Kansas State Historical Society Topeka, Ks. Daily Hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS Friday, March 9, 1956. 53rd Year, No. 105 College Honor Roll Lists 375 For Fall Term Forty students made a straight A average among the 375 in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences listed on the fall semester honor roll. The students on the honor list had completed at least a 12-hour program during the semester and had made a grade average of more than 2.25, or better than a B average. —(Daily Kansan Photo) The A students--Mary A. Alden, Hutchinson freshman; Jhelp Aulik, Holdredge, Reb junior; John E. Beam, Ottawa City, Bob minor; William H. Berry, Kansas City, Kas. senior; Marcia R. Bierlein, Pittsburg freshman; Robert B. Billinger, Pittsburgh junior; Gustave freshman; Thomas L. Bryan, Wichita junior; Robert D. Conn, Wichita senior; Gilbert Cuthbertson, Leavenworth junior; Phil Cuthbertson, Kansas City, Kas. senior; Paul P. Enes, Perry senior; Johna Forssberg, Logan junior; Jere Glover Salina sophomore, Roy Thurza M. Harris, Great Bend senior; Roger L. Hartman, Lyons junior; Stephen H. Hill, Lawrence freshman; F. B. Hollinger, Russell junior; Daw A. Horn; J. H. Nesbit, Joseph Freshman; Rosemary Ise, Wichita senior; Donna R. Jasper, Dionight sophomore; Noel M. Johnson, Kansas City. Mo; freshman; Janice M. Kibler, Topeka junior; Gayle J. Kinemond, Buhton fresh- laura R. Krantz, Hudson senior BEHIND THE SCENES—Between appearances on stage, Ruth Dodrill, Westchester, Pa., graduate student who plays Mrs. Higgins in the play Pygmalion, rehearses her next lines while Kenneth Baker, Helmetta, N. J., sophomore listens. Other students on the honor roll: Erin G. Marcus, Wellington junior; Donald W. Martin, Emporia junior; Dorothy L. Meier, Haven senior; Otto D. Jon Tulaa, Okien junior; Charles S. Reeder, Topeka sophomore; Bernice L. Schear, Lawrence senior; Laurian Seeber, Irvington, N. Y. freshman; Mary F. Snowday, Salina senior; Victor E. Viola, Tongan City Jr. Jams, Kansas City, Kas. senior; John F. Zoellner, Tonganico sophomore. Helen C. Adler, Fredonia freshman; Billy G. Aldridge, Kansas City, Kas junior; Monte L. Allen, Concordia sophomore; Shirley A. Allen, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; E. Anderson, Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; R. Anderson, Lawrence junior; Ruth A. Anderson, Hutchinson sophomore; Jessie M. Ball, Oneida senior; Kerstin I. Aarger, Toppea freshman; Barbara A. Barnes, Mission freshman; Teddy B. Berg, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; James Beal, Lawrence sophomore; Russell W. Beasley, Toppea sophomore; Patricia G. Beers, Holisington freshman; Judith A. Berg, Mission freshman; Jerry C. Burke, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Joanne Beal, Lawrence sophomore; Russell W. Beasley, Toppea sophomore; Patricia G. Beers, HolISINGTON freshman; Judith A. Berg, Mission freshman; Jerry C. Burke, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Mary E. Birney, Kansas City, Mo. freshman; Clement D. Blaklese, Wichita senior; Sandra K. Blankenship, Great Bend freshman; Richard C. Carter, North special student; Stamley L. Boles, Baldwin sophomore; Don R. Bowen, Salina freshman; Dr.crila L. Bremer, Lawrence sophomore. William P. Brigham, Topeka sophomore. Mo. Mason City, Ct. GM. sophomore; Mary J. Brown, Tulsa, Okla.; Mary K. Brown, Kansas City, Kas. freshman; Menzie H. Brown, Hiawata, junior; Peggy Brown, Iowa City, Ks. sophomores; Mary J. Burns, Prairie Village, Linda M. Carlson, Harper, freshmen; Maurice R. Cashman, Powhatan junior; Sonra Clark, Kansas City, Mo. Heken E. Cline, Wichita, freshmen; Anne L. Compton, Westfield, N. J. sophomore; David R Tomás, senior; Caroby Cook, Cochise junior; Kevin worth sophomore; Eugene G. Coombs, Wichita junior; Norma Cornett, Wichita junior; Norma Cornett, Wichita freshman; Adelbert D. Craneman, Wellsville senior; Robert D. Crist, Scott City sophomore; Howard E. Crotchett, Louisburg; Jerry E. Crown, Baiserheim, freshman; Betty E. Crowder, Lafayette, D. Deibert, Irving, Virginia E. Delp, Merriam, seniors; Ferruh Denirmen, Altiparmak, Turkey, freshman. Lawrence M. Detmere, Great Bend, specialist; Paul L. Dible, Topeka freshman. Carol A. Douglas, Newton, Sharon R. Dye, Wichita, freshman; William P. Edmonds, Fort Wayne, freshman; E. Edmonds, Lawrence sophomore; George H. Edwards, Kansas City, Kas; Kahletn A. Elsebise, Wichita, John R. Edmonds, Fort Wayne, sophomore; Edge, Meade sophomore; Joyce C. Elliott, Independence, Mo.; Carolyn J. Ely, Newton, freshman; Mary