1948 seeds to Amiya cure in day. ment of club, manent ns-for-1 Sun ent lace as the 1948 among natures neces- reader's party lives to are that Glenn rate bal- ain his not by systems faith other one of of the dhi is battle of ade his friend ihi and tary of Indian thinker. need the tational luicidal ation of solutions. They door bill universal officers' Svopurney, secreer; and ssor of alcutta tes for soprano eabody, Sunday audito- ings by Schu Richard Donna was Miss College e John Honor operation. chaplain ibid, tabl chapter nt only in a re- Maxine Georgia ls. STUDENT NEWS PAPER chapter e Con- April 11 Conboy, an, said d dates 8 p. m. tal Lawrence, Kansas Noted Baritone Will Sing In Hoch At 8:20 Tonight John Charles Thomas, internationally-known baritone, will sing at the final University concert of the semester at 8:20 p.m. today in Hochauditorium. Student activity tickets will admit. Said to have "one of the most tremendous voices of all times." Mr. Thomas recently returned from a concert tour of Australia, New Zealand, and the Hawaiian Islands. His tour of the United States is scheduled to include 110 concerts and will cover 40,000 miles. Richmond Gale, pianist, will accompany Mr. Thomas. The program follows: "Where've You Walk" (Handel), Air from "Comus" (Dr. Arne), "Che" Fiero Costume (Legrenzi), "Tu Lo Sai" (Torelli), "Se Nel Bon" (Stradella), Aria "Per Me Guinto" from "Don Carlo" (Verdi). "O Del Mio Amato Ben" (Donaudy), "Amuri Armui" (arr. by Sadero), "En Barque" (Pierne), "Chacozo Triste" (Duparc), "La Belle Jeunesse" (Poulene), "Alone Upon the Housetops" (Galloway), "Seashell" (Engel), "The Blade of Grass" (Roy), "Mister Jinat" (Nalotte), "Old Skinfint" (Howells), "Roll Jordan, Roll" (Johnson). Piano solos by Mr. Gale will include "Sarabande" (Rameau-Godowsky), "Prelude in E Flat Major" (Ruchmaninoff), "Rhpsody in C Major" (Dohanyi). 'Saint' Dance Is Saturday Tickets are on sale for the Saints and Sinners Swing, junior class dance, to be held from 9 p. m. to midnight Saturday. Tickets cost $1.75 a couple and may be purchased at booths in the lobbies of Frank Strong hall and the Union, and at the business office. A representative in each men's organized house has been appointed to sell tickets. Only 200 tickets will be sold. $259.50 budget for the Saints and Sinners Swing has been presented to the All Student Council by Samuel R. McCamack, junior class treasurer. Expenses for the dance will include ballroom, $14; orchestra, $135; decorations, $35; service, $15.50; publicity, $50; and miscellaneous, $10. Harlan Livinggood's orchestra will play for dancing. William A. Coboy will be master of devilment. Intermission entertainment will be by vocalists Hogue and Jeanne L. Chambers. Delta Gamma sorority will put on a skit, "Win, Place, or Show." Faculty Members Return From Trip J. Sheldon Carey, assistant professor of ceramics, and Norman Plummer, geologist, recently returned from a trip to the western part of the state to collect samples of volcanic ash. of Volcanic ash deposits are reported to the Geological Survey by persons throughout the state and are analyzed in an attempt to find a quantity of working material. WEATHER Mr. Carey will work with the Geological Survey this summer. Kansas—Fair west, partly cloudy east, cooler northwest today. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight and to-morrow. High today 75 to 80 except near 60 northwest. Low tonight 35 to 40 west and 45 to 50 east. JOHN CHARLES THOMAS Relay Floats To Get Cups Floats from campus organizations and other colleges and universities entered in the Kansas Relays will parade down Massachusetts street April 17. The parade will start at approximately 11 a.m. Four trophies will be awarded to the best floats. The trophies are now on display on the first floor of Watson library in the hallway. Any organized group on the campus may enter a float. Those who wish to do so may submit their applications to Patrick H. Thiessen at the Sigma Chi house by mail or telephone. Entries must be in by midnight Thursday. The decorations theme will be the Olympic games, in keeping with the international Olympic games this summer in England. Organizations who have entered a float in the parade at present are Alpha Chi Omega, Chi Omega, Delta Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Theta, Pikappa Alpha, Sigma Chi, Sigma Kappa, Sigma Nu, and Sigma Phi Epsilon. April 9 Deadline For Petitions On ASC Ballot Petitions to place independent candidates on the All-University election ballot must be turned in by midnight Friday, Elizabeth