round 9% - 10% Page 8 University. Daily. Kansan Wednesday, Jan. 16, 1952 251 Seniors Are Candidates For Graduation In February (Continued from page 1) (Continued from page 1) Robert Allen Sydney, Ralph Harlan Watkins. School of Engineering and Architecture Bachelor of Science in Aeronautical Engineering: Robert Edward Miller. Clyde Vernon Sultzer. Bachelor of Science in Architecture: Thomas Charles Crawford George Jim Pfefferkorn, Donald Dean Snakew. Bachelor of Science in Architectural Engineering: Frank Leslie Byam III, Milton Dale Dunlap, Robert Lanpher Nifong, Charles David Seeber, Baegar Shirazi. Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering: James Ethil Bryant Thomas Kent Foster, Clarence Alfred Lucas jr., Richard Andre Menuet, Corwin Scott Sterrett. Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering; John Pichler Bailley, Paul W. Bird, Leonard Kinnamon Clement, William Sherman Gartung, Harold Joseph Keeling, Ross C. Keeling jr., Harland Theodore Peterson, Kenneth Walter Philo, William G. Richey, Wilber Michael Seaver, Frank C. Short jr., Roy K. C. Sue. Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering; Eugene Carl Anderson, Harold Brailey, Norman Lee Bell, James Edward Elliott, Raldalph Erhart, Frank Gerald Exter, James L. Hogan, Vernon Earl Johnson, John Henry Kaaz, James Russell McDougal, Louis Stark Robb, Keith C. Smith, Robert Scott, Zimmerman. Bachelor of Science in Engineering Physics: Lawrence Nathan Cosner, Arvesta William Muzzle jr. Bachelor of Science in Geological Engineering: James Erwin Holdeman, Charles Edward Sloan. Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering; Richard Earl Brecko, Andrew Vivian Davis, George A. Hanson jr., Roy J. Haynes, Lawrence Ray Hill, Leonard Paul Knecht, Ludwig Johannes Lenz, Dale J. McBride, Clarence William Newhouse, Leslie Charles arrismj rr, Ainsleigh Chaine Settles, William Shih Shen, Elli Taylor, Anthony N. Tiaclos, Elmo Ceasus Tyree, John David Walters, Samuel Harrison, Zolliker. Bachelor of Science in Metallurgical Engineering: Robert McGrath Cracy. Bachelor of Science in Mining Engineering: Arthur Allyn McCinnis. Bachelor of Science in Petroleum engineering: Kenneth Brandon arey, James Loren Relph, Barney I. Vachal. School of Fine Arts Bachelor of Fine Arts: D'Arlene Kirk, Paul Baldwin Penny, Shirley anne Stewart, Elizabeth Ann swigart, Ronald S. White. Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy: Billie J. Burttscher, Virginia Ann Caldwell, Marjorie Sourland Clark, Dorothy Helen Wilson, Lolita Catherine Garcia, Margaret Jean Luatrick, Margeryine Myers, Betty Jane Sims, Esther芳雯 Thrasher, Claire Elizabeth White, Elizabeth Ann Regier, Mary Rose Waken. School of Pharmacy School of Pharmacy Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy: Donald Dwight Hunter, George Elert Rumple. School of Education School of Education Bachelor of Music Education: Dana Jane Richmond Saliba. Bachelor of Art Education: Carol Anne Donovan, Gary Dale Goodwin, Donna Hedges Miller. Bachelor of Science in Education: Russell W. Annis, Margaret Marie Bevan, Harry L. Cloverdyke, Mary O Davis, Frank Dixon Eichhorn, Mary Louise Fischer, Gordon Irvin Gaston, Catherine L. Hemphill, Robert Bertram Huggins. Betty Jane McChristy Koonse, Mary Alice LaMaster, Patricia Nason Meeks, Pearl Elizabeth Mitchell, Barbara Joanne Nash, Earl Wesley Nettucch, Betty McLaughlin Whale, Margaretta C. White, Sheila Wilder, Michiko Yamasaki, Robert R. Dunwell Bachelor of Science in Business: Shelley Lee Bates, Gaylord Nelson Benton, Bill Karl Bell, Ralph C. Blades jr., Lawrence Allen Blakeley, Hubert Capps jr., Beverly J. Chaffin, Clarence Henry Chambers jr., Robert Thomas Coleman, Robert G. Davidson, John W. Davis jr., Dudley C. Elliott. Richard Carson Fleener, John Cloyd Fox, Herbert William Hane- baum jr., Glenn A. Harberts, George M. Harper, Frank Robert Hass, Elden Arnoldnett Herd, Merill Eleryl Holmberg, James Lowell Houghton, William Wallace Howard jr., Harvey Allen Jetmore jr., Thomas A. Keiser. Jere Dean Kimmel, Charles Krone, Virginia Wood La Rue, Milton Ashely Lewis, James Loren Mc-Cormick, Charles W. Moore, David A. Moore, Guifford Wood Moore, Keith Edmund Moore, Andrew Gates Murray, Robert Murphy Pickrell, Joseph Rolland Powell, Paul Anthony Ramsey jr., William Donald Rhue, John George Schoap jr. School of Law Bachelor of Law: Richard L. Ashley, James Robert Barr, Robert Frederick Bennett, William John Conroy, James L. Grimes jr., Rajph George Henley, Norman Gail Maben, John Rarig Oliver, Aubrey Alphonso Perkins, Arthur Eugene Rudd, Russ Alfred Stanley, James Frederick Swoyer jr., Roderick Edward Weltmer. Official Bulletin Students expecting to graduate in February be sure your diploma fee of $12 is paid at the business office immediately. Christian Science organization, p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel. Holy Communion for Episcopal students, 7 a.m. Thursday, Danforth Chapel. Breakfast at the Union. CQ Code practice 7:30 tonight; E. E. lab. Lutheran Student association, 6 p.m. Sunday, Trinity Lutheran church. Installation of officers and cost supper. Student Union Activities is sponsoring a ride bureau for students desiring transportation during the interim between semesters. Those wanting rides and those desiring passengers should sign at hostess desk in Union between 8 a.m. and 10:30 p.m. The Jayhawker basketball team scored 1331 points in winning 16 games and losing eight last year. All officers commissioned in the U.S. Army reserve who have been or are being deferred from induction under the terms of an ROTC deferment agreement will be ordered into active military service during the period from June to September. Reserve Officers To Active Duty The Department of Army announced this policy in a statement released today. The Army said it was making its plans known early so that such students will have the maximum amount of advance notice and can plan accordingly. The Army also plans to order into military service those veterans who served less than two years on active duty with the armed forces during World War II and 1945. They will be ordered to duty upon being commissioned. It is not currently planned to order into active service those veterans commissioned upon successful completion of the ROVC course. The VA will coordinate between the above dates. Such officers may volunteer for active service. It is the intent of the Department of Army to give the officers an opportunity to select the month between June and September in which they desire to enter active service. Such requests will be honored provided at least one third of the officers in each branch will be on active duty by July 31, two thirds on active duty by Aug. 31, and the remainder in active military service by Sept. 30. The Army stated that those officers commissioned after successful completion of the advanced ROTC course, who will not meet the academic requirements for a baccalaureate of professional degree, will be delayed from being ordered into active service until they have completed the degree requirements or until they withdraw from college. The newly commissioned officers will be ordered directly to the appropriate branch service school for a three-month course. It may be necessary in some instances to assist with training in continental limits of the United States until spaces are available in the service schools. To Sell Annual 2nd Semester, Jayhawkers will not be sold and distributed until after the beginning of second semester. Students are requested not to try to obtain their Jayhawkers in the new Journalism building until next semester. Fall graduates should contact Hixon for picture appointments if they want their pictures in the 1952 Javhawker. Those Shirts were sent to.. ACME ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning Phone 646 1111 Mass. SUPERIOR JUDGE Frank Swain, Hollywood, ordered actress Diane Cassidy to invest 10 per cent of her salary in savings bonds after she argued she was having difficulty living on $200 per week and paying back debts from her income Fishing Ranks High In Sports More fishing licenses are sold than tickets to any other sport, Dr. Frank Cross, instructor in zoology, told members of Phi Sigma, national honorary biological society, Tuesday. Dr. Cross said that we should know more about fish and their places of habitation. "We have only a superficial knowledge of the ecology of lakes and streams," Dr. Cross said. Attempts to determine if lakes and streams are conductive to fish production have only been in the form of sampling. FOR YOUR By taking a sample of lake vegetation, attempts are made to determine if the lake would be good for growing aquatic plants. Using the method, is very unsatisfactory. "This is like taking one part of the human body and from it determining the functions of the rest of the organs of the body," Dr. Cross said. - Enough Anti-Freeze - Chains For Ice And Snow STOP AT - Dependable Brakes - A Good Heater - A Top Condition Motor SANDERS MOTORS 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 ELECTRICITY... is still the biggest bargain in your budget today! Everyone is well aware of the inflated cost of living today! We are all conscious of the shrinking dollar . . . and of how much less it buys today than in 1940. But, there is one bright spot in these days of rising costs . . . and that is the low price of electric service. The Kansas Power and Light Company pays more and more for materials manpower and everything else needed to provide your electric service. But despite this, and even with the new electric rate schedules which became effective January 1, 1952, a kilowatt-hour of electricity costs the average customer seven per cent less today than it did in 1940. Yes, while the cost of living continues to soar up and up, your electric service continues to be the biggest bargain in your budget today. THE KANSAS POWER and LIGHT COMPANY