--- x<2 $ \sqrt{19} $ Page 3 Kansas Editor To Be Honored Here Tomorrow A Kansas editor will be announced as 1955 recipient of the William Allen White foundation's award for journalistic merit here tomorrow as part of the University's annual tribute to the memory of Mr. White. Fred W. Brinkerhoff, editor of the Pittsburg Sun-Headlight, will make the award address at a luncheon in the Student Union. Charles M. Harger, editor of the Ablene Reflector-Chronicle, last year received the first White award. Norman Isaacs, managing editor of the Louisville Times and 1953 president of the Associated Press Managing Editors association, will give the sixth annual William Allen White lecture. He will speak at 3 p.m. in Strong auditorium on "Conscience and the Editor." Official Bulletin TODAY Clyde Reed $J_{r}$. editor of the Parsons Sun and president of the William Allen White foundation, will preside at the annual meeting of trustees that morning, Dean Burton W. Marvin, director of the foundation, will make the annual report. Mathematics Club, 4 p.m. 203 Strong hall Prof. G. W. Smith "Equation of Equations" P. h. D. French reading examination, Saturday 9-11 a.m., room 103, Strong hall. Hnd in books to Miss Craig, room 104. Shranghal hall, by noon Thursday. Feb. 10. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Schenbach: String Quartet AIEE-IRE, 4 p.m., room 201, EEL Representative from Remington Rand to speak on "Aircraft Antenna Coupler Program." Arnold Air Society, 7 p.m., room 107 Military Science building. Jay James, 5 p.m., Pine room, Student Union. YM-YWCA Pancake Supper a n d 6 Square Dance, 6 p.m. Community building, 11th and Vermont. Tickets 50c available at "Y" office. All welcome. KU Annual Bridge tournament registration, 7 p.m. room 306, Student Union. Play starts at 7:30 p.m. (room 306). Younger enrolled KU students are eligible. Liahona Fellowship choir practice, 7 p.m. fellowship service, 8 p.m. UVO. 7.30 p.m., Jayhawk room, Student Union. Student Religious Council, 5 p.m. Methodist Student center. TOMORROW Lt. (jg) William F. Mauer, USN, of the U.S. Recruiting Station and Office of Naval Officer Procurement to answer questions for interested students. 9 a.m. Law Wives, 8 p.m. Law lounge, Green bull, Speaker; Dr. B. M. Davis. Episcopal morning prayer. 6:45 a.m. Holy Communion, 7 a.m., Danforth 9:00 a.m. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Mahler: Symphony No. 1 Baptist Student Union devotions and prayer. 12:30 - 12:50 p.m., Danforth AWS House of Representatives, 4 p.m. Javhawk room. Student Union. Chemistry Club, 4 p.m., room 233. Milott hall. Ball report to be given on Monday. Red Peppers, 5 p.m., Ballroom, Student Union. Der Deutsche Verein, 5 p.m., Pine North Student Union, Seven Hills, where everyone welcome Institute of Aeronautical Sciences sponsored program. 7 p.m., room 4. Department of Electronics Development, Engineering department. Chance Vought Aircraft, Dallas, Texas, to speak on "How a New Airplane is Developed." All engineering students Christian Science organization 7 p.m. Danforth chapel. Faculty, students and students. Seaband and Blade, 7:15 p.m. Pine room. Student Union. Col. Lew Beyon Hion, speaker: Korean War. Uniforms. Attendance required. Le Cerce Francais, 7:30 p.m., suite 112 groupe, La Bretaise, étudiants francais, et étudiants américains. ASTE. 7.30 p. Operation Pulsation" KU Annual Bridge Tournament, 7.30 p. 160 Graduate club 8:30 p.m. Trail room, Student Union. Discussion. This China Newcomers, 8 p.m., Lounge, Museum of Art. Bridge, sewing, dessert. FRIDAY Hililel Foundation Services, 7:30 p.m. Jewish Community center, 1409 Tem Sociology club coffee forum, 4 p.m. room 17. Strong Annex E. Bill Arnold Mary Ellen B. In travel time, New York is now closer to Tokyo than it was to Philadelphia in the days of the 13 colonies. J-SCHOOL IN WATER COLOR—The second edition of the Jay-hawker, now on sale, features a painting by Connie White, fine arts senior, of the William Allen White School of Journalism. Eight Named To Honor Roll In Journalism Three seniors and five juniors were listed yesterday on the fall semester honor roll of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information. The seniors, news majors, are Letty Lemon, Nancy Neville, and Gene Shank. The Juniors are Larry Heil and Irene Coonfer, news, and Charles Sledd and Paul J. Bunge, advertising, and Gretchen Guinn, home economics-iournalism. Students on the honor roll rate scholastically in the upper ten per cent of the journalism student body. This semester they made grade point averages ranging from 2.29 to 2.75. Inspection of the hospital was made December 14. A more rigorous inspection program was recently initiated, according to Dr. Ralph I Canuteson, director. It is a joint project of the American Colleges of Surgeons and of Physicians, the American Hospital association, the American Medical association and the Canadian Medical association. Watkins Gets Accreditation Full accreditation for the current year has been given Watkins Memorial hospital by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals. Watkins Memorial hospital, a 62-bed structure with complete surgical and laboratory facilities, has been fully approved every year since 1940. It was the gift of the late Mrs. Elizabeth M. Watkins of Lawrence. "We are most pleased to receive accreditation under the new program," Dr. Canuteson said, "as even some of the larger hospitals are now receiving only provisional accreditation." He Took a Wrong Turn Windham, Conn.—(U.P.)