PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MAY 10. 1946 Beer Hearing Is Postponed By Amendment Roy Borgen, owner of the Dinea-Mite cafe, today amended his petition to restrain the Douglas county authorities from enforcing the beer-dance resolution, postponing the hearing n the petition originally set for this morning. The amendment to Mr. Borgen's petition said that immediately after the adoption of the regulation by the county commissioners, posters printed with the ruling prohibiting dancing were posted by the sheriff in all places affected by the resolution. Public announcements also had warned persons against dancing in places licensed to sell cereal malt beverages. The original ruling made by the commissioners has been amended to state that dancing is prohibited in places licensed to sell cereal malt beverages during the hours when the beverages are sold. the amendment, filed with the clerk of the district court this morning, states that the ruling of the commissioners is aimed directly at the individual conduct of Mr. Borgel's customers. No date has been set for the new hearing. At present, Mr. Borgen permits dancing between 8:30 p.m. and 12 midnight on Wednesday, Friday and Saturday with a cover charge. Beer is not sold during this time. Eight finalists were chosen from 18 soecht contestants Wednesday night in preliminaries of the speaking contest sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho The contest will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser theatre. Eight Finalists Chosen For Speech Contest Subject for the contest is "Postwar Problems of the University of Kansas." A silver trophy will be awarded the winner. Members of the speech department are judges. Those selected for the finals are: Kenneth Beasley, Robert Bock, Ben Foster, Harold Harvey, Kathleen Howland, Joe Merritt, Dorothy Scroggy, and Frederic Thomas. Other participants in the preliminaries were Eugene Fisher, Keith Wilson, Glenn Varenhorst, Wayne Hird, Maxine Bell, J. L. Callahan, Holdreth Stong, John Bergstrom, Paul Wisner, and Paul Dilabal. X. W.C.A. Meeting Postponed The Y.W.C.A. meeting which was to be held in the Union tonight, has been postponed, Mrs. Christine Alfred, secretary, announced this morning. Westminster Foundation Will Elect Officers Sunday Election of officers will be held by the Westminster foundation after its regular meeting at 5 p.m. Sunday in Westminster hall. Dr. Edwin F. Price, dean of School of Religion, will speak on "marriage" at the regular meeting. Refreshments will be served. Track Men Meet Tigers Tomorrow Coach Ray Kanehl will send the same track to men at the startping against the Missouri Tigers at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow at the stadium as he did against Kansas State. The Jayhawkers overwhelmed the Aggies 85-45. The contest will be the Jayhawk's last meet before next week's conference carnival in Lincoln and will offer a good chance to compare KU. strength with favored Nebraska. The Huskers defeated Missouri, 75-56, last week. Kansas hopes to use its winning weight pattern for its third consecutive outdoor dual title. The Jayhawkers will pin their hopes on Charlie Black, Leroy Robison, Karl Ebel, Tom Scofield, and Bob Stoland in the field events. Johnny Jackson and Hal Moore are Kanehl's top hopes to take track events, with Harold Hinchee running a close third. The relay teams will have their hands full against the Tigers, but they hope to come through with victories in these events. Jay Jones To Elect New Members Soon The Jay Janes will choose new members after a series of rush teas which end next week, Virginia Wickert, president, said today. Pledging and installation of officers will be held in about two weeks she added. AT THE HOSPITAL Admitted Wednesday Admitted, Wednesday David Tarbell, Spooner Thayer. Delphine Denni, 1420 Ohio. Ernest Fritz, Spooner Thayer. Albert Welch, 1301 West Campus Fred Johnson, 1238 Tennessee. Ida Bieber, 1329 Vermont. Osei Williams, 1230 New Jersey. Eugene Rhue, Sunflower. Dismissed, Wednesday Richard L. Hocker, 1025 West Hills. Marilyn McNeish, 1246 Oread. Earl Winsor. 1245 West Campus. Dr. F. C. Allen, head of the physical education department, will address the Hutchinson Rotary club Sunday. He spoke at a meeting of the Cherryvale chamber of commerce this week. Allen to Hutchinson A.S.C. For Aid To Foreign Students Pledging support to American scholarships for foreign students, the A.S.C. appointed a committee for the project, at its meeting Tuesday night. Members of the committee, who will work with Dean Henry Werner and the finance committee, are Carolyn Nigg, chairman; Betty Ball, Franzena Jackson, and Wendell Nickell. A committee to send letters to other universities concerning foreign students, and asking suggestions, includes Marguerita Kerschen, chairman; Carroll McCue, and Joan Anderson. "Students of Europe need help, and a small quota of approved foreign students should be given scholarships by American universities," Dean Werner told the council. The council went on record as supporting the food conservation program. The A.S.C. bulletin committee has