UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS GE TWELVE THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1947 OP's To Rally ere Wednesday A rally of the collegiate Young publicans with state leaders of the nesis Young G.O.P. organization is inned for Wednesday at the Uni- tity. 19. The meeting was planned at a concance Tuesday in the office of Gov. ank Carlson, attended by David mnn, College junior, and James Kay, senior. Extransion of the Young Republica club at the University is the rally inactive. Other members at the conference are Wes Roberts, state G.O.P. airman; Ed Chapman, Jr., Wash-ern university; Frank Harwi, state highway commission official; Jim larrison, chairman of the State collate Young Republicans; andorge Stafford, executive secretary Governor Carlson. Governor Carson, new state Tim Linkey, Cimarron, new state ung Republican chairman, and Al cker, Kansas City, national Young publican committeeman for Kau- will attend the meeting here. will attend Clymer explained that the local mpaign will bring prominent Rebelian speakers to the campus and it'll be climaxed with a membership live after the Christmas holidays. M, YWCA Planadership School improvement in executive guidance will be discussed at the first mt. Y. W.-Y. M. C. A. leadership training school to be held on the same after Christmas. important schools in leadershif们 have been held separately the two organizations. This year joint executive council decided combine the two study units into a group. "The training program will empire not only principles but also the techniques of leadership. The program will be open to any student so is interested in developing his statics as a leader," Wilbur Noble,lege junior and president of the M.C.A. said. Vonworth's Condition Good Del L. Woolworth, engineering man, underwent an appendectomy Watkins hospital Tuesday. His milieu is reported as good. Alumni At Miami To Get Together Because of the huge crowds exeucted, no special driers have been arranged. A committee will sponsor inpromptn get-togethers. Mr. Montgomery, who married Mary Elizabeth Kennedy, '29, was the Missouri valley lightweight boxing champion in 1925. John D. Montgomery, 25, editor of the Miami Beach Daily Tropic, will direct the activities of University alumni who attend the Orange bowl game in Miami. Headquarters will be in the hotel which quarters the team. Dr. Cora Downs, professor of bacteriology, will be honored on the "Women of Kansas" program at 9:30 today on station KFKU. Will Honor Dr. Downs Dr. Down's wartime experiences will be dramatized. During the war she was on leave from the University to do bacteriological warfare research at Camp Detrick, Md. The research is still shrouded in secrecy and all names and codes in the dramatization have been changed. Marjorie Shryock, assistant instructor in speech, will play the part of Dr. Downs. Loren Kennedy and Glenn Hunt will have the principal male parts. The program was written and produced by Gene Courtney. Others in the radio cast include Jack Labowitz, Warren Bowman, Frank Rotman, Charles Howe, Rip Collins and Joanne Jacobs. Students To Hear Atom Researcher Dr. Joseph W. Kennedy, University alumnus and co-discoverer of plutonium, the active material used in the atomic bomb, will visit the chemistry department today. While here Dr. Kennedy will speak to faculty and graduate students in chemistry and related fields on "The Chemistry and Production of the Trans-Uranic Elements." Dr. Kennedy is now chairman of the department of chemistry at Washington university, St. Louis. A native of Texas, he attended the University in 1936-37 and took his master's degree in chemistry under Prof. A. W. Davidson. campus Briefs--the problem. "Care Solve" (Handel), and "Guel sceletto" (Paradies), by Doris an Gilman, voice; "Concerto No. 1st movement, (DeBoriet), by Itty Tharp, violin; "Lt Capinaer (enodict), by Joyce Rohr, voice; ali flute obligato by Mary Helen oder; "Etude in D Flat" (Liszt), byila Wagner,琴面; "AI Nostri onid" from II Trovatore (Verdil), by Mary Carolyn Daugherty and Mont Reed, vocal duet, "Kol dreil" (Eruch), by Carl Bilger, alto; "Trio Etudes" (Chopin), by Anna Holm, piano. ine Arts Students To Give Recital Nine Fine Arts students will take it in the weekly student recital day at 3 p.m. in Frank Strong diphorium. The program follows: levv Man To Discuss Jobs onboy, Royer To Texas or Debate Tournament money will stage an exhibition debate with the University of Texas will meet four other Texasools on the question: Resolved, set a federal world government could be established. Conrad, A. C. Husband will explain the functions and responsibilities of the civil engineer corps of the regu- navy at 4 p. m. tomorrow in 207 provin hall. Commander Husband ll discuss job opportunities the en- gineer corps offers to engineering iors. William Conboy, College junior, Richard Royer, College senior, in Austin, Texas, today for a de- fense tournament. "Trends of Theology" was the topic of a panel forum of the University Christian Fellowship led by Adren Alquist, college sophomore. Four modern trends in religion and interpretation of the Bible were discussed. Christian Fellowship Discusses Trends The conference is sponsored annually by the Chamber of Commerce and Kansas State college at Manhattan to foster agriculture and industry in Kansas. The Bureau of Business research will have a display showing state services rendered by the bureau at the Midwest Farm, Home, and Industrial conference Monday and Tuesday in Topeka. Included in the exhibit will be publications, displays from various branches of the University of Kansas, and different services performed by the Bureau of Business research. The men's quartette from the Kansas City Bible college will entertain at next week's meeting. Business Research Bureau Plans Conference Display Students Discuss Changes In Business Curriculum Students in the School of Business suggested changes in the curriculum at an open meeting Tuesday. Under the supervision of D. Gaghardo, professor of economics, a tentative curriculum was presented to students for discussion. Directories Ready On Time This is the date originally scheduled for their appearance by staff members. Student directories will be ready for distribution about Wednesday. T. C. Rythe, superintendent of University press, said that the books should be completed by that time and ready to go on sale. Raymond King, advertising manager, said that it was possible that no charge would be made for the directory. "It depends on whether or not the All-Student council will grant us a little more money," he said. "Otherwise, we will have to charge for the directory, but it won't be more than 5 cents." Independents Unsuccessful Sunflower student veterans are apparently not interested in campus politics. While four members of the Independents party waited Wednesday in the Sunflower Community building, none of the 600 student veterans appeared for a meeting called to establish an Independents party at Sunflower to act with the campus organization. Dale Judy. Independents president, said, "A proposal for early enrollment of Sunflower students was to have been discussed. The plan would give Sunflower veterans a better choice of class hours to compensate for time lost in traveling to and from the village." Also present at the meeting were Ralph McClung, vice-president; lyle Martin and James Petersen. Education Frat Holds Initiation Eighteen new members were initiated by Phi Delta Kappa, education fraternity, at a banquet Tuesday in the Kansas room of the Union. Floyd Sappington, director of the Kansas Receiving home in Atchison, spoke to the members. k spoke to the members. New members are: G. B. Buster, Kansas City; John P. Dix, Kansas City; Merle B. Covell, graduate student; Dallas D. Pittenger, edu- cation senior; Merle L. Spring, edu- cation senior; Leo Horacek, graduate student; Robert E. Eichorn, graduate student. Robert F. Unkefer, education senior; Fred C. Gardner, education senior; Jack A. Nall, graduate student; Bruce Henoch, education junior; Dean Colle, College senior; Raymond Mannol, graduate student; Raymond E. Pitts, graduate student; Thomas Barlow, fraduate student; Eugene Thompson, graduate student; Adrian Dorsch, graduate student; Charles E. Gerber, education senior. ROBERTS Jewelry Gifts 833 Mass. 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