SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS AN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN X about us a shorts vision was enwrence ad Uni- sed last couldn't keep her ot noth- posses= he pin= erybody t house an dan- ed the Unt Uni- holding to the ecoan; Bill e skins weather time shown to be the job. more st. R. I. e Test for en- in the p. 0 m. Mar- given ll and those of one h stu- receipt forma- nized.— Frank Esther ub to- Room reiber, ing to at the o have cards do so 1941- later fice.— oe an ers at re- happenings on the hill Beatrice Hagedorn, fine arts senior, left for her home in Camden, N. J., Wednesday. She will visit her parents there and join her husband, an ensign in the n aval reserve in Honolulu late in May. Virginia Ochs, college freshman, is spending the weekend in Atchison. Lieutenant Francis Dill, former student, is visiting his mother, Mrs. W. A. Dill, and sister, Florence Dill of the Botany department this week. He will leave next week for Fort Leonard Wood at Rolla, Mo. Clarence Peterson, college junior, is spending the weekend on the University of Iowa campus. Forest Hashbarger, college sophomore, is spending the weekend at his home in Wellington. Bill McIntire, sophomore engineer, and Jim Cordell, junior engineer, are spending the weekend at their home in Gardner. L. L. McKinney, former student and now pharmacist at the Santa Fe hospital in Topeka, was on the campus Wednesday interviewing students for a position as junior pharmacist at the Santa Fe hospital. Raymond Blair, sophomore engineer, is spending the weekend in Topeka. James B. Martin, chemistry instructor, has accepted a position with the Ethyl Gasoline corporation of Detroit. Martin will be employed in the research laboratories. Marena Madden, college freshman is spending the weekend visiting friends in Columbia, Mo. Members of Mortar Board attended a dinner and a line party to a performance of "Hellzapoppin" in Kansas City Thursday night. Richard Lashley, business junior, spent the weekend in Girard. Read the Classified Section University Daily Kansan for many Useful Suggestions WANT ADS RENT: 3 or 4-room, furnished, 1st floor Apt. near K.U. piano, laundry facilities. Bills paid. Reasonable. Also, 2-room Apt. Single $13. Phone 2105. 888-136. LOST: Dandelion Day—1938 Topeka High School class ring. Initials on inside: C. W. T. Reward. Phone 877. 887-134 LAWRENCE Business College Lawrence, Kansas. Shorthand, Typewriting, Accounting, Comptometry, and Machine bookkeeping. on tuition to K.U. students Lawrence Business College Phone 894 One-half rates Pachacamac In For First Time Since 1938 Thursday's election placed the Pachacamac party in power in the Men's Student Council for the first time since Blaine Grimes, now a University instructor in Economics, was elected in the spring of 1938. Following Grimes as president were C. H. Mullen, second Following Grimes as pres year Law student, and Bill Farmer, retiring president. During these two years P. S. G. L. controlled the Council with an 11 to 10 majority. The 1938 results showed Grimes elected with the largest majority given to any candidate in the history of Hill politics. The Pachacamac landslide vote of 1,119 to 908 in the presidential election was confirmed by Pachacamae's winning all class offices and 10 out of 18 representatives. All Elected to Council During this campaign C.H. Mullen, Bill Farmer, and Bob McKay were all elected to office as representatives on the Council. In the 1939 campaign C. H. Mullen approached the record established by Grimes as he led the P.S.G. L. slate to victory by a vote of 1,045 to 883. John Oakson was the defeated candidate. This campaign was enlivened by the appearance of a third party, the Goldfish party which presented Robert Ramsay, famed goldfish swallower, as their presidential choice. Despite their efforts and the fame of their candidate the Goldfish party failed to elect any man, Ramsay getting only 60 votes for president. The 1940 presidential campaign was the closest ever waged on the campus. After Bob McKay, present