March. 1, GIRLS OUTNUMBER BOYS (Continued from Page 3) I ON N. T. HONOR ROLL Honorable Mention Honor Roll 1~29 WI L ME T .T E LIFE be, we are not going to succeed in keeping them from falJing down the hill. . Jack. is apparently in the .animal stage when a baby. His potentialities are still undeveloped, and appetite is the fundamental thing about him. Appeal can only be made through fear, love and his desire for praise at that time. He should be trained as carefully. as one train.s cats and dogs, and in jus.t the same way, Dr. Rassweiler felt. Aft~x: awhile he ·reaches the savage state, becoming a child of the fields, the streams and the for est. His love for .the out-of-doors should be utilized to lead him to a love for geography, zoology, physics, mechanics. books about deeds of courage and heroism. Then comes the tribal stage, when he is a member of a gang and the social urge is upon him. This club spirit should be used to instill in him a sense of discipline, a yielding to authority. He should learn how to merge his will into the will of the larger group, in other words to become a good citizen instead of a criminal. This is the time for the Boy Scout movement, said Dr. Rassweiler. After that, comes the romantic stage, a dangerous one. As for Jill all this time, evidently she is less aggressive in her impulses, for 7 she responds to repressive influences. But at the romantic age she becomes a different girl, and troubles begin. She and Jack must learn to sublimate their emotions, to develop something finer and more spiritual, to yield to the better social influence of life. If parents wish to keep them from falling down the hill, Jack and Jill shiJuld be taught how to balance their lives between passion and conscience, how to choose a life companion, the secrets of their own lives, and how to adjust themselves to society. Miss Helen Correll gave a group of songs at the beginning of the program, showing herself to possess a fine, clear and true soprano voice. _A_t_ .w_o_m_an_'s_c_l_ub_. By R. L P. "Jack and JiZZ went up tl'e hill To fetch a pail of water; Ja.ck Jell down and broke his crown, And Jm came tumbling after." Eleanor Mayer, Margaret Wegner, Phyllls Dubsky, Emma Bickham, Phyllis Bosley, Betty Dostal, Margaret Ebeling, Margaret Freyn, Frances Kelley, Gertrude McAdams, Helen Orwig. Janice Barr, Lorraine Bordeau, Eleanor Cufver, Jane Erickson, Anna Gerken, Marga ret Gould, Thelma Hayskar, Grace Hirschberg, Helen Holton, Esther Kriebel, Harriet " Leach, Page Mergentheim, Mary J. Miller, Evelyn Otten, Frances Payne, Harriet Redfern. SENIOR BOYS J a ck K a ufman, John Erickson, Morton Me r gentheim, Carl Hall, Roy Wilcox, Fra nk Roth, Robert Marcus, James Bake r, Duncan Clark, Robert Ellis, John Fetcher, Edward Munn, Ernest Solomon, Rohe rt Brown, Kenneth Moeller, George Brown, Duncan Jennings, John Reynolds , Jack Weiller. Martin Cassell, George Cogswell, Sidn e y Diller, William Gibson, Robert Gonsalve s, Conrad Gerstenbrand, Robert Jos lin, Walter Lindblad, Paul Redhead, Raymond Ringson, Robert Simmons, Charles Smith, Louis Weber, Stephen Windes. JUNIOR BOYS T om Hicks, Jack Loeb, Robert Schoenbrun, Robert Meyers, Brice Stephen:.;, Robert Forster, William McAllen, Paul Powell, Paul Seligmann, John Atwood, Willard Bent, Eugene Hildebrand, George Hunsche, Simeon Jester, Robert Krueger. Albert Bows, Townsend ChristiE', Eugene Derlacki, Robert King, B ernard Kram. SOPHOliORE BOYS George Boylston, David Crawford, Paul Gilbert, Olin Sethness, Philip VonAmmon, Gordon Cutler, Barclay Jones, Guy Robbins, James Alsdorff, Lowell Comee , Ed. Diercks, Gene Mancinelli, Jack Mee. Honorable llcntlon Honor Roll Why Jack fell and then blamed it on Jill was the concern of Dr. G. F. Rassweiler, professor ' of speech at Beloit college, in