WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1944 23,19 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE AM War an ers: Job English um. "His Unite(ers) re apartmen tories for Elizabeth university er engi- niversity on as ar this flight Training n active r opera- re being Field who was of Engi- cated at axas. S If found Muler. 02 In mass, St. ds, room -101 insan $1.75 Kansas a university year ex- University ms matter office at March 3, Fitted L CO. Anne 425 Service rhs graphs made isished e 675 REAU ing No Hour Dances or Midweeks As Students Prepare for Finals No hour dances or midweeks for tonight have been reported. Very few students feel they can spare any time from their final studying for social events. Tau Kappa Epsilon — Charlotte Wagner was a dinner guest Sunday, Charles Stahl was a guest last night. Triangle—has announced the following new officers: Bill Andrews, recording secretary, and Graybil Parks, corresponding secretary. Kappa Kappa Gamma -- dinner guest Monday night was Lt. John Fletcher, now stationed in Washington, D.C. Alpha Omicron Pi—the chapter had a surprise birthday party last night for Jean Sellers. Sigma Chi—had a dinner party at the Dine-A-Mite last night. Pi Beta Phi—has announced the pledging of Jean Stoddard of Burlingame. Mrs. Gerry Penny of Lawrence was a dinner guest last night. Chi Omega—Claire Kennedy of Kansas City, Mo., is a visitor this week. Phi Beta Pi—dinner guests last night were Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Larsen of-Wichita. Harmour Co-op — Sunday dinner guests were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kloeper and Mrs. A. R. McAdoo. Gamma Phi Beta-Edith Marie Darby was a luncheon guest Monday. Pfc. Metz Wright was a dinner guest Sunday. Mrs. Weaver Hutton was a dinner guest Monday evening. Alpha Chi Omega dinner guests last night were Midshipman Robert Farley, Annapolis, Md.; and A-C Harry Ritter, Kansas City, Mo. Battenfeld Hall—Lt. Dale Leuring, Dodge City, was a visitor yesterday. Col. Karl Baldwin, commandant of the University ROTC from 1936 to 1941, has a pair of blistered hands, a painful sunburn, and four fishermen to prove that his tale of catching a 207-pound marlin off the coast of New Zealand is not just another fish story. Alpha Delta Pi dinner guests Monday night were Mrs. B. G. Hays and Byron Hays, Jr., of Kansas City, Mo.; and Dr. and Mrs. Walter F. Priest, of Chicago, Ill. Former ROTC Head Captures Huge Fish After 35-Minute Fight It took 35 minutes after Colonel Baldwin, a member of the U. S diplomatic corps in Australia, had hooked the "most prized fish among deep sea fisherman" to gaff and pull it into the boat. Of the four fishermen, the skipper, and his mate, Colonel Baldwin was the only one to land a fish. Houses Plan Booths For Coming Carnival "The organized houses should be planning their booths, and as soon as the booths are planned they should be reported to Mary Nettles for her approval," Eugenia Hepworth has announced. The carnival, put on by the Union Activities committee in cooperation with the YWCA, will be from 9 to 12 p.m. March 25 in Hoch auditorium. The committee is trying to get an out-of-town band for the occasion. All the profits from the party will go to the YWCA for the student scholarship and postwar fund. Tickets for the booths and dancing will be sold at the gate. The faculty will entertain the guests, making the entire carnival a three-ring circus with booths, entertainment, and dancing. Will Show Pictures Of Life in Camps Colored motion pictures of life in the four camps for boys and girls at the Trail's End and Cheyel Camps in Estes Park, Colo., will be shown tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the basement of Green hall by E. E. Altick, Cheyel Camp director. Former Cheyel Camp counselors, prospective campers, and the parents of prospective campers have been invited to attend the meeting. Last summer there were several University students on the staff of Camp Cheley. Among the counselors were Margaret Whitfield, Lucy Smith, Caroline Carson, and Margaret Kreider. Junior counselors were Susan Atlick and Annette Bigelow. Twelfth Class of Waves Graduated The twelfth class of WAVE storekeepers was graduated recently at the University of Indiana. Dr. O'Brien Surveys School Pay Under the supervision of Prof. F. F. O'Brien of the School of Education a survey on school salaries in Kansas for the year 1943-44 was completed last week. Copies of this report were sent by the School of Education to the state's county superintendents, city superintendents, principals of high schools in first, second, and