UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1948 Engineering Lists 210 Students On Honor Roll Names of 210 students in the School of Engineering on the dean's honor roll for the fall, 1947 term were released today by Dean T. De Witt Carr. Dean Carr said that grades for all the semesters that a student has been at the University are averaged to determine the upper 10 per cent of the class. J. O. Jones, professor of applied mechanics, said that about 85 per cent of the sophomores, juniors, and seniors and 50 per cent of the freshmen on the roll are veterans. The honor roll includes the upper 10 per cent of each class with 41 freshmen, 71 sophomores, 54 juniors, and 44 seniors listed. Lloyd W. Davis is the high freshman with a straight A average. The highest in the sophomore class was made by David J. Foley who has a 2.98 grade point average. The highest junior average was made by Donald L. Luffell with 2.84. Norman G. Miller has the highest senior grade point average with a 2.82. Other students on the dean's honor or roll are: The lowest grade point average that would still place students on the roll was 145 for freshman and 125 for juniors, and 226 for seniors. Freshmen: Richard C. Arnspier. Warren E. Arnspier, Stacy A. Balafas, Joseph E. Balloun, Norman P. Baumann, Robert J. Becker, William P. Bingham, Leo B. Conner, Dwane M. Crowl, Donald E. Drummond, Harold E. Edmondson. James D. Griffith, James M. Handley, Gerald E. Hardesty, Frank R. Hass, Kenneth L. Hoffman, John P. Howard, Mary R. Jewett, Donald E. Johnson, Leonard C. Kuhn, William D. Leake, Quentin R. Long Robert D. McEwens, Jack E. McFadden, John M. McKinley, George R. McNeish, James E. Merrill, Robert V. Miller, Robert A. Moore, Leon L. Munier, Robert D. Reiswig, Frank I. Reynolds, Donald S. Simpson, Harry F. Spuehler, Don P. Stickrod, Robert V. Strobel. Dan L. Ward, James L. White William B. Wilhelm, Howard G. Wilshire. Sophomores: Windsor L. Adkison, Glenn W. Anschutz, William P. Barnett, James W. Black, Rupert J. Bledsoe, Robert G. Bransfield, Fred N. Brinkman, Dean E. Brodererson, Melvin E. Brown, Herbert F. Buchholtz, John H. Burnett. Edwin H. Calkins, John H. Campbell, Richard H. Capps, Alfred L. Case, Bruce R. Chadwick, Lyle J. Chapman, Dale L. Clinton, Clyde L. Coe, Calvin E. COombs, Neal B. Crane George W. Davis, Charles E. Dutton, Stanley M. Englund, Eugene T. Halbert, Howard B. Hamacher, John R. Harris, William L. Heard, Richard L. Heiney, Isaac H. Hoover, Donald E. Huffman, Robert D. Hutton Robert L. Kite, Wayne E. Kohman, William R. Leib, Herbert B.D Lewis, Rex Lucas, Jr., Scott Lynn James P. McFadden, Walter J. Michaelus, John D. Miller, Norman R. Miller, William E. Miller, Ralph M Moon, Robert G. Murrell. John A. Nelson, James E. Oram, James R. Page, Donald F. Payne, Charles N. Penny, Alan J. Pickerling, Francis W. Prosser, Leonard M. Richards, Homer G. Riley, John E. Robb, Arthur H. Roth David A. Seamans, John M. Shirley, Robert E. Shmalmberg, Stanley M. Smith, Frank H. Stevens, Robert K. Thayer, John E. Thimesch, David L. Von Niederhaus, Marvin Wanbaugh, Daniel Wold, William Wheeler, Dennis D. Willard, Parke H. Woodard, John S. Young. Juniors: James R. Bowden, Billy G. Bowers, Jack N. Butts, Edward R. Cheramy, Dale B. Chesney, James E. Chrisman, Little P. Curtis, Hal M. Davison, Earl G. Defenbaugh, William R. Faris, Victor Ferraro. Truman L. Gore, Charles A. Grimmett, Billy H. Hamilton, James C. Henderson, Joseph A. Hull, Paul H. Jackson, David S. Jones, Don B. Jones, James R. Kanehl, Joseph US To Palestine If Others Help Lake Success, N. Y., April 20—(UP) The United States told the United Nations today it would provide American troops to impose a trusteeship government on Palestine provided selected other countries of the U.N. also contribute some forces. American Delegate Warren Austin announced that the United States is ready to send troops to the Holy Land "but it is not prepared to act alone in this matter." All students and faculty members are invited to meet in Fraser theater at 4 p.m. today to discuss the University curriculum, said Richard Hawkinson, chairman of the student-faculty conference. The discussion today will be a preliminary to the annual student-faculty conference to be held at the Lawrence Country club Saturday. The conference is sponsored by Sachem circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, senior men's honor society. Will Discuss Curriculum Two more preliminary discussions will be held tomorrow