VOLUME XXXIII Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NUMBER 150 LAWRENC, KANSAS, THURSDAY, MAY 7. 1986 MID-WESTERN FESTIVAL OPENS TODAY Jawhawkers Meet Kansas State College Here Saturday Team Shows Strength in Practice; Dual Affair Is Only Home Engagement During Year Kansas track fans will have their only opportunity this season to see the Jayhawkers in action on the home field Saturday afternoon when the Kansas runners, jumpers and throwers match efforts with Kansas State. As a result of the Wildcats' test events being those in which the Jayhawks excel, Karnas should make it best showing of the year. In each successive meet the Kansas team has made an improved show. Richardson Should Win Jack Richardson should win the maryd dash for Kansas and is likely to finish first in the 220 also. Lloyd Foy is counted on for points in both dresses. David Loving will be pushed to the limb by Captain Bruce Nixon of the Wildcats Nixon, a quarter mile, run the farlong dash for six time Saturday and won in 22.2. Mile Relay Team Has Good Chance Harry Wiles may turn in a victory for Kansas in the low hardiness. Although he is up against a fast man in Hitchkiss, Kansas State sophomore star, Wiles has a good chance of breaking the tape. Shannon Is Favorite The Joyhawk mile relay team is accorded a good chance for victory, especially in view of their conquest of Nebraska last week. However, the Wildcat unit is an outstanding one with its win immediately be a battle from start to finish. The pole vault is virtually conceded to Kansas. Ray Nobile, Big Six record holder in the event has vaulted far higher than any of the Kansas State men. Ardery, junior vaulter, should finish second. Kansas should also have things all it own way in the high jump. Shannon and Cox are almost certain to take the first two places and if his sokle is healed, Al Welfhausen should ease into third place. Activity tickets will admit to the meet. Charlie Pits would be a heavy favorite in the broad jump if it were not for his bad leg. Pits' best jump is far better than anything the Wild Jumpers have done, but his leg injury may run his chances for victory. on the SHIN By DAVE HAMLIN, c'37 Delta Chi Boy Wants His Position. - Pledges Met With Stony Silence — New Records Made . . . Bands Hold Audition and Make Recordings . . . Theta's Eat and Get Wet . . . Baby a Good Excuse . . . Squid Cars Cause Consteneration . . . Ethal Seme, the girl who made Everett Allison lose his bet, has been caused some concern by that publicity. The woman said that she is going steady with a Delta Chi boy by the name of Roy Crawford. The bet that Allison lost was that he would win and be given the length of time. When she turned on the pressure, Allison paid through the nose. New Crawford is worried for her child, with that girl will be misinterpreted. All the Chi Omega pledges staged a walk-out Tuesday night. This was their second of the year, and it set a tone for the event. They had left the保护 arms of the activities more than once. When they strained in at closing hours, they were met with stony glues by their sisters. There were those who are wondering just (Continued on Page Three) Tau Sigma Sority Holds Initiation Services Tau Sigma, honorary dancing sorority, held initiation services followed by a formal banquet, Tuesday evening at the Manor. Those initiated were: Jean Savage, Betsy Smith, C39; Hilda McCarthy, Evelyn Meyer, Virginia Walker, eduncl; Dorothy Garlandhouse, C39; Mary Learnard, C38; Anna Grace Dotty, C38; Arlene Irvine, C39; Jane Allen, C37; Dorothy Lemon, C39; Nelle Mae Turner, C39; Dorothy Bucher, C39; Nellie O'Brien, C39; Betty Williams, C39; Martha Holmes, C39; Martha Turner, C39; Elaine Slothower, C36; Bernice Burns, C34; and Josephine Bell, C39. Italy Serves Notice on France And England Paris, May 6. (UF) Italy today served notice on France and Great Britain that Ethiopia heretofore must be regarded as Italian territory. At the same time, Premier Benito Mussolini officially notified the French of three decisions: 1. Italy will respect French rights in Ethiopia. At present they are limited to the Djibouti-Addis Abba railroad. 