1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXIV Sixth CSEP Payroll Is Largest of Year The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Nearly $10,000 Needed To Pay Students This Week The largest CSEP payroll of the year has been made out and sent to Topека Sunday, Miss Mary C (executive secretary), said yesterday. This payroll, which is for the sixth month, included 628 students for a total of $9.591.55. Five hundred seventy-five undergraduate students will get a total of $8.467.55. $111 will be paid to $3 graduate students. The checks for this payroll should be in about the list of the week. Miss Ohen said The average payment on this month's list is $14.73 for the undergrads, and $21.21 for graduates, the largest average for any payroll the office here has sent out. Because several of the previous payrolls have fallen short of their allotments, next month's list is expected to be even larger, according to Miss Olen. The increased amount of money for this year makes it possible for the office to care for all students and help them take jobs on CSEP, Miss Olson said. on the SHIN by Kenneth Morris Betty Graham. c'39) The Cov-Ed Hop furnished a lot of enjoyment for the gals the other night, but it's surprising how reficient most of the men are who attended the dance. In fact, it's surprising how many of the so-called Hill big shots were conspicuous by their absence. However, the girls did right well with their imitations of perennial stag-line snooks. Barbara Goll got ahead a perfect take-off on the amless wanderer in the garden, and she boredom and gazes at the dancers with that "Why am I wasting my time here?" air. Melvin Moore, the lad behind the lily, carried off very well the part of the girl who gets a loosy corsage, but is darned if she'll let her date know she doesn't like it. Dick Dawes, who does a lot of cutting on his own hook at varieties, was repaid by being the most cut boy on the floor, while Mary Hall on the bench and Rolla Rocklekles because she knew she wouldn't be stuck. Rolla's classes being large. It it seems the Theta Tau's were most traite at being confused with their bitter enemies, the Triangles, in the column a few days ago. The women were forced to rose to the occasion and the Alpha Chi sum porch—and rescued the ladies when they were locked in up there. Howard Moreland and Sam McKinney are the guys to help them due, so—all our apologies, fellas. + + + Ramblings: The dime-a-dance drug night must have been an awful flip—you can't find any body who was there. Rumor is that a lawyer in Howard are looking at furniture ... Art Wolfe, a better pink and blue boy, has one of the cleverest sones of humor on the campus ... Margaret Shrum, Alpha Delt, and James Hickey, both that five pounds one of these days ... 1603 Tennessee, where three of the Delta Chi boys have taken refuge, now answers the telephone with "Delta Chi Annex". ... The Sigma Chi Circus party this coming party to end all the "Keeping up with the Jones" parties that have furnished so much amusement for the campus lately. Instead of trying to outdo the Phi Dhi and all the organizations that have been putting on the dog so, they plan on a rough-and-ready affair designed to keep too-too-ultra events a hit. Numbered among articles appearing in the February number of the Kansas Bar Association Journal, which includes several students of the University, as well as the contributions of leading Kansas attorneys and students of the bar. Students Contribute to Journal Edward I. King, 137, Tum tose, Ile8 Richard Jones, 138, Tsoh S. Payne, 138 and Edwin Jefries, 137 have written for the periodical. OVER THE HILL Mrs. E. H. Lindley was called to Richland, IId, Sunday by the death of Kidder, Mrs. Kidder, Mrs. Kidder, Mrs. Kidder, death followed a long illness. Mrs. Kidder, IId, return to Mrs. Lindley's Relative Dies Mrs. Lindley will not return to Lawrence for several days. Howie Gives Final Lecture. The last of a course of six lectures on Contemporary Literature will be given in the library room 205, Fraser hall. William Howie, instructor in the department English will lecture on "The Contemporary Novel." The course, which covers twentieth century literature, is designed especially for those interested that everyone interested is welcome. A new organization in the form of the University Polytechnic Club had been held on Sunday afternoon with 17 staff dent stamp emitters in attendance to discuss the club's eund, the newly elected president and founder of the group, the purge of the student body and create interest in stump clecting among the student body. Beta Gamma Sigma Choose Ten Fees Gamma Sigma, national honor business fraternity, the follow were elected to membership. P Rash, Robert Radagighi Corey, Loren McGormack, Loren Mcmorcack, Er Maxwell C. Kraus, and J. Syyster Schmitt, one共Jny Syyster Schmitt, we initiation for the new men be held during the month April. New Organization Formed NUMBER 114 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY. MARCH 16. 