceThree Dollars per Couple“SPIKE” HAMILTON AND HIS BARBARY COASTORCHESTRA OF THE OPERA CLUBSupply the Inspiration for the“Letters this day ”12-3-24b Met a doctor from the Peking Union Medical Col¬lege who brought in a letter of mine written onJune 14 * * * * It had reached him the morninghe sailed for home * * * * Had saved it to remindhim to buy “General Cytology,” edited by Dr.E. V. Cowdry * * * * Told me that even in far-off China this book, with its investigations by thir¬teen eminent scientists, would be in great de¬mand * * * *A series of coincidences seems to be attending thepublication of the first three volumes cf the HarrisLectures * * * * Today we issued the second one,De Visscher’s “The Stabilization of Europe,” justas America was reading President Coolidge’s mes¬sage about similar problems in this country * * * *Several weeks ago, on the morning that Volume I,Sir Valentine Chirol’s “The Occident and theOrient,” was published, Egypt tilted the lid of thecauldron, much as Sir Valentine predicted shemight * * * * What.will happen next week, whenwe issue Kraus’s “Germany in Transition”? * * * *Wrote Prof. Millikan that his “Electron” had to¬day gone through another edition * * * *What the advertising manager of theUniversity of Chicago Press might havewritten in his diary if he had one:Page FivePublic Health Service ConductsEye Tests Among Nation's YoungFully 37 per cent, or approximately12,000 school children undergoingvision tests conducted by the UntedStates Public Health Service werefound to have defective eyes withless than standard vision, accordingto a statement by the Eye SightConservation Council of America,which, analyzing the results, callssuch conditions deplorable as consti¬tuting neglect of eyesight in the na¬tion’s schools.One tenth of the children examinedunder the direction of Dr. TaliaferroClark, in charge of field investiga¬tion in child hygiene, had one-halfstandard vision or less, in one orboth eyes. Only ten per cent, ofthose badly in need of glasses, it waspointed out, were provided withthem.Tests in EastThe tests, part of a general physi¬cal examination made by officers ofthe Public Health Service, accordingto a report of the Service, compdedby Selwyn D. Collins, Associate Sta¬tistician, embraced 9,245 native whitechildren from six to sixteen years ofage in four eastern areas; Spartan¬burg. South Carolina, and nearby vil¬lages; Frederick County, Maryland;New Castle County, Delaware; andNassau County, New York. In ad¬dition, 2,535 white children under¬went examination in Cecil County,Maryland.The results of the visual acuitytests, made with standard test typeinclude, it is stated, only the mani¬fest defects. These simple testsshowed that 63 per cent, of the ch:l-dren were normal in both eves: 27per cent, were moderately defective,and ten per cent, had only five-tenthsstandard vision or less in one orboth eyes.Increase With Age“ When separated according toage," says the statement of the EyeSight Conservation Council, inter¬preting the conditions revealed bythe Public Health Service, “ it wasfound that the number of childrenwith marked defects of vision atsixteen years of age was an increaseof over four times the number at sixyears of age with marked defects.There seems to be but slight rela¬tionship between defective vision andsex, although there were more girlsthan boys with moderately defectivevision. Also there were just aboutas many defective right eyes as therewere defective left eyes."It was shown that generally thevision was approximately the samein both eyes, but in many cases, goddvision in one eye was found com¬bined with very poor vision in theother.”Little AttentionThe Council, which is directingnation-wide effort for better visionin education and industry, calls thereport prepared by Mr. Collins,"striking evidence of the limited ex¬tent to which the eyesight of schoolchildren is being given attention,”adding;"There is such a large proportionof school children with deefetive vi¬ sion that every possible effort shouldbe made to discover those who areneedlessly handicapped and to bringthe matter so forcibly to the atten¬tion of parents that all those in needof correction will be fitted withproper glasses.”The report emphasizes that asmost striking that but a small pro¬portion of children with very poorvision were wearing glasses to im¬prove their sight. Among the olderchildren fourteen to sixteen years ofage only 23 per cent of those need¬ing glasses had glasses. Only 10.9per cent of the 925 children with vi¬sion five-tenths or less were wear¬ing glasses./More Girls Than BoysA larger proportion of girls werewearing glasses than boys. Onlytwenty-two per cent, of the childrenwith such poor vision as three-tenthsor less in both eyes were wearingglasses and only ten per cent, ofthose with three-tenths vision or lessla one eye and good vision in theother had glasses to aid the visionof the poor eye. Still lower proporltions provided with glasses werefound in groups with less severedefects.“ Such conditions are deplorable,"comments the Council. “ How canchildren handicapped with poor vi¬sion be expected to keep up withtheir classes and gain the educationwhich is rightfully theirs ? ”The Council advocates regular pe¬riodic examinations of the eyes ofall school children at least once eachyear. “ Children," it was asserted,“ should be taught how to care fortheir eyes and all condidtions condu¬cive to eyestrain should be corrected.“ Attention should be given to thenatural and artificial lighting of classrooms. Shades should be provided atall windows to control the light.Desk tops should be dull finished toelimina teglare; blackboards shouldbe placed where they will receivegood light; the type of the booksshould be clear and large in orderto avoid eyestrain ." These are some of the more im¬portant things that can be done toconserve the eyes of our future citi¬zens."WHO’S GOING TO WINTHAT CUP?The first lap in The Daily MaroonAdvertising Contest will be conclud¬ed Saturday, January 31, with adinner at the Gargoyle Tea Room.The advertising department oftwenty-five members will enjoy aroast pork and pumpkin pie dinner.Competition has been fast andfurious with Robert Hilton and BenTroxell fighting for the lead. Busi¬ness conditions are improving and asmany advertising compaigns arebreaking, the contestants are ex¬pected to be even more successful inthe coming weeks. To all those whohave 1,500 inches of advertising soldby February 13 a theater party willbe given. The winner of the con¬test receives possession of a five footloving cup with his name engravedTHE MIDWAY IS NO BARRIER!Come south of the Plaisance for your meals.We cater to Fraternity and Club FunctionsLUNCHEON, 11:30 to 2 P. M 40cAFTERNOON TEAS, 2 to 5 P. M SpecialDINNER, 5 to 8 P. M 50c and 65cSUNDAY DINNER, 1 to 8 P. M 75c and $1Waffles served at any timeTHE ARBOR TEA ROOM6051 Kimbark Ave.NATIONAL BANKOF W00DLAWN63rd Street—Just West of KenwoodA Clearing House BankMember Federal Reserve SystemSAVINGS ACCOUNTSCHECKING ACCOUNTSSAFE DEPOSIT VAULTSINVESTMENT SECURITIESAll Departments Open for BusinessSaturday Evenings 6:30 to 8:30 THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925i upon it. Second and third placewinners win silver and bronze med¬als respectively. The other contest¬ants are Ed Benson, W. L. Eckert,James Garard, Leon Lewis, EldredNewbauer, Jack Speer, Fred VonAmmon and EJoise White.The contest was instituted lastyear as a better and more scientificway of selling advertising. A dif¬ferent contest is held each quarter.The success of these contests is at¬tested to by the fact that over 30,-000 inches of advertising has beensold in the contests held thus far.The Advertising Department underthe leadership of Herbert DeYoung,business manager, and Thomas Mul-roy, advertising manager, is inauger-ating a campaign of expansion here¬tofore unattempted, Over threehundred