UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NAMES OF NEW MEN TO BOARD OF REGENTS Recommendations of Chancellor to be Acted Upon in Thursday's Session A number of new appointments to fill the vacancies left by the resignations of former members of the faculty will be recommended to the Board of Regents at its meeting Thursday. At the present time the new professors and instructors number thirteen but the list is not complete. No one will be appointed to take the place left by Prof. C. E. McClung who has been appointed head of the department of zoology in the University of Pennsylvania. The members of the faculty in that department will be organized into a committee and a chairman elected. This committee will report the status of the department. The same system is being used in the mathematics department of the School of Engineering. Grandville R. Jones, engineer for the State Board of Health. The following are the new appointments which will be recommen- dated by Board of Trustees. T. H. Sibley, assistant professor in Engineering. Marjorie Barstow, instructor in Rhetoric. Emma Palmer, instructor in German. Mary E. Pinney, instructor in scolloy. Leon M. McCarty, instructor Rhetoric. John D. Garver instructor Mechanical Engineering. H. E. Curl, instructor in physiology. Leonard Frank, assistant instruct or in Physical Education. H. S. Neal, assistant instructor in journalism and superintendent of laboratory. R. B. H. Begg, professor of Sanitary and Hydraulic Engineering. S. H. Lewis, assistant instructor in journalism. Glendale Griffith, librarian in Snow hall. Eleanor Draper, librarian in Marvin hall. FOR TEACHERS ONLY Practical Special Saturday Courses in School of Education to be Practical To bring about the closer co-operation between the public school teachers in active service and the teachers of the educational subjects in the School of Education of the University of Kansas, Saturday科院 began the purpose of studying some of the practical problems of education. THE ROBINSON GYMNASIUM The work is planned with special reference to the needs of the individual teachers and school administrators who may desire to concentrate their study upon some of their own every-day teaching problems. The following are some of the problems to be considered: Physical growth and development of children, work and fatigue, medical inspection and results, mental tests and measurements, defectives, arrested development, backward children, personal and sex hygiene, lab samples, and discipline and special methods of treatment. The class will meet at 10:30 on Saturday morning in Fraser hall. The amount of credit given will depend upon the nature of the work of the individual student. This course will extend through twenty weeks—ten weeks during the first semester, and ten during the second—the first semester beginning the first Saturday in October, the second Saturday in February. Dean Chas. Hughes Johnston, of the School of Education says: "A little girl once had the habit of falling out of bed. It was discovered afterward that the reason for this was that she fell asleep too near where she got in. The physician or lawyer who gets his license and then falls asleep or fails to study his profession, fails to keep our health and learns our entirely before long. So it is coming to be in teaching. The teacher who ceases to study the great modern pressing problems of the profession soon becomes ineffective, pessimistic, and behind the times. Why not make our work our study also? Why not make our schoolrooms our laboratories? Why not help preserve good educational experience, and co-operate to discover better methods and to formulate more dynamic principles of the educating process?" Sigma Nu! U. E. H. Elgin, Alex Johnson, Jack Frawley, Pinky Biglow, Clab Jones, Tom Stevenson, Vance Clevie, Joan Heppellin, Vale Yance, Clevie Swenson Many Guests From Kansas City Alpha Tau Omega: Ben Forbes, Been Reid, Frank Reid, Charles Pierson, Boston MS, Mo., Earl Fischer, Topeka. Where Students, new and old. go this week to meet the Registrar, the Treasurer and the College Dean Sigma Chi: Harold Woodbury, Charles Woodbury, Cady Daniels, Kansas City, Mo. She—Oh do tell me what she wore He—Impossible, she sat down for her. Ray Stemen, Kenneth Bower, Kansas City, Kan.; William Clarke, St Joseph, Mo. Chi Omega: Egamma Wilson, Lea- enworth; Marie Tilford, Olathe; Hildegard Mense, Ethel Lord, Besse Vance, Kansas City, Mo.; Louise Paichars; Peirce Mason, Great Masher; Pearl Emily, Great Bend; Hazel Soles, Houston, Texas. Phi Delta Theta: Fract Lostetter, Van Holmes, Gilbert Frith, Emporia; Paul Ketcherisd, Hope; Glen Porter, Wichita; Fred Cowles, Wm. Peet, Hayden Eaton, Kansas City, Mo.; Asa Black, Wellington. Alumnae Here In Bevies. Pi Beta Phi; Mary Coors, Las Vegas; Hazel Kelly, Paola; Bruce Porter, Helen Bangs, Mary Darlington, Kansas City, Mo.; Ava Hardcastle, Emporia, Cairnfield, Oksalasio; Macie Zoellner, Tonganoxie; Lucille Wilkinson, Muskegon, Okla; Jaka Rachel, Letta Wood, Ada Booth Dolman, Lincoln, Nebraska. (Continued from page 1.) Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Ray Watson, Cupe Haddock John Parker, Rialdo Darrrough, Kansas City, Mo.; W. Bradley Ward Maurier, Topeka, W. Kenecht He—Betty sat two rows in front f me at the opera last night. Kappa Alpha Theta: Maxae Buechle, George Smart, Olathe; Mrs. Wm. Clark, St. Joseph; Eupham智能, Seneca; Myra Rogers, Abilene; Hazel Allison, Clay Center; Midred Jones, Kansas City, Mo; Alpha Delta Phi: Gladys Elliot and Elizabeth Wilson of Kansas City, Mo Kappa Sigma: Hon. Phillip Campbell, H. F. Hefflefinger, C. M. Walk. Reese Hughes, Geo. Dalton Wm. Stevenson, Lymn Bom. Roy Dectrich, Flavel Robertson, John Johnson, Fred Bookmiller. Kappa Kappa Gamma: Maryzita Cahill, Lois Dillie, Falls City, Neb.; Lora Snodgrass, Mrs. Lee Judy, Irene Wurster, Marion Morrison, Kan-ja Wurster, Willfield, Willfood; Paola; Ruby Chisham, Akson; Bernice Brown, Holton. —Dartmouth Jack-o'-Lantern. OLD TIMERS RETURN TO START US RIGHT HE NEARLY FIT IN TEX. PROF.M'CLUNGRESIGNS Prof. J. N. Van der Vries Returns After Year on Mexican Border Spending several months one mile from the Mexican border with a gun in his pocket and on the lookout to keep Mexican rebels from molesting himself and wife, was the experience through which Prof. N. Van der Vries, associate professor of mathematics passed for several months during his year's leave of absence from which he returned this month. Home made pies at the Hiawathi Prof. Van der Vries was in Delen, Tex., up till the latter part of May when he went up to the Tecos forest reserve in New Mexico to escape At Delos they lived in a tent and boarded with an Indian rancher. Home made pies at Soxman's "We saw one lone bear," said Prof. Van der Vries, "and a few deer and wild cats. We caught an occasional trout who was young and unsophisticated, but the older ones were entirely too wary." Zoology Head Goes to Pennsylvania and a Better Position Prof. Clarence Erwin McClung, former head of the department of zoology has been appointed to fill the same position at the University of Pennsylvania. Professor McClung held this position at the University since 1902, and during that period he was acting dean of the School of Medicine. He has had charge of several scientific expeditions to Oregon, Washington and to western Kansas, and was superintendent of the state biological survey of Kansas. She—"Marry you? Why you couldn't even dress me." He—"Well then, we'll hire a maid." He is a member of Sigma Xi and was president of the central branch of the American Zoological Society in 1910. Professor McClung was also interested in athletics at the University and was secretary of the Athletic board during the past year. Wisconsin Sphinx Skeptic—Are you any better off for getting married? Victim—Yes formerly I had good quarters. S. —Well? V.—Now I have a better half. —Stanford Chaparral. Home made pies at the Hiawatha. ALUMNUS TO DIRECT WEIR MINING SCHOOL Burton Lee Wolfe, '03 Recommended to Board of Regents for Position Burton Lee Wolfe, B S.'03, will be recommended to the Board of Regents Thursday for director of the Weir City School of Mines. He has the recommendation of Prof. E. Haworth of the University, and of the University of Illinois for post of which Hon. L. S. Cambern of Erie is chairman. Mr. Wolfe began his mining experience when a boy and has had practical experience in coal mining in Wyoming, in lead and silver mining in Idaho, where he was from 1892-08. He spent his career at the University in Cripple Creek and in the gold mines of that district. For three years he worked in old Mexico as an expert for two of the great copper mining companies and later spent one year in Nevada in copper mining. His work has covered general field work, assaying, clay work, and the metallurgical side of mining. Old Grad—"So you've met my son at college, have you?" Columbia Jester. Freshie—"Sure, we sleep in the same philosophy class." The afflicted Stude—Um-ah-er-er! Ha-ha!... Jeweler, to his assistant—Bring that tray of engagement rings here, John." —Michigan Gargoyle. THE BEST YOU CAN GET FOR THE MONEY WATKIN'S BOARDING CLUB 1324 VERMONT STREET IN THE STUDENT DISTRICT ROY KNAPP STEWARDS J. C. PRIEST $3.75 PER WEEK BELL PHONE 1827 K. U. PANTATORIUM and DYE WORKS 1400 La. Phones 1400 10 presses $1.50; term $3.50; year $7.00 Cleaning and Ladies' Work a Specialty D. ROWLESS H. F. GORSUCH K.U. EMBLEMS 25 Cents to 5 Dollars We cater especially to the Students, hence the finest assortment of K. U. and other Jewelry in this city. Come in and get acquainted with The College Jeweler 911 MASS.