_ \_ At" �._. - �. \ ... r '• '.'_rl' \..' 'f .... :' •. ,STUDENT DESCRIBES HERWAR ZONE BXPBRlENCES4>f., ��..,�er- t .1 § ...... Jearaey.r.. fO ACTION ON BALL TOUR'-pq�'�&'.','�' �� foc;:- "':. Games-, to ;Be Pla�·ED Route. 'TIle coarse as ·Preseated LastAulUam WID Be ..., -� ""�ie+ ' .. -toft.t, to �:lS to 9:15-Dean Linn.DeaD Boynton wiJl compl�te tberegistration of men whose names'range from A to K today. and DeanLi •• - .....11 be ill .hi •. office, toda7" to­morrow and' Friday f� purPOses "i,fregistration .t),•'ftte proposed" choir trip to the���-Pac�!=, ,'��.���,�. n !!�. �will probably "9� � �p:·ffl .�,. opinion of Director St� 'l'\a� .proposed dates � � �t�ita�r20 to Sentember 2£ bat the �nta Fe, 7�:''f n"fl ''r. 'J. l' L • Of" -,railroad, on .D1�' tt'� ��oir,,,., to" traftl, is aDab� to proVYe aceom­modat;cm" MrOre 41te fint of October.. v .... �! ... r David Weidemann, "17" was elected���i�. �f' '�h�·"F����� Vars�tT��@ . ��. at, � !Deetiag b�4 yes­�� �Q9� W:���nn �s� ���� a� ��t � th� teas()'� � promise � develop iato (Meof �...e � !p:sJ 4JUemen Chicago �net' � 1f�. ��, . �. beenaround tbe .2160 mark for' tile seuoa,and he i. an accurate and steadyfielder. . Prof. � COntri ....Prof. Edward E. Barn,anl. of. �f'department of A�troDo�y. �I ��­tribated an article on .. " Great 'Nebu­lous Region Near. Omiqon' ���t� tbe May ��m�. 9,f, t1a,., ��physical Journal. -.;vhic .. bas �e, �­�ued by the U�;,.ersilf Press.. .I�f latlg _arn��0Edal Stadellt Newapapu of theUDivenity of Cbicaco . kh��-�nd thrills gratei e;�; thaD ill where one comes: t� be ectucat� .Dot··�tiacking" some" "itiiw iDdiYwaai - to take courses. wh�re .oae waDts tofrom the resounding '�colum�s of the'" "browse through'; four years tastingsecond page. the fruits of wisdom, unhampered byGradually as the year advanced the student activity fetish (in the in-the paper took stands on the differ: tensity of the present day), 'has be aent subjects that were confronting .right to consider tha� �bere is a placethe campus=-attitudes which probably for' his daily paper, made up as it' is,were wrong - and distorted in some largelS' 'of 'news about campus 01'­instances, but-which were sincere at ganizations which. ,he questions, orthe time and were an attempt to make the advisability of which in theirthe column justify itself as an edi- public acception be doubts?torial column. - The activity was not He waives the question to his sue­limited entirely to' the' University of <cessor. Logically, he believes thatChicago campus. but at tiolcs was an there is no place for The Daily Ma­·eff.:::'rt to discuss the' probl��s of col- roon if stude'nt life were what itlege students as a whole, a field which sbould be.' .·A·s a matter of sentiment,.really seems to be the most worth- personal enjoyment.. personal pride,�hile one the paper could' enter. and interest in life, he has an affection, 'Dhe paper, has been. criticized as for the. paper. which resents even thebeing iconoclastic, .rabid and, at slightest· sttir. . -', _c...times. of decidedly warped viewpoint. . Logic or no logic, .he feels I1bat TheHad the editor the confidence, he, 'MarOOn 'bas 'been the biggest thing inmight sit back and say that a prophet' cotrege-Jor'�ifu; and' he is glad of it.is not appreciated' in' his own. coun'-: If. this'k ::Ii:eresy,-' make the mosttry. that his ideas are the forerun- of. it�.:.