®he ©atlp ilaroonVol.2l. No. 83. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. Wednesday, March 14, 1923. Price 3 Cent*ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT TAKESREINS IN INTRAMURAL SPORTSAll-University Swimming And Mat Meets Planned;If New System Succeeds, It WillBe Made PermanentIn an effort to stimulate the wan¬ing interest in intra-mural athletics,the Athletic department of the Uni¬versity has taken over the control ofcampus athletics. In order to revivethe interest, two all-university ath¬letic meets will be held next quarter.In this mannr Coach Stagg hopes tointerest a greater number of men inathletics and at the same time todiscover new Varsity material.The first of the two meets \Vill be awrestling tournament open to all stu¬dents in residence, which will be heidfrom Apr. 11 to 15 under the directionof Coach Vorresc. There will bematches in the seven different weights,and gold, silver and bronze medalsgiven to the winners. A loving cupwill be awarded to the fraternitywinning the greatest number ofpoints in the meet.Feature Fraternity RelayAn intra-mural swimming meetwill be held at a later date in theSpring quarter, for which all Univer¬sity students who have not been mem¬bers of collegiate swimming teamswill be eligible, and a loving cup willbe given to the high team of themeet.In addition to the two meets heldunder the auspices of the athletic de¬partment there will be the annualinter-fraternity indoor baseball tourn¬ament and the June relays, both con¬trolled by the Inter-fraternity council.If these intra-mural contests aresupported by the fraternities, CoachStagg and the athletic departmentcontemplate including inter-frater¬nity sports under permanent controlof University athletics. The Inter¬fraternity Council has already voicedits unanimous support of tfiese meets,and it is expected that each organiza¬tion will enter as many contestantsas possible. JUNIORS WIN YEAR’STANK CHAMPIONSHIP FEDERATION PICKSTWENTY-FIVE TOACT AS SPONSORSWill Represent The Organiza¬tion On Campus And DoCommittee WorkCHOICE BASED ON FAST WEEKSenior College Loses For First TimeIn 'Three YearsFor the first time in three years, theJunior college team won the swim¬ming championship over the Seniorcollege, in the third meet of the sea¬son yesterday afternoon in the IdaNoyes pool. The score was 47 to39; and each event was closely con¬tested.Elizabeth Hull, captain, starred forthe Junior team, winning first placein the crawl for form and in the 20yard dash. Tying her in individualpoints was Mary Conley, who madea first in the breast stroke for form jand second in both the 20 yard back ]stroke and the 40 yard dash. RuthStagg took first place in the frutTgeon and second in the crawl, both forform.The Seniors were ably representedby Julius Ithodus, Ruth Corrigan, and jEllen Le Count. Julius Rhodus, cap- itain, took first place in the 20 yard Iback stroke in 15 4-5 seconds, and!first in the 40 yard dash. Ellen Le!Count won in the diving with her}usual ease with Ruth Corrigan tak¬ing second place. Ruth Corrigan, mak¬ing 48 1-2 feet, won in the plunge fordistance.Beecher hall captured in the inter¬dormitory relay, which was made the(Continued on page 4)SEES NOTHING NEWIN DISCOVERIES OFPROF. WASSERMANN Twenty-five women have been chos¬en from the body of the Federationof University Women to serve assponsors for the ensuing year. Thelist of women appointed is as fol¬lows: Clare Brereton, Dorothea Pfis-ter, Jane Cannell, Catherine Ilawson,Florence Helman, Helen Huber, RuthVeazy, Louise Weitzer, Edith Heal,Dorothy Tunison, Marion Muncaster,Eleanor ltice, Martha Leutsger, RuthArbaugh, Adelaide Ames, MadalynO’Shea, Josephine Bedford, WinifredFerry, Aimee Graham, Fauline Har¬ris, Rath Thomson, Margaret Brueck,Jeannette Baldwin, Virginia Movius,Margaret Hildebrand.These women have been appointed,according to Helen Wells, president ofthe organization, after a great dealof consideration by the Council of theFederation. The choice was basedon the general interest evinced by thewomen in the various activities of theorganization, such as the work in thesewing room in the afternoon and theattendance at the bi-monthly meet¬ings. Willingness to help in any ca¬pacity whenever needed was anotherpoint in their favor.To Spread Spirit on CampusThe primary function of the spon¬sors is to represent the Federation oncampus and to spread the spirit offriendship and happiness throughoutthe student body. Ten of the womensupervise the work carried on in thesewing room, and the others comprisethe executive committees of the or¬ganization.on 7 Says T uberculosisTest Only One OfManyDRAMA CLUB SENDSCALL FOR ORIGINAL‘ FOLK TYPE” PL AYS Long of the Department of Pathology. \I The newspaper account, Prof. LongWassermann’s “discovery” of a newtest for tuberculosis, which was an¬nounced in a morning newspaper yes¬terday, is in fact a mere variation ofa well-known type of tests of whichover a hundred forms already exist,according to Assistant Prof. E. R. • ALPHA SIG MAKESPROTEST ON A. T. O.PIN MATCH GAMESuspend SemiT inals PendingAction on Ille¬galityA workshop program of original!told The I)a,1y Maf,oon yesterday, isone-act plays will be the next per- gf®"1* exaggerated even going toformance to be presented bv the Uni- I £c extent °f misstating the facts forversitv Dramatic association, probably tht sak<: °uf aro«8,n* The test jduring the last week in April. The referred hc sald’ ,s doubtless ofGargoyles are sending out a call for the so-called complement-fixation typeoriginal campus one-act plays to beused in the program; they must be inthe hands of Will Ghere by April 6in order to compete.Four or five have already been re¬ceived