Daily Kansan LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1943 40TH YEAR Navy Requires Summer Term For Reserves NUMBER 119 All V-program men, with the exception of seniors, will be required by the Navy Department to enroll in the five-weeks' term which the University has been requested by the Navy Department to offer for all V-1 and V-7 men. The engineers classified as V-1 and V-7, on July 1, will presumably become part of the Navy College Training Program at the University and continue their education here. The five-weeks' term is to be given from May 24 to June 26. Regular credit will be given for the five weeks. Men who are not engineers in the V-program will probably be transferred to other navy schools when the Navy College program begins, July 1. Students who are not members of the Naval Reserve may enroll in the five-weeks' courses. Courses to be given in the five-weeks' term will be announced in a few days. Lewis Must Act Now, Ickes Says Washington, (INS)—Coal czar Harold L. Ickes said today that the coal mine crisis must be subjected to the War Labor Board's jurisdiction and denied that any "bargain, promise or pledge," had been made with John L. Lewis to obtain the 15 day truce for resumation of coal productions. Earlier Ickes had ordered all coal mines to operate on a 6 day week immediately to meet needed coal requirements. The order applied to all mines seized by the government. Reporters asked Ickes if the deadlock was about the same as before with the exception that the miners have gone back to work. "I think that is an accurate statement," Ickes replied. McCluggage Sworn Into Navy McCluggage Sworn Into Navy Dr. Marston McCluggage, assistant professor of sociology, today was sworn in as lieutenant, junior grade, in the U.S. Naval Reserve at Kansas City, Mo. He will attend a midshipman's school at Columbia University. Jayhawkers Available Tomorrow Those students who failed to obtain their final copies of the Jayhawker magazine, on sale last week, may get them at the Kansas business office tomorrow from 2 to 5 p.m., according to John Conard, editor. Senior Dues Are To Be Paid Soon Senior dues should be paid at the business office by tomorrow, Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, said today. If 275 students pay membership fees in the Alumni Association with their other senior dues, 25 cents from each person's fee will be given to the senior class fund, as promised by Ray Pierson, president of the association. A large number of January graduates have joined the association, Mr. Ellsworth reported. Since printed tickets for the senior breakfast are not available, Georgia Ferrel, chairman of the committee, has asked that seniors wear their caps and gowns as tickets of admission. Other members of the breakfast committee are Barbara Koch, Ducan McGregor, and Dale Lemon. United States Has Built Large Aerial Armada Washington, (INS) - Productor figures made public by WPB chairman, Donald M. Nelson, revealed today that the United States has built an aerial armada of nearly 75,000 planes in the 17 months since Pearl Harbor. Although this figure was originally President Roosevelt's goal for the first year of the war, the chief disclosed that the emphasis has been shifted to quantity rather than quality with heavier craft coming off the assembly lines. Highlights of Nelson's March production summary. Combat vehicles showed a gain of 13 per cent, almost 3,000 tanks being delivered. Heavy bomber production passed the 500 a month mark. Hindus Will Speak Here Tomorrow Maurice Gershon Hindus, Russian-born journalist and author, will speak on "The Russian Situation" at convocation at 10 o'clock tomorrow morning in Hoch auditorium. He just recently has returned from a six-months visit to his native country, and will be able to interpret and predict the news. Mr. Hindus is in close touch with the Russian people, and all predictions he has made concerning this war have so far proven true. He is considered the most authentic interpreter of Russia on the lecture platform today, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said. Once before, on March 11, 1931, Mr. Hindus addressed a group at the University. Books for which he is famous include: "The Russian Peasant and Revolution" (1920); "Broken Earth" (1926); "Humanity Uprooted" (1929); "Red Bread" (1931); "The Great Offensive" (1935); "Moscow Skies" (1936); "Green Worlds" (1938); "We Shall Live Again" (1939); "To Sing with the Angels" (1941); "Hitler Cannot Conquer Russia" (1941); and "Russia and Japan" (1942). Born in Russia in 1891, Mr. Hindus came to America for the first time in 1905. Since 1923, he has revisited his native country often. Mr. Hindus received a bachelor of science degree in 1915, a master of science degree in 1916, and a doctor of literature degree in 1931 from Colgate University. He has also studied at Harvard. Next Kansan Issue To Be Last for Year With Thursday's issue the Daily Kansan will complete its year's publication as a daily. Persons with notices or news should bear this in mind to insure publication. "The University of Kansas is maintaining and will continue ot maintain work in all departments of the University for those students not immediately needed in the war effort but upon whose broad and intelligent training the post war world with its many adjustments, may depend," said Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Dr. James C. Malin, professor of history at the University of Kansas, was elected president of the Agricultural History Society at the annual meeting held in Washington, D.C. last week, it was announced here today. Dr. Theodore R. Schellenberg, of the National Archives, Washington, and a graduate of the University of Kansas, was elected vice-president. Dr. Malin has served as vice-president during the past year. Malott States University Will Continue Work WEATHER FORECAST Scattered thundershowers extreme west portion tonight. Warmer today and tonight. The current year marks the 25th anniversary of the founding of the society, and it will be observed with appropriate ceremonies at the next annual meeting. The Society has a membership of over 400, both American and foreign. Principal objective of the organization is to stimulate interest in, promote the study of, and facilitate research and publication on the history of agriculture in the United States. Malin Elected National Head Of History Club This statement was issued in direct refutation to Dr. Malin pointed out that a number of projects are being promoted by the society at the present time, the most important being the saving of manuscript records dealing with the history of agriculture. The war activities, particularly on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, especially precautions against fire hazards which might result in bombing raids, have resulted in the clearing out of many storage spaces, out of which have come much valuable historical material. Musicians Banquet Tonight Dudley Crafts Watson JOHN J. MAYER Mr. Watson is a member of the Chicago Art Institute and his topic for this evening is "The Place of the Arts in American Life." Mr. Affleck is the founder of the Benjamin Franklin Society of Chicago and he will speak on "What Music Means to Me." This banquet is open to everyone who wishes to attend. Dudley Crafts Watson and Benjamin Franklin Affleck will be the speakers at the fine arts round-up banquet, an annual feature of Music Week, at 5 o'clock this evening in the Kansas room of the Union. A. E. H. This evening's program will feature Miss Mary Louise Beltz, a graduate of the University School of Fine Arts in 1936. Miss Beltz is a (continued to page two) Benjamin Franklin Affleck direct refutation to rumors that there would be no liberal arts training at the University next year, but instead the whole plant would be turned over to military training and to specialized training programs in engineering, medicine, chemistry, physics, pharmacy, and other critical war occupations. "The University accepts the challenge that the future of our civilization may depend upon the training and education of our people," the Chancellor added. Post-War Training to Continue Other University officials including Dr. Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Dr. Laurence C. Woodruff, registrar, reiterated the Chancellor's statements as to the future training program at the University. The post-war period cannot be neglected in any full rounded educational program, they pointed out, and while the University will co-operate to the fullest extent in the all-out war fort, it will also continue to provide the training necessary for the period (continued to page two) Engineers Will Elect Council Voting in Marvin hall and the chemistry building tomorrow from 8 to 5 o'clock, engineers will elect 14 members for next year's engineering council. Only chemical engineers will vote in the chemistry building; all others will vote in Marvin hall. Besides president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer, the senior, junior, and sophomore representatives and eight departmental representatives will be elected. Candidates for president are Dalton Eash, Harold McSpadden, and Reed Whetstone. Running for vice-president are Jack Doores and Jim Walker, and for secretary-treasurer, Mou Hui King, Steve Stimpson, and Art Benner. Bob Meredith, R. J. Atkinson, and Bob Samson are the candidates for senior class representative; Joe Beeler and Clyde McKale, for junior class representative; and Calvin Dresser, Harry Johnson, and Dick Shields, for sophomore representative. Departmental representative can- (continued to page two) Schedules Available Saturday Class schedules for the summer sessions will be available Saturday, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today. Students may obtain these schedules in any of the offices of the deans or at the registrar's desk, he added. Proof was read on the pamphlets yesterday, and Mr. Nichols believed they would be ready for distribution by Saturday. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1943 Malott States KU To Continue Work (continued from page one) after the military victory has been accomplished. Advices were received yesterday by the Chancellor confirming a previous announcement by the war department that the University would participate in the Army Specialized Training program. But as to when such trainees would arrive, no information is available. Such trainees, if of considerable numbers, would probably be housed in the Mineral Industries building. Fraternity Houses Will Be Used In the meantime, plans are being made to quarter approximately 500 naval engineers who will arrive at the University about July 1, for specialized training. These engineers will be housed in fraternity houses and negotiations are now under way between University and fraternity officials to complete the plans for the houses which the navy will require. Society houses and men's and women's dormitories will not be disturbed under any plans now known. The University is now to operate on a full year round basis with a full semester of 16 weeks opening on May 24 with offerings in all departments of the University if there is the demand for them. Advance registrations from over the state indicate that a sizeable freshman class will report for the summer semester. Paul Gilles Named Honor Chemistry Man For Year 1942-43 Paul W. Gilles, College senior, has been named the honor chemistry senior for the school year 1942-43, Dr. R. Q. Brewster, chairman of the department of chemistry, announced today. This award, made on the basis of scholarship, personality, and integrity, is made each year to the outstanding senior in the departments of chemistry and chemical engineering. The name of the honor student is then engraved on a placque hung on the wall of the first floor hall in Bailey Chemical Laboratories. The placque was donated by Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemical fraternity. VARSITY TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY JACK BENNY ANN SHERIDAN In 'Geo. Washington Slept Here' STUART ERWIN In 'He Hired the Boss' WITH EVELYN VENERABLE LATEST NEWS The semester for the engineering students will open July 1, and from May 24 until July 1, an intensive five weeks program will be offered to pre-engineering students, designed especially for those who may present deficiencies in the requirements for entering the engine school, especially in the field of mathematics. However, full University engineering credit will be given those enrolled in the five weeks period who are not required to make up any deficiencies. Fundamental Training Carried On Dean Lawson said, "it is the function of colleges and universities today to prepare both for our immediate war needs and for the needs of the post-war world. The College of Liberal Arts, therefore, proposes to offer training not only for today but also for tomorrow, and just as far as circumstances will permit, will offer work in all the main fields of human thought and culture. With this end in view, the University intends to carry on, alongside of its war training program the fundamental education and training of every department and division of the University." Kansas Exceeds Bond Quota Kansas has exceeded its bond quota by $13,000,000. The April bond sales were $63,394,388. MUSICIANS BANQUET--enlisted Men Get Officers' Training The United States navy has selected six young enlisted men from the British theater of operations for college training in the States leading to commissions as ensigns. (continued from page one) contralto. She is the winner of the Juliard Fellowship and first place, including $500 in the National Federation of Music Clubs biennial competition. Miss Beltz's concert will be given in Fraser hall at 8:30 tonight and it is open to all without any admission charge. ENGINEERS -enlisted Men Get Officers' Training The United States navy has selected six young enlisted men from the British theater of operations for college training in the States leading to commissions as ensigns. The University composers and artists including Robert Palmer, Carl A. Preyer, W. Otto Miessner and Ruth Orcutt will present a concert tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. in Hoch auditorium. This also is free of charge. At 9:30 tomorrow evening KFKU will broadcast a rehearsal of the Thursday concert with E. Thayer Gaston as commentator. (continued from page one) didates are as follows: chemical, John Margrave and John Michel; mechanical, Murray McCune, Bill Walker and John Jakosky; electrical, Bob Stephens and Dick Miller; civil, Bob Brothers, Bob Lamberton, and Ralph Jackson; aeronautical, Ralph May and Carl Davis; architectural, T. B. Anthony, Dick Dearing, and Bob Cowling; petroleum, Marion Smith; and mining and metallurgical, Bill Haines. Enlisted Men Get Officers' Training TODAY THRU WEDNESDAY GRANADA A PREMIER IN THE MID-WEST! IT'S HERE! THE ROUT OF ROMMEL IN AFRICA BECOMES "THE GREATEST FULL-LENGTH WAR FILM EVER MADE!"—N. Y. MIRROR DESERT VICTORY And As a Companion Feature This Brand New Musical Comedy ALLAN JANE JONES FRAZEE in RHYTHM OF THE ISLANDS with ANDY DEVINE MARY WICKES ERNEST TRUEX and introducing ACQUANETTA IT'S HERE! THE ROUT OF ROMMEL IN AFRICA BECOMES "THE GREATEST FULL-LENGTH WAR FILM EVER MADE!"—N. Y. MIRROR DESERT VICTORY ALLAN JANE JONES FRAZEE in RHYTHM OF THE ISLANDS with ANDY DEVINE MARY WICKES ERNEST TRUEX and introducing ACQUANETTA Alice McDonnell Elected Dramatic Workshop President Alice McDonnell, College junior, was elected president of the Dramatic Workshop at a meeting yesterday afternoon in Green hall. Other new officers elected were vice-president, Mary Morrill; secretary, Harriett Allen; treasurer, Billie Thiele. It was decided that the Workshop will not continue during the summer session. Tentative plans made for work in cooperation with service organizations when the club resumes activity at the beginning of the fall session. Nazi's Daughter Kidnapped Mt. Holyoke Does Welfare Work One hundred fifty Mount Holyoke students of applied sociology have arranged to do volunteer work in settlement houses, welfare agencies, and hospitals. London, (INS) — Netherland's patriots have kidnapped the daughter off Arthur Seyssu-Inquert, Nazi commissar for occupied Holland, and are holding her as a hostage, a Reuter's report quoted by the Dutch News Service, Anata, said today. Pre-Meteorology School A pre-meteorology school has been established at the University of North Carolina under guidance of the army air corps. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday, Wednesday and Saturday, September 17, 1010, at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under act of March 3, 1879. NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION 1943 Active Member MOTHERS DAY CALLS MOTHER'S DAY CALLS DELAYS and disappointments appear certain on Mother's Day Long Distance calls With so many men away from home on army and navy service, delays appear certain on many longer long distance telephone lines next Sunday—Mother's Day. We'll do the best we can, but we know that a lot of folks who place calls then will run into disappointments. If, despite this, you wish to talk home by long distance, please plan to make your call before Mother's Day if possible. And please make your call reasonably brief—not more. than five minutes—so that as many others as possible may talk to their mothers, too. We will do everything we can to get calls through. But—especially when vital metals are needed for war the telephone system cannot be expanded to handle floods of greeting calls on top of the exceptionally heavy business growing out of the war. On shorter lines—up to about a hundred miles away — to towns that are not military or war manufacturing centers—service will be about as usual. But all "main line" routes will be jammed. SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY MILITARY AVIATION MANAGEMENT AND EDUCATION THE NEW YORK TIMES CULSDAY, MAY 4, 1843 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN; LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Music Takes Highlight Of Midweek Events Music week here on the campus has provided the last week before finals with numerous social activities, including teas, dinners, and informal gatherings to give students and faculty an opportunity to meet the famous musicians present. The concert by Albert Spalding last night as well as the one Thursday night in which many musicians will participate, are presented for the University. Two parties last weekend provided entertainment for service men at the Community building. Friday night was the Fun Fest, and Saturday night with a special gift of the machinist's mates training school, Herb Price's orchestra. Senior banquets in all organized houses are being given to honor those who graduate this year. Many of the banquets are formal, and gifts of various kinds are presented. PI BETA PHI . . . . . . held a senior dinner last night for the following graduates: Barbara Jo Wilson, Rosemary Utterback, Rilla Townsend, Dorothy Jean Harvey, Betty Rowton, Mary Jane Miller, Marty Bitzer, Barbara Batcheler, and Louise Longenecker. The senior will and prophecy were read and two gifts were made to the House here. A war bond was presented by the freshmen Mrs. F. H. Smithmeyer, Lawrence, gave the chapter here her original I. C. Sorosis pin. It is to be worn in future years by the president and the honor initiate. I. C. Sorosis is the original name of Pi Beta Phi. PHI DELTA KAPPA . . . three newly elected members were initiated by members of the Kappa chapter at the home of Bert Nash last Wednesday evening. The initiates included Charles Shields, K.U. graduate of Kansas City, Richard Kell of Topeka and Eugene Fiser of Cherryvale, seniors in the school of education. ALPHA DELTA PI . . . ... the mother's club had a covered dish luncheon for the last meeting of the year at the home of Mrs. T. C.Blue, 1705 Illinois street. SIGMA PHI EPSILON .. SIGMA PHI EPSON . . . ... Mrs. Ellsworth Bryan, Cimarron, was a luncheon and dinner guest Saturday. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON ... ... Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Hilton were dinner guests Saturday. ... George Robb, McPherson, was a weekend guest. Joyce Standiferd Engaged Saturday The engagement of Joyce Standiford to Dana A. Tompkins was announced at Watkins hall May 1 by the housemother, Mrs. C. E. Estlerly. Mrs. Esterly wore a corsage of talisman roses and Miss Standiford American beauty roses. Betty Charles and Alice who passed the chocolates wore pink carnations. Tompkins is a College junior and a member of Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity. Miss Standiferd is a student laboratory technician at the University of Kansas hospitals in Kansas City and was president of Watkins hall in 1940-41. Cigars were passed at the Phi Beta house Sunday noon. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA . . . . . . weekend guests were Beverly Breon and Betty Jane Hamilton, Kansas City, Mo. . . . Sunday dinner guests included: Mr. and Mrs. Flavius Robertson and Flavia Robertson, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. Will Green, Abilene, Mr. Charles Morgan, Bill Butler, Warren Bowman, Bob Blackwell. . . Mrs, R. E. Cheney has spent several days as houseguard. . . Saturday dinner guests were Florence and Elizabeth Allen, Topeka. PHI KAPPA PSI... PHI CHI . . . ... dinner guests Sunday included the following: Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Atkinson,Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Lovelace, and Mrs. Anna Moore, all of Kansas City; Sergeant Kenneth Ray of Ft. Cook,Neb.; naval aviation cadet Dwight Horner of Kansas City; Hal Holt, of Hutchinson and a member of Phi Delta Theta at Kansas State. .. Sunday dinner guests were Lois Ihourney, Kansas City, Virginia Carmousche, Manhattan, and Betty Carman. DE LUXE CAFE Our 24th Year in Serving K. U. Students Adelane's For COOL COTTON DRESSES Shop at Adelane's Engaged Gamma Phi To Phi Psi Gamma Phi Beta has announced the engagement of Joan Taggart, Wellington, to Charles E. Russell, a member of Phi Kappa Psi, from Iola. The pinning ceremony took place Friday evening with Barbara Koch assisting. ALPHA KAPPA PSI . . . Miss Taggart wore an orchid corsage, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, housemother, and Miss Koch received gardenias. DELTA GAMMA . . SIGMA KAPPA... ... Margaret Hogan and Shirley Carl of Cherryvale and Jane Sullivan of Shawnee were weekend guests. PHI GAMMA DELTA... ...weekend guest was Mrs. E. S. Safford, Kansas City. ...dinner guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Basore, Bentley. Russell is a senior in the school of business. Miss Taggart is a College senior. ... Capt Frank Coulter, a member of the chapter, is a guest for several days. ALPHA TAU OMEGA . . ... guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Asher and Marybelle, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hale and Patricia, and Lucille Wallen, Ft. Scott; Richard Hamilton, Manhattan; and Nancy Abel. ALPHA DELTA PI . . . . . Sunday dinner guests were Bob McGregor, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, Mrs. F. C. Crowrey and Mrs. M. C. Hardman of Leavenworth, and Miss Jean Robertson. ... Jan Granger was a luncheon guest Friday. Colleen Poorman Announces Betrothal Miss Poorman received roses. Chocolates were passed to members of the hall. Miller Hall has announced the engagement of Colleen Poorman, College senior from Wichita, to Alexander Roth, Lawrence. The ceremony took place Sunday afternoon with Persis Snook and Jeanne Scott, roommates of Miss Poorman, and Mary Margaret Anderson, Topeka assisting. Roth, a graduate of Nebraska Wesleyan University, is an assistant instructor in the department of anatomy at the University of Kansas. Kappa-Sigma Chi ★★★ Pins Put Out Kappa Kappa Gamma has announced the pinning of Nancy Robertson, College junior from Kansas City, Mo., to Bill Butler, junior in the School of Business from Kansas City, Mo., and a member of Sigma Chi. The pinning took place Friday night, and Miss Robertson's roommates, Hannah Hedrick and Virginia Brehm, assisted. Miss Hedrick received a corsage of white roses, Miss Brehm one of red carnations, and Mrs. Charles Howe, housemother, one of gardenias. Miss Robertson wore a corsage of gardenias. K. U. Women's Club To Elect Officers 6-KUIL womens ... g ... AA. The University Women's club will meet in the Kansas room of the Union building Thursday afternoon from 3 to 5, for the annual business meeting, and election of officers. Mrs. C. G. Bayles is chairman of the hostess committee for the afternoon and is assisted by Mrs. R. H. Beamer, Miss Margaret Anderson, Mrs. John G. Blocker, Mrs. E. L. Falkenstein, Mrs. D. D. Hames, Mrs J. N. Carman, and Mrs. Earl D. Hay Mrs. H. E. Chandler and Miss Margaret Lynn will preside at the tea table. PHI DELTA THETA ... PHI DELTA THETA . . . .. dinner guests Sunday were Sue Lindemann, Kansas City, Elizabeth Lay, Patties Blank, and Everta Smith. "THAT'S RIGHT, SAILOR - - - On the Double-Quick to Weaver's New Shipment of Navy Regulation Socks 5 pair for $1.00 all sizes Main Floor Chandler Announces Graduates to Receive Teaching Positions H. E. Chandler, secretary of the Teachers Appointment Bureau, has announced that the following University graduates have received teaching positions; Muriel Johnson, A.B.'40, home economies in the Salina High School; Doris Hodson, A.B.'43, English in the Culver High School; Evelyn Nicelsen, A.B.'43, social science in the Culver High School. M. A. Kaufman, graduate, principal of the Inman High School; A. J. Gibson, M.Ed.42, superintendent Kensington city schools; Jacqueline Flaxer, graduate, music supervisor in the Moran city schools; Este Ersele, A.B.40, mathematics in the Garden City Junior high school. Winifred Hargrove, B.M.E.43, music supervisor in the Ovaga city schools; Virginia Henshaw, A.M.42, Spanish and English in the Burlinggame high school; Marjorie Henry, B.M.E.43, instrumental music in the Smith Center high school; Geraldine Sidener, B.S.Ed.43, commerce in the Valley Center high school; Nadine Stallard, B.S.Ed.43, social science in the Marion high school. Joe J. Hendrix, M.S.Ed.'32, principal of the Morrill high school; Kate N. Hendrix, graduate, English in the Morrill high school; Martha C. Angle, graduate, commerce in the Marion high school; Melva Good, B.M.E.'42, superviser of music in the Eureka city schools; Nelda Budde, A.M.'43, English in the Onaga high school; Frances McKenna, A.M.'42, English in the Manhattan high school; J. M Highfill, graduate, principal of the Dwight high school. ☆ KAW KOETTES . . THETA TAU ... ... Robert Schrepher was a dinner guest yesterday. ...Betty Whitney was a dinner guest Monday. ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . . weekend guests were Miss Dorothy Hathaway, Kansas City, and Miss Patricia Carey, Long Beach, Calif. ... dinner guests Sunday were Mr and Mrs. H. C. Baker and daughter of Kansas City. (continued to page seven) New under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration ARRID AIRD 1. Does not rot dresses or men's 1. Does not dress or men's skirts. Does not irritate skin. 2. No wading to dry. Can be used on wet surfaces. 