1 2. NEW STRUCTURES WILL ADD TO CAMPUS BEAUTY Lines Stadium and Union Building Area Planned on Modern REQUIREMENTS ARE MET Descriptions Show That All Needs Have Been Considered by Architects With another drive for the Stadium-Union close at hand, many of the Summer Session students who were not here in the regular term are rather anxious to know just what they are being asked to subscribe to a MOM call to K. U.'s war heroes in the shape of a hummingbird stadium built on a campus as a University building modeled after the one at Michigan, are proposed. The Stadium, as planned, will be u-shaped and constructed entirely of concrete. There will be a quarterterm running track with a 220-yard extension. Tennis courts and a practice field will be adjacent to the open end of the U, which is to open to the hockey field. Students take in most of McCook and Hamilton Fields and some of the ground to the north of McCook Field. The U will be 620 feet long and 465 feet wide. The width of the stand itself will be uniformly 100 feet and the height will vary from three feet at the bottom to forty-two feet at the top. There are forty rows of seats and the space allowance for each seat will be eighteen by twenty-eight inches. The entire deck of the structure will be a concave upward so that all spectators will be able to see everything going on in the field below. The seating is constructed of two-boot inch wooded planks raised above the concrete. The main entrance and ticket offices will be in the north or closed of the structure. There will be exits at such intervals as will safely handle a large crowd. There will be ample parking space for cars and the street car line will be one block east of the stadium. This Stadium will be one of the largest in the United States and one of the most scientifically arranged. The largest stadium is the Yale Bowl which has a seating capacity of 61,000, while the oldest Stadium is the Harvard Stadium, originally built to seat 23,000 but now with a capacity of 45,000. The Princeton U holds 42,000 persons. The University of Washington is constructing one with a capacity of 60,000. THE UNION BUILDING The definite plans for the Union Building have not as yet been decided upon, but it is looked upon by many as the real memorial to the men who paid the supreme sacrifice for the country. The big thing about the Union is that it offers a get-together place for the students and alumni of the University that it is otherwise impossible to obtain. The Union will be the center of all student activities in the University where all the clubs and organizations connected with the University may have headquarters. Here too the activities are more easily controlled than at present. It will make possible for the University to invite and properly entertain conventions and will afford a comfortable homelike place for the returning alumnums to make his headquarters while in town. A union building would emphasize and bring out strongly the democracy of a state university and bring together more and more every person in the institution. it is expected that the Union will make possible a closer association of the groups of the University through the proposed cafeteria, dining rooms and other facilities which tend to give to the University a more united strength and spirit. Contract Award Will Be Made Very Soor (Continued from page 1.) president of the Memorial Corporation. There are twenty-one directors. An executive committee trunts掌 the routine business of the Memorial and supervises the campaign plans. Members of this committee are Chancellor Lindley, Irving Hill, T. J. Swensen, the banker who attends K. U. fifty years ago; Thornton Cooke and R. J. Delano, leading Kansas City alumni; W. J. Baumgartner and F. C. Allen, director of athletics. Alfred