from Meyer Levin, Dan Rich, of tests, which have already been inuse for a number of years.New Tests FrequentNew variations of this clas of testsare always being developed. The sci¬entific journals report some half doz-and Ahmend El Easy. “Plays of a | en new forms every year. Every san-folk type,” said Will Ghere, “instead j itarium in the country has its ownof the smart skits of the gon’re of the test; every investigator claims specialcontemporary bandwagon riders of H. advantages for his own test, some-L. Mencken and George Jean Nathanare solicited.”Another possibility for a future per times citing thousands of cases toprove its accuracy. The Departmentof Anatomy in the University devel-formance is the presentation of a oped a new test last summer whichtranslation by Elizabeth Wallace of a works as well as any of its kind.Spanish play.BASEBALL SCHEDULEApril 14—Chicago at Northwestern.April 17—Michigan Aggies.April 21—Chicago at Iowa.April 24—Northwestern.April 27—Wisconsin.May 2—Chicago at Illinois.May 5—Chicngo at Ohio State.My 9—Illnois.May 16—Purdue.May 19—Iowa.May 25—Chicago at Wisconsin.june 2—Chicago at Purdue.June 9—Indiana (Alumni Day). As a matter of fact, Prof. Longsaid, no tests of the complement-fix¬ation type have produced very satis¬factory results, and real progress isnot to he expected with mere varia¬tions of the same type.Blames Reporter For ErrorsThe exaggeration is not, in Dr.Long’s opinion, due to any misstate¬ment on Wassermann’s part, but tothe incompetence of the reporter. Itis evident from the account, and itsreferences to Wassermann’s modestythat Wasserman himself does notover-estimate the value of his work.He is quoted as calling the new test“a progress” rather than “a discov¬ery.” Wassermann had developedmany such tests and new shades oftechnique in the past. Rolling of the semi-final games forthe interfraternity bowling championship \has been indefinitely postponedby Bertram Granquist, president ofthe Interfraternity Council, upon theprotest of a game between Alpha Sig¬ma Phi and Alpha Tau Omega, rolledJan. 25.The decision of the Interfraternitycouncil will change the preliminarystanding of the teams if Alpha SigmaPhi’s protest is upheld, as the protest¬ing team is but 8-50 of a point behindS. A. E., the present second team inLeague A. If the protested game isthrown out, one-half point will be add¬ed to the final standing of Alpha Sig¬ma Phi, putting them ahead of S. A. E.A. T. O. Used HoffThe basis for the protest is that Al¬pha Tau Omega used William Hoff,a member of their five man team,when he was ineligible in two ways.He was not in school at the time thegame was rolled, having left afterthe fall quarter, and he was not amember of the Reynolds club. Eitherone of these is sufficient reason tokeep a man out of the tournament,and make any game rolled by him il¬legal, is the opinion of the council.The Alpha Sigma Phi’s are in aweak position because they did notprotest the game at once, hut waiteduntil Mar. 6 a month and one-halfafter the game was rolled.Delay May Out-Rule Protest“According to the American Bowl¬ing Congress rules,” said Bud Howe,manager of the Reynolds club alleys,“any suspected gnme must be protest¬ed at the time of playing, or shortlythereafter, otherwise standing asrolled. As the Alpha Sig’s waited amonth and a half they have no realcause to protest the game.”In Bertram Granquist’s opinion the(Continued on page 3) COMMISSION TO HOLDSTUDENT MOCK TRIALReview Methods of Campus Judiciaryat Meeting Next MonthAs part of a campaign to aid thework of the Honor Commission bynew methods of publicity, a mocktrial will be staged at an open meet¬ing early next quarter. All the meth¬ods of the Commission will be dupli¬cated for the benefit of students forwhom the activities of this body haveacquired the character of mystery onaccount of its policy of limited pub¬licity.After the student body has becomefamiliar with the methods of theCommission, it will be the new policyof the organization to publish in TheDaily Maroon from time to time thedetails of such cases as are deemedimportant, without, of course, includ¬ing names of offenders.Members of the Honor Commissionare anxious to have a large audienceof students present at the open meet¬ing in April in order that they mayfamiliarize themselves with the wayin which accusations are made, evi¬dence adduced, and the entire routineconducted at Commission trials.CANDIDATES FORBASEBALL TEAMIN EARLY DRILLProspects Poor With Few MenBack. First Tilt WithPurpleAll candidates for the VarsityBaseball Team are asked to meetin the Gym today at 3. 1 COUNCIL DECIDESON PREFERENTIALBALLOTING PLANNew System Will EliminateMachine Control, BackersClaimPREVENTS WASTING OF VOTESWith the basketball season a thingof the past, Maroon sport fans arenow centering their gaze on the base¬ball team which is slated to open theBig Ten season Apr. 14 againstNorthwestern. Owing to the lack oPexperienced material, a championshipaggregation is almost out of the ques¬tion, and Coach Norgren will be morethan satisfied if the team ends theseason with a fifty-fifty standing.Five veterans—Yardley, McGuire,Forkel, Burch, and Weller—will beavailable when the spring quarteropens, and a captain will be selected jfrom this group. Yardley is the only|one of these players to win a “C”and naturally seems to be the logicalchoice for the honor.Start Work Immediately“Norgie” is planning to get the menstarted in their preliminary drill thisweek, and the squad will move outonto the field as soon as weather con¬ditions permit. The work indoors willbe confined to setting up exercisesand loosening up of sore arms.Among the battery candidates areWeller, Rhorke, and