Generally fair weather and Thursday. Possibly shows in east portion. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Broken record, eggs, steers and coming in hours over vacation. Vol. XXVII The Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16, 1930 Dr. Burdick Will Greet Rotarians at First Session Lawrence Club to Presen Noon Program Friday With Barrows Presiding The Friday noon luncheon and program, for the visiting Rotarians will include a presentation of bringing the luncheon two new members will be taken into the Lawrence or Berkley school. J. S. Barrows, LL.B, 60, president of the club will preside at the meeting and will present a program of history will give the main address, Dean K. A. Schlegel, of the School of Education, will welcome the school's new President, Johnson, A.B. 25, will play a violin note. The opening meeting of the conference will be at 9 Thursday morning, Dr. W. L. Burdick, vice-chancellor of the university, will address the speakers and the response will be made by Ed Zimmerman, president of the Wichita学院. The principal speakers on the morning's lecture are Professor John A. Rotary International from Mitchell, S. D., who will talk on "International Headquarters and International Service Programs," known lecture from New York, who will speak on "The Incubus Lie." No.160 The governor's banquet and will be held Thursday evening at the Memorial Union building on Sunday, Feb. 25, presided of the Kansas State Teacher College at Hays, will preside both at the dinner and at the dance. Tor Shevillk, representative from Auxiliary to "Massachusetts" and *Black Stirks*. The first meetings Friday will be the club president and club secretary. The second meeting will be the hotel and Wiedemann's grill room. The second general session will be on Saturday. The nurturing session will include the reports of committees, and an introduction to the role of the Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia, will speak on "The Development of the Individual Rotarian and his Devices and Capability for Service." The participants will address the meeting on "Revival of Personality" and Brigade General Sturm Hechtzolm, common member of the Rotary Club, on "What We Can Do for Our Boys." Nominations for district governor will finish the business meeting for the District of Columbia, and a day intermission will be taken with unhired business, report of elections, and art address by Albert Fauld. The individual will act as agent of "The Development of the Individual Rotarians in His Desire and Capacity for Service—In World Politics." the visiting Rotarians and their wives in the Memorial Union building following the rude Friday evening. The wives of the Rotarians will include a reception in Spencer-Thayer Museum Thursday afternoon at 3, the government tour of the city Friday afternoon, a military demonstration at Haskell attendance at the baucary rodeo Thursday morning, and been invited to attend the conference session and especially the address by Private Harold Paul Thursday morn Templin to Make Trip Through Eastern States The Lawrence golf course has been opened for the use of any Rotary Am or Rotarian who wishes to play. Prof. Olm Templin, chairman of the committee or endowments, will leave the eastern states in the interests of the endowment association. He will Professor Templem will go through Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Chicago and San Francisco before he Michigan, and Des Moines, to New York where he will aid in setting up group organizations of alumni from these three universities in committee to the board of trustees of the endowment association and help them establish a network of who are interested in endowments. There is one of these committees in each county of Kansas, and in most other states. Scotch Treat at Union Building Again Tonight The third of the mid-week dance will be held on the top floor of the Memorial Union building this evening. Mrs. C. A. Coe, hostess of the Union building will act as hostess to Read the Kansan want ads. Moore to Lead Students in Two-Day Geology Trip Prof. Raymond C. Moore, of the geology department, will take several days to collect and study Burtingame limestone in the southern part of the state. They will start from Lawrence on the morning of June 26, then move from there they will move south toward the Oklahoma line. They will return the footnotes for this work and will make the trip are Hyman Rosethal, *c*; *m23*, Merrill Haas, *c*; *m22*, Edward Hatton, *c*; *m13*, Joseph Winsor, *c*; *m23*, John Laham, *c*; *m24*, George Lancaster, *c*; *m33*, James Cowlew, *c*; *n18*, Robert Barry, *c*; *s13*, Silsay Dyer, *c*; *m33*, George Meister, *c*; *n23*, Paul Battenberg, *c*; *m33*, Melville Bear, *c*; *o5*, Ovid Osborn, *c*; *g22*, George Meister, *c*; *n23*, and Edgar Weltz and Feist Take Lead Roles in Annual W.S.G.A. Musical Faree Royalty,' by George Callahan to Be Given in Fraser April 28, 29, 30 Selection for the cast of the W.S. music which prominently "Hogues" in the evening's theater on the evenings of April 28 and 29 have been announced. Ruth Clement has signed the leading roles, and Joseph Holte and George Callahan will star. Other members of the cast are announced today are: Frank Thomas, George