THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Vol. XXIII Clavilux Program Screen Complete; Recital Is Tonight No.113 Thomas Wilfred, Inventor Will Talk on Nature of Selections and Organ The screen for the Clavius recital tonight was built yesterday by the department of buildings and grounds and is being kalsomed today. Ticket sales for the recital have been good, and reports from the Fine Arts office. Program Begins at 8:20 Frank Beach, director of music at the Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia, will come to Lawrence today to see the Clavius excursion. He will be the guest of Dan D. M. Swarthou while in Lawrence. Because of the Wednesday evening church meetings the program will not begin until 8:20 p. m. Before both part one and part two of the program Thomas Wilfred will make an explanatory talk on the nature of the selections and the arrangement and mechanism of the organ, which is compounded of steel and aluminum, electric guitar, and in accordance with very important optical formulas, responds to the lightest touch of its owner. Thomas Wilfred was born in Denmark. He inter lived in Paris and then in London. In his London studio he designed a small marble fountain upon whose waters played various colored rays but before further developments could take place he was called to war. After the war, Wilfred moved to States where he invented and developed the Clavius. He has been constantly improving it until now with his instrument he has made possible a wider variety of music and the control of form, color and motion. Program 1. In Two Parts October 13th, 2014 (a) Oceanside Formic Acid formic acid (b) Oc. 94, Charger Northurst, Ready to deep and Macclesfield (c) Oc. 94, Charger Northurst, Ready to declining - cloning, recording, calling (d) Oc. 94, Fairy Tale of the Orchid (e) Oc. 94, Fairy Tale of the Orchid Introduction Mr. Witreff ( ) Op. 27, Light and Shade Studiy FOUR PAGES 1. The Avenues, a new projected floor di- national (8) The Ocean Settings for a faashtat 30, 66, Groton. A visual Symo 24. The Avenues, a new projected floor di- grateful motion. (x) The Factory, Two projected four d (4) Op. 58, *Grotegne*. A visual Synec- path. 1) Op. 75, Joy. Double form revolving Aerocarpion swimming and expanding. Instrument: Five mannequin portable Cavitation Model K, built at the Cavitation Laboratories M. Magnuson, C. Chalky, B. Ervall Department of Management, H. J. Epert Manager, 1221钥匙库 Builder, Broadway at 42nd Street, New York City, Band Will Give Concerts Special Programs to Be Held in Kansas City The University band of 90 pieces, under the direction of Prof. J. C. McCanley, will go to Kansas City Thursday morning to give several concerts during the day and play at the K. U.-M. U. track meet in the season. The band will leave the Kaw Valley interurban station at 8 a.m. in two special care. The first concert will be held at the Kansas City, Kan. at 10 ocl. From there the band will be taken in buses to Junior College, Kansas City, Mo., where it will play at 11:20. After leaving the city, it may be given at some other school. Prof. P, P. R. Lawson, assistant dean of the college, will accompany the band and speak at the various schools in his area to Lawrence after the train meet. UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1926 Director, McCannes has announce the following new members of thh board: Horn, A. J. Thompson; saxophone, Ivan Mahanam; clarinet, G. I Newby, R. L. Fox and Willis Nol Bacteriology Club Meets The Bacteriology club held a lunch- meet meeting Tuesday in snow hall, after which a business meeting was held. Prospects for future members were considered on March 3. The business meeting was followed with a talk by Lewis Faibleh, a student in the department of bacteriology, on the Dr. H. P. Cady to Give Lectures Dr. H. P. Cady to Give Lectures Dr. H. P. Cady of the department of chemistry at the University where he will give a lecture and demonstration of the properties of liquid air tonight. Doctor Cady will give a lecture on his subject at Lyons tomorrow night. Y. M. C. A. Teams Visit Neighboring Communities The Stanley High School of Johnson County will be visited the week end of April 8, 9, and 10 by a deputation from the state police to the Y, M, C, A. This is the second of the series of trips that the Y deputation teams are macking to heighten awareness. Marion Devleib, c'26, who is in charge of the deputation team that will visit the Stanley High School and this morning that his assistants on the trip would be Harold Baker, c'27, Michael Mize, c'28, and Herbert Striker, c'29. An over-night retreat for making plans will be made by all four teams: the last week in March. Members Are Chosen for Sigma Delta Chi at Tuesday Meeting Staff Needs Literary Material for Next Owl to Be Out on Feb. 26 At a meeting of Sigma Delta Chi Tuesday night at the Delta TauDelta house, five new members were elected. They are: Vinyang Kimbaih, e27 George Alden, e27 Marion Wilson, C27 Cote, e27, and Tom Bech, e23. Reports from the committees on the Puritan number of the Sour Owl were also given at this