1941 gal row (UP) from the hills and tion for the 43rd livestock of the first Missouri is have of the m lead breeders ere en also re- oughout thousand acted to America conven- with the chief of service of edu- kge part invention. morrow honor- Fifty- ma and contest. queen UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS STUDENT PUBLICATION UNIVERSITY Daily Kansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1941 39th YEAR Marquette Trounces Jayhawks NUMBER 26 Senorita Cecilia Says "I Am Much Surprised" The senorita was sitting at a desk in the "Shack" typing. Between pecks she struggled with the tenses and phrases of the English language, but displayed a pearly, though exasperated, smile at some interpretations of English. The senorita is Cecilia Goncalves. Brazilian exchange student. norita Goncalves lives at Corbin hall with her 119 "sis Students enrolled in the advanced class are Jack R. Armstrong, Leo F. Brady, Percy H. Collins, George Elmer Drew, James T. Good, Warren Edward Hall, John F. Harrison, Fred Austin Johnson, Willard T. Leopold, Roy Matthews, Bill McCrum, oseph McMillen, Victor Valle Schloeser, Bert L. Shoemake, John Brigham Stewart, Jack Louis Walton, John S. Heibling, Foster Perkins, Thomas Morning, and Chain V. Healy. Senorita Goncalves lives " as she calls them. She has been surprised by them, having had a very different picture of North Americans. She had heard so much about "divorces one day and marriages the next." In Brazil students follow the fashions of North America, but the European influence also prevails. Cecilia says that Clark Gable is as popular in Brazil as in the States. Of French movies, the senorita said, "they are so real, but they lack the American technique." Cecilia attended the dinner given for President Roosevelt in Rio de Janeiro a few years ago. The senorita told of the thrill she received when she was presented to the president, "all I can say is that I shook hands with him." Advanced Flyers Begin Air Work Tomorrow "We do not wear jewelry with sports clothes. At the colleges and universities we do not wear anklets Actual flight instruction will begin tomorrow for the 20 students enrolled in the Civil Aeronautic Authority's advanced course. Primary work was taken on a small Aeronca ship, but advanced students will fly a heavier Waco. A minimum of 40 more additional hours is required for completion of the advanced course. Having previously taken the primary course, these 20 licensed pilots already have an average of 35 hours of combination solo and dual time in the air. or low heels. On dates there is always a third person—the chaperon." Cecilia likes the United States very much. She says that a North SENORITA CECILIA American is lucky. "Even the common laborer has a home and an automobile of some kind and is indeed much better off than many Brazilians." "Everyone has been so nice to me," beamed Senorita Cecilia Goncalves. WSGA Will Vote On Changes In Constitution University women will hold a mass meeting in the ballroom of the Memorial Union building at 4:30 o'clock Tuesday afternoon to vote on the first draft of the newly revised constitution of the Women's Self-Governing Association. An exhibit from the department of design will be on display in the Memorial Union lounge this week. These designs were made under the supervision of Miss Marjorie Whitney, chairman of the department of design. A complete revision of bills and by-laws of the constitution was made by the women's Council this fall. On Tuesday the whole Association will pass on changes recommended by the committee. The proposed change, if accepted, will make every woman registered in the University subject to rules and regulations of the W.S.G.A., whether she has paid an activity fee or not. Women graduate students are included. This project was adopted by the Association in the spring of last year and at that time a committee was appointed to redraft the constitution. Union Displays Student Art Work Fair and cooler today. Light frost in northwest. WEATHER Gibbens Jackrabbits 46 Yards for K.U. Tally POCO AND FRIEND Bernard "Poco" Frazier, local sculptor and University instructor, received first prize in the Western Hemisphere Ceramics competition, outstanding ceramic award, at (continued to page eight) Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. 18—(Special)—Marquette University's Golden Avalanche smothered an underpowered Kansas Jayhawk eleven, 33 to 7, on a slippery field tonight as the Hilltoppers passed and ran at will for three late last half touchdowns. Poco Frazier Wins National Ceramic Award To be or not to be, that is the question hovering over the University's proposed new men's dormitory, Joliffe hall. A special committee of seven appointed by Chancellor Deane W. Malott had reached no decision by today on whether to accept or reject contracting bids Jimmy Richardson starred at passing, completing a majority of 12 out of 14 passes. Denzil Gibbens, free wheeling Kansas jackrabbit, countered the only Kansas touchdown in the third quarter. Gibbens took a short pass in the flat from Altman on the Marquette 46- STARTING LINEUP Marquette Pos Kansas Kuffel LE Ulrich Klug LT Meade Kinsey LG Fluker Maceau C Githens Brye RG J. Kern Fugate RT Long Carlson RE Hardman Hall Q Miller Richardson LH Evans Goodyear RH Niblo Renzel FB Ettinger "Riffl' Ralph" Miller was injured with but a minute left to play in the first half. The rangy quarterback almost hurled Kansas to a touchdown early in the second period. From the K.U. 27. Miller hurl- yard line, then scampered down the sideline for a score. Marvin Vandaveer kicked extra point. However, the count at this juncture was Marquette, 20; Kansas, 7. SUMMARY Marq. Kan. First Downs 10 8 Yds. gained by forw'd passes 136 111 Forw'd passes attempted 14 20 Forw'd passes completed 12 8 Number of punts 9 10 Average yardage of punts 33 39.3 ed a screen pass to Ray Evans on the 30-yard line,Evans running to the Marquette 30 for a 43-yard gain. After two line plays had lost, Miller again passed to Evans from the 33, with the flashy sophomore sprinting all the way to the Hilltopper 5-yard marker. However, the play was called back and Kansas penalized 15 yards. The Jayhawker threat ended on the Marquette 43-yard line. Richardson passed 12, 8, and 13 yads to lead Marquette to an early second period score. Late in the same quarter Gooyear intercepted a Miller aerial and raced 75 yards for a second touchdown. After intercepting Harlan Altman's pass on their own 49 in the thid, the Golden Avalanche worked a lateral-forward pass from Renzel to McCahill to Harrington for 49 yards and a touchdown. Marquette scored again with 12 seconds left.