SPECIAL COMMENCEMENT EDITION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas Vol. XXVII 结 V No.194 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1930 CLASS REUNIONS ANNUAL MEETING ATTRACT ALUMN K. U. OBSERVES 58th ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT Interest Centers on Announcement of Officers Following Canvass of Votes ISE TO GIVE ADDRESS Several Changes in Policies May Be Announced; K. U. Dinner Will Include Graduate Speak Class and organization reunions, in addition to events for the University and the University dinner tomorrow, are in share for alumni and former students returning for con- Outside of the commencement programs themselves, the Alumni meet at 10 tomorrow morning and the dinner at noon are the high points. Interest in the association meeting will center in the announcement of off-prints from more than 1,200 ballets, greater in number than in any previous alien electoral committee. The committee consisting of Prof. U. G Mitchell, State National Light and Prof. R. H. Lester, State National Light and B.L.L.97, of Independence, and Edward Hawkey, A.W.365, Wellington, are canvassing. Several outstanding changes in the organization probably will be submitted by the board of directors, to be finally decided at a meeting this morning. Ise Will Sneak Following the business meeting, the retiring president, Charles D. Lee, will deliver a keynote address on custom of having the retiring president deliver the annual address is postponed due to time in many years. The meeting will be held at the Fraser theater in building rather than Fraser theater Reunians This Afternoon Speakers at the University dinner Gbrowne will include Albert L. Boseh, Director of the Rock Island Laboratory, Chancellor E. H. Lindsay, H. Clark, president of the Rock Island, representatives from the group reunions and the class of 1905. The deans of the various schools will be introduced. The faculty members will furnish manic Mr. Lee will inscribe. Class reunions will include the group meetings of the classes of 1866-7-8-9 and 1915-6-7-8, and the twenty-fifth anniversary celebration of the class of 1965. The reunions all will be held at 4:45 this afternoon. Lieut. Col. E. R. Gentry, A.B.05 of the Walker Roid hospital in Washington, Richard Michael, M.S.05 of Portland Orc, and Dr. W. H. Halsey, A.B.03 of the speech school to celebrate the class of 05 celebration at the University cateriae More Than 100 Expected Prof. Olm Tampin of the department of philosophy will be the speaker at the reunion of the classes of 1895-7-8 and 9 at the cafeteria. The 1915-0-7-3 reunion is expected to attract more than 100 members. Reunions are held in January and March, 88 Speakers will be W. Johnson, A.D.Ita, Trivingt Glom Swongen, A.A.Arnold, Jr. (Continued on pore 3) REORGANIZE W.S.G.A. GROUP SYSTEM PLANS FOR 1930-31 The group system, an organization on the Hill which promotes social life for women in our nation's houses, has made its future plans for next year. The whole system has been One of the new features which the group system is sponsoring is the "Gingering" tour, a series of various entertainment for the women who wish to come. A series of teens will be given at the homes of the leading designers and senior leaders. After these opening events, groups will be organized in the group system in order to increase the interest of interest to the women in the group. Some of the interests are clubs club, new book review groups, hiking This organization has been function- ing for three years and its motive has be a success for those who have been interested. Is Kansas Representative James Compton of Wichita to Enter National Edison Contest James H. Compton, Jr., of Wichita Falls, Miss., and the Kansas representative in the Ellison ship contest to be held in East Oransy, N. J., in August. The state examination was scheduled for June 15. Compton, who will be 16 years old this month, is the youngest of the 33 Summerfield candidates, and the 3 other candidates with whom he was competing. Compton, who is partially self-supporting, has a major interest in 'bethismy'. Last year Burton R. Power, of Salina, was the Kansas representative. He is a summerfield scholar at the University of Oklahoma, where he placed eighth at the national contest. Announcement