PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FEBRUARY 14. 1947 Student United Nations Delegates Will Discuss International Issues Four international issues—world disarmament, Franco Spain, control of atomic energy, and the Dardenelles—will be discussed at the Student United Nations conference in Hoch auditorium Feb. 27. Recommendations on these issues will be presented to the general assembly of the conference. The recommendations will be drawn up at meetings to be held in Fraser auditorium at 4:30 p.m. on the following days: Monday, Dardenelles; Tuesday, disarmament; Wednesday, Franco Spain, and Thursday, atomic energy. Thirty-five countries will have delegations at the conference. Supervisors and delegates for the various countries follow; United States, Jean Moore, Ernest Eskelin, Marilyn Schneckel, William Conboy, Helen Heath, Ralph Kiene, William Mitchell, Ada Hopke, and Allen Cromley. Russia, Harold Hierriott, Mrs. George Mendenhall, Byron Schutz Charles Marsh, James Scott, Lloyd Crant, Phillip Hill, Paul Dillion, Richard Raney, Roland Gidney, Frank Tyler, Donald Roberts, Ronald Roberts, Richard McKellar, and Marshall Fryer. England, Kansas City university. Australia, James Crook. Warren Huff, William Mullarky, Clifford Reynolds, Andrew Berry, Jack Beeeman, Joseph Brown, Lennie Moe, and Aubrey Bradley. France, Orville Roberts, Kathryn O'Leary, Joan Joseph, Joan Stevenson, Frank Stannard, Gwendolyn Singer, Glenn Varenhost, Walter Crockett, Jack Dillard, Daniel Kirkhous and Kathleen McClanahan. Canada, Robert Judy, Donald Vockey, Charles Crowley, Robert Hall, Gary Storm, Jack Harken, Albert Cornwell, Joan Degen- lard, Albert Fuller. China, Jack Shanahan, Constance Dean, Kathryn Pickens, Margaret Lawler, John Hinde, George Peterson, and Nile Peterson. Belgium. Arthur Partridge, Eugene Martin. Reed Hoffman, Walter Hoffman. Robert Mowry, John Crump, and Ben Foster. Egypt, Keith Wilson, Shirley Liem, Benz Edwards, Margaret O'Neil, Carl Henrichson, Warren Bowman, J. C. Halliburton, and Harold E. Jones. Netherlands, Dolores Custer, Anne Schaeffer, Mary Jo Moxley, Virginia Daniels, and Janice Nattier. Arabia, Abraham Persky, Luster Main, Wayne Miller, Clark Thomas, and Richard Lowe. Iraq. Robert Oberhelman, Nancy Slater, Patricia Ferguson, Martha Goodrich, Helen Pillar, Paul Barker, and James Baker. Philippines, Kenneth Beasley, Mary Je Hoffman, Elizabeth Sifers, Martha Metcalf, Shirley Hoyt, George Gorman, and Richard Heiny. Cuba, Elizabeth Evans, Bernice Brady, Betty Brothers, Dorothy James, Marilyn Carlson, Eileen O'Connor, and Barbara Haffner. Sweden. Joan Woodward, Joyce Harlearod. Sally Sandifer, Dorothy Wood. and Shannon McKimm. Iran. Newell Jenkins, Marian Maryam, Mina Zimmerman, and Ebolf Hussein Pern, Hilda James, Esther Calvin Byman, Beverly Semen and Jack Huck. Czeckoslavakia, Dorothy Hesch- Wichita U. Joins Collegiate U. N. The University of Wichita has been accepted as the 17th charter member of the National Intercollegiate United Nations association, and will send a delegation to the first national convention to be held at the University this November, Jean Moore, national chairman, announced today. Martin Pice, sophomore at the University of Wichita, has been appointed to represent the association on that campus. Moore will leave Friday for the University of Missouri where he will confer with Edward Junkham, national secretary, on coordinating the committees of the various member universities and colleges, and to draw up the final agenda from a list of questions selected by the executive committee. meyer, Ernest Dewey, Vern Schneider, Evelyn Kerschen, and Ruth Williams. Mexico, Dean Postlethwaite, Jessie Estrada, Richard Stucky, Arthur Nystrom, Billy Beeson, Stephen Ellsworth, and June Ward. Uruguay, Endel Nininger, Mary Jane Corsaut, James Dittmer, Rozanne Croff, and Mary Lou Davis. Yugoslavia. Ernest Freisen, Elaine Walker, Ralph Moon, Ralph Simmons, Edward Huycke, Sally Underwood, Marcella Stewart, Russell Fowler, George Caldwell, Barbara Ford, Georgann Eylar, and Ann Learned. Venezuela. Herbert Coles, Lois Skinner, Wilma Hildebrand, Jay Grimm, and Alice Wismer. Turkey, Bruce Bathurst, John Kennedy, William Chaffant, Robert Bray, Harold Hanshaw, Amos Glad, and Bailey Chaney. Denmark, Beth Bell, Eva Humphrey, Doreen Wallace, Doris Tihen and Peggy Graber. Costa Rica. Jose Portuquez, Carlos Aguiar, Alvaro Chavaria, Isabelle Moya, Judith Quiros, Armando Rivas, Evalengio Rounda, Alfonso Torres, Fernando Torres, and Mariva Torres. Greece, William Vandiver, Wilma Hildebrand, Kate Hanauer, Frances Maclver, William Douglas, and William Binter. New Zealand. Elaine Sawyer, Everett Bell, William Stewart, Donald Lamb, and Walter Bowers. Bolivia. Betty van der Smissen, Roman Altibrand and Robert Meyer. Formel Altibrand und Robert Meyer. Union of South Africa Marietta Rose Owens Rose Ann Maddekin and Shireen Holland Brazil, William Tincher, George Pyle, Arnold England, James Jackson, Robert Richter, Armando Rodriguez, and John Peard. India, Otis Hill, F. W. Spencer, Robert Koenig, Stanley Roberts, Ruby Kauffman, and Alice Golds- worthy. Norway, Thomas Scoval, William Black, James Connell, Donald Wyman, John Gunther, and Christine Moe. Syria, Virginia Powell, Delmer Harris, Phillip Carlson, and Donna Munn. Chile, Y.W.C.A. Opera Ensemble Uses K.U. Halls' Furniture Using the red and white candy stripped love seat and chair from Watkins hall and other pieces from Battenfield hall, the Episcopal church, and the dramatics department, the Metropolitan Operatic Ensemble presented scenes from seven operas in Hoch auditorium last night. The group, composed of Jasque Gerard, tenor; Jarmila Novotna, soprano; Herta Glas, contralto; and Martial Music, basso, performed in costume before an estimated audience of 3.000 people. The two hour concert was the fourth university concert attraction of the year. Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, spoke at a business meeting of the Sunflower chapter of the K.U. Dames, Wednesday. K.U. Dames Hear Tompkins Three Football Men Will Receive Awards Ray Evans, Otto Schnellbacher, and Dave Schmidt will be presented All-Big Six football rings at the half of the basketball game tomorrow night between Kansas and Nebraska. Football Coach Geroge Sauer will make the presentations. The three men were chosen on the all-Big Six football team for the past season. The rings are a gift from the Omaha World-Herald. Senator Introduces Rent Legislation Washington, (UP)-Sen. C. Douglas Buck, R., Del., introduced legislation today which would permit rent boosts to 10 per cent and substitute court enforcement for rent control by OPA. The rent measure would freeze rent ceilings as of Dec. 31, 1946 authorize landlords to increase rents 10 per cent above those ceilings, end OPA's jurisdiction over rent control, vest the enforcement job in the courts, and end all governmental controls on rooms, apartments and houses that were rented for the first time after Dec. 31, 1946. Truman-Senate Battle Seen In Approval of A.E.C. Head Washington. (UP) — Only strong backing by Senate President Arthur H. Vandenburg can save David E. Lilienthal's appointment to head the Atomic Energy commission, senate sources believed today. The issue promised to bring President Truman his first showdown with the new Republican senate majority. Mr. Truman reaffirmed his support of Mr. Lilienthal in the strongest terms Thursday when he rejected Republican demands to withdraw the appointment. U.S. Superfortresses In Russian Possession Washington. (UP)—Soviet Russia still has in her possession at least 3 American superfortresses which she confiscated after they made forced landings in Siberia during the war, the Army Air Forces said today, Crew members were held in internment camps. A fourth B-29 crashed on Russian soil, but AAF sources did not indicate whether it was in operational condition. The other three, however, would be ideal models from which to work if the Russians wanted to build long-range bombers, AAF designers said. Russia Revives Program To Scrap Atomic Bombs Lake Success, N. Y. (UF)—Andrei Gromyko of Russia revived the widely-opposed Soviet plan for an international atomic treaty today and touched off a new duel with the United States in the United Nations security council. The Russian proposal calls for a world pacf to outlaw atomic bombs and require countries owning the weapons to scrap them. London. (UP)—Britain passed the crisis point in her fuel battle today and appeared able to pull through without the American coal offered by President Truman. Britons Breathe Easier As Coal Begins To Move Rising temperatures and a speedup in the flow of coal to the electric power plants helped to maintain essential services and rebuild stockpiles. Lansford, Pa. (UP)—Six thousand anthracite miners in the Panther valley struck today in support of 13 fellow workers staging a sit-down 800 feet underground. The miners, staging a sidowd strike in a mine shaft caused the closing of the Lansford colliery. More than 2,000,000 were unemployed by the forced industrial shutdown. Miners Strike Underground U.S. Will Not Close Border Washington. (UP)—Dr. Autonic Espinosa De Los Monteros, the Mexican Ambassador, says he has been assured that the United States will not close the U. S.-Mexican border. The state department reportedly had been considering the step because of the epidemic of hoof and mouth disease in Mexico. Women Going To Learn To Drive At K.U. Because of the increased interest in drivers' training courses in many high schools, the University extension division is offering a one-week course this summer to teach methods of safe driving and automobile operation to men and women who intend to act as high-school instructors. Women are going to be taught to drive at K.U. Statistics show that high school students have compiled the worst record of any age group in regard to safety in driving. A boy 16 to 18 years old has five times as great a chance of being involved in an accident as a man 45 to 50. Norman Keys will teach the course, which will include in its 40 hours of instruction four hours behind the wheel of a dual-control car. The extension division will also cooperate with Kansas City university in presenting a similar course there Mar. 17-21 for teachers in Kansas City. Glamour Girls Convertibles Shine In Rally Escorded by the band and led by eight visiting beauty queens riding in convertibles. K.U. students will parade up Jayhawk drive as a feature of the rally tomorrow morning. The rally is scheduled to begin at 10:15 in the Union lounge and at 10:40 the procession will leave the Union to wind up Jayhawk drive to Lindley hall nad back to the lounge where Chancellor Deane W. Malott will welcome the visitors. Because of the parade, no parking will be allowed on Jayhawk drive until noon tomorrow, according to Chester Foster, K.U. traffic officer. Cheerleaders Alberta Cornwell Joan Woodward, Dorothy Serogry Richard Wintermote, and Rachel Cooper will have a new routine and vell. "Whistle Boom." Lawson To Speak Dr. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, will speak at the regular meeting of the Westminster foundation Sunday evening at Westminster hall. The subject of his talk will be "Christianity on the Campus." Union Activities Sponsors New Forum Informal discussions between faculty members and students will take place twice a month in the Kansas room this semester. Sponsored by the coffee and forums committee of the Union activities, the meeting will feature a different faculty member each time. Speakers will be given complete freedom on the choice of subjects they wish to discuss, according to Carolyn Campbell, chairman of the committee. "The purpose of these forums is to obtain better understanding between faculty members and students," Miss Campbell stated. The first meeting will be held the latter part of this month. 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