Stuart, George McDonald, George Martin, Paul Boardaldes, Clare Stevens, Robert Shoppy, Virginia Wade, and Andrew Baxter. Mentions, Robert Pitner, Donald Burnett, Robert Hugh, Donald Holly, and "Royalty" is a prize-winning musical comedy from the pen of George Gershwin and David Harey's "your" music production, "New Moon." It is a far more mixture of college life and true royalty. The lyrics are by Charles Larkin and Harriet Lall. The production, including both cast and choruses, has been in regular repertory for years. In the night the choreas worked out with Arlene Simmonside and the cast for the comedy. Discuss School Divisions Junior College Meeting Talks of Six-four-four Plan No decision was reached concerning the noch-discussed six-four-hour plan of arranging school divisions up to nine grades, and that at the annual meeting of the Kan. san Conference of Junior College which was held here yesterday it was decided to send students The plan was generally favored by the men at the conference but they must face the difficulty which must change. Most of the junior college as they now operate consist of the first two years of the ordinary senior school and a junior college and plan of management. The six-four-four plan would keep the grammar school grades together, and the sophomore class to the present junior college. The seventh and junior college and the senior high school. It would require a consider- changes and the state seems reluctant to grant the necessary amount. A legislative committee has been created to address the state aid to junior colleges for the effecting of a change from the pre-state state legislature to the before the state legislature, and the committee will also lay plans for a state-wide campaign in behalf of the committee. Bills for the necessary appropriations have been before the legislature for the last three sessions of Congress, but they have not been passed. One disappointing exception was noted however in reports from Kansas which said that the state's reliefers the big wrist counties of the western third section nor the south central parts of that state had suffered more severely ever reported encouraging relief. Kansas City, April 16—(UP) Additional rain benefited from farm to school drought and droughting drought were promised tonight. Rainfall has been general in Missouri Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, the Dakotas and Montana. Board, P. Connor, weather man said. Prof. E, F. Engel, of the department of German, gave a report on the scholarship records of junior college who are here at the University. Mrs. W. A. White Is Dinner Speaker for Mothers Day Says 'Women of University Art Pleased With Choice, Dean Husband Mrs. William Allen White will be the speaker at the Mother Day妈会 not to be given here May 3, it was announced from the Chancellor's office. Mrs. White is the wife of the well-known American author and editor, William I. "Young Bill" White their son, speaks here recently on his trip through France last summer and in New York. White has also been a speaker here. In former years the main feature of the occasion was a ten given from 3 to 8 in. in the building. However, for the past three years there has been a banquet given on Saturday at Watkins hall and various houses. "The women of the University have long desired to meet and bear Mrs. Marion McGregor, a former committing on the choice of speaker, for your Margaret. The latter gave her a lecture in the admirers and Ms. Ann M. Searay, of Onomworth, was the spoke in 1925. The plan of setting inside a day for the mothers of K. U. students is meeting with increasing popularity from year to year. At the dinner last year there were 750 guests and before there were 400 guests present. Invitations for All K. U., Mothers The University will send the mother of every K. U. student an in- vitation to the College and the program of University functions. Letters were sent by Fern Snyder, president of the College, and by president of Student Council, to the presidents of all organized houses asking that houses co-operate in making Mother's Day a followiing following is made on her letter. "We feel that the members of each organization can help materially through personal letters to their mothers urging them to visit the University and attend the banquet. Saturday, at the Memorial Union building, Two we request that the organizations plan their individual house reunions in commemoration of Mothers' day for May 4, thereby en ling greater participation and creating a spirit of unity in all activi- Prize for Best Poster Auctioneon has been made to the department of design that a prize of $5 will be given for the best poster portraying the spirit of Mother's Day, and another mother traveling the farther distances. Other posters submitted will be used about the campus, Mrs. Ella G. Saworth, of Los Angeles, mother of Dean Donald M. Saworth, of the university, Award was awarded the unrestured last year. The following women will be neceses: Corbin hall, Mrs. Charles Broek and Mrs. Pita Corpley; Henkel Bruner, Mrs. M. Larkins; Bruner, and Mrs. H. B. Latimere Watkins hall, Mrs. A. T. Walker, Mrs. C. H. Ashton and Mrs. R. C Members of the general committee on arrangements will be Kenneth McIntosh, president of the