of the 1930 Summerfield scholars and other awards by the University is expected to be made next week. Five Leading Educators Scheduled for Summer Charles W. Bailey, English Leet urer, Will Open Series June 25 Students enrolling for the summer session will be offered a program of lectures, seminars and workshops on the high standard reached by lectures during the past summers, according to the course's schedule. William John Cooper, of the United states commission of education, Washington, will probably be here to lecture July 14th. The date has not been made yet. The program will be opened Wednesday, March 14, for a charge of the Holl Secondary School, at Laurentius, England. "New Law requires secondary school to have title of this book," Secondary School is a private institution teaching a new type or the progressive type of books. Roy Hatch, school at *Upper Montclair*, N. J., will give two lectures here, in the afternoon and evening of September 26. On "A Unit-Fusion Course in the Social Studies," "Training in Citizenship" will be the title of his evening talk. Mr. Hatch will speak Columbia University of New York. E. R. Hedrick, of the University of California, will give two addresses July 10 on "The Teaching of Mathematics," "Alaska, Our Last Frontier" will be title of a talk, July 14, by A. E. Kernick of schools at Ketchikan, Alaska. The lectures will run through the first six weeks of the summer session The activity ticket includes the lectures. Ross H. Clayton Is Dead K. U. Alumnus, Prominent in Business and Lodge Circles, Passes Ross H. Clayton, A.B.U., superintendent of the Lawrence Paper Box Society, died on Monday evening, May 31, at the home in Lawrence from cancer after an illness. Mr. Clayton was born in Hill City, Nov. 7, 1880. He attended the University of Kansas and was graduated from the graduation he enlisted in the air service of the United States Army, commissioned a lieutenant, and was stationed at San Diego. In 1904 he returned to Lawrence and for several years was employed as an accountant in the business office of the University, and the department had a position about seven years ago to begin his work with the paper box company. Mr. Clayton was a member of the First Methodist Episcopal Church, Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity, American Legion, and of the Masonic lodge. At the time of his graduation from Lawrence, Sigma Delta Chi, professional law firm of Lawrence No. 6. He was a 32-degree Scottish Rite Mason and served last year as venerable master of Zerbal Lodge of Perfection and Abbadian Shrine of Leeworthy. On June 3, 1917, Mr. Clayton was married to Miss Marguerite McVey, of Hill City. They have two children: Alice, II; and Ruth, III. Other surviving relatives are the parents of Hill City) a sister, and Ruth, II. The only surviving grandmother is M. Clayton, A.B.15, of Chicago. Fueral services were held Tuesday afternoon after the funeral service at Park cemetery. The services were conducted by the Masonic lodge and the American Legion, with a special honor guard. The School of Education, and the Rev. H. A. Gordon, of the First Methodist Church. 161 CANDIDATES FOR GRADUATE SCHOOL DEGREES Names Are Submitted to Faculty of School at Final Meeting for Their Approval ELEVEN TO GET PH.D 115 Are Applicants in College Only One to Get Master of Science; Four in Business A total of 181 names of candidates for advanced degrees was submitted to the faculty of the graduate school yesterday afternoon. Names of 11 candidates for the degree of doctor of philosophy were submitted. Of this number 113 are applicants for the degree of master of arts in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; two with a master of education; and eight for master of education; four for master of business administration; five for master of architecture; three for degrees in civil engineering, two in electrical engineering, and one each in mechanical engineering and one each in engineering. Abbott & Bradley of Arlington Alabama A&M University A&M Bank, Berkshire Hathaway Berkshire Hathaway Berkshire Hathaway, Birkhaven Riverside, Marriott Hotels, Marriott Hotels The list follows; L. V. Davis, Doris Denton, John Woolf over author Robert H. Howard, David Bartel and Tom Horner. *The Making of the