THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of The University of Kansas Vol. XXVI SIX PAGES No.190 AROUND MT. OREAD LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 1920 Millard Humley, c.29, has accepted a position on the copy desk of the *Pennsylvania City Journal-Post*. Phi Beta Pi, medical fraternity, annuces the pledging of William F. Hettler, gt., of Phoenix, Ariz. Loyer Rockhill, 63-80, recently acteapted a position as assistant manager of the Rockhill theater in Kansas City, Mo. John Jolley, R.S.28, is now working in the army and the government of Japan. He formerly employed in the statistic department of the Japanese electronics industry, Schiedekomfort, N.Y. Lloyd M. Wheeler, B.S. 29, of Kauas City, Ma., has accepted a position with the Southwestern Bell Telephone company of Kaucas City Wheeler national in finance, and has also graduated of Di Kaipa Kai, social fraternity. Wilham J. Rice, BS, 29, of Warville has accepted a position in the credit department of the Kansas City office of the Goodrich Rubber Company of Akron, Ohio. Rice mentored and, in a member of Pi Kappa. Prof. E. D. Hay, of the School of Engineering and Architecture, returned yesterday from the third national conference of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in St. Louis, May 27-28, inclusive. Laube R. Pinder, gr., of Efingham who in June will be granted the degree of master of business administration, will then leave for research department of the Milwaukee Electric and Power Company. Paul Maleon, of the department of economies, will have a full-time in structure in the U.S. to support Malone, who received the degree of bachelor of science in business last year, is a mrm of the department of national honorary commerce society. James Albert Dent, B. S. 29, of Olathe has received notice of his appointment as assistant superintendent of the medical school at St. Mary's. Some of her duties will be in the buying of supplies for the hospital and in the collection of house bills. Dent may waived in accounting of the costs of Miami Pig commercial fraternity. Chancellor E. H. Lindley is going to Wichita Monday morning to deliver the commencement address to the graduate students in the afternoon he will talk before the meeting of the state fireman's association at Newton. Tuesday morning the commencement address of the commencement of Southwestern college, Winfield. Activities at Westminster Hall, Prebysterian student organization, will conclude with the regular Bible class on Monday, this morning at 10:00. The evening meeting of Forum will take the form of a lecture for the departing seniors. Phil Llamba Sigma, the Prebysterian co-ordinator, is grading 25 of its memorials. Andrew Olson, B.S.29 of Serranon, and Tom Greener, B.S.28 of Lawrence, have accepted positions with the Goodrich Rubber Company of Akin- a, Osaka, Japan; the Sigma Chi, the "K" Club, and Sacred honorary organization for senior mem- Greener is a member of Delta Tau Delta, publicity director for Haskell reporter for the Journal World, and the Kansas City Journal-Poet. Kenneth C. Johnson, B.S. 292 of Quincy, and R. W. Jaynes, B.S. 292 of Meath, will leave July 1 to the Volker Company of Kansas City, Mo. Upon completion of the course the men probably will work in the cakes industry. The course is a member of Delta Taun Taun, and the "k" club, having won his letter in baseball this season. Jaynes is a national commerce fraternity. Dr. W. I., B. Luckett received word yesterday from the Navy Department that his grandson Robert successfully passed the examination at Annapolis. Robert is the son of the late Major Harold D. Burdick, and is now sixteen years old. He is being graduated from the High School this month. He was appointed as an alternative by Senator Capper and his admission to the Academy at time awaits the out graduation of the principal appointee. Plans Completed for Many Displays at Commencement William Pitt-K. U. Telescope to Be Demonstrated for Visitors Prof. A.M.Wilcox Honored Classical Museum Renamed in Honor of Late Head of Latin and Greek we are ready now to begin the commencement activities as scheduled by the committee, chairman of the committee in charge of commencement arranging. "We expect everything now to work out exactly as planned because we have spent countless hours in hop of avoiding any mixups in the closely knit program. "All the receptions, teas, breakfasts, and speeches will take place exactly as planned the whole Commencement program concluding with the address of Dr. Clarence Cook Litcher, president of Michigan, Monday night." Special exhibits of interest will be offered this year under the direction of Dr. Walter H. Schowe, chairman of the committee on exhibits. Museums Place Exhibits Spencer-Thayer museum of art with its collections of ornamental objects colonial furniture and household manufactured articles. Indian collections quilted work, and many other rare objects from South America visited. Also a special attraction consisting of 48 original paintings drawings, and woodcuts, the work of Vienna children, pupils of Professor Egon Schiele at the South Gallery on the second floor. Dyeche Museum, housing one of the most elaborate and complete museums of mammals and birds in any college in America. will be open. Now Called "Wilcox Museum" Watson Library will be open from 2 to 5 Sunday afternoon, and the nain exhibit will be a collection of material illustrating works by Chester Woodward of Topeca. Perhaps