Wf)t Batlp jHaroonVol. 24 No. 91 UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. THURSDAY. MARCH 1271925 ' Price 9 Cent*FIVE INTRAMURALFINALS CULMINATEWINTER SCHEDULETrophies Will Be Awarded at5:30 to Winnersof EventsIntramural “Olypics” this after¬noon conclude the sports programfor the winter quarter. Finals inwrestling, track, boxing, field eventsand gymnastics are scheduled from3:30 to 5:15, after which trophiesfor the winter sports will be pre¬sented to the winners. Following isthe time schedule:3:30 Heavyweight ChampionshipHigh Jump3:35 Relay—Delta Tau Delta vs.Phi Sigma Delta3:38 Wrestling, 177 lbs.3:40 Relay—Delta Kappa Epsilonvs. Kappa Sigma3:45 Gymnastic exhibition3:48 Semi-finals 50-yard dash3:52 Special event3:55 Wrestling, 147 lbs.3:57 Finals 50-yard dash4:00 Boxing exhibition4 :03 Relay—Sigma Chi vs. Phi Kap¬pa Psi4 :07 Relay—Acacia vs. Alpha DeltaPhi4:08 Wrestling, 137 lbs.4:10 Fencing exhibition4:20 Finals 50-yard low hurdles4:23 Relay—T. K. E. vs. Tau DeltaPhi4:26 -Finals 300-yard run4:29 Wrestling, 127 lbs.4:30 Mile run4:35 Relay—Maroons vs. Metropol¬itans4:39 Relay—Sigma Alpha Epsilonvs. Sigma Nu4 :43 Relay—Tau Sigma Omicron vs.Delta Sigma Phi4:45 Wrestling, 117 lbs.4:47 600-yard run4:51 Relay—Phi Beta Delta vs. BetaTheta Pi4 :53 Relay—Tau Sigma Omicron vs.Delta Sigma Phi4:56 Relay—Phi Pi Phi vs. PhiKappa Sigma5:00 Relay—Phi Delta Theta vs.Alpha Tau Omega5:04 Relay—Delta Chi vs. Psi Upsi-lon5:08 Relay—Delta Upsilon vs KappaSigma5:12 Relay—Lambda Chi Alpha vs.Phi Gamma Delta5:15 Basketball Championship, ClassA5:20 Presentation of trophiesLutherans CelebrateOn ‘Unlucky Friday’“Bad Luck” and taffy apples willbe respectively disproved and eatenat the Unlucky party to be given bythe Lutheran club on Friday, from4 to 6 in the Y. W. C. A. room inIda Noyes hall.“We are planning to defy the age-old superstition about the bad luckprevalent on Friday the thirteenth,said Dorothy Hardt, chairman of theentertainment committee, “and hopeto prove that that date is not as un¬lucky for some people as traditionsays.” The program will consist ofgames planned to show how luckyparticipants may be, and communitysinging.As this is the last meeting of theWinter quarter, all Lutherans,whether members of the club or not,have been urged to “try their luck”at this social gathering.PETER ROEST ADDRESSESGERMANSPeter Roest will speak at the Ger¬man club next Friday at 4 in IdaNoyes hall. He will speak on theyouth movement in Germany. Be¬sides the talk there will be a socialmeeting, including music and re¬freshments. Treasures Lost?Try and Find ’em!Remember that vanity case, orfraternity pin that so mysteri¬ously disappeared?—you “turnedaround and it was gone?” Ninebets out of ten that self samecase and pin are peacefully wait¬ing for you to come and claimthem in the Lost and Found de¬partment.True democracy has at lastbeen found! Where? In thedrawer that houses all your luckyfinds and equally sad losses.There gauntlet gloves, rings,costly pins, gold and silver pen¬cils do not elevate their noses atthe sight of Ford keys, horn¬rimmed spectacles, biology in¬struments, and brief cases. Theyall revolve in the same sphere.FROSH REORGANIZEFORUM FOR SPRING THIRTEEN HONOR! STUDENTS ELECTEDTO PHI BETA KAPPA New Body AidsSpring QuarterCouncil PlansFive Juniors, Nine SeniorsTo Be InitiatedMondayConsider Debate With LouisMann, Horace BridgesFreshmen will meet Monday to or¬ganize the Freshmun Forum for nextquarter. The meeting will be inCobb 110 at 3:30. The success ofthe Forum sessions for this quarterwas so great, states Forum heads,that the new Forum will considerasking prominent speakers in anyheld. 4The meeting next Monday will befor the purpose of considering anysuggestions as to subjects or speak¬ers for next quarter’s sessions. Sug¬gestions have been made for a jointdebate featuring Dr. Louis Mannand Horace Bridges. The subjecthas not been announced.The Forum this quarter has hada full season of lectures and debates.Last Monday a debate between Dr.Ben Reitman and John Loughmandrew a good sized crowd and causedmuch debate from the floor. Thirteen students, five juniors andeight seniors, taking degrees thisquarter, were elected to Phi BetaKappa on Mar. 9.The students who have been elect¬ed to Beta Kappa are: Juniors,Jeanette Alice Baldwin, BenedictSeneca Einarson, Margaret Joseph¬ine Novak, Emily Lillian Sedlacek,and Daniel Warren Stanged. Theseniors, all of whom are taking de¬grees this quarter, are: AmeliaLeah Eisner, Jack Goldstein, EdwinJoseph Kunst, Emma Levitt, JamesLeRoy O'Leary, Helen Edwina Rob¬ertson, Helen Rose Ullman, and Mar¬garet Walker.Initiate in Classic*A meeting for the initiation ofthese students will be held Monday,at 4, in Classics 21. This meetingwill be made a social occasion andwill have for its principle feature aninformal address by Dean T. V.Smith. All the members of Phi BetaKappa in the faculty and studentbody have been invited to attend thismeeting.Of the 13 students elected, 5 werefrom the Junior class, giving thejuniors the largest percentage of in¬itiates that they have enjoyed for along time.The Junior standard of election isA—, whereas students who havecompleted four years are only re¬quired to have a B average. Out ofthe 13, 8 were women and 5 weremen, following the usual ratio ofmen and women elected.The result of the elections is anincrease of five in the membershipof the Undergraduate Phi BetaKappa, the local “active chapter” ofthe fraternity.What the School of Commerce andAdministration WantsToday the Dean of the School ofCommerce and Administration, Mr.W. H. Spencer, presents, for thereaders of The Daily Maroon, in theeighth of a seines of articles writtenby prominent members of the facultyspecially for this newspaper, theideals of the School of Commerce andAdministration.Coach MacGillivary, mentor of theUniversity swimming team, is towrtite the special article for tomor¬row’s Daily Maroon. Intercollegiateswimming is the tpic; and the ar¬ticle comes at an appropriate time,since the Conference Swimming meetis to be held in the University tanktomorrow night.W. H. Spencer,Dean of the School of Commerce andAdministrationThex-e are in the world about abillion, seven hundred million people.These people must be fed, clothed,housed, amused, and furnished withinnumerable other things which sat¬isfy human wants. The task of pro¬viding these things, which is by nomeans a simple one, is the task ofmodern business. This is but anotherway of saying that business is a pe¬cuniarily organized scheme forgratifying human wants, and proper¬ly understood falls little short ofbeing as broad and as inclusive aslife itself, in its motives, aspirations,and social obligations.Bearing in mind this general defi¬nition of business there are- certainpropositions which seem perfectlyclear. (1) The happiness and wellbeing of the human family dependupon how wisely and efficiently mod¬em busines sperforms its task. (2)The efficiency and wisdom of busi¬ness in the performance of its taskdepend upon the training of thosewho make up the business organiza¬tion of society. (3) There has been, is, and must be training of men whoare to take their place in business.(4) The task of training for the roleof an administrator is no simple one,and the training necessary musthave breadth and depth comparablewith those of the task.The School of Commerce and Ad¬ministration, with some awarenessof the importance and largeness ofthe task, has attempted year in andyear out, in the organization and de¬velopment of its curriculum, in thepreparation of teaching materials, inthe selection and training of in¬structors, and in the presentation ofcourses, to train men not merely for1‘outine positions,—certainly not totrain mere money makers,—but totrain men with vision for leadershipin the tremendous task of efficientlycoordinating social agents and wiselyutilizing social energies in makingavailable those things which satisfyhuman wants, upon which the happi¬ness of the human family rests.In striving for this important ob¬jective, the school has kept definitelyin mind certain aims and ideals. (1)It believes in an individualized cur¬riculum for each student rather thana rigid course of study for groupsof students. Apart from the coursesrequired of all to make certain thatevery student secures an apprecia¬tion of the physical and social envir¬onment in which business is carriedon, an understanding of the basicfunctions of business, each student’sprogram of work is a matter of per¬sonal adjustment on the basis ofprevious training, present aptitudes,and probably future occupation. (2)It believes in keeping with the in¬dividualization of the curriculum aneffort has been made for several(Continued on page two) Definite plans have been an¬nounced to make the new Personnelcommittee of the Undergraduatecouncil a permanent body that willassist the Council itself in the Springdrives that it inaugurates. Thecommittee will provide a meanswhereby the council may be broughtinto direct contact with the studentbody.At present the committee consistsof the following students: AbnerBerezniak, Gifford Hitz, WilliamDodd, Fred Jones, Norman Adelson,Lafayette Marsh, Claude Swanson,John Gerhart, Virginia Harvey,Elizabeth Gordon, Rebekah Green,Mary Harvey, Eleanor Wilkins, RuthBoyd, Elizabeth Linn, Mary Tabor,and Katherine Rose.Jack Abraham, a senior memberof the