MAY 28, 1918. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 3 Must Have Sixty Hours Of College Work Here To Join Medical Corps U. S. Surgeon-General Allows Students To Join Reserve and Stay in School May Enlist This Week Here Reports of Student Grades Will Be Made Twice Annually According to the new rulings, pre-medical students will be allowed to enroll in the Medical Enlisted Reserve Corps, thereby permitting them to continue the study of medicine if they had sixty hours of college credit, including ten hours in each of the following: Physics, biology (including comparative anatomy), modern languages (French or German), and chemistry. If a student has more than five hours of conditions in the above subjects, he is not allowed to enlist. Dr. John Sundwall of the K. U. School of Medicine returned from Washington, D.C., last week with the latest regulations issued by the surgeon-general regarding the enlistment of students in the medical reserve corps. MAY ENLIST MAY 30-31 All students who are eligible and wish to enlist may make application at Doctor Sundwall's office in the basement of the museum between 10 and 12 o'clock on Thursday and Friday. May 30 and 31. Any students who will be eligible after completing summer school may apply for enlistment at the close of the session. All students putting in applications must have a transcript of their work to date, which may be obtained at the registrar's office. MUST HAVE REQUIRED WORK The new provision differs in several respects from the old ruling for enlistment in the reserve corps. Formation of the Army was filled in the School of Medicine were permitted to enlist in the corps, but now any student who has completed the required work may do so. It is of course necessary to go on with the study of medicine, however, and anyone who may register in the draft and does not keep up his work will be dropped from the roll and will need a referee. No men in the current call of the draft will be allowed to join the reserve medical corps. APPLY TO DEAN NOW The ruling made last winter also allowed the dean to work with any recruiting officer, but now they must apply to the office of the dean of their school, who will take it up directly with the surgeon-general. REPORTS MADE TWICE YEARLY Reports of the student's grades will be recorded in your child's report card. five two or three times a year, and if the work done is not up to standard, the student will be dropped from the list. Bursts of Biography Salubrious Celebrities of K. U. The Truth About Them JOHN SHEA, CAMPUS BOSS To K. U, and K. U, means the majority of Hill people, the name, John Shea, signifies that of a good boss, a man who gets things done. In the winter muffed up in a gray coat giving orders curtly to workmen who are cleaning snow off the University walks. The snow gets cleaned by off noon, John Shea and the workman who is keeping track of K. U. going home for lunch, forgets such imaterial considerations as a clean sidewalk or the man who can make the snow go. Ask K. U., though, in so many words who John Shea is, and it answers, "Why, he's the man who keeps the buildings and grounds in repair. Gets things done, too. Must be a good boss—isn't he Irish?" As superintendent of buildings and ground?, John Shea does a few more things than order snow off the walks in winter and place window lights in to windows after a ninety-mile gate overseeing the Hill. Builds overseeing the ordinary repair work, he has supervised the landscape gardening on the campus, the reroofing of Fraser Hall, laying of walks, such as the cut-off; and now is busy with the construction of Administration Building. KEEPS PLANTS IN SHAPE Perhaps his hardest work is in keeping in good condition the heating and power plants. The business of buying coal does not end by writing an order to Leavenworth for the University's usual allotment. As a matter of fact, Leavenworth furnishes us little coal now. And so Mr. Shea has to keep on the look-out the year round ordering coal where he can, and when it arrives in town, getting it hauled. What duties apply to the Hill, apply to Rosedale, too. What John Shea would like to do is to "fix this place up the way it ought to be"; plant more landscape gardens, pave the driveways, build fireproof buildings, clean out the dandelions, and then "find some place else to fix up." If the present appropriations continue, it will be to- Work, he tells the reporter, is the thing he knows most about. He ought to know something about it. He has been brought up on work. norrow or maybe day after tomorrow before he jets this place "fixed up" to be in the basement. IN PACKING BUSINESS EARLY To begin with, he went into a pickle factory. Then he was graduated to the Job of office boy in the John Cudahay Packing Co. in Wichita and from moved up gradually to the position of superintendent for the Corn Belt Packing Co., Fort Dodge, Ia. Between Wichita and Fort Dodge, he worked in Omaha, Kansas City, Nashville, Louisville, and Chicago. He is an engineer, learned it in night schools, but since he is a natural student of the field, he has selected the latest about his particular field, mechanical and refrigerating en engineering. DOESN'T BOSS ALL THE TIME Outside his bossing business, he knows a little about other things, general history and philosophy and Gaelic language. He works in office hours. At least, he professes they do not interest him then. For the last four years, as superintendent of buildings and grounds, he has