WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1938 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Hill Society Bill Mitchell, Tueson, Ariz., a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, is returning to school this semester. ∞ --in the habit of illustrating their lectures. He can not read the te xt books assigned, and Brillle materials of this book, it is unwieldy to handle. Even ordi nary lecture notes are of no use to him. Albert J. Sohch, national chapter supervisor of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, who is on a tour of the United States, is visiting at the chapter house here. Mr. Sohch, who is from the Kansas Beta chapter at Manhattan will visit 98 chapters of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. --in the habit of illustrating their lectures. He can not read the te xt books assigned, and Brillle materials of this book, it is unwieldy to handle. Even ordi nary lecture notes are of no use to him. Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of Emery Josserand, ph. Franklin Bennett Clay, Jr. "36 who is now working for the Clay-Leddy Grain company, was a week earlier at the Alpha Tau Omega house. X The Triangle fraternity announces the pledging of Bill Black, e'41. --in the habit of illustrating their lectures. He can not read the te xt books assigned, and Brillle materials of this book, it is unwieldy to handle. Even ordi nary lecture notes are of no use to him. Brandon Gennesse, e38, and Stanford Thomas, e38, members of the Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, are returning to school this semester. ∞ Kappa En Kappa, electrical engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of Dale W. Whitaker, e'39, Robert and Robert L. Leeming, e'49, Raymond. Guests at the Alpha Omicron IPC house last Sunday were: Janet Turner, Kansas City; Mo. Lloyd Rocky, Eureka; Roy Kelcun, Roy Kelcun, and Don Simpson, c'38. ~ ∞ Phi Kappa Psi fraternity announces the marriage of Frank S. Allen, 179, to Miss Lois Turner of Independence, Mo., which took place Feb. 7, 1837, at the home of the Rev. L. W. Harper of Independence. The marriage had been kept secret. Allen is a former member of the Men's Student Council and chairman of the Phi Delta Phi He was elected to Sachem in 1936, and is a member of Phil Delta Phi, legal fraternity. The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will hold open house this afternoon and evening for students of the University at its new chapter house at 1433 Tennessee street. The hours are from 5:30 to 7:30 and from 7 to 10 o'clock. About twenty members of the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority went to Kansas City, Mo. Monday night, to attend a dinner at the Hotel Muehlenbruck. New 'Card Shark' Game Goes 'Round in Dallas The Sigma Kappa sorority will entertain at the W.S.G.A. tea this afternoon from 3 to 5 o'clock in the lounge of the Frank Strong building. Dallas, Texas, Feb. 1—(UP)—a new game, "Card Shark," is going the rounds in Dallas, and those "in the know" crawl from their beds in the small hours of the morning to keep the fun going. It starts when a hostess asks a guest to select any card but a face card from the deck. Then the guest is told to telephone a certain number and ask for Mr. So and So, the "card shark" and inquire what card is being held. The answer is always correct. The solution is simple. A group of friends first arrange to put the stunt over. They agree on a code as follows: A deuce calls for a first name a starting with B, a trey A and c on. on. The last name starts with H, S, for a heart, a brace, club or diamond. If a guest draws a deuce of diamonds, he is told to ask for M. Bert Dent, the "card shark." The "shark" figures a B and a D equals deuce of diamonds. Japan Makes Great Advance Shanghai, Feb. 2. (Wednesday) — (UP) Japanese troops were reported today to have pushed a hole in the Chinese lines along the Chih river on northern Awei front and advanced 43 miles in the greatest advance they had made in a single day during weeks of fighting. Chinese soldiers, who o' yesterday asserted that the Japanese had been driven back, were silent today on the fighting around Linhkwalkun. An unconfirmed Chinese report, however, said that Chinese soldiers had surmised about a possible attack, causing Japanese to begin preparations for evacuation. The Japanese were driving on Hichouch, Chinese base in north China, from north and south. The southern army was reported 100 miles south of Hichouch-at the intersection of the east-west Longhai and north - south Tiensian - Hukou valley. The Japanese was engaged in a heavy encounter around Taingi, 100 miles to the north. But in 24 hours the Japanese were reported to have drawn the jaws of their trap 23 miles closer to Huchow. Hospital Notes Harry Alden, e38, underwent an operation for the removal of his appendix in Watkins Memorial hospital yesterday. Joe Van Siekel, fa'41, is ill in the hospital with pneumonia. Dr. Frederick Ford, resident physician in the hospital, who came here from the University of Michigan, has resigned to become an assistant physician in the Santa Fe hospital at Topcka. Speller Wins on 'Misspell' Lorain, Ohio, —(UP) -Glenn Mae Steel won the Longfellow Junior High School spelling contest. She spelled "missell" correctly. Blind Student Symbolizes Progressive College Youth John Urich, c39, symbolizes progressive youth as found in the American college or university of today. He is the type to which baccalaureate speakers often refer as "the hope of future America." Except for one or two factors he might well be the winning candidate in a lot of these elections for the "most representative college man" still popular on some campuses in the spring of 2016. Urich has been clamorous bliss. Now a junior, he has accumulated 74 hours of college credit. Sixty-two of these have A grades attached to them; the other 12 have B's. But he is by no means a "grind". He keeps informed to the minute on current affairs. His student associates capsize him