WEDNESDAY, JUNE 2, 1926 PAGE THREE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Students in Design Win Cash Prizes in National Contest Sketches for Rugs Are Accepted by Eastern Manufacturing Concern Ruth V. Hill, Chapman; Frances Lomberg, Spavellie, and Dorothy Luxton, Topeka, were the winners of first, second, and third prizes in a competition of 15 higher schools. The contest was conducted by the Mohawk Carpet Mills, Amsterdam, N. Y. to develop interest and appreciation in rug making throughout the fine arts department of the colleges and colleges of the United States. The contestants from Lawrence are students in the department of design at the University of Kansas, under Ketchan Ketchan, professor of design. Twenty-two Jayahawk student competed in the contest. Honorable mention was awarded to Lucille Jarrett, Sewan Lawrence; and Elaine Wichita, Winthu The prizes awarded to the Kansas winners were $100 for first prize, $25 for second prize and $10 for third prize. The University also offers four different groups. The University of Kansas enorgested the winner in the group in which 20 to 30 persons competed. Ruth Hill, winner of first prize, presented a design based on nature forms in abstract motifs. A tree form together with flora decoration, treated in an abstract and imaginative manner was repres- ented by the second prize winner, Jessica Krasnyak. All of her all over pattern based on a flora motif but treated in an abstract way Campus Briefs Alpha Kappa Lambda announces the pledging of Lyle Brock, c'29, of Glascow. Sigma Alr. milton announces the pledging of . . . water Melorney, e28, of Kansas City, Mo. The college faculty will hold a meeting Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock to vote degrees for this commencement. Wilfred. Curpuch, c27, left Monda, eventing for his home in Salina when he was called by the serious illnes of his father. Miss Agris Husband, dean of wom- men, will stay in Lawrence unit July 1, and will be in her office each day during the summer term. Either McCauley, who was graded from the department of design this year, has accepted a position as an assistant to that department for the next year. Miss Edith Snow, fa95, the daughter of former Chancellor Snow, and secretary of the committee in charge of the program, visited June 26 for a short visit in France. Prof. and Mrs. C. H. Ashton will leave a week from Friday to spend part of the summer with their daughter and will make them will they make the trip by automobile. The college administrative committee will meet Friday evening in 7:30 to take care of any difficult circumstances determining the graduation of any senior. The class of 1881 will have a reunion at the home of Mrs. Alice Pee body Surna at 644 Kentucky street to attend a teddle may come to at tend and more may come. Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalistic sorrow, will hold an initiation next Sunday morning, June 6 in the sky parlor of the Journalism building. Jessie Edmundson will be initiated. The two University trucks are busy hauling coal for the heating plant of the University. The coal is from the Lansing mines, and replaces oil which has been used since the new plant was preceded. Dr. F, C.' Allen is teaching a short court in basketball this week at Kearney (Neb.) State Teachers College. He will remain on June 3. He teaches the Hays State Teachers' College to teach the same course until June 8. The state bar examination will be given in Topeka June 21 and will last three days. A number of senior Laws are planning to take the examination and they will remain here after commencement to prepare for it. Prof. Avin S. Olin, who was formerly a professor in the School of Education and is now a resident of New York City, will visit this week to visit friends and to attend the commencement exercises. He is still connected with the faculty of the University. The alumnus of Alpha Gamma beta sorority will hold their annual ieeting at the sorochouse at 1104 'enniesce next Sunday afternoon. Winnifred Luther, A. B. 906, died Tuesday morning at a local hospital. She has taught in the Lowwood number of years since her graduation. Season tickets for the summer lays are on sale now at the Dramatic Art office. There will be six performances, during the summer. Harry Stauffer, A. B. 25, is visiting at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house this week. He taught in the high school at Ellsworth this year and will hold the same position next year. Mrs. Frank T. Stockton left Towa day for Vernilion, S. D., where she will attend the commencement exercises of the University of South Dakota and visit friends. She expects to be gone ten days. Form. Wrestler, who received her Master's degree from the University this spring in mathematics, will teach mathematics in the summer session o the State Teachers' College at Pittsburg. Sigma Kappa announces their officers for the coming year. President, Heine Weissenger, Kansas City; vice president, Ruth James, Beloit; secretariat, Bettriee Williams, Topkiss and treasurer, Joseph Hospittel, Lawrence. A picture of a sorrow in the "gray nineties" posted in west Administration building has been causing a great deal of study by students. It was posted in an appropriate place, too—the history department bulletin board. After examination are over Thursday day evening, the library will be open only from 9 until 12 in the mornings and from 2 until 5 in the afternoon until the summer session begins Wednesday, June 9. Miss Missie Miller, professor of voice in the School of Fine Arts, and Miss Fanny May Ross, professor of piano, have gone to their respective homes in Waltham and Columbia, until the summer session begins. Miss May Gardner, assistant professor of Spanish, gave a tea Sunday at 5 o'clock at her home for all seniors in the Spanish department, students, faculty members and faculty members' wives or husbands. Clyde M. Blair, f196, and a former teacher at Haskell Institute, will superintendent of the institute in summer 2018. In school, July 1. He succeeds Harvey Cohen, who has been appointed principal with headquarters at Washington. The work of plastering the new Watkins dormitory was begun the latter part of last week. According to the foreman in charge, the worker had finished the room ready for interior finishing and decorating within a few days. Sigma Kappa sorority held its annual senior breakfast Sunday in honor of the following members who will graduate this year: Frances Mack, Garden City; Nelle Lorimer, Mary Ogle; Olathe Morris, St. Joseph M.D.; Marie Joyce Depowe, and Irene Kent; Olathe, Olath. The honor system is used in all R, O, T, C, work. A system of demos also provides an incentive for the cadets to attend class and drill. If a man has no demos and a B atstand, he does not have an A standing; if he has an A standing, he need not take finals if he has less than thirty demos for the year. Thomas Cable, e' 29, Alabamia street, has been appointed to the board of directors of Napoli, Md. He received his appointment through Chancey B. Little, United States representative from New York, who will report at the academy June 16. Alumni who will be guests at the Chi Omega house this week are the following: Miss Mattie MacLennan, c/o The Omega Club; Mrs. Jill Murray, Mary Musee; Mrs. Helen Smith, Mary Margaret Bright; Miss Louse Cotney; Miss Elizabeth Stankerberg, Wichita High School; of Wichita High School this year, here to attend the farewell parties. Design Work on Display The annual exhibition of student work in the department of design will be on view during Commencement week. Repaired Kiln Makes Possible Finishing Many Articles The crafts will be well represented by work in jewelry, metal work, leather tooling, hats and especially dollmaking. For three years the bib used in glasing the pottery work has been idle. This year due to the efforts of a student group working order. The department has been saving the work of the students for the past three years and now exhibit the finished work of more than 100 pottery pieces. The sensors who graduate from the department of design this year are Chira Hatton, McKinley McDaniel, Rita Jane Bownawen, Frances Loberder, and One of the features of the exhibition will be a display of some of the work of Ruth Goodhill, who accepted a position with the Marshall Field Company of Chicago when she finished in the department of design last year. London, June 2. - Modern Turkey has gone the "speed train" one better through the invention of the "brake" mechanism in Turkey, before Venezuela returned from Constantinople. Turkish Officers Invent Novel Brake Test Trap -- SAVE -your sole and heel and you have all. Turkish legislators recently passed a law specifying a certain involuntary body cycle, which the cyclic body cope have evolved as a caval foot plant well stranded with skin inch Seven Advanced Degrees Given Five degrees of Master of Arts and Bachelor's in mathematics department this spring Those receiving the degree of M. A. Were Violet Stinkwater, Form Wrestler, P. F. Wall, C. A. Beanan, and The H. D. Degrees were granted to Florence Black and Wardy Babcock. ROOM—For boys for summer school, Phone 365, 1503 Mac. Also house- keeping