TUESDAY, MAY 5.1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Graduating Class At Wisconsin To Hear Dr. Hu Shih Dr. Hu Shih, Chinese ambassador to the United States who spoke here at a recent convocation, will give the baccalaureate sermon to the eighty-ninth graduating class of the University of Wisconsin at the services to be held May 31, C. A. Dykstra, president of the University, has announced. Dr. Hu will also receive the honorary degree of doctor of laws at the commencement exercises Monday, June 1. Dr. Hu, who has served as ambassador to this country since 1938, has an international reputation as the foremost philosopher and author of modern China. Gen. Douglas MacArthur will also be granted the honorary degree of doctor of laws. President Dykstra revealed that plans were under way to make arrangements to confer the degree on General MacArthur at the commencement exercises via short wave radio to Australia, with the general's acceptance also being broadcast back to this country. If, however, such arrangements cannot be made, the degree will be granted in absentia. FLUGERS, PHI. DELT'S-- (continued from page four) gather more than three scores in the seventh. Battenfeld 11. I. R. G. 5 Battenfeld Hall scored eleven times to beat out the IRG's by a count of 11 to 5. Hays for Battenfeld, besides pitching good ball, had a perfect day at the plate with four hits in four times up. The IRG team started the game with a convincing rally of four runs in the first inning and one in the second. However, they failed to score again during the game. Battenfeld scored one in the first, three in the third, four in the fourth, one in the fifth, and two in the sixth. Pflugerville 12, Newman 5 The Newman Club bowed down to the Pflugerville Flashes in a 12 to 5 defeat. The game started evenly enough with two runs apiece in the first inning. But the Newman Club did not score again until the fifth inning while the Flashes were collecting 5 more runs. In the sixth the Flashes scored one and the Newman Club failed again to register. The Flashes finished their batting in the seventh with a rally netting four runs. The Newman club could push only a feeble two more across. TKE 7. Beta "B" 6 Tau Kappa Epsilon put down the Beta II team 7 to 6. Hubert Ulrich was the TKE pitcher and he allowed only five hits during the game. Don Welty, pitcher for the Beta team, allowed seven hits in seven innings. The Beta's led 5-4 in the sixth and collected one more in the first half of the seventh. But the TKE's staged a three run rally which pushed them out in front by one tally. The game between Alpha Chi Sigma and Delta Chi was not played. Turckol, Calif. — (UP) — John Rosenquist, on the recent occurrence of his 94th birthday, attributed his longevity to "single blessedness." Born in Sweden, he came to the United States in 1883 and never married. See Average Co-ed's Garb In Full Style A style show based on the needs and the budget of an average college woman was presented by Iota chapter of Omicron Nu, honorary home economics society, Saturday afternoon as part of the Parents' Day program on the Hill. All clothing modeled was the property of the girls taking part. Notes on the show and the typical budget are being sent to prospective freshman women. Copies will be available during the summer months at the office of Miss Elizabeth M. Meguiar, adviser of women. According to the budget worked out, the wardrobe should include a sport coat, $14.95; two shirts, $2; four pairs of anklets, $1.16; one skirt, $3.98; one pair of saddle oxfords, $4; one sweater, $2.95; one scarf, $1; and costume jewelry, $1. These total $31.04. Modeling were the following home economics students; Mary Helen Wilson, Pauline Kallaras, Margaret Boyle, Mary Ellen Roach, Alice Goff, Helen Guessford, Jean Miller, Evelyn Kamprich, Doris Larson, Rosemary Branine, Mari Lee Nelson, Nancy Kerber, Margaret Ann Reed, Mary McCroskey, Martha Nearing, Bette Baker, Lila Doughman, and Joan Basore. TRACK MEET---- (continued from page four) (KS); 2nd, Black (KU); 3 rd, Schneider (KS); distance, 137 ft. 8 in. Javelin throw won by Farneti (KU); 2nd, Theis (KS); 3rd, Socolofsky (KS); distance, 198 ft. 3 5-8 in., a new record; old record, 198 ft. by Durand, 1937. Mile relay won by Kansas State on forfeit. SIDELINES--- (continued from page four) aged by Mickey Cochrane, formerly of the Detroit Tigers, and having such stars as Frankie Pytlak (Cleveland Indians), Sam Harshany (St. Louis Browns), Benny McCoy (Philadelphia Athletics), Don Padgett (St. Louis Cards), and Paul Christman (Mizzou football and baseball player), the Lakes squad circles over through St. Louis this week, where it will play the Missouri nine. Mason is traveling with the