Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 11. 195 26 Faculty Members Go To Music - Art Clinic A busload of 26 faculty members from the Schools of Fine Arts and Education and from the departments of art education and music education went to Winfield at 11 a.m. today to participate in the Art and Music Clinic sponsored by the Winfield Public Schools. Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education, is coordinator of the entire clinic, which will be held for art, music, and elementary teachers and public school administrators from 19 counties in south-central Kansas. Similar clinics have been held throughout the state during the past five years. Activities scheduled for the two-day session include a concert by the KU music faculty at 8 p.m. today in the Winfield High School auditorium, an art exhibit displayed in the Art Gallery at the high school from 7 p.m. today until 2 p.m. Friday, and day time meetings and demonstrations on various phases of teaching music and art. The KU instructors will return to Lawrence sometime Friday evening. Dean Thomas Gorton of the School of Fine Arts will be in charge of the concert tonight. Dean Kenneth E. Anderson of the School of Education will also attend the clinic. Faculty members from the art education and design departments who are participating in the clinic are Alexander Boyle, assistant professor of design; G. Sheldon Carey, professor of design; Miss Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of art education; Robert Green, associate professor of drawing and painting; Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design; Miss Alice Schwartz, instructor of art education; and Carlyle H. Smith, associate professor of design. Music faculty members in attendance are Miss Charmaire Asher, instructor of percussion; Karel Blaas, assistant professor of viola and theory; Gerald M. Carney, associate professor of music education and French horn; Raymond Cerf, professor of violin; E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education; Marcus E. Hahn, assistant professor of music education and flute; Miss Genevieve Hargiss, instructor of music education; Roy Johnson, assistant professor of piano; Ellin Jorgensen, professor of music education; Clayton H. Krehbel, assistant professor of music education and chorus; Austin Ledwith, assistant professor of music theory and bassoon; Edward L. Masters, assistant professor of band and trumpet; L. Don Scheid, instructor of band and clarinet; Reimhold Schmidt, professor of voice Raymond Stuhl, associate professor of cello; Paul J. Wallace, instructor of music education and trombone and Russell L. Wiley, professor o band and orchestra. KU Mennonites To Meet Saturday Aget-acquainted social of the IU Mennonite Fellowship will be held at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Plymouth Congregational Church recreation room, 925 Vermont St. This organization of Mennonite students and faculty in Lawrence and at the Medical Center in Kansas City has a membership of nearly 100. Other programs scheduled for the fall semester include a devotional meeting in Kansas City Nov. 11, a Christmas banquet in Lawrence Dec. 8 and a devotional meeting in Lawrence Jan. 6. Faculty Club To See Silent Movie Slides John Ripley of Topeka will present an illustrated talk, "Nickelodeon Days, or the Story of the Illustrated Song," at 5 p.m. Sunday at the University Faculty Club. Ripley will describe the song slide industry of the silent moving picture era. He will show slides used in the theatres and will play tape recordings of the music and singers of those years. Riple's collection of slides made from Matthew B. Brady photographs of Civil War subjects will also be displayed. Geology Meet To Be Saturday Tours of Lindley Hall and the Natural History Museum and a talk "High-powered Mineralogy," by Dr. William W. Hambleton, will be part of 2 program events, sponsored by the State Geological survey, on the University of Kansas campus, Saturday afternoon and evening. The Wichita Gem and Mineral Society, in company of members of the Lawrence Rock and Mineral Club, have been invited. The tour of Lindley will be conducted by Dr. J. M. Jewett of the State Geological Survey and Don Lokke of the Department of Geology, beginning at 1 p.m. V. C. Fishel, in charge of the cooperative groundwater division of the Federal and State Geological Surveys, and Paul Franks, Russell T. Runnels, and Edwin D. Goebel, of the State Geological Survey, will talk on Geological Survey activities and services, during the tour. At 2:30 p.m. the group will move to the Natural History Museum, where Dr. Peter Vauhnu will act as guide. Dr. Hambleton, assistant director of the Geological Survey, will give his talk at an 8 p.m. meeting, room 301. Lindley. Members of the Lawrence Club will be hosts at the meeting with Mrs. C. C. Williams, Mrs. E. C. Stimpson, and Mrs. B. F. Stegmaier, in charge of a social hour following the talk. Business Senior Gets $500 Award A $500 cash award from Haskins and Sells Foundation, Inc., for excellence in accounting has been awarded to Robert Andrew Long, McCune senior in the School of Business. A wall plaque also was awarded to the School of Business in recognition of its selection by the Foundation as one of 40 colleges and universities in the nation outstanding in the field of accounting. Dean Leonard Axe accepted the plaque on behalf of the School of Business. The awards were made by S.E. Ellis, of the Foundation's Kansas City office. Dean Axe said the Foundation will give a $500 award each year for five years to the outstanding accounting student from each of the 40 schools. The student, to be selected by a faculty committee, will be chosen from the five top students majoring in accounting on the basis of his general grade average, with emphasis on grades in English, willingness to accept professional responsibilities, extra-curricular activities and moral character. The student must have completed his junior year. The annual regional convention of Gamma Delta, Lutheran student organization, will begin Friday at Laramie, Wyo. Gail Gerling, Mission cophomore, and Waldo Anderson, Traer junior, are regional officer nominees from the KU chapter. 