Burch, twirlers;and Yardley and Schimberg, catchers.Schimberg is from the freshman teamand the others are left from lastseason.Two Infielders BackForkel, first base, and McGuire,third, are the only experienced in¬fielders to return. Barnes, a reservefrom last year, is out for second baseand will probably draw an assign¬ment. Hughes, R. Howell, and John¬ston, infielders from the 1925 team,are also out for regular jobs.Dearth of OutfieldersThere are very few outfielders onhand, J. Howell from the frosh squadlooming up as the only man of Varsitycalibre. The other gardeners will haveto be selected from the new men.A schedule of 13 Conference gameshas been drawn up, and several prac¬tice games will be added previous tothe opening game of the title race.The number of practice tilts will alsobe affected by the weather conditions. Honor Commission and Undergrad¬uate Council members will be electedon a system of preferential ballotingwhich is used in many of the largestcities in the country as a result ofthe decision reached by the Councilyesterday to adopt the Hare system ofproportional representation.After a detailed talk by Joe Dugganon the Hare system, the council votedto adopt it as the best possible meansof solving the problem of providinga fair means of electing a group ofrepresentatives on one ballot.In marking a ballot under this sys¬tem, the voter will indicate his suc¬cessive choices for a group of repre¬sentatives. The system of countingprevents the wasting of votes, which,insures a just representation.Ends Boss Rule, ClaimMachine control is practically elim¬inated by the new system, the realpower being in the hands of the voter.The temptation to crookedness iseliminated, for it is impossible to turnthe scale with a few crucial votes.Each voter has an equal share inelecting the body.Progress and singleness of purposeare assured by the system, instead ofvacillation from one policy to another.A fair hearing is given to all ele¬ment®.Harris to Represent CouncilJack Harris is to represent theCouncil at the Midwest Student Con¬ference being held at NorthwesternUniversity the last of this week. Thisis the third annual meeting of theConference, which includes many ofthe leading middle western universi¬ties. The purpose of the organizationis to enable representatives of thevarious institutions to talk over stu¬dent problems and to exchange ideawhich have proven successful in deal¬ing with questions of undergraduatelife.QUADRANGLERS TOGIVE HOP TO RA!SESCHOLARSHIP FUNDSCHOLARSHIPSTANDARD AT THEUNIVERSITY OF ILLINOISDiscussedin Tomorrow’sDAILY MAROON With “Bud” Comb’s orchestra asthe feature attraction for the evening,the Quadranglers will give a Scholar¬ship dance next Saturday night at 9at the Cooper-Carlton hotel. Theproceeds from the dance will go to a$2,000 scholarship fund which is be¬ing raised by the club. KatherineLongwell will corrall tickets at thedoor, an addod attraction for theevening.A total of $400 has already beenraised by the alumni and active mem¬bers of the club. This sum was nettedby a rummage sale and a bridge atthp La Salle hotel. It is hoped tomake up the necessary $1600 at thescholarship dance. Tickets are $2.20per couple and can be procured fromGrace Bennett, Eleanor Pickett, Mar¬tha Smart, and Zoe Mae Sutherland,or at the door.Fraternities Head InStudies At MichiganThat fraternity men rank higherthan non-fraternity men in scholasticrecords at the University of Michiganis shown on the fraternity and soror¬ity scholarship record sheet which hasbeen received by The Daily Maroon.The figures are based on a collectionof the records of grades made at theUniversity of Michigan by the entirestudent body during the last eightyears.Page i wo THE DAILY MAROON, Wednesday, March 14, 1923.(Stir Daily iflarnmtThe Student Newspaper of theUniversity of ChicagoPublished mornings, except Saturday, Sun¬day and Monday during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters by The DullyMari mu Company.Entered as second class mull at the Chi¬cago Post office, Chicago, Illinois. March13, llKMi, under the act of March 3, 1873.Telephone Midway 800Offices Ellis 14Member ofThe H estern Conference 1‘ress AssociationOUR FAMOUS QUADRANGLESThe editor of a prominent nationalfraternity’s monthly magazine recent¬ly visited the quadrangles, and inwriting to the local chapter said:“Your campus is very beautiful, andyou should be very proud of it. Ofall the colleges which I have visited Ihave found none to excell it.” He ismaking a tour of the country, visit¬ing some ninety schools, and his opin¬ion is to be respected.Constant association with our en¬virons causes us to lose sight of theirremarkable beauty, and of the crea¬tive skill which planned and executedthem. It is well to remember thatthe University of Chicago is one of thefew educational institutions whichhad a definite architectural schemeworked out before even the first per¬manent building was erected, and thatin every case pains have been takento make the structures which will re¬main for years beautiful and inspir¬ing. Even in the cold stones and mor¬tar. which house its activities, AlmaMater ranks high if not highest. erly to enjoy a production, Coleridgecontinues, one must achieve a “willedsuspension of disbelief.” Under sucha condition even a tottering pylon isunnoticed. The art of seeing and en¬joying a play is thus only available tothe person having an imagination.With an imagination the onlooker Fri¬day night saw not University studentsperforming on Mandel Hall stage inthe twentieth century but was carriedback to the original production insome famous London theatre whenthe plays were first produced. With¬out an imagination the plays