council, is temporary chair¬man of the body. Later a perman¬ent head will be chosen who hasshown by his energy that he war¬rants the position. Membership onthe committee not only puts thepersons in line for membership onthe superior body after evidence ofcapable work, but it gives them anexperience that will be found help¬ful in activities on the campus, ac¬cording to Abraham. Howeverthose that do not report at the nextmeeting will be susequently dropped.The idea of using an affiliatedbody of students to work with thecouncil is entirely new as it wasproposed and approved for the firsttime this year. It was done to fillthe urgent need of some group tohelp on matters that the council it¬self had very little time to devote to.SUMMER STUDENTSHAVE 700 COURSESTO PERSPIRE OVERSeven hundx*ed courses in theschools of Arts, Literature and Sci¬ence, Divinity, Law, Medicine, Edu¬cation, Commerce and Administra¬tion, and Social Service Administra¬tion will be offered at the Univer¬sity during the summer quarter,which begins June 22 and ends Sept.4. The courses are the same asthose given during the rest of theyear in credit, and may be taken foreither of the six weeks terms or1 forboth.More than five thousand studentswere in residence last summer quar¬ter. Most of these were graduatesfrom all over the United States andCanada. The Univei'sity was thefirat to offer a summer course thirty-two years ago, and since then manyof the universities in the countryhave followed the plan. None, how¬ever, offer so large a variety ofcourses for advanced work.Diversion is offered for the sum¬mer quarter student as well as forthose studying during the year inthe form of public lectures and; con¬certs, given at internals.Eleanor Peterson toHead Home Ec. ClubHome Economics club elected thefollowing officers at its last regularmeeting; Eleanor Peterson, presi-den; Shirley Nestle, vice president;Priscilla Taylor, secretary, andFrances Rapport, treasurer. Thedate of the first meeting of theSpring quarter is to be announcedsoon.Membership in the Home Eco¬nomic club is open to women in theHome Economics department andmeetings are held three times eachquarter.There will be a meeting of thePersonnel Committee of the Un¬dergraduate Council this after¬noon at 3:30 in Cobb 110. It isimperative that all members thatwish to remain with the body re¬port at this meeting. Still Have To GoTo Chapel at N. U.After a prolonged discussionand consideration of the questionof discontinuing compulsorychapel service at Northwesternuniversity, a faculty student com¬mittee decided yesterday thatchapel attendance should con¬tinue to be compulsory.The whole agitation for volun¬tary chapel arose because studentopinion held that the requiredchapel was no longer serving itsoriginal purpose, because chapelhas ceased to be a distinctly re¬ligious occasion. Suggestionswere made that chapel be madevoluntary, and that the attend¬ance be sought purely on themerit of the program appeal.Chapel is at present held at 10every Monday, Wednesday andFriday and every student is heldfor one chapel attendance weekly.STUDENTS CLAMORFOR BIDS TO BALLTickt Allotment To BeMade SoonWith many already clamoring fortickets, indications are that the an¬nual Military Ball to be inauguratedon April 17 at the South ShoreCountry club is going to be the galaevent of the spring quarter. Lead¬ers reannounce that tickets will beput on sale the first day of nextquarter, and expect to publish fra¬ternity, gradute, women, and non-fraternity allotments soon.Although reports from Big Tencampuses reveal that the leadershere are setting a high standard incompeting with Military Balls atthese schools, the expected attend¬ance of nationally famous guests,securing of the South Shore, andenthusiasm being demonstrated herelead them to believe that the U. ofC. Military Ball will rank with thoseat other schools.Best Event at NebraskaAt Nebraska the entire three hun¬dred tickets for the classic militaryball were sold inside of an hour,two-thirds being taken by the stu¬dent body and the rest by cadetofficers. Gov. and Mrs. W. Bryan,Maj. Gen. and Mrs. George B. Dun¬can, and Chancellor and Mrs. Sam¬uel Avery were among the guests ofhonor. Decorations, of course, weredominated by things miiltary. “TheMilitary Ball,” says the Daily Ne¬braskan, “is the biggest social eventof the year.”Ida Noyes HoldsExhibit of QuiltsMade at Center\An exhibition of quilts of everycolor and design, made by the wo¬men of Ogden Park Center, at 65thand Racine, is being held in thenorth reception room of Ida Noyeshall this week. The main contribu¬tors to the exhibition are Mrs. MaryFitzgerald and Mrs. Anna Wynne,members of the Center.The seven