third class cities, the State Department of Education, the heads of education departments of other universities and colleges in the state, the Kansas State Teachers Association, the legislative committee of the state on education, faculty members of the School of Education, P.T.A. leaders, and Governor A. F. Schoeppel. The purpose of this report was to provide analyses of the school salary situation for the use of all interested school officials. Intelligent planning of subsequent policy on school salaries is dependent upon evidence of the prevailing practice. To what extent the unusual number of emergency appointments to the teaching staffs has affected school salaries this year is not known. What is regarded by many competent persons as a crisis in public education to both number and quality of teachers employed continues to disturb school administrative bodies, for the restless and underpaid teacher situation is reported to be most acute in the Middlewest. With school directories received from a total of 64 Kansas counties, this report presents an analysis of the salaries of teachers in rural, village, and first, second, and third class city elementary schools, and first, second, and third class city and rural high schools. The investigation was made with reference to the type of position, subjects of instruction, number of teachers in a particular field, the median salary per month of that particular group, and the middle fifty per cent of these salaries. Georgia Weinrich, with orchestral accompaniment on the second piano by Jan Chiapusso, will close the program with the first movement of the piano "Concerto No. 2 in C Minor." (Rachmaninoff). For All Occasions RIDE THE BUS Five students in the School or Fine Arts will give a recital of violin and piano numbers at 3:30 Thursday afternoon in Fraser theater. Students to Present Violin, Piano Recital Entomology Students Were Guests of Lawsons Sundav Marjorie Cooper will begin the program with a piano solo, "March in D Flat Major" (Alexis Hollaender). Sarepta Pierpont Ostrum will play the violin "Concerto in E Minor" (Nardini-Hauser). The other violin numbers will be "Nocturne" (Lili Boulanger) by Margaret Steeper and "Spanish Dance" (Granados-Kreisler) by Beverly Mendenhall. The Rapid Transit Your Local Bus Service To the Lunch 11:30 - 1:30 Former Students Begin Training Co. Dr. and Mrs. Paul B. Lawson had as dinner guests Sunday evening Dr. Lawson's entomology class. Guests were Maxine Jones, Carolyn Southall, Mrs. Caterina Croce, Mrs. Georgia Paulette, Betty Jean Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Plath, Bonnie Dee Gustafson, and Harold Smith. COLONIAL TEA ROOM Welcome Students Parker Students Begin Training Aviation Cadets Caryl J. Dodds, student here earlier this year, and Paul A Tiemeier, who attended K.U. from 1939 to 1943, have begun their officer basic training at Seymour Johnson Field, N. C., pretechnical school of the army air forces Eastern Technical Training ground. Dinner 5:30 - 7:30 Captain Taylor has just received his commission as a captain. Sunday Dinner ---- 12:00 - 2:00 NO SATURDAY MEALS Phone 978 An Ash Wednesday service was held at 10:30 this morning at the Episcopal church, and beginning today, communion will be at 7 a.m. every Wednesday. An evening prayer service will be held at 4:30 p.m. every Wednesday until the termination of Lent. Beginning at 7:45 this evening, the church of St. John the Evangelist, will have a special service including prayers for those in the service, a sermon on the "Sufferer of Christ" by Father McGinnis, Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament, distribution of the ashes, and confession. The forty days of denial of the Lenten worship began today, Ash Wednesday, with special emphasis for men in uniform in Lenten services in both the Catholic and Episcopal churches of Lawrence. Former Student Recovers In Australian Base Hospital William Ralph Taylor, a navigator in the army air corps who was recently wounded in the Pacific area, is recovering at a base hospital in Australia, Dr. Claude W. Hibbard learned in a recent letter. Capt. Taylor was a student in the University from 1939-1941. He was majoring in zoology. Lent Begins Today With Church Rituals 936 Ky. O.U. Seniors Have Luncheon FOR QUICKER, BETTER SERVICE CALL 400 Varsity Cleaners 1405 Mass. The University of Oklahoma honors its graduating seniors with a juncheon. Notice to the Army REGULATION: WOOL PANTS and SHIRTS SERVICE and GARRISON CAPS SHOES, SOX, TIES, and BELTS Patches Chevrons Dog Tags Toilet Rolls Shine Kits Spiffy Stays Furlough Bags Cap Covers