wereof no significance; with one they be¬came a splendid visualization of theperiod represented.But had Mr. Poliak nothing but asympathetic view he would have un¬derstood that one cannot attain pro¬fessional staging and perfected stage¬craft with an amateur group. Lack¬ing this sympathy he madeof the occa¬sion a Roman holiday for the massacreof the Dramatic association’s pur¬poses.Yet despite the review in the Ma¬roon many people among the facultyand student body are of the opinionthat the Cleopatra Saga representedan effort well done and achieving wellits purpose. We hope that Mr. Pol¬iak will take advantage of the pres¬ence in town of the “Scandals” andthere spend an enjoyable evening freefrom the “tottering pylons” thatmarred his evening last Friday.Ralph J. Helperin| VOX POP ;To the Daily Maroon:“To attempt to reply to a fool isfolly.’’ Yet the display of wit whichyour critic made in yesterday’s Ma¬roon deserves some comment. Mr.Poliak needs a reminder of what theplays were intended to accomplishsince the purpose of them had evi¬dently quite slipped his mind at thetime he wrote his review. May wethen point out our purpose in revivingthese old playsIn the first place the plays were notintended to amuse and send into con¬vulsions of laughter the averagewhose depth in drama (?) is the “Fol¬lies” but it was advertised and ex¬plained in these colums that the pur¬pose was a serious endeavour to pre¬sent, in contrast, three plays about agiven subject in which the effort wouldbe to imitate as nearly as possible thestaging, costuming, and acting of theperiods represented. This attempt wasa success. True, Dryden’s play wasan exaggeration, an overacted produc¬tion. But so were all the productionsof his day, and to speed it up and mod¬ernize it in order to provide an even¬ing of entertainment would not be pro¬ducing Dryden. And the attempt wasto reproduce Dryden.In the second place your critic takesmuch space to bewail the mechanicsof the production. The fact that therewere insufficient stage hands was oflittle or no interest to the audiencesince the lack of them was not noticed.Of course a person who has followeda play thru the throes of construc¬tion gets a rather mangled impressionbefore the night of production takesplace. And to be backstage during apart of the performance renders acritic impossible of giving an unbiasedopinion of the play from the stand¬point of the audience. Perhaps thetrue criticism may come from the ac¬tor himself but it is generally believedthat an outsider can judge a perfor¬mance more fairly and more intelli¬gently than the actor.Thirdly, Mr. Poliak takes ungodlyglee in the fact that the “pylons weretottering, the trumpets were nottrumping, and the lights were goingon and off too soon” and thereby dis¬closes in startling measure his absolute inability to act as a critic of anydrama. A copy of Coleridge on “Howto See a Play” might be an effectivetext-book for him. If he will look itthru he will find that the intelligentway of viewing a play is to create forhimself a “dramatic illusion.” Prop March 13, 1923.To the Editor:Our Renaissance course, GeneralLit. 30, that interesting experimentin professorial co-operation, is aboutto shuffle off the academic boards forthe current year. While some lecturerstalked over our heads, and some talkeddown to us, and still others gave usinstead of organized food for thoughta confused melange of erudition whichmore or less dazed us—in spite ofthese faults and some overlappinghardly avoidable in the experimentalstage, the course, I think, earned apermanent and high place in the cur¬riculum.It proved itself so eminently worth¬while an innovation, in fact, that oneasks oneself inevitably why the idea,giving as it does to the student thechance to see the best of the univer¬sity talent inaction, cannot be extend¬ed to other fields.Why not a general course in science,designed to acquaint us with the meth¬ods, aims, and achievements to dateof the chief sciences ? Such a coursemight entail introductory lectures onthe spirit and ideals and possibilitiesBE A WINNER!Drink BOWMA N'SMILK for health andstrength. It gives youthe power to endure—the power to win.Insist on BOWMAN SMILK. It is rich andpure.Bowman M-ii,DAIRY COMPANY I’lllIV of science; visits to the observatory,and to laboratories to witness experi¬ment and research in action. ‘Twouldnot be amiss if it were to involve asurvey of the treasures of the newField Museum by means of which onemight discover how to make the mostof its display. Age cannot wither norcustom stale its infinite variety; whatit suffers from most is our ignorance.At any rate, the moral of this para¬graph is, that few students sally forthfrom universities after four yearswith any adequate idea of the placeof science in the world of things; feweven of those who specialize in science.These latter only too often have a nar¬row and distorted view of things,which feeds a jealousy in the scienceslike that of the Baltic or the Balkanstates. To the students whose inter¬est in science is merely of the sketchykind now served by electives, such a general course in science, given by thebig men in each field, correlated, syn¬thesized, would give him what a ma¬jor in botany in the spring, plus atrifling bit of zoo in the fall, plus askimming of sociology in the winter,can never hope to as»:omplish. Forthe student planning to specialize ina science it would give a view of thewhole realm of thought and effort inone little corner of which he hopessome day to have the privilege ofworking. The idea is that science is aunity, and not a crazy-quilt. The thinghas of course been lately put betweencovers by Thomson in his Outline ofScience.Perhaps