TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 15, 1941 PAGE FIVE A and picture tholas- onship North. e title ys ays run John Harris, tzkopf will ming 1:30 Wil- nced. with pecka, onight quet of ague. other Athens, and of the sation, o win success- n the in the in the round empion Furs- After Easter Rest--by the physical education department, is free to the public. Jayhawks Practice Daily For Own Relays Meet With only four days remaining to prepare for their own Relays, Kansas thinclads have some stiff practice periods ahead. Coach H. W. "Bill" Hargiss dismissed the squad during Easter vacation, but most of the team members put in a few workouts. Standout Jayhawk individual entries include Bill Beven in the pole vault, Norman Sanneman, high jump, Bob Stoland, high and broad jump, and J. R.* Jones in the broad jump. Beven won his first major Relays title at the Texas meet when he tied for first in the pault vault. The Kansas co-captain has cleared 13 feet. John Michener and Jim Cordell are other entries. Sanneman Has Hopes Sanneman, holder of the school record after his 6 feet 6 inch leap at Texas, is Kansas' hope in the high jump. Stoland, Big Six champion in both the high and broad jump, competed for the first time at Texas following a muscle injury. He dropped out at 6 feet, 5 inches, but is expected to be in top shape Saturday. J. R. Jones will team with Stoland in the broad jump. Jones severed an artery on his second trial at the Texas Relays, and was unable to take his remaining jumps. He placed second to Stoland at the Big Six indoor meet. Mathes Ready for Dash Darrell Mathes, co-captain, and Ted Scott, chunky spinner, are 100-yard dash entries. Mathes has not been running up to early season expectations and Scott has been bothered by a leg ailment. Both will be ready for the Relays. Don Pollem, sophomore, sprinter, is the Jayhawks' only entry in the 120-vard high hurdles. In the shot put, Ralph Schaake, Larry Finney, and W. F. Jack will compete. Schaake and Ed Linguist are discuss entries, and Paul Hardman and Carlyle Dawes will throw the javelin. Relay Lineup Undecided The members of the 440-yard, half mile, and mile relays will be chosen from Mathes, Pollom, Orlando Epp, Kenny Hamilton, and Fred Eberhardt. Mathes, Hamilton, Epp, and Pollom comprised the team at Texas, and finished fourth in the 440-yard relay, and second to a fast Texas University foursome in the half-mile relay. Clarence Miller, Al Poznik, Don Thompson, and Dick Edwards will run the two-mile relay in that order. In the distance medley relay, Epp will run 440-yards, Poznik, a half-mile, Thompson, three-quarters, and Edwards will anchor with a mile. Hargiss has entered Hamilton, Mathes, Eberhardt, and Thompson in the sprint medley relay. Debate Team Meets Arizona Here Tonight Last debate of the school year will be held at 8 o'clock tonight in Green hall theater when a negative team from the University of Arizona and a University affirmative team debate the question, "Resolved: That the nations of the Western Hemisphere should form a permanent alliance." Members of the University team are Russell Baker, business junior; and John Waggoner, college sophomore. The debate will be followed by an open forum discussion. Announce Exams For State Jobs All applications for positions in the Unemployment Compensation division of the Kansas State Department of Labor must be submitted on the official application form and postmarked before midnight. May 5. The entrance salary for Employment Office Manager is $180 per month; for Supervising Interviewer, $150 per month; and for Interviewer, $130 per month. Promotional and open competitive examinations for the positions of employment office manager, supervising interviewer, and interviewer will be held. Announcements and application blanks may be secured at the local Kansas State Employment service offices, as well as from the Merit supervisor, 306 New England building, Topeka. Miessner to Speak To Art Fraternity Dr. W. Otto Miessner, professor of education, will be the speaker at the third lecture presented by the Delta Phi Delta, national art fraternity, at 8 p.m. tomorrow in room 35 of Frank Strong hall. Doctor Missner will demonstrate his much publicized phonoscope which may in time revolutionize the teaching of music appreciation. teWiyq- e fai wolHenry nvbpfig Spain to Teach At Summer Session During Vacation Charles R. Spain of Columbia University will teach two courses during the University summer session this year. The courses will be "Construction of Secondary School Curriculum" and "Construction of Elementary School Curriculum." Spain will also take active part in the Curriculum Institute to be held on Mount Oread from June 17-20, serving as advisor and consultant to graduate students working on the project. NEW WILMINGTON, Del. (UP).