2 To Attend Convention FOR STUDENTS CAR LUBRICATION $1.00 A committee meeting of Tau Beta Pi national officers and a dinner for the national officers, Kansas Alpha officers, and committee chairmen Wednesday opened the national convention of Tau Beta Pi, national honorary fraternity, in the Student Union. Mufflers — Tailpipes Instailed Free Registration Held Today Registration was held this morning. T. DeWitt Carr, Dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students, and Mr. H. M. King, national president of Tau Beta Pi, spoke at a welcoming luncheon today. The KU chapter is host to the annual national meeting which is featuring as speakers and honorary initiates Herbert Hoover Jr., U.S. under secretary of state, and Kenneth A. Spencer, Midwestern industrialist. The following events are scheduled for Friday. Tonight the members of the convention will attend a buffet supper in the Student Union and will be entertained by "Jayhawker Jamboree," a group of KU student performers. PAGE'S Sinclair Service th and Vermont Ph. VI 3-8994 Registration Held Today Tau Beta Pi Meeting Opens The third business meeting in the Jayhawk Room at 9 a.m., a noon luncheon in the Kansas Room at 12:15 p.m., chapter co-ordination meetings at 2 p. m., and the initiation banquet and program at which Mr. Hoover and Mr. Spencer will be initiated. They will be featured speakers at the banquet. KuKu Club Pledges Eleven The KuKu Club, men's upperclass pep organization, has pledged 11 students. The new pledges are John Wagner, Cimarron, Karl Wernett, independence, sophomores; Bill McAdams, Kansas City, Mo., Gail Wade, Belleville, William Amos. St. Louis, Mo., Ralph Robinson, Humansville, Mo.; Ward Cooper, Belleville, and Calvin Ellis, Okmulgee, Okla., juniors; William Fricke, sophomore, and Al Gardner, junior, home towns unavailable. Self-service type stores open at the rate of one every hour according to a survey by the Folding Paper Box Assn. Dudley J. Budrich, Evergreen Park, Ill., was presented a letter of commendation, and William E. Bell, Hickman Mills, Mo., a physical fitness test trophy. Awards of recognition were presented to two Army ROTC seniors by Col. R. J. Hanchin, professor of military science, in the drill hall of the Military Science Building Wednesday. 2 Army ROTC Seniors Get Awards Of Recognition Burdich has completed the AROTC program and will be commissioned a second lieutenant upon graduation. He is a Distinguished Military Student and has applied for a commission in the Regular Army. Burdich received his letter in recognition of having been rated first among 100 cadets from the University who attended camp at Fort Biley last summer. He was rated on job performance, leadership, weapons firing and general tests. He also placed fourth in the physical fitness tests with a score of 460 points out of a possible 500. Bell received the trophy for having scored the most points in tests at the Fort Riley summer camp. He scored 465 points out of a possible 500 in competition with 1,624 other cadets from 36 colleges and universities in the 5th Army area. Bell also was rated fourth among the 100 cadets from KU in tests based on leadership, job performance, weapons firing and general tests. Bell is also a Distinguished Military Student and has applied for a commission in the Regular Army. Present at the ceremony were George B. Smith, dean of the University; G. R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences; William Cottle, professor of education; Donald K. Alderson, dean of men; Capt. Samuel P. Davis, and Maj. Delbert L. Townsend, Army ROTC. Chemists Hear Research Leader Dr. Vernon Foster, Research Group Leader of the Petrochemical Research Division in the Dept. of Development and Research, Continental Oil Co., was the featured speaker at this month's meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Dr. Foster spoke on the subject, "Speculative Design," with special emphasis on cost estimation. During the business meeting, it was announced that the members will attend a hayrack ride on Oct. 27. J. Paul Sheedy* Was A Lone Wolf Till Wildroot Cream-Oil Gave Him Confidence yourself some Wildroot Cream-Oil and spruce up. Now J. Paul's the most popular wolf in the forest, because his hair looks healthy and handsome, the way Nature intended . . . neat but not greasy! Try Wildroot Cream-Oil yourself, in the bottle or handy tube. You'll soon be a howling success with the girls. "I'm starved for affection," wailed Sheedy, "but the girls think I'm just a cur. Whenever I paws to talk to one she makes tracks for the tall timber and hides." Poor old Sheedy felt so lousy he wanted to pack up and flea. - of 131 So. Harris Hill Rd., Williamsville, N. Y. Wildroot Cream-Oil gives you confidence 44 Hours A Week To Close Up Shop Did you know that it takes 11 men 44 hours a week just to close windows, turn out lights and lock doors in the University's buildings? Lewis Wulfkuhle's squad of night watchmen go on duty at 4:30 p. m. and make the rounds until 1 a.m. when three others come on duty until dawn. One of their biggest headaches is turning out the lights in a rest room. Often after they have done so they return to find someone has turned them on again. Another duty is to open buildings when a student wants to get a jacket, key or books he has forgotten. Massachusetts is the second largest state in the production of rubber products. 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