WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 23, 1927 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE Star Group Long Known Story From Grecian Mythology Tells of Cluster The star group represented in the above map, though known to us as Cassiosinia, or the lady in the chair, is made up of names in times gone by. For instance she called it the "tited hand." To some of the Greeks it was a key while to Egyptians it was a leg. The concept also led to the idea that the chair is also very ancient and one that is familiar to many people. Unlike many star groups it does look like a chair. However, the "W" man makes up not the chair she is sitting in. Cassiopina was a queen. She was the wife of Cepheus, whose constellation appears on the map to the left. She was of remarkable beauty but she was also a slave. It she claimed that she was more fair than even Juno or the son nymphs. The latter felt that they were insulted and so complained I. Cassiopina died result when she was placed in the sky, she was put there as one of the constellations that revolve around the pole. Because of this, sometimes as now, she is upide down or standing on the ground. She might be struggling enough position for a queen! Once in a great white that flushes out in the sky a star in a place where none has been seen previously. One of its planets, Jupiter, is surrounded by temporary stars appeared the year 1572 in Cuscaeiusia. This was observed by the great Danish astronomer, Tycho Brahe, one of the most renowned scientists of days. As a result it is frequently called "Tycho's star." By March 1574 the star and finished completely, so once a new star we do not know, even though virtually rather faint is exo sense and explode. The result is a sudden flash of light which makes visible the star's existence for a time. But soon it dies down, back to its previous obscurity Past President Speaks at Second Y.W. Vesper "We want above all, self-cultivation," expresses the queen of the freshmen in their rhetoric composition. She also introduced former president of the V. W. C. A. and now a member of the University's Board, who kept very keeners in Myers' hall Tuesday. Miss Day continued, "That not only expresses the desire of the freshmen but of all the upperclassmen; to be a teammate in these challenges can feel perfectly at home in any situation. Their aim is not to try to do a hundred and one things and not do one well, but do one well and ably. I think that is a great cultivation, or we neist talk?" Miss Eunice Harsey, e28, of the finance committee announced the program for the coming year. That it will be attended by ten teachers, Sunday school classes at Haskell, freshmen committees, campus groups and other interested parties, the fifteen interest groups outlined in the W. Y. C. A. information pamphlet and a series of values of life," said Miss Harsey, "and I am pleased to find that nearly a hundred women have signed up for the program." The meeting was closed with the reading of the budget and with a few moments of meditation and prayer. State Singing Contest to Be Held at Wichita Emporia, Sept. 28—The Kansas state singing contest in the Atwater Kent national radio audition will be held at the Wichita Falls University, to 10 p.m., and will be broadcast by The Hotel Lassen station—KFII. The two winners of the state audition at Wichita—one young man and one young woman—will be the state in a district audition to be held in Dallas in November. After the district auditions in November, the judges will select the winner from the singing contest will be held in New York in December for an aggregate of $17,500 in cash awards, and for six of the winners, free musical performances. Library Open to the Public A library is maintained for the use of students of the department of home economics in room 104 Fraser. However, according to members of the faculty, the library consists of magazines of such types as The American Medical Journal, The Textile World, and House Beautiful. Museum in Fraser Contains Historical Material of Value to Archeologists and Classicists The Classical Museum in Fraser hall is the home of one of the most interesting, stimulating spots on this campus. The would be classicists, catalog hunters, archeologists, and romance hunters will find this unique museum some supersizing currying rooms 206, 208, and 210, including its corridor. The Museum contains the illustrative apparatus for the study of the classical languages and literatures, historical documents, pictureshots of buildings, sculptures and paintings, restoration projects, reproductions of some ancient works of art; a series of samples of ancient art; an exploration of original objects of ancient life and art. There are 14 large full sized cuses of the most important statutes, several smaller models of larger ones, some metopias and a large part of the Greek inscriptions. There is a variety of reliefs, a number of busts of Greece and Roman authors and emperors. One thing of particular interest, the Acropolis at Athens is it today, accompanied by views of statues showing its original appearance. A large number of photographs German Archaeologist Doubts Story of Iliad Berlin, Sept. 28 - Helen of Troy wandered with more out a home in history. The destruction of her city by the Homeric inhabitants of Greece and its islands, long thought well established by archaeological research, was in question by Dr. Erich Bethe, a professor at the University of Leipzig. There is no question that there was a Troy, and that it was destroyed. So much the earlier investigations showed. The ruins of nine successive rooms in the church were its predecessors on the same site, were excavated by H. Schillemann, a German archaeologist, and of these, the sixth was designated as the Troy. In 1980, the date of the destruction of this city was determined as about 1200 B. C. The first evidences of the incoming of Greeks, Doctor Bethe states, because he had visited that island, that the Hind dates only from about 600 B. C., instead of from the much earlier date assigned by tradition, that the Greek materials already in existence Kappa Sigma fraternity announces the pledging of Russell Gideon, c'31, of Tulsa, Okla. Send the Daily Kansan home. Want Ads LOST—Statements and two note- books. Return to Kansan business office. Reward. 