Student,2 Girls Injured in Crash A student and two passengers in his car were injured in a two-car head-on collision about five miles northwest of Lawrence on Highway 24-40-59 Saturday. Milton Pitman, engineering freshman, received a cut on the forehead and other minor cuts and bruises. His sister, 16-year-old Lucinda Pitman of Humboldt and a companion, Pat Green, 16, Chanute, received cuts and bruises. All were taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital and were released after treatment. Investigating highway patrolmen said the accident occurred when a car driven by Rodney Brown, Topeka, went out of control while attempting to pass a car driven by Martin Titus, Topeka. The westbound Titus car collided with Pitman's vehicle which was headed east. 6 Students Win Awards The award of six $500 scholarships to juniors and seniors in electrical and mechanical engineering at the University was announced today by Dean T. DeWitt Carr. The John Morse Memorial Foundation of Chicago contributes $3,000 annually to maintain these scholarships. The foundation was established by Col. Robert H. Morse, chairman of Fairbanks, Morse and company to memorialize his son. Selection of the Morse scholars is based upon academic standing, character, personality and campus activities, Dean Carr explained. Consideration also is given to the student whose scholastic achievement would be improved if the scholarship money would release him from a heavy employment load. Three juniors receiving their first $500 awards are: Gene L. Rogers, Robert L. Lamb, and Lawrence C. Kravitz. Seniors receiving $500 renewals of the Morse scholarships are Leonard Urban, William Keith Hartell, and Donald Louis Creighton. For Smoothest, Slickest Shaves Do As Your Barber Does Use"Push-Button" Lather! AERO SHAVE gives you richer lather instantly! No brush! No grease scum! No razor clog! Contains soothing Lano-Lotion plus 3 beard softeners for smoother shaving comfort! Page 8 University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 10, 1952 By TOM STEWART Auden Compares Poetry To Marriage of Poet "The relation of a poet to his medium may be pictured as a marriage of the诗—as husband, to the language, as wife, begetting the poem." W. H. Auden, British-American poet, said Friday. Mr. Auden's discussion, "The Poet and His Poems", was heard by more than 60 students and faculty members in Fraser theater. "The writing of poetry is a historical act—unique, and related to other historical acts by analogy, not by identity," the poet said. "If I say of a machine, 'it is beautiful,' I mean it is what it ought to be. When I say of a face or a poem, 'it is beautiful,' I mean I am impressed by the number of things it might have been." One cannot compare poems by saying one is better than another, Mr. Auden said. "If I say a poem is a bad poem, I mean either that it should never have been written, or that it is a bad version of what could have been a good poem," he explained. A poet attempts to turn "a crowd of historical experiences into a Usually, a reader examines a poem and asks himself, "Is the poet sincere?" Mr. Auden said. The question in itself is useless, he pointed out, "for you can look at the poem and decide for yourself—the poem can't lie. If there is deception, then you are at fault, for it is your self-deception." community," Mr. Auden said. To accomplish this, the poet must embody those historical experiences in what he described as "a verbal society." Mr. Auden concluded by reading several of his poems. They were three pastorals—"Woods," "Mountains," and "Lakes." He also read two poems with modern themes—one on the daily awakening of the world and a poem from his recently published book, "Nones," which told of veterans on college campuses. Seoul, Korea —(U.P.)— Allied infantrymen fighting with grenades, bayonets, and rifle butts yesterday recaptured strategic Anchor hill on the extreme eastern front after losing it briefly to a 1,000-man attack by troops of the revitalized North Korean army. UN Infantrymen Retake Vital Hill Two hundred Chinese troops late yesterday attacked Porkchop hill on the western front northwest of Yonchon. The Reds struck in darkness against four hills in the Anchor sector after a 4,000-round artillery barrage from heavy guns apparently shifted secretly from the recently blazing Iron Triangle area on the central front. Allied troops surged back and chased the Communists down the western slopes of Anchor to the banks of the icy Nam river. Anchor hill is the northernmost UN position in Korea. There was little action elsewhere on the 155-mile ground front, but UN fighter-bombers hammered Chinese artillery positions in the Triangle hill sector. Vishinsky Terms War U.S. Fiasco United Nations, N. Y. — (U.P.)—Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky declared today that American insistence upon voluntary repatriation of war prisoners will force the collapse of the Pamunjun truce talks and drag out the Korean war. The Soviet foreign minister told the United Nations main political committee that the United States was "floundering" in a military "fiasco" in Korea and was using "pressure, coercion and brutal repression" to force prisoners, to declare against returning to their homelands. Prof. Wilkins, Wife In Voice Recital Joseph Wilkins, tenor, and Marie Wilkins, soprano, will present a recital in Strong auditorium at 8 tonight. Prof. Wilkins is head of the University voice department. Mrs. Wilkins is well-known for her appearances with the St. Louis Municipal opera, the Metropolitan opera, the Kansas City Philharmonic, and the Lindsborg and Asheville Mozart festivals. The big bad wolf, he huffed and puffed To blow the pigs' house down. 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