Great* Taylor Kone, Neil E. Kone, Veron Mildred Bilbar, Albert Coffin, Irmie Fried Master of Arts Sister Rose Dominic Galloway, Sponsor Lloyd James, Island Katherine Glenns, 1649 James, Island Mary Doyle, James Boy Hutchins, Eureen Lawn Harvey, James Becker, Ernest Lawn Harvey, Michael Christian Hoffman, Veronica Holm, Helene Holdsworth, Thomas Heyer Hopper, Alicia Haller, Christopher Green, Mary Alexander Grimpett, Mary Alexander Anna A. I. Ingram, London, Jordanian Herit, Mexico, and New York. Dr. Jill Kochman, Ph.D. Wilson Moehlman, Ph.D., Boston, and Kristallik Holmberg, Virginia, Knox, Kane, Memphis, and Atlanta. Dr. Dennis Kochman, Philadelphia, David Eriksson, David Lloyd, Joseph Kalimari, Mr. M. McBeth, McBeth, andandra Marion McBeth, William M. Janush J. Naimannis, Charles Andrew Newman, Eminem, John A. Dillen, Michael Kubrick, Nick Macalek, Roy William Naimannis, Elena May Oll, Bilson Pita, Opal McKay, Katie Walsh, Matthew Patton, Lauren S. Warren, Rob Loehner, Robertsen, Marion Fellin, Roy Adel.傅强 Thorntonchurch, Crannall Hall Albert.傅强 Thorntonchurch, Crannall Hall Alex.傅强 Thorntonchurch, Crannall Hall Alison.傅强 Thorntonchurch, Crannall Hall Ashley.傅强 Thorntonchurch, Crannall Hall Awaken Master of Science Historical World Curren Positifumia Adultae (Female) Car- rionis Infantium (Male) Fertility Car- rionis Infantium (Male) Fertility Car Charles Howard Carruth. Master of Science in Education Master of Business Administration Harold H. Lynton, Paul Eyreate Mathew Hurchel K. Underhill, Frank Joseph Vcital Jeanne Makes the Most of Getting a Sheepskin Maker of 387 Walter Lee Singer, K. E. Ken, Carl Gourlhb, Ibena Biss, C. M. Williams, Melchus, Colin Porge, George Richard Fermon, Will Warren Wilmshaw, Raymond C. Wooded. De Witt, Mickey, Albert Prekail Learned, Lincoln Elsner Grimster seymour H, Crook, Clifford William Nys reply. Mechanical Engineer William LeRoy Mathews. Mining Engineer wundering down the long steep hill, preparatory to receiving the skin the little sheep so willingly gave up that the sweet girl graduation ceremony embellished across the diploma and the official seal of the University in one corner, we find bonnie Jeanne wrapping the long sleeves of her dress in the gods that for be ever requiring dignified seniors to go through such a process. And then it is her luck to draw a seat in front both the jeane and few can see her. Dawn again! Mining Engineer Henry Carl Wildmer. Henry Carl Wyman Doctor of Philosophy June Brides Are Numerous And then she thought, in this place can smoke and no one will be the wiser. The old croons out in front the windows of the house little tide with ironmant majesty vies. She lilt in an Old Gold. Not a cough in a carload. And despite the efforts of the speakers and the desire to maintain, the day was not attertly ruined. Marriages and Engagements of Graduates and Students Announced In a double wedding next Saturday at Earlena, Virginia Sturgeon, A.B.29 and Grace, Virginia Sturgeon, A.B.29, of Wichita and her sister Grace, the bride of George E. Hull, of Virginia Sturgeon. Auctioneer has made of the engagement and coming marriage or June 21 in Kauai City of Kailua Bay, where she will meet on June 23, Miss Barbara Brown will become the bride of Morton E. Wilson, A.D. 23 at her home in Winthrop Another wedding of interest was that of Miss Edith Doty and Ben Hibba, ADA. The bride was a member of the home of the bride in Columbus, Kan. Announcement was made for Fridia Bart, e31, and Nelson Schubmacher, Burt, e31, who took place at Linden Fulton, t. 1820. Miss Helenie E. Dean and George A. Olson, A.B. 28 were married Wednesday afternoon at the home of the Rev. Jacques Charles A. Richard in Lawrence. Miss Margaret McDonnell of Kansas City and James yeldin of Kansas City. The marriage of Miss Winnifred Murray and Russell W. Pritz, A.D. 2013. Auctioneer of the marriage of Miss Ruth M. Smith of Kansas City to Ulysses M. Coffey, former student of Wichita State University, was urdeday at the Presbyterian church. A wedding will occur in July is that of Miss Loyte Young, B.S.28 of Wichita and Holland Miner, 93 of Barber College. The bride's valenta at Cheyenne, Wyo. Miss Ruth Brown will become the heir of Mary Ellis, but 30 of Fredonia on next Monday afternoon at the heirs' residence of