TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Lulli's Collection Of Jewelry Shown More than thirty pieces of that made by the Andean Inca the display which will be set main lounge of the Memorial U American day. The jewelry, t the display, were all collected by Antonio Lulli, College senior, who is a native of Lima Peru. Pieces of jewelry hand-made by present day descendants of Incas who live in little villages back in the Andes, were picked up by Lulli on tours into the mountains. Other articles he bought in towns along the coast. These articles have also been displayed in Chicago, New York, and at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill. Although first made so many centuries ago, the same patterns are being used for modern jewelry. One bracelet is of polished bone, decorated with silver symbols of the sun, the main god of the Incas. The silver itself is ornamented with bright reds and blues. A rug, which will be displayed, pictures the last of the Incas offering rooms full of gold and silver to his conqueror, Francisco Pizarro, in return for his life. Pizarro took the gold and silver, but also the man's life. The owner of the articles on display, Antonio Lulli, is in our country to be trained for diplomatic service, and is president of the Pan-American League of the University. This exhibition is under the auspices of the Student Union Activities Board. GOLD-PLATED---f silver jewelry, patterned after as 400 years ago, will be part of t up Thursday afternoon in the Union building in honor of Pantapestries, and other articles in $ \textcircled{1} $ (continued from page four) 'Skeeter' Newsome for the shortstop job. The outfield situation has Cronin sleep-walking. But the least said about the rest of the club at the moment, the better. The Sox need hitting. He has Pete Fox for right field. Your guess today is as good as his as to who, if anybody, he has who play center and left in big league style. As for the catching, it was below par last year, when taken care of by Johnny Peacock and Bill Conroy. The same two figure to do the bulk of the receiving again unless Roy Parte, a youngster from the Portsmouth, Va., club and Herb Bremer, a Cardinal cast-off from Little Rock, are better than their minor league records indicate. So, to sum it all up, it appears as though the 1943 Red Sox will do well if they escape finishing in the second division. HONOR SOCIETIES---f silver jewelry, patterned after as 400 years ago, will be part of t up Thursday afternoon in the Union building in honor of Pantapestries, and other articles in $ \textcircled{1} $ (continued from page one) et Marvin, Kansas City; Mo.; Joy Miller, Wichita; Jill Peck, Leavenworth; and Cara Shoemaker, Salina. Sachem Elections to Sachem, senior men's honor society, were: Robert Bellamy, Colby; James Walker Butin Chanute; Robert Coleman, Fairfield, Conn.; Allen Cromley, Minneapolis; Ray Evans, Kansas City Kan.; W. C. Hartley, Baxter Springs; Newell Jenkins, Humboldt; Mou Hui King, Peiping, China; Thornton McClanahan, Lawrence; Arthur Nelson; Lawrence; Dean Ostrum, Russell; Clifford Reynolds, Lawrence; James V. Walker, Hoisington. Pi Kappa Lambda The following were elected to Pi Kappa Lambda, national honor society in music: Margaret Fultz, Osawatonie; Winifred Hargrove, Ft. Scott; Maxine McGrannahan, Chanute; Jeanne Scott, Topeka; Melvin L.Zack, Kansas City, Mo.; David T. Lawson, Lawrence. Colgazier Receives Science Medal Mary Catherine Colglazier, Kansas City, Kansas, received the Phi Sigma medal, presented annually by the national society to the student who has done the most outstanding work during the past year in biological science. MEAT TESTED---injures them. Also, welding arcs generate considerable heat and a very small amount of poisonous gases. (continued from page three) Clifcorn and D. G. Heberlein, nutritional chemists of Chicago. Asparagus tips retained 65 per cent, whole beans 61 per cent, beets 69 per cent, tomatoes 89 per cent of their vitamin B-1 after canning. Pretty soon we might all be eating "ironclad eggs," that is eggs laid by bens fed a diet rich in iron. CLIMAXES YEAR--injures them. Also, welding arcs generate considerable heat and a very small amount of poisonous gases. Drs. Selma L. Bandem and P. J. Schaible, of the Michigan Agricultural experimental station, East Lansing, Mich., have discovered a way of measuring how much iron eggs contain. Fractions of iron in egg white and egg yellow can be separately measured. Iron is needed by human beings. (continued from page one) the sentimentality of the number. Allen Crafton Scores Hit Bill Sears displayed his agility with the baton by giving some intricate twirling exhibitions. Sears is one of the best men in the business and never fails to appeal to his audience. Allen Crafton, professor of speech, dressed