PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23; 1949 ROTC Appoints Air Unit Officers Robert A. Coldsnow, College senior, has been appointed commander of the University R.O.T.C. air unit, Lt. Col. Kenneth E. Rosebush, associate professor of military science, said today. Other officers appointed are group executive, Edward C. Klewer, business junior, and group adjutant, Robert B. York engineering senior. Squaron A: Commander, Charles K. Hinschow, College senior; executive Boher J. Clark, education senior; and senior, George Kroesling, the arts senior. Flg. 1 leader, Rex Lucas Jr., engi- neering techs in the US. Broadcaster, brookers College, Engl Fliggt 2, leader. John W. Pumphrey, business, junior; assisting the leader, leader. Flight 2. leader, Walter C. Yoakum, College sophomore; assistant flight leader, Howard E. Wyrlek, College sophomore. Philip H. Stears, b. Philadelphia Flight 3 leader, Phillip G. Williams, business junior, and assistant flight leader. Wendell V. Showalter, education teacher. Squaron B: Commander, Jullan F. Been, College senior; executive; B. Pringle, education Junior; and first sergeant, James W. Bouksa, College Flight 1 leader, Ralph R. Brock, College teacher, Paul C. Reagan, business senior, Paul C. Reagan, business senior, Flixt 3. leader Kenneth B. Tyson, business junior, Schrute, business junior. Gourment Eagle Displays Rare Taste In Sea Food Dover, N. H. - (U.P.)-Supervisor Bernard Smith and two other faculty members of the Davis Vocational School went to Lake Winnipegaukee to fish through the ice. They pulled out 15 perch and cusk, left the fish on the ice and ducked into a shelter briefly to warm themselves. They returned to find an eagle dining on their catch. The eagle flew away. Then they discovered that the eagle had eaten only the choice morsels of the perch and left them the less tasty cusks. It's No Longer Professional Suicide To Live A Normal Life In Hollywood Hollywood—(U)P—Among other marks of a new dawn in Hollywood is the fact that a normal life no longer is considered professional suicide. The matinee idol of the silent day, Francis X. Bushman, didn't dare reveal for years that he was married. Clara Bow thought having children was out of the question until after she retired from the screen. Today, every man who idolizes Betty Grable knows full well he sighs over a happily-married mother of two. Some stars, like Betty Hutton, alternates pictures with babies. Miss Hutton married a businessman, Ted Brisklin, in 1945 and since has produced two pictures and two children. Her first daughter, Lindsay Diane, was born in 1946 after she finished "Perils of Pauline." Miss Hutton came out next with "Dream Girl" and then with Candice. Now she's making Paramount's "Red, Hot and Blue." Miss Hutton's claim is that she'll keep up the pace. Anyway, nobody thinks it's going to hurt her popularity to take an occasional year's maternity leave. The notion that stars who stay off the screen commit harri-kari is deader than the pre-election Truman jokes. Stars as big as Clark Gable, Alan Ladd, Tyrone Power, Robert Taylor, Jimmy Stewart, Victor Mature, Ronald Reagan and Robert Montgomery were off the screen for years during the war. Most of them came back stronger than ever. Olivia de Havilland and Joan Crawford were off the screen for longer than they should have been because they couldn't find the right stories. When they did make a picture, "To Each His Own" and "Milred Pierce" respectively, each won an academy award. Frederic March often has been off the screen a year or more at a time. It was after one of his long absences that he, too, won an Oscar for his work in "Best Years of Our Life." Marlene Dietrich and Jean Arthur were off the screen for five years during the war, but scored big hits in "A Foreign Affair." Eight Attend Art Meeting In Dallas Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of art education, will read a paper on "Art Experiences High School. Students Should Have in school" at the Western Art Conference in Dallas, Texas. The conference began Tuesday and will last through Saturday. Dr. Robert W. Leeper of the University of Oregon is doing research at Duke university here on how children learn. He says a child is likely to draw a broader conclusion from each experience than its parents realize it does. Thus riding through a red light might convince him laws aren't to be obeyed, despite what you say. Three other faculty members and four students made the trip. The faculty members are J. Sheldon Carey, associate professor of ceramics; Miss Evelyn DeGraw, assistant professor of art; and Miss Alice Moomaw, instructor of design. The students attending are Guinevere Goerz, Helen Miller, Marvel Senti, and Shirley Sudenderf, education seniors. Run Red Lights—Teach Children Bad Morals Durham, N. C. — (U.P.)