Weather Party cloudy Sunday with showers possible. THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Official Student Paper of The University of Kansas A good chance to go to church. - Union Services in Auditorium. Vol. XXVI AROUND MT. OREAD M. Kelsey Beveridge, med., who has been confined in the University hospital for nearly two weeks, was discharged Saturday morning. The Freshman Commission will meet on Monday afternoon at 3:30 p.m. next week for a meeting of commission will be on membership in the Y. C.A. This will be the next meeting. Ruth Warrington, c'30, was admitted to the student hospital Friday The initiation of new members to Scabbard and Blade, honorary military science fraternity, will begin on the night of the military ball, May 27th. The organization will kick off night. Men pledging the organization will be announced later. Miss Melissa Shelley, A.B.14, was here Saturday for the Catering Day program. Miss Shelley is teaching English at Westport high school in Kansas City. Two tonsilelectomies were performed at the University hospital Saturday morning. The patients were J. Cedrien Jones, c 39, and Mahon Bell, c 42. Ralph Fulman, adv. st. ed., will charge the charge of the Hour at 6 p.m. at the Baptist church. Following this, Herbert Huntington, the youngest member of the Young Peoples Society, will lead the meeting in its discussion from 6:48 to 7:45 The Westminster Forum will be held at Westminster hall Sunday evening at 7:15. Student discussion will be followed by a presentation, is the percentage of cheating at the University of Kansas and how it be lowered? "Urban Education, gratefully," said Ms. Beltran, Selmah, c'39, will lead the forum Dean Brandt, of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, who was to speak, is unable to do on account of illness. SIX PAGES Alfred Hirshaw, med'31, will lead the course at the evening nursing meeting on Wednesday, March 27, at Methodist church at 6:30. The topic is medicine: A library book at its best. The Christian church will hold their Fellowship luncheon at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the Church of St. John the Baptist up the subpast "The Significance of Services." Robert McMerkon, e-29 Dr. Burdick of School of Law Is Main Speaker Today Pi Upsilon Has Convention Alumni of the local chapter of P Upsalan at the university were returning today to their alma mater for the first annual convention of the fraternity. This year marks the 20th anniversary of the founding of the fraternity here. Pi Uplion, although a local fraternity, has a poster of some 300 members and the convention will be an annual feature in the future. The convention program this year has been crowded into one day of activity, and includes three addresses and an event. B. M. BROWN, Kansas City, Mo., will deliver the keynote address of the convention. Howard Fleeson, LL.B.'20, Wichita, will speak at the afternoon session, and Dr. William L. Burick, of the University School of Art, will be the principal speaker at the banquet. No.161 Washington—(UIP)—Motif thunder ended詹纳 Saturday from the team's home room, where the tariff bill is being made ready for consideration in the vote. Tariff Draft Nearing Completion in House Both houses of Congress were in recess until Monday. The senate is ready for another week or oratory over the deliberation plan of farm relief but in the end probably will reject it, much like much the one the house adopted. The house committee is finishing six weeks of work in executive session, and the meeting has even "work" of the proceedings, authentic information which has been obtained indicates a strongent content is developing in rates on sugar, wool Syracuse, N. Y.-In the future admission to the Syracuse University will be based on character and personality in addition to intellectual attainment. This factor has not encouraged into college but there will be weighted equally with scholastic ability in determining admission. Syracuse U. Requires Character Graduating Class of 1874 to Hold Its 55th Reunion at K. U. Alumni to Gather at Union on June 9 to Renew Friendships Made Many class reunions are being planned for Commencement week. The most unusual of these reunions will be the gathering of all former state students from Kansas and the University of Kansas before 1880 at the Union building on June 9. The class of 1874 which will celebrate their fifty-fifth anniversary, is the first class in K. U's history to be on the campus and logging on that anniversary. The two members of the class are Mrs. W. J. Hasselman, Indianapolis, Ind.; and Miss Hannah Oliver, professor of Latin and Greek here at the University. The class of 1879 will hold their reunion June 9 in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of their graduation from K. U. U. Frant Presents, 905 Sage Street, Indianapolis, Ind., living members of the class. Other members of the class are Jessie A. Austin, Indiana Harbor, Int.; Samuel S. Ft. Worth, Township; William T. Knapp, School; Alain Wallis, Durango, Colo.; Mrs. W. T. Granger, Orange, Cal. Other classes planning reunions are the class of 1904; classes of 1900, 01, 02, 03; classes of 1881, 82, 83; classes of 1876, 21, 22, 21, 22 and the class of 1927. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry and chairman of the commencement committee, is working out descent plans for graduating students' graduation activities which will be printed and distributed to all persons connected with commencement plans in order that confusion in the running of the program may be entirely avoided. Roberts Will Be Guest LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, APRIL 28, 1920 Prominent Journalists Invited to Gridiron Banquet Roy Roberts, president of the National Press Club, for many years in Kansas City. In Kansas City Star, and now managing editor of that paper, will be the guest speaker at May 5 by Sigma Delta Chi professional fraternity, it will present its annual fraternity gift. Governor Clyde M. Reed will also be an honor guest, while still others who have been invited include Senator Joe Biden, Senator Ben Hillery, the Arkansas City Traveler and now of the Dallas Mavericks, William Al White Jr. "Gridiron banquets" have come to be an established institution with press organizations in the United States. At most, they are of "important sources of news, men in public life, are "roasted on" the gridiron, the newspaper men giving vent to the press, and those professional contacts with the noted. The "roasters" in turn are given their chance to talk freely and without fear of publication, while the news queues being that "ladies are always present and reporters罕." John Gilbert is to act as sole judge for the finals of the University of Hawai'i in a series representing many different races are competing. Four will be selected, rerepresented by a Chinese, a Japanese, an Hawaiian, and an Anglo-Saxon. The specimen is 20 feet in length. It was discovered by H. T. Martin, assistant curator of the department at the University of Chicago in 1917 in the rich cretaceous fossil beds near Gove, Kansas. Three weeks were required to gather up the bits of bone from the fossil parts were then stored in the museum until this winter when Mr. Martin and three assistants, after three months in the ark, completed mounting the monster. Although the specimen of the Platacarpus coriaceus, which 50 million years ago paddled about in the ocean, has been restored to its original shape and may be seen on the third deck of a ship, the sword-shaped splendor and glory, it will be some time before it will be placed in its final residing case, which is now Platecarpus Specimen Is Restored to Original Shape and Naturalness The platecarpus was a 3-eyed reptile, one of which was a pinal or medial eye raising up out of the skin. It held in a manner which allowed the monster to Washington—The senate judiciary committee will reconvene Monday in another effort to arrive at a decision as to whether Secretary Clinton's role will disqualify him for his position in the cabinet. After two and one-half hours of debate Saturday opinion was posted divided that the vote was postponed. --see its enemies and prey much easier. The mounting dark green in coarse wool makes it so hard to make it one of the very few of its particular kind that has ever been used. Wire Flashes United Press Bognor, Sussex, England — King knight on Mater H. O. D. Serge- sary Saturday by C. V. Cenan, presi- dent automobile speed record of 231 miles Fife, Pa. — The Ningara, bag ship the Norwegian coast in the War of 1812, sank at its berth in a harbor basin here Saturday. The ship had been carrying water during the night. The process of mounting which Mr Martin followed on this specimen is to place it in a flat or free mount used in museums. A manikin of papier-mache and plaster of paris was first made as nearly identical to the bone reptile as the fossil bones suggested. The vertebrae and rib were then put in an almond-shaped container applied to complete the mounting. Wichita, —Parker Cramer, who with Bert Hassel was forced down in Greenland while attempting to escape the ice, will try to break the around-the-world record in a Cessna monoplane, it was announced by V. Cessna, president of the company. A "Happy Day" was started this year for the first time on the University of Minnesota campus. Y. W. C. A. Lecturer to Present Plans at Cratty Memorial Tea The fossil has been mounted by Mr. Martin and his assistant in such a fashion as to show the original shape of its body. Both city and student W. W. C. A organization are having mentorship for students studying plans Miss Cratty had made before her death for future W. W. C. A Organization Honors Former National Executive by Finishing Work Marc, Carrie Campbell, of Omaha who is traveling for the national Y. W. C. A. in the interest of the Mabel Cratty Memorial meetings, will be the guest of honour at 10 a.m., to be given on Monday afternoon from 3:30 to 4:30 e'clock. Miss Cratty, who was the nation's executive of the Y. W. C. A., for 22 years, and the president of five children. Her father died while she was still in her teens, and after his death she shared the job of the Cratty graduated from the Ohio Wesleyan University in 1890, where she won Phi Kappa and other college awards. She served as principal at the Delaware, Ohio high school, to become a member of the staff of the American College of Athletics and quarterers in Chicago. She became general secretary of the national organization and remained in that position for many years. San Francisco, Cal.