University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 44th Year No. 148 Monday, May 26, 1947 Lawrence, Kansas I-M Winners To Get Awards At Varsity Ball Highlighted by the presentation of awards to winners of intramural sports championships during the '47-'48 season, an intramural ball will be held at the Military Science building from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Thursday. Trophies will be awarded for all sports except track. The Blanks won the track championship and each member of the Blank team who placed first, second or third in any event will receive a medal. The ball, which will be semi-formal, is open to all university students. There is no charge. Awards will be presented at internmission and Don Powell, intramural director, has asked that a representative from each team and all individuals who have won championships be present to receive awards. The following teams and individuals will be presented awards: Foothall — Division champions: Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Chi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Phi Delta Theta Playoff winner: Phi Gamma Delta Volleyball — Division champions Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Alpha Tau Omega, and Beta Theta P Plavoy winner: Phi Delta Theta. **Easketball** — A-division champions: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Delta Theta, and Rexal. B-division champions: Phi Delta Theta, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Delta Theta. A-division play-off winner: Sigma Alpha Epsilon. B-division playoff winner: Phi Gamma Delta. By Bibler Swimming — Beta Theta Pi. Softball — Division champions: Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Beta Theta P Playoff winner: Phi Delta Theta Rifle — Highest average score for season: Crowley, Tau Kappa Epsilon. Spring competition in tennis, golf, handball and horseshoes will not be completed in time for awards to be made Thursday. The follow-uppers will receive trophies for fall competition in these sports, however; Tennis — Black, Delta Tau Delta Cisco, Joseph Pete Theta Pi Handball — Shelton, Beta Theta Pi. Horseshoes — Henry, Smith hall. Horseshoes — Henry, Smith hall. In recognition for their services intramural managers, the following men will be presented sweaters: Francis W. Prosser, Thomas T. Hawkins, Woodson E. Dryden, Emil T. Heuer, Charles G. Wagstaff Clyde P. Johnson, William N. Daugherty, and William R. Parsons. Applications Due For Kansan Jobs Applications for two salaried positions in the Summer Session Kansas must be submitted in writing Tuesday to Prof. Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the journalism department. The applications should give complete details of the training and experience of the applicant for either of the two positions -editor-in-chief or business manager. The Summer Session Kansan will be published as a morning paper on sundays and is distributed during the summer session may try out for any of the staff positions. This Girl! Needs Blood— Are You A-RH Negative? URGENT—Needed today for Nora Hines, blood donor with type A-RH Negative. 15 per cent of type A's have this factor. Urge type A's to investigate. Donors will be paid. Contact Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Phone 870. Little Man On Campus "Sometimes I don't know whether to give up a college education or switch to fine arts." Shed A Tear For Those Old 'West Point Reminders' The old blue uniforms may see their last performance at the University band's annual spring concert tonight. A committee of band members and faculty advisors has designed a marine blue, gray, and red uniform complete with gray topcoat for winter wear. Next fall, the old "West Point reminders" will be discarded. They were purchased in 1934 shortly after Prof. Russell L. Wiley came from Phillips university in Texas to direct the K. U. band. While men will be wearing the uniforms for the last time tonight, the women of the band will be attired again in vari-colored formals. They first wore formalms at the fall concert and have worn them on all tours this year. Uniforms were taken from the women at the end of the football season so that all band men could be outfitted uniformly. Whether women ever will again wear uniforms is a big question— to the women at least. But from listening to the men of the band, you can be sure they too are in favor of women in the band. Women, they will argue, are nice things to have along on trips. But they admit that the women play havoc in marching formations. Not that women can't march—they just can't do it as well and as fast as the fellows can. From their view point membership in the concert band is an honor, but membership in the marching band is fun. Gals always have been crazy about uniforms. They will freeze courageously at winter drill sessions for the privilege of playing and marching at football games and for the fun of going on long trips. But one thing is certain. If women aren't fitted for new uniforms this spring, they surely won't be marching next fall. No one can march on a football field in a formal, not even a versatile gal who tots a tuba or pipes a flute as well as the next guy. KU Bond To Give Concert At 8 Tonight In Hoch The annual spring concert of the University concert band will be presented at 8 tonight in Hoch auditorium. Prof. Russell Wiley will direct the group. Leo Horacek, fine arts senior, will play a cornet solo, and Shir'ey Sloan, fine arts sophomore, will present a clarinet solo during the concert. Bill Sears, fine arts senior, will also give a baton twirling exhibition. Kenneth Postlethwaite, director of the World War II Memorial fund, will discuss the Memorial project with university alumni in Eureka, Winfield, Arkansas City, and other Kansas cities this week. He will speak at a community Memorial day meeting in Mankato on Friday. Postlethwaite Will Speak To Alumni On Memorial Topeka. (UP) — The Kansas board of regents will act on budgets submitted by state schools at its next meeting June 13 in Kansas City, Hubert Brighton, secretary of the board, said today. Regents Postpone Budget Action Hearings were conducted on the budgets, calling for increased expenditures including higher faculty pay, at the regents meeting Thursday and Friday at Manhattan. School heads were present to discuss budget items. "After the hearings," Mr. Brighton said, "It was decided to give the members of the board an opportunity to study further the individual budgets before deciding whether to approve them or not." Thus action was deferred until the June meeting. 