PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY. MARCH 22, 1949 Official Bulletin I. S.A. Chairmanship applications due by Saturday noon. Blanks at 228 Frank Strong hall. Tau Sigma rehearsal schedule; 4 p.m. today, Morning Rush; 9 to night, Night club scene; 4:15 p.m. tomorrow, Office scene; 9 p.m. Thursday, Fashion Salon. Please be prompt. A. S.C. meeting, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Three dimensional color movie sponsored by American Society of Civil Engineers, 8 tonight, Lindley auditorium. Open to public, no charge. S.A.M. meeting, 7:30 tonight, Frank Strong hall auditorium. Mr. Frank Dunkley, "Problems of Contracting." Leadership conference, 7:30 to night. Recreation room, Union. Freshman Y.M.C.A. 7:30 tonight, Little theater, Green hall. Movies and discussion on summer camp- ing. Bill Easton. A. W.S. House meeting, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. today, Hall mill. Square Dance club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Recreation room, Union Anyone interested is invited. Y.M.C.A. cabinet, 4 p.m. today. Mission room, Myers hall. Above the American Society of Heating and Ventilating Engineers charter banquet, 6:30 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Union. K. U. Cues meeting, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Pi Phi house. No Jay Jane meeting this week, Quill club, 7:15 p.m. tomorrow. East room. Union. Alpha Kappa Psi professional meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Recreation room, Union. Cerulee Francais, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Miller hall, Andre Delamare, speaker. ___ Froshawk meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 103 Frank Strong hall. Last chance to pay for spring picnic; room open 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. for this purpose. K.U. Young Democrats 7 p.m. Thursday, Union lounge. Plans for coming city election to be discussed; all interested are invited. University Women's club group meetings. Thursday afternoon and evening. Law Wives meeting, 8 p.m. Thursday, Law lounge. Dean F. J. Moreau, guest speaker. K.U. Dames bridge, 7:30 p.m. to- morrow, Union ballroom. General Semantics club, short meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, place to be announced. W. T. Carpenter, executive director of the Whiting Research laboratories, Standard Oil company of Indiana, will be the guest speaker at a combined meeting of the University chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and the Chemical Engineering Society of Greater Kansas City. AICE To Hear Research Leader The meeting will be at 8 p.m. Thursday in 101 Snow hall. Mr. Carpenter will speak on "Characteristics of Industrial Research Leaders." Charles A. Schanack, representative of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey group, will conduct a group meeting at 5 p.m. Wednesday in Lindley auditorium. June graduates in civil, electrical, and mechanical engineering interested in employment with the group may attend and sign the interview schedules immediately after the meeting. Miss Ann C. Armstrong, '34, was recently appointed regional field adviser for the Camp Fire Girls. The area which Miss Armstrong will supervise includes the states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana. Graduate Gets Adviser's Post Before her appointment Miss Armstrong was executive director of the Trenton, N.J., Camp Fire council. Midwesterners No Longer Isolationists, Metcalf Says People of the midwest, formerly isolationists, are now more fundamentally American than those in any other section of the country. This is the conclusion drawn by John C. Metcalfe, former diplomatic correspondent for Time magazine and the New York Herald Tribune. He returned recently from a two week lecture tour covering Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Arkansas. $ \textcircled{6} $ The tour was sponsored by the University bureau of lectures and concerts. "Many people in Washington have the mistaken notion that midwest-erners' have their heads in the sand.' Nothing could be farther from the truth; the midwest is the backbone of the country," Mr. Metcalfe said. The question and answer periods following the lectures show the way he people are thinking, he said. They are solidly behind the Marshall plan and show widespread approval of the Atlantic pact as being essential in dealing with the policies of Soviet Russia." Mr. Metcalfe said. "They realize the fact that the world has become a small place, and that what happens in other countries of the world has a dear bearing on their lives. Since the United States is in world affairs to stay there, they want the U.S. to hold world leadership." "The lecture bureau is bringing internationally known people to speak to the public. I only wish there were more universities which sponsored such a service," Mr. Metcalfe said. Mr. Metcalfe said he believes that the increased interest can be explained by the large attendance of veterans of the past war. They can comprehend the problems of the United States foreign policy much better than the pre-war midwestern. "Paris, London, and Berlin, are no longer strange, far-off places to them," he said. Applications for appointive offices in the Independent Student association will not be due until Saturday, the I.S.A. council decided Monday ISA Holds Offices Open The next meeting of the council and house representatives will be held Monday, March 28, in 16 Fraser hall. The applications were originally due Friday. Students may still get application blanks at the I.S.A. desk, 228 Frank Strong hall, or from Dorothy Eastwood, Miller hall. The council also made plans for the spring formal. It will be held in the Union ballroom from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday, April 2. Harlan Livinggood and his orchestra will play for the dance. A motion to allow house representatives to vote in the council meetings was tabled for further consideration. In humid weather an automobile engine runs more smoothly than in dry weather and often the combustion is improved, giving better fuel economy. Twenty-eight pictures of Inca ruins found in south central Peru are being displayed on the third floor of Frank Strong hall, west wing. The exhibition contains photographs of temples, houses, idols, and other ruins found in the Andean mountains. Brief explanatory notes accompany each picture. Photographs of three Inca cities are included in the series. The exhibition is based on a photographic essay by Frank Scherschel in Life magazine. It is a traveling exhibit, sent to universities throughout the country. Arvid Jacobson, associate profes- sor of design, is in charge of the dis- play. University Dally Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester. $4.50 year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unpublished. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Copyright 12-49, LOGGERT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.