1907 Pachacamac Banque Celebrates 25th Ye Alumni Members To Feted at Silver Anniversary Pachacamaca political a political founded in the fall of 1923, will critate its 25th anniversary w bienquette at 6:30 pm in the Meme Union building Thursday. Invitations have been sent to men whose names have been penned in the city's civic history since its inception. The program will include a short speeches. After the bar the group will follow an old I *agnac custom* by adjournment, Tonganocine, where the party's 'Votion Banques' have been held Each of the men whose p are on the membership list we give a certificate of membera the 25th anniversary group, Pachacamac. Three of the men were the founders of this org are expected to attend the quet. They are P. K. Cubbis Kansas City, Kans. who is I real estate business, A. R. lawyer, lawyer, and W. W lowey, lawyer, M. So, dealer. Several of the alumni have their intention to attend a banquet, and a large crowd is expected in committee in view of the reunion. Ball To Talk on Geo Will Present Four Lectures.e sissippi Valley Visitors are invited to attend the lectures. Prof John E. Ball of the met of geology and geogr Northwestern University, series of four lectures here the Professor Ball is well-known ally and has traveled abroad絮ively, studying rocks and the older paleoecystems. The lectures are as follow Cambrian Rocks of the Uprissiassip Valley" 4 p.m. today bror-Ordovician Problems in per Mississippi Valley" 4 morrow; "The Mississippi 739 p.m. tomorrow; and burian system in the Missiess lag" 4 p.m. Thursday. All be given in Haworth b 101 ATTEND CHEMICAL SQ MEETING IN KANSA Six faculty members Kansas City last night the March meeting of I Ht city section of the Americ science building of the of Kansas City. Dr. Georg man of the University of I on "Grigand Reagents." Those attending from tb in class of chemist. professor of chemistry; F assistant instructor, F Lawrence E. Forman, as instructor of chemistry; L son, assistant instructor of chemistry; S structor of chemistry; ran Ruckick, instructor of chem Water Analysis And Sanitation Classes Begin Laboratory classes began yesterday or the 18 students enrolled in the University Waterworks School in darvin hall. Waterworks superintendents and other city officials are included among the students. The staff of the state water and sewage laboratories will be in charge of the school for operators. Miss Cas- The purpose of the work is to teach technique of water analysis and sorption, giving special attention to the individual problems of the operator. The second half of the school, to be held here Thursday and Friday, will be of a more general nature with many of the officers, operators and city officials totaling 150. Borden Again Manager Edith Borden, c37, was re-appointed yesterday morning to serve a second term as manager of the W. S.G.A. book-store. Miss Borden was selected from among the applicants by a committee consisting of Ruth Learned, c37, retiring W.S.G.A. Council president; Dori Stockwell, c39, the president-elect, and the W.S.G.A. sponsor; Elizabeth McGraw, vice-president; NeuonSchwander, professor in the department of romance languages, and Miss Beulah Morrison, professor of psychology. W.S.G.A. Committee Appoints Book Store Head for Second Term "The book-store will continue to function as it always has until the W. S.G.A. Council has definitely accepted a satisfactory offer for the assistance needed." In yesterday in reference to the proposed co-operative book-store. Continued on page 2 He is taking this tour to gather first-hand information on public opinion to be used in his work on contemporary public opinion and political thought in the United States since the depression, for the Yale Graduate School Department of Government. At St. Andrews he was president of the student body, editor of the University magazine, captain of the football team, assistant president of the Debating Association. Student Missing From University Since March 8 Fred Fleming of Fredonix Left Roaming House To Report For Work Ry Marvin Gaebel, e'unel the University of Oklahoma. Frederick F. Cook, 90, observed from the