kept the University in repair. He gets things done smoothly, so smoothly, in fact, that few people know John Shen is working around here at all. She hopes he can handle men. To quote K. U. again, "He's a good boss." During office hours, he advocates work for himself and everybody else, work that the worker likes and lots of it. "But next to opportunity itself, comes work to make a man successful. If he's going to succeed, he ought to be so interested in it that—well, that he won't even want a vacation." "Say, how long at a stretch have you been gone from Lawrence since you came here?" Distance doesn't need to keep you from enjoying Wiedemann's chocolatees -- we ship our candies everywhere by mail and express. Adv- "Four days." Plymouth--Kansas at its best--Adv. The folks at home will enjoy the treat to be had in a box of Wiedemann's delicious sweets—they're wholesome, they're temptingly delicious, and they're pure—Adv. Plymouth--Kansas at its best.--Adv. Spring is here!—so are the new fabrics for Spring Suits. SCHULZ The TAILOR 917 Mass. St. "We're in Business for Your Health" Toilet and Shaving Needs Kodak Supplies Welkos Drug Store Formerly Evans' 819 Mass. A. G. ALRICH 736 Mass. St. THESIS BINDING Engraved Cards For Commencement Stationery Stationery Gift Suggestions in Brass and Leather from Roycroft 817 Mass. St. Unduplicated in quality and beauty of design are these creations in brass and leather made by the deft fingers of the Roycrofters at East Aurora, N. Y. SOL MARKS We are the exclusive agents in Lawrence for the Roycroft line and invite you to inspect the many appropriate graduation gifts to be found in this stock. The Reliable Jeweler LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Hotel Anchelebach BALTHORNE AVENUE AND TITLETOWN STREET 1205 SANTA CITY, NO. trains young people for good paying positions as bookkeepers, stenographers, cashiers, commercial teachers, court reporters, and private secretaries. We prepare students for civil service examinations and our graduates secure excellent appointments in departmental and field service. Catalog on request. Address, Lawrence Business College, Lawrence, Kan. 500 New Room Room Rate from $1200 Under the Personal Direction of S.J. Whitmore and Joseph Reischi The All-'Round Man's Drink MAKE MORE MONEY This Vacation. Get our special proposition for widelyawake, ambitious students. It is free to use. This is a planting year and the demand for our line of quick yielding fruits, and other nursery products, is breaking all records. "Nursery stock produces food." Sell it. Make more money this year. Write for equipment and reservation of territory. MOUNT HOPE NURSERIES, Lawrence, Kansas READ THE DAILY KANSAN Attend the Summer Seasons! First 6 Weeks Session Commences One Week From Today If You've Been On the Fence Get on the right side and go to Summer School! WHY MEN SHOULD ATTEND THE SUMMER SESSION The principle reason that should urge all men to attend the Summer Session is to conserve valuable time in obtaining their education, so that they can be ready to volunteer their services to Uncle Sam earlier than they could have had they not attended summer school. Men already in the draft should attend the Summer School to be able to continue their training as a safe-guard against any possibility of being called before next fall. The courses, offered in war work are also advantageous to the training of any young man, whether or not he is in the draft. Young men below the draft should seize the Summer Session as a positive opportunity in adding to their training before they become of age. Maybe you're been undecided as to what to do about the Summer Session which will open one week from today, or on June 4. If such is the case, don't let the opportunity of adding five to ten hours credit to your regular standing slip by—it is something that you will appreciate next fall! The Summer Session offers you a wide range of courses in all groups—there are no classifications as to who can enter the Summer Session—graduates, high school seniors, or freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors in the University, or even men and women who have long left school—the Summer Session is open to all of them! K. U.SummerSession Don't Put it off another day-decide now-that you will make the first six weeks of the summer advantageous to you, your standing and your country! TWO SEPARATE TERMS Enroll in Either or Both! First Session...June 4 to July 12 Second Session...July 15 to August 9 For further information see or address Director of Summer Session, Room 119, Fraser Hall, Lawrence, Kansas. First 6 Weeks Session Commences One Week From Today WHY WOMEN SHOULD ATTEND THE SUMMER SESSION But what the slogan means is that trained women will win the war--young women with a college education and training. The sooner the government receives services of these young women the sooner will come to Utopian day of victory! "The Summer Session Is Your Patriotic Opportunity To Save Time" "Women Will Win the War" is a frequent slogan applied to methods that will bring about a victory in the great World War. Women then should hasten their college careers in order to give their services to their country earlier than they had planned. Obviously this can be done by attending the Summer Session since three sessions of Summer School allows the student of the University to graduate in three year instead of four! One or two sessions attendance complete the college career proportionately. 一