and Thursday. The discussion tomorrow will be on student-faculty-administration relations, and Thursday on pre-enrollment. Bruce Bathurst, business junior, and Dean George B. Smith, cochairmen of the committee on the University curriculum, will lead the discussion at today's meeting. All persons interested in these subjects are invited to ask questions and offer suggestions at the pre-conference discussions. This will help the students and faculty members who are to discuss the topics at the conference Saturday. John Irwin, engineering junior, and Dean L. C. Woodruff led a discussion on student attitude at a meeting Monday. W. Keil, William R. Kiene, Carl G. Klaus, William F. Krall. Brownnell W. Landes, Wayne T. Lewis, William C. McCarthy, Maurice M. Mandelkehr, Victor M. Mathews, Russell B. Mesler. Donald E. Owen, James M. Ralls, Jimmie J. Remley, Bob Roberts, John H. Robinson, Harry E. Robson, Herbert A. Ross. Eugene R. Sabin, Warren A. Shaw, Kenneth I. Sleigh, William L. Sonnenberg, Leo F. Spector, Robert E. Serrett, William L. Stringer, Winton L. Studt, John M. Suptic. Robert D. Taly, Harold Tenenbaum, Carl E. Von Waaden, Paul Whitford, Gerald G. Wilson, William E. Winter, Charles A. Woodrow Seniors: Marion F. Bearly, Andrew F. Bertuzzi, Morris E. Borene, Carroll F. Bower, Jack H. Bradley, Jr., Lowell C. Case, Jack F. Daily, Oliver D. Edwards, John P. Ellis, Douglas E. Ferguson, Richard H. Finney, George E. Fitch, Herbert R. Foster. Elmo E. Maiden, John L. M.argrave, Robert D. Moore, William R. Nation, Dorman S. O'Leary, Robert W. Partridge, Richard R. Potter, Walter H. Robinson, Dale I. Rummer. Walter R. Garrison, Paul S. Gratny, Charles H. Green, William J. Hall, Robert H. Harris, Edward G. Hartronft, Howard H. Hobrock, Jack W. Holllowsworth, John M. Hunt Stanley W. Jervis, Harry W. Johnson. Mrs. Evelyn Allen, speech correctionist at the Delano public school for crippled children in Kansas City, Mo., will talk to members of the Speech Therapy seminar at 4 p. m. Thursday in the English room of the Union. Speech Therapy Seminar To Hear Correctionist Mrs. Allen will speak on "Speech Training for Cerebral Palsied Children." Charles J. Schuler, Robert V. Sellers, Richard J. Shea, Paul W. Stark, Arthur Toch, James D. Waugh, Robert L. Wehe, James L. Williams, George I. Worrall, Edwin N. York. CHARLES BAKER (right), surprise winner in the Kansas Relays decathlon, receives the 10-event trophy from referee Frank Potts of Colorado. Baker, running unattached from Fayetteville, Ark., but wearing the colors of Arkansas U., rose from fifth place to edge national champ Irving Mondschein in the final totals. University Daily Kansan photo by Dob Dellinger. K. U. has been host to the insurance school for several years. Seventeen Artists Exhibit 38 Paintings In Museum This year's curriculum, which will be cut so students may attend all lectures, includes fidelity and surety bonds, farm insurance, salesmanship, resident and theft policies and the personal property floater. Those accepting invitations to conduct courses are R. K. Hill, Chicago; Horace Smith, Hartford, Conn.; Maurice Ramsey, W. E. Evans, Kansas City, Mo.; North Coombs, D. J. Weldon, Wichita; E. H. Fikes, Topeka; Harley Cosby, Fi. Scott; and Harry Hoffman, Lawrence. Thirty-eight paintings representing 17 contemporary artists are on exhibition at the Spooner-Thayer museum. The exhibition, sponsored by the Midtown galleries of New York City, be shown until Thursday. Rockmore Davis, who is noted for her portraits of children. The annual insurance school sponsored by the Kansas association of insurance agents will be held at the University June 16, 17, and 18. Gladys Rockmore Davis, who is departs from this theme in two paintings in this exhibit. "From the Wings" depicts a phase of the theatrical world. Her other painting is a still life. "Roses." Other artists whose work is in the exhibition are Miron Sokole, Lenard Kester, Fred Nagler, Philip Guston, Julien Binford, Henry Billings, Emlen Etting, Bernardine Custer, Waldo Peirce, Margit Varga Maurice Freedman, and William Thon. For those who like realistic paintings, Isaac Soyer's "Child in Swing" will be of interest. Two of Doris Rosenthal's studies of Mexico are represented, Isabel Bishop and William Palmer each have paintings showing an artist's interest in types of people. Insurance School To Be Held In June Engineers May Apply For Reclamation Bureau Work Applications for civil service work with the bureau of