B. Emerson, Newton, freshman; Hunter H. Hutchinson, Donna M. Esslinger, Clifton, freshman; Mary Ann (Continued on/ Page 12) Studio Players Will Give 'Kind Lady' March 27-29 "Kind Lady," the last Studio Theater play of the season at the University, will be presented in Fraser Theater at 8 p.m. March 27-29. The following week the play by Edward Chodorov will go on a 2-week road tour of Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. A semi-trailer and two station wagons will be needed to move the production. Cities to be visited on the tour are Columbus, April 2; Joplin, April 3; Pittsburg and Alatmont, April 4; Fiverton, April 5; Miami, Okla, April 6; Ft Crowder, Mo., April 7; Wellington, April 9; Wichita, April 10 and 11; El Dorado, April 11; and Baldwin, April 13. Joyce Elliott, Independence, Mo. freshman, plays a wealthy art collector who befriends a starving young artist, acted by Ted Teichgraeber, Emporia sophomore. Through a clever ruse he and his friends take over the house and keep the art collector prisoner in an attempt to gain control of her fortune. Others in the cast: Don Bowen, Salina freshman; Mrs Ruth Dodrill, Westchester, Pa. graduate student; Sally Six, Lawrence graduate student; Vera Stough, Lawrence sophomore; Harper Barnes, Kansas City, Kan. freshman; George Edwards, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Lee MacMorris, Hutchinson junior; True Binford, Overland Park freshman; Judy Stone, Cedar Vale freshman; Warren Wandling, Milwaukee, Wis. freshman, and Jerry Bailey, Humboldt freshman. Nat Eek, Studio Theater director, staged the play and Richard Fanolio, fine arts junior from Kansas City, Mio., has designed the setting and properties. Charles Dodrill assistant director of Studio Theater, will supervise technical aspects of the production. Partly cloudy this afternoon, toonight and Saturday. Not so warm west and north central this afternoon. Colder northeast tonight and north central Saturday. Low tonight near 20 northwest to 30s southeast. High Saturday near 40 northwest to 50s southeast. Weather Quack Club To Go To Swim Clinic About 18 Quack Club members will attend a swimming clinic Saturday at Washburn University in Topeka to discuss composition of routine, types of music to be used in synchronized swimming, elementary techniques, and judging of events. A demonstration of stunts and actual teaching will be included as part of the day's activities. Four new Quack Club members were chosen Thursday. They are Judy Jones, Wellington sophomore; Sandra Selders, Kansas City, Mo; junior; Ernestine Adams, Topeka freshman, and Laddie Martin, Salina junior. Two others, Mary Sue Dunn, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, and Lee Coleman, Lawrence graduate student, were recently voted regular members because of their participation in the annual club's water show last month. Tentative plans for the annual intramural speaking contest were made by members of the Forensic League Wednesday night. Speaking Contest Plans Underway Final contest plans will be announced before spring vacation. The contest will be held soon after spring vacation and is open to all undergraduate students except members of the Forensic League and Delta Sigma Rho. Speeches may be informative, demonstrative, or humorous. Cups will be presented to the outstanding man and woman speaker in each division. Greeks To Start Canvass Saturday University Greeks will conduct a door-to-door canvass for the Lawrence Multiple Sclerosis Fund drive beginning at 2:30 p.m. Saturday as this year's Greek Week project. Santee To Run At Milwaukee NEW YORK (UP)—The New York State Supreme Court today continued an injunction permitting suspended mile Wes Sanchez to compete as an amateur, pending trial March 15. The decision was rendered despite National AAU objections that it could give the International Olympic Committee the right to reject the entire U.S. Olympic team. While Santee waited anxiously in the Marine Corps barracks at Quantico, Va., Supreme Court Justice Irving L. Levey said that he had a right to his "freedom pending conviction." Santee said he would leave immediately by air for Milwaukee where he will run in a meet Saturday night even though any competitors who run against him conceivably might lose their amateur standing. "Even the most hardened criminal has the right to apply for a certificate of reasonable doubt which will give him freedom pendning conviction," the jurist said. "There is such a question of reasonable doubt and we must prevent injustice until all the facts are explored by the courts," Levey said in continuing the stay pending trial on March 15. "We cannot pass a final judgment solely on affidavits and oral arguments." 