WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1951 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 25, 1951 ibler Eware? vou in- tip." tebook re asks, "don't wave figure? must we keep keep out offers, ing deuse for end out tebook erecatee climb in the nment." e says. around an and I Hurry," e." bloom 76 S. Assan, I Daily collegiate ad al- dee., New Manager Murray t Ogan a. John owher y Kehl Luk obmann Sydney er. $4.50 emer. Kans. university ys. Unifor- periods. sept. 17. wrence Inscription Will Remind Seniors Freedom Is A Struggle By ANNE SNYDER "Free Government Does Not Bestow Repose Upon Its Citizens ut Sets Them In The Vanguard Of Battle To Defend The Liberty Every Man." Seniors marching down the hill to Commencement exercises this spring will walk beneath these words, carved in the stone frieze around the Memorial room of the new campanile. The two sets of double, bronze-framed oak doors will be opened to let the procession through the Memorial room on the traditional Commencement day march down Mt. Oread. The inscription was composed by Allen Crafton, professor of speech, and the executive committee of the Memorial association. Twelve bronze panels, sculptured by Bernard Frazier, former faculty member, will be set in the doors. Six panels will portray the ideals of people in a democracy, and the other six will show the development of Kansas. On two walls inside the room the names of the 275 former University students who were killed in World War II will be carved in gold on Virginia greenstone. The only other inscription on the campanile is "World War II Memorial Campanile, Erected 1850" carved in the polished granite base of the tower. Frank C. Godfrey, foreman for the John Taylor and Company bell Foundry in Loughborough, England, arrived here Sunday to supervise the bell hanging, and the 53 bells are expected to arrive here at the end of the week. Some of the inside work on the campanile cannot be finished until the bells arrive, since they must be hoisted up from inside, said Mr. Godfrey. "The bells were shipped from England on the M.V. Brittanie, and are being brought to Lawrence by a Santa Fe freight train," said Mr. Godfrey. "The largest bell weighs 13,440 pounds and is 7 feet 2 inches across and 6 feet 9 inches tall." The bells will be arranged in tiers at the top of the 120-foot tower, he said. They will all hang in the open space above the grillwork, the smaller bells on top of the larger ones. "Circular stairs will go about halfway up the tower to the carillonneur's cabin, which is just below the bells," said Mr. Godfrey. "Wires from the clappers of the bells will be attached to levers on a hand clavier, from which the carillonneur will ring the bells. The wires will also be connected to foot pedals, so that several notes can be played at once." The campanile will be dedicated on Sunday, May 27. Professional Laa Group Pledges Six Men Students Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity, announces the pledging of Thomas W. Boone and Richard L. Moore, both second year students in the School of Law, and Marion J. Roesler, James Thompson, Richard W. Stavely, and Alexander H. Wilson, all first year students. Patronize Daily Kansan Advertisers Four KU Geologists To St. Louis For Meeting Four members of the geology department are attending the Annual meeting of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists in St. Louis. Dr. R. M. Dreyer, chairman of the department, Dr. H. A. Ireland, Dr. Ceil G. Lalicker, and Dr. Alfred Fischer are attending the convention which ends today. Nearly 2,000 petroleum geologists from all over the United States will be at the meeting. 'The Burro' Discontinued Tucson, Ariz. (U.P.)—"The Buro" is dead. That was the affectionate title bestowed on the small daily train between Tucson and Nogles, discontinued by the Southern Pacific because it didn't pay. During the heyday of the Mexican Express (its official title), through sleepers were carried from the United States to Mexico City lines six times daily. Navy Officer Criticizes Lack Of Air Defense In Nation Kansas City, Mo. (U.F.)A navy man sees no hope of the nation's throwing up an adequate air defense against enemy planes, and bitterly criticizes the "indifference" of the American people to the possibility of attack Capt. James F. Flatley, commander of the Olathe naval air station did not share the opinion voiced by Col. Edmund R. Goss of the central air defense force that Kansas City would be "properly protected" if an attack were to come in the next few daws. "There is no air defense of the United States or of Kansas City," Flatley said Wednesday. "It just doesn't exist." The naval officer said there is no more air defense in this country, now than there was 10 years ago. Twenty-four per cent of all drivers involved in fatal automobile accidents in the U.S. last year were between the ages of 18 and 24. LIKE THOUSANDS OF AMERICA'S STUDENTS— MAKE THIS MILDNESS TEST YOURSELF AND GET WHAT EVERY SMOKER WANTS OVER 1500 PROMINENT TOBACCO GROWERS SAY: "When I apply the standard tobacco growers' test to cigarettes I find Chesterfield is the one that smells milder and smokes milder." MILDNESS Plus NO UNPLEASANT AFTER-TASTE A WELL-KNOWN INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH ORGANIZATION REPORTS: "Chesterfield is the only cigarette in which members of our taste panel found no unpleasant after-taste." ALWAYS BUY CHESTERFIELD Copyright 1951, LOGCETT & MVERS TOBACCO CO.