Women's Council; Fern Snyder, president of W.S.G.A.; Shirley Cishelcey, presi- dent of the University of Kuwait; president of Ku Kus; Dorothy Dorsey and; Mrs. C. A. Co. ex-officio member of the Women's Council; Bryant and Florence Longmacker. Patti Johnson will be in charge of prizes given to the mother coming from abroad, while mother having the most children in school. Louise Irwin will be in charge of publicity and Jack Morris Mrs. W, L. Burdick and Mrs. C, E. Huckney, will serve as a committee on arrangements for the dinner. Other members will be Lela Hackney, Katherine Epps, Henry Hockney. Mrs. W, I. Baumgartner, Mrs. C, V. Kent, Curtia Skags, and Louse Thacker have been appointed to co-ordinate the building in the Memorial Union building. A joint concert of the men's and women's glce clubs will be given Friday night, May 2, in the University Auditorium. This annual concert will be included in the arrangements being made for the entertainment of the guests. There will be a group of number presented by both organizations annually. The Muh Pi Epsilon, honorary music security, will give a costume recitia day, May 4. This event will be one of the Mother's day activities on the day. Campus Gossip The sixty-second annual meeting on the Kansas Academy of Science meet tomorrow at Hays and continue until Monday. Attendance from the University will attend and have some part in the program Those who are going listed today for the conference will be F. T. Perkins, of the department of Psychology; Jesse Starcek, Harold Browne, of the chemistry department. John W. Hill will read a paper. Prof. Ray Q. Brewerst, of the department of chemistry is the treasurer of the Acad SIX PAGES Pl Lambda Theta, honorary education sorority, elected the following officers last night: Ruth Litchen, gr. president; Ruth Winston, M. Bacchia; Earl c., 231, recording secretary; Beulah Morlison, of the department of psychology, correspondent secretary; Rust Stout, c., 231, Stevens-Stambridge, c., 1, keeper of records. Watson library will close at 4 Thursday afternoon and will be open during the Easter vacation from the until 12 in the mornings and from the afternoon until 5 p.m. The emption of Saturday when the library will not be open in the afternoon. Mrs. Josephine N. Meyers, of the Denver city schools, visited the Bureau of Visual Instruction of the University of Colorado at Boulder. Meyers was seeking information to be used in organizing a visual instruction program in her school. The first Kansas district谋MoLoya convention will convene in Topkapi, Saturation State, on Wednesday. The president. Degree will be conferred during the afternoon session at which a member of the grant will participate. Williams, former United States district attorney, will speak at a banquet to be given at 6:30 at the Mason team center. The School of Fine Arts has charge of the radio program from KFKU this evening from 8 to 8:30. The follo- wed show will be "Pride and Fugue in A Miner" (Buch-List). by Florence Beamer;琴曲, "solaris," curtains ("Curell"), notes ("Neville"), and Genevieve Hargars; piano solos, "Al Wien" (Goldowsky), and "Polly schneider" (Rachmaninoff), a "A Study" (Popper), by Genevieve Hargars. Forrest Jackson, 132, was admitted to the student hospital this morning, and Fred Grant, e31, was discharged. The student hospital and dispensary will remain open during Easter when the student will be observed at the dispensary, and the afternoon hours will be observed. Dean R. M, Davis and Prof. F., J. Moreson of the School of Law were in Toptea today attending a meeting of professional ethics admission selection which is studying the problems of professional ethics admission selection. The meeting was held at the office of the Kansas supreme court and was attended from various parts of the state. Prof. Robert Calderwood of the dramatic department will return this week to speak about what he was called three weeks ago because of the illness of his father, who died in 2015. Stottler, son of m. O. W. Sterling, of the department of Latin and Greek, will be here Saturday morning at the Optical Company, of Rochester, N.Y. Mr. Sterling will meet to graduate from a line of optical research. The Bruch and Lomb Company offers a course for students who qualify for the position. A good salary is offered. Students must have a Bachelor's degree in W. J., Miller, A.B./88, abumus member of the athletic board, is in Christa's hospital in Topeka with an infected arm. F. T. Stockton, the dean of the School of Business will speak before the all-inclusive meeting in Wichita tomorrow on the subject, "The Interests of the School of Business in Foreign Trade Education." The meeting will be the joint auspices of the Wichita chamber of commerce and the designated United States department of commerce. Earnest Boyce, professor of sanitary engineering, and R. E. Lawrence, assistant professor, are making an inspection trip in the southern part of the state. They are studying the floods in the oil fields of that section. (Continued on page 4) Schoolmen Gather to Discuss Place of Activity Work Sealock, Nebraska, Leads Discussion of Problem at Alumni Meeting of Educators "The same plan for learning in the class room should be used in an extra-classroom setting," Sealock, of