PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1941 News From Page One P.S.G.L.'s SCORE---- (continued from page one) tion. When 291 votes had been counted of the total of 425 cast, the count stood Penny, 84; Stryker, 85; Worall, 85; and Laird Campbell, the other Pacchacamac candidate, 37. The final count was announced as Penny, 118; Stryker, 117; Worrall, 109; and Campbell, 48. Under the rules of the proportional representation method of electing, the ballots of the lowest man are cast out and re-counted for second choice on them. On second count Stryker was the first man officially of the votes cast for Campbell, elected, for he was the first to get the total of 131 votes necessary. Final count in the Presidential race was 243 for Schuerman to 175 for Hanstine. In the treasurer vote, Bill Kiene polled 255 votes to John Bradley's 166. WOMEN'S ELECTION Freshman women moved to the polls yesterday to elect Betty Pile vice-president of the freshman class and Joanne Johnson to the secretary post. Both newly elected officers moved in with more than 100 votes to spare. The women cast a total of 294 votes, the highest number of freshman women to vote in the past 10 years. Complete figures of the total number of women in the freshman class have not been compiled as yet but it is reasonably certain that more than half the class voted. The final count of the votes in the office of Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser of women, showed; for vice-president, Betty Pile 148, Ann Staley 45; for secretary, Joanne Johnson 156, Ann Cowan 38. SALISBURY TO BE HERE---- (continued from page one) will be in the spotlight for the feature of the day. All Kansas editors and press women will be guests of the University at the Kansas-Kansas State game Saturday afternoon. Free tickets will be available at the journalism building registration desk until 12:15 on Saturday. Each newspaper represented will be limited to two tickets. Additional tickets may be purchased in reserved section if advance notice is given to the department of journalism. At the conclusion of the sessions, editors and press women will be guests of the University and the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce at a luncheon in the Memorial Union building. Ed. Abels, Lawrence, publisher and editor of the Outlook, who is chairman of the second district of the Kansas Press Association, will conduct the Association's fall meeting at 9:15 a.m. on Saturday. ODDITIES OF THE DAY--- (continued from page one) the park department to take the ducks off their hands. Now the park department has a flock of ducks it plans to sacrifice as Thanksgiving dinners for Kansas City orphans. Scandal Note Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Mayor Fiorello La Guardia left on the same train for Washington today. Same Thing Isn't It? Waxey Gordon, who was a been baron back in prohibition days, arrived in San Francisco today, planning to start a cleaning fluid company. "Moider" Twelve police cars rushed to a Buffalo, N.Y., home in answer to a murder call last night, but found only a small boy who said he had put the call through in order to scare his little sister out of the house while he entertained some pals. Irony After returning home from hundreds of thousands of miles of traveling by automobile, roving columnist Ernie Pyle received his first traffic ticket. FLOAT COMMITTEE--- (continued from page one) the awards which will be made for the best float in the parade. The general route to be taken will also be decided. In the past prizes have been offered for the largest number of members of an organization on floats and marching behind floats. Such representation was based on the percentage of the membership of the respective organizations. Prizes have been offered also to the tackiest dressed man, the tackiest dressed woman, and the tackiest dressed couple. The members comprising the float and parade committee and the organizations they represent are as follows: Dave Watermulder, M.S.C.; Roy Edwards, Ku Ku's; Knute Kresie, K Club; Genevieve Harman, Jay Janes; Herbert Mueller, University band; Fred Robertson, I.S.A.; Doris Twente. W.S.G.A.; Virginia Gear, house presidents' council; Jude Anderson, chief of police. Sgt. William Kollender, chairman of the parade committee, said this morning that the meeting would be open to any student or faculty member who have any suggestions to improve the parade. This is not a secret meeting but an open student project. Homecoming will be held Nov. 22 when the K.U. Jayhawkers meet the Tigers of Missouri. First grade gasoline sold at a new low price. ALSO: • Seiberling Tires Save 2 - 3c per gallon Attention Students GAS FOR LESS WITH KVX - Veedol Motor Oils - Century Oil Furnaces - Accessories Kaw Valley Oil Company 1318 W. 7th Phone 598 (continued from page one) shortly then Japan will have to "use other means" to protect her existence against economic and military encirclement. FOREIGN