2. Britain will respect British rights in the Lake Tana area. 3. I rally pledges that there will be no militarization of natives in Ethiopia. Meanwhile in London, Great Britain officially admitted the failure of the League of Nations in the Halo-Ethiopian war against the Sudan. Anthony Eden told the House of Commons "We must admit our own disappointment." The last threat that Britain might take single-handed action against Italy now that the League's failure has been adained, is to appoint a Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin to the eminence that his government would not set alone despite the general debacle. Eight Seniors Of Business School To Be Initiated Eight seniors in the School of Business, will be initiated into Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, tonight at a dinner to be held at 6 p.m. at the Manor. They are: Clifford Cook, Mice Feesler, Occur Bellin, Willie Lomax, Tom Haneck, Bert Milla, David Lieberman, and Kenneth Midleton. Prof. J. H. Taggart, of the School of Business, will be admitted as a faculty member, and Charles Brokaw president of the National Commercial Bank, Kansas City, is to be made an associate professor in business known as a teacher in educational cycle and financial organizations in Kansas City and the Southwest. Prof. Frank T. Stockton, Dean of the School of Business will give a presentation at BioData Beta Gamma Sigma, held in Boston recently. Officers for next year will b Landon Retains Lead In South Dakota Primary Pierre, S. D., May 6-(UP)-Gov Alf M. Landon retained a margin of 1,256 votes over Senator William E Borah in almost complete unofficial returns in the South Dakota primary today. Photographs Are Taken Of CSEP Workers on Job Photographs of CSEP students at work on various projects were made Tuesday by a photographer sent to the state's NYA office in Topeka. Landon's lead, though small,virtually assured him a victory in unofficial compilations, experts agreed. Gordon gave Landon 39.211; Barcher, 37.835. Twenty-one pictures from 13 different departments were taken, some with students as well as the students. These photographs will be used to show the kind of tangible work that is being taught in students employed on CSEP projects. Anneberg Case Rests With Judges; Evidence Complete Defense Council Scores Liberal Element and Daily Kansan for Swaying Student Opinion The trial of August Ameberg, who was accused of setting off a tear gas bomb at the recent Peace Mobiliation, was completed yesterday afternoon after a short session spent in examination by the peace committee pleased by Le兰 Quantius, attorney for the fendent, and Logan Lane, attorney for the Men's Student Council. The five Supreme Court justice went into a closed session following the plea to deliberate on the evidence, and it is stated that a verdict will be delivered soon. Witnesses Testify Four witnesses who testified Tuesday and were subpoenaed again yesterday were diamond shortly after the beginning of the trial. Annelies was called to the stand, but no answers, given Tuesday, concerning the throwing of firecrackers at last year's peace strike. He testified that he did not know what had happened when who knew it and it was with that person at the time. A written affidavit was entered as evidence by the defense in which Horloh frowned, former student, that he had lighted the firecrackers. In his closing plea, Quantius scored he Kansan and also the liberal element in the campus. The former was reprimanded for convicting the defendant before the trial and for swaying a great part of the student body against Ancerg. "In such cases as these," he said, "the administration should see that baked beans, soup, salad and sand, should not be published, so that prejudice against democrats may not be observed." Indicts Liberals He indicted the liberals, saying that, "This trial was forced by a lobby of liberal student; who told us publicize the student; who told him to said he said that John Piercey, who testified at Anmegbe, might have been mistaken in his identification and that Anmegbe did not have the bomb, that he was not the bomber, that he was not at the scene of the disturbance. In the closing plea of the prosecution Lane asked for conviction of the defendant, stating that the motive was obvious, the defendant knew how to work in the right state of mind for such a stressed the fact that people have the right to assemble powerfully and that he could defend the defendant was a crime against society. "The University of Kansas has suffered damage from this crime," he said. "Eastern papers have written accounts of what happened so as to injure this institution." Kansas editors will vote on members for the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame this week at the annual election which is sponsored by the Kansas chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity. Editors Will Choose 'Hall of Fame' Members The following deceased Kansas news paper men have been nominated and are on the ballot this year: John S. Glimore, Jack Harrison, John Mack, Seth Wells, George W. Marble, George H. Mays, Charles P. Beeble, B. T. Murdock, John Spode D. A. Valentine, Frank P. Mac-Lennan. Each year enlarged photographs of the newly chosen members of the Hall of Fame are added to the group in the News Room of the Daily Kansas. Eleven editors of the past have elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame since the inception of the plan in 1930. Clayton Conner, c39, who underwent an appendectomy Monday night in the Watkins Memorial hospital, is recovering rapidly. Y.W.C.A. Cabinet To Meet Y.W.C.A. cabinet will hold its regular meeting tonight at 7 o'clock at Henley house. Clayton Conner Improves Y. W.C.A. Cabinet To Meet Law Day Banquet Includes Rhubarb Pie On Disputed Menu At last the vital question of rhubarb has been decided by the lawyers. After various and sundry learned debates, such as only lawyers can hold, this is why the menu for the Law Day banquet. Controversy arose, however, as to where it would be placed on the menu. The question of rhubarb pie had to be discarded, since no agreement could prevail that the fruit should top crust or metueing. Rhubarb saude, composed of chocolate ice cream, generously sprinkled with syrup rhubarb was also discarded, because some lawyers do not like chocolate ice cream. The question was finally decided by a member of the committee who suggested rhubarb sauce, Eureka. Franco-American Commercial Treaty Ends Old Quarrel Washington, D. C., May 6 (UP)—France and America today met most of their post-war trade quarrels by signing a new commercial treaty deserving the right of goods each nation sells to the other. The treaty was the thirteenth concluded in Secretary of State Cordell Hull's program for freeing the "strangled channels" of world trade, but offshores that from France, most promising of all the pacts so far. Hull and French Ambassador André de Laboulbeey signed the treaty at the state department in the late afternoon. They announced that in it both countries gave concessions on tariff duties on a carefully selected list of products, France gave the United States increases in import quotas on certain goods. The countries also gave each other "most favored nation" treatment or agreed that they would extend to each other and give their favors extended to any other nation. Officials kept secret for a few more days the nature of commodities affected but usually well informed quarters expected the terms to reveal French agreement to take a larger share in United States' agricultural goods including apples, pears, other fruits and nuts, tobacco, and possibly cotton. On the American side, it was hinted that the United States had made markets here more accessible to the French especially such as wines, perfumes, expensive styles, and certain metallic products. Dean and Mrs. Paul B. Lawson entertained with a dinner Tuesday evening at the University Club in honor of Miss Eugene Gallo, head of the Student Affairs department. Miss Gallo will retire from academy life at the end of this present academic year. Dinner for Galloo Held at University Club Heads of all the College departments and a few other guests were present. Dean Lawson presided as toucher at the dinner. Speeches were given by fellower E H. Lindley and Prof. F. E. Kerner, head of the department of physics. Gifts were presented Miss Gallo following the banquet by the guests present in appreciation of her contributions to the University. Acuña, Country Club, 12. Delta Tau Dell House, 12. Pkappa Alpha House, 12. Alpha, Alpha, Memorial Union, 2, arm. AUTHORIZED PARTIES Friday. May 8 ... Delta Upsilon, House, 12 Saturday, May 9 Cosmopolitan Club, Memorial Union Cafeteria and Cong. Union Cafeteria and Cong. Parish House, 12, Chi Omega, House, 12. Alpha Chi Omega, Memoria Ulson, 12. Theta Tau, Country Club, 12. Gamma, Phi Beta, House, 12. ELIZABETH MEGUIAR Adviser of Women, For the Joint Committee on Student Affairs. Six Dioramas In Dyche Museum Are On Display Exhibits Open for Three Days; Guides Will Explain Facts Concerning Background of Seenes Six dioramaes, scenes of pre-historic life in Kansas, will be on display