3. Instantly stop perspiration for 1 to 3 days. Prevents odor. 4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream. 5. Awarded Approval Seal of American Institute of Laundering for being harmless to children. Arrid is the largest selling deodorant 39¢ a jar Also in 10¢ and 59¢ jars Good Housekeeping Good Housekeeping Made in the UK ARRID PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY AUTHORITY Allen to Direct Intramurals Allen to Will Move Into New Office At Semester's End Dr. Forrest C. Allen, chairman of the department of physical education, will assume the duties of director of University intramural athletics with the beginning of the summer term later this month. He will succeed Henry Shenk, who was recently named track and football coach for the coming school year. Dr. Allen's office will be moved from its present site to the room now occupied by Shenk. Shenk and Reginald Strait, third member of the physical education staff, will be situated in the outer intramural office. Dr. Allen's former office will be used as a storeroom for equipment and records. The new setup is expected to facilitate the work of the department staff members, and aid in the more efficient keeping of ahtletic and physical education records. Dr. Allen stated that softball and basketball are possibilities for summer intramural activities. Basketball will be played only if the summer is comparatively cool. There is a possibility, Dr. Allen said, that a twilight ball league will be organized, with at least one team from the University, one from Haskell, one from the Navy trainees, and one from the Naval Air Cadets competing. Chi Omega and IWW To Play for Title Chi Omega won the right to play IWW, third division winner, for the championship in women's intramural softball by defeating Corbin Hall yesterday afternoon, 32 to 17. Barbara Baker pitched and Ernnestine Shears caught for Chi Omega. Lagging behind until the third inning, Chi Omega surged ahead in the fourth inning, stacking up 12 runs in those two innings. Mary Taylor opened the scoring for Chi Omega in the third inning when she hit a home run with the bases loaded; Shirley Rhoades pitched for Corbin Hall until she was relieved in the third inning by Jo Wells. Phylliss Struble caught for Corbin Hall. Texas Prints Songbook School songs of the University of Texas are being committed to black and white as the first university songbook in 35 years goes to press. PERFECTION . . . is something we all seek to attain. For 20 years Williams Perfection Grade meats have been the choice of HOTELS, RESTAURANTS, Clubs and INSTITUTIONS. Williams Meat Co. 20 Kansas Ave., Kansas City ↓ Jayhawk abberwock By J. DONALD KEOWN, Guest Columnist SPORTS REMINISCENSE Four years of following sports on the Campus—and what do we remember most vividly? In the world of football, who could forget on the Crimson and the Blue side the bullet passes of "Riflin" Ralph Miller, the savage tackling of all-American Ray Evans, the line-backing of Don Pierce, or the sturdy defensive play of Hub Ulrich? Also sticking in our minds are the color of Dick Amerine (at times too much of a showoff for some tastes), or the standout work of Quido Massare on woefully weak Kansas lines. As for the opposition, we won't forget quickly the plunging of Vike Francis, the brilliant all-around play of Bill Schatzer, the poise of all-American Christman, and the terrific line play of Nebraska's Forrest Behm. Harry Ice, Bob Steuber, Bob Waldorf, Leonard Dugan, Al Klug, Bud Schwenk, Elmer Hackney, Herman Rohrig, and Harry Hopp are other gridmen we won't forget. For the best game we witnessed in Memorial Stadium, we'll take the 1941 Kansas-Kansas State thriller, with this year's battle with the Nebraska Cornhuskers ranking high. As the strongest teams we've seen in Mount Oread, we'll take the Iowa Seahawks and the 1940 Nebraska Cornhuskers, with the 1941 Missouri Tigers close behind. Basketball stars in Hoch auditorium have more often worn the Crimson and the Blue. Our favorite is still cool, collected Howard Engleman, the Houdini of the Courts. The dash of Ralph Miller, the heady play of Bob Allen, the guarding of Dick Harp, the defensive work and the ball-handling of Ray Evans, and the rebounding of Charley Black are not to be overlooked. And when one thinks of the KU basketball teams, one always thinks first of its drive force—"Phog" Allen, and then not to be forgotten is trainer Dean Nesmith. What was the best Kansas team we saw in action? We'll take this year's quintet, with the spirited 1939-40 aggregation a close second. As for opposing teams, the best we saw in Hoch auditorium was the 1940-41 Oklahoma team, and the 1942-43 Creighton five. Lonnie Eggleston of A and M was tops as an opposing player. In track, we'll remember the 1940 Relays in which the Rideout twins beat out our own Glen Cunningham, and also the Relay high jumping of the Oklahoma Aggies' Don Boydston. As for the Jayhawk trackmen, we won't forget the high-jumping duo of Sanneman and Stoland, and also this year's Scoffield, the middle-distance running of "Churchie" Harris; and the performances of other boys such as Pollom, Farneti, Edwards, Foy, Bevens, Stannard, and Mathes. As for baseball to us it's all pitcher Knute Kresie on the Crimson and Blue side, and those fine Leavenworth Reception Center teams with Oadis Swigart, former major-league pitcher, as the outstanding opposition. Tennis once again recalls to our mind the slashing play of blond Howard Engleman, and that's just about enough reminiscing for one day. Allen to Give Graduation Talks Dr. Forrest C. Allen, head of the department of physical education, has been scheduled to deliver commencement addresses at the following high schools: Winchester, May 13; Lane, May 14; Roseland, May 15; Bennington, May 24; and Miltonvale, May 25. Giraud Extends Invitation Algiers, (INS) — Responding to Gen. Charles De Gaulle's request for direct and conclusive conversations regarding French unity, Gen. Henri Honore Giraud last night issued a formal invitation to the fighting French leader to visit North Africa after May 5. "Phog" Plans More Play For Students Dr. Forrest C. Allen, new intramural athletic director, in anticipation of increased interest in intramural sports following the war, today outlined a University program, which would emphasize conditioning for all Jayhawk students and faculty members. Declaring that "the cost of equipment is the biggest obstacle Declaring that "the cost of the students must meet before participating in body-building sports," he suggested that complete outfits for all sports be purchased by the University, and that such equipment be available free of charge to all students. "Every student should be guaranteed at least one complete sports outfit per season." Allen said. The equipment would be kept in a large storeroom, according to the new director's plan, and would be kept clean and sterilized. Such sports equipment as shoes, trunks, jerseys, tennis racquets, balls, bats, badminton racquets, golf clubs, horse shoes, football uniforms, baseball uniforms, and similar articles would be included in the equipment supply. "In the past since 1937," Allen declared, "all improvements upon intramural facilities have been made from student funds. I think that the athletic funds should at least in part go to those who so loyally have supported our teams." Dr. Allen estimated that a subsidy of $10,000 would be required to launch the program. He suggested that revenue from the athletic association be used to finance the program, pointing out 'that basketball this year turned in a profit. During the years Allen served as director of athletics, a sum of $1,000 was annually taken from the varsity athletic revenues and given to the intramural setup, he added. Dr. Allen also announced his support of the Stanford plan, by which faculty members are rohibited from keeping students in university buildings after 4 p.m. All time after that hour is free for recreation. Pointing out that the new emphasis upon intramural athletics will require larger recreational grounds than those now available, Dr. Allen suggested the University - owned Robinson farm northeast of the city as a possible location for a new and larger playgrounds. He estimated that at least 100 acres of space would be required for the new program. The farm is at present only in partial cultivation, with the proceeds from the land going to Bell Memorial hospital in Kansas City. The land stretches over an area of more than a thousand acres. Dr. Allen envisaged upon the new Be Patriotic in A NEW WAY-playgrounds an 18-hole golf course, tennis courts, a swimming pool, game fields, a club house, bridle paths, and possibly a physio-therapy hospital for the reclamation of soldiers. "I believe the program can be sold," declared Dr. Allen in suggesting that wealthy alumni, still interested in the welfare of the students of the University, might be induced to finance the huge program. The physical education chairman also stressed that many Eastern universities — including Yale — have their recreational grounds located several miles from the University. We Clean Everything You Wear But Your Shoes 1001 N.H. ------ Phone 392 LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS "Everybody is going to work less, and will play more following the war." Allen declared. "It is the right, and sensible thing to do. And it is going to take some planning to meet this new requirement upon our recreational facilities." KEEP 'EM WEARING Kansas Loses Meet To K-State Save Your Clothes The University track team was defeated in a duel meet Saturday at Manhattan by the Kansas State team, $ 86_{1 \frac{1}{2}} $ to $ 44_{1 \frac{1}{2}}$. The Jayhawkers took only three firsts and tied for two others. Valle Schloesser, only Kansas letterman, placed first in the 100-yard dash and the 220-yard low hurdles; Bill Haines won the mile run; Scofield tied for first in the high jump; and Walker tied for first in the pole vault. The summary: High hurdles—Won by Socolosky of K.S.; second, Mendell., K.S.; third, McCoy, K.U. Time, 16.7 seconds. Half mile run—Won by Johns, K. S.; second, Haines, K.U., third, Peterson, K.S. 220-yard dash—Won by Upham, K.S.; second, Keith, K.S.; third, Cole, K.U. Time 23.3 seconds (continued to page seven) Jaz Pu H Robb lunch he p Irvin the V sie V song the The "C'only learn Robb ure song retar write with song get Robb other A wen me nen Gri bus Liv Pa Mi at er ARROW'S DOUBLEY "The Two-Way" Shirt In White Oxford and in Colors "Shirts You Need" $2.24, $2.46 ARROW'S DOUBLER "I you busi you reve CARLS GOOD CLOTHES BROOKLYN, NASHVILLE, LONDON, NEW YORK, MIDTOWN, KANSAS PAGE FIVE 'Jazz Is Like Life . . . . Publisher Robbins Visits Here For Music Week Jazz is like life itself-youth," was a remark made by Jack Robbins, head of the Robbins Music Publishing company, at a luncheon interview yesterday. Mr. Robbins should know for he published almost every top popular song for 20 years until Irving Berlin's "White Christmas." Mr. Robbins is a guest at the University during the Mu- "Composing music is the only 'racket' which can't be learned in school," continued Mr. Robbins, in discussing the procedure of writing and publishing a song. He has a staff of three secretaries, whose work it is to return unsolicited manuscripts. If a song writer can influence a band leader with a wide following to "plug" his song, then he stands a chance to get his music published, stated Mr. Robbins. Only already successful composers may have much hope otherwise. Song Titles Must Be Good Even if a song writer has a good song, it is not worth much unless the title is good, explained Robbins. There is no way of telling in advance whether a song will be successful, he asserted. "It's not the good ones that make you a success in the publishing business; it's the ones on which you don't stick out your neck," he revealed. At the luncheon with Mr. Robbins were Peter de Rose, composer; Domenico Savino, composer and partner in the publishing firm; Ferde Grofe, composer; Edward McCauley, business manager of Robbins; Fud Livingstone, formerly arranger for Paul Whiteman, and Dr. W. Otto Miessner, professor of public music at the University and noted composer in his own right. The visitors were all enthusiastically agreed that University women are a great deal better looking than those found on either coast and also agreed that there was much talent on the campus. De Rose and Robbins contended that no musician on Broadway could play "Deep Purple" better than Martha Dooley, fine arts sophomore, who had just finished a piano solo in an adjoining room. successful career was also pre- produc ed by all present for Dorothy Mae Nelson, fine arts senior, should she go on the stage or enter motion pictures. Her personality and appearance should take her far, they said. The University Band also came in for generous praise. "Better than any of its kind in the East," asserted Mr. McCaulley. "There college bands are merely football adjuncts, more under the athletic departments than the fine arts." "Pagan Love Song" has sold more copies than any other music put out by the Robbins firm, Mr. Robbins stated, with "When I Grow Too Old to Dream," "Goodnight, Sweet-heart," and "When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain," following in that order. Peter de Rose wrote "Deep Purple," which is another of the Robbins' best sellers. It sold more than a half million copies. **Publishes Movie Music** The Robbins company publisher all the music for motion pictures made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, 20th Century Fox, Universal studios, and the Hal Roach studios, and has branches in Europe, South America, Cuba, Mexico, and Canada. "Don't Get Around Much Any More," is currently the firm's best seller, with "Coming In On a Wing and a Prayer" second. "A revival hymn" was the term applied to the later song by Robbins, but he conceded that it has universal appeal. He has just returned from a two months' tour of Latin America where he studied native dances and music. Equitation Classes Take Two-Day Ride Twenty-four women of the University equitation classes left at 8 o'clock Friday morning for a two-day ride to Topeka via the river bottom road. They arrived in Topeka about 4:30 and spent the night at the YWCA there. The horses were stabled at Shawnee Lake. They came back to Lawrence by way of Watson and Stull. Each woman took care of her own horse. They ate both noon meals out on the trip. Journalist Visits Parent After Work in Louisiana Miss Mary Rutter, '37, graduate from the department of journalism, is visiting this week with her parents Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Rutter. Since her graduation Miss Rutter has worked on the Lawrence Journal-World and subsequently has been Associated Press writer in New Orleans, La. She is now working for Associated Press in Baton Rouge, La. The Memorial Union fountain, Jayhawk Cafe, Rock Chalk cafe, and the Cottage will be open this summer. Bricks, however, will be closed during the summer session. Four Cafes Will Open for Summer Applicants Needed for State Civil Service Jobs Salary Kansas City, (INS) — Approximately 500 mines in the Kansas City region "will continue to operate just as in the past," Ernest N. Ahfeldt, manager of the bituminous coal division, bureau of mines, said yesterday. Ahhfiledt declined to predict the government's course as far as taking over physical control of the mines in this region was concerned. However, observers expressed the opinion that the government will take over actual operation of the mines only if serious trouble develops. Position Alhfeldt, whose region covers Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Iowa and Arkansas, was named regional mine manager. He said mine presidents have been designated as mine managers for the Federal government. WRITE IMMEDIATELY, FOR OFFICIAL APPLICATION Local Mines Are Still Operating Account Clerk I ... $120.75 - $150.75 Account Clerk II ... $149.50 - $184.50 Storekeeper I ... $ 97.75 - $127.75 Storekeeper II ... $132.75 - $162.75 Ahlfeldt said he would act as something of an observer for the government. Further than that, be said, the matter is up to Washington. KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL SERVICE Chanute Field, I., (INS) - Master Sergt. George P. Shindle of the Army Air forces technical training command sent a letter off to his York, Pa., draft board yesterday. His letter was occasioned by a notice from the draft board ordering him to report immediately for induction. Governor Schoepel Dedicates Gov. Andrew Schoepel spoke at the dedication of the Pratt Air Base, May 3. Sergt. Shindle has been in the army for the last 31 years. They Draft Him ★ ★ ★ Soldier 31 Years 801 Harrison, Topeka Phone 2-0588 Ober's AUTO TOOL OUTSHELL McGregor Governer Schoeppel Dedicates MCGREGOR ACTION SHIRTS $1.50 up Long and Short Sleeves Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS The decision which was Re 1942, when the court split 5 to 4 in a decision affecting the religious sect. Rehearing was granted after the court changed complexion. Ordinances of Opelika, Ala.; Fort Smith, Ark., and Casa Grande, Ariz., under which Jehovah's Witnesses were prosecuted for failure to pay fees prescribed were set aside. Jehovah's Witnesses Win Court Decision Justice Douglas said that the methods of Jehovah's Witnesses are religious. States, he said, cannot enact laws which abridge the freedom of religion or the press. Washington, (INS)—The supreme court yesterday by a 5 to 4 vote reversed itself on the issue of freedom of religion, press, and speech, and held unconstitutional various local ordinances requiring Jehovah's Witnesses to pay license fees for the privilege of distributing religious tracts. The decision which was reversed was handed down June 8, While states have power to impose license fees, the court said they cannot be used to suppress freedom of speech or religion. Members of Jehovah's Witnesses had contended that one ordinance provided that a tax of $10 a day be charged for peddling literature and a tax of $1.50 a day for canvassing for orders. "They may not prohibit the distribution of handbills in the pursuit of a clearly religious activity merely because the handbills invite the purchase of books for the improved understanding of the religion or because the hand bills seek in lawful fashion to promote the raising of funds for religious purposes,' said the court. If it did, then the passing of the collection plate in church would make the church service a commercial project. The constitutional rights of those spreading their religious beliefs through the spoken and printed word are not to be gauged by standards governing retailers or wholesalers of books. "But the mere fact that the religious literature is 'sold' by itinerant preachers rather than 'donated' does not transform evangelism into a commercial enterprise. "Freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of religion are available to all, not merely to those who can pay their way. "As we have said, the problem of drawing the line between a purely commercial activity and a religious one will at times be difficult. On this record it plainly cannot be said that petitioners were engaged in a commercial rather than a religious venture." ASK THE GIRL IN THE VICTORY GARDEN ASK THE GIRL IN THE VICTORY GARDEN "VEGETABLES FOR VICTORY — AND I'M PARCHED" "WHEN I'M THIRSTY. IT'S COCA-COLA FOR ME" "When you're doing your Victory gardening, you'll welcome ice-cold Coca-Cola. Speaking for Coke, I'm here to tell you that ice-cold Coca-Cola, brings you all the differ- ence between something really refreshing and just something to drink. It has a taste all its own and quality you trust. Enjoy it whenever you can." "VEGETABLES FOR VICTORY — AND I'M PARCHED" "WHEN I'M THIRSTY IT'S COCA-COLA FOR ME" never can." 5¢ BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY LAWRENCE COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. PAGE FOUR PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TODAY, MAY 1, 2016 The Editorial Page American Way of Rugged Individualism Is Slowly Passing Like An Ebbing Tide A way of life is passing from among us. Like the ebbing tide, it is retreating down the sands of time with an occasional lash back toward the rocky shore. Other ways of life have withered away like this; the thoughtful life of Athens, the patrician life of Rome; the ways of life of the nobles and knights of the middle ages, the monks in their monasteries, the serfs in their bondage; the lives of the bootmaker and the candlestickmaker, the blacksmith and the carriage-maker. A changing world has forced them out of existence or thrust them, like excess baggage, onto the rear of the stagecoach. Another way of life is going the way of the knight and the blacksmith. The rugged individualism of the pioneer and the self-made man is passing into the limbo of what was. It is withering away like an unpicked plum, vanishing like hail upon a summer afternoon. We cannot see it, but it is going. It is hard to see pass the most cherished ideal of the American people. But the way of the pioneer is gone. No longer can he build his cabin upon the outskirts of civilazation. No longer can he shoot down his meal from the front door of his house. No longer can he subsist with himself. Even the self-made man is going. There is little hope today for the newsboy hawking his wares upon the street corner to become editor of the paper. There is scant chance for the day laborer to rise much above the foremanship of the crew. Rugged individualism is going, like the gentle aristocracy of the South. Our society is becoming more involved, more integrated. Forces have sprung into being that must be controlled, social forces, economic forces. Government cannot continue a philosophy of laissez faire. Each man is not responsible solely to himself; he cannot spend his money as he pleases, sell his products as he would like. For there are forces, forces we do not yet understand, that are waiting to be unleashed upon a world once more. Forces of depression, forces of economic slavery, are waiting to be loosed. And rugged individualism must go. We shall feel sorry to see it go. It served us well. It made our land great and respected. And we shall dream of it, just as we dream of knights and blacksmiths. But evolution goes on.-J.G. Juvenile Delinquency Problem Grows As Work Takes Parents The wartime delinquency problem in Kansas City is like that of nearly every other city in the nation. In fact, Kansas City boasts of less trouble with delinquents than many other cities. Nevertheless, steps must be taken to prevent growth and flourishing of such action. This problem of delinquency has been alarming in other cities. In Los Angeles, thrived a gang of boys and girls who had committed every kind of crime. After an investigation, 400 boys were in custody,28 indicted for murder. In Detroit, a gang of 100 boys and girls terrorized the population by destruction of public houses and buildings. The war evidently has an effect on the increase of juvenile cases. In the first 6 months of 1942, New York City reported an increase Just Wondering Why the Fine Arts program planners have never learned that Hoch audiences get bored with programs that are too long, no matter how good the individual numbers may be. 1 in arrests of 14 per cent, Detroit reported that girl delinquency went up 43 per cent; in Niagara Falls area cases have gone up 58 per cent. In Los Angeles, arrest rose 35 per cent in the first 3 months after Pearl Harbor. One important aspect of the problem is the increased number of young girls who go out with soldiers and sailors. The girls, usually between 12 and 15 years of age, feel that they are patriotic by going out with the lonely soldiers. The wild tendency among the boys and girls can be attributed mainly to the lack of parental guidance. Many parents work in war plants, allowing their children to roam about as they please. In fact, many parents are so tired when they come home that they are glad to have their children gone. And they never know where. Judges have often said that juvenile delinquency was better termed parental delinquency. The solution to the problem is simple enough. The causes of delinquency are always the same: poverty, neglect, lack of community facilities, and lack of good outlets for energy and activity. What cities must do is to provide an outlet for young people's energy, imagination, their need of attention, understanding, and friendship. They must be busy, but at the right things.—B.L.P. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Student Paper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas MEMBER 1933 KANSAS PRESS ASSOCIATION NEWS STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief ... Virginia Tieman Editorial Associates ... Don Keown, Jimmy Gunn, Maurice Barker Managing Editor...Joy Miller Sunday editor...Bill Haage Campus Editors...Jane Miner, Florence Brown, Clara Lee Oxley Sports Editor...Matt Heuertz News Editor...Phyllis Jones Picture Editor...Bob Schultheis Society Editor...Annie Lou Rossman Wire Editor...Virginia Gunsolly Feature Editor...Jane Miner Business Manager ... Oliver Hughes Advertising Manager ... Betty Lou Perkins Assistant Advertising Manager .. Mary Eleanor Fry Advertising Assistant ... Mary Morrill BUSINESS STAFF Rock Chalk Talk By MARY MORRILL If you stand on the library steps long enough you'll hear everything: Bill McIntire and Joe Gray, Delts, met in jellyting territory before Watson. Gray's face showed definite signs of exposure. "Hmm," said McIntire, "are you brown from the sun?" "Well, fine," said McIntire, slapping his back, "I'm McIntire from 'Yeah,'" said Gray. the Tribune. How are you old man?" **** The All-American sport: When played right, baseball can be a very satisfying game. The A.I.Ch.E.'s (Chemical Engineers) played it right on their picnic. No one worried about a home run. The best hit was a one-base hit followed by leisurely sneaks from base to base. There was a cache of beer at each base. There was a cache of beer at each base. $$ ***** $$ What comes of having women reporteds: Shirley Kelly, Miller hall, making her regular calls for social news had skillfully extracted from Al Derrington, Phi Chi, the information that the medics had had a speaker Thursday. Shirley wanted to know his topic. Derrington seemed reluctant. But, as are all good reporters, Shirley was persistent. After ten minutes of intensified coaxing, Derrington weakened—— "Well, all right if you must know, he spoke on 'The Sex Life of the Male!' There, now go on. I just dare you to put that in your paper!" Derrington taunted. *** "Don't worry; it was just a movie"-nutz: Arising from the creative genius of Yogi Williams, Phi Gam, Frankenstein walked on the Hill Saturday night. Yogi made the mask and supervised the job of fitting it on Dick Shields--also of stuffing Shields shoulders. The monster was taken to the Kappa house first and was introduced by Warren Bowman as Frank N. Stein, the new pledge. The new pledge roared acknowledgment and the race for under table positions was on. Eight O'Clock Whistle Power Plant Pet By PEGGY McCONNELL Eight o'clock—the whistle blows; 8:20—the whistle blows again; and so on through the day, the steam whistle at the University signifies the beginning of class periods. The regularity of this whistle is not appreciated by many students and teachers at the University. They depend upon its familiar blast, but do not think $ ^{ \dagger} $ familiar blast, but do not think of the intricate device which causes it to be always on time. In the electrical department of the power plant, situated behind Fowler shops, is an automatic clock which is set so that when a little peg drops into place at 20 minutes past the hour, the steam is released to make the whistle. This automaticity is characteristic of the whole power plant. The plant, running 24 hours a day with a full crew of nine men working in shifts, makes electricity, heat, and water for the entire Hill. One hundred per cent efficiency with an economy of utilities at hand is the near goal of the power plant. Using steam twice, is only one economy. Steam is made in six big boilers—two 300 horsepower boilers, and four 500 horse-power boilers. The steam is then run through one of two turbines, thus making electricity, and is then sent on through pipes to heat the buildings on the campus. To do this, the turbines must be run at 3,600 revolutions a minute to furnish the 60-cycle a second current necessary to keep all the electric clocks and apparatus running correctly. Master Clock Is Set To keep the turbine at 60 cycles, a master clock is set for perfect time with the Arlington time signal from near Washington, D.C., every day at 11 a.m. The master clock is really two clocks combined—one run by electricity and the other run like an ordinary kitchen clock. If the little gold hand of the latter clock is running simultaneously with the hand of the correct electric clock, then the turbine is right at 60 cycles a second exactly. Every morning at 11, W. C. Sanderson, chief engineer of the power plant, receives the time signal over his radio, and waves his hand to an assistant standing by the clock. The assistant marks how slow or how fast the gold hand is on a calendar. With such system our heat, electricity, and water are supplied efficiently. Boilers Are Kant Coine. Boilers Are Kept Going Generally two or three boilers are kept going all the time, except in summer when only one is kept going to furnish steam for the hospital, the Navy quarters, the Memorial Union building, and the chemistry building. Mr. Sanderson, who has been at the power plant for 11 years, says that "no time in 11 years, 24 hours a day, has there been no boiler going." TUE The plant buys electricity in the summer from the Kansas Power and Light Company, for buying it is cheaper than making it. Mr. Sanderson watches the weather closely with barometers and weather reports to know exactly how long to run the plant to save operation costs. Or Na Ja Bu W Japas subr the tion ener und (continued to page seven) 3012 1F 89 4150 3400 TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Navy Announces Jap Ships Sunk By US Subs Washington, (INS)—The toll of Japanese ships taken by American submarines mounted yesterday with the Navy announcing the destruction of more than 125,000 tons of enemy shipping by 10 United States undersea craft. The 10 American subs destroyed 125,262 tons of Jap shipping of all types including a submarine and in addition sent to the bottom a heavy cruiser, an armed cargo ship and two medium-sized transports, inflicted damage on vessels totalling 73,500 tons, and probably sunk a second large submarine, a medium-sized cargoship and four troop landing barges. The enemy vessels which the ships account for are among the 223 Japanese warships and merchant vessels which have been sunk or damaged by American submarines since the beginning of the war. POWER PLANT--- (continued from page six) zero weather days, during the peak load of the plant, expenses run up into hundreds of dollars a day. Mr. Sanderson often wonders if people realize what would happen if, on a 15-below zero day, the plant were shut down for 24 hours. He says that every pipe, refrigerator, and incubator would be frozen or broken, and that over a million dollars worth of damage would be done which would require a year's time to repair. Third Highest Smokestack As for the smokestack in back of the plant, its great height—247 feet with a 19-foot diameter on the inside is necessary because of the large size of the boilers. According to Mr. Sanderson, the stack is the third highest in the state of Kansas and the tallest on any college campus in the country. A length-of-the-days chart is kept in the plant so that every night the campus lights are turned on at a slightly different time than the night store. To conserve electricity as much as possible by taking advantage of the longer period of daylight, the lights are turned on two minutes later each night. This is the amazing organization and clockwork which actually run our University, capable of producing 1250 kilowatts of electricity. Of the buildings on the campus consuming electricity, Mr. Sanderson says that the Administration building requires the most; but he predicts that when the Mineral Resources building is finally completed, it will require the greatest load from the power plant—750 kilowatts. KANSAS LOSES---- (continued from page four) Mile relay—Won by K.S.; second K.U. 440-yard dash—Won by Upham. K.S.; second, Keith, K.S.; third, Cole. K.U. Time 50.6 seconds. 