THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MANY LARGE SCHOOLS HAVE SUMMER TERMS Every Institution Holds Specia Inducements for Increasing Summer Enrollment DUDLEY BUCK TO BE HERE Fifteen Hundred Students Expe- pect to Attend Hot Weather Session at K-U. All the Universities and most of the colleges of this section of the country have a summer session in addition to the regular winter work. In each of them as well as the number enrolled varies, not in proportion to the size of the school or University, but as to the inductions offered in the climate, removal institute, and the general popularity of the place. This increase of the number of students attending the summer session is not due to any special desire to endure the intense rays of "Old Sol" in the super-heated city of Lawrence, when there are other institutions which are not located in such a warm section, but rather to the desire to take advantage of the opportunities offered at this school. The enrollment in the Summer Session at Kansas University last summer was nearly eleven hundred, an increase over the previous years. This summer an enrolment of fifteen thousand exceeded and the number may exceed that. The University of Missouri offers as its main inducement the fact that it is possible for one to get a full semester in two hours, in the Summer session. Colorado University holds out as its main influence its ideal summer climate and the special courses offered to teachers. Boulder is in the heart of the city, which is a section of the city, Chautauqua Park, is reserved for the accompilation of those spending the summer there with families. This section is above the town and a constant chautauqua action in the park during the summer. Dudley Buck is probably the largest inducement the University has in the summer session. His abilities as a voice cultureist need no commendation. He will have students from all this section of the country. The teachers institute draws many teachers to Boulder for the summer. For these two reasons the summer enrolment usually exceeds that of the school, and they are on a four quarter plan, one of the quarters being the summer session, and the other three take up the regular winter work. It is possible to take the same amount of credit there in the summer session as it is here, ten hours. The Lawrence Chapter of Order of DeMolay, gave a farewell party Saturday night at Ecke's Hall for members and Masons. A large crowd attended, including many students. The room was refreshment served. Music was farmed by Saunders. Lucas five piece orchestra. The band will meet Thursday afternoon at the Stadium at 4:30 o'clock instead of today as before announced McCanles. Pay your Stadium pledge. **Note:** The image contains text with many characters that are not clearly legible due to the cropping and blur. Therefore, no specific information can be extracted from this image. American Legion to Burn Memorials and Old Flags Indianapolis, Ind., May 24 (United Press)."On Memorial Day the old wooden war memorials that glittered with painted carving in 1919 are to be burned in accordance with military regulations by various authorities, according to reports received at national headquarters of the Legion. These memorials were built in many instances in the early days of the armistice, and bore on wooden panels of wrought iron. Of late they have fallen into decay, having been erected merely as temporary memorials. Souvenir hunters have already marked out the sites of all of them for mantelpiece ornaments. The Legionnaires remember the army regulations which provide that old American flags too shabby for display are to be burned, so that the torn pieces may never be scattered or soiled. ARMENIANS CLAIM COLUMBUS Discoverer of America's Real Name Was Kholumbian? Alexandropole, Armenia, May 24 (United Press)—That Christopher Columbus was an Armenian and that his correct family name is Kholubian, is the claim put forward by Miss Olivia Hill of the New York, who has spent the past year in Armenia with the Near East Relief. Columbus has been claimed by the Spaniards, Jews, Moors and Italians with a few sections still unheard from. The Armenian claim was first brought to Miss Hill's attention by prominent Armenian scholars, and she has since ascertained that several families of this name still exist in Iran, where they all share their close relationship with a Spanish branch of the family from which Christopher Columbus is supposed to have come. A very complete record of the early history of the Kholumbian family is said to have been included in the manuscript library of the ancient Armenian monastery church at Echizminis, where the monks were safe keeping early in the war. An effort to trace this book is being made by Miss Hill. Pay your Stadium pledge. HUGE WAR PAINTING TO BE SHOWN IN N.Y. Transportation of Work of Art Is a Real Problem for Experts Graduation Flowers Paris, May 24. (United Press).