Topeka, Ks. Daily hansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS 50th Year, No. 127 Tuesday, April 20, 1953 —Kansan photo by Lonnie Barlov BUBBLE GUM BRIGADE—Some of the kids saluted, some had their hands over their hearts, and others gave the girl and boy scout signs. But every one tried his best to imitate the cadets with ramrod positions at the review for federal inspection by the ROTC units yesterday. There was one thing that every kid did with equal dexterity—chew the bubble gum that had been provided for them at their own special reviewing stand in an airtight to keep them away from the marching cadets. stand in an attempt to keep them away from the marching cader Students Face Complex Ballot Students will be faced with a complex balloting system when they go to the polls tomorrow for the election of representatives to the reorganized All Student Council. Bob Worcester, engineering sophomore and ASC elections chairman, explained that the complex balloting system is a necessity of the reorganized ASC. "Every student will carry three, and some students four ballots into the voting booth," he said. On one ballot will be the candidates for ASC Senate seats from the voter's own school, he said. On another ballot the names of candidates for president and vice president will appear. Another ballot, like that of Senate, will list candidates for the House of Representatives. This means unorganized students vote for independents, Greeks for Greeks. Freshmen, sophomores, and juniors will be given still another ballot, Worcester said. They are to choose next year's class officers. The elections chairman said wrote that the polls will be supplied by the YMU. Worcester named 10 polling places which are to be used for Wednesday's election. They are Lindley, Marvin, Haworth, basement of Strong, Strong rotunda, Bailey, the Journalism building, Fraser, Green, and the Student Union. KU Gets Grant For Atomic Work University scientists are tackling part of the research program directed at finding suitable high temperature resistant materials, the lack of which is now a barrier to peace time use of atomic energy. Dr. Paul W. Gilles, associate professor of chemistry, is directing research of a fundamental nature on the metal titanium. The Atomic Energy commission contracted for the work, which will cost $11,124 in the next year. Three previous AEC contracts for this project amounted to approximately $29,000. Part of the study is concerned with titanium monoxide gas, which may supply answers about the behavior of titanium under high pressure. The gas is found in many stars and may help to determine the temperature and chemical aspects of distant stars. ROTC Groups Parade In Federal Inspection Sixteen groups of ROTC cadets from the three units were reviewed by visiting inspecting officers of the Army and Air Force yesterday in the annual federal inspection review. This included 12 groups from the Air Force and two each from the Army and Navy, a total of more than 1,800 men. The groups formed on the drive behind Hoch auditorium and in the Military Science building parking area and marched to the intramural fields for the review. The inspecting team for the Air Force, from the Air University at Montgomery, Ala., was Col. Hugh 29 Seniors Named To Phi Beta Kappa Twenty-nine students were named today to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society for students in liberal arts. The students, selected on the basis of scholarship, are scholastically above the upper 10 percent of their class. They will be initiated preceding the annual banquet May 6. Esther Ann Hund, Joan Kohman, Donald Landfried, Virginia Mackey, Shermon Nichols, William Nulton, William Patterson, Mary Helen Robinson, Suzanne Roop, Ann Sproul, Ronald Thomas, Denni Wade, Ann Wagner, and Zennon Jannotes. Julia Bolas, Jerry Brownlee, Eilabeth Cheney, Walter I. Cole, Kathryn Conrad, Margaret Coyne, Donald Decker, Sally Davidson, Herbert Ewy, Jeanne Fitzgerald, Stewart Gordon, Sue Grosjean, David Hagar, David Hills, Diane Hornaday. Those elected to Phi Beta Kappa are: Three of these students are not students in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences but have done all the work in distribution requirements in the College. They are Virginia Mackey and Jeanne Fitzgerald, journalism seniors, and Ann Wagner, education senior. Topeka — (U.P.)