meeting and their reports indicate that there is an abundance of art copy on hand, but that literary copy is needed. Advertisers are than far supporting this number of the Owl well, and the entire town has a large collection of advertising district to be canvassed thoroughly for advertisements; (for the magazine. The next issue of the Sour Owl will be ready for distribution on Feb. 20 with the deadline for ad copy on the Saturday once proceeding. The dead line for other copy is about ten day previous to the date of distribution. The fraternity vocal to give 810 to the Men's Glee Club, as the members are very inva­ mous; that the club makes them more aware and wish to assist in assisting them. The financial report of the trans- er showed that after the fine of $109 had been paid to the Men's Stud- ern Council an penalty for issuing the Lucky Number of the Sour Owl each case and its liabilities. This includes some accounts which are as yet uncollected. Students Hear Miss Ely Public Lack of Understanding of Citizenship Is Topic The lack of understanding of plenitude and democracy of the Amer- ican public was the subject of a tail- ing debate in the Senate over the new voters' section of the national board of the League of Women Voters, to the classes of American gov- ners. "War," said Miss Ely, "is a stupid and fetter thing but the world war did a great deal toward making the American public question its government and think about what real citizenship was. "The public is not well informed on the affairs of its own community, to say nothing about the national issues they may call upon men tell the rest what to do and there is no real knowledge of public affairs and how they are run by the people." At 23 the American citizen should have a knowledge of the affairs of his country sufficient to take part in them. "The best way to acquire such knowledge is by working with discussion groups on informed intellectual citizenship," and Mimi Ely. Valentine Party Given for Graduate Students A Valentine party was given for the students in the Graduate club Tuesday night at the Plymouth Congregational church. The program consisted of a speech by Mr. D. Gagliardo on "Industrial Unrest." Emily Ericson read a few original poems and several musical numbers in a book she commissioned by Dylan Smith. Donald Stoffer gave a few interesting facts about the poem. A. H. Long, C. E'26, has taken a position with G. Daniel Johnson, C. E'17, now county engineer of Mepheron county. Thirty Students Receive Bachelor of Arts Degrees Speech and Dramatic Ar May Now Offer Major, Faculty Decides at Meeting Seventeen Are Women Thirty students were given the degree of Bachelor of Arts and one was given a degree in Bachelor of Science at University of Illinois. Two students Tuesday at 4:30 p.m. m. Although the degrees have not yet been formally granted, the dean of the College has recommended that they be conferred, and the students will receive formations for graduation have been filled. Students receiving Bachelor of Arts degrees are: Arthur Grover Ames, Cliffin; Harry A. Bailley, Quitman, Mo.; Stanley Truman Brush, Mound George; Jeffrey Kovalev, Oathe; Myrtle The DeFever, Fall River; Pauline Mae WDewoody, Lawrence; Anna P. Easan, McPherson; Bessie Dennis Ferguson, Salma; Philip Collegon George; Topeka; Beaulah Quinn Gowell, Lawrence; Frances Sabina Hutchinson, Richmond; Frank Robert Isenbill, Ouawatutie; Mary Lone Jones, David Gentry McCread, Jr., Lawrence; Mary Elix Muesse, Independence; Archibald Beauty Oiller, Abiende; Joseph Stanley Pennell, Junction City; Iyey Percail, El Dorado; Benjamin Marcus Basen, S. Nicoe Brown; David Bassett, Ford, Olka; Louis Louis Shuber Lawrence; Ernestine Monger, Kansas City; Mt., Kenneth A. Spencer, Pittsburg; Artela Belle Streel, Bird City; Josephine S. Underhill, Lawrence; Omar Berbaded White, Kansas City; Dotryth McCartney Whithe Lawrence; Omar Berbaded White, Karson, Kansas City; Dotryth McCartney Whithe Lawrence; Omar Berbaded White, Karson, Kansas City A survey of the list shows that 13 of the students receiving degrees are men and 17 are women. New Ruling Made Before entering upon the junior year, all students must present 10 hours of some one foreign language, and a minimum of two hours of the faculty at the last meeting. This requirement can be met by two units of the same language in the high school; one unit in high school and one in college; or 10 hours in the College. This requirement will apply to all freshmen entering the University in the fall of 1928; to all sophomores entering the University in the spring of 1928; and all litterers entering the fall of 1928. In the discussion of the new requirement, it was the opinion that five hours of a foreign language were of little use to the student. Prof. E. B. Stouffer, dean of the Graduate School, stressed the need of an adept course in foreign language for the student who intends to do graduate work. Major Offered in Dramatics Rhadamanthi Deadline Is Announced for March 21 In the department of art: Design III and IV, 4 hours. In the department of German, 54; Realistic Drama, 1 