quilts on exhibit havebasket and flower designs in laven¬der, yellow, pink, blue, green, anddeep red. Most of the motifs areoriginal, and several of them havealready won various prizes, accord¬ing to Mrs. George Goodspeed, su¬pervisor of Ida Noyes hall.Walter Russell, who offered theexhibition to Ida Noyes hall, is astudent at the University, and hascharge of the Ogden Park play¬ground, through which work hegained the opportunity of having thequilts brought to the University. Ac¬cording to Mrs. Goodspeed, the dis¬play is in accordance with the cus¬tom of the hall to present artisticarticles of all kinds to the women ofthe University. VOTE FOR ADDITIONOF JUNIOR WOMENTO COUNCIL BOARDFauth Representative WillIncrease Competition forSecretaryshipWoman’s rights triumphed yester¬day in the Undei’graduate council,when an amendment was made to theconstitution, whereby two junior wo¬men will be elected to the councilhereafter, instead of one. The newamendment, proposed by MarthaSmart, was adopted unanimously bythe council after a lengthy discus¬sion.From the time the Undergraduatecouncil was first formed the ratio ofmen and women members has alwaysbeen two to one. Through the newsystem an attempt will be made toequalize the proportion in the coun¬cil, according to Kenneth Laird,president of the Undergraduatebody.Juniors Gain PowerThe new system will do away withthe weakness of the governing powerof the junior members, who haveserved the council as representativesof the various campus organizations,rather than as members interestedsolely in the work of the council,as the senior representatives havebeen.By the addition of an extra juniorwoman representative greater com¬petition for the office of secretarywill result. Formerly the one juniorwoman automatically became secre¬tary, while the tw<t junior men havehad tense competition for the pres¬idency of the council.The amendment will be broughtup before the Board of Student’ Or¬ganizations for approval next month,and if approved will go into ecectnext year.MINNESOTA PROFESSORANSWERS BURTONSTATEMENTNewspapers are not the only in¬stitutions that guess; universities doit too. This is the answer given byProf. Edwin G. Burrows of the jour¬nalism school of the University ofMinnesota, to President Ernest De-Witt Burton’s recent statment that“the cardinal virtue of the newspa¬per is promptness” rather than ac¬curacy as in the case of the univer¬sities.“Neither the university nor thenewspaper succeeds completely inthe task of finding the truth andtelling it,” said Prof. Burrows.“President Burton is right in sayingthat the newspaper sometimes re¬sorts to guesses, because it has to beprompt. He fails to state that theuniversities too, resort to guesses,because their knowledge of facts isincomplete. Frequently neither real¬izes that it is guessing.“The newspaper man’s view oflife is broad, quick, and shallow.The research worker’s view is deepand narrow. It is easy to check er¬rors in the newspaper man’s snapjudgments. It is not soi easy to findfault with the conclusion of a spe¬cialist, although his underlying prin¬ciples will surely be revised sooneror later by some other specialist.”ST. MARK’S TO MEETSt. Mark’s society will hold itsregular meeting Thursday at 4 in thenorth reception room of Ida Noyeshall. Miss Agnes Hall of the Na¬tional Student council, will talk tothe students. Refreshments will beserved after the business meeting.The committe in charge of the affairpromises an interesting time toeveryone present.THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1925—* ^Published mornings, except Sunday antfMonday during the Autumn. Winter ancSpring quarters by The Daily MarooiCompany.Entered as second class mail at the Chi¬cago Postoffice. Chicago, Illinois, March13. ISMlii, under the act of March 3, 1873.DeYoungBusiness ManagerOffices EllisTelephones:Editorial Office Midway 0800 jUIT benchBusiness Office Fairfax 5522Member ofThe Western Conference Press AssociationNews Editor for day,Allen HealdTHURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1925HOW THE WAR STARTEDAfter listening to ProfessorSchmitt’s account of the complicatedplots to assassinate the ArchdukeFranz Ferdinand in 1914, one is im¬pressed with the idea that it mightbe a good thing to throw HistoryC-16 open to the whole college. Thefeeble efforts of the Phoenix andCampus whistle—to say nothing ofthe Circle (an Oppenheim publica¬tion) pale beside the scholarly hu¬mor of our popular new history pro¬fessor.Apparently that there was notone, but at least ten separate anddistinct consipracies formed with theintention to “Get Ferdinand!” Thesituation was very much the sameas when Red Grange rashly steppedon