— Gov, Edward F. Arn today had proclaimed May 1 loyalty day in Kansas. The Veterans of Foreign Wars sponsors the nationwide loyalty day celebration. Arn Sets May 1 Loyalty Day AWS Sponsors Vote Drive The AWS will sponsor a get-out-the-vote campaign during tomorrows elections. They will distribute circulars saying "I voted, have you?" H. Bledsoe, Lt. Col. Owen Seatz, and Mai. Clyde H. Rogan. The Army inspecting team, made up of men designated by 5th Army headquarters, was Col. Robert T. Connor, Minnesota university; Maj. Jerry L. Peavy, Westminster college, and Capt. John W. Park Jr., Illinois university. A special reviewing area was provided for the children present. In the past there has been confusion because of children getting in the reviewing area, so a special "reviewing stand" was roped off and youngsters were given an ample supply of bubble gum. A small detachment of AFROTC Drill Team members were provided as an "honor guard" for the small reviewers. About 500 persons watched the review, which lasted a little over an hour. Preceding the marching review, recognition certificates were given to distinguished Air Force and Army ROTC students. The names will be carried tomorrow. 185 Scholars Win Honors The University this morning paid tribute to 185 of its best scholars at the 30th annual Honors convocation in Hoch auditorium. Ronald Lee Wigington, engineering senior from Topeka, was announced as the 1953 University Honor man. Wigington, a Summer- field scholar, was selected by an anonymous f a culty committee on the criteria of outstanding scholarship, leadership and service. The Honor man's editor of the Kansas Engineer and is a member of Sachem and Natasha National honorary Tau Beta Pi, ba- ronALD LEE WINGSTON and engineering fraternity Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy presented to the all-student gathering the students in the upper 10 per cent of the senior classes of nine schools in the University. He also singled out for recognition the top ranking student or students in the junior, sophomore and freshman classes of each school. The names of the 144 seniors and 41 underclassmen were printed in the convocation program and they were Better Use Of Education "Not the quantity or the size of an education, but the way the student uses it determines the value of the education." Dr. Charles E. Friley told the Honors convocation this morning. Dr. Friley, president of Iowa State college, pointed out that if the advancement of civilization could be measured by the amount of knowledge now available, our society would be near perfection—and it is not. "No scientific formula or laboratory technique can replace the wisdom of the ages which has come down to us from the Greek cultural idees, Roman law, and Christian standards of morality," he said. Truth comes from insight, as well as by reason. Dr. Friley continued. The significant things about persons and education are not in the visible objects, but in the unseen things and unseen places—for instance, Greece was famous for its beautiful buildings, most of which are not standing today, Dr. Friley said. "It is the intangible things of the Greek civilization—literature, art, philosophy, and scientific ideas—which survived and shall survive our civilization in coming ages," he said. Moreau to Give Last Lecture In Humanities Series Today The last Humanities lecture in the 1952-53 series will be given at 8 p.m. today in Fraser theater by Dean Frederick J. Moreau of the School of Law. society representative Dean Moreau is the fifth University faculty member invited to speak since the Humanities series began in 1947. His lecture will be the fifth in the 1952-53 series. Entitled "The Unwritten Law and Its Writers," the lecture concerns the development of basic common law principles in which American society is grounded. The previous four speakers were Dr. Frederico Ghiisi of the University of Florence, Dr. Morris Bishop of Cornell, Dr. Clarence Ward of Oberlin, and Dr. John Dodds of Stanford. Dean Paul B. Lawson of the college will introduce the speaker this evening. A dinner at the Faculty club will be given by the Humanities committee to honor Dean Moreau. FREDERICK J. MOREAU