COLLEGE COMMUNICATIONS WELCOME 3 We welcome you, old and new, to K.U. and to the school year 1937-1938, We hope the summer was kind to you and that this year will bring you deep satisfaction through your work and your associations with both students and colleagues, SUGGESTED RESOLUTIONS Resolved to: 1. Inform ourselves about the affairs of the University and particularly the Rules and Regulations of the College Faculty as printed in the 1937-1938 Regulations Regerding Enrollment. 2. Attend all Faculty meetings. We prom- ise to have no more meetings than are necessary and to make them just as short as possible without being too hard on the members who like to talk. People who attend these meetings regularly are usuai- ly well informed about the affairs of the College; and the converse is usually true. 3. Visit the College Office at least once a semester--not on business, but simply for a visit. All of us in the office would like to know all of you better. 4. Remember that the dean is simply try- ing to execute the orders and wishes of the Faculty. He doesn't have a single speck of authority that the Faculty has not delegated to him. If, therefore, you feel he is exercising ungranted authority, call him down. If he is enforcing regula- tions you do not like, get the Faculty to change the regulations. CHANGED SCHEDULES The blue schedules are for Freshmen and Sophomores and not just for Freshmen, as in the past. These schedules show the new group arrangement and are to be used for all students presenting the new form of the transcript, The white schedules are for Juniors and Seniors and show the old group arrangement, They are to be used for all students having the old transcript form. September 10, 1937 GROUP MAJORS FOR TEACHERS Please note in the schedule the notices regarding the new Group Majors for prospective teachers in the Physi--. cal, Biological, and Social Sciences. SOCIAL SCIENCE SURVEY CORRECTION The Social Science Survey courses should be listed in the blue schedule under Division III, Field B. PLEASE READ CAREFULLY | In the 1937-1938 Regulations Regarding Enrollment the following sections are new in whole or in part. Every member of the Faculty should read them care= Fuliys Section I, 4,6,9,10,11,12,13. Section II, 4,9. Section III, 4. HERE AND THERE "Unless a man undertakes more than he can possibly do, he will never do all that he can do."“--Henry Drummond. "The man who halted on third base to congratulate himself failed to make a home run," "The highest service of the educated man to our democratic society demands of him breadth of interest as well as depth of technical research, It requires unquench- ed ardor for the best things, spontaneous delight in the play of mind and character, a many—-sided responsiveness that shall keep a man from hardening into a mere high-geared machine, It is these quali- ties that perfect a liberal education and complete a man's usefulness. to his generation, Taken by themselves, they fit him primarily for living, rather than for getting a living,"--Bliss Perry.