Official Student Paper of the University of Kansas UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN VOLUME XXXIII LAWRENCE, KANSAS, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1980 NUMBER 139 PHILLIPS SWEEPS INTO M.S.C. PRESIDENCY Glee Clubs Offer Balanced Program in Combined Concert Solo Numbers, Dances, and Duets Are Included As Feature Specialties of Entertainment A well-balanced program ranging from an浸服ation of Beatrice Lille to the performance of The Women's Glee Club will feature the combined concert of the Men's and Women's Glees Clubs of the University will be given in Fraser theater tonight. The glee clubs will combine to the opening chorus from Bottle's opera "Methafolfo," which will open the program. Following this, the Women's Glee Club will perform The Gaines, and the Men's Glee Club will be heard in a group of three songs. Russian Dance Numbers of special interest will be a Russian bachelor by Mary Ellen Miller, accompanied by the Womentee Glee Club singing "Topkick" from Tchukovsky's "Nutracher Bsuite" and an imperious "Knotteur Lille" by Grethean Seatrice Lille. A diuet "La Cl Daren la Mano" from Mozart's opera *Don Giavanna* will be演唱 by Claude Dorsey, tartition, and Zonilla Emerson, soprano. Dorsey will have solo parts in "The Wreck of the Jolie Plante" by O'Hara, and will also perform with the Chorus. The Two Greediems, as will Roy Finky, tenor, and Eugene Pirtle, bass. "Grand Opera at the Breakfast Table," an original humor skit, will feature Jack Laffler and Aldeen Kizler. Returned From Tours A concert of unison merit and interest in the life of Joseph Pemboly and Prof. Joseph F. Wilkins. Both give ediths have returned from tours where they were received enthusiastically in the town of Kansas City, which was traveled through parts of Kansas and Missouri, giving five concerts in Kansas City, while the men travelled to various cities, including Kansas during the first week of February. Students will be admitted to the concert by activity tickets, and general admission is 25 cents. Tickets are available at Bell's Music Store and at the Fine Arts office. They will also be or sale at the door. on the SHIN By DAVE HAMLIN, c37 Bullet Bounces After Doing Damage . . . Vaccinations Start All Over . . . The Dove Finds no Peace . . . Lindsey Develops Punch . . . A Reporter Roves. . . The College Man Pick's His Beauty—First Annual ON THE SHIN Content Contest . . A good story comes out of Brick's basement where the blonde coke manne goes to hide from her public. A couple of days ago, the proprietor of a store in the city hunted. Frog hunting is done with gargains around these parts, and so he carried a pistol. On the way back from the trip, he needed in the back of the car for his way home. The bopper expeditions are very attuned and our hero was very tired. Soose, he was fast asleep. The car counsed, waking up here, who pulled the trigger. The gun was loaded and the bullet went into the trunk, there, however, but travelled on down through the floor of the car, struck a part of the steel frame and came back up through the bottom, but not via the bullet, which kept it in place for the leaden sledge was beside the wounded cafe owner. The bullet, somewhat flattered by its journey, now rests on 's dresser洗到 the man himself rests in bed. He won't be badly naked Recent vaccinations for University students proved to be in vain. Those who were exposed to the victims of the pandemic have been spared. But now it is said that small pox was (Continued on Paste Three) Suspicion Falls On Engine School Profs As Ballots Disappear A missing ballot box, believed to have been purified by anxious professors in the engine school, was still unheard late last night despite an official The loss became known yesterday afternoon when official vote gatherers found only empty space where the box should have been. Suspicion imminent has yet to be resolved, no jeans have been placed. The Kansas will offer no reward for information regarding these documents, but engineering students might find it to their advantage to apprehend the suspect and hallot to the Kansas for tabulation. Collected ballots have been placed beyond the reach of designing professors, and complete results of the Grade Prof campaign will be published soon. Plans Launched For Annual Parent's Day Banquet and Other Festivities Will Greet Visitors May 2-3 Committees Convene Tentative plans were made Monday, at a meeting in Central Administration auditorium, for the annual Day School event held at the University May 2 and 3. Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser of the commission and chairman of the general committee for the banquet, explained that Ms. McGuire was an imposed houses, Mortar Board, Sachem, doe's Student Council, W.S.G.A., the club, and others who are members of the committee. To Award Prizes The Parents Day dinner will be given May 2 at 6 p.m. in the Memorial Union cafeteria. Speakers and other plans for entertainment have not been announced, but three prizes will be awarded, one to the parents coming the greatest distance, one to those having the largest number of children attending the Uni- tion Day event, and one to a house having the greatest percentage of members and parents present. Registration and a reception will be held in Spooner-Thayer museum Saturday afternoon from 3:30 to 5. during which the University band will enter Musicale To Be Presented Organized houses will serve Parcens Day dinner Sunday and Mu Phi Epison, honorary music sorority, will present a short musical in the afternoon. Tickets for the Memorial Union banquet for 50 cents. They will be available until Friday afternoon, May 1. Miss Maguire also announced a contest for posters to call attention to the work of the Musicians in the 24 hours Miss Maguire by April 14. NOTICE NOTICE Committee chairmen are: Mrs Wheeler, Mrs. Lawson, Miss Moodie and George Guerney, r立体 reception; Mrs. Chubb, Mrs. Nelson, and Eleanor Slaten, dinner; Joe Griswold, perl; Vivid War, printing; Bobby Ruth Smith, posters; Gretchen Speel prize; Darothy Fry, entertainment. Magazine To Sponsor Short Short-Story Contest A short, short story contest, with cash prizes totaling $1,290, has been announced by the magazine College Humor. This contest is open to undergraduates enrolled in American Canadian schools or to graduates or ex-graduate students of college. Anyone who has previously had a story published is ineligible. A contestant may submit as many stories as he desires. It is required that the author's name, address, school, or be written on each manuscript. Beginning with the April issue, a prize of $100 will be awarded each month to the author of the best original short-story submitted that month. The stories must be between 1,000 and 3,500 words. Actors must be young, unmarried people, and the action should be placed in a modern environment. All photographs for the senior beauty queens must be turned into the Jayhawk office not later than Friday, April 24. Demonstration Against War Is Set For Ten-Thirty --when we get over there, we'll stage a real war for you. We'll make the worst damage of the World War lock in and battle carried on by six-year-olds. Students Plan To Gather on Fowler Commons To Hear Four Speakers at Mass Meeting A student mobilization for peace, in conjunction with a national movement, and sponsored by 20 local organizations, will be held on Fowler common this morning at 10:30. The demonstration will that approximately one hour before the form of a walk-out, as the University has not given it official sanction. The mobilization will be similar in form to the strike held last year, according to reports from Glenn Austen, committee chairman. A speaker's platform will be erected north of Fowler to be amplified by a speaker system. The University administration was asked to give school time for the demotion, and it gave that time was given last semester for a student speech conversation, and this semester for a student political meet- As the result of a decision by the mobilization committee, the Oxford oath, a sworn statement that an individual will not support his country in war regardless of the circumstances, will not be given. Professors on the campus have taken various attitudes toward the action. Some sanction and actively support the actions that are non-committal and inoperative. The program will be entirely in charge of students. Kenneth Born, c'36, Gevene Landrith, c'38, William Fusion, c'1el, and Martin Malmoyne, Jc, guel, all active in forensic circles, will speak. The strike held last year on the University campus was a peaceful demonstration by 900 students. On certain other campuses the movement resulted in riles and student battles, while some Universities turned the movement into a sanctioned, orderly meeting. No action will be taken to force students to attend the mobilization today or to force them to remain away. The national strike executive committee is in charge of religious, and political organizations. The mobilization is locally supported by Westminster Forum, the Wesley Foundation, the Fireside Forum, the Newman Club, the Baptist Young People's Union, young people of the Christian movement, the Peace Action Committee, the Peace Mobilization committee, the American Student Union, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Liberal Club, the Dove, the Companion Club, the Freshman Club, the MCA, WWC.A, IGL, WS.CA, and the Student Student University. "We who are about to die, salute you and laugh at you," Martin McLay III directed at the war lords in a Veterans of Future Wars meeting last night in the lounge of the Union building here. "And when they get their war, the youth of America will march a million or so strong to the defense of their native land, ready to make the world safe for whatever sacred principle the politicians may think of this time. And Fields Compliments Wilbert and Polkinghorr Maloney, who recently won first prize at the Kansas peace arena contest at Storling, used his winning pick to rally his team to Die 'Die' as a bass for his talk last night. Three Are Elected To Order of the Coil When informed of the election