rooms. (United States) From a hissing place along the road they toss the plank into the road about fifty feet in front of a passing automobile. If the car stops in time, it is considered to have "legal" breaks. Lanning P, Ranlan, A, R'2, Q', M. A.'25, of Hays, who has been working at the research laboratories of the Hermules Powder Company, Kernill, N. J., has been granted a year's leave of absence and will visit in Lawrences home. He has been connected with the naval stores industry at Kernill. Seven Advanced Degree Given Hillside Shoe Shop 9th and Indiana A N university superintendent is a graduate college administrator in each of five different colleges for one of the lowest ranked countries. Many current U.S. universities have a smaller body but provide more research and now use this research to improve the quality of their work. White House A, A.I., Alhambra University, Los Angeles, California; White House B, A.J., Alhambra University, Los Angeles, California; Jerry Lewis, University, New York City, U.S. Kansas Electric Power Company if Necessary—Rob the Baby's Bank But Be Sure to See COLLEEN MOORE — in — "ELLA CINDERS" Fans at all prices - in all sizes. Each of Each of General Electric electricity -no if it's the right price -may possibly at its price. 700 MASS. PHONE 880 --that matter taken from the digestive tracts of the molluscs show that the percentage of glucose in it is approximately four times as great as it is in sawthwat from the original wood. Inasmuch as all carbohydrates are converted into glucose during the process, we can conclude from strong evidence that the wood debris from the boring becomes food for the shipworms. Science Discovers Worm Destructive to Ships Seattle, June 2.—The shipworm or tereo, a boring mollusce very destructive to piling and wooden船 bottoms, makes its boring not only for the purpose of creating a bridge to an article by Prof. Robert C. Miller and Prof. Lyman C. Boynton of the University of Washington, who appear in the next issue of Science. It has long been a matter of considerable dispute among marine engineers and biologists whether the shipwright digests and uses as food the sandwich it scrapes in making its meat. It is hard to be certain that the total quantity of wood accensed to be considerably diminished. Prof. Miller and Boynton now find The University of Cincinnati is sending out a questionnaire to determine the popularity of prohibition among its students. Suiting You—That's My Business SCHULZ THE TAILOR 917 MASS. ST. What Do You Know? A CHANCE to cash in on your education (possibly the last chance you'll have) is offered by the TRAVEL CONTEST which is now running merrily along in LiFe Are you following this fascinating contest? If not, you should sprint to the nearest news-stand, treat yourself to the current copy of LIFE (the Commencement Number) and turn to page 24. There you will observe that the winner of the Travel Contest is to be given A Trip to Europe with all Expenses Paid-for Two People In addition to this transatlantic excursion, which would fit conveniently into your summer vacation, are several alluring cash prizes. COMMENCEMENT NUMBER is, now on sale, with a "Sweet Holdout" certificate and conti- nued support from Glenn's Williams. Don Hearle, George S. Chappell, Robert E. Kelly, James D. Lester, Fran- sh, Brandon Bueard, T. S. Salivant and practically every one You can obtain De-Luxe editions of Life at all the better-brite new浸 standings. For the absurdity now view of this, there is no earth- reason why you should Obey That Impulse Even in the days of Barrum when "Step right up, folks, and bring your buggy whips along," was the serm call of the circaster, the products of Antheuer-Busch nationally known to good fellow. And now, when buggy whipsare as out of date as hoop skirts and knee-breeches. BUSCH (A-B) PALE DRY is the favored drink of college men because, like the college man, Busch Pale Dry is a good mixer everywhere and every time. ANHEUSER-BUSCH ST.LOUIS THEO. POEHLER MERC. CO. Distributors ...4 Lawrence, Kansas Make Your Vacation Musical We shall be glad to make arrangements with students to send out the best of the latest RECORDS or SHEET MUSIC at certain periods during the summer. Make your arrangements with us before leaving. TO-NIGHT The Verba Cross Players in "My Irish Cinderalla" A Three-Act Comedy Drama With the Best of Vaudeville Between Acts $1.50 Worth of Merchandise Given Away UNDER CANVAS Vermont St. between Seventh and Eighth Tomorrow Night "The Country Store" PRICES PRICES Children, 10 Cents; Adults, 40 Cents No Extra Charge on the Inside; First Come, First Served