7 To Attend Conference Seven University professors will attend the annual human relations conference at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, April 6, 7, and 8. They are John T. Gullahorn visiting assistant professor of sociology; Marston M. McCluggage professor of sociology; Edward G. Nelson, professor of business; Frank Pinet, assistant professor of economics; Wiley Mitchell, associate professor of economics, and W. Keith Wetmer, associate professor of economics, and Howard Baumgartel, assistant professor of business and human relations. The conference was initiated by the late Dean Wallace B. Donham of the Harvard Business School to stimulate human relations teaching at the undergraduate level. The theme of the conference is to evaluate human relations training. This is the first opportunity to compare the Michigan approach of role-playing and skills practice techniques in human relations training to the case method approach used here. Junior Debaters In Winfield Tourney The junior division of the KU debate team will participate in the St. John's College tournament at Winfield today and Saturday. William Summers, Wichita, John Kerwitz, Chanute, Leonard Parkinson, Scott City, and Donald Bowen, Salina, all freshman, will make the trip. The debate is open to freshman and sophomores only. Universities, colleges, and junior colleges from seven states will be represented. The city will be zoned, and fraternities and sororites will solicit in sections assigned according to house membership. Joanne Hobbs, Wichita junior and chairman of the Greek Week project committee, said the project should be important because students are within the age limit of the disease. Duke Ellington, called America's genius of modern music, and his orchestra will play at the Greek Week dance from 8:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. in the Student Union Ballroom, beginning a week of activity for fraternities and sororities at the University. Royalty To Be Crowned Royalty To Be Crowned The King and Queen of Greek Week will be crowned at the dance, with Bryce Cook, Overland Park jury acting as master of ceremonies. This is the first year a king has been chosen to take on his third the queen. The queen and her six tendants and the king and his two escorts will be chosen from the six finalists. Candidates for queen are Dale Barham, Topeka, Mary Belle Brown, Kansas City, Mo., and Sandra James, Wichita. All are sophomores. King finalists are Gerald Rosenlund, Topeka senior, Jerry Cox, Lawrence senior, and Scott Dole, Pratt sophomore. The king and queen will reign over all the activities of the week. A scholarship dinner will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansan Room of the Student Union, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, will speak. His topic will be "In Praise of Excellence." The Inter-Fraternity Council or Panhellenic Council representative, the honor initiate, and the scholarship chairman from each fraternity and sorority will attend. The Greek Week Sing will be held Thursday in the -Student Union Ballroom. Entries of groups' and numbers the sing must be turned to by Monday for Amir Hartell, Plattsburg, Mo. junior and chairman of the program. Scholarship Dinner Wednesday "Anastasia," the Broadway nite play, has been booked as a special attraction by the University Concert Course. A fraternity chairot race will take place at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 17 in front of Strong Hall. The chariots will be made of tubular steel set on bicycle wheels. Two men will pull each chairot, and one man will ride in it. The race will start at the west end of Strong, go around the Chi Omega circle and back to the starting line. It will be run in heats of three or four chariots. Broadway Play Booked The play will be presented for a performance on Monday, April 23 in Hoch Auditorium, and will include the original cast with Viveca Lindfors and Eugenia Leontovich. Proficiency Exam Set For Saturday The spring semester English proficiency examination will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday to all juniors and seniors who have not passed it previously. A passing grade is a graduation requirement for all students in the College of Arts and Sciences, William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, School of Fine Arts, School of Education, and department of nursing.