TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8. 1927 THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN PAGE THREE University Deans Meet to Discuss Student Transfer Resolutions Are Adopted Outlining Various Steps Necessary in Changes Changes Growing out of a certain amount of uncertainty in the minds of the deans of the different schools of the University a conference of the deans was called yesterday afternoon to determine the regulations governing the transfer of students from one division of the University to another. 1. When the student is advancing from a regularly established preliminary program of work to the course advanced professional school program, the registrar will certify to the dean of the professional school the credits earned by the student up to that time. The dean of that school will then determine if the student has met the requirements, following which the student must complete the student's matriculation in the professional school shall then be sent to the dean of the school in which the preliminary work was done. The resolution of the conference that certain principles should be adopted in regard to student transfers was adopted in the meeting. Chancellor Final Authority 2. All other transfers are to be instructed as involving a change in objectives in objectives. In any such case the deans of the two schools affected shall act jointly in deciding upon the merits of the student's request. In any cases of doubt or of disagreement the deans will take the matter to the chancellor, who will then agree and so stood that the transfer form calling for signatures of both deans, or its equivalent, will be continued in use. Deans May Refuse Enrollment (a) . If the student is in good standing under the rules of both schools, or if he has returned after having been out of the University for one *exam* or more by reason of falling under the penalty for failures, then he is deemed eligible for transfer if no fault other than poor scholarship exists. (b) . If the student is regularly matriculated and is eligible to remain in the school from which he wishes to transfer but is not eligible under the rules of the other school, the dean school may decline to receive him. It is understood that under all conditions the student has the right of appeal to the chancellor." Court Asks Clinical Help Psychintrists Needed to Study Delinquent Cases C111111 D111111 This court is the Court of General Sessions in New York. According to the prison officer, Edwin J. Coulsey, it wanted studies made last year of the delinquent boys and girls, two-thirds whom were repeaters in the courts. New York, Feb. 5, s- Psychiatrist have been lamenting the small-like slowness of many courts in making use of scientific knowledge of mental and emotional disorders. Now, one court has turned the tables by saying psychiatric help is available to pay psychiatric help from all the hospitals and clinics in New York City. "We want the psychiatrist to give us his definition of the individual's problem," Mr. Cookey explains. "We can help you. We have let the individual to come into conflict with the law. And we want a plan outlined showing how the individual can be made into a useful member of the team. It is possible how he can be best cared for." --organized in the past few weeks. Suggestions for special programs are made in the newsletters and the club members make use of the material furnished by the bureau for their meetings. In Congress Today --organized in the past few weeks. Suggestions for special programs are made in the newsletters and the club members make use of the material furnished by the bureau for their meetings. Senate Today the senate considers the conference radio bill report and confere on the farm relief debate. Takes up nomination of W. J. Pillson as the judge of the new middle Georgia district, at 3 s. m. The interstate commerce commission considers the Walsh resolution for general investigation of industrial merger of the last four years. The judiciary sub-committee continues the bread investigation. The house expects to pass the legis native appropriation bill. The military committee considers Mussle Shoole Delta Chi fraternity announces the plodging of Lester Vogel, McPherson. A closer contact between teachers of Latin in Kannas has been made possible by the Kanna Service Bureau for the University. Mr. Bawker is Lawyer, instructor of Latin. This bureau which is located at the University has just sent out copies of his book to the public. Bureau for Latin Teachers Supplies Varied Information to Instructors of Kansas The service bureau, in addition to sending out a bi-monthly newsletter, has a supply of material which is furnished free to teachers upon request. This supply has been increased recently and the teacher is receiving a decreasing demand, said Doctor Lawler. Thirty-one new Latin clubs have been organized throughout the state and are sponsored by the service bureau. Of this number, six have been In the last issue of the newsletter, dated Feb. 8, suggestions are made for the Valentine day program. A number of Latin love stories and poems Mendel, Bruenn Monk, Expounded His Theory 72 Years Ago Today Austrian Was Probably Spurred by Darwin to Carry on Experiments Seventy-two years ago today, on Feb. 8, 1885, Gregor Mendel, the Austrian monk made famous long after his death through his discovery of the laws of heredity in living animals and plants, stood before the Natural History Society of Braun and for the first time accepted anyally accepted theory. For some reason hard now to explain, his revolutionary ideas attracted no attention, and his discoveries remained buried obscurely in the records until the beginning of the present century, when they were rediscovered and appreciated at their true worth, and the results have been widely reported. In Mendel's original communication there is one sentence that deserves at least a momentary place in the focus of our attention, because of the present flare-up of legislative hostility, to the theory of evolution. It seems to be an answer to a question asked by Darwin six years earlier when in 1890 he shook the scientific and then legal chains on to "The Species." In this book Darwin made "be following confession: Whether or not this sentence of Darwin's acted as a spur and a challenge to Mendel it is impossible to