100-yard dash—Won by Schloesser, K.U.; second, Rockhold, K.S; third, Lea, K.U. Time 10.5 seconds. Mile run—Won by Haines, K.U. Bond, Nelson, K.S.; third, Mount, K.U. Time, 4 minutes, 45.6 seconds. Two-mile run—Won by K.S.; second K.S.; third, Mount, K.U. Broad jump—Won by Rockhold, K.S.; second, Lea, K.U.; third, K.S. Distance, 22 feet, 3-4 inches. Letters to the Editor TO THE EDITOR: Tomorrow night the Men's Student Council and Women's Self Governing Association will vote themselves out of existence forever after some thirty years of operation. Their place will be taken by an efficient and more powerful All-Student Council of both men and women. The way in which that Council is to function and is to serve future generations of Jayhawkers depends upon whether it gets the right start now. I for one believe in student government at K.U. as being something potentially, if not currently, valuable—both for the students and for the University. The new Constitution and new Council attempt to set a new tradition of responsibility as well as of power for student government. But constructing in a time of destruction and confusion is difficult. It needs the support of every student and of the administration! ★ Last December, when student government was at a low ebb, I wrote the Kansan suggesting "that by spring either there will be no student government or it will have been completely revolutionized and revised—for the better." That the latter course has been carried out is to the credit of the entire student body. That it is truly "for the better" is up to the Council leaders and student body of next year to prove. I think they will! Low hurdles—Won by Schloesser, K.U.; second, Keith, K.S.; third, K.S. Time, 26.5 seconds. Discus—Won by Kimmell, K.S.; second, Kissell, K.U.; third, Penny, K.U. Distance, 117 feet. High jump—Scoffield, K.U. and Lill, K.S. tied for first; third, Yelley K.S. Height, 5 feet 11 inches. Shot put—Won by Kimmell, K.S. second, Johnson, K.U.; third, Penny, K.U. Javelin—Won by Socolsky, K.S.; second, Kimmell, K.S.; third, Kissell, K.U. Distance, 183 feet, 9 inches. Pole vault—Walker, K.U. and Nelson, K.S. tied for first at 11 feet 8 inches. ADD SOCIETY--- ... held its annual senior breakfast Sunday. Guests were Mrs. J. L Johnson, Mrs. L. G. Fell, Mrs. Francis Brown, Mrs. K. A. Rattcliffe, Mrs. John Oyer, Jr., Mrs. W. R. Rollins, Mrs. C. L. Omer, Mrs. F. A. Ermert, Mrs. C. F. Sloan, Courtney Sloan, Mrs. L. V. Hill, Ruth Ellege, and Nancy Cockrane, all of Kansas City; Marjorie Jacobs, tulsa; Malae Ninjaing and Jewell Potts, of Topeka; Mrs. A. J. Mix and Mrs. J. N. Arnold, of Lawrence; Mrs. Glen Utt and Mrs. W. V. Gentry of Neodesha. ... members of the chapter was entertained by the Mothers' Club with a picnic at the home of Mrs. H. E Chandler Sunday evening. (continued from page three) ALPHA MIOCRON PI . . . ... installed the following officers Monday evening; Lorraine Witt, rush captain; Olga Carl, alumna adviser; Helen Jine Wise, doorman; Patricia Sloan, study chairman; Gerry Gentry, corresponding secretary; and Jaunita Bowman, treasurer. Sincerely, Art Nelson ... the members of the chapter held a picnic at the City park Saturday noon. ... a surprise dinner was given for Mrs. Ralph Baldwin who has been housemother of the chapter for twenty years. Following the honorary dinner, the members of the chapter presented her with a gift. GAMMA PHI BETA . . . ☆ BATTENFELD HALL . . . . . . elected the following officers: president, Dale Robinson; vice-president, Lew Purinton; secretary, William Smith; treasurer, Robert Harrison; intramural manager, Paul Juelfs; scholarship chairman, Lew Purinton; and publicity manager, Dale Robinson. . . Prof. and Mrs. Allen Crafton were dinner guests Sunday. ALPHA CHI SIGMA . . . ... announces the initiation of William Stevenson, Hiawata; Robert Russell, Latour, Mo.; Ernest Hyde, Kansas City; David Chamberlain, Kansas City; Richard Burge, Kansas City; Fred Stults, Kansas City; John Davis, Topeka; Thomas Bean, Winchester, Ill.; and Donald Fleming of Kansas City. ... Henry Hossman of the Monsanto Chemical Company of St. Louis, was a guest Tuesday. ... Monday guests were Mr. L. W. Van Doren, national officer of the chapter of Elmhurst, Ill.; and Dr. W. T. Schrenk of the Missouri School of Mines. MILLER HALL... WU XT-RE-EE THE BEST PAPER MONEY CAN BUY! U.S. WAR BONDS STAMPS ..dinner guests Sunday were Miss Leona Handler, Mrs. J. M. Gillman, Kansas City, Mary Margaret Anderson, Topeka, Alexander Roth, John Reber, Paul Brownlee, Freoerschler, Kansas City, John Marshall, and George Johnson. .. Lafie Bauer, Kansas City, was a dinner guest Saturday. ...weekend guests were Patricia Frazier, Caldwell, Shirley Carl, Cherryvale; Phyllis Scott, Topeka; and Lawana Phelps, Wichita. One of the newest women's auxiliary groups is the WEEDS, formed at Illinois Institute of Technology. It stands for women's emergency engineering drafting society. WEEDS Organized at Illinois Instruments at the University of Santa Clara in California registered a series of earth tremors lasting two hours yesterday morning. earth Tremors Recorded Yesterday Bear Thrives on Poison ★★ ★ ★ ★ Um--Strychnine Elgin, Ill., (INS)—Elgin park authorities decided yesterday to let Lulu live after she not only had survived, but had thrived on, a diet of usually deadly poisons. In this extremity, Zimmerli appealed again for advice. Give her a terrific dose, he was told. He did that—seven cubes of strychnine, enough to wipe out a small menagerie. Very simple, said the experts. Just slip her some cyanide of potassium in an apple. She'll never know what hit her. It'll be practically instaneous and it'll be humane. They tried that. Lulu never batted an eye. They fed her a bigger dose. No effect, except possibly Lulu got a little more vicious. Lulu, a six-year-old black hibernation at Lords park zoo and cantankerous disposition which she promptly evidenced by trying to bite a chunk out of keeper Paul Petschow's anatomy. Can't Lose Keeper That did the work. Not that it killed her. It cured her! Lulu, a six-year-old black bear, came out of her winter hibernation at Lords park zoo in bad health and with an ugly. Would Kill Her or Cure Her Then they switched to strychine, mixing two cubes with a delectable combination of popcorn and honey. Ah, that was swell, Lulu indicated as she licked it up greedily. Her miseries have disappeared. Her coat is getting glossy again. She is her old sweet self once more. "We can't have our keeper chewed up, the manpower shortage being what it is," said city officials in effect, if not in those exact words. Park Commissioner John Zimmerli sought advice on the best way to ease the shrewish Lulu out of this troubled world. WANT ADS LOST: Girl's brown billfold containing money and IMPORTANT identifications. Finder please call Betty Parker. Phone 2910, 32-120 OFFICIAL BULLETIN FOUND: A gold 1940 class ring. Owner may claim article by paying for ad and identifying ring, at the Kansan business office in Journalism building. 2-120 LOST: Brown gabardine jacket int school room. Finder please notify Wallace Proctor. Phone 1617. Reward. 31-121 FOR SALE: Kodak Bantam special camera, 45 m.m. Ektar f.2 lens. Comput rapid shutter. Set of light filters. $135.00. Call Victor Mallory 2798, 1411 Mass. 30-120 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, May 4, 1943 KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS K.U.66 Noticeed at News Bureau, 8 Journalism, at 10 a.m. on day of publication during the week, and at 11 a.m. on Saturday for Sunday issue. CALL SIX-FIVE TAXI 107 W. 7 Phone 65 They liked them best—because they were made at--- HIXON'S SENIORS: The Diploma Fee should be paid by May 5. Seniors expecting to receive degrees either in May or at the end of the summer term who have not filed application-for-degree cards at the Registrar's Office should do so immediately. —Laurence C. Woodruff, Registrar Phone 41 Sporting goods, camping equipment, household items, general hardware and appliances. 721 Mass. GREEN BROS. HARDWARE 633 Mass. Phone 631 Registrar Money Loaned on Valuables Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale 743 Mass. WOLFSON'S Phone 2059 DUSTY RHODES Phone 675 Stop In For A JUMBO-BURGER at 110 West 7th First Grade Gas at Kaw Valley Oil Company 1318 W. 7th W. 23rd Phone 598 Phone 650 Webster Collegiate Dictionaries $3.50 up KEELER'S BOOK STORE Phone 33 939 Mass. Eye EYES EYE Examined and Glasses Fitted LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 Lenses Duplicated — Quick Service STUDENT SUPPLIES CARTER'S STATIONERY] 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 STATIONERY SPECIAL 100 Sheets, 50 Envelopes, $1.10 Name and address imprinted THE DALE PRINT SHOP PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DRIVE NORTH, LEVANCHER, NY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, MAY 4.1943 PAGE EIGHT Spalding Is Encored By Hoch Audience A reversed procedure was in operation last night at the closing attraction of the University Concert Series when Albert Spalding, foremost American violinist, appeared on the stage after intermission before his audience had returned to their seats. Upsetting the popular conception that all artists are tempermental, Mr. Spalding waited good-naturedly until everyone was seated, then proceeded. bers pl S One of the most brilliant numbers on the program was Saint-Saens "Caprice." The number was a virtuoso piece, and Spalding successfully projected the waltz-like theme. In Beethoven's "Sonata In C Minor, Op. 30, No. 2," Spalding and his accompanist, Andre Benoist, shared honors. Veering from the usual rugged, brusque interpretation of the sonata, Mr. Spalding and Mr. Benoist connived to present the central theme in a suave manner. American Group Included The American group of numbers on the program consisted of Samuel Barber's "Andante from Concerto for Violin and Orchestra" and one of the artist's own compositions, "Etchings." Spalding's composition held the audience's attention through its vivid scene painting. Adding another of his own num- Mr. Spalding closed the program with Debussy's simple "En Bateau," Chopin-Wilhem's "Nocture Op. 27, No. 2," and Chabrier-Loeffler's effervescent "Scherzo-Valse." Spalding Le Roupier Spalding Is Popular As evidence of the artist's popularity, Mr. Spalding was called back to the stage for four encores. The violinist obliged with de Falla's "Spanish Dance," Ravel's "Habanera," the Rumanian "Hora Staccato," and Brahm's Waltz. Throughout the concert, the audience was impressed with the violinist's apparent desire to make beautiful music rather than to exploit his personality. An unusual sidelight of the concert was the presence at the concert of Mrs. John Ames who heard Mr. Spalding in Florence, Italy, just after he had made his debut. Saint-Saens was the accompanist for the Florence concert. Men's Playoffs Held Over the Weekend In the first and second round play-offs for the softball championship, Saturday and Sunday, Beta Theta Pi defeated Sigma Chi, 11 to 5; Sigma Alpha Epsilon outscored Phi Delta Theta, 8 to 6; Beta Theta Pi crushed Phi Gamma Delta, 22 to 2; and Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Alpha Chi Sigma, 6 to 4. Conboy Whiffs Eight Beta Bill Conboy struck out eight men to defeat Sigma Chi, 11 to 5, in a game in which a three bagger was the best hit. Scoring only one run up to the fifth inning, a Sigma Chi rally was started by Boots Adams and Bill Norris, bringing them three runs in the sixth. Beta Bobby Timmons made three runs on three walks. Sigma Alpha Epsilon defeated Phi Delta Theta, 8 to 6, in a game that was tied 3 to 3 at the beginning of the sixth inning. In the sixth inning each team scored three runs, and in the seventh, the Sig Alphs added two more while the Phi Delts were held scoreless. Tom Walton was the winning pitcher. Beta Theta Pi had an easy time defeating Phi Gamma Delta, 22 to 2, in a five-inning game in which every Beta scored at least one run, and many scored three. The biggest which six runs were made, the Beta innings were the first, in second, adding seven, and the fourth with six more runs. Bill Cowboy pitched for the victors. SAE Upsets "Chem Kids" Sigma Alpha Epsilon upset the favored Alpha Chi Sigma's, 6 to 4, in a closely contested game in which the score was tied 2 to 2 at the beginning of the fifth inning. A rally started by Sig Alph's Schofield and Williams added four runs in the fifth inning, to leave the score 6 to 2. Supreme Court Denies Petition for Review of Suit Washington, (INS)—The Supreme count yesterday denied the petition of Thomas Swope and others for a review of an unsuccessful suit in the lower court to obtain payment from Kansas City, Kansas, and others for land upon which the $5.-000,000 terminal. food market was erected. Auto Wrecking & Junk Company Dealers in---- NEW and USED AUTO PARTS AUTO and HOUSE GLASS MIRRORS RESILVERED 9th & Dela. Phone 954 THEY'RE TRUE TO THEIR PLEDGE Giving you a MILDER BETTER TASTE The steadily growing popularity of Chesterfields is a sure sign that they make good their pledge to give you the things that count most in a cigarette. Smokers know they can depend on Chesterfield’s Right Combination of the world’s best cigarette tobaccos to give them a MILDER, BETTER TASTE. They’re true to their pledge …THEY SATISFY. THEY'RE TRUE TO THEIR PLEDGE AMERICA'S 180,000 MEN AND WOMEN OF MEDICINE are serving humanity faithfully wherever the need may be. They give their best with our troops and are doing double duty at home. BACK UP THE MAN IN UNIFORM BUY WAR BONDS WRITE LETTERS It's Chesterfield THE CIGARETTE THAT GIVES SMOKERS WHAT THEY WANT --- PUBLICATION DAYS Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday. Daily Kansan WEATHER FORECAST LAWRENCE, KANSAS, THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 Possible thunderstorms with cooler temperatures tonight. 40TH YEAR NUMBER 120 747 Will Receive Degrees American Music Featured Tonight Famous composers and University musical organizations will combine to present the final concert of the Music Week festival at 8 o'clock tonight in Hoch auditorium. Ferde Grofe and Dominico Savino will conduct their own numbers. This concert is open to the public without $ ^{8} $ charge. The program for this evening is as follows "Mississippi Suite" (Grofe) by the University symphony orchestra with Mr. Grofe conducting; "Deer Dance" and "War Dance" (Skilton) by the University Symphony Orchestra with Karl Kuersteiner conducting; selections of American choral numbers, (Miessner, Clokey, Foster, and Cain) by the University a cappella choir conducted by Dean Donald M. Swarthout; and "Song of Faith" (Carpenter) by the University a cappella assisted by members of the University men's glee club and Robert Calderwood as narrator, and conducted by Dean Swarthout. After intermission "The Two Americas" (Savino) will be played by the University symphony orchestra, the University a cappella choir, and David T. Lawson, soloist, with Mr. Savino conducting; selections by the University Band, "March Symphonique" (Savino) conducted by the composer; "On the Trail" from the "Grand Canyon Suite" (Grofe) conducted by the composer; "Deep Purple" (De Rose) with Gene Jennings as piano soloist and Ferde Grofe conducting. Selections from "Porgy and Bess" (Gershwin) with June Hammet and David T. Lawson as soloists and Russell L. Wiley conducting; and "Marching Along" (Savino), for band and chorus with the composer conducting. AERCPre-Medics To Special School They will remain at this school from 1 to 30 days, then if they qualify for medical school they will be assigned at a proper time to an Army Specialized Training Unit. Pre-medical students who are members of the AERC will be sent to a specialized training and replacement army school to be classified according to their ability. Those who do not qualify for medical school will enter the army as a private, and receive the same status as a drafted soldier. Injured Soldiers Awarded $60,000 Nine soldiers who were run down and injured, while marching in military formation, by an automobile that had gone out of control, were awarded $60,000 in damages by a court in Hackensack, N. J. A. B. S. Dominico Savino Summer Kansan Staff Appointed Allied headquarters in North Africa—Attacking in full armored force along a 50-mile front American and British troops in Tunisia today unleashed a giant general offensive designed to crush the Axis garrisons at Bizerte and the capital city of Tunis. When the first issue of the Summer Session Kansan appears on Tuesday, May 25, the "masthead" will list Betty Lou Perkins as business manager and R. Dale Robinson as editor. The appointments were made yesterday by the business committee of the Daily Kansan Board. Miss Perkins has been advertising manager and Robinson has been campus editor. Library Opened Friday Night The University Library will be open Friday night from 7 to 10. C. M. Baker, director. Miss Perkins also was appointed business manager of the Daily Kansan for 1943-44, but no new advertising manager was selected. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department of journalism, will accept applications for advertising manager, and an appointment will be made during the summer. Students in the beginning reporting course will help "cover" news for the Summer Session Kansan. This will be the first time Reporting I has been offered during the summer. Allied Offensive Begun Summer Registration Registration for former students will be on Monday, May 24, according to the following schedule: 8 to 10 a.m. J M X I L T R 10a.m. to 12n. F P A Y U V C K 1 to 3 p.m. E B Z O G W 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. D H S N Q This schedule will be effective for the following terms: Five week course. 16 week summer semester. 8 week medical session 16 week medical session. 10 week law session. Laurence C. Woodruff, Registrar. Engineers Elect Eash President Engineers turned out yesterday to elect Dalton Eash president, Jack Doores vice-jresident, and Mou Hui King secretary-treasurer of the engineering council. Senior class representative is Bob Meredith, junior class representative, Joe Beeler, and sophomore representative, Calvin Dresser. Represent the chemical engineers will be John Marggrave, mechanical, Murray McCune, electrical, Dick Miller, and Civil, Bob Brothers. Representing the aeronautical department is Ralph May, the architectural, T. V. Anthony, the petroleum, Marion Smith, and the mining, Bill Haines. ive Degrees Nursing, Medic Diplomas Increase The new ASC went into action soon after installation and elected Peggy Davis, College junior, president; Jill Peck, College junior, representative-at-large; Clarence Engle, College junior, secretary; and Reed Whetstone, junior engineer, treasurer. The council, which will continue during the summer school, made plans to have the first meeting May 25. Those council members who will not return to summer school will have their seats on council filled by appointment for the session. Russia Is Becoming Nationalistic--Hindus Mr. Hindus used many illustrations of the Russian heroism, their courage, and their patriotism. He Describing as accurately as possible the Russia of today, Maurice Hindus, Russian war correspondent, held the attention of about a thousand students and faculty members in convocation yesterday morning. Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced his speech as the simple story of "What I Saw in Russia." If all requirements for graduation are filled, the names of 747 students will appear on the seventy-first commencement program Monday night, May 17. Members of the new Associated Student Council were formally installed by Vernon McKale, past MSC president, last night after a joint banquet with members of the former men's and women's student councils. in Russia, his native country, as late as Jan Mr. Hindus was in Russia, hi uary of this year and for the eight months previous. He left for New York shortly after a luncheon held in his honor by Raymond Nichols, executive secretary. "Russia is going Russian on a large scale," he said, in regard to patriotism and nationalism. She seems to have forgotten her international feelings for the present, he explained. "Russia realizes that they are fighting not an ordinary war, not only for conquest, but for extermination and appropriation as well," he continued. Davis Elected ASC President At Installation mentioned that women are operating at least four-fifths of the farms in Russia, and there are no men between 18 and 50 except cripples in the villages. "Although Russia is opposed to America in government, economics, and politics," Mr. Hindus asked the audience to remember that "despite differences, 2,000,000 German soldiers killed by Russians will never point a gun at an American. The biggest job of both nations is to win the war." He warned Americans that if they become sentimental at the close of this war, they will have the hard-headed Russians to face, and they will not succumb to sentimentality. To this number will be added some 100 names of students who will receive certificates showing that they have finished the required courses in their particular branch of study. This will include such courses as nursing for which no courses other than nursing are taken. For the second year of the war, this number compares favorably with last year, when 767 degrees and certificates were awarded. The total number of awards, given for recognition of special work in a certain field of study, including ROTC commissions, graduate degrees, and Flying Jayhawkers, last year was 1,094. This year's total of special awards is not yet determined. Mary Are Graduated At Mad Term Included in this year's list of graduates are the names of 243 students who earned their degrees at the end of the winter semester or at the end of the last summer session. This number is the largest on record because of the full summer program last year. In the distribution of degrees in this year's class as compared with last year, nursing (those who took academic work in addition to the nursing work) and medicine made considerable gains while others remained nearly the same. Only Two Days For Commencement Streamlined because of war exigencies, the commencement exer- (continued to page two) (continued to page two) Medical Unit To Be Established Here Omaha, (INS)—Establishment of a specialized training program unit at the University of Kansas Medical School at Lawrence and Kansas City, Ks., on May 24 was announced today at 7th Command headquarters in Omaha. Approximately 122 students will enroll in the course at the University and 78 medical students will be stationed at the University hospital in Kansas City. The medical students will be in (continued to page five) Senior Invitations Out Monday Senior invitations will be distributed from 10 a.m. to 12 noon and from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday and Tuesday of next week in the basement of Frank Strong hall, Mary Alice Martin, chairman of the invitation committee, announced today. Seniors must present their receipts to get the invitations. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY REVIEW UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 PAGE TWO Probable Graduates Are Announced. 747 WILL---bachelor of Science in Geology Helen June King, Duncan Junior McGee (continued from page one) oises have been shortened to a two-day period. The featured speakers for the program will be Bishop Robert Nelson Spencer, of Kansas City, Mo., Dr. L. B. Spake, Kansas City, Kans., representing the Board of Regents; Governor Andrew Schoeppeel; and Chancellor Deane W. Malott. The seventy-first annual commencement program, including 11 events, will be as follows: Sunday, May 16 11:30 a.m. Commencement church services in Lawrence churches. 2. 30 p.m. Reception, Memorial Union lounge. 3:00 p.m. Film—War activities 4:20 p.m. Fine Arts Recital. 4:30 p.m. Class Reunions----93, '63, '18. 7:30 p.m. Baccalaurate, the Rev Robert Nelson Spencer, speaker, Monday, May 17 8:15 a.m. Senior breakfast. 9. 45 a.m. Annual Alumni meeting. 12:45 p.m. Commencement luncheon. 4:00 p.m. Phi Beta Kappa annual meeting 7. 30 p.m. Commencement. Candidates for graduation this year are as follows: "Miriam Abelle," *Charles M. Allen, Lewis George Allen, Jr.*, Theo Faye Allen, J. Robert Lowe, Richard Goss, Joanna Belle Anill, "Max Orlando Busty," Jean Elizabeth Bailley, Maurice E. Barker, Helen Ivan Barlow, Howard E. Kenneth Marshall Barnett, Lorraine Louise Barnett Earlaria Bain Batchelor, Marjorie Ukena Boor, *Spencer Bayle, Jane Beal, Meredith Martie Bale, Babiele Benson, Jeanne Boorr, Frederick G. Bohannon, Walter Ray Bohnenbust, Patricia Lee Bowser, Brannie Brennan Mary Melissa Brower, Robert F. Brinley Brown, Joan Elizabeth Brown, Joan Jean Bryant, *Lawrence Ferry Buck, Dorothy Ogrzelbine Dorsett, Dorothy Elizabeth Burts, *Osborne & Warner Butcher, Jr.* Ellison - Emmia Caldwell, *John Gillett* Cannonell, Geneva Jane Cannelly, William Clark Cavert, Betty Ann Charles, Mary Bryant, Kathleen Cassidy, *Fernanda* Gerasine Geraldine Clark, Kenneth Carroll Clawson, Florence Clement, *Nada Louise* Clifton, Phyllis Lollar, John Joseph Coundt, *Josie May Cooper*, Forest Augu- ntain, Margaret Larson, Carson, Cornwall Eitzebeth Mae Daley, Jessie Frances Dawe, Betty Ruth Duel Albert Enver, Michael J. Patterson Grant Dixon, *James Humont Coordierade, Dallas Dwight Dworn, Wanda Mauce Doughy, "Virginia Chair Douthart, Emily Drake, Betty Dunlap, Reola Durand* *Barbara Love Edmunds.* "Silver Doug- Edward, Edward Mary. Mary Eight. Eighth, Edward Eight." Georgina Mosse Ferrel, Mary Frances Fitzpatrick, Dorothy Florence Fizzell, *Mary Beatrice Flint, Angela Flores Marían Nadine Fox, Charlotte Frietoch, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY VARSITY The Leathernecks Own Story Full Length Feature Played by the United States Marines Produced by The March of Time Richard Travis, Virginia Christine TRUCK BUSTERS Mary Roberten Gans, David Marsh Gibson, Paul Wilson Gilles, Glenn Lieson Lucie Jackie Searles, William Gordon Granger, Grainger, Charles Luceen Gray II, "Mary Margaret Gray, Mary Kathryn Green, "Edun Ewen greenwell, Jennice Greer, William James Grarfs. Mary Elenner Fry, Margaret Virginia Funk. Gussie Helena Helmir, *Willetta Carter Henry, Connie Rose Hervet, Hersey Jenkins, Robin Sackett, Alice Poea Heymann, *Dolores Hiller, Leota Argnes Hinton, Loleta Rebecca Hinton, Marcie Hiss, *Harold Nelson Hobart, Doris Louise Hollison, Margaret Brown Wilmis Jean Hadden, "Helen Hall, Frances Alberta Hamler, "George James Hannan, Jr. Edward DeLois Hansen, Mary Hannan, Richard Husband, Erika Jane Harkerr, Roy Thomas Harmon, John Jewel Hartford, Nann Eleanor Harvey, Gladys M. Hawkins, Elieumer Harvey, Gladys M. Hawkins, Chapter 9, "Gang Busters" LATEST NEWS Alan B. Houghton, Mary Gene Hull, Bentrice Nadine Hunt, *Myra Hurd. Mary Louise Isigirg, Warren LeRoy Israel. *Eveline Delores Jackson, Voltie Vivian Jackson, *Ruby Mae Jenkins, Muriel Darling L. Johnson, Anna Belle Jones, Phyllis Jones.* Lucille J. Kadel, George Hump Keene, Jr., Ruth Irene Kelley, "William Arthur Kelly, Jack Lehmer Kendall, J. Donald Merkel M. Kimball, J. Mary Maxine Kingman "Shirley Jenette Klamm, John Robert John Knox, Barbara Kathryn Koch, Gerald John Koehchar, Hazel Marie Konantz, Ruth Krebthhle, Gladys Callabres Kunkel. Kenneth Speer Larkins, *Janne Annette Leteland, Dale Delton Lemmon*, *Ruby May Leonard,* Mary Jane Lewis, Charles Frances Lieberman, *Thomas Madison Lillard, J.* *Harold Lind Jr.* *Sue Lillard, Lind Gaetan Jr.* *Ira Claire Livermore, Louise Longenecker*, *Kennett King Lowe,* *Warren K. Lowen*, *Zita Ann Lowry,* *Bradley Lynch,* Comora E. Mallen MacGregor, Eva Magill, Helen E. Martin, Ben H. Mayer, Jr., Clare O'Neal, Donna O'Neal, Clure Anna Irene McConigly, Marjorie Anne Mokay, Mary Louise McNown, *Winifred II* McQueen, "Charles Richards," Winsted L. Miller, Peggy Alice Miller, Max I. Miller, Peggy Alice Miller, Nora Jane Miner, Selma Mae Moore, Merle Dodge Morris, "Mary Katherine Morton," Peggy Alice Miller, Bott Matt, Jr., William Lowe Mundy, Cordella艾利蒙. Thomas K. Myer, Dibelert D. Nels. Ann Lee Nelson, Ardine Johnson, Kenneth Koehler, Gordon William Nice. Kenneth Shookey Nicoley, Emma Louise Diermeyer, Evelyn Viola Nielsem. Mildred Ernestone Ogle, Raymond H. OHAra, Marjorie R. Heizer O'Neil, Margaret Dewan Ommel Lucile York Paden, Clark Mckew Page. Jack Sausen Saunder, *Margaret A.* Jones, *Michael B.* Gephart Pearson, Dell Vincent Perry, *Arthur J. Peters*, *Merrick D. Peterson* , *Christopher R. Peterson* , Pierce, Robert K. Plumb, Janet Colleen Poorman, Warren John Warren, Jeanne Etes Pohpm, Nancy Jane Prather, Helen Maryine Pringle, Mary Alice Pringle. *Joseph Radey, *Rachel Boel Reagle, Barbahn Alice Rebe, Margaret Replogle, Earl Waldo Riddle, Virginia Le Roach, Earl Waldo Riddle, Margaret Replogle, Margaret Ellen Robson, *Brajan Janet Rodgers, Betty Ann Rowton, *Normalee E. Rugan, Robert Raymond Russell, Clarence B. Rush, Margaret Schaffer, Marjorie Jean Schroeder, Dorothy Schreeter, *Nadine Ehlu Scherman, John Searlock, Helen Louise Sharp, *Glen Reid Sheppard, Jr., *Ruth Sheppard, *Susan Sherman, Evelyn Lois Ski, Sherman, Farrest Small, Robert Glein Sheppard Dale Compton Smith, Eileen Smith, Marian Sisman, Mildred Lebrela Spearman, *Richard Ballie Steeper, Mildred Elizabeth Barthe Marie Swain, Dorothy Jeanne Swenne, *Edwin Swowe, Judith Joan Taggart, Phyllis W尾ryladem, *Ivor B. Tatum, Evyned Brown Troyer, Cam J. Tennant, Mary E. Thompson, Leslie Maureus Thornton, Jr., Virginia Mae Tieman John Bunshield Tilson, Alice Marie Timepe, Daniel Harp Tompkins, Rebecca Lehman, Gibela Tucker, Daris Marjerie Turner. Rosemary De Lee Uttback, Barrett Harmon Van Dyke. *Theron Eugene-Van Scoter, John Temple Wargoner, Iva Maxine alken, taken by Michael Helen Friesen. *Frances B. Watson, Helen Alice Watson, *Mary Carnell Wehrli, Margaret Anne Welch, *Robert G. White, WANT ADS LOST: Girl's brown billfold containing money and IMPORTANT identifications. Finder please call Betty Parker. Phone 2910. 32-120 FOUND: A gold 1940. FOR SALE—Small Philco. Four tubes, sweet tone, portable box. Walnut finish and attractive loud speaker. See Ruth Newell, 1221 Oread. Phone 804. Owner may claim article by paying for ad and identifying ring, at the Kansan business office in Journalism building. 2-120 LOST: Brown gabardine jacket in school room. Finder please notify Wallace Proctor. Phone 1617. Reward. 