Sue Webster, All Student Council secretary, said today. tary, satiric, satirical petition with 200 signers is necessary to place the name of an independent candidate on the ballot for A. S. C. president in the April 15 election. One hundred names are necessary for other offices. District I, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, five men and two women. Polls in the east wing of Frank Strong hall and in Fraser. The following is a list of voting places by districts and the number of Council members to be elected. All polls are in the basement of the buildings. District III, Fine Arts and Business, three men and one woman. Polls in the west wing of Frank Strong hall. District II, Engineering, four men Pals in Marvin hall. Strong hall District IV. Law and Medicine. one man. Polls in Green hall and in Haworth hall. In the class election freshmen will vote for sophomore officers, sophomore for juniors, and juniors for senior officers. Seniors will not vote. Men will vote for men Council candidates and women for the women candidates. Matinia Tickets Left For 'Harvey' The only performance of "Harvey" for which tickets are still available is the matinee Saturday. All seats will cost $1 and no seats will be reserved at this performance. Brock Pemberton, '08. Broadway producer, rehearsed with the student-faculty cast for the first time Tuesday. The play will be given in Mr. Pemberton's home town of Emporia April 12. Senior Meeting Tomorrow At 10 a.m. Seniors will be dismissed from 10 o'clock classes tomorrow to attend a meeting of the senior class in Frank Strong auditorium, Joan Woodward, class secretary, said today. A previous announcement which said the meeting would be held Friday was incorrect. The class gift to the University and the senior dance will be discussed. Otto Schnellbacher, class president, will preside. Class rings and graduation announcements will be on display. ASC Abolishes Freshman Caps The All Student Council Tuesday granted $75 for the Eagle, swore in a new member, and decided that future freshmen students would not be required to wear freshman caps. The Council gave future first eem students a break when it was decided that freshman caps would not be required next fall. In the fall semester the Owl society and the Ku Ku's received the profits from the sale of freshmen caps. sale of resumes. Staff members of the Eagle, middle of the road campus publication, petitioned the Council for funds to make up an operating loss of $30.52. As the Council had previously given $75 to the Dove, a like amount was granted the Eagle. Both publications receive these donations with the understanding that no further financial aid will be given by the Council. the Council. Robert Vignery, College freshman, was sworn in as a member of the Council. He succeeds David O. Schmidt, who resigned. Chancellor Deane W. Malott approved a new parking regulation which permits unrestricted use of parking areas after 3:30 p. m., except on Jayhawk drive. On Jayhawk drive parking regulations will be in effect until 4:30 p. m., and from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p. m. on Saturdays. There are no restrictions on Sunday. Lost Job Began Pemberton Career By MILDRED GULNIK and FRED BROOKS Brock Pemberton sat in a broad red-leathered chair in the lobby of the Eldridge hotel this morning and talked for an hour about a subject close to his heart—the stage. Mr. Pemberton, '08, New York producer of "Harvey," arrived in Lawrence yesterday from New York and immediately hustled up to Fraser theater and ran through a dress re- theater and ran through a dress rehearsal of the play, which will open at 8:15 tomorrow for a three-day run. "The last time I was in Fraser," he said with a smile, "was 40 years ago when it was used as a chapel. I attended chapel regularly because I liked to sing. "He fired me after a while, but my pride hurt me so I told my friends I left him to produce my own plays. There was nothing left but to produce a play. My first, 'Enter Madam,' was a great success, and I've been in show business ever since." "Many years ago, I believe it was about 1910, I left the Emporia Gazette and went to New York to get some newspaper experience in the big city. Through a letter from William Allen White I got a job on the Evening Mail and was soon after put in the drama department." The soft-spoken producer, who was dressed in a blue pin-striped suit and black shoes, described the chain of circumstances that led him to become one of New York's top producers. Hopkins knew I worked for the old