—Ocean transportation experts are puzzled by a problem raised by the acquisition by an American organization known as the Pantheon la guerra, which is to be taken bodily from Paris to New York for exhibition. Not since the transfer from Egypt of the obelisk which is now in Central Park has such a job been tackled. The Panthéon de la Guerre, which consists of a canvas nearly 150 yards long and about 18 yards high, showcases a series of war chiefs and allied statemen standing out in startling relief against a background of the battlefields of France, has been purchased for a tour of the world beginning in New York. The canvas cannot be cut in pieces and put together on arrival. It must be shipped in one piece, entwined around an immense wooden roller. Not many steamships have facilities for such a feat of transport because most of them are not touring in the United States, special railroad cars will have to be built for it. Since the announcement was made that the famous canvas is to leave Paris there has been an outing in the press against the export of what is considered a great work of art, but investigation has demonstrated that of the million or so persons who paid for the canvas, almost all of the Pantheon, just after the armistice, less than 100,000 were French, the vast majority of the visitors being Americans, who went to see Pershing, Liggett, Allen, President Wilson, Ambassador Harrick and the other notable figures who took a direct part in the great war. ROSES Prof. and Mrs. E. Miller of Pasadena, Cal., will celebrate their sixteenth wedding anniversary there June 5. Professor Miller was for many years Dean of the College and is at present professor of mathematics, although retired. He and his wife were here last year for commencement through which he worked with friends here. Professor Miller writes that the K. U. Alumni Association of southern California will attend the anniversary reception in a body. BELLS FLOWER SHOP Phone 139 825 1-2 Mass. 2015.06.24 17:04:39 AM 原创文章 © 译者 唐伟强 版权所有 未经许可不得转载 2015.06.24 17:04:39 AM 原创文章 © 译者 唐伟强 版权所有 未经许可不得转载 "HIAWATHA" By Students of Haskell IN HASKELL AUDITORIUM MONDAY, MAY 29, 1922, at 8:15 Tickets on sale at the Round Corner Drug Store Reserved Seats 50c Bobbed Hair an Obstacle In Choosing Pageant Cast Bobbed hair has proved an obstacle to the sponsors of the Lake Geneva historical pageant to be presented by the mayor. Hundreds of girls are to represent Indian maidens, but most of the neighborhood girls have bobbled hair, and research has failed to reveal his genetic origins with abbreviated hirsute adornment. Pi Lambda Theta, honorary educational Sir Laudita will hold its annual strawberry shortake feast, at the home of the president, Jessamine Fugate, 1310 Tennessee Street, Wednesday afternoon, at 4:30 o'clock. Fifty per cent of the high school girls assigned a part in the pageant have been rejected, and now when a boy is selected for the requisite is that she has long hair. Pay your Stadium pledge. REPUBLICAN SENATOR PREDICTS BONUS BILL Senator Watson Makes "Keynote Speech" of Coming Congressional Campaign Indianapolis, Ind., May 24-Pre-treaties that a soldier billon bills will be enacted at the session of Congress, that railroad rates soon will be reductions that a soldier billon bills will duced and that a tax burden will be today by Senator Watson, Indiana and administration leader in a speech about the "second" of the republican congressional campaign thus far. Watson's speech was before the republican state convention of Indiana but national significance was attached to it because the senator is understood to have discussed these matters thoroughly last week with President Harding in Washington. In an emphatic manner the Senator made it clear that the republicans will conduct an aggressive campaign declaring the administration will stand on its record. Watson directed a vitriolic attack on the last administration. He gave many comparisons of what he called democratic waste, extravagance and incompetence, since public economy and efficiency, since March 4, 1921. He endorsed the ship subsidy and praised the pending Parrot bill. Wednesday afternoon, the members of Kappa Phi. Methodist organization for college women, will have a picnic at 10:30AM on Sunday and a farewell meeting for the seniors. The party is known who took an umbrella from Rowlands Annex Tuesday. Return to 1708 La. and no questions will be asked. 158-24-19. "GIFTS THAT LAST" We Like to Do Little Jobs of Repairing Gustafson The College Jeweler ENROLL NOW For Summer School Students now in attendance must pay a late enrollment fee if they enroll later than next Saturday noon. R. A.KENT,Director "The Cowardice of Intolerance" A sermon on the historic sin of organized religious movements brought down to date. The Unitarian preacher was excluded from the Lawrence Ministerial Alliance, not by direct action, but by the subterfuge of disbanding. We prophesy that they will organize again next fall by invitation of the elect. Can even Christian churches that maintain this spirit of intolerance survive against the scientific spirit of the free search for truth? In justice to the friends of the liberal spirit we add that not all the ministers of Lawrence sanctioned this policy. This is an issue that concerns your liberty. You are invited to hear the sermon. Unitarian Church (by the park)—Next Sunday at 11:00 a.m.