the gridiron at the U. of Minne¬sota last November. Only that Redfaced eleven patriots instead of justten. Both Red and Franz weredoomed from the take-off, for, inthe words of Prof. Schmidt, “If oneof them didn’t get him, somebodyelse would.”It seems that a cheerleader go¬ing—for some reason—by the nameof Dragutin Dmitrievic, who was aveteran of five or six pervious assas¬sinations, finding himself growing abit old for active competition butstill full of the good old Serbianspirit decided to organize thingswith a view to accomplishing whatthe rest of the Balkin Conferencehad so far failed to do—namely, to“Stop Ferdinand.”So, gathering around his desk afew choice spirits (pardon the insist¬ence), Dmitty—as all the boyscalled him—.-proceeded to hold amass meeting. On this occasion Ha! They missed me that time!”Well, it developed that the Arch¬duke had a twinge of conscience orsomething later in the day, and hedecided to visit his faithful adjutantin the hospital. This was the lasttwinge that poor Franz was destinedto have, for on the way over youngPrincip, on the pretext of bumminga lift, climber on the running boardand fired insistently, hitting theArchduke in the tonneau. He alsotook a shot at Mrs. Franz for goodmeasure. So they carried the re¬mains of poor Ferdinand over to thetown hall and parked him on theThe burgomaster wentthrough his pockets in a vain searchfor the ducal flask. Failing to findthis, he turned to his comrades witha disgusted expression on his faceand uttered the immortal words:“Fellows, this is terrible; there isn’ta drop on him. Let’s go out tolunch.”WHAT THE SCHOOL OF COM¬MERCE AND ADMINIS¬TRATION WANTS(Continued from page one)years, through the “Invitation Sec¬tion” as well as by other devices, toprovide for each student accordingto his ability. Plans are now beingformulated to provide more ade¬quately, not merely for excellentstudents, but for students who dem¬ onstrate ability and willingness todo creative work. (5) Along withthe policy of giving to each accord¬ing to his ability goes the policy of;expecting from each results commensurate with this ability. (6) Itassumes that there are certain fun¬damental principles of administra¬tion underlying all business activitiesand seeks by appropriate courses togive its students an appreciation ofthose fundamental principles. (7)It bases its training in business technique and administration on a broai1foundation of courses concernedwith physical and social environ¬ment, and with the outstanding functions of modern industrial society.(8) It is firmly convinced that it«chief function is not merely to fillits students with facts descriptive ofbusiness operations, but to trainthem in analyzing business problemsand in forming business judgments. The Ziegfield Chorus Is WearingThem—Gages Newest Sport Hat“PETER PAN” in SuedeTHEY’RE NEW,THEY’RE SMART,THEY’RE DIFFERENT.SPECIAL. RATESMONDAY AND WEDNESDAYShampooing .WeWaving 5®vTHE JONES BEAUTYSHOPPE1373 E. 55th St.Hyde Park 6941CI-ASSIFIEDV1443 E. 60TH ST., 1STBeautifully furnished front room,looking Midway; disappearing bed.overstuffed furniture, writing desk,;floor lamps; reasonable.AN UNDERWOOD No. 4 type-!writer; not used very much: excellentcondition. Best cash offer takes it.Call Went. 1701, afternoon or evening.SPRING VACATION WORKMen to sell Armour's Lawn Fertil¬izer on South Side. Phone F. L.Brown, Stewart 5290.TYPING—Thesis term papers, etc.5417 Inglesihe, 1st apt. H. P. 9005.two young sophomores blessed with $5 week,the name’s of Gavril Princip andNedjelko Gabrinovic dashed in, freshfrom Bosnia-Herzogovina—wherethey had been scouting the Austrianteam—and volunteered to do theSerbian for “the dirty work.”So Dmitty supplied them withthree Browning pistols and a plenti¬ful stock of assorted bombs, and as¬signed one Milan Ciganovic to takethem out behind the grandstand andcoach them. After ten days theywere pronounced proficient, and thenthey caught the Illinois Central forSeraffievo, which rhymes with Bevobut is nevertheless authentic.When Franz Ferdinand steppedoff the train and into a taxi on themorning of the 28th he was greetedby a bomb tossed from the prac¬ticed hand of a left-half-back Gab¬rinovic. This failed to perturb theArchduke, who reached for the mis¬sile and threw it at his adjutant inthe front seqt. The adjutant wastaken to a hospital and Franz turnedto his wife with the words: “Ha! TQ LET—5 room apt.; partly en-clozed sleeping porch; available May1. 