PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY,MAY12,1942 Kansan Board Award Banquet on Tonight The University Daily Kansan governing board will hold its annual award dinner tonight at 6 p.m. in the Colonial Tea Room. Kenneth Jackson, college senior will act as toastmaster at the affair. There will be announced the Kansan positions of publisher, managing editor, editor-in-chief, and chairman of the Kansan Board for the fall term. The yearly awards to the outstanding journalists of the department will be made. The L. N. Flint awards will be presented to the writers of the best news story, feature story, and editorial appearing in the Daily Kansan during the past year. Also the Henry Schott award will be given to the most promising junior man in the department of journalism. Sigma Delta Chi, national professional journalism fraternity, will announce the outstanding senior journalism majors according to scholarship. Marco Morrow, honorary national president of Sigma Delta Chi, will be the guest speaker. Mr. Morrow, until his recent retirement, was associated with Capper publications in Topeka. Let's Give the Dog a Hand A minor sensation stirred a Minneapolis neighborhood when a dog brought home a human hand. Newsmen assigned to the case learned a medical student at the University of Minnesota had brought the hand home for experimentation and had left it in his back yard. A nutrition course for housemothers or proprietors of sororites and boarding houses has been inaugurated at the University of California. Michigan Coeds Hit Jackpot Ann Arbor, Mich. —It looks as though the "date" problem will be a serious one during the University of Michigan's new summer term. Normally co-eds on the Michigan campus are outnumbered two to one by the men. During the summer term the masculine element is going to be even more dominant, according to a survey recently completed by the university's War board. Fifty-one per cent of the male students who replied to a questionnaire indicated they plan to enroll in the summer term, 35 percent were uncertain and 14 per cent indicated they expect to re-enroll in the university at some time during the 1942-43 year but not during the summer term. In contrast, only 29 per cent of the co-eds indicated plans to remain in school this summer. 37 per cent were uncertain and 34 per cent intend to re-enroll some time during the 1942- 43 year but not during the summer term. To Install Pharmacy Sorority on the Hill Mu chapter of Kappa Epsilon, national pharmacy sorority, will be installed and eight new members will be initiated at the banquet at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow at Evans Hearth. The new members will be Frances Lair, Wanda Allen, Catherine Gates, Erma Lee Wallace, Muriel Henry, Charlotte Robson, Ruth Anderson, and Mary Munson. Pledging will be held for Florice Barnum. Seniors Postpone Gift; To Buy Bonds The senior class, at its meeting yesterday, voted to use the money for its gift to the University for the purchase of war bonds. A gift will be decided upon and arranged by the class at a reunion in 1952, when the bonds are to mature. The seniors believed that the problems and needs of the University will be materially different after the war, and that the money will be of more benefit at that time than now. Arrangements were made for class dues and assessments, and a motion was carried that dues be set at $1.90. It was agreed that alumni membership would not be made compulsory, as it has been in the past, but the Alumni association agreed that for each member over 300 that was obtained, it would refund 25 cents to the class to be incorporated in the class gift. Balfour Jeffrey of Topeka, spoke on advantages of membership in the Association, and Fred Ellsworth, Alumni secretary, explained the commencement program and made announcements regarding senior activities. Insects Know Their Art At Illinois College -NOTICE Remember the legendary painting of a bunch of grapes that looked so natural the birds pecked at it? Well, listen to this one: On exhibit at James Milliken University, Decatur, ll., were several paintings, including one called "The Nude Back." The following books are missing from the Gillham Collection at Watson Library. They have been taken from the building by individuals, who, rather than accept responsibility for the volumes, carried them away without signing for them. Since these books are part of a memorial collection intended to help provide recreation reading for students, their return would be much appreciated. These 31 missing titles from a total collection of 106 titles is a high record of which the student body should not be proud. The books may be left at the Main Circulation Desk and no questions will be asked. Art department heads insist they found two mosquitoes perched on the "back" feverishly boring away. Beebe, William. Book of