UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1 PAGE EIGHT APRIL 14,1947 42 Candidates InIW Primary Forty-two candidates for ASC representatives and class officers will run in the primary election of the Independent Women's political party April 15. The candidates for ASC representatives from District 1 are: Patricia Bosien, Corbin; Lucie Ralston, Locksley; Shirley Wellborn, Locksley; Hilda James, Foster; Alberta Moe, Templin; Barbara Staplen, Jattife; Dorothy Scroggy, Miller; Marvlee Masterson, Miller. Candidates for ASC representatives from District 3 are Betty Barlis, Corbin; Shirley Ousley, Miller; Mary Jane Zollinger, Looksley; Georgiana Bennington, Miller; Ellen Joyce Spurney, Corbin; Mary Pritchard, Templin. Harriet Graves, Miller; Lorraine Runsey, Locksley; Geradine Bobbitt, Jolliffe; Helen Hastings, Carruth; Joyce Rohrer, Miller. Senior Class Candidates Candidates for senior class office are: Treasurer: Frances Neal, Carruth Melian Minor. Templin. secretary; Mary Savory, Templin Ruth Brown, Corsin; Ruth Hibbs, Lockley; Helen Havey, Jollifer Meertha Joo Easter, Miller. Candidates for junior class officers are: Vice-president: Joan Strowig, Wat- liss; Margaret van der Smissen, Locsley; Grace B. Strong, Miller. Secretary: Cleearn Bradford, Carrath; Mildred Garrison, Locksley; Marvin Graham, Sleepy Hollow; Judie Oehrle, Miller. Sophomore class officer candidates 60.1 Vice-president: Shirley French Watkins; Donna Rumsey, Locksley; Beverly Smith, Templin; Betty Cooper, Corbary; Mary Hercules, Milton; Janet Rummer, Watkins; Margaret Betz, Corbin; Colleen Helm- hunger, Locksley; and Rosemary Lordrey, Miller. Candidates will meet in the Stud eent Unit at 7 p. m. today. High School Students Attend Music Festival Students from 50 Kansas high schools were on the University campus Saturday for the Kansas State District Music festival. The festival, which began at 8 a.m. and continued until 6 p.m., was arranged by Prof. Russell Wiley, director of the University band and orchestra. Participants from Liberty Memorial High School, University High School, and Lawrence Junior High School placed high in the competition. The top three ratings for each position, superior, superior, and excellent. No trait, second, or third placings were used. Judges for the vocal and instrumental soloists and ensemble groups were D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts; Edwin Stuntsion, Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia; Harlin Spring, director of music at Westport High school, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Milton, director of music at Southwest high school, Kansas City, Mo.; and John Dillington, music director at Hannibal, Mo., Bohp school. Students from the School of Fine Arts assisted with the contest. Distribution Staff Needed For Kan-Do Persons interested in working on a distribution staff for the next issue of Kan-Do should contact, Marquette van der Smissen, editor-in-chief, she said. Assignments for the next issue of the paper, which is the official newsletter of the Independent Student Journal, be presented out at the annual meeting Thursday. The eight-page issue, which will be published the first week in May, will be the last one this semester. 'The Face Is Familiar . . .' She won second in the Student Union Activities bathing beauty contest last semester. Blonde, tanned, and the owner of a maroon convertible, she has been known as the "ooh la la" girl. A College senior, she was majoring in Spanish. Mac, the man she married, gave her a cocker spaniel, named "Mac." All three are now living in New York. ☆ ☆ Friday's caricature was of R. M. David, professor of law, identity of today's "Face" will be found somewhere on this page. Brack Will Present Voice Recital Tonight E. M. Druck, tenor, will present his senior recital at 8 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. His program ranges from a recitative and aria from Handel's "Judas Mirabeneus" to "The Frog in the Spring." A Vermont folk-song. It includes numbers by Strauss, Mahler, Rubinstein, Delius, and the aria "Che Gelida Manina" from Puccini's opera "La Boheme." While serving in the army he was tenor soloist at the First Presbyterian church in Wilmington, N.C., and sang Verdí 'Requiem,' the "Eliiah," and "Messiah." He was the tenor soloist at the First Congregational church in Los Angeles, and in 1844 sang the tenor role in the "Messiah" with the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestra. Brack has appeared as soloist with the University Symphony orchestra this spring, also singing a solo with them at the recent Palm Sunday vespers. He plans to go to New York City for advanced study in voice and opera following his graduation in June. Brack, a pupil of Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, enrolled first as a pre-medic at the University, but changed to a voice major in the spring of 1941. On KFKU 2:30 Hammond recital, Edward Utley Today: 2.45 News from Mt. Oread, Tony croftier of University of Pittsburgh, Philadelphia 9:30-10:00 Symphonic Favorites, Chopin Piano Concerto in E Tuesday: 2:30 Art by Radio, Maud Ellsworth 9:30 University of Kansas Concert Band, Russell L. Wiley, director. 