ARCH 28,1919. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN ears on Warm Ice Air So Cold It Snaps Among Sights on Hill onders of Uni. Museum and Paboratories Open to Visiting Students ild Laws Tame for a Day rthquake Ordered (It May Not Come Just Now) to Make Seismograph Work rolar bears on imitation ice!" Not really an exclamation, the foreing, but the University barker, liming up for the benefit of the University's guests at the annual high bowl basketball tournament. Hear Polar bears on imitation ice! laeches and gentleman, the big show it wohlly in the gymnasium. It all over the Hill. The big top is anywhere. Polar bears on imitation they form, but a tiny part of pers the best collection of North american animals possessed by any diversity or college. They are on the main floor of the muni in natural surroundings; polar on imitation ice, moose in birch at, snow rabbits, wolverines, ot., beavers, deer, buffaloes, mounts, wolves, coyotes, pumas, sums, coons, pumas, ocetols, all of t everything in the woods, included the only survivor of the Custer sacre on the Little Big Horn. Dyche Museum, which is the ornate, red-tile-roofed building with spire, is worth coming across the e to see. On the second floor are than 2,400 specimens of birds. the third floor is the collection of ils, arctic circle and African cu. In the hall on the second floor the museum is a small collection of berries and moths, a part of one the most complete entomological sections in the world. LAWS INHABIT GREEN HALL Across the road from the museum the library. Take a look inside, ving the wild polar bears on their ation ice, we come next to the laws entirely surrounded by air. They inhabit the classic gray Building, Green Hall. Push a laws off the steps and walk in, embering that at K. U. it is not a be, an honor to be a law basement is the Little we the Club gives its where the debaters and studs of public speaking practice. r not, they are muzzled for On the top floor of Green is the library, where, perhaps, your pa, inclue, corn or neighbor used to stile with Blackstone and practise his torts. FRASER ALSO MUSEUM The large stone building in front the school of Law is Fraser Hall. the basement, la-da-hees, is the e economics department with its hens, laboratories and lecture ps. On the second floor of Fraser the archaeological museum, old if, but fine business. The seismograph the instrument The seismograph, the instrument records earthquake is in the moment of Blake Hall, which is the French chateau south and east of Fraser. It also has the clock which does not run. The Journalism Building is the odd little structure of brick and stone with somewhat Jacobeban gables and with wooden leantos. It is the place where the students publish their daily paper, The Daily Kansan, and contains a complete newspaper plant. Take a look. SNOW HOME OF SCIENCES "The large white limestone building with the pointed gernacks on the corners is Snow Hall, the home of the biologic sciences. It is filled with many smells, all of them friendly. If you are interested in the study of anatomy, bacteriology, physiology, botany, or any branch of zoology grab a student in one of those subjects and tell him to take you to the points of interest in Snow Hall. It's his business to do so. AD HAS ART COLLECTION "Up the hill from Snow is the Chemistry Building, also smelly, but one of the most interesting holes on the Hill. In the basement the liquid air machine is at work today for your erudition and grinding out temperatures of 200 degrees below zero. Grab a chem student or a pharmic and tell him to take you through the building. Ask questions. All that is asked of you is that you break no apparatus nor hurt the profs. The apparatus costs money. AD HAS ART COLLECTION. The administration building, which is slowly coming to life, finished this summer, is the home of the art department. On the third floor original drawings and paintings will be on exhibition. Across the street from "Ad," and last building to the west, is Marvin Hall, the Engineering Building with the electric laboratories. Dynamics and other such creatures hiss and pound away for the benefit of observant students and interested visitors Haworth Hall, Geology Building, is next. It has the collection of model diamonds, exact reproductions of the largest diamonds in the world. Samples of minerals and rocks, fossils of tribolites and things are exhibited in the first floor museum, and in the basement are ore dressing laboratories with mine models, drills and safety lamps. Then comes Robinson Gymnasium which needs no explanations. WORKSHOPS IN FOWLER East of the gymnasium is Fowler Shops, which is the mechanical engineers' laboratory. Lathies and machinery for technical training are in operation there all day. The former S. A; T. C. barracks are built along Mississippi Street, while the vocational training barracks are on the campus between Marvin and Haworth Halls. They are regular barracks, the boys who lived in them say. McCook Field is at the extreme north end of the campus west of Mississippi Street. It is there the Missouri Tiger has his tail twisted, according to tradition. Depths of Potter Threaten Freshmen The recent rains and the melting snows of the east side of the campus have swelled the contents of Potter's Lake to overflowing, and the campus pool is now of sufficient size and wetness to dampen the arbor of even the most light-headed freshman Potter's Lake drains approximately sixteen acres of the northwest corner of the campus, according to the survey of the geological department, and the eight inches of rainfall of the month past, together with the melting snows, provides sufficient water to completely fill the lake, designed and excavated by the School of Engineering some years ago. The lake is now about twenty feet deep in the lowest part, which is immediately below the diving stand, and it is intimated by the erestwhile Vigilantes of last year that failure of freshmen to wear the postage-stamp headgear may undergo their baptism of school spirit in this artificial pool. Utah University—A university club for the promotion of the league of nations has been organized. The purpose of this club is to assist in developing the public sentiment in favor of President Wilson's Peace plan. A journal will be published in the future. Clem ismert is back on the Hill He is enrolled as a sophomore. The Supreme Cafe Read the Daily Kansan. We Invite You To try our excellent meals while you are in the city. You'll save money by coming down town— Regular meals and short orders at all hours— "That's the place to eat" 914 Mass St. Ten Hours' Credit Given In K. U. Summer Session Summer school this year will be composed of two terms as in former years: the first lasting six weeks, beginning June 17 and ending July 25, and the second lasting four weeks, begins July 28 and ends August 22. Six hours the first term and four hours the second term will be the maximum amount of credit allowed for the two terms. No arrangements for special lectures have been made yet but there will probably be several men from outside universities talk during the term. Catalogues have already been sent to the printers and will be ready for distribution in about three weeks. Mrs. Gaylord Weillep, A. B., 14'b St. John is visiting friends in Lawrence. Mrs. Weillep was formerly Miss Helen Allpin. K. U. Campus Has Been Quiet for Two Month No earthquakes have been recorded by the seismograph in Blake Hall for over two months. There have been only two or three instances of such an absence of disturbances since the seismograph has been set up at the University. Usually from two to five earthquakes are recorded every month. The average for a year is from twenty to thirty. NOTE BOOKS Betty Wales Dresses The apparatus has just recently been thoroughly cleaned, so that if there had been any appreciable disturbance it would have been recorded. Washburn—Services for the sixteen men who have given their lives in their service of their country, will be held next Sunday, March 30 in the McVicar Chapel. We have a fine assortment of leather and cloth note books, in all sizes—We cut paper to fill all sizes Call and see our splendid stock. Wolf's Book Store Look for this Label Betty Wales Dresses TRADE MARK BER. "You Certainly Should See Them" THE new Betty Wales models are ready and this is the only store in the city that sells them. SUCH VARIED STYLES! You will be sure to find just the dress you want among the Betty Wales assortment. Every occasion has been provided for, every taste considered. The newest materials, the smartest trimmings, the most becoming colors have been combined in a masterly way. AND WHAT CAREFUL FINISHING! Betty Wales Dresses are made under the brightest and cleanest conditions. They are finished with painstaking care. And inside of each dress you will find the Betty Wales label, which signifies that the dress is a genuine Betty Wales and is the symbol of its unqualified guarantee as to style, materials, finish and satisfaction. Onwes. Bulline & Hackman