hour; 55; Naturalistic Drama, 3 hours. In the department of Latte and Greek; 89; Green Drama in tradition; 64; Romance language; 64; French Drama I, 3 hours; 65; French Drama H, 3 hours; and 54; Classical Spanish Drama, 3 hours. "Tryouts for Rudanandhi must be in the Quill Club box by March 25, in order to be considered. Each person trying out must submit 20 lines of original poetry, type it, and enclose it in an envelope before drop-off. If no reply is received necessary," said Faye Smith, c'29 who is in charge of the tryouts. Permission was granted to offer a major in the department of speech and dramatic art. A student majoring in that department may, with the guidance of a faculty member, count toward satisfying a departmental and major group requirement as many as eight credit hours in the following approved list of courses: In the department of English: 80 History of English Drama, 3 hours; 80 Music of English Drama, 3 hours; 70 English usage, 3 hours; 82, Shakespeare, 3 hours. Rudhmanthi will hold a Washington's birthday dinner at Broadway on Monday evening, Feb. 22, afternoons the regular meeting will take place. Wire Flashes United Press Rome, Feb. 17. "Systematized terrorism" by the French in a mandate submitted to the League of Nations mandate committee by the Syrian government. Washington, Feb. 17. - President Coolidge early today cancelled all engagements and retired to the White House, where he intends to devote an invoke this morning feeling badly, but received calls until about 11 a.m., when Major-General James W. Coupal, the president's personal aide, said he would give up work for the day and retire. Salt Lake City, Feb. 17—A snow slide at Blakeburn, Utah, destroyed three residences and a church early today, according to reports received here. Three dead have been removed from the wreckage. San Diego, Feb. 17., Captain Low- ell Smith, formidable flier, today denied the report that he intended to resign his office here. "Nothing to the report," he stated when ques- tioned by the reporter, said that he did not intend to join Lieutenant Leigh Wade in his contemplated polar flight. Men's Glee Club Will Give Benefit Concert to Aid Eastern Trip Caswell, Zinn and Cockerill Ar in Charge of Ticket Sale; Price Is $1 The committee in charge of the ticket sale is composed of Gilbert Caswell, Thurman J. Zim, and Margaret Cockerell. The Women's Glee Club has volunteered its services in selling the tickets for the concert. Tickets to this club are members of this club as well as each member of the new club, at ocean dollar each. Missionaries Under Fire The Mba's Gice Club will give a benefit concert in Robinson gymnasium from which will be added to the fund to send the club to New York. "If the students gives on a full house and show that they are behind this effort, the club will have a lot of fun," A. Larrmore, director, said today. On the Missouri University campus last year, the hall was packed twice to hear benefit concerts given by the faculty and staff, and Karaus should do as well. Food Shortage and Kidnapping Add to Distress This is awavely a beneficial affair Professor Larremare said, and offer every student a chance to help in the research of their own work. The mood will be made later in the week. Pekin, China, Feb. 17—American missionaries were reported today to be under fire at Sinyang and one of their number was reported kidnapped. Their supplies have been cut off for three weeks and real distress has resulted. In consequence of the fire, American officials and American vice-consul at Hankow have proceeded to Sinyang in the hope of devising relief measures. Washington, Feb. 15. The neede dental death of the American m missionary, Niles Nikon, in connection with the civil war fighting at Sinyang, Chine, was reported to the Chicago Knitter Mac Murray at Pekin today. Another cable is expected from MacMurray today in regard to the trifle at Siyang and the kidnapping of the American missionary as reported in United Press dispatches. MacMurray's last message stated that 28 Americans, held as hostages by forces at Siyang, had been freed. Nilson was a naturalized American who had been with his wife in China since 1890 as a member of the mite community and later joined Malayan Jathar church of America. Higgins Visits Department Donald Higgins, A. B., 24', former instructor in the department of journalism, is in Lawrence on a two week vacation and yesterday visiting the department Higgins is now connected with the United Press bureau in Oklahoma City, OK. Higkins Visits Department Leaders Discuss Plans to Adjourn Congress in May Chief Business of Session Is Virtually Finished and Closing Is Advocated Washington, Feb. 17. —Republican leaders in both houses of congress today discussed plans for adjournment the first part of May or earlier. The chief business of the session—adoption of the World Court resolution, passage of the tax bill, and appropriation measure, is now virtually complete. He will then ment, encouraged from the White House, for closing the session. Part of Bill Concluded Farm relief, foreign dbe, Muscle Shanks, and