4 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXX University Senate Revises Schedule for Examinations NUMBER 160 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 3, 1829 Most Students Will Have One Day Intermission Before Finals Commence An examination schedule which will give 90 per cent of the students a one-day intermission between last recitations and their examinations, and will obviate practically all cases of two examinations in single half-day, was adopted by the University Senate yesterday afternoon. Due to the fact that the Memorial day holiday comes one day before the last day of recitations, there will be seven instead of six days for examination, permitting the spreading of these examinations somewhat. Following is the schedule: Thursday. June 1 8:30 to 10:20 m, All-4 3:00 classes, 10:20 m and 1 hour 10:30 m and 1 hours 1:30 to 4:20 p. m.-3:30 classes of 5, 4 and 3 hours. Friday, June 2 8:30 to 11:20 a.m. - 9:30 classes of 5, 4, and 3 hours. 8.30 to 11.20 p.m. m--9.30 classes of 4 and 3 hours. 1.30 to 3.20 p.m. m--9.30 classes of 2 and 1 hours. Saturday, June 3 8:30 to 12:30 a.m. 10-30 classes of 5, 4 and three hours, about 9 a.m. and 3:00 p. m. 1:30 to 2:00 p. m.-10:30 classes of 2 and 1 hours. 8:30 to 11:20 a. m—11:30 classes of 5. 1:30 to 3:20 p. m.-11:30 classes of 2 and 4 hours 8:30 to 11:30 a.m.—2:30 classes of 5, 4 Wednesdav. June 7 1:30 to 4:20 p. m.—1:30 classes of 5, 4 and 3 hours. 8:30 to 11:20 a.m.—8:30 classes of 5 and 3 hours. 4, and 3 hours. 14 a.m., p. m.: 8-30 classes of 2 and 3 hours. J hours. Thursday, June 8 8:30 to 10:20 a.m. - 2:30 classes of 2 an- hours. 1 hours. 10:30 a. m to 12:20 p. m—1:30 classes of 2 and 1 hours. University Senate Adopts Reports or Relations With Four-Year Colleges The customary rules requiring the schedule to be followed, except on permission from the examinations committee, and permitting the School of Medicine to the School of Medicine to a range its schedule, were adopted by the senate. TWO SCHOOLS ACCREDITED Election of Professor C. D. Clark and Professor U. G. Mitchell to the Senate advisory committee, and of Professor W. E. Sandelius to the committee or committees, was announced. Election was by letter ballot. The University senate, at its meeting yesterday, adopted the report of the committee on relations with four-year colleges, submitted by Dean E. B. Stouffer, chairman, recommending that Mt. St. Scholastica at Atchison be fully accredited to the University, and that St. Marys at Leavenworth be accredited for the academic years 1932-33 and 1933-34. The Senate looked with disfavor on the request of the Men's Student Council to use class period time for conducting a poll of the students on certain questions on student attitude toward war. Members of the Senate said the question of whether or not to bear arms was a pertinent question, and one student might well discuss and even vote upon, but that the crowded class schedule near the end of the term ought not to be disturbed. Dr. Edward Bartow, head of the water laboratories of the University of Iowa, will speak to a meeting of the Kansas City section of the American Chemistry society this evening at in room 1006 of the Building, where he will speak on "Water Treatment for Municipal Supply," and will illustrate with slides. DR. BARTOW WILL ADDRESS CHEMISTRY SOCIETY TONIGHT Frances Wilson, instructor in the speech and dramatic art department, will meet her classes on Friday. For the past month she has been confined to the Memorial Hospital and the Faculty Women's club. During this time other members of the department have been meeting her classes. A general election also will be held. Once a year the Kansas City division meets at the University. The meeting is open to the public. Dr. Bartow will be guest of honor at a dinner this evening at 6:15 at the university club. Wilson to Resume Teaching Embryo Economists Cast Aside Cares and Celebrate School of Business Day By Jo Am Grinstead, c'34 The faculty and students in the School of Business have tossed aside economies and finances and are celebrating their annual holiday. Every spring, just when classes grow too unbearable, and even Professors Ise and Gaggiarlo have to resort to highly emotional discourses to aid them in their awake, the bunch over in West Ad forget their worries and rally around for good Old School of Business Day. The last year has been an especially trying one. After worrying through the November election and nervously watching Roosevelt soar ahead, after answering a thousand inquiries in regard to the duration of the present depression, the effect of inflation on the farm situation, and after Professor Jensen had safely escorted several hundred