-.ner of a greater common sense era incollege life. and smirk with infiniteself-satisfaction. But he does not.Even now he can' see where mistakeswere made, and yet !he· does not en­tirely regret all of them.' if he hasmade the students think as he hasthouqht, over those matters whichreally are their problems. then !hiswork has been a good one. even ifhis conclusions were wrong. And.with his last dying brearth.-officiallyspeaking-he is ready to maintainthat he was, right in most instances.'Which shows" pedhaps, the. trueconnection between the individual. ex­pression and' the' expression of the. machine of The Daily Maroon-theman ready too. fight for wh3lt he thinksis· rig!!t, the _<?r�!liza�ion firm in itsdetermination to .back the-stand once i .tak�n.' .And as the last 'step in the evolutionof the editorial mind which has ques­tioned time-honored. "snap" courses.and hoary traditions. the theory' oafintercollegiate athletics which hasgrown up- with us and now is so .firm­ly rooted, .the . advisability of certain-campns organizations, .. the .. possibili-.ties of eduCating the student despite'itself, the administration, and' the, college .. at�()ISphere,· bas_ come a 11!��-,.dening question'-' .and .'one:' ·b�£<n.:e:which the. editor bows in hopeless-ness, as his last official'duty. Is TheMaroon :worth while? If his idea ofeollege so often expressed. a placePublished mornings, except Sunda,.aad Monda,.. during the . Autumn..Winter and SpriDC quarters, b,. TheDaily )broon Staff. .G. w. Cottincbam.�M."a,",C EditOrP. R. J[ah.� .... . .. :.� ... H_ �.. R.. swaaOa •••.••• � •• BaT BditGI''J. J. Donalaoe AthJetiea EditorR. P. llattbewa ·� IIaDiaprSUBSCRIPTION RATESBy Carrier, $2.50 a year; $1 a quarter.·B,. Mail, $3 a year; $1.25 a quarter.Editorial Rooms .••.......• Ellis '12Te��phoile Mid�y 800.BUmess Office , Ellis 14Telephone Blackstone 2591,Clarke - McElroy Publishing COmpany.at Cettqe Groft Aft. Tel JI1ctwa.7 1115ProfessorsandStudentsWEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 191�.THE LAST EDITORIAL OF THE1914-1915 SAFF.will find a cordial,One ideal of the staff of The DailyMaroon seems practically certain ofnever being realized. Perhaps thiscertainty is due largely to the factthat the ideal is too ambitious andalso somewhat out of key with thepurpose and possibilities of the paper.This ideal is' to ignore th. passing ofclasses 'and make 'oOf the paper one.continuous organization, with chang­ing officers, naturally,' but' with the,same policy. hopes and 'aspirations,. tempered, in so far as necessary, to,meet the changing times .. '.: :To carry out this idea adequately."the present staff would slip quietlyaway and the sceptter and pen wouldbe taken up next year in such a waythat no change . would- be noticed,The retiring editor would not sumuP : his attempts.', hopes, failures andsuccesses and Ibid a tearful farewell,and the incoming' editor "would not'fe�i