C University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, Nov. 12, 1946 44th Year No.36 Lawrence, Kansas Veterans Lead Business School Honor Roll Veterans-monopolized all but two of the 43 positions on the honor roll of the School of Business for the summer session at the University of Kansas, Dean Frank T. Stockton announced today. All 21 seniors on the honor roll are veterans. Of the 21 juniors all but one man and one woman are veterans. One special student made the list. He is Peter M. MacDonald of Salina, a veteran of the Royal Air force. Seniors making all "A" grades are: Winfield S. Harvey, Salina; Lloyd M. Jones, Osage City; John H. Motley and Edward R. Sims, Kansas City, Mo.; and Robert A. Walker, Acme, Wyo. Three juniors made straight "A"s. They are Robert A. Page, ElDorado Robert Wright, Fowler; and Goodroom, Sooner, Marionville, Mo. Names are listed on the honor roll in order of their grade point averages. Juniors; Robert A. Page, Eldorado; Goodreau Soper, Marionville, Mo; Robert Wright, Fowler; James Maloney, Wichita; Alan Miller, Boner Springs; Edwin Mahood, Kansas, Mo; Duane A. James, Independence; Ray C. Smith, Caney; Kenneth R. Anderson, Olathe Charles A. Dillon, Kansas City, Mo.; Everett M. O'Connor, Lawrence; John E. Sparling, Jr., Oneida; Don Traitwein, Salina; Willis Wheeler, Sunflower Village; Raymond Zimmerman, Burlingame; Phil S. Borden, Kansas City, Mo.; Ada L. Copk, Coldwater; Clayton McMurray, Kansas City; John Shelton, Great Bend; William W. Burt, To- Seniors: Winfield S. Harvey, Satina; Lloyd M. Jones, Osage City; John H. Motley, Kansas City, Mo; Edward R. Sims, Kansas City, Mo; Robert A. Walker, Acme, Wyo.; Eldon L. Lackey, Hutchinson; Ellsworth Stephens, Lawrence; Austir LeRoy Covey, Lawrence; William P Meek, Kansas City; Heard R. Amber, Fall River; Jack Armstrong Wellington; Edwin A. Ham, Sunflower Village; John A. Morgan, San Benito, Texas. James J. Riche, Stansbury Stockton, Marvin B. Allen (deceased), Lawrence; Byron W. Caskey, Independence; Harold D. Dufek, Hutchinson; Charles Gudger, Lawrence; Norman L. Cochran, Milo, Mo; Dwane E. Billie, Iola. M.U. Game Tickets Sold Out; 30 Remain For Kansas State All tickets for the football game at Missouri on Nov. 23 were sold out at 10:30 this morning at the athletic business office. About 30 tickets for the Kansas State game remained. No more tickets will be available for either game. WEATHER Kansas- Clear to partly cloudy today, tonight and Wednesday. Low tonight 26-32 except between 10-20 extreme northwest. Bob Bock, Now A State Representative, Lavs Plans For His First Legislature Here is Earl 'Round Man' Stanton Jr., who uses his weight to good advantage both in the Phi Gamma Delta intramural football team line and in the Pachacamaac's political activities. Earl, a member of Pachacamaac's Inner circle and a College sophomore from Leavenworth, admitted he weighs "over 200," said he'd lost 20 pounds from his summer peak. (Daily Kansan photo by Robert Line) ISA Award Winner Will Be Named Soon "I'm going to remember Alexander Pope's line, 'Tools rush in where angels fear to tread' and keep my feet on the ground," Robert Bock. K. U. student and newly-elected representative to the Kansas legislature, told the Daly Kansan today. The winner of the I.S.A. scholarship will be announced next week, Lorraine Carpenter, I.S.A. president, said today. The candidates will be judged today by the University Scholarship committee and two members of the I.S.A. council. Qualifications for the award are based on scholarship, personality, and need. The scholarship is a cash award of $50 given each semester to the most deserving independent student. Each candidate is given a personal interview with the judging committee. The winner of the award for next semester will be announced in January. Miss Carpenter said. Bock expects to plug for resubmission, educational improvements, and the 18-year-old vote. He hopes to be appointed to the education committee and the committee on federal and state affairs which, he thinks, would help him in the law "I'm going down to Topeka the first week in January," Bock explained, "but I'm coming back to take finals. I intend to take five hours of a senior seminar in political science under Dr. Frederick Guild, director of the research department of the legislative council, at Topeka next semester. "Then. if I am admitted, I will return to K. U. next summer and enter the law school to try for