Lawrence. Memorial Union Serves as Central Meeting Place Organizations Now May Petition for Use of Facilities in Building in Building The Jayhawker room will occupy the middle room on the west side, and the W.S.G.A. book exchange will be moved to a large room on the east corridor. Cabinets, shelves, and cash are also been provided for the book exchange. Centralized assembly facilities for all Hill organizations will be provided by next fall in the basement of the Memorial Union building as the result of a merger between the council co-operation with the Union operating committee. A committee with Morris Straight as chairman was appointed from the council to investigate the matter and to learn what机关 will be included under the new plan. The rooms will be divided to organizations on a regular time schedule, and his according to importance and full all have the choice of time and date. Up to this time there has been no centralized place for groups from over the Hall to meet, and as the result of the violence at fraternity and security houses Already the Men's Student Council and the W.S.G.A. have held meetings in the basement rooms, and other orchard locations. It will be in recognition by the committee. Filing cabinets, chairs, and desk will be provided as the operating com mittee can afford it. Nine exhibits are open to the public during commencement week, according to Prof. Raymond Eastward, a retired museum historical museum, Willex classical museum in Fraser hall, and the military equipment in Fowler shops will be open it. Nine Exhibitions Are Oper Museums and Special Displays Shown During the Week Two of Mrs. S. C. Thayer's art collections will be shown in Spooner-ton, VA. Students will be given the engineering exhibition and the University broadcasting system will be shown on display in the west Stadium, and the liquid air exhibit will be in the Chemistry building. Students will be collection and student art work will be hung in rooms 325, 325 and 327 Adjacent. The exhibit in Marvin will only be open from 2 to 5 today, but the others will be open today and tomorrow. Service Elevator For Memorial Union to Be Presented at Breakfast Tomorrow SENIOR CLASS CHOOSES GIFT TO UNIVERSITY SUTTON IS IN CHARGE Activities, Starting With Ball Game Yesterday, Include Also Chancellor's Reception and Annual Ball Events yesterday were the baseball game with the seniors pitted against alumni and coaches, the Charcellon reception last night and the annual To Present Service Elevator The class memorial, a service elevator at the Memorial Union building, will be presented. The class is giving a lecture to students mainly $3,000 in co-operation with the Memorial corporation. A bronze table will be placed on the main floor to The elevator will connect the kitchen of the cafeteria with both the main floor and the hall-room, and is exquisite and facilitate banquet serving in particular. Alice Sutton is chairman of the committee in charge of the program, which includes the meeting, reading of the class history and class prophecy by Betty Dumire and Edward McKernan respectively; pre-employment training is a service elevator for the Union building by Donald Judie the actuary; and the conference Lindley; and the smoking of the pipe of peace. The class will close the briefed meeting with the singing of the national anthem. Mav Attend Dinner Seniors were given tickets when requested yesterday to the University dinner tomorrow, providing they intended to remain until 2:30. Tonight the graduates will meet at 6:45 north of Administration building, from which the precessional for the baccalaureate will begin at 7 o'clock. They will meet at the same time for the commencement procession. Provision for parents of graduates for the best enjoyment of the occasion has been made. A special section has been reserved for commencement for the students, such as obtained by tickets procured by session with their cans and gowns. Parents will be entertained also at 2 tomorrow afternoon in Frazer hall with the presentation of "Mr. Pim Passes By" by the Kansas Player, who will be among the first to receive an Amission will be only by tickets obtained by seniors for their parents. The play is an English comedy, in which the eccentric man Pim nearly opens a settled English family by his house and then learns that he finally was a happy ending. Those who will take part are Allen Crafton, Francis Wilson, Tessiana Blakeleye, Jessica Crafton, George Calderwood and Ethel Mullin. 