qually re- months ago is com- agricul itics as the destruc more than agricultural Page 3 drainage dings and five-stock day, along grain and amounted Faculty to Honor Retiring Professor more than had sup unications flooded Seventeer 30 still are pondent. D. H. B, Latimer, professor of anatomy who will retire in June, will be honored at a testimonial dinner 7 p.m. Friday at the Faculty club Action. Can't see? the lunar unjom cal- He has been teaching in the anatomy department at KU for 26 years and has reached the mandatory retirement age of 70 years. Ad Room KU 376 y Press Assn.ented by the city. Joe Taylor Charles Price aurice Prathe Addresses by Dr. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Dr. Edward Hashinger, acting dean of the School of Medicine; Dr. Paul Roofe, chairman of the anatomy department, and Dr. Edwin Price, minister of the Wesley foundation, will be given at the dinner. Ben Holmman c Jim Power name Fitzgerald marine Barlow Joan Lambert n Herrington affair, Bob Not affair, J. Dillon About 60 persons are expected to attend the dinner. They will be faculty members, students and former pupils of Dr. Latimer. He is a member of the American Association of Advancement of Science, the American Association of Anatomists and the American Society of Zoologists. He is a past president of the KU chapter of Sigma Xi, honorary science organization. TODAY nory William Johnston Mitchell Mittelman Giang Macke Frank Lise Bart W. Dooren Official Bulletin Home Economies club: 7:15 p.m. 116 Fraser, installation of officers. Junior Panhellenic: 4:30 p.m. Kapua Kapua Gamma house. Senior announcements: now on sale at the business office. Deadline April 25. res if in Law y you except red second March s, 1879. Tau Sigma: important meeting, 7:15 p.m., Robinson gym. Bring recital costumes. ASC: 7:30 p.m., Pine room, Union. Alpha Phi Omega: 4:30 p.m., Pine room. WEDNESDAY Persons interested in editorship or business management of 1952-53 Jayhawker magazine should contact Karl Klooz, advisory board chairman, KU Business Office. Selections to be made April 26. Chess club: 7:30 p.m., Recreation room, Union. Arnold Air society: 7:30 p.m. Nominations of next year's host. Phi Mu Alpha: special short meeting, active chapter only. 11:45 am session, dissolution of Phi Mu Alpha Corps. Attendance required. Phi Mu Alpha: important meeting entire chapter, 7 p.m., 131. Strong. Induction of new officers, plans for chapter day and initiation. YWCA: cabinet meeting and sup- per. 5:30 p.m. Henley house. Nursing club: 4 p.m., Fraser dining room. Miss Hubert, Pyschiatric nurse to answer questions. THURSDAY Math club: 5 p.m., 203 Strong. Speaker: K. C. Hsu. Quack club: 7:30 p.m., Robinson pool. AIA: 8 p.m., Spooner auditorium, David Runnells, speaker. Water Safety Course To Begin Wednesday THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Travel Service TRAVEL AGENCY Tel.30 8th & Mass. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY (Nationally Accredited) An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. Doctor of Optometry degree in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. FALL REGISTRATION NOW OPEN Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. Excellent clinical facilities. Athletic and recreational activities. Dormitories on the campus. OPTOMETRY 1845-H Larrabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois CHICAGO COLLEGE OF COSMETRY The Red Cross course in water safety instruction will begin Wednesday in Robinson gymnasium for anyone holding a senior lifesaving certificate and who is 18 or over. The Red Cross instructors are Walter Mikols and Miss Ruth Hoover of the physical education department. The 15-hour course will be held three times a week, hours to be arranged at the first meeting. Sophomore Receives Regional ISA Office Victoria Rosenwald, college sophomore, was elected regional secretary of the Rocky mountain district at the national Independent Student Association convention at the University of Oklahoma. Topics discussed at the three-day meeting will be summed up at the regular ISA meeting Wednesday. Melvin Reuber, college senior, will report on "Who Is an Independent;" Victoria Rosenwald on "National ISA Week," and Lou Ann Smee, college sophomore, on "The Problem of the College-Owned Resident Halls." University Daily Kansan Full-color movies of the recent eruption of Mauna Loa volcano will be shown Wednesday evening to the University club during a travelog program presented by Major and Mrs. Robert A. Sydnor. Major Sydnor is assistant professor of air science. Volcano Eruption Films to Be Shown They will show color slides and motion pictures they took in 1948-49 while they were stationed in the Hawaiian Islands. The program will begin at 8 p.m. in the club rooms at $1007_{1/2}$ Massachusetts, and members may bring guests. The scenes were photographed on the