today, tomorrow and Saturday from 9 to 11 a.m. in Dyche Museum of Natural History. Dr. H. H. Lane, curator of the Museum; Mr. ClaudeHBundel, assistant curator of vertebrate paleoanthropology; Ms. ClaudiaWilson will act as the guides to explain the facts concerning the historical background of the various scenes. Anonymous Gift The dioramas, made possible by an anonymous gift, were constructed by "Poco" Frasier. They are one of the many new features that will be displayed in the Museum, when it is reopened to the public. The scenes depict the animal and plant life on this continent before it was inhabited by man. For instance, one case shows a sabre-tooth tiger (*Panthera tigris*) that sprouted on his prey, a group of camels. The camels supposedly left this state and migrated to South America and Asia to escape their worst enemy, the elephant (*Loxodonta africana*). America developed a food and are known as the lama; those in Asia developed the hump. Other cases, show sculptured models of the hairy mammoth, reptiles, pre-historic horses (life size) and fish and upward Devonian fish. Closed in November Dyche Museum was closed to the public Nov. 30, 1932, because the floors of the building were not safe. Specimens valued at a half million dollars, are deteriorating rapidly, because of unfavorable storage conditions, al-ready due to Reconstruction of the building was begun with funds appropriated by the state legislature and a grant under the PWA. An additional sum of approximately $41,000 is necessary to finish the restoration and move and reamount the exhibits. The dioramas are on display temporarily and are the only exhibits in the building. W.S.G.A. Committee To Revise Constitution At the W.S.G.A. council meeting held Tuesday, night Ruth Learned, president, appointed Catherine Holmes, c37, chairman of a committee to revise the W.S.G.A. constitution which is to be reprinted next year. At the meeting an announcement was made that the new and old count was made to a dinner at Weddalen's next Tuesday, the past president, and Ruth Learned will give reports of the W.I.A.W., convened by them they attended recently at Boulder, Colo. Dr. Lee To Speak At Kansas State Todav Dr. Alfred M. Lee, associate professor of sociology and journalism, will address a convocation of the journalism students at Kansas State College on Friday afternoon on "Front Pages in American Journalism". He will also give a talk on "Public Relations for Social Workers" at a dinner of sociology situational faculty, and members of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalistic fraternity. Three Receive Positions - Three appointments to teaching positions for the next school year were announced yesterday by Prof. H. E. Chan, secretary of the Teachers' Appointment Bureau. They are Laura Griswold, Kathleen Reed, James Arnold, gr34, English at Pratt; and Pauline All伯琳, gr32, mathematics at the junior college of Chanute. Lawson To Speak at Troy - Paul B. Lawson, de the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences of the University, will be the speaker for the conference at Troy, Monday night, May 18. More Than 2000 Musicians Expected For Events RUSSELL L. WILEY Director of Band Festival Prof. T. J. Moreau Will Take the Mound For Law Faculty Close upon the beckles of the Oklahoma representative came two musicians from McCook, Neb., in the extreme western part of the state. The two boys, Don Ralph and Allen Hein, had been driving Oklahoma Boy Is First Contestant To Arrive Preparations Are Completed for Taking Care of Large Crowd; Drawings Are This Morning Prof. T. J. Moreau, star extraordinarily, will pitch for the faculty in the traditional senior - faculty baseball game today which is one of the highlights of the Law School Day. Prods. T. G. McCormick and W. P. Viessepmann will be the members of the faculty who will play. Players among the seniors will be picked to fill out the necessary quota for a team. Other athletic events will be held in the morning. A golf tournament will be played on the new golf course and will be held. Norman Wrenstein, [27], is in charge of the athletic activities. Sumburned and amiling Roy Swiegoode, Okmulgee, OKla., band boy, was the first music to arrive at the Mid Western Band Festival to be held here today, Friday and Saturday. Roy left his home afternoon in order to arrive at Lawrence in time for the meeting. The annual banquet this evening will climax the program of the