Wednesday, January 5, 1955 University Daily Kansan Page 3 -Kansan photo by Pete Ford 'GOBS' OF FEET—Flying feet—all 16 of em—added spice to the half time of the KU-MU game last night. The "16" feet belong to Ann Rumsey, college sophomore; La Donna Weir, former student; Karen Ward, fine arts sophomore; and Collette Peterman, college sophomore. Kansan Board Dinner Committees Appointed Committees were appointed yesterday for the annual Kansan board dinner, which will be held at 6:30 Saturday, May 14, in the ballroom of the Student Union building. The speaker committee will be headed by Letty Lemon and will include Martha Chambers and Elizabeth Wolgemuth. Nancy Neville will be guest committee chairman, assisted by Karen Hilmer and Audrey Holmes, all journalism seniors. Outstanding students in the William Allen White School of Journalism will be honored at the dinner. Stan Hamilton, journalism senior and Kansan board chairman, will be program committee chairman, assisted by David Riley and David Conley, journalism seniors. Gene Shank, journalism senior, will chairman the hospitality committee, which also includes Ron Grandon, journalism junior, and Court Ernst, college senior. Georgia Wallace will head the menu committee, assisted by Ke Bronson. Amy De Yong will be chairman of the publicity committee, assisted by Dana Leibengood, all journalism seniors. Lloyd Kirk Awarded Boeing Scholarship Lloyd Lee Kirk, a senior in the School of Business, is winner of the newly established Boeing Airplane company scholarship in business administration, it was announced by Dr. Leonard H. Axe, dean of the School of Business. The award is $400 for the current academic year. The Boeing Airplane company of Wichita previously awarded four scholarships to seniors in engineering for the 1954-55 school year. Kansan Names New Executives Four journalism seniors—Letty Lemon, Gene Shank, Audrey Holmes, and Martha Chambers—will be the top executives on the Daily Kansan the first eight weeks of spring semester. All four and other staff executives were approved yesterday by the Kansan board. Miss Lemon will be executive editor, Shank editorial editor, Miss Holmes business manager, and Miss Chambers advertising manager. Other business executives will be Georgia Wallace, journalism senior, circulation manager; Jerry Jurden, journalism senior, national advertising manager; James Cazier, journalism junior, classified manager, and Taylor Rhodes, journalism graduate, and Sue Epperson, fine arts senior, promotion managers. Managing editors approved were Jack Lindberg, Amy Deyong, and Karen Hilmer, journalism seniors, and Ron Grandon, journalism junior. Editorial associates will be John Herrington, journalism junior, and Elizabeth Wohlgemuth, journalism senior. Silver Collection Now at Museum Editors of Kansan pages will be Stan Hamilton, journalism senior, sports editor; Mary Bess Stephens, journalism senior, society editor, and Irene Coonfer, journalism junior, society assistant; Nancy Neville, journalism senior, news editor, and Lee Ann Urban, journalism junior, news assistant; Tom Lyons, journalism senior, telegraph editor, and Dot Taylor, journalism senior, feature editor. 914 Massachusetts Street LAWRENCE, KANSAS The Kurdian Irish Silver collection is on display in the lower gallery of the Museum of Art. The collection consists of objects of every-day use in the early Irish home. These objects were produced primarily in Dublin, though the collection also contains some items from smaller towns such as Cork and Limerick which are very rare. Among the outstanding features of the collection are a pair of matched silver gilt Dublin jugs which date to 1740. --- MORE LUCKY DROODLES! MORE LAUGHS! --- FIGURE EIGHT SKATED ON THIN ICE Charles McGaha Eastern New Mexico University FOOTBALL STADIUM WITH ALL SEATS ON 50-YARD LINE Herbert V. Wilkins University of Alabama THEY'RE CLAMORING FOR THEM! Who? Students. What? Luckies. Coast to coast, dormitory to dormitory, college smokers prefer Luckies to all other brands, according to the greatest up-to-datest college survey. Again, the No.1 reason for Luckies' wide lead: Luckies taste better. They taste better, first of all, because Lucky Strike means fine tobacco. Then, that tobacco is toasted to taste better. "It's Toasted"—the famous Lucky Strike process tones up Luckies' mild, good-tasting tobacco to make it taste even better. So enjoy the better-tasting cigarette . . . Lucky Strike. But don't be like the man in the Droodd above, titled: Pickpocket acquiring Luckies. Make sure you have plenty of your own. Buy Luckies by the carton. COWARDLY TENNIS RACQUET (NO GUT54 Barbara Spring Borraca Spring Better taste Luckies... HIGHWAY FOR GRASSHOPPERS B. D. Toopfer University of Oregon LUCKIES TASTE BETTER CLEANER, FRESHER, SMOOTHER! O A.T. Co. PRODUCT OF The American Tobacco Company AMERICA'S LEADING MANUFACTURER OF CIGARETTES