the gem of this exhibition is an original page from the Gutenberg Bible, the first printed book in type and usually dated 1455. The classical museum, located in Bell Hall, has been named a coexistence center by cxcm Wilcox, for many years a professor of Latin and Greek at the University. The members of the faculty of the department of chemistry and the School of Pharmacy, will be at home to all students of these departments; and the faculty of the chemistry building on Sunday afternoon, from 2 to 5 o'clock. The fine arts exhibit will be shown in the Administration building and a separate section of paintings, exhibitions of drawings and paints done by students, craft work including pottery, clay modeling, and other handicraft work. Demonstrate New Telescope On the third door of the building, a student work done in the department of Architecture during the present school year. The new William Pitt, K. U. 23-incident reflecting telescope is almost the largest between Wisconsin and Arizona, north and south; and Ohio is also the largest. The mirror will be shown the mounting and the $5000 mirror at the following times: 1. 2. 3. 4 and 5; Monday at 11 sharp Each demonstration will last about 4 Worley was received Friday by Dean Geo. C, Sandal that the memorial planets memorandum, dated of the School of Engineering and Architecture, will arrive in Lawrence. Friday of next week is a presentation Saturday afternoon. WALKER MEMORIAL DONE resentation of Plaque Will Be Next Saturday Afternoon The plaque, which will be installed in the engineering library, will contain a portrait of Dean Walker in his early years. He may be inscribed, from time to time, the names of men who have contributed to the advancement of the School of Engineering but have either gone to other positions or had died in seri- (Continued on page 5) Presentation of the memorial will be made by E. H. Dunnire, president of the Association of Engineers in Kansas, who drew the nortrait was granted to J. Dreyer, Kansas City sculptor, who did the work on the bust of the late Henry Kaiser. The design engineer library. The design employee was the work of Edward W. The Graduate Magazine, in an issue now in press, lists hundreds of gifts to the University of Kansas. Through the courtesy of KU Press, the Graduate Magazine, the following high lights are gleaned: Other Gifts to the University ten buildings, including the original University building—North College — now razed; Spooner Library, now housing the Museum of African Art; a multifaceted gift; the Chancellor's residence; Fowler Schools; Bell Memorial Hospital at Rosebell (two buildings); Oread Training School; Memorial Stadium; Memorial Union; Workplaces Many tracts of land, including much of the original site, given by citizens of Lawrence; much of the present site; the Robinson farm nearst of Lawrence; hospital sites in Ranassa The Thayer Collection of Art, which has been added to by many individual contributions of art objects. Hundreds of other items of the widest range, including pictures, statuary, incinabula, fossils, Indian religies, and the like. The William Pitt-K. U. telescope. Statue of "Uncle Jimmy" Green. Annual awards to the outstanding students in the department of architecture were announced last night at the reception, held in the cafeteria, at 6:30. The medal and book of the American Institute of Architects for the best record in the four-year course was erranted to Earl Allen, e29. The William R. Thayer prize, including a medal and $50 in cash, went to Ruth Helen Stevens, for excellence in design of the president of Scarab, honorary fraternity, awarded the fraternity's medal for excellence in sophomore design to Jack Barnes. The president took for freshman excellence in design was granted to Frances C. Pomeroy. Willine Kinety, ex-president of Scarab, presented a volume on power pellets during an all-out best group summer sketches made last year. John Foster, A.B.29, has received word from the department of Company Entrance St. Lorenzo, B.S., Los Angeles, point of interest as manager of the college annual department. He will leave for New York. Styler, in announcing the Scarab award, said that the general high school student who was created such close competition that the prize had been awarded for the first time would instead of an accumulation of work for the entire year as has been customary. the fifteen graduating seniors honored by the department were: Earl W. Allen, Fredrick C. Ananen, W. Clifford Geery, Charles S. Haines, Earl W. Hortor, Robert O. Howard, Harold E. Keller, W. Olive Wilson Kenney, James B. Brown, Elbert E. Mosher, Charles S. Whismer, Jr., and Yunabu Yannato. John Foster Gets Position With St. Louis Engravers "Welcome," Prof. George Beal; "Chank in Sky," Edward W. Tanner; "How to paint in the dark," Raymond J. Eastwood; Fr. Hardt Halt"; Bill Cumnis Jr.; Kevin Dodd; Junior "We Are," Harriet Mugdurer "Senior and Farewell," Earl W. Foster was editor-in-chief of the 1928 Jawahar, and the 1929 student body of Theta, and the Owl society, honorary organization for junior men. He is son of George O. Foster, who has been University registrar for 32 years. Charles R. Whitner, president of the Architectural Society provided as well as other materials were made by Edward W. Tanner, B'16 and Dean Shanad, con- The last Daily Kansas of the year will be published tomorrow afternoon for distribution monday through for all advertising, classified and display will be 11 o'clock Monday morning. Summerfield Scholarships Splendid Gift to Kansas Donor of Summerfield Scholarships SOLON E. SUMMERFIELD, A.B.'99, LL.B.'01 In number and in value, the Summerfield Scholarships rank high among the most generous of such provisions for American colleges and Universities. They are a magnificent expression of Mr. Summerfield's loyalty to Kansas, and an inspiring expression of his faith in the possibilities in the young men of this region. These scholarships present a challenge to the gifted high school graduates whether rich or poor, and will set new standards of high school and college attainment. E. H. LINDLEY, Chancellor. It is a truly great gift of an honored son of Kansas. 