31-121 FOR SALE: Kodak Bantam special camera, 45 m.m. Ektar f2.lens. Compu rapid shutter. Set of light filters. $135.00. Call Victor Mallory 2798, 1411 Mass. 30-120 NOW ENDS SATURDAY JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 The Greatest Musical Comedy Sensation of All Time in Glorious New Technicolor. Alice FAYE John PAYNE Jack OAKIE Lynn BARI in TECHNICOLOR Hello, FRISCO,Hello 20 OWL SHOW PREVUE 11:45 SATURDAY SUNDAY LIMITED ENGAGEMENT 4 Days Only Kathleen Anne Whitmire, Roger Sidney Whitworth, Geneva Will, Corrine Pearl Williams, Barbara John Wilson, John Starkis John Mann, Maurice Tanner Vera Hilbaard farmer, Darrell Eugene Wood, *Lloyd William Woodnurm, Robert Earl Woodward, *William Clifton Woolston, *Betty Marie Wright, *Ruth Boehler, Science in Chemistry YOU'LL LIVE AND RE-LIVE IT OVER AND OVER AGAIN, SO DEEPLY WILL IT MOVE YOU! THE BOOK THAT SHOOK THE WORLD! Gernald Bate Carter, Ernest Barlow Hyde, Jr. John Steinbeck's THE MOON IS DOWN scholar of Science in Physics Richard F. Bick. Harwood George Kohlstein Bachelor of Science in Medicine Lafe Willson Wainer, Robert Frank Horsman, "Charles Ray Philsb, Joseph Holl Spearing, George Arthur Westfall, Jr. Bachelor in Artisitica Harry Alloway, Arlene Eyabelle Auchand, *Maurice Edmard* Bur- bauer Bachelor of Science in Nursing Dorothy Alice, Blush, Bless Lou Moudora Ekstrom, *Nancy Esther Fleming*, *Virginia Pearl French*, *Marian Virginia Heleker*, *Mary Ellen Hudson*, *Evelyn Arlin Johnson*, *Ruth Knoche*, *Betty Jean Koopman* *Jane Gorman*, *Kenneth Hilarie Montgomery*, *Sybelle Overboker*, *Ethelyn Frances Root*, *Marie Sallee*, *Pauline Elaine* inser. *John Franklin Baumgartner, Richard Hermeman Behner, Robert Leland Bell, Patricia Binelow, Arthur James Black, Jr. Robert Binelow, James Brown, Mary Katherine Brown *Walter Philip Buck, Jr.* "Harlold Ralph Bundy, Marion A. Bunyard, Delbert Lee Campbell, Roy Richard Chubb, Gerald Alarclus Closing, Charles enboud, Warren Robert DeYoung, Jean Diosen, Warren Robert DeYoung, Everton LeRoy Doom, *Harold L. Dummer*, *Roy Anderson Edwards, Jr.*, *Thomas Morgan Eaille*, Joseph Raggett *Joseph Raggett*, Hugh Giley *Hugh Giley* Dale Wilson Gordon, Delmar Orlen Green, *George Edwin Grist*. Jurritt Howell Hill, Jr., Wallace Birch-Hinshim Walton, Dalton McGee, William Rushall, M. Humphreys, Rosemary Henry Iyer, Gerald Dwight Jesperson, *Richard* Leon Keck, Michael Porter, *Richard* Kline, Jr., *William Townsend* Kopp, Armin Virgil Landis, *Richard Handley Lee* (continued to page six) UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Subscription rates, in advance, $3.00 per year, $1.75 per semester. Published at Lawrence, Kansas, daily during the school year except Monday, Wednesday and Saturday. Entered as an office attendant of Lawrence at the post office at Lawrence, Kansas, under the act of March 8, 1879. Announcing... Beginning Friday night, May 7, a cover charge of 25c a person will be imposed for lal persons in the dance room. This cover charge will be in effect every FRIDAY, SATURDAY, and SUNDAY nights in the future. On Friday nights 25c will admit a couple or stag. An air cooling system will be placed in the dance room this summer. Wiedemann's THURSDAY THRU GRANADA SATURDAY TWO FIRST RUN FEATURES Life was just a bubble to her... "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" with RICHARD CARLSON MARTHA O'DRISCOLL CECIL KELLAWAY A Poremeut Picture And 2nd Hit With The Raiders of San Joaquin Johnny Mack Brown — and — Tex Ritter COMING SUNDAY IN TECHNICOLOR Fabulous Adventure and Romance! DESPERADOS Randolph Scott — Glenn Ford — Claire Trevor LAST TIMES TONIGHT The Greatest of All War Pictures "DESERT VICTORY" "RHYTHM of the ISLANDS" THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE TKE Formal Highlights Last Weekend Here The highlight of the coming weekend campus social realm is the formal TKE party at the chapter house, which will also be attended by naval aviation cadets, who are living in the house. Many students probably will take time out from final studying Saturday night to indulge in various forms of relaxation. The numerous engagements and weddings now and weddings planned after school greet the close of the semester, but a short repose before starting in the summer session. ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . ALPHA CHI OMEGA . . . ... alumnae will have a buffet supper at 5 o'clock Sunday evening at the home of Mrs. Paul B. Lawson in honor of Margaret Welch, Edith Ann Fleming, and Mary Brower, WATKINS HALL . . . MATRIXS HALL guest Sunday was Aviation Cadet J. Robert Greene. weekend guest was Pearl Nelson, McPherson. ☆ KAPPA SIGMA . . . Mrs. E. G. Jones, Greensburg was a Sunday visitor. ... weekend guest was Roy Biggens, Kansas City. Jerry Ward was a guest Tues- dav and Wednesday. ☆ . . . a guest Tuesday was John Strand, who stopped on his way to Rockfort, Ill. SIGMA PHI EPSILON . . . Ensign Knute Kresie, Topeka, will be a houseguest this weekend. Ensign Kresie has recently graduated from a patrol torpedo boat school at Portsmouth, Rhode Island. A student here last year, he was active in Hill activities and president of Sigma Phi Epsilon. KU Dames Elect Officers At Banquet The KU chapter of Dames held their annual founder's day banquet at the Hearth at seven o'clock last evening. The banquet was carried out in a patriotic theme, with red carnations and white stock in a navy blue bowl as a centerpiece on the table. Defense stamp corsages were given as favors. Guests at the banquet included: Mrs. N. P. Sherwood, sponsor, Mrs. Ray Abbett, Mrs. P. T. Armsturt, Mrs. Bob Cooke, Mrs. Gerald Knabe, Mrs. Campbell Logan, Mrs. Edward Mishou, Mrs. J. W. Mitchell, Mrs. John Patterson, Mrs. Plathe, Mrs. Kenneth Razak, Mrs. Eldon Rich, Mrs. Lewis Rozelle, Mrs. W. K. Walker, Mrs. Harry Wherry, Mrs. James Ziegler, and Mrs. Al Johnson. After a short program, installation services of new members was held in the club room. The new officers are: president, Mrs. Logan; vicepresident, Mrs. Rich; secretary, Mrs. Patterson; treasurer, Mrs. Ziegler; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Wherry; reporter, Mrs. Walker; and pianist, Mrs. Razak. A DE LUXE CAFE Our 24th Year in Serving K. U. Students Kappa-SAE Peggy Ballard Pinned Kappa Kappa Gamma has announced the pinning of Peggy Ballard, College sophomore from Kansas City, Mo., to Val Schloesser, senior in the school of Engineering and Architecture, and member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The pinning ceremony took place at dinner Tuesday night. Suzanne Weider assisted with the pinning and received a corsage of white roses. Mrs. Charles Howe wore a corsage of red roses and Miss Ballard one of lilies-of-the-valley and purple and white browalla. Tau Sigma Initiates Members and Elects Next Year's Officers Initiation of new members and election of officers for next year highlighted the meeting of Tau Sigma, dance sorority, Tuesday evening in Robinson gymnasium. Each member invited a guest or guests to this last meeting for whom individuals and small groups gave several dances. For the last number the entire sorority joined in dancing "Ballads for Americans," with Beverly Bliss as soloist. An initiation service followed the serving of refreshments. Women initiated into Tau Sigma were Frances Gillman, Laura Moore, Betty Bohan, Martha Ann Trate, Frances Davison, Helen Gardner, Bettie Cohagan, and Catherine Fruin. Following the initiation ceremony. Betrothals, Marriage Announced at Alpha Chi Banquet Announcement of two engagements and one marriage highlighted the senior banquet which was celebrated at the Alpha Chi Omega house Tuesday night. The first engagement announced was that of Miss Marjorie Theis, senior in the school of fine arts, of Kansas City, Kan., to Mr. Jack Dodds, senior in the school on engineering and architecture, Lawrence, Kan. Miss Evelyn Taylor, who assisted Miss Theis in presentation of her ring, received a gardenia corsage, as did Mrs. Neal Sutherland, housemother. Miss Theis wore an orchid. The second announcement was that of the engagement of Miss Mary Christianson, College senior, of Sabetha, Kan., to Aviation Cadet Louis Lafferty, now stationed at Independence, Kan. Cadet Lafferty was a student in the school of engineering at the University of Kansas last semester. Miss Christianson received an orchid and the housemother, gardenias. Miss Mary Bea Flint and Geraldine Humphrey, who assisted Miss Christianson in putting out her ring, also received gardenia and rose cor-sages. Alphi Chi Omega also announced the marriage of the former Miss Frances Tucker, College senior, of Roswell, N. Mex., to Lt. Lorenz Schuessler who is now stationed at Camp Chaffe, Ark. Lt. Schuessler was graduated from Westminster College, Fulton, Mo., where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Lt. and Mrs. Schuessler were married Nov. 22, 1942, at Jefferson City, Mo. Mrs. Schuessler presented the house with flowers as an announcement of her marriage. ★ Authorized Party List ★ officers for the coming year were elected. The new officers are: president, Helen Gardner; vice-president, Frances Gillman; secretary, Frances Davison; and treasurer, Joan Power. Tau Kappa Epsilon, formal party for Naval Cadets, chapter house, 9 p.m. to 12 m. SATURDAY, MAY 8, 1943 It's Adelane's ... COTTON DRESSES For Wheatley gave Miss Anderson a corsage of green orchids, and Miss Ruth Brunkhart, who assisted with the pinning, received gardenies. Mrs. Gurdy, the Chi Omega housemother, received a corsage of white carnations. Miss Anderson passed chocolates, and Wheatley passed cigars here at the Kappa Sigma house. Kappa Sigma fraternity has announced the pinnings of Clinton Wheatley to Audrey Anderson, a Chi Omega at Kansas State college, and of Bobby Schulz to Margaret Edwards of Greensburg. Pinnings Announced At Kappa Sig House - Ideal for Summer Wear - Regular and Junior (9-17) Sizes $3.98 up Schulz, who gave Miss Edwards his pin while he was home for Easter, gave her a corsage of gardening. He also passed cigars at the house --stainless vanishing cream. E. awarded, Approval, Seal of Adelane's... Pi Phi-Phi Delt Put Out Pins Pi Beta Phi has announced the pinning of Dorothy Hardie, Collinville, Ill., and Bill McGee, member of Phi Delta Theta from Leavenworth. PHI GAMMA DELTA . . . . . Ensign Howard Roberts is visiting for two days. He is on his way to the Pacific coast. The pinning took place Tuesday night with the customary pinning ceremony and passing of chocolates. Barbara Breed and Peggy Shoeder assisted with the pinning. They received corsages of gardenias surrounded by narcissus. Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother, wore a corsage of carnations. Miss Hardie received a corsage of sweetheart hoses outlined with lilies of the valley. ... Michael Alt, Topeka, was a luncheon guest yesterday. Miss Hardie is in the education school and Mr. McGee is in the engineering school. PHI DELTA THETA . . . ... the members of Pi Beta Phi will be dinner guests tomorrow. GAMMA PHI BETA . . . . . (continued to page five) Wedding Chi Omega In Abilene Many Chi Omega members attended the wedding of the former Anna Jane Hoffman, former student here and member of Chi Omega from Enterprise, to Lieut. Dan LaShelle, from Junction City who was graduated from the University in 1941 and is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. The wedding took place at St. John's Episcopal church in Abilene. The bride wore a white faille dress and carried a prayer book. The wedding was carried out in white with Margaret Ann Reed, maid of honor, and Dorothy Burkhead, and Lois LaShelle, bridesmaids. T. P. Nelson was best man, and Bob Brown and Buddy Hoffman were ushers. After the reception, Lieut. and Mrs. LaShelle left for California, where he is stationed. CHI OMEGA . . . ... dinner guests Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Nearing and their two children, of Kansas City, Mo. ARKID New under-arm Cream Deodorant safely Stops Perspiration ARKRID 1. Does not rot dresses or men's 2. Doses does not dry. 3. No waking to dry. Can be used 3. Instantly stops perspiration for 1-2 days, maintains color. 4. A pure, white, greaseless 5. Awarded Approval Seal of American Institute of Laundering for being harmless to fabric, Arrid is the largest selling deodorant 39¢ a jar Also in 10¢ and 59¢ jars Guaranteed by Good Housekeeping ARRID OUR GIFTS--- Will Add the Final Touch to Their Graduation Day! Come in and let us help you choose the perfect gift. Weaver's PAGE FOUR --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 Shenk To Take Four Men To Big Six Meet Only four members of the University track squad will accompany Coach Henry Shenk to Lincoln, Neb., where the 15th annual Big Six outdoor track meet will be held Saturday. Shenk said that he will consider himself lucky if his trackmen finish above fifth place. The four Jayhawker entrants are: Tom Scofield, high jump; Bill Haines, 880-yard run and mile run; Don Johnson, shot put; and Valle Schloesser, low hurdles, 100-yard dash, and pole vault. There is a possibility of another man making the trip but, if so, Shenk has not yet decided who that man will be. The reason for taking such a small squad to the meet, Shenk said, is because most of the trackmen have at least one final examination scheduled for Saturday. Coach Shenk and his four entrants will leave tomorrow morning for Lincoln. 35 Pass English Proficiency Exam Thirty-five students passed the English proficiency examination given April 10. The names were released today by Prof. John B. Virtue of the English department. Professor Virtue announced that two proficiency examinations would be given during the summer session, one June 19 and one August 7. Though the June 19 examination was designed primarily for those students who will not attend the entire session, Professor Virtue wanted it to be understood that all juniors and seniors enrolled in summer school who have not passed the examination may take either or both tests. Those students who passed the April 10 examination are; J. Warren Blair, Bill R. Brown, Betty Lou Cave, Doris Dunkley, G. R. Duvall, Clarence Engle, Don Ferguson, Annabel Gerhardt, John McKeever, Gerhardt, Dorothy Henry, Shirley Henry, Simon Hershorn, Grant Hunter, Enid Alison Jones, Jan Jones, Robert V. Rick, Ruth Krebshi Thornton McClanahan, Jack Milem, Bet- tle Lou Pennell, Lillian Plaintiff, Glenn Loehring, Jake Wittmann, Robert Schultz, Robert Schultz, Joath Archee Schwank, Ernestine Shears, Jacqueline Simmons, Betty Lou Smith, Carl E. Thomas, Galen Hansen, Joe Schwartz, Milford Williams, Josephine Woelverton. Chinese General's Son In Portland Portland, Ore., (INS)—A 12-year-old son of the Chinese general who kidnapped Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek in 1936 is a student at Hill Military Academy in Portland, the Oregonian said today. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS For All Occasions Ride The Bus The Rapid Transit Stringbook Deadline The deadline for string books being prepared by county correspondents has been extended to May 10. Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, said today. The books should be taken to the Alumni office, headquarters of the Statewide Activities commission. Your Local Bus Service Pi Sigma Alpha Initiates 11 New Members Pi Sigma Alpha, national honorary political science fraternity, initiated 11 new members at its initiation and banquet last night in the Old English room of the Memorial Union building, H. B. Chubb, professor of political science, announced today. Those initiated were John Conard, College senior; Robert Gibbon, Edwin Kelley, George McClennand, Thornton McClanahan, Dean Os- Beta's Win Sweepstakes; Phi Gam's Take Second Beta Theta Pi edged out Phi Gamma Delta to win the 1942- 43 intramural sweepstakes championship. In 14 major sports the Beta's gathered 1054.1 points and the Phi Gam's made 1021.1 points. It was a two-team race which saw third place fall to Phi Kappa Psi with 740.8 points. The Beta's took first place in football, swimming, tennis singles, team handball, softball. $ ^{4} $ and (tie) team horseshoes. They took second in basketball, team golf, golf singles, handball singles, and volleyball. The Phi Gam's won the handball singles, horseshoe singles, (tie) team horseshoes, volleyball, team tennis, and basketball. They took second in swimming, softball, and tennis singles. The final team standings are as follows: Beta Theta Pi ... 1054.1 Phi Gamma Delta ... 1021.1 Phi Kappa Fsi ... 740.8 Sigma Alpha Epsilon ... 676.2 Phi Delta Theta ... 656.5 Alpha Tau Omega ... 599.1 Sigma Chi ... 537.8 Blanks ... 486.8 Sigma Phi Epsilon ... 462.9 Delta Tau Delta ... 459.9 Theta Tau ... 429.1 Templin Hall ... 422.6 Alpha Chi Sigma ... 394.1 Sigma Nu ... 392.1 Battenfeld Hall ... 373.9 Triangle ... 364.6 Delta Upsilon ... 363.6 John Moore Co-op ... 353.9 Delta Chi ... 352.8 Kappa Sigma ... 311.9 Rock Chalk Co-op ... 304.1 Tau Kappa Epsilon ... 300.1 Pi Kappa Alpha ... 298.7 Jolliffe Hall ... 269 Ramblers ... 134.5 Hopkins Hall ... 134.5 Medic Whiz Kids ... 127.5 Jayhawk Co-op ... 109.5 Hellhounds ... 94 Alpha Kappa Psi ... 85.6 Kappa Eta Kappa ... 80 Allen Semi-Co-op ... 65.8 4-F's ... 47 Deadheads ... 47 Pflugerville ... 45 Tennessee Club ... 43.5 Nu Sigma Nu ... 32.1 Bulldogs ... 25 ONE Slack IS NOT JUST LIKE ANOTHER Slack is That's why Carl's Slacks are in favor by the College Men--- Fine quality, expertly tailored in fabrics of--- Gaberdine Flannels Palm Beach Artecka $5 to $12 Sport Coats--- Good for year around wear, In Fine Wool Fabrics. $16.50 to $25 R CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Beta's Win Title; Defeat Sig Alph's By defeating Sigma Alpha Epsilon Tuesday afternoon, 8 to 0, Beta Theta Pi, undefeated in 10 games, became the intramural softball champion for 1943. The Beta pitcher, Bill Conboy, struck out six Sig Alph batters, while 12 more popped out to Beta fielders, thus accounting trum, and W. Ralph Michener, all juniors in the College. Also initiated, but in absentia, were Charles Floyd Forsyth, William Kelly, and Robert George White, all seniors in the College; and Betty Jo Glanville, College junior. Prof. W. Rolland Maddox, now on leave with the legislative council in Topeka, gave an analysis of the recent Kansas legislative session. The University chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha was the third chapter established in the country, having been started in 1922. That at the University of Texas, founded in 1920 was the first. There are now 29 chapters in the United States. No Long Underwear This Winter? A shortage of "longies" is probable next winter. Roy A. Cheney, president of the Underwear Institute, warned today. California Has Large Plant The University of California boasts a $60,000,000 plant. for all but three of the losing team's outs. Beta scoring started in the first inning when Hartley and Roderick were walked. Hartley came in on sacrifice hits, leaving Roderick on base. Nelson and Mowery added two more tallies in the second inning, making the score 3 to 0. A third inning drive, started by a home run by Jones, added three more runs when Roderick and Nelson completed the circuit to make the score 6 to 0. In a fast fourth inning, both teams were retired without hits. Jones singled in the sixth and was knocked in by Nelson. The side was retired when the next batter flied out. The last score of the game was made when Mowery got on base by a walk, making the run on sacrifice hits. Only three Sig Alph's reached first base, as, in every inning, the tight Beta fielding and excellent pitching held them scoreless. ARROW PRODUCTS Sold at 905 Mass. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES THE BIG FUNNY FASHION WEEK "She falls for any man who wears an Arrow Tie!" Nothing looks so well on a male chest as an Arrow Tie. Arrow ties are bias cut for perfect-knotting and wrinkle-resisting. The fabrics (whether khaki, black, or crimson and gold) are top quality, the kind you find in more expensive ties. Be sure to see your Arrow dealer today! $1, $1.50. A R R O W SHIRTS • TIES • HANDKERCHIEFS • UNDERWEAR • SPORT SHIRTS ★ BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS ★ ARROW PRODUCTS Sold by University Students Ober's HARDWOOD OUTFITTERS THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Ferde Grofe Relaxes . . . Composer Reviews Life For Kansan Reporter A short, rather corpulent gentleman eased himself into a comfortable chair, and lighted his cigarette which had dangled from his mouth during an interlude at the piano—the "Grand Canyon" man relaxed to tell a Kansan reporter about himself. Ferde Grofe, composer-conductor, made himself famous with of Corshwin's $ ^{o} $ Ferde Grofe, composer-condi his arrangement of Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue." He has written many arrangements for orchestras, writing for Paul Whiteman's orchestra for 12 years. He has ample experience for this since he can play almost any orchestral instrument. Inspiration Comes While Wife Shops Today Grofe devotes his time and own compositions for orchestration. energy to composing, arranging his He formulates an idea, then builds around it using atmosphere, nature, and history. At present, he in considering the composition of a musical tribute to Lawrence. Composer Grofe says that most of his writings are begun away from the piano, using it later for harmonic structure. In a car, waiting for his tireless wife to shop, is one location for inspiration. Grofe has no favorite composition. One of his most famous is the "Grand Canyon Suite." For the sound of crickets he used fuzzy halftones. At this time he was in California. His two homes are situated in California and New Jersey. Since there were no crickets in California, he went to New Jersey and found their tone to be exactly the one he had written. Grofe Is Known for Sound Effects Grofe uses unusual effects in his orchestrations. Rain and wind are produced by a violin; two pianos sound out the clicking of type-writers; a clarinet and trumpet are horses in a "neck and neck" Kentucky Derby race. When some southern colonels urged Grofe to write a composition on the Derby, he went there to feel the atmosphere and get his theme. His composition commences with a Mint Julip jig; then comes the traditional banquet and finally the day of the race. A bugle call first, a march following, then the actual race. Six themes start, one by one dropping out, until finally only the clarinet, last year's winner, and a trumpet contend for the title. The trumpet wins. Career Began At Early Age Ferde Grofe began his musical career at an early age. His grandfather, a member of a symphony orchestra, taught him to play several instruments. Clarinet, trombone, violin, and piano are a few on his achievements. At the age of 17 he played the viola in the Los Angeles Symphony Orchestra. Grofe speaks with a mild voice, and surprises one with his vigorous and masterful touch on the piano. Upon first hearing his playing, it is amazing to talk to the clam man, one not temperamental as the typical musician. Here at the University Grofe will be a guest conductor Thursday night. ADD SOCIETY--at (continued from page three) DELTA GAMMA . . . ... gave a breakfast Sunday for the following seniors: Geraldine Powell, Dorothy Jameyson, Jane Beal, Jessie Farmer, June Hammett, Comora MacGregor, Geraldine Shaw, Ruth Schaeffer Warner, Charline Johnson, Mary Louise Adams, Anna McConigly, and Gussie Helmig. . . . held the annual "crazy dinner" yesterday evening. The members of the chapter wore costumes and dinner courses were served in reverse order. PI BETA PHI . . . ... luncheon guests yesterday were Wanda Mae Doughty and Connie Herrera. ... entertained members of Phi Delta Theta fraternity last night when mebers arrived for the annual surprise dinner. ALPHA DELTA PI . . . . . . Virginia Adair and Harriet Neille, Topeka, were guests Wednesday. . Mrs. L, E. Lyons, Kansas City Mo., is a house guest this week. . Mrs. W. W. Taylor and Mrs. W. . R. Simpson, Kansas City, Kan., were guests Sunday. . . The chapter held its formal dinner for the seniors of the chapter Wednesday. . Dr. J. C. Peterson, Denver, was an overnight guest Tuesday. PHI BETA PI . . . ☆ Illinois Has Big Extension Division Illinois Has Big Extension Division The University of Illinois extension division offers 86 courses from accountancy to mechanics for which university credit is given. SUITS Made To Order Alterations on Men's and Women's Clothing SCHULZ THE TAILOR 2T Winners of Carruth Poetry Contest Will Be Announced Soon "Suiting You, That's My Business" O The University has always received an excellence rating on the federal inspections. The officers conducting the inspection will mail their report to army headquarters and the University will be informed soon of the rating of the corps. The inspection was held at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday on the intramural fields, southwest of the campus, where the public was invited to see the corps marching, working, and functioning as a unit. Colonel Briggs, who is assisted by Col. J. K. Campbell and Lt. Col. W. L. McMorris of the military science department of Kansas State College, inspected the administrative branch of the ROTC, while the other officers inspected the infantry and coast artillery corps. Winners of the Carruth Memorial poetry contest will be announced next week, according to Miss Rose Morgan, member of the contest committee. ROTC Parades For Army Officer The annual federal inspection of the University's Reserve Officer's Training Corps was held yesterday and today by 'Col. R. W. Briggs, commandant of the Seventh Service Command at Omaha, Neb. Local judges have not yet made their choice of winners, but the name of the winner will appear on the commencement program. Winners of the Lewis short story contest will also be announced' at commencement. Ober's AIRFOOT OUTFITTERS SPORTWEAR Ober's LEASED TO FOOTWEAR FITTERS Hot Gregoire SPORTWEAR M GREGOR Slack Ensembles . $5.95 up Short Sleeve Shirts $1.50 up Long Sleeve Shirts $2.00 up Slacks . . . . . $3.95 up Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS Liberator Shattered Transatlantic Speed Record by 8 Minutes London, (INS)—Shattering of the transatlantic speed record by an American Liberator plane was announced yesterday—the second such announcement within a week. Fully laden, a liberator bomber piloted by a Briton, Captain Samuel Buxton, made the 2,200-mile crossing from Newfoundland in six hours and 12 minutes. The flight clipped eight minutes from the record set last week by a Canadian pilot, also flying a heavily laden librator. MEDICAL UNIT--- (continued from page one) uniform and the government will house and pay them. University officials will announce the location of their quarters. The students resigned army commissions a few weeks ago in order that they could take advantage of this course. Navy Reserve students will begin the course at the same time but they will not be inducted into the Navy until July 1. Press To Meet Here Saturday Morning The second district Kansas Press association will meet at 9:30 Saturday morning in the journalism building at the University. The program will consist of roundtable discussions and talks. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department of journalism, Ed Abels, president of the National Editorial association, Howard Rusco, secretary of the Kansas Press Association, and Maj. C. H. Pruden, Jr., commanding officer of the Sunflower Ordnance plant will be speakers. A luncheon is being arranged for the association, according to information received from Milford C. Langley, president of the second district of the Kansas Press association. Journalism students are invited o attend the meeting, Mr. Beth said. Detroit Uses Wind Tunnel Engineering college of the University of Detroit is using an enlarged and revised wind tunnel to meet army and navy demands of increased speed and improved efficiency in testing of military air- It's Time To Look Into That Summer Wardrobe SLACKS For Right Now and All Summer $2.95 to $8.95 We have them in colors to harmonize with your coat or to wear separately. Light or medium weight. 100 SPORT SHIRTS Long or Short Sleeve Styles You'll need a lot of these if you are staying around this summer — so stock up early $1.29 to $3.95 Gibbs Clothing WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 811 Mass. St. 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 10.03.16:17:18:19:20:21 PAGE SIX THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Youth Accepts Its Challenge To Shape New World After Pattern Long Visioned An editorial Tomorrow . . . and a new world dawns. We, the seniors and the undergraduates who are planning to "postpone" graduation until after another job, we are the dreamers, the builders, the philosophers, the planners, and the founders of that new world. It is we who, from the doors of knowledge and learning, take our "bag of tools" to achieve realization of a pattern long visioned. It is we who are the players in the act of tomorrow. Some people call us the lost generation . . . the youth sacrificed for freedom . . . the shadow of a dying peace. Some people say we are happy-go-lucky, indifferent, negligent, and irresponsible. To them, we don't know where we are going, and we don't care. We don't know what we want, but we aren't particular. For all we care, they say, the world can rot; we'll have a good time while we're here, and when we're not—who cares? But the spirit of youth answers this challenge. We answer it not with harsh tones but with a firm and determined pledge that our generation will not be lost, our youth will not be vainly sacrificed, and our peace will not be shadowed by death. We, the youth of the world, know our places and we will take them. This year we have watched our friends leave for military service and we have made plans to follow. We have seen the world speed up in the war effort, and we have taken on more duties and speeded up with it. We have heard of the needs and the jobs that lie ahead, and proudly we have raised our heads and have declared "We can do it." Tomorrow . . . and a new world dawns . . . and a new generation rises with it to erase the shadows, the doubts, the persecutions, and the wrongs. We, the spirit of Youth, gladly accept our challenge. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 747 WILL---- (continued from page two) tmonth, Elason Frances Wooden, Edward Ray Eminist, "Robert E. Little, Mary Student Paper or THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas *Edward Morris Love, III, Mary Alice Martin, Robert William McCormick, Larry Eugene McSpadden, Daniel Merriott, Jr., "Stuart丹麦克思洛," Mister Eugene, Laura Irene Newcomb, *Edward E. Steinel North, Virginia Jenn Ott, Cifford Wayne Parson, Margaret Penny,* "John Paul Peters," Edward Porter, "Lois Daisy Richardson," Rae Andrew Riggs, Jr., "Philin Newell Roberten." 10 Beverly Erwin Rosentwig, Charles Ernest Russell, Jr., *Ralph L. Shenman*, Lawrence Earl Smith, III, Shirley Mae Snyder, Robert E. Stoddard, *John F. Stubet* Jr., Gena H. Curtis, *Paul Trower*, *Gurad Lovejoy Voelker*, *Milton Engene Wallace*, John Ritchie Wells, *R. B. Whitcher*, *Frank Wrenell Wileos*, *J.D. Donald Francis Williams*, *Warren Richard Williams*, Paul G. Woodperr, Marja Jean Bachelor of Science in Education *Warren John Newcomer, Marjorie Ann Rafter, Bert Hathaway, Marie Schauke, Schooling, Grace Leaf Seifert, *Lewis Blair Brown*, Mary Stever, *Mary Gindys Sturm*, Hubert Junior Ulrich, *Marvin James Vandevere*, Wintfred Wannear Weine, Mildred Helen M. Aldridge, William O'Harran Atwell, Elizabeth Murrell Burton, Kendall L. Caldwell, Mary Lee Chapple, Mary M. Creekhamn, *Jennie Crates* Jessie M. Farme, *Robert Forest* Tedie M. Gryce Gregory Todd, Betty Louise Maddeline A. Irwin, Barbara Helen Knapper, *Lois Ann Lehman*, *William Roy Means*, June Margaret Mullaina, Bachelor of Science in Chemical Engineering Bachelor of Science in Applied Arnoldson Curtis, Robert Eugene Earnheart, Frank Eugene Gudding, J. Louise Bachelr of Science in Arbuticulable Engineering Richard Howard Hodges, Victor Leonard Wolff. Jr. Jr. George Becker, David Ray Jabr. Jr., *Christian Roland Brown*, Richard Arthur Burge, Robert Lowell Burtch, Norman Graham Carlson, *Lowell Franklin Dagenau*, Leonard Leonard Allen Hays, Jr., *Christian Nissley Hoffman* J₀. Elmer Clyde Holt, Lloyd L. Januari dJ₄. Arthur陆Johnstone. ***Neil W. Kelly*, Byron Meltkern, George Richard Munkin, Jr., *Corridn William Marvin*, *Irwin Earl Miller*, *Charley Hillman Owen*, John W. H., *Sinnharbager*, *Donald Solden Stebbins*, Robert Warren Stewart, Carl Bardon Sutton, *William Henry Coller*, Jz., Carl Herman Ursich, *Donald Woodman*, J. John Moody Woods*. Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering Civil Engineering CARLEN C. BERRY Berrie Miles Asel, *John William Barber*, Jr., *Jerald H. Boynton*, *Francis Julian Domingo, Hubert Presett Duckett*, Jr., *Lawrence Stephen Karnowski*, *Robert Francis Kuhlein*, *Horace C. Lambertton*, *Albert Newman*, *William Rimmer*, *Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering* Electrical Engineering Roy Chester Abbett. *James Parker Brown, Norman Eugene Bruce. *Wilbur R. DeHart, John Henry Owcet, Robert Hatcher. *William Oscar Hunter, George Lee Johnson, Burt Gustav Larson. *Lloyd Arden Lobr. Howard Anderson, McGee Vernon Jessen, Mekele McKale, Ben Petrete, Walter Yaeger Thomas, Richard M. Walker. *Bermann George Barkmann, *John David Beamer, Danny Rothwell Bronne, Leon Bernard Carlson, Paul Duvall Conter, Kenneth Emmons, Marcus Pfeiffer, Mateud Sinem Harned, Gerald Leslie Knabe, *Donald Louis Morrigan, Clarence S. Miller, Jc. Carl Fickard, Kim Koch, John Clement Pearl, Robinson Emd穷 Robb, Laurie Robinson Russell, Victor Valle Schloesser, Robert David Serom, Jr., *Ralph Houghton Stills, John Edward Smith, *Edison Emmons, John Woods, Cilin Sollenberger, George Richard Verhance, *Barold Way Wilson Bachelor of Science in Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Metalurgical Engineering Clarence James Beck, Willard M. Har- r Backelor of Science in Mining Engineering Mining Engineering *William H. Easton, Jr., John F. Romary, Royal College Straight, Broker of Science in Mining Engineering Claude Frank, Martin, Edward Clark Bachelor of Education, Albion "G" Bannon. Bachelor of Arts in Teaching, Clarence S. Muller, JP. Bachelor of Music Education Berkson, *Robert* Bernard Forman, Ellia bath Ann Griffith, Virginia Eva Gasi june Eleene Hammett, *Karthran* Henry beth Hannes Hammett, *Karthran* Henry june Jenkins, *Clayton* Henry Krebble, *Maxine* McGennhan, Robert Elien, McGennhan Mae Mane Kelsey Elaine Pennington. Mary Louise Belcher, James Harold Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students Jewelry Store for 39 Years. A. A. J. Save yourself and your country by buying war bonds and stamps "Willeie Lou Robertson, Ruth Schaeffer, Janne Estelle Scott, Jack R. Stephenson, Mary Frances Sullivan, Minnie Betty Williams. "Wirt Dandrea Waton, Betty Williams." Bachelor of Music For Your Car--- Cities Service Gasoline and Koolmotor Motor Oil at Fritz Co. Phone 4 Bachelor Elizabeth Bitzer, Mary Ruth Brown, "Erna Carl," Ola Carle, Helen Marie Colburn, Agnes Anta Dunn, Mary Moore, Michel Leon Lezak, Farish of Fine Arts Nadine M. A., Buss, *Carol Jean Blue*, Jeanne Frances Brooke, *Alice Louise Brown*, Alice May Bruce, *Doris Audrain Chark*, David Kassar, *David Jaworski*, Danny Jayne Jonesson,蜜安 Hazel Kissler, Marybelle Long, Virginia Bell Marsh, Frances Elizabeth McCleery, *Rosemary Gillespie*, Barbara Perry, Mary Jewer Miller, William Lang Perdue, Margaret Mary Reed, Zona Eunice Richardson, Katherine Ann Sewell, Rachel Carvet, Georgia Georgia Elizabeth White, *Milton Berry Allen*, Curtis Andrew Burton, Charles Augustine Case, Jr. James Beanmire alone, John French Meade Kirkland Marcel Pugh, *Harry Waitle* 14 E. 8th Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy Bachelor of Science in History William T. Stern, Sr. Owen Bibb, Jude Richard Binell, Ardon Julian Buelt, Wojan Johnse Dewey, Lloyd Ray Carne- tin, Dean R. Gates, *Andrew Becker Gausz, Howard Gall Johnson, Russell Mount, Walter Winfred Nash, Plenant J. Prititt, *John Kenneth Reed, Arthur Allen Schueng*, *Richard Patrick Trueby, Hudson Fleming Wilson, Jr., Max Vanwilhon Wilson*, *Melissa Doctor of Medicine Fannie F. Ann Ack, Claude Eilard Arnett, Jee S. Glen Ashley, Elijah V. Rair, Lowell Bake Hakel, Edwin Blaubmhart, Anol Wilford Behnke, Blake Verson Alonso, Adam Blanket, Alonso Deles Blanchat, Robert E. Bolinger, Ben Harold Bolotzki, Robert E. Miles Brooker, Robert E. Brooks, Hawry Kliman, Jim Hayner Brown- crause Landen Brunbuck. Larry Leovy Calkins, Carl Sanford Carlson, *Albert William Clark*, *Lawrence Irving Coldwell*, J. Francis Taylor Collins, Iole Robert Cram, Jr., Quentin Cammer, Ewin Clary, *William John Goldwalt*, Henry Daniel Schoer, M. Jacob Drucker, J. Mochin D. Emm, Berthin Enlyn Ewing, Jeffrey Sheffield Ferris, Richard Farnsworth, Simmons Goldman, Max D. Graves. John A. Griffith, Jr., Dean Herbert Harding, Clemens Maximilian Hartig, James Louis Hoopinggarner, Walter S. Reiffer, Jr., Lewis Andrew Kidner, Anna Katherine Kleih, Dean Carl Kipp, *Daniel S. Klassen, Lloyd Harold Koelbing, Doria Alice Kabin, *Howard Neal Anderson, Jamaie Wondell Lichter, John Charles McQueen, Edwin Robert Maker, Malvin C. Marchand, James Asat Mason, Marmaniide D. McConnex, Jr., Robert William Mullen, James Morton, Donald Spencer Myers, Robert William Myers, Harry B. Neis, Charles N Moore, Jr., Ar- (continued to page seven) THE REVENUE CENTER MEET TOM! Tom is an expeditor for a New Jersey war plant. All day long, he contacts suppliers and subcontractors by Long Distance. "Are the castings ready? . . . OK New Orleans." "Hello Detroit, have those parts been shipped?" "Have you received the brass yet, Atlanta?" Urgent war calls like Tom's are crowding Long Distance lines,'round the clock. And the load is increasing daily. Won't you help us give war calls the right of way by observing these simple rules. 1. Make only necessary Long Distance calls. 2. If you must call, plan your conversation. 3. When you find the circuit busy, cancel your call if possible. Thank you for your help. THU The Sel The 1918 year, the A . WAR CALLS COME FIRST! live meen come meet p.m. iden Bank the the st Th Park Schr chain the Ja Sp AMERICAN TEL PHONE & TELEPHONE CO. BELL SYSTEM AMERICA ASSOCIATED CORPORATION Jade design or n lunch the build The in t prov best wen most the guis THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Three Class Reunions Scheduled For May The classes of 1893, 1903, and 1918 have scheduled reunions this year, Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association said today. Members of the class of 1893 who live in and around Lawrence, or members who find it necessary to come to this vicinity for business reasons are expected to attend the meeting, which will begin at 12:30 p.m. May 16 in the Memorial Union building. Thornton Cooke, president of the Columbia National Bank, Kansas City, Mo., is chairman, and Prof. D. H. Spencer of the School of Pharmacy is treasurer of the class. The class of 1903, with Jessie Parker Filkin, Olathe, and J. J. Schroeder, Kansas City, Mo., as cochairmen, will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Memorial Union building. James Gillie Chosen Speech Honor Man James Gillie, business senior, was designated as Delta Sigma Rho honor man of the year at the annual luncheon for speech majors held in the English room of the Union building yesterday. Three awards are annually given in the field of dramatics for improvement, general assistance, and best acting, and this year's award went to Alice McDonnell for the most improvement, Ted Lehman for the most general assistance, and to the entire girl cast for "Distinguished Service." Despite the war, rattoning, and all the other evils now besetting the United States and the world, this nation will pause Sunday, May 9, to pay tribute to its mothers. However, this year's observance of Mother's Day will be different from past years in many homes. Men who formerly had only to raise their eyes from their meal to say hello to Mother on "her" day now will have to call her, if they can find an open circuit, from the South Pacific or England or a training camp. And some won't be able to call. 747 WILL---- (continued from page six) thur L. Nichols, Jr., Robert Paul Norris, Raymond Wilson O'Hrien, Thomas G. Orr; Jr., Shirley Ruth Page, Fred Edward Patrick, Jr., C. Worth Payton, Gerald B. Hersh, P. Pennington,伯兴 Erges Peterson, *Warren A. Plewann*, William Fred Powers. Merrill Joseph Roller, *Wendell Fox Roller*, "Vincent theodore M. Ryding, Donalh Grisard, Joseph Ellsworth Windsor, William Arthur Schunck Jr., Charles Grant Stipp, Vincel Sunclad, Major M. Swan, John Edwin Tilly, Christopher H. Woolley, Vander Velde, George von Leonrod, Jr., Randal Weed, "Raymond Wempe, Gerald Ernest Wininger, Wineinger," Ruth Jacobs Ebeg, Jean Olivia Black, *Catherine Louise Bonette*, *Jessie Marie* Cassidy, Bonnie Lue Claip, Elizabeth Clarra Mary Clark, Kathleen Jebel, Jane english, *Nancy Eater Flether*, *Virginia Pearl French*, *Mildred Lorraine Gerber* Hefty, *Marion Viervaillard* Hefty, *Marion Viervaillard* Mary, *Ellen Ellen*, *Evelyn Arline Johnson*, Elizabeth Windsor King, *Kuth Knoche,* Marie Herrietta Horstman Langston, *Bainville*, *Beatrice Cozette McGuire*, Mary Henrietta Meyer, Hester Ione Miller, Ver- sity Belle Overhuser, Ester Robinson, Syl- ybelle Overhuser, Ester Robinson Lye Mary Reby, *Ethiune Frances Root*, *Cleta Marie Sallee, Bernice Holloway*, *Mary Lee Sallee, Bernice Holloway*, *Skeeter Sieker, Pauline Elaine Smith*, *Margaret Elaine Sramek, Mary Belle Trapp, Dorothy Ellen Sramek*, *Ruth Vokya, Eda Joy Wolf*. *denotes persons to whom degrees have An incomplete list of graduate tenure positions to individuals have been granted since June, 1942. degrees, released today by Dean Ellis B. Stouffer of the Graduate School, named 83 persons who are to receive honors in one of seven fields. All candidates have not turned in their theses and research papers but several more are expected to before commencement. The names of the persons, their degrees and special fields are as follows: Master of Arts. Loren Wesley Akers; education; Irene J. Aki, history; Penny Lou Anderson, Spanish; Maryliee Bruman, history; Bert Bird carpentry; Brydon Bird Carr; psychology; Margaret Louis Christner, history; Carolyn Collins, bacteriology; Lewis Madison Coombs, education; Ruth Elizabeth Crouch, mathematics; Ruth Elizabeth Crouch, education; Mary Jane Dengs, English; Dorothy Dee bacteriology; Ewain Coleman, English French; Ewain Coleman, English French; Henry Ewert, history; Dorothea S. Franzen, zoology; Walter Hinnell, Jr., English; Henry Ewert, chemistry; Walter Klein Hillner, education. Virginia Hinshaw, Spanish; Jarvis Holy, economics; Rufus Jewell, education; Florence Jones, French; William Juhkne, English; Earl Vance Kirkland, chemistry; Marion Coral Klema, history; John C. Lon- borg, education; France McKenna, Englis- h; Earl Vance Kirkland, chemistry; Taggert, English; Everett Marshall, edi- cation; Marie Messenger, English; Helen Pence, education; Maureen Pence, edi- cation; Roy Lloyd Sailer, education; Floyd Appleton, education; Etta Irene Smith, Sapphire, education; Francis Vincent Davis Voorhees, English. Master of Science. Platte Amstutz, petroleum engineering; Marmaduke Grove, civil engineering; Charles Kenneth Razak, mechanical engineering. Master of Music Education. John Lynn Bishop, Warren S. Edmundson, Alberta Marie Everett, Dorssey Earl Harp, Ameliann Taylor, and Harold Rollo Thompson. Master of Science in Education, Ellis College. Dr. George Eiffel, George Edward Hiatt, Joseph Victor Holly, George Washington Gargaret Sailes, and Katherine Carolina Sunn Master of Education. Homer E. Bigham, Montana; Bernard E. Bigham, Iberia; Larry Ferguson, Admund Gibson, Gilbert Hays, Dorothy Hart, Walter Hunter, Harold Schoenberg, Parker, George Peterson, Dewey Wolgast Master of Business Administration. Orin Klein Masters in Law, Harvard Everett, and John Frederick Kellogg. Doctor of Philosophy. William Alcee Bramlette, geology; George Herbert Duerkson, chemistry; Clifton Blair Huff, education; Claude Leist, zoology; Russell Mellon, biology; Moore, psychology; Donald J. Obee, botany; Glenn Stevens, chemistry. ALL AMERICAN TEAM-1943 READ the home towns of a typical bomber team, around the rim of the picture above. Here are United States in action. Here's a real All-American team! Not just because of geography either. You've got to be ready to play on this team. Competition is tough. You're on your own. Pull won't help. Only brains, ability and energy can make you the boss of a bomber. That's the way the Air Force works—and the way America works. That's one thing we're all fighting for—the right to live our own lives—the opportunity to work, save and get ahead. industries that are arming the United Nations for victory. It created the electric companies under business management that power most of America's war plants and produce far more electricity than any nation has ever known before! That system made America strong. It encouraged invention and research. It built the big The Kansas Electric Power Company THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA How Bus Travelers are HELPING WIN THE WAR UNION PACIFIC STAGES UNION PACIFIC STAGES STOPPING AT SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA BUS TRANSIT STATION They plan trips in advance 图示为两人面对面交谈的场景。 You'll have a better, more comfortable wartime bus trip if you let your agent plan it—in advance. Thev buv tickets in advance Only by advance ticket sales can we judge how many travel on a trip. We make them most comfortable. They are on time THEATER They carry only one bag 警察 With speed re- stricted and tires and gas ration, time can't be made up. One late passenger delays everyone. Luggage is weight -it uses gas and rubber. Tag your bag and be sure to claim it at destination. M.SMITH THEY TRAVEL IN MIDWEEK Leave the week-end travel for the fighting forces. Travel in midweek makes seats do more, and you will be more comfortable, took. MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT SUN LAST CROWDED MAYS MOST CROWDED MAYS - We are intent on doing our share of the immense war transportation job—in spite of restrictions and shortages. With your continued cooperation, we can do it. Thank you. UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. Phone 707-708 UNION PACIFIC STAGES BUY U.S. WAR BONDS KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS K.U. 66 CALL SIX-FIVE TAXI 107 W. 7 Phone 65 They liked them best—because they were made at--- HIXON'S 721 Mass. Phone 41 Sporting goods, camping equipment, household items, general hardware and appliances. GREEN BROS. HARDWARE 633 Mass. Phone 631 Money Loaned on Valuables Unreserved jums, clothing for sale Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 Stop In For A JUMBO-BURGER AT DUSTY RHODES West Tab Phone 110 West 7th Phone 2059 First Grade Gas at Kaw Valley Oil Company 1318 W. 7th Phone 598 W. 23rd Phone 650 Webster Collegiate Dictionaries $3.50 up KEELER'S BOOK STORE Phone 33 939 Mass. EYES Eye Eye Examined and Glasses Fitted LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 Lenses Duplicated - Quick Service STUDENT SUPPLIES CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 STATIONERY SPECIAL 100 Sheets, 50 Envelopes, $1.10 Name and address imprinted THE DALE PRINT SHOP PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1943 Arts Students Get Awards... Watson, Affleck Address Students at 'Round Up' Honored Tuesday night before a capacity crowd of 216 were Fine Arts students at the annual School of Fine Arts "Round-Up" banquet in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. The University cowboy band, directed by Russell Wiley, presented a fifteen-minute program of cowboy music in the lobby before cowgirl usherettes' escorted the guests to their places at the table. The cowboy theme was carried out in the table decorations, which were Indian headgear, dolls, pottery, and statuettes by "Foco" Frazier of the fine arts faculty. Watson and Affleck Speak Chancellor Deane W. Malott, toastmaster, introduced the speakers and the several musicians here for Music Week. The main address of the evening was given by Dudley Crafts Watson, of the Chicago Art Institute, who gave a talk on "The Place of Art in American Life." Benjamin Franklin Affleck, Chi- zago industrialist and founder of the Benjamin Franklin Society, spoke briefly on "What Music Means to Me." The evening's program consisted of group singing led by E. Thayer Gaston, solo numbers by David Lawson, baritone, and Clayton Krehbiel, tenor, and a marimba solo by Robert Jenkins. Several impromptu numbers added to the printed program were performance of their own piano compositions by Peter de Rose, Ferde Grofe, and Fud Livingston. Art and Music Honors Awarded Dr. W. Otto Miessner, president of Kappa Chapter of Pi Kappa Lambda, national honorary music society, presented the annual awards to the outstanding freshman, sophomore, and junior students in music for the year - James Lerch, Peggy Kay, and Suzanne Schmidt. $1,000 Mark Passed In CVC Bond Drive The Coed Volunteer Corps has sold $1,345.80 in war bonds and stamps since the opening of the national campaign, April 12, according to the report of Florence Brown, finance captain and chairman of the University drive. This record includes only those bonds purchased through the organization; many students and faculty members purchased bonds and stamps at the post office or banks or through other organizations. The bonds were sold by "minute maids" from a sales table set up The honor key of Delta Phi Delta honorary art fraternity, to the outstanding freshman art student of the year was made by Margaret Whitfield, president, to Billy Lakey. Arrangements for the dinner were made by the four student officers of the Fine Arts school, Virginia Gsell, Margaret Whitfield, Dorothy Mae Nelson, and Betsy Dodge. New Jersey Junior College New Jersey Junior College Fairleigh Dickinson Junior college, Rutherford, N. J., has recently been fully accredited by the New Jersey department of education. in Fraser hall and at individual houses; a special sale was conducted at the band concert April 12. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, Alpha Chi Omega, Gamma Phi Beta, Chi Omega and Watkins hall made the largest sales. Charles Skidmore Awarded Wings at Southern Plains Charles E. Skidmore, Jr., appeka, received his appointment as flight officer from the "Home of the Winged Commandos," a cargo and troop glider school, at Lubbock Texas. War Loan Drive Exceeds Goal The National War Loan Drive has exceeded its goal by four billion dollars. It's Picnic Time For Doughnuts, Potato Chips, Buns and Other Baked Goods It's DRAKE'S CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CHOICE QUALITY ★ IN THE MARINES they say: "GUN-DECKER" for one who tells tall tales "RIDING THE RANGE" for cleaning the cook-stove "MASKEE" for okay "CAMEL" for the favorite cigarette with men in the Marines CAMEL'S EXTRA MILDNESS IS MASKEE WITH ME__PLENTY ! THAT FULL FLAVOR HOLDS UP_ PACK AFTER PACK BUY WAR BONDS STAMPS FIRST IN THE SERVICE With men in the Marine Corps, Army, Navy, and Coast Guard, the favorite cigarette is Camel. (Based on actual sales records in Post Exchanges and Canteens.) THE ZONE —WHERE CIGARETTES ARE JUDGED The "T-ZONE"—Taste and Throat—is the proving ground for cigarettes. Only your taste and throat can decide which cigarette tastes best to you...and how it affects your throat. For your taste and throat are absolutely individual to you. Based on the experience of millions of smokers, we believe Camels will suit your "T-ZONE" to a "T." BUY WAR BONDS STAMPS SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Official Summer Session Publication of the University $ ^{s o r} $ $ ^{f o l} $ $ a n $ body LAWRENCE, KANSAS, TUESDAY, M. NUMBER 1 VOLUME XXXI Gifts Amount To $185,121.75 Gifts to the University during 1942-43 totaled $185,121.75, according to Chancellor Malott. The Chancellor made the revelation at the University luncheon held in Robinson gymnasium on Monday of Commencement week. The figure does not include $40,568.07 income from previously established endowments and trust funds. Gifts included: From F. E. Marcy of San Diego, Calif., $1,000, for establishment of William Chase Stevens fund. From Mrs. May H. Kunce of Kansas City, $500 as a memorial to her son, the late Louis Hatfield Kunce, to be used as an aid fund for medical students. From Mr. and Mrs. Irving Hill of Lawrence, $750 for purchase and planting of trees on the campus. From former students and friends of the late Olin Templin, $1,500 for additions to the Templin Fellowship fund. From Solon E. Summerfield of New York City, $20,000 for continuation of the Summerfield scholarships. From the estate of the late Elizabeth M. Watkins, additions to the endowment fund for Watkins Hall (continued to page five) Junior, Senior ROTC Students Sent to OCS More than 60 students in advanced R.O.T.C. at the University last semester have been assigned to army camps, from where they will be sent to officer candidate schools in preparation for commissions in the infantry and coast artillery units of the army. Many of the men received their orders before they left the University, and will report first to Ft. Leavenworth. Most of them then will be sent to schools in Texas. Several students who completed the advanced training in January were permitted to remain in school the past semester in order to finish work on their degrees. These men are being sent directly to officer candidate schools. Infantry Students in the University infantry unit included: William Bealshaw, Kansas City; Thomas J. Blakemore, Liberal; Frederick G. Bohannon, Kansas City; Jack C. Bower, Norton; Robert E. Cater, Kansas City; James B. Chandler, Wichita; William J. Cowling, III, Leon; Robert V. Cree, Gooding, Idaho; James C. Drapar, jr., Topeka; Robert C. Eriksen, Kansas City; Charles V. Foster, Parsons; Edgar A. Harrison, Lawrence; Frederick G. Humphrey, Kansas City; Newell N. Jenkins, Humboldt. Henry L. P. King, jr., Lawrence; John H. Kreamer, Downs; Joe R. Laird, Talmage; Dale N. Lingelbach, St. Joseph, Mo.; David B. Mor- (continued to page seven) Alumni Cited For Service To Country Citations for distinguished service to their country were given to 12 University alumni last week at the annual meeting of the Alumni Association. Governor Andrew Schoeppel announced the awards and the Alumni association president, Ray Pierson, made the presentations. The ceremony was held in Fraser theater. The precedent for the citation was established in 1941 during the seventy-fifth anniversary celebration at the University. Among those persons honored this year are Maj. Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead, '20, second in command of United States air forces in the Southwest Pacific, and Capt. Horace Boone, '15, surgeon of the naval medical service, now director of the navy hospital at Memphis, Tenn. Two women named for 'citations are Dr. Leona Baumgartner Elias, 23, director of child and maternal health activities in New York, and Etta Moten Barnett, '31, colored concert singer. Miss Moten appeared recently at the Music Hall in Kansas City, singing the part of Bess in George Gershwin's opera, "Porgy and Bess." Three Kansas City alumni who received awards are John B. Gage, '07 mayor of Kansas City, Mo., N. T. (continued to page five) Binderim Wins $25 In County Contest Don Binderim, College freshman from Chetopa, won first prize of $25 in the county correspondents string book contest for the past school year, Harlan Cope, county club chairman, has announced. Binderim wrote a weekly column of University news for the Chetopa Advance. Two dollar awards were given to Doris Bixby, Valley Center Times, Joe Beeler, Jewell County Republican, Beth Maxwell, Leavenworth Times, and Elizabeth Kindig, Barber County Index. Ruth Tippin, College sophomore, writing for the Topeka Daily Capital, was awarded $15 second prize, and Martha Julius third prize of $5. Miss Julius wrote for the Axtell Standard. Chancellor Malott Welcomes Students N.Y. On behalf of the Administration and Teaching Staff of the University, I welcome each student, old or new, as the summer semester begins. This is not a normal year on the campus, as this University is a part of the great war effort which engrosses our nation. But whatever the inconveniences and discomforts, they are of minor importance compared to the opportunities for study, for training and preparation, and for fellowship in the University community on Mount Oread which lie ahead of you in the days to come. DEANE W. MALOTT Chancellor Chancellor Drivers May Secure Parking Permits At Business Office University parking applications and permits for the summer session may be obtained from the University business office, A. D. Schick, campus officer, announced last week. These permits must be used by all University employees, trainees, faculty members, and students if they intend to park their automobiles on the campus. These permits cost 15 cents and are good until September 15. Free Zones The only free parking zones are on Oread drive between Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets, the west side of West Campus Road, Lilac Lane, and the north side of Crescent drive. Townspeople are requested to park on the street when they are on the Hill and those with parking permits must not park on the streets. This is the first time that the permits have been used during the summer session. The same type of permits will be used that were used during the past academic year. Zones Unchanged The zones are numbered in the same manner that they have been (continued to page three) Help! Positions as reporters and editors on the Summer Session Kansas are open to all persons interested, whether or not enrolled in journalism courses. Call Dale Robinson at KU 25 or City 234. Malott, Schoeppel Address Seniors Graduating seniors, 764 of them, were warned by Chancellor Deane W. Malott in his Commencement address that America must be prepared to "pay the price" of preserving world peace and order after the war is qver. The Chancellor spoke to the seniors, seamen who received machinists' mates ratings,candidates for commissions at army Summerfields Announced Last Week Announcement of the election of sixteen new Summerfield Scholars at athe University for 1943-44 was made by the University Scholarship Committee, last week as a feature of the seventy-first Commencement exercises. Recipients of these awards will receive all necessary University expenses while attending the University for a full four year course. The awards, which total $20,000 per year, are made possible through the generosity of Solon E. Summerfield, New York manufacturer, and an alumnus of the University. Recipients of the awards announced are: Earl Barney, Topeka; Jack Button, Topeka; Robert W. Campbell, Wichita; Rolland Cole, Long Island; Robert Conroy, Junction City; Kurt Galle, Arkansas City; Howard Hobrock, Princeton; Clyde Jacobs, Herington; Robert Jelinek, Leavenworth; Thad Marsh, Sedgwick; John May, Atchison; John Michener, Wichita; James Mordy, Halstead; Duane Olson, Greensburg; Thomas Shay, Kansas City, Kansas and Jack Taylor, Emporia. Campbell and Michener are graduates of Wichita East High, and Shay a graduate of Rosedale High in Kansas City. Attorney Elected To Head Alumni Richard B. Stevens, l'25, Lawrence attorney now on the staff of the Sunflower Ordnance Works, was elected president of the Alumni Association as the result of recent mail balloting among Association members. Kenneth S. Adams, former student in 1917-20, president of the Phillips Petroleum Co., Bartlesville, Okla., was elected vice-president, and Clarence McGuire,'29, of Kansas City, was elected to the board of directors. Ray Pierson, '123, Burlington lawyer and retiring alumni president, was also elected to the board of directors of the Association. officer training schools, and more than 3,000 visiotrs. In all, 1,146 persons