University Monroe, March 8, and up to the present time has not been heard from. A call last night to Mr. George Heckert, town marshal of Freidonia revealed that he has not been home and that his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C, W. Fleming, know nothing of his present whereabouts. Honor Dean Burdick With Birthday Dinner A check on his actions last Monday shows that he left his rooming Dr. W. L. Burdick, dean of the School of Law, who will retire at the end of this semester after 29 years on the law faculty, will be honored at a dinner to be given at the Hotel Eldridge by Alpha Phil Delta, law fraternity, on Dean Burdick's seventy-seventh birthday, March 22 Principal speaker at the dinner will be Gov. Walter Huxman, who will be initiated into honorary membership in Green chapter of Pit Alpha Delta shortly before the celebration in honor Doctor Burkick. The dean will make a farewell speech to the guests at the dinner, who will include John S. Dawson, chief justice of the Kavacek supreme court; Chancellor E. H. Lindley; Judge Hugh T. Wetell, of the supreme court; Judge R. A. Burch, dean of the Washburn School of Law and Kansas Debaters Have No Decision Meet With Yale Consumer Co- operatives Argued; Visitors Take Affirmative Side A four-man team from the Yale Debating Association who have been on a debate tour since March 5, will perform at the theater tomorrow for 8:15 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN "We are political liberals and economic radicals," said Edwin Jason Dryer, Jr., of Yale University in defending the affirmative side of liberalism. "We support the consumer co-operative movement in America?" This debate, between the University and Yale University teams was held in April 2015 at Yale Law School, W. W. Davis, professor of the history department, presided James Molby, 138, and Roy Stein- heimer, c37, will take the negative side of the question: "Should we The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Richard B. Tennant, president of Eli Team Will Defend Co-operatives Against Arguments of Kansans Tomorrow Night VOLUME XXXIV AWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 14. 1827 YALEMENTO ARGUE CORRECTION Robert L. Marshall is the exchange students on the Commonwealth fund from St. Andrew's University in Scotland and is making this tour as observer and adviser to the Yale squad. He is well known for his brilliant speech on the floor of the Political Union. Weather Bette Grove, fa38, won the Fine Arts representative position in the W.S.G.A. election, instead of Margaret Stough, fa38, as was announced in Friday morning's Kan- Kansas: Mostly cloudy Sunday and Monday; snow furries Sunday and continued cold; not so cold Monday. —these Yale men will support consumer co-operatives Monday night, (L to R) Manager William A. W. Kroca, Jr., Tulsa President Richard B. Temman, New York City; Robert L. Marshall of St. Andrew's University, St. Andrews, Scotland, and Edwin J. Dayer, Jr., New York City. support the consumer co-operative movement in America" against the Yale men. The New Haven team will have faced two twenty colleges in states from Pennsylvania to Oklahoma to Colorado. The team's swings back into Connecticut. Richard Bremner Teemant, Robert L. Marshall, Edwin Jason Dryer, Jr., and William A. Wailce Krebs, Jr., the men on the Yale debate team. Richard B. Tennant is president of the Yale Debating Association, and captain of the team. He is also a member of the Yale political Union. Scotchman on Team For Two Bits Kansas colleges could be protected from the loss of their professors by their getting offers of more money from other schools— And the Kansan could stop this insistent campaign— Professor's salaries in all state-operated colleges and universities could be raised back to their 1930 level— All for a more 25 cents a year from each Kansas tax-payer, according to a recent survey. Sharpshooters Snowed Under-Not in Match Songsters Go on Air Today "Snowbear — Sergeant Engle" was the last word received from Booneville last night where 15 students and two coaches ventured this weekend for the rifle shoot at the Kemper Military Academy. Despite the stuff competition of 500 crack shooters from 70 schools in nine states, the girls' team placed fourth with a score of 384 while the boys' team placed fourth in their division with a score of 702. James Scoogins, e39, William A. Smiley, c40, and King P. Aliken b37, own expert medals in close matches. Ten women and five men made up the team and were accompanied by Major Edwards and Sergeant Engle. Waldemar Geltch