2:30 Musical Matinee Waugh Named ASC Candidate 9:30 To Ee Announced Thursday: 2. 39 Hammond recital, Edward Utley 2:45 Excursion in Science Wednesday: James Waugh, engineering junior has been elected Pachacamac candidate for the All Student Council presidency, in the spring election, April 24. 2:43 Excursion in Science 9:30 To Ee Announced 9:30 Women of Kansas—"Beauty Goes with These" 2. 45 Book Review Pachacamac and Pachacamac N.O. W, the women's branch of the party, will share the ballot, offering candidates jointly. 9:39 K.U. Sports Farade, Mike Stuart 2:30 Children's Musical Stuart 9:45 League of Women Voters Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District I are Richard Boyd, Samuel Hoover, Chester Laniewski, Keith Wilson, Eunice Carlson, Helen Heath, and Sue Webster. Today's "The Face Is Familiar" is Mary Jane Holzman. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District II are Charles Van Buskirk, Robert Brown, Charles T. Black, and Ralph Robertson. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District III are Joseph Delaney, William Hogan, Harrier Harlow, and Marjorie Stark, William McElhenny is the District IV candidate. Junior class officer candidates are LuAnne Powell, president, William Braum, vice-president; Gwen Harger secretary, and Samuel McCamant, treasurer. Senior class officer candidates are Otto Schnellbacher, president, Jack Eskridge, vice-president, Joan Woodward, secretary, and John Anderson, treasurer. Sophomore class officer candidates are Stanley England, president, Joan Vermillion, vice-president, Buell Schiltz, secretary, and Charles Lindberg, treasurer. Boy Scouts To Be Guests At Relays Boy Scouts from Kansas and Missouri will be guests of the University Athletic association, Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, and the Extension division at the Kansas relays next Saturday. "Seout visitation day" will begin with registration of all visiting scouts at 9 a.m. in Frank Strong School and will be given a ticket to the relays. In the afternoon the boys will attend the 22nd annual Kansas relays. Scouts have been invited from the following districts: "Se Kan" with headquarters at Independence; Jay-Clark; Lincoln City; City, Kan; "Pony Express", St. Joseph, Mo.; and the Kansas City area council from Kansas City, Mo. Bundles Of Pink May Bring $100 For Some Proud Papa In 1967 Here's a chance for some lucky K.U. papa to win a prize of $100 in 1967. That money is offered each year by the National Father's Day committee, to the American father of the largest living family. But, here's the catch: Last year's winner, George Davis, was the father of 20 children. There's still hope, though. Davis has been declared ineligible in order that those papas whose tribes have increased during the past year might have a chance. Republicen Labor Group Defends Union Control Bill Washington. —(UP)—Republican members of the house labor committee today defended their sweeping union control bill as a weapon to free workers from "a tyranny more despotic than one could think possible in a free country." The majority report said the American working man "has been deprived of his dignity as an individual" for the past 14 years. The report blamed the New Deal labor laws which it said were "ill-copeeived and disastrously executed." G.M. Announces Wage Boost Detroit—(UP)—General Motors corporation announced today it had reached an agreement with the CIO United Electrical Workers union providing 15-cent hourly wage increases, effective today, for more than 30,000 employees. Disarmament Plan Ready Won't That $^{\$}(-!?; (£!&: Phone Ever Ring Again? Moscow.—(UP)—Gen. George C Marshall was ready today to submit to the Big Four council a 40-year plan for permanent disarmament of Germany, backed by assurance that in any case the United States was in Europe to stay. Fly Aid To Homeless San Antonio—(UP)—Eight C-47 transport planes were enlisted today in the campaign to provide housing for hundreds of homeless residents of tornado-torn Woodward, Okla. The planes were slated to carry 60,000 pounds of tarpaulins and tent stoves to the stricken Oklahoma area. Woman's morale sinks lower and lower. Seven nights and not a single buzz from an Amchel! The general cry of the female population is, "It's awful!" "You get that intellectual but isolated feeling, home all alone with the books, with not even one phone call to break into the evening," complained Joan Gregory, College freshman Maybe women and taxi owners take a dim view of the situation, but Norma McMullin, switchboard operator at an organized house, said that though