PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, MAY 4. 1933 Bill Hargiss Picks Twenty-one Men for Track Meet Kansas, K-State and Ne braska Will Compete for Supremacy Saturday Head track coach Bill Hargiss today named the 21 men entered in the dual-triangular track meet which is to be held at Manhattan Saturday. Kansas will meet both Kansas State and the University of Nebraska in a dual affair and at the same time the three schools will compete against each other in a triangular meet. Six places from those numbers, the points figure from those numbers. The squad will leave by motor cat Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. The entries announced are: The entries are announced here: Mile run—Cunningham and Borel. 440-yard dash—Graves, Gay, and Jensen. 120-yard high hurdles—Flick, Plumley and Weaver. 102-yard dash—Hall and Plumley. Two mile run—Pankratzand Menzie 220-yard low hurdles—Flick, Plumle and Harrionton. 889-yard-run -Taylor and Bordank. 229 yard-dash -Hall, Gay and Ro- manza. Pole vault—Gray, Beatty, and Rogers. Shot Put—Dees, Beach, and Beatty. Discus—Beach, Dees, Gray, Brink- Broad Jump-Hall, Plumley, and Harrisoning Javelin—Gard, Harrington, Brinkman, and Beatty. High jump-Dumm and Harrington Mile relay-Harrington, Taylor, Gay Mule relay—Harrington, Taylor, Gay Graves, Rogers, Cunningham, and Hall. 1ne meet is scheduled to start at 2 Plans to be Made for Carrying o Membership-Finance Campaign Lawrence Alumni to Meet The Lawrence group, which will carry on the membership and finance campaign for the K. U. Alumni association, is planning to hold its first and only meeting at 7:20 this evening at the alumni office, Room 2, Administration building. Mrs. Ivan D. Rowe',17, who is chairman of the organization, has started activities for the campaign. "The plan is to divide responsibilities," Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, said today. "We hope to have a fast-moving, livly campaign that will be over and done with in a very short time. The Lawrence group will set up a standard to alumni groups in other cities who are also beginning to plan their membership and finance campauns." Those who have been asked to serve on the group are as follows: Caryl Dodd, '49; John Brand, '29; E. L. Trece, '16; g'19; Corlett Colett, '29; W. S. Metcalf, '37; Wayne McCoy, '29; T. C. Rythe, '28; Ray Wright, '27; Helen Wagstaff, '19; Harold Allen, '31; Relen Kawakami, '20; C. G. Bayles, '15; Francis Baty, '28; Charles Holmes, '15; and Margaret Bushong, '32. Virginia Docking, 24; Urseau Henley, 32; Walter Keeler, 19; Helen Lindsey, 24; Elizabeth Prentice, 13; Donald Selssam, 32; Marie Simons, 28; Matteel Todd, 32; Glen Charlton, 10; Edema Lamb, 23; Elsworth Schoenel, 31; Dr. Ralph Krause, 27; Robert A Haggart, 24; Art Weaver, 15; Charles Louk, 26; Walker Greenfield, 26; Forrest Jackson, 30; Marian Coolidge, 26. Iowa College Cars Tested Ames, Iowa, May 4—(Special)—Testing of all cars operated by students, faculty, or employees of the Iowa State College here are being tested, starting today, on "safety lane" at the automobile laboratory. Each test cost 25 cents, and a complete report on the condition of the car is supplied by the police. The police reports ames reported decided lessons in the record of accidents to local cars since the starting of the testing campaign a year ago. Junior Colleges Gain Favor Report Shows Attendance Doubled in Attendance at the ten public junior colleges in Kansas has more than doubled in the past five years, according to figures just compiled by Professor E. F. Engel, chairman of the University of Kansas on relations with junior colleges. Past Five Years In 1928-29, when the number of municipal junior colleges had grown to ten, the total enrollment was 1680, whereas the enrollment for the current year is 3447. Two years ago the enrollment in these ten schools jumped from 2117 to 2918, after a period of slow growth. In 1923-24, ten years ago, the enrollment in the seven public junior colleges was only 447. At that time there were two private junior colleges which were accredited to the University. This number increased to six, for a period of years, and has now been reduced to four, through expansion of two schools affiliated with the University. This year's enrollment in the four private junior colleges is 264, or six more than were enrolled in five private colleges of the year before. Campaign Starts at Denver Rival Law Frats in Combine for Student Election Following comparatively mild nominating conventions, came bombshells in the form of the withdrawal of two candidates—George Martin, running for Interschool Council; and Rosemary De Seiolo, for campus secretary. Denver, May 4—(Special)—Campaign speeches today marked the opening of the campus elections, in what promises to be one of the hottest battles in many years. The election is to be held May 5. In a vigorous letter denouncing the combine sponsoring his opponents, Martin withdrew "in favor of James Bims," non-combine Kappa Sigma. Martin's eligibility to run was questioned by some of his political opponents, but up to the time he withdrew, he had not been prevented from running. He was questioned and was questioned, but her withdrawal was ascrib-d to personal reasons. Another factor, unusual since the two organizations concerned are on most campuses bitter rivals, was the announcement of the formation of an in-depth database for the management between Phi Delta Phi and Phi Alpha Delta, rival law fraternities. KFKU Thursday 2:30 p.m. The Rhythmic Sense, Professor J. E. Hankins. 