president-elect, had been declared winner by one vote over Bill Farmer, a re-check three days later changed this and declared Farmer winner by the same margin. New Election Refused Pachacamac's attempts to obtain a new election because of allegedly illegal votes cast in District I were refused by the Council and Farmer was officially installed as president. The present campaign which returned Pachacamac to power has as yet shown no such excitement. Though the race was close, with McKay winning by only 25 votes, there has not been any call for either a recount or a new election. The unusually light vote may be accounted for in part by the drop in enrollment. As the cleanest contest in the history of Hill politics, there was no muck-raking by either party, and it may be classed as the quietest in recent years. Library Adds New Books A rhetoric professor once defined a library as "the granary of knowledge." In keeping with this definition, Watson library is constantly acquiring new "grains." Here is a selected list of the newest additions: Abbot, Berenice—Changing New York; Barnes, N. C.-American Music; from Plymouth Rock to Tin Pan Alley; Benet, Stephen Vincent VARSITY Shows: 2:00, 7:00, 9:00 TODAY ENDS WEDNESDAY CAGNEY! SHERIDAN! ALL 15c ANY SHOWS TIME Continuous Shows Sunday Continuous Shows Sunday 2 GREAT HITS 2 TERRIFIC TOGETHER! A Sweetheart of a Picture! Romance in Swingtime Mirth! Melody! PLAY WAHOO — WEDNESDAY NITE —Five Men and Pompey; Benet, Stephen Vincent—Zero Hour, a Summons to the Free; Birdsall, Paul —Versailles Twenty Years After; Craven, Thomas—The Modern Art; Davidson, Lallah S.—South of Joplin Doane, Robert R.-The Anatomy of American Wealth; Eddy, Walter H.-What Are the Vitamins?; Garnett, James C. M.-Knowledge and Character; Gooch, Bernard-The Quiet World of Nature; Gray, Basil-Persian Painting from Minia- KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS Phone K.U. 66 DRAKES for B A K E S Phone 61 907 Mass. Latest Used Phonograph Records — 10c and 15c JOHNNY'S GRILL 1017 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 961 M. R. GILL Real Estate Sales, Rentals, Insurance 640 Mass. Phone 111 Drive In For A JUMBO-BURGER at DUSTY RHODES 110 West 7th Phone 2059 SHOE REPAIRING Is reasonable at BURGERT'S SHOE SHOP 1113 Mass. Phone 141 Boys and Girls LEARN TO DANCE NOW Marion Rice Dance Studio 9271/2 Mass. FOR A DELICIOUS MEAL Jackson, Robert H—The Struggle for Judicial Supremacy; Kent Rockwell—This is My Own; Langer, William L—An Encyclopedia of World History; Morton, Dudley J—Oh, Doctor! My Feet!; Peairs, Leonard M—Insect Pests of Farm, Garden and Orchard. Try Our 25c Plate Lunch ROCK CHALK SEE US FOR GIFTS and Colored Glassware Shimmons Shop 929 Mass. Lock and Key Service Tennis Rackets Re-Strung Baseball and Softball Supplies BUCKETS SHOP RUTTER'S SHOP 1014 Mass. Phone 319 tures of 13th-16th Centuries; Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons-Journals. 1796-1797-18-31-1832; Hearn Lafeadio-A History of English Literature. Money Loaned on Valuables Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Reliable Radio Service RADIO ELECTRIC HOSPITAL Phone 497 832 Mass 1941 Convertible Coupe Radio and Heater 2700 Actual Miles Black with Beautiful Red Leather Upholstery Car sold on a new-car guarantee This Would Make a Swell Graduating Present Car sold on a new car guarantee Williams-Robert Motor Co. Telephone 278 Drene or Oil ... 50c Castile Shampoo ... 35c End Curl Permanents IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP 941 1/2 Mass. Phone 533 OREAD BARBER SHOP DALE PRINT SHOP Under New Management "Give us a try" John Eaton, manager TAXI Calling Cards 75c per 100 1035 Mass. Hunsinger's 920-22 Mass. Phone 12 Typewriters We have complete typewriter service. Sales, rentals, cleaning and repairing. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 WILLIAMS - ROBERTS "Get the Facts and You'll Get a Ford" Phone 278 609 Mass. optometrist B. G. Gustafson BROKEN LENS DUPLICATED 911 Mass. Phone 911 Try Our New Water Softener HOTEL ELDRIDGE Barber Shop Downstairs