WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29. 1936 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS --- Hill Society ☆ ☆ ☆ 6 Miles Helen Louise Goodwin, fs, and Mr. E. H. Murrell of Roswell, N. M., will be married Feb. I, at the home of the bride in Roswell. Miss Goodwin was a friend of the Gi Oroma. Mr. Minten was a Kappa Prairie at New Mexico University. ☆ ☆ ☆ The marriages of Miss Elizabeth Carol Higgins, 74, of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. Edward P. Larkin, of Pierce City, Mo., has been announced. Merrill Larkin was a member of Alpha Zi Delta. They are at home after Feb. 15 in Pierce City. Kappa Phi. Methodist zorrority, will hold a rush party and acquaintancehall meeting Feb. 9, for students entering the University the second semester. The party will be held at 1200 Tennessee Street, 5:33, in charge of the meeting. ☆ ☆ ☆ The Co-ed group will meet at Henley House, Feb. 6. Catherine Holmes, c38 manager of the Co-ed committee, is in charge of the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Kunkle of Leavenworth visited at the Alpha Delta Pi house yesterday. Mrs. Robert Manning of Boxbury was a dinner guest at the Alpha Delta Pi house Monday. Henriettin Bates, fn36, is visiting Elizabeth Ebright, gr., at Baldwin. Reading Award Comes As Result of Student Initiative Honor Course Is Distinctive The award granted advanced students in the English department, after taking a course known as "Reading for Honors," is distinctive in that it is the only course offered at the University which results in that student's name appear on commencement program the list of honor awards, at the completion of the course. These honors have been awarded since 1931; that year the awards going to three seminars in the College. They were William McClelland, Clinton, Mo. Lyle Ardette Gifford, Lawrence, and Rob Alrubert Stout, Topeka. In 1852, Horns in English were awarded to John William, Lawrence and Leslie Abram Rutledge, Dunlap only who no award is in 1833 or only two, Kay Muller, Laham, in 1834. SETTINGS ARE COMPLETED FOR NEXT CAMPUS PLAY Stratton To Address Chemists Prof. G. W. Straton of the chemistry department and Velt Stafford, instructors, will speak at the first meeting of the Chemistry club, during the second semester, Thursday, Feb. 13. Newly students in the chemistry department will be especially invited to attend. Reading for Honors is a course in which the student does his own work, reading on a certain subject he has chosen, and some individual conferral. The student participates in the semester. The student is required to take a comprehensive examination over the material he has read before he is awarded the Honors. The award is considered an important one as it represents a high achievement almost entirely by the student alone. Settings for the Kansas Players' "Olympia" have been completed. The play will be presented Feb. 17. Suggesting the recoce and mildly suggestive of a mugue decade, the set makes no attempt at realism and gives players playing background to the actors. The set is not a room in the conventional sense of the word, but consist of backwall and side wings. Nothing on these sets has been used before on the Prater stages. H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education, is spending the week visiting junior colleges in various cities of the state. He is chairman of the Senate committee on relations with junior colleges. He will attend the Council of Administration meeting in Wichita, Friday and Saturday. This organization is composed of administration heads of the school systems in Kansas. Professor Chandler is chairman of the Teacher's also. PROF. H. E. CHANDLER TO VISIT JUNIOR COLLEGES OF STATE Settings have been designed and executed by Prof. Allen Crafton and Robert Gard. Professor Chandler is chairman of the Teachers Appointment Bureau, which also will meet in Wichita Saturday morning. --werewolf words or less one insertion 25; three insertion 30; six仕原词 75; six outrat词, six inrat词; seven仕原词 100; seven仕原词 125; payable in advance and approval at the Kavahi Business Office. PHONE K.U. 6G FOR SALE FOR SALE: Holtweil's "Principles of Marketing," and a "Land Economics Text." (Mississippi Survey Committee) Catch Pat a 2675J. -80 TAXI CLASSIFIED ADS TAILOR ROOMS FOR BENT FOR RENT: Large 2-room apartment, extra bed. Available at end of seminer. 