day. Gov M. A. Lundon of Topeka and Regents Fred Harris, Ottawa, and Baille Waggoner of Atchison will be present at the funeral of the Supreme Court of Kansas, Hon W. H.Warvey, Hon John S.Dawson, Regent Dudley Doolittle and class preadmites of the Law school, Walte Steiger, *36*, Robert Schroeder, *37*, and Stewart Chambers, *38*. Music will be furnished by the Alpha Delta Pi Society for Senior Seeders, fa. 37. The banquet will be held at 6:30 in the Endridge hotel. The Law Day has been a tradition since the founding of the University. Its purpose is to bring together the students in the school and the graduates. All graduates of the school have been invited to attend. Stage Lighting Effects To Be Demonstrated in Fraser A demonstration of stage lighting will be held in Fraser theater on the evening of May 12 for the purpose of showing experiments in projecting scenery, light, and the use of color mediums. Robert Gard of the department of speech will be in charge. Anyone interested will be invited to attend. Richard Mullins, 138, has resigned position as assistant book exchange manager. He is leaving the University to attend the University of Chicago. An appointment will be made in order to fill the vacancy. Requirements for the office are scholarship and business ability. Mullins Resigns Position Since 6 o'clock in the morning They arrived at about 5 in the afternoon. Delegations from Scottsbuff and Lexington, Neb., also arrived last night, Mr. Leo W. Moody, director of the Scottbuff band, will be one of the officials of the Festival and will be in charge of the band clinic demonstrations to be held Saturday morning. Today it is expected that about 2,000 band boys and girls will arrive for the solo and band contests. All preparations for caring for the musicians have been made. Very heavy rains will be able to interrupt in any way the program outlined. Construct Display Booths Workmen were busy all day yesterday at the University auditorium, constructing and finishing booths for the various firms advertising their products. The Joekins Music Company produced a number of music stands at St. Louis, and the Bell Music Store of Lawrence all have large and attractive displays of musical wares. Several other publishing and music houses booths in the Auditorium foers. Sole and band contacts will be held all day today. Drawings for positions in the various competitions will be held during training in the Administration auditorium. At 4 o'clock this afternoon the first rehearsal of the mammoth 600-piece Festival band will be held. Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman will direct the practice session, which will be held in the University auditorium. The big event of the day will be the Marching Band and Drum Major's Contests tonight at the Haskell stage, where students will be entered in the competition: Loural High School; Luray; North Akansas City High School, North Kansas City, Mo.; Humboldt High School, Humboldt; Topeka High School, Humboldt; American Legion Drum Corps, Lawncare, and the University of Kansas Band. Twenty Drum Majors Enter Twenty Drum Majors Enter About 20 drum majors have entered the contest and will display the tricks of their trade on the lighted field. William F. Ludwig, Chicago drum manufacturer, has donated a splendid drum baton to be given as first prize to the winners of the Festival committee will give two smaller batons to the winners of second and third places. The single admissions for the Marching Coutet will be 50 cents. Season tickets admitted to the three nightly events, the Marching Contests, Friday concertes and the Saturday night Festival Band concert, may be purchased for one dollar at the office of School or at the ticket booth in the building. The regular single admissions for the 'three events will total $135. All contests today are under the direction of the Kansas University Band boys with James Vint Dyck, l'la38, as the orchestra director. The contest drawings, and will run off the events, judges of the contests will be: Dr. Edwin Franko Goldman, Walter M. Smith, Col. Earl D. Irons, Dewey O. McKee, Richard R. Royland, and Dean D. M. Swearborn. Chest Clinic Held Tuesday Dr. C. F. Taylor, director of the state tuberculosis situmatorium at Norton, NJ, attended a brief session which 17 patients were examined Tuesday afternoon. The clinic was held at the Watkins Memorial hospital under the direction of the University Health Service.