4:45 p.m., Music Week Program. Sixty-eight Athletic Interview Friday 2:30 p.m. Music Appreciation Period. 9:45 p.m. Dramatic Program. 10 p.m. Music program arranged by G. Criss Simpson, instructor in organ. Mat. and Eve. 5-15c VARSITY Last Times Tonight The 4 Marx Brothers in "HORSE FEATHERS" ELBEL TO GIVE SIXTY-EIGHT ATHLETIC INTERVIEW TONIGHT Zane Grey's "Under the Tonto Rim" with Stuart Erwin The athletic interview to be given for KFKU tonight at 9:45, will be the sixty-eighth of these interviews conducted by Professor E. R. Elbel in the two years in which these have been one of the features of KFKU's program. The interview John McMurphy, director of athletics at the Manual High School, Kansas City, Mo. The athletic question box was presented by Professor Elbel last Tuesday Starts Sunday— Gary Cooper - Helen Hayes "A FAREWELL TO ARMS" Fri-Sat— R. H. Wheeler, head of the psychology department at the University, will be the guest speaker at the Baptist Young People's Society next Sunday night, May 7, at the First Baptist church, corner of Eighth and Kentucky streets. Professor Wheeler will discuss "The Problem of Science and Religion." Professor Wheeler is scheduled to read a paper on Gestalt Psychology before the International Symposium of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, which meets in Chicago on June 22 of this year. Other speakers at this Symposium will be Professor W. Kohler of the University of Berlin, Professor C. E. Spearman of the University of London, and Professor R. S. Woodworth of Columbia University. Psychology Tuesday night, May 9, Professor Wheeler will address the Principals club in Kansas City, Mo., on the subscriptions of New Psychology to Education." Professor Wheeler also announces the Midwestern Psychology convention will be held at Ames, Iowa, on May 18, 19 and 20. Professor Wheeler is chairman of the physiological psychology group of the University of Missouri, discussions of this group at the convention. Head to Address Baptis Young People Professor J. F. Brown, of the psychology department will give two speeches at the University of Iowa on May 17. He will discuss, "The Dynamic Conception of the Learning Process" and "Modern Methodology in Science." Wheeler Schedules Talks K-Aggies Defeat Oklahoma Professor Wheeler will also speak before the Entomology club of the University Monday afternoon, May 8, onamic Conception of the Organism. Kansas State won the second of a two-game series, played at Manhattan, with the Oklahoma Sooners, in the big Six conference yesterday. Kansas State won with a score of 7 to 6. Mastodon Tusk Restored Fossils Will Be Added to Collection in University Museum Restoration of the giant mastodon tusk donated to the Museum of Paleontology this winter by Ward M Anzalone of Everest, has just been completed. The tusk, which is 7 feet, 11 inches long on the outside curvature, is the largest and best tusk of any of the prehistoric elephants in the museum. It is the only mustodon tusk in the University position; its tusk has exposed portion, it has been broken off at the point of attachment to the skull. From the geological formation known as the Pleistocene this gigantic mammal evidently became mired down in a bog at least 50,000 years ago. Lest fall Mr. Thorston found the almost complete tusk, fragments of the other tusk, part of the skull, and a leg bone, and gave the material to the mu- C. W. Hibbard, c'33, a member of the museum staff, has been in charge of the work on the tusk. He has just finished fitting it together, and it will be possible to reproduce exhibition elephant material when the museum is again opened to the public. Miss Mabel K. Stafford, '01, general secretary of the Y.W.C.A. at Duluth, Minn., was in Lawrence yesterday and visited the Alumni office at the University. Miss Stafford directs the activities of the Y.W.C.A. which includes ALUMNAE IS WRITING BOOK ABOUT STAFFORD LINEAGE PUBLIC stenographer: Will call for your copy work or dictation, and re-rem prompt. Lowest prices, restructuring. Statewide State Bank. Building. Phone 482. -177 Want Ads LOST-Apha Chi Omega pin, on the Campus. G. Hughes. Phone 989—162 LOST: Kappa Alpha Theta pin with name of "Dorothy Harvey" engraved on back. Finder please call 3043. —162. LAWRENCE OPTICAL COMPANY Eye Glasses Exclusively 1025 Mass summer camps for young women all over the world. POTTED PLANTS 50c to $3.00 Flowers of Distinction Phone 621 Miss Stafford is now engaged in writing a book on the Stafford lineage. This book will include her brother, Dr. O.F. Stafford, '00, who is now a professor in chemistry at the University of Oregon, and her sister, Helen Stafford, '03, who is an instructor in French at Galloway College, Searcy, Ark. Also Roses, Sweet Peas, Violets, and Gladiolus. KANSAS GRADUATE ADDRESSES IOWA DENTAL ASSOCIATION CARNATIONS Ames, Iow., May 4—(Special)—Dr. E. V. McCollum, discoverer of vitamins, and research worker at Johns Hopkins University, will speak here this afternoon on "Recent Developments in the Field of Nutrition." He was guest of honor this noon at the Institutional Tea Room, and will speak this evening at Des Moines before the Iowa Dental association. Dr. McCollum received degrees from the University of Kansas in 1963 and 1904. Fresh cut daily from our own greenhouses. FLOWERS GIFTS CARDS for MOTHER'S DAY May 14 NOW! ENDS FRIDAY Lots of Girls Could Love Like She Does? But How Do They Dare? SHE SETS A NEW STYLE IN WOMEN! 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