— It won't do much good to teach your child to obey the law if he sees you drive through red lights, a psychology professor warns. The number of U.S. farm houses with modern bathrooms more than doubled between 1940 and 1947. Motor Managers To Meet Today Efficiency and human and public relations will be the main topics of discussion at the first conference for managers of motor fleets to be held in this area. The conference, sponsored by the University of Kansas extension, will be held today and tomorrow at the Bellerive hotel, Kansas City, Mo. Other topics to be considered are the reduction of insurance and accident costs and improvement of drivers. Discussion leaders will be Carl G. Seashore, director of the public safety institute, Pennsylvania State college; E. J. Buhner, board chairman of the American Trucking association of Louisville, Ky.; Robert Gardner, manager of the automotive department of Boston, Mass.; Charles Ray, Richmond, Va. The University extension has conducted short courses for fleet supervisors for the past two years, but this is the first conference for managers of the fleet. *Dan L. Fennell, executive vice president, Kansas City, Mo., Public Service company; William Carter, Stanford Safety service, Kansas City, Mo.; and F. R. Gaylord, president, Columbia Truck Leasing, Inc., Kansas City, Mo. Boston — (U,P)— The bass players in the Boston Symphony orchestra envy the piccolo players when it comes to toting instruments from place to place, but they come into their own when the orchestra is on tour. Bass Fiddlers Get Edge On Piccolo Players Then, all musicians but the bass players have to get their suitcase-sized evening clothes pressed before the performance. The bass players have no such problem. While traveling, they hang their evening clothes inside the big wooden boxes used to protect their instruments. Heating Engineers Will Hear Boester Dr. Carl Boester, professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue university, will be the guest speaker at the organizational meeting of the University chapter of the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers. The meeting will be held at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union. Approximately 25 members of the Kansas City chapter will attend to assist in the organization. James L. Williams, graduate student, and Vance Elder, engineering senior, will be in charge of the meeting. Doctor Installs Two-Way Radio To Aid Emergencies Camden, Tenn. —(U.P.)It's a far cry from the horse-and-buggy days the way young Dr. Robert L. Horton covers the countryside administering to his patients in West Tennessee. The 26-year-old physician gets cases via radio. Not long ago Horton visited patient some 14 miles from his home. As soon as he returned home he found another call for him almost next door to the other patient. Horton applied for a two-way radio permit. He's got the radio installed in his automobile. During the past months Horton received five emergency calls "while on the road." "And when things quiet down I can go fishing," Horton said. "My home can always find me via the radio." Man-made Lake Roosevelt in central Washington is 150 miles long. University Dally Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University holidays and examination periods. twenty holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Money-Back Guarantee! Try Camels and test them as you smoke them. If, at any time, you are not convinced that Camels are the mildest cigarette you ever smoked, return the package with the unused Camels and we will refund its full purchase price, plus postage. (Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. (A CAPITOL RECORDING) How Smooth can a swing song be? Hear Sam Donahue playing ... and you'll know! Sam Donahue's new waxing is a real something. Yes! It's smooth, it's swingy, it's something terrific for a fast Lindy—or what-do-you-do? In music, Sam knows that whether you dance it fast or slow—you'll want it smooth. And when it comes to cigarettes, Sam himself wants a cool, smooth-smoking cigarette. That's why Sam says, "Camels suit my 'T-Zone' to a 'T'. Camels are the mildest cigarette I've ever smoked—and they taste great, too!" How MILD can a cigarette be? WED Ph insta Marc Smoke CAMELS for 30 DAYS and you'll know! In a recent coast-to-coast test of hundreds of men and women who smoked only Camels for 30 days-an average of one to two packs a day-noted throat specialists, after making weekly examinations, reported presi presi ial o capta pond cord NOT ONE SINGLE CASE OF THROAT IRRITATION DUE TO SMOKING Alu dinas pora held hote in the Pen Tri Tern foll den Rie Pm 17 of Da wi