letters have been sent toadvertising agencies all over thecountry acquainting them with thepotentialities of Maroon advertising.Dodgers setting forth the points tobe gained through classified ads havebeen distributed throughout HydePark and Woodlawn under the super¬vision of Edward Bezazian, assistantT ypewri ters TypewritersFOR RENTSALEWe have a full stock of first-classMachines of All MakesWoodworth’s Book StoreOpen Evenings 1311 E. 57th business manager. This is only thebeginning of the plans to be carriedout in February.Business men are realizing thetremendous opportunities awaitingthem through securing the collegetrade, a* d that this can best be donethrough the-, college newspaper.The Daily Maroon has also an adwriting department and cut serviceunder the management of ElliottFulton, an art department under thesupervision of Sidney Collins, a mer¬chandising and service departmentwith Myron Weil as manager. Mil-ton Kreines and Jerome Zigmondmanage the loop copy departmentand Thomas Field runs the local copydepartment. The service of any orall these departments is renderedfree to all advertisers.SPECIAL RATESMONDAY AND WEDNESDAYShampooing SOcWaving ,50<-THE JONES BEAUTYSHOPPE1373 E. 55th St.Hyde Park 6941RENT A CARDrive It YourselfBiand new Fords and Gear-shiftJ & L DRIVE IT YOURSELFSYSTEM6118-28 Cottage Grove Ave.4111 Hyde Park 4181“A SPARE”Which Should Remind You Thata Spare Shirt or Two on HandIs Just What You Need.You can get shirts at any time by call¬ing Davies or Fulton at the A. D.House.Dorchester 1832 $2.25 to $3 COLLEGE MEN AND WOMENSummer Camps throughout America need CampCounselors for next summer. If you are interestedin a pleasant, financially profitable summer vacation—mail coupon or write TODAY!National AssociationOF SUMMER CAMPSFREE PRESS BLOB. DETROIT, MICHIGANRichardson’sFebruary SaleFurniture andFloor CoveringsThis is an opportune time to deco¬rate your home or Fraternity House.Exceptional values in high gradeFurniture and Floor Coveringsenable you to purchase regular Richard¬son Quality Home Furnishings at great¬ly reduced prices. Our Budget - Planof Selling will help you finance better qualities,enabling you to spread your payments over aperiod of time. Ask about it.Established 50 Years125 So. Wabash Ave.PERSHING POINTERSNumber One1. Pleasant Atmosphere.2. Familiar Evironment. y3. Distinguished Quality.4. Attentive Service.5. Pleasing Prices.We believe these factors to be indispensible to the popular collegerendezvous. tWith the advice of University men, we have completed arrange¬ments for our Winter College Season, beginning next Tuesday, Feb¬ruary Third. fTHE FEATURES OF OUR COLLEGE SEASONNo Admission No Cover Charge(if you clip the coupon)DAVE PEYTON’S SYMPHONIC SYNC0PATERSSPECIAL COLLEGE MENUSSuggestion No. 1 Suggestion No. 4Club Sandwich and French Pastry andCoffee 75c Coffee 25cWATCH FOR OTHER MENU SUGGESTIONSPershing Palace64th and Cottage Grove AvenueChicago's Most Elaborate RestaurantI GOOD FOR ENTIRE PARTYv This coupon will be honored as the CoverCharge for the bearer and his entire party onany night except Saturday and Sunday toThe Pershing Palace. Coupon must be pre¬sented.THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925vP&ge SixiSPORTS PAGE SECBUCKEYE CAGERS THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1925INVADE BARTLETTGYM SAT. NIGHTMaroons, Though Underdogs,Are Apt to Stage aSurpriseBy Irving GoodmanLineup:Ohio State ChicagoMiner R.F. BarnesShaw L.F. SackettCunningham C. AlyeaCameron (Capt.)R.G. Weiss (Capt.)Hunt L.G. Barta or MarksThe highly touted Ohio State fivewill display its wares tomorrow nightat Bartlett Gym against a revampedMaroon lineup. Norgren will use anew combination quite different fromthe one that has represented Chicagoin earlier starts. Barnes may beshifted to guard, since the Maroonguarding has been woefully weak inthe last three contest.Since the Buckeyes are all six-foot¬ers with the exception of