MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1927 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE Teaching Is Choice of 1025 Students, Statistics Show Report of Registrar Lists Varied Professions; Few Are Still Undecided More than one thousand of the students at the University of Kansas are planning to enter the teaching profession, according to statistics of the student body. Most recently compiled by George O. Foster, registrar. Of this 1025 who are planning to be teachers, 850 are women, which, when compared with the number of students in the school, that more than half, plan to teach. Business as a profession has been chosen by 372 men and 35 women. Accounting is chosen by 40 men and 10 women, veterinarians, tractors, drugstores, merchants, salesmen and insurance agents make the list of the so-called "white collar workers." In the field of medicine and public service a variety of professions have been chosen. Three hundred ninety-three men choose the medical profession in general while '9 women chose to be either physicians or surgeons. There are 120 engineers and one man chooses public service. Sixteen women are planning to do social services, and 55 nursing. Other occaional jobs in this line are bacteriologists, dentontist, pharmacy, distracter, and home economics. Many Choose Medicine Athletic directorship in some form is chosen by 29 men and 2 women. A photographer, two undertakers, a psychologist, economists, chemists, and seven lumbermen are listed. Five men chose writing, two men chose research. Only two men plan to be formers. Ten women are planning to become homemakers. Ten women are planning to correspondence, social secretaryship, personnel work, astronomy, library work, interpreting, recreational work, knowledge teaching. Journalism Is Popular Two men plan to enter Y, M, C, A. Work and one woman plans to enter Z. The two men plan to choose between 55 men and 68 men. Put 12 men and 4 women plan to enter Engineering in some form totals 362 men and women. Architecture, and architectural engineering, architecture, electrical and general engineering, industrial, metallic, mining, oil and gas petroleum, radio, and music. Architectural and chemical engineering, drafting, and landscape design are chosen by 8 women. Two men will be physicians, while chemistry is chosen by 40 men. General to Be Missionaries Various forms of the fine arts are chosen by both men and women. Artists, commercial artists, actors, filmmakers, and music are what 48 men choose. Eight women desire to be concert artists, 17 plains women want to be stage actors, dramatic stage, illustrators, interior decorators, literary workers, and musicians, make 62 women in the world. Three hundred and sixteen men choose to be lawyers while eight women plan to enter that profession. As one of the first groups to enter the religious profession, One woman and three men plan to become missourians while 14 men plan to be candidates. the foreign field is also represented. Two men plan to enter the consular service, seven foreign trade, and two women plan to work in government. One woman plans to become dean of women while one also plans to do research work. This survey was completed cards filled out at registration time, and those that were note that 212 men and women are as yet undecided as to choice of a life's vocation. Announcements Kappa Beta will have a candy store in March and an office in Marvin hall, one in central Administration building, and one in Watson Lawton. Proceeded去 to the Marlin Riley, chapman. W. S. G. A. Council members are to be at Squires studio at 12:30 sharp Tuesday, Nov. 15, for the Jayhawk picture. Every member will be a memorial mailchief president. Rose McCulloch, president. A collection of prints made from the stencils sent a few days ago to Mercy hospital, Kannam City, Mo. The prints are mounted in ministration building, after Monday, Nov. 14. These show 17 of the "Bedtime Storker" animals in stencil form during a session around the walls. These are to be stenciled on the walls of the house. The Rosary Rosemary Keteman was to have gone to Kansas City Nov. 10 to serve the work, but the inclement weather was requiring skipping to be postponed until Nov. 15. Modern Indians Show Ancient Tribal Customs Forth to the light of day They come! They come! Come push onward on their way Ah, hoy, hey, they, They称呼. They称呼! Ah hey — they come! Creek, Oagues, Kiwanaw, Winnipesaug, and Onedis. From the prairie, their rivers swept down upon us in a gray valhalla; chieffawn, squaws, and coyotes, not in birch canes, but in elk and furs, in Packardia, Lincolne, and some very few, in Henry Ford's Hey, hey, they Ah, hey, hey, they They came to receive the blessings of Child, Nah.Nu-Nom-Noun, 184. Became a saint and autumn tribe; to see the Haskell steve on the warpath against the Husk They came