d Hon- shman s quo, ecom- i, and u, say od for vn its 1 war. very ukon, much min- wned y out would ecting met on as ic to the wish and ment vern- Page 3 these would sts of rela- high health s. is not stra- ship cur- two who ning ed. ranger the doors, ors ards, the l us l to rman taylor Zahm man, wwers ibert martz partz urch pspson skaker erson ones lov brick blams 堡 berder chell lixcox oores aw- cept cond 879. Music Teachers Attend Meeting Nine members of the music staff are attending the annual meeting of the Music Teachers National association Monday through Thursday in Dallas. University Daily Kansan Dr. D. M. Swarthout, professor of piano and life member of the MTNA executive committee, gave a talk at the luncheon meeting of the Oklahoma Music Teachers association Tuesday. Marcus Hahn, instructor of music education, spoke on a music theory program. Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, and Dr. James Nickerson, associate professor of music education, addressed the psychology section. Also attending are Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts, G. Criss Simpson, associate professor of organ and theory, and Miss Jeannette Cass, associate professor of music theory. Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, spoke on a voice panel. Laurel Anderson, professor of organ and theory, spoke at a theory session. Proficiency Exam Registration Set Students desiring to take the spring semester proficiency examination in English composition must register March 3. 4 or 5. Registration will be held for College students at the College office, 229 Strong; education students at the education office, 103 Fraser; journalism majors at the journalism office, 105 Journalism, and fine arts majors at the fine arts office, 128 Strong. Any student who fails to register will not be admitted to the examination. The examinatin will be given at 2 p.m. Saturday, March 8, for students of junior and senior standing in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Education, School of Journalism and School of Fine Arts. 20 Engineers To Go On 2-Day Field Trip Twenty members of the Society of American Military Engineers will make a two-day field trip to the 50-million-dollar Harlan county dam on the Republican river near Alma, Neb. April 10 and 11. They will be conducted through the dam by the district supervisor. Those accompanying the group will be Col. Edward F. Kumpe, professor of military science; Capt. Bernard Turkla, assistant professor of military science; Col. Peter C. Bullard, chief of Kansas Military district, and T. F. McMahon, assistant professor, and D. D. Haines, associate professor of civil engineering. The society will send a letter to national HAJAS headquarters in Cincinnati to learn if a national insignia has been adopted for HAJAS squadrons. Hap Arnold Junior Air society has set March 14 as the date for a stag party. Air Society Plans Stag Party March 14 The group saw a film on the development of airships. Fewer Veterans Are Enrolled But KU Bureau Keeps Busy By SHIRLEY LYON Despite the fact that there are 4,698 fewer veterans on the campus now than there were in 1948, the Veterans Bureau still manages to keep busy. As of last fall, 1,902 veterans, including 33 women, were enrolled at the University. Not all veterans at the University are here under the G. I. Bill of Rights, although many of their affairs are handled by the bureau. Provision 346 of the G, I. Bill of Rights, under which many are attending, expires July, 1956. As yet, there is no similar provision applying to veterans fighting in the Korean area. Each case is handled separately by the Veterans' bureau in contrast to the production line method used during the peak of veteran enrollment in 1948 when 6,400 veterans attended classes here. "If Congress provides for college education for the Korean veterans as it did for World War II veterans, there probably will be a large number of veterans on the campus again as there was in 1948," Dr. Elbel said. "Our biggest problem is getting information to veterans attending school under the bill and interpreting to them the regulations of the Veterans Administration," he said. "It is more difficult to get the job done now," E. R. Elbel, director of the Veterans bureau, explained. During the past six years that Dr. Elbel has been director of the University Veterans bureau, he said he has found the veterans very fine to deal with despite complicated rules and regulations involved. Robert Miller, February graduate in engineering, is teaching in the aeronautical engineering department. His courses are Design II and Aircraft Structure I and III. Robert Miller Joins Faculty UNION CAB PHONE 2800 65 That New Look in Hair Styles THE POODLE CUT Is the new look in hair styles. For an expert job come in and see us. "The Best In Recreation" At Take Corn's Studio of Beauty 23 W.9th Ph.709 Time-Off From Your School Work! Brunswick's SNOOKER - POOL 714 Mass. As a result of the program many young men and women have been able to create names for themselves in many fields, especially science, Dr. Elbel said. Thursday, Feb. 28, 1952 Med Students Favor Family Doctor Idea Philadelphia—(U,P)—Medical students at the University of Pennsylvania have decided to do something about a recent gripe of medical authorities—over-emphasis on medical specialization in medical schools. The future doctors have formed an organization known as the General Practice society, dedicated to the reassertion of the traditional ideals of the "family" doctor and the emphasizing of the basic role of the general practitioner as the keystone of the medical profession. Watch Repair Electronically Timed Satisfaction Guaranteed Wolfson's 743 Mass. Call 675 Patronize Kansan Advertisers Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No. 35.. THE LARGEMOUTH Always a sucker for attractive bait, our aquatic brother went off the deep end and got caught on the quick-trick cigarette hook! But he wormed his way out when he suddenly realized that cigarette mildness can't be tossed off reel lightly. Millions of smokers have found, too, there's only one true test of cigarette mildness. It's the sensible test-the 30-Day Camel Mildness-Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke on a day-after-day pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments! Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat,T for Taste), you'll see why... After all the Mildness Tests... Camel leads all other brands by billions