4'1 ffifyt ©atlp JfflaroonVol. 20. No. 63. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO, TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1922 Price 3 CentsMINNESOTA FIVEDOWNS MAROONSIN BIG TEN FRAYGophers Win 25-12 AfterBeing Held Even InFirst HalfVARSITY GUARDED CLOSELYMinnesota’s basket five, at presentsetting the pace for the Big Ten fiveskept its slate unmarred by downingthe Maroons at Minneapolis Saturdayby a 25-12 score.Despite the fact that the final scoreshowed such a marked advantage forthe Gophers, it was a thrilling and ex¬citing battle, with the Maroons hold¬ing the Northmen almost even duringthe first half, which ended with theGophers on the long end of a 9-7score.Gophers Win in Final PeriodIn the final period the Minnesotaboys hit their true stride and ran theirtotal up to 25, while closely guardingthe Varsity tossers and keeping themfrom sinking even a single field goal.“Bill” McGuire’s free throwing count¬ed all of the Maroon points in thislast half.The game was featured throughoutby the fierce guarding of the Gophers,the Maroons getting but two basketsduring the whole game, those beingbucketed by “Mitt” Itomney and Dick¬son. McGuire made eight of his tenfree throw attempts good, and was,as a consequence, the heavy scorerfor Norgren’s five.Hanson Sinks Clever ShotsThe Gopher athletes displayed some(Continued on Page 2)CLARENCE BRICKMANWINS FIRST IN BOTHI.A.C. HURDLE EVENTSAlthough the relay team failed tocome through with a win last Fridaynight in the I. A. C. meet at the FirstRegiment Armory, the remainingmembers of the squad who competedin the miscellaneous events showedup unusually well.Clarence Brickman, who has beenshowing great promise all year inpractice, and who distinguished him¬self by tying the conference indoorrecord in the 50 yard high hurdlesagainst Northwestern, proved himselfto be one of the foremost college hur¬dlers in the middle west. Runningfrom scratch, “Jake” succeed in win¬ning first place in both the 70 yardhigh and low hurdles. It is seldomthat a sophomore, running his secondrace in such high class competitionas was seen in the meet, can accom¬plish such a feat. The men he metare of the best in the west, and hisperformance bids fair for his takingboth hurdle events in the conferencemeet in March.Maroons Cop Third PlaceWith these ten points as a starter,Chicago succeeded in gathering eightmore which placed the Maroon teamthird in the meet.“Os” Roberts, who seemed to havegone ‘stale” in the Northwesternmeet, showed a return to form, andsucceeded in placing second to Tel¬ford of Northwestern in the half-mileevent. With a little more training,Roberts has excellent prospects of de¬veloping into one of the best half-milers in the Big Ten conference.“Johnny” Rittenhouse added the otherfive points to the Maroons’ final score,by winning first place in the standingbroad jump.Relay Team Runs WellThe relay team put up a good race,but were matched against one of thebest two mile relay teams in the coun¬try. As the team has practiced to¬gether for only a short time, and asthis was the first time it has had anycompetition, the performance was notbad. The material for a first classtwo mile relay team is bright, andwith a little more practice running to¬gether and passing the baton, theyshould press the best in the confer¬ence.On account of the failure of enoughalumni to show up, the meet scheduledfor Saturday night had to be cnlledoff. Seniors to Hold SecondDinner in CafeFridayFestive melody from a jazz bandof eight pieces will be a feature ofthe second senior class dinner Fridayat 6:30 in Hutchinson cafe. Amongthose who will furnish the peppy syn¬copation are “Bill” Hatch, Max Leg-gette, Earl Little, Kenneth Bates, andWilliam Ruminer.There will also be an address by Dr.C. W. Gilkey of the Hyde Park Bap¬tist church. Tickets are priced atseventy-five cents and may be ob¬tained at the Reynolds club, the Book¬store, or from the following persons:Mina Morrison, Virginia Hibben, Bea¬trice Marks, Louise Apt, Clare Smith,Fay Millard, Robert Adler, Earl Lit¬tle, Luther Tatge, Robert Cole, Ken¬neth Gordon, Harry Hargreaves, andAlfred Brickman.According to Robert Cole, classpresident, the pasteboards have beengoing fast and the sale will closeWednesday at 4. At the last affairof this kind, there were 120 seniorspresent, and it is hoped that Friday’sdinner will break all attendance rec¬ords.LIBRARIES APPOINTDORF SUPERVISOROF READING ROOMNot Policy to Discipline Stud¬ents, Says DirectorHansonIn a statement from J. C. Hanson,assistant director of the Universitylibraries, the shift of Dr. Dorf, oneof the University’s best informed li¬brarians, from his post in the class¬ification department to that of super¬visor of the main reading room on thethird floor of Harper, is announced.Mr. Hanson made it clear that Dr.Dorf wras to be assistance to studentsin reference work especially, and wasto be in no way an officer of surveil¬lance. “We are not going to try todiscipline the students into studying,”he said.The communication from Mr. Han¬son is as follows:“The transfer of Miss Gettys to thepublic catalogue room and the loss ofMiss Ver Nooy from the informationdesk has necessitated a further shiftin the sreviee, as follows:“Dr. Dorf has been transferred fromthe classification department on thesecond floor to the main readingroom. Dr. Dorf is a graduate of theUniversity of Copenhagen. He wasfor ten years professor of history andliterature in one of the leading folk-universities in Denmark. Having re¬ceived a fellowship for advanced study(Continued on Pose 4)Council Meets InOpen Session TodayThe second open meeting of theUndergraduate council will be heldtoday at 4:30 in Classics 21.All students and faculty membersare invited to attend the meeting andwill be given the opportunity to offersuggestions and comments and totake part in the discussions of th«body. Curiosities as to just how aCouncil meeting is conducted may al¬so he satisfied.No special program is arranged forthese monthly open sessions. Theregular order of business is followed,deviation being made only to allowthe guests to speak.The idea of such meetings was con¬ceived by the Council last quarter andwas adopted as a means of bringingthe Council and the student body intocloser contact with each other. Prev¬ious to this year, meetings have beenclosed and in many quarters of thecampus the opinion had arisen thatthere was something of mystery con¬cerning the meetings and activitiesof the Council.It was to disprove this idea and tooffer the most practical means bywhich students and faculty couldmake direct suggestions to the mem¬bers of the Council as a whole thatthe policy of monthly open meetingswas adopted. FASHION CARNIVALJUDGES PICKED BYFEDERATION HEADSEntries for Show Must beMade by TomorrowNightARRANGE FOR LARGE CROWDThe Executive council of the Fed¬eration of University Women an¬nounces the following as judges forthe Fashion Show which is to be heldFriday at 3:30 in the theater of IdaNoyes hall: Mrs. Harry Pratt Judson,Mrs. Martyn Ryerson, Mrs. WilliamLinn, Dean Elizabeth Wallace, MissGertrude Dudley, Mrs. George Good-speed, Prof. Andrew McLaughlin, andDr. Edgar Goodspeed.Patrons and patronesses of the Fa¬shion Show will be: President HarryPratt Judson, Dean Marion Talbot,Dean Edith Foster Flint, Asst. Prof.Mabel B. Trilling, Mrs. Edgar Good-speed, Miss Robertson of the CarterHarrison high school, Miss Stewart,dean of girls at the Hyde Park highschool, Miss Allyn, dean of girls atthe Englewood high school, DeanDavid Robertson and Prof. AlgernonColeman.Close Entries TommorwAll entries for the Fashion Showmust be made before tomorrow night.Registrations may be made withCharlotte Montgomery. They maybe left in the Federation box in Mrs.Goodspeed’s office in Ida Noyes hall,or they may be left in the office ofThe Daily Maroon for Ruth Metcalfe.Clarke Kessler will play the pianoduring the afternoon. Alma Macdon¬ald and Mildred Metzger, two Fresh¬men women, will act as pages, an¬nouncing each group of contestantsas it enters the stage, and will addthe finishing touches to make theStyle Show live up to its name.Consider Hats and ShoesAccessories will be considered injudging the clothes of each contestant.If the hats or shoes of the outfit ofany contestant are unsuitable, eitherfrom he viewpoint of color, style, ma¬terial or good taste the entrant willnot >tand much chance of winning. Injudging home-made clothes, prefer¬ence will he shown to those dressesmade by the contestant herself or byhr mother. While dresses made bythe dressmaker are listed as home¬made they will not receive preference.Arrangements have been made foran overflow crowd. Chairs will beplaced in the receiving room in thefront of the theater, and the contest¬ants will walk down the center aisleand out through the aisle in this out¬side room. The doors will be leftopen to accommodate those who cannot find room in the theater. Althoughthe Fashion Show will not begin until4, registrants have been asked to bein the theater at 3:15 to be certainthat they are correctly registered andentered in the order of their appear¬ance.PROF. BREASTED TOADDRESS BODY OFPARISIAN SAVANTSWill Winter in Cairo Workingon Ancient MuseumDocumentsAnnouncement is made by Profes¬sor James Henry Breasted, chairmanof the Department of Oriental lang¬uages, that he will leave this springon a year’s trip to Europe, the Niledelta and Palestine. Plans for thetrip have not as yet been definitelyconcluded, but a brief itinerary hasbeen drawn up.According to this itinerary, I’rofes-(Continued on Page 2)DAILY PROGRAMTODAYChicago Symphony Orchestra con¬cert, 4:15, Leon Mandel.TOMORROWVesper service, 4:30, Ida Noyes. RIGID RULINGS TO GOVERN SALEOF PROM TICKETS THIS YEARTo Cost Around Six Dollars; Lanigan SubmitsRegulations For Big Affair; SaleStarts Feb. 7McCracken to LeadSing on WednesdayThe first all-Universitv Sing of thequarter will be held tomorrow at 7:15in Mandel hall. William McCrackenhas been secured by the Social com¬mittee of the Federation to lead thesing. Mr. McCracken received hisPh. B. in 1909 and his J. D. in 1912.While in college he was Universitycheer leader.New song programs have been pre¬pared and will be distributed by theFederation sponsors. A quartettefrom the Men’s and Women’s Gleeclub will furnish several selections.The sing will be over promptly at8:15.BLACKFRIARS WILLUSE TWO SETS IN1922 PRODUCTIONScenery to be Constructed byStudents; Poster ContestWinner AnnouncedBOX AT HEAD OF STORYThe University Blackfriar orchestrawill meet tonight at 8:30 in EmmonsBlaine 214.Two sets for the 1922 Blackfriarproduction, “Anybody’s Girl,” submitted by students, have been selected aswinners in scenery contest recentlyheld by the management for the show.The winning sets are the ideas ofGeorge Downey and an anonymousartist.The first scene will be laid in acountry club. A blue and white tiledfloor will figure in the color scheme,with a wide promenade looking outon a lake in the background. Thecountry club scene will be used in thefirst and second acts. In the third andlast scene a drop effect will be used.Here will be a realistic forest, withoverhanging Spanish moss, dark leafylabyrinths, and a setting sun behindthe trees.Superior Scenery in ShowLennox Grey and Franklin Barberwere awarded honorable mention inthe scenery contest. “A great dealof talent was brought out in the scen¬ery contest this year,” said Allen Hol¬loway, abbot of Blackfriars. “Therewere so many excellent scenic ideasthat a final choice was difficult. Thescenery to he used in this year’s showis by far more artistic than that ap¬pearing in any previous performance. ’The actual sets will be constructedthis year exclusively by students, theidea is an innovation for the 1922show, all sets formerly having beenbuilt by loop concerns. According to(Continued on page 3)Work On Portfolioto Progress DailyMandel ball and Ida Noyes theaterhave recently taken on an air of astudy hall every day at 3:30 whenmembers of the cast and chorus of“Paint, Powder, and Patches,” burythemselves deep in their books be¬tween rehearsals of their variousgroups in the play.The schedule for rehearsals thisweek is as follows: Tuesday, Jan. 31,Ida Noyes theater—all choruses at3:30 and the tryout scene at 5:00;Wed., Thurs., Fri., Feb. 1, 2, 3, Man-del hall—all choruses at 3:30. Mem¬bers of the cast are requested to re¬port for rehearsals every night from7 9 in Ida Noyes theater.Ticket prices for the two perform¬ances on Feh. 24 and 25 have beenannounced as follows: All main floorseats, $2.00; first four rows of bal¬cony, $1.50; remainder of balcony, 75c;lower boxes, $2.50; upper boxes, $2.00. Rigidity characterizes the rulesgoverning the sale and distribution oftickets for the Washington Promen¬ade as announced by the ticket com¬mittee yesterday. The sale has beenlimited to 300, including alumni, andevery effort is being made to meetthe necessarily greater demands inthe best manner possible.“The ticket committee for theWashington Prom, having but 300tickets to distribute among all thestudents and alumni of the Univers¬ity, has been forced to lay down veryrigid tides for their distribution,” saidWallace Lanigan, chairman of thecommittee. “Those rules must be ob¬served as published in The Daily Ma¬roon tod?.y.”Tickets are to be available Feb. 7and will be distributed in two man¬ners: through the various fraternitiesto fraternity men and by mailed ap¬plication to non-fraternity men. Adefinite number of tickets has beenreserved for each of the two groups.In the case of fraternities, each or¬ganization will submit its fist of ap¬plicants for the treasured card-boards.In tho case of non-fraternity men,applications will be filled in the orderof receipt after Thursday.Tickets this year will be non-trans-ferable and a system of numberedtickets will check up on the originalpurchaser. Those presenting ticketsbought by someone other than them¬selves will not be admitted to IdaNoyes, according to the rulings.Aboslutely no one will be admittedat the door without a ticket. Guestswill be presented with complimentarytickets and an impartial guard willre-execute “they shall not pass” forthe benefit of those who make theirappearance without the necessaryI card-board accompanimnt.All tickets reserved for the alumni(Continued on Page 4)WHITE’S NATATORSBEAT MILWAUKEEA. C. IN DUAL MEETThe highly touted Milwaukee Ath¬letic club swimming team w’ent downin defeat before the Varsity natators,last Saturday night at Bartlett. Itwas a hard earned victory for the Ma¬roons, the final score being 38 to 30.Captain Ed Blinks performed ingreat style for Chicago, and was highpoint scorer of the contest with 16 1-4markers. To reach this total, he wonthree firsts, besides swimming on therelay team. Thompson and Koch werethe Milwaukee stars with eight pointseach.Maroons Win RelayThe first event o nthe program wasthe relay. The Maroons, representedby Vandeventer, River, Glason, andBlinks, ran away from Hildebrandt,Crawford, Thompson, and Leders whoswa rnfor the M. A. C. The fancydiving contest wrent to Byler of theVarsity who showed great form, re-feating Koch. Sterling, also of theVasrity copped third place.Blinks took first in the 40 and inthe 100, nosing out Crawford of theclubmen in each event. The Varsitycaptain also won the 220, with Thomp¬son of the M. A. C. second, and Night¬ingale of Chicago third. Koch andEckert of the Wisconsin aggregationboth bested Lyons in the breaststroke, while Ivy, swimming for theMaroons in the backstroke took thirdto both Thompson and Hildebrandt ofthe opponents.lledeen Blunges BestHedeen won the plunge for Chica¬go, with his team-mate Hall second.The final event, the water basketballgame resulted in an easy victory forChicago. The score was 8 to 0. Mer-viam, Crawford and Vitkin starredfor the Varsity.A return meet will be held at Mil¬waukee on Feb. 3.25lir Baily iflarounThe Student Newspaper of theUniversity of ChicagoPuMUWil niorniiiKs, **x«fpt Saturday, Suu-day «"d Mamiajr during the Autumn,Winter and Spring quarters t»y The DailyMaroon Company.Entered as second class mail at the Chi¬cago post office, Chicago, Illinois, March13, 1908. under the net of March 3, 1873.Offices Ellis 14Telephone Midway 800Member ofThe Western Conference Press AssociationTuesday, January 31, 1922WHY BLAME THE WOMEN?The long list of defeats handed toNorthwestern university during thepast few years is due to the largenumber of women on the Evanstoncampus, according to the Daily North ¬western. And, our Purple contempo¬rary avers, “if the success of ath¬letics is menaced as suggested, morematerial will have to be attracted toallow for Cupid’s fatalities or influ¬ence of the co-ed automatically cur¬tailed by reduction in numbers, toavert the trouble.”But if an athlete is really an ath¬lete, we do not see how even as manywoman as there are at Northwesterncould detract from his athletic prowess. An athlete knows that to main¬tain his physical and mental energy,he must keep in the best of condition.He must retire at an early hour andkeep away from social affairs.The Daily Northwestern says thaf“Northwestern has long had the tep-utation of being a ‘women’s school.'That reputation has kept many a prepstar from addressing his trunk toEvanston and the solution lies only ineliminating the grounds for that as¬sertion." The truth is that women ata college are more liable to attractmen to a college than to discouragethem from coming. But if the menare to be athletes, they must keep agood distance from women at leastduring the time they are in training.If the women at Northwestern aremenacing athletes there, it is onlybecause these athletes do not knowenough to keep in condition.RELIEVING OUR POCKETBOOKSThe announcement that the Under¬graduate council will regulate allcampus campaigns for money in thefuture comes as a great relief to mostof us. Never before have we noticedso many requests for money at theUniversity, and all of them took placein one quarter. First the Daily Ma¬roon extracted its share from mostof us; then we were approached forthe Y. M. or Y. W. C. A., the Cap andGown, the Russian Relief, the UnitedCharities, the Band, Settlement Nightand the Child Welfare association.The deluge for contributions finallybecame so scouring that we were of¬ten left without any funds to buylunch with.But the Undergraduate council iscoming to our aid! Hereafter eachfinancial campaign must be registeredwith the Council three weeks beforethe opening of the drive and accord¬ing to the new ruling, not more thanone drive will be permitted to be heldat one time, and no campus organiza¬tion will be allowed to hold more thanone drive per year to raise funds forthe same purpose.Not only will this new plan elim¬inate the drive-after-drive program,but it will also increase the amount ofrevenue secured by each individualcampaign. If carried out successfullynext fall, the new council regulationshould act as a sedative to a cam¬paign-afflicted campus.MINNESOTA FIVE DOWNS MA¬ROONS IN BIG TEN FRAY(Continued from Page 1)stellar basketball ability, and in thesecond half showed their real power.Hanson, the big center, who had beentroubled all through the first half bythe close guarding of Capt. Halladayof the Varsity, got going in this pe¬riod, and sunk three baskets in rapidsuccession,Capt. Kearney and Severinson, whohas been playing forward in sensa¬tional style all season, also turned insome neat shooting exhibitions, theformer bagging two field goals andsniping three penalty shots, and thelatter ringing three baskets, two ofthem beautiful one-handed shots fromthe sidelines, and counting two freethrows.Maroons on DefensiveChicago was kept on the defensivepractically all of the time during thesecond half, due to Minnesota’s bril-1 ant offnese. The Gophers put up a THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1922ASCHER’SFROLIC THEATRE33th St. and Ellis Ave.Wednesday and Thursday, Feb. 1st and 2nd“A MAN’S HOME”Ralph Ince’s greatest production. Adapted fromEdmund Breese’s stage play.HARRY MOREYMATT MOOREKATHLYN WILLIAMSEvery man s home is a castle. Has he a right todefend it?«Also JOHNNIE HINES in“TORCHY AL CARTE” and REVUESPECIAL NOTICE—“WAY DOWN EAST,” FEB. 8, 9. 10 Y.M.C.A. Workersto Join by Feb. 5All prospective members of the Y.M. C. A. are urged to join before Feb.5. This advice is given because a re¬cent ruling prohibits those who signup later than that date to vote at th« jannual elections held in the spring.Students may sign up at the “Y”office or see Charles Dwinell, chair¬man of the membership committee,who is conducting the campaign.There are no dues since membershipis based solely on service and churchmembership. TARDY COURSE BOOKSCollege students who have notturned in their course books to theBureau of Records for the posting ofthe Autumn quarter grades shouldnot hand them in now. They shouldkeep them until the end of the currentquarter and then hand them in, aftermaking entry as directed on page 8for both the Autumn and the Winterquarters. The Recorder’s office can¬not now reopen the posting ot hooksfor the Autumn quarter.F. J. Gurney, Asst. Recorder.MAIL C. ANI) A. MAGAZINETO SUBSCRIBERS THURSDAYThe next issue of the C. & A. mag- Iazine, which will he out Thursday, willbe mailed to all subscribers. Those jwho have not already subscribed and jdesire to, are asked to hand in their jname and address, Faculty Exchange iBox 10. No copies will be sold on thecampus, as has been the custom.Those who have not subscribed, aswell as those who have not handed intheir addresses, however, will be ableto obtain their copies at any timeThursday in Ellis 23. JANUARY CLEARANCESALECoats, Suits, Party andStreet DressesPrices so low that anyonecan put in a supply.J. J. GIBS921 East 63rd Streetsweet short passing game, and keptpossession of the ball most of thetime. Most of the Gopher basketswere made from short range aftersome clever passing hail brought theball down the floor.Both of the Maroon baskets werebeautiful shots, “Mitt” Romney sink¬ing his counter from the middle of thefloor, and Dickson ringing his afterreceiving a perfect pass from theVarsity captain under the basket.Maroons Have Even BreakChicago's loss to Minnesota givesthem an even break in the Big Tenstanding. To date they have coppedtwo and dropped two, the victoriesbeing on the home floor, and the de¬feats being away from Bartlett.Coach Norgren is already at workdri\ ing his charges for the battle withthe lllini here Saturday. The Ma¬roons are expected to be at their bestagainst the downstaters, for Chicagoteams have always played withslightly more determination than us¬ual when battling the men of Orangeand Blue.Exhibit PhotographsIn Harper This WeekThe autographed photograph ofMarshal Foch is the chief point of in¬terest in the exhibition cases in Har¬per W31 this week. The protrait isone which the Marshal sent to theUniversity in memory of his vi.-it onNov. 5. Other photographs show thecrowd waiting for the Marshal tocome out of Hutchinson and the Mar¬shal on the steps of the building. Inthe same case with these pictures isa photograph of the meeting of theBritish Commission in Ida Noyes. Inthe west part of the case are photo¬graphs taken at the time of the visitof Cardinal Mercier and the openingof the S. A. T. C.The East Tower cases of Harperlibrary contain photographs of the de¬tails of the ceiling and walls of theSistine Chapel, where the College ofCardinals will meet to elect the newpope. Here also are a facsimile of asecret ballot and a short account ofthe details of a papal election. Thecase on the left contains coins andmedals (from the “Mannheimer col¬lection”) of the sort that are placedin the casket of the dead pope.Bills to Address C\ and A. Club Books on OxfordMovement Obtained Read The Daily Maroon for All the Campus NewsA recent gift from Mrs. F. R. Lilliewill enable the library to make anumber of important additions to itsliterature on the Oxford Movement,Cardinal Newman, and similar sub¬lets in Church history. The momentfor the gifts is opportune, because ofthr lectures to be given by Dr. Wagerin February.• The department of Oriental studieshas recently added one volume of thetext and two large volumes of platesof Denkmaler Agyptischen Sculptureedited by F. W. Van Bissng (Munich,1 f) 14), an important work on thesculpture of Egypt. The same depart¬ment has also added the first volumeof the excavations made by theFrankfurt Expedition to Egypt, 1905-1907.I’ROF. BREASTED TO ADDRESSBODY OF PARISIAN SAVANTS(Continued from Page 1)sor Breasted will proceed in July toLondon and Paris. At Paris he willattend the Centennial of the decipher¬ment of Egyptian which will be con¬cluded under the auspices of theFrench government. Two volumeswill he published by this assembly,one containing the results of Frenchresearch and the other containing ac¬counts of non-French research. Prof.Breasted will address the gathering,and give an account of oldest medicalbook in existence which dates fromthe 18 century B. C.From Paris he will go to Palermoin Sicily, and from Palermo to Cairo.From Cairo he will probably journeyup the Nile. Returning to Cairo, hewill spend the winter at the Cairomuseum where he will conduct thework of collecting, editing and pub¬lishing the archaic mortuary docu¬ments which preceded the famousBook of the Dead and out of which theBook of the Dead was later put to¬gether. He will be assisted in thiswork by Monsieur Pierre Lacau, theleading French egypologist, and Dr.Alan H. Gardiner, an eminent Britishegyptologist. When completed thispublication will be known as “CoffinTexts.”From Cairo he will go to Palestine,returning home late in the spring of1923. AT THE FOSTER SALEA GREAT EVENT for UNIVERSITY WOMEN7sj***ostenj%oesandjfosiety(or Women and ChildrenFoster OxfordsPumps & Slippers$7.75formerly $12.50 to $15The Annual FOS TER Sale is an eventwhich Chicago women eagerly welcomeThis year’s reductions are made onAll lines—including White Shoes forthe South and for spring wearF. E. FOSTER & COMPANY115 NORTH WABASH AVENUETHE DAILY MAROON]A CAMPUS NECESSITY ISUBSCRIBE TODAY!All Commerce club members areinvited to attend an interesting lec¬ture which will be given by Mr. Ben¬jamin Bills, a graduate and formerinstructor at the University, also for¬merly with the Trust Department ofthe Continental and Commercial Na¬tional Bank and now with the Amer¬ican Bond and Mortgage Company.Mr. Bills’ subject will be “Condi¬tions and Opportunities in Both theTrust Company and the Bond andMortgage Fields.”THE FROLIC THEATREDRUG STORECigarettes Fountain ServingCorner Ellis Ave. and 55th St.Adjacent to Frolic TheatreTelephone Hyde Park 761 THE FASHION LUNCH ROOM1004 East 55th StreetBEST OF FOOD, Properly CookedExcellent Service, Popular PricesThe All American PlaceORAHOOI) AND SONNext to Enjoying a Dance Yourself—Let Your Partner Enjoy it—DanceCorrectly—Take Private Lessons.—Day or Evening by Appointment—THERESA DOLANDANCING ACADEMY«3nl & STONY ISLAND AVE.Phone Hyde Park 3080—orStudio, 5101 Cottage Grove AvenuePhone Hyde Park 6852 They’re Vivacious!— a good smoke— not dried out, you know—sort of fresh, lively,—Vivacious, is the word—Iri'Com'pd'rci'bly fine!. fk:4 ! Jt* ti THE DAILY MAROON, TUESDAY, JANUARY 31, 1922PUBLICITY IS CHIEFGAIN OF ARMAMENTCONFERENCE—HARDLess Secrecy In WashingtonSession Than In Prev¬ious Councils OFFICIAL NOTICESBy WILLIAM HARD(Special to The Daily Maroon)Washington, Jan. JO. — Publicitymight be regarded as the principalachievement of the Washington Con¬ference during the last few days. Thisstatement is not to be takn as mean¬ing that the Conference itself has be¬come any more public in its proceed¬ings. Whether it ought to becomemore public or not is a disputed point.On the one hand it must be said thatevery conclusion reached by the Con¬ference seems to have been communi¬cated to the public with an almostinstant promptness. Also the sum¬maries transmitted to the public ofthe debates in the proceedings of theprivate meetings of the Conference,have been quite full enough to givethe public a quite considerable edu¬cation in Far Eastern affairs.Public Difficult to SatisfyOn the other hand, it is certainlytrue that no summary of a debate willaltogether satisfy the whole publicand it may be that future conferenceswill find that nothing really is lostand that something is gained by con¬ducting all debates in public with re¬porters present to make their ownsummaries in addition to the officialsummaries. The chief objection tosecrecy is not so much perhaps thatsinister things happen in secrecy, asthat innocent things—that is, thingsseeming innocent to the human beingsengaged in debating them—fail tocome with their full meaning to the. public, ami sometimes come with adistorted meaning.This Conference perhaps has giventhe public more information about it¬self than any other great Internation¬al Conference ever did before. Noclaim is made that any disadvantagehas hereupon resulted; whatever hurthas happened to the Conference inthis matter has come, not from goingso far toward publicity, but from notgoing all the way to a complete pub¬licity.Err in Withholding FactsIt seems probable now that a greatmistake was made in secreting thediscussions which preceded the draft¬ing of the four-power treaty: no sum¬mary of those discussions was issued.Virtually all the other discussions ofthe Far Eastern affairs have beenpresented to the public in some sortof summary form.The arguments regarding the four-power treaty were apparently alto¬gether informal, and the public re¬ceived only the treaty itself togetherwith the purely 'conventional congrat¬ulatory speeches of statesmen pleasedwith the treaty and pleased withthemselves in the open session inwhich the full Conference acceptedthe treaty. The consequence is thatthe Senate will demand further in¬formation and will proceed to makean inquisitorial inquiry of its own in¬to the origin and development of thefour-power treaty, just as soon as thetreaty reaches the Senate.Far East Situation ImprovedMeanwhile, however, the Confer¬ence has given evidence of its ownstrong belief in the value of publicityfor certain purposes. It has achieveda ruling to the effect that all the ex¬isting commitments between Chinaand Foreign Governments, and between China and Foreign Investors,shall be notified to the Conferenceand that all future commitments ofthat sort shall be notified immediatelyto the Governments represented in theConference. It has also elicited fromJapan a further extremely publicstatement of its intention to withdraw'from Siberia, and has spread thatstatement on the records of the Con¬ference with the evident idea thatpublicity is an important element inthe task of tunring the feet of Gov¬ernments toward the paths of virtue.Thus in one way and another, andby degrees now fast and now slow,we move toward giving internationalaffairs the same degree of public il¬lumination which can now be observedin domestic affairs by reading theCongressional Record.To Snap Wstern ClubThe Western club will have its pic¬ture taken at 12:30 Tuesday on theEast steps of Haskell. All membersplease be there.Patronize Our Advertisers The Chicago Symphony orchestrawill give a concert today at 4:15 inMandel hall under the auspices of theUniversity Orchestral association.Mr. Robert W. Stevens will lectureon today’s concert program at 3 inMitchell tower.The Christian Science society willmeet today at 7:30 in Haskell assem¬bly room.The Kent Chemical society meetstomorrow at 3 in Kent 14. Mr. E. D.Tweedell, assistant librarian, willspeak on the John Crerar library.The Inter fraternity council willmeet tomorrow at 7:30 in the Rey¬nolds club.Le Cercle Francais will hold a so¬cial hour tomorrow at 4:30 in theMaison Francais.A Review of Stockton’s “The Defini¬tion of Intelligence in Relation toModern Methods of Mental Measure¬ments,” w'ill be given by Miss Sim¬mons at a meeting of the Psycholog¬ical Journal club held tomorrow at4:30 in the Psychological laboratory.The Zoology club will meet tomor¬row at 4:30 in Zoology 29. Mr. Hoad-ley will give a review of Stieve’s“Concerning the Effect of Environ¬ment on the Ovary of Triton.”Members of the Varsity swimming,Water basketball and Freshmanswimming teams are asked to meettoday at 11:50 for their pictures. Menmust report in swimming suits.The Christian Science society willmeet tonight at 7:30 in Haskell as¬sembly hall. All are welcome.The Western club picture for theCap and Gown will be taken today at12 in front of Haskell.Martha Smait, Virginia Carpenter,Melvin Wamboldt, and Russell Pettitare requested to meet tomorrow at12, in Harper Mil.The Cap and Gown requests the fol¬lowing to be present in front of Cobbtomorrow at 12 in order to have theirpictures taken for the “Limelight”section of the year book: Mina Mor¬rison, Eleanor Pickett, Virginia Hib-ben, Dorothy Husband, Marge Moni-law, Dick Flint, Rus Ward, JackMoore, and Ed Blinks.BLACKFRIARS WILL USE TWOSETS IN 1922 PRODUCTION OPEN ADVERTISING COPYCONTEST TO STUDENTS(Continued from Pago 1)an announcement from the Blackfriaroffice, 30 men have reported for workin scenery construction.Samuels Wins Poster ContestRudolph Samuels has been announc¬ed as w inner of the poster contest.The winning poster will advertise theshow off campus and in the Univers¬ity bookstore.Final tryouts for cast parts will beheld tomorrow at 7:30 in the Rey¬nolds club theater. All men who madethe preliminary tryouts held at thelast meeting have been requested toreport to give the dialogues from theshow. They will also be required tosing. The cast will be announced af¬ter the tryouts held tomorrow night.Your best bet — MaroonClassified Ads bring results.Try one today!BOWMAN’S MILKis Whole Milk!The BOWMAN’S MILK you getin your home is just as rich incream as when it was taken fromthe cow.Nothing has been taken from it.Nothing has been added to it.It conies to you in all its orig¬inal richness and sweetness.Perfect pasteurization hy theBowman “holding” method de¬stroys all harmful bacteriawithout impairing the health-building vitamines so abundantin BOWMAN’S MILK.Ask our courteous driver toserve you.BOWMAN'S MILKA Surety of Purity Three contests are to be opened tostudents of the University and of Uni¬versity High school by the Mary’s LogCabin Candy Co. Prizes of $10 eachare to be offered for the three bestsuggestions, suitable for use by thecompany, one for the best idea for awindow display, one for the best pieceof advertising copy not more than 200words, and one for the best plan formarketing the Mary’s Log Cabin Can¬dies. All suggestions should bemailed in care of Commerce and Ad¬ministration, Box 10, by Feb. 14.Assistant Profs. Barnes and Lyon,and Mr. Greenberg, manager of thecompany will be the judges. Copy forthe contests will be given out in cer¬tain Political Economy classes as as¬signments. Full details of the con¬test will appear in the Daily Maroonon Thursday and Friday of this week. Former Maroon Editor WedsJohn Joseph, managing editor ofThe Daily Maroon in 1919-20, wasmarried Saturday, Jan. 28, to MissLorene Winn of Indianapolis, therebyculminating a school days’ romancethat had lasted over eight years.Joseph is now production manager ofthe McCutcheon-Gerson advertisingservice. An apartment at 9325 Van-derpoel Ave. has been burnished, andthe newlyweds will be at home afterFeb. 