UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN GEORGE O. FOSTER IS BACK Registrar Returns From Meeting at Richmond, Va.-Has No Recommendation on Enrolling Registrar George O. Foster is back in his office after a week spent at the meeting in Richmond, Va., but is not ready to make any recommendations for the betterment of the enrollment system. Forty-eight institutions were represented at the registrars' convention. Some of the more prominent schools were Harvard, Columbia, Michigan, Texas, Virginia, Carnegie Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Vermont. On the trip he visited William and Marys college, the oldest institution in the United States and the home of the Phi Beta Kappa fraternity, Hampton Institute where Booker T. Washington got his first education, and the University of Virginia. NAMES MEN WHO WILL GO TO ST. LOUIS TRACK MEET Mamger Hamilton announced today the list of men who will represent K. U. in the St. Louis Indoor Tour on Saturday evening, March 14. They are: Ellswick Cissna, Fiske, O'Neil, Smee, Henderson, Davis, Creighton, Hazen, Edwards, Poos, and Reber. Sigma Kappa has pledged Ruth O Dyche, of Pratt. Sigma Delta Phi gave a party at Ecke's Hall, Saturday night. Kappa Sigma entertained with a dance at the chapter house Friday evening. New Shirts New Suits THE young man who knows what's what in styles, value, appearance wears a Stetson as a matter of course- We pride ourselves on the completeness of our Stetson stocks feature the new developments while they are new—and do a big business in Stetsons. An hour's visit with our Stetson department is time well spent. Come visit us a while. Johnson & Carl New Caps New Neckwear The Clothes Question College clothes are different. Our advertisers will show you the correct solution. Ober's Johnson & Carl Peckhams J. House & Sons Skofstad They will appreciate it if you tell them you "saw it in the Kansan." COLLEGE TEAM WINS A GAME Defeats St. Marys 36 to 22—Brown Stars For K. U.-2500 See The Game The College basketball team defeated the St. Mary's team 36 to 22 last night at St. Marys. Twenty-five hundred saw the game. brown starred for K. U., making seven baskets. Ms McSweeney was the star for St. Marys. Lamar Hoover of Baker refereed. The line-up: The line-up: K. U. Brown Bramine, Laird Strachan Painter Walters Melville R. F. L. F. C. R. G. St. Marys, Bellieu McSweeney Dondonville Isly Sullivan, Quinn greeks Arrange For Game To Settle Pan-Hellenic Championship— Divisions are Drawn FRATERNITIES TO PLAY BALI A committee has been appointed from the Pan-Hellenic council to organize an inter-fraternity baseball league for the coming season. Teams from each fraternity will contest for the championship of the University. The teams are divided and the final winner will from all of its division will play the winning team from the other division for the championship. The second division is composed of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Psi, and Alpha Tau Omega. The first division consists of the following members: Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Beta Theta Pi. 19 K. U. ATHLETES TO GO TO K. C. A. C. TRACK MEET The following athletes from the University of Kansas will compete in the Kansas City Athletic Club Track Meet at Hall Saturdays on March 7th. 'O'Neil, Henderson, Edwards, Poos, Creighton, Hazen, Blinne, Bousey, Hilton, Cissma, McColmson, Perry, Thompson, Dar, Fake, Fluse, Thompson, and McKay. AMUSEMENTS Eva Tanguy, the cyclonic one dienne comes to the Bowersock Monday, March 9, matinee and night Miss Tanguy's greatest success has been in singing about herself. Every little experience she has, is put into verse, and when she comes to this city she will tell in song some of her recent experiences in musical comedy and with vaudeville and other managers. Then she'll tell all about the vaudeville manager who about that she was "lucky to get by" with her act. She just keeps one on the edge of expectancy and she is generous with encores, singing and dancing until she is pretty near out of breath and has to give up simply out of sheer exhaustion. There are always demands for "I Don't Care." perhaps the most famous song of Miss Tanguy's repertoire. Miss Tanguy on her coming visit will not confine herself entirely to songs. She gives her own interpretation of "Salome," with beautiful stage settings and exquisite beadwork. She is the director for which Miss Tanguy received $3,500 a week in New York theatres. MISS EVA TANGUAY This is Miss Tanguya's second annual tour at the head of her own company, and she has surrounded herself with people who usually occupy headline positions in vaudeville theaters throughout the country.