PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1940 Lawson Ends Tour Tonight Dean Paul B. Lawson will address a teachers' meeting at Hutchinson this evening, culminating a two-day speaking tour which has taken him to eight Kansas towns. Lawson began his speaking schedule at Ellsworth yesterday morning where he addressed the high school assembly. Later in the morning he spoke before an assembly of Hoisington high school. In the afternoon he was speaker at the Rotary club and high school assembly in Great Bend. He finished the afternoon's schedule at Ellinwood where he appeared before the high school assembly. Today' schedule took him to Lyons for a Kiwanis club meeting and high school assembly, then to the Sterling high school and Reno Community high school at Nickerson. He will return to Lawrence tomorrow afternoon. Nesmith Attends Father's Funeral in Belleville Dean Nesmith, University of Kansas athletic trainer, left for Belleville after the Thanksgiving game Thursday, to attend funeral services for his father, Leslie Nesmith, 70, who died at his home in Belleville Wednesday. The elder Nesmith is survived by four other sons, all of whom were athletes. News From Page One REICH CLAIMS---within 24 hours of the sinkings. In this connection it is known that German submarines normally make no reports to their home bases on any action until they return from a cruise This is to protect the U-boats from enemy submarine hunters which might overhear the submarine's signals and locate the position. The German High Command offered no explanation as to how it had obtained the detailed report on submarine operations so quickly. physical fitness for the chosen work of the student and to establish the habit of periodic physical examination. SENIORS MAY TAKE---- Doctor Canuteson said that students should have on file recent data on their physical condition to offer when making applications for positions. Recommended for examinations are: A recheck of the general physical examination; blood examination, including a Wassermann test; urine examination. A repetition of the tuberculin test if it was negative previously; x-ray of chest again if the tuberculin test was positive; a Schick test to determine immunity to diphtheria and immunization if the test is positive; small pox vaccination if not successfully vaccinated in the past three years; typhoid immunization if not immunized during the past three years; other tests indicated on the basis of findings on the physical examination. FILL LAST ROLL---college groups as well as legitimate theater groups giving "Cradle Song". About five years ago it was filmed under the same title with the German actress Dorothy Weick in one of the most important parts. Evelyn Venable, a screen actress for many years, played the role of the young girl who is raised from childhood by the nuns of the convent where the play takes its locale. Reserved ticket sales for the play will open Thursday at the basement office in Green hall, according to Don Dixon. Students have only to call at the office and exchange their activity book stubs for reserved seats for any of the four nights the play will be given. The 15 cast members will round out four weeks of rehearsal Sunday when they will have both afternoon and evening dress rehearsal. pressive used in any Hill production for many seasons. All of the seenery and painting for the play has been completed and the accompanying stage lighting setup is nearly finished. Don Dixon, stage manager, has used his own scene designs for "Cradle Song" and they promise to be the most im- BOARD TO NAME---- mendation of the Chancellor. Undergraduates were being included in the list of those eligible for examination due to requests of many college authorities in the seventh corps area who contemplate the loss of junior students due to the selective service law. Lieut. Col. Theodore J. Koenig, of Langley Field, Virginia, heads the examining board. Names of those selected will not be known until the board meets at four o'clock this afternoon, he said, but that up until 1 o'clock only a small number of students had been interviewed. Students selected will be called to a nine-month period of service about six weeks after they are interviewed. They will go either to St. Louis or Oklahoma where they will remain during the first three months as flying cadets. Requirements for entry into the corps is a minimum of two years college education, its equivalent, or 50 percent of the credits necessary for graduation. While in training the student receives a regular salary. The army flying schools are situated in localities where the climate has been found generally favorable for yearround flying, thus reducing the amount of time lost by bad weather. The course of instruction as a fly- mg cadet at present requires nine months, including three months' elementary, three months' basic and three months' advanced training. This instruction, in addition to the flying training, includes courses in navigation, meteorology, radio, and other subjects allied with military aviation. Upon completion of the three months' elementary training under supervision of the army at the civil flying school, the flying cadet is sent to Randolph Field, Texas, for a three months' additional instruction and, upon graduation therefrom, to Kelly Field, Texas, for the final three months' training. The course of training includes approximately 215 hours in the air, during which time the student receives instruction in all maneuvers necessary to pilot military airplanes. In addition to pilot training, the student also pursues academic work in specialized military subjects. As the physical condition of flyers is of primary importance, special attention is paid to the health of flying cadets. Not only is physical exercise a part of the curriculums, but facilities are provided for flying cadets to engage in various forms of recreation to enable them to maintain a good physical condition. All women who wish to check their W.A.A. points should send their names into the women's physical education office immediately. Right Dad...it's the ONE cigarette that really SATISFIES ... for cooler milder better taste, Chesterfield is the smoker's cigarette Hunt the world over and you can't find the equal of Chesterfield's right combination of Turkish and American tobaccos...the best tobaccos that grow in all of Tobaccoland. Do you smoke the cigarette that SATISFIES Copyright 1940, LEGGERT & MVERS Tobacco Co. 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