DEVELOPMENTS- Speaking in Moscow's Red Square on the twenty-fifth anniversary of the soviet revolution, Joseph Stalin said today that the Germans are "confronting catastrophe." Stalin Says Germans Admit The high command of the German army admitted today that Russian rear guard troops in the Crimea are offering "obstinate" resistance to Nazi pursuit. The other fighting fronts remained practically stationary. Official quarters in England said today that Dictator Stalin's public assertion on the imminence of a second war front against Germany would not budge the British government's stand on this vital issue. No Budge (continued from page one) special leased wire. The play by play description will be relayed to the students over the public address system by Glenn Perkins, college sophomore. GAME RELAYED---- There are no regular scheduled broadcasts for the game with the Mountainers at Morgantown, so the party in the Union building will be the only way the students can follow the action of the team: The broadcast will be sponsored by the Ku Ku's, Jay Janes, K-Club and the Union Building activities committee. Roy Edwards, head cheerleader and president of the Ku Ku's, said that students attending the party could play cards, drink cokes, and have a general mixer while listening to the game. To Formulate Plans For Annual R.O.T.C. Military Ball Dec. 5 Plans for the annual R.O.T.C. military ball will be formulated early next week. The ball, which will be held Dec. 5th in the Union ballroom, is one of the highlights of military affairs in the University. Invitations to the affair will probably be issued shortly after the meeting of the committee. Representatives of all R.O.T.C. units in Kansas and Missouri and representative members of the faculty are usually included in the list of invitations. The committee in charge of the ball will be announced next week. "CITADEL of CRIME" SUNDAY — 4 Days SPENCER TRACY MICKEY ROONEY "Men of Boys Town" Sally Eilers Donald Woods "I Was a Prisoner on Devil's Island Newsmen Attend Conclave Four delegates to the national convention of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity, will leave the department of journalism Wednesday for New Orleans. K. W, Davidson, director of University information, will conduct at the meeting a roundtable discussion for teachers of newspaper business administration. Verdun R. Daste, instructor in journalism, and Charles Pearson and Stan Stauffer, college seniors, who will accompany Davidson, will return from the meeting Nov. 17. Town Hall Meetings Discuss Radio Topics At the first K.U. Town Hall meeting, a group of interested students discussed "Must We Fight Japan?" after listening to the Town Hall Meeting of the Air's presentation of the same question. The meeting was held in the Memorial Union lounge last night under the leadership of Orville Wright political science senior. The broadcast program presented Major George Fielding Elliott, Wilfred Fleisher, Rear Admiral Reginald Belnap, and Harry Peckston Howard, who are familiar with the situation in the Far East. The K.U. Town Hall meetings are weekly programs under the sponsorship of the Student Union Activities board. The question for next week is "What Kind of Peace Must We Have" and the broadcast portion of the program will present Norman Thomas and Dorothy Thompson as guest speakers. DATING DATA (continued from page seven) few. Say, maybe I can find a solution yet. Remind me to keep pegging away at it. Until I do find this method of dissolving the stag-line, I'll stick along with guys like Horace, cursing the no-date man, spending all my dough, . . ." Jayhawker Today ENDS SATURDAY 25c plus tax SUNDAY SUNDAY THIS ADAM GETS A RIBBING! CHARLES LAUGHTON DEANNA DURBIN "IT STARTED WITH EVE" Activities Carnival Closes Concessions The fair ground is full. A meeting of key committee chairmen for Union Activities decided yesterday afternoon to let no more organizations take concessions for the Pumpkin Prom and Carnival to be held in the Memorial Union ballroom next Friday night. Under the ropes are 24 organizations which will be booth-holders, Don Keplinger, special programs committee chairman, announced today. These groups either reported definite plans or spoke for a place to be held open for them before yesterday afternoon. Concession sponsors will be the I.S.A., Watkins hall, Miller hall, Corbin hall, Jay James, Gamma Pi Beta, Delta Gamma, Kappa Kappa Gamma Pi, Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Chi Omega, Kappa Alpha Theta, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Gamma Delta, Delta Tau Delta, Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, Alpha Tau Omega, Ku Ku's, Battenfeld hall, and Alpha Pi Omega. GRANADA JUST ONE MORE DAY TODAY ENDS Mat. 25c. Eve. 31c. plus tax The Gayest . . . Fastest Four Star Musical of 1941! Alicia Faye-Carmen Miranda John Payne - Cesar Romero in the musical ALL 25c PLUS SHOWS TAX SUNDAY — 3 Days IT'S A ROMANTIC MASQUERADE --- 007