University Daily Kansan Monday, January 15, 1962 Page 4 Kise Krueger - 'Dean for a Day' The dean of women and a sorority president traded places last Friday. The result: new rules in the sorority and a confused new dean of women. Kise Krueger, Laramie, Wyo, senior and president of Pi Beta Phi, won the right to trade places for a day with Emily Taylor, dean of women, when Pi Beta Phi raised the most money per member in an Associated Women Students Memo- rial Scholarship drive last fall. The two traded places from Friday noon until Saturday noon. A VIGOROUS HOUSE president, Dean Taylor issued a sweeping revision of house rules shortly after assuming her new office. Included in the new rules were: - A rule requiring sorority members to wear name tags at all times. * Stricter controls over senior boys. "TD SAY THE HOUSE was one step behind the dean of women all the time," added Miss Krueger. "They had a lot of fun although, of course, nobody did too much studying over the weekend." "We tried to keep in mind that I was president," commented Dean Taylor. While Dean Taylor appears to have assumed her new duties with relative ease, Miss Krueger found her duties as dean of women rather exhausting—due, no doubt, to some elaborate planning beforehand by her predecessor. While in office, she attempted to deal with the following problems, all staged: - A woman student from the University of Chicago (actually a KU drama student) seeking admit-tance to KU after she had been dismissed from the Chicago school for unexplained disciplinary reasons. - A KU sorority president seeking advice on how to depledge. - A telephone call from a KU housemother who announced that she was going to Europe the next day. "BY ABOUT FOUR o'clock Friday, I began to realize that all this was a joke," Miss Krueger said. "But the transfer student from Chicago really had me fooled." "About 1:30 Friday afternoon, Carl Fahrbach (assistant director of admissions) called to say he was sending this girl up to see me about being admitted to KU. He said the girl was a straight-A student, but that she had been dismissed for disciplinary reasons. "The girl wouldn't tell me why she had been dismissed from school. She said she had flown here just to see about being admitted, and she was very angry that she had happened to come on a day when Dean Taylor and I switched places. She said she had to leave for Chicago at five o'clock." Miss Krueger summed up the experience as follows: "I can certainly sympathize with all the problems that the dean of women has to face." IT WAS ONLY LATER, after Miss Krueger had held an urgent problem conference with Janet Noel, assistant to the dean of women, that she learned of the hoax. "No," she said, "I think I'd rather be a sorority president." Wayne Records HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — John Wayne has been signed to a non-exclusive recording pact by Liberty Records. His initial recording will be "Walk With Him" and "I Have Faith." 912 Mass. — VI 3-0151 PORTABLES - $49.50 up Catholic Daily Mass: 6:30 & 8 a.m. St. John's Church, 13th & Kentucky Official Bulletin SERVICE RENTALS Printing, Mimegraphing and Duplicating Pick up — Delivery Teacher Interviews; Jan. 17 & 18. Club Sports; Jeff. Co. Schoolbooks, Lakewood, Colo. TODAY Analytical Chemistry Seminar; 4 p.m. 1234567890 Zimmerman, "Absorption Spectroscopy." Angel Flight Meeting: 7 p.m., Military Science Building. Episcopal Holy Communion and Breakfast: 7 a.m. Cotterbury House. TOMORROW **Humanities Forum:** 8 p.m. Oread Room, Kansas Union. Dr. William O. Scott, Assistant Professor of English, Teens, and Methods in the Analysis of "Poetry." Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. WEDNESDAY El Ateneo. El programa de hoy consitera en cinco películas en colores sobre la naturaleza del mundo, torno Fontecito (Sound Lab) a las cuadritos de la tarde. Refrescos. Todos invitados. AUSTIN, Tex. —(UPI) — Texas' cattle population is about the same size as the human population, the University of Texas Bureau of Business Research reports. The Bureau said there are 9.5 million head of cattle and about the same number of people. However, the cattle population in 1900 was about what it is today, but the human population has risen sharply in the past 60 years. Population Note Traffic Fines Indicate Watchful Campus Police KU's somewhat elaborate parking arrangement could easily deteriorate into mass chaos except for the efforts of a small group of men who patrol the campus. If figures representing the number of parking violation tickets issued since the fall semester began are any indication, these men do their jobs well. The campus traffic department has issued a total of 5,817 tickets for parking infractions since the current semester opened. In the six month period from July to the end of December the University business office collected $11,141 in student parking fines alone. INCLUDED IN the total number of tickets issued are 3,006 to students, 464 to staff members, and 1,809 to visitors, all since September. An additional 171 tickets are being processed to identify the owner of a car that does not include 367 tickets issued by violation of city, parking, ordinances. The mass of figures suggests that without a system of parking zones such as the University has set up, the result would be a motorist's "free-for-all" to the accompaniment of crinkled fenders. The number of parking tickets issued to date this semester, though seemingly high, reflects no startling increase, however. For a comparable period last year, the total was slightly higher at 6.287. This total included 3,400 to students, 432 to staff members, 1,153 to visitors, and 724 unidentified. The unidentified tickets are eventually traced through motor vehicle registration offices of Kansas and Missouri. Students who fail to pay the parking infraction fees, along with library penalties and Kansas Union fees, will have trouble carrying out their enrollment for the second semester. A studer can not enroll, receive a copy, his transcript, THE MATTER of parking tickets has a particular significance at this time of year to students who have neglected their monthly notices that fines are due. graduate or transfer colleges unless the fees have been paid. There is little correlation between the number of parking tickets issued and fines collected since the first ticket issued is in the form of a warning. Only subsequent tickets require payment of a penalty fee. This year the traffic office has instituted a new system of billing for parking violations each month in order to give several reminders to violators. Previously, billing was twice a semester, according to Joe Skillman, chief of campus police. Animal Actors HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — How many animal actors are there? The American Humane Association says more than 8,000 animals performed for motion picture and television cameras during the first half of 1961. In July, on television alone, there were 465 working horses, 76 sheep, 12 chickens and 8 dogs. During the same month the movies employed 206 horses, 65 sheep and 58 cows. THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: NORM SHERER Norm Sherer joined Ohio Bell two years ago. He hadn't been with the company long when he had an imaginative idea for speeding up customer billing. This idea and others won Norm an important promotion to Sales Supervisor for the Columbus Office. Now, with six engineers who report to him, Norm keeps Columbus businessmen informed on advances in telephone service and equipment. Norm Sherer of the Ohio Bell Telephone Company, and other engineers like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country, help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Wir come have The fluid winter and s intere The C impot nate and inchi less, Re when seen oppos "Hi were gent "Wha TH comp from Menc this r on th I g first well "How to yo I. my s "O she t Th barr she "S the had help at th I and Yocc matc said, over