some other affairs of relative importance remain to be acted upon, but the situation is such that full chance can be given proponents if each measure to try action before The house has concluded half of the appropriation bills and those can be cleaned up in the senate in a few weeks. The Senate will no longer agree today than they have been for the last few years, and unless consolidation of opinion rules are passed, the state's marketing bills, which have been sanctioned by the administration, can be passed. Muscle Shanks will be brought up in the senate next Mon. Debt Question Settled No date has been set for taking up the Italian debt settlement in the senate and unless prospectus for adoption are materially increased Republicans prefer that it remain unconsidered than defended. The house will probably clean up its calendar within a few weeks and the three-day adjournment will be awaiting a clearing up of senate business. Plans have not reached formal announcement and leaders are content to wait a few weeks to use what develops, but arrangements are being made to adjust the course each earlier than June 1, the date first settled upon. Graves Speaks to A. D. S. Former Advertising Vigilance Man Explains Work Alfred G. Graves, instructor in the department of journalism spoke to the members of Alpha Digma Sigma, advertising fraternity, at their inauguration in the fields of better advertising. Mr. Graves, before he came here as an instructor in the department of journalism was secretary of the Better Business Bureau is to see that the merchant is selling the exact article that he is advertising. This is on store. Mr. Graves wants the merchant to go to the stores and buy the goods. If the business man is found to be deceiving the public by his advertising he is notified by the bureau or in some cases is used for deceiving the state's advertising law. A number of outside guests were present at the meeting. Questions Are Answered in Open Forum by Fitch "A man should not keep the same scale of moral values throughout his life," declared Dr. Albert Fitch at the open forum meeting in room 922, central Administration building. Tuesday afternoon at 4:20. "A scale of moral values must develop and grow," he continued. "If I have the same moral standards that I had 20 years ago, I am not going to ask someone to a statement grade in his speech in conversation that morning in which he said that the "young pagans" constituted the larger part of the body body, one student at the university who was a pagan" were a detriment to the University. He answered that it was only those who were campus parasites. Doctor Fitch expresses his regret that we did not more questions asked directly concerning the Bible and religion. Searab, professional architectural engineering fraternity, announces the pleading of Malcolm Bliss, *e'28, Kanley City;* Fredrick Amos, *e'28, Humbert;* Earl Allen, *e'28, Lawrence;* and John Meta, *e'27, Mankato. Jason Rogers Speaks to Journalism Classes Jason Rogers, publisher of The Adventurer's Weekly, of New Rochelle, New York, speaks to three of the leaders in the media journal today. White here, Mr. Rogers read the papers submitted in the context for the best discussion on the three strongest appeals in advertisement content. The test will be announced in a few days. Mr. Rogers came to Kansas City on business, and made a visit to the Kansas an as has been his custom for the past six or eight years when he was a professor at Brown before* an association of advertisers in Kansas City tonight. University Receives Art Collection From Student in Philippines Donation Consists of Blankets, Coins, Pieces of Jewelry, and Newspapers The ethnological collection of the University has been curated by the donation of a series of articles from museums, libraries and art galleries and ceramics of the island, which includes wearing apparel and other articles used in the daily life of the museum. The collection consists of a number of photographs, a blanket, barring or skirt, "G" string or breech depth, handkerchief, a pair of gloves, and the ingerotics, native of Loon, and a bolo or a short heavy knife, in a hand carved malong knack. There is also a number of coats and counters, and an embroidered work, and aMore news work. These articles were donated by Ray Wick, B. S., "10," who collected them in a spare two years to civil engineers of the supply project for the city of Manila. His surveys often took him on barge and he was able to add to his collection. He was able to add to his collection. On one occasion, on a waw- tion he made a trip covering 250 miles on foot through the island of Lunan on a second trip Wick went to坐 about six hundred miles north of Manila. While he was in the Maco- country, he was fortunate enough to an audience with the Sultan of Saba. Wick, in presenting the collection, and be left that he was in a very frying to enjoy his debt to the Almud Mater, and that he hoped the public would enjoy the collection as he had enjoyed collecting it. Senior Recital Thursday The first senior recital will be given by Margaret