Y 2,194.. Fighty 1. 8, and manable to bouts of ampion- heavy- morrow. finials of d at 4:30 on gym id. This real pro- follow- respec- UNIVERSITY Daily Kansan Publication Days published daily except Saturday and Sunday by Students of the University of Kansas Weather Forecast Increasing high cloudiness Tuesday. Warmer tonight lowest 25 to 30. Warmer Tuesday. 5 pounds bounds day bracket, one upper volley p.m. to os — pounds W NUMBER 92 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1945 War Memorial So Be Pondered By Committee A War Memorial committee has been appointed to consider the proposition of a war memorial for all university graduates and former students, who have served in World Var II, Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, said today. The appointments of committee members was made by the chancellor and the alumni board. Included on the committee are Hugo T. Wedell, '15, law '20, Toeka chairman; Chancellor Deane V. Malot; Edward W. Tanner, '16, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Elizabeth Stephens Haughey, '10, Concordia; J. W. Murray, '11, Lawrence; Justin Hill, '26, Lawnice; Carl V. Rice, '18, Kansas City; Prof. Allen Crafton; Dr. F. C. Allen; H. V. Chase, '13, Lawrence; T. J. Strickler, '06, Kansas City, Mo.; L. J. Bond, '16, Eldorado; Albert Haas, '25, Kansas City, Bertha Luckan McCoy, '09, Emporia; Judge John G. Somers, '15, Newton. Sixteen Will Appear in Second Recital Of Advanced Students piano. The sixteen students are from the studios of Miss Ruth Orcutt, Miss Meribah Moore, Walderam Geltch, Miss Irene Peabody, D. M. Swarthout, Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, J. F. Wilkins, Carl A. Preyer, and Mrs. Mercyn Anderson. Advanced students in the School of Fine Arts will present their second mid-winter recital at 7:30 to night in Fraser theater. Voice, harp and violin students will open. The program will be as follows: "Etude," Op. 25, No. 1 (Chipin) and "Serenata Andalucia" (DeFalla) or Marjane Carr, piano; "Per Peta" (Stradella) and "Chi Vuole Innanorasii" (Scarlatti) by Theodora Criesson, voice; "Concerto A Minor," allegro, (Vivaldi-Nachiz) by Barbara Stanley, violin; "Je Sais Atacher des Rubans," Old French, and "Les Filles de Cadix" (Delibes) by Norma Jean Lutz, voice. "Jeux d'Eau" (Ravel) by Allen Rogers, piano; "A Dream" (Grieg) and "Je Crois Entendre Encore" from "Les Pecheurs de Perles" (Biet) by Corp. Norman Myrvik, voice; "Slavonic Dance in G" (Dvorsak-Kreisler) by Peggy Kay, violin; "Magic Fire Music" from "Die Walkure" (Brassin-Wagner) by Ange Krebbeli, piano. "Shepherd, Thy Dmeanour Vary," Old English, and "Stressa" (Winter Watt) by Arlene Nickels, voice; "The Fountain" (Vadel) by Anabel Keeney, harp; "Hear Me Ye Winds and Waves" from "Seipio" (Handel) by James T. Getys, voice; and "El Puerto," "Evocação," and "Malaga" (Albeniz) by Gorgjia Weinrich, piano. "Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue" (Bach) by Margaret Snodgrass, piano; "Depuis de Jour" from "Louise" (Charpentier) by Ruth Reisner, voice; "Valse Bluette" (Drigo-Auer) by Betty McMillin, violin; "Je Suis Titania" from "Mignon" (Thomas) by Elaine Talley, voice. Senate to Hold Closed Hearing on Work Bill Washington—(INS)—The senate military affairs committee voted today to hold closed hearings on the controversial May 'work or jail bill.' Hearings will begin tomorrow and will be limited to invited witnesses, who will be allowed only 30 minutes before the committee. However the hearings are expected to run into next week. Photo Exhibit Shown at Thayer "Action Photography" showing all types of photographic recording of action except motion pictures, is the exhibit being shown in Thayer museum from Feb. 5 through Feb. 26, after which it will continue on a tour of the country under the direction of New York's Modern Museum of Art, Mrs. Ruth Rider, Thayer curator, said today. The chronological range of the display starts with an 1837 daguerreotype of a Paris street showing a man having his boots shined, and continues through the multiple-camera pictures made by Muybridge in 1877 and the multiple-exposure experiments by Mairey in 1888, both of which were for runners of the movies. It continues through periods of the hand camera, the miniature camera, news and war photography, astronomical photography, the silhouette method where the shadow