WILMETTE LIFE February 7, 19~ Students Publishing Paper at New Trier High School A new weekly publication called the New Trier Special has made its appearance on the New Trier High school campus. The high school has been without an official publication this year. Printing of the New Trier Special is strictly a student enterprise, and it is being done without any financial assistance from the school. The second issue of the Special this week was an eightpage sheet five inches by eight. The paper is being sold at two cents a copy and the reputed circulation last week BANANA and ORANGE ICE CREAl\1 FuU Ou.t Brick There 111 Hydro· Apncy Nc1r Your Home was 631. Ted Wachs, Frank Seyl, Dexter Martin, Bill Kidd and Agnes Halley, New Trier students, compose the staff. These students are endeavoring to present in th'e New Trier Special the most interesting news of the high school. The For the second time this season New paper is being distributed in the mess Trier High school won a doubleheader hall during the lunch periods. basketball engagement with Oak Park at the latter's fieldhouse last Saturday night. The heavies won, 22 to 17, and New Trier Tri-Ship Club the lights, 20 to 19. · Plans Party for Feb. 22 This double victory placed the New The 'fri-Ship club of New Trier High school is planning a novel party to be Trier lightweight team on top in the held in the mess ·hall of the school race for Suburban league championSaturday night, February 22. It is to ship honors and gave the Gray and be called a "pound" party and will be Green heavyweight fiv!-! a tie with in the nature of an all-school dance. Evanston for second place. Both games were thrillers, although Admission per couple will be one dollar plus one cent for each pound that the the lightweight battle evoked the most girl weighs over one hundred pounds. controversy. It was won by New Trier The high school boys declare, however, in the last thirty seconds of play when that they are not urging New Trier Frank Church, center. sank a fr~e girls to go on a diet. Music for the throw on a technical foul by Oak Park. dance will be furnished by one of the Church was responsible more than any Cope Harvey orchestras. other single player for New Trier's victory, as he contributed fi\·e field CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICE goals besides the free throw that " ·on "Spirit" will be the subject in the the game. First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Jn both the hea\·yweight and light\Vilmette, Sunday morning, February weight games New Trier was behind 9, at the 11 o'clock service. Sunday at half time by two point s. the heavies school convenes at 9:45 o'clock. tO to 8 and the lights 11 to 9. The Oak Park heavies were ahead 16 to 13 at the end of the third quarter, and when the final quarter was half gone they held a five-point lead. only to lose to the Gray and Green by this same margin. The New Trier lights held a scant 17 to 15 lead at the end of the third quarter, but the west siders tied the score and then lo st the game by a single point. Marshall Ling, forward. made three field goals and one free throw to !earl the scoring for the New Trier he a Yyweight team. Clayton Paulson. \Yho holds clown the other forward position for the Gray and Green, was close behind him with a field goal ancl four free throws . All of these free throws were made in the last quartrr, and were only one short of ~ew Trier's margin of victory. The New Trier teams were scheduled to engage Evanston on the latter's . floor Friday night, February 7. in another Suburban league doubleheader. On January 3 in the ~cw Trier gymnasium the Gray and Green lightweights trounced Evanston 29 to 10, but the Evanston hea,·yweights " ·ere triumphant 28 to 23. · New Trier Cagers Trounce Oak Park in Doubleheader · GUIDE-LECTURE TOURS Next week's guide-lecture tours for the public at Field :M useum of Xatural History wil begin Monday, February 10. with "Cereals and Spices" at 11 o'clock and "Indian Homes" at 3. Other days at the same hours subjects ·will be: Tuesday, "Skeletons" and "The Art of the Ancons' ' : \Vednesday, "Indian Costumes" and "Chicago ~!am mats"; Thursday, two general tours of anthropological, botanical, geological and zoological exhibits; and Friday "Chinese Archaeology" and "Boats and Boat Models." These tours of museum exhibits, conducted by staff lecturers, are free. Persons wishing to participate should assemble inside the north entrance of the museum. j(ARLOS~ DISCUSS O'NEILL DRAMAS Friday evening, February 7, the Rev. Daniel A. Lord, S. J ., will lecture on the dramas of Eugene O'Neill and George Bernard Shaw, at the Loyola Community theater, Lakewood and Loyola avenues, Chicago. Because of the showing in Chicago of O'Neill's "Strange Interlude," which has caused some favorable and much adverse criticism by a public which knows not whether to reject or endorse it as a play of merit, the Rev. Mr. Lord will give special emphasis to an analysis of this play and its influence upon a theater-gomg people. PHOTOS Ml RALAGO BLDG.: 1647 Sheridan Road cJt the Lc1ke, between Wilmette c1nd Kenilworth c Telephone Wilmette 650 ·