Cookeril, mezzo-cantele, in the audition of the central building Thursday. Feb. 15, at 8 P.M. Initial Concert Will Be Given by Margaret Cockerill Mini Cookeillier is a pool of Musa Agnes Husband. She will be scanned in the program and play two piano numbers, Helen Merkin, fa25, will play her accompany Miss Cockerill's program is: Miss Cockerill's program is: Florida George F. Woods Frenchy F. de Rondeau Steve Pacheco Alanna V. from "Story of the Faride" Amy A. from "Story of the Faride" The Magicians (from "Cameron at Duluth") Training Zeppelin Briggs and Briggs Joe Hale Ivy L. In Fahrenheit Rhaphope in Fahrenheit Dolphin Bob Hale (from "Amadiel") Linda Carr Lucy Carr Walt Harvey Ivan Is there Hilda in the Heart of a Bear Bone Fernandine Forrester The Two Magicians John Ayers Will Be Sent to Reformatory John E. Ayers, University student who robbed the Oread café on the night of Feb. 8, will be sent to the state reformary at Hutchinson next week. His term is indefinite, and will probably be decided by his conduct while in prison. When he is released from jail, he may record according to county authorities. Rev. A, E. Ayers Pawnee Rack, father of the former student has removed young Ayers' belongings from his former room at 1223 Mississippi Duplicates of the checks stolen that have already been issued by students total about $23 according to Harvey Black, proprietor of the Oread cafe, Black expressed the belief that nearly all will be redeemed. Genuine Religion Involves Drudgery, Says Doctor Fitch Codified Experience and Recorded Happenings Behind Church Authority "One cannot be genuinely religious unless one studies hard and works扎实 at it," said Dr. Albert Fich, principal speaker of Religious week, in online one point of his convocation experience "here this morning." "The experiences of religion is the authority of $n$" he pointed out. "The church is a record of the happiness of the world and it shows the authority of codified experiments." "Two religion involves continuous denudity, and more will find the way of religious art unless they strive for it. We give another and more myriad reasons; some will never attain our perfection, some are incapable of perceiving it. Experience Makes Belief "Hate, belief is born of his experience. The real method of religious investigation does not differ from that of sciences. It merely deals with different matters and its conclusions are not contradictory to those of science." It is not merely the thinking of these facts into a correlated pattern that is essential it was shown. Doctor Fitch believes that we are on the eve of a new transcendent of philosophy, an answer value through intellectual integrity. It would seem to me that anyone wishing to know the worth of religion would then to an expert or to some person who is not in the field. Fitch listed in the early part of his address, "When one comes to the field of religion, unless one's mind has been exposed to it," I am experts. I should be perverse on one hand, and stupid on the other, if I refused to give attention to those who are authorities in a particular situation. Euphoria Needed in Religion "Man's world is a divided, frustrated, repressed one," Doctor Fitch declined in taking up a fourth point. He then said he would be forced to one principle. We have the comic hostility of nature to deal with. We cannot control natural forces. Man through all ages has been defied by Ajaa defying the lightning. We do not question authorities in the matters of music, of art, of science, it was pointed out, and if we are of bachian, thinking minds we shall ap- pear ourselves. We expect experts in religions the same as specialists in any other field. "However, back of all the innate, innate cruelty of nature there is some truth. There are people who stated. Poste, dramatists and thought leaders have been conscious of this invariability of nature, but they haven't back of nature, which is guiding." Man Has Dual Nature "The duchessian daimler is man," added Fitch Ditch. "A man is a moral norm unless he knows and recognizes a terrific inner strife that makes eight personalities. Back of that strength there is something allied to the higher part of one's being. It is the kind of man something other than hero." As a part of convocation the names of the senior women who were chosen to chair the Mutter board, national committee and leadership based upon leadership, schlolastic standing and unaffiliated work, were announced by Chancellor E. H. Lind. They are: Anna Dorothy Laster, Kathrine Klein, Ethel Ott, and Derek Lamb, all of Lawrence; Virginia Tucker, Helen McCalla, Ottawa; Tomika Halen McCalla, Ottawa; Dorothy Pointron, Hutchinson; and Lucie Gibbal, Osage City. Special Musical Number Feature Radio Program KFKU. will broadcast its regular program Thursday, Feb. 18. program Thursday, Feb. 18. Maria Gadsen Rate of the department of design will give a short talk on "The Appeal of the Poster." Several manual numbers will be given by Marcos Giorgano, and Virginia Miranda, magister. At 8 p.m., a senior recital will be given by Esther Ott, soprano, of the School of Fine Arts.