—Adv. CHEMICAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE OF WONDERS Comparatively Unknown, it Directs, Production of Half the Kansas Wealth The meeting of prominent chemical engineers of the west at the University of Kansas Friday directed attention to a science which but resembled biology, vision, and which is comparatively unknown to most Kansans. Yet is a science that guards the prosperity of industries producing half the wealth of Kansas and comprehends the best paid of professional men. The chemical engineer is the modern genie of the land. His science today accomplishes wonders greater than the dreams of medieval alchemist. It has unlocked the sunrise of past ages stored in bode of coal. Who presides at the birth of metals in the mine supervises their smelting in the foundry and directs their fashioning into articles of usefulness? The chemical engineer. Who combines the need with the needs of the manufacturer, to the mutual benefit of both? The chemical engineer. One-third of the wealth of Kansas is mineral wealth. Last year the value of the coal mined in the state was $11,500,000. The value of the gas produced was $4,400,000. Portland cement was $300,000 in Kentucky and $80,000 in Tennessee and zinc mine was $15,000,000. Salt mine brought $844,000. Oil wells produced $444,000. Gypas mills ground out $880,000 worth of plaster. Brick kilns baked $1,100,000 worth of brick, tile, and terra cotta. And all these industries are operated under the direction of expert graduate chemical engineers. Add to this the meat packing and soap business which employs the fragrant interests of the state. These establishments employ most of the chemical engineers graduated at the University of Kansas. And the soil itself, the basis and foundation of all agricultural wealth, is perhaps the greatest field in which chemical engineering may work for the betterment of mankind. When the soil languishes and that matter are called on to refresh it and to bring it to its original state of productivity. The University of Kansas maintains the only school of chemical engineering in the state. It graduates each year lean, fume-toughened chemists who at once take leading positions in the working industrial field. The chemical engineering course is said to be the hardest on the hill, but at the same time to be worth the most in dollars and cents to the graduate. BIG EDITORS TO VISIT KANSAS CONFERENCE Charles H. Grasty and Wilbur D. Nesbit Join K. U. List of Speakers Charles H. Grasty and Wilbur D. Nesbitt today joined the list of men who will travel to Kansas to address the National Newspaper Conference during the Kansas Newspaper Week at the University of Kansas May 11-14. Mr. Grassy, president of the Baltimore Sun, and a former director of the Associated Press, will talk on "Publicity—The New Force Behind the New Freedom to Invade" with Joy enjoys a reputation as an advertising man, a poet, and a humorist, will speak on "Newspaper Humor and Advertising." Among other visitors to the conference will be Mark Sullivan, editor of Colliers; James Melvin Lee, formerly editor of Judge; George McCormick, manager for the Wanamaker and Siegel-Cooper stores, who will make an address on "How Kansas Editors Can Get National Advertising and Promotion," in the United Press Association. Invitations have been sent to Oswald Garrison Villard, Melleville E. Stone, Lyman Abbott, Hamilton Holt, Samuel G. Blythe, Will Irwin, George Horace Washington Gladden, Franklin Leroy Blanchard, S. S. McClure, Henry King and a score of others. Don Seitz, business manager of the New York office of the University of Kansas. Mr. Seitz has already tentatively agreed to come. Kansas Newspaper Week is attracting considerable attention at Washington, because of the fact that the state editors and national newspapermen who will attend, will be welcomed, that has been proposed in many states against the press and will recommend just measures for its regulation, if such be needed. Subscribe for the Daily Kansan. Your Education Free One Thousand Dollar Scholarships The Opportunity to Win One of Our FREE SCHOLARSHIPS is now yours If you are working your way through college, funds low—no money in sight—will you "drop" you in June or return next year? You will want to come back. Our plan will make it possible. You can win a scholarship worth $250.00 or $1000.00. Over 1000 students working under our direction have already earned such scholarships. This plan of awarding cash scholarships has been endorsed by college presidents and university employment bureaus from Maine to California as a sure means of winning a college eduction. This plan brings success to the many, not the few For Particulars See IRA M. SMITH 1338 Ohio Ave. Western Representative Review of Reviews Scholarship Fund Bell 2056 Hours 2 to 6 p. m. 7 to 8 p. m. MARCH 2-3-4 BOWERSOCK OPERA HOUSE Matinee & Night 9 Mon., March THE WORLD'S GREATEST ENTERTAINER EVA CYCLONIC DYNAMIC TANGUAY AND HER GREAT COMPANY 9--GREAT ACTS--9 VOLCANIC VAUDEVILLE From the leading stages of the world's capitals. MISS TANGUAY will sing her latest songs and will also present her original version of SALOME AND THE WALTZ AND THE TANGO A-LA-TANGUAY. Matinee. . . . . . . . . . . . 2:30 Night. . . . . . . . . . . . 8:15 **PRICES** PRICES AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA CURTAIN ...2:30 Night. . . . Night Performance: Maline Performance: First 11 rows, parquet. $1.50 First 11 rows, parquet. $1.00 Next 6 rows, parquet. $1.00 Next 6 rows, parquet. $1.00 Next 5 rows, balcony. $1.00 First 3 rows, balcony. $7.50 Next 5 rows, balcony. $7.50 Next 5 rows, balcony. $5.00 All second balcony. $5.00 All Second balcony. $2.50 MAIL ORDERS received and filled now when accompanied by check and stamped envelope for return of tickets. Address Sherman Wiggins, Manager, Bell Phone 106. Matinee Performance: Inspiring to The Young Man are the stories of achievement in Civil Engineering Graduates of the School of Engineering of the University of Kansas have had an important part in many of the modern marvels of engineering work, from the carrying through of the greatest irrigation projects to the planning and construction of the unique sea-going railroad on the Florida Keys. Address Vocation Editor UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Lawrence, Kansas