18 LOST—Spectacle case containing $8. enable one to study the development of sculpture from its beginnings through its entire history. Greece was the first influence of the ancient sculptures in the period of the Renaissance, an latter even on American sculptur* A number of views of Greek vases come in colors show the intricacies of Greek painting. Paintings of the walls in the houses of Pompeii, all painted with a black or white armor face to face with the art of the famous city. Two of the great Paramesis etchings of the columns of Trajan and Marcus Aurelius give the sense that ancient Rome was mass of Roman historical relief sculpture that winds its way around the columns. The influence of ancient painting and the use of Latin in the middle ages are shown in a series of manuscripts of the British museum. Prof. Wilcox, curator of the museum gives occasional lectures in the museum on the articles on exhibition of art and artifacts, Thursday before the Classical club. The time and place of meetings are specified by the Kauai and on bullet boards. SALESMAN—Student to cell grow cells who will work in the lab. Offer positions on campus. experience. Address Friedman Brothers, Second and Wyattonite, Kansas at Varsity theater Tuesday afternoon. Call Marian Chastain, 898.11 LOST—Pair of tortoise snail glasses in Administration building Finder please call James Gilmorow 1612. 17 LOFT—Sheafier Lifetime pen arcward Fraser hall, Thursday, Sept. 22 Reward. Name is printed dially on Call. Call 1629 white on 20 LOST—In beaker room of gymnastics a brown leather billboard and paper valuable to owner. Please return to Athletic office. 18 FOR RENT - Reasonable; please strictly modern sleeping room for white. Centrally located. Phone 2580 17 ROOMS and meals for girls with all the comforts of home. Close to town and college. Phone 1450 blues LOST—Pair black horn "rim spectacles. Finder please return to Kannan business office. **HOME LAUNDRY--Shirts, 12c** BID, by 25c. 2pairs, jacqueline co. collection. Call Perry's 5551, 1116 New Delivery. Work called for a delivered. LOST—lady's black pocketbook containing vanity case, and red coin purse. Peward. Call 1440 Red. 17 LOST—On campus, a Kappa key between Ad and Fraser. Finder call Mary Cherry, phone 2399. FOR RENT - A fine fine apartment in modern house. Two rooms and sleeping porch. All house bills paid. Located at 1236 Tenn Street, Phone #5512 W18 1206 Tenn FOR RENT: Furnished rooms, for girl at 123 Louisiana. Formerly Wawankau House. Board if desired. Phone 1879. WANTED student laundry. Work guaranteed and prices reasonable. Phone 2250 white. 18 FOR RENT-3-Broom apartment, $25. Double room, nicely furnished, $15. House bills paid. Call at 1017 New Hampshire. MARCELLING, finger waving, water waving; 568 first 4 days of week 272 Friday and Saturday; Shampoo-phone 1015 Kentucky, phone 2775. New Mazda Lamps Better and Cost Less KENNEDY PLUMBING 937 Mass. CO. Phone 658 Manhattan Shirts for Fall F. I. Carter Corona Typewriters Sale or Rent HOUK AND GREEN 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 17 West Ninth S. B. LOWELL SHOE SHOP SHOE REPAIRING We cater to particular people and phase them, with Our first team being a group of ten volunteers together with Goodyear wood machinery, we are entitled to hold the workshops. A clean, fresh, reshaped tie— Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD HAIRRANCE Send 'em by the dozen and have lots of "new" ties. at the price you now pay. what WE INVITE COMPARISON will buy— 15c The Golden Apple to be given in the Contest would make Paris green. Ask Helen of Troy. LOOK A new contest is being announced in this issue of the Owl. You can't afford to miss it. SO DON'T FORGET TO BRING YOUR TWO BITS Tommorow Morning Voices THE day is full of voices—meaningless, insistent. They drone upon the street, chatter at parties, hurl snatches of themselves at you from passing automobiles, rise up and down dramatically from open-air platforms, end with question marks at the office, trail after you on street cars. . . Your ears, forever open, almost have to hear. Yet in this same room with you are voices of utmost silence, whose every word concerns you. You control them more surely than you control telephone or radio. Open a page—they talk to you quietly. Close a page—they are through. They are the voices of the advertisements. They talk direct to you. Tell of salads, delicious drinks, to gratify you. Reinforced hosiery, cooler underwear, purer soap. You believe in these voices, for they have to be sincere. Else they would not be in these pages—could not have the nation's belief. You buy the goods they proffer, for you know already what those goods will do. And wide belief has lowered their prices. They are economical—sure! Loose products everywhere in stores are crying out, "Buy me!" But behind the voice of the advertised product is the voice of authority. The voice that tells the why, what, when, where and how of the goods you buy. Heed these courteous voices often. Read the advertisements every day