in his army uniform of the first World War, sang "Over There" and "Wake Up America." Judging from the applause, the numbers struck responsive chords in almost everyone present. The band, featuring a baritone solo by David Lawson and a trombone solo by Danny Bachmann, played "Roses Of Picard." A rather pretentious arrangement of "Indian Love Call" was notable for the perfectly coordinated tones of Robert Cater and Eugene Fiser in their cornet duet. Violin Is Accompanied By Band Violin Is Accompanied by Banda To those who doubted the success of a violin solo with band accompaniment, "Cubana," by David Bennett, was an overwhelming triumph. James Lerch, a freshman in the School of Fine Arts, played the solo with the polish of a professional. Landon Disapproves Barring of Press Weinberger's "Czech Rhapsody" provided a fitting climax for the concert. The hearty, vigorous spirit was projected by the band with easy assurance. New York, (INS)—"Not only freedom of the press but freedom of speech of all the people is involved in the proposed attempt to isolate delegates from the press from the United Nations food conference," former Governor Alf M. Landon of Kansas asserted today. As an encore, the band gave a stirring rendition of "Anchors A- weigh." One of the "elders" of the Republican party, and its presidential candidate in 1936, Landon declared: "The making of America has been the fact that a reporter on the "Bingville Bugle" could step up to any public man of any size and say 'you said so and so . . . What do you mean?" "The average man in the street doesn't realize it, but the reporters are talking for him, asking questions for him, trying to get the truth beyond the glittering generalities and the high-sounding platitudes, for him. When the average man in the street thinks of 'freedom of the press' he thinks of the big newspapers, but it's his freedom of speech that is involved." Death Reveals Identity Of Fellowship Donor Cambridge, Mass., (ACP)—Harvard University has disclosed that A. Lawrence Lowell, late president of the university, was the donor of a $2,000,000 fellowship fund established at Harvard in 1932-34, and that he had insisted the gift remain anonymous until after his death. The fund, carried on Harvard's books as "The Society of Fellows Foundation" will be known henceforth as "The Anna Parker Lowell Fund" in memory of Lowell's wife FLUKER IS CHOSEN---injures them. Also, welding arcs generate considerable heat and a very small amount of poisonous gases. (continued from page one) student riot last year and the senior class memorial gift committee of 1942, Fluker included none of these in his write up for his senior Jayhawk picture. SHIRT $2.25 TIE $1 SHORTS 75c HANDKERCHIEF 35c Occupational Sterility Is Just Rumor, Says Doctor Washington, D.C., (ACP) The nation's men and women war plant welders have been assured they can go on welding without fear of suffering occupational sterility. This is science's answer to rumors, said to have originated in San Francisco, that voltages which produce welding arcs may destroy a welder's fertility. "Welding arcs are produced at low voltages such as 25 to 50. Such voltages cannot produce X-rays and the arcs have no effect whatever on either men or women. It came from Dr. Philip Drinker of Harvard university, chief health consultant for the maritime commission and navy department, with a notation from the maritime commission that it was designed to "reassure over 100,000 welders in shipyards and factories." Dr. Drinker gave this explanation: "Sterility in both men and women can be produced by X-rays, a scientific fact which is well known to modern medicine and surgery. The machines which produce X-rays for sterilizing operate at very high voltage, such as 200,000 and more. "Welding arcs give off invisible ultra-violet light which can produce burns, much like sunburn, and can cause severe eye damage when proper goggles or shields are not used. In addition, the light from the arc is intensely bright, like the sun, and will injure one's eyes exactly as looking directly at the sun MISSOURI TO PLAY--- "There is no danger to welders from any of these sources if the work is done under the conditions prescribed in our shipyards." The rest of the schedule follows: May 1 - Westminster at Fulton. (continued from page four) The tigers will open their season Friday against Westminster in Columbia. May 4- Washington University, St. Louis, at Columbia. May 7—Washington University at St. Louis. May 8-Lambert Field Naval Air Station at St. Louis. May 14-Lambert Field Naval Air Station at Columbia. May 17—Macomb, Ill., Teachers at Columbia. May 18-Macomb, Ill., Teachers at Columbia. May 21—Iowa State at Columbia. May 22—Iowa State at Columbia. 09 04 BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTILING CO.