it necessary to indulge in a longstatement of policy-having at basisthe' correction .of all that was donethe year before. But. after all, somer�c-:an;tnlat,ion is almost essential. be­fo�e -a,' long 'Vacation, and in makingthis summary the editor scarcely canrestrain the desire to appear as aperson,' not part of a vast machine,and to' assert kor the last time theviews which all year he has express­ed for an unknown factor which !hasa ·policy.'" When' all' is Said' anddane. lie is only "a eollege studentaDd.. despite bluster and protest; hewants 'to talk for himself fur once.And so the present editor, ignoringhiS exPressed poticy and his once highSoWn hopes' for' a paper which wouldnever deviate from the straigfht andnarrow path laid down in' style bookaDd office tradition, desires to comeforward as himself and make his fi­nal bow.'This year The Maroon has been farfrom perfect-s-that is realized-j-but­the .editor feels that a step in ad­vance has been made. and possiblywhile that is not' enough to feel "igfl­ly satisfied over � it is sufficient. tomake the year seem a success. . Theyear has represented a process ofe�olution in the mind of the editor'which has brought his <:-C'I1victionsand feelings to a point where .hefeels he would like to start overagain and really make the paper thebest in the land. Unfortunately it istoo late now and all he can do is toturn it over to his successor ar.� IO::lkforward to the great pleasure he wil1have when ne:oct seen on the campusin teUing the then editor that thesheet is going. to the dogs and that-the undergraduate mind is at leasto;Ue hundred degrees lower in devel­b�ment than it was it) his time. Thisis something to look forward to as a'gtiat pfeasuri fOr �i1ainly the prac-tice is .indulged in to such a great ex­tent by former managing editors asto make one believe that it must have welcome and everybanking conven-ienceat theNEAR�ST BANK'iotheuNivERSrtY 'OF CHICAGO.RESOURCES: TWO MILUONDOLLARSWOODLAWN TRUST.& SAVINGS 'BANK. 12M· 'BAST '. SIXTY-THIRD ,ST.:Nur' w ........ Ayaae".Ho�: 9,·�·m. to �-� IlL ". .� . . .... OPEN SATUJlDAY,BVBlQNG8• •• . •. '. .i ."We pay 3 per cent. interest in.our Savings DepartlDent. , .· YOUR' FO' OD ch' ooomkeed_ as you had it ,atEat your -, three"Squares" at the Men's' Commons,The Home Made Muffins, Pies, Puddings; Etc.­· are what ·you like.The Club Breakfasts, Cafeteria 'Lunc:heo�s u..da la carte Dinners are giviag sa.faction.···. .. STUDENTS!. . Typewritten papers prove the' c:arefaf ·.student who tabs pridein eveI7 detail of his work.. .'.'1'be.J imariabl,. make • favorable impression with the taeulty and.help JOIII to .. beUer IDlb..... ,'. ,III TBENEWMULTIPLEXHAMMONDis the typewriterfor scholars andlinguists.TWO DIFFERENT STYLES OF TYPE, or three to rIVe differentlanguages, are carried on the machine at once. ."JUST TURN THE KNOB" and change instantly from Roman typeto Italics, or from English to Greek, German, Russian, Ft-eneb, etc.Other eombinations substituted in a few seconds. .The new LIGHT-WEIGHT aluminum Multiplex weighs only l1�lbs.THE RAIIMOND TYPEWRITER COMPANYNew York, N. y� . Chieago 'Branebt. W.