'Russia Violating Potsdam Pact' New York-(UP)-Gen. Mark W. Clark last night accused Russian occupation forces in Austria of confiscating industries, farm products, and the Danube river shipping lifeline in direct violation of the Potsdam agreement. He also accused the Russians of using food as a political weapon by giving extra rations to workers who joined the Communist party. General Clark said he was convinced that "to be firm and definite in our relations with the Soviet Union" would reduce the chances of war. He said the Soviet seizure of industrial properties, farm products, livestock and other resources was carried out "despite my personal, repeated protest to the Soviet high commissioner." "I saw Austria as a final battleground in the war that ended two years ago," he said. "Today, it is another kind of battleground in a war for a way of life." As a result of the seizures, Clark said, the Austrian people are on a starvation diet and the burden of UNRRA "and indirectly the burden of the American taxpayer who was the principal contributor to UNRRA" have increased. The general's indictment of Russia was less bristling in its final broadcast form than an advanced text distributed to the press by CBS. The advance text quoted Clark as accusing the Russians also of confiscating oil and UNRRA supplies. Clark later told newsmen that t. mention of UNRRA supplies was "a misstatement" and that "I can't prove that they did it." He said the reference to seizure of American oil was deleted at the suggestion of CBS because the sponsor of the program was the Gulf Oil company. It Was A Beat-Up K.U. Towel Anyhow It's an ill wind that blows lighted cigaret butts. On a field trip to Kansas City Saturday, several journalism students were riding with Gordon Sabine, assistant professor of journalism and tennis coach. Arleen Feldkamp, College sophomore, tossed a cigarette out of the window. It didn't stay tossed. Soon Professor Sabine asked, "What's on fire?" Arleen replied, "It's just your cigar." But Mr. Sabine stopped, searched the car, and found a half-burned towel on which the cigarette that wouldn't stay tossed had come to rest. Said Arleen this morning, "I've quit smoking and I'm going to buy Mr. Sabine a new towel." Mr. Sabina a new towel. The towel was marked "K.U." Ralph Zingaro Receives Upjohn Fellowship Award Ralph Zingaro, graduate student. been given a one-year fellow by the Upjohn Pharmaceutical company to do research on chemical problems connected with medicine. The fellowship carries a yearly allowance of $1,320. Calvin VanderWerf and Jacob Kleinberg, professors of chemistry will direct Zingaro in his work. Union Activities Fills 159 Jobs On Committees Twelve chairmen to head Union Activities committees for the 1947-48 year were announced today by President Otis Hill. Other appointments include two ex officio members of the Student Union Executive board, 73 special project chairmen, and 71 project assistants. The selections were made by Hill, LuAnne Powell, vice-president; Louise Lambert, secretary, and Homer Sherwood, treasurer of the executive board. The ex officio members are Sue Webster and Thornton Cooke. Special Project Chairmen The new committee chairmen are Frank Rotman, publicity; Kathy Culley, secretarial; Joan Joseph, public liaison; Thomas Hanna, intramurals; Donna Munn, library; Margaret Meeks, coffee and forums; Ann Learned, clubs and organizations; Jack Kendree, social; James Hawes, decorations; Paul Dillon, service; Grace Gwinner, entertainment; and Harriet Harlow, announcements. Eleanor Howell and Nancy McGraw, secretarial committee. The special project chairmen are Byron DeHaan, Joan Harris, Bill Van Diver, Mila Williams, George M. Polk, Morgan Wright, Bud Francis, Arleen Feldkamp, Sally Sandifer, Barbara Schweheimer, Sidney Litson, Betty J. Bennett, and Glendale Jones, publicity committee. Public liaison special projects chairmen are Dorothy Scroggy, Sidney Letson, Bud Francis, Pat Thiesson, Dan Westerman, and Frank Pomeroy. John Stoopes, George Peterson, Jerry Sheidler, Joan Anderson, Bill Tincher, and Bud Francis, intramurals. James R. Pratt, Doris Tihen, and Matt Zimmerman, library. Joan Rettig, Betty Sara Brothers, Barbara Hume, and Marjorie Darli- ple, coffees and forums. Marvin Martin, Phil Carlson, and Virginia Daugherty, clubs and organizations. Social Dances Thornton Cooke, Jim MeBride, Richard Collins, and Barbara Byrd, social dances. Special projects chairmen for decorations are Helen Dietzel, Rose Ann Madden, Patty Kelley, Joe McCoskrie, Joan Degenhardt, and William Wintermote. Frank Pomeroy, Peggy Foster, Lindbergh Bell, Jack Wayland, and Bob Hughes. service. Helen Ward, Dorothy O'Connor, Norman Jennings, Jack Moorehead, and Sue Webster, entertainment. Peggy Sue Cloey, Marjorie Burtscher, Bill Tincher, Joan Woodward, Robert Tinkelpaugh, Thornton Cook, announcements. Special projects chairmen for the social committee are: Moulton Green, Gwen Harger, William Webb, Nile Peterson, Loyd Rusty, Sally Peleg, Byron Bold, Edith Schilts, Regus, Byron Bold, Nina Green, Assistants and Committees Assistants And Committees The special projects assistants and their committees are Carol Buhler, Jordan Struad, Shannon McKim, Erl Robertson, Judy Torrey, Dick Wintermute, Ralph R. Smith, and Gene Wetzel, publicity. Carol Hastings and Royce Walz, secretarial. Joanne Quester, Nora Marie Will- (continued to pages eight) WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy. Cooler in extreme north. Scattered thunder- showers in south west today. Partly cloudy with scattered thunder- showers tonight and Tuesday. Low tonight 45 to 50 north to near 60 in south.