10.DO YOU KNOWThat a two ounce sack of popped corncontains as much food value as oneegg? Your corn is ready to eat whenyou buy it. The egg isn’t.GOODRICH1333 EAST 57th STREET COWHEY'SStore for MenMen’s Furnishings, Hats,Cape and NeckwearBilliardsCigars, Cigarettes, PipesE. Cor. 53th and Ellis Ave.Y. W. Dines Settlement HeadsThe Y. W. C. A. will be hostess ata banquet to the heads of the settle¬ments which are assisted by the Uni¬versity, Thursday, Feb. 2. Dean Wal¬lace has been asked to serve as toastmistress and speeches will be madeby the guests and faculty members. ENUSPENCILSNOTICE!By patronizing our ad¬vertisers you benefit your-jI self, our advertisers and The {♦ Daily Maroon. WHIPHARROWJomfit CollarCIuett.Pe.abo.ly & Co. Inc.Troy. N.Y. TTOR the student or prof.,the superb VENUS out¬rivals all for perfect pencilwork. 17 black degrees and3 copying.American LeadPencil Go. ^no FifthAve.New YorkTheselling Iquality pencil 'in the worldPhone Hyde Park 9650H. D. CALDWELLFLORISTFlowers for All Occasions1375 E. 53rd STREETCHICAGO VAN’S BAZAARA True Variety Store1119 East 55th St.Published inthe interest of Elec¬trical Development byan Institution that willbe helped by what¬ever helps theIndustry. This Junior is learningto be a bankerIF you are putting in three hours a day in the electricallab, don’t be surprised twenty years later to find your¬self promoting a public utility bond issue. Or if you startin newspaper work, as like as not later on you will turn tomanufacturing or advertising or law.You don’t know where opportunity or inclination willlead you. This fact has a great deal to do with your workat college — not so much the things you learn as the wayyou learn them.Don’t think of education as a memory test in names anddates and definitions. That knowledge is important, butonly as an incidental. Of far greater value is the habit ofgetting at underlying laws, the basic principles which tie factstogether.The work of the pioneers in electrical experiment, atfirst glance confusing, is simplified once you realize thatmuch of it hinged upon a single chemical phenomenon, theaction of (he voltaic cell.Analyze your problems. Look for fundamentals. Learnto connect a law or an event with what went before and whatcomes after. Make your education a training in logicalthinking.This ability to think straight, whether acquired inEngineering or Arts, is the biggest thing you can get atcollege. Its aid as a means to success applies equally towhatever work you take up—sinee mental processes are thesame everywhere. It is the power which enables a mechanicto become sales manager, a lawyer to head a great industrialorganization. Develop it, if you would be ready when yourbig opportunity comes.Astern Electric 'ttyThe executives of this Company have beenchosen from all branches of the organization.It doesn’t make much difference where youlearn to think straight, so longas you learn. /THo CampusFLIVVER GOLFThe object of the game is, as inlawn golf, to put the ball in the holein the fewest strokes.Who may play: Anyone possessinga four-wheeled motor vehicle may en¬ter. Bicyclers are barred.Any person afoot may serve as aball. If holes into which they maybe driven are not available, remove afew manhole covers.Hit the ball squarely. Any playertopping or slicing his drive will beserved with summons.It is illegal to pursue the ball in¬doors. The fairway, consisting of thepavement, and the rough, the side¬walks, are free territory.Professionals (those who have par¬ticipated under Yellow Cab rules)may not enter amateur contests.It is advisable to visit the nine¬teenth hole first. Players will thenhave twice as many objects to aim at.Mashie shots are legal but messy.THE FROSH president has ap¬pointed a sub-chairman. We thoughtthe Arms conference had settled thosethings.SOMEBODY asked Maurice Copeif he was helping out the Trib in theirlucky name contest. Reliable infor¬mation later was to the effect that itwas not he, but his brother, HoraceCope.M. S. NEWSFirst sarge: “Sir, the battery isformed.”B. C\: “All right, turn on the juice.”Hire Learning“I work at the Univresity-“You do?”“ cafe.”Frier.WHADDYA MEAN, FOOL?(A. P. Dispatch)Women use makeup to deceive,Commander Evangeline Booth of theSalvation Army said. “A woman hasno right to fool the world with arti¬ficial bloom,” she added.Birdie: Varsity the tailor featuresa suit in his window: “Uncalled forsuit, $15.” After seeing the suit, wereadily understand why.J.V.Z.URBANA FURORES“H. O. Rice, makeup man for theDaily Illini, had two toes severelysmashed when a page of The Illini fellon his foot. He was rushed to theBurnham hospital.”LECTURES WE SHALL NOTATTEND“Variations in the Cytology andGross Morphology of Taraxacum.”(Weekly Calendar.)WE MAY expect an exodus of cam¬pus flappers to Peru, if the informa¬tion dug up yesterday by Chuck Loef-fel becomes widely known.“The Incas buried quantities ofgold in Peru, much of which has neverbeen unearthed,” he read.THE CUB REPORTERThe cub reporter is so dumb hethinks Fraternity Row is a boat race.WHAT with suiciding co-eds, miss¬ing frosh, and campus style shows theold school is getting to be a sensa¬tional place.First thing we know they’ll be ad¬dressing our mail to Evanston.Birdie.RIGID RULINGS TO GOVERNSALE OF PROM TICKETSTHIS YEAR(Continued from page 1)have been taken, according to Lani-gan. and no more are available.Although the price of the ticketshas not been definitely set, it is ex¬pected that the admission slips willcost within the neighborhood of $6.00.Varying opinions as to whether wartax must be charged or not, are re¬sponsible for the delay in definitelyestablishing the price.The rules as laid down by the ticketcommittee are as follows:1. Tickets will be available onTuesday, Feb. 7.2. Tickets for non-fraternity menmay be reserved by letter addressedto Wallace H. Lanigan, 5737 Univers¬ity Ave., after Thursday morning,Feb. 2. A certain number has been set aside for this purpose and theywill be sold to