MAY 2,1919. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN By The Way Phi Chi announces the pledging of Harry Sheets and Van H. Magill, of Lawrence. Sigma Kappa will entertain with a week-end rushing party. A luncheon will be given Saturday noon and a dance at the Country Club Saturday night. Miss Ada Dykes of Lebanon and Miss Frances Jobes of Kansas City, Mo., were guests at the Pi Phi house this week. Alpha Chi Omega will entertain a few out of town guests with an informal chocolate Saturday morning at the chapter house. Chi Omega will entertain with a week-end house party for fifteen guests. A dance will be given at Eagle's Hall tonight. Delta Tau will give a dance at Eagle's Hall Saturday night. Charles Nicolet, c21, will spend Saturday and Sunday at his home in Kansas City. Miss Betty Bonebake and Miss Mary Rogers of Topeka came today to attend the Phi Pi party tonight and are guests at the Theta house. Mu Phi Epsilon entertained with its third faculty dinner Thursday evening at 6 o'clock. The guests were Miss Anna Sweeney, Miss Harriet Grelisinger, Miss Minerva Hall, Miss Maud Miller, and Miss Cora Reynolds. The students in the School of Pharmacy made their annual trip through the drug houses of Kansas City, Friday. They were met in the city by forty medical students who made the trip with them. They were entertained by a wholesale house at breakfast at the Harvey House. Junior and Senior Electricals and Mechanicals are Offered Employment Westinghouse Company Seeks K. U. Engineers Mr. Dooley offered permanent employment to seniors graduating this year, and summer work to juniors. The pay for the first year is $80 a month. The pay for the second year is $100 a month. C. R. Dooley, manager of the educational department of the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company, East Pittsburgh, Pa., was at the School of Engineering Wednesday and Thursday interviewing mechanical and electrical engineering students who desire to enter the employ of his company. "We want three types of men," said Mr. Dooley, "First, the technical specialist and efficiency expert who can design new electric devices and work out improved methods of construction. Second, the commercial man who will travel and business is not prizileous; take orders, but to analyze conditions and report what the market needs. And, third, the production engineer. "The Westinghouse Company manufactures practically everything in the electric line, from a hair curler to a locomotive. Our quota, which is the same as previous years, calls for 150 engineering graduates, and they will be obtained eighty university colleges. Two or three graduates, on an average, have been selected from K. U. each of the last ten years." The number of engineering graduates in the United States this year is about one-third normal, according to Mr. Dooley. One of the best possible ways in which to get a high school student interested in a particular college or university is to have the student visit the school and show him an enjoyable time. Little trips over the compus are to be communicated with when the students are gaining the desired results. The students of the University should not pass up these inestimable opportunities. A few individuals have been asking why the tennis courts have not been put into shape and Manager Hamilton wishes to say that the courts south of Robinson Gymnasium are too muddy, while there will be continual hauling over the McCook Field courts so that any money spent on fixing them up now would be thrown away. The Phi Psis should have the fastest team in the Pan-hellenic League. They practice in the street almost every evening and seem to be developing some mighty sluggers. Their best means of practicing is to play one-old-cat and they use a telephone pole for first base. To Import Six Profs for Summer Session Two Short Terms Prove Attractive to Graduate Students, Says Dean Kelly The summer session of the University is appealing to the graduate student more strongly each year, according to Dean F. J. Kelly, director of the summer session. In the last four years, said Dean Kelly, the percentage of graduate students has been something like 22% per cent, increasing from 109 graduate students in 1915, to 137 in 1918, a year when graduate work fell far below the average in almost all institutions, owing to the older students being engaged in war activities. "The session this summer," Dean Kelly added, "promises to be fine. The instructor will be professors from six of the leading universities of the country, and many of the ranking professors and assistant professors of the University. The men from outside will be John R. Clark, A.M., of the Chicago Normal College; Kate Daum, A.M., instructor in home economics, University of Indiana; Halford L. Hoskins, A.B., assistant professor of history, Trinity College, North Carolina; Oskar A. Johannsen, Ph.D., Cornell University; Guy Mitchell Wilson, Ph.D., Iowa State College, and William B. Wilson of Ottawa University. "Two terms will be given, the first a 6-weeks' course opening June 17, and closing July 25; the other a 4-weeks' course opening July 28 and closing August 22. "Work in the summer session will count toward a University degree. The average student obtains five hours credit in the first term, while a possible six hours can be earned. In the second term it is possible to earn four hours' credit, making a total of ten hours for both terms. "The work of necessity is very intensive, so ample recreation will be provided in the gymnasium and elsewhere. Handball courts, tennis, boating and other sports will be provided. School of Fine Arts will give a weekly concert. There will be other entertainments