Johnny“Shorty ” Miner, the Maroons willhave to do some tight guarding toprevent their elongated opponentsfrom poking the ball through thenet on the follow-up shots.Ohio uses a short-pass attack withspecial emphasis on the follow-up.Maroons in Good ShapeThe Maroons tonight wound up astrenuous wee kof practice with thefrosh. Weiss has been sinking someof the long shots that made him aterror in the Conference last year.The team as a whole displays moreco-ordination and better pass-workthan they have shown in practice thisseason, and Alyea’s return has giventhe players the much-needed confi¬dence; so that it would not surpriseMaroon followers should Coach Ol¬son's proteges go back to Columbuson the short end of the score. Topredict a winner is futile in basket¬ball. If experience and past per¬formances mean anything the Ohio¬ans have a decided edge; if fight anddetermination are the vital factors inthe cage sport, the Maroons have aneven chance to win. PINMEN GET UP SMOKEAS CHI PSIS TAKEHIGH SCOREBowling has a real start this yearwith twenty-four teams entered inthe tournament. Very few gameshave been forfeited as contrasted withother years. To make the game morescientific, the alleys at the Reynoldsclub have been put in fine condi¬tion, and new pins are used for alltournament matches.Following are the scores of theteams in the five- leagues:Following are the standings of theteams in the five leagues (points):Alpha LeagueBeta Theta Pi, 44.Zeta Beta Tau, 70 (2 games).Delta Sigma Phi 38.Delta Sigma Phi, 38.Kappa Sgma. 38.Phi Sigma Delta, 42.No games.Gamma LeagueChi Psi, 44.Alpha Tau Omega, 44.Psi Upsilon, 33,Phi Kappa Sigma, 23.Sigma Chi, (no games played).Delta LeagueSigma Alpha Epsilon, 32.Acacia, .Phi Gamma Delta, 36.Phi Kappa Psi, 41.Kappa Nu, 5.Independent LeagueRomans, 43.Reds, 39.Midway A. C., 19.Blues, 5.The Chi Psis have captured thehigh team score with 2,088 pins.Smutney holds the high individualmatch score, with 535 pins. He alsoholds the high individual score, with214 pins.THURSDAY’S SCORESJAP DANCERS GIVEPERFORMANCE IN MANDEL(Continued from page 1)of Miss Konami Ishii, the seventennyear-old girl, is an expression of the*mysticism of the Far East, and thato fher brother, Bac, is a contrast otpassion to power,” remarked one ofthe critics in a jffominent Berlinpaper.Tickets may be purchased for fiftycents at the Y. M. C. A. or Y. W. C.A. After the expenses have beenpaid the remainder of the proceedsare to be divided between the artistsand the International Students Asso¬ciation, it was announced by A. S.Will anything ever convince an En¬glishman that Americans Have passedthe primitive stage of civilization?The Honorable H. A. L. Fisher, for¬mer minister of education in En¬gland, recently made a tour of collegecenters in America, and on his returnhome enlightened his compatriotsabout the educational conditions inAmerica, according to the McGillDaily. He bemoans the low intel¬lectual standards which prevail inAmerican colleges and regrets thwattitude of the American student to¬ward higher education, saying thatAmericans go to college for the sociallife rather than to absorb culture.But Mr. Fisher generously con¬cedes that Americans are more to bepitied than blamed foi their amazinglack of culture. They have not thegenerations of well-bred progenitorsto form the requisite cultural back¬ground. The McGill Daily, however,takes a more optimtistic view of thematter. It looks forward to a timewhen American educational institu¬tions shall have passed the experi¬mental stage in their developmentand will have arrived at a conditionof “intellectual thoroughness”—andincidentalyl acquired a few culturedancestors. Class APhi Beta Delta, . 0; Phi SigmaDelta, 1 (forfeit).Chi Psi, 18; Tau Delta Phi, 4.Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 0; SigmaChi, 0 (no game).Sigma Nu, 17; Zeta Beta Tau, 15.Phi Gamma Delta, 14; Delta TauDelta, 17.Beta Theta Pi, 11; Delta SigmaPhi, 28.Kappa Nu, 15; Pi Lambda Phi, 8.Alpha Sigma Phi, 2; Tau KappaEpsilon, 28.JUNIOR COLLEGES READYFOR PROMENADE TONIGHT(Continued from page 1)unprecedented amount of liquid waspurchased because it usually runsshort at the crucial moment of thenight, according to George YViddmanof the Sophomore council.Miniature Review DistributedThe Frosh-Soph Review, a minia¬ture paper to be distributed tonight,has already been printed and deliv¬ered to the hotel. On the first pageof this unique bulletin a dance pro¬gram has been arranged so that pro¬grams may be dispensed with. Thepaper abounds with satires on prom¬inent members of the Freshman andSophomore calsses. All-In, editor ofthe Whistle in The Daily Maroon,has made up a column of wit thatwill entertain the younger classes forthe duration of the prom, or so atleast thinks A1 Widdifield of theFrosh-Soph Review staff.Tickets will be on sale today atthe University bookstore, Reynoldsclub, and may be obtained of anymember of the Freshman or Sopho¬more executive councils. “ Ticketsare going very well, and the twoclasses should realize a profit thatwill financially support two or threeparties in the future,” Bennett said.Non-fraternity men may now obtaintickets at the Reynolds club due toa reorganization of ticket sales. Allmen are urged by the councils to buytheir bids now so that a financialstatement may be made at noon to¬day.Ohio State has three men amongthe ten high point scorers in the BigTen. It does seem as if the Ma¬roons will have their hands full withthe Miner-Cunningham-Shaw com-*bination. SWIM CARNIVAL ANDATHLETIC REVUENEXT MONTHThe Intramural Sports Departmentannounce that a huge swimmingcarnival and athletic revue will bestaged Mar. 3, 4, 5, and 6. Paul Cul-lum and Graham Hagey are incharge and are working hard to putover this athletic show, which is thefirst thing of this kind ever attempt¬ed at this University. Events to berun-off and committees to assist themanagers will be announced nextweek.The swimming meet will take placeon the afternoons and evenings ofMar. 3 and 4, with the big nightcoming on the 4th. Every event inthe sport of swimming will be onthe program.The athletic revue will take placeon the 5th and 6th, with the climaxof the whole program coming on thenight of the 6th. On that night, be¬ginning at 7:30, and continuing forat least three hours, there will bean immense revue of athletic feats,interspersed with clown acts and,very probably, enlivening music from SPORT SPATSANNOUNCE ENTRIES FORINDIANA MEETFEB. 6, ’25The folowing are the expectedentries in the Indiana-Chicago TrackMeet to be held Friday evening, Feb.6, 1925:50-yard dash—MacFarlane, Stack-house, Widman, G. Kernwein, L.Smith, Harvey.50-yard high hurdles—Russell,Wright, A. Adler, F. Edler, Harvey.4 40-yard run—MacFarlane, Beall,Spence, Sullivan, Landwirth.880-yard run—Cusack, A. Edler,F. Edler, Ravenscroft, J. Bly.One-n;ile run—Bourke, Dugan,Benton, Bly, Cusack, Ryan, Snyder,Hitz, McNeil.Two-mile run—Bourke, Levine,Hegovic, Betts, Glasser, McNeil,Grimmer, King, McConnell, Farris,Levin.High jump—Russell, Althin, Berg,Webster, Bull.Pole vault—Russell, Burg, Freida,Webster, Budlong.Shot put—Hobscheid, Freida, Har¬rison, Gowdy, Goodman, Russell. By Smith and GoodmanA survey of Big Ten basketballstatistics show that Capt. Haggertyof Michigan has, alone, scored morepoints than the entire Maroon team.The Wolverine high point man hasscored 44 points, Chicago has scored43 in three games.Henry Bourke will soon take thespotlight away from Nurmi if hekeeps up his record breaking per¬formances. The diminutive Bourkehas broken the Bartlett Gym. recordfor the two mile twice within a week.The old record made by Campbellhad stood since 1905.Michigan has one of the bestsprinters in the west, in the sopho¬more Leshinskv of Detroit whoplaced second in the Olympic tryoutsat Ann Arbor.There will be some keen competi¬tion in the half mile run this yearwith such record breakers as Martinof Northwestern, Vallely