is recorded directly on the sensitized plate or film by electric spark without use of lens, and on to the most advanced stroboscopic photography of today. Exhibition Is in Three Parts Prefaced by a brief historical introduction, the exhibition is divided into three parts consisting of high-speed photography, normal exposure, and prolonged exposure. The exhibit shows a series of photographs by Edward Muybridge, a photographer hired in 1872 by Leland Stanford of California to enable him to win a $25000 bet that a galloping horse lifts all four feet off the ground at once. The task in that day of slow wet plates was enormous, but in 1877 Muybridge (continued to page three) Redecoration Started On F.S. Auditorium Faculty, student, and senior re计als were given in this auditorium instead of in the Fraser theater before the Navy moved into the third floor of Frank Strong hall in 1942. The auditorium has been replastered and is being painted a light green. The procentum arch will be a greennish blue to blend with the dark blue curtains at the back of the stage, Dean Swarthout said. The seats eventually will be recovered but satisfactory material cannot be obtained now, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, explained. The auditorium on the third floor in the west wing of Frank Strong hall is being redecorated and may be ready for use by next semester, D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said today. The senior recitals have already been scheduled for the Fraser theater but could easily be changed if the auditorium were finished in time, Dean Swarthout said. 3,700 Liberated As Yanks Take Over in Manila Kansan Review Available Today The University Kansan Review, inserted in today's Daily Kansan is the special weekly edition published for K. U. service men and women. The Daily Kansan is distributing this second issue of the Review without charge to acquaint subscribers with the publication. The Kansan Review is a convenient way for you to send a complete digest of University news to your friends in the services. Include a copy of the weekly Review in your letters and let former Jayhawkers know "what gives" at their old Alma Mater. Extra copies of today's edition of the Review may be obtained at the Kansas business office for one cent a copy. The University Kansan Review, edited by Ruth Tippin, College senior, will be ready for distribution each Monday afternoon at the Kansan business office. After today there will be a charge of one cent a copy to cover printing costs. The business committee, which is composed of faculty members of the department of journalism and the business manager of the Daily Kansan, will also consider the replacement of an advertising manager. Kelma Smith, is acting as advertising manager until the end of the semester, House Quiet Hours Problem for Students Miss Miller Declares Enforcing quiet hours to make possible rest and study at night is largely a problem for student government in the individual houses, according to Marie Miller, acting dean of women. The lack of organized recreational facilities may also have something to do with the problem, Miss Miller suggested. If recreation were organized, perhaps within each house, unorganized recreation with accompanying noise might be eliminated, she pointed out. The problem is a serious one. Miss Miller said, attributing part of the cause for "bedlam during quiet hours" to poor management of time on the part of students. Recreational activities should be planned especially for women the man shortage considered, Miss Miller said. Lois Scott Resigns As Business Manager The resignation of Lois Elaine Scott as business manager of the University Daily Kansan has been announced by George R. Rinechart, adviser of the Daily Kansan. Faculty members of the Kansan business committee will consider applicants for the vacant position at a meeting tomorrow afternoon. Mr. Rinehart said. (International News Service) The stars and stripes flew over Manila, queen city of the Philippines, today for the first time in three years. After liberating approximately 3,700 internees — mostly Americans — from the Santo Tomas concentration camp in Manila's heart, Yank forces sat about cleaning out snipers and crushing isolated pockets of Japanese resistance in North Manila. Three hundred of the internees, held as hostages, were released after Japanese units which defended Santo Tomas Flying Club Will Select Emblem A contest for a suitable emblem for the Jayhawk Flying club was announced today by Charles McMillan, local manager of the Ong Aircraft corporation. The entries must be in full color in regular show card stock and the size must be uniform. 