a similar course might beworked out in the History of Mankind—a sort of super-anthropology. An¬thropology as we now know it stopsjust at the point where one feels itought to begin. Somehow or other, there is a gap between it and history.What we want is a survey of man¬kind, not merely from China to Peru,but from Adam and Eve or the man¬like ape (choose your side) to thepresent: Wells, Van Loon, and Rob¬inson rolled together, and tied up ina neat bundle with the academic tape.Maybe it’s a college tradition, asacred cow of the campus meadows,that students should take no furtherinterest in the curriculm beyond scan¬ning the advance sheets for tidings ofso-called snap courses. Our properelement is frat affairs, the chances ofthe relay team, and the girl Bill’s go¬ing to take to the prom. Still, withthe Faculty working on fundamentalquestions of curriculum and admission,one feels almost stimulated to mountthe sophomoric soapbox, as I havedone.Lawrence Martin*aa;mmm-Mis leM z /«/•After Graduation-What?/T QUICK rise to a responsible position in the business world—or a longperiod of training at minor work before you are fitted for an executive role?Which shall it be? A college trained man, if he has earnestly appliedhimself, has acquired one of the greatest assets in life—the ability to think. It is atremendous advantage. For now you are trained to set yourself for a certain definite goal andnot be side-tracked. Have you centrated into an intensive one-yearChosen business for your life S training course. Babson Institute, anwork? If SO, and if you seek endowed educational institution, is con¬ducted for the purpose ofleadership in the commercialworld, here are facts worthyof your deepest consideration.The principles of leadership in busi¬ness are not many in number. They arenot hard to grasp. Yet less than twomen in one hundred ever learn them.The two chief reasons for this fail¬ure are: (1) — lack of an all-’roundbusiness experience. (2) — the diffi¬culty of drawing sound conclusionsfrom the relatively few experiencesthat any one person can have.A Study of LeadersThrough your studies thus far youhave created for yourself a substantialbackground—a foundation upon whichyou can build high. Why not use thisfoundation in the largest possible way?If you are truly ambitious for steadyand permanent progress, it will be wellfor you — in addition to your under¬graduate work to consider the advisa¬bility of special training which will cutoff years of apprenticeship in the busi¬ness world. This training is availableat the Babson Institute—an education¬al institution organized under the lawsof Massachusetts not for profit.Every man who hopes to be a leaderin the business world needs specialtraining—a training that can be hadonly from actual experience. A studyof the successful business men oftoday shows they are those who have—<l)-a fundamental knowledge of busi¬ness principles; (2)— a faculty for thepractical application of these principlesto daily business life.These tried and proven principles,thisgift for application may now be yours.The Business ofLearning BusinessThe specialists of the Babson Insti¬tute have spent years in business re¬search, laboratory work, and the studyof the lives of successful men. Theyhave arrived at the fundamentals whichevery one must have to achieve leader¬ship in business. These vitally impor¬tant facts have been put together inclear, understandable form and con- purpose of trainingyoung men who are to occupy posi¬tions of responsibility and trust.The Laboratory MethodSince it is the purpose of the BabsonInstitute Course to train men for busi¬ness, all work and all study is con¬ducted in the same manner as work isconducted in any regularly establishedbusiness house. For instance, there areregular office hours not merely schoolhours. Lessons and reports are dic¬tated by the student as in an office—not written. Thus the student acquiresa mastery of business English and theability to transform quickly histhoughts into definite form.Teaching in ConferenceClasses are conducted on the confer¬ence plan. The teachers, or directors asthey are more properly called, are ex¬perienced business men, successful intheir own line. Factory inspection tripsare not long distance walking matches,but personally conducted tours by ex¬perts in that particular industry. Theproblems discussed are present-dayones and are drawn from actual experi¬ence. They are the same problems onwhich over 17,(X)0 of America’s keenestexecutives are seeking aid and solutionfrom the largest organization of busi¬ness advisers in the world. The stu¬dent at Babson Institute works onactual cases — not hypothetical prob¬lems — and consequently he developsthe business man’s point of view.Business ClinicsThe student at the Babson Institutelearnstodothe things he will be expect¬ed to do in business by constant contactwith actual business procedure. He par-ticipatesin theclinic msteadof sitting ina class. The training coversthe four ma¬jor divisions of business, Manufactur¬ing and Production, Financing, Distribu¬tion and Marketing, and Management.If you are anxious for achievement, if,by inheritance or initiative, you seemdestined to become one of our leadersof business, send for particularsabout this training and its unusualteaching methods. Send forthis Booklet!Training for Business Leader¬ship. ’ It describes the coursesin detail, and wives complete in¬formation of the facilities ofBabson Institute. You will learnof the practical methods peculiarto this institution by which menare fitted without loss of timefor executive positions. Noobligation.5 Babson Institute- 330 Washington Street1 Wellc.lcv Hills, Mass.