Lincoln, Neb., who led a spirited discussion this morning in the classroom. Dean Sealock affirmed that extra- curricular activities should be broad enough for all students to participate in. Activities should have a purpose, and the teacher must let the student work out his own extra-curricular The fact that the best extracurricular activities are those which run through school is also an advantage. Snakechk. An activity, such as having the best school in one which gets the most exposure. The next question was that of dealing with the falling student who is not at grade level in her activities. The speaker said, "Participation in extracurricular work can be difficult but it raises it. One exception may be made to this and that is competitive." Many Doubles Expressed The two doubles, Dean Sealock and many critiques and doubts were expressed. J. F. Willemer, principal of Wyndamette High School, told us that of 2,000 students, 45 per cent did not care for extracurricular activities. Immediately the question was asked if these same students cared for the car The discussion ended with the hopes that as much time will be given to education to those over 16 years of age as there is to those under that age now. The school has been trained in the field who have been trained to do the work which extracurricular activities require. The teachers of today have been trained in the old school and are not prepared for all of the activities. French Stresses Future Value "Extracurricular activities are transitory, but many of them come back in life," said Will French, superintendent of the most transitory of activities leave some of us to use our later lives." "Activities that develop an avocational interest are of double value," she says. "Kunzle City, Mo., "They should not, however be activities that take complicated apparatus that only the school can provide. A classroom outside of school, it will do a great deal to help him in his later life. When an activity of this type becomes important, he must be done to further that activity. Many of these activities lead into an art or science, and they are detrimental to the development of the individual as an artist." Mehler Outlines Dangers "Extracurriculum in schools is supposed to develop the students physically and psychologically, made Mr. Mehler." When the activities continue to such a state that the weighing in of contestants must be watched by the judges to insure fairness, the extracurriculum is not doing This was the theory applied when inter-school athletics were abolished in junior highs of Kansas City. It is thought that the athletic affairs within the school is an profitable to the students, as it is in theism of the students in the school against school type was thought harmful to the young students. National Advertising Question to Be Discussed Final Debate Is Tonight The final debate of the season will be given this evening at 8 p. m. in the National Convention for construction building. The debate will be on national advertising, Russell St. John's College and its affiliation to the affirmative side of the question and Henry Ashler and Rice Lardine. The debate will be a decision affair and will be judged by faculty members. The faculty members of the faculty will be the deciding one. The faculty members chosen to participate in the debate are A. T. Walker, Prof. J. W. Twente, B. E. W. Sendelius, and Prof. J. W. Visiting Rotarians will be especially welcome, according to Prof. E. C. Bucher, debate coach. Student enterprise tickets will admit students An unusual feature of the debate will be the fact that the opponents may ask each other questions during the rebuttal period. Kansas Track Captain Read the Kansan want ads. CAPT. LOWELL HINSHAW Hinshaw is expected to enjoy his best and bad season. He holds the lead in the standings, and the odds favor his lowering that track camp is completed. Journalism Fraternity Plans Annual Banquet on 21st Anniversary Local Sigma Delta Chi Ranka Fifth in Total Number of Members The banquet is to be given in celebration of the twenty-first anniversary of the founding of the fraternity. Marco Morrow, managing editor of the Caper publications, will speak at the banquet of Sigma Delta Chi to start at 6:30 p.m. at Wiedemann's tenure room. The local Beta chapter was founded in 1019, the year after the first chapter was established at Delkaw University. In 2013, there were 241 members from this chapter, which ranks fifth among the 44 active chapters in number of men. Wisconsin ranks first, Missouri second, Oklahoma ranks third, and the University of Washington fourth. The banquet will be attended by many alumni and prominent Kansas leaders, including a few who attended also. The new officers of the organization will be introduced at an annual banquet in October, president; Wiburn Moore, vice president; William Nichols, secretary. The etiring officers are: are Jailite, president; Arthur Circle, vice president; Homer Miller, secretary and treasurer. A male quartet composed of Glen Simmonds, Merle Birney, Bernard Ewart, and Charles Larkin will sing, W. Y. Morgan, publisher of the Harlem News, was scheduled to speak about illness will be unable to attend. Glee Club Gives Concert Men to Leave Monday Morning on Annual Tour The K.U. Men's