team. A war information bureau will open tomorrow night in the browsing room of Watkins library, Miss Helen Wagstaff, chairman of the committee, announced today. Information concerning the background of the World War, the present war and conditions facing the world in the future will be available there. Sponsor Information Bureau In Library PLAYS TOMORROW Material similar to that presented in the lecture course, "The World at War," is being prepared by the committee. The bureau will be open all day and from 7 to 9 p.m. in the evenings. The Co-ed Volunteer Corps under the supervision of Lieut. Lila May Reetz will have charge of the evening hours. University of California department of hygiene has worked out a co-operative plan for emergency use of its facilities by the state and the city of Berkeley. Carroll Glenn Sarvis to Address World-At-War Class Byron Sarvis, assistant professor of psychology, will speak to the World at War class in Fraser theater next Thursday at 7:30 p.m. His subject will be "The Social Psychology of War; The Problem of Morale at Home and at the Front." The lecture was to have been given by J. F. Brown, professor of psychology, but he was called out of town, C. B. Realey, professor of history and chairman of the World at War committee, said today. There will be only one more lecture after Thursday's. Chandler Appoints Two New Teachers H. E. Chandler, director of the teachers' appointment bureau, today announced the appointment of Elizabeth Hinshaw Shaffer, graduate in 1934, and June Cochern, fine arts senior, to teaching positions for next fall. Miss Shaffer will teach mathematics and Latin in Ellis high school. Miss Cochren, who will receive her degree as bachelor of music education this spring, will teach in the high and grade schools at Enterprise. Jones Gets Science Academy Fellowship A fellowship from the National Academy of Science has been awarded to Tom Douglas Jones, assistant professor of design at the University, for the development of his Symphocrome, a device for the study and demonstration of all the principles and applications of light and color in its various fields. The amount of the grant is $500. Jones plans to spend the summer in New York studying at the Art Institute of Light under the supervision of Thomas Wilfred, who developed the Clavilux, color organ. He will return to the University in the fall. Wilfred is regarded as one of the world's outstanding authorities in the fields of light and color. A part of the grant from the Academy of Science will be used for building a model of Jones' Symphocrome for mass manufacture to be used particularly in schools, for a study of the application of light and color in the fields of camouflage for military and industrial defense; commercial display and advertising domestic and industrial lighting; and for class and laboratory use in psychology, physics, and art. Quill Club Holds Next Meeting Thursday The American College Quill club will hold its next meeting Thursday evening in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. A dinner at 5:30 will precede the meeting. Guest speaker will be Mrs. A. J. Mix, who writes under the pen name of Catherine Lyon. A number of her stories have appeared in the New Yorker. All money for the club's magazine, "Feoh," must be turned in at the meeting. Students in Rectal Students in Recital SINGS TONIGHT Minerva Davis, mezzo soprano, Margaret Dunn, pianist; and Eugene Nininger, violinist, all seniors in the School of Fine Arts, presented a recital over KFKU at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon. Helen Traubel Paullin Will Read Historical Paper Dr. Theodore Paullin, professor of history, left today to attend the annual meeting of the Mississippi Valley historical association at Lexington, Ky., where he will read a paper entitled "James Wier, Lexington Merchant and Manufacturer, 1805-1824." On Saturday he will attend a meeting of alumni and faculty of the University of Wisconsin experimental college to be held at the University of Chicago. This meeting will commemorate the fifteenth anniversary of the founding of the experimental college by Dr. Alexander Meikeljohn, who will be honored at the occasion. Dr. Paullin will read a paper as a representative of those alumni who are members of the college teaching profession in an experiment to assess the educational value of the experimental college in the experience of its former students. Dr. Wheeler To Air Morale Question "Keeping Up Morale Through Understanding" is to be the title of an address by Dr. R. H. Wheeler, chairman of the department of psychology, this afternoon at 6 o'clock over KFKU. You trust its quality BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY