- FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1931 SEVEN SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Impostors Sell Magazines Peddlers Say They Are Working Way Through College "The "working my way through college" gag is being exercised on the University campus by peddlers claiming a connection with various other institutions, according to reports received in the office of Dean Agnes Husband. Mrs. D. R. Eryant, assistant to the dean of women, said that the office had received reports concerning a car bearing an Arkansas license which comes to the campus during the hours when few University employees are around and two men approach students with the plea that the duty of every well-wisher for education is to help them through college by purchasing magazines. She warns Summer Session people that the University has a rule against selling on the campus and that this particular scheme is a recognized hoax in any event. Kansan Reprints Directory The first section of the student directory was republished in Tuesday's Kansan as originally printed in order to supply a demand from persons who failed to get the paper. Copies of the reprinted section may be secured at the Kansan business office. Mr. George O. Foster, registrar of the University, told of a similar scheme which was being worked at another school in which the culprits, when caught, said they were from this institution. The school records here did not contain their names. Read the Kansan Want Ads. LEAVENGOOD IS SELECTED FOR VIOLIN PROFESSORSHIP Luther Leavengood, for the past two years a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts of the University, has been selected by Dean Luke L Gaskell, as professor of violin of the Baker University conservatory of music. Mr. Leavengood has his music degree from the University. For 12 years he has played in the orchestras of Carl Busch, Forrest Schulz, and N. DeRubertis, all of Kansas City, and did special work under Leon Samentine of Chicago Musical College. At present he is also director of the choir at the First Christian church of Lawrence. "Melting Pot" Is Approved Racial Mixture May Be Source of National Progress Racial mixtures are not the unmitigated evil imagined by many propagandists and politicians. They may, on the contrary, be the source of great national vigor and progress. This is, in essence, a major thesis defended before the opening session of the American Association for the Advancement of Science recently, by its president, Prof. Franz Boas of Columbia University, one of the foremost anthropologists in the world. "Let us recall to our minds the migrations that occurred in early times in Europe," he said, "when the Celts of Western Europe swept over Italy and eastward to Asia Minor, when the Germanic tribes migrated from the Black Sea westward into Italy, Spain and even into North Africa; when the Slavs expanded northwestward over Russia, and southward into the Balkan Peninsula; when the Moors held a large part of Spain, when Roman and Greek slaves disappeared in the general population, and when Roman colonization affected a large part of the Mediterranean area. It is interesting to note that Spain's greatness followed the period of greatest race mixture, that its decline set in when the population became stable and immigration stopped. Jayhawk Taxi TAXI 65 Ike Guffin Fords and Burks The Cafeteria COUNTER IS CLOSED FRIDAY EVENING because of the School of Education Banquet OPEN AGAIN Saturday Morning and Noon The Cafeteria CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING or WANT ADS Are the most economical means of reaching the public Whatever Your Needs Call K. U. 66 or Call at the Office FOR Summer Session Kansan SERVICE