University Daily Kansan Page 3 Painters Smear DU House; 16 Trophies Also Taken Members of Delta Upsilon fraternity woke up about 6:30 Sunday morning to find their front door, walk, and carpets leading to the living room, smeared with blue paint and red lipstick. They also found about 16 brass trophies missing. Campus police checking the call from the fraternity's president, Jerrad J. Hertzler, Newton senior, found blue paint tracks leading to the Kappa Sigma house and smeared on the steps and handrails of the basement entrance. Penney Here For Lecture J. C. Penney, founder and now honorary chairman of the board of J. C. Penney Co. Inc., will speak on "Opportunity As a Way of Life" at 3:30 p.m., Monday, April 21, in the J. C. PENNEY Kansas Union Ballroom. The lecture is sponsored by the K.U. chapter of Police found three men stealing on a divan in the Kappa Sigma house. All had blue paint on their shoes. Two of the men gave their names to police as Richard Goode, a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity and Overland Park sophomore, and William Ralston, who told police he was from Wichita University. The third man would not give his name and University officials refused to disclose it. In the Delta Upsilon house the police found another broken trophy in the hallway, smashed lip stick container in the living room and blue paint foot prints were on the hall and living room carpets. Find Broken Trophies Police found seven broken brass trophies from the Delta Upsilon house on the front steps of the Chi Omega sorority house early Sunday morning. Police said the incident must have taken place after 2 a.m. Sunday. Richard Eugene McClain, president of the Kappa Sigma house, returned the other missing trophies. Several were damaged. Vandals Agree To Clean Up Vandals Agree 10 Clean Up The vandals agreed to clean the paint off the rugs and door, but Clark Coan, assistant dean of men, Richard D. Winternote, Alumni Assn. field secretary and chairman of the alumni board of Delta Upsilon, the American Marketing Assn. and is open to the public. Penney, who was born in Hamilton, Mo. in 1875, began as a dry-goods clerk at $2.27 a month in 1895. By 1902 he managed to open his own store in Kemmerer, Wyo. Named "The Golden Rule," the store was the start of the vast J. C. Penney chain which is now the largest dry-goods chain in the world with 1,694 stores throughout the country. Find It In The Kansan Classifieds and the members of Delta Upsilon wanted the cleaning done by a cleaning service. The vandals started to clean the door, but most of the varnish was taken off the door. Official Bulletin Items for the Official Bulletin must be brought to the public relations office, 222-A Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of publication. Do not bring Bulletin to school. Daily Kansan. Notices should include name, place, date, and time of function. Men's counselor positions open: Triple-cate- l applications for men's residence hall counseling positions for 1958-59 are avail- able from office of the dean of students, 228 Strong. Mathematics Club, 4 p.m., 203 Strong Organization for Engineering Exposition TODAY Public lecture, 4 p.m., Bailey Auditorium. "Teaching of Foreign Languages in Public Schools." Speaker, Dr. Emma Birkmair, University of Minnesota. Episcopal morning prayer, 6:45 a.m. Episcopal Holy Eucharist, 7 a.m., St Anselm's Chapel, Canterbury House, Broadwell follows. TUESDAY Pre-Med Tech Club, noon, Nurses Honor House,shall, staff member for campus galleries SUA art forum, 4 p.m., Music Room, Kansas Union, Speaker, Don Jones, psychologist, Menninger's Clinic, Topka, "Psychological Uses of Modern Art." German art lecture, 4 p.m., Trophy Room, Kansas Union. Speaker, Dr. Klaus Berger, chairman, department of art history. Nursing Club, 7 p.m. 110 Fraser; Public Health, (student nurses). Alpha Rho Gamma, 7.15 p.m. Bailey Abbey Group discussion and business meeting Joint meeting of Young Democrats and Young Republicans, 7:30 p.m. Kansas City (Dem—Kansas City) and Senator Don Hults (Rep.-Lawrence). Informal debate on the issues to arise in the special session of the Kansas legislature, Refreshments. Monday, April 14, 1958 Department of economics, 8 p.m. Bailey Auditorium, Speaker, Mr. Richard Miles, Sr., economic officer, British Information Service, "Monetary Policy & Economic Stability, With Special Reference To British Experience." Puerto Williams, on Navarino Island south of Argentina, is the world's southernmost town and has a population of 350 persons living only 680 miles from the continent of Antarctica. Sports Will Be The Word At KU Relays Parade It may be the space age, but sports won't be ignored in this scientific world in downtown Lawrence Saturday morning. The winners in a race for space, the annual Kansas Relays parade, will have their trophies before the earth-bound track men take to the cinders. About 10 a.m. the city will be invaded by space ships, rockets, flying saucers and satellites. Their passengers, little green men and monsters, will demonstrate "Sports in a Scientific World" in an hour-long parade from Sixth street to South Park. The strange sportsmen and their modes of travel will be created by about 19 organized houses working on Relays Parade floats this week. The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce will award trophies to the two three winners in both men's and women's divisions. The Delta Gamma sorority women will enter a team from "Crater U." Smoke From A Crater Smoke will pour from a moon crater built on a 14-foot-long truck bed while little green men go about their activities. The men are three feet tall with huge heads for dreaming up moon-made sports. The fellows are hunting, fishing, skiing and catching flying saucers in a butterfly net. The Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity says "Man is Still the Key Figure" in Sports and Science." Bill Albright, Hutchinson junior, is designating a modernistic statue of a "stylized version of a human athlete." The 7-foot plaster figure will be shown performing a hammer throw with a satellite instead of the usual weight at the end of the chain. The figure will be surrounded by Olympic rings on a platform. Batter Up "Rookies in the Rocket Age" are being created by Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall upperclass women. A mechanical batter and catcher will throw a baseball back and forth from their two worlds on opposite ends of the float. Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity plans a molecular chain depicting seven sports. The fraternity will build a cony of the Brussels World's Fair centenille around a model of the Campanile. Spheres radiating from all sides will represent types of sports. Sorority Torch-Carriers Alpha Chi Omega will send a red and blue rocket out of a cloud to build, "A Stronger America Through Science and Sports." S. U.A. ART FORUM Presents Dr. Berger Speaking on GERMAN ART Tuesday, 4 p.m. Kansas Union Trophy Room DON'T MISS OUR SECOND STEREOPHONIC DEMONSTRATION University Symphony Orchestra Conducted by Robert Baustian Tuesday, April 15 at 4:00 University Theatre $ For Your Party $ Try Our Hi-Fi Disc Jockey $ Service $ We furnish—operator, equipment, records You will like this recording better than the December demonstration.