■ Send me. without charge, “TrainingJ for Rusiness Leadership”and full par-■ ticulars about the Babson Institute.Name.Babson InstituteAn Educational Institution Organized Under the Laws of Massachusetts Not for ProfitWellesley Hills, (s”,h0uif) Mass. ■ Address: Gty..mm" State.THE DAILY MAROON, Wednesday, March 14, 1923. Page ThreePLAY OFF FINALSTONIGHT IN INTER-HALL BASKETBALLBeecher and Woodlawn Leadfor ChampionshipHonors Announce Eleven Y. W.Second CabinetChairmenFinal names of the interhall basket¬ball tournament will be played off to-,night, beginning at 7 in Ida Noyes |gymnasium. To date the leadingteams are: Beecher, won six, lostone, tied one; Woodlawn, won five,;lost one, tied one. Woodlawn’s teamalone halted the winning streak of jBeecher, and as a result the last game jbetween the two scheduled for to¬night is expected to be keenly con-1tested. The schedule for the games jis as follows: Kenwood vs. French)house; Greenwood vs. Foster, at 7.Beecher vs. Woodlawn; Kelly vs.Green, at 8.A banquet in honor of the teamswill be given on Mar. 16 in the sun!parlors of Ida Noyes. On this occa¬sion Miss Dudley of the gymnasium jdepartment will present a silver lov-!ing cup to the victorious team,;which will become the permanent tro- jphy of the dormintory winning it forthree consecutive years. Dr. Ida Ort- \mayer and Miss Geneva Drinkwater,:a graduate student, will speak.First Honor BanquetAccording to Mary Louise Brock, jwho has the banquet in charge, thejdinner is the first affair of its kindever given on campus, and is the cul-1mination of a very successful move¬ment for inter-hall activities. The sue-!cess of the whole project is due, in Ia great degree, to the enthusiastic!leadership of Miss Wylie, and the co¬operation of the whole gym depart¬ment,” she continued. Choice of the Y. W. C. A. secondcabinet members for the coming yearhave been announced by the new offi¬cers. These officers complete the per¬sonnel of the first and second cabinets.Margaret Druech has been chosen assecretary of the Second cabinet. Thenew members arb:Campus Community committee:Gladys Walker and Jane Cannell.Intercollegiate committee: MarthaLuetzker and Marion Graham.Church Co-operation committee:Eleanor Hughes and Frances Reinkin.Industrial Co-operation committee:Louise Lamphear and Louise Weitzer.College Exchange committee: Win¬ifred Wadsworth and Lucy Lamon.Finance committee: Ruth Veasey,Alice Snyder, and Esther Lee.Publicity committee: AntoinetteForrester and Helen Harpel.Meetings committee: CarolynBarnes and Aimie Graham.Membership committee: Edith Brig¬ham, Martha Skinner, and MargaretViberta.Social committee: Helen Tiekan,Constance Lloyd, and Alta Cundy.Social Service committee: FlorenceHolman, Elsa Dahl, Lena Mords, MaryDavis, and Dorothy Wills.The install; tion of the new officersand the first and second cabinets willtake place today at 4:30 in the northparlor of Ida Noyes hall.Program Committee MeetsThe program committee of the Na-jtional Interscholastic Basketball jTournament will meet today at 12in Bartlett trophy room.ALPHA SIG MAKES PROTESTON A. T. O. PIN MATCH GAME(Continued from vage 1)matter cannot be handled fairly toboth sides .Council At Deadlock“It seems a shame,” he said, “thatthe A. T. O’s. should play an ineligibleman, and cause the Alpha Sig’s to loseout by such a small margin, but owing115 the fact that the latter fraternitydelayed so long in protesting thegame, even though it is a fact thatHoff was not in school at the time,makes it almost impossible to countout the game. In either case the In¬terfraternity council would do someone an injustice, and it seems probablethat we will let matters stand as theyare.”As yet the Council has made no de¬cision, or set a time for the semi-finalgames to be rolled off. Universities PlanBilliard LeaguesA movement towards making bil¬liards a recognized sport in inter-col¬legiate circles is being fostered by theBrunswick-Balke-Collender Company.Billiards has attained great popular¬ity in the eastern universities and bynext winter is expected to have pene¬trated to those colleges further west.Recent tourneys in straight rail,balkline and pocket billiards have beenheld, the most notable one at Harvardwhere many of the New Englandschools sent representatives. The gen¬eral plan is to form regularly organ¬ized leagues so that dual matches be¬tween the various teams can be play¬ed. One general tournament can beheld for representatives of all the uni¬versities.WATCH YOUR STEPand learn to dance correctly at theMary Kiefer DancingStudio1305 E. 63rd St. Fairfax 09995 Lessons for $5.00—Personal ServiceELIZABETH STOKESSOPRANOConcert Artist and Teacher of SingingStudio506 Fine Arts Building—Wabash 2255VOICES TRIEDMondays, Wednesdays, Fridays—untilApril 30,1923dailyXcursionsVia Sante Fe Ry.California—ArizonaNew Mexico—TexasFred Harvey Meals “all the way”via the Sante Fe.reservationsand details J. It. MORIARTY, Div. Pass. Agt.A. T. & S. F. Ry.179 West Jackson St., Chicago, Ill. JPhone; Wabash 4600 j PICK COMM*TTEESFOR INTRA-MURALWRESTLING MEETMembers Of Mat Team ToHave Charge. FraternityAid SoughtThe University will have its firstbig intra-mural contest when thewrestling tournament takes place,April 11, 12 and 13. The managementis in the hands of Coach Vorres anda committee headed by Leonard O.Loeb of the Physics Department. Theother members of the committee areCapt. Carl Sarpalius, Herbert Ball,Robert Wolf, Arnold Marcont, LouisSchimberg, A. L. Jones, George Tsou-los, and R. A. Loveland.Special attention is given the fra¬ternities in this meet and the inter-Greek council has given its supporttoward making the meet a success. Alarge silver loving cup will be givento the fraternity scoring