PAGE SIXTEEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1950 Military Expansion May Not Affect Enrollment The current expansion of the military forces will probably have little affect on enrollment in Kansas colleges this fall. That is the concensus of administrators here at the University. The factors producing the estimate also prevail at most other senior and junior colleges in the state. Even a rapidly stepped up rate of mobilization shouldn't decimate college student bodies until September of 1951—unless existing selective service regulations are altered. A digest of selective service regulations, prepared by Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, for use in the offices of the deans and by student advisers, confirms the estimate. University's 24 Social Fraternities (Continued from page 9) Reinhold Schmidt, Lawrence; Robert R. Wilson, Lawrence; Charles William R. Dorsch, Kansas City, Kansas Sigma Chi (19): Richard Sears, Kansas City, Mo; Jack Cole, Park Ridge, Ill; Richard Eflin, Jack Morris, Wichita; Jim Nelson, Wichita; Jerry Linley, Coffeyville; Bob Snowden Atchison. Charles Watkins, Kansas City, Mo.; George Wolfe, Mission; Jacob Rathbun, Winfield; Fred Van Bebber, Lawrence; Jim Blessing, Kansas City, Mo.; Dick Gamble, Chicago, Ill.; Larry Miller, Iola; Dan Donica, Anthony; Dan Dibble, Topeka; Charles Grover, Hutchinson; Jerry Cooley, Wichita; Joe Conklin, Hutchinson. Sigma Nu (17): Eric Null, Wichita Ronald Meeker, Wichita; James S Swords, Wamego; Allen Elmer Hall Kansas City, Mo.; William Henry Johnson, Independence; Larry Bullene, Wichita; Donald Herbert Aungst, Harrisburg, Pa.; William Henry Marshall, Kinsley. Alexander Adams McBurney, Slater, Mo.; Murray Wayne Meeder, Jr., Independence; Harold Orris Harper, Island Park, Hutchinson; Robert Everett Burlingane, Wilmette, Ill.; William Henry Crews, Salina; John Hollister Golden, Goodland; Lowell Warren Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.; George Niles Warren, Chanute; Dale Edward Dixon, Topeka Sigma Phi Epsilon (19): Richard A. Bucher, Kansas City, Mo.; Jerry Shafer, Topeka; Merrill R. Hinkle, Topeka; Vic Goering, Kingman; John Thompson, Grandview, Mo.; Louis D. Breyfogle III, Overland Park; Frank H. Ward, Goodland; Roger Schroeder, Kansas City, Mo. Douglas C. Kay, Topeka; Hugh C Satterwhite, Jr., DeSoto; John K. Weber, Salina; James W. Atkinson, Sedalia, Mo.; James S. Ralston, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Godwin, Beloit; Mike Benson, Salina; F. Forst, Salina; Conrad L, Davis, Fort Scott; Dean L, Glasoo, Walter W, Burdick, Wichita Sigma Pi (7): Philip Wickliffe Waugh, Jr., Iola; Ronald L. Simmons, Kansas City, Kansas; Frank Lymne Vacin, Colin; Arlie Dale Stonestreet, Cullison; William Wesley Fitzsimons, Yonkers, N. Y.; Kermit Murl Beal, Lawrence; Harry Dean Hunt, Guymon, Okla. Tau Kappa Epsilon (19): Donald Dean Conard, Garden City; Dex Moss Scranton, Great Bend; Joe Lee Russell, Kansas City, Kansas; Franklin W. McCollum, Logan; Robert H. Hein, Marion; Donald L. Menchelt, Pittsburg; Manuel Palmer, Douglass, Newton; Herb S. Schmeltz, Kansas City, Kansas. Robert H. Kobler, DeSoto; Lee Kansas City, Kansas; Thailor R. Warmack, Joplin; Ronald B. Winslow, Holden, Mass.; Richard Stewart, Lawrence; Donald J. Becker, Wichita; Richard D. Pickett, Council Grove; Richard L. Sjoberg, Nickerson; Robert M. Fluker, Junction City; Robert D. Martin, Kansas City, Kansas; Patrick H. Poole, Columbus. Triangle (12): William Mark Perry, Kansas City, Mo.; Clifford Calvin Beck, Kansas City, Mo.; John Wesley MacCormack, Kansas City, Mo.; Rafael Villasenor, Mexico City, Mexico; John Milton Smith, Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Lee Craig Bullock, Toppea; Benjamin Willis Phillips, NE, Aberdeen, S. Dak.; Norman Gary Wilson, Lawrence; William Overton Park, Kansas City, Mo.; Charles Norman Junod, Chanute; John Timmons Buford, Joplin, Mo.; Donald Max McClure, Richfield. Current selective service regulations provide that a student enrolled in college during a regular term will be deferred until the end of the academic year provided to remain in continued enrollment and good standing. Thus any student enrolling in college this month will not be drafted into service before June, 1951. Student status during a summary session does not confer temporary deferment. Deferment is for the entire academic year, Nichols emphasized. At KU, there are few non-veteran students in the upper age brackets of the 19-to-26-year group due to be drafted before school starts in mid-September. The University and other Kansas senior colleges are likely to lose more students through mobilization of the national guard and organized reserves than to the draft. Some KU reservists already Grinstead To Address Club Miss Frances Grinstead, assistant professor of journalism, will speak before the second district Kansas Authors club Saturday, Sept. 30 at a luncheon in the Terrace club at Kansas City, Kan. have been called to active duty. Others expect calls but the total is unlikely to produce a significant effect on the natural trends in fall enrollment. Other important selective service factors for students; Students in the School of Medicine at K.U. are deferred. Pre-medical students who have been provisionally accepted by a School of Medicine are deferred. However, the K.U. school and most others do not grant provisional acceptance until the spring before fall admittance to the school. Since a minimum of three years of pre-medical study is required, medical schools and selective service representatives are discussing a new agreement to prevent a drying up of the stream of pre-medical students two and three years from now. Students enrolled in Army, Air Force, and Naval R.O.T.C. units, either as basic or advanced students, may be deferred within quotas now being worked out by the Department of Defense. The medical and pre-medical student deferment provisions also apply to those studying and preparing for veterinary medicine, dentistry, or osteopathy, Mr. Nichols pointed out. All The Hits Are On "45" All My Love Patti Page Goodnight Irene Frank Sinatra I Wanna Be Loved Billy Eckstine Mona Lisa Ralph Flanagan Victor, Columbia, Decca, Capital, MGM, Mercury Rush Week May Be Over But— We want you to visit our house all the year through. Whether you are a Rushee or an "old head" at K.U.you will find a friendly welcome and the type of service you like at The Lawrence National Bank Welcome K.U. Students Both New and Old 7th & Mass. We're glad to have you back and we want to see you around all year. So take it easy when you're driving. We can keep your car in tip top condition . . . we're equipped to do any job big or small . . . but we can't replace a life lost by careless driving. MOTOR IN CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 827 Vermont Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. CLOTHING FROM As Preferred As Two Tickets On The 50 Yard Line Top preference, wherever men of good taste gather, is given to the fine clothing you'll find at Ober's. So, why not stop in and let our experienced sales people help you make your fall wardrobe selections from the nationally advertised "names you know" in clothing. Leading Outfitters to Young Men for Over Fifty Years