G. Hill, secretary of the Alumni Association, is secretary of the Memorial corporation. Registrar George O. Foster is treasurer. SOCIETY The Spanish club which is situate at the Sigma Kappa house is one of the live summer organizations on the Hill. A Spanish tertulia is held or Thursday night of each week. The feature of last night's meeting was a written report by Agnes Jeffries, c22 and Marjorie Steele, c22, who are majoring in the department. On Saturation Plan to plan to Kansas City to spend the day. The club had a picnic on the Fourth of July. J. B. Ramsey, former instructor in the chemical department has returned from California where he has been instructor in the University of California. Mr. Ramsey will return there this fall. Seventeen students in entomology work are spending the day at Rock Creek. The forenoon work planned was that of collecting a picnic lunch and the afternoon spent in a way pleasing to the students. Clarice Gardner spent several days in Kansas City with friends. Frieda Lewis spent several days in aransas City. Emmet Tuttle spent the weekend in Kansas City. edna King visited with friends over the weekend at Emporia. Ronald Dilz attended a house party last week end at Neodosha. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Rader of Sedan announce the birth of a daughter, Helen Louse, Mrs. Rader was formerly Amy Gladys V安 Horn and was an assistant in the chemistry department. Mr. Rader received his LLB. degree at K. U, and is at present county attorney at Sedan. Josephine Fulcher, a student of Manhattan, visited here with friends last weekend. Jack Stewart spent the weekend at Manhattan and Alta Vista. Asa Tenney spent Wednesday A1 Topeka. Lloyd Buikstra spent the weekend in Kansas City, Mo. The Walling Club gave a dance Wednesday evening. Twenty guests were present. Lois Ferguson and Alvina Hults of Topela visited last weekend at the Alpha Delta Pi house with Kathleen Hood. Josephine Tector, of Ottawa, a student in the Summer Session, became ill with apendicitis last week and was sent home to treatment. When she was operated on Thursday, Raymond Dyer, c24, spent the Fourth of July in Iola visiting with friends. Martha Banker, A.B.29, who was a guest of Florine Shoemaker at her house in Severy, accompanied her to the Chihuahua city of friends at the Chi Omega house. Mrs. Catherine Burnett, of the correspondence study section of the Extension Division, has gone to her home in Kansas City. AN EDUCATIONAL CREED [The following creed was read by Prof. Merle Prunty before the Men's Forum Wednesday and is published by request.] "I believe that education is the strong defense of a free nation, and that ignorance is a curse to any people. I believe that the free public school system of the United States is the best guarantee of the rights vouchsafed to us by the constitution, and that other public schools of the land are the cradle of our democracy, and that in class rooms and upon the playgrounds, where the sons and daughters of the street sweeper and railroad magnate, of day laborer and multimillionaire meet on an equal footing and stand upon their own individual merits, the lessons of democracy and fraternity are best taught. I believe that the hope of the child is that the battleground of the world is the heart of the child, and that Government fails at its source when it ceases to make ample provision for the development and nurture of its future citizens." FREED L. SHAW, Supt. of Public Instruction of South Dakota. - * * * * * * * * * * * * * * THE SUMMER SESSION KANSAN The Summer Session Kansan is publishing the names and Lawrence addresses of the Summer Session students as rapidly as space will permit. The following is additional to the list that was started in the Kansan for Tuesday, June 21: Roll of Summer Session Students