all atlBhre with the thought of another "Pow-Wow" at the next year's carnival, where the red man once again reigned supreme. They came for games and presents, for dances and barbecue. The boys were the main way of entertainment for the red men and for those pale faces who are bold and amiable toward their customs. So for two days the tribes lived in their primitive manner. Then the native costumes were laid aside until next year. Sills and fars are so common that they are turned out to graze, and the Packa lincolnis, Cadillacs spi along, carrying the Indians—the Creeks, the Oates Cheyennes, Winn nehapas, Oneidas, Klowas and Potto watiories—back to their modern "light our hearts and gay as we homeward take our way to play the music we use Singing as we go Hy-yi; hy-yi; hy-yi" Orchestra to Make Tour University Organization to Visi Six Kansas Towns A concert tour through six Kansas towns is to be made by the University of Kansas in February and will be followed December 5, it was announced by Karl O. Kuinkerstein, director. The event is scheduled for May 26, include Auburn, Janetton City, Clyde Clay Center and Wamogo, with one other location. Somewhat less than forty members of the orchestra will make the trip through the personnel not yet been decided upon, but they will be made up of Dvorak's Carnival overture, two movements from Beethoven's symphony in C major, and the Erk-king, and the second part of pieces a little more popular. A special feature of the program will be soloes by Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, associate professor of voice, who will sing "Something Old" and will use Schubert's *Kr*-Eing and several of the popular familiar numbers; Mrs. Moncrieff is an experienced interpretative artist having sung in the University last year. Nov. 17, the entire orchestra of forty-five live broadcast from the Raleigh Bilbo Blues Festival performs a harp solo, the first student harp solo ever featured in the Unitarian Church. The fourth of a series of poetry hours sponsored by the W. W. C, A. was given Sunday afternoon from to 6, at the home of Miss Margaree Lynn, professor in the department of English. Ten was served at p. m.; M. Lynn wrote ten; Edward A. Robinson and Alfred Noves. Want Ads LOST—PI Kappa Delta key. Name on back, Ethie Morris. Reward. Call 2476. $80. LOST—Pair silver rimmed glasses Phone 628. Reward. 5 TO RENT—Three stalls in garage adjacent to east campus. Call 321. FOR SALE - 7-room modern home—nearly new fine-line home. Hard-wired floors, built-in-bookcase and kitchen cabinet. Lots of closet room sleeping on. Garage. $600.00 land. Dove Ridge. Call at 1850 Bode Island. MARCELLING, finger wating, wate- waring; 5de first 4 days of week on Friday and Saturday. Shampoo- ing; 5de week. 1015 Kentucky phone 2775. DR. FLORENCIA BAROWS Osteopathic Physician, Calls answered. Over Barber's Drug. Phone 2235 WANTED - Your typing neatly and correctly done. Satisfaction guaranteed. Prices reasonable. Helen Louise Foster. Phone 1561 5 R. WANTED—At once, one girl roommate; also a single room for rent at 1231 Louisiana. Just off the campus. Phone 1879. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Gasses Exclusively 1025 Mass. Yesterday Today Always Never before in its entire existence has the American Red Cross been called into action in disaster relief service of such magnitude as has marked the year ending June 30th, 1927. Flood and fire, cyclone and explosion, seemed to follow one another throughout the year with clock-like regularity. Not one month of the twelve was free from some destructive outburst of the forces of nature. Twenty-five of the states were visited by disaster in some form. All told, the Red Cross served in 75 domestic disasters during the fiscal year, and extended relief for twenty disasters in foreign countries. For two of these—Florida and the Mississippi floods—national appeals were made and the response was prompt and generous. In a few others local appeals helped pay the cost. In each case the national treasury of the organization had to supplement the relief fund. While the Mississippi Valley floods were dwarfing all else because of their appalling destruction, the Red Cross was quietly but efficiently acting as your agent of relief in twelve other disasters, occurring simultaneously. During the same month which saw the great Florida Hurricane with its accompanying toll of destruction blazed across the front page of every newspaper in the land, the Red Cross was directing relief work following a tornado in Ohio, a devastating fire in Alaska, and floods in Illinois, Kansas and Iowa. 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 Your Membership Dues Make This Disaster Service Possible JOIN K. U. ROLL CALL Tomorrow - Wednesday - Thursday Contributed to the Red Cross Campaign "On the Hill" by the University Daily Kansan