results last night, Lyman Field, president of the M.S.C. said, "I wish to compliment Mr.Paul Willert and his assistants, Jim Miles, for the efforts he made, for the able manner in which theyould a record vote in a record time." "No one of the Veterans of Future War is going to stop the next conflict." he continued "Probably no force short of the might of God himself can prevent us from being forced. We can do it to take its privilege of telling the war - profiteers, the self-made patriot, the would-be statesmen, that we are no longer to be cheapened with their ideals and their dishwater patriotism. We must fight, yes, and die, when they pull the strings; but we refuse to believe that the death which they met out to us is glorious or noble, or anyone incomparably fills and obscure. Honorary Senior Law Society Chooses Anderson, Pfeiffer and Mustard Three members of the senior law class were elected into the Order of the Coif, national honorary society for law students. They are: Darlene G. Anderson, T36; Thomas D. Mustard, T36; and Jack Pfeiffer, T36. This society corresponds to Phi Beta Kappa for college students. Not more than 10 per cent of the senior class members are eligible for this bachelor's selection being based on the grades received throughout their law school studies. Mrs. Franklin D. Rosechwell joined caders in progressive education and in the protection of teachers' right by paying tribute March 28 to Dr Henry Tidemann, a graduate of the New York Teachers' Guild and the veteran exponent of academic freedom. Maloney Attacks War Profiteers In Veterans of Future Wars Meeting The Order of the Coif has existed as a national law school hemiory society since 1906. It was founded on an ancient English organization of leading lawyers, and judges were appointed. There are 22 chapters of this order in leading law schools of the United States. The Kansas chapter was granted its charter in 1842 and was installed by Dean John Kaiser of Northwestern University, Chicago. Graduate Is Honored By New York Teachers' Guild The Fem-Medic club, composed of pre-medic women, held its regular meeting at Watkins hall Monday evening. Members of the faculty who attended were: Dr. Gail A. McCurni, Dr. Florence B. Drorce, and Mrs Mary E. Larson. Mrs. Roosevelt sent Dr. Linville a message of congratulation and a contribution to the Linville Pension fund, in which she celebrated his seventieth birthday. More than 700 teachers attended the event, which was held in New York City. Pre-Medic Women Hold Meeting at Watkins Hall Next Monday night the club will entertain the women medical students from the University of Kansas hospital at City at the home of Dr. Sherbon. "There will be more men killed in more ingenious ways, more cities waste, more country laid waste, more proper housing, billions of dollars scattered about battlefields for body-robbing profiteers to loot, than the world has ever dreamed." "We today are revising the World War philosophy. We are fighting a war to end all wars, fighting it on out its western front of ideas and ideals. We are fighting it with our will, we will fight, not in the name of any ancient, cruel Lord of Battles, but in the name of the Prince of Peace." Our only hope is that we may make the next war so terrible, so costly, so dangerous. "We will turn to peace as its last hope." Other speakers during the evening were Lieut_C. Col. Hugh Gordon Hadley Col. Richard Reginald Heap and Gen. Philp Remick. Following the meeting a war council was held of the veteran's leaders to decide on methods of attack on this morning's peace mobilization. A large crowd attended the meeting Pachacamac Party Regains Power; PSGL Fails To Elect A Major Officer Elected! Pachacucha candidates who were elected to the Men's Student Council yesterday. From top to bottom they are: John Phillips, president; Hubert Androne, vice-president; William Zucchini secretary; Bill Townley, treasurer. Faculty Members Return From Meeting at Lincoln Dr. R. I. Cantuteon, Dr. Gail McClure, and Dr. Florence Sherbon returned Sunday night from Lincoln, N.J., for a meeting of the American Student Health Association held there Saturday. Dr. Cantuateon, who is the retiring president of the association, was elected president of the American Student Board, replacing Dr. R. A. Lyman. Student Court Carries by Vote of 1010 to 662; Freshman and Sophomore Class Presidents to Have Council Vote; Bob Childs Defeats Bob Kenyon for Senior Class President; Fisher Receives Junior Office All of the seven major offices went to Pachacamac. Yesterday it was conclusively proved that the radiant half disz. of the Pacchacame party was not a setting, but a rising sun. Pachacamaca's sum, after a year's eclipse, dispelled all clouds and brought into power all its entire slate led by John Milton Phillips, who won by a decisive victory over Bob Thorpe, leader of the PSCL ticket, by a vote of 93 to 909. School Elections Settled in Close Fights The election was one of the most peaceful in recent years. There was no ogging or mud sling, but apparently the parties resorted The