20 PAGE TWELVE THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN FRIDAY, NOV. 20, 1925 People in Every Walk of Life Send Their Children to School at the University of Kansas Nearly one-fourth of the students enrolled in the University of Kansas come from farm homes. Seven hundred were represented in the student body. (Seminary 375 of the University's total enrollment have leafers for parcels for they neglected in place their parent's vocation in the blank provided for this purpose during registration.) Army officer, baker, butcher, caterer maker, clerk of federal college, college president and chancellor, evangelist, press cutter, housewife, invocation, plumber, plumber, pipe organ manufacturer, shoe repairer, speculator, stockman, weaver, and night watchman have thought K. U. a good place to educate their students. Four hours per day are required by university students are enrolled in the University. Ninety-five parents are teachers and professors as contrasted with the 702 students who are registered with the intention of becoming teachers. The majority of them follow a route that truck drivers are followed by undrafters as usual. Three sons and daughters of missionaries are attending K.I.Us as compared with the four sons and daughters of missionaries, who are attending K.I.Us of real residence work, and cannot secure educational facilities where they are. The vocations of parents in detail follow: Abbreviator Accountant Advertiser Ancest, Mist Annual Keymaster Architect Airport Officer Arist Architector Auditor Automobile Dealer Baker Banker Bake, Messenger Barber Bachelor Blacksmith Backupworker Board of Trade Cancer Cutlery, Meat Dealer Cabinet Maker Carrier Chaplain Commerce of Commerce Secretary Chanfeour Chapel Chippewater Chippewater Worker City Employee City Office Engineer Cheek, Mist Cheek, District Court Cheek of Federal Court Collecting Naturalist College Press or Chair Confederation Member Confederation Work Foundation Engineer Cook Cook Official Chemerysman Construction Work Boundary Engineer Cooker Cook Official Chemerysman Construction Work Deadwood Decommissioner Dentist Diploma of Personnel Dressmaker Imparted Editor Examiner, Mist Electrical Engineer Electrician The advance sale of tickets for the business cycle is very satisfactory, according to Glenn Parker, manager. The number of tickets to be sold is limited to 250 and all of these are expected to be sold soon. The party will for all University students at A. R. U. home comes night. Business Cycle Tickets Will Be Limited to 200 Several interesting features have been arranged for the party. Program favors in the form of little memoirs will be given to all those Art Work Is Displayed Dean Frank T. Stockton and Mrs. Stockton will chanceon the party. Music will be furnished by John- son's serendibs. Collection Is Sent by American Crayon Company A collection of work from various high schools in the United States has been received by the department of design and will be placed on exhibition in the department rooms within a few days. The work will be on exhibition in the department of design until Dec. 5, when it will be sent to the State Teacher's College at Cedar Falls, IA. The collection is sent out under the management of the American Crayon Company, of Sandhuky, Ohio. The company is sending this collection to various high schools and universities all over the country. "Ron Horse" relies are being dis played at Stanford University due t the interest stimulated by the show ting of the motion picture. The gol spike which was driven in by Stan Fouliar, uniting the eastern and wester branches of the ball display. The sledge use by Sonner Stantford and the shore which turned the last shot successful of die are also to be seen. Factory, Warehouse or Industrial Factory 7 Factory 7 Fire Chief 1 Fireman 1 Employee 1 Employees 1 National Organizations Brick Grover 1 Grover 1 Gross Cutter 1 Gross Dyeer 1 Grass Thrower 1 Ground Maker or Sand Diesler 1 Greezer 1 Harbortrucker 1 Harbortruck, Boarding or Room Lime House 2 Homework 2 Ice Continuation 1 Impairment 1 Impairment 1 Inventor 1 Inventor 1 Inventor 1 Inventor 1 Janker 1 Janker 1 Journalist 1 Journalist 1 Judge 1 Labourer 1 Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Labourer Machinist 1 Dr. OBrien Gives Report Cities Able to Maintain College Discussed in Article The type of city and the logical location for a city, that can properly maintain a junior college is the subject which was discussed by Dr. F. P. O'Brien, director of the bureau of school service of the University, in an article in the November issue of the American Educational Digest. The article embolizes a report of a study made for the city of Hutchinson in order to determine the feasibility of a unproposed junior college there. From the report there are several things which seem to point, to the ability of Hutchinson to maintain such a college. The first is the number in the county, who are pursuing college courses. At present are 266. The total number of high school students graduated in the county in 1923-24 was 343. It is more about work than about taking up college work; they were a local school. A second important question in determining the feasibility of a junior college is the city's ability to finance the proposition. Doctor Obrion's report is favorable to Hutchinson's ability along this line also. Parent-Teachers Meet at Oread High School A small representation of parents attended a Parent-Teachers meeting Tuesday night at Oread High School, at which F. J. Wearing, superintendent, explained the purposes of the class and methods of conducting classes. Psychology Fraternity Discusses Introspection H. A. Cunningham, assistant professor of education at the University of Kansas, spoke to the group on the subject "Teaching Pupils How to A short program was given conditi- ting of numbers by the Oroad High School orchestra and the girls' glee club. Beta Chi Sigma, honorary psychological fraternity, held open meeting Tuesday afternoon at 4:30 in the psychology laboratory in east Admiralty Street. Dr. Omar Pashar of the department of psychology presented a paper on "introspection", after which a discussion of it followed. The leading problem taken up according to P. H. Kearney, the relative value of the observer's and onlooker's report, or introspection versus the objective report, which is also used in other research, was addressed. Introspection is a method of observation peculiar to psychology but that in many respects it is closely related to observation found in other sciences. There is a tendency of the behavioristic psychologist to regard introspection as an irrelevant method of observation. However, no psychology textbook has ever been written which was free from introspection, it was said. The faculty of the School of Business has recommended the granting of a B. S. degree of the School of Business, to Loloy R. Stuer of Glenwood Hills High School, for recent meeting that beginning next year, all students failing in subjects in the School of Business would be offered the same grades for each hour in which they failed. Faculty Grants Degree Eighteen Vessels Flock to Alaska for Whales (Statistics Services) Tacoma, Washington — 20 — The greatest winless season ever experienced at the Akwan, Alaska, station, rupped one of the largest in the world, has been recorded this year, according to the membership of crews of the state's ski resorts. More than five hundred whales were harponed, the whaler Morgan having burged 42 in 26 days. The largest whale caught this season measured 84 feet in length and season长 close to 100 feet. The whale was an enormous quantity of fertilizer were proclaimed this season. The oil has been ( Sciences Services ) The presence of numerous schools of whales off the Alaska coast this past summer was accredited to great runs of small fish, sardines, herring and anchovies. Finback whales followed the small fish into shallow coves in the face of danger of being stranded on beaches or reefs. marketed to eastern soap maker leather and steel manufactures. Kadium Deposits Found in Altai Mountain Slopes Fifteen college professors, three of them women, picked a third of a bale of cotton in two hours, in an inter-school faculty contest at the experiment farm of the Oklahoma A. and M. college last week when the agriculture won the decision with a total of 139 pounds to their credit. Moscow, Nov. 29 — Deposits of radium ore and other radioactive minerals have been found in the Fergara district of Russian Turkestan by an expedition sent out by the government to study the state that the main vein lies on the northern slopes of the Altai mountains. The total wealth of these deposits could not be exactly estimated but it is certainly very large, and in the opinion of the explorers, the radium and other rare elements that can be produced will become a very significant part of the world supplies of radioactive materials.