PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1949 Official Bulletin Three A.S.C. vacancies due to resignation of Frank Rozich and Bernard Nagle, District II, and Marjorie McCullough, District III, Scabbair and Blade. 7:30 p.m. today, Frank Strong auditorium. Documentary film, "The True Glory." Jay Janes tea, 4:30 to 5:30 p.m today. Pine room. Memorial Union Uniforms, meeting afterwards. Pre-Nursing club. 4 p.m. today. Fraser dining hall. Election of officers. All pre-nursing students invited. Former Boy Scouts welcome open meeting of Alpha Phi Omega. 7:30 p.m. today, East room, Union. Sigma Delta Chi. 5 p.m., today, 107 Journalism building. Quill club, 7:30 p.m. today, Ballroom, Union. U. N.E.S.C.O. Education committee open meeting, 4 p.m. today. East room. Union. Foreign students will tell of their campuses. Classical club, 8 p.m. today, 210 Fraser, Dr. R. L. Lind, "Inscriptions;" slides. All basic R.O.T.F. students invited to Pershing Rifles rushing smoker, 7:30 to 9 p.m. today, recreation room, Union. K. U. Dames, 8 p.m. today, 101 Snow. Student Religious council meeting, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Sigma Xi, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Blake. Mathematics club, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 211 Frank Strong, Dr. Robert Schatten, "Some Identities for Binomial Coefficients." Everyone welcome. Achtung! Deutscher Verein. Donnerstag um Halb Funf Uhr, Frazer, Zimmer 405. Wohl des Neuen Ausschusses. K.U. Amateur Radio club meeting, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 205 E. E. Lab. Quack club tryouts, 10 a.m. Saturday. Robinson gym. W.Y.C.A. cubinet, 4 p.m. Friday, Kappa Alpha Theta house. Student Union activities meeting 7 p.m. today Fraser hall. Committees will meet in the following rooms: art, 209; announcements, 206; coffee and forums, 311; decorations, 207; entertainment, 205; K-Union, 305; publicity, 119; public liaison, 213; secretarial, 110; social, 307; special projects, 210; and sports and organizations, 309. Two States To Try Rubberized Roads Chicago—(U.P.) -Two states, Virginia and Texas, are going to try out rubberized highways. The American Public Works association said both states have agreed to lay test stretches of the new types of road to compare it with asphalt. Ohio, too, is considering giving the rubberized road a try. Advocates of rubberized highways claim that rubber mixed with asphalt or tar lengthens the life of a road. The formula is one ton of natural rubber for every mile of paving material, mixed well and spread smoothly. The rubber-producing center of Akron, Ohio, has a synthetic rubber street on trial in a busy downtown building. The road built a year ago is standing. England and Holland have used similar roads for years. Life Gets Tedious, Don't It? Savannah, Ga. — (U,P) — C. M. Briggs, captain of the fishing boat Stardust, came in off a trawling expedition grumbling about the poor pickings. He didn't know how bad it was. A day later he was in court on charges of illegal trawling. University Daily Kansan 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 on Monday. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879. Religion Classes Filled This Year It isn't often that students are prevented from learning religion, but that is the case at the University this spring. For the first time in its history, the school of Religion had to close out its classes during enrollment, and students who wanted to learn religion were turned away. This semester there are 407 students enrolled in the 13 religion classes offered. The previous high number was in the spring of 1934 when there were 265. In that year the largest classes were the one hour courses. The three hour classes are the most popular this semester. more chairs and new reference books had to be ordered by the school to accommodate the sudden increase in students. Pearson Predicts Carlson Will Run For Senator Topeka. — (U.P.) — Kansas' 1950 senatorial election is in the limelight today. Political observers have sparked a rumor here that Gov. Frank Carlson might enter the race when Sen. Clvde Reed's term expires. Drew Pearson, columnist, here with the French "Thank You" train yesterday, fanned the spark. He made a flat prediction that Governor Carlson would go back to Washington as a U. S. senator after 1950. "Thank you for the prediction," was Governor Carlson's only comment. Coal underlies about 8,000 square miles of Alabama and its iron ore deposits are said to be sufficient to supply its blast furnaces for 160 years. Its agricultural production is large. Grandpa Once Sighed, 'Oh You Kid' But Lazy Junior Merely Whistles Hollywood—(UP)—Almost everything's streamlined in this atomic day. People can't even take time to talk slowly any more. Instead of "23 skidoo," a dragging, five syllables, they bark "drop dead." This, it appears, is one reason why it takes at least two hours to show a historical movie. It took people in the old language about twice as much time to say the same thing. $ \textcircled{4} $ It also explains why most historical movies sound so stiff. The hero intones: "By all that's holy, lovely maiden. I would that I could aid and succor you in this moment of deepest travail." The audience finally figures out that he's trying to say: "Gee, kid, sure wish I could help." Movie producers think the old-fashioned talk gives flavor to a movie about the good old days. The next of that crop, M-G-M's "Good Old Summertime," is liberally sprinkled with some of the five-syllable slang words of the day, now expressed by a single short. One of them is "ginger peachy", which used to mean anything from the way a girl wore her hat to the kind of fudge she made. "Ishkabibbble" was a four-syllable production of the time. It means translated to modern simplicity, "so what." Smoke a LUCKY to feel your LEVEL best! Luckies' fine tobacco puts you on the right level—the Lucky level—to feel your level best, do your level best. That's why it's important to remember that LUCKY STRIKE MEANS FINE TOBACCO—mild, ripe, light tobacco that makes a thoroughly enjoyable smoke. No wonder more independent tobacco experts—auctioneers, buyers and warehousemen—smoke Lucky Strike regularly than smoke the next two leading brands combined. Light up a Lucky! 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