those whose letters arereceived first. Letters received anytime before Thursday will not be con¬sidered. Any other applications thanby letter will not be considered.3. Tickets for fraternities will begiven to one member who must sub¬mit a list of the names of those whoare to use them. No changes will bemade in this list without the consentof the committee.4. The tickets are NOT TRANS¬FERABLE and the committee re¬serves the right to take up any whichmay be presented at the door by aperson other than the original pur¬chaser and to refuse admittance tosuch person.5. Persons who lose their ticketsor who come to the Prom withoutthem will positively not be admitted.6. The tickets reserved for thealumni have all been ordered by let¬ter and no more are available.LIBRARIES APPOINT DORF SU¬PERVISOR OF READING ROOM(Continued from Page 1)abroad, he spent the winter of 1910-11in Berlin and Rome, specializing inhistory and literature. After a timewith the New York public library hecame, in 1917, to the University.“While Dr. Dorf will endeavor tocontinue, in part, his work on classifi¬cation, it is expected that the majorpart of his time will soon be occupiedin advising and assisting students andothers who use the reading room forstudy purposes.“It is hoped that both students andmembers of the faculty will find thischange to their advantage, and thattheir cooperation and help may becounted on in this effort to strengthenthe reference service and to improvethe conditions under which studentshave to carry on their study while onthe campus.(Signed) “J. C. M. Hanson.”CLASSIFIED ADSLOST—Glasses in brown leather caseand card case containing personalcards, money and etc. Return toMiss Smith, No.“60, Green Hall.LOST—Large gray and white TomCat. Has V shaped notch out ofone ear. Fine house cat. Reward.Call Midway 3217.SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS—Themes, Term papers a specialty.Ethel I. Allen, Public Stenographer.807 East 63rd St. Midway 0272.WANTED—Salesmen, all or parttime for automobile, burglary, ac¬cident, health, life, and etc., insur¬ance. Only live wires need apply.Inquire of Cody, care Maroon office.HAMMOND TYPEWRITER—$25.00,leather carrying case; $60.00, Stev¬ens, 8 sets of type, good condition.Phone Wentworth 5469.ETHEL I. ALLEN, Pubilc Stenog¬rapher, 807 E. 63rd St., Midway0272. Special Rates to StudentsTerm papers a specialty.Photographs of Qualityat moderate prices837 E. 63rd StreetPhone Midway 3568Special Discounts to StudentsSUBSCRIBE FORTHE MAROONRATESQuarter YearCalled for $1.50 $3.00Delivered 2.00 4.00Mailed 2.00 4.00 In a program comprising repre¬sentative works of Schumann, Ber¬lioz, and Saint-Saens, the Chicagosymphony orchestra will hold its reg¬ular concert today at 4:15 in Mandelhall, under the direction of ConductorFrederick Stock. The re-orchestratedverston of Schumann’s “Rhenish”symphony, as conceived by Stock him¬self, lends additional interest to theprogram. The complete program isas follows:Overture to “Benvenuto Cellini,”Opus 23—Berlioz.Symphony No. 3, “Rhenish” in Eflat, Op. 97—Schumann.Lebhaft.Scherzo (sehr massig).Nicht Schnell.Feierlich.Lebhaft.(Arranged by Frederick Stock.)Prelude to “The Deluge,” Op. 45—Saint-Saens.Violin obbligato by Mr. JacquesGordon.“Midsummer Wake,” SwedishRhapsody—Alfven.Zeta Beta Tau Announces PledgeZeta Beta Tau onnounces the pledg¬ing of Morris Landwirth of MichiganCity, Ind.WANTEDA Young Man for PartTime Only.Good Money for the Right FellowAdolph Uhler22 QUINCY STREETWabash 8392 Suite 810. . C- 'COMINGValentine Dinner DanceOn Wednesday, February the 15th,there’ll be a Valentine party at theSisson. A special entertainment hasbeen arranged. A delightful dinner,too, at two dollars the plate. You’lllike it all—better be on hand!SISSON SOCIETYSYNCOPATORSEvery Wednesday and SaturdayLake Michigan at Fifty-Third StreetNEAREST BANK TO THEUNIVERSITY OF CHICAGONew Building Under ConstructionWoodlawn Trust& Savings Bank1204 E. SIXTY-THIRD ST.Under State and National SupervisionMWi Club Breakfast, 7:30-10:0025-30-35-40 centsWaffles and Light Refreshments,Special 50c Plate Dinner, 5 to 7THE SHANTY EAT SHOP1309 East 57th StreetThere must be some young man who is attending theUniversity at this time who started out with the idea thathe would select a college career for the reason that he hadnot found himself and for the additional reason that hedid not see any opportunity for breaking into any line ofbusiness that would offer him the chance for a successfulfuture unless he went to College and secured an educa¬tion that fitted him for a profession or otherwise.Perhaps this young man is at the present time think¬ing that, if he could get an opportunity today of breakinginto a first-class live growing organization that would of¬fer him a remarkable opportunity for his future develop- ,ment and also offer him a position that would give him avery lucrative income in the future, he would be veryglad to make such a connection.Any young man 2 1 or over that has intelligence andlots of energy and the determination to be square and dothe right thing and work real hard, can secure an oppor¬tunity in cur organization today. Naturally we are par¬ticular and we want personal references that will bearscrutiny and are satisfactory in every way.E. W. COX616-226 West Adams StreetPHONE STATE 4700 FOR AN APPOINTMENTT HOUSANDS of smokers have proved it—and nowgive the verdict to youOf all the other tobaccos NATURE has produced— none can approach the finest varieties of pure Turkishfor cigarettes—None has the delicious FLAVOR t f the finest Turkish—None gives the ENJOYMENT of the finest Turkish—None will SATISFY you as w ill the finest Turkish—None but the highest grade and personally selectedTurkish tobaccos is used in MURAD.To enjoy 100'/c pureTurkish at its VERYBEST—to reach thePEAK of CigaretteQuality—you have butto smoke MURAD —Try MURAD to¬day and“ Judge forYourself—!**