reclamation may be obtained in the office of the dean of the School of Engineering. Undergraduates, juniors and seniors may apply. Applications have to be sent to the central board in Denver by tomorrow. Research Director At Geology Meeting Dr. Raymond C. Moore, research director of the state Geological Survey, is in New York attending a council meeting of the Geological Society of America being held this week. While in New York Dr. Moore will confer with Norman D. Newell, curator of invertebrate paleontology at the American Museum of Natural History. He will also go to the United States National museum in Washington, D.C., where he will confer with Dr. G. Arthur Cooper, curator of invertebrate paleontology. The men are collaborating on the study of fossils from the Appalachian area. Newman May Queen Chosen Eileen O'Brien, College senior, was elected May queen at the Newman club Sunday. She will preside at the "Living Rosary" ceremonies May 16. Her attendants will be Cathleen Collins and Carol Prochaska, College freshmen, Joan Sullivan, junior and Patricia Jordan, sophomore. Reds Gather Near Milan 'To Celebrate' Rome, April 20—(UP)—Premier Aldeie Da Gasperi hailed his crushing 2-to-1 victory over the "Communities today as an 'absolute majority' and indicated clearly he would continue to bar Communists and Leftwing Socialists from the new Italian Government. "I was certain we would have a relative majority, but I would never had dreamed we could have had this absolute majority." Premier De Gaspier said at noon, after hearing the latest official election returns. These results gave Premier De Gasperi's anti-Communist coalition a better than 2-to-1 majority over the Communist front in the senate elections as official counting passed the halfway mark. In the district south of the Po river however, things didn't appear as rosy as Mr. De Gasperi's statement painted them. Reports reaching the Italian military command in Milan said the Communist partisans were forming in the Pavia and Piacenza regions, where two of four attacks made against government arsenals since April 17 have occurred. Reports that partisans were gathering came jointly with Communist front announcement of plans for a special demonstration in downtown Milan April 25 to celebrate the "electoral success" of the Leftist bloc. Rumors were current that the Communists planned a violent attempt to take over the government soon, and it was pointed out that the strongly Leftist Milan industrial region would be a logical starting point for such action. Italian fighter planes were sent to scout the strength of Leftist partisans. Despite a government ban on meetings of any kind, the Communist group announced through party newspapers that arrangements have been completed for a "great peoples parade." By CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN Albeneri Trio Has Triumph The Albeneri Trio was greeted by an enthusiastic audience of chamber music lovers Monday evening when they gave their second concert in Frank Strong auditorium. Alexander Schneider, at the violin, Benar Heifetz at the cello, and Erich Kahn at the piano, presented a unified interpretation of Brahms, Mozart, and Beethoven. To Brahm's C Minor Trio with its intricate classical quality the artists gave drive and integrity. Technical ability was obvious in the second movement when each player took his turn in presenting a small portion of the musical theme and blending it with the other two instruments for interpretive meaning. The vigorous last minute climax of the Brahm's Allegro Molto was carried over into Mozart's E Major Trio. By the time the players had reached The Andante Grazioso, it would not have been difficult to imagine oneself in a Viennese court, but the desire to build up climaxes resulted in irregular bowing. Beethoven's trio in B flat Major, the closing number on the program, was the triumph of the concert. In the first movement the piano solo part was very effective against a background of pizzicato by the cello and violin. Mr. Heifetz, the cellist, gave the audience a few moments of sheer tonal beauty in the Scherzo movement, and the Andante Cantabile with its inspiring quality was musical expression at its height in trio ensemble. Humanities Lecture April 27 Joseph Warren Beach, professor of English at the University of Minnesota, will speak on "The Problem of Evil in Modern Fiction" April 27 in Fraser theater. This will be the sixth in the University Humanities lecture series.