completed plans for publishing a paper "explaining the projects carried out by the council this year." Dixie Gilland, chairman, reported. Tryouts for next year's cheerleaders will be at 7:30 p.m. May 27 in the Union ballroom, it was decided. Student checks can be cashed at the business office after July 1. Shirley Wellborn, chairman of the special check committee, said, but the committee has no information about the size of checks, or the cost of cashing them. New council members will be sworn in at the third A.S.C. meeting after the election, Eugenia Hepworth, president, announced. Members absent were Helen Howe Sewell Macferran, Charles Hall Emily Hollis, and George Caldwell Malott to Kansas City For Conference Chancellor Deane W. Malott was in Kansas City yesterday attending a meeting of the presidents of universities and colleges in this area. The meeting was called by Harold Vagtborg, president of the Midwest Research Institute of Kansas City, to discuss organizing a research council. Members of the faculty who also attended the meeting are Prof. J. O. Maloney, Prof. J. C. Frye, and Prof. R. Q. Brewster. Chancellor Malott returned to the campus late yesterday. Malott To Speak At Meeting Chancellor Deane W. Malott will be the principal speaker at the annual meeting of the Chamber of Commerce to be held at the Hotel Eldridge on June 6. His subject will be "The University Looks Ahead." You'd look glum, too, if you had been through the Paris conference of the Big Four foreign ministers. Here are Sen. Arthur Vandenburg, left, and Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, as they left one of the difficult Paris sessions. Byrnes, Vandenberg Leave Paris Conference Smith, Partridge Up for Y.M. Head Dean Smith, College senior, and Arthur Partridge, College junior, have been nominated for 1946-47 president of the Y.M.C.A., Luther Buchele, president, announced today. Other cabinet nominations made by the nominating committee are: Vice-president: Dale Rummer, engineering sophomore, Welliott Elliott, College junior, and Clifford Reynolds, business senior; secretary-treasurer: Wilbur Noble, College freshman, Hartwell Jewell, junior special student in the College, and Donald Pomeroy, College junior. Here Are Areas of U.S. Hit Hardest by Coal Strike Members of the nominating committee are Calvin VanderWerf, board member of Y.M.C.A.; Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. secretary; Neal Woodruff, Wendell Nickell, and Buchele, senior cabinet members of the former Y.M.C.A. The election and a general discussion of next year's program will be in the Kansas room of the Union at 7:30 p.m. next Thursday. Other nominations, which must be in by Saturday noon, may be submitted by petitions signed by at least 25 students, Buchele said. K-Club Won't Select A Queen This Year No K-Club queen will reign this year, Leroy Robison, K-Club president, announced today. Thirty-five candidates had been selected by their organized houses, and K-Club members were to have voted Wednesday night on a queen and two attendants for the K-Club dance Saturday, at which Boyd Faeburn's band was to play. Raeburn's Hollywood agent today told Karl Klooz, bursar, that Raeburn can not afford to charter a plane to come this far. No other big name band can be contracted, so the dance has been cancelled, Mr. Klooz said. Library Association Meets Here Tomorrow The northeast district of the Kansas Library association, composed representatives from 17 counties in this region of the state, will meet tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union. Mr. C. M. Baker, director of Watson library, is local chairman of the northeast district. OFFICIAL BULLETIN May 9, 1946 K. U. Young Democrats club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Men's Lounge of the Union. American College Quill club will meet at 7 tonight at Corbin hall. Quack club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson gym. Alpha Phi Omega will meet at 7 tonight in the Men's lounge of the Union. All pledges are to attend for instructions regarding initiation on Saturday. Big Cr All students now in school who plan to enroll in the summer session, or the fall semester are urged to sign up at the Registrar's Office, room 122, Frank Strong hall, during the month of May so as to guarantee themselves a place in the University under the priority system. To avoid congestion, students should appear at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: (Letters are initial letters of students' last names). Mil In W. rate naft time tiate settl Tl reach futil and May 9-11 D, H, S, N, Q May 13-18 E, B, Z, O, G, W May 20-25 F, P, A, Y, U, V, C, K May 27-June 1 J, M, X, L, I, T, R Home Economics club will hold its last meeting of the year at 7 tonight in Fraser. Election of officers will be held. N like ure will fere men P on I stag on May 9-11 D. H. S. N. O. He Ve Students interested in the U.N. convention who have not previously registered may do so this week at the Student Organization window of the Business office. Phi Chi Theta will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Council room at Miller hall. 3495 10 YEAR