-Probably the only American-born Chinese reporter in this country and a graduate of the University of Southern California, she also serves as a reporter in the country. In her career in American journalism she has showed ability practically without parallel, according to her associates on the San Francisco website. There will be no vespers Tuesday as this tea will take its place. Depicting an age in which monstrous reptiles, vicious mammals and human beings inhabit the ancient, mysterious world, this silent form now takes life easy as its wondering audience envelops its worsening existence. We gain a knowledge of that strange world. Mrs. Campbell will speak informally at a 4 o'clock and again at 5 p.m. All of her staff are all. All women of the city and the Hill are invited, especially all members and committee women, Advisory Board, and cabinet of the local Y. W. Chinese Journalist Leaving 'My Boy, My Girl,' Chief Attractions to Mothers Here "MY SON!" was the answer re- mitted in reply to the question, "wat- ould I be asked that would the card returned by a mother who will be here for Mother's day at the home?" Acceptances have been received by Dean Agnes Husband, from 44 mothers and fathers. Over 3000 invite their children to meet her. Replies are due by Monday. Other answers were: "The boys and girls," "My daughter," "Union building," "Art Museum," "My boy," "My friend," "Department." "All there is to be shown." Mother will wear badges of crimson ribbon, with the inscription "K U. Mother," in blue letters, Jay Janes and Ku Mus will have "Ask Me' buttons, and will act so interest to the places of interest on the capis." Sights of University Come Second as Reason for Visits to Hill Next Week Reports from the curious surroundings on the Hill show that few are yet known the number of guests to be present, and the number of rooms in a room is in excess of 150. Dummes, teas and musical programs are planned at the garden each season for decoration in the spring atmosphere. Tickets for the Mother's day dinner at the Union Building, will go on sale Monday morning at the business offices. Tuesday and Wednesday, May 3. "Reservations must be made, and parents who accept the invitations sent out by the University will expect their children to attend." The event will be chaired by Dean Agnes Husband, said. "Several mothers have asked for rooms at Corbin hall during their stay here. We are glad to see this interest, since it was the women of our community who were curate the building for the University. Last year Watkins hall was filled to overflowing and preparations are being made in anticipation of a like number of visitors, at the tea to be given on Thursday afternoon." Mrs. Bryant added. The official program, as planned, is as follows: Dinner Tickets Monday Teas at Corbin hall, Watkins hall, Henley house, 3 to 4:30 p.m. Saturday, May 4 Rooms at Corbin University Band Concert (Open Air), 4:30 p.m. Dinner at Union building (Margar ret Hill McCarter, principal speaker) 6 o.m. All University Dance, 2 p.m. Musical program by Mu Phi Epsilon (University Auditorium), 4 p.m. Wayde Grinstead Found Banking and Gardening Mr. and Mrs. Grinstead, who before her marriage, was Elizabeth Gay, fs30, moved to Bartleville shortly after their marriage last fall. Judiciary committee resumes investigation of Secretary of Treasury Mellon's right to hold his cabinet post. Wayde Grinstead, a K. U. student of 28, and a former Sour Dot editor, was recently employed in a bank in Bartlesville, Oklah. It oceans he is meeting with rights since he has been on this job. "He've got things down here," he said, "green sort of, and made out of paper, with 20, 50 and 100 in the corners. Then they have some shiny metal round things." In Congress Saturday Senate --meet here. May 17—R.O.T.C. Ball. Sunday, May 5 Wayde is doing a little gardening on the side. "I spaded up a space and made some ditches and put come around some mud so we could be poached to that garden. You know, we live in the river bottoms, and when it rains in Bartlesville, it rains. The garden was planted in it, and I ing I went out back to find the garden, which had been planted, located on the bank. He needed anguagely against the posts of the back porch." His conclusion was that this would prove to be quite an adventure, picking vegetables. His only other wish is for a stronger main which will wash the garden right up on the back wall. Not in session. Ways and means committee conti- nue tariff bill discussion. House Honor students are listed on page 4 The month of May and the first part of June are full of events which will intertwine with sports, concerts, recitals, track meet, basketball games, banquets, class reunions, and weekends. We are crowded into these next few weeks. The dunt athlete meets with Mimi and the alumni of the University as well as to the students. Busy Weeks Ahead April 22 Honor Convocation May 1—Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra. --meet here. May 17—R.O.T.C. Ball. April 29—Honors Convocation May 2—Fine Arts Day Convocation Lawrence Choral Union, Verdi's "Requiem." May 3-Young American Artist's Concert. Gridiron Banquet. May 4—Kansas-Kansas State, track meet, there. May 3. 