· M.iii •• Street�.nL· ... ::\ �".. •,i. " I, ::. _�.I' '.�ALL STUDENTS� oa ORGANIZATIONSDESIRING ,..B d V IGUn �_ 0 umes. :of �h. .r:;,CaD at EIIia 14 01' ........ canl to 80K •IFi�...... 1All I.... ad.., -==.�� ·TOroangi,avMNO,th'th'tbGI, WEtilw�tec(14-TYCpE--"rv." 51atf1bb.1w�1rii"··Gii .. ·HOME····��·�··] :: via· :,1··· .' I C. &, E." I. l.: (Chicago & Eutwn lIIinot. Railroad) :.:. . �The'road of unequaled service to: aD points 8Outh� : •:. south and southwest. - Fast, direct, splendidlY equipped trains : f' �.� t: �T. LOVIS, ]110. )lAC9N. GA. TEBBII: HAUTE. DD. f• FORT woaTH. TEX. .IACKSONVILLE. PIA NASRVILLE, TENN. ": GAI�VI!I8TON. TEX. MOBILE. ALA. ATLANTA. GA. : •t ItVANSVlLI�B, IND. AUGUSTA. GAo •• (,HATTANOOGA. nAI�I�AS. TEX. BI1lMOORAli. ALA. • ,: 'l'BNN" ROOSTOlf. TEX. NEW O.LlUlfS. LA. :: If you live anywh�re in the south, .we wjU be.gIad � give : �• you full inf9rm�ti9n regarding rates, routeS and schedules. •i. W. e �� deem it • pl�ure to have you tPhone our city i .:. office In �rd to your trip. . .. •: ,Trains leave from .Dearborn Station. South side sta�ons: : ': 47th Street, �d En��, (63rd and Wallace Sts.) i ·<. .. , . ., City Tieket Office, •.: .108 WEST ADAMS STREET •.:. 'PhOae .. Ral'l'isoll. 5US 'PIaeae Aatc.atle 52-S'n •. it· J. F. GOVAN,.·, .,-. • ..,: General Agent, .: .? . cm�. :<·ot·)·:·':·(-oI).c.-:'-:'oI)·)·,.+.,.�·:-.:·.a..+.,...,.� .,,++.++ ).,. " ..... w=T�I:1. "\===... '" ..�:i.: ,.: '. .. :.i• t•. +t, : •lS :t'""(.of'(,�.••: '•7e ...:.8 •• b�is: : '. ,••••••'7. :••... ,,:.:0. :.... T�I:1� I!J�' -.---�-�.-"."'- -- .... ---_-. --- __ '"_--WHEN YOU-· WANT .. TO .. KNOW. th� ��i()r _ .. c()l1�ges_��s:.e_ .�n�d..the conference record iD� the mile; honorable mention in.�ccif:ic subjectswhen, you want to lOok"up .a:fellOw ; for work done in- the·-:Jun'ior -eolleges ..�udent's activities; -you must turn The Parmelia Brown scholarships �to the Cap aDd.· Gown. Plenty of were awarded to Mabel Iser and Eva:copies for ev�ry�ne. csn at Elli.'· Marie .RicholsoD. The 'Political Sci-'e�c� prize was ,given to Arthur Ed-17.", ... - .- win'Norb«g,�first/and Frank Katzln.TYPEW.RITI NG WANTED;....;..· ··second. �, '.Quick, / neat work.·· Reaaonabl� .. � .' Fourt�. Get SCholanbipa.Pric�.! Address",»� '9,'" FaCulty Fourteen Students received sebolar-.Exchance. .' ',"-.._ ships in th'e gradua� sch�ls for ex-rO� �E:'rr-F!!R!o!!.5HE.!l FO� c�l1ence .in the work. iD;_�the Seniorsummer\ -quarters, �r90m' '-m;d�� c-;'iieges. ', The' H()ward' 'h"IOr. Rick-;apartment, .1st floor, :ne�ly and at- etts prize' for research in Pathologytracti�ely: fumished(' .ODe 'bloCk: was awarded. ',to: Mis:; Maud 'Slye.from School- of Edueation, titree ,�en Ia� s���t5-'�ere elected-Intoblocks from campus..; H. -'F. WiD': t_b� 9r�er� oq'&e.� Gaif •. the bon�ral")"brenner, 5703 KenwoOd Ave� H�e' ".legal: SOC:Iety�?:,i..,t.; three former:_-stu-.Pa�k-1849. _ ',. "; !i��. ,���&��de_-!!l���bers of t��. or-·WA-NTED_;_BY .YOUNG LADY, ganlzation. ;QD'iftnity student," r��"an'crboard" -. The following 'stud'ents .were elect-n�� :Un�ersity, with �Cuifured. ed into Sigma: Xi.' the honorUy sci­German family. References -ex-� inti� frateniity: '-Ada Arlitt:;�Arthurchanged. Address, C., care of Miss . Bmn�' . Sa..ah� Doubt, LeO Hardt.Parhr� 56Z4 EIB. A'Ve. � � " Townes -Leigb, Carl Moon. RaymondM�l1inD[, 'Ed'ith Roberts. and LeRoyCAN ACCOMMODATE -THREE -��'��.' � ,Thil1Y.