FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1940 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE ap en ar in the marketing institutions surches Me- spices ch, is hour. pre- Fred Robertson, college junior, and Bill Hogle, business senior, have been named by the Independent Student Association Council as candidates for I.S.A. president. Election will be held at the association's dance Jan. 18. ISA Names Candidates For Election Candidates for the four representatives at large on the Council, named in the district elections this week, are Joy Miller and Dorothy May, from District One; Joe Keast and Janie Lorimer, from District Two; Alice Hoad and Howard Sells from District Three; and Donn Messer and Betty Thoman, from District Four. From these eight candidates four representatives-at-large will be elected to the Council. Each of the four districts also elected a district representative to sit on the Council. They are Jack Chigger from District One, Claudine Scott from District Two; Mary Jean Hull from District Three, and Orville Kretzmeier from District Four. The four district representatives, the four representatives at large, the defeated presidential candidate who places second, and the president make up the Council. Any member of the I.S.A. who wishes to run for representative-at-large may put his name upon the ballot by presenting a petition signed by 25 members to Charlotte Steele, I.S.A. president, not later than Tuesday. Any member desiring to run for the presidency who is at least a sophomore and has served at least one semester on the Council, can secure a place on the ballot by presenting a petition signed by 50 members to Miss Steele by Tuesday. The election will be managed by an election board consisting of W. R. Maddox, assistant professor of political science, Paul Gilles, a member of the I.S.A. Council, Charlotte Steele, president, and Roscoe Born. Two amendments to the I.S.A. constitution which were proposed by the Council were passed by the four districts in the elections this week and will go into immediate effect. One provides that no longer will one-third of the members need to vote in order to secure a legal election: the other provides that the presidential candidate having the second largest number of votes will be given a place on the Council. Markham Prophesies Jobs For All Education Can Adjust Youths To Proper Work Reeling off statistics like a new adding machine, W. T. Markham, state supervisor of educational guidance, told 75 teachers and students of the School of Education yesterday that, "I believe that under proper adjustment there is work for every person who wants to work. It is a matter of qualification." Mr. Markham explained the six points of the State Program for Occupational Information and Guidance in a talk before an Education convocation in room 206 of Fraser hall at 3:30 yesterday afternoon. 1. An individual inventory of the school child, with a complete record of his grades, aptitudes, health, and hobbies. This record, when completed, will give aid in obtaining the right kind of jobs for various types of personalities. The program, he said, is divided in the following ways: 2. Occupational information, which is information concerning available jobs. 3. Counseling, a guidance service Siegfried Mickelson, department of journalism, was appointed to a committee of five to study the possible value and methods of further journalistic education in relation to radio at a meeting of the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism, in New York City. Leonard Axe, professor of economics, was named at the American Business Law Association convention in Chicago to the editorial board of a new magazine, Law and Business, which will be started soon in Chicago. Eight members are on the editorial board, five from the American Business Law Association and three from the American Finance Association. Swarthout, Axe Mickelson Named Of the score of University faculty members who attended national meetings of learned societies during the Christmas vacation, at least three were elected to office. to be available to all school students, which is the nucleus of the school program. 4. Exploration of training possibilities in given areas. Mid-Winter Clearance Now on Women's Style Shoes Vitalitys $6.75 Style Shoes ___ $4.95 "Modernettes" $4 and $4.45 Style Shoes $3.45 Dean D. M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts was re-elected secretary of the National Association of Music Teachers for his seventeenth term at a meeting of the organization at Cleveland. Dean Swarthout has held this office since 1923 with the exception of 1931 and 1932 when he was national president. Campus Sport Oxfords ___ $2.95, $3.45 "Paris Fashion" $3.50 Style Shoes ---- $2.85 people find jobs through agencies. 6. A follow-up investigation to see if the people placed succeed and are in harmony with their work. 5. Placement, which will help people find jobs through agencies. There is room in the professional world for only seven out of every hundred people who are graduated from college, Mr. Markham said. He stressed the fact that high schools should cut down on college preparatory work and emphasize trades, such as aircraft industries, dietetics, beauty work, and building trades. Haynes and Keene Lawrence, Kan. 819 Mass. St. The communications course at the Cavalry School, increasingly important in this day of horse and mechanized cavalry teamplay, will soon be moved from the already crowded Academic Building to a new building of its own. VARSITY All Shows 20c, No Fed. Tax Opening Sunday With Big New Double Feature Policy SUNDAY — 4 Days Meet That Fugitive From a Picket Fence! Charlie McCARTHY EDGAR BERGEN 1st Big Double Program Cancel Sunday Vespers in Hoch "Letter of Introduction" Adolphe George Andrea MENJOU MURPHY LEEDS Fast! Funny! Thrills in the Air! LLOYD NOLAN 2nd HIT "Charter Pilot" A trip to Cleveland, the music clinic in Hoch auditorium, and the basketball team's practices all added up to no practice, and consequently no vespers Sunday, Laurel Everette Anderson, professor in the School of Fine Arts, said today. Lynn Bari ALWAYS 2 BIG HITS! The program was slated in the K-book for 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon in Hoch auditorium, but will not be played. Eighty-nine of Kansas' 105 counties showed population decreases during the 1930-1940 decade according to a report of the census bureau. Two Summerfields To Present Paper At Dinner Tonight Bruce Crabtree and Samuel Iwig, college seniors, will present papers at the meeting following the Summerfield Colloquium dinner being given at 6 o'clock this evening at the Colonial Tearoom. Summerfield scholars, members of the scholarship committee, and guests of the speakers will be present. Olin Templin, secretary of the Endowment Association, will preside. This is the second of five meetings to be held by the group this year. The three remaining meetings are scheduled for Feb. 28, March 21, and May 2. GRANADA NEW POLICY Starting with Kitty Foyle, Top "A" Pictures Will Be Shown, at a Slight Increase in Admission 35c SUNDAYS and EVENINGS 25c Week-Day MATINEES Week-End Double Bills Will Remain at 25c Matinees and Evenings Above Prices Plus Tax Kiddies 10c Anytime FRIDAY 6 BIG DAYS! Thru Wed., Jan. 15th X-TRA "FIGHTING 69%2" NEWS Color Cartoon GRID BOWL GAMES from coast to coast