World and for the Times for six years before I went to work for Arthur Hopkins, a producer, who offered me a job as utility man in one of his theaters. Hopkins Fired Him "There's a classic," he began, increasing the volume of his voice slightly. "Harvey will continue to play for years. It has no time element. It has such a great acting part that you can always find actors willing to play it. When the subject of "Harvey" was brought up, his eyes brightened and he shifted to a more comfortable position in his chair. "Sometimes through repetition you discover weak or dull spots in your play. There are no weak or dull places in 'Harvey'." I have been told of persons who have seen the play 20 or 30 times. Says He's 'Terrific' Says He's 'Terrific' Mr. Pemberton was taken slightly offguard when asked how well he thought he played the role of the star, Elwood P. Dowd. "Gosh, you really put me on the spot," he chided. Then he added humorously, "To be an actor you have got to think you are great. So I'll just say I'm terrific." BROCK PEMBERTON Luck, perseverance, and ability are necessary for success in show business, he explained. Of the three ability is of course the most important. Asked what type of plays he liked to produce best he replied simply, "successful ones. A play is only half a play without the audience. 'Harvey' has played to audiences of 30,000 persons." Marshall Plan Heats Cold War, Schuman Savs The Marshall plan is another step in the "cold war" which is becoming hotter and hotter, Frederick L. Schu man, political scientists, said at an all-student convolution this morning in Hoch auditorium. Professor Schuman said that the Marshall plan will fail because it is a part of an anti-Soviet crusade, a plan to restore Germany as a bulwark against communism, a plan to exclude eastern Europe from economic reconstruction, and a plan to forego making a peace settlement with Russia. Dr. Schuman is a professor of political science at Williams college. He has traveled and studied in Europe, and has written 11 books on political science topics. During World War II he served in a governmental intelligence position in Washington. 'Part Of War Plan' "The Marshall plan has become a part of a war plan instead of a peace plan," he said. "Government policies in Russia and the United States will have to change if we expect to keep the cold war from developing into a shooting war. "Co-operation is necessary for peace. Russia and the United States will have to compromise and bargain on all world issues if peace is to be maintained," Mr. Schuman said. "The Marshall plan is 'intended to reconstruct Germany for political and military reasons and to continue the economic boycott against Russia." Professor Schuman said. The lend-lease program and U.N.R.A.R. failed, so we are taking stronger measures in "bribing our so-called friends and punishing and weakening our so-called enemies," he added. Commenting on the widely publicized idea that communism is our real enemy and that its spread must be stopped, the speaker quoted from a recent statement by Thomas Dewey, "You cannot kill an idea with a gun. Dozens of military men are our leaders today, and they cannot think of anything except the use of force and guns." "If the next war comes, it will be a long war of attrition," he predicted. "It will last at least 10 years—and it might last 30 years. There would be no way for us to stop Russia from occupying all of Europe and Asia." 'Co-operation Necessary' Professor Schuman said that eastern Europe supplies western Europe with resources, such as coal. Russian satellites need heavy machinery to mine coal, and our economic boycott of eastern Europe will make it impossible for them to get resources out of the ground. America Can't Do It All America can't supply western Europe with all the goods she needs, he said. Our own re-armament program has created a shortage of critical materials which are also lacking in Europe. The United States and Russia should reach an accord on control of the Reich, on the Greek-Turkey question, on Near East oil areas, China, and German reparations, Professor Schuman said. After peace details have been worked out Professor Schuman believes that a U. N. program of world re-construction should be enacted through co-operation of all countries. SAM To Make Field Trip To KC Research Institute All S.A.M. members wishing to make the field trip tomorrow should meet at the rear of Marvin hall at 12:20 p.m. Ted Hanske, field trip chairman, said the group will tour the Midwest Research Institute, Kansas City, Mo.