945 PAGE TEN UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1948 Those Bars Mean Something By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times The Editorial Page- Food Costs Students beset with expenses for food, rent, and clothing, far out of proportion to their income, are still looking for a solution. The largest number of married students ever to participate in campus life are now a part of the record enrollment at the University. They find the price of food a critical problem. Particularly concerned are men with families; men who can find only limited amounts of work at 50 cents an hour; who get no outside help, have no scholarship, and yet want to graduate. Success of the Student Union bookstore in cutting expenses on school supplies is suggestive that a cooperative food store might well afford proportionate savings on items that cost more than books and must be bought oftener. Better food and more food would be on the tables of many married students if they obtained cooperative savings on purchases for the family larder. Such a market could be housed in quisset huts. Labor could be furnished by students. If such a market could give the G.I. and the non G.I. a break on food bills during these years of high prices and low, part-time wages, the effort would be worth the time and trouble. Operation of cooperative food stores at other universities is an indication that the food problem has been recognized and given attention. —Richard Jones. "Morons make the best drivers" reports an eminent psychologist. At least there's some consolation for persons failing to pass tests for drivers' licenses. Dear Editor- Thank You Dear Editor: The dinner invitations extended by members of the faculty and residents of Lawrence, to make Thanksgiving a memorable occasion for the foreign students who stayed on the campus, was deeply appreciated. It was all the more appreciated because there were many of us who learned for the first time why Thanksgiving is celebrated in the United States. We certainly hope that through these informal meetings with the "American family" we may get to know the American way of life. Baa-quer Shirazi Bombay, India Faruk Mutman Istanbul, Turkey University Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Na- tional Adm. Press Assn., the Associated Collegi- al Press. Represented by the National Ad- ministration. 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Daily Hansan New Camera Spots Cancer Inside Body Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS St. Louis—(UP)—A camera that takes color pictures of the body's internal organs will be important in detecting cancer, its inventor, Dr. Lowrain E. McCrea of Temple university, said here today. Editor-in-Chief ... Maurice C. Lungen Managing Editor ... Hal D. Nelson Asst. Man. Editor ... Anne Murphy Asst. Man. Editor ... Bill F. Mayer City Editor ... Rowan E. Rose Asst. City Editor ... Nora Temple Asst. City Editor ... Patricia James Asst. City Editor ... Richard D. Barton Asst. Tel. Editor ... Andy Kroner Asst. Tel. Editor ... Robert D. Snair Sports Editor ... Osmero L. Bartell Asst. Sports Editor ... Marvin L. Rowlands Society Editor ... Rosemary Rospaw Business Mgr. ... Bill Nelligan Advertising Mgr. ... Don Tennant Circulation Mgr. ... William A. Beck Circ. Mgr. ... Desa Knuth Classified Mgr. ... Don Waldenr Asst. Class. Mgr. .. Yvonne Josserand Asst. Class. Mgr. .. William W. Beck Nati. Adv. Mgr. .. Charles O'Connor Promotion Mgr. ... Charles O'Connor The natural color pictures are especially important in detecting diseases such as cancer in the bladder, Dr. McCrea said. The camera has a 13-inch telescopic lens with a light bulb on the end. It performs seven automatic operations and can be used in various parts of the body. Flash Gordon Should Be Told About This The first hotel under construction to include a system for television is the Terrace Plaza Hotel in Cincinnati. It will have video outlets in 350 rooms. Berkeley, Calif.—(UP) —Shooting stars smaller than a garden pea may prevent passenger rocket flights higher than 50 miles above the earth, two scientists hinted today. The tiny meteors that constantly bombard the upper atmosphere pack the wallop of a Big Bertha shell and could turn a rocket or space ship into an airless coffin by puncturing its shell. Professors Laurence A. Manning and Oswald G. Villard, Jr., of Stanford university said they have clocked meteors at speeds of more than 150,000 miles an hour. Even a tiny pellet generates as much energy as a big locomotive as it whizzes into the earth's air blanket. Read the Daily Kansan daily. Heavens, Men, Let's Learn To Cuss Like A Real Soldier Washington—(UP)—If GI's mus swear, says Maj. Gen. Hobart M Gay, they ought to use "one virile profanity." The military commander of the Washington, D.C. area suggested it a memorandum to his aides that they start a drive "to tone down the GI vocabulary." But General Gay emphasized the he was referring "not to the strong virile profanity of which every man is entitled to free usages, but the vulgar obscenity which has so generally replaced profanity." He Was Swep Off His Feet Peabody, Mass.—(UP) A boy with a broom hospitalized Jose, Wodanode, 64. Wodanode stepped fro a bus just as a street cleaner ga his broom a push and actually wa swept off his feet. Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL You can always figure on looking your best—when you're wearing clothes cleaned and pressed by INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 740 Vermont Phone 432