19 Will Go to Estes Park Conference Attracts Students for 10-Day Stay Mr. Bronson was just moving to the place and after the gas stove had been set up, he went to the basement with his pipe in his mouth. The resulting explosion caused the fire to be damaged the furniture of two. Mr. Bronson's son was with him, and died. W. E. Bronson, caretaker of the Spooner-Thayer museum, suffered a fractured thumb on Friday when gas exploded in the basement of his home at 843 Alabama Ave. for 10-Day Stav W. E. Bronson Burned by Explosion of G. Nineteen students, ten women and nine men will form the University del Carmen campus to be held at Eates Park, Colorado June 7, 173, at the University of Arizona Y. M. C.A. Hershal Underbill, of the department of economics, next year will take charge of the classes that were held in 1964. His assistant professor of economics, Prof. Gagharlo will be on leave of absence from his duties during the summer. During the first semester Mr Underbill supplied the place of Prof. Henry Unterbielch who then was on leave of employment. Underhill to Teach Next Year One foreign student who plans to go is still in need of about $10 to pay for college. The student should wish to make an investment in giving this student a wider glimpse of American student life, Carter believed that he could choose no better Final arrangements will be discussed by all those who intend to make the trip, this afternoon, at 10 a.m. The delegation is already the largest since 1923 when 23 students attended the conference; there is still room for one more. Practically every known method of transportation will be employed by the delegates in making the trip. Some plan to go by train, others by bus, and others by Ford. Plans of some would be chartered to transportandoned buildings found that the rates to Denver would be prohibitive for the delegation. Who Says This Woman Can't Keep a Secu Kansas City—(Special) The old saying that a woman can not keep a secret has been disproved again. Jessie Sullivan Corbett announced the other day that she had been married to H. Corbett for two and a half years. Miss Sullivan was enrolled at the University of Kansas in 1924 and 1925. The following year she was out of school, re-enrolled in 1927. In the time she was a teacher, when she returned to school she retained her maiden name and kept the secret from all her friends for over two years. Two K. U. Psychologists Will Attend Convention The University of Kansas will be represented at a convention-conference of American Psychologists at the University of Louisville, on Monday the month of June by Dr. Harry R. DeSilva, professor of psychology and director in the department of psychology. Word was recently received that Doctor DeSilva would be on the program. He is the only representative selected for that honor while the Mid-Year conference on "Vision" before coming to the University, last year, Doctor DeSilva was an instructor in the University of Oxford, in England. The two men will leave for California examination week after a period of return soon after July 1. Professor of Law Lures Professor of Psychologist Paul C. Squires of the department of psychology, has resigned from his position in the division. Doctor Squires practically has completed his law work and expects to become a partner. Following that he will enter the bar here where he says he must practicable his psychology. Doctor Squires, will be succeeded here by Donald M. Purdy, who is finishing his Ph. D. degree this year at Harvard. Mr. Purdy has held andGraduated from a university and comes here highly recommended. He received his A. B. degree at Princeton and his M. A. at Harvard. He has taught physics for two years at Princeton, astronomy for three years at Princeton, and two years at the University of California at Berkeley. ALUMNUS OF UNIVERSITY PROVIDES FUNDS FOR FULL COLLEGE COURSES FOR TWENTY TO FORTY YOUNG MEN Provision is Made to Carry on the Scholarship Plan Indefinitely; First Group of Five or More to Be Selected for 1929-30; Faculty Committee Named by Chancellor To Seek Fossils in West Martin's Party to Spend Summer Near Colorado Scholarships on a plan new for American colleges, and most generous in scope, will be established at the University of Kansas by Solon E. Summerfeld, A.R. 399; L.L.R. 01, now a New York College graduate. The gift was made by Mr. Summerfeld, New York late yesterday. Endowment Association Holds Money Mr. Summerfield proposes the granting this year of at least five and perhaps ten scholarships for freshmen at the University, the scholarship to be tenable for the full four years of a University course. Next year at least five more freshman scholarships are offered; there would be at least 20 of the Summerfield Scholarships in effect. The plan is