the mostpoints. The committee in charge of..v card consists of A. L. Jones,chairman; Louis McMasters, DonGuyer, Bud Wood, Fred Law, HowardGriffin and Jack Long.In addition to the loving cup, therewill be three individual prizes givenin each division. Tsoulos is chairmanof the trophy committee, which con¬sists of S. Johnson, Key, and Kalish.The direct management of the meetwill be taken care of by a committeecomposed of Sarpalius, chairman;Frankenstein, and J. Pondelik. Thiscommittee will see that the best avail¬able officials are engaged to refereethe bouts.Publicity and advertising for themeet will be in the hands of Wolf andLoveland. L. Schimberg will head acommittee to draw up a schedule, andH. Ball is chairman of the rules com¬mittee. p——————————————REAL COLLEGE MEN S STOREFULL LINE OF MEN’S FURNISHINGSL. D R AC HSPECIALTY IN HATS & CAPS nMVl E. 55th St■ -4The Roselma Tea Shop6331 Kimbark AvenueHome-Cooked Dinner—Evenings, 85c; Sundays, $1.00Luncheon, 11 to 2—40c and 60cAlso a la CarteReservations for Sorority or Fraternity DinnersTelephone Hyde Park 297355th & Blackstone Ave.A Good Place to Bank19 years of service to the com¬munity in all branches ofBANKINGCENTRAL HYDE PARKBANKA STATE BANKAlpha Sigs Pledge TwoAlpha Sigma Phi announces thepledging of Noel Black of Muskegon,Mich.; and John H. Robbins of Deca¬tur, Ill. Yards 0444 Boulevard 9269PEOPLE'SCREAMCOMPANYICECREAM sTacM.The Cream of All Creams, our“SUNDA E”Get It at U. of C. BookstoreWith FRUIT CENTER is DeliciousThe Study of Expressive Dress/T/" HILE you may not find it in the curriculum, thepTy study of how to select garments that interpreteffectively your own personality is one of the mostimportant things to learn.When you have discovered what House of YouthSuits, Wraps and Dresses can do toward helping you. produce the impression of grace, poise and attractive¬ness you will be a post-graduate in the art of Success¬ful Dressing.In our new fashion maga¬zine—“Success in Dress”—you will find many help¬ful suggestions. The Houseof Youth shop in your vi¬cinity has a copy for you.Or write us direct. THE HOUSE OF YOUTH38 East 39th Street, New York3 Avenue De L’Opera, Paris J4 A smart shop near you isnow featuring House ofYouth Styles for Spring.If you do not find it easily,write us.Page Four THE DAILY MAROON, Wednesday, March 14, 1923THE CYNIC’S SPRINGNow, all this talk of spring gives mea pain.It’s the time of wind and mud andrain.Women hunt for violets,Poets gush forth triolets,Yearly farce of spring has comeagain.Lovers mope around beneath themoon,Plan for weddings in the month ofJune.Lovers start to pine,Need Beef Iron and Wine,Each of them is crazy as a loon.Yet when I say that spring is rot,They plan to kill me on the spot.Say it’s a wonderful season,You’ve merely lost your reason.Wish you had the cold that I’ve got.* * *The Maroon writes of a movie starwho once was prominent in the Dra¬matic club here, but that’s not theimportant thing. Will he admit itnow?* * *Ruth Metcalfe is quoted as sayingthat she objects to the present Wom¬en’s club rushing season because itis “Two hectic,’ ’which must be prettybad; but imagine three hectic.* * *You Must Come OverDear Jacques: Understand thatthe Dekes have a new dogma. Con¬gratulate the Dutchess for me.Bill._ * *Ts This Intended for a Roast?Dear Jacques: There’s a lecture to¬night on “Pork and Its Products.”May I meat you there?Jacqueline.* * *May we copy the Phoenix, institutea theatrical department, and suggestthat you Grace McVickers with yourpresence this week ?* * *Our greatest worry, now that theBare Headed Days approach, is whatare the Red Feather boys going to dowhen they discard their hats ?* * *Famous last lines—No!Jacques.Beating Old ManWebsterNoah Webster becamefamous when he wrote70,000 wordsItigersoii^Pencil>carries in its magazine15 double length leadswith a writing mileageof 540,000 words.It requires a new leadonly once for every36,000 written wordsand is so simply con¬structed that it alwaysworks. Will not clogat the point.The GIFT—shown here¬of Rolled Gold $3.00. InRolled Silver $1.00.See this and other modelsat your stationery or cooper¬ative store.Ingersoll Redlpolnt Co.,Inc.Wm. H. Ingwtoll, Pres.461 Fourth Ave., New York City UBLISHINGNot for Profit—but for ServiceGood books that are expected by the publishers to pass throughmore than one printing are generally stereotyped or electro-typed. By either of these processes the heavy forms of type arereproduced in thin plates of metal, from which additional impressions ofthe volume are printed. Plates r< quire little storage space, replace expensivetype metal, are easily handled on the presses, and are not subject to the lossof letters or the accident known as “pi-ing a form.”In the stereotype foundry an exact impression of the type pageis made by beating into the face of the type a wet mat of paper,surfaced with very thin tissue. This paper shell is thoroughlydried over a steamheated table and inserted into a ca>ting-hox where itacts as a mold for the molten metal tHat is poured against it. The plate somade, when carefully trimrmd and shaved to the Ce ited thickness, repro¬duces in one piece the original page of type, which needs no longer to hepreserved.CT Stereotype plates will be manufactured by the University ofJ Chicago Press for Qoeemmenl in Illinois, by Walter F. Dodd andSue FI. Dodd, because it is considered likely that a number ofimpressions, will He required of this volume, to supply the needs of citizens whoare looking for a concise description of the machinery of their stare «■ ' em¬inent as well as a reasonable diu ussion c f its accomplishments and failuies.THIS IS THE FIFTH OF A SERIFS OF ADVERTISEMENTSTHAT WILL DESCRIBE THE MAKING OF COOD BOOKS ATTHE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESSCALLS “VICARIOUSATTONEMENT” IDEABIGGEST BLUNDER PUBLICATION RULECAUSES AGITATIONAT U. OF MICHIGANDean Small Raps Bryan In“Cooperation” Talk AtY. M. C. A. Magazine ArticleTrouble CausedRegulation ReviewsBy“What do you understand by vicar- i Despotic rulings on the part of theious atonement?” Board in Control of Student Publica-“Why is it that today our countryis not overrun by wild beasts?”