were granted degrees, ratings, or certificates at the Commencement exercises. Governor Andrew F. Schoeppel also addressed the audience, stressing the values of University life and education in a war-torn world. "After the fires of conflict have died out, we will build anew," promised the Governor. "The landmarks left standing as guides to the future will be the shafts and spires of the colleges and the universities." "It will avail us little to win the war," the chancellor said, "If we are not willing to pay the price of a sound, continuing peace set in a framework of world order, in which other races, other systems of government, other philosophies of life must have their part. It has often been (continued to page four) Create Pool To Train Journalists To help relieve a serious shortage of newspaper workers, five national and regional associations of publishers have announced a plan to form a "replacement pool" of women and draft-exempt men by working closely with the 33 schools in the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism—of which the department of journalism at the University is a charter member. "This new plan shows that the publishers are relying heavily upon the professional schools to supply trained, educated workers," explained Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department of journalism. At Kansas, we are trying to find upper-classmen who can be trained quickly by electing our 'war-time' minor sequence of fundamental journalism courses. This 11-credit sequence can be completed in two semesters—beginning this summer—entirely on an elective basis, without a shift in major. Students who complete the minor sequence satisfactorily will be assisted by this department in getting 'placed' on publications." The "replacement pool" will be a list of possible candidates for journalism training compiled by the publishers' National Council and the names of prospective students will be sent to the 33 Class A schools of journalism in the AASDJ. The publishers' organizations cooperating through the National (continued to page four) 38576 PAGE TWO SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1943 Priorities Be Damned Women Need 'Em By HARRIET ROUSE You, the male of the species, can probably never quite appreciate the great potentialities of that small cylinder some two inches long and one half inch in diameter which is a permanent object on the beskirted dresser and in the feminine purse. This small tube might well be considered the fountain of the female personality and, some say the—ah—source of her at any rate, its im-^A. appear. At any rate, its importance to a girl's general state of well-being is inestimable. Historically I daresay it is hard to trace the lipstick's origin. Indeed, so inherent a part it is of the womanly habit that I should not be surprised to be told of The Original Lipstick owned by Eve,—perhaps even before the apple. At any rate, I seem to recall some mention of jars of sweet smelling rouges in the Egyptian world which would attest to its early invention. After some centuries of persecution at the hands of the more puritanic, during which time it persisted in the secrecy of milady's boudoir nevertheless, the lipstick has come into its own in this machine-age world. Samples of the most exclusive brands were included in a Time Capsule recently buried. Is that not proof of its essentiality? I shiver to imagine our modern civilization without lipstick! The courtly red accent on a girl's lips certainly has some brightening effect on a life that is dreadfully drab at times. It puts style and character into a face that might otherwise be one of the humdrum mob. A military red mouth adds dash to the finest Molyeaux or Schiaparelli creation. Demure pink beneath a froth of veil highlights the latest brainchild of the ingenious Suzy. And, too, the baggy sweater and nondescript saddle oxfordes are lost without the scarlet accent of lipstick. The Hedy Lamar droop of Laana Turner curve or one of a thousand other patterns appear on women's faces, each of them a hint of the wearer's personality, her taste, her skill, and the making or breaking of her handsomeness. But even more important, the lipstick has played a major part in modern history and sociological development. A bold statement, perhaps not scientifically correct. But I will go as far to say that woman suffrage would have failed, at least been long delayed, without that symbol of bravery, the lipstick. No doubt you have heard it said by some lady acquaintance, "T'd feel undressed without my lipstick!" It is not just a major article of her apparel she'd leave at home; it's her very confidence in herself that would be missing. SHAVE HITLER × SAVE AMERICA buy WAR STAMPS The lipstick is of greatest moral encouragement to a woman. Psychologists might say that it was a screen to inferiority complexes or that women have idolized it, endowed it with mystic symbolism. I give no explanation, but simply present the truism: From the tiny lipstick flows faith in self and consequently the strength and force of modern womanhood. That approximately one square inch of volume can be the source of such power. The clerk arranges before you all the exciting, shiny, and brightly enameled tubes. Then, uncapping each one, she carefully rubs a little of the ointment on your hand; crimson, pink, brownish, blue-tinted, dark, natural, pure red; and such fascinating names! Dramatic Red, Appleblossom, Nutbrown, Gypsy, Rico, Cyclamen, Midnight, Flare Red— even just window shopping, at the lipstick counter. But aside from the foregoing practical considerations, there's a romance in lipstick (the connotation of this term being synonymous with adventure, not suggestive of Cupid). Right now I can think of nothing so thrilling as shopping. As she selects each new "favor" another entirely heavenly odor tickles your nose, all the latest scents. It is an experience which, in the modern idiom, is definitely out of this world. When you finally decide on the lipstick or sticks (one must have a wardrobe of them nowadays) you take the little treasure home. What pleasure the glittering case, the smooth rounded stick gives you! After an expedition like that, I can see no possible joy in being a lipstick-less male. Official Publication of the Summer Session SUMMER SESSION KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Louisiana, Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Editor Dale Robinson Business Mgr. Betty Lou Perkins It is for these reasons and perhaps others that the lipstick is of such incalculable worth to a woman, It is her artillery, her line of defense, her Red Badge of Courage. Over the Rails Go Foods for Fighters UNION PACIFIC "KEEP 'EM ROLLING" THE RAILROADS ARE THE BACKBONE OF OFFENSE TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1943 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Former Professor Discovers Flying Aid A new secret chemical development enabling American long-range bombers to fly higher and for longer periods in the sub-stratosphere was discovered by Dr. Howard M. Elsey, research chemist for the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing company, and associate professor of chemistry at the University from 1919 to 1925. If the brushes fail and batteries are drained of power, a bombing plane's radio, radio compass, landing gear, lights, landing flaps, gun turrets, and other vital auxiliaries cannot operate. Dr. Elsey explained, "Generators equipped with treated brushes now are able to deliver electric power at normal capacity for 100 hours or more above 30,000 feet. Untreated brushes wear out in an average of two hours, and they may fail in a few minutes if the generator is called upon to deliver large amounts of power." Dr. Elsey is a brother-in-law of Dr 'A. W. Davidson, professor of chemistry at the University. Axis Defeat to Be Double Feature Axis Defeat to Be Double Feature Tunisia may be just a prelude to the invasion of Europe, but the conquering of both Germany and Japan will be the biggest double feature the world has ever seen. Ordnance Facilities Widespread The approximately 60 new ordnance facilities under the control of the field director of ammunition plants in St. Louis, Mo., are geographically located in an area extending from Massachusetts to Texas and from Wisconsin to Alabama. Science Teachers Teach Aeronautics Las Vegas, N. M., (ACP-By enrolling for a special course to be given in June at New Mexico Highlands university, science teachers will be prepared to teach pre-flight aeronautics to hundreds of boys in their high schools next fall. Journalism Students Accept Positions Jobs by the dozens were offered journalism seniors at the University this spring, a situation reflecting the general shortage of newspaper workers, according to Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department. Several seniors accepted jobs before Commencement. Among them are Miss Salarena Sherman, Topeka, who is working on the Topeka Daily Capital; Miss Miriam Abele, Lawrence, on the Ottawa Herald; Miss Phyllis Jones, Sedan, on the Hutchinson News; Miss Virginia Tieman, Leavenworth, in the Kansas City office of the United Press; and Miss Florence Brown, Sabetha, in the Des Moines bureau of the Associated Press. William Haage, a journalism major, is working on the Garden City Daily Telegram this summer. Miss Mary Eleanor Fry, Spearville, will begin work June 1 as a reporter on the Lyons Daily News. During the past school year she was assistant advertising manager of the University Daily Kansan. Extending facilities of its school of engineering to the government, the University of Missouri is making it possible for women from 18 to 25 years of age to take a 24-week course in aircraft radio. 12 Something New AROUND HERE! PAGE THREE We have now placed a 25c cover charge on the back room on Friday (25c a couple), Saturday and Sunday (25c per person). Enjoy COKES, DINING and DANCING at Wiedemann's Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students Jewelry Store for 39 Years. Nichols Announces Phi Beta Kappa's Ten new members, five seniors and five graduate students, were elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary scholarship society for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences during Commencement exercises at the University. Raymond Nichols, secretary of the Kansas chapter of Phi Beta Kappa and executive secretary to Chancellor Malott, announced the following new members: Seniors: Dallas Dornan, Topeka; Mary Cheney, Salina; Eleanor Boehmmer, sugar Creek, Mo., Elain Boney, Larned; and John Scurlock, Victoria. Graduate students: Mary Jane Diggs, Emporia; Marion Klema, Sa- lina; Lois G. McMullen, Oberlin; Russell L. Mellies, Peoria, III.; and Carold Gene English, Topeka. (continued from page one) in the past. The zones are as follows: DRIVERS MAY -owned by students or not, are subject to the following regulations; 1. Automobiles are not allowed to park on the main streets of the campus between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. except Sundays. (Visitors except.) 1. Lot behind Bailey chemical laboratories. 4. Lot near rock crusher on west side of campus. 2. The drive around Fraser hall. 3. Lot on west side of library. 1. Lot behind University hospital. 2. Lot behind Snow hall. 8. Lot behind Journalism building. 7. Lot behind Robinson gymnasium. All automobiles being driven or parked on the campus, whether Parking Regulations 2. No parking where the curbs are painted orange. 3. No cars permitted to park on the Campus without K.U. permit. (Visitors excepted.) 4. Parking restricted to zone designated on permit. University of California libraries house a total of 1,597,304 books. 5. Speed limit 20 miles per hour at al times. 6. Permits must be placed inside of rear window or windshield. VARSITY Now and Wednesday JOAN BENNETT MILTON BERLE OTTO PREMINGER "Margin for Error" "Bahama Passage" Starts Thursday JINX FALKENBERG in "SHE HAS WHAT IT TAKES" SIMONE SIMON in "TANI IT HONEY" with Dennis O'Keefe BOOKS WILL HELP YOU Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. Indexed. $4.00 Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Indexed. $4.00 Webster's Dictionary of Synonyms, Indexed. $4.00 Officer's Guide. $2.50 Naval Officer's Guide. $3.00 Shea—The Army Wife, $2.50 Pye & Shea—The Navy Wife, $2.50 Wylie—Essentials of Modern Navigation, $3.00 Johnson & Haven—Automatic Handles, $5.00 Colvin & Stanley-American Machinist's Handbook, $4.00 Complete Modern Library, 229 Vols. at 95c 62 Modern Library Giants at $1.45 62 Modern Library Giants of $1-$1 New Fiction and Non-Fiction, Children's Books, Poetry, Art, Bibles, Cook Books LCC 103689 Rental Library of the Popular New Books and a wide selection of Mystery and Detective Stories, 15c—5 days. Come in and see us whenever you are downtown (Hours 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturdays) (Across from the Granada) 1021 Mass. Tel. 656 THE BOOK NOOK Welcome All Summer STUDENTS Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE Phone 75 newy Members Elected to Kansan Board Students recently elected to membership of the Kansan Board, governing body of the University Daily Kansan, include: Paul Brownlee, sophomore; Frances Abts, junior; Ruth Tippin, sophomore; Jeanne Shoemaker, junior; and Annie Lou Rossman, junior. A new course titled "Man and His Freedom in the Western Tradition" is being offered to Princeton university undergraduates. NOW WEEK'S ENGAGEMENT JAYHAWKER 1943's new kind of movie! It has a DINGLE! JEAN ARTHUR JOEL Mc CREA CHARLES COBURN "The More the Merrier" Disney's Latest Donald Duck Latest World News SUNDAY Owl Show Preview 11:45 Saturday BETTY HUTTON MARY MARTIN EDDIE BRACKEN "Happy Go Lucky" For ALL Occasions RIDE THE BUS Bus leaves campus for downtown 5-15-45 min. post hour Bus leaves downtown for campus 15-35-55 min. post hour Service direct from campus to downtown. Transfer connection to rest of city For Any Information Call 388 The Rapid Transit Your Local Bus Service SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1943 Don't Worry About Points, Says Scientist Detroit, Mich. (ACP) — Housewives plagued by the need of devising varied menus in the face of rationing and everdwindling stocks on shelves of the corner grocery could simplify their tasks considerably by utilizing some items eaten by paleolithic man and would still be able to furnish their families with a balanced diet. So says Dr. George Lechler, instructor in anthropology at Wayne university. Whether the squeamish appetites of modern Americans could survive some of the dishes enjoyed by their primitive ancestors is, he admits, a somewhat debatable point. Dr. Lechler claims it is quite possible to reconstruct the diet of ancient man by studying bones excavated in paleolithic dwelling-places and by examining eating habits of contemporary primitive peoples. Such study, he contends, indicates that, while Neanderthal man was partial to bear meat, our more immediate ancestors 100,000 years ago had a more catholic taste and enjoyed mammoth, rhinoceros, bison, reindeer, and horse indiscriminately. And, to prove that they knew facts which modern research has only recently uncovered, he says, they ate not only the choice cuts but organs such as liver and kidneys as well. Furthermore, they drank the blood of the animals they killed and apparently devoured with relish the half-digested contents of reindeer stomachs. Primitive hunters in Siberia, Dr. Lechler observes, still eat this "reindeer spinach," which tests have shown to be exceptionally rich in vitamins. Succulent leaves and cruciferae, an order of plants which includes cabbage, radish, and cress, must have been among the vegetable dishes favored by ancient man, Dr. Lechler believes, as were many bitter plants which were processed by putting them into pits and allowing them to ferment. MALOTT-- (continued from page one) said in recent months that the first 48 hours of peace would be the most dangerous time in the history of Europe. We could elaborate this statement to say that the two or three years following the armistice will determine whether or not the world peace is a reality we can establish, or the idealist's vague and fantastic dream." Chancellor Malott also cautioned against following the same path traveled by the United States after the first World War. "In 1920 we faced restoration versus reconstruction. We had an opportunity to build a new world on the ruins of the old. It was a pioneer task worthy of our pioneer traditions. We chose normalcy; we yearned for a past which could never return. We deluded ourselves for a decade with a false prosperity wherein we loaned Europe to pay her debts to us. Instead of a healthy and vigorous plan for united action, the world fell back into her old mistrusts, the old alignments, and the old suspicions, resulting in a period of 20 years of spiritual doldrums in which moral and political action was confused and uncertain. We did not plan for an adequate peace." The Chancellor paid tribute to University men who have been called to service, and summed up his feelings in regard to the past year. "The senior year for the class of 1943 has been one of disorganization," he said. "It has been one of uncertainty of tenure and of future plans; of curtailed activities, and disruption in almost every phase of your lives. It has been an unhappy year for students and faculty—for each individual person in the University community. "Yet it has been a glorious year in the annals of the University. By the very reason of the generous spirit of cooperation and willingness down to the last man and woman. Your classmates have gone willingly and on short notice, by the hundreds, either by enlistment or by the accelerated calling out of the enlisted reserves. To them we pay special tribute and honor in these KEEP Personal Appearance TOPS! Governor Schoeppel declared that an acute awareness of the uncivilized menaces which now threaten the American ideal is important to the spiritual stimulation of American young people. The governor emphasized a belief that the traditions of democracy and the United States should be accented in the educational system. "Never before has education been called upon for such high service," Governor Schoeppel said. "As a people we have come to take our American privileges far too lightly. We had, and even today there still are too many who still have, no vivid mental concept of how we should be individually affected if the Axis emblem of barbarism should supplant our democratic heritage. "We do not know how long the present struggle to maintain these hard-won privileges will endure. But we do know that it is high time that the drama of our historical national record should be presented adequately and forcefully in our schools—woven warp and woof into the pattern of present day preparation for war in such manner that it shall become the integral part of our lives that it must be. Loyalty to the ideal of the American way becomes a demand upon every citizen when it is remembered that the spirit of American college men and women is the spirit that is helping America and her allies to win this war." Never in history, the governor pointed out, has the University, as now, epitomized the growth of American democracy. Today, at the end of 67 years, it stands stalwart and strong, a bulwark against ignorance, fear, and intolerance, even through the shadows of war lick against the stone of its walls, he said. Chinese, Greek and Russia recently were added to the curriculum of Finch Junior college. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS For Quality Cleaning "We Clean Everything But Your Shoes" commencement exercises. It is its commencement as well as yours:" Call Phone 383 (continued from page one) Council are the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the Inland Daily Press Association, the American Newspaper Publishers Association, the National Editorial Association and the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association. CREATE POOL - is the head that wears this crown! Mathematics of air and marine navigation are among new courses at the College of St. Elizabeth in New Jersey. 1001 N. H. GRANADA TODAY AND WEDNESDAY A brilliant performance by Van Heflin, Recently voted the screen's most popular new star. "Tennessee Johnson" The Stormy Romance of the Only President Ever to be Impeached WITH VAN HEFLIN RUTH HUSSEY LIONEL BARRYMORE SUNDAY "Flight for Freedom" VIGNY'S Intimate Hour Every second counts when you use "VIGNY'S INTIMATE HOUR"... the fragrance that lingers longer. Rare, exotic perfume that leaves cherished afterthoughts! $1.50 and $3.75 Plus Federal Tox Weaver's PATEE Always 2 Big Features TUE-WED "THE GHOST and GUEST" "TEXAS RANGERS RIDE AGAIN" THUR.-FRI.-SAT. "INVISIBLE AGENT" "BAD MEN OF THUNDER GAP" "VANISHING MEN" NO. 9 Next Week SUNDAY 4 DAYS "DEATH VALLEY OUT- LAWS" "THE LADY HAS PLANS" · THURSDAY—3 Days "GHOST RIDER" "SWING IT SOLDIER" Adults 25—Kiddies 11 Tax Inc. Sot.-Sun. CONTINUOUS SHOWS 1—7—9 Laughs—Thrills And Action at all Shows — BUY U.S. WAR BONDS — E-A-S-Y From Hopkin's Zephyr-weight soft straws to Dodd's exclusive styling, we have a complete stock of smarter than ever straws I for you. Ober's HEAD TO TOOTH OUTHITTERS TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1943 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE Taraxacum Officinale ★★★ ★★★ Dandelions To You Taraxacum officinale, a well-known yellow flowered plant of the chicory family, abundant as a weed, is now brightening our hillsides in uncountable numbers. In other words, that pesky dandelion is back again. Dandelions don't grow like ordinary specimens. One day the plant may not be visible to the naked eye, but the very next day is a plant in full bloom $ \textcircled{4} $ The dandelion defends itself by fairly sharp prickles on the leaves and a milky substance in the stem and roots which turn black on contact with the hands and is impossible to remove. It possesses a remarkably tenacious system of roots running at least several miles underground. The best means of attack is a knife, a pronged dandelion digger, or if one is lazy, a lawn mower or grass whip to cut off the most obvious yellow heads. defying the world. A few days later the yellow bloom has become a white fuzzy head of seeds which are scattered by the winds over acres of territory. The dandelion is a hardy plant peculiar to North America, from river bottom land to mountain tops, growing in all types of soil and even on bare rocks. It can be uprooted, burned, or frozen, but will be back inside of two days. But this year the dandelion may go comparatively unmolested while armies are subduing another yellow menace. GIFTS AMOUNT - tion of Hatboro, Pa., equipment for pineline studies valued at $200. (continued from page one) $22,000; Miller hall, $22,000; Watkins hospital, $22,000; Elizabeth M. Watkins fund, $22,000. From an anonymous friend, $255 or establishment of a fund for award to a needy junior or senior student who shows promise of civic From Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Griesa of Lawrence, 200 yellow pine trees and the labor for planting on the campus. Additional contributions to the Flower fund, $314.75 for emergency loans or gifts to needy students. From Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Battenfold of Kansas City, $200 for continuation of the John C. Battenfold award. To Aid Museum From friends of the University, $450 for a special project in Dyche museum. From the estate of the late Prof. William Savage Johnson, $3,000 for purchase of books for the department of English. From Mrs. E. E. Slosson, $300 for estimation of the Edwin E. Slosson norial Scholarship in Science. From the Kansas Industrial Development commission, to the Engineering Experiment station, for establishment of a plastics molding and casting laboratory, $25,000; for research on methods of converting natural gas to the liquid hydrocarbons. 25,000. From the National Geophysics Meguiar Makes Changes In Closing Hours Closing hours for University women students during the summer sessions have been set by Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser of women On Sundays through Thursdays, instead of the former 10:30 closing time, women must be in their houses by 11 o'clock. On Fridays and Saturdays, the closing hour will be 12 o'clock midnight, instead of 12:30. The 12 o'clock hour will prevail tonight, but tomorrow the regular schedule will be in effect, Miss Meguai stated. From the Ken-Rad Tube and Lamp company, of Owensboro, Ky., electronic tubes for use in the Communication and Electronics laboratories, valued at $400. From Senator Arthur Capper, for reference in the Engineering Experiment station, files of the U.S. Patent office—Gazette and Index. From the Phillips Petroleum company of Bartlesville, Ok., a 16-inch steel cylinder for pressure experiments in petroleum engineering. From Walter Bohenstengel of Topeka, seven student memberships in the American Society of Testing Materials, valued at $50. From the Western Electric company of New York City, four ultrahigh frequency tubes for special electronic studies. From the Class of 1943, $2,000 for construction of picnic and recreational facilities near Potter lake. From the International Foundation for Cancer Research, $250 for assistance in a research project in bacteriology. Provide for Student Loans From the United States government, $27,500 for student war loans; $557 for student war loans to students in physics. From the Phillips Petroleum company, the Stanolind Oil and Gas company, and the Cities Service Oil company, $600 for continuation of a research fellowship in petroleum engineering conducted in cooperation with the Kansas industrial development commission. From the Ninety-ninth district of Rotary, $200 for partial support of a South American student scholarship. From Stuart Henry, a mass of company of Dallas, Tex., equipment for reflection seismographic exploration, valued at $2.000. From an anonymous friend, $100 for purchase of books on aeronautics and plastics. From the Fischer-Porter corpora- WELCOME SUMMER STUDENTS UNIVERSITY SUPPLIES CARTER'S STATIONERY at (continued from page one) Veatch, '09, consulting engineer of Kansas City, and Dr. Roy Cross,'05, director of the Kansas City testing laboratories. Phone 1051 ALUMNI CITED - manuscript documents of value to students of French literary history, and of American-French literary relations, deposited in the University library for the special benefit of the Department of Romance Languages. The University track team, composed of four men, placed last in the Big Six outdoor conference meet held at Lincoln Saturday, May 8. Coach Henry Shenk entered only four men because the remaining trackmen were taking finals on that day. Scofield Wins Jump; Track Team Places Last In Big Six Tom Scofield won the high jump with a leap of six feet, two inches, Valle Schloesser placed fifth in the 100-yard dash and fifth in the low hurdles. Don Johnson placed fifth in the shot put, and Bill Haines placed fifth in the mile run. Also named were Kenneth A. Speneer, '126, president of the Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Mining company and manager of the Jayhawk ordnance works at Pittsburg and Kansas City; E. C. Case, '93, University of Michigan paleontologist; W. C. Hoad, '98, professor of sanitary and municipal engineering at the University of Michigan; Richard R. Price, '97, retiring director of the University of Minnesota extension division; and Arthur Ridgway, '92, engineer of Denver, Colo. From Thomas J. Claney of Sedalia, Mo., $100 for the purchase of an honor roll plaque for medical school and hospital employees in military service. From Dr. A. Morris Ginsberg of Kansas City, $100 for a prize to the junior student doing the best work in physical diagnosis. From Dr. Logan Clendening of Kansas City, $200 for medical re- sourcing. From the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., for loans to students in nursing, $3,000; for scholarships in nursing, $1,000. Gifts to the University hospitals in Kansas City included; From former students of the late Prof. A. L. Owen, $200 for purchase of Spanish classics for use of students in Spanish, to be known as the Owen Memorial collection. From Aircraft Accessories Corporation of Kansas City, twelve quartz crystals for use in research of sound waves and infections, valued at $300. 1025 Mass. Pity the Boys of 1920 Curfew Early By JEAN JONES Breathes there a man with tongue so dead who never to his date hath said, "Oh, % - * $ - ! ! it's closing hours"? If the 12:30 a.m. curfew seems a little rugged to you when at 11:30 some Saturday night in Kansas City you realize only superhuman manipulation of the landing gears will get you in Lawrence before the general lockup, you might console yourself with the plight of the poor $ ^{6} $ fellows in 1920. they had to take the straight and In those days, the zero hour on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday was 11 p.m. With special permission from the adviser of women, however, dances didn't have to break up until 12 m. No girl was supposed to have dates on week days except "library dates." There was a catch to this concession, however, for although men could walk their dates home, The chances against women even getting out on week days was 100 to 1, for after 10 in the evening women weren't even to look at men. The governing bodies did extend closing hours to 10:30, however, to give coeds who felt the atmosphere of the library conducive to study time to get home after the library closed at 10 p.m. they had to take the straight and narrow path without even stopping in at Brick's for cokes. Promptly at 10:30, keys were turned in the locks and anyone out after that time had to sleep in the porch swing or climb the fire escape to her_room. Former K.U. Students Now Army Bombardiers Two former students at the University have been graduated from an army air force bombardier school in Texas, according to a release from the public relations office at Midland. Texas, headquarters. The two are Clark B. Jackson, Garnett, who attended the University in 1939-41, and Jay O. Eichorn, Osawatomie, who attended school here in 1936-37. They received their training at San Angelo, Texas. WELCOME New Students Make it a habit to drop in when you are downtown to see what's new in Apparel. Gibbs Clothing WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 811 Mass. St. WELCOME! SUMMER SCHOOL STUDENTS For authentic college styled clothes and sportswear that's different— IT'S The Palace 843 Mass. The College Man's Shop PAGE SIX SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1943 The Editorial Page Hitler Can Be Allegorized As A Bully Playing Marbles The eighth grade in the National High School had, for the past few years, always encountered a tinge of friction among the students on problems of major importance. While they were all physically and morally sound, there seemed to be a constant disunity; agreements could never be reached. As time passed it became apparent that two of the larger and stronger boys, Tojo and Fritz, were the indirect cause of this friction. Never were they satisfied with what they were acquiring at school, materially or intellectually. Eventually they decided that the eighth graders needed some form of leadership. "What kind?