4—Kansas-Ames, baseball, here. May 4-Mother's Day Teas and Banquet. May 5—Mother's Day program sponsored by the second generator club. May 9—Kansas-Missouri tennis, there. May 11—Kansas-Missouri, track meet, here. May 10-11—Kansas Missouri-base ball, here. May 17—R.O.T.C. Ball. May 17, 18 — Kansai May 17, 18 — Kansas-Oklahoma, baseball, herc. Missouri Valley Conference tennis. Ames. Conference track meet, Ames May 28, 29—Kansas- Kansas State baseball, baseball May 30—Decoration day, holiday May 31—Semester Examination begin. May 31, June 1—Kansas Nebraska baseball, there. June 6—Semester Examinations en. June 7—Fine Arts Commencement concert. June 8—Kansas-Haskell, baseball basket Golf Tournament. Cancellor's Recentio June 9—Class Reunions and Baccalureate sermon. June 10- Alumni address, alumni meeting. University dinner. Commencement exercises. U. S. Consulate Bombed Washington, —(UF) — Damage to the American consulate at Ciudad Alcazar from a federal airplane was reported Saturday to the state department by Vice-consul Saton, who was drafting an order for his unit when a bomb dropped through the roof and exploded. Considerable property damage was caused but no one was injured. Mexican Federal Airplane Hit Residence at Cuidad The report was contained in the final paragraph of the routine report by Eaton, and stated that the bomb was indeed while the report was being written. Nogales, Ariz. — (UP) — Unofficial sports reports indicate that the team of Sonora has been forced to abandon its troop many times in recent years. The troops trained in defense defenses. I. M. Vasquez, Mexican consul here I. M. Vasquez, Mexican consul here Saturday he was informed that federal forces under General Petehite she held the rebel retreat by ransfer a bridge. The fight was reported to have started after a battle in which 1,000 rebels are said to have been killed and hundreds wounded. General Plutarco Calles, federal minister of war, was undertested by Vasquez to have entered Navalista, where the encounter took place. Better Homes Group Hears Talk on Architect V. E. Smith, of the department of architecture, gave a talk on "The Modern Woman at the chamber of commerce building. The talk was given in connection with the Better Homes week Lawrence has been conducting. It Mr. Smith gave a short sketch of the history of domestic architecture from early times to the present, and requested the house of today, and gave some of the details in the planning of a house as arrangements of the rooms; he planned the layout of the space, planning of the exterior of the house which included the subject of planting shrubbery, trees and flowers, illustrated his talk with lantern slides. The fraternities at the University of Minnesota contend that if pledges are to be dropped because of their failure to make the required requirements, no count should be made against the fraternity in making up the average for the year. Convocation Speaker President W. A. Jesup of the University of Iowa, who will address the Honors Convocation in the Auditorium, will have mentors and deputy dents may be found on page four. Children Will Present Concert Monday Night in K. U. Auditorium awrence High Orchestra Will Accompany Chorus of 350 Grade Pupils The second event on the calendar is a concert by the Lawrence school children to be given Monday night, at 8 p.m. in the University Auditorium. This concert will be presented by a chorus of 350 to 400 children in the fourth, sixth, eighth and the eighteenth of eight Lawrence schools. The chorus will be accompanied by the high school orchestra under the direction of Byrth C. Dun The chorus is not a select group and every child in this range of grades is eligible to take part. The pupils were trained by the teachers in the use of Mabel Barnart, superintendent of Mabel Barnart, superintendent of public school music. This will be the first program give exclusively by children in the University Auditorium. Program The program consists of four numbers besides the cantata, "The Wheat Fence" and the sections to be presented, "The Morning Hymn" by Palestrina, and "See Lovely Day is Drawing." (Madrigal) It is, sixteenth century compositions. 2. "The Sandman's Song and Children's Prayer," from Hanuel and Gretel—Hummedrick. "The Sun Worshipers," Zuni Indian melody harmonized by Harvey Worthingham Looma. 3. "Morning Hymn," Palestrina "Seet Lovely Day is Dawning (madri- nal)" Thomas Murley. 