Wednesday, Sept. 24, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page 3 98 Engineers Listed On Spring Honor Roll Ninety-eight students in the School of Engineering and Architecture were listed on the dean's honor roll for the 1952 spring News Briefs Rv UNITED PRESS Shizuoka, Japan — (U.P.) Tetsuo Teraji said today he was "overwhelmed" when he learned that the estate he was caught robbing was the winter-villa of Emperor Hirohito. \* \* \* After the jury had been out two hours yesterday he jumped to his feet and pleaded guilty on one count. San Francisco—(U.P.)-Harry Lum, 35, couldn't stand the suspense of waiting for the jury to decide his fate on three narcotic charges. The judge dismissed the other two charges and then prolonged the suspense by ordering Lum to return to court later for sentencing. Washington—(U.P.)-Attorney Nathan M. Lubar today claimed the rare distinction of winning an argument with a traffic cop. "I knew it belonged to someone important," he said, "because it was so gorgeous." The argument started when Lubar made a U-turn around the front of a streetcar loading platform. The cop on duty wanted to give him a ticket but backed down meekly when Lubar assured him it was not a violation. Lubar wrote the District of Columbia's traffic code. Truro, Nova Scotia—(U.P.)=Twenty male students at Nova Scotia Normal college decided today that Horace Greeley was wrong when he advised young men to "go west." The male students said that enrollment at this East coast college this year was 230 . . . "210 females and us." St. Louis, Mo.-O1P.Mrs. Georgia Theodore found a $2,006 check, a wallet and a woman's purse in the first 30 minutes of her lunch hour. She returned the check to a firm in her office building, gave the wallet back to its owner but left the purse where she found it. "That was too much," she said. Read the Kansan want ads! semester. Fourteen students made 3.0 grade averages. Of these, nine were seniors, two were juniors and three were freshmen. Seniors listed were Willis Athearn, Lee Bullock, Lloyd Davis, Duane Dunwoodie, Amos Glad, Bob Holman, Frank Short, Corwin Sterrett, and George Swift. Juniors listed were John Transue and Ronald Wigington. Freshmen listed were Delbert Jones, Jim Lamb and Charles Peterman. Two girls also were listed on the honor roll. They were Dina Gaskell and Phylliss Sims, both sophomores. Others listed on the honor roll were seniors Dick Etherington, Phillip Peterson, Decio DeCampus, Donald Drummond, Ed Richardson, James Ashley, Edwin Stimpson, Marvin White, Ed House, James Morrill, Damon Simpson, Charles Stephens, Emmet Corman, Bill Spann, Richard Gibson, G. Christopher, Ralph Indin, Dale Luthye, Bill McGinn, George Farris, Roger Swank, Jack Long, and Frank Walter. Other juniors listed were Harry Childers, Harold Conner, Joe Christy, Christian Mann, Marvin Carter, John Wilkening, Eugene Nelson, Keith MacIvor, Robert Sutton, Leonard Urban, Richard Anshutz, Mahlon Ball, John Porter, James Worthington, William Hartell, Leland Duvall, Bert Larkin, Joe Russell, Bill Behrmann, Duane Benton, Doyle Miller, and Paul Wlihelm. Other sophomores listed were Raymion Carpenter, H. K. Bowden, Lee Douglass, G. Brechenridge, Lit Ming Ma, Harold Bergsten, Phillip Greene, Joe Fountain, James McClure, James Simmons, George Mayberry, Ed Miller, George Lund, Charles Gillam, Montgomery Greene, and Jack Jester. Other freshmen listed were Walter Hauler, George Daniels, Edward Freebury, LeRoy Herold, Ron Evans, Robert Kennedy, Walter Ash, Dwight Harrison, Vernon Schrag, Thomas Childers, Ben Dalton, Robert Foster, Jerry Ivie, Lynn Stewart, Douglas B. Smith, James Perkins, Lawrence Taylor, Ron Holmes, Ron Justice, Leon Mason, and Don Smith. Pinkeye is a highly contagious disease caused by infection. WeaverS Weaver's Millinery — Second Floor 3 Foreign Doctors Join Watkins Staff Two foreign doctors have joined the Watkins Memorial hospital staff and a third will arrive in this country next month to begin work at the hospital as the result of grants for Exchange Visitors fellowships under the Fulbright plan, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University health service said today. The two already in Lawrence are Dr. Klobljorn Jensen of Oslo, Norway and Dr. Luminging J. Roa of Cabanatuan City, Philippines. They will be joined on the hospital staff about Oct. 20 by Dr. Oystein Langfeld Vinje, also of Oslo. Dr. Jenssen is serving at the hospital for under a year's fellowship. Dr. Roa will be in Lawrence for two months as part of her residency work at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan. Dr. Vinje will remain on the staff in a temporary position replacing Dr. Maurice E. Gross who is taking a leave of absence as the result of sickness. Dr. Gross is expected to be able to return to the hospital about Jan. 1. Dr. Roa, a graduate of the University of the Philippines is married and has two children who are now in the Philippines. She served her internship at the Philippine General hospital. Dr. Jenssen, who graduated from the Medical School of the University of Oslo, is also married and the father of two children. Mrs. Jenssen and the children are expected to join him here shortly . Dr. Jensen was a 1st Lieutenant in the Norwegian army stationed in Sweden during the war. His training and experience include medicine and surgery at Opland hospital, Oslo, and Ulleval hospital first aid station. He served for a period as physician for war refugees going from Europe to Australia. Dr. Vinje is a 1950 graduate of the Oslo Medical School. For All Weathercrest Jackets REGULAR STYLES REVERSIBLES They're fine fitting in ever respect. 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