150 Teachers Are Placed handler Hopes to Reach Last Year's Mark of 223 Approximately 150 placements have been made by the teachers' placemeter bureau since the beginning of the sem year. The number of places in the side of the state; approximately 25 at college positions; approximately 25 as in graduate schools; and the remaining 25 as internships. The appointments in the field of English and French are set for this year, probably due to the surplus of graduates in these fields. Other colleges have a number of appointments in the past years have been made in these fields so it is unfortunate that there is a surplus of applicants. Between now and September 1, the burea hops to place between 30 and 45 acres of land. Charlie Chandler. Last year 223 teachers were given employment and that number rose from 161 to 223. Since the last publication, the following teachers have been placed: Syed M. Khan in high school at Denton; Steve Gudner will teach in the grade schools at Prairie; and Dorothy Willis will teach and art in the grades at Lawrence. Alumni Meet at Detroit Seventy-Five View K. U. Publications and Campus Pictures Seventy-five Kansas graduates were present May 23 at the annual meeting of Kansas alumni hosted in the winery. The event was attended by the alumni office recently from Paul Eendacott, B.S. 23, member of the board of directors of the K. U. Exhibition of the 1831 Jayhawk and of several copies of the University Daily Kansas, the Graduate magazine feature of the evening. The alumni picture, "A View of Old KU," was also shown, and created considerable interest in the university. The Kansas-Pennsylvania (football game was announced at the meeting, and a number of the alumni are planning to attend the game. anuse for the evening was led by Gordon Saunders. A,B,24. a former Kansas football star and a member of several college orchestras during his 35 Students to Attend R.O.T.C. Training Camps Program Leavenworth, Knox, Snelling to Have Intensive Program All students who have completed junior work in the military department are eligible to attend college. An applicant is required to acquisition of a reserve officer's commission. Thirty-five students in the University R.O.T.C. will attend summer training programs for two weeks, Ky, and Fort Smailing, Minn., for a period of six weeks from June 1 through August. Each camp will include an intensive program of training especially designed to meet demands of the particular student. The student, who the student is preparing himself. Those who will attend the summer camps are as follows: Fort Leavenworth, (engineer unit): A. S. Burt, W. L. Burton, L. Caean, A. J. Ferrin, F. E. Gildenko, F. E. Glindeko, L. P. Straught, W. S. Wainer, E. W. Williams and C. L. Wood. Camp Knox (coat artillery-anti- aircraft unit); E. W.凳, E. Dale, E. D. Decker, V. A. Goodrich, M. A. Guy, G. A. Guy, M. A. Guy, F. M. Fullus, F. M. Danka, F. L. Singleton, R. E. Woodmance, H. L. Butter, J. Deal, H. M. Fairhurst, H. G. Green, R. G. Hanson, E. J. Hillstead, R. G. Kirk, R. G. Littlewood, H. A. Seely, and G. A. White. C. Bowers, a member of the court artillery unit who is in the medical school, will be sent to the medical R.O.C.P. camp at Fort Silling, in Minneapolis. Members of the staff of the local military department, who will accompany them to the island, W. M. Flewers, S. W. Kellender, and H. R. Pfeiffer, C. H. P. Enkert, to England, H. C. E. King, to Fort Leavenworth, Only One Play This Summer Difficulty in Casting Causes the Cancellation of Others The recently organized Fraser Players will give oil onye production duration of the series of six plays as he been previously announced, to be playing trips abroad and others will not be in school makes impossible the casts. "The Silver Cord," directed by Miss Frances Wilson, instructor in the department of speech and drama at the summer program. The cast has not been chosen Tentative plans have been made to give the performance three nights, June 23 The casting of Tarkington's "Tweedles," the play which was to be given under the old plan, has been discontinued. To New Teaching