—Classrooms at Westminster College will be done over in colors like salmon, apricot and "cool green" in an experiment to relieve the monotony of drab walls for students and thus keep the sleepy ones awake. Moving figure in the plan is Prof. Harold J. Brennan, head of the art department, who believes college and university classrooms are the "last citadel of drabness" and should be "individualized." Bright Pink Walls To Wake Up Spring Sleepers "There would be fewer dozing and sleepy students if classrooms were made attractive, instead of being merely 50 chairs surrounded by 80 feet of blackboards and bare walls," Brennan said. Sports-Gab If this downpour slackens before the weekend, a little track meet known as the nineteenth annual Kansas Relays will be held down in Memorial stadium Friday and Saturday. And that "little" track meet will be just about the biggest athletic event ever held on this campus. Friday, the crack high school athletes from all over the state will open the carnival with the thirty-seventh annual University of Kansas interscholastic track and field meet . But Saturday is the big day . Although Glenn Cunningham will be among the absent for the first time in a decade, the meet will attract the cream of midwestern track stars, including many nationally known luminaries. Such performers as George Franck, Minnesota's All-American halfback, Campbell Kane, sensational Indiana distance man, and John Munski, Missouri's lonesome miler will be on hand . . . George Paskvan, Big Ten shotput champion from Wisconsin, Myron Piker, 100-yard dash champion from Northwestern, Mel Truitt, two-mile star from Indiana are entered . . . Archie Harris, national collegiate champ in the discus, Jack Hughes, two-time Relays winner in the discus, and Loren Creese, of Colorado are a trio of giant weight tossers. And these are only a few of the champions and near-champions who will be in Lawrence Saturday for the famous Kansas Relays . . . It's a show one can't afford to miss. As a preview to the Relays this weekend, three reels of track pictures will be screened in room 202 of Robinson gym at 3:30 o'clock tomorrow afternoon . . . One film will demonstrate the technique of running events, another Glenn Cunningham's form in the mile run, and the third will be shots from the 1936 Olympics . . . The show, sponsored "MORE POWER" Footballers Finish Practice Thursday Thursday will be the last day of spring football practice, according to a statement made by Gwinn Henry, head football coach, today. In New RESTRUNG TENNIS RACQUETS "The boys have shown great enthusiasm and spirit this spring and I think it has been one of my most successful spring practices," he said. - New Low Prices - Expert Workmanship - One Day Service "With a promising group of numeral winners to add to his returning lettermen Henry is optimistic about his prospects next fall. Six Laud K.U. At Argentine "The only worry I have now is grades," he said. "Several of the boys are down and they will have to bring them up to be eligible to play." Six University students who went home to plug the University during the Easter vacation were Richard Burge, sophomore engineer; Richard Mankin, sophomore engineer; R. J. Atkinson, freshman engineer; Paul Gilles, college sophomore; Betty June Thoman, college sophomore; and Jean Sellers, college sophomore; all graduates of Argentine High School in Kansas City. The group conducted a forum discussion; spoke on activities at the University; and discussed housing problems, individual expenses, cost of books and fees, group requirements, and co-ops. Serviced with Wilson Bros. Equipment Three ex-Kansas athletes are seeking catching berths with professional baseball teams this spring . . . Francis Kappelman had a try-out with the Hollywood Stars of the Pacific Coast league before being sold to Wenatchee, of the Western International league . . . Ferrell Anderson, former guard on the Jayhawker eleven, is competing with Ralph Houk, another Lawrence lad, for the receiving job at Binghampton, a Yankee farm . . . Ed Cadwalader, a main-stay on last year's diamond squad is trying out with the Topeka Owls in the Western Association. Sold only at Will Add Editors To Hall of Fame Another veteran journalist will take his place in the "Hall of Fame" a selection of outstanding Kansas editors chosen by journalists over the state and sponsored by the University. Ballots have been issued to "members" of the fictious "Quarter Century club" in Kansas journalism, to vote for the 1941 member of Hall. Twelve candidates have been nominated for the honor, all of whom must be deceased three years or more before they may be considered. The Hall was started ten years ago, in 1931 and is composed of 19 members, who have their pictures hung on the walls of the Kansan's newsroom. E.W. Howe, founder and publisher of the Atchison Globe, was elected last year. Hill Delegation Plans to Attend Sociological Meet A delegation of University faculty members and students plans to attend the Mid-west Sociological society conference in Des Moines, Iowa, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Russell Barrett, college junior, will present a paper on "Motivation and Causes of War" to the student society of the conference. Seba Eldridge, professor of sociology; Marston McCluggage, instructor of sociology; and Mabel Elliott, associate professor of society, will also contribute to the program. Professor Elliott is one of the seven sponsors of the conference. University Debaers Ague At Haskell Institute A University debate team met the University of Southern California debate team in an exhibition debate at Haskell Institute last Wednesday evening to debate the question, "Resolved: That Kansas is a better state than California." Members of the University team were Mary McAnaw, college junior, and Ann McConigly, college sophomore. Grand Songs! Thur.—Bette Davis "The Great Lie" SUNDAY—"ROAD TO ZANZIBAR" Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, Dorothy Lomour Coming : "MEN OF BOYSTOWN"