PAGE FOUR THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1926 Dean F. T. Stockton Announces Changes in School of Business Accounting Majors Exempte From All Senior Seminar Requirements Several changes in the faculty of the School of Business have been announced by Frank T. Stockton, dean of the school. Prof. J. W. Sternberg realigned due in the summer to help become assistant finance at Ohio State University. He will be connected with the extra division and will deliver lectures on division classes in several Ohio cities. Professor Sternberg's place will be taken by Earl Moser, assistant professor of business finance, Professor Moser received his A. B. at Grinnell College and his M. B. A. at Harvard. He has been connected during the past year with the First National Kansas City, Mo. Following his graduation he will be on the staff of the American University at Cairo, Egypt. Professor Sternberg's position is secretary of the business plenomium bureau will be taken by Assadian Professor H. F. Berectroosr. Two new instructors have been added to the School of Business faculty. Hayes B. Richardson, A. B. Ribardon Macron College, will be assigned as adjunct professor and anson has been taking graduate work at Johns Hopkins and must only one more year for his doctoral degree. L. Scott, who received his B. S. and M. S. in commerce from the University of California, will also be a graduate instructor for the past two years he has been a graduate instructor at California. The faculty of the School of Business has decided to exempt account majors from the senior senior requirements, the reason being that advanced accounting courses already meet those requirements of training and investigation work. The School of Business is offering two courses at 12:30clock this year. They are elementary economics and accounting I. These courses will count as regular afternoon classes for sophomores and freshmen. Two new courses are being offered this year. Governmental and institutional accounting will be taught in two hours course, Building and loan associations, also a two hour course, will be taught by Professors Dada and Gargiulo. Kumu is the first student to be taught in building and loan associations. Quake Center Is in Asia Washington, Sept. 13. — The earthquake that was felt in various parts of the Levant on Monday, Aug. 30, 2014, is the result of a catastrophe, Ses, not far east of Constantinople, so coding to calculations made here by the United States Coast and Goodwill Banking Corporation has been the Science Service by Georgetown University, by Canadian government scientific observatories at Ottawa and Quebec, and by the地震局 at West Dromwich, England. Our Specialties Sandwiches—Chili Home-made Pies GEORGE'S LUNCH First Door North Varsity Theater THE KANSAN GIVES YOU— Complete Campus News Sport News Official Chancellor's Bulletin United Press Service Full Science Service State and National News --- Official Student Paper Delivered to Your Door Six Days a Week A Necessity for the up-to-the-minute Student. $4.00 for the year Dried Oranges to Supply Sailors With Vitamines Baltimore, Sept. 13—In the future, compact little packages of oried orange juice will probably form an essential part of aje's supplies. (Scratch Programming) It is well known that citrus fruits are rich in vitamin C which has the property of preventing scurry, a distance from which sailors on long voyages use to suffer greatly in years of war. According to a report to be published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, that orange juice can be dried and still retains its health-giving vitamins after long periods of time. Building Improvements Are Extensive on Hill After Summer's Work Steel Arches of Auditium Are Placed; Capacity to Be 7,000 An extensive program of building has been carried on this summer on the campus and will continue through the capital year, according to H. H. Ball, superintendent of buildings and grounds. The center of building activity is Galt and Fairfield, which will be the new auditorium and the most memorial building. The massive steel arches of the nautilium are now in place, and work will be pushed rapidly forward during the fall. The completed building will seat 2,700 people, although seating capacity is limited and vided at present. The University observatory was moved from the site which it occupied west of Haworth to a present location beyond Marvin hill. New sidewalks have been laid from the drive which leads off the Hill to the gymnasium and also in front of the gymnasium. A new street car station west of Green hall adds much to that part of the campus. It is made of native wood and has a built-in finishing wall supports the structure. The new Walkins dormitory for women students who work was completed by the university occupancy. The dormitory was built at a cost of $80,000 by Mgr. J. B. Watters. Workmen are completing the shell of the memorial union building this week. The roof is all that remains to be finished. The structure has five floors and will serve as a headquarters of University life and a central place for alumni, students and faculty to meet. Work on the interior will be carried forward as funds come in and pledges to the memorial corporation. Send the Kansan home today. University Book Store 803 Massachusetts We do not carry the University texts because of the uncertain demand down town. But students will find it to their advantage to buy their supplies at this store. HARL H. BRONSON, PROP. A Jewelry Store in the midst of Jewelry Stores, yet ALWAYS when you ask for the Dependable Jewelry Store in Laverne, they send you to Next door north of Wiedemann's Four-hour load-carry or the longest in the world - installed in a Pennsylvania mine for transporting coal from mines to river basins. Electric motors convey the cargo. 90,000 Wheelbarrows in one hand Through an abandoned mine runs this giant wheelbarrow carrying nine thousand tons of coal per day in a steady stream from the miners to the coal barges on the Monongahela River. One man controls it with no more effort or concern than pressing a switch button. Electricity pushes it. A button is pressed. An electric motor goes to work, followed by another and still others until twenty sections of a belt conveyor four miles long are in operation! A series of G-E advertisements showing what electricity is doing in many fields will be held at the booklet A.K. for booklet GEK-1. The General Electric Company is the largest commercial manufaclading and transportation problem. In its own way, it involves the moving of materials and products in a complex network to the highest degree, thus providing a daily demonstration of the company's capabilities. Not only conveyor belts of all sizes,shapes and kinds, but also hoists, tractors, cranes, elevators, stackers, locomotives, and other material-handling equipment have gained flexibility, dependability, and ease of control through electric motorization. Moving things in one way or another is the educated man's work in life. And electricity, ever at his command, is moving more and still more of the things which move this new world of ours. GENERAL ELECTRIC GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK PRINCE ALBERT has been the campus favorite since the days of long-haired fullbacks, high button shoes, turtle-neck sweaters, and hand-painted dormitory cushions. This same wonderful tobacco is even more popular in these days of plus-fours. And no wonder. Throw back the hinged lid of the familiar red tin and release that rare aroma of real tobacco! Tuck a load into your pipe and pull that fragrant P. A. smoke up the stem! That's Prince Albert, Fellows! Nothing like it anywhere. When peg-tops were in flower When problems press and your spirits slip over into the minus column, just get out your jimmy-pipe and load up with this really friendly tobacco. P. A. is so kind to your tongue and throat and general disposition. Buy a tidy red tin today. PRINGE ALBERT —no other tobacco is like it! A. P. I. old cowperson I in B. A. P. I. old cowperson II in B. A. P. I. old cowperson III in B. A. P. I. old cowperson IV in B. A. P. I. old cowperson V in B. A. P. I. old cowperson VI in B. A. P. I. old cowperson VII in B. A. P. I. old cowperson VI © 1926, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company. Winston-Salem, N. C. 624. 5 13 Tom Carey Style authority on college clothes will be at our store September 16-17-18 Showing a wide variety of university type suits and overcoats tailored by the makers of Society Brand Clothes—also new imported and domestic woolens for the man who wishes his suit made to measure. where SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES are sold