5644 Drexel. Tel. Fairfax 6572.FOR RENT—Room for gentleman,5461 Greenwood, 3rd. 37 DaysAO s'ExpensesA tour to the shrines of the great inArt, Literature and Music with sight¬seeing trips in care of academici guides. Your opportunity to com¬bine a bracing sea voyage with re¬creation and education.The entire modern, comfortableTourist Class or the following shipshas been reserved forTEACHERS,PROFESSORS and STUDENTS.S.S.SierraVentana, June 135.5. Bremen • • June255.5.Muenchen • June30Dining Room (Table Service), SmokingRoom,Ladies' Lounge, Swimming Pool,Music, Dancing, Deck Games, with am¬ple Space for exercise.The Service and Cuisine on all LloydShips are maintained at a world-renowned standard.Also Superb one-class CabinService to BREMEN Direct $140Pot Reservations, Rates, etc., applyCompany’s OfficesNew York, N.Y. New Orleans, La.32 Broadway 501-02 Cotton Exck. Bldg.Philade)phis, Pi. Saa Francisco. Cal.15thft Locust Sts. 118 Sansome St.Chicago, 111. Baltimore, Md.Ill N. La Salle St. Charles ft Redwood Sts.Boston, Mass. Galveston, Tex.) M2 (Washington St. Marine BuildingWinnipeg, Man., 794 Main St. MBB or any local S. S. Agent HGERMAN LLOYD ALSO A FULL LINE OF DRESS HATSIN WHITE, MEXICAN, ORANGE, PERU BLUE, ANDCRANBERRY.Adapted to campus wear, and at thepopular price of .... . $5^00The Alice Hat Shop1157 East 63rd Street"Opposite Lexington Theatre"(FORMERLY WATERMAN’S)oLOST — Silver-rimmed Oxfordnose glasses. Please return to EdithBrigham, 5620 Kimbark Ave. Re¬ward $5.GOOD FLOORCONVENIENTLY LOCATEDMODERATE PRICESEXPERT INSTRUCTIONat theiiijiir f arkofSmrarHotel Theodore H. P. 68075236 Lake Pk. Ave. Open Eve. Nestlesthe creamiermilk chocolateTHE MIDWAY IS NO BARRIER!• - Come south of the Plaisance for your meals.We cater to Fraternity and Club FunctionsLUNCHEON, 1 1:30 to 2 P. M 40c' AFTERNOON TEAS, 2 to 5 P. M SpecialDINNER, 5 to 8 P. M 50c and 65cSUNDAY DINNER, I to 8 P. M 75c and $1Waffles served at any timeTHE ARBOR TEA ROOM6051 Kimbark Ave. If you haven’t visited this shop under the new manage- ^£|| ment, you’ve missed something. jjstoMcAnany & FinniganPRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTSCor. 55th and Woodlawn Ave.Drugs. Cigars, and Cigarettes: Perfumes, Toilet Articles andParker, Waterman and Conklin PensIGraduate—and Go lYou can travel tO Europeand Back for as little asSee a bit of the world before you settle downto a real job. Get a fund of pep for a goodhead start. Get a real knowledge of conditionsand affairs for a helpful background.Here’s the way!Our College SpecialsTourist Third Cabin on great ships—includ¬ing Majestic, world’s largest steamer—entirelyreserved for students, educators and congenialpeople. Also the Minnekahda, only steamer inthe world carrying Tourist Third cabin exclu¬sively. Rates: $ 155 to $ 180 according to steamer.Good food and service, attractive staterooms,broad decks, commodious public halls. Sevenvacation sailings to all principal Europeanports, between June 18 and July 3, convenientto the close of college.MAJESTICy/orkil Largest Ship This advertisement appears inYale Daily News, Californian,Vassar News, Michigan Daily,Cornell Sun, and other leadingpublications in colleges through¬out the country, from whichmen and women are reservingpassage on the College Specials.For complete information apply to127 So. State St., or any Steamship Agent.White Star lineAtlanti c * rir.ansport Line • Red Star LineiNTEMNATKONAt AlEiUCAWTliE MARINE COMPANY Danceto the MusicofTHE BARBARY COASTORCHESTRA(of the Opera Club)Directed by“Spike” HamiltonEVERY FRIDAYEVENING 'at theHYDE PARKHOTEL51st and Lake Park Ave.“The really smart placeto go.”Informal$2 Per CouplePATRONIZEMAROON ADVERTISERSPrintingz4s you like it COLONIAL PRESS 1510 E. 56th St.Midway 0864i >* VThe Maroons losttheir last basket gameof the season lastnight. . • - , 'Wednesday Morning SPORTS MaroonMarch 12, 1925 Only that first Michi¬gan gar.ie kept themfrom getting a cleanslate.LAKEVIEW HIGH GETS CAGE BIDAlpha Delts Given Edge in Sport Revue TodayTRACK STARS OFFUTURE TO HOLDSWAY AT CARNIVALBig Fields to Compete inFinals of 50 and 30 yd.EventsTrack stars of the future willmake their first bid for attention to¬day when the finals events of theUniversity’s first annual intramuraltrack and field revue are run off inBartlett gym. The meet, held ex¬clusively for men who have not asvet distinguished themselves in collegiate track circles will start at3:30 and will run until 6:30.Finals in five track events andwrestling are on the card in addi¬tion to the final intramural basketgame of the season. More than 40embryo athletes qualified in the pre¬liminaries ami will take part in to¬day’s events.Alpha Delts Have Ed <eAlpha Delta Phi leads the frater¬nities in number of men qualified,with two in the 50-yard dash, onein the low hurdles and three in the300-yard run. A, T. O. is secondwith five qualifiers, three of whomare in the high jump, with