4. "In Derry Vale," (Londonderry air with descent), arranged by Geof frov Shaw. 5. "The Walrus and the Carpenter," Percy E. Fetcher, Part 1, the prologue; part 2, the story; part 3, the epilogue. Reparations Agreement Held One in Ten Chance Paris, (UP)—It was authoritatively stated in reparations circles Saturday that the chance of the experts reaching a final agreement is American spokesman still holds some hope while awaiting the return from Berlin Tuesday of Dr. Talaib Schacht, leader of the Islamic Front, bolstered by an announcement from Doctor Schacht that Sir Charles Addis, one of the British experts who is also one of the foreign directors of the Reichsbank, be in Berlin with Doctor Schacht for the monthly meeting of the bank. Debenture Plan Safe in Senate, Nye Says Washington—(UP)—Senator Nye, Republican, North Dakota, after conferring with President Hoover Sat. day, expressed belief the debenture plan incorporated in the senate farm bill be rejected when it comes to a vote. Nye said he was convinced also the board board proposed in the bison bill what he hoped with the real problems of agriculture and would make a genuine effort to Convocation Notice First 8:30 to 9:05 Second hour 9:15 to 9:50 Third hour 9:50 to 10:35 Third hour 11:00 to 11:35 Fourth hour E. H. LINDLEY To provide for the all-University convocation at 10 a.m. Monday, April 29, the following classes has arranged: Music Week Opens With First Event a Union Service Charles M. Sheldon Will Speak on "The Life That Satisfies" Tonight Music Festival Week will begin tonight with a union church service and sacred concert at 8 o'clock in the evening, when the public without charge, but a silver offering will be taken during the evening to help cover the expense of the event. This is the first time that a union service has ever been held as the opening event of Music Week, formerly the presentation of the "Messengers" or other works of nature have opened the Music Week program The music for this opening event will be furnished by the Lawrence Choral School in the University Symphony Center and Miss Meribach Morris, of the Fine Arts faculty, soloist. The musical numbers will consist of Inflammatus by Gustavo Dudamel and Holy Lord," by Dett; and the Halloween chorus from the "Messiah" by John Carroll. The performance will be played by Laurel E. Anderson and Lee S. Greene of the School of Fine Arts. Dr. Charles M. Sheddon of Toledo will sing an onsson on "The Life that Satelles." Other Events of the Week The second event will be the canvata "The Walrus and the Carpenter" presented by the 350 Lawrence school children, under the direction of Miss Monday evening, April 23, at 8 o'clock in the University auditorium. Verdi's "Mazon" Reumien will be offered by the Lawrence Clarion Union and four solo artists from New York. The program will begin at 1 o'clock in the university auditorium. Two concertas of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra will be the high lights in Webbedday's program. A two-part performance, 2 p.m. and the symphony "America" will be given at the evening performance on Thursday. The clock in the University auditorium. Beatrice Belkin in Concert K. Ui's own artist will be featured Thursday, when Beatrice Beikin, known to the University as Beatrice Beikin, will play a crucial in conjunction with Harry Farman, violinist, at 8:20 o'clock in the University Auditorium. The Fine Art Day banquet will also take place on Thursday at 6 o'clock in the University cafeteria. Pi Kappa fraternity, honorary musical fraternity will hold its annual banquet at the Broadview Inn at 6:30, Friday evening, which will be followed by a fund-raiser and honored University Gee Clubs at 8 O'clock in the University auditorium. Saturday will mark the closing of Music Festival Week and will be given over to the musical organizations of the University of Wisconsin, a band concert at 2 p. m., and a musical program at 8 clock in the evening, given in the University auditorium. Spain for a Day on Hill Cervantes Honored at Meeting of Language Teachers "Cervantes day," a Spanish national holiday, was celebrated yesterday in Lawrence at the semi-annual meet-up of American Association of Teachers of Spanish. The program for the day was arranged by various teachers of Spanish in the University. The next meeting will be held next November in Topeka. The program for yesterday morning included a report of the national education survey, which Spanish students from various colleges, and a concluding discussion by two speakers. In the afternoon, a modern omelet in Spanish comedy, "La Rea Rie," was prepared and served to students in the department of Spanish of the University. Places were laid for 150 people at 6 p.m., and there was a night at 6 p.m. in the Union building. After the banquet, a program of Spanish music included the Carvannes day celebration. Many Aluminae percent of the alumnus more than 48 per cent of the alumnus of the University of Wisconsin have failed to marry in Alabama and Illinois 49 per cent do not marry; at Isleland Stanford and the University of Oklahoma 52 per cent in Arkansas and Massachusetts the opposite is true, 96 per cent at Arkansas and Massachusetts marry before they are 40. Etta Kett heads our fashion department.