seated in a special section of the auditorium. Dr. Charles E. Friley, president of Iowa State college, delivered the Honors address on "The Quality of the Educational Process." The 144 seniors whose names follow constitute the highest 10 percent in scholarship in their respective schools: THE COLLEGE Julia Bolas, Jerry Brownlee, Elizabeth Cheney, Walter Cole, Kathryn Conrad, Margaret Coyne,辛迪 Davidson, Donald Decker, Donald Dirkls, John H. Evers, Gene Ewy, Stewart Gordon, Sue Groeian, Carlos Guzman-Perry, Hagar, Herbert Hall, David Hills, Hormaday, Dana Dickins, Esther Hund. Jean Paul Richter, Mary Robinson, Suzanne Roop, William R. Scott, Marjorie Sereda, Kermit Sewell, Kenneth Simpson, Ann Sproat, Andrea Deniol Wade, Mary Williamson, Otto Wullschleger, Zenon S. Zannetos. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Noye M. J. Johnson, Mary Kielh, Loy Kirkpatrick, Joan Kohman, William Kunz, Donald Landfried, Longsworth, Patti Doyd, Robert F. Lyle, Sherman Nichols, William C. Nulton, Carolyn Olver, John Olson, William T. Patterson. William A. Chance, Robert R. Davis, Jeanne Attkinson Dodson, Charles A. Harney, Jeremy B. Harney, Jeffrey Moynhead, M. Moehr, Richard R. McCall, Frederick S. O'Brien, Howard A. Schlundt, Ralph E. Tannahil, Oliver F. Wenger, Viktor Virgil, Virgil W. James, W. Wright SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Margaret Allison, Elizabeth Banker, Josephine Bonney, Milo Farnham, Keith Gallleigh, Hugh Grove, Karell Kearny, Kendall, William Oldham, Keith Palmoust. Wilma Parsons, Marlene Peterson, James E. Phillips, Vrygale Rawline, Sammy Sebesta, Marilyn More Smith, Georgia Thomson, Thomson, Rosalie Thorne, Ann Warner, SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE James L. Amend, Clark Anderson, Richard Anschutz, Mahon Ball, William Behrmann, Richard T. Brackman, Harry Childers, Joseph Chisty, Conner, Leland Duvall, Gerald Harris, William Keith Hartell, Gerald Hollenbach. Edward House, Gerald Imming, Bert Jockin, David Hogan, Peter Richardson, Damon Simpson, James Stewart, Walter Teegarden, John Ronald, Wingington, Paul Wilhelm, SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS SCHOOL OF LAW Eldenan B. Brownlee, Dorothea Dalton, Louise Davis, Martha Heck, Doris McConnell, Ariene Price, Joseph Stiles, Ada Storer, Dorothy Whitford. SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM Janet Dearduff, Jeanne Fitzgerald, Jerry Knudson, Virginia Mackey, Elbert Sivey. Norman E. Fuller, Dan Topson Jr, Dwayne L. Olegsy, Robert A. Page. www.norman.edu Donald L. Cooper, Lamont W. Gaston, Dale D. Griswold, Edward J. Huycke, Willard Kaufman, Hugh McCaughay, Charles B. Replogle, William E. Ruth, Walter J. Stelmach, Thomas S. Westcott, James N. Winblad. SCHOOL OF PHARMACY Ray W. Chiles, Robert Nicholson, Robert Sutter, Carl Snider. The following juniors, sophomores, and freshmen lead in their respective classes. Where the decision was close, more than one name is given: THE COLLEGE Juniors: Carl Amber, Mendel Small. Sophomores: Ia Dawson, Elizabeth Delbert, Margaret Duchossois, Carol Hemphill, Eleanor Hunter, Julia Ena, E.R. Tyrone. Freshmen: Sara Deibert, Ann Edmonds, Phyllis Elder, Russell Etzenhauer, Jackson Koon, Beverley Lander, Nina Posthiltwale, Marcet Smith. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Junior: Kenneth W. Dam. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION Junior: Susan Wilson. Sophomore: Mary McKibben Freshman: Mary Anderson sshman: Mary Anderson SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE AND ARCHITECTURE Sophomore: John Lazio Freshmen: Donald Park, Karl Meck- len SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS Junior: Mary Harder Sophomore: Mary Eklund Sophomore: Mafy Ekubu Freshman: Barbara Boole, Mary A. Curtis SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM Institute. Phillip E. Dangertfield. Junior: Philip E. Dangerfield. SCHOOL OF LAW Second-year: Camille Klein Second-year: Camilla Klein First-year: Herbert Hopper Second-year: Camila Bonber First-year: Herbert Honber SCHOOL OF MEDICINE Juniors: William E. Burkhalter, James C. Warren. Sophomore: Merle A. Clue. Freshman: John W. Heaton, Robert L. O'Connor. SCHOOL OF PHARMACY Junior: Walter D. Haskins Sophomore: Ivan W. Watkins Freshman: Richard E. Phillips.