one eachin the 50 and 300 yard events.Both Delta Sigma Phi and Phi Psihave four men in the finals, whileother fraternities range on down toone entry. Three men are runningunattached.Twenty-two fraternities and onenon-Greek organization, the Macs,are represented in the carnival. TheAlpha Delts, because of their largenumber of qualifiers, are given aslight edge over the other organiza¬tions to win the meet. The great¬est number of qualifiers are in the50-yard dash, where ten men willrun both semi-final and final heatsto determine the winners. An equalnumber is qualified for the 300 yardrun.In the mile, twelve men are en¬tered and will decide the winners onthe basis of today’s race, no qualify¬ing heats having been held in thisevent.The officials of the meet will keepa progressive point table throughoutthe competition, so that prizes, bothfor individual honors and team win¬ners may be awarded directly afterthe finish of the Psi Psi Roman bas¬ketball game, the last number ofthe program. Phi Psis Meet RomansIn Cage PlayoffTodayPhi Kappa Psi, champions ofthe fraternity leagues by virtueof its win over the Delts Thurs¬day, and the Romans, undisputedkings of the non-Greek players,will mix things this afternoon at5:15 for the purpose of decidingthe all-University champions.The Greek representatives, de¬spite the loss of Don Irwin, whostrained a ligament in hi^s shoul¬der in the Delt contest, will gointo the fray the favorites. Har¬rison will fill the vacant berth atcenter. Other Phi Psi playersare Laverty, Macklind, Duval andHobscheid. The Roman repre¬sentatives are Lewison, Sharpe,Greeman, Taymor and Greene-baum. MAROONS BOW TONORTHWESTERN INFINAL CAGE GAMEAlye3 and Marks Star asLocals Drop HecticFray 17-16HOLD CONFERENCETANK PRELIMSTONIGHTSwimming stars from every schoolin the Big Ten will, with the excep¬tion of Ohio State, take part in thepreliminaries of the conference meetwhich will be held in the Bartlettpool this evening, to qualify for thefinals tomorrow night.The number of heats in each eventof the preliminaries depends uponthe number of men entertained byeach school, and the number of qual¬ifiers for the finals depends upon \the same thing. The coaches of thecompeting teams will meet this noonto hand in their lists of entries.As in dual meets the list of eventsconsists of the 40, 100, and 220yard swims, backstroke, breaststroke,plunge, relay and fancy diving.Some of the stars who are prac¬tically assured of entering the finalstomorrow are: Breyer and Howellof Northwestern, Herschberger ofWisconsin, Dorf and Noyes of Chi¬cago, Lake of Iowa, Faricy and Hil!of Minnesota, and Kerr of Michigan.WOMEN SHOOT PERFECTSCOREMembers of the University Wom¬an’s Rifle team hung up a perfectscore of 500 in a dual meet this weekand it is believed to be the first per¬fect score made by a collegiatewoman team. Coach Norgren’s Maroons did theexpected thing in an unexpected waylast night when they dropped thefinal basketball game of the seasonto Northwestern, 17-16, in the mosthair raising contest of the 1025 year.The game was not decided in favorof the Purple until the final sevenseconds of play, when White rangup the final deciding basket.Although neither team distin¬guished itself, and the ball was beingkicked around on the floor most ofthe time, the Varsity had the slightedge over the visitors throughoutthe fray. Only eight of the Purplepoints were made on field goals, thegame being virtually won on freethrows, while the Varsity sank sevenbaskets, but missed four of their sixfree shots.Locals Lead at HalfThe locals led at the half, 9-6, andin the final period ran their lead upto 14-10. Then Mathews made afre throw and was followed by MoonBaker who sank his second basket ofthe game. A moment later Whiteput the visitors in the lead, only tolose it again a moment later whenGordon sank his last basket. A mo¬ment later, with seven seconds to go,White tossed the final counter.Moon Mullins Baker, the Purpleflash, was held to two bkskets, duemainly to the stellar defensive gameplayed by Marks. Alyea led the of¬fense with three baskets. Two ofthese were among the prettiest shotsever seen on Bartlett floor.Northwestern (17Baker, rfWhite, IfGraves, cMathews, rgChristman, lg. ...Korslens, IfChicago (16)Sackett, rf. .. ...Abbott, IfAlyea, c 3Marks, rg 0Barta, lg 0Barnes, rf 0Gorden, If 1Umpire, Kearns, DePauw.Referee. Reynolds. FT212220FT0101000 p.1('1210PF0112300Oil Tank Explosions and AutoWrecks Mark Stagg’s Coast TripCoach A. A. Stagg, who returnedWednesday from a 7000 mile junketthroughout the western states -onbehalf of the University committee^n development, will cut loose againtomorrow on a similar tour of theeast where he