18 x 24, Mr. McMillan said. The contest is open to any University student. The awards will be made on the basis of originality, cleverness of design, suitability, and art work. The contest closes March 15, Mr. McMillan said. A $50 war bond will be awarded for first prize, a $25 war bond will be given for the second prize, and there will be five additional prizes of $5 each in war stamps. Mr. McMillan explained that all the entries will become the property of the Ong Aircraft corporation and none will be returned. The winning design will be used as the official emblem of the Jayhawk Flying club, Mr. McMillan said, and the winner will be publicized in national magazines. Judges for the contest are Chancellor Deane Malott, Jack Fry, president of the Transcontinental airways and T. W. A., and Mr. McMillan. Lights Are Adequate At Watson Library Lights at Watson library are adequate in all rooms according to daily checks by members of the building and grounds staff, C. G. Bayles, superintendtn of the department of buildings and grounds said today. Mr. Bayles was questioned as the result of a letter to the editor printed in the Daily Kansan last week, in which a student complain about the poor lighting in the upstairs reading room at the library. A daily lighting check is made over the campus, he said, by means of a foot candle meter. If the meter registers 25, lighting is correct. The lights in the library fulfill the requirement. Changes in the lighting system in the library, possibly to florescent desk lighting, will be made as soon as possible after the war, Raymond Nichols, University executive secretary, has announced. New lighting systems installed in Fowler shops and in Lindley hall since the war were made possible because of Navy and Army priorities, he said. university in a hand-to-handle struggle were granted safe conduct to Manila's city limits. However these Japanese must face U.S. Eighth army forces coming up toward the city from Nichols field. B-29's Strike at Kobe Shortly after fewer than 100 cavalry men, stormed into the city from the east to climax a three-day advance of more than 100 nooks, the 37th infantry division entered Manila from the north. Russians 33 Miles from Berlin At the same time, a "sizeable force" of B-29's struck at Kobe rail hub of the main Japanese home islands of Honshu, from new advanced bases in the Pacific. On the western front American First and Third armies pressed forward up to six miles into western Germany on a 40-mile front. Four First army divisions broke through the first belt of the German westwall fortifications to engulf another seven German towns. In Europe Germany reeled under Allied blows from the east and west. A powerful Soviet drive was reported to have split open the last ditch Oder river defense line on the direct road to the Reich capital, putting the first white Russian army in a position for a break-through onto the open terrain before Berlin. In east Prussia, meanwhile, tanks and artillery-supported Red columns swept northwest of Koenigberg to the shores of Danzig bay First Army Engulfs Seven Towns The German radio put the Russians only 33 miles from Berlin and said Soviet pressure was increasing in almost every sector. Moscow said the Reds were in Kumarasheef, four miles east of Frankfurt. The Third army hurled the Germans from their last stronghold in Belgium and swept into Germany to points more than eight miles east of the line from which the German panzers started their Dec. 16 breakthrough. Orchestra to Give Concert Thursday The University Symphony orchestra's annual winter concert, at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium, will feature Tschalkowsky's "Symphony No. 5." Beethoven's "Overture Leonore No. 3," St. Agnes Eye Suite" by Coleridge-Taylor, "Parandale" from "L'Ancesieenne" by Bizet and other numbers. The orchestra will be under the direction of Russell L. Wiley, associate professor of band. The University of Texas recently created a personal guidance clinic for the benefit of students.