high school debaters through the question of whether more than 50 per cent of our taxes should come from sources Water Colors by Bloch on Exhibit at Museum Professor's Paintings to Be Displayed for Fine Arts Day An exhibition of a collection of water colors by Albert Bloch, professor of drawing and painting at the University of Kansas, will be on display in the south gallery of Spooner-Thayer Art museum, as a part of the School of Fine Arts day program, May 11. The exhibition may be viewed throughout the month of May. Professor Bloch has studied at the St. Louis Art School, and in New York, Munich and Paris. He has exhibited in the Berlin and Munich Seessions, and by invitation at the New Secession in Munich, the International Exhibition at Cologne, and the International Exhibition at Geneva. He has had numerous one-man exhibitions in Berlin and Munich, as well as Frankfort, Hamburg, Zurich, Switzerland, Stockholm and various other European centers. In the United States he has been represented in New York, Los Angeles, London and Paris paintings in many well-known private collections in this country and abroad. He is exhibiting this year by invitation of the American Federation of Arts in the travelling group of pictures entitled Fifty American Painters He has taught privately in Europe, on the faculty of the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, and since 1923 he has been head of the department of drawing and painting at the University of Kansas. Completing his tenth year at Kansas, the present water color exhibition serves as a sort of retrospect of Mr. Bloch's work in this medium while at the University. Several of the pieces in the exhibition are being lent by the owners. About 20 of the works are new and are being shown for the first time. House Rules Are Discussed W.S.G.A. Will Get Student Opinion or Question Before Taking Action A discussion of house rules on the campus was the main business at the meeting of the W. S. G. A. council last night. In view of the fact that many suggestions have been made recently in regard to changing the rules, the council has been studying them with intention of getting the opinion of the student body before taking any action. Three committee were appointed by Lila Lawson, president of the S. G. They are as follows: Social committee Hiram Bellu, fa34; Katherine Mangeldeff, c35, Meredith Fulkin, c34; Budget committee, Virginia Rufi, c34; Marjorie Nelson, b34; Dorothy Bangs, c36; committee for gathering material for K book, Margaret McNown, fa35, Flavia Hay, c36, Laura Cooke, c36. FOUR BUSINESS CANDIDATES WILL RUN INDEPENDENTLY Candidates on an independent tickets for officers in the School of Business election were announced this morning. The candidates are as follows: president, Karl Leidig, b34; vice president, Carl Fowler, b34; secretary, John Lumpkin, b34; and treasurer, Ronald Roberts, b34. FOUR BUSINESS CANDIDATES WILL RUN INDEPENDENTLY Results of the election, which ended at noon today, will be announced at the banquet tonight. French Club Meets At a meeting of the French club, Le Cerule Francais, yesterday afternoon at 430, Miss Mattie Crumine, instructor of French, spoke to the members of "Brittany." other than tangleable property, they felt that they had really earned a holiday. But then there was the unexpected—or if you are a wise economist, you will say expected—bank moratorium to live through. How to meet it? How long will it last? What will the effect be? Professor Jennings spent the better part of that week talking to groups here and there over the country, urging them to have confidence in the banks and not make any new ones, on one hand, we were susceptible to doom." He could scarcely find time to bill the sale of his new Chevrolet—a souvenir of his public service. But all good things must come to an end, and before the day is over this group of business experts will be back talking about "Sound Money," for such is the theme of the evening banquet. However, talking about something that is sound will be quite a treat because since the onus in '29 has been about unsound institutions, unsound markets, and unsound currency. But at last the day of celebration is here. Promptly at noon today—too bad there had to be a morning classes—business cycles and probability curves will be forsaken and, in order to get completely away from the usual routine, members of the school will indulge in a hard game of baseball. The winner of the junior-senior match will take on the time with Stokton a Captain "Joe-Joe" Taggart at the helm. Last year the Speedbirds edged out a close victory and are determined to keep the record going in their favor. McCanles' Band to Give Annual Spring Concert