PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FEBRUARY 10,1947 Religious Emphasis Week Will Bring National, State Ministers Religious Emphasis week will come to the campus Feb. 22, and with it will come 13 church leaders, including representatives from England, Mexico and China. Convocations, informal discussions, classroom sessions, and faculty meetings on all phases of religion, will be included in the week's activities in internademational The program is interdenominational. Conversions will be held Feb 24. and 27. Speaker at the first convocation will be the Rev. Bryan Green, vicar of Holy Trinity, London. The second convocation is being held in cooperation with a state-wide ministers conference, and will be addressed by Dr. Daniel Poling, director of the Baptist Temple in Philadelphia, and editor of the Christian Herald. Dean Paul B. Lawson, pastor of the in charge of the program for the in-West Side Presbyterian church, is tridenominational conference. Mrs. Mary Missle Amelung of the Home Missions council of North America, has been appointed part-time executive-secretary for Religious Emphasis week, and will direct program coordination. Other religious leaders taking part in the project are Dr. Homer Armstrong, minister of the Judson Memorial Baptist church, and a student at the University in 1921; the Rev. Gene E. Bartlett, minister to students at the University of Missouri; Miss Lois Crozier, Topeka national student director of the YWCA in the Rocky Mountain region; Samuel Dean, professor of mechanical engineering and architecture at Peking National Teachers college Peking, China. Rabbit Morton C. Fierman, associate pastor of Congregational B'nai Shuhadh, Kansas City, Mo.; the Rev. Henry D. Jones, director of Dodge Christian Community house, Detroit; Phillips Moulton, director of the University Christian mission, New York City. John Oliver Nelson, director of the Commission on the Ministry, Federal Council of Churches, New York, and editor of the Intercolegialian; Dr. Victor Obenahaus, associate professor of social ethics of the Chicago Theological seminary; and Dr. Daniel Poling, director of the Baptist Temple in Philadelphia, and editor of the Christian Herald. 'Y' Forums Speaker MARY BREED ☆ ☆ Mary Breed, Y.W.C.A. president will speak on "The Challenge of Youth to Higher Education" at 4 p.m. February 17, in the Pine room of the Union. This will be the first in a series of forums sponsored by the Y.M.-Y.W on Higher Education and our Christian Heritage, Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. secretary, said today. Betty van der Smissen and Dale Rummer are co-chairman of the planning committee for the forums to be held on succeeding Mondays. Dr. Baez-Camargo of Mexico will be the second speaker, February 24. Stand Back Gals, Line Forms On The Right For The University's Most Dateable Male Take out your "little black book." girls. Nine "most datable" males on the campus will be chosen by three women, faculty members for the Sweetheart Swing Saturday. Top man of the nine M.D.M.'s will not be known as the Greatest, but simply as "the" most dateable male, according to Oral W. Vandiver, *c* the dance publicity committee. Phone numbers of these men will dates or the day, nine visiting coeds, have gone back to their balliwicks, Vandiver sold today. The nine guests will arrive Saturday. GY: John McGuckin, chairman of the committee to select dates, will study descriptions of the coeds and the older M. D. M.'s, and the committee will pair them. Vandiver explained. "We hope to get them as nearly as possible the same height, and of similar personalities," he said. Other points the committee will consider in choosing the "nine" will be reputation, likes, and dislikes, he added. "Being married won't necessarily disqualify a man if his wife appo-ves." Vandiver said. Selection of contest winners is scheduled for today, and names will be announced this week. A Union "open house" will be held Saturday from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m., according to Vandiver. All rooms will be open to all students, with special displays appropriate to each room. The dance will be sponsored by the Union Activities committee as a Valentine's day celebration. The committee will furnish a guide for students, Vandiver said. Rosemary Alderman, chairman of the Union public relations committee, Mrs. Dorothy Farner, assistant instructor of German and Dr. James Coleman, assistant professor of psychology will choose the "most typical college couple" at the dance's intermission Saturday night, Vandiver said. will be in charge of the open house. The visiting coeds will be presented to Mayor C. B. Russell, at the Union and the party will leave for a tour of the campus and downtown. The parade will end at the chancellor's office where the women will be welcomed by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Winners will be presented prizes valued over $150, including an orchid corsage, a bouquet of sweetheart roses, and jewelry, credit at Lawrence stores, and free portraits. A reception for all new men students will be held at 7:30 p.m. toorrow in Frank Strong auditorium, according to Don Pomeroy, chairman of the YMCA student activities committee. You, Too, Can Make Good in College, Says Y.M.C.A. "How to Make Good in College," will be the subject of a panel discussion by student leaders. After the discussion new students will meet with student counselors. Italians Rip U.S. Flag In Protest To Treaty Rome. (UP)—Rioting Italians protesting the signing of the Italian peace treaty today smashed into the Yugoslav military mission building and unfurled the Italian flag from a balcony. The incident came after disturbances in Piazza Venezuela where 25,000 Italians, gathered for "National Mourning," ripped an American flag to shreds. The attack on the U.S. flag occurred after a 10-minute period of silence in protest against the treaty came to an end. The demonstrators seized a laurel wreath six feet in diameter bearing an American flag from the tomb of the unknown soldier where it was placed last week by American Ambassador James C. Dunn. Congress Will Act On Portal-Pay Suits Washington. (UP) — Republican leaders assured industry today that congress will move speedily to deal with portal-pay issues left unclear by dismissal of the Mt. Clemens, Mich., pottery workers case. Federal Judge Frank A. Picard held in a test case Saturday that, in general, portal-to-portal claims of labor unions against manufacturing industries are invalid. Austrian Duke Gives Grim Picture Of Europe Dallas. (UP)—The political outlook in Europe is almost as hopeless as the economic situation, according to Archduke Otto. Hapsburg pretender to the Austrian throne. The Archduke was a weekend guest in Dallas. He said heating facilities are needed abroad more desperately than food, declaring that cold causes more suffering than hunger. Criticizes GOP Leadership Washington. (UP) George J. Berger, director of the National Federation of Small Business, today criticized what he termed "a lack of Republican leadership" in the house. He specifically attacked the GOP leadership for not giving a go-ahead to a bill by Rep. Walter C. Ploeser, R., Mo., to recreate the House Small Business committee. Through These Snowy Portals Pass The Coldest Students In The Whole World This snow-touched scene of the entrance of Frank Strong hall is a familiar winter sight to students braving the polar blasts which sweep Mount Oread. The proverbial barbed-wire fence which is supposed to shield Kansans from the icy winds seems to be down this winter, the coldest in Kansas in a score of years. Suggestion to new students: Get all classes in one building. Drama Department To Give 'Midsummer Nights Dream' "A Midsummer Night's Dream will be presented by the department of Speech and Drama, March 11. 12, and 13, the department announced today. *Madecmoiseille* College Editor Will Visit K.U. Feb. 19 Miss Betty Clea Schmid, college board travel editor for Mademoiselle magazine, will visit K. U. February 19 to conduct interviews with campus leaders, Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, said today. Let's Go Out Tonight Nothing to Study Tonight and the Finals are a Thing of the Past. Start Out the Semester with a Fine Evening of Dancing--Dining and Fun at THE SKYLINE FOR EARLY RESERVATIONS Phone 3339 2233 HASKELL Ge In The tenen mem Jacq Metta appe cert the Jarn Czoc cont Frer