somewhat similar to the Rhodes scholarship. Circle and Suhler Head Summer Session Kansai A party from the department of vertebrate paleontology under the direction of Dr. Ralph Curturator, will spend part of the summer in the western part of Mexico, and another, further points, principally in the two tiers of counties extending from the north to the south. The main object of this session's field work will be to examine all the exposed outcrops for any evidence of subsurface correlation to correlate the different localities both paleontologically as well as geologically, and secure data for future studies. In addition to Mr. Martin, the party will consist of Curtin J. Hesse, his assistant, Billy McNown, laboratory assistant, and Claud Hibbard. While the work will be devoted mostly to a survey of the outcropings, tools and materials will be taken along to cure for special needs. In addition, localities containing fossils will be recorded and mapped for future reference. In case extensive deposits of fossil occur, these will be left for further research. Arthur Circle, c20, has been appointed editor, and Leater Sculber, c30 business manager of the Summer Session Kanan. Negotiations for the University were carried on by Prof. Olin Templin, secretary of the University of Kennesaw Endowment Association, and all faculty members of the university will be handed through the Endowment Association but selection of the high school graduates for the Summerfold Scholarships, and the supervision of their academic work while holding the scholarships will be in the hands of a committee of the Uni- This committee, already selected by Chancellor E. H. Lindley, is composed of five members of the faculty and two representatives of the trustees of the Endowment Association. The committee: Prof. Olin Templin, chairman; Dean E. B. Stouffer, Prof. John Ise, Prof. U. G. Mitchell, Prof. Paul B. Lawson; Irving Hill of Lawrence, and Frank G. Crowell, Kansas City, Mo. The Summer Session Kansan an peers as an eight-page tableau on Tune. You'll also be reporting and editing is done by students in the department just as it is in the regular course. The Kauanah has no subscription fee in the summer term. Enough copies are needed for each student in school students. These copies are placed at different points on the campus, and the student can pay to attend and students may obtain them there. A small fee on the activity tickets covers transportation. Gwynne L. Guthrie, M. A.'26 in economics, who since his graduation from Kirkland University of business administration at the New Mexico College of Agricultural and Mechanical Arts, received a Bachelor's degree to the president of the school. ... All summer session students are entering the University required to take the physiological examination either on Monday or Tuesday, 2 p.m. or on Saturday, June 16, at 9 a.m., in room 9 of the Admission Building. George O. Foster. Registrar. Father Was On K. U. Faculty Mr. Summerfield is proprietor of the Gotham Ski Hosiery Company. He is a son of the late Marcus Summerfield, M. D., member of the University of Kansas School of Law, with Uncle Jimmy Green, from 1885 The motives of Mr. Summerfield, Prof. Tempellain said, are to make possible a college education to a number of worthy boys who would not have had the opportunity to benefit a beneficial influence on other students by the presence on the campus of these students selected for their superior qualities; to establish a sense of academic achievement among superior students without regard to their financial condition; to encourage boys in preparatory schools to put forward their best efforts while training them with the required decision to high ideals by all recipients of the scholarships. Many Bases For Selection The plan of the scholarship is to provide a high degree of perseverance ability, high ideas, excellent character, unquestionable fidelity, and a definite promise of future usefulness. A letter is being sent out by the University of Tennessee, a university of all Kansas schools adding them to nominate candidates from the graduating class whom they will be chosen for a scholarship. This number will be cut down by competitive examinations held in August. Those passing this test will come to the University for further examination and conference with the committee. From this number of post-graduate candidates, ten will be selected to five and ten, will be selected to receive the award. To up this point no questions of financial nature will be asked. After the fortunate men have been chosen, the committee will quietly inquire into the financial affairs of each to determine the amount of money each person owes him and how he comes on his studies here without the necessity of outside work. The scholarship is to pay all expenses of those boys who have little knowledge of English, and it is expected to work on anything but the students. For the boys who need more credit in their studies and incentive to live up to the high bids that such a student is required to make. Can Withdraw Scholarship The trustees of the fund retain the privilege of withdrawing the scholar-status in judgment of three-fourths of the trustees no longer merits the assistance offered by the scholarship or the good name that goes with being a trustee. For support of these scholarships a fund to provide an annual income of $20,000 or more from coming school year, or $5,000 will be deposited with the En- (Continued on page 5) ___