it's a great life to be an economist especially during a depression. Twenty-Sixth Program to Begin at 8:10 This Evening The twenty-sixth annual Spring concert of the combined bands of the University will be presented tonight at 8:10 o'clock in the University Auditorium. The bands will be under the direction of Dr. Owen Dorrity. The band will be the xylophone solosist, and Miss Dorothy Enlow will accompany him at the piano. The bands will present the following numbers: March, "College Life" (J. H. Bell); Overture, "Siege of Rochelette" (Balfe); a Spanish song, "Seniora" (J. C. McCancles); Mother's Day song, "Springtime" (J. C. McCancles); the Suite "Don Quixote" (V. F. Franck); two xylophone solos, "Reve Anglueligi" (A. Rubinstein) and "Cross Corners" (George H. Green), by Mr. David, accompanied by Miss Enlow; "The Dance of the Serpents" (E. Boccalari); a group of numbers from "Faust" (Ch. Goucod); and a descriptive American and Indian Fantasia, "The Death of Custer" (Lee Johnson). The program will be closed with the "Crimson and the Blue." Paul Hansen Gives Recital Opening with the Leonard arrangement of the Corelli variations, "La Folia," the program offered the Clazouoff A Minor Concerto, two numbers, Boatanger and Kreisler's arrangement of a Spanish dance from de Falla. Paul Hansen, a candidate in June for the Master of Music degree, appeared in a zeitful Monday evening in the Adelaide music historium in a program of violin music. Heads Department of Violin at Washburn College Hansen, a pupil of Professor Waldemar Gellch, presented his picklift to the B.M. degree several years ago. He is, at the present time, the head of the department of violin at Washburn College. Gavin Doughty, 32, acted as accompanist for Mr. Hansen. Richard Edelbute, gr. 28, has received word that he won first prize in the prescription compound contest at the Kansas Pharmaceutical convention held recently in Topeka. In the open contest for filling practical prescriptions he won first place and a certificate of excellence. EDELBLUTE RANKS HIGHEST IN PRESCRIPTION CONTEST Edulbatel score is the highest in a grading based on method of procedure, accuracy and neatness. Contestants were admitted from the ranks of all staff members of the students of Kanusd and members of the senior class of the School of Pharmacy. Dr. Pleyte Speaks on Tuberculosis at Open Meeting Medical Men Interested in Disease Among Apparently Healthy Youths Youths Dr. Arthur A. Pleyte of Milwaukee, Wis., in speaking on "Finding Tuberculosis in Apparently Healthy Youth" began the second day of the seventy-fifth annual meeting of the Kansas Medical Society at the Memorial Union today. Dr. Pletye is clinical director of the Wisconsin Anti-Tuberculosis association and his trip here was made possible by the Kansas Tuberculosis and Health associations. He stated that his problems have been in the mass-testing of large numbers of students, and the cost of giving such tests. In testing the students at the University of Wisconsin, he found that from 30 to 35 percent of them have been exposed to bacillus tuberculosis. Many have been only infected and are to be watched closely. Those found to be diseased have their history traced and x-rays are made, they are further examined, and then laboratory tests are given. Following Dr. Fletye's address, many took the tuberculin test. This demonstration was made possible by Dr. Ca-nutson, director of Watkins Memorial hospital. Dr. Phillip C. Jeans of Iowa City, Iowa, spoke to the conference this morning on "Certain Practical Aspects of Nutrition in Childhood," and an address was given this morning by Dr. Russell L. Haden of Cleveland, Ohio, on "The Problem of Chronic Arthritis." The program for this afternoon includes three addresses, Dr. E. H. Lindley of Lawrence will speak on "Higher Education and the Medical Profession." "Tumors of the Symptom," he said, is the subject for the address by Dr. Dean Lewis of Baltimore, surgeon in chief of John Hopkins hospital. The closing address for the day will oe given by Dr. Edward L. Cornell of Chicago. He will speak on "The Physiology and Conduct of Normal Labor." This will be illustrated by a motion picture. Bridge Winners Announced Final Results of Last Night's Play Sent to New York The Trinity Episcopal Guild served as sponsors in this city of the nation-wide contract bridge tournament last night at Wiedemanns. The purpose of the tournament was to play and study its rules, which offered effort to better the individual's playing. Winners of the tournament were: North-South, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Barrow, first; and Professor E. H. Taylor and Miss Jesse Stareck, second; East-West, Miss Janet Wheeler and