calls are zero, callers are as numerous as ever. "They're just more unexpected and have to wait longer for their dates. It's kind of wearing on our magazines," she said. Norma threw in a remark about getting too much studying done herself. Taxi Drivers Play Checkers But while women eye reproachfully the silent instrument on the phone desk, the boys down at the taxi station draw up their chairs for business and ask "What business from the Hill?" asked the boss when he walked into the station. "Pretty dull around here," said a yawning driver. "Guss the fellows are walking their dates." Men Aren't Disturbed Another taxi service commented that its usual 150 to 175 calls to the University has dwindled to scattered emergency calls and a few time calls placed personally before the taxi was wanted. "None," the drivers chorused, grinning happily. "Absolutely none!" he men don't seem to be greatly disturbed by it. "The strike makes for more dates," said Kenny Davis, College sophomore. "It eliminates the date-hungry male who sits down with five phone numbers in his hand and manages a conversational evening on five nickels. Now he actually has to take a woman out and show her a good time, which everyone knows can't be done on five nickels." Pinball Crowd Is Same The eternal gang around the pinball machine at a local night spot didn't seem any larger than usual. Just to keep the records straight, one of the players turned around and said, "This strike doesn't bother us. We merely isn't got sex appeal." And then there is the fellow who leamed over the counter at the Union fountain and declared, "The fact that the phones aren't working isn't nearly as important to date averages as women think it is. Nothing will ever be able to beat personal contact. After all, you can't kiss a telephone." Figuring at the rate of one new baby a year from now on, any one of the University's proud papas could be eligible sometime in the 1960's. The contest is open to every male citizen of the United States, and sponsors of the contest are urging all interested daddies to compete for the prize. Entries should be made to the National Father's Day committee, 50 East 42nd street, New York 17. Prospective fathers are urged to clip this article for reference in 20 years or so. Traffic Violators 'To Remove Tickets' Traffic violation tickets should be removed before cars are moved, Robert Corwin. University traffic patrolman, said today. Any person caught using old tickets and changing the date on the stubs will be punished. Corwin warned. "Some city ordinance violators are still failing to appear in police court," he said. "It's for their own good if they do." The patrolman also warned drivers to watch the 20 mile-an-hour speed limit while driving on the campus. Honor Roll (Continued from page one) derson, Donald Henning, Walter Hulen. Joseph Hull, Paul Jackson, David S. Jones, Don B. Jones, James K. nehl, William Kiene, Carl Klaus, William Krall, Stewart Lambers, Verness Lamping, Donald Luffel, Victor Mathews, Richard Matzdorff, Russell Mesler, Donald Owen, Robert Pepper, James Ralls, Marion Raper, Bob Roberts, John Robinson, Eugene Sabin, Warren Shaw. Kenneth Sleigh, William Sonnenberg, Leo Spector, Robert Sterrett, William Stringer, Winton Studt, James Thornton, L. Duane Walrafen, Gerald Wilson, Wayne Wilson, Jack Winter. Freshmen; Billy Adams, Lawrence Allred, Glen Anschutz, John Ashby, Maynard Bauleke, Jack Beeman, Robert Beu, Rupert Bledsoe, Robert Bowersock, Edward Brass, Fred Brinkman, Melvin Brown Herbert Bueholt, Edward Burns, Edwin Carpenter, Edward Cause, David Carpenter, Alfred Case, Bruce Chad-wick, Lyle Chapman, Edward Cheram-y, Myron Click, Dale Clinton, Calvin Coombs, William Corman, Davis Crawford. Paul Dillon, Charles Dutton, Clint Edwards, Stanley England, William Faris, Victor Ferraro, Jack Fink, David Foley, Robert Ford, George Frazer, Thomas Fuller, Clark Grissold, Eugene Halbert, Howard Hamacher, Charles Harris; John P. Harris, Richard Heiny, Jack Herron, James Hunt, Robert Hutton, Joseph Keil, Robert Kite William Leib, Wayne Lewis, William McDonald, Guy Mabry, Clinton Maiden, Boyd Marts, John Meyer, Walter Michaelis, Bertram Miller, Rodney N. Miller, William E. Miller, Edison Mincheff, Ralph Moon, Chester Moore, George J. Moore, John Nelson, Ernest Neuer, James Oram, James R. Page, Donald Payne. Charles Penny, Allan Persson, Richard Philips, Francis Prosser, Richard Raidt, Elwyn Reynolds, John Robb, Dae Ree, Arthur Roth, Gor- dassel, Dessel Seamans, Neal Shaw, David Seaman, Mull, Jerome Smith, Lowell E. Smith, Stanley M. Smith, Richard Stewart, Jack Stines. Robert Tally, Robert Thayer, John Thimesch, George Thomas, Robert Unholtz, Donald Vesper, David Von Niederhausern, Carl Von Wanden, Charles Walker, Marvin Wanbaugh, Ronald Weddle, Herbert Weidensauh, Harry Wheeler, Harold Wilde, Clayton Williams, Charles Woodcock, William Worford, Stanley Wright.