PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1944 BEAT IOWA---tion of the magazine Friday morning. (continued from page one) upon the students." he stated. "The only way to make this rally a success is to have every member of the student body who can possibly make it, be there." Hugo T. Wedell, Chief Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court and president of the alumni association, will be the principal speaker. Coach Gwinn Henry and a member of the team, as yet not named, will also speak. The University band, under Russell Wiley, will play. The Glee Club, under Joseph L. Wilkins, will sing. Edwards said a prominent man from the University will act as master of ceremonies. The annual night-shirt parade for new students will form in front of the auditorium immediately after the rally. ODDITIES OF THE DAY---tion of the magazine Friday morning. (continued from page one) When a dockworker ran away with Petty Officer Terrance O'Neil's cap while they were drinking in a Brooklyn saloon it was no joke to Terrance. When the barkeeper made no effort to get the cap back, O'Neil vowed he would get even. In a few minutes he returned carrying three hand-grenades and threatened to blow up the tavern, but some free drinks soon cleared the situation. After Terrance was thoroughly mellowed, a police officer took the grenades away. Taking time off from his isolationist campaign Senator Burton K. Wheeler declared that if anything needed investigating it was juke box movies. They are both "lewd and lascivious" he declared. He shouldn't have much trouble getting the Senate to investigate. A man was thrown in prison in California after giving his brother-in-law a ride into the state. Not for bringing in his brother-in-law, but because he didn't make sure that there was a job waiting for the in-law. He is taking it to the Supreme Court. In Portland, Me., a bee producer put the bee on the city government because the city sprayed trees with a poison that killed, by actual count, 315,000 bees. The bee is for $713 and no cents. OWL GETS---tion of the magazine Friday morning. (continued from page one) meets all our expectations but we plan to make even more advances with the publication of the next issue. My opinion is that the photography in this issue cannot be improved upon." Fred Robertson, chief Sachem and I.S.A. president, was most vociferous in his approval. He said, "The new Owl is such an improvement over former issues of the magazine that it is difficult to make an overstatement of its merits." Coming out with a two-color Life-magazine-style cover page, the Sour Owl contains picture stories of various phases of University life. Besides these new photographic features, the remodeled humor magazine also retains some of the more popular features of Owls of the past, such as a complete date guide with the pertinent specifications of University women, selected jokes, gossip and cartoons. Representatives of the organized house will meet with business manager Bill Allen, college junior, and Bob McClure, circulation manager in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building at 7:30 tonight to organize for the distributi- It's Chesterfield Try a couple of packs. We feel sure you'll be coming back for more . . . because Chesterfield's right combination of the world's leading cigarette tobaccos makes them so much Milder, Cooler and Better-Tasting that more smokers are turning to them every day. Yes, the approval of smokers is the big thing that's pushing Chesterfield ahead all over the country. Copyright 1941 LUCKEY & MYERS TOBACCO CO. 400 HIGH SCHOOLS---supervisors. (continued from page one) Teachers of Journalism will hold its sixteenth annual meeting. Miss Iva Belle Harper, president of the K.C.T.J. and a member of the faculty of Liberty Memorial High School in Lawrence, has prepared a practical program for teacher-delegates and the general session and discussion programs are also open to teachers and Special speakers who will be on hand are Bert Brandt, manager of the Kansas City bureau of Acme Newspictures, Inc.; Dolph Simons, business manager of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World; R. W. Reed, military commentator for the Kansas City Star; and Hilda Mauck, novelist and short story writer. In addition there will be speakers from the University journalism faculty. Former Student Here University with a major in journalism in 1939. As a student he had been staff photographer for the Jayhawker Magazine and had done free lance photography. Two years after starting to work for Acme Newspictures, Inc., he was made manager of the Kansas City bureau. He will discuss photography and news pictures at the conference. Brandt was graduated from the Miss Mauck, the authoress of "A Mind of Her Own," a novel in the October issue of Ladies' Home Journal, will relate her experiences and describe her methods at one of the general session programs of the conference. Miss Mauck has had several stories published in McCall's, Pictorial Review, Ladies' Home Journal, Red Book, Liberty, Woman's Home Companion, and Collier's. Lawrence and vicinity: Fair to mostly cloudy tomorrow with possible showers. Slightly cooler with a high near 70. WEATHER FORECAST