UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS --- EAGE TWO MONDAY. DECEMBER 19, 1949 CORE Sells $397 In Meal Tickets Members of the Committee on Racial Equality sold meal tickets amounting to $397 to be used in a campaign against racial discrimination in restaurants. The committee plans to present the final amount to any restaurant on or near the campus which will co-operate in the campaign. When this is completed, the hotel may be valid at the particular restaurant and holders may use them there. The Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy has voted unanimously to support the campaign Walter Conrad, publicity chairman, said. A committee of Walter Conrad graduate student, Elmer Rusco, College senior, and Helen Ulatowski graduate student, was appointed to get local organizations to help in promoting the campaign. The organizations are the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy, All Student Council, Ministerial alliance, and the American Federation of Teachers. CORE. hopes that representatives from these organizations will be able to convince some local restaurant and food worker to work and would be good business. Meal ticket selling will continue until Wednesday, Jan. 4. when C.O.R.E. will meet again. Negotiations with a local restaurant owner are expected to commence Thursday, Jan. 5, 1950. Abalone Avalon Is Costly Monterey, Cal. — (U.P.) — Abalone fishing is a great sport but one Monterey resident found it to be an expensive one. The fisherman had wandered blissfully onto the marine life refuge in searching for his abalone. A state warden happened by and levied a $25 fine. Monday, Dec. 19 Kansan Calendar of Coming Events Tuesday, Dec. 20 Union open house, 2 to 5:30 p.m Union lobby. Union open house, 2 to 4.30 p.m. Junion lobby. "I selected one site on the Crow Creek Indian reservation, north of Chamberlain, S.D. It has about 20 Dr. Smith described the sites as "surfaces of villages covered with depressions. At each depression was a round dome-shaped structure, but it was as 30 people. One village site had 25 visible depressions, or house sites." Christmas recess begins at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 3 Members of the committee are Charles Hoffhaus, Edith Malott, Marian Rippeeau, and Hardy Scheuerman, College seniors; Grace Gwinner, education senior; and Peggy Baker, John H. Burnett, and Elmer Dougherty, engineering seniors. Current Exhibits Dr. Smith Plans Expedition To South Dakota Indian Sites Classwork resumes at 8 a.m. Corrected Failible. Plans for a barbecue and dance at Potter lake for the evening of class day were discussed. A tug of war across Potter lake between engineering seniors and first year law students is being arranged as a feature attraction. D: Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of sociology, recently has been in the upper Missouri river basin surveying prospective archaeological sites to be excavated. Senior class day been tentatively set for Tuesday, May 2 by the class day committee. The committee will see if that day will be available for the annual event. Seniors Plan Day In May The committee will meet to make further plans after the Christmas vacation, announced Stanley Englund, engineering senior, who is chairman of the class day committee. Several dams to be built in the area will inundate large areas "in one of the richest archaeological sites in the western plains, where very few excavations have been made." Dr. Smith said. He is assistant curator of the Museum of Natural History. If the plans materialize. Dr. Smith will take about 12 students on an expedition next summer to excavate some of the sites he examined the past week. Representatives of the Smithsonian institution and the National Park service accompanied Dr. Smith on the inspection tour of the Missouri river valley from Vermillion, S. D. to a point 30 miles north of Pierre, S.D. "The sites are largely remains of earth-lodge villages inhabited by sedentary Indian tribes over a period of several centuries prior to the advent of the white man in the great plains." Dr. Smith said. The Smithsonian institution has located over 200 such archaeological sites. house depressions with one side enclosed by a fortification ditch. The site dates from an unknown period before white contact. Fragments of pottery indicate it belongs to a heretofore unknown culture. "A Yanktonai Sioux family is living on one site in a log cabin. We can study present day Indians while excavating prehistoric remnants of earlier Indians. "Some of the sites are fortified and some are not. The fortifications present a historical problem. Are the fortified sites those of original inhabitants protecting themselves from roving tribes, or are they advance fortifications of invaders? "In some burial mounds were bones of Indians with arrow heads imbedded in them." The proposed project is being considered by the Museum of Natural History at the University, the Smithsonian institution and the National Park service. University Dally Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Uni- holidays and examination periods Entertain at the Post Office at Lawrence 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence 1918, under act of March 3, 1879 Green Inn, the Kansas chapter, of Phi Delta Phi, international legal fraternity, held its semi-annual initiation recently in the Douglas county court house. Ora D. McClellan, retired judge of the 8th judicial district of Kansas, was the principal speaker at the banquet which followed the ceremonies. The topic of his speech was "I am a man" and in it he presented some of the failings of the legal profession in its relations with the public. PUT YOUR TALENT ON RECORD Special rates on extra copies. Studios at— 10 inch records — $2.50 The fraternity founded at University of Michigan in 1869, is one of the leading organizations in the legal profession and has many famous names in its membership list, such as; Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas E. Dewey, and two sons of Kansas, Aledar M. Landon, '08 and Clarence V. Beard, both army generals of Kansas, Frederick J. Moreau dean of the Law school is also a member of the fraternity, in addition to several other members of the Law school faculty. This year give recordings for Christmas — a personalized gift they will appreciate. Phi Delta Phi Initiates 10 12 inch records — $3.00 Call today for appointment. UNIVERSITY RADIO AT BELL MUSIC 235 Mass Ph. 375 The ten new members of Phi Delta Phi are; Kenneth F. Beck, 2nd year law; Ralph R. Brock, 1st year law; Joseph S. Davis, Jr., 1st year law; Jack H. Greene, 3rd year law; David L. Lutton, 3rd year law; Donald A. Hardy, 2nd year law; Jack Tenenbaum, 2nd year law; John J. Rader, 1st year law; Ruell E. Reddoch, 2nd year law; and Loren A. Watson, 2nd year law. Official Bulletin Dec. 19, 1949 Mathematical colloquium, 5 p.m. today, 203 strong hall. Ronald L. Reed, "Generalized Cauchy and Schwarz Inequalities." Ward T, 7 tonight, 110 Fraser hall. Ward will be renamed; plans for next activity will be made. Urgent meeting; all members please attend. Joint meeting of officers of wards P, T, and Z. 7:30 tonight, 205 Fraser hall. Plans for next semester to be discussed. Wesley foundation caroling party meet 8 tonight, Union lobby. German department Christmas party, 8 tonight, Museum of Art. Public invited. Dooks club rally meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesday. Aeronautical laboratory. Wear keys, bring initiation fees and dues. Phi Sigma meeting, noon Tuesday 301 Snow hall. Anatomy department in charge. I. S.A. council, 7:15 tonight, Union recreation room. Ringling Brothers Circus To Feature Two Baby Apes Tampa. Fla. — (U.P.)—A couple of gorillas flew in here on a National Air line plane from New York, and their passengers didn't even know it. The gorillas, Gargantua, Jr., and Toto, Jr., didn't take up much room. They are just babies and were crated up inside the plane's baggage compartment. Ringling Brothers circus, now wintering at Sarasota, Fla., hoped the pair of little gorillas will take the place of huge Gargantua, who died in his cage recently. Read the Want Ads Daily. LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. 80th Year. Modern-to-the-minute. Courses in Computer Science, Secretarial Training. Civil Service. Higher Accounting and Au- llege. Bachelor's College Box 424, Lawrence Business College. DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE 10116, Mass. Phone: 2007 10.6½ Mass. Mission Line Reservations with us. Official agents all lines, 24 hour service. Travel is our business. THE PIPE SHOP 727 Mass. Gifts For The Family XMAS MERRY Smokers $9.95 up LAMPS 7-WAY $1.98 up COME AND LOOK OVER OUR STOCK Ph.834-FRANK'S FURNITURE-834 Mass. "Say, Ma, it's only 133 days 'til ---" --- we see 'West of Abilene' isn't it?' "Shore Is, Pa, and you best hurry ---- --- 'cause we're due thar May 2."