THE MICGHIGA N ILL _________________ ., ____. _ ..__..._.w. _. _. ! ._ __... _ _. _ __ _ t , SOPHOMORE PROM COMMITTEE MAKES FINAL PREPARATIONS FOR ANNUAL FPORMIL PARTY r I a I i Advertising Head To Address Group PROFESSOR VIBBERT DISCUSSES TECHNICALITY OF FRENCH STUDY "In the French universities, the' war, Professor Vibbert stated, the T-f et IL Tni I E. St. EImo Lewis, advertising Is authority and lecturer, will ad- i Favors Consisting Of Small Leather Purses To Be Distributed .At Union Today REOORAMS TO BE TAKEN Featuring a well-known night club band with a leader of unusual- ly wide experience in this field, the Sophomore Prom, the annual formal party of the second year class, and the first big event in the campus social calendar of the year, will be held Friday evening in the Union ballroom. Favors for the party, to be a small leather purse in the Michi-I gan colors-maize and blue, will be distributed ostarting 1 o'clock to- morrow afternoon at the side desk in the lobby of the Union. They will be securable from 1 to 5 o'clock each' afternoon at this desk. To receive the favor, a ticket must be presented. The regular favor cou- pon will not be taken at this time, but the card will be punched to signify that the holder has received the favor. Tickets are sold each afternoon at the Union desk and in the main corridor of Angell hall. Arrangements for the party have practically been completed by the prom'committee, which is headed by Walter Yeagley, '31. Christmas decorations, including several trees, red and green wreathes, and mis-_ tltoe will be used to give a moe artistic appearance to the Union ballroom. Dancing at the Prom will be from 9 until 1 o'clock it was an- nounced yesterday by the commit- tee. At 11 o'clock a grand march, lead by Yeagley and his partner will be held. A block "M" will then be formed, and the official flash- light picture will be taken. "Reo- gram" moving pictures will be taken of the march, the formation Cost Of Education Doubled Since 1900 The cost of a higher education is twice the price of the same edu- cation in 1900, and the average yearly cost of attending college is $581.00; these two facts are part of a number of figures collected by the United States bureau of edu- cation, after a survey of 1,100 col- leges throughout the country. The $581.00 includes everything spint, tuition fees, books, board and room, clothing, and entertain- ment. Of course this figure means sticiking very close to an establish- ed budget, and a minimum of the last item,-entertainment. Other parts of the investigation of the bureau include the follow- ing: Tuition in public controlled schools for arts and science courses average $137.00 for a nine-months term. Law courses cost about $50.- 00 a year more than the above fig- ure The average cost of board and room amounts to $276.00 for the college year. The. yearly average for books and stationary is ap- proximately $20.00. $36.00 is the laundry average.The average min- imum for entertainment is $12.00. With the above figures it is cer- tainly hard to discover where all the money goes to. Included in the report of the bu- reau was the following remark, "Travel should not necessarily add much to the students expenses. For with good roads and the varied means of transportation now avail- able, an energetic student will find a way to keep dfown the costs of travel." This sounds very much like an advocation of the past time of hitch-hiking. " _ ___ - dress students of the school of' of the M". , Characteristic pic- Business Administration and alle tures of the function in general others who may be interested, ind will also be photographed. a speech to be delivered at 4:15 . Refreshments for the party will o'clock tomorrow afternoon inn be punch, it was also announced room 101 of the Economics build- yesterday. ing. Jimmie Green, the director of "Changing Conditions in the t the night club band that will play Field of Advertising" is the an- for the Prom, has had a varied nounced subject of Lewis' speech.f p experience in this field. He start- He will probably dwell on the grow- ed after a career as pianist and ing tendency toward the use of re-s saxaphonist on one of the leading search methods as a basis in ad- u vaudeville circuits of the country, vertising campaigns, according to in which he played at the Balaban Professor Griffin. , and katz theaters in Chicago. He Lewis was associated for manyt then became director of the Blos- years with the 'ampbell Ewaldo som Heath Entertainers, originally company, a Detroit advertising of the Blossom Heath Inn, on Long agency. At various times he has I Island, but which travelled about been a lecturer at Harvard uni-i the country considerably, gaining versity, the University of Pennsyl- n nation-wide fame. The band vania, and .Northwestern univer-t which he is bringing here Friday sity. night is noted for its performances At present Lewis is a free lance at the Garden of Allah night club advertising and marketing con- in Chicago.: It has been called sultant, Professor Griffin said. In it back four times to the Garden aft- this capacity, he is called into con-s er its contract had expired. ference by advertising agencies and even more by companies con- Campbell Will Not templating extensive advertising C m l campaigns to advise as to methods Remain At Harvard of ;marketing and advertising a given product, or series of products. Prof. 0. J. Campbell of the Ln> I,"The School of Business Admin- lish department has been granted istration is very glad to be able leave by the University to fill a to bring Mr. Lewis to town," said visiting professorship chair. at Professor Griffin yesterday. "He is Harvard during the second seme- a nationally known authority in ster of the present