will speak to Univer¬sity alumni in several seaboardstates on behalf of the $17,500,00Irb'e.He will go first to Philadelphia,and then to Pittsburg and New York,where he will participate in the an-mal meeting of the National foot¬ball rules committee.Coach Stagg’s western trip wasfull of thrills other than those ex¬pected at the outset. At one pointbe narrowly escaped death when twoail tanks on a train little more thana city block away from him, blewup and killed two bystanders.On the southern leg of the jour-ley the wheel came off the automo-aile in which he was riding and the entire party narrowly escaped a bodspill. Coach Stagg on his trip wasaccompanied by Dean J. H„ Tufts,vic§ president of the University.The two delivered more than onehundred speeches on their trip togatherings of Chicago alumni. The following members ofthe Rushing Committee for theInterscholastic will meet tomor¬row at 11:50 in the Reynoldsclub foyer: Fred Henderson,Walter Marks, John McDon¬ough, James Cusack, GlennRavenscroft, Austin McCarty,Seward Covert, Stanley Freid,Ralph Martin, Theodore Zolla,Babe Alyea, and $en Frost.Trousers Madeto Measureto MatchYour Coat andVest.' Knickerand RidingBreeches. We Save Youthe Price ofA New Suit.Bring Vest^orSample.New PairMade to YourMeasure.Room 1516431 South Dearborn St., Chicago Junior Women Win MeetBut Drop Seriesto SophsDespite the fact that theJunior women swimers outswamthe three other classes to ameagre one point victory in thefinal tank meet of the quarteryesterday, they were unable toovercome the seven point sopho¬more lead, and the second yearteam acquired the season cham¬pionship. The final totals for thethree meets were: Sophomores 95,juniors 89, seniors 77 and fresh¬man 61. ROGERS HIGH, STATE CHAMPIONS OFRHODE ISLAND IS FIRST EASTERNINSTITUTION TO RECEIVE INVITATIONWomen Close SeasonBasket Play TodayJunior women cagers will make afinal desperate effort to get into atie for first place in the interclassbasketball league today when theyplay the sophomore aggregation inthe final game of the season thisafternoon. The juniors’ chances ata tie, however, are contingent onthe frosh defeating the seniors, aremote possibility at best, and ad¬vance indications are that the fourthyear women will annex the title to¬day. Eastern School Has Won 21 Games Without Defeat; ThreeBids to Tourney Now Outstanding; Arizona TeamTeam Seeks Means to Finance TripLakeview high school, runners upfor the Chicago high school basket¬ball championship and Rogers highschool of Newport, Rhode Island,were invited yesterday to representChicago and Rhode Island respec¬tively, in the National Interscholasticto be held here March 31 - April 5.The invitation to Lakeview was is¬sued after Hyde Park, Chicago cham¬pions, had declined a bid to the tourney d^e to the lightness and inexper¬ience of three of their team mem¬bers, who are but sixteen years old.If Lakeview accepts the invitation,which was issued by Manager Cris-ler last night, it will be the firsttime the north side school has beenrepresented in the National tourney.The Rhode Island team is one ofthe leading teams on the Atlantic seaboard and is state champion ofRhode Island. In the season justclosing, they won 21 straight gameswithout a defeat. Among the scalpswhich they annexed this year werethose of Crosby high, of Crosby,Conn., one year runners up in theNational Interscholastic, and thecrack Woonshockett high school ofWoonshockett, Delaware. The lat¬ter team was submerged by the de¬cisive score of 49-17.The two invitations sent out yes¬terday made a total of three bidsnow outstanding. No reply has beenreceived from Mesa, Arizona, thefirst team to be invited.. Reportsfrom Arizona state that the answeris being withheld pending attemptsto raise funds for the teams trip toChicago.DangerousacidsCross-section of atooth, showing AcidDecay at The DangerLine. —which causeAcid Decay, re¬sult from foodswhich collectand fermentin those tinyV-shaped crev¬ices where gums meet teeth—The Danger Line. Squibb’sDental Cream, made withSquibb’s Milk of Magnesia,safely and promptly neutral-«izes these dangerous acids—safeguards your teeth fromAcid Decay and relieves sen¬sitiveness. Use it regularly.At druggists.Sqjjibb’sDental CreamMade with Squibb's Milk of Magnesiafi. R. SQUIBB & SONS, Chemists to theDental and Medical Professions since 1858.O 1925 HUSK 0’HARECOWHEY’SMEN SHOPMEN'S WEAR & BILLIARDSS. E. Corner 55th & EUis AvFor information regarding Patison’sannual summer tour to Mexico, includ¬ing six weeks in Mexico City during*he summer session of the NationalUniversity, address G. M. Patisort,Box 1181. Sap Antonio, Texas.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1925