from time to time." Pictures of Honor Men Given Permanent Place K. U. Sons Who Made Suprem Sacrifice Recognized by Memorial in Fraser The pictures of the K. U. men who have died in the service of their country will be displayed in nine glass cases which will be placed in the wall in Fraser Hall just opposite the Woman's Rest Room. Each case is thirty-three inches wide and forty-four inches long and when they are placed side by side their height will exactly fill that section of the wall. Prof. M. W. Sterling, who has charge of collecting data of the University's part in the war, has pictures of all but about six of the 120 K. U. men who made the supreme sacrifice. These pictures are to be placed permanently on the cases. The answer should be finished and on display late next week. The Victory Loan is next. Send The Daily Kansan Home. "All copy for the Senate edition of the Sour Owl must be in by May 5," said Basil Church editor. "The feature of this number will be the cartoons and locals concerning practically all the University. Copy for Senate Edition of Owl Must Be In May 5 The Sour Owl will be issued May 16, when the Aggies come here for a track meet, followed the next day at State Invitation High School meet. The Owl board for this number is: Editor, Basil Church; Associate Editor, Marvin Harms; Art Editor, Freed Leach; Business Manager, Glenn Banker; Advertising Manager, John Montieth. University Democratic Writes Prof. Patterson rendency Toward General Facility Participation in Government Growing That the University of Kansas ranks high in the roll of educational institutions on the basis of democratic organization, is the conclusion arrived at by Prof. D. L. Patterson, assistant dean of the College, in his article, "The Growth of Democracy in University and College Administration," in the April number of the Graduate Magazine. HELP "One of the most striking features in the recent development of institutions of higher learning in this country, has been the growth of democracy in university and college administration," says Professor Patterson. "This movement forward, seems in all cases, to have been on local initiative and not as a part of any general inter-institutional plan." Two-line Contributions Especially Needed for the Pepper Pot —Dope Must be in By May 8—Give Contributions to Professor Patterson's article is based partly upon a publication containing the results of an investigation made recently by Colorado colleges. This publication points out some distinct tendencies. Advance toward democracy has been made along three lines, finance, faculty appointments and selection of committees. Generally speaking, finance is the most important committee on which professoritis is generally the last tendency in the movement toward greater participation of the faculty in university administration. Institutions may be divided into three groups, under the classifiastion of the Colorado survey; those in which the power of administration is exercised mainly by a board of trustees and the chief executive, those in which the initiative is divided such officers and the faculty; and those in which the faculty exercises the chief administrative power. Make The Sour Owl SOURER Twenty-one shades of Rit at the City Drug Store.—Adv. See the latest styles in the new fashion magazines at the City Drug Store.—Adv. BASIL CHURCH or MARVIN HARMS The boys are coming home. Treat them to a box of Wiedemann's chocolates.—Adv. 1. When the boys come home remember they like Wiedemann's pure ice cream. Give us your order early. Wiedemann's."—Adv. C. E. ORELUP, M. D., Eye, ear, nose, and throat. Glass work guaranteed. Phone 445. Dick Building.—Adv. Professor Patterson places the University of Kansas in the third group, and continues; "Although the government of the University of Kansas does not possess all the features which indicate a full participation of the faculty in administration, the movement in that direction has been steady, even though there are still instances he points out the regularity of faculty meeting, the legislative power of the Senate, and the tendency for committees to become elective. Women to Devote Time to Social Service Next Year Several women of this year's senior class are going into social service work next year. Irene Fowden, Helen Forbes, and Edith Banks are going to attend the School of Civies and Philanthropy at Chicago. They have applied for admission into the Chicago Commons where they wish to live and do settlement work in connection with both the Commons and the school. Mary Burnett has accepted a position as social and girl's work secretary at the Bronx Y. W. C. A., New York City. She will have complete charge of high school clubs and young industrial girls. Julia Kennedy is planning to do some social investigation and juvenile protective work, but has no definite position in mind. Rose Seegelbaum is likewise planning to do Commercial Club or Juvenile Court work. Marie Ketels is going to take special dietician training in the Pent Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, for four months in the fall. In January she will go to Moberly, Missouri where she will do dietician work in a hospital. Dorothy Flint is going into her father's estate and insurance affliction in Glarnd. Florence Butler is planning to attend the American Academy of Arts in New York City. Margaret Mitchell and Sibyl Martin will attend Columbia. Liberty Tube and Tire Co. Opposite Masonic Bldg. Phone 991 VULCANIZING Tires Re-Soled and Re-Treaded Get the "Russell Tire Service" Every Job a Masterpiece A box of Johnstona favorite chocolates will be appreciated by her.— Rankins.— Adv. 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