PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS OCTOBER 1.1946 There Aren't Too Many Cooks It takes lots of food to keep those Union cafeteria lines moving. Reading from left to right, Mrs. Katie Anderson, Mrs. Elvie Armstrong, Miss Pearl Kitsmiller, supervisor, and Mrs. Leona Wolf make sure the serving pass are well filled. They Serve 7,500 Meals A Day, But Hungry Students Still Are Piling In Nearly 7,500 meals a day are being served in the Union on all floors except the main lounge, and the peak has not yet been reached. Miss Hermina Zipple, Union director, announced today. New tables and chairs to seat 500 have been installed in the ballroom. A quick buffet service in the Kansas room for faculty members has been added to the regular Union food services, the second floor eateria and the fountain, to relieve the feeding problem created by the record enrollment, Miss Zipple said. Cafeteria service will be operated seven days a week with breakfast being served from 6:45 until 10 a.m.; lunch, 11 a.m. until 2 p.m., and dinner from 5 until 7 p.m. Miss Zipple urged that students take advantage of the 1 to 2 p.m. lunch hour and avoid the double line that forms for both cafeterias at the 12 to 1 p.m. hour. Members of the cafeteria staff this year are Miss Libuse Kriz, head dictician, and food supervisors, Miss Roth Cadwell, Mrs. Hazel Long, Ms. Nell Kuhlman, Miss Pearl Kitmiller and Mary Strain. A cheek of the average amount spent daily in the cafeteria, revealed that $1.25 or less a day will provide sufficient portions of a balanced diet, from a varied menu of both d'hote and a la carte, three meals a day, Miss Zippe related. About 1,500 pounds of potatoes are consumed daily. Amounts of other items that make up a typical day's menu are 2,160 eggs, 6,000 pounds of meat, 250 loaves of bread, 1,500 rolls, 50 pounds of butter, 60 chickens, 3,200 half pints of milk, 450 quarts of milk, 60 quarts of cream, 54 gallons of green beans, 8 crates of cauliflower, 4 crates of carrots, and 1 crate of lettuce. A cafeteria in the Union anney at Sunflower, directed by Mrs. Clara Yelton, is open to students and other persons not connected with the University and is under lease from htm army ordnance department. At least 2,200 persons are expected to eat in dormitories and organized houses. It is estimated that 700 students are living in Lawrence where they have cooking facilities and will be able to go home for the noon meal. Possibly 300 will carry lunches and up to 600 will be able to eat at the restaurants near the campus. Klein Has Appendectomy Paul Klein, College junior, underwent an appendectomy at Watkins hospital Monday. His condition is good, hospital authorities reported today. Miss Kriz Is Dietician 253 Men Enroll In R.O.T.C. Courses A total of 170 have signed in the navy,49 of them under provisions of the Holloway bill which requires students to complete a course of training afloat. About 253 University men have enrolled in the army and navy R.O.-T.C. programs, Capt John D. Peterson, navy commander, and Col. John Alfrey, army commander, announced today. Mrs. Leona Wolf uses a king-sized stirring paddle as she helps prepare food under the direction of Miss Libuse Kriz, cafeteria dietician. Eighty-three men are enrolled in the army program, Col. Alfrey said. Thirty-one are enrolled in air corps training, 15 in advanced coast artillery, 8 in the infantry, 19 in first year basic training course, and 10 in the second year basic course. Students Must Wait For Library Books Building facilities and limitations are main causes for delay at the reserve desks in Watson library, but the problem of congestion is being considered, C. M. Baker, director of the library, said today. With the size of the University almost double that of previs years, r. Baker pointed out that students checking out books must wait in line in the library as elsewhere on the campus. The library is now keeping a full staff of five working at the reserve desk from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Books need not be kept in the rooms from which they are checked if seating space is not available. Library rules forbid persons to take reserve books from the building, Mr. Baker added. Parkinson Is Chairman Of Psychology Organization Robert Parkinson was elected chairman of the graduate colloquium, an organization of the staff and graduate students of the department of psychology, at the first meeting Monday night in Frank Strong hall. Dr. C. Hess Haagen, assistant professor of psychology, was chosen chairman of the program committee. The colloquium voted a fee for refreshments and for subscription to the University Journal of Psychology. New graduate students were introduced. Employment Office Needs Men To Work In Cafeteria The men's employment office has announced that out of a total of 296 job applicants, no one has applied for Union cafeteria work. Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, said that the office has placed 80 persons in permanent and 44 in temporary positions. It is encouraging local merchants to employ University students, and still is trying to find someone to send to the cafeteria. Teams having games Monday will be notified by telephone, but other schedules will be in the Daily Kansan, he said. The final selection of the 15 student managers will be announced next week. Men's IM Schedules To Be Released Saturday Schedules for men's intramural competition will be announced Saturday, Don Powell, supervisor of the program, said today. College Faculty Will Meet Wednesday In Frank Strong The College faculty will meet in the theater of Frank Strong hall at 4 p.m. Wednesday, Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College, said today. Faculty members having 4 p.m. classes have been asked by Dean Lawson to attend their classes rather than the meeting. Seven students will participate in the first recital of the School of Fine Arts at 3 p.m. Thursday in Frank Strong auditorium. Appearing on the program will be Marshall Butler, piano; James Gettys, voice; Loraine Mai, voice; Jack Mohlkamp, piano; Ruth Reisner and E. M. Brack, vocal duet; and Edward Utley, piano. Student Recital Thursday Kansans Available At 11 Places The University Daily Kansan may be obtained in nine boxes on the campus and two at Sunflower Village. Campus boxes are situated at Fraser hall, 14th street, Union lounge, Union fountain, Watson library, center and east wing of Frank Strong hall, Marvin hall, and Snow hall. Kansans are available at the rear of the drug store and at the cafeteria at Sunflower. YMCA To Present Marriage Forums The "Love and Marriage" forums are back. Art Partridge, chairman of the Y.M.C.A. forums committee, announced today the beginning of another series of Love and Marriage forums for K.U. faculty and students. Dr. R. H. Wheeler, chairman of the psychology department, will speak at the first meeting at 4 p.m. Oct. 10 in Fraser theater. His subject will be, "The Psychology of Love." Subsequent meetings will be every Tuesday, same place and time, but with a different speaker and subject for each meeting. K.U. Will Try To Get Necessary Equipment The University will take advantage of Reconversion Director John R. Steelman's order to channel surplus laboratory and classroom equipment to colleges and universities participating in the veterans educational program, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today. "We will make an effort to get any equipment that is needed here," Mr. Nichols said, "if we should get the priority to do so." The order also includes the Federal Works agency, which in some instances will purchase equipment to outfit buildings which it has made available to educational institutions. In other cases, schools will get priorities for outright purchase of equipment needed to finish the expansion program. Hull Suffers Stroke Washington (UP)—Cordell Hull, former secretary of state, suffered "a slight stroke" last night, the navy department announced today. Hull, who will be 75 tomorrow, entered the naval hospital Sept.12 for a check up and a rest. YOU SHOULD BE THERE— If You Are a COLLEGIATE REPUBLICAN Help Select Your Delegate to the STATE CONVENTION OCT. 4 and 5 8:00 p.m., Tuesday, October 1 Frank Strong Auditorium, 3rd Floor For automotive parts and expert care, SERVICE COMES FIRST allow us to service your car. ... TO MAKE THE MOTOR LAST MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY 609 MASS. PHONE 277