Positions Majors and Others in Political Science Go to Eastern Universities Paul C. Aiken, A.B. 79, Lee S. Cohen, B.A. 80, and Jeffrey C. 39, majors in the department of political science department, have received assistance to universities in the field of public policy. Alken has received an assistance at Princeton university. Google has received a fellowship from the University of Wisconsin, and Flynn has received a fellowship in the school of computer science. Cyde F. Snider, A.B.28, who has been an assistant instructor in the department of Physics at the University and the University the past two years has received an appointment to the faculty of the University of India and will be an instructor in political science. BIZZELL TO GIVE MAIN ADDRESS MONDAY NIGHT Snow Hall Dedication Is to Be This Day; Davis to Deliver Baccalaurate Sermon Tonight 'ROGRAMS IN STADIUM Among the visitors coming for the event will be Gov. Clyde M. Reed, who has indicated he will be here for the Processionalers for Both Services to Start at 7 p.m. From North Side of Administration Building The University community, augmented by many visitors, is in the midst of its fifty-eighth commencement week which will reach its climax Monday night when more than 1,000 women and women will receive degrees and W. B. Bissell commitement program, a n d d members of the board of regents, will be here and tomorrow. The commencement rectal by the School of Finance opened a full three-day day-schedule of which many meetings and transactions take place. Yearday's program was featured by the annual re- Chancellor Receives aption and meeting of the School of Engineering, and dedication of a plaque to the late Frank G. Concert last night from the steps of the Alumni Hall in the center of Bell University cepitation and the alumni-senior ball. With Chancellor and Mrs. E. H. Lund-in the receiving list last night were the deans of the University and their wives. About 29 sophomore and junior women assisted. Hub Elsie and his wife accompanied music for the ball which followed. An important addition to the commencement program will be the dedication of New Snow hall this afternoon. It will be preceded by a band concert on the campus. The baccalaureate services and commencement services are planned in the Lawrence churches this morning. The University dinner tomorrow morn, and the commencement program will be features of the closing day. Bizzell Is Speaker The commencement speaker this year will be Dr. W. B. Brizzer, president of University Oklahoma. Doctor Brizzer was proclaimed the university since 1925. Previous to that time he was president of Texas A. and M. College from Columbia. Doctor Brizzzell hold degrees also from Baylor University, the Chicago College of Law of the Uni- Dr. Ozora Stearns Davis, president Seminary, will be the speaker at the becalcarea tonight. Doctor Davis wrote an article about his seminary after holding the position since 1969. He received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Leipzig in 1952 and is a professor at Hartford Theological Seminary. Among his books on theology are "International Aspects of Christianity" and "Jung's Gospel in the Light of the World War." Prof. W. C. Stevens, B.S.85, M.S.92 of the department of botany; M.S.92 of the pathology and parasitology of the University of Michigan and C. W. Spencer, a member of the board of regents, will speak at the dedication of New Snow hall at 3 this Friday. Dedication This Afternoon The program will be held in the University of Kansas on Friday, March 16. E.H. Lindley presiding. Organ precludes by Prof. Laurel E. Anderson, a song by the University of Kansas Glee club will precede the talks. Inspection Professor Stevens has been a member of the University faculty more than forty years. Doctor Case was a faculty member in 1863, and served at the University of Chicago and the State North Carolina before to color in Michigan in 1906. Both baccalaureate and commencement addresses will be held in the bowl of the Auditorium, or in rainy or threatening, in which case the University Auditorium will be used. Processional Sessions The processional both services will begin promptly at 7 p.m. at the north side of Administration building. The Chancellor's party will head the (Continued on page 3)