—they were unable to say for they were only eighth graders. A committee appointed by Fritz, which consisted of Fritz, was appointed to work out the problem for the mutual benefit of all concerned. The plan which he finally settled on was to promote a marble day. This, he sincerely believed,—that is he was sincere in all his outward appearances — would unite the class in a venture which would lead toward a common goal. Everyone would have an equal chance, he impressed upon his classmates; but deep down inside of him he knew that only by force would a leader evolve from such a fracas. There were many excellent marble players among the sixth graders; and some of the less proficient were highly skilled in the application of wit, daring, and the spirit of "never say die." Upon the arrival of the momentous day, Fritz and Tojo pplayed side by side using their only weapon, force, to clean out the smaller fellows. Tojo found himself undertaking a task of immense proportions when he tried to defeat Chang. Chang had probably the largest marble collection in the entire school. Chang and Ivor, who also had a large collection and who was, over and above that, powerful and strong-willed, caused Tojo and Fritz many hours of complete unrest. Although the eighth grade marble day was not proposed to last more than a very short time-long enough for Tojo and Fritz to amply increase their marble collections-they have found it a more strenuous task than they had bargained for and it is still in progress. Subversive Influence? The class of 1943 will go down in history as the class which sabotaged the wartime physical conditioning program. True, the class of 1943 has furthered the war effort by giving its men and women to the services, by giving its ballroom and part of its classrooms so that the navy could train some machinists mates, by taking physical conditioning. But now the class of 1943 has negated these contributions by showing unmistakably that it wishes to be the last class to be graduated in good physical condition. For now the class of 1943 has given a picnic ground with ovens, benches, tables, and a shelter house with a dance floor, nickelodeon and electric lights. Yes, it gave a plausible explanation for choosing this as its gift, but it was still sabotage. No longer will the college men build up his arms by pulling fence posts for fire wood, or his legs by pushing a loaded car out of the muddy roads to the picnic grounds, or his stomach by washing down half-cooked weinies with dirt-filled beer. No longer will he strengthen his eyes by peering through semi-darkness for his date, or his lungs by making them breath the poison smoke of dance halls, or his ruggedness and competitive spirit by battling and shoving around, through, and over a handkerchief-sized dance floor. For now the class of 1943 is going to change all this. It will substitute civilized pinching for the pioneer picnicking in Smith's Timbers or Holecomb grove. It will take the student from the invigorating dangers of the downtown dance hall with its beer and the characters of whom Mother wouldn't approve. It plans to rob the students of future generations of the opportunity to struggle through interminable brush and low-hanging limbs toward a clearing and of the opportunity to fight their way across a crowded dance floor. Future students will find a well-lighted picnic ground and a spacious dance pavilion to ease them through their college days. And with this ease, the future students will find that their muscles have become flabby, their pioneering spirit has died, and their ability to face the world in its own habitat has been lost. The class of 1943—saboteurs of America. If Roosevelt runs for a fourth term, he will have to alter the words of his favorite song, "Home on the Range." General MacArthur says the Pacific war can be won only by air supremacy. Japan has needed a good "airing" for some time. 0--on a solid surface, putting it in the mouth while the other hand grasps the match holder and strikes the match, the millions of Americans do not pause to think. This unconscious act is repeated from 5 to 50 times a day. In many cases only a few minutes after the cigarette is stamped down to a pulp, the smoker feels the urge for another. Rather than combat the urge, he nonchalantly reaches for his pack and repeats the procedure. He is popularly known as a "chain smoker." His case is beyond redemption. He is a confirmed smoker and resigns himself to the fact. With school starting again, boys look almost eagerly at approaching army life. Their slogan, "Soldiers work from sun to sun; student's work is never done." In a study of college expenses at Indiana University, the average student paid the low figure of $9.71 for laundry for the year."Luxing the undies" must be the rage there. A girl's first kiss is something she cherishes and she never forgets it. A boy's first kiss is something he duplicates so often he lives to regret it. ---o--on a solid surface, putting it in the mouth while the other hand grasps the match holder and strikes the match, the millions of Americans do not pause to think. This unconscious act is repeated from 5 to 50 times a day. In many cases only a few minutes after the cigarette is stamped down to a pulp, the smoker feels the urge for another. Rather than combat the urge, he nonchalantly reaches for his pack and repeats the procedure. He is popularly known as a "chain smoker." His case is beyond redemption. He is a confirmed smoker and resigns himself to the fact. Liquor is now being rationed in Michigan. What would Kansans do if liquor were rationed in Missouri? It is a woman's privilege to change her mind. Mussolini probably wishes men had been included. A woman we know is warning her daughter to beware of soldiers. She came to America as an American doughboy's French bride. By BETTY LOU PERKINS Could YOU Quit?--- Smoking Is Pernicious, Addict Discovers Millions of Americans find that they cannot do without the familiar small container of tobacco commonly known as a cigarette. As they realize that the habit is deeply entrenched in their daily routine and that part of the involuntary actions on the day consist of taking out a cigarette, humping one end lightly To others, however, the fact that smoking is habitual and not always pleasurable occurs to them after a time. These persons are the ones who say confidently, "Oh, I can stop if I want to. I can take 'em or leave 'em alone." But mostly, they take 'em. The self control of the smoker is weakened by the habit that tenaciously clings, partly through the pleasure of watching the smoke curl languidly out the mouth and nostrils. True, the reasons for smoking are often no more understandable than the one mentioned above. Smokers can not often explain why they smoke. "I smoke to relax," claims one; or "I want something to do with my hands while chatting." So, as the smoker decides he will give up smoking, he does not realize the self torture he may be inflicting. He is already a victim of habit and unless he "can convince himself that he rules his habits rather than lives according to what his habits direct, he can not stop smoking. If he tries and fails, he will probably mutter, "I couldn't do without them," or cheerfully, "I guess I'm not strong enough," or unconcernedly, "I can't understand why, but I just can't stop." Not one of these reasons are sound. Take the case of Mr. X. He has just promised his wife that he will give up cigars. After a touching scene in which he swears to stop smoking for at least a month, he answers the doorbell and finds that Cousin Hubert sent him a box of his favorite brand. Somehow the iron will cracks, and Mr. X is again contentedly puffing a cigar while Mrs. X sits disconsolately by, unable to object, since Cousin Hubert is on her side of the family. A person who is slave to habits will never attempt to stop smoking. Breaking a habit is a difficult and painstaking effort. Strength of character can do it. Will power and a will never attempt to stop smoking, determined mind will and can cause the breakdown of a long practised habit. And after these remarks, I smile to myself as I reach across the table for—yes—a cigarette! IF IT'S A PICNIC You Want TUE TRY FOR DRAKE'S BAKES TO SUMMER STUDENTS Greetings: Get Your CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS at the MIN north MINI S PAUL is HENE c SEYN Fritz Co. J b SARI I JERO c JACK FE Phone 4 TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1943 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN habits looking, t and char- and looking, cause cised orks, I across te! Honors And Prizes The following list of scholarships and awards is reprinted from the Commencement Program: HONOR STUDENTS MERRILL D. PETERSON, of Lawrence, a Senior in the College, Honors in Political Science. LOYD W. WOODBURN, of Cleburne, a Senior in the College, Honors in Political Science. FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS AT OTHER INSTITUTIONS The following graduates of the University of Kansas have received fellowships at other institutions for the year 1943-44: MINERVA DAVIS, of Lawrence, B.M., 1942, a fellowship at Julliard School of Music. FAUL GILLES, of Kansas City, A.B., 1943, a fellowship in chemistry at the University of California. HENRY HOLTZCLOW, of Lawrence, A.B., 1942; a fellowship in chemistry at the University of Illinois. SEYMOUR KALTER, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, B.S., 1940. Sei College, Philadelphia, fellowship in background of Pennsylvania. JEROME B. THOMPSON, of Lawrence, A.B., 1943; a fellowship in chemistry at the University of Illinois. JACK MELVILLE WOODS, of Wichita, B.S.Ch.E., 1943, a fellowship at the Institute of Gas Technology, Institute of Technology at Chicago. FELLOWSHIPS AND SCHOLARSHIPS AT THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Appointments to Scholarships in the Graduate School for the year 1943-1944 have been announced as follows: MARGARET A. DUNN, Kansas City, Missouri, B.M., 1943, University of Kansas, Music. ADRIE MARY EGBERT, Topeka, A.B., 1942, University of Kansas, Entomoloe. MARY ALICE HARDMAN, Los Angeles, California, A.B., 1942, University of Kansas, Spanish. Max Hughes, Colby, B.M., 1939, Fort Hays Kansas State College, Music. CONSTANCE JUNE RYNDERS, Wichita, A.B., 1943, University of Wichita, French. JAMIE A. TENNER, Topeka, A.B., 1943, Washlburn Municipal University, History. Other Gift Scholarships The American Association of University Women (Lawrence Branch) Scholarship for 1943-1944 to JULIA ANN CASAD, a Freshman in the College, from Wichita. the John Battenfeld Scholarship for 1942-1943 to HARLAN COPE, a Junior in the College, from Greenburg; LEONARD HAYS, a Senior in the School of Engineering and Architecture, from Kansas City, Missouri; DENEY NEMC, a Junior in the School of Pharmacy, from Agenda; MARVIN ZOSCHKE, a Junior in the School of Fine Arts, from Junction City. he Arthur Jerome Boynton Memorial Scholarship for 1943-1944 to GLENN WILLIAM PORTE, a Junior in the College, from Wichita. the Lathrop Bullene Memorial Scholarship for 1943-1944 to ALICE GOFF, a Junior in the College, from Topeka. the Christmas Vesper Scholarship Fund in Art for 1943-1944 to JOAN JUSTICE, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Buffalo; BILLY LAKEY, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Neodesha; MARGARTE NEARING, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Kansas City, Missouri; SILAS ANTHONY SIMMES, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Newton; and to MARGARTE WHITFIELD, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Topcka. e Christmas Vesper Fund in Music for 1943-1944 to BARBARA Husser, a Senior in the College, from Wichita; MARGARET LOCKLEY, KAY; a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Dodge City; DOROTHY SHOPU, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Topeka; and to August VoGR, a Junior in the School of Fine Arts, from Lawrence. Class of 1913 (25th Anniversary) Scholarship for 1024-1943 to MARY GENE HULL, a Senior in the College, from Wichita; Donnelley Scholarships for 1024-1943 to LUCIE BAKER, a Sophomore in the School of Pharmacy, from Leavenworth; FRANCES BLAIR, a Junior in the School of Pharmacy, from Dillon; LESLIE BUTTERFIELD, a Junior in the College, from Iola; BERTHA CUMMINS, a Sophomore in the College, from Holyrood; MARY ANN DECKERT, a Junior in the College, from Tessett; CATHERINA FRUN, an unclassed student in the College, from New York City, NY.; GRACE GLENN, a Freshman in the College, from Leavenworth; HELEN HIRD, a Freshman in the College, from Lawrence; MARY GENE HULL, a Senior in the College from Wichita; JOANNE JOHNSON, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Kansas City, Missouri; BETTY LEKSAL, a Junior in the College, from Kansas City, Missouri; MEDIA GAE LITTON, a Senior in the College from Stockton; MAWK LUKERT, a Freshman in the School of Pharmacy, from Sotheba; ELIZABETH SHURLEY MAXWELL, a Sophomore in the College, from Leavenworth; DANIEL MERRIOTT, a Senior in the School of Business, from Lawrence; JOY MILLER, a Junior in the College, from Wichita; M. ARLENE NICKELS, a Sophomore in the College, from McLouth; HELEN PIERSON, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Lawrence; EVELYN RAISCHB, a special student in the School of Education, from Langdon; FLORIENCE LUCILE ROTHENBERGER, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Osborne; JEANNE SCOTT, a Senior in the School of Fine Arts, from TopekA ALTHEA SIUSS, a Junior in the College, from Lared; DONNIE STEMBER, a Junior in the College, from Ozawkie; HELEN STORMOUT, a Sophomore in the College, from Dighton; EMMA ELIZABETH STRAIN, a Junior in the School of Fine Arts, from琅雪; JEROME B. THOMPSON, a Senior in the College, from琅雪. Kansas Chapter of Order of Eastern Star Scholarship for 1942-1943 to NADINE HUNT, a Senior in the College, from otwin. The Aldie Haver Scholarship for 1943-1944 to Richard N. Todd, a Junior in the College, from ElDorado. The Lawrence Alumnae of Gamma Phi Beta Scholarship for 1942-1943 to FRANCES HAMLER, a Senior in the College, from Lyons. The University of Kansas Housemothers' Association Scholarship for 1943-1044 to Donatty Wiggins, a Senior in the School The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship for 1943-194- to IDABELLE BRADLEY, a Freshman in the College, from Blue Mound. The George Innes Music Scholarships for 1943-1944 to BETTY LEDEBER, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Waterville; and to MARTHA BANTER, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Pittsburg. The Charles D. Jse Memorial Scholarship for 1943-1944 to Mrs. VINITIA CLAY COLVER, from Coffeville. The Huilda Ise Memorial Scholarship for 1943-1944 to MARY STEELE, a Junior in the School of Education, from Kansas City, Missouri. The Florence Finch Kelley Scholarship for 1943-1944 to MYRTLE MOLZIN, a Senior in the College, from Newton. The Lawrence Music Club Scholarship for 1942-1943 to NADYNE BREWER, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Kansas City, Kansas. The Eliza K. Party Memorial Gift Scholarships for 1942-1943 to MARTHA LEE BAXTER, a Freshman in the School of Fine Art, from Pittsburgh; NADYNE BREWER, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Kansas City, Kansas; BEVERLY GRENNER, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Salina; ZENDRA KASS, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Topcake; MARGARET LOUSE KAY, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Dodge City; JAMES LERCH, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Kansas City, Missouri; WILLIAM SPENCE, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Springfield; AUDREY ELANE TALLEX, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Humboldt. The Luella F. *Stewart Music Scholarship* for 1943-1944 to the University of Pennsylvania, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Lawrence. The Porter Scholarship in the School of Medicine for 1942-1943 to ROBERT BOLINGER, a Senior in the School of Medicine, from Merriam. The Lulia F. * Stewart Art Scholarships for 1943-1944 to MARY FRANCES NEIDIG, a Freshman in the School of Fine Arts, from Belpre; and to MARGARET ANN BOLtz, a Sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, from Topkape. The Torch Chapter of Mortar Board Scholarship for 1943-1944 AMERICAN Junior in the School of Education, from Kansas City, Missouri Elizabeth M. Watkins Scholarships for 1942-1943 were awarded to BETTY JANE ANDERSON, Lawrence; IDABELLE BRADLEY Blue Mound; LUCY HELEN BUESS, Ford; IMAYNE BUTTER WORTH, Kansas City, Missouri; DOROTHY MARIE CARR, Osa watomie; VIRGINIA DOUTHAKT, Pratt; JUNE ERHART, Valle Falls; ANCELIFA FLORES, Kansas City; ALICE GOOP, Toppea VRICINA GSELL, Olathe; SARA ANN JONES, Garden City; BLAKE ROBERTSON, Oshawa; DOROTHY SNOP Cherrywale; PEGGY ROTHMAN, Osborne; DOROTHY SNOP Toppea, O'RUTH Sisk, Lake City; VIRGINIA VAN ORDER Wichita. The Gertrude Bullene Weaver Memorial Scholarship for 1943-1944 to BONNIE DEE GUSTAFSON, a Senior in the School of Education, from Marquette. The University Women's Club Scholarship for 1943-1944 to RUTH GREENE, a Sophomore in the School of Engineering and Architecture, from Berryton. The Caroline Mumford Winston Memorial Scholarship for 1943-1944 to JULIA ANN CASAD, a Freshman in the College, from Wichita. Loan Scholarships The American Association of University Women (Junction City Branch) for 1942-1943 to HENRIETTA Cox, a student in the Graduate School, from Topeka. The Max Lowell Brown Memorial Loan Scholarship for 1942 1943 to Robert WITT, a junior in the College, from Hays. The Class of 1932 Memorial Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to ROBERT CATER, a junior in the School of Fine Arts, from Kansas City, Missouri, and to BERNARD LAMPEMT, a Junior in the College, from New York City, N.Y. The Persis Bell Cook Memorial Loan Scholarship (Alpha Chi Omega) for 1942-1943 to BERNARD LAMPERT, a Junior in the College. from New York City, N.Y. The Class of 1911 Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to LYLE LTRON, a junior in the College, from Stockton. The Frank Egbert Bryant Memorial Loan Scholarship for 1942 to Ioy MILLER, a Junior in the College, from Wichita. The Daughters of the American Revolution (Betty Washington Chapter) Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to EILEEN MARTIN, a Special student in the School of Fine Arts, from Lawrence. The Goldie R. George Memorial Loan Scholarship for 1942- 1943 to FRANK ANDERSON, a Sophomore in the College, from Kanopolis. The Flint Memorial Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to R. DALE ROBinson, a Senior in the College, from Minneapolis. The Friends in Council Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to John CONARD, a Senior in the College, from Coolidge. The Pi Lambda Theta Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to NADINE STAILLARD, a senior in the School of Education, from LAWRENCE; and to MARY GENE HULL, a Senior in the College, from Wichita. The Iota Sigma Pi Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to RHEVA M. REED, a Senior in the College, from Norton. The Kansas City Alumni Association Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to BLL Bass, a Senior in the School of Pharmacy, from Wathena. The Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers Loan for 1942-1943 to Lewis Cripps, a Sophomore in the College, from Admire. The Men's Student Council Loan Scholarship for 1942-1943 to LYNN LITTON, a Junior in the College, from Stockton. JUNIOR, SENIOR -- (continued from page one) ris, St. Paul, Minn.; Thomas K. Myer, Winfield; Dean Ostrum, Russell; William L. Perdue, Parsons; William N. Powers, jr., Ft. Leavenworth. William W. Sears, Topeka; William C. Shaw, jr., Hutchinson; Jack Singleton, jr., Topeka; John G. Somer, jr.; Newton; Alan G. Stutz, Topeka; Frank B. Tyler, Kansas City; John R. Walker, St. Joseph; and Galen W. Wampler, Minneapolis, Kans. Coast Artillery In the coast artillery unit were: Harold K. Allen, Lawrence; Ramon E. Bird, Albert; Charles J. Bliss, Perry; Francis L. Brumback, Columbus; William H. Clark, Topeka; Keith Criswell, Herington; Allan W. Cromley, Minneapolis, Kans.; Marshall Davis, jr., Topeka; William H. Duke, St. Johns, Ariz.; John R. Fee, Cunningham. Fred H. Gades, jr., Topeka; Donald D. Gill, Wichita; Paul A. Hardman, jr., Topeka; Velories M. Harlan, Wichita; W. C. Hartley, Baxter Springs; Warren D. Hodges, Lawrence; Howard D. Hull, Kansas City; James W. Kelly, Stafford; James G. Jacobs, jr., Mankato; George L. Johnson, Lawrence; Albert G. Kistner, Topeka; Harwood G. Kolsky, Lawrence; William W. Krum, Lawrence; Burt G. Larson, Rock Springs, Wyo. Lewis F. Lichty, Mankato; Vernon J. M.Kcale, Garnett; Henry A. Perro, jr., New York City; Donald A. Fomeryo, Holton; Clifford E. Reynolds, Lawrence; Charles W. Rohler, Ellis; John T. Sheffield, Cherryvale; John P. Taylor, De Soto; John B. Tilson, Kansas City; Alvin E. Voigt, Topeka; Robert C. Wright, Scott City; and John L. Yarnell, Topeka. Gifts received by Northwestern University since 1936-37 have totaled $18,507,437. Northwestern Receives iff Prof Finds Students Egocentric Greencastle, Ind., (ACP)—Delving into conversation and interests of college students, Prof. Paul Fay of the DePauw university psychology department has discovered they still talk more about themselves than anything else, although not so much this year as heretofore. Checking 7,000 conversations of men with men and 7,800 of women with women over a two-year period, Dr. Fay and his research aided learners that next to themselves students liked best to talk about individuals of the opposite sex. The most significant rise in conversational favor from the fall of 1941 to autumn,1942,was discussion of the war. Women showed less interest in this topic than men, also having less concern about news in general. Professor Fay found that last yeat 73 per cent of all co-ed conversations were about themselves, the person to whom they were talking or about other individuals of the same or opposite sex. Men gave 64 per cent of their conversations to the same topics. Commenting on the extremely small percentage of conversation devoted to cultural subjects, 3 per cent by both men and women in 1941 and only 2 per cent in 1942, Professor Fay said similar studies at other coleges would show the same results. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS Our 24th Year in Serving K. U. Students DE LUXE CAFE CALL KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS K.U. 66 SIX-FIVE TAXI 107 W. 7 Phone 65 They liked them best—because they were made at--- HIXON'S UOOU 721 Mass. Phone 41 Sporting goods, camping equipment, household items, general hardware and appliances. GREEN BROS. HARDWARE 633 Mass. Phone 631 Money Loaned on Valuables Unredeemed guns, clothing, for sale WOLFSON'S 743 Mass. Phone 675 110 West 7th Phone 2059 Stop In For A JUMBO-BURGER at DUSTY RHODES West 7th Phone 2059 First Grade Gas at Kaw Valley Oil Company 1318 W. 7th W. 23rd Phone 598 Phone 650 Webster Collegiate Dictionaries $3.50 up KEELER'S BOOK STORE Phone 33 939 Mass. EYES Eye Examined and Glasses Fitted LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 Lenses Duplicated — Quick Service STUDENT SUPPLIES CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. Phone 1051 STATIONERY SPECIAL 100 Sheets, 50 Envelopes, $1.10 Name and address imprinted THE DALE PRINT SHOP PAGE EIGHT SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, MAY 25,1943 CONVOCATION Opening Opening Exercises for the Summer Summer Semester Semester The schedule for the morning will be as follows: 7:30 classes meet 7:30 to 8:10 8:30 classes meet 8:20 to 9:00 9:30 classes meet 9:10 to 9:50 CONVOCATION 10:00 to 10:40 10:30 classes meet - 10:50 to 11:30 11:30 classes meet - 11:40 to 12:20 Wednesday, May 26 Fraser Theater,10 a.m. Special Music SUMMER SESSION KANSAN Official Summer Session Publication of the University of Kansas VOLUME XXXI 1 LAWRENCE, KANSAS, FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1943 Malott Urges Education Be Liberal Even though enrolled in technical courses, University students should seek for a truly "liberal" education while in college, advised Chancellor Deane W. Malott at the semester's opening convocation Wednesday morning in Fraser hall. More than 500 students heard the Chancellor speak. "We are in the midst of at least a dozen revolutions," stated the Chancellor, "and we must have a liberal education in order to meet the problems presented by them." Changing conceptions of the social sciences, especially, require broad and extensive knowledge of persons who wish to be well informed about their environment. Looking to the post-war world. Chancellor Malott said that the present generation of American college students and teachers are the con- NUMBER 2 (continued to page four) Fiction, Other Books Added To Collection Recent aditions to the Clara S. Gillham collection of books for recreational reading are now available for circulation among University students and the faculty, according to Miss Leva Lash, reference librarian at Watson library. Housed in the former "browsing room" with the War Information library, the collection now contains more than 150 books, said Miss Lash. The books were provided by the late Miss Gillham, reference librarian from 1894 until 1939. Included among more recent additions are "The Dickens Digest" (edited by M. L. Aswell), "Kings Row" (Bellamann) ("The Mountains Wait" (Broch), "This Is My Best" (edited by Whit Burnett), "Look to the Mountain" (Cannon), "Good-Bye, My Son" (Coryn), "The Valley of Decision" (Davenport), "The Days of Ophelia" (Diamant), "The Robe" (Lloyd C. Douglas), "Colonel Effingham's Raid" (Fleming), "See Here, Private Harrogrove" (Hargrove), "Men at War" (edited by Ernest Hemingway), "Into the Valley" (Hersey), "Random Harvest" (Hilton), "Dust Tracks on a Road" (Hurston). "The Wisdom of China and India" (edited by Lin), "Above Suspicion" (MacInnes), "Assignment in Brittany," "Thorofare" (Morley), "South from Corregidor" (Morrill), "Head Hunting in the Solomon Islands" (Mytinger), "Good Intentions" (Nash), "We Took to the Woods" (Rich), "I Saw the Fall of the Philippines" (Romule). Calls for Students Who Want Work, Says 'Y' Secretary Several calls for men/students who wish to work for their board and room have been received at the men's employment office, according to Harry W. O'Kane, director of employment and secretary of the YMCA. There have also been calls for men who want time jobs. Students interested in working should apply at the YMCA office in the basement of Frank Strong hall, stated O'Kane. Prof. Cady Invented Measuring Device Completion of a device for determining the molar weights of gases and vapors was announced by Dr. Cady in 1934. The invention was heralded as a great improvement in chemistry technique, since it permitted quicker and more accurate measurement. Under former methods, the molar weight of a gas was obtained by weighing a measured quantity and then making the computations to reduce the weight under room temperature and the prevailing atmospheric pressure to a standard temperature and pressure. Dr. Cady's machine contains a device by which atmospheric pressure is harnessed to change the temperature of the tested gas to the degree that the departures from the base normals will cancel each other. Then a reading of the weight is all that is required. The weighing is done by an especially delicate balance which is calibrated to give readings in the accepted figures for molecular weights of substances. It makes use of the principle of "making the pickle brine strong enough to float an egg." The denser the brine, the (continued to page four) May Change Enrollment Tomorrow Changes in enrollment of College students may be made tomorrow in the corridor outside the College office, according to Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean. Dean Ulmer also stated that tomorrow is the last day for such changes. Changes have been made in the College office since Tuesday, and students who wish may alter their courses during today, said Ulmer. Some courses have been dropped from the summer schedule, he said, and students enrolled in such classes will necessarily have changes ses will necessarily have changes The enrollment staff will work to make. from 9:30 to 11:30 tomorrow morning (after which courses may be dropped but no new one substituted. The following courses have been dropped from the summer semester: Quantitative Analysis, 8:30, TT. Organic Chemistry II, 9:30, MWF. Physical Chemistry II, 11:30, MWF. Accounting II, 2:30, MWF. Business Law, 7:30, MWF. History of English Literature In the particular central Kansas community in which I have spent most of my life, this quality is very evident. It was instilled into the lives of their posterity by the earliest settlers to whom it was in a real sense "the tie that binds." Their philosophy may have been Gestaltan and its practice may have been History of English Literature 10:30. MWF. Map Reading and Interpretation, 8:30. TT. Magazine Writing, 8:30, MWF. Calculus II, 9:30, MWF. Physics II, 10:30, TTS. Vacuum Tube Electronics, Appt. Russian II, 9:30, MWF. Fundamentals of Play Production 10:30, MWF. Parasitology, 10:30, every day. Classes in German, English Literature and Composition, Speech, Chemistry II, and Navigation had such large enrollments that new sections had to be added to the schedule. I do not think that the spirit of "general helpfulness" is quite so prevalent in all parts of the country as it is here in the Middle West; but is must be admitted that an element of general amicability can be found in the social atmosphere virtually all over this nation. Lord Tweedsmuir, in his autobiography, "Pilgrim's Way," said of America that "there is a general helpfulness which I have not found in the same degree elsewhere." While we Americans are proud of this reputation, we have been woefully negligent in the preservation of it. Mid-Western Hospitality Is It Passing? By Floyd Krehbiel communistic, but these pioneers manifested their belief in their living before the times of Gestalt and Lenin. To them their hospitality and friendliness were qualities to be expected and not at all uncommon. Their latch-strings were always out and they were unshesitatingly ready to share their meager substance with the passing stranger and the unfortunate friend alike. Their philosophy has, by no means, vanished; it is still in practice in every section of our country to some degree. (continued to page four) Prof. H.P.Cady, Noted Chemist, Died Wednesday Prof. H. P. Cady Issue Uuiforms To ROTC Men For Campus Use Funeral services will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 for Professor Hamilton Perkins Cady, former chairman of the department of chemistry at the University, who died Wednesday morning at his home. The services will be at the Plymouth Congregational church, of which Dr. Cady was a member, and will Expecting more to enroll with the coming of those high school seniors who have been detained by late graduations and with the beginning of the sixteen week summer engineering semester beginning July 1. Col.W.C.Washington announced yesterday that already 33 have enrolled in freshman R.O.T.C. and nine in the second year advanced course. PETER CHEYNE All enrollees have been issued summer uniforms, including two shirts, two pairs of trousers, two caps, and one belt. Ties will also be issued when they are obtained. It was also mentioned that perhaps two more pairs of shirts and trousers will be issued to each student at a later date since it is required that all R.O.T.C. students wear their uniforms on all school days, as well as keeping them neat and trim. Freshmen meet at 4:30 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, the same days, except on Friday when both meet together at 4:30 while sophomores meet at 3:30 on for infantry drill. As usual one hour of credit is given for the course. (continued to page two) Captains Smith and Baker, Coast artillery officers, are the instructors of the two classes with the former taking the freshmen and the latter the sophomores. The courses have been streamlined and changed so that students may get the information and training that will be the most valuable and helpful to them when they are called into the service. be conducted by the Rev. Fosberg C. Hughes. Burial will be in Oak Hill cemetery. Professor Cady was internationally famous for his discovery of helium in a Kansas gas field. Prior to his discovery, helium had been found only in minute concentrations in the atmosphere, in the waters of certain mineral springs, and in the pores of a few rare minerals. Dr. Cady was noted also for his research with liquid ammonia and the invention of scales to determine the molecular weights of gases and vapors. In ill health for the past five months, Professor Cady taught up until December of last year. He retired as chairman of the department of chemistry in 1940, a position to which he was appointed in 1920. His death terminated 44 years of service to the University. He joined the faculty here in 1899 as assistant professor of chemistry, became an associate professor in 1905, and a professor in 1911. Of Dr. Cedy's death, Chancellor Deane W. Malott said; "In the inevitable changes of time which so largely shape the destiny of the University, we have lost, in the death of Dr. Cady, one of the great figures in our history. He was a builder in the University, a distinguished member of the world of science and discovery, and a friend of us all." In October, 1939, friends and former students of the professor gave a dinner for him to commemorate his 40 years of teaching service at the University. He and Mrs. Cady were presented with engraved watches and Dr. Cady was given a short-wave radio set because of his interest in that field. Dr. Roy Cross, founder and director of the Kansas City Testing Laboratory, last year presented the University Endowment Association with $4,000 for the establishment of the H. P. Cady Fellowship in Chemistry. The fellowship was given in honor of Dr. Cady. Dr. Cady is reported in "Who's Who in America" as being born at Camden, Kansas, May 2, 1874. He attended Carleton College at Northfield, Minnesota, and came to the University in 1894, receiving his bachelor's degree in 1897. For two years he studied at Cornell, but returned to Kansas and was granted a doctor of philosophy degree by the University in 1903. Upon the death of Dr. E. H. S. Bailey, for whom the chemical laboratories are named, Professor Cady became chairman of the department of chemistry. He retired in 1940 and (continued to page three) PAGE TWO SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY,MAY28,1943 Official Publication of the Summer Session SUMMER SESSION KANSAN THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas Editor ... Dale Robinson Business Mgr. ... Betty Lou Perkins Kansas May Claim General Eisenhower As 'Native Son' Kansas now claims another of the world's leaders, General Dwight Eisenhower. To obtain his military education, Eisenhower went to West Point. He was in the top third of his class, played football and was outstanding in gymnastics. Since his face, when sober, is as "bleak as Kansas plains," General Dwight "Ike" Eisenhower makes it a point to keep his friendly disposition obvious by his engaging grim. He was graduated from West Point in 1915 and was married a few months later to a San Antonio girl. During the World War I he was in charge of the Tank Training Center at Camp Celt, Pennsylvania. At the age of 28 he was a lieutenant colonel with 6,000 men under him. After the war he remained with the Tank Corps for several years. Several years later he worked with MacArthur in the Philippines. The General's most outstanding characteristic is his mid-western friendliness and, though born on the Texas plains, he has always claimed Kansas as his home state. Dale to the skill of his maneuvers in Louisiana in 1941 as Chief of Staff of General Walter Kreuger's Third Army, he was made a Brigadier General. Five days after Pearl Harbor, he was given a desk job in the War Department where he worked until he assumed his European post. Eisenhower worked as Chief of the Operations Division, second only to General Marshall in power of military decision. It was during his work there that he was sent to Europe to command the American Divisions there. Eisenhower's men and officers feel very much at home with their likeable general. This spirit paves the way for greater cooperation between officers and men. Hope Springs Eternal In Our Nation, a girl sat, wide-eyed, and chin in palm, in the pink-amber rays of a setting sun, unmindful of her pink-eyed and eared white rabbit nibbling at spring's tender green clover. The rabbit moved closer and touched her knee, and the girl absently stroked its soft fur. it is spring, and she was dreaming Issues Uniforms (continued from page one) classes (three times a week for 16 weeks), the freshmen will spend 15 hours in leadership training (infantry drill), eight hours in physical training, four hours in military fundamentals, including the National Defense Act and their obligations of citizenship, nine hours of rifle marksmanship, four hours of military sanitation and first aid, five hours mechanical training in taking apart and examining the M-1 rifle, and three hours in learning about military discipline, courtesy, and customs. Besides the 23 hours included in infantry drill and physical training, the second year basic R.O.T.C. students will also put in 20 hours in map reading and photographic reading, besides five hours in study of the identification of aircraft. "Without a doubt," said Capt Smith, "those men with the training they will receive in these courses will be 'way ahead of the field' whenever they are called into active military service." no doubt of that, but hers are no ordinary dreams, for these are no ordinary times. The softness of the fur beneath her touch is the antithesis of the harshness war has brought her world. This harshness makes her dreams what they are. Nostalgic reminiscences of happy hours, joyous days spent with a sweetheart, a brother, or friends now away, perhaps never to return. Incredulous wonderings about far lands, distant seas, and strange people. Straining efforts to see into a future darker than the approaching night. Horrified visions of a somehow remote but vivid present blood-red with fears and hatreds. Her dreams are sad and fearful, but yet somehow tinged with hopes, happy hopes. "Someday" is the warp in the cloth her mind is weaving; "everything will be all right," the pattern in which the cloth is woven. Her admitted confusion slows the loom's shuttles at times, but the pattern is never confused. Certainty that her world will return to happy normality remains. The orange sun dropped below the horizon beyond which she was looking, into a hope-brightened future. She paid no heed, until a chill breeze touched her and reminded her of here and now. With a faint pensive sigh, she rose and carried her white rabbit to his hutch. Then with light, almost gay steps, she returned to the house. In youth, "Hope springs eternal." Dean John H. Wigmore of Northwestern university law school bequeathed a set of law books to Keio university, Tokyo, where he taught more than 40 years ago. Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" As was expected, Chandler said, there has been a greater number of calls this spring than in years, for many of which the bureau has been unable to find applicants. Among those persons accepting positions through the placement bureau are Russell E. Worman, B.M.E., who will be instructor in instrumental music in the city schools at Abilene; Merle Watters, A.M. music supervisor in school schools at Concordia; Evelyn Thompson, A.B., English instructor in Colby High School; Mary Christianson, A.B., English instructor in Lawrence Junior High School; Wilma Biddle, music instructor in city schools at McLouth; Isabelle Benson, A.B., English instructor in Valley Falls High School. Twenty-eight graduates of the University have been placed in teaching positions in the past few weeks through the Teacher's Placement Bureau, according to H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education and director of the bureau. Students Jewelry Store for 39 Years Find Positions For 28 Grads Says Chandler W. A. McElroy, M. S. Ed., principal of Washburn Rural High School at Topeka; Jean Morgan, A. B., social science and home economics instructor in Beattie High School; Betty Harmon, B. S. Ed., physical education instructor in the Kansas City, Missouri, elementary schools; June Mullinax, B. S. Ed., first grade instructor in Beechwood School, Wichita; Mary F. Fitzpatrick, A. B., English instructor in Lawrence Junior High School; Alice Harrington, B. F. A., art instructor in Lawrence Junior High School; Jeanne Scott, B. M. E., music instructor in Lawrence Junior High School; Emily Jane Yount, A. M., English instructor in McPherson High School; George Bistline, M. Ed., superintendent of city schools at Holton. Elizabeth Boys, biology instructor in Pratt High School; Myrtle Haughn, A. B., librarian at Iowa PATEE Always 2 Features TONIGHT-SAT. "INVISIBLE AGENT" "BAD MEN OF THUNDER GAP" "VANISHING MEN" NO. 9 "DEATH VALLEY OUT LAWS" THE LADY HAS PLANS SUNDAY 4 DAYS THURSDAY—3 Days "GHOST RIDER" "SWING IT SOLDIER" "VANISHING MEN" No. 10 Adults 25—Kiddies 11 Tax Inc. Sat.-Sun. CONTINUOUS SHOWS Shows 2 - 7 - 9 SQUIRRELS ARBITRATE 'After You, Alphonse' A Moral? By Bill Haage Peaceful settlement of problems is not a monopoly of the genus homo sapiens. Around the third floor of our house runs a white railing just wide enough for a squirrel to scamper along. At the middle is a flag pole, and at either end black locust trees brush the railing; From time to time, squirrels use the railing as a shortcut between the two trees; usually only one squirrel tries to use the bridge at a time, and traffic congestion has been unknown. The other morning, however, two chattering red squirrels dropped from the branches on opposite sides of the house and began crossing to the other side. As they drew near to the center of the railing, they became aware that one must back up or get off the railing. They met at the flag pole, vainly tried to pass, retreated, and surveyed the situation, chattering and cussing in army muleskinner language. As they paused to regain their breath, they evidently abandoned the idea of playing "King on the Mountain" and began hunting for a more peaceful settlement. Again meeting at the flag pole, they chattered softly for a few minutes, and then nodded gravely as a decision was reached. The southbound squirrel turned, scampered up the flag pole, and with an "After you, my dear Alphonse" gesture, waved the northbound squirrel across the railing. State College, Ames; Juanita Austill, A. B. English instructor in Tonganoxie High School; W. E Hoggatt, M. Ed., superintendent of schools at Argonia; Kathleen Whitmire, A. B. instructor in English and Spanish in Gridley High School; W. V. McFerrin, M. S., chemistry and physics instructor at College of Emporia; Dave C. Massey, principal of Neal High School Gladys Hawkins, A. B., English instructor in Protection High School; Gladys Bitter, B. S. Ed., physical education instructor in Topeka Junior High School; Winifred Scott, A. B., English and history instructor in Bucyrus High School; Mary Lee Chapple, B. S. Ed., physical education instructor in Humboldt High School; Elizabeth Griffith, B. M. E., music instructor in high school and grades at Wononah, Ill.; and Dorothy Clendennen, A. B., assistant dean of women, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. BUY U.S. WAR BONDS Secret de Suzanne ...the fragrance of intrigue Every drop of this fascinating fragrance holds a masquered potency! Suzanne Perfumes PRICE $3.00 (plus tax) Weaver's A FRID SENSE DE FIGURA SUZANNE E O dagger diffi the ree Lau of spr tag spe D11 14 FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1943 SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 'Educational Circus' On Mt. Oread At least a twelve-ring educational circus staged under the "big top" on Mt. Oread was opened by the University this week, with the inauguration of its full year-round schedule of training for both students and military groups. More than a dozen different training programs are available with the opening of At least a twelve-ring educat big top" on Mt. Oread was open with the inauguration of its full ing for both students and milita different training programs are the full 16-weeks summer sem received at the office of Dr. Laurencee C. Woodruff, registrar, indicated that hundreds of high school graduates this spring have taken the advantage of the opportunity to speed up their education. Under the new program, it is possible for a high school student to get both a high school diploma and a college degree in six and two-thirds years, and even possible for members of the upper ten per cent of senior classes to do the job in five and two-thirds years as they may be admitted at the end of the junior year upon recommendation of the high school principal and by passing a University aptitude test. Engineers Begin July 1 In addition to the 16-week summer semester, the regular engineering summer semester will begin on July 1. The regular eight-week summer session will run from June 14 until August 7. An interim program staged primarily for engineering and V-1 and V-7 naval reserve students will run from May 24 to June 26, with refresher courses for teachers of mathematics extending from May 24 to June 18. In addition, there are the eight and sixteen-week courses offered by the School of Medicine, the 10-week law term, special Red Cross courses, and special courses for certain medical students. It's education a la carte—a menu for every educational taste, and the requirement of every student, graduate or undergraduate will be served by the speeded up program on Mt. Oread. Nearly 1,000 Sailors In addition to the wide range of academic training at the University, there are half a dozen military programs in progress on Mt. Oread. Largest of these is the naval school for machinists mates with nearly thousand seamen in training, and the naval school for cooks and bakers. A school for engineer trainees under the direction of the United States Signal Corps is being conducted for a period of 24 weeks. Incidentally, this is the second of the signal corps training schools that have been set up on the K. U. campus. All signal corps trainees in the present program are young women. Also for women is the program sponsored by four major aircraft companies in the training of aeroautical technicians. Courses are given in the School of Engineering and Architecture, and at the completion of the 16-weeks training period, all young women, who are now in the employ of the aircraft companies, will go to work in the factories of their respective employers. The first technicians program will be completed May 24 and the second will open June 1. Marine and Navy Fliers two other aeronautical programs being offered through the School Engineering and Architecture. Right naval aviation cadets are stationed here for flight and ground school training under the C.A.A. naval training program, and 40 marines have been undergoing a similar course of training. The schedule calls for 240 hours of ground school and 30 to 40 hours of flight instruction. Also on the docket beginning July 1, are 500 V-12 naval reservists who will enter the University for training through the Navy College Training Program. The University has also been selected by the United States Army as a center for the Army Specialized Training Program and University officials have been advised that a group of army reserves will be sent here for training in the near future. And finally, advices have been received that a specialized medical training program unit has been established for the University. Ellsworth, Frye Visit Council Grove Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, and John C. Frye, member of the Geological Survey and assistant professor of geology, were business visitors in Council Grove Wednesday. Advanced student officers are being given the responsibility of conducting physical training classes for freshmen and sophomores at New Hampshire university. JAYHAWKER Just One More Day TODAY SATURDAY ENDS 1943's new kind of movie I it has a DINGLE! 1943's new kind of movie I I has a DINGLE! JEAN JOEL CHARLES ARTHUR·McCREA·COBURN in GEORGE STEVENS' The More The Merrier Screen Play by Robert Russell and Frank Ross; Richard Floorty and Lloyd R. Foster Story by Robert Russell and Frank Rock; Directed by GEORGE STEVENKS A COLUMBIA PICTURE Disney's Latest Donald Duck LATEST WORLD NEWS SUNDAY Owl Show Prevue 11:45 Saturday The tropical trip of your dreams come true! BETTY HUTTON MARY MARTIN EDDIE BACKEN "HAPPY GO LUCKY" Blazing with color Laughs, Romance, and Rhythm Fishel in Concordia To Hunt for Water V. C. Fishel, a member of the cooperative ground water staff of the State and Federal Geological Surveys, has gone to Concordia to supervise test drilling in an effort to locate a suitable water supply for an internment camp for enemy soldiers. The work is being done with a core drill owned by the Geological Survey. The work is being done as part of an extensive special wartime survey of water supplies, and is being done at the request of Army engineers. Increasing numbers of Axis prisoners being brought to the United States necessitates the additional camps. PROF. H. P. CADY - technician in Billings, Mont.; and Mrs. Lewis Longworth, of Whitestone, Long Island; a son, George, on the chemistry staff of the University of Washington, Seattle; two sisters, Mrs. Allen C. Austin, Kansas City, Mo., and Mrs. A. C. Gildemeister, Randolph, Vt., and five grandchildren. Dr. R, Q. Brewster, present chairman, succeeded him. During the first World War, Dr. Cady engaged in helium research for the federal government. He was asked to find a natural gas supply with sufficient helium to make extraction feasible for use as a substitute for inflammable hydrogen, which was being used in lighter-than-air craft at the time. After prolonged experiments, helium was discovered in a wide belt of territory extending through eastern Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas. He was the author of "A Laboratory Guide to the Study of Qualitative Analysis," 1901; (with Edgar Henry Summerfield Bailey); "The Principles of Inorganic Chemistry," 1912; and "General Chemistry," 1916. A Fellow of the American Association for the Adancement of Science, Professor Cady belonged also to the American Chemical Society, Kansas Academy of Science, Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity, and Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity. Dr. Cady is survived by Mrs. Cady; two daughters, Ruth, a laboratory Say Hello to Summer on Decoration Day BENEFIT CUSTOMERS We have cool, smart McGregor sport clothes ready for you. If you want to cut down on clothing costs and not let your appearance be any the worse for your saving, you'll find it a cinch with jacket and slacks combinations. Get more variety,wear,style and comfort by choosing sport clothes from our complete collection. We will remain closed Monday — Buy War Bonds Ober's 4010010 OUTFITTERS 100 Ask Yourself. Will my trip help win the War?" THERE are only so many trains—so many Pullmans—so many coaches so many dining cars. No more can be had. This equipment was more than adequate for peace-time travel even during vacation periods. Today it is barely sufficient to meet the transportation needs of our armed forces. And we know you'll agree that the men in war service should have first consideration. Therefore, we ask you, as a patriotic American, to question yourself as to the necessity of your trip by rail. Is it important to the winning of the war? Or, as might be the case, is it a truly emergency trip necessitated, for example, by serious illness in the family? These are questions which call for a conscientious answer. Uncle Sam will appreciate your cooperation. It's for your country's welfare. The Progressive UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD ROAD OF THE STREAMLINERS AND THE CHALLENGERS PAGE FOUR SUMMER SESSION KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1943 Summer Session Stuff By BETTY LOU PERKINS The freshmen are gradually getting the buildings in mind and discovering in which their classes are held. The upperclassmen will unconcernedly be looking for them for a week yet... Mr. Vincent Harris of the business office is the most popular man on the Hill. Every student gets around to seeing him within four days after enrollment... The Chancellor's yard looks much better now that Mrs. Malott is taking care of it... A. D. Schick, campus cop, would make a good car salesman. He's trying to get students to bring cars on the Hill so he can keep busy giving them parking tickets. Wally Kunkel left for New York this week to work for Nation's Business magazine in New York. He's an advertising promotion man with 15 men under him. . Wally Grimes, who has his car (?) here now, recently gave the police a bawling out. Said Wally, as the police drove around the Chi O circle the wrong way, "Hey, that's against the law!" Then Wally executed a quick disappearing act. . Johnny Pope and Don Cousins picked up a few ideas on how to play fine music from Count Basie in Kansas City last Saturday night. And they claim that all they picked up. . Duane Smith, Phi Gam, and business manager of the Jayhawk, looks lost without Christine Turk. . $$ * * * * * $$ Jerry Cattlett, just new on the Hill, learns quickly. She went over to register Monday and came back to Miller hall with a date to I. S. A. mixer that night. . . Prof. Robert Calderwood got to his class two minutes early the other day and was in a class by himself. . . The men on the campus claim there is a shortage of girls. Hmmmmm, the girls haven't noticed it. . . The newcomers on the Hill ought to be entertained by another program of some kind with Herbert Dinnerman as master of ceremonies. Former students won't forget Dinny's clever work at one of our basketball games this fall. By the way, Dinny is a sailor. . . $$ $$ The University has quieted down a great deal since the summer session started. The only thing which seems the same is the sailor's singing. . R. T. Kingman, a new student, should help the Kansan keep up its outstanding work (no remarks), since Kingman has been working on the Kansas City Star lately. . New students needn't feel like strangers, there seem to be more new students than old. Tomorrow Is Last Day For Payment of Fees Tomorrow is the last day for students to pay fees without being fined for late payment, warned Karl Klooz, bursar. Monday all fees will have 50 cents added for late payment, and 50 cents for each day after that. The business office will remain open Saturday afternoon until 5 o'clock. Klooz said, to accommodate students who wish to pay then. Prof. Cady Invented Mid-western Hospitality (continued from page one) higher will the egg be lifted. In the same way, Dr. Cady led the gas into a chamber adjoining the pressure-temperature control, and in this chamber a float is lifed by the bouyant power of the gas. The scales were accurate within one-hundredth of a milligram when Dr. Cady first revealed his invention. The machine is useful in testing the purity of a substance, since for a pure substance repeated observations will give the same molar weight throughout the test; impurities will have a different molar weight than the pure substance. (continued from page one) But this feeling of friendly helpfulness has suffered disintegration through the years. It would now be hard to find a house without a lock on the door. The man who today would say, "All that I have is yours," would be inviting disaster. We have not lost our pride in being a friendly people, but there can be little doubt that we are not as whole-hearted in the practice of friendliness as were our forefathers. And it follows logically that unless we discontinue our present trend, Lord Tweedsmuir may have been among the last visitors to see in America a "sincere and widespread friendliness." Malott Urges (continued from page one) servators of one of the nation's greatest assets-education. est assets - don't train only your hands," he said, stressing that in order to preserve this country from "governmental gangsters and intriguers" an educated and thinking populace is needed. War removes many of the most talented men in both arts and sciences, and today's youth must be trained to replace the lost leaders, the Chancellor emphasized. Students present at the convocation were urged by Chancellor Malott to enroll in courses under stimulating professors, and to take work in some fields as far removed as possible from their major. A 40-volume history of the American Indian, illustrated by more than 2,000 photographs and plates, has been placed in the University of Texas library's rare books collection. SIMONE SIMON in "TAHITI HONEY" with Dennis O'Keefe NOW AND SATURDAY JINX FALKENBERG in "SHE HAS WHAT IT TAKES" VARSITY STARTS SUNDAY for 4 days WEAVER BROTHERS and ELVIRY in "GRAND OLE OPRY" GENE AUTREY in "STAR DUST ON SAGE" with SMILY BURNETTE -By Gosh -By Gosh HE WAS PICKED BY THE GREAT LAKES TRAINING STA. AS THEIR OUTSTANDING OPPONENT OF 1943 MY-MY- I FEEL JUST LIKE A BIRD! CHARLES IS A PRE-AVIATION CADET AND WILL GO ON FROM HERE TO EARN HIS WINGS PVT. Charles BLACK JR FORMER COURT STAR FROM KANSAS U. NOW IN THE ARMY AIR FORCES AT KEARNS UTAH - HIS HOME IS LAWRENCE, KANSAS- CHARLIE WAS CHOOSEN ALL-AMERICAN IN 1943 SGT. HOWARD GOSHORN AAF - DTC'S - KEARNS, JUDAH Your Local Bus Service Service direct from campus to downtown. Transfer connection to rest of city. For Any Information Call 388 Rapid Transit The Co. For ALL Occasions RIDE THE BUS Bus leaves campus for downtown 5-15-45 min. past hour Bus leaves downtown for campus 15-35-55 min. past hour —Courtesy the "Kearns Post Review," AAFTTC-BTC(5), Kearns, Utah. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY GRANADA TWO FEATURE HITS HAL ROACH presents William BENDIX ★ Grace BRADLEY "TAXI, MISTER" FRIDAY AND SATURDAY GRANADA TWO FEATURE HITS HAL ROACH presents William BENDIX ★ Grace BRADLEY "TAXI, MISTER" 2nd Feature AS POWERFUL AS THE MEN WHO BUILT THE NATION! "BUCKSKIN FRONTIER" A HARRY SHERMAN PRODUCTION • A UNITED ARTISTS PICTURE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY GRANADA TWO FEATURE HITS HAL ROACH presents William BENDIX ★ Grace BRADLEY "TAXI, MISTER" 2nd Feature AS POWERFUL AS THE MEN WHO BUILT THE NATION! "BUCKSKIN FRONTIER" A HARRY SHERMAN PRODUCTION A UNITED ARTISTS PICTURE SUNDAY, 4 Days BEFORE PEARL HARBOR, THEIR STORY WAS DYNAMITE. NOW IT'S TNT! Rosalind Fred RUSSELL MACMURRAY FLIGHT FOR FREEDOM BEFORE PEARL HARBOR, THEIR STORY WAS DYNAMITE. NOW IT'S TNT! Rosalind Fred RUSSELL* MACMURRAY FLIGHT FOR FREEDOM