1501 Rhode Island. Phone 2541. -86 A NEW VIEW FROM A NEW PLAN PHONE K.U. C6 One Stop Clothes Service Station SCHULZ THE TAILOR 924 Mass. GIRLS: Large, well-heated and ventilated rooms; large windows, East and South side; large closets. Lavatory, hot and cold sinks. Bedrooms, Street Phone, 140-685. Phone 12 - 987 BOYS: Large first floor room accommodating 2 or 3 boys. Also board outside entrance, but and cold water in inside. 108 Tennessee. Phone 158-3120. Phone 12 - 987 HUNSINGER'S — 920-22 Mass. BOYE: THREE ROOM apartment with sleeping porch. Modern, Gas and coat heat. Hot water at all times. Re- sistance rates. Call 1583 or 28288. BOYS: Have you seen the good modern rooms at 1501 Rode Island? Prices reasonable. Phone 1509.-87 BOYS: A very pleasant single south room, also garage. 1415 Tennessee. Phone 1355. -88 LOST AND FOUND LOST. Red Vacuumate Parker foemin- tin pen. Reward. Call Mayorjie Brooks 1818J. 1248 Ohio. -29 PECIAL—50c reduction on any per-ment, with this ad, except Saturday; ermantures $1.50 to $5.00, complete hair i.e. art UV BEAUTY SHOPS. $12\% Mass, Phone 2333; 9411\% Mass, home 533. TYPING LOST. Brown clown in or near South Park. Finder call 2013. Reward. Jane Burkholder, 1232 Tennessee. - $3 BEAUTY SHOPS HAVE YOUR term papers typed by an experienced typist. Very reasonable. Phone 60.-87 --werewolf words or less one insertion 25; three insertion 30; six仕原词 75; six outrat词, six inrat词; seven仕原词 100; seven仕原词 125; payable in advance and approval at the Kavahi Business Office. BOYS: We have room and board for 4 boys during next semester. $3.00 per week. Homelike privilege. Good gardge. garage 927. Ind. rooms '1709 HOMY. ROOM AND BOARD ROOM AND BOARD for boys, $20 per calendar month. Meals served family style. 128 Kentucky. Phone 223281. MISCELLANEOUS Student Loans BOYS-Large delightful room with private tite bath. Excellent meals three times a day including Sundays. Damage guance free. Removable. The Room is adorned with rugs. BOYS; Board and room, with private bath for two boys. Right on the Hill. $25 per month. 1137 Indiana. -86 PLACE for 5 boys. Room and board. $23 per month. Good meals and good service. Phone 1471. 1244 Luf. -86 ABE WOLFSON 743 Mass. Forty-nine students in the School of Education and the College of Liberal Arts were approved by the Joint Committee on Administration of the University Teacher's Diploma to do supervise students in Oread Training School next semester. Forty-nine Students Receive Permission To Be Supervisors Will Teach At Oread High This action was taken by the committee at a meeting yesterday morning in the office of R. A. Schweigler, dean of the college of law in the approved list of those to teach. To do practice teaching in English are: Alfred C. Ames, Mary Lou Burges, Catherine Hardy, Wilma Aloise Johnson, Lois Margaret Nelson, Irene Pennock, Mary Frerson, Josephine Riederer, Rider Shoemailler, Adalyn Swope, Margaret Walton Zurn, Ava E. Kessha, Kathryn Ingramie, Ms. Florence Kirby jumina Stone. Those to teach English for foreign students Whitfield; for home economics; Roberta Badaky; for journalism; Rosemary Fisher; Permission to do practice teaching in mathematics was granted to Margaret B. Brooke, Vivi Ferguson, Stuart Gorman, Elizabeth Riley, Jennifer Jones, Milicent Robinson; music Vajee Davey; natural science Joe Brewer, Florence Brisson, Fritz Forbes, Leonard C. Horne, George S. Ibodes, John M. Lefkowitz, Mary Evelyn Stamper, Lea Seenna. Library Deserted As Fair Weather Friends Leave for Home No more will hordes of students eager for knowledge crowd the library entrance. No more will anxious groups gather to trade exam questions. The place is forever deserted. (At least for the next 16 weeks). In social science: Louse Humphrey, Mary Irwin, Clyta L. McMurray, C. M. Mickey, Virginia Stearns, Roland Melborn, Marien Fogn, Margen L. Havel, O. Verley. Evelyn L. Burkeer were grand pernasia and Martien Lutes. Valma F. Old and Marien Lutes. A few other names may yet be added to the lists in the next few days. The library today is probably the most desolate building on the Hill. Its sudden flurry of extreme popularity has died and gone with the quail prizes. But the library wasn't fooled at any time. It knew that the friends were all of the fair weather variety and didn't make any serious mistake, because it knew that today's drawn would see its desertion. High School Giant Graduates The tallest high school student in the country was graduated from the Alton, IL high school last Friday night, according