a combined degree," he added. studies he expects to take up soon. Officials To Probe Rough Intramurals An investigation of Monday's Alpha Tau Omega-Kappa Sigma touch football game, called "the roughest game this year," will be held at 4:30 p.m. today by the intramural executive board. Kappa Sigma won, 18 to 0, in a game which was interrupted by a fight and in which there was consid- erable "slugging, fighting, and kicking," according to observers. "The intramural department is going to make a full investigation of the affair," Don Powell, intramural supervisor, said "and the responsible parties will suffer the consequences." Love And Marriage Today The sixth meeting of the Love and Marriage forum will be at 4 today in Fraser theater. Miss Esther Twente, associate professor of sociology, will speak on "The Family, a Social Institution." Gangway! Being Early Won't Help For Basketball Tickets Watkins library needs a traffic cop. Each hour between classes students, enjoying their 10-minute break, gather in the doorway and create a bottleneck. Your application for basketball tickets will be just as good later this week as at the opening minute at 8 a.m. tomorrow, Earl Falkenstien, athletic business manager, emphasized today. "All the seats will be unreserved," he said, "and an application made early next week or later this week will get the same chance at good seats as the first one made tomorrow. There isn't any reason for students to stand in line the first day." C. M. Baker, library director, suggests that students can eliminate the jam by moving out onto the steps for their cigarettes or conversation. you have a week, beginning tomorrow, in which to apply for tickets to half the home cage season. Only activity book holders are eligible for this early priority sale. Court To Decide Midweek Case The second round of a legal bout between Joan Woodward, chairman of the Union Activities committee, and Larry McSpadden, Varsity dance manager, will open in Green hall's arena at 7:15 tonight. Attorneys for plaintiff and defendant will present their closing arguments before the student court on the dispute over which of the two parties has the power to hold Midweek dances. Malcolm Miller, chief justice, said the court will probably reach a decision. At the opening session of the court, defense counsel John Q. Royce and Charles Knapp, after plaintiff's testimony and cross-examination, demurred to the evidence. In effect, the demurrer meant that no case had been presented because evidence failed to show the plaintiff had any power to hold a Midweek dance. Justice Miller overruled the demurrier, making it possible for the court to hear new evidence tonight. Court is open to the public. King Outlines Plans For British Nationalization London (UP)—King George VI opened a new session of parliament under exceptional security precautions today with an announcement that the labor government will nationalize electricity and the nation's inland transportation system. The richest display of medieval pomp since pre-war days was in evidence as the king read to the assembled lords and commoners his speech—written for him by Prime Minister Clement Attlee's cabinet—outlining the next steps in the labor government's program to socialize Britain. Included in the inland transport to be nationalized, labor sources said, will be British railroads, canals, docks, buses, and certain other road transport services. The king announced the government's intention to continue conscription of men for the armed forces. The monarch pledged Britain's cooperation in the United Nations, asked for reduction of the financial burden of the German occupation, urged an early treaty with Austria, pledged elections next year in Burma, assured continuance of the present policy toward India, asked a stable and just settlement in Japan, and promised Britain's best efforts to increase international trade and prevent unemployment internationally. The program, as outlined in general terms, showed that Prime Minister Attlee's government planned to move steadily ahead on its broad nationalization policy. Omissions from the speech suggested that the government may be yielding to opposition against nationalization of the iron and steel industry. Berlin. (UP)—Soviet army troops reportedly were moving in to strengthen the guard around industrial plants in Russian-occupied Germany today Little Man On Campus "Holy Smoke—ifen Pa could only see THIS one!"