PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1950 Official Bulletin Wednesday Required meeting of all students in school of pharmacy: 4:30 p.m. Thursday, 305 Bailey. Purpose is to meet representatives of the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education and is required by this Council for purposes of accreditation. Students will receive permission from Dean of School of Pharmacy to leave at 4:20 p.m. any class which they may have in order to attend meeting. General Semantics club, 7:45 tonight, 111 Strong hall. Anyone interested is invited. El Ateneo se reunira el mierecoles a las 4:30 en 113 Strong hall. Programa: Poesea. Women's Rifle club, 7 to 9 tonight. Military Science building. K.U. Dames, 8 tonight, 426 Lindley hall.Initiation of new members. All Student Council, 7:15 tonight Pine Room, Memorial union. Stateswomen's club, 7:15 to 8 tonight, Kappa Kappa Gamma house Important. Bacteriology club, 7:30 tonight, 417 Snow hall, Dr. A. J. Mix, guest speaker Dr. Sherwood will give a few remarks about Van Leeuwen-hook, the theme of the meeting. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, 206 Strong hall. Topic: "I.V.C.F.-What It Stands For." All invited. Jay Janes, 5 today, Pine Room, Memorial union. Lab Theatre, I-act play "The Romance of the Willow Pattern" and staged reading, "The Dear Departed", 8 tonight and Thursday, Little Theatre, Green hall. No production Friday. Single admission 25c; season ticket $1.50. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m Thursday, Snow hall. Dr. Metcalf speaker. No Square Dance club this week. Next meeting Nov. 1, Memorial union ballroom. Red Peppers, 7:15 p.m. Thursday. 101 Snow hall. Dues must be paid $\textcircled{1}$ KRIMP TWIST*... a leg-hugging, dull finish! $\textcircled{2}$ CAMONFLAGE HEEL*... only you know it's there! $\textcircled{3}$ HIDDEN SOLE*... so narrow it's unseen! $\textcircled{4}$ SECRET TOE*... perfectly concealed reinforcement! $\textcircled{5}$ SHADOW SEAM*... for the trim, slenderized silhouette! S1 GAUGE • 15 DENIER Patent Pending *Trade Mark $1.95 K. U. Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 106 Green hall. Speaker, refreshments. Phi Alpha Theta coffee, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine Room, Memorial union. All history majors invited. Christian Science student organization, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel. at this meeting in order to retain membership. Math Club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 203 Strong hall. Mr. Showalter, "The International Congress of Mathematicians." Bring 50c dues. Deutscher verein; Nachste Zusam- menkunft, Donnersstag 5 uhr nachmittags in 502 Fraser hall. Bringen Sie Iir Geld! KuKu's, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 105 Green hall. Bring money for K- State trip. The Palace 843 Massachusetts English Proficiency examination 2 to 5 p.m. November 4. Registration Oct. 30 and 31 and Nov. 1, in the offices of the College, Education and Journalism. Juniors and seniors in these schools are eligible to take the examination and must pass it before graduation. See Mrs. Calder- wood, 9 to 11 am. Monday, Oct. 30, through Friday, Nov. 3. 313 Fraser: hall for further information. The following are notified to appear before Student court, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26, basement of Green hall, Room 4: Frank Mischlich, Raymond H. Shilier, Raymond E. Youmans, Howard Allen Lane, Jerome A. Grunt, James Sunye, Guy Louis Quinn, Duane L. Wilderson, Doris Jean Hudson, Dudley Kelley, Richard Loomis, Robert M. King, Wallace E. Good, John H. Enegren, Margery Kauffman Gray, Roland E. Pratt, Mary L. Perman Hickox, Cornelius J. Gillin III, Patrick H. Bowers, Clare-A. Stewart, Arthur W. Johnson, Jr., Dwain E. Kays, Howard Grobe Moore, Jack E. Smader, Ralph E. Kroy, Ron L. Oswald, Jimmy Vohs, Bauista Murillo. Delta Sigma Pi formal pledging 7:30 p.m. Thursday Big Six room of the Eldridge hotel. Correspondent Says War Is One Of 'Best Covered' BEAT NEBRASKA ous stands against overwhelming odds in the early day of the war. Chicago—(U.P.)—The Korean war was "one of the best-covered wars in the history of American journalism," Murray M. Moler, veteran United Press war correspondent, said recently. Mr. Moler, who returned recently from the fighting front, told newspapermen attending the 66th annual meeting of the Inland Daily Press association of the problems confronting reporters in the war zone. He said the newsmen, "in addition to facing the perils as the troops, also had a continual battle of communications to fight—a battle that gave even the strongest men the jitters from frustration in trying to get copy out over shaky, jammed telephone lines from forward battle areas. He said the United Nations air superiority was "the major factor" in beating down the enemy supply lines and preventing the Communists from taking full advantage of their numerical superiority." "The newsmen paid a high price, too," he said. "Fifteen are dead or missing and 20 more—at least—wounded." Mr. Moler said the "democratic world owes a debt it can never repay to the officers and men of the 24th and 25th infantry divisions, the 1st cavalry division and the First marine division" for their courage- The U.S. troops, he said, "knew what they were fighting for." Scores of them. Mr. Moler said, told him: "You're damn right we know why we're here—if we don't stop these Red so-and-so's here in Korea, there'll be no stopping them any place." BEAT NEBRASKA