something of an authority already in his chosen field, labor relations. Teaches Braille in Summer He can tell you the significance of the latest move made by John L. Lewis in the game of chess he is playing against William Green. He can also tell you what Dizy Dean is likely to do to the Yanks next summer—if he plays. He has his own radio and follows his favorite programs faithfully. He enjoys a good movie occasionally, especially if it is a musical. His hobbies are radio, music, and sports. During the summer he helps to pay for his education by teaching Brille to men and women who have special needs in the school for the Blind in Kansas City, Missouri. He himself graduated from this school where his father, a Kansas City lumberman, had sent him, before he enrolled in the University as a freshman. One can imagine the seemingly insumountable difficulties inevitable in his position as a student here. Overcomes Numerous Handicaps He can not see the charts and diagrams with which professors are COMING The Event of the Year A Company of 125 With Symphony Orchestra Elaborate Dancing - Gorgeous Scenery - Brilliant Costumes ONE EVENING ONLY The Most Successful Spectacle of the Century Monday Evening, Feb. 14 University Concert Course (Extra Attraction) Seats now selling - popular prices: $2.00, $1.50, $1.00, 75c and 50c at School of Fine Arts Bell's Music Store Round Corner Drug Store HOCH AUDITORIUM D. M. SWARTHOUT, Manager. But an one who knows John Urich could picture him waving raffa' baskets in some basement room, or going from door to door in the city selling brooms to pitying housewives. He wanted to be a lawyer—a labor lawyer—and to do that he must have the necessary education, eliminated by a high school diploma or to overcome the difficulty which stood in his way. First he learned to utilize a metal device for writing Braille with which he could take extensive class notes. Then he found he could obey the instructions in the text and outside material necessary to his grasp of his chosen subjects. He had already learned to use a typewriter, and with the aid of this machine he can prepare his written assignments satisfactorily. He can also read from the documentation and his grades to date prove how well he has kept his vow. Next fall john will go into the School of Law. "I want to become a labor lawyer," he says. "Right now there seems to be little call for that type of work, but I believe that this aspect of the legal profession loom larger and larger in the future. American labor is coming to realize that it needs trained men—legal men—as its leaders, in order to avoid the chaos which has too often been its condition in the past. That! Aspires To Be Labor Lawyer Thus John Ullrich, physically blind but with a starting insight into the problems which confront a world he has never seen, looks confidently to the future. He is preparing himself for a useful life, and he has committed Two out of five traffic deaths are pedestrians, and safety authoritative report that this ratio has obtained in the United States since 1837. Of the 70,800 motor vehicle fatalities between 2015 and 2016 were pedestrians. Most of the pedestrian deaths occurred while crossing intersections. Forty Per Cent of Traffic Deaths are Pedestrians A Meal Ticket Will Save You Money is where I intend to come in," he smiles. $2.75 Value $2.75 Value for $2.50 UNION FOUNTAIN Sub document Memorial Union Note Books Zipper Books Note Book Fillers Slide Rules Drawing Paper Sub-basement Memorial Union Welcome Students We're glad to see you back for the spring semester Try Our Special Plate Lunch 25c Drawing Instruments Typewriters Fountain Pens Medical Equipment Artists Supplies UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES Buy your paper by the pound at STATIONERY 1025 Mass. Opposite the GRANADA Theatre Phone 1051 ECONOMIZE By Patronizing The Student Book Exchange Sponsored by W.S.G.A. We have been buying and selling textbooks for years. K. U. students have learned to save at the Book Exchange. Room 6 Sub-Basement Open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. It isn't too late to advertise vacant rooms for rent in the Kansan. Let's All Go to the Game Tonite Help K.U. Win the Big G Until 7 than 15c Dorothy "Hurricane" Lamour "Jungle Princess" No. 2 Greatest Actor in His Greatest Creation CHARLES LAUGHTON "Rembrandt" Friday - Saturday No. 1 Your Favorite and Mine And a First Run Special to Chill and Thrill You SUNDAY Joel McCrea, Barbara Stanwyck 'Internes Can't Take Money' We Show the Best and Leave the Rest! DICKINSON The Students Choice Shows 3-7-9 25c 't1 7 NOW! ENDS TOMQBROW Here's the Happiness--- and the Sonia--- You've Never Known Till Now! Sonja Henie DON AMECHE ETHEL MERMAN EXTRA! WALT DISNEY'S "COUNTRY COUSIN" in Color FRIDAY! FRIDAY! Hitting the High Note of the Year in Joyous Romance! GRACE MOORE MELVYN DOGLAS "I'LL TAKE ROMANCE" STUART ERWIN SUNDAY! FREDERIC MARCH in Cecil B. DeMille's 'The Buccaneer' Help K.U. Retain Her Fame Attend the K.U.-M.U. Game Week 10c Till 7 Days Then 15c Buck Taylor BETTER DAVIS "Marked Woman" THURSDAY Beverly Roberts 'Expensive Husbands' TIM MCCOY "RIDING TORNADO" ZORRO - CARTOON A Newstreet Cameraman in the War Zone "EXILED TO SHANGHAI" Your Entertainment Spot Shows 2:30-7-9 25c 'til 7 Just One More Day TODAY AND THURSDAY Also --- Color Cartoon Latest News Events Friday - Saturday America's Monarch Favorites and Star of the Show's Funeral Presentation Alh. All Saints Street "She's Got Everything" Has Everything--- and Everybody! ANN SOTHERN GENE RAYMOND HELEN BRODERICK PARKYAKARKUS BILLY GILBERT VICTOR MOORE X-TRA BRADDOCK vs. FARR The Complete Fight SUNDAY JOAN CRAWFORD SPENCER TRACY RALPH MORGAN ALAN CURTIS "MANNEQUIN" Order Your DAILY KANSAN Today - Complete University News - Official Bulletins - Campus Gossip - United Press News Service $175 Per Semester - Sport News - Classified Ads - Campus Opinion Column - Sunday Rotogravure Just Call K.U. 66 or Place Your Order at the Kansan Business Office, East of Watson Library