age 6 University Daily Kansan Mondav. Jan. 14. 1952 WHAT MANWOULDNTE ENJOY the comfort of this all-wool casual jacket? In a traditional black, brown and gray plaid, with leather buttons, it affords plenty of pocket space in three large patch pockets. Women's Rifle club, practice Monday thru Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. No exercise Tuesday night. Student Union Activities is sponsoring a ride bureau for students desiring transportation during the incim between semesters. Those attending rides and those desiring passengers should sign at hostessask in Union between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. Mathematics colloquium, 5 tonight, 2 Strong hall. Students who are planning to transfer from one school of the University to another (College to Business, College to Education, College Journalism, or from any school at U to another school at KU) should up at the Registrar's office before the beginning of final examinations make application for transfer so that the papers may be prepared in time for enrollment. It will save a lot of standing in line if you do!— James K. Hitt, registrar. While basketball coach at Warensburg Teachers college from 1913 1919, Phog Alen coached his ims to seven straight conference les. Right or wrong? YOU BE THE JUDGE! Sigma Kappa Elects Pat Davis President Patricia Davis, education senior, was elected president of Sigma Kappa for the spring semester. Travel Service THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK TRAVEL AGENCY Tel. 30 8th & Mass. Other officers elected were Elrin Watson, vice-president; Marian Miller, pledge trainer; Vernie Theden, recording secretary; Haven Moore, corresponding secretary; Anneliese Schierlin, treasurer; Dot Taylor, scholarship chairman; Gay Bonney, social chairman; Sally Black, house chairman; Baskett, as much chairman; Jeanne Carter, triangle correspondent; Pat Hessling, registrar and Carolyn Neff, historian librarian. Delta Gamma Announces Delta Gamma sorority announces the pledging of Miss Joan Bingaman. College junior from Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Overman, of Oswego, announce the engagement of their daughter, Helen, to Don Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Wilson, of Kansas City, Kan. Overman-Wilson Engagement Told Miss Overman is a business senior. Mr. Wilson, a naval cadet stationed at Pensacola, Fla., attended the University before entering the service. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi social fraternity. Miss Overman's name was incorrectly given as Lee Ann in Friday's edition of the Daily Kansan. Jim Shaff Chosen AKL President Jim Shaff, business senior, was elected president of Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity Monday night. Other officers are Dick Etherington, vice-president; Stan Lehmberg, recording secretary; Frank Mischlich, corresponding secretary; John Esther, steward; and Ralph Tannahill, treasurer. Appointed officers are Leroy Carroll, assistant treasurer; Lyle Jenkins, social chairman; Frank Mischlich, assistant social chairman; Ralph Kiehl, membership chairman; Bob Davis, scholarship chairman; Kent Bowden, intramurals chairman; Chuck Morelock, chapter editor; Gene Campbell, forums chairman; Bert Larkin, historian; Jim E. Phillips and Bill Bowden, sergeants at arms; Jack Chittenden, chaplain; and Stan Lehmberg, rush booklet chairman. Mechanical Engineers Elect William Garlock President William Garlock, engineer senior, was elected president of Pi Tau Sigma, honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, at a recent meeting. James Archibald, engineering senior, was elected vice-president; Paul Randall, engineering senior, correspondring secretary; James McCormick, engineering secretary and Decio DeCampos, engineering junior, treasurer. A. W. Gibson, instructor in mechanical engineering, is the fraternity's faculty advisor. Engineers Choose McLead President Of ASTE James McLeod, engineering senior, was elected president of the American Society of Tool Engineers Thursday night in Fowler shops. Other officers elected included Gerald Tibbs, engineering junior, Television Cleanup Includes LowNecklines,WildWest Shows Hollywood — (U.P.) — Plunging necklines aren't the only dangers kids have to be protected from on TV. Now they're cleaning up ole Kit Carson. Yep, that fine, upstanding example of young manhood. That's the problem. Everybody's afraid Junior's gonna try to be just like he was. “It’s all in the history books,” Williams explained. “But we’re afraid to put it on TV. What if some kid went out looking for grizzly bears to prove he was as brave as Kit?” "And that's too dangerous," grinned Bill Williams, who plays KIT on TV. "Some of his exploits are so wild and risky you wouldn't believe 'em." Take the time he rassled a wild grizzly bear with his bare hands, his only weapon a knife clutched in his teeth. Got pretty mauled, Carson did, but he killed the critter eventually. Carson was a pretty lusty gent, too. Needless to say, the script writers don't breathe a word about this on the program. Historians will tell you Kit had an Indian squaw for a wife. But television won't. "There's another famous legend about Carson taking on a whole band of hostile Indians almost single-handed," Williams went on. "He did it for revenge. He and six others went in one night and slaughtered a whole village. Campus Pinnings Gloria Anne Lehmann, Alpha Delta Pi, Dodge City, to Jack Stewart, Sigma Nu, Salina. Judy Robohn. Garden City, attends St. Mary's, Leavenworth, to Raymond Birk, Alpha Kappa Lambda, Gridley. Kitty Lou Schrimpf, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Leavenworth, to Cadet Vald Heiberg, USMC, West Point, N.Y. vice-president; Gene Brunson, engineering sophomore, secretary-treasurer and William Garlock, engineering senior, parliamentarian. During the meeting a movie on straddle milling, a machine operation, was shown. “这我们 don't use. For two reasons. One, it's kinda hard to believe. Two, we don't think the kids oughta see too much of this blood and gore.” There's a lot more of Carson's famous exploits the mopps don't see, either. Too rip-roarin'. "We play down the shooting," Williams said. "The only time I ever fire a gun is in self-defense. And I never draw first. Even then, I only wound the bad men in the hand." "I used to carry a knife in my boot top. But we're cutting that out. It's too easy for some little guy to see me throw a knife and then go out in the kitchen, fish out a butcher knife and try the same thing on his little sister." Williams doesn't go around romancin' the purty girls, either, a situation that'd probably have old Kit spinning in his grave. And the kids eat it up. All except his own four-year-old daughter, Jody. She still calls him "Wild Bill." Hiccup." "I play a sissy on horseback, if you wanta know the truth," Williams grinned. "But we have to do it. We make up for it with a lot of action and a lot of educational stuff." YOUR EYES should be examined today. Call for appointment. Any lens or prescription duplicated. Lawrence Optical Co. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Motor, bicycle, rail, flatfoot and study tours for students and teachers from $500 60 GU or up to $1200. On air or at 30-50 days, $550 up. SEE MORE. SPEND ELLS A OR A SITA TURTLE 19th year! SITA Students International Travel Association WRITE OR PHONE FOR FREE FOLDER PHONE 3661 "your midwest SITA representative" DOWNS Travel Service Lawrence, Kana. Help In Your Finals Schaum's Outline Series including THEORY AND SOLVED PROBLEMS COLLEGE PHYSICS, including 425 SOLVED PROBLEMS___$1.75 Edited by Carel W. van der Merwe, Ph.D., Professor of Physics, New York University COLLEGE CHEMISTRY. including 276 SOLVED PROBLEMS___ $1.75 including 276 SOLVED PROBLEMS $1.75 Edited by Carles O. Beckmann, Ph.D., Professor of Chemistry, Columbia University and Henry Mouquin, Sc.D., Associate Professor of Chemistry, New York University ANALYTIC GEOMETRY. including 345 SOLVED PROBLEMS___$1.50 By Joseph H. Kindle, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, University of Cincinnati CALCULUS. including 974 SOLVED PROBLEMS___$2.25 By Frank Ayres, Jr., Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics, Dickinson College - Student Union Book Store MECI tudor see al