Will Be On Radio Program With Club Selections from the second act of Sigmund Romberg's The Desert Song," with Claude Dovey, c'38, Nathan Landon, fa'39, and Prof. Joseph F. Wilkins as solistos, will be featured in an hour's broadcast by the university Mere's Mile Club over a KFRU this afternoon at 4 o'clock. Members of the club will sing an octet by Jack Laffer. e'39, entitled. "A Sailor's Life." An arrangement of "Congerio Gratergno" by Respigh will be played by Prof. Waldemar Geltch, accompanied by Miss Crutt, assistant professor of piano, as another feature of the broadcast. Professor Joseph Wilkins is director of the glee club. He formerly sang the role of El Sid El Kara in presenta- tion for the Schubert Theater corporation. The club will leave on a five-day tour of several Kansas towns, March 22. Numbers given in today's broad- Continued on page 2 Dr. Harold C. Case RELIGION REVAMPED NUMBER 113 ... a Methodist pastorate his vocation. WIBW his mouthpiece an college president's daughter his life. Pauliflowers And Marrots Make Spring Debut At Coed Hop Girl escorts, girl stages, and vegetable corsages evidenced the reverse of the usual at the Owl Society's Coed Hop Friday night in when the University women took the place the men ordinarily hold. At the Union the same sort of thing continued. Girls opened doors, took coats, paying checked bills, and the fellows waited for their dates to take them upstairs. On the dance floor cauliflower and carrot corsages were prominent. It is surprising how decorative a carrot on a paper dolly can be. One man wore on his lap a huge lily that Both sides, dates and escorts, took every opportunity to get even with their companions on old scores. Girls called at their dates' houses and frequently met with the same kind of conduct as often ennobled by men. The girls were asked to wait while upstairs carried on loud conversations about, "Shall I eat the pink or the blue?" "Oh, goodness, I haven't shaved yet," and "Are you here so soon?" Continued on page 6 today's broadcasters are the members of the University Glee Club, under the direction of Prof Wilkins. Prof. Waldenar Geltch also will appear on the program. Case Is First Speaker In Week of Religious Reinterpretation; Y. T. Wu Is Headliner Dr. Harold C. Case is the speaker this evening at Spooner-Thayer museum, in the first of a series of talks during the Religious Interpretation Center's annual speaker during the week will talk both Monday and Wednesday in Spooner-Thayer on "Religion in Social Change" and "The Formation of a Christian Creed" and Tuesday at the Jewish Museum on "Why I Became a Christian." Doctor Wu, editor-in-chief of the Associated Press in China, has served extensively in Student Christian work in China and for the Nanking in America. He has studied at University in New York City and at Drews Seminary in Madison, N. J. He was awarded a master of arts degree from Columbia University in New York in 1927. He's serving at Ching Kai-Shek's National Community Faith and Mission of the Chinese Student Christian Movement. In regard to his country he says, "We are living in the most difficult moment, but we are not over perturbed and confident that we possess the powers to rise above them all in time." Samuel H. Baron, rabbi of Temple B'Nai Jeshurim of Leavenworth, and the Rev, Joseph F. King, pastor of the Congregational Church, whose memorial is in the Museum of Creed's at Spooner-Thayer Museum Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. Continued on page 2 Renovation Will Start This Spring Dyche Funds Ready "I am highly elated over the recent appropriation which passed the state legislature for the completion of the repair work on Dyche museum. Now we shall be permitted to begin where we left off several years ago and really place the museum in the lime-light which it deserves—among the greatest educational attractions" of the state of Kansas." So commented Prof. H. H. Lane, curator of the University's Museum of Natural History, last night. The $55,000 appropriation was passed several weeks ago and therefore was not included in the senate resolution. The University fund submitted Friday. Money for the project was voted in the emergency building bill and is available for immediate use. The state architect announced yesterday that he is revising the original plans. As soon as the blueprints are completed the state will advertise for the bids and the contract will be let. Professor Lange hesitated to predict when work will begin. However, the plan that construction would start shortly before school would out in June. 1