of Wiscon¬sin who won the Conference outdoorlast year with 1:55, and Jimmy Cu¬sack of the Maroons.Spradling, Purdue’s star threesport man, has returned to the Boil¬ermaker school after a visit in Cali¬fornia to regain his health.When Indiana defeated the Ma¬roons last Saturday, it was the firstteam in the history of Big Ten Ath¬letics that an Indiana basket teamhas defeated Chicago.BY THE WAYRUSSEL TAKES PIGSKINFOR RIDE OVER BARJustin Russel is doing lots of ex¬citing things, but jumping with afootball is an innovation. In theNorthwestern meet he jumped 6 feet2 >4 inches and sent an old Bartlettrecord up in smoke. By way of sideline he also took a first in the highhurdles and a tie for third in thepole vault.Wednesday night, at the Alumni-Varsity-Frosh meet, Russel was dis¬cussing his English course with someof the boys when some one hove upwith a football, and they began totoss it around as boys will do. Thecall came for the high jump, and oneof them was afflicted with an idea.He dared Russel to take the jumpwith the football.“Yep,” said Russel, “I’ll do it.”And he did—jumped 5 feet 11 incheswith the old pigskin tucked underhis arm. (Continued from page 3)At a cost of about $30,000 the Ob¬servatory was built by Mr. Scammonand the $18,500 contributed by theAstronomical Society covered thecost of the telescope and dome.4. No, because there is none. L. G.B. Merely a scheme of landscapedesign, the Circle was planned as aconvenient driveway in the Univer¬sity quadrangles.5. Eminent scholars had assuredPresident Harper that to put a greatgraduate University “in Chicagowould be only the next thing to put¬ting it in the Fiji Islands.” Theyargued, “that in New Haven, for ex¬ample, it wps not the men who hap¬pened to be in the faculty, but Yaleitself that drew students; that east¬ern graduates would not go west;that an instituion in Chicago wouldbe provincial; that Dr. Harperwould not live to see any consider¬able number of graduate students inChicago,” etc., etc. At the end ofthe first year, however, Dr. Harperstated:“The facts show that the demandfor graduate work was greater thancould have been anticipated. . . .The history of the Graduate Schoolsfor the year shows also that easternmen will not hesitate to come west;that antiquity after all means little.Students soon learn where good workis done. In undergraduate work itmay be the institution which drawsstudents; in graduate work, it is notthe institution, but the man.WAYFARER. Page SevenINITIAL PLANSMADE FOR B.B.INTERSCHOLASTIC ament was won by Warrensburg, Mo.Curiously enough, Windsor, Colo.,defeated Warrensburg, Mo., ultimatewinner of the Consolation tourna¬ment by a score of 27 to 22.Forty Teams Are Expected toCompete in 7th AnnualTouranment PATRONIZE MAROONADVERTISERSThe Seventh Annual National In-1terscholastic Basketball Tournamentwill be held under the auspices ofthe University of Chicago, April 1,2, 3, and 4. 1925. The date was setlate so that all the state tournamentswill have been completed, thereby al¬lowing all of the state champions toenter.Forty teams, practically all ofwhom will be state champions, willhe selected to represent nearly everyState in the Union. In addition tothe state champions, the winner ofthe Chicago league and the winnerof the Suburban league will be in¬vited to compete.The tournament will be divided in¬to two sections — one for the Na¬tional Interscholastic championship,and the other, a Consolation tourna- THE FROLIC THEATREDRUG STOREAdjacent to Frolic TheatreCigarettes — Fountain ServingTel. H. Park 0761Cor. Ellis Ave. and 55th St.Husk O’Hareatment for the teams eliminated in the 1 WASHINGTONPROMatSOPH-FROSHPROMOpen forYourDancesPhoneHarrison 0103first round. Each team, therefore,will have at least two chances tocompete against champions fromother parts of the country.Last year, forty teams representingthirty-one states and including thirtystate champions competed for theNational honors. The major