School of Engineering and Architecture, also choosing their representatives by the proportional representation system, elected Victor Koerl, Ozrin Hantla, and Henry Nottebry after two transfers. Vee Tucker defeated King Aitken, PSGL, 80 to 50 for representative from the School of Business. Tom Brown, Pachaamac, defamed Jill Gillippe, PSGL, 29 to 13, for School of Pharmacy representative. John Hampton was defeated by August McCollum, PSGL, 20 to 29. John Paul, PSGL, won from Bob Briggs, for Fine Art School representative, 31 to 19. Henry Parker, PSGL, defeated Elvin Brickel, Pachacamac, for representation of the School of Education, 8 to 6. Dule Cushing defeated Evan Gammon, Pachacamac, 48 to 37, for representation from the School on Medicine. Lawrence Smith, PSGL, defeated Al Harmon, independent, 48 to 37 for representation from the School of Law. Phil Raup defeated Moe Ettenson, Pacachumac, 92 to 470, for two-year College representative. Payroll for CSEP Is Largest of the Year The largest CSEP payroll of the year covering the period from March 13 to April 12, has been sent to the state CSEP office, and checks will be ready for distribution to students tomorrow or Thursday. Four hundred and ninety students are on the payroll, 450 undergraduates and 40 graduates. The 450 undergraduates worked 18,143 hours and earned $6,384.45, the workers worked 1,858 hours and earned $853.10, bringing the payroll to $7,253.55, approximately $200 thousand at any other time this year. Two more months of CSEP work may remain, the period from April 13 to May 12, and from May 13 to June 6, the end of the summer season. It will be allowed for the last short month. Psychology Department To Show Yale Sound Films The department of psychology will present sound films of child development Wednesday and Thursday, April 22 and 23, at 4 p.m. in Froater theater. The films, which were prepared by Dr. Arnold Gessel of the Yale psychoclinic, present the development of behavior in the human child during the first year and a half of life. Explanations of the films are given by Doctor Gessel. The public is invited; there is no admission charge. only to "careful analysis" of the nebulously defined issues. No PSGL candidate succeeded in withstanding the smooth drive of the well-oiled Pacchiaamic machine. The squeaking mechanism of the Progressive Student Government League failed to function. Aside from the seven major offices Pacacharan won five of the representatives from the eight schools. Three of the College representatives went to PSGL. Hubert Anderson, Pachacamac, won over Ross Robertson, PSGL 1059 to 784 for the vice-presidency of the Council. William Zipura, Pachacamac orator, defeated Frank Allen, veteran PSGL 1059 to 784 in the decisive Condemder by 619 to 909. Marin Writers, Pachuaurea, was elected over Sam Mellinger, PSGL, 1941 to 788, for two-year representative-at-large. Dave Conderman, PSU, but a hosted content to Bill Townsend, 951 to 916. Dave Conderman, Psu, but a representative, Ferdinand Hall, defended Wade Green, PSU, 751 to 845. Jack Schrey, Pacchacam, won over Clark Barker, 842 for management of the student directory. The amendment providing for the establishment of a student court as an adduct to the council was 1010 to 662. Amendments Win The second amendment, which gave to the sophomore and freshman class presidents a vot in the council, was carried 1313 to 349. Bob Childs, Pachaoancha, was elected by both Kenyon, PSGL for the presidency of the senior class, 159 to 168. For a secretary-treasurer, Bill Hampton. Paul Fisher, Pachaacam, was elected junior class president over George Haines, 182 to 167. Floyd Kelly won the position of secretary-treasurer, 298 to David Ludeman and Foster Parriot, Pachaacam, were elected junior dance managers over Bill Wells and Bob Polson by 152 to 153 and 178 to respectively. Norman, Hemphill, Pachacamac, defaced Diane Griselle, PSG 270 to 192. The secretary-treatmentship went to Chet Mizo who defeated Ceil Wienstock, 262 to 189. Lester Kappelman and Don Wood over爱尔兰 Lemenausse and Don Scott, 292 to 157 and 390 to 185. Bill Shirer, Dean and Dean Moorehoad Board, and Dean Moorehoad Townsend, Cordell Meeks, and Stan Marietta were chosen College representatives on the council by means of the proportional representation system of selection. Townsend won on the second, Marietta and Meeks on the third, Smiley and Coleman on the fifth. The requisite number to elect was 134. Hemphill Defeats Grimes The Vote by Schools Prec. Vice-P. Sec. Treas. Ath.Bd. Stud.Dir. Scheyé Howerton Cristeine Proule Townsley Condemnan Zupennee Allen Andeson Robertson Phillips Phillips Thayse College 511 468 450 230 499 112 469 514 462 481 191 484 487 Engineering 142 122 150 236 112 163 418 426 151 164 128 423 Law 60 51 48 63 53 57 62 53 49 51 49 67 48 Pharmacy 19 53 38 14 63 57 16 38 15 37 16 58 Fine Arts 27 23 23 28 25 24 37 14 24 25 33 26 3 Education 10 4 8 6 12 14 3 10 4 9 2 5 13 6 Business 50 78 39 84 55 70 48 79 43 65 32 94 Graduate 35 14 39 18 53 10 48 13 75 13 82 17 TOTALS 894 931 778 1050 847 964 909 916 845 971 847 976