�t' , students 'wereyoung meG seekiftg first-cl�ss bOard. ehosen £Or Phi Beta Kappa..3n_d :_!'�m, $7.00 per week. CallMicfway' i923.--- 560f"�xcer Ave:=-�' ,...: ...=-.- EiteniID 8eDior Reii&Dts:WANTED-STUDENTS, MEN ORwomen, to sell' our high grade Residems :0£ Greenwood hall gavchousehold speer.dties during the a party: for graduating residents lastsummer vacation. Exceptionally =ni=gh=t=3=t=:,d=in=n=e=·r=. ========easy selling articles. Call, at 0027University Ave. or phone H. P .4545.::.'f.".� FaD Liae of "'TENNIS GOODS, �Racket Restringinga SpecialtyM HOUR SERVICE,Pennants. Pins' : PillowsFobsHandmade JewelryATHLETIC GOODS; The W. C. KERN CO.1331 EAST 57th STREET,'- ',l" .2 Blocb EaSt of Towerrooms, nicely furnished, modern.and private family. Will .rent. sin­gle or: en suite. 6404 Greenwood-avenue, first apartment. PhoneMidway 3748.-NO SENIORS"COW B·B Y 'S1001 - 1003 East 65th StreetMea's Fandsh ....Base BaD ReturnsB,lmabtpSo. E. Cor. 55th 8L" DBa Ay.PRINCESSOPERETTA SUCCESSThe Lady in Red (CoaUnue4 from Pqe 1)SU,MMER CLOTH,ING. ..' . " i �' •Io 6: H SUITS AT $25With our ��. stand­ard of style, . qualitjt1f)and service, \ �. "�'" - .O.UR STR.'AW HATS ; .,.;It.......... .,• .. URAD ,...� .......... ,... .. 57• k 1 tis. AlIi� ......._It..' IIc. From' Chase"It;' Co. of"- Ne� Haven, .. Cpnn., arerecognized -, u, ,the bestamong college men._ MEN·S� STo��,�'(:!':'I-:2',()gJl�e &Heneiee18-2.0 East .lackscnBoulevard-'---�..;_ ··-t.;"·"""'_7(--- 'H-. " '.···1· C. _.�.:- .. �.:' -: ": � .. '-.. '...- -. - _:__. _...=_ --- -_ A ,'0 '-0", : 'r_,.'q THE GARDEN CLUB at the MidfJJay Gardnu lllGies 1M follmviag. fMfJlbns�ip:. offer. !o the members. of the faculty' a..d the stMd""ts of lhe U,,""'llnsity of Chicogo.qTHE INn7ATlON FEE'is $is arid the dtU� are $15 a year !HJyobk·.three illstall ... ents, October -first,' FebrlUJry first mul JuJU first. Me""'ers fIOt ita10fJJJI for the su",,,,er mC?"ths "eed "ot ,ay the Juu d�s. -TIte iflilitJtio" fe�fJlay be applied· "po" a regular membershi, G"Y time tI1i,lu. 1W0 yetJrs after'graduatio", or is traKS/nable to a"y other U"ft1ersity stMdnet .qP�LEGES Of_'lWEMBERs-a member has free otl",itt_ce ifltDthe Garde"s au is natilkd to .talle two lady au ou ou'-O/-tOfVfl gnatleflUJ',.g"ests ;"to the Garderu free. There is "0 extra tabl� cMrge for CIfIy tablei" the Wi"ter Ga"dtflS. The Roof Gardm, au the Balcor.us """,o",,diflgthe Summer Garderu are excltUively for "",,,,bers. Also tlat Cl"b Roo�0" t/ae first arid secou floors 'are for members au th�ir g"ests oraly.CALL AT THE DAILY MAROON OFFICE FOR A.PPLICATIONBLANKS FOR MEMBERSHIP OR FORFURTHER INFORMATION .<»,.,• II. il •• - •••• ; .. Ie, ·i •• · ••••••• � ••••• � ce � ••••• � I I I I. I I I •• I "'if4ii"-� i it iii·.�•• M · ••• 11 ,.-.M'... ._'" a.:" Why" not SEE AMERICA aE.ST. ! I·' '.. � '. \ . --1,"'78-BThe Christian Seienee society held11�'!��'(1 �;l'fo���a��ter were discussed.