tourna¬ment was won by Windsor, Colo.,and by virtue of their victory theyannexed the title of High SchoolBasketball Champions of America.Yankton, S. D.. Winchester, N. H.,and North Eastern High of Detroit,Mich., were second, third, and fourth,respectively. The consolation tourn-SALEofMen’s WearAll merchandise reduced, re¬gardless of cost, for immedi¬ate clearance. It representsthe finest of our regulationstock.ShirtsCollar-attached, $5values,.65Hose MufflersFancy imported WoolHose, values to $3.50, Imported Cashmere,Values to $5.50,Slipover SweatersImportation, values to $20$11 .95AStarrBestRANDOLPH AND WABASH•1 'l'r* *"4 ri atohuMtrifi Yifr'fMlfoiniiiKilAi-iPage Eight THE DAILY MAROON, FRIDAY, JANUARY 30. 1925It’s seein’ things and readin’ thingsThat makes an education.And doin’ things an’ tryin’ thingsDetermines our vocation.It’s workin’ hard and bein’ rightThat brings us commendation,An’ things in which we most delightShould be our recreation.Of all such thing I do, the oneThat gives me greatest pleasureIs gettin’ out and seein’ thingsIn broad extensive measure.Yes, doin’ things and tryin’ thingsAnd readin’ things ars fine,But don’t forget the other things—It’s seein’ things for mine!—The Satyr.Things We Never Could UnderstandWhy people stand in line to gettheir course books.Why they say that Bib. Lit. is apipe course.Suggestions for AdvertisementsSt. Peter stood at the gate or gatesof heaven directing the traffic.. Theminister came up in a Ford (This isnot a Ford story).‘‘Ah,” welcomed St. Peter,” “comeright in—Your life has been virtuousand self-sacrificing. But no—whatis this? No, you shall not enter.You have halitosis (bad breath).Star chewing tobacco will remedythis social evil.TRACTION TOPICSThe Chicago Surface Lines (Thebest in the world, by the way) re¬grets that they must charge you,dear riders, for the best service inthe world. But our conductors must 1 live, and so we take this small feefrom you.Modern Tendencie* in Education asSeen in a DayFrom the Life of CuthbertWakes at 9:30 and decides to cut9 o’clock class.Writes paper for Eng. 40 during10 o’clock class.Sends same to class via fraternitybro.Lunch and rest perior for recuper¬ation of tired mind.Spends several hours taking copyfor the Maroon, answering the tele¬phone at the Intramural office orloafing around the Cap and Gown.Fights for the old chapter in thebowling tournament.Dinner and listening to stirringmusic as played by the victrola.Solves cross word puzzle from theAmerican and gets a date for Fridaynight.After plajmg u Class B basketballgame for the old fraternity goeshome and to bed.“Have University women lost theirreserve?” asks Virginia McKay in aMaroon feature. Lost!“The college woman is too free,”is the conclusion which Miss McKayreaches after a study of the matter.“We ought to be chained up, shesaid privately.“Free,” says T. Mulroy, “I alwaysthought they were darn expensive.”Bob Koerber, we take it, is thesupreme optimist. We saw him solv¬ing a X word puzzle in class theother day and he was using a pen.BY THE BACKWAYWith the suggested preferential1 point bidding system in effect it is! possible that future rushing seasonswill be run like auction sales.What could be a more cheeringsight than a good prospect standing! on the block while extravagantbrothers address him in aritmeticalterms.Instead of football players or ,alumni for arguments the rushingchairmen will use statistics.The pledges will probably be ratedby numbers. An expensive speci-man would only have to shine thedoor plate, while those picked up ata bargain will be responsible for thewindows and washing the dog.But at that the darn system hasits points.—Terrible Turk.But We Have Seen Street Cars That !Didn’t StopDere Awlin:Jest a not frum won watt nose.These guys watt always mope whenthey lose their girls auto no thestreet car filosophy. Here it is: Agirl is like a street car if you loseone, there’s awlways another rightbehind—and if you wait long enuff,the first one will come back.