school year. his field and has a reputation as His work will be in comparative a very able lecturer." I literature, teaching a course to1 The general public is invited to graduates in European comedy attend the lecture. There will be since the Renaissance and a course no admission charge. to juniors and seniors in the Euro- I pean novel since Balzac. WASHINGTON, Dec. 11-The As visiting professor in English, Jones-Dill bill, authorizing the Professor Campbell will follow secretary of interior to make a sur- Prof. Charles J. Sisson of the Uni- vey of the Columbia river basin ir- versity of London, editor of the rigation project was passed with- "Year Book of English Studies," out a dissenting vote today by the who has been at Harvard this Senate. semester. Spiking rumors to the effect that he was considering a call to accept a permanent chair at Harvard, D A N C I N G Professor Campbell said yesterday that he had not considered accept- at the ing such an offer. He will return Ar or to the University next September. i Every WASHINGTON, D.. C.-Funds totaling nearly $4,000,000 are lent Wednesday and annually by 282 colleges and uni- versities to students of character Saturday N ite and ability to enable them to finish their college education. In addition more than 100 agen- Park Plan cies and foundations maintain in- dependent loan funds, Walter J. Greenleaf, associate specialist in Everybody higher education, Bureau of Edu- Welcome cation, found in a study of student loan funds just .completed. I:.' liiliiillililllllll1 ill if lllllllliillllltlll1 1lllitil1 ilillllillillilll lllI IIIII SFRATERNITIES --SORORITIES GIVE US A TRIAL ON ALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS Printing That Pleases' >S -Th jn l. fbr 6etter impresson 711 N. Univ Ave. Phone 8805 (Over Geo. Moe's)_I illliillliili 1111lIIIII~111l~ l111l111111iliiiilll111IIIIIIIIIU IU I1111111U11 I-f 'IFAMC& students' work is regarded as pri- 'licence' (or diploma, which gives to m.arify technical," said Prof. Clar- its holder the privilege of teach- ying) could only be obtained in ence B. Vibbert, of the philosophy specialized subjects. With the ad- department, speaking on the Uni- vent of the war and many Ameri- versity of Paris at the bi-monthly can soldiers in France, several new meeting of the Men's Educational courses in more general subjects club last night. "Those working were added. It -was found that there are considered as technicians these were such of an advantage to be, or future teachers. to the university that they were re- "The University of Paris," Pro- tamed, so now a 'licence' in an e UnVibbersweton,"ParsPro-Iacademic curricula may be had, but fessor Vibbert went on, "knows no wtottepiieeo ecig such think as a general 'college ed- itout the privilege of teaching. ucation' in the sense in which that Today, the University of Paris is term is used in this country, since one of the most international in- the students' general cultural stitutions in the world. Eleven na- training is completed in the lisee' d tions have, at present, dormitory or secondary school." buildings in the "University City" Professor Vibbert proceeded to among which are numbered the sketch briefly the history of the United States, Great Britain, University of Paris from its begin- China, Belgium and other world ning in the twelfth century A. D. powers. to its present form and administra- It is expected by the authorities tion. The university is one of the of the university that 33 nations oldest in the western world and will be represented there within the its history is inseparable from the next decade. intellectual history of France and scholasticism. Subscribe to The Michigan Daily, Up until the close of the World 1$4.00 a year. Wieman, Tapping Return From Tour -C Coach Tad Wieman and T. Hawley Tapping, field secretary of the Alumni association returned this morning from a four-day trip to meetings of alumni clubs in the vicinity of the Great Lakes. They were in Escanaba, Friday EPORK Sj I-leaping plates of ju Sausage sizzling hot a NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF RETAILING Service Fellowships Retailing is an attractive field for college graduates. Experience in department stores is linked with instruction. Master of Science in Retailing degree granted upon comple- tion of one year of graduate work. Illustrated booklet on request. For further information write Dr. Norris A. Brisco, Dean, New York University School of Retailing, Washington Square East, New York City. r. s J.3J. MELLON. Ceneral hEngineer, Rensselaer. '24 J M.CUNNINGHAM. Po-werrEutineer, Colorado School of -Mines, 22 J. F. KOVALSKY, Contract A drnstration w. T. N. S., '24 I 1 CLARENCE LAYNN. YOU NG ER C O L L E G E M E N CL~EC N Designing E-naneer °University of Kansas, .,9 ON RE CE NT W ESTING HOUS E JO BRS The Largest Hot Strip Mill in the World Subscribe to $4.00 a year. The Michigan Daily, a op /± . Wool a l Where doyoung college menget in a large industrial. organization? Have they opportunity to exercise creative talent? Is individual work recognized? S QUEEZED between giant rolls, heated steel bars flatten to form steel sheets for the bodies of the automobile§ that our mod- ern hurrying America demands. So rapidly has this demand of Middletown, Ohio, recently found it necessary to install a "hot strip" mill larger than any before. Such record-breaking capacity brought with it a train of new problems. Electric control had to be devised to keep the big 3,000 and 4,ooo hp. D. C. motors "in step" and prevent irregularities in thickness or quality of the fin- ished sheets. Huge generators and grown within the past few years that the American Roll- ing Mill Company, E A EBUSERS B UYV Aft WesIt.i -se uw YOUR-~I -- -- ,'- -