Mrs. W. O. Hamilton, first; and Miss Marcia Beauty and Miss Helen Wagstaff, second. According to Miss Madge Bullene, under whose direction the games were played last night, there were 13 tables of players present. Sixteen hands of bridge were played during the evening. The Olympic Committee, in charge of the National Contract Bridge Tournament, was composed of 30 men and woman among whom heli and Josephine Culbertson and Milton C. Forster of the United States, which enclosed all the players over the entire United States to be playing the same thing were arranged by the Olympic Committee. "No trick hands were dealt," said Miss Bullene, "only those containing ordinary problems not impossible to solve." The scores compiled by a local committee were sent to headquarters in New York City this morning from where the grand bridge prize will be awarded. Varsity From 8 Until 9 Tonight The Mid-Week Varsity will be held from 8 until 9 p.m. tonight instead of the usual time of from 7 to 8. Theause for this change is to enable the factors here attending the medical convention to attend the dance. Bill Phipps orchestra will play. Hospital Hours To permit health service physicians to attend the Kansas State medical meetings, dispensary hours at Watkins hospital will be from 8 until 10 a.m. tomorrow. Emergencies will be treated as usual. Work on Fire Exit Begins Much Cement and Steel to Go Into Memorial Union Escape Eleven hundred sacks of cement, which will make about 150 cubic yards of concrete, and one small car load of steel, weighing approximately 20 tons, will be utilized in the construction of the Memorial Union fire escape. Work of clearing the ground is being carried on at the present time, and will be completed about July 1, it was estimated. The five escape will be double width, four feet, to accommodate the double load which will be occasioned by the construction of an additional wing to the building in the future. Openings from every floor, including the subbasement, but not the kitchen, will be made. The escape will be enclosed by building materials to match the rest of the structure. It will be so arranged that entry doors will be out through the walls when the addition is made. Construction work is being done by Busboom and company, Salina contractors. Coen Declared Ineligible for Big Six Tennis Play Kansas Net Star Is Barred for Participation in Texas Meet Wilbur F. Coen, Jrn captain of the tennis team at University, has been declared technically ineligible for further participation in the Big Six conference by Dean George C. Shaad, Kansas Big Six conference faculty representative, and his reinstitution is being sought by a vote of the remaining conference faculty representatives, Coen's participation in an invitation tennis tournament at Houston, Texas, in April of 1923 without the necessary permission from the conference is the basis upon which Dean Shaad ruled him ineligible, it was explained by Dean Shaad today, who said the point had been raised by other members of the conference. Under rules of the Big Six conference any student of a member school cannot compete in other than regular college athletics unless special permission is granted, if eligibility to represent his school in Big Six athletic contests is to be retained. It is expected that a vote from the other conference members will be on record within a short time. Tennis schedules for the Kansas team for this spring are being held up pending word on Coen's eligibility, Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics at the University of Kansas, said today. To Convene at Manhattan Approximately 30 members of the University of Kansas branch of the A. I. E. E. will meet with the A. I. E. E. branches of Kansas State College and the University of Baska, tomorrow evening at Michigan it was reported today. A. I. E. E. Chapters Will Have Joint Conference Tomorrow Part of the entertainment will be a steak fry in the afternoon, the inspection of the new vertical antenna of WXOAK, and the reading of papers on some electrical engineering project, worked out and presented by a representative of each of the three branches. R. W. Warner, assistant professor of electrical engineering; R. P. Stringham, instructor of electrical engineering, and D. C. Jackson, Jr., professor of electrical engineering, are planning to attend the meeting, according to Professor Jackson. Geology Field Trip Planner Students Will Visit Tri-State Lead and Zinc District The economic geology class of G. L. Knight, assistant professor of geology, will begin a four-day field trip Sunday morning to the tri-state lead and zinc district. The three states to be visited are Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas The mining districts will be inspected and some of the mines in Joopil, Granby, Picher, Galena, and a few other towns along the borders of three states will be explored. Professionals will accompany the class on the trip. M. S. C. INSTALLATION DINNER TO BE HELD NEXT THURSDAY The installation banquet for the new members of the Men's Student Council has been postponed until next Thursday evening. May 11. The banquet was originally planned for tomorrow night but due to the Phi Beta Kappa banquet, and because George Schalhabmer, the college Council, is out of town, the date has been changed, according to Kirt Reisen, chairman of the banquet committee. Registrar Names Students Seeking Degrees in June Graduating Class Expected to Exceed Thousand Mark, Foster Declares All parts of Kansas, 18 other states, and four foreign countries, will be represented among the thousand or more students who receive their degrees at the University Monday evening, June 12. This will be the University's sixty-first annual commencement, and the graduates will be addressed by Robert Andrews Millikan, noted scientist of Pasadena, Calif. George O. Foster, Registrar, has just compiled a list of the students candidates for degrees at the 1933 Commencement. The list includes names of 219 students who have completed their degree; 46 students who have been voted degrees by the several faculties; and 659 students now enrolled in sufficient work to receive degrees. The list of Graduate School candidates will not be available until about June 1, and petitions for University Teachers' diplomas are received until late May. These two groups, with those already listed, bring the total pro-spective graduating class beyond the 1000 mark. Mr. Foster said. Last Commencement, 1127 degrees and certificates were presented to 1.004 different persons. The following are the candidates who have not yet received their degrees: COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES BART M. PARK Roman S. B. Abalos, Ringer Ringer Abernethy, Elizabeth Ainworth, Malcolm Neolin Allison, Frank J. Anneberg Jr., Dorothy Mordell Arnold, Kathleen Shcarer Asher, Ogle Vernon Ashley, Polly Avers. Eleanor-Beth Baer, Joe F. Balch, Thela Marion Baltis, Conrad M. Barnes, Barbara Barteldes, Mary Flor- ce Bennett, Arthur Goodwin Billings, Dorothy L耳 Birt, Leonard Andrew Birzer, Gordon Clark Blackman, William F. Blair, Erma Josephine Blodgett, Holly Joy Erma, Mary Elizabeth Brandt, Alfred F. Beeckle, Lacile Elizabeth Elizabetht, Eliza Bell Brown, F. Brown, B. Fuchen, Hester Elizabeth Buell, William Henry Bullard, James Leslie Burchem, Freda die Lucile Burdx, Frederick William Burnett, Maria Elizabeth Beverley. James M. Callahan, Florence Crannell Campbell, Evalyn E. Carpenter, Percy Merion Caruthers, Wilford Adair Caskey, Margaret Ruth Chamney, Joseph Robinson Clair, Wilbur Franklin Coen, Jr., Lorn Jean Coghill, Carolyn Combe, Harold Rees Condit, Mabel Irene Conley, Ron娇 Conrad, Anne Bernice Cook, Frances Coon, Donald Cosley, Margaret T. Coon, Frank Trissal Brain, Elizabeth A. Cramer, Frances Katherine Criley. Jospheine Agnes Daeschner, Margaret Lincoln Dale, William Fowler丹enbanger港, Marietta Daniels, Ellen E. Davis, Paul Benjamin Denton, Robert Harold Denton, Sister Edward Deplazers, Margery D. Eckley, Ross Dale Dickson, Dorothy Lee Dixon, Luke Jacob Dalibur, Dorothy Esther Doering, Earl M. Doll, Dorothy Mae Donovan, Olive M. Douglass, Helen Sheila Drecnan, Winfield W. Duncan, J Dean Doorak, Gaurke Axtell Dyche. Nary Naomi Edwards, Donald J. Elkin, Edward Carpenter Eller, Howard Golden Ellis, Frederic Oliver Epp, Maurice Maude, James Johns-Emau, David J. Evans, Harry Charles Feinold, Lawrence E. Flink, Mildred Carrie Fisher, Helen Cecilia Fleming, Dorothy Margaret Fogelberg, Iyul Charles Fowler, James Turton Fursten, Frederick William Fauni, Neil Kinnian, Naomi Ritvley, Pauline Funk. Jack W. Galbraith, Faye Louise Ganfield, Mary Margaret Gainer, Grace Marion Gasaway, Alva Allan George, Gus H. Gibson, Hilton R. Gibson, Norman Aaron Ginsberg, Lucena Jane Glover, Frances S. Goins, Dorothy May Green, Hoy R. Green, Garel Athey Grunder, Lillian Ruth Grunder. Charles Kelly Hacker, Vera Voigt Hannes, Mary Louise Harbaugh, Cecil D. Harris, Barbara Jane Harrison, Elmer F. Hartman, Lyman S. Henderson, Helen Henry, William Conyers Herring, Charles W. Hess, Jr., Claude William Hibbard, Allena Hicks, Jose Higgs, Clifford E. Kelley, Nicholas Higgs, Mozill M. Ocellz clarence Hill, Marie Hillman, Robert Lee Hitchcock, Treva Ariel Hhelm, Kenneth LaVern Hodge, Lucylace Hodgson, David Duncan Holaday, Helen Marie Holie, Marie W. Hollecker, Robert C. Holloway, Lida Forrester Holmes, Katherine Anne Continued on page 4