—Breezy.That’s all for today., Enough,what?ALL-IN.SUBSCRIBE TOTHE DAILY MAROONTnk»‘ orders forYal.Style Hats fromyour friends. Liberali-ommiaaion. Hats sellat far less than re¬tail stores charge.No collecting; no delivering.An easy and dignified way ofhelping yourself through collegeor earning money for extra lux¬uries.AddressC0LU« VAL-5TYLE HAT CO. TVltDEP T- ) CINCINNATI,0 tfl'gbc.I I I ilM l l l 5 I l l. li l III | I: Jl ill I 111 I HI I I illlllll!llllllfllll!ll!llaii a i iYear—round Weights IncludedContinuing OurJERREMS’ SALE(Of Special Interest toCollege Men)For a limited time we are continuing the Jerrems Sale.This is an opportunity young men cannot afford to miss.Suit and Extra Trousers or Knickers atthe Price of the Suit Alone$65 to $110Fine, imported Learoyds, Martins, Scotch Bannockburns, xIrish Tweeds, Unfinished Worsteds, as well as new ScotchImportations — whatever your choice — included in thesale. ANTICIPATE YOUR FUTURE NEEDS NOW!FORMAL BUSINESSAND SPORT CLOTHES324 S. MICHIGAN AVE.(McCormick Building)7 N. La Salle St. 71 E. Monroe St.illHU«ll»lH'H»»ll*ll»ll»lllllllllll*llli;li:|ll>l!»‘ll:i»''»‘|l|l»ll*ll»ill|l|llllll“lll,|l|lllllllllllllllllllll|H|||llllllll,l|l||>lllll>|H|lllllll*|H||>llllllllll»"»l'»'H»»'HIHHIIIllllllllHlllHIUIimiHIHII«lll7 MARSHALL FIELD© COMPANYCABLEGRAMS fly from Paris — and soon ourfrocks, slippers, suits, chapeaux, even our hand¬kerchiefs begin to show a new interest in color, oramusing variations of line. Let us whisper of the pastelshades and new soft kasha weaves; skirts that are flaredgracefully below the knee; a devotion to tweeds in thefeminine case; hats that are of felt in the shade of a thistle-bloom or turbans made of a single great poppy.Of the Many New ThingsThe Time —and the Place is, of course,Field’s where this 16 jewel sen¬try of the flying moments maybe purchased for #12 — whitegold filled case, engraved front,and above all it keeps time!First Floor,'IVabashA High Jumpernot in price, you understand,but in favor. These JumperSkirts are of finest flannel, somemodels with the very new Chanelpleated effect, braid bound strapsand pockets — they are indeedsmart. The colors are temptingto the eye as well as the ear: man¬darin, beetelnut, bambino blue,rouge, and many more. #9.75and up.Sixth Floor, IVabash'Be My Valentine—it won’t be difficult to persuadeher if her morning mail includesa gay red folder with the latestFrench voile handkerchief inside—particularly when the hand¬kerchief hem is exquisitely hand-done with cut work. Folders,25c. Handkerchiefs, #1.00 up.First Floor, StatecAdmiration—on all sides is sure to greet thisadorable evening bag—just im¬agine it, white crepe studdedwith rhinestones, so that itdances with light. Inside a lit¬tle mirror and a purse, withplenty of room for a compactand handkerchief. #12.50First Floor, IVabash is the one adorning the smartlittle toe of your newest Shoes—for indeed this is a season ofmany bows. They appear onsuede or satin for the afternoon,for evening a pair dyed to matchperfectly tne frock they are toaccompany, and for school thefine tan calf Pumps shown abovewhich are #12.50.Fourth Floor, StatePearls Are Still Castfor the leading part in the sea¬son’s revue of Jewels. And theyare, like the tragic necklace ofde Maupassant, of paste. Thechoker of large tinted beads,#2.75 up; a bracelet of manybeads in tiny rows, #7.50 up;triple strand necklaces, #7.50 up;and also there are earrings, pins,rings.First Floor, IVabashWith That Suit —That just needs something tomake it brighter — a Belgianlinen vestee with the snappiestlittle touches of red, and a filetedging—or perhaps a blue silkone, with a row of crystal but¬tons. Vests are #1.00 up.First Floor, StateOne, Two, Three —over the head and it’s, on, thisSweater of soft imported woolwith its very smart checked front,V neck and delightfully softcolorings — brown, rose, gray orgreen. #6.75.Sixth Floor, State