Glee club gave a concert at Bucyrus last night before an audience of more than 200 persons. "The program last night was phenomenal," said spring trip. Some numbers were exceptionally well done, said Prof. Eugene Christy, director, this morning. Rough spots will be inedited in 8 tonight at 1 p.m. on Thursday and possibly at 3 Friday morning. A bus has been chartered for the glee club tour next week by the lineup of pianists and musicians on the Union Pacific Railway company, at a price which will make it possible for the club to break even on Christy. The club will leave at 7:30 Monday morning for its annual concert in Lyon. The first program is a 3:30 matinee at Lyons. On consecutive evening trips from Lyons, Wilson, Russell, Great Bend, and Herington, the Club will return to Lawrence Saturday April The soloists on the concert pro programs are Charles Sager, Merle Birney, Donald Smith, Elmer Anderson, and Robert Milton. The co-eds of Willamette College declare that flirting is perfectly improvable. They have a keen awareness and ambition of every woman. To their mind, the college campus is a place where you can learn and enjoy, for after all a girl wants some pleasant memories after college days. - Publication will be resumed with the issue of Tuesday evening April 22. This is the last Kansan before Easter vacation. ing April 23. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Rodeo Entrants Will Broadcast Special Program More Than 1,600 Tickets Sold; Approximately 700 Not Claimed in Office The stage is set at the University of Kansas Memorial stadium for the presentation, Friday evening, of the announcement in the United States at night time, as a feature of the Kansas State football night show is a parachute jump to the stadium field immediately before the opening of the rehearsal have just begun. More than 250 students have not called at the athletic office to get 700 hours of training. More than 300 of the students requested and were all labed by turning in activity tickets With more than 900 tickets for reserved seats all ready in the possession of all students, more students will attend the relays and rodeo have been present in The athletic department asks that students call for their tickets as soon as possible in order to avoid a rush immediately before the events start. Stryker to Broadcast John A. Stryker, of Kansas City, MN, will ceremonies at a nightly concert on the radio station WREN from 7 to 7:30 Thursday evening under the cogmons of a plane. Cowgirls, cowboys, and Indians who will participate in the night rode are also scheduled to take part in the radio broadcast. After Mr. Stryker's performance four native Potawatomi Indians, William Wap-kon-ma, Wild Bill Potts, Charles Chiles-blake-to-ne, and George Woodchuck will render tribal songs "to the accompaniment of tom-tomas." Bonnie Jean Gray of Burbank, Calif., one of the outstanding women curators and a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, broadcast piano琴谱s. Old time enchwiy songs including the doleful "Honey Bee" by Oley Graham of Hays, Jack Cody Hale of the Potawatomi reservation, and Jack Jeffries of Dendwood. After introduction of champions and near champions entered in the playoffs, the Oakland Claybera, a little Potwatotaffia girl, will sing "Carolina Moon." Col. R. L. (Boho) Miller, generalissimo of the league, describe the livestock which will be released. A poem to "Baby Lorraine" Graham, nine-year-old world champion juvenile trick rider, written by the poet "laint狼" will conclude the broad- Steers Are from Texas Steers are used in the rodeo to be used in the rodeo are Brahmas directly from the plains of Texas and are unusually fierce as they have never been in a rodeo arena before. They have been trained by Miller, are also of unusually high class as were raised in the Jackson Hole country of Wyoming. An unnamed parachute jumper of the Independent Aviation corporation of Lawrence will leap from a plane 6,500 feet in the air at 743 o'clock Friday night at the opening of the hospital. The plane will fly within a strain 29 feet in diameter. Dr. F. C. Alen said he would not hold the jumper to his contract to light within the 20-foot strip provided he was able to be somewhere within the stadium field. The feat is regarded as a particularly dangerous one as the flood lights, which will light the stadium, are posted on all sides of the field. The jumper, however, is an old-timer who has not been officially and has made numerous successful leaps in the past under more trying conditions. Wets Declare No Money Was Spent for Lobbying Washington, April 16—(UP)—The association against the amendment spending $127,213 during 1929 in its fight for the repeal of the eighteenth amendment but not a cent of it. Robert Curran, president of the association, who addressed the senate lobbying committee today. Washington, April 16—(UP) —The association against the prohibition amendment is centering its fight for a state law that would elect a election of wet candidates to office and a campaign showing the American people how the dry law works. Henry Curran, the senate lobby committee told the senate lobby committee today. Curran was the first witness in the committee's investigation, of both wet and dry organizations. .