“Who got your breakfast this morn¬ing?”“How many years do you suppose jit would take us if we were thrown jlike Romulus and Remus on a fertile jisland to produce what we now have (on our persons—why Methuselahwould be a kid.”These were some of the questions iset forth by Dean Albion Woodbury jSmall, head of the Department of So-|ciology, speaking on the subject, “Co- joperation,” yesterday at noon in theY. M. C. A. rooms.The vicarious atonement doctrinewhich teaches that God has condemn¬ed every member of the human raceto infinite guilt and that Christ died jto make sacrifice for this guilt in lieu iof the human race, so that the human jrace might be held guiltless on thisaccount, is the “most colossal hone- [header ever pulled in the history ofhuman thought,” said Dean Small. Itis analogous with the acceptancenowadays of Bryan’s theories as op¬posed to science’s findings in the phys¬ical and natural sciences.Exchange of Services NeededThe world today, he declared, couldnot be what it is if this substitutionalidea were accepted, if people from thebeginning had not developed th hab¬it of exchanging services. It took hun¬dreds of vicarious sacrifices beforethe automatic train couplers were in¬stituted. It took many disasters tobring about fire escape legislation.People before us have passed ontheir accomplishments. When eachgeneration arrives at the years of dis*cretion the question confronts it,“Will you do as your predecessors havedone and get under your shnre of theworld’s work, or are you going to boa slacker, taking the attitude thatthe world owes you a living?” tions at the University of Michiganare the subject of an article coveringapproximately two pages in the cur¬rent issue of The New Republic.The article, written by the executivesecretary of the National Studentforum, is based on the observationsof a group of foreign students whowere sent under the auspices of thatorganization to study conditions in alarge number of American collegesand universities. These students werequite surprised at the necessity of anykind of control of student publica-1tions.Board Controls PublicationsThe student publications of the Uni¬versity of Michigan, says the article,,are subject to the regulations of a1Board consisting of four faculty mem- jbers and three students. Not long!ago this Board passed a ruling which jforbade the publication of articles!written by a certain student, who is}well known for his iconoclastic views. [The decree further ordered that this jstudent’s name should not be men-1tioned in any university publication, jThis, as well as other arbitrary regu-1lations, caused dissatisfaction among tthe staffs of the publications; all th*. feditorial staff of the Sunday literary imagazine resigned.The writer of this article attributesthe action of the Board to the factthat the administration was afraid otcreating a questionable reputation forthe University among the people ofthe state. This, the writer pointed out,would threaten the proposed buildingprogram.The writer expresses the opinionthnt the remedy for this situation de¬pends solely on the students. Theyalone, he snys, are free to make thetruth known. JUNIORS WIN YEAR’STANK CHAMPIONSHIP(Continued from page 1)last even on the program. Kelly hall,which made second in the relay, hasbeen compelled to forfeit its place,since three of its women swam with¬out having had a medical examination.The judges for the meet were “Doc”White, Coach George Eckhart of SinaiCenter, and Miss Burns of the gymdepartment.CLASSIFIED ADSFOR SALE—Dining room set of greyand blue enamel, drop leaf table,and Windsor chairs. Also smallrosewood table and vacuum cleaner.Phone Mid. 1868, or the Maroon Of¬fice.FRENCH lessons given in exchangefor room by woman student. CallH. P. 9576.rENUSPENCILSWrite forbooklet onVrniis Pencil* nmlVknph Kviori'ointkhMeehanlrnl pi ru llnLEARN TO DANCE NOW—Teresa Dolan DancingAcademy63rd St. and Stony Island AvenueBeginners Monday Eve—12 Lea., $6.00Private lessons by appointrpent.Academy or Branch Studio:5401 Cottage Grove Ave. WANT TO GO TO THATDANCELucia HENDERSHOTwill prepare you QUICKLY and COR¬RECTLY. 6 PRIVATE Lessons, $6.001541 East 57th St. Hyde Park 2314THE FROLIC THEATREDRUG STORECigarettes Fountain ServingCor. Ellis Ave. and 55th St., adjacento Frolic Theatre. Tel. Hyde Park 761COWHEY’SStore for MenMen’s Furnishings, Hats,Caps and NeckwearBilliardsCigars, Cigarettes, PipesS. E. Cor. 55th and Ellis Ave.Typewriters!Remington 32.50Royal 30.00Corona 27.50Molle 39.50Und Port 40.00Rem Port 50.00Underwood $40.00Large Assortment of all MakesTerms Granted—Rental Appliedon Purchase Price.Full Line of Typewriter SuppliesReliable Typewriter Co.Wab. 0568 326 Plymouth CtMOSERSHORTHANDCOLLEGESpecialThree Months CourseOpen to University Gradu¬ates or UndergraduatesBULLETIN ON REQUEST116 So. Michigan Ave.Twelfth Floor Randolph 4347CHICAGOHigh School GraduatesONLY arc Enrolled>< ”!•'» i( U U «:>( J. ,K.KI| Rare,Medium,ii or Well Done?• Grilledor Fried?:STEAKSAny way you like them.Fresh every day, and guar¬anteed not only by our¬selves, but also by ourbutcher to be absolutely thebest.BALDWINS1025 E. 55TH ST.Between Ellis and Greenwood“/ly Students for Students”