say now. But it is warthin't noting that Mendel set to work in his garden to discover something about the "We are far from precisely knowing the cause; nor is this surprising, seeing how profoundly ignorant we are in regard to the normal and abnormal action of the reproductive system." are listed as being suitable for the program and plans for a Latin valentine box, with home-made valentines written in Latin, are given. During the past two months, 200 requests have been made for material furnished by the bureau. This moralistic consists of suggestions for teacher Latin in the high school Latin area, and this might be of assistance to the teachers and clubs. Some of the other topics which have been popular, according to Doctor Lawler, are "How to Teach the Word Order Method." "Suggestions and Meeting the Needs of Super- and "Meeting the Needs of Super-Pulil." Facts of interest in regard to the Latin language are pointed out in the newsletter. According to the last issue, about 70% of the high school students in the United States are studying Latin. It is also pointed out that more high school students are studying Latin today than foreign languages combined. normal and abnormal action of the reproductive system at a date nearly coinciding with the publication of Darwin's book, and that when he finally reported his results to his colleagues at Brunel, he prefaced his discussion with this significant remark: "It really required considerable courage to undertake so far-reachingly a labor, inasmuch as it seems to be the only right way in which the solution of a question can finally be reached, which will have a significance not to be underestimated for the revolutionary history of organic forms." Whether deliberately intended or not, no more direct answer to Darwin's question can will be imagined. And Mendel's estimate of the importance of his own work has been amply justified since its rediscovery, for the present-day directed evolution of organic forms, both for "pure" science and for the multicolored enterprises of crop improvement and stock breeding, all goes back to the keen insight and patient labor of the black-clad figure stooping over his rows of oceans in the closer garden at Bruenn. Drive It Yourself Phone 655 916 Mass. RENT-A-FORD Drive It Yourself 33 1-3% Discount on all pipes (except Dunhill). City Drug Store 715 Mass. Phone 17 We specialize in repairing Swiss watches Newcomb Jewelry & Optical Co. 7287 Maga St. The Coca-Cola Company, Atlanta, Ga. IT HAD TO BE GOOD TO GET WHERE IT IS = 7 MILLION A DAY When Three Are Not a Crowd Coca-Cola is enjoyed by more people, of more ages, at more places than any other drink ANNOUNCEMENTS All men who intend to enter the Annual Men's Oratory Contest are to meet with Professeur Beuber at 12:30 p.m. in the dramatic arts office in Green hall, Monday, Feb. 14, by the order in which they are to speak. LOST—Webster fountain pen, Red Dusoffel, Leave at Kauanen Business Office, Leave at Nekava at 1023. Want Ads LOST—Thursday morning between Eighteenth and Indiana and Oreed Training School, red Conklin Endura LOST—A green Parker fountain pen between fourteenth Ohio and Robinson gymnasium, Liberal reward, Call 2331, Dorothy Worsley. 105 FOR RENT—Furnished apartment, 2 rooms, kitchenette and bath., 1126 Tennessee, phone 2397 blue., 105 LOST—A gold PI Phi pin with stone in shaft. If found notify Kansan office. Liberal reward. 105 FOR RENT: Rooms for boys at 124 Ohio. Prices reasonable. C. B. May field. 104 Fountain pen. Phone 1448 white or leave at Kansan business office. Liberal reward. FOR RENT—A very pleasant south single room, $10.00, 1206 Tennessee, phone 939, 165 GIRL—At 1142 Indiana wishes a roommate for second semester. Let Sebulz do your repairing, remodeling in ladies as well as men's suits, and also cleaning Cipepe Papers, Serpentine, Nut Cups, Party Decorations, Place Cards, Programs, Engraving, Stamps, Stationery, Roller Stamps. 917 Mass. St. A. G. ALRICH Stationery 736 Mass. St. Pleasant southeast room with private sleeping porch. Phone 573. tf FOR SALE* Typewriter; Royal Standard No. 10, Excellent condition, Preferred price. Ralph Preston, phone 1398. 107 LOST: Friday evenin, a Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity pin, with diutond points; initials B. G. Leave at 1200 Louisiana or call 565, Liberal reward. j 104 EXPERIENCED MARCELLING- 50a. Phone 2775. 1015 Kentucky. ROOM FOR GIRL—Single or double private home, convenient to campus town, and tennis courts. Room is large, comfortable, and quiet. 1134 Mississippi, phone. 1429. 105 HOME accommodations for 8 boys, one-half block from campus. 1329 Ohio, philie 2199. FOR RENT, modern single or double room, for boys, at reduced price. 1345 Tennessee, phone 2025. 00 Best in any class To be absolutely truthful, we must admit a Wahl Jen will not get up and make your 8 o'clock for you. It won't answer the roll call, or take notes all by itself. But it will go along with you to any class you have, and do a better writing job than any other mountain pen you've ever seen. Hour after hour, it will glide across the pages with an ease that rests your wrist and leaves your mind free to consider what you're writing. for somebody else to read. Its iridium-tipped point of solid gold will stand up to the action when the "prok" is talking fast and you just have to "jab em down," or it will roll she rounded out sentences when you're building a theme And, oh, yes! A Wahlful of ink is a bookful of words, whether you're passing an exam or writing out your alibi. Fill up a new one at the Wahl Pen and Eversharp counter and see if it isn't so. This most serviceable and handsome pen comes in a wide variety of materials and styles. In slim, symmetrical cylinders of solid gold or sterling silver, gold-filled or silver-filled, or in red, black, or mottled rubber. For point, you can choose exactly the Wahl nib that suits your writing style: stiff or flexible, fine, medium, stub, oblique, or Wahl Standard Signature. $3 to $7 for the silver or rubber $6 and Northward for the gold 1926. The Waltz I USE ONE And you never see me at a loss for words. Have you got your own way of telling back your words you'll Evening — We'll all be working together. Send the following message, subject to the terms on back hereof, which are hereby agreed. 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