Prosser, Francis Ware, 1005 Ind. Pugh, Clifford H., 1043 Ind. Pumley, Harry H., 14th. Puney, David H., 1215 Oread. Quackenbush, L. O., 1001 Miss. Quecker, Gilbert H., Sigma Nu hous Rachel, John A., 1001 Miss. Raney, Frank L. Readio, Philip A., 919 Ind. Reamin, Fred C., 1222 Miss. Reeyler, Emil, 308 W, 16th. Reynolds, Adrian W, 1720 La. Reynolds, Basil, 820 Ohio. Reynolds, Thomas H. Richards, Walter M. Rieger, Herbert, Ala. Rieger, Herbert, M, 831 Ky. Rinehart, Wm, G, 1341 Mass. Burt, Tert R. Roberts, Harold H, 719 La. Robinson, Harold M, 1246 Oread. Robinson, Ernest F, 1237 Oread. Robinson, Hugh E. Robson, Robert, 1288 Ohio. Rogers, Jacob, H, 920 La. Rogers, Wilmer K, 1140 La. Follow, R. Herbert. Rose, Marion M. Rose, Marion M, (Continued from last issue.) (Continued from last issue.) WOMEN Pyle, Mary Llewellyn, 1317 Mass. Quinn, Grace Katherine, 1116 Ind. Nacotinhuy, Idaa, 1708 Mass. Ramsheimer, Billem, H. J. Ramsheimer, Billem, W. 19. Witt. Rankin, Mrs. Paul C., 1600 H.庐, Laurine Marne, 124 Oread Scott, Hazel Louise, 1122 Ohio. Sexton, Nina Lera, 127 E. 17th. Seymour, Mabel, 126 E. 17th. Elizabeth, 1645 Barker. Shepherd, Finmore, 132 La. Shepherd, Mary Elizabeth, 132 La. Tenn. Tenn., 1319 Tenn. Siler, Nora, 900 Illinois. Simmone, Edith Naomi, 1011 Ind. Sisson, Grace Mary, 1236 La. Seymour, Mabel, 126 E. 17th. Smiley, Mrs. Ruth H., 1291 Oread. Smiley, Blanche C., 1423 N. Y. Smith, Esther B., 1128 Tenn. Smith, Indiana, 1088 W. 10th St. Sopher, Maude Myrtle. Speck, Clara Marie, 1205 K. Stevens, Melissa, 1270 W. 10th St. Spierer, Miriam Russell, 413 W. 14th. Stanley, Constance E., Haskell Inst. Stanley, Dorothy J., 1236 Oread Stevens, Caroline Frances, 1121 La. Stevenson, Wayne Bernice. Stilson, Gladys Larsen, 1144 Miss Stilson, Dorothy J., 1236 Oread Stevens, Caroline Frances, 1121 La. Strafford, Jan Augustus, 1142 Ind. Stuart, Mrs Celia Louse, 916 Vt. Ungrueh, Nellis, 1247 Oread Stuert, Arnums Whitney, 2235 Mass. Sutton, Eleanor K., 1304 Tenn. Sweigert, Gladys Naima, 914 Vt. Taylor, Lora, 1246 Miss Tector, Josephine, 1220 Oread Teserman, Pearl, 1706 Vt. Thomas, Aileen Lola, 1312 Ohio. Thomas, Helene Laze, 2043 Miss Thomas, Edythe Eldyke, 1150 Tenn. Troster, Stella, 1208 Miss Troster, Annale, A宝娜, 1254 Lau. Truelle, A宝娜, 1254 Lau. Vail, Helen Robison, 1217 Tenn. Van Buskirk, Julia, 1041 K. Vienna, Marianne, 1217 Tenn. Vienna, Marguerite, 1317 R. I. Waddell, Florence Catherine, 706 Wahlin, Venда. Jennon, Jemma. May. Walker, Marnie. 1224 Ohio. Walling, Beauh. 1241 Tenn. Warreng, Kathleen Frances. 1142 Ind Watkins, Mary E., 1217 Tenn. Wattens, Mary E., 1217 Tenn. Watson, Alauncee. 1231 La. Wedel, Emili. 1339 Tenn. Welch, Lena H., 1015 Miss. Wilde, Melissa. 1231 La. Wenzel, Marie. 1138 Ky. West, Genevieve. 1230 Haskell ave. West, Louise. 1230 W. 9th. West, Wiechen. Gladys. 1225 R. I. Wilhite, Margaret Luclie, University Heights. West, Elizabeth. 1145 La. Williams, Bess Mae. 1014 Miss. Williams, Edna. 1024 Vt. Williams, Jennie. 1400 Tenn. Williams, Louise Angelina. 1145 La. Williams, Mary Leoa. 1224 N. J. Wolfe, Mary M. 940 Ind. Wilson, Elendra. 1916 Tenn. Wynne, Belle. Young, Blanche. 804 La. Young, Myrtle M. 940 Ky. Wilson, Marie. 1225 Ky. Yust, Ruth Ellette. 1014 Miss. Williams, J. H., 1111 Miss. Williams, Myron. 1425 Tenn. Willgus, Leon A. Wilson, Allen D., 1001 Conn. Wilson, Carl. M. Winsor, Chas. B., 1102 W. 6th. Winsor, Carl. 1215 Oread. Wood, Dinmore. 1231 Ind. Wycoff, GlenL. 116 Tenn. Tap, Benjamin T. H., 1409 R. I. Chas, Charles. 1215 Tenn. Young, Marmel. M., 804 La. Young, Lindley. City Y.M.C.A. Raymond J., 1537 Tenn. Adams, Howard. W., 1031 Miss. Bayles, Ernest E. 501 La. Bouzin, Chas. G., 1300 Tenn. Prof, and Mrs. P. W. Claassen spent the Fourth with Professor Claassen's mother at Hillborough. 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