UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1941. teenth, 19, and versity k and as, two schools. ass in- nesota, versity Iowa, Iowa, schoolsachers of Em-Kan-氟Emacherss, and include kitoona, Valley, ansing, Hutch- Geology Survey Has Published 10 Treatises Extensive investigation and field work by the Kansas State Geological Survey in the twelve month period ending April 1, 1941, has resulted in nine new technical bulletins and one picture booklet of popular interest, the University office of the Survey has revealed. In addition, four other reports are either in the hands of the editor or printer and nine reports are in preparation, field work for them having been completed. Ground-water resources, oil and gas, coal deposits, subsurface rocks, and topography are the main subjects treated in the bulletins. In Five Groups Current field operations may be divided into five groups, stratigraphy, paleontology, economic geology, ground-water investigations, and topographic mapping. Collaboration with the Experiment Station of the School of Engineering is being carried on in the field of petroleum technology and in relation to oil and gas engineering problems. The Federal Geological Survey with S. W. Lohman, federal geologist in charge, is cooperating in ground-water investigations. The booklet by the Survey arranged and written to appeal to popular interest is "Resource-Full Kansas" written by K. K. Landis and O. R. Bingham. Nine Bulletins The nine bulllets, numbering from 27 to 35, are the following; Bulletin 27—Groundwater Resources of Kansas by R. C. Moore. Bulletin 28—Exploration for Oil and Gas in Western Kansas During 1939 by W. A. Verwie. Bulletin 29 - Asphalt Rock in Eastern Kansas by J. M. Jewett. Bulletin 30-Oil and Gas in Limn County, Kansas, by J. M. Jewett. Bulletin 31-Oil and Gas in Montgomery County, Kansas, by G. E. Abernathy, Bulletin 32—Coal Resources of Kansas by R. E. Whitla. Bulletin 33-Subsurface Mississippian Rocks of Kansas by Wallace Lee. Bulletin 34—Geologic Studies in Southwestern Kansas by H. T. U. Smith. Bulletin 35-A Preliminary Report on the Water Supply of Meade Artesian Basin, Meade County, Kansas, by J. C. Frye. Speech Frat Members Return From Chicago Meet University representatives to the national Delta Sigma Rho student congress held in Chicago Thursday, Friday, and Saturday returned last night. Russell Baker, business junior, Jack Dunagin, Donald Mitchell, and Richard Oliver, college juniors, all members of the Kansas chapter of Delta Sigma Rho, honorary speech fraternity, and E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, made the trip. RELAYS ENTRIES--lap of his mile, when a bone was broken in his ankle, and he hobbled to the finish in second place. Shortly before this year's relays, he was spiked on the ankle in practice. But he accompanied the team to Texas, and hoped to run unattached in the mile队 race. A few days before the meet, infection set in and at the last minute Coach Hargiss decided not to run Harris in the event. Lyndon, Durham, Rock Creek, and Cullison, Wichita North, Leavenworth, Eureka, Bonner Springs, Atchison County Community, Kiowa, Conway Springs, Westphalia, and Axtell. TEXAS JOTS---- J. R. JONES, broadjumper, severed an artery above his left knee as he was landing in the broad jump pit. He was given first aid treatment, and came back to take his remaining trials, but weakened by loss of blood, did not place. Jones was the only Jayhawk to place in individual events last year. ON THEIR WAY to Texas, the squad stopped at Arkansas City, and had a Dr. Pepper on Don Bird, former K.U. pole vault star, now working for the Dr. Pepper Bottling Works there. Bird holds the Kansas vault record at 14 feet 2 inches. Miss Myra Hull, late instructor or English who died Feb. 4, left an estate of $500 to the Kansas Bible College to be used for teaching the Bible to University students, it was announced today. The money will go to the Bible College endowment fund. Bible College Gets $500 In Hull Will Miss Hull had taught here since 1921. She was a Phi Beta Kappa and a member of the Modern Language Association of America. She was graduated from this University in 1919 and received her master's degree the following year. For eight years she had been working on an anthology of popular songs and ballads of Kansas origin. Midsemester Grades Out Soon Midsemester exams are over, the grades are in, but the worst is yet to come. Students have yet to receive their midsemester standings. Freshmen and sophomores in the College will get the news by contacting their advisers, and upperclassmen will be notified of any unsatisfactory grades by mail according to J. H. Nelson, associate dean of the College. During the first week following vacation, April 16 to 18, the underclassmen should make arrangements to see their advisers. Names, offices, and office hours of the advisers are posted opposite the names of the students on the College bulletin board opposite the College office. The office staff will spend the vacation period getting out the grades so the standings will be available on April 16. Dean Nelson also announced that any organization needing the standings of their junior or senior members may get the information by Rain No Damper---- Band Well Received At Garnett Concert (This special band bulletin comes to the Kansan from Saralena Sherman, drum majorete and star baton twirler, now with the University Band on its spring concert tour.) At a quarter of five the band rolled away from the campus in three large buses, headed for its first concert at Garnett on on the western Kansas tour during Easter vacation. After five minutes of travel, bridge games were going strong and bull sessions were heating up. Russell L. Wiley, director of the band proceeded to line up his music and camera fiends got their instruments in shape $ ^{ \textcircled{1}} $ audience and all was over. The concert flashed off to a hearty Happy Easter Vacation To You All---leaving a list of the names at the College office. Freshmen and sophomores needing this information must get it from their advisers. When we arrived in Garnett, cars lined the street outside the high school and in two's and four's the band was hauled to private homes, where dinner was waiting for them. Stage A Tight Fit A few miles out of Ottawa the first bus nearly hit another calf, as it did on the way home from the Topeka concert two weeks ago. Shortly before eraching Garnett the buses ran into a few showers and by the time they had reached the outskirts of the town the rain poured steadily. Remember to make your last stop in Lawrence before hitting the homeward trail, at Fritz Co. Stop any time at the sign of the Jayhawk for the best in service or just phone 4. Fritz Co. CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS audience and all was over at 10:30 p.m. Although the 100 members of the band had to hug each other throughout the performance because of the small stage and the twirlers were forced to perform in the pit, Garnett will be remembered by the band as a swell town and it is likely that the band will be remembered by Garnett as being a swell band. Deadline For Poetry Set Up to April 16 Students who have been working to meet the deadline set for entries in the Carruth Memorial Poetry Contest have been granted a two day reprieve. April 14, the deadline originally set for entries will be the day before students return from Easter vacation, so the contest committee set the date up to noon of Wednesday, April 16. 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