-Authorities reported that while Leo A. Racine was fleeing the scene of an accident he drove through a bedroom wall and awakened Ernest Angel—a state policeman. Korean Colonel To Speak Here Col. Lew Byon Hion is one of a number of Korean war veterans from that country now attending the Command and General Staff college at Ft. Leavenworth, Smith said. He will illustrate with slides and maps. A Korean army colonel will speak here tomorrow on his experiences in the Korean war, Don Smith, engineering senior, president of Scabbard and Blade, announces. All staff officers of the Reserve Officer Training corps programs at KU have been invited to hear Col. Byon Hion. A question-and-answer period is scheduled after the talk. Don Endacott, college senior, one of two chairmen for the Scabbard and Blade program committee, is credited with bringing Col. Byon Hion to the University. He visited Ft. Leavenworth recently and arranged the trip. The new officers are Mrs. Bruce A. Brent, 1231 Louisiana st., president; Mrs. Eugene R. Tait, 1414 New Jersey st., vice president; Mrs. Harold W. Conner, 1311 West 6th st., secretary, and Mrs. Eldon R. Davis, 2125 Learned st., treasurer. Other officers are appointive, and will be selected early next week. Engineerettes, wives of University engineers recently elected officers for the spring semester. Engineerettes Elect Next Term Officers Canuteson Attends New York Meeting Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of health service at Watkins hospital left early this morning by plane for New York City to attend the four-day meetings of the National Tuberculosis association committee and board of directors. Dr. Canuteson is one of the directors for the association. The board meeting is a semi-annual affair. Wednesday, February 9, 1955 University Daily Kansan The Women's Medical Specialist Corps is the youngest of the women's corps in the U.S. Army. But American weaponers recouped quickly, and the United States—so say its atomic officials—is well out front in the nuclear arms race. Weaponeers Claim U.S. Ahead in Nuclear Race Washington—(U.F.)The belief has long persisted in some Washington quarters that Russia may have beaten this country to a cheap and efficient way to make hydrogen superbombs. Even so, no responsible government figure doubts that Russia has a stockpile of H-bombs and the means of delivering them. Nevertheless, yesterday's declaration by Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov that Russia is the No. 1 H-bomb power was greeted here as a pugnacious boast designed to scare the free world at a moment when Soviet stock needed boosting. The Atomic Energy commission refused to comment officially on Molotov's boast. But AEC Chairman Lewis L. Strauss and Commissioner Thomas E. Murray often have proclaimed America's atomic superiority. And Mr. Strauss is known to believe that the U.S. superbomb stock-pile is big enough by comparison with Russia's to offset the Soviet's admitted superiority in armed manpower and to constitute the world's best insurance against all-out aggression by the East. But neither Mr. Strauss nor others informed on the subject discount GI Bill to Be Speech Topic Art Rose, field director of the Kansas Veterans commission, will speak to the University Veterans organization at 7:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union on the extent and privileges of the Korean GI bill (Public Law 550). He will discuss with the veterans the recent cuts and adjustments to the bill by Congressional legislation. Mr. Rose is a World War II Marine veteran. He served four years in the Pacific theater. A native of Lincoln, Kan., and a graduate of Ft. Hays college, he has served on the commission since his discharge from the service in 1946. Russia's technical capabilities, and many a U.S. authority has warned that the Reds could some day forge ahead if this country ever slackened its atomic effort. The world's first full-scale hydrogen explosion, so described by President Eisenhower, was detonated at Eniwetok in the Marshall islands by the United States on Nov. 1, 1952. It wiped out the test island. Some nine months later, on Aug. 12, 1953, the second hydrogen explosion in history was set off—by Russia. Mr. Strauss commented later that in view of the relatively short time period between the two tests, "there is good reason to believe that they had begun work on this weapon substantially before we did." The report, never officially confirmed on the record, got out that Soviet H-bomb also was cheaper, more efficient, and more manageable than ours. Then on March 1, 1954, at Bikini in the Marshalls the United States began a new series of H-bomb tests with an explosion that dwarfed the curtain-raiser of 1952. Cement Plant Work Beqins in Lawrence Construction of a new Lawrence cement mixing plant at 4th and Maple streets began yesterday. The plant will provide cement for construction of the Kansas Turnpike authority's Kaw River bridge north-west of Lawrence. Travis E. Glass, former Douglas county sheriff, is plant manager. Officials of the new plant, the Lawrence Ready-Mix, said it will be a permanent installation. YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or Prescription duplicated. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. SLACKS SHOES (Entire Stock) SUEDE JACKETS Single-breasted TUXEDOS SPORTCOATS SUITS SWEATERS (Entire Stock) SPORTSHIRTS CORDUROYS 20% off 25% off TOPCOATS (Entire Stock) SOCKS 33 1/3 % off And Don't Miss Our Big HALF-PRICE TABLE the University shop BOYS APPAREL 1.45 LUX GRAINY DRESS, IN MOST COLORS. 1420 Crescent Rd. West Campus