his talk before members of the Woman's club of Wilmette on Wednesday afternoon. "We're interested in Jack and Jill trudging up the hill of life," said Dr. Rassweiler, "and to see that they make the top without a fall." The top of the hill is . full grown manhood and womanhood, he said. There is a hill of biological evolutipn, too, the base of which is the lowest form of amphibian life, and the height is the most "complex form-the human being. Society has gone up a hill, starting with the caveman, working up through the stone age, the bronze age, the iron age, to this age of electricity. And the life of Jack and Jill, according to Dr. Rassweiler, repeats all these stages of life. Unless we recognize · that fact he said, unless we meet them in th~ stage of life in which they happen to Ask Young People to Take Interest in Church Music Plans for utilizing music towar1 helping the churches to enrich t~ j lives of their young people are bei· ~eworked out as a feature of Natio ~g Music Week, May 5-11. Such ac' t~al is in keeping with the keynote of ~· on sixth annual observance, whict . is active participation in music in . . istion to listening to it. That p1 ddithe movement has been epito· e-cf this .injunc!ion: "?~,ar Mu 1~11'~ jtt Mustc- EnJOY Mustc. ··c- ..a.c..,.,"' _,,. f ·il., Jlonoro.ble llentlon .1·' Honor Roll llonoro.ble 1 \lentlon John Barden, John Borino, Norman Bruedigan, John Chapman. David Davis, Jack Durham, William Freeman, Alan Fuller, John Howe, Robert Livingston, Alex Logan, Davis Lott, H e rbert Otten , Charles Patterson, Alan Robinson, Henry Schauffler, William Sundlof, Dan Wachs, Elliott Witt. FRESHJIA:S BOYS Arthur Weldon, Cameron Brown, George Cole, Jack DeBeers, Elwood Mons , Frank Seyl, Shelby 1\Iiner, Elmer Anderson, Jack Broad, Ed. Bristol, Stephen Brooks, John Dernehl, · Edgar Haight, John Hellmuth, Edward Howard, Harry K eator, Dexter Martin, Jim Ricks, Ted Wachs , Jerry Westerfield, Walker Wolford. Honor Roll FREE j INST~ T~J,CTION r . ' · llonorahle l\lentlon Foster Bennett, George Browning, Frank Church, Lyman Huff, William Kidd, Ed. Kumen, Fred Robinson, Henry Stanton, J erome Strauss, Arno VonReinsberg, Milton Vore. Athletic Leagues Approach. Close of Big Winter Ga1nes Two athletic leagues conducted by the . Playground and Recreation board closed the winter season this week and the entire winter program will be brought to an end within the next two or three weeks, according to offileague. The remaining meetings in the various women's activities will continpe to the week of Spring vacation in the public schools with the exception of the two swimming classes. The Friday evening women's class at the Sovereign hotel will come to an end March 22 and the Wednesday morning ,class closes April 3. The men's basketball program ha'3 been enlarged to include three evenings each week in order to finish the season by the time of the Easter vacation. The most important game of the sea'30n which could result in tumbling the Presbyterians, leaders in the league from their position will take place Friday evening, March 8 at 8 :30 o'clock between the Presbyterian I and the Terminal A. C. team, winr..ers of the cup for the past two years. The Men'·3 gymnasium class meeting on Thursday evenings at Stolp gymnasium will continue to the last of March. Frotn March 4th to 16th inr ~~ . . h ~ ~ustve we WI 11 ave an instructress from ~~ ~ at our store teaChing the constructir ~ f L Sh d C I Trees, Plaques, Fre~ l_ c ,.Jh oD lalm.pGI a .f~s,d rysta p o· s, ort te Glass . P tctu~es, aper ar d Wax Flower d Denntson crafts. .f s an other .4. + I Don't pass up this opportunity to receive t'his instruction here at home. Your .onl'Y cost will be the materials 'YOU use. WILMEITE STATIONERY & GIFT SHOP I Phone Wil. 3051 1155 Wi~ette Ave.