to the Topkapi Capital. The student is Robert Wadlow, who is now 8 feet tall and still growing. He was called "trigian giant" of the last century, according to physicians. He weighs 200 pounds, having gained 103 pounds since he first entered high school. Wadlow intends to study law in college. Even the Scientists Can't Tell a Grasshopper From a Cicada One of the great American delusions was no longer solution yesterday with the receipt by the department of ecology that in 2014, years the public has persisted in an irritating habit of classifying these insects indictimately as cicadas or grasshoppers, or just plain bugs. That meant they were not able to strove for a time to stem the taste of public ignorance, but who finally accepted the inevitable and gracefully received from the list. Popular science seemingly had triumphed over the real world. rab. But then the awful realization stoke upon him. How could he be anate un-scientific public for not knowing the simple difference between a cicada, a grasshopper and a plain bug if real scientists couldn't identify them? But last summer, Dr. Raymond H. Beamer conceived a plan whereby he would enlist the public and increase the cicadas, or bug, population of the Francis Hunting Snow collection at one fall snow, Dr. Beamer, al, went to the city in order to get the way. One thousand and fifty cicadas, or bugs, were trapped, and sent for classification to a Mr. William T. Davis of Staten Island, New York. Well, the whole point is that Mr. Davis was forced to admit court. In his zeaborn plot for specimen, Dr. Beamer introduced entirely new kinds of cicadas, or bugs. When Mr. Davie wrote that he was unable to match two of the 42 different varieties with any of the 150 varieties used in his pulse was to throw up his hat and hur- "CRUSADE" BROADCAST TO BE TODAY, NOT NEXT FRIDAY *Nestdayor* the Kansan stated that the "Yankee Crusade" would be broadcast over radio station KFKU on Friday afternoon, Wednesday is Wednesday is Wednesday, Jan. 29. The play was written last year by Prof. Allen Crafton, of the department of speech and dramatic art, and a short broadcast. The prologue and first three episodes of the play will be given from 2:30 to 3:00 p.m., and the remaining three episodes and the epilogue will be given another half hour period at 6 o'clock. FACULTY MEMBERS TO GO TO REGIONAL CONFERENC Other University faculty members who have been invited to speak are; Dr. B. A. Nash, Dr. E. E. Bayles, and Dr. Auryn Tailur, all of the School of Education; and Rosemary Ketchum, professor of design. Prof. Raymond H. Wheeler, of the psychology department, will be one of the principal speakers at the Regional Conference of the Progressive Educational Association, which will be held in Wichita, Feb. 14 and 15. MEETING ON 'NEUTRALITY' IS POSTPONED TO FEB. 1 The forum will be held in the Memorial Union building in the evening. It will feature a panel discussion led by several distinguished guests, one interested is invited to attend. Alfred Ames, c'26, president of the Peace Action committee, announced yesterday that the committee's forum on "Neutrality" would be postponed until Feb. 13. It was originally scheduled for Thursday, Feb. 6. HOPE IS STILL ENTER CAINED KAGAWA MAY VISIT CAMPUS **Pharmicists to See Picture** Students in the School of Pharmacy will see a talking picture in room 205 in the Chemistry building Thursday afternoon. The Glass Company is sponsoring 'the film Glass Company' is sponsoring 'the film It will be shown to 13:30 class'. According to the Rev. C.W. Thomas, student pastor of the "Baptist church, it is improbable that To Kokoga kagan will visit the University of Kansas campus on his present tour which will see Kokoga's City the first part of next week. The Rev, Mr. Thomas, in charge of the committee which is attempting to arrange for Mr. Sagawa's appearance will announce that he may come at a later d'ate. Maker of Artificial Legs Attributes Success To Auto.Accidents Omaha, Neb., (UP)-George A. Johnson, Ormaha manufacturer of artificial legs and aces and orthopedic appliances for broken knees, back and pelvic bones, attributes the upturn in his business to auto accidents. Jo Mason said his business had iner- and 60 per cent due principally to auto mobil accidents. "If it didn't be for accidents we wouldn't have much business," Johnson said (p. 12) he surveyed his busy work environment. 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