PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, SEPT. 26, 1949 Official Bulletin Sept. 26,1949 Anyone who has paid I.S.A. dues must fill out placement forms at 228 Strong hall. I. S.A. is offering $50 scholarship to any independent student enrolled in the University. Applications may be obtained at Graduate school, 227 Strong hall. Nov. 15 is deadline. Applications for Business School association chairmanships of professional, social, publicity, Jayhawk News editor, service and membership committees are to be made with Miss Ewing. 214 Strong hall, before Sept. 29. A. S.T.E., 7 tonight, New Fowler shops. Movies and business; visitors welcome. Mathematical colloquium, 5 today. 203 Strong hall. Professor S. Chowla, "Combinatorial problems." All members and those interested in joining the Jayhawk Archery club meet 3-5 today, Robinson annex. I. S.A. council, 7 tonight, Pine room Union. Y. M.C.A. Funfest, 7:15 p.m. Tuesday, Recreation room, Union Inter Co-op Council meeting, 7:30 tonight, Don Henry. Bring committee member list. Tau Sigma, 4 today, Robinson gym. Jewish Student Union "Get acquainted" meeting, 4 p.m. Tuesday 1247 Ohio. Sigma Delta Chi, 7 p.m. Tuesday 107 Journalism. Sigma Gamma Epsilon, business meeting, 7 p.m. Tuesday, 402 Lindley. Notice to former Boy Scouts and members: Alpha Phi Omega meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Kansas room, Union. I. S.A., 7:30 tonight, Pine room Union. Women's Rifle club, 7 p.m. Tuesday, 107 Military Science building Those interested in becoming members are invited. Bacteriology club 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, 417 Snow. First meeting of the year; members and those attending for first time are requested to sign reservation list, 5th floor bulletin board, Snow hall, before Tuesday afternoon. Engineerettes, first fall general meeting, 7:45 tonight, Kansas room of the Union. All wives of engineering students invited. Please try to come. Plans will be made for the fall semester. Cove, Ore, Claims High School Honor Cherry Tree, Pa., Sept. 26—(U.P.) Students at Cherry Tree High school today yielded their claim of being the smallest high school in the nation to field an 11-man football team to Cove, Ore. Cherry Tree with an enrollment of 43 boys, 21 of them on the football squad, made its claim for national fame last week. The words were hardly spoken before other small schools began chopping down Cherry Tree's claim. But Cove applied the clincher. It has only 14 male students and 12 of them play football. Conference Scheduled For Elementary Teachers Pittsburg,—(U.P.)-Dr. Jane M. Carroll, professor in Horace Mann elementary laboratory school at the Pittsburgh state teachers college, has been named chief consultant for a series of one-day curriculum conferences for elementary teachers. The first of the 21 scheduled conferences will be held at Topeka Oct 1. Others on the schedule: Iola, Oct. 3; Independence, Oct. 4; Ottawa, Oct. 19; Larned, Oct. 24; Meade, Oct. 25; Greensburg, Oct. 26; Harper, Oct. 27; Hutchinson, Oct. 28; Phillipsburg, Nov. 8; Goodland, Nov. 9; Scott City, Nov. 10; Hays, Nov. 11; Belleville, Nov. 16; Beloit, Nov. 17; Junction City, Nov. 28; Salina, Nov. 29; Marysville, Nov. 30; Troy Dec. 1; Kansas City, Dec. 2; El Dorado, Dec. 12. Hollander Likes Campus Life Prefers Soccer To Football Schelto Van Heemstra, visiting student from Holland, still prefers soccer and rugby, after viewing his first American football game between T.C.U. and K.U. "At home they don't obviously try to hurt each other," he said. While a delegate at the student federation in Canada, Van Heemstra was asked to visit the United States as guest of the Wesleyan fellowship. He has visited the University of Arkansas, Phillips University, the Wesley foundation at Baker university, and since Saturday has been the house guest of Westminster hall at K. U. Van Heemstra will return to New York Wednesday. There he will spend a few days with his brother, a Dutch importer. On Oct. 15 he will sail for Holland. When asked if he is eager to return to Holland, he replied: "I have, of course, much to tell my family and friends about America. But if I could come back I would like very much to study a year in sociology at Chicago or Columbia university." Asked for his opinion on American colleges. Van Heemstra said: "I am very impressed by campus life and the homes. In Holland the buildings are scattered and the students live in private homes or boarding houses. "There, too, the college is not an area in the city like Mt. Oread and has only 5000 students." He stated that no practical applications are made in his university for business and professional courses. Students are not taught to "earn a living." "In Europe everyone thinks of Americans as being all of America," said Van Heemstra, "but I soon found on arrival that the Canadians do not appreciate this thought." His schedule for the remainder of his stay here included a talk at the Y. W. C. A. cabinet meeting Sept. 24 and meetings with various churches Sept. 25. The Dutchman will speak Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at a Y. M. C. A. sponsored freshman meeting in the Union recreation hall. Farmers Step Up Wheat Planting Topeka, Sept. 26—(U.P)—A stepped up tempo of wheat planting in Kansas was reported today. Government agricultural observers also said in a weekly summary that the outlook was excellent for fall pasture on seeded and volunteer wheat fields. The last week has been a busy one for Kansas farmers. While seeding of the 1950 wheat crop spread eastward through central Kansas harvesting of corn was reported in all sections of the state. Sorghum prospects, said the report of federal and state agriculture departments, continued generally favorable. However, the crop is maturing slowly in western counties and there is the hazard of early frost. Prague, —(U,P)—The Czechoslovak Communist party announced Tuesday that it would purge members who had not mastered the fundamentals of Marx-Leninism by 1950. Reds Must Learn Leninism Or Be Purgad In 1950 Hubert Collins, federal-state agricultural statistician, said wheat drilling has been completed in some extreme western counties, and there are many fields in the area up to good stands. The party newspaper Rude Pravo bannered the announcement on its front page. Marxist schools will start Nov. 1 for every party member and candidate. The purge will be carried out in June, 1950, when the schooling has ended, the party organ said. Mail 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. Unpublished in Lawrence, Kans., Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. University Daily Kansan Political Science Faculty Adds Four Four instructors have been added to the department of political science faculty for the fall semester and several other changes in the department have been announced. New instructors are Robert Eichhorn, political science and human relations; Kenneth Beasley, Aubrey Bradley, and William Cape, political science. Mr. Cape taught at the University of Wyoming last year. Tom Page, instructor of political science, has returned from the University of Minnesota where he received notice of his work for the doctor's degree. Eldon Fields, associate professor of political science, will be director of Western Civilization this year. Hilden Gibson professor of political science formerly was the director of Western Civilization. Professor Gibson will work specifically in human relations this semester. K. U. Food Service Is Back On the "Hill" Open Sundays Thru Thursdays KU Food Service will serve your house with wholesome food at your convenience. "Wait for the call of the Food Man" K. U. FOOD SERVICE Phone 3406 Kodak Tourist Camera, Kodet Lens — here's a wonderful, inexpensive folding camera for your picture taking the year round. Has new shutter release bar for sharper, steadier exposures — and fixed-focus lens. Negatives are $2 1/4 \times 3 1/4$ inches; oversize black-and-white snapshots and Kodacolor Prints measure about $3 1/2 \times 5$ inches. Camera, $24.50; Flasholder, $11.08. Federal Tax included. Keep Your Memories Fresh . . . in snapshots Through the months and years, snapshots can keep a wonderful day as alive as the day you're living right now. Stop in today and get two or three rolls of Kodak Film for your camera. And for best results from each shot, let our experts do the developing and printing. 1107 Mass. St