Bays. Bemelman, Ludwig. The Donkey Inside. Cleaveland, Agnes. No Life For a Lady. Cronin, A. J. The Keys of the Kingdom. Deutsch, Babette. Rogue's Legacy. Esquire. The Bedside Esquire. Estes, Harlow. Hildreth. Fedorova, Nina. The Family. Ferber, Edna. The Saratoga Trunk. Field, Rachel. All This and Heaven too. Fishback, Margaret. Time for a Quick One. Carnes, Cecil. Jimmy Hare, News Photographer. Joyce, James. Dubliners. Maurer, D. W. The Big Con. MacDougall, C. D. Hoaxes. McGinley, Phyllis. Husbands are Difficult. McKenney, Ruth. My Sister Eileen. McKenney, Ruth. The McKenney's Carry On. McKinney, Laurence. People of Note. MacMurray, Claire. —And Beat Him When He Sneezes. Morley, Christopher. Kitty Foyle. Nash, Ogden. The Face is Familiar. New Yorker. The 1942 New Yorker Album. Norway, N. S. Pied Piper. O'Malley, Pat. The Lancashire Lad. Rorick, I. S. Mr. and Mrs. Cugat. Saint Exupery, Antoine de. Flight to Arras. Smith, Paul Gerard. The New Lancashire Lad. Spence, Hartzell. One Foot in Heaven. White, T. H. The Ill-Made Knight. Williams, Gluyas. Fellow Citizens. C.M. BAKER Director of Libraries Beebe, William. Book of Bays. C. M. BAKER, Director of Libraries. (continued from page one) Ernest Fremont Tittle, pastor of the First Methodist Episcopal church at Evanston, Ill. ELLSWORTH---with GAIL PATRICK • LEE BOWMAN MARJORIE MAIN • REGINALD OWEN ALAN MOWBRAY • FLORENCE BATES JAYHAWKER ENDS TONITE The customary senior breakfast will be served in the Union building at 7:15 Monday morning. At 9:45, the Alumni Association will hold its annual meeting in Fraser theater. At 12:15, a luncheon will be served in the Union building. The ceremonies of the laying of the cornerstone of Lindley hall will be held, followed by the annual Phi Beta Kappa meeting in the basement of Spooner-Thayer museum. The commencement exercises will be held in the stadium at 7:30. PHI BETA KAPPA--with GAIL PATRICK • LEE BOWMAN MARJORIE MAIN • REGINALD OWEN ALAN MOWBRAY • FLORENCE BATES Disney's Sensational, Record Breaking, Technicolor Feature Triumph Now at Regular Prices. "FANTASIA" Those initiated last night were X-Tra Special March of Time "INDIA IN CRISIS" The True Story of India Plus-Clara Barton and the Red Cross Latest News Events (continued from page one) F. Anderson, instructor of German, led group singing for which Miss Ruth Orcutt, associate professor of piano, played. LIMITED ENGAGEMENT FULL LENGTH NOTHING CUT BUT THE PRICE WEDNESDAY 4 Days Only Twice Daily at 2 and 8 p.m. No Seats Reserved Mat. 40c, Eve. 50c, Kiddies 18c These prices include tax Wastepaper Contest Ends Frances Butterfield, Letha Jean Curtis, Mary Elizabeth Evans, Janice Gartrell, Emmett Hook, Helen Houston, Warren Lowen, Ruth Mason, Hugh Mathewson, Jessie McClune, Pauline Miller, Andrew Mitchell, Marcia Molby, Donn Mosser, Marjorie Mossman, Muriel Olson, Ralph William Pfouts, Mary Ellen Roach, Fred Robertson, Arthur Robinson, Keith Spalding, Heidi Viets, Erma Jean Wakeman, and Vivian Adelle Woodside. "GONE WITH THE WIND" The University wastepaper contest will close Saturday noon, Laird Campbell, chairman of the drive, said today. By that time all check slips, no matter how small, must be turned in to Campbell along with the number of persons in each house. SUNDAY—3 Days No individual houses will be called, Campbell said, and it will be the responsibility of each house to see that its results are checked in. BETTE DAVIS HERBERT MARSHALL "THE LITTLE FOXES" UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS EXAMINATION SCHEDULE FRIDAY, A.M. MAY 22: P.M. SATURDAY, A.M. MAY 23: P.M. SPRING SEMESTER, 1942 May 22 to May 28, 1942, inclusive MONDAY, MAY 25: TUESDAY, MAY 26: WEDNESDAY, MAY 27: THURSDAY, MAY 28: A.M. 3:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 1:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 2:30 to 5:20 A.M. 9:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 9:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 4:30 classes, all hours at 3:30 to 5:20 A.M. 10:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 10:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 A.M. 2:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 11:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 1:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 3:30 to 5:20 A.M. 8:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 8:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 2:30 to 4:20 A.M. 11:30 classes, 5, 4, 3 hours at 8:30 to 11:20 P.M. 2:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 3:20 3:30 classes, 2, 1 hours at 1:30 to 5:20 GRANADA ALL SHOWS LAST TIMES TONITE HENRY FONDA — GENE TIERNEY "RINGS ON HER FINGERS" 25c PLUS TAX WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY — 2 Days Only! NORMA MELVYN Shearer Douglas WE WERE DANCING FREE $275.00 IN CASH FOR BONDS COMING SUNDAY — 3 Days Only "REMEMBER PEARL HARBOR"