islands of Oahu, Kauai, and Hawaii. Although some were "shot" from an airplane, most were taken while the Sydnors were on motor or hiking trips. Most of the camera work was done by Mrs. Sydnor, and she will do most of the narrating during the program Wednesday. "Kauai is called the 'Garden Island,' explained Major Sydnor, "because of the striking beauty of the trees and flowers there. Our prettiest films were taken on Kauai. Some of our flower shots have been most admired by our friends who have seen the films. Tuesday, April 22, 1952 All Was Quiet Here During Vacation Joseph G. Skillman campus police chief reported "all quiet" over the spring vacation. "Nothing was reported to the campus police," Chief Skillman said. The dorms and other organized houses were apparently unmolested. One student, Paul Roger Thompson, college freshman, was involved in a three-car accident between Topeka and Perry Sunday night. He was uninjured. Skunk Theft Not Smelly Job Murphy to Be Guest Speaker Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy will be guest speaker Sunday in Phillipsburg at an open house celebration commemorating 50 years of service to the community by local practitioner Dr. E. A. Nelson, and former Senator W. A. Barron. Alger, Ohio (U.P.)-Somebody stole a pet skunk owned by Virginia Ross Cox from its cage but it was a safe job. "Stinky" has been deodorized for the last two years. Three to Attend Chicago Meeting Dr. Paul W. Gilles, assistant professor of chemistry, Bernard D. Pollock and Thomas A. Milne, graduate students, will attend a conference in Chicago Wednesday to Friday on high temperature research in chemistry. The meeting was called by the atomic energy commission and the office of naval research. Dr. Gilles, who is directing work at KU on a research contract from the atomic energy commission, will present a paper Friday. It deals with the thermodynamic determination of the dissociation energy of titanium oxide. The co-author is Quentin deL. Wheatley, graduate student. Conference participants will come from universities and industries throughout the nation. All research discussed there will deal with the properties of substances and their chemical reactions at high temperatures. Army ordinance men repair everything from watches to tanks. They are the Army's "fix-it" corps. This book is a guide to your future The result is a book of major importance to everyone. Its subject: How have college graduates made out? Published by Harcourt, Brace. Now on sale at your local book store. How this book came about They Went to College is based on a survey sponsored by TIME, whose interest in this group stems naturally from the fact that most of TIME's readers are college-trained. TIME is written for you and people like you, people like the thousands of graduates of the more-than-a-thousand American colleges who answered TIME's questionnaire and revealed many facets of their lives—from the courses they took, to their religious beliefs. This mountain of data was tabulated and analyzed by Patricia Salter West at the Columbia University Bureau of Applied Social Research, then turned over to Ernest Havemann, a former editor of TIME and a specialist at making interesting reading out of statistical material. You'll find answers to your future in the answers to these questions, questions that are explored in They Went to College, TIME's new book about one of America's most influential groups of people, the U.S. college graduates. Is it true that our colleges are turning out atheists and radicals? How do graduates stack up against the selfmade men who battled their way without the help of four years in college—but got a four-year head start in the business world? Are they better husbands and wives? Is a sheepskin really worth all the effort? Inits pages, you'll peer into the post-graduation careers of the ex-Greasy Grind, the exBMOC, the ex-Around Student and the One Who Just Sat There. How many of them married, how many These are just a few of the former dark areas of conjecture and folklore lighted up by this unprecedented study. children did they have, who got divorced, who got the best jobs, what do they think of courses they took? Low-Down on Higher Learning They Went to College is required reading for everybody who wants the real low-down on higher learning. If you're an undergraduate, you'll learn much about your probable future. If you're a teacher, you'll discover what has become of your students. If you're a college graduate, you'll find out how you stack up against your peers. And, no matter what your interest, you'll find fuel for plenty of debate in this book. Because its audience represents one of the largest concentrations of college graduates reading any major magazine in the world today, TIME. The Weekly Newsmagazine, undertook the comprehensive study which is the basis of this milestone book.